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                    <text>�DATE DUE&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
NOV 1 4 2006&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
GAYLORD&#13;
&#13;
PAINTED IN U.S.A.&#13;
&#13;
�\&#13;
&#13;
�EX LIBRIS&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
�The Sioux '18&#13;
BEING THE ANNUAL YEAR BOOK&#13;
OF MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHED BY&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 19 18&#13;
G. EARL BARKS, EDITOR&#13;
E. J. HARRINGTON MANAGER&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVED&#13;
&#13;
THE CANTON&#13;
&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVING AND ELECTROTYPE&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
CANTON, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
PRINTED BY&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
ECONOMY ADVERTISING CO.&#13;
&#13;
IOWACITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
P UB LISHED BY&#13;
&#13;
The Class&#13;
&#13;
of 1918&#13;
&#13;
IN ITS J UN IOR YEAR&#13;
&#13;
�Foreword&#13;
Not fo r&#13;
Not for&#13;
Not fo r&#13;
H ave&#13;
&#13;
The Staff&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
E ARL B ARKS&#13;
&#13;
E. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
NOBLE N. RICHARDSON&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
R U TH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
literary splendor,&#13;
mere artistic beauty,&#13;
honor nor for glory&#13;
we written down this tale.&#13;
&#13;
B ut to tell you of our college,&#13;
Her environment and beauty,&#13;
Her t raditions and her legends;&#13;
And t o tell you of the stu dent,&#13;
His activities and habits,&#13;
Of his victories in battle,&#13;
Of his longings and ambitions&#13;
Have we written down this tale.&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Societ ies&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WE N IG&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES H . KLI PPEL&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
LIDA S AUNDE RS&#13;
CLAIR&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Dramatics&#13;
Alumni&#13;
C alendar&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
Photography&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Photography&#13;
&#13;
ROYAL H. J U RGEN SEN&#13;
&#13;
Artist&#13;
&#13;
If it adds aught to her glory,&#13;
If it makes you r love more loyal,&#13;
If, in years that are to follow&#13;
I t shall call up to your memory&#13;
Scenes of battle, hours of labor,&#13;
Pleasures, honors, tasks well-done&#13;
In the mighty Big Sioux College&#13;
In the Big Sioux R iver Country,&#13;
Then our labor is not useless,&#13;
A ll our work is not in vain.&#13;
With this thought before you always&#13;
We submit to you this legend,&#13;
This, your annual and our class book,&#13;
And extend to you t his g reeting&#13;
Of t he 19-1 8 class.&#13;
EDITOR.&#13;
&#13;
�· Robert NegleyVanHorne&#13;
Who has won our love and esteem as a&#13;
professor and as a man; and who has poured&#13;
out the best part of his life at the feet of his&#13;
Alma Mater, Morningside College, we&#13;
the Class of 1918, respectfully dedicate&#13;
this Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
�ACKNOWLEDGMENTS&#13;
We wish to acknowledge and express&#13;
our appreciation to Ewart Williams '17,&#13;
for the Cartoons; to Lynn Castle '19, for&#13;
the Decorative Emblems on the society&#13;
pages; to Horace Morgan '14, for the&#13;
Order of Books Design; and to Professor&#13;
James J. Hayes, for the Insert Design and&#13;
Ex Libris, found in this book.&#13;
&#13;
�Book I&#13;
BOOK I&#13;
&#13;
The College&#13;
BOOK II&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
BOOK III&#13;
&#13;
Activities&#13;
BOOK IV&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
BOOK V&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
BOOK VI&#13;
&#13;
College Life&#13;
&#13;
the College&#13;
&#13;
�Sing the song of Hiawatha,&#13;
Of the happy days that fallowed&#13;
In the Big Sioux River country,&#13;
In the pleasant land and peaceful,&#13;
On the muskody, the meadow,&#13;
On the prairie full of blossoms.&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
�· I.&#13;
Alma Mater&#13;
PA UL MAcCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Refrain&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
Sing the praises of Dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her heroes bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices,&#13;
The chorus swelling,&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
Then cheer for Dear Old Morningside,&#13;
To thee we pledge anew,&#13;
Hearts of faithful love,&#13;
Now and forever,&#13;
Thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning,&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
we'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought us-­&#13;
Fair Morningside! Our home!&#13;
Hear our vow, 0 Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee.&#13;
All we have&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
For the Glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
eleven&#13;
&#13;
�WINNING POEM OF THE CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
" The Genesis of Morningside .Spirit"&#13;
J. FINLEY CHRIST,&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
On a bare and wind-swept hill-top,&#13;
Sloping gently to the southward,&#13;
Looking toward the broad :M issouriToward the swirling Muddy WaterStood a prophet with a vision ,&#13;
With a vision of the future,&#13;
With a dream of mighty compass,&#13;
Dreaming of what he would build thereOn the hill that looks to southward,&#13;
Toward the swirling Muddy Water.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Comes to Morningside a freshman&#13;
In his hungry search for learning;&#13;
With his burning thirst for knowledge;&#13;
With his bounding youthful spirit;&#13;
With his crude and noisy manner;&#13;
And his heart of sterling metal,&#13;
Though it has not yet been tested .&#13;
Little reeks the bounding freshmanLittle reeks he, aye, or wondersOf the prophet and his vision;&#13;
Of the portrait in the chapel;&#13;
Or of those who followed afterThose who strengthened the foundation;&#13;
Those who toiled, and fought, and struggled&#13;
For the college on the hill-top;&#13;
For the freshman, that his hunger&#13;
After truth should not consume him;&#13;
And he marvels at the spiritAt the loyal, boosting spiritWhich the numbers gone before him&#13;
(Though their names have been forgotten)&#13;
Have bequeathed to those who follow.&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
'Tis with awe he views the battle&#13;
With the warriors of VermilionWith the tribes of South DakotaFrom beyond the Muddy Water.&#13;
With astonishment he ponders'Tis beyond his comprehension-&#13;
&#13;
twelve&#13;
&#13;
thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�When he sees us still unconquered&#13;
Though the scoTe should stand against us;&#13;
When he sees we still are loyal&#13;
To our teams and to our SandyWhether winning, tied, or losing;&#13;
'Tis in vain he tries to solve it&#13;
And appreciates it fully:&#13;
For he still is but a freshman,&#13;
And he cannot comprehend it.&#13;
But in five or six semestersAfter years and years of struggleAfter years of living with ITAfter years of lusty battle,&#13;
And of patient, silent fighting,&#13;
On the field or in the class-roomHe begins to understand it,&#13;
And to have that spirit in him.&#13;
Many times he's been defeated;&#13;
Many times has hope been shattered;&#13;
Many victories have escaped him&#13;
As his hand stretched forth to grasp them.&#13;
But with each defeat he suffered&#13;
He has taken one step onward;&#13;
And at last he is a senior,&#13;
With his proud and knowing manner;&#13;
Oh, SO different from the freshman,&#13;
That but yesterday he had been.&#13;
And among the many things that&#13;
Make him different from the freshman,&#13;
Is the conscious, living knowledge&#13;
That he comprehends the spirit&#13;
Of this college, and its meaning&#13;
To the world that moves about us.&#13;
For the greatest thing this college&#13;
Gives to those that go out from it&#13;
( 'Tis a thing to keep us fighting&#13;
In the battles still before us)&#13;
Is the spirit of its founderIs the spirit of the vision&#13;
Of the prophet on the hill-top&#13;
&#13;
fourteen&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�Who could see the shining future&#13;
And could carve a way out to it:&#13;
Change a footpath to a roadway,&#13;
And a wigwam to a mansion.&#13;
Neither time, nor man, nor devil&#13;
Such a spirit e'er can conquer;&#13;
For as long as rolling prairie&#13;
Forms the banks of Old Missouri,&#13;
Or as long as Muddy Water&#13;
Flows on swiftly to the ocean,&#13;
Morningside shall live and prosper&#13;
On the hill-top, looking southward&#13;
Toward the swirling Muddy Water;&#13;
Shall send forth her sons and daughters&#13;
With her dauntless, fearless spirit,&#13;
That was never known to falter,&#13;
And that never can be conquered .&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
AGNETTE FLOM&#13;
&#13;
'20&#13;
&#13;
In the outskirts of Sioux City&#13;
On the river's winding shore,&#13;
Far upon a hill-top pretty&#13;
Stands our college, as of yore.&#13;
And its halls are wide and spacious,&#13;
Plenty room for fun and care,&#13;
But the spirit of the college&#13;
With its size cannot compare.&#13;
You may talk about you r "pep"&#13;
And your "vim" and "go" and so,&#13;
And think your "spizerinctum"&#13;
Is the best that you can know.&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
Grace Methodist Episcopal Church&#13;
&#13;
But if once you feel the spirit&#13;
Of our collge here so dear,&#13;
You will then forget all others&#13;
And with us abide quite near.&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�We have joys and we have sorrows&#13;
As in other lands and schools,&#13;
But we still cling to each other&#13;
For we've " Friendship" for our rule.&#13;
You should hear us all on Thursday,&#13;
When our pep meetings are on,&#13;
You would sure then wish to join us&#13;
And partake of college fun.&#13;
We are here too for a purpose,&#13;
'Tis to learn, to live and do&#13;
And if you would test our motive&#13;
Let us come and help you too.&#13;
So to Morningside we're loyal&#13;
Yes, loyal, staunch and true,&#13;
·'Til upon the dear old campus&#13;
Our four years or more are through.&#13;
Then we'll boost, boost, boost&#13;
For the college in the west,&#13;
For Morningside, yes, Morningside,&#13;
The fairest and the best.&#13;
Then all join in the "Yip-ki-yi"&#13;
For Morningside, Maroon,&#13;
And then the nine and fifteen rahs,&#13;
While the band strikes up a tune.&#13;
&#13;
A Toast to the Morningside Squaw&#13;
]. R.&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
THE PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
In days th·at long ago were gone,&#13;
In times when tribes were few,&#13;
There lived a band of Indian braves .&#13;
On shores of the Big Sioux.&#13;
On shores of the Big Sioux they lived,&#13;
Right near the old Mizzou,&#13;
Their camp was on a hill-top green,&#13;
Their squaws were worthy too.&#13;
&#13;
eighteen&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Not few the. wars that they did have&#13;
With tribes from neighboring lands;&#13;
Nor few the scalps that home they brought,&#13;
Those scalps of hostile bands.&#13;
'Tis not for me to tell of how&#13;
This tribe has fought and won;&#13;
But mine to tell of just their squaws,&#13;
Their squaws that held them one.&#13;
When shades&#13;
......... were softly drawn,&#13;
.........&#13;
..&#13;
The God of Light sunk low,&#13;
The braves came up the hill to camp&#13;
From. hunts they'd had below.&#13;
They gathered on the river's bank&#13;
To watch the setting sun ;&#13;
While shadows lengthened through the trees&#13;
Their camp-fires were begun.&#13;
The fires they lighted in the woods&#13;
Come back to us again ;&#13;
They now are fires of knowledge&#13;
That glow in hearts of men.&#13;
At first the squaws came not to school,&#13;
They in their homes did hide,&#13;
But soon it was a co-ed school,&#13;
Its name was Morningside&#13;
The squaws now hold the braves in check&#13;
And point to things above&#13;
And teach them how to love to live&#13;
And living is to love.&#13;
&#13;
All&#13;
All&#13;
All&#13;
Of&#13;
&#13;
To them, who have inspired through trife;&#13;
To them we hold in awe;&#13;
To them who give ideals of life;&#13;
Here's to the Morningside Squaw.&#13;
&#13;
the w isdom of the M edas,&#13;
the craft of the Wabenos,&#13;
the marvelous dreams and visions&#13;
the J ossakeeds, the Pro phets.&#13;
&#13;
tw enty- one&#13;
twenty&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
H ILMER&#13;
&#13;
V ice-President and R egistrar&#13;
Ger·man L iterature&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED EDWIN CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
D IMMITT&#13;
&#13;
Dean of W omen&#13;
&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
twenty-tw o&#13;
&#13;
twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�*&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTLEHNER&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HAYES&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
CAMPBELL&#13;
&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
. English&#13;
&#13;
Greek&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET G . DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
FERGUSON&#13;
MAIN&#13;
&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Home Economics&#13;
FREDERICK SCHAUB&#13;
&#13;
A. MARSH&#13;
Public Speaking&#13;
HIRSCH&#13;
&#13;
Biblical Literature&#13;
&#13;
A. BROWN&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
Coach of Athletics&#13;
&#13;
. JASON&#13;
&#13;
GARFIELD JONES&#13;
&#13;
Economics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
w ALTER J.&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
PEARL S. GREENE&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
A. Coss&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
Ger.man&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
Physics&#13;
AGNES&#13;
&#13;
OLAF HOVDA&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Ass't Biology&#13;
&#13;
LAURA .C. FISCHER&#13;
&#13;
Ass't German and Latin&#13;
&#13;
twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�r a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --&#13;
&#13;
IVY B.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MacCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
MacCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
RUBY&#13;
HAROLD R. HARVEY&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Violin and Theory&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F.&#13;
&#13;
w OODFORD&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Expression&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
ZENANA OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Academy English&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
ESTELLA&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
MRS. JESSIE H. JACKSON&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
M. BARTLETT&#13;
Secretary to President&#13;
&#13;
F. OTTO BARZ&#13;
&#13;
BRYAN&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
CECILIA C. STENGER&#13;
&#13;
French&#13;
MRS. BERTHA BOSLEY&#13;
&#13;
Ass't Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
PEARL JANE DOUGHTY&#13;
&#13;
Ass't Expression&#13;
&#13;
LUND&#13;
&#13;
Piano&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Board of Trustees&#13;
&#13;
Book II&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
First Vice President&#13;
Second Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
BRENNER&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
BARZ&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Term expires 1919&#13;
&#13;
Term expires 1918&#13;
&#13;
Term expires 1917&#13;
&#13;
F. 0. BARZ&#13;
L. J. BRENNER&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE ALLEE&#13;
&#13;
W. D. BOIES&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE C. CALL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT CLEGG&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
J. L.&#13;
&#13;
P. E . HELD&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
M. BOND&#13;
&#13;
A.G. BUSS&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
CHAPMAN&#13;
&#13;
R. T. CHIPERFIELD&#13;
· E . M. CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
J. HASKINS&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
C. A. MAUER&#13;
&#13;
J. H. KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
W. T.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
C. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
HATHAWAY&#13;
&#13;
C. P. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
J. C. LOCKIN&#13;
&#13;
J. L.&#13;
&#13;
FELLER&#13;
&#13;
C.H. LocKIN&#13;
&#13;
H. A. KECK&#13;
&#13;
H. SPENCE&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
BENZ&#13;
&#13;
G . F. TINKNELL&#13;
&#13;
C. D. KILLAM&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
J. E.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WEBB&#13;
&#13;
E. A. MORLING&#13;
D. A. McBuRNEY&#13;
&#13;
P. MANLEY&#13;
&#13;
J. H. O'DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
C. METCALF&#13;
&#13;
J. G . SHUMAKER&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
J. P. NEGUS&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
F. H. THIEL&#13;
&#13;
H.B. PIERCE&#13;
&#13;
G. H. WESSEL&#13;
&#13;
WALTER TORBETT&#13;
&#13;
J. B. TRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE F. WHITFIELD&#13;
&#13;
PANZLAU&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE RAW&#13;
&#13;
SCOTT M. LADD&#13;
&#13;
twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
E . T ACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
F. McDowELL&#13;
&#13;
�From his lodge went Hiawatha,&#13;
Dressed for travel, armed for hunting;&#13;
On his head his eagle fea t hers,&#13;
In his hand his bow of ash-wood.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�CLASSPRESIDENT&#13;
RAYMOND HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"So like a courtier, contempt nor bitterness&#13;
Were in his pride or sharpness."&#13;
&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
His nature is&#13;
He would not&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
too noble for th e world:&#13;
flatter Neptune for his tri-&#13;
&#13;
dent&#13;
Or love for his power to thunder."&#13;
&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" With what his valour did enrich his wit&#13;
His wit set down to make his valour live."&#13;
&#13;
vain pomp, and glory of the world, I hate&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
ye."&#13;
&#13;
. SECRETARY-TREASURER&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville&#13;
&#13;
"Age can not wither her, nor custom stale&#13;
H er infinite variety."&#13;
&#13;
STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
DONALD&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
WALTON&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
Lennox, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
imply the thing I am shall make me live."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
hath Prosperous art&#13;
When will Play with reason and disshe&#13;
&#13;
"He cannot flatter, he!An honest mind and plain,- he must speak&#13;
truth."&#13;
&#13;
thirty&#13;
&#13;
thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�H.&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
CHAM P&#13;
&#13;
" She is young, w ise, fair ;&#13;
In th ese to nature she's immediate heir."&#13;
&#13;
WILSON&#13;
T. CLARK&#13;
&#13;
GRORGEB. DUTTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"And faster than his tongue did make off ense,&#13;
His eye did heal it up."&#13;
&#13;
Haubstad t, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
Give thy thought no tongue,&#13;
Norany unproportioned th ought his act."&#13;
&#13;
SUSAN EADS&#13;
&#13;
SinceI am crept in favour w ith m yself,&#13;
&#13;
I will maintain it with some little cost."&#13;
&#13;
West Side&#13;
MILLIE CORNE LIU SSEN&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
"Her life-a quiet stream&#13;
In whose calm depth the beautiful and pure&#13;
A lone are mirror'd."&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
CUMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" L et none presume to wear an undeserved&#13;
dignity."&#13;
&#13;
I hold the world but as th e w orld&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
stage where every man must play his&#13;
part."&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville&#13;
He is complete&#13;
&#13;
in f eature and in mind&#13;
&#13;
With good grace to grace a gentleman."&#13;
all&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
�MINNIE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
FRY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" I must hav e liberty&#13;
Withal, as large a charter as the wind,&#13;
To blow on w hom I please."&#13;
&#13;
Who not content that form er w orth stand&#13;
&#13;
fast,&#13;
Looks forward persevering to the last&#13;
From wellto better, daily self-surpast."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
CHARLES G ARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
w ith this special&#13;
&#13;
" H ear him debate of commonwealth affairs,&#13;
You w ould say,- it had been all his study."&#13;
&#13;
not the modesty of&#13;
nature."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
LUCIA&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" For if our virtues did not go fo rth for us,&#13;
' T were all alike as if we had them not."&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN G. HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
Le M ars&#13;
&#13;
" His eye begets occasion for his w it,&#13;
For ev ery object that the one doth catch,&#13;
Th e other turns to a mirth-moving jest."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
dare do all that may become a man,&#13;
&#13;
who do more is none."&#13;
dares&#13;
&#13;
J acksonville, Ill.&#13;
the world's new fashion&#13;
hath a mint of Phrases in his brain."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�ESTHER LARSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Her pure and eloquent blood&#13;
Spoke in her cheek and so distinctly wrought&#13;
That one might almost say her body&#13;
thought."&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
EDITH LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
FERN J. MARQUART&#13;
&#13;
Lansing, Mich.&#13;
&#13;
"From lowest place w hen virtuous things&#13;
proceed,&#13;
The place is dignified by the doer's deed."&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Stillin thy right hand carry gentle peace,&#13;
envious tongues."&#13;
&#13;
Yankton, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Castana·&#13;
&#13;
"His heart and hand doth open, and both&#13;
free;&#13;
For w hat he has, he gives, and what he&#13;
thinks, he shows."&#13;
&#13;
and sweet majesty,&#13;
That every wretch pining and pale before,&#13;
Beholding her, plucks comfort from her&#13;
looks."&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"So may the outward shows be least themselves:&#13;
The world is still deceived by ornament."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
This fellow of exceeding honesty,&#13;
and knows all qualities as a learned spirit,&#13;
&#13;
ofhuman dealings."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�LAURA E. PEASE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Hath not old custom made this life more&#13;
sweet&#13;
Than that of painful pomp?"&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
the spider; and hath&#13;
&#13;
woven&#13;
golden&#13;
mesh to entrap the hearts of men&#13;
faster&#13;
than gnats in cobwebs.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Thou about her from her&#13;
Shall read the perfect ways of honour."&#13;
&#13;
"Be just and fear not&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
HARRY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
ROSENE&#13;
&#13;
"He must, he is, he cannot but be wise."&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
when whom we serve's&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
"So well to know&#13;
Her own, that w hat she wills to do or say&#13;
Seems wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
than by our d eed&#13;
&#13;
Ft. Dodge&#13;
&#13;
St. Lawrence, S. D.&#13;
check'd silence&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�DOROTHY&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
STEELE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"She hath a tear for pity, and a hand&#13;
Open as the day for melting charity."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
sinful fantasy I&#13;
lust and luxury!''&#13;
&#13;
Avon , S. D .&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
SWAlN&#13;
&#13;
Sinclair, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
"The best-conditioned and unwearied spirit&#13;
In doing courtesies."&#13;
&#13;
LILAH&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Loving well compos' d, with gifts of nature&#13;
flowing,&#13;
And swelling o'er with arts and exercise."&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
DON VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
man!"&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
"The elements so mix'd in him, that nature&#13;
might stand up,&#13;
And say to all the world, 'This was a&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
Hull&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
must follow , as the night the day,&#13;
tanst not then be false to any man."&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
&#13;
"How many things by season season'd are&#13;
To their right praise and true perfection."&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
forty -one&#13;
&#13;
�"Say, do you know what is meant by ' Pride of the Sioux'?"&#13;
"No, what?"&#13;
"Why the Junior class, of course."&#13;
&#13;
P atiently sat Hiawatha,&#13;
Listening to his father'sboasting;&#13;
s&#13;
With a smile he sat and listened&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
Uttered neither threat nor m enace.&#13;
&#13;
forty-two&#13;
&#13;
forty -three&#13;
&#13;
�CLASS PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Chick" is our jolly class president. No one can have the blues when he&#13;
is around. He is ever ready for a good time and his policy is not to let&#13;
his studies interfere with his college education. He plays the mandolin&#13;
and is taking expression, but everyone knows his failing for "reeds."&#13;
No doubt we shall hear more from "Chick" later on, for he's always&#13;
&#13;
one of our rare girls. She is a leader and takes lnuch interest&#13;
activities of college life. Notwithstanding that her thoughts are&#13;
between Morningside and Illinois U, Marion finds tirrie to do&#13;
could be asked of any American College girl. She is dependable&#13;
always does everything well, and enjoys everything&#13;
&#13;
springing something.&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
EARL G. STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A quiet, industrious worker whose heart is bigger than his words. He&#13;
takes an interest in all phases of college life, particularly in "fussing."&#13;
He is an energetic spirit, a sturdy progressive type of manhood, and his&#13;
influence is clean and wholesome. He possesses the zeal of an enthusiast&#13;
who strives after some end, and yet stops along the way to lend a hand to&#13;
&#13;
Julia is quiet, faithful, and unassuming. · She goes her way silently, and&#13;
it is only when we come to know her well that we realize and appre-&#13;
&#13;
those in need.&#13;
&#13;
desire.&#13;
&#13;
ciate her true merit. The class of '17 made a mistake by trying to claim&#13;
her last year, for she has ·been in our ranks since we started. She is&#13;
always busy and as a reward she gets grades that anyone might well&#13;
&#13;
SECRETARY-TREASURER&#13;
VIVIAN DowN&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt&#13;
&#13;
Viv is Y. W. C. A. President. This fact alone speaks for the respect&#13;
which all the girls have for her, and their faith in her ability. She&#13;
is faithful to her friends, as well as to her Latin and German classes.&#13;
She is an enthusiastic, tireless worker, an entertaining reader, a poetess,&#13;
·&#13;
"To&#13;
and a jolly good friend. Indeed we can truly say of Vivian.&#13;
know her is to love her."&#13;
&#13;
forty-four&#13;
&#13;
IRVING BACK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
It is with just pride that we claim this man as a member of our class.&#13;
He is a fellow whom we all admire for his manly qualities, his openmindedness, his unselfishness, his big-heartedness, and his genial personality. While quiet and very modest, he is nevertheless a fluent and&#13;
convincing debater, and has represented his college ably on the forensic&#13;
platform. A man among men.&#13;
&#13;
forty-five&#13;
&#13;
�G.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A loyal supporter of every activity which exists in the college. He is a&#13;
member of the famous Kennel Klub. He loves his society and has been&#13;
a good "Barks" on the debate platform. Although kept busy as editor&#13;
of the annual, he finds time to enjoy a good joke, especially on the other&#13;
fellow, and has a smile that we will all remember.&#13;
&#13;
Yes. But a man with ideas of his own, and who has the&#13;
and courage to carry them out. His mind is never changed&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
ment, yet he is as good-natured after a difference of opinion&#13;
There must be action every minute of the day to suit him.&#13;
has more "pressing" engagements than any other man in&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Bush" is a minister's son. He is always pleasant, although of a somewhat retiring nature. He did all his stepping while a freshman. In&#13;
him we see a most rugged and tireless specimen of physical manhood.&#13;
He plays forward in basketball, end in football, and is a handy man in&#13;
baseball. He is sometimes found in the physics laboratory.&#13;
&#13;
though Winifred came to Morningside this year for the first time we&#13;
already come to realize in a measure her true worth. She is&#13;
reserved unassuming, but nevertheless very efficient. She is a girl&#13;
and&#13;
gentleness and refinement, and ·yet so large-minded and broadd that she is admired by all who know her. Hers is the type of a&#13;
le and sincere friend.&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
ORIN&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
BELL&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Orin is a quiet fellow, but beneath a modest exterior there exists a&#13;
man of true gold. He is one of those fellows who is always ready to&#13;
help another, no matter how deeply engrossed in his own work. Orin&#13;
intends to enter Y. M. C. A. work when he has finished college, and,&#13;
judging from his good record of the past, we know that he will be&#13;
most successful in his chosen profession.&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
&#13;
IRENE&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
Springfield, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Irene knows more about Morningside than most of us do, having been&#13;
connected with the academy and the Conservatory before the Class&#13;
of '18 came to claim her. We were almost afraid that she had lost&#13;
her interest in Morningside this year, but we find that she · is still a&#13;
loyal booster. She is an accomplished musician, but is specializing in&#13;
domestic art at present.&#13;
&#13;
forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
We were quite alarmed last year when the class of '17 claimed Jay&#13;
Christ, but we have found that it was, after all, one of their mistakes.&#13;
Here is a man who upholds our reputation for learning. He "keeps up&#13;
with the subjects of the day, and is most contented when the busiest.&#13;
He is deliberate of speech and sound in judgment. There is surely a&#13;
place among the first for him to fill.&#13;
&#13;
is not afraid to express her thoughts. In the midst&#13;
citement she remains cool and confident. She is a perservering&#13;
and has every reason to be proud of her grades. Here is one&#13;
does not think it necessary to make use of every "cut." One&#13;
know her well to appreciate what a splendid friend and comrade&#13;
&#13;
J. FINLEY CHRIST&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN CLOUGH&#13;
&#13;
Allen, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Marty" is a quiet, bashful youth from Nebraska. He is always&#13;
willing to do his share of any work and let someone else have the&#13;
glory. He does not let his books worry him much, but manages to pull&#13;
good grades. He delights in bodily activity and is our baseball captain&#13;
this spring. "Marty" is a good companion and a true friend.&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
Marieooms wiht "Katink" and boards at Sunshine Inn. Should it&#13;
r&#13;
be necessary to say more? Jolly? Yes, indeed! She is the life of any&#13;
gatheringwith her humor and jollity. She believes in a good time,&#13;
&#13;
even though it be at the expense of a lesson or two. It is such enthusiasm and life as Marie's, that make for t rue class and college spirit.&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ctiy&#13;
&#13;
Floyd spent two and one-half years with us, and now holds a responsible position in one of the Sioux City banks. We were obliged to look&#13;
up to him from the very first. He played forward for his class two&#13;
years in basketball and was a member of one championship team. He&#13;
was a splendid mixer in social life and we miss him a great deal. We&#13;
sincerely hope for his return next year.&#13;
&#13;
forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps one of the busiest men in school. Editor of the Collegian&#13;
Reporter, and an orator and debater of recognized ability. He has&#13;
a most unusual power of winning persons to his point of view. His&#13;
studies are his pastimes, yet he is able to claim his share of enviable&#13;
marks. In spite of all this, he still finds ample time to "fuss."&#13;
&#13;
forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
Ruth is a hustler. Whatever she attempts she starts with a will and&#13;
usually finds the way. Hers is the vim and snap that make things go.&#13;
The test of her ability is not so much what she does, but the way in&#13;
which she does it. She is prominent in class and society affairs, and is&#13;
an enthusiastic member of the Y. W. C. A. cabinet.&#13;
&#13;
an all-around good fellow and is full of the M. C. spirit that&#13;
everything which he undertakes a success. He is a good student&#13;
class room, likes to jump the hurdles on the cinder path, is a&#13;
in the glee clu,b, and plays· center for his class basketball team.&#13;
himself really busy he solicits ads for the Sioux '18.&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A mixture of music, gallantry, wit, enthusiasm, and energy. He plays&#13;
the "slide" like few others can. Ask the Sunshine Inners if that's&#13;
true. A member of the College Band and Orchestra. His manners&#13;
are precise and his gallantry is unquestioned. He appears serious at&#13;
all times, but those who know him realize that beneath that cold exterior is a vein of mischievous humor and frivolity.&#13;
&#13;
not have been done better. She is so totally without conceit, and yet&#13;
we ll know that what Cleo sets out to do is done well. In spite of her&#13;
a&#13;
,encrous, gracious, considerate and even calm spirit, she 1s so resoute and determined that success is bou nd to be hers.&#13;
&#13;
ARCHIE FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Cleo never admits that she has done anything so well that it might&#13;
&#13;
HILDA JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GOUDIE&#13;
&#13;
Margaret takes music and incidentally classes junior. She has a rare&#13;
gift of words and smiles; neither conversation nor enthusiasm can lag&#13;
when Margaret is about. She allows nothing to interfere with her&#13;
pleasure and may be found read y at any time for a jolly time. Don't&#13;
be mistaken, however, for though preeminently mirthful, she can be&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
determination she carries out he r resolutions.&#13;
Her spirit is invincible and if at first unsuccessful she triesuntil the&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
purpose is achieved ·&#13;
. is hereto get the most out of her work, and&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
She&#13;
applies herself conscientiously to her work, though patient, plodding&#13;
· ·&#13;
study&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
mistic. be often required.·&#13;
Hilda1s ever found good-natured and optia&#13;
&#13;
With honest plunk and&#13;
&#13;
real serious at times.&#13;
&#13;
fifty&#13;
&#13;
fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�- - ------------lil&#13;
&#13;
Ponca, Nebr.&#13;
LEON&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
"Jerry" is not a one talented individual, though we hear of him most&#13;
often as connected with athletics. He is an athlete in every sense of&#13;
the word. And whether it is on the gridiron, the basketball floor, or&#13;
the diamond, he enjoys doing his share of the hard work. He is a popular captain and plays football with the spirit that wins. Known for his&#13;
broad smile and cheery manner.&#13;
&#13;
good-natured rascal, chuck full of yarns, quips, quirks,&#13;
In this respect he is perhaps like all the other K ennel&#13;
"King" is not unusually fond of work, but is brilliant&#13;
mind and takes an active interest in debate. He is also much ined in t.he College Orchestra. He is kind of manner, a firm friend,&#13;
better still, an honorable foe.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
MARION&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Marion is a live wire and a good mixer. She is always brim full of&#13;
enthusiasm. When asked to serve on a committee, she works with all of&#13;
her real Morningside "pep." She has taken an active part in debate&#13;
and possesses marked literary ability. Because of her capabilities and&#13;
her love for real sport, Marion has won a host of friends.&#13;
&#13;
"Casey" is glad that he came to Morningside because he has received&#13;
more from it than just his college course. He has brought honor to&#13;
the school through his oratorical ability. He ·is loyal to his class and to&#13;
his college, but more than this, he is sincere in his chosen life work,&#13;
that of Christian service, and is Y. M. C. A. president for next year.&#13;
"Casey" loves a good time and is capable of doing his share towards&#13;
making it.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
ROYAL JURGENSEN&#13;
&#13;
U. S. Army, Philippine Islands&#13;
&#13;
" Jurgie" is full of life and vigor, and a hard worker. His bright&#13;
As a result&#13;
ideas and capable hands were always in demand.&#13;
we miss him greatly. Though imaginative and idealistic, yet he is. ,&#13;
practical that he wants to see results for all that he does. "Jurgie"&#13;
&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
"Fran" came from Illinois to be one of the class of '18 at Morningside,&#13;
and we're mighty proud of her. She has ideas all her own-good ones,&#13;
too-and is exceedingly independent. Although she leaves her capabilities to be discovered, she has almost any one. Singing, playing and&#13;
acting, she is equally charming. She is a member of the Madrigal&#13;
Club and an enthusiastic basketball player.&#13;
&#13;
feels at home anywhere.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�ca-----------------&#13;
&#13;
Here is a man who puts forth untiring and consecrated effort to help&#13;
his fellows. His profession is the Christian ministry. He has no time&#13;
or desire for meaningless, wasteful, and selfish activities. He works&#13;
consistently and cheerfully, rarely taking any relaxation. His greatest&#13;
rest is found in doing more work. A man who comes to college for&#13;
the sole purpose of development.&#13;
&#13;
Clara returned to Morningside after spending a year in an eastern&#13;
school. We respect her for her good judgment. Her genuine good&#13;
nature makes her a good friend to everyone. Always in a gracious&#13;
manner she does many little things that other folks overlook. She is an&#13;
excellent student and has as much Morningside spirit as the rest of&#13;
her family. We are proud to claim Clara as a member of our class.&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
Torn has been unanimously elected to the handsome class. A goodnatured fellow and a well-rounded athlete ·who is also somewhat of&#13;
a student. He plays outfield in baseball, guard in basketball and in&#13;
the backfield in football. Most of his spare moments are spent around&#13;
the chemistry laboratory, where he entertains his fellow workers with&#13;
his melodious voice.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
one of those persons who find time to do everything and do&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
well. If not engaged in working deep problems in analytic&#13;
or in calculus, he passes his spare time in fussing and in the&#13;
ter things of life. When Arthur becomes one of the foreercial chemists in the country, we will recall with gi·eater&#13;
the old saying that "the boy is the father of the man."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
THOS.&#13;
&#13;
Ft. Dodge&#13;
&#13;
N atland, England&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD LANCASTER&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
'Rusty" is a most talented young man.&#13;
&#13;
Whether as a physician for&#13;
&#13;
the pink eye or as an investigator in astronomy, his . equal would be&#13;
hard to find. He holds a responsible position as President of the&#13;
Amalgamated Snipe Hunters of America. Notwithstanding the cares&#13;
and worries produced by preforming the duties connected with this&#13;
office, he is always cheerful and is ever ready to help a friend in trouble.&#13;
&#13;
THOS. H.&#13;
&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
Hubbard&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" is a good-natured fellow with an Irish smile and cheer that we&#13;
.&#13;
all like. Looking after his cousin is his chief worry. He is an earnest&#13;
student, a persistent worker on the gridiron or on the basketball floor,&#13;
and supports every true and worthy cause. He is loyal to his friends,&#13;
his class, his society, and his college.&#13;
&#13;
fi fty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Yankton, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Wise from the top of his head up. His studies really don't bother him&#13;
a great deal, and he enjoys life immensely. He boosts all along the&#13;
line for everything in which he is interested. Especially known for&#13;
his track work. A delightful talker, full of wit and brilliancy. May&#13;
usually be found in the halls or library-talking to the girls.&#13;
&#13;
came to us from Sioux City High. She is as gay and irresponsi-&#13;
&#13;
BLY McCoNKEY&#13;
&#13;
is brainy and well-meaning. Variety is the spice of her life,&#13;
never knows just where to find her. She likes a good time betthe average girl, and has lots of enthusiasm. On committee&#13;
always does her share ably.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
The rule of her life is to make business a pleasure, though some might&#13;
think it were to make pleasure her business. She is one of those cheerful, happy-go-lucky individuals, who apparently have nothing to do,&#13;
nevertheless, she is an excellent student, a willing and conscientious&#13;
Y. W. C. A. worker, and a booster of every college activity. Esther&#13;
is a true friend and scatters sunshine wherever she goes.&#13;
&#13;
hereis a type of girl in demand in every college. Elma is an enthusi·c booster in every activity of school life. She is always ready for a&#13;
laugh and a good time, and yet she works hard and is often seen&#13;
ring over her Latin and German book. Elma is a friend to every, sincere and conscientious. Whenever called upon to help, she&#13;
nd willingly&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
Yell-master and pep-generator! "Buster" isn't very big, but he is full&#13;
of loyalty and school spirit. Characteristic of him is the intensity and&#13;
changeability of his moods, for once in a while, ( though you may not&#13;
believe it) he does scold wonderfully, if he is making all the noise. you&#13;
would know "Buster" for his whole-souled and infectious laugh.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
She may seem dignified-but wait until you know her. Mildred is&#13;
one of the most sincere friends that we have.&#13;
&#13;
She is a reader of ability&#13;
and a girl with mos t original an d c1ever ideas. For this reason she is&#13;
. . 1&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
f&#13;
a avonte committ ee mem ber. Th e b rightness of her eyes the gentle.&#13;
ness of her smile , an d t h e grac10usness of her words, win many ftiends.&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
one know her but to love her.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-s ev en&#13;
&#13;
�HOW ARD&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
REYMAN&#13;
&#13;
Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
He never says much, but his silence speaks louder than words, because&#13;
of the sympathetic, unselfish intent of his life. While he is somewhat&#13;
diffident in his speech, manner, and action, yet · he is true and sincere&#13;
in his desire to help the other fellow. Reyman is a diligent student, .&#13;
loves his college, and upholds all things that are high and noble.&#13;
&#13;
NOBLE&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
are never known to Ida. She is always the same jolly, carefree,&#13;
Ida. Good grades come with little effort on her part, and&#13;
her studies first thought only at examination time. She is runwith wit, and she can always argue, tho' she never becomes&#13;
Her highest ambition is to teach in Montana.&#13;
&#13;
Ainsworth, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Rich" hails from the sand hills of Nebraska. No, he isn't a farmer,&#13;
but he's going to make an excellent business man. At least he ought&#13;
to, for he is getting practice while in school. At present he spends his&#13;
afternoons in one of the city banks. "Rich" possesses that valuable sense&#13;
of humor, and never gets "peeved" if a joke happens to be played on&#13;
him. A warbler in the Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
more from Dakota than any other part of the&#13;
&#13;
earth And she is majoring in home economics, too. To see her one&#13;
might think her very quiet, sedate, and reserved. Knowing her, howr, we realize what a jolly and charming friend she is. She is an un• tiring&#13;
worker, and is not afraid to give others the benefit of her own&#13;
&#13;
hard work.&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS RIDDLE&#13;
&#13;
LIDA SAUNDERS&#13;
&#13;
Novelty has a peculiar charm for Gladys, and the regular routine&#13;
classes soon seems monotonous to her. Gladys has a lovable disposition&#13;
is very cheery, very merry, and as happy-go-lucky as they make th&#13;
She takes her own time about everything, and never has a care except&#13;
a week before examination time. An eager participant in sport,&#13;
pleasant friend and a genial companion.&#13;
&#13;
If you could hear her laugh, you would know that she is a part of all&#13;
fun, and a plotter of much mischief. Never is a frolic complete with-&#13;
&#13;
Manilla&#13;
&#13;
When she feels like studying, she may be seen engrossed in&#13;
She prefers James' Psychology, but of&#13;
course . she's prejudiced. There's so much in a name. Lida is a charmf&#13;
nend and companion.&#13;
out her&#13;
&#13;
a Latin or a psychology book.&#13;
&#13;
fifty.-eight&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Merlin&#13;
&#13;
Bay City, Mich.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
Merlin stayed out of .school last year to teach and naturally she fell&#13;
hack into our class, but she now acknowledges that she has nothing&#13;
to regret. This is not insinuating anything against you seniors. Merl in studies hard, is faithful on committee work, and likes a good time.&#13;
She always goes to the bottom of things and wants to Know the "why"&#13;
&#13;
is serious-minded&#13;
&#13;
all that he does. He is an untmng workIn his school studies, whether&#13;
class room or on the debate platform, he is systematic and thora conscientious student, loyally pledged to his books and studies,&#13;
worthy fellow to have as a friend.&#13;
111&#13;
&#13;
a definite purpose and aim in life.&#13;
&#13;
and the "wherefore."&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Another member of the Kennel Klub. " Deak" is editor of our joke&#13;
department. No, he is not a joke himself, but he tries to represent oth_ r&#13;
e&#13;
folks as such. he is a faithful and accommodating librarian and&#13;
though he studies conscientiously he is quite a lively and consistent&#13;
"stepper." Deak has common sense in a way that is uncommon, and un-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ALICE SWAN&#13;
&#13;
A quiet, modest, studious lass, and yet one who is as loyal as the most .&#13;
loyal. She goes about her work never troubling anyone. But she is so&#13;
&#13;
full of generosity and never-failing kindness, that every one likes her.&#13;
She enjoys her work and studies earnestly and conscientiously. Alice&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
genuine th rough and through, and can ever be depended upon.&#13;
&#13;
derneath all there is real worth.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
R uTH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Indeed if it be true that there is great ability in knowing how to conceal one's ability, Ruth is a most able person. She is very modest&#13;
few realize how much she really does. Nevertheless she is a lead&#13;
in all college activities and has been chosen President of the Agora&#13;
Club. Ruth is a girl of high ideals, absolutely dependable, and a&#13;
&#13;
HERALD&#13;
&#13;
w ALKER&#13;
&#13;
·Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Never burdens himself by carrying books around. H e is able to do&#13;
anything from managing the Park Moving Picture Theatre to talking to the girls in the library: He has always taken an act ive interest&#13;
in his class and ser.ved as pres,ident l ast year. It was largely due to his&#13;
efforts (in penmanship? ) that the Class of ' 18 won the cups at the&#13;
Men's Banqu t th' year. H' accommodatmg and cheerful spirit&#13;
.&#13;
1s&#13;
makes him&#13;
·&#13;
nen to everyone.&#13;
&#13;
cere friend.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
sixty&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
ERWIN&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
WENIG&#13;
&#13;
Inwood&#13;
&#13;
" Obe" is a close rival of Sherlock Holmes. He says more funny things&#13;
with less effort than any ten men in school. He has a letter in football,&#13;
baseball and track. He plays guard in basketball, pitches in baseball,&#13;
and plays end or tackle in football. He is just the opposite of "Bush"&#13;
( they roomed together when Freshmen) ; he left all of his stepping until&#13;
&#13;
At the same time she is one of the best-natured, sunHer head is as&#13;
her heart is big. Perhaps she is not as steady a worker as some&#13;
has times and seasons of working as they come to her. Then&#13;
plishes much with her swift hand and swifter .brain.&#13;
pered, and kindest-hearted girls that we have.&#13;
&#13;
his junior and senior years.&#13;
&#13;
Merrill&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WETMORE&#13;
&#13;
When Frances isn't having a good time or making a good time for someone else, she is · worrying about her grades. She minors in biology&#13;
Perhaps that's the reason. When she is in the proper optimistic mood&#13;
she creates much fun and laughter by her wit and humor. Frances&#13;
plays the violin, and is business manager of the Madrigal Club. She is&#13;
&#13;
A quiet, non-excitable chap who studies ardently because he likes to.&#13;
&#13;
Lay be found at most any time of the day in the biology laboratory.&#13;
keen_ thinking strong feeling, and direct speaking are particularly&#13;
aracteristic&#13;
Though averse to all frivolity and mischief, he sympath1zes m all reasonable forms of pleasure We might add th t h.&#13;
.&#13;
ular&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
a 1s part1cp easure is ca11 mg over on Third Avenue.&#13;
&#13;
a loyal booster for Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
AGNES&#13;
&#13;
C. WOLLE&#13;
The Class of '18 began its college career under the able direction of&#13;
this man as president. "Bill" is a man who possesses ability mixed&#13;
with a great deal of good common sense. He is a sincere and untiring&#13;
worker both in the church and in the Y. M. C. A. He talks intelligent·&#13;
ly on any subject and at any time, and wherever he gets a chance.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
FRY&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
We were glad t o we1&#13;
come A gnes back to Old M. C. last fall&#13;
d&#13;
now we are espe . 11&#13;
I d to welcome her once more to the ranksan&#13;
' of&#13;
now we&#13;
gnes debated fo M ormngs1 e unng her freshman year· 111&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
11 forms of college activities, and fi nds time t o&#13;
'&#13;
a e good grades· Sh never 1&#13;
.&#13;
oses a chance for a good time.&#13;
mencan College Girl !&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
act, s e is active 111&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-three&#13;
sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�JAMES&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
One of Uncle Sam's Soldiers who went down to Mexico. Donahue&#13;
came to l\!Iorningside last year from Yankton. He knew what he was&#13;
about when he came back from the south in time to enroll as a Junior&#13;
this fall. Very modest and unassuming, he believes in fair play, and&#13;
his perfect sincerity is not to be questioned. A man of broad sympathies and enviable cheerfulness.&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
GOLDIE JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
As pleasant as she looks. She is never idle a moment, is always thrifty&#13;
and thoughtful of others. Goldie is a most brilliant student, and notwithstanding the fact that she was not in school all last year she is back&#13;
in her old class. She goes her own way and goes quietly. She is happy&#13;
always and has a bright look for all.&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
LEHAN&#13;
&#13;
President of the Tennis Association. And Lloyd enjoys playing tennis&#13;
perhaps more than any other one thing except "fussing." He seems&#13;
to have more time on his hands than most folks. No doubt this is&#13;
because he needs less to keep up his scholarship. Social life delights&#13;
him and he is not to be excelled in gallantry. Though dignified and&#13;
conservative in appearance, he appreciates cleverly turned phrases.&#13;
&#13;
.sixty-/our&#13;
&#13;
Out of childhood into manhood&#13;
N ow had grow n my Hiawatha,&#13;
Skilled in all the i:raft of hunters,&#13;
L earned in all the lore of old men.&#13;
&#13;
sixty ·five&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
R. Troutman, President; R. Ma.hood, Vice-President ; R . Engberg, Secretary-rrreasurer; D.&#13;
Council Representative.&#13;
L. Sandvig&#13;
R. Schellenger&#13;
A. Lunblad, A. Sturdevant, A. Fry, R. Whitfield&#13;
H.&#13;
H. Carter&#13;
F. Appel, L. Smith, H. Freeman, G. Crouch&#13;
R . Reid&#13;
E. Westfall, E. Wessel, C. Baldwin, R. B erry&#13;
E. Persinger&#13;
G. Easton&#13;
L. Knapp, H. Meeks, R. Hill, E. Pritchard&#13;
S. Brodkey&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
Hambleton, G Brown G D&#13;
L H .&#13;
Walker, c. H~rt&#13;
' mi unn, · a1tz, A. Hunt, T. Friest, R. Burpee.&#13;
Caatle, A. Wolcott&#13;
R. Randolph, W. Wood, R. Brady, M. Evans.&#13;
Ferguson&#13;
A&#13;
Warnes F. Morrison, H. Hunter, C. Albertson.&#13;
Trankle H. Fouke&#13;
Schroeder E. Wood, F. Newland, L . Keene.&#13;
, · erg , . tterback, H. H utchison, M. Stru ck.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�F.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Boyd, V. Gerkin, I. Smith, L. Herron , L . Hornnev, M. N icholson, M. Bishop.&#13;
Daniels, G. Dykstra, V. Payne, G. Wishard&#13;
L. Steele, E. Peitzke, M. Woocl.&#13;
Clark, M. Gusteson, M. Fish, E. Secoy, E. Savonel, L. Shuster, M. Gu steson.&#13;
Knapp, H. Wulf, A . Boyd, M. Purdy, M . Mahood, K. Tharp, F. Foresberg.&#13;
&#13;
Nursed the little Hiawatha,&#13;
Rocked him in his linden cradle&#13;
Bedded soft in moss and rushes&#13;
Safely bound w ith reindeer Sinews.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-nine&#13;
sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
�ra----------------&#13;
&#13;
Paul BLue&#13;
Class President&#13;
Died October 16, 1916&#13;
C. Hyde,Secretan·-Treasurer: M. Lorv, Student Council Representative&#13;
0. Crews, H. Hayes S. Hutchison, J. Dean, B. R eed, C. Swartz.&#13;
&#13;
er, Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
C. Back J. Glasgow, M Hanson, A. H inkley, E. McKinn ey.&#13;
J. Trefz, L. Twogood, C. Starr, A. Jeep, E. Atwood .&#13;
&#13;
M Evans&#13;
&#13;
II. Butler, M. Wulf, F . Porter, L. Beard, C. Hallam.&#13;
J. Mcburney, M. Walker , H. Bergeson , I-L Albertson, L. Steele, F. H ackett.&#13;
&#13;
,·&#13;
seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�O. Easthouse, L. Fowler. L. Dahl, H. Pitstick , D. Troutman.&#13;
\V. VanC leve, S . Burpee, A. Kampe r, H . Raun, M. Ru eber, L. Pearre.&#13;
&#13;
C. Taylor, L. Engberg, M. Harrington, E. Persinger, C. Jorstad.&#13;
G. Brown, L. Sutherland, P. Day, :&#13;
M. Lutz. F. \Vier, A. Thompson.&#13;
P. Chamberlai n, P. Mickelson , A. Abel, L. P eterson, G. Goudie.&#13;
A . Montgomery, C. Northrup, T. Kenney, S . Sherr, M. Benton, II. Dodsley.&#13;
&#13;
R. Smith&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
BA&#13;
&#13;
L. Stone, E. P ayne, I-I. Smith, C. Engle.&#13;
&#13;
R. Rhinehart, F. Ander son, G. Tou n send, E. Bradley, E . Morris.&#13;
Hartman, C. Harder, M. Leitch, A. Corr, E . Sanger.&#13;
&#13;
E. Wagner, F. Isham, M. Johnson, G. Omer, Steele.&#13;
I. Keeler E. Lake, E. Ostling, L. Hansen, A. Flom, V. Hart.&#13;
· I· Skinner, M. Dewell, E . D un agen, C. Cowan , O. Aistrope.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
A. Carter M. Mo n tgomer v, A. Beck, G. Leignton M. Swanson&#13;
R Jo hn son H . Lu gla n. H . Me1dell, E. Au sma n, . Le G&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
G Yo un g L . Sto ne, V. Clark., B. Ca rver, . r1&#13;
H . Search, T .. Klatt, P Hod ge, R. Marten.&#13;
&#13;
seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
Bring a maid w ith nimble fing ers,&#13;
H eart and hand that move togeth er.&#13;
Sh e shall run upon your errands&#13;
B e yo ur starlight, moonlight, fir elight,&#13;
B e th e sunlight of our people.&#13;
&#13;
sevrn ly -fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�SENIOR MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
Book III&#13;
Margaret&#13;
&#13;
Gowdie, Piano&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Ordway, Piano&#13;
&#13;
Gert rude Groshon. Pia110&#13;
&#13;
Rubetta ,Johns, Piano&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR EXPRESSION&#13;
&#13;
Activities&#13;
M. Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
A . Boyd, C. Lewis, M. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
G. Cla rk , F. Beacham.&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
H . H a rtl e•·, E. Sawyer, F. Fair, M. Ch amp, D. Cha mp. H . Albro, R. And rews:&#13;
Lon&#13;
H. Whyte, G. Jenkenson, R. Johnston, L. Bleakley, D. Bleakley, C. Mahood, H . Buehle1, R.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
�/&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
D ear, too, unto Hiaw atha&#13;
Was the very strong man, K w asind,&#13;
Hee the strongest of all mortals,&#13;
JEe the mightiest among many;&#13;
For his very strength he loved him,&#13;
For his strength allied to goodness.&#13;
&#13;
sev enty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
:1,&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
,•·&#13;
&#13;
'«I&#13;
&#13;
.··,.,&#13;
&#13;
()&#13;
&#13;
·.· : °&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
J ASON&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Director of Men's Athletics&#13;
Who stands for clean athletics and&#13;
who has put us on the map&#13;
athletically&#13;
&#13;
Seventy ·eight&#13;
&#13;
se'Ve11ty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Champions&#13;
of Iowa, South Dakota, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
FACTORS O F A W I NN I NG F OOTBALL SEASO N&#13;
&#13;
S'rANDING- Coa ch Saund er son , Beck , Swartz, Wulf Hornney, Eiffert.&#13;
SEATED-Norten,&#13;
Gantt, Ba s haw. John s on , Northrup, Wenig, Lloyd&#13;
Seated- Hinkl ey, Clark, Behm er , Williams, Warnes.&#13;
&#13;
SCH ED U L E&#13;
M orningside&#13;
&#13;
O ct. 7, State T eachers at Cedar F alls ........................................................ 38&#13;
O ct. 14, Buena Vista at Sioux City ............................................................&#13;
O ct. 21, .W ayne N ormal at Sioux City ....................................................... .&#13;
O ct. 28, D akota W esleyan at Sioux Ci ty ....................................................&#13;
Nov. 4, N ebraska W esleyan at Lincoln ........................................................ .&#13;
Nov. 11 , Iowa State College at Ames ......................................................... .&#13;
Nov. 18, South Dakota U nive rsity at Sioux City ................................ ......&#13;
Total ------- -------- -- -- ---------- -- ---------- ------ ----- --------------- -------- ------ ------------------- --- --· 306&#13;
&#13;
eig hty&#13;
&#13;
eighty·o·ne&#13;
&#13;
�- -----------Ii]&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE NORMAL GAME&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE TEACHERS GAME&#13;
The first game of the season was played against the&#13;
Iowa State Teachers' College, at Cedar Falls. The&#13;
Maroons were victorious by the decisive score of 38 to 6.&#13;
A much closer game was expected because of thi; fact&#13;
that the Ames Aggies the previous week had been able to&#13;
score only 19 points against them. The State Teachers'&#13;
paper likened the Maroon squad to a "well-oiled machine,&#13;
each man having his certain work to do and then doing it."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Wayne game was a decisive victory for the Marom the blow of the first whistle the game was&#13;
roons. F&#13;
in doubt · the Maroons scored at will. All of the&#13;
never 1&#13;
backfield men, Behmer, J ohnson , Gnatt and Hinkley,&#13;
making sensational runs of thirty and forty yards at a&#13;
clip. At the end of the first half a total of 54 points&#13;
had been registered and the second half started with&#13;
several of the second squad in the lineup. The final score&#13;
which showed that their work was not in vain was&#13;
&#13;
112&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA WESLEYAN GAME&#13;
&#13;
BUENA VISTA GAME&#13;
The Buena Vista game, which was played at Mizzou&#13;
Park, was a comparatively easy victory for the Maroons.&#13;
They started with a rush and scored two touchdowns in&#13;
the first seven minutes of play. From here on the game&#13;
was played in a seemingly indifferent manner; the Maroons being content to hold them, and only occasionally&#13;
showing the fighting spirit that so dominated the entire&#13;
squad the week before.&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
The overwhelming defeat of the Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
squad was the sweetest victory of t he season because of&#13;
the fact that the Wesleyanites had the previous season&#13;
defeated the Maroons by a score of 29 to 10.&#13;
The liaroons outplayed them from the first blow of&#13;
whistle! The backfield men plunged through their&#13;
line for short smashes of three to eight yards, and skirted&#13;
their ends for thirty and forty yards at will. The 112&#13;
points scored by us was the largest score ever amassed&#13;
by _any Maroon eleven against a team of equal rank,&#13;
h1ch was re mar ka bl e cons1'd enng that there was only&#13;
.&#13;
"Gile. varsity ma remammg 111 t e 1&#13;
· ·&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
meup when the final&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
tie blew.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�VERMILION GAME&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN GAME&#13;
This game, which was played at Lincoln, was one of&#13;
the hardest battles of the season, both teams fighting to&#13;
their utmost, but the Maroons by their smashing style of&#13;
play finally won out by a score of 17 to 0. Nevertheless&#13;
it was a dear victory because of injuries to Johnson and&#13;
Northrup&#13;
This was the first time in the history of Morningside&#13;
that any Maroon eleven has defeated Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
at Lincoln, and it is also the first time in the history of the •&#13;
school that we defeated Dakota Wesleyan and Nebraska&#13;
\Vesleyan in the same season.&#13;
&#13;
AMES GAME&#13;
When we met the Aggies we were in very poor condition because of the hard game the week before. Nevertheless the Maroons played stellar football and lost only&#13;
by a single touchdown caused by a fumble, due to the&#13;
intense cold. Neither team was able to make consistent&#13;
gains because of the condition of the field. The touchdown came in the third quarter and was the second and&#13;
last time the Maroon goal was crossed during the entire&#13;
season, resulting in our only defeat.&#13;
&#13;
-'th South Dakota came as a fitting climax&#13;
he mos successful of all Maroon football seane of t&#13;
The enthusiasm and the spirit shown was greater&#13;
.&#13;
than dunng any previous year , because of .the fact that&#13;
hold them at least to a tie.&#13;
were d&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
me really started in the morning when&#13;
The f oot baII a&#13;
d consisting of the entire student body, led by&#13;
aparae&#13;
f h d&#13;
CoII ege B and ' marched thru the streets o . t . e own&#13;
the&#13;
.&#13;
town district, arousing and creating pep by giving yells&#13;
&#13;
The contest w 1&#13;
&#13;
and singing songs.&#13;
&#13;
The game started promptly at three. The Maroons&#13;
kicked off and the Coyotes after several plays were forced&#13;
to punt.&#13;
The ball was in the Coyote's territory most of the time&#13;
and only once during the entire contest was there a chance&#13;
for either team to score. This opportunity came in the&#13;
third quarter when, after a series of forward passes, the&#13;
ball was advanced to the Coyote's seven yard line, where&#13;
the Maroons were held for downs. The game ended&#13;
with the ball in South Dakota's possession on their own&#13;
forty yard line.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-five&#13;
eiqhty-four&#13;
&#13;
�ta------&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON, '18&#13;
&#13;
Captain "Jerry," our husky right halfback, by his wonderful line plunging&#13;
ability, his open field running, his aggressiveness on offense and his good&#13;
right toe made many a victory possible for the Maroons. Jerry is a typical&#13;
football leader, and a clean, hard player and deserves the position on the allState eleven accredited him by football critics.&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG, '18&#13;
&#13;
right tackle, was a wizard at analyzing plays and delighted&#13;
&#13;
end runs and off-tackle smashes before they got under way as&#13;
ing forward passes and carrying them down the field.&#13;
many points, once lifting a d'rop kick 49 yards and hanging&#13;
&#13;
for Sioux City.&#13;
COACH J.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
"Obe" received honorable mention for&#13;
&#13;
SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
" Saundy," the man who made the football squad what it was, the man who&#13;
is a natural football fighter and who has the faculty of instilling it into his&#13;
men; a man who, by his personality, can win the respect of any of his football men and can give them that dogged persistency which will surmount&#13;
any obstacle on the football field.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD, ' 18&#13;
&#13;
ubstitute backfield man, was ,fast on his feet and a clever runner.&#13;
both at fullback and the quarterback position, and from this&#13;
bowed unusual generalship in directing the plays of the squad.&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP, '20&#13;
&#13;
"Norty," the captain-elect who played the right end' position, was a&#13;
at breaking up interference and tackling the man in the same play;&#13;
received forward passes in a phenomenal manner and in going down&#13;
punts oft times tackled the safety man in his tracks. He was given a&#13;
on the second all-State eleven.&#13;
&#13;
LEVI HORNNEY, ' 19&#13;
&#13;
"Lee" at the center position was a man worthy of the place ; on defense&#13;
he never failed to block a play through the center of the line; he was&#13;
especially good at passing the ball to the backfield men and in no little&#13;
degree should the showing of these men be accredited to him.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-six&#13;
eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�EDWARD Gantt,&#13;
&#13;
'20&#13;
'20&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR Hinkley,&#13;
&#13;
"Ted" played left halfback on the squad and was a tower of strength in that&#13;
position, being fast on his feet, a clever runner, and a man who could hit&#13;
the line when occasion demanded. He was also adept at receiving passes&#13;
and he was one of the hardest and surest tacklers on the Maroon squad.&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER,&#13;
&#13;
'19&#13;
&#13;
"Little Al," the quarterback who directed the playing in the squad, was&#13;
a fast, clever, and shifty open field runner, a wonder at receiving and&#13;
returning punts. On several occasions twisting through the entire opposing&#13;
squad for touchdowns. "Al" was given the position on the all-State eleven&#13;
of quarterback and' captain.&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW,&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF,&#13;
&#13;
' 19&#13;
&#13;
the big left tackle, was a fighter from start to finish. He never&#13;
sensational, but always got his man, he was a veritable giant&#13;
anything&#13;
en e when called upo n t o ma ke a h oIe · t h e opposing line for the&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
in&#13;
I&#13;
d plungers.&#13;
&#13;
Alligan&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
"Bush" played left end for us. He was a hard worker and a man&#13;
always used good judgment in playing his man; he was especially&#13;
on defense, breaking up plays and smashing the in_&#13;
terference on many&#13;
sions before the play was fairly started.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
gh playing as a sub in the early part of the season, held the&#13;
lback during the closing games. He was a hard runner and&#13;
er and made superb intereference for his teammates in the&#13;
&#13;
EWART WILLIAMS,&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
"Ewart'' was su bstituted both in the backfield and the end positions. He&#13;
·&#13;
was 3 hard worker and a consistent tackler and his small size in no way&#13;
measured his fighting determination to return victor.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-11i11e&#13;
&#13;
�DALE NORTON,&#13;
&#13;
'19&#13;
&#13;
"Skinney,'' playing at right guard, proved to be a tower of strength. His&#13;
weight and power enabling him to make a hole in the opposing line when&#13;
called upon to do so. On defense, he marched through the line, blocking&#13;
many a play before it was started.&#13;
&#13;
WILSON C LARK,&#13;
&#13;
ituted in many positions, playing at center, guard, end, and&#13;
A very valuable man because of his ability to fill any posi• con istent fighter, and distinguished himself as a hard&#13;
&#13;
HARRY Warnes&#13;
&#13;
AXEL BECK, '20&#13;
&#13;
"Swede" played left guard and never left anything undone; on offense he&#13;
always put his man out of the play, and on d'efense he broke thru the line&#13;
time after time, blocking the man behind the line of scrimmage.&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
'19&#13;
&#13;
on several occasions was substituted in the backfield and whenev er&#13;
called upon to carry the ball made a substantial gain, being fast on&#13;
&#13;
and a hard runner.&#13;
&#13;
' 17&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
0&#13;
has associated with Paul, especially on the football&#13;
• becomes rnfected with the never die spirit of " hit 'em hard men." He&#13;
the sec&#13;
.&#13;
on squa and he put the fight into them which made the&#13;
fight to th ·&#13;
·&#13;
utmost to hol d their positions.&#13;
PAU L EIFF ERT,&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES SWARTZ, ' 20&#13;
&#13;
"Red" was substituted at both the center and guard positions. He&#13;
himself in a creditable manner. He was a hard, consistent worker&#13;
a real fighter from start to finish.&#13;
&#13;
ninety&#13;
&#13;
"Turk." An&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�- - - - - - - - - - - --&#13;
&#13;
The Reserves&#13;
&#13;
R eifstick, Omer , Hackett, T. McBride, Behmer.&#13;
Bogard, K enn ey, Brown, Pearce, D owns.&#13;
Walker Quinn, Conners (Capt.), Mickelson, Cowa n.&#13;
&#13;
On the afternoon of November 29, the "Scrubs" journeyed to Sutherland, w&#13;
a hard-fought game was played with the town team. A little stage fright at&#13;
caused them to surrender the first half by a score of 6 to 0. After a little hea&#13;
heart talk with Behmer, their manager, they went into the game the second half&#13;
a determination to win. After a few minutes of play, a forward pass signal&#13;
called. The line held like a stone wall and a forward pass, Mickelson to C&#13;
resulted in a thirty yard run for their only touchdown. Conner's ability at ki&#13;
goal won for them the game.&#13;
Scrubs 7, Sutherland 6.&#13;
P. M.&#13;
The lineup was as follows:&#13;
Left End ------------····-····--····-···--····-····-··-···-··-···--·- Cowan&#13;
Left Tackle ·····-··-··-····--···------------······-····-··-··-· Walker&#13;
Left Guard ----------·-··. ···-·····-·-··--·---···-······-··-··· Kenney&#13;
Center ------··--·····-···-·····-··-·····-------------------···-··----- Bogard&#13;
Right Guard ---····-····· ···--····-····-···-···-··-···- T. McBride&#13;
Right Tackle ··-······--··-··· ·-········-···-···-······-------·- Hackett&#13;
Right End ·····-··----·········-·····-···-·······-···-··-····- G . Brown&#13;
Quarter ----····--·······-···-·····-···-------···-··--·- Capt. Connors&#13;
Left Half -------------------· . ------------------------------------- Quinn&#13;
Right Half ------------···-··---------------------------------- Mickelson&#13;
Full Back --------------·-· ------------------------------------------ Steele&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
ninety-three&#13;
uinety-two&#13;
&#13;
�First Installment&#13;
&#13;
Whoops&#13;
&#13;
of the Sioux&#13;
OR&#13;
&#13;
" THE COYOTE H unt"&#13;
Vermilion, S. D .&#13;
&#13;
The feature of the game was the work of the pitch&#13;
"Obe" Wenig of Morningside and Steele of South&#13;
kota pitched wonderful ball, each holding their oppon&#13;
to two hits. At the end of the tenth inning the score st&#13;
0 to 0. An overthrow in the first of the eleventh, with&#13;
coyote on second and two out, gave South Dakota the&#13;
score of the game.&#13;
Score: Morningside 0, South Dakota· University 1.&#13;
Vermilion, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
May 13, 1916&#13;
This game was featured by heavy hitting on both si&#13;
A high wind made errorless ball impossible. North&#13;
twirled for us and kept the hits of the coyotes well&#13;
tered .&#13;
Score: Morningside 8, South Dakota University 6.&#13;
&#13;
given Wenig was the feature of the game.&#13;
ert's work behind the bat was even better&#13;
Two errors were checked up against the&#13;
orningside 5, Ellsworth 3.&#13;
Scene IV. Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
May 18, 1916&#13;
completed their record-breaking trip by an&#13;
over Buena Vista. Obrecht allowed but five&#13;
One error made by&#13;
orningside 1&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
&#13;
"THE HAWKEYE Trail"&#13;
&#13;
Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
D es Moines, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
May 15, 1916&#13;
The heavy-hitting of the Maroons again fea&#13;
"Obe" Allowed but two hits while the much-touted&#13;
ley was driven off the mound.&#13;
Score: Morningside 9, Highland Park 0.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-four&#13;
our&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista 0.&#13;
&#13;
"THE Sroux INVASION BY THE CoYOTEs"&#13;
Bass Field, Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MAy 1916&#13;
19,&#13;
the game were Duncan's batting,&#13;
g, and a rally by the Maroons in the&#13;
enig, after pitching superb ball for four&#13;
compelled to leave the game with a dislocated&#13;
&#13;
Scene II.&#13;
Part&#13;
&#13;
Northrup&#13;
&#13;
May 17, 1916&#13;
&#13;
May 12, 1916&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
their belt.&#13;
&#13;
Scene Ill. Iowa Falls, Io,Ya&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Scene II.&#13;
&#13;
her scalp&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
ide 12&#13;
Morningside State Teachers 0.&#13;
&#13;
Produced under the direction of Jason l\I. Saunder&#13;
&#13;
Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
by Eiffert Northrup and Johnson enabled&#13;
I ert,&#13;
annex anot&#13;
&#13;
A Story of State Champions&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
Captain "Tu rk" Eiffert&#13;
AND HIS&#13;
Tribe of Scalp-Hunters&#13;
&#13;
P ART I.&#13;
&#13;
Cedar Falls, Iowa&#13;
Scene II ·&#13;
)lay 16, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Bass Field&#13;
&#13;
May 20, 1916&#13;
aftnged themselves of the defeat of the prehering the Coyotes. Eighteen hits were&#13;
elivery of the South Dakota pitcher, inruns. four three-baggers, to say noth'lnd s!ngles. Northrup pitched.&#13;
gside 23 , South Dakota University 4.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�p ART IV.&#13;
&#13;
"THE BADGER&#13;
&#13;
Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
H unt"&#13;
&#13;
Northfield, Minh.&#13;
&#13;
May 24, 1916&#13;
Rain prevented starting the game until after&#13;
o'clock and left the field slow and slippery.&#13;
Clough pitched.&#13;
Score: Morningside 2, St. Olaf's 8.&#13;
Scene II.&#13;
&#13;
Northfield, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
May 25, 1916&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The heavy slugging of the Maroons&#13;
Carlton pitchers to leave the mound.&#13;
Score: Morningside 19, Carlton 7.&#13;
Scene III. Northfield, Minn&#13;
May 26, 1916&#13;
Northrup pitched and allowed but five hits as did&#13;
oppor{ent, but errors at critical times allowed the latte&#13;
win&#13;
&#13;
Score: l\Iorningside 3, Carlton 8.&#13;
&#13;
GRAND TOTAL&#13;
&#13;
Morningside 121, Opponents 42&#13;
&#13;
LINE-UP&#13;
&#13;
Catcher&#13;
First&#13;
Second&#13;
Short&#13;
Third&#13;
Right Field&#13;
Center Field&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Substitute .&#13;
&#13;
ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
CAPTAIN PAUL EIFFERT&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
CAPTAIN- ELECT MARTIN CLOUGH&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP&#13;
CLARENCE Obrecht&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
ninety-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�ke the previous record,&#13;
&#13;
Second Installment&#13;
&#13;
Whoops of the. Sioux&#13;
CAPTAIN WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
Supported by an All-Star Cast&#13;
Produced under the Direction of&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
PART I&#13;
Drake Relays, Drake Stadium, Des moines&#13;
Captain Wendell Curry, Herald Walker&#13;
Williams, and Harry Warnes carried the&#13;
for us in the two-mile relay, the only race we&#13;
tered. We were unlucky in drawing the&#13;
outside lane. Williams, our first man, was&#13;
until the last 220 where he managed to&#13;
through and pass up several men. He ran an&#13;
race and could have bettered his time if gi&#13;
chance. Warnes took up the race with a h&#13;
of a bad start and passed up man after man of&#13;
seven ahead of him and ran the fastest race&#13;
young career. His magnificent sprint on the&#13;
gave Walker second place with a 20-foot han&#13;
"Steve" loafed around behind his man in&#13;
tomary style until the last 300 yards, where&#13;
the whole field and gave Captain Curry a&#13;
lead of 20 yards. Our holder of the con&#13;
record continued to increase the lead between&#13;
self and the Cornell man until fully 50 yard&#13;
arated them at the finish. Curry was con&#13;
be the prettiest runner of the afternoon. he&#13;
ered his first lap in 55 and would have made&#13;
time if pressed.&#13;
The bad starting position probably preve&#13;
from setting a new record. As it was, we&#13;
·w ithin 2% seconds of it, covering the&#13;
8: 17: 2, the record being 8: 15, held by M&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
year,&#13;
&#13;
event.&#13;
&#13;
PART II&#13;
.&#13;
Morningside South Dakota University&#13;
Field, May 10, 1916&#13;
.&#13;
tnmme us , but they just evened&#13;
the year before. Vidal of South&#13;
individual star, carrying off 18&#13;
n curry. was easily second with 11&#13;
&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
&#13;
]ASON&#13;
&#13;
hen we bro&#13;
.&#13;
by l3 seconds. With the exves, Iorningside has always heId&#13;
&#13;
a good day for a track meet as there&#13;
e gale blowing up the home stretch&#13;
to the chilly weather, made it unpleasthe spectators and the participants.&#13;
twas 64 points for Vermilion and 45&#13;
&#13;
de.&#13;
feature event was the 4+0-yard dash.&#13;
contest between two state champions.&#13;
the South Dakota record in that event,&#13;
holds the conference record in the 880rry broke the tape a stride and one• In the 880 Walker had things all&#13;
Steve" to forsake his opponent's com-&#13;
&#13;
In the broad&#13;
&#13;
with a good lead.&#13;
&#13;
beat out Vidal, the S. D. star, by two&#13;
two-mile Van Horne had an easy&#13;
&#13;
being Williams of Mornshot put Ray Harrington pulled&#13;
for us. Ed Harrington copped 3&#13;
hurdles and threw a big scare into&#13;
the lows. No records were made beand windy atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
competitor&#13;
&#13;
tephens, S. D.; Curry, M. 10: 3&#13;
tephens, S. D.; Quigley,&#13;
curry M.; Meade, S. D.&#13;
Walker&#13;
M. Meade&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
24:2&#13;
54: 2&#13;
&#13;
2: 08: 1&#13;
&#13;
ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
�ca.------------ Mile run-Cobb, S. D. '· Curry ' M .&#13;
,v&#13;
4&#13;
Two-mile run-VanHorne ' M .,. Williams&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
120-yard hurdles-Young S· D ·,&#13;
ington, M.&#13;
220-yard hurdles-Quii,:ley,&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
ar-&#13;
&#13;
S. D.&#13;
High-jump-Vidal, S. D.; Young, S. D.&#13;
and Wenig, M. tied for second&#13;
Broad-jump-Wenig, M. Vidal, S. D.&#13;
Pole-Vault-Vidal, S. D.; E. Mahood, M.&#13;
and Bennett, S. D. tied for second&#13;
Discus-Vidal, S. D.; Anderson,&#13;
D.&#13;
Shot-put--R. Harrington, M. Anderson ,&#13;
&#13;
S. D.&#13;
&#13;
START OF TWO-MILE AT THE DRAKE RELAYS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred one&#13;
one hundred&#13;
ed&#13;
&#13;
�School Champions, 1918 Class Team&#13;
&#13;
Cross County&#13;
&#13;
Meyers Williams&#13;
McConkey,&#13;
Walker&#13;
&#13;
W eni g, E. H ar1·in gto n.&#13;
&#13;
K enn ey, Sh erwood.&#13;
&#13;
ANNUAL MONUMENT RUN&#13;
February 22, 1917&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY&#13;
120~yard hurdles-E. Harrington, '18; Warnes, '19; Fouke, '19&#13;
100-yard dash-Curry, '17; Behmer, '19; D. Bleakly, acad.&#13;
Two-mile run-VanHorne, '17; Trefz, acad.; E. L. Williams, '17&#13;
Pole vault-E. Mahood, '19; R. Troutman, '19; Warnes, '19&#13;
440-ya rd dash-Curry, '17; Held, '17; Conner, '18&#13;
Mile run-McConkey, '18; Warnes, '19; Hunt, '19&#13;
220-yard hurdles-A. Romney, '17; E. Harrington, '18; Fouke, '19&#13;
880-yard dash-Walker,'18; Warnes, '19; Wenig, '18&#13;
Shot put-Wenig, '18; E. Harrington, '18; L. Johnson, '17&#13;
Broad jump-Behmer, '19; Wenig, '18; E. Harrington, '18&#13;
220-yard dash-Curry, '17; D. Bleakly, acad.; Behmer, '19&#13;
High jump-Wenig, '18; Fouke, '19; E. Harrington, '18&#13;
Discus-Wenig, '18; R. Harrington, '17; Johnson, '17&#13;
Class of 1918, first,&#13;
Class of 1917, second,&#13;
Class of 1919, third,&#13;
Academy, fourth,&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
43&#13;
34&#13;
24&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Kenney '20 (first)&#13;
Ewart Williams '17 (second)&#13;
ams&#13;
Clair Sherwood '18 (third)&#13;
Herbert 11eyers First Academy&#13;
&#13;
Time 18 :58&#13;
"&#13;
19:32&#13;
" 19 :32 :3&#13;
&#13;
points.&#13;
points.&#13;
points.&#13;
points.&#13;
&#13;
hundred two&#13;
011 e hundred three&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The "M" Club Inter~State Invitation Mi&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
MAY, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Sinkley Miller, E.Smith); Sioux City; LeMars.&#13;
hero ee (&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Fonda· McKennon, Sioux Falls; Rogers, Yankton.&#13;
Pearce, Si'oux City· Goodrich, Ida Grove; Slife, Hawarden.&#13;
ates,&#13;
'&#13;
. Coffie Sergeants Bluffs; Pearce, Fonda; and Gates of Sioux&#13;
&#13;
3:48:3&#13;
10:2&#13;
21 :9Yz&#13;
&#13;
5:4&#13;
.&#13;
108&#13;
Lemars · Pearce, .Fonda; Piper, Ida Grove.&#13;
rueher,&#13;
.&#13;
38 :8 1/2&#13;
Brueher, Lemars · Manmng, Elk Po111t; Pearce, Fonda.&#13;
row-Berberich, Yankton; Moulton, Fonda; Bergh, Sioux Falls.&#13;
127&#13;
Gates, Sioux City, 13 points.&#13;
Pearce, Fonda, 12 points.&#13;
ioux City 34 points&#13;
Fonda&#13;
17 points&#13;
Lemars&#13;
17 points&#13;
broken: Broad jump Mile run, 440 yard dash.&#13;
tied for second.&#13;
&#13;
RECORDS OF THE "M" MEET&#13;
&#13;
GATES, BREAKING THE RECORD&#13;
SUMMARY&#13;
100-yard dash-Gates, Sioux City; Goodrich, Ida Grove; Murphy, Fonda.&#13;
220-yard dash-Cannon, Sioux City; Goodrich, Ida Grove; Murphy, Fonda.&#13;
440-yard dash-Shafenberg, Sergeants Bluffs; Berquist, Sioux City; Kircher, Sio&#13;
880-yard dash-Beatty, Vermilion; Swancutt, Sioux Falls; Berquist, S. C. 2 :14&#13;
Mile-run-L. Larson, Sioux City and Swancutt, Sioux Falls tied for first;&#13;
Roberts, Storm Lake, third.&#13;
120-yard hurdles-Kennedy, LeMars; Goodrich, Ida Grove; Kelly, Fonda.&#13;
220-yard hurdles-Rummel, Hawarden; Stiles, Cherokee; Jacobson, Sioux&#13;
Falls&#13;
Half-mile relay-Sioux City (Gates, Hope, Cannon, B. Smith);&#13;
LeMars&#13;
&#13;
011e hundred four&#13;
&#13;
(Storm Lake), 1909,&#13;
Osborne ( LeMars), 1911,&#13;
dash-Wilson (Cherokee) ,1911,&#13;
dash-Shafenberg (Sergeants Bluffs), 1916,&#13;
dash-Rogers (Yankton) , 1914,&#13;
L. Larson (Sioux City), 1916,&#13;
Swancutt (Sioux Falls), 1916,&#13;
hurdles-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911,&#13;
hurdles-Quigley (Hawarden), 1911.&#13;
t-Leuder (Cherokee) , 1911.&#13;
Peterson (Centerville), 1911.&#13;
Wilkins (Correctionville), 1911.&#13;
Aldrich ( Sioux City), 1911.&#13;
hammer-Gilliland ( Storm Lake), 1911.&#13;
shot-Knapp (Cherokee) , 1911&#13;
ates (Sioux City), 1916.&#13;
relay-Le Mars, 1915&#13;
Le Mars-1915&#13;
have won:&#13;
1909-Storm Lake&#13;
1910-Sioux City&#13;
1911-Cherokee&#13;
1912-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
:10 flat&#13;
:23&#13;
54:2&#13;
2:07&#13;
4:48 :1&#13;
:17&#13;
11 feet.&#13;
&#13;
5 feet 8 inches&#13;
146 feet 3inches&#13;
110 feet&#13;
21 feet 9.5 inches&#13;
1 :37.3&#13;
3 :45.2&#13;
1913-Sioux City&#13;
1914-Le Mars&#13;
1915-Sioux Falls&#13;
1916-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fi&lt;v e&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash-C. Rogers, 1908&#13;
220 yard dash-F. F. Hall, 1903&#13;
44 yard dash-V. E. Montgomery, 1913&#13;
880 yard dash-W. E. Curry, 1915&#13;
Mile run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1908&#13;
N. ]. Williams, 1914&#13;
Two mile run-L. R. Chapman, 1908&#13;
220 yard hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910&#13;
120 yard hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
High jump-W. McIntosh, 1914&#13;
Broad jump-G. E . West, 1911&#13;
Shot put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912&#13;
Hammer throw-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
Discus-R. R. Vernon, 1915&#13;
Pole vault-Herman Leuder, 1915&#13;
Mile relay-V. E . Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser,&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, F. E. Burns, 1909&#13;
Two mile relay-H. Walker, V. Lavely,&#13;
M. Morley, W. Curry, 1915&#13;
l\1onument run-V. Lavely, 1914&#13;
&#13;
one hundred six&#13;
&#13;
10.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
:15&#13;
5 feet, 7 1/2&#13;
21. feet, 2&#13;
39 feet, 1/2&#13;
·&#13;
121 feet, 3 1/2&#13;
·&#13;
128 feet, 6 ·&#13;
11 feet, 10 ·&#13;
&#13;
011r&#13;
&#13;
hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
�t a - - - - - - - - - - - - -Northwest&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
lnter--Class Basketball Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Basketball Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Gymnasium&#13;
February 9-10&#13;
PRELIMINARIES&#13;
&#13;
, Sanborn&#13;
&#13;
Orange City, 33; Sergeant Bluffs, 13&#13;
Castana, 21; Remsen, 13&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
FIRST ROUND&#13;
&#13;
12; Holstein, 6&#13;
&#13;
14; Rock Valley, ..J.&#13;
&#13;
, 11 '· Linn&#13;
&#13;
Grove, 6&#13;
r, 33; Kingsley, 1&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek, 33; Hartley, 12&#13;
Marcus, 12; Ireton, 4&#13;
Orange City, 14; Sac City, 13&#13;
Spencer, 19; Castana, 12&#13;
SECOND ROUND&#13;
&#13;
STANDING-Brown, Dodsley, Swartz, P ear ce, Luglan.&#13;
SEATED-Hinkley, R. Smith (Capt.) , Mickelson.&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake, 29; Hawarden, 5&#13;
Orange City, 11 ; Sioux Center, 9&#13;
&#13;
STANDING-Wenig, Johnson, Llo,·d (Capt&#13;
B ashaw, E. Harrington, T. McBride.&#13;
&#13;
SEMI-FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake, 38; Marcus, 14&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, 26; Spirit Lake, 15&#13;
Officials&#13;
Time Keeper, Prof. J.&#13;
Umpires&#13;
Erwin Wenig&#13;
&#13;
CLASS STANDING&#13;
Won&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1920 _&#13;
...................................................................................................&#13;
Class of 1918 _&#13;
...................................................................................................&#13;
Class of 1919......................................................................................................&#13;
.Academy .................................................... ...........................................................&#13;
Class of 1917 ........................................................................................................&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Second Team&#13;
First Team&#13;
Russel Smith, '20&#13;
George Brown, '20, Capt.&#13;
Clark Conner, Acad.&#13;
Homer Dodsley, '20&#13;
Hugh Foulke, '19&#13;
Guard&#13;
Ed. Harrington, '18&#13;
Lawrence Pearce, '20, Capt.&#13;
Center&#13;
Erwin Wenig, '18&#13;
Carrol Northrup, Acad.&#13;
T homas Lloyd, '18&#13;
Officials&#13;
Erwin Wenig&#13;
Time Keeper,Prof. ]. ] . Hayes&#13;
Referees :George Brown&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Position&#13;
Forward&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
Hayes&#13;
&#13;
IOUX CITY JOURNAL'S ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
First Team&#13;
&#13;
Holder, Castana&#13;
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Clapper, Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Second Team&#13;
Burguitt, Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Third T eam&#13;
Fletcher, (Capt. ), Sioux&#13;
City&#13;
Haskell, (Capt. ), Spirit Ottipaly, Sioux Center&#13;
Lake&#13;
Loomis, Marcus&#13;
Bergman, Spirit Lake&#13;
Nelson, Spirit Lake&#13;
Balkema, Orange City&#13;
&#13;
Emrick, Spirit Lake&#13;
Montgomery, (Capt.)&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Thompson, Sioux City Hollenbeck, Sioux City Seemann, Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
OUX CITY TRIBUNE'S ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
( Picked at the end of the second round)&#13;
S econ&#13;
eam&#13;
ergman, Spirit Lake&#13;
Scanlon, Rock Valley&#13;
Montgomery (Capt.) Sioux CityDoornick, Sioux Center&#13;
tt1polv , Sio c enter&#13;
.&#13;
Clapper, Spencer&#13;
Thompson&#13;
.&#13;
ux 1ty&#13;
W assnaar, (Capt.), S10ux Center&#13;
K k&#13;
Re msen&#13;
Blasdell, Holstein&#13;
First Team&#13;
&#13;
one hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
�ZGym&#13;
&#13;
TWO SQUADS AT WORK&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
H U GH FO UKE&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
�Lrene&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
LOIS R U SSELL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Athletics&#13;
M" sweater is to a man, so an Agora Athletic Medal is to a girl. The&#13;
b gives two medals each year to the two best all-around girl athletes. It is&#13;
a point system. A girl playing basketball gets one point for each half of&#13;
e she plays in, and five points if she is a member of the champion class&#13;
ys a half or more in the final game. This year points will also be awarded&#13;
of the Crimson and Blue teams. In Tennis five points are awarded to&#13;
wins the tournament, and three points to the runnerup. The winner of&#13;
gets five points, the one taking second, three points, and the one taking&#13;
t. Each member of the winning relay team gets one point. Five points&#13;
to the girls doing the best gym work.&#13;
Lois Russell had the greatest number of points and received first medal.&#13;
DIRECTORS OF PHYSICAL TRAINING FOR WOMEN&#13;
&#13;
ams was the next highest and received second medal.&#13;
&#13;
Miss SALOME LUECHAUER&#13;
MRS. MARGARET BRAND-HAYES&#13;
&#13;
1915- 16&#13;
&#13;
1916-17&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirteen&#13;
one hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
�Inter-Class&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tournament&#13;
School Champions&#13;
&#13;
R USSELL, MAHOOD, Ratliffe,&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS.&#13;
&#13;
TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
Lois RussELL&#13;
&#13;
Winner&#13;
Runner up&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
CRIMSON-BLUE GAME&#13;
(All-Star Teams)&#13;
Blue&#13;
TRACK MEET&#13;
Summary&#13;
440 yard dash-A. Sturdevant, first; R. Gillies, second&#13;
Standing broad J ump-R. Hill&#13;
Short dash-Irma Ratliffe , first; L. Williams, second .&#13;
Traveling rings-I. Lippert, first; H. Carter, second&#13;
220 yard dash-I. Ratliffe, first; L. Williams, second&#13;
Medicine ball throw-A. Sturdevant, first; R. Mahood , second&#13;
Horizontal ladder-R. Gillies, M. Mahood , I. Ratliffe, tied&#13;
Half mile-I. Ratliffe; first; L. Williams, second&#13;
High jump-I. Ratliffe, first; L. Williams and R. Hill , second&#13;
Pull Up-I. Ratliffe, first; L Williams, Second&#13;
Totals:&#13;
Irma Ratliffe, 27 2-3 points&#13;
Lorene Williams, 19 .,Y;; points&#13;
Aurelia Sturdevant, 10 points&#13;
&#13;
one hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
A Sturdevant (Capt.), M. WalkerR Mahood.&#13;
.D. Champ, H . Bergeson, E. Payne&#13;
&#13;
Score: Crimson 2, Blue 5&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
one Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�With their pipes they sat in silence,&#13;
Wailing to behold the strangers,&#13;
Waiting to receive their message;&#13;
Till the Black Robe chief, the Pale face,&#13;
From the wigwam came to greet them,&#13;
Stammering in his speech a little,&#13;
Speaking words yet unfamiliar.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixteen&#13;
one hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�Our Inter&#13;
&#13;
Cp;;egiate&#13;
Orators&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CYRUS Albertson,&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL.&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Parsons College, Fairfield, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
MARSH&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
Who has coached forensic teams with the development&#13;
of the individual as his chief purpose, but under whom&#13;
forensic teams have made for us an enviable record.&#13;
&#13;
ndon Harvinghurst, (first)&#13;
s Albertson , (second)&#13;
&#13;
ph Miller, (third)&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Simpson&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
• A. Buell, (first)&#13;
.&#13;
H. Klippel, (second)&#13;
Woods, (third)&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Penn College&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighteen&#13;
one hundred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�Triangular Inter&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
MORN I GSIDE-HAMLINE UNIVERSITY-UPPER IOWA U&#13;
OUR AFFIRMATIVE TEAM vs. UPPER IOWA AT SIOUX CI&#13;
&#13;
Quadrangular&#13;
Inter-&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
In'GSIDE-YANKTON-HURON-DAKOTA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
Up AFFIRMATIVE TEAM VS. HURON AT SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
DON WALTON, DON VAN HORNE, WILLIS FORBES.&#13;
&#13;
D ecision: Affirmative 3, Negative 0.&#13;
Question: Resolved, That Federal and State Boards of Arbitration, with&#13;
sory Powers, should be appoined to settle all disputes between employers and empl&#13;
&#13;
L.\ URA PEASE, GLADYS CLARK, MARION JOHNSOK.&#13;
&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, Negative 2&#13;
Resolved, That Capital Punishment should be abolished.&#13;
&#13;
OUR NEGATIVE TEAM vs. HAMLINE AT NORTHFIELD&#13;
OUR NEGATIVE TEAM VS. YANKTON AT YANKTON&#13;
&#13;
IRVING BACK, ALLEN BARTLETT, CHARLES GARLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, Negative ·2.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK, ADA CARTER, LUCYLLE TWOGOOD.&#13;
&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 3, Negative 0&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
The Man Below, (first)&#13;
&#13;
CYRUS Albertson&#13;
Allen&#13;
&#13;
The Era of Enlightenment&#13;
&#13;
BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
0. W. Craik&#13;
&#13;
The Star&#13;
The Fruits of Democracy&#13;
The Star of Hope for Mexico&#13;
&#13;
.CLAUDE Baldwin&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Hilmer&#13;
&#13;
Wayne&#13;
&#13;
HOME PROHIBITION CONTEST&#13;
The Demand of the Age, (first)&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES Klippel&#13;
&#13;
The New Patriotism&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Our Duty to Liberty&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN LEITCH&#13;
&#13;
Donald&#13;
&#13;
The Dawn of a New Age&#13;
&#13;
HARRY WHYTE&#13;
&#13;
Walton&#13;
&#13;
Francis&#13;
&#13;
KINGSBURY, EARL BARKS.&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Debateers&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ANDREWS&#13;
&#13;
The Booze Army&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Question: Resolved,' That Federal and State Boards of Abitration with&#13;
sory powers should be appointed to settle all disputes between employers and&#13;
Negative Teams&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative T eams&#13;
JANUARY 8&#13;
Philomathean 0&#13;
&#13;
Ionian 5&#13;
&#13;
JANUARY9&#13;
Philomathean 1&#13;
&#13;
Othonian 4&#13;
JANUARY 10&#13;
Ionian 1&#13;
&#13;
Othonian 4&#13;
&#13;
Edward&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
STil,i&lt;;S. Charles&#13;
&#13;
GARLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
LEE Saltow&#13;
&#13;
DON VAN HORNE , Willis&#13;
&#13;
Forbes&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBride,&#13;
&#13;
Royce&#13;
&#13;
ENGBERG, HARRY WARXES.&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Debates&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Debaters&#13;
&#13;
. NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN Bartlett,&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE Easton&#13;
&#13;
Arthur&#13;
&#13;
Oayne&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Intra-Society Gold Medal Debate Series&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
E. Ausman&#13;
vs.&#13;
S. Burpee&#13;
Geo. Brown&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Intra Society&#13;
Gold Medal Debate Series&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
S. Burpee&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
H. Foulke&#13;
R. Schellenger&#13;
vs.&#13;
G . Call&#13;
L, Dye&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Trefz&#13;
vs.&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
C. L.&#13;
&#13;
L. Castle&#13;
M Erickson&#13;
&#13;
C. Baldwin&#13;
)I. Erickson&#13;
&#13;
J. McBurney&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Medal Winne.rs&#13;
&#13;
L. Castle&#13;
F. Hackett&#13;
&#13;
H. Fouke&#13;
Burpee&#13;
&#13;
H. Fouke&#13;
G . Call&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Trefz&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
M. Evans&#13;
First&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
T. 11cBride&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
L Steele&#13;
C. Cowan&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan O, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker U. 1, Morningsid'e 2.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3; Baker U. 2, Morningside 1 .&#13;
"d&#13;
.&#13;
. B k r u 2 Morningside 1&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa 2, Mornings, e 1 ' a e&#13;
. '&#13;
.&#13;
1906_Upper Iowa 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa 2 Morningside 1&#13;
M&#13;
.&#13;
3&#13;
orningsi&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
N b k Wesleyan O&#13;
J 908-U pper Iowa O, Morn111gs1de 3;&#13;
e ras a&#13;
. '.&#13;
?&#13;
U&#13;
.&#13;
.d&#13;
Iowa 1 Morningside ~·&#13;
l910-Simpson 0, Mornings, e 3 ; pper&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
.d 0&#13;
M&#13;
.&#13;
. d 2. Upper Iowa 3 Mornings, e&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa 1,&#13;
ornings1 e '&#13;
'&#13;
1 . 2 Morningside 1.&#13;
1912-Nebraska \\lesleyan 1, Morningside 2; Dakota \\' es e)~n '.d 2&#13;
.&#13;
. Coe 1 Mornmgs1 e&#13;
"d&#13;
1913-Iowa State Teachers 2, M ornrngsi e 1 ,&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
"d 2&#13;
.&#13;
'd&#13;
M ornmgsi e 3.' Coe 1' Mornmgs1 e&#13;
191 4-Iowa State Teachers 0,&#13;
1915-Southwestern 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
.&#13;
.d 1&#13;
.&#13;
. de 3 . Coe 2 Mornings&gt; e&#13;
l915-lowa State Teachers 0, M orningsi&#13;
,&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
. d' 2&#13;
" "' .&#13;
. d 3. St Olaf 1 Mornings&gt; e&#13;
nornings1 e , ·&#13;
' .&#13;
.&#13;
191 6-Dakota \\lesleyan O, 1&#13;
2&#13;
.&#13;
"d 3. Hamlin 1' Morningside&#13;
1917_Upper Iowa O, Mornmgs1 e ,&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
A. Davies, ninth&#13;
1909-F. \\T. Backemeyer, first&#13;
, A. Keck, seventh&#13;
1910-H. S. Hamilton, second&#13;
R. Toothaker, eliminated&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson, secon d'&#13;
C. Hall, fourth&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson, second&#13;
E. Heilman&#13;
1913-F. P. Johnson, secon d&#13;
J. Poppenheimer&#13;
1914-R. H. M cVicker, sixth&#13;
G. Cushman&#13;
1915-J. I. Dolliver, third&#13;
G. Cushman, fifth&#13;
191 6-R. L. Mitchell, eliminated&#13;
W. Backemeyer, second&#13;
1917-C. E. Albertson, second&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
P. Johnson, first&#13;
1914-C. T. Craig, fifth&#13;
R. Vernon, fifth&#13;
1915-V. Stenseth, tied for third&#13;
L Wickens, first&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
"d&#13;
s·&#13;
n 3 Morningside 0&#13;
1915-Simpson 3 Mornings, e O, ,mpso&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
"d 2&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
"d 2 H ron 1 Mornings, e .&#13;
1916-South Dakota U 1, Mornings, e ; u&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-seven&#13;
one hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
�Intra-Society Gold Medal Debate Ser&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
J. Dean&#13;
0. Crews&#13;
H. White&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
N. Richardson&#13;
H. Freeman&#13;
L. Southerland&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
J. Dean&#13;
0. Crews&#13;
L. Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
D. Troutman&#13;
C Shenrnod&#13;
C. Albertson&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
A. Jeep&#13;
V. Hart&#13;
G . Dunn&#13;
&#13;
0. Crews&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
J. D ean&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
C. Albertson&#13;
C. Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
\'S.&#13;
&#13;
W. Wolle&#13;
L. Fowler&#13;
J. Glasgow&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
V. Payne&#13;
L. Peterson&#13;
R. Jurgensen&#13;
H. White&#13;
F. Hambleton&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
D. Norton&#13;
T. Kenney&#13;
H. Butler&#13;
&#13;
V. Payne&#13;
L. Peterson&#13;
(Jeep, Sub.)&#13;
R. Jurgensen&#13;
(Freeman, Sub.)&#13;
&#13;
D. Norton&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
L. Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
D . Norten&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
F. Hambleton&#13;
(Sutherland, Sub.)&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch, first; Interstate, first; National, third&#13;
l 912-C. E. Smith, third&#13;
1902-J. N. McCay, second&#13;
191 3-J. L. Ralston, third&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner, third&#13;
191+-R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
1907-Ida Lewis, fifth&#13;
1915 -R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett, third&#13;
1916-C. H. Klippel, second&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill, second&#13;
1917-C,. H. Klippel&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson, first&#13;
1911-W A . McCurdy, sixth&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
flow Iago, the great boaster,&#13;
He the marvelous story teller,&#13;
Told his tales of strange adventure,&#13;
That the time might pass more gayly&#13;
And the gu ests be more contented.&#13;
&#13;
one hllndred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Agora Dramatic Con test&#13;
MEDAL WINNERS&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT, FERN BEACHAM.&#13;
&#13;
DRAMAT IC&#13;
&#13;
"lnja"&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED P ECA U T&#13;
&#13;
"Dat Little Boy o' Mine"&#13;
&#13;
ALIC E STANHOPE&#13;
&#13;
"Mother"&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
MABEL ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Who has given so willingly of her time&#13;
and thought to make our dramatic&#13;
productions a success&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
ALICE B OYD&#13;
H UMORO U S&#13;
&#13;
"Bud's Fairy Tale"&#13;
&#13;
FERN B EACHAM&#13;
&#13;
"Behind a C urtain"&#13;
&#13;
GRACE HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
"Little Sister"&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS CLARK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�O thonian Grand Public&#13;
Senior Class play&#13;
Fanchom&#13;
&#13;
THE CRICKET"&#13;
&#13;
June 12, 1916&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
MARIE EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
)lather Barbeaud&#13;
&#13;
HARRY M. CLARK&#13;
&#13;
Father Barbeaud&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Landrey&#13;
&#13;
MARION&#13;
&#13;
Fanchon&#13;
"THE Melting&#13;
&#13;
LovrcE STROBEL&#13;
&#13;
Fadet&#13;
&#13;
POT"&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
Martineau&#13;
&#13;
April 24, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
DELBERT McKINNEY&#13;
&#13;
Didier&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
&#13;
Glen&#13;
&#13;
Etiennet&#13;
Vera Revendal&#13;
&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
David Quixano&#13;
Quincy Davenport,&#13;
&#13;
Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Herr Poppelmeister&#13;
Mendel&#13;
&#13;
PATRICK&#13;
&#13;
ARTH UUr LOCKE&#13;
&#13;
Ralph&#13;
&#13;
Kolp&#13;
&#13;
OVERHOLSER&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
Quixano .&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS HAY&#13;
&#13;
Pierre&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Collin&#13;
&#13;
E A RL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
Madelon&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR Winkleman&#13;
&#13;
Marlette&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Frau Quixano&#13;
Kathleen O'Reilly&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Baroness Revendal&#13;
&#13;
EARL HICKS&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
Baron Revendal&#13;
&#13;
Suzette&#13;
Annette&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BULL&#13;
&#13;
Father Caillard&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
1Ianon&#13;
&#13;
COMl\IITTEES&#13;
General&#13;
RALPH OVERHOLSER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL&#13;
&#13;
Madison&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
Comittee&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR LOCKE&#13;
&#13;
Finance and Publicity&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
MARION METCALF&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS KINGSBURY&#13;
EWERT Williams&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Scenery and Property&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�ca------------ --Zetalethean Grana Public&#13;
&#13;
Pierian Grana Public&#13;
&#13;
"THE SLAVE GIRL OF BALSORA"&#13;
An Original Production&#13;
An Original Production&#13;
&#13;
March 5, 1917&#13;
&#13;
M arch 19, 1917&#13;
&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTERS&#13;
&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTE R S&#13;
&#13;
Enis E lgelis, Slave Girl of Balsora&#13;
Neureddin Ali, Son of Fadladd111&#13;
Fad laddin Vi zier of Sultan .&#13;
Lady Badpura, Mother of A li&#13;
Ibrahim, Sheik . of Bagdad&#13;
Haroun Al Rashid, Caliph&#13;
Mohammed, Sultan of Balsora&#13;
Mowein, Enemy of the house of Fadladd111&#13;
Ja iffer, Vizier of the caliph&#13;
.&#13;
Alameddin, Chamberlain of Sultan&#13;
Kerim, a Fisherman&#13;
Herald&#13;
Servant&#13;
Headsman&#13;
&#13;
Companions&#13;
of Ali&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON&#13;
ETHEL Westfall&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
AGNES FRY&#13;
HELEN \VEDGEWOOD&#13;
Merlin&#13;
SAWYER&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
MARGARET FERGUSEN&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Gua rds&#13;
&#13;
Court&#13;
Dancers&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
RUTH SMITH&#13;
Mildred&#13;
PEC.\UT&#13;
Run1 Brady&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
Vivian&#13;
down&#13;
Lida SAUNDERS&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
Elma Parkinson&#13;
Mae PURDY&#13;
Mae Wickens&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
Clara&#13;
Swain&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
) Fern MARQUART&#13;
MABEL Day&#13;
HELEN Wedgewood&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL CARTER&#13;
R UTH REID&#13;
R UTH BRADY&#13;
FLORENCE newland&#13;
ETHEL Ordway&#13;
MARY BISHOP&#13;
&#13;
Courtiers, Merchants, etc.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
COMMITTEE: C lara swain Mary Bishop, mildr d Pecaut, ·Ruth Brady,&#13;
1&#13;
re&#13;
. 1&#13;
Ester Montgome ry, Vivian down Ruth smith1 •&#13;
&#13;
rryblossom Maiden of Low Caste&#13;
o, wealthy Samurai&#13;
"chi, Sandal Maker&#13;
Zaburp Tokoyo's Companion&#13;
o, Chief of the Robber's B a nd .&#13;
u hi, Cherryblossom's Father&#13;
a, Cherryblossom's Com panion&#13;
do, Owner of Teahouse&#13;
&#13;
Mahood&#13;
Sandyig&#13;
BURPEE&#13;
Rachael&#13;
Madison&#13;
Marie&#13;
Lillian&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Walker&#13;
Owen&#13;
&#13;
Isabelle&#13;
Dorothy&#13;
Alice&#13;
&#13;
Boyd&#13;
&#13;
Winifred&#13;
&#13;
Miriam&#13;
Anna&#13;
&#13;
Amanda ROOST&#13;
Clara LEWIS&#13;
Susan Eads&#13;
Marion&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
Marion J OHNSON&#13;
Rachael&#13;
W HITFIELD&#13;
Cornelia&#13;
Mcburney&#13;
Ruth M AHOOD&#13;
Booth&#13;
Own ers&#13;
&#13;
Elva PERSINGER&#13;
FRANC ES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
M usicians&#13;
&#13;
Lilah T HOMPSON&#13;
LYCYLE Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Pedestrians&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Wood&#13;
MARGARET Goudie&#13;
Mildred C HAMP&#13;
GRACE Wishard&#13;
Mabel F RA NCHERE&#13;
KATHRYN D UGGAN&#13;
&#13;
Bussey&#13;
&#13;
Fish&#13;
Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
COMMITTE E&#13;
General Chairman, Amanda&#13;
roost&#13;
Scenery and M usic, Winifred Wood&#13;
Publica tion, Iva Smith&#13;
M Writing Committee, CLARA LEWIS&#13;
ARION HEIKES&#13;
Cornelia&#13;
Mcburney&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-four&#13;
one hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Junior Ex pression Recital&#13;
&#13;
Senior ExpressionRecital&#13;
&#13;
SCENE IN THE RAJ BOW INN&#13;
&#13;
INTERPRETATIVE RECITAL OF SILAS Marner&#13;
Interpretative Recital of Folk Tales&#13;
March 14 1916&#13;
&#13;
THE FOREST SPRI G&#13;
CAST&#13;
Silas Marner&#13;
Landlord .&#13;
Butcher .&#13;
Jim Rodney&#13;
Farrier&#13;
Mr. Macy .&#13;
&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
Grace&#13;
Elma&#13;
&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE Sammons&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
G L.\DYS Clark&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
MILDRED Pecaut&#13;
May WICKENS&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
one Hundred Thirty-seven&#13;
one hundred thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
�-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
--------Ei]&#13;
&#13;
German Class Flag&#13;
&#13;
WEIHNACHTS-MARKT&#13;
At. Immungsbild&#13;
PERSONEN&#13;
Puppen Verkauferin&#13;
Kuchen Verkauferin&#13;
Baumschmuck Verkauferin&#13;
Spielzeug Verkauferin ·&#13;
Mutter&#13;
Erstes Kind ·&#13;
Zweites Kind&#13;
Arme Frau&#13;
Armes Kind .&#13;
Armes Kind .&#13;
Schornsteinfeger&#13;
Backerjunge&#13;
W eihnachtsengel&#13;
Knecht Ruprecht&#13;
Puppenfee&#13;
Children dressed as dolls&#13;
&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
Vivian&#13;
Dow&#13;
HELEN HAYES&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
ISABELLE W ALKEll&#13;
EvA DuNAGA&#13;
MARGUERITE STRUCK&#13;
•&#13;
RUTH BELEW&#13;
HELEN ALBERTSO&#13;
HARRY ROSE&#13;
ARTHUR Locke&#13;
Amanda&#13;
ROOST&#13;
JACOB Trefz&#13;
Irma&#13;
OSTLING&#13;
• katherine&#13;
Coss&#13;
{&#13;
Irma&#13;
Snyder&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
From the hollow reeds he fashioned&#13;
Flutes so musical and mellow&#13;
That the brook, the Sebocoisha&#13;
Ceased to murmur in the woodland,&#13;
And the squirrel, A djidaunio&#13;
Ceased to chatter in the oak tree,&#13;
And the rabbit, the Wabassa&#13;
Sat upright to look and listen.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-eight&#13;
one hundred thirty -nine&#13;
&#13;
�Men's Glee Club&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
First Tenor&#13;
AAROI\' RUTH&#13;
Vernon&#13;
BENNETT&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
CECIL MAHOOD&#13;
David&#13;
BLEAKLEY&#13;
Paul&#13;
MacCollin&#13;
&#13;
Bariton e&#13;
ED. Harrington&#13;
LELA ND SUTHERLA:,;"D&#13;
NOBLE Richerdson&#13;
LEWIS Bleakly&#13;
HUGH Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Second Tenor&#13;
DICK BURROWS&#13;
CARL ANDERSO:,;'&#13;
HANS DALE&#13;
LOWELL FOWLER&#13;
HERBERT MAHOOD&#13;
GEORGE Brown&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
HARVEY Lawrence&#13;
JOE DEAN&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
JULIUS GLASGOW&#13;
&#13;
Pianist&#13;
HELEN Whitney&#13;
LUND&#13;
GEORGE Easton&#13;
EWART WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
PAUL MacCollin&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
Whose ability and untiring efforts have given&#13;
us two glee clubs which we are proud&#13;
to have touring the country&#13;
representing us.&#13;
OFF ICERS&#13;
.&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Student Manager&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
one hundred f orly&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Madrigal Club&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
First Soprano&#13;
VEDA Clark&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
Myrtle&#13;
HEATHMAN&#13;
ALMEDA CORR&#13;
R UTH E. MAHOOD&#13;
AURELIA Sturdevant&#13;
Lillian&#13;
DAH L&#13;
&#13;
Grace Church Choir&#13;
S O LOISTS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Second Alto&#13;
LOIS SMITH&#13;
FRANCES&#13;
WhETMORE&#13;
R UBY HILL&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
faith&#13;
&#13;
Paul&#13;
Maccollin&#13;
FOSTER Woodford&#13;
G. G. GORDEN&#13;
LOWE LL FOWL ER&#13;
&#13;
MRS. P AUL M ACCOLL IN&#13;
Mrss M ARY D OLLIVER&#13;
MR. A ARON R un1 .&#13;
MR. R OYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
Sopran os&#13;
&#13;
Pianist&#13;
&#13;
MRS. Dean&#13;
MRS. Burt&#13;
H. Vannest&#13;
M. Vannest&#13;
M. HEATHMAN&#13;
H . H OUK&#13;
A. B OYD&#13;
A. CORR&#13;
L. DA HL&#13;
&#13;
Ruth MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
Second Soprano&#13;
EDITH Holman&#13;
Genevieve&#13;
Y OU NG&#13;
EVELYN PEITZK E&#13;
GERTRU DE DYKSTRA&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
Marie&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
First Alto&#13;
GLADYS DANIELS&#13;
Minnie&#13;
FRY&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
Laura&#13;
Engberg&#13;
Minnie&#13;
RE U BER&#13;
PHOE CHAMBERLAIN&#13;
&#13;
Sopran o&#13;
Alto&#13;
&#13;
Tenor&#13;
Bass&#13;
V . CLA RK&#13;
&#13;
R. M AHOOD&#13;
M. M AHOOD&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH&#13;
M ONTGOMERY&#13;
E. L EHA N&#13;
G. D YKSTRA&#13;
E . Pitsky&#13;
C ; BRIGGS&#13;
C. N EWLAND&#13;
G. YOUNG&#13;
A. PETERSON&#13;
L. PEIRSON&#13;
E. ORDWAY&#13;
E. B AHNSON&#13;
M. OLSON&#13;
R. FLYNN&#13;
A. S TURDEVANT&#13;
G. W IC KST ROM&#13;
L. R OBINSON&#13;
l. R ATLIFF&#13;
F. Whetmore&#13;
E. M ORRIS&#13;
P IPPETT&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
J. LEE&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
WICKSTROM&#13;
&#13;
V. BENNETT&#13;
C. RICHARDS&#13;
Basses&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
GLASGOW&#13;
GORDER&#13;
HARVEY&#13;
V. HART&#13;
\\7• HILMER&#13;
R. WHITEHILL&#13;
L SHEERER&#13;
F. WEAVER&#13;
T. CAINE&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Student Manager&#13;
Student Director&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred f orly-three&#13;
&#13;
�Band&#13;
Director, W .&#13;
&#13;
J . HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Clarinets&#13;
R. ENGBERG&#13;
F. JONES&#13;
L. Sutherland&#13;
Piccolo&#13;
H. M&#13;
&#13;
EYERS&#13;
&#13;
Cornets&#13;
R. R ANDOLPH&#13;
C. OBRECHT&#13;
MICHAELSON&#13;
V. GERK IN&#13;
L. SHEARER&#13;
C . Cowan&#13;
L. Thomas&#13;
H. Carter&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
WILLIA&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Whose unselfish efforts have crystallized&#13;
in the best band we have ever had.&#13;
&#13;
Altos&#13;
G.&#13;
C.&#13;
V.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
E.\STON&#13;
BALDWI N&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Drums&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Ostling&#13;
HYDE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
f orty-fi've&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
Book IV&#13;
&#13;
Freeman, IIimmel, N ielsen, Larson , Ratliffe.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
J. HIMMEL, Conductor&#13;
&#13;
INSTRUMENTATION&#13;
First Violin&#13;
Second Violin&#13;
Piano&#13;
Cornet&#13;
Trombone&#13;
&#13;
HARRY Larson&#13;
!RMA RATLIFFE&#13;
KATHINCA Nielsen&#13;
W. J. HIMMEL&#13;
ARCHIE Freeman&#13;
&#13;
one hzmdred f orly-six&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Looked they at the gamesome labor&#13;
Of the young men and the women;&#13;
Listened to their noisy talking,&#13;
To their laughter and their singing,&#13;
&#13;
Heard them chattering like the magpies,&#13;
Heard them laughing like the blue jays,&#13;
Heard them singing like the robins .&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean Litera&#13;
&#13;
Y&#13;
&#13;
Society&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term 1916 Winter Term, 1917&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
John · Madison&#13;
&#13;
Ex. Bd. R oRERT McBride&#13;
Ex. Bd. Orin BELL&#13;
Ex. Bd.J oE BoGARD&#13;
&#13;
Alvin&#13;
&#13;
Orin&#13;
&#13;
JOE BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
BELL&#13;
&#13;
JoE BoGARD&#13;
&#13;
HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
HARRY WARNES&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRITCH ARD&#13;
&#13;
McK. Erickson&#13;
&#13;
Clinton&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
R Ussel&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD Conner&#13;
&#13;
Floyd&#13;
&#13;
Thomas&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
HA RRY&#13;
&#13;
Sonebrook&#13;
&#13;
Wilber&#13;
Lee&#13;
&#13;
W Arnes&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Horneey&#13;
&#13;
Conner&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
Stanley&#13;
&#13;
Cowan&#13;
SMITH&#13;
LLOYD&#13;
BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
LEE HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
LEE HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
March 23-Athenaeum-Philo Joint&#13;
May 29-Special Program&#13;
&#13;
Top Row - s Bashaw, T. McBride, R. McBride, W Clark P. Eiffert, F Co nn ers, E Stone&#13;
Scond&#13;
ROW-)I. Clough, E. Wenig, H. Walker&#13;
L. Johnson, J. Bogard, H. Warn es, A.&#13;
THIRD Row - M Erickson, L. Hornney, V. Gerkin, T. Lloyd , A. Hornnei·, R. Randolph,&#13;
d&#13;
R. Martin.&#13;
SOCIETY Emblem&#13;
FOURTH ROW-L. Pearce, F. Hackett, 0 . Cowan . T Friest, A Hinkley, 0 . Jorstad.&#13;
fith&#13;
ROW-S . Johnson, M Evans, L. Castle R. Engberg, H. Wulf.&#13;
Bottom&#13;
Row - L. Steele, G. Goudie, R. Smith P. Mickelson 0. Baldwin, H. Dodsley, A.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
June 3-Up-River Picnic&#13;
June 5-Philo Graduation&#13;
June 13- Reunion&#13;
Sept. 25-Annu al Philo Stag&#13;
Oct. 16-Annual Duck Feed&#13;
ov. 6-Joint Party&#13;
ov. 20-Initiation&#13;
Dec. -1--Harding Banquet&#13;
Dec. IS-Christmas Party&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 8-9-Intersociety Debates&#13;
Jan. 29-Athenaeum Banquet fo r Philo D ebaters&#13;
Feb. 19-Annual Mock TriaL&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Athenaeum Literary Society&#13;
OFFICER S&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm, 1916&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
EASTHOUSE Minnie&#13;
&#13;
:\'ORA SH ULDT&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm, 1916 fVinter T erm, 1917&#13;
&#13;
GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
F RY&#13;
&#13;
BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
VERA S IPE&#13;
GRACE R USKELL&#13;
&#13;
IDA R OBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
R Uby&#13;
&#13;
K NUDSON&#13;
&#13;
R UTH GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL H UNTER&#13;
&#13;
Irene&#13;
&#13;
CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
Cleo&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE THARP&#13;
&#13;
Katherine&#13;
&#13;
Holmes&#13;
&#13;
LEASER M . B RETHORST&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER BAHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
March 18-Irish Program&#13;
March 23-P hilo-Athenaeum Joint in H all&#13;
&#13;
April 8-Athenaeum Banq uet at Martin&#13;
April 15-0pen Door&#13;
May 13-11other's D ay&#13;
May 13-0pen Door&#13;
&#13;
June 13-Alumni Reunion&#13;
Sept. 16-Reception to pledges in H all&#13;
Sept. 23-Ravine P arty&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 7- Riley P rogram&#13;
Oct. 23-Philo-Athenaeum Joint. A nnual D uck Feed&#13;
ov. 3--1--Athenaeum J ubilee. Twenty-fifth Anniversary.&#13;
ov. -1--Athenaeum Banquet at West&#13;
Dec. 18-Philo-Athenaeum Joint&#13;
t&#13;
Cummings. Ru sk ell, I.&#13;
T OP ROW-N. H ouk, F. Whetmore, M. Breth ors, D Steele MSha n no n,&#13;
SECOND ROW-V . S ipe, E. B a hnson, I. Rober tson ,&#13;
SOCI E T Y EM&#13;
Ber gh&#13;
Struck.&#13;
THIRD&#13;
U tterback, A. Sturtevan t, F. Forsb.erg. L .&#13;
·&#13;
FOU RTH ROW-E . Secoy, L . D ahl, -C. H olmes, E. Pitzke&#13;
BOTTOM ROW-R. B erry, G. Knapp, H . Hunter , E: Mo&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 13- 0 pen D oor-" Betty's Degree"&#13;
Athenaeum Banquet to D ebaters&#13;
Feb. 2-1--0pen D oor -" L ocal and Long D istance"&#13;
Mar. 16-Philo din ner to A thenaeums&#13;
Mar. 26-Philo-Athenaeum Open D oor-"U p to Freddie"&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 29-&#13;
&#13;
011e hundred fifty&#13;
one hundred fif ty-011e&#13;
&#13;
�ATHENAE U M-PHILO SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
fil l&#13;
&#13;
-two&#13;
&#13;
one lnmdred fifty-three&#13;
, J&#13;
&#13;
�Ionian Literarg Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Fall Tenn, 1916 Winter T erm, 1917&#13;
&#13;
!\RTHCR LINDSEY&#13;
&#13;
H. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
Dox&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
VANHORNE&#13;
&#13;
HARYEY LAWRENCE ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
Hugh&#13;
&#13;
FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
H. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
RAY Harrington&#13;
&#13;
DoN VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
ED. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD SMITH&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE HART&#13;
&#13;
ED. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE EASTON&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
Rov ScttELLINGER&#13;
&#13;
WM . BERKSTRESSER JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
March I6-St. Patrick's Party&#13;
&#13;
April I-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
May I I-Final Gold Medal Debate&#13;
May 29-Annual Up-River Trip&#13;
&#13;
June I3-Reunion&#13;
Sept. I6-Stag at Kilborne's&#13;
Sept. 30-Rush Stag at Ionian House&#13;
Oct. 28-Annual Halloween Party&#13;
ov. 20-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
Dec. I6-Christmas Party&#13;
TOP ROW- B . McConkey. D. Van Horn e, R. Harrin gton , L. L ehan.&#13;
SECOND ROw-,v. Forbes, H. Kilborn e, A. Payn e, H . Lawrence.&#13;
b&#13;
'!' HIRD ROW-E. Au sman, L. Saltow, J. Christ, E. Harrington, G. Easton, R. Sc&#13;
SOCIE'l'Y EMBLEM&#13;
FOURTH RO,V-G. Brown , A. Hunt, A. Bartlett, H. Fouke, G. Crouch, _.T. Tre~~&#13;
BOT'l' OM ROW-S. Burpee, J. l\IcBurne)', Guy Brown , J. Donahue, H. Smith, C.&#13;
&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
9-Inter-Society Debate with Philos&#13;
I I-Inter-Society Debate With Othos&#13;
22-Second Degree Initiation&#13;
26-Annual Martha W ashing,ton Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred /if ty-four&#13;
one hundred fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
�P ierian Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
Amanda&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
Marion&#13;
&#13;
S econd S emester&#13;
&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
Lilah&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Marion&#13;
Cornelia&#13;
Mildred&#13;
&#13;
LILAH THOMPSON"&#13;
HELEN GULLICKSON&#13;
&#13;
Thompson&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL M ADISON&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
McBuRNEY&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McBurney&#13;
&#13;
Champ&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
E:-r:-rA WIESE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
Margaret&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
&#13;
GOUDIE&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY Owen&#13;
&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
Lucyle&#13;
&#13;
HAITZ&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE&#13;
&#13;
Rachel&#13;
&#13;
Madison&#13;
&#13;
Elva&#13;
&#13;
L UCLA Holmes&#13;
&#13;
Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Persinger&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED Wood&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
May 27-Pi Picnic&#13;
May 29-Pi-Ionian Up-river Trip&#13;
&#13;
TOP ROW-S. Eads, L. Holmes, E. W eise, M. Champ, 0. Mcburney&#13;
S1'00ND ROW- D. Owen , R. F ouke, A. Roos t, L. lhompson , W. wood&#13;
·&#13;
SOCIETY Emblem&#13;
.&#13;
ROW- R. Whitfield, E. Persin ge r, M.&#13;
C.&#13;
0 \·&#13;
FO URTH ROW- M. Goudi e, I. Walker, A. Boyd F · Boyd , M. W. 01 M. F. smith&#13;
BOTTOM RO\\' -E. Wood, W. Bu ssey, A. Lunblad , R. Burpee, h&#13;
a&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
L. Su&#13;
&#13;
June 13-Alumnae Breakfast&#13;
June 15-30-Camp at McCook Lake&#13;
ept. 23-0pen Door, "Not a man in the House"&#13;
Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
Oct. 6-Birthday Banquet at the West&#13;
Oct. 7-Invitation Dinner&#13;
Oct. 16-Party at Marion Heikes'&#13;
Oct. 21-0pen Door, "An Evening in the South.land"&#13;
Oct. 28-Pi-Ionian Hallowe'en Party&#13;
ov. ~Stunt Night&#13;
ov. 6-Party at McBurney's&#13;
ov. 7-Faculty Tea&#13;
ov. 20-Joint Masquerade&#13;
Dec. 16-Christmas Party&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
,I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 6-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
Jan. 13-Debate Dinner t&#13;
·&#13;
a&#13;
anon Heikes'&#13;
Jan. - 0-0pen D&#13;
"Pi' Ch autauqua"&#13;
1&#13;
oor,&#13;
eh. 10-0pen Door "Ch&#13;
,&#13;
urns&#13;
- 6-Pi-Ioman Colonial Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
/if ty-six&#13;
&#13;
011e /mnd, ed&#13;
&#13;
fif ty-sevcn&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
PI-IONIAN SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty- eight&#13;
&#13;
PI-IONIAN SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one hund red&#13;
&#13;
/if ty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian Literarg Societg&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm, 191 ,1&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm, 1916 Winter T erm, 1917&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
WENDE LL C U RRY&#13;
&#13;
JAMES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
I)o;-.:A LD WALTON&#13;
&#13;
JAMES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
JOHN F ARNH A M&#13;
&#13;
EwART Williams&#13;
&#13;
J OHN F A RNH AM&#13;
&#13;
C LAIR SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
E DWARD STILES&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
EWART WILLIAl\1S&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL C t: RRY&#13;
&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
WM . WOLLE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR J OHNSON'&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE D UNN&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE Dunn&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR SH E RWOOD&#13;
&#13;
C H A RLES K LIPP EL&#13;
&#13;
Noel&#13;
&#13;
N OEL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
NOEL Williams&#13;
&#13;
KoLP&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
. N williams&#13;
C obrecht&#13;
ROW-W. Wolle, E. Stiles, D. Walton, E. Williams, G. Dutton, ·&#13;
·&#13;
F. Kingsbury.&#13;
C&#13;
.&#13;
Back C. Klippel, .\. Lork&#13;
SECOr D ROW- E. Barks, C. Sherwood, R. Jurgenson, .&#13;
J Kolp R. Trout&#13;
ROW-F. Hambleton, V. Payne, A . B eck , C. Garlock,&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
top&#13;
&#13;
.: .&#13;
&#13;
ardson, D. Norton.&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY EMBT EM&#13;
·' .&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH ROW- G. Omer , V. Hart, H. B u tler, .M. L eitch,&#13;
fifth&#13;
ROvV- H. F r eem a n , O . Cr ews, S. Hutchison , J.&#13;
BOTTOM ROvV- T. K enney, C. Albertson, G . Dunn ,&#13;
&#13;
Hyde L Peterson&#13;
Fowler.•I. Dea&#13;
Sutherland.&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
April 2+-0tho Public&#13;
May ]-Reception to Z ets&#13;
May 8-Annual Spring Stag&#13;
May 22-Closed Door&#13;
May 29-Zet-Otho Breakfast at South R avine&#13;
May 29-Final Gold Medal Debate&#13;
June 5-Graduation Exercises&#13;
June 13-Alumni Reunion&#13;
Sept. 25-Joint Hard T imes Party at Barlowe H all&#13;
Oct. 2-Annual Rush Stag&#13;
Nov 13- Zet-Otho Promenade&#13;
Dec. 19- Z et-Otho J oint&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 9-0tho Philo D ebate&#13;
Jan. IO-Otho-Ionian D ebate&#13;
Jan. 12-Zet reception to D ebaters&#13;
Jan. 29-Annual Banquet at the M artin&#13;
March 26-Reception to Zets&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty ·o111&gt;&#13;
one hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Zetalethean Literary Society&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
Esse, quam videri (To be, rather than to seem).&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm, 1916 Winter T erm,&#13;
&#13;
MAry WEDGEWOOD FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
MARIE Sebren&#13;
&#13;
Lura&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
McLANE&#13;
&#13;
H AZEL BARROW&#13;
Ina&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
MARY ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY MABEL D AY&#13;
R U TH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN D owr-;-&#13;
&#13;
p ARKI&#13;
&#13;
FRAI\"CES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
ELMA&#13;
&#13;
L EONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN D OWN&#13;
&#13;
' SON&#13;
&#13;
ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
FERN B EACHAM&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
ELMA&#13;
&#13;
Mildred&#13;
&#13;
LIDA SAUNDE RS&#13;
&#13;
F RANC ES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
PECAUT&#13;
SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
ALICE JEFFERY&#13;
&#13;
p AR KINSON&#13;
&#13;
C LARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
RUTH S MITH&#13;
&#13;
MABEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON'&#13;
&#13;
Lois R ussELL&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
MARY B ISHOP&#13;
&#13;
R UTH KLINE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINTON&#13;
&#13;
Agnes&#13;
&#13;
FRY&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
'l'OP ROW-M. ordway&#13;
C. Swain, M. W ickens, F. Marquaat&#13;
SECOND ROW- M. Sawyer, E. Ordwar, M. Sebern , F Beacham M.&#13;
THIRD ROW- V. Down, R . Smith, M. Peca ut. L. Saunde1s.&#13;
SOCIETY EMBLEM&#13;
FOURTH ROW- H. Carter,&#13;
E. Montgomery,&#13;
BOTTOM Row - M&#13;
,Gerguson, F. Newland, R. Bradr, M. Purdy, ·&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
April 17-Zet Hen P arty at Mary Wedgewood's&#13;
May I- Otho Reception for Z ets&#13;
M ay 16- Reception for Mothers&#13;
M ay 29-Zet-Otho Breakfast&#13;
June 13-Reunion&#13;
Sept. 16-Reception for Pledges&#13;
Sept. 25-Joint Hard Times Party at Barlowe Hall&#13;
Oct. !+-Public Initiation&#13;
ov. -1--Reception for Louise M cDonald&#13;
ov. 13-Zet-Otho Prornenade&#13;
Dec. 9-0pen Door, "The Milkman's Bride"&#13;
Dec. 19-Zet-Otho Joint&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 112-Reception for Otho D ebaters at Lois Crouch's&#13;
Public Initiation&#13;
Jan. 25-Ruth R id e ntertame zets at S1x o,cl ock Dmner.&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 20-&#13;
&#13;
Grand Public, "The Slave Girl of Balsora"&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-two&#13;
one hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�ZET-OTHO SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one lnuulrf'd sixly four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
�A Delphian Literary Society&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian Literary Society&#13;
&#13;
Moringside Academy&#13;
&#13;
MorningsideAcademy&#13;
&#13;
H. Hartley, R. Long.&#13;
G. Long, G. J enkin son.&#13;
R. Andrews, L. Shearer.&#13;
&#13;
R. Mahood, M. Dewel!.&#13;
D. Cha mp, M. Champ.&#13;
0. Easthonse, V. Clark, R. Challnrnn.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fir st Semester&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
C ritic&#13;
Censor&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
RALPH LONG&#13;
GARNET ]ENK INSON&#13;
GAYLORD Omer&#13;
&#13;
WALTER WERTZ&#13;
&#13;
H AROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
RALPH Andrews&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
Glen&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD B UEHLER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
June 9-Annual Up-River Trip&#13;
June 12-Final Gold Medal Debate&#13;
Sept. 29-Stag for New Students&#13;
O ct. 2-Joint Party at Belew's&#13;
Oct. 31-Hallowe'en Party&#13;
1917&#13;
,&#13;
Jan. 15-Aesthesian-Adelphian Party at. Cobbs&#13;
March 9-Annual Banquet at the Martin&#13;
&#13;
D OROTHY ROBI NSON&#13;
&#13;
M ERLE&#13;
&#13;
CHA;f p&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
lMarguerite&#13;
&#13;
Dewell&#13;
&#13;
VEDA CLARK&#13;
&#13;
R UTH B ELEW&#13;
&#13;
DORIS CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
R UT H Challman&#13;
&#13;
arch Taffy&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
Pull&#13;
&#13;
l--2\.Iay D ay Party for Miss Brand&#13;
t. 30--Party for new girls&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
ov.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
2--Aesthesian-Adelphian Party at Belew's&#13;
U--Tea for New Girls&#13;
4--Kid Party at Cobb's&#13;
9--Costume Party at Dewell 's&#13;
&#13;
115--Aesthesian-Adelphian Party at Cobb's&#13;
• 0-Fudge Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-six&#13;
one hundred sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Hawkege Literary Society&#13;
M Morningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
ATop ROW-0.&#13;
MIDDLE&#13;
BOTTOM ROW- .&#13;
&#13;
L Bl&#13;
·&#13;
,oc e '&#13;
&#13;
kle' E Samson , H. Dal e.&#13;
B enn ett, W. Han sen.&#13;
Brown M. Brenn er , R. Webb R.&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Crescent Literary Society&#13;
M orningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
p ROW-H. Albro, A. P eter son, F. Fair, E. Ratliffe.&#13;
DLE ROW-M. Moss, C. P eterson.&#13;
·&#13;
OM ROW-E. Hickman , M. Catterrnole, F . Winkle, M. Sawyer , E. Sawyer.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1910&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm, 1916&#13;
LOUIS BLEAKLEY&#13;
ERNEST SAMSON&#13;
STEVEN CROCKER&#13;
FLOYD ERTLE&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
rreasurer&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST Samson&#13;
Steven Crocker&#13;
Edward&#13;
Flyn&#13;
Ernest&#13;
Hauswald&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
·&#13;
Oct. 2-Hawkeye-Crescent R ecept10n o New Students&#13;
Oct.' 10-Stag&#13;
.&#13;
Oct. 23-Crescent-Hawkeye Basket Social&#13;
Oct. 30-Hawkeye-Crescent Hallowe'en Party&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Feb&#13;
·&#13;
F eb .&#13;
&#13;
one Hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
2-Hawkeye-Crescent Closed door&#13;
13-Crescent-Hawkeye skating ar y&#13;
22-Joint Open Door&#13;
.&#13;
3-Hard Times Party&#13;
·&#13;
· party&#13;
19-Crescent-Hawkeye Valent111e&#13;
&#13;
PAULINE BARRETT&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
FLORENCE FAIR&#13;
FREDA WINKLE&#13;
]ESSE REED&#13;
U ABEL HOUK&#13;
PEARL MCKERCHER&#13;
&#13;
ew Girls&#13;
&#13;
for pledges&#13;
·Hawkeye Basket Social&#13;
e-Crescent Hallowe'en&#13;
&#13;
Fall Tenn, 1916 Winter Term, 1917&#13;
FLORENCE FAIR&#13;
FREDA WINKLE&#13;
ELLA SA WYER&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
NONA Moss&#13;
EVA MILLER&#13;
PAULINE BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
Jan .&#13;
Jan .&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
ABBIE PETERSON&#13;
ELiz. HICKMAN&#13;
CHRISTINE PETERSON&#13;
NONA Moss&#13;
EVA MILLER&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
MARY SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
9-Crescent Initiation&#13;
2-Hawkeye-Crescent Closed Door&#13;
13-Crescent-Hawkeye Skating Party&#13;
22-Joint Open Door&#13;
3-Hard Time Party&#13;
19-Crescent-Hawkeye Valentine&#13;
Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Book V&#13;
Men's Banquet Trophy Cup .&#13;
Given on table decorations and class attendance&#13;
&#13;
Won Easily by the Class of 1918&#13;
(Junior Class)&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.I&#13;
D own the rivers, o' er the prairies,&#13;
came the warriors of the nations,&#13;
Came the D elawares and M ohawks,&#13;
Came the Cho ctaws and Comman cl1es,&#13;
Came the Shoshonies and Blackfeet,&#13;
Came th e P awnees and Omahas,&#13;
Came the M andans and D acotalts,&#13;
Came the 1-Iurons and Ojibways,&#13;
A ll the warriors drawn together&#13;
B y the signal of the P eace Pipe.&#13;
&#13;
one hu11dred scv c11ty-011e&#13;
&#13;
�c a - - - - - - -- Student Council&#13;
&#13;
Student body&#13;
&#13;
KOLP, Sw AIN. ROOST, EIFFERT.&#13;
&#13;
P.resident&#13;
&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Athletic Committee Representative&#13;
yell Leaders&#13;
&#13;
STAXDING-Troutman, Norton , liarrington, Johnson, Fry, Forbes.&#13;
SE.\TED-__Sebern, Roost, Swain, Kolp, Walton.&#13;
&#13;
J. R. KoLP&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
manda&#13;
&#13;
p A UL&#13;
&#13;
SwAin&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
Same as for t he Student Body&#13;
&#13;
EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
C. ]. OBRECHT&#13;
RoBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
MEMBE RSHIP&#13;
Leon&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Willis&#13;
&#13;
Ray&#13;
&#13;
Marion&#13;
&#13;
Sebern&#13;
&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
R AY Troutman&#13;
&#13;
F ORBES&#13;
&#13;
D ALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
harrington&#13;
&#13;
MARY D OLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Don Walton&#13;
&#13;
M ILTON LORY •&#13;
EARNEST H AUSWALD&#13;
Lo urs B LEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College was organized a few years ago to&#13;
&#13;
felt by both students and administration fo r some organization that would&#13;
upon certain student actions and at the same time present to the admindcnt problems from the student's standpoint. The council is made up of&#13;
body officers and a representative of each college organization including&#13;
&#13;
]. R. K.&#13;
&#13;
B USTER , R U STY.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred se'Venty-tliree&#13;
&#13;
�Agora Club Executive Board--&#13;
&#13;
S'l'AND JXG-F. K olp, C. Back, A. Keefe, D. Utterback,&#13;
M. Mahood, A. Ba\·tlett, A. Roost , ~' - Beacham.&#13;
SEATED-P. Pai r , E. Hardin g, C. McBurney, R. Smith, C. Swain, E. Montgomerr,&#13;
M John son, M Pecaut.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Naboklis Club&#13;
&#13;
Walt&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Faculty Adviser&#13;
&#13;
CLARA Swain&#13;
Amanda&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED Pecaut&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN E. Dimmit&#13;
&#13;
Back, Carter, Fry Da y, Payne.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Auditing&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Membership&#13;
Point System&#13;
Social&#13;
Student Government&#13;
&#13;
First S emester&#13;
&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
SusAN EADS&#13;
MARION Johnson&#13;
RUTH Smith&#13;
Anna&#13;
Alica&#13;
&#13;
Keefe&#13;
BOYD&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE REED&#13;
&#13;
S econd Sem ester&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
&#13;
HELEN HAYES&#13;
&#13;
ADA CARTE R&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FLOSSY DAY&#13;
&#13;
MARVEL EVANS&#13;
&#13;
EvA PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
&#13;
FERN Beacham&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 15-Kensington Party&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 6-More eats.&#13;
&#13;
AGORA ISSUE OF COLLEGIAN REPORTER&#13;
Editor-in-chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
HELEN HAYES&#13;
LucIA HoD!ES&#13;
&#13;
The Agora C lub includes every girl in school and all women on the facul&#13;
club takes charge of all girls' activities of the school and its highest aim is toa democratic spirit at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
011c hu11dred se'Veuty-four&#13;
&#13;
Boys (?) and girls&#13;
&#13;
Literary Program&#13;
&#13;
meet at Dolliver's&#13;
learn to guard eats&#13;
Jan. 20-0pen Door. "Great Moments&#13;
pread)&#13;
in Literature"&#13;
·&#13;
Feb. 2-1--Taffy-pull at Helen Albertson 's&#13;
IS Club was&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
f .&#13;
organized as a means 0 f&#13;
ty among the&#13;
.&#13;
promotmg nendship, social and&#13;
res man girls Th CI b h 1·&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
ord. \Vith th&#13;
d&#13;
.&#13;
e u as ived up to its ideal in every&#13;
a true and 1 e _wo r . N aboklis every member will associate a host of&#13;
astmg fnendship.&#13;
&#13;
B. R.&#13;
&#13;
011 e hundred se'IJenty-fi'Ve&#13;
&#13;
�Intersociety C ommiltee&#13;
&#13;
Forensic League&#13;
&#13;
STANDING-McBurney, Brady, Holmes, Fouke.&#13;
SEATED-Sebern, Utterback, Brethorst, Wood&#13;
Standing--Mcbride&#13;
Seated - stonebrook,&#13;
&#13;
V anHorne, W a lton.&#13;
Barks, Lloyd, Forbes.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBE R SHIP&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
A the1zaeum&#13;
&#13;
Pierian&#13;
&#13;
M ARG UERITE Brethorst&#13;
C LEO HOLMES, Secretary&#13;
D ORIS UTTERBACK&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McB u RN EY&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
WINNIFRED WooD&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. M ARSH , F aculty A dviser&#13;
&#13;
Io nian&#13;
&#13;
O tlzo nian&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
D ONALD W ALTON&#13;
EARL B ARKS, Secret ary&#13;
&#13;
Z etaleth ian&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
ELMA p ARKIN SON&#13;
R UTH BRADY&#13;
·&#13;
h girls' societie ·&#13;
This committee h as ch arge o f a ll matters concerning t e&#13;
&#13;
P lzilomathean&#13;
THOMAS Lloyd, Vice President&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
R OBERT M c BRIDE&#13;
ic Leag ue selects inter-colleg iate a n d inter-society q uestions for debate&#13;
of other forensic activities.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
one hundred se'Venty -se'Ven&#13;
&#13;
�Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club&#13;
&#13;
ms,&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
Northrup&#13;
&#13;
ST AN DI N G- I. Ba ck , W alton.&#13;
Standing - Clark,&#13;
Carter , Tw ogood , 0. Bac k, Keefe, ,John son,&#13;
SEAT ED - V a nHorn e, : a rsh, Garlock, Forbes&#13;
M&#13;
K lippe l.&#13;
&#13;
IRVING BACK&#13;
DoN VAN HoRNE&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
DONALD WALTON&#13;
ANNA KEEFE&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
Wilson&#13;
CLARK&#13;
&#13;
Presid ent&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Leon&#13;
&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
DON VANHORNE&#13;
MARION Johnson&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
CYR US Albertson&#13;
&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATE&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Norton,&#13;
&#13;
Pease&#13;
&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE ORATORY&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
B eck, S w a rtz, E. Ha rr ington.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fry&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Llord, Wenig&#13;
&#13;
Cu rry, Jo hnson, Clark, Cloug h, Wulf&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
PA UL Eiffert&#13;
Capt.&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
MARTIN CLOUGH, Capt.-elect&#13;
LEON ]OHNSON&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
ERWIN Wenig&#13;
&#13;
MARION Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
WENDELL CURRY, Capt.&#13;
&#13;
AGNES FRY&#13;
GLADYS CLARK&#13;
L UCILE TWOGOOD&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER, Capt.-elect&#13;
Paul EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
LA URA PEASE&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
HONORARY MEMBER&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD HARRINGTON&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
DONALD VANHORNE&#13;
HARRY&#13;
ARNES&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Noel WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. MARSH , Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
PROFESSOR&#13;
&#13;
on e hu11drcd se'Ve11/y-eight&#13;
&#13;
J. J.&#13;
&#13;
H AYES&#13;
&#13;
011 c hundred se'Ve11ty-11i11e&#13;
&#13;
�------Ei]&#13;
&#13;
ra&#13;
Teutonia Club&#13;
&#13;
rranklt).&#13;
Brown , I'refz, r&#13;
ANDING-Ld. Shus ter , Sangae1~;,.&#13;
. Schaub, B&#13;
. ST&#13;
SEATED-Sh1e e, , OFFIC ERS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
V . President&#13;
ice&#13;
·er&#13;
Treasu1&#13;
Smet,cy-&#13;
&#13;
E. P.&#13;
&#13;
WESSEL&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
CLARA TRANKLE&#13;
&#13;
Cl b&#13;
Chemsistry Club&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
0&#13;
e President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
.&#13;
Facu Ity Adviser ·&#13;
&#13;
• McBride.&#13;
VnnHorne, F ry, crews&#13;
Williams, Coss, Locke,&#13;
&#13;
. N J.&#13;
&#13;
AP .&#13;
&#13;
v·&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
one h&#13;
&#13;
eighty&#13;
&#13;
T ld this message to the people,&#13;
. .&#13;
o the blessed son d S av101,&#13;
the l ages&#13;
Of&#13;
.&#13;
flo w in distant la s and&#13;
an&#13;
do&#13;
. d&#13;
earth as we&#13;
II e had&#13;
on&#13;
d&#13;
d labored&#13;
! l ow he f astec.l , praye an · 1&#13;
That our sins mzg ll t be f org1ve1 .&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
LocKE&#13;
&#13;
Arrington&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
J. .&#13;
&#13;
Coss&#13;
&#13;
011 e ·'11wdred eiglity-011e&#13;
&#13;
�Y. M. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
DI&#13;
Reed , E . Montgomery,&#13;
V Down , R. Brady, R. Ma di so n.&#13;
TED-R. Fouke, M. Sebe rn , D. U tt erbac k, E . P ers in ger , M. Brethor st.&#13;
STANDING-D . Walton R. McBride, C. Klippel, X. Williams.&#13;
SEATED- II. Fouke, J. 'Kolp, R. H a r r ingto n, W. Wolle&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
RA y&#13;
&#13;
HARR11'GTO&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES Klippel&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
D EPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
Administration&#13;
Campus Service&#13;
Community Service&#13;
Life Work Guidance&#13;
Religious Education&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighly-two&#13;
&#13;
Pre ident&#13;
Vice-Presid ent&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBride&#13;
DoN WALTON&#13;
&#13;
WM.&#13;
Noel&#13;
&#13;
Wolle&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
Hugh Fouke&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERJ\'&#13;
R UTH FOUKE&#13;
DORIS UTTERB ACK&#13;
ELVA PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
D EPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
&#13;
Association News&#13;
Bible Study&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Missions&#13;
Social&#13;
Social Service&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE Reed&#13;
MARGARET BRETHORST&#13;
VrvIAN DowN&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
BRADY&#13;
&#13;
R ACHAEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�l..------ - - - - - - - - - 6 ]&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition League&#13;
&#13;
K L I P P E L , Long&#13;
&#13;
Sebern&#13;
&#13;
Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
CHAS.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Klippel&#13;
&#13;
RALPH Long&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
SEBER N&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
&#13;
Dutton&#13;
&#13;
BRETH ORST, L AWrence&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE B. Dutton&#13;
MARG U ERITE BRETHORST&#13;
EDITH Lawrence&#13;
&#13;
on th e smooth bark of a birch tree&#13;
Pamted many shapes and /i gu,.es,&#13;
.&#13;
W&#13;
onderful and mystic fig ures&#13;
And each fi gure nad a meaning,&#13;
,&#13;
'&#13;
Each some though t or word suggested .&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Minnie Gusteson&#13;
JUNE PIPPETT&#13;
Elva&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
Sioux '18&#13;
&#13;
'DING-Sherwood,&#13;
Bartlett, Freeman , F ouke, Stonebrook, McBride Willia&#13;
V&#13;
Van H orne, Day Curry . , Forbes , McBurney Wishard&#13;
&#13;
Seated&#13;
Seated&#13;
&#13;
naon Fry Saunders, Lewis, Wenig Conn ers, Richardson, Klippel, Sherwood, R . McB ride.&#13;
arrington Barks, Pecaut, Kolp, IIeikes, Down, Sm ith.&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS F. FORBES&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
STAFF&#13;
ROYAL J URGE, ' SO&#13;
&#13;
DoN VAN HORNE&#13;
NOEL WILLIAMS&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
MABEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
AL Behmer&#13;
&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
H u GH Fo u KE&#13;
&#13;
MARION JOHNSON&#13;
HELEN H AYES&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Artist&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Classes&#13;
Dramatics and Literary&#13;
Faculty ·&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Jokes&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Photography&#13;
Photography&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
G . EARL B ARKS&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
H ARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
MARION&#13;
&#13;
N. N.&#13;
&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
RICHA RDSON&#13;
&#13;
CLARA L EWIS&#13;
R OYAL JURGENSON&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
L IDA SAUNDERS&#13;
VIVIAN D OWN&#13;
MILDRED PECA UT&#13;
R OBERT&#13;
&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
.CHARLES H. KLIPPEL&#13;
CLAIR&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
R UTH&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
F LOYD CONNERS&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
FRANC ES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-six&#13;
one Hundred eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Pride of the Sioux&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
Rorem&#13;
&#13;
'09&#13;
&#13;
s·&#13;
&#13;
Oh Morningside thou are the "Pride of the lOUX,&#13;
And we'll honor thy name evermore&#13;
To th y standard we'll ever be loyal and' true&#13;
As thy sons ever have been before.&#13;
We shall sing of the honor and fame thou hast won&#13;
With our hearts and our voices attune&#13;
'&#13;
And forever we'll stand united as one&#13;
In our love for the dear old Maroon&#13;
We are glad for the days that we've spent on thy hills,&#13;
And the friendship we've formed in thy halls,&#13;
And for dear Alma Mater our hearts shall beat still,&#13;
When at last we shall turn from thy walls.&#13;
'Till the waters have dried in the "Rolling Mizzou"&#13;
And all love in the old world has died,&#13;
We shall stand by our college, "The pride of the Sioux,"&#13;
And ,n'll cheer for our old Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
In the Vale of Tawasentlw&#13;
In the Valley of W yommg, '&#13;
.&#13;
In the G roves of T uscahosa&#13;
InthefaroffR oc k Y M ountains&#13;
'&#13;
On the shores of Gitch e G&#13;
Gummee&#13;
last the shining Big-Sea-Wat er&#13;
Gathered all th e trib es together&#13;
with one feeding and one purpose&#13;
hat the_ light might burn the brightrr&#13;
In the Big Sioux River Country .&#13;
&#13;
one lmndi rd eig hty· eig ht&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty -nine&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Clubs&#13;
&#13;
The Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
year, through. the untiring efforts of Miss Dimm ·tt an . ot.he1. Morningd&#13;
.&#13;
C&#13;
lasts a Morningside lub movement has been st&#13;
e&#13;
· t e c1.. and&#13;
.&#13;
· ·&#13;
.and . colleges where graduates and ex-studez1 s ·. are living&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
The purorganizations 1s to keep alive the old Morningside S · .· w 1c character.&#13;
who has been a student in her halls to make th spu 1t a vita l factor&#13;
·. ·&#13;
.&#13;
tion • of the best mterests of the College ' and to Inspire t e young people&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
L&#13;
umt1es where the clubs are established to seek th en&#13;
·.&#13;
·&#13;
ucat10n under th&#13;
lter of "The College on the Hill."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
omingside Clubs are constantly increasing .&#13;
.&#13;
nson , H awarden Sac city&#13;
1Y&#13;
are among the . . to . sign the constitution n en 1·&#13;
first&#13;
t e interest of&#13;
ates and Fellow citizens Ill an energetic and prog ress1ve M ornzngszde.&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
Iowa City, and Boston, have led the way in e&#13;
&#13;
bl·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
ubs. T he Ch1cago-l\lormngs1de Club has streng th ene&#13;
&#13;
U mvers1ty-Morn·&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
t e old time ties&#13;
her members to their Alma Mater by pa r a&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
h&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
Ill two&#13;
rally-banquets&#13;
I mont s.&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
. club is d1stmguished by a mem bers 1p o f thirty-seven&#13;
t in t e act1v1t1es and progress of th · co ege serves as a stimulus·&#13;
.&#13;
d&#13;
b d&#13;
nt stu ent o Y to do its best in upholding the h. h stan d ar d s set by the&#13;
1g&#13;
&#13;
G. W. FINCH&#13;
President Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
OUR ALUMNI&#13;
The real worth of any college is determined by the lives and deeds of the&#13;
women who leave the halls of their Alma Mater to take up their share of the&#13;
in the work of the world. Since such a test is applicable to all institutio&#13;
gladly say that Morningside College has attained and is constantly measu '&#13;
the highest stands of life through the earnest endeavors of her loyal sons and&#13;
everywhere.&#13;
During the years when the alumni of today were students in the old fami&#13;
Morningside College inspired them with high ideals which they are now&#13;
maintain in all parts of the world. The aim of the institution is the&#13;
"To attain high scholarship, to maintain clean athletics, to preserve pure&#13;
inspire lofty living to urge a fine conservation of talents to the service of the&#13;
From the classes graduated in the last five years, ninety five men and w&#13;
availed themselves of the opportunity of post graduate work in more th&#13;
universities and colleges in all parts of the United States and in foreign&#13;
Iowa, Northwestern, Chicago, Columbia, Boston, Illinois, Denver, and&#13;
universities and the Y. M. C. A. College claim the largest quota of thi nu&#13;
The subjects chosen for advanced study by our alumni have embraced&#13;
various fields of knowledge. The number is too great to enumerate here, but&#13;
many of the sciences, foreign languages, law , medicine, and theology.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety&#13;
&#13;
-Morningside Club ' alth oug sma ll lll numbers, shows by the . d&#13;
1&#13;
of her members that ea h . b . .&#13;
m&#13;
ua&#13;
goals achieved but is&#13;
is&#13;
not only to himself and&#13;
so contn ut1ng his O&#13;
.&#13;
of her Alma Mater.&#13;
s are o glory to the&#13;
&#13;
a city-morningside Club with a mem bers 1p of&#13;
h .&#13;
&#13;
us1astic letter&#13;
th&#13;
th formation of the Mm . pres1 ent to "Th&#13;
ornmgs1 e Clubs:&#13;
&#13;
an&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
ve n y-s1x, expresses very&#13;
, the fundamen-&#13;
&#13;
that. the. idea with&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
our club is to rally to brin h&#13;
.&#13;
furnishing e&#13;
g ome to the State Umversity&#13;
very year some of th ·&#13;
'&#13;
and professional sch 1 M&#13;
strong men and women for&#13;
good in his prof . oo&#13;
of the students here think that in case&#13;
.&#13;
ess10na or his gr d&#13;
k&#13;
umversity, wherea&#13;
1&#13;
a uate wor ' the reason is all to be&#13;
'd before he saw&#13;
of credit is due to the foundatioi:&#13;
mvers1ty. '&#13;
that all e f e1&#13;
at Iowa are in&#13;
.&#13;
e have much t&#13;
sympathy with the Morningside Club&#13;
at&#13;
.&#13;
o congratulate ourselves&#13;
th&#13;
orn1ngside College."&#13;
on&#13;
at we spent our und er-&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�From all the clubs comes the hearty greeting: "We are r ea d Y to assi •&#13;
.&#13;
to make a bigger and a better Morningside and help to kind! e an keep&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
in the hearts of our members the nght and genuine morning 1&#13;
· .&#13;
,&#13;
e sp1nt."&#13;
This "spirit" is that of daring and eagerness such as is expresse ·&#13;
&#13;
"There's a breathless hush in the close tonight,&#13;
Ten to make and the match to win;&#13;
There's a bumping pitch and a blinding light,&#13;
An hour to play and the last man in.&#13;
And its not for the sake of a ribboned coat ,&#13;
Nor the selfish hope of a season's fame;&#13;
But his captain's hand on his shoulder smote'Play up, play up; and play the game!' .&#13;
"The sands of the desert are sodden red,&#13;
Red with the wreck of the square that broke;&#13;
The Gatling's jammed, and the colonel's dead,&#13;
The regiment's blind with dust and smoke.&#13;
The river of death has brimmed its banks,&#13;
And England's far and honor a name,&#13;
When the voice of a school boy rallies the ranks'Play up, play up, and play the game!'&#13;
This is the word that year by year,&#13;
While in her place the school is set,&#13;
Everyone of her sons must hear,&#13;
And none that hears it dares forget.&#13;
This they all with a willing mind&#13;
Bear through life like a torch in flame,&#13;
And falling, fling to the host behind'Play up, play up; and play the game!' "&#13;
&#13;
Everyone who has had the privilege of attending Morningside College has&#13;
strong, wholesome spirit of daring which makes the words "Alma '&#13;
r.nd essential force in his life: broadening the vision of his service; encou&#13;
in defeat and inspiring him to higher purposes in victory. · It is that spirit&#13;
times and on all occasions spurs him on to do his best, with the watch&#13;
Alma Mater ringing in his thoughts:&#13;
"Play up , play up; and play the game!"&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
Book VI&#13;
&#13;
Student Life&#13;
&#13;
�I.&#13;
&#13;
You shall hear how Pau-Puk-Keewis&#13;
He the handsome Y enadizze&#13;
e&#13;
Whom th e people called th e Storm-F ool&#13;
Vexed the village w ith disturbance,&#13;
You shall hear of all his m ischief.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred 11in ety-t!tree&#13;
&#13;
�Monument Day&#13;
&#13;
May Fete&#13;
&#13;
May 19, 1916&#13;
&#13;
may 26, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Lovice Stroble, Retiri ng Queen ; Ruth Gill ies, Queen .&#13;
&#13;
Mag Night Revels&#13;
Under the Direction of MRS. MARGARET BRAND-HAYES&#13;
spectacular annual performance for the girls of our college is the May&#13;
am given by the Agora Club on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
Last year's exhibition was&#13;
&#13;
Over a hundred girls took part in it.&#13;
&#13;
It w as an&#13;
&#13;
usual luck, we picked the very best night of the&#13;
Winning every game 011 a down-state baseball trip is too much for any red&#13;
student body to sit down and fold their hands over. As early as 8 :30 on the&#13;
f M&#13;
16 murmurs of "monument" were· heard. By chapel tnne t IS cry&#13;
o&#13;
ay and the whole student body Journeye d to Floy d' s Monument forIIa ce&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
perative&#13;
.&#13;
b b&#13;
&#13;
The morning had been warm and cloudy,&#13;
rain, but it cleared off at noon drying the field, and maki ng the most&#13;
&#13;
ing possible. The city responded.&#13;
&#13;
People began to arrive an hour before&#13;
&#13;
ce, and by the time the girls began to appear on the hill back of t he&#13;
&#13;
the bleachers and surrounding hills were black w ith spectators, w hile&#13;
&#13;
and to imbibe some good old Morningside Pep for the com111g&#13;
al g&#13;
·11·&#13;
Some "Pecans" also got valuable experience out of the tnp, ea&#13;
V&#13;
erm1 1011.&#13;
the only safe way to ride in a wagon is to have a horse&#13;
e&#13;
I&#13;
dents w&#13;
After Champ had led us in some yells, facultly members an s u&#13;
&#13;
signal was given. Then down the long cinder track came the stately proces-&#13;
&#13;
nee for&#13;
&#13;
of the field. Here she was crowned by the May Queen of the year before,&#13;
court" stood in a semi-circle facing the throne.&#13;
&#13;
the goats and compelled to amuse the crowd.&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
A very democratic spirit prevailed, expressmg&#13;
&#13;
its&#13;
I se lf&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
an a&#13;
&#13;
bh&#13;
&#13;
orre&#13;
&#13;
cially if they suggested the hue of Vermillion.&#13;
h&#13;
h South Ra&#13;
·&#13;
The student body came home 111 groups. The route . t roug as to not&#13;
by far the most popular. Most o f t h em reach ed Mormngs1 e so&#13;
late for 1 :30 laboratories and classes.&#13;
&#13;
were lined up three deep with their headlights ready to play on the field&#13;
in bright colored costumes escorting the May Queen elect to her position&#13;
&#13;
the queen had been crowned she took her position on the throne and the&#13;
· They represented an eighteenth century rural May Day in the fields.&#13;
a Grand March executed with faultless precision by the w hole body of&#13;
&#13;
in single, double, and quadruple lines in intricate figures over the&#13;
before the throne.&#13;
&#13;
one hu11dred 11i11ety-four&#13;
&#13;
This was followed by a rural Folk D ance, w hich&#13;
&#13;
one hu11dred 11i11ely-five&#13;
&#13;
�ca--------- - -- -.&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
turn by a Shepherdess Dance, both well received by the Queen&#13;
During the last part of the Shepherdess Dance the drums of the&#13;
&#13;
ing&#13;
warning of thunder and forced the dancers to flee for cover while the&#13;
filled the "stage." It was a violent dance, based upon Wagner's Ride&#13;
and performed by five storm-clouds and the spirit of Lightning.&#13;
passed as quickly as it had come, and the Rainbow took its place. This&#13;
display of colors and so encouraged the village girls that they brought&#13;
May Pole, and wound it perfectly to the delight of everybody. This&#13;
while, and twilight had given way to darkness before it was finished.&#13;
headlights were directed on the field where Moths danced in the light.&#13;
ere put out again while a solo dancer performed the Will o' the Wisp&#13;
search-light being flashed on and off her misty figure, now clearly and&#13;
&#13;
seen like the Will o' the Wisp itself. This brought out the Dance of the&#13;
frolicksome little dance, which concluded the program.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Once more the&#13;
&#13;
formed and marched toward the spectators, then turned abruptly and&#13;
&#13;
the night. Another May Day was over to the satisfaction of all conas the prettiest and most elaborate we have ever had.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred 11i11 rty six&#13;
&#13;
one hundred 11i11ety-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Commencement Week&#13;
Men's Banquet&#13;
February 21, 1917&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
has become _&#13;
one of the important traditions of the College. It&#13;
a1&#13;
et-to-gether event of the men, for the men, and by the men of the&#13;
Its motto is Unity, Fellowship, Enthusiasm, and Achievement.&#13;
quet was born on Washington's Birthday, 1906. The idea, however, had&#13;
b · for many months before. It came to fill a need, and the need was&#13;
.&#13;
The Men's Literary Societies did not love each other as angels should, 111&#13;
and College Spirit slumped, and Alma Mater wept.&#13;
Banquet idea furnished a rallying point and a unifying center. The men&#13;
timidly at first, almost suspiciously. A thirty-five cent menu served at 8 :_30&#13;
the old "Boarding Hall" in the north end of the college basement, with&#13;
.&#13;
smells a plenty, was not calculated to arouse great ent hus1asm 111 hnugry&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY, JUNE 10&#13;
8 :15 P. M.-Graduation of the School of Expression,&#13;
SUNDAY, JUNE 11&#13;
&#13;
11 :00 A. M.-Baccalaureate Sermon, Grace Church.&#13;
7 :00 P. M .-Vespe.r Service, College Chapel.&#13;
MONDAY, JUNE 12&#13;
3 :00 P . M.-Class Play, College Chapel.&#13;
'i&#13;
8:L p . M.-Graduation of the Conservatory of Music, College Cha&#13;
TUESDAY, JUNE 13&#13;
M.-Meeting of the Board of Trustees, College Hall.&#13;
M.-Reunion of Classes and Societies, Campus.&#13;
M.-Farewell Students Assembly, College Chapel. .&#13;
M.-Alumni Luncheon and Business Meeting, Society H&#13;
M.-Alumni Banquet, Grace Church Pariors&#13;
8:30 P. M.-President's Annual Reception, Presidents Home.&#13;
&#13;
9 :00&#13;
9 :00&#13;
11 :00&#13;
12 :30&#13;
6:00&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
A.&#13;
A.&#13;
P.&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14&#13;
&#13;
toast program was chiefly a booster for Track, Football, and Baseball. The&#13;
its were inclined to treat the idea of a Men's Banquet lightly and humorously.&#13;
not seen the vision of possibility that the few had seen who fathered and&#13;
the idea, but the Banquet weathered the first three years and then began&#13;
on strength. It was not until the Banquet of 1912 that the competitive plan&#13;
n table decorations and class attendance was introduced. This added greatly&#13;
mterest, even though the trophy was but a small silk banner of uncertain&#13;
&#13;
uts.&#13;
16 the committee determined to get a trophy worthy of the occasion and one&#13;
d have added interest as the years pass. The fine Trophy Cup was secured&#13;
&#13;
class winning it each year had its name inscribed upon it.&#13;
year the former students and alumni were asked to send in the names of their&#13;
year these will be announced at the banquet and dropped in the cup; there&#13;
in until the son arrives at College and at the first Banquet thereafter draws&#13;
from the cup. New names received during the year will be announced and&#13;
in the cup at the next Banquet.&#13;
Banquet idea is one of unity and fellowship among Morningside Men everyThough sundered far by faith we meet, for college ties shall ne'er be broken&#13;
at old M. C. As Washington's birthday draws near each year, remember&#13;
on the campus wish to draw back to the College and Banquet the memories&#13;
hearts of all our men everywhere. Those who cannot be here in person are&#13;
join us in reverie o'er the past and in hope and prayer for the future that&#13;
ater may fulfill her own high ideals.&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
H. G.&#13;
&#13;
CAMPBELL.&#13;
&#13;
10 :00 A. M.-Commencement Address.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
011e hundred 11i11ety-nine&#13;
&#13;
�l&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Banquet&#13;
&#13;
"M" Minstrels&#13;
&#13;
March 3, 1917&#13;
&#13;
March 24, 1917&#13;
&#13;
The Girls' Banquet is the one big get-to-gether event for the coe s.&#13;
academy, faculty and alumnae, mothers and high school sisters unite&#13;
most Joyous occas10n o fh e year.&#13;
t&#13;
nt usiasm runs high when the to&#13;
vie with each other in "pulling off" stunts, cracking jokes and per pe&#13;
Seven years ago the women of Morningside decided not to allow the&#13;
lize the banquet idea. So committees were appointed and arrangements&#13;
first girls' banquet. The girls had such a good time at this first banquet&#13;
succeeding year has added both numbers and interest.&#13;
Since its organization in 1913 the Agora Club has had charge of the&#13;
has added a number of new features and clever ideas. At first the decor&#13;
planned and executed by a general committee. But later the rivalry&#13;
classes which had already manifested itself in the class songs and stunts at the&#13;
led to the idea of each class decorating it's own table. For the last three&#13;
class spirit has been further fostered by the presentation of the silver loving&#13;
class having the highest percentage in attendance and the best decorated table.&#13;
Each year a different idea has been carried out in the toast program. One&#13;
toaster was assigned the title of a Shakesperean play. The next year music&#13;
theme. Another year the unfolding plant was developed into a toast program.&#13;
the four-leaf clover was used as a symbol. The banquet was held in the&#13;
the year it was completed, then the idea of " the building" was used in the&#13;
The next year the college added its Domestic Science Department, so wheat w&#13;
ground to flour and baked into bread by the speakers. Another time the&#13;
"hitched their wagons to the stars." This year music was again used as the&#13;
the program. Indeed, the ease with which the classes, alumnae and faculty&#13;
have compared themselves to "As You Like It" or " Much Ado about&#13;
the opening flower; to the lucky leaves of the four-leaf clover; to the co&#13;
walls of the building; to the field of waving wheat or batch of dough; to J&#13;
Saturn; to sharps and flats or chords is truly marvelous. Morningside coeds&#13;
tainly versatile.&#13;
At the first banquet the president of the Girls' Student Body, Miss Ide&#13;
was toast mistress. In other years the president of the Agora Club has P&#13;
introduced as toast mistress one of the faculty ladies. Miss Margaret Gay&#13;
was the first. Then Mrs. A. E. Craig and the next year Mrs. J. A. Coss.&#13;
the gymnasium was opened Miss Lillian E. D immitt as toast mistress P&#13;
the largest banquet the girls have ever had. Mrs. W. C. Hilmer was toast&#13;
the Domestic Science program. Last year Mrs. H. G. Campbell introduced&#13;
This year Mrs. J. J. Hayes told the story of writing of music and presented the&#13;
What the future may bring of joy and happiness we cannot tell, but&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
h&#13;
Is' B anquet w1·11 b e arked with&#13;
calendar of Mormngs1de coeds, t e&#13;
MARY Lois Crouch&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
RJGIIT-H.&#13;
Farnham D. Norton&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
W eni&#13;
C C&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
onners,&#13;
t, C. Obrecht.&#13;
&#13;
Day in each year the athletic organization of M&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
or111ngs1de C ollege, known as&#13;
. h .&#13;
an e ort to raise funds T h b&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
e a ove pict ure shows&#13;
in t eir minstrel show given M arch 24th&#13;
the audience was kept ·&#13;
. · With Wulf and Obrecht as end&#13;
facuity and student in an uproar over Jokes cracked at t he expense of members&#13;
bod&#13;
O h&#13;
y.&#13;
t er members of the C I b&#13;
and characteristic dances F II&#13;
.&#13;
h&#13;
u executed some very&#13;
liege appeared in songs and&#13;
the various societies of&#13;
demonstrated the " hoe d&#13;
,,&#13;
h&#13;
egro Stringed Q uartette from P atown an t e cake walk&#13;
matter of secu rin&#13;
.&#13;
t bd&#13;
g an au&#13;
never worries the " M" CI b&#13;
0 Y and faculty alike&#13;
u · Everyone&#13;
O •&#13;
fers the latter more th, g e1t&#13;
entertainment or to the stocks and&#13;
the&#13;
an once.&#13;
or&#13;
reason the "M" C&#13;
. I .&#13;
ar111va is unquesmost popular event of the year.&#13;
&#13;
M Club, rules the campus in&#13;
&#13;
ff&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
t&lt;u·o hundred one&#13;
&#13;
�- - -- ---:---------6]&#13;
.&#13;
always&#13;
&#13;
as ,,·ith the First; Untrustworthy and Corrupt&#13;
&#13;
SQUIRREL Dodger&#13;
back&#13;
live on hot a1 r.&#13;
&#13;
\Ve do everybody&#13;
that a first-class&#13;
newspaper should.&#13;
&#13;
fall.&#13;
&#13;
WEATHER&#13;
U nsettled at time we went to&#13;
press.&#13;
Storm expected w hen&#13;
this gets in circulation.&#13;
&#13;
Published whenever an insane delusion exists&#13;
&#13;
April 1, 19 17&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
No. 23&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MATERIAL TO BE FOUND IN SENIOR&#13;
CLASS.&#13;
PRESIDENT.&#13;
&#13;
night before Commencement. The&#13;
was shining brightly on our fair&#13;
on the Spoon-bolder, where WenGlady that old, old story for the&#13;
and on a porch on· Morningside&#13;
bade Edna good night and&#13;
to the monument was well lighted&#13;
&#13;
and Cecil could give all their&#13;
each other and were not compelled&#13;
their step, whi le on the Big Sioux&#13;
was almost inspired to words, as&#13;
floated along in the bright moon little squirrels which haunt the&#13;
d Sunshine In n had gone to sleep&#13;
gluttonous feast.&#13;
night, or rather, about 2 A. M.&#13;
Kolp bade his fair maiden good&#13;
started for home. As Obrecht had&#13;
to come and stay w ith him some&#13;
thought that would be a good&#13;
So he went to Obrecht's room&#13;
to retire. Thinking that he had&#13;
wind his watch and unable to find&#13;
he turned on the light. As he&#13;
wind ing his watch he&#13;
towards the bed and- - - ( Cut out&#13;
&#13;
day was Commencement Day.&#13;
Was happy but Jimmie, who went&#13;
Continued on Page 206.)&#13;
&#13;
two 1.-undred two&#13;
&#13;
Great excitement w as created on our campus&#13;
when it was announced that Henry Ford was&#13;
going to establish , a Branch Ford Factory at&#13;
M orni ngsid e. M uch speculation was rife as&#13;
to where and how he would get his material,&#13;
but a staff reporter. in a personal interview obtai ned this information from Mr. Ford.&#13;
He announced that he could' get all of his&#13;
material from the Senior Class. For the body&#13;
of the machine he would use R ay Harrington's shoes by cutting them down a little. For&#13;
the mudgua rds Dutton's ears would be sufficiently large. Eiffert would make good axles&#13;
because he is so well seasoned. Rosene's neck&#13;
would make good tires, it is solid rubber. Marguerite Cummings would make a good steering&#13;
w heel , she is so easy to turn . For a made-toorder crank there is Laura P ease. For a brake&#13;
Al R omney could be used, he is always broke.&#13;
G ailorcl1 Starr could be used to good advantage for a windshield as no w ind ever blows&#13;
a round him. For a headlight Bess Sha nnon's&#13;
dome could be used, it is light and shining.&#13;
For wheels, he sa id, he wou ld borrow some&#13;
from Art Payne's hea d. For nuts to fasten&#13;
the machine together any senior would do. For&#13;
cushions Wils Clark woul d be excellent for&#13;
h e has been sat on so many times by the faculty.&#13;
For an air pump any member of the class&#13;
would' serve.&#13;
&#13;
two lm11dred three&#13;
&#13;
�THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
&#13;
THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
&#13;
SPORTING SECTION&#13;
&#13;
BRAINIEST PAGE OF ANY AMERICAN Publication&#13;
&#13;
EDITORIAL PAGE&#13;
TEN&#13;
&#13;
THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
Published by&#13;
Mental Aberration Co., Inc.&#13;
&#13;
Why is&#13;
&#13;
Subscriptions&#13;
Vegetables from the subscription list&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-chief ................ Marcus Tullius Cicero&#13;
Assistant editor ...... William Randolph Hearst&#13;
Business Manager ............John D. Rockefeller&#13;
Ass't. Business Manager ........ Andrew Carnegie&#13;
Sports&#13;
John L. Sullivan&#13;
Buffalo Bill&#13;
Locals&#13;
Sherlock Holmes&#13;
Diamond Dick&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Bob Ingersoll&#13;
Theodore Roosevelt&#13;
Associate Editors&#13;
W. J. Bryan&#13;
Julius Caesar&#13;
Wilhelm II&#13;
Gen. Carranza&#13;
Office Boys&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Horace Wulf&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
&#13;
Those who belie,·e in a Ii&#13;
tion are many. Most of the&#13;
favor of this interpretation. In&#13;
they do not believe there&#13;
o'clock rule, and second, if it&#13;
be liberally interpreted.&#13;
Now we think a young gent!&#13;
allowed to star after ten when&#13;
a fair, ( or unfair), co-ed under&#13;
tions. These conditions are.&#13;
1. That he talks loud enough&#13;
be heard all over the house••&#13;
&#13;
2. That he will shut all the&#13;
goes.&#13;
3. That he will not take&#13;
morning paper with him.&#13;
&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
Gentel Reeder we take our pen in hand (ov&#13;
corse eny fule wud no that it wud not by our&#13;
foot), with the intenshun ov dashin off red hot&#13;
Editoriuls, as it wer, warnin our reeders ov the&#13;
vital fact not to become peeved or odd'e rwise&#13;
sore at what may eppeer in The Squirrel Dodger, becuz, like the paper we ar nuts as well as&#13;
the reporters ov the same, to say nothin ov&#13;
the manager and printer. ( Gosh that is the&#13;
longest sentence we ever writ.)&#13;
Laff with uz and we won't cry. Scold uz&#13;
and we will laff-so ther you ar. You hev to&#13;
take it good nacherdly or we will sue you for&#13;
libell. So ther you ar again. Laff you nutt,&#13;
laff.&#13;
&#13;
Five? Gee, that's a small nu&#13;
good old days we used to think&#13;
enough. Well, fifteen wa but&#13;
least to some. what we advocate&#13;
fussers, both faculty and studen&#13;
an extension on the number of&#13;
fussers such as George pratt&#13;
James Reistrup, Dale Norton, and&#13;
kin never went fussing simply&#13;
could ·not cut chapel and fussas&#13;
under the old regime. It is&#13;
gentlemen should have&#13;
their hearts and heads cracked,&#13;
Continued on Page&#13;
&#13;
Orleans Yaps Humbled&#13;
for another successful seasons are&#13;
amoung the most promising re-&#13;
&#13;
Smith of Eagle Grove, Fred&#13;
Orville Crews of Sioux&#13;
nawa,&#13;
Omer, who threatens to replace the&#13;
ht. Downs of Manson, although&#13;
made a strong start but has&#13;
and has been forced back to the&#13;
whence he came. Sanger, although&#13;
game, showed extraordinary ability&#13;
ther game, not to be drawn into plays&#13;
result in his being put -0ut. Among&#13;
Walker and Forbes, trying for the&#13;
have a hard battle, but Forbes&#13;
out and \\'alker is warming the&#13;
d, Johnson and Wolle are showing&#13;
and seem to have their heart in the&#13;
utility man, McConkey is making a&#13;
bowing, often stepping in and' fillace when the regular is absent. Those&#13;
retaining their old positions are Van&#13;
p, Kingsbury, Hartley, Stonebrook,&#13;
and Northrup, although he is being&#13;
by a man from the federal league.&#13;
experienced man in the bushes, made&#13;
rt and is working under a handicap.&#13;
theseprospects, and under such coaches&#13;
Hayes, Jones, and Himmel, we should&#13;
)1&#13;
&#13;
Continued from Last Column.)&#13;
n the field and were halted only by&#13;
called.&#13;
halves the south Newton Band&#13;
more music.&#13;
The game was&#13;
hile Tom Kenney went home to see&#13;
a letter from Early, his home town.&#13;
return the game was resumed. Orleans&#13;
off Kingsbury made 15 yards on a&#13;
. Leitch was completely exhausted&#13;
eating a couple dozen onions he was&#13;
and agam went back into the game.&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
next play Kingsbury would have&#13;
touchdown but he broke his shoe string&#13;
(Continued on Page 206 .)&#13;
&#13;
CR U CIAL GAME OF SEASON GOES TO&#13;
SOUTH NEWTON BRAVES&#13;
&#13;
On Orleans Avenue there are two rooming&#13;
houses. One is called the Bleakly House and&#13;
the other the Patrick Gang. They bought a&#13;
football and practiced every day until they&#13;
thought they were quite. proficient in the workings of the game, and all were stricken with&#13;
inflated craniums.&#13;
They challenged the South Newton Braves&#13;
to a game of football. This South Newton&#13;
street also had two rooming houses, the Kennel Klub and Sunshine Inn, whose inmates&#13;
were all fine young men. Although these men&#13;
had no football and had had no practice, yet&#13;
they accepted the challenge of the Orleans&#13;
Yaps.&#13;
The game was called at 3 :30. At three the&#13;
bleachers were packed and the field lined with&#13;
students and cohorts of the two hostile camps.&#13;
At 3 :OS the South Newton team appeared and&#13;
were given a great ovation. At 3 :30 the Orleans team appeared and were greeted' with&#13;
hisses, cabbages, eggs and over-ripe fruit. The&#13;
South Newton Band now appeared and rendered&#13;
some partial airs.&#13;
At 3 :30 the wind whistled through the trees&#13;
and the game was on. It was a game remarkably free from football. South Newton kicked&#13;
off to Orleans. Kolp, the Orleans fullback was&#13;
downed in his tracks. Farnham gained four&#13;
yards through the line. Nicholson, Orleans&#13;
half, was stricken wirh goose pimples and had&#13;
to be removed from the game. At this point&#13;
Orleans tried a forward pass, but Hutchison,&#13;
not having his compass along, passed the ball&#13;
in the wrong direction. South Newton now&#13;
took the hall on downs. The mighty South&#13;
Newton backfield quartette, Kingsbury, Sherwood, Barks and Martin started a triumphant&#13;
(Continued in First Column.)&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fiv e&#13;
two hundred four&#13;
&#13;
�THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
LOCALS&#13;
we haven'thanded the Seniors any compliments because we are like the Father of our&#13;
Country, we cannot tell a lie.&#13;
&#13;
Judging from some of the hours the freshmen&#13;
keep, they must be out for milkmen.&#13;
&#13;
Chas. Fry has accepted a position at Stone&#13;
Park for the summer, teaching the ostriches to&#13;
fly.&#13;
&#13;
Joe Bogard will never try to bribe any of&#13;
the faculty again. He wanted to get on the&#13;
good side of the .Librarian, so he gave her a&#13;
box of rouge, but .Toe says he got about half&#13;
of it back again when she thanked him for it.&#13;
&#13;
Ruby Flrnn says she doesn't believe in preparedness, but that she wouldn't mind being&#13;
in arms.&#13;
&#13;
Archie Freeman has waited for the fussing&#13;
season to open up with Patience.&#13;
&#13;
willis Forbes has opened' up a new dray line&#13;
for books between Dolliver's and the Main Hall.&#13;
Times of transit: going north 8 :30 A. M.;&#13;
going south 12 :30 P. M.&#13;
&#13;
A petition is being circulated among the students to witness the girl's inter-collegiate debate: This will be presented to the College Educat10n Boa rd of Iowa for action upon.&#13;
&#13;
Minnie Fry. reports that she is studying so&#13;
little that she 1s almost getting Rusty.&#13;
&#13;
See "The Great Emancipator" by Harrison&#13;
Kilbourne. In this great play Killy announces&#13;
himself as heartil y in favor of freedom of the&#13;
Blackman.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred six&#13;
&#13;
Orleans Yaps&#13;
( Conti nued from&#13;
on their five y·ard 1·&#13;
. .&#13;
and&#13;
Orleans then got the ball&#13;
Bill Wolle here lost his s oes,&#13;
1s&#13;
ence (for the dead) f II over&#13;
.&#13;
they were being carried off the&#13;
..&#13;
After two or three&#13;
ore I&#13;
called ancl the Orleans aps went&#13;
deJected, because they had been&#13;
the South Newton&#13;
.&#13;
weeks&#13;
.&#13;
raves m pite&#13;
.&#13;
of practice. However it al&#13;
pain of their inflated cranium&#13;
being.&#13;
&#13;
about the campus with a melancholy&#13;
muttering, "'Why didn't Obrecht&#13;
wasn 't going to sleep there."&#13;
&#13;
Editorials Continued&#13;
they cannot go fussing during chapel&#13;
Horne, Harvey, Dodsley, Johnson,&#13;
Clark, Northrup, Forbes, Lloyd, McC&#13;
an army of others. VVas it not while&#13;
chapel that Professor Hayes first got&#13;
with Miss Brand? Was it not while&#13;
neath our fair trees ( 10 :20-10:40),&#13;
got that deeper friendship for Ruby?&#13;
not while stan ding by the window, in&#13;
er corrider during chapel that Mabel&#13;
of Glen as her Sir Galahad? Look&#13;
examples in contrast with these lint&#13;
see for yourself if it is not an inju&#13;
student body to be restricted to five&#13;
&#13;
We wonder who will take&#13;
rence's place, playing the part of&#13;
glee club trips next year.&#13;
&#13;
They are&#13;
&#13;
BOOSTERS&#13;
For&#13;
&#13;
ORNINGSIDE&#13;
two hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
�FOUND&#13;
&#13;
CLOTHING HOUSE&#13;
" The Home of_ Good Clothes "&#13;
&#13;
Nobby Clothes for&#13;
College Men!&#13;
&#13;
letter was picked up in the corridor of the Main H all, first floor.&#13;
r&#13;
owner may recognize it we are printing it in full.&#13;
&#13;
Opie? W ell, he's my friend ( maybe more than t hat some time).&#13;
aophomore. I'm just a freshma n, you know Prof. J ones said Opie was&#13;
I guess he must have meant apt to flun k ; I hope so because then I could&#13;
&#13;
his class.&#13;
&#13;
they have lots of exams in his classes, so he studies hard and holds a class&#13;
outside the door j ust before exams, then he takes up a collection. When&#13;
&#13;
Clothes of Character&#13;
- Clothes of Refinement&#13;
- Clothes with that dash and&#13;
go to them all College&#13;
Men demand.&#13;
Such as - ·&#13;
&#13;
SocietyBRand Clothes&#13;
"For Y oung M en and Men Who Stay Young"&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES&#13;
are designed by men who are pastmasters in the art of ta1lonng-they&#13;
are styled up-to-the-minute, guaran&#13;
teed to fit and wear to perfection&#13;
&#13;
know answer he says, "See text, please, for answer" . But you know&#13;
the&#13;
profs don't have books, so that is w hy he is apt to flu nk.&#13;
&#13;
glade term is almost over. You see, I live almost a block from college,&#13;
the&#13;
get up so early. So to be su re to get there in t ime I have to have two alarm&#13;
I set for five o'clock. This wakes me up so I can set the other one fo r&#13;
that way I'm never late to classes.&#13;
I like baseball better than sewing because I know it better. All of our-boys&#13;
around their stockings. Opie says they are for the same reason that&#13;
white stripes around the tree trunks ; so that bugs can't crawl up them.&#13;
of the players tried to make a goal by pushing another down in the game.&#13;
umpire say "one down" and he told one fellow to strike, but he never did it&#13;
umpire seemed to know everybody pretty well because he kept waving&#13;
his shoulder. I should think they would have more than one ball fo r&#13;
wouldn't you ? Well I guess I had better close,&#13;
You rs confectionately,&#13;
R osie.&#13;
pie and I went to the movies last night.&#13;
is trying to listen to them.&#13;
&#13;
LOCAL S&#13;
M r. Fred Hackett B. V. D. has been&#13;
appointed assistant in t he F rench Department to assist Miss Cecilia Stenger.&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES&#13;
are " the clothes" among the young&#13;
men who choose their wearables&#13;
discriminately. They are clothes&#13;
that we, as well as the maker, back&#13;
to the limit.&#13;
-And our assortments of Society&#13;
Brand Clothes leave no clothing&#13;
want lacking - no matter· h ow&#13;
urgent your desire.&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
They weren't very clear and I&#13;
&#13;
T he results of the election fo r this year's&#13;
May Q ueen are as follows:&#13;
Harry R osene&#13;
452&#13;
Gailord Starr&#13;
326&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Agnes F ry and Francis Boyd have announced their intention of taking a cou rse&#13;
in oratory the remainder of the year.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
�OFFICIAL STATEMENT OF THE SIOUX '18.&#13;
figures have been compiled and published by the sioux '18&#13;
ment ,rith the view of putting the soft pedal on the numerous&#13;
and prattlings of the "Allied Army of Knockers" and the "Who&#13;
the Doe" Club.&#13;
&#13;
passedthe Sioux Board of Senselessship)&#13;
by&#13;
nditures&#13;
tique Mahogany Furniture. for Office&#13;
hound, to keep squirrels away from office&#13;
usine for Fry, (Taking Jule home)&#13;
fe Insurance, Barks and Sherwood&#13;
ent, of Jim for Lida&#13;
ree pairs of shoes for Harrington&#13;
's trip to Akron for inspiration&#13;
1vian Down, for Bill presented&#13;
arion Heikes, postage to Ill. U. for suggestions&#13;
ective for Rusty, to shadow Leitch&#13;
ars for office boy&#13;
Jar button for R. Smith, to produce dimple&#13;
ranees Kolp. Wedding present for Harve&#13;
ra Lewis. Auto veil&#13;
te Book for Athletic Editor&#13;
ttoon for Office&#13;
ildred Pecaut, to hire poems written&#13;
Rum for Richardson's hair&#13;
tbs, to obtain pictures&#13;
&#13;
WEARABLES FOR YOUNG MEN&#13;
You young fellows who want stylish, servicea&#13;
clothes with plenty of dash and go in them will find&#13;
&#13;
$ 385.95&#13;
10.00&#13;
85.73&#13;
1000.00&#13;
128.53&#13;
43.25&#13;
86.86&#13;
50.00&#13;
1079.14&#13;
25.00&#13;
1,007.85&#13;
.25&#13;
.01&#13;
25.00&#13;
.45&#13;
4.50&#13;
10.00&#13;
33 .75&#13;
47,698.75&#13;
1.19&#13;
.79&#13;
&#13;
..+9&#13;
&#13;
assortments of just this very kind at this store.&#13;
&#13;
Total ( adding machine broken)&#13;
&#13;
Also furnishings, hats, caps and shoes in the ne&#13;
of styles for young men.&#13;
PRICES VERY REASONABLE&#13;
&#13;
om Lloyd Hush money&#13;
$100.00&#13;
45.00&#13;
3.45&#13;
8,464.95&#13;
&#13;
pictures run by request&#13;
of Annuals&#13;
for unpublished scandal&#13;
&#13;
Deficit&#13;
&#13;
Total&#13;
&#13;
$6,493 .72&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ten&#13;
two hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
�c a - - - - - - - - - - -- SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
STYLE-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
that elusive, exclusive&#13;
something that so many&#13;
asp ire to and s 0 few&#13;
achieve, is part and parcel of the clothes you'll&#13;
see in this "Live Store."&#13;
&#13;
Forbes takes off that girl's sweater.&#13;
&#13;
ebrook gets a steady girl.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
In the models for the Season&#13;
you can See it and Feel it.&#13;
Young men will find sparkling, snappy Styles in a greater&#13;
array and more striking assortments than ever before.&#13;
M~n of quiet taste will find&#13;
new notes of distinction in&#13;
the sort of clothes they like.&#13;
&#13;
r yields to temptation.&#13;
Kolp gets fussed.&#13;
&#13;
"STAR''&#13;
" MANHATTAN"&#13;
&#13;
"W. B."&#13;
&#13;
SHIRTS&#13;
"KNOX"&#13;
"STETSON"&#13;
MOORE&#13;
"SPECIAL"&#13;
&#13;
·nny Norton makes a date.&#13;
&#13;
e Boys see the girl's basketball games.&#13;
&#13;
dy sees a joke.&#13;
f. Jones gets a law passed to successfully stop the manufact ure of&#13;
ed cheese without stopping the manufact u re of all other kinds of&#13;
e freshmen quit chasing the milkmen around.&#13;
&#13;
ark gets to a class on ti:,1e.&#13;
&#13;
HATS&#13;
&#13;
Boys' Clothes of the Best&#13;
Kind in our Boys' Store&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twt/&lt;vt&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirtem&#13;
&#13;
�WI NNING HUMOR OUS Poem&#13;
&#13;
We Would Like to S&#13;
and Collar You&#13;
THE&#13;
HOME OF GOOD SHIRTS AND&#13;
FURNISHINGS&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
BATH&#13;
ROBES&#13;
&#13;
Six Pairs&#13;
&#13;
Cotton Hose&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
to Wear&#13;
Six&#13;
&#13;
Months&#13;
or New&#13;
&#13;
Hose FREE&#13;
TRAVELING LUGGAGE&#13;
&#13;
NECKWEAR&#13;
HOSIERY&#13;
PAJAMAS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fourt een&#13;
&#13;
"THE RAVI NG"&#13;
BESSIE R EED&#13;
&#13;
'20&#13;
&#13;
so dreary one green freshman baby was weary&#13;
upon a d&#13;
'.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
roast the 111gh t befo1 ea&#13;
gave his number, then, like Williams took a slumber,&#13;
cl ass&#13;
..&#13;
·ovial&#13;
to restored J&#13;
gay an&#13;
.&#13;
Slumber m111us every snore.&#13;
&#13;
* * * *&#13;
Hyde and Search the sun did play as in his F ord he made his wayt his comrades on the distant shore-&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
the boat for a short Crews, a little Harder applied the fuse,&#13;
thus the lonely hours swiftly wore.&#13;
D arkness then and nothing more.&#13;
last the L ake came into view, and from his F ord he fairly flew,&#13;
0 gently stroke her Back of Steele once more0 say that she had D unn-again the class of work t hat she did when&#13;
childhood days the L izzie left the storeN ever again- no- nevermore.&#13;
to the \Vest-fall of the L ake, the L izzie came without mistake,&#13;
fore her there a league out from the shore,&#13;
t peace the great W hite ship, the Kamper drifted quietly at anchor,&#13;
ncircled by the night's majestic lore,&#13;
T ossed and rocked, no, nothing more.&#13;
f human eyes were not deceiving, it were t ime that she were leaving,&#13;
They would not leave him there upon the shore,&#13;
rne along by wings of air, the Call soon came "We're ,,·ait ing here,&#13;
ship will sail in just ten minutes more."&#13;
O nly this and nothing more.&#13;
ith one quick move he doffed his coat and sprang into an old rowboat,&#13;
Troutman paced aghast the rocky shore.&#13;
freshman lad so Bent-on going, saved the D ay by violent rowing,&#13;
twas Two-good the way the croud did roar,&#13;
Cheered and shouted, yea, and more.&#13;
ith cheerful sound of " H ackett, Hackett",· Fry ( ed ) the.engine of the packet,&#13;
Hall-em to-Ward the Sutherland's shore :&#13;
deck the Carver and the D ean, the Smith and Porter could be seen&#13;
Taylor and Butler with the ladies, yea, by the scoreAll of these and still some more.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fift een&#13;
&#13;
�through his subconscious soul the English principles did roll&#13;
"Unity" be with him evermore?&#13;
'&#13;
"Emphasis" and then "Coherence" with him did start interference&#13;
answered not a Jeep, not even a single snore,&#13;
_&#13;
'&#13;
Green for sure and something more.&#13;
&#13;
THE SEAL OF TRU&#13;
The Foundation upon which this&#13;
has built since its&#13;
institution&#13;
1ncept1on years and years ago is the&#13;
Truth. The Truth in advertising&#13;
the Truth in merchandising, the&#13;
Truth over the counter, the truth&#13;
everywhere and nothing butthe Truth&#13;
THIS is the only fertile soil in&#13;
which any store can grow, thrive&#13;
and prosper, and the wonderful prosperity Davidson's have enjoyed is&#13;
proof conclusive that the Truth has&#13;
always been and is the pivot around&#13;
which all the activities of this estabment are revolving.&#13;
&#13;
TRUTH engenders public confidence and public cbnfidence is&#13;
the most cherished and valued asset&#13;
"'The Big Store" possesses. To foster, strengthen and spread this public confidence to the utmost hm1ts&#13;
of its sphere of influence shall be&#13;
its goal always.&#13;
&#13;
from Belew in trembling sound, a piteous wai l was wafted Raun&#13;
as like a Cow,-an Wolf's and Martin's roar,&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
was the old Bald-win with the Beard, as he his lady gently cheered&#13;
"le thus he sang-er 1&#13;
ove songs o ' er and o'er,&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Worse than Hilmer, yea far more.&#13;
&#13;
with this Wier ( d) and Hays ( y) tone, a Payne did Pearce his Hart&#13;
of Stone,&#13;
Pearced his Hart unto the very Corr,&#13;
Back: he Wendt to yonder side to ask her to become his bride&#13;
ore Abel was none, not even one Whitt-more.&#13;
De-well my lad, or nevermore.&#13;
ect your words right well old man, yes that was the emphasis plan,&#13;
you your point successfully would score&#13;
so with pleading words and clever, asked her to be his Doll-ever&#13;
h yes, Mei-Dell", she sobbed, "I'd just adore,&#13;
Yours I am for evermore."&#13;
&#13;
just as he was ready to speak, at yonder door he heard a click&#13;
door was locked, the English class was o'er&#13;
when he heard the sweet refrains of those entrancing chapel strains&#13;
1th tear-dimmed eyes in his boyish heart, he swore"Naps in class, NO, Nevermore."&#13;
&#13;
AMONDS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Your&#13;
Investmentsmoney put in a Di amon d wou Id be one of the most satisfactory&#13;
you could make&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
You can have the pie • · 0 f&#13;
·&#13;
. ~-ure . weanng the gem and the satisfaction of&#13;
W&#13;
ue Is Increasing&#13;
e are offering beautif I&#13;
. h.&#13;
bemely low prices.&#13;
u, pure w 1te and steel-blue Diamonds at exL_&#13;
&#13;
&amp;110Wing that its val&#13;
&#13;
DAV1DSON BROS. C&#13;
&#13;
Tlzen buy ofa fi.&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1,&#13;
&#13;
·I&#13;
&#13;
your&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�ra,---------- - -&#13;
&#13;
Reach Her Heart Through a Box of&#13;
&#13;
La Fama Chocola&#13;
" a m a tte r o f good taste"&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Co.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
where&#13;
&#13;
Quality is Supreme&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
"PALMER HOUSE OF SIOUX CITY"&#13;
&#13;
Modern in every respect. 230 rooms, 140 with private&#13;
Cafes unsurpassed and our metropolitan quick lunch&#13;
prices to meet all. Sanitary and up to the standard set&#13;
West Hate.&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL COMPANY, PROPS.&#13;
Jay MacLarty , Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Twas the night before Thursday w hen all through the school&#13;
ot a creature did stir but a couple of fools.&#13;
And J essie was sleeping so calmly in bed&#13;
While visions of discipline ran through her head.&#13;
And all the good students who honor the right,&#13;
Had Just settled themselves for the rest of the night,&#13;
when back in the library there appeared two young boys.&#13;
With pamt-brush and paint-pail they made not a noise.&#13;
These two young collegians, with slow stealthy stride&#13;
approached the pen closer and each other guyed&#13;
About which color would look best by the light of the day&#13;
red and Black they selected, both somber and gay.&#13;
'&#13;
Don t lean on the fence" and " K ids, keep away"&#13;
Were warning which glared at us all through the day.&#13;
And now one more mystery confronts our dear college ·&#13;
W&#13;
' .&#13;
e all seem a se&#13;
knowledge,&#13;
t he f o II .&#13;
O are the you ng culprits with artists rich mind?&#13;
ome help us ' youI SCOUn d re I t h. tangle unwind&#13;
IS&#13;
·&#13;
Students of&#13;
'II l&#13;
or111ngs1 e, though you may have done wrong&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
S u ,ong be 1·emem ere 111 verse&#13;
in song.&#13;
0 ere s to the&#13;
· ·&#13;
om we dare not disclose&#13;
ay they live Ion&#13;
d b h&#13;
'&#13;
an&#13;
e appy, and at last, sweet repose.&#13;
&#13;
C. I. S. '18&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
two lmndred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�Chicago&#13;
&#13;
THE OLYMPIA FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
New Store&#13;
&#13;
5(8 Pierce St.&#13;
&#13;
"Leads Them A II"&#13;
Potted Plants and Cut Flowers. Don't forget the loved&#13;
LOWEST PRICES.&#13;
ones at home.&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
"Don't Forget the New Store"&#13;
AN ODE&#13;
&#13;
L ive Stock Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
TOM DEAL T RY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
TAC-CU&#13;
COFFEE.&#13;
&#13;
35¢ a Pound&#13;
&#13;
FROM THE CLASS OF '18 TO THE CLASS OF ' 17&#13;
It was as freshmen seeking knowledge&#13;
That we came to Morningside College,&#13;
And you met us here, a baloon-dome sophomoric crew.&#13;
&#13;
It was as brothers t hat you met us,&#13;
But well we knew you would not let us&#13;
Know the plots you had against us, as 111 your minds they grew&#13;
As it came time fo r class scrapping,&#13;
Then you tried to catch us napping,&#13;
And you took some of our members out into the ru ral brush.&#13;
And you bound them with strong fetters,&#13;
You were regular goat-getters,&#13;
But your hopes were to be shattered, and trampled in the slush.&#13;
As the time came for the tussle&#13;
All fresh men began to hustle,&#13;
They escaped the bonds t hat bound them, and to the fray they flew&#13;
Hard they fought, cheered on by co-ed,&#13;
But we freshies from the start , led ,&#13;
And when the scrap was over, defeat was hung on you.&#13;
Since that time we've ne'er been beaten&#13;
You've been skin ned alive and eaten&#13;
By the dear old class that graduates in the year 191 8.&#13;
Both in basketball and t rack meets,&#13;
1 ou ve been made to t ake the back seats&#13;
And in many other conflicts, you've been clicked upon the bean.&#13;
ow as seniors you must leave us&#13;
We scarce can tell how it will grieve us&#13;
alothoughyou're still uncultu red , your faults we'll overlook,&#13;
as we bid fa rewell tomorrow&#13;
though it causes both much sorrow&#13;
yet in ways th t we outcl ass you, we still could wnte a book.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
!:!&#13;
&#13;
C. I. S. '1 8.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty&#13;
i'U.'O&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�-&#13;
&#13;
---------Ii]&#13;
&#13;
G. ADOLPH OLSON, Pres. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
OLSON'S&#13;
Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 Pearl Street, SIOUX CITY, IOWA .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City' s Only Exclusive Sporting Goods&#13;
ALWAYS READY TO SUPPLY&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the Sportsman and Athlete&#13;
AGENTS&#13;
&#13;
FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
&#13;
A. S. Reach Co., P. Goldsmith's Sons&#13;
&#13;
Frolics&#13;
nf the&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Books&#13;
&#13;
A 29- Reel Photoplay&#13;
&#13;
College Book Store&#13;
G. T. PENDELL, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
SlOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
moore's Non-Leakable&#13;
Fountain Pens&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-three&#13;
two hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
�COMING ATTRACTI ONS&#13;
&#13;
LOONAN .LUMBER COMPAN&#13;
&#13;
J ames Kolp in "The Little Girl Next D oor."&#13;
Song Hits-"There's no place like home."&#13;
"By the light of the silvery moon."&#13;
&#13;
122 West Seventh Street&#13;
&#13;
Let us Figure your next&#13;
&#13;
LUMBER BILL&#13;
O nly the Best Materials and the Lowest Prices&#13;
N.&#13;
Auto Phone 1075&#13;
&#13;
ONE NIGHT ONLY&#13;
Williams in "A Bachelor's Honeymoon"&#13;
Assisted by Obe Wenig.&#13;
Song Hits-"No Wedding Bells for Me."&#13;
"I want to be a bachelor"&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Class Pins&#13;
&#13;
Medals&#13;
&#13;
Don VanHorne and lVIarie l\1ahood in "The Strollers"&#13;
Don't miss this.&#13;
6 shows daily&#13;
&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing&#13;
&#13;
Jonas Olson &amp; Co&#13;
&#13;
Frances Weir and Flossy Day in "The Man From Home."&#13;
Song Hits-"! can't forget that old home town of mine."&#13;
"O promise me"&#13;
A three month's run, commencing June 15.&#13;
&#13;
Established '! 895&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturing Jewelers and&#13;
Diamond Mounters&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
&#13;
5 10 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
The Exclusive Women 's Shop of Better Service&#13;
&#13;
Tom Kenney in "the Woman in the Case."&#13;
J ust finished a four year successful run in Early&#13;
&#13;
Sue WormJy in "The Winning of Jerry Johnson"&#13;
Song Hit-"I'll get you"&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury and Katinka Neilson in "The Treaty of Trent" ( S. D.)&#13;
the public will have a chance to see Mr. Kingsbury, the expert baggage smasher,&#13;
by miss Neilson in their new life drama. Messrs. Walker and Freeman&#13;
the part of the villains in this soul-stirring play.&#13;
&#13;
THE ANDERSON SHOP&#13;
506 Fourth Street&#13;
Women 's and Misses ' High Grade Suits, Coats, Dresses&#13;
Skirts and Blouses&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
PLAYING CONTINUOUSLY&#13;
Sam Lory in "The Furnace"&#13;
Appearing for the fourth season in his great song hit,&#13;
"Hot Air"&#13;
IO A. M. to 11 P . M. Daily&#13;
&#13;
two hundred lwe11ty-fivc&#13;
&#13;
�Why&#13;
&#13;
are the naughty, naughty&#13;
t swiped the boys clothing.&#13;
&#13;
fiendish glee written on their&#13;
This picture was a strong conin the atrocious contest, but&#13;
receive first because of bribes&#13;
ats which the editor received.&#13;
't tell you all we would like&#13;
&#13;
You Should Insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand&#13;
&#13;
Food Products&#13;
Look for the Rose on&#13;
Every package&#13;
&#13;
The Reason ts This Superb Brand is the result of&#13;
many years of persistent effort&#13;
to assemble under one Brand&#13;
a complete line of Food Products of the very highest quality&#13;
at the most reasonable prices&#13;
You always get the best when you insisi on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand Food Produc&#13;
&#13;
3re the victims of the above&#13;
. These poor boys had to&#13;
up for the lost time while the&#13;
had their clothes.&#13;
are here seen "sawing wood",&#13;
avorite pastime.&#13;
&#13;
are the champion som'r'set&#13;
ewton and OrThe man in the&#13;
r is the champion stepper in&#13;
and it is expected that he will&#13;
oe's record before June I.&#13;
&#13;
of South&#13;
&#13;
we have N akado and his hathis might be interpreted as&#13;
rtisement for the Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
and Awning Company, but it&#13;
&#13;
a quartette of versatile abili-&#13;
&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
&#13;
Tolerton &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
&#13;
the stepper, Hunt&#13;
etball forward , P ayne t h e&#13;
d V&#13;
an&#13;
anH orne, d ebater and&#13;
extraordinary.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-six&#13;
two hundred tw enty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�European Plan&#13;
&#13;
125 Rooms---F orty with Bath&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
New Lunch Room Recently Installed&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
Corner Fifth and Jackson&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
HOMES&#13;
&#13;
not&#13;
&#13;
HOUSES&#13;
&#13;
PILCHARD BUILDING CO.&#13;
P. H. PILCHARD, President&#13;
&#13;
the Petty Gang of last year.&#13;
happy they look as they gaze&#13;
distance out of which will&#13;
young Sir Galahads, or&#13;
say Romeos, or possibly they&#13;
the cap and bells.&#13;
&#13;
next is&#13;
rather the case is down as&#13;
Mary says&#13;
doesn't&#13;
hair is&#13;
&#13;
are the preps.&#13;
&#13;
On the ex-&#13;
&#13;
left is Sanger, who can resist&#13;
in any form and of very&#13;
ngth. There are also some&#13;
alubrities" here.&#13;
&#13;
QUARTER MILLION CAPITAL&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Second Floor Franees Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
It is a matter of Especial pride that during the past year we have De&#13;
our faith in the Suburb of Morningside in the erection of our new and modernly&#13;
ped Bank Building. Morningside College, with its rapid strides in educational&#13;
ment has helped us greatly in making this substantial improvement possible&#13;
for the banking needs of a city suburb is a live factor in the growth and&#13;
ages offered to prospective home builders and home owners. We are esp&#13;
ful to the college faculty and students for past favors and shall always use our&#13;
forts in the handling of their accounts.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
&#13;
home makers. On the left&#13;
of the victims, just ready for&#13;
lice. Its too bad and they're&#13;
&#13;
picture we had her&#13;
part lY hidden' by&#13;
hand although she said she&#13;
w it was there · A 1&#13;
of&#13;
says that sensations benot1ceable if habitually 1g-&#13;
&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY $100,000&#13;
JOHN SCOTT, JR., Cashier&#13;
&#13;
W . L. AYERS, Assistant Cashier&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-eight&#13;
two hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�YOU FRIENDS CAN BUY ANYTHng&#13;
THAT YOU CAN GIVE THEM&#13;
&#13;
Except Your Photograp&#13;
&#13;
"WHERE QUALITY IS REPRESENTED"&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
410 Pierce St. Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
we have the Prattler Club.&#13;
Stonebrook, who believes&#13;
&#13;
fu ing and concentrated efritchard, who fusses a nice&#13;
sometimes and Randolph who,&#13;
y, believes in much fussing,&#13;
concentrated fussing; Engell-known violator of the ten&#13;
rule; \Varnes who roomed&#13;
rry and has gone home to see&#13;
, and McBride&#13;
the snipe&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
IS after the Great Compromise&#13;
6 which was settled peaceab ly&#13;
t bloodshed and without ComArbitration, but nevertheless&#13;
rily to all parties.&#13;
the most notorious figure&#13;
picture is th at illustrious ( ?)&#13;
Minnie Fry. She and Rusty&#13;
are often seen together, thus&#13;
out that old Maxim, "Birds&#13;
ther."&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S&#13;
&#13;
BIGGEST AND BUSIEST&#13;
STUDIQ&#13;
&#13;
end are the champion long&#13;
ers of the junior and se, respecti vely. We don't&#13;
hether they have been playing&#13;
not but according to King&#13;
been holding some good&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty&#13;
two hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�A.R.JOHNSON &amp;C&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
pictures are typical of Morn-&#13;
&#13;
groups.&#13;
first one is entitled "Why&#13;
I men come to Morning&#13;
e know a good one on the&#13;
right, but we&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Mother for&#13;
&#13;
MOTHER'S and NATURE'S MEAL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Out of Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
&#13;
up-river t rip. This is the crew&#13;
boat&#13;
R. slow on the Big&#13;
River. T hey go on duty at&#13;
, and stay until 12 P."M.&#13;
&#13;
Our Customers are Our Best Reference&#13;
Auto Phone 1197&#13;
Bell hone 197&#13;
&#13;
408-410&#13;
d to be a snake dance, a bread&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRIC&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
The Practicability and Stability of brick---its value as an investm&#13;
a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever. Thoughts&#13;
these matters we would like to submit for consideration&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Brick &amp; Tile C&#13;
&#13;
more Salubrities. From left&#13;
Tuffer N . LeaHelen Highwater, A Buncha&#13;
Etta Bugg, G. A Longfellona Carr, Will E. Bite, and G.&#13;
a Crabb.&#13;
t they are :&#13;
&#13;
N aughty. Why childhere is your chaperone. There&#13;
eats, the girls, and everything&#13;
party, but the chaperD1d you forget about the rule&#13;
Jawn?&#13;
&#13;
Office and Display Room, No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
tw o lmndr!'.i thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�DR. CLARA L. O CKERMAN&#13;
&#13;
OCKERMAN &amp; OCKERMAN&#13;
&#13;
linbbolm Furniture Co&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Homes Furnished thruout&#13;
&#13;
310 Nebraska Street&#13;
We are working eleven&#13;
&#13;
41 2- 14- 16 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
people in this office&#13;
&#13;
TIME FOR EVERYONE&#13;
&#13;
WE OFFER FOR&#13;
$ 100,000.00&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
This bank looks after the requirements&#13;
of the small depositors as carefully as it&#13;
does the large ones.&#13;
Don't think because you do not&#13;
handle large sums of money, that we&#13;
are indifferent to -you.&#13;
We have time for everyone&#13;
comes in our bank.&#13;
We pay 4 %&#13;
deposits.&#13;
&#13;
Interest payable February IS&#13;
gust 15. Certificates in a&#13;
$100 or any mutiple. A safe&#13;
ment in a strong, well ma&#13;
pany.&#13;
&#13;
there is a very interesting&#13;
nnected with these pictures,&#13;
&#13;
ever the moral of it is.&#13;
t tell us you have some good&#13;
but that " ·e can't have them,&#13;
&#13;
who&#13;
&#13;
on savings and time&#13;
&#13;
The Continental National Bank&#13;
&#13;
GEO. CALL,&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
"OU&#13;
&#13;
O F THE HIGH rent&#13;
&#13;
413 4th xtreet&#13;
&#13;
DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHINGS&#13;
824 Fourth Street: Corner of Jennings&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
Outdoors, Afield and Afloat&#13;
&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C lees&#13;
Tennis, Golf, Baseball Goods&#13;
Fishing Tackle, Vacuum Bottles, Auto lunch Kits&#13;
and Vacalion&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
Ware&#13;
&#13;
312-15&#13;
Nebraska St&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-/ our&#13;
two hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�CANDY&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
O U R SPEC IALTY, CHO I CE&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Creations&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO . FRESH B LOSSOMS . E XPERT K N O WLE DGE, PROMPT SE RVIC E , LOWES T PRKES ,&#13;
C HOICE SELECTIONS .&#13;
&#13;
OUR QUALITY C A NDI E S, AND I CE CR EAM , FRESH DA ILY&#13;
&#13;
DO N 'T M I S S OU R&#13;
&#13;
itt&#13;
&#13;
A BEA U T Y SPOT&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
PLA,:E DINNER&#13;
&#13;
D AILY&#13;
&#13;
BELL PHONE : 1240&#13;
&#13;
Womens and Misses&#13;
•&#13;
§uits, coats&#13;
&#13;
Feeding time. See how the crowd&#13;
has gathered around, as it always does,&#13;
when the squirrels are being fed .&#13;
See the great dexterity with which&#13;
M abel serves the food , thinking of the&#13;
future. Even R uth is smiling as if&#13;
contemplating a happy future.&#13;
To be shot at sunrise. Some are&#13;
partly so now. See how Clara&#13;
through fo rce of habit, holds the hand&#13;
of the person beside her. And there&#13;
is Cleo, who just loves to put on&#13;
stunts at the carnival, or perhaps we&#13;
should say puts on love stunts.&#13;
This is the Devitt Bunch. The&#13;
boy standing at the left with that&#13;
platonic smile, Sammy, \Yould be a&#13;
pretty good kid if he wasn't rooming&#13;
,Yith Strangler Norton. This taken&#13;
with another fact, that he stays with&#13;
the Patrick Gang accounts fo r his&#13;
eccentricities.&#13;
Therefore we pity&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Afternoon dresses&#13;
also&#13;
&#13;
Distributors&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
smart college&#13;
&#13;
footwear&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
Men&#13;
And Women&#13;
&#13;
PETERS &amp; HARRINGTON&#13;
The House of Quality Style and&#13;
&#13;
THE MORN INGSIDE R EAL ESTA TE MEN&#13;
&#13;
Houses, Lots and City Property&#13;
&#13;
Farm Lands and Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Office at Peters Park Station&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6464&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-six&#13;
fq;;o hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�picture of the " Cobb House".&#13;
left to right they are : I. Otto&#13;
, Ida K now, M. T. D ome, 0 .&#13;
a )lalone, I. Will Stingham, LePagenster, Squ r L. Feed, Fuss M&#13;
ly. Below are : S. Nauta Walk0 . Leva Malone&#13;
&#13;
to the farm movement".&#13;
very clearly why so many boys&#13;
&#13;
ve chool and go back to the farm .&#13;
&#13;
Anybody ,rho notices who is in th&#13;
t seatwith A I could tell that this&#13;
&#13;
re was taken last year. This&#13;
Al and Marionas we saw t hem&#13;
of the time then.&#13;
&#13;
The pen with the " Perfect Balance" and the&#13;
"Better Shape"&#13;
&#13;
Please notice the central figu re in&#13;
picture. J ust recently she has&#13;
ered whether she w ill affiliate&#13;
life with nature or with music&#13;
'&#13;
nature finally won.&#13;
&#13;
A point for every kind of work&#13;
&#13;
JIFFY PEN COMPANY&#13;
Manufacturers&#13;
406 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
n't the striped girl look melanand&#13;
ect ·&#13;
course, any&#13;
ould who 11 t out f or a picnic&#13;
•&#13;
with these guys w hen "he" is&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
W. A HOUSTON, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
t&lt;teo l,u11dred tl,irty-eigl,t&#13;
two l,u11dred thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
��--- -- - - - - - - - - - - 6 ]&#13;
CONSERVE YOU R ENERGIES&#13;
&#13;
Spring, 1917&#13;
&#13;
Make your efforts count for as much as possible. You cannot do thi&#13;
all you earn. Therefore the sensible thin g to do, is place your surplu 8&#13;
8&#13;
ing, w here it will be safe and increase.&#13;
we invite you to make use of our Savings Se r vice, w hich will be the&#13;
custodian.&#13;
&#13;
Howard Clothing Co.&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Security Build ing&#13;
&#13;
MEN 'S STORE&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Tops&#13;
Cushions and&#13;
Upholstery&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
H EDEN BERG&#13;
&#13;
Out of the Ordinary&#13;
is Out of the R ut&#13;
&#13;
420 Pierce Str.&#13;
&#13;
Fugitives. From left to right :&#13;
Head , W ersen Y eusless,&#13;
r E.&#13;
E. Z . M ark, Iss A&#13;
&#13;
ood .&#13;
&#13;
Manufactured and Repaired&#13;
&#13;
JOBBERS OF&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
HEAVY H ARD WA RE&#13;
Blacksmith, Mechanic's and&#13;
Garage Supplies&#13;
Automobile Accessories&#13;
I mplement Specialties&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX CITY&#13;
JRON COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
&#13;
FRUITS and&#13;
PR ODUCE&#13;
&#13;
CLYDE H. TENNIS&#13;
330-331 Davidson Build ing&#13;
&#13;
INVESTMEN TS&#13;
Fa rm L and s&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-tw o&#13;
&#13;
H ere w e&#13;
some historic personages. They&#13;
: Cleopatra M arie Antoinette,&#13;
therine de Medici H etty Green,&#13;
een Victoria J oan of Arc, Mrs.&#13;
iu Caesar, Cassie C hadwick, M aTheresa, and M ary Pickfo rd.&#13;
otice.&#13;
&#13;
Here is a typical senior.&#13;
&#13;
ote the intelligent look on th at face,&#13;
&#13;
broad fo rehead and fa r-seeing eyes.&#13;
JS picture is here fo r two reasons&#13;
give you a pictu re of a senior stu~&#13;
t and also because we don 't w ish&#13;
pictures to vary too much.&#13;
&#13;
this&#13;
&#13;
is our Red H ead Club. Th e&#13;
notable person age here is Bishop&#13;
our Prominent preacher,&#13;
and bootlegger. When this&#13;
was taken he had just come&#13;
from J efferson.&#13;
&#13;
tw o hu11dred f orly-three&#13;
&#13;
�- --------------6]&#13;
&#13;
TODD - BECKER CO.&#13;
Drugs, Candies&#13;
&#13;
Kodaks and Finishing&#13;
Cut Flowers and Designs&#13;
&#13;
ENJOY REFRESHMENTS OR LUNCH IN OUR TEA ROOM&#13;
&#13;
TODD - BECKER CO.&#13;
this is not th·e womens ward in&#13;
city jail, although some might&#13;
&#13;
so. This is a corner of our&#13;
estic science department where&#13;
girls cook things for the biology&#13;
t-0 save the boys the trouble of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Folks&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
College Students&#13;
&#13;
_Ilgn't you pity that one lad y there,&#13;
t junior? Dame Fortune was&#13;
to her and brought her into this&#13;
h of unsophisticated Sophs, and&#13;
&#13;
all agree that&#13;
&#13;
LARSON'S&#13;
is the very best place to buy FR UJTS&#13;
and VEGETABLES, FANCY CAKES&#13;
and all sorts of PICKLES for their&#13;
"spreads" and picnics&#13;
&#13;
THE "BIG" STORE&#13;
Around the Corner off the Campus&#13;
&#13;
Wouldn't the little squirrels ha_e&#13;
v&#13;
ins" here? Gee, they'd feast for&#13;
month. But these ladies feel safe&#13;
use they're behind thick walls&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON LUMBER CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA, Fourth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete stock of building material&#13;
&#13;
in the city. Do not fail to let us&#13;
figure on your bill.&#13;
PHONES: Auto 1065. Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
two hu11dred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-ji'U e&#13;
&#13;
�I a - - - - - - - - - -- -&#13;
&#13;
GUY N. PILLSBURY&#13;
Residence Phone Auto 6 190&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
PILLSBURY &amp; ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
would call this picture "hashed&#13;
rones".&#13;
Women's Ath letics,&#13;
Expression and Agriculture&#13;
meet here. As certain bells have&#13;
ince this picture was taken, we&#13;
not say any more.&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate and Insurance&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6694&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Our Auto Service is at Your Disposal for the&#13;
&#13;
This is a picture- of the sophomores&#13;
they were freshmen, althou gh&#13;
have not improved much. As&#13;
background of this picture is also&#13;
n it is impossible to distinguish&#13;
inly where the landscape ends and&#13;
freshmen start.&#13;
&#13;
When You Get it from Us&#13;
It's Right&#13;
The resources of our shop in&#13;
ideas, suggestions, criticisms&#13;
workmanship, materials - every&#13;
helpful thing that goes to make&#13;
up our better-than-ordinary print&#13;
ing- are always at your beck and&#13;
call. We invite you to use them.&#13;
&#13;
to adapt our banking&#13;
ence and facilities to the&#13;
quirements of our custo&#13;
&#13;
Security Natio&#13;
&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
Deak says, "Tread Easy", so we&#13;
n't say anything about this, algh we ha ve the goods on him.&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surpl&#13;
&#13;
$500,000&#13;
&#13;
Interstate Publishing Co.&#13;
Printers&#13;
&#13;
Stationers&#13;
&#13;
W. P. MANLEY&#13;
A. BLACK&#13;
W. BRITTON&#13;
G. CUMMINS&#13;
R. MANLEY&#13;
&#13;
We don't know whether the gun&#13;
for self-defense against squirrels or&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
Wholesalers and Retailers of sweet Cream, Milk&#13;
and Lactone Buttermilk&#13;
&#13;
From left to right they are :&#13;
Quick, Otto B. Schott, I.&#13;
a !\Iule, and Ima Nutt.&#13;
&#13;
i /.&#13;
&#13;
write volumes on the&#13;
ered careers of these four and of&#13;
trail of broken hearts they have&#13;
by the wayside. But suffice it to&#13;
they are sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
Our Cream is Served at Morningside Pharmac!J and Cecelia Park. drug&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM co.&#13;
&#13;
707. FIFTHS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-six&#13;
two hundred f orly-seven&#13;
&#13;
�QUALITY FEEDS&#13;
&#13;
" The Drug Store Where they Make you Feel at Home&#13;
&#13;
a nd&#13;
&#13;
GRADED HAY&#13;
Alfalfa, Molasses Feeds, Dairy Feed s, Hay Fat Feeds, Horse Feed.&#13;
Poultry and Chick Feeds made in Sioux City, under C.&#13;
&#13;
Make fat&#13;
&#13;
horses, steers, hogs, sheep and poultry.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
M. brand.&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the feeder&#13;
&#13;
C. J. MILLIGAN COMPANY, Inc.&#13;
304 Wall Street, Souix City, Iowa&#13;
utablished 1899. Me_ l er of&#13;
m&#13;
National Hay Assoc1ahon,&#13;
and Sioux City Board of Trade.&#13;
&#13;
S tudents a re invited to&#13;
inspect our plan t at&#13;
any time.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ELEVATOR FEED &amp; COAL CO.&#13;
East Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Coal&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
E. K. BAR EY&#13;
Prop.&#13;
&#13;
A. B. HIRSCHMA&#13;
&#13;
Feed&#13;
&#13;
Hay&#13;
&#13;
Retail d·eJiveries in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
H ere&#13;
t noble, illust rious, peppery, un-&#13;
&#13;
ble class of 1918. W e are&#13;
you don't belong to this class,&#13;
all of you can't be as fortunate&#13;
&#13;
Ass't l\lang'r&#13;
&#13;
i is one of the annual up-river&#13;
The ignoble ignoramus in the&#13;
ound is King Herald, who is&#13;
"ng back and forth as he impay awaits the arrival of Queen&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park·&#13;
&#13;
is part of the 1918 Class&#13;
• Yes they are noted fo r their&#13;
· and general all-around&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
two hundred f orty -eight&#13;
two hundred forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�THE COLLEGE MAN&#13;
Learns&#13;
&#13;
WELL&#13;
&#13;
DOES WELL&#13;
&#13;
BUILDS WELL&#13;
This is part of the ill ustrious C lass&#13;
&#13;
If his Plumbing and Heating is Installed by&#13;
&#13;
1918 when they we re freshmen,&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAVES CO.&#13;
&#13;
even then they were admitted to&#13;
a talented and industrious bunch.&#13;
&#13;
513 Jackson Ave.&#13;
&#13;
P er-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
It's an Established Fact&#13;
That good Jewelry is to be&#13;
found at the Store of the&#13;
&#13;
they have a mere ma n co rn ered&#13;
n there. We hope the poo r fe l-&#13;
&#13;
Here is the Naboklis C lub.&#13;
&#13;
T his&#13;
Some&#13;
their classmates visited th em but&#13;
re violentl y ejected fro m thei r pre-&#13;
&#13;
rty was for members onl y.&#13;
&#13;
W5tll 1!,.&#13;
Established in 1877 and maintaining&#13;
a policy during these years w hich&#13;
now bespeaks for itself&#13;
&#13;
This is a&#13;
&#13;
fres hme n breakfas t .&#13;
didn 't dare to go to Sou th R abecause there were so m any squirthere so they had to have th eir litpicnic on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WOR&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
Bank, Store, Offece Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
Our Motto is Quality&#13;
&#13;
some more of that ' 18 c1ass.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
E .&#13;
&#13;
t y they have been slickering fru it&#13;
hope it wa s f&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
t h e S e111ors.&#13;
&#13;
507-509-511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
tv.;o hundred fift y&#13;
&#13;
/,;.;;o hun dr ed fifty-o ne&#13;
&#13;
�MORINGSIDE GIRLS AT LAKE GENEVA&#13;
" Geneva, so much looked forward to--so much enjoyed" was a slogan which proved itself to the Morningside Delagation last August. After some trying&#13;
experiences with such trivialities as no breakfasts and&#13;
lost baggage, Morningside found her way to . Williams&#13;
Bay, Wisconsin&#13;
where with two hundred college and&#13;
university girls of Chicago, a steamer was boarded and&#13;
guid'ed to that beautiful si te of the Y. M. C. A. College-Summer Camp.&#13;
&#13;
Service Courtesy Safety Convenienc&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
E. L. KIRK,&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
Everyone was made to feel quite at home and it was&#13;
but a short time until we were located and settled in&#13;
our tent near Grinnell, Cornell and Ames, for a ten&#13;
day camp. Nine hundred and fifty girls can make a&#13;
decided impression on any community, but soon we&#13;
found that the great oaks, parks, drives, shady paths,&#13;
and the lake, dotted' in every direction with yachts,&#13;
steamers, sails, and happy bathers, gradually impressed&#13;
us in such a way that the remainder of the time we&#13;
gave our selves up to the "spell of Geneva."&#13;
Because we had the largest conference ever held&#13;
there, it was necessary to be very alert in order to take&#13;
in everything that the committees in charge offered.&#13;
For instance, one failing to reaeh the Dining Hall at&#13;
the proper time might miss the first four or five courses&#13;
of the dinner, and at Geneva this does not do. The&#13;
usual wa lks, hik es, swims, picnics, etc., were indulged&#13;
in, if one cou ld mange either side of the " two o'clock&#13;
quiet hour" skillfu ll y. Classes and lectures took up the&#13;
morning hours, w hil e in the evening ad'dresses by&#13;
famous men drew immense crowds from surrounding&#13;
camps.&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
ICE CREAM&#13;
The Cream&#13;
of Quality&#13;
We furnish any Special Flavor Wanted&#13;
in Ice Cream, Ices, Sherbets&#13;
ORDER FROM THE DEALER&#13;
&#13;
A reception given at the first of the Conference made&#13;
us feel acquainted and until the time we parted in&#13;
Chicago, we considered ourse lves as just one big family. T here was no unfriend ly rivalry at '&#13;
time and&#13;
various " U"s and' Colleges met together for chats,&#13;
study, good times or prayer after the even ing services.&#13;
The influence of the great men and women· who were&#13;
there fo r our uplift and education cou ld not help but&#13;
broaden our lives. Christi an spirit and' fe ll owship were&#13;
everywhere. If you have not been to Geneva, plan to&#13;
go next year, as it should be a part of every student's&#13;
co ll ege course.&#13;
&#13;
'' Hanfords Creamery · Butter'&#13;
The Best in Every Way&#13;
Sold by all Discriminating Dealers&#13;
&#13;
F. M. S., '17.&#13;
Wm. Beuttler&#13;
&#13;
BEUTTLER &amp; arnold&#13;
This Firm Designed the Alumni Gymnasium&#13;
and Rebuilt the Conservatory&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Storing&#13;
&#13;
Packing&#13;
&#13;
Shipping Household Goods and Pianos&#13;
&#13;
Architects&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4240&#13;
&#13;
Moving&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. I&#13;
&#13;
beakins Van &amp; storage Co&#13;
120 Riverside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-two&#13;
two hundred /if ty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Lake Geneva for&#13;
Men&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Think it Over.&#13;
&#13;
There is no reason why ·you&#13;
should not use the Automatic&#13;
Telephone exclusivelyThere is every reason why&#13;
you should.&#13;
&#13;
Think it ·Over.&#13;
&#13;
an ·&#13;
impe t u ous demand for&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
Leadership in this world today&#13;
ding within the walls of every&#13;
t ts&#13;
.&#13;
in America. Nothing short of a&#13;
" d bl l d"&#13;
includi ng every re&#13;
e&#13;
Iege ma n with a great evanglist1c pas.&#13;
.&#13;
will be sufficient fo r the 1mmed1ate&#13;
&#13;
There is&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
414-416 Court&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Automatic-1346&#13;
&#13;
Established 1883&#13;
&#13;
~tlliam Gordon&#13;
The Real Estate M an&#13;
&#13;
demands of the future.&#13;
The Lake Geneva Stu dent Conference&#13;
one of the most ferti le spots in the&#13;
orld for the birth of ideals that direct&#13;
the course of tru e Christian Ii ves. Of&#13;
the nine hundred and fifty men who gathon the shores of Lake Geneva every&#13;
ear, perhaps every man w ould say, that&#13;
hi conception of what Ch ri stianity should&#13;
ean to a college man ha d been changed&#13;
that he- has become a more efficient&#13;
Lake Geneva invites eve ry college student who has accepted, or is willing to&#13;
accept definite responsibil ity for the p romotion of Christian influe nce in college. ·&#13;
&#13;
No pains have been spared to secure&#13;
&#13;
the men who are especia lly qualified in&#13;
&#13;
705-710 Frances Building&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
leading students into such vital relation ship with Jesus Christ. We feel safe&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
therefore in recommending Geneva as an&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
essential part of a complete college edu GO TO GENEY A.&#13;
R. J. H., ' '17.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Stationery Co&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX C ITY&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-fou r&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Phone us your Coal Order&#13;
We will take care of you&#13;
when the t •me comes&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal and Building Material&#13;
J,.&#13;
200 United Bank&#13;
Au to Phone 2174&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
building phone&#13;
&#13;
The Place to Buy TTunks is&#13;
Where Trunks are Made&#13;
SAMPLE CASES TO ORDER&#13;
Repairing Done&#13;
Ladies' Hand Bags Repaired&#13;
&#13;
D. S. ANTHON Y&#13;
Ma nufacturer&#13;
5th Street, near Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred /ifty-fi'Ve&#13;
&#13;
�When Ordering Flowers, Remember K rooneme&#13;
WHY?·&#13;
&#13;
During the past seven years nineteen )Iorningside st udents have en·oyed a 1·ery profitable part of their&#13;
Summer ,·acations at t he McBride&#13;
Lakeside L aboratory on West Okiboji L ake. Here&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Because they are Distinctive and Best&#13;
Corsage Bouquets and Commencement Flowers put up in the Late&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
ower&#13;
&#13;
J. KROONEMEYER&#13;
Successor to Elder&#13;
&#13;
Greenhouse, 15th and Omaha&#13;
&#13;
512 fifth&#13;
&#13;
If you are looking for&#13;
&#13;
Service and quality&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
&#13;
Call both Phones&#13;
&#13;
2512&#13;
&#13;
Manu/aclurer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
A. F. Jensen&#13;
&#13;
H. A. Morrill&#13;
&#13;
SCHOENEMAN-JENSEN&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
3 10 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ROSS M. COOMER, Mem. Am. Soc. C. E.&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL,&#13;
Engineers and Contractors&#13;
WE BUilT MORNINGSIDE Collegeg&#13;
311-312 United Bank Building&#13;
Ask our Clients about us&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The McBride Lake.s ide&#13;
Laboratorp&#13;
&#13;
-"ou r life, exempt from public&#13;
hau nt,&#13;
Finds tongues in trees, books in runing brooks,&#13;
Sermons in stones, and good in everything."&#13;
&#13;
A summer spent here on moranic&#13;
hills, natural prairies, woodland shores&#13;
and sparkling waters of Iowa's most&#13;
beautiful summer resor t will never&#13;
be forgotten by anyone w ho has availed himself of the unequaled opportunitr afforded here for combining&#13;
tudy and recreation.&#13;
From the time your ambitious tentmate rouses you from sou nd outdoor&#13;
sleep until you wearily forget yourself in the same sound slumber on the&#13;
ame cot at night, there is never a dull&#13;
minute. Y ou get to breakfast on&#13;
time at six forty-five and at tempt to&#13;
satisfr a ravenous appetite. At seven-thirty you meet fo r classes or embark on a field trip w ith hand lens&#13;
bird glass, or specimen cases under the&#13;
direction of the able instructor who&#13;
I enjoying&#13;
the experience as much as&#13;
anyone. It is a long w hile u ntil din~er at elevem-forty-five and your appetite is still ravenous, as is that of the&#13;
others. T o&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
eat t ree times a day&#13;
With students of other colleges and&#13;
teachers of&#13;
l&#13;
.&#13;
ear11111g, experience&#13;
and travel who are a ll 111 for a genu.&#13;
·&#13;
the and upro ·&#13;
anous good time at meal&#13;
me and se&#13;
I h&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
II .&#13;
vera ot er times a day as&#13;
,&#13;
an ed&#13;
· 111 itself.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
/if Ly-six&#13;
two hundred fifty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�Say-Ain't it the truth&#13;
that Good P eople die young&#13;
&#13;
Your new suit will become "old" while it&#13;
young I you don't keep it&#13;
&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
"Steam Pressed"&#13;
We Steam Press&#13;
&#13;
and do it Right&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE GROC&#13;
Home of&#13;
&#13;
Ford Lumber Co.&#13;
Owned in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
·Right Prices&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
338&#13;
1338&#13;
100 Third St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Good Things to Eat&#13;
JOHN O'LEARY, Prop.&#13;
902 M. S. Ave,&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD W. WIXSON&#13;
Morningside Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
College Bookstore&#13;
&#13;
A service augmented&#13;
experience&#13;
Located in new Theatre Buildina&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
FRED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
BRINK'S MEAT MARKE&#13;
We Supply the Leading Boarding Houses of&#13;
Morningside with all kinds of Fresh Meats&#13;
Phone us your Order and our Delivery will reach you&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6284&#13;
&#13;
afternoon until four o'clock&#13;
pent much as the forenoon, in the&#13;
ratory, or out in the field whenr the weather permits. After four&#13;
clock the professors and instructors&#13;
rget "·hat little dignity they may&#13;
ve had during school hours and enr into the water sports on a splend, nearby bathing beach with as&#13;
uch roguish hilarity as the most en~&#13;
u iastic freshman. The hours after&#13;
pper, which comes at six thirty, are&#13;
nt much as one's heart desires ; hing, boating, studying or reading&#13;
the spacious library of the cottage&#13;
here, on cool eveni1igs a fire roars&#13;
in the fireplace, or playing games.&#13;
nee a week there is a stunt party&#13;
ter supper, which is productive of&#13;
uch merriment. Occasional launch&#13;
sailboat parties are organized to&#13;
nd the evening or Su nday aftern on the lake.&#13;
Too much emphasis can hardly be&#13;
ace~ on the benefits of being a part&#13;
this rare comb'&#13;
·&#13;
matwn of democratic&#13;
lowship ' st u d Y, recreatwn, and liv.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
"''.th students of other colleges&#13;
with some of the most able scienmen of the country, even during&#13;
hort. perwd of six weeks. Such&#13;
·&#13;
expenence is a c hens h ed memory&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
anyone who has been a part of it.&#13;
&#13;
Bogard Pantorium&#13;
&#13;
McBride Lakeside&#13;
Laboratorg (Cont.)&#13;
&#13;
N.J.W.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
two lnmdred fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
two hu11dred fifty -11i11e&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Students!&#13;
&#13;
If you value economy, satisfaction, and style-Corne&#13;
&#13;
Never in the history of this store have we had a larger and&#13;
selection of&#13;
&#13;
Spring Suits&#13;
Dress Shoes&#13;
Shirts &amp; Hats&#13;
&#13;
Quality is&#13;
&#13;
When Yon Wade Into&#13;
Business Life you will&#13;
need Financial Boots&#13;
&#13;
The lowest of prices&#13;
and the highest&#13;
of Qualities&#13;
&#13;
A Bank Account&#13;
will supply this need&#13;
&#13;
Come and pay cash&#13;
and you get the&#13;
benefit&#13;
&#13;
Education&#13;
only puts the polish on&#13;
Both are necessary to&#13;
Success&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of Commerce&#13;
Fourth and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
Cash grocery&#13;
&#13;
Poor May. On the day of the&#13;
"M" Carnival she didn't buy a ticket, so the mean , naughty "M" boys&#13;
put her in the stocks. They could&#13;
have obtained . several doll ars more&#13;
by charging a nickel admission to gaze&#13;
upon ·the young lady.&#13;
no this is not Annette Kellerman&#13;
o&#13;
playing the part of a mermaid in "A&#13;
Daughter of the Gods." But to one&#13;
of our seniors we suppose she is a&#13;
daughter of the Gods.&#13;
&#13;
"All right l\1aurice, we have no&#13;
arguments." This picture was not&#13;
taken in Jerusalem, but in front of&#13;
Sunshine Inn just before he went to&#13;
see "Rosie" ( ?)&#13;
&#13;
One Quality- The Best&#13;
&#13;
]. C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
Florists&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
and&#13;
PLANTS&#13;
&#13;
"Jimmie Harrington ," just getting&#13;
read y to give old Ki Yi. N uf Ced .&#13;
&#13;
Store Sixth and Pierce Sts. '&#13;
Bell Phone 130&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-ine&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
�AUTHIER STYLE SHO&#13;
Correct Dress /or Women&#13;
&#13;
This is a page of Salubrities about&#13;
·&#13;
orn11&#13;
· This is Bill getting&#13;
it isn't Vivian, but her&#13;
n&#13;
D&#13;
little sister. See with what brotherly&#13;
care he guides and helps her.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Most Appreciated Store&#13;
&#13;
''Good Coal"&#13;
&#13;
this is not Queen Liliuokalani,&#13;
Mary Dolliver with her ukelele.&#13;
Perhaps she is trying to quiet some of&#13;
the many girls that stay there, as it is&#13;
said that music will subdue the fierc-&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
'' Lumber of Quality"&#13;
Service&#13;
&#13;
This picture was not run by request. We don't know whether to&#13;
name it, "The Days of Real Sport,"&#13;
'When a Fellow Needs a Friend,"&#13;
or the "Powerful Katrinka."&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lbr. C&#13;
Here we see one of our salubrities,&#13;
but, fellow students, what we want&#13;
you to notice is that shadow. If you&#13;
can guess who it is send in your aner to Mr. E. G. Stonebrook, and&#13;
receive a liberal reward.&#13;
&#13;
Retail Coal&#13;
1604 East Fourth St&#13;
&#13;
FOUNDATIONS FOR SUCCESS&#13;
are laid in College&#13;
.&#13;
·11&#13;
The foundation for your Business S uccess w1 b e your Savings Ace&#13;
&#13;
Start One Today&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank&#13;
S. E. Cor. 4th and Jackson Sts.&#13;
&#13;
t'U.•O&#13;
&#13;
The Days of 49&#13;
"Trapper" alay did have an innate tendency to&#13;
Vestigate into the inner workings&#13;
the unknown and unknowable.&#13;
ere we have him investigating the&#13;
icile of a pocket gopher.&#13;
&#13;
hundred sixty-two&#13;
two hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�ELMER BLOOD, President&#13;
&#13;
we run this person as a celebrity for two reasons. First ' she was manager of the so-called&#13;
basketball game betffeen Yale and harvard and&#13;
ld&#13;
second, ( this reason proves her good Judgment&#13;
more than any other possibly could ) because she&#13;
says the joke department of this Annual is ve ry&#13;
&#13;
C. T. WESTCOTT,&#13;
&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
Private Ambulance&#13;
Exclusive Parlors&#13;
&#13;
Westcott Undertaking Co.&#13;
FUNERAL Directors&#13;
&#13;
AND EMBALMERS&#13;
&#13;
713 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
good.&#13;
Yes, of course, A l posed for this picture.&#13;
However, since it is this year instead of last; he&#13;
could find his own book. Al is stud yi ng hard this&#13;
year at that. Besides his resident work he is&#13;
taking a correspondence course w hich requires&#13;
much reverie and dreaming,&#13;
&#13;
Licensed Lady Embalmer&#13;
Where did you get those books, Lee?&#13;
AUTO PHONES&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
2076&#13;
2685&#13;
&#13;
Did&#13;
&#13;
you forget to hand them to her when you said&#13;
&#13;
Good-bye or did you get them for the college&#13;
librarian? You're supposed to be on the blacklist there.&#13;
&#13;
WHERE TO SELL YOUR RANGER&#13;
&#13;
Sixty Minutes&#13;
&#13;
Don't Overlook Sioux City Market&#13;
This year when disposing of your RANGE CATTLE or SHEEP-:&#13;
Have a firm with a reputation sell your stock. We also ~ake&#13;
specialty of buying stock on order, and guarantee satisfacbon&#13;
every car we buy, Write us or wire us at any time, and you&#13;
have prompt attention.&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS ,&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
soxty-four&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
If you realized how much easier it is to prevent&#13;
aggravated forms of eye trouble than it is to&#13;
relieve them, you would not neglect your eyes&#13;
for a day.&#13;
It will probably take less than an hour of your&#13;
time to have us thoroughly examine your eyes&#13;
and tell you how to relieve them, and it may&#13;
save you from years of eye trouble.&#13;
&#13;
Globe Optical Co.&#13;
406 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
�- -------------6]&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
We are the original ''cut price'' Dentists of&#13;
"When better dental work is done you will&#13;
· find us doing it."&#13;
&#13;
NE"\1\7 YORK D ENTISTS&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
DOWN&#13;
WHERE&#13;
THE&#13;
SENEY&#13;
SHOE&#13;
SIGN&#13;
SHINES&#13;
&#13;
Te College Drinks&#13;
h&#13;
--are--&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
hesterman's Beverages&#13;
&#13;
This picture received first prize in&#13;
the atrocious contest. See the beautiful expression on her face as he "·hispers sweet little syllables into her shelllike ear. of course she is a senior, so&#13;
we suppose this accounts for the picture.&#13;
&#13;
This picture received second place&#13;
in the atrocious contest. They are a&#13;
couple of our fair co-eds. The one&#13;
above is a fair senior, a lady with lots&#13;
of blond, curly hair. w e are telling&#13;
you all we know now so as not to be&#13;
pestered with questions when the annual comes out.&#13;
&#13;
Better&#13;
Than Soda Fountain&#13;
Drinks&#13;
&#13;
419-21 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
I/&#13;
&#13;
Here we have 'the princess Frederica a Dupont Von Appel and her&#13;
gallant husband. Alas, his affections&#13;
have been alienated and now he has&#13;
his Knapp regularly.&#13;
&#13;
405 Pearl St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1864&#13;
&#13;
Paramount&#13;
SUCCESSORS TO&#13;
&#13;
Hutchinson's Retail Bakery-Luncheonette&#13;
&#13;
No, this is not Ruby. Neither was&#13;
the picture run by request. Here we&#13;
have Casey as he was in the days of&#13;
yore when love was new and fickle.&#13;
Although his favo rite stone is the&#13;
Ruby, he has been known to buy diamonds.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
French Pastry&#13;
Luncheonette De Luxe&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-six&#13;
two hundred sixty-se'Ven&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
Kodak Develop-ng and Printing&#13;
i&#13;
of Pictures in this Annual by, Us&#13;
&#13;
Don has won two "M's" since he&#13;
has been in school and it is whispered&#13;
that he has one M . M. also.&#13;
&#13;
We guarantee you the best possible&#13;
results from your&#13;
&#13;
negatives.&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
department is complete and strictly&#13;
modern in every particular.&#13;
&#13;
We are&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
exclusive dealers in Kodaks and Kodak&#13;
Supplies&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
You ask what the lad y is doing.&#13;
She wanted a&#13;
toothpick so she j ust reached up and&#13;
cratched his head.&#13;
&#13;
\Veil we'll explain.&#13;
&#13;
608 PIERCE STREET&#13;
New Davidson Building.&#13;
we think it was Shakespeare who&#13;
said about K ay, " He loved not .unwisely, but too frequently."&#13;
&#13;
TAILORING&#13;
Suits and Overcoats&#13;
&#13;
$15.00&#13;
&#13;
$18.00&#13;
&#13;
$20.00&#13;
&#13;
$22.00&#13;
&#13;
Charles Victor P ayne, student and&#13;
astronomer. His favorite poem is&#13;
"T kl e, twmkle, little star, how'&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Over 400 patterns to select from&#13;
&#13;
A Tailor for 24 Years Solicits Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
THE GUARANTEE TAILORS&#13;
Our Clothes Fit Better&#13;
&#13;
This picture like the editor of this&#13;
annual is a graft.&#13;
Signed, "Deak."&#13;
The editor in 01 er to eep peace&#13;
and&#13;
within the staff had to&#13;
promise to let th.&#13;
.&#13;
h&#13;
is wnteup by, but we&#13;
ope you don't believe a word of it.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. WORTH, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-eight&#13;
two hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
�Greater value and more extra&#13;
.&#13;
given ecause 98% is&#13;
tured m our own factory.&#13;
&#13;
See the EXTRA FEATURES&#13;
&#13;
WATSON AUTOMOBILE CO.&#13;
8th and Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Although Don is not a botany fiend&#13;
he is very interested in Ferns. Here&#13;
we have them abusing the silences of&#13;
the Big Sioux River with their chatter and giggles. Since this Don has&#13;
listened to the music of othe1' lady's&#13;
voices by his side.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
This is Hod and Cecil along the&#13;
west bank of the Big Sioux. They are&#13;
not in school this year, but a film of&#13;
fussers would not seem complete without them. A monument in the background would make them look more&#13;
at home however.&#13;
&#13;
"The Home Market /or the Great Northwest"&#13;
&#13;
See how the business is&#13;
conducted at a large market&#13;
S fUDENTS will be given a cordial welcome at any time.&#13;
Come and see the best all steel and concrete double&#13;
deck hog house in the world.·&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
GALINSKY BROS. COMPANY&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES-The Lowest&#13;
QUALITY-The Highest&#13;
GOODS-The Freshest&#13;
SERVICE-The Promptest&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
Ladies and Gentlemen, you may observe before you the champion middle distance fusser of the college.&#13;
\Vendell smiles in that regular go-to\\·edding manner, which has fooled&#13;
many girls before Gladys.&#13;
&#13;
we had to tree this couple ·before&#13;
we could get their picture. She is&#13;
teaching school this year. She addressed a letter to her brother to Orleans Avenue. Her brother lives on&#13;
South Newton. Some explanation&#13;
due here.&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd says that although he isn't&#13;
playing cards he is holding some good&#13;
hands. Lloyd was elected president&#13;
of the Tennis Association three years&#13;
ago and is still president. Reason , no&#13;
meetings called.&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
two hundred srventy&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�THE BEST STORE TO BUY&#13;
Ladies' Ready-to-Wear&#13;
&#13;
504 fourth&#13;
&#13;
street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ills.&#13;
Kansas City; Mo.&#13;
East Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
South St." Joseph, Mo.&#13;
South St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
Fort Worth, Tex.&#13;
El Paso, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
Denver, Colo.&#13;
South Omaha, Neb.&#13;
East St. Louis, Ills.&#13;
&#13;
YOUR NEXT STEP&#13;
On your money ladder is within your reach. Will it be upward or&#13;
down? Each time you spend---spend wisely or spend not at all. Sums&#13;
you deposit at the First National are always safe and ready at your&#13;
command---and meanwhile are earning compound interest. Watch&#13;
your step.&#13;
&#13;
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
N. W. Corner Fifth and Pierce Stteets&#13;
&#13;
THE NATIONAL BANK FOR Savings&#13;
&#13;
Open Saturday Evenings---? to 9 o'clock&#13;
&#13;
Clay&#13;
&#13;
Robinson &amp; Co&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Gas for Fuel and Heat&#13;
Electricity for Light and Power&#13;
Sioux City Gas &amp; Electric Co ..&#13;
&#13;
two hundred Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
hundred se'Venty-three&#13;
&#13;
�-&#13;
&#13;
GRACELAND PARK CEMETERY&#13;
PERPETUAL CARE&#13;
E. C. PETERS,&#13;
&#13;
A. T. BENNETT,&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
EATS&#13;
&#13;
HICKS---FULLER---PIERSON CO.&#13;
Wholesale Dry Goods&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Right Kind&#13;
&#13;
Sell&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Young Men's Christian Association&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
ROYAL JEWELRY CO.&#13;
&#13;
Stoney's&#13;
favorite&#13;
subject&#13;
for&#13;
themes . in English is "The Modern&#13;
Co-ed," so that both Professor Hayes&#13;
and She know what his idea of an&#13;
ideal women is.&#13;
&#13;
"Westland" ·&#13;
&#13;
Cor. 4th and'. Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Lines of&#13;
&#13;
TRY US&#13;
&#13;
Bing!&#13;
This is another case of high school&#13;
affairs being carried into college. But&#13;
brace up Fish. Take it like a man.&#13;
'T1ras ever thus.&#13;
&#13;
Ask retail dealers to show you our&#13;
&#13;
"Merit Make"&#13;
&#13;
'The Store that puts High Grade&#13;
Jewelry within the reach&#13;
of all the people&#13;
&#13;
we don't know who this fellow is,&#13;
but he looks happy anyway. We&#13;
wonder why a state school appeals to&#13;
him more than a denominational&#13;
school. Lida told us that no one&#13;
had this picture but herself, but she&#13;
surely must have been mistaken.&#13;
&#13;
Merchants Only&#13;
&#13;
CAFETERIA&#13;
&#13;
ROYAL&#13;
&#13;
------------------Ei]&#13;
&#13;
This picture run by Spec's request.&#13;
&#13;
He can throw more concentrated fuss-&#13;
&#13;
Furnishing Goods&#13;
&#13;
HANSEN GLASS AND PAINT COMPANY&#13;
504-506-508-510 Douglas Street&#13;
&#13;
Glass, Paints, Oils, Varnishes&#13;
&#13;
ing into a square inch than any other&#13;
man in school. We suppose he will&#13;
have another girl by the time this is&#13;
published , but then we are not going&#13;
to attempt to keep up to his pace.&#13;
&#13;
hugh is very good at doing person- ·&#13;
This is one picture showing&#13;
a failure however, for she has not returned to school this year. Brace up,&#13;
Hugh.&#13;
&#13;
al work&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
MIRRORS, BEVELED TABLE and DESK TOPS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred se'l!enty-four&#13;
&#13;
_&#13;
two hundred se'Venty-fi'Ve&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
�D. &amp; M. Sporting Goods&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
&#13;
J. A. SMITH&#13;
Morningside's R eal Estate D ealer&#13;
&#13;
Grocery Dep't&#13;
Meat Dep't&#13;
Dry Goods Dep't&#13;
Shoe and Rubber Dep'I&#13;
hardware Dep't&#13;
Paint Dep't&#13;
Feed and Fuel Dep't&#13;
&#13;
Are&#13;
&#13;
us ed&#13;
&#13;
by all leading&#13;
players&#13;
If you don't think so ask&#13;
&#13;
WALTER Johnson&#13;
The World's Greatest Pitcher&#13;
&#13;
Louisville "Slugger" Bats $ I .00&#13;
&#13;
All goods sold at prices to&#13;
city competition&#13;
Please Don't Forget Our Number,&#13;
4 Phones. Iowa ,670 and 671&#13;
Auto 6912 and 69/ I&#13;
&#13;
HUNT &amp; SCHUETZ&#13;
4th and Pearl&#13;
&#13;
41 02-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Residence Phone 6268&#13;
Shop Phone 6306&#13;
Res. Phone No. 4217 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
SUPERIOR&#13;
LUMBER CO&#13;
&#13;
A I/ Work Guaranteed&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
"The Big White Shed"&#13;
Old Phone 1995&#13;
&#13;
Properties of All Kinds Rented or Sold&#13;
Office at&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
Office Phone 6136&#13;
Residence Phone 6657&#13;
&#13;
Ladies, here is the champion heavyweight fusser of the college. In the&#13;
library (before kicked out), in the&#13;
corridors, or on the campus, Jons is&#13;
equally at home if his Sue is by his&#13;
side.&#13;
"Ji mmie Hayes and l\.1iss Brand."&#13;
As such they will always be remembered ,by Morningside students, instead of Dr. and Mrs. Hayes. In this&#13;
picture, however, professor Hayes is&#13;
not sitting on that dining room&#13;
chair.&#13;
&#13;
Kernel Fouke, commissioned while&#13;
on Glee Club tour, is here seen profaning th e silence of Stone Park with&#13;
his clownish foolishness.&#13;
&#13;
Hartley L. Larson&#13;
Successor lo Piper &amp; Larson&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
&#13;
C. A. HOLLENBECK&#13;
Tailor&#13;
Shop Floor&#13;
&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
20.12 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Au to Phone 25655&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
WINNERS&#13;
&#13;
two !11mdred se'Ve11ty-six&#13;
two hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Ten Per Cent Discount to Students and Faculty&#13;
&#13;
J. W. DUNFORD&#13;
Retail Store, 418 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4212&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST -&#13;
&#13;
Quantity&#13;
&#13;
Quality&#13;
&#13;
NURSERYMAN&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 930&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Service&#13;
LANDSCAPE GARDENER&#13;
&#13;
DID YOU !VER EAT AT&#13;
&#13;
Props Cafe·&#13;
Try Us Once -&#13;
&#13;
We'll Risk the Rest&#13;
&#13;
Here is our Y. M. president looking out over the M issouri R iver. We&#13;
had hard work to persuade them to&#13;
let us take this picture, that is we&#13;
had a hard time finding it. We can't&#13;
tell what she is thinking about.&#13;
&#13;
It is never cloudy to Hildred, always Fair. But the football captainelect appears upon the sceqe, the plot&#13;
thickens. But what can men expect&#13;
of fickle co-ed.&#13;
&#13;
Shoey, we didn't t hink it of you.&#13;
&#13;
An ex-champion fusser who hac! the&#13;
fine art of kidding the fairer sex up&#13;
to 100 per cent efficiency, to at last&#13;
give all his valuable time to one lady.&#13;
&#13;
Lunches and Meals for Everyone&#13;
A. M. PROPS, Mgr.&#13;
411 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove High School is responsible for this, so don't blame it on&#13;
Morningside College. The first date&#13;
this couple had dates back farther&#13;
than any other couple in school.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
THE CHAIN STORES&#13;
Chain No. 1 Chain No. 2 Chain No. 3 -&#13;
&#13;
Corner 4th and Court&#13;
403 4th Street&#13;
607 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
THE STORES WITH A REPUTATION&#13;
&#13;
,David says, "D aisies won't tell. "&#13;
Its too bad . she isn't in school this&#13;
,&#13;
on t see how he can&#13;
narrett.&#13;
&#13;
Cash and no delivery&#13;
&#13;
two hzmdred se'Venty-eiglzt&#13;
two hundred St:'Venty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
FRESH CUT FLOWERS - All kinds ol lloral emblems made up by&#13;
We know how. American Beau.ties, roses and Carnations always on hand&#13;
Positively the lines! and largest display m town. Our prices are right.&#13;
ROCKLIN &amp; LEHMAN&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
NEW STORE: 402 Fourth Street, one ol the Finest in the West&#13;
AUTO 9856&#13;
&#13;
Jim, on his way to see " her. " note&#13;
with which he&#13;
proceeds to his fate. Jim says " Only&#13;
two more blocks and then--"&#13;
the melancholy air,&#13;
&#13;
BELL 3112&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
See how guilty this pair look. They&#13;
are the misfits of the picture above.&#13;
Cupie isn 't in school this year. We&#13;
don't know whether this is the reason or not.&#13;
&#13;
Goods of quality&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
V . A , SWAN , PRES.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
&#13;
A . E , ANDERSON , TREAS.&#13;
&#13;
.•.&#13;
SWAN-ANDERSON CO.&#13;
( INC.)&#13;
&#13;
+i+&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
The gentleman ll1 this picture has&#13;
that pessimistic, getting married ,&#13;
never-do-it-again look, but his fate&#13;
has already been sealed. "And when&#13;
he became a man he put away childish _&#13;
th111gs and took up a&#13;
S ee ,page&#13;
&#13;
213&#13;
&#13;
DRY GOODS&#13;
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S&#13;
FURNISHINGS&#13;
Shh! Q uiet! We mustn't disturb&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1882&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
these&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
· f&#13;
&#13;
atuated individuals&#13;
ar&#13;
'&#13;
' morous Juxtaposition&#13;
But, don 't worry, they'll get over it'.&#13;
&#13;
nestled in&#13;
&#13;
.The lady in the pictL11·e 1s the capfaith of this g 00 d h.&#13;
·&#13;
s 1&#13;
P· R uth says he&#13;
minds the helm pretty well too.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty&#13;
two hundred eighty- one&#13;
&#13;
�ca----------&#13;
&#13;
PREPAREDNESS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
After the War B e Prepared to do Your Share in the Great Industrial R organ,zat,o&#13;
. .&#13;
That Is certain to Take Place.&#13;
Education is not a Luxury, It Is a Necessity.&#13;
Prepare for Leadership.&#13;
Why&#13;
&#13;
Cy and Frances. Cy is a fusser of&#13;
the first magnitude. What happened&#13;
to your South Dakota Romance, Cy?&#13;
She seems to be in a hurry to get&#13;
a11·ay. We would too if we were&#13;
11·ith him.&#13;
&#13;
GO TO COLLEGE?&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
Why&#13;
&#13;
heightens the ideals and gives direction to the ambitions.&#13;
increases efficiency and earning ab1\ity.&#13;
develops mental mastery and trains the mental processes.&#13;
helps you find your place in the professions.&#13;
develops all that is best and worth preserving in you.&#13;
widens your circle of friendships.&#13;
trains for the most useful citizenship.&#13;
opens the door of opportunity.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CHOOSE MORNINGSIDE?&#13;
&#13;
Here only the highest standards of scholarship and morality prevail.&#13;
It has a splendid coll ege atmosphere.&#13;
It has many graduates of distinction.&#13;
It is not condurted for the purpose of making money. An that a student pa&#13;
in and much more goes back into his education.&#13;
Its social life is exceptionally free from objectionable features.&#13;
It has a fine enthusiasm for clean and legitimate sports:&#13;
It has one of the best equipped gymnasiums in the state.&#13;
It has a faculty especially strong in scholarship, having been trained in the lead&#13;
ing universities of Europe and America. The teaching is done by expc&#13;
enced professors, not by tutors . and instructors without experie.nce.&#13;
Its buildings are all fireproof and equipped with thorough}y modern appoi&#13;
ments and conveniences.&#13;
Thorough practical instruction is offered at a cost as low as is&#13;
high quality.&#13;
Scholarships are offered to worthy and meritorious students.&#13;
It welcomes tn these privileges the worthy of all ranks with&#13;
opportunities to all.&#13;
&#13;
This is Walker in his characteristic position. Of course, the ladies are&#13;
just freshmen, so that accounts for it.&#13;
They'!~ kno1,· better by the time they&#13;
are semors.&#13;
&#13;
You're a fine guy, Stiles.&#13;
Why .&#13;
aren't you ·carrying her books. Lucky&#13;
thtng for you that Hartley never&#13;
heard of this or you wou ld be under&#13;
th e care of the Red Cross Association.&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
THANKS&#13;
To the engra vers and photographers for taking the&#13;
them good 1&#13;
1&#13;
oo&#13;
e who were-well, otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
es og people and making&#13;
&#13;
To the student Body for its many suggestions as to&#13;
how the sioux&#13;
nlade a tt racttve,-several days after it h b&#13;
as · een pnnted.&#13;
&#13;
'I&#13;
&#13;
might&#13;
&#13;
be&#13;
&#13;
To the Senior Class who have made possible a JO ke sect10n.&#13;
&#13;
The fall term opens September eleventh.&#13;
Address communicatiocs to:&#13;
President ALFRED E. Craig, Ph . . D., D.&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
Sioux City Iowa&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ·eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Experience:&#13;
Some annuals we&#13;
printed &amp; bound&#13;
last year &amp; this&#13;
&#13;
ILLUSTRATIONS&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
This Bo ok&#13;
engraved&#13;
&#13;
f:J&#13;
&#13;
Canton&#13;
&#13;
Engraving and&#13;
Electrotype&#13;
comany&#13;
college&#13;
&#13;
Engravers&#13;
&#13;
CANTON. OHIO.&#13;
&#13;
ZENITH: Simpson College, Indianola, Ia.&#13;
PELICAN: Central College, Pella, Ia.&#13;
PILOT: Western Unio n&#13;
College, Le Mars, Ia.&#13;
QUILL:&#13;
Fairfield, Ia.,&#13;
High School&#13;
SCREECH: Albia, Ia.,&#13;
High School&#13;
PATEE:&#13;
Hot Springs,&#13;
S. Dak., High Schoo l&#13;
PERUVIAN: Peru State&#13;
Normal, Peru , Nebr.&#13;
PEIRA:&#13;
Parsons College, Fairfield, Ia.&#13;
RUDDER: Buena Vista&#13;
College, Storm Lake, Ia.&#13;
SIOUX: Morningside College Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
ROYAL PURPLE: Cornell College, Mt. Vernon&#13;
BOMB: Iowa State College, Ames, Ia.&#13;
TUMBLEWEED: Dakota&#13;
wesleyan Mitchell, S .D.&#13;
CROAKER: Iowa Wesleyan Mt. P leasant, Ia.&#13;
QUAKER: Penn College,&#13;
Oskaloosa, Ia.&#13;
ACORN:&#13;
Coe College,&#13;
Cedar Rapids, I a.&#13;
CARDINAL:&#13;
Lean d er&#13;
Clark Col., Toledo, Ia.&#13;
WEB: Ellsworth College,&#13;
Iowa Falls, Ia.&#13;
ANEMONE: Dak ota Normal. Madison, S. Dak .&#13;
CHARITONIAN: Chariton, Ia., High' School&#13;
TOMAHAWK: Iowa City&#13;
high School&#13;
ARV A: Park Coll ege,&#13;
Parkville, Mo.&#13;
PIONEER :&#13;
P latteville&#13;
State Normal, Wis .&#13;
SCROLL:&#13;
Boone, la.,&#13;
High School&#13;
ALBAQUE ORANGIA:&#13;
Dexter, Ia., High School&#13;
BLAST:&#13;
Benton,&#13;
Ia.,&#13;
high School&#13;
BOOSTER:&#13;
Sevmour,&#13;
Ia., High Sch ool&#13;
SANDPIPER: Clarkston,&#13;
Wash., High School&#13;
OKIHE: Yankton College, Yankton. S. Dak.&#13;
K irksville, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
two hundred eiqhty-four&#13;
&#13;
The getting of experience&#13;
is usually very expensive&#13;
to all parties concerned&#13;
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111n111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111m111111111111 111111 11n11111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11,1l&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
F YOU WANT YOUR ANNUAL PRINTED AND&#13;
&#13;
bound the way you want it&#13;
And when you want it, the&#13;
logical thing to do is to place your&#13;
order where you feel at ease about&#13;
it being properly taken care of.&#13;
Editors, managers and others who&#13;
have to do with the making of an- _&#13;
nualshavetheirtime fully occupied&#13;
without the anxieties and perplexities that come because of placing&#13;
their order in the hands of inexperienced annual builders.&#13;
We are annual specialists. You can&#13;
place your order with us with full&#13;
confidence that you will get a&#13;
high-class book.&#13;
&#13;
The Clio Press&#13;
&#13;
Economy A dvertising Co m pany&#13;
&#13;
D ependability&#13;
&#13;
row A CIT Y, row A&#13;
&#13;
two hu11dred eiq hty -five&#13;
&#13;
�GEO. W. FINCH&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
&#13;
Book Index&#13;
&#13;
Filth and pierce&#13;
&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
&#13;
J. E. DE WALT&#13;
&#13;
Suite 605.606 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
3 J S.316 F ranees Buildinir&#13;
SIOUX CITY, lOW A&#13;
&#13;
PLAZA&#13;
&#13;
PHIL LANDR Y&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Finest Theatre&#13;
&#13;
Importing Tailor&#13;
&#13;
Pipe Organ and Selected Photoplays&#13;
&#13;
DR . J . A B L ISS&#13;
&#13;
DENT IST&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bui!ding&#13;
&#13;
F. sargent&#13;
&#13;
5th and Pierce Su.&#13;
&#13;
A C STRONG&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
G. T struble&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
OENTIST&#13;
&#13;
SARGENT, STRONG &amp; STR BLE&#13;
U&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 85686&#13;
Suite 6 J S.616 F ra nees Building, 5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
SIOUX C l l Y, !OW A&#13;
&#13;
A TTOR NEYS&#13;
&#13;
C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
&#13;
202-206 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
J. W . hubbvard&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
&#13;
A ttorn e y and Cou nsellor at Law&#13;
&#13;
A uto Phone 3 785&#13;
605 F ranees Bld g.&#13;
~ioux C ity. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
327 Davidson Building&#13;
6th a nd Pierce Sts.&#13;
SIO UX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON BROTHERS&#13;
LAN D CO.&#13;
&#13;
SHULL, GILL, SAMMIS &amp; S ILWILL&#13;
T&#13;
Attorneys&#13;
&#13;
602 Pie rce St.&#13;
&#13;
Improved Farms a nd Mortgages&#13;
&#13;
Introduction&#13;
Page&#13;
Staff .............................................. 4&#13;
Foreword ...................................... 5&#13;
Acknowledgements ...................... 7&#13;
O rder of_'Books ............................ 8&#13;
Dedication .................................... 6&#13;
Book I.&#13;
&#13;
John R . Carter H. W . Brackney Homer B. Carter&#13;
&#13;
CAR&#13;
TER, BRAC N &amp; C R&#13;
K EY&#13;
A TER&#13;
A ttorn ey s at L a w&#13;
&#13;
Suite 707.703.709, Security Ba nk Bld g.&#13;
Phones, Auto 1522, Bell I 065&#13;
S io ux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
400. 41 8 Iowa Bu ilding&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS.&#13;
L AWYERS&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 302-305 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
H. R. DEALY&#13;
&#13;
W. S. GILMAN&#13;
&#13;
City Property---Farms&#13;
&#13;
R eal Estate&#13;
&#13;
Investments&#13;
604 IOW A BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Established 1870&#13;
&#13;
J. A. &amp; 0. S. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
6 11 P ierce Street&#13;
&#13;
GAYNOR LUMBER CO.&#13;
WholesalF Lu m b er&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
308 Davidson Buildin g&#13;
&#13;
Book IIII. Cont.&#13;
&#13;
The College&#13;
&#13;
Campus&#13;
Main H all ................................ 11&#13;
Gymnasium .............................. 13&#13;
Conservatory ............................ 15&#13;
Grace Church ............................ 17&#13;
The President's ·H ome .............. 19 ,&#13;
Poems&#13;
Alma . Mater .......................... 10&#13;
G e n e s i s of Morningside&#13;
Spirit .................................. 12&#13;
Morningside .......................... 16&#13;
A Toast to the Morningside&#13;
Squaw ................................ 18&#13;
Faculty .......................................... 21&#13;
Board of Trustees ........................ 28&#13;
Book II.&#13;
&#13;
60 1-602 United Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
Seniors .. ........................................&#13;
Juniors ..........................................&#13;
Sophomores ....................................&#13;
Freshmen ......................................&#13;
D epartments ..................................&#13;
Music&#13;
Expression&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
Northwest Iowa Basketball&#13;
T ournament .................. 109&#13;
Gym .................................. 110&#13;
Tennis ................................ 110&#13;
Women's A thletics ................ 111&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
-l-3&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
69&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
Book III. Activities&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Men's Athletics&#13;
Football .................................. 79&#13;
Baseball .................................. 93&#13;
Traek ...................................... 97&#13;
"M" Invitation Meet ...... 104&#13;
Basketball .............................. 107&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Oratory .......... 119&#13;
Inter-Collegiate D ebate ............ 120&#13;
Inter-Society D ebates ................ 122&#13;
Gold Medal Series D ebates ...... ] 26&#13;
D ramatics&#13;
Arona D eclamatory Contest .... 131&#13;
Othonian Public ........................ 132&#13;
Senior C lass P lay ...................... 133&#13;
Zetalethean P ublic .................... 134&#13;
P ierian Public ............................ 135&#13;
Expression Plays ........................ 136&#13;
German C lass Play .................... 138&#13;
Music&#13;
Men's G lee C lub ........................ 141&#13;
Madrigal Club .......................... ] 42&#13;
Grace C hurch C hoir .................. f43&#13;
Band .......................................... 145&#13;
O rchestra ............................ :....... 146&#13;
Book I V.&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
College Societies&#13;
Philon1athean .............................. 148&#13;
Athenaeu m ................................ 150&#13;
. Ionian ........................................ 154&#13;
P ierian ...................................... 156&#13;
Athenaeum ................................ 150&#13;
Othonian .................................... 160&#13;
Zetalethean .............................. 162&#13;
Academy Societies&#13;
Adelphian .................................. 166&#13;
Aesthesian .................................. 167&#13;
Hawkeye .................................. 168&#13;
Crescent .................................... 169&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eiglity-six&#13;
two hundred eighty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Book V .&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
General&#13;
Student Body ····------------------------172&#13;
Stude nt Counci l _________ _ _ _ _ l 73&#13;
___ ___ __ _&#13;
Agora C lub _________ _&#13;
___________ _&#13;
__________ l 74&#13;
N aboklis Club ______ ___ __________ _ _ l 7 5&#13;
_____&#13;
Girls' Inter-society Committee l 76&#13;
F orensic L eague __________ _&#13;
____________ _1 77&#13;
Pi K appa D elta _________ _ _&#13;
_ ____________ l 78&#13;
"M " C lub _ _ __________________ _&#13;
__&#13;
_________ l 79&#13;
T eutonia Club ___________ __ __ ______ _&#13;
_ __&#13;
_180&#13;
Ch emisl ry Club ___ _&#13;
_____________ _ _ 180&#13;
_____&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
Y. M . C. A. _______________ _&#13;
_______ _ __ .1 82&#13;
___&#13;
Y. W. C. A. _______________________ _ 183&#13;
______&#13;
Volunteer B and&#13;
l 84&#13;
Prohibition L eague _____ _ _&#13;
__ ___________ 184&#13;
Publications&#13;
Collegian Reporter ______ _ __ _1 86&#13;
__ ______&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux -------- --------- --- ----- --- -.&#13;
····&#13;
Booster Organizations&#13;
Alumni Association&#13;
l\Iorningside Clubs&#13;
Book V I.&#13;
&#13;
Student L ife&#13;
&#13;
Calend ar&#13;
M onument D ay --------------··---- ---.194,&#13;
l\I ay Fete ----------------------- ---------.195&#13;
Commencement ---------------------.. -198&#13;
mens&#13;
Banquet -------------------------.199&#13;
W omen's Banquet -------- ---- ·------JOO&#13;
"M" Minstreks -------------------- ---.201&#13;
J okes&#13;
Th e Squirrel D odger&#13;
?03&#13;
M iscell aneous ----- -------------------- -..207&#13;
H umorous Poems ----------- ----------.217&#13;
Snaps&#13;
223&#13;
F rolics of t he Sioux&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
two hund red ei{lltty -ei{ll,t&#13;
&#13;
����</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="7853">
                    <text>Beckmann, Danielle: Cataloger</text>
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                  <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College annual yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The yearbooks contain pictures, short articles, sporting event results, and other college news and events related to that particular year.&#13;
&#13;
A number of yearbooks do not have people's names index in this database. Those yearbooks will have a PDF index of the people's names in that particular year with a reference to the page(s) that they appear on.</text>
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                  <text>Morningside College</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="7854">
              <text>DATE DUE&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
NOV 1 4 2006&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
GAYLORD&#13;
&#13;
PAINTED IN U.S.A.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
EX LIBRIS&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux '18&#13;
BEING THE ANNUAL YEAR BOOK&#13;
OF MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHED BY&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 19 18&#13;
G. EARL BARKS, EDITOR&#13;
E. J. HARRINGTON MANAGER&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVED&#13;
&#13;
THE CANTON&#13;
&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVING AND ELECTROTYPE&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
CANTON, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
PRINTED BY&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
ECONOMY ADVERTISING CO.&#13;
&#13;
IOWACITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
P UB LISHED BY&#13;
&#13;
The Class&#13;
&#13;
of 1918&#13;
&#13;
IN ITS J UN IOR YEAR&#13;
&#13;
Foreword&#13;
Not fo r&#13;
Not for&#13;
Not fo r&#13;
H ave&#13;
&#13;
The Staff&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
E ARL B ARKS&#13;
&#13;
E. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
NOBLE N. RICHARDSON&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
R U TH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
literary splendor,&#13;
mere artistic beauty,&#13;
honor nor for glory&#13;
we written down this tale.&#13;
&#13;
B ut to tell you of our college,&#13;
Her environment and beauty,&#13;
Her t raditions and her legends;&#13;
And t o tell you of the stu dent,&#13;
His activities and habits,&#13;
Of his victories in battle,&#13;
Of his longings and ambitions&#13;
Have we written down this tale.&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Societ ies&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WE N IG&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES H . KLI PPEL&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
LIDA S AUNDE RS&#13;
CLAIR&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Dramatics&#13;
Alumni&#13;
C alendar&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
Photography&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Photography&#13;
&#13;
ROYAL H. J U RGEN SEN&#13;
&#13;
Artist&#13;
&#13;
If it adds aught to her glory,&#13;
If it makes you r love more loyal,&#13;
If, in years that are to follow&#13;
I t shall call up to your memory&#13;
Scenes of battle, hours of labor,&#13;
Pleasures, honors, tasks well-done&#13;
In the mighty Big Sioux College&#13;
In the Big Sioux R iver Country,&#13;
Then our labor is not useless,&#13;
A ll our work is not in vain.&#13;
With this thought before you always&#13;
We submit to you this legend,&#13;
This, your annual and our class book,&#13;
And extend to you t his g reeting&#13;
Of t he 19-1 8 class.&#13;
EDITOR.&#13;
&#13;
· Robert NegleyVanHorne&#13;
Who has won our love and esteem as a&#13;
professor and as a man; and who has poured&#13;
out the best part of his life at the feet of his&#13;
Alma Mater, Morningside College, we&#13;
the Class of 1918, respectfully dedicate&#13;
this Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS&#13;
We wish to acknowledge and express&#13;
our appreciation to Ewart Williams '17,&#13;
for the Cartoons; to Lynn Castle '19, for&#13;
the Decorative Emblems on the society&#13;
pages; to Horace Morgan '14, for the&#13;
Order of Books Design; and to Professor&#13;
James J. Hayes, for the Insert Design and&#13;
Ex Libris, found in this book.&#13;
&#13;
Book I&#13;
BOOK I&#13;
&#13;
The College&#13;
BOOK II&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
BOOK III&#13;
&#13;
Activities&#13;
BOOK IV&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
BOOK V&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
BOOK VI&#13;
&#13;
College Life&#13;
&#13;
the College&#13;
&#13;
Sing the song of Hiawatha,&#13;
Of the happy days that fallowed&#13;
In the Big Sioux River country,&#13;
In the pleasant land and peaceful,&#13;
On the muskody, the meadow,&#13;
On the prairie full of blossoms.&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
· I.&#13;
Alma Mater&#13;
PA UL MAcCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Refrain&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
Sing the praises of Dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her heroes bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices,&#13;
The chorus swelling,&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
Then cheer for Dear Old Morningside,&#13;
To thee we pledge anew,&#13;
Hearts of faithful love,&#13;
Now and forever,&#13;
Thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning,&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
we'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought us-­&#13;
Fair Morningside! Our home!&#13;
Hear our vow, 0 Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee.&#13;
All we have&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
For the Glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
eleven&#13;
&#13;
WINNING POEM OF THE CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
" The Genesis of Morningside .Spirit"&#13;
J. FINLEY CHRIST,&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
On a bare and wind-swept hill-top,&#13;
Sloping gently to the southward,&#13;
Looking toward the broad :M issouriToward the swirling Muddy WaterStood a prophet with a vision ,&#13;
With a vision of the future,&#13;
With a dream of mighty compass,&#13;
Dreaming of what he would build thereOn the hill that looks to southward,&#13;
Toward the swirling Muddy Water.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Comes to Morningside a freshman&#13;
In his hungry search for learning;&#13;
With his burning thirst for knowledge;&#13;
With his bounding youthful spirit;&#13;
With his crude and noisy manner;&#13;
And his heart of sterling metal,&#13;
Though it has not yet been tested .&#13;
Little reeks the bounding freshmanLittle reeks he, aye, or wondersOf the prophet and his vision;&#13;
Of the portrait in the chapel;&#13;
Or of those who followed afterThose who strengthened the foundation;&#13;
Those who toiled, and fought, and struggled&#13;
For the college on the hill-top;&#13;
For the freshman, that his hunger&#13;
After truth should not consume him;&#13;
And he marvels at the spiritAt the loyal, boosting spiritWhich the numbers gone before him&#13;
(Though their names have been forgotten)&#13;
Have bequeathed to those who follow.&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
'Tis with awe he views the battle&#13;
With the warriors of VermilionWith the tribes of South DakotaFrom beyond the Muddy Water.&#13;
With astonishment he ponders'Tis beyond his comprehension-&#13;
&#13;
twelve&#13;
&#13;
thirteen&#13;
&#13;
When he sees us still unconquered&#13;
Though the scoTe should stand against us;&#13;
When he sees we still are loyal&#13;
To our teams and to our SandyWhether winning, tied, or losing;&#13;
'Tis in vain he tries to solve it&#13;
And appreciates it fully:&#13;
For he still is but a freshman,&#13;
And he cannot comprehend it.&#13;
But in five or six semestersAfter years and years of struggleAfter years of living with ITAfter years of lusty battle,&#13;
And of patient, silent fighting,&#13;
On the field or in the class-roomHe begins to understand it,&#13;
And to have that spirit in him.&#13;
Many times he's been defeated;&#13;
Many times has hope been shattered;&#13;
Many victories have escaped him&#13;
As his hand stretched forth to grasp them.&#13;
But with each defeat he suffered&#13;
He has taken one step onward;&#13;
And at last he is a senior,&#13;
With his proud and knowing manner;&#13;
Oh, SO different from the freshman,&#13;
That but yesterday he had been.&#13;
And among the many things that&#13;
Make him different from the freshman,&#13;
Is the conscious, living knowledge&#13;
That he comprehends the spirit&#13;
Of this college, and its meaning&#13;
To the world that moves about us.&#13;
For the greatest thing this college&#13;
Gives to those that go out from it&#13;
( 'Tis a thing to keep us fighting&#13;
In the battles still before us)&#13;
Is the spirit of its founderIs the spirit of the vision&#13;
Of the prophet on the hill-top&#13;
&#13;
fourteen&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
fifteen&#13;
&#13;
Who could see the shining future&#13;
And could carve a way out to it:&#13;
Change a footpath to a roadway,&#13;
And a wigwam to a mansion.&#13;
Neither time, nor man, nor devil&#13;
Such a spirit e'er can conquer;&#13;
For as long as rolling prairie&#13;
Forms the banks of Old Missouri,&#13;
Or as long as Muddy Water&#13;
Flows on swiftly to the ocean,&#13;
Morningside shall live and prosper&#13;
On the hill-top, looking southward&#13;
Toward the swirling Muddy Water;&#13;
Shall send forth her sons and daughters&#13;
With her dauntless, fearless spirit,&#13;
That was never known to falter,&#13;
And that never can be conquered .&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
AGNETTE FLOM&#13;
&#13;
'20&#13;
&#13;
In the outskirts of Sioux City&#13;
On the river's winding shore,&#13;
Far upon a hill-top pretty&#13;
Stands our college, as of yore.&#13;
And its halls are wide and spacious,&#13;
Plenty room for fun and care,&#13;
But the spirit of the college&#13;
With its size cannot compare.&#13;
You may talk about you r "pep"&#13;
And your "vim" and "go" and so,&#13;
And think your "spizerinctum"&#13;
Is the best that you can know.&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
Grace Methodist Episcopal Church&#13;
&#13;
But if once you feel the spirit&#13;
Of our collge here so dear,&#13;
You will then forget all others&#13;
And with us abide quite near.&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
We have joys and we have sorrows&#13;
As in other lands and schools,&#13;
But we still cling to each other&#13;
For we've " Friendship" for our rule.&#13;
You should hear us all on Thursday,&#13;
When our pep meetings are on,&#13;
You would sure then wish to join us&#13;
And partake of college fun.&#13;
We are here too for a purpose,&#13;
'Tis to learn, to live and do&#13;
And if you would test our motive&#13;
Let us come and help you too.&#13;
So to Morningside we're loyal&#13;
Yes, loyal, staunch and true,&#13;
·'Til upon the dear old campus&#13;
Our four years or more are through.&#13;
Then we'll boost, boost, boost&#13;
For the college in the west,&#13;
For Morningside, yes, Morningside,&#13;
The fairest and the best.&#13;
Then all join in the "Yip-ki-yi"&#13;
For Morningside, Maroon,&#13;
And then the nine and fifteen rahs,&#13;
While the band strikes up a tune.&#13;
&#13;
A Toast to the Morningside Squaw&#13;
]. R.&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
THE PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
In days th·at long ago were gone,&#13;
In times when tribes were few,&#13;
There lived a band of Indian braves .&#13;
On shores of the Big Sioux.&#13;
On shores of the Big Sioux they lived,&#13;
Right near the old Mizzou,&#13;
Their camp was on a hill-top green,&#13;
Their squaws were worthy too.&#13;
&#13;
eighteen&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Not few the. wars that they did have&#13;
With tribes from neighboring lands;&#13;
Nor few the scalps that home they brought,&#13;
Those scalps of hostile bands.&#13;
'Tis not for me to tell of how&#13;
This tribe has fought and won;&#13;
But mine to tell of just their squaws,&#13;
Their squaws that held them one.&#13;
When shades&#13;
......... were softly drawn,&#13;
.........&#13;
..&#13;
The God of Light sunk low,&#13;
The braves came up the hill to camp&#13;
From. hunts they'd had below.&#13;
They gathered on the river's bank&#13;
To watch the setting sun ;&#13;
While shadows lengthened through the trees&#13;
Their camp-fires were begun.&#13;
The fires they lighted in the woods&#13;
Come back to us again ;&#13;
They now are fires of knowledge&#13;
That glow in hearts of men.&#13;
At first the squaws came not to school,&#13;
They in their homes did hide,&#13;
But soon it was a co-ed school,&#13;
Its name was Morningside&#13;
The squaws now hold the braves in check&#13;
And point to things above&#13;
And teach them how to love to live&#13;
And living is to love.&#13;
&#13;
All&#13;
All&#13;
All&#13;
Of&#13;
&#13;
To them, who have inspired through trife;&#13;
To them we hold in awe;&#13;
To them who give ideals of life;&#13;
Here's to the Morningside Squaw.&#13;
&#13;
the w isdom of the M edas,&#13;
the craft of the Wabenos,&#13;
the marvelous dreams and visions&#13;
the J ossakeeds, the Pro phets.&#13;
&#13;
tw enty- one&#13;
twenty&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
H ILMER&#13;
&#13;
V ice-President and R egistrar&#13;
Ger·man L iterature&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED EDWIN CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
D IMMITT&#13;
&#13;
Dean of W omen&#13;
&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
twenty-tw o&#13;
&#13;
twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTLEHNER&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HAYES&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
CAMPBELL&#13;
&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
. English&#13;
&#13;
Greek&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET G . DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
FERGUSON&#13;
MAIN&#13;
&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Home Economics&#13;
FREDERICK SCHAUB&#13;
&#13;
A. MARSH&#13;
Public Speaking&#13;
HIRSCH&#13;
&#13;
Biblical Literature&#13;
&#13;
A. BROWN&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
Coach of Athletics&#13;
&#13;
. JASON&#13;
&#13;
GARFIELD JONES&#13;
&#13;
Economics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
w ALTER J.&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
PEARL S. GREENE&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
A. Coss&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
Ger.man&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
Physics&#13;
AGNES&#13;
&#13;
OLAF HOVDA&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Ass't Biology&#13;
&#13;
LAURA .C. FISCHER&#13;
&#13;
Ass't German and Latin&#13;
&#13;
twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
r a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --&#13;
&#13;
IVY B.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MacCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
MacCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
RUBY&#13;
HAROLD R. HARVEY&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Violin and Theory&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F.&#13;
&#13;
w OODFORD&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Expression&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
ZENANA OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Academy English&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
ESTELLA&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
MRS. JESSIE H. JACKSON&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
M. BARTLETT&#13;
Secretary to President&#13;
&#13;
F. OTTO BARZ&#13;
&#13;
BRYAN&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
CECILIA C. STENGER&#13;
&#13;
French&#13;
MRS. BERTHA BOSLEY&#13;
&#13;
Ass't Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
PEARL JANE DOUGHTY&#13;
&#13;
Ass't Expression&#13;
&#13;
LUND&#13;
&#13;
Piano&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Board of Trustees&#13;
&#13;
Book II&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
First Vice President&#13;
Second Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
BRENNER&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
BARZ&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Term expires 1919&#13;
&#13;
Term expires 1918&#13;
&#13;
Term expires 1917&#13;
&#13;
F. 0. BARZ&#13;
L. J. BRENNER&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE ALLEE&#13;
&#13;
W. D. BOIES&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE C. CALL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT CLEGG&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
J. L.&#13;
&#13;
P. E . HELD&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
M. BOND&#13;
&#13;
A.G. BUSS&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
CHAPMAN&#13;
&#13;
R. T. CHIPERFIELD&#13;
· E . M. CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
J. HASKINS&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
C. A. MAUER&#13;
&#13;
J. H. KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
W. T.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
C. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
HATHAWAY&#13;
&#13;
C. P. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
J. C. LOCKIN&#13;
&#13;
J. L.&#13;
&#13;
FELLER&#13;
&#13;
C.H. LocKIN&#13;
&#13;
H. A. KECK&#13;
&#13;
H. SPENCE&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
BENZ&#13;
&#13;
G . F. TINKNELL&#13;
&#13;
C. D. KILLAM&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
J. E.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WEBB&#13;
&#13;
E. A. MORLING&#13;
D. A. McBuRNEY&#13;
&#13;
P. MANLEY&#13;
&#13;
J. H. O'DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
C. METCALF&#13;
&#13;
J. G . SHUMAKER&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
J. P. NEGUS&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
F. H. THIEL&#13;
&#13;
H.B. PIERCE&#13;
&#13;
G. H. WESSEL&#13;
&#13;
WALTER TORBETT&#13;
&#13;
J. B. TRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE F. WHITFIELD&#13;
&#13;
PANZLAU&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE RAW&#13;
&#13;
SCOTT M. LADD&#13;
&#13;
twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
E . T ACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
F. McDowELL&#13;
&#13;
From his lodge went Hiawatha,&#13;
Dressed for travel, armed for hunting;&#13;
On his head his eagle fea t hers,&#13;
In his hand his bow of ash-wood.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
CLASSPRESIDENT&#13;
RAYMOND HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"So like a courtier, contempt nor bitterness&#13;
Were in his pride or sharpness."&#13;
&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
His nature is&#13;
He would not&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
too noble for th e world:&#13;
flatter Neptune for his tri-&#13;
&#13;
dent&#13;
Or love for his power to thunder."&#13;
&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" With what his valour did enrich his wit&#13;
His wit set down to make his valour live."&#13;
&#13;
vain pomp, and glory of the world, I hate&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
ye."&#13;
&#13;
. SECRETARY-TREASURER&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville&#13;
&#13;
"Age can not wither her, nor custom stale&#13;
H er infinite variety."&#13;
&#13;
STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
DONALD&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
WALTON&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
Lennox, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
imply the thing I am shall make me live."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
hath Prosperous art&#13;
When will Play with reason and disshe&#13;
&#13;
"He cannot flatter, he!An honest mind and plain,- he must speak&#13;
truth."&#13;
&#13;
thirty&#13;
&#13;
thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
CHAM P&#13;
&#13;
" She is young, w ise, fair ;&#13;
In th ese to nature she's immediate heir."&#13;
&#13;
WILSON&#13;
T. CLARK&#13;
&#13;
GRORGEB. DUTTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"And faster than his tongue did make off ense,&#13;
His eye did heal it up."&#13;
&#13;
Haubstad t, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
Give thy thought no tongue,&#13;
Norany unproportioned th ought his act."&#13;
&#13;
SUSAN EADS&#13;
&#13;
SinceI am crept in favour w ith m yself,&#13;
&#13;
I will maintain it with some little cost."&#13;
&#13;
West Side&#13;
MILLIE CORNE LIU SSEN&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
"Her life-a quiet stream&#13;
In whose calm depth the beautiful and pure&#13;
A lone are mirror'd."&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
CUMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" L et none presume to wear an undeserved&#13;
dignity."&#13;
&#13;
I hold the world but as th e w orld&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
stage where every man must play his&#13;
part."&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville&#13;
He is complete&#13;
&#13;
in f eature and in mind&#13;
&#13;
With good grace to grace a gentleman."&#13;
all&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
FRY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" I must hav e liberty&#13;
Withal, as large a charter as the wind,&#13;
To blow on w hom I please."&#13;
&#13;
Who not content that form er w orth stand&#13;
&#13;
fast,&#13;
Looks forward persevering to the last&#13;
From wellto better, daily self-surpast."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
CHARLES G ARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
w ith this special&#13;
&#13;
" H ear him debate of commonwealth affairs,&#13;
You w ould say,- it had been all his study."&#13;
&#13;
not the modesty of&#13;
nature."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
LUCIA&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" For if our virtues did not go fo rth for us,&#13;
' T were all alike as if we had them not."&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN G. HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
Le M ars&#13;
&#13;
" His eye begets occasion for his w it,&#13;
For ev ery object that the one doth catch,&#13;
Th e other turns to a mirth-moving jest."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
dare do all that may become a man,&#13;
&#13;
who do more is none."&#13;
dares&#13;
&#13;
J acksonville, Ill.&#13;
the world's new fashion&#13;
hath a mint of Phrases in his brain."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER LARSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Her pure and eloquent blood&#13;
Spoke in her cheek and so distinctly wrought&#13;
That one might almost say her body&#13;
thought."&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
EDITH LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
FERN J. MARQUART&#13;
&#13;
Lansing, Mich.&#13;
&#13;
"From lowest place w hen virtuous things&#13;
proceed,&#13;
The place is dignified by the doer's deed."&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Stillin thy right hand carry gentle peace,&#13;
envious tongues."&#13;
&#13;
Yankton, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Castana·&#13;
&#13;
"His heart and hand doth open, and both&#13;
free;&#13;
For w hat he has, he gives, and what he&#13;
thinks, he shows."&#13;
&#13;
and sweet majesty,&#13;
That every wretch pining and pale before,&#13;
Beholding her, plucks comfort from her&#13;
looks."&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"So may the outward shows be least themselves:&#13;
The world is still deceived by ornament."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
This fellow of exceeding honesty,&#13;
and knows all qualities as a learned spirit,&#13;
&#13;
ofhuman dealings."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
LAURA E. PEASE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Hath not old custom made this life more&#13;
sweet&#13;
Than that of painful pomp?"&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
the spider; and hath&#13;
&#13;
woven&#13;
golden&#13;
mesh to entrap the hearts of men&#13;
faster&#13;
than gnats in cobwebs.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Thou about her from her&#13;
Shall read the perfect ways of honour."&#13;
&#13;
"Be just and fear not&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
HARRY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
ROSENE&#13;
&#13;
"He must, he is, he cannot but be wise."&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
when whom we serve's&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
"So well to know&#13;
Her own, that w hat she wills to do or say&#13;
Seems wisest, virtuousest, discreetest, best."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
than by our d eed&#13;
&#13;
Ft. Dodge&#13;
&#13;
St. Lawrence, S. D.&#13;
check'd silence&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
STEELE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"She hath a tear for pity, and a hand&#13;
Open as the day for melting charity."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
sinful fantasy I&#13;
lust and luxury!''&#13;
&#13;
Avon , S. D .&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
SWAlN&#13;
&#13;
Sinclair, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
"The best-conditioned and unwearied spirit&#13;
In doing courtesies."&#13;
&#13;
LILAH&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Loving well compos' d, with gifts of nature&#13;
flowing,&#13;
And swelling o'er with arts and exercise."&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
DON VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
man!"&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
"The elements so mix'd in him, that nature&#13;
might stand up,&#13;
And say to all the world, 'This was a&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
Hull&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
must follow , as the night the day,&#13;
tanst not then be false to any man."&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
&#13;
"How many things by season season'd are&#13;
To their right praise and true perfection."&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
forty -one&#13;
&#13;
"Say, do you know what is meant by ' Pride of the Sioux'?"&#13;
"No, what?"&#13;
"Why the Junior class, of course."&#13;
&#13;
P atiently sat Hiawatha,&#13;
Listening to his father'sboasting;&#13;
s&#13;
With a smile he sat and listened&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
Uttered neither threat nor m enace.&#13;
&#13;
forty-two&#13;
&#13;
forty -three&#13;
&#13;
CLASS PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
STUDENT COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Chick" is our jolly class president. No one can have the blues when he&#13;
is around. He is ever ready for a good time and his policy is not to let&#13;
his studies interfere with his college education. He plays the mandolin&#13;
and is taking expression, but everyone knows his failing for "reeds."&#13;
No doubt we shall hear more from "Chick" later on, for he's always&#13;
&#13;
one of our rare girls. She is a leader and takes lnuch interest&#13;
activities of college life. Notwithstanding that her thoughts are&#13;
between Morningside and Illinois U, Marion finds tirrie to do&#13;
could be asked of any American College girl. She is dependable&#13;
always does everything well, and enjoys everything&#13;
&#13;
springing something.&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
EARL G. STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A quiet, industrious worker whose heart is bigger than his words. He&#13;
takes an interest in all phases of college life, particularly in "fussing."&#13;
He is an energetic spirit, a sturdy progressive type of manhood, and his&#13;
influence is clean and wholesome. He possesses the zeal of an enthusiast&#13;
who strives after some end, and yet stops along the way to lend a hand to&#13;
&#13;
Julia is quiet, faithful, and unassuming. · She goes her way silently, and&#13;
it is only when we come to know her well that we realize and appre-&#13;
&#13;
those in need.&#13;
&#13;
desire.&#13;
&#13;
ciate her true merit. The class of '17 made a mistake by trying to claim&#13;
her last year, for she has ·been in our ranks since we started. She is&#13;
always busy and as a reward she gets grades that anyone might well&#13;
&#13;
SECRETARY-TREASURER&#13;
VIVIAN DowN&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt&#13;
&#13;
Viv is Y. W. C. A. President. This fact alone speaks for the respect&#13;
which all the girls have for her, and their faith in her ability. She&#13;
is faithful to her friends, as well as to her Latin and German classes.&#13;
She is an enthusiastic, tireless worker, an entertaining reader, a poetess,&#13;
·&#13;
"To&#13;
and a jolly good friend. Indeed we can truly say of Vivian.&#13;
know her is to love her."&#13;
&#13;
forty-four&#13;
&#13;
IRVING BACK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
It is with just pride that we claim this man as a member of our class.&#13;
He is a fellow whom we all admire for his manly qualities, his openmindedness, his unselfishness, his big-heartedness, and his genial personality. While quiet and very modest, he is nevertheless a fluent and&#13;
convincing debater, and has represented his college ably on the forensic&#13;
platform. A man among men.&#13;
&#13;
forty-five&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A loyal supporter of every activity which exists in the college. He is a&#13;
member of the famous Kennel Klub. He loves his society and has been&#13;
a good "Barks" on the debate platform. Although kept busy as editor&#13;
of the annual, he finds time to enjoy a good joke, especially on the other&#13;
fellow, and has a smile that we will all remember.&#13;
&#13;
Yes. But a man with ideas of his own, and who has the&#13;
and courage to carry them out. His mind is never changed&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
ment, yet he is as good-natured after a difference of opinion&#13;
There must be action every minute of the day to suit him.&#13;
has more "pressing" engagements than any other man in&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Bush" is a minister's son. He is always pleasant, although of a somewhat retiring nature. He did all his stepping while a freshman. In&#13;
him we see a most rugged and tireless specimen of physical manhood.&#13;
He plays forward in basketball, end in football, and is a handy man in&#13;
baseball. He is sometimes found in the physics laboratory.&#13;
&#13;
though Winifred came to Morningside this year for the first time we&#13;
already come to realize in a measure her true worth. She is&#13;
reserved unassuming, but nevertheless very efficient. She is a girl&#13;
and&#13;
gentleness and refinement, and ·yet so large-minded and broadd that she is admired by all who know her. Hers is the type of a&#13;
le and sincere friend.&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
ORIN&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
BELL&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Orin is a quiet fellow, but beneath a modest exterior there exists a&#13;
man of true gold. He is one of those fellows who is always ready to&#13;
help another, no matter how deeply engrossed in his own work. Orin&#13;
intends to enter Y. M. C. A. work when he has finished college, and,&#13;
judging from his good record of the past, we know that he will be&#13;
most successful in his chosen profession.&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
&#13;
IRENE&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
Springfield, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Irene knows more about Morningside than most of us do, having been&#13;
connected with the academy and the Conservatory before the Class&#13;
of '18 came to claim her. We were almost afraid that she had lost&#13;
her interest in Morningside this year, but we find that she · is still a&#13;
loyal booster. She is an accomplished musician, but is specializing in&#13;
domestic art at present.&#13;
&#13;
forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
We were quite alarmed last year when the class of '17 claimed Jay&#13;
Christ, but we have found that it was, after all, one of their mistakes.&#13;
Here is a man who upholds our reputation for learning. He "keeps up&#13;
with the subjects of the day, and is most contented when the busiest.&#13;
He is deliberate of speech and sound in judgment. There is surely a&#13;
place among the first for him to fill.&#13;
&#13;
is not afraid to express her thoughts. In the midst&#13;
citement she remains cool and confident. She is a perservering&#13;
and has every reason to be proud of her grades. Here is one&#13;
does not think it necessary to make use of every "cut." One&#13;
know her well to appreciate what a splendid friend and comrade&#13;
&#13;
J. FINLEY CHRIST&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN CLOUGH&#13;
&#13;
Allen, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Marty" is a quiet, bashful youth from Nebraska. He is always&#13;
willing to do his share of any work and let someone else have the&#13;
glory. He does not let his books worry him much, but manages to pull&#13;
good grades. He delights in bodily activity and is our baseball captain&#13;
this spring. "Marty" is a good companion and a true friend.&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
Marieooms wiht "Katink" and boards at Sunshine Inn. Should it&#13;
r&#13;
be necessary to say more? Jolly? Yes, indeed! She is the life of any&#13;
gatheringwith her humor and jollity. She believes in a good time,&#13;
&#13;
even though it be at the expense of a lesson or two. It is such enthusiasm and life as Marie's, that make for t rue class and college spirit.&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ctiy&#13;
&#13;
Floyd spent two and one-half years with us, and now holds a responsible position in one of the Sioux City banks. We were obliged to look&#13;
up to him from the very first. He played forward for his class two&#13;
years in basketball and was a member of one championship team. He&#13;
was a splendid mixer in social life and we miss him a great deal. We&#13;
sincerely hope for his return next year.&#13;
&#13;
forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps one of the busiest men in school. Editor of the Collegian&#13;
Reporter, and an orator and debater of recognized ability. He has&#13;
a most unusual power of winning persons to his point of view. His&#13;
studies are his pastimes, yet he is able to claim his share of enviable&#13;
marks. In spite of all this, he still finds ample time to "fuss."&#13;
&#13;
forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
Ruth is a hustler. Whatever she attempts she starts with a will and&#13;
usually finds the way. Hers is the vim and snap that make things go.&#13;
The test of her ability is not so much what she does, but the way in&#13;
which she does it. She is prominent in class and society affairs, and is&#13;
an enthusiastic member of the Y. W. C. A. cabinet.&#13;
&#13;
an all-around good fellow and is full of the M. C. spirit that&#13;
everything which he undertakes a success. He is a good student&#13;
class room, likes to jump the hurdles on the cinder path, is a&#13;
in the glee clu,b, and plays· center for his class basketball team.&#13;
himself really busy he solicits ads for the Sioux '18.&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A mixture of music, gallantry, wit, enthusiasm, and energy. He plays&#13;
the "slide" like few others can. Ask the Sunshine Inners if that's&#13;
true. A member of the College Band and Orchestra. His manners&#13;
are precise and his gallantry is unquestioned. He appears serious at&#13;
all times, but those who know him realize that beneath that cold exterior is a vein of mischievous humor and frivolity.&#13;
&#13;
not have been done better. She is so totally without conceit, and yet&#13;
we ll know that what Cleo sets out to do is done well. In spite of her&#13;
a&#13;
,encrous, gracious, considerate and even calm spirit, she 1s so resoute and determined that success is bou nd to be hers.&#13;
&#13;
ARCHIE FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Cleo never admits that she has done anything so well that it might&#13;
&#13;
HILDA JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GOUDIE&#13;
&#13;
Margaret takes music and incidentally classes junior. She has a rare&#13;
gift of words and smiles; neither conversation nor enthusiasm can lag&#13;
when Margaret is about. She allows nothing to interfere with her&#13;
pleasure and may be found read y at any time for a jolly time. Don't&#13;
be mistaken, however, for though preeminently mirthful, she can be&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
determination she carries out he r resolutions.&#13;
Her spirit is invincible and if at first unsuccessful she triesuntil the&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
purpose is achieved ·&#13;
. is hereto get the most out of her work, and&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
She&#13;
applies herself conscientiously to her work, though patient, plodding&#13;
· ·&#13;
study&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
mistic. be often required.·&#13;
Hilda1s ever found good-natured and optia&#13;
&#13;
With honest plunk and&#13;
&#13;
real serious at times.&#13;
&#13;
fifty&#13;
&#13;
fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
- - ------------lil&#13;
&#13;
Ponca, Nebr.&#13;
LEON&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
"Jerry" is not a one talented individual, though we hear of him most&#13;
often as connected with athletics. He is an athlete in every sense of&#13;
the word. And whether it is on the gridiron, the basketball floor, or&#13;
the diamond, he enjoys doing his share of the hard work. He is a popular captain and plays football with the spirit that wins. Known for his&#13;
broad smile and cheery manner.&#13;
&#13;
good-natured rascal, chuck full of yarns, quips, quirks,&#13;
In this respect he is perhaps like all the other K ennel&#13;
"King" is not unusually fond of work, but is brilliant&#13;
mind and takes an active interest in debate. He is also much ined in t.he College Orchestra. He is kind of manner, a firm friend,&#13;
better still, an honorable foe.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
MARION&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Marion is a live wire and a good mixer. She is always brim full of&#13;
enthusiasm. When asked to serve on a committee, she works with all of&#13;
her real Morningside "pep." She has taken an active part in debate&#13;
and possesses marked literary ability. Because of her capabilities and&#13;
her love for real sport, Marion has won a host of friends.&#13;
&#13;
"Casey" is glad that he came to Morningside because he has received&#13;
more from it than just his college course. He has brought honor to&#13;
the school through his oratorical ability. He ·is loyal to his class and to&#13;
his college, but more than this, he is sincere in his chosen life work,&#13;
that of Christian service, and is Y. M. C. A. president for next year.&#13;
"Casey" loves a good time and is capable of doing his share towards&#13;
making it.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
ROYAL JURGENSEN&#13;
&#13;
U. S. Army, Philippine Islands&#13;
&#13;
" Jurgie" is full of life and vigor, and a hard worker. His bright&#13;
As a result&#13;
ideas and capable hands were always in demand.&#13;
we miss him greatly. Though imaginative and idealistic, yet he is. ,&#13;
practical that he wants to see results for all that he does. "Jurgie"&#13;
&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
"Fran" came from Illinois to be one of the class of '18 at Morningside,&#13;
and we're mighty proud of her. She has ideas all her own-good ones,&#13;
too-and is exceedingly independent. Although she leaves her capabilities to be discovered, she has almost any one. Singing, playing and&#13;
acting, she is equally charming. She is a member of the Madrigal&#13;
Club and an enthusiastic basketball player.&#13;
&#13;
feels at home anywhere.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
ca-----------------&#13;
&#13;
Here is a man who puts forth untiring and consecrated effort to help&#13;
his fellows. His profession is the Christian ministry. He has no time&#13;
or desire for meaningless, wasteful, and selfish activities. He works&#13;
consistently and cheerfully, rarely taking any relaxation. His greatest&#13;
rest is found in doing more work. A man who comes to college for&#13;
the sole purpose of development.&#13;
&#13;
Clara returned to Morningside after spending a year in an eastern&#13;
school. We respect her for her good judgment. Her genuine good&#13;
nature makes her a good friend to everyone. Always in a gracious&#13;
manner she does many little things that other folks overlook. She is an&#13;
excellent student and has as much Morningside spirit as the rest of&#13;
her family. We are proud to claim Clara as a member of our class.&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
Torn has been unanimously elected to the handsome class. A goodnatured fellow and a well-rounded athlete ·who is also somewhat of&#13;
a student. He plays outfield in baseball, guard in basketball and in&#13;
the backfield in football. Most of his spare moments are spent around&#13;
the chemistry laboratory, where he entertains his fellow workers with&#13;
his melodious voice.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
one of those persons who find time to do everything and do&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
well. If not engaged in working deep problems in analytic&#13;
or in calculus, he passes his spare time in fussing and in the&#13;
ter things of life. When Arthur becomes one of the foreercial chemists in the country, we will recall with gi·eater&#13;
the old saying that "the boy is the father of the man."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
THOS.&#13;
&#13;
Ft. Dodge&#13;
&#13;
N atland, England&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD LANCASTER&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
'Rusty" is a most talented young man.&#13;
&#13;
Whether as a physician for&#13;
&#13;
the pink eye or as an investigator in astronomy, his . equal would be&#13;
hard to find. He holds a responsible position as President of the&#13;
Amalgamated Snipe Hunters of America. Notwithstanding the cares&#13;
and worries produced by preforming the duties connected with this&#13;
office, he is always cheerful and is ever ready to help a friend in trouble.&#13;
&#13;
THOS. H.&#13;
&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
Hubbard&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" is a good-natured fellow with an Irish smile and cheer that we&#13;
.&#13;
all like. Looking after his cousin is his chief worry. He is an earnest&#13;
student, a persistent worker on the gridiron or on the basketball floor,&#13;
and supports every true and worthy cause. He is loyal to his friends,&#13;
his class, his society, and his college.&#13;
&#13;
fi fty-five&#13;
&#13;
Yankton, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Wise from the top of his head up. His studies really don't bother him&#13;
a great deal, and he enjoys life immensely. He boosts all along the&#13;
line for everything in which he is interested. Especially known for&#13;
his track work. A delightful talker, full of wit and brilliancy. May&#13;
usually be found in the halls or library-talking to the girls.&#13;
&#13;
came to us from Sioux City High. She is as gay and irresponsi-&#13;
&#13;
BLY McCoNKEY&#13;
&#13;
is brainy and well-meaning. Variety is the spice of her life,&#13;
never knows just where to find her. She likes a good time betthe average girl, and has lots of enthusiasm. On committee&#13;
always does her share ably.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
The rule of her life is to make business a pleasure, though some might&#13;
think it were to make pleasure her business. She is one of those cheerful, happy-go-lucky individuals, who apparently have nothing to do,&#13;
nevertheless, she is an excellent student, a willing and conscientious&#13;
Y. W. C. A. worker, and a booster of every college activity. Esther&#13;
is a true friend and scatters sunshine wherever she goes.&#13;
&#13;
hereis a type of girl in demand in every college. Elma is an enthusi·c booster in every activity of school life. She is always ready for a&#13;
laugh and a good time, and yet she works hard and is often seen&#13;
ring over her Latin and German book. Elma is a friend to every, sincere and conscientious. Whenever called upon to help, she&#13;
nd willingly&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
Yell-master and pep-generator! "Buster" isn't very big, but he is full&#13;
of loyalty and school spirit. Characteristic of him is the intensity and&#13;
changeability of his moods, for once in a while, ( though you may not&#13;
believe it) he does scold wonderfully, if he is making all the noise. you&#13;
would know "Buster" for his whole-souled and infectious laugh.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
She may seem dignified-but wait until you know her. Mildred is&#13;
one of the most sincere friends that we have.&#13;
&#13;
She is a reader of ability&#13;
and a girl with mos t original an d c1ever ideas. For this reason she is&#13;
. . 1&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
f&#13;
a avonte committ ee mem ber. Th e b rightness of her eyes the gentle.&#13;
ness of her smile , an d t h e grac10usness of her words, win many ftiends.&#13;
.&#13;
,&#13;
,&#13;
one know her but to love her.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-s ev en&#13;
&#13;
HOW ARD&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
REYMAN&#13;
&#13;
Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
He never says much, but his silence speaks louder than words, because&#13;
of the sympathetic, unselfish intent of his life. While he is somewhat&#13;
diffident in his speech, manner, and action, yet · he is true and sincere&#13;
in his desire to help the other fellow. Reyman is a diligent student, .&#13;
loves his college, and upholds all things that are high and noble.&#13;
&#13;
NOBLE&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
are never known to Ida. She is always the same jolly, carefree,&#13;
Ida. Good grades come with little effort on her part, and&#13;
her studies first thought only at examination time. She is runwith wit, and she can always argue, tho' she never becomes&#13;
Her highest ambition is to teach in Montana.&#13;
&#13;
Ainsworth, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"Rich" hails from the sand hills of Nebraska. No, he isn't a farmer,&#13;
but he's going to make an excellent business man. At least he ought&#13;
to, for he is getting practice while in school. At present he spends his&#13;
afternoons in one of the city banks. "Rich" possesses that valuable sense&#13;
of humor, and never gets "peeved" if a joke happens to be played on&#13;
him. A warbler in the Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
more from Dakota than any other part of the&#13;
&#13;
earth And she is majoring in home economics, too. To see her one&#13;
might think her very quiet, sedate, and reserved. Knowing her, howr, we realize what a jolly and charming friend she is. She is an un• tiring&#13;
worker, and is not afraid to give others the benefit of her own&#13;
&#13;
hard work.&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS RIDDLE&#13;
&#13;
LIDA SAUNDERS&#13;
&#13;
Novelty has a peculiar charm for Gladys, and the regular routine&#13;
classes soon seems monotonous to her. Gladys has a lovable disposition&#13;
is very cheery, very merry, and as happy-go-lucky as they make th&#13;
She takes her own time about everything, and never has a care except&#13;
a week before examination time. An eager participant in sport,&#13;
pleasant friend and a genial companion.&#13;
&#13;
If you could hear her laugh, you would know that she is a part of all&#13;
fun, and a plotter of much mischief. Never is a frolic complete with-&#13;
&#13;
Manilla&#13;
&#13;
When she feels like studying, she may be seen engrossed in&#13;
She prefers James' Psychology, but of&#13;
course . she's prejudiced. There's so much in a name. Lida is a charmf&#13;
nend and companion.&#13;
out her&#13;
&#13;
a Latin or a psychology book.&#13;
&#13;
fifty.-eight&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Merlin&#13;
&#13;
Bay City, Mich.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
Merlin stayed out of .school last year to teach and naturally she fell&#13;
hack into our class, but she now acknowledges that she has nothing&#13;
to regret. This is not insinuating anything against you seniors. Merl in studies hard, is faithful on committee work, and likes a good time.&#13;
She always goes to the bottom of things and wants to Know the "why"&#13;
&#13;
is serious-minded&#13;
&#13;
all that he does. He is an untmng workIn his school studies, whether&#13;
class room or on the debate platform, he is systematic and thora conscientious student, loyally pledged to his books and studies,&#13;
worthy fellow to have as a friend.&#13;
111&#13;
&#13;
a definite purpose and aim in life.&#13;
&#13;
and the "wherefore."&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Another member of the Kennel Klub. " Deak" is editor of our joke&#13;
department. No, he is not a joke himself, but he tries to represent oth_ r&#13;
e&#13;
folks as such. he is a faithful and accommodating librarian and&#13;
though he studies conscientiously he is quite a lively and consistent&#13;
"stepper." Deak has common sense in a way that is uncommon, and un-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ALICE SWAN&#13;
&#13;
A quiet, modest, studious lass, and yet one who is as loyal as the most .&#13;
loyal. She goes about her work never troubling anyone. But she is so&#13;
&#13;
full of generosity and never-failing kindness, that every one likes her.&#13;
She enjoys her work and studies earnestly and conscientiously. Alice&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
genuine th rough and through, and can ever be depended upon.&#13;
&#13;
derneath all there is real worth.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
R uTH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Indeed if it be true that there is great ability in knowing how to conceal one's ability, Ruth is a most able person. She is very modest&#13;
few realize how much she really does. Nevertheless she is a lead&#13;
in all college activities and has been chosen President of the Agora&#13;
Club. Ruth is a girl of high ideals, absolutely dependable, and a&#13;
&#13;
HERALD&#13;
&#13;
w ALKER&#13;
&#13;
·Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Never burdens himself by carrying books around. H e is able to do&#13;
anything from managing the Park Moving Picture Theatre to talking to the girls in the library: He has always taken an act ive interest&#13;
in his class and ser.ved as pres,ident l ast year. It was largely due to his&#13;
efforts (in penmanship? ) that the Class of ' 18 won the cups at the&#13;
Men's Banqu t th' year. H' accommodatmg and cheerful spirit&#13;
.&#13;
1s&#13;
makes him&#13;
·&#13;
nen to everyone.&#13;
&#13;
cere friend.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
sixty&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
ERWIN&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
WENIG&#13;
&#13;
Inwood&#13;
&#13;
" Obe" is a close rival of Sherlock Holmes. He says more funny things&#13;
with less effort than any ten men in school. He has a letter in football,&#13;
baseball and track. He plays guard in basketball, pitches in baseball,&#13;
and plays end or tackle in football. He is just the opposite of "Bush"&#13;
( they roomed together when Freshmen) ; he left all of his stepping until&#13;
&#13;
At the same time she is one of the best-natured, sunHer head is as&#13;
her heart is big. Perhaps she is not as steady a worker as some&#13;
has times and seasons of working as they come to her. Then&#13;
plishes much with her swift hand and swifter .brain.&#13;
pered, and kindest-hearted girls that we have.&#13;
&#13;
his junior and senior years.&#13;
&#13;
Merrill&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WETMORE&#13;
&#13;
When Frances isn't having a good time or making a good time for someone else, she is · worrying about her grades. She minors in biology&#13;
Perhaps that's the reason. When she is in the proper optimistic mood&#13;
she creates much fun and laughter by her wit and humor. Frances&#13;
plays the violin, and is business manager of the Madrigal Club. She is&#13;
&#13;
A quiet, non-excitable chap who studies ardently because he likes to.&#13;
&#13;
Lay be found at most any time of the day in the biology laboratory.&#13;
keen_ thinking strong feeling, and direct speaking are particularly&#13;
aracteristic&#13;
Though averse to all frivolity and mischief, he sympath1zes m all reasonable forms of pleasure We might add th t h.&#13;
.&#13;
ular&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
a 1s part1cp easure is ca11 mg over on Third Avenue.&#13;
&#13;
a loyal booster for Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
AGNES&#13;
&#13;
C. WOLLE&#13;
The Class of '18 began its college career under the able direction of&#13;
this man as president. "Bill" is a man who possesses ability mixed&#13;
with a great deal of good common sense. He is a sincere and untiring&#13;
worker both in the church and in the Y. M. C. A. He talks intelligent·&#13;
ly on any subject and at any time, and wherever he gets a chance.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
FRY&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
We were glad t o we1&#13;
come A gnes back to Old M. C. last fall&#13;
d&#13;
now we are espe . 11&#13;
I d to welcome her once more to the ranksan&#13;
' of&#13;
now we&#13;
gnes debated fo M ormngs1 e unng her freshman year· 111&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
11 forms of college activities, and fi nds time t o&#13;
'&#13;
a e good grades· Sh never 1&#13;
.&#13;
oses a chance for a good time.&#13;
mencan College Girl !&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
act, s e is active 111&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-three&#13;
sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
One of Uncle Sam's Soldiers who went down to Mexico. Donahue&#13;
came to l\!Iorningside last year from Yankton. He knew what he was&#13;
about when he came back from the south in time to enroll as a Junior&#13;
this fall. Very modest and unassuming, he believes in fair play, and&#13;
his perfect sincerity is not to be questioned. A man of broad sympathies and enviable cheerfulness.&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
GOLDIE JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
As pleasant as she looks. She is never idle a moment, is always thrifty&#13;
and thoughtful of others. Goldie is a most brilliant student, and notwithstanding the fact that she was not in school all last year she is back&#13;
in her old class. She goes her own way and goes quietly. She is happy&#13;
always and has a bright look for all.&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
LEHAN&#13;
&#13;
President of the Tennis Association. And Lloyd enjoys playing tennis&#13;
perhaps more than any other one thing except "fussing." He seems&#13;
to have more time on his hands than most folks. No doubt this is&#13;
because he needs less to keep up his scholarship. Social life delights&#13;
him and he is not to be excelled in gallantry. Though dignified and&#13;
conservative in appearance, he appreciates cleverly turned phrases.&#13;
&#13;
.sixty-/our&#13;
&#13;
Out of childhood into manhood&#13;
N ow had grow n my Hiawatha,&#13;
Skilled in all the i:raft of hunters,&#13;
L earned in all the lore of old men.&#13;
&#13;
sixty ·five&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
R. Troutman, President; R. Ma.hood, Vice-President ; R . Engberg, Secretary-rrreasurer; D.&#13;
Council Representative.&#13;
L. Sandvig&#13;
R. Schellenger&#13;
A. Lunblad, A. Sturdevant, A. Fry, R. Whitfield&#13;
H.&#13;
H. Carter&#13;
F. Appel, L. Smith, H. Freeman, G. Crouch&#13;
R . Reid&#13;
E. Westfall, E. Wessel, C. Baldwin, R. B erry&#13;
E. Persinger&#13;
G. Easton&#13;
L. Knapp, H. Meeks, R. Hill, E. Pritchard&#13;
S. Brodkey&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
Hambleton, G Brown G D&#13;
L H .&#13;
Walker, c. H~rt&#13;
' mi unn, · a1tz, A. Hunt, T. Friest, R. Burpee.&#13;
Caatle, A. Wolcott&#13;
R. Randolph, W. Wood, R. Brady, M. Evans.&#13;
Ferguson&#13;
A&#13;
Warnes F. Morrison, H. Hunter, C. Albertson.&#13;
Trankle H. Fouke&#13;
Schroeder E. Wood, F. Newland, L . Keene.&#13;
, · erg , . tterback, H. H utchison, M. Stru ck.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Boyd, V. Gerkin, I. Smith, L. Herron , L . Hornnev, M. N icholson, M. Bishop.&#13;
Daniels, G. Dykstra, V. Payne, G. Wishard&#13;
L. Steele, E. Peitzke, M. Woocl.&#13;
Clark, M. Gusteson, M. Fish, E. Secoy, E. Savonel, L. Shuster, M. Gu steson.&#13;
Knapp, H. Wulf, A . Boyd, M. Purdy, M . Mahood, K. Tharp, F. Foresberg.&#13;
&#13;
Nursed the little Hiawatha,&#13;
Rocked him in his linden cradle&#13;
Bedded soft in moss and rushes&#13;
Safely bound w ith reindeer Sinews.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-nine&#13;
sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
ra----------------&#13;
&#13;
Paul BLue&#13;
Class President&#13;
Died October 16, 1916&#13;
C. Hyde,Secretan·-Treasurer: M. Lorv, Student Council Representative&#13;
0. Crews, H. Hayes S. Hutchison, J. Dean, B. R eed, C. Swartz.&#13;
&#13;
er, Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
C. Back J. Glasgow, M Hanson, A. H inkley, E. McKinn ey.&#13;
J. Trefz, L. Twogood, C. Starr, A. Jeep, E. Atwood .&#13;
&#13;
M Evans&#13;
&#13;
II. Butler, M. Wulf, F . Porter, L. Beard, C. Hallam.&#13;
J. Mcburney, M. Walker , H. Bergeson , I-L Albertson, L. Steele, F. H ackett.&#13;
&#13;
,·&#13;
seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
O. Easthouse, L. Fowler. L. Dahl, H. Pitstick , D. Troutman.&#13;
\V. VanC leve, S . Burpee, A. Kampe r, H . Raun, M. Ru eber, L. Pearre.&#13;
&#13;
C. Taylor, L. Engberg, M. Harrington, E. Persinger, C. Jorstad.&#13;
G. Brown, L. Sutherland, P. Day, :&#13;
M. Lutz. F. \Vier, A. Thompson.&#13;
P. Chamberlai n, P. Mickelson , A. Abel, L. P eterson, G. Goudie.&#13;
A . Montgomery, C. Northrup, T. Kenney, S . Sherr, M. Benton, II. Dodsley.&#13;
&#13;
R. Smith&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
BA&#13;
&#13;
L. Stone, E. P ayne, I-I. Smith, C. Engle.&#13;
&#13;
R. Rhinehart, F. Ander son, G. Tou n send, E. Bradley, E . Morris.&#13;
Hartman, C. Harder, M. Leitch, A. Corr, E . Sanger.&#13;
&#13;
E. Wagner, F. Isham, M. Johnson, G. Omer, Steele.&#13;
I. Keeler E. Lake, E. Ostling, L. Hansen, A. Flom, V. Hart.&#13;
· I· Skinner, M. Dewell, E . D un agen, C. Cowan , O. Aistrope.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
A. Carter M. Mo n tgomer v, A. Beck, G. Leignton M. Swanson&#13;
R Jo hn son H . Lu gla n. H . Me1dell, E. Au sma n, . Le G&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
G Yo un g L . Sto ne, V. Clark., B. Ca rver, . r1&#13;
H . Search, T .. Klatt, P Hod ge, R. Marten.&#13;
&#13;
seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
Bring a maid w ith nimble fing ers,&#13;
H eart and hand that move togeth er.&#13;
Sh e shall run upon your errands&#13;
B e yo ur starlight, moonlight, fir elight,&#13;
B e th e sunlight of our people.&#13;
&#13;
sevrn ly -fiv e&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
Book III&#13;
Margaret&#13;
&#13;
Gowdie, Piano&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Ordway, Piano&#13;
&#13;
Gert rude Groshon. Pia110&#13;
&#13;
Rubetta ,Johns, Piano&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR EXPRESSION&#13;
&#13;
Activities&#13;
M. Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
A . Boyd, C. Lewis, M. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
G. Cla rk , F. Beacham.&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
H . H a rtl e•·, E. Sawyer, F. Fair, M. Ch amp, D. Cha mp. H . Albro, R. And rews:&#13;
Lon&#13;
H. Whyte, G. Jenkenson, R. Johnston, L. Bleakley, D. Bleakley, C. Mahood, H . Buehle1, R.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
D ear, too, unto Hiaw atha&#13;
Was the very strong man, K w asind,&#13;
Hee the strongest of all mortals,&#13;
JEe the mightiest among many;&#13;
For his very strength he loved him,&#13;
For his strength allied to goodness.&#13;
&#13;
sev enty-seven&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
:1,&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
,•·&#13;
&#13;
'«I&#13;
&#13;
.··,.,&#13;
&#13;
()&#13;
&#13;
·.· : °&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
J ASON&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Director of Men's Athletics&#13;
Who stands for clean athletics and&#13;
who has put us on the map&#13;
athletically&#13;
&#13;
Seventy ·eight&#13;
&#13;
se'Ve11ty-nine&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Champions&#13;
of Iowa, South Dakota, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
FACTORS O F A W I NN I NG F OOTBALL SEASO N&#13;
&#13;
S'rANDING- Coa ch Saund er son , Beck , Swartz, Wulf Hornney, Eiffert.&#13;
SEATED-Norten,&#13;
Gantt, Ba s haw. John s on , Northrup, Wenig, Lloyd&#13;
Seated- Hinkl ey, Clark, Behm er , Williams, Warnes.&#13;
&#13;
SCH ED U L E&#13;
M orningside&#13;
&#13;
O ct. 7, State T eachers at Cedar F alls ........................................................ 38&#13;
O ct. 14, Buena Vista at Sioux City ............................................................&#13;
O ct. 21, .W ayne N ormal at Sioux City ....................................................... .&#13;
O ct. 28, D akota W esleyan at Sioux Ci ty ....................................................&#13;
Nov. 4, N ebraska W esleyan at Lincoln ........................................................ .&#13;
Nov. 11 , Iowa State College at Ames ......................................................... .&#13;
Nov. 18, South Dakota U nive rsity at Sioux City ................................ ......&#13;
Total ------- -------- -- -- ---------- -- ---------- ------ ----- --------------- -------- ------ ------------------- --- --· 306&#13;
&#13;
eig hty&#13;
&#13;
eighty·o·ne&#13;
&#13;
- -----------Ii]&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE NORMAL GAME&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE TEACHERS GAME&#13;
The first game of the season was played against the&#13;
Iowa State Teachers' College, at Cedar Falls. The&#13;
Maroons were victorious by the decisive score of 38 to 6.&#13;
A much closer game was expected because of thi; fact&#13;
that the Ames Aggies the previous week had been able to&#13;
score only 19 points against them. The State Teachers'&#13;
paper likened the Maroon squad to a "well-oiled machine,&#13;
each man having his certain work to do and then doing it."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Wayne game was a decisive victory for the Marom the blow of the first whistle the game was&#13;
roons. F&#13;
in doubt · the Maroons scored at will. All of the&#13;
never 1&#13;
backfield men, Behmer, J ohnson , Gnatt and Hinkley,&#13;
making sensational runs of thirty and forty yards at a&#13;
clip. At the end of the first half a total of 54 points&#13;
had been registered and the second half started with&#13;
several of the second squad in the lineup. The final score&#13;
which showed that their work was not in vain was&#13;
&#13;
112&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA WESLEYAN GAME&#13;
&#13;
BUENA VISTA GAME&#13;
The Buena Vista game, which was played at Mizzou&#13;
Park, was a comparatively easy victory for the Maroons.&#13;
They started with a rush and scored two touchdowns in&#13;
the first seven minutes of play. From here on the game&#13;
was played in a seemingly indifferent manner; the Maroons being content to hold them, and only occasionally&#13;
showing the fighting spirit that so dominated the entire&#13;
squad the week before.&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
The overwhelming defeat of the Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
squad was the sweetest victory of t he season because of&#13;
the fact that the Wesleyanites had the previous season&#13;
defeated the Maroons by a score of 29 to 10.&#13;
The liaroons outplayed them from the first blow of&#13;
whistle! The backfield men plunged through their&#13;
line for short smashes of three to eight yards, and skirted&#13;
their ends for thirty and forty yards at will. The 112&#13;
points scored by us was the largest score ever amassed&#13;
by _any Maroon eleven against a team of equal rank,&#13;
h1ch was re mar ka bl e cons1'd enng that there was only&#13;
.&#13;
"Gile. varsity ma remammg 111 t e 1&#13;
· ·&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
meup when the final&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
tie blew.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
VERMILION GAME&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN GAME&#13;
This game, which was played at Lincoln, was one of&#13;
the hardest battles of the season, both teams fighting to&#13;
their utmost, but the Maroons by their smashing style of&#13;
play finally won out by a score of 17 to 0. Nevertheless&#13;
it was a dear victory because of injuries to Johnson and&#13;
Northrup&#13;
This was the first time in the history of Morningside&#13;
that any Maroon eleven has defeated Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
at Lincoln, and it is also the first time in the history of the •&#13;
school that we defeated Dakota Wesleyan and Nebraska&#13;
\Vesleyan in the same season.&#13;
&#13;
AMES GAME&#13;
When we met the Aggies we were in very poor condition because of the hard game the week before. Nevertheless the Maroons played stellar football and lost only&#13;
by a single touchdown caused by a fumble, due to the&#13;
intense cold. Neither team was able to make consistent&#13;
gains because of the condition of the field. The touchdown came in the third quarter and was the second and&#13;
last time the Maroon goal was crossed during the entire&#13;
season, resulting in our only defeat.&#13;
&#13;
-'th South Dakota came as a fitting climax&#13;
he mos successful of all Maroon football seane of t&#13;
The enthusiasm and the spirit shown was greater&#13;
.&#13;
than dunng any previous year , because of .the fact that&#13;
hold them at least to a tie.&#13;
were d&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
me really started in the morning when&#13;
The f oot baII a&#13;
d consisting of the entire student body, led by&#13;
aparae&#13;
f h d&#13;
CoII ege B and ' marched thru the streets o . t . e own&#13;
the&#13;
.&#13;
town district, arousing and creating pep by giving yells&#13;
&#13;
The contest w 1&#13;
&#13;
and singing songs.&#13;
&#13;
The game started promptly at three. The Maroons&#13;
kicked off and the Coyotes after several plays were forced&#13;
to punt.&#13;
The ball was in the Coyote's territory most of the time&#13;
and only once during the entire contest was there a chance&#13;
for either team to score. This opportunity came in the&#13;
third quarter when, after a series of forward passes, the&#13;
ball was advanced to the Coyote's seven yard line, where&#13;
the Maroons were held for downs. The game ended&#13;
with the ball in South Dakota's possession on their own&#13;
forty yard line.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-five&#13;
eiqhty-four&#13;
&#13;
ta------&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON, '18&#13;
&#13;
Captain "Jerry," our husky right halfback, by his wonderful line plunging&#13;
ability, his open field running, his aggressiveness on offense and his good&#13;
right toe made many a victory possible for the Maroons. Jerry is a typical&#13;
football leader, and a clean, hard player and deserves the position on the allState eleven accredited him by football critics.&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG, '18&#13;
&#13;
right tackle, was a wizard at analyzing plays and delighted&#13;
&#13;
end runs and off-tackle smashes before they got under way as&#13;
ing forward passes and carrying them down the field.&#13;
many points, once lifting a d'rop kick 49 yards and hanging&#13;
&#13;
for Sioux City.&#13;
COACH J.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
"Obe" received honorable mention for&#13;
&#13;
SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
" Saundy," the man who made the football squad what it was, the man who&#13;
is a natural football fighter and who has the faculty of instilling it into his&#13;
men; a man who, by his personality, can win the respect of any of his football men and can give them that dogged persistency which will surmount&#13;
any obstacle on the football field.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD, ' 18&#13;
&#13;
ubstitute backfield man, was ,fast on his feet and a clever runner.&#13;
both at fullback and the quarterback position, and from this&#13;
bowed unusual generalship in directing the plays of the squad.&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP, '20&#13;
&#13;
"Norty," the captain-elect who played the right end' position, was a&#13;
at breaking up interference and tackling the man in the same play;&#13;
received forward passes in a phenomenal manner and in going down&#13;
punts oft times tackled the safety man in his tracks. He was given a&#13;
on the second all-State eleven.&#13;
&#13;
LEVI HORNNEY, ' 19&#13;
&#13;
"Lee" at the center position was a man worthy of the place ; on defense&#13;
he never failed to block a play through the center of the line; he was&#13;
especially good at passing the ball to the backfield men and in no little&#13;
degree should the showing of these men be accredited to him.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-six&#13;
eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD Gantt,&#13;
&#13;
'20&#13;
'20&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR Hinkley,&#13;
&#13;
"Ted" played left halfback on the squad and was a tower of strength in that&#13;
position, being fast on his feet, a clever runner, and a man who could hit&#13;
the line when occasion demanded. He was also adept at receiving passes&#13;
and he was one of the hardest and surest tacklers on the Maroon squad.&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER,&#13;
&#13;
'19&#13;
&#13;
"Little Al," the quarterback who directed the playing in the squad, was&#13;
a fast, clever, and shifty open field runner, a wonder at receiving and&#13;
returning punts. On several occasions twisting through the entire opposing&#13;
squad for touchdowns. "Al" was given the position on the all-State eleven&#13;
of quarterback and' captain.&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW,&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF,&#13;
&#13;
' 19&#13;
&#13;
the big left tackle, was a fighter from start to finish. He never&#13;
sensational, but always got his man, he was a veritable giant&#13;
anything&#13;
en e when called upo n t o ma ke a h oIe · t h e opposing line for the&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
in&#13;
I&#13;
d plungers.&#13;
&#13;
Alligan&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
"Bush" played left end for us. He was a hard worker and a man&#13;
always used good judgment in playing his man; he was especially&#13;
on defense, breaking up plays and smashing the in_&#13;
terference on many&#13;
sions before the play was fairly started.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
gh playing as a sub in the early part of the season, held the&#13;
lback during the closing games. He was a hard runner and&#13;
er and made superb intereference for his teammates in the&#13;
&#13;
EWART WILLIAMS,&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
"Ewart'' was su bstituted both in the backfield and the end positions. He&#13;
·&#13;
was 3 hard worker and a consistent tackler and his small size in no way&#13;
measured his fighting determination to return victor.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-11i11e&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON,&#13;
&#13;
'19&#13;
&#13;
"Skinney,'' playing at right guard, proved to be a tower of strength. His&#13;
weight and power enabling him to make a hole in the opposing line when&#13;
called upon to do so. On defense, he marched through the line, blocking&#13;
many a play before it was started.&#13;
&#13;
WILSON C LARK,&#13;
&#13;
ituted in many positions, playing at center, guard, end, and&#13;
A very valuable man because of his ability to fill any posi• con istent fighter, and distinguished himself as a hard&#13;
&#13;
HARRY Warnes&#13;
&#13;
AXEL BECK, '20&#13;
&#13;
"Swede" played left guard and never left anything undone; on offense he&#13;
always put his man out of the play, and on d'efense he broke thru the line&#13;
time after time, blocking the man behind the line of scrimmage.&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
'19&#13;
&#13;
on several occasions was substituted in the backfield and whenev er&#13;
called upon to carry the ball made a substantial gain, being fast on&#13;
&#13;
and a hard runner.&#13;
&#13;
' 17&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
0&#13;
has associated with Paul, especially on the football&#13;
• becomes rnfected with the never die spirit of " hit 'em hard men." He&#13;
the sec&#13;
.&#13;
on squa and he put the fight into them which made the&#13;
fight to th ·&#13;
·&#13;
utmost to hol d their positions.&#13;
PAU L EIFF ERT,&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES SWARTZ, ' 20&#13;
&#13;
"Red" was substituted at both the center and guard positions. He&#13;
himself in a creditable manner. He was a hard, consistent worker&#13;
a real fighter from start to finish.&#13;
&#13;
ninety&#13;
&#13;
"Turk." An&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - - - - - - --&#13;
&#13;
The Reserves&#13;
&#13;
R eifstick, Omer , Hackett, T. McBride, Behmer.&#13;
Bogard, K enn ey, Brown, Pearce, D owns.&#13;
Walker Quinn, Conners (Capt.), Mickelson, Cowa n.&#13;
&#13;
On the afternoon of November 29, the "Scrubs" journeyed to Sutherland, w&#13;
a hard-fought game was played with the town team. A little stage fright at&#13;
caused them to surrender the first half by a score of 6 to 0. After a little hea&#13;
heart talk with Behmer, their manager, they went into the game the second half&#13;
a determination to win. After a few minutes of play, a forward pass signal&#13;
called. The line held like a stone wall and a forward pass, Mickelson to C&#13;
resulted in a thirty yard run for their only touchdown. Conner's ability at ki&#13;
goal won for them the game.&#13;
Scrubs 7, Sutherland 6.&#13;
P. M.&#13;
The lineup was as follows:&#13;
Left End ------------····-····--····-···--····-····-··-···-··-···--·- Cowan&#13;
Left Tackle ·····-··-··-····--···------------······-····-··-··-· Walker&#13;
Left Guard ----------·-··. ···-·····-·-··--·---···-······-··-··· Kenney&#13;
Center ------··--·····-···-·····-··-·····-------------------···-··----- Bogard&#13;
Right Guard ---····-····· ···--····-····-···-···-··-···- T. McBride&#13;
Right Tackle ··-······--··-··· ·-········-···-···-······-------·- Hackett&#13;
Right End ·····-··----·········-·····-···-·······-···-··-····- G . Brown&#13;
Quarter ----····--·······-···-·····-···-------···-··--·- Capt. Connors&#13;
Left Half -------------------· . ------------------------------------- Quinn&#13;
Right Half ------------···-··---------------------------------- Mickelson&#13;
Full Back --------------·-· ------------------------------------------ Steele&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
ninety-three&#13;
uinety-two&#13;
&#13;
First Installment&#13;
&#13;
Whoops&#13;
&#13;
of the Sioux&#13;
OR&#13;
&#13;
" THE COYOTE H unt"&#13;
Vermilion, S. D .&#13;
&#13;
The feature of the game was the work of the pitch&#13;
"Obe" Wenig of Morningside and Steele of South&#13;
kota pitched wonderful ball, each holding their oppon&#13;
to two hits. At the end of the tenth inning the score st&#13;
0 to 0. An overthrow in the first of the eleventh, with&#13;
coyote on second and two out, gave South Dakota the&#13;
score of the game.&#13;
Score: Morningside 0, South Dakota· University 1.&#13;
Vermilion, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
May 13, 1916&#13;
This game was featured by heavy hitting on both si&#13;
A high wind made errorless ball impossible. North&#13;
twirled for us and kept the hits of the coyotes well&#13;
tered .&#13;
Score: Morningside 8, South Dakota University 6.&#13;
&#13;
given Wenig was the feature of the game.&#13;
ert's work behind the bat was even better&#13;
Two errors were checked up against the&#13;
orningside 5, Ellsworth 3.&#13;
Scene IV. Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
May 18, 1916&#13;
completed their record-breaking trip by an&#13;
over Buena Vista. Obrecht allowed but five&#13;
One error made by&#13;
orningside 1&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
&#13;
"THE HAWKEYE Trail"&#13;
&#13;
Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
D es Moines, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
May 15, 1916&#13;
The heavy-hitting of the Maroons again fea&#13;
"Obe" Allowed but two hits while the much-touted&#13;
ley was driven off the mound.&#13;
Score: Morningside 9, Highland Park 0.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-four&#13;
our&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista 0.&#13;
&#13;
"THE Sroux INVASION BY THE CoYOTEs"&#13;
Bass Field, Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MAy 1916&#13;
19,&#13;
the game were Duncan's batting,&#13;
g, and a rally by the Maroons in the&#13;
enig, after pitching superb ball for four&#13;
compelled to leave the game with a dislocated&#13;
&#13;
Scene II.&#13;
Part&#13;
&#13;
Northrup&#13;
&#13;
May 17, 1916&#13;
&#13;
May 12, 1916&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
their belt.&#13;
&#13;
Scene Ill. Iowa Falls, Io,Ya&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Scene II.&#13;
&#13;
her scalp&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
ide 12&#13;
Morningside State Teachers 0.&#13;
&#13;
Produced under the direction of Jason l\I. Saunder&#13;
&#13;
Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
by Eiffert Northrup and Johnson enabled&#13;
I ert,&#13;
annex anot&#13;
&#13;
A Story of State Champions&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
Captain "Tu rk" Eiffert&#13;
AND HIS&#13;
Tribe of Scalp-Hunters&#13;
&#13;
P ART I.&#13;
&#13;
Cedar Falls, Iowa&#13;
Scene II ·&#13;
)lay 16, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Bass Field&#13;
&#13;
May 20, 1916&#13;
aftnged themselves of the defeat of the prehering the Coyotes. Eighteen hits were&#13;
elivery of the South Dakota pitcher, inruns. four three-baggers, to say noth'lnd s!ngles. Northrup pitched.&#13;
gside 23 , South Dakota University 4.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
p ART IV.&#13;
&#13;
"THE BADGER&#13;
&#13;
Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
H unt"&#13;
&#13;
Northfield, Minh.&#13;
&#13;
May 24, 1916&#13;
Rain prevented starting the game until after&#13;
o'clock and left the field slow and slippery.&#13;
Clough pitched.&#13;
Score: Morningside 2, St. Olaf's 8.&#13;
Scene II.&#13;
&#13;
Northfield, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
May 25, 1916&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The heavy slugging of the Maroons&#13;
Carlton pitchers to leave the mound.&#13;
Score: Morningside 19, Carlton 7.&#13;
Scene III. Northfield, Minn&#13;
May 26, 1916&#13;
Northrup pitched and allowed but five hits as did&#13;
oppor{ent, but errors at critical times allowed the latte&#13;
win&#13;
&#13;
Score: l\Iorningside 3, Carlton 8.&#13;
&#13;
GRAND TOTAL&#13;
&#13;
Morningside 121, Opponents 42&#13;
&#13;
LINE-UP&#13;
&#13;
Catcher&#13;
First&#13;
Second&#13;
Short&#13;
Third&#13;
Right Field&#13;
Center Field&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Substitute .&#13;
&#13;
ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
CAPTAIN PAUL EIFFERT&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
CAPTAIN- ELECT MARTIN CLOUGH&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP&#13;
CLARENCE Obrecht&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
ninety-sev en&#13;
&#13;
ke the previous record,&#13;
&#13;
Second Installment&#13;
&#13;
Whoops of the. Sioux&#13;
CAPTAIN WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
Supported by an All-Star Cast&#13;
Produced under the Direction of&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
PART I&#13;
Drake Relays, Drake Stadium, Des moines&#13;
Captain Wendell Curry, Herald Walker&#13;
Williams, and Harry Warnes carried the&#13;
for us in the two-mile relay, the only race we&#13;
tered. We were unlucky in drawing the&#13;
outside lane. Williams, our first man, was&#13;
until the last 220 where he managed to&#13;
through and pass up several men. He ran an&#13;
race and could have bettered his time if gi&#13;
chance. Warnes took up the race with a h&#13;
of a bad start and passed up man after man of&#13;
seven ahead of him and ran the fastest race&#13;
young career. His magnificent sprint on the&#13;
gave Walker second place with a 20-foot han&#13;
"Steve" loafed around behind his man in&#13;
tomary style until the last 300 yards, where&#13;
the whole field and gave Captain Curry a&#13;
lead of 20 yards. Our holder of the con&#13;
record continued to increase the lead between&#13;
self and the Cornell man until fully 50 yard&#13;
arated them at the finish. Curry was con&#13;
be the prettiest runner of the afternoon. he&#13;
ered his first lap in 55 and would have made&#13;
time if pressed.&#13;
The bad starting position probably preve&#13;
from setting a new record. As it was, we&#13;
·w ithin 2% seconds of it, covering the&#13;
8: 17: 2, the record being 8: 15, held by M&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
year,&#13;
&#13;
event.&#13;
&#13;
PART II&#13;
.&#13;
Morningside South Dakota University&#13;
Field, May 10, 1916&#13;
.&#13;
tnmme us , but they just evened&#13;
the year before. Vidal of South&#13;
individual star, carrying off 18&#13;
n curry. was easily second with 11&#13;
&#13;
FEATURING&#13;
&#13;
]ASON&#13;
&#13;
hen we bro&#13;
.&#13;
by l3 seconds. With the exves, Iorningside has always heId&#13;
&#13;
a good day for a track meet as there&#13;
e gale blowing up the home stretch&#13;
to the chilly weather, made it unpleasthe spectators and the participants.&#13;
twas 64 points for Vermilion and 45&#13;
&#13;
de.&#13;
feature event was the 4+0-yard dash.&#13;
contest between two state champions.&#13;
the South Dakota record in that event,&#13;
holds the conference record in the 880rry broke the tape a stride and one• In the 880 Walker had things all&#13;
Steve" to forsake his opponent's com-&#13;
&#13;
In the broad&#13;
&#13;
with a good lead.&#13;
&#13;
beat out Vidal, the S. D. star, by two&#13;
two-mile Van Horne had an easy&#13;
&#13;
being Williams of Mornshot put Ray Harrington pulled&#13;
for us. Ed Harrington copped 3&#13;
hurdles and threw a big scare into&#13;
the lows. No records were made beand windy atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
competitor&#13;
&#13;
tephens, S. D.; Curry, M. 10: 3&#13;
tephens, S. D.; Quigley,&#13;
curry M.; Meade, S. D.&#13;
Walker&#13;
M. Meade&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
24:2&#13;
54: 2&#13;
&#13;
2: 08: 1&#13;
&#13;
ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
ca.------------ Mile run-Cobb, S. D. '· Curry ' M .&#13;
,v&#13;
4&#13;
Two-mile run-VanHorne ' M .,. Williams&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
120-yard hurdles-Young S· D ·,&#13;
ington, M.&#13;
220-yard hurdles-Quii,:ley,&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
ar-&#13;
&#13;
S. D.&#13;
High-jump-Vidal, S. D.; Young, S. D.&#13;
and Wenig, M. tied for second&#13;
Broad-jump-Wenig, M. Vidal, S. D.&#13;
Pole-Vault-Vidal, S. D.; E. Mahood, M.&#13;
and Bennett, S. D. tied for second&#13;
Discus-Vidal, S. D.; Anderson,&#13;
D.&#13;
Shot-put--R. Harrington, M. Anderson ,&#13;
&#13;
S. D.&#13;
&#13;
START OF TWO-MILE AT THE DRAKE RELAYS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred one&#13;
one hundred&#13;
ed&#13;
&#13;
School Champions, 1918 Class Team&#13;
&#13;
Cross County&#13;
&#13;
Meyers Williams&#13;
McConkey,&#13;
Walker&#13;
&#13;
W eni g, E. H ar1·in gto n.&#13;
&#13;
K enn ey, Sh erwood.&#13;
&#13;
ANNUAL MONUMENT RUN&#13;
February 22, 1917&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY&#13;
120~yard hurdles-E. Harrington, '18; Warnes, '19; Fouke, '19&#13;
100-yard dash-Curry, '17; Behmer, '19; D. Bleakly, acad.&#13;
Two-mile run-VanHorne, '17; Trefz, acad.; E. L. Williams, '17&#13;
Pole vault-E. Mahood, '19; R. Troutman, '19; Warnes, '19&#13;
440-ya rd dash-Curry, '17; Held, '17; Conner, '18&#13;
Mile run-McConkey, '18; Warnes, '19; Hunt, '19&#13;
220-yard hurdles-A. Romney, '17; E. Harrington, '18; Fouke, '19&#13;
880-yard dash-Walker,'18; Warnes, '19; Wenig, '18&#13;
Shot put-Wenig, '18; E. Harrington, '18; L. Johnson, '17&#13;
Broad jump-Behmer, '19; Wenig, '18; E. Harrington, '18&#13;
220-yard dash-Curry, '17; D. Bleakly, acad.; Behmer, '19&#13;
High jump-Wenig, '18; Fouke, '19; E. Harrington, '18&#13;
Discus-Wenig, '18; R. Harrington, '17; Johnson, '17&#13;
Class of 1918, first,&#13;
Class of 1917, second,&#13;
Class of 1919, third,&#13;
Academy, fourth,&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
43&#13;
34&#13;
24&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Kenney '20 (first)&#13;
Ewart Williams '17 (second)&#13;
ams&#13;
Clair Sherwood '18 (third)&#13;
Herbert 11eyers First Academy&#13;
&#13;
Time 18 :58&#13;
"&#13;
19:32&#13;
" 19 :32 :3&#13;
&#13;
points.&#13;
points.&#13;
points.&#13;
points.&#13;
&#13;
hundred two&#13;
011 e hundred three&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The "M" Club Inter~State Invitation Mi&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
MAY, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Sinkley Miller, E.Smith); Sioux City; LeMars.&#13;
hero ee (&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Fonda· McKennon, Sioux Falls; Rogers, Yankton.&#13;
Pearce, Si'oux City· Goodrich, Ida Grove; Slife, Hawarden.&#13;
ates,&#13;
'&#13;
. Coffie Sergeants Bluffs; Pearce, Fonda; and Gates of Sioux&#13;
&#13;
3:48:3&#13;
10:2&#13;
21 :9Yz&#13;
&#13;
5:4&#13;
.&#13;
108&#13;
Lemars · Pearce, .Fonda; Piper, Ida Grove.&#13;
rueher,&#13;
.&#13;
38 :8 1/2&#13;
Brueher, Lemars · Manmng, Elk Po111t; Pearce, Fonda.&#13;
row-Berberich, Yankton; Moulton, Fonda; Bergh, Sioux Falls.&#13;
127&#13;
Gates, Sioux City, 13 points.&#13;
Pearce, Fonda, 12 points.&#13;
ioux City 34 points&#13;
Fonda&#13;
17 points&#13;
Lemars&#13;
17 points&#13;
broken: Broad jump Mile run, 440 yard dash.&#13;
tied for second.&#13;
&#13;
RECORDS OF THE "M" MEET&#13;
&#13;
GATES, BREAKING THE RECORD&#13;
SUMMARY&#13;
100-yard dash-Gates, Sioux City; Goodrich, Ida Grove; Murphy, Fonda.&#13;
220-yard dash-Cannon, Sioux City; Goodrich, Ida Grove; Murphy, Fonda.&#13;
440-yard dash-Shafenberg, Sergeants Bluffs; Berquist, Sioux City; Kircher, Sio&#13;
880-yard dash-Beatty, Vermilion; Swancutt, Sioux Falls; Berquist, S. C. 2 :14&#13;
Mile-run-L. Larson, Sioux City and Swancutt, Sioux Falls tied for first;&#13;
Roberts, Storm Lake, third.&#13;
120-yard hurdles-Kennedy, LeMars; Goodrich, Ida Grove; Kelly, Fonda.&#13;
220-yard hurdles-Rummel, Hawarden; Stiles, Cherokee; Jacobson, Sioux&#13;
Falls&#13;
Half-mile relay-Sioux City (Gates, Hope, Cannon, B. Smith);&#13;
LeMars&#13;
&#13;
011e hundred four&#13;
&#13;
(Storm Lake), 1909,&#13;
Osborne ( LeMars), 1911,&#13;
dash-Wilson (Cherokee) ,1911,&#13;
dash-Shafenberg (Sergeants Bluffs), 1916,&#13;
dash-Rogers (Yankton) , 1914,&#13;
L. Larson (Sioux City), 1916,&#13;
Swancutt (Sioux Falls), 1916,&#13;
hurdles-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911,&#13;
hurdles-Quigley (Hawarden), 1911.&#13;
t-Leuder (Cherokee) , 1911.&#13;
Peterson (Centerville), 1911.&#13;
Wilkins (Correctionville), 1911.&#13;
Aldrich ( Sioux City), 1911.&#13;
hammer-Gilliland ( Storm Lake), 1911.&#13;
shot-Knapp (Cherokee) , 1911&#13;
ates (Sioux City), 1916.&#13;
relay-Le Mars, 1915&#13;
Le Mars-1915&#13;
have won:&#13;
1909-Storm Lake&#13;
1910-Sioux City&#13;
1911-Cherokee&#13;
1912-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
:10 flat&#13;
:23&#13;
54:2&#13;
2:07&#13;
4:48 :1&#13;
:17&#13;
11 feet.&#13;
&#13;
5 feet 8 inches&#13;
146 feet 3inches&#13;
110 feet&#13;
21 feet 9.5 inches&#13;
1 :37.3&#13;
3 :45.2&#13;
1913-Sioux City&#13;
1914-Le Mars&#13;
1915-Sioux Falls&#13;
1916-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fi&lt;v e&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash-C. Rogers, 1908&#13;
220 yard dash-F. F. Hall, 1903&#13;
44 yard dash-V. E. Montgomery, 1913&#13;
880 yard dash-W. E. Curry, 1915&#13;
Mile run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1908&#13;
N. ]. Williams, 1914&#13;
Two mile run-L. R. Chapman, 1908&#13;
220 yard hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910&#13;
120 yard hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
High jump-W. McIntosh, 1914&#13;
Broad jump-G. E . West, 1911&#13;
Shot put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912&#13;
Hammer throw-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
Discus-R. R. Vernon, 1915&#13;
Pole vault-Herman Leuder, 1915&#13;
Mile relay-V. E . Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser,&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, F. E. Burns, 1909&#13;
Two mile relay-H. Walker, V. Lavely,&#13;
M. Morley, W. Curry, 1915&#13;
l\1onument run-V. Lavely, 1914&#13;
&#13;
one hundred six&#13;
&#13;
10.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
:15&#13;
5 feet, 7 1/2&#13;
21. feet, 2&#13;
39 feet, 1/2&#13;
·&#13;
121 feet, 3 1/2&#13;
·&#13;
128 feet, 6 ·&#13;
11 feet, 10 ·&#13;
&#13;
011r&#13;
&#13;
hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
t a - - - - - - - - - - - - -Northwest&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
lnter--Class Basketball Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Basketball Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Gymnasium&#13;
February 9-10&#13;
PRELIMINARIES&#13;
&#13;
, Sanborn&#13;
&#13;
Orange City, 33; Sergeant Bluffs, 13&#13;
Castana, 21; Remsen, 13&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
FIRST ROUND&#13;
&#13;
12; Holstein, 6&#13;
&#13;
14; Rock Valley, ..J.&#13;
&#13;
, 11 '· Linn&#13;
&#13;
Grove, 6&#13;
r, 33; Kingsley, 1&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek, 33; Hartley, 12&#13;
Marcus, 12; Ireton, 4&#13;
Orange City, 14; Sac City, 13&#13;
Spencer, 19; Castana, 12&#13;
SECOND ROUND&#13;
&#13;
STANDING-Brown, Dodsley, Swartz, P ear ce, Luglan.&#13;
SEATED-Hinkley, R. Smith (Capt.) , Mickelson.&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake, 29; Hawarden, 5&#13;
Orange City, 11 ; Sioux Center, 9&#13;
&#13;
STANDING-Wenig, Johnson, Llo,·d (Capt&#13;
B ashaw, E. Harrington, T. McBride.&#13;
&#13;
SEMI-FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake, 38; Marcus, 14&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, 26; Spirit Lake, 15&#13;
Officials&#13;
Time Keeper, Prof. J.&#13;
Umpires&#13;
Erwin Wenig&#13;
&#13;
CLASS STANDING&#13;
Won&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1920 _&#13;
...................................................................................................&#13;
Class of 1918 _&#13;
...................................................................................................&#13;
Class of 1919......................................................................................................&#13;
.Academy .................................................... ...........................................................&#13;
Class of 1917 ........................................................................................................&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Second Team&#13;
First Team&#13;
Russel Smith, '20&#13;
George Brown, '20, Capt.&#13;
Clark Conner, Acad.&#13;
Homer Dodsley, '20&#13;
Hugh Foulke, '19&#13;
Guard&#13;
Ed. Harrington, '18&#13;
Lawrence Pearce, '20, Capt.&#13;
Center&#13;
Erwin Wenig, '18&#13;
Carrol Northrup, Acad.&#13;
T homas Lloyd, '18&#13;
Officials&#13;
Erwin Wenig&#13;
Time Keeper,Prof. ]. ] . Hayes&#13;
Referees :George Brown&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Position&#13;
Forward&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
Hayes&#13;
&#13;
IOUX CITY JOURNAL'S ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
First Team&#13;
&#13;
Holder, Castana&#13;
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Clapper, Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Second Team&#13;
Burguitt, Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Third T eam&#13;
Fletcher, (Capt. ), Sioux&#13;
City&#13;
Haskell, (Capt. ), Spirit Ottipaly, Sioux Center&#13;
Lake&#13;
Loomis, Marcus&#13;
Bergman, Spirit Lake&#13;
Nelson, Spirit Lake&#13;
Balkema, Orange City&#13;
&#13;
Emrick, Spirit Lake&#13;
Montgomery, (Capt.)&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Thompson, Sioux City Hollenbeck, Sioux City Seemann, Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
OUX CITY TRIBUNE'S ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
( Picked at the end of the second round)&#13;
S econ&#13;
eam&#13;
ergman, Spirit Lake&#13;
Scanlon, Rock Valley&#13;
Montgomery (Capt.) Sioux CityDoornick, Sioux Center&#13;
tt1polv , Sio c enter&#13;
.&#13;
Clapper, Spencer&#13;
Thompson&#13;
.&#13;
ux 1ty&#13;
W assnaar, (Capt.), S10ux Center&#13;
K k&#13;
Re msen&#13;
Blasdell, Holstein&#13;
First Team&#13;
&#13;
one hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
ZGym&#13;
&#13;
TWO SQUADS AT WORK&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
H U GH FO UKE&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
Lrene&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
LOIS R U SSELL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Athletics&#13;
M" sweater is to a man, so an Agora Athletic Medal is to a girl. The&#13;
b gives two medals each year to the two best all-around girl athletes. It is&#13;
a point system. A girl playing basketball gets one point for each half of&#13;
e she plays in, and five points if she is a member of the champion class&#13;
ys a half or more in the final game. This year points will also be awarded&#13;
of the Crimson and Blue teams. In Tennis five points are awarded to&#13;
wins the tournament, and three points to the runnerup. The winner of&#13;
gets five points, the one taking second, three points, and the one taking&#13;
t. Each member of the winning relay team gets one point. Five points&#13;
to the girls doing the best gym work.&#13;
Lois Russell had the greatest number of points and received first medal.&#13;
DIRECTORS OF PHYSICAL TRAINING FOR WOMEN&#13;
&#13;
ams was the next highest and received second medal.&#13;
&#13;
Miss SALOME LUECHAUER&#13;
MRS. MARGARET BRAND-HAYES&#13;
&#13;
1915- 16&#13;
&#13;
1916-17&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirteen&#13;
one hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Class&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tournament&#13;
School Champions&#13;
&#13;
R USSELL, MAHOOD, Ratliffe,&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS.&#13;
&#13;
TENNIS TOURNAMENT&#13;
Lois RussELL&#13;
&#13;
Winner&#13;
Runner up&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
CRIMSON-BLUE GAME&#13;
(All-Star Teams)&#13;
Blue&#13;
TRACK MEET&#13;
Summary&#13;
440 yard dash-A. Sturdevant, first; R. Gillies, second&#13;
Standing broad J ump-R. Hill&#13;
Short dash-Irma Ratliffe , first; L. Williams, second .&#13;
Traveling rings-I. Lippert, first; H. Carter, second&#13;
220 yard dash-I. Ratliffe, first; L. Williams, second&#13;
Medicine ball throw-A. Sturdevant, first; R. Mahood , second&#13;
Horizontal ladder-R. Gillies, M. Mahood , I. Ratliffe, tied&#13;
Half mile-I. Ratliffe; first; L. Williams, second&#13;
High jump-I. Ratliffe, first; L. Williams and R. Hill , second&#13;
Pull Up-I. Ratliffe, first; L Williams, Second&#13;
Totals:&#13;
Irma Ratliffe, 27 2-3 points&#13;
Lorene Williams, 19 .,Y;; points&#13;
Aurelia Sturdevant, 10 points&#13;
&#13;
one hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
A Sturdevant (Capt.), M. WalkerR Mahood.&#13;
.D. Champ, H . Bergeson, E. Payne&#13;
&#13;
Score: Crimson 2, Blue 5&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
one Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
With their pipes they sat in silence,&#13;
Wailing to behold the strangers,&#13;
Waiting to receive their message;&#13;
Till the Black Robe chief, the Pale face,&#13;
From the wigwam came to greet them,&#13;
Stammering in his speech a little,&#13;
Speaking words yet unfamiliar.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixteen&#13;
one hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
Our Inter&#13;
&#13;
Cp;;egiate&#13;
Orators&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CYRUS Albertson,&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL.&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Parsons College, Fairfield, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
MARSH&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
Who has coached forensic teams with the development&#13;
of the individual as his chief purpose, but under whom&#13;
forensic teams have made for us an enviable record.&#13;
&#13;
ndon Harvinghurst, (first)&#13;
s Albertson , (second)&#13;
&#13;
ph Miller, (third)&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Simpson&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
• A. Buell, (first)&#13;
.&#13;
H. Klippel, (second)&#13;
Woods, (third)&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Penn College&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighteen&#13;
one hundred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
MORN I GSIDE-HAMLINE UNIVERSITY-UPPER IOWA U&#13;
OUR AFFIRMATIVE TEAM vs. UPPER IOWA AT SIOUX CI&#13;
&#13;
Quadrangular&#13;
Inter-&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
In'GSIDE-YANKTON-HURON-DAKOTA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
Up AFFIRMATIVE TEAM VS. HURON AT SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
DON WALTON, DON VAN HORNE, WILLIS FORBES.&#13;
&#13;
D ecision: Affirmative 3, Negative 0.&#13;
Question: Resolved, That Federal and State Boards of Arbitration, with&#13;
sory Powers, should be appoined to settle all disputes between employers and empl&#13;
&#13;
L.\ URA PEASE, GLADYS CLARK, MARION JOHNSOK.&#13;
&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, Negative 2&#13;
Resolved, That Capital Punishment should be abolished.&#13;
&#13;
OUR NEGATIVE TEAM vs. HAMLINE AT NORTHFIELD&#13;
OUR NEGATIVE TEAM VS. YANKTON AT YANKTON&#13;
&#13;
IRVING BACK, ALLEN BARTLETT, CHARLES GARLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, Negative ·2.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK, ADA CARTER, LUCYLLE TWOGOOD.&#13;
&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 3, Negative 0&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
The Man Below, (first)&#13;
&#13;
CYRUS Albertson&#13;
Allen&#13;
&#13;
The Era of Enlightenment&#13;
&#13;
BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
0. W. Craik&#13;
&#13;
The Star&#13;
The Fruits of Democracy&#13;
The Star of Hope for Mexico&#13;
&#13;
.CLAUDE Baldwin&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Hilmer&#13;
&#13;
Wayne&#13;
&#13;
HOME PROHIBITION CONTEST&#13;
The Demand of the Age, (first)&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES Klippel&#13;
&#13;
The New Patriotism&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Our Duty to Liberty&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN LEITCH&#13;
&#13;
Donald&#13;
&#13;
The Dawn of a New Age&#13;
&#13;
HARRY WHYTE&#13;
&#13;
Walton&#13;
&#13;
Francis&#13;
&#13;
KINGSBURY, EARL BARKS.&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Debateers&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ANDREWS&#13;
&#13;
The Booze Army&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Question: Resolved,' That Federal and State Boards of Abitration with&#13;
sory powers should be appointed to settle all disputes between employers and&#13;
Negative Teams&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative T eams&#13;
JANUARY 8&#13;
Philomathean 0&#13;
&#13;
Ionian 5&#13;
&#13;
JANUARY9&#13;
Philomathean 1&#13;
&#13;
Othonian 4&#13;
JANUARY 10&#13;
Ionian 1&#13;
&#13;
Othonian 4&#13;
&#13;
Edward&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
STil,i&lt;;S. Charles&#13;
&#13;
GARLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
LEE Saltow&#13;
&#13;
DON VAN HORNE , Willis&#13;
&#13;
Forbes&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBride,&#13;
&#13;
Royce&#13;
&#13;
ENGBERG, HARRY WARXES.&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Debates&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Debaters&#13;
&#13;
. NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN Bartlett,&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE Easton&#13;
&#13;
Arthur&#13;
&#13;
Oayne&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
Intra-Society Gold Medal Debate Series&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
E. Ausman&#13;
vs.&#13;
S. Burpee&#13;
Geo. Brown&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Intra Society&#13;
Gold Medal Debate Series&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
S. Burpee&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
H. Foulke&#13;
R. Schellenger&#13;
vs.&#13;
G . Call&#13;
L, Dye&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Trefz&#13;
vs.&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
C. L.&#13;
&#13;
L. Castle&#13;
M Erickson&#13;
&#13;
C. Baldwin&#13;
)I. Erickson&#13;
&#13;
J. McBurney&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Medal Winne.rs&#13;
&#13;
L. Castle&#13;
F. Hackett&#13;
&#13;
H. Fouke&#13;
Burpee&#13;
&#13;
H. Fouke&#13;
G . Call&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Trefz&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
M. Evans&#13;
First&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
T. 11cBride&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
L Steele&#13;
C. Cowan&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan O, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker U. 1, Morningsid'e 2.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3; Baker U. 2, Morningside 1 .&#13;
"d&#13;
.&#13;
. B k r u 2 Morningside 1&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa 2, Mornings, e 1 ' a e&#13;
. '&#13;
.&#13;
1906_Upper Iowa 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa 2 Morningside 1&#13;
M&#13;
.&#13;
3&#13;
orningsi&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
N b k Wesleyan O&#13;
J 908-U pper Iowa O, Morn111gs1de 3;&#13;
e ras a&#13;
. '.&#13;
?&#13;
U&#13;
.&#13;
.d&#13;
Iowa 1 Morningside ~·&#13;
l910-Simpson 0, Mornings, e 3 ; pper&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
.d 0&#13;
M&#13;
.&#13;
. d 2. Upper Iowa 3 Mornings, e&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa 1,&#13;
ornings1 e '&#13;
'&#13;
1 . 2 Morningside 1.&#13;
1912-Nebraska \\lesleyan 1, Morningside 2; Dakota \\' es e)~n '.d 2&#13;
.&#13;
. Coe 1 Mornmgs1 e&#13;
"d&#13;
1913-Iowa State Teachers 2, M ornrngsi e 1 ,&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
"d 2&#13;
.&#13;
'd&#13;
M ornmgsi e 3.' Coe 1' Mornmgs1 e&#13;
191 4-Iowa State Teachers 0,&#13;
1915-Southwestern 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
.&#13;
.d 1&#13;
.&#13;
. de 3 . Coe 2 Mornings&gt; e&#13;
l915-lowa State Teachers 0, M orningsi&#13;
,&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
. d' 2&#13;
" "' .&#13;
. d 3. St Olaf 1 Mornings&gt; e&#13;
nornings1 e , ·&#13;
' .&#13;
.&#13;
191 6-Dakota \\lesleyan O, 1&#13;
2&#13;
.&#13;
"d 3. Hamlin 1' Morningside&#13;
1917_Upper Iowa O, Mornmgs1 e ,&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
A. Davies, ninth&#13;
1909-F. \\T. Backemeyer, first&#13;
, A. Keck, seventh&#13;
1910-H. S. Hamilton, second&#13;
R. Toothaker, eliminated&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson, secon d'&#13;
C. Hall, fourth&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson, second&#13;
E. Heilman&#13;
1913-F. P. Johnson, secon d&#13;
J. Poppenheimer&#13;
1914-R. H. M cVicker, sixth&#13;
G. Cushman&#13;
1915-J. I. Dolliver, third&#13;
G. Cushman, fifth&#13;
191 6-R. L. Mitchell, eliminated&#13;
W. Backemeyer, second&#13;
1917-C. E. Albertson, second&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
P. Johnson, first&#13;
1914-C. T. Craig, fifth&#13;
R. Vernon, fifth&#13;
1915-V. Stenseth, tied for third&#13;
L Wickens, first&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
"d&#13;
s·&#13;
n 3 Morningside 0&#13;
1915-Simpson 3 Mornings, e O, ,mpso&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
"d 2&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
"d 2 H ron 1 Mornings, e .&#13;
1916-South Dakota U 1, Mornings, e ; u&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-seven&#13;
one hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Intra-Society Gold Medal Debate Ser&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
J. Dean&#13;
0. Crews&#13;
H. White&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
N. Richardson&#13;
H. Freeman&#13;
L. Southerland&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
J. Dean&#13;
0. Crews&#13;
L. Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
D. Troutman&#13;
C Shenrnod&#13;
C. Albertson&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
A. Jeep&#13;
V. Hart&#13;
G . Dunn&#13;
&#13;
0. Crews&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
J. D ean&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
C. Albertson&#13;
C. Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
\'S.&#13;
&#13;
W. Wolle&#13;
L. Fowler&#13;
J. Glasgow&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
V. Payne&#13;
L. Peterson&#13;
R. Jurgensen&#13;
H. White&#13;
F. Hambleton&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
D. Norton&#13;
T. Kenney&#13;
H. Butler&#13;
&#13;
V. Payne&#13;
L. Peterson&#13;
(Jeep, Sub.)&#13;
R. Jurgensen&#13;
(Freeman, Sub.)&#13;
&#13;
D. Norton&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
L. Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
D . Norten&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
F. Hambleton&#13;
(Sutherland, Sub.)&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch, first; Interstate, first; National, third&#13;
l 912-C. E. Smith, third&#13;
1902-J. N. McCay, second&#13;
191 3-J. L. Ralston, third&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner, third&#13;
191+-R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
1907-Ida Lewis, fifth&#13;
1915 -R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett, third&#13;
1916-C. H. Klippel, second&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill, second&#13;
1917-C,. H. Klippel&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson, first&#13;
1911-W A . McCurdy, sixth&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
flow Iago, the great boaster,&#13;
He the marvelous story teller,&#13;
Told his tales of strange adventure,&#13;
That the time might pass more gayly&#13;
And the gu ests be more contented.&#13;
&#13;
one hllndred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Agora Dramatic Con test&#13;
MEDAL WINNERS&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT, FERN BEACHAM.&#13;
&#13;
DRAMAT IC&#13;
&#13;
"lnja"&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED P ECA U T&#13;
&#13;
"Dat Little Boy o' Mine"&#13;
&#13;
ALIC E STANHOPE&#13;
&#13;
"Mother"&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
MABEL ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Who has given so willingly of her time&#13;
and thought to make our dramatic&#13;
productions a success&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
ALICE B OYD&#13;
H UMORO U S&#13;
&#13;
"Bud's Fairy Tale"&#13;
&#13;
FERN B EACHAM&#13;
&#13;
"Behind a C urtain"&#13;
&#13;
GRACE HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
"Little Sister"&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS CLARK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
O thonian Grand Public&#13;
Senior Class play&#13;
Fanchom&#13;
&#13;
THE CRICKET"&#13;
&#13;
June 12, 1916&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
MARIE EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
)lather Barbeaud&#13;
&#13;
HARRY M. CLARK&#13;
&#13;
Father Barbeaud&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Landrey&#13;
&#13;
MARION&#13;
&#13;
Fanchon&#13;
"THE Melting&#13;
&#13;
LovrcE STROBEL&#13;
&#13;
Fadet&#13;
&#13;
POT"&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
Martineau&#13;
&#13;
April 24, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
DELBERT McKINNEY&#13;
&#13;
Didier&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
&#13;
Glen&#13;
&#13;
Etiennet&#13;
Vera Revendal&#13;
&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
David Quixano&#13;
Quincy Davenport,&#13;
&#13;
Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Herr Poppelmeister&#13;
Mendel&#13;
&#13;
PATRICK&#13;
&#13;
ARTH UUr LOCKE&#13;
&#13;
Ralph&#13;
&#13;
Kolp&#13;
&#13;
OVERHOLSER&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
Quixano .&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS HAY&#13;
&#13;
Pierre&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Collin&#13;
&#13;
E A RL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
Madelon&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR Winkleman&#13;
&#13;
Marlette&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Frau Quixano&#13;
Kathleen O'Reilly&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
Baroness Revendal&#13;
&#13;
EARL HICKS&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
Baron Revendal&#13;
&#13;
Suzette&#13;
Annette&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BULL&#13;
&#13;
Father Caillard&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
1Ianon&#13;
&#13;
COMl\IITTEES&#13;
General&#13;
RALPH OVERHOLSER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL&#13;
&#13;
Madison&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
Comittee&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR LOCKE&#13;
&#13;
Finance and Publicity&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
MARION METCALF&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS KINGSBURY&#13;
EWERT Williams&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Scenery and Property&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
ca------------ --Zetalethean Grana Public&#13;
&#13;
Pierian Grana Public&#13;
&#13;
"THE SLAVE GIRL OF BALSORA"&#13;
An Original Production&#13;
An Original Production&#13;
&#13;
March 5, 1917&#13;
&#13;
M arch 19, 1917&#13;
&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTERS&#13;
&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTE R S&#13;
&#13;
Enis E lgelis, Slave Girl of Balsora&#13;
Neureddin Ali, Son of Fadladd111&#13;
Fad laddin Vi zier of Sultan .&#13;
Lady Badpura, Mother of A li&#13;
Ibrahim, Sheik . of Bagdad&#13;
Haroun Al Rashid, Caliph&#13;
Mohammed, Sultan of Balsora&#13;
Mowein, Enemy of the house of Fadladd111&#13;
Ja iffer, Vizier of the caliph&#13;
.&#13;
Alameddin, Chamberlain of Sultan&#13;
Kerim, a Fisherman&#13;
Herald&#13;
Servant&#13;
Headsman&#13;
&#13;
Companions&#13;
of Ali&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON&#13;
ETHEL Westfall&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
AGNES FRY&#13;
HELEN \VEDGEWOOD&#13;
Merlin&#13;
SAWYER&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
MARGARET FERGUSEN&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Gua rds&#13;
&#13;
Court&#13;
Dancers&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
RUTH SMITH&#13;
Mildred&#13;
PEC.\UT&#13;
Run1 Brady&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
Vivian&#13;
down&#13;
Lida SAUNDERS&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
Elma Parkinson&#13;
Mae PURDY&#13;
Mae Wickens&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
Clara&#13;
Swain&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
) Fern MARQUART&#13;
MABEL Day&#13;
HELEN Wedgewood&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL CARTER&#13;
R UTH REID&#13;
R UTH BRADY&#13;
FLORENCE newland&#13;
ETHEL Ordway&#13;
MARY BISHOP&#13;
&#13;
Courtiers, Merchants, etc.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
COMMITTEE: C lara swain Mary Bishop, mildr d Pecaut, ·Ruth Brady,&#13;
1&#13;
re&#13;
. 1&#13;
Ester Montgome ry, Vivian down Ruth smith1 •&#13;
&#13;
rryblossom Maiden of Low Caste&#13;
o, wealthy Samurai&#13;
"chi, Sandal Maker&#13;
Zaburp Tokoyo's Companion&#13;
o, Chief of the Robber's B a nd .&#13;
u hi, Cherryblossom's Father&#13;
a, Cherryblossom's Com panion&#13;
do, Owner of Teahouse&#13;
&#13;
Mahood&#13;
Sandyig&#13;
BURPEE&#13;
Rachael&#13;
Madison&#13;
Marie&#13;
Lillian&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Walker&#13;
Owen&#13;
&#13;
Isabelle&#13;
Dorothy&#13;
Alice&#13;
&#13;
Boyd&#13;
&#13;
Winifred&#13;
&#13;
Miriam&#13;
Anna&#13;
&#13;
Amanda ROOST&#13;
Clara LEWIS&#13;
Susan Eads&#13;
Marion&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
Marion J OHNSON&#13;
Rachael&#13;
W HITFIELD&#13;
Cornelia&#13;
Mcburney&#13;
Ruth M AHOOD&#13;
Booth&#13;
Own ers&#13;
&#13;
Elva PERSINGER&#13;
FRANC ES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
M usicians&#13;
&#13;
Lilah T HOMPSON&#13;
LYCYLE Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Pedestrians&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Wood&#13;
MARGARET Goudie&#13;
Mildred C HAMP&#13;
GRACE Wishard&#13;
Mabel F RA NCHERE&#13;
KATHRYN D UGGAN&#13;
&#13;
Bussey&#13;
&#13;
Fish&#13;
Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
COMMITTE E&#13;
General Chairman, Amanda&#13;
roost&#13;
Scenery and M usic, Winifred Wood&#13;
Publica tion, Iva Smith&#13;
M Writing Committee, CLARA LEWIS&#13;
ARION HEIKES&#13;
Cornelia&#13;
Mcburney&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-four&#13;
one hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
Junior Ex pression Recital&#13;
&#13;
Senior ExpressionRecital&#13;
&#13;
SCENE IN THE RAJ BOW INN&#13;
&#13;
INTERPRETATIVE RECITAL OF SILAS Marner&#13;
Interpretative Recital of Folk Tales&#13;
March 14 1916&#13;
&#13;
THE FOREST SPRI G&#13;
CAST&#13;
Silas Marner&#13;
Landlord .&#13;
Butcher .&#13;
Jim Rodney&#13;
Farrier&#13;
Mr. Macy .&#13;
&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
Grace&#13;
Elma&#13;
&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE Sammons&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
G L.\DYS Clark&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
MILDRED Pecaut&#13;
May WICKENS&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
one Hundred Thirty-seven&#13;
one hundred thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
--------Ei]&#13;
&#13;
German Class Flag&#13;
&#13;
WEIHNACHTS-MARKT&#13;
At. Immungsbild&#13;
PERSONEN&#13;
Puppen Verkauferin&#13;
Kuchen Verkauferin&#13;
Baumschmuck Verkauferin&#13;
Spielzeug Verkauferin ·&#13;
Mutter&#13;
Erstes Kind ·&#13;
Zweites Kind&#13;
Arme Frau&#13;
Armes Kind .&#13;
Armes Kind .&#13;
Schornsteinfeger&#13;
Backerjunge&#13;
W eihnachtsengel&#13;
Knecht Ruprecht&#13;
Puppenfee&#13;
Children dressed as dolls&#13;
&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
Vivian&#13;
Dow&#13;
HELEN HAYES&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
ISABELLE W ALKEll&#13;
EvA DuNAGA&#13;
MARGUERITE STRUCK&#13;
•&#13;
RUTH BELEW&#13;
HELEN ALBERTSO&#13;
HARRY ROSE&#13;
ARTHUR Locke&#13;
Amanda&#13;
ROOST&#13;
JACOB Trefz&#13;
Irma&#13;
OSTLING&#13;
• katherine&#13;
Coss&#13;
{&#13;
Irma&#13;
Snyder&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
From the hollow reeds he fashioned&#13;
Flutes so musical and mellow&#13;
That the brook, the Sebocoisha&#13;
Ceased to murmur in the woodland,&#13;
And the squirrel, A djidaunio&#13;
Ceased to chatter in the oak tree,&#13;
And the rabbit, the Wabassa&#13;
Sat upright to look and listen.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-eight&#13;
one hundred thirty -nine&#13;
&#13;
Men's Glee Club&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
First Tenor&#13;
AAROI\' RUTH&#13;
Vernon&#13;
BENNETT&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
CECIL MAHOOD&#13;
David&#13;
BLEAKLEY&#13;
Paul&#13;
MacCollin&#13;
&#13;
Bariton e&#13;
ED. Harrington&#13;
LELA ND SUTHERLA:,;"D&#13;
NOBLE Richerdson&#13;
LEWIS Bleakly&#13;
HUGH Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Second Tenor&#13;
DICK BURROWS&#13;
CARL ANDERSO:,;'&#13;
HANS DALE&#13;
LOWELL FOWLER&#13;
HERBERT MAHOOD&#13;
GEORGE Brown&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
HARVEY Lawrence&#13;
JOE DEAN&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
JULIUS GLASGOW&#13;
&#13;
Pianist&#13;
HELEN Whitney&#13;
LUND&#13;
GEORGE Easton&#13;
EWART WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
PAUL MacCollin&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
Whose ability and untiring efforts have given&#13;
us two glee clubs which we are proud&#13;
to have touring the country&#13;
representing us.&#13;
OFF ICERS&#13;
.&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Student Manager&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
one hundred f orly&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-one&#13;
&#13;
Madrigal Club&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
First Soprano&#13;
VEDA Clark&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
Myrtle&#13;
HEATHMAN&#13;
ALMEDA CORR&#13;
R UTH E. MAHOOD&#13;
AURELIA Sturdevant&#13;
Lillian&#13;
DAH L&#13;
&#13;
Grace Church Choir&#13;
S O LOISTS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Second Alto&#13;
LOIS SMITH&#13;
FRANCES&#13;
WhETMORE&#13;
R UBY HILL&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
faith&#13;
&#13;
Paul&#13;
Maccollin&#13;
FOSTER Woodford&#13;
G. G. GORDEN&#13;
LOWE LL FOWL ER&#13;
&#13;
MRS. P AUL M ACCOLL IN&#13;
Mrss M ARY D OLLIVER&#13;
MR. A ARON R un1 .&#13;
MR. R OYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
Sopran os&#13;
&#13;
Pianist&#13;
&#13;
MRS. Dean&#13;
MRS. Burt&#13;
H. Vannest&#13;
M. Vannest&#13;
M. HEATHMAN&#13;
H . H OUK&#13;
A. B OYD&#13;
A. CORR&#13;
L. DA HL&#13;
&#13;
Ruth MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
Second Soprano&#13;
EDITH Holman&#13;
Genevieve&#13;
Y OU NG&#13;
EVELYN PEITZK E&#13;
GERTRU DE DYKSTRA&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
Marie&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
First Alto&#13;
GLADYS DANIELS&#13;
Minnie&#13;
FRY&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
Laura&#13;
Engberg&#13;
Minnie&#13;
RE U BER&#13;
PHOE CHAMBERLAIN&#13;
&#13;
Sopran o&#13;
Alto&#13;
&#13;
Tenor&#13;
Bass&#13;
V . CLA RK&#13;
&#13;
R. M AHOOD&#13;
M. M AHOOD&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH&#13;
M ONTGOMERY&#13;
E. L EHA N&#13;
G. D YKSTRA&#13;
E . Pitsky&#13;
C ; BRIGGS&#13;
C. N EWLAND&#13;
G. YOUNG&#13;
A. PETERSON&#13;
L. PEIRSON&#13;
E. ORDWAY&#13;
E. B AHNSON&#13;
M. OLSON&#13;
R. FLYNN&#13;
A. S TURDEVANT&#13;
G. W IC KST ROM&#13;
L. R OBINSON&#13;
l. R ATLIFF&#13;
F. Whetmore&#13;
E. M ORRIS&#13;
P IPPETT&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
J. LEE&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
WICKSTROM&#13;
&#13;
V. BENNETT&#13;
C. RICHARDS&#13;
Basses&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
GLASGOW&#13;
GORDER&#13;
HARVEY&#13;
V. HART&#13;
\\7• HILMER&#13;
R. WHITEHILL&#13;
L SHEERER&#13;
F. WEAVER&#13;
T. CAINE&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Student Manager&#13;
Student Director&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred f orly-three&#13;
&#13;
Band&#13;
Director, W .&#13;
&#13;
J . HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Clarinets&#13;
R. ENGBERG&#13;
F. JONES&#13;
L. Sutherland&#13;
Piccolo&#13;
H. M&#13;
&#13;
EYERS&#13;
&#13;
Cornets&#13;
R. R ANDOLPH&#13;
C. OBRECHT&#13;
MICHAELSON&#13;
V. GERK IN&#13;
L. SHEARER&#13;
C . Cowan&#13;
L. Thomas&#13;
H. Carter&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
WILLIA&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Whose unselfish efforts have crystallized&#13;
in the best band we have ever had.&#13;
&#13;
Altos&#13;
G.&#13;
C.&#13;
V.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
E.\STON&#13;
BALDWI N&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Drums&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Ostling&#13;
HYDE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
f orty-fi've&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
Book IV&#13;
&#13;
Freeman, IIimmel, N ielsen, Larson , Ratliffe.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
J. HIMMEL, Conductor&#13;
&#13;
INSTRUMENTATION&#13;
First Violin&#13;
Second Violin&#13;
Piano&#13;
Cornet&#13;
Trombone&#13;
&#13;
HARRY Larson&#13;
!RMA RATLIFFE&#13;
KATHINCA Nielsen&#13;
W. J. HIMMEL&#13;
ARCHIE Freeman&#13;
&#13;
one hzmdred f orly-six&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Looked they at the gamesome labor&#13;
Of the young men and the women;&#13;
Listened to their noisy talking,&#13;
To their laughter and their singing,&#13;
&#13;
Heard them chattering like the magpies,&#13;
Heard them laughing like the blue jays,&#13;
Heard them singing like the robins .&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Litera&#13;
&#13;
Y&#13;
&#13;
Society&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term 1916 Winter Term, 1917&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
John · Madison&#13;
&#13;
Ex. Bd. R oRERT McBride&#13;
Ex. Bd. Orin BELL&#13;
Ex. Bd.J oE BoGARD&#13;
&#13;
Alvin&#13;
&#13;
Orin&#13;
&#13;
JOE BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
BELL&#13;
&#13;
JoE BoGARD&#13;
&#13;
HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
HARRY WARNES&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRITCH ARD&#13;
&#13;
McK. Erickson&#13;
&#13;
Clinton&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
R Ussel&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD Conner&#13;
&#13;
Floyd&#13;
&#13;
Thomas&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
HA RRY&#13;
&#13;
Sonebrook&#13;
&#13;
Wilber&#13;
Lee&#13;
&#13;
W Arnes&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Horneey&#13;
&#13;
Conner&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
Stanley&#13;
&#13;
Cowan&#13;
SMITH&#13;
LLOYD&#13;
BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
LEE HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
LEE HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
March 23-Athenaeum-Philo Joint&#13;
May 29-Special Program&#13;
&#13;
Top Row - s Bashaw, T. McBride, R. McBride, W Clark P. Eiffert, F Co nn ers, E Stone&#13;
Scond&#13;
ROW-)I. Clough, E. Wenig, H. Walker&#13;
L. Johnson, J. Bogard, H. Warn es, A.&#13;
THIRD Row - M Erickson, L. Hornney, V. Gerkin, T. Lloyd , A. Hornnei·, R. Randolph,&#13;
d&#13;
R. Martin.&#13;
SOCIETY Emblem&#13;
FOURTH ROW-L. Pearce, F. Hackett, 0 . Cowan . T Friest, A Hinkley, 0 . Jorstad.&#13;
fith&#13;
ROW-S . Johnson, M Evans, L. Castle R. Engberg, H. Wulf.&#13;
Bottom&#13;
Row - L. Steele, G. Goudie, R. Smith P. Mickelson 0. Baldwin, H. Dodsley, A.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
June 3-Up-River Picnic&#13;
June 5-Philo Graduation&#13;
June 13- Reunion&#13;
Sept. 25-Annu al Philo Stag&#13;
Oct. 16-Annual Duck Feed&#13;
ov. 6-Joint Party&#13;
ov. 20-Initiation&#13;
Dec. -1--Harding Banquet&#13;
Dec. IS-Christmas Party&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 8-9-Intersociety Debates&#13;
Jan. 29-Athenaeum Banquet fo r Philo D ebaters&#13;
Feb. 19-Annual Mock TriaL&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum Literary Society&#13;
OFFICER S&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm, 1916&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
EASTHOUSE Minnie&#13;
&#13;
:\'ORA SH ULDT&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm, 1916 fVinter T erm, 1917&#13;
&#13;
GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
F RY&#13;
&#13;
BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
VERA S IPE&#13;
GRACE R USKELL&#13;
&#13;
IDA R OBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
R Uby&#13;
&#13;
K NUDSON&#13;
&#13;
R UTH GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL H UNTER&#13;
&#13;
Irene&#13;
&#13;
CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
Cleo&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE THARP&#13;
&#13;
Katherine&#13;
&#13;
Holmes&#13;
&#13;
LEASER M . B RETHORST&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER BAHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
March 18-Irish Program&#13;
March 23-P hilo-Athenaeum Joint in H all&#13;
&#13;
April 8-Athenaeum Banq uet at Martin&#13;
April 15-0pen Door&#13;
May 13-11other's D ay&#13;
May 13-0pen Door&#13;
&#13;
June 13-Alumni Reunion&#13;
Sept. 16-Reception to pledges in H all&#13;
Sept. 23-Ravine P arty&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 7- Riley P rogram&#13;
Oct. 23-Philo-Athenaeum Joint. A nnual D uck Feed&#13;
ov. 3--1--Athenaeum J ubilee. Twenty-fifth Anniversary.&#13;
ov. -1--Athenaeum Banquet at West&#13;
Dec. 18-Philo-Athenaeum Joint&#13;
t&#13;
Cummings. Ru sk ell, I.&#13;
T OP ROW-N. H ouk, F. Whetmore, M. Breth ors, D Steele MSha n no n,&#13;
SECOND ROW-V . S ipe, E. B a hnson, I. Rober tson ,&#13;
SOCI E T Y EM&#13;
Ber gh&#13;
Struck.&#13;
THIRD&#13;
U tterback, A. Sturtevan t, F. Forsb.erg. L .&#13;
·&#13;
FOU RTH ROW-E . Secoy, L . D ahl, -C. H olmes, E. Pitzke&#13;
BOTTOM ROW-R. B erry, G. Knapp, H . Hunter , E: Mo&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 13- 0 pen D oor-" Betty's Degree"&#13;
Athenaeum Banquet to D ebaters&#13;
Feb. 2-1--0pen D oor -" L ocal and Long D istance"&#13;
Mar. 16-Philo din ner to A thenaeums&#13;
Mar. 26-Philo-Athenaeum Open D oor-"U p to Freddie"&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 29-&#13;
&#13;
011e hundred fifty&#13;
one hundred fif ty-011e&#13;
&#13;
ATHENAE U M-PHILO SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
fil l&#13;
&#13;
-two&#13;
&#13;
one lnmdred fifty-three&#13;
, J&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Literarg Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Fall Tenn, 1916 Winter T erm, 1917&#13;
&#13;
!\RTHCR LINDSEY&#13;
&#13;
H. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
Dox&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
VANHORNE&#13;
&#13;
HARYEY LAWRENCE ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
Hugh&#13;
&#13;
FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
H. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
RAY Harrington&#13;
&#13;
DoN VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
ED. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD SMITH&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE HART&#13;
&#13;
ED. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE EASTON&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
Rov ScttELLINGER&#13;
&#13;
WM . BERKSTRESSER JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
March I6-St. Patrick's Party&#13;
&#13;
April I-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
May I I-Final Gold Medal Debate&#13;
May 29-Annual Up-River Trip&#13;
&#13;
June I3-Reunion&#13;
Sept. I6-Stag at Kilborne's&#13;
Sept. 30-Rush Stag at Ionian House&#13;
Oct. 28-Annual Halloween Party&#13;
ov. 20-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
Dec. I6-Christmas Party&#13;
TOP ROW- B . McConkey. D. Van Horn e, R. Harrin gton , L. L ehan.&#13;
SECOND ROw-,v. Forbes, H. Kilborn e, A. Payn e, H . Lawrence.&#13;
b&#13;
'!' HIRD ROW-E. Au sman, L. Saltow, J. Christ, E. Harrington, G. Easton, R. Sc&#13;
SOCIE'l'Y EMBLEM&#13;
FOURTH RO,V-G. Brown , A. Hunt, A. Bartlett, H. Fouke, G. Crouch, _.T. Tre~~&#13;
BOT'l' OM ROW-S. Burpee, J. l\IcBurne)', Guy Brown , J. Donahue, H. Smith, C.&#13;
&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
9-Inter-Society Debate with Philos&#13;
I I-Inter-Society Debate With Othos&#13;
22-Second Degree Initiation&#13;
26-Annual Martha W ashing,ton Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred /if ty-four&#13;
one hundred fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
P ierian Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
Amanda&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
Marion&#13;
&#13;
S econd S emester&#13;
&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
Lilah&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Marion&#13;
Cornelia&#13;
Mildred&#13;
&#13;
LILAH THOMPSON"&#13;
HELEN GULLICKSON&#13;
&#13;
Thompson&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL M ADISON&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
McBuRNEY&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McBurney&#13;
&#13;
Champ&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
E:-r:-rA WIESE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
Margaret&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
&#13;
GOUDIE&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY Owen&#13;
&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
Lucyle&#13;
&#13;
HAITZ&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE&#13;
&#13;
Rachel&#13;
&#13;
Madison&#13;
&#13;
Elva&#13;
&#13;
L UCLA Holmes&#13;
&#13;
Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Persinger&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED Wood&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
May 27-Pi Picnic&#13;
May 29-Pi-Ionian Up-river Trip&#13;
&#13;
TOP ROW-S. Eads, L. Holmes, E. W eise, M. Champ, 0. Mcburney&#13;
S1'00ND ROW- D. Owen , R. F ouke, A. Roos t, L. lhompson , W. wood&#13;
·&#13;
SOCIETY Emblem&#13;
.&#13;
ROW- R. Whitfield, E. Persin ge r, M.&#13;
C.&#13;
0 \·&#13;
FO URTH ROW- M. Goudi e, I. Walker, A. Boyd F · Boyd , M. W. 01 M. F. smith&#13;
BOTTOM RO\\' -E. Wood, W. Bu ssey, A. Lunblad , R. Burpee, h&#13;
a&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
L. Su&#13;
&#13;
June 13-Alumnae Breakfast&#13;
June 15-30-Camp at McCook Lake&#13;
ept. 23-0pen Door, "Not a man in the House"&#13;
Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
Oct. 6-Birthday Banquet at the West&#13;
Oct. 7-Invitation Dinner&#13;
Oct. 16-Party at Marion Heikes'&#13;
Oct. 21-0pen Door, "An Evening in the South.land"&#13;
Oct. 28-Pi-Ionian Hallowe'en Party&#13;
ov. ~Stunt Night&#13;
ov. 6-Party at McBurney's&#13;
ov. 7-Faculty Tea&#13;
ov. 20-Joint Masquerade&#13;
Dec. 16-Christmas Party&#13;
1917&#13;
&#13;
,I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 6-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
Jan. 13-Debate Dinner t&#13;
·&#13;
a&#13;
anon Heikes'&#13;
Jan. - 0-0pen D&#13;
"Pi' Ch autauqua"&#13;
1&#13;
oor,&#13;
eh. 10-0pen Door "Ch&#13;
,&#13;
urns&#13;
- 6-Pi-Ioman Colonial Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
/if ty-six&#13;
&#13;
011e /mnd, ed&#13;
&#13;
fif ty-sevcn&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
PI-IONIAN SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty- eight&#13;
&#13;
PI-IONIAN SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one hund red&#13;
&#13;
/if ty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Literarg Societg&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm, 191 ,1&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm, 1916 Winter T erm, 1917&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
WENDE LL C U RRY&#13;
&#13;
JAMES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
I)o;-.:A LD WALTON&#13;
&#13;
JAMES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
JOHN F ARNH A M&#13;
&#13;
EwART Williams&#13;
&#13;
J OHN F A RNH AM&#13;
&#13;
C LAIR SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
E DWARD STILES&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
EWART WILLIAl\1S&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL C t: RRY&#13;
&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
WM . WOLLE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR J OHNSON'&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE D UNN&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE Dunn&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR SH E RWOOD&#13;
&#13;
C H A RLES K LIPP EL&#13;
&#13;
Noel&#13;
&#13;
N OEL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
NOEL Williams&#13;
&#13;
KoLP&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
. N williams&#13;
C obrecht&#13;
ROW-W. Wolle, E. Stiles, D. Walton, E. Williams, G. Dutton, ·&#13;
·&#13;
F. Kingsbury.&#13;
C&#13;
.&#13;
Back C. Klippel, .\. Lork&#13;
SECOr D ROW- E. Barks, C. Sherwood, R. Jurgenson, .&#13;
J Kolp R. Trout&#13;
ROW-F. Hambleton, V. Payne, A . B eck , C. Garlock,&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
top&#13;
&#13;
.: .&#13;
&#13;
ardson, D. Norton.&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY EMBT EM&#13;
·' .&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH ROW- G. Omer , V. Hart, H. B u tler, .M. L eitch,&#13;
fifth&#13;
ROvV- H. F r eem a n , O . Cr ews, S. Hutchison , J.&#13;
BOTTOM ROvV- T. K enney, C. Albertson, G . Dunn ,&#13;
&#13;
Hyde L Peterson&#13;
Fowler.•I. Dea&#13;
Sutherland.&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
April 2+-0tho Public&#13;
May ]-Reception to Z ets&#13;
May 8-Annual Spring Stag&#13;
May 22-Closed Door&#13;
May 29-Zet-Otho Breakfast at South R avine&#13;
May 29-Final Gold Medal Debate&#13;
June 5-Graduation Exercises&#13;
June 13-Alumni Reunion&#13;
Sept. 25-Joint Hard T imes Party at Barlowe H all&#13;
Oct. 2-Annual Rush Stag&#13;
Nov 13- Zet-Otho Promenade&#13;
Dec. 19- Z et-Otho J oint&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 9-0tho Philo D ebate&#13;
Jan. IO-Otho-Ionian D ebate&#13;
Jan. 12-Zet reception to D ebaters&#13;
Jan. 29-Annual Banquet at the M artin&#13;
March 26-Reception to Zets&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty ·o111&gt;&#13;
one hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Literary Society&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
Esse, quam videri (To be, rather than to seem).&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm, 1916 Winter T erm,&#13;
&#13;
MAry WEDGEWOOD FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
MARIE Sebren&#13;
&#13;
Lura&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
McLANE&#13;
&#13;
H AZEL BARROW&#13;
Ina&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
MARY ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY MABEL D AY&#13;
R U TH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN D owr-;-&#13;
&#13;
p ARKI&#13;
&#13;
FRAI\"CES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
ELMA&#13;
&#13;
L EONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN D OWN&#13;
&#13;
' SON&#13;
&#13;
ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
FERN B EACHAM&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
ELMA&#13;
&#13;
Mildred&#13;
&#13;
LIDA SAUNDE RS&#13;
&#13;
F RANC ES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
PECAUT&#13;
SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
ALICE JEFFERY&#13;
&#13;
p AR KINSON&#13;
&#13;
C LARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
RUTH S MITH&#13;
&#13;
MABEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON'&#13;
&#13;
Lois R ussELL&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
MARY B ISHOP&#13;
&#13;
R UTH KLINE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINTON&#13;
&#13;
Agnes&#13;
&#13;
FRY&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
'l'OP ROW-M. ordway&#13;
C. Swain, M. W ickens, F. Marquaat&#13;
SECOND ROW- M. Sawyer, E. Ordwar, M. Sebern , F Beacham M.&#13;
THIRD ROW- V. Down, R . Smith, M. Peca ut. L. Saunde1s.&#13;
SOCIETY EMBLEM&#13;
FOURTH ROW- H. Carter,&#13;
E. Montgomery,&#13;
BOTTOM Row - M&#13;
,Gerguson, F. Newland, R. Bradr, M. Purdy, ·&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
April 17-Zet Hen P arty at Mary Wedgewood's&#13;
May I- Otho Reception for Z ets&#13;
M ay 16- Reception for Mothers&#13;
M ay 29-Zet-Otho Breakfast&#13;
June 13-Reunion&#13;
Sept. 16-Reception for Pledges&#13;
Sept. 25-Joint Hard Times Party at Barlowe Hall&#13;
Oct. !+-Public Initiation&#13;
ov. -1--Reception for Louise M cDonald&#13;
ov. 13-Zet-Otho Prornenade&#13;
Dec. 9-0pen Door, "The Milkman's Bride"&#13;
Dec. 19-Zet-Otho Joint&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 112-Reception for Otho D ebaters at Lois Crouch's&#13;
Public Initiation&#13;
Jan. 25-Ruth R id e ntertame zets at S1x o,cl ock Dmner.&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 20-&#13;
&#13;
Grand Public, "The Slave Girl of Balsora"&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-two&#13;
one hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
ZET-OTHO SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
one lnuulrf'd sixly four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
A Delphian Literary Society&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian Literary Society&#13;
&#13;
Moringside Academy&#13;
&#13;
MorningsideAcademy&#13;
&#13;
H. Hartley, R. Long.&#13;
G. Long, G. J enkin son.&#13;
R. Andrews, L. Shearer.&#13;
&#13;
R. Mahood, M. Dewel!.&#13;
D. Cha mp, M. Champ.&#13;
0. Easthonse, V. Clark, R. Challnrnn.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fir st Semester&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
C ritic&#13;
Censor&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
RALPH LONG&#13;
GARNET ]ENK INSON&#13;
GAYLORD Omer&#13;
&#13;
WALTER WERTZ&#13;
&#13;
H AROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
RALPH Andrews&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
Glen&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD B UEHLER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
June 9-Annual Up-River Trip&#13;
June 12-Final Gold Medal Debate&#13;
Sept. 29-Stag for New Students&#13;
O ct. 2-Joint Party at Belew's&#13;
Oct. 31-Hallowe'en Party&#13;
1917&#13;
,&#13;
Jan. 15-Aesthesian-Adelphian Party at. Cobbs&#13;
March 9-Annual Banquet at the Martin&#13;
&#13;
D OROTHY ROBI NSON&#13;
&#13;
M ERLE&#13;
&#13;
CHA;f p&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
lMarguerite&#13;
&#13;
Dewell&#13;
&#13;
VEDA CLARK&#13;
&#13;
R UTH B ELEW&#13;
&#13;
DORIS CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
R UT H Challman&#13;
&#13;
arch Taffy&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
Pull&#13;
&#13;
l--2\.Iay D ay Party for Miss Brand&#13;
t. 30--Party for new girls&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
ov.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
2--Aesthesian-Adelphian Party at Belew's&#13;
U--Tea for New Girls&#13;
4--Kid Party at Cobb's&#13;
9--Costume Party at Dewell 's&#13;
&#13;
115--Aesthesian-Adelphian Party at Cobb's&#13;
• 0-Fudge Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-six&#13;
one hundred sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Hawkege Literary Society&#13;
M Morningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
ATop ROW-0.&#13;
MIDDLE&#13;
BOTTOM ROW- .&#13;
&#13;
L Bl&#13;
·&#13;
,oc e '&#13;
&#13;
kle' E Samson , H. Dal e.&#13;
B enn ett, W. Han sen.&#13;
Brown M. Brenn er , R. Webb R.&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Crescent Literary Society&#13;
M orningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
p ROW-H. Albro, A. P eter son, F. Fair, E. Ratliffe.&#13;
DLE ROW-M. Moss, C. P eterson.&#13;
·&#13;
OM ROW-E. Hickman , M. Catterrnole, F . Winkle, M. Sawyer , E. Sawyer.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term, 1910&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm, 1916&#13;
LOUIS BLEAKLEY&#13;
ERNEST SAMSON&#13;
STEVEN CROCKER&#13;
FLOYD ERTLE&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
rreasurer&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST Samson&#13;
Steven Crocker&#13;
Edward&#13;
Flyn&#13;
Ernest&#13;
Hauswald&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
·&#13;
Oct. 2-Hawkeye-Crescent R ecept10n o New Students&#13;
Oct.' 10-Stag&#13;
.&#13;
Oct. 23-Crescent-Hawkeye Basket Social&#13;
Oct. 30-Hawkeye-Crescent Hallowe'en Party&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Feb&#13;
·&#13;
F eb .&#13;
&#13;
one Hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
2-Hawkeye-Crescent Closed door&#13;
13-Crescent-Hawkeye skating ar y&#13;
22-Joint Open Door&#13;
.&#13;
3-Hard Times Party&#13;
·&#13;
· party&#13;
19-Crescent-Hawkeye Valent111e&#13;
&#13;
PAULINE BARRETT&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
FLORENCE FAIR&#13;
FREDA WINKLE&#13;
]ESSE REED&#13;
U ABEL HOUK&#13;
PEARL MCKERCHER&#13;
&#13;
ew Girls&#13;
&#13;
for pledges&#13;
·Hawkeye Basket Social&#13;
e-Crescent Hallowe'en&#13;
&#13;
Fall Tenn, 1916 Winter Term, 1917&#13;
FLORENCE FAIR&#13;
FREDA WINKLE&#13;
ELLA SA WYER&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
NONA Moss&#13;
EVA MILLER&#13;
PAULINE BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
Jan .&#13;
Jan .&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
ABBIE PETERSON&#13;
ELiz. HICKMAN&#13;
CHRISTINE PETERSON&#13;
NONA Moss&#13;
EVA MILLER&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
MARY SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
9-Crescent Initiation&#13;
2-Hawkeye-Crescent Closed Door&#13;
13-Crescent-Hawkeye Skating Party&#13;
22-Joint Open Door&#13;
3-Hard Time Party&#13;
19-Crescent-Hawkeye Valentine&#13;
Party&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Book V&#13;
Men's Banquet Trophy Cup .&#13;
Given on table decorations and class attendance&#13;
&#13;
Won Easily by the Class of 1918&#13;
(Junior Class)&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.I&#13;
D own the rivers, o' er the prairies,&#13;
came the warriors of the nations,&#13;
Came the D elawares and M ohawks,&#13;
Came the Cho ctaws and Comman cl1es,&#13;
Came the Shoshonies and Blackfeet,&#13;
Came th e P awnees and Omahas,&#13;
Came the M andans and D acotalts,&#13;
Came the 1-Iurons and Ojibways,&#13;
A ll the warriors drawn together&#13;
B y the signal of the P eace Pipe.&#13;
&#13;
one hu11dred scv c11ty-011e&#13;
&#13;
c a - - - - - - -- Student Council&#13;
&#13;
Student body&#13;
&#13;
KOLP, Sw AIN. ROOST, EIFFERT.&#13;
&#13;
P.resident&#13;
&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Athletic Committee Representative&#13;
yell Leaders&#13;
&#13;
STAXDING-Troutman, Norton , liarrington, Johnson, Fry, Forbes.&#13;
SE.\TED-__Sebern, Roost, Swain, Kolp, Walton.&#13;
&#13;
J. R. KoLP&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
manda&#13;
&#13;
p A UL&#13;
&#13;
SwAin&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
Same as for t he Student Body&#13;
&#13;
EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
C. ]. OBRECHT&#13;
RoBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
MEMBE RSHIP&#13;
Leon&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Willis&#13;
&#13;
Ray&#13;
&#13;
Marion&#13;
&#13;
Sebern&#13;
&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
R AY Troutman&#13;
&#13;
F ORBES&#13;
&#13;
D ALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
harrington&#13;
&#13;
MARY D OLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Don Walton&#13;
&#13;
M ILTON LORY •&#13;
EARNEST H AUSWALD&#13;
Lo urs B LEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College was organized a few years ago to&#13;
&#13;
felt by both students and administration fo r some organization that would&#13;
upon certain student actions and at the same time present to the admindcnt problems from the student's standpoint. The council is made up of&#13;
body officers and a representative of each college organization including&#13;
&#13;
]. R. K.&#13;
&#13;
B USTER , R U STY.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred se'Venty-tliree&#13;
&#13;
Agora Club Executive Board--&#13;
&#13;
S'l'AND JXG-F. K olp, C. Back, A. Keefe, D. Utterback,&#13;
M. Mahood, A. Ba\·tlett, A. Roost , ~' - Beacham.&#13;
SEATED-P. Pai r , E. Hardin g, C. McBurney, R. Smith, C. Swain, E. Montgomerr,&#13;
M John son, M Pecaut.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Naboklis Club&#13;
&#13;
Walt&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Faculty Adviser&#13;
&#13;
CLARA Swain&#13;
Amanda&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED Pecaut&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN E. Dimmit&#13;
&#13;
Back, Carter, Fry Da y, Payne.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Auditing&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Membership&#13;
Point System&#13;
Social&#13;
Student Government&#13;
&#13;
First S emester&#13;
&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
SusAN EADS&#13;
MARION Johnson&#13;
RUTH Smith&#13;
Anna&#13;
Alica&#13;
&#13;
Keefe&#13;
BOYD&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE REED&#13;
&#13;
S econd Sem ester&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
&#13;
HELEN HAYES&#13;
&#13;
ADA CARTE R&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FLOSSY DAY&#13;
&#13;
MARVEL EVANS&#13;
&#13;
EvA PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR, 1916&#13;
&#13;
FERN Beacham&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 15-Kensington Party&#13;
1917&#13;
Jan. 6-More eats.&#13;
&#13;
AGORA ISSUE OF COLLEGIAN REPORTER&#13;
Editor-in-chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
HELEN HAYES&#13;
LucIA HoD!ES&#13;
&#13;
The Agora C lub includes every girl in school and all women on the facul&#13;
club takes charge of all girls' activities of the school and its highest aim is toa democratic spirit at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
011c hu11dred se'Veuty-four&#13;
&#13;
Boys (?) and girls&#13;
&#13;
Literary Program&#13;
&#13;
meet at Dolliver's&#13;
learn to guard eats&#13;
Jan. 20-0pen Door. "Great Moments&#13;
pread)&#13;
in Literature"&#13;
·&#13;
Feb. 2-1--Taffy-pull at Helen Albertson 's&#13;
IS Club was&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
f .&#13;
organized as a means 0 f&#13;
ty among the&#13;
.&#13;
promotmg nendship, social and&#13;
res man girls Th CI b h 1·&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
ord. \Vith th&#13;
d&#13;
.&#13;
e u as ived up to its ideal in every&#13;
a true and 1 e _wo r . N aboklis every member will associate a host of&#13;
astmg fnendship.&#13;
&#13;
B. R.&#13;
&#13;
011 e hundred se'IJenty-fi'Ve&#13;
&#13;
Intersociety C ommiltee&#13;
&#13;
Forensic League&#13;
&#13;
STANDING-McBurney, Brady, Holmes, Fouke.&#13;
SEATED-Sebern, Utterback, Brethorst, Wood&#13;
Standing--Mcbride&#13;
Seated - stonebrook,&#13;
&#13;
V anHorne, W a lton.&#13;
Barks, Lloyd, Forbes.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBE R SHIP&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
A the1zaeum&#13;
&#13;
Pierian&#13;
&#13;
M ARG UERITE Brethorst&#13;
C LEO HOLMES, Secretary&#13;
D ORIS UTTERBACK&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McB u RN EY&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
WINNIFRED WooD&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. M ARSH , F aculty A dviser&#13;
&#13;
Io nian&#13;
&#13;
O tlzo nian&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
D ONALD W ALTON&#13;
EARL B ARKS, Secret ary&#13;
&#13;
Z etaleth ian&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
ELMA p ARKIN SON&#13;
R UTH BRADY&#13;
·&#13;
h girls' societie ·&#13;
This committee h as ch arge o f a ll matters concerning t e&#13;
&#13;
P lzilomathean&#13;
THOMAS Lloyd, Vice President&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
R OBERT M c BRIDE&#13;
ic Leag ue selects inter-colleg iate a n d inter-society q uestions for debate&#13;
of other forensic activities.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
one hundred se'Venty -se'Ven&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club&#13;
&#13;
ms,&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
Northrup&#13;
&#13;
ST AN DI N G- I. Ba ck , W alton.&#13;
Standing - Clark,&#13;
Carter , Tw ogood , 0. Bac k, Keefe, ,John son,&#13;
SEAT ED - V a nHorn e, : a rsh, Garlock, Forbes&#13;
M&#13;
K lippe l.&#13;
&#13;
IRVING BACK&#13;
DoN VAN HoRNE&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
DONALD WALTON&#13;
ANNA KEEFE&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
Wilson&#13;
CLARK&#13;
&#13;
Presid ent&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Leon&#13;
&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
DON VANHORNE&#13;
MARION Johnson&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
CYR US Albertson&#13;
&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATE&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Norton,&#13;
&#13;
Pease&#13;
&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE ORATORY&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
B eck, S w a rtz, E. Ha rr ington.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fry&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Llord, Wenig&#13;
&#13;
Cu rry, Jo hnson, Clark, Cloug h, Wulf&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
PA UL Eiffert&#13;
Capt.&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
MARTIN CLOUGH, Capt.-elect&#13;
LEON ]OHNSON&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
ERWIN Wenig&#13;
&#13;
MARION Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
WENDELL CURRY, Capt.&#13;
&#13;
AGNES FRY&#13;
GLADYS CLARK&#13;
L UCILE TWOGOOD&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER, Capt.-elect&#13;
Paul EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
LA URA PEASE&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
HONORARY MEMBER&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD HARRINGTON&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
DONALD VANHORNE&#13;
HARRY&#13;
ARNES&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Noel WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. MARSH , Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
PROFESSOR&#13;
&#13;
on e hu11drcd se'Ve11/y-eight&#13;
&#13;
J. J.&#13;
&#13;
H AYES&#13;
&#13;
011 c hundred se'Ve11ty-11i11e&#13;
&#13;
------Ei]&#13;
&#13;
ra&#13;
Teutonia Club&#13;
&#13;
rranklt).&#13;
Brown , I'refz, r&#13;
ANDING-Ld. Shus ter , Sangae1~;,.&#13;
. Schaub, B&#13;
. ST&#13;
SEATED-Sh1e e, , OFFIC ERS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
V . President&#13;
ice&#13;
·er&#13;
Treasu1&#13;
Smet,cy-&#13;
&#13;
E. P.&#13;
&#13;
WESSEL&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
CLARA TRANKLE&#13;
&#13;
Cl b&#13;
Chemsistry Club&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
0&#13;
e President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
.&#13;
Facu Ity Adviser ·&#13;
&#13;
• McBride.&#13;
VnnHorne, F ry, crews&#13;
Williams, Coss, Locke,&#13;
&#13;
. N J.&#13;
&#13;
AP .&#13;
&#13;
v·&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
one h&#13;
&#13;
eighty&#13;
&#13;
T ld this message to the people,&#13;
. .&#13;
o the blessed son d S av101,&#13;
the l ages&#13;
Of&#13;
.&#13;
flo w in distant la s and&#13;
an&#13;
do&#13;
. d&#13;
earth as we&#13;
II e had&#13;
on&#13;
d&#13;
d labored&#13;
! l ow he f astec.l , praye an · 1&#13;
That our sins mzg ll t be f org1ve1 .&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
LocKE&#13;
&#13;
Arrington&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
J. .&#13;
&#13;
Coss&#13;
&#13;
011 e ·'11wdred eiglity-011e&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
DI&#13;
Reed , E . Montgomery,&#13;
V Down , R. Brady, R. Ma di so n.&#13;
TED-R. Fouke, M. Sebe rn , D. U tt erbac k, E . P ers in ger , M. Brethor st.&#13;
STANDING-D . Walton R. McBride, C. Klippel, X. Williams.&#13;
SEATED- II. Fouke, J. 'Kolp, R. H a r r ingto n, W. Wolle&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
RA y&#13;
&#13;
HARR11'GTO&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES Klippel&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
D EPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
Administration&#13;
Campus Service&#13;
Community Service&#13;
Life Work Guidance&#13;
Religious Education&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighly-two&#13;
&#13;
Pre ident&#13;
Vice-Presid ent&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBride&#13;
DoN WALTON&#13;
&#13;
WM.&#13;
Noel&#13;
&#13;
Wolle&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
Hugh Fouke&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERJ\'&#13;
R UTH FOUKE&#13;
DORIS UTTERB ACK&#13;
ELVA PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
D EPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
&#13;
Association News&#13;
Bible Study&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Missions&#13;
Social&#13;
Social Service&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE Reed&#13;
MARGARET BRETHORST&#13;
VrvIAN DowN&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
BRADY&#13;
&#13;
R ACHAEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
l..------ - - - - - - - - - 6 ]&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition League&#13;
&#13;
K L I P P E L , Long&#13;
&#13;
Sebern&#13;
&#13;
Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
CHAS.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Klippel&#13;
&#13;
RALPH Long&#13;
Marie&#13;
&#13;
SEBER N&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
&#13;
Dutton&#13;
&#13;
BRETH ORST, L AWrence&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE B. Dutton&#13;
MARG U ERITE BRETHORST&#13;
EDITH Lawrence&#13;
&#13;
on th e smooth bark of a birch tree&#13;
Pamted many shapes and /i gu,.es,&#13;
.&#13;
W&#13;
onderful and mystic fig ures&#13;
And each fi gure nad a meaning,&#13;
,&#13;
'&#13;
Each some though t or word suggested .&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Minnie Gusteson&#13;
JUNE PIPPETT&#13;
Elva&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
Sioux '18&#13;
&#13;
'DING-Sherwood,&#13;
Bartlett, Freeman , F ouke, Stonebrook, McBride Willia&#13;
V&#13;
Van H orne, Day Curry . , Forbes , McBurney Wishard&#13;
&#13;
Seated&#13;
Seated&#13;
&#13;
naon Fry Saunders, Lewis, Wenig Conn ers, Richardson, Klippel, Sherwood, R . McB ride.&#13;
arrington Barks, Pecaut, Kolp, IIeikes, Down, Sm ith.&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS F. FORBES&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
STAFF&#13;
ROYAL J URGE, ' SO&#13;
&#13;
DoN VAN HORNE&#13;
NOEL WILLIAMS&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
MABEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
AL Behmer&#13;
&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
H u GH Fo u KE&#13;
&#13;
MARION JOHNSON&#13;
HELEN H AYES&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Artist&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Classes&#13;
Dramatics and Literary&#13;
Faculty ·&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Jokes&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Photography&#13;
Photography&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
G . EARL B ARKS&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
H ARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
MARION&#13;
&#13;
N. N.&#13;
&#13;
HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
RICHA RDSON&#13;
&#13;
CLARA L EWIS&#13;
R OYAL JURGENSON&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
L IDA SAUNDERS&#13;
VIVIAN D OWN&#13;
MILDRED PECA UT&#13;
R OBERT&#13;
&#13;
McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
.CHARLES H. KLIPPEL&#13;
CLAIR&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
SHERWOOD&#13;
&#13;
R UTH&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
F LOYD CONNERS&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
FRANC ES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-six&#13;
one Hundred eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Pride of the Sioux&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
Rorem&#13;
&#13;
'09&#13;
&#13;
s·&#13;
&#13;
Oh Morningside thou are the "Pride of the lOUX,&#13;
And we'll honor thy name evermore&#13;
To th y standard we'll ever be loyal and' true&#13;
As thy sons ever have been before.&#13;
We shall sing of the honor and fame thou hast won&#13;
With our hearts and our voices attune&#13;
'&#13;
And forever we'll stand united as one&#13;
In our love for the dear old Maroon&#13;
We are glad for the days that we've spent on thy hills,&#13;
And the friendship we've formed in thy halls,&#13;
And for dear Alma Mater our hearts shall beat still,&#13;
When at last we shall turn from thy walls.&#13;
'Till the waters have dried in the "Rolling Mizzou"&#13;
And all love in the old world has died,&#13;
We shall stand by our college, "The pride of the Sioux,"&#13;
And ,n'll cheer for our old Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
In the Vale of Tawasentlw&#13;
In the Valley of W yommg, '&#13;
.&#13;
In the G roves of T uscahosa&#13;
InthefaroffR oc k Y M ountains&#13;
'&#13;
On the shores of Gitch e G&#13;
Gummee&#13;
last the shining Big-Sea-Wat er&#13;
Gathered all th e trib es together&#13;
with one feeding and one purpose&#13;
hat the_ light might burn the brightrr&#13;
In the Big Sioux River Country .&#13;
&#13;
one lmndi rd eig hty· eig ht&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty -nine&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Clubs&#13;
&#13;
The Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
year, through. the untiring efforts of Miss Dimm ·tt an . ot.he1. Morningd&#13;
.&#13;
C&#13;
lasts a Morningside lub movement has been st&#13;
e&#13;
· t e c1.. and&#13;
.&#13;
· ·&#13;
.and . colleges where graduates and ex-studez1 s ·. are living&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
The purorganizations 1s to keep alive the old Morningside S · .· w 1c character.&#13;
who has been a student in her halls to make th spu 1t a vita l factor&#13;
·. ·&#13;
.&#13;
tion • of the best mterests of the College ' and to Inspire t e young people&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
L&#13;
umt1es where the clubs are established to seek th en&#13;
·.&#13;
·&#13;
ucat10n under th&#13;
lter of "The College on the Hill."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
omingside Clubs are constantly increasing .&#13;
.&#13;
nson , H awarden Sac city&#13;
1Y&#13;
are among the . . to . sign the constitution n en 1·&#13;
first&#13;
t e interest of&#13;
ates and Fellow citizens Ill an energetic and prog ress1ve M ornzngszde.&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
Iowa City, and Boston, have led the way in e&#13;
&#13;
bl·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
ubs. T he Ch1cago-l\lormngs1de Club has streng th ene&#13;
&#13;
U mvers1ty-Morn·&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
t e old time ties&#13;
her members to their Alma Mater by pa r a&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
h&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
Ill two&#13;
rally-banquets&#13;
I mont s.&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
. club is d1stmguished by a mem bers 1p o f thirty-seven&#13;
t in t e act1v1t1es and progress of th · co ege serves as a stimulus·&#13;
.&#13;
d&#13;
b d&#13;
nt stu ent o Y to do its best in upholding the h. h stan d ar d s set by the&#13;
1g&#13;
&#13;
G. W. FINCH&#13;
President Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
OUR ALUMNI&#13;
The real worth of any college is determined by the lives and deeds of the&#13;
women who leave the halls of their Alma Mater to take up their share of the&#13;
in the work of the world. Since such a test is applicable to all institutio&#13;
gladly say that Morningside College has attained and is constantly measu '&#13;
the highest stands of life through the earnest endeavors of her loyal sons and&#13;
everywhere.&#13;
During the years when the alumni of today were students in the old fami&#13;
Morningside College inspired them with high ideals which they are now&#13;
maintain in all parts of the world. The aim of the institution is the&#13;
"To attain high scholarship, to maintain clean athletics, to preserve pure&#13;
inspire lofty living to urge a fine conservation of talents to the service of the&#13;
From the classes graduated in the last five years, ninety five men and w&#13;
availed themselves of the opportunity of post graduate work in more th&#13;
universities and colleges in all parts of the United States and in foreign&#13;
Iowa, Northwestern, Chicago, Columbia, Boston, Illinois, Denver, and&#13;
universities and the Y. M. C. A. College claim the largest quota of thi nu&#13;
The subjects chosen for advanced study by our alumni have embraced&#13;
various fields of knowledge. The number is too great to enumerate here, but&#13;
many of the sciences, foreign languages, law , medicine, and theology.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety&#13;
&#13;
-Morningside Club ' alth oug sma ll lll numbers, shows by the . d&#13;
1&#13;
of her members that ea h . b . .&#13;
m&#13;
ua&#13;
goals achieved but is&#13;
is&#13;
not only to himself and&#13;
so contn ut1ng his O&#13;
.&#13;
of her Alma Mater.&#13;
s are o glory to the&#13;
&#13;
a city-morningside Club with a mem bers 1p of&#13;
h .&#13;
&#13;
us1astic letter&#13;
th&#13;
th formation of the Mm . pres1 ent to "Th&#13;
ornmgs1 e Clubs:&#13;
&#13;
an&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
ve n y-s1x, expresses very&#13;
, the fundamen-&#13;
&#13;
that. the. idea with&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
our club is to rally to brin h&#13;
.&#13;
furnishing e&#13;
g ome to the State Umversity&#13;
very year some of th ·&#13;
'&#13;
and professional sch 1 M&#13;
strong men and women for&#13;
good in his prof . oo&#13;
of the students here think that in case&#13;
.&#13;
ess10na or his gr d&#13;
k&#13;
umversity, wherea&#13;
1&#13;
a uate wor ' the reason is all to be&#13;
'd before he saw&#13;
of credit is due to the foundatioi:&#13;
mvers1ty. '&#13;
that all e f e1&#13;
at Iowa are in&#13;
.&#13;
e have much t&#13;
sympathy with the Morningside Club&#13;
at&#13;
.&#13;
o congratulate ourselves&#13;
th&#13;
orn1ngside College."&#13;
on&#13;
at we spent our und er-&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
From all the clubs comes the hearty greeting: "We are r ea d Y to assi •&#13;
.&#13;
to make a bigger and a better Morningside and help to kind! e an keep&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
in the hearts of our members the nght and genuine morning 1&#13;
· .&#13;
,&#13;
e sp1nt."&#13;
This "spirit" is that of daring and eagerness such as is expresse ·&#13;
&#13;
"There's a breathless hush in the close tonight,&#13;
Ten to make and the match to win;&#13;
There's a bumping pitch and a blinding light,&#13;
An hour to play and the last man in.&#13;
And its not for the sake of a ribboned coat ,&#13;
Nor the selfish hope of a season's fame;&#13;
But his captain's hand on his shoulder smote'Play up, play up; and play the game!' .&#13;
"The sands of the desert are sodden red,&#13;
Red with the wreck of the square that broke;&#13;
The Gatling's jammed, and the colonel's dead,&#13;
The regiment's blind with dust and smoke.&#13;
The river of death has brimmed its banks,&#13;
And England's far and honor a name,&#13;
When the voice of a school boy rallies the ranks'Play up, play up, and play the game!'&#13;
This is the word that year by year,&#13;
While in her place the school is set,&#13;
Everyone of her sons must hear,&#13;
And none that hears it dares forget.&#13;
This they all with a willing mind&#13;
Bear through life like a torch in flame,&#13;
And falling, fling to the host behind'Play up, play up; and play the game!' "&#13;
&#13;
Everyone who has had the privilege of attending Morningside College has&#13;
strong, wholesome spirit of daring which makes the words "Alma '&#13;
r.nd essential force in his life: broadening the vision of his service; encou&#13;
in defeat and inspiring him to higher purposes in victory. · It is that spirit&#13;
times and on all occasions spurs him on to do his best, with the watch&#13;
Alma Mater ringing in his thoughts:&#13;
"Play up , play up; and play the game!"&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
Book VI&#13;
&#13;
Student Life&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
You shall hear how Pau-Puk-Keewis&#13;
He the handsome Y enadizze&#13;
e&#13;
Whom th e people called th e Storm-F ool&#13;
Vexed the village w ith disturbance,&#13;
You shall hear of all his m ischief.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred 11in ety-t!tree&#13;
&#13;
Monument Day&#13;
&#13;
May Fete&#13;
&#13;
May 19, 1916&#13;
&#13;
may 26, 1916&#13;
&#13;
Lovice Stroble, Retiri ng Queen ; Ruth Gill ies, Queen .&#13;
&#13;
Mag Night Revels&#13;
Under the Direction of MRS. MARGARET BRAND-HAYES&#13;
spectacular annual performance for the girls of our college is the May&#13;
am given by the Agora Club on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
Last year's exhibition was&#13;
&#13;
Over a hundred girls took part in it.&#13;
&#13;
It w as an&#13;
&#13;
usual luck, we picked the very best night of the&#13;
Winning every game 011 a down-state baseball trip is too much for any red&#13;
student body to sit down and fold their hands over. As early as 8 :30 on the&#13;
f M&#13;
16 murmurs of "monument" were· heard. By chapel tnne t IS cry&#13;
o&#13;
ay and the whole student body Journeye d to Floy d' s Monument forIIa ce&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
perative&#13;
.&#13;
b b&#13;
&#13;
The morning had been warm and cloudy,&#13;
rain, but it cleared off at noon drying the field, and maki ng the most&#13;
&#13;
ing possible. The city responded.&#13;
&#13;
People began to arrive an hour before&#13;
&#13;
ce, and by the time the girls began to appear on the hill back of t he&#13;
&#13;
the bleachers and surrounding hills were black w ith spectators, w hile&#13;
&#13;
and to imbibe some good old Morningside Pep for the com111g&#13;
al g&#13;
·11·&#13;
Some "Pecans" also got valuable experience out of the tnp, ea&#13;
V&#13;
erm1 1011.&#13;
the only safe way to ride in a wagon is to have a horse&#13;
e&#13;
I&#13;
dents w&#13;
After Champ had led us in some yells, facultly members an s u&#13;
&#13;
signal was given. Then down the long cinder track came the stately proces-&#13;
&#13;
nee for&#13;
&#13;
of the field. Here she was crowned by the May Queen of the year before,&#13;
court" stood in a semi-circle facing the throne.&#13;
&#13;
the goats and compelled to amuse the crowd.&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
A very democratic spirit prevailed, expressmg&#13;
&#13;
its&#13;
I se lf&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
an a&#13;
&#13;
bh&#13;
&#13;
orre&#13;
&#13;
cially if they suggested the hue of Vermillion.&#13;
h&#13;
h South Ra&#13;
·&#13;
The student body came home 111 groups. The route . t roug as to not&#13;
by far the most popular. Most o f t h em reach ed Mormngs1 e so&#13;
late for 1 :30 laboratories and classes.&#13;
&#13;
were lined up three deep with their headlights ready to play on the field&#13;
in bright colored costumes escorting the May Queen elect to her position&#13;
&#13;
the queen had been crowned she took her position on the throne and the&#13;
· They represented an eighteenth century rural May Day in the fields.&#13;
a Grand March executed with faultless precision by the w hole body of&#13;
&#13;
in single, double, and quadruple lines in intricate figures over the&#13;
before the throne.&#13;
&#13;
one hu11dred 11i11ety-four&#13;
&#13;
This was followed by a rural Folk D ance, w hich&#13;
&#13;
one hu11dred 11i11ely-five&#13;
&#13;
ca--------- - -- -.&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
turn by a Shepherdess Dance, both well received by the Queen&#13;
During the last part of the Shepherdess Dance the drums of the&#13;
&#13;
ing&#13;
warning of thunder and forced the dancers to flee for cover while the&#13;
filled the "stage." It was a violent dance, based upon Wagner's Ride&#13;
and performed by five storm-clouds and the spirit of Lightning.&#13;
passed as quickly as it had come, and the Rainbow took its place. This&#13;
display of colors and so encouraged the village girls that they brought&#13;
May Pole, and wound it perfectly to the delight of everybody. This&#13;
while, and twilight had given way to darkness before it was finished.&#13;
headlights were directed on the field where Moths danced in the light.&#13;
ere put out again while a solo dancer performed the Will o' the Wisp&#13;
search-light being flashed on and off her misty figure, now clearly and&#13;
&#13;
seen like the Will o' the Wisp itself. This brought out the Dance of the&#13;
frolicksome little dance, which concluded the program.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Once more the&#13;
&#13;
formed and marched toward the spectators, then turned abruptly and&#13;
&#13;
the night. Another May Day was over to the satisfaction of all conas the prettiest and most elaborate we have ever had.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred 11i11 rty six&#13;
&#13;
one hundred 11i11ety-seven&#13;
&#13;
Commencement Week&#13;
Men's Banquet&#13;
February 21, 1917&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
has become _&#13;
one of the important traditions of the College. It&#13;
a1&#13;
et-to-gether event of the men, for the men, and by the men of the&#13;
Its motto is Unity, Fellowship, Enthusiasm, and Achievement.&#13;
quet was born on Washington's Birthday, 1906. The idea, however, had&#13;
b · for many months before. It came to fill a need, and the need was&#13;
.&#13;
The Men's Literary Societies did not love each other as angels should, 111&#13;
and College Spirit slumped, and Alma Mater wept.&#13;
Banquet idea furnished a rallying point and a unifying center. The men&#13;
timidly at first, almost suspiciously. A thirty-five cent menu served at 8 :_30&#13;
the old "Boarding Hall" in the north end of the college basement, with&#13;
.&#13;
smells a plenty, was not calculated to arouse great ent hus1asm 111 hnugry&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY, JUNE 10&#13;
8 :15 P. M.-Graduation of the School of Expression,&#13;
SUNDAY, JUNE 11&#13;
&#13;
11 :00 A. M.-Baccalaureate Sermon, Grace Church.&#13;
7 :00 P. M .-Vespe.r Service, College Chapel.&#13;
MONDAY, JUNE 12&#13;
3 :00 P . M.-Class Play, College Chapel.&#13;
'i&#13;
8:L p . M.-Graduation of the Conservatory of Music, College Cha&#13;
TUESDAY, JUNE 13&#13;
M.-Meeting of the Board of Trustees, College Hall.&#13;
M.-Reunion of Classes and Societies, Campus.&#13;
M.-Farewell Students Assembly, College Chapel. .&#13;
M.-Alumni Luncheon and Business Meeting, Society H&#13;
M.-Alumni Banquet, Grace Church Pariors&#13;
8:30 P. M.-President's Annual Reception, Presidents Home.&#13;
&#13;
9 :00&#13;
9 :00&#13;
11 :00&#13;
12 :30&#13;
6:00&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
A.&#13;
A.&#13;
P.&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14&#13;
&#13;
toast program was chiefly a booster for Track, Football, and Baseball. The&#13;
its were inclined to treat the idea of a Men's Banquet lightly and humorously.&#13;
not seen the vision of possibility that the few had seen who fathered and&#13;
the idea, but the Banquet weathered the first three years and then began&#13;
on strength. It was not until the Banquet of 1912 that the competitive plan&#13;
n table decorations and class attendance was introduced. This added greatly&#13;
mterest, even though the trophy was but a small silk banner of uncertain&#13;
&#13;
uts.&#13;
16 the committee determined to get a trophy worthy of the occasion and one&#13;
d have added interest as the years pass. The fine Trophy Cup was secured&#13;
&#13;
class winning it each year had its name inscribed upon it.&#13;
year the former students and alumni were asked to send in the names of their&#13;
year these will be announced at the banquet and dropped in the cup; there&#13;
in until the son arrives at College and at the first Banquet thereafter draws&#13;
from the cup. New names received during the year will be announced and&#13;
in the cup at the next Banquet.&#13;
Banquet idea is one of unity and fellowship among Morningside Men everyThough sundered far by faith we meet, for college ties shall ne'er be broken&#13;
at old M. C. As Washington's birthday draws near each year, remember&#13;
on the campus wish to draw back to the College and Banquet the memories&#13;
hearts of all our men everywhere. Those who cannot be here in person are&#13;
join us in reverie o'er the past and in hope and prayer for the future that&#13;
ater may fulfill her own high ideals.&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
H. G.&#13;
&#13;
CAMPBELL.&#13;
&#13;
10 :00 A. M.-Commencement Address.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
011e hundred 11i11ety-nine&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Banquet&#13;
&#13;
"M" Minstrels&#13;
&#13;
March 3, 1917&#13;
&#13;
March 24, 1917&#13;
&#13;
The Girls' Banquet is the one big get-to-gether event for the coe s.&#13;
academy, faculty and alumnae, mothers and high school sisters unite&#13;
most Joyous occas10n o fh e year.&#13;
t&#13;
nt usiasm runs high when the to&#13;
vie with each other in "pulling off" stunts, cracking jokes and per pe&#13;
Seven years ago the women of Morningside decided not to allow the&#13;
lize the banquet idea. So committees were appointed and arrangements&#13;
first girls' banquet. The girls had such a good time at this first banquet&#13;
succeeding year has added both numbers and interest.&#13;
Since its organization in 1913 the Agora Club has had charge of the&#13;
has added a number of new features and clever ideas. At first the decor&#13;
planned and executed by a general committee. But later the rivalry&#13;
classes which had already manifested itself in the class songs and stunts at the&#13;
led to the idea of each class decorating it's own table. For the last three&#13;
class spirit has been further fostered by the presentation of the silver loving&#13;
class having the highest percentage in attendance and the best decorated table.&#13;
Each year a different idea has been carried out in the toast program. One&#13;
toaster was assigned the title of a Shakesperean play. The next year music&#13;
theme. Another year the unfolding plant was developed into a toast program.&#13;
the four-leaf clover was used as a symbol. The banquet was held in the&#13;
the year it was completed, then the idea of " the building" was used in the&#13;
The next year the college added its Domestic Science Department, so wheat w&#13;
ground to flour and baked into bread by the speakers. Another time the&#13;
"hitched their wagons to the stars." This year music was again used as the&#13;
the program. Indeed, the ease with which the classes, alumnae and faculty&#13;
have compared themselves to "As You Like It" or " Much Ado about&#13;
the opening flower; to the lucky leaves of the four-leaf clover; to the co&#13;
walls of the building; to the field of waving wheat or batch of dough; to J&#13;
Saturn; to sharps and flats or chords is truly marvelous. Morningside coeds&#13;
tainly versatile.&#13;
At the first banquet the president of the Girls' Student Body, Miss Ide&#13;
was toast mistress. In other years the president of the Agora Club has P&#13;
introduced as toast mistress one of the faculty ladies. Miss Margaret Gay&#13;
was the first. Then Mrs. A. E. Craig and the next year Mrs. J. A. Coss.&#13;
the gymnasium was opened Miss Lillian E. D immitt as toast mistress P&#13;
the largest banquet the girls have ever had. Mrs. W. C. Hilmer was toast&#13;
the Domestic Science program. Last year Mrs. H. G. Campbell introduced&#13;
This year Mrs. J. J. Hayes told the story of writing of music and presented the&#13;
What the future may bring of joy and happiness we cannot tell, but&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
h&#13;
Is' B anquet w1·11 b e arked with&#13;
calendar of Mormngs1de coeds, t e&#13;
MARY Lois Crouch&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
RJGIIT-H.&#13;
Farnham D. Norton&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
W eni&#13;
C C&#13;
.&#13;
·&#13;
onners,&#13;
t, C. Obrecht.&#13;
&#13;
Day in each year the athletic organization of M&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
or111ngs1de C ollege, known as&#13;
. h .&#13;
an e ort to raise funds T h b&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
e a ove pict ure shows&#13;
in t eir minstrel show given M arch 24th&#13;
the audience was kept ·&#13;
. · With Wulf and Obrecht as end&#13;
facuity and student in an uproar over Jokes cracked at t he expense of members&#13;
bod&#13;
O h&#13;
y.&#13;
t er members of the C I b&#13;
and characteristic dances F II&#13;
.&#13;
h&#13;
u executed some very&#13;
liege appeared in songs and&#13;
the various societies of&#13;
demonstrated the " hoe d&#13;
,,&#13;
h&#13;
egro Stringed Q uartette from P atown an t e cake walk&#13;
matter of secu rin&#13;
.&#13;
t bd&#13;
g an au&#13;
never worries the " M" CI b&#13;
0 Y and faculty alike&#13;
u · Everyone&#13;
O •&#13;
fers the latter more th, g e1t&#13;
entertainment or to the stocks and&#13;
the&#13;
an once.&#13;
or&#13;
reason the "M" C&#13;
. I .&#13;
ar111va is unquesmost popular event of the year.&#13;
&#13;
M Club, rules the campus in&#13;
&#13;
ff&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
t&lt;u·o hundred one&#13;
&#13;
- - -- ---:---------6]&#13;
.&#13;
always&#13;
&#13;
as ,,·ith the First; Untrustworthy and Corrupt&#13;
&#13;
SQUIRREL Dodger&#13;
back&#13;
live on hot a1 r.&#13;
&#13;
\Ve do everybody&#13;
that a first-class&#13;
newspaper should.&#13;
&#13;
fall.&#13;
&#13;
WEATHER&#13;
U nsettled at time we went to&#13;
press.&#13;
Storm expected w hen&#13;
this gets in circulation.&#13;
&#13;
Published whenever an insane delusion exists&#13;
&#13;
April 1, 19 17&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
No. 23&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MATERIAL TO BE FOUND IN SENIOR&#13;
CLASS.&#13;
PRESIDENT.&#13;
&#13;
night before Commencement. The&#13;
was shining brightly on our fair&#13;
on the Spoon-bolder, where WenGlady that old, old story for the&#13;
and on a porch on· Morningside&#13;
bade Edna good night and&#13;
to the monument was well lighted&#13;
&#13;
and Cecil could give all their&#13;
each other and were not compelled&#13;
their step, whi le on the Big Sioux&#13;
was almost inspired to words, as&#13;
floated along in the bright moon little squirrels which haunt the&#13;
d Sunshine In n had gone to sleep&#13;
gluttonous feast.&#13;
night, or rather, about 2 A. M.&#13;
Kolp bade his fair maiden good&#13;
started for home. As Obrecht had&#13;
to come and stay w ith him some&#13;
thought that would be a good&#13;
So he went to Obrecht's room&#13;
to retire. Thinking that he had&#13;
wind his watch and unable to find&#13;
he turned on the light. As he&#13;
wind ing his watch he&#13;
towards the bed and- - - ( Cut out&#13;
&#13;
day was Commencement Day.&#13;
Was happy but Jimmie, who went&#13;
Continued on Page 206.)&#13;
&#13;
two 1.-undred two&#13;
&#13;
Great excitement w as created on our campus&#13;
when it was announced that Henry Ford was&#13;
going to establish , a Branch Ford Factory at&#13;
M orni ngsid e. M uch speculation was rife as&#13;
to where and how he would get his material,&#13;
but a staff reporter. in a personal interview obtai ned this information from Mr. Ford.&#13;
He announced that he could' get all of his&#13;
material from the Senior Class. For the body&#13;
of the machine he would use R ay Harrington's shoes by cutting them down a little. For&#13;
the mudgua rds Dutton's ears would be sufficiently large. Eiffert would make good axles&#13;
because he is so well seasoned. Rosene's neck&#13;
would make good tires, it is solid rubber. Marguerite Cummings would make a good steering&#13;
w heel , she is so easy to turn . For a made-toorder crank there is Laura P ease. For a brake&#13;
Al R omney could be used, he is always broke.&#13;
G ailorcl1 Starr could be used to good advantage for a windshield as no w ind ever blows&#13;
a round him. For a headlight Bess Sha nnon's&#13;
dome could be used, it is light and shining.&#13;
For wheels, he sa id, he wou ld borrow some&#13;
from Art Payne's hea d. For nuts to fasten&#13;
the machine together any senior would do. For&#13;
cushions Wils Clark woul d be excellent for&#13;
h e has been sat on so many times by the faculty.&#13;
For an air pump any member of the class&#13;
would' serve.&#13;
&#13;
two lm11dred three&#13;
&#13;
THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
&#13;
THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
&#13;
SPORTING SECTION&#13;
&#13;
BRAINIEST PAGE OF ANY AMERICAN Publication&#13;
&#13;
EDITORIAL PAGE&#13;
TEN&#13;
&#13;
THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
Published by&#13;
Mental Aberration Co., Inc.&#13;
&#13;
Why is&#13;
&#13;
Subscriptions&#13;
Vegetables from the subscription list&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Editor-in-chief ................ Marcus Tullius Cicero&#13;
Assistant editor ...... William Randolph Hearst&#13;
Business Manager ............John D. Rockefeller&#13;
Ass't. Business Manager ........ Andrew Carnegie&#13;
Sports&#13;
John L. Sullivan&#13;
Buffalo Bill&#13;
Locals&#13;
Sherlock Holmes&#13;
Diamond Dick&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Bob Ingersoll&#13;
Theodore Roosevelt&#13;
Associate Editors&#13;
W. J. Bryan&#13;
Julius Caesar&#13;
Wilhelm II&#13;
Gen. Carranza&#13;
Office Boys&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Horace Wulf&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
&#13;
Those who belie,·e in a Ii&#13;
tion are many. Most of the&#13;
favor of this interpretation. In&#13;
they do not believe there&#13;
o'clock rule, and second, if it&#13;
be liberally interpreted.&#13;
Now we think a young gent!&#13;
allowed to star after ten when&#13;
a fair, ( or unfair), co-ed under&#13;
tions. These conditions are.&#13;
1. That he talks loud enough&#13;
be heard all over the house••&#13;
&#13;
2. That he will shut all the&#13;
goes.&#13;
3. That he will not take&#13;
morning paper with him.&#13;
&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
Gentel Reeder we take our pen in hand (ov&#13;
corse eny fule wud no that it wud not by our&#13;
foot), with the intenshun ov dashin off red hot&#13;
Editoriuls, as it wer, warnin our reeders ov the&#13;
vital fact not to become peeved or odd'e rwise&#13;
sore at what may eppeer in The Squirrel Dodger, becuz, like the paper we ar nuts as well as&#13;
the reporters ov the same, to say nothin ov&#13;
the manager and printer. ( Gosh that is the&#13;
longest sentence we ever writ.)&#13;
Laff with uz and we won't cry. Scold uz&#13;
and we will laff-so ther you ar. You hev to&#13;
take it good nacherdly or we will sue you for&#13;
libell. So ther you ar again. Laff you nutt,&#13;
laff.&#13;
&#13;
Five? Gee, that's a small nu&#13;
good old days we used to think&#13;
enough. Well, fifteen wa but&#13;
least to some. what we advocate&#13;
fussers, both faculty and studen&#13;
an extension on the number of&#13;
fussers such as George pratt&#13;
James Reistrup, Dale Norton, and&#13;
kin never went fussing simply&#13;
could ·not cut chapel and fussas&#13;
under the old regime. It is&#13;
gentlemen should have&#13;
their hearts and heads cracked,&#13;
Continued on Page&#13;
&#13;
Orleans Yaps Humbled&#13;
for another successful seasons are&#13;
amoung the most promising re-&#13;
&#13;
Smith of Eagle Grove, Fred&#13;
Orville Crews of Sioux&#13;
nawa,&#13;
Omer, who threatens to replace the&#13;
ht. Downs of Manson, although&#13;
made a strong start but has&#13;
and has been forced back to the&#13;
whence he came. Sanger, although&#13;
game, showed extraordinary ability&#13;
ther game, not to be drawn into plays&#13;
result in his being put -0ut. Among&#13;
Walker and Forbes, trying for the&#13;
have a hard battle, but Forbes&#13;
out and \\'alker is warming the&#13;
d, Johnson and Wolle are showing&#13;
and seem to have their heart in the&#13;
utility man, McConkey is making a&#13;
bowing, often stepping in and' fillace when the regular is absent. Those&#13;
retaining their old positions are Van&#13;
p, Kingsbury, Hartley, Stonebrook,&#13;
and Northrup, although he is being&#13;
by a man from the federal league.&#13;
experienced man in the bushes, made&#13;
rt and is working under a handicap.&#13;
theseprospects, and under such coaches&#13;
Hayes, Jones, and Himmel, we should&#13;
)1&#13;
&#13;
Continued from Last Column.)&#13;
n the field and were halted only by&#13;
called.&#13;
halves the south Newton Band&#13;
more music.&#13;
The game was&#13;
hile Tom Kenney went home to see&#13;
a letter from Early, his home town.&#13;
return the game was resumed. Orleans&#13;
off Kingsbury made 15 yards on a&#13;
. Leitch was completely exhausted&#13;
eating a couple dozen onions he was&#13;
and agam went back into the game.&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
next play Kingsbury would have&#13;
touchdown but he broke his shoe string&#13;
(Continued on Page 206 .)&#13;
&#13;
CR U CIAL GAME OF SEASON GOES TO&#13;
SOUTH NEWTON BRAVES&#13;
&#13;
On Orleans Avenue there are two rooming&#13;
houses. One is called the Bleakly House and&#13;
the other the Patrick Gang. They bought a&#13;
football and practiced every day until they&#13;
thought they were quite. proficient in the workings of the game, and all were stricken with&#13;
inflated craniums.&#13;
They challenged the South Newton Braves&#13;
to a game of football. This South Newton&#13;
street also had two rooming houses, the Kennel Klub and Sunshine Inn, whose inmates&#13;
were all fine young men. Although these men&#13;
had no football and had had no practice, yet&#13;
they accepted the challenge of the Orleans&#13;
Yaps.&#13;
The game was called at 3 :30. At three the&#13;
bleachers were packed and the field lined with&#13;
students and cohorts of the two hostile camps.&#13;
At 3 :OS the South Newton team appeared and&#13;
were given a great ovation. At 3 :30 the Orleans team appeared and were greeted' with&#13;
hisses, cabbages, eggs and over-ripe fruit. The&#13;
South Newton Band now appeared and rendered&#13;
some partial airs.&#13;
At 3 :30 the wind whistled through the trees&#13;
and the game was on. It was a game remarkably free from football. South Newton kicked&#13;
off to Orleans. Kolp, the Orleans fullback was&#13;
downed in his tracks. Farnham gained four&#13;
yards through the line. Nicholson, Orleans&#13;
half, was stricken wirh goose pimples and had&#13;
to be removed from the game. At this point&#13;
Orleans tried a forward pass, but Hutchison,&#13;
not having his compass along, passed the ball&#13;
in the wrong direction. South Newton now&#13;
took the hall on downs. The mighty South&#13;
Newton backfield quartette, Kingsbury, Sherwood, Barks and Martin started a triumphant&#13;
(Continued in First Column.)&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fiv e&#13;
two hundred four&#13;
&#13;
THE SQUIRREL DODGER&#13;
LOCALS&#13;
we haven'thanded the Seniors any compliments because we are like the Father of our&#13;
Country, we cannot tell a lie.&#13;
&#13;
Judging from some of the hours the freshmen&#13;
keep, they must be out for milkmen.&#13;
&#13;
Chas. Fry has accepted a position at Stone&#13;
Park for the summer, teaching the ostriches to&#13;
fly.&#13;
&#13;
Joe Bogard will never try to bribe any of&#13;
the faculty again. He wanted to get on the&#13;
good side of the .Librarian, so he gave her a&#13;
box of rouge, but .Toe says he got about half&#13;
of it back again when she thanked him for it.&#13;
&#13;
Ruby Flrnn says she doesn't believe in preparedness, but that she wouldn't mind being&#13;
in arms.&#13;
&#13;
Archie Freeman has waited for the fussing&#13;
season to open up with Patience.&#13;
&#13;
willis Forbes has opened' up a new dray line&#13;
for books between Dolliver's and the Main Hall.&#13;
Times of transit: going north 8 :30 A. M.;&#13;
going south 12 :30 P. M.&#13;
&#13;
A petition is being circulated among the students to witness the girl's inter-collegiate debate: This will be presented to the College Educat10n Boa rd of Iowa for action upon.&#13;
&#13;
Minnie Fry. reports that she is studying so&#13;
little that she 1s almost getting Rusty.&#13;
&#13;
See "The Great Emancipator" by Harrison&#13;
Kilbourne. In this great play Killy announces&#13;
himself as heartil y in favor of freedom of the&#13;
Blackman.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred six&#13;
&#13;
Orleans Yaps&#13;
( Conti nued from&#13;
on their five y·ard 1·&#13;
. .&#13;
and&#13;
Orleans then got the ball&#13;
Bill Wolle here lost his s oes,&#13;
1s&#13;
ence (for the dead) f II over&#13;
.&#13;
they were being carried off the&#13;
..&#13;
After two or three&#13;
ore I&#13;
called ancl the Orleans aps went&#13;
deJected, because they had been&#13;
the South Newton&#13;
.&#13;
weeks&#13;
.&#13;
raves m pite&#13;
.&#13;
of practice. However it al&#13;
pain of their inflated cranium&#13;
being.&#13;
&#13;
about the campus with a melancholy&#13;
muttering, "'Why didn't Obrecht&#13;
wasn 't going to sleep there."&#13;
&#13;
Editorials Continued&#13;
they cannot go fussing during chapel&#13;
Horne, Harvey, Dodsley, Johnson,&#13;
Clark, Northrup, Forbes, Lloyd, McC&#13;
an army of others. VVas it not while&#13;
chapel that Professor Hayes first got&#13;
with Miss Brand? Was it not while&#13;
neath our fair trees ( 10 :20-10:40),&#13;
got that deeper friendship for Ruby?&#13;
not while stan ding by the window, in&#13;
er corrider during chapel that Mabel&#13;
of Glen as her Sir Galahad? Look&#13;
examples in contrast with these lint&#13;
see for yourself if it is not an inju&#13;
student body to be restricted to five&#13;
&#13;
We wonder who will take&#13;
rence's place, playing the part of&#13;
glee club trips next year.&#13;
&#13;
They are&#13;
&#13;
BOOSTERS&#13;
For&#13;
&#13;
ORNINGSIDE&#13;
two hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
FOUND&#13;
&#13;
CLOTHING HOUSE&#13;
" The Home of_ Good Clothes "&#13;
&#13;
Nobby Clothes for&#13;
College Men!&#13;
&#13;
letter was picked up in the corridor of the Main H all, first floor.&#13;
r&#13;
owner may recognize it we are printing it in full.&#13;
&#13;
Opie? W ell, he's my friend ( maybe more than t hat some time).&#13;
aophomore. I'm just a freshma n, you know Prof. J ones said Opie was&#13;
I guess he must have meant apt to flun k ; I hope so because then I could&#13;
&#13;
his class.&#13;
&#13;
they have lots of exams in his classes, so he studies hard and holds a class&#13;
outside the door j ust before exams, then he takes up a collection. When&#13;
&#13;
Clothes of Character&#13;
- Clothes of Refinement&#13;
- Clothes with that dash and&#13;
go to them all College&#13;
Men demand.&#13;
Such as - ·&#13;
&#13;
SocietyBRand Clothes&#13;
"For Y oung M en and Men Who Stay Young"&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES&#13;
are designed by men who are pastmasters in the art of ta1lonng-they&#13;
are styled up-to-the-minute, guaran&#13;
teed to fit and wear to perfection&#13;
&#13;
know answer he says, "See text, please, for answer" . But you know&#13;
the&#13;
profs don't have books, so that is w hy he is apt to flu nk.&#13;
&#13;
glade term is almost over. You see, I live almost a block from college,&#13;
the&#13;
get up so early. So to be su re to get there in t ime I have to have two alarm&#13;
I set for five o'clock. This wakes me up so I can set the other one fo r&#13;
that way I'm never late to classes.&#13;
I like baseball better than sewing because I know it better. All of our-boys&#13;
around their stockings. Opie says they are for the same reason that&#13;
white stripes around the tree trunks ; so that bugs can't crawl up them.&#13;
of the players tried to make a goal by pushing another down in the game.&#13;
umpire say "one down" and he told one fellow to strike, but he never did it&#13;
umpire seemed to know everybody pretty well because he kept waving&#13;
his shoulder. I should think they would have more than one ball fo r&#13;
wouldn't you ? Well I guess I had better close,&#13;
You rs confectionately,&#13;
R osie.&#13;
pie and I went to the movies last night.&#13;
is trying to listen to them.&#13;
&#13;
LOCAL S&#13;
M r. Fred Hackett B. V. D. has been&#13;
appointed assistant in t he F rench Department to assist Miss Cecilia Stenger.&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES&#13;
are " the clothes" among the young&#13;
men who choose their wearables&#13;
discriminately. They are clothes&#13;
that we, as well as the maker, back&#13;
to the limit.&#13;
-And our assortments of Society&#13;
Brand Clothes leave no clothing&#13;
want lacking - no matter· h ow&#13;
urgent your desire.&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
They weren't very clear and I&#13;
&#13;
T he results of the election fo r this year's&#13;
May Q ueen are as follows:&#13;
Harry R osene&#13;
452&#13;
Gailord Starr&#13;
326&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Agnes F ry and Francis Boyd have announced their intention of taking a cou rse&#13;
in oratory the remainder of the year.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIAL STATEMENT OF THE SIOUX '18.&#13;
figures have been compiled and published by the sioux '18&#13;
ment ,rith the view of putting the soft pedal on the numerous&#13;
and prattlings of the "Allied Army of Knockers" and the "Who&#13;
the Doe" Club.&#13;
&#13;
passedthe Sioux Board of Senselessship)&#13;
by&#13;
nditures&#13;
tique Mahogany Furniture. for Office&#13;
hound, to keep squirrels away from office&#13;
usine for Fry, (Taking Jule home)&#13;
fe Insurance, Barks and Sherwood&#13;
ent, of Jim for Lida&#13;
ree pairs of shoes for Harrington&#13;
's trip to Akron for inspiration&#13;
1vian Down, for Bill presented&#13;
arion Heikes, postage to Ill. U. for suggestions&#13;
ective for Rusty, to shadow Leitch&#13;
ars for office boy&#13;
Jar button for R. Smith, to produce dimple&#13;
ranees Kolp. Wedding present for Harve&#13;
ra Lewis. Auto veil&#13;
te Book for Athletic Editor&#13;
ttoon for Office&#13;
ildred Pecaut, to hire poems written&#13;
Rum for Richardson's hair&#13;
tbs, to obtain pictures&#13;
&#13;
WEARABLES FOR YOUNG MEN&#13;
You young fellows who want stylish, servicea&#13;
clothes with plenty of dash and go in them will find&#13;
&#13;
$ 385.95&#13;
10.00&#13;
85.73&#13;
1000.00&#13;
128.53&#13;
43.25&#13;
86.86&#13;
50.00&#13;
1079.14&#13;
25.00&#13;
1,007.85&#13;
.25&#13;
.01&#13;
25.00&#13;
.45&#13;
4.50&#13;
10.00&#13;
33 .75&#13;
47,698.75&#13;
1.19&#13;
.79&#13;
&#13;
..+9&#13;
&#13;
assortments of just this very kind at this store.&#13;
&#13;
Total ( adding machine broken)&#13;
&#13;
Also furnishings, hats, caps and shoes in the ne&#13;
of styles for young men.&#13;
PRICES VERY REASONABLE&#13;
&#13;
om Lloyd Hush money&#13;
$100.00&#13;
45.00&#13;
3.45&#13;
8,464.95&#13;
&#13;
pictures run by request&#13;
of Annuals&#13;
for unpublished scandal&#13;
&#13;
Deficit&#13;
&#13;
Total&#13;
&#13;
$6,493 .72&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ten&#13;
two hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
c a - - - - - - - - - - -- SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
STYLE-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
that elusive, exclusive&#13;
something that so many&#13;
asp ire to and s 0 few&#13;
achieve, is part and parcel of the clothes you'll&#13;
see in this "Live Store."&#13;
&#13;
Forbes takes off that girl's sweater.&#13;
&#13;
ebrook gets a steady girl.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
In the models for the Season&#13;
you can See it and Feel it.&#13;
Young men will find sparkling, snappy Styles in a greater&#13;
array and more striking assortments than ever before.&#13;
M~n of quiet taste will find&#13;
new notes of distinction in&#13;
the sort of clothes they like.&#13;
&#13;
r yields to temptation.&#13;
Kolp gets fussed.&#13;
&#13;
"STAR''&#13;
" MANHATTAN"&#13;
&#13;
"W. B."&#13;
&#13;
SHIRTS&#13;
"KNOX"&#13;
"STETSON"&#13;
MOORE&#13;
"SPECIAL"&#13;
&#13;
·nny Norton makes a date.&#13;
&#13;
e Boys see the girl's basketball games.&#13;
&#13;
dy sees a joke.&#13;
f. Jones gets a law passed to successfully stop the manufact ure of&#13;
ed cheese without stopping the manufact u re of all other kinds of&#13;
e freshmen quit chasing the milkmen around.&#13;
&#13;
ark gets to a class on ti:,1e.&#13;
&#13;
HATS&#13;
&#13;
Boys' Clothes of the Best&#13;
Kind in our Boys' Store&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twt/&lt;vt&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirtem&#13;
&#13;
WI NNING HUMOR OUS Poem&#13;
&#13;
We Would Like to S&#13;
and Collar You&#13;
THE&#13;
HOME OF GOOD SHIRTS AND&#13;
FURNISHINGS&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
BATH&#13;
ROBES&#13;
&#13;
Six Pairs&#13;
&#13;
Cotton Hose&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
to Wear&#13;
Six&#13;
&#13;
Months&#13;
or New&#13;
&#13;
Hose FREE&#13;
TRAVELING LUGGAGE&#13;
&#13;
NECKWEAR&#13;
HOSIERY&#13;
PAJAMAS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fourt een&#13;
&#13;
"THE RAVI NG"&#13;
BESSIE R EED&#13;
&#13;
'20&#13;
&#13;
so dreary one green freshman baby was weary&#13;
upon a d&#13;
'.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
roast the 111gh t befo1 ea&#13;
gave his number, then, like Williams took a slumber,&#13;
cl ass&#13;
..&#13;
·ovial&#13;
to restored J&#13;
gay an&#13;
.&#13;
Slumber m111us every snore.&#13;
&#13;
* * * *&#13;
Hyde and Search the sun did play as in his F ord he made his wayt his comrades on the distant shore-&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
the boat for a short Crews, a little Harder applied the fuse,&#13;
thus the lonely hours swiftly wore.&#13;
D arkness then and nothing more.&#13;
last the L ake came into view, and from his F ord he fairly flew,&#13;
0 gently stroke her Back of Steele once more0 say that she had D unn-again the class of work t hat she did when&#13;
childhood days the L izzie left the storeN ever again- no- nevermore.&#13;
to the \Vest-fall of the L ake, the L izzie came without mistake,&#13;
fore her there a league out from the shore,&#13;
t peace the great W hite ship, the Kamper drifted quietly at anchor,&#13;
ncircled by the night's majestic lore,&#13;
T ossed and rocked, no, nothing more.&#13;
f human eyes were not deceiving, it were t ime that she were leaving,&#13;
They would not leave him there upon the shore,&#13;
rne along by wings of air, the Call soon came "We're ,,·ait ing here,&#13;
ship will sail in just ten minutes more."&#13;
O nly this and nothing more.&#13;
ith one quick move he doffed his coat and sprang into an old rowboat,&#13;
Troutman paced aghast the rocky shore.&#13;
freshman lad so Bent-on going, saved the D ay by violent rowing,&#13;
twas Two-good the way the croud did roar,&#13;
Cheered and shouted, yea, and more.&#13;
ith cheerful sound of " H ackett, Hackett",· Fry ( ed ) the.engine of the packet,&#13;
Hall-em to-Ward the Sutherland's shore :&#13;
deck the Carver and the D ean, the Smith and Porter could be seen&#13;
Taylor and Butler with the ladies, yea, by the scoreAll of these and still some more.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fift een&#13;
&#13;
through his subconscious soul the English principles did roll&#13;
"Unity" be with him evermore?&#13;
'&#13;
"Emphasis" and then "Coherence" with him did start interference&#13;
answered not a Jeep, not even a single snore,&#13;
_&#13;
'&#13;
Green for sure and something more.&#13;
&#13;
THE SEAL OF TRU&#13;
The Foundation upon which this&#13;
has built since its&#13;
institution&#13;
1ncept1on years and years ago is the&#13;
Truth. The Truth in advertising&#13;
the Truth in merchandising, the&#13;
Truth over the counter, the truth&#13;
everywhere and nothing butthe Truth&#13;
THIS is the only fertile soil in&#13;
which any store can grow, thrive&#13;
and prosper, and the wonderful prosperity Davidson's have enjoyed is&#13;
proof conclusive that the Truth has&#13;
always been and is the pivot around&#13;
which all the activities of this estabment are revolving.&#13;
&#13;
TRUTH engenders public confidence and public cbnfidence is&#13;
the most cherished and valued asset&#13;
"'The Big Store" possesses. To foster, strengthen and spread this public confidence to the utmost hm1ts&#13;
of its sphere of influence shall be&#13;
its goal always.&#13;
&#13;
from Belew in trembling sound, a piteous wai l was wafted Raun&#13;
as like a Cow,-an Wolf's and Martin's roar,&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
was the old Bald-win with the Beard, as he his lady gently cheered&#13;
"le thus he sang-er 1&#13;
ove songs o ' er and o'er,&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Worse than Hilmer, yea far more.&#13;
&#13;
with this Wier ( d) and Hays ( y) tone, a Payne did Pearce his Hart&#13;
of Stone,&#13;
Pearced his Hart unto the very Corr,&#13;
Back: he Wendt to yonder side to ask her to become his bride&#13;
ore Abel was none, not even one Whitt-more.&#13;
De-well my lad, or nevermore.&#13;
ect your words right well old man, yes that was the emphasis plan,&#13;
you your point successfully would score&#13;
so with pleading words and clever, asked her to be his Doll-ever&#13;
h yes, Mei-Dell", she sobbed, "I'd just adore,&#13;
Yours I am for evermore."&#13;
&#13;
just as he was ready to speak, at yonder door he heard a click&#13;
door was locked, the English class was o'er&#13;
when he heard the sweet refrains of those entrancing chapel strains&#13;
1th tear-dimmed eyes in his boyish heart, he swore"Naps in class, NO, Nevermore."&#13;
&#13;
AMONDS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Your&#13;
Investmentsmoney put in a Di amon d wou Id be one of the most satisfactory&#13;
you could make&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
You can have the pie • · 0 f&#13;
·&#13;
. ~-ure . weanng the gem and the satisfaction of&#13;
W&#13;
ue Is Increasing&#13;
e are offering beautif I&#13;
. h.&#13;
bemely low prices.&#13;
u, pure w 1te and steel-blue Diamonds at exL_&#13;
&#13;
&amp;110Wing that its val&#13;
&#13;
DAV1DSON BROS. C&#13;
&#13;
Tlzen buy ofa fi.&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1,&#13;
&#13;
·I&#13;
&#13;
your&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
ra,---------- - -&#13;
&#13;
Reach Her Heart Through a Box of&#13;
&#13;
La Fama Chocola&#13;
" a m a tte r o f good taste"&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Co.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
where&#13;
&#13;
Quality is Supreme&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
"PALMER HOUSE OF SIOUX CITY"&#13;
&#13;
Modern in every respect. 230 rooms, 140 with private&#13;
Cafes unsurpassed and our metropolitan quick lunch&#13;
prices to meet all. Sanitary and up to the standard set&#13;
West Hate.&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL COMPANY, PROPS.&#13;
Jay MacLarty , Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Twas the night before Thursday w hen all through the school&#13;
ot a creature did stir but a couple of fools.&#13;
And J essie was sleeping so calmly in bed&#13;
While visions of discipline ran through her head.&#13;
And all the good students who honor the right,&#13;
Had Just settled themselves for the rest of the night,&#13;
when back in the library there appeared two young boys.&#13;
With pamt-brush and paint-pail they made not a noise.&#13;
These two young collegians, with slow stealthy stride&#13;
approached the pen closer and each other guyed&#13;
About which color would look best by the light of the day&#13;
red and Black they selected, both somber and gay.&#13;
'&#13;
Don t lean on the fence" and " K ids, keep away"&#13;
Were warning which glared at us all through the day.&#13;
And now one more mystery confronts our dear college ·&#13;
W&#13;
' .&#13;
e all seem a se&#13;
knowledge,&#13;
t he f o II .&#13;
O are the you ng culprits with artists rich mind?&#13;
ome help us ' youI SCOUn d re I t h. tangle unwind&#13;
IS&#13;
·&#13;
Students of&#13;
'II l&#13;
or111ngs1 e, though you may have done wrong&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
S u ,ong be 1·emem ere 111 verse&#13;
in song.&#13;
0 ere s to the&#13;
· ·&#13;
om we dare not disclose&#13;
ay they live Ion&#13;
d b h&#13;
'&#13;
an&#13;
e appy, and at last, sweet repose.&#13;
&#13;
C. I. S. '18&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
two lmndred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
THE OLYMPIA FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
New Store&#13;
&#13;
5(8 Pierce St.&#13;
&#13;
"Leads Them A II"&#13;
Potted Plants and Cut Flowers. Don't forget the loved&#13;
LOWEST PRICES.&#13;
ones at home.&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
"Don't Forget the New Store"&#13;
AN ODE&#13;
&#13;
L ive Stock Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
TOM DEAL T RY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
TAC-CU&#13;
COFFEE.&#13;
&#13;
35¢ a Pound&#13;
&#13;
FROM THE CLASS OF '18 TO THE CLASS OF ' 17&#13;
It was as freshmen seeking knowledge&#13;
That we came to Morningside College,&#13;
And you met us here, a baloon-dome sophomoric crew.&#13;
&#13;
It was as brothers t hat you met us,&#13;
But well we knew you would not let us&#13;
Know the plots you had against us, as 111 your minds they grew&#13;
As it came time fo r class scrapping,&#13;
Then you tried to catch us napping,&#13;
And you took some of our members out into the ru ral brush.&#13;
And you bound them with strong fetters,&#13;
You were regular goat-getters,&#13;
But your hopes were to be shattered, and trampled in the slush.&#13;
As the time came for the tussle&#13;
All fresh men began to hustle,&#13;
They escaped the bonds t hat bound them, and to the fray they flew&#13;
Hard they fought, cheered on by co-ed,&#13;
But we freshies from the start , led ,&#13;
And when the scrap was over, defeat was hung on you.&#13;
Since that time we've ne'er been beaten&#13;
You've been skin ned alive and eaten&#13;
By the dear old class that graduates in the year 191 8.&#13;
Both in basketball and t rack meets,&#13;
1 ou ve been made to t ake the back seats&#13;
And in many other conflicts, you've been clicked upon the bean.&#13;
ow as seniors you must leave us&#13;
We scarce can tell how it will grieve us&#13;
alothoughyou're still uncultu red , your faults we'll overlook,&#13;
as we bid fa rewell tomorrow&#13;
though it causes both much sorrow&#13;
yet in ways th t we outcl ass you, we still could wnte a book.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
!:!&#13;
&#13;
C. I. S. '1 8.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty&#13;
i'U.'O&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
---------Ii]&#13;
&#13;
G. ADOLPH OLSON, Pres. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
OLSON'S&#13;
Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 Pearl Street, SIOUX CITY, IOWA .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City' s Only Exclusive Sporting Goods&#13;
ALWAYS READY TO SUPPLY&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the Sportsman and Athlete&#13;
AGENTS&#13;
&#13;
FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
&#13;
A. S. Reach Co., P. Goldsmith's Sons&#13;
&#13;
Frolics&#13;
nf the&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Books&#13;
&#13;
A 29- Reel Photoplay&#13;
&#13;
College Book Store&#13;
G. T. PENDELL, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
SlOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
moore's Non-Leakable&#13;
Fountain Pens&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-three&#13;
two hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
COMING ATTRACTI ONS&#13;
&#13;
LOONAN .LUMBER COMPAN&#13;
&#13;
J ames Kolp in "The Little Girl Next D oor."&#13;
Song Hits-"There's no place like home."&#13;
"By the light of the silvery moon."&#13;
&#13;
122 West Seventh Street&#13;
&#13;
Let us Figure your next&#13;
&#13;
LUMBER BILL&#13;
O nly the Best Materials and the Lowest Prices&#13;
N.&#13;
Auto Phone 1075&#13;
&#13;
ONE NIGHT ONLY&#13;
Williams in "A Bachelor's Honeymoon"&#13;
Assisted by Obe Wenig.&#13;
Song Hits-"No Wedding Bells for Me."&#13;
"I want to be a bachelor"&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Class Pins&#13;
&#13;
Medals&#13;
&#13;
Don VanHorne and lVIarie l\1ahood in "The Strollers"&#13;
Don't miss this.&#13;
6 shows daily&#13;
&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing&#13;
&#13;
Jonas Olson &amp; Co&#13;
&#13;
Frances Weir and Flossy Day in "The Man From Home."&#13;
Song Hits-"! can't forget that old home town of mine."&#13;
"O promise me"&#13;
A three month's run, commencing June 15.&#13;
&#13;
Established '! 895&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturing Jewelers and&#13;
Diamond Mounters&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
&#13;
5 10 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
The Exclusive Women 's Shop of Better Service&#13;
&#13;
Tom Kenney in "the Woman in the Case."&#13;
J ust finished a four year successful run in Early&#13;
&#13;
Sue WormJy in "The Winning of Jerry Johnson"&#13;
Song Hit-"I'll get you"&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury and Katinka Neilson in "The Treaty of Trent" ( S. D.)&#13;
the public will have a chance to see Mr. Kingsbury, the expert baggage smasher,&#13;
by miss Neilson in their new life drama. Messrs. Walker and Freeman&#13;
the part of the villains in this soul-stirring play.&#13;
&#13;
THE ANDERSON SHOP&#13;
506 Fourth Street&#13;
Women 's and Misses ' High Grade Suits, Coats, Dresses&#13;
Skirts and Blouses&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
PLAYING CONTINUOUSLY&#13;
Sam Lory in "The Furnace"&#13;
Appearing for the fourth season in his great song hit,&#13;
"Hot Air"&#13;
IO A. M. to 11 P . M. Daily&#13;
&#13;
two hundred lwe11ty-fivc&#13;
&#13;
Why&#13;
&#13;
are the naughty, naughty&#13;
t swiped the boys clothing.&#13;
&#13;
fiendish glee written on their&#13;
This picture was a strong conin the atrocious contest, but&#13;
receive first because of bribes&#13;
ats which the editor received.&#13;
't tell you all we would like&#13;
&#13;
You Should Insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand&#13;
&#13;
Food Products&#13;
Look for the Rose on&#13;
Every package&#13;
&#13;
The Reason ts This Superb Brand is the result of&#13;
many years of persistent effort&#13;
to assemble under one Brand&#13;
a complete line of Food Products of the very highest quality&#13;
at the most reasonable prices&#13;
You always get the best when you insisi on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand Food Produc&#13;
&#13;
3re the victims of the above&#13;
. These poor boys had to&#13;
up for the lost time while the&#13;
had their clothes.&#13;
are here seen "sawing wood",&#13;
avorite pastime.&#13;
&#13;
are the champion som'r'set&#13;
ewton and OrThe man in the&#13;
r is the champion stepper in&#13;
and it is expected that he will&#13;
oe's record before June I.&#13;
&#13;
of South&#13;
&#13;
we have N akado and his hathis might be interpreted as&#13;
rtisement for the Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
and Awning Company, but it&#13;
&#13;
a quartette of versatile abili-&#13;
&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
&#13;
Tolerton &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
&#13;
the stepper, Hunt&#13;
etball forward , P ayne t h e&#13;
d V&#13;
an&#13;
anH orne, d ebater and&#13;
extraordinary.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-six&#13;
two hundred tw enty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
European Plan&#13;
&#13;
125 Rooms---F orty with Bath&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
New Lunch Room Recently Installed&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
Corner Fifth and Jackson&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
HOMES&#13;
&#13;
not&#13;
&#13;
HOUSES&#13;
&#13;
PILCHARD BUILDING CO.&#13;
P. H. PILCHARD, President&#13;
&#13;
the Petty Gang of last year.&#13;
happy they look as they gaze&#13;
distance out of which will&#13;
young Sir Galahads, or&#13;
say Romeos, or possibly they&#13;
the cap and bells.&#13;
&#13;
next is&#13;
rather the case is down as&#13;
Mary says&#13;
doesn't&#13;
hair is&#13;
&#13;
are the preps.&#13;
&#13;
On the ex-&#13;
&#13;
left is Sanger, who can resist&#13;
in any form and of very&#13;
ngth. There are also some&#13;
alubrities" here.&#13;
&#13;
QUARTER MILLION CAPITAL&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Second Floor Franees Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
It is a matter of Especial pride that during the past year we have De&#13;
our faith in the Suburb of Morningside in the erection of our new and modernly&#13;
ped Bank Building. Morningside College, with its rapid strides in educational&#13;
ment has helped us greatly in making this substantial improvement possible&#13;
for the banking needs of a city suburb is a live factor in the growth and&#13;
ages offered to prospective home builders and home owners. We are esp&#13;
ful to the college faculty and students for past favors and shall always use our&#13;
forts in the handling of their accounts.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
&#13;
home makers. On the left&#13;
of the victims, just ready for&#13;
lice. Its too bad and they're&#13;
&#13;
picture we had her&#13;
part lY hidden' by&#13;
hand although she said she&#13;
w it was there · A 1&#13;
of&#13;
says that sensations benot1ceable if habitually 1g-&#13;
&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY $100,000&#13;
JOHN SCOTT, JR., Cashier&#13;
&#13;
W . L. AYERS, Assistant Cashier&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-eight&#13;
two hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
YOU FRIENDS CAN BUY ANYTHng&#13;
THAT YOU CAN GIVE THEM&#13;
&#13;
Except Your Photograp&#13;
&#13;
"WHERE QUALITY IS REPRESENTED"&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
410 Pierce St. Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
we have the Prattler Club.&#13;
Stonebrook, who believes&#13;
&#13;
fu ing and concentrated efritchard, who fusses a nice&#13;
sometimes and Randolph who,&#13;
y, believes in much fussing,&#13;
concentrated fussing; Engell-known violator of the ten&#13;
rule; \Varnes who roomed&#13;
rry and has gone home to see&#13;
, and McBride&#13;
the snipe&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
IS after the Great Compromise&#13;
6 which was settled peaceab ly&#13;
t bloodshed and without ComArbitration, but nevertheless&#13;
rily to all parties.&#13;
the most notorious figure&#13;
picture is th at illustrious ( ?)&#13;
Minnie Fry. She and Rusty&#13;
are often seen together, thus&#13;
out that old Maxim, "Birds&#13;
ther."&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S&#13;
&#13;
BIGGEST AND BUSIEST&#13;
STUDIQ&#13;
&#13;
end are the champion long&#13;
ers of the junior and se, respecti vely. We don't&#13;
hether they have been playing&#13;
not but according to King&#13;
been holding some good&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty&#13;
two hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
A.R.JOHNSON &amp;C&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
pictures are typical of Morn-&#13;
&#13;
groups.&#13;
first one is entitled "Why&#13;
I men come to Morning&#13;
e know a good one on the&#13;
right, but we&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Mother for&#13;
&#13;
MOTHER'S and NATURE'S MEAL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Out of Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
&#13;
up-river t rip. This is the crew&#13;
boat&#13;
R. slow on the Big&#13;
River. T hey go on duty at&#13;
, and stay until 12 P."M.&#13;
&#13;
Our Customers are Our Best Reference&#13;
Auto Phone 1197&#13;
Bell hone 197&#13;
&#13;
408-410&#13;
d to be a snake dance, a bread&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRIC&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
The Practicability and Stability of brick---its value as an investm&#13;
a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever. Thoughts&#13;
these matters we would like to submit for consideration&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Brick &amp; Tile C&#13;
&#13;
more Salubrities. From left&#13;
Tuffer N . LeaHelen Highwater, A Buncha&#13;
Etta Bugg, G. A Longfellona Carr, Will E. Bite, and G.&#13;
a Crabb.&#13;
t they are :&#13;
&#13;
N aughty. Why childhere is your chaperone. There&#13;
eats, the girls, and everything&#13;
party, but the chaperD1d you forget about the rule&#13;
Jawn?&#13;
&#13;
Office and Display Room, No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
tw o lmndr!'.i thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
DR. CLARA L. O CKERMAN&#13;
&#13;
OCKERMAN &amp; OCKERMAN&#13;
&#13;
linbbolm Furniture Co&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Homes Furnished thruout&#13;
&#13;
310 Nebraska Street&#13;
We are working eleven&#13;
&#13;
41 2- 14- 16 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
people in this office&#13;
&#13;
TIME FOR EVERYONE&#13;
&#13;
WE OFFER FOR&#13;
$ 100,000.00&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
This bank looks after the requirements&#13;
of the small depositors as carefully as it&#13;
does the large ones.&#13;
Don't think because you do not&#13;
handle large sums of money, that we&#13;
are indifferent to -you.&#13;
We have time for everyone&#13;
comes in our bank.&#13;
We pay 4 %&#13;
deposits.&#13;
&#13;
Interest payable February IS&#13;
gust 15. Certificates in a&#13;
$100 or any mutiple. A safe&#13;
ment in a strong, well ma&#13;
pany.&#13;
&#13;
there is a very interesting&#13;
nnected with these pictures,&#13;
&#13;
ever the moral of it is.&#13;
t tell us you have some good&#13;
but that " ·e can't have them,&#13;
&#13;
who&#13;
&#13;
on savings and time&#13;
&#13;
The Continental National Bank&#13;
&#13;
GEO. CALL,&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
"OU&#13;
&#13;
O F THE HIGH rent&#13;
&#13;
413 4th xtreet&#13;
&#13;
DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHINGS&#13;
824 Fourth Street: Corner of Jennings&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
Outdoors, Afield and Afloat&#13;
&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C lees&#13;
Tennis, Golf, Baseball Goods&#13;
Fishing Tackle, Vacuum Bottles, Auto lunch Kits&#13;
and Vacalion&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
Ware&#13;
&#13;
312-15&#13;
Nebraska St&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-/ our&#13;
two hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
CANDY&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
O U R SPEC IALTY, CHO I CE&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Creations&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO . FRESH B LOSSOMS . E XPERT K N O WLE DGE, PROMPT SE RVIC E , LOWES T PRKES ,&#13;
C HOICE SELECTIONS .&#13;
&#13;
OUR QUALITY C A NDI E S, AND I CE CR EAM , FRESH DA ILY&#13;
&#13;
DO N 'T M I S S OU R&#13;
&#13;
itt&#13;
&#13;
A BEA U T Y SPOT&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
PLA,:E DINNER&#13;
&#13;
D AILY&#13;
&#13;
BELL PHONE : 1240&#13;
&#13;
Womens and Misses&#13;
•&#13;
§uits, coats&#13;
&#13;
Feeding time. See how the crowd&#13;
has gathered around, as it always does,&#13;
when the squirrels are being fed .&#13;
See the great dexterity with which&#13;
M abel serves the food , thinking of the&#13;
future. Even R uth is smiling as if&#13;
contemplating a happy future.&#13;
To be shot at sunrise. Some are&#13;
partly so now. See how Clara&#13;
through fo rce of habit, holds the hand&#13;
of the person beside her. And there&#13;
is Cleo, who just loves to put on&#13;
stunts at the carnival, or perhaps we&#13;
should say puts on love stunts.&#13;
This is the Devitt Bunch. The&#13;
boy standing at the left with that&#13;
platonic smile, Sammy, \Yould be a&#13;
pretty good kid if he wasn't rooming&#13;
,Yith Strangler Norton. This taken&#13;
with another fact, that he stays with&#13;
the Patrick Gang accounts fo r his&#13;
eccentricities.&#13;
Therefore we pity&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Afternoon dresses&#13;
also&#13;
&#13;
Distributors&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
smart college&#13;
&#13;
footwear&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
Men&#13;
And Women&#13;
&#13;
PETERS &amp; HARRINGTON&#13;
The House of Quality Style and&#13;
&#13;
THE MORN INGSIDE R EAL ESTA TE MEN&#13;
&#13;
Houses, Lots and City Property&#13;
&#13;
Farm Lands and Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Office at Peters Park Station&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6464&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-six&#13;
fq;;o hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
picture of the " Cobb House".&#13;
left to right they are : I. Otto&#13;
, Ida K now, M. T. D ome, 0 .&#13;
a )lalone, I. Will Stingham, LePagenster, Squ r L. Feed, Fuss M&#13;
ly. Below are : S. Nauta Walk0 . Leva Malone&#13;
&#13;
to the farm movement".&#13;
very clearly why so many boys&#13;
&#13;
ve chool and go back to the farm .&#13;
&#13;
Anybody ,rho notices who is in th&#13;
t seatwith A I could tell that this&#13;
&#13;
re was taken last year. This&#13;
Al and Marionas we saw t hem&#13;
of the time then.&#13;
&#13;
The pen with the " Perfect Balance" and the&#13;
"Better Shape"&#13;
&#13;
Please notice the central figu re in&#13;
picture. J ust recently she has&#13;
ered whether she w ill affiliate&#13;
life with nature or with music&#13;
'&#13;
nature finally won.&#13;
&#13;
A point for every kind of work&#13;
&#13;
JIFFY PEN COMPANY&#13;
Manufacturers&#13;
406 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
n't the striped girl look melanand&#13;
ect ·&#13;
course, any&#13;
ould who 11 t out f or a picnic&#13;
•&#13;
with these guys w hen "he" is&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
W. A HOUSTON, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
t&lt;teo l,u11dred tl,irty-eigl,t&#13;
two l,u11dred thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
--- -- - - - - - - - - - - 6 ]&#13;
CONSERVE YOU R ENERGIES&#13;
&#13;
Spring, 1917&#13;
&#13;
Make your efforts count for as much as possible. You cannot do thi&#13;
all you earn. Therefore the sensible thin g to do, is place your surplu 8&#13;
8&#13;
ing, w here it will be safe and increase.&#13;
we invite you to make use of our Savings Se r vice, w hich will be the&#13;
custodian.&#13;
&#13;
Howard Clothing Co.&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Security Build ing&#13;
&#13;
MEN 'S STORE&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Tops&#13;
Cushions and&#13;
Upholstery&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
H EDEN BERG&#13;
&#13;
Out of the Ordinary&#13;
is Out of the R ut&#13;
&#13;
420 Pierce Str.&#13;
&#13;
Fugitives. From left to right :&#13;
Head , W ersen Y eusless,&#13;
r E.&#13;
E. Z . M ark, Iss A&#13;
&#13;
ood .&#13;
&#13;
Manufactured and Repaired&#13;
&#13;
JOBBERS OF&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
HEAVY H ARD WA RE&#13;
Blacksmith, Mechanic's and&#13;
Garage Supplies&#13;
Automobile Accessories&#13;
I mplement Specialties&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX CITY&#13;
JRON COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
&#13;
FRUITS and&#13;
PR ODUCE&#13;
&#13;
CLYDE H. TENNIS&#13;
330-331 Davidson Build ing&#13;
&#13;
INVESTMEN TS&#13;
Fa rm L and s&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-tw o&#13;
&#13;
H ere w e&#13;
some historic personages. They&#13;
: Cleopatra M arie Antoinette,&#13;
therine de Medici H etty Green,&#13;
een Victoria J oan of Arc, Mrs.&#13;
iu Caesar, Cassie C hadwick, M aTheresa, and M ary Pickfo rd.&#13;
otice.&#13;
&#13;
Here is a typical senior.&#13;
&#13;
ote the intelligent look on th at face,&#13;
&#13;
broad fo rehead and fa r-seeing eyes.&#13;
JS picture is here fo r two reasons&#13;
give you a pictu re of a senior stu~&#13;
t and also because we don 't w ish&#13;
pictures to vary too much.&#13;
&#13;
this&#13;
&#13;
is our Red H ead Club. Th e&#13;
notable person age here is Bishop&#13;
our Prominent preacher,&#13;
and bootlegger. When this&#13;
was taken he had just come&#13;
from J efferson.&#13;
&#13;
tw o hu11dred f orly-three&#13;
&#13;
- --------------6]&#13;
&#13;
TODD - BECKER CO.&#13;
Drugs, Candies&#13;
&#13;
Kodaks and Finishing&#13;
Cut Flowers and Designs&#13;
&#13;
ENJOY REFRESHMENTS OR LUNCH IN OUR TEA ROOM&#13;
&#13;
TODD - BECKER CO.&#13;
this is not th·e womens ward in&#13;
city jail, although some might&#13;
&#13;
so. This is a corner of our&#13;
estic science department where&#13;
girls cook things for the biology&#13;
t-0 save the boys the trouble of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Folks&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
College Students&#13;
&#13;
_Ilgn't you pity that one lad y there,&#13;
t junior? Dame Fortune was&#13;
to her and brought her into this&#13;
h of unsophisticated Sophs, and&#13;
&#13;
all agree that&#13;
&#13;
LARSON'S&#13;
is the very best place to buy FR UJTS&#13;
and VEGETABLES, FANCY CAKES&#13;
and all sorts of PICKLES for their&#13;
"spreads" and picnics&#13;
&#13;
THE "BIG" STORE&#13;
Around the Corner off the Campus&#13;
&#13;
Wouldn't the little squirrels ha_e&#13;
v&#13;
ins" here? Gee, they'd feast for&#13;
month. But these ladies feel safe&#13;
use they're behind thick walls&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON LUMBER CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA, Fourth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete stock of building material&#13;
&#13;
in the city. Do not fail to let us&#13;
figure on your bill.&#13;
PHONES: Auto 1065. Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
two hu11dred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-ji'U e&#13;
&#13;
I a - - - - - - - - - -- -&#13;
&#13;
GUY N. PILLSBURY&#13;
Residence Phone Auto 6 190&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
PILLSBURY &amp; ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
would call this picture "hashed&#13;
rones".&#13;
Women's Ath letics,&#13;
Expression and Agriculture&#13;
meet here. As certain bells have&#13;
ince this picture was taken, we&#13;
not say any more.&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate and Insurance&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6694&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Our Auto Service is at Your Disposal for the&#13;
&#13;
This is a picture- of the sophomores&#13;
they were freshmen, althou gh&#13;
have not improved much. As&#13;
background of this picture is also&#13;
n it is impossible to distinguish&#13;
inly where the landscape ends and&#13;
freshmen start.&#13;
&#13;
When You Get it from Us&#13;
It's Right&#13;
The resources of our shop in&#13;
ideas, suggestions, criticisms&#13;
workmanship, materials - every&#13;
helpful thing that goes to make&#13;
up our better-than-ordinary print&#13;
ing- are always at your beck and&#13;
call. We invite you to use them.&#13;
&#13;
to adapt our banking&#13;
ence and facilities to the&#13;
quirements of our custo&#13;
&#13;
Security Natio&#13;
&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
Deak says, "Tread Easy", so we&#13;
n't say anything about this, algh we ha ve the goods on him.&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surpl&#13;
&#13;
$500,000&#13;
&#13;
Interstate Publishing Co.&#13;
Printers&#13;
&#13;
Stationers&#13;
&#13;
W. P. MANLEY&#13;
A. BLACK&#13;
W. BRITTON&#13;
G. CUMMINS&#13;
R. MANLEY&#13;
&#13;
We don't know whether the gun&#13;
for self-defense against squirrels or&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
Wholesalers and Retailers of sweet Cream, Milk&#13;
and Lactone Buttermilk&#13;
&#13;
From left to right they are :&#13;
Quick, Otto B. Schott, I.&#13;
a !\Iule, and Ima Nutt.&#13;
&#13;
i /.&#13;
&#13;
write volumes on the&#13;
ered careers of these four and of&#13;
trail of broken hearts they have&#13;
by the wayside. But suffice it to&#13;
they are sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
Our Cream is Served at Morningside Pharmac!J and Cecelia Park. drug&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM co.&#13;
&#13;
707. FIFTHS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-six&#13;
two hundred f orly-seven&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY FEEDS&#13;
&#13;
" The Drug Store Where they Make you Feel at Home&#13;
&#13;
a nd&#13;
&#13;
GRADED HAY&#13;
Alfalfa, Molasses Feeds, Dairy Feed s, Hay Fat Feeds, Horse Feed.&#13;
Poultry and Chick Feeds made in Sioux City, under C.&#13;
&#13;
Make fat&#13;
&#13;
horses, steers, hogs, sheep and poultry.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
M. brand.&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the feeder&#13;
&#13;
C. J. MILLIGAN COMPANY, Inc.&#13;
304 Wall Street, Souix City, Iowa&#13;
utablished 1899. Me_ l er of&#13;
m&#13;
National Hay Assoc1ahon,&#13;
and Sioux City Board of Trade.&#13;
&#13;
S tudents a re invited to&#13;
inspect our plan t at&#13;
any time.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ELEVATOR FEED &amp; COAL CO.&#13;
East Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Coal&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
E. K. BAR EY&#13;
Prop.&#13;
&#13;
A. B. HIRSCHMA&#13;
&#13;
Feed&#13;
&#13;
Hay&#13;
&#13;
Retail d·eJiveries in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
H ere&#13;
t noble, illust rious, peppery, un-&#13;
&#13;
ble class of 1918. W e are&#13;
you don't belong to this class,&#13;
all of you can't be as fortunate&#13;
&#13;
Ass't l\lang'r&#13;
&#13;
i is one of the annual up-river&#13;
The ignoble ignoramus in the&#13;
ound is King Herald, who is&#13;
"ng back and forth as he impay awaits the arrival of Queen&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park·&#13;
&#13;
is part of the 1918 Class&#13;
• Yes they are noted fo r their&#13;
· and general all-around&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
two hundred f orty -eight&#13;
two hundred forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE MAN&#13;
Learns&#13;
&#13;
WELL&#13;
&#13;
DOES WELL&#13;
&#13;
BUILDS WELL&#13;
This is part of the ill ustrious C lass&#13;
&#13;
If his Plumbing and Heating is Installed by&#13;
&#13;
1918 when they we re freshmen,&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAVES CO.&#13;
&#13;
even then they were admitted to&#13;
a talented and industrious bunch.&#13;
&#13;
513 Jackson Ave.&#13;
&#13;
P er-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
It's an Established Fact&#13;
That good Jewelry is to be&#13;
found at the Store of the&#13;
&#13;
they have a mere ma n co rn ered&#13;
n there. We hope the poo r fe l-&#13;
&#13;
Here is the Naboklis C lub.&#13;
&#13;
T his&#13;
Some&#13;
their classmates visited th em but&#13;
re violentl y ejected fro m thei r pre-&#13;
&#13;
rty was for members onl y.&#13;
&#13;
W5tll 1!,.&#13;
Established in 1877 and maintaining&#13;
a policy during these years w hich&#13;
now bespeaks for itself&#13;
&#13;
This is a&#13;
&#13;
fres hme n breakfas t .&#13;
didn 't dare to go to Sou th R abecause there were so m any squirthere so they had to have th eir litpicnic on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WOR&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
Bank, Store, Offece Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
Our Motto is Quality&#13;
&#13;
some more of that ' 18 c1ass.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
E .&#13;
&#13;
t y they have been slickering fru it&#13;
hope it wa s f&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
t h e S e111ors.&#13;
&#13;
507-509-511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
tv.;o hundred fift y&#13;
&#13;
/,;.;;o hun dr ed fifty-o ne&#13;
&#13;
MORINGSIDE GIRLS AT LAKE GENEVA&#13;
" Geneva, so much looked forward to--so much enjoyed" was a slogan which proved itself to the Morningside Delagation last August. After some trying&#13;
experiences with such trivialities as no breakfasts and&#13;
lost baggage, Morningside found her way to . Williams&#13;
Bay, Wisconsin&#13;
where with two hundred college and&#13;
university girls of Chicago, a steamer was boarded and&#13;
guid'ed to that beautiful si te of the Y. M. C. A. College-Summer Camp.&#13;
&#13;
Service Courtesy Safety Convenienc&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
E. L. KIRK,&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
Everyone was made to feel quite at home and it was&#13;
but a short time until we were located and settled in&#13;
our tent near Grinnell, Cornell and Ames, for a ten&#13;
day camp. Nine hundred and fifty girls can make a&#13;
decided impression on any community, but soon we&#13;
found that the great oaks, parks, drives, shady paths,&#13;
and the lake, dotted' in every direction with yachts,&#13;
steamers, sails, and happy bathers, gradually impressed&#13;
us in such a way that the remainder of the time we&#13;
gave our selves up to the "spell of Geneva."&#13;
Because we had the largest conference ever held&#13;
there, it was necessary to be very alert in order to take&#13;
in everything that the committees in charge offered.&#13;
For instance, one failing to reaeh the Dining Hall at&#13;
the proper time might miss the first four or five courses&#13;
of the dinner, and at Geneva this does not do. The&#13;
usual wa lks, hik es, swims, picnics, etc., were indulged&#13;
in, if one cou ld mange either side of the " two o'clock&#13;
quiet hour" skillfu ll y. Classes and lectures took up the&#13;
morning hours, w hil e in the evening ad'dresses by&#13;
famous men drew immense crowds from surrounding&#13;
camps.&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
ICE CREAM&#13;
The Cream&#13;
of Quality&#13;
We furnish any Special Flavor Wanted&#13;
in Ice Cream, Ices, Sherbets&#13;
ORDER FROM THE DEALER&#13;
&#13;
A reception given at the first of the Conference made&#13;
us feel acquainted and until the time we parted in&#13;
Chicago, we considered ourse lves as just one big family. T here was no unfriend ly rivalry at '&#13;
time and&#13;
various " U"s and' Colleges met together for chats,&#13;
study, good times or prayer after the even ing services.&#13;
The influence of the great men and women· who were&#13;
there fo r our uplift and education cou ld not help but&#13;
broaden our lives. Christi an spirit and' fe ll owship were&#13;
everywhere. If you have not been to Geneva, plan to&#13;
go next year, as it should be a part of every student's&#13;
co ll ege course.&#13;
&#13;
'' Hanfords Creamery · Butter'&#13;
The Best in Every Way&#13;
Sold by all Discriminating Dealers&#13;
&#13;
F. M. S., '17.&#13;
Wm. Beuttler&#13;
&#13;
BEUTTLER &amp; arnold&#13;
This Firm Designed the Alumni Gymnasium&#13;
and Rebuilt the Conservatory&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Storing&#13;
&#13;
Packing&#13;
&#13;
Shipping Household Goods and Pianos&#13;
&#13;
Architects&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4240&#13;
&#13;
Moving&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. I&#13;
&#13;
beakins Van &amp; storage Co&#13;
120 Riverside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-two&#13;
two hundred /if ty-three&#13;
&#13;
Lake Geneva for&#13;
Men&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Think it Over.&#13;
&#13;
There is no reason why ·you&#13;
should not use the Automatic&#13;
Telephone exclusivelyThere is every reason why&#13;
you should.&#13;
&#13;
Think it ·Over.&#13;
&#13;
an ·&#13;
impe t u ous demand for&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
Leadership in this world today&#13;
ding within the walls of every&#13;
t ts&#13;
.&#13;
in America. Nothing short of a&#13;
" d bl l d"&#13;
includi ng every re&#13;
e&#13;
Iege ma n with a great evanglist1c pas.&#13;
.&#13;
will be sufficient fo r the 1mmed1ate&#13;
&#13;
There is&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
414-416 Court&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Automatic-1346&#13;
&#13;
Established 1883&#13;
&#13;
~tlliam Gordon&#13;
The Real Estate M an&#13;
&#13;
demands of the future.&#13;
The Lake Geneva Stu dent Conference&#13;
one of the most ferti le spots in the&#13;
orld for the birth of ideals that direct&#13;
the course of tru e Christian Ii ves. Of&#13;
the nine hundred and fifty men who gathon the shores of Lake Geneva every&#13;
ear, perhaps every man w ould say, that&#13;
hi conception of what Ch ri stianity should&#13;
ean to a college man ha d been changed&#13;
that he- has become a more efficient&#13;
Lake Geneva invites eve ry college student who has accepted, or is willing to&#13;
accept definite responsibil ity for the p romotion of Christian influe nce in college. ·&#13;
&#13;
No pains have been spared to secure&#13;
&#13;
the men who are especia lly qualified in&#13;
&#13;
705-710 Frances Building&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
leading students into such vital relation ship with Jesus Christ. We feel safe&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
therefore in recommending Geneva as an&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
essential part of a complete college edu GO TO GENEY A.&#13;
R. J. H., ' '17.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Stationery Co&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX C ITY&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-fou r&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Phone us your Coal Order&#13;
We will take care of you&#13;
when the t •me comes&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal and Building Material&#13;
J,.&#13;
200 United Bank&#13;
Au to Phone 2174&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
building phone&#13;
&#13;
The Place to Buy TTunks is&#13;
Where Trunks are Made&#13;
SAMPLE CASES TO ORDER&#13;
Repairing Done&#13;
Ladies' Hand Bags Repaired&#13;
&#13;
D. S. ANTHON Y&#13;
Ma nufacturer&#13;
5th Street, near Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred /ifty-fi'Ve&#13;
&#13;
When Ordering Flowers, Remember K rooneme&#13;
WHY?·&#13;
&#13;
During the past seven years nineteen )Iorningside st udents have en·oyed a 1·ery profitable part of their&#13;
Summer ,·acations at t he McBride&#13;
Lakeside L aboratory on West Okiboji L ake. Here&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Because they are Distinctive and Best&#13;
Corsage Bouquets and Commencement Flowers put up in the Late&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
ower&#13;
&#13;
J. KROONEMEYER&#13;
Successor to Elder&#13;
&#13;
Greenhouse, 15th and Omaha&#13;
&#13;
512 fifth&#13;
&#13;
If you are looking for&#13;
&#13;
Service and quality&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
&#13;
Call both Phones&#13;
&#13;
2512&#13;
&#13;
Manu/aclurer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
A. F. Jensen&#13;
&#13;
H. A. Morrill&#13;
&#13;
SCHOENEMAN-JENSEN&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
3 10 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ROSS M. COOMER, Mem. Am. Soc. C. E.&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL,&#13;
Engineers and Contractors&#13;
WE BUilT MORNINGSIDE Collegeg&#13;
311-312 United Bank Building&#13;
Ask our Clients about us&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The McBride Lake.s ide&#13;
Laboratorp&#13;
&#13;
-"ou r life, exempt from public&#13;
hau nt,&#13;
Finds tongues in trees, books in runing brooks,&#13;
Sermons in stones, and good in everything."&#13;
&#13;
A summer spent here on moranic&#13;
hills, natural prairies, woodland shores&#13;
and sparkling waters of Iowa's most&#13;
beautiful summer resor t will never&#13;
be forgotten by anyone w ho has availed himself of the unequaled opportunitr afforded here for combining&#13;
tudy and recreation.&#13;
From the time your ambitious tentmate rouses you from sou nd outdoor&#13;
sleep until you wearily forget yourself in the same sound slumber on the&#13;
ame cot at night, there is never a dull&#13;
minute. Y ou get to breakfast on&#13;
time at six forty-five and at tempt to&#13;
satisfr a ravenous appetite. At seven-thirty you meet fo r classes or embark on a field trip w ith hand lens&#13;
bird glass, or specimen cases under the&#13;
direction of the able instructor who&#13;
I enjoying&#13;
the experience as much as&#13;
anyone. It is a long w hile u ntil din~er at elevem-forty-five and your appetite is still ravenous, as is that of the&#13;
others. T o&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
eat t ree times a day&#13;
With students of other colleges and&#13;
teachers of&#13;
l&#13;
.&#13;
ear11111g, experience&#13;
and travel who are a ll 111 for a genu.&#13;
·&#13;
the and upro ·&#13;
anous good time at meal&#13;
me and se&#13;
I h&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
II .&#13;
vera ot er times a day as&#13;
,&#13;
an ed&#13;
· 111 itself.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
/if Ly-six&#13;
two hundred fifty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
Say-Ain't it the truth&#13;
that Good P eople die young&#13;
&#13;
Your new suit will become "old" while it&#13;
young I you don't keep it&#13;
&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
"Steam Pressed"&#13;
We Steam Press&#13;
&#13;
and do it Right&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE GROC&#13;
Home of&#13;
&#13;
Ford Lumber Co.&#13;
Owned in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
·Right Prices&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
338&#13;
1338&#13;
100 Third St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Good Things to Eat&#13;
JOHN O'LEARY, Prop.&#13;
902 M. S. Ave,&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD W. WIXSON&#13;
Morningside Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
College Bookstore&#13;
&#13;
A service augmented&#13;
experience&#13;
Located in new Theatre Buildina&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
FRED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
BRINK'S MEAT MARKE&#13;
We Supply the Leading Boarding Houses of&#13;
Morningside with all kinds of Fresh Meats&#13;
Phone us your Order and our Delivery will reach you&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6284&#13;
&#13;
afternoon until four o'clock&#13;
pent much as the forenoon, in the&#13;
ratory, or out in the field whenr the weather permits. After four&#13;
clock the professors and instructors&#13;
rget "·hat little dignity they may&#13;
ve had during school hours and enr into the water sports on a splend, nearby bathing beach with as&#13;
uch roguish hilarity as the most en~&#13;
u iastic freshman. The hours after&#13;
pper, which comes at six thirty, are&#13;
nt much as one's heart desires ; hing, boating, studying or reading&#13;
the spacious library of the cottage&#13;
here, on cool eveni1igs a fire roars&#13;
in the fireplace, or playing games.&#13;
nee a week there is a stunt party&#13;
ter supper, which is productive of&#13;
uch merriment. Occasional launch&#13;
sailboat parties are organized to&#13;
nd the evening or Su nday aftern on the lake.&#13;
Too much emphasis can hardly be&#13;
ace~ on the benefits of being a part&#13;
this rare comb'&#13;
·&#13;
matwn of democratic&#13;
lowship ' st u d Y, recreatwn, and liv.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
"''.th students of other colleges&#13;
with some of the most able scienmen of the country, even during&#13;
hort. perwd of six weeks. Such&#13;
·&#13;
expenence is a c hens h ed memory&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
anyone who has been a part of it.&#13;
&#13;
Bogard Pantorium&#13;
&#13;
McBride Lakeside&#13;
Laboratorg (Cont.)&#13;
&#13;
N.J.W.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
two lnmdred fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
two hu11dred fifty -11i11e&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Students!&#13;
&#13;
If you value economy, satisfaction, and style-Corne&#13;
&#13;
Never in the history of this store have we had a larger and&#13;
selection of&#13;
&#13;
Spring Suits&#13;
Dress Shoes&#13;
Shirts &amp; Hats&#13;
&#13;
Quality is&#13;
&#13;
When Yon Wade Into&#13;
Business Life you will&#13;
need Financial Boots&#13;
&#13;
The lowest of prices&#13;
and the highest&#13;
of Qualities&#13;
&#13;
A Bank Account&#13;
will supply this need&#13;
&#13;
Come and pay cash&#13;
and you get the&#13;
benefit&#13;
&#13;
Education&#13;
only puts the polish on&#13;
Both are necessary to&#13;
Success&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of Commerce&#13;
Fourth and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
Cash grocery&#13;
&#13;
Poor May. On the day of the&#13;
"M" Carnival she didn't buy a ticket, so the mean , naughty "M" boys&#13;
put her in the stocks. They could&#13;
have obtained . several doll ars more&#13;
by charging a nickel admission to gaze&#13;
upon ·the young lady.&#13;
no this is not Annette Kellerman&#13;
o&#13;
playing the part of a mermaid in "A&#13;
Daughter of the Gods." But to one&#13;
of our seniors we suppose she is a&#13;
daughter of the Gods.&#13;
&#13;
"All right l\1aurice, we have no&#13;
arguments." This picture was not&#13;
taken in Jerusalem, but in front of&#13;
Sunshine Inn just before he went to&#13;
see "Rosie" ( ?)&#13;
&#13;
One Quality- The Best&#13;
&#13;
]. C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
Florists&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
and&#13;
PLANTS&#13;
&#13;
"Jimmie Harrington ," just getting&#13;
read y to give old Ki Yi. N uf Ced .&#13;
&#13;
Store Sixth and Pierce Sts. '&#13;
Bell Phone 130&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-ine&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
AUTHIER STYLE SHO&#13;
Correct Dress /or Women&#13;
&#13;
This is a page of Salubrities about&#13;
·&#13;
orn11&#13;
· This is Bill getting&#13;
it isn't Vivian, but her&#13;
n&#13;
D&#13;
little sister. See with what brotherly&#13;
care he guides and helps her.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Most Appreciated Store&#13;
&#13;
''Good Coal"&#13;
&#13;
this is not Queen Liliuokalani,&#13;
Mary Dolliver with her ukelele.&#13;
Perhaps she is trying to quiet some of&#13;
the many girls that stay there, as it is&#13;
said that music will subdue the fierc-&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
'' Lumber of Quality"&#13;
Service&#13;
&#13;
This picture was not run by request. We don't know whether to&#13;
name it, "The Days of Real Sport,"&#13;
'When a Fellow Needs a Friend,"&#13;
or the "Powerful Katrinka."&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lbr. C&#13;
Here we see one of our salubrities,&#13;
but, fellow students, what we want&#13;
you to notice is that shadow. If you&#13;
can guess who it is send in your aner to Mr. E. G. Stonebrook, and&#13;
receive a liberal reward.&#13;
&#13;
Retail Coal&#13;
1604 East Fourth St&#13;
&#13;
FOUNDATIONS FOR SUCCESS&#13;
are laid in College&#13;
.&#13;
·11&#13;
The foundation for your Business S uccess w1 b e your Savings Ace&#13;
&#13;
Start One Today&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank&#13;
S. E. Cor. 4th and Jackson Sts.&#13;
&#13;
t'U.•O&#13;
&#13;
The Days of 49&#13;
"Trapper" alay did have an innate tendency to&#13;
Vestigate into the inner workings&#13;
the unknown and unknowable.&#13;
ere we have him investigating the&#13;
icile of a pocket gopher.&#13;
&#13;
hundred sixty-two&#13;
two hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
ELMER BLOOD, President&#13;
&#13;
we run this person as a celebrity for two reasons. First ' she was manager of the so-called&#13;
basketball game betffeen Yale and harvard and&#13;
ld&#13;
second, ( this reason proves her good Judgment&#13;
more than any other possibly could ) because she&#13;
says the joke department of this Annual is ve ry&#13;
&#13;
C. T. WESTCOTT,&#13;
&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
Private Ambulance&#13;
Exclusive Parlors&#13;
&#13;
Westcott Undertaking Co.&#13;
FUNERAL Directors&#13;
&#13;
AND EMBALMERS&#13;
&#13;
713 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
good.&#13;
Yes, of course, A l posed for this picture.&#13;
However, since it is this year instead of last; he&#13;
could find his own book. Al is stud yi ng hard this&#13;
year at that. Besides his resident work he is&#13;
taking a correspondence course w hich requires&#13;
much reverie and dreaming,&#13;
&#13;
Licensed Lady Embalmer&#13;
Where did you get those books, Lee?&#13;
AUTO PHONES&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
2076&#13;
2685&#13;
&#13;
Did&#13;
&#13;
you forget to hand them to her when you said&#13;
&#13;
Good-bye or did you get them for the college&#13;
librarian? You're supposed to be on the blacklist there.&#13;
&#13;
WHERE TO SELL YOUR RANGER&#13;
&#13;
Sixty Minutes&#13;
&#13;
Don't Overlook Sioux City Market&#13;
This year when disposing of your RANGE CATTLE or SHEEP-:&#13;
Have a firm with a reputation sell your stock. We also ~ake&#13;
specialty of buying stock on order, and guarantee satisfacbon&#13;
every car we buy, Write us or wire us at any time, and you&#13;
have prompt attention.&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS ,&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
soxty-four&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
If you realized how much easier it is to prevent&#13;
aggravated forms of eye trouble than it is to&#13;
relieve them, you would not neglect your eyes&#13;
for a day.&#13;
It will probably take less than an hour of your&#13;
time to have us thoroughly examine your eyes&#13;
and tell you how to relieve them, and it may&#13;
save you from years of eye trouble.&#13;
&#13;
Globe Optical Co.&#13;
406 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
- -------------6]&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
We are the original ''cut price'' Dentists of&#13;
"When better dental work is done you will&#13;
· find us doing it."&#13;
&#13;
NE"\1\7 YORK D ENTISTS&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
DOWN&#13;
WHERE&#13;
THE&#13;
SENEY&#13;
SHOE&#13;
SIGN&#13;
SHINES&#13;
&#13;
Te College Drinks&#13;
h&#13;
--are--&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
hesterman's Beverages&#13;
&#13;
This picture received first prize in&#13;
the atrocious contest. See the beautiful expression on her face as he "·hispers sweet little syllables into her shelllike ear. of course she is a senior, so&#13;
we suppose this accounts for the picture.&#13;
&#13;
This picture received second place&#13;
in the atrocious contest. They are a&#13;
couple of our fair co-eds. The one&#13;
above is a fair senior, a lady with lots&#13;
of blond, curly hair. w e are telling&#13;
you all we know now so as not to be&#13;
pestered with questions when the annual comes out.&#13;
&#13;
Better&#13;
Than Soda Fountain&#13;
Drinks&#13;
&#13;
419-21 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
I/&#13;
&#13;
Here we have 'the princess Frederica a Dupont Von Appel and her&#13;
gallant husband. Alas, his affections&#13;
have been alienated and now he has&#13;
his Knapp regularly.&#13;
&#13;
405 Pearl St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1864&#13;
&#13;
Paramount&#13;
SUCCESSORS TO&#13;
&#13;
Hutchinson's Retail Bakery-Luncheonette&#13;
&#13;
No, this is not Ruby. Neither was&#13;
the picture run by request. Here we&#13;
have Casey as he was in the days of&#13;
yore when love was new and fickle.&#13;
Although his favo rite stone is the&#13;
Ruby, he has been known to buy diamonds.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
French Pastry&#13;
Luncheonette De Luxe&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-six&#13;
two hundred sixty-se'Ven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Kodak Develop-ng and Printing&#13;
i&#13;
of Pictures in this Annual by, Us&#13;
&#13;
Don has won two "M's" since he&#13;
has been in school and it is whispered&#13;
that he has one M . M. also.&#13;
&#13;
We guarantee you the best possible&#13;
results from your&#13;
&#13;
negatives.&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
department is complete and strictly&#13;
modern in every particular.&#13;
&#13;
We are&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
exclusive dealers in Kodaks and Kodak&#13;
Supplies&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
You ask what the lad y is doing.&#13;
She wanted a&#13;
toothpick so she j ust reached up and&#13;
cratched his head.&#13;
&#13;
\Veil we'll explain.&#13;
&#13;
608 PIERCE STREET&#13;
New Davidson Building.&#13;
we think it was Shakespeare who&#13;
said about K ay, " He loved not .unwisely, but too frequently."&#13;
&#13;
TAILORING&#13;
Suits and Overcoats&#13;
&#13;
$15.00&#13;
&#13;
$18.00&#13;
&#13;
$20.00&#13;
&#13;
$22.00&#13;
&#13;
Charles Victor P ayne, student and&#13;
astronomer. His favorite poem is&#13;
"T kl e, twmkle, little star, how'&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Over 400 patterns to select from&#13;
&#13;
A Tailor for 24 Years Solicits Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
THE GUARANTEE TAILORS&#13;
Our Clothes Fit Better&#13;
&#13;
This picture like the editor of this&#13;
annual is a graft.&#13;
Signed, "Deak."&#13;
The editor in 01 er to eep peace&#13;
and&#13;
within the staff had to&#13;
promise to let th.&#13;
.&#13;
h&#13;
is wnteup by, but we&#13;
ope you don't believe a word of it.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. WORTH, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-eight&#13;
two hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Greater value and more extra&#13;
.&#13;
given ecause 98% is&#13;
tured m our own factory.&#13;
&#13;
See the EXTRA FEATURES&#13;
&#13;
WATSON AUTOMOBILE CO.&#13;
8th and Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Although Don is not a botany fiend&#13;
he is very interested in Ferns. Here&#13;
we have them abusing the silences of&#13;
the Big Sioux River with their chatter and giggles. Since this Don has&#13;
listened to the music of othe1' lady's&#13;
voices by his side.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
This is Hod and Cecil along the&#13;
west bank of the Big Sioux. They are&#13;
not in school this year, but a film of&#13;
fussers would not seem complete without them. A monument in the background would make them look more&#13;
at home however.&#13;
&#13;
"The Home Market /or the Great Northwest"&#13;
&#13;
See how the business is&#13;
conducted at a large market&#13;
S fUDENTS will be given a cordial welcome at any time.&#13;
Come and see the best all steel and concrete double&#13;
deck hog house in the world.·&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
GALINSKY BROS. COMPANY&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES-The Lowest&#13;
QUALITY-The Highest&#13;
GOODS-The Freshest&#13;
SERVICE-The Promptest&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
Ladies and Gentlemen, you may observe before you the champion middle distance fusser of the college.&#13;
\Vendell smiles in that regular go-to\\·edding manner, which has fooled&#13;
many girls before Gladys.&#13;
&#13;
we had to tree this couple ·before&#13;
we could get their picture. She is&#13;
teaching school this year. She addressed a letter to her brother to Orleans Avenue. Her brother lives on&#13;
South Newton. Some explanation&#13;
due here.&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd says that although he isn't&#13;
playing cards he is holding some good&#13;
hands. Lloyd was elected president&#13;
of the Tennis Association three years&#13;
ago and is still president. Reason , no&#13;
meetings called.&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
two hundred srventy&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
THE BEST STORE TO BUY&#13;
Ladies' Ready-to-Wear&#13;
&#13;
504 fourth&#13;
&#13;
street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ills.&#13;
Kansas City; Mo.&#13;
East Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
South St." Joseph, Mo.&#13;
South St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
Fort Worth, Tex.&#13;
El Paso, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
Denver, Colo.&#13;
South Omaha, Neb.&#13;
East St. Louis, Ills.&#13;
&#13;
YOUR NEXT STEP&#13;
On your money ladder is within your reach. Will it be upward or&#13;
down? Each time you spend---spend wisely or spend not at all. Sums&#13;
you deposit at the First National are always safe and ready at your&#13;
command---and meanwhile are earning compound interest. Watch&#13;
your step.&#13;
&#13;
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
N. W. Corner Fifth and Pierce Stteets&#13;
&#13;
THE NATIONAL BANK FOR Savings&#13;
&#13;
Open Saturday Evenings---? to 9 o'clock&#13;
&#13;
Clay&#13;
&#13;
Robinson &amp; Co&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Gas for Fuel and Heat&#13;
Electricity for Light and Power&#13;
Sioux City Gas &amp; Electric Co ..&#13;
&#13;
two hundred Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
hundred se'Venty-three&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
GRACELAND PARK CEMETERY&#13;
PERPETUAL CARE&#13;
E. C. PETERS,&#13;
&#13;
A. T. BENNETT,&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
EATS&#13;
&#13;
HICKS---FULLER---PIERSON CO.&#13;
Wholesale Dry Goods&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Right Kind&#13;
&#13;
Sell&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Young Men's Christian Association&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
ROYAL JEWELRY CO.&#13;
&#13;
Stoney's&#13;
favorite&#13;
subject&#13;
for&#13;
themes . in English is "The Modern&#13;
Co-ed," so that both Professor Hayes&#13;
and She know what his idea of an&#13;
ideal women is.&#13;
&#13;
"Westland" ·&#13;
&#13;
Cor. 4th and'. Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Lines of&#13;
&#13;
TRY US&#13;
&#13;
Bing!&#13;
This is another case of high school&#13;
affairs being carried into college. But&#13;
brace up Fish. Take it like a man.&#13;
'T1ras ever thus.&#13;
&#13;
Ask retail dealers to show you our&#13;
&#13;
"Merit Make"&#13;
&#13;
'The Store that puts High Grade&#13;
Jewelry within the reach&#13;
of all the people&#13;
&#13;
we don't know who this fellow is,&#13;
but he looks happy anyway. We&#13;
wonder why a state school appeals to&#13;
him more than a denominational&#13;
school. Lida told us that no one&#13;
had this picture but herself, but she&#13;
surely must have been mistaken.&#13;
&#13;
Merchants Only&#13;
&#13;
CAFETERIA&#13;
&#13;
ROYAL&#13;
&#13;
------------------Ei]&#13;
&#13;
This picture run by Spec's request.&#13;
&#13;
He can throw more concentrated fuss-&#13;
&#13;
Furnishing Goods&#13;
&#13;
HANSEN GLASS AND PAINT COMPANY&#13;
504-506-508-510 Douglas Street&#13;
&#13;
Glass, Paints, Oils, Varnishes&#13;
&#13;
ing into a square inch than any other&#13;
man in school. We suppose he will&#13;
have another girl by the time this is&#13;
published , but then we are not going&#13;
to attempt to keep up to his pace.&#13;
&#13;
hugh is very good at doing person- ·&#13;
This is one picture showing&#13;
a failure however, for she has not returned to school this year. Brace up,&#13;
Hugh.&#13;
&#13;
al work&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
MIRRORS, BEVELED TABLE and DESK TOPS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred se'l!enty-four&#13;
&#13;
_&#13;
two hundred se'Venty-fi'Ve&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
D. &amp; M. Sporting Goods&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
&#13;
J. A. SMITH&#13;
Morningside's R eal Estate D ealer&#13;
&#13;
Grocery Dep't&#13;
Meat Dep't&#13;
Dry Goods Dep't&#13;
Shoe and Rubber Dep'I&#13;
hardware Dep't&#13;
Paint Dep't&#13;
Feed and Fuel Dep't&#13;
&#13;
Are&#13;
&#13;
us ed&#13;
&#13;
by all leading&#13;
players&#13;
If you don't think so ask&#13;
&#13;
WALTER Johnson&#13;
The World's Greatest Pitcher&#13;
&#13;
Louisville "Slugger" Bats $ I .00&#13;
&#13;
All goods sold at prices to&#13;
city competition&#13;
Please Don't Forget Our Number,&#13;
4 Phones. Iowa ,670 and 671&#13;
Auto 6912 and 69/ I&#13;
&#13;
HUNT &amp; SCHUETZ&#13;
4th and Pearl&#13;
&#13;
41 02-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Residence Phone 6268&#13;
Shop Phone 6306&#13;
Res. Phone No. 4217 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
SUPERIOR&#13;
LUMBER CO&#13;
&#13;
A I/ Work Guaranteed&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
"The Big White Shed"&#13;
Old Phone 1995&#13;
&#13;
Properties of All Kinds Rented or Sold&#13;
Office at&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
Office Phone 6136&#13;
Residence Phone 6657&#13;
&#13;
Ladies, here is the champion heavyweight fusser of the college. In the&#13;
library (before kicked out), in the&#13;
corridors, or on the campus, Jons is&#13;
equally at home if his Sue is by his&#13;
side.&#13;
"Ji mmie Hayes and l\.1iss Brand."&#13;
As such they will always be remembered ,by Morningside students, instead of Dr. and Mrs. Hayes. In this&#13;
picture, however, professor Hayes is&#13;
not sitting on that dining room&#13;
chair.&#13;
&#13;
Kernel Fouke, commissioned while&#13;
on Glee Club tour, is here seen profaning th e silence of Stone Park with&#13;
his clownish foolishness.&#13;
&#13;
Hartley L. Larson&#13;
Successor lo Piper &amp; Larson&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
&#13;
C. A. HOLLENBECK&#13;
Tailor&#13;
Shop Floor&#13;
&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
20.12 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Au to Phone 25655&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
WINNERS&#13;
&#13;
two !11mdred se'Ve11ty-six&#13;
two hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
Ten Per Cent Discount to Students and Faculty&#13;
&#13;
J. W. DUNFORD&#13;
Retail Store, 418 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4212&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST -&#13;
&#13;
Quantity&#13;
&#13;
Quality&#13;
&#13;
NURSERYMAN&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 930&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Service&#13;
LANDSCAPE GARDENER&#13;
&#13;
DID YOU !VER EAT AT&#13;
&#13;
Props Cafe·&#13;
Try Us Once -&#13;
&#13;
We'll Risk the Rest&#13;
&#13;
Here is our Y. M. president looking out over the M issouri R iver. We&#13;
had hard work to persuade them to&#13;
let us take this picture, that is we&#13;
had a hard time finding it. We can't&#13;
tell what she is thinking about.&#13;
&#13;
It is never cloudy to Hildred, always Fair. But the football captainelect appears upon the sceqe, the plot&#13;
thickens. But what can men expect&#13;
of fickle co-ed.&#13;
&#13;
Shoey, we didn't t hink it of you.&#13;
&#13;
An ex-champion fusser who hac! the&#13;
fine art of kidding the fairer sex up&#13;
to 100 per cent efficiency, to at last&#13;
give all his valuable time to one lady.&#13;
&#13;
Lunches and Meals for Everyone&#13;
A. M. PROPS, Mgr.&#13;
411 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove High School is responsible for this, so don't blame it on&#13;
Morningside College. The first date&#13;
this couple had dates back farther&#13;
than any other couple in school.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
THE CHAIN STORES&#13;
Chain No. 1 Chain No. 2 Chain No. 3 -&#13;
&#13;
Corner 4th and Court&#13;
403 4th Street&#13;
607 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
THE STORES WITH A REPUTATION&#13;
&#13;
,David says, "D aisies won't tell. "&#13;
Its too bad . she isn't in school this&#13;
,&#13;
on t see how he can&#13;
narrett.&#13;
&#13;
Cash and no delivery&#13;
&#13;
two hzmdred se'Venty-eiglzt&#13;
two hundred St:'Venty-nine&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
FRESH CUT FLOWERS - All kinds ol lloral emblems made up by&#13;
We know how. American Beau.ties, roses and Carnations always on hand&#13;
Positively the lines! and largest display m town. Our prices are right.&#13;
ROCKLIN &amp; LEHMAN&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
NEW STORE: 402 Fourth Street, one ol the Finest in the West&#13;
AUTO 9856&#13;
&#13;
Jim, on his way to see " her. " note&#13;
with which he&#13;
proceeds to his fate. Jim says " Only&#13;
two more blocks and then--"&#13;
the melancholy air,&#13;
&#13;
BELL 3112&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
See how guilty this pair look. They&#13;
are the misfits of the picture above.&#13;
Cupie isn 't in school this year. We&#13;
don't know whether this is the reason or not.&#13;
&#13;
Goods of quality&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
V . A , SWAN , PRES.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
&#13;
A . E , ANDERSON , TREAS.&#13;
&#13;
.•.&#13;
SWAN-ANDERSON CO.&#13;
( INC.)&#13;
&#13;
+i+&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
The gentleman ll1 this picture has&#13;
that pessimistic, getting married ,&#13;
never-do-it-again look, but his fate&#13;
has already been sealed. "And when&#13;
he became a man he put away childish _&#13;
th111gs and took up a&#13;
S ee ,page&#13;
&#13;
213&#13;
&#13;
DRY GOODS&#13;
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S&#13;
FURNISHINGS&#13;
Shh! Q uiet! We mustn't disturb&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1882&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
these&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
· f&#13;
&#13;
atuated individuals&#13;
ar&#13;
'&#13;
' morous Juxtaposition&#13;
But, don 't worry, they'll get over it'.&#13;
&#13;
nestled in&#13;
&#13;
.The lady in the pictL11·e 1s the capfaith of this g 00 d h.&#13;
·&#13;
s 1&#13;
P· R uth says he&#13;
minds the helm pretty well too.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty&#13;
two hundred eighty- one&#13;
&#13;
ca----------&#13;
&#13;
PREPAREDNESS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
After the War B e Prepared to do Your Share in the Great Industrial R organ,zat,o&#13;
. .&#13;
That Is certain to Take Place.&#13;
Education is not a Luxury, It Is a Necessity.&#13;
Prepare for Leadership.&#13;
Why&#13;
&#13;
Cy and Frances. Cy is a fusser of&#13;
the first magnitude. What happened&#13;
to your South Dakota Romance, Cy?&#13;
She seems to be in a hurry to get&#13;
a11·ay. We would too if we were&#13;
11·ith him.&#13;
&#13;
GO TO COLLEGE?&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
It&#13;
Why&#13;
&#13;
heightens the ideals and gives direction to the ambitions.&#13;
increases efficiency and earning ab1\ity.&#13;
develops mental mastery and trains the mental processes.&#13;
helps you find your place in the professions.&#13;
develops all that is best and worth preserving in you.&#13;
widens your circle of friendships.&#13;
trains for the most useful citizenship.&#13;
opens the door of opportunity.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CHOOSE MORNINGSIDE?&#13;
&#13;
Here only the highest standards of scholarship and morality prevail.&#13;
It has a splendid coll ege atmosphere.&#13;
It has many graduates of distinction.&#13;
It is not condurted for the purpose of making money. An that a student pa&#13;
in and much more goes back into his education.&#13;
Its social life is exceptionally free from objectionable features.&#13;
It has a fine enthusiasm for clean and legitimate sports:&#13;
It has one of the best equipped gymnasiums in the state.&#13;
It has a faculty especially strong in scholarship, having been trained in the lead&#13;
ing universities of Europe and America. The teaching is done by expc&#13;
enced professors, not by tutors . and instructors without experie.nce.&#13;
Its buildings are all fireproof and equipped with thorough}y modern appoi&#13;
ments and conveniences.&#13;
Thorough practical instruction is offered at a cost as low as is&#13;
high quality.&#13;
Scholarships are offered to worthy and meritorious students.&#13;
It welcomes tn these privileges the worthy of all ranks with&#13;
opportunities to all.&#13;
&#13;
This is Walker in his characteristic position. Of course, the ladies are&#13;
just freshmen, so that accounts for it.&#13;
They'!~ kno1,· better by the time they&#13;
are semors.&#13;
&#13;
You're a fine guy, Stiles.&#13;
Why .&#13;
aren't you ·carrying her books. Lucky&#13;
thtng for you that Hartley never&#13;
heard of this or you wou ld be under&#13;
th e care of the Red Cross Association.&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
THANKS&#13;
To the engra vers and photographers for taking the&#13;
them good 1&#13;
1&#13;
oo&#13;
e who were-well, otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
es og people and making&#13;
&#13;
To the student Body for its many suggestions as to&#13;
how the sioux&#13;
nlade a tt racttve,-several days after it h b&#13;
as · een pnnted.&#13;
&#13;
'I&#13;
&#13;
might&#13;
&#13;
be&#13;
&#13;
To the Senior Class who have made possible a JO ke sect10n.&#13;
&#13;
The fall term opens September eleventh.&#13;
Address communicatiocs to:&#13;
President ALFRED E. Craig, Ph . . D., D.&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
Sioux City Iowa&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ·eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
Experience:&#13;
Some annuals we&#13;
printed &amp; bound&#13;
last year &amp; this&#13;
&#13;
ILLUSTRATIONS&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
This Bo ok&#13;
engraved&#13;
&#13;
f:J&#13;
&#13;
Canton&#13;
&#13;
Engraving and&#13;
Electrotype&#13;
comany&#13;
college&#13;
&#13;
Engravers&#13;
&#13;
CANTON. OHIO.&#13;
&#13;
ZENITH: Simpson College, Indianola, Ia.&#13;
PELICAN: Central College, Pella, Ia.&#13;
PILOT: Western Unio n&#13;
College, Le Mars, Ia.&#13;
QUILL:&#13;
Fairfield, Ia.,&#13;
High School&#13;
SCREECH: Albia, Ia.,&#13;
High School&#13;
PATEE:&#13;
Hot Springs,&#13;
S. Dak., High Schoo l&#13;
PERUVIAN: Peru State&#13;
Normal, Peru , Nebr.&#13;
PEIRA:&#13;
Parsons College, Fairfield, Ia.&#13;
RUDDER: Buena Vista&#13;
College, Storm Lake, Ia.&#13;
SIOUX: Morningside College Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
ROYAL PURPLE: Cornell College, Mt. Vernon&#13;
BOMB: Iowa State College, Ames, Ia.&#13;
TUMBLEWEED: Dakota&#13;
wesleyan Mitchell, S .D.&#13;
CROAKER: Iowa Wesleyan Mt. P leasant, Ia.&#13;
QUAKER: Penn College,&#13;
Oskaloosa, Ia.&#13;
ACORN:&#13;
Coe College,&#13;
Cedar Rapids, I a.&#13;
CARDINAL:&#13;
Lean d er&#13;
Clark Col., Toledo, Ia.&#13;
WEB: Ellsworth College,&#13;
Iowa Falls, Ia.&#13;
ANEMONE: Dak ota Normal. Madison, S. Dak .&#13;
CHARITONIAN: Chariton, Ia., High' School&#13;
TOMAHAWK: Iowa City&#13;
high School&#13;
ARV A: Park Coll ege,&#13;
Parkville, Mo.&#13;
PIONEER :&#13;
P latteville&#13;
State Normal, Wis .&#13;
SCROLL:&#13;
Boone, la.,&#13;
High School&#13;
ALBAQUE ORANGIA:&#13;
Dexter, Ia., High School&#13;
BLAST:&#13;
Benton,&#13;
Ia.,&#13;
high School&#13;
BOOSTER:&#13;
Sevmour,&#13;
Ia., High Sch ool&#13;
SANDPIPER: Clarkston,&#13;
Wash., High School&#13;
OKIHE: Yankton College, Yankton. S. Dak.&#13;
K irksville, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
two hundred eiqhty-four&#13;
&#13;
The getting of experience&#13;
is usually very expensive&#13;
to all parties concerned&#13;
1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111n111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111m111111111111 111111 11n11111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11,1l&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
F YOU WANT YOUR ANNUAL PRINTED AND&#13;
&#13;
bound the way you want it&#13;
And when you want it, the&#13;
logical thing to do is to place your&#13;
order where you feel at ease about&#13;
it being properly taken care of.&#13;
Editors, managers and others who&#13;
have to do with the making of an- _&#13;
nualshavetheirtime fully occupied&#13;
without the anxieties and perplexities that come because of placing&#13;
their order in the hands of inexperienced annual builders.&#13;
We are annual specialists. You can&#13;
place your order with us with full&#13;
confidence that you will get a&#13;
high-class book.&#13;
&#13;
The Clio Press&#13;
&#13;
Economy A dvertising Co m pany&#13;
&#13;
D ependability&#13;
&#13;
row A CIT Y, row A&#13;
&#13;
two hu11dred eiq hty -five&#13;
&#13;
GEO. W. FINCH&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
&#13;
Book Index&#13;
&#13;
Filth and pierce&#13;
&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
&#13;
J. E. DE WALT&#13;
&#13;
Suite 605.606 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
3 J S.316 F ranees Buildinir&#13;
SIOUX CITY, lOW A&#13;
&#13;
PLAZA&#13;
&#13;
PHIL LANDR Y&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Finest Theatre&#13;
&#13;
Importing Tailor&#13;
&#13;
Pipe Organ and Selected Photoplays&#13;
&#13;
DR . J . A B L ISS&#13;
&#13;
DENT IST&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bui!ding&#13;
&#13;
F. sargent&#13;
&#13;
5th and Pierce Su.&#13;
&#13;
A C STRONG&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
G. T struble&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
OENTIST&#13;
&#13;
SARGENT, STRONG &amp; STR BLE&#13;
U&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 85686&#13;
Suite 6 J S.616 F ra nees Building, 5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
SIOUX C l l Y, !OW A&#13;
&#13;
A TTOR NEYS&#13;
&#13;
C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
&#13;
202-206 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
J. W . hubbvard&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
&#13;
A ttorn e y and Cou nsellor at Law&#13;
&#13;
A uto Phone 3 785&#13;
605 F ranees Bld g.&#13;
~ioux C ity. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
327 Davidson Building&#13;
6th a nd Pierce Sts.&#13;
SIO UX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON BROTHERS&#13;
LAN D CO.&#13;
&#13;
SHULL, GILL, SAMMIS &amp; S ILWILL&#13;
T&#13;
Attorneys&#13;
&#13;
602 Pie rce St.&#13;
&#13;
Improved Farms a nd Mortgages&#13;
&#13;
Introduction&#13;
Page&#13;
Staff .............................................. 4&#13;
Foreword ...................................... 5&#13;
Acknowledgements ...................... 7&#13;
O rder of_'Books ............................ 8&#13;
Dedication .................................... 6&#13;
Book I.&#13;
&#13;
John R . Carter H. W . Brackney Homer B. Carter&#13;
&#13;
CAR&#13;
TER, BRAC N &amp; C R&#13;
K EY&#13;
A TER&#13;
A ttorn ey s at L a w&#13;
&#13;
Suite 707.703.709, Security Ba nk Bld g.&#13;
Phones, Auto 1522, Bell I 065&#13;
S io ux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
400. 41 8 Iowa Bu ilding&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS.&#13;
L AWYERS&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 302-305 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
H. R. DEALY&#13;
&#13;
W. S. GILMAN&#13;
&#13;
City Property---Farms&#13;
&#13;
R eal Estate&#13;
&#13;
Investments&#13;
604 IOW A BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Established 1870&#13;
&#13;
J. A. &amp; 0. S. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
6 11 P ierce Street&#13;
&#13;
GAYNOR LUMBER CO.&#13;
WholesalF Lu m b er&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
308 Davidson Buildin g&#13;
&#13;
Book IIII. Cont.&#13;
&#13;
The College&#13;
&#13;
Campus&#13;
Main H all ................................ 11&#13;
Gymnasium .............................. 13&#13;
Conservatory ............................ 15&#13;
Grace Church ............................ 17&#13;
The President's ·H ome .............. 19 ,&#13;
Poems&#13;
Alma . Mater .......................... 10&#13;
G e n e s i s of Morningside&#13;
Spirit .................................. 12&#13;
Morningside .......................... 16&#13;
A Toast to the Morningside&#13;
Squaw ................................ 18&#13;
Faculty .......................................... 21&#13;
Board of Trustees ........................ 28&#13;
Book II.&#13;
&#13;
60 1-602 United Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
Seniors .. ........................................&#13;
Juniors ..........................................&#13;
Sophomores ....................................&#13;
Freshmen ......................................&#13;
D epartments ..................................&#13;
Music&#13;
Expression&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
Northwest Iowa Basketball&#13;
T ournament .................. 109&#13;
Gym .................................. 110&#13;
Tennis ................................ 110&#13;
Women's A thletics ................ 111&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
-l-3&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
69&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
Book III. Activities&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Men's Athletics&#13;
Football .................................. 79&#13;
Baseball .................................. 93&#13;
Traek ...................................... 97&#13;
"M" Invitation Meet ...... 104&#13;
Basketball .............................. 107&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Oratory .......... 119&#13;
Inter-Collegiate D ebate ............ 120&#13;
Inter-Society D ebates ................ 122&#13;
Gold Medal Series D ebates ...... ] 26&#13;
D ramatics&#13;
Arona D eclamatory Contest .... 131&#13;
Othonian Public ........................ 132&#13;
Senior C lass P lay ...................... 133&#13;
Zetalethean P ublic .................... 134&#13;
P ierian Public ............................ 135&#13;
Expression Plays ........................ 136&#13;
German C lass Play .................... 138&#13;
Music&#13;
Men's G lee C lub ........................ 141&#13;
Madrigal Club .......................... ] 42&#13;
Grace C hurch C hoir .................. f43&#13;
Band .......................................... 145&#13;
O rchestra ............................ :....... 146&#13;
Book I V.&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
College Societies&#13;
Philon1athean .............................. 148&#13;
Athenaeu m ................................ 150&#13;
. Ionian ........................................ 154&#13;
P ierian ...................................... 156&#13;
Athenaeum ................................ 150&#13;
Othonian .................................... 160&#13;
Zetalethean .............................. 162&#13;
Academy Societies&#13;
Adelphian .................................. 166&#13;
Aesthesian .................................. 167&#13;
Hawkeye .................................. 168&#13;
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&#13;
two hundred eiglity-six&#13;
two hundred eighty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Book V .&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
General&#13;
Student Body ····------------------------172&#13;
Stude nt Counci l _________ _ _ _ _ l 73&#13;
___ ___ __ _&#13;
Agora C lub _________ _&#13;
___________ _&#13;
__________ l 74&#13;
N aboklis Club ______ ___ __________ _ _ l 7 5&#13;
_____&#13;
Girls' Inter-society Committee l 76&#13;
F orensic L eague __________ _&#13;
____________ _1 77&#13;
Pi K appa D elta _________ _ _&#13;
_ ____________ l 78&#13;
"M " C lub _ _ __________________ _&#13;
__&#13;
_________ l 79&#13;
T eutonia Club ___________ __ __ ______ _&#13;
_ __&#13;
_180&#13;
Ch emisl ry Club ___ _&#13;
_____________ _ _ 180&#13;
_____&#13;
Religious Organizations&#13;
Y. M . C. A. _______________ _&#13;
_______ _ __ .1 82&#13;
___&#13;
Y. W. C. A. _______________________ _ 183&#13;
______&#13;
Volunteer B and&#13;
l 84&#13;
Prohibition L eague _____ _ _&#13;
__ ___________ 184&#13;
Publications&#13;
Collegian Reporter ______ _ __ _1 86&#13;
__ ______&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux -------- --------- --- ----- --- -.&#13;
····&#13;
Booster Organizations&#13;
Alumni Association&#13;
l\Iorningside Clubs&#13;
Book V I.&#13;
&#13;
Student L ife&#13;
&#13;
Calend ar&#13;
M onument D ay --------------··---- ---.194,&#13;
l\I ay Fete ----------------------- ---------.195&#13;
Commencement ---------------------.. -198&#13;
mens&#13;
Banquet -------------------------.199&#13;
W omen's Banquet -------- ---- ·------JOO&#13;
"M" Minstreks -------------------- ---.201&#13;
J okes&#13;
Th e Squirrel D odger&#13;
?03&#13;
M iscell aneous ----- -------------------- -..207&#13;
H umorous Poems ----------- ----------.217&#13;
Snaps&#13;
223&#13;
F rolics of t he Sioux&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty -eight&#13;
&#13;
Alfred Edwin Craig&#13;
William C. Hilmer&#13;
Lillian E. Dimmitt&#13;
Henry F. Kanthlehner&#13;
James J. Hayes&#13;
Herbert G. Campbell&#13;
Agnes B. Ferguson&#13;
Charles A. Marsh&#13;
Arthur H. Hirsch&#13;
Ephenor A. Brown&#13;
Margaret G. Dolliver&#13;
Frederick Schaub&#13;
O. Garfield Jones&#13;
Olaf Hovda&#13;
Robert N. VanHorn&#13;
Salome Luechauer&#13;
Helen I. Loveland&#13;
Thomas C. Stephens&#13;
Walter J. Himmel&#13;
James A. Coss&#13;
Pearl S. Greene&#13;
Jason M. Saunderson&#13;
Laura C. Fischer&#13;
Elizabeth Newton&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
James Reistrup&#13;
Faith F. Woodford&#13;
Zenana Osborne&#13;
Helen W. Lund&#13;
Harold R. Harvey&#13;
Mabel E. Brown&#13;
Ivy B. Bryan&#13;
F. Otto Barz&#13;
Estella M. Bartlett&#13;
Jessie H. Jackson&#13;
Cecilia C. Stenger&#13;
Ruby K. Flynn&#13;
Bertha Bosley&#13;
Pearl Jane Doughty&#13;
Raymond Harrington&#13;
E. Wendell Curry&#13;
Fern Beacham&#13;
Donald J. Walton&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
Anna M. Anderson&#13;
Marguerite Brethorst&#13;
Mildred Brown&#13;
Mildred H. Champ&#13;
Wilson T. Clark&#13;
Millie Corneliussen&#13;
Marguerite Cummings&#13;
George B. Dutton&#13;
Susan Eads&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
John A. Farnham&#13;
Minnie J. Fry&#13;
Charles Garlock&#13;
Lucia M. Holmes&#13;
Alvin G. Hornney&#13;
Neva A. Houk&#13;
Anna Keefe&#13;
Harrison Kilborne&#13;
James R. Kolp&#13;
Esther Larson&#13;
B. Edith Lawrence&#13;
Harvey Lawrence&#13;
Rachel Madison&#13;
Fern I. Marquart&#13;
Cornelia McBurney&#13;
Mary K. Ordway&#13;
Arthur C. Payne&#13;
Laura E. Pease&#13;
Amanda B. Roost&#13;
Harry E. Rosene&#13;
F. Marie Sebern&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
George E. Shieder&#13;
Vera M. Sipe&#13;
Gaylord A. Starr&#13;
Dorothy J. Steele&#13;
Clara P. Swain&#13;
Lilah G. Thompson&#13;
J. Don VanHorne&#13;
Helen G. Van Nest&#13;
Marie E. Van Nest&#13;
May E. Wickens&#13;
Emma J. Wiese&#13;
Ewart L. Williams&#13;
Noel J. Williams&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
Earl G. Stonebrook&#13;
Vivian Down&#13;
Marion Heikes&#13;
Julia Anderson&#13;
Irving Back&#13;
G. Earl Barks&#13;
Stanley Bashaw&#13;
Orin W. Bell&#13;
Joseph Bogard&#13;
Winifred Bussey&#13;
Irene A. Chapin&#13;
J. Finley Christ&#13;
Martin Clough&#13;
Floyd Conner&#13;
Mabel C. Day&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Archie Freeman&#13;
Margaret Goudie&#13;
Ed J. Harrington&#13;
Cleo Holmes&#13;
Hilda Jackson&#13;
Leon J. Johnson&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Royal Jurgensen&#13;
Francis R. Kingsbury&#13;
Charles Klippel&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
Harold Lancaster&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
Thos. K. Lloyd&#13;
Arthur P. Locke&#13;
Robert H. McBride&#13;
Thos. H. McBride&#13;
Bly McConkey&#13;
Esther Montgomery&#13;
Clarence Obrecht&#13;
Dorothy Owen&#13;
Elma Parkinson&#13;
Mildred Pecaut&#13;
Howard A. Reyman&#13;
Noble Richardson&#13;
Gladys Riddle&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
Grace Ruskell&#13;
Lida Saunders&#13;
Merlin Sawyer&#13;
Clair I. Sherwood&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
A. Edward Stiles&#13;
Alice Swan&#13;
Herald Walker&#13;
Erwin C. Wenig&#13;
Frances Wetmore&#13;
William C. Wolle&#13;
Sue Wormley&#13;
Milton Irwin&#13;
Agnes M. Fry&#13;
James H. Donahue&#13;
Goldie Jackson&#13;
Lloyd D. Lehan&#13;
R. Troutman&#13;
R. Mahood&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
D. Norton&#13;
L. Sandvig&#13;
H. Carter&#13;
R. Reid&#13;
G. Easton&#13;
S. Brodkey&#13;
A. Lunblad&#13;
A. Sturdevant&#13;
A. Fry&#13;
R. Whitfield&#13;
F. Appel&#13;
L. Smith&#13;
H. Freeman&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
E. Westfall&#13;
E. Wessel&#13;
C. Baldwin&#13;
R. Berry&#13;
L. Knapp&#13;
H. Meeks&#13;
R. Hill&#13;
E. Pritchard&#13;
R. Schellenger&#13;
H. McCutcheon&#13;
R. Connor&#13;
E. Persinger&#13;
F. C. Jones&#13;
F. Hambleton&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
L. Haitz&#13;
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T. Friest&#13;
R. Burpee&#13;
I. Walker&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
H. Smith&#13;
R. Randolph&#13;
W. Wood&#13;
R. Brady&#13;
M. Evans&#13;
L. Castle&#13;
A. Wolcott&#13;
M. Erickson&#13;
H. Warnes&#13;
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H. Fouke&#13;
H. Bergh&#13;
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M. Struck&#13;
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V. Gerkin&#13;
I. Smith&#13;
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M. Nicholson&#13;
M. Bishop&#13;
G. Daniels&#13;
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M. Gusteson&#13;
G. Knapp&#13;
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H. Hayes&#13;
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H. Albertson&#13;
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O. Easthouse&#13;
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M. Lutz&#13;
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M. Benton&#13;
H. Dodsley&#13;
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L. Stone&#13;
E. Payne&#13;
H. Smith&#13;
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E. Morris&#13;
A. Hartman&#13;
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E. Bahnson&#13;
E. Wagner&#13;
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E. Ostling&#13;
L. Hansen&#13;
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M. Dewell&#13;
E. Dunagen&#13;
C. Cowan&#13;
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M. Montgomery&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
G. Leighton&#13;
M. Swanson&#13;
R. Johnson&#13;
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H. Meidell&#13;
E. Ausman&#13;
L. Wendt&#13;
E. Hilmer&#13;
G. Young&#13;
L. Stone&#13;
V. Clark&#13;
B. Carver&#13;
L. Griffen&#13;
H. Search&#13;
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P. Hodge&#13;
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                    <text>�Library&#13;
&#13;
Accession&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Book&#13;
&#13;
43621&#13;
R&#13;
378&#13;
&#13;
7774&#13;
&#13;
[v.40)1939&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College&#13;
Presents&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
DOROTHY ANN OLSON&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
J.M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Faculty Advisor&#13;
&#13;
�Foreword&#13;
&#13;
- First Building on the Campus.&#13;
- Campus Close-up.&#13;
The twenty-one thousand students who have enrolled at Morningside College since its institution as the University of the Northwest&#13;
in 1889, salute it on this-its golden anniversary. May this book,&#13;
published during Morningside's fiftieth year, bring back delightful&#13;
memories of their own college days to those who are no longer in&#13;
school, and serve as a record of never-to-be-forgotten experiences&#13;
to the students of 1939.&#13;
&#13;
43621.&#13;
&#13;
�To&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
whose understanding friendliness has&#13;
been an everpresent help and&#13;
guide to every student.&#13;
&#13;
�President Earl Alan Roadman&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-Campus Canopy.&#13;
&#13;
"For a jolly good fellow."&#13;
he's&#13;
B.D., D.D., LL.D.&#13;
Iowa State Teachers College, Upper Iowa&#13;
University, Boston University Graduate&#13;
School, University of Halle, Germany.&#13;
&#13;
�Staff&#13;
In Memoriam&#13;
&#13;
- Journal Photo.&#13;
&#13;
Associate&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR ................................................Mildred Wikert&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY Editor&#13;
LITERARY Assistant&#13;
SENIOR EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Nelson&#13;
Clara Louise McBurney&#13;
Margaret Lundquist&#13;
&#13;
JUNIOR Editor&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
Keene Roadman&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN's SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
PHOTOGRAPH Y EDITOR&#13;
SNAPSHOT Editor&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Brown&#13;
.Irene Johnson&#13;
Bonnie Jean Wall en&#13;
Jean Anderson&#13;
&#13;
FORENSICS EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
J. BUSHNELL&#13;
&#13;
In the death of Dr. J. J. Bushnell, Morningside College has lost&#13;
a great man; great because he risked everything that he might do&#13;
for others. Though h e knew that death might come a t an y moment,&#13;
he gave himself to the thorough stud y of books, a skin g as did&#13;
Browning's grammarian, " What's in the scroll thou keepes t furl ed 'I'&#13;
Let me kn ow all." Books and p eople were his life, his great desire&#13;
being to know, and to bring his students to know the high , not the&#13;
low, not the night, but the mornin g.&#13;
&#13;
- A Faculty Memb er.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
DRAMATI CS EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
DR. J .&#13;
&#13;
Dale Harter&#13;
&#13;
ARTIST&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
TYPIST&#13;
&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
Bob Swift, Russell Martin&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
&#13;
Under Morningside's last three presidents one professor more&#13;
than an y other firml y established himself, throu gh his jovial disp osition and shining integrity in the h earts of his students. To him&#13;
they freely turned for the sympathetic counsel which it was his&#13;
deepest joy to b estow, and to Dr. Bushnell 's m emory they will&#13;
turn many times again for comfort and inspiration.&#13;
&#13;
- A Student.&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
- Campus Conclave.&#13;
&#13;
�Board of Trustees&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
R. J.&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON,&#13;
&#13;
C. L.&#13;
&#13;
BARKS,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City.......................................................... President&#13;
&#13;
Orange City..........................................................Vice.President&#13;
&#13;
T. N. McCLURE, Sioux City............................................Secretary.Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
EMERITI&#13;
&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER, Alamo, Texas&#13;
HONORARY&#13;
J. N. Hughes, Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
J. C. Rasmussen, Spencer, Iowa&#13;
C. C. Harshbarger, Onawa, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. C. R. Long, Sioux City&#13;
A. M. Jackson, Sioux City&#13;
ACTIVE&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1939&#13;
&#13;
0. M. Bond, Sioux City&#13;
R. J . Harrington, Sioux City&#13;
C. H . Kingsbury, Ponca, Nebraska&#13;
John Kolp, Manson, Iowa&#13;
W. H. Lease, Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
Howard Martin, Sioux City&#13;
Harry Pratt, Sioux City&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1940&#13;
&#13;
C. W. Britton, Sioux City&#13;
J . J. Davies, Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
G. W. Dunn, Sioux City&#13;
L. W. Feik, Sioux City&#13;
Gordon Metcalf, Sioux City&#13;
Rueben Roach, Sioux City&#13;
A. L. Semans, Spencer, Iowa&#13;
J. R. Tumbleson, Eagle Grove, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1941&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks, Orange City, Iowa&#13;
F. Earl Burgess, Algona, Iowa&#13;
J. C. Ruth man, Algona, Iowa&#13;
H. I. Down , Sioux City&#13;
J. A. Farnham, Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
J . V. Madison, Sioux City&#13;
Carrol N. Smith, Sioux City&#13;
D. W . Stewart, Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Faculty&#13;
&#13;
CLARA L. ASMUS&#13;
&#13;
LYNN BEYER&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EMANUEL JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
.·&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, Chicago&#13;
Musical College.&#13;
&#13;
Dean of the College and&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
Hamline University, Oxford&#13;
Universit y, London University ,&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., Cornell College, 1920; A.M., University&#13;
of Chicago, 1921; S.T.B., Boston University,&#13;
1923; Graduate Fellow in Philosophy, Boston&#13;
University, 1923-4; Graduate Assistant in Philosophy,&#13;
Brown University, 1924-5: Graduate&#13;
&#13;
Studies, Harvard University, 1925, 1927-8; Ph.D.,&#13;
Bos ton University. 1928.&#13;
&#13;
LOIS JESSIE BRINKMAN&#13;
&#13;
JOHN J. BUSHNELL&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
D.D., Ph.D. , S.T .B.&#13;
&#13;
lnstrucior in Physical&#13;
Education for Women&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and R eligion&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek College,&#13;
Professional Physica l Education&#13;
Camp.&#13;
&#13;
Boston University, School of&#13;
Theology , Epworth Seminary,&#13;
Upper lowa University.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
A.B.,&#13;
&#13;
lllinois Wescleyan University, 1888; A.M., Co1umbia University, 191 3; L.H.D., lllinois Wes-&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH&#13;
DIMMITT&#13;
&#13;
l eya n University, 1920; Graduate&#13;
Student,&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Chicago,&#13;
summer quarters , 1894 and 1897;&#13;
Student in the American School of&#13;
Classical Studies, Rome, 1903-4;&#13;
Graduate Student, Columbia Univers ity, 1912-3; University of Chicago ,&#13;
summer, 1918.&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women and&#13;
Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CANNING&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Instructo r in Theory and&#13;
Organ&#13;
&#13;
Instructo r in Public School&#13;
Music and in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin College.&#13;
&#13;
Missouri State Teachers College,&#13;
Columbia University.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AusnN Coss&#13;
&#13;
EARLE E. EMME&#13;
&#13;
B.S., M.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., D.B., A.M., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Psychology&#13;
&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan University ,&#13;
University of II linois, University of Chicago, Clark&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern University, Garrett Biblical Institute, Co lum bia University, Boston Univers it y, University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
LAURA CLARA FISCHER&#13;
A.B. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
A.B., M.S.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Ancient Languages and&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professo r of&#13;
Physics&#13;
&#13;
MYRON EARLE GRABER&#13;
Dean of Men and Professor of Physics&#13;
A.B., H eidelberg University, 1901; A.M. , ibid .,&#13;
&#13;
1904; Ph.D., University of Iowa, 1924; Graduate Student. University of Michigan, summer,&#13;
1907; Columbia University, 1908; Ohio State&#13;
University, 191 3: Fellow in Physics, University&#13;
of Chicago. 1917- 8 : Fellow in Physics, Univer·&#13;
s it y of low a, 1923-4.&#13;
&#13;
Carleton College, University of&#13;
Chicago, University of Colorado, University of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, University&#13;
of Iowa .&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
Twelve&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�HELEN&#13;
BIRDINA HILL&#13;
&#13;
HORACE B. HAWTHORN&#13;
&#13;
B.S., M.S., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
State&#13;
&#13;
College, University&#13;
&#13;
of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN HOWE&#13;
&#13;
Cleveland Institute&#13;
of Music,&#13;
Pu pil of Louis Persinger, Josef&#13;
Fuchs, Herbert Elwell, Juilliard&#13;
School of Music.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
lowa State College, Ames Business College, Gregg College,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
KA NTHLENER&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Romance&#13;
Languages&#13;
Cornell&#13;
&#13;
College, Harvard University, lnstitut Francais&#13;
and&#13;
Univers ity of Madrid, Universi ty&#13;
of Chicago. University of Dijon,&#13;
National Un iversity of Mexi co.&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON&#13;
MACCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
LOVELAND&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Emeritus of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice&#13;
&#13;
Smith College, Oxford&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin Conservatory of Music,&#13;
Lake Geneva, Student of L. A.&#13;
Torrens.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
A.B. , Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
MARCIA McNEE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music and&#13;
Professor of Voice&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Elementary&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin&#13;
College,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, Oberlin Conservatory&#13;
of Music, Lak e Geneva, Pupil&#13;
of Dr. Carl Duflt, El lison Van&#13;
H oose.&#13;
&#13;
Upper Iowa University, Univerof Chicago, University of&#13;
Iowa, University of Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
sity&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE KAULL  KINNEY&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
University o f Kansas, Eastman&#13;
School of Music, Stu dent o f&#13;
Lawrence Schaufflrt, Fredonia&#13;
State Normal, New York.&#13;
&#13;
J. KINNEY&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
GORDON&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violoncello&#13;
and Double B ass&#13;
Maas School of Music, Eastman&#13;
School of Mu sic, Student of&#13;
Karl Agnesy, Ne l son Watson.&#13;
&#13;
EDWARDA&#13;
&#13;
METZ&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Piano fo rte&#13;
Chicago Musical College, Boguslawski College of Music, Curtis Institute, Pupil of Tom ford&#13;
Harris, Ernest Hutcheson ,&#13;
Austin Conradi.&#13;
&#13;
MENDAL B . MILLER&#13;
A.B., A.M .&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Economics and Sociology&#13;
Greenville Co l lege, University&#13;
of Southern Californi a .&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
]AMES E . KIRKPATRICK&#13;
A.B., A.M., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE H. KLEINPELL&#13;
A.B. , A.M., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History and&#13;
Political Science&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College, University of&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
University of Iowa, University&#13;
of Chicago, Ohio State&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
MIRAH MILLS&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL RUTH MURRAY&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Engish and&#13;
Secretary of the Facuity&#13;
&#13;
Registrar and Assistant&#13;
Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages and History&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, University&#13;
of Chicago, University of Michigan, University of Sout he rn&#13;
California.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL THOMPSON&#13;
KUCINSKI&#13;
&#13;
LEO KUCINSKI&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Violin&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Head of P ianoforte&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College,&#13;
Warsaw&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Oberlin&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Cl evel and Institute of Music, Juilliard Graduate School of Mu sic,&#13;
Pupil of Edward lbzikowski,&#13;
Charlotte Demuth Williams, De&#13;
Ribaupierre,&#13;
Albert&#13;
Stoessel ,&#13;
Rubin Goldmark, Naoum&#13;
Blinder.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Col lego, P upil of&#13;
Emma Sage. J. E rick Sch mall,&#13;
Theo. Otterstrom, R udo lph&#13;
Ganz, Fritz Voegeley, Ceci l&#13;
Burleigh.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
Morningside College, Eastman&#13;
School of Music, Chicago Musica l Co ll ege, Cleveland Tnstitute,&#13;
Juilliard School of Music, Student of Rudolph Ganz, Raymond Wilson, Arthur Loesser,&#13;
James Friskin.&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, University&#13;
of Illinois , Columbia&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT GLEN ROGERS&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Physical&#13;
Education and Assistant&#13;
Athletic Director&#13;
Morningside Co ll ege, University&#13;
of Illinois.&#13;
&#13;
Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�JASON M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical&#13;
Education and Director of&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Albion College.&#13;
&#13;
SAMUEL&#13;
&#13;
C. STEINBRENNER&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
N. McCLURE&#13;
Bursar&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MOOK&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Vincennes University , University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
Charles City College , Theological Seminary, Frankfurt-onMain. Germany. University of&#13;
Strassburg, University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN WILSON STEWART&#13;
B.A. , M.A.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MAE MACARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
&#13;
Adrian Coll ege, University of&#13;
Chicago. Kansas State University , Kan sas City University ,&#13;
Marine&#13;
Biological&#13;
Laboratory ,&#13;
University of Iowa, University&#13;
of Michigan.&#13;
&#13;
Geneva College , Montana State&#13;
University, University of Iowa,&#13;
University of Illinois, Univer•&#13;
sity of Washington.&#13;
&#13;
Western Union College,&#13;
National Business Training&#13;
School.&#13;
&#13;
Director of Admissions&#13;
Ball State Teachers College,&#13;
Indiana, University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS&#13;
A.B. , M.D.&#13;
&#13;
ALICE MATTICE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
Secretary to the President&#13;
Morningside College .&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
LAURA TASCHE&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT TIMM&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
University of South Dakota,&#13;
Spearfish Normal, Aberdeen&#13;
Normal, Fort Wayne Business&#13;
Institute.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Field Representative&#13;
&#13;
AKESON&#13;
&#13;
Secretary to the Bursar&#13;
National&#13;
&#13;
Business Training&#13;
School.&#13;
&#13;
Morning side College, Juilli ard&#13;
Schoo l of Music, Eastman&#13;
Sc hool of Music, Pupil of&#13;
Donald Lentz , George Carlson,&#13;
Georges Barre, Arthur Lora,&#13;
Daniel Groth, Donald Schmid,&#13;
Chau tau qua Summer School.&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
Ph.B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Manager of Women's&#13;
Residence Halls&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Valley Hospital&#13;
Sioux Falls.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State College.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in Biology&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, Johns&#13;
Hopkins University, University&#13;
o f Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Dormitory Nurse&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
Lois M. VANDENBRINK&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
ILA BUNCH&#13;
MILTON WIKSELL&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F. Wood FORD&#13;
A.B., Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Speech and&#13;
Dramatics&#13;
&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte,&#13;
History of Music, and&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College,&#13;
University of Missouri , University of Iowa, Louisiana State&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HELEN JENSEN&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
ROY J . SWEET&#13;
&#13;
Head of Wind Instruments&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, Berlin&#13;
Conservatory of Music , University of Michigan, Pupil of&#13;
Emil Liebling , Alberto Jones ,&#13;
Clarence Eddy , John Doane,&#13;
Olaf Anderson , Howard Well s,&#13;
Palmer Christian.&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Health&#13;
&#13;
Office&#13;
&#13;
CI ass of&#13;
&#13;
I93 9&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Under the watchful eye of Dr. C. F . Berkstresser, the students&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
have been kept in excellent physical condition throughout the year.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Daily office hours were kept by " Doc" and Nurse Inez Grove in&#13;
the Health Office which is now in its second year of existence.&#13;
Free medical attention is available to all students in need of it;&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
voluntary Wasserman tests we re given this year and all examina-&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
tion s for the Heal th King and Qu een were done in the Health Office.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ____________ ____________________________ ________________ David Brinkman&#13;
Vice-President -------·---- _____________________________ __ __ _____ _Ted Barnowe&#13;
_&#13;
Secretary _____ _&#13;
________________________________________________ Virginia Thomas&#13;
Representative __________ _&#13;
________ __ _&#13;
_ ____________ _ Margaret Lundquist&#13;
____&#13;
&#13;
Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
43621&#13;
&#13;
�DORIS ALEXANDER&#13;
&#13;
WILLI E BELLE ALEXANDER&#13;
&#13;
IRENE AN DERSON&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
Redfield , South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
L inn Grove, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Lake Park, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
L iberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
L iberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
M usic&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Zera Chi,&#13;
Lib,rarian, 3,&#13;
Directress. 4; Sigma Tau Del ta,&#13;
3 . 4 , Secre tary-Treasurer, 4:&#13;
Chapel Choir, I. 2, 3, 4; W. S .&#13;
G. A .. Ha ll P resident, 4 .&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Cl ub, I, 2 , 3 , 4,&#13;
Secretary, 2. Treasurer, 1: Dramatics, I . 2, 3, 4; M. C. A. ,&#13;
I , 2.&#13;
&#13;
A lpha Sigma; Cosmopolitan&#13;
Club, 2, 3. 4, P resident, 4; M .&#13;
C. A., 1, 2 , 3, 4 , Secretary, 4;&#13;
Grace League. 1, 2, 3, 4; lsh koodah. Vice P res ident, l.&#13;
&#13;
A lpha Sigma , H istorian, 2, Corresponding Secretary, 3; Choir.&#13;
2. 3, 4; M. C. A.; Cooperative&#13;
House P resident, 4.&#13;
&#13;
MYRLE AUSTIN&#13;
Rock ford, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
FLETAMAE BANE&#13;
K anawha . Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
L iberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Cen tral State T eachers Co l lege.&#13;
1,: P arsons Juni or Co llege. 2:&#13;
Kan sas State T eachers Co ll ege.&#13;
3.&#13;
&#13;
Pre-Engineer's Club, Treasure r,&#13;
2, Vice Presi de nt , 3, P resident,&#13;
4 : Sigma P i Sigma, Vi ce P resident, 3, President, 4 : Vice&#13;
P resident, Senior Class.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi; Sigma Mu,&#13;
Treasu rer, 3; Mu P hi Epsilon .&#13;
Histo rian, 4; Chapel Choi r. 1,&#13;
2. 3. 4; Student Council, 4 :&#13;
W. S. G . A . , President, 4;&#13;
Who' s Who, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Chapel Choir, 2, 3. 4.&#13;
&#13;
TED&#13;
&#13;
BARNOWE&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY BEHRENS&#13;
Whiting, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN BRA DY&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
MARY BRILMAN&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BRINKMAN&#13;
&#13;
Norfolk. Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Primghar, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
RALPH BRAKKE&#13;
&#13;
Sanborn, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan . ] , 2; Morn·&#13;
ingside, 3, 4; Pre -Engin eers&#13;
Clu b ; Aviation Club.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Club, 1: Pi Gam ma Mu.&#13;
4; Intramural Basketball , 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4; I ntramural Ki tte nba ll , 1,&#13;
2, 3, 4; Track, 1.&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
K appa&#13;
si lon :&#13;
Band,&#13;
crative&#13;
&#13;
Zeta Chi ; M u Phi EpVesper Choi r, 1,, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
l, 3; M . C. A.; Coop·&#13;
House Vice President, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
Al pha T au Delta, Vi ce President, 3. President, 4 : "M" C lub,&#13;
3, 4: F ootball: President Sen ior Class; Student Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Hinton, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BRUNTJEN&#13;
&#13;
BORDEN BUCHANAN&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BUCKINGHAM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Palo Alto, California&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Pre -Engineer's Club, Sec reta ry,&#13;
2, Vice P resident, 4, President ,&#13;
4 ; Sigma P i S igma, P resident,&#13;
3; T rack , I , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta; Biology Club;&#13;
Aeronautics Club, Assistant&#13;
Commanding Officer; Beta Beta&#13;
Beta; Intramural BasketbalI;&#13;
Tri Beta, President.&#13;
&#13;
P hi Sigma, Treasurer, 4 ; Basketba ll , 2, 3, 4; Football , 2, 3,&#13;
4; " M" Club, 2, 3, 4; President&#13;
of Student Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
AGNES CARLIN&#13;
&#13;
BERTH A CONNER&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM CORKHILL&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA CRANE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Glidden, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Historian, 2,&#13;
President, 3, Recording Secretary, 4, Usher, 4; Psychology&#13;
Clu b, 4; Sigma T au Delta 4 ·&#13;
P i Gamma Mu , 4; A lpha Kappa&#13;
Delta, 4; M. C. A .. 2, 3 ; InterSororit y Council, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi; Psychology&#13;
Club, 4; Band, I , 3; W. A. A. ,&#13;
I, 2, 3, 4, Board, 2 , 3, 4; Honorary Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Honorary Kitte n -ball ; Sweater Winner; Scarf Win ner; Sioux, 4;&#13;
M. C. A. , I , 2, 3. 4; Cheer&#13;
Leader, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Pianist. 2, Recording Secretary, 3. Vice President , 4: Sigma&#13;
Mu, President.&#13;
3; Mu Ph i E psilon, Correspondi ng Secretary, 4; Vesper Ch oir,&#13;
3, 4: M . C. A. , Chairman of&#13;
M. C. A . Radio Broad cast , 4 :&#13;
S tudent Coun cil, 4; Conservatory P resident, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi. l. 2 : Col legiate P layers : Phi Sigma Iota,&#13;
V ice P residen t, 2, P resident. 3,&#13;
Sec retary. 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Directress, 3,&#13;
4: Mu Ph i Eps ilon, Vice Presi dent, 3, P resident, 4; S igma&#13;
Mu, 2, 3, 4, Socia l Chai rman,&#13;
2; Chapel Choir, I, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Band, I , 2; K. Z. X . Trio, 2,&#13;
3; W . S. G. A. , Vi ce P resident,&#13;
4; Messiah Contralto S oloist, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Doris DAVIS&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN DEPUE&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS DowN&#13;
&#13;
OWEN ENGFN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Minneapolis , Minnesota&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Players, 3; Chapel&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha , President, 4;&#13;
Collegiate Players, l, 2; Psychology Club, 3, 4 ; Chapel&#13;
Choir, 1, 2, 3; Vice President,&#13;
Sophomore Class; Christian&#13;
Service Club Radio Quartet, I;&#13;
lshkoodah,&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms, 1 ;&#13;
May Queen Attendant; Beauty&#13;
Queen, 4.&#13;
&#13;
A I pha Tau Del ta. Sergeant-atArms, 4; Football , 1; Basket·&#13;
ball, I.&#13;
&#13;
Hibbing Juni or College, I, 2;&#13;
"M" Club, 3, 4; Football, 3,&#13;
4 ;, Kittenball, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
DALE FLINDERS&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD FORBES&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA FORRESTER&#13;
&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
JAK EFELKER&#13;
Trenton,&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Keosauqua , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sutherland , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club, 3, 4; Football ,&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Pi&#13;
Sigma, 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer, 4; Choir, 2, 3, 4; Male&#13;
Quartet, 4; M. C. A. Radio&#13;
Quartet. 2, 3, 4; Football , 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4: Track, 1, 2; Who's Who ,&#13;
4; H ealth King Attendant, 3;&#13;
Health King , 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta; Chapel Choir,&#13;
l , 2, 3, 4; Dramatics.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Usher, 2, 4&#13;
P ep Club, 2; Biology Club, 2&#13;
Int ernationa l R e l ations Club , 2&#13;
Beta Beta Beta, 4; W. A. A. , 1,&#13;
2, 4 , Basketball Chairman , 4 ,&#13;
Awards Chairman, 2; Yale-Harva rd , 1, 2, 4; Scarf Winner, 2;&#13;
Sweater Winner, 4; H onorary&#13;
H ockey, Volleyball, and Basket ball T eams, I , 2, 4; M. C. A.,&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM HAWTHORN&#13;
Cas tana , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA GASINK&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Players, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club, 3, 4; International Relations Club , 3, 4;&#13;
Symphony Orchestra , 1, 2. 3. 4;&#13;
String Quartet. l , 2, 3, 4; Vesper Choir, 2. 3, 4; String Trio ,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Battle Cree k, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
University of Iowa , 2. 3; Biol·&#13;
ogy Club , 4; Band, I , 4.&#13;
&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4; M. C. A., I, 2, 3,&#13;
4; Grace League , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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Alpha Sigma, Chaplain, 2, 3,&#13;
President,&#13;
4; Manuscript Club,&#13;
Librarian, 4; Editor of "Manuscript ", 4; Sociology Club, 2;&#13;
lnternational&#13;
Relations&#13;
Club&#13;
Vice President, 2; Alpha Kappa Delta , Secretary, 3, President, 4; Sigma Tau Delta , President, 4; Intramural, 1, 2 , 3, 4;&#13;
Yale-Harvard , 3; Scarf Winner,&#13;
3: Sweater Winner, 3: Collegian&#13;
Reporter, Y. M. C. A. , l, 2, 3,&#13;
4, Social Service Chairman, 2,&#13;
Secretary 3, Y. W. Representative, 4: Grace League, 1,. 2 , 3,&#13;
4, Cabinet, 2. 3, 4; Int er-Sor·&#13;
ority Council, 4: W. A. A.,&#13;
Board , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
FRED HOFFMAN&#13;
&#13;
I, 2, 4.&#13;
CAROL HELD&#13;
Hint on, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Directress, 3,&#13;
Critic, 4 , President, 4; Pep&#13;
Club , 3; Sigma Mu, 3; Chapel&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4; Band, I;&#13;
H ea lth Queen , 2; Student Body&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, 4; Bea uty&#13;
Queen, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Minneapolis , Minn eso ta&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Directress , 2,&#13;
Recording Secretary, 4; P sycho logy Club, 4; Vesper Choir, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Hibbing Junior College , 1, 2 :&#13;
Football, 3, 4: Kittenball;&#13;
Track, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Vice President, 3,&#13;
Corresponding Secretary, 4; Psychology Club, 4; Pep Club, 3;&#13;
Agora , Junior&#13;
Representative;&#13;
Collegian Reporter; M. C. A.,&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta, Sergeant-atArms, 2, Vice President, 4;&#13;
Economics Club, 2, 3; Cheer&#13;
Leader, 3: Editor of Alumni&#13;
Bulletin, 4.&#13;
&#13;
HOSNER&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HUGHES&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD JACOBSON&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAY KLINKER&#13;
&#13;
RUSSELL KRAAI&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA LEWTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Denison, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Orange City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Francis Shimer College; Cosmopolitan Club , 4; Chap e l&#13;
Choir, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern Junior CoJlege, l,&#13;
2: Phi Sigma, President, 4;&#13;
"M" Club , 3, 4; Football , 3,&#13;
4; Basketball , 3, 4; Kittenball,&#13;
3, 4; Track, 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, 4, Inter-Sorority&#13;
Council , 2, Critic, 4; Chapel&#13;
Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Vocal Trio,&#13;
l, 2, 3; Madrigals, 3; Song&#13;
Leader, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL HELD&#13;
Hinton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�NADINE LINDQUIST&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET LUNDQUIST&#13;
&#13;
CLARA LouISE McBuRNEY&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Kapp a Ze ta Chi; Mu Phi Epsilon, 3, 4, Warden , 3, Treasurer, 4; Sigma Mu, 2; Chapel&#13;
Choir ], 2, 3 , 4; Band , I , 2;&#13;
Contralto So loi st in "Messiah",&#13;
3 ; Solos in " Rose Maiden", l.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi , Corres ponding&#13;
Sec retary, 3, Treasu rer, 4; Pi&#13;
Gamma Mu. 4; Junior Class,&#13;
Treasurer; Senior Class Rep re sentative; Senior Editor , Juni or&#13;
Editor, "Sioux''; Grace Leagu e,&#13;
2; Student Council , 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Chaplain, 3, Reporter, 4; Art Club , 2; Ger man&#13;
Club, Musician, 1, Vi ce P resid e nt, 2; Mu Phi Ep sil on. Hi storian , 4, R ec ording Secretary,&#13;
4; Sigma Mu , 2, 3; Pi Gamma&#13;
Mu; Symphony Orch es tra, 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4 ; Collegian Re porter, 1, 4;&#13;
A s sis ta n t Literary Editor ,&#13;
"Sioux" , 4; M. C. A. , 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Inter-Sorority Council.&#13;
&#13;
M. C. A., 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS McLAUGHLIN&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT McQuEEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY NELSON&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
BERNICE PETRONIS&#13;
&#13;
Delavan , Illin ois&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PEARSON&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn , Iowa&#13;
Bio log y Club, 1, 2; P sychology&#13;
Club, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE PRIMMER&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
NARYKA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Biology Club, 2, 3, 4; P syc hology Club, 4; Beta Be ta Be ta, 4.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD PAWSON&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Zeta Chi; German Club ,&#13;
2; W. A. A., 2, 3, 4, Vice President, 4; Intramural Ho ckey, 2,&#13;
3: Snapshot Editor, 3 , Literary&#13;
Editor, 4. "Sioux"; M. C. A.,&#13;
2. 3: Grace League , l ; Art&#13;
Club, 2.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
MORRISON&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta . Secretary. 3,&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms, 2, President ,&#13;
4: Int er-Fraternity Council. 4;&#13;
Economics Club , 2 ; "M" Club ,&#13;
3, 4, Secretary , 4; Football , l,&#13;
2. 3, 4; Basketball , I, 3, 4;&#13;
Int ramural&#13;
Basketbal I, 2, 3:&#13;
Intramural Kittenball , ] , 2. 3.&#13;
4: Junior Class Pres ident: Stude nt Council 3; Sports Editor.&#13;
"Sioux" , 2; Grace Leag ue . l, 2.·&#13;
3, Cab in et, 2; M. C. A. , I , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Pre-Engineer's Club; Band;&#13;
Brass Quartet; Trumpet Trio;&#13;
Acrobatic Team.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Peterson. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MCKENNA&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE PRITCHARD&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi; Mu Phi Epsi1on , Vice President. 4 ; Sigma&#13;
Mu; Chapel Choir, 1. 2, 3, 4;&#13;
W. S. G. A. , H a ll President , 4.&#13;
&#13;
KEENE ROADMAN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberai Arts&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Treasurer, 3, 4,&#13;
Pres id e nt, 4; Psychology Club ,&#13;
4, Se c re tary , 4; Economics&#13;
Club, 2; Eta Sigma Phi, 3, 4,&#13;
Sec re tary, 4 ; Pi Gamma Mu , 4 ;&#13;
A I pha Kappa Del ta, 4; Intramural Baske tball, 2, 3, 4, Volleyball&#13;
2, 3, 4, Hockey, 4;&#13;
Typist&#13;
Sioux , 4; M. C. A&#13;
1, 2; Agora, Senior Represen tati ve.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
DALE ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi ; Ves per Choir,&#13;
President; Symphony Orchestra;&#13;
Student St rin g Quartet.&#13;
&#13;
Economics Club; Coll eg iate&#13;
Players, 2, 3; Pi Kappa Delta :&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega; Student Body&#13;
Vice President , 4; Collegian&#13;
R eport e r ; Sports Editor,&#13;
"Sioux", 3, 4; M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Marathon , lowa&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT ROHWER&#13;
&#13;
HENRY SCHUNCK&#13;
&#13;
ALBERTA SEAVEY&#13;
&#13;
CHARELS SEWARD&#13;
&#13;
Paullina, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Aurora, T!lin oi s&#13;
&#13;
Forest City , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club, 4; Economics Club , 2: Pi Kappa Delta, 2.&#13;
3, 4, President, 4; Pi Gamma&#13;
Mu;. Chapel Choir, 1, 2, 3 , 4,&#13;
President, 4; Student Council ,&#13;
2. 3, 4; M. C. A. , I, 2, 3, 4,&#13;
President, 3; Class Scholarship,&#13;
1: Board of Control, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Tnter-Collegiate Debate, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Treasurer, 3,&#13;
President, 4 , Int er-Sorority&#13;
Council , 3, 4; Pep Club ; Ishkoodah President , 1 ; Chapel&#13;
Choir, 2, 3, 4, Vice P residen t,&#13;
4 ; Juni or Class Represe ntative;&#13;
. Agora, President , 4, Vic e President, 3; H ealth Queen, 3;&#13;
"Yumph Girl", 3; Miss Morningsid e, 4; Student Council,&#13;
3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Chapel Choir, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Usher, 2; Col1egiate Players , 1. 2: W. A. A. ,&#13;
l, 2, 4, Board Member. 2; \V.&#13;
S. G . A. , H a ll Pres id e nt, 4;&#13;
Int ramura l Sports, 1, 2, 4;&#13;
Yal e -Harvard, 1, 2, 4: Sw ea ter&#13;
Winner, 4; Scarf Winn e r, 2;&#13;
C o I l e g i an R e porter, 1, 2;&#13;
"Sioux", 2; M. C. A., I. 2, 4;&#13;
Grace Leagu e , ] , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th e ta Rho, 2, 3, Chap lain , 3; Manu sc ript Club, Vice&#13;
President , 4; Collegiate Players.&#13;
2, 3; Choir, 2, 4; Collegian&#13;
R e porter, 2, 3, Art Editor, 3;&#13;
Student Ministerial Association,&#13;
Vice Pres ident, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta, Treasurer, 4 ,&#13;
President , 4; Biology Club, 2;&#13;
Junior Class Vi ce Pres id ent.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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X&#13;
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�BIRDIE MAE SLOTHOWER&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA SMITH&#13;
&#13;
DON SNYDER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Onawa, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Rockford , Illinois&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Usher, Directress,&#13;
Secretary; Collegiate Playe rs;&#13;
W. A. A. , I ; Sigma Tau Delta;&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi, Vice Presid ent;&#13;
Ma nu script Club.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Pianist, 2, Usher,&#13;
3, Directress, 4, Historian, 4;&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon , Warden, 4;&#13;
Sigma Mu, Secretary, 3; Chapel&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4 ; M. C. A.&#13;
Radio Quartet , 4 ; Soprano&#13;
Soloist in "Messiah", 4.&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Theta Rho; "M" Club,&#13;
2, 3, 4, Secretary, 3, Presi dent,&#13;
4; Chapel Choir, 1 ; Footbal I,&#13;
&#13;
MARY STANKIEWICZ&#13;
&#13;
RUTH THATCHER&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
West Bend, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, 2, Re co rding Secretary, 3, Reporter, 4; Psychology&#13;
Club, 4 ; Pep Club, 3; W. A.&#13;
A., l , 2, 3, 4; Intramural , I , 2,&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Chaplain, 4; German Club, 2; Vespe r Choir, 1;&#13;
Collegian R eporter, l ; M. C.&#13;
A., I; Crace L eague, 1; Gospel&#13;
T eam, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi, Directress, 3,&#13;
Critic, 3, Vice President, 4;&#13;
Dram atics, 2, 3; Sigma Tau&#13;
De lta, 3, 4; Freshman Class&#13;
Secretary; Senior Class Secretary; Collegian Repor ter, 2;&#13;
Freshmen Green Sheet Editor,&#13;
I; Editor Agora Edition , 2; Editor, "Sioux" , 3; Board of Control, l , 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 2;&#13;
May Queen, 1; Agora Secretary,&#13;
2; Ishkoodah President, l.&#13;
&#13;
3, 4; Yale- Harvard, l, 2, 3;&#13;
Collegian Reporter, 3; M. C.&#13;
A., 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4; Basketba ll , I, 2, 3,&#13;
4; Kittenball , l , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Hancock, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WADE&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State College, 3; Alph a&#13;
Tau De l ta; Pre-Engin eer's Club,&#13;
I , 2, 4; Football, I.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JAMES VANDERSALL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Theta Rho ; German&#13;
&#13;
Psychology Club, 4; M. C. A.,&#13;
1 , 3, 4; Grace League, l, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE JEAN WALLEN&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Club, 1, 2, 3, President, 3; Phi&#13;
Be ta Rho , 3; Band, 3; Sioux&#13;
City Symphony Orchestra , 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4, Concert Master, ] , 2, 3;&#13;
Fa culty String Quartet, 1, 2, 3,&#13;
4; Grace L eag ue, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
KELLOGG WELLS&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
GARNETT WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ro ckwe ll City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi, Usher, 3; W.&#13;
A. A. , Treasurer, 3, President,&#13;
4; Sigma Tau De l ta; Phi Sigma&#13;
lota, Secretary, 2, 3, Hi s torian ,&#13;
4; Eta Sigma Phi, Presid ent, 4;&#13;
Intramural Hock ey, 1, 2, 3, 4 ;&#13;
Basketball , I , 2, 3, 4; Volleyball, I , 2, 3, 4; Baseball, I, 2,&#13;
3, 4; Yale-Harvard, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Sweater Winner, 3; Scarf Winner , 2; Women's Sports Editor,&#13;
3, Snapshot Edit o r, 4, "Sioux ".&#13;
M. C. A. , 2, 3, 4, Cabinet Me mber 3, 4 ; Student Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th eta Rho ; Dramatics, 2;&#13;
Psychology Club, 4; Phi Sigma&#13;
Tota, Presid ent , 3, 4; Choir, 1 ;&#13;
M. C. A., I , 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi , Chaplain, 3;&#13;
P syc ho logy Club, 2, 3, 4, President, 3, 4; Economics Club, 2;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu , Vice Pres id en t ,&#13;
3, Pres id ent, 4; M. C. A. , l, 2,&#13;
3, 4, Cabinet, l , 4; SecretaryTreasurer , 2, Vice President, 3;&#13;
Grace League, 1 , 2, 3, 4, Cabinet, 1, 2, 4, Secretary-Treasurer,&#13;
3; International Relations Club.&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary , 2.&#13;
&#13;
WORRELL&#13;
&#13;
HOYT GRANTER&#13;
&#13;
Whiting, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Danbury, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi; W. A. A .. I;&#13;
Ve sper Choir, 1; Health&#13;
Qu een, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta, Vi ce President , 4; Biol ogy Club, 1 ; Economics Club, 2, 3, 4; Intra mural Bask etba l I.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty -seven&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
BRUCE VAN DEMARK&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�SEDATE ( ?) SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class of&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
o·&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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u&#13;
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u&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ............................................................................Lester Olson&#13;
Vice-President ..................................................................Art Lundblad&#13;
Secretary .......................................................................... Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Representative ................................................................Margaret Long&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�HARLAN DEWELL&#13;
VIRGINIA ALLEN&#13;
Recent member of the Diamond Ring SociNy.&#13;
&#13;
Th e better half of his education has not&#13;
been found in books.&#13;
&#13;
JEANNE ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
VERONA DEMOND&#13;
&#13;
Seldom seen with books, but frequently&#13;
with a man.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Gentleness does more than violence.&#13;
&#13;
JEAN FOWLER&#13;
JAMES ARRASMITH&#13;
A pre-med and a mighty "Merrie" fellow.&#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS BEGGS&#13;
&#13;
Napoleon was little; so is Jean.&#13;
&#13;
LUCILLE FRITZCHE&#13;
Music washes away from the soul the dust&#13;
of everyday life.&#13;
&#13;
Watch out, women, here I come.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
·o&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY BROOKE&#13;
Neither sinner nor saint.&#13;
&#13;
B. ROY BROWN&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Not real good and not real bad.&#13;
&#13;
BETTY GREENE&#13;
The way to a professor's heart is through-&#13;
&#13;
He awoke one afternoon, and found&#13;
himself- awake.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
CONSTANCE GALL&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Even the Health Office is a pleasant place&#13;
with her on duty.&#13;
&#13;
A live wire with a short circuit.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT CHAPMAN&#13;
Knowledge in youth is wisdom in age.&#13;
&#13;
JANET COE&#13;
Play and I'll play with you;&#13;
study and you study alone.&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE DEVRIES&#13;
Her outward quietness covers a wealth&#13;
of hidden character.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
INEZ GROVE&#13;
&#13;
GLEN BURROW&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GUSTESON&#13;
A case of quality; not quantity.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES GASINK&#13;
Something attempted, something done.&#13;
&#13;
DEVON HAHN&#13;
He laughs best who laughs when the&#13;
prof laughs.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�ADELAIDE HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
KATHLYN KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Better sense in the head than cents&#13;
in the pocket.&#13;
&#13;
As subtle as the b in subtle.&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MARIE LARSON&#13;
ALICE HANSON&#13;
The other half of the Sweeney-Hanson team.&#13;
&#13;
Some people have the habit of winking the&#13;
eye oftener than is absolutely necessary.&#13;
&#13;
ELWOOD HETLAND&#13;
&#13;
ELLA LAURITSEN&#13;
&#13;
Absence from class makes the marks&#13;
grow rounder.&#13;
&#13;
Always right with the world.&#13;
&#13;
BETTY LING&#13;
&#13;
LETHA HOWES&#13;
To be determined&#13;
your work done.&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
to have half&#13;
&#13;
An inspiration and example to us&#13;
American students.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ROGER HUGHES&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET LONG&#13;
&#13;
Studying makes some people wiseme otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
"My heart belongs to--"&#13;
&#13;
WALTER HURD&#13;
Another year has passed. Have you?&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
NANCY LOWRY&#13;
One of those whose mind runs in a whirl.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
MILLICENT "&#13;
JENSEN&#13;
A guaranteed tonic for the blues.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
ART LUNDBLAD&#13;
I can resist anything but temptation.&#13;
&#13;
IRENE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
&#13;
To surpass in the classroom is a habit of hers.&#13;
&#13;
A word to the wise is useless .&#13;
&#13;
LUCILLE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
DON MICHAELSON&#13;
&#13;
When you play, play hard. When you work,&#13;
don't play at all.&#13;
&#13;
A man who blushes is not quite a brute.&#13;
&#13;
RALPH KITTERMAN&#13;
Arise with the lark, but avoid larks&#13;
in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
MINETTA MILLER&#13;
Her heart is not altogether in her work.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�DEON MOOR&#13;
&#13;
RUTH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Serious? Yes ... a little.&#13;
&#13;
Smart, but doesn't advertise the fact .&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ANN OLSON&#13;
"R efreshing" is the word that describes&#13;
Dorothy Ann.&#13;
&#13;
LESTER OLSON&#13;
Popular because he doesn't seek popularity.&#13;
&#13;
CLIFF SPAYDE&#13;
Majors in alibiology&#13;
&#13;
AL STROZDAS&#13;
Men wouldn't die so fast if they didn't&#13;
live so fast.&#13;
&#13;
MARLYN PEDERSON&#13;
&#13;
RUTH SUNDERLIN&#13;
&#13;
Many are called, but few get up.&#13;
&#13;
Time deals gently with those who take&#13;
it gently.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HELEN POSEY&#13;
Ease with dignity.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
DON SWEENEY&#13;
Just so it's a good time---&#13;
&#13;
MARION PRESTON&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
BOB SWIFT&#13;
&#13;
So persistent she would have the last word&#13;
with an echo.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Twice a year his studies come first.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
QUINTIN PRICHARD&#13;
Hey, give me the dope on that for the&#13;
Reporter!&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
IRVINE THOE&#13;
A blonde with brains.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
JOHN THROWER&#13;
VERNA RODDA&#13;
A whizz on a dance floor.&#13;
&#13;
' Tis better to have loafed and flunked than&#13;
never to have loafed at all.&#13;
&#13;
ARNOLD RUDD&#13;
&#13;
PATRICIA WARNER&#13;
&#13;
Th e greatest men are the simplest.&#13;
&#13;
Sincere, friendly, and reliable.&#13;
&#13;
LEO SMITH&#13;
&#13;
JOYCE WEED&#13;
&#13;
If a prof asks you a question at least let on&#13;
that you know something about it.&#13;
&#13;
Zets, W. A . A., and John.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�WISE ( ? ) JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
Class of&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President .................................................................... Perry Kruidenier&#13;
Vice-President ........ .................................................... Garrett Wallman&#13;
Secretary ................................................................................ Alice Scott&#13;
Representative .. ....... ....................................................... Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Edythe Mae Albert&#13;
Winnie Allen&#13;
Donnin Ame.s&#13;
&#13;
Darlene Cottington&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
Jackson Davis&#13;
&#13;
Josephine Dixon&#13;
Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Maxine Behrens&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Emme&#13;
Maxine Ericksen&#13;
&#13;
Vilmer Berger&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Milton Binger&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Esther Blomberg&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Beverly Borland&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Donald Fritzche&#13;
Rolland Grefe&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
Rollie Buckholz&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Cheely&#13;
Maurice Clare&#13;
Glennys Corderman&#13;
&#13;
Thirty eight&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn Guelff&#13;
Dale Harter&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
Genevieve Hileman&#13;
Robert Hill&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�l&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Hill&#13;
Dureth Helen Hitchcock&#13;
Betty Huxtable&#13;
&#13;
Wendell Jackson&#13;
Helen Jensen&#13;
Lyle Johnson&#13;
&#13;
James McNally&#13;
Oliver Mogck&#13;
Gwynne Morris&#13;
&#13;
Norma Neilson&#13;
Leonard Nelson&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Jones&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Frank Kahoun&#13;
Emil Knipp&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Myna Nickum&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Ernest Peterson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Perry Kruidenier&#13;
Clifford Lamkin&#13;
Kenneth Lawrence&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Locke&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
Lucille Mathena&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Pippett&#13;
Les Pruehs&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
Charlotte Robinson&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Irene Schaal&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Class o f&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Robert Shaver&#13;
Gordon Sheldall&#13;
&#13;
Leroy Sheley&#13;
Clarine Stone&#13;
Alice Swanson&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Vivian Toomer&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Frances WaIker&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Mary Walker&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Garrett Wallman&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Mary Ellen Walpole&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Charles Wert&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
Robert Van Stryland&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Donna Youngstrom&#13;
Ila Eberly&#13;
&#13;
President --------------------------------------------------·-·····-··-···········Edgar Graham&#13;
Vice-President ----············-····-·············----·-·······------------Stanley Anderson&#13;
Secretary ········-····-················----------·-·····---··-······--------------·Lauretta Kin g&#13;
Representative ---------··············--------········--·-·····------------Barbara Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Forty.two&#13;
&#13;
F o rty- three&#13;
&#13;
�Glenn Adcock&#13;
Joyce Addy&#13;
Gerald Austin&#13;
&#13;
John Byers&#13;
Helen Cady&#13;
Louise Cairy&#13;
&#13;
Alice Clayton&#13;
Thelma Addy&#13;
Barbara Barry&#13;
&#13;
Bryce Clayton&#13;
Gerald Cobb s&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Berg&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
·9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Coe&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Marie Berquist&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Virginia Boline&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Dayrle Crabb&#13;
Arlene Demots&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
James Bolton&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Gerald Fritzson&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Booth&#13;
Betty Boo tj er&#13;
&#13;
Celia Fordyce&#13;
Brown Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Bowen&#13;
&#13;
Mary Beth Brinkman&#13;
Kathryn Brown&#13;
Stephen Brown&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Homer Garretson&#13;
Ivan Gossoo&#13;
Edgar Graham&#13;
&#13;
Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Dorothy Granter&#13;
Billy Gray&#13;
George Green&#13;
&#13;
Ted Grier&#13;
Raymond Gusteson&#13;
Charlotte Hackell&#13;
&#13;
Betty Hoefer&#13;
Joseph Holdcroft&#13;
Edith Jensen&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
Jean Jones&#13;
Lauretta King&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Ardis Hall&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Doris Hall&#13;
Ardith Hart&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Anthony Kooiker&#13;
LeRoy Kuhlmann&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Georgia Harvey&#13;
Robert Harvey&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
&#13;
Robert Hempstead&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Muriel Hiler&#13;
&#13;
Fort y-Six&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Romain Lamkin&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Bette Larson&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
&#13;
Eric Lilj estrand&#13;
Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
Kathryn Madison&#13;
&#13;
Forty -seven&#13;
&#13;
�Roy Michaud&#13;
Marion Miller&#13;
Jack Milton&#13;
&#13;
Richard Reister&#13;
Ferne Roland&#13;
George Ross&#13;
&#13;
William Rozeboom&#13;
Douglas Oakleaf&#13;
Evelyn O'Harrow&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Salsbury&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
Bob Olson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Kathleen Schatz&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Jeanette Osterberg&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Thuma Perrin&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Ione Swanlund&#13;
Gordon Taft&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Petheram&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Thomas&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Yvonne Petrick&#13;
Mildred Pfeiffer&#13;
&#13;
Phyllis Thorngreen&#13;
Lester Triggs&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Elna Van Camp&#13;
Allan Priester&#13;
Dorothy Rensink&#13;
&#13;
Ella Jean Waddell&#13;
Betty Lou Welding&#13;
&#13;
Charles Richards&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Second Semester Students&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Name&#13;
&#13;
.·&#13;
Lavonne Wertz&#13;
Donald Widler&#13;
&#13;
Home&#13;
&#13;
Freda Agostine ·····-----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
Fred Ashley ---·-·---·-·--·----·-···-·······················---·-···Sioux City&#13;
Isadore Bichove ················-··-····---···-·-·······-··-·--···Sioux City&#13;
Francis Bentzinger --·-- -·--··-------·-·--·--·-·······-·--·--·-·Sioux City&#13;
Betty Lee Carter ..·-········-····--····--·-·-··----········-·---··Sioux City&#13;
Philip Clark ............. ·-·--·-·----·-··-············-·Evanston, Illinois&#13;
Robert Cohen ·--·---·············-··-··-··---·-·---······-··------·Sioux City&#13;
Chyrl Cose ·----·-··--·······-··-·--·------····-·······-·--·---······Sioux City&#13;
Larry Curtis ··-··-·----·············-····--·-·--··········-··---····Sioux City&#13;
Carl Fooken ·····--·-·-·············--·--··············-··-·-·--····-·Kingsley&#13;
Eileen Gil son.---·--·······-··--··-·--··-·-·····-·--·-·Crofton , Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Mary Jane Winch&#13;
Leona Witzenburg&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Paul Jones ··············-·--··········--·---··---········-·--·-·--··Sioux City&#13;
Ruth Kingsbury ---·--······-···--·--········--·-·-··--·········-·Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
James Leachman -·-·····-···---·-············-·--·-···········-·Sioux City&#13;
Edward McCarthy --··-·······-·-----·-·-··----·---·---·--- --- --Sioux City&#13;
Darrel McEntaffer -·-·------· --·-·-·-··--·· ··-··-·-·--·----·-·-·Sioux City&#13;
Clarence Morrison---·-----·-·---·- -------·----·-·--·-·----·Rock Rapids&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Sam Newton ---·- -- ------·--·-·--- -·- -- ---·----·------·--·-·--·-----Sioux City&#13;
William Prescott -- -- ---------- ----·----------·-·- -· ----·---·----Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Maxcean Rook ---·-- -·------ ---·-·--· ----·-·-·---·-·-·-·-·- ------·Sioux Cit y&#13;
Joe Rosenblum ---·-----------·-- ·----·-------·-·-·-----·-·- --·----Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Shirleymae Zechmann&#13;
Clifford Lewis&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Jay Sterling ---·-·----·----·---··--·-------·-·----·----·-------··-·-Sioux City&#13;
George Tripp --··--·----·---··-·---··----·----·-·-·--··--·----·-·-·Sioux City&#13;
Charles Verlinden ---·-·-·---··-----··--·--·-·-·--·----··----- -·Sioux City&#13;
Martin Weiner -----·- ·---------·-·--·------··-·-- --·-·--·------·-·Sioux City&#13;
Bill Williges ---·---·--·--·-·---· ---·-··--· -·-·-·---·--·--·-·----·-Sioux City&#13;
John Maynard -·- ·- -·--·-·---··-·----·---··-··-··-·------·-·-·--·-Sioux City&#13;
Marvin Shieleceberger ---·-·-·- -·-·--·-·-·· -----·-----· ----·Sioux City&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ila Eberly ---·-------·---·- -- ------ ·-·-------·----·-- ----·--·----·-----·-·Lawton&#13;
&#13;
Betty Lee Carter&#13;
Eileen Gilson&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Jane Mahoney ----·------·-------·- ----------·---·---·---·-----·-·Sioux City&#13;
William Dahlstrom ·--· ------ ·-·-----·----Bloomfield, Nebraska&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Carl Bolin -------·- ----·-----·-------·------·----·----------·----·-·--·-----Sloan&#13;
Mrs. Chester Fowler..---- ---- --- ----------··---·---------·-----Sioux City&#13;
Russel Martin --·----------------------------------------------·----Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Fifty.one&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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&#13;
�GREEN ( ! ! ! ) FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
�,&#13;
&#13;
MUS IC&#13;
&#13;
REVERIE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
&#13;
" -ST ART HERE''&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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&#13;
Fifty -three&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
CHOIR&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
A " bigger" and "better" choir was molded by P rofes-&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
sor MacCollin for this year's tour. They again added to&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
their laurels by becoming the first Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
organization to be accorded the honor of broadcasting&#13;
over the National Broadcasting Company network from&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
the nation's capital in Washington, D. C.&#13;
&#13;
dents as "Mr. Mac", is the director of the Conservatory and of the nationally famous Morningside College Methodist Choir. The Sioux City Civic&#13;
Concert Course, since its inception some years ago,&#13;
has come to enjoy the cordial patronage of the entire city under Mr. MacCollin's direction.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
SOPRANO&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth MacCollin&#13;
Doris Mae Alexander&#13;
Helen Pearson&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
Myrle Austin&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
Maxine Foster&#13;
Anna Mae Klinker&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
Edith Jensen&#13;
&#13;
James Bolton&#13;
Robert Caine&#13;
Eugene Emme&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
Jean Jones&#13;
Betty Bootjer&#13;
Marjorie Nelson&#13;
&#13;
ALTO&#13;
TENOR&#13;
&#13;
Roger Hodgson&#13;
Thomas Moon&#13;
Charels Seward&#13;
Odell Woods&#13;
LeRoy Kuhlmann&#13;
Anthony Kooiker&#13;
Dale Flinders&#13;
Robert Brooks&#13;
Lawrence Johnson&#13;
George Green&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
Nadine Lindquist&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Virginia Crane&#13;
Barbara Lewton&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Mary Beth Brinkman&#13;
Edythe Mae Albert&#13;
Dorothy Behrens&#13;
Dorothy Arnold&#13;
Ruth Harris&#13;
Doris Davis&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
&#13;
Professor MacCollin, better known to the stu-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
Irene Schaal&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
James McNally&#13;
Ralph Kitterman&#13;
Gerald Fritzson&#13;
William Rozeboom&#13;
Oliver Mogck&#13;
Robert McLain&#13;
James Arrasmith&#13;
Robert Rohwer&#13;
Keith Arnold&#13;
George Iseminger&#13;
Ronald Rawson&#13;
Norman Gefke&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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&#13;
�BAND&#13;
&#13;
Male Quartet&#13;
Whether it be classic or barbershop harmony the male quartet consisting of Dale Flinders, Eugene&#13;
Emme, William Rozeboom, and&#13;
George Iseminger is the group which&#13;
is called upon to perform at the&#13;
various school and civic functions.&#13;
Flinders, Emme , Rozeboom, l seminger.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
The band, under the flashing baton of Everett Timm, added another triumph to its growing reputation on its fifth annual tour&#13;
throughout Iowa. Besides being a medium for promotion of pep at&#13;
football and basketball games, it is a concert organization of which&#13;
Morningside can be justly proud.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
is the newly organized Flute Quartet com-&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
posed of Jeanne Anderson, first flute; Leona&#13;
&#13;
Everett Timm ...................................................... Conductor&#13;
Devon Hahn ........................................Assistant Conductor&#13;
Harold Wright........................................Business Manager&#13;
Odell Woods.................................................... Drum Major&#13;
Dean Brox ..............................................Personnel Manager&#13;
Lawrence Johnson..............................Equipment Manager&#13;
&#13;
Witzenburg, second flute ; Jean Jones, third&#13;
flute ; and Miriam Hartley, fourth flute. I t&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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&#13;
Flute Quartet&#13;
Something new and different in ensembles&#13;
&#13;
was featured on the band trip and has appeared in Conservatory recitals.&#13;
&#13;
Quartet&#13;
drum major from&#13;
is Odell Woods&#13;
&#13;
who leads the&#13;
&#13;
band in all pa-&#13;
&#13;
rad es and field&#13;
&#13;
maneuvers.&#13;
&#13;
A group which has attracted favorable comment from organizations&#13;
throughout the city and surrounding&#13;
territory where it has appeared in&#13;
recital and as musical background&#13;
is the Student String Quartet composed of Arnold Rudd, first violin;&#13;
Nancy Lowry, second violin; Marjorie Pritchard, viola; Virginia Gasink, 'cello.&#13;
Rudd, Lowry, Pritchard, Gasink.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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X&#13;
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Student String&#13;
&#13;
shako to boots&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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MAJOR&#13;
&#13;
Every inch a&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
Jones, Anderson, Witzenburg.&#13;
&#13;
DRUM&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�CIVIC CONCERT COURSE&#13;
&#13;
Girl s' Trio&#13;
Three misses, Alice Scott, Virginia&#13;
Crane, and Merrie June Heetland,&#13;
compose the girls' vocal trio. They&#13;
have "swung" numbers for various&#13;
student programs throughout the&#13;
year, among which their "hill-billy"&#13;
numbers and the . novelty " Sister&#13;
Kate" are the most memorable.&#13;
Heetland, Scott, Crane.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Symphony Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
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0&#13;
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X&#13;
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X&#13;
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I&#13;
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I&#13;
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u&#13;
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u&#13;
Under the inspiring guidance of Leo Kucinski, the Sioux City&#13;
Symphony Orchestra has grown to be one of the outstanding organizations for the propagation of culture in northwest Iowa. The&#13;
Symphony is a civic group composed of professional musicians&#13;
and augmented by the most talented of the Conservatory students.&#13;
During the past year it app eared in concert with I da Krehm,&#13;
pianist; Stephan Hero, violinist; and Edward Dudley, tenor. Other&#13;
artists who completed the schedu le of the Civic Concert Course&#13;
were Lawrence Tibbett, baritone; Angna Enters, dance mime; and&#13;
the Mozart Choir Boys.&#13;
Edward Dudley&#13;
Angna Enters&#13;
Stephan Hero&#13;
Mozart Choir Boys&#13;
Ida Krehm&#13;
Headliner Lawrence Tibbett&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�DRAMATICS&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon&#13;
Ten years ago Phi Zeta Chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon,&#13;
the national honor music sorority, was organized at&#13;
Morningside College. The members are junior, senior,&#13;
and faculty women of the Conservatory who have attained membership through high scholastic standing and&#13;
musical ability.&#13;
Virginia Crane, who was the president last year, was&#13;
a delegate to the national convention held in Chicago&#13;
last summer.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Crane&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Mu&#13;
Sigma Mu, the local honorary music sorority, has&#13;
Scene from a one-act play, "There's Always Tomorrow",&#13;
by David L. Pettigrew.&#13;
&#13;
been an inactive but none the less prominent organization&#13;
on the campus this year. Membership determined by&#13;
high scholarship and musical ability was attained by&#13;
Myrle Austin, Dorothy Behrens, Bertha Conner, Virginia Crane, Carol Held, Nadine Lindquist, Clara Louise&#13;
McBurney, Lucille Johnson, Helen Pearson, and Virginia Smith.&#13;
The president for the past year was Lucille John son.&#13;
John son&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�The Show- O ff&#13;
CAST&#13;
Clara Hyland.............................. Arlene DeMots&#13;
Mrs. Fisher................................Dorothy Granter&#13;
Amy Fisher......................................Betty Bootjcr&#13;
Frank Hyland.......................... LeRoy Kuhlmann&#13;
Mr. Fisher.......................................Lewis Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Joe Fisher........................................ Robert Caine&#13;
Aubrey Piper .................................. Lester Menke&#13;
Mr. Gill... ..................................... Robert· Rohwer&#13;
Mr. Rogers........................................ George Ross&#13;
&#13;
The 1938-39 drama tic season opened with George Kelly's wellknown domestic farce " The Show-Off".&#13;
Lester Menke, playing the role of the loud-talking, loud-laughing&#13;
"show-off", stole the show-lock, stock, and barrel. Three character parts were excell ently done by Lewis Mahood as the henpecked husband; Robert Rohwer, a factory worker; and George&#13;
Ross as a smooth-talking insurance man. Family life was well de-&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
picted by Dorothy Granter as the mother, Robert Caine as the near-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
genius son, and Betty Bootjer as the sweet young thing who would&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
like very much to get married. Arlene DeMots as the married&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
daughter and LeRoy Kuhlman, her husband, did very commendable bits of acting.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Although this is only his first year at Morningside,&#13;
Mr. Wiksell has established himself in the hearts of all&#13;
Morningside playgoers by presenting four hit-produc-&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
tions. Outstanding were Philip Barry's "Holiday" and&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
"The Rock", a religious drama.&#13;
This year through Mr. Wiksell's efforts, the Department of Speech has presented a series of radio plays&#13;
over a local broadcasting station. Many improvements&#13;
in equipment, make-up facilities, and scene-building&#13;
have also been effected, resulting in the Scene Shop and&#13;
the Workshop Theatre.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�The Rock&#13;
&#13;
Holiday&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
Simon Peter.................................... Robert Caine&#13;
Adinah ........................................ Betty Lee Carter&#13;
Deborah ................................ Charlotte Robinson&#13;
Ucal... ............................................... B. Roy Brown&#13;
Mary of Magdala ...................... Dorothy Gartner&#13;
&#13;
Pandira .......................................... Robert Reese&#13;
Titus ............................................. James Gifford&#13;
Agur ......................................Lawrence John son&#13;
Servant .......................................... Kellogg Wells&#13;
Servant ................................ Robert Dannenburg&#13;
&#13;
On Palm Sunday, the Collegiate Players in cooperation with&#13;
many of the Morningside churches, presented " The Rock" by Mary&#13;
Hamlin. This drama, one of the most widely known religious plays,&#13;
deals with the introduction of Simon Peter to the teachings of&#13;
Jesus and his denial of the Christ on the eve of the crucifixion.&#13;
Robert Caine, in the role of Simon Peter, gave an outstanding&#13;
performance. The parts of Adinah, Peter's wife, taken by Betty Lee&#13;
Carter and Deborah, Adinah's mother, done by Charlotte Robin son,&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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&#13;
CAST&#13;
Linda Seton ...................................... Bette Greene&#13;
Johnny Case ................................ Fred Davenport&#13;
Julia Seton............................ Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Ned Seton.................................. Bartlett Lubbers&#13;
Susan Potter. ............................... Margaret Long&#13;
Nick Potter ....................................John Thrower&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Male Quartet&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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&#13;
Edward Seton ....................................Dale Harter&#13;
Laura Cram ...................................Minetta Miller&#13;
Seton Cram ............................................. Joe Turk&#13;
Henry .............................................Kellogg Wells&#13;
Charles ···········-······························John Brilman&#13;
Delia .......................................... Virginia Thomas&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
were both excellent portrayals. The difficu lt rol e of Ucal, the rich&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
merchant, was well handled by Roy Brown. In the character of Mary&#13;
of Magdala, a woman of questionable repute who was saved by th &#13;
Master, Dorothy Gartn er gave one of the best performances seen&#13;
in a coll ege production. Members of the supporting cast added&#13;
greatly to the atmosphere of the play as did the realistic settings&#13;
which portrayed typica l scenes at the time of the crucifixion.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
a so phisticated comedy about a young lady and a young man who&#13;
refused to let money rule the affairs of the heart. Presented by&#13;
Alpha P si Omega, "Holiday" was a well-polished production by an&#13;
excellent cast.&#13;
Edward Seton, the head of the "made of money" Seton family&#13;
was well portrayed by Dale Harter. Bartlett Lubbers did an excellent job in the part of Ned Seton, a young man who was slightly&#13;
"off the water-wagon". Ned's sister Julia, a typical social satellite,&#13;
was splendidly characterized by Dorothy Ann Olson. The romantic&#13;
leads were well handled by Fred Davenport as Johnny Case and&#13;
Bette Greene in the role of Linda Seton. Johnny and Linda, aided&#13;
(John&#13;
&#13;
Thrower and Margaret Long) added much to the play with their&#13;
well acted comedy. The parts of Seton and Laura Cram, the "relatives", were well taken by Joe Turk and Minetta Miller.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty -four&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
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The outstanding play of the year was Philip Barry's " Holiday"-&#13;
&#13;
by the happy-go-lucky couple, Nick and Susan Potter&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Radio Groups&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega&#13;
The director of the Alpha Gamma Cast of&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary dramatics&#13;
fraternity, was Dorothy Ann Olson. Margaret&#13;
Long was vice-president and Bette Greene was&#13;
secretary. This year the Cast gave an excellent&#13;
performance of Philip Barry's romantic comedy, "Holiday" .&#13;
Several members of the Cast journeyed to&#13;
Wayne, Nebraska, to attend the Alpha Psi&#13;
Omega play presented by Wayne State Teachers&#13;
College. Judging of the high school plays presented at the annual play contest was done by&#13;
the Cast.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
Ol so n&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
This year the Speech Department of Morningside College has&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
been on the air. Twenty plays, sponsored by the U. S. Post Office&#13;
Department, have been broadcast over KSCJ and have given expe·&#13;
rience to more than thirty speech students. Among those participat-&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Players&#13;
&#13;
ing were: Robert Caine, Stanley Anderson, Dorothy Gartner, Clifford Spayde, Frances Haverfield, Lillian Brown, Dale Harter, Clif-&#13;
&#13;
This year the Collegiate Players took an active part in both on-stage and back-stage activities of the season's productions. At club meetings demonstrations, readings, plays, and reviews of contemporary plays were presented.&#13;
Several of the members have earned points for&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega and are nearing the goal of&#13;
all the Players.&#13;
The officers for this year were: First semester- Bette Greene, president; Dale Harter, vicepresident; Margaret Long, secretary; Second semester- Fred Davenport, president; Margaret&#13;
Long, vice-president; and Winifred Cheely, secretary.&#13;
&#13;
ford Lewis, Ted Grief, Lawrence Johnson, and Orval Spiry.&#13;
&#13;
Commencement Play&#13;
The Commencement Play was A. A. Milne's "The Romantic Age".&#13;
It centers around a girl who wants romance from the "- days of&#13;
old when knights were bold". Of course, knighthood was in flower&#13;
only about a thousand years previous. She meets her knight (an&#13;
ordinary man in a masquerade costume) and falls madly in love&#13;
only to refuse to marry him when she finds that he is just a business&#13;
&#13;
Greene&#13;
&#13;
man. The rejected suitor then proposes to the heroine's sister: this&#13;
creates the eternal triangle and- oh well, the play ends happily.&#13;
&#13;
Si xty -six&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Si x ty-seven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
�Roh wer&#13;
&#13;
Intercolleg i ate Debate&#13;
This year the debate season officially opened with a&#13;
pre-season, non-decision&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
During the following month debates were carried on&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Omaha, Ne-&#13;
&#13;
Harter, Robert Hamel, Geraldine Booth, and Ruth Olsen.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
braska. The representatives from Morningside were Dale&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
tournament&#13;
&#13;
with colleges and universities in the surrounding territory.&#13;
During the last week in February and the first of&#13;
Mendal B. Mill er heads the Forensics department of&#13;
&#13;
March, Morningside debaters were in St. Paul attending&#13;
&#13;
the coll ege and has been, for the past year, president of&#13;
&#13;
the St. Thomas and St. Catherine tournaments. Our rep-&#13;
&#13;
the Iowa Forensics Association.&#13;
&#13;
resentatives were Fred Davenport, Robert Hamel, Robert&#13;
&#13;
The results of Mr. Mill er's ability as a coach are&#13;
&#13;
Rohwer, Geraldine Booth, and Ruth Olsen.&#13;
&#13;
shown in the hon ors his teams won throughout the sea-&#13;
&#13;
The State Forensics meetin g was held in Cedar Rap-&#13;
&#13;
son. His keen insight, logical reasonin g, and col orful&#13;
&#13;
ids, March 16, 17, and 18. Morningside representatives.&#13;
&#13;
expression served as an impetus to each debater. His&#13;
&#13;
were Robert Rohwer, Robert Hamel, Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
good sportsmanship and companionship are an inspiration to all who come in contact with him .&#13;
&#13;
Olsen&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�INDIVIDUAL SCHEDULES&#13;
•&#13;
FRED DAVENPORT&#13;
H art e r&#13;
&#13;
and Ruth Olsen. The boys' team won the state championship by receiving the highest superior rating. Robert&#13;
Rohwer was rated the highest individual debater at the&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
tournament and Robert Hamel was second. The girls received the second highest rating at the tournament by receiving an excellent. Ruth Olsen received a superior in&#13;
the poetry-reading contest at this same tournament.&#13;
On March 24 and 25 Morningside College was repre·&#13;
sented by Lester Menke, Dale Harter, and Byron Walter&#13;
at the annual Junior College debate meet held at Dakota&#13;
&#13;
DALE HARTER&#13;
&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Provincial&#13;
Tournament&#13;
University of South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
Mitchell Tournament&#13;
GERALDINE BOOTH&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HAMEL&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Provincial&#13;
Tournament&#13;
University of South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
St. Catherine Tournament&#13;
Western Union College&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
RUTH OLSEN&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
St. Catherine Tournament&#13;
Western Union College&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Wesleyan, Mitchell, South Dakota. The tournament in ROBERT ROHWER&#13;
&#13;
cluded debate, extemporaneous, and oratory.&#13;
&#13;
In January Morningside debaters entertained two debate teams from Augustana College of Sioux Falls in&#13;
two rounds of debate.&#13;
&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
Mitchell Tournament&#13;
&#13;
BYRON WALTER&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Mitchell Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Booth&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
S eve nt y-on e&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Robert Rohwer&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta is a national honorary forensics fraternity in which degrees are awarded in orders of debate,&#13;
oratory, and extemporaneous speaking. Morningside' s&#13;
Iowa Delta chapter is one of about 150 chapters which&#13;
are scattered throughout thirty-six states. The question&#13;
argued by the various chapters this year was, " Resolved:&#13;
That the government should cease spending public funds&#13;
to stimulate business."&#13;
Iowa Delta chapter officers of Pi Kappa Delta were:&#13;
Robert Rohwer, president ; Fred Davenport, vice-president; and Ruth Olsen, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
Fred Davenport and Robert Hamel were the Morningside representatives at the Provincial Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
meeting held at Aberdeen, South Dakota, on March 30&#13;
and 31.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
�Student&#13;
Council&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Albert Buckingham ..............................................President&#13;
Keene Roadman ..........................................Vice.President&#13;
Carol Held ............................................................ Secretary&#13;
&#13;
" I owe much to Morningside College. The rest of my life I shall be&#13;
attempting to re pay her for the privileges and opportunities she has put&#13;
before me as one of the student body. It is with sorrow in my heart that&#13;
I think of leaving the campus so soon. I have truly enjoyed my four years&#13;
at Morningside, especially the last year as president of the Student Coun·&#13;
cil. It has been a pleasure to work with and for such an appreciative stu·&#13;
dent body. With such fine college spirit and faculty cooperation it has&#13;
been merely a matter of routine to act as Student President. A special&#13;
vote of thanks should go to the members of the Student Council for their&#13;
enthusiasm and willingness to work in everything that has been under·&#13;
taken. The Student Council joins with me in thanking all the students for&#13;
their cooperation and in saying to the faculty, 'May Morningside con·&#13;
tinue to prosper'."&#13;
&#13;
- "BUCK."&#13;
&#13;
Seventy- three&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Agora&#13;
Board of Control&#13;
For twenty-seven years there has existed on the Morningside campus an organization which includes every girl in school in its membership. Agora was the name given to this group by its founder,&#13;
Miss Agnes Ferguson, who wished to see the opportunity for helpful fellowship created among the women of the college.&#13;
Two means of providing this opportunity are found in the Campus Sister movement which is a part of the Freshman Week activities, and the Mother-Daughter Banquet which is held every spring.&#13;
The officers for the past year were : Marjorie Primmer, president;&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp, vice-president; Mildred Wikert, secretary; Betty&#13;
Schunck, treasurer; Bernice Petronis, Senior representative; Marian&#13;
Preston, Junior representative; Ruth Olsen, Sophomore representa-&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
tive; and Virginia Boline, Freshman representative . Dean Lillian&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Dimmit is the faculty adviser for the group.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Beyer, Stephens, Mills, Kanthlener, Gwinn.&#13;
Bottom Row: Thomas, Rohwer, Miller , Booth,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
All student publications are under the jurisdiction of&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
the Board of Control which consists of ten membersfive faculty representatives and five students. Appoint-&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
ments for the newspaper, the yearbook, and all other&#13;
publications are under its supervision.&#13;
The chairman of the board is Professor H. F. Kanthlener. Other faculty members are Miss Mirah Mills,&#13;
Lynn Beyer, Ira J. Gwinn, and Dr. T. C. Stephens. The&#13;
student members are Virginia Thomas, senior; Minetta&#13;
Miller, junior; Robert Glock, sophomore; Geraldine&#13;
Booth, freshman; and Robert Rohwer, representative-atlarge. Quentin Prichard, editor, and Lester Olson, business manager of the Collegian Reporter, are ex-officio&#13;
members.&#13;
Top Row: Primmer , Greene, Wikert, Schunck.&#13;
&#13;
Bottom Row: Petronis , Preston , Olsen, Boline&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Seventy - five&#13;
&#13;
�Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
U.&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Leopold, Nelson, Olson , Wikert, Roadman .&#13;
Second Row: Brown, McBurney, Menke, Long, Lundquist.&#13;
Third Row: Olsen, Swift, Petronis, Harter, Wallen.&#13;
Fourth Row: Anderson, Saunderson, Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Between the covers of the Annual can be found a record of the&#13;
year's progress at Morningside. The material is gathered and compiled by the various department editors under the direction of the&#13;
editor-in-chief.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy- six&#13;
&#13;
Top R ow: DeMond, Prichard, Johnson, Olson.&#13;
Second Row: Grefe, Cheely, Seward, Warner,&#13;
Third R ow: Greene, Mahood, Madison, Gusteson.&#13;
Fourth Row: Nickum , Roadman.&#13;
&#13;
The all-college newspaper is written, edited, and managed by&#13;
students who present us with a fresh edition each Thursday. Its&#13;
various departments ably cover the social, political, and athletic&#13;
phases of Morningside campus life in true journalistic style.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
�W. S. G. A.&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Magazine&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
VOL1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
NO !&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Behrens, Crane , Long , Olsen.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Bottom Row: Mook , Pearson, Seavey, Alexander.&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Self-Governing Association is the board elected by&#13;
the dormitory girls to act as their governing body for the year. This&#13;
group also serves as the Honor Court in all disciplinary matters&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Magazine, the first literary publication on the campus, made its initial appearance December 7, 1938. The second issue&#13;
was published May 10, 1939. The cost of the magazine is included&#13;
in the Student Activity ticket.&#13;
&#13;
which arise.&#13;
Several traditional social functions such as the Christmas Dinner&#13;
and the Spring Formal as well as informal teas and musicales for&#13;
both dormitory residents and other girls are under the sponsorship&#13;
&#13;
The magazine is being sponsored by the Manuscript Club; but&#13;
any students as well as alumni are invited to contribute. The plan is&#13;
to have two issues yearly.&#13;
Miriam Hawthorne was the first editor. Those assisting her were&#13;
&#13;
of the W. S. G. A.&#13;
Members for the past year have been Dorothy Behrens, president;&#13;
Virginia Crane, vice-president and Senior hall president; Margaret&#13;
Long, social chairman; Ruth Olsen, secretary; Mrs. Mook, social&#13;
director; Helen Pearson, Junior hall president; Alberta Seavey,&#13;
Sophomore hall president; and Doris Mae Alexander, Freshman&#13;
&#13;
Lester Olson, Business Manager, and Bette Greene, Irene Johnson,&#13;
and Charels Seward, Associate Editors. Lynn Beyer was the faculty&#13;
adviser. The magazine has a regular exchange list with other colleges and universities and copies are also sent out to high schools&#13;
and to Sioux City public libraries.&#13;
&#13;
hall president.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy -eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�11&#13;
&#13;
Zeta Sigma&#13;
&#13;
M. C. A.&#13;
The Morningside Christian Association&#13;
&#13;
The local honor scholastic society has a&#13;
&#13;
is the group which start the college off to'&#13;
&#13;
twofold objective: to give recognition to&#13;
&#13;
a successful year every fall by sponsoring&#13;
&#13;
those students whose scholastic records&#13;
&#13;
the freshman week activities. During the&#13;
&#13;
show evidence of special merit, and to&#13;
&#13;
year M. C. A. continues its goodwill work&#13;
&#13;
promote the ideals of true scholarship. To&#13;
&#13;
through the weekly Sunday broadcasts,&#13;
&#13;
become eligible for Zeta Sigma a student&#13;
&#13;
firesides in faculty homes, traveling gospel&#13;
teams, Stone Park retreats, and religious&#13;
&#13;
must meet all the requirements for graduation and have a scholarship average of&#13;
&#13;
emphasis week in the spring and in the&#13;
fall. Every Tuesday morning meetings are&#13;
&#13;
Officers for the past year have been :&#13;
Mrs. E. Satrang, president ; Mrs. M. E.&#13;
Graber, vice-president; Miss Ruth Wedgwood, secretary; and Mrs. L. C. McClaran,&#13;
&#13;
representative of Y. W. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
ership of Irvine Thoe, president. Other&#13;
officers are: Keene Roadman, vice presiderson, treasurer; and Miriam Hawthorn,&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
to membership in the group.&#13;
&#13;
dent; Irene Anderson, secretary; Dale An-&#13;
&#13;
Thoe&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
graduates of the Class of 1938 were elected&#13;
&#13;
held in the Student Union under the lead11&#13;
&#13;
three and one-third honor points. Twelve&#13;
&#13;
treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Satrang&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club&#13;
Alumni Organization&#13;
&#13;
In 1926 a chapter of the National Association of Cosmopolitan Clubs was established at Morningside. The club maintains&#13;
&#13;
Each June the alumni organization in-&#13;
&#13;
a two-fold purpose : to create a spirit of&#13;
goodwill and fellowship among students&#13;
&#13;
itiates the graduates into its ranks; into&#13;
the Tribe of the Sioux-a group which has&#13;
&#13;
of various nationalities at Morningside ;&#13;
&#13;
steadily increased its number until in al-&#13;
&#13;
and to learn more about the customs and&#13;
&#13;
most every state of the Union it has mem-&#13;
&#13;
attitudes of people in foreign lands. The &#13;
ers who keep faithful contact with their&#13;
&#13;
outstanding events of the year were the&#13;
Christmas breakfast held at Dr. Johnson's&#13;
&#13;
Alma Mater.&#13;
Newly elected officers are: president,&#13;
Frank Henderson, Sioux City, '20; vice-&#13;
&#13;
home and the "Cosmopolitan Night".&#13;
&#13;
president, Ada Carter, Whiting, '20; sec-&#13;
&#13;
The officers were: Irene Anderson, president; Betty Ling, vice-president; Frances&#13;
&#13;
retary, W. C. Wolle, Sioux City, '20;&#13;
&#13;
and Lester Menke,&#13;
&#13;
treasurer, Ira J. Gwinn, Sioux City, '22.&#13;
&#13;
WaIker, secretary;&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
Henderson&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Psychology Club&#13;
&#13;
Beta&#13;
&#13;
Beta Beta&#13;
&#13;
Beta Beta Beta, the national honorary&#13;
society for students of the biological&#13;
sciences, was established to encourage&#13;
scholarly attainment in biology and thus&#13;
reserves its membership to those who&#13;
achieve high academic records and who&#13;
have a special interest in the subject. It&#13;
maintains a three-fold program: namely,&#13;
stimulation of sound scholarship;&#13;
&#13;
dis-semination of scientific knowledge; and&#13;
promotion of biological research.&#13;
Officers presiding over Tau chapter this&#13;
year were: Borden Buchanan, president;&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Buchanan&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Robert Chapman, vice-president; James&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Arrasmith, secretary; and Barbara For-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
rester, historian. Dr. T. C. Stephens is the&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
faculty adviser.&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Biology Club&#13;
To promote scientific ideals and to prepare its members for membership in Beta&#13;
Beta Beta is the twofold aim of the Biol-&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Williams, Held, Naryka, Pawson , Carlin , Wade .&#13;
Second Row: Wells. Petronis, Stankiwiecz, DePue, Hosner, Grefe.&#13;
Third Row: Grove, Brown, Swift. Harter, Held , Sunderlin.&#13;
Fourth Row: Hurd , Pippett, Thorngreen , McLaughlin.&#13;
Fifth Row: Roland , Gusteson, Emme , Howes.&#13;
&#13;
The P sychology Club of Morningside College was organized in&#13;
1935 by Dr. Earl E. Emme who is the adviser. It provides opportunity for psychology students to present additional material of&#13;
psychological content not always adaptable for classroom procedure. Fellowship for students pursuing similar academic interests is&#13;
stimulated greatly by the monthly meetings.&#13;
Officers for the year were : Garnett Williams, president; Lawrence Johnson, vice-president; and Bernice P etronis, secretarytreasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty. two&#13;
&#13;
ogy Club. This club is maintained in the&#13;
Biology department for the purpose of&#13;
creating and developing interest in biological fields.&#13;
Officers this year were : Joe Naryka,&#13;
president;&#13;
&#13;
Wendell&#13;
&#13;
Jackson,&#13;
&#13;
vice-presi-&#13;
&#13;
dent; and Dale Rogers, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
Naryka&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Sigma Tau Delta&#13;
&#13;
· Pre-Engineers&#13;
&#13;
The Gamma Beta chapter of Sigma Tau&#13;
Delta, national honorary English fraternity, was organized at Morningside College&#13;
in 1926. Both the study of literature and&#13;
the pursuit of writing are stressed. Memers, who must be majors in the English&#13;
department, are elected on the basis of&#13;
scholastic standing and proficiency in Eng- ·&#13;
lish. Original work of the members is submitted for publication to the National&#13;
Quarterly Magazine, The Rectangle, twice&#13;
during the year.&#13;
Officers for the year were: Miriam&#13;
&#13;
Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
Hawthorn, president; Margaret Gusteson,&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
vice-president; Doris Mae Alexander, sec-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
retary; and Miss Mirah Mills, faculty ad-&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
viser.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
The oldest independent organization on&#13;
the campus is the Pre-Engineers Club&#13;
which was organized in 1920 with a twofold object in view: to serve as a means&#13;
of stimulating a spirit of friendliness and&#13;
cooperation among the engineering students of the school, and to encourage advanced study and research in the field of&#13;
engineering.&#13;
One of the highlights of the winter social season is the annual " Engineers'&#13;
Night", during which the wonders of the&#13;
world of science are demonstrated by the&#13;
members of the department .&#13;
Officers this year were : Ted Barnowe,&#13;
president; Stanley Bruntjen, vice-president; George Koch, secretary; John Swanson, treasurer; Bruce Lindsay, historian .&#13;
Dean Graber and Mr. Gwinn served as advisers.&#13;
&#13;
Barnowe&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Club&#13;
Manuscript&#13;
&#13;
Club&#13;
&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
organized&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
Phi&#13;
&#13;
March 18, 1938, with the aim "to promote&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Iota&#13;
&#13;
creative writing among the students of the&#13;
Phi Sigma Iota is maintained for stu-&#13;
&#13;
college." Membership is open to any student on the campus and is attained by&#13;
&#13;
dents of outstanding ability and attain-&#13;
&#13;
submitting an original manuscript which&#13;
&#13;
ment in Romance languages and literature.&#13;
&#13;
is passed upon by the entire club. Because&#13;
of the nature of the work undertaken,&#13;
&#13;
advanced work and individual research in&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of the society is to stimulate&#13;
&#13;
membership has been necessarily limited&#13;
&#13;
this field, and to promote a sentiment of&#13;
&#13;
to sixteen members who are required to&#13;
&#13;
friendship between our own nation and&#13;
&#13;
submit manuscripts regularly. These, to-&#13;
&#13;
the nations using these languages.&#13;
&#13;
gether with those submitted by prospective&#13;
&#13;
Officers this year were: Kellogg Wells,&#13;
&#13;
members, form the basis of the programs.&#13;
&#13;
president ; Ella Lauritsen, vice-president;&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
this&#13;
&#13;
year&#13;
&#13;
were:&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Corkhill, secretary; Bonnie Jean&#13;
&#13;
Bette&#13;
&#13;
Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Greene, president; Irene Anderson, secre-&#13;
&#13;
lener, faculty adviser and treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
tary; and Lynn Beyer, faculty adviser.&#13;
Greene&#13;
&#13;
Eight y- four&#13;
&#13;
historian; and Henry F. Kanth-&#13;
&#13;
Wells&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Alpha Kappa Delta&#13;
Alpha Kappa Delta, national honorary&#13;
sociological fraternity, was organized at '&#13;
Morningside in 1922 for the purpose expressed in its Greek name, Anthropos Katamon thano Diakonesis, an investigating&#13;
society for the purpose of service to humanity. It has been intermittently active •&#13;
in scholastic and social pursuits for sixteen years. Membership requires · a high&#13;
scholastic average in all subjects and a&#13;
major or minor in sociology.&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn has been president&#13;
Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
th e past year.&#13;
&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu&#13;
All senior students who have striven for&#13;
high scholarship in their respective social&#13;
science fields and succeeded are eligib le&#13;
for membership in Pi Gamma Mu, the&#13;
national honorary social science fraternity. The requirement for eli gibility is a&#13;
grade average of B for thirty semester&#13;
hours in a field with fifteen hours from&#13;
one department.&#13;
The officers for the past year were:&#13;
Bill Kirchner, president; Garnett Wi] .&#13;
Iiams, vice-president; Miss Murray, secretary-treasurer; Dr. Emme, director. Faculty members are : Dean Dimmitt, Mr. Miller, Mr. Wiksell, Miss McNee, and Dean&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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9&#13;
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3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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s&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Pi Sigma&#13;
&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi is the national honorary&#13;
&#13;
The Omicron chapter of Sigma Pi&#13;
Sigma is maintained at Morningside for&#13;
those students who have outstanding interests and academic records in the physics&#13;
department. Its purpose is to promote an&#13;
interest in the advanced study of physics,&#13;
to encourage a spirit of cooperation and&#13;
friendship among those who have shown&#13;
marked ability in this particular phase of&#13;
science, and to stimulate individual research.&#13;
Directing the activities of Sigma Pi&#13;
Sigma which included weekly luncheon&#13;
meetings this year were: Ted Barn owe,&#13;
president; George Koch, vice-president;&#13;
and Dale Flinders, secretary-treasurer. Dr.&#13;
M. E. Graber serves as adviser to the club.&#13;
&#13;
Latin and Greek fraternity. A major in&#13;
Latin or Greek and high scholarship are&#13;
required for membership. At the monthly&#13;
meetings this year the programs were&#13;
based on a study of Greek and Roman&#13;
mythology.&#13;
The officers for the past year were:&#13;
Bonnie Jean Wallen, president;&#13;
Mae&#13;
&#13;
Slothower, vice-president;&#13;
&#13;
Birdie&#13;
Bernice&#13;
&#13;
Petronis, secretary; and Deon Moor, treasurer. Honorary members include Miss Lillian E. Dimmitt, Miss Laura C. Fisher,&#13;
Miss Ethel R. Murray, and Miriam Hartley.&#13;
Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Eighty -six&#13;
&#13;
Barnowe&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
�International Relations Cl u b&#13;
The purpose of the International Relations Club is to foster student interest in world-wide economic and political problems, and&#13;
to provide an opportunity to discuss matters of peace, finance, government, and transportation. The club is significant in that it affords students the chance to understand better America's relations&#13;
with the world.&#13;
Delegates from Morningside were sent to the national convention&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
this spring where they discussed world problems with representatives from the various colleges and universities of the nation.&#13;
The faculty adviser is Dr. E. H . Kleinpell.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
College League&#13;
Grace M. E. Church offers to every college student an opportunity for religious self-expression through the medium of the College League. At the weekly Sunday evening meetings speakers from&#13;
outside and from the coll ege appear and special musical programs&#13;
are provided.&#13;
Officers for this year were : Dale Anderson, president; Ruth Hayward, vice-president; Doreen Dallam, secretary-treasurer; LeRoy&#13;
Kuhlmann, social chairman.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Engineering Groups&#13;
Out of the Engineer's Club there have come three groups which&#13;
are rapidly growing in popularity among the members of the Engineering Department. The fi rst group, the Aeronaut ics division, was&#13;
organized in 1937 with a two-fold purpose: to further the students'&#13;
interest in aeronautics and to give those taking aeronautical engineering the opportunity to meet and work together on different&#13;
technical proj ects of common interest.&#13;
Morningside is one of two Iowa Schools, the other being Iowa&#13;
State College, which is approved by the United States Aeronautical&#13;
Board to teach Aeronautical Engineering. Weekl y meetings include&#13;
reports by members on different technical subjects pertaining to&#13;
aeronautical engineering. The officers for the first semester were:&#13;
Vic Alvey, president; Borden Buchanan, vice-president; DeLos Hartwig, secretary-treasurer. Second semester officers were : Vic Alvey,&#13;
president ; Fuller Haskins, vice-president; Bob Harvey, secretarytreasurer.&#13;
Another unit of the Engineering Club is the Radio Club. One&#13;
cannot become a member of this group unless he is already a member of the Engineer's Club and has a special interest in radio which&#13;
he wishes to develop.&#13;
Papers and reports which deal with the most advanced phases in&#13;
radio are given before the Engineer's Club. Members of the Radio&#13;
Club are also active members in the Naval Reserve and National&#13;
Guard Radio Unit.&#13;
The newly-chartered Photography Club was organized with the&#13;
purpose of creating interest in photography and of giving to those&#13;
interested in it an opportunity to learn the fundamentals and technical processes of photography. Meetings held every Tuesday included reports given by the members on different phases of photography. The governing body consisted of Mr. I. J. Gwinn, adviser,&#13;
and a committee of four- Harlan Dewell, chairman, Vic Alvey,&#13;
Glenn Pomeroy, and George Koch.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
�lshkoodah&#13;
.•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
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3&#13;
&#13;
Booth&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The first social group in which women students a t&#13;
Morningside may become members is Ishkoodah- the&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
freshman girls' society. The bi-monthly meetings held in&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
the Student Union are planned for entertainment and&#13;
also to give each girl substantial and worthwhile con-&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
tacts which will enrich her college career.&#13;
Two formal dances were the highlights of the past.&#13;
year's social calendar which also included a roller-skating part y and a picnic fo r all frosh men.&#13;
Officers fo r the first semester were Gerry Booth, president ; Kathryn Brown, vice-president ; Jean J ones, secretary-treasurer ; Helen Johnson, sergeant-a t-arms; and&#13;
Virginia Boline, program chairman. Those who served&#13;
during the second term were Marian Miller, president ;&#13;
Lauree Wood, vice-president ; Barbara Prichard, secretary- treasurer; Louise Cairy, sergeant-a t-a rms; and Betty&#13;
Lou Saunderson, program chairman. Mrs. Paul E. Johnson is the adviser for the group.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�Alpha Sigma&#13;
T he Useful and&#13;
the Pleasing&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President. ....................................Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Vice-President... .......................... Bertha Connor&#13;
Recording Secretary................... Agnes Carlin&#13;
Corresponding Secretary........... Jean Hosner&#13;
Treasurer..................................... Bernice Petronis&#13;
Reporter.......................................Mary Stankiwiecz&#13;
Historian.....................&#13;
..................Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Chaplain...................................... Ruth Thatcher&#13;
Directresses..................................Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Musician...................................... Dolorys Cook&#13;
Usher............................................Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
Donna Youngstrom&#13;
Esther Blomberg&#13;
Clara Louise McBurney&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Bertha Connor&#13;
Agnes Carlin&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
So plwmores&#13;
&#13;
Irene Anderson&#13;
Dorothy Arnold&#13;
Agnes Carlin&#13;
Bertha Connor&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Jean Hosner&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Nellie DeVries&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Ella Lauritsen&#13;
&#13;
Esther Blomberg&#13;
Donna Youngstrom&#13;
Lucille Mathena&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
Clara Louise McBurney&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Many Stankiwiecz&#13;
Ruth Thatcher&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Anderson, Arnold , Blomberg, Carlin, Coe .&#13;
Second Row: Conner, DeVries, Forsberg, Hawthorn , Hosner.&#13;
Third Row : Lauritsen, Mathena, McBurney, Petronis, Robinson.&#13;
Fourth Row: Slothower, R. Smith, V. Smith,&#13;
&#13;
Fifth Row: Stankiwiecz, Thatcher, Youngstrom.&#13;
&#13;
Nine ty -two&#13;
&#13;
Ninety.three&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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&#13;
�Phi Sigma&#13;
We R etrace No&#13;
Footsteps&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Second Term&#13;
&#13;
Third T erm&#13;
&#13;
President... .................. Russell Kraai&#13;
&#13;
Glen Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President... ......... Joseph Turk&#13;
&#13;
Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
Secretary .....................Clarence Soucek&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bob Swift&#13;
&#13;
First T erm&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. .................. Albert Buckingham Albert Buckingham&#13;
Pledge Master.. ........... Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Don Michael son&#13;
&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Albert Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Irving Bliss&#13;
&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
&#13;
Lester Triggs&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms........ Arthur Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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1&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
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3&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Turk&#13;
Russell Kraai&#13;
Albert Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
Glen Burrow&#13;
Elwood Hetland&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
Arthur Lundblad&#13;
Clarence Soucek&#13;
Frank Allison&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
Jack Loff&#13;
Bob Swift&#13;
&#13;
Lester Triggs&#13;
Irving Bliss&#13;
Orval Spiry&#13;
Don Widler&#13;
Cliff Lewis&#13;
Art Clayton&#13;
Pete Clayton&#13;
Albert Haenfler&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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X&#13;
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Top Row: Smith, Buckingham, Kraai, Burrow.&#13;
Seco nd Row: Hetland , Lundblad, Spayde .&#13;
Thir d Row: Widler, Vanderboom, Michaelson .&#13;
Fourth Row: Triggs, Lewis, Swift.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
�Kappa Zeta Ch i&#13;
To Be Rather Than&#13;
to Seem&#13;
OFF I CE RS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President_________________ _ ___ ___ _&#13;
______ _ ________ ,Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Vice-President. __ _________________________ Virginia Thomas&#13;
_&#13;
_____&#13;
Recording Secretary_________ _ _ ______ ___ ,Hazel Held&#13;
_ __ _&#13;
Corresponding Secretary _____ _ ___ _,Barbara Lewton&#13;
____ _ _&#13;
Treasurer _ _ __________________ _ ___ __ _&#13;
____ _&#13;
_____ __ ___Margaret Lundquist&#13;
Critics _______ _ __ ___ _ _________ __ ____ Carol Held&#13;
____ __ _ _ ______ ___ _&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Virginia Allen&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Directresses _ ___________ _______ ______ _&#13;
__&#13;
_&#13;
_ _ _______ Virginia Crane&#13;
Doris Mae Alexander&#13;
Librarian _____&#13;
_______ ------------------------------ Constance Gall&#13;
______&#13;
_______ _ __ Jean Fowler&#13;
_____&#13;
Ushers______ _______ _ _ __________ _&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Virginia Thomas&#13;
Constance Gall&#13;
Barbara Forrester&#13;
Margaret Lundquist&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Barbara Lewton&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Dorothy Jones&#13;
Helen Pearson&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Lucille Pippett&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Doris Mae Alexander&#13;
Lillian Brown&#13;
Virginia Crane&#13;
Barbara Forrester&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Hazel Held&#13;
Barbara Lewton&#13;
Margaret Lundquist&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Virginia Thomas&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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X&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Jean Wallen&#13;
Alberta Seavey&#13;
Helen Pearson&#13;
Mary Brilman&#13;
Dorothy Nelson&#13;
Dorothy Behrens&#13;
Marian Walsh&#13;
Marjorie Pritchard&#13;
Garnett Williams&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Jean Fowler&#13;
Jonstance Gall&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Nancy Lowry&#13;
Deon Moor&#13;
Dorothy Ann&#13;
Olson&#13;
Joyce Weed&#13;
Irvine Thoe&#13;
Virginia Allen&#13;
&#13;
Top Row : Held, Alexander, Nelson, Crane, Forrester, Lundquist.&#13;
Second Row: Brown , Primmer, Wallen, Held, Thomas, Lewton.&#13;
Third Row: Kolp , Gall , Pearson, Brilman, Seavey, Lowry.&#13;
Fourth Row : Long, Olson, Fowler, Hanson, Weed, Moor.&#13;
Fifth Row : Cheely, Olsen, Held, Pippctt, Wikert.&#13;
Sixth Row: Neilson, Barrett, Scott, Jones, Nickum .&#13;
Seventh Row: Hitchcock, Corderman, Nelson.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
Dorothy Jones Glennys Corderman&#13;
Shirley Wallen Ruth Harris&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Mildred Wikert Marjorie Nelson&#13;
Lucille Pippett Norma Neilson&#13;
Myna Nickum Dureth Helen&#13;
Winifred Cheely Hitchcock&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Maxine Behrens&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Alpha Tau Delta&#13;
Smoothness in Manner,&#13;
Strength in All Things.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
President... .............................. H. G. Morrison&#13;
&#13;
David Brinkman&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President... ..................... William Hughes&#13;
Secretary................................. Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
Hoyt Granter&#13;
Ray Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. .............................. Wilbur Rogers&#13;
&#13;
Gene Kennedy&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms....................Thomas Down&#13;
&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Dale Rogers&#13;
David Brinkman&#13;
Thomas Down&#13;
H. G. Morrison&#13;
Richard Forbes&#13;
Hoyt Granter&#13;
Bruce Van DeMark&#13;
William Hughes&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Don Sweeney&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
John Thrower&#13;
Russell Martin&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
Garrett Wallman&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
Leonard Nelson&#13;
Rollie Buckholz&#13;
Bob PerrinI&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
James Bolton&#13;
Stephen Brown&#13;
Jerry Cobbs&#13;
Robert Hempstead&#13;
John Maynard&#13;
Larry Curtis&#13;
Don Plagman&#13;
Harold Wellmerling&#13;
Dean Harrison&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
Gene Kennedy&#13;
Ray Gusteson&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Dick Wpods&#13;
Bob Caine&#13;
Bob Olson&#13;
Philip Clark&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
T op R ow: Brinkman, Van DeMark , Rogers, Morrison , Granter, Forbes.&#13;
Second Row: Down , Wallman, Sweeney, Hughes, Menke, Mahood.&#13;
Third Row: Hempstead, Bolton , Gusteson, Nelson, Brown, Thrower.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Row: Buckholz, Brown, Leopold , Kolp.&#13;
Fifth Row: Cobbs, Olson, Caine, Hicks.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Kap pa Pi Alp ha&#13;
Faithfully, Bravely,&#13;
Happily&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President. ..........................................Evelyn DePue&#13;
Vice-President. .................................Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Recording Secretary........................Marion Preston&#13;
Corresponding Secretary................Ann Larson&#13;
Treasurer.. ........................................ Bette Greene&#13;
Chaplain........................................... Ruth Sunderlin&#13;
Critic................................................Irene Johnson&#13;
Sergeant.at.Arms.............................Ruth Sunderlin&#13;
Librarian.......................................... Jean Lott&#13;
Hall Chairman................................. Millicent Jensen&#13;
Social Chairman .............................. Marion Preston&#13;
Reporter.. ......................................... Jean Lott&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Alta Claire Harrison&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
Mary Ellen Walpole&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Dorothy Hill&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
Ann Larson&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Carrigg,&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Verona DeMond&#13;
Bette Greene&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
Alta Claire Harrison&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
Anna Marie Larson&#13;
Marian Preston&#13;
Ruth Sunderlin&#13;
Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
Jean Anderson&#13;
&#13;
DeMond , Jensen, Preston.&#13;
&#13;
Second Row : Grove, Gusteson, DePue, Brooke.&#13;
Third Row: Schunck, Sunderlin, Larson, Walpole.&#13;
Fourth Row: Greene, Haverfield, Walker, Jensen.&#13;
Fifth Row: Hill , Anderson , Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred One&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Nancy Arthur&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
Dorothy Hill&#13;
Helen Jensen&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Mary Margaret Walker&#13;
Mary Ellen Walpole&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Inter-Sorority Council&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA PI ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA PI ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Bette Greene&#13;
KAPPA ZETA CHI&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Margaret Gustesori&#13;
Bette Greene&#13;
KAPPA ZETA CHI&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Fraternity Council&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
President... .................... Robert Paget&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.. ............. Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
George Koch&#13;
&#13;
Secretary....................... George Koch&#13;
&#13;
Howard&#13;
&#13;
Neilsen&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
ALPHA TAU DELTA&#13;
&#13;
H. G. Morrison&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
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PHI SIGMA&#13;
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Glen Burrow&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
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SIGMA THETA RHO&#13;
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Robert Paget&#13;
George Koch&#13;
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Second Semester&#13;
ALPHA TAU DELTA&#13;
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David Brinkman&#13;
Garry Wallman&#13;
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PHI SIGMA&#13;
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Leo Smith&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
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One Hundred Two&#13;
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SIGMA THETA RHO&#13;
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George Koch&#13;
Howard Neilsen&#13;
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�MEN 'S ATHLETICS&#13;
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Throughout a long career as head of the Physical&#13;
Education Department at Morningside College, Coach&#13;
&#13;
J. M. Saunderson has built up a reputation as one of&#13;
the finest and best-known coaches in this territory. Under&#13;
his direction the sports practices have been classes in&#13;
character building with the ideals of fair play and sportsmanship uppermost in the minds of the men.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Three&#13;
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Up and Over the Coyote Line&#13;
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- Tribune Photo.&#13;
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Varsity Football&#13;
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The Maroons opened their 1938 season under the floodlights at Hastings, Nebraska, on September 23, and closed it eight weeks later against Wayne State Teachers on Dad's Day at Stock Yards Park. The Sioux finished in fifth place in the NorthCentral standings with a record of one win, three losses, and a tie. At Hastings the&#13;
Sioux outsmashed the highly rated Broncos for 211 yards and 14 first downs to gain&#13;
a 14-6 triumph. Hetland and Burrow drove through holes opened principally by&#13;
Buckingham, Flinders, and Turk; these two backs picked up most of the yardage&#13;
with Flinders distinguishing himself by converting twice.&#13;
Fritz Pollard and Company gave the Maroon and White a cold reception and&#13;
sent them heading back south on the short end of a 27-12 score. However, Morningside gained 12 first downs to seven for the Sioux, and the Maroon forward wall more&#13;
than matched the Nodak line. But the ebony ace, Pollard, one of the shiftiest runners&#13;
ever to play in the North-Central, proved to be the difference between the two teams.&#13;
Three times he snatched the ball, maneuvered into the open, shook off a couple of&#13;
would-be tacklers and crossed the goal line standing up. Morningside depended on&#13;
straight football for their two scoring drives. Twice more were the losers within&#13;
hailing distance of pay dirt, being stopped once by the half-time whistle and once&#13;
by a fumble.&#13;
Kansas Wesleyan of Salina, Kansas, came to Sioux City the following week, and&#13;
met a Morningside team that was bouncing back from its northern defeat of the previous Friday. Displaying a razzle- dazzle offense the home team rushed the heavier&#13;
Tigers off their feet. Halford and Burrow each scored in the second quarter and&#13;
Murphy added one in the third. Engen, playing his first game of the season, converted on the last touchdown to bring the score to 19-0 which was the final score.&#13;
Cooperating with the smooth working offense was the stellar defensive play of Brinkman, Flinders, and Koch.&#13;
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One Hundred Four&#13;
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In their first home conference game the&#13;
Morningside gridsters lost a heartbreaker to&#13;
South Dakota State, 14-13. For the fourth&#13;
time in four games the Sioux dominated ever y&#13;
department of the game, but two lightninglike touchdowns by the Bunnies in the second&#13;
quarter, plus two conversions, spelled defeat.&#13;
The Maroons scored first, Burrow cutting&#13;
back for a counter after a 50-yard offensive&#13;
drive. In the second quarter, Engler, S. D. S.&#13;
back, failing to find a pass receiver, picked&#13;
his way through the scattered players thirty&#13;
yards for a touchdown. On the next Bunny&#13;
play from scrimmage, Brill smashed through&#13;
center, cut back and dashed 70 yards for another counter. With the score 14-6 against&#13;
them the Maroons fought back viciously with&#13;
Halford leading a brilliant passing and running attack, but could engineer only one&#13;
touchdown. Four other times the y put the ball&#13;
in position to score, but each time they were&#13;
without a big man in the backfield to punch&#13;
it over. This defeat left Morningside at the&#13;
bottom of the conference standards, with two&#13;
losses in as many games.&#13;
The Coyotes of South Dakota used their&#13;
Dakota Day as an excuse to measure the Maroons by a score of 13-0 on windblown Inman&#13;
field at Vermillion, October 22. For the first&#13;
and only time during the season, Morningside&#13;
was on the short end of the statistics. The&#13;
Redshirts, future conference champions, had&#13;
eve r ything their own way after they scored&#13;
their first touchdown seconds before the close&#13;
of the first half. Until that time the two teams&#13;
had see-sawed up and down the field, with&#13;
the Sioux making the only real threat as they&#13;
drove to the 15-yard line only to lose the ball&#13;
on downs. A few minutes after the second&#13;
half began South Dakota scored again, using&#13;
the same end-around pass that had resulted&#13;
in the first counter. For the Maroons Buckingham and Brinkman looked good defensively at the end posts.&#13;
Before a Homecoming crowd of 5,000 Iowa&#13;
Teachers' fans the Maroon and White showed&#13;
a complete reversal of form to run and pass&#13;
their way to a 13-7 victory over the favored&#13;
P anthers. The first half was scoreless, but in&#13;
the third quarter the passing combination of&#13;
Halford and Morrison began to click and the&#13;
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One Hundred Five&#13;
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Flinders&#13;
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Snyder&#13;
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Maroons pushed over two touchdowns. Hetland plunged for the second score after a&#13;
long pass had put the ball in position. Behind&#13;
13-0, the Panthers came back with a .flashy&#13;
attack to score once, and threaten again, but '&#13;
the Morningside forward wall stiffened to&#13;
prevent another counter. Buckingham, Snyder, and Paget played a bang-up game in the&#13;
line.&#13;
Homecoming fans who hoped to see Morningside better her conference standing at the ·&#13;
expense of Omaha U. were doomed to disappointment as the two teams battled to a scoreless tie on a field of icy mud. Again the Maroons threatened several times but couldn't&#13;
score. One of the outstanding features of the&#13;
game was the success of the Morningside passing attack, said attack having failed dismally&#13;
on days much more suitable for that department. With Burrow pitching and Snyder and&#13;
Brinkman doing some excellent receiving&#13;
eight out of eighteen passes were completed&#13;
during the course of the game. Murphy did&#13;
some nice line-bucking, and Flinders and&#13;
Hakala were outstanding in the line.&#13;
The Dad's Day game with Wayne dropped&#13;
the curtain on the Maroon's season. The long&#13;
punts of Bradford, Wayne back, served to&#13;
keep the Sioux away from scoring territory&#13;
most of the afternoon, but the Maroons took&#13;
advantage of a break and moved to the four&#13;
yard line in the second quarter from where&#13;
Hetland scored. Late in the final period, big&#13;
Russ Kraai entered the game. Exhibiting that&#13;
kind of powerful line plunging that had been&#13;
sorely needed at times during the season, he&#13;
engineered a drive that shoved over another&#13;
touchdown just seconds before the final&#13;
whistle.&#13;
P erhaps the season wasn't the most successful in the annals of Maroon football history. There were a few high points, however.&#13;
Once and only once did Morningside leave&#13;
the field with the statistics against them. Perhaps the breaks were against them; perhaps&#13;
they lacked the indefinable something that&#13;
makes the difference between a good team&#13;
and a fair one. Whatever it was, they lost&#13;
games that were hard to lose. Time and again&#13;
they outfought and outplayed the opposing&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Six&#13;
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team· only to be on the short end of the final&#13;
score. In spite of this the players, individually and as a t eam, gave all they had in every&#13;
game. In both the North Dakota and the&#13;
South Dakota State games, when it appeared&#13;
that Morningside was badly beaten, they&#13;
fought their way back to score and turn each&#13;
contest into anybody's ball game. If there is&#13;
something more to a football season than a&#13;
final won and lost reckoning then the 1938&#13;
Maroons achieved it.&#13;
Eleven men finished their collegiate football careers when the whistle signalled the&#13;
end of the Morningside-Wayne game and the&#13;
close of the 1938 season. Al Buckingham. allconference end. leads. the group who will receive their diplomas in June. "Buck" has&#13;
played three years of football under Saundy&#13;
and has received all-conference recognition&#13;
two of these years. Opposing quarterbacks&#13;
sent few p]ays around Buck's end.&#13;
Dale Flinders has been an outstanding&#13;
tackle on the squad this year. His first two&#13;
years he played at a guard post. Dale was&#13;
placed on the second all-conference team this&#13;
fall. Occupying the other tackle post has&#13;
been big Bob Paget. Bob has been a regular&#13;
for two years, and opposing ends have found&#13;
him big and tough.&#13;
Dave Brinkman came up fast to develop&#13;
into one of Saundy's most aggressive ends.&#13;
Dave loves the game and he was an outstanding performer all season, playing one of his&#13;
best games against South Dakota U. Don Snyder is the best pass receiver on the squad.&#13;
Possessing an uncanny ability to snag any&#13;
toss, high or low, Don was in his glory when&#13;
the going was roughest. In the Omaha game&#13;
he grabbed pass after pass with the ball just&#13;
a slippery blob of mud.&#13;
Jake Felker was one of the small est men&#13;
on the squad, but one of the toughest. A&#13;
"watch-charm" guard, Jake never asked for&#13;
quarter, but always came out of the pile with&#13;
a word of encouragement for the team. Fred&#13;
Hoffman graduates after having been with us&#13;
for only two years. A transfer student, Fritz&#13;
has had two seasons at a guard post, where&#13;
he has gained recognition for his aggressive&#13;
play. Joe Turk, another transfer student,&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seven&#13;
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�stepped into a big job when he became the center on the Morningside team, for Morn-&#13;
&#13;
FROSH FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
ingside has always seemed to have a corner on the best centers. Joe carried on in the&#13;
finest way, winning two letters and playing heads up ball always during the two&#13;
seasons he has been with us.&#13;
Owen Engen, H. G. Morrison, and Russ Kraai are the three senior backfield men.&#13;
" Blondie" Engen was the workhorse of the men who work behind the line. Injured&#13;
at the first of the season, Owen played most of the games in spit of it. His was the&#13;
unheralded job of blocking for the ball luggers and few have done better. Owen has&#13;
also been at Morningside just two years, being a transfer student from Minnesota.&#13;
Outstanding as a freshman, H. G. Morrison has been developing under Saundy's&#13;
tutelage for three seasons and he played his finest ball this season. Probably his outstanding performances were in the two games with Iowa Teachers the last two seasons. He sparked the final-quarter drive that netted two touchdowns and a 13-13 tie&#13;
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.&#13;
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with the Panthers last year, and he was at his best against the same team this year.&#13;
Russ Kraai, a transfer from Orange City Junior College, is big, fast, and a pow-&#13;
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erful fullback. Dogged by hard luck, Russ broke his arm and was confined to the&#13;
sidelines most of his first year. However, he came back fast and saw action at the&#13;
end of the season and this year developed into one of the hardest hitting fullbacks&#13;
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as staunchly support her as alumni as they did defend her laurels on the gridiron.&#13;
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We will miss these eleven men- these eleven seniors who have given much to&#13;
Morningside. They have proven themselves to be " for Morningside" and they will&#13;
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Top Row: Feikema, Bailantine , Haenfler. Spiry, Leopold, Kennedy, Harvey, Kolp, Widler.&#13;
Bottom Row: Connor, Heitman, Triggs, Bliss, Lewis, Thompson, Reese, Goodenow, Sheridan.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five men answered Honie Rogers' call for freshman foo tballers and the&#13;
first-year men began preparations for three tough games against Estherville Junior&#13;
College, South Dakota University frosh, and the Omaha University first year men .&#13;
The backfield boasted of such stars as Joe Lease, Gene Kennedy, Don Leopol d, Al&#13;
Haenfler, Bob Harvey, Eddie Lamkin, Earl Hicks, Cliff Lewis, Walt Baumann, and&#13;
Danny Sardison, while bolstering the frontline were the following standouts: Chuck&#13;
Sheridan, Don Widler, Ollie Heitman, Red Bliss, Tommy Thompson, Orval Spiry,&#13;
Bernie Feikema, Bob Reese, Les Triggs, Earl Goodenow, Wally Hanson, Bob Sharp,&#13;
John Kolp, and Bruce Connor.&#13;
In their initial game the yearlings scored a last-minute victor y over the more&#13;
experienced Junior Collegians from Estherville. Two weeks later the yearlings lost&#13;
to the Coyote Pups of South Dakota U., 12-8. The Pups scored on their now famous&#13;
end-around pass play. Kennedy's passes, Haenfler's driving plunges, and a trick lateral forward combined to score for the yearlings, but in the final quarter the Pups&#13;
put on another drive which won the game for them. The frosh ended their season&#13;
with a 6-6 deadlock with the Omaha University first-year men on a wind-swept Omaha&#13;
gridiron.&#13;
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Three Maroons&#13;
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One Hundred Eight&#13;
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- Tribune Photo.&#13;
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One Hundred Nine&#13;
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- Tribune Photo.&#13;
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�Varsity Basketball&#13;
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Another successful year under the tutelage of Coach&#13;
Glen Rogers has been added to the Morningside basketball records. Although his team did not come up to the&#13;
championship play of last year's team, they demonstrated the power and clever ball handling characteristic&#13;
of the Maroons.&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen men answered Coach Honie&#13;
Rogers' early season call, and with this&#13;
squad he undertook the difficult task of&#13;
defending the North Central championship gained last year. Only three lettermen remained from that team of champions, and with these as a nucleus,&#13;
Honie developed a team that enjoyed a&#13;
much better season than early prognostications would have foretold. While&#13;
the Maroons were forced to be content&#13;
with fifth place in the conference they&#13;
gained victories over several highly&#13;
rated teams, including North Dakota&#13;
and Iowa Teachers, who finished in a&#13;
tie for second position. The North&#13;
Dakota game was the first time that the&#13;
Northerners had been defeated in a&#13;
home court conference game in eight&#13;
years and the first time that the Morningsiders had ever taken a basketball&#13;
victory at Grand Forks. Besides whipping the runners-up, the Maroons took&#13;
the measure of South Dakota State who&#13;
finished the season in fourth place just&#13;
above the Sioux Cityans. At one time&#13;
during the early part of the season, the&#13;
Sioux stayed on top of the conference&#13;
race for two weeks. But they couldn't&#13;
keep the pace and costly defeats were&#13;
suffered, defeats that, had they been&#13;
victories, might have given the team the&#13;
necessary spark to climb back into the&#13;
title race.&#13;
The Maroons opened the season with&#13;
five non-conference games, winning the&#13;
first two and dropping the following&#13;
ones. Surprising the strong Alumni aggregation, made up mostly of last&#13;
year's players, Morningside gained a&#13;
36-23 win. Yankton College came to&#13;
Sioux City the following week and&#13;
made it a close game fo r the first half&#13;
before weakening in the following&#13;
stanza and dropping the contest to the&#13;
Maroons 36-22. Sioux Falls won a&#13;
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One Hundred Eleven&#13;
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SNYDER&#13;
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BUCKINGHAM&#13;
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thrilling pre-vacation game as they took&#13;
the measure of the home team by a&#13;
count of 24,-22. A basket in the closing&#13;
seconds by Morningside fa.i led to count&#13;
and the Sioux dropped their first game&#13;
of the season. Playing basketball that&#13;
was far from conference championship&#13;
style, the Maroons lost both games in&#13;
their Invitational Tournament, and as&#13;
a result they finished in last place. Ottawa University of Ottawa, Kansas,&#13;
tripped them the first night 31-28, and&#13;
Cornell College of Mount Vernon, defeated them 27-16 in the final game.&#13;
Ottawa went on to win the tournament&#13;
by whipping South Dakota U. who had&#13;
beaten Cornell the first night.&#13;
The Maroons opened the conference&#13;
season with a stunning victory over the&#13;
highly favored Iowa Teachers from&#13;
Cedar Falls. Starting the contest in a&#13;
listless fashion, the Morningside team&#13;
suddenly came to life and overcame a&#13;
12 point deficit to win handily 48-34.&#13;
Immediately the other teams in the&#13;
conference pointed towards Morningside as the team to beat. In this first&#13;
game Michaelson poured in 18 points&#13;
to take up his high powered scoring&#13;
where he had left off last season.&#13;
Omaha University was the next victim to fall as the Maroons, riding atop&#13;
the conference standings, swept over&#13;
the Cardinals by a margin of 44-34.&#13;
Michaelson again was top scorer as he&#13;
dumped eight fielders and three free&#13;
throws through the hoop for a 19 point&#13;
total. Don was ably assisted by his&#13;
teammates led by Dewey Halford who&#13;
played a sparkling game at a forward&#13;
post.&#13;
South Dakota was the next opponent&#13;
and the pair of games played with the&#13;
Coyotes proved disastrous to the Maroon title hopes. The first game, at Vermillion, began with a Morningside&#13;
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One Hundred Twelve&#13;
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flourish, the Sioux Cityans jumping into&#13;
a seven point lead. From this point on&#13;
Maynard Ingalls and Company took&#13;
complete charge and the Redmen won&#13;
39-27. Loff and Michaelson each gathered eight points for the losers. The&#13;
following week the Coyotes invaded the&#13;
home court and swamped the Maroons&#13;
41-19. Morningside led only once in a&#13;
game that was South Dakota's all the&#13;
way. The victors demonstrated that they&#13;
had other luminaries besides the much&#13;
publicized Ingalls, as nine men besides&#13;
himself broke into the scoring column,&#13;
Taplet taking honors with six points.&#13;
Dewey Halford dropped five points for&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
Boasting only a .500 per cent conference rating, the Maroons left Sioux&#13;
City for a two-game trip in North Dakota. Fans gave them little chance to&#13;
gain even one victory on the suicide&#13;
trek. Upsetting all the dope, the defending champs overwhelmed the powerful Sioux of North Dakota University, outfighting them all the way.&#13;
Dewey Halford hit from all angles to&#13;
garner 17 points, but the whole Morningside team starred. The following&#13;
night the Maroons lost a listless game&#13;
to North Dakota State 44-23. Showing&#13;
the effects of the three-day trip and the&#13;
hard game the night before, the Morningsiders were no match for the Staters&#13;
who played their best game of the season. Loff, Michaelson, and Strozdas&#13;
looked best for the losers. This defeat&#13;
left the Maroons with a .500 per cent&#13;
rating and three games yet to go. The&#13;
second place South Dakota State Bunnies were the next opponents.&#13;
Don Snyder, star senior guard, dropped a basket with seconds to go to pull&#13;
a close one out of the fire and drop&#13;
South Dakota State, 35-33. South Dakota took an early lead only to lose it&#13;
as Halford and Michaelson started hitthe&#13;
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On e Hundred Thirteen&#13;
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KRZNARICH&#13;
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ROADMAN&#13;
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MICHAELSON&#13;
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ting. Th e Bunnies came back into . the&#13;
lead late in the second half to overcome a five point deficit and forge into&#13;
the lead late in the third quarter. From&#13;
then on it was anybody's game, with&#13;
Loff hitting a hot streak, only to be&#13;
matched by the deadly firing of Fergen,&#13;
stellar Bunny guard. With the score&#13;
tied South Dakota got a flurry of shots&#13;
in the closing minutes, before Snyder&#13;
grabbed one off the backboard&#13;
and&#13;
dribbled the length of the floor to sink&#13;
it. This win boosted the Maroons into&#13;
second place and bolstered their hope&#13;
for a hi gh place in the final standings.&#13;
The Cardinals of Omaha University&#13;
severely jolted these hopes as they&#13;
pulled a 32-21 upset victory over the&#13;
Maroons at Omaha. The game was&#13;
fairly close until the final quarter when&#13;
the Cards ran wild. Pflasterer and&#13;
Marks got ten apiece for the winners&#13;
while Michaelson and Kraai each&#13;
counted five for the losers. A slim&#13;
chance for the runner-up spot still remained after this game, but even this&#13;
possibility was blasted three days later&#13;
by the Iowa Teachers in the finale at&#13;
Cedar Rapids.&#13;
Th e first half of the Teachers' game&#13;
was close with the Tutors holding a&#13;
15-10 half-time margin. The second&#13;
half, however, turned into a riot as the&#13;
two Teachers' forwards, Lofquist and&#13;
Olsen, set a torrid pace. The Morningside scoring was evenly divided, with&#13;
Halford and Loff leading with six and&#13;
four points respectively. Morningside's&#13;
difficuty was entirely due to inability&#13;
to hit the basket. The losers got almost&#13;
as many tries as the Tutors but managed to hit the hoop but 6 times in 66&#13;
tries. Buckingham did a good job of&#13;
filling Snyder's shoes- Don being kept&#13;
on the sidelines because of a severe&#13;
attack of the flu.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fourteen&#13;
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Two members of the Morningside&#13;
team gained positions on the coaches'&#13;
All North Central team. They were Don&#13;
Michaelson, who was chosen on the first&#13;
team last year, and Don Snyder, who&#13;
made last year's second squad. Michaelson bore much of the scoring burden&#13;
of the team this year and as a result&#13;
many opposing teams built their defense with the purpose of stopping him.&#13;
This accounted for the fact that Don&#13;
scored less toward the end of the season than he did a t first. Don Snyder is&#13;
well known for his defensive abil ity&#13;
and spirited play. He broke into th e&#13;
lineup in many games during his soph omore year and for the last two years&#13;
has been a regular guard .&#13;
Five seniors finished their college&#13;
basketball careers with the Teachers'&#13;
game. Russ Kraai played two years for&#13;
the Maroons, coming here from Orange&#13;
City Junior College. Russ is big and&#13;
aggressive and particularly effective&#13;
unde r the basket. Don Snyder and Al&#13;
Buckingham played as guards on this&#13;
year's squad. Both are three year veterans. Snyder for two years received&#13;
all conference honors while Buck was&#13;
given recognition this y- ar on the all&#13;
e&#13;
conference honorable mention roll.&#13;
Buck probably scored more for the time&#13;
he played than any member of the&#13;
squad . Kept out of the lineup at the&#13;
first of the season by injuries, he averaged nearly a half in all the conference&#13;
games during which time he never&#13;
failed to drop in a bucket or two . H. G.&#13;
Morrison and Keene Roadman were&#13;
used in the front line this year. H. G.&#13;
was a small but aggressive player noted&#13;
for his drive and determination.&#13;
With four regulars back- Michaelson&#13;
at center, Loff and Halford at forward,&#13;
and Strozdas at a guard post, and with&#13;
a wealth of freshman material coming&#13;
up, Morningside's Maroons should enjoy a successful and a wmmng season&#13;
next year.&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
KRAAI&#13;
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3&#13;
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s&#13;
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BROWN&#13;
&#13;
�Frosh&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
&#13;
"M" CI u b&#13;
&#13;
Top Row : Halford, Kraai , Adams.&#13;
Second Row: Koch , Michaelson , Hakala.&#13;
Third Ro w: Port. Krznarich, Loff, Strozdas .&#13;
Fourth Row: Felker. Burrow , Hetland,&#13;
Denny , Engen .&#13;
Fifth Row: Turk, Buckingham , Paget, Snyder, Flinders, Morrison , Brinkman.&#13;
Top Row: Hanson, Langstaff , Sheridan, Jones, Spiry.&#13;
Bottom Row: Graham , Harrison, Sharp, Cobb, Adcock.&#13;
&#13;
Whil e they did not compile the most impressive record in freshman basketball&#13;
annal s, this year's yearl ing team was one of the best in recent years. Thirty-five aspirants answered Coach Hugh Luby's first call and from these were chosen the following men who bore the brunt of the season's play : Sharp, Adcock, Lan gstaff,&#13;
Nagel, Harrison, Graham, Lease, Macur, Cobb, Spiry, Sheridan, Goodenow, Jones.&#13;
Their schedule included games with Metz Bakers, Orange City Junior College,&#13;
South Dakota University Pups, and the Omaha University freshmen.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
For thirty-one years the " Men of the M", a group in which all varsity letter winners are members, has been an active organization on the campus. In an effort to&#13;
create leaders as well as to develop physical strength, the "M" Club has complete&#13;
charge of all Freshman-Sophomore Day events and of th e Homecoming parade.&#13;
The club was guided in its activities during the past year by Don Snyder, president; Pete Burrow, vice-president; and H. G. Morrison, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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Cheer&#13;
Leaders&#13;
&#13;
Porter. Wallman, B. Perrin.&#13;
&#13;
L. Brown , K. Brown , Boline, T. Perrin.&#13;
&#13;
Although track is listed as a major sport at Morningside, it has never held the&#13;
spotlight as it did in the days of the famous Four Horsemen. Nevertheless, outstanding men in certain individual events have been developed under the tutelage of&#13;
Coaches Saunderson and Rogers. Dave Denny, ace hurdler, was the only returning&#13;
letterman this year, but he was ably supported by several promising sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
M-0 -R-N-I-N-G-S-I-D-E- Yea, Morningside- ! To a squad of seven cheerleaders&#13;
captained by Bob Perrin goes much of the credit for the fine cheering sections which&#13;
characterized all the home games. Costumed in the traditional maroon and white, the&#13;
squad made a striking appearance on the field and on the floor and added pep and&#13;
color to the excitement of the football and basketball seasons. The group was composed of Virginia Boline, Lillian and Kathryn Brown, Thuma and Bob Perrin, Garry&#13;
Wallman, and Maynard Porter.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�Intramural Program&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
Sig Rho s. Basketball&#13;
&#13;
Independents,&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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S&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Champ s&#13;
&#13;
Over the Fence&#13;
&#13;
Touch ball Champ s&#13;
&#13;
Three events of a seven sport Intramural pro gram have been completed and two&#13;
tournaments are being played as the Annual goes to press. Thirteen individual medal s&#13;
and two trophi es have been or will be awarded to the champions in the various&#13;
events. Tennis and touchball dominate the fall intramural schedul es with basketball&#13;
and bridge takin g over durin g the winter months; kitten ball , pin g pong, golf, and&#13;
sprin g t ennis followin g in th e spring. Dale Harter captured the sin gles title, and&#13;
Fred Davenport and Dick Kin g the doubles title, in the fall tennis matches.&#13;
The Independents copped the touchhall title by defeatin g the Sig Rhos, 13-0.&#13;
Members of the winning team are Denny, Buckholz, Pruehs, Clare, Harrison, Road.&#13;
man, and Cobb. In the basketball tournament the Sig Rhos fought an uphill battl e&#13;
to win in the play-offs. In the final contest the fraternity men beat the Independents&#13;
32-21 to gain possession for one year of the Dwight Hauff trophy, which goes permanentl y to the team first winning it three times.&#13;
In the bridge tournament the titl e will be decided as Anderson and Schiller meet&#13;
Hughes and Forbes in the final round. Both teams won three hard matches to gain&#13;
the finals. Forty students are entered in the three divisions of the annual ping pon g&#13;
tourn ey, namel y, the boys' singles, the girl s' sin gles, and the mixed doubl es. This is&#13;
the most popular and most evenly fought even t in the Intramural program .&#13;
Six team s submitted entry lists for the kittenball season which go t underway&#13;
following spring vacation. Each of these teams was gunnin g for the titl e held by the&#13;
Phi Sigs. To the eventual winner went the Ol son Sports trophy for one year. This&#13;
cup is permanently given to the team that win s it three years. The four standbys, the&#13;
Phi Sigs, Sig Rhos, Tau Delts, and the Independents ente red teams as did two new&#13;
backers, Don Ballentine's Foo Goo Foos, and Feikema's Tyler's Boarders.&#13;
On the schedule, but as ye t unplanned, are the two remaining Intramural sports,&#13;
go lf and spring tennis. Keene Roadman and Al Strozdas compose this yea r's Intramural Board.&#13;
&#13;
Lining Up a Long One&#13;
&#13;
Two Paddle Artists&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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u&#13;
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-- Kick It!&#13;
&#13;
Harter and Daven port&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�Women's Athletic Association&#13;
&#13;
Hockey&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Under the direction of Miss&#13;
Lois Jessie Brinkman the Women's&#13;
Athletic&#13;
&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
has&#13;
&#13;
com-&#13;
&#13;
pleted another successful year on&#13;
the campus. Her enthusiasm, fairness, and ski ll in all. sports have&#13;
proven her an able instructor, a&#13;
true&#13;
&#13;
friend,&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
an&#13;
&#13;
excellent&#13;
&#13;
ll o nor Players&#13;
&#13;
Upper-Cl ass me n&#13;
&#13;
leader.&#13;
effort to bring out the ideals of good sportsmanship and to create and develop an&#13;
interest in the various sports. The annual four seasons of sport was opened by the&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
hockey season which continued until snow covered the dorm field. The Zets defeated&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
a hard-fighting Ishkoodah team in the sorority finals by a score of 4-2, while the&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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The W. A. A. Board which con trols the women's sports program was composed&#13;
of Bonnie Jean Wallen, president ; Dorothy Nelson, vice-president; Virginia Allen,&#13;
secretary; Joyce Weed, treasurer; Patricia Warner, hockey chairman ; Barbara Forrester, basketball chairman; Winifred Cheely, individual sports chairman; Darlene&#13;
Cottington, social chairman; Mildred Wikert, awards chairman; Frances Forsberg,&#13;
publicity chairman .&#13;
All intramural and interclass tournaments are sponsored by the W. A. A. in an&#13;
&#13;
freshmen lost a close battle to the upper-classmen in the finals of the class tourney.&#13;
The honorary players selected at the close of the season on the basis of abiliiy and&#13;
sportsmanship were Bonnie Jean Wallen, Lillian Brown, Alberta Seavey, Dorothy&#13;
Ann Olson , Barbara Forrester, Joyce Weed, and Kathryn Brown .&#13;
The second annual swimming meet sponsored by W. A. A. was enthusiastically&#13;
greeted by the entire school. The evening's program consisting of individual and&#13;
team events of speed and skill was interspersed with comedy, the whole providing&#13;
much entertainment for both spectators and participants. The individual awards&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
were won by Nancy Kingsbury and Bob Harvey; the team trophies became the&#13;
possessions of the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority and the Sigma Theta Rho fraternity .&#13;
A style show of the bathing costumes from grandmother's time up to the present day,&#13;
and a demonstration by the Senior Mariners were fea tures of the evening.&#13;
&#13;
W . A. A. BOARD&#13;
Standin g : Allen , Weed , Wallen, Rohinson, Forsberg.&#13;
Kneeling: Wikert , Cheely, Warner.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undre d Tw ent y&#13;
&#13;
Harvey&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Zet Swimming Team&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
�Yale&#13;
&#13;
Winter Program&#13;
&#13;
Lowry, Locke , Seavey, Allen , Wallen,&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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P e rri n.&#13;
&#13;
Harvard&#13;
&#13;
Brown , Borland , Weed , Cottington , Kingsbury, Forrester.&#13;
- Tribune Photo.&#13;
&#13;
The winter dance festival, sponsored annually by the W. A. A. under the&#13;
&#13;
Two members of W. A. A., Joyce Weed and Shirley Wallen, were sent asdele-&#13;
&#13;
direction of Miss Brinkman, this year followed the theme "Coming Home for&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
gates to the National W. A. A. Convention held in Berkeley, California, on April&#13;
&#13;
Christmas" by showing the different ways the various countries celebrate the&#13;
Christmas· spirit by means of the dance: it was effectively climaxed by two&#13;
&#13;
12, 13, and 14.&#13;
On May 6, the annual "Play-Day" under the sponsorship of W. A. A. was held&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
excellent examples of the modern dance.&#13;
&#13;
on the campus. Senior girls from one hundred high schools in the territory were in-&#13;
&#13;
Basketball proved to be the most successful and popular season of the year&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
with keen competition in all the games. The Zets came through undefeated to&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
vited to take part in a day of play and fun which was climaxed by a banquet at the&#13;
&#13;
were: Virginia Allen, Joyce Weed, Nancy Kingsbury, Alice Scott, Lillian Brown,&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
win the round-robin sorority tournament while the Seniors' dark-horse team&#13;
&#13;
dormitory.&#13;
The May Fe te, presented annually by the members of the physical education&#13;
&#13;
surprised everyone by winning the class tournament. Members of the Zet team&#13;
&#13;
classes, was held during Commencement Week on the night of May 27.&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Cheely, Mildred Wikert, Connie Gall, Barbara Forrester, Shirley&#13;
&#13;
Sweater Winners&#13;
&#13;
bara Forrester, Lillian Brown, Mary Stankiewicz, Alberta Seavey, and Ruth&#13;
Worrell.&#13;
The climax of the basketball season is the annual Yale-Harvard game. The&#13;
two teams are selected on the basis of playing ability, sportsmanship, and allcollege spirit by the class captains, the basketball chairman, the president of&#13;
&#13;
The highest honor which the&#13;
Women's Athletic Department can&#13;
confer upon a girl is the sweater&#13;
&#13;
W. A. A., and Miss Brinkman. The game, played March 22, was one of the best&#13;
&#13;
award- a symbol of good sports-&#13;
&#13;
games ever played on the campus, both teams showing good teamwork and&#13;
&#13;
manship, leadership, service, schol-&#13;
&#13;
sportsmanship. An honorary team consisting of Joyce Weed , Virginia Allen,&#13;
&#13;
arship, and active participation in&#13;
&#13;
and Barbara Forrester, forwards; and Lucille Locke, Darlene Cottington, and&#13;
&#13;
sports. Those winning sweaters&#13;
&#13;
Shirley Wallen, guards, was selected to give recognition to the best players on&#13;
the two teams .&#13;
The volleyball and softball seasons had not been completed at the time&#13;
&#13;
this year were Bonnie Jean Wallen, Miriam Hawthorn, and Lillian Brown.&#13;
&#13;
the Annual went to press.&#13;
&#13;
Hawthorn, Wall en , Brown.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty -three&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
Wallen, Dorothy Ann Olson, Bonnie Jean Wallen, Nancy Lowry, Myna Nickum ,&#13;
and Alberta Seavey. The senior class team consisted of Marjorie Primmer, Bar-&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
�HEALTH WEEK&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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Flinders, Worrell.&#13;
Pawson , Lowry, Olsen , Kolp.&#13;
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I&#13;
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&#13;
During Morningside College Health Week, which was held March&#13;
20 to 25, the importance of good health was stressed by W. A. A.&#13;
Twenty good-posture tags were awarded in Monday chapel to the&#13;
following: Connie Gall , Doreen Dallam, Evelyn DePue, Ruth Kingsbury, Helen Osbey, Dorothy Ann Olson, Ruth Olsen, Helen Pearson,&#13;
Marian Walsh, Ruth Worrell, Scotty Allison, David Denny, Bernard Feikema, Dale Flinders, DeLos Hartwig, Bob Harvey, Perry&#13;
Kruidenier, William Rozeboom, Dan Sardeson, and Packard Wolle.&#13;
At Wednesda y Chapel Reverend W. R. Moore spoke on "Mental&#13;
and Spiritual Health".&#13;
To climax the week, the iden tity of the Health Kin g and Queen&#13;
was revealed at an all-college dance Saturday night. The basis on&#13;
which these students were chosen was similar to the 4-H requirements. This year the king and queen were Dale Flinders and Ruth&#13;
Worrell; th eir attendants were Nancy Lowry, Richard Pawson,&#13;
Ruth Olsen, and John Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Twe nty-four&#13;
&#13;
�1&#13;
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&#13;
Miss Morningside&#13;
With all the pomp and solemnity necessari ly attendant upon such an occasion,&#13;
lovely Marjorie Primmer was revealed as "Miss Morningside of 1938" at the Pep&#13;
Chapel on November 4. Marjorie is a member of the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority and is&#13;
president of Agora . She reigned over the Homecoming festivities which included the&#13;
annual barbecue and pep-chapel, the snake-dance, and the Homecoming dance which&#13;
was held in the Alumni Gym .&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty- five&#13;
&#13;
�ALL FOR&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
.·&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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3&#13;
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3&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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s&#13;
0&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
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X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
" A beauty with brains" is an adequate&#13;
characterization of Carol who has won many&#13;
honors during her college career, among them&#13;
being the presidency of her sorority and the&#13;
secretaryship of the Student Council.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Albert Buckingham&#13;
Athletic ability and executive responsibility&#13;
rest equally light on the shoulders of as capable a person as Albert Buckingham. Buck's&#13;
friendliness and his contagious grin have won&#13;
him a permanent p lace in the hearts of the&#13;
student body for whom he acted as president&#13;
this year.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�ALL FOR&#13;
&#13;
MORNING S IDE&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Marjorie's gracious reception of two coveted senior honors, the presidency of her sorority and selection as "Miss Morningside",&#13;
was a fitting climax to a college career of&#13;
active participation in social and scholastic&#13;
affairs.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Dale Flinders&#13;
An athlete with a golden voice- add intelligence to these two qualities and the result&#13;
is Dale Flinders. Morningsiders will miss&#13;
Dale's genial personality and happy smile&#13;
when he graduates.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
ALL FOR&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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9&#13;
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3&#13;
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3&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
Robert Rohwer&#13;
&#13;
A budding young poet in our midst is&#13;
&#13;
Bob is Morningside's premier gentleman&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn. Her works have appeared&#13;
&#13;
and scholar. Active in forensic and musical&#13;
circles, he has maintained an excellent scho-&#13;
&#13;
in college publications and in literary magazines. She has also taken an active part in&#13;
athletic and sorority affairs.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty&#13;
&#13;
lastic average throughout his four years in&#13;
school.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX QUEENS&#13;
&#13;
STUDEN T UN I ON&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
-Tribune Photo.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
One of the most popular places on the campus is the new Student Union Room&#13;
on the third floor of Main Hall. Furnished with red leather and blond mapl e furni-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
ture, the Union has been a source of many enjoyable hours of relaxation and com-&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
radeship for all the students.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
WOMEN 'S LOUNGE&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
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1&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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u&#13;
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X&#13;
&#13;
-Tribune Photo.&#13;
&#13;
A room done in orange and tan leather with attractive drapes and reading lamps&#13;
EVELYN DEPUE, CAROL HELD, DOROTHY ANN OLSON&#13;
&#13;
has been provided for the women of the college on the first flo or of Main Hall. Here&#13;
&#13;
Chosen by popular student body vote, these three girl s combine&#13;
the ideals of personality, intelligence, and beauty; true queenly&#13;
qualities.&#13;
&#13;
the girl s may come to study or to chat with their friends; the only restriction is&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty- two&#13;
&#13;
" No Boys Allowed" .&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�OUR DECOROUS ( ?) INSTRUCTORS&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
COUNCIL OAK STORES&#13;
Your Friend at Mealtime&#13;
&#13;
row A&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
. . SOUTH DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
tame!) Ole Floyd a bit muddy, fellows?&#13;
7- Formal social season opened by the Faculty&#13;
Reception. You can meet other people, you&#13;
know.&#13;
19- Dormitory tea for Sioux City girls. Orange&#13;
sherbet, uum-mm-m !&#13;
21-Pilgrimage to Vermillion. The game wasn't&#13;
good, but oh, that train! We'll get that&#13;
pelt next year, Professor Van Horne.&#13;
28- Dr. Roadman wearing his maroon shirtCorn Hunt has started.&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
2- 0ne concert well attended. Reason: Lawrence Tibbett.&#13;
5-Homecoming! "Prim" lovely as Miss Morningside. Weather not so lovely. Football&#13;
team made mud-pies on the field. Gym was&#13;
dry, so we had a dance, anyway.&#13;
&#13;
SEPTEMBER&#13;
12-New freshmen arrive to start the four-year&#13;
grind. Park Theatre party-girls have escorts home.&#13;
16-Classes begin at 8:00. No new shoesbooks are higher!&#13;
23-Sorority rushing gets under way-and is it&#13;
rushing!&#13;
25----New home, new paint, new semester, another Open House- Tau Delts. Mosquitoes&#13;
give M. C. A. retreaters a royal welcome at&#13;
Stone Park.&#13;
OCTOBER&#13;
3-W. A. A. picnic for freshman girls-transportation provided.&#13;
5-Freshman-Sophomore Day. Frosh must&#13;
wear green caps until Thanksgiving.&#13;
Double Cane Rush ( the first one was too&#13;
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with Dairy&#13;
Products&#13;
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Co.&#13;
Printing with Service&#13;
&#13;
MILK DEALERS&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
&#13;
516 Sixth St.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty . five&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
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CALENDAR-Continued&#13;
19-Dad's Day! They watch us play football&#13;
and dance - and see where their money&#13;
goes.&#13;
22-The dorm goes Mexican at the Turkey-day&#13;
formal.&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
I- Pre-Engineers Night after the ball game.&#13;
"Fire-Bug" is on the market!&#13;
3- The "Snow-Ball" - Who said what abo ut&#13;
corsages?&#13;
13-Another Winter Festival- learn the Lambeth Walk from Pitchett.&#13;
14---Where are the movie scouts ? "Holiday"&#13;
was an excellent show.&#13;
JAN UARY&#13;
8- Dan Cupid was about two months ahead of&#13;
his regular schedule. Look at the co-eds&#13;
who came back with diamonds- Virginia&#13;
&#13;
MIDWEST COLLEGE&#13;
OF COMMERCE&#13;
&#13;
Allen, Dorothy Carlson, Virginia Thomas,&#13;
Mary Margaret Walker, and Bette Greene.&#13;
16-Angna Enters tonight. Did we hear com·&#13;
ment?&#13;
21-Choir leaves on tour-Lewton, Held, and&#13;
Primmer got the loveliest going-away presents.&#13;
23-Midnight oil did no good. The exams were&#13;
really tou gh.&#13;
27-Choir sings over N.B.C. Guess we're fa.&#13;
mous, now.&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
2- S. D. U. basketball game. Packed house&#13;
and disappointment.&#13;
4---W. A. A. swimming meet. A splashing good&#13;
time was had by all.&#13;
7-New Outlook Days! Is this a college or a&#13;
billboard?&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING FOR PROGRAMS&#13;
&#13;
PLAYS&#13;
PAGEANTS&#13;
READINGS&#13;
OPERETTAS&#13;
STUNTS&#13;
&#13;
The Dependable School for&#13;
Commercial Training&#13;
&#13;
SEE US NOW&#13;
400 Commerce Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
WETMORE&#13;
DECLAMATION BUREAU&#13;
1631 South Paxton Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-seven&#13;
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s&#13;
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Builders of&#13;
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Planned School Year Books&#13;
Sin c e Nineteen Hundred&#13;
'Eighteen&#13;
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One Hundred Thirty-nine&#13;
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�CAMPUS SHOTS&#13;
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Member F. D. I. C.&#13;
&#13;
MAKE&#13;
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THE TOY NATIONAL BANK&#13;
YOUR BANK&#13;
Intelligent and Conservative Banking Since 1873&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR- Continued&#13;
21-C hoir co ncert. Why don' t more peo ple realize what an excellent choral gro up we have&#13;
in our choir ?&#13;
24-FREE college party. More fun! Didn' t&#13;
know so manv people liked to play badminton and shuffleboard.&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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APRIL&#13;
10- Weed and Wallen in Californi a. Bet th ey&#13;
give the World' s Fair a goin g-over.&#13;
17- Back to th e old grind after th e Bunny holidays.&#13;
&#13;
3-M. C. A. roller skati ng party. Again tran sportation is provided- what is thi s school&#13;
coming to ?&#13;
7- Student Union Room dedi ca ted. It is really&#13;
a swell place- now we ca n study in th e&#13;
library.&#13;
22-Yale-Harvard game. Those girls could give&#13;
the Maroon s a run for th eir mon ey.&#13;
25- Dean John so n's sec retary and Son gbird&#13;
Flinders reign as H ealth Mon arch s.&#13;
&#13;
6--Senior girls from hi gh schools invade the&#13;
cam pus for Play Day.&#13;
12- Annual Mother-Dau ghter banquet.&#13;
19-Senior farewell dan ce. Co ngra ts to the&#13;
Sioux Queens.&#13;
27- May Fete. Oh , those mod ern dances !&#13;
&#13;
JUNE&#13;
5- Commencement. College days&#13;
memories to the gra duates !&#13;
&#13;
are&#13;
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s&#13;
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May You Find the&#13;
Rainbow's End&#13;
As you journey through life, we hope it&#13;
will be your good fortune to find the&#13;
rainbow's end, and with it the fulfillment&#13;
of all your cherished desires.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY GAS&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC CO.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-one&#13;
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u&#13;
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�AT RANDOM-&#13;
&#13;
STUDIOS&#13;
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THIS ANNUAL and nearly&#13;
all preceding annuals in the&#13;
past thirty-five years have been&#13;
illustrated by photography produced by Martin Youngberg.&#13;
We believe that this is proof&#13;
of the popularity of this modern&#13;
and highly equipped studio.&#13;
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Youngberg Studio&#13;
•&#13;
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615 Pierce Street&#13;
(Williges Furrier Building )&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Fo rty-three&#13;
&#13;
�MORE CAMPUS SHOTS&#13;
&#13;
TRAVEL&#13;
BY&#13;
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COOL&#13;
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AIR-CONDITIONED SUPER-COA. H&#13;
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Plan your trip to the World's Fair or to other&#13;
vacation spots this summer by cool air-conditioned Interstate Super-Coach, and travel in&#13;
luxurious comfort. The trip by bus will be a&#13;
sightseeing tour all the way--and you' ll save&#13;
a pocketfu l of money on your ticket!&#13;
Ask your local agent about convenient schedules low fares, and Expense-Paid Tours.&#13;
&#13;
DEPOT&#13;
Fifth and Douglas&#13;
Local Phone 5-7678&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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INTERSTATE TRANSIT LINES&#13;
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Eastman&#13;
Kodak Stores , Inc .&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County&#13;
Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
&amp; Arnold&#13;
Architects and Engineers&#13;
&#13;
DIXSON'S&#13;
PHARMACY&#13;
&#13;
Specializing in Planning&#13;
Public Buildings&#13;
&#13;
Iowa's Finest Suburban&#13;
Drug Store&#13;
&#13;
Beuttler&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5374&#13;
&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
450 Insurance Exchange Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
�The Favorite Candy of the Northwest&#13;
&#13;
LA FAMA CHOCOLATES&#13;
One of a Family of Famous Products&#13;
:Made by&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON BISCUIT COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS&#13;
&#13;
FIR&#13;
&#13;
sT&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
BANK&#13;
&#13;
CITY&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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FERRIS FLORISTS&#13;
Flowers for All Occasions&#13;
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s&#13;
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&#13;
BETWEEN CLASSES&#13;
&#13;
DRINK&#13;
&#13;
Telephone 8-7505&#13;
&#13;
From the Four Corners&#13;
of the Earth&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
Hours a Day&#13;
. . . comes the latest news in the field of&#13;
foreign affairs . . . politics .. . sports . ..&#13;
local and state news . . . editorial comments . . . news from Washington by world famous political analysts! All brought to you hot&#13;
off the wire so that you may be constantly abreast of the times!&#13;
&#13;
Warrior Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HOUSE OF HAMBURG&#13;
&#13;
I t's the Refreshing&#13;
Thing to Do&#13;
&#13;
Fitze's prices&#13;
Fit the purse.&#13;
Fitze's food is&#13;
Quite the nertz.&#13;
&#13;
CHESTERMAN CO.&#13;
&#13;
For news when it is news read ...&#13;
&#13;
DWIGHT HAUFF SPORTING GOODS CO.&#13;
Agent for&#13;
&#13;
A. G. SPALDING &amp; BROS .&#13;
ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT&#13;
"For Fairways and Allways, Say Spalding"&#13;
511 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Forty- six&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
IN BOTTLES&#13;
&#13;
. . . Sioux City's Largest Circulated Newspaper .. .&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-seven&#13;
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�J.C. RENNISON&#13;
&#13;
FRANK'S CAFE&#13;
&#13;
FLO RA.L CO.&#13;
&#13;
Lady cooks have a style of cooking&#13;
wh ich appeals to our restaurant-going&#13;
public. The food tastes like a home&#13;
cooked meal and that means a lot.&#13;
&#13;
NebraskaStreet&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
WIRE FLOWERS ANYWHERE&#13;
&#13;
GLASS FRONT&#13;
607 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
516&#13;
&#13;
"Say It with Flowers"&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Quality Shoes"&#13;
&#13;
BEN FRANKLIN STORES&#13;
&#13;
F&amp;C&#13;
&#13;
4006 Mornin gside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
"COAST TO COAST"&#13;
&#13;
P eters P ark&#13;
&#13;
"Your Dime Store at Peters Park"&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Shoe Stores Co.&#13;
&#13;
Everythin g from Five Cents to&#13;
One Dollar and Up&#13;
&#13;
Incorporated&#13;
&#13;
507 Fourth Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
T. L. SCHAEFER, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
GRAYSON'S&#13;
&#13;
DUSTY'S&#13;
PARK LUNCH&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
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X&#13;
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"SUITS ME"&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
BREAKFASTS : LUNCHES&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Swift and Courteous Service&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Meet Your Friends at&#13;
&#13;
Barney's College Service Store&#13;
Where you can buy everything&#13;
in college needs.&#13;
CARA NOME TOILETRIES&#13;
and all other brands.&#13;
OUR FOUNTAIN SERVICE IS THE&#13;
VERY BEST&#13;
&#13;
Bus Tickets Anywhere&#13;
&#13;
Barney's Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
The Rexall Store&#13;
&#13;
On e Hu ndred Fort y-eigh t&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
LUGGAGE SHOP&#13;
Large Selection&#13;
of Luggage and&#13;
Handbags&#13;
&#13;
���</text>
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              <text>Library&#13;
&#13;
Accession&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Book&#13;
&#13;
43621&#13;
R&#13;
378&#13;
&#13;
7774&#13;
&#13;
[v.40)1939&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Presents&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
1939&#13;
DOROTHY ANN OLSON&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
J.M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Faculty Advisor&#13;
&#13;
Foreword&#13;
&#13;
- First Building on the Campus.&#13;
- Campus Close-up.&#13;
The twenty-one thousand students who have enrolled at Morningside College since its institution as the University of the Northwest&#13;
in 1889, salute it on this-its golden anniversary. May this book,&#13;
published during Morningside's fiftieth year, bring back delightful&#13;
memories of their own college days to those who are no longer in&#13;
school, and serve as a record of never-to-be-forgotten experiences&#13;
to the students of 1939.&#13;
&#13;
43621.&#13;
&#13;
To&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
whose understanding friendliness has&#13;
been an everpresent help and&#13;
guide to every student.&#13;
&#13;
President Earl Alan Roadman&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
-Campus Canopy.&#13;
&#13;
"For a jolly good fellow."&#13;
he's&#13;
B.D., D.D., LL.D.&#13;
Iowa State Teachers College, Upper Iowa&#13;
University, Boston University Graduate&#13;
School, University of Halle, Germany.&#13;
&#13;
Staff&#13;
In Memoriam&#13;
&#13;
- Journal Photo.&#13;
&#13;
Associate&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR ................................................Mildred Wikert&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY Editor&#13;
LITERARY Assistant&#13;
SENIOR EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Nelson&#13;
Clara Louise McBurney&#13;
Margaret Lundquist&#13;
&#13;
JUNIOR Editor&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
Keene Roadman&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN's SPORTS EDITOR&#13;
PHOTOGRAPH Y EDITOR&#13;
SNAPSHOT Editor&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Brown&#13;
.Irene Johnson&#13;
Bonnie Jean Wall en&#13;
Jean Anderson&#13;
&#13;
FORENSICS EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
J. BUSHNELL&#13;
&#13;
In the death of Dr. J. J. Bushnell, Morningside College has lost&#13;
a great man; great because he risked everything that he might do&#13;
for others. Though h e knew that death might come a t an y moment,&#13;
he gave himself to the thorough stud y of books, a skin g as did&#13;
Browning's grammarian, " What's in the scroll thou keepes t furl ed 'I'&#13;
Let me kn ow all." Books and p eople were his life, his great desire&#13;
being to know, and to bring his students to know the high , not the&#13;
low, not the night, but the mornin g.&#13;
&#13;
- A Faculty Memb er.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
DRAMATI CS EDITOR&#13;
&#13;
DR. J .&#13;
&#13;
Dale Harter&#13;
&#13;
ARTIST&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHERS&#13;
TYPIST&#13;
&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
Bob Swift, Russell Martin&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
&#13;
Under Morningside's last three presidents one professor more&#13;
than an y other firml y established himself, throu gh his jovial disp osition and shining integrity in the h earts of his students. To him&#13;
they freely turned for the sympathetic counsel which it was his&#13;
deepest joy to b estow, and to Dr. Bushnell 's m emory they will&#13;
turn many times again for comfort and inspiration.&#13;
&#13;
- A Student.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
- Campus Conclave.&#13;
&#13;
Board of Trustees&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
R. J.&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON,&#13;
&#13;
C. L.&#13;
&#13;
BARKS,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City.......................................................... President&#13;
&#13;
Orange City..........................................................Vice.President&#13;
&#13;
T. N. McCLURE, Sioux City............................................Secretary.Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
EMERITI&#13;
&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER, Alamo, Texas&#13;
HONORARY&#13;
J. N. Hughes, Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
J. C. Rasmussen, Spencer, Iowa&#13;
C. C. Harshbarger, Onawa, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. C. R. Long, Sioux City&#13;
A. M. Jackson, Sioux City&#13;
ACTIVE&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1939&#13;
&#13;
0. M. Bond, Sioux City&#13;
R. J . Harrington, Sioux City&#13;
C. H . Kingsbury, Ponca, Nebraska&#13;
John Kolp, Manson, Iowa&#13;
W. H. Lease, Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
Howard Martin, Sioux City&#13;
Harry Pratt, Sioux City&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1940&#13;
&#13;
C. W. Britton, Sioux City&#13;
J . J. Davies, Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
G. W. Dunn, Sioux City&#13;
L. W. Feik, Sioux City&#13;
Gordon Metcalf, Sioux City&#13;
Rueben Roach, Sioux City&#13;
A. L. Semans, Spencer, Iowa&#13;
J. R. Tumbleson, Eagle Grove, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1941&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks, Orange City, Iowa&#13;
F. Earl Burgess, Algona, Iowa&#13;
J. C. Ruth man, Algona, Iowa&#13;
H. I. Down , Sioux City&#13;
J. A. Farnham, Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
J . V. Madison, Sioux City&#13;
Carrol N. Smith, Sioux City&#13;
D. W . Stewart, Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
CLARA L. ASMUS&#13;
&#13;
LYNN BEYER&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EMANUEL JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
.·&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, Chicago&#13;
Musical College.&#13;
&#13;
Dean of the College and&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
Hamline University, Oxford&#13;
Universit y, London University ,&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., Cornell College, 1920; A.M., University&#13;
of Chicago, 1921; S.T.B., Boston University,&#13;
1923; Graduate Fellow in Philosophy, Boston&#13;
University, 1923-4; Graduate Assistant in Philosophy,&#13;
Brown University, 1924-5: Graduate&#13;
&#13;
Studies, Harvard University, 1925, 1927-8; Ph.D.,&#13;
Bos ton University. 1928.&#13;
&#13;
LOIS JESSIE BRINKMAN&#13;
&#13;
JOHN J. BUSHNELL&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
D.D., Ph.D. , S.T .B.&#13;
&#13;
lnstrucior in Physical&#13;
Education for Women&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and R eligion&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek College,&#13;
Professional Physica l Education&#13;
Camp.&#13;
&#13;
Boston University, School of&#13;
Theology , Epworth Seminary,&#13;
Upper lowa University.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
A.B.,&#13;
&#13;
lllinois Wescleyan University, 1888; A.M., Co1umbia University, 191 3; L.H.D., lllinois Wes-&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH&#13;
DIMMITT&#13;
&#13;
l eya n University, 1920; Graduate&#13;
Student,&#13;
University&#13;
of&#13;
Chicago,&#13;
summer quarters , 1894 and 1897;&#13;
Student in the American School of&#13;
Classical Studies, Rome, 1903-4;&#13;
Graduate Student, Columbia Univers ity, 1912-3; University of Chicago ,&#13;
summer, 1918.&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women and&#13;
Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CANNING&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Instructo r in Theory and&#13;
Organ&#13;
&#13;
Instructo r in Public School&#13;
Music and in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin College.&#13;
&#13;
Missouri State Teachers College,&#13;
Columbia University.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AusnN Coss&#13;
&#13;
EARLE E. EMME&#13;
&#13;
B.S., M.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., D.B., A.M., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Psychology&#13;
&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan University ,&#13;
University of II linois, University of Chicago, Clark&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern University, Garrett Biblical Institute, Co lum bia University, Boston Univers it y, University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
LAURA CLARA FISCHER&#13;
A.B. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
A.B., M.S.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Ancient Languages and&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professo r of&#13;
Physics&#13;
&#13;
MYRON EARLE GRABER&#13;
Dean of Men and Professor of Physics&#13;
A.B., H eidelberg University, 1901; A.M. , ibid .,&#13;
&#13;
1904; Ph.D., University of Iowa, 1924; Graduate Student. University of Michigan, summer,&#13;
1907; Columbia University, 1908; Ohio State&#13;
University, 191 3: Fellow in Physics, University&#13;
of Chicago. 1917- 8 : Fellow in Physics, Univer·&#13;
s it y of low a, 1923-4.&#13;
&#13;
Carleton College, University of&#13;
Chicago, University of Colorado, University of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, University&#13;
of Iowa .&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
Twelve&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
BIRDINA HILL&#13;
&#13;
HORACE B. HAWTHORN&#13;
&#13;
B.S., M.S., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
State&#13;
&#13;
College, University&#13;
&#13;
of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN HOWE&#13;
&#13;
Cleveland Institute&#13;
of Music,&#13;
Pu pil of Louis Persinger, Josef&#13;
Fuchs, Herbert Elwell, Juilliard&#13;
School of Music.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
lowa State College, Ames Business College, Gregg College,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
KA NTHLENER&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Romance&#13;
Languages&#13;
Cornell&#13;
&#13;
College, Harvard University, lnstitut Francais&#13;
and&#13;
Univers ity of Madrid, Universi ty&#13;
of Chicago. University of Dijon,&#13;
National Un iversity of Mexi co.&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON&#13;
MACCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
LOVELAND&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Emeritus of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice&#13;
&#13;
Smith College, Oxford&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin Conservatory of Music,&#13;
Lake Geneva, Student of L. A.&#13;
Torrens.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
A.B. , Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
MARCIA McNEE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music and&#13;
Professor of Voice&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Elementary&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin&#13;
College,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, Oberlin Conservatory&#13;
of Music, Lak e Geneva, Pupil&#13;
of Dr. Carl Duflt, El lison Van&#13;
H oose.&#13;
&#13;
Upper Iowa University, Univerof Chicago, University of&#13;
Iowa, University of Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
sity&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE KAULL  KINNEY&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
University o f Kansas, Eastman&#13;
School of Music, Stu dent o f&#13;
Lawrence Schaufflrt, Fredonia&#13;
State Normal, New York.&#13;
&#13;
J. KINNEY&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
GORDON&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violoncello&#13;
and Double B ass&#13;
Maas School of Music, Eastman&#13;
School of Mu sic, Student of&#13;
Karl Agnesy, Ne l son Watson.&#13;
&#13;
EDWARDA&#13;
&#13;
METZ&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Piano fo rte&#13;
Chicago Musical College, Boguslawski College of Music, Curtis Institute, Pupil of Tom ford&#13;
Harris, Ernest Hutcheson ,&#13;
Austin Conradi.&#13;
&#13;
MENDAL B . MILLER&#13;
A.B., A.M .&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Economics and Sociology&#13;
Greenville Co l lege, University&#13;
of Southern Californi a .&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
]AMES E . KIRKPATRICK&#13;
A.B., A.M., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE H. KLEINPELL&#13;
A.B. , A.M., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History and&#13;
Political Science&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College, University of&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
University of Iowa, University&#13;
of Chicago, Ohio State&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
MIRAH MILLS&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL RUTH MURRAY&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Engish and&#13;
Secretary of the Facuity&#13;
&#13;
Registrar and Assistant&#13;
Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages and History&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, University&#13;
of Chicago, University of Michigan, University of Sout he rn&#13;
California.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL THOMPSON&#13;
KUCINSKI&#13;
&#13;
LEO KUCINSKI&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Violin&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Head of P ianoforte&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College,&#13;
Warsaw&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Oberlin&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Cl evel and Institute of Music, Juilliard Graduate School of Mu sic,&#13;
Pupil of Edward lbzikowski,&#13;
Charlotte Demuth Williams, De&#13;
Ribaupierre,&#13;
Albert&#13;
Stoessel ,&#13;
Rubin Goldmark, Naoum&#13;
Blinder.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Col lego, P upil of&#13;
Emma Sage. J. E rick Sch mall,&#13;
Theo. Otterstrom, R udo lph&#13;
Ganz, Fritz Voegeley, Ceci l&#13;
Burleigh.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
Morningside College, Eastman&#13;
School of Music, Chicago Musica l Co ll ege, Cleveland Tnstitute,&#13;
Juilliard School of Music, Student of Rudolph Ganz, Raymond Wilson, Arthur Loesser,&#13;
James Friskin.&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, University&#13;
of Illinois , Columbia&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT GLEN ROGERS&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Physical&#13;
Education and Assistant&#13;
Athletic Director&#13;
Morningside Co ll ege, University&#13;
of Illinois.&#13;
&#13;
Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical&#13;
Education and Director of&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Albion College.&#13;
&#13;
SAMUEL&#13;
&#13;
C. STEINBRENNER&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
N. McCLURE&#13;
Bursar&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MOOK&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Vincennes University , University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
Charles City College , Theological Seminary, Frankfurt-onMain. Germany. University of&#13;
Strassburg, University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN WILSON STEWART&#13;
B.A. , M.A.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MAE MACARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
&#13;
Adrian Coll ege, University of&#13;
Chicago. Kansas State University , Kan sas City University ,&#13;
Marine&#13;
Biological&#13;
Laboratory ,&#13;
University of Iowa, University&#13;
of Michigan.&#13;
&#13;
Geneva College , Montana State&#13;
University, University of Iowa,&#13;
University of Illinois, Univer•&#13;
sity of Washington.&#13;
&#13;
Western Union College,&#13;
National Business Training&#13;
School.&#13;
&#13;
Director of Admissions&#13;
Ball State Teachers College,&#13;
Indiana, University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS&#13;
A.B. , M.D.&#13;
&#13;
ALICE MATTICE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
Secretary to the President&#13;
Morningside College .&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
LAURA TASCHE&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT TIMM&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
University of South Dakota,&#13;
Spearfish Normal, Aberdeen&#13;
Normal, Fort Wayne Business&#13;
Institute.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Field Representative&#13;
&#13;
AKESON&#13;
&#13;
Secretary to the Bursar&#13;
National&#13;
&#13;
Business Training&#13;
School.&#13;
&#13;
Morning side College, Juilli ard&#13;
Schoo l of Music, Eastman&#13;
Sc hool of Music, Pupil of&#13;
Donald Lentz , George Carlson,&#13;
Georges Barre, Arthur Lora,&#13;
Daniel Groth, Donald Schmid,&#13;
Chau tau qua Summer School.&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
Ph.B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Manager of Women's&#13;
Residence Halls&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Valley Hospital&#13;
Sioux Falls.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State College.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in Biology&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, Johns&#13;
Hopkins University, University&#13;
o f Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Dormitory Nurse&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
Lois M. VANDENBRINK&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
ILA BUNCH&#13;
MILTON WIKSELL&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F. Wood FORD&#13;
A.B., Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Speech and&#13;
Dramatics&#13;
&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte,&#13;
History of Music, and&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College,&#13;
University of Missouri , University of Iowa, Louisiana State&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HELEN JENSEN&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
ROY J . SWEET&#13;
&#13;
Head of Wind Instruments&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, Berlin&#13;
Conservatory of Music , University of Michigan, Pupil of&#13;
Emil Liebling , Alberto Jones ,&#13;
Clarence Eddy , John Doane,&#13;
Olaf Anderson , Howard Well s,&#13;
Palmer Christian.&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Health&#13;
&#13;
Office&#13;
&#13;
CI ass of&#13;
&#13;
I93 9&#13;
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I&#13;
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I&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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9&#13;
&#13;
Under the watchful eye of Dr. C. F . Berkstresser, the students&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
have been kept in excellent physical condition throughout the year.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Daily office hours were kept by " Doc" and Nurse Inez Grove in&#13;
the Health Office which is now in its second year of existence.&#13;
Free medical attention is available to all students in need of it;&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
voluntary Wasserman tests we re given this year and all examina-&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
tion s for the Heal th King and Qu een were done in the Health Office.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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u&#13;
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X&#13;
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X&#13;
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OFFICERS&#13;
President ____________ ____________________________ ________________ David Brinkman&#13;
Vice-President -------·---- _____________________________ __ __ _____ _Ted Barnowe&#13;
_&#13;
Secretary _____ _&#13;
________________________________________________ Virginia Thomas&#13;
Representative __________ _&#13;
________ __ _&#13;
_ ____________ _ Margaret Lundquist&#13;
____&#13;
&#13;
Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
43621&#13;
&#13;
DORIS ALEXANDER&#13;
&#13;
WILLI E BELLE ALEXANDER&#13;
&#13;
IRENE AN DERSON&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
Redfield , South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
L inn Grove, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Lake Park, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
L iberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
L iberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
M usic&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Zera Chi,&#13;
Lib,rarian, 3,&#13;
Directress. 4; Sigma Tau Del ta,&#13;
3 . 4 , Secre tary-Treasurer, 4:&#13;
Chapel Choir, I. 2, 3, 4; W. S .&#13;
G. A .. Ha ll P resident, 4 .&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Cl ub, I, 2 , 3 , 4,&#13;
Secretary, 2. Treasurer, 1: Dramatics, I . 2, 3, 4; M. C. A. ,&#13;
I , 2.&#13;
&#13;
A lpha Sigma; Cosmopolitan&#13;
Club, 2, 3. 4, P resident, 4; M .&#13;
C. A., 1, 2 , 3, 4 , Secretary, 4;&#13;
Grace League. 1, 2, 3, 4; lsh koodah. Vice P res ident, l.&#13;
&#13;
A lpha Sigma , H istorian, 2, Corresponding Secretary, 3; Choir.&#13;
2. 3, 4; M. C. A.; Cooperative&#13;
House P resident, 4.&#13;
&#13;
MYRLE AUSTIN&#13;
Rock ford, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
FLETAMAE BANE&#13;
K anawha . Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
L iberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Cen tral State T eachers Co l lege.&#13;
1,: P arsons Juni or Co llege. 2:&#13;
Kan sas State T eachers Co ll ege.&#13;
3.&#13;
&#13;
Pre-Engineer's Club, Treasure r,&#13;
2, Vice Presi de nt , 3, P resident,&#13;
4 : Sigma P i Sigma, Vi ce P resident, 3, President, 4 : Vice&#13;
P resident, Senior Class.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi; Sigma Mu,&#13;
Treasu rer, 3; Mu P hi Epsilon .&#13;
Histo rian, 4; Chapel Choi r. 1,&#13;
2. 3. 4; Student Council, 4 :&#13;
W. S. G . A . , President, 4;&#13;
Who' s Who, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Chapel Choir, 2, 3. 4.&#13;
&#13;
TED&#13;
&#13;
BARNOWE&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY BEHRENS&#13;
Whiting, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN BRA DY&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
MARY BRILMAN&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BRINKMAN&#13;
&#13;
Norfolk. Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Primghar, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
RALPH BRAKKE&#13;
&#13;
Sanborn, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan . ] , 2; Morn·&#13;
ingside, 3, 4; Pre -Engin eers&#13;
Clu b ; Aviation Club.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Club, 1: Pi Gam ma Mu.&#13;
4; Intramural Basketball , 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4; I ntramural Ki tte nba ll , 1,&#13;
2, 3, 4; Track, 1.&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
K appa&#13;
si lon :&#13;
Band,&#13;
crative&#13;
&#13;
Zeta Chi ; M u Phi EpVesper Choi r, 1,, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
l, 3; M . C. A.; Coop·&#13;
House Vice President, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
Al pha T au Delta, Vi ce President, 3. President, 4 : "M" C lub,&#13;
3, 4: F ootball: President Sen ior Class; Student Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Hinton, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BRUNTJEN&#13;
&#13;
BORDEN BUCHANAN&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BUCKINGHAM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Palo Alto, California&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Pre -Engineer's Club, Sec reta ry,&#13;
2, Vice P resident, 4, President ,&#13;
4 ; Sigma P i S igma, P resident,&#13;
3; T rack , I , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta; Biology Club;&#13;
Aeronautics Club, Assistant&#13;
Commanding Officer; Beta Beta&#13;
Beta; Intramural BasketbalI;&#13;
Tri Beta, President.&#13;
&#13;
P hi Sigma, Treasurer, 4 ; Basketba ll , 2, 3, 4; Football , 2, 3,&#13;
4; " M" Club, 2, 3, 4; President&#13;
of Student Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
AGNES CARLIN&#13;
&#13;
BERTH A CONNER&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM CORKHILL&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA CRANE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Glidden, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Historian, 2,&#13;
President, 3, Recording Secretary, 4, Usher, 4; Psychology&#13;
Clu b, 4; Sigma T au Delta 4 ·&#13;
P i Gamma Mu , 4; A lpha Kappa&#13;
Delta, 4; M. C. A .. 2, 3 ; InterSororit y Council, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi; Psychology&#13;
Club, 4; Band, I , 3; W. A. A. ,&#13;
I, 2, 3, 4, Board, 2 , 3, 4; Honorary Hockey, 2, 3, 4; Honorary Kitte n -ball ; Sweater Winner; Scarf Win ner; Sioux, 4;&#13;
M. C. A. , I , 2, 3. 4; Cheer&#13;
Leader, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Pianist. 2, Recording Secretary, 3. Vice President , 4: Sigma&#13;
Mu, President.&#13;
3; Mu Ph i E psilon, Correspondi ng Secretary, 4; Vesper Ch oir,&#13;
3, 4: M . C. A. , Chairman of&#13;
M. C. A . Radio Broad cast , 4 :&#13;
S tudent Coun cil, 4; Conservatory P resident, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi. l. 2 : Col legiate P layers : Phi Sigma Iota,&#13;
V ice P residen t, 2, P resident. 3,&#13;
Sec retary. 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Directress, 3,&#13;
4: Mu Ph i Eps ilon, Vice Presi dent, 3, P resident, 4; S igma&#13;
Mu, 2, 3, 4, Socia l Chai rman,&#13;
2; Chapel Choir, I, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Band, I , 2; K. Z. X . Trio, 2,&#13;
3; W . S. G. A. , Vi ce P resident,&#13;
4; Messiah Contralto S oloist, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Doris DAVIS&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN DEPUE&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS DowN&#13;
&#13;
OWEN ENGFN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Minneapolis , Minnesota&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Players, 3; Chapel&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha , President, 4;&#13;
Collegiate Players, l, 2; Psychology Club, 3, 4 ; Chapel&#13;
Choir, 1, 2, 3; Vice President,&#13;
Sophomore Class; Christian&#13;
Service Club Radio Quartet, I;&#13;
lshkoodah,&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms, 1 ;&#13;
May Queen Attendant; Beauty&#13;
Queen, 4.&#13;
&#13;
A I pha Tau Del ta. Sergeant-atArms, 4; Football , 1; Basket·&#13;
ball, I.&#13;
&#13;
Hibbing Juni or College, I, 2;&#13;
"M" Club, 3, 4; Football, 3,&#13;
4 ;, Kittenball, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
DALE FLINDERS&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD FORBES&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA FORRESTER&#13;
&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
JAK EFELKER&#13;
Trenton,&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Keosauqua , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sutherland , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club, 3, 4; Football ,&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Pi&#13;
Sigma, 3, 4, Secretary-Treasurer, 4; Choir, 2, 3, 4; Male&#13;
Quartet, 4; M. C. A. Radio&#13;
Quartet. 2, 3, 4; Football , 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4: Track, 1, 2; Who's Who ,&#13;
4; H ealth King Attendant, 3;&#13;
Health King , 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta; Chapel Choir,&#13;
l , 2, 3, 4; Dramatics.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Usher, 2, 4&#13;
P ep Club, 2; Biology Club, 2&#13;
Int ernationa l R e l ations Club , 2&#13;
Beta Beta Beta, 4; W. A. A. , 1,&#13;
2, 4 , Basketball Chairman , 4 ,&#13;
Awards Chairman, 2; Yale-Harva rd , 1, 2, 4; Scarf Winner, 2;&#13;
Sweater Winner, 4; H onorary&#13;
H ockey, Volleyball, and Basket ball T eams, I , 2, 4; M. C. A.,&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM HAWTHORN&#13;
Cas tana , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA GASINK&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Players, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club, 3, 4; International Relations Club , 3, 4;&#13;
Symphony Orchestra , 1, 2. 3. 4;&#13;
String Quartet. l , 2, 3, 4; Vesper Choir, 2. 3, 4; String Trio ,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Battle Cree k, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
University of Iowa , 2. 3; Biol·&#13;
ogy Club , 4; Band, I , 4.&#13;
&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4; M. C. A., I, 2, 3,&#13;
4; Grace League , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Chaplain, 2, 3,&#13;
President,&#13;
4; Manuscript Club,&#13;
Librarian, 4; Editor of "Manuscript ", 4; Sociology Club, 2;&#13;
lnternational&#13;
Relations&#13;
Club&#13;
Vice President, 2; Alpha Kappa Delta , Secretary, 3, President, 4; Sigma Tau Delta , President, 4; Intramural, 1, 2 , 3, 4;&#13;
Yale-Harvard , 3; Scarf Winner,&#13;
3: Sweater Winner, 3: Collegian&#13;
Reporter, Y. M. C. A. , l, 2, 3,&#13;
4, Social Service Chairman, 2,&#13;
Secretary 3, Y. W. Representative, 4: Grace League, 1,. 2 , 3,&#13;
4, Cabinet, 2. 3, 4; Int er-Sor·&#13;
ority Council, 4: W. A. A.,&#13;
Board , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
FRED HOFFMAN&#13;
&#13;
I, 2, 4.&#13;
CAROL HELD&#13;
Hint on, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Directress, 3,&#13;
Critic, 4 , President, 4; Pep&#13;
Club , 3; Sigma Mu, 3; Chapel&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4; Band, I;&#13;
H ea lth Queen , 2; Student Body&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, 4; Bea uty&#13;
Queen, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Minneapolis , Minn eso ta&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Directress , 2,&#13;
Recording Secretary, 4; P sycho logy Club, 4; Vesper Choir, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Hibbing Junior College , 1, 2 :&#13;
Football, 3, 4: Kittenball;&#13;
Track, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Vice President, 3,&#13;
Corresponding Secretary, 4; Psychology Club, 4; Pep Club, 3;&#13;
Agora , Junior&#13;
Representative;&#13;
Collegian Reporter; M. C. A.,&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta, Sergeant-atArms, 2, Vice President, 4;&#13;
Economics Club, 2, 3; Cheer&#13;
Leader, 3: Editor of Alumni&#13;
Bulletin, 4.&#13;
&#13;
HOSNER&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HUGHES&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD JACOBSON&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAY KLINKER&#13;
&#13;
RUSSELL KRAAI&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA LEWTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Denison, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Orange City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Francis Shimer College; Cosmopolitan Club , 4; Chap e l&#13;
Choir, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern Junior CoJlege, l,&#13;
2: Phi Sigma, President, 4;&#13;
"M" Club , 3, 4; Football , 3,&#13;
4; Basketball , 3, 4; Kittenball,&#13;
3, 4; Track, 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, 4, Inter-Sorority&#13;
Council , 2, Critic, 4; Chapel&#13;
Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4; Vocal Trio,&#13;
l, 2, 3; Madrigals, 3; Song&#13;
Leader, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL HELD&#13;
Hinton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
NADINE LINDQUIST&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET LUNDQUIST&#13;
&#13;
CLARA LouISE McBuRNEY&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Kapp a Ze ta Chi; Mu Phi Epsilon, 3, 4, Warden , 3, Treasurer, 4; Sigma Mu, 2; Chapel&#13;
Choir ], 2, 3 , 4; Band , I , 2;&#13;
Contralto So loi st in "Messiah",&#13;
3 ; Solos in " Rose Maiden", l.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi , Corres ponding&#13;
Sec retary, 3, Treasu rer, 4; Pi&#13;
Gamma Mu. 4; Junior Class,&#13;
Treasurer; Senior Class Rep re sentative; Senior Editor , Juni or&#13;
Editor, "Sioux''; Grace Leagu e,&#13;
2; Student Council , 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Chaplain, 3, Reporter, 4; Art Club , 2; Ger man&#13;
Club, Musician, 1, Vi ce P resid e nt, 2; Mu Phi Ep sil on. Hi storian , 4, R ec ording Secretary,&#13;
4; Sigma Mu , 2, 3; Pi Gamma&#13;
Mu; Symphony Orch es tra, 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4 ; Collegian Re porter, 1, 4;&#13;
A s sis ta n t Literary Editor ,&#13;
"Sioux" , 4; M. C. A. , 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Inter-Sorority Council.&#13;
&#13;
M. C. A., 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS McLAUGHLIN&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT McQuEEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY NELSON&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
BERNICE PETRONIS&#13;
&#13;
Delavan , Illin ois&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PEARSON&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn , Iowa&#13;
Bio log y Club, 1, 2; P sychology&#13;
Club, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE PRIMMER&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
NARYKA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Biology Club, 2, 3, 4; P syc hology Club, 4; Beta Be ta Be ta, 4.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD PAWSON&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Zeta Chi; German Club ,&#13;
2; W. A. A., 2, 3, 4, Vice President, 4; Intramural Ho ckey, 2,&#13;
3: Snapshot Editor, 3 , Literary&#13;
Editor, 4. "Sioux"; M. C. A.,&#13;
2. 3: Grace League , l ; Art&#13;
Club, 2.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
MORRISON&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta . Secretary. 3,&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms, 2, President ,&#13;
4: Int er-Fraternity Council. 4;&#13;
Economics Club , 2 ; "M" Club ,&#13;
3, 4, Secretary , 4; Football , l,&#13;
2. 3, 4; Basketball , I, 3, 4;&#13;
Int ramural&#13;
Basketbal I, 2, 3:&#13;
Intramural Kittenball , ] , 2. 3.&#13;
4: Junior Class Pres ident: Stude nt Council 3; Sports Editor.&#13;
"Sioux" , 2; Grace Leag ue . l, 2.·&#13;
3, Cab in et, 2; M. C. A. , I , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Pre-Engineer's Club; Band;&#13;
Brass Quartet; Trumpet Trio;&#13;
Acrobatic Team.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Peterson. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MCKENNA&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE PRITCHARD&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi; Mu Phi Epsi1on , Vice President. 4 ; Sigma&#13;
Mu; Chapel Choir, 1. 2, 3, 4;&#13;
W. S. G. A. , H a ll President , 4.&#13;
&#13;
KEENE ROADMAN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberai Arts&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Treasurer, 3, 4,&#13;
Pres id e nt, 4; Psychology Club ,&#13;
4, Se c re tary , 4; Economics&#13;
Club, 2; Eta Sigma Phi, 3, 4,&#13;
Sec re tary, 4 ; Pi Gamma Mu , 4 ;&#13;
A I pha Kappa Del ta, 4; Intramural Baske tball, 2, 3, 4, Volleyball&#13;
2, 3, 4, Hockey, 4;&#13;
Typist&#13;
Sioux , 4; M. C. A&#13;
1, 2; Agora, Senior Represen tati ve.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
DALE ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi ; Ves per Choir,&#13;
President; Symphony Orchestra;&#13;
Student St rin g Quartet.&#13;
&#13;
Economics Club; Coll eg iate&#13;
Players, 2, 3; Pi Kappa Delta :&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega; Student Body&#13;
Vice President , 4; Collegian&#13;
R eport e r ; Sports Editor,&#13;
"Sioux", 3, 4; M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Marathon , lowa&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT ROHWER&#13;
&#13;
HENRY SCHUNCK&#13;
&#13;
ALBERTA SEAVEY&#13;
&#13;
CHARELS SEWARD&#13;
&#13;
Paullina, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Aurora, T!lin oi s&#13;
&#13;
Forest City , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club, 4; Economics Club , 2: Pi Kappa Delta, 2.&#13;
3, 4, President, 4; Pi Gamma&#13;
Mu;. Chapel Choir, 1, 2, 3 , 4,&#13;
President, 4; Student Council ,&#13;
2. 3, 4; M. C. A. , I, 2, 3, 4,&#13;
President, 3; Class Scholarship,&#13;
1: Board of Control, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Tnter-Collegiate Debate, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Treasurer, 3,&#13;
President, 4 , Int er-Sorority&#13;
Council , 3, 4; Pep Club ; Ishkoodah President , 1 ; Chapel&#13;
Choir, 2, 3, 4, Vice P residen t,&#13;
4 ; Juni or Class Represe ntative;&#13;
. Agora, President , 4, Vic e President, 3; H ealth Queen, 3;&#13;
"Yumph Girl", 3; Miss Morningsid e, 4; Student Council,&#13;
3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Chapel Choir, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi, Usher, 2; Col1egiate Players , 1. 2: W. A. A. ,&#13;
l, 2, 4, Board Member. 2; \V.&#13;
S. G . A. , H a ll Pres id e nt, 4;&#13;
Int ramura l Sports, 1, 2, 4;&#13;
Yal e -Harvard, 1, 2, 4: Sw ea ter&#13;
Winner, 4; Scarf Winn e r, 2;&#13;
C o I l e g i an R e porter, 1, 2;&#13;
"Sioux", 2; M. C. A., I. 2, 4;&#13;
Grace Leagu e , ] , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th e ta Rho, 2, 3, Chap lain , 3; Manu sc ript Club, Vice&#13;
President , 4; Collegiate Players.&#13;
2, 3; Choir, 2, 4; Collegian&#13;
R e porter, 2, 3, Art Editor, 3;&#13;
Student Ministerial Association,&#13;
Vice Pres ident, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta, Treasurer, 4 ,&#13;
President , 4; Biology Club, 2;&#13;
Junior Class Vi ce Pres id ent.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
BIRDIE MAE SLOTHOWER&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA SMITH&#13;
&#13;
DON SNYDER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Onawa, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Rockford , Illinois&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Usher, Directress,&#13;
Secretary; Collegiate Playe rs;&#13;
W. A. A. , I ; Sigma Tau Delta;&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi, Vice Presid ent;&#13;
Ma nu script Club.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Pianist, 2, Usher,&#13;
3, Directress, 4, Historian, 4;&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon , Warden, 4;&#13;
Sigma Mu, Secretary, 3; Chapel&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4 ; M. C. A.&#13;
Radio Quartet , 4 ; Soprano&#13;
Soloist in "Messiah", 4.&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Theta Rho; "M" Club,&#13;
2, 3, 4, Secretary, 3, Presi dent,&#13;
4; Chapel Choir, 1 ; Footbal I,&#13;
&#13;
MARY STANKIEWICZ&#13;
&#13;
RUTH THATCHER&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
West Bend, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, 2, Re co rding Secretary, 3, Reporter, 4; Psychology&#13;
Club, 4 ; Pep Club, 3; W. A.&#13;
A., l , 2, 3, 4; Intramural , I , 2,&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Chaplain, 4; German Club, 2; Vespe r Choir, 1;&#13;
Collegian R eporter, l ; M. C.&#13;
A., I; Crace L eague, 1; Gospel&#13;
T eam, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi, Directress, 3,&#13;
Critic, 3, Vice President, 4;&#13;
Dram atics, 2, 3; Sigma Tau&#13;
De lta, 3, 4; Freshman Class&#13;
Secretary; Senior Class Secretary; Collegian Repor ter, 2;&#13;
Freshmen Green Sheet Editor,&#13;
I; Editor Agora Edition , 2; Editor, "Sioux" , 3; Board of Control, l , 2, 3, 4, Secretary, 2;&#13;
May Queen, 1; Agora Secretary,&#13;
2; Ishkoodah President, l.&#13;
&#13;
3, 4; Yale- Harvard, l, 2, 3;&#13;
Collegian Reporter, 3; M. C.&#13;
A., 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4; Basketba ll , I, 2, 3,&#13;
4; Kittenball , l , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Hancock, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WADE&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State College, 3; Alph a&#13;
Tau De l ta; Pre-Engin eer's Club,&#13;
I , 2, 4; Football, I.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JAMES VANDERSALL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Theta Rho ; German&#13;
&#13;
Psychology Club, 4; M. C. A.,&#13;
1 , 3, 4; Grace League, l, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE JEAN WALLEN&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Club, 1, 2, 3, President, 3; Phi&#13;
Be ta Rho , 3; Band, 3; Sioux&#13;
City Symphony Orchestra , 1, 2,&#13;
3, 4, Concert Master, ] , 2, 3;&#13;
Fa culty String Quartet, 1, 2, 3,&#13;
4; Grace L eag ue, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
KELLOGG WELLS&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
GARNETT WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ro ckwe ll City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi, Usher, 3; W.&#13;
A. A. , Treasurer, 3, President,&#13;
4; Sigma Tau De l ta; Phi Sigma&#13;
lota, Secretary, 2, 3, Hi s torian ,&#13;
4; Eta Sigma Phi, Presid ent, 4;&#13;
Intramural Hock ey, 1, 2, 3, 4 ;&#13;
Basketball , I , 2, 3, 4; Volleyball, I , 2, 3, 4; Baseball, I, 2,&#13;
3, 4; Yale-Harvard, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Sweater Winner, 3; Scarf Winner , 2; Women's Sports Editor,&#13;
3, Snapshot Edit o r, 4, "Sioux ".&#13;
M. C. A. , 2, 3, 4, Cabinet Me mber 3, 4 ; Student Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th eta Rho ; Dramatics, 2;&#13;
Psychology Club, 4; Phi Sigma&#13;
Tota, Presid ent , 3, 4; Choir, 1 ;&#13;
M. C. A., I , 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi , Chaplain, 3;&#13;
P syc ho logy Club, 2, 3, 4, President, 3, 4; Economics Club, 2;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu , Vice Pres id en t ,&#13;
3, Pres id ent, 4; M. C. A. , l, 2,&#13;
3, 4, Cabinet, l , 4; SecretaryTreasurer , 2, Vice President, 3;&#13;
Grace League, 1 , 2, 3, 4, Cabinet, 1, 2, 4, Secretary-Treasurer,&#13;
3; International Relations Club.&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4, Secretary , 2.&#13;
&#13;
WORRELL&#13;
&#13;
HOYT GRANTER&#13;
&#13;
Whiting, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Danbury, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi; W. A. A .. I;&#13;
Ve sper Choir, 1; Health&#13;
Qu een, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta, Vi ce President , 4; Biol ogy Club, 1 ; Economics Club, 2, 3, 4; Intra mural Bask etba l I.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty -seven&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
BRUCE VAN DEMARK&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
SEDATE ( ?) SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class of&#13;
&#13;
1940&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
o·&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ............................................................................Lester Olson&#13;
Vice-President ..................................................................Art Lundblad&#13;
Secretary .......................................................................... Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Representative ................................................................Margaret Long&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
HARLAN DEWELL&#13;
VIRGINIA ALLEN&#13;
Recent member of the Diamond Ring SociNy.&#13;
&#13;
Th e better half of his education has not&#13;
been found in books.&#13;
&#13;
JEANNE ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
VERONA DEMOND&#13;
&#13;
Seldom seen with books, but frequently&#13;
with a man.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Gentleness does more than violence.&#13;
&#13;
JEAN FOWLER&#13;
JAMES ARRASMITH&#13;
A pre-med and a mighty "Merrie" fellow.&#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS BEGGS&#13;
&#13;
Napoleon was little; so is Jean.&#13;
&#13;
LUCILLE FRITZCHE&#13;
Music washes away from the soul the dust&#13;
of everyday life.&#13;
&#13;
Watch out, women, here I come.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
·o&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY BROOKE&#13;
Neither sinner nor saint.&#13;
&#13;
B. ROY BROWN&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Not real good and not real bad.&#13;
&#13;
BETTY GREENE&#13;
The way to a professor's heart is through-&#13;
&#13;
He awoke one afternoon, and found&#13;
himself- awake.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
CONSTANCE GALL&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Even the Health Office is a pleasant place&#13;
with her on duty.&#13;
&#13;
A live wire with a short circuit.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT CHAPMAN&#13;
Knowledge in youth is wisdom in age.&#13;
&#13;
JANET COE&#13;
Play and I'll play with you;&#13;
study and you study alone.&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE DEVRIES&#13;
Her outward quietness covers a wealth&#13;
of hidden character.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
INEZ GROVE&#13;
&#13;
GLEN BURROW&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GUSTESON&#13;
A case of quality; not quantity.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES GASINK&#13;
Something attempted, something done.&#13;
&#13;
DEVON HAHN&#13;
He laughs best who laughs when the&#13;
prof laughs.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
ADELAIDE HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
KATHLYN KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Better sense in the head than cents&#13;
in the pocket.&#13;
&#13;
As subtle as the b in subtle.&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MARIE LARSON&#13;
ALICE HANSON&#13;
The other half of the Sweeney-Hanson team.&#13;
&#13;
Some people have the habit of winking the&#13;
eye oftener than is absolutely necessary.&#13;
&#13;
ELWOOD HETLAND&#13;
&#13;
ELLA LAURITSEN&#13;
&#13;
Absence from class makes the marks&#13;
grow rounder.&#13;
&#13;
Always right with the world.&#13;
&#13;
BETTY LING&#13;
&#13;
LETHA HOWES&#13;
To be determined&#13;
your work done.&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
to have half&#13;
&#13;
An inspiration and example to us&#13;
American students.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ROGER HUGHES&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET LONG&#13;
&#13;
Studying makes some people wiseme otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
"My heart belongs to--"&#13;
&#13;
WALTER HURD&#13;
Another year has passed. Have you?&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
NANCY LOWRY&#13;
One of those whose mind runs in a whirl.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
MILLICENT "&#13;
JENSEN&#13;
A guaranteed tonic for the blues.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
ART LUNDBLAD&#13;
I can resist anything but temptation.&#13;
&#13;
IRENE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
&#13;
To surpass in the classroom is a habit of hers.&#13;
&#13;
A word to the wise is useless .&#13;
&#13;
LUCILLE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
DON MICHAELSON&#13;
&#13;
When you play, play hard. When you work,&#13;
don't play at all.&#13;
&#13;
A man who blushes is not quite a brute.&#13;
&#13;
RALPH KITTERMAN&#13;
Arise with the lark, but avoid larks&#13;
in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
MINETTA MILLER&#13;
Her heart is not altogether in her work.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
DEON MOOR&#13;
&#13;
RUTH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Serious? Yes ... a little.&#13;
&#13;
Smart, but doesn't advertise the fact .&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ANN OLSON&#13;
"R efreshing" is the word that describes&#13;
Dorothy Ann.&#13;
&#13;
LESTER OLSON&#13;
Popular because he doesn't seek popularity.&#13;
&#13;
CLIFF SPAYDE&#13;
Majors in alibiology&#13;
&#13;
AL STROZDAS&#13;
Men wouldn't die so fast if they didn't&#13;
live so fast.&#13;
&#13;
MARLYN PEDERSON&#13;
&#13;
RUTH SUNDERLIN&#13;
&#13;
Many are called, but few get up.&#13;
&#13;
Time deals gently with those who take&#13;
it gently.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HELEN POSEY&#13;
Ease with dignity.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
DON SWEENEY&#13;
Just so it's a good time---&#13;
&#13;
MARION PRESTON&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
BOB SWIFT&#13;
&#13;
So persistent she would have the last word&#13;
with an echo.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Twice a year his studies come first.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
QUINTIN PRICHARD&#13;
Hey, give me the dope on that for the&#13;
Reporter!&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
IRVINE THOE&#13;
A blonde with brains.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
JOHN THROWER&#13;
VERNA RODDA&#13;
A whizz on a dance floor.&#13;
&#13;
' Tis better to have loafed and flunked than&#13;
never to have loafed at all.&#13;
&#13;
ARNOLD RUDD&#13;
&#13;
PATRICIA WARNER&#13;
&#13;
Th e greatest men are the simplest.&#13;
&#13;
Sincere, friendly, and reliable.&#13;
&#13;
LEO SMITH&#13;
&#13;
JOYCE WEED&#13;
&#13;
If a prof asks you a question at least let on&#13;
that you know something about it.&#13;
&#13;
Zets, W. A . A., and John.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
WISE ( ? ) JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
Class of&#13;
&#13;
1941&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President .................................................................... Perry Kruidenier&#13;
Vice-President ........ .................................................... Garrett Wallman&#13;
Secretary ................................................................................ Alice Scott&#13;
Representative .. ....... ....................................................... Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Edythe Mae Albert&#13;
Winnie Allen&#13;
Donnin Ame.s&#13;
&#13;
Darlene Cottington&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
Jackson Davis&#13;
&#13;
Josephine Dixon&#13;
Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Maxine Behrens&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Emme&#13;
Maxine Ericksen&#13;
&#13;
Vilmer Berger&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Milton Binger&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Esther Blomberg&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Beverly Borland&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Donald Fritzche&#13;
Rolland Grefe&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
Rollie Buckholz&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Cheely&#13;
Maurice Clare&#13;
Glennys Corderman&#13;
&#13;
Thirty eight&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn Guelff&#13;
Dale Harter&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
Genevieve Hileman&#13;
Robert Hill&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Hill&#13;
Dureth Helen Hitchcock&#13;
Betty Huxtable&#13;
&#13;
Wendell Jackson&#13;
Helen Jensen&#13;
Lyle Johnson&#13;
&#13;
James McNally&#13;
Oliver Mogck&#13;
Gwynne Morris&#13;
&#13;
Norma Neilson&#13;
Leonard Nelson&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Jones&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Frank Kahoun&#13;
Emil Knipp&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Myna Nickum&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Ernest Peterson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Perry Kruidenier&#13;
Clifford Lamkin&#13;
Kenneth Lawrence&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Locke&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
Lucille Mathena&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Pippett&#13;
Les Pruehs&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
Charlotte Robinson&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Irene Schaal&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
Class o f&#13;
&#13;
1942&#13;
&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Robert Shaver&#13;
Gordon Sheldall&#13;
&#13;
Leroy Sheley&#13;
Clarine Stone&#13;
Alice Swanson&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Vivian Toomer&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Frances WaIker&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Mary Walker&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Garrett Wallman&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Mary Ellen Walpole&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Charles Wert&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
Robert Van Stryland&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Donna Youngstrom&#13;
Ila Eberly&#13;
&#13;
President --------------------------------------------------·-·····-··-···········Edgar Graham&#13;
Vice-President ----············-····-·············----·-·······------------Stanley Anderson&#13;
Secretary ········-····-················----------·-·····---··-······--------------·Lauretta Kin g&#13;
Representative ---------··············--------········--·-·····------------Barbara Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Forty.two&#13;
&#13;
F o rty- three&#13;
&#13;
Glenn Adcock&#13;
Joyce Addy&#13;
Gerald Austin&#13;
&#13;
John Byers&#13;
Helen Cady&#13;
Louise Cairy&#13;
&#13;
Alice Clayton&#13;
Thelma Addy&#13;
Barbara Barry&#13;
&#13;
Bryce Clayton&#13;
Gerald Cobb s&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Berg&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
·9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Coe&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Marie Berquist&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Virginia Boline&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Dayrle Crabb&#13;
Arlene Demots&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
James Bolton&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Gerald Fritzson&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Booth&#13;
Betty Boo tj er&#13;
&#13;
Celia Fordyce&#13;
Brown Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Bowen&#13;
&#13;
Mary Beth Brinkman&#13;
Kathryn Brown&#13;
Stephen Brown&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Homer Garretson&#13;
Ivan Gossoo&#13;
Edgar Graham&#13;
&#13;
Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Granter&#13;
Billy Gray&#13;
George Green&#13;
&#13;
Ted Grier&#13;
Raymond Gusteson&#13;
Charlotte Hackell&#13;
&#13;
Betty Hoefer&#13;
Joseph Holdcroft&#13;
Edith Jensen&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
Jean Jones&#13;
Lauretta King&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Ardis Hall&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Doris Hall&#13;
Ardith Hart&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Anthony Kooiker&#13;
LeRoy Kuhlmann&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Georgia Harvey&#13;
Robert Harvey&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
&#13;
Robert Hempstead&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Muriel Hiler&#13;
&#13;
Fort y-Six&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Romain Lamkin&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Bette Larson&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
&#13;
Eric Lilj estrand&#13;
Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
Kathryn Madison&#13;
&#13;
Forty -seven&#13;
&#13;
Roy Michaud&#13;
Marion Miller&#13;
Jack Milton&#13;
&#13;
Richard Reister&#13;
Ferne Roland&#13;
George Ross&#13;
&#13;
William Rozeboom&#13;
Douglas Oakleaf&#13;
Evelyn O'Harrow&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Salsbury&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
Bob Olson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Kathleen Schatz&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Jeanette Osterberg&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Thuma Perrin&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Ione Swanlund&#13;
Gordon Taft&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Petheram&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Thomas&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Yvonne Petrick&#13;
Mildred Pfeiffer&#13;
&#13;
Phyllis Thorngreen&#13;
Lester Triggs&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Elna Van Camp&#13;
Allan Priester&#13;
Dorothy Rensink&#13;
&#13;
Ella Jean Waddell&#13;
Betty Lou Welding&#13;
&#13;
Charles Richards&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester Students&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Name&#13;
&#13;
.·&#13;
Lavonne Wertz&#13;
Donald Widler&#13;
&#13;
Home&#13;
&#13;
Freda Agostine ·····-----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
Fred Ashley ---·-·---·-·--·----·-···-·······················---·-···Sioux City&#13;
Isadore Bichove ················-··-····---···-·-·······-··-·--···Sioux City&#13;
Francis Bentzinger --·-- -·--··-------·-·--·--·-·······-·--·--·-·Sioux City&#13;
Betty Lee Carter ..·-········-····--····--·-·-··----········-·---··Sioux City&#13;
Philip Clark ............. ·-·--·-·----·-··-············-·Evanston, Illinois&#13;
Robert Cohen ·--·---·············-··-··-··---·-·---······-··------·Sioux City&#13;
Chyrl Cose ·----·-··--·······-··-·--·------····-·······-·--·---······Sioux City&#13;
Larry Curtis ··-··-·----·············-····--·-·--··········-··---····Sioux City&#13;
Carl Fooken ·····--·-·-·············--·--··············-··-·-·--····-·Kingsley&#13;
Eileen Gil son.---·--·······-··--··-·--··-·-·····-·--·-·Crofton , Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Mary Jane Winch&#13;
Leona Witzenburg&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Paul Jones ··············-·--··········--·---··---········-·--·-·--··Sioux City&#13;
Ruth Kingsbury ---·--······-···--·--········--·-·-··--·········-·Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
James Leachman -·-·····-···---·-············-·--·-···········-·Sioux City&#13;
Edward McCarthy --··-·······-·-----·-·-··----·---·---·--- --- --Sioux City&#13;
Darrel McEntaffer -·-·------· --·-·-·-··--·· ··-··-·-·--·----·-·-·Sioux City&#13;
Clarence Morrison---·-----·-·---·- -------·----·-·--·-·----·Rock Rapids&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Sam Newton ---·- -- ------·--·-·--- -·- -- ---·----·------·--·-·--·-----Sioux City&#13;
William Prescott -- -- ---------- ----·----------·-·- -· ----·---·----Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Maxcean Rook ---·-- -·------ ---·-·--· ----·-·-·---·-·-·-·-·- ------·Sioux Cit y&#13;
Joe Rosenblum ---·-----------·-- ·----·-------·-·-·-----·-·- --·----Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Shirleymae Zechmann&#13;
Clifford Lewis&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Jay Sterling ---·-·----·----·---··--·-------·-·----·----·-------··-·-Sioux City&#13;
George Tripp --··--·----·---··-·---··----·----·-·-·--··--·----·-·-·Sioux City&#13;
Charles Verlinden ---·-·-·---··-----··--·--·-·-·--·----··----- -·Sioux City&#13;
Martin Weiner -----·- ·---------·-·--·------··-·-- --·-·--·------·-·Sioux City&#13;
Bill Williges ---·---·--·--·-·---· ---·-··--· -·-·-·---·--·--·-·----·-Sioux City&#13;
John Maynard -·- ·- -·--·-·---··-·----·---··-··-··-·------·-·-·--·-Sioux City&#13;
Marvin Shieleceberger ---·-·-·- -·-·--·-·-·· -----·-----· ----·Sioux City&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ila Eberly ---·-------·---·- -- ------ ·-·-------·----·-- ----·--·----·-----·-·Lawton&#13;
&#13;
Betty Lee Carter&#13;
Eileen Gilson&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Jane Mahoney ----·------·-------·- ----------·---·---·---·-----·-·Sioux City&#13;
William Dahlstrom ·--· ------ ·-·-----·----Bloomfield, Nebraska&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Carl Bolin -------·- ----·-----·-------·------·----·----------·----·-·--·-----Sloan&#13;
Mrs. Chester Fowler..---- ---- --- ----------··---·---------·-----Sioux City&#13;
Russel Martin --·----------------------------------------------·----Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Fifty.one&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
GREEN ( ! ! ! ) FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
MUS IC&#13;
&#13;
REVERIE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
" -ST ART HERE''&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Fifty -three&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CHOIR&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
A " bigger" and "better" choir was molded by P rofes-&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
sor MacCollin for this year's tour. They again added to&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
their laurels by becoming the first Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
organization to be accorded the honor of broadcasting&#13;
over the National Broadcasting Company network from&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
the nation's capital in Washington, D. C.&#13;
&#13;
dents as "Mr. Mac", is the director of the Conservatory and of the nationally famous Morningside College Methodist Choir. The Sioux City Civic&#13;
Concert Course, since its inception some years ago,&#13;
has come to enjoy the cordial patronage of the entire city under Mr. MacCollin's direction.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
SOPRANO&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth MacCollin&#13;
Doris Mae Alexander&#13;
Helen Pearson&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
Myrle Austin&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
Maxine Foster&#13;
Anna Mae Klinker&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
Edith Jensen&#13;
&#13;
James Bolton&#13;
Robert Caine&#13;
Eugene Emme&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
Jean Jones&#13;
Betty Bootjer&#13;
Marjorie Nelson&#13;
&#13;
ALTO&#13;
TENOR&#13;
&#13;
Roger Hodgson&#13;
Thomas Moon&#13;
Charels Seward&#13;
Odell Woods&#13;
LeRoy Kuhlmann&#13;
Anthony Kooiker&#13;
Dale Flinders&#13;
Robert Brooks&#13;
Lawrence Johnson&#13;
George Green&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
Nadine Lindquist&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Virginia Crane&#13;
Barbara Lewton&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Mary Beth Brinkman&#13;
Edythe Mae Albert&#13;
Dorothy Behrens&#13;
Dorothy Arnold&#13;
Ruth Harris&#13;
Doris Davis&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
&#13;
Professor MacCollin, better known to the stu-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
Irene Schaal&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
James McNally&#13;
Ralph Kitterman&#13;
Gerald Fritzson&#13;
William Rozeboom&#13;
Oliver Mogck&#13;
Robert McLain&#13;
James Arrasmith&#13;
Robert Rohwer&#13;
Keith Arnold&#13;
George Iseminger&#13;
Ronald Rawson&#13;
Norman Gefke&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
BAND&#13;
&#13;
Male Quartet&#13;
Whether it be classic or barbershop harmony the male quartet consisting of Dale Flinders, Eugene&#13;
Emme, William Rozeboom, and&#13;
George Iseminger is the group which&#13;
is called upon to perform at the&#13;
various school and civic functions.&#13;
Flinders, Emme , Rozeboom, l seminger.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
The band, under the flashing baton of Everett Timm, added another triumph to its growing reputation on its fifth annual tour&#13;
throughout Iowa. Besides being a medium for promotion of pep at&#13;
football and basketball games, it is a concert organization of which&#13;
Morningside can be justly proud.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
is the newly organized Flute Quartet com-&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
posed of Jeanne Anderson, first flute; Leona&#13;
&#13;
Everett Timm ...................................................... Conductor&#13;
Devon Hahn ........................................Assistant Conductor&#13;
Harold Wright........................................Business Manager&#13;
Odell Woods.................................................... Drum Major&#13;
Dean Brox ..............................................Personnel Manager&#13;
Lawrence Johnson..............................Equipment Manager&#13;
&#13;
Witzenburg, second flute ; Jean Jones, third&#13;
flute ; and Miriam Hartley, fourth flute. I t&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Flute Quartet&#13;
Something new and different in ensembles&#13;
&#13;
was featured on the band trip and has appeared in Conservatory recitals.&#13;
&#13;
Quartet&#13;
drum major from&#13;
is Odell Woods&#13;
&#13;
who leads the&#13;
&#13;
band in all pa-&#13;
&#13;
rad es and field&#13;
&#13;
maneuvers.&#13;
&#13;
A group which has attracted favorable comment from organizations&#13;
throughout the city and surrounding&#13;
territory where it has appeared in&#13;
recital and as musical background&#13;
is the Student String Quartet composed of Arnold Rudd, first violin;&#13;
Nancy Lowry, second violin; Marjorie Pritchard, viola; Virginia Gasink, 'cello.&#13;
Rudd, Lowry, Pritchard, Gasink.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Student String&#13;
&#13;
shako to boots&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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MAJOR&#13;
&#13;
Every inch a&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
Jones, Anderson, Witzenburg.&#13;
&#13;
DRUM&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
CIVIC CONCERT COURSE&#13;
&#13;
Girl s' Trio&#13;
Three misses, Alice Scott, Virginia&#13;
Crane, and Merrie June Heetland,&#13;
compose the girls' vocal trio. They&#13;
have "swung" numbers for various&#13;
student programs throughout the&#13;
year, among which their "hill-billy"&#13;
numbers and the . novelty " Sister&#13;
Kate" are the most memorable.&#13;
Heetland, Scott, Crane.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Symphony Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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s&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
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u&#13;
Under the inspiring guidance of Leo Kucinski, the Sioux City&#13;
Symphony Orchestra has grown to be one of the outstanding organizations for the propagation of culture in northwest Iowa. The&#13;
Symphony is a civic group composed of professional musicians&#13;
and augmented by the most talented of the Conservatory students.&#13;
During the past year it app eared in concert with I da Krehm,&#13;
pianist; Stephan Hero, violinist; and Edward Dudley, tenor. Other&#13;
artists who completed the schedu le of the Civic Concert Course&#13;
were Lawrence Tibbett, baritone; Angna Enters, dance mime; and&#13;
the Mozart Choir Boys.&#13;
Edward Dudley&#13;
Angna Enters&#13;
Stephan Hero&#13;
Mozart Choir Boys&#13;
Ida Krehm&#13;
Headliner Lawrence Tibbett&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
DRAMATICS&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon&#13;
Ten years ago Phi Zeta Chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon,&#13;
the national honor music sorority, was organized at&#13;
Morningside College. The members are junior, senior,&#13;
and faculty women of the Conservatory who have attained membership through high scholastic standing and&#13;
musical ability.&#13;
Virginia Crane, who was the president last year, was&#13;
a delegate to the national convention held in Chicago&#13;
last summer.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Crane&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Mu&#13;
Sigma Mu, the local honorary music sorority, has&#13;
Scene from a one-act play, "There's Always Tomorrow",&#13;
by David L. Pettigrew.&#13;
&#13;
been an inactive but none the less prominent organization&#13;
on the campus this year. Membership determined by&#13;
high scholarship and musical ability was attained by&#13;
Myrle Austin, Dorothy Behrens, Bertha Conner, Virginia Crane, Carol Held, Nadine Lindquist, Clara Louise&#13;
McBurney, Lucille Johnson, Helen Pearson, and Virginia Smith.&#13;
The president for the past year was Lucille John son.&#13;
John son&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
The Show- O ff&#13;
CAST&#13;
Clara Hyland.............................. Arlene DeMots&#13;
Mrs. Fisher................................Dorothy Granter&#13;
Amy Fisher......................................Betty Bootjcr&#13;
Frank Hyland.......................... LeRoy Kuhlmann&#13;
Mr. Fisher.......................................Lewis Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Joe Fisher........................................ Robert Caine&#13;
Aubrey Piper .................................. Lester Menke&#13;
Mr. Gill... ..................................... Robert· Rohwer&#13;
Mr. Rogers........................................ George Ross&#13;
&#13;
The 1938-39 drama tic season opened with George Kelly's wellknown domestic farce " The Show-Off".&#13;
Lester Menke, playing the role of the loud-talking, loud-laughing&#13;
"show-off", stole the show-lock, stock, and barrel. Three character parts were excell ently done by Lewis Mahood as the henpecked husband; Robert Rohwer, a factory worker; and George&#13;
Ross as a smooth-talking insurance man. Family life was well de-&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
picted by Dorothy Granter as the mother, Robert Caine as the near-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
genius son, and Betty Bootjer as the sweet young thing who would&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
like very much to get married. Arlene DeMots as the married&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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daughter and LeRoy Kuhlman, her husband, did very commendable bits of acting.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
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s&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
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Although this is only his first year at Morningside,&#13;
Mr. Wiksell has established himself in the hearts of all&#13;
Morningside playgoers by presenting four hit-produc-&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
tions. Outstanding were Philip Barry's "Holiday" and&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
"The Rock", a religious drama.&#13;
This year through Mr. Wiksell's efforts, the Department of Speech has presented a series of radio plays&#13;
over a local broadcasting station. Many improvements&#13;
in equipment, make-up facilities, and scene-building&#13;
have also been effected, resulting in the Scene Shop and&#13;
the Workshop Theatre.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
The Rock&#13;
&#13;
Holiday&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
Simon Peter.................................... Robert Caine&#13;
Adinah ........................................ Betty Lee Carter&#13;
Deborah ................................ Charlotte Robinson&#13;
Ucal... ............................................... B. Roy Brown&#13;
Mary of Magdala ...................... Dorothy Gartner&#13;
&#13;
Pandira .......................................... Robert Reese&#13;
Titus ............................................. James Gifford&#13;
Agur ......................................Lawrence John son&#13;
Servant .......................................... Kellogg Wells&#13;
Servant ................................ Robert Dannenburg&#13;
&#13;
On Palm Sunday, the Collegiate Players in cooperation with&#13;
many of the Morningside churches, presented " The Rock" by Mary&#13;
Hamlin. This drama, one of the most widely known religious plays,&#13;
deals with the introduction of Simon Peter to the teachings of&#13;
Jesus and his denial of the Christ on the eve of the crucifixion.&#13;
Robert Caine, in the role of Simon Peter, gave an outstanding&#13;
performance. The parts of Adinah, Peter's wife, taken by Betty Lee&#13;
Carter and Deborah, Adinah's mother, done by Charlotte Robin son,&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
Linda Seton ...................................... Bette Greene&#13;
Johnny Case ................................ Fred Davenport&#13;
Julia Seton............................ Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Ned Seton.................................. Bartlett Lubbers&#13;
Susan Potter. ............................... Margaret Long&#13;
Nick Potter ....................................John Thrower&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Male Quartet&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Edward Seton ....................................Dale Harter&#13;
Laura Cram ...................................Minetta Miller&#13;
Seton Cram ............................................. Joe Turk&#13;
Henry .............................................Kellogg Wells&#13;
Charles ···········-······························John Brilman&#13;
Delia .......................................... Virginia Thomas&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
were both excellent portrayals. The difficu lt rol e of Ucal, the rich&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
merchant, was well handled by Roy Brown. In the character of Mary&#13;
of Magdala, a woman of questionable repute who was saved by th &#13;
Master, Dorothy Gartn er gave one of the best performances seen&#13;
in a coll ege production. Members of the supporting cast added&#13;
greatly to the atmosphere of the play as did the realistic settings&#13;
which portrayed typica l scenes at the time of the crucifixion.&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
a so phisticated comedy about a young lady and a young man who&#13;
refused to let money rule the affairs of the heart. Presented by&#13;
Alpha P si Omega, "Holiday" was a well-polished production by an&#13;
excellent cast.&#13;
Edward Seton, the head of the "made of money" Seton family&#13;
was well portrayed by Dale Harter. Bartlett Lubbers did an excellent job in the part of Ned Seton, a young man who was slightly&#13;
"off the water-wagon". Ned's sister Julia, a typical social satellite,&#13;
was splendidly characterized by Dorothy Ann Olson. The romantic&#13;
leads were well handled by Fred Davenport as Johnny Case and&#13;
Bette Greene in the role of Linda Seton. Johnny and Linda, aided&#13;
(John&#13;
&#13;
Thrower and Margaret Long) added much to the play with their&#13;
well acted comedy. The parts of Seton and Laura Cram, the "relatives", were well taken by Joe Turk and Minetta Miller.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty -four&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
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The outstanding play of the year was Philip Barry's " Holiday"-&#13;
&#13;
by the happy-go-lucky couple, Nick and Susan Potter&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
Radio Groups&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega&#13;
The director of the Alpha Gamma Cast of&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega, national honorary dramatics&#13;
fraternity, was Dorothy Ann Olson. Margaret&#13;
Long was vice-president and Bette Greene was&#13;
secretary. This year the Cast gave an excellent&#13;
performance of Philip Barry's romantic comedy, "Holiday" .&#13;
Several members of the Cast journeyed to&#13;
Wayne, Nebraska, to attend the Alpha Psi&#13;
Omega play presented by Wayne State Teachers&#13;
College. Judging of the high school plays presented at the annual play contest was done by&#13;
the Cast.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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1&#13;
Ol so n&#13;
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3&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
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3&#13;
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9&#13;
&#13;
This year the Speech Department of Morningside College has&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
been on the air. Twenty plays, sponsored by the U. S. Post Office&#13;
Department, have been broadcast over KSCJ and have given expe·&#13;
rience to more than thirty speech students. Among those participat-&#13;
&#13;
Collegiate Players&#13;
&#13;
ing were: Robert Caine, Stanley Anderson, Dorothy Gartner, Clifford Spayde, Frances Haverfield, Lillian Brown, Dale Harter, Clif-&#13;
&#13;
This year the Collegiate Players took an active part in both on-stage and back-stage activities of the season's productions. At club meetings demonstrations, readings, plays, and reviews of contemporary plays were presented.&#13;
Several of the members have earned points for&#13;
Alpha Psi Omega and are nearing the goal of&#13;
all the Players.&#13;
The officers for this year were: First semester- Bette Greene, president; Dale Harter, vicepresident; Margaret Long, secretary; Second semester- Fred Davenport, president; Margaret&#13;
Long, vice-president; and Winifred Cheely, secretary.&#13;
&#13;
ford Lewis, Ted Grief, Lawrence Johnson, and Orval Spiry.&#13;
&#13;
Commencement Play&#13;
The Commencement Play was A. A. Milne's "The Romantic Age".&#13;
It centers around a girl who wants romance from the "- days of&#13;
old when knights were bold". Of course, knighthood was in flower&#13;
only about a thousand years previous. She meets her knight (an&#13;
ordinary man in a masquerade costume) and falls madly in love&#13;
only to refuse to marry him when she finds that he is just a business&#13;
&#13;
Greene&#13;
&#13;
man. The rejected suitor then proposes to the heroine's sister: this&#13;
creates the eternal triangle and- oh well, the play ends happily.&#13;
&#13;
Si xty -six&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Si x ty-seven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Roh wer&#13;
&#13;
Intercolleg i ate Debate&#13;
This year the debate season officially opened with a&#13;
pre-season, non-decision&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
During the following month debates were carried on&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Omaha, Ne-&#13;
&#13;
Harter, Robert Hamel, Geraldine Booth, and Ruth Olsen.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
braska. The representatives from Morningside were Dale&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
tournament&#13;
&#13;
with colleges and universities in the surrounding territory.&#13;
During the last week in February and the first of&#13;
Mendal B. Mill er heads the Forensics department of&#13;
&#13;
March, Morningside debaters were in St. Paul attending&#13;
&#13;
the coll ege and has been, for the past year, president of&#13;
&#13;
the St. Thomas and St. Catherine tournaments. Our rep-&#13;
&#13;
the Iowa Forensics Association.&#13;
&#13;
resentatives were Fred Davenport, Robert Hamel, Robert&#13;
&#13;
The results of Mr. Mill er's ability as a coach are&#13;
&#13;
Rohwer, Geraldine Booth, and Ruth Olsen.&#13;
&#13;
shown in the hon ors his teams won throughout the sea-&#13;
&#13;
The State Forensics meetin g was held in Cedar Rap-&#13;
&#13;
son. His keen insight, logical reasonin g, and col orful&#13;
&#13;
ids, March 16, 17, and 18. Morningside representatives.&#13;
&#13;
expression served as an impetus to each debater. His&#13;
&#13;
were Robert Rohwer, Robert Hamel, Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
good sportsmanship and companionship are an inspiration to all who come in contact with him .&#13;
&#13;
Olsen&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
INDIVIDUAL SCHEDULES&#13;
•&#13;
FRED DAVENPORT&#13;
H art e r&#13;
&#13;
and Ruth Olsen. The boys' team won the state championship by receiving the highest superior rating. Robert&#13;
Rohwer was rated the highest individual debater at the&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
tournament and Robert Hamel was second. The girls received the second highest rating at the tournament by receiving an excellent. Ruth Olsen received a superior in&#13;
the poetry-reading contest at this same tournament.&#13;
On March 24 and 25 Morningside College was repre·&#13;
sented by Lester Menke, Dale Harter, and Byron Walter&#13;
at the annual Junior College debate meet held at Dakota&#13;
&#13;
DALE HARTER&#13;
&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Provincial&#13;
Tournament&#13;
University of South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
Mitchell Tournament&#13;
GERALDINE BOOTH&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HAMEL&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Provincial&#13;
Tournament&#13;
University of South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
St. Catherine Tournament&#13;
Western Union College&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
RUTH OLSEN&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
St. Catherine Tournament&#13;
Western Union College&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Wesleyan, Mitchell, South Dakota. The tournament in ROBERT ROHWER&#13;
&#13;
cluded debate, extemporaneous, and oratory.&#13;
&#13;
In January Morningside debaters entertained two debate teams from Augustana College of Sioux Falls in&#13;
two rounds of debate.&#13;
&#13;
Augustana College&#13;
Vermillion Tournament&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
Mitchell Tournament&#13;
&#13;
BYRON WALTER&#13;
Wayne State Teachers College&#13;
Mitchell Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Booth&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
S eve nt y-on e&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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I&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Robert Rohwer&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta is a national honorary forensics fraternity in which degrees are awarded in orders of debate,&#13;
oratory, and extemporaneous speaking. Morningside' s&#13;
Iowa Delta chapter is one of about 150 chapters which&#13;
are scattered throughout thirty-six states. The question&#13;
argued by the various chapters this year was, " Resolved:&#13;
That the government should cease spending public funds&#13;
to stimulate business."&#13;
Iowa Delta chapter officers of Pi Kappa Delta were:&#13;
Robert Rohwer, president ; Fred Davenport, vice-president; and Ruth Olsen, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
Fred Davenport and Robert Hamel were the Morningside representatives at the Provincial Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
meeting held at Aberdeen, South Dakota, on March 30&#13;
and 31.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
Student&#13;
Council&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Albert Buckingham ..............................................President&#13;
Keene Roadman ..........................................Vice.President&#13;
Carol Held ............................................................ Secretary&#13;
&#13;
" I owe much to Morningside College. The rest of my life I shall be&#13;
attempting to re pay her for the privileges and opportunities she has put&#13;
before me as one of the student body. It is with sorrow in my heart that&#13;
I think of leaving the campus so soon. I have truly enjoyed my four years&#13;
at Morningside, especially the last year as president of the Student Coun·&#13;
cil. It has been a pleasure to work with and for such an appreciative stu·&#13;
dent body. With such fine college spirit and faculty cooperation it has&#13;
been merely a matter of routine to act as Student President. A special&#13;
vote of thanks should go to the members of the Student Council for their&#13;
enthusiasm and willingness to work in everything that has been under·&#13;
taken. The Student Council joins with me in thanking all the students for&#13;
their cooperation and in saying to the faculty, 'May Morningside con·&#13;
tinue to prosper'."&#13;
&#13;
- "BUCK."&#13;
&#13;
Seventy- three&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Agora&#13;
Board of Control&#13;
For twenty-seven years there has existed on the Morningside campus an organization which includes every girl in school in its membership. Agora was the name given to this group by its founder,&#13;
Miss Agnes Ferguson, who wished to see the opportunity for helpful fellowship created among the women of the college.&#13;
Two means of providing this opportunity are found in the Campus Sister movement which is a part of the Freshman Week activities, and the Mother-Daughter Banquet which is held every spring.&#13;
The officers for the past year were : Marjorie Primmer, president;&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp, vice-president; Mildred Wikert, secretary; Betty&#13;
Schunck, treasurer; Bernice Petronis, Senior representative; Marian&#13;
Preston, Junior representative; Ruth Olsen, Sophomore representa-&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
tive; and Virginia Boline, Freshman representative . Dean Lillian&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Dimmit is the faculty adviser for the group.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Beyer, Stephens, Mills, Kanthlener, Gwinn.&#13;
Bottom Row: Thomas, Rohwer, Miller , Booth,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
All student publications are under the jurisdiction of&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
the Board of Control which consists of ten membersfive faculty representatives and five students. Appoint-&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
ments for the newspaper, the yearbook, and all other&#13;
publications are under its supervision.&#13;
The chairman of the board is Professor H. F. Kanthlener. Other faculty members are Miss Mirah Mills,&#13;
Lynn Beyer, Ira J. Gwinn, and Dr. T. C. Stephens. The&#13;
student members are Virginia Thomas, senior; Minetta&#13;
Miller, junior; Robert Glock, sophomore; Geraldine&#13;
Booth, freshman; and Robert Rohwer, representative-atlarge. Quentin Prichard, editor, and Lester Olson, business manager of the Collegian Reporter, are ex-officio&#13;
members.&#13;
Top Row: Primmer , Greene, Wikert, Schunck.&#13;
&#13;
Bottom Row: Petronis , Preston , Olsen, Boline&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Seventy - five&#13;
&#13;
Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
U.&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Leopold, Nelson, Olson , Wikert, Roadman .&#13;
Second Row: Brown, McBurney, Menke, Long, Lundquist.&#13;
Third Row: Olsen, Swift, Petronis, Harter, Wallen.&#13;
Fourth Row: Anderson, Saunderson, Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Between the covers of the Annual can be found a record of the&#13;
year's progress at Morningside. The material is gathered and compiled by the various department editors under the direction of the&#13;
editor-in-chief.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy- six&#13;
&#13;
Top R ow: DeMond, Prichard, Johnson, Olson.&#13;
Second Row: Grefe, Cheely, Seward, Warner,&#13;
Third R ow: Greene, Mahood, Madison, Gusteson.&#13;
Fourth Row: Nickum , Roadman.&#13;
&#13;
The all-college newspaper is written, edited, and managed by&#13;
students who present us with a fresh edition each Thursday. Its&#13;
various departments ably cover the social, political, and athletic&#13;
phases of Morningside campus life in true journalistic style.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
W. S. G. A.&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Magazine&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
VOL1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
NO !&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Behrens, Crane , Long , Olsen.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Bottom Row: Mook , Pearson, Seavey, Alexander.&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Self-Governing Association is the board elected by&#13;
the dormitory girls to act as their governing body for the year. This&#13;
group also serves as the Honor Court in all disciplinary matters&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Magazine, the first literary publication on the campus, made its initial appearance December 7, 1938. The second issue&#13;
was published May 10, 1939. The cost of the magazine is included&#13;
in the Student Activity ticket.&#13;
&#13;
which arise.&#13;
Several traditional social functions such as the Christmas Dinner&#13;
and the Spring Formal as well as informal teas and musicales for&#13;
both dormitory residents and other girls are under the sponsorship&#13;
&#13;
The magazine is being sponsored by the Manuscript Club; but&#13;
any students as well as alumni are invited to contribute. The plan is&#13;
to have two issues yearly.&#13;
Miriam Hawthorne was the first editor. Those assisting her were&#13;
&#13;
of the W. S. G. A.&#13;
Members for the past year have been Dorothy Behrens, president;&#13;
Virginia Crane, vice-president and Senior hall president; Margaret&#13;
Long, social chairman; Ruth Olsen, secretary; Mrs. Mook, social&#13;
director; Helen Pearson, Junior hall president; Alberta Seavey,&#13;
Sophomore hall president; and Doris Mae Alexander, Freshman&#13;
&#13;
Lester Olson, Business Manager, and Bette Greene, Irene Johnson,&#13;
and Charels Seward, Associate Editors. Lynn Beyer was the faculty&#13;
adviser. The magazine has a regular exchange list with other colleges and universities and copies are also sent out to high schools&#13;
and to Sioux City public libraries.&#13;
&#13;
hall president.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy -eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Zeta Sigma&#13;
&#13;
M. C. A.&#13;
The Morningside Christian Association&#13;
&#13;
The local honor scholastic society has a&#13;
&#13;
is the group which start the college off to'&#13;
&#13;
twofold objective: to give recognition to&#13;
&#13;
a successful year every fall by sponsoring&#13;
&#13;
those students whose scholastic records&#13;
&#13;
the freshman week activities. During the&#13;
&#13;
show evidence of special merit, and to&#13;
&#13;
year M. C. A. continues its goodwill work&#13;
&#13;
promote the ideals of true scholarship. To&#13;
&#13;
through the weekly Sunday broadcasts,&#13;
&#13;
become eligible for Zeta Sigma a student&#13;
&#13;
firesides in faculty homes, traveling gospel&#13;
teams, Stone Park retreats, and religious&#13;
&#13;
must meet all the requirements for graduation and have a scholarship average of&#13;
&#13;
emphasis week in the spring and in the&#13;
fall. Every Tuesday morning meetings are&#13;
&#13;
Officers for the past year have been :&#13;
Mrs. E. Satrang, president ; Mrs. M. E.&#13;
Graber, vice-president; Miss Ruth Wedgwood, secretary; and Mrs. L. C. McClaran,&#13;
&#13;
representative of Y. W. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
ership of Irvine Thoe, president. Other&#13;
officers are: Keene Roadman, vice presiderson, treasurer; and Miriam Hawthorn,&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
to membership in the group.&#13;
&#13;
dent; Irene Anderson, secretary; Dale An-&#13;
&#13;
Thoe&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
graduates of the Class of 1938 were elected&#13;
&#13;
held in the Student Union under the lead11&#13;
&#13;
three and one-third honor points. Twelve&#13;
&#13;
treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Satrang&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club&#13;
Alumni Organization&#13;
&#13;
In 1926 a chapter of the National Association of Cosmopolitan Clubs was established at Morningside. The club maintains&#13;
&#13;
Each June the alumni organization in-&#13;
&#13;
a two-fold purpose : to create a spirit of&#13;
goodwill and fellowship among students&#13;
&#13;
itiates the graduates into its ranks; into&#13;
the Tribe of the Sioux-a group which has&#13;
&#13;
of various nationalities at Morningside ;&#13;
&#13;
steadily increased its number until in al-&#13;
&#13;
and to learn more about the customs and&#13;
&#13;
most every state of the Union it has mem-&#13;
&#13;
attitudes of people in foreign lands. The &#13;
ers who keep faithful contact with their&#13;
&#13;
outstanding events of the year were the&#13;
Christmas breakfast held at Dr. Johnson's&#13;
&#13;
Alma Mater.&#13;
Newly elected officers are: president,&#13;
Frank Henderson, Sioux City, '20; vice-&#13;
&#13;
home and the "Cosmopolitan Night".&#13;
&#13;
president, Ada Carter, Whiting, '20; sec-&#13;
&#13;
The officers were: Irene Anderson, president; Betty Ling, vice-president; Frances&#13;
&#13;
retary, W. C. Wolle, Sioux City, '20;&#13;
&#13;
and Lester Menke,&#13;
&#13;
treasurer, Ira J. Gwinn, Sioux City, '22.&#13;
&#13;
WaIker, secretary;&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
Henderson&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Psychology Club&#13;
&#13;
Beta&#13;
&#13;
Beta Beta&#13;
&#13;
Beta Beta Beta, the national honorary&#13;
society for students of the biological&#13;
sciences, was established to encourage&#13;
scholarly attainment in biology and thus&#13;
reserves its membership to those who&#13;
achieve high academic records and who&#13;
have a special interest in the subject. It&#13;
maintains a three-fold program: namely,&#13;
stimulation of sound scholarship;&#13;
&#13;
dis-semination of scientific knowledge; and&#13;
promotion of biological research.&#13;
Officers presiding over Tau chapter this&#13;
year were: Borden Buchanan, president;&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Buchanan&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Robert Chapman, vice-president; James&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Arrasmith, secretary; and Barbara For-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
rester, historian. Dr. T. C. Stephens is the&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
faculty adviser.&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Biology Club&#13;
To promote scientific ideals and to prepare its members for membership in Beta&#13;
Beta Beta is the twofold aim of the Biol-&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Williams, Held, Naryka, Pawson , Carlin , Wade .&#13;
Second Row: Wells. Petronis, Stankiwiecz, DePue, Hosner, Grefe.&#13;
Third Row: Grove, Brown, Swift. Harter, Held , Sunderlin.&#13;
Fourth Row: Hurd , Pippett, Thorngreen , McLaughlin.&#13;
Fifth Row: Roland , Gusteson, Emme , Howes.&#13;
&#13;
The P sychology Club of Morningside College was organized in&#13;
1935 by Dr. Earl E. Emme who is the adviser. It provides opportunity for psychology students to present additional material of&#13;
psychological content not always adaptable for classroom procedure. Fellowship for students pursuing similar academic interests is&#13;
stimulated greatly by the monthly meetings.&#13;
Officers for the year were : Garnett Williams, president; Lawrence Johnson, vice-president; and Bernice P etronis, secretarytreasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty. two&#13;
&#13;
ogy Club. This club is maintained in the&#13;
Biology department for the purpose of&#13;
creating and developing interest in biological fields.&#13;
Officers this year were : Joe Naryka,&#13;
president;&#13;
&#13;
Wendell&#13;
&#13;
Jackson,&#13;
&#13;
vice-presi-&#13;
&#13;
dent; and Dale Rogers, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
Naryka&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta&#13;
&#13;
· Pre-Engineers&#13;
&#13;
The Gamma Beta chapter of Sigma Tau&#13;
Delta, national honorary English fraternity, was organized at Morningside College&#13;
in 1926. Both the study of literature and&#13;
the pursuit of writing are stressed. Memers, who must be majors in the English&#13;
department, are elected on the basis of&#13;
scholastic standing and proficiency in Eng- ·&#13;
lish. Original work of the members is submitted for publication to the National&#13;
Quarterly Magazine, The Rectangle, twice&#13;
during the year.&#13;
Officers for the year were: Miriam&#13;
&#13;
Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
Hawthorn, president; Margaret Gusteson,&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
vice-president; Doris Mae Alexander, sec-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
retary; and Miss Mirah Mills, faculty ad-&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
viser.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
The oldest independent organization on&#13;
the campus is the Pre-Engineers Club&#13;
which was organized in 1920 with a twofold object in view: to serve as a means&#13;
of stimulating a spirit of friendliness and&#13;
cooperation among the engineering students of the school, and to encourage advanced study and research in the field of&#13;
engineering.&#13;
One of the highlights of the winter social season is the annual " Engineers'&#13;
Night", during which the wonders of the&#13;
world of science are demonstrated by the&#13;
members of the department .&#13;
Officers this year were : Ted Barnowe,&#13;
president; Stanley Bruntjen, vice-president; George Koch, secretary; John Swanson, treasurer; Bruce Lindsay, historian .&#13;
Dean Graber and Mr. Gwinn served as advisers.&#13;
&#13;
Barnowe&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Club&#13;
Manuscript&#13;
&#13;
Club&#13;
&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
organized&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
Phi&#13;
&#13;
March 18, 1938, with the aim "to promote&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Iota&#13;
&#13;
creative writing among the students of the&#13;
Phi Sigma Iota is maintained for stu-&#13;
&#13;
college." Membership is open to any student on the campus and is attained by&#13;
&#13;
dents of outstanding ability and attain-&#13;
&#13;
submitting an original manuscript which&#13;
&#13;
ment in Romance languages and literature.&#13;
&#13;
is passed upon by the entire club. Because&#13;
of the nature of the work undertaken,&#13;
&#13;
advanced work and individual research in&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of the society is to stimulate&#13;
&#13;
membership has been necessarily limited&#13;
&#13;
this field, and to promote a sentiment of&#13;
&#13;
to sixteen members who are required to&#13;
&#13;
friendship between our own nation and&#13;
&#13;
submit manuscripts regularly. These, to-&#13;
&#13;
the nations using these languages.&#13;
&#13;
gether with those submitted by prospective&#13;
&#13;
Officers this year were: Kellogg Wells,&#13;
&#13;
members, form the basis of the programs.&#13;
&#13;
president ; Ella Lauritsen, vice-president;&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
this&#13;
&#13;
year&#13;
&#13;
were:&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Corkhill, secretary; Bonnie Jean&#13;
&#13;
Bette&#13;
&#13;
Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Greene, president; Irene Anderson, secre-&#13;
&#13;
lener, faculty adviser and treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
tary; and Lynn Beyer, faculty adviser.&#13;
Greene&#13;
&#13;
Eight y- four&#13;
&#13;
historian; and Henry F. Kanth-&#13;
&#13;
Wells&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Kappa Delta&#13;
Alpha Kappa Delta, national honorary&#13;
sociological fraternity, was organized at '&#13;
Morningside in 1922 for the purpose expressed in its Greek name, Anthropos Katamon thano Diakonesis, an investigating&#13;
society for the purpose of service to humanity. It has been intermittently active •&#13;
in scholastic and social pursuits for sixteen years. Membership requires · a high&#13;
scholastic average in all subjects and a&#13;
major or minor in sociology.&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn has been president&#13;
Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
th e past year.&#13;
&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu&#13;
All senior students who have striven for&#13;
high scholarship in their respective social&#13;
science fields and succeeded are eligib le&#13;
for membership in Pi Gamma Mu, the&#13;
national honorary social science fraternity. The requirement for eli gibility is a&#13;
grade average of B for thirty semester&#13;
hours in a field with fifteen hours from&#13;
one department.&#13;
The officers for the past year were:&#13;
Bill Kirchner, president; Garnett Wi] .&#13;
Iiams, vice-president; Miss Murray, secretary-treasurer; Dr. Emme, director. Faculty members are : Dean Dimmitt, Mr. Miller, Mr. Wiksell, Miss McNee, and Dean&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Pi Sigma&#13;
&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi is the national honorary&#13;
&#13;
The Omicron chapter of Sigma Pi&#13;
Sigma is maintained at Morningside for&#13;
those students who have outstanding interests and academic records in the physics&#13;
department. Its purpose is to promote an&#13;
interest in the advanced study of physics,&#13;
to encourage a spirit of cooperation and&#13;
friendship among those who have shown&#13;
marked ability in this particular phase of&#13;
science, and to stimulate individual research.&#13;
Directing the activities of Sigma Pi&#13;
Sigma which included weekly luncheon&#13;
meetings this year were: Ted Barn owe,&#13;
president; George Koch, vice-president;&#13;
and Dale Flinders, secretary-treasurer. Dr.&#13;
M. E. Graber serves as adviser to the club.&#13;
&#13;
Latin and Greek fraternity. A major in&#13;
Latin or Greek and high scholarship are&#13;
required for membership. At the monthly&#13;
meetings this year the programs were&#13;
based on a study of Greek and Roman&#13;
mythology.&#13;
The officers for the past year were:&#13;
Bonnie Jean Wallen, president;&#13;
Mae&#13;
&#13;
Slothower, vice-president;&#13;
&#13;
Birdie&#13;
Bernice&#13;
&#13;
Petronis, secretary; and Deon Moor, treasurer. Honorary members include Miss Lillian E. Dimmitt, Miss Laura C. Fisher,&#13;
Miss Ethel R. Murray, and Miriam Hartley.&#13;
Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Eighty -six&#13;
&#13;
Barnowe&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
International Relations Cl u b&#13;
The purpose of the International Relations Club is to foster student interest in world-wide economic and political problems, and&#13;
to provide an opportunity to discuss matters of peace, finance, government, and transportation. The club is significant in that it affords students the chance to understand better America's relations&#13;
with the world.&#13;
Delegates from Morningside were sent to the national convention&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
this spring where they discussed world problems with representatives from the various colleges and universities of the nation.&#13;
The faculty adviser is Dr. E. H . Kleinpell.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
College League&#13;
Grace M. E. Church offers to every college student an opportunity for religious self-expression through the medium of the College League. At the weekly Sunday evening meetings speakers from&#13;
outside and from the coll ege appear and special musical programs&#13;
are provided.&#13;
Officers for this year were : Dale Anderson, president; Ruth Hayward, vice-president; Doreen Dallam, secretary-treasurer; LeRoy&#13;
Kuhlmann, social chairman.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Engineering Groups&#13;
Out of the Engineer's Club there have come three groups which&#13;
are rapidly growing in popularity among the members of the Engineering Department. The fi rst group, the Aeronaut ics division, was&#13;
organized in 1937 with a two-fold purpose: to further the students'&#13;
interest in aeronautics and to give those taking aeronautical engineering the opportunity to meet and work together on different&#13;
technical proj ects of common interest.&#13;
Morningside is one of two Iowa Schools, the other being Iowa&#13;
State College, which is approved by the United States Aeronautical&#13;
Board to teach Aeronautical Engineering. Weekl y meetings include&#13;
reports by members on different technical subjects pertaining to&#13;
aeronautical engineering. The officers for the first semester were:&#13;
Vic Alvey, president; Borden Buchanan, vice-president; DeLos Hartwig, secretary-treasurer. Second semester officers were : Vic Alvey,&#13;
president ; Fuller Haskins, vice-president; Bob Harvey, secretarytreasurer.&#13;
Another unit of the Engineering Club is the Radio Club. One&#13;
cannot become a member of this group unless he is already a member of the Engineer's Club and has a special interest in radio which&#13;
he wishes to develop.&#13;
Papers and reports which deal with the most advanced phases in&#13;
radio are given before the Engineer's Club. Members of the Radio&#13;
Club are also active members in the Naval Reserve and National&#13;
Guard Radio Unit.&#13;
The newly-chartered Photography Club was organized with the&#13;
purpose of creating interest in photography and of giving to those&#13;
interested in it an opportunity to learn the fundamentals and technical processes of photography. Meetings held every Tuesday included reports given by the members on different phases of photography. The governing body consisted of Mr. I. J. Gwinn, adviser,&#13;
and a committee of four- Harlan Dewell, chairman, Vic Alvey,&#13;
Glenn Pomeroy, and George Koch.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
lshkoodah&#13;
.•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Booth&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The first social group in which women students a t&#13;
Morningside may become members is Ishkoodah- the&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
freshman girls' society. The bi-monthly meetings held in&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
the Student Union are planned for entertainment and&#13;
also to give each girl substantial and worthwhile con-&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
tacts which will enrich her college career.&#13;
Two formal dances were the highlights of the past.&#13;
year's social calendar which also included a roller-skating part y and a picnic fo r all frosh men.&#13;
Officers fo r the first semester were Gerry Booth, president ; Kathryn Brown, vice-president ; Jean J ones, secretary-treasurer ; Helen Johnson, sergeant-a t-arms; and&#13;
Virginia Boline, program chairman. Those who served&#13;
during the second term were Marian Miller, president ;&#13;
Lauree Wood, vice-president ; Barbara Prichard, secretary- treasurer; Louise Cairy, sergeant-a t-a rms; and Betty&#13;
Lou Saunderson, program chairman. Mrs. Paul E. Johnson is the adviser for the group.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma&#13;
T he Useful and&#13;
the Pleasing&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President. ....................................Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Vice-President... .......................... Bertha Connor&#13;
Recording Secretary................... Agnes Carlin&#13;
Corresponding Secretary........... Jean Hosner&#13;
Treasurer..................................... Bernice Petronis&#13;
Reporter.......................................Mary Stankiwiecz&#13;
Historian.....................&#13;
..................Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Chaplain...................................... Ruth Thatcher&#13;
Directresses..................................Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Musician...................................... Dolorys Cook&#13;
Usher............................................Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
Donna Youngstrom&#13;
Esther Blomberg&#13;
Clara Louise McBurney&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Bertha Connor&#13;
Agnes Carlin&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
So plwmores&#13;
&#13;
Irene Anderson&#13;
Dorothy Arnold&#13;
Agnes Carlin&#13;
Bertha Connor&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Jean Hosner&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Nellie DeVries&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Ella Lauritsen&#13;
&#13;
Esther Blomberg&#13;
Donna Youngstrom&#13;
Lucille Mathena&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
Clara Louise McBurney&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
Birdie Mae Slothower&#13;
Virginia Smith&#13;
Many Stankiwiecz&#13;
Ruth Thatcher&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Anderson, Arnold , Blomberg, Carlin, Coe .&#13;
Second Row: Conner, DeVries, Forsberg, Hawthorn , Hosner.&#13;
Third Row : Lauritsen, Mathena, McBurney, Petronis, Robinson.&#13;
Fourth Row: Slothower, R. Smith, V. Smith,&#13;
&#13;
Fifth Row: Stankiwiecz, Thatcher, Youngstrom.&#13;
&#13;
Nine ty -two&#13;
&#13;
Ninety.three&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma&#13;
We R etrace No&#13;
Footsteps&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Second Term&#13;
&#13;
Third T erm&#13;
&#13;
President... .................. Russell Kraai&#13;
&#13;
Glen Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President... ......... Joseph Turk&#13;
&#13;
Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
Secretary .....................Clarence Soucek&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bob Swift&#13;
&#13;
First T erm&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. .................. Albert Buckingham Albert Buckingham&#13;
Pledge Master.. ........... Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Don Michael son&#13;
&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Albert Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Irving Bliss&#13;
&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
&#13;
Lester Triggs&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms........ Arthur Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
Joseph Turk&#13;
Russell Kraai&#13;
Albert Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
Glen Burrow&#13;
Elwood Hetland&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
Arthur Lundblad&#13;
Clarence Soucek&#13;
Frank Allison&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
Jack Loff&#13;
Bob Swift&#13;
&#13;
Lester Triggs&#13;
Irving Bliss&#13;
Orval Spiry&#13;
Don Widler&#13;
Cliff Lewis&#13;
Art Clayton&#13;
Pete Clayton&#13;
Albert Haenfler&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: Smith, Buckingham, Kraai, Burrow.&#13;
Seco nd Row: Hetland , Lundblad, Spayde .&#13;
Thir d Row: Widler, Vanderboom, Michaelson .&#13;
Fourth Row: Triggs, Lewis, Swift.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Ch i&#13;
To Be Rather Than&#13;
to Seem&#13;
OFF I CE RS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President_________________ _ ___ ___ _&#13;
______ _ ________ ,Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Vice-President. __ _________________________ Virginia Thomas&#13;
_&#13;
_____&#13;
Recording Secretary_________ _ _ ______ ___ ,Hazel Held&#13;
_ __ _&#13;
Corresponding Secretary _____ _ ___ _,Barbara Lewton&#13;
____ _ _&#13;
Treasurer _ _ __________________ _ ___ __ _&#13;
____ _&#13;
_____ __ ___Margaret Lundquist&#13;
Critics _______ _ __ ___ _ _________ __ ____ Carol Held&#13;
____ __ _ _ ______ ___ _&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Virginia Allen&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Directresses _ ___________ _______ ______ _&#13;
__&#13;
_&#13;
_ _ _______ Virginia Crane&#13;
Doris Mae Alexander&#13;
Librarian _____&#13;
_______ ------------------------------ Constance Gall&#13;
______&#13;
_______ _ __ Jean Fowler&#13;
_____&#13;
Ushers______ _______ _ _ __________ _&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Virginia Thomas&#13;
Constance Gall&#13;
Barbara Forrester&#13;
Margaret Lundquist&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Barbara Lewton&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Dorothy Jones&#13;
Helen Pearson&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Lucille Pippett&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Doris Mae Alexander&#13;
Lillian Brown&#13;
Virginia Crane&#13;
Barbara Forrester&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Hazel Held&#13;
Barbara Lewton&#13;
Margaret Lundquist&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Virginia Thomas&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Jean Wallen&#13;
Alberta Seavey&#13;
Helen Pearson&#13;
Mary Brilman&#13;
Dorothy Nelson&#13;
Dorothy Behrens&#13;
Marian Walsh&#13;
Marjorie Pritchard&#13;
Garnett Williams&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Jean Fowler&#13;
Jonstance Gall&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Nancy Lowry&#13;
Deon Moor&#13;
Dorothy Ann&#13;
Olson&#13;
Joyce Weed&#13;
Irvine Thoe&#13;
Virginia Allen&#13;
&#13;
Top Row : Held, Alexander, Nelson, Crane, Forrester, Lundquist.&#13;
Second Row: Brown , Primmer, Wallen, Held, Thomas, Lewton.&#13;
Third Row: Kolp , Gall , Pearson, Brilman, Seavey, Lowry.&#13;
Fourth Row : Long, Olson, Fowler, Hanson, Weed, Moor.&#13;
Fifth Row : Cheely, Olsen, Held, Pippctt, Wikert.&#13;
Sixth Row: Neilson, Barrett, Scott, Jones, Nickum .&#13;
Seventh Row: Hitchcock, Corderman, Nelson.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
Dorothy Jones Glennys Corderman&#13;
Shirley Wallen Ruth Harris&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Mildred Wikert Marjorie Nelson&#13;
Lucille Pippett Norma Neilson&#13;
Myna Nickum Dureth Helen&#13;
Winifred Cheely Hitchcock&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Maxine Behrens&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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Alpha Tau Delta&#13;
Smoothness in Manner,&#13;
Strength in All Things.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
President... .............................. H. G. Morrison&#13;
&#13;
David Brinkman&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President... ..................... William Hughes&#13;
Secretary................................. Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
Hoyt Granter&#13;
Ray Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. .............................. Wilbur Rogers&#13;
&#13;
Gene Kennedy&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms....................Thomas Down&#13;
&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Dale Rogers&#13;
David Brinkman&#13;
Thomas Down&#13;
H. G. Morrison&#13;
Richard Forbes&#13;
Hoyt Granter&#13;
Bruce Van DeMark&#13;
William Hughes&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
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9&#13;
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Juniors&#13;
Don Sweeney&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
John Thrower&#13;
Russell Martin&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
Garrett Wallman&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
Leonard Nelson&#13;
Rollie Buckholz&#13;
Bob PerrinI&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
James Bolton&#13;
Stephen Brown&#13;
Jerry Cobbs&#13;
Robert Hempstead&#13;
John Maynard&#13;
Larry Curtis&#13;
Don Plagman&#13;
Harold Wellmerling&#13;
Dean Harrison&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
Gene Kennedy&#13;
Ray Gusteson&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Dick Wpods&#13;
Bob Caine&#13;
Bob Olson&#13;
Philip Clark&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
&#13;
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T op R ow: Brinkman, Van DeMark , Rogers, Morrison , Granter, Forbes.&#13;
Second Row: Down , Wallman, Sweeney, Hughes, Menke, Mahood.&#13;
Third Row: Hempstead, Bolton , Gusteson, Nelson, Brown, Thrower.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Row: Buckholz, Brown, Leopold , Kolp.&#13;
Fifth Row: Cobbs, Olson, Caine, Hicks.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
Kap pa Pi Alp ha&#13;
Faithfully, Bravely,&#13;
Happily&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President. ..........................................Evelyn DePue&#13;
Vice-President. .................................Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Recording Secretary........................Marion Preston&#13;
Corresponding Secretary................Ann Larson&#13;
Treasurer.. ........................................ Bette Greene&#13;
Chaplain........................................... Ruth Sunderlin&#13;
Critic................................................Irene Johnson&#13;
Sergeant.at.Arms.............................Ruth Sunderlin&#13;
Librarian.......................................... Jean Lott&#13;
Hall Chairman................................. Millicent Jensen&#13;
Social Chairman .............................. Marion Preston&#13;
Reporter.. ......................................... Jean Lott&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Alta Claire Harrison&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
Mary Ellen Walpole&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Dorothy Hill&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
Ann Larson&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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Seniors&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
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Top Row: Carrigg,&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Verona DeMond&#13;
Bette Greene&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
Alta Claire Harrison&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
Anna Marie Larson&#13;
Marian Preston&#13;
Ruth Sunderlin&#13;
Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
Jean Anderson&#13;
&#13;
DeMond , Jensen, Preston.&#13;
&#13;
Second Row : Grove, Gusteson, DePue, Brooke.&#13;
Third Row: Schunck, Sunderlin, Larson, Walpole.&#13;
Fourth Row: Greene, Haverfield, Walker, Jensen.&#13;
Fifth Row: Hill , Anderson , Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred One&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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Sophomores&#13;
Nancy Arthur&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Frances Haverfield&#13;
Dorothy Hill&#13;
Helen Jensen&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Mary Margaret Walker&#13;
Mary Ellen Walpole&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
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Inter-Sorority Council&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Petronis&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA PI ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA PI ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Bette Greene&#13;
KAPPA ZETA CHI&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn DePue&#13;
Margaret Gustesori&#13;
Bette Greene&#13;
KAPPA ZETA CHI&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
&#13;
Carol Held&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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Inter-Fraternity Council&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
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First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
President... .................... Robert Paget&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.. ............. Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
George Koch&#13;
&#13;
Secretary....................... George Koch&#13;
&#13;
Howard&#13;
&#13;
Neilsen&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
ALPHA TAU DELTA&#13;
&#13;
H. G. Morrison&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
PHI SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
Glen Burrow&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
SIGMA THETA RHO&#13;
&#13;
Robert Paget&#13;
George Koch&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
ALPHA TAU DELTA&#13;
&#13;
David Brinkman&#13;
Garry Wallman&#13;
&#13;
PHI SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
Ilo Vanderboom&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Two&#13;
&#13;
SIGMA THETA RHO&#13;
&#13;
George Koch&#13;
Howard Neilsen&#13;
&#13;
MEN 'S ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
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Throughout a long career as head of the Physical&#13;
Education Department at Morningside College, Coach&#13;
&#13;
J. M. Saunderson has built up a reputation as one of&#13;
the finest and best-known coaches in this territory. Under&#13;
his direction the sports practices have been classes in&#13;
character building with the ideals of fair play and sportsmanship uppermost in the minds of the men.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Three&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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Up and Over the Coyote Line&#13;
&#13;
- Tribune Photo.&#13;
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9&#13;
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Varsity Football&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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The Maroons opened their 1938 season under the floodlights at Hastings, Nebraska, on September 23, and closed it eight weeks later against Wayne State Teachers on Dad's Day at Stock Yards Park. The Sioux finished in fifth place in the NorthCentral standings with a record of one win, three losses, and a tie. At Hastings the&#13;
Sioux outsmashed the highly rated Broncos for 211 yards and 14 first downs to gain&#13;
a 14-6 triumph. Hetland and Burrow drove through holes opened principally by&#13;
Buckingham, Flinders, and Turk; these two backs picked up most of the yardage&#13;
with Flinders distinguishing himself by converting twice.&#13;
Fritz Pollard and Company gave the Maroon and White a cold reception and&#13;
sent them heading back south on the short end of a 27-12 score. However, Morningside gained 12 first downs to seven for the Sioux, and the Maroon forward wall more&#13;
than matched the Nodak line. But the ebony ace, Pollard, one of the shiftiest runners&#13;
ever to play in the North-Central, proved to be the difference between the two teams.&#13;
Three times he snatched the ball, maneuvered into the open, shook off a couple of&#13;
would-be tacklers and crossed the goal line standing up. Morningside depended on&#13;
straight football for their two scoring drives. Twice more were the losers within&#13;
hailing distance of pay dirt, being stopped once by the half-time whistle and once&#13;
by a fumble.&#13;
Kansas Wesleyan of Salina, Kansas, came to Sioux City the following week, and&#13;
met a Morningside team that was bouncing back from its northern defeat of the previous Friday. Displaying a razzle- dazzle offense the home team rushed the heavier&#13;
Tigers off their feet. Halford and Burrow each scored in the second quarter and&#13;
Murphy added one in the third. Engen, playing his first game of the season, converted on the last touchdown to bring the score to 19-0 which was the final score.&#13;
Cooperating with the smooth working offense was the stellar defensive play of Brinkman, Flinders, and Koch.&#13;
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One Hundred Four&#13;
&#13;
In their first home conference game the&#13;
Morningside gridsters lost a heartbreaker to&#13;
South Dakota State, 14-13. For the fourth&#13;
time in four games the Sioux dominated ever y&#13;
department of the game, but two lightninglike touchdowns by the Bunnies in the second&#13;
quarter, plus two conversions, spelled defeat.&#13;
The Maroons scored first, Burrow cutting&#13;
back for a counter after a 50-yard offensive&#13;
drive. In the second quarter, Engler, S. D. S.&#13;
back, failing to find a pass receiver, picked&#13;
his way through the scattered players thirty&#13;
yards for a touchdown. On the next Bunny&#13;
play from scrimmage, Brill smashed through&#13;
center, cut back and dashed 70 yards for another counter. With the score 14-6 against&#13;
them the Maroons fought back viciously with&#13;
Halford leading a brilliant passing and running attack, but could engineer only one&#13;
touchdown. Four other times the y put the ball&#13;
in position to score, but each time they were&#13;
without a big man in the backfield to punch&#13;
it over. This defeat left Morningside at the&#13;
bottom of the conference standards, with two&#13;
losses in as many games.&#13;
The Coyotes of South Dakota used their&#13;
Dakota Day as an excuse to measure the Maroons by a score of 13-0 on windblown Inman&#13;
field at Vermillion, October 22. For the first&#13;
and only time during the season, Morningside&#13;
was on the short end of the statistics. The&#13;
Redshirts, future conference champions, had&#13;
eve r ything their own way after they scored&#13;
their first touchdown seconds before the close&#13;
of the first half. Until that time the two teams&#13;
had see-sawed up and down the field, with&#13;
the Sioux making the only real threat as they&#13;
drove to the 15-yard line only to lose the ball&#13;
on downs. A few minutes after the second&#13;
half began South Dakota scored again, using&#13;
the same end-around pass that had resulted&#13;
in the first counter. For the Maroons Buckingham and Brinkman looked good defensively at the end posts.&#13;
Before a Homecoming crowd of 5,000 Iowa&#13;
Teachers' fans the Maroon and White showed&#13;
a complete reversal of form to run and pass&#13;
their way to a 13-7 victory over the favored&#13;
P anthers. The first half was scoreless, but in&#13;
the third quarter the passing combination of&#13;
Halford and Morrison began to click and the&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Five&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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Morrison&#13;
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Koch&#13;
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Koch&#13;
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Flinders&#13;
&#13;
Snyder&#13;
&#13;
Maroons pushed over two touchdowns. Hetland plunged for the second score after a&#13;
long pass had put the ball in position. Behind&#13;
13-0, the Panthers came back with a .flashy&#13;
attack to score once, and threaten again, but '&#13;
the Morningside forward wall stiffened to&#13;
prevent another counter. Buckingham, Snyder, and Paget played a bang-up game in the&#13;
line.&#13;
Homecoming fans who hoped to see Morningside better her conference standing at the ·&#13;
expense of Omaha U. were doomed to disappointment as the two teams battled to a scoreless tie on a field of icy mud. Again the Maroons threatened several times but couldn't&#13;
score. One of the outstanding features of the&#13;
game was the success of the Morningside passing attack, said attack having failed dismally&#13;
on days much more suitable for that department. With Burrow pitching and Snyder and&#13;
Brinkman doing some excellent receiving&#13;
eight out of eighteen passes were completed&#13;
during the course of the game. Murphy did&#13;
some nice line-bucking, and Flinders and&#13;
Hakala were outstanding in the line.&#13;
The Dad's Day game with Wayne dropped&#13;
the curtain on the Maroon's season. The long&#13;
punts of Bradford, Wayne back, served to&#13;
keep the Sioux away from scoring territory&#13;
most of the afternoon, but the Maroons took&#13;
advantage of a break and moved to the four&#13;
yard line in the second quarter from where&#13;
Hetland scored. Late in the final period, big&#13;
Russ Kraai entered the game. Exhibiting that&#13;
kind of powerful line plunging that had been&#13;
sorely needed at times during the season, he&#13;
engineered a drive that shoved over another&#13;
touchdown just seconds before the final&#13;
whistle.&#13;
P erhaps the season wasn't the most successful in the annals of Maroon football history. There were a few high points, however.&#13;
Once and only once did Morningside leave&#13;
the field with the statistics against them. Perhaps the breaks were against them; perhaps&#13;
they lacked the indefinable something that&#13;
makes the difference between a good team&#13;
and a fair one. Whatever it was, they lost&#13;
games that were hard to lose. Time and again&#13;
they outfought and outplayed the opposing&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Six&#13;
&#13;
team· only to be on the short end of the final&#13;
score. In spite of this the players, individually and as a t eam, gave all they had in every&#13;
game. In both the North Dakota and the&#13;
South Dakota State games, when it appeared&#13;
that Morningside was badly beaten, they&#13;
fought their way back to score and turn each&#13;
contest into anybody's ball game. If there is&#13;
something more to a football season than a&#13;
final won and lost reckoning then the 1938&#13;
Maroons achieved it.&#13;
Eleven men finished their collegiate football careers when the whistle signalled the&#13;
end of the Morningside-Wayne game and the&#13;
close of the 1938 season. Al Buckingham. allconference end. leads. the group who will receive their diplomas in June. "Buck" has&#13;
played three years of football under Saundy&#13;
and has received all-conference recognition&#13;
two of these years. Opposing quarterbacks&#13;
sent few p]ays around Buck's end.&#13;
Dale Flinders has been an outstanding&#13;
tackle on the squad this year. His first two&#13;
years he played at a guard post. Dale was&#13;
placed on the second all-conference team this&#13;
fall. Occupying the other tackle post has&#13;
been big Bob Paget. Bob has been a regular&#13;
for two years, and opposing ends have found&#13;
him big and tough.&#13;
Dave Brinkman came up fast to develop&#13;
into one of Saundy's most aggressive ends.&#13;
Dave loves the game and he was an outstanding performer all season, playing one of his&#13;
best games against South Dakota U. Don Snyder is the best pass receiver on the squad.&#13;
Possessing an uncanny ability to snag any&#13;
toss, high or low, Don was in his glory when&#13;
the going was roughest. In the Omaha game&#13;
he grabbed pass after pass with the ball just&#13;
a slippery blob of mud.&#13;
Jake Felker was one of the small est men&#13;
on the squad, but one of the toughest. A&#13;
"watch-charm" guard, Jake never asked for&#13;
quarter, but always came out of the pile with&#13;
a word of encouragement for the team. Fred&#13;
Hoffman graduates after having been with us&#13;
for only two years. A transfer student, Fritz&#13;
has had two seasons at a guard post, where&#13;
he has gained recognition for his aggressive&#13;
play. Joe Turk, another transfer student,&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seven&#13;
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stepped into a big job when he became the center on the Morningside team, for Morn-&#13;
&#13;
FROSH FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
ingside has always seemed to have a corner on the best centers. Joe carried on in the&#13;
finest way, winning two letters and playing heads up ball always during the two&#13;
seasons he has been with us.&#13;
Owen Engen, H. G. Morrison, and Russ Kraai are the three senior backfield men.&#13;
" Blondie" Engen was the workhorse of the men who work behind the line. Injured&#13;
at the first of the season, Owen played most of the games in spit of it. His was the&#13;
unheralded job of blocking for the ball luggers and few have done better. Owen has&#13;
also been at Morningside just two years, being a transfer student from Minnesota.&#13;
Outstanding as a freshman, H. G. Morrison has been developing under Saundy's&#13;
tutelage for three seasons and he played his finest ball this season. Probably his outstanding performances were in the two games with Iowa Teachers the last two seasons. He sparked the final-quarter drive that netted two touchdowns and a 13-13 tie&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
with the Panthers last year, and he was at his best against the same team this year.&#13;
Russ Kraai, a transfer from Orange City Junior College, is big, fast, and a pow-&#13;
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erful fullback. Dogged by hard luck, Russ broke his arm and was confined to the&#13;
sidelines most of his first year. However, he came back fast and saw action at the&#13;
end of the season and this year developed into one of the hardest hitting fullbacks&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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Morningside has had.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
as staunchly support her as alumni as they did defend her laurels on the gridiron.&#13;
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s&#13;
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We will miss these eleven men- these eleven seniors who have given much to&#13;
Morningside. They have proven themselves to be " for Morningside" and they will&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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Top Row: Feikema, Bailantine , Haenfler. Spiry, Leopold, Kennedy, Harvey, Kolp, Widler.&#13;
Bottom Row: Connor, Heitman, Triggs, Bliss, Lewis, Thompson, Reese, Goodenow, Sheridan.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five men answered Honie Rogers' call for freshman foo tballers and the&#13;
first-year men began preparations for three tough games against Estherville Junior&#13;
College, South Dakota University frosh, and the Omaha University first year men .&#13;
The backfield boasted of such stars as Joe Lease, Gene Kennedy, Don Leopol d, Al&#13;
Haenfler, Bob Harvey, Eddie Lamkin, Earl Hicks, Cliff Lewis, Walt Baumann, and&#13;
Danny Sardison, while bolstering the frontline were the following standouts: Chuck&#13;
Sheridan, Don Widler, Ollie Heitman, Red Bliss, Tommy Thompson, Orval Spiry,&#13;
Bernie Feikema, Bob Reese, Les Triggs, Earl Goodenow, Wally Hanson, Bob Sharp,&#13;
John Kolp, and Bruce Connor.&#13;
In their initial game the yearlings scored a last-minute victor y over the more&#13;
experienced Junior Collegians from Estherville. Two weeks later the yearlings lost&#13;
to the Coyote Pups of South Dakota U., 12-8. The Pups scored on their now famous&#13;
end-around pass play. Kennedy's passes, Haenfler's driving plunges, and a trick lateral forward combined to score for the yearlings, but in the final quarter the Pups&#13;
put on another drive which won the game for them. The frosh ended their season&#13;
with a 6-6 deadlock with the Omaha University first-year men on a wind-swept Omaha&#13;
gridiron.&#13;
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Three Maroons&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
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on This Tackle.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eight&#13;
&#13;
- Tribune Photo.&#13;
&#13;
No Hole&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
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This Line.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Nine&#13;
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- Tribune Photo.&#13;
&#13;
Varsity Basketball&#13;
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Another successful year under the tutelage of Coach&#13;
Glen Rogers has been added to the Morningside basketball records. Although his team did not come up to the&#13;
championship play of last year's team, they demonstrated the power and clever ball handling characteristic&#13;
of the Maroons.&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen men answered Coach Honie&#13;
Rogers' early season call, and with this&#13;
squad he undertook the difficult task of&#13;
defending the North Central championship gained last year. Only three lettermen remained from that team of champions, and with these as a nucleus,&#13;
Honie developed a team that enjoyed a&#13;
much better season than early prognostications would have foretold. While&#13;
the Maroons were forced to be content&#13;
with fifth place in the conference they&#13;
gained victories over several highly&#13;
rated teams, including North Dakota&#13;
and Iowa Teachers, who finished in a&#13;
tie for second position. The North&#13;
Dakota game was the first time that the&#13;
Northerners had been defeated in a&#13;
home court conference game in eight&#13;
years and the first time that the Morningsiders had ever taken a basketball&#13;
victory at Grand Forks. Besides whipping the runners-up, the Maroons took&#13;
the measure of South Dakota State who&#13;
finished the season in fourth place just&#13;
above the Sioux Cityans. At one time&#13;
during the early part of the season, the&#13;
Sioux stayed on top of the conference&#13;
race for two weeks. But they couldn't&#13;
keep the pace and costly defeats were&#13;
suffered, defeats that, had they been&#13;
victories, might have given the team the&#13;
necessary spark to climb back into the&#13;
title race.&#13;
The Maroons opened the season with&#13;
five non-conference games, winning the&#13;
first two and dropping the following&#13;
ones. Surprising the strong Alumni aggregation, made up mostly of last&#13;
year's players, Morningside gained a&#13;
36-23 win. Yankton College came to&#13;
Sioux City the following week and&#13;
made it a close game fo r the first half&#13;
before weakening in the following&#13;
stanza and dropping the contest to the&#13;
Maroons 36-22. Sioux Falls won a&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eleven&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
LOFF&#13;
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u&#13;
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SNYDER&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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HALFORD&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
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BUCKINGHAM&#13;
&#13;
thrilling pre-vacation game as they took&#13;
the measure of the home team by a&#13;
count of 24,-22. A basket in the closing&#13;
seconds by Morningside fa.i led to count&#13;
and the Sioux dropped their first game&#13;
of the season. Playing basketball that&#13;
was far from conference championship&#13;
style, the Maroons lost both games in&#13;
their Invitational Tournament, and as&#13;
a result they finished in last place. Ottawa University of Ottawa, Kansas,&#13;
tripped them the first night 31-28, and&#13;
Cornell College of Mount Vernon, defeated them 27-16 in the final game.&#13;
Ottawa went on to win the tournament&#13;
by whipping South Dakota U. who had&#13;
beaten Cornell the first night.&#13;
The Maroons opened the conference&#13;
season with a stunning victory over the&#13;
highly favored Iowa Teachers from&#13;
Cedar Falls. Starting the contest in a&#13;
listless fashion, the Morningside team&#13;
suddenly came to life and overcame a&#13;
12 point deficit to win handily 48-34.&#13;
Immediately the other teams in the&#13;
conference pointed towards Morningside as the team to beat. In this first&#13;
game Michaelson poured in 18 points&#13;
to take up his high powered scoring&#13;
where he had left off last season.&#13;
Omaha University was the next victim to fall as the Maroons, riding atop&#13;
the conference standings, swept over&#13;
the Cardinals by a margin of 44-34.&#13;
Michaelson again was top scorer as he&#13;
dumped eight fielders and three free&#13;
throws through the hoop for a 19 point&#13;
total. Don was ably assisted by his&#13;
teammates led by Dewey Halford who&#13;
played a sparkling game at a forward&#13;
post.&#13;
South Dakota was the next opponent&#13;
and the pair of games played with the&#13;
Coyotes proved disastrous to the Maroon title hopes. The first game, at Vermillion, began with a Morningside&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twelve&#13;
&#13;
flourish, the Sioux Cityans jumping into&#13;
a seven point lead. From this point on&#13;
Maynard Ingalls and Company took&#13;
complete charge and the Redmen won&#13;
39-27. Loff and Michaelson each gathered eight points for the losers. The&#13;
following week the Coyotes invaded the&#13;
home court and swamped the Maroons&#13;
41-19. Morningside led only once in a&#13;
game that was South Dakota's all the&#13;
way. The victors demonstrated that they&#13;
had other luminaries besides the much&#13;
publicized Ingalls, as nine men besides&#13;
himself broke into the scoring column,&#13;
Taplet taking honors with six points.&#13;
Dewey Halford dropped five points for&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
Boasting only a .500 per cent conference rating, the Maroons left Sioux&#13;
City for a two-game trip in North Dakota. Fans gave them little chance to&#13;
gain even one victory on the suicide&#13;
trek. Upsetting all the dope, the defending champs overwhelmed the powerful Sioux of North Dakota University, outfighting them all the way.&#13;
Dewey Halford hit from all angles to&#13;
garner 17 points, but the whole Morningside team starred. The following&#13;
night the Maroons lost a listless game&#13;
to North Dakota State 44-23. Showing&#13;
the effects of the three-day trip and the&#13;
hard game the night before, the Morningsiders were no match for the Staters&#13;
who played their best game of the season. Loff, Michaelson, and Strozdas&#13;
looked best for the losers. This defeat&#13;
left the Maroons with a .500 per cent&#13;
rating and three games yet to go. The&#13;
second place South Dakota State Bunnies were the next opponents.&#13;
Don Snyder, star senior guard, dropped a basket with seconds to go to pull&#13;
a close one out of the fire and drop&#13;
South Dakota State, 35-33. South Dakota took an early lead only to lose it&#13;
as Halford and Michaelson started hitthe&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
STROZDAS&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
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u&#13;
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&#13;
KRZNARICH&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
ROADMAN&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
MICHAELSON&#13;
&#13;
ting. Th e Bunnies came back into . the&#13;
lead late in the second half to overcome a five point deficit and forge into&#13;
the lead late in the third quarter. From&#13;
then on it was anybody's game, with&#13;
Loff hitting a hot streak, only to be&#13;
matched by the deadly firing of Fergen,&#13;
stellar Bunny guard. With the score&#13;
tied South Dakota got a flurry of shots&#13;
in the closing minutes, before Snyder&#13;
grabbed one off the backboard&#13;
and&#13;
dribbled the length of the floor to sink&#13;
it. This win boosted the Maroons into&#13;
second place and bolstered their hope&#13;
for a hi gh place in the final standings.&#13;
The Cardinals of Omaha University&#13;
severely jolted these hopes as they&#13;
pulled a 32-21 upset victory over the&#13;
Maroons at Omaha. The game was&#13;
fairly close until the final quarter when&#13;
the Cards ran wild. Pflasterer and&#13;
Marks got ten apiece for the winners&#13;
while Michaelson and Kraai each&#13;
counted five for the losers. A slim&#13;
chance for the runner-up spot still remained after this game, but even this&#13;
possibility was blasted three days later&#13;
by the Iowa Teachers in the finale at&#13;
Cedar Rapids.&#13;
Th e first half of the Teachers' game&#13;
was close with the Tutors holding a&#13;
15-10 half-time margin. The second&#13;
half, however, turned into a riot as the&#13;
two Teachers' forwards, Lofquist and&#13;
Olsen, set a torrid pace. The Morningside scoring was evenly divided, with&#13;
Halford and Loff leading with six and&#13;
four points respectively. Morningside's&#13;
difficuty was entirely due to inability&#13;
to hit the basket. The losers got almost&#13;
as many tries as the Tutors but managed to hit the hoop but 6 times in 66&#13;
tries. Buckingham did a good job of&#13;
filling Snyder's shoes- Don being kept&#13;
on the sidelines because of a severe&#13;
attack of the flu.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
Two members of the Morningside&#13;
team gained positions on the coaches'&#13;
All North Central team. They were Don&#13;
Michaelson, who was chosen on the first&#13;
team last year, and Don Snyder, who&#13;
made last year's second squad. Michaelson bore much of the scoring burden&#13;
of the team this year and as a result&#13;
many opposing teams built their defense with the purpose of stopping him.&#13;
This accounted for the fact that Don&#13;
scored less toward the end of the season than he did a t first. Don Snyder is&#13;
well known for his defensive abil ity&#13;
and spirited play. He broke into th e&#13;
lineup in many games during his soph omore year and for the last two years&#13;
has been a regular guard .&#13;
Five seniors finished their college&#13;
basketball careers with the Teachers'&#13;
game. Russ Kraai played two years for&#13;
the Maroons, coming here from Orange&#13;
City Junior College. Russ is big and&#13;
aggressive and particularly effective&#13;
unde r the basket. Don Snyder and Al&#13;
Buckingham played as guards on this&#13;
year's squad. Both are three year veterans. Snyder for two years received&#13;
all conference honors while Buck was&#13;
given recognition this y- ar on the all&#13;
e&#13;
conference honorable mention roll.&#13;
Buck probably scored more for the time&#13;
he played than any member of the&#13;
squad . Kept out of the lineup at the&#13;
first of the season by injuries, he averaged nearly a half in all the conference&#13;
games during which time he never&#13;
failed to drop in a bucket or two . H. G.&#13;
Morrison and Keene Roadman were&#13;
used in the front line this year. H. G.&#13;
was a small but aggressive player noted&#13;
for his drive and determination.&#13;
With four regulars back- Michaelson&#13;
at center, Loff and Halford at forward,&#13;
and Strozdas at a guard post, and with&#13;
a wealth of freshman material coming&#13;
up, Morningside's Maroons should enjoy a successful and a wmmng season&#13;
next year.&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
KRAAI&#13;
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3&#13;
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BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Frosh&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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I&#13;
0&#13;
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Basketball&#13;
&#13;
"M" CI u b&#13;
&#13;
Top Row : Halford, Kraai , Adams.&#13;
Second Row: Koch , Michaelson , Hakala.&#13;
Third Ro w: Port. Krznarich, Loff, Strozdas .&#13;
Fourth Row: Felker. Burrow , Hetland,&#13;
Denny , Engen .&#13;
Fifth Row: Turk, Buckingham , Paget, Snyder, Flinders, Morrison , Brinkman.&#13;
Top Row: Hanson, Langstaff , Sheridan, Jones, Spiry.&#13;
Bottom Row: Graham , Harrison, Sharp, Cobb, Adcock.&#13;
&#13;
Whil e they did not compile the most impressive record in freshman basketball&#13;
annal s, this year's yearl ing team was one of the best in recent years. Thirty-five aspirants answered Coach Hugh Luby's first call and from these were chosen the following men who bore the brunt of the season's play : Sharp, Adcock, Lan gstaff,&#13;
Nagel, Harrison, Graham, Lease, Macur, Cobb, Spiry, Sheridan, Goodenow, Jones.&#13;
Their schedule included games with Metz Bakers, Orange City Junior College,&#13;
South Dakota University Pups, and the Omaha University freshmen.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
For thirty-one years the " Men of the M", a group in which all varsity letter winners are members, has been an active organization on the campus. In an effort to&#13;
create leaders as well as to develop physical strength, the "M" Club has complete&#13;
charge of all Freshman-Sophomore Day events and of th e Homecoming parade.&#13;
The club was guided in its activities during the past year by Don Snyder, president; Pete Burrow, vice-president; and H. G. Morrison, secretary-treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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Cheer&#13;
Leaders&#13;
&#13;
Porter. Wallman, B. Perrin.&#13;
&#13;
L. Brown , K. Brown , Boline, T. Perrin.&#13;
&#13;
Although track is listed as a major sport at Morningside, it has never held the&#13;
spotlight as it did in the days of the famous Four Horsemen. Nevertheless, outstanding men in certain individual events have been developed under the tutelage of&#13;
Coaches Saunderson and Rogers. Dave Denny, ace hurdler, was the only returning&#13;
letterman this year, but he was ably supported by several promising sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
M-0 -R-N-I-N-G-S-I-D-E- Yea, Morningside- ! To a squad of seven cheerleaders&#13;
captained by Bob Perrin goes much of the credit for the fine cheering sections which&#13;
characterized all the home games. Costumed in the traditional maroon and white, the&#13;
squad made a striking appearance on the field and on the floor and added pep and&#13;
color to the excitement of the football and basketball seasons. The group was composed of Virginia Boline, Lillian and Kathryn Brown, Thuma and Bob Perrin, Garry&#13;
Wallman, and Maynard Porter.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
Intramural Program&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
Sig Rho s. Basketball&#13;
&#13;
Independents,&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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u&#13;
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Champ s&#13;
&#13;
Over the Fence&#13;
&#13;
Touch ball Champ s&#13;
&#13;
Three events of a seven sport Intramural pro gram have been completed and two&#13;
tournaments are being played as the Annual goes to press. Thirteen individual medal s&#13;
and two trophi es have been or will be awarded to the champions in the various&#13;
events. Tennis and touchball dominate the fall intramural schedul es with basketball&#13;
and bridge takin g over durin g the winter months; kitten ball , pin g pong, golf, and&#13;
sprin g t ennis followin g in th e spring. Dale Harter captured the sin gles title, and&#13;
Fred Davenport and Dick Kin g the doubles title, in the fall tennis matches.&#13;
The Independents copped the touchhall title by defeatin g the Sig Rhos, 13-0.&#13;
Members of the winning team are Denny, Buckholz, Pruehs, Clare, Harrison, Road.&#13;
man, and Cobb. In the basketball tournament the Sig Rhos fought an uphill battl e&#13;
to win in the play-offs. In the final contest the fraternity men beat the Independents&#13;
32-21 to gain possession for one year of the Dwight Hauff trophy, which goes permanentl y to the team first winning it three times.&#13;
In the bridge tournament the titl e will be decided as Anderson and Schiller meet&#13;
Hughes and Forbes in the final round. Both teams won three hard matches to gain&#13;
the finals. Forty students are entered in the three divisions of the annual ping pon g&#13;
tourn ey, namel y, the boys' singles, the girl s' sin gles, and the mixed doubl es. This is&#13;
the most popular and most evenly fought even t in the Intramural program .&#13;
Six team s submitted entry lists for the kittenball season which go t underway&#13;
following spring vacation. Each of these teams was gunnin g for the titl e held by the&#13;
Phi Sigs. To the eventual winner went the Ol son Sports trophy for one year. This&#13;
cup is permanently given to the team that win s it three years. The four standbys, the&#13;
Phi Sigs, Sig Rhos, Tau Delts, and the Independents ente red teams as did two new&#13;
backers, Don Ballentine's Foo Goo Foos, and Feikema's Tyler's Boarders.&#13;
On the schedule, but as ye t unplanned, are the two remaining Intramural sports,&#13;
go lf and spring tennis. Keene Roadman and Al Strozdas compose this yea r's Intramural Board.&#13;
&#13;
Lining Up a Long One&#13;
&#13;
Two Paddle Artists&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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9&#13;
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u&#13;
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-- Kick It!&#13;
&#13;
Harter and Daven port&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Women's Athletic Association&#13;
&#13;
Hockey&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Under the direction of Miss&#13;
Lois Jessie Brinkman the Women's&#13;
Athletic&#13;
&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
has&#13;
&#13;
com-&#13;
&#13;
pleted another successful year on&#13;
the campus. Her enthusiasm, fairness, and ski ll in all. sports have&#13;
proven her an able instructor, a&#13;
true&#13;
&#13;
friend,&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
an&#13;
&#13;
excellent&#13;
&#13;
ll o nor Players&#13;
&#13;
Upper-Cl ass me n&#13;
&#13;
leader.&#13;
effort to bring out the ideals of good sportsmanship and to create and develop an&#13;
interest in the various sports. The annual four seasons of sport was opened by the&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
hockey season which continued until snow covered the dorm field. The Zets defeated&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
a hard-fighting Ishkoodah team in the sorority finals by a score of 4-2, while the&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
&#13;
The W. A. A. Board which con trols the women's sports program was composed&#13;
of Bonnie Jean Wallen, president ; Dorothy Nelson, vice-president; Virginia Allen,&#13;
secretary; Joyce Weed, treasurer; Patricia Warner, hockey chairman ; Barbara Forrester, basketball chairman; Winifred Cheely, individual sports chairman; Darlene&#13;
Cottington, social chairman; Mildred Wikert, awards chairman; Frances Forsberg,&#13;
publicity chairman .&#13;
All intramural and interclass tournaments are sponsored by the W. A. A. in an&#13;
&#13;
freshmen lost a close battle to the upper-classmen in the finals of the class tourney.&#13;
The honorary players selected at the close of the season on the basis of abiliiy and&#13;
sportsmanship were Bonnie Jean Wallen, Lillian Brown, Alberta Seavey, Dorothy&#13;
Ann Olson , Barbara Forrester, Joyce Weed, and Kathryn Brown .&#13;
The second annual swimming meet sponsored by W. A. A. was enthusiastically&#13;
greeted by the entire school. The evening's program consisting of individual and&#13;
team events of speed and skill was interspersed with comedy, the whole providing&#13;
much entertainment for both spectators and participants. The individual awards&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
were won by Nancy Kingsbury and Bob Harvey; the team trophies became the&#13;
possessions of the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority and the Sigma Theta Rho fraternity .&#13;
A style show of the bathing costumes from grandmother's time up to the present day,&#13;
and a demonstration by the Senior Mariners were fea tures of the evening.&#13;
&#13;
W . A. A. BOARD&#13;
Standin g : Allen , Weed , Wallen, Rohinson, Forsberg.&#13;
Kneeling: Wikert , Cheely, Warner.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undre d Tw ent y&#13;
&#13;
Harvey&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Zet Swimming Team&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
3&#13;
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9&#13;
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s&#13;
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0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Yale&#13;
&#13;
Winter Program&#13;
&#13;
Lowry, Locke , Seavey, Allen , Wallen,&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
P e rri n.&#13;
&#13;
Harvard&#13;
&#13;
Brown , Borland , Weed , Cottington , Kingsbury, Forrester.&#13;
- Tribune Photo.&#13;
&#13;
The winter dance festival, sponsored annually by the W. A. A. under the&#13;
&#13;
Two members of W. A. A., Joyce Weed and Shirley Wallen, were sent asdele-&#13;
&#13;
direction of Miss Brinkman, this year followed the theme "Coming Home for&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
gates to the National W. A. A. Convention held in Berkeley, California, on April&#13;
&#13;
Christmas" by showing the different ways the various countries celebrate the&#13;
Christmas· spirit by means of the dance: it was effectively climaxed by two&#13;
&#13;
12, 13, and 14.&#13;
On May 6, the annual "Play-Day" under the sponsorship of W. A. A. was held&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
excellent examples of the modern dance.&#13;
&#13;
on the campus. Senior girls from one hundred high schools in the territory were in-&#13;
&#13;
Basketball proved to be the most successful and popular season of the year&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
with keen competition in all the games. The Zets came through undefeated to&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
vited to take part in a day of play and fun which was climaxed by a banquet at the&#13;
&#13;
were: Virginia Allen, Joyce Weed, Nancy Kingsbury, Alice Scott, Lillian Brown,&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
win the round-robin sorority tournament while the Seniors' dark-horse team&#13;
&#13;
dormitory.&#13;
The May Fe te, presented annually by the members of the physical education&#13;
&#13;
surprised everyone by winning the class tournament. Members of the Zet team&#13;
&#13;
classes, was held during Commencement Week on the night of May 27.&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Cheely, Mildred Wikert, Connie Gall, Barbara Forrester, Shirley&#13;
&#13;
Sweater Winners&#13;
&#13;
bara Forrester, Lillian Brown, Mary Stankiewicz, Alberta Seavey, and Ruth&#13;
Worrell.&#13;
The climax of the basketball season is the annual Yale-Harvard game. The&#13;
two teams are selected on the basis of playing ability, sportsmanship, and allcollege spirit by the class captains, the basketball chairman, the president of&#13;
&#13;
The highest honor which the&#13;
Women's Athletic Department can&#13;
confer upon a girl is the sweater&#13;
&#13;
W. A. A., and Miss Brinkman. The game, played March 22, was one of the best&#13;
&#13;
award- a symbol of good sports-&#13;
&#13;
games ever played on the campus, both teams showing good teamwork and&#13;
&#13;
manship, leadership, service, schol-&#13;
&#13;
sportsmanship. An honorary team consisting of Joyce Weed , Virginia Allen,&#13;
&#13;
arship, and active participation in&#13;
&#13;
and Barbara Forrester, forwards; and Lucille Locke, Darlene Cottington, and&#13;
&#13;
sports. Those winning sweaters&#13;
&#13;
Shirley Wallen, guards, was selected to give recognition to the best players on&#13;
the two teams .&#13;
The volleyball and softball seasons had not been completed at the time&#13;
&#13;
this year were Bonnie Jean Wallen, Miriam Hawthorn, and Lillian Brown.&#13;
&#13;
the Annual went to press.&#13;
&#13;
Hawthorn, Wall en , Brown.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty -three&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
Wallen, Dorothy Ann Olson, Bonnie Jean Wallen, Nancy Lowry, Myna Nickum ,&#13;
and Alberta Seavey. The senior class team consisted of Marjorie Primmer, Bar-&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
HEALTH WEEK&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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Flinders, Worrell.&#13;
Pawson , Lowry, Olsen , Kolp.&#13;
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During Morningside College Health Week, which was held March&#13;
20 to 25, the importance of good health was stressed by W. A. A.&#13;
Twenty good-posture tags were awarded in Monday chapel to the&#13;
following: Connie Gall , Doreen Dallam, Evelyn DePue, Ruth Kingsbury, Helen Osbey, Dorothy Ann Olson, Ruth Olsen, Helen Pearson,&#13;
Marian Walsh, Ruth Worrell, Scotty Allison, David Denny, Bernard Feikema, Dale Flinders, DeLos Hartwig, Bob Harvey, Perry&#13;
Kruidenier, William Rozeboom, Dan Sardeson, and Packard Wolle.&#13;
At Wednesda y Chapel Reverend W. R. Moore spoke on "Mental&#13;
and Spiritual Health".&#13;
To climax the week, the iden tity of the Health Kin g and Queen&#13;
was revealed at an all-college dance Saturday night. The basis on&#13;
which these students were chosen was similar to the 4-H requirements. This year the king and queen were Dale Flinders and Ruth&#13;
Worrell; th eir attendants were Nancy Lowry, Richard Pawson,&#13;
Ruth Olsen, and John Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Twe nty-four&#13;
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Miss Morningside&#13;
With all the pomp and solemnity necessari ly attendant upon such an occasion,&#13;
lovely Marjorie Primmer was revealed as "Miss Morningside of 1938" at the Pep&#13;
Chapel on November 4. Marjorie is a member of the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority and is&#13;
president of Agora . She reigned over the Homecoming festivities which included the&#13;
annual barbecue and pep-chapel, the snake-dance, and the Homecoming dance which&#13;
was held in the Alumni Gym .&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty- five&#13;
&#13;
ALL FOR&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
.·&#13;
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Carol Held&#13;
" A beauty with brains" is an adequate&#13;
characterization of Carol who has won many&#13;
honors during her college career, among them&#13;
being the presidency of her sorority and the&#13;
secretaryship of the Student Council.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Albert Buckingham&#13;
Athletic ability and executive responsibility&#13;
rest equally light on the shoulders of as capable a person as Albert Buckingham. Buck's&#13;
friendliness and his contagious grin have won&#13;
him a permanent p lace in the hearts of the&#13;
student body for whom he acted as president&#13;
this year.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
ALL FOR&#13;
&#13;
MORNING S IDE&#13;
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Marjorie Primmer&#13;
Marjorie's gracious reception of two coveted senior honors, the presidency of her sorority and selection as "Miss Morningside",&#13;
was a fitting climax to a college career of&#13;
active participation in social and scholastic&#13;
affairs.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Dale Flinders&#13;
An athlete with a golden voice- add intelligence to these two qualities and the result&#13;
is Dale Flinders. Morningsiders will miss&#13;
Dale's genial personality and happy smile&#13;
when he graduates.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
ALL FOR&#13;
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Miriam Hawthorn&#13;
&#13;
Robert Rohwer&#13;
&#13;
A budding young poet in our midst is&#13;
&#13;
Bob is Morningside's premier gentleman&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Hawthorn. Her works have appeared&#13;
&#13;
and scholar. Active in forensic and musical&#13;
circles, he has maintained an excellent scho-&#13;
&#13;
in college publications and in literary magazines. She has also taken an active part in&#13;
athletic and sorority affairs.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty&#13;
&#13;
lastic average throughout his four years in&#13;
school.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX QUEENS&#13;
&#13;
STUDEN T UN I ON&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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-Tribune Photo.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
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One of the most popular places on the campus is the new Student Union Room&#13;
on the third floor of Main Hall. Furnished with red leather and blond mapl e furni-&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
ture, the Union has been a source of many enjoyable hours of relaxation and com-&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
radeship for all the students.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
WOMEN 'S LOUNGE&#13;
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&#13;
A room done in orange and tan leather with attractive drapes and reading lamps&#13;
EVELYN DEPUE, CAROL HELD, DOROTHY ANN OLSON&#13;
&#13;
has been provided for the women of the college on the first flo or of Main Hall. Here&#13;
&#13;
Chosen by popular student body vote, these three girl s combine&#13;
the ideals of personality, intelligence, and beauty; true queenly&#13;
qualities.&#13;
&#13;
the girl s may come to study or to chat with their friends; the only restriction is&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty- two&#13;
&#13;
" No Boys Allowed" .&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
OUR DECOROUS ( ?) INSTRUCTORS&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
COUNCIL OAK STORES&#13;
Your Friend at Mealtime&#13;
&#13;
row A&#13;
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1&#13;
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NEBRASKA&#13;
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. . SOUTH DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
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MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
tame!) Ole Floyd a bit muddy, fellows?&#13;
7- Formal social season opened by the Faculty&#13;
Reception. You can meet other people, you&#13;
know.&#13;
19- Dormitory tea for Sioux City girls. Orange&#13;
sherbet, uum-mm-m !&#13;
21-Pilgrimage to Vermillion. The game wasn't&#13;
good, but oh, that train! We'll get that&#13;
pelt next year, Professor Van Horne.&#13;
28- Dr. Roadman wearing his maroon shirtCorn Hunt has started.&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
2- 0ne concert well attended. Reason: Lawrence Tibbett.&#13;
5-Homecoming! "Prim" lovely as Miss Morningside. Weather not so lovely. Football&#13;
team made mud-pies on the field. Gym was&#13;
dry, so we had a dance, anyway.&#13;
&#13;
SEPTEMBER&#13;
12-New freshmen arrive to start the four-year&#13;
grind. Park Theatre party-girls have escorts home.&#13;
16-Classes begin at 8:00. No new shoesbooks are higher!&#13;
23-Sorority rushing gets under way-and is it&#13;
rushing!&#13;
25----New home, new paint, new semester, another Open House- Tau Delts. Mosquitoes&#13;
give M. C. A. retreaters a royal welcome at&#13;
Stone Park.&#13;
OCTOBER&#13;
3-W. A. A. picnic for freshman girls-transportation provided.&#13;
5-Freshman-Sophomore Day. Frosh must&#13;
wear green caps until Thanksgiving.&#13;
Double Cane Rush ( the first one was too&#13;
&#13;
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HARRY H. ADAIR&#13;
&#13;
PAUL A. WARNER&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
Keep Youthful&#13;
with Dairy&#13;
Products&#13;
&#13;
Adair -Warner&#13;
Printing&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
Printing with Service&#13;
&#13;
MILK DEALERS&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
&#13;
516 Sixth St.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty . five&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
"WOULD I WERE A CHOIR MEMBER!"&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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1&#13;
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CALENDAR-Continued&#13;
19-Dad's Day! They watch us play football&#13;
and dance - and see where their money&#13;
goes.&#13;
22-The dorm goes Mexican at the Turkey-day&#13;
formal.&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
I- Pre-Engineers Night after the ball game.&#13;
"Fire-Bug" is on the market!&#13;
3- The "Snow-Ball" - Who said what abo ut&#13;
corsages?&#13;
13-Another Winter Festival- learn the Lambeth Walk from Pitchett.&#13;
14---Where are the movie scouts ? "Holiday"&#13;
was an excellent show.&#13;
JAN UARY&#13;
8- Dan Cupid was about two months ahead of&#13;
his regular schedule. Look at the co-eds&#13;
who came back with diamonds- Virginia&#13;
&#13;
MIDWEST COLLEGE&#13;
OF COMMERCE&#13;
&#13;
Allen, Dorothy Carlson, Virginia Thomas,&#13;
Mary Margaret Walker, and Bette Greene.&#13;
16-Angna Enters tonight. Did we hear com·&#13;
ment?&#13;
21-Choir leaves on tour-Lewton, Held, and&#13;
Primmer got the loveliest going-away presents.&#13;
23-Midnight oil did no good. The exams were&#13;
really tou gh.&#13;
27-Choir sings over N.B.C. Guess we're fa.&#13;
mous, now.&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
2- S. D. U. basketball game. Packed house&#13;
and disappointment.&#13;
4---W. A. A. swimming meet. A splashing good&#13;
time was had by all.&#13;
7-New Outlook Days! Is this a college or a&#13;
billboard?&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING FOR PROGRAMS&#13;
&#13;
PLAYS&#13;
PAGEANTS&#13;
READINGS&#13;
OPERETTAS&#13;
STUNTS&#13;
&#13;
The Dependable School for&#13;
Commercial Training&#13;
&#13;
SEE US NOW&#13;
400 Commerce Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
WETMORE&#13;
DECLAMATION BUREAU&#13;
1631 South Paxton Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
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I&#13;
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ODDITIES!&#13;
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VERSTEGEN&#13;
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s&#13;
I&#13;
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I&#13;
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PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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X&#13;
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•&#13;
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X&#13;
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u&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
CITY&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Builders of&#13;
&#13;
Planned School Year Books&#13;
Sin c e Nineteen Hundred&#13;
'Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUS SHOTS&#13;
&#13;
Member F. D. I. C.&#13;
&#13;
MAKE&#13;
&#13;
THE TOY NATIONAL BANK&#13;
YOUR BANK&#13;
Intelligent and Conservative Banking Since 1873&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR- Continued&#13;
21-C hoir co ncert. Why don' t more peo ple realize what an excellent choral gro up we have&#13;
in our choir ?&#13;
24-FREE college party. More fun! Didn' t&#13;
know so manv people liked to play badminton and shuffleboard.&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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s&#13;
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APRIL&#13;
10- Weed and Wallen in Californi a. Bet th ey&#13;
give the World' s Fair a goin g-over.&#13;
17- Back to th e old grind after th e Bunny holidays.&#13;
&#13;
3-M. C. A. roller skati ng party. Again tran sportation is provided- what is thi s school&#13;
coming to ?&#13;
7- Student Union Room dedi ca ted. It is really&#13;
a swell place- now we ca n study in th e&#13;
library.&#13;
22-Yale-Harvard game. Those girls could give&#13;
the Maroon s a run for th eir mon ey.&#13;
25- Dean John so n's sec retary and Son gbird&#13;
Flinders reign as H ealth Mon arch s.&#13;
&#13;
6--Senior girls from hi gh schools invade the&#13;
cam pus for Play Day.&#13;
12- Annual Mother-Dau ghter banquet.&#13;
19-Senior farewell dan ce. Co ngra ts to the&#13;
Sioux Queens.&#13;
27- May Fete. Oh , those mod ern dances !&#13;
&#13;
JUNE&#13;
5- Commencement. College days&#13;
memories to the gra duates !&#13;
&#13;
are&#13;
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s&#13;
0&#13;
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I&#13;
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u&#13;
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just&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
May You Find the&#13;
Rainbow's End&#13;
As you journey through life, we hope it&#13;
will be your good fortune to find the&#13;
rainbow's end, and with it the fulfillment&#13;
of all your cherished desires.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY GAS&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC CO.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
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AT RANDOM-&#13;
&#13;
STUDIOS&#13;
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1&#13;
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&#13;
THIS ANNUAL and nearly&#13;
all preceding annuals in the&#13;
past thirty-five years have been&#13;
illustrated by photography produced by Martin Youngberg.&#13;
We believe that this is proof&#13;
of the popularity of this modern&#13;
and highly equipped studio.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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Youngberg Studio&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
615 Pierce Street&#13;
(Williges Furrier Building )&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Fo rty-three&#13;
&#13;
MORE CAMPUS SHOTS&#13;
&#13;
TRAVEL&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
COOL&#13;
&#13;
AIR-CONDITIONED SUPER-COA. H&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
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9&#13;
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Plan your trip to the World's Fair or to other&#13;
vacation spots this summer by cool air-conditioned Interstate Super-Coach, and travel in&#13;
luxurious comfort. The trip by bus will be a&#13;
sightseeing tour all the way--and you' ll save&#13;
a pocketfu l of money on your ticket!&#13;
Ask your local agent about convenient schedules low fares, and Expense-Paid Tours.&#13;
&#13;
DEPOT&#13;
Fifth and Douglas&#13;
Local Phone 5-7678&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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INTERSTATE TRANSIT LINES&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
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KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Developing and Printing&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
HOME MOVIES&#13;
&#13;
Eastman&#13;
Kodak Stores , Inc .&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County&#13;
Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
&amp; Arnold&#13;
Architects and Engineers&#13;
&#13;
DIXSON'S&#13;
PHARMACY&#13;
&#13;
Specializing in Planning&#13;
Public Buildings&#13;
&#13;
Iowa's Finest Suburban&#13;
Drug Store&#13;
&#13;
Beuttler&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5374&#13;
&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
450 Insurance Exchange Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
The Favorite Candy of the Northwest&#13;
&#13;
LA FAMA CHOCOLATES&#13;
One of a Family of Famous Products&#13;
:Made by&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON BISCUIT COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS&#13;
&#13;
FIR&#13;
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sT&#13;
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IN&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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CITY&#13;
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1&#13;
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1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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9&#13;
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FERRIS FLORISTS&#13;
Flowers for All Occasions&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
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BETWEEN CLASSES&#13;
&#13;
DRINK&#13;
&#13;
Telephone 8-7505&#13;
&#13;
From the Four Corners&#13;
of the Earth&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
Hours a Day&#13;
. . . comes the latest news in the field of&#13;
foreign affairs . . . politics .. . sports . ..&#13;
local and state news . . . editorial comments . . . news from Washington by world famous political analysts! All brought to you hot&#13;
off the wire so that you may be constantly abreast of the times!&#13;
&#13;
Warrior Hotel&#13;
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Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HOUSE OF HAMBURG&#13;
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I t's the Refreshing&#13;
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Fitze's prices&#13;
Fit the purse.&#13;
Fitze's food is&#13;
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&#13;
CHESTERMAN CO.&#13;
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For news when it is news read ...&#13;
&#13;
DWIGHT HAUFF SPORTING GOODS CO.&#13;
Agent for&#13;
&#13;
A. G. SPALDING &amp; BROS .&#13;
ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT&#13;
"For Fairways and Allways, Say Spalding"&#13;
511 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Forty- six&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
IN BOTTLES&#13;
&#13;
. . . Sioux City's Largest Circulated Newspaper .. .&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
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Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
J.C. RENNISON&#13;
&#13;
FRANK'S CAFE&#13;
&#13;
FLO RA.L CO.&#13;
&#13;
Lady cooks have a style of cooking&#13;
wh ich appeals to our restaurant-going&#13;
public. The food tastes like a home&#13;
cooked meal and that means a lot.&#13;
&#13;
NebraskaStreet&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
WIRE FLOWERS ANYWHERE&#13;
&#13;
GLASS FRONT&#13;
607 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
516&#13;
&#13;
"Say It with Flowers"&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Quality Shoes"&#13;
&#13;
BEN FRANKLIN STORES&#13;
&#13;
F&amp;C&#13;
&#13;
4006 Mornin gside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
"COAST TO COAST"&#13;
&#13;
P eters P ark&#13;
&#13;
"Your Dime Store at Peters Park"&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Shoe Stores Co.&#13;
&#13;
Everythin g from Five Cents to&#13;
One Dollar and Up&#13;
&#13;
Incorporated&#13;
&#13;
507 Fourth Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
T. L. SCHAEFER, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
GRAYSON'S&#13;
&#13;
DUSTY'S&#13;
PARK LUNCH&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
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"SUITS ME"&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
BREAKFASTS : LUNCHES&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Swift and Courteous Service&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Meet Your Friends at&#13;
&#13;
Barney's College Service Store&#13;
Where you can buy everything&#13;
in college needs.&#13;
CARA NOME TOILETRIES&#13;
and all other brands.&#13;
OUR FOUNTAIN SERVICE IS THE&#13;
VERY BEST&#13;
&#13;
Bus Tickets Anywhere&#13;
&#13;
Barney's Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
The Rexall Store&#13;
&#13;
On e Hu ndred Fort y-eigh t&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
LUGGAGE SHOP&#13;
Large Selection&#13;
of Luggage and&#13;
Handbags&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>���Published by&#13;
Class of 191 7 of&#13;
&#13;
Compiled&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
at Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Engraved by&#13;
THE ELECTRIC CITY ENGRAVING CO.&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
Printed by&#13;
TH E ECONOMY ADVERT ISING CO.&#13;
Iowa City, la .&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
Volume XV&#13;
&#13;
�Donald J. Walton&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Wilson C. Clark .&#13;
AssistantEditor&#13;
Noel J. Williams&#13;
Ray C. Harrington Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Fern Beacham&#13;
Ewart L. Williams&#13;
Artist&#13;
Athletics&#13;
WendellCurry&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Leon J. Johnson&#13;
Laura E. Pease&#13;
Classes&#13;
Faculty&#13;
J. Don Van Horne&#13;
Forensics&#13;
W. Charles Garlock&#13;
Jokes&#13;
James R. Kolp .&#13;
F. Marie Sebern&#13;
Literary&#13;
Minnie J. Fry .&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Albin G. Hornney&#13;
Photography&#13;
Ruth V. Gillies .&#13;
Society&#13;
&#13;
four&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
To all thsoe whose loyalty, perseverance, true friendship, and liberal&#13;
contributions have aided our Alma&#13;
Mater to weather the sever crises of&#13;
past years; to that constituency whose&#13;
efforts have erededa firm foundation&#13;
upon which to build the Greater Morningside of the future, the Class of&#13;
1917 respectfully dedicate this book.&#13;
&#13;
fice&#13;
&#13;
�r&#13;
&#13;
.I&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Foreword&#13;
Contents&#13;
THE PRIDE OF THE SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Our Alma&#13;
Mater&#13;
&#13;
During the past year, Morningside has&#13;
experienced a remarkable growth. the enthusiastic support of her constituency during the&#13;
financial campaign, the increased strength of&#13;
her faculty, and the unexcelled achievements of&#13;
her student body have caused her to be recognized as the "Leader of our State."&#13;
In compiling this book, we have attempted&#13;
to portray these successes as best we could.&#13;
But, in reality the story of Morningside can&#13;
not be expressed in words and pictures. It is&#13;
impossible to breathe into these lifeless pages&#13;
the full significance of college friendships, familiar campus scenes, and that powerful influence&#13;
in the life of every student-the spirit of Morningside. These must be lived to be truly appreciated and enjoyed. So, it we have mininterpretedor erred in any respect, we ask your charity.&#13;
&#13;
SIX&#13;
&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Amid H er B eautiful Environment&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Honored by L oyal Sons and Daughters&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
Stimulating the Spirit of Fellowship&#13;
B OOK&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
&#13;
Successful in D efeat or Victory&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
Expressing H er thoughts in P rose and&#13;
Poetry&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
VI&#13;
&#13;
En P assant&#13;
&#13;
seven&#13;
&#13;
�Alma Mater&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
R EFR A IN&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
llI&#13;
&#13;
eight&#13;
&#13;
Sing the praises of Dear AlmaMater,&#13;
Tell of her heroes bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices&#13;
The chorus swelling&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
then cheer for Dear Old Morningside&#13;
To thee we pledge anew&#13;
·&#13;
Hearts of faithful love&#13;
Now and forever,&#13;
thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
We'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought us&#13;
Fair Morningside ! Our home&#13;
Hear our vow, O Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee.&#13;
All we have&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
for the Glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
�In appreciation of&#13;
Miss Gretchen K. Lutz, A. M.,&#13;
who has won the admiration and respect&#13;
of both faculty and students&#13;
by her friendly counsels&#13;
.&#13;
and true comradeship&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
MISS GRETCHEN K. LUTZ&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
elev en&#13;
&#13;
�MARGARET G. DOLLIVER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Ex-Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
DlMMlTT, A. M ..&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET R. BRAND, A. B.&#13;
Director of Physical T rai ning&#13;
for Women&#13;
&#13;
Wm.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM C. HILMER, PH. D .&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Professor German Literature&#13;
&#13;
A. M .&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
AGNES B. FERG U SON,&#13;
&#13;
A. BROWN, A. M.&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
on leave.&#13;
EPHENOR&#13;
&#13;
*Absent&#13;
&#13;
ALF RED E . CRAIG , PH. D. , D. D .&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
*HELENI. LOVELAND, A .&#13;
&#13;
GRETCH EN K. LUTZ, A. M.&#13;
P rofessor of French and Span ish&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
HERB ERT G. CA MP BELL, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Psychol ogy and&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
J. H AYES,&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. MARSH , B.&#13;
Professor of P ublic Speaking&#13;
L AU RA C . FISCH ER, A. M.&#13;
Instructor in German and Latin&#13;
&#13;
w ALLACE C ARSON, PH . D.&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
D irector of Physical Training&#13;
for Men&#13;
&#13;
JASON M . S AU NDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
C. S ANBORN&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA&#13;
&#13;
twelve&#13;
&#13;
thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
MACMILLAN,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
PEARL&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
GREENE,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTHLENER,&#13;
&#13;
MABEL E. BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
B., B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Home Economics&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST R. BURTON,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICK SCHAUB,&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
OLAF HOVDA, PH .&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M .,&#13;
&#13;
D. D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Sociology and&#13;
Biblical Literature&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Greek&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE, PH .&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAcCOLLIN,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
MAcCOLLIN, Mus.·B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
fourt een&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD R. HARVEY, Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
ALTA F . FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Biology&#13;
FAITH WOODFORD,&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
HOUGHTON, PH . B.&#13;
&#13;
Lecturer in Sociology&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS TUTTLE,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Academy&#13;
&#13;
fifteen&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Board of Trustees&#13;
O FFICERS&#13;
President .......................................................................... E. C. H EILMAN&#13;
First Vice-President ... .......................................................C.&#13;
&#13;
W . P AYNE&#13;
&#13;
Second Vice-President......................................................W . H . ROLFING&#13;
Secretary ....................................................................... .......... F. 0. BARZ&#13;
F. OTTO BARTZ&#13;
Financial Secret ar y&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C . STEPHENS, M . D.&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
]AMES A. Coss, M . S.&#13;
Professor of C hemistry·&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer ................................................................................ F. 0. B ARZ&#13;
&#13;
M E MB E RSHIP&#13;
&#13;
T erm Expires 1916&#13;
GEORGE ALLEE&#13;
]. E. BENZ&#13;
]. w. FELLER&#13;
N. R. H ATHAWAY&#13;
.&#13;
P. E. HELD&#13;
E. C. H EILMAN&#13;
w . R. JAMESON&#13;
w. KENYON&#13;
C . A. MA UER&#13;
E . A. MORLING&#13;
D. A. McBURNEY&#13;
J. H. DONAH UE&#13;
J. G. SH UMAKER&#13;
ROBERT SMYLIE&#13;
w. E. T ACKABERRY&#13;
G. H. WESSEL&#13;
G EORGE WH ITFIELD&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
Instructor in Banjo, Mandolin,&#13;
and G uitar&#13;
&#13;
]AMES R EISTRUP&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
T erm Expires 1917&#13;
CHARLES B EACHAM&#13;
W . D. BOIES&#13;
0. M . BOND&#13;
A. G. B u ss&#13;
C . E . CHAPLER&#13;
R. T. CHIPPERFIELD&#13;
E. M. C ORBETT&#13;
L. J. H ASKINS&#13;
H. A. K ECK&#13;
C . D . K ILLAM&#13;
J. H. K LAUS&#13;
SCOTT M . LADD&#13;
J. w . L OTHIAN&#13;
C . w. P AYNE&#13;
J. L. PANSLAU&#13;
GEORGE R AW&#13;
F . H . T HIEL&#13;
W ALTER TORBET&#13;
&#13;
Term E x pires 1918&#13;
F . 0. BARZ&#13;
L. J. BRENNER&#13;
G . C. C ALL&#13;
H ERB ERT C LEGG&#13;
J. L. GILLIES&#13;
F . w. K LAUS&#13;
C . P. KILBORNE&#13;
C .H. L OCKIN&#13;
E . S. J OH NSON&#13;
w. T . M ACD ONALD&#13;
w. P. M ANLEY&#13;
w . C. M F.TCALF&#13;
B ENNETT MITCH ELL&#13;
J. P . N EG US&#13;
H. B. P IERCE&#13;
W. H. R o LFING&#13;
J. B. TRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
./&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN A. MORSE, A. A.G. 0.&#13;
Director of Conservatory of Music&#13;
Instructor of :Music&#13;
&#13;
sixteen&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
MORNI NGS IDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
To Morningside'sstately halls and attactive campus come&#13;
young men and women desirous of learning the fundamentals&#13;
of true living, as well as tje knowledge and mental equipment&#13;
essential to gain a livelihood. The aim of MorningsideCollege&#13;
is to develop the latent talents which lie within her students to&#13;
arouse in them discernment originality, resource, and responsibility, and to hold up before them the ideal of an effectiveChristian&#13;
life. Noplace is better adapted to accomplish this worthy aim,&#13;
no spot is more pleasant to spend the best four years of a&#13;
student's life than amid the beautiful environment of her campus.&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�MAIN HALL&#13;
&#13;
Home of ourcollege days,&#13;
&#13;
Hark to our song of praise,&#13;
While we our voices raise&#13;
For Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
twenty&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
Thou queen of all the land,&#13;
loyal to thee we stand,&#13;
thy sons a faithful band Dear Morningside&#13;
&#13;
twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�------------•-----------------:-------,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
We shall sing of the honor and fa,e thou hast won,&#13;
Withour hearts and our voices attune,&#13;
And forever we'll stand united as one&#13;
In our love for the dear old Maroon.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Morningside thou art the "Pride of the Sioux"&#13;
And we'll honor thy name evermore,&#13;
to thy standard we'll ever be loyal and true,&#13;
As thy sons ever have been before.&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�GRACE M. E.-THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
MOONLIGHT ON THE MISSOURI&#13;
&#13;
We are glad for the days that we've spent on thy hills,&#13;
Andthe friendships we've formed in thy halls,&#13;
Andfor dear Alma Mater our hearts shall beat still,&#13;
when at last we shall turn from thy walls.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Till the waters have dried in the "Rolling Mizzou"&#13;
Andall love in the old world has died,&#13;
We shallstand by our college,"The Prideof theSioux"&#13;
And we'll cheer for our old Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�SOUTH RA VINE IN THE WINTER&#13;
CRYSTAL LAKE&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�CHEMISTRY HALL&#13;
Destroyed by fire Aug. 22, 1914&#13;
&#13;
twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
OLD CONSERVATORY OF M USIC&#13;
D estroyed by fire D ec. 6, 1914&#13;
&#13;
twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�the Classes&#13;
BOOK&#13;
TWO&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUS SCENE&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
swear a vow beforetheenow;&#13;
Our thoughts in life with thee abide,&#13;
And ever from our hearts shallflow&#13;
A song, a cheerfor Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Honors and Prizes Conferred at Commencement&#13;
1915 CLASS HONORS&#13;
Honorable Mention&#13;
DAISY ETHEL ENGLISH&#13;
ALLAN BLAIR KLINE&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
K ATHRYN NEWLAND&#13;
&#13;
CARL WILLIAM HENRY SASS&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE PRIZES&#13;
Men's Intercollegiate DebateCLARENCE TUCKER CRAIG, JOHN VINCIN MADISON, BENJAMIN WILSON&#13;
RINER.&#13;
HERBERT DUNHAM, CHARLES EDGAR HUTTON, HERMAN HINMAN LEUDER.&#13;
Girls' Intercollegiate DebateHELEN DOROTHY CARLSON, ANNA KEEFFE, AGNES FRY.&#13;
HAZEL EFFIE DAY, HELEN MARIE EASTHOUSE, ELIZABETH ]AMES.&#13;
Alumni Prizes in OratoryFirst, JAMES ISAAC DOLLIVER.&#13;
Second, .CHARLES HAWN KLIPPEL.&#13;
Third, CLARENCE TUCKER CRAIG.&#13;
Dewey Prizes in OratoryFirst, RICHARD LANGLEY MITCHELL.&#13;
Second, CHARLES EDGAR HUTTON.&#13;
Chapin Peace PrizeVERNON STENSETH.&#13;
&#13;
ANNA L. BEARD&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OFFICERS&#13;
President,&#13;
&#13;
AN NA&#13;
&#13;
L. BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President , HARRY M. CLARK&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, KATH ERINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
T he Frederick C . Tucker PrizeJAY FINLEY CHRIST.&#13;
The Milligan Prize-&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
Seal Brow n and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH&#13;
HALE.&#13;
Iowa Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution Prize in American HistoryETHEL OLSEN.&#13;
&#13;
thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�HOWARD A. ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn&#13;
&#13;
"I wish to possess firmness and virtue&#13;
enough to maintain what I consider the&#13;
most enviable of all titles-the character&#13;
of an honest man."&#13;
&#13;
THOM AS C. ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
F . EARL B U RGESS&#13;
&#13;
Ruthven&#13;
&#13;
"In all thy humors whether grav e or mellow,&#13;
Thou art such a touchy, testy, pleasant&#13;
fellow,&#13;
Hast so much wit and mirth about thee."&#13;
&#13;
BERN ICE CH ALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Moville&#13;
&#13;
''Nothing great was ever accomplished&#13;
in this world without enthusiasm."&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
B U LL&#13;
&#13;
Humboldt&#13;
&#13;
" 'Tis something to be willing to command,&#13;
But my best praise is that I am your&#13;
fri end."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" Gentle of speech, beneficent of m ind."&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
ANNA&#13;
&#13;
P ierson&#13;
&#13;
" Hi s judg men t like the heavenly moon did&#13;
show,&#13;
Tempering ' all things down here below."&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
C LARK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" Ambition is my idol, on whose wings&#13;
Great minds a re ca rried only to extremesTo be sublimely great."&#13;
&#13;
C ORDELIA C OLB U RN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" For she is jes' the qui et kind,&#13;
Whose natures never vary,&#13;
Like streams that keep a summer mind,&#13;
Snow hid in Janua ry."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-five&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
"It is the privilege of genius that to it&#13;
life never grows commonplace, as to the&#13;
rest of us."&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
AMBROSE C. DELAPP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"It is the mind that makes the man, and&#13;
our vigor is in our immortal soul."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
H. MARIE EASTHO USE&#13;
&#13;
"0, let us still the secret joy partake,&#13;
To follow virtue even for virtue's sake."&#13;
&#13;
Hartley&#13;
&#13;
" She who, secure within, can say :&#13;
'Tomorrow, do thy worst, for I have&#13;
lived today.'"&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
M. LOIS CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, blest with temper whose unclouded&#13;
ray,&#13;
Can make tomorrow cheerful as today.''&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Presence of mind, and courage in distress,&#13;
Are more than armies to procure success.''&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
HARRY&#13;
HAZEL E. DAY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A perfect woman, nobly planned,&#13;
To warn, to comfort, and command.''&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
Burbank, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
"An honest man, close butoned to the chin,&#13;
Broadcloth without, and a warm heart&#13;
within.''&#13;
&#13;
thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�I.&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR HALL&#13;
&#13;
ARTHU R&#13;
&#13;
Westfield&#13;
&#13;
" Of reason firm, of temperate will,&#13;
Endurance, foresight, strength and skill."&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
HORN&#13;
&#13;
LES LIE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
DELBERT&#13;
&#13;
L OGAN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
M c KI NN EY&#13;
&#13;
Fort D odge&#13;
&#13;
"A man of cheerful yesterdays, a nd confident tomorrows."&#13;
&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
" Zealous yet modest, innocent tho free!&#13;
Patient of toil, serene amid alarms."&#13;
&#13;
L U RA MCLAN E&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
"A strong character, found ed on the&#13;
solid rock of p rinciple."&#13;
&#13;
"The noblest mind the best contentment&#13;
has."&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN&#13;
&#13;
LINDSEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"But words are things, and a small drop&#13;
of ink,&#13;
Falling like dew upon a thought,&#13;
Produces that which makes thousands,&#13;
perhaps millions, think."&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
" Now, Nature is not at v ariance with&#13;
Art, nor Art with Nature."&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
" She has no t ra it more striking than her&#13;
common sense."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
JOHNV. MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Loathing pretense, he does with cheerful&#13;
will&#13;
What others talk about while their hands&#13;
are still."&#13;
&#13;
MARION M. METCALF&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN W. RINER&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
H. FLOYD PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" I dare do all that may become a man;&#13;
Who dares do more is none."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" She is willful, mutable,&#13;
Untamed, inscrutable,&#13;
Swifter-fashioned than the fairies,&#13;
Substance mixed with pure contraries."&#13;
&#13;
" Formed on the good old-fashioned plan,&#13;
A true, a brave, and downright honest&#13;
man."&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
Huddersfield, Eng.&#13;
&#13;
" He adorned whatever subject he either&#13;
spoke or wrote upon, by the most splendid&#13;
eloquence."&#13;
&#13;
GLENN B. PATRICK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A man who consecrates his hours by&#13;
vigorous effort and an honest aim."&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"I need no spurs to prick the sides of my&#13;
intent,&#13;
But only vaulting ambition, which o'erleaps itself."&#13;
&#13;
NORA M. SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
" Tho' deep, yet clear; tho' gentle, yet&#13;
not dull."&#13;
&#13;
forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�KATHERINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" The heart to conceive,&#13;
The understanding to direct,&#13;
And the hand to execute."&#13;
&#13;
LOVICE&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
STROBEL&#13;
&#13;
R. TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Is always happy, reign whoever ·may,&#13;
And laughs the sense of misery far&#13;
away."&#13;
&#13;
Jefferson, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
" Cheerful at morn, she wakes from short&#13;
repose,&#13;
Breathes the keen air, and carols as she&#13;
goes."&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
F. EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
" Friend, lead on and I will follow thee&#13;
To the last gasp with truth and loyalty."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A mind forever voyaging&#13;
great seas of thought."&#13;
&#13;
through&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
Lohrville&#13;
&#13;
"Whatever she did was done with so much&#13;
ease,&#13;
In her alone 'twas natural to please."&#13;
&#13;
forty-two&#13;
&#13;
forty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
F RANK ABEL&#13;
&#13;
Frank is able all right in mathematics, physics, chemistry, or&#13;
photography. Frank is a blonde, short, and sober as a j udge to&#13;
the casual observer, but has enough mischief in his make-up to&#13;
keep "something doing," especially in chemistry lab. D oes not let&#13;
anyone know that he pays any attention to the girl s, but wi ll&#13;
probably fall some day as has the ma jority of his contemporaries.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR C . PAYNE&#13;
AN NA&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
A N DERSON&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President, ARTHUR C. PAYNE&#13;
Vice-President, CORNELIA E . McBURNEY&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, AMANDA B. RoosT&#13;
&#13;
A nna's complexion, as well as her name, betrays her nationality. She is a most loya l Morningsider, and fe ll so deeply in&#13;
love with the college duri ng her Freshman year that when she&#13;
retu rned the next fall she b rought her sister w ith her. Not all&#13;
of us ca n so easily convince our fami lies. A nna has the admiration of her classmates because of her natural efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
JACOB&#13;
&#13;
Old Gold and Blue&#13;
&#13;
forty-four&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Estherv ille, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
" Andy," if you know him. A lways ready to do the other&#13;
fell ow a good turn. He has a han d and a heart that rings true&#13;
of the stuff that makes for the goal and purpose of his ambi tion.&#13;
He knows where good things are, fo r he has tried Iowa U. and&#13;
then returned to M orn ingside Coll ege. We admi re his perseverance, for he had the courage to canvass books all of last summer.&#13;
&#13;
forty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
J. JULIA ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MILDRED BROWN&#13;
&#13;
We note in the office records that Julia started last year with&#13;
the class of '18, but by hard work and consistent effort she has&#13;
joined our ranks. We appreciate her wisdom. Her chief claim&#13;
to honors is in the classroom, where few can equal her in scholarship. The Anderson sisters sure make some studious pair.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Brown, not willing to acknowledge her goal reached, returned to Morningside College for a degree. She is taking Latin,&#13;
German, French, Spanish, Greek, and if the college offered any&#13;
more languages, we would fear for her. She is Prof. Campbell's&#13;
Psychology assistant, which speaks- well for her intellectual&#13;
achievements. One may see her arms piled high with books at&#13;
any hour.&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
WILSON&#13;
&#13;
Fern is one of our busiest and most genial classmates. Her&#13;
pleasant smile, sincere manner of expressing brilliant ideas, and&#13;
enthusiastic interest in student activities have won the admira•&#13;
tion of all. When someone is needed to work on committees,&#13;
Fern is always willing to do.more than her share. Absolutely dependable and a steadfast friend, she is an ideal college girl.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
"Wilse" is one of those happy-go-lucky fellows who never&#13;
worry. He delights in bothering the librarian and in talking with&#13;
the girls in the halls. He is an enthusiastic booster for the college, especially in athletics. If he thinks the project worth his&#13;
effort he can carry it through to a successful end, as has been&#13;
proven by his work as Business Manager of the SIOUX '17.&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
MARGUERITE BRETHORST&#13;
&#13;
Lennox, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite is a South Dakota girl , who some day hopes to join&#13;
her three sisters in the foreign field. She is kept pretty busy, for&#13;
she is finishing college in three years, but she still finds time to&#13;
attend all the college functions, social or otherwise. A girl who&#13;
believes in taking life as it comes, and salting it with plenty of&#13;
wit and good humor. She is satisfied only with the best.&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CLARK&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mildred came to us this year from Dakota Wesleyan, and we&#13;
certainly appreciate this move on her part. Her bright smile and&#13;
good fellowship make her an interesting companion. She likes&#13;
a good game of tennis, early in the morning. She is rather shy,&#13;
but is always ready for a mischievous good time. Mildred has&#13;
looked over the assortment of young men at Morningside, but still&#13;
hears from Mitchell.&#13;
&#13;
forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
JAY&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
CHRIST&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sloan, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
E. WE NDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
Some great and wise spirit knew what it was about when it&#13;
whispered in Jay Christ's ear, "Go to Morningside." By night&#13;
he sends life saving messages from post to post, and by day he&#13;
maintains a scholarship which is well worth our admiration. Remembering, in addition, his power of concentration, and his reputation as a debater, we would call him a man of unusual ability.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COOMER&#13;
&#13;
Wendell has won fame for his class and for his Alma Mater&#13;
in track, by holding the Morningside record in the one-half mile.&#13;
He was a tower of strength on the class basketball team. Last&#13;
Washington 's Birthday he learned the way out to the Monument,&#13;
and since then has made severa l trips on cloudy moonlight nights.&#13;
His capacity for hard work makes him one of the busiest men in&#13;
school.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Most every one knows Ethel, or has heard her sing. Next&#13;
year we expect that she will be charming the people of another&#13;
village with her beautiful voice and training the rising generation to a better knowledge and appreciation of music. She is a&#13;
faithful and cheerful worker, whether in Glee Club, in church,&#13;
or in society. Ethel is one of the kind who always ha s a cheerful&#13;
smile.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Talk about your Emerald Isles-if this is a fair sample, let's&#13;
have more of them. " Donna" is the boy who can put it across&#13;
equally well in the class-room and on the gridiron. He won his&#13;
letter at Yankton, but is too modest and unassuming to wear it&#13;
much down here. Another who must needs go back and forth&#13;
daily on the car, but does it gladly to be a " loyal son and and&#13;
true".&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE CUMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite makes an excellent fairy, and her black, curly&#13;
hair is the envy of her classmates, especially the boys. With&#13;
all of these winsome qualities she left us the second semester, and&#13;
went to teach German and Latin at Laurens. She has the faculty of being able to learn most everything, and at the same&#13;
time enjoy herself. We miss her cheery face, and will welcome&#13;
her back again next year.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE D UTTO N&#13;
&#13;
Haubstadt, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
George knows a good thing when he sees it, as was evidenced&#13;
last year by his coming all of the way from Indiana to enroll&#13;
in "The greatest seat of wisdom since Solomon died." Since his&#13;
arrival he has advanced from the Class of '18 to the Class of&#13;
' 17-more evidence of good judgment. A combination of jollity,&#13;
studiousness and reliability which can overcome all obstacles.&#13;
&#13;
forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
MERLE&#13;
&#13;
Humboldt, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH EDGE&#13;
&#13;
Westside, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Who knows Turk? We all do. The " Old War Horse" who&#13;
has helped to pull home the bacon from football and baseball&#13;
field s in a way that has helped to put Morningside on the map&#13;
for athletics. As a captain he has sacrificed much to promote&#13;
the interests of her teams. This is not all, in addition to his athletic attainments, Turk is a bird man, and can tell you all about&#13;
them.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Jack" joined us this year after wandering out to Colorado&#13;
and then back to Evanston for two years. He has at last found&#13;
the right school and the right class. We wonder how we ever&#13;
got along without each other. He possesses a keen, analytical&#13;
mind well fitted for majoring in Psych., and even shows symptoms of becoming a "shark". Spends much of his spare time&#13;
talking-intelligently too.&#13;
&#13;
fifty&#13;
&#13;
M a rcus, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FRE NCH&#13;
&#13;
"Frenchy"- a man from Mark Us ( Marcus), another of those&#13;
sp ecimens of the ra rely ever seen ( Book O podi us), a type of anim al sometimes found un der electric lig hts in the student's room&#13;
or in the laboratory hovering over the microscope. If caught in&#13;
time and nurtured ca refull y und er such men as Dr. Stephens,&#13;
w ill develop into a n excellent specimen of " Doctoreinius".&#13;
&#13;
Agreeable, unobtrusive, studious, we all like Beth, even&#13;
the faculty. She is one of the Loveland bunch, which fact indicates that she has had a good time, even though she seems so&#13;
quiet. She plays basketball with a good deal of zest. She&#13;
writes letters to Boston Theological Seminary,-but don't get excited, they are to her brother Joe.&#13;
&#13;
PAU L EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MIN NIE J. FRY&#13;
&#13;
M inn ie won fame this year by a th ree-minute speech, at a&#13;
chapel mass meeting. A sk Minnie if she did n't. If w e h ad&#13;
never heard that speech we w ould still remember her as a lover&#13;
of tennis. Minnie is a charming hostess, a loyal society worker,&#13;
a first-class Y. W. C. A. p resident, and above everything else a&#13;
g irl of sincere conv ictions an d sound good sense.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
C HARL ES GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux, Neb r.&#13;
&#13;
" Chick" really needs no introduction, fo r he matriculated way&#13;
back in '08. H e is one of those straight-forward kind, w ho&#13;
knows exactly where he stands upon a ny subject. He has won&#13;
honor for his class a nd for his Alma M ater in d ebate, and some&#13;
d ay we shall see hi m administering justice in an impartial way.&#13;
H e is not only a cool, d eliberate master of the platform, but also&#13;
sing s in the G lee Club, and takes pa rt in athletics.&#13;
&#13;
fifty -one&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
RUTH GILLIES&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
" Moxie" can never outlive his reputation as a joker. They&#13;
tried to quarantine him over at Patrick's, but he got the&#13;
small pox and broke out. He had nerve enough to attempt canvassing last summer. Moxie comes from the West&#13;
but looks toward the East for his inspiration. His aspirations lead him toward a goal which shall sometime be reached, by one withsuch&#13;
an earnest purpose.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth is a minister's daughter, one of those lovable creatures&#13;
whom we all like to have around. She is cheerful and optimistic, except that her studies worry her a little. She sings in the&#13;
Madrigal Club and majors in Latin. She is also vice-president&#13;
of the Agora Club. Ruth has surprised us all by flashing a Chi&#13;
Delta pin. Nine rahs for Brownie!&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
LUCIA&#13;
&#13;
Hinton, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
" Anna's" chief characteristic is perseverance. For the past&#13;
few years he has been trying to find a class with whom he might&#13;
be proud to graduate, and we welcome him to our midst. An&#13;
enthusiastic athlete, for he has been content to labor on the second team that Morningside's first team might be better. For the&#13;
past two years he has been an active member of the Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
Lucia spent one year at Ames, but decided to finish at Morningside. We have learned to depend upon her, for her worth&#13;
has been tried and proven. She would make an excellent suffragette if we were to judge by her ability to recite in History and&#13;
Politics. She has the excellent quality of sticking to her friends&#13;
through thick and thin.&#13;
&#13;
Ray is an all-round man . When he is not working in the&#13;
science laboratory, he may be found attending to his numerous&#13;
duties as president of the Y. M. C. A., heaving the shot or discus&#13;
out on Bass Field, or playing the saxophone in the college band.&#13;
He is a thorough student, even taking an active interest in Domestic Science.&#13;
&#13;
WALTER W. HELD&#13;
&#13;
Hagerman, New Mexico&#13;
&#13;
EARL E. HICKS&#13;
&#13;
Clear Lake, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
Le Mars, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
" Al" is our dapper young man from Le Mars. Loves fun,&#13;
makes it, and enjoys it. Has been a free lance until this year,&#13;
but he fell and fell hard. However he still had himself well&#13;
enough in hand to mount the Annual pictures, pursue his ambitions on the cinder track and manage his club at Cobbs. His&#13;
avocation is stepping, his vocation is Geology.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
NEVA&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HOUK&#13;
&#13;
Anna is a happy combination of Irish wit and Yankee shrewdness. She has made a success in intercollegiate debate and has&#13;
twice represented the college in that field. Studies are the least&#13;
of her worries but she gets more than her share of A grades, and&#13;
at the same time is making college in three years. Her greatest&#13;
responsibility to date is instructing her professors to spell her&#13;
name correctly-"two f's, if you please".&#13;
&#13;
Neva is one of those modest, sincere, dependable persons who&#13;
are indispensable to every class and every college. She is not&#13;
spectacular in the performance of her duties, but is always found&#13;
ready and willing. She is a consistent student, with an invaluable resource of experience along pedagogical lines, upon which&#13;
to rely. In short, she has made an excellent record in Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR H. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Art" is one of Uncle Sam's soldier boys. Calm and self-con. trolled, he says what he thinks and then holds firmly to the convictions which are formed. Yet beneath that calm exterior lies a&#13;
wit which can always detect humor in the situation. He has remarkable literary talent, especially along lines of thrilling romance.&#13;
&#13;
LEON J. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Jons" is a versatile genius. He is right at home on the gridiron, basketball floor, or diamond, behind the footlights, in the&#13;
kitchen, or warbling with the Glee Club. He ably fills any&#13;
position from " Mrs. Bridget Van Deutscher", President of the&#13;
Bingville Musical Uplift Society, to the hard-hitting, shifty half&#13;
back and, captain of the football team.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ANNA KEEFFE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
"Killy," known as the "Man in the Moon," spends most of his&#13;
spare time attending to his duties as president of the Forensic&#13;
League. While his interest in debate and history take a great&#13;
deal of attention, he still finds time occasionally to visit a little&#13;
black-eyed girl on Jones Street. "Killy" has been with us from&#13;
the cradle up.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Illinois sent us a good specimen when Jim arrived, and the&#13;
care he has had here is producing remarkable results. He is&#13;
always ready for work or fun, and is a master of both. A busy&#13;
student, he can sing "coon" songs, play the mandolin, violin, or&#13;
bass drum, give midnight serenades, and still find time to let&#13;
Lida "take gym".&#13;
&#13;
fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
LAUB&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD LEHAN&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd's chief accomplishment, outside of the class room, is ten nis. His skill in this sport won the fal l tournament for him last&#13;
year and made him the logical man for president of the Tennis&#13;
Association, which position he now holds.&#13;
Another dapper&#13;
young "stepper" who delights in the social wh irl, as is evidenced&#13;
by hi s attendance at all the class parties and his use of the time&#13;
between cl asses.&#13;
&#13;
Helen started with the class of ' 16, but she dropped out to&#13;
teach a year, and so the class of '17 is glad to claim her. She is&#13;
a reader of pronounced ability, very conscientious, of cheerful&#13;
temperament, and a general favorite of all, including the boys.&#13;
She is talking of teaching again next year but we hope she will&#13;
change her mind and finish with us.&#13;
&#13;
Lansing, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
B. EDITH LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
A most conscientious and earnest girl, who comes to school with&#13;
a firm determination to get the most out of college. She is an excellent student, active in all lines of Christian work in the church&#13;
and the college. A student volunteer who because of the earnestness of her purpose, the sincerity of her life, and her spirit of&#13;
self-sacrifice is sure to make a helpful and successful worker in&#13;
her chosen field.&#13;
&#13;
Rachel is not so bashful as you might think. Unassuming,&#13;
modest, optimistic, and amiable, she makes a faithful friend even&#13;
though we have known her such a short time. Her reputation at&#13;
Buena Vista has followed her, and in consequence you find her&#13;
one of our earnest workers on the Y. W. C. A. Cabinet.&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA E . MCBURNEY&#13;
HARVEY&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
Yankton, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Harvey joined us last fall, coming here from Yankton College.&#13;
With hi s trombone he soon became a valuabl e asset to the college band, and just to show us that he really did have musical&#13;
ability he soon won a place in the Glee Club. Not content with&#13;
being merely musical, he is a brilliant student as well, especially&#13;
in the sciences.&#13;
&#13;
fif Ly-six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Cornelia is a friend worth havi ng. Always cheerful and will ing, she creates an atmosphere of congeniality wherever she may&#13;
be. She has gained much from college besides grades, is very&#13;
fond of "French" to which subject she has devoted much time&#13;
and thought during her college course. We expect that after she&#13;
finishes college she will gi ve "it" her entire thought an d consideration.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
GLENN&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Spencer, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
ARTHU R&#13;
&#13;
The elusive little forward who shoots baskets from almost anywhere on the floor. Spends a large part of his time on or near the&#13;
Crescent Park car line, and is well acquainted with the shortest&#13;
way out from the car barn. A good trombonist, an efficient playground instructor, and an aspiring physical director.&#13;
&#13;
R UTH&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Art is a whole-hearted college man, studies hard and makes&#13;
the required number of A grades, besides making good in debate.&#13;
He fusses systematically one night a week. As to the girls, he&#13;
loves them all , but has not specialized yet. He aspires to success&#13;
in the business world.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
OLSON&#13;
&#13;
LA URA&#13;
&#13;
We might search the dictionary through but we could not find a&#13;
word that would so fully describe Ruth as "friend, " and h er&#13;
friend ship once given is sure to be appreciated. A faithful worker in church, society, and classes, and an accomplished musician.&#13;
Examinations frighten her terribly, but that is because she underestimates her own ability, for her professors know her as a consistent student.&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PEASE&#13;
&#13;
Laura has a spirit that can never die. She pursues her studies&#13;
assiduously, and gets the highest results in everything except&#13;
Psych., but there is another reason for that. Laura has auburn&#13;
hair, literary aspirations and hig h ambitions. She hopes she has&#13;
told the truth about everybody in the class, as fa r as possible.&#13;
She almost got F ickle once, but he went to Wisconsin U.&#13;
&#13;
Castana, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mary, the most sympathetic friend we ha ve, can always say&#13;
the right word at the right time. She has big brown eyes that&#13;
fa irly dance when she is happy, and that is most of the time.&#13;
Everyone knows her fa iling fo r "carrots." Her banking business&#13;
is carried on by means of special delivery letters in yellow envelopes. She says she hopes to teach English, but on ly for one&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
"Mandy" has been with us from the start, and no other girl in&#13;
school has more real friends. She is loved by "one" and all.&#13;
We cannot explain the mystery of her hidden power, but we are&#13;
aware that it exists. Her sympathetic and genial nature combine&#13;
well with her hobby, " home-making." She studies the textbooks,&#13;
"Good Housekeeping" and "The Craftsman," faithfully. A&#13;
splendid girl on committees when there is w ork to do.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Bess is in a class all by herself. She has heaps and heaps of&#13;
fluffy curls and the prettiest pink cheeks. She gets her lessons,&#13;
but they do not hinder her from having a good time. Her friends&#13;
often enjoy her hospitable entertainment. Bess's disposition is&#13;
sweet and most lovable.&#13;
&#13;
Harry is one of the most conscientious men in school. A thorough student, and quiet as a mouse until you get acquainted with&#13;
him; then you realize in part what you have been missing. If&#13;
you think him too shy to even look at the girls, just watch him&#13;
in the laboratory or on bird trips.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
SCHIEDER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
VERA&#13;
&#13;
George is a preacher by profession and a married man by&#13;
choice. After deciding that two heads were better than one he&#13;
used his eloquence to good advantage. He takes an active interest in the Teutonia Club, which received his support while a&#13;
student at Charles City. His willingness to work and his cheery&#13;
smile have won the friendship of his classmates.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ROSENE&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Alta, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SIPE&#13;
&#13;
Vera is a quiet, consistent and industrious individual. She has&#13;
the knack of winning the respect and good-will of all who know&#13;
her. She never advertises her good deeds, nor does she need to.&#13;
Vera has splendid musical ability, although few people are&#13;
aware of this fact. In serving on committees she has proved to&#13;
be an efficient and dependable worker.&#13;
&#13;
Manson, Iowa&#13;
GAYLORD&#13;
&#13;
One of the finest girls ever enrolled at old M. C. By her&#13;
earnest loyalty, her sweet-tempered disposition, and her true&#13;
friendship, she has become a favorite among the students, and&#13;
·with one graduate student in particular. She is president of the&#13;
Y. W. C. A. and a dependable worker in all college activities.&#13;
W e can say of Marie that her life rings true.&#13;
&#13;
sixty&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
STARR&#13;
&#13;
St. Lawrence, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Gaylord is a South Dakota lad. He is bright in his studies,&#13;
bright in his ideas, and bright in his neckties. He is gentle, imperturbable, and confident. He aspires to the profession of law&#13;
and to the admiration of the fair sex. But just at present he is&#13;
most often found in the science laboratory.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
STEELE&#13;
&#13;
" Don" is one of our intercollegiate debaters. Besides winning&#13;
the silver medal in the Monument Run, he has demonstrated his&#13;
ability as a student, especially in chemistry. Don takes time to&#13;
consider many deep problems but when he does express himself&#13;
he has an opinion worth while. Has not shown particular interest in the girls, but perhaps thinks one year is sufficient for&#13;
"fussology."&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy is small, with light hair and blue eyes. But whatever she lacks in height, she makes up in good humor and cheerful disposition. She is not trivial but manages to combine fun&#13;
and work in such a charming manner that her friends wonder&#13;
which is her master. The biggest responsibility of her college&#13;
life, so far, is taking care of her young big brother.&#13;
&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
Manson, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
DON VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
Sinclair, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
After two years at Illinois Woman's College, Clara decided&#13;
to come to a co-ed school, and could find none better than Morningside. She is a recognized leader, for she has been chosen&#13;
president of the Agora Cl uh. Her influence is felt a great distance away, for a certain student at Princeton asks her advice&#13;
concerning matters as important as texts for sermons. Clara is&#13;
a girl of high ideals and lives up to them.&#13;
&#13;
LILAH&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
One of the Van Nest twins! She is very much like her sister; in fact, it is hard to tell them apart. Helen is majoring in&#13;
German and loves to study Greek. She is an excellent student&#13;
and aspires to honorable mention at the end of her college career.&#13;
The twins are always jolly whenever and wherever you meet&#13;
them.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
MARIE VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
Lilah is a bright, energetic Junior lass with shining eyes and a&#13;
happy disposition. She is never mistaken for a lover of men or&#13;
books, although she has more than a passing acquaintance with&#13;
both. Always bubbling over with fun, always good-natured and&#13;
loyal to her friends. She likes good times and is often accused&#13;
of specializing in them.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
The other Van Nest twin! Marie holds a gold medal which&#13;
she received for a high standard of work in history. Like her&#13;
twin she is a brilliant student, but she prefers to study Latin.&#13;
One of these people who take A grades as a matter of course, and&#13;
never accept but the best.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
DONALD&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
\VALTO N&#13;
&#13;
EMMA&#13;
&#13;
"Don" is our busy editor and landlord of the Sunshine Inn.&#13;
He is retiring in manner and a man of few words, but when he&#13;
does talk he has something to say. Besides being a gospel team&#13;
worker and somewhat of a debater, he finds time for a " quadrennium of fun." By his frank and cheerful manner, he has&#13;
won a host of friends.&#13;
&#13;
WIESE&#13;
&#13;
If you are heavy-hearted and downcast just get Emma to chase&#13;
away the blues. She is blessed with cheeriness and that happy&#13;
state of mind which can grasp a situation and turn it to good use.&#13;
She is a good student, especially of German, and has the excellent quality of reliability. She went to Nebraska Wesleyan once,&#13;
but we know she will not go back now.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ALICE WARING&#13;
&#13;
EWART&#13;
&#13;
Alice comes out to school every morning from her home in the&#13;
city. She arrived here with a good record for grades and bids&#13;
fair to leave with a still better one. She is majoring in mathematics, so how could she help it? Alice is quiet and unassuming in manner, but nevertheless a charming companion.&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Ewart is sure some "Russeler." If you are in doubt ask Lois.&#13;
Editor of the Collegian Reporter, and cartoonist for the annual,&#13;
he still finds time for other college activities. He has a rare&#13;
combination of wit and humor, possesses musical and drawing&#13;
ability, and enjoys athletics. Wherever he goes he creates a pleasant atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
Avon, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
May is our " Girl of the Golden West," for she comes from a&#13;
big ranch in South Dakota. College is a serious matter with&#13;
her, and she manages to take domestic science as well as expression, for she knows that she will have need of " household art"&#13;
when she goes to live on her farm near Whiting. A girl on&#13;
whom we can depend and who does her work thoroughly and&#13;
zealously.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
NOEL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Noel is a reliable old scout, and a bachelor by nature, although&#13;
he takes some pleasure in conversing with the fair sex. His hobby&#13;
is chasing birds with a field glass, and his most difficult duty is&#13;
looking after his brother. He has been in M. C. for a long time&#13;
and knows the history of nearly all the grads.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomores&#13;
I. Back&#13;
&#13;
S. Wormley&#13;
&#13;
I.Smith&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OFFICERS&#13;
President, HERALD WALKER&#13;
Vice-President, FRANCES KOLP&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, LOUISE HANSEN.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
Orange and Black&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
sixty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�HORACE WULF&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OFFICERS&#13;
President, HORACE WULF.&#13;
Vice-President, MIRIAM&#13;
&#13;
FISH.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, MARGARET STRUCK.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
Green and White&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
seventy&#13;
&#13;
sev enty-one&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
FRES HMEN&#13;
&#13;
sev enty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Department of Home Economics&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
The new Department of Home Economics means a great deal to the girl who takes&#13;
the two-year course or who has chosen Home Economics as her college major. To&#13;
her, homemaking has taken its place of real dignity among the worth-while occupations&#13;
of the world; and whether she contributes to it directly, in her own home, or indirectly, in teaching, she feels that it commands her keenest intelligence, inspires her&#13;
highest effort, and justifies her greatest devotion. She brings to it the efficiency which&#13;
develops from a training of mind, eye and hand to work in concert, and the understanding of scientific problems which illuminates the simplest household task. In short,&#13;
she learns how to bake, and how to teach others to bake; she learns whether, under&#13;
given circumstances, it is wiser to buy or to make the bread; she learns what are the&#13;
city and state laws regarding the sanitary handling of bread and flour, and whether&#13;
these laws are enforced.&#13;
The girl who completes this course has done more than read texts. She has made&#13;
clothes and hats of every description; planned, prepared, and served meals fo r every&#13;
variety of purse and occupation; demonstrated before her critical classmates; and&#13;
planned and prepared practice lessons. She has pursued an education which is at&#13;
once cultural and vocational.&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
seventy-four&#13;
sev enty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
INTERIOR OF CONSERVATORY&#13;
The mission of a music department connected with a college of liberal arts differs in&#13;
many respects from the independent music school; for, in such an environment, music&#13;
becomes much more than a mere professional study and takes its proper place in the&#13;
general curriculum of education. The study of fine arts has assumed a place of great&#13;
importance in the modern educational scheme. For centuries education was considered&#13;
as merely cultural. Then came a reaction, and the cultural side of education was&#13;
largely lost to sight.&#13;
The Conservatory of Music at Morningside College has experienced a most substantial growth during the past six years; and while the attendance and tuition receipts have almost doubled in this time, yet the most important advancement has been&#13;
made in the methods of study and the character of the work offered. The standards&#13;
have been raised, until the requirements for graduation are fully up to those of any&#13;
college music school. Such institutions as the New England Conservatory of Music&#13;
and Oberlin Conservatory recognize the standards and accept the graduates on their&#13;
records.&#13;
&#13;
Music Seniors&#13;
&#13;
Courses now offered in the Conservatory are as follows: Pianoforte, Artists'&#13;
Course; Pianoforte, Teachers' Course; Singing, Artists' Course; Singing, Teachers'&#13;
Course; Violin, Artists' Course; Violin, Teachers' Course; Pipe Organ; Public&#13;
School Music; Theory of Music; Mandolin , Guitar, Banjo, Viola. These are all&#13;
organized courses, leading to diplomas or certificates, but there are many other courses&#13;
available, either in whole or in part, such as Sight Singing, Accompanying, Choir&#13;
Training, General Aesthetics, etc.&#13;
The equipment of the Conservatory is one of its strongest features. First in this&#13;
respect is the new building, which has arisen within the stone walls that remained of&#13;
the old building which was burned a year ago. In place of the old wooden construction , everything is of stone, steel, and concrete. On the first floor are the Conservatory&#13;
offices, the Reading Room, and the Recital Hall with its one hundred folding opera&#13;
chairs, its pipe organ, and concert grand piano.&#13;
The second and third floors of the building are devoted to studios and practice&#13;
rooms, which are admirably suited for this purpose. Indeed, it would be difficult to&#13;
find a better equipped building for musical purposes anywhere in the middle west.&#13;
Special attention is given to the instrumental music. Ten grand pianos and nine&#13;
uprights are in constant use. The studios are all furnished with new library chairs&#13;
and tables, music racks, and blackboards.&#13;
Thus housed and equipped, together with the excellent faculty that is in charge of&#13;
the work, there is every reason to expect that the Conservatory will, in the next few&#13;
years, surpass the record of the past five yea rs.&#13;
&#13;
seventy-seven&#13;
seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
�School of Expression&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Same as Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
Godfrey Cass .................... Mildred Pecaut&#13;
Dunst an Cass .................... Dorothy Gootch&#13;
&#13;
Squire Cass ......................Louise Sammons&#13;
Godfrey Cass ...................... Fern Beacham&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
In Silas Marner's cottage.&#13;
D unstan Cass .................. Dorothy Gootch&#13;
Silas Marner ......................Alice Stanhope&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
SCENES FROM "S HE STOOPS TO CONQUER"&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
In home of Squire Cass.&#13;
&#13;
Same as Scene I.&#13;
VI&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
In home of Godfrey Cass, sixteen years&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
At the Rainbow Tavern.&#13;
Silas M arner ............................Alice Boyd&#13;
Landlord ............................ Grace Hartzell&#13;
Butcher ............................ Elma Parkinson&#13;
Jem Rodney ............ ....... Louise Sammons&#13;
Farrier ................................May Wickens&#13;
Mr. Macy ............................ Gladys C!ark&#13;
&#13;
later.&#13;
Godfrey Cass .................. Lou ise Sammons&#13;
Mrs. C ass ............................ Fern Beacham&#13;
Jane ................................... :Alice Stanhope&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
VII&#13;
&#13;
In Silas Marner's cottage.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
interpreted by Senior Class June 12, 1915.&#13;
"She Stoops to Conquer,"&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Hardcastle................. .Lovice Strobel&#13;
Mrs. Hardcastle..................Doris Struble&#13;
Tony Lumpkin •••.•.••••••••••Ruth Blackman&#13;
Miss N ewcastle ..............Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Miss Neville ................Mabel McComber&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
George H astmgs ............. .E lizabeth James&#13;
Charles Marlow ........Eleanor Winkelman&#13;
Sir Chas. Marlow ............ Helcn Warfield&#13;
L andlord ..........................Marie Anderson&#13;
Servant ............................Florence Forbes&#13;
&#13;
AcT I&#13;
Sc. 1.- Room in Mr. Hardcastle's house.&#13;
Sc. 2-Public room in the Three Pigeons.&#13;
ACT II&#13;
Parlor in Mr. H ardcastle's house.&#13;
&#13;
AcT IV&#13;
Same as Act Ill.&#13;
AcT V&#13;
Sc. 1- Room in Mr. Hardcastle's house.&#13;
Sc. 2- Park in rear of house.&#13;
Sc. 3- Room in Mr. H ardcastle s house.&#13;
&#13;
AcT Ill&#13;
Same as Act. II.&#13;
"Silas Marner," interpreted by Junior Class, March 15, 1916.&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
&#13;
Silas Marner ..................Dorothy Gootch&#13;
Squire Cass ......................Mildred Pecaut&#13;
Godfrey Cass ............................Alice Boyd&#13;
The R ector. .........................May Wickens&#13;
Mr. C rack enth orp ........... .Grace H artzell&#13;
Dr. Kimble ........................E lma Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
NancyLameter ....................Fern Beacham&#13;
Mrs. Crackenthorp ..............G ladys C lark&#13;
Silas Marner ............................Alice Boyd&#13;
Godfrey Cass ....................Mildred Pecaut&#13;
M rs. C ass ........... . ...............Fern Beacham&#13;
Eppie ..................................Alice Stanhope&#13;
&#13;
EXPRESSION SENIORS&#13;
The Department of Expression aims to be thoroughly educational by offering a&#13;
course of study that will result in greater culture, increased personal power and ability&#13;
to command one's resources, as well as to prepare effective readers, platform speakers&#13;
and teachers. No mechanical methods are used and the student's development is&#13;
along natural lines.&#13;
The cou rse of study covers two years and requires eight hours of class work and a&#13;
half-hour private lesson every week. In addition, each candidate for gradu ation must&#13;
classify Freshman, and have taken English I and I V in the regular college classes.&#13;
One period each week is given over to recital work in which each student pursuing&#13;
the regular course will be expected to take part. O ccasional public recit als are given&#13;
during the year, thus affording advanced pupils the opportunity to appear before larger&#13;
audiences.&#13;
Upon satisfactory completion of the course, a diploma is granted , and ten hours'&#13;
credit is given toward a degree in any one of the regular courses of the college.&#13;
&#13;
seventy-nine&#13;
seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
�SENIOR ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Academy offers an opportunity to those who have been unable to&#13;
attend high school to pursue the equivalent of a high school course in a college environment. The Conservatory of Music and School of Expression are also open to&#13;
students of Academy rank. Academy work may or may not be taken in preparation for&#13;
college entrance.&#13;
The students are allowed all the advantages of the gymnasium and athletics, the&#13;
college lecture course, the college library, and in short, to enjoy most of the privileges&#13;
and advantages afforded by a first-class college. the faculty maintains a high standard, and the equipment on the lower floor of the Conservatory of Music is well&#13;
adapted for the work.&#13;
&#13;
eighty&#13;
&#13;
�eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
&#13;
CABINET&#13;
CABINET&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE FRY --------------· ····--···-·-·President&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE -------·-·-····-·-·---Bible Study&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD __________ Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN ---···-·-···-····-·---Devotional&#13;
&#13;
G. B. PATRICK. ______ __ _________ _________ President&#13;
&#13;
A. C. PAYNE-----·-·-···-·····-·-·Administration&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EASTHOUSE --··-··-·--···-·-·-·Mission&#13;
&#13;
C. H&#13;
&#13;
N. J. WILLIAMS___________ _ _&#13;
____ _______ Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Bible Study&#13;
ORIN BELL.·-·--···-·······--------·-·&#13;
Wm. WOLLE_______ _ Community Service&#13;
____&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS McBRIDE____________________ Secretary&#13;
&#13;
J. R. KOLP---···-··········-·--··-Campus Service&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN ·-··-······-·····--·-·----Secretary&#13;
MARION JOHNSON -·-········-···-·-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
FERN BEACHAM ·-·--··--·-----···----------Social&#13;
&#13;
ELMA PARKINSON ________ Association News&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE LEAZER __________ Social Service&#13;
&#13;
KLIPPEL __________________ Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
EARL BURGESS ·-·····-·---·-··-··-----Life Work&#13;
my dear fellow students : The Y. W. C. A. is a mighty influence in the college&#13;
girl's life because it creates good comradeship. This year, on the first day after the&#13;
new girls arrived, each of them received a note containing greetings from the Y. W_&#13;
and an invitation to a reception where all the girls in school could become acquainted.&#13;
Besides this, the Y. W. gives the college gi rl a chance to deepen her spiritual self&#13;
in the weekly devotional meetings. These meetings are conducted by either students&#13;
or out-of-town visitors, and deal with problems of vital importance to every girl. Dr.&#13;
Craig assisted wonderfully this year with a week's series of addresses.&#13;
These are but two phases of the Y. W.'s activity. Let all the girls continue to support and receive benefit from the Y. W.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
To every red-blooded man the Y. M. C. A. presents a challenge to unselfish service&#13;
for his school, for his fellows, and for his community. The weekly devotional meetings held every Wednesday night, the evangelistic and membership campaigns, the&#13;
voluntary study courses, and the social events offer the chance for a valuable and complete development in Christian leadership. The gospel team work, which this year&#13;
has been conducted with remarkable success, is daily awakening scores of men in and&#13;
around Sioux City to see their opportunities for helpful Christian service in their&#13;
every-day life. This is the call and challenge of our college Y. M. C. A.-to a&#13;
Christian life, which is essentially unselfish, and which is the same during the week&#13;
as it is on Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Association Social Service&#13;
&#13;
GOSPEL TEAM&#13;
&#13;
WALL STREET MISSION&#13;
&#13;
The gospel team is one of the livest departments of the Y . M. C. A. It is composed of live men , conducting live meetings in a live way. During the year, the&#13;
college Y. M. has cooperated with the Sioux City Y. M . The men go out in teams&#13;
of five , not only to the churches of Sioux City but also to neighboring towns. One&#13;
team spent an entire week during Christmas vacation at Primghar, Iowa. This year,&#13;
the men have made nineteen visits, conducted seventy-two meetings, addressed some&#13;
sixteen thousand persons, and held seven hundred and twenty-nine personal interviews. As a result one hundred and forty-seven decisions to lead the Christian life&#13;
have been made, two hundred and fifty have joined church, and about one thousand&#13;
forward steps have been made.&#13;
While the Y. M. has been doing such fine work, the Y. W. C. A. has been&#13;
equally as busy with the more unfortunate children and parents in the poorer districts of Sioux City. This work is centered about Haddock and Wall Street Missions and the Florence Crittenden Horne. The work consists of Bible study classes,&#13;
a night school, sewing and cooking lessons, and gymnasium or play training. While&#13;
this work is aimed especially to aid the children who do not have an opportunity to&#13;
attend the public schools, it is of great advantage to the college students themselves.&#13;
It acquaints them with the underlying conditions of this class of people, makes them&#13;
more sympathetic with the poorer people, and broadens their social knowledge.&#13;
&#13;
LAKE GENEVA&#13;
&#13;
eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
�The Student Volunteer Band&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN ------------------------------------------------------------President&#13;
MARGUERITE BRETHORST ______&#13;
________ _ _&#13;
___ ________&#13;
_____________ Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
O F FICERS&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL ___ ___ _____ ___ _ _ _ __ _ _ ____ _ ______________ _&#13;
_ _ __ _ ___ __ _ ____ __&#13;
President&#13;
CHARLES H. KLIPPEL. _____ _ __ __ __ _____________ _ _ ________ _&#13;
__ _&#13;
__ _ __&#13;
___________ V ice-President&#13;
F. EARL BURGESS _ _ _ _ _ ____ ____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ Secret ary-T reasu rer&#13;
______ _ _ _ ___ ___ __ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _&#13;
EwART L. W ILLIAMS__ _ ____ _ __ _ _ _&#13;
_ _ _ ___ _______________ _ __ _ _ __ _____________ R eporter&#13;
___ _ _ _ _ _______&#13;
&#13;
Declaration : It is my purpose, if God permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
The organization started in Morningside in 1902, and is a branch of a national&#13;
movement that had its beginning in a Bible Study Conference held at Mt. H ermon,&#13;
Massachusetts, J uly, 1896. This band endeavors to interest you ng men and women&#13;
in foreign missionary work. Problems of the foreign field are discussed, and a syst ematic preparation for the future life of service is encouraged. Representatives of&#13;
this band may be found in C hina, India, Korea, and South America.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Prohibition L eague is a local branch of the Intercollegiate Prohibition Association, w hich is the largest civic student movement in A merica. In the nat ion-wide campaign w hich is being successfully waged against the liquor traffic, the I.&#13;
P . A. occupies a peculiarly strategic position. I t is the training school for leadership.&#13;
This is brought abou t by means of study classes, lectures, oratorical contests, and field&#13;
activities. Last year seventy-eight college leagues sent fi ve hundred men into depu tation&#13;
and educational community work as quartettes of singers, speaking teams, petition canvassers, vote pledgers, and surveyors of saloon conditions.&#13;
This year the local league enrolled fi fty-six in membership. A short study cou rse&#13;
w as undertaken, using Richardson's "Liquor Problem" as a text. Survey of local and&#13;
state saloon cond it ions was made. Four contestants took part in the annual Prohibition Oratorical contest at which forty dollars in prizes w as given by M r. E rwin&#13;
Dewey of Sergeant's Bluffs.&#13;
during the past year, Morningside has also held the presidency of the State Association.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�The Student Counci;&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ........................................................................KATHERINE SPRY&#13;
Vice-President ........................................................................ HAZEL DAY&#13;
Secretary .............................................................................. CLARA SWAIN&#13;
Treasurer ............................................................................ LEONE LANGE&#13;
Dean of Women ................................................ Miss. LILLIAN DIMMTT&#13;
STANDING COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN&#13;
Athletics ............................................................................LOVICE STROBEL&#13;
Auditing ................................................................ CORNELIA McBuRNEY&#13;
Forensics .............................................................. ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
Membership .................................................................. MARION JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
HowARD ALLEN ...................................... ................................. President&#13;
&#13;
Social .................................................................................. MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
K ATHERINE SPRY .............................................................. .Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
Student Government ...·.........................................................ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN ............................................ Secretary-Treasu rer&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Board is t he administrative body which is chosen by the girls of the student body to represent their interests. During the past year, the Board has certainly&#13;
performed its work well. I t has given every girl in school an opportunity to engage in&#13;
debate, dramatics, athletics, and social good times ..&#13;
Each month the club had some special feature at their Saturday night meeting. One&#13;
month Mr. E. C. Wolcott gave an address; another time there was a "Post-Exam&#13;
Jubilee." But the most important event of the year was the Agora banquet, which&#13;
was the best in the history of the college both in spirit and in attendance.&#13;
The Agora Club is beyond question a great factor in each girl's college life, because&#13;
it gives her a place to assert and develop her abilities.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
The Student Council is a representative body of students who meet bi-monthly to&#13;
discuss matters of common interest to the whole school. H ere affairs which trouble&#13;
The&#13;
both faculty and students are threshed out and a suitable remedy proposed.&#13;
group is a medium of increased cooperation between the student body and the faculty.&#13;
One of the most apparent features of the Student Council is the series of successful&#13;
meetings w hich are held every Thursday at the chapel hour, with the student body&#13;
president presiding. Everyone goes to chapel on Thu rsday, curious but assured of&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�l&#13;
Grace Church Choir&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Director _________________________________ _&#13;
_______________ _______&#13;
___________ ___ __ PROF- McCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
D irector -------------------------------,--------------------------------PROF. W .&#13;
&#13;
President --------------------------------------------------------------------------G- G.&#13;
&#13;
President ------------------------------------------------------------------------A. L. FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
GORDON&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President -------------------------------------------------------------------RUBY FLINN&#13;
Secretary and Librarian _____ _ __ _&#13;
__ ___________ _&#13;
_______________ ____________ N. RICHARDSON&#13;
Treasurer --------------------------------------------------------------------EARL FuLLBROOK&#13;
Executive Committee: NOLA Ho u K, MINNIE FRY, GLEN OXFORD,&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
H IMM EL&#13;
&#13;
Vice-Presdent. ------------------------------------------------------------------GEORGE EASTON&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ---------------···-·-··-----------------------------E. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
Librarian --------------------------------------------------------------------------FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
N. RICHARDSON&#13;
&#13;
MEM B E R SHIP&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Soprano&#13;
SARAH LEHMAN&#13;
&#13;
MRS. G . G . GORDON&#13;
MRS. McCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
T enor&#13;
&#13;
NOLA HO UK&#13;
&#13;
EDITH WILLIAMS&#13;
MARGARET F ERG USON&#13;
R U BY HILL&#13;
&#13;
Clarinet&#13;
&#13;
Cornet&#13;
&#13;
w. J.&#13;
&#13;
R OYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL&#13;
R. F . R ANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
&#13;
FRA NCIS H AY&#13;
&#13;
M AE SMITH&#13;
&#13;
C. OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
PROF. MCCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
ANNA OLSON&#13;
&#13;
V. GERKIN&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE PEASE&#13;
&#13;
NOBLE RICH ARDSON&#13;
&#13;
OMA&#13;
&#13;
RuBY FLINN&#13;
&#13;
EARL FULLBROOK&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS D ANIELS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE EASTON&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER OLSON&#13;
&#13;
OTIS DAY&#13;
&#13;
MISS L EHAN&#13;
&#13;
GLENN NOE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE L ARSON&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
Alto&#13;
&#13;
HELEN VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
MIN NIE FRY&#13;
&#13;
B ass&#13;
&#13;
MRS. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
ETH EL HEDENR URG&#13;
&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
&#13;
Miss MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
MR. MARPLE&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GLEASON&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD CAIN&#13;
&#13;
GLYDEDEVITT&#13;
&#13;
MARIE MAHOOD&#13;
R UTH Hos FORD&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
RAE WHITTEMORE&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
ROYC E ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTENSON&#13;
&#13;
Flute&#13;
OTIS D AY&#13;
&#13;
Alto&#13;
&#13;
Eu phonium&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Saxophone&#13;
&#13;
Trombone&#13;
&#13;
A. L. FREEMAN&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
w . L AWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Drums&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
GLENN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
Tuba&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
R. OSTLING&#13;
E . NEAL&#13;
&#13;
VERNE P AUL&#13;
&#13;
This year, Professor Himmel has developed probably the best band in Morning-&#13;
&#13;
Miss WICKSTRUM&#13;
&#13;
EDNA ORGAN&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
A URELIA ST URDEVANT&#13;
&#13;
G. G. GORDON&#13;
&#13;
side's history out of pract ically new mat erial.&#13;
&#13;
ELLA MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
JANETTE WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
ARTH U R L INDSEY&#13;
&#13;
men have worked h a rd.&#13;
&#13;
GLEN OXFORD&#13;
&#13;
enth usiasm at our football games or mass meetings.&#13;
&#13;
The qualit y of the work shows that the&#13;
&#13;
They have been an important factor in generating pep and&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�Madrigal Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
H ARRY CLARK -------------------------------- --------------------------------------------President&#13;
DELBERT McKIN NEY -----------------------------------------------· Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
PAUL MAcCOLLIN _______________________________________________ ___ ____ Manager-Director&#13;
ARTH UR LINDSEY ----------------------------------------------------------Student Manager&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
LOVICE STROBEL------------------------------------------------------------------------- President&#13;
ANNA MAE EvANS----------------------------------------------------Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
L ORENE WILLIAMS -------------·-------------------------: ______________ _&#13;
________ _ _Librarian&#13;
____&#13;
MRS. PAUL M cCoLLIN _______________ ___ _______ ________ ________________ _ _&#13;
__ ___ ______ Di rector&#13;
__&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
First T enor&#13;
&#13;
Second T enor&#13;
&#13;
A ARON RUTH&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
D ELB ERT McKINNEY&#13;
DAVID BLEAKLY&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
ANDR EW HA UGAN&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS H AY&#13;
C ARL ANDERSON&#13;
NOBLE RICHARDSON&#13;
AYLAND C ASE&#13;
RICHARD B URROWS&#13;
PA UL MacCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Baritone&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
LOUISBLEAKLY&#13;
RALPH OVERHOLSER&#13;
THOMAS CAIN&#13;
H UGH FOUKE&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY L AWRENC E&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
H ARRY CLARK&#13;
ARTHUR LINDS EY&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
Pianist, GEORGE EASTON&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday, December 28-Lake Park.&#13;
Wednesday, December 29-Estherville.&#13;
Thursday, December 30-Swea City.&#13;
Friday, December 31-Goldfield.&#13;
Saturday, January 1-Belmond.&#13;
Sunday, January 2-Clarion.&#13;
Monday, January 3-Humboldt.&#13;
Tuesday, January 4-Paullina.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
MEM B E R S&#13;
&#13;
First Soprano&#13;
&#13;
First A Ito&#13;
&#13;
GLYDE D EVITT&#13;
ETHEL COOMER&#13;
R UTH GILLIES&#13;
VETA CLARK&#13;
CECIL ScHMOKER&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE GILLIES&#13;
V IVIAN D OWN&#13;
LuRA McLANE&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
GLADYS D ANIELS&#13;
&#13;
Second Alto&#13;
&#13;
S econd Soprano&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET SAGE&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
FRANCES WETMORE&#13;
FRANCES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
LovICE STROBEL&#13;
LORENE WILLIAMS&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
SYBIL AUSMAN&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
Pianist, RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
Tuesday, March 28-Sanborn.&#13;
Wednesday, March 29- Spencer.&#13;
Thu rsday, March 30-Britt.&#13;
Friday, March 31-Algona.&#13;
Saturday, April 1-Clear L ake.&#13;
Sunday, April 2-Clear L ake.&#13;
Monday, April 3-Luverne.&#13;
Tuesday, April 4-Livermore.&#13;
Wednesday, April 5-Marathon.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
�Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
The Annual Board&#13;
&#13;
ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
�Chemistry Club&#13;
&#13;
The Teutonia Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
J. DON VAN HoRNE .................................................................... President&#13;
NOEL J. WILLIAMS ............................................................Vice-President&#13;
CLIFFORD JON ES ........................................................ Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FRANK ABEL&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
PROF. J. A. Coss&#13;
HORACE DEWALT&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
MERLE FRENCH&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
ALVIN HoRNNEY&#13;
CLIFFORD JONES&#13;
&#13;
HARRY LARSON&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
ARTHUR LOCKE&#13;
MARK McDONALD&#13;
SPENCER POLAND&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
WILLIAM SCHRIEVER&#13;
DoN VAN HoRNE&#13;
NOEL J. WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Although the Teutonia Club has but recently become a part of our institution, its&#13;
origin dates back forty-three years. When the amalgamation of Charles City College and Morningside was agreed upon in J une, 1914, it was agreed to transfe r this&#13;
organization from Charles City to Morningside.&#13;
Membership is open to any student who has the abilit y to t ake part in the programs which are conducted twice a month, exclusively in German.&#13;
The purpose is to cultivate the use of the German language, and to create a better&#13;
fellowship among the German students. The Professor of German Literature serves&#13;
as critic at all meetings.&#13;
&#13;
Last year the Chemistry Club was organized, and since then has rapidly developed&#13;
in size and in scope of activity. Its purpose is to promote a deeper study and research&#13;
into scientific problems of chemistry. The club has regular meetings at which some&#13;
special work is discussed and explained in the most educational and interesting manner. These interesting meetings create a desire for further investigations. Last fall a&#13;
banquet was held at the home of Prof. Coss, where Mr. Countermine addressed the&#13;
Club on " Paints and the Paint Industry."&#13;
&#13;
ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
ninety-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�Intersociety Committee&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
ANNA BEARD,&#13;
&#13;
Presiden t&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McBuRNEY,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
ELMA&#13;
&#13;
p AR KINSON&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EASTHOUSE&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
FLORENCE BULL&#13;
&#13;
What is the Inter-Society Committee? Well , it is a representative group&#13;
from the three societies. The rushing rules and all other matters of common&#13;
to the societies are settled by this group of girls. This arrangement allows&#13;
settlement of all difficulties and establishes a better relationship between the&#13;
.societies.&#13;
&#13;
of girls&#13;
interest&#13;
a rapid&#13;
various&#13;
&#13;
LAKESIDE LABORATORY&#13;
&#13;
nin ety- eight&#13;
&#13;
11i11ely-11ine&#13;
&#13;
�The 1916 Co-Ed Confederation&#13;
&#13;
The Ruth Club&#13;
&#13;
ARTICLE I . The aim of this organization shall be to promote a more nearly perfect&#13;
state of affairs, avoid partiality, and to make a date at least twenty minutes before time&#13;
of stepping.&#13;
Sec. 1. Candidates for above consideration are:&#13;
Esther Montgomery&#13;
Marion Heikes&#13;
Cornelia McBurney&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Edna Smith&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
&#13;
ARTICLE ,II. Only upon due explanation of all the details is any engagement announced before the last day of Leap Year, to be considered legal.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
BLACKMAN&#13;
FOUKE&#13;
GILLIES&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
KLINE&#13;
OLSON&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
BRADY&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
BELEW&#13;
CHALLMAN&#13;
HOSFORD&#13;
BERRY&#13;
RIED&#13;
&#13;
Sec. 1. Those submitting legal engagements to date are:&#13;
Miss Brand-aided by the students.&#13;
Irene Chapin-obvious.&#13;
Nola Houk-inevitable.&#13;
Cora Dutton-Fry disqualified Jan. 1, 1916.&#13;
Morda Coleman-undecided, Casey or Rusty.&#13;
Anna Beard-inevitable.&#13;
Ruth Gillies-that Chi Delta pin.&#13;
Marion Metcalfe-Leap Year. Aye, Al.&#13;
Ruth K line-cinched by April 19.&#13;
ARTICLE III. No bachelor left after December 31, 1916, shall be considered in the&#13;
proposition 1920.&#13;
Sec. 1.&#13;
&#13;
Snipe-hunters Association&#13;
Purpose: To train unsuspecting Freshmen in the art of chatching snipe.&#13;
Motto : Perserverance wins.&#13;
After surviving the required tests of patience and skill, the following candidates have&#13;
been admitted to the rights and privileges of full membership :&#13;
FURMAN HILL&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR DAVIDSON&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY ............................................................................ President&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE ...................................................... Chief Story-Teller&#13;
GLENN MISHLER .......................................................... Chief Bag-Setter&#13;
JOE BOGARD ............................................................ Chief Ghost Marshal&#13;
RALPH LONG .............................................................................. Chaplain&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
Those to be disqualified are:&#13;
Dr. W. W. Carson&#13;
&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
ARTICLE IV. Bachelors shall not be conceded the privilege of evading the fair sex.&#13;
The Morningside Co-eds have the legal right to sieze whoever, whenever, and wherever they find them during 1916.&#13;
Sec. 1. In order to avoid confusion and facilitate matters, those already being&#13;
looked after are :&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Francis Hay&#13;
Ray Harrington&#13;
Lee Barks&#13;
Charles Klippel&#13;
William McCurdy&#13;
Ewart Williams&#13;
Richard Mitchell&#13;
ARTICLE V .&#13;
happiness.&#13;
Sec. 1.&#13;
&#13;
Special dispensation may be needed to go beyond Morningside men for&#13;
&#13;
Dispensations granted to&#13;
Marie Easthousc&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
Isabelle Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
Mildred Champ&#13;
&#13;
one hundred one&#13;
&#13;
�The Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
would live send away missionaries. If you would have pure water dig ditches. It is&#13;
useless to repeat the condition that the world is in today, because all are well aware of&#13;
the dreadful catastrophe that has befallen the world.&#13;
The call of the alumni of Morningside College is the grief-stricken call of humanity.&#13;
This call is world-wide, for no land exists today that is not ready to welcome light&#13;
from America. Into this fieldthe inspiration of the alumni is to lead them to lay down&#13;
their lives for their friends. It may be in business, in the home, in the foreign field.&#13;
In whatever walks of life they may be, our Alma Mater expects that humanity will get&#13;
a light from them that will lead to higher and nobler things. No course of study is&#13;
outlined, and no limit exists as to the length of service. Our Alma Mater does not&#13;
graduate the alumni from this work, nor do they receive any diploma from the institution when the course is completed. It ends when the workman has laid down the tools,&#13;
and the irresistible fire of time will test the character of the work accomplished.&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
R. N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR R. N. VAN HORNE&#13;
President of the Alumni Association&#13;
The Alumni Association of any institution is from its very nature a loosely-connected&#13;
organization. And what is the purpose of this scattered organization? What is its&#13;
work? These questions can be easi ly answered from one angle and not so easily answered from another. It is to bring together annually the graduates of the college that&#13;
they may meet old associates, form new acquaintances, and receive new inspiration.&#13;
The inspiration which comes from this fe llowship together is the underlying object of&#13;
this annual meeting. To be the means of even having a part in inspiring the alumni is&#13;
a great work. The overwhelming force of this privilege is seen when one views clearly&#13;
the tasks that the alumni are expected to do. Another way of expressing the same thing&#13;
is Look at the world's need! The field of work of our alumni and the world's work&#13;
are identical.&#13;
The world's needs can be seen as well by looking into the past as into the present.&#13;
In this generation the "Horizon of History" has been pushed back two thousand years&#13;
or more. On clay-hardened pages of this history is recorded the lives of nations that more&#13;
or less abruptly ceased to be. It was not the lack of science of government, or scientific learning, or the need of a healthful , fertile land that caused the end. All these&#13;
things belonged to those generations. Yet the cities of these people are clay today because the people cou ld not realize the great truth that "He that loseth his Life shall&#13;
find it." Selfish were the desires and lives of these older nations, and oblivion was their&#13;
fate. All pages of history teach that no nation can live with a selfish heart. If you&#13;
&#13;
one hundred two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred three&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred four&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
hundred five&#13;
&#13;
�Pieria&#13;
Organized October&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
4, ]908&#13;
&#13;
Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
Feliciter, Fortiter, Fideliter ( Happy, Brave, F aithful)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Wint er&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALF&#13;
&#13;
F LORENC E B ULL&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
HELEN LAUB&#13;
&#13;
MARION J OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS HORN&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McB uRN EY&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
LILAH THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
NORMA B ORMAN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
S eniors&#13;
FLORENCE BULL&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALF&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
M ILDRED TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS HORN&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
C ORNELIA McB u RN EY&#13;
&#13;
CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
ANNE GALINSKY&#13;
&#13;
D OROTHY OWEN&#13;
&#13;
L UCIA HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA RoosT&#13;
&#13;
HELEN LAUB&#13;
&#13;
L ILAH THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
R ACHEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
E M MA WIESE&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
SIBYL AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GOUDIE&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BOOH ER&#13;
&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
NORMA&#13;
&#13;
BORMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARION J OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA BROWN&#13;
&#13;
M AY BELLE KR UAMAN N&#13;
&#13;
R U TH BLACKMAN&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE LUDLUM&#13;
&#13;
KATH ERINE BuRTNEss&#13;
&#13;
ISABEL METCALF&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE FORBES&#13;
&#13;
six&#13;
&#13;
D I LLA WHITTEM ORE&#13;
&#13;
FANCHON GA METTE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
CECIL ScH.M OKER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED WOOD&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sev en&#13;
&#13;
�Pieria Calendar&#13;
April 10, 1915-0pen Door.&#13;
May 4, 1915-Presented the "Lamentable Tragedy of&#13;
Omelet and Oatmelia" at Whitfield Methodist Church.&#13;
May 17, 1915-Picnic at Stone Park.&#13;
June 15, 1915-Farewell Breakfast to Graduates.&#13;
June 15, 1915-Reunion.&#13;
June 16-26, 1915-Pieria Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 25, 1915-Pieria-Ionian Joint.&#13;
October 11, 1915-Birthday Banquet at Martin.&#13;
October 23, 1915-Formal Initiation.&#13;
November 13, 1915-0pen Door.&#13;
December 6, 1915-Dinner for the Ionians.&#13;
December 14, 1915-Ionian Tea.&#13;
January 15, 1916-0pen Door, "Silver Thread."&#13;
February 26, 1916-0pen Door, "Review of Parsifal."&#13;
February 28, 1916-Washington Birthday Party.&#13;
March 20, 1916-Joint at President Craig's.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
one hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
�Ionian&#13;
6, 1909&#13;
&#13;
Organized January&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Motto :&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
Possunt quod Credere Possunt (They are able because they believe)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
A. J. COOMBS&#13;
R. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
SASS&#13;
&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
LAVELY&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
Wint er&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
H. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
GLENN NOE&#13;
&#13;
E ARL MILLER&#13;
&#13;
E. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR LINDSEY&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
JAY CHRIST&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
JAMES DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD LEHAN&#13;
&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
&#13;
DON. VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD JONES&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR COOMBS&#13;
HORACE DE&#13;
&#13;
BLY MCCONKEY&#13;
&#13;
w ALT&#13;
&#13;
GLENN NoE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
LEE SALTOW&#13;
&#13;
EDMOND HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
ANDREW HAUGEN&#13;
&#13;
LYMAN BEARDSLEY&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BERKSTRESSER&#13;
&#13;
EARL MILLER&#13;
&#13;
GUYBROWN&#13;
&#13;
STILLMAN PIKE&#13;
&#13;
OTIS DAY&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD SMITH&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE EASTON&#13;
&#13;
RoY ScHELLINGER&#13;
&#13;
HUGH FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
�Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
March 11 , 1915- Joint at the Ionian House.&#13;
April 19, 1915- South Ravine P arty.&#13;
April 24, 1915-Banquet at J ackson Hotel.&#13;
May 3, 191 5-F inal Gold M edal D ebate.&#13;
May 31, 1915-Annual U p-River T rip.&#13;
J une 14, 1915-Reunion.&#13;
September 20, 1915-H ard T imes P arty at Kilborne's.&#13;
O ctober 4, 1915-Rush Stag at Ionian House.&#13;
O ctober 30, 1915-Annual H allowe'en Party.&#13;
November 22, 1915-Pi-Ionian J oint.&#13;
November 30, 1915-I nter-Society D ebate with O thos.&#13;
D ecember 1, 1915- Inter-Society D ebate with Philos.&#13;
February 22, 1916- Second D egree Initiation.&#13;
February 28, 1916- Annual M artha Washington P arty.&#13;
M arch 20, 1916-Ann ual St. P at rick's P arty.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�Athenaeum&#13;
Organ ized November&#13;
Colors :&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
4, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Light Blue and White&#13;
&#13;
Utile dulce (The useful with t he pleasing )&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
B EATRICE WRIGHT ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Vice-Presid e nt EDITH LYLES&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
CORDELIA COLBURN&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL EWER&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE CUMMINGS BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PERRY&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN McLAUGHLIN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
S eniors&#13;
A NNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
MA RIE EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
C ORDE LIA COLB U RN&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
B ERNICE CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
NORA SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
M ARGUERITE BRETHORST&#13;
&#13;
BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
M A RGUE RITE C UMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
VERA SIPE&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE FRY&#13;
&#13;
D OROTHY STEELE&#13;
&#13;
R UTH GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
MARTINA McNARY&#13;
&#13;
C LEO HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
G RACE R USKELL&#13;
&#13;
RUBY&#13;
&#13;
B LANCHE THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN McLAUGH LIN&#13;
&#13;
one hundred four teen&#13;
&#13;
F RANCES WETMORE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fift een&#13;
&#13;
�Athenaeum Calendar&#13;
April 8, 1915-Annual Banquet.&#13;
April 15, 1915-0pen D oor.&#13;
April 25, 1915-Joint with Philos.&#13;
May 13, 1915-Athenaeum's Mothers' Day.&#13;
May 20, 1915-Joint Picnic with Philos.&#13;
November 16, 1915-Joint with Philos at Ida Robertson 's.&#13;
November 19, 1915-New Girls entertain O ld Girls.&#13;
November 24, 1915-Classical Open Door Program.&#13;
December 5, 1915-Joint with Philos at Irene Chapin's.&#13;
December 9, 1915-New Girls entertain Old Girls at&#13;
Irene's.&#13;
December 19, 1915-Joint Christmas Party with Philos.&#13;
January 10, 1916- Reception to Philo Debaters.&#13;
January 19, 1916-"Rainbow Kimona Club."&#13;
Door.&#13;
&#13;
Open&#13;
&#13;
January 19, 1916-Reception to Football Squad.&#13;
February 3, 191 6-Formal Initiation of New Members.&#13;
February 22, 1916-"His Uncle John."&#13;
Door.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
Joint Open&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sev enteen&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean&#13;
Organized October 14, 1892&#13;
Colors : Olive Green and Maroon&#13;
Motto: V estigia N ulla Rectrorsum (No slipping backward)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Upham&#13;
&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
&#13;
RoBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRlCHARD&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
CYRIL&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
E. SHOEMAKER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Seniors&#13;
JOHN V . M ADISON&#13;
&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
AMBROSE DELAPP&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
C. GREY&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
ORIN BELL&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDIUS PIKE&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN CLOUGH&#13;
&#13;
A. L.&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
LOUIS KEENE&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
HERSCHELL BOOTON&#13;
&#13;
Guy KAY&#13;
&#13;
WILBUR BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
BURNETT COOPER&#13;
&#13;
RONALD RANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
SPENCER POLAND&#13;
&#13;
McKINLEY ERICKSON&#13;
&#13;
CULBERT RUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
LAFE BOND&#13;
&#13;
FELLER&#13;
&#13;
VIRGIL GERKIN&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE STEELE&#13;
&#13;
OscAR HART&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM WARN ES&#13;
&#13;
LEE HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF&#13;
&#13;
EDWARDHouGHTON&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
one hundred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean Calendar&#13;
April 8, 1915-Initiation.&#13;
April 12, 1915-Annual Mock Trial.&#13;
April 26, 1915-Grand Public.&#13;
May 10, 1915-Closed Door.&#13;
May 31, 1915-Joint Reception.&#13;
June 7, 1915-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
September 27, 1915-Annual Stag.&#13;
October 7, 1915-Joint Duck Dinner.&#13;
November 8, 1915-Joint at Chapin's.&#13;
November 30, 1915-Philo-Otho Debate.&#13;
December 1, 1915-Philo-Ionian Debate.&#13;
December 18, 1915-Joint in the Hall.&#13;
January 10, 1916-Joint Dinner for Debaters at Colburn's.&#13;
January 17, 1916-Initiation.&#13;
February 22, 1916-Joint Open Door.&#13;
February 28, 1916-The "Prattler Doo."&#13;
&#13;
THE PRATTLER CLUB&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twenty-on e&#13;
&#13;
�Organized November 11, 1897&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
Scarlet and Black&#13;
&#13;
Esse, quam videri (To be, rather than to seem)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
RUTH PRENTICE&#13;
&#13;
LovicE STROBEL&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
LURA MCLANE&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
RUTH OLSON&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Seniors&#13;
LOISCROUCH&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
LOVICESTROBEL&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
LURA MCLANE&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
MARY ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MILDRED BROWN&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COOMER&#13;
&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
RUTH OLSON&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
HAZEL BARROW&#13;
&#13;
FERN McKINNEY&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MABEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
ELMA PARKINSON&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DowN&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
LOISRUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
ALICE JEFFERY&#13;
&#13;
INA SMITH&#13;
&#13;
RUTH KLINE&#13;
&#13;
RUTH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
LIDA SAUNDERS&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
ADAH VAN SLYKE&#13;
&#13;
VERA LUNBUM&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WARFIELD&#13;
&#13;
College Specials&#13;
MARIE DEVITT&#13;
&#13;
ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-three&#13;
one hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
�Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
May 10, 1915-0tho Breakfast for the Zets.&#13;
May 15, 1915-Zet Hen Party at Lois Crouch's.&#13;
&#13;
May 17, 1915-0tho Reception for the Zets.&#13;
May 12, 1915-Reception for Mothers.&#13;
May18, 1915-Pi's entertain us.&#13;
June 3, 1915-Aletheias at home.&#13;
June 16, 1915-Reunion.&#13;
September 18, 1915-Reception for "Pledges."&#13;
September 27, 1915-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
October 9, 1915-Public Initiation.&#13;
November 1, 1915-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 13, 1915-0pen Door; War Program.&#13;
November 20, 1915-Entertained by Zet Alumni.&#13;
December 13, 1915-Reception to Othos at Ruth Olson's.&#13;
January 8, 1916-New Zets entertain Old Zets at Mildred Pecaut's.&#13;
January 22, 1916-New Girls' Open Door, "Breezy&#13;
Point."&#13;
February 28, 1916-Leap Year Party at Anna Mae Evans'.&#13;
March 11, 1916-Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
March 20, 1916-Zets entertained by Hazel Day.&#13;
:March 23, 1916-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�l&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Organized November7, 1891&#13;
Colors : Royal Purple and White&#13;
Motto: Suaviter in Modo, F ortiter in R e ( G entle in manner, resolute in deed )&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
S pring&#13;
&#13;
E. V.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
K U HNS&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
H. P AYNE&#13;
&#13;
C . T. WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
M. E.&#13;
&#13;
W inter&#13;
&#13;
F all&#13;
&#13;
STEVENS&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
R INER&#13;
&#13;
D. C. McK I NNEY&#13;
&#13;
L. B.&#13;
&#13;
L. 0. GI NGER ICH&#13;
A. E. ST ILES&#13;
A. P . L OCKE&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
L OGAN&#13;
&#13;
C. GARLOCK&#13;
P. L OCK E&#13;
&#13;
M E MBERSHIP&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
0. I.&#13;
L. B.&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
G .&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
P ATRICK&#13;
RINE R&#13;
&#13;
D. C. McKINNEY&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
CURRY&#13;
&#13;
A. H.&#13;
&#13;
J OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
G .&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
D UTTON&#13;
&#13;
J. R.&#13;
&#13;
K OL P&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
G . w. M ILLER&#13;
w . P. SYMONDS&#13;
&#13;
M. R. FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
C. GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
E. E.&#13;
&#13;
D. J. W ALTON&#13;
&#13;
E. L.&#13;
N. J.&#13;
&#13;
HICKS&#13;
&#13;
M. G.&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
I. BACK&#13;
E. BARKS&#13;
&#13;
w . s.&#13;
C.&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
P. LOCK E&#13;
&#13;
G LE N MISH LE R&#13;
&#13;
D. FRY&#13;
&#13;
C. J.&#13;
R. E.&#13;
&#13;
R. HAY&#13;
&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
CASE&#13;
&#13;
O BREC H T&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
O VER HOLSER&#13;
REYMAN&#13;
&#13;
R . H. J U RGE NSON&#13;
&#13;
N . N . RICH ARDSON&#13;
&#13;
F. R .&#13;
&#13;
C. H. KLIPPE L&#13;
&#13;
C. I. SH E RWOOD&#13;
A. E. S TI LES&#13;
&#13;
0 . L.&#13;
&#13;
w. C .&#13;
&#13;
KINGSB U RY&#13;
&#13;
LIMING&#13;
&#13;
W OLLE&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
D U NN&#13;
&#13;
s. FREEM AN&#13;
&#13;
M. 0 . N ICHOLSON&#13;
D. E. N ORTON&#13;
&#13;
H.B. HOLM ES&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
B U RDETT STEVENSON&#13;
&#13;
M ARK McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
R. D. TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian Calendar&#13;
May 8, 1915-Reception to Zets.&#13;
May 22, 191 5-Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 29, 1915-Annual Spring Stag.&#13;
J une 5, 1915-Final Gold Medal D ebate.&#13;
Ju ne 8, 1915-Graduating Exercises.&#13;
June 13, 1915-Alumni Reunion.&#13;
October 7, 1915-Annual Fall Stag.&#13;
October 18, 1915-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 29, 1915-0tho-Philo D ebate.&#13;
November 30, 1915-0tho-Ionian D ebate.&#13;
February 21, 1916-Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
April 24, 1916-Grand Public, "The Melting Pot."&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN PICNIC&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Hawkeye&#13;
Organized September&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Organized June&#13;
&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
11, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors :&#13;
&#13;
We Succeed by Doing&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma sine Pulvere (No victory without dust)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Nile Green and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
27, 1899&#13;
&#13;
Gold and Silver&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
LOUIS&#13;
BLEAKLY&#13;
F U RMAN HILL&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
NATHLIE ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
PAULINE BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
EMMA HAEGLE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HANSON&#13;
&#13;
GARNER OSBORN&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD ERTEL&#13;
&#13;
ABBIE PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GOODRICH&#13;
&#13;
WESLEY DRUSENBERG&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
]ESSIE REED&#13;
IRMA RATLIFF&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
EVA MILLER&#13;
&#13;
MARIE CATERMOLE&#13;
&#13;
VIOLA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
ELLA SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER DAY&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE FAIR&#13;
&#13;
HELEN MAYER&#13;
&#13;
LORENE WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
MABEL HOUK&#13;
&#13;
NONA Moss&#13;
&#13;
FREDA WINKEL&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
PEARL McKIRCHER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST SANGER&#13;
&#13;
LOUISBLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST SAMPSON&#13;
&#13;
WALTER DUNN&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST HAUSWALL&#13;
&#13;
AXEL BECK&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
VERNON BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
CECIL MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE PARADISANOS&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD ERTEL&#13;
&#13;
STEPHEN CROCKER&#13;
&#13;
EARL S ANEM&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HANSON&#13;
&#13;
HARRY WHYTE&#13;
&#13;
ROY WHITEHILL&#13;
&#13;
FURMAN HILL&#13;
&#13;
ROY WEBB&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
Moss&#13;
&#13;
NEAL SALLE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-three&#13;
one hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
�Adelphian&#13;
Organized June 18, 1903&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian&#13;
&#13;
Colors : Cerise and W hite&#13;
Organized February, 1902&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
Colors : Olive Green and White&#13;
&#13;
C arpe Diem ( Sieze the opportunity)&#13;
&#13;
Motto: To possess the aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ·&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
BELEW&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ROBIN SON&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ROBINSO N&#13;
&#13;
DORIS CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE DEWELL&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD H A RTLEY&#13;
&#13;
R ALPH L ON G&#13;
&#13;
RALP H LONG&#13;
&#13;
KIETH&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
B UEHLER&#13;
&#13;
EVA NS&#13;
BUEHLER&#13;
&#13;
MERLE CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
MEMBER SHIP&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
B ELEW&#13;
&#13;
OMA EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
JACOB&#13;
&#13;
TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
JOHN STOTZ&#13;
&#13;
K ATHIN EA NIELSON&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD B UEHL ER&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
R U TH CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARIE WOODS&#13;
&#13;
RALPH&#13;
&#13;
KIETH EVA NS&#13;
&#13;
MERLE CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
IRENE COBBS&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD H ARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD MASON&#13;
&#13;
DORIS CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
MARG UERITE DEWELL&#13;
&#13;
GRANT MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE STEELE&#13;
&#13;
VERNA COMOLI&#13;
&#13;
MORTON&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
. VETA CLARK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
one hundred th irty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�Activities&#13;
&#13;
WINTER SCENES&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-six .&#13;
&#13;
�WHEN&#13;
&#13;
A FELLER&#13;
A FRIEND&#13;
&#13;
NEEDS&#13;
&#13;
"WISH I HADN'T NEGLECTED MY&#13;
EARLY&#13;
&#13;
PHYSICAL TRAINING."&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�The Athletic Committee&#13;
&#13;
"M "&#13;
&#13;
CLUB PERSONNEL&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
PAUL&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
&#13;
EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
BYRON HILL&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
LEE HORNN EY&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
&#13;
EARL MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CARROL NORTHR U P&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN CLO UGH&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
PA U L EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFE RT&#13;
&#13;
HERALD&#13;
&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
WALKER&#13;
&#13;
NOEL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
" M"&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
CL U B&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Coach Jason M. Saunderson graduated from Albion College in 1908, where he had&#13;
been captain of both football and track teams and had starred in baseball. He is an&#13;
excellent example of the athletic ideal, a combination of brain and brawn. In his&#13;
football days he was defensive end and offensive quarterback, and was regarded as the&#13;
fastest man on the team. After three years' service at Brookings and one year at&#13;
Sewanee, a southern military school, he came to Morningside. During the past four&#13;
years he has led our teams to repeated victories.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty-on e&#13;
&#13;
�the&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's First Football Team&#13;
&#13;
Football Team&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
TOP ROW ( left to ri ght) -Capt. Quirin , Ha lf ; Mill er , Qu art er ; Rinehart, F ull ; Whitn ey, Manager;&#13;
Barbour, Half; Wunn , Gu ard.&#13;
MIDDLE ROW- Clapsaddle,&#13;
S u b.; Wyli e, Tackle; Ch and ler, Center: Brews ter, Guard ; Hou s ton , End.&#13;
BOTTOM ROW-Cripp en , Tackle; Fry, Sub.: Eber s il e, S ub.; Ri ch ards, End.&#13;
Rob ert Van Horn e w ho played gua rd at fir st and late r quarter wa s one of the mai nsta ys of th e team.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Opponents&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
2-Yankton&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
9-Iowa University&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 13-Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 20-State Teachers' College&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Total .................................................. 93&#13;
&#13;
62&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 30-Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Nov.&#13;
The first football team at Morningside was organized in the fall of 1898. After&#13;
some practice games with various schools of non-collegiate standing, they met a number of colleges. The best game was with South Dakota University at Vermilion ,&#13;
which resulted in a tie, neither team scoring. In fact, Morningside's first team was&#13;
not scored upon during the entire season.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty two&#13;
&#13;
6-Ames&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-three&#13;
&#13;
�PAUL EIFFERT, '17&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER, '18&#13;
&#13;
Left Half&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
Quarterback&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON, '17&#13;
Right Half&#13;
Captain-elect&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK, '17&#13;
Fullback&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�BYRON HILL, ACAD.&#13;
Left Tackle&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG, '18&#13;
Left End&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER, '16&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP, '19&#13;
&#13;
Right Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Right End&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-seven&#13;
one hundred forty-six&#13;
&#13;
�EARL W ILLIAMS, '16&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF, '19&#13;
&#13;
Center&#13;
&#13;
Left Guard&#13;
&#13;
LEE HORN NEY, '19&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD, '18&#13;
Sub. Quarterback&#13;
&#13;
Right Guard&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
�HOWARD ALLEN, '16&#13;
&#13;
ELIHU SHOEMAKER, '15&#13;
&#13;
Sub. Fullback&#13;
&#13;
Sub. Tackle&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW, '18&#13;
Sub. Half&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
DELBERT McKINNEY, '16&#13;
Sub. End&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�EWART WILLIAMS, '17&#13;
Sub. End&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has a just right to feel proud of the results of the 1915 football season.&#13;
The creditable showing made by the Maroon team was due to the untiring efforts of&#13;
Coach Saunderson, the hard work of both varsity and scrubs, and Morningside spirit.&#13;
The fact that the Maroons won but three of the six games played does not indicate&#13;
the strength of the team, when we consider that two of these defeats were received at&#13;
the hands of Iowa University and Ames State College, both by very small margins.&#13;
In the opening game of the season, Morningside easily won over Yankton by a&#13;
score of 51 to 0. The next game with Iowa University proved to the supporters of the&#13;
Maroons that Coach Saunderson had overcome what seemed to be almost impossible&#13;
at the beginning of the season, the problem of developing a new line out of practically&#13;
new material. Iowa in the first half succeeded in registering two touchdowns, yet in the&#13;
third and fourth quarters Morningside played Iowa off their feet, and secured a touchdown to Iowa's drop kick. The old Morningside fight displayed by every member of&#13;
the team in this game will never be forgotten by those on the sidelines.&#13;
Then Nebraska Wesleyan, collegiate champions of Nebraska, met Morningside at&#13;
Mizzou Park, and their scalp was annexed to our belt by a score of 7 to 0. Next&#13;
week, we met Ames · State College at Ames, where we were defeated by one lone touchdown. Again Morningside gained recognition downstate. Throughout the game the&#13;
Maroons put up a hard fight, and time after time we were within but a few yards of&#13;
the "Aggies" goal. The only defeat of the season by a collegiate team was at Mitchell&#13;
by the fast Dakota Wesleyan team. The last game of the season with Iowa State&#13;
Teachers College, at Morningside, ended with the long end of the score in favor of&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
With our old rivals the "Coyotes" on next season's schedule, and with Coach Saunderson as monitor and the great halfback, "Jerry" Johnson,as captain, the prospects for&#13;
the coming season indeed look bright.&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
Coach&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Track&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. HERMAN LEUDER&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SCHEDULE&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
18-Drake Relays.&#13;
25-Home Meet.&#13;
2-South Dakota University.&#13;
8-"M" Meet.&#13;
9-Nebraska Wesleyan.&#13;
16-Coe Conference Meet.&#13;
23-State Meet.&#13;
&#13;
THE IOWA GAME&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Drake Relays&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The 1915 Track season was most successful, when we consider the showing made&#13;
by the Maroon team. They captured both dual meets, were a close second in the Coe&#13;
Conference meet, and established a new record in the two-mile Drake Relay classic.&#13;
Lowering the two-mile record by thirteen seconds at the Drake Relays was a brilliant&#13;
start for the season. The next event was the Home meet, in which no fast time was&#13;
recorded in any of the events, yet the showing made by the men argued well for the&#13;
coming meets. The dual meet with South Dakota University was easily won by&#13;
Morningside. This event was to a certain degree uninteresting, as both teams were&#13;
strong in different events. The Nebraska Wesleyan dual was thrilling throughout,&#13;
and here again the Maroons proved their superiority by securing the long end of the&#13;
score. The feature race of the meet was when Lavely defeated the Wesleyan twomiler. In the Coe Confernce meet, Morningside took second place with five firsts,&#13;
two seconds and two thirds. Captain Leuder set a new mark in the pole vault when&#13;
he cleared the bar at 11 feet 10 inches. Curry also lowered his own record in the&#13;
half mile by one and one-half seconds. In the State meet at Drake, Morningside finished fifth with eight points to their credit.&#13;
&#13;
Home Meet&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONS OF THE WEST&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1915&#13;
SUMMARY OF EVENTS&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash-Upham (Senior), Curry (Sophomore).&#13;
220 yard dash-Upham (Senior), Jones (Freshman).&#13;
&#13;
:10:02.&#13;
:24: 01.&#13;
&#13;
220 yard hurdles-E. Harrington (Freshman), Cottam (Sophomore).&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Hornney (Sophomore), Cottam (Sophomore).&#13;
&#13;
:28: 03.&#13;
&#13;
: 18: 01.&#13;
&#13;
16 pound shotput-R. Harrington (Sophomore), E. Harrington (Freshman).&#13;
feet 5 inches.&#13;
440 yard dash-Curry (Sophomore), Blakely (Academy).&#13;
&#13;
:52 : 02.&#13;
&#13;
Mile run-Morley (Senior), Lavely (Senior). 4 : 45 : 3.&#13;
Two mile run-Lavely (Senior), Trefz (Academy).&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
The Drake Relay Meet which is held at the Drake Stadium, Des Moines, is the&#13;
second largest relay meet in the United States. Competition is growing keener each&#13;
year. Representatives from the strongest schools in the middle west annually meet&#13;
here. Morningside, indeed, has a right to feel proud of her two-mile team, composed&#13;
of Walker, Lavely, Morley and Curry, which established a new record last year in&#13;
this event of the college division. The old record of 8: 28, which was also held by&#13;
Morningside, was lowered to 8: 15. The two men of this record-breaking team who&#13;
remain in school will form the nucleus for another good team.&#13;
&#13;
10: 50: 3.&#13;
&#13;
880 yard dash-Curry (Sophomore), Walker (Freshman).&#13;
&#13;
2: 05: 1.&#13;
&#13;
Discus-Vernon (Senior), R. Harrington (Sophomore) . 119 feet 8 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-E. Harrington (Freshman), McKinney (Senior).&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (Senior), Mahood (Freshman).&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
18 feet 10 inches.&#13;
&#13;
11 feet.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Nebraska Wesleyan Meet&#13;
SIOUX CITY, MAY 9, 1915&#13;
100 yard dash-Upham (M. C.), Johnson (Wes.). :10: 4.&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Vernon ( M . C.), E. Harrington ( M . C.). :18: 1.&#13;
Mile run-Brunig (Wes.), Cozier (Wes.) . 4 : 49.&#13;
220yard dash-Johnson (Wes. ), Upham (M. C.). :24:3.&#13;
880 yard dash-Curry ( M . C.), Cozier (Wes.). 2: 07: 2.&#13;
220 yard hurdles-Werner (Wes.), E. Harrington ( M. C.) . : 27: 2.&#13;
Discus-Vernon (M. C.), Durham (Wes.). 121 feet 4 inches.&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder ( M. C. ), Mahood ( M. C.). 11 feet 6 inches.&#13;
440 yard dash-Curry (M. C.), Van Norman (Wes.). : 54&#13;
16 pound shotput-Johnson (Wes.), R. Harrington (M. C.) . 38 feet 7 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Werner (Wes.), Wenig (M. C.). 19 feet 9 inches.&#13;
High jump-Durham (Wes.), Wenig (M. C. ). 5 feet 9 inches.&#13;
Two mile run-Lavely ( M. C.), Brunig (Wes.) 10: 17: 4.&#13;
Half mile relay-Wesleyan, Morningside. 1 : 37 4.&#13;
Morningside 56, Nebraska Wesleyan 53 .&#13;
&#13;
VERMILION, MAY 2, 1915&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Quigley (S. D.), Vidal (S. D .) . : 18.&#13;
Two mile-Lavely (M. C.), Williams (M. C.). 11: 23.&#13;
100 yard dash-Quigley (S. D.), Stevens (S. D . ). :11 2/5.&#13;
Discus-Vernon (M. C.), Hengel (S. D . ). 128 feet 6 inches.&#13;
440 yard dash-Curry (M. C.), Meade (S. D.) . : 53 4/5.&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (M. C.), Mahood (M. C. ). 10 feet 4 inches.&#13;
220 yard dash-Quigley (S. D.), Stevens (S. D . ) . : 24 3/5.&#13;
High jump-Vidal (S. D.), Wenig (M. C.). 5 feet 10 inches.&#13;
220 yard hurdles-Quigley (M. C.), E. Harrington (M. C. ). : 29 2/5.&#13;
880 yard dash-Walker (M. C.), Curry (M. C. ) . 2: 12 2/5.&#13;
Shotput-R. Harrington ( M. C.), Eiffert ( M . C.). 36 feet 11 }:4 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Vidal (S. D . ), Gilbertson (S. D . ). 20 feet 1/2 inch.&#13;
Mile run-Morley ( M . C.), Lavely ( M. C.). 5: 28.&#13;
Mile relay-Morningside, South Dakota. 3: 55.&#13;
Morningside 61, South Dakota 48.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Track Squad&#13;
&#13;
CEDAR RAPIDS, MAY 16, 1915&#13;
100 yard dash-Hoyt (Grinnell), Bailey (Coe), Burns (Grinnell). : 10 flat Ties&#13;
record.&#13;
Mile run-Morley (Morningside), Barlow (Coe). No official time.&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Lighter (Coe), Massey (Coe), Jones (Des Moines) . : 15 2/5&#13;
New record .&#13;
440 yard dash-Bailey (Coe), Armstrong (Des Moines), Purmort (Coe). : 52.&#13;
220 yard hurdles-Lighter (Coe), Massey (Coe), Dewey (Grinnell). : 25 4/5&#13;
Half mile-Curry (Morningside), Walker (Morningside), Augustine (Grinnell).&#13;
2 : 01 3/5 New record.&#13;
220 yard dash-Hoyt (Grinnell), Curtis (Cornell), Smith (Cornell) . : 22 4/5&#13;
Mile relay-Grinnell, Coe, Cornell. 3: 34 3/5 New record.&#13;
Two mile run-Lavely (Morningside), Daft (Simpson), Townsend (Grinnell).&#13;
10: 16 2/5&#13;
Half mile relay-Grinnell, Coe, Cornell. 1 : 33 2/5&#13;
Shotput-Pettit (Des Moines), Flaherty (Dubuque), Vernon (Morningside). 39&#13;
feet.&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (Morningside), Parker (Grinnell) and Lee (Coe) tied for second.&#13;
11 feet 10 inches.&#13;
High jump-Wenig (Morningside), Hill (Coe) and Parsons (Grinnell) tied for second. 5 feet 4 1/2inches.&#13;
Discus-Knapp (Coe), Vernon (Morningside), Treacy ( Highland Park) . 129 feet&#13;
5 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Lighter (Coe), Andrad (Highland Park), Wenig (Morningside). 21&#13;
feet 3 inches.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
The Monument Run&#13;
&#13;
The annual cross country run to Floyd's Monument and return was held on Washington's Birthday as usual, regardless of the muddy condition of the course. This event&#13;
has been thoroughly established as one of Morningside's traditions. Competition is&#13;
very keen as each class endeavors to register the greatest number of points. Three&#13;
medals are given to winners of the first three places and a gold medal is also given to&#13;
the first Academy man who crosses the tape.&#13;
The event this year was won by Wendell Curry, with Van Horne second and McConkey third . Ralph Long finished first for the Academy.&#13;
TRACK SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred sixty-three&#13;
one hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
�The seventh annual "M" meet on Bass Field was won by Sioux Falls High School.&#13;
The meet was the largest which has yet been held, both in number of contestants and&#13;
attendance. O ver two thousand people witnessed the contest between two hundred and&#13;
one athletes of twenty different high schools from Iowa, South Dakota and Nebraska.&#13;
Owing to the strong wind that prevailed on the day of the meet, fast time was recorded&#13;
in all of the events. A few new records were established and many others nearly&#13;
equaled.&#13;
Three medals were given to the winners of each event. The design of the medal was&#13;
changed last year and it is now one of the classiest medals given in any high school&#13;
meet. Several individual cups were given to point-winners in relay races, besides a&#13;
large cup given to the team winning the meet. Also a cup was given to the individual&#13;
winning the greatest number of points.&#13;
The meet was held under the auspices of the "M" Club, and was directed by Coach&#13;
J. M. Saunderson. It not only gives the college students an opportunity to see one of&#13;
the best high school meets in this part of the country, but it is one of the best boosters&#13;
for Morningside College.&#13;
RECORDS OF THE "M" CLUB INTERSCHOLASTIC MEET&#13;
100 yard dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909, and Osborne (Le Mars), 1911. : 10 flat&#13;
220 yard dash-Wilson (Cherokee), 1911. : 23.&#13;
440 yard dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909. : )).&#13;
Half mile-Rodgers (Yankton ), 1914. 2:07.&#13;
Mile-Deally (Hawarden), 1914. 4: 55.&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911. : 17.&#13;
220 yard hurdles- Quigley (Hawarden), 1911. : 27 4/5&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (Cherokee), Peterson ( Centerville, S. D.) and Wilkins ( Correctionville) , 1911. 11 feet.&#13;
High jump-Aldrich ( Sioux City), 1911. 5 feet 8 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Kiner (Sioux Falls), 1915. 19 feet 10 1/4 inches.&#13;
12 pound hammer- Gilliland ( Storm Lake), 1911 146 feet 3 inches.&#13;
12 pound shot-Elliott (Hurley, S. D.), 1909. 43 feet 8 1/4 inches.&#13;
Discus- Knapp (Cherokee), 1911. 110 feet.&#13;
Half mile relay-Le Mars, 1915. 1: 37 3/5&#13;
Mile relay-Le Mars, 1915. 3: 45 2/5&#13;
SCHOOLS THAT HAVE WON&#13;
1909-Storm Lake.&#13;
1910-Sioux City.&#13;
1911-Cherokee.&#13;
&#13;
1912-Sioux City.&#13;
1913-Sioux City.&#13;
1914-Le Mars.&#13;
1915-Sioux Falls.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
T HE "M" MEET&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty -five&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Records&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash&#13;
&#13;
C. Rogers, 1908&#13;
&#13;
:·10 flat&#13;
&#13;
220 yard dash&#13;
&#13;
F. F. Hall, 1903&#13;
&#13;
: 22 1/5&#13;
&#13;
440 yard dash&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, 1913&#13;
&#13;
: 51 4/5&#13;
&#13;
880 yard run&#13;
&#13;
W. E. Curry, 1915&#13;
&#13;
2:01 1/5&#13;
&#13;
Mile run&#13;
&#13;
A. P. Berkstresser, 1908&#13;
&#13;
4: 40&#13;
&#13;
Two mile run&#13;
&#13;
L. R. Chapman, ] 908&#13;
&#13;
220 yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910&#13;
&#13;
: 25 1/5&#13;
&#13;
l 20 yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
&#13;
: 15 4/5&#13;
&#13;
High jump&#13;
&#13;
W. McIntosh&#13;
&#13;
5 ft. '7 1-2 in.&#13;
&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
&#13;
G. E. West, 1911&#13;
&#13;
Shotput&#13;
&#13;
Ben Holbert,&#13;
&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
&#13;
121 ft. 3 1-2 in.&#13;
&#13;
Discus&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon, 1915&#13;
&#13;
128 ft. 6 in.&#13;
&#13;
Mile relay&#13;
&#13;
Jr.,&#13;
&#13;
21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
1912&#13;
&#13;
3: 36 2/5&#13;
&#13;
H. Walker, V. Lavely,&#13;
&#13;
M. Morley, W. Curry&#13;
Monument run&#13;
&#13;
V. Lavely, 1914&#13;
&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
&#13;
Herman Leuder&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
39 ft. 1-2 in.&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, A. P . Berkstresser,&#13;
&#13;
E. G . Quarnstrom, F . E. Burns, 1909&#13;
Two mile relay&#13;
&#13;
10: 05&#13;
&#13;
8: 15&#13;
18:01 2/5&#13;
11 ft. 10 in.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�High School Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Season&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The 1915 baseball team put out by Coach Saunderson was no doubt one of the&#13;
best that ever represented Morningside. The showing made by the team was excellent, yet their success was handicapped, due to the inability to secure a proper schedule&#13;
and the canceling of several games on account of rain. In the three collegiate games&#13;
played, the Maroons had little difficulty in winning. The only defeat of the season&#13;
was received at the hands of the Sioux City Western League team in a practice game&#13;
early in the season. Our old rivals, the "Coyotes," champions of South Dakota, were&#13;
met twice and trounced both times. Again our team journeyed to Yankton and defeated Yankton College by a decisive score.&#13;
The prediction of the coming season could be no other than a brilliant success with&#13;
practically all of last year's team again ready to appear in uniform.&#13;
&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
April 16-Sioux City Western League, Mizzou Park__Morningside&#13;
&#13;
1, Opponents 7&#13;
&#13;
April 23-University of South Dakota, Bass Field ........ Morningside&#13;
&#13;
3, Opponents 0&#13;
&#13;
April 30-Yankton College, Yankton, S. D . ................ Morningside 12, Opponents 2&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1-University of South Dakota, Vermillion-Rain.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
3-South Dakota School of Mines, Bass Field-Rain.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5-University of South Dakota, Bass Field ........ Morningside&#13;
&#13;
8, Opponents 1&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BASKETBALL SQUAD&#13;
For a number of years Morningside has received as her guests the high schools of&#13;
northwest Iowa at the annual "M" meet. This year Morningside been hostess to&#13;
has&#13;
the high schools at another event-the Northwest Iowa Basketball Tournament.&#13;
The new district, which was organized this year, will hold its annual tournaments at&#13;
the local gymnasium in the future. The big, well-lighted gymnasium with its excellent floor, its ample locker room for the teams, and abundant seating capacity for&#13;
the spectators is ideally equipped for such an event.&#13;
An excellent beginning was made this year. Sioux City High won first place from&#13;
a field of sixteen teams after a series of hard, fast games. The work of the Whiting&#13;
team which took second place, is especially worthy of mention . With a team of light&#13;
men, and without the use of substitutes, she played a fast, heady game that pushed the&#13;
heavier Sioux City team hard for first place.&#13;
SECOND PRELIMINARIES&#13;
Whiting&#13;
22&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Spirit Lake 33&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Spencer&#13;
29&#13;
Pomeroy&#13;
Orange City&#13;
Sioux City 41&#13;
Whiting&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
SEMI-FINALS&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
27&#13;
Pomeroy&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
28&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy&#13;
&#13;
Whiting&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�Class&#13;
&#13;
Basketbll&#13;
&#13;
Team&#13;
&#13;
THE ACADEMY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' TOURNAMENT&#13;
Academy defeated Freshmen, Sophomores, Seniors.&#13;
Freshmen defeated Sophomores, Seniors.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores defeated Seniors.&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S TOURNAMENT&#13;
Won&#13;
&#13;
Lost&#13;
&#13;
Percentage&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ------------------------&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
1.000&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
.750&#13;
&#13;
Seniors --------------------------------&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
.500&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
.250&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
.000&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
THE SOPHOMORE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
�Tennis&#13;
&#13;
LURA McLANE, '16&#13;
Winner Girls' Tournament&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD LEHAN,&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES MARTIN,&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up Girls' Tournament&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
Winner Autumn Tournament&#13;
Runner-up Spring Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Among the minor sports at Morningside, none has a larger or more enthusiastic following than tennis. Every fair day in autumn and spring finds the courts in use, and&#13;
interest is divided among the women and the men. The increase in the number of&#13;
women players has been particularly noticeable in the last two or three years. It may be&#13;
conservatively estimated that more than one hundred students follow the game more or&#13;
less regularly during the playing season .&#13;
The courts are maintained by the Athletic Association and are open to all the students. The tournaments are controlled by the Tennis Association, made up of all&#13;
students actively interested in the game. Mr. Lloyd Lehan is president. The Athletic&#13;
Association is considering the advisability of granting an appropriate "M" to the winner of the annual spring tournament for men.&#13;
During the year 1914-15, three tournaments were played. In the autumn a tournament of thirty entries for singles was held among the men. Lloyd Lehan, '17, was the&#13;
winner and Clarence Craig, '15, runner-up. In the spring the men's singles with&#13;
forty entries was won by Clarence Craig, '15, with Lloyd Lehan, '17, runner-up. In&#13;
the girls' singles, Miss Lura McLane, '16, won over Frances Martin and an entry of&#13;
twenty contestants. Appropriate trophies were awarded the winners.&#13;
WALLACE CARSON.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
�MONUMENT DAY&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
�PROFESSOR CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
In forensics, Morningside maintains an enviable position among the various colleges&#13;
of the middle west. No small part of this achievement has been due to the consistent&#13;
efforts of Professor Marsh, who has been at the head of the Public Speaking Department for the past six years. Not only do the records of this period testify to Professor&#13;
Marsh's career at Morningside, but the students who have been privileged to receive&#13;
his instructions in oratory and debate have had ideas and ideals impressed upon them,&#13;
which has developed and prepared them for the greater achievements of life. Professor&#13;
Marsh has promoted extemporaneous debating at Morningside, and has launched a&#13;
movement in this direction which is gaining momentum every year and which will be a&#13;
great contributing factor to Morningside's forensics of future decades.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
The Forensic League is a college organization composed of representatives from&#13;
each of the men's literary societies together with Professor Marsh, the head of the&#13;
Public Speaking Department. This organization forms compacts with other colleges&#13;
for intercollegiate forensic contests; it selects questions for inter-society and intercollegiate debates ;it supervises oratorical contests of the institution, and in fact has under&#13;
its control all matters relating to the forensics of thecollege, as well as promoting the&#13;
interests of Morningside College in both state and inter-state forensic circles.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
�CHARLES H. KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
R I CHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
ome&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
MARCH 1, 1916&#13;
&#13;
"A Call to Action" ( first )----------------------------------- .. -----------------------CHARLES H. KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
HomeOratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
"The Conflict of Today" (second) __________ ___ _ _&#13;
__ ________ '. _________________ ____ _____ ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
NOVEMBER 5, 1915&#13;
&#13;
"The Unfinished Fight" (third) ------------- -------------- ------ ------------ ---------------CORA DUTTON&#13;
&#13;
"The Man of the Hour" (first) --·-·-·-·-·-·-------------- .. -------------------RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
"The Dawn of a New Age" (fourth) _______________________________ ________ .... _______ HARRY WHYTE&#13;
&#13;
"The Era of Awakening" (second) ___ __ ___ ______ .. ________ _ _____________________ ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
____&#13;
"The White Man's Burden" (third) _ ______________________ ____ .. __________ _ VERA LUNBUM&#13;
__&#13;
______&#13;
"The Private Corporations and the Munitions of War Problem" ____ A . EDWARD STILES&#13;
Morningside representative fails to place in the Divisional Contest.&#13;
&#13;
State Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
MT. VERNON, IOWA, MARCH 31, 1916&#13;
"A Momentous Conflict" (first) ____________________________________W. A. BUELL, Cornell College&#13;
"A Call to Action" (second) ____________________ CHARLES H . KLIPPEL, Morningside College&#13;
"The American Minotaur" (third)--------- _________ __ ______ _ _______ ROYWOODS,Penn College&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Girls' Triangular&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, SOUTH DAKOTA UNIVERSITY, HURON, S. D.&#13;
February 29, 1916&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Loui se Sammon s&#13;
&#13;
H azel Day&#13;
&#13;
Charles Garlock&#13;
&#13;
B e n. Riner&#13;
&#13;
Don Van Horn e&#13;
&#13;
That t he city manager plan of government should be adopted by&#13;
nicipalities in the United States .&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At St . Olaf, Minn.&#13;
RESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
a literacy test.&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
At Huron, S . D.&#13;
&#13;
Morni ngside, affirmative.&#13;
South Dakota University, negative.&#13;
Decision : Affirmative 2, negative 1.&#13;
&#13;
Huron College, affirmative.&#13;
Morningside, negative.&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, negative 2.&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
That immigration into the United States should be further restricted by&#13;
&#13;
Vera Lumbom&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Edna Smith&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
RESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, DAKOTA WESLEYAN, ST. OLAF, MINN.&#13;
March17, 1916&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Anna K eeffe&#13;
&#13;
mu-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, affirmative.&#13;
St. Olaf, affirmative.&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan, negative.&#13;
Morningside, negative.&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, negative 2.&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 3, negative 0.&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
&#13;
John Madison&#13;
&#13;
Irving B ack&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Triangular Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Be n. R in er&#13;
&#13;
Irv in g Back&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
D elbert McKin ney&#13;
&#13;
Donald Walton&#13;
&#13;
Ch a r les Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Earl Bark s&#13;
&#13;
Othonian vs. Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Othonian vs. Philomathean&#13;
November 29, 1915&#13;
&#13;
November 30, 1915&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
That th e manager plan of city governm ent should be adopted by municipalities of th e United States.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED:&#13;
That t he manager plan of city governm ent should be adopted by municipalities of th e United Stat es.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Decision:&#13;
&#13;
D ecision :&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 0, negative 5.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eig hty-four&#13;
&#13;
Jo hn Mad ison&#13;
&#13;
Earl B urgess&#13;
&#13;
negative 1.&#13;
&#13;
IO NIAN NEGAT IVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Earl Stonebr ook&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 4,&#13;
&#13;
All a n Bar tlett&#13;
&#13;
Will is For bes&#13;
&#13;
Ja y C hri st&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Triangular&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate&#13;
&#13;
Academy Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Payn e&#13;
&#13;
Don Van Horn e&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Coombs&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Ern est Hauswald&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Ionian vs. Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye vs. Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
D ecember 1, 1915&#13;
&#13;
D ecember 2, 191 5&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED : T hat t he manager plan of city government should be adopted by municipalities of the United States.&#13;
&#13;
That fed eral legislation should be shaped toward the gradual abandonm ent of th e protective tariff.&#13;
&#13;
D ecision :&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3, negative 2.&#13;
&#13;
Decision : Affirmative 3; negative 0.&#13;
&#13;
P HILOMATHEAN NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Neville Grey&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
&#13;
Clair Cooper&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence Steele&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Records&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1900-J. A. Davies, ninth.&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer, second.&#13;
1901-H. A. Keck, seventh.&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer, first.&#13;
1902-A. R. Toothaker, eliminated.&#13;
1910-H S. Hamilton, second.&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall, fourth .&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson, second.&#13;
1904-R. E. Heilman.&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson, second.&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer.&#13;
1913-F. P . Johnson, second.&#13;
1906-A. G. Cushman.&#13;
1914-R. H. McVicker, sixth.&#13;
1907-A. G. Cushman, fifth.&#13;
1915-J. I. Dolliver, third.&#13;
1916-R. L. Mitchell, eliminated.&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch, first; Inter-state, first; National, third.&#13;
1902-J. N. McCay, second.&#13;
1911-W. A. McCurdy, sixth.&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner, third.&#13;
1912-C. E. Smith, fifth.&#13;
1907-lda Lewis, fifth.&#13;
1913-J. L. Ralston, third.&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett, third.&#13;
1914-R. L. Mitchell, second.&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill, second.&#13;
1915-R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnston, first.&#13;
1916-C. H. Klippel, second.&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson, first.&#13;
1913- D. L. Wickens, first.&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon, fifth.&#13;
1914-C. T. Craig, fifth.&#13;
1915-V. Stenseth, tied for third.&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker U. 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3; Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1; Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa U . 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3; Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3; Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 3.&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2; Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2; Dakota Wesleyan 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1912-Iowa State Teachers 3, Morningside O; Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1913-Iowa State Teachers 2, Morningside 1; Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1914-Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3; Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1915-Southwestern 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1915- Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3; Coe 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1916-Dakota Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3; St. Olaf 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
GIRLS' DEBATE&#13;
1915-Simpson 3, Morning O; Simpson 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1916-South Dakota U . 1, Morningside 2; Huron 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Literary&#13;
BOOK&#13;
FIVE&#13;
&#13;
�Old Father Time&#13;
&#13;
Will&#13;
&#13;
Get The Common&#13;
&#13;
Stuff&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
&#13;
"Betty's a brick!" said John Barry, throwing his books on the table and deftly tossing&#13;
his hat on the chandelier.&#13;
"Well," answered Bob, his roommate, "for a fellow that expects to work his way up&#13;
in the newspaper world, that is hardly what you would call a scoop. You might&#13;
preach a sermon on it, though, for it is as true as our old algebra axioms. Betty is a&#13;
brick. What's she done now?"&#13;
"Been helping me get that beastly Carlyle through my head. Feel kind of guilty&#13;
now, taking so much of her time," John replied.&#13;
"Well, you have added another 'thank-you' to her collection, I presume," said Bob.&#13;
pulling on a sweater preparatory for a walk to the gymnasium. "You know she says&#13;
she has a thank-you box and that is her hobby. So long, I'm off."&#13;
John Barry and Bob Moore are students at Fairfield College, which boasts of an&#13;
enrollment of five hundred, and a firm belief on the part of every member of the institution that theirs is the best college in the middle west. However, to a spectator it appears no different, even in this respect, from the usual small college.&#13;
On the way to the gymnasium, Bob fell to thinking of Betty and her thank-you box.&#13;
"We've all got a fad or hobby, I guess, but I'll be blessed if that isn't the best ever," he&#13;
mused. "I'll bet that girl has more friends on this campus than all the rest of us put&#13;
together. Mighty poor friends some of us are, too-regular spongers, soak up all she&#13;
gives us." At this juncture in his thought he noticed a bright red coat just ahead and&#13;
he quickened his pace.&#13;
"May I?" he asked, falling into step with the owner of the coat and meeting a pair&#13;
of merry brown eyes.&#13;
"You're the very man I'm looking for," answered Ruth, for by this time you know it&#13;
was either a Ruth or a Mary. "I was told to inform you that you are on the committee&#13;
to select a speaker for Commencement. I'm on, too, so we can console each other."&#13;
"Thanks for the information. I haven't the remotest idea on the subject," said Bob.&#13;
"Nor I. See you later," and Ruth vanished into the dormitory.&#13;
With her hand on the door knob of her own room Ruth paused, for she had caught&#13;
the sound of weeping within. Betty Conwell, Betty the "brick," who was also Ruth's&#13;
roommate, was not often given to tears, and Ruth was so surprised that she could&#13;
scarcely open the door. The sight which met her eyes was even more disturbing than&#13;
the sound of tears had been, for, prone upon the floor, her coat on and her hat tossed&#13;
to the farthest corner of the room, lay Betty sobbing as if she would never stop.&#13;
"Are you ill? For goodness sakes, what's the matter? What has happened?" cried&#13;
Ruth. "I'll run for the doctor."&#13;
At that Betty sat up, and pointing to a letter on the floor said: "Read that!"&#13;
Ruth, sitting down beside Betty, read the following letter from Betty's father, a&#13;
clergyman in a small village some two hundred miles away.&#13;
"My darling daughter," it began. "Throughout your college life I have tried to&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety&#13;
&#13;
spare you all disappointments, and to think that now, at the last, you should have to&#13;
bear this, is indeed hard. Your old Daddy, who has had to be a mother and father to&#13;
you all these years, is more sorry than this slip of paper can possibly show to tell you&#13;
that all our happy Commencement plans must be given up. The money we had saved&#13;
for this has been used to keep a true friend from disgrace. My little girl, do not think&#13;
that this has been lightly sacrificed on my part, but trust Daddy when he says he took&#13;
the only right way. Look your prettiest and act your sweetest on the happy day, and&#13;
know that I am close to you in spirit."&#13;
"Oh, what a shame!" cried Ruth, with her arms about Betty. "Don't cry, dear,&#13;
there must be some way to fix it. Your Daddy must know best."&#13;
"Of course he does, and I am a selfish pig. Anyone can see that, but I just can't help&#13;
it," said Betty, drying her eyes. "But you know Daddy has never once visited me all&#13;
these four years, and we had made such big plans for Commencement. It just seems&#13;
as if I couldn't bear it."&#13;
"We must get our thinking caps on and see what we can do," encouraged Ruth.&#13;
"No, it's no use. I'll just keep a stiff upper lip and we won't mention it again; that&#13;
will be easier," and with a determined air Betty set about improving her appearance.&#13;
The weeks that followed were full of joyous preparations for the coming Commencement. Betty entered bravely in and worked with all her might, but sometimes in the&#13;
midst of a happy plan a lump would rise in her throat, and she would have a hard&#13;
fight to keep back the tears of disappointment.&#13;
The committee to select a speaker for Commencement Day was the busiest of them&#13;
all. They had a list of names a foot long from which to decide, but on none of them&#13;
could they agree. One day Ruth and Betty were having an animated discussion over&#13;
the merits of a certain speaker. Betty, although not a member of the committee, was&#13;
willing to help as at all times.&#13;
"What does a big eastern man know about our little western school, anyway?" complained Ruth. "I would like to get someone whom we know or who has an interest in&#13;
us aside from the fifty dollars we shall hand him."&#13;
With the last word Ruth jumped a foot in the air. "Hand me my coat quick; I'll be&#13;
back in a minute. Forgot-have an appointment with the president."&#13;
Betty was so surprised that she could not speak, and by the time she had recovered&#13;
her breath , Ruth was halfway across the campus.&#13;
"Well, that was sudden," said Betty aloud . "I wonder what her appointment with&#13;
the president can be and how she ever forgot it."&#13;
Ruth told a tiny fib when she said she had an appointment with the president, for up&#13;
to that moment such a thing had never entered her mind. To be exactly truthful she&#13;
should have said, "I am going to get an appointment with the president."&#13;
When Ruth came out of the office of that high official a full hour later, she looked as&#13;
if she had just been handed a million dollars. She danced all the way back to the&#13;
dormitory, and was just about to dance into her own room, when she seemed to remember something. She stopped her capering, caught her breath, and at her usual pace&#13;
entered the room. Betty had settled herself to study. Looking up as Ruth entered she&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-on e&#13;
&#13;
�said, "You know, Ruth, I am really alarmed about you. Anybody who had an appointment with 'prexy' and then forgot it can't be quite normal. Come here and let&#13;
&#13;
and hugged and kissed him until the bystanders began to smile&#13;
Daddy!" was all she could say.&#13;
. "Oh Daddy! Daddy!&#13;
&#13;
me feel your pulse, and tell me all about it."&#13;
"I shan't do either," said Ruth, airily. "Not now, anyway; some day I shall." And&#13;
with that Betty had to be satisfied, for , although she coaxed and pleaded Ruth would&#13;
&#13;
At that moment the committee arrived ' each member with a broad grin on his face.&#13;
·&#13;
Betty&#13;
suddenly remembered. "Did he come?" she asked.&#13;
"Looks as if he did," laughed Bob, and then they all began shaking hands with&#13;
Betty s father.&#13;
"I mean the speaker. Where is he?" demanded Betty, still uncomprehending.&#13;
And then they all told her at once the big secret which they had guarded so carefully all these weeks. The tears shone in Betty's eyes as she asked , "Did you ever know&#13;
better friends than these, Daddy? There's a whole college full of them here."&#13;
That Commencement&#13;
address was a big success goes without saying although in this&#13;
case everyone said 1t.&#13;
&#13;
only answer, "Some day."&#13;
It was announced a few days later that a speaker had been found whom the committee thought was qualified to make the Commencement address, but contrary to the usual&#13;
custom the identity of the speaker was to be kept a secret until Commencement Day.&#13;
"Well of all the swindles!" exclaimed Betty. "Here I have racked my brain for days&#13;
on this subject and now I am not to know whom the illustrious committee has chosen."&#13;
"Sorry," said Ruth, "but you see it is no more fair to tell you than anyone else.&#13;
But I'll tell you what you can do. You can go to the train to meet him with the committee, and be the first to see the honored gentleman."&#13;
"Pooh, I probably never heard of him, anyway," scoffed Betty.&#13;
"Oh, you will be crazy about him," promised Ruth.&#13;
"Must be young and good looking to get you interested," said Betty.&#13;
Suddenly Betty asked, "Was that what your appointment with the president was&#13;
about?"&#13;
"Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies," sang Ruth most aggravatingly.&#13;
The days flew fast and the night before Commencement Day had come. Ruth was&#13;
out but Betty was glad to be alone. She took her father's picture from the wall,&#13;
propped it up on her desk and seating herself, looked long and earnestly at it. At last&#13;
she began to write:&#13;
"My dearest Daddy," she wrote, "it is here at last-the big Commencement time&#13;
that has seemed the goal for so many years. I am glad because I know how it pleases&#13;
you that I am to be graduated with honors tomorrow. There's just one flaw in it all,&#13;
and of that we shall not speak again . I can feel you near, if I cannot see you, and I&#13;
shall be your own brave daughter, look my prettiest, and act my sweetest tomorrow as&#13;
is your wish. Soon I shall be home with you again and we shall talk it over then. All&#13;
with love, Betty."&#13;
Ruth was up bright and early the next morning, for "the man," as they had fallen&#13;
to calling the speaker, was to arrive at eight o'clock.&#13;
"I guess I'll take another nap, and see him later," said Betty sleepily.&#13;
"I guess you will not do any such thing. You will come right along with me," and&#13;
with one mighty tug she pulled the lazy Betty from her "downy cot."&#13;
The committee and Betty rode to the station in great state in the president's automobile. The train was just whistling in as they drew up to the platform, and Betty,&#13;
being the first out of the machine, arrived at the steps a little in advance of the committee, who seemed in no hurry to overtake her. The usual passengers alighted-a&#13;
jaunty drummer with his sample case, a tired looking woman with three small children,&#13;
a nurse stepping briskly off, and then-Betty almost fainted. A white-haired, kindlyfaced gentleman was looking about with eager eyes. With a cry, Betty rushed to him,&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
At the big banquet w,hich crowned the day's festivities, Betty was called upon for a&#13;
toast. Her heart was so full she could hardly speak · "You all know what my hobby&#13;
has beenthese four years," she began. "I haven't collected snapshots autographs or&#13;
postage stamps, but I have a big box of 'thank-yous' that I prize highly-that is I did&#13;
have them until tonight. Now I want to return them all , multiplied many times to&#13;
you dear peoplewho gave them to me, for I haven't a 'thank-you' of my own big enough&#13;
toconvey to you the gratitude that I feel."&#13;
&#13;
Anne's Purpose&#13;
MORDA COLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
"Wh atever has become of Anne?" demanded the girl at the chafing dish.&#13;
.&#13;
"Who dares to speak my name ?" said Anne's clear voice as she danced into the room.&#13;
"What is there to eat? It s mighty hard work persuading the dean-"&#13;
"Anne McCutcheon, have you been called to the dean's office again?"&#13;
Yes, again-and yet. We had a fine little chat."&#13;
"Oh, yes, you did !"&#13;
"We were discussing," remarked Anne loftily, with a sandwich in each hand "the&#13;
value of a senous purpose in life. The dean thinks I need one."&#13;
"Fancy you with a Serious Purpose," laughed Charlotte, Anne's roommate.&#13;
I told her I didn't exactly see what I would do with such a thing at present&#13;
but if she liked, she could find one for me."&#13;
"What about all your late English Lit. themes and the times you've cut?"&#13;
"Now 'Lotte don't tell everything you know. She was so absorbed in that purpose&#13;
't&#13;
that she forgot those other little matters. I'm off to the postoffice . Anybody coming&#13;
·&#13;
along?"&#13;
"We aren ' t so sure of a letter as you are," was the answer.&#13;
Everything edible consumed, the party broke up, Charlotte staying to help Ruth&#13;
straighten up the room.&#13;
&#13;
Well&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
�" 'Lotte," said Ruth, seriously, "is Anne ever serious? I've known her a year and&#13;
she's always light-hearted and gay and full of mischief. She gets out of trouble as&#13;
easily as she gets into it. As she said, she wouldn't know what to do with a purpose or&#13;
ambition in life. Isn't there anyone who cares what she does or for whom she cares?"&#13;
"Anne is an orphan, you know," returned Charlotte. "She used to live with her&#13;
grandmother, who is dead now, so Anne has only a guardian. Naturally she doesn't&#13;
worry about her lessons, for there is no one to care whether she gets them or not. If&#13;
there is anyone for whose opinion she cares, it is John Alexander."&#13;
"Is he the one who writes to her so regularly?"&#13;
"Yes, he's an old friend; lives in Danbury, her home town."&#13;
Charlotte went back to her ow n room and as she entered she was seized by an excited Anne and danced around the room. " 'Lotte, 'Lotte, John is coming through&#13;
here tomorrow night and he is going to stop over and take me to see Madame Butterfly."&#13;
"Ah, Anne, you've given yourself away this time," laughed Charlotte.&#13;
"Given myself away? Why, all you girls know he is the best friend I have in the&#13;
world. I have no family to visit me as you have ; John is the only one w ho cares what I&#13;
am doing."&#13;
"Is there anyone for w hom Anne cares?" Charlotte thought of R uth's question.&#13;
Then the thought popped into her head that this would be a good time to find out how&#13;
much Anne cared for this particular somebody.&#13;
" 'Scuse me," starting up, "I must see Ruth a minute."&#13;
There was no reply from Anne, who was reading her letter again.&#13;
Both Ruth and Charlotte were on hand that evening to help Anne dress.&#13;
"Girls!" exclaimed Anne, as she pointed to the clock, "I won't be ready."&#13;
"Oh, yes, you will," Charlotte assured her, calmly. "Sit down ; I'm going to do your&#13;
hair."&#13;
In the midst of the hair-dressing operation, a call came floating down the hall:&#13;
"Anne! The phone!"&#13;
"I'll go," said Ruth.&#13;
She was back in a few moments with a white scared face.&#13;
"What's the matter, Ruthie? Been talking to a ghost?" inquired Anne, cheerfully.&#13;
" Oh, Anne, they're afraid the train from Danbury has been wrecked!"&#13;
"John! Did he phone?"&#13;
"No, it wasn't he, but someone-someone else-phoning for him."&#13;
"Is-he hurt?" Anne appeared to be scarcely able to frame the words.&#13;
"They didn't know."&#13;
"But if they were phoning for him? What did they call me up for if they didn't&#13;
know?"&#13;
"Why- "&#13;
Quick-witted Charlotte saved Ruth from further questions by telling her to phone&#13;
to the depot and find out whether the report was true. Then she turned to Anne&#13;
solicitously. "Why, Anne, child, you're all read y! You surely can't go to the play,&#13;
even if he-"&#13;
&#13;
"I believe I'm a little faint. Won't you go and borrow Marie's smelling salts?&#13;
They always help me."&#13;
"Why, I don't want to leave you alone."&#13;
"I'll be all right. Hurry!" commanded Anne in a weak voice.&#13;
The instant C harlotte was out of the room, Anne jumped up, pinned on her hat,&#13;
stopping long enough to smile wickedly at her reflection in the mirror, caught up her&#13;
gloves and coat, and was gone down the hall like a flash. She rushed out and looked&#13;
w ildly up and down the hall. Ruth was the only person in sight.&#13;
"Anne's gone! Do you suppose she suspected?"&#13;
"He must have come, but how-"&#13;
They started down the st airs and were halfway down w hen the door of the reception&#13;
room opened and after one look they sat limply down on the nearest step. Anne came&#13;
out with roses in her arms, a smile on her lips, a roguish twinkle in her eyes, andJohn Alexander. The two girls on the step recognized him instantly from the picture&#13;
Anne had on her writing desk.&#13;
"Why, girls," she called clearly up to the two, "it was nice of you to come down to&#13;
see us off. Thanks awfully for your help. "&#13;
" I certainly do appreciate the fact that you got her ready on time," laughed her&#13;
escort.&#13;
" I can't help it; I've simply got to tell you . 'Lotte, w hen I told you that J ohn was&#13;
coming, I neglected t o mention the interesting fact that he would travel by auto."&#13;
R uth and Charlotte rose slowly to their feet as the two disappeared. But before&#13;
they had time to say anything, Anne reappeared in the doorway.&#13;
"Yesterday afternoon I happened to overhear you two worrying because I'm not&#13;
serious and haven't any purpose in life. I have t wo now. One is to pay you back for&#13;
scaring me so that first minute before I remembered that J ohn wasn't coming by train&#13;
anyway and the other"-with one of Anne's own sparkling smiles-"the other is a&#13;
secret."&#13;
&#13;
Zet Novelette&#13;
C HAPTE R I&#13;
Written by RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
Marjorie Clinton, Wellesley's prettiest graduate, was nearing the end of her journey&#13;
at the rate of sixty miles an hour. Her mother had implored, had fairly begged her to&#13;
remain at home in New York and become one of the season's society buds, but Marjorie&#13;
felt that she was called to higher things. Every English professor she had ever had&#13;
had assured her that she was destined for a great literary career and that all she lacked&#13;
was age, and a w ide variet y of experience. For her first experience she had secured a&#13;
position as teacher in a western mountain town, and it was towards this place she was&#13;
now traveling.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-fiv e&#13;
one hundred ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
�The hardest working man&#13;
In that industrious clan&#13;
Was the man who led the students in the cheers.&#13;
It was "Ki Yi Yi,&#13;
Everybody up and give old Ki Yi Yi!&#13;
Locomotive, take it slow,&#13;
M. C. Rah Rah, Let it go!&#13;
Ki Yi Yi Yi Yi for Morningside."&#13;
When the rest of us were glum,&#13;
Had a cold, or just felt bum&#13;
'&#13;
He would work just twice as hard to make up for it;&#13;
When we'd shouted "Ki Yi Yi"&#13;
Till our throats were cracked and dry&#13;
He would not give up but start once more to roar it.&#13;
He would go to any length&#13;
He would exert all his strength&#13;
Just to get us cheering as we ought to do.&#13;
The victories we've won&#13;
By the things that he has done&#13;
Can't be counted, but we only wish we knew.&#13;
With his "Ki Yi Yi."&#13;
Everybody up and give old Ki Yi Yi&#13;
Fifteen for the Coach,-the team!&#13;
Now let's try the old Si rene.&#13;
Rah Rah Rah Rah Rah for Morningside!"&#13;
For three long successful years&#13;
He has led us in our cheers&#13;
And we're going to miss him mightily next fall.&#13;
Without him and his megaphone&#13;
Morningside wpn't seem like home,&#13;
The bleachers will not be the same at all.&#13;
The debates, orations too,&#13;
Football, track team got their due,&#13;
Each of them he's cheered on to their victory;&#13;
So 'twould only be fair play&#13;
Part of our debt to repay&#13;
And join in, for him, a rousing three times three,&#13;
With our R ah, Rah, Rah!&#13;
Let us cheer today for him w ho's cheered us on.&#13;
When we're old, or dead and gone,&#13;
In school lore he'll still live on,&#13;
Morningside true loyal son.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred six&#13;
&#13;
Orpheus and Eurydice&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
SMITH,&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
When Orpheus played upon his lyre&#13;
All Nature harkened to the sound.&#13;
He played his soul, he could not tire,&#13;
For in his heart the spell was bound.&#13;
His music soothed, and eased all pains,&#13;
And swelled, and poured as some great tide.&#13;
Wild beasts grew gentle at the strains&#13;
And stood entranced by his side.&#13;
The very trees were touched and charmed&#13;
And murmuring gently, breathing low&#13;
They swayed toward him, now unharmed,&#13;
For none but peacefu l winds dared blow.&#13;
It softened w ith its tones so mild&#13;
Even the rocks so hard and cruel ;&#13;
It lulled the torrents rushing wild&#13;
Into a quiet bubbling pool.&#13;
Into this happy life so free&#13;
Now Cupid thrust his dart of fire.&#13;
There came the maid Eurydice&#13;
Whose love was Orpheus' sole desire.&#13;
For love of her his heart now burned,&#13;
And from his lyre he poured his soul&#13;
In sweetest strains, which plead and yearned&#13;
Till to his love's own heart they stole.&#13;
Eurydice was moved indeed,&#13;
And to his pleading she replied.&#13;
'Twould seem that kindly fate decreed,&#13;
She flew so lightly to his side.&#13;
Thus Orpheus gained his only d ream.&#13;
His music lovelier grew each day;&#13;
All life a sunlit path did seem,&#13;
With flowers and laughter all the way.&#13;
And then, alas ! w ith mocking breath&#13;
Cruel Fate beheld the pair so gay,&#13;
And w ith the iron grasp of death&#13;
Eurydice he bore away.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
�The train gave one long whistle and stopped. All the passengers but Majorie&#13;
began filing out of the car.&#13;
"This is your station, Miss," said the conductor, addressing Marjorie.&#13;
"But this is not Arrow Rock."&#13;
"You have to take the stage the rest of the way. Arrow Rock is a dam site, you&#13;
know."&#13;
"A what?"&#13;
"A dam site. They are building a darn up there. The town is only temporary.&#13;
When the dam 1s done, the folks'll leave. The agent will tell you where to get&#13;
the stage."&#13;
A porter seized her two suit cases and our heroine followed him off the train&#13;
and into the station. There were very few people in the building. The station&#13;
agent was over in one corner in a little coop and Miss Clinton made bold to address&#13;
him. "Can you tell me when and where the stage leaves for Arrow Rock?"&#13;
"When and where it pleases," was the answer. "Did you want to take it?"&#13;
"Oh yes, can't I get it some way?" Miss Clinton had meant to be very dignified&#13;
and self-possessed but this stage business was so unexpected. She had read about&#13;
stages before, and they were usually either held up and robbed or else stuck in the&#13;
river and the passengers drowned. Truly she was getting more experience than she&#13;
had bargained for. What was the agent saying?&#13;
"Hello, Ike ?-Lady over here wants to go to Arrow Rock.- Bout twenty minutes?&#13;
-Two suit cases and ninety-seven trunks. Sure-guess so." He hung up the receiver and turned to Majorie. "The stage will be here in twenty minutes to take&#13;
you and half your stuff to the school house." How did he know she was going to&#13;
teach? Then she said aloud, "Why half?"&#13;
"Because the mail has to go too."&#13;
"But I haven't ninety-seven."&#13;
"Never mind, I'll see that all your stuff gets up there by tomorrow night if I have&#13;
to carry it up myself. Anything else?"&#13;
"No thank you."&#13;
Presently a little man in a faded blue shirt and khaki trousers stood in the door.&#13;
"Are you the dam teacher?"&#13;
"Sir."&#13;
.&#13;
"Are you the Arrow Rock dam teacher that wants to be took up in the stage.&#13;
"Yes, sir, my name is Miss Clinton."&#13;
"That so? Well, there's a Miss Clinton that lives in this town too. We'll have&#13;
to call you the dam Miss Clinton so's not to get you mixed."&#13;
This man was worse than the agent. Well, she wouldn't have to listen to him&#13;
inside the coach. She picked up her suitcases and followed onto the platform.&#13;
"Where is the stage?"&#13;
"Right here, you'd better sit in front with me.&#13;
about fills up the back."&#13;
"You don't mean that auto there is the stage?"&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
The mail and all your stuff just&#13;
&#13;
"Yes, Ma'am. W e've outgrown them pict uresque Buffalo Bill things. This&#13;
trunk yours too? W e'll leave it till tomorrow ."&#13;
"Must be plannin' to stay some?"&#13;
"Yes, during the school year."&#13;
"Guess you're boss o' that. L ast year the teacher ran off with a sheep man and&#13;
quit before spring, year before that she married the electrical engineer but she finished&#13;
her term after she was married. That's the best way to do. You get more pay.&#13;
Now we're ready. You'll have to excuse me if I seem kind o' silent the rest of the&#13;
way. M aking record time over the mountains ain't real cond ucive to conversation."&#13;
And they were off.&#13;
C HAPTER II&#13;
Written by LOIS CROUCH&#13;
" How far is it to Arrow Rock ?" asked Marjorie.&#13;
" Seventy-five miles by the way we got to go," answered Ike, the driver.&#13;
"And how long will it take?" gasped Marjorie.&#13;
"We'll git there 'bout sundown, if we don't have no bad luck."&#13;
For many miles their way lay through a beautiful, little valley. They passed&#13;
an occasional ranch house with its accompanying buildings and cor rals. T wice they&#13;
saw a bunch of coyotes and once they sighted a herd of deer. All this was so new&#13;
to Marjorie, that it held her attention for some time. After a w hile she began to&#13;
think about her literary career.&#13;
"There is going to be plenty of scenery here but what am I going to do for characters?" mused Marjorie. " The station agent might do, but still I don't like him,&#13;
he is common and altogether too fresh."&#13;
"I wonder if I could use this driver?" thought Marjorie. Then she began to&#13;
look him over.&#13;
" He doesn't look much like a character in a novel, but his language is certainly&#13;
picturesque. W ell, I don't know, perhaps I can use him." And she began to make&#13;
a tentative plot in which Ike figu red as the policeman who made love to the cook.&#13;
Just at this point the Ford began to ascend the mountain trail and Marjorie became too interested in the scenery to think about her story. They climbed up and&#13;
up, now running close to the towering rock on the left and now swinging out over&#13;
the. precipice on the right. Once they met another machine w here the trail w as so&#13;
narrow that it seemed to M arj orie that it would be impossible to pass. As Ike turned&#13;
out toward the precipice she shut her eyes in ter ror. W hen she fel t that they must&#13;
be safely past, she opened them again just in t ime to get a glimpse of a little log&#13;
cabin on the mountain side, away across the valley. She continued to think about&#13;
the quaint little cabin and ventured to ask, "Who lives in that house, Mister D river,&#13;
and what do they do away out here?"&#13;
" Hunting shack of the dam engineer," answered Ike as he clutched the driving&#13;
wheel with a fi rmer grip.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-sev en&#13;
&#13;
�A little farther on the machine struck a loose stone and skidded towards the precipice. "Oh," screamed Marjorie, "Couldn't you drive slower around these curves?"&#13;
"Lose my speed if I did."&#13;
So Marjorie resigned herself to her fate and began to think of her family way back&#13;
in New York. As she thought of their sorrow when they shou ld hear that she had&#13;
been dashed to death on the rocks below, the tragedy of the imaginary scene appealed&#13;
to her literary sense. And she began to arrange a little plot with herself as the heroine. When the hero found her dead upon the rocks his grief was so deep that he&#13;
retired to the little cabin in the mountains to live the life of a hermit. Marjorie shed&#13;
a tear over her own sad fate and just as she decided to change the plot, be saved&#13;
from death, marry the hero, and spend her honey-moon in the little cabin, the "honk,&#13;
honk" of the horn told her that they were approaching another. curve. She looked&#13;
ahead and saw a heavily loaded wagon drawn by four mules. The head team,&#13;
frightened by the "honk", began to prance wildly.&#13;
Ike yelled, "Take the inside." But the man on the wagon shook his head. So&#13;
the machine turned in toward the cliff and attempted to drive past. The head&#13;
team, already frightened, slipped, regained their footing, slipped again and went over&#13;
the edge of the trail. Marjorie held her breath. A few moments of tense excitement passed. Ike jumped from the machine and ran to the second team which was&#13;
in imminent danger of being dragged over by the others. The driver had already&#13;
jumped from the wagon and grasping some bushes had let himself down to where&#13;
the mules were struggling and kicking over the edge. By coaxing, pulling and using&#13;
much lurid language, he succeeded in getting them up on the trail again.&#13;
Marjorie caught her breath and for the first time, looked at the driver, tall,&#13;
brown-eyed, sun-burned, handsome and dressed like the westerner in the novels she&#13;
had read. She said to herself, "There is my hero."&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
Written by HELEN&#13;
&#13;
WARFIELD&#13;
&#13;
As Marjorie continued to stare at the tall, handsome figure, she became aware of&#13;
his eyes fixed steadily on her, and for the moment, neither spoke. Ike was the first&#13;
to break the silence:&#13;
"Waal, that was a mighty narrow escape, Bob!" So the young man was called&#13;
"Bob!" Indeed, that was a very nice name for a hero, and even sounded well coming from the lips of rough-talking Ike.&#13;
"Yes, but it was a little too near death to make it interesting, and thanks, Ike,&#13;
for holding the second team. I'm afraid we should have"There's a man comin' on horse-back. One of us will have to move along-guess&#13;
we'll be a-goin'," and with that and a honk of the horn, Ike drove Marjorie away&#13;
from the stranger.&#13;
Now, it's always just as affairs are growing interesting that things like that happen. Here, she had seen a very handsome young man, and was just about to intro-&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
duce herself since Ike made no move to, when a most unwelcome person had come&#13;
along on horse-back and shattered all her plans.&#13;
Marjorie caught herself looking back in the direction from which they had come,&#13;
and several moments passed before she was conscious of Ike talking to her. He&#13;
was muttering something about "fine young fellow," "dam engineer," "college gink."&#13;
"What's that you were saying? What's his name? What is he doing out here?&#13;
He looks like a typical westerner."&#13;
"Nope, he ain't a westerner, though he's made the West his home fer 'most four&#13;
years now. "Don' know jes' whar' he is from-back East somewhere. His name&#13;
is Robert Kirkwood, an' he's the darn engineer who lives in that cabin we passed&#13;
awhile ago. Seems like a good 'nuf fellow, even though he is one of them college&#13;
high-breds. I never did have much use fer' em-usually they don't 'mount t' much ,&#13;
but ez fer Bob, he's as good as the best of 'em." All of this made Marjorie the&#13;
more 'curious. Where, in the East, had he lived, and what college had he attended?&#13;
As she was trying to persuade Ike to answer more of her incessant flow of questions,&#13;
they neared the town of Arrow Rock. So this was the place in which she was to&#13;
live till the end of the school year. How could she ever endure it? And as for&#13;
literary efforts-she would do well if she would write an "Ode to a Dead Town."&#13;
If she had only met the esteemed Mr. Kirkwood, she was sure that things would&#13;
have proved more interesting, but there was nothing to do now, but make the best&#13;
of the conditions.&#13;
The school teacher· always made her home with Mrs. Brigham, Ike told her, and&#13;
proceeded to drive there immediately, and deposit her and all of her baggage on the&#13;
front porch of the house. Mrs. Brigham met her at the door and from the first&#13;
Marjorie was sure she ·would like her. She was a frail-looking little woman, and getting along in years to such an extent that she found it necessary to hold fast to&#13;
the bannister as she led Marjorie up the stairs to her room.&#13;
Settled at last in the small, though very neat room assigned her, Marjorie sat down&#13;
to think over her day's experiences. If every day proved as adventuresome as had&#13;
this one, she would surely have enough to write about. But it wouldn't, for there&#13;
would be no more traveling for sometime, no more excitement on the way-there&#13;
would just be the tiresome rising in the morning, teaching all day and then going&#13;
to bed, tired out!&#13;
But the worst of all-she was afraid she would never see Robert Kirkwood again,&#13;
or anyone else as interesting, out here.&#13;
CHAPTER IV&#13;
Written by LOIS RUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
It was Friday afternoon and a quarter holiday at the school so Marjorie came home&#13;
early, looking not at all like her cheerful little self.&#13;
"You look tired this afternoon, Marjorie, something wrong?" Marjorie looked&#13;
at little Mrs. Brigham and tried hard to keep back the tears as she replied:&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
�"Oh! I guess its nothing but a headache. Or maybe I am just a little homesick."&#13;
Mrs. Brigham put her hand kindly over Marjorie's and said, "Hadn't you better tell&#13;
me about it? Maybe I can help you."&#13;
"You are awfully good to me, Mrs. Brigham. I guess I don't understand things&#13;
here very well. Everybody is just lovely to me and I have plenty to do to keep me&#13;
busy but somehow I-"&#13;
"I believe I understand you, dear," Mrs. Brigham said, sitting down beside her&#13;
on the sofa. "You feel so lost-so all alone in this big lonesome country. Instead&#13;
of there being plenty and even too many friends to call and see you, and for you&#13;
to go and see, there are only a few that you would care to call friends . There is nobody to really talk your heart too because people are shy of you. Why, do you know,&#13;
Marjorie, the people think you are different from common folks because you can play&#13;
and sing and because you use good grammar. But before long they will come to know&#13;
you as I do and you will find them the truest of friends-rough but faithful and ready&#13;
to receive the help you can give them."&#13;
"And what about my school? Why can't I make friends with those children?&#13;
They won't even talk to me. It is all I can do to squeeze an answer to my questions&#13;
out of them even when they know well enough what the answer is. I've tried so hard&#13;
to get some response. They seem to think I will eat them alive if they talk to me.&#13;
Are all children in the West like that?" Mrs. Brigham laughed.&#13;
"Why, Miss Marjorie, you are such a picture of despair! I'm sure it isn't really&#13;
half so bad as all that. The children are timid because they think you know so much.&#13;
They are hard to get acquainted with but before long you will be keeping them after&#13;
school because they talk too much." She took the tired little teacher by the hand and&#13;
led her out into the yard.&#13;
"Will you go on an errand for me, Marjorie?" she said.&#13;
"I want you to go to the very top of that hill you see over there-see that little&#13;
path ?-go up it and when you get to the top take one of the paths going down and&#13;
sit down by the little creek and rest. You'll have plenty of time before supper and&#13;
you will feel worlds better."&#13;
&#13;
j,&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
And Marjorie did as she was told. She followed the path to the very top of the&#13;
hill. The sun was shining down fiercely but the breeze was cool. She walked along&#13;
not interested in what she saw and thinking it was rather a waste of time, when suddenly she saw something that made her open her eyes in wonder. She was looking&#13;
into the coulee below her. Was there ever such a delightful place to rest? Why had&#13;
she never come here before? She lost no time in deciding which direction to turn&#13;
but made directly for the nearest tree. She sat down in the cool shade and listened to&#13;
the stream as it rushed over the big rocks in front of her, watched a tiny waterfall which displayed every color of the rainbow as the sun shone on the fine spray.&#13;
She forgot that she had thought of crying. She forgot everything and in three minutes was fast asleep.&#13;
It must have been the rain that awakened her, or it might have been the first clap&#13;
of thunder. Whatever it was she realized without being told that the rain was pour-&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
ing down and that the lightning was playing around in the raindrops. She was so&#13;
confused for a while that she didn't realize what she was doing. She started to run.&#13;
What was that awful rumbling? Would it never stop? She stumbled and fell;&#13;
got up again and rushed on. The rain blinded her and the noise was deadening.&#13;
Suddenly she ran against something. It was a large rock.&#13;
" Oh , dear! if I can only get behind that rock," she thought and started to climb.&#13;
But she was arrested by a hand on her shoulder. She turned around and looked&#13;
into the face of "Bob" Kirkwood. He grasped her arm and almost dragged her down&#13;
past the rock and through the little stream to a clump of evergreen trees, which&#13;
formed a natural shelter against the storm.&#13;
They stood and . watched the storm together. It was impossible to talk for the&#13;
roar of the thunder was deafening. Marjorie forgot her fear of lightning in the wonder of it all. She had never known lightning to be beautiful before. It played on&#13;
the rocks-on the very one she had tried to climb-seeming to jump from one rock&#13;
to another and the big drops of rain seemed to be on fire. The thunder claps were&#13;
deadened by the roar of the echoes of a previous clap, and each echo was strengthened&#13;
again by the new clap until the roar was unceasing. The little stream had grown&#13;
to twice its original size by now and Marjorie noticed that all the rocks ran waterfalls .&#13;
How long the storm lasted she never knew. Her interest had been so intense that&#13;
she had forgotten time, and everything. That is, almost everything. She never forgot that our hero was standing by her side and she never forgot to keep wondering&#13;
just how he happened to be there at just the right moment.&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER V&#13;
Written by ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
"I don't know what would have ever become of me if you hadn't been there,"&#13;
sighed Marjorie.&#13;
"Oh, I'm so glad, you can't be as glad as I am," answered Bob with a look that&#13;
made her hastily say, "I must get back home. Mrs. Brigham will be so worried."&#13;
"Your not going to dismiss me with a disdainful air and never a backward glance&#13;
are you, Miss Clinton?"&#13;
"Not if you care to follow, Mr. Kirkwood." Then they looked at each other and&#13;
laughed, shook hands and Bob said, "We are now formally introduced and the next&#13;
act on my part will be to carry you across that stream."&#13;
"Oh, will it!" answered Marjorie, saucily. "Well, I think I do prefer that to being&#13;
dragged through it as I was a few minutes ago."&#13;
"Oh, but you see we hadn't been introduced then?" answered Bob with mock&#13;
seriousness.&#13;
Quick as a flash he had lifted her in his strong arms and was cautiously feeling for&#13;
the stepping stones which led across the stream and over which the water was now&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred one&#13;
&#13;
�rushing. Marjorie shut her eyes and forgot to think what a really exciting situation&#13;
this would be in a story.&#13;
The shower left as quickly as it had come and the sun, although by now far in the&#13;
West was casting a rosy glow over the whole world and made the drenched landscape&#13;
sparkle with the glory of millions of raindrops which shone from every tree and&#13;
bush.&#13;
" Oh, what a wonderful sight!" said Marjorie as they again reached the top of the&#13;
hill. "A sight like this almost makes up for all the homesickness."&#13;
"Are you afflicted with that awful malady too?" asked Bob.&#13;
"That's what I was running away from when I got caught in the storm." laughed&#13;
Marjorie.&#13;
"Me too, well what do you think of that? We'll have to form a society for homesick New Yorkers, won't we?" asked Bob. "And say, let's have the membership&#13;
limited to two."&#13;
"Hey, get some action in there" yelled the director and the camera man was scowling,&#13;
grinding out the film.&#13;
"Don't you know this is the finis?"&#13;
&#13;
A Legend&#13;
&#13;
of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN,' 18&#13;
&#13;
In dread silence alone one dark night&#13;
Walked the chief of the Siouxs, man of might;&#13;
'Neath the pines looking downward with scorn,&#13;
O'er the mosses, dark sodden with rain,&#13;
As a bright· happy greeting they feign ,&#13;
N ekumonta was pressing-forlorn.&#13;
The low beeches against his brow brushed,&#13;
Chilling showers of ice his face flushed ,&#13;
As he anxiously passed 'neath the elms.&#13;
Snarling panthers crept 'cross his dim path,&#13;
For disturbed, they were sullen with wrath;&#13;
Frightened rabbits sped back to their realms.&#13;
Gazing sadly the bear turned aside,&#13;
As his brother with swift struggling stride&#13;
Hurried into the fast gathering dark;&#13;
How they love him, these mutes,- and repent&#13;
That Dame Sorrow his heart thus should rent,&#13;
For a change in their friend could they mark.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred two&#13;
&#13;
Through the cheerless and long winter moons,.&#13;
When the plague had wrought havoc for boons,&#13;
Taking out of bright souls man's last breath,&#13;
N ekumonta by grief and care spent&#13;
With fair Shanewis-light of his tentOften talked of the sorrow of death.&#13;
They had chanted again and again&#13;
The w,e ird deathsong for women and men ;&#13;
Many times they had watched the last spark&#13;
Of a life seem to flicker and die, .&#13;
Calmly answering departed ones' cry&#13;
It would linger, then swiftly embark.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
And at length when the soft breezes blew&#13;
Telling all that the winter was through&#13;
Then the heart of the chieftain sank low&#13;
For though spring whispered hope in his ear&#13;
She was stricken, his Shanewis dear,&#13;
From her couch she was whispering so.&#13;
And then as before he could see there&#13;
His poor Shanewis kneeling in prayer.&#13;
" I must fight with the spirits, my love&#13;
And though sisters are calling above,&#13;
N ekumonta, I will not yet leave&#13;
You who watches me lovingly kind ;&#13;
Yes, I need you and I have long pined&#13;
Lest they call-but to you I will cleave."&#13;
For a moment the chief stood erect,&#13;
The dark gloom of despair he then checked&#13;
As he bent o'er his squaw's shivering form,&#13;
Slowly uttered this promise secure,&#13;
"I will seek for the vine that can cure,&#13;
I will save you from darkness and storm."&#13;
He had pushed back the robe at the door,&#13;
And was hurrying fast to the core&#13;
O f the fo rest so drear and so lone,&#13;
Peering under the fallen dead trees,&#13;
Crawling neath them on hands and on knees&#13;
While the winds seemed to whisper and moan.&#13;
Three long suns in the snow and in the rain&#13;
He had sought, and yet all was in vain;&#13;
&#13;
two hundred three&#13;
&#13;
�As the third slowly drew to a close,&#13;
Stumbling onward in gathering black.&#13;
N ekumonta, exhausted, fell back&#13;
And his eyes soon were sealed in repose.&#13;
&#13;
In his dream he could see one so fair&#13;
Lying sleepless on fur rich and rare,&#13;
He could see the plague run through her veins&#13;
Like the fires which forests oft sweep;&#13;
To the door of the lodge did she creep,&#13;
And looked earnestly out through the rains.&#13;
But again he was in his canoe&#13;
With the spirits of plague chasing too,&#13;
And they laughed as he reached in despair&#13;
For the herbs grow',i ng close by the shore;&#13;
And then, as before, he could see there&#13;
His poor Shanewis kneeling in prayer.&#13;
Then low murmuring voices he heard,&#13;
More distinctly and clearly averred,&#13;
"Ah the pure healing waters are we,&#13;
Nekumonta, thou good and brave man,&#13;
And she'll live, thy dear Shanewis can&#13;
If from prisons so dark us you free."&#13;
With a spring from his slumber he rose,&#13;
Just as night gladly drew to a close;&#13;
Though he glanced all around for the one&#13;
Who had uttered those few welcome words,&#13;
Not a thing cou ld he see but the birds&#13;
As they chirped in the cold morning sun.&#13;
Then he suddenly bent to the ground,&#13;
And his ear closely placed to the mound&#13;
To his feet he soon leaped with a cry&#13;
For he heard a faint voice with this plea,&#13;
"Ah, our pure healing waters set free&#13;
And we'll save your dear Shanewis shy."&#13;
With a bound like a panther's he dashed&#13;
To a tree which the lightning had crashed;&#13;
Then its tuughened damp branches he broke,&#13;
Which he forced far down into the dirt.&#13;
What had changed to a creature alert&#13;
The most hopeless and saddened of folk?&#13;
&#13;
two hundred four&#13;
&#13;
As he toiled, never resting a whit,&#13;
Ry the voices his heart was now lit,&#13;
As they whispered of freedom they hoped;&#13;
Then imprisoning barriers gave way,&#13;
And by welcoming light of the day&#13;
A small stream trickled forth and was oped.&#13;
Just as dusk was beginning to fall&#13;
N ekumonta stepped into the hall&#13;
Of his Shanewis's dark lonely tent;&#13;
With soft mosses he soothed her hot brow&#13;
And with draughts of the water-free nowShe was lured back to health and content.&#13;
Once again, o'er the village warm winds&#13;
Gently stole, bringing comfort to minds&#13;
Once so hopeless, dejected,- forlorn.&#13;
At the door of their tent open wide&#13;
N ekumonta at Shanewis's side&#13;
Whispered love on that happy spring morn.&#13;
And now such is the tale that is told&#13;
Of the manner the barrier was rolled&#13;
Setting free the Missouri's clear tide&#13;
Which turned black when the plague disappeared&#13;
Leaving no evil thing to be feared&#13;
In that village-our own Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
An Appreciation&#13;
VERA LUNBOM&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
You may talk of college pep&#13;
When you come here as a prep&#13;
&#13;
And denounce as dead the school that doesn't possess it;&#13;
But you'll come to comprehend,&#13;
As we all do in the end,&#13;
It's no snap to keep it, and you will confess it.&#13;
Now in a certain college&#13;
Where I acqu ired my knowledge&#13;
And sojourned for a certain term of years;&#13;
&#13;
two hundred five&#13;
&#13;
�All joy was gone, all laughter died;&#13;
Poor Orpheus with grief was mad.&#13;
No longer love walked by his side;&#13;
All earth and heaven was cruel and sad.&#13;
&#13;
He played such tender, pleading strains&#13;
The very ghosts shed bitter tears,&#13;
And tortured ones forgot their pains&#13;
When his sweet music reached their ears.&#13;
&#13;
He plead and bowed to gods above;&#13;
To mortal men his grief he sang.&#13;
He begged them to return his love,&#13;
But only echo's answer rang.&#13;
&#13;
Old Ixion stopped his mighty wheel,&#13;
Stern Proserpine could not forbear,&#13;
The Furies could the magic feel,&#13;
And Pluto gave him back the fair.&#13;
&#13;
Then wretchedly, despairingly,&#13;
When all his hope had almost fled,&#13;
He turned, to seek Eurydice,&#13;
Below, in regions of the dead.&#13;
He took his lyre, his only friend,&#13;
And bravely started on his way,&#13;
Through gloomy caves the path did wend&#13;
And led afar from light of day.&#13;
Through gruesome caverns, awful sights,&#13;
Past hissing things, through flames of red,&#13;
Through blackest darkness of the night&#13;
With fearless, hopeful steps he sped.&#13;
At last he stood at Pluto's throne&#13;
And bowed before his majesty;&#13;
His heart and faith had stronger grownNow he would have Eurydice.&#13;
With lyre in hand and strength in heart&#13;
He cast himself at Pluto's feet.&#13;
His wish he told with words in part&#13;
Accompanied with music sweet.&#13;
"O deities of underworld&#13;
To whom all who ever live must bow,&#13;
By thee to destiny are hurled,&#13;
Oh hear my words in mercy now.&#13;
"I come not as a spy nor foe,&#13;
I am not sent for worldy gain,&#13;
Nor do I come my strength to show,&#13;
I come to seek relief from pain.&#13;
"A god all powerful led me here&#13;
To beg from thee a human life;&#13;
This god was Love. Now I in fear&#13;
Beseech of you my love, my wife."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
Eurydice came forth at last&#13;
From out a darkened passageway,&#13;
But as to Orpheus' arms she passed&#13;
The voice of Pluto bade her stay.&#13;
On one condition she might go:&#13;
The lovers' glances should not meet&#13;
Until beyond this world below&#13;
On earthly soil they touched their feet.&#13;
They then proceeded on their way;&#13;
She followed gladly as he led.&#13;
On, on they hurried eagerly,&#13;
Till light and sunshine shone ahead.&#13;
They'd almost reached the cheerful air&#13;
And Orpheus could not resist,&#13;
Could not be sure that she was there&#13;
Until her loving lips he'd kissed.&#13;
Their arms they stretched for fond embrace,&#13;
Their glances met; then back they swayed.&#13;
His love was carried into space,&#13;
For Pluto's will must be obeyed.&#13;
In loud despair he cried "Farewell!"&#13;
In anguished moans he raised his cries,&#13;
But only echoes seemed to swell,&#13;
And blackest darkness met his eyes.&#13;
Then long and dreary days passed by&#13;
Till Orpheus welcomed eagerly&#13;
The blow of death, with grateful sigh,&#13;
And met at last, Eurydice.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
�Editorials&#13;
Our debating history for the past year needs no rehearsal for the benefit of students or residents of Morningside. The success of the girls at Huron as well as the&#13;
home victory with Vermillion as our rivals, will long be remembered. And was the&#13;
1916 tradition to end with the girls? No! The men's debates with St. Olaf. and&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan as worthy opponents also resulted in our favor. With such spirit&#13;
in our midst let us strive for other victories, ever reaching toward the goal-a greater&#13;
Morningside!&#13;
An aggressive movement of tangible significance has centered itself upon the girls of&#13;
the Freshman class. A club, which organized for democracy and good fellowship and&#13;
designed to provide many good things on Saturday evenings, has already made a place&#13;
for itself in the college as one of prominence. The girls are to be congratulated upon&#13;
this forward movement.&#13;
Morningside is proud of her Glee Clubs! The tours Christmas and Easter vacations by these clubs are made through many a sacrifice by their members, but in the&#13;
effort put forth, and in the splendid entertainments there lies the ever loyal spirit of&#13;
progress and interest for our College-which so unfailingly shows itself in the existence&#13;
and growth of the Madrigal and Men's Glee Clubs.&#13;
Just how much has been accomplished by the Men's Gospel Teams sent out to our&#13;
city churches and to those of nearby towns can be but partially realized. Only time,&#13;
under the special influence of the growing brotherhood feeling, will ever portray the&#13;
· results and benefits. "A noble purpose, well attained, is strength for all, and victory&#13;
gained."&#13;
Another organization which deserves unlimited space for commendation is .our Band.&#13;
Under an able and experienced director, Prof. Himmel, unusual progress has raised&#13;
· its standards as a musical project to that of the very best. No other body has been&#13;
more ready or steadfast in its support of athletics and forensics. No other body has&#13;
been more agreeably entertaining in concerts, programs, or boosting campaigns. We&#13;
wish to thank our College band for being.&#13;
Never has a body of young people realized the benefits, opportunities and privileges&#13;
of life at Morningside more than the student bod y of today, and never has a class&#13;
Not ne is ignorant of the&#13;
o&#13;
appreciated these advantages more than the class of '17 !&#13;
successful financial campaign carried on last year, and to those who have so generously&#13;
made it possible for us to be here, we wish to express our thanks.&#13;
&#13;
In conclusion, we wish to thank all who have so liberally contributed to the Literary&#13;
Department of the "Sioux ' 17," and especially do we wish to express our appreciation&#13;
to Prof. Hayes and Dr. Hilmer, who so generously assisted the Annual Board in&#13;
making the Prize Story and Poem Contest possible. As a legacy to the "Sioux&#13;
'18" we do hereby bequeath to it all material not appropriated by this or any other&#13;
annual.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
EnPassant&#13;
n&#13;
BOOK&#13;
SIX&#13;
&#13;
�two hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City&#13;
JOHN J. BIDDISON&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College is a part of Sioux City; Sioux City is all part of the environment-the campus-of Morningside College. It is a part of the library, part of the&#13;
curriculum, and not an inconsiderable part of the laboratory experience to which&#13;
every student is entitled by virtue of his enrollment. Morningside College has brought&#13;
hundreds of citizens to Sioux City, settled them here, and made them a part of the&#13;
civic, business and social life of its sixty-two thousand inhabitants. The city has contributed to the college many thousands of its dollars, many hundreds of its best students,&#13;
and has always maintained a friendly and encouraging spirit toward the institution.&#13;
Physically, Sioux City is situated, like Rome, upon seven hills, which slope down to&#13;
the basin of the Missouri River. Located at the conjunction of the Big Sioux and&#13;
Missouri Rivers, she forms a natural distributing point. She has sent her salesmen into&#13;
the surrounding states, built up great wholesale and jobbing houses, and has become&#13;
the market town for a vast territory. Groceries, dry goods, clothing, fruits, candies,&#13;
notions, hardware, automobiles, farm implements, jewelry-practically every line of&#13;
goods needed in a community is either manufactured or jobbed through the big distributers of this city.&#13;
&#13;
SECTION OF STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
But the distinctive factor in Sioux City's development is the packing and live stock&#13;
industry. She furnishes the market for feeder and fat stock, and the packing houses&#13;
convert into meat the millions of animals that pour into it from the ranches and feed- '&#13;
yards of Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Nebraska, Wyoming and&#13;
Colorado. This live stock industry furnishes employment for approximately six&#13;
thousand men, and involves a manufacturing output of so many millions that Sioux&#13;
City is ranked as the first in Iowa for manufactured products. As a packing center&#13;
she is ranked variously from fourth to sixth in the United States.&#13;
During the last decade, the city has developed much along political, social, religious&#13;
and aesthetic lines. For six years she has been operating successfully under the commission form of government. Five years has seen the building of an adequate public&#13;
library with extended service into the suburbs. The artistic sense is being developed&#13;
by an art society and various musical organizations. Charitable social service is prominently emphasized. The rather indifferent attitude toward religion is being replaced&#13;
by one of positive and aggressive interest in the things that are more than passing.&#13;
Simultaneous with these movements has been the re-creation of the public school&#13;
system, which is now numbered among the most modern in the country.&#13;
Sioux City is rapidly growing, because she is meeting and taking advantage of great&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
&#13;
She likes her college; she has done much for it, and she will do as&#13;
&#13;
much again if necessary. And in return the college owes the city loyal cooperation and&#13;
support.&#13;
LOOKING UP PIERCE FROM FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�AT THE SPEEDWAY&#13;
&#13;
ALONG FIFTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
two hundred four teen&#13;
&#13;
PIERCE STREET, LOOKING SOUTH&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH STREET, LOOKING EAST&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�ELKS' CLUB&#13;
CRYSTAL LAKE BEACH&#13;
&#13;
GOLF LINKS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
PUBLIC LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�AT CRYSTAL LAKE&#13;
&#13;
RIVERSIDE BOAT CLUB&#13;
&#13;
CRYSTAL LAKE SCENE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BOAT CLUB&#13;
&#13;
two hundred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
�STONE PARK DRIVE&#13;
&#13;
STONE PARK ENTRANCE&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�UNION DEPOT&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
SHORE ACRE BOAT CLUB&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�10&#13;
&#13;
OUR SIOUX CITY HOME&#13;
701 - 703- 705 - 707 4th&#13;
Corner of Jackso n&#13;
&#13;
We offer at all seasons for your&#13;
inspection the largest line of&#13;
&#13;
Clothing, Furnishings, Hats and&#13;
Sboes shown in Sioux City.&#13;
Our enormous buying power for&#13;
five stores enables us to give&#13;
better than ordinary values.&#13;
The E. &amp; W. Guarantee of Satisfaction goes with every purchase&#13;
&#13;
Complete Outfitters for Men and Boys&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Mitchell takes second in Prohibition&#13;
Contest at Simpson. Also elected President of&#13;
State Prohibition Association.&#13;
"Oh, Richard !"&#13;
14 Wednesday. Annual Board Election.&#13;
"Quoth the Raven, 'Nevermore'."&#13;
15 Thursday. Agora Club established as Board of&#13;
Censorship of the movies.&#13;
17 Saturday. Drake Relays.&#13;
"Some two-mile team-eh, wot?"&#13;
Madison elected President of State Peace Assocition.&#13;
20 Tuesday. Girls' debates with Simpson.&#13;
"Nuff sed !"&#13;
21 Wednesday. Morningside -\efeats Vermillion in&#13;
baseball, 3-0.&#13;
"Strike three and out. Oh, you Obe !"&#13;
22 Thursday. Men's Glee Club sings at _ igh&#13;
H&#13;
School.&#13;
"Some Country Store."&#13;
23 Friday. Lovice Strobel elected May Queen.&#13;
"Fletcher almost got it."&#13;
24&#13;
Saturday. Horne Track Meet.&#13;
"Our class wins."&#13;
26 Monday. Seniors present cinder track as class gift.&#13;
"Guess we'll show some speed now."&#13;
26 Monday. Philo-Athenaeurn Grand Public.&#13;
"A wee bit of Scotch. I love a lassie."&#13;
27 Tuesday. Seniors choose cast for class play.&#13;
"It wasn't so bad at that."&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�.-------&#13;
&#13;
Pride is the Base&#13;
Upon Which Skyward Rears&#13;
the Majestic Column&#13;
of Achievement&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Pride in the race is the spur&#13;
which marks the progress of a nationpride in itself is the incentive which feeds&#13;
personal ambition - pride is the foothold of self respect and its first physical&#13;
expression is the clothes you wear.&#13;
&#13;
--We offer this thought in the&#13;
hope that all who read this announcement may realize the pride in this store&#13;
and in the success of this business has&#13;
been responsible for the gathering of such&#13;
vast assortments of quality merchandise&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Collegian R eporter.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS. CO.&#13;
"The Big Store"&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
27&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Morningside defeats Vermillion in&#13;
track. "60-40. Fair enough."&#13;
Wednesday. Morningside defeats Vermillion in&#13;
baseball. 8-l. "Guess the boys didn't crack that&#13;
apple."&#13;
Friday. Invitation "M" Meet.&#13;
"Sioux Falls cops the prize."&#13;
Saturday. Nebraska Wesleyan loses to Morningside.&#13;
"Students raid the Princess."&#13;
Tuesday. Girls' Glee Club Concert.&#13;
"O you little Japanese!"&#13;
Saturday. Morningside takes second place in Coe&#13;
Conference Meet.&#13;
"Leuder makes new record."&#13;
Monday. Williams and Clark selected to manage&#13;
"Some team."&#13;
Wednesday. Maroons defeat Yankton in baseball.&#13;
"Poor Greyhounds."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside takes fifth place at the&#13;
State Meet.&#13;
"Not so bad."&#13;
Monday. Juniors entertain the Seniors.&#13;
"Who swiped the ice cream?"&#13;
Tuesday. Financial campaign finished.&#13;
"Who rang the Victory Bell?"&#13;
Thursday. Seniors take a hike.&#13;
"Gone, but not forgotten."&#13;
Saturday. Howard Allen elected Student Body&#13;
President.&#13;
"Congratulations, Hod."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
THE ungrudging&#13;
measure in which&#13;
the public has responded to our efforts&#13;
.... to the attractiveness and quality of&#13;
our merchandise has&#13;
been more than a&#13;
surprise; it has been&#13;
a revelation.&#13;
&#13;
A revelation of how&#13;
&#13;
unmistakably&#13;
clothes buyers register their appreciation&#13;
of a store that renders&#13;
them the genuine&#13;
service of giving&#13;
them a bigger money's worth.&#13;
"Kuppenheimer" Cloth es&#13;
Stetson " H ats&#13;
" Star" Shi1ts&#13;
" Superior" Union Suits&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. May D ay Festi val.&#13;
"Some Fete, believe me !"&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
F ri day. L orene W illi ams w ins G irls' T rack&#13;
Meet.&#13;
"Several records broken. "&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Frid ay. T he "Sioux ' 16" appears.&#13;
"Where's my A nnu al receipt ?"&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Sat urd ay. Philo up-ri ver tri p.&#13;
"Floatin ' down the rive r. "&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Coburn Pl ayers here.&#13;
" L ay on, M acDuff !"&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
T hursday. Philos present bust of R obert Burns&#13;
to library.&#13;
"Th at hel ps some."&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Sat urday. C ur ry elected track captai n.&#13;
"Success to yo u, W end ell !"&#13;
&#13;
7-12&#13;
&#13;
Mond ay to Saturd ay. F inal exams.&#13;
"Yea boo ! and then some."&#13;
&#13;
two hu ndred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Su nd ay. Baccalaureate Sermon.&#13;
" D id you thi nk seriously."&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Monday. Seniors give class play.&#13;
"Trelawney of the W ells."&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Alumni D ay.&#13;
"Glad to see the 'has-beens' again."&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Wed nesday. Graduation exercises.&#13;
"Sen iors begin- "&#13;
&#13;
two hu ndred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�·.'&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
College&#13;
Co-Eds&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. First day of school.&#13;
"Glad to see you back, old top."&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Registration.&#13;
"Which shall it be-history or economics,&#13;
biology or chem?"&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Y . M. Stag in Gym .&#13;
"Hicks, champion watermelon eater."&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Classes begin.&#13;
"Where does my class meet?"&#13;
"Usual number of chapel seats sold."&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Y . M. and Y. W . entertain at reception.&#13;
"Entertain is right!"&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Girls' societies elect.&#13;
"This suspense is awful."&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Facu lty R eception.&#13;
"Where did you get your dress suit?"&#13;
"Prof. Burton: 'Do you like this as well as&#13;
I do?'"&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Dr. Hilmer "sings a solo" in chapel.&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
-A store that's a veritable bower&#13;
of all that is new and authentic&#13;
in suits, coats and dresses&#13;
depicting the latest ideas&#13;
and interpretations of&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Class scrap. Sophs win.&#13;
"Padlocks, broken box cars, torn clothing."&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. "Book of Blues" introduced.&#13;
"Everybody feeling blue."&#13;
&#13;
faashion for the young&#13;
&#13;
college women.&#13;
-It's a Pelletier specialty to always secure the dashing, the&#13;
winning modes of the season particularly for milady in&#13;
college who is sure to demand apparel of distinction&#13;
-A visi t to our apparel section will wonderfully acquaint you with the&#13;
extensiveness and beautifulness of our always new displays.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Chicago&#13;
&#13;
,O maha&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Co1nmission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
TOM DEALTRY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
9&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Pete's Candy Palace&#13;
Home of&#13;
Pete's Hand Rolled&#13;
Bitter S weets&#13;
&#13;
U DENTS&#13;
need of&#13;
ST Glasses willlin find our&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Optometrists competent eye&#13;
examiners and specialists in&#13;
fitting nose glasses. Ask&#13;
any of the thousands we&#13;
have fitted. All g lasses&#13;
made in our own shop.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Stationery Co.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Optical Co.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers, Wholesalers&#13;
and Importers&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Corner 5th and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Choicest Qualities in Confections&#13;
&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
New Martin Block&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
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hundred thirty-two&#13;
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Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Big "Pep" meeting, parade, and band.&#13;
" Beat Yankton! "&#13;
Saturday. Football season opens.&#13;
"Beat Yankton , 51-0."&#13;
Wednesday. Y. W. C. A. has tea in honor of Ida&#13;
Lewis.&#13;
" One of our successful grads."&#13;
Friday. Shumann Concert opens lecture course.&#13;
" Meanwhile, snipe hunt-two victims."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside loses to Iowa U ., 17-6.&#13;
"Iowa coach expressed himself freel y."&#13;
Monday. Accident to former Student Body&#13;
President.&#13;
"Boob Vernon pinched fo r speeding on&#13;
Chicago streets."&#13;
Wednesday. Prof. Harvey gives violin recital.&#13;
" He can make the fiddle talk. "&#13;
Friday. Freshmen have breakfast at South&#13;
Ravine.&#13;
"Who fell in the creek?"&#13;
Thursday. Lee Saltow and D orothy Gootch give&#13;
readings in chapel.&#13;
" Poor little shop-girl."&#13;
Friday. Prof. H arvey plays in chapel.&#13;
"Made a hit."&#13;
Saturday. Harold Fisher, Freshman student, dies.&#13;
Monday. Academy has wiener roast.&#13;
"Boys play football. "&#13;
Tuesday. Prof. Reistrup's pupils' recital.&#13;
" M ight y good."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside beats Nebraska Wesleyan, 6-0.&#13;
"Goodness, wasn't that fellow fat?"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-three&#13;
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�Exclusive Creations&#13;
in&#13;
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Women's and Misses'&#13;
Suits, Coats&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Afternoon Dresses&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
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Also&#13;
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Distributors&#13;
nf&#13;
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Smart College Footwear&#13;
for&#13;
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Men and Women&#13;
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6&#13;
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The House of Quality, Style and Courtesy&#13;
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two hundred thirty-four&#13;
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Monday. Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
"How the time did fly."&#13;
Tuesday. Kennedy speaks in chapel.&#13;
"A Man of Iron."&#13;
Thursday. Football team goes to Ames.&#13;
"We're right with you, fellows."&#13;
Friday. Mitchell wins Home Oratorical Contest.&#13;
"The Man of the Hour."&#13;
Friday. Several go to Ames.&#13;
"By freight and Fords-just part of the&#13;
way."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside loses to Ames. 6-0.&#13;
"Almost clicked them."&#13;
Tuesday. Prof. Reistrup gives recital.&#13;
"Where was all the crowd ?"&#13;
Friday. Send football team off.&#13;
"Go to it, gang."&#13;
Saturday. Dakota Wesleyan beats Morningside.&#13;
"It might have been worse."&#13;
Monday. Epworth League social at Craig's.&#13;
"John wants the long-necked one."&#13;
Friday. Pep meeting in chapel. .&#13;
"Everybody up. Old 'Ki Yi,' now!"&#13;
Saturday. Maroons win from State Teachers,&#13;
20-9.&#13;
"Guess we brought home the bacon that&#13;
time."&#13;
Monday. Miss Willmer, second number of&#13;
Lecture Course.&#13;
"The Sign of the Cross."&#13;
Tuesday. All ready for Thanksgiving vacation.&#13;
"Till we meet again."&#13;
Monday. Inter-society debate. Othos defeat&#13;
Philos.&#13;
" Noise."&#13;
Tuesday. Inter-society debate. Othos defeat&#13;
Ionians.&#13;
"Bad as Ladies' Aid Society."&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1&#13;
&#13;
England, Germany, Franee&#13;
Agree That&#13;
&#13;
LARSON'S&#13;
Have the best Groceries&#13;
in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
"Just off the Campus"&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON CO.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Inter-society debate. Ionians defeat Philos.&#13;
"That poor city manager."&#13;
Thursday. Academy inter-society debate.&#13;
2&#13;
Hawkeyes defeat Adelphians.&#13;
"Buehler gets excited."&#13;
4 Saturday. Y. M . and Y. W. party.&#13;
"We like that kind."&#13;
4 Saturday. Intercollegiate debaters chosen.&#13;
"Good lineup."&#13;
6 Monday. Letter men named.&#13;
"We are proud of them."&#13;
6 Monday. Sophs, Juniors and Seniors give parties.&#13;
"Some minstrel show."&#13;
7 Tuesday. Special Y. M . and Y. W . C. A.&#13;
meetings begin.&#13;
"Everybody interested."&#13;
8 Wednesday. Miss Woodford gives piano recital&#13;
in city library.&#13;
"Good interpretation."&#13;
9 Thursday. "Jons" elected captain of football&#13;
team.&#13;
"Wonder who he is."&#13;
14 Tuesday. Coach Saunderson entertains Varsity&#13;
squad.&#13;
"What's the matter w ith Coach? He's all&#13;
right!"&#13;
15 Wednesday. Christian Associations give party.&#13;
"Stock yards method of handling young&#13;
animals."&#13;
16-Jan. 5 Christmas Vacation.&#13;
"I want to go back to the farm."&#13;
&#13;
/ I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Students' Headquarters&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. School begins again.&#13;
" All ready fo r another spasm."&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Thursd ay. G lee Club retu rns from trip.&#13;
"W ho wrote that Black H and letter?"&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. F reshmen give a real party.&#13;
" Backward, 0 backward, turn time in your&#13;
flight,&#13;
And make me a Freshie again for tonight."&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
We have everything in Kodaks and Supplies. An&#13;
Autographic Kodak and our Finishing Department will keep that college diary perfect.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy .&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
E . K . BARNEY,&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
F riday. Dr. Craig talks on " Exams."&#13;
" Begin to feel nervous alread y.'.'&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Men's G lee Cl ub gives H ome Concert.&#13;
" Bingville Musical Uplift Society featu res."&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Our large w ell filled candy case and our perfect&#13;
fountain service are irresistible attractions.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. G irls' basketball series begins.&#13;
"Williams and Curry are favored ones."&#13;
&#13;
Friday. C oncert number on Lectu re Course.&#13;
"Were you there ?"&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Bean Shower.&#13;
" Naughty boys."&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
2 5-28&#13;
&#13;
Prop.&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I ' '&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
',&#13;
&#13;
Examinations.&#13;
" I guess not cram."&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. P ost-Exam Agora J ubilee.&#13;
" Big Fair, the feature."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Reach Her Heart Through a Box of&#13;
&#13;
La Fama Chocolates&#13;
"a matter of good taste"&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Co.&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Basketball series for men begins.&#13;
"Sophomores show class."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Special meetings begin at Grace&#13;
Church. Henry Ostrom the evangelist.&#13;
"Many students in choir."&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Dr. Hough, of Garrett Institute, here.&#13;
"Excellent chapel talk."&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Trustees of college hold executive&#13;
meeting.&#13;
"Janitor, the cause of interruption."&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Grace Church men give banquet.&#13;
"Mayor Smith and Lieutenant-Governor&#13;
Harding speak."&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Curry wins the Monument Run. Van&#13;
Horne second.&#13;
"And they were both Juniors, too."&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Philos and Athenaeums present "His&#13;
Uncle John."&#13;
"Orchestra features ."&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Annual Men's Banquet.&#13;
"Clearing house for latest war news."&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Girls' triangular debate with Huron&#13;
and Vermillion. We win both.&#13;
"Fifteen Rahs for the girls!"&#13;
&#13;
Where Quality is Supreme&#13;
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SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
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&#13;
WEST HOTEL COMPANY, P ROPS.&#13;
Jay MacLarty, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
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Frank J . Donohoe, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
Wholesalers and Retailers of Sweet Cream, Milk&#13;
and Lactone Buttermilk&#13;
Our Cream is Served at Morningside Pharmacy and Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
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707 FIFTH STREET&#13;
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Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C. Lees&#13;
Tennis, Golf, Baseball Goods&#13;
Fishing Tackle, Vacuum Bollles, A ulo Lunch Kits&#13;
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Orcutts Hardware&#13;
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Camp&#13;
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Nebraska St.&#13;
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FULLERTON&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
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Saturday. Agora Banquet. Seniors win the cup.&#13;
"Waiters devour left-overs."&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Glee Club sings for Older Boys' Conference at Martin.&#13;
"Heap big music."&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Klippel wins Dewey Oratorical&#13;
Contest.&#13;
"Congratulations, Ruby!"&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Outdoors, Afield and Afloat&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Freshman girls organize Dais Club.&#13;
"Ruth Mahood elected president."&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Friday. St. Patrick's Day. Men defeat St. Olaf&#13;
and Dakota Wesleyan in debate.&#13;
"Follow example set by girls."&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Girls' number of Collegian&#13;
Reporter appears.&#13;
"Good work, girls."&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Engagement announced. Wonder&#13;
who it can be. · Guess !-you're right.&#13;
"I must save enough to buy a dining room&#13;
chair."&#13;
Friday. Spring vacation begins.&#13;
"No rest for the wicked" ( Annual Board) .&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Klippel wins second in State Prohibition Contest&#13;
at Cornell.&#13;
"What became of that medal, Casey?"&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Fourth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Checking and Savings&#13;
Accounts Solicited&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Sioux City High wins high school&#13;
basketball tournament.&#13;
"Whiting-the dark horse."&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
First National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete&#13;
stock of building material in&#13;
the city.&#13;
Do not fail to let us figure&#13;
your lumber bill.&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE M. JORDAN, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
$720,000.00&#13;
&#13;
Phones : Auto I 065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-two&#13;
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two hundred&#13;
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forty-thre e&#13;
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Medals&#13;
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Emblems&#13;
&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing&#13;
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Jonas Olson &amp; Co.&#13;
Established 1895&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturing Jewelers and&#13;
Diamond Mounters&#13;
Auto Phone 3211&#13;
&#13;
5 10 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Get Your&#13;
&#13;
Graduation Flowers and&#13;
Gifts&#13;
From&#13;
&#13;
The College Book Store&#13;
G. T. Pendell, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�New Cars&#13;
Auto&#13;
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RAY DARLING, Prop.&#13;
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GOODS-The Freshest&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
Heard at the Men's&#13;
&#13;
YOUR MONEY-Where do you keep it?&#13;
Many years ago people were in the habit of keeping large sums of money&#13;
around the house, and as a consequence frequently suffered heavy losses.&#13;
Now-a-days the man or woman who does not have a bank account is the&#13;
exception.&#13;
Nearly 10,000 people have accounts with us at the present time and we extend to you a hearty invitation to join our army of savers.&#13;
'&#13;
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WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK&#13;
SECURITY BANK BUILDING&#13;
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Chicago, Ills.&#13;
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South Omaha, Neb.&#13;
East St. Louis, Ills.&#13;
&#13;
Banquet&#13;
&#13;
Latest war news-General Buehler's forces routed at Fort Cooper.&#13;
Say, Cooper, are your hands Chapin?&#13;
Say, is Lida still taking "Gym"?&#13;
Listen, Bernice can't keep the Wulf from the door.&#13;
What's Casey's birthstone? A Ruby.&#13;
Miss Wilson has a little Stile.&#13;
"Al" Hornney says Marion Isabel.&#13;
&#13;
If Carson got a light, would Miss Dimmitt?&#13;
Freshies, if Ed na Smith was hungry, would " Fish" bite?&#13;
If Rusty caught any snipes, would "Chuck" Fry them? No, "Deak" Sherwood.&#13;
If the Sophs had a goat, would it eat Hay?&#13;
Say, Sophs, w ill Down ever get Wolle?&#13;
Hey, the toastmaster wants to hold a Schmoker after the feed. Where will he put&#13;
the cigar stubs? In his trunk.&#13;
If Schmoker couldn't walk, could "Hod-carrier"?&#13;
Where is Miss Brand? Being Ha(y)zed.&#13;
&#13;
Clay, Robinson &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
0 Claire, where is Irene? Can't you Cooper?&#13;
Just now a Freshman would have to climb on the dresser to see himself in the&#13;
mirror.&#13;
The seniors can cross the English Channel. Why? The Germans don't consider&#13;
squirrel food contraband.&#13;
Academy-Let's ·hear from the Faculty? Seniors-Can't you hear them eating?&#13;
Say Otis, what part of an apple do you like? The Corr.&#13;
Is Hayes a union man? Yes, he always looks for the Brand.&#13;
We heard that " Bill" Williams made a strike about Bowling.&#13;
\Vhere will Madison wear his Beard when he's married?&#13;
&#13;
On his arm.&#13;
&#13;
What would "Al" Hornney do, if he Met (a) calf ?&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-eight&#13;
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two hundred forty -nine&#13;
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We are concerned about you. Even now you are buying&#13;
our merchandise, (Standard Old Line Policy Contracts). We are&#13;
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is growing, we are selling more business, and we are employing constantly the best brains and ability we can find.&#13;
Make an early visit to our Home Office. Look over a better plant. Know about our 20-Pay Preferred Policy. It is the&#13;
most desirable to buy and the easiest on earth to sell.&#13;
Truly, we are interested in you Mr. Ambitious Student, you&#13;
mean much to us and our Company is prepared to mean much&#13;
indeed to you.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
&#13;
National Fidelity Life Insurance Campany&#13;
OF IOWA&#13;
RALPH H. RICE, President&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, U. S . A.&#13;
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Olympia&#13;
The finest line of&#13;
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Candies, Sundaes, Ices and Fruits&#13;
in the city&#13;
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TRY OUR LUNCHEONETTES&#13;
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5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
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P. S . Simply do not buy Life Insurance or e mploy your services, until you know our proposition&#13;
&#13;
Heard at the Agora Banquet&#13;
Does "Jimmy" Hayes smoke?&#13;
&#13;
No, but he knows a good Brand.&#13;
&#13;
WHERE TO SELL YOUR RANGERS&#13;
&#13;
Why shou ld "Kill y" live in the South? He loves a Blackman.&#13;
Mary had a little lamb, but Bernice has a Wulf.&#13;
&#13;
If "Hod" had a pipe, wou ld Cecil Schmoker?&#13;
What school does Clara Swain like next to Morningside?&#13;
Will Alice Thornburg ever be broke?&#13;
&#13;
Don't Overlook Sioux City Market&#13;
Princeton.&#13;
&#13;
No, she'll always have a "Penny."&#13;
&#13;
Should think Marion Heikes would get lost this year without any Leuder.&#13;
What is Earl Williams' favorite sport? Bowling.&#13;
&#13;
this year when disposing of your RANGE CATTLE or SHEEP.&#13;
Have a firm with a reputation sell your stock. We also make a&#13;
specialty of buying stock on order, and guarantee satisfaction on&#13;
every car we buy. Write us or wire us at any time, and you will&#13;
have prompt attention.&#13;
&#13;
The only reason that the Seniors make so much n01se 1s that they have a Horn.&#13;
If Martina ran, would Harry Fowler?&#13;
&#13;
If G ladys had a pony, would Wendell Curry it?&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
Why doesn't Sibyl Ausman need a flash light ? She has a Ray all her own.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
Where is John Madison's Beard?&#13;
&#13;
STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
Kewpie, Lovice thou me?&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-on e&#13;
&#13;
�HearthePATHE PHONE&#13;
at ANDERSON'S&#13;
&#13;
Did you "Flunk" in&#13;
that last exam?&#13;
NO- because you believed&#13;
in preparedness&#13;
PREPAREDNESS for later&#13;
life will include a bank account&#13;
Now is the time to start one&#13;
We have an interesting plan of&#13;
SAVING /or students&#13;
&#13;
d&#13;
Anderson's&#13;
&#13;
New Stock of New Home&#13;
Furnishings is Bigger and&#13;
Better than ever.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
S. E. Cor. 4th and Jackson Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Did you ever stop to think&#13;
how comfortably your new GYM. is heated by&#13;
the Webster Modulation System installed by&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAYES CO.?&#13;
PETERS &amp; HARRINGTON&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDE REAL ESTATE MEN&#13;
Houses, Lots and City Property&#13;
&#13;
Farm Lands and Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Office at Peters Park Station&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6464&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-thr ee&#13;
&#13;
�Lindholm Furniture Co.&#13;
Homes Furnished thruout&#13;
&#13;
Take advantage of our Parcel Post Delivery and you&#13;
will have the same service as if living in the City&#13;
&#13;
Hamilton Soft Water Laundry&#13;
DYERS AND DRY CLEANERS&#13;
&#13;
513-15-17 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
412-14-16 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
Hats Cleaned and Blocked&#13;
615 PEARL&#13;
&#13;
It's an Established Fact&#13;
That good Jewelry is to be&#13;
found at the Store of the&#13;
&#13;
WillH. Beck Company&#13;
Established in 1877 and maintaining&#13;
a policy during these years which&#13;
now bespeaks for itself.&#13;
&#13;
Convenient Office 404 Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Who bought the beans?&#13;
Who stacked the Petty girls' rooms?&#13;
Who hugged the janitor after a meeting of the annual board?&#13;
? ? ? ? Claire Cooper and Irene Chapin ? ? ? ?&#13;
"what Ewart was thinking about when he paid fifty cents admission to the Hawkeye-Adelphian debate?&#13;
What was wrong with "Anna" Held's feet one morning?&#13;
When "Al" and Marion study?&#13;
Why "N orty" likes to spend his vacant periods on the third floor?&#13;
What leap-year girl tried to make dates with Earl Barks?&#13;
How Bernice liked her Christmas present?&#13;
Why "Shoey" stays in Morningside?&#13;
Where Fred Appel spends Saturday afternoons and evenings?&#13;
The Socialists' Club.&#13;
Some of the college news in the Journal.&#13;
Addenda To The Calender.&#13;
March 24-Friday. Vacation begins. Great exodus.&#13;
25-Saturday. Ewart "stays to study Economics," i. e., Home Economics.&#13;
Mitchell, "Casey", and Hugh Fouke have leap-year dates out at East&#13;
End, Cypress St., and vainly endeavor to recover the ice-cream.&#13;
&#13;
Service Courtesy Safety Convenience&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
y&#13;
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r&#13;
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u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
E. L. KIRK, Gen'l Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
I stole a kiss the other night.&#13;
My conscience hurts, alack;&#13;
I think I'll go again tonight&#13;
And put the blamed thing back.&#13;
Student desirous of a fine evening for a picnic supper calls up the weather bureauHow about a shower tonight?&#13;
Reply-Don't ask me. If you need one, take it.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
��During your years at college, you aren't forgetting the comfort&#13;
and welfare of the folks at home. There's one way especially in&#13;
which you can help.&#13;
Give them your best suggestions when they build a new home&#13;
or remodel the old one.&#13;
You've seen enough modern homes to know how important is&#13;
good wood work. The doors, windows, cabinet work, stair work&#13;
are before you every-day. They must be wisely selected if the&#13;
home is to be satisfactory.&#13;
Curtis Woodwork is made in all the .modern designs. And&#13;
Curtis Woodwork is so carefully made of selected material that it&#13;
is known as the permanent furniture for the home.&#13;
&#13;
Curtis&#13;
&#13;
BRINK'S MEAT MARKET&#13;
We Supply the L eading Boarding H ouses of&#13;
Morningside with all kinds of Fresh M eats&#13;
Phone us your Order and our Delivery will reach you Promptly&#13;
&#13;
Your home lumber dealer has the Curtis&#13;
Catalog. Ask him to show it to you.&#13;
&#13;
WOODWORK&#13;
"the PermanentFurniture for your home"&#13;
&#13;
Curtis Sash &amp; Door Co.&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
T hat Cora thi nks H ay stole the ice cream because Nola wasn't invited to the&#13;
party.&#13;
T hat Ewart's t ru nk was on L ehman's porch the fi rst morning of spring vacation&#13;
week.&#13;
That Carson was going to care fo r a misplaced eyebrow d uring vacation.&#13;
That Cora publicly thanked H arry Hartley for carrying that bouquet up to her.&#13;
That the back door of the Main Hall has been kept locked all year.&#13;
That "Casey" K lippel is in the habit of spending his vacations at a certain lit tle&#13;
tow n on the Milwaukee, not many miles away.&#13;
That "Al" H ornney has a pretty soft snap, riding around in that big brown car.&#13;
That we are not trying to run opposition to the "Sandburr Man."&#13;
&#13;
O f all sad words of tongue or pen,&#13;
For w hich we pay good money,&#13;
The saddest is the A nnual dope,&#13;
W hen the writer thinks it's fu nny.&#13;
&#13;
Firestone Tires&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Queal Co.&#13;
LUMBER&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
DID Y O U KNOW&#13;
&#13;
When stepping out at night alone&#13;
A girl should t ake a chaperone,&#13;
U ntil in times to come&#13;
She calls some chap-'er-own.&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6284&#13;
&#13;
Automobile&#13;
Accessories ·&#13;
&#13;
Oak Flooring&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
For All M akes of Cars&#13;
&#13;
WM. WARNOCK CO.&#13;
&#13;
J. H.Queal Co.&#13;
&#13;
607-9-11 D ouglas St.&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Iowa Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Delicious&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
For the Educated T aste&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fift y-eight&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
Correct Dress for Women&#13;
Exclusive Ladies' Suits, Coats, Furs, Waists, Muslin&#13;
Underwear, Corsets and Millinery&#13;
&#13;
S/0 UX CITY'S MOST APPRECIATED STORE&#13;
509- 11 - 13 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Peters&#13;
p ark Grocery&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Qua lity is Our Motto&#13;
-Exclusive agent in M o rningsid e&#13;
for the Woolson Spice Co.' s&#13;
line of&#13;
&#13;
Teas, Coffees and Spices&#13;
Five Different Blends&#13;
&#13;
Have You Seen&#13;
Our Idea Factory?&#13;
Probably not.&#13;
results of it in&#13;
work, and you&#13;
of our shop is&#13;
and high class&#13;
&#13;
But you have seen the&#13;
the printing of col lege&#13;
know that the imprint&#13;
the guaranty of novel&#13;
workmanship.&#13;
&#13;
INTERSTATE PUBLISHING COMPANY&#13;
THE LEADE S&#13;
R TATIONE STORE&#13;
RY&#13;
.-" GO NORTH."&#13;
&#13;
of Coffee&#13;
&#13;
0 NE FOR YOU&#13;
&#13;
INT HE STEADY GROWTH AND SUBSTANTIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SUBURB&#13;
We ar e indeed glad to be a live factor. From the day our Bank opened for business,&#13;
nearly three years ago, we have endeavored to keep in touch with and assist in every&#13;
way p ossible along conservative lines in the upbuilding and advancement of Morningside a nd the adjacent farming community. We are especia ll y grateful to the College&#13;
Faculty and Students for t he business entrusted to us, and sha ll always use our best&#13;
efforts in the handling of their accounts.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
E. C. PETERS, Pres.&#13;
C. J. MILLIGAN&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY $100,000.00&#13;
GEO. E. WARD, V. Pres.&#13;
W. L. AYERS, Asst. Cash.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN SCOTT,JR., Cash.&#13;
C. W. PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
WHO'S WHO&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-on e&#13;
&#13;
�"Could anyone in the class tell me the technical name for snoring?"&#13;
Wise One-"Yeah, sheet music."&#13;
&#13;
VISITING TEAMS&#13;
WELCOMED&#13;
&#13;
"Mr. DeWalt, who are your favorite presidents?"&#13;
Sappy-"Jackson and Jefferson."&#13;
Hayes in class, reading roll for the firs t time-"Kathryn Leazie? I don't believe&#13;
I know her."&#13;
Kathryn Leazer-"I believe you would if you were to change my name."&#13;
&#13;
Archie Freeman-"Miss Walker has cut off a little patch of hair on the top of her&#13;
head."&#13;
Other Boarders-"How do you know?"&#13;
Archie-"Why, I felt of the place."&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
the Martin Hotel&#13;
ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF&#13;
&#13;
Ewart Williams threatens to wear sideburns.&#13;
Minnie Fry-"0, don't do that !"&#13;
Ewart-"Why not ?"&#13;
Minnie-"Because they always feel so funny."&#13;
&#13;
G. ADOLPH OLSON, Pres. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
THE OLSON&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CIT Y, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 Pearl Street, SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Only Exclusive Sporting Goods Store&#13;
ALWAYS READY TO SUPPLY&#13;
&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Parties&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the Sportsman and Athlete&#13;
FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
&#13;
A. S. Reach Co., P. Goldsmith's Sons&#13;
&#13;
AGENTS&#13;
&#13;
A. G. Spalding &amp; Bros.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
�When Ordering Flowers&#13;
Remember Elder's&#13;
&#13;
Why&#13;
Because they are&#13;
&#13;
Distinctive and&#13;
Best&#13;
Corsage Bouquets and&#13;
Commencement&#13;
F lowers&#13;
Put up in the Latest Flower Fashion&#13;
&#13;
J. R. ELD ER&#13;
512 5th St.&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILV ER&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Tops&#13;
Cushions and&#13;
Upholstery&#13;
Manufactured and Repaired&#13;
JOBB E RS OF&#13;
&#13;
HEAVY HARDWARE&#13;
Blacksmith, M echanics and&#13;
Garage Supplies&#13;
Automobile Accessories&#13;
Implement Specialties&#13;
&#13;
THE SI OUX CI TY&#13;
IRON COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Residence Phone 6268&#13;
Shop Phone 6306&#13;
Res. Phone No. 4217 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Full Line in followin g Departments&#13;
&#13;
Grocery Dep 't&#13;
Meat Dep't&#13;
D ry Goods D ep't&#13;
Shoe and Rubber Dep 't&#13;
Hardware Dep't&#13;
Paint Dep't&#13;
Feed and Fuel Dep 't&#13;
&#13;
DIAMON DS&#13;
Your money put in a D iamond would be one of the most satisfactory&#13;
investments you could make.&#13;
You can have t he pleasure of wearing the gem and the satisfaction of&#13;
k now ing that its value is increasing.&#13;
We are offering beautiful, pure white and steel-blue Diamonds at extremely low prices.&#13;
Then buy of a firm that is worthy of y our confidence&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; COMPANY&#13;
509 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
UNCLAS SIFIED&#13;
The following are not exactly jokes but we didn't know where else to put them&#13;
so here they are. Anyhow this list w ill help you to remember Who was Whose&#13;
away back in 1915-16. If you consider them as jokes, remember that C hurchill said,&#13;
"A joke is a very serious thing," and that some of those listed here think the same.&#13;
Prof. Hayes and Miss Brand.&#13;
Prof. Macmillan and Miss Greene.&#13;
"Casey" an d Ruby.&#13;
" F ish" a nd Edna.&#13;
Claire and Irene.&#13;
(After G rey left. )&#13;
"Bill" a nd Marie.&#13;
Curry and G ladys.&#13;
Ray a nd Sibyl.&#13;
*David and Pauline.&#13;
" Hod" and Cecil.&#13;
John and Anna.&#13;
John and Marie.&#13;
Lee and Hazel.&#13;
"R usty" a nd Minnie.&#13;
Glen and Lila.&#13;
&#13;
"J im" and Lida.&#13;
"Kewpie" and Lov ice.&#13;
Ewart and Lois.&#13;
*Louie and Loren e.&#13;
" A lfal fa" and Nola.&#13;
" A l" and Marion.&#13;
*W ulf and Bernice.&#13;
" A rt" and Winnifred.&#13;
*Mitchell and Cora.&#13;
" Ki lly" and R uth.&#13;
" Ch uck" Fry and Ruth Reid.&#13;
I rw in and one of the tw ins.&#13;
*Stiles and Nellie.&#13;
Stoneb rook and Grace.&#13;
*"Bog ie" and M y rtle.&#13;
G len and Mary.&#13;
&#13;
*Considered&#13;
as jokes in order to p lace this list in the joke department.&#13;
fully cor rected.&#13;
&#13;
A ny m istakes cheer-&#13;
&#13;
All Work Guaranteed&#13;
&#13;
Hartley L. Larson&#13;
Successor to Piper &amp; Larson&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
&#13;
THE WAY GIRLS D ECLINE "HIC"&#13;
Hie, Haec, H oc,&#13;
Hug us, Hug us, H ug us,&#13;
Q uick, Quick, Quick.&#13;
&#13;
All goods sold at prices to meet city&#13;
compet1t1on.&#13;
Please Don 't Forget Our Numbers&#13;
4 Phones.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 670 and 671&#13;
Auto 6912 and 6911&#13;
&#13;
4102-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
MORNI NGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
There was once a Chinaman, Ching,&#13;
Fell off a street car, Bing Bing,&#13;
The "con" t urned his head,&#13;
And to the passengers said ,&#13;
The car's lost a washer, Ding, Ding.&#13;
&#13;
two h undred six ty -fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�Cora Dutton-"I&#13;
arm. "&#13;
P rof. Marsh-"I&#13;
be cracked."&#13;
&#13;
didn't know t ill last night that Mitchell was paralyzed in one&#13;
&#13;
Why&#13;
&#13;
can see how, if the speakers were especially nutty, that they might&#13;
&#13;
Ewar t W illiams-"When I sit next t o you w hile you are wearing that big hat, it&#13;
seems like being under an umbrella."&#13;
R uth Smith- " But you are not supposed to get under it."&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
You Should Insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand&#13;
&#13;
A Freshman hesitates on the word, "connoisseur."&#13;
P rof.-"What would you call a man who pretends t o know everything?"&#13;
Freshman-"A professor. "&#13;
&#13;
Food Products&#13;
&#13;
"Leon, did you ever hear of a mermaid?"&#13;
Leon-"Yes, sir."&#13;
&#13;
Look for the Rose on&#13;
Every Package&#13;
&#13;
"Well, could you tell me w ho t he suitors of the mermaids are?"&#13;
L eon-"Well, I don't know unless they are the swells of the sea."&#13;
"Well, Hod, you have been keepin' pretty late hours lately."&#13;
Hod-" I would rather keep a few than lose out entirely."&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Auto Supply Co.&#13;
DISTR IBUTO RS OF&#13;
&#13;
WHITE AND HALLADAY&#13;
PLEASURE CARS&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
4541&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Supplies&#13;
&#13;
The Reason is This Superb Brand . is the result of&#13;
many years of persistent effort&#13;
to assemble under one Brand&#13;
a complete line of Food Products of the very highest quality&#13;
at the most reasonable pnces&#13;
You always get the best w hen y ou insist on&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
416&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand Food Products&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
&#13;
Fire Proof Garage&#13;
&#13;
Open Day and Night&#13;
&#13;
Six th and N ebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
Tolerton &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade.&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
Any Style&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRICK&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
&#13;
Visit our Tea Room, the Most Popular Place in&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
&#13;
Two Stores&#13;
&#13;
The Practicability and stability of brick-its value as an investment-as a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever. Thoughts&#13;
concerning these matters we would like to submit for consideration&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Brick &amp; 'Tile Co.&#13;
&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Two fleas were in ·conversation, when one said to the other, "You're looking fine ,&#13;
you must have been on a vacation."&#13;
"Not much," responded the other, "I've been on a bum for two weeks."&#13;
&#13;
It has been said of our good friend, John Madison, that he is such a good talker&#13;
that he can start his mouth going in a chapel talk and then walk off and leave it.&#13;
&#13;
Office and Display Room, No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
"Where Quality is as Represented"&#13;
&#13;
Rastus was the man who kept the court records for the judge. He didn't have&#13;
any books but remembered all the court proceedings. If at any time the judge wanted&#13;
to know anything about what had happened on a certain day, all he had to do was&#13;
ask Rastus. One day the devil appeared before the judge and told him that he wanted&#13;
Rastus. The judge objected, "Why, I couldn't find another man with a memory&#13;
&#13;
HEADINGTON&#13;
HEDENBERGH&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Oscar&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Hoberg&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
such as Rastus has."&#13;
"I just want to try his memory, if you don't mind."&#13;
The judge consented, so the devil went to Rastus and asked, "Do you like eggs?"&#13;
"Yessah," said Rastus.&#13;
Thirty years later Rastus, now old and gray, was running the lawn mower over&#13;
the lawn. The devil crept up behind him and learning over his shoulder asked,&#13;
"How?"&#13;
Apparently not noticing the questioner Rastus promptly answered, "Fried, Sir,"&#13;
and went on with his work.&#13;
The devil gave up.&#13;
&#13;
410 PIERCE STREET&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Mah hair in de middle am parted, and&#13;
Yo' hair on yo' haid am departed.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
Exclusive Things&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
FRUITS and&#13;
PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
Mother-"When you were in the hammock with that young man didn't I see&#13;
his arm around you?"&#13;
Daughter-"Why, Mother, both of us couldn't sit in the hammock without squeezing a little."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Clothiers&#13;
We carry a complete line&#13;
of Up-to-Date Clothing&#13;
Furnishing Goods, Shoes&#13;
Trunks and Valises at&#13;
very lowest prices.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
Ten per cent discount to Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Mother for&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
and Students of College&#13;
&#13;
MOTHER'S and NATURE'S MEAL BREAD&#13;
&#13;
Standard Clothing Co.&#13;
&#13;
Out of Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
Successors to&#13;
&#13;
Our Customers are Our Best Reference&#13;
Auto Phone 119 7&#13;
Bell Phone 19 7&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson&#13;
&#13;
408-4 10 Iowa Street&#13;
&#13;
If you are looking for&#13;
&#13;
Service and Quality&#13;
Call both Phones 25 12&#13;
&#13;
7:0-712 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
3 10 Pierce Street&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Phone us your Coal Order&#13;
W e will take care of you&#13;
when the time comes&#13;
Good Coal, Good Measure and&#13;
Good Service&#13;
&#13;
The H. E. Haakinson Coal Co.&#13;
200 United Bank Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2174&#13;
&#13;
A. F. Jensen&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 572&#13;
&#13;
H. A. Morrill&#13;
&#13;
PATTON &amp; SMITH&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6136&#13;
&#13;
Schoeneman-Jensen&#13;
Lumber Co.&#13;
&#13;
Leading Morningside Real&#13;
Estate Dealers&#13;
OFFICE AT PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Moningside Agency for INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MOUNTING ANNUAL PICTURES&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sev enty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�125 Rooms-Forty with bath&#13;
&#13;
European Plan&#13;
&#13;
Cafe in Connection&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
New Lunch Room Recently Installed&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
Corner Fifth and Jackson&#13;
&#13;
MAKE A START&#13;
T hese t hree w ord s a re t he in itiative to success in business. You w ill nev er have a&#13;
bank account if you d o not make a sta rt. D o not wait until you hav e a ny large amount,&#13;
but start now or nex t pay-d ay.&#13;
There are several good r easons why you should commence a t once&#13;
The sooner you begin, the sooner you w ill h ave a capital of your own.&#13;
2. If you r money is in t he bank, it w ill not be stolen or dest royed.&#13;
3. When it is in the bank it is earn ing someth ing and inc reasin g itself.&#13;
START NOW&#13;
WE PAY 4 % ON SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL NATIONAL BANK&#13;
IOWA BU ILDING&#13;
&#13;
A Se rvice Augmented thro ugh Y ea rs of Experience&#13;
&#13;
Located in New Theatre Building&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
F R ED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
R eciprocity Stimulates Cordiality&#13;
&#13;
Absolutely Sanitary&#13;
&#13;
Nolen Laundry Co.&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
The Place for Quality&#13;
and Right Prices&#13;
PETE RS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Graceland Park Cemetery&#13;
PERPETUAL CARE&#13;
&#13;
See our College Agent&#13;
Phones 1638- 333&#13;
&#13;
E . C . PETERS , Pres.&#13;
&#13;
A . T. BEN NETT , V.-Pres.&#13;
&#13;
When&#13;
&#13;
YOU GET HUNGRY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber&#13;
Shop&#13;
&#13;
Try&#13;
&#13;
PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
Two doors south of Peters Park Station&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Under Dierking's Market&#13;
&#13;
Refined Photo Plays&#13;
&#13;
Our commutation tickets at a discount&#13;
are economical&#13;
&#13;
When you want&#13;
&#13;
Any Kind of an Instrument&#13;
to play MUSIC on&#13;
&#13;
Park Theatre&#13;
10c&#13;
&#13;
5c&#13;
&#13;
Weekly Features&#13;
&#13;
or any kind of Music to play&#13;
on the INSTRU MENT&#13;
&#13;
'There's a Music Store in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Aton Music Company&#13;
508 5th&#13;
&#13;
A UTO 3934&#13;
&#13;
Scene at G raceland Cemetery&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-thre&#13;
&#13;
�125 Rooms- Forty with bath&#13;
&#13;
European Plan&#13;
&#13;
Cafe in Connection&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
New Lunch Room Recently Installed&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
Corner Fifth and J ackson&#13;
&#13;
MAKE A START&#13;
These t h ree word s are the initiative to success in business. You will never have a&#13;
bank account if you do not make a start. Do not wait until you have any large amount,&#13;
but start now or next pay -day.&#13;
The re are several good reasons why you should commence at once:1. T he soon er you begi n, t he sooner you will h ave a capital of your own.&#13;
2. If you r money is in the bank, it will not be stolen or dest royed.&#13;
3. When it is in the ba nk it is ea rning someth ing and increasing itself.&#13;
START NOW&#13;
WE PAY 4 % ON SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL NATIONAL BANK&#13;
IO WA BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
A Service Au gmented through Years of E xperience&#13;
&#13;
Located in New Theatre Building&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
FRED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
R eciprocity Stim ulates Cordiality&#13;
&#13;
A bsolutely Sanitary&#13;
&#13;
Nolen Laundry Co.&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
The Place f or Quality and Right Prices&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Graceland Park Cemetery&#13;
PERPETUAL CARE&#13;
&#13;
See our College Agent&#13;
Phones 1638- 333&#13;
&#13;
E. C. PETERS, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
A. T . BENNETT, V.-Pres.&#13;
&#13;
When&#13;
&#13;
YOU GET HUNGRY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber&#13;
&#13;
Try&#13;
&#13;
Shop&#13;
&#13;
PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
Two doors south of Peters Park Station&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Under Dierking's Market&#13;
&#13;
Our commutation tickets at a discount&#13;
are economical&#13;
&#13;
When you want&#13;
&#13;
Refined Photo Plays&#13;
&#13;
Any Kind of an I nstrument&#13;
&#13;
Park Theatre&#13;
&#13;
or any kind of Music to play&#13;
&#13;
to play MUSIC on&#13;
&#13;
10c&#13;
&#13;
Sc&#13;
&#13;
Weekly Features&#13;
&#13;
on the INSTRUMENT&#13;
&#13;
There's a Music Storein Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
AtonMusic Company&#13;
508 5th&#13;
&#13;
A UTO 3934&#13;
&#13;
Scene at Graceland Cemetery&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
�NATIONAL . WOOD WORKS&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
Bank, Store, Office Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
Our Motto is Quality&#13;
507-509-511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
SUPERIOR&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
The College Drinks&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman's Beverages&#13;
&#13;
"The Big White Shed"&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
Old Phone 1995&#13;
&#13;
"Out of the High Rent District"&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON &amp;COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Beller&#13;
&#13;
Tail ors, Clothiers, Hatters&#13;
and Men's Furnishers ·&#13;
&#13;
Than Soda Fountain&#13;
&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Drinks&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 245&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1864&#13;
&#13;
SUCCESSORS TO&#13;
&#13;
Hutchinson's Retail Bakery-Luncheonette&#13;
French Pastry&#13;
Luncheonette De Luxe&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CLASS SCRAP&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
The Home Market for the Northwest&#13;
&#13;
See how the business 1s&#13;
conducted at a large market&#13;
STUDENTS will be given a cordial welcome at any time. Special&#13;
effort will be made to see that every moment of your time spent at&#13;
the yards will be "full of interest".&#13;
&#13;
Sioux ,City Stock Yards&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
FRESH CUT FLOWERS-All kinds of floral emblems made up by us. We&#13;
know how. American Beauties, Roses and Carnations always on hand. Positively&#13;
the finest and largest display in town. Our prices are right.&#13;
&#13;
ROCKLIN&#13;
&#13;
&amp; LEHMAN&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
NEW STORE:&#13;
&#13;
402 Fourth Street; one of the Finest in the West.&#13;
&#13;
Auto 4199-3112; Iowa 3112&#13;
&#13;
GET YOUR EATS&#13;
&#13;
Clyde E. Reynolds&#13;
&#13;
From&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
MIKE &amp; BEN CO.&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
High Class Groceries&#13;
and Meats&#13;
" JUST AROUND THE CORNER"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
&#13;
Kodak Developing and Printing&#13;
of Pictures in this Annual by Us&#13;
We guarantee you the best possible&#13;
results from your negatives. Our&#13;
department is complete and strictly&#13;
modern in every particular. W e are&#13;
&#13;
exclusive dealers in Kodaks and&#13;
Kodak Supplies&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
608 PIERCE STREET&#13;
New D avidson Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Man (to cyclist) - "Your beacon has ceased its function."&#13;
Cyclist-"What I?-"&#13;
"Your illuminator is shrouded in unmitigated oblivion."&#13;
"I don't-"&#13;
"The effulgence of your irradiator has evanesced."&#13;
"Well, I-"&#13;
"The transverse ether vibrations in you r incandescencer have been discounted."&#13;
Just then a kid yelled, "Hey, mister, your lamp is out."&#13;
Which threw light on the situation."&#13;
Rosene expressed the wish the other day that he might die with his boots on. The&#13;
only reason we can conceive for so doing is that he wants to be prepared against&#13;
stubbing his toe when he kicks the bucket.&#13;
When Eleanor Winkelman was a little girl her teacher asked her where the diamond, the purest form of carbon, w as found. Eleanor looked up knowingly and said,&#13;
"On the third fi nger of the left hand."&#13;
Of course it has turned out that way.&#13;
Customer, at the Park Restaurant-"Have you any tongue?"&#13;
W aiter-"Suah, boss; does yo' tink Ah's a d umb waitah ?"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
�ROSS M. COOMER, Mem . Am. Soc. C. E.&#13;
&#13;
Eat More&#13;
&#13;
Hanford's&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL&#13;
&#13;
Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
Engineers and Contractors&#13;
&#13;
WE BUILT MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
IT'S GOOD FOR YOU&#13;
The more sense we get the lon ger we live.&#13;
Very few of us die of old age.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
31 I - 312 United Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
We are nearly all killed by ignorance.&#13;
&#13;
Ask our Clients about us&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Auto .Phone 3719&#13;
&#13;
What the human race ha s learned about food values in the la st generation has increased the average length of life by fifteen years.&#13;
We ha ve found for example, that Ice Cream makes fo r a long life. There are two&#13;
reasons for this: First, being made of sugar and cream, it ha s one of the highest food&#13;
values known. Second, being so easy to digest, it puts th e least amount of effort on our&#13;
digestive organs.&#13;
&#13;
BEUTTLER &amp; ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
We ha ve learned these facts and as a consequence we are eating FIVE H UNDRED&#13;
PER CENT MORE ICE CREAM THAN WE DID FOUR YEARS AGO.&#13;
Try it.&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
WM . BEUTTLER&#13;
&#13;
Architects&#13;
&#13;
Eat it oftener and you'll live longer.&#13;
&#13;
This Firm. Designed the Alumni Gymnasium&#13;
and Rebuilt the Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
HANFORD PRODUCE COMPANY&#13;
Auto Phone 4951&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 421&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4240&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
1338&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
338&#13;
&#13;
JOO 3rd St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
"Say, Deak, I understand that the French government is buying up all the available supplies of paper suitable for printing?"&#13;
Deak-"Why ?"&#13;
"So that the soldiers can sleep on the border."&#13;
Ikie, the proprietor of a little store in a small town, went to see his friend, Jakie,&#13;
who lived in the city, Going into Jakie's office he noticed the letters, E. E., after&#13;
Jakie's name.&#13;
"Jakie, vot iss de meaning of de E. E . after your name?"&#13;
"Vy, dot means dot iss de vay I makes my living-how I gets mine money-dot&#13;
stands for Electrical Engineer."&#13;
Not long afterward, Jakie went to visit Ikie. On the front of lkie's store he saw&#13;
after Ikie's name five F's, F. F. F. F . F.&#13;
"Vy, Ikie, vot iss de meaning of the five F's after your name?"&#13;
"Vy, dot iss de way I makes mine money," said Ikie, "Those five F's stand for&#13;
three fires, a flood, and a fortune for Ikie."&#13;
A man w ho had been run over by an auto and because of it had had his foot amputated sued the auto owner for $5,000.&#13;
"What do you think I am, a millionaire?" asked the irate auto owner."&#13;
To which question the plaintiff countered with, "Well, what do you think I am,&#13;
a centipede?"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Your friends can buy&#13;
Anything&#13;
that you can&#13;
give&#13;
&#13;
them - -&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
sCity's&#13;
&#13;
Biggest and Busiest&#13;
Studio&#13;
CLASS SCRAP&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred eighty- one&#13;
&#13;
�Before Deciding on a College&#13;
Consider the Advantages of&#13;
&#13;
602 Pierce St.&#13;
Suite 605-606, Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
John R. Carter&#13;
&#13;
H. W. Brackney&#13;
&#13;
Homer B, Carter&#13;
&#13;
Improved&#13;
&#13;
FRED&#13;
&#13;
Farms and&#13;
&#13;
H . SCHMIDT&#13;
&#13;
Mortgages&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT B. PIKE&#13;
&#13;
CARTER, BRACKNEY &amp; CARTER&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
SCHMIDT &amp; PIKE&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS AT LAW&#13;
Suite 707-708-709, Security Bank Bldg.&#13;
Phones, Auto 1522, Bell 1065&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
LA WYERS&#13;
Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
&#13;
J. E. DEWALT&#13;
&#13;
IT OFFERS THE BEST&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Room 7, Iowa Bldg.&#13;
Oct. 1st, Frances Bldg.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
W H FARNSWORTH&#13;
&#13;
· ·&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
Auto 8973&#13;
&#13;
242-3 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Mental, Physical and Moral Training&#13;
E. P. FARR&#13;
&#13;
Credits Recognized by all the&#13;
Best Universities&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
&#13;
511-512 Farmers Loan &amp; Trust Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
.611 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
LYLE GOODWIN&#13;
&#13;
JOHN F. JOSEPH&#13;
&#13;
LA WYER&#13;
&#13;
LA WYER&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3155&#13;
210 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
510-13 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS '&#13;
&#13;
Modern Buildings and Equipment&#13;
New Gymnasium with Athletic Field&#13;
Live and Wholesome Religious Influences&#13;
Well Equipped Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
W. S. GILMAN&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
F. E. ARCHITECTS SON&#13;
COLBY &amp;&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
510 C and D Davidson Building&#13;
Auto Phone 4433&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 302-305, Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
F. W . Sargent, A. C. Strong, G. T. Struble&#13;
&#13;
C. R. METCALFE&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
Railway Connections Excellent for Vacations&#13;
at Home&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1062&#13;
&#13;
SARGENT, STRONG &amp; STRUBLE&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
&#13;
613 F. L. &amp; T. Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
SHULL GILL SAMMIS&#13;
&#13;
202-206 Iowa Building&#13;
EDWIN&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
STASON&#13;
&#13;
A. L.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1165&#13;
&#13;
BEARDSLEY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
&amp; STILWILL&#13;
&#13;
STASON &amp; BEARDSLEY&#13;
&#13;
400-418 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, President&#13;
&#13;
600-601 F. L. &amp; T. Bldg,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-three&#13;
two hundred eighty-tw o&#13;
&#13;
�There&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVINGS FOR THIS BOOK&#13;
&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
WAS A TIME&#13;
NOT SO VERY LONG&#13;
ago, when all printing&#13;
looked alike to most of&#13;
us; it wasjust printing;&#13;
but that time is past and a&#13;
new day has dawned.&#13;
Most everyone today has a&#13;
very highly developed sense&#13;
of what is right and proper&#13;
in all manner of printing.&#13;
It is one thing to appreciate&#13;
superior quality and another&#13;
to produce it.&#13;
To produce it requires men&#13;
of skill, industry and ·zeal&#13;
and a good equipment.&#13;
We have a corps of efficient_&#13;
craftsmen who are schooled&#13;
in what is right and how to&#13;
get the best results.&#13;
We have a master printer&#13;
who will give your work his&#13;
personal attention.&#13;
Our equipment is of the best.&#13;
There is a glowing sense of&#13;
satisfaction in dealing with&#13;
people in whom you have absolute faith.&#13;
&#13;
the Clio&#13;
Press&#13;
Economy&#13;
Advertising&#13;
&#13;
Company&#13;
Iowa City&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Eelctric City Engraving Co.&#13;
BUFFALO&#13;
&#13;
Dependability&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Index&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
Dutton, George B ............................................ .49, 126&#13;
Dunn, George .......................................... 70, 126, 187&#13;
Dunn, W alter ........................................................ 133&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
"A Legend of Morningside" ............................ 202·205&#13;
. Abel, Frank ....................................................... .45, 96&#13;
Adelphian Society .................................................. 1 35&#13;
Administration Cartoon ........................................ 9&#13;
Aesthesian Society ................................................ 134&#13;
Agora Club ............................................................ 38&#13;
Allen, H oward A ............. 34, 89, 110, 139, 150, 169&#13;
Allen, Nathlie ........................................................ 132&#13;
Alumni ............................................................ 102· 104&#13;
"An Appreciation' ' ................................................ 205&#13;
Anderson, Anna M ................................................. 45&#13;
Anderson, Jacob I.................................................. 46&#13;
Anderson, Julia .................................................... 45&#13;
''Anne's Purpose'' .......................................... 193- 195&#13;
Appel, Fred ............................................................ 70&#13;
Annual Board ......................... : ......................... .4, 95&#13;
"Appreciation of Alumni" .................................... 104&#13;
April Calendar ...................................................... 225&#13;
Archer, Thomas .............................. 34, 110, 139, 149&#13;
Athenaeum Society ........................................ 114·117&#13;
Athletics .......................................................... 137· 175&#13;
Athletics Cartoon .................................................. 137&#13;
Athletic Committee ................................................ 138&#13;
Ausman, Sibyl.. .......................................... 75, 93, 106&#13;
&#13;
Burtness, Katherine........................................ 66, 106&#13;
Burton, Earnest .................................................... 14&#13;
&#13;
Back, George I.. ..................................... 126, 183, 184&#13;
Bahn son, Esther .................................................... 70&#13;
Band ...................................................................... 91&#13;
Barks, G. Earl... ............................. 94, 126, 179, 185&#13;
Barber, F ern ........................................................ 70&#13;
Barrett, Pauline .................................................... 1 32&#13;
Barrow, Hazel.. ........................................ 66, 75, 122&#13;
Bartlett, Allan ........................................ 70, 110, 1 85&#13;
B artz, F. Otto .................................................... 16, 97&#13;
Baseball .......................................................... 167·170&#13;
B aseball Cartoon .................................................. 167&#13;
Baseball Schedule ................................................ 170&#13;
Bashaw, Stanley............................ 66, 119, 150, 173&#13;
Basketball-Academy Girls' Team ........................ 172&#13;
Basketball-H. S. Tournament ............................ 171&#13;
Basketball-Sophomore Team ............................ 173&#13;
Beacham, Fern ....................... .4, 46, 78, 82, 95, 122&#13;
Beard, Anna L ................. 33, 34, 88, 89, 97, 99, 114&#13;
Beardsley, Lyman ........................................ 110, 170&#13;
B eck, Axel ............................................................ 187&#13;
B ehmer, Albert.. .............................. 66, 110, 139, 145&#13;
Belew, Ruth .................................................. 100, 1 34&#13;
Bell, Orin .................................................. 66, 83, 118&#13;
Bennett, Vernon .................................................. 133&#13;
Berry, Ruth .................................................... 70, 100&#13;
Blackman, Rut h ...................................... 78. 100, 106&#13;
Bleakly, David .......................................... 89, 92, 1 33&#13;
Bleakly, Lewis ................................................ 92, 133&#13;
Board of Trustees.................................................. 17&#13;
Bogard, Joe ...................................................... 66, 118&#13;
Booher, Florence.............................................. 66, 106&#13;
Bond, Lafe...................................................... 70, 118&#13;
Booton, Herschell ............................................ 70, 118&#13;
Boyd, Alice.................................................. 70, 78, 98&#13;
Boyd, Fran ces .......................................... 66, 75, 122&#13;
Boyden, Elbert ...................................................... 70&#13;
Brady, Rut h .................................................... 70, 100&#13;
Brand, Margaret .................................................. 1 3&#13;
Briggs, Wilbur................................................ 70, 118&#13;
Brethorst, Margu erite ............................. .46, 86, 114&#13;
Brodkey, Sarah .................................................... 70&#13;
Brown, E. A......................................................... 12&#13;
Brown, Georgia .................................................... 66&#13;
Brown, Guy.................................................... 70, 110&#13;
Brown, Mabel ........................................................ 14&#13;
Brown, Mrs. Mildred ..................................... .47, 122&#13;
Bryan, William .................................................... 70&#13;
Buehler , Harold ............................................ 135, 187&#13;
Bull, Florence ............................................ 34, 99, 106&#13;
Burgess, F. Earl.. ...................... 35, 83, 87, 118, 184&#13;
Burrows, Richard ............................................ 92, 133&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Cain, Thomas ........................................................ 92&#13;
Calendar Cartoon .................................................. 223&#13;
Campbell, H . G .....................•................................. 12&#13;
Campus Scene ...................................................... 30&#13;
Carson, W.. W ................................................. 13, 138&#13;
Carter , Hazel ........................................................ 70&#13;
Case, Wayland .......................................... 66, 92, 126&#13;
Castle, Lynn .................................................... 70, 118&#13;
Challman, Bernice.......................................... 35, 114&#13;
Challman, Ruth ............................................ 100, 134&#13;
Champ, Doris ........................................................ 134&#13;
Champ, Merle ........................................................ 13 4&#13;
Champ, Mildred ............................................... .47, 146&#13;
Chapin, Irene .................................... 66, 94, 99, 114&#13;
Chemistry Club .................................................... 96&#13;
Chemistry Hall .................................................... 2 8&#13;
Christ, Jay .............................................. 48, 110, 185&#13;
Clark, Gladys .................................................... 70, 78&#13;
Clark, Harry ........................ 33, 35, 92, 94, 118, 1 86&#13;
Clark, Lillian ........................................................ 70&#13;
Clark, Veta .......................................................... 93&#13;
Clark, Wilson ..........4, 47, 92, 95, 96, 118, 139, 145&#13;
Classes ................................................................ 31·80&#13;
Classes Cartoon .................................................... 31&#13;
Class Scrap .................................................... 275, 281&#13;
Clough, Martin ...................................................... 168&#13;
Cobbs, Irene ........................................................... 134&#13;
Coe Conference Meet. ........................................... 1 60&#13;
Colburn, Cordelia ............................................ 35, 114&#13;
Coleman, Morda ................................ 6 6, 75, 94, 194&#13;
College Section .................................................. 19·30&#13;
Collegian R eporter ................................................ 94&#13;
Commencement Prizes .......................................... 32&#13;
Connor, Floyd .................................. 66, 91, 118, 173&#13;
Connor, Rosemary ................................................ 70&#13;
Conservatory of Music ........................................ 76·77&#13;
Conser vatory of Music (New Bldg.) .................... 23&#13;
(Old Bldg.) .................... 29&#13;
Coombs, Arthur ................................ 66, 89, 110, 186&#13;
Coomer , Ethel.. .......................................... 48, 93, 122&#13;
Cooper, Burnett.............................................. 70, 118&#13;
Cooper, Delmar C................................... 36, 118, 186&#13;
Corr, E dith I.. ................................................... 66, 75&#13;
Corr, Mildred ........................................................ 79&#13;
Coss, James A ................................................... 16, 96&#13;
Craig, Dr. A. E ..................................................... 12&#13;
Cr aig, Frances .......................................... 36, 93, 1 06&#13;
Crescent Society .................................................... 132&#13;
Crou ch, Mary L ......................................... 36, 94, 122&#13;
Cummings, Marguerite ............................. .48, 95, 114&#13;
Curry, Wendell ............ 4, 49, 95, 126, 138 , 139, 159&#13;
Dahl, Lillia n ........................................................ 70&#13;
Daniels, Gladys .................................................. 70, 93&#13;
Davidson, Clair .................................................... 70&#13;
Day, Hazel E ................................... 36, 88, 122, 182&#13;
Day, Mabel ...................................................... 66, 122&#13;
Day, Mary ............................................................ 70&#13;
Day, Otis .................................................... 70, 91, 110&#13;
D ecember Calenda r .............................................. 237&#13;
D edication ...................................................... ...... 5&#13;
D eLapp, Ambrose C......................................... 37, 118&#13;
D evitt, Glyde ........................................................ 73&#13;
D evitt, Marie ........ ................................................ 122&#13;
DeWalt, Horace ........................................ 66, 70, 110&#13;
D epartment of Home Economics .......................... 75&#13;
Dimmitt, Lillian ................................................ 12, 88&#13;
Dolliver, Margaret G ............................................. 12&#13;
Donahue, James ............................................. .49, 110&#13;
Down, Vivian ............................ 66, 82, 93, 122, 203&#13;
Drake R elays ........................................................ 157&#13;
Dutton, Cora ................................................ 66, 79, 86&#13;
&#13;
Easthouse, H elen Marie.................... 37, 82, 99, 114&#13;
Easthouse, Oma .................................................... 134&#13;
Easton, George.................................... 70, 91, 92, 11 0&#13;
Edge, Elizabeth .................................................... 5 0&#13;
Edgington, Marie ·············-··--·-···-·························· 66&#13;
Eiffert, Paul.. .......... 50, 89, 118, 139, 144, 161, 1 68&#13;
Engberg, R oyce .................................... 70, 91, 92, 118&#13;
Erickson, Erik McKinley ................................ 70, 118&#13;
Ertel, Floyd .......................................................... 1 33&#13;
Evans, Anna Mae .................................... 37, 93, 122&#13;
Evans, Kieth .................................................... 80, 135&#13;
Expression Seniors ... ............................................. 79&#13;
&#13;
Harvey, Harold R.&#13;
............................................... 14&#13;
Haugen, Andrew................................................ 70, 92&#13;
Hay, Francis R. ........................................66, 92, 1 26&#13;
Hayes, Prof. J. J ............................................. 13, 1 38&#13;
Heikes, Marion ...... :............................................... 66&#13;
Herron, Lenna ······························· ····.··················· 70&#13;
Hicks, Earl ...................................................... 53, 126&#13;
Hill, Byron .................................................... 139, 147&#13;
Hill, Fur man .......................................................... 133&#13;
Hill, R uby ............................................................ 7 0&#13;
Hilmer, Dr. W. C ............................................... 12, 97&#13;
Himmel, W. J ..................................................... 15, 91&#13;
Holmes, Cleo Dulcie..&#13;
. ....................................... 66&#13;
Holmes, Howard .............................................. 70, 126&#13;
&#13;
Faculty ................................................................ 12·16&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Florence ·················-·· -- ·--·---· -- -- -················----- 132&#13;
&#13;
Farnham, J ohn A ............................................. 50, 126&#13;
February Calendar ................................................ 241&#13;
Ferguson, Agnes B ................................................. 12&#13;
Ferguson, Margaret B ............................................ 70&#13;
Fischer, Laura C. ....................................... ........... 13&#13;
.&#13;
F ish, Esther ............. ............................................. 7 0&#13;
Fish, Miriam ······································-·-·-···-----·-----· 70&#13;
&#13;
First Football Team ................................................ 142&#13;
Football ..................... ................................... 141·154&#13;
Football Cartoon .......&#13;
. ................................ 141&#13;
Foot.ball Season .................................................... 153&#13;
Football Schedule .................................................. 143&#13;
Forbes, Flor ence ........................................ 78, 79, 106&#13;
Forbes, Willis .................. 66, 94, 11 0, 1 79, 183, 1 85&#13;
Ford, Dorothy .................................... .............• 70, 77&#13;
Forensics ........................................................ 177·188&#13;
Forensics Cartoon .......................... ..................... 1 77&#13;
Forensics L eague ............................................... :.. 1 79&#13;
Foreword .......................................................&#13;
6&#13;
Fouke, Hugh ........................................ 70, 92, 94 , 110&#13;
Fouke, Rut h ...................................... 66, 99, 100, 109&#13;
Fowler , H arry L .................................... .47, 196, 110&#13;
French Merle............................................51, 49, 126&#13;
Freeman, Alta )&lt;'..................................................... 14&#13;
Freeman,&#13;
A. L ......................................... 66, 9 1, 118&#13;
Freeman, Harold ...................................... 70, 9 6, 126&#13;
Freshmen ............................................................ 7 0· 74&#13;
Fry, Char les ................................................ 66, 96, 126&#13;
Fry, Minnie............................. .4, 5 1, 82, 89, 95, 114&#13;
Garlock, Chas ............ .4, 51, 92, 126, 179, 183, 185&#13;
Gerkin, Virgil.. .......................................... 70, 9 1, 118&#13;
Gillies, Olive ........................................................ 93&#13;
Gillies, Ruth ........................... .4, 52, 93 , 94, 100, 114&#13;
Girls' Inter collegiate D ebate .................................. 182&#13;
Gootch, Dorothy ................................................ 70, 78&#13;
Gospel Team ............................................................ 85&#13;
Goudie, Margaret ............................................ 66, 106&#13;
Grace Church ........................................................ 24&#13;
Gr ace Church Choir ............................................ 90&#13;
Green, Pea rl S. ...................................................... 14&#13;
Grey, N. C. .................................................. 118, 186&#13;
Gymnasium ...... ................ .... .................&#13;
21&#13;
Haines, Irene ........................................................ 70&#13;
Hall, I. Oscar .................................................... 38, 126&#13;
Hansen, Louise H . .................................. 66, 75, 122&#13;
Hanson, William .................................................... 133&#13;
Harding, Edith ...................................................... 132&#13;
H arding, Mary ...................................................... 70&#13;
Harrington, E. J ................... 66, 110, 139, 161, 173&#13;
Harrington, Ray .......... 14, 52, 91, 95, 118, 139, 144&#13;
H art, Cecil Raymond ........................................ 70, 118&#13;
Hartley, Har old .................................................... 135&#13;
Haitz, Lucile D or othea .......................................... 70&#13;
Hartzell, Grace ...................................................... 70&#13;
Hartzell, Ruth .................................... 38, 94, 106, 122&#13;
&#13;
H ome Oratorical Contest ........................................ 180&#13;
Horn, Gladys E ................................................. 38, 106&#13;
H ornnev. Al vin ....... ...................... .4, 53, 95, 96, 118&#13;
Hornney, Lee .................................... 1 0, 118, 1 39, 148&#13;
Hosford, Ru th ................................................... ... 100&#13;
Hovda, Dr. Olaf .................................................... 15&#13;
H oughton, Edward L . ........ •........................ 70, 118&#13;
H oughton, H. L . .................................................... 15&#13;
Houk, Mabel ............................................................ 132&#13;
H ouk, Neva&#13;
............................................................ 54&#13;
Houk, Nola ............................................................ 66&#13;
Hunt, Albert .................................................... 70, 11 0&#13;
Hunter, Hazel Vivian .. ......................................... ... 70&#13;
Hutchendorf, Clara ................................................ 70&#13;
H utchinson, Horace ................................................ SQ&#13;
H utchinson, Milclr ecl . ................................&#13;
70&#13;
Intercollegiate D ebate ............................................ 183 ·&#13;
Inter·Society Committee.......................................... 99&#13;
Inter · Society ( Acad.) Debate ................................ 187&#13;
Inter· Society Debate ...................................... 184·186&#13;
Ionian Society .............................................. 110-113&#13;
Jackson, Goldia ...................................................... 66&#13;
Jackson, Hilda ........................................................ 66&#13;
January Calendar .................................................. 239&#13;
Jeffery, Alice .............................................. 66, 75, 122&#13;
Johnson, Arth ur H . ........................................ 5 4, 126&#13;
Johnson, Leon J .... .4, 54, 92, 95, 118, 1 39, 144, 1 69&#13;
Johnson, Marion .................... 66, 82, 88, 94, 106, 182&#13;
J okes Cartoon ........................................................ 24 7&#13;
,Jones, Clifford ............................................ 66, 96, 110&#13;
June Calendar ........................................................ 229&#13;
Junior .............................. ................. .................44, 65&#13;
Kanthlener, Henry&#13;
F. ............................................ 15&#13;
K ay, Guy .......................................................... 70, 118&#13;
Keeffe, Ann a .................................................... 55, 182&#13;
Keene, Louis .......................................................... 118&#13;
K ennel Klub ............................................................ 244&#13;
Kilborne, Harr ison .................................. 55, 11 0, 179&#13;
Kingsbury, Francis.......................................... 66, 126&#13;
Kline, Ruth ........................................ 66, 75, 100, 12 2&#13;
Klippel, Char les ............................ 66, 83, 87, 126, 181&#13;
Knapp, Gladys ........................................................ 70&#13;
Knapp, Lois ............................................................ 70&#13;
Knudson, Ru by ................................................ 66, 114&#13;
K olp, Frances .................................................... 66, 122&#13;
Kolp, James R. ........................4 , 55, 83, 91, 95, 126&#13;
Krurnann, Mae B . .................................................. 66&#13;
&#13;
Lak eside Labor atory .............................................. 98&#13;
Lake Geneva .......................................................... 84&#13;
Lange, Leone ....................................... 66, 82, 88, 122&#13;
Langfo rd, Flor ence ................................................ 77&#13;
Larson, Harry .................................................... 70, 96&#13;
Larson, Mabel ........................................................ 70&#13;
Laub, Helen G . ........................................ 56, 79, 106&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence, Edith B ............................................. 56, 86&#13;
Lawrence, Harvey ........................ 56, 91, 92, 96, 110&#13;
Leazer , Kathryn B ............................. 38, 82, 86, 114&#13;
Lehan, Lloyd ............................................ 5 7, 110, 174&#13;
Leuder, H erman ............................................ 155, 159&#13;
Liming, Orlan .................................................. 66, 126&#13;
· Lindsay, Arthur W ..................................... 39, 92, 110&#13;
Literary Cartoon .................................................. 189&#13;
Literary Section ............................................ 189·2 10&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas .......... 66, 96, 118, 149, 169, 173, 179&#13;
Locke, Arthur ............................................ 66, 96, 126&#13;
Logan, Leslie B . .............................................. 39, 126&#13;
Long, Ralph .................................................... 135, 187&#13;
Loveland, H elen I. .................................................. 12&#13;
Ludlum, Louise .................................. 66, 79, 94, 106&#13;
Lunbom, Judith .................................................... 70&#13;
Lunbom, Vera ................................ 66, 122, 182, 206&#13;
Lundblad, Anna ...................................................... 70&#13;
Lutz, Gretchen K ............................................... 11 , 13&#13;
&#13;
Ordway, Ethel ............................................ 77, 93, 122&#13;
Ordway, Mary .................................................. 58, 122&#13;
Organizations .................................................... 81, 135&#13;
Organ ization Cartoon ............................................ 81&#13;
" Orpheus and Eurydice" ..................................207·209&#13;
Othonian Society .............................................. 126· 129&#13;
Overholser, Ralph ........................................ 66, 92 94&#13;
&#13;
Silas Marner .......................................................... 78&#13;
&#13;
Tutt le, Gladys .. ... .... ....... ...... .... ................ .... ......... 15&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club ................................................................ 13 8&#13;
''M'' Meet ................................................................ 164&#13;
McBride, Robert ...................................... 66, 118, 1 79&#13;
McBride, 'fhomas ...................................... 66, 83, 118&#13;
McBurney, Cornelia ............................ 57, 88, 99, 106&#13;
Mcconkey, Bly ................................................ 66, 110&#13;
McCutcheon, Helen ................................................ 70&#13;
McDonald, Mark ........................................ 70, 96, 126&#13;
McKinney, Delbert .................... 39, 92, 126, 151, 184&#13;
McKinney, Fern .................................... 66, 75, 94, 122&#13;
McKircher , Pearl .................................................. 132&#13;
McLane, Lura .................................. 39, 93, 122, 174&#13;
McNary, Martin a ......................................66, 75, 114&#13;
MacCollin, Elizabeth N ........................................... 14&#13;
MacCollin, Paul ................................................ 14, 92&#13;
MacMillian, John D ............................................... 14&#13;
Madison, John V . ........................... .40, 118, 183, 184&#13;
Madison, Rachel.. .............................................. 57, 106&#13;
Madsen, Una .......................................................... 70&#13;
Madrigal Club ........................................................ 93&#13;
Mahood, H erbert ............................................ 70, 118&#13;
Mahood, Marie ........................................................ 70&#13;
Mahood, Ruth ........................................................ 100&#13;
Mahood, Ruth ( Acad.) .......................................... 134&#13;
Main Hall ................................................................ 20&#13;
March Calendar ...................................................... 243&#13;
Marsh, Charles A ............................................. 13, 178&#13;
May Calendar .......................................................... 227&#13;
Meeks, Helen .......................................................... 70&#13;
Men' s Glee Club .................................................... 92&#13;
Metcalf, Marion ............................................... .40, 106&#13;
Metcalfe, Isabel ................................................ 66, 106&#13;
Miller, Earl ...................................................... 70, 110&#13;
Miller, Glen ................................................ 58, 91, 126&#13;
Mitchell, Richard L .................................... .40, 87, 180&#13;
Moen, Mabel ............................................................ 77&#13;
Montgomery, Esther ........................................ 66, 122&#13;
Monument Day ...................................................... 176&#13;
Monument Run ...................................................... 165&#13;
Moonlight on the Misouri. ....................................... 25&#13;
Morningside For ensic R ecords ................................ 1 88&#13;
Mornings ide Track Records .................................... 166&#13;
: orrison, Florence .................................................. 70&#13;
M&#13;
Morse, Orwin A . .................................................... 16&#13;
Moss, Nona .............................................................. 1 32&#13;
Mus ic Seniors ........................................................ 77&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan ................................................ 1 58&#13;
N icholson, Morris ............................................ 70, 126&#13;
N ielson, Kathinea .................................................... 134&#13;
Noe, Glenn ................................................ 66, 91, 110&#13;
Northrup, Carrol.. .................................. 139, 146, 1 68&#13;
Norton, Dale .................................................... 70, 126&#13;
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Obrecht, Clarence ........................................ 66, 91, 92&#13;
October Calendar .................................................... 233&#13;
Olsen, Ethel ............................................................ 32&#13;
Olson, Ruth ............................................ 58, 100, 122&#13;
&#13;
Van Horne, J. Don , 4, 64, 95, 96, 110, 179, 183, 186&#13;
Van Horne Robert N ..................: .......... 1 5, 1 02, 138&#13;
&#13;
Paradisanos, George .............................................. 70&#13;
Parkinson. Ehna ............................ 66, 78, 82, 99, 122&#13;
Patrick, Glenn B .......................... .40, 83, 86, 89, 126&#13;
Paul, Verne&#13;
&#13;
··--·-····--·· ·······························----------· 70, 91&#13;
&#13;
Payne, Arthur .............................. 59, 83, 89, 110, 186&#13;
&#13;
Pease, Laura .................................................. 4 1 59, 95&#13;
P earson, Mabel ...................................................... 70&#13;
P ecaut, Mildred&#13;
............................ 66, 78, 122&#13;
P eitzke, Ruth ........................................................ 70&#13;
P ersinger, Elva ...................................................... 70&#13;
P ersinger, Everett .......................................... 80, 133&#13;
P eterson, Abbie ...................................................... 132&#13;
Phelps, Floyd ................................................. .41, 118&#13;
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Pieria Society ......&#13;
. .................................. 106· 109&#13;
Pike, Cla udius ...................................................... 119&#13;
Pike, Stillman .................................................. 70, 110&#13;
Poland, Spencer ........................................ 70, 96, 118&#13;
Pratt, George.......... ............................... ................. 70&#13;
Prentice, Ruth ........................................................ 70&#13;
President's Home .................................... :............... 22&#13;
Pritchard, Elbert.. ...................................... 70, 96, 118&#13;
Prohibition L eague ..................................................87&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest.. .............................. 18 L&#13;
&#13;
Randolph, R on ald ........................................ 70, 91, 118&#13;
Ratliff, Irma .........................•................................ 132&#13;
R eed, Jessie ...................................................... 77, 132&#13;
R eistrup, James ...................................................... 1 6&#13;
R eyman, Howard A ......................................... 66, 126&#13;
Richardson, N. N . .......................................... 66, 126&#13;
Riddle, Gladys ...................................................... 66&#13;
Ried, Ruth E. . ............................................... 70, 100&#13;
Riner, Benjamin ........................... .4 1, 1 26, 183, 184&#13;
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Rosene, Harry ........ ............................................. 59&#13;
Ruskell, Grace ................................................ 66. 114&#13;
Russell, Culbert ................................................ 70, 118&#13;
Russell, Lois ............................................ 75, 94, 122&#13;
Ruth Club .............................................................. 100&#13;
&#13;
Spry, Katherine .................... 33, 42, .88, 89, 97, 122&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Her ald ....................... 66, 89, 118, 139, 161&#13;
Wall Street Mission ................................................ 85&#13;
Walton, ald J .......... .4, 63, 85, 95, 126, 179, 185&#13;
Don&#13;
&#13;
Wedgwood, Mary F . ............................... .4 3, 82, 122&#13;
Wenig, Ervine ................ 66, 118, 139, J.46, 168, 173&#13;
Stonebrook, Earl.. ..........................66, 118, 1 79, 184&#13;
Strobel, Lovice V ................................ .42, 78, 88, 122&#13;
..&#13;
Studen t Volunteer and ........................................ 86&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
Wiese, Emma J.&#13;
................&#13;
Williams, Earl.. ...................... 43, 118, 139, 149, 168&#13;
Williams, Ewar t L ...... 4, 65, 87, 94 , 95, 126, 152&#13;
&#13;
Williams, Noel J ............. 4, 65, 83, 95, 96, 126, 139&#13;
Winkleman, F. Eleanor ... .43, '78, 86, 88, 89, 99, 122&#13;
&#13;
Teutonia&#13;
&#13;
Club ........................................................ 97&#13;
Woodford, Faith ...................................................... 15·&#13;
Woole William .......................................... 66, 83, 126&#13;
Wulf, Horace ............................ 70, 89, 118, 139 , 148&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
Track&#13;
Track&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
R ecords ........................................................ 166&#13;
Schedule ...................................................... 155&#13;
Season .......................................................... 156&#13;
Team ............................................................ 160&#13;
&#13;
Troutman, R ay D ............................................. 70, 126&#13;
&#13;
Y . M . C. A ............................................................. 83&#13;
Y. W. C. A ............................................................. 82&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Society ........................................ 122-125&#13;
"Zet. Novelette" ............................................ 195·202&#13;
&#13;
Sage, Harriett ........................................................ 93&#13;
Salie, Neal ........................................................ 80, 133&#13;
Sammons, Louise ........................................ 70, 78, 182&#13;
Sampson, Ernest .............................................. 86, 133&#13;
Sanborn, Martha .................................................... 13&#13;
San em, Earl ............................................................ 133&#13;
Sanger, Ernest .......................................... 80, 97, 134&#13;
Saunders, Lida ................................................ 66, 122&#13;
Saunderson , ,Jason Jlf.. ........................... 1 3 , 1 38, 140&#13;
Savonell, Elsie ........................................................ 70&#13;
Sawyer, Ella .......................................................... 132&#13;
Schaub, Dr. Frederick&#13;
........................................ 15, 97&#13;
Schellinger , R oy .............................................. 70, 110&#13;
Schieder, Geor ge .............................................. 60, 97&#13;
Schmoker, Cecil ........................................ 66, 93, 106&#13;
School of Expression ................................................ 78&#13;
Schriever , Wm ........................................ .41, 96, 118&#13;
Schuldt, Nora M . ........................................... .41, 114&#13;
Schuster, Laura .................................................... 70&#13;
Schuster, Lydia ...................................................... 70&#13;
Sebern, Marie ................... .4, 60, 82, 88, 89, 9 5, 122&#13;
Secoy, Ed ith .......................................................... 70&#13;
Seniors .............................................................. 33, 43&#13;
Seniors (Acad.) .................................................... 80&#13;
September Calendar .............................................. 231&#13;
Shannon, Bess ................................................ 61, 114&#13;
Sherwood, Cla ir ................................................ 66, 126&#13;
Shipley, Sadie ........................................................ 70&#13;
Shoemaker, Elihu .................................................. 151&#13;
"She Stoops to Conquer" ...................................... 78&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
�Autographs&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ninety&#13;
&#13;
���</text>
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&#13;
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              <text>Published by&#13;
Class of 191 7 of&#13;
&#13;
Compiled&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
at Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Engraved by&#13;
THE ELECTRIC CITY ENGRAVING CO.&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
Printed by&#13;
TH E ECONOMY ADVERT ISING CO.&#13;
Iowa City, la .&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
Volume XV&#13;
&#13;
Donald J. Walton&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Wilson C. Clark .&#13;
AssistantEditor&#13;
Noel J. Williams&#13;
Ray C. Harrington Asst. Business Manager&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Fern Beacham&#13;
Ewart L. Williams&#13;
Artist&#13;
Athletics&#13;
WendellCurry&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Leon J. Johnson&#13;
Laura E. Pease&#13;
Classes&#13;
Faculty&#13;
J. Don Van Horne&#13;
Forensics&#13;
W. Charles Garlock&#13;
Jokes&#13;
James R. Kolp .&#13;
F. Marie Sebern&#13;
Literary&#13;
Minnie J. Fry .&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Albin G. Hornney&#13;
Photography&#13;
Ruth V. Gillies .&#13;
Society&#13;
&#13;
four&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
To all thsoe whose loyalty, perseverance, true friendship, and liberal&#13;
contributions have aided our Alma&#13;
Mater to weather the sever crises of&#13;
past years; to that constituency whose&#13;
efforts have erededa firm foundation&#13;
upon which to build the Greater Morningside of the future, the Class of&#13;
1917 respectfully dedicate this book.&#13;
&#13;
fice&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
.I&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Foreword&#13;
Contents&#13;
THE PRIDE OF THE SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Our Alma&#13;
Mater&#13;
&#13;
During the past year, Morningside has&#13;
experienced a remarkable growth. the enthusiastic support of her constituency during the&#13;
financial campaign, the increased strength of&#13;
her faculty, and the unexcelled achievements of&#13;
her student body have caused her to be recognized as the "Leader of our State."&#13;
In compiling this book, we have attempted&#13;
to portray these successes as best we could.&#13;
But, in reality the story of Morningside can&#13;
not be expressed in words and pictures. It is&#13;
impossible to breathe into these lifeless pages&#13;
the full significance of college friendships, familiar campus scenes, and that powerful influence&#13;
in the life of every student-the spirit of Morningside. These must be lived to be truly appreciated and enjoyed. So, it we have mininterpretedor erred in any respect, we ask your charity.&#13;
&#13;
SIX&#13;
&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Amid H er B eautiful Environment&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Honored by L oyal Sons and Daughters&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
Stimulating the Spirit of Fellowship&#13;
B OOK&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
&#13;
Successful in D efeat or Victory&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
Expressing H er thoughts in P rose and&#13;
Poetry&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
VI&#13;
&#13;
En P assant&#13;
&#13;
seven&#13;
&#13;
Alma Mater&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
R EFR A IN&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
llI&#13;
&#13;
eight&#13;
&#13;
Sing the praises of Dear AlmaMater,&#13;
Tell of her heroes bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices&#13;
The chorus swelling&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
then cheer for Dear Old Morningside&#13;
To thee we pledge anew&#13;
·&#13;
Hearts of faithful love&#13;
Now and forever,&#13;
thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
We'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought us&#13;
Fair Morningside ! Our home&#13;
Hear our vow, O Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee.&#13;
All we have&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
for the Glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
Miss Gretchen K. Lutz, A. M.,&#13;
who has won the admiration and respect&#13;
of both faculty and students&#13;
by her friendly counsels&#13;
.&#13;
and true comradeship&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
MISS GRETCHEN K. LUTZ&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
elev en&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET G. DOLLIVER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Ex-Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
DlMMlTT, A. M ..&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET R. BRAND, A. B.&#13;
Director of Physical T rai ning&#13;
for Women&#13;
&#13;
Wm.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM C. HILMER, PH. D .&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Professor German Literature&#13;
&#13;
A. M .&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
AGNES B. FERG U SON,&#13;
&#13;
A. BROWN, A. M.&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
on leave.&#13;
EPHENOR&#13;
&#13;
*Absent&#13;
&#13;
ALF RED E . CRAIG , PH. D. , D. D .&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
*HELENI. LOVELAND, A .&#13;
&#13;
GRETCH EN K. LUTZ, A. M.&#13;
P rofessor of French and Span ish&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
HERB ERT G. CA MP BELL, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Psychol ogy and&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
James&#13;
&#13;
J. H AYES,&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. MARSH , B.&#13;
Professor of P ublic Speaking&#13;
L AU RA C . FISCH ER, A. M.&#13;
Instructor in German and Latin&#13;
&#13;
w ALLACE C ARSON, PH . D.&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
D irector of Physical Training&#13;
for Men&#13;
&#13;
JASON M . S AU NDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
C. S ANBORN&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA&#13;
&#13;
twelve&#13;
&#13;
thirteen&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
MACMILLAN,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
PEARL&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
GREENE,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTHLENER,&#13;
&#13;
MABEL E. BROWN&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
B., B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Home Economics&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST R. BURTON,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICK SCHAUB,&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
OLAF HOVDA, PH .&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M .,&#13;
&#13;
D. D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Sociology and&#13;
Biblical Literature&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Greek&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE, PH .&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAcCOLLIN,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
MAcCOLLIN, Mus.·B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
fourt een&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD R. HARVEY, Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
ALTA F . FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Biology&#13;
FAITH WOODFORD,&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
HOUGHTON, PH . B.&#13;
&#13;
Lecturer in Sociology&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS TUTTLE,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Academy&#13;
&#13;
fifteen&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Board of Trustees&#13;
O FFICERS&#13;
President .......................................................................... E. C. H EILMAN&#13;
First Vice-President ... .......................................................C.&#13;
&#13;
W . P AYNE&#13;
&#13;
Second Vice-President......................................................W . H . ROLFING&#13;
Secretary ....................................................................... .......... F. 0. BARZ&#13;
F. OTTO BARTZ&#13;
Financial Secret ar y&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C . STEPHENS, M . D.&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
]AMES A. Coss, M . S.&#13;
Professor of C hemistry·&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer ................................................................................ F. 0. B ARZ&#13;
&#13;
M E MB E RSHIP&#13;
&#13;
T erm Expires 1916&#13;
GEORGE ALLEE&#13;
]. E. BENZ&#13;
]. w. FELLER&#13;
N. R. H ATHAWAY&#13;
.&#13;
P. E. HELD&#13;
E. C. H EILMAN&#13;
w . R. JAMESON&#13;
w. KENYON&#13;
C . A. MA UER&#13;
E . A. MORLING&#13;
D. A. McBURNEY&#13;
J. H. DONAH UE&#13;
J. G. SH UMAKER&#13;
ROBERT SMYLIE&#13;
w. E. T ACKABERRY&#13;
G. H. WESSEL&#13;
G EORGE WH ITFIELD&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
Instructor in Banjo, Mandolin,&#13;
and G uitar&#13;
&#13;
]AMES R EISTRUP&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
T erm Expires 1917&#13;
CHARLES B EACHAM&#13;
W . D. BOIES&#13;
0. M . BOND&#13;
A. G. B u ss&#13;
C . E . CHAPLER&#13;
R. T. CHIPPERFIELD&#13;
E. M. C ORBETT&#13;
L. J. H ASKINS&#13;
H. A. K ECK&#13;
C . D . K ILLAM&#13;
J. H. K LAUS&#13;
SCOTT M . LADD&#13;
J. w . L OTHIAN&#13;
C . w. P AYNE&#13;
J. L. PANSLAU&#13;
GEORGE R AW&#13;
F . H . T HIEL&#13;
W ALTER TORBET&#13;
&#13;
Term E x pires 1918&#13;
F . 0. BARZ&#13;
L. J. BRENNER&#13;
G . C. C ALL&#13;
H ERB ERT C LEGG&#13;
J. L. GILLIES&#13;
F . w. K LAUS&#13;
C . P. KILBORNE&#13;
C .H. L OCKIN&#13;
E . S. J OH NSON&#13;
w. T . M ACD ONALD&#13;
w. P. M ANLEY&#13;
w . C. M F.TCALF&#13;
B ENNETT MITCH ELL&#13;
J. P . N EG US&#13;
H. B. P IERCE&#13;
W. H. R o LFING&#13;
J. B. TRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
./&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN A. MORSE, A. A.G. 0.&#13;
Director of Conservatory of Music&#13;
Instructor of :Music&#13;
&#13;
sixteen&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
MORNI NGS IDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
To Morningside'sstately halls and attactive campus come&#13;
young men and women desirous of learning the fundamentals&#13;
of true living, as well as tje knowledge and mental equipment&#13;
essential to gain a livelihood. The aim of MorningsideCollege&#13;
is to develop the latent talents which lie within her students to&#13;
arouse in them discernment originality, resource, and responsibility, and to hold up before them the ideal of an effectiveChristian&#13;
life. Noplace is better adapted to accomplish this worthy aim,&#13;
no spot is more pleasant to spend the best four years of a&#13;
student's life than amid the beautiful environment of her campus.&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
MAIN HALL&#13;
&#13;
Home of ourcollege days,&#13;
&#13;
Hark to our song of praise,&#13;
While we our voices raise&#13;
For Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
twenty&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
Thou queen of all the land,&#13;
loyal to thee we stand,&#13;
thy sons a faithful band Dear Morningside&#13;
&#13;
twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
------------•-----------------:-------,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
We shall sing of the honor and fa,e thou hast won,&#13;
Withour hearts and our voices attune,&#13;
And forever we'll stand united as one&#13;
In our love for the dear old Maroon.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Morningside thou art the "Pride of the Sioux"&#13;
And we'll honor thy name evermore,&#13;
to thy standard we'll ever be loyal and true,&#13;
As thy sons ever have been before.&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
GRACE M. E.-THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
MOONLIGHT ON THE MISSOURI&#13;
&#13;
We are glad for the days that we've spent on thy hills,&#13;
Andthe friendships we've formed in thy halls,&#13;
Andfor dear Alma Mater our hearts shall beat still,&#13;
when at last we shall turn from thy walls.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Till the waters have dried in the "Rolling Mizzou"&#13;
Andall love in the old world has died,&#13;
We shallstand by our college,"The Prideof theSioux"&#13;
And we'll cheer for our old Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH RA VINE IN THE WINTER&#13;
CRYSTAL LAKE&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
CHEMISTRY HALL&#13;
Destroyed by fire Aug. 22, 1914&#13;
&#13;
twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
OLD CONSERVATORY OF M USIC&#13;
D estroyed by fire D ec. 6, 1914&#13;
&#13;
twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
the Classes&#13;
BOOK&#13;
TWO&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUS SCENE&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
swear a vow beforetheenow;&#13;
Our thoughts in life with thee abide,&#13;
And ever from our hearts shallflow&#13;
A song, a cheerfor Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
Honors and Prizes Conferred at Commencement&#13;
1915 CLASS HONORS&#13;
Honorable Mention&#13;
DAISY ETHEL ENGLISH&#13;
ALLAN BLAIR KLINE&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
K ATHRYN NEWLAND&#13;
&#13;
CARL WILLIAM HENRY SASS&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE PRIZES&#13;
Men's Intercollegiate DebateCLARENCE TUCKER CRAIG, JOHN VINCIN MADISON, BENJAMIN WILSON&#13;
RINER.&#13;
HERBERT DUNHAM, CHARLES EDGAR HUTTON, HERMAN HINMAN LEUDER.&#13;
Girls' Intercollegiate DebateHELEN DOROTHY CARLSON, ANNA KEEFFE, AGNES FRY.&#13;
HAZEL EFFIE DAY, HELEN MARIE EASTHOUSE, ELIZABETH ]AMES.&#13;
Alumni Prizes in OratoryFirst, JAMES ISAAC DOLLIVER.&#13;
Second, .CHARLES HAWN KLIPPEL.&#13;
Third, CLARENCE TUCKER CRAIG.&#13;
Dewey Prizes in OratoryFirst, RICHARD LANGLEY MITCHELL.&#13;
Second, CHARLES EDGAR HUTTON.&#13;
Chapin Peace PrizeVERNON STENSETH.&#13;
&#13;
ANNA L. BEARD&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OFFICERS&#13;
President,&#13;
&#13;
AN NA&#13;
&#13;
L. BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President , HARRY M. CLARK&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, KATH ERINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
T he Frederick C . Tucker PrizeJAY FINLEY CHRIST.&#13;
The Milligan Prize-&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
Seal Brow n and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH&#13;
HALE.&#13;
Iowa Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution Prize in American HistoryETHEL OLSEN.&#13;
&#13;
thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD A. ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn&#13;
&#13;
"I wish to possess firmness and virtue&#13;
enough to maintain what I consider the&#13;
most enviable of all titles-the character&#13;
of an honest man."&#13;
&#13;
THOM AS C. ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
F . EARL B U RGESS&#13;
&#13;
Ruthven&#13;
&#13;
"In all thy humors whether grav e or mellow,&#13;
Thou art such a touchy, testy, pleasant&#13;
fellow,&#13;
Hast so much wit and mirth about thee."&#13;
&#13;
BERN ICE CH ALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Moville&#13;
&#13;
''Nothing great was ever accomplished&#13;
in this world without enthusiasm."&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
B U LL&#13;
&#13;
Humboldt&#13;
&#13;
" 'Tis something to be willing to command,&#13;
But my best praise is that I am your&#13;
fri end."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" Gentle of speech, beneficent of m ind."&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
ANNA&#13;
&#13;
P ierson&#13;
&#13;
" Hi s judg men t like the heavenly moon did&#13;
show,&#13;
Tempering ' all things down here below."&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
C LARK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" Ambition is my idol, on whose wings&#13;
Great minds a re ca rried only to extremesTo be sublimely great."&#13;
&#13;
C ORDELIA C OLB U RN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" For she is jes' the qui et kind,&#13;
Whose natures never vary,&#13;
Like streams that keep a summer mind,&#13;
Snow hid in Janua ry."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-five&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
"It is the privilege of genius that to it&#13;
life never grows commonplace, as to the&#13;
rest of us."&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
AMBROSE C. DELAPP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"It is the mind that makes the man, and&#13;
our vigor is in our immortal soul."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
H. MARIE EASTHO USE&#13;
&#13;
"0, let us still the secret joy partake,&#13;
To follow virtue even for virtue's sake."&#13;
&#13;
Hartley&#13;
&#13;
" She who, secure within, can say :&#13;
'Tomorrow, do thy worst, for I have&#13;
lived today.'"&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
M. LOIS CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, blest with temper whose unclouded&#13;
ray,&#13;
Can make tomorrow cheerful as today.''&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Presence of mind, and courage in distress,&#13;
Are more than armies to procure success.''&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
HARRY&#13;
HAZEL E. DAY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A perfect woman, nobly planned,&#13;
To warn, to comfort, and command.''&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
Burbank, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
"An honest man, close butoned to the chin,&#13;
Broadcloth without, and a warm heart&#13;
within.''&#13;
&#13;
thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR HALL&#13;
&#13;
ARTHU R&#13;
&#13;
Westfield&#13;
&#13;
" Of reason firm, of temperate will,&#13;
Endurance, foresight, strength and skill."&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
HORN&#13;
&#13;
LES LIE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
DELBERT&#13;
&#13;
L OGAN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
M c KI NN EY&#13;
&#13;
Fort D odge&#13;
&#13;
"A man of cheerful yesterdays, a nd confident tomorrows."&#13;
&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
" Zealous yet modest, innocent tho free!&#13;
Patient of toil, serene amid alarms."&#13;
&#13;
L U RA MCLAN E&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
"A strong character, found ed on the&#13;
solid rock of p rinciple."&#13;
&#13;
"The noblest mind the best contentment&#13;
has."&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN&#13;
&#13;
LINDSEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"But words are things, and a small drop&#13;
of ink,&#13;
Falling like dew upon a thought,&#13;
Produces that which makes thousands,&#13;
perhaps millions, think."&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
" Now, Nature is not at v ariance with&#13;
Art, nor Art with Nature."&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
" She has no t ra it more striking than her&#13;
common sense."&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
JOHNV. MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Loathing pretense, he does with cheerful&#13;
will&#13;
What others talk about while their hands&#13;
are still."&#13;
&#13;
MARION M. METCALF&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN W. RINER&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
H. FLOYD PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" I dare do all that may become a man;&#13;
Who dares do more is none."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" She is willful, mutable,&#13;
Untamed, inscrutable,&#13;
Swifter-fashioned than the fairies,&#13;
Substance mixed with pure contraries."&#13;
&#13;
" Formed on the good old-fashioned plan,&#13;
A true, a brave, and downright honest&#13;
man."&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
Huddersfield, Eng.&#13;
&#13;
" He adorned whatever subject he either&#13;
spoke or wrote upon, by the most splendid&#13;
eloquence."&#13;
&#13;
GLENN B. PATRICK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A man who consecrates his hours by&#13;
vigorous effort and an honest aim."&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
"I need no spurs to prick the sides of my&#13;
intent,&#13;
But only vaulting ambition, which o'erleaps itself."&#13;
&#13;
NORA M. SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
" Tho' deep, yet clear; tho' gentle, yet&#13;
not dull."&#13;
&#13;
forty-one&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
" The heart to conceive,&#13;
The understanding to direct,&#13;
And the hand to execute."&#13;
&#13;
LOVICE&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
STROBEL&#13;
&#13;
R. TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Is always happy, reign whoever ·may,&#13;
And laughs the sense of misery far&#13;
away."&#13;
&#13;
Jefferson, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
" Cheerful at morn, she wakes from short&#13;
repose,&#13;
Breathes the keen air, and carols as she&#13;
goes."&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
F. EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
" Friend, lead on and I will follow thee&#13;
To the last gasp with truth and loyalty."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A mind forever voyaging&#13;
great seas of thought."&#13;
&#13;
through&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
Lohrville&#13;
&#13;
"Whatever she did was done with so much&#13;
ease,&#13;
In her alone 'twas natural to please."&#13;
&#13;
forty-two&#13;
&#13;
forty-three&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
F RANK ABEL&#13;
&#13;
Frank is able all right in mathematics, physics, chemistry, or&#13;
photography. Frank is a blonde, short, and sober as a j udge to&#13;
the casual observer, but has enough mischief in his make-up to&#13;
keep "something doing," especially in chemistry lab. D oes not let&#13;
anyone know that he pays any attention to the girl s, but wi ll&#13;
probably fall some day as has the ma jority of his contemporaries.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR C . PAYNE&#13;
AN NA&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
A N DERSON&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President, ARTHUR C. PAYNE&#13;
Vice-President, CORNELIA E . McBURNEY&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, AMANDA B. RoosT&#13;
&#13;
A nna's complexion, as well as her name, betrays her nationality. She is a most loya l Morningsider, and fe ll so deeply in&#13;
love with the college duri ng her Freshman year that when she&#13;
retu rned the next fall she b rought her sister w ith her. Not all&#13;
of us ca n so easily convince our fami lies. A nna has the admiration of her classmates because of her natural efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
JACOB&#13;
&#13;
Old Gold and Blue&#13;
&#13;
forty-four&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Estherv ille, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
" Andy," if you know him. A lways ready to do the other&#13;
fell ow a good turn. He has a han d and a heart that rings true&#13;
of the stuff that makes for the goal and purpose of his ambi tion.&#13;
He knows where good things are, fo r he has tried Iowa U. and&#13;
then returned to M orn ingside Coll ege. We admi re his perseverance, for he had the courage to canvass books all of last summer.&#13;
&#13;
forty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
J. JULIA ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MILDRED BROWN&#13;
&#13;
We note in the office records that Julia started last year with&#13;
the class of '18, but by hard work and consistent effort she has&#13;
joined our ranks. We appreciate her wisdom. Her chief claim&#13;
to honors is in the classroom, where few can equal her in scholarship. The Anderson sisters sure make some studious pair.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Brown, not willing to acknowledge her goal reached, returned to Morningside College for a degree. She is taking Latin,&#13;
German, French, Spanish, Greek, and if the college offered any&#13;
more languages, we would fear for her. She is Prof. Campbell's&#13;
Psychology assistant, which speaks- well for her intellectual&#13;
achievements. One may see her arms piled high with books at&#13;
any hour.&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
WILSON&#13;
&#13;
Fern is one of our busiest and most genial classmates. Her&#13;
pleasant smile, sincere manner of expressing brilliant ideas, and&#13;
enthusiastic interest in student activities have won the admira•&#13;
tion of all. When someone is needed to work on committees,&#13;
Fern is always willing to do.more than her share. Absolutely dependable and a steadfast friend, she is an ideal college girl.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
"Wilse" is one of those happy-go-lucky fellows who never&#13;
worry. He delights in bothering the librarian and in talking with&#13;
the girls in the halls. He is an enthusiastic booster for the college, especially in athletics. If he thinks the project worth his&#13;
effort he can carry it through to a successful end, as has been&#13;
proven by his work as Business Manager of the SIOUX '17.&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
MARGUERITE BRETHORST&#13;
&#13;
Lennox, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite is a South Dakota girl , who some day hopes to join&#13;
her three sisters in the foreign field. She is kept pretty busy, for&#13;
she is finishing college in three years, but she still finds time to&#13;
attend all the college functions, social or otherwise. A girl who&#13;
believes in taking life as it comes, and salting it with plenty of&#13;
wit and good humor. She is satisfied only with the best.&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CLARK&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mildred came to us this year from Dakota Wesleyan, and we&#13;
certainly appreciate this move on her part. Her bright smile and&#13;
good fellowship make her an interesting companion. She likes&#13;
a good game of tennis, early in the morning. She is rather shy,&#13;
but is always ready for a mischievous good time. Mildred has&#13;
looked over the assortment of young men at Morningside, but still&#13;
hears from Mitchell.&#13;
&#13;
forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
JAY&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
CHRIST&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sloan, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
E. WE NDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
Some great and wise spirit knew what it was about when it&#13;
whispered in Jay Christ's ear, "Go to Morningside." By night&#13;
he sends life saving messages from post to post, and by day he&#13;
maintains a scholarship which is well worth our admiration. Remembering, in addition, his power of concentration, and his reputation as a debater, we would call him a man of unusual ability.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COOMER&#13;
&#13;
Wendell has won fame for his class and for his Alma Mater&#13;
in track, by holding the Morningside record in the one-half mile.&#13;
He was a tower of strength on the class basketball team. Last&#13;
Washington 's Birthday he learned the way out to the Monument,&#13;
and since then has made severa l trips on cloudy moonlight nights.&#13;
His capacity for hard work makes him one of the busiest men in&#13;
school.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Most every one knows Ethel, or has heard her sing. Next&#13;
year we expect that she will be charming the people of another&#13;
village with her beautiful voice and training the rising generation to a better knowledge and appreciation of music. She is a&#13;
faithful and cheerful worker, whether in Glee Club, in church,&#13;
or in society. Ethel is one of the kind who always ha s a cheerful&#13;
smile.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Talk about your Emerald Isles-if this is a fair sample, let's&#13;
have more of them. " Donna" is the boy who can put it across&#13;
equally well in the class-room and on the gridiron. He won his&#13;
letter at Yankton, but is too modest and unassuming to wear it&#13;
much down here. Another who must needs go back and forth&#13;
daily on the car, but does it gladly to be a " loyal son and and&#13;
true".&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE CUMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite makes an excellent fairy, and her black, curly&#13;
hair is the envy of her classmates, especially the boys. With&#13;
all of these winsome qualities she left us the second semester, and&#13;
went to teach German and Latin at Laurens. She has the faculty of being able to learn most everything, and at the same&#13;
time enjoy herself. We miss her cheery face, and will welcome&#13;
her back again next year.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE D UTTO N&#13;
&#13;
Haubstadt, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
George knows a good thing when he sees it, as was evidenced&#13;
last year by his coming all of the way from Indiana to enroll&#13;
in "The greatest seat of wisdom since Solomon died." Since his&#13;
arrival he has advanced from the Class of '18 to the Class of&#13;
' 17-more evidence of good judgment. A combination of jollity,&#13;
studiousness and reliability which can overcome all obstacles.&#13;
&#13;
forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
MERLE&#13;
&#13;
Humboldt, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH EDGE&#13;
&#13;
Westside, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Who knows Turk? We all do. The " Old War Horse" who&#13;
has helped to pull home the bacon from football and baseball&#13;
field s in a way that has helped to put Morningside on the map&#13;
for athletics. As a captain he has sacrificed much to promote&#13;
the interests of her teams. This is not all, in addition to his athletic attainments, Turk is a bird man, and can tell you all about&#13;
them.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
Farnhamville, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Jack" joined us this year after wandering out to Colorado&#13;
and then back to Evanston for two years. He has at last found&#13;
the right school and the right class. We wonder how we ever&#13;
got along without each other. He possesses a keen, analytical&#13;
mind well fitted for majoring in Psych., and even shows symptoms of becoming a "shark". Spends much of his spare time&#13;
talking-intelligently too.&#13;
&#13;
fifty&#13;
&#13;
M a rcus, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FRE NCH&#13;
&#13;
"Frenchy"- a man from Mark Us ( Marcus), another of those&#13;
sp ecimens of the ra rely ever seen ( Book O podi us), a type of anim al sometimes found un der electric lig hts in the student's room&#13;
or in the laboratory hovering over the microscope. If caught in&#13;
time and nurtured ca refull y und er such men as Dr. Stephens,&#13;
w ill develop into a n excellent specimen of " Doctoreinius".&#13;
&#13;
Agreeable, unobtrusive, studious, we all like Beth, even&#13;
the faculty. She is one of the Loveland bunch, which fact indicates that she has had a good time, even though she seems so&#13;
quiet. She plays basketball with a good deal of zest. She&#13;
writes letters to Boston Theological Seminary,-but don't get excited, they are to her brother Joe.&#13;
&#13;
PAU L EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MIN NIE J. FRY&#13;
&#13;
M inn ie won fame this year by a th ree-minute speech, at a&#13;
chapel mass meeting. A sk Minnie if she did n't. If w e h ad&#13;
never heard that speech we w ould still remember her as a lover&#13;
of tennis. Minnie is a charming hostess, a loyal society worker,&#13;
a first-class Y. W. C. A. p resident, and above everything else a&#13;
g irl of sincere conv ictions an d sound good sense.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
C HARL ES GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux, Neb r.&#13;
&#13;
" Chick" really needs no introduction, fo r he matriculated way&#13;
back in '08. H e is one of those straight-forward kind, w ho&#13;
knows exactly where he stands upon a ny subject. He has won&#13;
honor for his class a nd for his Alma M ater in d ebate, and some&#13;
d ay we shall see hi m administering justice in an impartial way.&#13;
H e is not only a cool, d eliberate master of the platform, but also&#13;
sing s in the G lee Club, and takes pa rt in athletics.&#13;
&#13;
fifty -one&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
RUTH GILLIES&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
" Moxie" can never outlive his reputation as a joker. They&#13;
tried to quarantine him over at Patrick's, but he got the&#13;
small pox and broke out. He had nerve enough to attempt canvassing last summer. Moxie comes from the West&#13;
but looks toward the East for his inspiration. His aspirations lead him toward a goal which shall sometime be reached, by one withsuch&#13;
an earnest purpose.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth is a minister's daughter, one of those lovable creatures&#13;
whom we all like to have around. She is cheerful and optimistic, except that her studies worry her a little. She sings in the&#13;
Madrigal Club and majors in Latin. She is also vice-president&#13;
of the Agora Club. Ruth has surprised us all by flashing a Chi&#13;
Delta pin. Nine rahs for Brownie!&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
LUCIA&#13;
&#13;
Hinton, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
" Anna's" chief characteristic is perseverance. For the past&#13;
few years he has been trying to find a class with whom he might&#13;
be proud to graduate, and we welcome him to our midst. An&#13;
enthusiastic athlete, for he has been content to labor on the second team that Morningside's first team might be better. For the&#13;
past two years he has been an active member of the Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
Lucia spent one year at Ames, but decided to finish at Morningside. We have learned to depend upon her, for her worth&#13;
has been tried and proven. She would make an excellent suffragette if we were to judge by her ability to recite in History and&#13;
Politics. She has the excellent quality of sticking to her friends&#13;
through thick and thin.&#13;
&#13;
Ray is an all-round man . When he is not working in the&#13;
science laboratory, he may be found attending to his numerous&#13;
duties as president of the Y. M. C. A., heaving the shot or discus&#13;
out on Bass Field, or playing the saxophone in the college band.&#13;
He is a thorough student, even taking an active interest in Domestic Science.&#13;
&#13;
WALTER W. HELD&#13;
&#13;
Hagerman, New Mexico&#13;
&#13;
EARL E. HICKS&#13;
&#13;
Clear Lake, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
Le Mars, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
" Al" is our dapper young man from Le Mars. Loves fun,&#13;
makes it, and enjoys it. Has been a free lance until this year,&#13;
but he fell and fell hard. However he still had himself well&#13;
enough in hand to mount the Annual pictures, pursue his ambitions on the cinder track and manage his club at Cobbs. His&#13;
avocation is stepping, his vocation is Geology.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
NEVA&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HOUK&#13;
&#13;
Anna is a happy combination of Irish wit and Yankee shrewdness. She has made a success in intercollegiate debate and has&#13;
twice represented the college in that field. Studies are the least&#13;
of her worries but she gets more than her share of A grades, and&#13;
at the same time is making college in three years. Her greatest&#13;
responsibility to date is instructing her professors to spell her&#13;
name correctly-"two f's, if you please".&#13;
&#13;
Neva is one of those modest, sincere, dependable persons who&#13;
are indispensable to every class and every college. She is not&#13;
spectacular in the performance of her duties, but is always found&#13;
ready and willing. She is a consistent student, with an invaluable resource of experience along pedagogical lines, upon which&#13;
to rely. In short, she has made an excellent record in Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR H. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Art" is one of Uncle Sam's soldier boys. Calm and self-con. trolled, he says what he thinks and then holds firmly to the convictions which are formed. Yet beneath that calm exterior lies a&#13;
wit which can always detect humor in the situation. He has remarkable literary talent, especially along lines of thrilling romance.&#13;
&#13;
LEON J. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Jons" is a versatile genius. He is right at home on the gridiron, basketball floor, or diamond, behind the footlights, in the&#13;
kitchen, or warbling with the Glee Club. He ably fills any&#13;
position from " Mrs. Bridget Van Deutscher", President of the&#13;
Bingville Musical Uplift Society, to the hard-hitting, shifty half&#13;
back and, captain of the football team.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ANNA KEEFFE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
"Killy," known as the "Man in the Moon," spends most of his&#13;
spare time attending to his duties as president of the Forensic&#13;
League. While his interest in debate and history take a great&#13;
deal of attention, he still finds time occasionally to visit a little&#13;
black-eyed girl on Jones Street. "Killy" has been with us from&#13;
the cradle up.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Illinois sent us a good specimen when Jim arrived, and the&#13;
care he has had here is producing remarkable results. He is&#13;
always ready for work or fun, and is a master of both. A busy&#13;
student, he can sing "coon" songs, play the mandolin, violin, or&#13;
bass drum, give midnight serenades, and still find time to let&#13;
Lida "take gym".&#13;
&#13;
fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
LAUB&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD LEHAN&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd's chief accomplishment, outside of the class room, is ten nis. His skill in this sport won the fal l tournament for him last&#13;
year and made him the logical man for president of the Tennis&#13;
Association, which position he now holds.&#13;
Another dapper&#13;
young "stepper" who delights in the social wh irl, as is evidenced&#13;
by hi s attendance at all the class parties and his use of the time&#13;
between cl asses.&#13;
&#13;
Helen started with the class of ' 16, but she dropped out to&#13;
teach a year, and so the class of '17 is glad to claim her. She is&#13;
a reader of pronounced ability, very conscientious, of cheerful&#13;
temperament, and a general favorite of all, including the boys.&#13;
She is talking of teaching again next year but we hope she will&#13;
change her mind and finish with us.&#13;
&#13;
Lansing, Michigan&#13;
&#13;
B. EDITH LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
A most conscientious and earnest girl, who comes to school with&#13;
a firm determination to get the most out of college. She is an excellent student, active in all lines of Christian work in the church&#13;
and the college. A student volunteer who because of the earnestness of her purpose, the sincerity of her life, and her spirit of&#13;
self-sacrifice is sure to make a helpful and successful worker in&#13;
her chosen field.&#13;
&#13;
Rachel is not so bashful as you might think. Unassuming,&#13;
modest, optimistic, and amiable, she makes a faithful friend even&#13;
though we have known her such a short time. Her reputation at&#13;
Buena Vista has followed her, and in consequence you find her&#13;
one of our earnest workers on the Y. W. C. A. Cabinet.&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA E . MCBURNEY&#13;
HARVEY&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
Yankton, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Harvey joined us last fall, coming here from Yankton College.&#13;
With hi s trombone he soon became a valuabl e asset to the college band, and just to show us that he really did have musical&#13;
ability he soon won a place in the Glee Club. Not content with&#13;
being merely musical, he is a brilliant student as well, especially&#13;
in the sciences.&#13;
&#13;
fif Ly-six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Cornelia is a friend worth havi ng. Always cheerful and will ing, she creates an atmosphere of congeniality wherever she may&#13;
be. She has gained much from college besides grades, is very&#13;
fond of "French" to which subject she has devoted much time&#13;
and thought during her college course. We expect that after she&#13;
finishes college she will gi ve "it" her entire thought an d consideration.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
GLENN&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Spencer, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
ARTHU R&#13;
&#13;
The elusive little forward who shoots baskets from almost anywhere on the floor. Spends a large part of his time on or near the&#13;
Crescent Park car line, and is well acquainted with the shortest&#13;
way out from the car barn. A good trombonist, an efficient playground instructor, and an aspiring physical director.&#13;
&#13;
R UTH&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Art is a whole-hearted college man, studies hard and makes&#13;
the required number of A grades, besides making good in debate.&#13;
He fusses systematically one night a week. As to the girls, he&#13;
loves them all , but has not specialized yet. He aspires to success&#13;
in the business world.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
OLSON&#13;
&#13;
LA URA&#13;
&#13;
We might search the dictionary through but we could not find a&#13;
word that would so fully describe Ruth as "friend, " and h er&#13;
friend ship once given is sure to be appreciated. A faithful worker in church, society, and classes, and an accomplished musician.&#13;
Examinations frighten her terribly, but that is because she underestimates her own ability, for her professors know her as a consistent student.&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PEASE&#13;
&#13;
Laura has a spirit that can never die. She pursues her studies&#13;
assiduously, and gets the highest results in everything except&#13;
Psych., but there is another reason for that. Laura has auburn&#13;
hair, literary aspirations and hig h ambitions. She hopes she has&#13;
told the truth about everybody in the class, as fa r as possible.&#13;
She almost got F ickle once, but he went to Wisconsin U.&#13;
&#13;
Castana, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mary, the most sympathetic friend we ha ve, can always say&#13;
the right word at the right time. She has big brown eyes that&#13;
fa irly dance when she is happy, and that is most of the time.&#13;
Everyone knows her fa iling fo r "carrots." Her banking business&#13;
is carried on by means of special delivery letters in yellow envelopes. She says she hopes to teach English, but on ly for one&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
ROOST&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
"Mandy" has been with us from the start, and no other girl in&#13;
school has more real friends. She is loved by "one" and all.&#13;
We cannot explain the mystery of her hidden power, but we are&#13;
aware that it exists. Her sympathetic and genial nature combine&#13;
well with her hobby, " home-making." She studies the textbooks,&#13;
"Good Housekeeping" and "The Craftsman," faithfully. A&#13;
splendid girl on committees when there is w ork to do.&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Bess is in a class all by herself. She has heaps and heaps of&#13;
fluffy curls and the prettiest pink cheeks. She gets her lessons,&#13;
but they do not hinder her from having a good time. Her friends&#13;
often enjoy her hospitable entertainment. Bess's disposition is&#13;
sweet and most lovable.&#13;
&#13;
Harry is one of the most conscientious men in school. A thorough student, and quiet as a mouse until you get acquainted with&#13;
him; then you realize in part what you have been missing. If&#13;
you think him too shy to even look at the girls, just watch him&#13;
in the laboratory or on bird trips.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
SCHIEDER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
VERA&#13;
&#13;
George is a preacher by profession and a married man by&#13;
choice. After deciding that two heads were better than one he&#13;
used his eloquence to good advantage. He takes an active interest in the Teutonia Club, which received his support while a&#13;
student at Charles City. His willingness to work and his cheery&#13;
smile have won the friendship of his classmates.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ROSENE&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Alta, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SIPE&#13;
&#13;
Vera is a quiet, consistent and industrious individual. She has&#13;
the knack of winning the respect and good-will of all who know&#13;
her. She never advertises her good deeds, nor does she need to.&#13;
Vera has splendid musical ability, although few people are&#13;
aware of this fact. In serving on committees she has proved to&#13;
be an efficient and dependable worker.&#13;
&#13;
Manson, Iowa&#13;
GAYLORD&#13;
&#13;
One of the finest girls ever enrolled at old M. C. By her&#13;
earnest loyalty, her sweet-tempered disposition, and her true&#13;
friendship, she has become a favorite among the students, and&#13;
·with one graduate student in particular. She is president of the&#13;
Y. W. C. A. and a dependable worker in all college activities.&#13;
W e can say of Marie that her life rings true.&#13;
&#13;
sixty&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
STARR&#13;
&#13;
St. Lawrence, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
Gaylord is a South Dakota lad. He is bright in his studies,&#13;
bright in his ideas, and bright in his neckties. He is gentle, imperturbable, and confident. He aspires to the profession of law&#13;
and to the admiration of the fair sex. But just at present he is&#13;
most often found in the science laboratory.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
STEELE&#13;
&#13;
" Don" is one of our intercollegiate debaters. Besides winning&#13;
the silver medal in the Monument Run, he has demonstrated his&#13;
ability as a student, especially in chemistry. Don takes time to&#13;
consider many deep problems but when he does express himself&#13;
he has an opinion worth while. Has not shown particular interest in the girls, but perhaps thinks one year is sufficient for&#13;
"fussology."&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy is small, with light hair and blue eyes. But whatever she lacks in height, she makes up in good humor and cheerful disposition. She is not trivial but manages to combine fun&#13;
and work in such a charming manner that her friends wonder&#13;
which is her master. The biggest responsibility of her college&#13;
life, so far, is taking care of her young big brother.&#13;
&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
Manson, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
DON VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
Sinclair, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
After two years at Illinois Woman's College, Clara decided&#13;
to come to a co-ed school, and could find none better than Morningside. She is a recognized leader, for she has been chosen&#13;
president of the Agora Cl uh. Her influence is felt a great distance away, for a certain student at Princeton asks her advice&#13;
concerning matters as important as texts for sermons. Clara is&#13;
a girl of high ideals and lives up to them.&#13;
&#13;
LILAH&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
One of the Van Nest twins! She is very much like her sister; in fact, it is hard to tell them apart. Helen is majoring in&#13;
German and loves to study Greek. She is an excellent student&#13;
and aspires to honorable mention at the end of her college career.&#13;
The twins are always jolly whenever and wherever you meet&#13;
them.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
MARIE VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
Lilah is a bright, energetic Junior lass with shining eyes and a&#13;
happy disposition. She is never mistaken for a lover of men or&#13;
books, although she has more than a passing acquaintance with&#13;
both. Always bubbling over with fun, always good-natured and&#13;
loyal to her friends. She likes good times and is often accused&#13;
of specializing in them.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
The other Van Nest twin! Marie holds a gold medal which&#13;
she received for a high standard of work in history. Like her&#13;
twin she is a brilliant student, but she prefers to study Latin.&#13;
One of these people who take A grades as a matter of course, and&#13;
never accept but the best.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
DONALD&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
\VALTO N&#13;
&#13;
EMMA&#13;
&#13;
"Don" is our busy editor and landlord of the Sunshine Inn.&#13;
He is retiring in manner and a man of few words, but when he&#13;
does talk he has something to say. Besides being a gospel team&#13;
worker and somewhat of a debater, he finds time for a " quadrennium of fun." By his frank and cheerful manner, he has&#13;
won a host of friends.&#13;
&#13;
WIESE&#13;
&#13;
If you are heavy-hearted and downcast just get Emma to chase&#13;
away the blues. She is blessed with cheeriness and that happy&#13;
state of mind which can grasp a situation and turn it to good use.&#13;
She is a good student, especially of German, and has the excellent quality of reliability. She went to Nebraska Wesleyan once,&#13;
but we know she will not go back now.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
ALICE WARING&#13;
&#13;
EWART&#13;
&#13;
Alice comes out to school every morning from her home in the&#13;
city. She arrived here with a good record for grades and bids&#13;
fair to leave with a still better one. She is majoring in mathematics, so how could she help it? Alice is quiet and unassuming in manner, but nevertheless a charming companion.&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Ewart is sure some "Russeler." If you are in doubt ask Lois.&#13;
Editor of the Collegian Reporter, and cartoonist for the annual,&#13;
he still finds time for other college activities. He has a rare&#13;
combination of wit and humor, possesses musical and drawing&#13;
ability, and enjoys athletics. Wherever he goes he creates a pleasant atmosphere.&#13;
&#13;
Avon, South Dakota&#13;
&#13;
May is our " Girl of the Golden West," for she comes from a&#13;
big ranch in South Dakota. College is a serious matter with&#13;
her, and she manages to take domestic science as well as expression, for she knows that she will have need of " household art"&#13;
when she goes to live on her farm near Whiting. A girl on&#13;
whom we can depend and who does her work thoroughly and&#13;
zealously.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
NOEL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Noel is a reliable old scout, and a bachelor by nature, although&#13;
he takes some pleasure in conversing with the fair sex. His hobby&#13;
is chasing birds with a field glass, and his most difficult duty is&#13;
looking after his brother. He has been in M. C. for a long time&#13;
and knows the history of nearly all the grads.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
I. Back&#13;
&#13;
S. Wormley&#13;
&#13;
I.Smith&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OFFICERS&#13;
President, HERALD WALKER&#13;
Vice-President, FRANCES KOLP&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, LOUISE HANSEN.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
Orange and Black&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
sixty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OFFICERS&#13;
President, HORACE WULF.&#13;
Vice-President, MIRIAM&#13;
&#13;
FISH.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, MARGARET STRUCK.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
Green and White&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
seventy&#13;
&#13;
sev enty-one&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
FRES HMEN&#13;
&#13;
sev enty-three&#13;
&#13;
Department of Home Economics&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
The new Department of Home Economics means a great deal to the girl who takes&#13;
the two-year course or who has chosen Home Economics as her college major. To&#13;
her, homemaking has taken its place of real dignity among the worth-while occupations&#13;
of the world; and whether she contributes to it directly, in her own home, or indirectly, in teaching, she feels that it commands her keenest intelligence, inspires her&#13;
highest effort, and justifies her greatest devotion. She brings to it the efficiency which&#13;
develops from a training of mind, eye and hand to work in concert, and the understanding of scientific problems which illuminates the simplest household task. In short,&#13;
she learns how to bake, and how to teach others to bake; she learns whether, under&#13;
given circumstances, it is wiser to buy or to make the bread; she learns what are the&#13;
city and state laws regarding the sanitary handling of bread and flour, and whether&#13;
these laws are enforced.&#13;
The girl who completes this course has done more than read texts. She has made&#13;
clothes and hats of every description; planned, prepared, and served meals fo r every&#13;
variety of purse and occupation; demonstrated before her critical classmates; and&#13;
planned and prepared practice lessons. She has pursued an education which is at&#13;
once cultural and vocational.&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
seventy-four&#13;
sev enty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
INTERIOR OF CONSERVATORY&#13;
The mission of a music department connected with a college of liberal arts differs in&#13;
many respects from the independent music school; for, in such an environment, music&#13;
becomes much more than a mere professional study and takes its proper place in the&#13;
general curriculum of education. The study of fine arts has assumed a place of great&#13;
importance in the modern educational scheme. For centuries education was considered&#13;
as merely cultural. Then came a reaction, and the cultural side of education was&#13;
largely lost to sight.&#13;
The Conservatory of Music at Morningside College has experienced a most substantial growth during the past six years; and while the attendance and tuition receipts have almost doubled in this time, yet the most important advancement has been&#13;
made in the methods of study and the character of the work offered. The standards&#13;
have been raised, until the requirements for graduation are fully up to those of any&#13;
college music school. Such institutions as the New England Conservatory of Music&#13;
and Oberlin Conservatory recognize the standards and accept the graduates on their&#13;
records.&#13;
&#13;
Music Seniors&#13;
&#13;
Courses now offered in the Conservatory are as follows: Pianoforte, Artists'&#13;
Course; Pianoforte, Teachers' Course; Singing, Artists' Course; Singing, Teachers'&#13;
Course; Violin, Artists' Course; Violin, Teachers' Course; Pipe Organ; Public&#13;
School Music; Theory of Music; Mandolin , Guitar, Banjo, Viola. These are all&#13;
organized courses, leading to diplomas or certificates, but there are many other courses&#13;
available, either in whole or in part, such as Sight Singing, Accompanying, Choir&#13;
Training, General Aesthetics, etc.&#13;
The equipment of the Conservatory is one of its strongest features. First in this&#13;
respect is the new building, which has arisen within the stone walls that remained of&#13;
the old building which was burned a year ago. In place of the old wooden construction , everything is of stone, steel, and concrete. On the first floor are the Conservatory&#13;
offices, the Reading Room, and the Recital Hall with its one hundred folding opera&#13;
chairs, its pipe organ, and concert grand piano.&#13;
The second and third floors of the building are devoted to studios and practice&#13;
rooms, which are admirably suited for this purpose. Indeed, it would be difficult to&#13;
find a better equipped building for musical purposes anywhere in the middle west.&#13;
Special attention is given to the instrumental music. Ten grand pianos and nine&#13;
uprights are in constant use. The studios are all furnished with new library chairs&#13;
and tables, music racks, and blackboards.&#13;
Thus housed and equipped, together with the excellent faculty that is in charge of&#13;
the work, there is every reason to expect that the Conservatory will, in the next few&#13;
years, surpass the record of the past five yea rs.&#13;
&#13;
seventy-seven&#13;
seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
School of Expression&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Same as Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
Godfrey Cass .................... Mildred Pecaut&#13;
Dunst an Cass .................... Dorothy Gootch&#13;
&#13;
Squire Cass ......................Louise Sammons&#13;
Godfrey Cass ...................... Fern Beacham&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
In Silas Marner's cottage.&#13;
D unstan Cass .................. Dorothy Gootch&#13;
Silas Marner ......................Alice Stanhope&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
SCENES FROM "S HE STOOPS TO CONQUER"&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
In home of Squire Cass.&#13;
&#13;
Same as Scene I.&#13;
VI&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
In home of Godfrey Cass, sixteen years&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
At the Rainbow Tavern.&#13;
Silas M arner ............................Alice Boyd&#13;
Landlord ............................ Grace Hartzell&#13;
Butcher ............................ Elma Parkinson&#13;
Jem Rodney ............ ....... Louise Sammons&#13;
Farrier ................................May Wickens&#13;
Mr. Macy ............................ Gladys C!ark&#13;
&#13;
later.&#13;
Godfrey Cass .................. Lou ise Sammons&#13;
Mrs. C ass ............................ Fern Beacham&#13;
Jane ................................... :Alice Stanhope&#13;
SCENE&#13;
&#13;
VII&#13;
&#13;
In Silas Marner's cottage.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
interpreted by Senior Class June 12, 1915.&#13;
"She Stoops to Conquer,"&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Hardcastle................. .Lovice Strobel&#13;
Mrs. Hardcastle..................Doris Struble&#13;
Tony Lumpkin •••.•.••••••••••Ruth Blackman&#13;
Miss N ewcastle ..............Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Miss Neville ................Mabel McComber&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
George H astmgs ............. .E lizabeth James&#13;
Charles Marlow ........Eleanor Winkelman&#13;
Sir Chas. Marlow ............ Helcn Warfield&#13;
L andlord ..........................Marie Anderson&#13;
Servant ............................Florence Forbes&#13;
&#13;
AcT I&#13;
Sc. 1.- Room in Mr. Hardcastle's house.&#13;
Sc. 2-Public room in the Three Pigeons.&#13;
ACT II&#13;
Parlor in Mr. H ardcastle's house.&#13;
&#13;
AcT IV&#13;
Same as Act Ill.&#13;
AcT V&#13;
Sc. 1- Room in Mr. Hardcastle's house.&#13;
Sc. 2- Park in rear of house.&#13;
Sc. 3- Room in Mr. H ardcastle s house.&#13;
&#13;
AcT Ill&#13;
Same as Act. II.&#13;
"Silas Marner," interpreted by Junior Class, March 15, 1916.&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
&#13;
Silas Marner ..................Dorothy Gootch&#13;
Squire Cass ......................Mildred Pecaut&#13;
Godfrey Cass ............................Alice Boyd&#13;
The R ector. .........................May Wickens&#13;
Mr. C rack enth orp ........... .Grace H artzell&#13;
Dr. Kimble ........................E lma Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
NancyLameter ....................Fern Beacham&#13;
Mrs. Crackenthorp ..............G ladys C lark&#13;
Silas Marner ............................Alice Boyd&#13;
Godfrey Cass ....................Mildred Pecaut&#13;
M rs. C ass ........... . ...............Fern Beacham&#13;
Eppie ..................................Alice Stanhope&#13;
&#13;
EXPRESSION SENIORS&#13;
The Department of Expression aims to be thoroughly educational by offering a&#13;
course of study that will result in greater culture, increased personal power and ability&#13;
to command one's resources, as well as to prepare effective readers, platform speakers&#13;
and teachers. No mechanical methods are used and the student's development is&#13;
along natural lines.&#13;
The cou rse of study covers two years and requires eight hours of class work and a&#13;
half-hour private lesson every week. In addition, each candidate for gradu ation must&#13;
classify Freshman, and have taken English I and I V in the regular college classes.&#13;
One period each week is given over to recital work in which each student pursuing&#13;
the regular course will be expected to take part. O ccasional public recit als are given&#13;
during the year, thus affording advanced pupils the opportunity to appear before larger&#13;
audiences.&#13;
Upon satisfactory completion of the course, a diploma is granted , and ten hours'&#13;
credit is given toward a degree in any one of the regular courses of the college.&#13;
&#13;
seventy-nine&#13;
seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Academy offers an opportunity to those who have been unable to&#13;
attend high school to pursue the equivalent of a high school course in a college environment. The Conservatory of Music and School of Expression are also open to&#13;
students of Academy rank. Academy work may or may not be taken in preparation for&#13;
college entrance.&#13;
The students are allowed all the advantages of the gymnasium and athletics, the&#13;
college lecture course, the college library, and in short, to enjoy most of the privileges&#13;
and advantages afforded by a first-class college. the faculty maintains a high standard, and the equipment on the lower floor of the Conservatory of Music is well&#13;
adapted for the work.&#13;
&#13;
eighty&#13;
&#13;
eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
CABINET&#13;
CABINET&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE FRY --------------· ····--···-·-·President&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE -------·-·-····-·-·---Bible Study&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD __________ Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN ---···-·-···-····-·---Devotional&#13;
&#13;
G. B. PATRICK. ______ __ _________ _________ President&#13;
&#13;
A. C. PAYNE-----·-·-···-·····-·-·Administration&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EASTHOUSE --··-··-·--···-·-·-·Mission&#13;
&#13;
C. H&#13;
&#13;
N. J. WILLIAMS___________ _ _&#13;
____ _______ Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Bible Study&#13;
ORIN BELL.·-·--···-·······--------·-·&#13;
Wm. WOLLE_______ _ Community Service&#13;
____&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS McBRIDE____________________ Secretary&#13;
&#13;
J. R. KOLP---···-··········-·--··-Campus Service&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN ·-··-······-·····--·-·----Secretary&#13;
MARION JOHNSON -·-········-···-·-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
FERN BEACHAM ·-·--··--·-----···----------Social&#13;
&#13;
ELMA PARKINSON ________ Association News&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE LEAZER __________ Social Service&#13;
&#13;
KLIPPEL __________________ Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
EARL BURGESS ·-·····-·---·-··-··-----Life Work&#13;
my dear fellow students : The Y. W. C. A. is a mighty influence in the college&#13;
girl's life because it creates good comradeship. This year, on the first day after the&#13;
new girls arrived, each of them received a note containing greetings from the Y. W_&#13;
and an invitation to a reception where all the girls in school could become acquainted.&#13;
Besides this, the Y. W. gives the college gi rl a chance to deepen her spiritual self&#13;
in the weekly devotional meetings. These meetings are conducted by either students&#13;
or out-of-town visitors, and deal with problems of vital importance to every girl. Dr.&#13;
Craig assisted wonderfully this year with a week's series of addresses.&#13;
These are but two phases of the Y. W.'s activity. Let all the girls continue to support and receive benefit from the Y. W.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
To every red-blooded man the Y. M. C. A. presents a challenge to unselfish service&#13;
for his school, for his fellows, and for his community. The weekly devotional meetings held every Wednesday night, the evangelistic and membership campaigns, the&#13;
voluntary study courses, and the social events offer the chance for a valuable and complete development in Christian leadership. The gospel team work, which this year&#13;
has been conducted with remarkable success, is daily awakening scores of men in and&#13;
around Sioux City to see their opportunities for helpful Christian service in their&#13;
every-day life. This is the call and challenge of our college Y. M. C. A.-to a&#13;
Christian life, which is essentially unselfish, and which is the same during the week&#13;
as it is on Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
Association Social Service&#13;
&#13;
GOSPEL TEAM&#13;
&#13;
WALL STREET MISSION&#13;
&#13;
The gospel team is one of the livest departments of the Y . M. C. A. It is composed of live men , conducting live meetings in a live way. During the year, the&#13;
college Y. M. has cooperated with the Sioux City Y. M . The men go out in teams&#13;
of five , not only to the churches of Sioux City but also to neighboring towns. One&#13;
team spent an entire week during Christmas vacation at Primghar, Iowa. This year,&#13;
the men have made nineteen visits, conducted seventy-two meetings, addressed some&#13;
sixteen thousand persons, and held seven hundred and twenty-nine personal interviews. As a result one hundred and forty-seven decisions to lead the Christian life&#13;
have been made, two hundred and fifty have joined church, and about one thousand&#13;
forward steps have been made.&#13;
While the Y. M. has been doing such fine work, the Y. W. C. A. has been&#13;
equally as busy with the more unfortunate children and parents in the poorer districts of Sioux City. This work is centered about Haddock and Wall Street Missions and the Florence Crittenden Horne. The work consists of Bible study classes,&#13;
a night school, sewing and cooking lessons, and gymnasium or play training. While&#13;
this work is aimed especially to aid the children who do not have an opportunity to&#13;
attend the public schools, it is of great advantage to the college students themselves.&#13;
It acquaints them with the underlying conditions of this class of people, makes them&#13;
more sympathetic with the poorer people, and broadens their social knowledge.&#13;
&#13;
LAKE GENEVA&#13;
&#13;
eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
The Student Volunteer Band&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN ------------------------------------------------------------President&#13;
MARGUERITE BRETHORST ______&#13;
________ _ _&#13;
___ ________&#13;
_____________ Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
O F FICERS&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL ___ ___ _____ ___ _ _ _ __ _ _ ____ _ ______________ _&#13;
_ _ __ _ ___ __ _ ____ __&#13;
President&#13;
CHARLES H. KLIPPEL. _____ _ __ __ __ _____________ _ _ ________ _&#13;
__ _&#13;
__ _ __&#13;
___________ V ice-President&#13;
F. EARL BURGESS _ _ _ _ _ ____ ____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ Secret ary-T reasu rer&#13;
______ _ _ _ ___ ___ __ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _&#13;
EwART L. W ILLIAMS__ _ ____ _ __ _ _ _&#13;
_ _ _ ___ _______________ _ __ _ _ __ _____________ R eporter&#13;
___ _ _ _ _ _______&#13;
&#13;
Declaration : It is my purpose, if God permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
The organization started in Morningside in 1902, and is a branch of a national&#13;
movement that had its beginning in a Bible Study Conference held at Mt. H ermon,&#13;
Massachusetts, J uly, 1896. This band endeavors to interest you ng men and women&#13;
in foreign missionary work. Problems of the foreign field are discussed, and a syst ematic preparation for the future life of service is encouraged. Representatives of&#13;
this band may be found in C hina, India, Korea, and South America.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Prohibition L eague is a local branch of the Intercollegiate Prohibition Association, w hich is the largest civic student movement in A merica. In the nat ion-wide campaign w hich is being successfully waged against the liquor traffic, the I.&#13;
P . A. occupies a peculiarly strategic position. I t is the training school for leadership.&#13;
This is brought abou t by means of study classes, lectures, oratorical contests, and field&#13;
activities. Last year seventy-eight college leagues sent fi ve hundred men into depu tation&#13;
and educational community work as quartettes of singers, speaking teams, petition canvassers, vote pledgers, and surveyors of saloon conditions.&#13;
This year the local league enrolled fi fty-six in membership. A short study cou rse&#13;
w as undertaken, using Richardson's "Liquor Problem" as a text. Survey of local and&#13;
state saloon cond it ions was made. Four contestants took part in the annual Prohibition Oratorical contest at which forty dollars in prizes w as given by M r. E rwin&#13;
Dewey of Sergeant's Bluffs.&#13;
during the past year, Morningside has also held the presidency of the State Association.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
The Student Counci;&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ........................................................................KATHERINE SPRY&#13;
Vice-President ........................................................................ HAZEL DAY&#13;
Secretary .............................................................................. CLARA SWAIN&#13;
Treasurer ............................................................................ LEONE LANGE&#13;
Dean of Women ................................................ Miss. LILLIAN DIMMTT&#13;
STANDING COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN&#13;
Athletics ............................................................................LOVICE STROBEL&#13;
Auditing ................................................................ CORNELIA McBuRNEY&#13;
Forensics .............................................................. ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
Membership .................................................................. MARION JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
HowARD ALLEN ...................................... ................................. President&#13;
&#13;
Social .................................................................................. MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
K ATHERINE SPRY .............................................................. .Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
Student Government ...·.........................................................ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN ............................................ Secretary-Treasu rer&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Board is t he administrative body which is chosen by the girls of the student body to represent their interests. During the past year, the Board has certainly&#13;
performed its work well. I t has given every girl in school an opportunity to engage in&#13;
debate, dramatics, athletics, and social good times ..&#13;
Each month the club had some special feature at their Saturday night meeting. One&#13;
month Mr. E. C. Wolcott gave an address; another time there was a "Post-Exam&#13;
Jubilee." But the most important event of the year was the Agora banquet, which&#13;
was the best in the history of the college both in spirit and in attendance.&#13;
The Agora Club is beyond question a great factor in each girl's college life, because&#13;
it gives her a place to assert and develop her abilities.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
The Student Council is a representative body of students who meet bi-monthly to&#13;
discuss matters of common interest to the whole school. H ere affairs which trouble&#13;
The&#13;
both faculty and students are threshed out and a suitable remedy proposed.&#13;
group is a medium of increased cooperation between the student body and the faculty.&#13;
One of the most apparent features of the Student Council is the series of successful&#13;
meetings w hich are held every Thursday at the chapel hour, with the student body&#13;
president presiding. Everyone goes to chapel on Thu rsday, curious but assured of&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
&#13;
eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
Grace Church Choir&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Director _________________________________ _&#13;
_______________ _______&#13;
___________ ___ __ PROF- McCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
D irector -------------------------------,--------------------------------PROF. W .&#13;
&#13;
President --------------------------------------------------------------------------G- G.&#13;
&#13;
President ------------------------------------------------------------------------A. L. FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
GORDON&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President -------------------------------------------------------------------RUBY FLINN&#13;
Secretary and Librarian _____ _ __ _&#13;
__ ___________ _&#13;
_______________ ____________ N. RICHARDSON&#13;
Treasurer --------------------------------------------------------------------EARL FuLLBROOK&#13;
Executive Committee: NOLA Ho u K, MINNIE FRY, GLEN OXFORD,&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
H IMM EL&#13;
&#13;
Vice-Presdent. ------------------------------------------------------------------GEORGE EASTON&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ---------------···-·-··-----------------------------E. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
Librarian --------------------------------------------------------------------------FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
N. RICHARDSON&#13;
&#13;
MEM B E R SHIP&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Soprano&#13;
SARAH LEHMAN&#13;
&#13;
MRS. G . G . GORDON&#13;
MRS. McCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
T enor&#13;
&#13;
NOLA HO UK&#13;
&#13;
EDITH WILLIAMS&#13;
MARGARET F ERG USON&#13;
R U BY HILL&#13;
&#13;
Clarinet&#13;
&#13;
Cornet&#13;
&#13;
w. J.&#13;
&#13;
R OYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
HIMMEL&#13;
R. F . R ANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
&#13;
FRA NCIS H AY&#13;
&#13;
M AE SMITH&#13;
&#13;
C. OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
PROF. MCCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
ANNA OLSON&#13;
&#13;
V. GERKIN&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE PEASE&#13;
&#13;
NOBLE RICH ARDSON&#13;
&#13;
OMA&#13;
&#13;
RuBY FLINN&#13;
&#13;
EARL FULLBROOK&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS D ANIELS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE EASTON&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER OLSON&#13;
&#13;
OTIS DAY&#13;
&#13;
MISS L EHAN&#13;
&#13;
GLENN NOE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE L ARSON&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
Alto&#13;
&#13;
HELEN VAN NEST&#13;
&#13;
EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
MIN NIE FRY&#13;
&#13;
B ass&#13;
&#13;
MRS. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
ETH EL HEDENR URG&#13;
&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
&#13;
Miss MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
MR. MARPLE&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GLEASON&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD CAIN&#13;
&#13;
GLYDEDEVITT&#13;
&#13;
MARIE MAHOOD&#13;
R UTH Hos FORD&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
RAE WHITTEMORE&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
ROYC E ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTENSON&#13;
&#13;
Flute&#13;
OTIS D AY&#13;
&#13;
Alto&#13;
&#13;
Eu phonium&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Saxophone&#13;
&#13;
Trombone&#13;
&#13;
A. L. FREEMAN&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
w . L AWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Drums&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
GLENN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
Tuba&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
R. OSTLING&#13;
E . NEAL&#13;
&#13;
VERNE P AUL&#13;
&#13;
This year, Professor Himmel has developed probably the best band in Morning-&#13;
&#13;
Miss WICKSTRUM&#13;
&#13;
EDNA ORGAN&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
A URELIA ST URDEVANT&#13;
&#13;
G. G. GORDON&#13;
&#13;
side's history out of pract ically new mat erial.&#13;
&#13;
ELLA MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
JANETTE WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
ARTH U R L INDSEY&#13;
&#13;
men have worked h a rd.&#13;
&#13;
GLEN OXFORD&#13;
&#13;
enth usiasm at our football games or mass meetings.&#13;
&#13;
The qualit y of the work shows that the&#13;
&#13;
They have been an important factor in generating pep and&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
Madrigal Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
H ARRY CLARK -------------------------------- --------------------------------------------President&#13;
DELBERT McKIN NEY -----------------------------------------------· Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
PAUL MAcCOLLIN _______________________________________________ ___ ____ Manager-Director&#13;
ARTH UR LINDSEY ----------------------------------------------------------Student Manager&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
LOVICE STROBEL------------------------------------------------------------------------- President&#13;
ANNA MAE EvANS----------------------------------------------------Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
L ORENE WILLIAMS -------------·-------------------------: ______________ _&#13;
________ _ _Librarian&#13;
____&#13;
MRS. PAUL M cCoLLIN _______________ ___ _______ ________ ________________ _ _&#13;
__ ___ ______ Di rector&#13;
__&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
First T enor&#13;
&#13;
Second T enor&#13;
&#13;
A ARON RUTH&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
D ELB ERT McKINNEY&#13;
DAVID BLEAKLY&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
ANDR EW HA UGAN&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS H AY&#13;
C ARL ANDERSON&#13;
NOBLE RICHARDSON&#13;
AYLAND C ASE&#13;
RICHARD B URROWS&#13;
PA UL MacCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Baritone&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
LOUISBLEAKLY&#13;
RALPH OVERHOLSER&#13;
THOMAS CAIN&#13;
H UGH FOUKE&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY L AWRENC E&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
H ARRY CLARK&#13;
ARTHUR LINDS EY&#13;
CHARLES GARLOCK&#13;
Pianist, GEORGE EASTON&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday, December 28-Lake Park.&#13;
Wednesday, December 29-Estherville.&#13;
Thursday, December 30-Swea City.&#13;
Friday, December 31-Goldfield.&#13;
Saturday, January 1-Belmond.&#13;
Sunday, January 2-Clarion.&#13;
Monday, January 3-Humboldt.&#13;
Tuesday, January 4-Paullina.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
MEM B E R S&#13;
&#13;
First Soprano&#13;
&#13;
First A Ito&#13;
&#13;
GLYDE D EVITT&#13;
ETHEL COOMER&#13;
R UTH GILLIES&#13;
VETA CLARK&#13;
CECIL ScHMOKER&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE GILLIES&#13;
V IVIAN D OWN&#13;
LuRA McLANE&#13;
ALICE BOYD&#13;
GLADYS D ANIELS&#13;
&#13;
Second Alto&#13;
&#13;
S econd Soprano&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET SAGE&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
FRANCES WETMORE&#13;
FRANCES K OLP&#13;
&#13;
LovICE STROBEL&#13;
LORENE WILLIAMS&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
SYBIL AUSMAN&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
Pianist, RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
Tuesday, March 28-Sanborn.&#13;
Wednesday, March 29- Spencer.&#13;
Thu rsday, March 30-Britt.&#13;
Friday, March 31-Algona.&#13;
Saturday, April 1-Clear L ake.&#13;
Sunday, April 2-Clear L ake.&#13;
Monday, April 3-Luverne.&#13;
Tuesday, April 4-Livermore.&#13;
Wednesday, April 5-Marathon.&#13;
&#13;
ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
The Annual Board&#13;
&#13;
ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
Chemistry Club&#13;
&#13;
The Teutonia Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
J. DON VAN HoRNE .................................................................... President&#13;
NOEL J. WILLIAMS ............................................................Vice-President&#13;
CLIFFORD JON ES ........................................................ Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FRANK ABEL&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
PROF. J. A. Coss&#13;
HORACE DEWALT&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
MERLE FRENCH&#13;
CHARLES FRY&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
ALVIN HoRNNEY&#13;
CLIFFORD JONES&#13;
&#13;
HARRY LARSON&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
ARTHUR LOCKE&#13;
MARK McDONALD&#13;
SPENCER POLAND&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
WILLIAM SCHRIEVER&#13;
DoN VAN HoRNE&#13;
NOEL J. WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Although the Teutonia Club has but recently become a part of our institution, its&#13;
origin dates back forty-three years. When the amalgamation of Charles City College and Morningside was agreed upon in J une, 1914, it was agreed to transfe r this&#13;
organization from Charles City to Morningside.&#13;
Membership is open to any student who has the abilit y to t ake part in the programs which are conducted twice a month, exclusively in German.&#13;
The purpose is to cultivate the use of the German language, and to create a better&#13;
fellowship among the German students. The Professor of German Literature serves&#13;
as critic at all meetings.&#13;
&#13;
Last year the Chemistry Club was organized, and since then has rapidly developed&#13;
in size and in scope of activity. Its purpose is to promote a deeper study and research&#13;
into scientific problems of chemistry. The club has regular meetings at which some&#13;
special work is discussed and explained in the most educational and interesting manner. These interesting meetings create a desire for further investigations. Last fall a&#13;
banquet was held at the home of Prof. Coss, where Mr. Countermine addressed the&#13;
Club on " Paints and the Paint Industry."&#13;
&#13;
ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
ninety-sev en&#13;
&#13;
Intersociety Committee&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
ANNA BEARD,&#13;
&#13;
Presiden t&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McBuRNEY,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
ELMA&#13;
&#13;
p AR KINSON&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EASTHOUSE&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
FLORENCE BULL&#13;
&#13;
What is the Inter-Society Committee? Well , it is a representative group&#13;
from the three societies. The rushing rules and all other matters of common&#13;
to the societies are settled by this group of girls. This arrangement allows&#13;
settlement of all difficulties and establishes a better relationship between the&#13;
.societies.&#13;
&#13;
of girls&#13;
interest&#13;
a rapid&#13;
various&#13;
&#13;
LAKESIDE LABORATORY&#13;
&#13;
nin ety- eight&#13;
&#13;
11i11ely-11ine&#13;
&#13;
The 1916 Co-Ed Confederation&#13;
&#13;
The Ruth Club&#13;
&#13;
ARTICLE I . The aim of this organization shall be to promote a more nearly perfect&#13;
state of affairs, avoid partiality, and to make a date at least twenty minutes before time&#13;
of stepping.&#13;
Sec. 1. Candidates for above consideration are:&#13;
Esther Montgomery&#13;
Marion Heikes&#13;
Cornelia McBurney&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Edna Smith&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
&#13;
ARTICLE ,II. Only upon due explanation of all the details is any engagement announced before the last day of Leap Year, to be considered legal.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
BLACKMAN&#13;
FOUKE&#13;
GILLIES&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
KLINE&#13;
OLSON&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
BRADY&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
BELEW&#13;
CHALLMAN&#13;
HOSFORD&#13;
BERRY&#13;
RIED&#13;
&#13;
Sec. 1. Those submitting legal engagements to date are:&#13;
Miss Brand-aided by the students.&#13;
Irene Chapin-obvious.&#13;
Nola Houk-inevitable.&#13;
Cora Dutton-Fry disqualified Jan. 1, 1916.&#13;
Morda Coleman-undecided, Casey or Rusty.&#13;
Anna Beard-inevitable.&#13;
Ruth Gillies-that Chi Delta pin.&#13;
Marion Metcalfe-Leap Year. Aye, Al.&#13;
Ruth K line-cinched by April 19.&#13;
ARTICLE III. No bachelor left after December 31, 1916, shall be considered in the&#13;
proposition 1920.&#13;
Sec. 1.&#13;
&#13;
Snipe-hunters Association&#13;
Purpose: To train unsuspecting Freshmen in the art of chatching snipe.&#13;
Motto : Perserverance wins.&#13;
After surviving the required tests of patience and skill, the following candidates have&#13;
been admitted to the rights and privileges of full membership :&#13;
FURMAN HILL&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR DAVIDSON&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FRY ............................................................................ President&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE ...................................................... Chief Story-Teller&#13;
GLENN MISHLER .......................................................... Chief Bag-Setter&#13;
JOE BOGARD ............................................................ Chief Ghost Marshal&#13;
RALPH LONG .............................................................................. Chaplain&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
Those to be disqualified are:&#13;
Dr. W. W. Carson&#13;
&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
ARTICLE IV. Bachelors shall not be conceded the privilege of evading the fair sex.&#13;
The Morningside Co-eds have the legal right to sieze whoever, whenever, and wherever they find them during 1916.&#13;
Sec. 1. In order to avoid confusion and facilitate matters, those already being&#13;
looked after are :&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Francis Hay&#13;
Ray Harrington&#13;
Lee Barks&#13;
Charles Klippel&#13;
William McCurdy&#13;
Ewart Williams&#13;
Richard Mitchell&#13;
ARTICLE V .&#13;
happiness.&#13;
Sec. 1.&#13;
&#13;
Special dispensation may be needed to go beyond Morningside men for&#13;
&#13;
Dispensations granted to&#13;
Marie Easthousc&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
Isabelle Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
Mildred Champ&#13;
&#13;
one hundred one&#13;
&#13;
The Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
would live send away missionaries. If you would have pure water dig ditches. It is&#13;
useless to repeat the condition that the world is in today, because all are well aware of&#13;
the dreadful catastrophe that has befallen the world.&#13;
The call of the alumni of Morningside College is the grief-stricken call of humanity.&#13;
This call is world-wide, for no land exists today that is not ready to welcome light&#13;
from America. Into this fieldthe inspiration of the alumni is to lead them to lay down&#13;
their lives for their friends. It may be in business, in the home, in the foreign field.&#13;
In whatever walks of life they may be, our Alma Mater expects that humanity will get&#13;
a light from them that will lead to higher and nobler things. No course of study is&#13;
outlined, and no limit exists as to the length of service. Our Alma Mater does not&#13;
graduate the alumni from this work, nor do they receive any diploma from the institution when the course is completed. It ends when the workman has laid down the tools,&#13;
and the irresistible fire of time will test the character of the work accomplished.&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
R. N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR R. N. VAN HORNE&#13;
President of the Alumni Association&#13;
The Alumni Association of any institution is from its very nature a loosely-connected&#13;
organization. And what is the purpose of this scattered organization? What is its&#13;
work? These questions can be easi ly answered from one angle and not so easily answered from another. It is to bring together annually the graduates of the college that&#13;
they may meet old associates, form new acquaintances, and receive new inspiration.&#13;
The inspiration which comes from this fe llowship together is the underlying object of&#13;
this annual meeting. To be the means of even having a part in inspiring the alumni is&#13;
a great work. The overwhelming force of this privilege is seen when one views clearly&#13;
the tasks that the alumni are expected to do. Another way of expressing the same thing&#13;
is Look at the world's need! The field of work of our alumni and the world's work&#13;
are identical.&#13;
The world's needs can be seen as well by looking into the past as into the present.&#13;
In this generation the "Horizon of History" has been pushed back two thousand years&#13;
or more. On clay-hardened pages of this history is recorded the lives of nations that more&#13;
or less abruptly ceased to be. It was not the lack of science of government, or scientific learning, or the need of a healthful , fertile land that caused the end. All these&#13;
things belonged to those generations. Yet the cities of these people are clay today because the people cou ld not realize the great truth that "He that loseth his Life shall&#13;
find it." Selfish were the desires and lives of these older nations, and oblivion was their&#13;
fate. All pages of history teach that no nation can live with a selfish heart. If you&#13;
&#13;
one hundred two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred three&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred four&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
hundred five&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Organized October&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
4, ]908&#13;
&#13;
Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
Feliciter, Fortiter, Fideliter ( Happy, Brave, F aithful)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Wint er&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALF&#13;
&#13;
F LORENC E B ULL&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
HELEN LAUB&#13;
&#13;
MARION J OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS HORN&#13;
&#13;
CORNELIA McB uRN EY&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
LILAH THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
NORMA B ORMAN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
S eniors&#13;
FLORENCE BULL&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALF&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
M ILDRED TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS HORN&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
C ORNELIA McB u RN EY&#13;
&#13;
CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
ANNE GALINSKY&#13;
&#13;
D OROTHY OWEN&#13;
&#13;
L UCIA HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA RoosT&#13;
&#13;
HELEN LAUB&#13;
&#13;
L ILAH THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
R ACHEL MADISON&#13;
&#13;
E M MA WIESE&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
SIBYL AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GOUDIE&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BOOH ER&#13;
&#13;
MARION HEIKES&#13;
&#13;
NORMA&#13;
&#13;
BORMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARION J OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA BROWN&#13;
&#13;
M AY BELLE KR UAMAN N&#13;
&#13;
R U TH BLACKMAN&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE LUDLUM&#13;
&#13;
KATH ERINE BuRTNEss&#13;
&#13;
ISABEL METCALF&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE FORBES&#13;
&#13;
six&#13;
&#13;
D I LLA WHITTEM ORE&#13;
&#13;
FANCHON GA METTE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred&#13;
&#13;
CECIL ScH.M OKER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED WOOD&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sev en&#13;
&#13;
Pieria Calendar&#13;
April 10, 1915-0pen Door.&#13;
May 4, 1915-Presented the "Lamentable Tragedy of&#13;
Omelet and Oatmelia" at Whitfield Methodist Church.&#13;
May 17, 1915-Picnic at Stone Park.&#13;
June 15, 1915-Farewell Breakfast to Graduates.&#13;
June 15, 1915-Reunion.&#13;
June 16-26, 1915-Pieria Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 25, 1915-Pieria-Ionian Joint.&#13;
October 11, 1915-Birthday Banquet at Martin.&#13;
October 23, 1915-Formal Initiation.&#13;
November 13, 1915-0pen Door.&#13;
December 6, 1915-Dinner for the Ionians.&#13;
December 14, 1915-Ionian Tea.&#13;
January 15, 1916-0pen Door, "Silver Thread."&#13;
February 26, 1916-0pen Door, "Review of Parsifal."&#13;
February 28, 1916-Washington Birthday Party.&#13;
March 20, 1916-Joint at President Craig's.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
one hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
6, 1909&#13;
&#13;
Organized January&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Motto :&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
Possunt quod Credere Possunt (They are able because they believe)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
A. J. COOMBS&#13;
R. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
SASS&#13;
&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
LAVELY&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
Wint er&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
H. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
GLENN NOE&#13;
&#13;
E ARL MILLER&#13;
&#13;
E. J. HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR LINDSEY&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
JAY CHRIST&#13;
&#13;
HARVEY LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
JAMES DONAHUE&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD LEHAN&#13;
&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
&#13;
DON. VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD JONES&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR COOMBS&#13;
HORACE DE&#13;
&#13;
BLY MCCONKEY&#13;
&#13;
w ALT&#13;
&#13;
GLENN NoE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS FORBES&#13;
&#13;
LEE SALTOW&#13;
&#13;
EDMOND HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
ANDREW HAUGEN&#13;
&#13;
LYMAN BEARDSLEY&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BERKSTRESSER&#13;
&#13;
EARL MILLER&#13;
&#13;
GUYBROWN&#13;
&#13;
STILLMAN PIKE&#13;
&#13;
OTIS DAY&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD SMITH&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE EASTON&#13;
&#13;
RoY ScHELLINGER&#13;
&#13;
HUGH FOUKE&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
March 11 , 1915- Joint at the Ionian House.&#13;
April 19, 1915- South Ravine P arty.&#13;
April 24, 1915-Banquet at J ackson Hotel.&#13;
May 3, 191 5-F inal Gold M edal D ebate.&#13;
May 31, 1915-Annual U p-River T rip.&#13;
J une 14, 1915-Reunion.&#13;
September 20, 1915-H ard T imes P arty at Kilborne's.&#13;
O ctober 4, 1915-Rush Stag at Ionian House.&#13;
O ctober 30, 1915-Annual H allowe'en Party.&#13;
November 22, 1915-Pi-Ionian J oint.&#13;
November 30, 1915-I nter-Society D ebate with O thos.&#13;
D ecember 1, 1915- Inter-Society D ebate with Philos.&#13;
February 22, 1916- Second D egree Initiation.&#13;
February 28, 1916- Annual M artha Washington P arty.&#13;
M arch 20, 1916-Ann ual St. P at rick's P arty.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Organ ized November&#13;
Colors :&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
4, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Light Blue and White&#13;
&#13;
Utile dulce (The useful with t he pleasing )&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
B EATRICE WRIGHT ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Vice-Presid e nt EDITH LYLES&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
CORDELIA COLBURN&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL EWER&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE CUMMINGS BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PERRY&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN McLAUGHLIN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
S eniors&#13;
A NNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
MA RIE EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
C ORDE LIA COLB U RN&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
B ERNICE CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
NORA SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
M ARGUERITE BRETHORST&#13;
&#13;
BESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
M A RGUE RITE C UMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
VERA SIPE&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE FRY&#13;
&#13;
D OROTHY STEELE&#13;
&#13;
R UTH GILLIES&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
MARTINA McNARY&#13;
&#13;
C LEO HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
G RACE R USKELL&#13;
&#13;
RUBY&#13;
&#13;
B LANCHE THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN McLAUGH LIN&#13;
&#13;
one hundred four teen&#13;
&#13;
F RANCES WETMORE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fift een&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum Calendar&#13;
April 8, 1915-Annual Banquet.&#13;
April 15, 1915-0pen D oor.&#13;
April 25, 1915-Joint with Philos.&#13;
May 13, 1915-Athenaeum's Mothers' Day.&#13;
May 20, 1915-Joint Picnic with Philos.&#13;
November 16, 1915-Joint with Philos at Ida Robertson 's.&#13;
November 19, 1915-New Girls entertain O ld Girls.&#13;
November 24, 1915-Classical Open Door Program.&#13;
December 5, 1915-Joint with Philos at Irene Chapin's.&#13;
December 9, 1915-New Girls entertain Old Girls at&#13;
Irene's.&#13;
December 19, 1915-Joint Christmas Party with Philos.&#13;
January 10, 1916- Reception to Philo Debaters.&#13;
January 19, 1916-"Rainbow Kimona Club."&#13;
Door.&#13;
&#13;
Open&#13;
&#13;
January 19, 1916-Reception to Football Squad.&#13;
February 3, 191 6-Formal Initiation of New Members.&#13;
February 22, 1916-"His Uncle John."&#13;
Door.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
Joint Open&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sev enteen&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Organized October 14, 1892&#13;
Colors : Olive Green and Maroon&#13;
Motto: V estigia N ulla Rectrorsum (No slipping backward)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Upham&#13;
&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
&#13;
RoBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRlCHARD&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
CYRIL&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
E. SHOEMAKER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Seniors&#13;
JOHN V . M ADISON&#13;
&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
AMBROSE DELAPP&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
C. GREY&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
ORIN BELL&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS McBRIDE&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDIUS PIKE&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD CONNOR&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN CLOUGH&#13;
&#13;
A. L.&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
LOUIS KEENE&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
HERSCHELL BOOTON&#13;
&#13;
Guy KAY&#13;
&#13;
WILBUR BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
LYNN CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
BURNETT COOPER&#13;
&#13;
RONALD RANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
SPENCER POLAND&#13;
&#13;
McKINLEY ERICKSON&#13;
&#13;
CULBERT RUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
LAFE BOND&#13;
&#13;
FELLER&#13;
&#13;
VIRGIL GERKIN&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE STEELE&#13;
&#13;
OscAR HART&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM WARN ES&#13;
&#13;
LEE HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF&#13;
&#13;
EDWARDHouGHTON&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
one hundred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Calendar&#13;
April 8, 1915-Initiation.&#13;
April 12, 1915-Annual Mock Trial.&#13;
April 26, 1915-Grand Public.&#13;
May 10, 1915-Closed Door.&#13;
May 31, 1915-Joint Reception.&#13;
June 7, 1915-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
September 27, 1915-Annual Stag.&#13;
October 7, 1915-Joint Duck Dinner.&#13;
November 8, 1915-Joint at Chapin's.&#13;
November 30, 1915-Philo-Otho Debate.&#13;
December 1, 1915-Philo-Ionian Debate.&#13;
December 18, 1915-Joint in the Hall.&#13;
January 10, 1916-Joint Dinner for Debaters at Colburn's.&#13;
January 17, 1916-Initiation.&#13;
February 22, 1916-Joint Open Door.&#13;
February 28, 1916-The "Prattler Doo."&#13;
&#13;
THE PRATTLER CLUB&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred twenty-on e&#13;
&#13;
Organized November 11, 1897&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
Scarlet and Black&#13;
&#13;
Esse, quam videri (To be, rather than to seem)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
RUTH PRENTICE&#13;
&#13;
LovicE STROBEL&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
LURA MCLANE&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
RUTH OLSON&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Seniors&#13;
LOISCROUCH&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
LOVICESTROBEL&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MAE EVANS&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
LURA MCLANE&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
FERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
MARY ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MILDRED BROWN&#13;
&#13;
MARIE SEBERN&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COOMER&#13;
&#13;
CLARA SWAIN&#13;
&#13;
RUTH OLSON&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
HAZEL BARROW&#13;
&#13;
FERN McKINNEY&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MABEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
ELMA PARKINSON&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DowN&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
LOISRUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
ALICE JEFFERY&#13;
&#13;
INA SMITH&#13;
&#13;
RUTH KLINE&#13;
&#13;
RUTH SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES KOLP&#13;
&#13;
LIDA SAUNDERS&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
ADAH VAN SLYKE&#13;
&#13;
VERA LUNBUM&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WARFIELD&#13;
&#13;
College Specials&#13;
MARIE DEVITT&#13;
&#13;
ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ORDWAY&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-three&#13;
one hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
May 10, 1915-0tho Breakfast for the Zets.&#13;
May 15, 1915-Zet Hen Party at Lois Crouch's.&#13;
&#13;
May 17, 1915-0tho Reception for the Zets.&#13;
May 12, 1915-Reception for Mothers.&#13;
May18, 1915-Pi's entertain us.&#13;
June 3, 1915-Aletheias at home.&#13;
June 16, 1915-Reunion.&#13;
September 18, 1915-Reception for "Pledges."&#13;
September 27, 1915-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
October 9, 1915-Public Initiation.&#13;
November 1, 1915-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 13, 1915-0pen Door; War Program.&#13;
November 20, 1915-Entertained by Zet Alumni.&#13;
December 13, 1915-Reception to Othos at Ruth Olson's.&#13;
January 8, 1916-New Zets entertain Old Zets at Mildred Pecaut's.&#13;
January 22, 1916-New Girls' Open Door, "Breezy&#13;
Point."&#13;
February 28, 1916-Leap Year Party at Anna Mae Evans'.&#13;
March 11, 1916-Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
March 20, 1916-Zets entertained by Hazel Day.&#13;
:March 23, 1916-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Organized November7, 1891&#13;
Colors : Royal Purple and White&#13;
Motto: Suaviter in Modo, F ortiter in R e ( G entle in manner, resolute in deed )&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
S pring&#13;
&#13;
E. V.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
K U HNS&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
H. P AYNE&#13;
&#13;
C . T. WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
M. E.&#13;
&#13;
W inter&#13;
&#13;
F all&#13;
&#13;
STEVENS&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
R INER&#13;
&#13;
D. C. McK I NNEY&#13;
&#13;
L. B.&#13;
&#13;
L. 0. GI NGER ICH&#13;
A. E. ST ILES&#13;
A. P . L OCKE&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
L OGAN&#13;
&#13;
C. GARLOCK&#13;
P. L OCK E&#13;
&#13;
M E MBERSHIP&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
0. I.&#13;
L. B.&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
G .&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
P ATRICK&#13;
RINE R&#13;
&#13;
D. C. McKINNEY&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
CURRY&#13;
&#13;
A. H.&#13;
&#13;
J OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
G .&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
D UTTON&#13;
&#13;
J. R.&#13;
&#13;
K OL P&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
G . w. M ILLER&#13;
w . P. SYMONDS&#13;
&#13;
M. R. FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
C. GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
E. E.&#13;
&#13;
D. J. W ALTON&#13;
&#13;
E. L.&#13;
N. J.&#13;
&#13;
HICKS&#13;
&#13;
M. G.&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
I. BACK&#13;
E. BARKS&#13;
&#13;
w . s.&#13;
C.&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
P. LOCK E&#13;
&#13;
G LE N MISH LE R&#13;
&#13;
D. FRY&#13;
&#13;
C. J.&#13;
R. E.&#13;
&#13;
R. HAY&#13;
&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
CASE&#13;
&#13;
O BREC H T&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
O VER HOLSER&#13;
REYMAN&#13;
&#13;
R . H. J U RGE NSON&#13;
&#13;
N . N . RICH ARDSON&#13;
&#13;
F. R .&#13;
&#13;
C. H. KLIPPE L&#13;
&#13;
C. I. SH E RWOOD&#13;
A. E. S TI LES&#13;
&#13;
0 . L.&#13;
&#13;
w. C .&#13;
&#13;
KINGSB U RY&#13;
&#13;
LIMING&#13;
&#13;
W OLLE&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
H .&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
D U NN&#13;
&#13;
s. FREEM AN&#13;
&#13;
M. 0 . N ICHOLSON&#13;
D. E. N ORTON&#13;
&#13;
H.B. HOLM ES&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
B U RDETT STEVENSON&#13;
&#13;
M ARK McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
R. D. TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Calendar&#13;
May 8, 1915-Reception to Zets.&#13;
May 22, 191 5-Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 29, 1915-Annual Spring Stag.&#13;
J une 5, 1915-Final Gold Medal D ebate.&#13;
Ju ne 8, 1915-Graduating Exercises.&#13;
June 13, 1915-Alumni Reunion.&#13;
October 7, 1915-Annual Fall Stag.&#13;
October 18, 1915-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 29, 1915-0tho-Philo D ebate.&#13;
November 30, 1915-0tho-Ionian D ebate.&#13;
February 21, 1916-Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
April 24, 1916-Grand Public, "The Melting Pot."&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
one hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN PICNIC&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye&#13;
Organized September&#13;
Colors:&#13;
Organized June&#13;
&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
11, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors :&#13;
&#13;
We Succeed by Doing&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma sine Pulvere (No victory without dust)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Nile Green and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
27, 1899&#13;
&#13;
Gold and Silver&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
LOUIS&#13;
BLEAKLY&#13;
F U RMAN HILL&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
NATHLIE ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
PAULINE BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
EMMA HAEGLE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HANSON&#13;
&#13;
GARNER OSBORN&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD ERTEL&#13;
&#13;
ABBIE PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GOODRICH&#13;
&#13;
WESLEY DRUSENBERG&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
]ESSIE REED&#13;
IRMA RATLIFF&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
EVA MILLER&#13;
&#13;
MARIE CATERMOLE&#13;
&#13;
VIOLA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
ELLA SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER DAY&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HARDING&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE FAIR&#13;
&#13;
HELEN MAYER&#13;
&#13;
LORENE WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
MABEL HOUK&#13;
&#13;
NONA Moss&#13;
&#13;
FREDA WINKEL&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
PEARL McKIRCHER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST SANGER&#13;
&#13;
LOUISBLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST SAMPSON&#13;
&#13;
WALTER DUNN&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST HAUSWALL&#13;
&#13;
AXEL BECK&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
VERNON BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
CECIL MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE PARADISANOS&#13;
&#13;
FLOYD ERTEL&#13;
&#13;
STEPHEN CROCKER&#13;
&#13;
EARL S ANEM&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HANSON&#13;
&#13;
HARRY WHYTE&#13;
&#13;
ROY WHITEHILL&#13;
&#13;
FURMAN HILL&#13;
&#13;
ROY WEBB&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
Moss&#13;
&#13;
NEAL SALLE&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-three&#13;
one hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
Organized June 18, 1903&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian&#13;
&#13;
Colors : Cerise and W hite&#13;
Organized February, 1902&#13;
Motto:&#13;
&#13;
Colors : Olive Green and White&#13;
&#13;
C arpe Diem ( Sieze the opportunity)&#13;
&#13;
Motto: To possess the aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ·&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
BELEW&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ROBIN SON&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY ROBINSO N&#13;
&#13;
DORIS CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE DEWELL&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD H A RTLEY&#13;
&#13;
R ALPH L ON G&#13;
&#13;
RALP H LONG&#13;
&#13;
KIETH&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
B UEHLER&#13;
&#13;
EVA NS&#13;
BUEHLER&#13;
&#13;
MERLE CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
MEMBER SHIP&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
B ELEW&#13;
&#13;
OMA EASTHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
JACOB&#13;
&#13;
TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
JOHN STOTZ&#13;
&#13;
K ATHIN EA NIELSON&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD B UEHL ER&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
R U TH CHALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARIE WOODS&#13;
&#13;
RALPH&#13;
&#13;
KIETH EVA NS&#13;
&#13;
MERLE CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
IRENE COBBS&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD H ARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD MASON&#13;
&#13;
DORIS CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
MARG UERITE DEWELL&#13;
&#13;
GRANT MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE STEELE&#13;
&#13;
VERNA COMOLI&#13;
&#13;
MORTON&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
. VETA CLARK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
one hundred th irty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
Activities&#13;
&#13;
WINTER SCENES&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-six .&#13;
&#13;
WHEN&#13;
&#13;
A FELLER&#13;
A FRIEND&#13;
&#13;
NEEDS&#13;
&#13;
"WISH I HADN'T NEGLECTED MY&#13;
EARLY&#13;
&#13;
PHYSICAL TRAINING."&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
The Athletic Committee&#13;
&#13;
"M "&#13;
&#13;
CLUB PERSONNEL&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
PAUL&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK&#13;
&#13;
EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
BYRON HILL&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
LEE HORNN EY&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER&#13;
&#13;
EARL MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CARROL NORTHR U P&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN CLO UGH&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
PA U L EIFFERT&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
WENDELL CURRY&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFE RT&#13;
&#13;
HERALD&#13;
&#13;
RAY HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
WALKER&#13;
&#13;
NOEL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG&#13;
&#13;
" M"&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
CL U B&#13;
&#13;
one hundred thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Coach Jason M. Saunderson graduated from Albion College in 1908, where he had&#13;
been captain of both football and track teams and had starred in baseball. He is an&#13;
excellent example of the athletic ideal, a combination of brain and brawn. In his&#13;
football days he was defensive end and offensive quarterback, and was regarded as the&#13;
fastest man on the team. After three years' service at Brookings and one year at&#13;
Sewanee, a southern military school, he came to Morningside. During the past four&#13;
years he has led our teams to repeated victories.&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty-on e&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's First Football Team&#13;
&#13;
Football Team&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
TOP ROW ( left to ri ght) -Capt. Quirin , Ha lf ; Mill er , Qu art er ; Rinehart, F ull ; Whitn ey, Manager;&#13;
Barbour, Half; Wunn , Gu ard.&#13;
MIDDLE ROW- Clapsaddle,&#13;
S u b.; Wyli e, Tackle; Ch and ler, Center: Brews ter, Guard ; Hou s ton , End.&#13;
BOTTOM ROW-Cripp en , Tackle; Fry, Sub.: Eber s il e, S ub.; Ri ch ards, End.&#13;
Rob ert Van Horn e w ho played gua rd at fir st and late r quarter wa s one of the mai nsta ys of th e team.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Opponents&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
2-Yankton&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
9-Iowa University&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 13-Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 20-State Teachers' College&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Total .................................................. 93&#13;
&#13;
62&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 30-Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Nov.&#13;
The first football team at Morningside was organized in the fall of 1898. After&#13;
some practice games with various schools of non-collegiate standing, they met a number of colleges. The best game was with South Dakota University at Vermilion ,&#13;
which resulted in a tie, neither team scoring. In fact, Morningside's first team was&#13;
not scored upon during the entire season.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty two&#13;
&#13;
6-Ames&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-three&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT, '17&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BEHMER, '18&#13;
&#13;
Left Half&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
Quarterback&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON, '17&#13;
Right Half&#13;
Captain-elect&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK, '17&#13;
Fullback&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred forty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
BYRON HILL, ACAD.&#13;
Left Tackle&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WENIG, '18&#13;
Left End&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER, '16&#13;
CARROL NORTHRUP, '19&#13;
&#13;
Right Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Right End&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-seven&#13;
one hundred forty-six&#13;
&#13;
EARL W ILLIAMS, '16&#13;
&#13;
HORACE WULF, '19&#13;
&#13;
Center&#13;
&#13;
Left Guard&#13;
&#13;
LEE HORN NEY, '19&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD, '18&#13;
Sub. Quarterback&#13;
&#13;
Right Guard&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
one hundred forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN, '16&#13;
&#13;
ELIHU SHOEMAKER, '15&#13;
&#13;
Sub. Fullback&#13;
&#13;
Sub. Tackle&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY BASHAW, '18&#13;
Sub. Half&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
DELBERT McKINNEY, '16&#13;
Sub. End&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
EWART WILLIAMS, '17&#13;
Sub. End&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has a just right to feel proud of the results of the 1915 football season.&#13;
The creditable showing made by the Maroon team was due to the untiring efforts of&#13;
Coach Saunderson, the hard work of both varsity and scrubs, and Morningside spirit.&#13;
The fact that the Maroons won but three of the six games played does not indicate&#13;
the strength of the team, when we consider that two of these defeats were received at&#13;
the hands of Iowa University and Ames State College, both by very small margins.&#13;
In the opening game of the season, Morningside easily won over Yankton by a&#13;
score of 51 to 0. The next game with Iowa University proved to the supporters of the&#13;
Maroons that Coach Saunderson had overcome what seemed to be almost impossible&#13;
at the beginning of the season, the problem of developing a new line out of practically&#13;
new material. Iowa in the first half succeeded in registering two touchdowns, yet in the&#13;
third and fourth quarters Morningside played Iowa off their feet, and secured a touchdown to Iowa's drop kick. The old Morningside fight displayed by every member of&#13;
the team in this game will never be forgotten by those on the sidelines.&#13;
Then Nebraska Wesleyan, collegiate champions of Nebraska, met Morningside at&#13;
Mizzou Park, and their scalp was annexed to our belt by a score of 7 to 0. Next&#13;
week, we met Ames · State College at Ames, where we were defeated by one lone touchdown. Again Morningside gained recognition downstate. Throughout the game the&#13;
Maroons put up a hard fight, and time after time we were within but a few yards of&#13;
the "Aggies" goal. The only defeat of the season by a collegiate team was at Mitchell&#13;
by the fast Dakota Wesleyan team. The last game of the season with Iowa State&#13;
Teachers College, at Morningside, ended with the long end of the score in favor of&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
With our old rivals the "Coyotes" on next season's schedule, and with Coach Saunderson as monitor and the great halfback, "Jerry" Johnson,as captain, the prospects for&#13;
the coming season indeed look bright.&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
Coach&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. HERMAN LEUDER&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SCHEDULE&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
18-Drake Relays.&#13;
25-Home Meet.&#13;
2-South Dakota University.&#13;
8-"M" Meet.&#13;
9-Nebraska Wesleyan.&#13;
16-Coe Conference Meet.&#13;
23-State Meet.&#13;
&#13;
THE IOWA GAME&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
Drake Relays&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The 1915 Track season was most successful, when we consider the showing made&#13;
by the Maroon team. They captured both dual meets, were a close second in the Coe&#13;
Conference meet, and established a new record in the two-mile Drake Relay classic.&#13;
Lowering the two-mile record by thirteen seconds at the Drake Relays was a brilliant&#13;
start for the season. The next event was the Home meet, in which no fast time was&#13;
recorded in any of the events, yet the showing made by the men argued well for the&#13;
coming meets. The dual meet with South Dakota University was easily won by&#13;
Morningside. This event was to a certain degree uninteresting, as both teams were&#13;
strong in different events. The Nebraska Wesleyan dual was thrilling throughout,&#13;
and here again the Maroons proved their superiority by securing the long end of the&#13;
score. The feature race of the meet was when Lavely defeated the Wesleyan twomiler. In the Coe Confernce meet, Morningside took second place with five firsts,&#13;
two seconds and two thirds. Captain Leuder set a new mark in the pole vault when&#13;
he cleared the bar at 11 feet 10 inches. Curry also lowered his own record in the&#13;
half mile by one and one-half seconds. In the State meet at Drake, Morningside finished fifth with eight points to their credit.&#13;
&#13;
Home Meet&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGIATE CHAMPIONS OF THE WEST&#13;
&#13;
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1915&#13;
SUMMARY OF EVENTS&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash-Upham (Senior), Curry (Sophomore).&#13;
220 yard dash-Upham (Senior), Jones (Freshman).&#13;
&#13;
:10:02.&#13;
:24: 01.&#13;
&#13;
220 yard hurdles-E. Harrington (Freshman), Cottam (Sophomore).&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Hornney (Sophomore), Cottam (Sophomore).&#13;
&#13;
:28: 03.&#13;
&#13;
: 18: 01.&#13;
&#13;
16 pound shotput-R. Harrington (Sophomore), E. Harrington (Freshman).&#13;
feet 5 inches.&#13;
440 yard dash-Curry (Sophomore), Blakely (Academy).&#13;
&#13;
:52 : 02.&#13;
&#13;
Mile run-Morley (Senior), Lavely (Senior). 4 : 45 : 3.&#13;
Two mile run-Lavely (Senior), Trefz (Academy).&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
The Drake Relay Meet which is held at the Drake Stadium, Des Moines, is the&#13;
second largest relay meet in the United States. Competition is growing keener each&#13;
year. Representatives from the strongest schools in the middle west annually meet&#13;
here. Morningside, indeed, has a right to feel proud of her two-mile team, composed&#13;
of Walker, Lavely, Morley and Curry, which established a new record last year in&#13;
this event of the college division. The old record of 8: 28, which was also held by&#13;
Morningside, was lowered to 8: 15. The two men of this record-breaking team who&#13;
remain in school will form the nucleus for another good team.&#13;
&#13;
10: 50: 3.&#13;
&#13;
880 yard dash-Curry (Sophomore), Walker (Freshman).&#13;
&#13;
2: 05: 1.&#13;
&#13;
Discus-Vernon (Senior), R. Harrington (Sophomore) . 119 feet 8 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-E. Harrington (Freshman), McKinney (Senior).&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (Senior), Mahood (Freshman).&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
18 feet 10 inches.&#13;
&#13;
11 feet.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan Meet&#13;
SIOUX CITY, MAY 9, 1915&#13;
100 yard dash-Upham (M. C.), Johnson (Wes.). :10: 4.&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Vernon ( M . C.), E. Harrington ( M . C.). :18: 1.&#13;
Mile run-Brunig (Wes.), Cozier (Wes.) . 4 : 49.&#13;
220yard dash-Johnson (Wes. ), Upham (M. C.). :24:3.&#13;
880 yard dash-Curry ( M . C.), Cozier (Wes.). 2: 07: 2.&#13;
220 yard hurdles-Werner (Wes.), E. Harrington ( M. C.) . : 27: 2.&#13;
Discus-Vernon (M. C.), Durham (Wes.). 121 feet 4 inches.&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder ( M. C. ), Mahood ( M. C.). 11 feet 6 inches.&#13;
440 yard dash-Curry (M. C.), Van Norman (Wes.). : 54&#13;
16 pound shotput-Johnson (Wes.), R. Harrington (M. C.) . 38 feet 7 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Werner (Wes.), Wenig (M. C.). 19 feet 9 inches.&#13;
High jump-Durham (Wes.), Wenig (M. C. ). 5 feet 9 inches.&#13;
Two mile run-Lavely ( M. C.), Brunig (Wes.) 10: 17: 4.&#13;
Half mile relay-Wesleyan, Morningside. 1 : 37 4.&#13;
Morningside 56, Nebraska Wesleyan 53 .&#13;
&#13;
VERMILION, MAY 2, 1915&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Quigley (S. D.), Vidal (S. D .) . : 18.&#13;
Two mile-Lavely (M. C.), Williams (M. C.). 11: 23.&#13;
100 yard dash-Quigley (S. D.), Stevens (S. D . ). :11 2/5.&#13;
Discus-Vernon (M. C.), Hengel (S. D . ). 128 feet 6 inches.&#13;
440 yard dash-Curry (M. C.), Meade (S. D.) . : 53 4/5.&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (M. C.), Mahood (M. C. ). 10 feet 4 inches.&#13;
220 yard dash-Quigley (S. D.), Stevens (S. D . ) . : 24 3/5.&#13;
High jump-Vidal (S. D.), Wenig (M. C.). 5 feet 10 inches.&#13;
220 yard hurdles-Quigley (M. C.), E. Harrington (M. C. ). : 29 2/5.&#13;
880 yard dash-Walker (M. C.), Curry (M. C. ) . 2: 12 2/5.&#13;
Shotput-R. Harrington ( M. C.), Eiffert ( M . C.). 36 feet 11 }:4 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Vidal (S. D . ), Gilbertson (S. D . ). 20 feet 1/2 inch.&#13;
Mile run-Morley ( M . C.), Lavely ( M. C.). 5: 28.&#13;
Mile relay-Morningside, South Dakota. 3: 55.&#13;
Morningside 61, South Dakota 48.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Track Squad&#13;
&#13;
CEDAR RAPIDS, MAY 16, 1915&#13;
100 yard dash-Hoyt (Grinnell), Bailey (Coe), Burns (Grinnell). : 10 flat Ties&#13;
record.&#13;
Mile run-Morley (Morningside), Barlow (Coe). No official time.&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Lighter (Coe), Massey (Coe), Jones (Des Moines) . : 15 2/5&#13;
New record .&#13;
440 yard dash-Bailey (Coe), Armstrong (Des Moines), Purmort (Coe). : 52.&#13;
220 yard hurdles-Lighter (Coe), Massey (Coe), Dewey (Grinnell). : 25 4/5&#13;
Half mile-Curry (Morningside), Walker (Morningside), Augustine (Grinnell).&#13;
2 : 01 3/5 New record.&#13;
220 yard dash-Hoyt (Grinnell), Curtis (Cornell), Smith (Cornell) . : 22 4/5&#13;
Mile relay-Grinnell, Coe, Cornell. 3: 34 3/5 New record.&#13;
Two mile run-Lavely (Morningside), Daft (Simpson), Townsend (Grinnell).&#13;
10: 16 2/5&#13;
Half mile relay-Grinnell, Coe, Cornell. 1 : 33 2/5&#13;
Shotput-Pettit (Des Moines), Flaherty (Dubuque), Vernon (Morningside). 39&#13;
feet.&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (Morningside), Parker (Grinnell) and Lee (Coe) tied for second.&#13;
11 feet 10 inches.&#13;
High jump-Wenig (Morningside), Hill (Coe) and Parsons (Grinnell) tied for second. 5 feet 4 1/2inches.&#13;
Discus-Knapp (Coe), Vernon (Morningside), Treacy ( Highland Park) . 129 feet&#13;
5 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Lighter (Coe), Andrad (Highland Park), Wenig (Morningside). 21&#13;
feet 3 inches.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The Monument Run&#13;
&#13;
The annual cross country run to Floyd's Monument and return was held on Washington's Birthday as usual, regardless of the muddy condition of the course. This event&#13;
has been thoroughly established as one of Morningside's traditions. Competition is&#13;
very keen as each class endeavors to register the greatest number of points. Three&#13;
medals are given to winners of the first three places and a gold medal is also given to&#13;
the first Academy man who crosses the tape.&#13;
The event this year was won by Wendell Curry, with Van Horne second and McConkey third . Ralph Long finished first for the Academy.&#13;
TRACK SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred sixty-three&#13;
one hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
The seventh annual "M" meet on Bass Field was won by Sioux Falls High School.&#13;
The meet was the largest which has yet been held, both in number of contestants and&#13;
attendance. O ver two thousand people witnessed the contest between two hundred and&#13;
one athletes of twenty different high schools from Iowa, South Dakota and Nebraska.&#13;
Owing to the strong wind that prevailed on the day of the meet, fast time was recorded&#13;
in all of the events. A few new records were established and many others nearly&#13;
equaled.&#13;
Three medals were given to the winners of each event. The design of the medal was&#13;
changed last year and it is now one of the classiest medals given in any high school&#13;
meet. Several individual cups were given to point-winners in relay races, besides a&#13;
large cup given to the team winning the meet. Also a cup was given to the individual&#13;
winning the greatest number of points.&#13;
The meet was held under the auspices of the "M" Club, and was directed by Coach&#13;
J. M. Saunderson. It not only gives the college students an opportunity to see one of&#13;
the best high school meets in this part of the country, but it is one of the best boosters&#13;
for Morningside College.&#13;
RECORDS OF THE "M" CLUB INTERSCHOLASTIC MEET&#13;
100 yard dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909, and Osborne (Le Mars), 1911. : 10 flat&#13;
220 yard dash-Wilson (Cherokee), 1911. : 23.&#13;
440 yard dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909. : )).&#13;
Half mile-Rodgers (Yankton ), 1914. 2:07.&#13;
Mile-Deally (Hawarden), 1914. 4: 55.&#13;
120 yard hurdles-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911. : 17.&#13;
220 yard hurdles- Quigley (Hawarden), 1911. : 27 4/5&#13;
Pole vault-Leuder (Cherokee), Peterson ( Centerville, S. D.) and Wilkins ( Correctionville) , 1911. 11 feet.&#13;
High jump-Aldrich ( Sioux City), 1911. 5 feet 8 inches.&#13;
Broad jump-Kiner (Sioux Falls), 1915. 19 feet 10 1/4 inches.&#13;
12 pound hammer- Gilliland ( Storm Lake), 1911 146 feet 3 inches.&#13;
12 pound shot-Elliott (Hurley, S. D.), 1909. 43 feet 8 1/4 inches.&#13;
Discus- Knapp (Cherokee), 1911. 110 feet.&#13;
Half mile relay-Le Mars, 1915. 1: 37 3/5&#13;
Mile relay-Le Mars, 1915. 3: 45 2/5&#13;
SCHOOLS THAT HAVE WON&#13;
1909-Storm Lake.&#13;
1910-Sioux City.&#13;
1911-Cherokee.&#13;
&#13;
1912-Sioux City.&#13;
1913-Sioux City.&#13;
1914-Le Mars.&#13;
1915-Sioux Falls.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
T HE "M" MEET&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty -five&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Records&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash&#13;
&#13;
C. Rogers, 1908&#13;
&#13;
:·10 flat&#13;
&#13;
220 yard dash&#13;
&#13;
F. F. Hall, 1903&#13;
&#13;
: 22 1/5&#13;
&#13;
440 yard dash&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, 1913&#13;
&#13;
: 51 4/5&#13;
&#13;
880 yard run&#13;
&#13;
W. E. Curry, 1915&#13;
&#13;
2:01 1/5&#13;
&#13;
Mile run&#13;
&#13;
A. P. Berkstresser, 1908&#13;
&#13;
4: 40&#13;
&#13;
Two mile run&#13;
&#13;
L. R. Chapman, ] 908&#13;
&#13;
220 yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910&#13;
&#13;
: 25 1/5&#13;
&#13;
l 20 yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
&#13;
: 15 4/5&#13;
&#13;
High jump&#13;
&#13;
W. McIntosh&#13;
&#13;
5 ft. '7 1-2 in.&#13;
&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
&#13;
G. E. West, 1911&#13;
&#13;
Shotput&#13;
&#13;
Ben Holbert,&#13;
&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911&#13;
&#13;
121 ft. 3 1-2 in.&#13;
&#13;
Discus&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon, 1915&#13;
&#13;
128 ft. 6 in.&#13;
&#13;
Mile relay&#13;
&#13;
Jr.,&#13;
&#13;
21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
1912&#13;
&#13;
3: 36 2/5&#13;
&#13;
H. Walker, V. Lavely,&#13;
&#13;
M. Morley, W. Curry&#13;
Monument run&#13;
&#13;
V. Lavely, 1914&#13;
&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
&#13;
Herman Leuder&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
39 ft. 1-2 in.&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, A. P . Berkstresser,&#13;
&#13;
E. G . Quarnstrom, F . E. Burns, 1909&#13;
Two mile relay&#13;
&#13;
10: 05&#13;
&#13;
8: 15&#13;
18:01 2/5&#13;
11 ft. 10 in.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
one hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
High School Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Season&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The 1915 baseball team put out by Coach Saunderson was no doubt one of the&#13;
best that ever represented Morningside. The showing made by the team was excellent, yet their success was handicapped, due to the inability to secure a proper schedule&#13;
and the canceling of several games on account of rain. In the three collegiate games&#13;
played, the Maroons had little difficulty in winning. The only defeat of the season&#13;
was received at the hands of the Sioux City Western League team in a practice game&#13;
early in the season. Our old rivals, the "Coyotes," champions of South Dakota, were&#13;
met twice and trounced both times. Again our team journeyed to Yankton and defeated Yankton College by a decisive score.&#13;
The prediction of the coming season could be no other than a brilliant success with&#13;
practically all of last year's team again ready to appear in uniform.&#13;
&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
April 16-Sioux City Western League, Mizzou Park__Morningside&#13;
&#13;
1, Opponents 7&#13;
&#13;
April 23-University of South Dakota, Bass Field ........ Morningside&#13;
&#13;
3, Opponents 0&#13;
&#13;
April 30-Yankton College, Yankton, S. D . ................ Morningside 12, Opponents 2&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1-University of South Dakota, Vermillion-Rain.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
3-South Dakota School of Mines, Bass Field-Rain.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5-University of South Dakota, Bass Field ........ Morningside&#13;
&#13;
8, Opponents 1&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BASKETBALL SQUAD&#13;
For a number of years Morningside has received as her guests the high schools of&#13;
northwest Iowa at the annual "M" meet. This year Morningside been hostess to&#13;
has&#13;
the high schools at another event-the Northwest Iowa Basketball Tournament.&#13;
The new district, which was organized this year, will hold its annual tournaments at&#13;
the local gymnasium in the future. The big, well-lighted gymnasium with its excellent floor, its ample locker room for the teams, and abundant seating capacity for&#13;
the spectators is ideally equipped for such an event.&#13;
An excellent beginning was made this year. Sioux City High won first place from&#13;
a field of sixteen teams after a series of hard, fast games. The work of the Whiting&#13;
team which took second place, is especially worthy of mention . With a team of light&#13;
men, and without the use of substitutes, she played a fast, heady game that pushed the&#13;
heavier Sioux City team hard for first place.&#13;
SECOND PRELIMINARIES&#13;
Whiting&#13;
22&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Spirit Lake 33&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Spencer&#13;
29&#13;
Pomeroy&#13;
Orange City&#13;
Sioux City 41&#13;
Whiting&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
SEMI-FINALS&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
27&#13;
Pomeroy&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
28&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy&#13;
&#13;
Whiting&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Basketbll&#13;
&#13;
Team&#13;
&#13;
THE ACADEMY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' TOURNAMENT&#13;
Academy defeated Freshmen, Sophomores, Seniors.&#13;
Freshmen defeated Sophomores, Seniors.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores defeated Seniors.&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S TOURNAMENT&#13;
Won&#13;
&#13;
Lost&#13;
&#13;
Percentage&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ------------------------&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
1.000&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
.750&#13;
&#13;
Seniors --------------------------------&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
.500&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
.250&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
.000&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
----------------------------&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
THE SOPHOMORE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
LURA McLANE, '16&#13;
Winner Girls' Tournament&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD LEHAN,&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES MARTIN,&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up Girls' Tournament&#13;
&#13;
'17&#13;
&#13;
Winner Autumn Tournament&#13;
Runner-up Spring Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Among the minor sports at Morningside, none has a larger or more enthusiastic following than tennis. Every fair day in autumn and spring finds the courts in use, and&#13;
interest is divided among the women and the men. The increase in the number of&#13;
women players has been particularly noticeable in the last two or three years. It may be&#13;
conservatively estimated that more than one hundred students follow the game more or&#13;
less regularly during the playing season .&#13;
The courts are maintained by the Athletic Association and are open to all the students. The tournaments are controlled by the Tennis Association, made up of all&#13;
students actively interested in the game. Mr. Lloyd Lehan is president. The Athletic&#13;
Association is considering the advisability of granting an appropriate "M" to the winner of the annual spring tournament for men.&#13;
During the year 1914-15, three tournaments were played. In the autumn a tournament of thirty entries for singles was held among the men. Lloyd Lehan, '17, was the&#13;
winner and Clarence Craig, '15, runner-up. In the spring the men's singles with&#13;
forty entries was won by Clarence Craig, '15, with Lloyd Lehan, '17, runner-up. In&#13;
the girls' singles, Miss Lura McLane, '16, won over Frances Martin and an entry of&#13;
twenty contestants. Appropriate trophies were awarded the winners.&#13;
WALLACE CARSON.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
MONUMENT DAY&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
In forensics, Morningside maintains an enviable position among the various colleges&#13;
of the middle west. No small part of this achievement has been due to the consistent&#13;
efforts of Professor Marsh, who has been at the head of the Public Speaking Department for the past six years. Not only do the records of this period testify to Professor&#13;
Marsh's career at Morningside, but the students who have been privileged to receive&#13;
his instructions in oratory and debate have had ideas and ideals impressed upon them,&#13;
which has developed and prepared them for the greater achievements of life. Professor&#13;
Marsh has promoted extemporaneous debating at Morningside, and has launched a&#13;
movement in this direction which is gaining momentum every year and which will be a&#13;
great contributing factor to Morningside's forensics of future decades.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
The Forensic League is a college organization composed of representatives from&#13;
each of the men's literary societies together with Professor Marsh, the head of the&#13;
Public Speaking Department. This organization forms compacts with other colleges&#13;
for intercollegiate forensic contests; it selects questions for inter-society and intercollegiate debates ;it supervises oratorical contests of the institution, and in fact has under&#13;
its control all matters relating to the forensics of thecollege, as well as promoting the&#13;
interests of Morningside College in both state and inter-state forensic circles.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES H. KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
R I CHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
ome&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
MARCH 1, 1916&#13;
&#13;
"A Call to Action" ( first )----------------------------------- .. -----------------------CHARLES H. KLIPPEL&#13;
&#13;
HomeOratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
"The Conflict of Today" (second) __________ ___ _ _&#13;
__ ________ '. _________________ ____ _____ ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
&#13;
NOVEMBER 5, 1915&#13;
&#13;
"The Unfinished Fight" (third) ------------- -------------- ------ ------------ ---------------CORA DUTTON&#13;
&#13;
"The Man of the Hour" (first) --·-·-·-·-·-·-------------- .. -------------------RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
"The Dawn of a New Age" (fourth) _______________________________ ________ .... _______ HARRY WHYTE&#13;
&#13;
"The Era of Awakening" (second) ___ __ ___ ______ .. ________ _ _____________________ ALLAN BARTLETT&#13;
____&#13;
"The White Man's Burden" (third) _ ______________________ ____ .. __________ _ VERA LUNBUM&#13;
__&#13;
______&#13;
"The Private Corporations and the Munitions of War Problem" ____ A . EDWARD STILES&#13;
Morningside representative fails to place in the Divisional Contest.&#13;
&#13;
State Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
MT. VERNON, IOWA, MARCH 31, 1916&#13;
"A Momentous Conflict" (first) ____________________________________W. A. BUELL, Cornell College&#13;
"A Call to Action" (second) ____________________ CHARLES H . KLIPPEL, Morningside College&#13;
"The American Minotaur" (third)--------- _________ __ ______ _ _______ ROYWOODS,Penn College&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Triangular&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, SOUTH DAKOTA UNIVERSITY, HURON, S. D.&#13;
February 29, 1916&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Loui se Sammon s&#13;
&#13;
H azel Day&#13;
&#13;
Charles Garlock&#13;
&#13;
B e n. Riner&#13;
&#13;
Don Van Horn e&#13;
&#13;
That t he city manager plan of government should be adopted by&#13;
nicipalities in the United States .&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At St . Olaf, Minn.&#13;
RESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
a literacy test.&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
At Huron, S . D.&#13;
&#13;
Morni ngside, affirmative.&#13;
South Dakota University, negative.&#13;
Decision : Affirmative 2, negative 1.&#13;
&#13;
Huron College, affirmative.&#13;
Morningside, negative.&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, negative 2.&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
That immigration into the United States should be further restricted by&#13;
&#13;
Vera Lumbom&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Edna Smith&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
RESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, DAKOTA WESLEYAN, ST. OLAF, MINN.&#13;
March17, 1916&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Anna K eeffe&#13;
&#13;
mu-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, affirmative.&#13;
St. Olaf, affirmative.&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan, negative.&#13;
Morningside, negative.&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 1, negative 2.&#13;
Decision: Affirmative 3, negative 0.&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
&#13;
John Madison&#13;
&#13;
Irving B ack&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Be n. R in er&#13;
&#13;
Irv in g Back&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
D elbert McKin ney&#13;
&#13;
Donald Walton&#13;
&#13;
Ch a r les Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Earl Bark s&#13;
&#13;
Othonian vs. Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Othonian vs. Philomathean&#13;
November 29, 1915&#13;
&#13;
November 30, 1915&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
That th e manager plan of city governm ent should be adopted by municipalities of th e United States.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED:&#13;
That t he manager plan of city governm ent should be adopted by municipalities of th e United Stat es.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Decision:&#13;
&#13;
D ecision :&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 0, negative 5.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eig hty-four&#13;
&#13;
Jo hn Mad ison&#13;
&#13;
Earl B urgess&#13;
&#13;
negative 1.&#13;
&#13;
IO NIAN NEGAT IVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Earl Stonebr ook&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 4,&#13;
&#13;
All a n Bar tlett&#13;
&#13;
Will is For bes&#13;
&#13;
Ja y C hri st&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate&#13;
&#13;
Academy Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Payn e&#13;
&#13;
Don Van Horn e&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Coombs&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Ern est Hauswald&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Ionian vs. Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye vs. Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
D ecember 1, 1915&#13;
&#13;
D ecember 2, 191 5&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED : T hat t he manager plan of city government should be adopted by municipalities of the United States.&#13;
&#13;
That fed eral legislation should be shaped toward the gradual abandonm ent of th e protective tariff.&#13;
&#13;
D ecision :&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3, negative 2.&#13;
&#13;
Decision : Affirmative 3; negative 0.&#13;
&#13;
P HILOMATHEAN NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Neville Grey&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
&#13;
Clair Cooper&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence Steele&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Records&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1900-J. A. Davies, ninth.&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer, second.&#13;
1901-H. A. Keck, seventh.&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer, first.&#13;
1902-A. R. Toothaker, eliminated.&#13;
1910-H S. Hamilton, second.&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall, fourth .&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson, second.&#13;
1904-R. E. Heilman.&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson, second.&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer.&#13;
1913-F. P . Johnson, second.&#13;
1906-A. G. Cushman.&#13;
1914-R. H. McVicker, sixth.&#13;
1907-A. G. Cushman, fifth.&#13;
1915-J. I. Dolliver, third.&#13;
1916-R. L. Mitchell, eliminated.&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch, first; Inter-state, first; National, third.&#13;
1902-J. N. McCay, second.&#13;
1911-W. A. McCurdy, sixth.&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner, third.&#13;
1912-C. E. Smith, fifth.&#13;
1907-lda Lewis, fifth.&#13;
1913-J. L. Ralston, third.&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett, third.&#13;
1914-R. L. Mitchell, second.&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill, second.&#13;
1915-R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnston, first.&#13;
1916-C. H. Klippel, second.&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson, first.&#13;
1913- D. L. Wickens, first.&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon, fifth.&#13;
1914-C. T. Craig, fifth.&#13;
1915-V. Stenseth, tied for third.&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker U. 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3; Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1; Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa U . 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3; Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3; Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 3.&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2; Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2; Dakota Wesleyan 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1912-Iowa State Teachers 3, Morningside O; Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1913-Iowa State Teachers 2, Morningside 1; Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1914-Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3; Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1915-Southwestern 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1915- Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3; Coe 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1916-Dakota Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3; St. Olaf 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
GIRLS' DEBATE&#13;
1915-Simpson 3, Morning O; Simpson 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1916-South Dakota U . 1, Morningside 2; Huron 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Literary&#13;
BOOK&#13;
FIVE&#13;
&#13;
Old Father Time&#13;
&#13;
Will&#13;
&#13;
Get The Common&#13;
&#13;
Stuff&#13;
&#13;
one hundred eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
&#13;
"Betty's a brick!" said John Barry, throwing his books on the table and deftly tossing&#13;
his hat on the chandelier.&#13;
"Well," answered Bob, his roommate, "for a fellow that expects to work his way up&#13;
in the newspaper world, that is hardly what you would call a scoop. You might&#13;
preach a sermon on it, though, for it is as true as our old algebra axioms. Betty is a&#13;
brick. What's she done now?"&#13;
"Been helping me get that beastly Carlyle through my head. Feel kind of guilty&#13;
now, taking so much of her time," John replied.&#13;
"Well, you have added another 'thank-you' to her collection, I presume," said Bob.&#13;
pulling on a sweater preparatory for a walk to the gymnasium. "You know she says&#13;
she has a thank-you box and that is her hobby. So long, I'm off."&#13;
John Barry and Bob Moore are students at Fairfield College, which boasts of an&#13;
enrollment of five hundred, and a firm belief on the part of every member of the institution that theirs is the best college in the middle west. However, to a spectator it appears no different, even in this respect, from the usual small college.&#13;
On the way to the gymnasium, Bob fell to thinking of Betty and her thank-you box.&#13;
"We've all got a fad or hobby, I guess, but I'll be blessed if that isn't the best ever," he&#13;
mused. "I'll bet that girl has more friends on this campus than all the rest of us put&#13;
together. Mighty poor friends some of us are, too-regular spongers, soak up all she&#13;
gives us." At this juncture in his thought he noticed a bright red coat just ahead and&#13;
he quickened his pace.&#13;
"May I?" he asked, falling into step with the owner of the coat and meeting a pair&#13;
of merry brown eyes.&#13;
"You're the very man I'm looking for," answered Ruth, for by this time you know it&#13;
was either a Ruth or a Mary. "I was told to inform you that you are on the committee&#13;
to select a speaker for Commencement. I'm on, too, so we can console each other."&#13;
"Thanks for the information. I haven't the remotest idea on the subject," said Bob.&#13;
"Nor I. See you later," and Ruth vanished into the dormitory.&#13;
With her hand on the door knob of her own room Ruth paused, for she had caught&#13;
the sound of weeping within. Betty Conwell, Betty the "brick," who was also Ruth's&#13;
roommate, was not often given to tears, and Ruth was so surprised that she could&#13;
scarcely open the door. The sight which met her eyes was even more disturbing than&#13;
the sound of tears had been, for, prone upon the floor, her coat on and her hat tossed&#13;
to the farthest corner of the room, lay Betty sobbing as if she would never stop.&#13;
"Are you ill? For goodness sakes, what's the matter? What has happened?" cried&#13;
Ruth. "I'll run for the doctor."&#13;
At that Betty sat up, and pointing to a letter on the floor said: "Read that!"&#13;
Ruth, sitting down beside Betty, read the following letter from Betty's father, a&#13;
clergyman in a small village some two hundred miles away.&#13;
"My darling daughter," it began. "Throughout your college life I have tried to&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety&#13;
&#13;
spare you all disappointments, and to think that now, at the last, you should have to&#13;
bear this, is indeed hard. Your old Daddy, who has had to be a mother and father to&#13;
you all these years, is more sorry than this slip of paper can possibly show to tell you&#13;
that all our happy Commencement plans must be given up. The money we had saved&#13;
for this has been used to keep a true friend from disgrace. My little girl, do not think&#13;
that this has been lightly sacrificed on my part, but trust Daddy when he says he took&#13;
the only right way. Look your prettiest and act your sweetest on the happy day, and&#13;
know that I am close to you in spirit."&#13;
"Oh, what a shame!" cried Ruth, with her arms about Betty. "Don't cry, dear,&#13;
there must be some way to fix it. Your Daddy must know best."&#13;
"Of course he does, and I am a selfish pig. Anyone can see that, but I just can't help&#13;
it," said Betty, drying her eyes. "But you know Daddy has never once visited me all&#13;
these four years, and we had made such big plans for Commencement. It just seems&#13;
as if I couldn't bear it."&#13;
"We must get our thinking caps on and see what we can do," encouraged Ruth.&#13;
"No, it's no use. I'll just keep a stiff upper lip and we won't mention it again; that&#13;
will be easier," and with a determined air Betty set about improving her appearance.&#13;
The weeks that followed were full of joyous preparations for the coming Commencement. Betty entered bravely in and worked with all her might, but sometimes in the&#13;
midst of a happy plan a lump would rise in her throat, and she would have a hard&#13;
fight to keep back the tears of disappointment.&#13;
The committee to select a speaker for Commencement Day was the busiest of them&#13;
all. They had a list of names a foot long from which to decide, but on none of them&#13;
could they agree. One day Ruth and Betty were having an animated discussion over&#13;
the merits of a certain speaker. Betty, although not a member of the committee, was&#13;
willing to help as at all times.&#13;
"What does a big eastern man know about our little western school, anyway?" complained Ruth. "I would like to get someone whom we know or who has an interest in&#13;
us aside from the fifty dollars we shall hand him."&#13;
With the last word Ruth jumped a foot in the air. "Hand me my coat quick; I'll be&#13;
back in a minute. Forgot-have an appointment with the president."&#13;
Betty was so surprised that she could not speak, and by the time she had recovered&#13;
her breath , Ruth was halfway across the campus.&#13;
"Well, that was sudden," said Betty aloud . "I wonder what her appointment with&#13;
the president can be and how she ever forgot it."&#13;
Ruth told a tiny fib when she said she had an appointment with the president, for up&#13;
to that moment such a thing had never entered her mind. To be exactly truthful she&#13;
should have said, "I am going to get an appointment with the president."&#13;
When Ruth came out of the office of that high official a full hour later, she looked as&#13;
if she had just been handed a million dollars. She danced all the way back to the&#13;
dormitory, and was just about to dance into her own room, when she seemed to remember something. She stopped her capering, caught her breath, and at her usual pace&#13;
entered the room. Betty had settled herself to study. Looking up as Ruth entered she&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-on e&#13;
&#13;
said, "You know, Ruth, I am really alarmed about you. Anybody who had an appointment with 'prexy' and then forgot it can't be quite normal. Come here and let&#13;
&#13;
and hugged and kissed him until the bystanders began to smile&#13;
Daddy!" was all she could say.&#13;
. "Oh Daddy! Daddy!&#13;
&#13;
me feel your pulse, and tell me all about it."&#13;
"I shan't do either," said Ruth, airily. "Not now, anyway; some day I shall." And&#13;
with that Betty had to be satisfied, for , although she coaxed and pleaded Ruth would&#13;
&#13;
At that moment the committee arrived ' each member with a broad grin on his face.&#13;
·&#13;
Betty&#13;
suddenly remembered. "Did he come?" she asked.&#13;
"Looks as if he did," laughed Bob, and then they all began shaking hands with&#13;
Betty s father.&#13;
"I mean the speaker. Where is he?" demanded Betty, still uncomprehending.&#13;
And then they all told her at once the big secret which they had guarded so carefully all these weeks. The tears shone in Betty's eyes as she asked , "Did you ever know&#13;
better friends than these, Daddy? There's a whole college full of them here."&#13;
That Commencement&#13;
address was a big success goes without saying although in this&#13;
case everyone said 1t.&#13;
&#13;
only answer, "Some day."&#13;
It was announced a few days later that a speaker had been found whom the committee thought was qualified to make the Commencement address, but contrary to the usual&#13;
custom the identity of the speaker was to be kept a secret until Commencement Day.&#13;
"Well of all the swindles!" exclaimed Betty. "Here I have racked my brain for days&#13;
on this subject and now I am not to know whom the illustrious committee has chosen."&#13;
"Sorry," said Ruth, "but you see it is no more fair to tell you than anyone else.&#13;
But I'll tell you what you can do. You can go to the train to meet him with the committee, and be the first to see the honored gentleman."&#13;
"Pooh, I probably never heard of him, anyway," scoffed Betty.&#13;
"Oh, you will be crazy about him," promised Ruth.&#13;
"Must be young and good looking to get you interested," said Betty.&#13;
Suddenly Betty asked, "Was that what your appointment with the president was&#13;
about?"&#13;
"Ask me no questions, I'll tell you no lies," sang Ruth most aggravatingly.&#13;
The days flew fast and the night before Commencement Day had come. Ruth was&#13;
out but Betty was glad to be alone. She took her father's picture from the wall,&#13;
propped it up on her desk and seating herself, looked long and earnestly at it. At last&#13;
she began to write:&#13;
"My dearest Daddy," she wrote, "it is here at last-the big Commencement time&#13;
that has seemed the goal for so many years. I am glad because I know how it pleases&#13;
you that I am to be graduated with honors tomorrow. There's just one flaw in it all,&#13;
and of that we shall not speak again . I can feel you near, if I cannot see you, and I&#13;
shall be your own brave daughter, look my prettiest, and act my sweetest tomorrow as&#13;
is your wish. Soon I shall be home with you again and we shall talk it over then. All&#13;
with love, Betty."&#13;
Ruth was up bright and early the next morning, for "the man," as they had fallen&#13;
to calling the speaker, was to arrive at eight o'clock.&#13;
"I guess I'll take another nap, and see him later," said Betty sleepily.&#13;
"I guess you will not do any such thing. You will come right along with me," and&#13;
with one mighty tug she pulled the lazy Betty from her "downy cot."&#13;
The committee and Betty rode to the station in great state in the president's automobile. The train was just whistling in as they drew up to the platform, and Betty,&#13;
being the first out of the machine, arrived at the steps a little in advance of the committee, who seemed in no hurry to overtake her. The usual passengers alighted-a&#13;
jaunty drummer with his sample case, a tired looking woman with three small children,&#13;
a nurse stepping briskly off, and then-Betty almost fainted. A white-haired, kindlyfaced gentleman was looking about with eager eyes. With a cry, Betty rushed to him,&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
At the big banquet w,hich crowned the day's festivities, Betty was called upon for a&#13;
toast. Her heart was so full she could hardly speak · "You all know what my hobby&#13;
has beenthese four years," she began. "I haven't collected snapshots autographs or&#13;
postage stamps, but I have a big box of 'thank-yous' that I prize highly-that is I did&#13;
have them until tonight. Now I want to return them all , multiplied many times to&#13;
you dear peoplewho gave them to me, for I haven't a 'thank-you' of my own big enough&#13;
toconvey to you the gratitude that I feel."&#13;
&#13;
Anne's Purpose&#13;
MORDA COLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
"Wh atever has become of Anne?" demanded the girl at the chafing dish.&#13;
.&#13;
"Who dares to speak my name ?" said Anne's clear voice as she danced into the room.&#13;
"What is there to eat? It s mighty hard work persuading the dean-"&#13;
"Anne McCutcheon, have you been called to the dean's office again?"&#13;
Yes, again-and yet. We had a fine little chat."&#13;
"Oh, yes, you did !"&#13;
"We were discussing," remarked Anne loftily, with a sandwich in each hand "the&#13;
value of a senous purpose in life. The dean thinks I need one."&#13;
"Fancy you with a Serious Purpose," laughed Charlotte, Anne's roommate.&#13;
I told her I didn't exactly see what I would do with such a thing at present&#13;
but if she liked, she could find one for me."&#13;
"What about all your late English Lit. themes and the times you've cut?"&#13;
"Now 'Lotte don't tell everything you know. She was so absorbed in that purpose&#13;
't&#13;
that she forgot those other little matters. I'm off to the postoffice . Anybody coming&#13;
·&#13;
along?"&#13;
"We aren ' t so sure of a letter as you are," was the answer.&#13;
Everything edible consumed, the party broke up, Charlotte staying to help Ruth&#13;
straighten up the room.&#13;
&#13;
Well&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
" 'Lotte," said Ruth, seriously, "is Anne ever serious? I've known her a year and&#13;
she's always light-hearted and gay and full of mischief. She gets out of trouble as&#13;
easily as she gets into it. As she said, she wouldn't know what to do with a purpose or&#13;
ambition in life. Isn't there anyone who cares what she does or for whom she cares?"&#13;
"Anne is an orphan, you know," returned Charlotte. "She used to live with her&#13;
grandmother, who is dead now, so Anne has only a guardian. Naturally she doesn't&#13;
worry about her lessons, for there is no one to care whether she gets them or not. If&#13;
there is anyone for whose opinion she cares, it is John Alexander."&#13;
"Is he the one who writes to her so regularly?"&#13;
"Yes, he's an old friend; lives in Danbury, her home town."&#13;
Charlotte went back to her ow n room and as she entered she was seized by an excited Anne and danced around the room. " 'Lotte, 'Lotte, John is coming through&#13;
here tomorrow night and he is going to stop over and take me to see Madame Butterfly."&#13;
"Ah, Anne, you've given yourself away this time," laughed Charlotte.&#13;
"Given myself away? Why, all you girls know he is the best friend I have in the&#13;
world. I have no family to visit me as you have ; John is the only one w ho cares what I&#13;
am doing."&#13;
"Is there anyone for w hom Anne cares?" Charlotte thought of R uth's question.&#13;
Then the thought popped into her head that this would be a good time to find out how&#13;
much Anne cared for this particular somebody.&#13;
" 'Scuse me," starting up, "I must see Ruth a minute."&#13;
There was no reply from Anne, who was reading her letter again.&#13;
Both Ruth and Charlotte were on hand that evening to help Anne dress.&#13;
"Girls!" exclaimed Anne, as she pointed to the clock, "I won't be ready."&#13;
"Oh, yes, you will," Charlotte assured her, calmly. "Sit down ; I'm going to do your&#13;
hair."&#13;
In the midst of the hair-dressing operation, a call came floating down the hall:&#13;
"Anne! The phone!"&#13;
"I'll go," said Ruth.&#13;
She was back in a few moments with a white scared face.&#13;
"What's the matter, Ruthie? Been talking to a ghost?" inquired Anne, cheerfully.&#13;
" Oh, Anne, they're afraid the train from Danbury has been wrecked!"&#13;
"John! Did he phone?"&#13;
"No, it wasn't he, but someone-someone else-phoning for him."&#13;
"Is-he hurt?" Anne appeared to be scarcely able to frame the words.&#13;
"They didn't know."&#13;
"But if they were phoning for him? What did they call me up for if they didn't&#13;
know?"&#13;
"Why- "&#13;
Quick-witted Charlotte saved Ruth from further questions by telling her to phone&#13;
to the depot and find out whether the report was true. Then she turned to Anne&#13;
solicitously. "Why, Anne, child, you're all read y! You surely can't go to the play,&#13;
even if he-"&#13;
&#13;
"I believe I'm a little faint. Won't you go and borrow Marie's smelling salts?&#13;
They always help me."&#13;
"Why, I don't want to leave you alone."&#13;
"I'll be all right. Hurry!" commanded Anne in a weak voice.&#13;
The instant C harlotte was out of the room, Anne jumped up, pinned on her hat,&#13;
stopping long enough to smile wickedly at her reflection in the mirror, caught up her&#13;
gloves and coat, and was gone down the hall like a flash. She rushed out and looked&#13;
w ildly up and down the hall. Ruth was the only person in sight.&#13;
"Anne's gone! Do you suppose she suspected?"&#13;
"He must have come, but how-"&#13;
They started down the st airs and were halfway down w hen the door of the reception&#13;
room opened and after one look they sat limply down on the nearest step. Anne came&#13;
out with roses in her arms, a smile on her lips, a roguish twinkle in her eyes, andJohn Alexander. The two girls on the step recognized him instantly from the picture&#13;
Anne had on her writing desk.&#13;
"Why, girls," she called clearly up to the two, "it was nice of you to come down to&#13;
see us off. Thanks awfully for your help. "&#13;
" I certainly do appreciate the fact that you got her ready on time," laughed her&#13;
escort.&#13;
" I can't help it; I've simply got to tell you . 'Lotte, w hen I told you that J ohn was&#13;
coming, I neglected t o mention the interesting fact that he would travel by auto."&#13;
R uth and Charlotte rose slowly to their feet as the two disappeared. But before&#13;
they had time to say anything, Anne reappeared in the doorway.&#13;
"Yesterday afternoon I happened to overhear you two worrying because I'm not&#13;
serious and haven't any purpose in life. I have t wo now. One is to pay you back for&#13;
scaring me so that first minute before I remembered that J ohn wasn't coming by train&#13;
anyway and the other"-with one of Anne's own sparkling smiles-"the other is a&#13;
secret."&#13;
&#13;
Zet Novelette&#13;
C HAPTE R I&#13;
Written by RUTH HARTZELL&#13;
Marjorie Clinton, Wellesley's prettiest graduate, was nearing the end of her journey&#13;
at the rate of sixty miles an hour. Her mother had implored, had fairly begged her to&#13;
remain at home in New York and become one of the season's society buds, but Marjorie&#13;
felt that she was called to higher things. Every English professor she had ever had&#13;
had assured her that she was destined for a great literary career and that all she lacked&#13;
was age, and a w ide variet y of experience. For her first experience she had secured a&#13;
position as teacher in a western mountain town, and it was towards this place she was&#13;
now traveling.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-fiv e&#13;
one hundred ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
The hardest working man&#13;
In that industrious clan&#13;
Was the man who led the students in the cheers.&#13;
It was "Ki Yi Yi,&#13;
Everybody up and give old Ki Yi Yi!&#13;
Locomotive, take it slow,&#13;
M. C. Rah Rah, Let it go!&#13;
Ki Yi Yi Yi Yi for Morningside."&#13;
When the rest of us were glum,&#13;
Had a cold, or just felt bum&#13;
'&#13;
He would work just twice as hard to make up for it;&#13;
When we'd shouted "Ki Yi Yi"&#13;
Till our throats were cracked and dry&#13;
He would not give up but start once more to roar it.&#13;
He would go to any length&#13;
He would exert all his strength&#13;
Just to get us cheering as we ought to do.&#13;
The victories we've won&#13;
By the things that he has done&#13;
Can't be counted, but we only wish we knew.&#13;
With his "Ki Yi Yi."&#13;
Everybody up and give old Ki Yi Yi&#13;
Fifteen for the Coach,-the team!&#13;
Now let's try the old Si rene.&#13;
Rah Rah Rah Rah Rah for Morningside!"&#13;
For three long successful years&#13;
He has led us in our cheers&#13;
And we're going to miss him mightily next fall.&#13;
Without him and his megaphone&#13;
Morningside wpn't seem like home,&#13;
The bleachers will not be the same at all.&#13;
The debates, orations too,&#13;
Football, track team got their due,&#13;
Each of them he's cheered on to their victory;&#13;
So 'twould only be fair play&#13;
Part of our debt to repay&#13;
And join in, for him, a rousing three times three,&#13;
With our R ah, Rah, Rah!&#13;
Let us cheer today for him w ho's cheered us on.&#13;
When we're old, or dead and gone,&#13;
In school lore he'll still live on,&#13;
Morningside true loyal son.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred six&#13;
&#13;
Orpheus and Eurydice&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
SMITH,&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
When Orpheus played upon his lyre&#13;
All Nature harkened to the sound.&#13;
He played his soul, he could not tire,&#13;
For in his heart the spell was bound.&#13;
His music soothed, and eased all pains,&#13;
And swelled, and poured as some great tide.&#13;
Wild beasts grew gentle at the strains&#13;
And stood entranced by his side.&#13;
The very trees were touched and charmed&#13;
And murmuring gently, breathing low&#13;
They swayed toward him, now unharmed,&#13;
For none but peacefu l winds dared blow.&#13;
It softened w ith its tones so mild&#13;
Even the rocks so hard and cruel ;&#13;
It lulled the torrents rushing wild&#13;
Into a quiet bubbling pool.&#13;
Into this happy life so free&#13;
Now Cupid thrust his dart of fire.&#13;
There came the maid Eurydice&#13;
Whose love was Orpheus' sole desire.&#13;
For love of her his heart now burned,&#13;
And from his lyre he poured his soul&#13;
In sweetest strains, which plead and yearned&#13;
Till to his love's own heart they stole.&#13;
Eurydice was moved indeed,&#13;
And to his pleading she replied.&#13;
'Twould seem that kindly fate decreed,&#13;
She flew so lightly to his side.&#13;
Thus Orpheus gained his only d ream.&#13;
His music lovelier grew each day;&#13;
All life a sunlit path did seem,&#13;
With flowers and laughter all the way.&#13;
And then, alas ! w ith mocking breath&#13;
Cruel Fate beheld the pair so gay,&#13;
And w ith the iron grasp of death&#13;
Eurydice he bore away.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
The train gave one long whistle and stopped. All the passengers but Majorie&#13;
began filing out of the car.&#13;
"This is your station, Miss," said the conductor, addressing Marjorie.&#13;
"But this is not Arrow Rock."&#13;
"You have to take the stage the rest of the way. Arrow Rock is a dam site, you&#13;
know."&#13;
"A what?"&#13;
"A dam site. They are building a darn up there. The town is only temporary.&#13;
When the dam 1s done, the folks'll leave. The agent will tell you where to get&#13;
the stage."&#13;
A porter seized her two suit cases and our heroine followed him off the train&#13;
and into the station. There were very few people in the building. The station&#13;
agent was over in one corner in a little coop and Miss Clinton made bold to address&#13;
him. "Can you tell me when and where the stage leaves for Arrow Rock?"&#13;
"When and where it pleases," was the answer. "Did you want to take it?"&#13;
"Oh yes, can't I get it some way?" Miss Clinton had meant to be very dignified&#13;
and self-possessed but this stage business was so unexpected. She had read about&#13;
stages before, and they were usually either held up and robbed or else stuck in the&#13;
river and the passengers drowned. Truly she was getting more experience than she&#13;
had bargained for. What was the agent saying?&#13;
"Hello, Ike ?-Lady over here wants to go to Arrow Rock.- Bout twenty minutes?&#13;
-Two suit cases and ninety-seven trunks. Sure-guess so." He hung up the receiver and turned to Majorie. "The stage will be here in twenty minutes to take&#13;
you and half your stuff to the school house." How did he know she was going to&#13;
teach? Then she said aloud, "Why half?"&#13;
"Because the mail has to go too."&#13;
"But I haven't ninety-seven."&#13;
"Never mind, I'll see that all your stuff gets up there by tomorrow night if I have&#13;
to carry it up myself. Anything else?"&#13;
"No thank you."&#13;
Presently a little man in a faded blue shirt and khaki trousers stood in the door.&#13;
"Are you the dam teacher?"&#13;
"Sir."&#13;
.&#13;
"Are you the Arrow Rock dam teacher that wants to be took up in the stage.&#13;
"Yes, sir, my name is Miss Clinton."&#13;
"That so? Well, there's a Miss Clinton that lives in this town too. We'll have&#13;
to call you the dam Miss Clinton so's not to get you mixed."&#13;
This man was worse than the agent. Well, she wouldn't have to listen to him&#13;
inside the coach. She picked up her suitcases and followed onto the platform.&#13;
"Where is the stage?"&#13;
"Right here, you'd better sit in front with me.&#13;
about fills up the back."&#13;
"You don't mean that auto there is the stage?"&#13;
&#13;
on e hundred ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
The mail and all your stuff just&#13;
&#13;
"Yes, Ma'am. W e've outgrown them pict uresque Buffalo Bill things. This&#13;
trunk yours too? W e'll leave it till tomorrow ."&#13;
"Must be plannin' to stay some?"&#13;
"Yes, during the school year."&#13;
"Guess you're boss o' that. L ast year the teacher ran off with a sheep man and&#13;
quit before spring, year before that she married the electrical engineer but she finished&#13;
her term after she was married. That's the best way to do. You get more pay.&#13;
Now we're ready. You'll have to excuse me if I seem kind o' silent the rest of the&#13;
way. M aking record time over the mountains ain't real cond ucive to conversation."&#13;
And they were off.&#13;
C HAPTER II&#13;
Written by LOIS CROUCH&#13;
" How far is it to Arrow Rock ?" asked Marjorie.&#13;
" Seventy-five miles by the way we got to go," answered Ike, the driver.&#13;
"And how long will it take?" gasped Marjorie.&#13;
"We'll git there 'bout sundown, if we don't have no bad luck."&#13;
For many miles their way lay through a beautiful, little valley. They passed&#13;
an occasional ranch house with its accompanying buildings and cor rals. T wice they&#13;
saw a bunch of coyotes and once they sighted a herd of deer. All this was so new&#13;
to Marjorie, that it held her attention for some time. After a w hile she began to&#13;
think about her literary career.&#13;
"There is going to be plenty of scenery here but what am I going to do for characters?" mused Marjorie. " The station agent might do, but still I don't like him,&#13;
he is common and altogether too fresh."&#13;
"I wonder if I could use this driver?" thought Marjorie. Then she began to&#13;
look him over.&#13;
" He doesn't look much like a character in a novel, but his language is certainly&#13;
picturesque. W ell, I don't know, perhaps I can use him." And she began to make&#13;
a tentative plot in which Ike figu red as the policeman who made love to the cook.&#13;
Just at this point the Ford began to ascend the mountain trail and Marjorie became too interested in the scenery to think about her story. They climbed up and&#13;
up, now running close to the towering rock on the left and now swinging out over&#13;
the. precipice on the right. Once they met another machine w here the trail w as so&#13;
narrow that it seemed to M arj orie that it would be impossible to pass. As Ike turned&#13;
out toward the precipice she shut her eyes in ter ror. W hen she fel t that they must&#13;
be safely past, she opened them again just in t ime to get a glimpse of a little log&#13;
cabin on the mountain side, away across the valley. She continued to think about&#13;
the quaint little cabin and ventured to ask, "Who lives in that house, Mister D river,&#13;
and what do they do away out here?"&#13;
" Hunting shack of the dam engineer," answered Ike as he clutched the driving&#13;
wheel with a fi rmer grip.&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-sev en&#13;
&#13;
A little farther on the machine struck a loose stone and skidded towards the precipice. "Oh," screamed Marjorie, "Couldn't you drive slower around these curves?"&#13;
"Lose my speed if I did."&#13;
So Marjorie resigned herself to her fate and began to think of her family way back&#13;
in New York. As she thought of their sorrow when they shou ld hear that she had&#13;
been dashed to death on the rocks below, the tragedy of the imaginary scene appealed&#13;
to her literary sense. And she began to arrange a little plot with herself as the heroine. When the hero found her dead upon the rocks his grief was so deep that he&#13;
retired to the little cabin in the mountains to live the life of a hermit. Marjorie shed&#13;
a tear over her own sad fate and just as she decided to change the plot, be saved&#13;
from death, marry the hero, and spend her honey-moon in the little cabin, the "honk,&#13;
honk" of the horn told her that they were approaching another. curve. She looked&#13;
ahead and saw a heavily loaded wagon drawn by four mules. The head team,&#13;
frightened by the "honk", began to prance wildly.&#13;
Ike yelled, "Take the inside." But the man on the wagon shook his head. So&#13;
the machine turned in toward the cliff and attempted to drive past. The head&#13;
team, already frightened, slipped, regained their footing, slipped again and went over&#13;
the edge of the trail. Marjorie held her breath. A few moments of tense excitement passed. Ike jumped from the machine and ran to the second team which was&#13;
in imminent danger of being dragged over by the others. The driver had already&#13;
jumped from the wagon and grasping some bushes had let himself down to where&#13;
the mules were struggling and kicking over the edge. By coaxing, pulling and using&#13;
much lurid language, he succeeded in getting them up on the trail again.&#13;
Marjorie caught her breath and for the first time, looked at the driver, tall,&#13;
brown-eyed, sun-burned, handsome and dressed like the westerner in the novels she&#13;
had read. She said to herself, "There is my hero."&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
Written by HELEN&#13;
&#13;
WARFIELD&#13;
&#13;
As Marjorie continued to stare at the tall, handsome figure, she became aware of&#13;
his eyes fixed steadily on her, and for the moment, neither spoke. Ike was the first&#13;
to break the silence:&#13;
"Waal, that was a mighty narrow escape, Bob!" So the young man was called&#13;
"Bob!" Indeed, that was a very nice name for a hero, and even sounded well coming from the lips of rough-talking Ike.&#13;
"Yes, but it was a little too near death to make it interesting, and thanks, Ike,&#13;
for holding the second team. I'm afraid we should have"There's a man comin' on horse-back. One of us will have to move along-guess&#13;
we'll be a-goin'," and with that and a honk of the horn, Ike drove Marjorie away&#13;
from the stranger.&#13;
Now, it's always just as affairs are growing interesting that things like that happen. Here, she had seen a very handsome young man, and was just about to intro-&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
duce herself since Ike made no move to, when a most unwelcome person had come&#13;
along on horse-back and shattered all her plans.&#13;
Marjorie caught herself looking back in the direction from which they had come,&#13;
and several moments passed before she was conscious of Ike talking to her. He&#13;
was muttering something about "fine young fellow," "dam engineer," "college gink."&#13;
"What's that you were saying? What's his name? What is he doing out here?&#13;
He looks like a typical westerner."&#13;
"Nope, he ain't a westerner, though he's made the West his home fer 'most four&#13;
years now. "Don' know jes' whar' he is from-back East somewhere. His name&#13;
is Robert Kirkwood, an' he's the darn engineer who lives in that cabin we passed&#13;
awhile ago. Seems like a good 'nuf fellow, even though he is one of them college&#13;
high-breds. I never did have much use fer' em-usually they don't 'mount t' much ,&#13;
but ez fer Bob, he's as good as the best of 'em." All of this made Marjorie the&#13;
more 'curious. Where, in the East, had he lived, and what college had he attended?&#13;
As she was trying to persuade Ike to answer more of her incessant flow of questions,&#13;
they neared the town of Arrow Rock. So this was the place in which she was to&#13;
live till the end of the school year. How could she ever endure it? And as for&#13;
literary efforts-she would do well if she would write an "Ode to a Dead Town."&#13;
If she had only met the esteemed Mr. Kirkwood, she was sure that things would&#13;
have proved more interesting, but there was nothing to do now, but make the best&#13;
of the conditions.&#13;
The school teacher· always made her home with Mrs. Brigham, Ike told her, and&#13;
proceeded to drive there immediately, and deposit her and all of her baggage on the&#13;
front porch of the house. Mrs. Brigham met her at the door and from the first&#13;
Marjorie was sure she ·would like her. She was a frail-looking little woman, and getting along in years to such an extent that she found it necessary to hold fast to&#13;
the bannister as she led Marjorie up the stairs to her room.&#13;
Settled at last in the small, though very neat room assigned her, Marjorie sat down&#13;
to think over her day's experiences. If every day proved as adventuresome as had&#13;
this one, she would surely have enough to write about. But it wouldn't, for there&#13;
would be no more traveling for sometime, no more excitement on the way-there&#13;
would just be the tiresome rising in the morning, teaching all day and then going&#13;
to bed, tired out!&#13;
But the worst of all-she was afraid she would never see Robert Kirkwood again,&#13;
or anyone else as interesting, out here.&#13;
CHAPTER IV&#13;
Written by LOIS RUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
It was Friday afternoon and a quarter holiday at the school so Marjorie came home&#13;
early, looking not at all like her cheerful little self.&#13;
"You look tired this afternoon, Marjorie, something wrong?" Marjorie looked&#13;
at little Mrs. Brigham and tried hard to keep back the tears as she replied:&#13;
&#13;
one hundred ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
"Oh! I guess its nothing but a headache. Or maybe I am just a little homesick."&#13;
Mrs. Brigham put her hand kindly over Marjorie's and said, "Hadn't you better tell&#13;
me about it? Maybe I can help you."&#13;
"You are awfully good to me, Mrs. Brigham. I guess I don't understand things&#13;
here very well. Everybody is just lovely to me and I have plenty to do to keep me&#13;
busy but somehow I-"&#13;
"I believe I understand you, dear," Mrs. Brigham said, sitting down beside her&#13;
on the sofa. "You feel so lost-so all alone in this big lonesome country. Instead&#13;
of there being plenty and even too many friends to call and see you, and for you&#13;
to go and see, there are only a few that you would care to call friends . There is nobody to really talk your heart too because people are shy of you. Why, do you know,&#13;
Marjorie, the people think you are different from common folks because you can play&#13;
and sing and because you use good grammar. But before long they will come to know&#13;
you as I do and you will find them the truest of friends-rough but faithful and ready&#13;
to receive the help you can give them."&#13;
"And what about my school? Why can't I make friends with those children?&#13;
They won't even talk to me. It is all I can do to squeeze an answer to my questions&#13;
out of them even when they know well enough what the answer is. I've tried so hard&#13;
to get some response. They seem to think I will eat them alive if they talk to me.&#13;
Are all children in the West like that?" Mrs. Brigham laughed.&#13;
"Why, Miss Marjorie, you are such a picture of despair! I'm sure it isn't really&#13;
half so bad as all that. The children are timid because they think you know so much.&#13;
They are hard to get acquainted with but before long you will be keeping them after&#13;
school because they talk too much." She took the tired little teacher by the hand and&#13;
led her out into the yard.&#13;
"Will you go on an errand for me, Marjorie?" she said.&#13;
"I want you to go to the very top of that hill you see over there-see that little&#13;
path ?-go up it and when you get to the top take one of the paths going down and&#13;
sit down by the little creek and rest. You'll have plenty of time before supper and&#13;
you will feel worlds better."&#13;
&#13;
j,&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
And Marjorie did as she was told. She followed the path to the very top of the&#13;
hill. The sun was shining down fiercely but the breeze was cool. She walked along&#13;
not interested in what she saw and thinking it was rather a waste of time, when suddenly she saw something that made her open her eyes in wonder. She was looking&#13;
into the coulee below her. Was there ever such a delightful place to rest? Why had&#13;
she never come here before? She lost no time in deciding which direction to turn&#13;
but made directly for the nearest tree. She sat down in the cool shade and listened to&#13;
the stream as it rushed over the big rocks in front of her, watched a tiny waterfall which displayed every color of the rainbow as the sun shone on the fine spray.&#13;
She forgot that she had thought of crying. She forgot everything and in three minutes was fast asleep.&#13;
It must have been the rain that awakened her, or it might have been the first clap&#13;
of thunder. Whatever it was she realized without being told that the rain was pour-&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
ing down and that the lightning was playing around in the raindrops. She was so&#13;
confused for a while that she didn't realize what she was doing. She started to run.&#13;
What was that awful rumbling? Would it never stop? She stumbled and fell;&#13;
got up again and rushed on. The rain blinded her and the noise was deadening.&#13;
Suddenly she ran against something. It was a large rock.&#13;
" Oh , dear! if I can only get behind that rock," she thought and started to climb.&#13;
But she was arrested by a hand on her shoulder. She turned around and looked&#13;
into the face of "Bob" Kirkwood. He grasped her arm and almost dragged her down&#13;
past the rock and through the little stream to a clump of evergreen trees, which&#13;
formed a natural shelter against the storm.&#13;
They stood and . watched the storm together. It was impossible to talk for the&#13;
roar of the thunder was deafening. Marjorie forgot her fear of lightning in the wonder of it all. She had never known lightning to be beautiful before. It played on&#13;
the rocks-on the very one she had tried to climb-seeming to jump from one rock&#13;
to another and the big drops of rain seemed to be on fire. The thunder claps were&#13;
deadened by the roar of the echoes of a previous clap, and each echo was strengthened&#13;
again by the new clap until the roar was unceasing. The little stream had grown&#13;
to twice its original size by now and Marjorie noticed that all the rocks ran waterfalls .&#13;
How long the storm lasted she never knew. Her interest had been so intense that&#13;
she had forgotten time, and everything. That is, almost everything. She never forgot that our hero was standing by her side and she never forgot to keep wondering&#13;
just how he happened to be there at just the right moment.&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER V&#13;
Written by ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
"I don't know what would have ever become of me if you hadn't been there,"&#13;
sighed Marjorie.&#13;
"Oh, I'm so glad, you can't be as glad as I am," answered Bob with a look that&#13;
made her hastily say, "I must get back home. Mrs. Brigham will be so worried."&#13;
"Your not going to dismiss me with a disdainful air and never a backward glance&#13;
are you, Miss Clinton?"&#13;
"Not if you care to follow, Mr. Kirkwood." Then they looked at each other and&#13;
laughed, shook hands and Bob said, "We are now formally introduced and the next&#13;
act on my part will be to carry you across that stream."&#13;
"Oh, will it!" answered Marjorie, saucily. "Well, I think I do prefer that to being&#13;
dragged through it as I was a few minutes ago."&#13;
"Oh, but you see we hadn't been introduced then?" answered Bob with mock&#13;
seriousness.&#13;
Quick as a flash he had lifted her in his strong arms and was cautiously feeling for&#13;
the stepping stones which led across the stream and over which the water was now&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred one&#13;
&#13;
rushing. Marjorie shut her eyes and forgot to think what a really exciting situation&#13;
this would be in a story.&#13;
The shower left as quickly as it had come and the sun, although by now far in the&#13;
West was casting a rosy glow over the whole world and made the drenched landscape&#13;
sparkle with the glory of millions of raindrops which shone from every tree and&#13;
bush.&#13;
" Oh, what a wonderful sight!" said Marjorie as they again reached the top of the&#13;
hill. "A sight like this almost makes up for all the homesickness."&#13;
"Are you afflicted with that awful malady too?" asked Bob.&#13;
"That's what I was running away from when I got caught in the storm." laughed&#13;
Marjorie.&#13;
"Me too, well what do you think of that? We'll have to form a society for homesick New Yorkers, won't we?" asked Bob. "And say, let's have the membership&#13;
limited to two."&#13;
"Hey, get some action in there" yelled the director and the camera man was scowling,&#13;
grinding out the film.&#13;
"Don't you know this is the finis?"&#13;
&#13;
A Legend&#13;
&#13;
of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN,' 18&#13;
&#13;
In dread silence alone one dark night&#13;
Walked the chief of the Siouxs, man of might;&#13;
'Neath the pines looking downward with scorn,&#13;
O'er the mosses, dark sodden with rain,&#13;
As a bright· happy greeting they feign ,&#13;
N ekumonta was pressing-forlorn.&#13;
The low beeches against his brow brushed,&#13;
Chilling showers of ice his face flushed ,&#13;
As he anxiously passed 'neath the elms.&#13;
Snarling panthers crept 'cross his dim path,&#13;
For disturbed, they were sullen with wrath;&#13;
Frightened rabbits sped back to their realms.&#13;
Gazing sadly the bear turned aside,&#13;
As his brother with swift struggling stride&#13;
Hurried into the fast gathering dark;&#13;
How they love him, these mutes,- and repent&#13;
That Dame Sorrow his heart thus should rent,&#13;
For a change in their friend could they mark.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred two&#13;
&#13;
Through the cheerless and long winter moons,.&#13;
When the plague had wrought havoc for boons,&#13;
Taking out of bright souls man's last breath,&#13;
N ekumonta by grief and care spent&#13;
With fair Shanewis-light of his tentOften talked of the sorrow of death.&#13;
They had chanted again and again&#13;
The w,e ird deathsong for women and men ;&#13;
Many times they had watched the last spark&#13;
Of a life seem to flicker and die, .&#13;
Calmly answering departed ones' cry&#13;
It would linger, then swiftly embark.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
And at length when the soft breezes blew&#13;
Telling all that the winter was through&#13;
Then the heart of the chieftain sank low&#13;
For though spring whispered hope in his ear&#13;
She was stricken, his Shanewis dear,&#13;
From her couch she was whispering so.&#13;
And then as before he could see there&#13;
His poor Shanewis kneeling in prayer.&#13;
" I must fight with the spirits, my love&#13;
And though sisters are calling above,&#13;
N ekumonta, I will not yet leave&#13;
You who watches me lovingly kind ;&#13;
Yes, I need you and I have long pined&#13;
Lest they call-but to you I will cleave."&#13;
For a moment the chief stood erect,&#13;
The dark gloom of despair he then checked&#13;
As he bent o'er his squaw's shivering form,&#13;
Slowly uttered this promise secure,&#13;
"I will seek for the vine that can cure,&#13;
I will save you from darkness and storm."&#13;
He had pushed back the robe at the door,&#13;
And was hurrying fast to the core&#13;
O f the fo rest so drear and so lone,&#13;
Peering under the fallen dead trees,&#13;
Crawling neath them on hands and on knees&#13;
While the winds seemed to whisper and moan.&#13;
Three long suns in the snow and in the rain&#13;
He had sought, and yet all was in vain;&#13;
&#13;
two hundred three&#13;
&#13;
As the third slowly drew to a close,&#13;
Stumbling onward in gathering black.&#13;
N ekumonta, exhausted, fell back&#13;
And his eyes soon were sealed in repose.&#13;
&#13;
In his dream he could see one so fair&#13;
Lying sleepless on fur rich and rare,&#13;
He could see the plague run through her veins&#13;
Like the fires which forests oft sweep;&#13;
To the door of the lodge did she creep,&#13;
And looked earnestly out through the rains.&#13;
But again he was in his canoe&#13;
With the spirits of plague chasing too,&#13;
And they laughed as he reached in despair&#13;
For the herbs grow',i ng close by the shore;&#13;
And then, as before, he could see there&#13;
His poor Shanewis kneeling in prayer.&#13;
Then low murmuring voices he heard,&#13;
More distinctly and clearly averred,&#13;
"Ah the pure healing waters are we,&#13;
Nekumonta, thou good and brave man,&#13;
And she'll live, thy dear Shanewis can&#13;
If from prisons so dark us you free."&#13;
With a spring from his slumber he rose,&#13;
Just as night gladly drew to a close;&#13;
Though he glanced all around for the one&#13;
Who had uttered those few welcome words,&#13;
Not a thing cou ld he see but the birds&#13;
As they chirped in the cold morning sun.&#13;
Then he suddenly bent to the ground,&#13;
And his ear closely placed to the mound&#13;
To his feet he soon leaped with a cry&#13;
For he heard a faint voice with this plea,&#13;
"Ah, our pure healing waters set free&#13;
And we'll save your dear Shanewis shy."&#13;
With a bound like a panther's he dashed&#13;
To a tree which the lightning had crashed;&#13;
Then its tuughened damp branches he broke,&#13;
Which he forced far down into the dirt.&#13;
What had changed to a creature alert&#13;
The most hopeless and saddened of folk?&#13;
&#13;
two hundred four&#13;
&#13;
As he toiled, never resting a whit,&#13;
Ry the voices his heart was now lit,&#13;
As they whispered of freedom they hoped;&#13;
Then imprisoning barriers gave way,&#13;
And by welcoming light of the day&#13;
A small stream trickled forth and was oped.&#13;
Just as dusk was beginning to fall&#13;
N ekumonta stepped into the hall&#13;
Of his Shanewis's dark lonely tent;&#13;
With soft mosses he soothed her hot brow&#13;
And with draughts of the water-free nowShe was lured back to health and content.&#13;
Once again, o'er the village warm winds&#13;
Gently stole, bringing comfort to minds&#13;
Once so hopeless, dejected,- forlorn.&#13;
At the door of their tent open wide&#13;
N ekumonta at Shanewis's side&#13;
Whispered love on that happy spring morn.&#13;
And now such is the tale that is told&#13;
Of the manner the barrier was rolled&#13;
Setting free the Missouri's clear tide&#13;
Which turned black when the plague disappeared&#13;
Leaving no evil thing to be feared&#13;
In that village-our own Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
An Appreciation&#13;
VERA LUNBOM&#13;
&#13;
'18&#13;
&#13;
You may talk of college pep&#13;
When you come here as a prep&#13;
&#13;
And denounce as dead the school that doesn't possess it;&#13;
But you'll come to comprehend,&#13;
As we all do in the end,&#13;
It's no snap to keep it, and you will confess it.&#13;
Now in a certain college&#13;
Where I acqu ired my knowledge&#13;
And sojourned for a certain term of years;&#13;
&#13;
two hundred five&#13;
&#13;
All joy was gone, all laughter died;&#13;
Poor Orpheus with grief was mad.&#13;
No longer love walked by his side;&#13;
All earth and heaven was cruel and sad.&#13;
&#13;
He played such tender, pleading strains&#13;
The very ghosts shed bitter tears,&#13;
And tortured ones forgot their pains&#13;
When his sweet music reached their ears.&#13;
&#13;
He plead and bowed to gods above;&#13;
To mortal men his grief he sang.&#13;
He begged them to return his love,&#13;
But only echo's answer rang.&#13;
&#13;
Old Ixion stopped his mighty wheel,&#13;
Stern Proserpine could not forbear,&#13;
The Furies could the magic feel,&#13;
And Pluto gave him back the fair.&#13;
&#13;
Then wretchedly, despairingly,&#13;
When all his hope had almost fled,&#13;
He turned, to seek Eurydice,&#13;
Below, in regions of the dead.&#13;
He took his lyre, his only friend,&#13;
And bravely started on his way,&#13;
Through gloomy caves the path did wend&#13;
And led afar from light of day.&#13;
Through gruesome caverns, awful sights,&#13;
Past hissing things, through flames of red,&#13;
Through blackest darkness of the night&#13;
With fearless, hopeful steps he sped.&#13;
At last he stood at Pluto's throne&#13;
And bowed before his majesty;&#13;
His heart and faith had stronger grownNow he would have Eurydice.&#13;
With lyre in hand and strength in heart&#13;
He cast himself at Pluto's feet.&#13;
His wish he told with words in part&#13;
Accompanied with music sweet.&#13;
"O deities of underworld&#13;
To whom all who ever live must bow,&#13;
By thee to destiny are hurled,&#13;
Oh hear my words in mercy now.&#13;
"I come not as a spy nor foe,&#13;
I am not sent for worldy gain,&#13;
Nor do I come my strength to show,&#13;
I come to seek relief from pain.&#13;
"A god all powerful led me here&#13;
To beg from thee a human life;&#13;
This god was Love. Now I in fear&#13;
Beseech of you my love, my wife."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
Eurydice came forth at last&#13;
From out a darkened passageway,&#13;
But as to Orpheus' arms she passed&#13;
The voice of Pluto bade her stay.&#13;
On one condition she might go:&#13;
The lovers' glances should not meet&#13;
Until beyond this world below&#13;
On earthly soil they touched their feet.&#13;
They then proceeded on their way;&#13;
She followed gladly as he led.&#13;
On, on they hurried eagerly,&#13;
Till light and sunshine shone ahead.&#13;
They'd almost reached the cheerful air&#13;
And Orpheus could not resist,&#13;
Could not be sure that she was there&#13;
Until her loving lips he'd kissed.&#13;
Their arms they stretched for fond embrace,&#13;
Their glances met; then back they swayed.&#13;
His love was carried into space,&#13;
For Pluto's will must be obeyed.&#13;
In loud despair he cried "Farewell!"&#13;
In anguished moans he raised his cries,&#13;
But only echoes seemed to swell,&#13;
And blackest darkness met his eyes.&#13;
Then long and dreary days passed by&#13;
Till Orpheus welcomed eagerly&#13;
The blow of death, with grateful sigh,&#13;
And met at last, Eurydice.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
Editorials&#13;
Our debating history for the past year needs no rehearsal for the benefit of students or residents of Morningside. The success of the girls at Huron as well as the&#13;
home victory with Vermillion as our rivals, will long be remembered. And was the&#13;
1916 tradition to end with the girls? No! The men's debates with St. Olaf. and&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan as worthy opponents also resulted in our favor. With such spirit&#13;
in our midst let us strive for other victories, ever reaching toward the goal-a greater&#13;
Morningside!&#13;
An aggressive movement of tangible significance has centered itself upon the girls of&#13;
the Freshman class. A club, which organized for democracy and good fellowship and&#13;
designed to provide many good things on Saturday evenings, has already made a place&#13;
for itself in the college as one of prominence. The girls are to be congratulated upon&#13;
this forward movement.&#13;
Morningside is proud of her Glee Clubs! The tours Christmas and Easter vacations by these clubs are made through many a sacrifice by their members, but in the&#13;
effort put forth, and in the splendid entertainments there lies the ever loyal spirit of&#13;
progress and interest for our College-which so unfailingly shows itself in the existence&#13;
and growth of the Madrigal and Men's Glee Clubs.&#13;
Just how much has been accomplished by the Men's Gospel Teams sent out to our&#13;
city churches and to those of nearby towns can be but partially realized. Only time,&#13;
under the special influence of the growing brotherhood feeling, will ever portray the&#13;
· results and benefits. "A noble purpose, well attained, is strength for all, and victory&#13;
gained."&#13;
Another organization which deserves unlimited space for commendation is .our Band.&#13;
Under an able and experienced director, Prof. Himmel, unusual progress has raised&#13;
· its standards as a musical project to that of the very best. No other body has been&#13;
more ready or steadfast in its support of athletics and forensics. No other body has&#13;
been more agreeably entertaining in concerts, programs, or boosting campaigns. We&#13;
wish to thank our College band for being.&#13;
Never has a body of young people realized the benefits, opportunities and privileges&#13;
of life at Morningside more than the student bod y of today, and never has a class&#13;
Not ne is ignorant of the&#13;
o&#13;
appreciated these advantages more than the class of '17 !&#13;
successful financial campaign carried on last year, and to those who have so generously&#13;
made it possible for us to be here, we wish to express our thanks.&#13;
&#13;
In conclusion, we wish to thank all who have so liberally contributed to the Literary&#13;
Department of the "Sioux ' 17," and especially do we wish to express our appreciation&#13;
to Prof. Hayes and Dr. Hilmer, who so generously assisted the Annual Board in&#13;
making the Prize Story and Poem Contest possible. As a legacy to the "Sioux&#13;
'18" we do hereby bequeath to it all material not appropriated by this or any other&#13;
annual.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
EnPassant&#13;
n&#13;
BOOK&#13;
SIX&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
JOHN J. BIDDISON&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College is a part of Sioux City; Sioux City is all part of the environment-the campus-of Morningside College. It is a part of the library, part of the&#13;
curriculum, and not an inconsiderable part of the laboratory experience to which&#13;
every student is entitled by virtue of his enrollment. Morningside College has brought&#13;
hundreds of citizens to Sioux City, settled them here, and made them a part of the&#13;
civic, business and social life of its sixty-two thousand inhabitants. The city has contributed to the college many thousands of its dollars, many hundreds of its best students,&#13;
and has always maintained a friendly and encouraging spirit toward the institution.&#13;
Physically, Sioux City is situated, like Rome, upon seven hills, which slope down to&#13;
the basin of the Missouri River. Located at the conjunction of the Big Sioux and&#13;
Missouri Rivers, she forms a natural distributing point. She has sent her salesmen into&#13;
the surrounding states, built up great wholesale and jobbing houses, and has become&#13;
the market town for a vast territory. Groceries, dry goods, clothing, fruits, candies,&#13;
notions, hardware, automobiles, farm implements, jewelry-practically every line of&#13;
goods needed in a community is either manufactured or jobbed through the big distributers of this city.&#13;
&#13;
SECTION OF STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
But the distinctive factor in Sioux City's development is the packing and live stock&#13;
industry. She furnishes the market for feeder and fat stock, and the packing houses&#13;
convert into meat the millions of animals that pour into it from the ranches and feed- '&#13;
yards of Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Nebraska, Wyoming and&#13;
Colorado. This live stock industry furnishes employment for approximately six&#13;
thousand men, and involves a manufacturing output of so many millions that Sioux&#13;
City is ranked as the first in Iowa for manufactured products. As a packing center&#13;
she is ranked variously from fourth to sixth in the United States.&#13;
During the last decade, the city has developed much along political, social, religious&#13;
and aesthetic lines. For six years she has been operating successfully under the commission form of government. Five years has seen the building of an adequate public&#13;
library with extended service into the suburbs. The artistic sense is being developed&#13;
by an art society and various musical organizations. Charitable social service is prominently emphasized. The rather indifferent attitude toward religion is being replaced&#13;
by one of positive and aggressive interest in the things that are more than passing.&#13;
Simultaneous with these movements has been the re-creation of the public school&#13;
system, which is now numbered among the most modern in the country.&#13;
Sioux City is rapidly growing, because she is meeting and taking advantage of great&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
&#13;
She likes her college; she has done much for it, and she will do as&#13;
&#13;
much again if necessary. And in return the college owes the city loyal cooperation and&#13;
support.&#13;
LOOKING UP PIERCE FROM FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
AT THE SPEEDWAY&#13;
&#13;
ALONG FIFTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
two hundred four teen&#13;
&#13;
PIERCE STREET, LOOKING SOUTH&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH STREET, LOOKING EAST&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifteen&#13;
&#13;
ELKS' CLUB&#13;
CRYSTAL LAKE BEACH&#13;
&#13;
GOLF LINKS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
PUBLIC LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
AT CRYSTAL LAKE&#13;
&#13;
RIVERSIDE BOAT CLUB&#13;
&#13;
CRYSTAL LAKE SCENE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BOAT CLUB&#13;
&#13;
two hundred nineteen&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
STONE PARK DRIVE&#13;
&#13;
STONE PARK ENTRANCE&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
UNION DEPOT&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
SHORE ACRE BOAT CLUB&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
OUR SIOUX CITY HOME&#13;
701 - 703- 705 - 707 4th&#13;
Corner of Jackso n&#13;
&#13;
We offer at all seasons for your&#13;
inspection the largest line of&#13;
&#13;
Clothing, Furnishings, Hats and&#13;
Sboes shown in Sioux City.&#13;
Our enormous buying power for&#13;
five stores enables us to give&#13;
better than ordinary values.&#13;
The E. &amp; W. Guarantee of Satisfaction goes with every purchase&#13;
&#13;
Complete Outfitters for Men and Boys&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Mitchell takes second in Prohibition&#13;
Contest at Simpson. Also elected President of&#13;
State Prohibition Association.&#13;
"Oh, Richard !"&#13;
14 Wednesday. Annual Board Election.&#13;
"Quoth the Raven, 'Nevermore'."&#13;
15 Thursday. Agora Club established as Board of&#13;
Censorship of the movies.&#13;
17 Saturday. Drake Relays.&#13;
"Some two-mile team-eh, wot?"&#13;
Madison elected President of State Peace Assocition.&#13;
20 Tuesday. Girls' debates with Simpson.&#13;
"Nuff sed !"&#13;
21 Wednesday. Morningside -\efeats Vermillion in&#13;
baseball, 3-0.&#13;
"Strike three and out. Oh, you Obe !"&#13;
22 Thursday. Men's Glee Club sings at _ igh&#13;
H&#13;
School.&#13;
"Some Country Store."&#13;
23 Friday. Lovice Strobel elected May Queen.&#13;
"Fletcher almost got it."&#13;
24&#13;
Saturday. Horne Track Meet.&#13;
"Our class wins."&#13;
26 Monday. Seniors present cinder track as class gift.&#13;
"Guess we'll show some speed now."&#13;
26 Monday. Philo-Athenaeurn Grand Public.&#13;
"A wee bit of Scotch. I love a lassie."&#13;
27 Tuesday. Seniors choose cast for class play.&#13;
"It wasn't so bad at that."&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
.-------&#13;
&#13;
Pride is the Base&#13;
Upon Which Skyward Rears&#13;
the Majestic Column&#13;
of Achievement&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Pride in the race is the spur&#13;
which marks the progress of a nationpride in itself is the incentive which feeds&#13;
personal ambition - pride is the foothold of self respect and its first physical&#13;
expression is the clothes you wear.&#13;
&#13;
--We offer this thought in the&#13;
hope that all who read this announcement may realize the pride in this store&#13;
and in the success of this business has&#13;
been responsible for the gathering of such&#13;
vast assortments of quality merchandise&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Collegian R eporter.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS. CO.&#13;
"The Big Store"&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
27&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Morningside defeats Vermillion in&#13;
track. "60-40. Fair enough."&#13;
Wednesday. Morningside defeats Vermillion in&#13;
baseball. 8-l. "Guess the boys didn't crack that&#13;
apple."&#13;
Friday. Invitation "M" Meet.&#13;
"Sioux Falls cops the prize."&#13;
Saturday. Nebraska Wesleyan loses to Morningside.&#13;
"Students raid the Princess."&#13;
Tuesday. Girls' Glee Club Concert.&#13;
"O you little Japanese!"&#13;
Saturday. Morningside takes second place in Coe&#13;
Conference Meet.&#13;
"Leuder makes new record."&#13;
Monday. Williams and Clark selected to manage&#13;
"Some team."&#13;
Wednesday. Maroons defeat Yankton in baseball.&#13;
"Poor Greyhounds."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside takes fifth place at the&#13;
State Meet.&#13;
"Not so bad."&#13;
Monday. Juniors entertain the Seniors.&#13;
"Who swiped the ice cream?"&#13;
Tuesday. Financial campaign finished.&#13;
"Who rang the Victory Bell?"&#13;
Thursday. Seniors take a hike.&#13;
"Gone, but not forgotten."&#13;
Saturday. Howard Allen elected Student Body&#13;
President.&#13;
"Congratulations, Hod."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
THE ungrudging&#13;
measure in which&#13;
the public has responded to our efforts&#13;
.... to the attractiveness and quality of&#13;
our merchandise has&#13;
been more than a&#13;
surprise; it has been&#13;
a revelation.&#13;
&#13;
A revelation of how&#13;
&#13;
unmistakably&#13;
clothes buyers register their appreciation&#13;
of a store that renders&#13;
them the genuine&#13;
service of giving&#13;
them a bigger money's worth.&#13;
"Kuppenheimer" Cloth es&#13;
Stetson " H ats&#13;
" Star" Shi1ts&#13;
" Superior" Union Suits&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. May D ay Festi val.&#13;
"Some Fete, believe me !"&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
F ri day. L orene W illi ams w ins G irls' T rack&#13;
Meet.&#13;
"Several records broken. "&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Frid ay. T he "Sioux ' 16" appears.&#13;
"Where's my A nnu al receipt ?"&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Sat urd ay. Philo up-ri ver tri p.&#13;
"Floatin ' down the rive r. "&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Coburn Pl ayers here.&#13;
" L ay on, M acDuff !"&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
T hursday. Philos present bust of R obert Burns&#13;
to library.&#13;
"Th at hel ps some."&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Sat urday. C ur ry elected track captai n.&#13;
"Success to yo u, W end ell !"&#13;
&#13;
7-12&#13;
&#13;
Mond ay to Saturd ay. F inal exams.&#13;
"Yea boo ! and then some."&#13;
&#13;
two hu ndred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Su nd ay. Baccalaureate Sermon.&#13;
" D id you thi nk seriously."&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Monday. Seniors give class play.&#13;
"Trelawney of the W ells."&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Alumni D ay.&#13;
"Glad to see the 'has-beens' again."&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Wed nesday. Graduation exercises.&#13;
"Sen iors begin- "&#13;
&#13;
two hu ndred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
·.'&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
College&#13;
Co-Eds&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. First day of school.&#13;
"Glad to see you back, old top."&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Registration.&#13;
"Which shall it be-history or economics,&#13;
biology or chem?"&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Y . M. Stag in Gym .&#13;
"Hicks, champion watermelon eater."&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Classes begin.&#13;
"Where does my class meet?"&#13;
"Usual number of chapel seats sold."&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Y . M. and Y. W . entertain at reception.&#13;
"Entertain is right!"&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Girls' societies elect.&#13;
"This suspense is awful."&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Facu lty R eception.&#13;
"Where did you get your dress suit?"&#13;
"Prof. Burton: 'Do you like this as well as&#13;
I do?'"&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Dr. Hilmer "sings a solo" in chapel.&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
-A store that's a veritable bower&#13;
of all that is new and authentic&#13;
in suits, coats and dresses&#13;
depicting the latest ideas&#13;
and interpretations of&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Class scrap. Sophs win.&#13;
"Padlocks, broken box cars, torn clothing."&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. "Book of Blues" introduced.&#13;
"Everybody feeling blue."&#13;
&#13;
faashion for the young&#13;
&#13;
college women.&#13;
-It's a Pelletier specialty to always secure the dashing, the&#13;
winning modes of the season particularly for milady in&#13;
college who is sure to demand apparel of distinction&#13;
-A visi t to our apparel section will wonderfully acquaint you with the&#13;
extensiveness and beautifulness of our always new displays.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
,O maha&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Co1nmission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
TOM DEALTRY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
9&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Pete's Candy Palace&#13;
Home of&#13;
Pete's Hand Rolled&#13;
Bitter S weets&#13;
&#13;
U DENTS&#13;
need of&#13;
ST Glasses willlin find our&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Optometrists competent eye&#13;
examiners and specialists in&#13;
fitting nose glasses. Ask&#13;
any of the thousands we&#13;
have fitted. All g lasses&#13;
made in our own shop.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Stationery Co.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Optical Co.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers, Wholesalers&#13;
and Importers&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Corner 5th and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Choicest Qualities in Confections&#13;
&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
New Martin Block&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Big "Pep" meeting, parade, and band.&#13;
" Beat Yankton! "&#13;
Saturday. Football season opens.&#13;
"Beat Yankton , 51-0."&#13;
Wednesday. Y. W. C. A. has tea in honor of Ida&#13;
Lewis.&#13;
" One of our successful grads."&#13;
Friday. Shumann Concert opens lecture course.&#13;
" Meanwhile, snipe hunt-two victims."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside loses to Iowa U ., 17-6.&#13;
"Iowa coach expressed himself freel y."&#13;
Monday. Accident to former Student Body&#13;
President.&#13;
"Boob Vernon pinched fo r speeding on&#13;
Chicago streets."&#13;
Wednesday. Prof. Harvey gives violin recital.&#13;
" He can make the fiddle talk. "&#13;
Friday. Freshmen have breakfast at South&#13;
Ravine.&#13;
"Who fell in the creek?"&#13;
Thursday. Lee Saltow and D orothy Gootch give&#13;
readings in chapel.&#13;
" Poor little shop-girl."&#13;
Friday. Prof. H arvey plays in chapel.&#13;
"Made a hit."&#13;
Saturday. Harold Fisher, Freshman student, dies.&#13;
Monday. Academy has wiener roast.&#13;
"Boys play football. "&#13;
Tuesday. Prof. Reistrup's pupils' recital.&#13;
" M ight y good."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside beats Nebraska Wesleyan, 6-0.&#13;
"Goodness, wasn't that fellow fat?"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Creations&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Women's and Misses'&#13;
Suits, Coats&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Afternoon Dresses&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Also&#13;
&#13;
Distributors&#13;
nf&#13;
&#13;
Smart College Footwear&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
Men and Women&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
12&#13;
13&#13;
15&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
The House of Quality, Style and Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
Monday. Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
"How the time did fly."&#13;
Tuesday. Kennedy speaks in chapel.&#13;
"A Man of Iron."&#13;
Thursday. Football team goes to Ames.&#13;
"We're right with you, fellows."&#13;
Friday. Mitchell wins Home Oratorical Contest.&#13;
"The Man of the Hour."&#13;
Friday. Several go to Ames.&#13;
"By freight and Fords-just part of the&#13;
way."&#13;
Saturday. Morningside loses to Ames. 6-0.&#13;
"Almost clicked them."&#13;
Tuesday. Prof. Reistrup gives recital.&#13;
"Where was all the crowd ?"&#13;
Friday. Send football team off.&#13;
"Go to it, gang."&#13;
Saturday. Dakota Wesleyan beats Morningside.&#13;
"It might have been worse."&#13;
Monday. Epworth League social at Craig's.&#13;
"John wants the long-necked one."&#13;
Friday. Pep meeting in chapel. .&#13;
"Everybody up. Old 'Ki Yi,' now!"&#13;
Saturday. Maroons win from State Teachers,&#13;
20-9.&#13;
"Guess we brought home the bacon that&#13;
time."&#13;
Monday. Miss Willmer, second number of&#13;
Lecture Course.&#13;
"The Sign of the Cross."&#13;
Tuesday. All ready for Thanksgiving vacation.&#13;
"Till we meet again."&#13;
Monday. Inter-society debate. Othos defeat&#13;
Philos.&#13;
" Noise."&#13;
Tuesday. Inter-society debate. Othos defeat&#13;
Ionians.&#13;
"Bad as Ladies' Aid Society."&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
England, Germany, Franee&#13;
Agree That&#13;
&#13;
LARSON'S&#13;
Have the best Groceries&#13;
in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
"Just off the Campus"&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON CO.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Inter-society debate. Ionians defeat Philos.&#13;
"That poor city manager."&#13;
Thursday. Academy inter-society debate.&#13;
2&#13;
Hawkeyes defeat Adelphians.&#13;
"Buehler gets excited."&#13;
4 Saturday. Y. M . and Y. W. party.&#13;
"We like that kind."&#13;
4 Saturday. Intercollegiate debaters chosen.&#13;
"Good lineup."&#13;
6 Monday. Letter men named.&#13;
"We are proud of them."&#13;
6 Monday. Sophs, Juniors and Seniors give parties.&#13;
"Some minstrel show."&#13;
7 Tuesday. Special Y. M . and Y. W . C. A.&#13;
meetings begin.&#13;
"Everybody interested."&#13;
8 Wednesday. Miss Woodford gives piano recital&#13;
in city library.&#13;
"Good interpretation."&#13;
9 Thursday. "Jons" elected captain of football&#13;
team.&#13;
"Wonder who he is."&#13;
14 Tuesday. Coach Saunderson entertains Varsity&#13;
squad.&#13;
"What's the matter w ith Coach? He's all&#13;
right!"&#13;
15 Wednesday. Christian Associations give party.&#13;
"Stock yards method of handling young&#13;
animals."&#13;
16-Jan. 5 Christmas Vacation.&#13;
"I want to go back to the farm."&#13;
&#13;
/ I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Students' Headquarters&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. School begins again.&#13;
" All ready fo r another spasm."&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Thursd ay. G lee Club retu rns from trip.&#13;
"W ho wrote that Black H and letter?"&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. F reshmen give a real party.&#13;
" Backward, 0 backward, turn time in your&#13;
flight,&#13;
And make me a Freshie again for tonight."&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
We have everything in Kodaks and Supplies. An&#13;
Autographic Kodak and our Finishing Department will keep that college diary perfect.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy .&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
E . K . BARNEY,&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
F riday. Dr. Craig talks on " Exams."&#13;
" Begin to feel nervous alread y.'.'&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Men's G lee Cl ub gives H ome Concert.&#13;
" Bingville Musical Uplift Society featu res."&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Our large w ell filled candy case and our perfect&#13;
fountain service are irresistible attractions.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. G irls' basketball series begins.&#13;
"Williams and Curry are favored ones."&#13;
&#13;
Friday. C oncert number on Lectu re Course.&#13;
"Were you there ?"&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Bean Shower.&#13;
" Naughty boys."&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
2 5-28&#13;
&#13;
Prop.&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
two hundred thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I ' '&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
',&#13;
&#13;
Examinations.&#13;
" I guess not cram."&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. P ost-Exam Agora J ubilee.&#13;
" Big Fair, the feature."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Reach Her Heart Through a Box of&#13;
&#13;
La Fama Chocolates&#13;
"a matter of good taste"&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Co.&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Basketball series for men begins.&#13;
"Sophomores show class."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Special meetings begin at Grace&#13;
Church. Henry Ostrom the evangelist.&#13;
"Many students in choir."&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Dr. Hough, of Garrett Institute, here.&#13;
"Excellent chapel talk."&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Trustees of college hold executive&#13;
meeting.&#13;
"Janitor, the cause of interruption."&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Grace Church men give banquet.&#13;
"Mayor Smith and Lieutenant-Governor&#13;
Harding speak."&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Curry wins the Monument Run. Van&#13;
Horne second.&#13;
"And they were both Juniors, too."&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday. Philos and Athenaeums present "His&#13;
Uncle John."&#13;
"Orchestra features ."&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Friday. Annual Men's Banquet.&#13;
"Clearing house for latest war news."&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Girls' triangular debate with Huron&#13;
and Vermillion. We win both.&#13;
"Fifteen Rahs for the girls!"&#13;
&#13;
Where Quality is Supreme&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Most Popular H otel&#13;
&#13;
Modern in every respect. 230 rooms, 140 with private&#13;
bath. Cafes unsurpassed and our metropolitan quick&#13;
lunch room with prices to meet all, sanitary and up to&#13;
the standard set by the West Hotel.&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL COMPANY, P ROPS.&#13;
Jay MacLarty, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
Frank J . Donohoe, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-one&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
Wholesalers and Retailers of Sweet Cream, Milk&#13;
and Lactone Buttermilk&#13;
Our Cream is Served at Morningside Pharmacy and Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
&#13;
707 FIFTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C. Lees&#13;
Tennis, Golf, Baseball Goods&#13;
Fishing Tackle, Vacuum Bollles, A ulo Lunch Kits&#13;
&#13;
Orcutts Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Camp&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
312-15&#13;
Nebraska St.&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Agora Banquet. Seniors win the cup.&#13;
"Waiters devour left-overs."&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Glee Club sings for Older Boys' Conference at Martin.&#13;
"Heap big music."&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Klippel wins Dewey Oratorical&#13;
Contest.&#13;
"Congratulations, Ruby!"&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Outdoors, Afield and Afloat&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Freshman girls organize Dais Club.&#13;
"Ruth Mahood elected president."&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Friday. St. Patrick's Day. Men defeat St. Olaf&#13;
and Dakota Wesleyan in debate.&#13;
"Follow example set by girls."&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday. Girls' number of Collegian&#13;
Reporter appears.&#13;
"Good work, girls."&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
Thursday. Engagement announced. Wonder&#13;
who it can be. · Guess !-you're right.&#13;
"I must save enough to buy a dining room&#13;
chair."&#13;
Friday. Spring vacation begins.&#13;
"No rest for the wicked" ( Annual Board) .&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Klippel wins second in State Prohibition Contest&#13;
at Cornell.&#13;
"What became of that medal, Casey?"&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Fourth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Checking and Savings&#13;
Accounts Solicited&#13;
&#13;
Saturday. Sioux City High wins high school&#13;
basketball tournament.&#13;
"Whiting-the dark horse."&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
First National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete&#13;
stock of building material in&#13;
the city.&#13;
Do not fail to let us figure&#13;
your lumber bill.&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE M. JORDAN, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
$720,000.00&#13;
&#13;
Phones : Auto I 065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-thre e&#13;
&#13;
Class Pins&#13;
&#13;
Medals&#13;
&#13;
Emblems&#13;
&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing&#13;
&#13;
Jonas Olson &amp; Co.&#13;
Established 1895&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturing Jewelers and&#13;
Diamond Mounters&#13;
Auto Phone 3211&#13;
&#13;
5 10 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Get Your&#13;
&#13;
Graduation Flowers and&#13;
Gifts&#13;
From&#13;
&#13;
The College Book Store&#13;
G. T. Pendell, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
New Cars&#13;
Auto&#13;
Livery&#13;
Your Service&#13;
RAY DARLING, Prop.&#13;
at&#13;
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MORNINGSIDE GARAGE&#13;
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GALINSKY BROS. COMPANY&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
QUALITY- The Highest&#13;
PRICES-The Lowest&#13;
SER VICE- The Promptest&#13;
GOODS-The Freshest&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
Heard at the Men's&#13;
&#13;
YOUR MONEY-Where do you keep it?&#13;
Many years ago people were in the habit of keeping large sums of money&#13;
around the house, and as a consequence frequently suffered heavy losses.&#13;
Now-a-days the man or woman who does not have a bank account is the&#13;
exception.&#13;
Nearly 10,000 people have accounts with us at the present time and we extend to you a hearty invitation to join our army of savers.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK&#13;
SECURITY BANK BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ills.&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
East Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS&#13;
&#13;
South St. Joseph, Mo.&#13;
South St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
Fort Worth, Tex.&#13;
El Paso, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
D enver, Colo.&#13;
South Omaha, Neb.&#13;
East St. Louis, Ills.&#13;
&#13;
Banquet&#13;
&#13;
Latest war news-General Buehler's forces routed at Fort Cooper.&#13;
Say, Cooper, are your hands Chapin?&#13;
Say, is Lida still taking "Gym"?&#13;
Listen, Bernice can't keep the Wulf from the door.&#13;
What's Casey's birthstone? A Ruby.&#13;
Miss Wilson has a little Stile.&#13;
"Al" Hornney says Marion Isabel.&#13;
&#13;
If Carson got a light, would Miss Dimmitt?&#13;
Freshies, if Ed na Smith was hungry, would " Fish" bite?&#13;
If Rusty caught any snipes, would "Chuck" Fry them? No, "Deak" Sherwood.&#13;
If the Sophs had a goat, would it eat Hay?&#13;
Say, Sophs, w ill Down ever get Wolle?&#13;
Hey, the toastmaster wants to hold a Schmoker after the feed. Where will he put&#13;
the cigar stubs? In his trunk.&#13;
If Schmoker couldn't walk, could "Hod-carrier"?&#13;
Where is Miss Brand? Being Ha(y)zed.&#13;
&#13;
Clay, Robinson &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
0 Claire, where is Irene? Can't you Cooper?&#13;
Just now a Freshman would have to climb on the dresser to see himself in the&#13;
mirror.&#13;
The seniors can cross the English Channel. Why? The Germans don't consider&#13;
squirrel food contraband.&#13;
Academy-Let's ·hear from the Faculty? Seniors-Can't you hear them eating?&#13;
Say Otis, what part of an apple do you like? The Corr.&#13;
Is Hayes a union man? Yes, he always looks for the Brand.&#13;
We heard that " Bill" Williams made a strike about Bowling.&#13;
\Vhere will Madison wear his Beard when he's married?&#13;
&#13;
On his arm.&#13;
&#13;
What would "Al" Hornney do, if he Met (a) calf ?&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
two hundred forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
MR. AMBITIOUS STUDENT:&#13;
We are concerned about you. Even now you are buying&#13;
our merchandise, (Standard Old Line Policy Contracts). We are&#13;
the largest Company ever organized in Iowa. Our Company&#13;
is growing, we are selling more business, and we are employing constantly the best brains and ability we can find.&#13;
Make an early visit to our Home Office. Look over a better plant. Know about our 20-Pay Preferred Policy. It is the&#13;
most desirable to buy and the easiest on earth to sell.&#13;
Truly, we are interested in you Mr. Ambitious Student, you&#13;
mean much to us and our Company is prepared to mean much&#13;
indeed to you.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
&#13;
National Fidelity Life Insurance Campany&#13;
OF IOWA&#13;
RALPH H. RICE, President&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, U. S . A.&#13;
&#13;
Olympia&#13;
The finest line of&#13;
&#13;
Candies, Sundaes, Ices and Fruits&#13;
in the city&#13;
&#13;
TRY OUR LUNCHEONETTES&#13;
&#13;
OLYMPIA CANDY CO.&#13;
5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
&#13;
P. S . Simply do not buy Life Insurance or e mploy your services, until you know our proposition&#13;
&#13;
Heard at the Agora Banquet&#13;
Does "Jimmy" Hayes smoke?&#13;
&#13;
No, but he knows a good Brand.&#13;
&#13;
WHERE TO SELL YOUR RANGERS&#13;
&#13;
Why shou ld "Kill y" live in the South? He loves a Blackman.&#13;
Mary had a little lamb, but Bernice has a Wulf.&#13;
&#13;
If "Hod" had a pipe, wou ld Cecil Schmoker?&#13;
What school does Clara Swain like next to Morningside?&#13;
Will Alice Thornburg ever be broke?&#13;
&#13;
Don't Overlook Sioux City Market&#13;
Princeton.&#13;
&#13;
No, she'll always have a "Penny."&#13;
&#13;
Should think Marion Heikes would get lost this year without any Leuder.&#13;
What is Earl Williams' favorite sport? Bowling.&#13;
&#13;
this year when disposing of your RANGE CATTLE or SHEEP.&#13;
Have a firm with a reputation sell your stock. We also make a&#13;
specialty of buying stock on order, and guarantee satisfaction on&#13;
every car we buy. Write us or wire us at any time, and you will&#13;
have prompt attention.&#13;
&#13;
The only reason that the Seniors make so much n01se 1s that they have a Horn.&#13;
If Martina ran, would Harry Fowler?&#13;
&#13;
If G ladys had a pony, would Wendell Curry it?&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
Why doesn't Sibyl Ausman need a flash light ? She has a Ray all her own.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
Where is John Madison's Beard?&#13;
&#13;
STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
Kewpie, Lovice thou me?&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-on e&#13;
&#13;
HearthePATHE PHONE&#13;
at ANDERSON'S&#13;
&#13;
Did you "Flunk" in&#13;
that last exam?&#13;
NO- because you believed&#13;
in preparedness&#13;
PREPAREDNESS for later&#13;
life will include a bank account&#13;
Now is the time to start one&#13;
We have an interesting plan of&#13;
SAVING /or students&#13;
&#13;
d&#13;
Anderson's&#13;
&#13;
New Stock of New Home&#13;
Furnishings is Bigger and&#13;
Better than ever.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
S. E. Cor. 4th and Jackson Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Did you ever stop to think&#13;
how comfortably your new GYM. is heated by&#13;
the Webster Modulation System installed by&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAYES CO.?&#13;
PETERS &amp; HARRINGTON&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDE REAL ESTATE MEN&#13;
Houses, Lots and City Property&#13;
&#13;
Farm Lands and Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Office at Peters Park Station&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6464&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-thr ee&#13;
&#13;
Lindholm Furniture Co.&#13;
Homes Furnished thruout&#13;
&#13;
Take advantage of our Parcel Post Delivery and you&#13;
will have the same service as if living in the City&#13;
&#13;
Hamilton Soft Water Laundry&#13;
DYERS AND DRY CLEANERS&#13;
&#13;
513-15-17 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
412-14-16 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
Hats Cleaned and Blocked&#13;
615 PEARL&#13;
&#13;
It's an Established Fact&#13;
That good Jewelry is to be&#13;
found at the Store of the&#13;
&#13;
WillH. Beck Company&#13;
Established in 1877 and maintaining&#13;
a policy during these years which&#13;
now bespeaks for itself.&#13;
&#13;
Convenient Office 404 Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Who bought the beans?&#13;
Who stacked the Petty girls' rooms?&#13;
Who hugged the janitor after a meeting of the annual board?&#13;
? ? ? ? Claire Cooper and Irene Chapin ? ? ? ?&#13;
"what Ewart was thinking about when he paid fifty cents admission to the Hawkeye-Adelphian debate?&#13;
What was wrong with "Anna" Held's feet one morning?&#13;
When "Al" and Marion study?&#13;
Why "N orty" likes to spend his vacant periods on the third floor?&#13;
What leap-year girl tried to make dates with Earl Barks?&#13;
How Bernice liked her Christmas present?&#13;
Why "Shoey" stays in Morningside?&#13;
Where Fred Appel spends Saturday afternoons and evenings?&#13;
The Socialists' Club.&#13;
Some of the college news in the Journal.&#13;
Addenda To The Calender.&#13;
March 24-Friday. Vacation begins. Great exodus.&#13;
25-Saturday. Ewart "stays to study Economics," i. e., Home Economics.&#13;
Mitchell, "Casey", and Hugh Fouke have leap-year dates out at East&#13;
End, Cypress St., and vainly endeavor to recover the ice-cream.&#13;
&#13;
Service Courtesy Safety Convenience&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
E. L. KIRK, Gen'l Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
I stole a kiss the other night.&#13;
My conscience hurts, alack;&#13;
I think I'll go again tonight&#13;
And put the blamed thing back.&#13;
Student desirous of a fine evening for a picnic supper calls up the weather bureauHow about a shower tonight?&#13;
Reply-Don't ask me. If you need one, take it.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fifty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
During your years at college, you aren't forgetting the comfort&#13;
and welfare of the folks at home. There's one way especially in&#13;
which you can help.&#13;
Give them your best suggestions when they build a new home&#13;
or remodel the old one.&#13;
You've seen enough modern homes to know how important is&#13;
good wood work. The doors, windows, cabinet work, stair work&#13;
are before you every-day. They must be wisely selected if the&#13;
home is to be satisfactory.&#13;
Curtis Woodwork is made in all the .modern designs. And&#13;
Curtis Woodwork is so carefully made of selected material that it&#13;
is known as the permanent furniture for the home.&#13;
&#13;
Curtis&#13;
&#13;
BRINK'S MEAT MARKET&#13;
We Supply the L eading Boarding H ouses of&#13;
Morningside with all kinds of Fresh M eats&#13;
Phone us your Order and our Delivery will reach you Promptly&#13;
&#13;
Your home lumber dealer has the Curtis&#13;
Catalog. Ask him to show it to you.&#13;
&#13;
WOODWORK&#13;
"the PermanentFurniture for your home"&#13;
&#13;
Curtis Sash &amp; Door Co.&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
T hat Cora thi nks H ay stole the ice cream because Nola wasn't invited to the&#13;
party.&#13;
T hat Ewart's t ru nk was on L ehman's porch the fi rst morning of spring vacation&#13;
week.&#13;
That Carson was going to care fo r a misplaced eyebrow d uring vacation.&#13;
That Cora publicly thanked H arry Hartley for carrying that bouquet up to her.&#13;
That the back door of the Main Hall has been kept locked all year.&#13;
That "Casey" K lippel is in the habit of spending his vacations at a certain lit tle&#13;
tow n on the Milwaukee, not many miles away.&#13;
That "Al" H ornney has a pretty soft snap, riding around in that big brown car.&#13;
That we are not trying to run opposition to the "Sandburr Man."&#13;
&#13;
O f all sad words of tongue or pen,&#13;
For w hich we pay good money,&#13;
The saddest is the A nnual dope,&#13;
W hen the writer thinks it's fu nny.&#13;
&#13;
Firestone Tires&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Queal Co.&#13;
LUMBER&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
DID Y O U KNOW&#13;
&#13;
When stepping out at night alone&#13;
A girl should t ake a chaperone,&#13;
U ntil in times to come&#13;
She calls some chap-'er-own.&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6284&#13;
&#13;
Automobile&#13;
Accessories ·&#13;
&#13;
Oak Flooring&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
For All M akes of Cars&#13;
&#13;
WM. WARNOCK CO.&#13;
&#13;
J. H.Queal Co.&#13;
&#13;
607-9-11 D ouglas St.&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Iowa Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Delicious&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
For the Educated T aste&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
two hundred fift y-eight&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
Correct Dress for Women&#13;
Exclusive Ladies' Suits, Coats, Furs, Waists, Muslin&#13;
Underwear, Corsets and Millinery&#13;
&#13;
S/0 UX CITY'S MOST APPRECIATED STORE&#13;
509- 11 - 13 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Peters&#13;
p ark Grocery&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Qua lity is Our Motto&#13;
-Exclusive agent in M o rningsid e&#13;
for the Woolson Spice Co.' s&#13;
line of&#13;
&#13;
Teas, Coffees and Spices&#13;
Five Different Blends&#13;
&#13;
Have You Seen&#13;
Our Idea Factory?&#13;
Probably not.&#13;
results of it in&#13;
work, and you&#13;
of our shop is&#13;
and high class&#13;
&#13;
But you have seen the&#13;
the printing of col lege&#13;
know that the imprint&#13;
the guaranty of novel&#13;
workmanship.&#13;
&#13;
INTERSTATE PUBLISHING COMPANY&#13;
THE LEADE S&#13;
R TATIONE STORE&#13;
RY&#13;
.-" GO NORTH."&#13;
&#13;
of Coffee&#13;
&#13;
0 NE FOR YOU&#13;
&#13;
INT HE STEADY GROWTH AND SUBSTANTIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SUBURB&#13;
We ar e indeed glad to be a live factor. From the day our Bank opened for business,&#13;
nearly three years ago, we have endeavored to keep in touch with and assist in every&#13;
way p ossible along conservative lines in the upbuilding and advancement of Morningside a nd the adjacent farming community. We are especia ll y grateful to the College&#13;
Faculty and Students for t he business entrusted to us, and sha ll always use our best&#13;
efforts in the handling of their accounts.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
E. C. PETERS, Pres.&#13;
C. J. MILLIGAN&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY $100,000.00&#13;
GEO. E. WARD, V. Pres.&#13;
W. L. AYERS, Asst. Cash.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN SCOTT,JR., Cash.&#13;
C. W. PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
WHO'S WHO&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-on e&#13;
&#13;
"Could anyone in the class tell me the technical name for snoring?"&#13;
Wise One-"Yeah, sheet music."&#13;
&#13;
VISITING TEAMS&#13;
WELCOMED&#13;
&#13;
"Mr. DeWalt, who are your favorite presidents?"&#13;
Sappy-"Jackson and Jefferson."&#13;
Hayes in class, reading roll for the firs t time-"Kathryn Leazie? I don't believe&#13;
I know her."&#13;
Kathryn Leazer-"I believe you would if you were to change my name."&#13;
&#13;
Archie Freeman-"Miss Walker has cut off a little patch of hair on the top of her&#13;
head."&#13;
Other Boarders-"How do you know?"&#13;
Archie-"Why, I felt of the place."&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
the Martin Hotel&#13;
ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF&#13;
&#13;
Ewart Williams threatens to wear sideburns.&#13;
Minnie Fry-"0, don't do that !"&#13;
Ewart-"Why not ?"&#13;
Minnie-"Because they always feel so funny."&#13;
&#13;
G. ADOLPH OLSON, Pres. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
THE OLSON&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CIT Y, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 Pearl Street, SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Only Exclusive Sporting Goods Store&#13;
ALWAYS READY TO SUPPLY&#13;
&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Parties&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the Sportsman and Athlete&#13;
FACTORY REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
&#13;
A. S. Reach Co., P. Goldsmith's Sons&#13;
&#13;
AGENTS&#13;
&#13;
A. G. Spalding &amp; Bros.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
When Ordering Flowers&#13;
Remember Elder's&#13;
&#13;
Why&#13;
Because they are&#13;
&#13;
Distinctive and&#13;
Best&#13;
Corsage Bouquets and&#13;
Commencement&#13;
F lowers&#13;
Put up in the Latest Flower Fashion&#13;
&#13;
J. R. ELD ER&#13;
512 5th St.&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILV ER&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Tops&#13;
Cushions and&#13;
Upholstery&#13;
Manufactured and Repaired&#13;
JOBB E RS OF&#13;
&#13;
HEAVY HARDWARE&#13;
Blacksmith, M echanics and&#13;
Garage Supplies&#13;
Automobile Accessories&#13;
Implement Specialties&#13;
&#13;
THE SI OUX CI TY&#13;
IRON COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Residence Phone 6268&#13;
Shop Phone 6306&#13;
Res. Phone No. 4217 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Full Line in followin g Departments&#13;
&#13;
Grocery Dep 't&#13;
Meat Dep't&#13;
D ry Goods D ep't&#13;
Shoe and Rubber Dep 't&#13;
Hardware Dep't&#13;
Paint Dep't&#13;
Feed and Fuel Dep 't&#13;
&#13;
DIAMON DS&#13;
Your money put in a D iamond would be one of the most satisfactory&#13;
investments you could make.&#13;
You can have t he pleasure of wearing the gem and the satisfaction of&#13;
k now ing that its value is increasing.&#13;
We are offering beautiful, pure white and steel-blue Diamonds at extremely low prices.&#13;
Then buy of a firm that is worthy of y our confidence&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; COMPANY&#13;
509 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
UNCLAS SIFIED&#13;
The following are not exactly jokes but we didn't know where else to put them&#13;
so here they are. Anyhow this list w ill help you to remember Who was Whose&#13;
away back in 1915-16. If you consider them as jokes, remember that C hurchill said,&#13;
"A joke is a very serious thing," and that some of those listed here think the same.&#13;
Prof. Hayes and Miss Brand.&#13;
Prof. Macmillan and Miss Greene.&#13;
"Casey" an d Ruby.&#13;
" F ish" a nd Edna.&#13;
Claire and Irene.&#13;
(After G rey left. )&#13;
"Bill" a nd Marie.&#13;
Curry and G ladys.&#13;
Ray a nd Sibyl.&#13;
*David and Pauline.&#13;
" Hod" and Cecil.&#13;
John and Anna.&#13;
John and Marie.&#13;
Lee and Hazel.&#13;
"R usty" a nd Minnie.&#13;
Glen and Lila.&#13;
&#13;
"J im" and Lida.&#13;
"Kewpie" and Lov ice.&#13;
Ewart and Lois.&#13;
*Louie and Loren e.&#13;
" A lfal fa" and Nola.&#13;
" A l" and Marion.&#13;
*W ulf and Bernice.&#13;
" A rt" and Winnifred.&#13;
*Mitchell and Cora.&#13;
" Ki lly" and R uth.&#13;
" Ch uck" Fry and Ruth Reid.&#13;
I rw in and one of the tw ins.&#13;
*Stiles and Nellie.&#13;
Stoneb rook and Grace.&#13;
*"Bog ie" and M y rtle.&#13;
G len and Mary.&#13;
&#13;
*Considered&#13;
as jokes in order to p lace this list in the joke department.&#13;
fully cor rected.&#13;
&#13;
A ny m istakes cheer-&#13;
&#13;
All Work Guaranteed&#13;
&#13;
Hartley L. Larson&#13;
Successor to Piper &amp; Larson&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
&#13;
THE WAY GIRLS D ECLINE "HIC"&#13;
Hie, Haec, H oc,&#13;
Hug us, Hug us, H ug us,&#13;
Q uick, Quick, Quick.&#13;
&#13;
All goods sold at prices to meet city&#13;
compet1t1on.&#13;
Please Don 't Forget Our Numbers&#13;
4 Phones.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 670 and 671&#13;
Auto 6912 and 6911&#13;
&#13;
4102-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
MORNI NGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
There was once a Chinaman, Ching,&#13;
Fell off a street car, Bing Bing,&#13;
The "con" t urned his head,&#13;
And to the passengers said ,&#13;
The car's lost a washer, Ding, Ding.&#13;
&#13;
two h undred six ty -fiv e&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dutton-"I&#13;
arm. "&#13;
P rof. Marsh-"I&#13;
be cracked."&#13;
&#13;
didn't know t ill last night that Mitchell was paralyzed in one&#13;
&#13;
Why&#13;
&#13;
can see how, if the speakers were especially nutty, that they might&#13;
&#13;
Ewar t W illiams-"When I sit next t o you w hile you are wearing that big hat, it&#13;
seems like being under an umbrella."&#13;
R uth Smith- " But you are not supposed to get under it."&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
You Should Insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand&#13;
&#13;
A Freshman hesitates on the word, "connoisseur."&#13;
P rof.-"What would you call a man who pretends t o know everything?"&#13;
Freshman-"A professor. "&#13;
&#13;
Food Products&#13;
&#13;
"Leon, did you ever hear of a mermaid?"&#13;
Leon-"Yes, sir."&#13;
&#13;
Look for the Rose on&#13;
Every Package&#13;
&#13;
"Well, could you tell me w ho t he suitors of the mermaids are?"&#13;
L eon-"Well, I don't know unless they are the swells of the sea."&#13;
"Well, Hod, you have been keepin' pretty late hours lately."&#13;
Hod-" I would rather keep a few than lose out entirely."&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Auto Supply Co.&#13;
DISTR IBUTO RS OF&#13;
&#13;
WHITE AND HALLADAY&#13;
PLEASURE CARS&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
4541&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Supplies&#13;
&#13;
The Reason is This Superb Brand . is the result of&#13;
many years of persistent effort&#13;
to assemble under one Brand&#13;
a complete line of Food Products of the very highest quality&#13;
at the most reasonable pnces&#13;
You always get the best w hen y ou insist on&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
416&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand Food Products&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
&#13;
Fire Proof Garage&#13;
&#13;
Open Day and Night&#13;
&#13;
Six th and N ebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
Tolerton &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade.&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
Any Style&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRICK&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
&#13;
Visit our Tea Room, the Most Popular Place in&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
&#13;
Two Stores&#13;
&#13;
The Practicability and stability of brick-its value as an investment-as a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever. Thoughts&#13;
concerning these matters we would like to submit for consideration&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Brick &amp; 'Tile Co.&#13;
&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Two fleas were in ·conversation, when one said to the other, "You're looking fine ,&#13;
you must have been on a vacation."&#13;
"Not much," responded the other, "I've been on a bum for two weeks."&#13;
&#13;
It has been said of our good friend, John Madison, that he is such a good talker&#13;
that he can start his mouth going in a chapel talk and then walk off and leave it.&#13;
&#13;
Office and Display Room, No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
"Where Quality is as Represented"&#13;
&#13;
Rastus was the man who kept the court records for the judge. He didn't have&#13;
any books but remembered all the court proceedings. If at any time the judge wanted&#13;
to know anything about what had happened on a certain day, all he had to do was&#13;
ask Rastus. One day the devil appeared before the judge and told him that he wanted&#13;
Rastus. The judge objected, "Why, I couldn't find another man with a memory&#13;
&#13;
HEADINGTON&#13;
HEDENBERGH&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Oscar&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Hoberg&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
such as Rastus has."&#13;
"I just want to try his memory, if you don't mind."&#13;
The judge consented, so the devil went to Rastus and asked, "Do you like eggs?"&#13;
"Yessah," said Rastus.&#13;
Thirty years later Rastus, now old and gray, was running the lawn mower over&#13;
the lawn. The devil crept up behind him and learning over his shoulder asked,&#13;
"How?"&#13;
Apparently not noticing the questioner Rastus promptly answered, "Fried, Sir,"&#13;
and went on with his work.&#13;
The devil gave up.&#13;
&#13;
410 PIERCE STREET&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Mah hair in de middle am parted, and&#13;
Yo' hair on yo' haid am departed.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
Exclusive Things&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
FRUITS and&#13;
PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
Mother-"When you were in the hammock with that young man didn't I see&#13;
his arm around you?"&#13;
Daughter-"Why, Mother, both of us couldn't sit in the hammock without squeezing a little."&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Clothiers&#13;
We carry a complete line&#13;
of Up-to-Date Clothing&#13;
Furnishing Goods, Shoes&#13;
Trunks and Valises at&#13;
very lowest prices.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
Ten per cent discount to Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Mother for&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
and Students of College&#13;
&#13;
MOTHER'S and NATURE'S MEAL BREAD&#13;
&#13;
Standard Clothing Co.&#13;
&#13;
Out of Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
Successors to&#13;
&#13;
Our Customers are Our Best Reference&#13;
Auto Phone 119 7&#13;
Bell Phone 19 7&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson&#13;
&#13;
408-4 10 Iowa Street&#13;
&#13;
If you are looking for&#13;
&#13;
Service and Quality&#13;
Call both Phones 25 12&#13;
&#13;
7:0-712 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
3 10 Pierce Street&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Phone us your Coal Order&#13;
W e will take care of you&#13;
when the time comes&#13;
Good Coal, Good Measure and&#13;
Good Service&#13;
&#13;
The H. E. Haakinson Coal Co.&#13;
200 United Bank Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2174&#13;
&#13;
A. F. Jensen&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 572&#13;
&#13;
H. A. Morrill&#13;
&#13;
PATTON &amp; SMITH&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6136&#13;
&#13;
Schoeneman-Jensen&#13;
Lumber Co.&#13;
&#13;
Leading Morningside Real&#13;
Estate Dealers&#13;
OFFICE AT PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Moningside Agency for INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
MOUNTING ANNUAL PICTURES&#13;
&#13;
two hundred sev enty&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
125 Rooms-Forty with bath&#13;
&#13;
European Plan&#13;
&#13;
Cafe in Connection&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
New Lunch Room Recently Installed&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
Corner Fifth and Jackson&#13;
&#13;
MAKE A START&#13;
T hese t hree w ord s a re t he in itiative to success in business. You w ill nev er have a&#13;
bank account if you d o not make a sta rt. D o not wait until you hav e a ny large amount,&#13;
but start now or nex t pay-d ay.&#13;
There are several good r easons why you should commence a t once&#13;
The sooner you begin, the sooner you w ill h ave a capital of your own.&#13;
2. If you r money is in t he bank, it w ill not be stolen or dest royed.&#13;
3. When it is in the bank it is earn ing someth ing and inc reasin g itself.&#13;
START NOW&#13;
WE PAY 4 % ON SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL NATIONAL BANK&#13;
IOWA BU ILDING&#13;
&#13;
A Se rvice Augmented thro ugh Y ea rs of Experience&#13;
&#13;
Located in New Theatre Building&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
F R ED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
R eciprocity Stimulates Cordiality&#13;
&#13;
Absolutely Sanitary&#13;
&#13;
Nolen Laundry Co.&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
The Place for Quality&#13;
and Right Prices&#13;
PETE RS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Graceland Park Cemetery&#13;
PERPETUAL CARE&#13;
&#13;
See our College Agent&#13;
Phones 1638- 333&#13;
&#13;
E . C . PETERS , Pres.&#13;
&#13;
A . T. BEN NETT , V.-Pres.&#13;
&#13;
When&#13;
&#13;
YOU GET HUNGRY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber&#13;
Shop&#13;
&#13;
Try&#13;
&#13;
PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
Two doors south of Peters Park Station&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Under Dierking's Market&#13;
&#13;
Refined Photo Plays&#13;
&#13;
Our commutation tickets at a discount&#13;
are economical&#13;
&#13;
When you want&#13;
&#13;
Any Kind of an Instrument&#13;
to play MUSIC on&#13;
&#13;
Park Theatre&#13;
10c&#13;
&#13;
5c&#13;
&#13;
Weekly Features&#13;
&#13;
or any kind of Music to play&#13;
on the INSTRU MENT&#13;
&#13;
'There's a Music Store in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Aton Music Company&#13;
508 5th&#13;
&#13;
A UTO 3934&#13;
&#13;
Scene at G raceland Cemetery&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-thre&#13;
&#13;
125 Rooms- Forty with bath&#13;
&#13;
European Plan&#13;
&#13;
Cafe in Connection&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
New Lunch Room Recently Installed&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
Corner Fifth and J ackson&#13;
&#13;
MAKE A START&#13;
These t h ree word s are the initiative to success in business. You will never have a&#13;
bank account if you do not make a start. Do not wait until you have any large amount,&#13;
but start now or next pay -day.&#13;
The re are several good reasons why you should commence at once:1. T he soon er you begi n, t he sooner you will h ave a capital of your own.&#13;
2. If you r money is in the bank, it will not be stolen or dest royed.&#13;
3. When it is in the ba nk it is ea rning someth ing and increasing itself.&#13;
START NOW&#13;
WE PAY 4 % ON SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL NATIONAL BANK&#13;
IO WA BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
A Service Au gmented through Years of E xperience&#13;
&#13;
Located in New Theatre Building&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
FRED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
R eciprocity Stim ulates Cordiality&#13;
&#13;
A bsolutely Sanitary&#13;
&#13;
Nolen Laundry Co.&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
The Place f or Quality and Right Prices&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Graceland Park Cemetery&#13;
PERPETUAL CARE&#13;
&#13;
See our College Agent&#13;
Phones 1638- 333&#13;
&#13;
E. C. PETERS, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
A. T . BENNETT, V.-Pres.&#13;
&#13;
When&#13;
&#13;
YOU GET HUNGRY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber&#13;
&#13;
Try&#13;
&#13;
Shop&#13;
&#13;
PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
Two doors south of Peters Park Station&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Under Dierking's Market&#13;
&#13;
Our commutation tickets at a discount&#13;
are economical&#13;
&#13;
When you want&#13;
&#13;
Refined Photo Plays&#13;
&#13;
Any Kind of an I nstrument&#13;
&#13;
Park Theatre&#13;
&#13;
or any kind of Music to play&#13;
&#13;
to play MUSIC on&#13;
&#13;
10c&#13;
&#13;
Sc&#13;
&#13;
Weekly Features&#13;
&#13;
on the INSTRUMENT&#13;
&#13;
There's a Music Storein Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
AtonMusic Company&#13;
508 5th&#13;
&#13;
A UTO 3934&#13;
&#13;
Scene at Graceland Cemetery&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL . WOOD WORKS&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
Bank, Store, Office Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
Our Motto is Quality&#13;
507-509-511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
SUPERIOR&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
The College Drinks&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman's Beverages&#13;
&#13;
"The Big White Shed"&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
Old Phone 1995&#13;
&#13;
"Out of the High Rent District"&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON &amp;COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Beller&#13;
&#13;
Tail ors, Clothiers, Hatters&#13;
and Men's Furnishers ·&#13;
&#13;
Than Soda Fountain&#13;
&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Drinks&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 245&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1864&#13;
&#13;
SUCCESSORS TO&#13;
&#13;
Hutchinson's Retail Bakery-Luncheonette&#13;
French Pastry&#13;
Luncheonette De Luxe&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CLASS SCRAP&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
The Home Market for the Northwest&#13;
&#13;
See how the business 1s&#13;
conducted at a large market&#13;
STUDENTS will be given a cordial welcome at any time. Special&#13;
effort will be made to see that every moment of your time spent at&#13;
the yards will be "full of interest".&#13;
&#13;
Sioux ,City Stock Yards&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
FRESH CUT FLOWERS-All kinds of floral emblems made up by us. We&#13;
know how. American Beauties, Roses and Carnations always on hand. Positively&#13;
the finest and largest display in town. Our prices are right.&#13;
&#13;
ROCKLIN&#13;
&#13;
&amp; LEHMAN&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
NEW STORE:&#13;
&#13;
402 Fourth Street; one of the Finest in the West.&#13;
&#13;
Auto 4199-3112; Iowa 3112&#13;
&#13;
GET YOUR EATS&#13;
&#13;
Clyde E. Reynolds&#13;
&#13;
From&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
MIKE &amp; BEN CO.&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
High Class Groceries&#13;
and Meats&#13;
" JUST AROUND THE CORNER"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
&#13;
Kodak Developing and Printing&#13;
of Pictures in this Annual by Us&#13;
We guarantee you the best possible&#13;
results from your negatives. Our&#13;
department is complete and strictly&#13;
modern in every particular. W e are&#13;
&#13;
exclusive dealers in Kodaks and&#13;
Kodak Supplies&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
608 PIERCE STREET&#13;
New D avidson Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Man (to cyclist) - "Your beacon has ceased its function."&#13;
Cyclist-"What I?-"&#13;
"Your illuminator is shrouded in unmitigated oblivion."&#13;
"I don't-"&#13;
"The effulgence of your irradiator has evanesced."&#13;
"Well, I-"&#13;
"The transverse ether vibrations in you r incandescencer have been discounted."&#13;
Just then a kid yelled, "Hey, mister, your lamp is out."&#13;
Which threw light on the situation."&#13;
Rosene expressed the wish the other day that he might die with his boots on. The&#13;
only reason we can conceive for so doing is that he wants to be prepared against&#13;
stubbing his toe when he kicks the bucket.&#13;
When Eleanor Winkelman was a little girl her teacher asked her where the diamond, the purest form of carbon, w as found. Eleanor looked up knowingly and said,&#13;
"On the third fi nger of the left hand."&#13;
Of course it has turned out that way.&#13;
Customer, at the Park Restaurant-"Have you any tongue?"&#13;
W aiter-"Suah, boss; does yo' tink Ah's a d umb waitah ?"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
ROSS M. COOMER, Mem . Am. Soc. C. E.&#13;
&#13;
Eat More&#13;
&#13;
Hanford's&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL&#13;
&#13;
Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
Engineers and Contractors&#13;
&#13;
WE BUILT MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
IT'S GOOD FOR YOU&#13;
The more sense we get the lon ger we live.&#13;
Very few of us die of old age.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
31 I - 312 United Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
We are nearly all killed by ignorance.&#13;
&#13;
Ask our Clients about us&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Auto .Phone 3719&#13;
&#13;
What the human race ha s learned about food values in the la st generation has increased the average length of life by fifteen years.&#13;
We ha ve found for example, that Ice Cream makes fo r a long life. There are two&#13;
reasons for this: First, being made of sugar and cream, it ha s one of the highest food&#13;
values known. Second, being so easy to digest, it puts th e least amount of effort on our&#13;
digestive organs.&#13;
&#13;
BEUTTLER &amp; ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
We ha ve learned these facts and as a consequence we are eating FIVE H UNDRED&#13;
PER CENT MORE ICE CREAM THAN WE DID FOUR YEARS AGO.&#13;
Try it.&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
WM . BEUTTLER&#13;
&#13;
Architects&#13;
&#13;
Eat it oftener and you'll live longer.&#13;
&#13;
This Firm. Designed the Alumni Gymnasium&#13;
and Rebuilt the Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
HANFORD PRODUCE COMPANY&#13;
Auto Phone 4951&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 421&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4240&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
1338&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
338&#13;
&#13;
JOO 3rd St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
"Say, Deak, I understand that the French government is buying up all the available supplies of paper suitable for printing?"&#13;
Deak-"Why ?"&#13;
"So that the soldiers can sleep on the border."&#13;
Ikie, the proprietor of a little store in a small town, went to see his friend, Jakie,&#13;
who lived in the city, Going into Jakie's office he noticed the letters, E. E., after&#13;
Jakie's name.&#13;
"Jakie, vot iss de meaning of de E. E . after your name?"&#13;
"Vy, dot means dot iss de vay I makes my living-how I gets mine money-dot&#13;
stands for Electrical Engineer."&#13;
Not long afterward, Jakie went to visit Ikie. On the front of lkie's store he saw&#13;
after Ikie's name five F's, F. F. F. F . F.&#13;
"Vy, Ikie, vot iss de meaning of the five F's after your name?"&#13;
"Vy, dot iss de way I makes mine money," said Ikie, "Those five F's stand for&#13;
three fires, a flood, and a fortune for Ikie."&#13;
A man w ho had been run over by an auto and because of it had had his foot amputated sued the auto owner for $5,000.&#13;
"What do you think I am, a millionaire?" asked the irate auto owner."&#13;
To which question the plaintiff countered with, "Well, what do you think I am,&#13;
a centipede?"&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
two hundred seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
Your friends can buy&#13;
Anything&#13;
that you can&#13;
give&#13;
&#13;
them - -&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
sCity's&#13;
&#13;
Biggest and Busiest&#13;
Studio&#13;
CLASS SCRAP&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred eighty- one&#13;
&#13;
Before Deciding on a College&#13;
Consider the Advantages of&#13;
&#13;
602 Pierce St.&#13;
Suite 605-606, Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
John R. Carter&#13;
&#13;
H. W. Brackney&#13;
&#13;
Homer B, Carter&#13;
&#13;
Improved&#13;
&#13;
FRED&#13;
&#13;
Farms and&#13;
&#13;
H . SCHMIDT&#13;
&#13;
Mortgages&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT B. PIKE&#13;
&#13;
CARTER, BRACKNEY &amp; CARTER&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
SCHMIDT &amp; PIKE&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS AT LAW&#13;
Suite 707-708-709, Security Bank Bldg.&#13;
Phones, Auto 1522, Bell 1065&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
LA WYERS&#13;
Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
&#13;
J. E. DEWALT&#13;
&#13;
IT OFFERS THE BEST&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Room 7, Iowa Bldg.&#13;
Oct. 1st, Frances Bldg.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
W H FARNSWORTH&#13;
&#13;
· ·&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
Auto 8973&#13;
&#13;
242-3 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Mental, Physical and Moral Training&#13;
E. P. FARR&#13;
&#13;
Credits Recognized by all the&#13;
Best Universities&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
&#13;
511-512 Farmers Loan &amp; Trust Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
.611 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
LYLE GOODWIN&#13;
&#13;
JOHN F. JOSEPH&#13;
&#13;
LA WYER&#13;
&#13;
LA WYER&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3155&#13;
210 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
510-13 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS '&#13;
&#13;
Modern Buildings and Equipment&#13;
New Gymnasium with Athletic Field&#13;
Live and Wholesome Religious Influences&#13;
Well Equipped Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
W. S. GILMAN&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
F. E. ARCHITECTS SON&#13;
COLBY &amp;&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
510 C and D Davidson Building&#13;
Auto Phone 4433&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 302-305, Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
F. W . Sargent, A. C. Strong, G. T. Struble&#13;
&#13;
C. R. METCALFE&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
Railway Connections Excellent for Vacations&#13;
at Home&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1062&#13;
&#13;
SARGENT, STRONG &amp; STRUBLE&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
&#13;
613 F. L. &amp; T. Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
SHULL GILL SAMMIS&#13;
&#13;
202-206 Iowa Building&#13;
EDWIN&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
STASON&#13;
&#13;
A. L.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1165&#13;
&#13;
BEARDSLEY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
&amp; STILWILL&#13;
&#13;
STASON &amp; BEARDSLEY&#13;
&#13;
400-418 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, President&#13;
&#13;
600-601 F. L. &amp; T. Bldg,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-three&#13;
two hundred eighty-tw o&#13;
&#13;
There&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVINGS FOR THIS BOOK&#13;
&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
WAS A TIME&#13;
NOT SO VERY LONG&#13;
ago, when all printing&#13;
looked alike to most of&#13;
us; it wasjust printing;&#13;
but that time is past and a&#13;
new day has dawned.&#13;
Most everyone today has a&#13;
very highly developed sense&#13;
of what is right and proper&#13;
in all manner of printing.&#13;
It is one thing to appreciate&#13;
superior quality and another&#13;
to produce it.&#13;
To produce it requires men&#13;
of skill, industry and ·zeal&#13;
and a good equipment.&#13;
We have a corps of efficient_&#13;
craftsmen who are schooled&#13;
in what is right and how to&#13;
get the best results.&#13;
We have a master printer&#13;
who will give your work his&#13;
personal attention.&#13;
Our equipment is of the best.&#13;
There is a glowing sense of&#13;
satisfaction in dealing with&#13;
people in whom you have absolute faith.&#13;
&#13;
the Clio&#13;
Press&#13;
Economy&#13;
Advertising&#13;
&#13;
Company&#13;
Iowa City&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Eelctric City Engraving Co.&#13;
BUFFALO&#13;
&#13;
Dependability&#13;
&#13;
tw o hundred eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
Index&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
Dutton, George B ............................................ .49, 126&#13;
Dunn, George .......................................... 70, 126, 187&#13;
Dunn, W alter ........................................................ 133&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
"A Legend of Morningside" ............................ 202·205&#13;
. Abel, Frank ....................................................... .45, 96&#13;
Adelphian Society .................................................. 1 35&#13;
Administration Cartoon ........................................ 9&#13;
Aesthesian Society ................................................ 134&#13;
Agora Club ............................................................ 38&#13;
Allen, H oward A ............. 34, 89, 110, 139, 150, 169&#13;
Allen, Nathlie ........................................................ 132&#13;
Alumni ............................................................ 102· 104&#13;
"An Appreciation' ' ................................................ 205&#13;
Anderson, Anna M ................................................. 45&#13;
Anderson, Jacob I.................................................. 46&#13;
Anderson, Julia .................................................... 45&#13;
''Anne's Purpose'' .......................................... 193- 195&#13;
Appel, Fred ............................................................ 70&#13;
Annual Board ......................... : ......................... .4, 95&#13;
"Appreciation of Alumni" .................................... 104&#13;
April Calendar ...................................................... 225&#13;
Archer, Thomas .............................. 34, 110, 139, 149&#13;
Athenaeum Society ........................................ 114·117&#13;
Athletics .......................................................... 137· 175&#13;
Athletics Cartoon .................................................. 137&#13;
Athletic Committee ................................................ 138&#13;
Ausman, Sibyl.. .......................................... 75, 93, 106&#13;
&#13;
Burtness, Katherine........................................ 66, 106&#13;
Burton, Earnest .................................................... 14&#13;
&#13;
Back, George I.. ..................................... 126, 183, 184&#13;
Bahn son, Esther .................................................... 70&#13;
Band ...................................................................... 91&#13;
Barks, G. Earl... ............................. 94, 126, 179, 185&#13;
Barber, F ern ........................................................ 70&#13;
Barrett, Pauline .................................................... 1 32&#13;
Barrow, Hazel.. ........................................ 66, 75, 122&#13;
Bartlett, Allan ........................................ 70, 110, 1 85&#13;
B artz, F. Otto .................................................... 16, 97&#13;
Baseball .......................................................... 167·170&#13;
B aseball Cartoon .................................................. 167&#13;
Baseball Schedule ................................................ 170&#13;
Bashaw, Stanley............................ 66, 119, 150, 173&#13;
Basketball-Academy Girls' Team ........................ 172&#13;
Basketball-H. S. Tournament ............................ 171&#13;
Basketball-Sophomore Team ............................ 173&#13;
Beacham, Fern ....................... .4, 46, 78, 82, 95, 122&#13;
Beard, Anna L ................. 33, 34, 88, 89, 97, 99, 114&#13;
Beardsley, Lyman ........................................ 110, 170&#13;
B eck, Axel ............................................................ 187&#13;
B ehmer, Albert.. .............................. 66, 110, 139, 145&#13;
Belew, Ruth .................................................. 100, 1 34&#13;
Bell, Orin .................................................. 66, 83, 118&#13;
Bennett, Vernon .................................................. 133&#13;
Berry, Ruth .................................................... 70, 100&#13;
Blackman, Rut h ...................................... 78. 100, 106&#13;
Bleakly, David .......................................... 89, 92, 1 33&#13;
Bleakly, Lewis ................................................ 92, 133&#13;
Board of Trustees.................................................. 17&#13;
Bogard, Joe ...................................................... 66, 118&#13;
Booher, Florence.............................................. 66, 106&#13;
Bond, Lafe...................................................... 70, 118&#13;
Booton, Herschell ............................................ 70, 118&#13;
Boyd, Alice.................................................. 70, 78, 98&#13;
Boyd, Fran ces .......................................... 66, 75, 122&#13;
Boyden, Elbert ...................................................... 70&#13;
Brady, Rut h .................................................... 70, 100&#13;
Brand, Margaret .................................................. 1 3&#13;
Briggs, Wilbur................................................ 70, 118&#13;
Brethorst, Margu erite ............................. .46, 86, 114&#13;
Brodkey, Sarah .................................................... 70&#13;
Brown, E. A......................................................... 12&#13;
Brown, Georgia .................................................... 66&#13;
Brown, Guy.................................................... 70, 110&#13;
Brown, Mabel ........................................................ 14&#13;
Brown, Mrs. Mildred ..................................... .47, 122&#13;
Bryan, William .................................................... 70&#13;
Buehler , Harold ............................................ 135, 187&#13;
Bull, Florence ............................................ 34, 99, 106&#13;
Burgess, F. Earl.. ...................... 35, 83, 87, 118, 184&#13;
Burrows, Richard ............................................ 92, 133&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Cain, Thomas ........................................................ 92&#13;
Calendar Cartoon .................................................. 223&#13;
Campbell, H . G .....................•................................. 12&#13;
Campus Scene ...................................................... 30&#13;
Carson, W.. W ................................................. 13, 138&#13;
Carter , Hazel ........................................................ 70&#13;
Case, Wayland .......................................... 66, 92, 126&#13;
Castle, Lynn .................................................... 70, 118&#13;
Challman, Bernice.......................................... 35, 114&#13;
Challman, Ruth ............................................ 100, 134&#13;
Champ, Doris ........................................................ 134&#13;
Champ, Merle ........................................................ 13 4&#13;
Champ, Mildred ............................................... .47, 146&#13;
Chapin, Irene .................................... 66, 94, 99, 114&#13;
Chemistry Club .................................................... 96&#13;
Chemistry Hall .................................................... 2 8&#13;
Christ, Jay .............................................. 48, 110, 185&#13;
Clark, Gladys .................................................... 70, 78&#13;
Clark, Harry ........................ 33, 35, 92, 94, 118, 1 86&#13;
Clark, Lillian ........................................................ 70&#13;
Clark, Veta .......................................................... 93&#13;
Clark, Wilson ..........4, 47, 92, 95, 96, 118, 139, 145&#13;
Classes ................................................................ 31·80&#13;
Classes Cartoon .................................................... 31&#13;
Class Scrap .................................................... 275, 281&#13;
Clough, Martin ...................................................... 168&#13;
Cobbs, Irene ........................................................... 134&#13;
Coe Conference Meet. ........................................... 1 60&#13;
Colburn, Cordelia ............................................ 35, 114&#13;
Coleman, Morda ................................ 6 6, 75, 94, 194&#13;
College Section .................................................. 19·30&#13;
Collegian R eporter ................................................ 94&#13;
Commencement Prizes .......................................... 32&#13;
Connor, Floyd .................................. 66, 91, 118, 173&#13;
Connor, Rosemary ................................................ 70&#13;
Conservatory of Music ........................................ 76·77&#13;
Conser vatory of Music (New Bldg.) .................... 23&#13;
(Old Bldg.) .................... 29&#13;
Coombs, Arthur ................................ 66, 89, 110, 186&#13;
Coomer , Ethel.. .......................................... 48, 93, 122&#13;
Cooper, Burnett.............................................. 70, 118&#13;
Cooper, Delmar C................................... 36, 118, 186&#13;
Corr, E dith I.. ................................................... 66, 75&#13;
Corr, Mildred ........................................................ 79&#13;
Coss, James A ................................................... 16, 96&#13;
Craig, Dr. A. E ..................................................... 12&#13;
Cr aig, Frances .......................................... 36, 93, 1 06&#13;
Crescent Society .................................................... 132&#13;
Crou ch, Mary L ......................................... 36, 94, 122&#13;
Cummings, Marguerite ............................. .48, 95, 114&#13;
Curry, Wendell ............ 4, 49, 95, 126, 138 , 139, 159&#13;
Dahl, Lillia n ........................................................ 70&#13;
Daniels, Gladys .................................................. 70, 93&#13;
Davidson, Clair .................................................... 70&#13;
Day, Hazel E ................................... 36, 88, 122, 182&#13;
Day, Mabel ...................................................... 66, 122&#13;
Day, Mary ............................................................ 70&#13;
Day, Otis .................................................... 70, 91, 110&#13;
D ecember Calenda r .............................................. 237&#13;
D edication ...................................................... ...... 5&#13;
D eLapp, Ambrose C......................................... 37, 118&#13;
D evitt, Glyde ........................................................ 73&#13;
D evitt, Marie ........ ................................................ 122&#13;
DeWalt, Horace ........................................ 66, 70, 110&#13;
D epartment of Home Economics .......................... 75&#13;
Dimmitt, Lillian ................................................ 12, 88&#13;
Dolliver, Margaret G ............................................. 12&#13;
Donahue, James ............................................. .49, 110&#13;
Down, Vivian ............................ 66, 82, 93, 122, 203&#13;
Drake R elays ........................................................ 157&#13;
Dutton, Cora ................................................ 66, 79, 86&#13;
&#13;
Easthouse, H elen Marie.................... 37, 82, 99, 114&#13;
Easthouse, Oma .................................................... 134&#13;
Easton, George.................................... 70, 91, 92, 11 0&#13;
Edge, Elizabeth .................................................... 5 0&#13;
Edgington, Marie ·············-··--·-···-·························· 66&#13;
Eiffert, Paul.. .......... 50, 89, 118, 139, 144, 161, 1 68&#13;
Engberg, R oyce .................................... 70, 91, 92, 118&#13;
Erickson, Erik McKinley ................................ 70, 118&#13;
Ertel, Floyd .......................................................... 1 33&#13;
Evans, Anna Mae .................................... 37, 93, 122&#13;
Evans, Kieth .................................................... 80, 135&#13;
Expression Seniors ... ............................................. 79&#13;
&#13;
Harvey, Harold R.&#13;
............................................... 14&#13;
Haugen, Andrew................................................ 70, 92&#13;
Hay, Francis R. ........................................66, 92, 1 26&#13;
Hayes, Prof. J. J ............................................. 13, 1 38&#13;
Heikes, Marion ...... :............................................... 66&#13;
Herron, Lenna ······························· ····.··················· 70&#13;
Hicks, Earl ...................................................... 53, 126&#13;
Hill, Byron .................................................... 139, 147&#13;
Hill, Fur man .......................................................... 133&#13;
Hill, R uby ............................................................ 7 0&#13;
Hilmer, Dr. W. C ............................................... 12, 97&#13;
Himmel, W. J ..................................................... 15, 91&#13;
Holmes, Cleo Dulcie..&#13;
. ....................................... 66&#13;
Holmes, Howard .............................................. 70, 126&#13;
&#13;
Faculty ................................................................ 12·16&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Florence ·················-·· -- ·--·---· -- -- -················----- 132&#13;
&#13;
Farnham, J ohn A ............................................. 50, 126&#13;
February Calendar ................................................ 241&#13;
Ferguson, Agnes B ................................................. 12&#13;
Ferguson, Margaret B ............................................ 70&#13;
Fischer, Laura C. ....................................... ........... 13&#13;
.&#13;
F ish, Esther ............. ............................................. 7 0&#13;
Fish, Miriam ······································-·-·-···-----·-----· 70&#13;
&#13;
First Football Team ................................................ 142&#13;
Football ..................... ................................... 141·154&#13;
Football Cartoon .......&#13;
. ................................ 141&#13;
Foot.ball Season .................................................... 153&#13;
Football Schedule .................................................. 143&#13;
Forbes, Flor ence ........................................ 78, 79, 106&#13;
Forbes, Willis .................. 66, 94, 11 0, 1 79, 183, 1 85&#13;
Ford, Dorothy .................................... .............• 70, 77&#13;
Forensics ........................................................ 177·188&#13;
Forensics Cartoon .......................... ..................... 1 77&#13;
Forensics L eague ............................................... :.. 1 79&#13;
Foreword .......................................................&#13;
6&#13;
Fouke, Hugh ........................................ 70, 92, 94 , 110&#13;
Fouke, Rut h ...................................... 66, 99, 100, 109&#13;
Fowler , H arry L .................................... .47, 196, 110&#13;
French Merle............................................51, 49, 126&#13;
Freeman, Alta )&lt;'..................................................... 14&#13;
Freeman,&#13;
A. L ......................................... 66, 9 1, 118&#13;
Freeman, Harold ...................................... 70, 9 6, 126&#13;
Freshmen ............................................................ 7 0· 74&#13;
Fry, Char les ................................................ 66, 96, 126&#13;
Fry, Minnie............................. .4, 5 1, 82, 89, 95, 114&#13;
Garlock, Chas ............ .4, 51, 92, 126, 179, 183, 185&#13;
Gerkin, Virgil.. .......................................... 70, 9 1, 118&#13;
Gillies, Olive ........................................................ 93&#13;
Gillies, Ruth ........................... .4, 52, 93 , 94, 100, 114&#13;
Girls' Inter collegiate D ebate .................................. 182&#13;
Gootch, Dorothy ................................................ 70, 78&#13;
Gospel Team ............................................................ 85&#13;
Goudie, Margaret ............................................ 66, 106&#13;
Grace Church ........................................................ 24&#13;
Gr ace Church Choir ............................................ 90&#13;
Green, Pea rl S. ...................................................... 14&#13;
Grey, N. C. .................................................. 118, 186&#13;
Gymnasium ...... ................ .... .................&#13;
21&#13;
Haines, Irene ........................................................ 70&#13;
Hall, I. Oscar .................................................... 38, 126&#13;
Hansen, Louise H . .................................. 66, 75, 122&#13;
Hanson, William .................................................... 133&#13;
Harding, Edith ...................................................... 132&#13;
H arding, Mary ...................................................... 70&#13;
Harrington, E. J ................... 66, 110, 139, 161, 173&#13;
Harrington, Ray .......... 14, 52, 91, 95, 118, 139, 144&#13;
H art, Cecil Raymond ........................................ 70, 118&#13;
Hartley, Har old .................................................... 135&#13;
Haitz, Lucile D or othea .......................................... 70&#13;
Hartzell, Grace ...................................................... 70&#13;
Hartzell, Ruth .................................... 38, 94, 106, 122&#13;
&#13;
H ome Oratorical Contest ........................................ 180&#13;
Horn, Gladys E ................................................. 38, 106&#13;
H ornnev. Al vin ....... ...................... .4, 53, 95, 96, 118&#13;
Hornney, Lee .................................... 1 0, 118, 1 39, 148&#13;
Hosford, Ru th ................................................... ... 100&#13;
Hovda, Dr. Olaf .................................................... 15&#13;
H oughton, Edward L . ........ •........................ 70, 118&#13;
H oughton, H. L . .................................................... 15&#13;
Houk, Mabel ............................................................ 132&#13;
H ouk, Neva&#13;
............................................................ 54&#13;
Houk, Nola ............................................................ 66&#13;
Hunt, Albert .................................................... 70, 11 0&#13;
Hunter, Hazel Vivian .. ......................................... ... 70&#13;
Hutchendorf, Clara ................................................ 70&#13;
H utchinson, Horace ................................................ SQ&#13;
H utchinson, Milclr ecl . ................................&#13;
70&#13;
Intercollegiate D ebate ............................................ 183 ·&#13;
Inter·Society Committee.......................................... 99&#13;
Inter · Society ( Acad.) Debate ................................ 187&#13;
Inter· Society Debate ...................................... 184·186&#13;
Ionian Society .............................................. 110-113&#13;
Jackson, Goldia ...................................................... 66&#13;
Jackson, Hilda ........................................................ 66&#13;
January Calendar .................................................. 239&#13;
Jeffery, Alice .............................................. 66, 75, 122&#13;
Johnson, Arth ur H . ........................................ 5 4, 126&#13;
Johnson, Leon J .... .4, 54, 92, 95, 118, 1 39, 144, 1 69&#13;
Johnson, Marion .................... 66, 82, 88, 94, 106, 182&#13;
J okes Cartoon ........................................................ 24 7&#13;
,Jones, Clifford ............................................ 66, 96, 110&#13;
June Calendar ........................................................ 229&#13;
Junior .............................. ................. .................44, 65&#13;
Kanthlener, Henry&#13;
F. ............................................ 15&#13;
K ay, Guy .......................................................... 70, 118&#13;
Keeffe, Ann a .................................................... 55, 182&#13;
Keene, Louis .......................................................... 118&#13;
K ennel Klub ............................................................ 244&#13;
Kilborne, Harr ison .................................. 55, 11 0, 179&#13;
Kingsbury, Francis.......................................... 66, 126&#13;
Kline, Ruth ........................................ 66, 75, 100, 12 2&#13;
Klippel, Char les ............................ 66, 83, 87, 126, 181&#13;
Knapp, Gladys ........................................................ 70&#13;
Knapp, Lois ............................................................ 70&#13;
Knudson, Ru by ................................................ 66, 114&#13;
K olp, Frances .................................................... 66, 122&#13;
Kolp, James R. ........................4 , 55, 83, 91, 95, 126&#13;
Krurnann, Mae B . .................................................. 66&#13;
&#13;
Lak eside Labor atory .............................................. 98&#13;
Lake Geneva .......................................................... 84&#13;
Lange, Leone ....................................... 66, 82, 88, 122&#13;
Langfo rd, Flor ence ................................................ 77&#13;
Larson, Harry .................................................... 70, 96&#13;
Larson, Mabel ........................................................ 70&#13;
Laub, Helen G . ........................................ 56, 79, 106&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
PAGE&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence, Edith B ............................................. 56, 86&#13;
Lawrence, Harvey ........................ 56, 91, 92, 96, 110&#13;
Leazer , Kathryn B ............................. 38, 82, 86, 114&#13;
Lehan, Lloyd ............................................ 5 7, 110, 174&#13;
Leuder, H erman ............................................ 155, 159&#13;
Liming, Orlan .................................................. 66, 126&#13;
· Lindsay, Arthur W ..................................... 39, 92, 110&#13;
Literary Cartoon .................................................. 189&#13;
Literary Section ............................................ 189·2 10&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas .......... 66, 96, 118, 149, 169, 173, 179&#13;
Locke, Arthur ............................................ 66, 96, 126&#13;
Logan, Leslie B . .............................................. 39, 126&#13;
Long, Ralph .................................................... 135, 187&#13;
Loveland, H elen I. .................................................. 12&#13;
Ludlum, Louise .................................. 66, 79, 94, 106&#13;
Lunbom, Judith .................................................... 70&#13;
Lunbom, Vera ................................ 66, 122, 182, 206&#13;
Lundblad, Anna ...................................................... 70&#13;
Lutz, Gretchen K ............................................... 11 , 13&#13;
&#13;
Ordway, Ethel ............................................ 77, 93, 122&#13;
Ordway, Mary .................................................. 58, 122&#13;
Organizations .................................................... 81, 135&#13;
Organ ization Cartoon ............................................ 81&#13;
" Orpheus and Eurydice" ..................................207·209&#13;
Othonian Society .............................................. 126· 129&#13;
Overholser, Ralph ........................................ 66, 92 94&#13;
&#13;
Silas Marner .......................................................... 78&#13;
&#13;
Tutt le, Gladys .. ... .... ....... ...... .... ................ .... ......... 15&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club ................................................................ 13 8&#13;
''M'' Meet ................................................................ 164&#13;
McBride, Robert ...................................... 66, 118, 1 79&#13;
McBride, 'fhomas ...................................... 66, 83, 118&#13;
McBurney, Cornelia ............................ 57, 88, 99, 106&#13;
Mcconkey, Bly ................................................ 66, 110&#13;
McCutcheon, Helen ................................................ 70&#13;
McDonald, Mark ........................................ 70, 96, 126&#13;
McKinney, Delbert .................... 39, 92, 126, 151, 184&#13;
McKinney, Fern .................................... 66, 75, 94, 122&#13;
McKircher , Pearl .................................................. 132&#13;
McLane, Lura .................................. 39, 93, 122, 174&#13;
McNary, Martin a ......................................66, 75, 114&#13;
MacCollin, Elizabeth N ........................................... 14&#13;
MacCollin, Paul ................................................ 14, 92&#13;
MacMillian, John D ............................................... 14&#13;
Madison, John V . ........................... .40, 118, 183, 184&#13;
Madison, Rachel.. .............................................. 57, 106&#13;
Madsen, Una .......................................................... 70&#13;
Madrigal Club ........................................................ 93&#13;
Mahood, H erbert ............................................ 70, 118&#13;
Mahood, Marie ........................................................ 70&#13;
Mahood, Ruth ........................................................ 100&#13;
Mahood, Ruth ( Acad.) .......................................... 134&#13;
Main Hall ................................................................ 20&#13;
March Calendar ...................................................... 243&#13;
Marsh, Charles A ............................................. 13, 178&#13;
May Calendar .......................................................... 227&#13;
Meeks, Helen .......................................................... 70&#13;
Men' s Glee Club .................................................... 92&#13;
Metcalf, Marion ............................................... .40, 106&#13;
Metcalfe, Isabel ................................................ 66, 106&#13;
Miller, Earl ...................................................... 70, 110&#13;
Miller, Glen ................................................ 58, 91, 126&#13;
Mitchell, Richard L .................................... .40, 87, 180&#13;
Moen, Mabel ............................................................ 77&#13;
Montgomery, Esther ........................................ 66, 122&#13;
Monument Day ...................................................... 176&#13;
Monument Run ...................................................... 165&#13;
Moonlight on the Misouri. ....................................... 25&#13;
Morningside For ensic R ecords ................................ 1 88&#13;
Mornings ide Track Records .................................... 166&#13;
: orrison, Florence .................................................. 70&#13;
M&#13;
Morse, Orwin A . .................................................... 16&#13;
Moss, Nona .............................................................. 1 32&#13;
Mus ic Seniors ........................................................ 77&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan ................................................ 1 58&#13;
N icholson, Morris ............................................ 70, 126&#13;
N ielson, Kathinea .................................................... 134&#13;
Noe, Glenn ................................................ 66, 91, 110&#13;
Northrup, Carrol.. .................................. 139, 146, 1 68&#13;
Norton, Dale .................................................... 70, 126&#13;
November Calendar ................................................ 235&#13;
Obrecht, Clarence ........................................ 66, 91, 92&#13;
October Calendar .................................................... 233&#13;
Olsen, Ethel ............................................................ 32&#13;
Olson, Ruth ............................................ 58, 100, 122&#13;
&#13;
Van Horne, J. Don , 4, 64, 95, 96, 110, 179, 183, 186&#13;
Van Horne Robert N ..................: .......... 1 5, 1 02, 138&#13;
&#13;
Paradisanos, George .............................................. 70&#13;
Parkinson. Ehna ............................ 66, 78, 82, 99, 122&#13;
Patrick, Glenn B .......................... .40, 83, 86, 89, 126&#13;
Paul, Verne&#13;
&#13;
··--·-····--·· ·······························----------· 70, 91&#13;
&#13;
Payne, Arthur .............................. 59, 83, 89, 110, 186&#13;
&#13;
Pease, Laura .................................................. 4 1 59, 95&#13;
P earson, Mabel ...................................................... 70&#13;
P ecaut, Mildred&#13;
............................ 66, 78, 122&#13;
P eitzke, Ruth ........................................................ 70&#13;
P ersinger, Elva ...................................................... 70&#13;
P ersinger, Everett .......................................... 80, 133&#13;
P eterson, Abbie ...................................................... 132&#13;
Phelps, Floyd ................................................. .41, 118&#13;
P hilomathean Society ..................................... 118· 121&#13;
Pieria Society ......&#13;
. .................................. 106· 109&#13;
Pike, Cla udius ...................................................... 119&#13;
Pike, Stillman .................................................. 70, 110&#13;
Poland, Spencer ........................................ 70, 96, 118&#13;
Pratt, George.......... ............................... ................. 70&#13;
Prentice, Ruth ........................................................ 70&#13;
President's Home .................................... :............... 22&#13;
Pritchard, Elbert.. ...................................... 70, 96, 118&#13;
Prohibition L eague ..................................................87&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest.. .............................. 18 L&#13;
&#13;
Randolph, R on ald ........................................ 70, 91, 118&#13;
Ratliff, Irma .........................•................................ 132&#13;
R eed, Jessie ...................................................... 77, 132&#13;
R eistrup, James ...................................................... 1 6&#13;
R eyman, Howard A ......................................... 66, 126&#13;
Richardson, N. N . .......................................... 66, 126&#13;
Riddle, Gladys ...................................................... 66&#13;
Ried, Ruth E. . ............................................... 70, 100&#13;
Riner, Benjamin ........................... .4 1, 1 26, 183, 184&#13;
Roost, Amanda ................................................ 60, 106&#13;
Rosene, Harry ........ ............................................. 59&#13;
Ruskell, Grace ................................................ 66. 114&#13;
Russell, Culbert ................................................ 70, 118&#13;
Russell, Lois ............................................ 75, 94, 122&#13;
Ruth Club .............................................................. 100&#13;
&#13;
Spry, Katherine .................... 33, 42, .88, 89, 97, 122&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Her ald ....................... 66, 89, 118, 139, 161&#13;
Wall Street Mission ................................................ 85&#13;
Walton, ald J .......... .4, 63, 85, 95, 126, 179, 185&#13;
Don&#13;
&#13;
Wedgwood, Mary F . ............................... .4 3, 82, 122&#13;
Wenig, Ervine ................ 66, 118, 139, J.46, 168, 173&#13;
Stonebrook, Earl.. ..........................66, 118, 1 79, 184&#13;
Strobel, Lovice V ................................ .42, 78, 88, 122&#13;
..&#13;
Studen t Volunteer and ........................................ 86&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
Wiese, Emma J.&#13;
................&#13;
Williams, Earl.. ...................... 43, 118, 139, 149, 168&#13;
Williams, Ewar t L ...... 4, 65, 87, 94 , 95, 126, 152&#13;
&#13;
Williams, Noel J ............. 4, 65, 83, 95, 96, 126, 139&#13;
Winkleman, F. Eleanor ... .43, '78, 86, 88, 89, 99, 122&#13;
&#13;
Teutonia&#13;
&#13;
Club ........................................................ 97&#13;
Woodford, Faith ...................................................... 15·&#13;
Woole William .......................................... 66, 83, 126&#13;
Wulf, Horace ............................ 70, 89, 118, 139 , 148&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
Track&#13;
Track&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
R ecords ........................................................ 166&#13;
Schedule ...................................................... 155&#13;
Season .......................................................... 156&#13;
Team ............................................................ 160&#13;
&#13;
Troutman, R ay D ............................................. 70, 126&#13;
&#13;
Y . M . C. A ............................................................. 83&#13;
Y. W. C. A ............................................................. 82&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Society ........................................ 122-125&#13;
"Zet. Novelette" ............................................ 195·202&#13;
&#13;
Sage, Harriett ........................................................ 93&#13;
Salie, Neal ........................................................ 80, 133&#13;
Sammons, Louise ........................................ 70, 78, 182&#13;
Sampson, Ernest .............................................. 86, 133&#13;
Sanborn, Martha .................................................... 13&#13;
San em, Earl ............................................................ 133&#13;
Sanger, Ernest .......................................... 80, 97, 134&#13;
Saunders, Lida ................................................ 66, 122&#13;
Saunderson , ,Jason Jlf.. ........................... 1 3 , 1 38, 140&#13;
Savonell, Elsie ........................................................ 70&#13;
Sawyer, Ella .......................................................... 132&#13;
Schaub, Dr. Frederick&#13;
........................................ 15, 97&#13;
Schellinger , R oy .............................................. 70, 110&#13;
Schieder, Geor ge .............................................. 60, 97&#13;
Schmoker, Cecil ........................................ 66, 93, 106&#13;
School of Expression ................................................ 78&#13;
Schriever , Wm ........................................ .41, 96, 118&#13;
Schuldt, Nora M . ........................................... .41, 114&#13;
Schuster, Laura .................................................... 70&#13;
Schuster, Lydia ...................................................... 70&#13;
Sebern, Marie ................... .4, 60, 82, 88, 89, 9 5, 122&#13;
Secoy, Ed ith .......................................................... 70&#13;
Seniors .............................................................. 33, 43&#13;
Seniors (Acad.) .................................................... 80&#13;
September Calendar .............................................. 231&#13;
Shannon, Bess ................................................ 61, 114&#13;
Sherwood, Cla ir ................................................ 66, 126&#13;
Shipley, Sadie ........................................................ 70&#13;
Shoemaker, Elihu .................................................. 151&#13;
"She Stoops to Conquer" ...................................... 78&#13;
&#13;
two hundred eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
two hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Autographs&#13;
&#13;
two hundred ninety&#13;
&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
Howard A. Allen&#13;
Nathlie Allen&#13;
Anna M. Anderson&#13;
Jacob I. Anderson&#13;
Julia Anderson&#13;
Fred Appel&#13;
Thomas Archer&#13;
Sibyl Ausman&#13;
George I. Back&#13;
Esther Bahnson&#13;
G. Earl Barks&#13;
Fern Barber&#13;
Pauline Barrett&#13;
Hazel Barrow&#13;
Allan Bartlett&#13;
F. Otto Bartz&#13;
Stanley Bashaw&#13;
Fern Beacham&#13;
Anna L. Beard&#13;
Lyman Beardsley&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
Albert Behmer&#13;
Ruth Belew&#13;
Orin Bell&#13;
Vernon Bennett&#13;
Ruth Berry&#13;
Ruth Blackman&#13;
David Bleakly&#13;
Lewis Bleakly&#13;
Joe Bogard&#13;
Florence Booher&#13;
Lafe Bond&#13;
Herschell Booton&#13;
Alice Boyd&#13;
Frances Boyd&#13;
Elbert Boyden&#13;
Ruth Brady&#13;
Margaret Brand&#13;
Wilbur Briggs&#13;
Marguerite Brethorst&#13;
Sarah Brodkey&#13;
E. A. Brown&#13;
Georgia Brown&#13;
Guy Brown&#13;
Mabel Brown&#13;
Mildred Brown&#13;
William Bryan&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
Florence Bull&#13;
F. Earl Burgess&#13;
Richard Burrows&#13;
Katherine Burtness&#13;
Earnest Burton&#13;
Thomas Cain&#13;
H. G. Campbell&#13;
W. W. Carson&#13;
Hazel Carter&#13;
Wayland Case&#13;
Lynn Castle&#13;
Bernice Challman&#13;
Ruth Challman&#13;
Doris Champ&#13;
Merle Champ&#13;
Mildred Champ&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
Jay Christ&#13;
Gladys Clark&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Lillian Clark&#13;
Veta Clark&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Martin Clough&#13;
Irene Cobbs&#13;
Cordelia Colburn&#13;
Morda Coleman&#13;
Floyd Connor&#13;
Rosemary Connor&#13;
Arthur Coombs&#13;
Ethel Coomer&#13;
Burnett Cooper&#13;
Delmar C. Cooper&#13;
Edith I. Corr&#13;
Mildred Corr&#13;
James A. Coss&#13;
Dr. A. E. Craig&#13;
Frances Craig&#13;
Mary L. Crouch&#13;
Marguerite Cummings&#13;
Wendell Curry&#13;
Lillian Dahl&#13;
Gladys Daniels&#13;
Clair Davidson&#13;
Hazel E. Day&#13;
Mabel Day&#13;
Mary Day&#13;
Otis Day&#13;
Ambrose C. DeLapp&#13;
Glyde Devitt&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Horace DeWalt&#13;
Lillian Dimmitt&#13;
Margaret G. Dolliver&#13;
James Donahue&#13;
Vivian Down&#13;
Cora Dutton&#13;
George B. Dutton&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Walter Dunn&#13;
Helen Marie Easthouse&#13;
Oma Easthouse&#13;
George Easton&#13;
Elizabeth Edge&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
Erik McKinley Erickson&#13;
Floyd Ertel&#13;
Anna Mae Evans&#13;
Kieth Evans&#13;
Florence Fair&#13;
John A. Farnham&#13;
Agnes B. Ferguson&#13;
Margaret B. Ferguson&#13;
Laura C. Fischer&#13;
Esther Fish&#13;
Miriam Fish&#13;
Marie Flint&#13;
Edward Flynn&#13;
Florence Forbes&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Dorothy Ford&#13;
Hugh Fouke&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Harry L. Fowler&#13;
Merle French&#13;
Alta F. Freeman&#13;
A. L. Freeman&#13;
Harold Freeman&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
Minnie Fry&#13;
Chas Garlock&#13;
Virgil Gerkin&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
Ruth Gillies&#13;
Dorothy Gootch&#13;
Margaret Goudie&#13;
Pearl S. Green&#13;
N. C. Grey&#13;
Irene Haines&#13;
Oscar I. Hall&#13;
Louise H. Hansen&#13;
William Hanson&#13;
Edith Harding&#13;
Mary Harding&#13;
E. J, Harrington&#13;
Ray Harrington&#13;
Cecil Raymond Hart&#13;
Harold Hartley&#13;
Lucile Dorothea Haitz&#13;
Grace Hartzell&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Harold R. Harvey&#13;
Nellie Haskell&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Andrew Haugen&#13;
Francis R. Hay&#13;
J. J. Hayes&#13;
Marion Heikes&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
George Henderson&#13;
Lenna Herron&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Byron Hill&#13;
Furman Hill&#13;
Ruby Hill&#13;
Dr. W. C. Hilmer&#13;
W. J. Himmel&#13;
Cleo Dulcie Holmes&#13;
Howard Holmes&#13;
Lucia M. Holmes&#13;
Gladys E. Horn&#13;
Alvin Hornnev&#13;
Lee Horney&#13;
Ruth Hosford&#13;
Dr. Olaf Hovda&#13;
Edward L. Houghton&#13;
H. L. Houghton&#13;
Mabel Houk&#13;
Neva Houk&#13;
Nola Houk&#13;
Albert Hunt&#13;
Hazel Vivian Hunter&#13;
Clara Hutchendorf&#13;
Horace Hutchinson&#13;
Mildred Hutchinson&#13;
Goldia Jackson&#13;
Hilda Jackson&#13;
Alice Jeffery&#13;
Arthur H. Johnson&#13;
Leon J. Johnson&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Clifford Jones&#13;
Henry F. Kanthlener&#13;
Guy Kay&#13;
Anna Keefe&#13;
Louis Keene&#13;
Harrison Kilborne&#13;
Francis Kingsbury&#13;
Ruth Kline&#13;
Charles Klippel&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
Lois Knapp&#13;
Ruby Knudson&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
James R. Kolp&#13;
Mae B. Krumann&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
Florence Langford&#13;
Harry Larson&#13;
Mabel Larson&#13;
Helen G. Laub&#13;
Edith B. Lawrence&#13;
Harvey Lawrence&#13;
Kathryn B. Leazer&#13;
Lloyd Lehan&#13;
Herman Leuder&#13;
Orlan Liming&#13;
Arthur W. Lindsay&#13;
Thomas Lloyd&#13;
Arthur Locke&#13;
Leslie B. Logan&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
Helen I. Loveland&#13;
Louise Ludlum&#13;
Judith Lunbom&#13;
Vera Lunbom&#13;
Anna Lundblad&#13;
Gretchen K. Lutz&#13;
Robert McBride&#13;
Thomas McBride&#13;
Cornelia McBurney&#13;
Bly McConkey&#13;
Helen McCutcheon&#13;
Mark McDonald&#13;
Delbert McKinney&#13;
Fern McKinney&#13;
Pearl McKircher&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Martina McNary&#13;
Elizabeth N. MacCollin&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
John D, MacMillian&#13;
John V. Madison&#13;
Rachel Madison&#13;
Una Madsen&#13;
Herbert Mahood&#13;
Marie Mahood&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Charles A. Marsh&#13;
Helen Meeks&#13;
Marion Metcalf&#13;
Isabel Metcalfe&#13;
Earl Miller&#13;
Glen Miller&#13;
Richard L. Mitchell&#13;
Mabel Moen&#13;
Esther Montgomery&#13;
Florence Morrison&#13;
Orwin A. Morse&#13;
Nona Moss&#13;
Morris Nicholson&#13;
Kathinea Nielson&#13;
Glenn Noe&#13;
Carrol Northrup&#13;
Dale Norton&#13;
Clarence Obrecht&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Ethel Ordway&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
Ralph Overholser&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
Elma Parkinson&#13;
Glenn B. Patrick&#13;
Verne Paul&#13;
Arthur Payne&#13;
Laura Pease&#13;
Mabel Pearson&#13;
Mildred Pecaut&#13;
Ruth Peitzke&#13;
Elva Persinger&#13;
Everett Persinger&#13;
Abbie Peterson&#13;
Floyd Phelps&#13;
Claudius Pike&#13;
Stillman Pike&#13;
Spencer Poland&#13;
George Pratt&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
Elbert Pritchard&#13;
Ronald Randolph&#13;
Irma Ratliff&#13;
Jessie Reistrup&#13;
Howard A. Reyman&#13;
N. N. Richardson&#13;
Gladys Riddle&#13;
Ruth E. Ried&#13;
Benjamin Riner&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Harry Rosene&#13;
Grace Ruskell&#13;
Culbert Russell&#13;
Lois Russell&#13;
Harriett Sage&#13;
Neal Salie&#13;
Louise Sammons&#13;
Ernest Sampson&#13;
Martha Sanborn&#13;
Earl Sanem&#13;
Ernest Sanger&#13;
Lida Saunders&#13;
Jason M. Saunderson&#13;
Elsie Savonell&#13;
Ella Sawyer&#13;
Dr. Fredrick Schaub&#13;
Roy Schellinger&#13;
George Schieder&#13;
Cecil Schmoker&#13;
Nora M. Schuldt&#13;
Laura Schuster&#13;
Lydia Schuster&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
Edith Secoy&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
Clair Sherwood&#13;
Sadie Shipley&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
Wm. Schriever&#13;
Vera M. Sipe&#13;
Edna Smith&#13;
Harold Smith&#13;
Ina Smith&#13;
Iva Smith&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Katherine Spry&#13;
Gaylord A. Starr&#13;
Dorothy Steele&#13;
Lawrence Steele&#13;
Thomas C. Stephens&#13;
Burdett Stevenson&#13;
Mary Stewart&#13;
Edward Stiles&#13;
Earl Stonebrook&#13;
Lovice V. Strobel&#13;
Marguerite Struck&#13;
Aurelia Sturdevant&#13;
John Stotz&#13;
Clara P. Swain&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
Mildred Tackaberry&#13;
Chas A. Templeman&#13;
Katherine, Tharp&#13;
Lilah Thompson&#13;
Alice Thornburg&#13;
Clara Trankle&#13;
Jacob Trefz&#13;
Ray D. Troutman&#13;
Gladys Tuttle&#13;
Cyril Upham&#13;
Doris Utterback&#13;
J. Don Van Horne&#13;
Robert N. Van Horne&#13;
Helen Van Nest&#13;
Marie Van Nest&#13;
Adah Van Slyke&#13;
Herald Walker&#13;
Donald J. Walton&#13;
Helen Warfield&#13;
Alice Waring&#13;
William Warnes&#13;
Mary F. Wedgwood&#13;
Ervine Wenig&#13;
Frances Wetmore&#13;
Rachael Whitfield&#13;
Dilla Whittemore&#13;
Emma J. Wiese&#13;
Earl Williams&#13;
Ewart L. Williams&#13;
Florence Williams&#13;
Lorene Williams&#13;
Noel J. Williams&#13;
Nellie Wilson&#13;
May E, Wickens&#13;
F. Eleanor Winkleman&#13;
Frieda Winkle&#13;
Grace Wishard&#13;
Amy Wolcott&#13;
Emma Wood&#13;
Winifred Wood&#13;
Faith Woodford&#13;
William Woole&#13;
Horace Wulf&#13;
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                    <text>�Floyd Conner&#13;
Alta,Iowa&#13;
51002&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
VOL. XIV&#13;
PRINTED AND B OUND BY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
YearBook&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Published by&#13;
&#13;
The Class of 1916&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
·'&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
To invisible and invincible something . atmosthmg which pervades the&#13;
.&#13;
phere at every contest for new&#13;
honors; to that tie which binds her&#13;
students in an inseparable union of fellowship, patriotism and devotion; to that force&#13;
which has endured unto the achievement of&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
victory in all her many hardships and catastrophies; to that hope which leads her up&#13;
onto the mountain . top to view her coming&#13;
kingdom in the boundless and limitless future;&#13;
to that spirit which knows no defeat-the&#13;
Spirit of Morningside College-this book is&#13;
loyally dedicated.&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
FOREWORD&#13;
&#13;
Staff&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
LOVICE STROBEL&#13;
HOWARD A. ALLEN&#13;
KATHARIN E SPRY&#13;
&#13;
One more cog in the wheel of time&#13;
has turned. The cycle of months has&#13;
witnessed incidents of momentous import to all the world. In this complete,&#13;
unwritten history are a few details&#13;
concerning the trials, the achievements,&#13;
the victories and the triumphs of&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
It has fallen to the lot of the class&#13;
which entered the college immediately&#13;
after her greatest catastrophy- the&#13;
burning of Main Hall-to record these&#13;
events in this book. We are few in&#13;
numbers and the burdens of a clas·s&#13;
have been heavy upon us, but we have&#13;
done our best. For our errors we ask&#13;
charity, for our success, support.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
A C.&#13;
&#13;
DELAPP&#13;
&#13;
MARION M. M ETCALFE&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
ANNA&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
BEARD&#13;
&#13;
F. ELFANOR WINKLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Asst. Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Classes and Department&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Societies&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Literary&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
LURA M c LAN E&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
MARION SIMME&#13;
&#13;
Art&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
Asst. Art&#13;
&#13;
GLEN PATRI CK&#13;
&#13;
Photography&#13;
&#13;
�Contents&#13;
BOOK I- THE SPIRIT OF LEARNING&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
BOOK II-THE SPIRIT OF CONQUEST&#13;
CLASSES AND DEPARTMENTS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK III- THE SPIRIT OF CONTEST&#13;
ATHLETICS AND FORENSICS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK IV-THE SPIRIT OF FELLOWSHIP&#13;
SOCIETIES AND ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK Y- THE SPIRIT OF THE MUSE&#13;
LITERARY&#13;
&#13;
BOOK YI-THE SPIRIT OF JEST&#13;
CALENDAR AND JOKES&#13;
&#13;
-9-&#13;
&#13;
�In appreciation of&#13;
PROF. EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN&#13;
We desire to express our appreciation of one&#13;
who has given to our predecessors, is giving&#13;
to ourselves, and will give to our successors&#13;
Prof. Brown&#13;
that greatest of gifts-himself.&#13;
has given twenty-five years of his life, in this&#13;
institution, to enrich and make fruitful our lives.&#13;
He is one who never fails to supply from his&#13;
broad and sympathetic understanding and from&#13;
his cheerful, smiling nature, helpful&#13;
advice and wise counsel.&#13;
&#13;
-11-&#13;
&#13;
- 10-&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
MA.IN HALL FIRE--CHAPEL WING&#13;
MAIN HALL FIRE&#13;
&#13;
tution of College grade with the understanding that there be guaranteed a suitable campus&#13;
&#13;
HISTORICAL SKETCH&#13;
&#13;
and $500,000.00, in accredited securities.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The enterprising spirit of Sioux City business men responded promptly to the propo-&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
sition; during the fall and winter following, grounds. were purchased at Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE NORTHWEST&#13;
and of the founding of&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
By PROF.&#13;
&#13;
E. A&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
plans were drawn, contracts let, and, in the sprini of l 890, the erection of the first&#13;
building was begun, the present Conservatory of Music.&#13;
&#13;
Not a College, but a collection&#13;
&#13;
of colleges was planned-a University, to be known as The University of The Northwest.&#13;
That nothing less than a University would be considered, was not unreasonable,&#13;
for thos• were times of great projects; it was the time of the building of the Combination&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
That twenty-five years ago Morningside College, or rather the institution which&#13;
later became Morningside College, should have existed only in the mind of man, or perhaps more concretely in the plans of the architect, seems almost impossible&#13;
Yet, at that&#13;
time, nothing could have been seen on the present College campus that gave any indication that a college ever would exist here. So rapidly are great in.stitutions built up in&#13;
modern times, that a standard liberal arts college, with an enrollment of more than seven&#13;
hundred students, may be established, pass through the adversities common to most institutions of this kind, and become a possibility within a quarter of a century.&#13;
The first action of which any record can be found, looking toward the establishment of an educational institution of College grade in Northwest Iowa, was taken at the&#13;
session of the Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, held at Algona&#13;
in September, 1889. The record is to the effect that bids be received to locate an insti-&#13;
&#13;
Bridge, the first permanent bridge across the Missouri at Sioux City; the time of the&#13;
great Union Depot; and of the Elevated Railroad, connecting the suburb of Morningside&#13;
with the business part of the city.&#13;
&#13;
A University was organized, faculties were chosen for&#13;
&#13;
a liberal arts college, a college of medicine, and a college of law, but somewhat peculiarly,&#13;
the fourth college to constitute a real university, namely the College of Theology, was&#13;
left out.&#13;
The corner stone for the present Conservatory of Music, known then as the School&#13;
of Technology, was laid in the early summer of 1 890, with the expectation that it would&#13;
be ready for occupancy by the following September, when the institution should open&#13;
its doors to students.&#13;
&#13;
But, when September came, the building was far from completion&#13;
-13-&#13;
&#13;
- 1 2-&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY FIRE&#13;
CHEMISTRY HALL FIRE&#13;
&#13;
tendance is said to have increased during the year, but why it should increase has always&#13;
and the Liberal Arts College began September 16, 1890, in the brick church then stand-&#13;
&#13;
been a matter of wonder, for the advantages in coming to Morninside were certainly few.&#13;
&#13;
ing at the corner of Orleans A venue and the Sioux Trail.&#13;
There was little that was inviting, except the natural beauty of the campus.&#13;
The first chapel exercise was an interesting event, though somewhat poorly attended,&#13;
for the actual number in the student body was fifteen, two of whom were visitors.&#13;
&#13;
This&#13;
&#13;
number probably did not constitute the entire enrollment, for doubtless some students were&#13;
loitering in the vestibule or strolling on the church lawn.&#13;
&#13;
The horrifying accounts of feline destruction in the modern department of&#13;
&#13;
Biology are not to be compared with the grewsome accounts of the dissection of human&#13;
bodies in the upper rooms of the medical building.&#13;
&#13;
The law college was established&#13;
&#13;
in down town offices, while the college of music existed only as a department of the&#13;
liberal arts college.&#13;
&#13;
m honor of its completion and the college of Liberal Arts took possession in January,&#13;
The foundation of the Main Hall was put in at the same time, but the super·&#13;
&#13;
structure was not erected until 189 7.&#13;
&#13;
Stock Yards car line, the only one running to Morningside, announced an hour schedule;&#13;
frequently good cause for being late at classes or for not coming at all.&#13;
Board was advertised to be had in the basement of the College building at $2.2S&#13;
per week, and that good board and neatly furnished rooms would be furnished at from&#13;
&#13;
$2.7S to $3.50 per week, but the most attractive feature was the low price.&#13;
&#13;
Announce-&#13;
&#13;
ment was made that students could further reduce the cost of living by boarding them-&#13;
&#13;
The student publications of the Institution began with the first issue of The University&#13;
Graphic in December 1890, to be issued monthly. This first issue was of large dimension,&#13;
almost the size of a small town newspaper; a large part of the first page was• given to a&#13;
cut of three magnificent buildings that were to adorn the campus, but, so far as known ,&#13;
&#13;
According to the best information obtainable, the first student to enroll in the&#13;
University was Mr. McClellan Davis, now a prominent real estate owner and dealer&#13;
in Portland, Oregon.&#13;
&#13;
the best, no sidewalks had been laid, not even cinder walks were provided, and the&#13;
&#13;
selves, but the wonder was how they could further reduce the cost ·of living and still live.&#13;
&#13;
The first building having been completed in the fall of 1890, a reception was held&#13;
1891 .&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
heating plant was not a success, the accommodations for boarding and rooming were not&#13;
&#13;
but the occasional student from the city who honored the new institution by enrolling, had&#13;
&#13;
The medical school was established in a residence building at 1 712 Garretson&#13;
Avenue.&#13;
&#13;
,·&#13;
&#13;
Probably fifty students enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
during the fall term, but most of them were Academy or Normal students.&#13;
&#13;
these buildings have not been erected.&#13;
&#13;
On the first editorial staff of the Graphic appears&#13;
&#13;
the name of J. W. Mahood, now the Rev. Mahood, as literary editor.&#13;
The following&#13;
&#13;
item from this issue shows that the pun, as a common figure of&#13;
&#13;
The at- 15-&#13;
&#13;
- 14-&#13;
&#13;
�THE SPOON HOLDER&#13;
CLASS ROCK&#13;
&#13;
speech, was used in College publications then as now:&#13;
&#13;
"Miss Anna Burnip' s young lady&#13;
&#13;
friends are curious to know why she so highly values her walks beside · the Brook."&#13;
&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. C . Peters were in sympathetic relation with student interests was shown&#13;
by the announcement that they would give a reception to the students in their elegant home.&#13;
The statement that the Institution had an enrollment of about a hundred and fifty by&#13;
&#13;
Northwest was taken over by the Northwest Iowa Conference; the institution was reorganized and named Morningside College.&#13;
three years.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. G. W. Carr, served as President for&#13;
&#13;
At the close of his term of service Dr. W. S. Lewis, now the honored&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Lewis, succeeded to the presidency and a new era of financial and educational&#13;
progress was ushered in.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis was followed by Dr. Luther Freeman, who ably&#13;
&#13;
January of the first year was probably true since this number included the students enrolled&#13;
&#13;
served, and was succeeded by Dr. A. E. Craig, under whose leadership Morningside has&#13;
&#13;
in the Law School, College of Medicine, Commercial School, etc., as well as those in the&#13;
&#13;
passed through three mysterious and costly fires.&#13;
&#13;
College of Liberal Arts.&#13;
&#13;
back and a bright future awaits the institution.&#13;
&#13;
A sketch of this kind would be lacking in justice to some connected with the institution should it not mention the names of some of the men who bore its great burdens at&#13;
that time.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Wilmot Whitfield, D. D., now of Seattle, Washington, was the Chancel-&#13;
&#13;
lor of the University.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Whitfield was a man of commanding presence, of a most&#13;
&#13;
kindly disposition, of strong personality and of the highest Christian ideals.&#13;
&#13;
The Dean&#13;
&#13;
of the College of Liberal Arts was Rev. R. C. Glass, A. M., now also of Seattle.&#13;
&#13;
Rev.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Glass was a most scholarly man and a man of great intellectual keenness and fine&#13;
executive ability.&#13;
&#13;
Dr.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
C. Gilchrist, a man of rugged, physical characteristics, of high&#13;
&#13;
ideals and scholarly attainments, was Dean of the Normal College.&#13;
The financial burden being too heavy Dr. Whitfield resigned in 1892.&#13;
&#13;
His succes-&#13;
&#13;
sor was Dr. William Brush, formerly President of Upper Iowa University, and later&#13;
President of the University at Mitchell, South Dakota.&#13;
- 16-&#13;
&#13;
In 1894 the University of the&#13;
- 17-&#13;
&#13;
However, the clouds are already rolled&#13;
&#13;
�In appreciation of&#13;
PRESIDENT ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
We cannot here fully express our appreciation&#13;
of the one who heard Morningside's "Macedonian Cry" and came over to help her in the&#13;
hour of her darkest gloom. No man has ever&#13;
been called to face more perplexing problems&#13;
than those which confronted our president after&#13;
the series of calamities which our institution&#13;
has undergone. Yet, because of the greatness&#13;
of the man, we are already filled with hope&#13;
and the future seems to be without limitations.&#13;
Despite his multitudinous cares Dr. Craig is&#13;
an intimate friend of the students, and&#13;
we are proud to have him for a&#13;
counselor and president.&#13;
&#13;
- 18-&#13;
&#13;
·-1 9-&#13;
&#13;
�CAMPUS-REAR VIEW&#13;
THE PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College:&#13;
&#13;
The Present and the Future&#13;
&#13;
By PRES. A E. CRAIG&#13;
The outstanding event in the interests of Morningside College during the present year&#13;
is the successful amalgamation with Charles City College, located at Charles City, Iowa.&#13;
Negotiations looking towards this action had been going on for almost two years before&#13;
the matter was brought to a conclusion last June. It is needless to say that many and&#13;
grave objections arose, especially on the part of the college which was in some measure&#13;
to lose its identity, and which indeed must needs lose its name and change its location in&#13;
order to enter the merger proposed. Much sentiment naturally clung to . the old name and&#13;
the historic location. But the harsh dictates of necessity could not be ignored. The advancing scale of college standards made neces• ary by our rapid educational progress&#13;
s&#13;
compelled Charles City College to face the stern facts of the case that it must either secure&#13;
greatly enlarged resources or seek some other alignment. The latter course seemed the&#13;
only feasible one open, and the conclusion was unanimously reached that it was the part&#13;
of wisdom to close the doors of Charles City College and join forces with Morningside.&#13;
This conclusion was reached by the Board of Trustees of Charles City College in June,&#13;
and their action was unanimously endorsed by the Northwest German Conference the&#13;
patronizing conference of the college. As it was impossible to arrange immediately all&#13;
the legal details of such a union it was decided to maintain both corporations intact for&#13;
at least one year and operate in the meantime under a contract. The chief conditions of&#13;
this contract were that such members of the faculty of Charles City College as so desired,&#13;
should be taken over by Morningsde College, and the resources of Charles City College be&#13;
paid into the treasury of Morningside. Arrangements were also made to dispose of the&#13;
property of Charles City College as circumstances might permit. Already a part of the&#13;
buildings have been disposed of and the rest will be sold as soon as satisfactory arrangements can be made. The library of over seven thousand volumes has already been transferred to Morningside as has several thousand dollars worth of furniture and scientific equip-&#13;
&#13;
ment. The President of Charles City College, Dr. W. C. Hilmer, becomes the VicePresident of Morningside College. Professors Schaub, Patton and Fischer also take&#13;
positions with Morningside. These new members have already assumed their work and&#13;
have made an excellent impression upon both faculty and students in their new positions.&#13;
Dr. Hilmer, in addition to his administrative work as Vice-President, is the head of the&#13;
department of German Literature. For this he is most admirably equipped, as he holds&#13;
his degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Illinois. Dr. Schaub assumes&#13;
the headship of the departinent of Biblical and Religious Literature. In this capacity he&#13;
will offer courses in the German language for young people preparing for religious work&#13;
in the German Conference. Mr. Patton assists in the department of mathematics and&#13;
Miss Fischer in Latin and German.&#13;
Morningisde College has a right to congratulate herself that Charles City College&#13;
selected her rather than some other institution nearer by. The reasons stated for this&#13;
'selection were that it was conceded that Morningside, in view of its marvelous growth&#13;
and its strategic location has before it a most hopeful future. The state of South Dakota&#13;
is a part of the patronizing territory, included in the Northwest German conference, and&#13;
this was an added reason for favoring Sioux City as a desirable location for the united&#13;
college.&#13;
Charles City College has had a most honorable career. In 1863 the Federal&#13;
Government erected a Marine Hospital on the picturesque brow of a hill just south of the&#13;
city of Galena, Illinois. The venture was not a success and the building was put up at&#13;
public auction. Two German Methodist ministers, William Schreiner and Frederick&#13;
Kluckhohn, realizing the need of a school to furnish secondary education, bought the&#13;
property for six thousand dollars. An organization was consummated, a board of trustees&#13;
elected, and the Northwest German Normal School was duly launched. The next year&#13;
the school was placed under the auspices of the Northwest German Conference of the&#13;
Methodist Episcopal Church. The career of the school at Galena was typical of the&#13;
struggling western institution. Numbers of vigorous, somewhat crude, but eager students&#13;
flocked to its halls. Splendid self-sacrificing work was done on very small capital. The&#13;
financial struggle was continuous and difficult. For the first decade little progress was&#13;
-21-&#13;
&#13;
-20-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�THE ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
MOONLIGHT ON THE MISSOURI&#13;
&#13;
made in a material way. But in 1878 the institution was advanced to the grade of a&#13;
standard college, the debt was wiped out and steps were taken to secure an endowment.&#13;
A modest sum was raised for this purpose which made possible greater things for the&#13;
school. Slowly, but steadily, collegiate and theological branches were added to the&#13;
curriculum, the equipment and library were improved, the literary societies were lifted to&#13;
a higher plane and the Young Men's Christian Association organized. In 1891 the&#13;
college was removed to Charles City, Iowa, a location more central to its patronizing territory. Here it continued to maintain a vigorous growth. The excellent work of the&#13;
institution was recognized by Mr. Carnegie in his splendid gift of $25,000 towards the&#13;
endowment. But as has been stated, the rapid advance of the requirements made upon a&#13;
recognized standard college made the struggle of Charles City College to attain this desired end so difficult that, after due consideration, it was deemed better to unite interests&#13;
with some college already well established and, so, meet the needs of its constituency. The&#13;
outstanding progress made by the vigorous young institution by the Sioux could not but&#13;
arrest the attention of those wide awake German Methodists and a course of college&#13;
coquetting went on for many months, which ended happily in the agreement to unite&#13;
hands and hopes and move on together towards the building of one of the most vigorous&#13;
institutions of its class to be found anywhere throughout the middle west.&#13;
The announcement of this decision greatly pleased the friends of Morningside&#13;
College and the citizens of Sioux City. Perhaps no one thing in the history of the college&#13;
has created more enthusiasm. And well it might. Besides the flattering recognition&#13;
implied in the selection of Morningside College, there came also the addition to its resources of all the property and endowment of Charles City College. It is too soon to&#13;
state definitely what these material assets will total. The outlook is that if any reasonable&#13;
disposition can be made of thal part of the Charles City realty not sold, that at least&#13;
$100.000 will be added to the endowment of the united institutions. This will bring&#13;
the permanent, productive endowment of the college up to half a million dollars. Besides&#13;
the endowment very substantial additions have come by way of library and equipment.&#13;
After duplicate books were eliminated and disposed of it was found that very nearly&#13;
seven thousand volumes would be added to the library. This brings this important asset&#13;
&#13;
up to about 19,000 volumes. When it is considered that both institutions were young and&#13;
that these books are necessarily recent we are justified in believing that Morningside&#13;
College will have one of the most practical and up to date libraries of any of our colleges.&#13;
The results of this merger have been very happy. While a large number of&#13;
students did not transfer from Charles City to Morningside, yet the effect upon the constituency was so stimulating that a very large class of freshmen applied for admission at&#13;
the opening of the school year. When the new constituency has had opportunity to become fully informed as to the real character of the college and has begun to feel it is an&#13;
institution in which it is vitally concerned, there will doubtless be a marked increase from&#13;
that source. As it is, the growth of the college is as rapid as it is wholesome. Some appreciation of this · growth will be gained by a comparison of the registrations of three successive&#13;
years. 191 2-1 3 showed an enrollment of 504, 191 3-14 of 638 and 191 4-1 5 of about&#13;
an even 700. The growth in the collegiate part of the college is equally gratifying, as the&#13;
figures for the three years stated are 24 3, 285, 33 7. At the present growth of the&#13;
s&#13;
college it will not be long before 500 students enroll in the four collegiate clas• es and&#13;
I 000 in the whole institution. Our territory is only awaking to the fact that there is&#13;
within its owns bounds a college capable of competing with any other institution of its&#13;
class in the state. Already Sioux City is becoming aware of the privileges offered her&#13;
own young people at home. The past two years has shown a marvelous increase in the&#13;
registration from the Sioux City high school.&#13;
The ideals for which Morningside College have always stood are becoming more&#13;
and more recognized as the true ones to guide in an educational development. The&#13;
emphasis on Christian character was never so pronounced as it is today. Even our taxsupported institutions are realizing that they cannot ignore this side of the young person's&#13;
culture and still claim to give a well rounded equipment for life. Public sentiment has&#13;
vastly changed during the past decade. It has been insistently proclaimed that material success without a corresponding ethical awakening is a most dangerous thing and will&#13;
spell the ruin of our national ideals. This new spirit has already pervaded both politics&#13;
and business. Our great universities are becoming aware that attention must be given to&#13;
the moral culture of the young people in their charge if they are to fulfill their true&#13;
&#13;
-22-&#13;
&#13;
- 28-&#13;
&#13;
�GRACE M. E.-THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
mission.&#13;
This can only create satisfaction in all circles. But it also emphasizes the fact&#13;
that the colleges which have long stood for these principles are peculiarly equipped to&#13;
furnish this moral atmosphere and to instil this genuine ethical spirit. While our colleges&#13;
with religious affiliations are broad and generous enough to satisfy the different tastes and&#13;
include the varying beliefs that divide our society into denominations, yet they are fully&#13;
and thoroughly committed to the idea that education must recognize the religious needs of&#13;
our youth and make some adequate provision for their care.&#13;
Speaking purely from the pedagogical side, it is also fair to insist that there is a&#13;
marked trend towards the smaller college for a genuine educational efficiency. Of course ·&#13;
this implies that the smaller institution must be adequately equipped to perform the task&#13;
it announces. But granted reasonable equipment, it is realized by many that it is better&#13;
for the youth in the younger stage of its educational development to be placed where&#13;
personal supervision can be given, where individual inclinations can be observed and provision made for their proper direction, where intimate friendships, both between students,&#13;
among themselves, and with their instructors can be easily formed. This general culture&#13;
does not demand the immense resources that are required for the advanced stages of a&#13;
university training. It is not too much to predict that the time will come when the undergraduate work will be largely done in this class of independent colleges and the great.&#13;
universities will be left free to pursue their particular work of dealing with the graduate =&#13;
student in his literary or professional work.&#13;
In view of these educational tendencies the friends of Morningside College have a&#13;
right to be very hopeful as to its future. It does not claim to have all its needs supplied&#13;
yet, but it does boast of a most magnificent beginning and it comforts itself with the&#13;
bright prospects ahead in the not distant future. With a growing city to encourage it, with&#13;
a rich agricultural constituency to support it, with a strong religious denomination to inspire it, with a growing alumni to enthusiastically boost for it, Morningside College turns a&#13;
bright face to the future and holds out beckoning hands to the great army of aspiring&#13;
young people contiguous to its location, saying "Come with us and we will do thee good,&#13;
for the Lord hath spoken good" concerning Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK I&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
-21-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, PH.&#13;
&#13;
C. HILMER, PH. D.&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Professor German Literature&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
M. S.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
STEPHENS,&#13;
&#13;
M. D.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Registrar&#13;
Professor Economic-Sociology&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL, A.&#13;
&#13;
OLAF HOVDA&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, A.&#13;
&#13;
PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
Professor Psychology-Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
&#13;
-26-&#13;
&#13;
Coss,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED EMORY HAYNES, PH.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
D. D. D.&#13;
&#13;
-27-&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�I '&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX .&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE&#13;
CARSON,&#13;
&#13;
*AGNES&#13;
&#13;
PH. D .&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADL EY,&#13;
&#13;
PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
L uTz,&#13;
&#13;
MARSH,&#13;
&#13;
JOHN D . MACMILLAN,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
S.&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
BERYL F. PATTON, B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Professor of French and Spanish&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-28-&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
GRETCHEN&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
M., D . D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biblical Literature&#13;
Acting Professor of Sociology and Economics&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN E. DIMMIT,&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant and Acting Professor&#13;
of German&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICK SCHAUB,&#13;
&#13;
FERGUSON,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
]AMES J. HAYES,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-29-&#13;
&#13;
�SI O U X&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON,&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Coach-Director of Physical Culture for Men&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
&#13;
]ANET&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
MACDONALD,&#13;
&#13;
HELEN I. LOVELAND, A. B.&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Latin&#13;
&#13;
LAURA&#13;
&#13;
C. FISCHER, A M.&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET G . DOLLIV ER,&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in German and Latin&#13;
&#13;
PEARL S. GREENE,&#13;
&#13;
A 8.,&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Home Economics&#13;
&#13;
MARGAR ET&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
BRAND,&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Women&#13;
&#13;
-30-&#13;
&#13;
-31-&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
�SI O Ux&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAcCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
MAcCOLLIN, Mus.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
MERRILL&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
MARCY&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Banjo, Mandolin&#13;
and Guitar&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F. WoooFORD,&#13;
&#13;
A B.&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Ross&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
ANNA&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
STEVENS&#13;
&#13;
Secretary to the President&#13;
and Assistant Registrar&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
ALTA F. FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
-32-&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
-33-&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
C. W.&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
TOWNER&#13;
&#13;
At the death of Mr. 0. W. Towner, Morningside&#13;
College lost a most loyal friend. In the dark days of the&#13;
institutions history, when its supporters were few and its&#13;
prospects for the future were dim, this man gave of his&#13;
resources, and, what was fully as beneficial, of his energy.&#13;
For over ten years he was a member of the board of trustees, being President of that body at one time. Later he&#13;
was elected to the position of Secretary which he filled up to&#13;
the time of his last illness.&#13;
&#13;
Patron and Liberal Supporter of the College&#13;
&#13;
-34-&#13;
&#13;
-35-&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN, M. D.&#13;
C. w. PAYNE&#13;
ANNA M. STEVENS&#13;
L. J. HASKINS&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Acting Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Auditor&#13;
&#13;
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
E. C HEILMAN&#13;
WALTER ToRBET&#13;
w. P. MANLEY&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER&#13;
C. W. PAYNE&#13;
R. T. CHIPPERFIELD&#13;
&#13;
C. LocKIN&#13;
GEORGE C. CALL&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
N. R. HATHAWAY&#13;
L. J. HASKINS&#13;
w. E. TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
FINANCE COMMITTEE&#13;
P. MANLEY&#13;
C. w. PAYNE&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN&#13;
J. C. Loc KIN&#13;
E. TACKABERRY&#13;
GEORGE RAW&#13;
GEORGE C. CALL&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK II&#13;
"The Spirit of Conquest"&#13;
&#13;
-36-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-37-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE BALCOM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
Pella&#13;
&#13;
PAUL BOODAGH&#13;
&#13;
Urmia, Persia&#13;
&#13;
WALTER&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
BREAW&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
-38-&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
- 39-&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE DARVILLE&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARIE DEVITT&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL M. COLLIER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
B. CosTAR&#13;
Alcester, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
SARAH CROWTHER&#13;
&#13;
New York, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
-40-&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Hot Springs, S. D .&#13;
&#13;
-41-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
BURRELL E. EVANS&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
RUTH E. FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTINE M. HAAS&#13;
&#13;
Woodbine&#13;
&#13;
HERBSTER&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
HIETT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Lake View&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
]OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE&#13;
&#13;
A. JONES&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
-42-&#13;
&#13;
-43-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
KING&#13;
&#13;
EDITH E. LYLES&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LYDIA E. McCRE E RY&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN&#13;
&#13;
KLINE&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Neb. ·&#13;
&#13;
ELLIS&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
Early&#13;
&#13;
KUHNS&#13;
&#13;
Frankfort, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE McKE NZI E&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
LAVELY&#13;
&#13;
Crookston, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
H E RMAN H. LUEDER&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
GUY D. McKINNEY&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
&#13;
L UCIL L E&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
METCALFE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 44-&#13;
&#13;
-45-&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
RUTH E. PRENTI C E&#13;
&#13;
MORLEY&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN NEWLAND&#13;
&#13;
RALPH C. PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Galva&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE B. ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CARL&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Inwood&#13;
&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich. .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-46-&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
SASS&#13;
&#13;
C. ELIHUSHOEMAKER&#13;
&#13;
FLETCHER POLLOCK&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Millnor, N. D.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE F. SHUMAKER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
TRENARY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
B. UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
CYRIL&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 48-&#13;
&#13;
-4 9-&#13;
&#13;
�SI OU X&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
"Hod" is primarily&#13;
and above all a student&#13;
and accordingly has&#13;
the respect of the faculty as well as the students.&#13;
After mastering his assignments he&#13;
finds time to play baseball, rush ads, fill the&#13;
office of class presidency, and participate&#13;
in social life. He is&#13;
modest, unassuming, and&#13;
congenial.&#13;
A&#13;
man&#13;
among men. To know&#13;
him is to admire him.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
"Tom" comes to us&#13;
after a two years sojourn at Cornell college, where he won&#13;
honors on the gridiron&#13;
and diamond. Experience here whetted ·his&#13;
judgment, hence his&#13;
choice of Morningside.&#13;
A versatile man, gets&#13;
into athletics, "fusses"&#13;
seven or six nights a&#13;
week and still gets "A"&#13;
grades.&#13;
&#13;
-50-&#13;
&#13;
ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Anna is a booster in&#13;
every activity. She is&#13;
an inspiration to any&#13;
one who works with her.&#13;
Her p r o f e s s o rs are&#13;
·never disappointed when&#13;
they call on her and&#13;
some of her classmates&#13;
do not seem to be when&#13;
they call on her. The&#13;
longer you know her the&#13;
better you like her. She&#13;
is a conscientious Y.&#13;
W. C. A. worker, a&#13;
loyal supporter of the&#13;
Agora Club, a strong ·&#13;
society worker and an&#13;
excellent student.&#13;
&#13;
-51-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FRAN CES CRA IG&#13;
&#13;
Never did one know&#13;
a girl mo re true, a&#13;
friend mo re sincere a&#13;
student more conscientious. She talks flu ently&#13;
and interestingly. H er&#13;
wit and humor dominate every situation. Althou gh&#13;
her&#13;
relatives&#13;
govern the throne she&#13;
trembles with the least&#13;
of us when considering&#13;
what the faculty may&#13;
proclaim. Unsurpassed&#13;
as a hostess, her home&#13;
is always open and has&#13;
been the scene of many&#13;
college activities.&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
One of our most&#13;
capable girls. It seems&#13;
she was born to rule,&#13;
and she is quite happy&#13;
in her vocation. She&#13;
could successfully manage any affair and have&#13;
money left in the treasury. A sheer waste of&#13;
ability for her to have&#13;
a banker's income when&#13;
she could live in luxury&#13;
on the wages of a daylaborer. A good student, a reader and singer of ability, and a&#13;
charming hostess.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
AMBROSE D E LAPP&#13;
&#13;
Brother DeLapp is&#13;
a preacher of marked&#13;
ability. He will read&#13;
this so all the truth cannot be told. He says&#13;
of himself, "I try to do&#13;
too mu.ch business on&#13;
too small c a p i t a 1,"&#13;
mental capital&#13;
and&#13;
we have noticed that&#13;
he sometimes says "Hallelujah" in the wrong&#13;
place. Yet he is very&#13;
liberal minded, serious&#13;
at tim.es, humorous but&#13;
never trivial. He is a&#13;
sincere friend, devoted&#13;
to his family, and an&#13;
earnest student.&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
-52-&#13;
&#13;
- 5 3-&#13;
&#13;
�S IO UX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
LEROY GINGERICH&#13;
&#13;
Won the prize, during his Freshman year,&#13;
for the greatest success&#13;
under the most adverse&#13;
circumstances. A hard&#13;
worker and an energetic student. Helping&#13;
his landlady wash is his&#13;
His honor&#13;
pleasure.&#13;
and manliness are every&#13;
where unquestioned, and&#13;
he has the profound respect of all who know&#13;
him.&#13;
He&#13;
will put him·&#13;
·&#13;
se If to any inconvenence to play a trick. He&#13;
·&#13;
greets you always with&#13;
a cheery smile.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR LI NDSAY&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZEL&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
Just as the Seniors&#13;
are proud of Olive so&#13;
we are of Ruth. S he&#13;
has endeared herself to&#13;
us by her agreeable and&#13;
unobtrusive m a n n e r.&#13;
This semester, during&#13;
her sojourn in the west,&#13;
&#13;
This girl goes to college for the real purpose o f d eveIopment.&#13;
She is as earnest and&#13;
sincere a worker as our&#13;
class has produced. H er&#13;
further intelligence is&#13;
manifest in the fact that&#13;
&#13;
we have all truly missed&#13;
her, and next fall we&#13;
shall gladly welcome&#13;
her back to her class&#13;
and college, providing&#13;
she does not become&#13;
enamored with&#13;
the&#13;
mountains.&#13;
&#13;
. WALTER HELD&#13;
&#13;
"A nn a" has sur- .&#13;
rised everybody this&#13;
year, even himself. He&#13;
is happy because he&#13;
was still in school when&#13;
the class of ' 18 came in.&#13;
When he isn't walking&#13;
or calling or ta lking in&#13;
the library you might&#13;
find him in the Biology&#13;
Laboratory or strolling&#13;
around looking as if he&#13;
were lost or wondering&#13;
if some one else was.&#13;
Other moments he is&#13;
training for track or&#13;
singing.&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS HORN&#13;
&#13;
By virtue of her&#13;
good scholarship&#13;
Gladys is finishing her&#13;
college course in three&#13;
years, and is making&#13;
good 1with many "A"&#13;
grades to her credit. A&#13;
good friend to all who&#13;
know her, quiet, but&#13;
interesting, because interested.&#13;
Her sound&#13;
judgment is always regarded. If you want&#13;
to know more about&#13;
her, go to her hospitable&#13;
home and try some of&#13;
her valentine cookies.&#13;
&#13;
she stayed out one year&#13;
so she could graduate&#13;
with a class worthy of&#13;
· her. She loves a good&#13;
time when other things&#13;
&#13;
has remarkable mus-&#13;
&#13;
She&#13;
sical ability. Our college needs more girls&#13;
like her.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 54-&#13;
&#13;
--55-&#13;
&#13;
A biologist, zoologist,&#13;
ornothologist, '"bugologist," and a human being for a' that. A proficient assistant in biology laboratory. "Art" is&#13;
a hard worker, sometimes a student, a photographer of some renown, a warbler in the&#13;
glee club, and a follower of nature. He says&#13;
he would fuss "wood"&#13;
his time permit.&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
A Scotchman of the&#13;
old style brand. Hails&#13;
from Moville, Iowa.&#13;
Loves to argue and realizes the weight of his&#13;
own argument, but is&#13;
ever willing to be convinced. Is an ardent&#13;
admirer of the West.&#13;
We are assured of his&#13;
advancement and progress in the ministry,&#13;
his chosen profession,&#13;
because of the utmost&#13;
sincerity in whatever he&#13;
undertakes.&#13;
&#13;
D ELBERT&#13;
&#13;
We call him "Del".&#13;
b ut th ere are f ew dells&#13;
Is&#13;
in his nature. A singer&#13;
of ability, an untiring&#13;
worker, a w o rt h y&#13;
friend. "Dirty shirts"&#13;
are his hobby. A laugh&#13;
that would make "Job"&#13;
smile. A broncho buster and a lover of the&#13;
war-field. Nevertheless&#13;
a prince of a fellow.&#13;
His greatest difficulty&#13;
is keeping his brother in&#13;
the straight and narrow&#13;
path.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALFE&#13;
&#13;
McKINN EY&#13;
&#13;
LURA M c LAN E&#13;
&#13;
Lura has honored her&#13;
class by her athletic&#13;
prowess in tennis, basketball, and track, and&#13;
is the only girl in school&#13;
wearing a gold "A."&#13;
She is game for anything and jolly on all&#13;
occasions, as a result&#13;
she is liked by all who&#13;
know her. Her's is the&#13;
type of a true friend.&#13;
Her greatest responsibility in school is probably her room-mate.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Our busy editor, and&#13;
probably the b u s i e s t&#13;
man in school. When&#13;
occasion demands a&#13;
and&#13;
influential&#13;
wise&#13;
leader, the responsibility&#13;
is thrust upon him.&#13;
This is because he is&#13;
capable and ambitious.&#13;
He thinks clearly and&#13;
logically, and his ideals&#13;
are the purest. He appears impressively, he&#13;
talks convincingly, and&#13;
he executes effectively.&#13;
&#13;
"Mitze"is so changeable that what we say&#13;
about her may not be&#13;
true when this book&#13;
comes before the public .&#13;
A happy mixture of&#13;
gaiety, soberness and&#13;
sincerity. She is ever&#13;
in a hurry and always&#13;
i n d e· m a n d. Her&#13;
studies usually get her&#13;
undivided attention just&#13;
before finals, but this&#13;
year she is working&#13;
hard to finish college&#13;
and expression at the&#13;
same time.&#13;
Just ask&#13;
the Freshmen boys if&#13;
she is popular.&#13;
&#13;
Here is a student&#13;
who equips himself well.&#13;
He imagines himself in&#13;
the futu re as a great&#13;
preacher and we second&#13;
the motion. Already he&#13;
says he has one hundred and seven sermons,&#13;
the most of which are&#13;
masterpieces. H e is a&#13;
happy combination of a&#13;
thorough student and a&#13;
His great&#13;
reformer.&#13;
hobby is temperance&#13;
and, as he has always&#13;
practiced it, his words&#13;
are with power. He is&#13;
most respected and admired by those who&#13;
know him best.&#13;
&#13;
1 6&#13;
&#13;
-56-&#13;
&#13;
-57-&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
�S IO U X&#13;
&#13;
GLEN PATRICK&#13;
&#13;
"Pat"&#13;
has made&#13;
good. He is a Morn-•&#13;
ingside booster. Brought&#13;
his parents with him on&#13;
his second return. An&#13;
earnest,&#13;
conscientious,&#13;
loyal student. · Mathematics are his pastime,&#13;
the Y. M. C. A work&#13;
is his chosen profession .&#13;
A big heart, a true student, a worthy friend.&#13;
He would get up any&#13;
time of night to take&#13;
t&#13;
snaps for the Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
KATHARINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN RINER&#13;
&#13;
MARION SIMME&#13;
&#13;
Ben is a man of high&#13;
character and ideals.&#13;
Loyal to his class, his&#13;
society, and his college.&#13;
Most of all he is absolutely sincere in his life&#13;
heart that&#13;
can scarcely be contained in his body. Is&#13;
admired and loved by&#13;
all who know him, even&#13;
his wife. An intercollegiate debater of no&#13;
mean ability. Works&#13;
for his fellow men&#13;
rather than himself .&#13;
&#13;
Marion is not only&#13;
very artistic but practical as well. She paints&#13;
At our&#13;
beautifully.&#13;
banquets, society and&#13;
class functions her a bility and clever ideas are&#13;
always in d emand. A&#13;
special shark in mathematics and a student of&#13;
distinction in every department. Pretty, witty and charming, she is&#13;
admired by all. "Loyalis her motto.&#13;
&#13;
-58-&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
A man who is here&#13;
for hard work. He is&#13;
doing his best to live up&#13;
to his brother's reputation. He is unostentatious, quiet and self controlled. His ambition&#13;
is to get what knowledge he can out of&#13;
books and he ranks&#13;
high in scholarship. Respected by all who&#13;
know him.&#13;
&#13;
B ESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Bess has been with&#13;
us since we started, but&#13;
we haven't seen much&#13;
of her this year. She&#13;
has been devoting her&#13;
time to domestic science&#13;
and whether or not she&#13;
is serious about it we&#13;
cannot tell. Any way,&#13;
she is a charming entertainer and would be a&#13;
good practitioner of her&#13;
profession.&#13;
&#13;
-59-&#13;
&#13;
The only one whom&#13;
we would trust to write&#13;
up our class. Katharine&#13;
has joined us since our&#13;
debut and has proved&#13;
a valuable addition to&#13;
the class. Although she&#13;
leaves her capabilities&#13;
to be discovered, she is&#13;
a leader in college activities, and has been&#13;
chosen A gora President&#13;
for next year. Being&#13;
at once brilliant, charitable, candid and optimistic she becomes a&#13;
choice friend upon acquaintance.&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
A true American college girl. A girl of sense, wit and&#13;
humor. Always busy but congenial and companionable.&#13;
A student volunteer by choice, Mac's choice. Is characterized by push, vim and vigor. She possesses high ideals and&#13;
a dominant will to insure their fulfillment. B elieves ardently that man was not made to live alone. She has heard the&#13;
voice of duty and her "Will" now leads her to the performance of that duty .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
LOVICESTROBEL&#13;
&#13;
Lura's room-mate. If&#13;
we were not afraid of&#13;
hurting somebody's feelings we would say she&#13;
is the most popular, the&#13;
prettiest, and the very&#13;
sweetest girl in Morningside. Singing, reading, or talking she is&#13;
equally charming. Her&#13;
greatest difficulty is her&#13;
vain attempt to be on&#13;
time once in a while&#13;
any way, but still she&#13;
is the most dependable&#13;
of persons. Her studies&#13;
are her pastime.&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
Mildred is a friend&#13;
to all and is liked by&#13;
all who know her. She&#13;
is frank, sincere, and&#13;
good-natured. Capable&#13;
and proficient in many&#13;
ways. She drives an&#13;
automobile and rows a&#13;
boat with equal skill.&#13;
She plays the piano and&#13;
she tats. Already she&#13;
has seen the exposition&#13;
at San Francisco. No&#13;
other class can boast of&#13;
a member who can&#13;
travel and make good&#13;
grades all in the same&#13;
semester.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 60-&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Laughing, chattering,&#13;
giggling, happy go&#13;
lucky Mary! Would&#13;
one ever believe she had&#13;
a serious moment? And&#13;
yet she must have serious thoughts or how&#13;
could she be such a&#13;
good student and such&#13;
a true and loyal friend?&#13;
Her auburn hair and&#13;
dancing eyes only serve&#13;
as symbols of her happy sun-shiney disposition. The blues are&#13;
simply impossible when&#13;
Mary is about.&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
"Bill" is handsome, strong and muscular, a good student&#13;
and a sincere friend. He plays football, basketball, baseball, and loves all athletic sports. He is not a debater or&#13;
an orator, women can use words why need he enter a field&#13;
so crowded? He never pushes himself forward, he does&#13;
not need to, but he will be in the front ranks with the doers&#13;
of the worlds work .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
-62-&#13;
&#13;
-63-&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
- 64-&#13;
&#13;
-65-&#13;
&#13;
�S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-66-&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-67-&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-68-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
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-69-&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
SI O U X&#13;
&#13;
~,~&#13;
&#13;
- 70-&#13;
&#13;
-71-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE SPECIAL&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
-72-&#13;
&#13;
-73-&#13;
&#13;
�.. ..&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-74-&#13;
&#13;
-75-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
- 77-&#13;
&#13;
��1916&#13;
- 79-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
-80-&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
-81-&#13;
&#13;
�S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
COACH SAUNDERSONA man's worth is to be judged by the results&#13;
of his work. So we may judge Coach Saunderson, who has&#13;
built up a team at Morningside superior to that of any&#13;
college of the state.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. PAUL EIFFERT"Turk" has made an enviable record as a&#13;
football man at Morningside. As captain he was a spirited&#13;
and vigorous leader. He hit the line harder than any man&#13;
on the team, ran the ends with great speed and was skilled&#13;
at the forward pass.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT VERNON"Boob" has played end at Morningside for&#13;
four years, and is one of the best men that the school has&#13;
ever produced. The best recommendation he can be given is&#13;
to say that he was accorded a place on the all Iowa team&#13;
second to none.&#13;
&#13;
-82-&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON"Jons" comes to us from Buena Vista with&#13;
a good record and his playing for the Maroons at the right&#13;
half position has been of the highest quality. His brilliancy&#13;
consists of spectacular open field running, forward passing&#13;
and surety in tackling.&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER"Tom," at right tackle, was a stone-wall&#13;
in himself. He is a large, husky, hard-working line-man of&#13;
exceptional ability, and plays a strong consistent game. His&#13;
strength was not fully appreciated until, because of an injury, he was called from the line in the Nebraska U niversity&#13;
game.&#13;
GUY McKINNEY"Mac," at center, was a man with every&#13;
qualification. He was strong and active, not too heavy but&#13;
with sufficient avordupois for a man who stars at that position. On offensive, he blocked the center well; on defensive, he tore through the opposing position.&#13;
&#13;
-83-&#13;
&#13;
�SI O Ux&#13;
&#13;
SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD-&#13;
&#13;
EARL MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
"BOgie" was&#13;
our bulwark at left tackle,&#13;
He was a strong man in both offensive and defensive, many&#13;
times succeeding in breaking up his opponents play and rarely failing to open holes for our "backs" to go through.&#13;
&#13;
"Hoodie," at quarter, filled his position&#13;
well. At all times, he piloted the team with keen judgment-the right man and the right play at the right time.&#13;
Next year should find him a very efficient leader.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN HERBSTER-&#13;
&#13;
CARL NORTHRUP-&#13;
&#13;
"Herb," at right guard, although badly&#13;
injured, never quit until relieved by the coach. He comes&#13;
to us from Leander Clark with three years experience on&#13;
the gridiron. In every game he blocked his opponent well, or&#13;
tore through the opposing line.&#13;
&#13;
"Nortie," playing his second year on varsity, at right end made a line running mate for Vernon. He&#13;
was fast in going down under punts and good in interference&#13;
and defensive play. His excellency was well displayed in&#13;
the Nebraska Wesleyan game.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM PAYNE-&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK-&#13;
&#13;
" Bill," at left guard, played a great game.&#13;
Large, strong and aggressive he proved a stumbling block&#13;
to every team which tried to penetrate the left side of the&#13;
line. A more willing worker, or a more consistent player&#13;
would be hard to find.&#13;
&#13;
"Wils" played both guard and full-back .&#13;
At either position he distinguished himself as a lighter, running good interference, carrying the ball well and tackling&#13;
hard. As he classes Sophomore, we predict a great player&#13;
in this man before he graduates.&#13;
&#13;
19 1 6&#13;
-84-&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 85-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYDHOWARD ALLEN"Hod," as substitute back-field man deserves much credit and praise. A harder or more aggressive&#13;
player it would be impossible to find. Only injuries kept&#13;
him from making a letter this year.&#13;
&#13;
"Tom" as substitute quarter was a good&#13;
man. At all times he kept the regulars fighting for their&#13;
positions. One years experience, combined with his strength&#13;
and speed should make him a valuable man for Morningside .&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS-&#13;
&#13;
EWART WILLIAMS"Bill" failed in making a letter by only a&#13;
few minutes play, when his collar bone was broken. He&#13;
was placed in Capt. Eiffert' s position and filled it creditably,&#13;
carrying the ball fast and hard and tackling every man with&#13;
sureness.&#13;
&#13;
"Bill," as a line substitute, was called upon&#13;
several times. Wherever he was placed he proved a strong&#13;
and heady player. Although this is not his particular field&#13;
of athletics, his size and speed make him a good man for the&#13;
gridiron .&#13;
HENRY COTTAM-&#13;
&#13;
ELIHU SHOEMAKER"Shoie," the big husky line substitute, was&#13;
a stone-wall to the enemy in every game in which he played.&#13;
His weight with more experience would have made him of&#13;
varsity caliber.&#13;
&#13;
-86-&#13;
&#13;
"Heinie" was Captain of the reserves, playing quarter back for that aggregation. He led his team&#13;
with such ability that it kept the varsity watchful at all&#13;
times for new plays. His past two years experience in&#13;
football on Bass Field will make him a strong bidder for the&#13;
varsity next fall.&#13;
&#13;
-87-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Football Season of 1914&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
College opened with many clouds on the&#13;
T HE football season at Morningside Coach Saunderson, aided by Morningsidehorizon,&#13;
but they were brushed away by&#13;
spirit.&#13;
&#13;
In reviewing the material which reported at the first nights practice, we miss the&#13;
faces of McCurdy and Wright of the line, Capt. Holbert, Behmer and Cobbs of the&#13;
back field, men whose places were hard to fill. However, by the persistent drive of our&#13;
coach and the old spirit of Morningside in each mans heart, they were filled .&#13;
The Sioux warriors first matched their strength against their old rival at Yankton,&#13;
who was smarting under the 33-0 defeat administered the year previous. After the&#13;
game fight put up by Yankton, our warriors again attached her scalp to their belt by a&#13;
48-0 score.&#13;
The Morningside Redmen met a good team at Simpson, a team likewise feeling&#13;
the smarts of defeat suffered at their hands in 191 3. Here again our lines held at every&#13;
critical moment and our backs tore through the line, or skirted the ends at will.&#13;
However, to play against fate is an impossibility. Owing to injuries received in&#13;
practice, our team work was shattered when we met the greatest team in the West, Nebraska University . However, our showing was creditable as we succeeded in getting&#13;
the pigskin across the goal line, in the last few minutes of play, a feat not accomplished&#13;
by larger schools.&#13;
Again our old rivals, the Coyotes, carried away our scalp after an hour of the&#13;
stiffest fighting ever seen in Sioux City. Each point gained by Vermillion was won only&#13;
after every ounce of energy had been put to test by the Morningside men. But superior&#13;
weight will tell and Morningside again saw a year pass without a coyote pelt to lay at&#13;
her door.&#13;
The last game of the season with Nebraska Wesleyan at Lincoln was a defeat for&#13;
the Maroons. The previous year Morningside had amassed a total of 33 points&#13;
against the Nebraska school. However, after the two university games of this year, and&#13;
the reception of so many injuries, we were in no shape to win.&#13;
The football season, as a whole, was a success. We came out victorious in games&#13;
with colleges of our size, and put up a good showing against the universities.&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
Results&#13;
M'Side&#13;
()pponents&#13;
Oct. 10 -Yankton College ................ .. .. . ... .. 48&#13;
0&#13;
Oct. 1 7- Wayne Normal (forfeited) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1&#13;
0&#13;
Oct. 24- Dakota Wesleyan .. . . . . . . . ...... . .. .. .. . .. 14&#13;
7&#13;
Oct. 30- Simpson ... . .. . . . . . .. .. . .... .. .. . . ..... 33&#13;
0&#13;
Nov.&#13;
7-N ebraska University ..... . ..... . . . . ... . . . .. 7&#13;
34&#13;
Nov. 14- University of South Dakota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
20&#13;
Nov. 20-Nebraska Wesleyan . . . .. . . . .... . .......... 0&#13;
13&#13;
Total. . .. . ... . . . . 103&#13;
&#13;
74&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
- 88-&#13;
&#13;
- 89-&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�SI OU X&#13;
&#13;
The baseball season in 191 4 opened with bright prospects, under the leadership of&#13;
Captain Cobbs. Of the team of the previous year, all reported except Captain Holbert&#13;
and George Prichard. These vacant positions were filled most creditably by new&#13;
material.&#13;
Our opening game was lost to the Hornick town team, but, from that time on, our&#13;
team was formidable against opposing colleges, winning one game from our old rival, .&#13;
Vermillion, and capturing Yankton's scalp, who had the record of winning every game&#13;
for three years.&#13;
&#13;
In our game at Anthon, lost by a score of 1 to 0, the star was Herbert Dunham,&#13;
who pitched a no hit game. This is quite remarkable when we consider the caliber of&#13;
the Anthon team.&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Under the leadership of Captain Eiffert, elect, and with the team losing but one&#13;
man, the record for Morningside in baseball next year can be predicted in no other way&#13;
than that it will be a brilliant success.&#13;
&#13;
R. PRICHARD&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
&#13;
Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
M'Side&#13;
1 6-Hornick town team, Bass Field. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3&#13;
27- University of S. D., Bass Field . ... . .. . ........ 7&#13;
4 -Yankton College, Yankton, S. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6&#13;
5-University of S. D., Vermillion, S. D .. . . . . . ... . 0&#13;
14-South Dakota School of Mines, Bass Field. . . . . . 6&#13;
28-Anthon Town T earn, Anthon, la. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
&#13;
Results&#13;
Opponents&#13;
8&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
CLOUGH&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
DUNHAM&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
-92-&#13;
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-93-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
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•&#13;
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-&#13;
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I 9&#13;
-94-&#13;
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I 6&#13;
-95-&#13;
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�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
The track season opened with gloomy prospects, for the old Morningside stars, such&#13;
as Montgomery, Kingsbury, Lemon, Holbert and Wickens did not report for work outs.&#13;
Nearly every event · had to be filled with a new man, but in reviewing the season we see&#13;
that each place was filled with a considerable degree of success.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
IN TRACK&#13;
&#13;
The opening contest on Bass Field was the Home Meet, which was won by the&#13;
Juniors. Although our men showed up strong in numerous events, the Coyotes · demonstrated their superiority in our first inter-scholastic event, by a decisive score.&#13;
Our next contest was with Nebraska Wesleyan at Lincoln. Last year w.e lost to&#13;
this school by a close score and this year they again lived up to their reputation by administering a defeat of 65 to 52. The Nebraska dope sheet was upset in this meet&#13;
when Upham won the 100 yard dash and Curry lowered the collegiate record for the&#13;
880 yard dash.&#13;
Morningside again won honors in the Conference meet at Coe when .Curry clipped&#13;
a margin of 1 1/ 5 seconds from the conference record for the half, and when Noel&#13;
Williams lowered the time for the mile by 2 / 5 of a second. In the State Meet Morningside ranked fifty and was only outclassed by Coe, which was the only other college in&#13;
the State to rank above the Maroons .&#13;
From this review the record does not seem to be great, but, considering that Morningside was developing an entirely new team the results have a far greater significance .&#13;
This ability to develop winners from raw recruits augers well for the future. All of the&#13;
team have stated their expectation to return next year. This, together with the ability of&#13;
an exceptionally strong Freshman class, should&#13;
place Morningside in a most favorable place for laurels next season .&#13;
&#13;
Coach Saunderson and the prospects of&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SCHEDULE&#13;
Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
18-Drake Relay Meet.&#13;
25-Home Meet- won by Juniors.&#13;
2-Dual Meet with U. S. D.-Bass Field-won by Vermillion.&#13;
8 - lnvitation "M" Meet- Bass Field- won by LeMars.&#13;
9 - Dual Meet with Neb. Wesleyan- Lincoln, Neb.,- won by Neb. Wes . .&#13;
15-Conference Meet at Coe.&#13;
23-State Meet-Des Moines-Morningside fourth place.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
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I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 96-&#13;
&#13;
- 97-&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan Meet&#13;
&#13;
MORLEY&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. LUEDER&#13;
&#13;
High Hurdles-Vernon, Morningside, first; Warner, Wesleyan, second .... .. ... . 18&#13;
Mile- Gillilan, Wesleyan, first; Williams, Morningside, second ........ . .. .. . .4 :42&#13;
100-yard Dash- Upham. Morningside, first; Johnson, Wesleyan, second ...... 10 4 / 5&#13;
440-yard Dash-McCandlass, W esleyan, first; Engle, M orningside, second .... 5 3 3/5&#13;
Low Hurdles-Warner, Wesleyan, first; McCandlass, W esleyan, second . .... . .. . . 28&#13;
Half Mile-Curry, Morningside, first; G illilan, Wesleyan, second . . ...... 2 :03 1/ 5&#13;
T wo-mile- Brunig, Wesleyan, first; Lavely, M orningside, second . . .. .. . ... .. 10 :29&#13;
High Jump- Mclntosh, Morningside, and Hayworth Wesleyan, tied for first . . 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Hammer-Lesh, Wesleyan, first; Stryker, Wesleyan second . ........ 123 ft. 9 1/2 m.&#13;
Shot Put- Johnson, Wesleyan, first; Vernon, Morningside, second ....... 28 ft. 2 m.&#13;
P ole Vault- Brown, Morningside, fi rst; Lueder, Morningside, second .. . . 10 ft. 9 m.&#13;
Broad Jump-Hayworth, Wesleyan, first; Geo. Hayworth, Wesleyan, sec . . 22 ft. 1 m.&#13;
Discus- Vernon, Morningside, first; Durham, Wesleyan, second . .. . . . . 11 0 ft. 8 in.&#13;
220-yard Dash- Fetz, W esleyan, first; U pham, Morningside, second . . .. . . . ..... 2 3&#13;
Half-mile Relay- W esleyan won ........... .. ... . ..... . ... . ... .... 1 :33 1/ 5&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota Meet&#13;
&#13;
The Drake Relay Meet is one of the track events to which Morningside looks&#13;
forward each year. We have made records that we have right to be proud of in this&#13;
meet, however, coming early in the season, it proved too much for our new men this year&#13;
and we did not succeed in winning. Next year the story will be different.&#13;
&#13;
Those winning were:&#13;
Mile Relay- Coe, Hamlin&#13;
Two Mile Relay-South Dakota, Yankton&#13;
&#13;
120-yard Hurdles- Quigley, S. D ., first ; Vernon, Morningside, second . .. . . . .. 17 1/ 5&#13;
Half-mile-Olson, S. D., first; Curry, Morningside, second ...... ... ... . . . .. . 2:07&#13;
100-yard Dash- Quigley, S. D., first; U pham, Morningside, second .... ... . 10 2/ 5&#13;
Shot-Eiffert, Morningside, first; Vernon, Morningside, second . . . . . .. . .. 35 ft. 4 in.&#13;
High Jump- McIntosh, Morningside, first; Frear and Collins, S. D ., second . 5 ft. 2 in.&#13;
220-yard D ash- Quigley, S. D., first; Upham, M orningside, second . . . . . . . . 23 2 / 5&#13;
Mile-Williams, Morningside, first; Carlson, S. D ., second . . . ......... .... . .4:45&#13;
440-yard Dash- Willy, S. D., first; M eade, S. D. , second ............ . . . . 53 215&#13;
Broad Jump--Vernon, Morningside, first; Gilbertson, S. D ., second . . .... 20 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus- V ernon, Morningside, first; Ferguson, S. D ., second ...... ... . . 11 6 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Low Hurdles- Quigley, S. D., first; R owe, S. D ., second ..... . . .. ..... .. . .. . 29&#13;
Pole Vault- Lueder, Morningside, first; McKay and Bates, S. D., second .. 9 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Two-mile Run- D eakin, Morningside, first; Lavely, Morningside, second ...... 1O:35&#13;
Mile Relay-South Dakota . .. . . . ........ . .... . .. . . . ......... .. . . 3 :36 4/ 5&#13;
&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Hamlin, Coe&#13;
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I 9&#13;
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I 6&#13;
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-98-&#13;
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-99-&#13;
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.&#13;
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�SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
New Record .&#13;
&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
The Coe&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
M&#13;
E M&#13;
E&#13;
CASTLE RELAY.&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
IVANHOE ?.&#13;
&#13;
Conference Meet&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash- Bailey (Coe), Lynch (Grinnell), Manley (Cornell) . . . . . . :10 1/5&#13;
Mile Run- Williams (Morningside), Walker (Cornell), Barlow (Coe) . . .. 4:40 2/ 5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- Lighter (Coe), J. Cliton (Cornell), Massey (Coe) ...... : i 6&#13;
*440 Yard Dash- Bailey (Coe), Armstrong (Des Moines), Norris (Grinnell) :5 1 1/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-West (Coe), O'Brien (St. Joseph), Dritt (Highl'd Pk.) .25 415&#13;
Mile-Curry (M'side), Maples (Simpson), Townsend (Grinnell) .. . 2 :02 2/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Lighter (Coe) and Manley (Cornell), Tied for first,&#13;
Lynch (Grinnell) .. . . .. . .. . ........... .. .. . .. .. . . . ... . .. :23&#13;
Mile Relay-Coe, Grinnell, Cornell . .. ... .......... . . .. . . . ... . . ... . . . 3 :40 3/ 5&#13;
Two Mile- Townsend (Grinnell), Thompson (Cornell), O tis (Coe) .. ...... 10:29&#13;
*Pole Vault- Verink (Coe), Clapper (I. S. T. C), Willits (Grinnell),&#13;
Lueder ( M' side), and Brown ( M' side), Tied for third . . 11 ft 9 1/2 in.&#13;
Discus-Knapp (Coe)), Vernon (Morningside), Carter (Grinnell) .. . . 127 ft. 4 in.&#13;
High Jump--Verink (Coe) and J. Clinton (Cornell), Tied for first; McIntosh .&#13;
(M'side), and W. Clinton (Cornell), Tied for third .... 5 ft. 6 1/4 m.&#13;
*Shot Put-Carlstrom (Coe), Verink (Coe), Vernon ( M 'side) . . . . . . . ..... 4 2 ft.&#13;
in.&#13;
Broad Jump--Lighter (Coe), J. Clinton (Cornell) Tooley (Grinnell) .. 21 ft 4 1/4&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Coe, Cornell, Grinnell. . .... .. . ... .. . . . ..... . ... .. .. .. I :36&#13;
&#13;
*R eco rd bro k en.&#13;
&#13;
- 100-&#13;
&#13;
-101-&#13;
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�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The "M" Meet is an invitation High School meet held each year under the auspices&#13;
of the "M" Club of Morningside College. There are from fifteen to twenty schools&#13;
which contend each year, making an event of stronger competition than any other similar&#13;
contest. This gives the College an opportunity to see, at their best, the athletes of her&#13;
constituency, besides engendering a good spirit between the high schools and the college .&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS IN MILE&#13;
&#13;
STATE MEET&#13;
&#13;
Three medals are given to the successful contestants in each event-gold, silver and&#13;
bronze. There are also various cups offered. The Tribune Cup and the Palmer Cup&#13;
are given each year to the school which wins the meet. The College gives a cup to each&#13;
member of the winning relay team and to the individual who wins the most points in the&#13;
meet. The Philo Society Cup is given to the school whose representatives are successful&#13;
in the relay race, and is to become the permanent property of the school which shall first&#13;
win it three times .&#13;
The weather conditions were as favorable as possible for the meet this year. This&#13;
resulted in many good records and one of the largest crowds that have ever witnessed&#13;
an everit of any kind on Bass Field. There were approximately two thousand spectators.&#13;
&#13;
RECORDS OF M CLUB INTERSCHOLASTIC MEET&#13;
&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Schraeder (Ia.) and Lighter (Coe) Tied for first,&#13;
McHenry (Drake) .. . ............ .. ..... . . . .. .. .. ... : 15 4 / 5&#13;
Mile Run-Watson (Drake), Thomas (Drake), Williams (Morningside) . . 4 :25 215&#13;
High Jump-Schraeder (Ia.) and Burrus (Ames), Tied for first,&#13;
Blackburn (Drake) ...... . .... .. .... . .... . ... . .. 5 ft. 9 1/4 in .&#13;
I 00 Yard Dash-Baily (Coe), Shearer (Drake), Dick (Iowa) .. ... . ... . : IO 2/ 5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Baily (Coe), Iverson (Ames), Johnson (Highland Park) . . :50 4/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Leeder (Coe), Schraeder (Ia.), Noble (Ames) .. .. ... . :22 2/ 5&#13;
Discus- Simons (Drake), Vernon (Morningside), Marcin (Ia.) . . . ... . . 121 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Krull (Drake), Crull (Drake), Beck (Ames) . . . . .... . . .. 29 ft. 3Yz in.&#13;
Half Mile-Parsons (Ia.), Haggard (Ames), Tyler (Iowa) . ... . . . . . .. .. I :58 3/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Dash- Shearer (Drake), Frasier (Ames), Collins (Ames) . .. . .... . . :22&#13;
Pole Vault-Schraeder (Ia.), and Smith (Ames), Tied for first,&#13;
Lueder (Morningside) . .. . .. . . ..... . .. ....... . .. 11 ft. 5 1/2 in .&#13;
Mile Relay-Ames, Iowa, Coe . .. . . ... .. .. . . .... . ... .... . ... . .. . ... 3:26 415&#13;
Two Mile-Makestadt (Ames). Fieke (Drake), Garst (Ames) .. . .. .. . ... 10:8 1/2&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Drake, Ames, Iowa . .. . ... ...... . . .. .. . .... .. . .. . I :31 1/ 5&#13;
Broad Jump-Shearer (Drake) , Lighter (Coe) , Tooley (Grinnell) . . . . .. 21 ft. 5 in.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
-10 2-&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909 and Osborne (LeMars), 1911 .. :10 flat&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Wilson (Cherokee), 1911 ... .. ... . .. .. . .. .. . .. . .... . . :23&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909 .......................... . .. :55&#13;
Half Mile-Rodgers (Yankton), 1914 ..... ... .. .. .... . . . ........ .. .. . . 2 :07&#13;
Mile-Deally (Hawarden), 1914 .... . ...... .. .. . ... . . . . . .. .. .. .... .. .4:55&#13;
120 Hurdles-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911 ... . ..... . . . .. . . . ..... .. .. . . .. .. : 17&#13;
220 Hurdles-Quigley (Hawarden), 1911 . . . ..... . ..... .. . .... ...... :27 4 / 5&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder (Cherokee), Peterson (Centerville, S. D.), and Wilkins&#13;
(Correctionville) , 191 1 .. .. ... . .... . .. . ... . . .. ...... 1 1 feet&#13;
High Jump-Aldrich (Sioux City), 1911 ... . ... ....... . . . ....... 5 feet 8 inches&#13;
Broad Jump-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911 .... . ............. . . 19 feet 9 1/2 inches&#13;
Hammer-Gilliland (Storm Lake), 1911 . . .. ( 12 pound hammer) 146 feet, 3 inches&#13;
Shot-Elliott (Hurley, S. D.), 1909 .. .. .. .... ( 12 pound shot) 43 feet, 8 1/4 inches&#13;
Discus- Knapp (Cherokee), 1911 ... . ..... . ...... . .. . .. . .. . .. .. . . ... 110 feet&#13;
Half Mile Relay-LeMars, 1909 .. ..... . . . . . ........ . . .. .. . .. .. .. .. ... 1 :39&#13;
Mile Relay-LeMars, 1909 .................. .. .. . . . ........... 3 :4 7 3/ 5&#13;
SCHOOLS THAT HAVE WON&#13;
May 7, 1909-Storm Lake&#13;
May 10, 1912-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
May 6, 191 0-Sioux City&#13;
May 9, 191 3-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-103-&#13;
&#13;
May 6, 1911-Cherokee&#13;
May 9, 1914-LeMars&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
Run&#13;
&#13;
TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
McCONKEY&#13;
&#13;
THEMonument&#13;
&#13;
Run&#13;
&#13;
The cross country run to Floyd's Monument and return takes place each year on&#13;
February 22, and is one of the most interesting contests of all that the athletics of the&#13;
school afford. No matter what the weather conditions may be, this event is never postponed. It has already become one of Morningside's few traditions.&#13;
Besides the competition that is always engendered by a contest of this kind, added&#13;
inducement is offered by medals which are presented. The winners of first, second and&#13;
third places receive, respectively, a gold, silver and bronze medal. The first academy man&#13;
to finish receives a gold medal also.&#13;
This year the trail was heavy and the time therefore somewhat slower than last&#13;
year.&#13;
Lavely, a Senior, broke all previous records last year and won again this year,&#13;
butwith Van Horne a close second. The other winners were McConkey, third, and&#13;
Trefz, the first academy man to finish, fourth . There were nine men in all who entered.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
- 1 04-&#13;
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1 6&#13;
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- 10 5-&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908 .. . ......................... . ...... 10 :00&#13;
220 Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903 .......... . ..... .. ..... . ........ 22 l /5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Y. E. Montgomery, 1913 ....... .... ........... . .... 51 415&#13;
880 Yard Run-W. E. Curry, 1914 .... .. ...... . ................. . 2:02 2/ 5&#13;
Mile Run-A P. Berkstresser, 1908 ..... . .. . . . .... . .......... . ·&#13;
&#13;
4:40&#13;
&#13;
Two Mile Run-L. R. Chapman, 1908 ............................... 10 :05&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910 .. ......... . ..... .. ...... 25 l /5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-E. G . Quarnstrom, 1911 . ......................... 15 4/ 5&#13;
High Jump-W. McIntosh .............. .. ............ ... ... 5 ft. 7 1/2 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E. West, 1911 ............. .. . .&#13;
&#13;
. ............. 21 ft. 2 m.&#13;
&#13;
Shot Put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912 . ..... .. ...... .. . ............ 39 ft. 1/2 m.&#13;
Hammer Throw-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911 ..................... . 121 ft. 31/2 m.&#13;
Discus- D. L. Wickens, 1911. .... .. .. ................ · ..... . .... 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay- V. E. Montgomery, A. P . Berkstresser, E. G. Quarnstrom,&#13;
F. E. Burns, 1909 . . ....... . .. .......................... 3 :36 2/5&#13;
Two Mile Relay-AC. Lemon, W. H. Bowker, L. H . Kingsbury,&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, 1912 . ................ . ... .. ......... ... 8:28 4/5&#13;
Monument Run- V. Lavely, 1914 ................ . ......... .. . 18:01 2/ 5&#13;
Pole Vault- Herman Leuder ...... ... .......................... . 11 ft. 1 in .&#13;
&#13;
- 106-&#13;
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-107-&#13;
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�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball Series&#13;
MEN'S SCHEDULE&#13;
Seniors 26&#13;
Sophs. 15&#13;
&#13;
Seniors 14&#13;
Freshmen, 2nd place&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 35&#13;
Acad . 10&#13;
&#13;
Soph. 40&#13;
Acad . 9&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 25&#13;
&#13;
}&#13;
&#13;
Soph. 16&#13;
Sophomores, 1st place&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 36&#13;
Juniors 19&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 15&#13;
&#13;
Juniors 9&#13;
Soph. 19&#13;
&#13;
Soph.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors 23&#13;
Acad. 20&#13;
&#13;
}&#13;
&#13;
Seniors 15&#13;
Juniors, 3rd place&#13;
&#13;
Juniors 22&#13;
Acad. 5&#13;
&#13;
Juniors 22&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS SCHEDULE&#13;
Acad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8- Soph. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
Soph. . . .. . ...... ... . 12-Senior............... 10&#13;
Fresh. . .......... . .. . 19-Acad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
Fresh. . . . . ........... I 2-Soph. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Acad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-Senior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
Fresh. . . .. . . .. . ..... . 10- Senior .. . ..... . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Freshmen ........ . . .. . ............ . ... . First Place&#13;
Academy . ...... .. ...... . .. ... . .... Second Place&#13;
Sophomores . . .. . .............. . .... . .. Third Place&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
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I 6&#13;
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- 108-&#13;
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CLOUGH&#13;
&#13;
CURRY&#13;
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I 9&#13;
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I 6&#13;
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- 109-&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
By PROF. MARGARET BRAND&#13;
&#13;
F. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
With the opening of the Alumni Gymnasium last year, a new department was born&#13;
at Morningside College-the department of physical training. Now, at the close of this&#13;
first years work, it is well to stop a moment in our mad pursuit and ask ourselves " Why?"&#13;
What is it we are pursuing? Is the prize worth the time and the effort of the chase?&#13;
Ask the average person what is the use of Physical Training, and nine times out of&#13;
ten he will answer, "To make our men strong and our girls graceful." Certainly strength&#13;
and grace should be among the results obtained, but again we must ask Why? Would&#13;
these alone be worth the cost? A second anwser comes, "Health." Yes, health, too,&#13;
we are seeking. But after all, are not all of these-strength, health, grace- merely&#13;
letters which go to make up that key-word of this twentieth century, EFFICIENCY?&#13;
&#13;
C. SHADE&#13;
&#13;
The body is not even a mere machine run by the mind. It is a part of that mind;&#13;
and they cannot be trained separately. Physical training, then, is not simply physical&#13;
training. It is one branch in the development of the completely efficient man.&#13;
&#13;
--110-&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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GIRLS GYM. CLASS&#13;
MENS GYM. CLASSES&#13;
&#13;
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�SI OUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Dual Debate&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Dual Debate&#13;
SIMPSON COLLEGE, APRIL 20, 19 J 5&#13;
&#13;
MoRNINGSIDE, APRIL&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
SIMPSON COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
VS.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
SIMPSON COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
, RESOLVED : That ( constitutionality granted) the&#13;
Federal Government should prohibit Interstate Traffic&#13;
in goods produced wholly or partly by Child Labor.&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED: That ( constitutionality granted) the&#13;
Federal Government should prohibit Interstate Traffic&#13;
in goods produced wholly or partly by Child Labor.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Simpson&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Simpson&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
DECISION:&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
- 117-116-&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
J. DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
NOVEMBER 13, 1914&#13;
&#13;
FEBRUARY 23, 1915&#13;
&#13;
"Cost of Child Labor," First&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
"The Power of Peace," Second&#13;
&#13;
J. DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES H. KLIPPLE&#13;
CLARENCE T. CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
" Inevitable Peace," Third&#13;
"Who Built Babylon?"&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
"The Prize of an Awakened Nation," Second&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES HUTTON&#13;
&#13;
"A Plea for Prohibition," Third&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPLE&#13;
&#13;
A . C . D E LAPP&#13;
&#13;
"Commercial Militarism"&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
"Public Opinion and the Liquor Traffic&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
ST A TE PROHIBITION ORATORI CAL CONTEST&#13;
INDIANOLA, APRIL 9, 1915&#13;
&#13;
ST A TE ORATORI CAL CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
"Public Opinion and the Liquor Traffic&#13;
&#13;
-118-&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE&#13;
&#13;
"The Industrial Mandate," First&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN, Simpson&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
-119-&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
lnter-Society&#13;
Debate ·&#13;
NOVEMBER 30, 1914&#13;
&#13;
ION IAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
OTHO N IAN&#13;
&#13;
VERNON S TE NSETH&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED: T h a t t h e&#13;
Federal Government should&#13;
Own and Operate all InterState R ailways .&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, MARCH 9, 1915&#13;
"America's Mission," First&#13;
&#13;
VERNON STENSETH&#13;
&#13;
"The Havoc of Commercialism," Second&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS F ORBES&#13;
&#13;
"The Mission of the United States"&#13;
&#13;
ARTH UR L OCKE&#13;
&#13;
" Ideas and War"&#13;
&#13;
PAUL BOODAGH&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeIonian&#13;
&#13;
H ERMAN BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
"The World Without War"&#13;
&#13;
NegativeOthonian&#13;
STA TE PEACE ORATORICAL C ONTEST&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, APRIL 9, 191 5&#13;
Morningside tied with P arsons for third place.&#13;
Simpson C ollege won First.&#13;
&#13;
DECISION:&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
Negative&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
- 120-&#13;
&#13;
-1 21-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
DECEMBER 1, 1914&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
D ECEMBER 2, 19 14&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
PHILO MAT HEAN&#13;
&#13;
O T HONIAN&#13;
&#13;
VS.&#13;
&#13;
vs .&#13;
&#13;
ION IA N&#13;
&#13;
P HILO MATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTIO N:&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED: T hat th e&#13;
Fed eral Government should&#13;
own and operate all InterState R ailways.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED: T hat the&#13;
F ederal Government should&#13;
O wn and Operate all InterState R ailways.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativePhilomathean&#13;
&#13;
N egativeIonian&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeO thonian&#13;
&#13;
NegativePhilomathean&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative 4&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-122-&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
- 1 23-&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter- Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Sioux CITY, IOWA,&#13;
MARCH 19, 19 15&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
vs .&#13;
&#13;
CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA MARCH 19, 1915&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STA TE TEACHER'S COLLEGE&#13;
QUESTION :&#13;
R ESOLVED: That the Federal Government should&#13;
own and operate all Inter.State Railways.&#13;
AffirmativeMorningside College&#13;
NegativeIowa State Teacher's College&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
COE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Collegiate Debate&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED: That the Federal Government should&#13;
own and operate all Inter.State Railways.&#13;
&#13;
WINFIELD, .KANSAS, APRIL 9, 1915&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE C OLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeCoe College&#13;
NegativeMorningside College&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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I 6&#13;
-125-&#13;
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)&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
D ebate&#13;
D ECEMBER 3, 1914&#13;
&#13;
S TATE O RATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1901- Toothaker ..............................................Ehmmated on thought&#13;
H. A. Keck...................Seventh&#13;
o2-A, R.&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
C. H all ..........................................................Fourth&#13;
1904- R. E. Heilman ................................................. .&#13;
1905- G. J. Poppenheimer ........................................&#13;
1903-D.&#13;
&#13;
1906-7- A. G. Cushman ··::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Fifth&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer.......................................... Second&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer. ......................................... First; Interstate, ·E ighth&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
A D ELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
R ESOLVED: Tha t a S ingle&#13;
Tax on all land values should&#13;
be gradually substituted for&#13;
all other forms of Taxation .&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeH awkeye&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
DECISION:&#13;
Affirma tive 3&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
-126-&#13;
&#13;
1907-. Barrett ..................................................Third&#13;
Ida Lewis.................Fifth&#13;
1908--G. W&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill... ....................................................... Second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson .................................................. First ; Interstate, Third&#13;
1911-W. A. McCurd y ................................................ Sixth&#13;
1912-C. E . Smith ...................................................... Fifth&#13;
1913-J. L. Ralston .................................................... Thi rd&#13;
1914-R. L. Mitchell ..................................................S econd&#13;
1915-R. L . Mitchell .................................................. Second&#13;
STATE P EACE O RATORI CAL AssocIATION&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson .................................................. First&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon .................................................... Fifth&#13;
1913- D. L. Wickens .................................................. First; Interstate, Third&#13;
...................................................... Fifth&#13;
1915-Vernon Stenseth ..............................................Tied for Third&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morn ingside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Mornin gside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1905- Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa U . 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1908- Upper Iowa U. O, Mor ningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan l, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morn ingside 3. Upper Iowa U. 1. Morningside 2.&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2. Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2. Dakota Wesleyan 2, Mornings ide 1.&#13;
&#13;
N egative-&#13;
&#13;
N egative&#13;
&#13;
STATE P ROHIBITION ORATORICAL A SSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch ....................................................First ; Interstate, F irst; National, Third&#13;
1902-J. N . McCay ....................................................Second&#13;
&#13;
1913- Iowa State Teachers 2, Morningside 1. Coe 1, M&#13;
0, Morningside 3.&#13;
&#13;
1914-Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3. Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1915-Iowa State T eacher s O, Morn ingside 3. Coe 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1915-Southwestern 3, Morningside O&#13;
.&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
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:-&#13;
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Love&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
Sight&#13;
&#13;
BOOK IV&#13;
&#13;
-128-&#13;
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�--129-&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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.&#13;
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.&#13;
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I 9&#13;
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�·&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
COLORS-Scarlet and black.&#13;
MOTTO-Esse, quam videri (to be rather than to seem.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Dora Carlson&#13;
Mabel King&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
&#13;
President . . ... .. . . .. Olive Hartzell&#13;
Vice President . . . .... Dora Carlson&#13;
Secretary . . .. ... . ... Mabel Pecaut&#13;
Treasurer .. . . . .... .. Hazel Day&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
Mary Wedgwood&#13;
Fem Beacham&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 18-Zet Hen Party at Lois Crouch's.&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
25-New Zets entertain old Zets at Ethel Coomers .&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
9-German Program .&#13;
&#13;
May 18-0tho breakfast for the Zets.&#13;
Zet Talbot farm picnic.&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
1- Reception for mothers.&#13;
&#13;
June 16-Reunion.&#13;
August 4-11-Zet camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
9-Zet-Otho joint.&#13;
&#13;
October 24-Zet Open Door-"Songs of Seven."'&#13;
October 19-Zet-Otho Prom .&#13;
Dcember 1 I-Reception to the Othos at Dora Carlson's.&#13;
February 13- Banquet at the West.&#13;
February 22-Zet Grand Public-"The Heart of the World."'&#13;
&#13;
I 9 I 6&#13;
- 132-&#13;
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- 133-&#13;
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�S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
GRAND&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
PUBLl C&#13;
&#13;
- 134-&#13;
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-13 5-&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian&#13;
COLOR-Royal Purple.&#13;
MOTTO-Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re (Gentle in manner, resolute in deed.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
H. L. Dunham&#13;
&#13;
President ........... R. R. Vernon&#13;
Vice President .. . .. .. W. B. Costar&#13;
Secretary ...... . . ... G. D. McKinney&#13;
Treasurer .. ..... . . . . H. L. Dunham&#13;
&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
W. B. Costar&#13;
J. R. Kolp&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 2 7- G rand Public.&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4- Reception to the Zetaletheans.&#13;
&#13;
May 18- Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 25-Stag.&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
1- Final debate of the gold medal senes.&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
8- Graduating exercises.&#13;
&#13;
June 16- Reunion.&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
2- Annual Otho stag.&#13;
&#13;
October 19- Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 30- 0tho-Ionian debate.&#13;
February Otho Banquet at the est.&#13;
8W&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
- 136-&#13;
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I 6&#13;
-137-&#13;
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..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
W . H. Payne&#13;
C. T. Williams&#13;
M. E . Stevens&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
-138-&#13;
&#13;
-139-&#13;
&#13;
�Pieria&#13;
COLORS-Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
MoTTO-Feliciter, fortiter, fideliter (Happy, brave, faithful.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President ............ Elsie Johnson&#13;
Vice President . . ... .. Florence Bull&#13;
Rec. Secretary .... ... Marion Metcalfe&#13;
C. Secretary ...... . .. Harriet Patterson&#13;
Treasurer ..... .. .... Amanda Roost&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
Marion Simme&#13;
Laura Robinson&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Ruth Blackman&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 17-Pieria-lonian ravine party.&#13;
May 25- Picnic .&#13;
June 16-Alumnae, Senior breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
October 10- 0pen door.&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
9-Pieria-lonian pep meeting.&#13;
&#13;
November 1 ?-Butterfly tea for faculty ladies.&#13;
December 11-Progressive dinner for the lonians.&#13;
December 17-Christmas party,- Marion Simme's.&#13;
January 5-Shower for Helen Gullickson.&#13;
February 20-Pieria-lonian Washington birthday party.&#13;
March 1-Pieria-lonian grand public.&#13;
March 20-Formal initiation and dinner.&#13;
&#13;
-140-&#13;
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-141-&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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•&#13;
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I 9&#13;
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..&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Colors- Royal Purple. and Old Gold&#13;
MOTTO-Possunt quod credere possunt (They are able through faith)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm&#13;
President ... . ..... .. W. Henderson&#13;
Vice President . . .. . .. C. Sass&#13;
Rec. Secretary . .. ... H. Kilbourne&#13;
C. Secretary ...... .. E. Gould&#13;
Treasurer ..... . ... .. H . Allen&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Howard A llen&#13;
Charles Hutton&#13;
Carl Sass&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
Charles Hutton&#13;
Roland C. Frost&#13;
St. Clair Moore&#13;
Don Van Horne&#13;
&#13;
CALEN DAR&#13;
May 25-Final Gold medal debate.&#13;
June I-Up-river trip.&#13;
June 15-- Reunion.&#13;
September 28-Rush stag at the Ionian House.&#13;
November 2-Annual Halloween party .&#13;
November 9- Joint closed door.&#13;
December I - Otho-Ionian debate.&#13;
December 2-Philo-Ionian debate.&#13;
December 4- Stag Banquet at the house .&#13;
December 11-Pieria reception.&#13;
&#13;
February 20- Annual Martha Washington party&#13;
...&#13;
-144-&#13;
&#13;
-145-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-146-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-147-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Aletheia&#13;
CoLORs-Champagne and Chocolate&#13;
MOTTO-Lovers of the best .&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Sarah Crowther&#13;
Fern Marquart&#13;
Millie Corneliussen&#13;
Esther Larson&#13;
&#13;
President ........... Myrtle Britton&#13;
Vice President ....... Ruth French&#13;
Secretary . .. ... .. .. . . Lulu Hawcutt&#13;
Treasurer ...... ... . . Fern Marquart&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Olive Jones&#13;
Kathryn Leazer&#13;
Beth Edge&#13;
Vera Sipe&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 4-The New Girls entertain the Old Girls at the North Ravine.&#13;
June 6-Annual Banquet.&#13;
September 20-Watermelon spread.&#13;
September 2 7-&#13;
&#13;
hafing d ish spread.&#13;
&#13;
October 10-0pen Door .&#13;
October 17-Party at the home of Sarah Crowther.&#13;
October 20-Eats at the South Ravine .&#13;
October 31-Halloween party.&#13;
November 2 1-0pen Door.&#13;
December 12-Christmas party.&#13;
January 16-0pen Door.&#13;
February 1 3-Anniversary dinner.&#13;
March 13- 0pen Door.&#13;
March-Chafing-dish spread.&#13;
March 24-Installation of officers.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
1 6&#13;
&#13;
- 149-&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-1 50-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-1 51-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
COLORS- Light Blue and White .&#13;
&#13;
MoTTO-Utile dulce (The useful with the pleasing.)&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Balcom&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
Lydia McCreery&#13;
Anna Beard&#13;
Minnie Fry&#13;
&#13;
President . . ... ...... Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Vice President . . . . . . Edith Lyles&#13;
Rec. Secretary ....... Ethel Olsen&#13;
C. Secretary ........ Ethel Ewer&#13;
Treasurer. .... . ..... Ruby Flinn&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Lydia McCreery&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 12-Athenaeums' Mothers' Day.&#13;
June 1-Athenaeum picnic-Riverside Boat Club.&#13;
June 16-Reunion&#13;
&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
June 27- July 5-Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 19-Dinner for new members .&#13;
October 5-Alumnae party.&#13;
October 12-Joint with Philos .&#13;
October 17-Open door.&#13;
October 31-Masquerade party.&#13;
December 17-Progressive dinner in honor of the Philo debaters .&#13;
January 23-0pen&#13;
&#13;
door.&#13;
&#13;
February 3-Formal initiation of new members.&#13;
February 20- 0pen door.&#13;
&#13;
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-153-&#13;
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�Sioux&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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I&#13;
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I 6&#13;
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I 9&#13;
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-154-155-&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Green and Maroon.&#13;
MOTTO- VESTIGIA&#13;
Nu/la Retrorsum (No stepping backward)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
R. Prichard&#13;
C. Upham&#13;
H. French&#13;
E. Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
President .. ......... V.&#13;
Vice President ... .... R.&#13;
Secretary . . . . .. ... . . B.&#13;
Treasurer. . ... ... ... H.&#13;
&#13;
Hornney&#13;
Prichard&#13;
Brown&#13;
Cobbs&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 18-Philo Annual Trial.&#13;
May 31-Philo Up-River trip .&#13;
June 1-Philo-Athenaeum Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 4-Election of Inter-society Debaters .&#13;
June 16-Reunion.&#13;
September 21-Philo stag .&#13;
October I 5- Initiation of new members.&#13;
December 1 7-Athenaeum reception to Philos .&#13;
February 15-Philo Annual Trial.&#13;
March 8-0pen Door.&#13;
March I 5-Philo Reception to the Athenaeums.&#13;
April 26-Philo Athenaeum Grand Public.&#13;
&#13;
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-157-&#13;
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Winter Term&#13;
E. Shoemaker&#13;
C. Upham&#13;
F. Bondhus&#13;
F. Phelps&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-159-&#13;
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I 6&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian&#13;
COLORS-Olive Green and White.&#13;
MOTTO-To Possess the Aesthetic.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President . . ..... . .. Olive Gillies&#13;
Vice President . ... . Irene Smith&#13;
Secretary . .. ....... Edith Black&#13;
Treasurer ... . ... . .. Cleo Holmes&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Fem Hemstreet&#13;
Ula Beck&#13;
Dorothy Robinson&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Ula Beck&#13;
Ruth Belew&#13;
Edith Black&#13;
Irene Cobbs&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Verna Comoli&#13;
Marguerite Dewell&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
Irene Smith&#13;
Dorothy Robinson&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
Fern Hemstreet&#13;
Cleo Holmes&#13;
Cora Holmes&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
Lillian Smith&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 1 60-&#13;
&#13;
- 1 61-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
COLORS-Cerise and White.&#13;
MOTTO- Carpediem.&#13;
&#13;
(Seize the opportunity.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
President .......... G .&#13;
Vice President ... .. L.&#13;
Rec. Secretary .... . .L.&#13;
Treasurer .......... H.&#13;
&#13;
Omer&#13;
Steele&#13;
Berger&#13;
Hartley&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
L. Berger&#13;
R. Long&#13;
B. Brevic&#13;
H. Buehler&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
&#13;
K. Main&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
R. Harvey&#13;
G. Mulford&#13;
C. Northrup&#13;
R. Broome&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Trefz&#13;
E. Wessel&#13;
H. Buehler&#13;
E. Brewster&#13;
B. Brevic&#13;
&#13;
-162-&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
R.&#13;
Y.&#13;
R.&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
Steele&#13;
Lenart&#13;
Wolcot&#13;
Long&#13;
Berger&#13;
G. Omer&#13;
&#13;
-163-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
COLORS-Nile Green and White.&#13;
MoTTo- We Succeed by Doing.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm&#13;
President . . . ....... Ruth Brown&#13;
Vice President . ... . Pauline Barret&#13;
R ec. Seccretary .... Florence Fair&#13;
C. Secretary .. . .. . . Emma Haegili&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Clara Huchendorf&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
Nathalie Allen&#13;
Viola Lewis&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Ruth Brown&#13;
Lorene Williams&#13;
Esther Day&#13;
Clara Huchendorf&#13;
Emma Haegili&#13;
Frieda Winkle&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Graham&#13;
Myrtle Sampson&#13;
Pauline Barret&#13;
Florence Fair&#13;
Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
&#13;
Emma Hough&#13;
Nathalie Allen&#13;
Mabel Houk&#13;
Bernice Lehan&#13;
Viola Lewis&#13;
Abbie Patterson&#13;
&#13;
- 1 65-&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS-Gold and Silver .&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO- Non palma sine pulvere (No victory without dust.)&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
President ... . .. . . . . . Garner Osborne&#13;
Vice President . . . .. . . Axel Beck&#13;
R. Secretary . . . . . . . . Fay Knapp&#13;
C. Secretary .... .. .. Gabriel Welch&#13;
Treasurer .... .. . ... . Claudius Pike&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
Lewis Bleakley&#13;
Firman Hill&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
David Bleakley&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
Wesley Dusenberg&#13;
Lewis Bleakley&#13;
Garner Osborne&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Raymond Bates&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
David Bleakley&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Walter Dunn&#13;
Floyd Ertel&#13;
Earl Engle&#13;
Jacob Shaboz&#13;
Winifred Day&#13;
&#13;
Earl Griffith&#13;
Walter Griffith&#13;
Earnest Hauswald&#13;
Firman Hill&#13;
Harry Highton&#13;
Edwin Hickman&#13;
Simeon Hickman&#13;
Walter Schrem&#13;
&#13;
-166-&#13;
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H. E. Duryea&#13;
Arthur Hopkinson&#13;
Garner Osborne&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
Ellis Markham ·&#13;
Ernest Eampson&#13;
Ernest Sanger&#13;
Victor Starr&#13;
Harry White&#13;
&#13;
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TALL CLUB&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Y. W. C. A.&#13;
The inherent nature of the college environment demands some sort of common&#13;
meeting ground for religious activities. Different experiences in college life reach different needs of the student. The principles and convictions of the religious life of our&#13;
young women are worked out through the Y. W. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
All the activities are carried on by the voluntary service of the girls. Membership&#13;
on the cabinet and committees develops a sense of moral responsibility for living the&#13;
Christian life and for exerting an influence for good in the college community. Thus&#13;
responsibility demands self expression and leads the girls to face the demands of Christ&#13;
upon their lives.&#13;
Our association receives great inspiration from inter-collegiate relationships through&#13;
the various conferences. In these gatherings the local college interests give way to the&#13;
larger demands and the young women look at C hristian enterprises from a world-wide&#13;
view point.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The Y. M. C. A .&#13;
The Y. M. C. A. in Morningside College was organized to supplement the church&#13;
work of the suburb, directly meeting the needs of the college man. The association has&#13;
kept pace with the college in its rapid development and today is deeply woven into the&#13;
fabric of the college life .&#13;
The slogan of the organization adopted at the Lake G eneva S tudent's Conference&#13;
last spring was indeed a splendid program, " to guard, convert, develop, enlist and train,&#13;
every man in school." With this great perspective before the college men of today, and&#13;
of Morningside, Christian spirit and action is challenged to do its utmost.&#13;
.&#13;
The factors which furnish the motive power to carry out this program are the&#13;
Christian men of the school, and they have various lines along which to work. The opportunities are many for faithful service, in attending and taking part in the weekly&#13;
devotional meetings, promoting the finances, attending and seeing that every available&#13;
man is attending bible study, and above all the splendid opportunity a college of this&#13;
kind offers for real inspiring personal work. R are friendships are found in college and&#13;
sincere Christian men are able to keep M orningside standards of action upon a high level,&#13;
and always respond to the ever challenging call to step "higher up."&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
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...:-..&#13;
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I 6&#13;
-171-&#13;
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�S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
DEAR SICILY ANNE:-&#13;
&#13;
Home again, and of course it is good to be here, but I suppose I can scarcely&#13;
wait until time to start back next fall. This has been the best year M orningside has&#13;
ever known, and the Agora Club has been largely the cause of this. Just let me tell you&#13;
about it and then I know you will w ant to come to our college next year.&#13;
We have one meeting each month. These are planned a year in advance, and&#13;
each is different.&#13;
Some months competent women give us talks on subjects of&#13;
interest to girls, such as health and etiquette. One time we have what we call&#13;
"stunt night," then each class in college, the academy, and the faculty, see who can put&#13;
on the best stunt. You can just imagine how much fun that would be. Twice a year&#13;
we give parties to all the men in school. O f course we do our very best at entertaining&#13;
and the men assure us that they appreciate our efforts. The Agora banquet is one of our&#13;
biggest social events. Every girl in school is sure to be there, besides many alumni and&#13;
senior High School girls from all over the state. Here you get real college spirit.&#13;
&#13;
YMCA&#13;
&#13;
Now just a few things we did this year to make our new girls feel that this college&#13;
is really theirs. We had a big sister club of Senior and Junior girls, each one of whom&#13;
took a new girl as her little sister. We had lots of fun having parties and wiener roasts&#13;
and found that this was the best plan ever to make acquaintances and form friendships.&#13;
&#13;
LAKE&#13;
&#13;
This year, through the Agora, our girls glee club has been organized.&#13;
success and will make our college still more popular.&#13;
&#13;
It is a big&#13;
&#13;
During the football season about one hundred and fifty of us accompanied our&#13;
girdiron heroes to Lincoln, one of the biggest games of the season. The Agora agitated&#13;
the idea, and by hard work pushed it through. Every one had the best time ever, and&#13;
we hope to do the same thing next year.&#13;
Much interest has been shown in our walking club. The girls love these walks&#13;
partly for the recreation and exercise, but more especially because on these trips they&#13;
&#13;
- 172-&#13;
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&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
have discovered the marvelous beauty surrounding our campus on the hill.&#13;
we have visited interesting factories of Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
On these walks&#13;
&#13;
The girls' edition of the Collegian Reporter has aroused much enthusiasm. Here&#13;
again we have shown ourselves to be as capable as the men in a financial as well as in ,&#13;
a literary way.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
We have a lovely rest-room fitted out cosily and comfortably.&#13;
&#13;
In athletics we have given three medals, one of gold, one of silver, and one of&#13;
bronze, to the three girls making the most points m basketball, tennis, indoor track,&#13;
gymnasium and the walking club.&#13;
This year we have started our first girls' intercollegiate debating teams .&#13;
splendid material and we can see only success.&#13;
&#13;
We have&#13;
&#13;
I just cannot tell you everything here, but come next year and find out for yourself&#13;
how thoroughly alive we are and what jolly times we have in our Agora Club.&#13;
With heaps of love,-&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 25-Home track Meet- Agora Castle relay.&#13;
May 2- Stunt night.&#13;
May I 6- Mayday Festival.&#13;
June 6-Agora athletic meet.&#13;
October 3-Question box by Mrs. Taylor.&#13;
Nov. 7-Health&#13;
&#13;
and hygiene talk by Dr. Clara Whittemore.&#13;
&#13;
December 5- Party to the student body.&#13;
February 6-Social evenmg.&#13;
THE ST U DENT COUNCIL&#13;
&#13;
March 6- Girls banquet.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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I 9&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Girls Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COLLIER&#13;
RUTH GILLI ES&#13;
GLYDE DEVITT&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
SECOND SOPRANO&#13;
Ethel Coomer&#13;
F ranees Craig&#13;
Christine Haas&#13;
Mamie Jones&#13;
Helen Perry&#13;
Mary Royce&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
Lovice Strobel&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SOPRANO&#13;
Veda Clark&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
Clyde Devitt&#13;
Ruth Gillies&#13;
Kathryn Leazer&#13;
Alberta Still&#13;
Cecil Schmoker&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST ALTO&#13;
Vivian Down&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
Gladys Long&#13;
Laura Robinson&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Accompanist&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
G.&#13;
R.&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
KILBOURNE&#13;
McKINNEY&#13;
PRICHARD&#13;
WOOD&#13;
&#13;
J. DOLLIVER&#13;
W . PAYNE&#13;
L . CROUCH&#13;
L. LUDLUM&#13;
S. MOORE&#13;
W. WOOLE&#13;
M. DEVITT&#13;
&#13;
19 1 6&#13;
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&#13;
E. WILLIAMS&#13;
M. STEVENS&#13;
L. ROBINSON&#13;
C. CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
SECOND ALTO&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Anna Evans&#13;
F ranees Wetmore&#13;
Mrs. MacCollin&#13;
Soloist&#13;
&#13;
Prof. MacCollin&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
The girls glee club was organized under the auspices of the Agora club this last&#13;
Fall. Its first appearance was made at the reception given by the Agora club to the men&#13;
of the school. Their first tour was taken during Easter vacation, when they had the&#13;
opportunity of singing at Hornick, Pierson and Kingsley. The first year of the club&#13;
has been one of success. It has filled a long felt need for a girls musical organization&#13;
similar to the Morningside College Mens Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
-177-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Glee Club&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Manager&#13;
Pianist&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
JAMES DOLLIVER&#13;
CALARENCE CRAIG&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
PROF. M. L. MARCY&#13;
PROF. PAUL MAcCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
Leon Johnson&#13;
Delbert McKinney&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
Fred Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Francis Hay&#13;
Carl Anderson&#13;
Roy Henze&#13;
Wayland Case&#13;
Richard Burrows&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Fletcher Pollock&#13;
Ralph Overholser&#13;
Tyler Williams&#13;
Lester Berger&#13;
Clarence Obrecht&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Merril Stevens&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
Charles Garlock&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTMAS TOUR&#13;
&#13;
EASTER TOUR&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
Peterson&#13;
Sac City&#13;
Early&#13;
Onawa&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Rapids&#13;
Marathon&#13;
Laurens&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
Webster City&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
Che·rokee&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-178-&#13;
&#13;
-179-&#13;
&#13;
�SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
W . A WEDGWOOD&#13;
EDITH LYLES&#13;
PROF. CHAS. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST MANDOLIN&#13;
&#13;
SE COND MANDOLIN&#13;
&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Alice Klock&#13;
W. A Wedgwood&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Bess Howell&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
Merlin Sawyer&#13;
Mabel Macomber&#13;
&#13;
TENOR MANDOLIN&#13;
&#13;
MANDO-CELLO&#13;
&#13;
GUITAR&#13;
&#13;
Mabel Banks&#13;
John D. Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. C. Templeman&#13;
&#13;
Verna Comoli&#13;
Lilah Thompson&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
&#13;
READER&#13;
&#13;
James Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Robert Vernon&#13;
&#13;
PIANO&#13;
&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
&#13;
MANDO BASS&#13;
&#13;
BANJO&#13;
&#13;
Robert Vernon&#13;
&#13;
Julia Clark&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTMAS TOUR&#13;
&#13;
EASTER TOUR&#13;
&#13;
Hull&#13;
&#13;
Oakland, Neb.&#13;
Winnebago, Neb.&#13;
Sloan&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
Newell&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Sibley&#13;
Estherville&#13;
Marathon&#13;
Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
-180-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SI OU X&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The College Band&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Mr. C. A . Templeman&#13;
DIRECTOR&#13;
CLARINETS&#13;
&#13;
CORNETS&#13;
&#13;
M. Morley&#13;
F. Bondhus&#13;
F. Conner&#13;
&#13;
M . Stevens&#13;
D. Starr&#13;
C. Obrecht&#13;
L. Phelps&#13;
&#13;
BARITONES&#13;
&#13;
ALTOS&#13;
&#13;
G. Noe&#13;
G . Miller&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington&#13;
L. Wall&#13;
&#13;
SAXAPHONE&#13;
&#13;
T ROMBONE&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington&#13;
&#13;
W . Wolle&#13;
&#13;
TUBA&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
Kolp&#13;
THE ANNUAL BOARD&#13;
&#13;
199 I 6&#13;
- 182-&#13;
&#13;
- 183-&#13;
&#13;
�S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Teutonia Club&#13;
The Student Volunteer Band&#13;
The objective of the Student Volunteer band is well expressed by the watchword&#13;
of the organization, "The evangelization of the world in this generation." Since its&#13;
founding, about twenty years ago, over 5000 students from the colleges in North&#13;
America have reached the front. Of these fourteen have gone out from M orningside.&#13;
The object of the local band is to promote missionary intelligence and enthusiasm&#13;
in the school, by working in conjunction with the Christian Associations. The membership is confined to those who have signed the declaration, "It is my purpose, if God&#13;
permits, to become a foreign missionary."&#13;
&#13;
Although this organization has just recently become a part of our institution, its&#13;
origin dates back to 1873, when a number of the students of the college then located at&#13;
Galena, Illinois, feeling the need of an exclusive German literary society, organized the&#13;
"Teutonia Verein." This society became and remained an important educational factor&#13;
in connection with the college in Galena and later in the same institution known as&#13;
Charles City College.&#13;
When the amalgamation of Charles City College with Morningside College was&#13;
agreed upon last June, the further existence of this society seemed rather doubtful, but in&#13;
a special meeting, it was decided to transfer this organization in connection with the&#13;
college to Morningside.&#13;
We are indeed proud of the fact, that an organization of this kind has found a place&#13;
here. For local reasons the name " T eutonia Verein" has been suspended, and " T eutonia&#13;
Club" substituted for it. Although the present membership is not large, the general&#13;
interest is good. Membership is open to any student with three years of previous training&#13;
in German,&#13;
and the ability to take part in the program, which is conducted exclusively&#13;
m German.&#13;
Many of the most prominent alumni of Charles City College feel greatly indebted&#13;
to this organization for valuable friendships and important training.&#13;
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The Prohibition League&#13;
The Morningside Prohibition League is one of two hundred and sixty similar&#13;
leagues organized in the colleges and universities of the country, under the supervision of&#13;
the National Intercollegiate Prohibition Association. The general purpose of the I. P.&#13;
A. is "the championship by the college world of the present movement for national prohibition of the liquor traffic." Oratorical contests are held, the local, state and interstate, of which there are four divisions, annually, and the national bienially. In the&#13;
twelve years existence of the local league its representatives have won, in the state contest,&#13;
three seconds and two firsts; in the interstate, one first and one third; and in the national,&#13;
one third place. In this years contest the president of the Prohibition League, R . L.&#13;
Mitchell, received second place. In addition to the contests the l.e ague holds fortnightly ·&#13;
meetings in the Association Hall, and also a weekly voluntary study class. The text used&#13;
this year was " Winning the Fight A gainst Drink," by Eaton. Several members also&#13;
assisted the Anti-Saloon League in the recent local fight.&#13;
With an enrollment of 6,500 members the I. P. A . has become "the most extensive&#13;
and widely active intercollegiate movement of a civic character in America. " The&#13;
present membership of the local league is 32. Plans are under way, however, to secure&#13;
a bigger and better league during the coming year.&#13;
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The Forensic League&#13;
In 19 13 the divers forensic organizations of Morningside College were combined&#13;
into one-The Forensic League. This solved the problem, for previous to this time there&#13;
was a lack of interest in certain branches .&#13;
The means for the selection of members is as follows : Each of the three mens&#13;
literary societies elects three members, and the faculty is represented by the head of the&#13;
Public Speaking D epartment. Thus all of the interests of the school have a representa-·&#13;
tion. These members serve for one year. From among themselves they elect a president,&#13;
vice president and secretary, the head of the Public Speaking Department being the&#13;
corresponding secretary. All transactions and deliberations are governed by a constitution&#13;
and by-laws. All the forensic activities, both local and inter-collegiate are controlled by&#13;
this body. From this consolidation of the forensic interests there has come a unity and&#13;
harmony which assures a greater record for Morningside in all forensic activities.&#13;
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The Macbride Lakeside Laboratory&#13;
Last July the Macbride Lakeside Laboratory completed its seventh successful&#13;
year. The coming season will find many of the fifty students of the last term again&#13;
enrolled, eager as the new "freshies" for another summer survey of morainic hills of&#13;
picturesque rock formations, woodland shores offering exquisite moth and butterfly studies,&#13;
and the shimmering lake teeming with its myriads of wonderful biological creations.&#13;
Such evidence of student favor emphasizes the success of the institution, founded by&#13;
President T. H . Macbride, of Iowa University.&#13;
To those who delight in the study of science, or desire a greater knowledge of the&#13;
natural history of their native state, the Lakeside Laboratory presents a field unsurpassed&#13;
by any similar establishment in this part of the country. Here one may enjoy the recreative pleasures of Iowa's most beautiful summer resort, while at the same time engaged&#13;
in enjoyable and gainful study of its great natural resources.&#13;
Dr. T. C. Stephens, head of the biological department of the college, is a member&#13;
of the staff of instructors, and, it is largely due to his influence in this field that Morningside students are steadily coming to a fuller realization of the advantages of a course&#13;
at the Lake. To the students of a small institution, the various classes of college and&#13;
university men and women who attend from institutions scattered through every section&#13;
of Iowa, present a cosmopolitan atmosphere which is equivalent in many ways to a&#13;
university education itself.&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
Every student, whether freshman or senior, should find the laboratory a most&#13;
pleasant and beneficial part of his education.&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
Chemistry Club&#13;
A long felt need has at last been filled by the formation of the Morningside&#13;
Chemists Club. The purpose of the organization is to promote interest in Chemistry and&#13;
to aid those who are making this branch of science their life work. Topics that are of&#13;
interest chemically and commercially are taken up and discussed at a greater length&#13;
than is possible in the regular class work. From time to time the various members give&#13;
papers or lectures on topics that are of exceptional interest and accompany them with&#13;
appropriate experiments.&#13;
One of the plans for the future is to make expeditions to the various industries in&#13;
which applied chemistry plays an important part. It is hoped that the organization will,&#13;
in time, become an honorary society, only those being admitted tto membership whose&#13;
scholarship is of the highest.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
F acuity Member&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
HERBERT FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
J. D.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
PROF. J.&#13;
&#13;
A. Coss&#13;
&#13;
REV. HERBERT ALLEN KE CK&#13;
PRESIDENT OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
THE ALUMNI&#13;
&#13;
By&#13;
&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
R. N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
The word "Alma Mater" to a true College man implies not merely buildings, a&#13;
campus and a rolled parchment. It is a living, breathing, omnipresent force drawing him,&#13;
raising him upward and onward to achievement. It colors his dreams, it enlarges his&#13;
vision, it strengthens his purpose, it lifts him after defeat. To feel oneself a part of a&#13;
great organization has a lifting power in its self that reflects unconsciously in words and&#13;
deeds. It was this idea of organization, of strength in unity that, in the spring of 1900,&#13;
brought together a group of men and women to form the Alumni Association of Morningside College. Fifteen short summers, fifteen short winters; what does that mean but a bare&#13;
beginning in the march of centuries. Reasoning by analogy from what has been accomplished in fifteen years into the next two centuries produces results that fairly stagger.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
One can hear from many lips that our Alma Mater has had more than its share of struggle,&#13;
during its life of two decades. We do not dispute this for we know that anyone who is&#13;
familiar with them will say that the times were of a nature that simultaneously tried men's&#13;
souls and emptied their purses. Our College does not stand alone in this sort of experience&#13;
for the early history of all similar institutions of learning relate similar trials. Because&#13;
of this period of effort that has been necessary to thus far build the College the Alumni&#13;
has been taught that very useful lesson, that a College course is not intended to shield one&#13;
from all the blows of a very exacting world, but to teach one to rise above them and&#13;
contribute something for the permanent good of humanity. It is useless to repeat here the&#13;
struggles the school has been through and is now passing through; this is familiar to all.&#13;
Suffice it, at this point, to say that it is to be hoped there will continue to be a struggle .&#13;
Because things work for and attain to, unless it be a final consummation of something,&#13;
either, a Mill-Stone around the neck or merely a Mile-Stone on the road of progress. It&#13;
is also needless to give in detail the history of the Alumni Association itself. It has had a&#13;
continuous and rather quiet existence, during the fifteen years of its life. It has tried to&#13;
help the school to the full extent of its strength. This has not been anything to that which&#13;
will be done in the future, for because of the very nature of the case the Alumni are not&#13;
able to bear burdens during the first years of the life of a College. The College of the&#13;
future will more and more be fashioned by the Alumni. They will bear its burdens and&#13;
help to make its plans. It is the College of the future that we are continually looking&#13;
forward to, even though present struggles seem amply sufficient.&#13;
Much has been said concerning the position of the College strategically and of its future&#13;
in connection with the material development of this great valley of the Missouri.&#13;
We hear of the probable number in attendance, of the complete semi-circle of buildings.&#13;
It is grand and is just what should be and, in all probability, will be. Of the spirit of&#13;
the past one has said "All Morningside has is a handful of students and plenty of spirit.''&#13;
Not much has been said concerning the future spirit of our Alma Mater. This is a&#13;
serious subject. Prosperity can easily be a cause of stagnation of effort. The battle of&#13;
the future will be as to whether or no we will be as spiritual as we are prosperous. In our&#13;
annual march will our Ideals along all lines advance accordingly? We are led to&#13;
believe that we are becoming world-wide in our comprehension. We feel that we have&#13;
given of our best to the Yellow race. That we are giving Ministers, Teachers and&#13;
Laymen to humanity in some of the most strategic places of the world and at one of the&#13;
most critical times in the world's history. We are molding lives in our Alma Mater and&#13;
that Intangible something called "Spirit" that we receive must be such that it will not&#13;
only be a guide to the future Alumnus individually, but that the Individual in turn will&#13;
be able to guide others. It must not be selfish, but must, in the next century, reach such&#13;
heights as is now impossible to be conceded to be even practical. If the present Alumni&#13;
lay the proper foundations, a future structure will be reared that, in its influence, will&#13;
reach into the jungles of humanity and will have a part in the future victories of earth's&#13;
manhood; when the whole enlightened human race will sing, in one harmonious chorus,&#13;
that the complete Brotherhood of man exists.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Robert Negley Van Horne, Ph. B. Morningside 1900; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins&#13;
Univ. 1900-0 I. Graduate Student of Chicago&#13;
Univ. Summer 1906. Prof. of Mathematics in&#13;
Morningside College since 1902. Many of Prof.&#13;
Van Horne's major students are making good in our&#13;
surrounding High Schools. The Honorable R. E.&#13;
Root (below) is one of Prof. Van Horne's former&#13;
major students.&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Eugene Root, B. S. Morningside '05;&#13;
Instr. in Mathematics in Iowa Univ. 1906-1910;&#13;
M. S. State Univ. of Iowa 1909; Fellow in Math.&#13;
in Univ. of Mo. 1911-13; Instr. in U. S. Naval&#13;
Acad. July I 9 I 3 to Feb. I 9 I 4; Prof. of Mechanics and Engineering Math.; Post Graduate&#13;
department of the U.S . Naval Acad. Feb. 1914.&#13;
Member of the honorary scientific society, Sigma&#13;
Xi; elected in 19 I 0. Member of the American&#13;
Math. Society and the Society for the promotion&#13;
of Engineering education.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Carl W. Maynard, A B. Morningside 1905;&#13;
M. D . North Western Univ. 1910; Director of&#13;
the Health Department Laboratory, Pueblo, Colorado; Laboratory Diagnostician .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Victor Josiah Hays, A B. Morningside 1911.&#13;
Entered Iowa State Univ. as a Scholar in the&#13;
Zoology department in I 91 I ; held this position&#13;
one year. During the two years, 1912 and 1913,&#13;
held position as Fellow in the same department.&#13;
Ph. D. Iowa Univ. 1914. Prof. of Biology and&#13;
Embryology in the Medical College of Loyola&#13;
Univ., Chicago, 1914-15.&#13;
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Guy Griffin Frary, B . S. Morningside 1902 ·&#13;
Chemist State Food and Drug Commission, Vermillion, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Emerson Heilman, A. B. Morningside&#13;
1906; Ph. B., AM. North Western Univ.1907;&#13;
Ph. D . Harva rd 1913; Asst. Prof. of Political&#13;
Economy and Sociology and Chief of the Bureau&#13;
of Social Welfare University of Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
J. B. Trimble, A B . Morningside 1891 ; D .&#13;
D.; General Secretary of the Laymen's Missionary&#13;
Movement. Noble Spirit, Large Vision, A Great&#13;
Factor in the Missionary· Endeavor .&#13;
&#13;
Lydia Trimble, A B. Morningside 1904. Missionary F oochow, China. She is giving her best&#13;
in noble service to the Chinese.&#13;
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Stanley Browning Collins, A. B. Morningside&#13;
College 1907; A M. University of Penn. 1908.&#13;
N ow Secretary· of the Young Men's Christian Association in Tientsin, China .&#13;
&#13;
Carrie Brown, A. B. Morningside 1905. A .&#13;
M. Univ. of C hicago in 1907 . Student at American Academy in R ome 191 3-1 4. A cting as head&#13;
of the Latin Department of the Sioux City High&#13;
School. The first student to receive honorable&#13;
mention from Morningside College. An Alumna&#13;
to be proud of.&#13;
&#13;
Ida Belle Lewis, daughter of Bishop Lewis,&#13;
former President of Morningside College. AB.&#13;
Morningside 1909. Missionary in Tientsin, China.&#13;
Who can tell where her influence shall end?&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Edward M. Corbett, A . B . Morningside&#13;
1894; LL. B . Iowa State U niversity 1896. Now&#13;
lawyer in Sioux City, Iowa. Attorney fo r M orningside College. Member of the Committee on&#13;
Instructors, W ays and M eans Executive. A loyal&#13;
Alumnus of old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
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�SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Epigrams&#13;
Clara Janette Yetter-Flint, A. B. Morningside&#13;
College 1900. A home maker. Wife of Dr.&#13;
Charles Flint, pastor of the New York Ave. ·&#13;
Church, Brooklyn.&#13;
Dr. Flint is a native of&#13;
Canada; a graduate of Victoria Univ. at Toronto.&#13;
A graduate of Drew Theological Seminary 1906.&#13;
Recently offered the Presidency of the Wesley&#13;
College of Arts and Theology in Winnepeg,&#13;
Canada.&#13;
&#13;
It requires men of Spirit to make a Morningside College; and Morningside's chief&#13;
function is to make men of Spirit.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ! The school that turns the disaster of a fire into a financial T riumph.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Spirit! Something intangible, which never fails to leave its good&#13;
impression upon all who come in contact with it.&#13;
&#13;
Energy, Sticktoitiveness, Intelligence and true Principle make Morningside Spirit.&#13;
Just this: When a Morningside man is beaten, he's dead. "It's not the fact that you're&#13;
dead that counts, but only, how did you die?" "Backbone, not wishbone brings home&#13;
the bacon."&#13;
&#13;
Frank E. Mossman, A. B. Morningside College 1903; Ph. B.; A M. Univ. of Chicago&#13;
1908; D. D. Upper Iowa Univ. Now President&#13;
of South Wes tern College at Winfield, Kansas.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
One sees from the outside an increasing development in the efficiency, spmts and&#13;
enthusiasm of the student body and faculty, which is solving the slogan, "A greater&#13;
Morningside."&#13;
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�MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MEN&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Epigrams&#13;
&#13;
AT&#13;
Morningside for preparation and vision; China for work and fulfillment.&#13;
Prof. F. E Haynes PhD.&#13;
Senior Fellow&#13;
The Morningside spirit-the magnet that has drawn to this institution the&#13;
orators&#13;
and&#13;
young people of the N orthwest, the good that has spurred on our athletes,&#13;
debaters to their supreme efforts, the key that has unlocked the hearts of a constituency to&#13;
·&#13;
even to sacrifice at every crisis, the vision that has led a faculty to give itself in&#13;
give,&#13;
·&#13;
Greater Morningside&#13;
noble service, yes, the hope upon which rests our dream of the&#13;
to the M orningside Spirit be tribute forever.&#13;
&#13;
M . C. Spirit ! It is wierd. It's like all Spirits; you can't define it. You can only&#13;
feel it. The old football slogan said, " P lay the game. and don't quit until. _YOU are&#13;
·&#13;
That's what genuine M C. Spirir feels like and Spirits don t&#13;
carried from the field&#13;
die, they follow you everywhere.&#13;
&#13;
Geo. W. Prichard&#13;
LAW&#13;
&#13;
M orningside spirit is not confined to the college halls and campus for its influence&#13;
is felt throughout the country at large .&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Spirit-yesterday, today and forever!&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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&#13;
FORMER&#13;
&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
W H O ARE&#13;
&#13;
LEADERS.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. RD. Acheson&#13;
&#13;
-Success&#13;
&#13;
Hon. W L. Harding - LLB&#13;
Lieut. Gov. OF IOWA&#13;
&#13;
1ST. M.E. Church Sac City&#13;
12 YRS&#13;
&#13;
of service&#13;
&#13;
Chas McCaffree&#13;
Pres. SD State&#13;
Poultry&#13;
&#13;
Pres. STATE&#13;
&#13;
Assoc.&#13;
&#13;
Press Assoc.&#13;
&#13;
COMM.&#13;
&#13;
Of&#13;
&#13;
Immigration&#13;
&#13;
Raymond Young -LLR&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Creighton&#13;
U.&#13;
Jr. MEMBER- Montgomery-Young-Hall&#13;
Attornies&#13;
&#13;
BOOKV&#13;
C.W. BRITTON-A.B.&#13;
CASHIER&#13;
&#13;
VERNON PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Security Natl BK. WEST Point&#13;
Cadet&#13;
Sioux City, SCHOOLBOARD&#13;
CAPT ARMY FOOT-BALL&#13;
&#13;
J.W. Kindig- LLB&#13;
' A SST. CO.ATTORNEY&#13;
&#13;
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Working for an Answer&#13;
' 18&#13;
&#13;
MARION JOHNSON,&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, Gee!&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
blazed much.&#13;
&#13;
I'd wire if I didn't need the 'coin' so&#13;
&#13;
Even postage stamps are a scarcity around here.&#13;
&#13;
But I'll write, and,&#13;
&#13;
paying my respects to the honorable debaters of her dear Jackson College, I'll inform&#13;
her that we intend to beat their glorious team."&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
I'll have to write to 'sis' sure.&#13;
&#13;
Hudson Randall was relieving himself of some of his exuberant spirits as he and&#13;
his room·mate, Guy Cameron, swung home from the hard debate tryout, in the crisp&#13;
night air.&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
"Better save some of your enthusiasm for the siege ahead, Randall," was the reply&#13;
of the big, calm fellow at his side, the "Debate Guy" as he was called, for he had&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
already brought honors to the State "U" and had won first place in the tryout. I'm&#13;
&#13;
p&#13;
&#13;
glad, old man, that you came in second, though.&#13;
&#13;
You deserved it and now with that fifth&#13;
&#13;
man we ought to work it down till we can easily bring back victory from Jackson's star&#13;
team. I'm surprised that Brown chose our team so quickly, but I suppose he knows his&#13;
mind and, as he said, we can get right to business tomorrow?"&#13;
No one was more aware of or more concerned in the hard work which the team at&#13;
the "U" was putting in than Elizabeth Randall.&#13;
&#13;
Ever since the morning that she re-&#13;
&#13;
ceived the letter from her brother telling of his victory, she had almost bombarded the&#13;
post office with letters of ecstacy and encouragement.&#13;
&#13;
No one knew as well as she how&#13;
&#13;
Hudson had worked, with law always in his mind, to become a proficient debater.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
had come up slowly, but finally in his last year he had been given second place in the&#13;
great University tryout.&#13;
&#13;
Nothing could now occupy her thought and ambition other than&#13;
&#13;
that his team should win, even though it would be at Jackson's loss.&#13;
&#13;
All this she confided, the night after the first announcement, to her chum and admirer, Lisle Greyson.&#13;
&#13;
Greyson was one of those "big" fellows-big hearted and big&#13;
&#13;
souled-the kind that star themselves through college.&#13;
&#13;
He had worked through the&#13;
&#13;
football season leaving a trail of glory behind him, had starred in the basketball tournament and now had won first place in the debate tryout.&#13;
Elizabeth was aware that, despite the frankness of this friend of hers, he had some&#13;
&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
"TO take you seriously, Beth, you misjudge me.&#13;
&#13;
conceit over his successes and therefore perhaps a bit too much self-confidence for his&#13;
own good, and so it. was her great desire to eradicate this small evil.&#13;
&#13;
work afterward.&#13;
&#13;
I have my good times and then&#13;
&#13;
I came over here tonight just for an inspiration for work.&#13;
&#13;
It is early&#13;
&#13;
and I'm intending some good work yet tonight."&#13;
That first evening, when she repeated so unfeelingly to him her brother's praise of&#13;
the merits of the "U" team, he had been surprised.&#13;
&#13;
teasing him until she spoke of her brother and her ambition for him.&#13;
the seriousness of it and continued to worry little over the debate.&#13;
in the team that had won over the university before?&#13;
. done his best.&#13;
&#13;
Beth knew that she had said enough, for Listle was serious .&#13;
&#13;
He had thought that she was merely&#13;
But he soon forgot&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
that she had greatly strengthened his weak intention to leave her early and "grind" till&#13;
midnight.&#13;
&#13;
For had he not been&#13;
&#13;
But she did not know&#13;
&#13;
She wanted to spur him on with the statement that the men at the University&#13;
&#13;
had not been out any night excepting Sundays since the work began.&#13;
&#13;
Of course, he admitted, he hadn't&#13;
&#13;
But that would be&#13;
&#13;
breaking confidence; so she was silent.&#13;
&#13;
But then, if he could win and have a good time too, what were the odds?&#13;
&#13;
They had reached the dormitory steps and the beauty of the night caused them to&#13;
Such was his attitude as he hastened over one evening, about two weeks later, to&#13;
go for a walk with Elizabeth.&#13;
&#13;
The evening had been so different from that which Greyson had planned.&#13;
&#13;
linger there.&#13;
&#13;
She thought for a moment and then consented · with a&#13;
&#13;
He had hoped to win the answer to the question he had asked Elizabeth a week ago .&#13;
&#13;
look in her eyes which said, "There's method in my madness."&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth had known then, in her heart, that she loved Lisle Greyson, but to tell&#13;
They were strolling through the walks of the campus, delighting in the balminess&#13;
&#13;
him so then she felt was not the thing.&#13;
&#13;
of the air when the conversation lagged and Greyson in his humorous way broke . out in&#13;
dramatic style: "Oh Jackson, fairest college of the West! Great is thy name and&#13;
greater thy glories!"&#13;
&#13;
might open his eyes to himself.&#13;
she was happy.&#13;
&#13;
She felt that she had wakened his worthy self a bit and&#13;
&#13;
Greyson could feel her wistful eyes upon him as he stood in deep thought.&#13;
&#13;
The night, with her presence, was so perfect that his big heart thrilled with the anticipation&#13;
of her answer.&#13;
&#13;
"Is fair Jackson counting on you for her glories, Lisle?" Elizabeth's voice held&#13;
some meanmg which Greyson could not interpret.&#13;
said it.&#13;
&#13;
She had hoped that perhaps in this affair she&#13;
&#13;
Yes, he must have it.&#13;
&#13;
"Beth, you've set me thinking and, though I guess I don't deserve it, I believe&#13;
&#13;
He wanted to watch her while she&#13;
&#13;
your answer would set me working .&#13;
&#13;
Beth dear, do you love me?" His voice was&#13;
&#13;
passionate, deep and tender.&#13;
"Pardon me, Miss 'Beth, but would you mind repeating that question?&#13;
get the significance of it."&#13;
Uh, you mean to say that I am hard to understand.&#13;
&#13;
equally so.&#13;
&#13;
I do not&#13;
&#13;
It was Elizabeth's turn to feel a wistful gaze, and oh, how her heart fluttered&#13;
beneath it!&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps I am, but you are&#13;
&#13;
hadn't opened them enough yet.&#13;
&#13;
You sing the praises of a school for which you would not sacrifice one&#13;
&#13;
is now two weeks before the debate and since the tryout you haven't left out three good&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
You told Helen so the other day, and she, in talking, happened to repeat&#13;
&#13;
it in my hearing.&#13;
&#13;
I began to think.&#13;
&#13;
No, she must not give way to that crying call within&#13;
&#13;
"I said I would wait and see, Lisle; I guess I'll not be sure until after the debate."&#13;
&#13;
wrongly.&#13;
&#13;
debate and, I knew that the other men were working; so I could figure it out only in this&#13;
&#13;
He removed his hat and took her hand.&#13;
&#13;
He was gone and through the dormitory hall passed a fleet girlish figure.&#13;
&#13;
I decided that you did not know that it was a sin to hold a talent and not deIt's easy enough to give what's been given to you, but it's what you've worked&#13;
&#13;
strain in a flood of tears.&#13;
&#13;
The story followed soon and all was well, for these girls knew&#13;
&#13;
each others hearts.&#13;
&#13;
This speech had been an effort for Elizabeth, but her voice, though low, was&#13;
&#13;
That night Lisle Greyson entered the frat house a different man.&#13;
&#13;
earnest and Lisle's usual jesting reply was not forthcoming.&#13;
&#13;
indeed opened.&#13;
&#13;
- 208-&#13;
&#13;
His eyes were&#13;
&#13;
It was not yet nine o'clock when he entered the debate study room and&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
Straight&#13;
&#13;
to her room she went and into the arms of her room-mate, Helen, where she relieved the&#13;
&#13;
for that's valuable to you and means a sacrifice in the giving."&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
"May God help you to know best.&#13;
&#13;
Good night."&#13;
&#13;
way-that you were counting upon your natural abilities and not your effort to put it&#13;
velop it.&#13;
&#13;
But she knew that she&#13;
&#13;
Greyson was all disappointment, and yet he did not feel that she had acted&#13;
&#13;
I knew that you were counting on winning the&#13;
&#13;
through.&#13;
&#13;
It was the evil spirit which&#13;
&#13;
You have opened his eyes."&#13;
&#13;
her, not tonight.&#13;
&#13;
good time." Greyson looked astonished and a bit guilty. Mut 'Miss Beth' continued: "It&#13;
times to work.&#13;
&#13;
How her whole soul cried out to answer it!&#13;
&#13;
was saying to her, "It's all right.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
- 209-&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
got together his notes and books.&#13;
studying debate, Greyson?&#13;
'Grey?'"&#13;
&#13;
The other men looked up in surprise.&#13;
&#13;
"Thinking&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Beauties, containing Lisle Greyson's card .&#13;
&#13;
It'll be kind of dry after 'peaches and cream' won't it&#13;
&#13;
On the back was written the significant&#13;
&#13;
word, "tonight."&#13;
Elizabeth reasoned a dozen things that "tonight" could mean, that time of testing,&#13;
and yet she was confident of the powers of Lisle for she had read it all in his face and acts.&#13;
&#13;
These were some of the parenthetical remarks of the fellows as they discussed&#13;
various points in their work.&#13;
&#13;
But they all liked Greyson and his good humored silence&#13;
&#13;
That night in the great chapel room Elizabeth sat by Helen.&#13;
&#13;
was not particularly noticed till eleven o'clock, when the rest began to drop off.&#13;
Greyson did not appear to notice them.&#13;
&#13;
her cheeks vied in color with the roses she wore, as the debaters filed upon the platform .&#13;
&#13;
The fellows looked inquiringly at each other,&#13;
&#13;
Cheer upon cheer was given. Then the chairman of the evening announced the speakers.&#13;
&#13;
but, thinking it best, said nothing.&#13;
&#13;
The debate was warm from the beginning.&#13;
&#13;
The first four men had spoken.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Jackson team was doing well, but now all looked to G reyson, for the teams were, so far,&#13;
&#13;
When night after night, succeeding the first late hours, Greyson "ground" away on&#13;
debate till the small hours had come again, and he was missed at all the social functions,&#13;
people began to inquire the meaning of his unusual ambition.&#13;
&#13;
Her eyes shone and&#13;
&#13;
an even match.&#13;
&#13;
But only three people&#13;
&#13;
Lisle stepped to the middle of the platform.&#13;
&#13;
knew.&#13;
&#13;
but held its breath instead.&#13;
&#13;
The audience was going to cheer,&#13;
&#13;
This wasn't the carefree Greyson of past debates.&#13;
&#13;
carried an air of determination rather than an air of confidence.&#13;
&#13;
It was a week later that the program of debaters came to the debate room of the&#13;
&#13;
He now&#13;
&#13;
The thought of the&#13;
&#13;
frat house. Greyson did not even notice it, for Elizabeth had already informed him of the-&#13;
&#13;
audience was "The boy Greyson has become a man."&#13;
&#13;
team that was coming.&#13;
&#13;
as he stood in masterful grace and poured out such a wonderful argument that the people&#13;
&#13;
But one of the other men picked it up.&#13;
&#13;
" I notice that Elizabeth&#13;
&#13;
sat spellbound.&#13;
&#13;
Randall's brother is on the Affirmative team."&#13;
Greyson looked up.&#13;
&#13;
"I think you're mistaken, Mac.&#13;
&#13;
His references, his clear logic, and his splendid delivery left an im-&#13;
&#13;
pression which cheer upon cheer could not lessen.&#13;
&#13;
Randall comes here."&#13;
&#13;
But his opponent was his match.&#13;
"Well contradict this if you wish.&#13;
&#13;
Here are the names of the teams."&#13;
&#13;
as&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Work&#13;
&#13;
now progressing much better."&#13;
Well that explains&#13;
&#13;
it.&#13;
&#13;
forceful.&#13;
&#13;
He too had worked and his arguments were just&#13;
&#13;
Everyone said the debate was a tie and waited for the rebuttals. They were&#13;
&#13;
equally even. Greyson was well aware of this, and from the appeal in her eyes, felt that&#13;
&#13;
"Look in the University Scout and see what it says."&#13;
Mac found in the head lines- "Debate coach decides a change in teams.&#13;
&#13;
And such he proved himself,&#13;
&#13;
the wearer of his roses was as deeply conscious of it.&#13;
forth for the last rebuttal.&#13;
&#13;
The crowd waited.&#13;
&#13;
He pitched himself again and went&#13;
&#13;
No, they were not to be disappointed .&#13;
&#13;
The rebuttal came like a miniature oration, so clear, so concise, so conclusive.&#13;
So Randall isn't coming after all!"&#13;
&#13;
the judges would be slow over such a debate.&#13;
&#13;
" Interested are you?"&#13;
&#13;
not slow.&#13;
&#13;
"Slightly!"&#13;
And Beth hadn't told him.&#13;
&#13;
How could they wait!&#13;
&#13;
O f course&#13;
&#13;
But they were&#13;
&#13;
Greyson' s rebuttal had tipped the scales and they were quick.&#13;
&#13;
Then the house came down with applause, and G reyson, striving to get one look&#13;
Strange! She didn't want her brother beaten and yet•&#13;
&#13;
at Elizabeth's face was caught and carried away on the shoulders of his friends.&#13;
&#13;
she wanted him to work. He hadn't known what she had expected of him except the&#13;
&#13;
begged for release and finally managed to slip away.&#13;
&#13;
development of his talent and that was the thing for which he had been working.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
at that moment, it was one word fro m Beth.&#13;
&#13;
But&#13;
&#13;
now he could work for something else- for Jackson's glories and for "Her!"&#13;
For the next week Greyson fairly lived d ebate.&#13;
dreamed it!&#13;
&#13;
The fellows eyes stuck out in wonder.&#13;
&#13;
He ran to the dormitory and rang the bell.&#13;
&#13;
He knew of only one thing in life&#13;
&#13;
The matron answered, looking surHe felt like he had been&#13;
&#13;
He ate it, breathed it, drank it, and&#13;
&#13;
prised, when, with little ceremony, he asked for Elizabeth.&#13;
&#13;
Surely Greyson would win this time&#13;
&#13;
doused in ice water when in reply she started to close the door, with "It's after hours and&#13;
the girls are in their rooms."&#13;
&#13;
for he had never really worked before.&#13;
He had not seen Elizabeth since the eventful night except to exchange about three&#13;
words in the halls, but the day before the debate there came to her a box of American&#13;
&#13;
-210-&#13;
&#13;
"After hours!&#13;
affair!&#13;
&#13;
After hours!&#13;
&#13;
What does a matron know about the hours of a love&#13;
&#13;
But I'm desperate and I must see Beth."&#13;
&#13;
-211-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth, in one of the other rooms, was unaware of all this, but not so her roommate. She had heard the bell, and, guessing the purport, had listened to all the proceedings. She was all alert, so that when she heard a voice at the window calling&#13;
"Beth," she was there.&#13;
Would that she could summon Beth, but the matron was too likely to suspect and&#13;
she knew that this affair was important. There was only one thing to do. She leaned&#13;
out of the window. Love is blind and unsuspecting, Greyson whispered, "Beth, I must&#13;
have your answer tonight. Do you love me, Beth?"&#13;
Helen knew the heart of Beth and knew the answer she would give. She considered only a moment, then drawing from the vase on the table at her side, one beautiful&#13;
rose she dropped it down to him and said " Your Beth whispers to you-yes!"&#13;
The figure was gone from the window. Picking up the rose, Greyson bowed his&#13;
head and bending beneath the window held the flower to his lips. He had heard a&#13;
voice, no matter whose; it had come, he knew, from a heart which answered the&#13;
question of his soul.&#13;
&#13;
A Song of Praise&#13;
To Thee we sing O Morningside,&#13;
With heart and voice atune,&#13;
To tell the praise afar and wide&#13;
O f our dear old Maroon.&#13;
For never shall our praises end,&#13;
Though o'er the world we roam .&#13;
In memory forever dear,&#13;
Our college home, sweet home.&#13;
0 hear the joyous shouts that tell&#13;
The news of vict'ry won.&#13;
And ringing of the Vict'ry Bell&#13;
Proclaiming what is done.&#13;
How eagerly all gather round&#13;
To join the cheer of praise&#13;
As nine rahs for the varsity&#13;
Unitedly we raise .&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
When far away in future days,&#13;
Still thinking of the past,&#13;
Sweet memories that never die&#13;
While thot and vigor last&#13;
Will steal like music o'er the soul&#13;
In tender soothing strain&#13;
"To lure us gently from our care,&#13;
And give us heart again."&#13;
&#13;
R. L.&#13;
&#13;
-212-&#13;
&#13;
-213-&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL.&#13;
&#13;
�Stubb's Chagrin&#13;
EARL BARKS, ' 18&#13;
&#13;
The pompous individual, Stub Stanley, a freckled-faced boy of twelve, hands in&#13;
his pockets, . chest thrown out and shrill notes issuing from his lips, was on his way&#13;
home from school. The defiant note of his whistle was a signal of triumph. He had· at&#13;
last accomplished the seemingly impossible task of whistling through his teeth, a feat&#13;
which Sam and his chum had taught him. Suddenly he caught sight of a flutter of&#13;
white, and looking more closely discerned it to be a girl. This caused him to throw his&#13;
shoulders still further back and assume a superior air, for he was a confirmed girl-hater,&#13;
and took every occasion possible to express himself as such before his comrades who&#13;
,would invariably express some sign of awe.&#13;
While in truth witnessing her approach from the corner of his eye he apparently&#13;
became engaged in watching something on the opposite side of the street. O wing to&#13;
this indifference he did not notice the slight rise in the sidewalk ahead of him and failure&#13;
to lift his feet the required height at the proper time caused his downfall. While in an&#13;
undignified position on his hands and knees, he heard a titter, and, looking up, beheld&#13;
a girl of about his own age actually laughing at him. Greatly embarrassed and blushing&#13;
profusely, Stub quickly rose and beat a hasty retreat. On the way home his mind was&#13;
a kaleidoscope of horrible pictures of himself on his hands and knees before dozens of ,&#13;
laughing girls. All kinds of fantastic schemes for making that girl respect him. entered&#13;
his mind, but he was helpless in view of the fact that he had appeared before a girl as&#13;
a clumsy gawk.&#13;
Walking seemed to be the best remedy for his state of mind and so he continued&#13;
past his own gate on down the road. Not noticing where he was going, he came to a&#13;
foot bridge spanning a small stream. The bridge was protected by a railing on both sides ·&#13;
Lifting his eyes from the ground he was horrified to see that girl, who had already caused&#13;
him so much discomfiture, approaching him. Glancing hastily around, he sought a place&#13;
of refuge, but could find none. He must meet her. In some inconceivable way she&#13;
reached the bridge first. As there was not room enough to pass, Stub must wait until&#13;
she crossed. The idea of having to give way to a girl, and to her especially, was un-&#13;
&#13;
step and just as he had about decided to ignore her his foot missed the railing. Stub&#13;
made frantic efforts to recover his equilibrium, but all in vain. He made an unceremonious&#13;
descent into the brook in anything but a graceful manner. The stream was not deep and&#13;
he easily touched bottom. Seeing an old culvert he hid himself for about fifteen minutes&#13;
endeavoring to summon enough courage to make his appearance.&#13;
He scurried across lots to his home, carefully avoiding familiar districts and streets .&#13;
He had carefully planned his entrance to the house in order to avoid any inquiring members of the family. Just as he was about to make a final dash he caught a glimpse of a&#13;
figure in white talking to G enet, a girl who lived next door to him. The girl in white&#13;
seemed to be telling a story which was often interrupted by shouts of laughter. Stub&#13;
hid in the barn and waited for the intruder to go away. It seemed ages, however, before&#13;
she departed and he had plenty of time to reflect upon his recent adventures. He could&#13;
vividly see himself on that bridge awkardly trying to secure his balance, and, yes, he&#13;
remembered distinctly that he had uttered a cry, and before a girl too. Now she was&#13;
telling Genet who was continually making fun of him anyway. Oh, he couldn' t stand it,&#13;
he would run away, or, he would get a revolver and shoot the first person that dared to&#13;
laugh at him. Just then a chance came and he dashed into the house. The scolding&#13;
from his mother for being so late made no impression on him. His whole mind was&#13;
engaged in deciding just how to punish those who laughed at him. All night he rolled&#13;
and tossed upon his pillow, but went to school the next morning with his course of action&#13;
still undecided.&#13;
When he reached school he saw a new girl with Genet whom he immediately&#13;
recognized as the girl who had contributed to his chagrin of the day before. W hen Genet&#13;
saw him she made a rush for him bringing the stranger along. There was no escape; he&#13;
must bear the awful humiliation. Then G enet presented her friend. S he was really&#13;
very pretty. He also beheld with joy that there was no look of recognition in her eyes,&#13;
his school clothes had changed his entire appearance. A short visit ensued in which&#13;
Stub regained his old self-confidence.&#13;
As he ambled home at noon, the old swagger was very prominent, the whistle had&#13;
an even more defiant ring, but not of contempt. No, whats the use? he might as well&#13;
admit that there ought to be girls in the world, and maybe they did help a fellow at&#13;
times, even if they could make him feel mightily embarrassed .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
bearable.&#13;
Then a brilliant idea came to him. He had walked on top of this railing many&#13;
times; here was a great opportunity to recover his lost dignity. Surely a daring feat&#13;
would attract her rapt attention and accomplish the desired result. So mounting to the&#13;
top of the railing he balanced himself carefully and started across. Then the trouble&#13;
started. Should he absolutely ignore her or should he give her a haughty stare as he&#13;
passed her? He became so engrossed in this weighty matter that he did not watch his&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-214-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-215-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zet&#13;
&#13;
Nobelette&#13;
&#13;
"Sunbeam arrives in Leeds"&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER I&#13;
W RITTEN BY F ERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
The crimson sun of morning&#13;
Came peeping o'er a hill,&#13;
With radiance adorning&#13;
A temple, white and still,&#13;
A fane we thought immortal,&#13;
So ·solidly it stood,&#13;
Inscribed above its portal:&#13;
" The Beautiful, the Good "&#13;
&#13;
But as the night descended,&#13;
The toilers, standing by,&#13;
Saw all their labors ended&#13;
In flames, which leaping high,&#13;
'Mid roars and lurid crashes,&#13;
Devoured it where it stood,&#13;
And left in smoking ashes :&#13;
" The Beautiful, the Good "&#13;
&#13;
"Everybody off," shouted Harry Clark as the train slowed down at the station.&#13;
"Let's get off and see the sights in this wonderful metropolis."&#13;
Everyone made a dive for the door. Although they were in the "Sunbeam" they&#13;
had been riding all d ay and were anxious for a little excitement and rest.&#13;
Buster and M erril were the last ones off, for they were in another car flirting with&#13;
some pretty girls. F or this very reason they were usually late for everything.&#13;
D ick Butler, the manager, went immediately to the opera house to make the final&#13;
preparations for the evening's concert, while the other "stars" sauntered around town&#13;
taking in the "huge buildings," exclaiming over the "sky-scrapers," viewing the famous&#13;
"Zoological Gardens" and the other wonders of which the city boasted.&#13;
C hick A nderson, Fletch, Clarence and L eon Johnson, as they were returning to the&#13;
car, noticed a man in one of the parks throwing stones up in a tree. Chick, with mischief&#13;
sparkling in his eyes inquired :&#13;
"My dear, kind sir, pray tell me just why you are gazing so intently at the marvels&#13;
of the heavens."&#13;
&#13;
" I am not watchin the stars," he replied, "I am trying to get my Ford."&#13;
But as new suns ascended&#13;
Behind the selfsame hill,&#13;
Behold, a vision splendid!&#13;
A fairer temple still !&#13;
A temple ever growing,&#13;
E xpanding as it should,&#13;
To all the nations showing :&#13;
" The Beautiful, the Good "&#13;
-JAMES JUVE NAL HAYES.&#13;
&#13;
"Your F ord?"&#13;
"Well, that's what I said, wasn't it ?"&#13;
" But what would a sedate Ford be doing up m a tree?"&#13;
"Well, I'll tell you if you are so inquisitive. I tried to crank the crazy thing and it&#13;
slipped out of my hand and landed upon the topmost branch of this tree," said the&#13;
none too sweet-tempered gentleman.&#13;
"Now I'll tell you what I'll do if you'll give us&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
ride," said Chic.&#13;
&#13;
" W hat ?"&#13;
&#13;
"I'll climb up and get it fo r you, since I'm quite like a monkey."&#13;
"All right, I d do anything to get it back again.&#13;
plied the man.&#13;
&#13;
Be quick about it though," re-&#13;
&#13;
In a few minutes Chic had scrambled down to "terra firma" again with the little&#13;
F ord clutched safely under his arm. H e placed it carefully by the curbing and they&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 216-&#13;
&#13;
-2 17-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"We will now have the pleasure of hearing Samanthy Jones sing her latest original&#13;
&#13;
climbed in and were off for a spin, away from the city's noise and thunder.&#13;
They flew along at a Ford's pace until they were three miles away from the&#13;
city limits .&#13;
&#13;
production."&#13;
Dick sat staring at the charming girl down in front.&#13;
&#13;
He didn't so much as move&#13;
&#13;
Leon was gazing at the "roof gardens" through a microscope and the others were&#13;
looking at an aeroplane, when CRASH!!! they struck a bump, and the next thing the&#13;
young sports knew, they were sitting in the middle of the road covered with dust.&#13;
&#13;
an eyelid.&#13;
&#13;
Fletch, with his nose scratched and bleeding, his mouth full of dust, slowly arose .&#13;
spluttering:&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
"Perhaps I can assist Miss Jones in getting up here"-and with that, the indignant&#13;
instructor set about to pull the pensive Dick from his seat, and taking the "dunce cap"&#13;
from its accustomed placed proceeded to place it upon his head. Now had he fallen&#13;
from the platform Dick would not have been more mortified. He met the situation well&#13;
and started out bravely-but lo! it wasn't the "Mary had a little Lamp" which had&#13;
been his "original production," that he sang, but in its stead he gushed out, "Put your&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, my lovely polished finger nails are all dirty and I won't have time to manicure&#13;
them before the concert. What shall I do?"&#13;
· .&#13;
When they had picked themselves up they looked around for the car, but lo. and&#13;
behold, all they saw of said Ford and driver was a tiny speck in the distance continually&#13;
getting smaller.&#13;
&#13;
No answer, Dick still sat gazing into the audience.&#13;
&#13;
arms around me honey, hold me tight."&#13;
Chic gigled out loud and Buster twisted his little gloved hands in an endeavor to&#13;
suppress his glee.· Dick, however, failed to see the fun, but realized that he had made a&#13;
bone-head of himself and tried his best to play a good farce.&#13;
&#13;
"I wonder where we can find a car," said Clarence.&#13;
"Oh let's walk; it's a good reducing exercise," growled Leon.&#13;
&#13;
In the meanwhile the rest of the fellows had returned from their various expeditions&#13;
and could not imagine what had happened to their more adventurous comrades.&#13;
were not to be found.&#13;
&#13;
"Is Miss Samanthy Jones present?" asked the teacher.&#13;
&#13;
They&#13;
&#13;
At seven-thirty they were ready for the concert and still the wanderers had not&#13;
returned. Just as they were ready to leave the "Sunbeam" in despair, they saw four&#13;
dusty, smeary looking figures coming up the "asphalt" with a look on their "beaming"&#13;
(?) faces that did not speak of entire bliss.&#13;
&#13;
When school was dismissed and the platform was empty a storm of hisses and&#13;
exclamations greeted Dick:&#13;
"Say, whose the girl?"&#13;
"Say, you bone-head, did you think this was a moonlight picnic?"&#13;
"Pretty soft."&#13;
"Disgusting" (Fletcher.)&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER II&#13;
WRITTEN BY ELEANOR W INKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
The evening's concert was on.&#13;
&#13;
They were singing their best, f or th e audience was&#13;
· ·&#13;
·&#13;
a very appreciative one, when Dick, who was the leading baritone, saw someone in the&#13;
audience who attracted his attention. The face seemed so familiar, but he could not remember where he had seen that fair feminine creation. One thing he was sure of, that&#13;
she was most interesting and he could not keep his eyes away from her. Suddenly it&#13;
dawned upon him that she was the charming Betty Fitch that he met that afternoon&#13;
while completing arrangements at the opera house. Why was it that he kept looking&#13;
at her all the time? Why couldn't he get her off his mind? He didn't like girls at all,&#13;
and never cared for them, except as jolly good friends.&#13;
Everything went off beautifully, even though the baritone did sing in an absentminded way until they came to the "rural school." Then, as usual, there was some&#13;
The program was progressing as well as the "dear teacher" could expect, when the time&#13;
came for Dick to sing his original song.&#13;
&#13;
-2 18-&#13;
&#13;
Dick, in dismay, demanded all "sushing" to be cut out.&#13;
Dick sang a solo in the last group of songs. The Fates were against him for it was&#13;
a love song and he forgot the crowd and the other fellows. None was there but the&#13;
"girl" and himself--"Here's to the day when mine she'll be, Heres to the girl I love"&#13;
-rang out with more fervor than those closing lines were accustomed to. The fellows&#13;
nudged each other and vowed to make it hotter than ever for their manager next time they&#13;
got behind the curtains.&#13;
Sure enough they did make it lively for the lovesick Dick, so lively in fact that he&#13;
decided to cut the Epworth League reception and beat it for the car. Yes he started&#13;
heroically for the car, but turned shortly and went back to the church. There he stood&#13;
for fully an hour peering into the window with eyes for one alone.&#13;
So absorbed was he that he didn't notice Jimmy Dolliver, Prof. MacCollin and Mr.&#13;
Ruth come out-but good luck-they noticed him. Prof. Mac and Ruth offered him&#13;
married man's advice while Jimmy offered him of the Sandburr department and the&#13;
Annual Jokes. But Dick grabbed his suit-case and made a dash. 'Twas the car for&#13;
him sure enough this time, no more fooling, he'd never hear the last of this, even now.&#13;
&#13;
-2 19-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
WRITTEN BY HELEN WARFIELD&#13;
&#13;
The "Sunbeam" was now preparing for the trip home. The boys h.ad all arrived&#13;
at last, though it was feared for some time that "Kewpie" and Buster would surely be&#13;
left. However, they sauntered along at the last moment and were now all speeding&#13;
back to their dear Alma Mater. Dick was unusually quiet all the way, in spite of the&#13;
fact that the fellows pestered him nearly to death with their clever remarks of what would&#13;
happen on their return. He sat gazing out of the window, not paying the slightest attention to any of them till he caught one of Merril' s remarks:&#13;
"Say, Miss Samanthy, are you dreaming of the day when 'mine she'll be?'"&#13;
"No," snarled Dick, for not for anything would he have them suspect that he had&#13;
even met her.&#13;
Dick turned again to the window, seemmg to take more interest than ever in the&#13;
field after field of growing grain.&#13;
It was not long after that the "Sunbeam" arrived in Sioux City and the boys made&#13;
their way to the various rooming places. The events of this trip still fresh in their minds&#13;
for future use .&#13;
&#13;
old friend of mine, we used to go to school together-anyway when he asked me to help&#13;
carry out their plan I was only too glad to get a chance for a little excitement, so readily&#13;
consented. But I'm dreadfully sorry it's gone so far, really I am, · if you'll only forgive&#13;
me for the part I've had in it. By the way, have you seen these?" And with that she&#13;
opened the "Reporter" which she held, to the "Sandburrs" and offered it to him .&#13;
"No, if you don't mind I'd a little rather not read the Sandburrs this week.&#13;
should I'm afraid something might happen. But"-he hesitated.&#13;
"Well?"&#13;
"I was about to say that if you would like to help turn the tables now you-willmay-1 mean, would you like to go to the home concert with me?"&#13;
"Oh yes, indeed, I surely would enjoy it and would also enjoy "turning the tables."&#13;
The night of the home concert Dick was really the star of the evening. He sang&#13;
his "original production" so well that the boys were actually astounded, and when he&#13;
sang "Here's to the girl I love," he put his whole heart into it.&#13;
&#13;
In fact we're a little inclined to believe that it wasn't the last time he sang that song&#13;
to the one person.&#13;
&#13;
About a week later Dick sat in the library laboriously pondering over books and&#13;
occasionally taking a few seconds off to write a sentence or two in his History note book.&#13;
It must have been instinct that caused him to look up suddenly and see Kewpie .standing&#13;
beside him.&#13;
However, it was not Kewpie he stared at, but the fair girl with him, who was&#13;
thoroughly enjoying the situation, though trying hard not to laugh. Dick appeared&#13;
awkward, very much so, and the worst of it was he felt it deeply. Yet what was there&#13;
for him to do? Evidently nothing, for he still stared. After what seemed to him an&#13;
hour Kewpie in a tantalizing way remarked:&#13;
"You know Dickit would&#13;
give me the greatest of pleasure to introduce you to&#13;
Miss Fitch, but after the threat you made to the fellows on the way home I'm afraid&#13;
I'll have to make the rounds of the club first, otherwise some of them might not get to&#13;
meet her at all. And I'm determined she shall meet everyone," and before the astonished&#13;
Dick had time to say a word Kewpie and Betty had turned and were making their way&#13;
to another table.&#13;
They had not been sitting there long when someone called Kewpie from the library,&#13;
and as he left he cautioned Betty not to even glance in Dick's direction. But the fun&#13;
loving Betty thought that matters were becoming altogether one sided and a minute later&#13;
she was slowly walking over to where Dick sat.&#13;
"It's been lots of fun I know" she began apologetically, "But I couldn't help&#13;
noticing how you looked at me the night of the concert, and I knew I must have met you&#13;
somewhere, though I couldn't think for some time, so when Kewpie--you know he's an&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 220 -&#13;
&#13;
If I&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-221-&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Traffic Cop&#13;
The traffic cop stands in the street,&#13;
Despair his heart is rending:&#13;
For tumbling toward him down he sees&#13;
An aeroplane descending.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
In vain he tries to step aside,He' d like to dodge it neatly.Whichever way he tries to run,&#13;
The way is blocked completely.&#13;
At all the windows round about&#13;
Appear excited faces.&#13;
The traffic cop seems doomed to death.Of hope there are no traces .&#13;
&#13;
"The Glory of the Conquered'&#13;
Our ears are filled with the victor's cry .&#13;
&#13;
From one way comes a plunging truck,&#13;
'Tis loaded high with bundles;&#13;
The driver does not heed the cop&#13;
As on his way he trundles .&#13;
&#13;
As it floats on the morning air,&#13;
For old M. C. has won agamA fig for toil and care!&#13;
&#13;
The other way he quickly sees,&#13;
Along the car-track banging,&#13;
A ladder-truck, in mad career,&#13;
With all its fearsome clanging.&#13;
&#13;
But what of the morning after defeat?&#13;
Do we hear the same strong cheer;&#13;
&#13;
He looks to see if he may reach&#13;
The "elevated" landing ;&#13;
But, no, alas! before him there&#13;
The autos thick are standing.&#13;
&#13;
Do the men who tried and failed to win&#13;
Take heart from what they hear?&#13;
And is the victory all in the score?&#13;
&#13;
He's surely doomed, there is no hope;&#13;
The scene, indeed, is tragic.&#13;
He cannot possibly escape&#13;
Unless it be by magic.&#13;
&#13;
Does fair play count for nought?&#13;
No !&#13;
&#13;
Who fail in a battle well fought.&#13;
&#13;
But when it seems he must be crushed,&#13;
A plan he does discover :&#13;
He sees before his feet a ring&#13;
Upon a manhole cover.&#13;
&#13;
Then here's to the day in old M . C.&#13;
When the flag aloft shall sail,&#13;
Not alone for those who win the day&#13;
&#13;
He seizes it ; he tugs and pulls&#13;
With wild and frantic lunges ;&#13;
'Tis lifted up and tossed aside,&#13;
And in the hole he plunges.&#13;
But ah! again he is too late&#13;
(Alas! for human blunders!) :&#13;
A subway train comes rushing by,&#13;
And him in two it sunders!&#13;
&#13;
There's honor and praise for the men&#13;
&#13;
But for those who try.&#13;
&#13;
AL. B.&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
But do not feel too good a grief&#13;
And sympathy does not extend&#13;
To moving-picture actors.&#13;
&#13;
-·&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
and fail.&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
1 6&#13;
&#13;
- 222-223-&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
BOOK VI&#13;
"The Spirit of Jest"&#13;
&#13;
-224-&#13;
&#13;
�-225-&#13;
&#13;
�Students and Fellow Alumni&#13;
We are always glad to welcome the new students&#13;
and have the old ones call&#13;
&#13;
for a&#13;
&#13;
chat about old times.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·Headquarters for&#13;
&#13;
College Books and Supplies&#13;
Spalding Athletic Goods&#13;
"M" Blankets and Pennants&#13;
Pillow Tops (leather and felt)&#13;
Society Stationery. and pennants&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Agents&#13;
&#13;
for College Seal Goods&#13;
&#13;
The College Bookstore&#13;
G. T. PENDELL, Proprietor&#13;
· 22 6&#13;
-227-&#13;
&#13;
�PETERS PARK&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
We Lead in Morningside when it comes to Variety · and Prices .&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY IS OUR MOTTO&#13;
&#13;
We are Exclusive A gents in&#13;
&#13;
for the&#13;
&#13;
Woolson Spice Co. line of Teas, Coffees and Spices&#13;
&#13;
Five Different Blends of Coffees - One for You&#13;
. -228-&#13;
&#13;
-229-&#13;
&#13;
�ANDERSON'S STOCK OF NEW&#13;
HOME FITTINGS&#13;
IS BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER&#13;
&#13;
OLYMPIA, th&#13;
&#13;
PALACE of&#13;
&#13;
SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
•.&#13;
&#13;
The finest line of Candies, Sundaes, Ices,&#13;
Fruits and Luncheonettes in the city. Our&#13;
service pleases.&#13;
&#13;
Olympia Candy Co.&#13;
FIVE FLOORS FULL OF NEW FURNITURE;&#13;
RUGS AND DRAPERIES&#13;
&#13;
5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City 's&#13;
Biggest and&#13;
Busiest Studio&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE&#13;
&#13;
an Incorporated Bank under Iowa State Laws for the&#13;
Purpose of Operating a Savings and Commercial Bank.&#13;
&#13;
O FFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
W . S. Snyder&#13;
&#13;
E . M . Corbett&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Len O'Harrow&#13;
Vice President&#13;
C. A. N orrbom&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
W . C. Johnson&#13;
H. Galinsky&#13;
0 . L. Johnson&#13;
H . A Meyer&#13;
Geo. C. Call&#13;
&#13;
American Savings&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
"SAVE WITH US AND THOU SHALT HA VE"&#13;
-23 0-&#13;
&#13;
-231-&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Apparel of Ultra&#13;
Distinction&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
-for Young Women&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
-Suits, Coats, Dresses, Millinery , Footwear and Lingerie that appeal.&#13;
strongly to young women who wish the utmost in Style Combined with&#13;
Practicability.&#13;
- Our selections of Modish Apparel for College Women are particularly&#13;
large and of an extensiveness that gives a wide range of choice.&#13;
&#13;
-232-&#13;
&#13;
-233-&#13;
&#13;
�COLLEGE MEN&#13;
Want Clothes that are&#13;
Specially Designed for&#13;
the Younger Fellows&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
particular type of clothes&#13;
we recommend and feature&#13;
are made expressly for us,&#13;
and expressly for young men.&#13;
They type youth and strength to&#13;
the utmost degree. Not in a single&#13;
item are they common or usual.&#13;
Not in a single stitch are they&#13;
mediocre. They embody that particular quality of workmanship&#13;
which has made E. &amp; W. Clothes&#13;
famous thoughout this section.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Our showing of High Grade Furnishings, Hats, Caps, Shoes, etc., 1s very&#13;
complete and the assortments are so&#13;
varied that we can please every young&#13;
man.&#13;
&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR YOUNG MENS TOGS&#13;
-235-234-&#13;
&#13;
�''Meet Me at&#13;
&#13;
That's where I always do&#13;
shopping.&#13;
The reason that I make Martin's mv shopping headquarters is because they carry the&#13;
best grade of materials in everv line. Their&#13;
ready made suits, dress goods, millinery,&#13;
gloves, shoes and in fact everything that you&#13;
want are of the best that is possible to be had.&#13;
Another reason whv I prefer Martin, s, is&#13;
because their employees treat me kinaly.&#13;
They always have time to wait on me. "&#13;
A SATISFIED CUSTOMER&#13;
&#13;
A Mail Order House As Well&#13;
Besides satisfying the best Sioux City trade, we are&#13;
accommodating thousands of out-of-town customers. Our&#13;
" Same Day" mail order system has enabled us to reach&#13;
people who are desirous of the best. We pay transportation&#13;
charges on all out of town purchases.&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Established in 18 80&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
-236-&#13;
&#13;
- 237-&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
You&#13;
&#13;
can have your&#13;
College Days with&#13;
you always, if you&#13;
have a Kodak while here. We have everything in Kodaking and will do your finishing.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PHARMACY&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
-238-&#13;
&#13;
-239-&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
THE Ungrudging Measure&#13;
in which the public has responded to our efforts is a revelation of how unmistakably men register their appreciation&#13;
of a store that renders them the service. of&#13;
giving them a greater money's worth.&#13;
&#13;
HERE in this LiveisStore&#13;
"More Value"&#13;
the&#13;
watch word---it's the biggest word in business and&#13;
the dominant factor in our&#13;
'•&#13;
success.&#13;
&#13;
WE offer Kuppenheimer Clothes in a&#13;
score of new models and hundreds of&#13;
fabrics and patterns - Suits and Light Overcoats, which, price for price, prove conclusively the truthfulness of our statements.&#13;
&#13;
$18, $20, $22.50 $25, $30 AND $35&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Moore Special Clothes&#13;
&#13;
$15&#13;
&#13;
are the result of tremendous, spot cash buying&#13;
power, to you they mean $3 to $5&#13;
more value than you're accustomed&#13;
to getting at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
"Star'' Shirts, "Knox,'' "Stetson,''&#13;
"Moore Special'' Hats, "Superior' '&#13;
Underwear, "Fownes '' Gloves,&#13;
"WayneKnit' ' Hose, '' Carter and&#13;
Holmes'' Neckwear.&#13;
Boys' Clothes in our "Big Boys' Store"&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
-240-&#13;
&#13;
�A&#13;
&#13;
Man&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
had the seven-year itch and an automobile, and when he was not working&#13;
on the auto he was paying attention to the itch.&#13;
&#13;
We are not too busy to give the best of our skill and time to even your&#13;
smallest printing job. STUDENTS, make our shop your headquarters.&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING AND STATIONERY&#13;
" GO NOR TH"&#13;
&#13;
Interstate Publishing Company&#13;
''The Home of Good Printing,"&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Phone Auto 62 1 1&#13;
&#13;
3631 Peters Ave&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A year's work of remodeling and refurnishing the West Hotel from the top floo r&#13;
to the basement is now completed. The result is gratifying to us and pleasing to our&#13;
patrons. We now have 230 rooms, 144 with private bath, 40 sample rooms with&#13;
bath. First-Class Cafe, Rathskeller and private dining rooms in connection.&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN PLAN&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
RATES-&#13;
&#13;
Single, Without Bath, $1.00 Per Day&#13;
&#13;
With Bath, $1.50 to $3.00 Per D ay&#13;
&#13;
FRANK DONOHOEProprietor&#13;
&#13;
JAY&#13;
&#13;
-242-&#13;
&#13;
MACLARTY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�' ' THE&#13;
&#13;
BIG STORE ''&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Will Always Be First&#13;
in the&#13;
Hearts of&#13;
the Students&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'' The Store with the College Spirit"&#13;
THE CREATEST&#13;
DEPARTMENT STORE&#13;
IN IOWA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY IOWA&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WHERE A WELCOME ALWAYS AWAITS YOU&#13;
&#13;
-244-&#13;
&#13;
-245-&#13;
&#13;
�Kodak Developing and Printing of Pic-tures in this Annual By Us ·&#13;
We&#13;
guarantee you the best possible&#13;
results from your negatives. Our&#13;
department is complete and strictly&#13;
modern in every particular. We are&#13;
exclusive dealers in Kodak Supplies&#13;
&#13;
THE PIECE O' PIPE&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
608 PIERCE STREET&#13;
NEW&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON&#13;
&#13;
BLDG.&#13;
&#13;
INTEREST PAID ON CERTIFICATES&#13;
OF DEPOSIT&#13;
&#13;
"Where Quality is as Represented"&#13;
&#13;
OPEN ACCOUNTS INVITED&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Two BITS ON THE CORNER&#13;
&#13;
Established I 889&#13;
W. P.&#13;
T . A.&#13;
C. W.&#13;
C. G.&#13;
&#13;
410 PIERCE STREET&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Manley Pres.&#13;
Blach, V. Pres.&#13;
Britton, Cash.&#13;
Cummins, Asst. Cash.&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive CChings&#13;
IN HIS CHARIOT&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $500,000.00&#13;
&#13;
-246-&#13;
&#13;
-247-&#13;
&#13;
�....._&#13;
&#13;
IN SEP ARABLES&#13;
&#13;
MATTERS OF SPEECH&#13;
Don't forget that, because ·you are a&#13;
college "stude," you are not . supposed to&#13;
use good English freely .'&#13;
&#13;
Lois Crouch and her note book.&#13;
George Washington Pratt, his little&#13;
wagon and his ambling gait.&#13;
&#13;
Don't say "fool" when you mean&#13;
"Idiot."&#13;
&#13;
Bess Shannon and her rosy cheeks.&#13;
Lois Russel, her tatting and Ewart&#13;
. Williams.&#13;
&#13;
" Don't say "Yep" for "yes."&#13;
Don't&#13;
say " get me" for " did you&#13;
catch the drift of the avalanche that detached itself from my storehouse of information and rolled its&#13;
ponderous&#13;
course down the steep incline of my sharpened lingual member?''&#13;
&#13;
Herbert .French and his Chemistry.&#13;
Kuhns and his smile.&#13;
Ethel Olsen and "A" grades.&#13;
Allan Kline and sarcasm.&#13;
Elsie Johnson and her Philo pin.&#13;
&#13;
She-" Lets tell ghost stories."&#13;
Kuhns-"Can you tell hair-raising&#13;
ghost stories?"&#13;
&#13;
Jas. Reistrup and a bored · expression&#13;
in chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Why were the Freshmen mustaches&#13;
like faith? Answer See Hebrews&#13;
&#13;
We foreshadow the inseparability,&#13;
hence-forth forever, of Luella and her K.&#13;
A frat pin.&#13;
&#13;
XI-I.&#13;
&#13;
DIAMONDS&#13;
The Hotel Martin&#13;
Absolutely Fireproof&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Our continuous progress in this department is largely&#13;
due to the constant personal efforts and close application&#13;
of the Members of our Firm, to our good understanding&#13;
of this particular commodity, and to our ability to offer the&#13;
best in quality and value.&#13;
&#13;
N ew goods recently&#13;
purchased in addition to our usual&#13;
supply afford a wide assortment.&#13;
&#13;
City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Will H Beck Co.&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Parties a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
IOWA'S LEADING JEWELERS AND DIAMOND ME RCHANTS&#13;
&#13;
Established 1877&#13;
-248-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
-249-&#13;
&#13;
�Quality .&#13;
Photographs&#13;
WEGOT IT&#13;
&#13;
BA RKS TALKS TO&#13;
&#13;
Studio&#13;
&#13;
407 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
- 250-&#13;
&#13;
M. PURDY&#13;
&#13;
FOR 1 3/4 HOURS&#13;
&#13;
SALUTE&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
"HOD&#13;
&#13;
CHICK AND HIS&#13;
BASKET&#13;
&#13;
-251-&#13;
&#13;
I/&#13;
&#13;
�PLACING HER&#13;
&#13;
UNHEARD-OF-THINGS&#13;
&#13;
If she goes with all the -boys, she is a&#13;
"coquette." If she goes with one, she is&#13;
"married," or can't get anyone else.&#13;
If she majors in Chemistry or Biology,&#13;
she is queer. If she does not, she is looking for snappy courses.&#13;
If she's athletic, she loses her "maidenenly charms." If she is not-well "girls&#13;
can't do very much anyway."&#13;
If she asserts herself in class, she is&#13;
"strong-headed."&#13;
If she doesn't, she&#13;
"hasn't any brains."&#13;
If she doesn't talk much, she'.s "uninteresting." If she does, she's a " Bore."&#13;
So how is a girl to please.&#13;
EXCHANGES&#13;
' They walked among the shredded wheat&#13;
When grape-nuts were in season.&#13;
He asked her why she was so sweet,&#13;
She answered, "There's a reason."&#13;
Don't try to drive a nail with a sponge.&#13;
You can't do it, no matter how much you&#13;
soak it.&#13;
"What becomes of the righteous?"&#13;
"Eternal bliss."&#13;
"What becomes of the unrighteous?"&#13;
. "Eternal blister."&#13;
Who&#13;
western&#13;
The&#13;
creeping&#13;
&#13;
was the builder of the NorthRailroad?&#13;
Bible says, "God created all&#13;
things."&#13;
&#13;
43 Years a Resident of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman-chewing gum.&#13;
&#13;
I Know Values and Locations&#13;
&#13;
M.C.PETERS&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College-without a fire.&#13;
Prof. Hayes-giving a chapel talk.&#13;
&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDE REAL ESTATE MAN&#13;
&#13;
The library- being used for study.&#13;
Write me-Phon·e me, 6464 or 6567&#13;
or Better Yet&#13;
COME AND SEE ME&#13;
&#13;
Shelley-pulling off a bone-head.&#13;
The campus-with side walks.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
PETERS PARK STATION&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Bob Vernon-missing the train.&#13;
Eng. I -without an Orpheum skit by&#13;
Hayes.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
"Chick" Anderson-with a civilized·&#13;
laugh.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•.&#13;
&#13;
$4.00&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Carson- breaking a faculty for&#13;
a date with Luella.&#13;
&#13;
TELL TALES&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
$6.00 Values&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal&#13;
Good Measure&#13;
And Good Service&#13;
&#13;
$2.95&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dutton-keeping a date book.&#13;
Unmarried faculty members-being&#13;
hilarious at ravine picnics.&#13;
&#13;
PHONE US YOUR COAL ORDER&#13;
We Will Take Care of You&#13;
When the Time Comes&#13;
&#13;
Shoes for Young Men&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig-at ease.&#13;
&#13;
The H. E. Haakinson Coal Co.&#13;
&#13;
The Sample Shoe Store&#13;
&#13;
3 I 2 Jackson Street&#13;
Auto Phone 2 I 7 4&#13;
&#13;
Over Beck's&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 5 7 2&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
"She told me you told her that secret I&#13;
told you not to tell her."&#13;
"The mean thing! I told her not to&#13;
tell you I told her. I promised her I&#13;
wouldn't tell you she told me so don't tell ·&#13;
her I told you."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Leading Florists&#13;
FRESH CUT FLOWERS-All kinds of floral emblems made up by us. We&#13;
know how. American Beauties, Roses and Carnations always on hand. Positively the&#13;
finest and largest display in town. Our prices are right.&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
ROCKLIN &amp; LEHMAN&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
NEW STORE :&#13;
&#13;
402 Fourth Street; one of the Finest in the West&#13;
Auto 4199-3112; Iowa 3112&#13;
TOM DEALTRY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
-252- 253-&#13;
&#13;
�FLOWERS&#13;
Flowers convey best the glad or the sad or the particular&#13;
story you wish to tell&#13;
Let us handle your requirements from the rarest and choicest assortment&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY AND SERVICE UNEQUALLED&#13;
&#13;
J. R. ELDER&#13;
HOME-GROWN FLOWERS&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
Greenhouses at Riverside&#13;
&#13;
5 12 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Students in need of Glasses will find our OPTOMETRISTS&#13;
competent eye examiners and specialists in fitting nose glasses.&#13;
Ask any of the thousands we have fitted. All glasses made&#13;
in our own shop.&#13;
Corner 5th&#13;
and&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
Streets&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 3730&#13;
&#13;
605 FIFTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST BLOOM&#13;
TAILOR&#13;
Also Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing&#13;
BETWEEN JACKSON AND NEBRASKA STREETS&#13;
&#13;
-254-&#13;
&#13;
- 255-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
(Left out of the College Catalogue)&#13;
&#13;
T HE D E P A R TMENT O F HUMAN NATUR E&#13;
·. Professor, Dr. Wallace Carson&#13;
Dr. James Hayes, Ass't.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
We carry a complete line of&#13;
Up-to-Date Clothing and Furnishing Goods at very lowest&#13;
prices. Visit our store when m&#13;
need of clothing.&#13;
&#13;
COURSES IN&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MA NUFACTURER OF&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FINE FUits&#13;
&#13;
Ten per cent discount to&#13;
F acuity and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
FussoL OGY AND CORRIDOROLOGY&#13;
&#13;
I. ELEMENTARY COURSE-Ir regular class periods with various subjects, pursuing differen t bran ches of study, such as t he Princess or Grand, auto rides, short walks&#13;
and other equally entertaining courses. Open to all those who are undecided as to&#13;
what permanent subject to. pursue. Especially desirable for Freshmen.&#13;
II.&#13;
SEMI-ADVANCED COURSE (A continuation of course I)-The aim of this&#13;
course is to make the laboratory -method more prominent and encourage original work&#13;
as much as possible. Long field trips are required&#13;
on moonlight nights to interesting&#13;
points of th.e suburb, such as Floyd's Monument, South Ravine, Graceland Cemetery,&#13;
etc., also short s picy trips are offered during the regular chapel hours, tete tetes between classes and various at.her similar lines of work ( ?) Conference hours a r e held&#13;
in the library for individual ins truction intended to develop an appreciation of an d love&#13;
for human nature in the concrete.&#13;
III. ADVANCED COURSE~This course is a preparation course for the future.&#13;
Open only to t hose who are majoring in this department and intending to follow it as a&#13;
life work. This course is conducted entirely without text books, stress being laid on&#13;
lengthy conversations on personal topics. Research work in waist-line measurement&#13;
a nd standards of osculatorology required. Special credit given for field trips and&#13;
laboratory work completed in Course II.&#13;
.&#13;
IV. CORRESPONDENCE COURSE-Special ·c ourse offered in letter writing. The&#13;
intensive pursuit of the different s teps in its developmen t will entitle the student the&#13;
same credit as cou rse III.&#13;
*In the spring time Campis try i s substituted for Corridorology&#13;
especially attractive and desirable.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson&#13;
&#13;
310 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
710-712 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
CITY,&#13;
&#13;
STUD ENTS ENR OLL E D&#13;
•'Moxey" Hicks&#13;
"Bill" Wedgwood&#13;
" Bi ll" Payne&#13;
Merril 1 Stevens&#13;
"Turk"&#13;
&#13;
Eiffert&#13;
•'Sappy" DeWalt&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
COUR SE II&#13;
&#13;
COUU SE I&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
"OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
and is considered&#13;
&#13;
Marie Anderson&#13;
Alice Jeffery&#13;
Louise Hansen&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Charmion Holbert&#13;
Lucille Me tcalfe&#13;
&#13;
••'Jim" Kolp&#13;
*R. Overholser&#13;
*D. Shelmidine&#13;
*Undecided w h at cou r se to pursue&#13;
&#13;
z - ''Bisho p" Buehler Irene Chapin&#13;
Marion Metcalfe&#13;
"Ed" Harrington&#13;
Cornelia McBurn ney&#13;
''Herbie" French&#13;
"Chuck"&#13;
Hutton&#13;
'•Bill" Will iams&#13;
Al. Hornney&#13;
x-Wendell Curry&#13;
&#13;
June Bowen&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
&#13;
MArg Cu mmings&#13;
Bes&#13;
Howell&#13;
x-F lorence Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Archer&#13;
z-Receiving onl y hal f credi t.&#13;
x - Conflict w i th course IV.&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
&#13;
COUR SE III&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHERS&#13;
&#13;
827 Fourth Street; Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Service&#13;
&#13;
Courtesy Safety&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Convenience&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
E. L. KIRK, Gen'! Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Harrison Kil b ourne Ruth Blackman&#13;
z- Glen Patrick&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
z -Joh n Kolp&#13;
z -Lysle Hosford&#13;
Winnie&#13;
Wood&#13;
z-Arthur Lindsay&#13;
Lois Russel&#13;
Ewart Williams&#13;
L eone C lou gh&#13;
Stanley Bashaw&#13;
Gladys Long&#13;
Glen Oxford&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
Clair Cooper&#13;
Mabel Irwin&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
Marie Devit t&#13;
H e r bert Dunh a m&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
Wayne Coster&#13;
Marion Heikes&#13;
Herman L ueder&#13;
Anna vVilliams&#13;
Tyler Williams&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
*Lee Barks&#13;
*Prof. Carson&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Robert Verno n&#13;
Bess Johnson&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Lol a Williamso n&#13;
Vivian Lavel y&#13;
Leona Wheatley&#13;
Walter Hel d&#13;
Mary Royse&#13;
x-Elihu Shoemaker x-Lovice Str obel&#13;
z-Receiving o nl y half credi t.&#13;
x-Conflict with course IV.&#13;
*Post graduate.&#13;
&#13;
COURSE&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth James (Ames)&#13;
Ruth Gill ies (Drake)&#13;
MAry Ordway (Castana)&#13;
E leanor Winkleman (N orthwestern U.)&#13;
M arie Easthouse (So. Dakota)&#13;
Ethel Ordway (Castana and Ames)&#13;
Bonnie Robinson (Wisconsin)&#13;
Glen Mille r (Spencer)&#13;
Ethel Coom e r (Kingsley)&#13;
Burrel Evans (Cedar Falls)&#13;
Elsie Johnson (Dixon, Mon t.)&#13;
Leone Lange (Nebraska U).&#13;
Frances Kolp (Jacksonville, Ill.)&#13;
Elihu Sh oemak er (Danbury, e tc.)&#13;
Lo vice Strobel (AMes)&#13;
-257-&#13;
&#13;
-256-&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
&#13;
Florence Bull (Ames)&#13;
&#13;
�BRINK'S MEAT MARKET&#13;
WE SUPPLY THE LEADING BOARDING HOUSES OF&#13;
MORNINGSIDE WITH ALL KINDS OF FRESH MEATS&#13;
PHONE US YOUR ORDER&#13;
AND OUR DELIVERY WILL REACH YOU PROMPTLY&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6284&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
K&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
Everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles,&#13;
Rubber Goods, Trusses, etc.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
Supplies and Finishing&#13;
High Grade Candies- All Popular&#13;
Brands&#13;
VISIT OUR&#13;
&#13;
TEA ROOM&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
The most popular refreshment place in&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
ELIASON&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
Two STORES&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Home Portrait Photography&#13;
He Pleases&#13;
&#13;
Galinsky Bros. Company&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES--The lowest.&#13;
QUALITY- The highest&#13;
GooDs-The freshest.&#13;
SERVICE-The promptest&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
- 258-&#13;
&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
E&#13;
T&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
HARPERS&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
&#13;
PIPER &amp; LARSON&#13;
&#13;
FAULTLESS&#13;
FASCINATING&#13;
FASHIONABLE&#13;
are the adjectives that best describe our SHOES and HOSIERY&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
&#13;
H. &amp; H. SHOE CO.&#13;
512 Fourth Street ·&#13;
&#13;
FIRST CLASS WORK AT&#13;
&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES&#13;
&#13;
WANTED&#13;
-An&#13;
&#13;
.unattached, suitable&#13;
companion to take the place of Luella.&#13;
Christine Haas.&#13;
&#13;
WANT ADS&#13;
&#13;
ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE. CHEAP-several slightly damaged text books, commenceGuy McKinney&#13;
ment week.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
19 17 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 1227&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE-The art of bluffing. Not&#13;
in very good repair, but might be of&#13;
use to Greek students.&#13;
Vivian Lavely.&#13;
FOR SALE-Annuals of all kinds and&#13;
descriptions.&#13;
John V. Madison.&#13;
&#13;
FORSBERG&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
IN CITY OR COUNTRY&#13;
&#13;
CO.&#13;
&#13;
K. &amp; K . G rocery&#13;
&#13;
All Know the&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE-Latest book-"How to&#13;
avoid accident when alighting from an&#13;
Ames street car."&#13;
"Tommy" James.&#13;
&#13;
Buy Your Groceries of Us&#13;
and Get the Best and the&#13;
Most for Your Money&#13;
&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
CUTLERY&#13;
AND STOVES&#13;
&#13;
Sell your produce to us&#13;
and Get All That Is Coming&#13;
to You.&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Furnace and Tin Work&#13;
Give Us a Trial for&#13;
Anything in Hardware&#13;
&#13;
K. &amp; K . Grocery&#13;
&#13;
WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1832-305 7; Iowa 942&#13;
&#13;
10 10- 10 12 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
522-524 Fifth St.&#13;
- 260-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FOR R ENT-Nice brown freckles. In&#13;
good condition by June-Easy terms.&#13;
Marion Metcalfe.&#13;
FOR RENT-A popular laugh. Guaranteed to "Take" in any crowd.&#13;
"Chick" Anderson.&#13;
FOR RENT-All of my books during&#13;
the evening, at your own price.&#13;
Herman Lueder.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED&#13;
&#13;
C. F. MANHOLD, Mngr.&#13;
&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
FOR R ENT -A good grouch. Will&#13;
prove satisfactory on any and all oc"Chuck" Hutton.&#13;
casions.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-A steady girl. Will receive considerable attention, including&#13;
best plays, Princess and auto rides, if she&#13;
can appreciate my ability and position.&#13;
Arthur Payne.&#13;
&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
LOSTAda Beans.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-Cement walks on the campus.&#13;
Student Body.&#13;
&#13;
FOUND- In Kingsley, one very nice&#13;
agreeable man.&#13;
Ethel Coomer.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-A patented, guaranteed&#13;
contraption that will bring Miss Strobel&#13;
to class on time.&#13;
Prof. Macmillan.&#13;
&#13;
FOUND-A good opinion of myself.&#13;
Glen Miller.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-A monopoly on Winnie&#13;
Wood.&#13;
Arthur Lindsay.&#13;
WANTED-Lessons on how to become&#13;
J. G. Herbster.&#13;
graceful.&#13;
WANTED-Someone to take care of&#13;
me.&#13;
"Uppie."&#13;
- 26 1-&#13;
&#13;
LOST- The last remnant of my bash"Ike" Breckenridge.&#13;
fulness.&#13;
DON'TS FOR MEN&#13;
Upon meeting a lady, don't bother to&#13;
raise your hat-it takes too much energy&#13;
to take your hand out of your pocket.&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN PLAN&#13;
&#13;
RATES 75c AND UP&#13;
&#13;
125 Rooms-&#13;
&#13;
CAFE IN CONNECTION&#13;
&#13;
Fortywith Bath&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
SIOUX C ITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
CORNER FIFTH AND JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
PEEK-A-BOO&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BARBER SHOP&#13;
C. D. KELLOGG, Proprietor&#13;
Under Dierkin's Market&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S CANDY PALACE&#13;
Hom e of&#13;
PETE 'S HAND ROLLED BITTER SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Choicest Qualities in Confections&#13;
&#13;
Ross M . CooMER, MEM. AM. soc. c. E.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL&#13;
ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS&#13;
We Rebuilt Main Hall, Morningside College&#13;
We Built the Alumni Gymnasium&#13;
&#13;
JIM&#13;
&#13;
MORE&#13;
&#13;
FUSSERS&#13;
&#13;
311-312 United Bank Building, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ask Our C lients About Us&#13;
Auto Phone 3719&#13;
&#13;
AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
CORRECT DRESS FOR WOMEN&#13;
EXCLUSIVE LADIES' SUITS, COATS, FURS, WAISTS,&#13;
MUSLIN UNDERWEAR, CORSETS AND MILLINERY&#13;
&#13;
DOMESTICS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S MOST APPRECIATED STORE&#13;
509-11-13 FOURTH STREET&#13;
-262263-&#13;
&#13;
�TAILORIN·G&#13;
SUITS AND OVERCOATS&#13;
&#13;
$15.00, $18.00, $20,00, $22.00&#13;
OVER 400 PATTERNS TO SELECT FROM&#13;
&#13;
A Tailor for 24 Years Solicits Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
W. A. WORTH, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
404 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
STUNG&#13;
&#13;
Engineers&#13;
Contractors&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing&#13;
Heating&#13;
&#13;
Orr &amp; Graves Co.&#13;
We did the heating and plumbing in all the&#13;
College Buildings&#13;
S 13 JACKSON STREET&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 15 44&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
First Class in Every Respect&#13;
&#13;
The Hess Music House&#13;
&#13;
West Barber Shop&#13;
and Bath Rooms&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Street&#13;
264-&#13;
&#13;
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF ALL KINDS&#13;
Sheet Music and Music Supplies&#13;
FREDERICK E . H ESS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
LORD, Proprietor&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
508 Fifth Street&#13;
- 26 5-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�The whole store&#13;
&#13;
breathing the atmosphere&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
"Smart Style"&#13;
&#13;
The Stanley Company&#13;
OUTFITTERS for LADIES and MISSES&#13;
&#13;
DONT'S FOR MEN (Cont.)&#13;
&#13;
TABLE DON'TS&#13;
&#13;
Don't open a door for a lady unless&#13;
you want to go inside yourself-then always pass in first.&#13;
&#13;
Don't surprise the table by being&#13;
time.&#13;
&#13;
Don't overload your fork. You can&#13;
hold a great deal more food on your&#13;
knife and it requires much more dexterity&#13;
to manage it.&#13;
&#13;
Don't exert yourself or soil your hands&#13;
by putting on or taking off a ladies rubbers.&#13;
Don't burden yourself down by carrying any girls books.&#13;
Don't ask for a date until the last&#13;
minute-you may change your mind and&#13;
then a girl always enjoys the suspense of&#13;
uncertainty.&#13;
Don't offer your seat to a lady standing in a street car; it is a reflection on&#13;
your college training.&#13;
Don't bother to wear a collar and tie&#13;
to breakfast; a sweater · looks just as well&#13;
and gives you more time to sleep.&#13;
Don't think it a mark of ill-breeding&#13;
to use a tooth pick at the table ; in high&#13;
society it is considered quite •comme ii&#13;
faut.&#13;
Don't shave too often; its such a waste&#13;
of time, for whiskers only grow out again,&#13;
besides they serve as a protection to the&#13;
face .&#13;
Don't, above all things, be fussy about&#13;
your personal appearance on the campus.&#13;
Wear anything for comfort. Even house&#13;
slippers have been seen.&#13;
Don't tell one girl what you think of&#13;
the others. Better tel-a-phone.&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
Don't let your spoon stand in your cup.&#13;
Be polite, and ask it to " Be seated."&#13;
Don't become embarrassed if you should&#13;
happen to get a spot on the table cloth.&#13;
Absent-mindedly place a piece of bread&#13;
over it-butter side down- this keeps the&#13;
spot from the public eye beautifully.&#13;
Don't cause a scene if you spill your&#13;
coffee in your neighbor's lap. Smooth the&#13;
matter over by telling him that you really&#13;
didn't care for the coffee anyway.&#13;
Don't take your soup from the side of&#13;
the spoon, but sip it from the end, making&#13;
a cute noise like a leaky faucet. The&#13;
sound of a good soup is as music to the&#13;
ear.&#13;
Don't hesitate to drink much water at&#13;
a meal. When doing so, remember that&#13;
it is considered quite a feat to make a&#13;
noise like a soda fountain.&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"Now Mr. Omer, just&#13;
what does Grace mean to you?" It is&#13;
reported that Omer blushed and acted as&#13;
if too full for words.&#13;
Joke Editor-"Know any jokes Carl?"&#13;
Carl Sass-No. What have I to do&#13;
with the evanescent effervescences of temperamental imbecility, or the transient ebullitions of scurrility?"&#13;
&#13;
-266-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Most Complete Line of Sporting&#13;
and Athletic Goods&#13;
IN THIS PART OF THE COUNTRY&#13;
W E CARRY&#13;
&#13;
REACH, COLDSMITH &amp; SPAULDIN G ATHLETIC GOODS&#13;
IF IT IS TO BE FOUND IN SIOUX CITY IT IS HERE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College and its Students use Our&#13;
ATHLETIC AND KNIT GOODS, SO IT MUST BE THE BEST&#13;
-2 67-&#13;
&#13;
�I .&#13;
&#13;
The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company&#13;
OF MILWAUKEE, WIS.&#13;
WHAT IT DID IN IOWA IN 1914IT WROTE MORE INSURANCE THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY&#13;
IT GAINED MORE INSURANCE THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY&#13;
WHAT IT HAS IN IOWA-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
,.,&#13;
&#13;
IT HAS IN FORCE A LARGER AMOUNT OF INSURANCE THAN ·&#13;
ANY OTHER COMPANY ON THE LEGAL RESERVE PLAN&#13;
IT HAS OVER $26,000,000 LOANED ON&#13;
&#13;
!OWA REAL ESTATE&#13;
College Men Wanted for Agents&#13;
&#13;
310-311-312-313 Davidson Building&#13;
&#13;
W . M . McKERCHER General Agent&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
CLEANING&#13;
&#13;
RELINING&#13;
&#13;
.PETERS PARK TAILOR SHOP&#13;
SUITS MADE TO MEASURE&#13;
Auto 6336&#13;
&#13;
PRESSING&#13;
&#13;
NEAR THE RESTAURANT&#13;
&#13;
REMODELING&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STATIONERY CO.&#13;
NEW LOCATION&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
NEW MARTIN BLOCK&#13;
&#13;
BUY YOUR TRUNKS AND SUIT CASES WHERE&#13;
THEY ARE MADE AND SAVE MONEY&#13;
REPAIRING NEATLY DONE&#13;
&#13;
ANTHONY TRUNK FACTORY&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
&#13;
21 08&#13;
&#13;
Fifth St., Near Pierce&#13;
-268-&#13;
&#13;
-269-&#13;
&#13;
�·' .&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC SCREENED COAL&#13;
THE PERFECT FUEL&#13;
&#13;
Brown Coal Company&#13;
UNITED BANK BUILDING&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
IN THE STEADY GROWTH AND SUBSTANTIAL&#13;
DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SUBURB&#13;
we are indeed g lad to be a live factor . From the day our Bank opened for business,&#13;
n early three years ago, we have endeavored to keep in touch with and assist in every way&#13;
possible along conserva ti ve lin es in the upbuilding and advancement of Morningside and&#13;
the a dj ace nt farming commu nit y. We are espec ially grateful to the College Faculty and&#13;
students fo r the busin ess entrusted to us, and sha ll a l ways use our best efforts in the&#13;
h andl in g of th ei r accounts.&#13;
&#13;
MUD-HENS&#13;
&#13;
·MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
E. C.&#13;
C. J.&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
Full Line in Following Departments:&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
GROCERY DEPT.&#13;
MEAT DEPT.&#13;
DRY GOODS DEPT.&#13;
HARDWARE DEPT.&#13;
PAINT DEPT .&#13;
FEED AND FUEL DEPT.&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
"LITTLE BROWN JUG"&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY $100,000.00&#13;
]OHN SCOTT,&#13;
Cash.&#13;
GEO. E. WARD, V. Pres.&#13;
F. w. LOHR&#13;
C. w. PAYN :':&#13;
&#13;
PETERS, Pres.&#13;
MILLIGAN&#13;
&#13;
All Goods Sold at Prices&#13;
Competition&#13;
PLEASE&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
"I. W. W'S&#13;
&#13;
FORGET&#13;
&#13;
Auto&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
NUMBERS&#13;
&#13;
670 and 671 ;&#13;
69 and 691 1&#13;
4102-4-6-8&#13;
&#13;
-270-&#13;
&#13;
Meet Cit;y&#13;
&#13;
Phones&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
To MARKET&#13;
&#13;
DON'T&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Ave.&#13;
-271-&#13;
&#13;
�LET LINDHOLM FURNISH YouR HOME COMPLETE&#13;
ACRES OF FURNITURE TO CHOOSE FROM&#13;
&#13;
Lindholm Furniture Co.&#13;
51 3-15-1 7 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
4 I 2- I 4- I 6 SIXTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
MODERN CLOTHES MAKERS FOR MEN&#13;
&#13;
Glasgow Tailors&#13;
&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
UP&#13;
&#13;
Suit or Overcoat to order&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
$15.00&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR BETTER MAKES&#13;
&#13;
5 I I Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; Co.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
GOING UP&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR&#13;
&#13;
Mother's Bread&#13;
Out-of-Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
&#13;
ROUGH NECKS -&#13;
&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
Auto Phone I I 9 7&#13;
Bell Phone I 9 7&#13;
&#13;
DOWN&#13;
&#13;
408-4 I O Iowa Street&#13;
-272-&#13;
&#13;
-273-&#13;
&#13;
TREE TAG&#13;
&#13;
�SUPERB BRAND&#13;
·FOOD PRODUCTS&#13;
&#13;
Mabel I. goes to make personal application for position. Earl goes to the car&#13;
to meet her.&#13;
Uppie-"Hello, Earl-Where's everybody?"&#13;
Earl-"She'll be out on the next car."&#13;
Cora Dutton-"What did I make in&#13;
my French exam, Miss Lutz?"&#13;
Miss Lutz- " Mistakes."&#13;
A DRAMA IN THREE ACTS&#13;
ACT. I&#13;
Guy McKinney sizes up the F reshmen girls and picks out a neat one for an&#13;
early season fussing venture. He makes&#13;
a date for that evening.&#13;
ACT. II&#13;
Since Act. I., "Mac" has forgotten the&#13;
girl's name and isn't sure that he knows&#13;
where she lives, but recalling that a&#13;
" faint heart ne'er won a fair lady," he&#13;
&#13;
ARE NOT ONLY SUPERB I N QUALITY, BUT&#13;
ARE&#13;
&#13;
DEPENDABLE&#13;
&#13;
UNIFORMITY.&#13;
&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
THEIR&#13;
&#13;
SOLD STRICTLY ON MERIT&#13;
&#13;
AND C ONTAIN NO PREMIUMS OR COUPONS&#13;
&#13;
ACT. Ill.&#13;
"Mac" calls his forces for a consultation for a time to locate the place and&#13;
the girl.&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"No really, I am not&#13;
saving my money for anything serious."&#13;
Comment-We are glad you take it&#13;
with a light heart.&#13;
Prof. Carson-waiting impatiently for&#13;
an answer from the rear of the room"Well, I would think that you could&#13;
answer that question with all the help that&#13;
you are getting."&#13;
just&#13;
the&#13;
Leon Johnson-"That's&#13;
trouble, there seems to be a difference of&#13;
opinion back here."&#13;
First F reshie-"What is the synonym&#13;
for accrue?''&#13;
Second F reshie- " A gang."&#13;
&#13;
Established 1890&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
calls at Cobbs and asks for the lady with&#13;
whom he has a date&#13;
&#13;
D epository of the United&#13;
States.&#13;
D epository of the · County&#13;
of Woodbury&#13;
D epository of the City of&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
D epository of the Sioux&#13;
City School&#13;
District.&#13;
Is it Y O U R depository?&#13;
&#13;
rowA&#13;
&#13;
Four th and LafayetteSts.&#13;
&#13;
LEADING GROCERS ARE CLAD&#13;
TO SUPPLY YOU&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete&#13;
stock of building material in&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
&#13;
the city.&#13;
DISTRIBUTED BY&#13;
&#13;
Tolerlon &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Fourth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
General Banking&#13;
Safety D eposit Boxes&#13;
Savings D epartment Open Saturday&#13;
Evenings&#13;
&#13;
Do not fail to let us figure&#13;
your lumber bill.&#13;
&#13;
J. A&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE M . JORDAN, Mngr.&#13;
Phones: Auto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
-274-&#13;
&#13;
-275-&#13;
&#13;
MAGOUN, President&#13;
B . H . KINGSBURY, Vice-Pres.&#13;
I. M. LYON, Cahier&#13;
&#13;
�HAMILTON SOFT WATER LAUNDRY&#13;
Dyers and Dry Cleaners&#13;
613 - 615 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
YOUTH&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Livery, Feed and Sale Stable&#13;
(Blue Barn)&#13;
FANCY DRIVERS A N D SADDLERS&#13;
HEAVY HAULING&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Shipman's Grocery&#13;
and Resturant&#13;
&#13;
W. R. SHIPMAN, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
YD&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phones 6126-6453, Bell 1811&#13;
2101-2 121 Lakeport, Morningside&#13;
Blue G arage&#13;
Blacksmith and Machine Shop&#13;
All Work Guaranteed&#13;
Automobile Accessories and Repairing. Auto Livery. Never Closed.&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
P&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
THE OLD FOLKS&#13;
&#13;
SAFETY FIRST&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BAKERY&#13;
GOODS OF QUA LITY&#13;
AN EVENIN GS ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
&#13;
A Service Augmented Through&#13;
Y EARS OF EXPERIENCE&#13;
&#13;
A VARIETY OF&#13;
&#13;
REFINED PHOTO PLAYS&#13;
&#13;
10c Park Theatre&#13;
FACULTY -&#13;
&#13;
LOCATED&#13;
&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
NEW&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
5c&#13;
&#13;
FRED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
BEFORE&#13;
TEN PER CENT DISCOUNT GIVEN TO FACULTY AND STUDENTS&#13;
FROM REGULAR PRICES&#13;
&#13;
Quality and&#13;
Service&#13;
&#13;
The Sign&#13;
of&#13;
3 15&#13;
&#13;
AFTER THE CEREMONY&#13;
NURSERYMAN&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH S TREET&#13;
&#13;
LANDSCAPE GARDENER&#13;
-277-&#13;
&#13;
- 276-&#13;
&#13;
�...&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
XTENDS A HEARTY WELCOME TO YOU,&#13;
WHO ARE AMBITIOUS FOR AN EDUCATION. EDUCATION MEANS PREPARATION.&#13;
THE BETTER THE PREPARATION,&#13;
THE BETTER THE SERVICE; THE LARGER&#13;
THE REW ARDS; REWARDS IN TERMS OF&#13;
"MONEY," IN TERMS OF "HAPPINESS" AND&#13;
IN TERMS OF "REAL LIFE." YOU NEED THE&#13;
COLLEGE FOR YOUR PREPARATION.&#13;
&#13;
For further particulars,&#13;
catalog or illustrated bulletin,&#13;
address the President,&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, PH. D.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
-278-&#13;
&#13;
-279-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Auto Livery- New Cars At Your Service&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ORA Y AND AUTO CO.&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
D A R LIN G, P rop.&#13;
&#13;
Reciprocity Stimulates Cordiality&#13;
&#13;
I WILL&#13;
&#13;
We are the only Laundry West of Chicago Washing Your Linen in Distilled&#13;
Water.&#13;
ABSOLUTELY SAN ITARY&#13;
&#13;
Should be ·your life's motto-it breathes the spirit of accomplishment. Successful&#13;
business · men have invariably laid the foundation of their success to the Savings Bank&#13;
habit. You cannot do better than follow their example by · opening an account with&#13;
this bank at the earliest moment and putting yourself in line.&#13;
&#13;
We invite you to call any day and examine the plant&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE AGENT. HENRY COTTAM&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN LAUNDRY CO.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
Security Building&#13;
&#13;
Phones 1638-333&#13;
&#13;
ThreeRahs and&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Tiger&#13;
&#13;
For the Table Set With&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
CLEAN GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
FROM THE -&#13;
&#13;
Model Grocery&#13;
_&#13;
"Good Groceries for L ess Money"&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS&#13;
Auto 6625, Iowa 945&#13;
&#13;
$720,000.00&#13;
&#13;
2101 St. Mary's St.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Stephens, in Biology, has a bad&#13;
cold and asks Mr. D e L app if he has&#13;
anything to say on the lesson.&#13;
DeLapp-"No."&#13;
D r. Stevens- "I thought I might draw&#13;
something out by hearing you talk."&#13;
D eLapp-"There's nothing in."&#13;
Spec. Hambleton says the reason why&#13;
Clair Sherwood wears ear flappers is to&#13;
keep his ears from flapping his brains out.&#13;
Fletcher Pollock-"Miss Stevens, why&#13;
do you wear two pair of glasses?"&#13;
Miss Stevens-"! need these strong&#13;
ones when I record the grades."&#13;
Why didn't Marie and Herb go to&#13;
Lois' party?&#13;
Because of an accident - Herb fell&#13;
asleep.&#13;
We learn that Carson is inquiring&#13;
about the best kind of furnaces. He won't&#13;
have to ask about dishes, he bought some&#13;
for the Agora club.&#13;
&#13;
Fletch. Pollock on the glee club trip&#13;
staid with a Quaker family. Not being&#13;
accustomed to silent prayer, he offers&#13;
thanks.&#13;
Stranger comes into the hall and asks&#13;
a loiterer for Royal JurgesonLoiterer-"Is he a Freshman?"&#13;
Stranger-"No, he's a Dutchman."&#13;
P rof. Hayes-"Morgan Wallace, now&#13;
at the Princess, unbuttons one button of&#13;
his vest, and so does P rof. Carson. That&#13;
style is sure to pass. Now if you want&#13;
to be conservative, button up every button&#13;
you've got!"&#13;
Prof. Brown in Education III, when&#13;
the class was unusually slow in responding&#13;
lo questions, "This is a Methodist institution, and in Methodist churches and institutions it is customary to give prompt testimony."&#13;
Prof. Campbell, sitting in his home one&#13;
evening, feels a draft and , rising, closes&#13;
the book case door.&#13;
&#13;
-281--&#13;
&#13;
-28 0-&#13;
&#13;
�CLASSPINS&#13;
&#13;
''GOOD COAL''&#13;
&#13;
MEDALS&#13;
&#13;
EMBLEMS&#13;
&#13;
MA DE . TO O RDE R&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
"Lumber of Quality"&#13;
&#13;
Expert&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds and Solid Gold J ewelry&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lbr. Co.&#13;
RETAIL COAL&#13;
15 04 East Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Watch and J ewelry Repairing&#13;
&#13;
OLSON-EHLERMAN CO.&#13;
&#13;
RETAIL LUMBER&#13;
600 W. Seventh St.&#13;
&#13;
51 0 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Patton &amp; Smith&#13;
&#13;
Art Publishing Co.&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Auto P hone 61 36&#13;
LEADING&#13;
MORNINGSIDE R EAL EST A TE&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY PRI NTING&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
&#13;
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES&#13;
FRESH FRUI TS AND CON FECTION S&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE AT PETERS&#13;
&#13;
PARK&#13;
&#13;
ST UDENTS LET US FURNISH YOUR PICN IC SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
52 1 Douglas Street, Oxford H otel Building, opposite City Hall&#13;
Auto Phone 2588&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Agency for&#13;
HA RTFORD INSURANCE CO.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ST, AUBINS STATION&#13;
&#13;
SCHULEIN&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Undertaking Parlors&#13;
J. D. ROSE,&#13;
&#13;
HOME OF GOOD SHOES AND HOSIERY&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
A COMPLETE LIN E AT ALL TIMES FOR THE E NTIRE FAMILY&#13;
&#13;
4202 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
5 08 4th Street&#13;
Telephone Auto 6721&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
YES WE DO SHOE REPAIRING&#13;
&#13;
Residence P hone&#13;
-283-&#13;
&#13;
282-&#13;
&#13;
�The Class of Work We Turn Out&#13;
Pleases the Most Particular&#13;
&#13;
We Can Convince You&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
CO LLEGE&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
&#13;
The Motto of Millions&#13;
of thrifty, indus trious, happy citizens of {he&#13;
United States is, "Live R espectably and&#13;
Save a Little."&#13;
This is an excellent rule, _&#13;
and if you can&#13;
save a good deal, so much the better. ..&#13;
This Bank Provides P erfect Safety for&#13;
Sioux City Savers and Pays Them Compound Interest on Th eir Savings.&#13;
&#13;
New Method&#13;
Soft Water&#13;
Laundry&#13;
31 3 Pearl Street&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank ·&#13;
Southeast Corner Fourth and&#13;
&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Sts&#13;
&#13;
Under the Supervision of the State of Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
CHIEF-GROWERS&#13;
&#13;
OH&#13;
&#13;
Open Saturday Evenings- 7 to 9 o'clock.&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
Ice&#13;
&#13;
Eat More&#13;
&#13;
WH&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
Cream&#13;
&#13;
KE&#13;
&#13;
IT'S GOOD · FOR YOU&#13;
The more sense we get the longer we live. We are nearly all killed&#13;
by ignorance. Very few of us die of old age.&#13;
What the human race has learned abou t food values in the last generation has increased the average length of life by fift een years.&#13;
We have found, for example, that Ice Cream makes for a long life.&#13;
There are two reasons for this: First, being made of sugar and cream, it&#13;
has one of the highest food values known. Second, being so easy to digest,&#13;
it puts the least amount of effort on our digestive organs.&#13;
We have learned these facts and as a consequence we are eating&#13;
&#13;
FIVE HUNDRED PER CENT MORE IC E CREAM THAN WE&#13;
DID FOUR YEARS AGO.&#13;
Try it. Eat it oftener and you'll live longer.&#13;
&#13;
HANFORD PRODUCE COMPANY&#13;
Auto Phone 49 5 1 ,&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 4 2 1&#13;
&#13;
RS&#13;
&#13;
AFTERTHE&#13;
&#13;
SCRAP.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
CO&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
PL&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
�JOKES&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dimmit-"During your stay&#13;
abroad did you meet any old ruins?"&#13;
Ruby Flinn-"I was proposed to by&#13;
three!"&#13;
Class in Physics- Prof. Styles"Will you define phosphoresence, Mr.&#13;
Sass?"&#13;
Sass-"It is a continuation of a sensation of radiation after a cessation of&#13;
the stimulation."&#13;
English Nine-Hamlet holds his lady&#13;
friend at arms length and looks intently&#13;
at her"Bee" Wright-"! don't see anything&#13;
unusual iri that."&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"Why, are you used to&#13;
having such things happen?"&#13;
Laughter by Coster.&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in'· Brick&#13;
&#13;
Hoody and " Dot" Owen start the&#13;
second semester by arousing the librarian's&#13;
wrath for playing Romeo and Juliet in&#13;
the stack room.&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRICK&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Campbell-"Mr. Arthur Johnson, what does our author say about the&#13;
pugnacity instinct in the English and do ·&#13;
you agree with him?"&#13;
Johnson- "I don't believe I know what · .&#13;
the author says, but I agree with him.".&#13;
&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
The Practicability and stability of brick-its value as an&#13;
&#13;
Advice to Mr. Christ-Never marry&#13;
a girl named Anne, for the dictionary says&#13;
"an" is an indefinite article.&#13;
Burgess, at a mass meeting- "Now we .·&#13;
will hear from the other side of the&#13;
house.'' Calls on Mable.&#13;
Guy-"Yes,"- I fell for her the first&#13;
time I saw her."&#13;
Bogard-"Did you break any bones?" ·&#13;
Guy- "Yes every bone in my pocket' •&#13;
book."&#13;
&#13;
investment-as a thing of . beauty which will be a joy forever.&#13;
&#13;
Thoughts concerning these matters we would like to&#13;
&#13;
submit for consideration.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BRICK &amp; TILE CO.&#13;
N o. 9 W est Third Street&#13;
&#13;
Office and Display Room,&#13;
&#13;
C. J. Milligan,&#13;
&#13;
HEADQU ARTERS&#13;
&#13;
Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
OR CUTTS HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
FOR THE - -&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
FAMOUS&#13;
WRIGHT &amp;&#13;
DITSON&#13;
TENN IS RACKETS&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
' H . W.&#13;
&#13;
Milligan,&#13;
&#13;
v.-P.&#13;
&#13;
Sh i pp i ng O r ders Promptly Fi lled&#13;
M e m ber Board of Trade&#13;
&#13;
OUTDOORS- AFIELD OR AFLOAT&#13;
SPALDINGS&#13;
BASEBALL, TEN NIS AND GOLF GOODS,&#13;
LEES SLOTTED THROAT RACKETS, AYERS TENNIS BALLS,&#13;
FISHING TACKLE, VACUUM BOTTLES, VACATION GOODS&#13;
&#13;
Any Style&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLIGAN&#13;
&#13;
CO.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
HAY&#13;
&#13;
COMMISSION&#13;
&#13;
MERCHANTS&#13;
&#13;
Receive r s a n d shippers of H ay, Grain and&#13;
Mi ll Feed. H ay bought an d s old i n large&#13;
quantities&#13;
A u t o T el. 2361, I o w a. T el. 819.&#13;
Consign m e n t s sol icited.&#13;
Reference s: Live Stock National&#13;
Bank,&#13;
Si oux Ci ty; F i r st National B an k, O'Neill ,&#13;
N eb.; Brads t ree t 's Commercial A ge n cy.&#13;
301 Virgini a Street&#13;
S IOUX CI TY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ALSO&#13;
&#13;
3 12-14 Nebraska Street&#13;
DRAPER &amp;&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
THE OR I GI NAL&#13;
NON-LEAKABLE&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE AT ALL COLLEGE&#13;
BOOKSTORES and DEALERS&#13;
Every Moore Non-Leakable&#13;
Fountain Pen carries with it&#13;
the most unconditiunal guar-&#13;
&#13;
~ antee.&#13;
&#13;
D escriptive circulars&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN FOUNTAIN PEN CO.&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
GOOD EATS&#13;
&#13;
USED EXC L USIVE LY&#13;
-BY-&#13;
&#13;
For Students and Teachers Alike&#13;
&#13;
HARVARD&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
Commutation Tickets Sold at a Discount.&#13;
ALWAYS READY FOR TRANSIE NT S&#13;
&#13;
HUNT &amp; SCHUETZ&#13;
&#13;
Park Restuarant&#13;
&#13;
MANUFACTURERS&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Pearl Sts.&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS, CUSHING &amp; FOSTER, Selling Agents&#13;
&#13;
168 Devonshire St.,&#13;
&#13;
Boston, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
T wo Doors South of P eters P ark Station&#13;
MORN I NGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Save the Difference&#13;
-286-&#13;
&#13;
-287-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�\&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
- - MANUFACTURERS OF - -&#13;
&#13;
BANK, STORE, OFFICE FIXTURES&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Robinson at one time pondered&#13;
over the question "college or not?" but&#13;
decided~"college first and then the&#13;
(k) not."&#13;
Kuhns, entering a barber shop, planted&#13;
himself in the chair.&#13;
Barber-"Bright or dull shine?"&#13;
&#13;
AND INTERIOR FINISH&#13;
507 -509- 5 II WATER STREET&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock&#13;
"HOME MARKET FOR THE GREAT NORTHWEST"&#13;
The Live Stock Business is one of the Most Important&#13;
Industries of the Country.&#13;
&#13;
After Harry Clark announces the Glee&#13;
Club concert Pres. Craig said "I just want&#13;
to add, I have heard the concert and have&#13;
never heard anything like it."&#13;
Editorial Comment-Poor advertising.&#13;
Prof. Brown-assigning work for the&#13;
future, " Give full account of some scientists life, and, secondly, of some lady womans life."&#13;
&#13;
Miss Fischer- "Give ind'eclinable and&#13;
declinable indefinites!"&#13;
Ula Beck-"One begin·s with 'jeder,'&#13;
I know."&#13;
Miss Fischer-"Well, that is surely indefinite."&#13;
&#13;
In Educ. V. The question was asked&#13;
"If Calvin was called the accusative&#13;
Calvin, would "Shoey" be called the&#13;
Dative .&#13;
&#13;
Chas. Hutton, phoning from a farm&#13;
house to the garage-"I guess you will&#13;
have to come and get me, I've turned&#13;
turtle."&#13;
The Reply-"This is a garage. You&#13;
want the aquarium."&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Hayes- Explaining Carlyle's domestic troubles. "They' re not hard to&#13;
explain: He was a dyspeptic and it would&#13;
have taken an angel to get along with him,&#13;
while his wife had black hair and black&#13;
snappy eyes."&#13;
&#13;
Bob Vernon-"I was just crazy this&#13;
morning until I saw Bess in Bib. Lit.-"&#13;
&#13;
Deduction-She who has light hair is&#13;
an angel.&#13;
&#13;
See how the business is carried on at one of the large&#13;
stock yards.&#13;
STUDENTS will be given a cordial welcome at any&#13;
time. Special effort will be made to see that every minute&#13;
of your time spent at the yards will be "full of interest."&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
THE BEST AND PUREST IN THE CITY&#13;
WHOLESALERS AND RETAILERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards·&#13;
&#13;
SWEET CREAM, MILK AND LACTONE BUTTERMILK&#13;
OUR CREAM IS SERVED AT&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PHARMACY AND CECELIA PARK DRU G STORE&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
707 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
SUPERIOR&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
Residence Phone Auto 6190&#13;
&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6694&#13;
&#13;
The Place for Quality and Right Prices&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
GUY N. PILLSBURY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTA TE AND INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
THE BIG WHITE SHED&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Old Phone 1995&#13;
&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
OUR AUTO SERVICE IS AT YOUR DISPOSAL FOR THE INSPECTION OF PROPERTIES&#13;
&#13;
- 288-28 9-&#13;
&#13;
�STATIONERS&#13;
LITHOGRAPHERS&#13;
PRINTERS&#13;
ARTISTS&#13;
PHOTO.ENGRAVERS&#13;
BINDERS&#13;
&#13;
Room-Mates&#13;
&#13;
THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers of Advertising Specialties, Badges,&#13;
Pennants, Leather Goods, Celluloid Novelties,&#13;
Buttons, Pocket Mirrors, Printed Pencils,&#13;
Rubber Stamps&#13;
&#13;
FIFTH and DOUGLAS STREETS&#13;
&#13;
-290-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
291-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�"THOROUGHLY&#13;
SATISFACTORY SERVICE&#13;
SUPERB QUALITY&#13;
OF ENGRAVINGS :&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
COURTEOUS CO-OPERATION AND IMMENSE IDEAS"&#13;
is the typical expression&#13;
of Business&#13;
and Editors&#13;
served.&#13;
&#13;
Managers&#13;
we have&#13;
&#13;
Write for our ·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Big 1916 Plan-get your&#13;
name on our Mailing List!&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING,&#13;
Incorporated&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
&#13;
MINNESOTA •&#13;
&#13;
By Making Drawing for National Advertiser.&#13;
Our faculty trained him. Millions of dollars spent for&#13;
Commercial Designs. Com'l Designing mastered at&#13;
home by our practical Correspondence Method.&#13;
Takes only part of your time. Increase&#13;
your Income. Book entitled Your Future&#13;
and Folio of Commercial Illustrations&#13;
mailed free.&#13;
&#13;
FEDERAL SCHOOL OF&#13;
COMMERCIAL DESIGNING&#13;
&#13;
-292-&#13;
&#13;
-293-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Page&#13;
Adelphian Society ...... . ......... 162-163&#13;
Aesthesian Soc i et y .... . ... . ...... 160 - 161&#13;
Agora Club .......... . ........... 173-174&#13;
Aletheia Society ... . ............ . 147-150&#13;
Allen, Howard A.50, 80, 86, 93, 144, 175, 183&#13;
A l umni Association ......... . ... . 191-204&#13;
Ames, Clara ............... . ... . ...... 70&#13;
Anderson, Anna ......... , .... 65, 78, 148&#13;
Anderson, Julia ..... . ......... . . . .. 68, 78&#13;
Anderson, Marie ......... .. .. . ........ 68&#13;
Annual Board ...... . ............... 183&#13;
April Calendar ......... .. ........ . ... 227&#13;
Archer,Thomas&#13;
.&#13;
.. . ..... 50, 80, 83, 144&#13;
A Song of Praise&#13;
.. . . ....... . ....... 213&#13;
Athenaeum Soci ety .......... .. ... 151-154&#13;
Ausman, S i byl .................. . .. 68, 78&#13;
Ba 1&#13;
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69, 136&#13;
B a ck, George&#13;
com,&#13;
enev1eve . .. , ......... . . . 39, 152&#13;
Barrett, Walter .... . .............. 68, 136&#13;
Barrett, Pauline ........ . .. ... .. . .... 164&#13;
Bartz, F . Otto ................... .. 33, 185&#13;
Barks, Earl . ....... . ............. 71, 136&#13;
Baseball ............................ 91 - 94&#13;
Baseball Seaso n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92&#13;
Baseball Schedule .... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 92&#13;
Bashaw, Stanl ey .................. 68, 156&#13;
Basketball .. ... . ... . ............. 107-110&#13;
Basketball Schedu l es . ................ 108&#13;
Bates, Raymond ...................... 166&#13;
Beacham, Fern ........ . .. . ........ 64-132&#13;
Beard, Anna ......... 50, 152, 170, 183, 185&#13;
Beck, Axel ....... . .............. 126, 166&#13;
Beck,&#13;
Ula .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... , 160&#13;
Bell , Orrin ........ . ........... .. . 71, 156&#13;
Blackman, Ruth ................. . 73, 140&#13;
Bleakl ey, David ......... .. ... . ..... 166&#13;
Bleakley, Lewis ..................... 166&#13;
Bogard, Herman ...... . ... . 39, 80 , 84., 156&#13;
Bogard, Joe ........ . . . ............ 71, 156&#13;
Bondhus, Francis .... . ... . ....... . . 64, 156&#13;
Boodagh, Paul ........... . 39, 121, 144, 184&#13;
Booher, Florence ..... . .............. 68&#13;
Book I ............. . ............. . . 25 - 36&#13;
Book II . .......... . . . ..... . . .. ... 37-78&#13;
Book III ....... , .... . .. . .... .. .... 79-128&#13;
Book IV .. ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 129 - 204&#13;
Book V . ...... . ..... . ..... , ...... 205-224&#13;
Book VI ... .. ... . ..... . ... . .. . .. 225-292&#13;
Boyd, Frances ............ ... . . .... 68 , 78&#13;
Brand, Margaret R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 30&#13;
Breaw, Walter ......... . ...... . . . 39, 136&#13;
Breckenri dge, Ida .. . . . ................ 70&#13;
B r ethorse, M. . ..... . .......... . ...... 70&#13;
Broome, Ray .... .. . . ................ 126&#13;
Brown, G . . . . . . . . . . . ................. 70&#13;
Brown, Ru th .. . ........... , .... . .. 71 - 76&#13;
Brown, Carrie ............... . ... .. .. 199&#13;
Brown, Ephenor A ... . ...... . .......... 26&#13;
B r own, Mabel E. . . . . . . . ............•. 30&#13;
Buehler, Harold .. . . . .... . ....... 126-162&#13;
Bull, Florence ........ . .. .. .. . ..... 51-140&#13;
Burgess, F. Earl ......... 123, 156, 186, 187&#13;
Burgstahler, Susie ... . ............ 39, 185&#13;
Burpee, Ruth . . .. .. . .. ...... . ......... 71&#13;
Burrows, Hazel ...... . . . ............ 110&#13;
Campbell, Herbert G ............. . .. ... 26&#13;
Carson, Wm. Wallace .. . . . . . ........... 28&#13;
Carlson , H. Dorothy . ..... . ... . 40, 117, 132&#13;
Carl son, Oscar B .. . ...... . ........ . 69, 156&#13;
Case. Wayland .. .. . ...... .... . . .. 70, 136&#13;
Chall man, Bernice ... . .. , . ... , . . .. . ... 51&#13;
Chapin, Irene .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 68, 76&#13;
Chemistry Club . . ..... .. . . ........ . .. 190&#13;
C h rist, Jay F .... . . .. ... , ... . ...... 70, 144&#13;
Clark, Wilson .............. 65, 80, 85, 156&#13;
Cl ark, Gladys . ......... . .............. 73&#13;
Clark, Harry . ... . .. . ..... . ..... 156, 187&#13;
C lasses .... . ........ .. ... . ... . ..... 37-74&#13;
C l ass Scrap&#13;
............... . ...... 66&#13;
Clough, Martin . .............. . . 65, SO, 93&#13;
C l ough, Leone .......... ... ...... 68, 110&#13;
Cobbs. Irene .. . . . . .. ... , . .... . . .. . . .. 160&#13;
Coe Conference Meet .......... . ..... . . 101&#13;
Co l eman, Morda . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68, 78&#13;
College Band .... .. ....... . .......... 182&#13;
College Glee Club . . .. . ...... . . ... 178, 179&#13;
College Special ..... . ................. 7 3&#13;
Collier, Ethel M .... . . .. ........ . ... 40 - 140&#13;
Collins, Stanley B .... . ...... . ....... 198&#13;
Coombs, Arthur ....... .. ... . ...... 69, 144&#13;
Coomer, Ethel . . . ................. 73, 132&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Comoli,, Verna ..... . .............. 76, 160&#13;
Conners, Floyd . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . 68, 156&#13;
Cooper, Clair .. . . .. .. . .. .. ........ 51, 156&#13;
Corbett, Edward M ....... . .. , ........ 199&#13;
Corneliussen, Millie ... ... . . ....... 64, 148&#13;
Corr, Mildred ....... . ... . ......... 70, 78&#13;
Corr, Ethel ........ . .......... .. .. . .. 68&#13;
Corssen, Mab e l ..... . ...... .. . . .. . . 71, 78&#13;
Coss, James A ........................ 27&#13;
Costar, Way ne B. ........ .. . . . . .. . 40, 136&#13;
Cottam, Henry .. ......... . 65, 87, 109, 136&#13;
Crai g, Alfred E. ...... . ................. 26&#13;
Craig, Clarence T ... . .... . .. . ... . ... .&#13;
........ . . 40, 121, 124, 144, 176, 171, 184&#13;
Craig, Frances ........ 52, 78, 140, 170, 183&#13;
Crescent Society ......... . ....... 164 - 165&#13;
Crouch, Lois ..... . ............... 132, 176&#13;
Crowther, Sarah .......... 40, 148, 170, 184&#13;
Cummings, Marguerite .. . ........ . 64, 152&#13;
Curry, Wendell ... . .. . . . 68, 80, 97, 109, 136&#13;
Darville, Olive ....... . .... .. ........ 41&#13;
Day, Hazel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 52, 116, 132_ ·&#13;
Day, Mabel ...... . ........... . . . .. .&#13;
. 69&#13;
Day, Esther ........... . ........&#13;
, 164&#13;
Day, Winifred ....... .. ......... · .... . 166&#13;
December Calendar&#13;
........ . ..... 239.&#13;
DeLapp, Ambrose C . .. 52, 122, 156, 175, 183&#13;
Departments ............. . ..... .. .. 7 4-78&#13;
Devitt, Marie . . . ... . .. . . .. . . ... . .. 41 - 132&#13;
De Walt, Horace .......... . ........ 68-144&#13;
Dimmit, Lillian E. ....... . ............. 28&#13;
Dolliver, Margaret G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31&#13;
Dolliver, James I. ................... . .&#13;
.. . ....... 41, 118, 121, 144, 176,. 171, 175&#13;
Down, Vivian . ......... . . . ...... . .. . .. 70&#13;
Drake Relay Meet ........... . ..... . ... 98&#13;
Duesenberg, Wesley .... . ......... 166, 184&#13;
Dutton, George B. .. . .. .. ... . .. . ... 53, 136&#13;
Dutton, Cora . . ...... . ............ 70, 184&#13;
Dunham, Herbert ......... . . . .. . .... .&#13;
........ 41, 80, 93, 121, 125, 136, 171, 184&#13;
Dunn, George .... . ............ 73, 126, 166&#13;
Dunn, Walter ............. . .. . ...... 166&#13;
East house, Marie ..... .. ....... 65, 116 , 152&#13;
Edge, Beth ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65., 148&#13;
Eiffert, Paul .... .. . .. ...... 80, 82, 93, 156&#13;
Engle, John ........ . . .. ............... 98&#13;
English, Daisy E .. . ........ .. ........ . 41&#13;
Ertel, Floyd . . ... . . .. ....... .. ..... . . 166&#13;
Evans, Burrell. ..... , ............. 42, 136&#13;
Evans, Anna Mae . . .. ..... . ........ 53, 132&#13;
Faculty, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26-33&#13;
Fair, Florence .. . . .. ..... . . . ...... . .. 164&#13;
February Calendar ...... . . . . . ...... . . 243&#13;
Feller, Viola ....... . .............. 64, 152&#13;
Ferguson , Agnes B ........... , . . ...... 29&#13;
Fischer, Laura C ....... .. .............. 30&#13;
Flint, Cla r a .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200&#13;
Football . . ... . .... .. ....... . . ....... 81 - 90&#13;
Football Season ............ .. . . . . . . . . 89&#13;
Football Schedu l e .... . . .... . .. . ... . ... 89&#13;
Forbes, Wiilis ...... . . . . , . . .. . 70, 144, 187&#13;
Forensics ....... . ... . .. ... . . .... 115 - 127&#13;
Forensic League ... . ... . . . ... . ....... 187&#13;
Former Students who are Leaders .... 204&#13;
Fowler, Harry . . . . . . ... . ....... ... . 53, 144&#13;
Frary, Guy Griffin . . ... . . . ..... . ... . .. 196&#13;
Freeman, Alta F ... . ..... . ........ . . . .. 32&#13;
Freshmen . ..... .. ..... . .. .. ....... 67-71&#13;
French, Herbe1·t ............. . .. . . 42 , 156&#13;
French, Ruth E. ..... . . . .. . .... 42 , 76, 148&#13;
French, Merle.. .&#13;
. .......... . .. . . 65, 136&#13;
Frost, Roland .. . ..... . .. . ..... . ... 65, 144&#13;
Fry, Minnie ........ . ...... ... 64, 152, 170&#13;
Fry, Agnes ........ . ........ . ...... 69, 117&#13;
Fry, Charles ........ . ...... . .. . ... 68, 136&#13;
Galinsky, Anne ......... .. ........... 64.&#13;
Garlock, Charles ...... 65, 123, 136, 175, 187&#13;
G i llies, Ruth . . .... ... ............. 65, 152&#13;
Gillies, Olive ........ . ............. 73 , 160&#13;
G i ngerich, LeRoy ........ . ... . .... . 54, 136&#13;
Girls Glee Club .. ....... .. . . . . ..... . .. 177&#13;
G i rls Gym Cl asses . . ... . . .. ......... . 13 3&#13;
G i r l s Intercollegiate Debate ... .. ... 116 - 17&#13;
Goudie, George . . .. .. ..... . ..... . .. 70-156&#13;
Graham, Doroth y . .. . .. ....... ... . . .. 164&#13;
Greene, Pearl S .. ... ... . .... . . . . . . . . . . 30&#13;
Griffith, Earl ............. .. ............ 73&#13;
Haas, Christine ........... . ....... 42, 185,&#13;
Hadley, Edith .... . .. . . , .. . . . . . . . .... 29&#13;
&#13;
-294-&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Haegili, H. . ......... . ... . ............ 73&#13;
Hambleton, Sarah ........ . ........ .. .. 71&#13;
Hambleton, Francis ..........&#13;
, . . 71, 136&#13;
Hanson, Louise ...... . ..... . .... . . . ... 70&#13;
Harrington., Ray . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 109, 144&#13;
Harrington, Edmund . . ....... . .. ... 71, 144&#13;
Har tle y , Haro l d .. . .............. . .... 162&#13;
Hartzell, Olive ..... .. ..... 42, 132, 170, 175&#13;
Hartzell, Ruth . . ..... .. ... . ........ 54, 132&#13;
Haskins, Luella . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .... 64, 132&#13;
Hay, Francis . ........ . ...... . ..... 69, 136&#13;
Hayes, James J . ........... . ...... . ... 28&#13;
Haynes, Fred Emory ...... . .... . .. . .... 26&#13;
Hays, Victor Josiah ...... . . . . . ........ 195&#13;
Hawkeye, Soc iety ..... .. .... . .... 166-167&#13;
Heilman, Ralph E. ....... .. . . . . . . . . . . 196&#13;
Held, Walter ....... .. .. .... ... 54, 98, 144&#13;
Hemstreet, Fern .......... . ... .. · . . ... 160&#13;
Herbster, John Geo . .. .. . .. . 43, 80, 84, 144&#13;
Hicks, Earl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 65, 136&#13;
H i ett, Earl E ....... . .. .. .......... 43, 156&#13;
H ill , D r ucie .................... .. .. . .. 73&#13;
Hi l mer, William C .. . ......... . .... 26, 185&#13;
Histor i cal Section .. .. ....... .. .. . .. . 9-24&#13;
Holbert, Charm ion ......... . ... 73, 78, 152&#13;
Ho l mes, C l eo ............. . .......... 69&#13;
Holmes, Cora ......... . .. .. .... .. ..... 73&#13;
Home Meet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .......... 97&#13;
Home Oratorical Con t e st .............. 118&#13;
Horn, G ladys . . . ...... . . ..... . .. .. . 55, 140&#13;
Hornney, Alvin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 156&#13;
Hovda, Olaf ................ , ....... . .. 27&#13;
Houk, Nola . ...... .. .. . ......... . . 64, 152&#13;
Houk , Neva .. .. . . ..... .. ... . .... . ..... 71&#13;
Mable ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164&#13;
Houk,&#13;
Howell, Bess ... . .. . ........... 64, 152, 170&#13;
Hoyt, Ra l ph . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70&#13;
Huchendorf, Clara ... . ............. 73, 164&#13;
Hutton, Char l es . .. . .. 65, 122, 125 , 144, 187&#13;
Ihde, Clifford . .. . . ... . ............ . 64, 156&#13;
Intercollegite Debate ... . . 116 - 117, 124 - 125&#13;
Inter-Society Debate (Academy) ...... 126&#13;
Inter-Society Debate ............ . 121 - 123&#13;
Ionian Society ... . ................ 143 - 146&#13;
Irw i n, Mabe l .. . ......... . ... · . . 43, 132, 17 5&#13;
I rwin, M i lton . . ................. . ... 64, 136&#13;
Jackson, Hi l da ...... . ..... . ... . ....... 68&#13;
Jackson, Go ldia ......... . ........... . 70&#13;
James, Elizabeth .. . . ... . ... 73., 77, 116, 132&#13;
January Calendar . ... , ......... . ..... 241&#13;
Jeffery, Alci e . . . ... ... . ............. 70, 78&#13;
Johns, Ethel .... . ... . ........... . ... . 68&#13;
Johns, Rubetta ... . ... . .......... . .. 70, 76&#13;
Jo h nson, E l sie .. . .. .. . ........ 43; 140, 175&#13;
Jo h nson, Leon ... .. ..... 64, 80, 83, 109, 156&#13;
Johnson , Arthur . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64, 136&#13;
Johnson, Allan ............ . .. .. . . . 64, 144&#13;
Johnson, Mar ion . . .. . .... . .... . ...... 71&#13;
Johnson, Mildred . ... . . . .... . ......... 160&#13;
Jones, Olive ......... . .. . ... . ..... . 43, 148&#13;
Jones, Clifford . ... . . , ........... . . 68, 144&#13;
Jones, Marine ... . . . .. . . .. . . . ........ : . 73&#13;
June Calendar .. . ......... .. ........ 231&#13;
Jurgenson, Royal . .. .. .. ... .. . ..... 69, 136&#13;
Kantlehner, Henry F ........ , ... .. .... . 27&#13;
Keck, Herbert A .............. .. ...... 191&#13;
Keefe, Anna ..... . .. . ............. 68, 117&#13;
Kee n e , Louis ................ .. .... 68, 156&#13;
K i lbourne, Harrison .. . . .. 64, 144, 176 , 187&#13;
King, Mabel R. ..... . . . ... . . .. .... 44, 132&#13;
Kingsbury, Franci s ................ 68, 136&#13;
Kl i ne, Allan ............ . .. . ...... . .. . 44&#13;
Kline, Ruth ... . ........ , ...... . ... 70, 78&#13;
Kl i ppel, Charles . . ... .............. 70, 136&#13;
Knudson, Ruby .. . .. , . .. . . . ....... . .. 69&#13;
Ko l b, Z . . . . . . .. . ......... ... ......... 164&#13;
Kolp, James .......... . . . . . . . . . . . 64, 136&#13;
Ko l p, Frances . . ........ , . . . . . .. .. . 68, 110&#13;
Kuhns, Ellis V ................ 44, 136, 186&#13;
Lakeside Laboratory ... . .. .. ..... 188-189&#13;
Lange, Leone ............... . ... . . . .. . 70&#13;
Langford, F l orence .......... . .... 76, 160&#13;
Lavely, V i vian . . ... . .. . . 44, 80, 97, 105, 144&#13;
Leahn, Lloyd ......... . .. . ... . ..... 64, 144&#13;
Leazer, Kathryn .............. 55, 148, 184&#13;
Lewis, Clara ..... . .... . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 140&#13;
Lewis, Ida Belle . . . . .. . .... . .......... 198&#13;
Liming, Oran .. .... . .. .... . .......... 70&#13;
Lindsay, Arthur ....... , . .. ... ..... 55, 144&#13;
L i pton, William ... , .... . .. ... . . .. .. ... 70&#13;
Literary Secti on ......... . ........ 205 - 224&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas ......... , .. . .... 71, 87, 156&#13;
Locke, Arthur . . ... .. .............. 71, 136&#13;
Logan, Lesl i e ....... . ......... 56, 136, 186&#13;
Long, Gladys ............. . . . ........ 73&#13;
Long, Ralph ............ . . . . .. . . .. 126, 162&#13;
Loveland, Helen I ........ . .. . .. . ........ 31&#13;
Ludlum, Lou ise ........ . .. . .... .. .. 70, 176&#13;
Lueder, Herman .... 44, 80, 97, 122, 125, 144&#13;
Lutz, Gretchen .. . ..... .. . . ............ 2S&#13;
Lyles, Edith E ..... . . ... ........ 45, 76, 152&#13;
"M" Meet, The .. .. .. . . .. . . . ....... 103-104&#13;
McBride, Robert . .......... , ....... 68, 156&#13;
McBride, Thomas .. . ...... . . , . . . .. . 70, 156&#13;
McBurnney, Cornelia . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 140&#13;
Mcconkey, Blye ................. . .. . 105&#13;
Mccreery, Lydia . .. . . .............. 45, 152&#13;
McKenzie, Catherine . .. . .... . .......... 45&#13;
McKinney, Guy .. . .. .... 45, 80, 8 3, 136, 176&#13;
McKinney, Del b ert. .. ...... .. . 56, 121, 136&#13;
McKinney, Fern . ........ .. ..... . .... 70, 78&#13;
McLane, Lura . . . . ........... . . 53, 132, 183&#13;
McNary, Martina .. . ..... . . . . . . . . . . 70, 78&#13;
MacCollin, Paul . . . . . . .&#13;
. ......... 32&#13;
MacCollin , Elizabeth N ....... . ......... 32&#13;
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Mad i son, John V .. 57, 123, 124, 156, 183 187&#13;
Mahood, R. Earl . . ............... 68, 80, S5&#13;
Mahood, Ruth .... .. . . . . ...... . .&#13;
160&#13;
Mandol i n Orchestra . .. . . . .. . . ..... 180-181&#13;
Markham, Ellis ....... ... . . .......... . . 166&#13;
March Calendar ... . ... . .. . , .......... 245&#13;
Marcy, Merril .. . ....... . . . . .. ...... . . 33&#13;
Marsh, Char l es A .... . , . ........ .. ... .. . 29&#13;
Martin , Frances ..... . ............ 65, 132&#13;
May Calendar ..... . . . . .. ........ .. . .. 229&#13;
May-Day Festival ..... . .... , . .. . .. . ... 7 4&#13;
Maynard, Carl W ...... . , ........ . ..... 195&#13;
Mens Gym Classes .. . . .... ... ........ 112&#13;
Merry, Myrtle ........ , ...... . .. . ...... 70&#13;
Metcalfe, Lucille .. .. . . . . . .......... 45, 140&#13;
Metcal fe, Marion ...... . .... .. . 57, 140, 183&#13;
Metcalf, Carl . . ........ . . .. . .. ....... . . 68&#13;
Metcalfe, Isabel ........ . .............. 70&#13;
Mi ll er, Glen.. . . . . . . . . .. . ..... . .. . 71, 136&#13;
M i tchell, Richard L ........ . ... 57, 119, 186&#13;
Montgome r y, Esther .... . . . .. . .. . . . ... 68&#13;
Monument Run, The .... .. .......... . 105&#13;
Moore, St. Clair ............... 64, 144 , 176&#13;
Morley, Maynard ........... 46, 98, 156, 171&#13;
Morningside&#13;
.............. . ........ . 216&#13;
Morn i ngside Forensic Records .... . .... 127&#13;
Morn i ngside Men at Iowa U..&#13;
. .. 202&#13;
Morningside Track Records ........... 106&#13;
Morr is, E. . .......... . . . ............... 73&#13;
Morse,Orwin A ..................... . .. 31&#13;
Mossman,Frank E . . . . . .. .. ........... 200&#13;
Mu n son, Vincent ... . ....... .. ... , .... 73&#13;
Murphy, Lilah .... .... . . ........... . ... 68&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan Meet.....&#13;
. . . .. 99&#13;
Newland, Kathryn . .. .. . . . ....... . . 46, 140&#13;
Noe, Glen .. . ............. . .. . .... 68, 144&#13;
Northrup, Car l ... . .... , .... 80, S5, 93, 162&#13;
November Calendar .. . .... .... .... . .. 237&#13;
Obrecht, C l arence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71, 136&#13;
October, Calendar . . . . ................ 235&#13;
Olsen, Ethel ......... ... ... . ...... 46, 152&#13;
Olson, Ruth ...... . ......... . . . .. . 65 , 132&#13;
Omer, Gailord .......... . . . . . .. ... . 70, 162&#13;
Ordway, Mary . . ..... . .... . . , . .... 65, 132&#13;
Ordway, Ethel .. . .. . .. .. . . ......... 68, 148&#13;
Osborne, Garner ...... . .... .... ....... 166&#13;
Othonian Society ... . .. . ... , . .. . . . 135, 138&#13;
Overho l ser, Ralph . . . , . . . .. . .. . .. . . 69, 136&#13;
Parkinson, Elma ..... .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 1&#13;
Patton, Beryl ... . .. .. .... . ....... . ... 29&#13;
Patterson, Harr i et ... . .......... . .. 65, 140&#13;
Patrick, Gle n ........ . .. . . 58, 136, 171 183&#13;
Patrick Lydia . . .. .. . . . ....... . .... .. 68&#13;
Payne, C . W.................... . ...... 34&#13;
Payne, William H. .. 46, 80, 84, 136, 171, 176&#13;
Payne, Arthur .......... . .. . .. . .... 64, 144&#13;
Payne, V i ctor . . ... . . . . .. . . ........ 71, 136&#13;
Pa y ne, Harold ................ . ...... lRR&#13;
Peace Oratorical Contest. . . ........... 120&#13;
Pecaut, Mildred ....... . .............. . 71&#13;
Perry, Helen .............. . ... .. . 65, 152&#13;
Phelps, Floyd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 156&#13;
Philomathean Society . . . .. .. ... . . 155-158&#13;
&#13;
-295-&#13;
&#13;
�Page&#13;
Steele, Lawrence ........ . .. . ..... . 73, 162&#13;
Stenseth, Vernon&#13;
.......... 69, 120, 144&#13;
Stephens, Thomas C.................... 27&#13;
Stevens, Anna M .. .. . . • .. .. . .......... . 33&#13;
Stevens, Merrill . . ..... .. ...... 65, 136, 176&#13;
Stiles, Edward ..... . .. . ..... . .. . .. 70, 136&#13;
Still, Alberta ..... . ... . .. ... ....... . . 71&#13;
Stonebrook, Earl .. . ............... 69, 156&#13;
Strobel, Lovice ..... . ... . . . 60, 77, 132, 183&#13;
•'Stubb's Chagrin" . . .. . ... . .. . .. . .. . .. 214&#13;
Student Volunteer Band ... .. .. .. ... . .. 184&#13;
Swanson, Myrtle ........... . ... . ..... 164&#13;
Symonds, Walter .. . .............. 64, 136&#13;
Tackaberry, Mildred ......... . ..... . .. 60&#13;
Teutonia Club ..... . ................ 185&#13;
''The Glory of the Conquered" ....... . 223&#13;
The Spirit of Contest (Cartoon) ........ 79&#13;
The Spirit of Conquest (Cartoon) ...... 37&#13;
The Spirit of Fellowship (Cartoon) ... . 129&#13;
The Spirit of Jest (Cartoon) .. .. . . .... 225&#13;
The Spirit of the Muse (Cartoon) .... . 205&#13;
The Spirit of Learning (Cartoon) ...... 25&#13;
The Traffic Cop ................. .. .. . . 222&#13;
The Varsity Football Team . ... . . . . . . :·. 88&#13;
Thornburg, Opal .. . .................. 69&#13;
Royce, Mary ....... ... .. . .. .. ........ 71&#13;
Towner, 0. W . (In Memoriam) ......... 35&#13;
Rudy, Carlson ........ . . . . . .. . ........ 68&#13;
Track ..... . ............ . .......... 95-106&#13;
Ruskell, Gladys .... .. ... . ...... .. . .. .. 71&#13;
Track Season ............ . . . .... . .... 9G&#13;
Russel, Lo is .................. .. .. 69, 78&#13;
Track Schedule . . .. . ...... . . . ... . .. . . . 96&#13;
Ruthven, Alexander ...... . ........... 193&#13;
Trefz, James ... .. .... . . . . ... 105, 162, 185&#13;
Trenary, Mabel ......... . ......... 48, 152&#13;
Sampson, Ernest. ..... . .. .. .. .. . . 166, 184&#13;
Trimble, J. B. . . ... . .... .. .... . .. .. .. . . l 97&#13;
Sanborn, Martha .. . .. . ... ... ......... 31&#13;
Trimble, Lydia .... . ................. 197&#13;
Sandvold, Conrad ...... . ..... . 64. 109. 156&#13;
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Sass, Carl W. H .. . ......... .. . 47, 122, 144&#13;
Upham, Cyrl B . . .. .. . . 48, 80, 122, 156, 171&#13;
Saunders, Lida .. . .. . ....... . .... 69, 11.0&#13;
Saunderson, Jason M ............&#13;
. .. 31, 82&#13;
Van Horne, Robert N .... .. . .. . .. .. 27, 194&#13;
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Van Horne, Don ....... . ....... . .... . 105&#13;
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Scheider, George . . ........ . ....... 65, 185&#13;
Schmoker, Cecil .. .. ...... . .. . ......... 69&#13;
Vernon, Robert. . . ......... ......... .&#13;
.......... 48, 80, 82, 97, 121, 136, 171,&#13;
175&#13;
Sc h reiver. Willima ...... . .......... 58, 156&#13;
Seaver, Fred J....... . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. 193&#13;
Walker, Herald ...... .. . ... ... 69, 156, 175&#13;
Sebern, Marie . . .. . .......... ·... 64,&#13;
78, 132&#13;
Wall, Lloyd .... . . .. ............... 69, 156&#13;
Seniors . .. . .... . .... . .............. . 39-48&#13;
Walton, Donald .... . ..... 64, 123, 136, 187&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
.&#13;
....&#13;
. .... 73&#13;
Weed, Lillian .. . . . .......... . ... . ... 71&#13;
Senjor Expression . .. . ........&#13;
.....77 Wedgwood, Mary ... . .. . . . .. . . ... . . 60, 132&#13;
Senior Music . . . . . . . . .. . . . ... . . .. . . .. . 76&#13;
Wedgwood,&#13;
William . .. . .. . . . 76, 80, 136&#13;
...&#13;
September Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233&#13;
Wessel., Emil . . ........... . .... 73, 162, 185&#13;
S h aboz, Jacob .. ...... , . ..........&#13;
... 166&#13;
Wetmore, Frances ................... 71&#13;
Shade, Chloris ........ . ... . .... . .. 68, 110&#13;
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WicKens, May . . ................ . . 64, 132&#13;
Shelmidine, Donald .... . .... . ..... 69, 136&#13;
Wiese, .Emma .. . .. . .... .. . . ... . ....... 69&#13;
Sherwood, Clair . . . . . . .&#13;
. ... 70, 136&#13;
Williams, F. Earl .... . .. .. .. . .... .. . . . .&#13;
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.......... 61, 80, 87, 93, 156, 171, 175, 183&#13;
Shumaker, Florence F&#13;
........ 48, l 52&#13;
Williams,&#13;
C. Tyler ................. 64, 136&#13;
S t mme, Marion.. . .. . ...... 59, 78, 140, 183&#13;
Williams, Ewart ... . ....... 65, 86, 136, 176&#13;
Singer, Ernest . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. .... . .... 185&#13;
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Sipe, Vera..... ... .. .. . . . . .&#13;
64, 148&#13;
Wi lliams, Noel .... . .. . .. . ............ 97&#13;
Winkelman, Eleanor .......... .. ..... .&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61, 77, 132, l 70, 183, 184&#13;
Smith, Irene . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
160&#13;
Woelfer, R ......... ... .......... .. . 185&#13;
Societies&#13;
....... .. .. . . ....&#13;
.· 130- 168&#13;
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Sophomores&#13;
..&#13;
. . . . . . . . 63-65&#13;
Wolfe, Muriel . .. . ....... . . .. . .. ...... 71&#13;
South Dakota Meet. ............. . ... 99&#13;
Woodford, Fai th F . . . .. ....... . ... . ... 32&#13;
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Speer, Bernice . . .. .. .. . . ...... . ....... 69&#13;
\Voodsife, Cli fton ... . .............. 71, 144&#13;
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Woo le, William ........... 69, 136, l 76, 175&#13;
Spiecker, · Emory . . . .. . . . . . .... . .... 69, 156&#13;
"Working&#13;
for an Answer" ...... . ..... 207&#13;
Spry, Katharine . . ............. 59, 170, l 83&#13;
Wright Beatrice . . . . .&#13;
. ..... . .... 152&#13;
Starr, Gaylord ...... .. ......... . . .. ... 65&#13;
Y. M . C. A ...........................&#13;
170&#13;
Starr. Delano .. .............. .. .. . ... 65&#13;
Y. W. C . A...&#13;
. .. . ............. . 171&#13;
Starr, Victor .. . ......... .. .. . , . . ..... 166&#13;
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Zet Novelette ......... . .. . ...... . .... 217&#13;
Stee le, Dorothy . ...... . .. .. . .... . . 64, 152&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Physical Training .. . ...... . . . .. . . 111-113&#13;
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Pike, Cladius ............ . ... . . 69, 126, 156&#13;
Pollock, Harold C. (ln Memoriam) .. ... 38&#13;
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Prentice&#13;
Ruth .... . . ...... ......... 47, 132&#13;
Prichard Ralph.... . . .&#13;
. .. . ....... .&#13;
........... .. 47, so. 93, 123, 156, 176, 175&#13;
Pro hi bi tion League .................. 186&#13;
Prohibit ion Oratorical Contest .... . : .. 119&#13;
Purdy, Elizabeth May .............. 71, 78&#13;
Reilly, Marie . . . .. .. . .. . .......... 65, 140&#13;
Reistrup, James ......... . ... . ......... 32&#13;
Richardson, Noble . ... . .&#13;
. ...... 71, 136&#13;
Riddle, Gladys .. . .... . ............... 69&#13;
Riner, Benjamin .. 58, 123, 124, 136, 183 187&#13;
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Rodin, David ......... .. . . ...... . .. 71, 156&#13;
Roost, Amanda .. . . .... . ... 65, 78, 140, 185&#13;
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&#13;
· ::&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-296-&#13;
&#13;
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                  <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College annual yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The yearbooks contain pictures, short articles, sporting event results, and other college news and events related to that particular year.&#13;
&#13;
A number of yearbooks do not have people's names index in this database. Those yearbooks will have a PDF index of the people's names in that particular year with a reference to the page(s) that they appear on.</text>
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                  <text>Morningside College</text>
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                  <text>Sioux City Public Museum</text>
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                  <text>Fullerton, Adam: Cataloger</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="8048">
              <text>Floyd Conner&#13;
Alta,Iowa&#13;
51002&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
VOL. XIV&#13;
PRINTED AND B OUND BY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
YearBook&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Published by&#13;
&#13;
The Class of 1916&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·'&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
To invisible and invincible something . atmosthmg which pervades the&#13;
.&#13;
phere at every contest for new&#13;
honors; to that tie which binds her&#13;
students in an inseparable union of fellowship, patriotism and devotion; to that force&#13;
which has endured unto the achievement of&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
victory in all her many hardships and catastrophies; to that hope which leads her up&#13;
onto the mountain . top to view her coming&#13;
kingdom in the boundless and limitless future;&#13;
to that spirit which knows no defeat-the&#13;
Spirit of Morningside College-this book is&#13;
loyally dedicated.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FOREWORD&#13;
&#13;
Staff&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
LOVICE STROBEL&#13;
HOWARD A. ALLEN&#13;
KATHARIN E SPRY&#13;
&#13;
One more cog in the wheel of time&#13;
has turned. The cycle of months has&#13;
witnessed incidents of momentous import to all the world. In this complete,&#13;
unwritten history are a few details&#13;
concerning the trials, the achievements,&#13;
the victories and the triumphs of&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
It has fallen to the lot of the class&#13;
which entered the college immediately&#13;
after her greatest catastrophy- the&#13;
burning of Main Hall-to record these&#13;
events in this book. We are few in&#13;
numbers and the burdens of a clas·s&#13;
have been heavy upon us, but we have&#13;
done our best. For our errors we ask&#13;
charity, for our success, support.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
A C.&#13;
&#13;
DELAPP&#13;
&#13;
MARION M. M ETCALFE&#13;
FRANCES CRAIG&#13;
ANNA&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
BEARD&#13;
&#13;
F. ELFANOR WINKLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Asst. Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Classes and Department&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Societies&#13;
Organizations&#13;
Literary&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
LURA M c LAN E&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
MARION SIMME&#13;
&#13;
Art&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR COOPER&#13;
&#13;
Asst. Art&#13;
&#13;
GLEN PATRI CK&#13;
&#13;
Photography&#13;
&#13;
Contents&#13;
BOOK I- THE SPIRIT OF LEARNING&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
BOOK II-THE SPIRIT OF CONQUEST&#13;
CLASSES AND DEPARTMENTS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK III- THE SPIRIT OF CONTEST&#13;
ATHLETICS AND FORENSICS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK IV-THE SPIRIT OF FELLOWSHIP&#13;
SOCIETIES AND ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK Y- THE SPIRIT OF THE MUSE&#13;
LITERARY&#13;
&#13;
BOOK YI-THE SPIRIT OF JEST&#13;
CALENDAR AND JOKES&#13;
&#13;
-9-&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
PROF. EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN&#13;
We desire to express our appreciation of one&#13;
who has given to our predecessors, is giving&#13;
to ourselves, and will give to our successors&#13;
Prof. Brown&#13;
that greatest of gifts-himself.&#13;
has given twenty-five years of his life, in this&#13;
institution, to enrich and make fruitful our lives.&#13;
He is one who never fails to supply from his&#13;
broad and sympathetic understanding and from&#13;
his cheerful, smiling nature, helpful&#13;
advice and wise counsel.&#13;
&#13;
-11-&#13;
&#13;
- 10-&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
MA.IN HALL FIRE--CHAPEL WING&#13;
MAIN HALL FIRE&#13;
&#13;
tution of College grade with the understanding that there be guaranteed a suitable campus&#13;
&#13;
HISTORICAL SKETCH&#13;
&#13;
and $500,000.00, in accredited securities.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The enterprising spirit of Sioux City business men responded promptly to the propo-&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
sition; during the fall and winter following, grounds. were purchased at Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF THE NORTHWEST&#13;
and of the founding of&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
By PROF.&#13;
&#13;
E. A&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
plans were drawn, contracts let, and, in the sprini of l 890, the erection of the first&#13;
building was begun, the present Conservatory of Music.&#13;
&#13;
Not a College, but a collection&#13;
&#13;
of colleges was planned-a University, to be known as The University of The Northwest.&#13;
That nothing less than a University would be considered, was not unreasonable,&#13;
for thos• were times of great projects; it was the time of the building of the Combination&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
That twenty-five years ago Morningside College, or rather the institution which&#13;
later became Morningside College, should have existed only in the mind of man, or perhaps more concretely in the plans of the architect, seems almost impossible&#13;
Yet, at that&#13;
time, nothing could have been seen on the present College campus that gave any indication that a college ever would exist here. So rapidly are great in.stitutions built up in&#13;
modern times, that a standard liberal arts college, with an enrollment of more than seven&#13;
hundred students, may be established, pass through the adversities common to most institutions of this kind, and become a possibility within a quarter of a century.&#13;
The first action of which any record can be found, looking toward the establishment of an educational institution of College grade in Northwest Iowa, was taken at the&#13;
session of the Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, held at Algona&#13;
in September, 1889. The record is to the effect that bids be received to locate an insti-&#13;
&#13;
Bridge, the first permanent bridge across the Missouri at Sioux City; the time of the&#13;
great Union Depot; and of the Elevated Railroad, connecting the suburb of Morningside&#13;
with the business part of the city.&#13;
&#13;
A University was organized, faculties were chosen for&#13;
&#13;
a liberal arts college, a college of medicine, and a college of law, but somewhat peculiarly,&#13;
the fourth college to constitute a real university, namely the College of Theology, was&#13;
left out.&#13;
The corner stone for the present Conservatory of Music, known then as the School&#13;
of Technology, was laid in the early summer of 1 890, with the expectation that it would&#13;
be ready for occupancy by the following September, when the institution should open&#13;
its doors to students.&#13;
&#13;
But, when September came, the building was far from completion&#13;
-13-&#13;
&#13;
- 1 2-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY FIRE&#13;
CHEMISTRY HALL FIRE&#13;
&#13;
tendance is said to have increased during the year, but why it should increase has always&#13;
and the Liberal Arts College began September 16, 1890, in the brick church then stand-&#13;
&#13;
been a matter of wonder, for the advantages in coming to Morninside were certainly few.&#13;
&#13;
ing at the corner of Orleans A venue and the Sioux Trail.&#13;
There was little that was inviting, except the natural beauty of the campus.&#13;
The first chapel exercise was an interesting event, though somewhat poorly attended,&#13;
for the actual number in the student body was fifteen, two of whom were visitors.&#13;
&#13;
This&#13;
&#13;
number probably did not constitute the entire enrollment, for doubtless some students were&#13;
loitering in the vestibule or strolling on the church lawn.&#13;
&#13;
The horrifying accounts of feline destruction in the modern department of&#13;
&#13;
Biology are not to be compared with the grewsome accounts of the dissection of human&#13;
bodies in the upper rooms of the medical building.&#13;
&#13;
The law college was established&#13;
&#13;
in down town offices, while the college of music existed only as a department of the&#13;
liberal arts college.&#13;
&#13;
m honor of its completion and the college of Liberal Arts took possession in January,&#13;
The foundation of the Main Hall was put in at the same time, but the super·&#13;
&#13;
structure was not erected until 189 7.&#13;
&#13;
Stock Yards car line, the only one running to Morningside, announced an hour schedule;&#13;
frequently good cause for being late at classes or for not coming at all.&#13;
Board was advertised to be had in the basement of the College building at $2.2S&#13;
per week, and that good board and neatly furnished rooms would be furnished at from&#13;
&#13;
$2.7S to $3.50 per week, but the most attractive feature was the low price.&#13;
&#13;
Announce-&#13;
&#13;
ment was made that students could further reduce the cost of living by boarding them-&#13;
&#13;
The student publications of the Institution began with the first issue of The University&#13;
Graphic in December 1890, to be issued monthly. This first issue was of large dimension,&#13;
almost the size of a small town newspaper; a large part of the first page was• given to a&#13;
cut of three magnificent buildings that were to adorn the campus, but, so far as known ,&#13;
&#13;
According to the best information obtainable, the first student to enroll in the&#13;
University was Mr. McClellan Davis, now a prominent real estate owner and dealer&#13;
in Portland, Oregon.&#13;
&#13;
the best, no sidewalks had been laid, not even cinder walks were provided, and the&#13;
&#13;
selves, but the wonder was how they could further reduce the cost ·of living and still live.&#13;
&#13;
The first building having been completed in the fall of 1890, a reception was held&#13;
1891 .&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
heating plant was not a success, the accommodations for boarding and rooming were not&#13;
&#13;
but the occasional student from the city who honored the new institution by enrolling, had&#13;
&#13;
The medical school was established in a residence building at 1 712 Garretson&#13;
Avenue.&#13;
&#13;
,·&#13;
&#13;
Probably fifty students enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
during the fall term, but most of them were Academy or Normal students.&#13;
&#13;
these buildings have not been erected.&#13;
&#13;
On the first editorial staff of the Graphic appears&#13;
&#13;
the name of J. W. Mahood, now the Rev. Mahood, as literary editor.&#13;
The following&#13;
&#13;
item from this issue shows that the pun, as a common figure of&#13;
&#13;
The at- 15-&#13;
&#13;
- 14-&#13;
&#13;
THE SPOON HOLDER&#13;
CLASS ROCK&#13;
&#13;
speech, was used in College publications then as now:&#13;
&#13;
"Miss Anna Burnip' s young lady&#13;
&#13;
friends are curious to know why she so highly values her walks beside · the Brook."&#13;
&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. C . Peters were in sympathetic relation with student interests was shown&#13;
by the announcement that they would give a reception to the students in their elegant home.&#13;
The statement that the Institution had an enrollment of about a hundred and fifty by&#13;
&#13;
Northwest was taken over by the Northwest Iowa Conference; the institution was reorganized and named Morningside College.&#13;
three years.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. G. W. Carr, served as President for&#13;
&#13;
At the close of his term of service Dr. W. S. Lewis, now the honored&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Lewis, succeeded to the presidency and a new era of financial and educational&#13;
progress was ushered in.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis was followed by Dr. Luther Freeman, who ably&#13;
&#13;
January of the first year was probably true since this number included the students enrolled&#13;
&#13;
served, and was succeeded by Dr. A. E. Craig, under whose leadership Morningside has&#13;
&#13;
in the Law School, College of Medicine, Commercial School, etc., as well as those in the&#13;
&#13;
passed through three mysterious and costly fires.&#13;
&#13;
College of Liberal Arts.&#13;
&#13;
back and a bright future awaits the institution.&#13;
&#13;
A sketch of this kind would be lacking in justice to some connected with the institution should it not mention the names of some of the men who bore its great burdens at&#13;
that time.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Wilmot Whitfield, D. D., now of Seattle, Washington, was the Chancel-&#13;
&#13;
lor of the University.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Whitfield was a man of commanding presence, of a most&#13;
&#13;
kindly disposition, of strong personality and of the highest Christian ideals.&#13;
&#13;
The Dean&#13;
&#13;
of the College of Liberal Arts was Rev. R. C. Glass, A. M., now also of Seattle.&#13;
&#13;
Rev.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Glass was a most scholarly man and a man of great intellectual keenness and fine&#13;
executive ability.&#13;
&#13;
Dr.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
C. Gilchrist, a man of rugged, physical characteristics, of high&#13;
&#13;
ideals and scholarly attainments, was Dean of the Normal College.&#13;
The financial burden being too heavy Dr. Whitfield resigned in 1892.&#13;
&#13;
His succes-&#13;
&#13;
sor was Dr. William Brush, formerly President of Upper Iowa University, and later&#13;
President of the University at Mitchell, South Dakota.&#13;
- 16-&#13;
&#13;
In 1894 the University of the&#13;
- 17-&#13;
&#13;
However, the clouds are already rolled&#13;
&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
PRESIDENT ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
We cannot here fully express our appreciation&#13;
of the one who heard Morningside's "Macedonian Cry" and came over to help her in the&#13;
hour of her darkest gloom. No man has ever&#13;
been called to face more perplexing problems&#13;
than those which confronted our president after&#13;
the series of calamities which our institution&#13;
has undergone. Yet, because of the greatness&#13;
of the man, we are already filled with hope&#13;
and the future seems to be without limitations.&#13;
Despite his multitudinous cares Dr. Craig is&#13;
an intimate friend of the students, and&#13;
we are proud to have him for a&#13;
counselor and president.&#13;
&#13;
- 18-&#13;
&#13;
·-1 9-&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUS-REAR VIEW&#13;
THE PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College:&#13;
&#13;
The Present and the Future&#13;
&#13;
By PRES. A E. CRAIG&#13;
The outstanding event in the interests of Morningside College during the present year&#13;
is the successful amalgamation with Charles City College, located at Charles City, Iowa.&#13;
Negotiations looking towards this action had been going on for almost two years before&#13;
the matter was brought to a conclusion last June. It is needless to say that many and&#13;
grave objections arose, especially on the part of the college which was in some measure&#13;
to lose its identity, and which indeed must needs lose its name and change its location in&#13;
order to enter the merger proposed. Much sentiment naturally clung to . the old name and&#13;
the historic location. But the harsh dictates of necessity could not be ignored. The advancing scale of college standards made neces• ary by our rapid educational progress&#13;
s&#13;
compelled Charles City College to face the stern facts of the case that it must either secure&#13;
greatly enlarged resources or seek some other alignment. The latter course seemed the&#13;
only feasible one open, and the conclusion was unanimously reached that it was the part&#13;
of wisdom to close the doors of Charles City College and join forces with Morningside.&#13;
This conclusion was reached by the Board of Trustees of Charles City College in June,&#13;
and their action was unanimously endorsed by the Northwest German Conference the&#13;
patronizing conference of the college. As it was impossible to arrange immediately all&#13;
the legal details of such a union it was decided to maintain both corporations intact for&#13;
at least one year and operate in the meantime under a contract. The chief conditions of&#13;
this contract were that such members of the faculty of Charles City College as so desired,&#13;
should be taken over by Morningsde College, and the resources of Charles City College be&#13;
paid into the treasury of Morningside. Arrangements were also made to dispose of the&#13;
property of Charles City College as circumstances might permit. Already a part of the&#13;
buildings have been disposed of and the rest will be sold as soon as satisfactory arrangements can be made. The library of over seven thousand volumes has already been transferred to Morningside as has several thousand dollars worth of furniture and scientific equip-&#13;
&#13;
ment. The President of Charles City College, Dr. W. C. Hilmer, becomes the VicePresident of Morningside College. Professors Schaub, Patton and Fischer also take&#13;
positions with Morningside. These new members have already assumed their work and&#13;
have made an excellent impression upon both faculty and students in their new positions.&#13;
Dr. Hilmer, in addition to his administrative work as Vice-President, is the head of the&#13;
department of German Literature. For this he is most admirably equipped, as he holds&#13;
his degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Illinois. Dr. Schaub assumes&#13;
the headship of the departinent of Biblical and Religious Literature. In this capacity he&#13;
will offer courses in the German language for young people preparing for religious work&#13;
in the German Conference. Mr. Patton assists in the department of mathematics and&#13;
Miss Fischer in Latin and German.&#13;
Morningisde College has a right to congratulate herself that Charles City College&#13;
selected her rather than some other institution nearer by. The reasons stated for this&#13;
'selection were that it was conceded that Morningside, in view of its marvelous growth&#13;
and its strategic location has before it a most hopeful future. The state of South Dakota&#13;
is a part of the patronizing territory, included in the Northwest German conference, and&#13;
this was an added reason for favoring Sioux City as a desirable location for the united&#13;
college.&#13;
Charles City College has had a most honorable career. In 1863 the Federal&#13;
Government erected a Marine Hospital on the picturesque brow of a hill just south of the&#13;
city of Galena, Illinois. The venture was not a success and the building was put up at&#13;
public auction. Two German Methodist ministers, William Schreiner and Frederick&#13;
Kluckhohn, realizing the need of a school to furnish secondary education, bought the&#13;
property for six thousand dollars. An organization was consummated, a board of trustees&#13;
elected, and the Northwest German Normal School was duly launched. The next year&#13;
the school was placed under the auspices of the Northwest German Conference of the&#13;
Methodist Episcopal Church. The career of the school at Galena was typical of the&#13;
struggling western institution. Numbers of vigorous, somewhat crude, but eager students&#13;
flocked to its halls. Splendid self-sacrificing work was done on very small capital. The&#13;
financial struggle was continuous and difficult. For the first decade little progress was&#13;
-21-&#13;
&#13;
-20-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
THE ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
MOONLIGHT ON THE MISSOURI&#13;
&#13;
made in a material way. But in 1878 the institution was advanced to the grade of a&#13;
standard college, the debt was wiped out and steps were taken to secure an endowment.&#13;
A modest sum was raised for this purpose which made possible greater things for the&#13;
school. Slowly, but steadily, collegiate and theological branches were added to the&#13;
curriculum, the equipment and library were improved, the literary societies were lifted to&#13;
a higher plane and the Young Men's Christian Association organized. In 1891 the&#13;
college was removed to Charles City, Iowa, a location more central to its patronizing territory. Here it continued to maintain a vigorous growth. The excellent work of the&#13;
institution was recognized by Mr. Carnegie in his splendid gift of $25,000 towards the&#13;
endowment. But as has been stated, the rapid advance of the requirements made upon a&#13;
recognized standard college made the struggle of Charles City College to attain this desired end so difficult that, after due consideration, it was deemed better to unite interests&#13;
with some college already well established and, so, meet the needs of its constituency. The&#13;
outstanding progress made by the vigorous young institution by the Sioux could not but&#13;
arrest the attention of those wide awake German Methodists and a course of college&#13;
coquetting went on for many months, which ended happily in the agreement to unite&#13;
hands and hopes and move on together towards the building of one of the most vigorous&#13;
institutions of its class to be found anywhere throughout the middle west.&#13;
The announcement of this decision greatly pleased the friends of Morningside&#13;
College and the citizens of Sioux City. Perhaps no one thing in the history of the college&#13;
has created more enthusiasm. And well it might. Besides the flattering recognition&#13;
implied in the selection of Morningside College, there came also the addition to its resources of all the property and endowment of Charles City College. It is too soon to&#13;
state definitely what these material assets will total. The outlook is that if any reasonable&#13;
disposition can be made of thal part of the Charles City realty not sold, that at least&#13;
$100.000 will be added to the endowment of the united institutions. This will bring&#13;
the permanent, productive endowment of the college up to half a million dollars. Besides&#13;
the endowment very substantial additions have come by way of library and equipment.&#13;
After duplicate books were eliminated and disposed of it was found that very nearly&#13;
seven thousand volumes would be added to the library. This brings this important asset&#13;
&#13;
up to about 19,000 volumes. When it is considered that both institutions were young and&#13;
that these books are necessarily recent we are justified in believing that Morningside&#13;
College will have one of the most practical and up to date libraries of any of our colleges.&#13;
The results of this merger have been very happy. While a large number of&#13;
students did not transfer from Charles City to Morningside, yet the effect upon the constituency was so stimulating that a very large class of freshmen applied for admission at&#13;
the opening of the school year. When the new constituency has had opportunity to become fully informed as to the real character of the college and has begun to feel it is an&#13;
institution in which it is vitally concerned, there will doubtless be a marked increase from&#13;
that source. As it is, the growth of the college is as rapid as it is wholesome. Some appreciation of this · growth will be gained by a comparison of the registrations of three successive&#13;
years. 191 2-1 3 showed an enrollment of 504, 191 3-14 of 638 and 191 4-1 5 of about&#13;
an even 700. The growth in the collegiate part of the college is equally gratifying, as the&#13;
figures for the three years stated are 24 3, 285, 33 7. At the present growth of the&#13;
s&#13;
college it will not be long before 500 students enroll in the four collegiate clas• es and&#13;
I 000 in the whole institution. Our territory is only awaking to the fact that there is&#13;
within its owns bounds a college capable of competing with any other institution of its&#13;
class in the state. Already Sioux City is becoming aware of the privileges offered her&#13;
own young people at home. The past two years has shown a marvelous increase in the&#13;
registration from the Sioux City high school.&#13;
The ideals for which Morningside College have always stood are becoming more&#13;
and more recognized as the true ones to guide in an educational development. The&#13;
emphasis on Christian character was never so pronounced as it is today. Even our taxsupported institutions are realizing that they cannot ignore this side of the young person's&#13;
culture and still claim to give a well rounded equipment for life. Public sentiment has&#13;
vastly changed during the past decade. It has been insistently proclaimed that material success without a corresponding ethical awakening is a most dangerous thing and will&#13;
spell the ruin of our national ideals. This new spirit has already pervaded both politics&#13;
and business. Our great universities are becoming aware that attention must be given to&#13;
the moral culture of the young people in their charge if they are to fulfill their true&#13;
&#13;
-22-&#13;
&#13;
- 28-&#13;
&#13;
GRACE M. E.-THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
mission.&#13;
This can only create satisfaction in all circles. But it also emphasizes the fact&#13;
that the colleges which have long stood for these principles are peculiarly equipped to&#13;
furnish this moral atmosphere and to instil this genuine ethical spirit. While our colleges&#13;
with religious affiliations are broad and generous enough to satisfy the different tastes and&#13;
include the varying beliefs that divide our society into denominations, yet they are fully&#13;
and thoroughly committed to the idea that education must recognize the religious needs of&#13;
our youth and make some adequate provision for their care.&#13;
Speaking purely from the pedagogical side, it is also fair to insist that there is a&#13;
marked trend towards the smaller college for a genuine educational efficiency. Of course ·&#13;
this implies that the smaller institution must be adequately equipped to perform the task&#13;
it announces. But granted reasonable equipment, it is realized by many that it is better&#13;
for the youth in the younger stage of its educational development to be placed where&#13;
personal supervision can be given, where individual inclinations can be observed and provision made for their proper direction, where intimate friendships, both between students,&#13;
among themselves, and with their instructors can be easily formed. This general culture&#13;
does not demand the immense resources that are required for the advanced stages of a&#13;
university training. It is not too much to predict that the time will come when the undergraduate work will be largely done in this class of independent colleges and the great.&#13;
universities will be left free to pursue their particular work of dealing with the graduate =&#13;
student in his literary or professional work.&#13;
In view of these educational tendencies the friends of Morningside College have a&#13;
right to be very hopeful as to its future. It does not claim to have all its needs supplied&#13;
yet, but it does boast of a most magnificent beginning and it comforts itself with the&#13;
bright prospects ahead in the not distant future. With a growing city to encourage it, with&#13;
a rich agricultural constituency to support it, with a strong religious denomination to inspire it, with a growing alumni to enthusiastically boost for it, Morningside College turns a&#13;
bright face to the future and holds out beckoning hands to the great army of aspiring&#13;
young people contiguous to its location, saying "Come with us and we will do thee good,&#13;
for the Lord hath spoken good" concerning Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK I&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
-21-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, PH.&#13;
&#13;
C. HILMER, PH. D.&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Professor German Literature&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
M. S.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
STEPHENS,&#13;
&#13;
M. D.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Registrar&#13;
Professor Economic-Sociology&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL, A.&#13;
&#13;
OLAF HOVDA&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, A.&#13;
&#13;
PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
Professor Psychology-Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
&#13;
-26-&#13;
&#13;
Coss,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED EMORY HAYNES, PH.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
D. D. D.&#13;
&#13;
-27-&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I '&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX .&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE&#13;
CARSON,&#13;
&#13;
*AGNES&#13;
&#13;
PH. D .&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADL EY,&#13;
&#13;
PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
L uTz,&#13;
&#13;
MARSH,&#13;
&#13;
JOHN D . MACMILLAN,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
S.&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
BERYL F. PATTON, B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Professor of French and Spanish&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-28-&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
GRETCHEN&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
M., D . D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biblical Literature&#13;
Acting Professor of Sociology and Economics&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN E. DIMMIT,&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant and Acting Professor&#13;
of German&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICK SCHAUB,&#13;
&#13;
FERGUSON,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
]AMES J. HAYES,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-29-&#13;
&#13;
SI O U X&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON,&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Coach-Director of Physical Culture for Men&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
&#13;
]ANET&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
MACDONALD,&#13;
&#13;
HELEN I. LOVELAND, A. B.&#13;
&#13;
A M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Latin&#13;
&#13;
LAURA&#13;
&#13;
C. FISCHER, A M.&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET G . DOLLIV ER,&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in German and Latin&#13;
&#13;
PEARL S. GREENE,&#13;
&#13;
A 8.,&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Home Economics&#13;
&#13;
MARGAR ET&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
BRAND,&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Women&#13;
&#13;
-30-&#13;
&#13;
-31-&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
SI O Ux&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAcCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
MAcCOLLIN, Mus.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
MERRILL&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
MARCY&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Banjo, Mandolin&#13;
and Guitar&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F. WoooFORD,&#13;
&#13;
A B.&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Ross&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
ANNA&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
STEVENS&#13;
&#13;
Secretary to the President&#13;
and Assistant Registrar&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
ALTA F. FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
-32-&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
-33-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
C. W.&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
TOWNER&#13;
&#13;
At the death of Mr. 0. W. Towner, Morningside&#13;
College lost a most loyal friend. In the dark days of the&#13;
institutions history, when its supporters were few and its&#13;
prospects for the future were dim, this man gave of his&#13;
resources, and, what was fully as beneficial, of his energy.&#13;
For over ten years he was a member of the board of trustees, being President of that body at one time. Later he&#13;
was elected to the position of Secretary which he filled up to&#13;
the time of his last illness.&#13;
&#13;
Patron and Liberal Supporter of the College&#13;
&#13;
-34-&#13;
&#13;
-35-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN, M. D.&#13;
C. w. PAYNE&#13;
ANNA M. STEVENS&#13;
L. J. HASKINS&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Acting Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Auditor&#13;
&#13;
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
E. C HEILMAN&#13;
WALTER ToRBET&#13;
w. P. MANLEY&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER&#13;
C. W. PAYNE&#13;
R. T. CHIPPERFIELD&#13;
&#13;
C. LocKIN&#13;
GEORGE C. CALL&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
N. R. HATHAWAY&#13;
L. J. HASKINS&#13;
w. E. TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
FINANCE COMMITTEE&#13;
P. MANLEY&#13;
C. w. PAYNE&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN&#13;
J. C. Loc KIN&#13;
E. TACKABERRY&#13;
GEORGE RAW&#13;
GEORGE C. CALL&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK II&#13;
"The Spirit of Conquest"&#13;
&#13;
-36-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-37-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE BALCOM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
Pella&#13;
&#13;
PAUL BOODAGH&#13;
&#13;
Urmia, Persia&#13;
&#13;
WALTER&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
BREAW&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
-38-&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
- 39-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE DARVILLE&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARIE DEVITT&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL M. COLLIER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
B. CosTAR&#13;
Alcester, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
SARAH CROWTHER&#13;
&#13;
New York, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
-40-&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Hot Springs, S. D .&#13;
&#13;
-41-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
BURRELL E. EVANS&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
RUTH E. FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTINE M. HAAS&#13;
&#13;
Woodbine&#13;
&#13;
HERBSTER&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
HIETT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Lake View&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
]OHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE&#13;
&#13;
A. JONES&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
-42-&#13;
&#13;
-43-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
KING&#13;
&#13;
EDITH E. LYLES&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LYDIA E. McCRE E RY&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN&#13;
&#13;
KLINE&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Neb. ·&#13;
&#13;
ELLIS&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
Early&#13;
&#13;
KUHNS&#13;
&#13;
Frankfort, Ind.&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE McKE NZI E&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
LAVELY&#13;
&#13;
Crookston, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
H E RMAN H. LUEDER&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
GUY D. McKINNEY&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
&#13;
L UCIL L E&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
METCALFE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 44-&#13;
&#13;
-45-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
RUTH E. PRENTI C E&#13;
&#13;
MORLEY&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN NEWLAND&#13;
&#13;
RALPH C. PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Galva&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE B. ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CARL&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Inwood&#13;
&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich. .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-46-&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
SASS&#13;
&#13;
C. ELIHUSHOEMAKER&#13;
&#13;
FLETCHER POLLOCK&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Millnor, N. D.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE F. SHUMAKER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
TRENARY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
B. UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
CYRIL&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 48-&#13;
&#13;
-4 9-&#13;
&#13;
SI OU X&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
"Hod" is primarily&#13;
and above all a student&#13;
and accordingly has&#13;
the respect of the faculty as well as the students.&#13;
After mastering his assignments he&#13;
finds time to play baseball, rush ads, fill the&#13;
office of class presidency, and participate&#13;
in social life. He is&#13;
modest, unassuming, and&#13;
congenial.&#13;
A&#13;
man&#13;
among men. To know&#13;
him is to admire him.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER&#13;
&#13;
"Tom" comes to us&#13;
after a two years sojourn at Cornell college, where he won&#13;
honors on the gridiron&#13;
and diamond. Experience here whetted ·his&#13;
judgment, hence his&#13;
choice of Morningside.&#13;
A versatile man, gets&#13;
into athletics, "fusses"&#13;
seven or six nights a&#13;
week and still gets "A"&#13;
grades.&#13;
&#13;
-50-&#13;
&#13;
ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Anna is a booster in&#13;
every activity. She is&#13;
an inspiration to any&#13;
one who works with her.&#13;
Her p r o f e s s o rs are&#13;
·never disappointed when&#13;
they call on her and&#13;
some of her classmates&#13;
do not seem to be when&#13;
they call on her. The&#13;
longer you know her the&#13;
better you like her. She&#13;
is a conscientious Y.&#13;
W. C. A. worker, a&#13;
loyal supporter of the&#13;
Agora Club, a strong ·&#13;
society worker and an&#13;
excellent student.&#13;
&#13;
-51-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FRAN CES CRA IG&#13;
&#13;
Never did one know&#13;
a girl mo re true, a&#13;
friend mo re sincere a&#13;
student more conscientious. She talks flu ently&#13;
and interestingly. H er&#13;
wit and humor dominate every situation. Althou gh&#13;
her&#13;
relatives&#13;
govern the throne she&#13;
trembles with the least&#13;
of us when considering&#13;
what the faculty may&#13;
proclaim. Unsurpassed&#13;
as a hostess, her home&#13;
is always open and has&#13;
been the scene of many&#13;
college activities.&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL DAY&#13;
&#13;
One of our most&#13;
capable girls. It seems&#13;
she was born to rule,&#13;
and she is quite happy&#13;
in her vocation. She&#13;
could successfully manage any affair and have&#13;
money left in the treasury. A sheer waste of&#13;
ability for her to have&#13;
a banker's income when&#13;
she could live in luxury&#13;
on the wages of a daylaborer. A good student, a reader and singer of ability, and a&#13;
charming hostess.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
AMBROSE D E LAPP&#13;
&#13;
Brother DeLapp is&#13;
a preacher of marked&#13;
ability. He will read&#13;
this so all the truth cannot be told. He says&#13;
of himself, "I try to do&#13;
too mu.ch business on&#13;
too small c a p i t a 1,"&#13;
mental capital&#13;
and&#13;
we have noticed that&#13;
he sometimes says "Hallelujah" in the wrong&#13;
place. Yet he is very&#13;
liberal minded, serious&#13;
at tim.es, humorous but&#13;
never trivial. He is a&#13;
sincere friend, devoted&#13;
to his family, and an&#13;
earnest student.&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
-52-&#13;
&#13;
- 5 3-&#13;
&#13;
S IO UX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
LEROY GINGERICH&#13;
&#13;
Won the prize, during his Freshman year,&#13;
for the greatest success&#13;
under the most adverse&#13;
circumstances. A hard&#13;
worker and an energetic student. Helping&#13;
his landlady wash is his&#13;
His honor&#13;
pleasure.&#13;
and manliness are every&#13;
where unquestioned, and&#13;
he has the profound respect of all who know&#13;
him.&#13;
He&#13;
will put him·&#13;
·&#13;
se If to any inconvenence to play a trick. He&#13;
·&#13;
greets you always with&#13;
a cheery smile.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR LI NDSAY&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HARTZEL&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
Just as the Seniors&#13;
are proud of Olive so&#13;
we are of Ruth. S he&#13;
has endeared herself to&#13;
us by her agreeable and&#13;
unobtrusive m a n n e r.&#13;
This semester, during&#13;
her sojourn in the west,&#13;
&#13;
This girl goes to college for the real purpose o f d eveIopment.&#13;
She is as earnest and&#13;
sincere a worker as our&#13;
class has produced. H er&#13;
further intelligence is&#13;
manifest in the fact that&#13;
&#13;
we have all truly missed&#13;
her, and next fall we&#13;
shall gladly welcome&#13;
her back to her class&#13;
and college, providing&#13;
she does not become&#13;
enamored with&#13;
the&#13;
mountains.&#13;
&#13;
. WALTER HELD&#13;
&#13;
"A nn a" has sur- .&#13;
rised everybody this&#13;
year, even himself. He&#13;
is happy because he&#13;
was still in school when&#13;
the class of ' 18 came in.&#13;
When he isn't walking&#13;
or calling or ta lking in&#13;
the library you might&#13;
find him in the Biology&#13;
Laboratory or strolling&#13;
around looking as if he&#13;
were lost or wondering&#13;
if some one else was.&#13;
Other moments he is&#13;
training for track or&#13;
singing.&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS HORN&#13;
&#13;
By virtue of her&#13;
good scholarship&#13;
Gladys is finishing her&#13;
college course in three&#13;
years, and is making&#13;
good 1with many "A"&#13;
grades to her credit. A&#13;
good friend to all who&#13;
know her, quiet, but&#13;
interesting, because interested.&#13;
Her sound&#13;
judgment is always regarded. If you want&#13;
to know more about&#13;
her, go to her hospitable&#13;
home and try some of&#13;
her valentine cookies.&#13;
&#13;
she stayed out one year&#13;
so she could graduate&#13;
with a class worthy of&#13;
· her. She loves a good&#13;
time when other things&#13;
&#13;
has remarkable mus-&#13;
&#13;
She&#13;
sical ability. Our college needs more girls&#13;
like her.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 54-&#13;
&#13;
--55-&#13;
&#13;
A biologist, zoologist,&#13;
ornothologist, '"bugologist," and a human being for a' that. A proficient assistant in biology laboratory. "Art" is&#13;
a hard worker, sometimes a student, a photographer of some renown, a warbler in the&#13;
glee club, and a follower of nature. He says&#13;
he would fuss "wood"&#13;
his time permit.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
A Scotchman of the&#13;
old style brand. Hails&#13;
from Moville, Iowa.&#13;
Loves to argue and realizes the weight of his&#13;
own argument, but is&#13;
ever willing to be convinced. Is an ardent&#13;
admirer of the West.&#13;
We are assured of his&#13;
advancement and progress in the ministry,&#13;
his chosen profession,&#13;
because of the utmost&#13;
sincerity in whatever he&#13;
undertakes.&#13;
&#13;
D ELBERT&#13;
&#13;
We call him "Del".&#13;
b ut th ere are f ew dells&#13;
Is&#13;
in his nature. A singer&#13;
of ability, an untiring&#13;
worker, a w o rt h y&#13;
friend. "Dirty shirts"&#13;
are his hobby. A laugh&#13;
that would make "Job"&#13;
smile. A broncho buster and a lover of the&#13;
war-field. Nevertheless&#13;
a prince of a fellow.&#13;
His greatest difficulty&#13;
is keeping his brother in&#13;
the straight and narrow&#13;
path.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALFE&#13;
&#13;
McKINN EY&#13;
&#13;
LURA M c LAN E&#13;
&#13;
Lura has honored her&#13;
class by her athletic&#13;
prowess in tennis, basketball, and track, and&#13;
is the only girl in school&#13;
wearing a gold "A."&#13;
She is game for anything and jolly on all&#13;
occasions, as a result&#13;
she is liked by all who&#13;
know her. Her's is the&#13;
type of a true friend.&#13;
Her greatest responsibility in school is probably her room-mate.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Our busy editor, and&#13;
probably the b u s i e s t&#13;
man in school. When&#13;
occasion demands a&#13;
and&#13;
influential&#13;
wise&#13;
leader, the responsibility&#13;
is thrust upon him.&#13;
This is because he is&#13;
capable and ambitious.&#13;
He thinks clearly and&#13;
logically, and his ideals&#13;
are the purest. He appears impressively, he&#13;
talks convincingly, and&#13;
he executes effectively.&#13;
&#13;
"Mitze"is so changeable that what we say&#13;
about her may not be&#13;
true when this book&#13;
comes before the public .&#13;
A happy mixture of&#13;
gaiety, soberness and&#13;
sincerity. She is ever&#13;
in a hurry and always&#13;
i n d e· m a n d. Her&#13;
studies usually get her&#13;
undivided attention just&#13;
before finals, but this&#13;
year she is working&#13;
hard to finish college&#13;
and expression at the&#13;
same time.&#13;
Just ask&#13;
the Freshmen boys if&#13;
she is popular.&#13;
&#13;
Here is a student&#13;
who equips himself well.&#13;
He imagines himself in&#13;
the futu re as a great&#13;
preacher and we second&#13;
the motion. Already he&#13;
says he has one hundred and seven sermons,&#13;
the most of which are&#13;
masterpieces. H e is a&#13;
happy combination of a&#13;
thorough student and a&#13;
His great&#13;
reformer.&#13;
hobby is temperance&#13;
and, as he has always&#13;
practiced it, his words&#13;
are with power. He is&#13;
most respected and admired by those who&#13;
know him best.&#13;
&#13;
1 6&#13;
&#13;
-56-&#13;
&#13;
-57-&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
S IO U X&#13;
&#13;
GLEN PATRICK&#13;
&#13;
"Pat"&#13;
has made&#13;
good. He is a Morn-•&#13;
ingside booster. Brought&#13;
his parents with him on&#13;
his second return. An&#13;
earnest,&#13;
conscientious,&#13;
loyal student. · Mathematics are his pastime,&#13;
the Y. M. C. A work&#13;
is his chosen profession .&#13;
A big heart, a true student, a worthy friend.&#13;
He would get up any&#13;
time of night to take&#13;
t&#13;
snaps for the Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
KATHARINE SPRY&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN RINER&#13;
&#13;
MARION SIMME&#13;
&#13;
Ben is a man of high&#13;
character and ideals.&#13;
Loyal to his class, his&#13;
society, and his college.&#13;
Most of all he is absolutely sincere in his life&#13;
heart that&#13;
can scarcely be contained in his body. Is&#13;
admired and loved by&#13;
all who know him, even&#13;
his wife. An intercollegiate debater of no&#13;
mean ability. Works&#13;
for his fellow men&#13;
rather than himself .&#13;
&#13;
Marion is not only&#13;
very artistic but practical as well. She paints&#13;
At our&#13;
beautifully.&#13;
banquets, society and&#13;
class functions her a bility and clever ideas are&#13;
always in d emand. A&#13;
special shark in mathematics and a student of&#13;
distinction in every department. Pretty, witty and charming, she is&#13;
admired by all. "Loyalis her motto.&#13;
&#13;
-58-&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
A man who is here&#13;
for hard work. He is&#13;
doing his best to live up&#13;
to his brother's reputation. He is unostentatious, quiet and self controlled. His ambition&#13;
is to get what knowledge he can out of&#13;
books and he ranks&#13;
high in scholarship. Respected by all who&#13;
know him.&#13;
&#13;
B ESS SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Bess has been with&#13;
us since we started, but&#13;
we haven't seen much&#13;
of her this year. She&#13;
has been devoting her&#13;
time to domestic science&#13;
and whether or not she&#13;
is serious about it we&#13;
cannot tell. Any way,&#13;
she is a charming entertainer and would be a&#13;
good practitioner of her&#13;
profession.&#13;
&#13;
-59-&#13;
&#13;
The only one whom&#13;
we would trust to write&#13;
up our class. Katharine&#13;
has joined us since our&#13;
debut and has proved&#13;
a valuable addition to&#13;
the class. Although she&#13;
leaves her capabilities&#13;
to be discovered, she is&#13;
a leader in college activities, and has been&#13;
chosen A gora President&#13;
for next year. Being&#13;
at once brilliant, charitable, candid and optimistic she becomes a&#13;
choice friend upon acquaintance.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR WINKLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
A true American college girl. A girl of sense, wit and&#13;
humor. Always busy but congenial and companionable.&#13;
A student volunteer by choice, Mac's choice. Is characterized by push, vim and vigor. She possesses high ideals and&#13;
a dominant will to insure their fulfillment. B elieves ardently that man was not made to live alone. She has heard the&#13;
voice of duty and her "Will" now leads her to the performance of that duty .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
LOVICESTROBEL&#13;
&#13;
Lura's room-mate. If&#13;
we were not afraid of&#13;
hurting somebody's feelings we would say she&#13;
is the most popular, the&#13;
prettiest, and the very&#13;
sweetest girl in Morningside. Singing, reading, or talking she is&#13;
equally charming. Her&#13;
greatest difficulty is her&#13;
vain attempt to be on&#13;
time once in a while&#13;
any way, but still she&#13;
is the most dependable&#13;
of persons. Her studies&#13;
are her pastime.&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
TACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
Mildred is a friend&#13;
to all and is liked by&#13;
all who know her. She&#13;
is frank, sincere, and&#13;
good-natured. Capable&#13;
and proficient in many&#13;
ways. She drives an&#13;
automobile and rows a&#13;
boat with equal skill.&#13;
She plays the piano and&#13;
she tats. Already she&#13;
has seen the exposition&#13;
at San Francisco. No&#13;
other class can boast of&#13;
a member who can&#13;
travel and make good&#13;
grades all in the same&#13;
semester.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 60-&#13;
&#13;
MARY WEDGWOOD&#13;
&#13;
Laughing, chattering,&#13;
giggling, happy go&#13;
lucky Mary! Would&#13;
one ever believe she had&#13;
a serious moment? And&#13;
yet she must have serious thoughts or how&#13;
could she be such a&#13;
good student and such&#13;
a true and loyal friend?&#13;
Her auburn hair and&#13;
dancing eyes only serve&#13;
as symbols of her happy sun-shiney disposition. The blues are&#13;
simply impossible when&#13;
Mary is about.&#13;
&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
"Bill" is handsome, strong and muscular, a good student&#13;
and a sincere friend. He plays football, basketball, baseball, and loves all athletic sports. He is not a debater or&#13;
an orator, women can use words why need he enter a field&#13;
so crowded? He never pushes himself forward, he does&#13;
not need to, but he will be in the front ranks with the doers&#13;
of the worlds work .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
-62-&#13;
&#13;
-63-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
- 64-&#13;
&#13;
-65-&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-66-&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-67-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-68-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
-69-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
SI O U X&#13;
&#13;
~,~&#13;
&#13;
- 70-&#13;
&#13;
-71-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE SPECIAL&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
-72-&#13;
&#13;
-73-&#13;
&#13;
.. ..&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-74-&#13;
&#13;
-75-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
- 77-&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
- 79-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
&#13;
-80-&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
-81-&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
COACH SAUNDERSONA man's worth is to be judged by the results&#13;
of his work. So we may judge Coach Saunderson, who has&#13;
built up a team at Morningside superior to that of any&#13;
college of the state.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. PAUL EIFFERT"Turk" has made an enviable record as a&#13;
football man at Morningside. As captain he was a spirited&#13;
and vigorous leader. He hit the line harder than any man&#13;
on the team, ran the ends with great speed and was skilled&#13;
at the forward pass.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT VERNON"Boob" has played end at Morningside for&#13;
four years, and is one of the best men that the school has&#13;
ever produced. The best recommendation he can be given is&#13;
to say that he was accorded a place on the all Iowa team&#13;
second to none.&#13;
&#13;
-82-&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON"Jons" comes to us from Buena Vista with&#13;
a good record and his playing for the Maroons at the right&#13;
half position has been of the highest quality. His brilliancy&#13;
consists of spectacular open field running, forward passing&#13;
and surety in tackling.&#13;
THOMAS ARCHER"Tom," at right tackle, was a stone-wall&#13;
in himself. He is a large, husky, hard-working line-man of&#13;
exceptional ability, and plays a strong consistent game. His&#13;
strength was not fully appreciated until, because of an injury, he was called from the line in the Nebraska U niversity&#13;
game.&#13;
GUY McKINNEY"Mac," at center, was a man with every&#13;
qualification. He was strong and active, not too heavy but&#13;
with sufficient avordupois for a man who stars at that position. On offensive, he blocked the center well; on defensive, he tore through the opposing position.&#13;
&#13;
-83-&#13;
&#13;
SI O Ux&#13;
&#13;
SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD-&#13;
&#13;
EARL MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
"BOgie" was&#13;
our bulwark at left tackle,&#13;
He was a strong man in both offensive and defensive, many&#13;
times succeeding in breaking up his opponents play and rarely failing to open holes for our "backs" to go through.&#13;
&#13;
"Hoodie," at quarter, filled his position&#13;
well. At all times, he piloted the team with keen judgment-the right man and the right play at the right time.&#13;
Next year should find him a very efficient leader.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN HERBSTER-&#13;
&#13;
CARL NORTHRUP-&#13;
&#13;
"Herb," at right guard, although badly&#13;
injured, never quit until relieved by the coach. He comes&#13;
to us from Leander Clark with three years experience on&#13;
the gridiron. In every game he blocked his opponent well, or&#13;
tore through the opposing line.&#13;
&#13;
"Nortie," playing his second year on varsity, at right end made a line running mate for Vernon. He&#13;
was fast in going down under punts and good in interference&#13;
and defensive play. His excellency was well displayed in&#13;
the Nebraska Wesleyan game.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM PAYNE-&#13;
&#13;
WILSON CLARK-&#13;
&#13;
" Bill," at left guard, played a great game.&#13;
Large, strong and aggressive he proved a stumbling block&#13;
to every team which tried to penetrate the left side of the&#13;
line. A more willing worker, or a more consistent player&#13;
would be hard to find.&#13;
&#13;
"Wils" played both guard and full-back .&#13;
At either position he distinguished himself as a lighter, running good interference, carrying the ball well and tackling&#13;
hard. As he classes Sophomore, we predict a great player&#13;
in this man before he graduates.&#13;
&#13;
19 1 6&#13;
-84-&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 85-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYDHOWARD ALLEN"Hod," as substitute back-field man deserves much credit and praise. A harder or more aggressive&#13;
player it would be impossible to find. Only injuries kept&#13;
him from making a letter this year.&#13;
&#13;
"Tom" as substitute quarter was a good&#13;
man. At all times he kept the regulars fighting for their&#13;
positions. One years experience, combined with his strength&#13;
and speed should make him a valuable man for Morningside .&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS-&#13;
&#13;
EWART WILLIAMS"Bill" failed in making a letter by only a&#13;
few minutes play, when his collar bone was broken. He&#13;
was placed in Capt. Eiffert' s position and filled it creditably,&#13;
carrying the ball fast and hard and tackling every man with&#13;
sureness.&#13;
&#13;
"Bill," as a line substitute, was called upon&#13;
several times. Wherever he was placed he proved a strong&#13;
and heady player. Although this is not his particular field&#13;
of athletics, his size and speed make him a good man for the&#13;
gridiron .&#13;
HENRY COTTAM-&#13;
&#13;
ELIHU SHOEMAKER"Shoie," the big husky line substitute, was&#13;
a stone-wall to the enemy in every game in which he played.&#13;
His weight with more experience would have made him of&#13;
varsity caliber.&#13;
&#13;
-86-&#13;
&#13;
"Heinie" was Captain of the reserves, playing quarter back for that aggregation. He led his team&#13;
with such ability that it kept the varsity watchful at all&#13;
times for new plays. His past two years experience in&#13;
football on Bass Field will make him a strong bidder for the&#13;
varsity next fall.&#13;
&#13;
-87-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Football Season of 1914&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
College opened with many clouds on the&#13;
T HE football season at Morningside Coach Saunderson, aided by Morningsidehorizon,&#13;
but they were brushed away by&#13;
spirit.&#13;
&#13;
In reviewing the material which reported at the first nights practice, we miss the&#13;
faces of McCurdy and Wright of the line, Capt. Holbert, Behmer and Cobbs of the&#13;
back field, men whose places were hard to fill. However, by the persistent drive of our&#13;
coach and the old spirit of Morningside in each mans heart, they were filled .&#13;
The Sioux warriors first matched their strength against their old rival at Yankton,&#13;
who was smarting under the 33-0 defeat administered the year previous. After the&#13;
game fight put up by Yankton, our warriors again attached her scalp to their belt by a&#13;
48-0 score.&#13;
The Morningside Redmen met a good team at Simpson, a team likewise feeling&#13;
the smarts of defeat suffered at their hands in 191 3. Here again our lines held at every&#13;
critical moment and our backs tore through the line, or skirted the ends at will.&#13;
However, to play against fate is an impossibility. Owing to injuries received in&#13;
practice, our team work was shattered when we met the greatest team in the West, Nebraska University . However, our showing was creditable as we succeeded in getting&#13;
the pigskin across the goal line, in the last few minutes of play, a feat not accomplished&#13;
by larger schools.&#13;
Again our old rivals, the Coyotes, carried away our scalp after an hour of the&#13;
stiffest fighting ever seen in Sioux City. Each point gained by Vermillion was won only&#13;
after every ounce of energy had been put to test by the Morningside men. But superior&#13;
weight will tell and Morningside again saw a year pass without a coyote pelt to lay at&#13;
her door.&#13;
The last game of the season with Nebraska Wesleyan at Lincoln was a defeat for&#13;
the Maroons. The previous year Morningside had amassed a total of 33 points&#13;
against the Nebraska school. However, after the two university games of this year, and&#13;
the reception of so many injuries, we were in no shape to win.&#13;
The football season, as a whole, was a success. We came out victorious in games&#13;
with colleges of our size, and put up a good showing against the universities.&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE&#13;
Results&#13;
M'Side&#13;
()pponents&#13;
Oct. 10 -Yankton College ................ .. .. . ... .. 48&#13;
0&#13;
Oct. 1 7- Wayne Normal (forfeited) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1&#13;
0&#13;
Oct. 24- Dakota Wesleyan .. . . . . . . . ...... . .. .. .. . .. 14&#13;
7&#13;
Oct. 30- Simpson ... . .. . . . . . .. .. . .... .. .. . . ..... 33&#13;
0&#13;
Nov.&#13;
7-N ebraska University ..... . ..... . . . . ... . . . .. 7&#13;
34&#13;
Nov. 14- University of South Dakota . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
20&#13;
Nov. 20-Nebraska Wesleyan . . . .. . . . .... . .......... 0&#13;
13&#13;
Total. . .. . ... . . . . 103&#13;
&#13;
74&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
- 88-&#13;
&#13;
- 89-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SI OU X&#13;
&#13;
The baseball season in 191 4 opened with bright prospects, under the leadership of&#13;
Captain Cobbs. Of the team of the previous year, all reported except Captain Holbert&#13;
and George Prichard. These vacant positions were filled most creditably by new&#13;
material.&#13;
Our opening game was lost to the Hornick town team, but, from that time on, our&#13;
team was formidable against opposing colleges, winning one game from our old rival, .&#13;
Vermillion, and capturing Yankton's scalp, who had the record of winning every game&#13;
for three years.&#13;
&#13;
In our game at Anthon, lost by a score of 1 to 0, the star was Herbert Dunham,&#13;
who pitched a no hit game. This is quite remarkable when we consider the caliber of&#13;
the Anthon team.&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Under the leadership of Captain Eiffert, elect, and with the team losing but one&#13;
man, the record for Morningside in baseball next year can be predicted in no other way&#13;
than that it will be a brilliant success.&#13;
&#13;
R. PRICHARD&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
&#13;
Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
M'Side&#13;
1 6-Hornick town team, Bass Field. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3&#13;
27- University of S. D., Bass Field . ... . .. . ........ 7&#13;
4 -Yankton College, Yankton, S. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6&#13;
5-University of S. D., Vermillion, S. D .. . . . . . ... . 0&#13;
14-South Dakota School of Mines, Bass Field. . . . . . 6&#13;
28-Anthon Town T earn, Anthon, la. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
&#13;
Results&#13;
Opponents&#13;
8&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
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CLOUGH&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
DUNHAM&#13;
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...&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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Sioux&#13;
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The track season opened with gloomy prospects, for the old Morningside stars, such&#13;
as Montgomery, Kingsbury, Lemon, Holbert and Wickens did not report for work outs.&#13;
Nearly every event · had to be filled with a new man, but in reviewing the season we see&#13;
that each place was filled with a considerable degree of success.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
IN TRACK&#13;
&#13;
The opening contest on Bass Field was the Home Meet, which was won by the&#13;
Juniors. Although our men showed up strong in numerous events, the Coyotes · demonstrated their superiority in our first inter-scholastic event, by a decisive score.&#13;
Our next contest was with Nebraska Wesleyan at Lincoln. Last year w.e lost to&#13;
this school by a close score and this year they again lived up to their reputation by administering a defeat of 65 to 52. The Nebraska dope sheet was upset in this meet&#13;
when Upham won the 100 yard dash and Curry lowered the collegiate record for the&#13;
880 yard dash.&#13;
Morningside again won honors in the Conference meet at Coe when .Curry clipped&#13;
a margin of 1 1/ 5 seconds from the conference record for the half, and when Noel&#13;
Williams lowered the time for the mile by 2 / 5 of a second. In the State Meet Morningside ranked fifty and was only outclassed by Coe, which was the only other college in&#13;
the State to rank above the Maroons .&#13;
From this review the record does not seem to be great, but, considering that Morningside was developing an entirely new team the results have a far greater significance .&#13;
This ability to develop winners from raw recruits augers well for the future. All of the&#13;
team have stated their expectation to return next year. This, together with the ability of&#13;
an exceptionally strong Freshman class, should&#13;
place Morningside in a most favorable place for laurels next season .&#13;
&#13;
Coach Saunderson and the prospects of&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SCHEDULE&#13;
Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
18-Drake Relay Meet.&#13;
25-Home Meet- won by Juniors.&#13;
2-Dual Meet with U. S. D.-Bass Field-won by Vermillion.&#13;
8 - lnvitation "M" Meet- Bass Field- won by LeMars.&#13;
9 - Dual Meet with Neb. Wesleyan- Lincoln, Neb.,- won by Neb. Wes . .&#13;
15-Conference Meet at Coe.&#13;
23-State Meet-Des Moines-Morningside fourth place.&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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Nebraska Wesleyan Meet&#13;
&#13;
MORLEY&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. LUEDER&#13;
&#13;
High Hurdles-Vernon, Morningside, first; Warner, Wesleyan, second .... .. ... . 18&#13;
Mile- Gillilan, Wesleyan, first; Williams, Morningside, second ........ . .. .. . .4 :42&#13;
100-yard Dash- Upham. Morningside, first; Johnson, Wesleyan, second ...... 10 4 / 5&#13;
440-yard Dash-McCandlass, W esleyan, first; Engle, M orningside, second .... 5 3 3/5&#13;
Low Hurdles-Warner, Wesleyan, first; McCandlass, W esleyan, second . .... . .. . . 28&#13;
Half Mile-Curry, Morningside, first; G illilan, Wesleyan, second . . ...... 2 :03 1/ 5&#13;
T wo-mile- Brunig, Wesleyan, first; Lavely, M orningside, second . . .. .. . ... .. 10 :29&#13;
High Jump- Mclntosh, Morningside, and Hayworth Wesleyan, tied for first . . 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Hammer-Lesh, Wesleyan, first; Stryker, Wesleyan second . ........ 123 ft. 9 1/2 m.&#13;
Shot Put- Johnson, Wesleyan, first; Vernon, Morningside, second ....... 28 ft. 2 m.&#13;
P ole Vault- Brown, Morningside, fi rst; Lueder, Morningside, second .. . . 10 ft. 9 m.&#13;
Broad Jump-Hayworth, Wesleyan, first; Geo. Hayworth, Wesleyan, sec . . 22 ft. 1 m.&#13;
Discus- Vernon, Morningside, first; Durham, Wesleyan, second . .. . . . . 11 0 ft. 8 in.&#13;
220-yard Dash- Fetz, W esleyan, first; U pham, Morningside, second . . .. . . . ..... 2 3&#13;
Half-mile Relay- W esleyan won ........... .. ... . ..... . ... . ... .... 1 :33 1/ 5&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota Meet&#13;
&#13;
The Drake Relay Meet is one of the track events to which Morningside looks&#13;
forward each year. We have made records that we have right to be proud of in this&#13;
meet, however, coming early in the season, it proved too much for our new men this year&#13;
and we did not succeed in winning. Next year the story will be different.&#13;
&#13;
Those winning were:&#13;
Mile Relay- Coe, Hamlin&#13;
Two Mile Relay-South Dakota, Yankton&#13;
&#13;
120-yard Hurdles- Quigley, S. D ., first ; Vernon, Morningside, second . .. . . . .. 17 1/ 5&#13;
Half-mile-Olson, S. D., first; Curry, Morningside, second ...... ... ... . . . .. . 2:07&#13;
100-yard Dash- Quigley, S. D., first; U pham, Morningside, second .... ... . 10 2/ 5&#13;
Shot-Eiffert, Morningside, first; Vernon, Morningside, second . . . . . .. . .. 35 ft. 4 in.&#13;
High Jump- McIntosh, Morningside, first; Frear and Collins, S. D ., second . 5 ft. 2 in.&#13;
220-yard D ash- Quigley, S. D., first; Upham, M orningside, second . . . . . . . . 23 2 / 5&#13;
Mile-Williams, Morningside, first; Carlson, S. D ., second . . . ......... .... . .4:45&#13;
440-yard Dash- Willy, S. D., first; M eade, S. D. , second ............ . . . . 53 215&#13;
Broad Jump--Vernon, Morningside, first; Gilbertson, S. D ., second . . .... 20 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus- V ernon, Morningside, first; Ferguson, S. D ., second ...... ... . . 11 6 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Low Hurdles- Quigley, S. D., first; R owe, S. D ., second ..... . . .. ..... .. . .. . 29&#13;
Pole Vault- Lueder, Morningside, first; McKay and Bates, S. D., second .. 9 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Two-mile Run- D eakin, Morningside, first; Lavely, Morningside, second ...... 1O:35&#13;
Mile Relay-South Dakota . .. . . . ........ . .... . .. . . . ......... .. . . 3 :36 4/ 5&#13;
&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Hamlin, Coe&#13;
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SI OUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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.&#13;
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New Record .&#13;
&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
The Coe&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
M&#13;
E M&#13;
E&#13;
CASTLE RELAY.&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
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IVANHOE ?.&#13;
&#13;
Conference Meet&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash- Bailey (Coe), Lynch (Grinnell), Manley (Cornell) . . . . . . :10 1/5&#13;
Mile Run- Williams (Morningside), Walker (Cornell), Barlow (Coe) . . .. 4:40 2/ 5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- Lighter (Coe), J. Cliton (Cornell), Massey (Coe) ...... : i 6&#13;
*440 Yard Dash- Bailey (Coe), Armstrong (Des Moines), Norris (Grinnell) :5 1 1/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-West (Coe), O'Brien (St. Joseph), Dritt (Highl'd Pk.) .25 415&#13;
Mile-Curry (M'side), Maples (Simpson), Townsend (Grinnell) .. . 2 :02 2/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Lighter (Coe) and Manley (Cornell), Tied for first,&#13;
Lynch (Grinnell) .. . . .. . .. . ........... .. .. . .. .. . . . ... . .. :23&#13;
Mile Relay-Coe, Grinnell, Cornell . .. ... .......... . . .. . . . ... . . ... . . . 3 :40 3/ 5&#13;
Two Mile- Townsend (Grinnell), Thompson (Cornell), O tis (Coe) .. ...... 10:29&#13;
*Pole Vault- Verink (Coe), Clapper (I. S. T. C), Willits (Grinnell),&#13;
Lueder ( M' side), and Brown ( M' side), Tied for third . . 11 ft 9 1/2 in.&#13;
Discus-Knapp (Coe)), Vernon (Morningside), Carter (Grinnell) .. . . 127 ft. 4 in.&#13;
High Jump--Verink (Coe) and J. Clinton (Cornell), Tied for first; McIntosh .&#13;
(M'side), and W. Clinton (Cornell), Tied for third .... 5 ft. 6 1/4 m.&#13;
*Shot Put-Carlstrom (Coe), Verink (Coe), Vernon ( M 'side) . . . . . . . ..... 4 2 ft.&#13;
in.&#13;
Broad Jump--Lighter (Coe), J. Clinton (Cornell) Tooley (Grinnell) .. 21 ft 4 1/4&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Coe, Cornell, Grinnell. . .... .. . ... .. . . . ..... . ... .. .. .. I :36&#13;
&#13;
*R eco rd bro k en.&#13;
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Sioux&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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The "M" Meet is an invitation High School meet held each year under the auspices&#13;
of the "M" Club of Morningside College. There are from fifteen to twenty schools&#13;
which contend each year, making an event of stronger competition than any other similar&#13;
contest. This gives the College an opportunity to see, at their best, the athletes of her&#13;
constituency, besides engendering a good spirit between the high schools and the college .&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS IN MILE&#13;
&#13;
STATE MEET&#13;
&#13;
Three medals are given to the successful contestants in each event-gold, silver and&#13;
bronze. There are also various cups offered. The Tribune Cup and the Palmer Cup&#13;
are given each year to the school which wins the meet. The College gives a cup to each&#13;
member of the winning relay team and to the individual who wins the most points in the&#13;
meet. The Philo Society Cup is given to the school whose representatives are successful&#13;
in the relay race, and is to become the permanent property of the school which shall first&#13;
win it three times .&#13;
The weather conditions were as favorable as possible for the meet this year. This&#13;
resulted in many good records and one of the largest crowds that have ever witnessed&#13;
an everit of any kind on Bass Field. There were approximately two thousand spectators.&#13;
&#13;
RECORDS OF M CLUB INTERSCHOLASTIC MEET&#13;
&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Schraeder (Ia.) and Lighter (Coe) Tied for first,&#13;
McHenry (Drake) .. . ............ .. ..... . . . .. .. .. ... : 15 4 / 5&#13;
Mile Run-Watson (Drake), Thomas (Drake), Williams (Morningside) . . 4 :25 215&#13;
High Jump-Schraeder (Ia.) and Burrus (Ames), Tied for first,&#13;
Blackburn (Drake) ...... . .... .. .... . .... . ... . .. 5 ft. 9 1/4 in .&#13;
I 00 Yard Dash-Baily (Coe), Shearer (Drake), Dick (Iowa) .. ... . ... . : IO 2/ 5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Baily (Coe), Iverson (Ames), Johnson (Highland Park) . . :50 4/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Leeder (Coe), Schraeder (Ia.), Noble (Ames) .. .. ... . :22 2/ 5&#13;
Discus- Simons (Drake), Vernon (Morningside), Marcin (Ia.) . . . ... . . 121 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Krull (Drake), Crull (Drake), Beck (Ames) . . . . .... . . .. 29 ft. 3Yz in.&#13;
Half Mile-Parsons (Ia.), Haggard (Ames), Tyler (Iowa) . ... . . . . . .. .. I :58 3/ 5&#13;
220 Yard Dash- Shearer (Drake), Frasier (Ames), Collins (Ames) . .. . .... . . :22&#13;
Pole Vault-Schraeder (Ia.), and Smith (Ames), Tied for first,&#13;
Lueder (Morningside) . .. . .. . . ..... . .. ....... . .. 11 ft. 5 1/2 in .&#13;
Mile Relay-Ames, Iowa, Coe . .. . . ... .. .. . . .... . ... .... . ... . .. . ... 3:26 415&#13;
Two Mile-Makestadt (Ames). Fieke (Drake), Garst (Ames) .. . .. .. . ... 10:8 1/2&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Drake, Ames, Iowa . .. . ... ...... . . .. .. . .... .. . .. . I :31 1/ 5&#13;
Broad Jump-Shearer (Drake) , Lighter (Coe) , Tooley (Grinnell) . . . . .. 21 ft. 5 in.&#13;
&#13;
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100 Yard Dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909 and Osborne (LeMars), 1911 .. :10 flat&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Wilson (Cherokee), 1911 ... .. ... . .. .. . .. .. . .. . .... . . :23&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Foell (Storm Lake), 1909 .......................... . .. :55&#13;
Half Mile-Rodgers (Yankton), 1914 ..... ... .. .. .... . . . ........ .. .. . . 2 :07&#13;
Mile-Deally (Hawarden), 1914 .... . ...... .. .. . ... . . . . . .. .. .. .... .. .4:55&#13;
120 Hurdles-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911 ... . ..... . . . .. . . . ..... .. .. . . .. .. : 17&#13;
220 Hurdles-Quigley (Hawarden), 1911 . . . ..... . ..... .. . .... ...... :27 4 / 5&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder (Cherokee), Peterson (Centerville, S. D.), and Wilkins&#13;
(Correctionville) , 191 1 .. .. ... . .... . .. . ... . . .. ...... 1 1 feet&#13;
High Jump-Aldrich (Sioux City), 1911 ... . ... ....... . . . ....... 5 feet 8 inches&#13;
Broad Jump-Vernon (Hawarden), 1911 .... . ............. . . 19 feet 9 1/2 inches&#13;
Hammer-Gilliland (Storm Lake), 1911 . . .. ( 12 pound hammer) 146 feet, 3 inches&#13;
Shot-Elliott (Hurley, S. D.), 1909 .. .. .. .... ( 12 pound shot) 43 feet, 8 1/4 inches&#13;
Discus- Knapp (Cherokee), 1911 ... . ..... . ...... . .. . .. . .. . .. .. . . ... 110 feet&#13;
Half Mile Relay-LeMars, 1909 .. ..... . . . . . ........ . . .. .. . .. .. .. .. ... 1 :39&#13;
Mile Relay-LeMars, 1909 .................. .. .. . . . ........... 3 :4 7 3/ 5&#13;
SCHOOLS THAT HAVE WON&#13;
May 7, 1909-Storm Lake&#13;
May 10, 1912-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
May 6, 191 0-Sioux City&#13;
May 9, 191 3-Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
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I 6&#13;
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-103-&#13;
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May 6, 1911-Cherokee&#13;
May 9, 1914-LeMars&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Cross&#13;
Country&#13;
Run&#13;
&#13;
TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
McCONKEY&#13;
&#13;
THEMonument&#13;
&#13;
Run&#13;
&#13;
The cross country run to Floyd's Monument and return takes place each year on&#13;
February 22, and is one of the most interesting contests of all that the athletics of the&#13;
school afford. No matter what the weather conditions may be, this event is never postponed. It has already become one of Morningside's few traditions.&#13;
Besides the competition that is always engendered by a contest of this kind, added&#13;
inducement is offered by medals which are presented. The winners of first, second and&#13;
third places receive, respectively, a gold, silver and bronze medal. The first academy man&#13;
to finish receives a gold medal also.&#13;
This year the trail was heavy and the time therefore somewhat slower than last&#13;
year.&#13;
Lavely, a Senior, broke all previous records last year and won again this year,&#13;
butwith Van Horne a close second. The other winners were McConkey, third, and&#13;
Trefz, the first academy man to finish, fourth . There were nine men in all who entered.&#13;
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19&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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100 Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908 .. . ......................... . ...... 10 :00&#13;
220 Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903 .......... . ..... .. ..... . ........ 22 l /5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Y. E. Montgomery, 1913 ....... .... ........... . .... 51 415&#13;
880 Yard Run-W. E. Curry, 1914 .... .. ...... . ................. . 2:02 2/ 5&#13;
Mile Run-A P. Berkstresser, 1908 ..... . .. . . . .... . .......... . ·&#13;
&#13;
4:40&#13;
&#13;
Two Mile Run-L. R. Chapman, 1908 ............................... 10 :05&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910 .. ......... . ..... .. ...... 25 l /5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-E. G . Quarnstrom, 1911 . ......................... 15 4/ 5&#13;
High Jump-W. McIntosh .............. .. ............ ... ... 5 ft. 7 1/2 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E. West, 1911 ............. .. . .&#13;
&#13;
. ............. 21 ft. 2 m.&#13;
&#13;
Shot Put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912 . ..... .. ...... .. . ............ 39 ft. 1/2 m.&#13;
Hammer Throw-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911 ..................... . 121 ft. 31/2 m.&#13;
Discus- D. L. Wickens, 1911. .... .. .. ................ · ..... . .... 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay- V. E. Montgomery, A. P . Berkstresser, E. G. Quarnstrom,&#13;
F. E. Burns, 1909 . . ....... . .. .......................... 3 :36 2/5&#13;
Two Mile Relay-AC. Lemon, W. H. Bowker, L. H . Kingsbury,&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, 1912 . ................ . ... .. ......... ... 8:28 4/5&#13;
Monument Run- V. Lavely, 1914 ................ . ......... .. . 18:01 2/ 5&#13;
Pole Vault- Herman Leuder ...... ... .......................... . 11 ft. 1 in .&#13;
&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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Basket Ball Series&#13;
MEN'S SCHEDULE&#13;
Seniors 26&#13;
Sophs. 15&#13;
&#13;
Seniors 14&#13;
Freshmen, 2nd place&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 35&#13;
Acad . 10&#13;
&#13;
Soph. 40&#13;
Acad . 9&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 25&#13;
&#13;
}&#13;
&#13;
Soph. 16&#13;
Sophomores, 1st place&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 36&#13;
Juniors 19&#13;
&#13;
Fresh. 15&#13;
&#13;
Juniors 9&#13;
Soph. 19&#13;
&#13;
Soph.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors 23&#13;
Acad. 20&#13;
&#13;
}&#13;
&#13;
Seniors 15&#13;
Juniors, 3rd place&#13;
&#13;
Juniors 22&#13;
Acad. 5&#13;
&#13;
Juniors 22&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS SCHEDULE&#13;
Acad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8- Soph. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
Soph. . . .. . ...... ... . 12-Senior............... 10&#13;
Fresh. . .......... . .. . 19-Acad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
Fresh. . . . . ........... I 2-Soph. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Acad. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-Senior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
Fresh. . . .. . . .. . ..... . 10- Senior .. . ..... . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Freshmen ........ . . .. . ............ . ... . First Place&#13;
Academy . ...... .. ...... . .. ... . .... Second Place&#13;
Sophomores . . .. . .............. . .... . .. Third Place&#13;
&#13;
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CLOUGH&#13;
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CURRY&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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By PROF. MARGARET BRAND&#13;
&#13;
F. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
With the opening of the Alumni Gymnasium last year, a new department was born&#13;
at Morningside College-the department of physical training. Now, at the close of this&#13;
first years work, it is well to stop a moment in our mad pursuit and ask ourselves " Why?"&#13;
What is it we are pursuing? Is the prize worth the time and the effort of the chase?&#13;
Ask the average person what is the use of Physical Training, and nine times out of&#13;
ten he will answer, "To make our men strong and our girls graceful." Certainly strength&#13;
and grace should be among the results obtained, but again we must ask Why? Would&#13;
these alone be worth the cost? A second anwser comes, "Health." Yes, health, too,&#13;
we are seeking. But after all, are not all of these-strength, health, grace- merely&#13;
letters which go to make up that key-word of this twentieth century, EFFICIENCY?&#13;
&#13;
C. SHADE&#13;
&#13;
The body is not even a mere machine run by the mind. It is a part of that mind;&#13;
and they cannot be trained separately. Physical training, then, is not simply physical&#13;
training. It is one branch in the development of the completely efficient man.&#13;
&#13;
--110-&#13;
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GIRLS GYM. CLASS&#13;
MENS GYM. CLASSES&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SI OUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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Girls' Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Dual Debate&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Dual Debate&#13;
SIMPSON COLLEGE, APRIL 20, 19 J 5&#13;
&#13;
MoRNINGSIDE, APRIL&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
SIMPSON COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
VS.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
SIMPSON COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
, RESOLVED : That ( constitutionality granted) the&#13;
Federal Government should prohibit Interstate Traffic&#13;
in goods produced wholly or partly by Child Labor.&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED: That ( constitutionality granted) the&#13;
Federal Government should prohibit Interstate Traffic&#13;
in goods produced wholly or partly by Child Labor.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Simpson&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Simpson&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
DECISION:&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
- 117-116-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
J. DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
NOVEMBER 13, 1914&#13;
&#13;
FEBRUARY 23, 1915&#13;
&#13;
"Cost of Child Labor," First&#13;
&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
"The Power of Peace," Second&#13;
&#13;
J. DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES H. KLIPPLE&#13;
CLARENCE T. CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
" Inevitable Peace," Third&#13;
"Who Built Babylon?"&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
"The Prize of an Awakened Nation," Second&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES HUTTON&#13;
&#13;
"A Plea for Prohibition," Third&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPLE&#13;
&#13;
A . C . D E LAPP&#13;
&#13;
"Commercial Militarism"&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
"Public Opinion and the Liquor Traffic&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
ST A TE PROHIBITION ORATORI CAL CONTEST&#13;
INDIANOLA, APRIL 9, 1915&#13;
&#13;
ST A TE ORATORI CAL CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
"Public Opinion and the Liquor Traffic&#13;
&#13;
-118-&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE&#13;
&#13;
"The Industrial Mandate," First&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN, Simpson&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
RICHARD L. MITCHELL, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
-119-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
lnter-Society&#13;
Debate ·&#13;
NOVEMBER 30, 1914&#13;
&#13;
ION IAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
OTHO N IAN&#13;
&#13;
VERNON S TE NSETH&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED: T h a t t h e&#13;
Federal Government should&#13;
Own and Operate all InterState R ailways .&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, MARCH 9, 1915&#13;
"America's Mission," First&#13;
&#13;
VERNON STENSETH&#13;
&#13;
"The Havoc of Commercialism," Second&#13;
&#13;
WILLIS F ORBES&#13;
&#13;
"The Mission of the United States"&#13;
&#13;
ARTH UR L OCKE&#13;
&#13;
" Ideas and War"&#13;
&#13;
PAUL BOODAGH&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeIonian&#13;
&#13;
H ERMAN BOGARD&#13;
&#13;
"The World Without War"&#13;
&#13;
NegativeOthonian&#13;
STA TE PEACE ORATORICAL C ONTEST&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, APRIL 9, 191 5&#13;
Morningside tied with P arsons for third place.&#13;
Simpson C ollege won First.&#13;
&#13;
DECISION:&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
Negative&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
- 120-&#13;
&#13;
-1 21-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
DECEMBER 1, 1914&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
D ECEMBER 2, 19 14&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
PHILO MAT HEAN&#13;
&#13;
O T HONIAN&#13;
&#13;
VS.&#13;
&#13;
vs .&#13;
&#13;
ION IA N&#13;
&#13;
P HILO MATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTIO N:&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED: T hat th e&#13;
Fed eral Government should&#13;
own and operate all InterState R ailways.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED: T hat the&#13;
F ederal Government should&#13;
O wn and Operate all InterState R ailways.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativePhilomathean&#13;
&#13;
N egativeIonian&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeO thonian&#13;
&#13;
NegativePhilomathean&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative 4&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-122-&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
- 1 23-&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter- Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Sioux CITY, IOWA,&#13;
MARCH 19, 19 15&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
vs .&#13;
&#13;
CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA MARCH 19, 1915&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STA TE TEACHER'S COLLEGE&#13;
QUESTION :&#13;
R ESOLVED: That the Federal Government should&#13;
own and operate all Inter.State Railways.&#13;
AffirmativeMorningside College&#13;
NegativeIowa State Teacher's College&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
COE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Collegiate Debate&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED: That the Federal Government should&#13;
own and operate all Inter.State Railways.&#13;
&#13;
WINFIELD, .KANSAS, APRIL 9, 1915&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE C OLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeCoe College&#13;
NegativeMorningside College&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
- 124-&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
-125-&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
D ebate&#13;
D ECEMBER 3, 1914&#13;
&#13;
S TATE O RATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1901- Toothaker ..............................................Ehmmated on thought&#13;
H. A. Keck...................Seventh&#13;
o2-A, R.&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
C. H all ..........................................................Fourth&#13;
1904- R. E. Heilman ................................................. .&#13;
1905- G. J. Poppenheimer ........................................&#13;
1903-D.&#13;
&#13;
1906-7- A. G. Cushman ··::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Fifth&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer.......................................... Second&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer. ......................................... First; Interstate, ·E ighth&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
A D ELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
R ESOLVED: Tha t a S ingle&#13;
Tax on all land values should&#13;
be gradually substituted for&#13;
all other forms of Taxation .&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeH awkeye&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
DECISION:&#13;
Affirma tive 3&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
-126-&#13;
&#13;
1907-. Barrett ..................................................Third&#13;
Ida Lewis.................Fifth&#13;
1908--G. W&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill... ....................................................... Second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson .................................................. First ; Interstate, Third&#13;
1911-W. A. McCurd y ................................................ Sixth&#13;
1912-C. E . Smith ...................................................... Fifth&#13;
1913-J. L. Ralston .................................................... Thi rd&#13;
1914-R. L. Mitchell ..................................................S econd&#13;
1915-R. L . Mitchell .................................................. Second&#13;
STATE P EACE O RATORI CAL AssocIATION&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson .................................................. First&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon .................................................... Fifth&#13;
1913- D. L. Wickens .................................................. First; Interstate, Third&#13;
...................................................... Fifth&#13;
1915-Vernon Stenseth ..............................................Tied for Third&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morn ingside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Mornin gside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1905- Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa U . 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1908- Upper Iowa U. O, Mor ningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan l, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morn ingside 3. Upper Iowa U. 1. Morningside 2.&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2. Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2. Dakota Wesleyan 2, Mornings ide 1.&#13;
&#13;
N egative-&#13;
&#13;
N egative&#13;
&#13;
STATE P ROHIBITION ORATORICAL A SSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch ....................................................First ; Interstate, F irst; National, Third&#13;
1902-J. N . McCay ....................................................Second&#13;
&#13;
1913- Iowa State Teachers 2, Morningside 1. Coe 1, M&#13;
0, Morningside 3.&#13;
&#13;
1914-Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3. Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1915-Iowa State T eacher s O, Morn ingside 3. Coe 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1915-Southwestern 3, Morningside O&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 127-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
:-&#13;
&#13;
Love&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
Sight&#13;
&#13;
BOOK IV&#13;
&#13;
-128-&#13;
&#13;
--129-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-130-&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-131-&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
COLORS-Scarlet and black.&#13;
MOTTO-Esse, quam videri (to be rather than to seem.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Dora Carlson&#13;
Mabel King&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
&#13;
President . . ... .. . . .. Olive Hartzell&#13;
Vice President . . . .... Dora Carlson&#13;
Secretary . . .. ... . ... Mabel Pecaut&#13;
Treasurer .. . . . .... .. Hazel Day&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
Mary Wedgwood&#13;
Fem Beacham&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 18-Zet Hen Party at Lois Crouch's.&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
25-New Zets entertain old Zets at Ethel Coomers .&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
9-German Program .&#13;
&#13;
May 18-0tho breakfast for the Zets.&#13;
Zet Talbot farm picnic.&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
1- Reception for mothers.&#13;
&#13;
June 16-Reunion.&#13;
August 4-11-Zet camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
9-Zet-Otho joint.&#13;
&#13;
October 24-Zet Open Door-"Songs of Seven."'&#13;
October 19-Zet-Otho Prom .&#13;
Dcember 1 I-Reception to the Othos at Dora Carlson's.&#13;
February 13- Banquet at the West.&#13;
February 22-Zet Grand Public-"The Heart of the World."'&#13;
&#13;
I 9 I 6&#13;
- 132-&#13;
&#13;
- 133-&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
GRAND&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
PUBLl C&#13;
&#13;
- 134-&#13;
&#13;
-13 5-&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
COLOR-Royal Purple.&#13;
MOTTO-Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re (Gentle in manner, resolute in deed.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
H. L. Dunham&#13;
&#13;
President ........... R. R. Vernon&#13;
Vice President .. . .. .. W. B. Costar&#13;
Secretary ...... . . ... G. D. McKinney&#13;
Treasurer .. ..... . . . . H. L. Dunham&#13;
&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
W. B. Costar&#13;
J. R. Kolp&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 2 7- G rand Public.&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4- Reception to the Zetaletheans.&#13;
&#13;
May 18- Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 25-Stag.&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
1- Final debate of the gold medal senes.&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
8- Graduating exercises.&#13;
&#13;
June 16- Reunion.&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
2- Annual Otho stag.&#13;
&#13;
October 19- Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 30- 0tho-Ionian debate.&#13;
February Otho Banquet at the est.&#13;
8W&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
- 136-&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
-137-&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
W . H. Payne&#13;
C. T. Williams&#13;
M. E . Stevens&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
-138-&#13;
&#13;
-139-&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
COLORS-Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
MoTTO-Feliciter, fortiter, fideliter (Happy, brave, faithful.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President ............ Elsie Johnson&#13;
Vice President . . ... .. Florence Bull&#13;
Rec. Secretary .... ... Marion Metcalfe&#13;
C. Secretary ...... . .. Harriet Patterson&#13;
Treasurer ..... .. .... Amanda Roost&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
Marion Simme&#13;
Laura Robinson&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Ruth Blackman&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 17-Pieria-lonian ravine party.&#13;
May 25- Picnic .&#13;
June 16-Alumnae, Senior breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
October 10- 0pen door.&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
9-Pieria-lonian pep meeting.&#13;
&#13;
November 1 ?-Butterfly tea for faculty ladies.&#13;
December 11-Progressive dinner for the lonians.&#13;
December 17-Christmas party,- Marion Simme's.&#13;
January 5-Shower for Helen Gullickson.&#13;
February 20-Pieria-lonian Washington birthday party.&#13;
March 1-Pieria-lonian grand public.&#13;
March 20-Formal initiation and dinner.&#13;
&#13;
-140-&#13;
&#13;
-141-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
-142-&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Colors- Royal Purple. and Old Gold&#13;
MOTTO-Possunt quod credere possunt (They are able through faith)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Spring T erm&#13;
President ... . ..... .. W. Henderson&#13;
Vice President . . .. . .. C. Sass&#13;
Rec. Secretary . .. ... H. Kilbourne&#13;
C. Secretary ...... .. E. Gould&#13;
Treasurer ..... . ... .. H . Allen&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Howard A llen&#13;
Charles Hutton&#13;
Carl Sass&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
Charles Hutton&#13;
Roland C. Frost&#13;
St. Clair Moore&#13;
Don Van Horne&#13;
&#13;
CALEN DAR&#13;
May 25-Final Gold medal debate.&#13;
June I-Up-river trip.&#13;
June 15-- Reunion.&#13;
September 28-Rush stag at the Ionian House.&#13;
November 2-Annual Halloween party .&#13;
November 9- Joint closed door.&#13;
December I - Otho-Ionian debate.&#13;
December 2-Philo-Ionian debate.&#13;
December 4- Stag Banquet at the house .&#13;
December 11-Pieria reception.&#13;
&#13;
February 20- Annual Martha Washington party&#13;
...&#13;
-144-&#13;
&#13;
-145-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-146-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-147-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Aletheia&#13;
CoLORs-Champagne and Chocolate&#13;
MOTTO-Lovers of the best .&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Sarah Crowther&#13;
Fern Marquart&#13;
Millie Corneliussen&#13;
Esther Larson&#13;
&#13;
President ........... Myrtle Britton&#13;
Vice President ....... Ruth French&#13;
Secretary . .. ... .. .. . . Lulu Hawcutt&#13;
Treasurer ...... ... . . Fern Marquart&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Olive Jones&#13;
Kathryn Leazer&#13;
Beth Edge&#13;
Vera Sipe&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 4-The New Girls entertain the Old Girls at the North Ravine.&#13;
June 6-Annual Banquet.&#13;
September 20-Watermelon spread.&#13;
September 2 7-&#13;
&#13;
hafing d ish spread.&#13;
&#13;
October 10-0pen Door .&#13;
October 17-Party at the home of Sarah Crowther.&#13;
October 20-Eats at the South Ravine .&#13;
October 31-Halloween party.&#13;
November 2 1-0pen Door.&#13;
December 12-Christmas party.&#13;
January 16-0pen Door.&#13;
February 1 3-Anniversary dinner.&#13;
March 13- 0pen Door.&#13;
March-Chafing-dish spread.&#13;
March 24-Installation of officers.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
1 6&#13;
&#13;
- 149-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-1 50-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
-1 51-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
COLORS- Light Blue and White .&#13;
&#13;
MoTTO-Utile dulce (The useful with the pleasing.)&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Balcom&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
Lydia McCreery&#13;
Anna Beard&#13;
Minnie Fry&#13;
&#13;
President . . ... ...... Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Vice President . . . . . . Edith Lyles&#13;
Rec. Secretary ....... Ethel Olsen&#13;
C. Secretary ........ Ethel Ewer&#13;
Treasurer. .... . ..... Ruby Flinn&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Lydia McCreery&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 12-Athenaeums' Mothers' Day.&#13;
June 1-Athenaeum picnic-Riverside Boat Club.&#13;
June 16-Reunion&#13;
&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
June 27- July 5-Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 19-Dinner for new members .&#13;
October 5-Alumnae party.&#13;
October 12-Joint with Philos .&#13;
October 17-Open door.&#13;
October 31-Masquerade party.&#13;
December 17-Progressive dinner in honor of the Philo debaters .&#13;
January 23-0pen&#13;
&#13;
door.&#13;
&#13;
February 3-Formal initiation of new members.&#13;
February 20- 0pen door.&#13;
&#13;
-152-&#13;
&#13;
-153-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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I&#13;
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&#13;
-154-155-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Green and Maroon.&#13;
MOTTO- VESTIGIA&#13;
Nu/la Retrorsum (No stepping backward)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
R. Prichard&#13;
C. Upham&#13;
H. French&#13;
E. Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
President .. ......... V.&#13;
Vice President ... .... R.&#13;
Secretary . . . . .. ... . . B.&#13;
Treasurer. . ... ... ... H.&#13;
&#13;
Hornney&#13;
Prichard&#13;
Brown&#13;
Cobbs&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 18-Philo Annual Trial.&#13;
May 31-Philo Up-River trip .&#13;
June 1-Philo-Athenaeum Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 4-Election of Inter-society Debaters .&#13;
June 16-Reunion.&#13;
September 21-Philo stag .&#13;
October I 5- Initiation of new members.&#13;
December 1 7-Athenaeum reception to Philos .&#13;
February 15-Philo Annual Trial.&#13;
March 8-0pen Door.&#13;
March I 5-Philo Reception to the Athenaeums.&#13;
April 26-Philo Athenaeum Grand Public.&#13;
&#13;
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Winter Term&#13;
E. Shoemaker&#13;
C. Upham&#13;
F. Bondhus&#13;
F. Phelps&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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•&#13;
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I 9&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian&#13;
COLORS-Olive Green and White.&#13;
MOTTO-To Possess the Aesthetic.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President . . ..... . .. Olive Gillies&#13;
Vice President . ... . Irene Smith&#13;
Secretary . .. ....... Edith Black&#13;
Treasurer ... . ... . .. Cleo Holmes&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Fem Hemstreet&#13;
Ula Beck&#13;
Dorothy Robinson&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Ula Beck&#13;
Ruth Belew&#13;
Edith Black&#13;
Irene Cobbs&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Verna Comoli&#13;
Marguerite Dewell&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
Irene Smith&#13;
Dorothy Robinson&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
Fern Hemstreet&#13;
Cleo Holmes&#13;
Cora Holmes&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
Lillian Smith&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
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- 1 60-&#13;
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- 1 61-&#13;
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•&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
COLORS-Cerise and White.&#13;
MOTTO- Carpediem.&#13;
&#13;
(Seize the opportunity.)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
President .......... G .&#13;
Vice President ... .. L.&#13;
Rec. Secretary .... . .L.&#13;
Treasurer .......... H.&#13;
&#13;
Omer&#13;
Steele&#13;
Berger&#13;
Hartley&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
L. Berger&#13;
R. Long&#13;
B. Brevic&#13;
H. Buehler&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
&#13;
K. Main&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
R. Harvey&#13;
G. Mulford&#13;
C. Northrup&#13;
R. Broome&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Trefz&#13;
E. Wessel&#13;
H. Buehler&#13;
E. Brewster&#13;
B. Brevic&#13;
&#13;
-162-&#13;
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R.&#13;
R.&#13;
Y.&#13;
R.&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
Steele&#13;
Lenart&#13;
Wolcot&#13;
Long&#13;
Berger&#13;
G. Omer&#13;
&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
COLORS-Nile Green and White.&#13;
MoTTo- We Succeed by Doing.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm&#13;
President . . . ....... Ruth Brown&#13;
Vice President . ... . Pauline Barret&#13;
R ec. Seccretary .... Florence Fair&#13;
C. Secretary .. . .. . . Emma Haegili&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
Clara Huchendorf&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
Nathalie Allen&#13;
Viola Lewis&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Ruth Brown&#13;
Lorene Williams&#13;
Esther Day&#13;
Clara Huchendorf&#13;
Emma Haegili&#13;
Frieda Winkle&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Graham&#13;
Myrtle Sampson&#13;
Pauline Barret&#13;
Florence Fair&#13;
Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
&#13;
Emma Hough&#13;
Nathalie Allen&#13;
Mabel Houk&#13;
Bernice Lehan&#13;
Viola Lewis&#13;
Abbie Patterson&#13;
&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
COLORS-Gold and Silver .&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO- Non palma sine pulvere (No victory without dust.)&#13;
OFFICIARY&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
President ... . .. . . . . . Garner Osborne&#13;
Vice President . . . .. . . Axel Beck&#13;
R. Secretary . . . . . . . . Fay Knapp&#13;
C. Secretary .... .. .. Gabriel Welch&#13;
Treasurer .... .. . ... . Claudius Pike&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
Lewis Bleakley&#13;
Firman Hill&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
David Bleakley&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
Wesley Dusenberg&#13;
Lewis Bleakley&#13;
Garner Osborne&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Raymond Bates&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
David Bleakley&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Walter Dunn&#13;
Floyd Ertel&#13;
Earl Engle&#13;
Jacob Shaboz&#13;
Winifred Day&#13;
&#13;
Earl Griffith&#13;
Walter Griffith&#13;
Earnest Hauswald&#13;
Firman Hill&#13;
Harry Highton&#13;
Edwin Hickman&#13;
Simeon Hickman&#13;
Walter Schrem&#13;
&#13;
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H. E. Duryea&#13;
Arthur Hopkinson&#13;
Garner Osborne&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
Ellis Markham ·&#13;
Ernest Eampson&#13;
Ernest Sanger&#13;
Victor Starr&#13;
Harry White&#13;
&#13;
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TALL CLUB&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Y. W. C. A.&#13;
The inherent nature of the college environment demands some sort of common&#13;
meeting ground for religious activities. Different experiences in college life reach different needs of the student. The principles and convictions of the religious life of our&#13;
young women are worked out through the Y. W. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
All the activities are carried on by the voluntary service of the girls. Membership&#13;
on the cabinet and committees develops a sense of moral responsibility for living the&#13;
Christian life and for exerting an influence for good in the college community. Thus&#13;
responsibility demands self expression and leads the girls to face the demands of Christ&#13;
upon their lives.&#13;
Our association receives great inspiration from inter-collegiate relationships through&#13;
the various conferences. In these gatherings the local college interests give way to the&#13;
larger demands and the young women look at C hristian enterprises from a world-wide&#13;
view point.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The Y. M. C. A .&#13;
The Y. M. C. A. in Morningside College was organized to supplement the church&#13;
work of the suburb, directly meeting the needs of the college man. The association has&#13;
kept pace with the college in its rapid development and today is deeply woven into the&#13;
fabric of the college life .&#13;
The slogan of the organization adopted at the Lake G eneva S tudent's Conference&#13;
last spring was indeed a splendid program, " to guard, convert, develop, enlist and train,&#13;
every man in school." With this great perspective before the college men of today, and&#13;
of Morningside, Christian spirit and action is challenged to do its utmost.&#13;
.&#13;
The factors which furnish the motive power to carry out this program are the&#13;
Christian men of the school, and they have various lines along which to work. The opportunities are many for faithful service, in attending and taking part in the weekly&#13;
devotional meetings, promoting the finances, attending and seeing that every available&#13;
man is attending bible study, and above all the splendid opportunity a college of this&#13;
kind offers for real inspiring personal work. R are friendships are found in college and&#13;
sincere Christian men are able to keep M orningside standards of action upon a high level,&#13;
and always respond to the ever challenging call to step "higher up."&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
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S IOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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Morningside College, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
DEAR SICILY ANNE:-&#13;
&#13;
Home again, and of course it is good to be here, but I suppose I can scarcely&#13;
wait until time to start back next fall. This has been the best year M orningside has&#13;
ever known, and the Agora Club has been largely the cause of this. Just let me tell you&#13;
about it and then I know you will w ant to come to our college next year.&#13;
We have one meeting each month. These are planned a year in advance, and&#13;
each is different.&#13;
Some months competent women give us talks on subjects of&#13;
interest to girls, such as health and etiquette. One time we have what we call&#13;
"stunt night," then each class in college, the academy, and the faculty, see who can put&#13;
on the best stunt. You can just imagine how much fun that would be. Twice a year&#13;
we give parties to all the men in school. O f course we do our very best at entertaining&#13;
and the men assure us that they appreciate our efforts. The Agora banquet is one of our&#13;
biggest social events. Every girl in school is sure to be there, besides many alumni and&#13;
senior High School girls from all over the state. Here you get real college spirit.&#13;
&#13;
YMCA&#13;
&#13;
Now just a few things we did this year to make our new girls feel that this college&#13;
is really theirs. We had a big sister club of Senior and Junior girls, each one of whom&#13;
took a new girl as her little sister. We had lots of fun having parties and wiener roasts&#13;
and found that this was the best plan ever to make acquaintances and form friendships.&#13;
&#13;
LAKE&#13;
&#13;
This year, through the Agora, our girls glee club has been organized.&#13;
success and will make our college still more popular.&#13;
&#13;
It is a big&#13;
&#13;
During the football season about one hundred and fifty of us accompanied our&#13;
girdiron heroes to Lincoln, one of the biggest games of the season. The Agora agitated&#13;
the idea, and by hard work pushed it through. Every one had the best time ever, and&#13;
we hope to do the same thing next year.&#13;
Much interest has been shown in our walking club. The girls love these walks&#13;
partly for the recreation and exercise, but more especially because on these trips they&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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.&#13;
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have discovered the marvelous beauty surrounding our campus on the hill.&#13;
we have visited interesting factories of Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
On these walks&#13;
&#13;
The girls' edition of the Collegian Reporter has aroused much enthusiasm. Here&#13;
again we have shown ourselves to be as capable as the men in a financial as well as in ,&#13;
a literary way.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
We have a lovely rest-room fitted out cosily and comfortably.&#13;
&#13;
In athletics we have given three medals, one of gold, one of silver, and one of&#13;
bronze, to the three girls making the most points m basketball, tennis, indoor track,&#13;
gymnasium and the walking club.&#13;
This year we have started our first girls' intercollegiate debating teams .&#13;
splendid material and we can see only success.&#13;
&#13;
We have&#13;
&#13;
I just cannot tell you everything here, but come next year and find out for yourself&#13;
how thoroughly alive we are and what jolly times we have in our Agora Club.&#13;
With heaps of love,-&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 25-Home track Meet- Agora Castle relay.&#13;
May 2- Stunt night.&#13;
May I 6- Mayday Festival.&#13;
June 6-Agora athletic meet.&#13;
October 3-Question box by Mrs. Taylor.&#13;
Nov. 7-Health&#13;
&#13;
and hygiene talk by Dr. Clara Whittemore.&#13;
&#13;
December 5- Party to the student body.&#13;
February 6-Social evenmg.&#13;
THE ST U DENT COUNCIL&#13;
&#13;
March 6- Girls banquet.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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Morningside College Girls Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COLLIER&#13;
RUTH GILLI ES&#13;
GLYDE DEVITT&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
SECOND SOPRANO&#13;
Ethel Coomer&#13;
F ranees Craig&#13;
Christine Haas&#13;
Mamie Jones&#13;
Helen Perry&#13;
Mary Royce&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
Lovice Strobel&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SOPRANO&#13;
Veda Clark&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
Clyde Devitt&#13;
Ruth Gillies&#13;
Kathryn Leazer&#13;
Alberta Still&#13;
Cecil Schmoker&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST ALTO&#13;
Vivian Down&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
Gladys Long&#13;
Laura Robinson&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Accompanist&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
G.&#13;
R.&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
KILBOURNE&#13;
McKINNEY&#13;
PRICHARD&#13;
WOOD&#13;
&#13;
J. DOLLIVER&#13;
W . PAYNE&#13;
L . CROUCH&#13;
L. LUDLUM&#13;
S. MOORE&#13;
W. WOOLE&#13;
M. DEVITT&#13;
&#13;
19 1 6&#13;
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E. WILLIAMS&#13;
M. STEVENS&#13;
L. ROBINSON&#13;
C. CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
SECOND ALTO&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Anna Evans&#13;
F ranees Wetmore&#13;
Mrs. MacCollin&#13;
Soloist&#13;
&#13;
Prof. MacCollin&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
The girls glee club was organized under the auspices of the Agora club this last&#13;
Fall. Its first appearance was made at the reception given by the Agora club to the men&#13;
of the school. Their first tour was taken during Easter vacation, when they had the&#13;
opportunity of singing at Hornick, Pierson and Kingsley. The first year of the club&#13;
has been one of success. It has filled a long felt need for a girls musical organization&#13;
similar to the Morningside College Mens Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
1916&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Glee Club&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Manager&#13;
Pianist&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
JAMES DOLLIVER&#13;
CALARENCE CRAIG&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
PROF. M. L. MARCY&#13;
PROF. PAUL MAcCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
Leon Johnson&#13;
Delbert McKinney&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
Fred Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Francis Hay&#13;
Carl Anderson&#13;
Roy Henze&#13;
Wayland Case&#13;
Richard Burrows&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Fletcher Pollock&#13;
Ralph Overholser&#13;
Tyler Williams&#13;
Lester Berger&#13;
Clarence Obrecht&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Merril Stevens&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
Charles Garlock&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTMAS TOUR&#13;
&#13;
EASTER TOUR&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
Peterson&#13;
Sac City&#13;
Early&#13;
Onawa&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Rapids&#13;
Marathon&#13;
Laurens&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
Webster City&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
Che·rokee&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
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I 6&#13;
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SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
W . A WEDGWOOD&#13;
EDITH LYLES&#13;
PROF. CHAS. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST MANDOLIN&#13;
&#13;
SE COND MANDOLIN&#13;
&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Alice Klock&#13;
W. A Wedgwood&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Bess Howell&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
Merlin Sawyer&#13;
Mabel Macomber&#13;
&#13;
TENOR MANDOLIN&#13;
&#13;
MANDO-CELLO&#13;
&#13;
GUITAR&#13;
&#13;
Mabel Banks&#13;
John D. Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. C. Templeman&#13;
&#13;
Verna Comoli&#13;
Lilah Thompson&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
&#13;
READER&#13;
&#13;
James Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Robert Vernon&#13;
&#13;
PIANO&#13;
&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
&#13;
MANDO BASS&#13;
&#13;
BANJO&#13;
&#13;
Robert Vernon&#13;
&#13;
Julia Clark&#13;
ITINERARY&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTMAS TOUR&#13;
&#13;
EASTER TOUR&#13;
&#13;
Hull&#13;
&#13;
Oakland, Neb.&#13;
Winnebago, Neb.&#13;
Sloan&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
Newell&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Sibley&#13;
Estherville&#13;
Marathon&#13;
Sutherland&#13;
&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SI OU X&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The College Band&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Mr. C. A . Templeman&#13;
DIRECTOR&#13;
CLARINETS&#13;
&#13;
CORNETS&#13;
&#13;
M. Morley&#13;
F. Bondhus&#13;
F. Conner&#13;
&#13;
M . Stevens&#13;
D. Starr&#13;
C. Obrecht&#13;
L. Phelps&#13;
&#13;
BARITONES&#13;
&#13;
ALTOS&#13;
&#13;
G. Noe&#13;
G . Miller&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington&#13;
L. Wall&#13;
&#13;
SAXAPHONE&#13;
&#13;
T ROMBONE&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington&#13;
&#13;
W . Wolle&#13;
&#13;
TUBA&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
Kolp&#13;
THE ANNUAL BOARD&#13;
&#13;
199 I 6&#13;
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S IOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Teutonia Club&#13;
The Student Volunteer Band&#13;
The objective of the Student Volunteer band is well expressed by the watchword&#13;
of the organization, "The evangelization of the world in this generation." Since its&#13;
founding, about twenty years ago, over 5000 students from the colleges in North&#13;
America have reached the front. Of these fourteen have gone out from M orningside.&#13;
The object of the local band is to promote missionary intelligence and enthusiasm&#13;
in the school, by working in conjunction with the Christian Associations. The membership is confined to those who have signed the declaration, "It is my purpose, if God&#13;
permits, to become a foreign missionary."&#13;
&#13;
Although this organization has just recently become a part of our institution, its&#13;
origin dates back to 1873, when a number of the students of the college then located at&#13;
Galena, Illinois, feeling the need of an exclusive German literary society, organized the&#13;
"Teutonia Verein." This society became and remained an important educational factor&#13;
in connection with the college in Galena and later in the same institution known as&#13;
Charles City College.&#13;
When the amalgamation of Charles City College with Morningside College was&#13;
agreed upon last June, the further existence of this society seemed rather doubtful, but in&#13;
a special meeting, it was decided to transfer this organization in connection with the&#13;
college to Morningside.&#13;
We are indeed proud of the fact, that an organization of this kind has found a place&#13;
here. For local reasons the name " T eutonia Verein" has been suspended, and " T eutonia&#13;
Club" substituted for it. Although the present membership is not large, the general&#13;
interest is good. Membership is open to any student with three years of previous training&#13;
in German,&#13;
and the ability to take part in the program, which is conducted exclusively&#13;
m German.&#13;
Many of the most prominent alumni of Charles City College feel greatly indebted&#13;
to this organization for valuable friendships and important training.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
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SI O UX&#13;
&#13;
The Prohibition League&#13;
The Morningside Prohibition League is one of two hundred and sixty similar&#13;
leagues organized in the colleges and universities of the country, under the supervision of&#13;
the National Intercollegiate Prohibition Association. The general purpose of the I. P.&#13;
A. is "the championship by the college world of the present movement for national prohibition of the liquor traffic." Oratorical contests are held, the local, state and interstate, of which there are four divisions, annually, and the national bienially. In the&#13;
twelve years existence of the local league its representatives have won, in the state contest,&#13;
three seconds and two firsts; in the interstate, one first and one third; and in the national,&#13;
one third place. In this years contest the president of the Prohibition League, R . L.&#13;
Mitchell, received second place. In addition to the contests the l.e ague holds fortnightly ·&#13;
meetings in the Association Hall, and also a weekly voluntary study class. The text used&#13;
this year was " Winning the Fight A gainst Drink," by Eaton. Several members also&#13;
assisted the Anti-Saloon League in the recent local fight.&#13;
With an enrollment of 6,500 members the I. P. A . has become "the most extensive&#13;
and widely active intercollegiate movement of a civic character in America. " The&#13;
present membership of the local league is 32. Plans are under way, however, to secure&#13;
a bigger and better league during the coming year.&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
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&#13;
The Forensic League&#13;
In 19 13 the divers forensic organizations of Morningside College were combined&#13;
into one-The Forensic League. This solved the problem, for previous to this time there&#13;
was a lack of interest in certain branches .&#13;
The means for the selection of members is as follows : Each of the three mens&#13;
literary societies elects three members, and the faculty is represented by the head of the&#13;
Public Speaking D epartment. Thus all of the interests of the school have a representa-·&#13;
tion. These members serve for one year. From among themselves they elect a president,&#13;
vice president and secretary, the head of the Public Speaking Department being the&#13;
corresponding secretary. All transactions and deliberations are governed by a constitution&#13;
and by-laws. All the forensic activities, both local and inter-collegiate are controlled by&#13;
this body. From this consolidation of the forensic interests there has come a unity and&#13;
harmony which assures a greater record for Morningside in all forensic activities.&#13;
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The Macbride Lakeside Laboratory&#13;
Last July the Macbride Lakeside Laboratory completed its seventh successful&#13;
year. The coming season will find many of the fifty students of the last term again&#13;
enrolled, eager as the new "freshies" for another summer survey of morainic hills of&#13;
picturesque rock formations, woodland shores offering exquisite moth and butterfly studies,&#13;
and the shimmering lake teeming with its myriads of wonderful biological creations.&#13;
Such evidence of student favor emphasizes the success of the institution, founded by&#13;
President T. H . Macbride, of Iowa University.&#13;
To those who delight in the study of science, or desire a greater knowledge of the&#13;
natural history of their native state, the Lakeside Laboratory presents a field unsurpassed&#13;
by any similar establishment in this part of the country. Here one may enjoy the recreative pleasures of Iowa's most beautiful summer resort, while at the same time engaged&#13;
in enjoyable and gainful study of its great natural resources.&#13;
Dr. T. C. Stephens, head of the biological department of the college, is a member&#13;
of the staff of instructors, and, it is largely due to his influence in this field that Morningside students are steadily coming to a fuller realization of the advantages of a course&#13;
at the Lake. To the students of a small institution, the various classes of college and&#13;
university men and women who attend from institutions scattered through every section&#13;
of Iowa, present a cosmopolitan atmosphere which is equivalent in many ways to a&#13;
university education itself.&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
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Every student, whether freshman or senior, should find the laboratory a most&#13;
pleasant and beneficial part of his education.&#13;
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.&#13;
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Chemistry Club&#13;
A long felt need has at last been filled by the formation of the Morningside&#13;
Chemists Club. The purpose of the organization is to promote interest in Chemistry and&#13;
to aid those who are making this branch of science their life work. Topics that are of&#13;
interest chemically and commercially are taken up and discussed at a greater length&#13;
than is possible in the regular class work. From time to time the various members give&#13;
papers or lectures on topics that are of exceptional interest and accompany them with&#13;
appropriate experiments.&#13;
One of the plans for the future is to make expeditions to the various industries in&#13;
which applied chemistry plays an important part. It is hoped that the organization will,&#13;
in time, become an honorary society, only those being admitted tto membership whose&#13;
scholarship is of the highest.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
F acuity Member&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
HERBERT FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
J. D.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
PROF. J.&#13;
&#13;
A. Coss&#13;
&#13;
REV. HERBERT ALLEN KE CK&#13;
PRESIDENT OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
THE ALUMNI&#13;
&#13;
By&#13;
&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
R. N.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
The word "Alma Mater" to a true College man implies not merely buildings, a&#13;
campus and a rolled parchment. It is a living, breathing, omnipresent force drawing him,&#13;
raising him upward and onward to achievement. It colors his dreams, it enlarges his&#13;
vision, it strengthens his purpose, it lifts him after defeat. To feel oneself a part of a&#13;
great organization has a lifting power in its self that reflects unconsciously in words and&#13;
deeds. It was this idea of organization, of strength in unity that, in the spring of 1900,&#13;
brought together a group of men and women to form the Alumni Association of Morningside College. Fifteen short summers, fifteen short winters; what does that mean but a bare&#13;
beginning in the march of centuries. Reasoning by analogy from what has been accomplished in fifteen years into the next two centuries produces results that fairly stagger.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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One can hear from many lips that our Alma Mater has had more than its share of struggle,&#13;
during its life of two decades. We do not dispute this for we know that anyone who is&#13;
familiar with them will say that the times were of a nature that simultaneously tried men's&#13;
souls and emptied their purses. Our College does not stand alone in this sort of experience&#13;
for the early history of all similar institutions of learning relate similar trials. Because&#13;
of this period of effort that has been necessary to thus far build the College the Alumni&#13;
has been taught that very useful lesson, that a College course is not intended to shield one&#13;
from all the blows of a very exacting world, but to teach one to rise above them and&#13;
contribute something for the permanent good of humanity. It is useless to repeat here the&#13;
struggles the school has been through and is now passing through; this is familiar to all.&#13;
Suffice it, at this point, to say that it is to be hoped there will continue to be a struggle .&#13;
Because things work for and attain to, unless it be a final consummation of something,&#13;
either, a Mill-Stone around the neck or merely a Mile-Stone on the road of progress. It&#13;
is also needless to give in detail the history of the Alumni Association itself. It has had a&#13;
continuous and rather quiet existence, during the fifteen years of its life. It has tried to&#13;
help the school to the full extent of its strength. This has not been anything to that which&#13;
will be done in the future, for because of the very nature of the case the Alumni are not&#13;
able to bear burdens during the first years of the life of a College. The College of the&#13;
future will more and more be fashioned by the Alumni. They will bear its burdens and&#13;
help to make its plans. It is the College of the future that we are continually looking&#13;
forward to, even though present struggles seem amply sufficient.&#13;
Much has been said concerning the position of the College strategically and of its future&#13;
in connection with the material development of this great valley of the Missouri.&#13;
We hear of the probable number in attendance, of the complete semi-circle of buildings.&#13;
It is grand and is just what should be and, in all probability, will be. Of the spirit of&#13;
the past one has said "All Morningside has is a handful of students and plenty of spirit.''&#13;
Not much has been said concerning the future spirit of our Alma Mater. This is a&#13;
serious subject. Prosperity can easily be a cause of stagnation of effort. The battle of&#13;
the future will be as to whether or no we will be as spiritual as we are prosperous. In our&#13;
annual march will our Ideals along all lines advance accordingly? We are led to&#13;
believe that we are becoming world-wide in our comprehension. We feel that we have&#13;
given of our best to the Yellow race. That we are giving Ministers, Teachers and&#13;
Laymen to humanity in some of the most strategic places of the world and at one of the&#13;
most critical times in the world's history. We are molding lives in our Alma Mater and&#13;
that Intangible something called "Spirit" that we receive must be such that it will not&#13;
only be a guide to the future Alumnus individually, but that the Individual in turn will&#13;
be able to guide others. It must not be selfish, but must, in the next century, reach such&#13;
heights as is now impossible to be conceded to be even practical. If the present Alumni&#13;
lay the proper foundations, a future structure will be reared that, in its influence, will&#13;
reach into the jungles of humanity and will have a part in the future victories of earth's&#13;
manhood; when the whole enlightened human race will sing, in one harmonious chorus,&#13;
that the complete Brotherhood of man exists.&#13;
&#13;
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Robert Negley Van Horne, Ph. B. Morningside 1900; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins&#13;
Univ. 1900-0 I. Graduate Student of Chicago&#13;
Univ. Summer 1906. Prof. of Mathematics in&#13;
Morningside College since 1902. Many of Prof.&#13;
Van Horne's major students are making good in our&#13;
surrounding High Schools. The Honorable R. E.&#13;
Root (below) is one of Prof. Van Horne's former&#13;
major students.&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Eugene Root, B. S. Morningside '05;&#13;
Instr. in Mathematics in Iowa Univ. 1906-1910;&#13;
M. S. State Univ. of Iowa 1909; Fellow in Math.&#13;
in Univ. of Mo. 1911-13; Instr. in U. S. Naval&#13;
Acad. July I 9 I 3 to Feb. I 9 I 4; Prof. of Mechanics and Engineering Math.; Post Graduate&#13;
department of the U.S . Naval Acad. Feb. 1914.&#13;
Member of the honorary scientific society, Sigma&#13;
Xi; elected in 19 I 0. Member of the American&#13;
Math. Society and the Society for the promotion&#13;
of Engineering education.&#13;
&#13;
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Carl W. Maynard, A B. Morningside 1905;&#13;
M. D . North Western Univ. 1910; Director of&#13;
the Health Department Laboratory, Pueblo, Colorado; Laboratory Diagnostician .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Victor Josiah Hays, A B. Morningside 1911.&#13;
Entered Iowa State Univ. as a Scholar in the&#13;
Zoology department in I 91 I ; held this position&#13;
one year. During the two years, 1912 and 1913,&#13;
held position as Fellow in the same department.&#13;
Ph. D. Iowa Univ. 1914. Prof. of Biology and&#13;
Embryology in the Medical College of Loyola&#13;
Univ., Chicago, 1914-15.&#13;
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Guy Griffin Frary, B . S. Morningside 1902 ·&#13;
Chemist State Food and Drug Commission, Vermillion, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Emerson Heilman, A. B. Morningside&#13;
1906; Ph. B., AM. North Western Univ.1907;&#13;
Ph. D . Harva rd 1913; Asst. Prof. of Political&#13;
Economy and Sociology and Chief of the Bureau&#13;
of Social Welfare University of Iowa.&#13;
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J. B. Trimble, A B . Morningside 1891 ; D .&#13;
D.; General Secretary of the Laymen's Missionary&#13;
Movement. Noble Spirit, Large Vision, A Great&#13;
Factor in the Missionary· Endeavor .&#13;
&#13;
Lydia Trimble, A B. Morningside 1904. Missionary F oochow, China. She is giving her best&#13;
in noble service to the Chinese.&#13;
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Stanley Browning Collins, A. B. Morningside&#13;
College 1907; A M. University of Penn. 1908.&#13;
N ow Secretary· of the Young Men's Christian Association in Tientsin, China .&#13;
&#13;
Carrie Brown, A. B. Morningside 1905. A .&#13;
M. Univ. of C hicago in 1907 . Student at American Academy in R ome 191 3-1 4. A cting as head&#13;
of the Latin Department of the Sioux City High&#13;
School. The first student to receive honorable&#13;
mention from Morningside College. An Alumna&#13;
to be proud of.&#13;
&#13;
Ida Belle Lewis, daughter of Bishop Lewis,&#13;
former President of Morningside College. AB.&#13;
Morningside 1909. Missionary in Tientsin, China.&#13;
Who can tell where her influence shall end?&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Edward M. Corbett, A . B . Morningside&#13;
1894; LL. B . Iowa State U niversity 1896. Now&#13;
lawyer in Sioux City, Iowa. Attorney fo r M orningside College. Member of the Committee on&#13;
Instructors, W ays and M eans Executive. A loyal&#13;
Alumnus of old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Epigrams&#13;
Clara Janette Yetter-Flint, A. B. Morningside&#13;
College 1900. A home maker. Wife of Dr.&#13;
Charles Flint, pastor of the New York Ave. ·&#13;
Church, Brooklyn.&#13;
Dr. Flint is a native of&#13;
Canada; a graduate of Victoria Univ. at Toronto.&#13;
A graduate of Drew Theological Seminary 1906.&#13;
Recently offered the Presidency of the Wesley&#13;
College of Arts and Theology in Winnepeg,&#13;
Canada.&#13;
&#13;
It requires men of Spirit to make a Morningside College; and Morningside's chief&#13;
function is to make men of Spirit.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ! The school that turns the disaster of a fire into a financial T riumph.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Spirit! Something intangible, which never fails to leave its good&#13;
impression upon all who come in contact with it.&#13;
&#13;
Energy, Sticktoitiveness, Intelligence and true Principle make Morningside Spirit.&#13;
Just this: When a Morningside man is beaten, he's dead. "It's not the fact that you're&#13;
dead that counts, but only, how did you die?" "Backbone, not wishbone brings home&#13;
the bacon."&#13;
&#13;
Frank E. Mossman, A. B. Morningside College 1903; Ph. B.; A M. Univ. of Chicago&#13;
1908; D. D. Upper Iowa Univ. Now President&#13;
of South Wes tern College at Winfield, Kansas.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
One sees from the outside an increasing development in the efficiency, spmts and&#13;
enthusiasm of the student body and faculty, which is solving the slogan, "A greater&#13;
Morningside."&#13;
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MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MEN&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Epigrams&#13;
&#13;
AT&#13;
Morningside for preparation and vision; China for work and fulfillment.&#13;
Prof. F. E Haynes PhD.&#13;
Senior Fellow&#13;
The Morningside spirit-the magnet that has drawn to this institution the&#13;
orators&#13;
and&#13;
young people of the N orthwest, the good that has spurred on our athletes,&#13;
debaters to their supreme efforts, the key that has unlocked the hearts of a constituency to&#13;
·&#13;
even to sacrifice at every crisis, the vision that has led a faculty to give itself in&#13;
give,&#13;
·&#13;
Greater Morningside&#13;
noble service, yes, the hope upon which rests our dream of the&#13;
to the M orningside Spirit be tribute forever.&#13;
&#13;
M . C. Spirit ! It is wierd. It's like all Spirits; you can't define it. You can only&#13;
feel it. The old football slogan said, " P lay the game. and don't quit until. _YOU are&#13;
·&#13;
That's what genuine M C. Spirir feels like and Spirits don t&#13;
carried from the field&#13;
die, they follow you everywhere.&#13;
&#13;
Geo. W. Prichard&#13;
LAW&#13;
&#13;
M orningside spirit is not confined to the college halls and campus for its influence&#13;
is felt throughout the country at large .&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Spirit-yesterday, today and forever!&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FORMER&#13;
&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
W H O ARE&#13;
&#13;
LEADERS.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. RD. Acheson&#13;
&#13;
-Success&#13;
&#13;
Hon. W L. Harding - LLB&#13;
Lieut. Gov. OF IOWA&#13;
&#13;
1ST. M.E. Church Sac City&#13;
12 YRS&#13;
&#13;
of service&#13;
&#13;
Chas McCaffree&#13;
Pres. SD State&#13;
Poultry&#13;
&#13;
Pres. STATE&#13;
&#13;
Assoc.&#13;
&#13;
Press Assoc.&#13;
&#13;
COMM.&#13;
&#13;
Of&#13;
&#13;
Immigration&#13;
&#13;
Raymond Young -LLR&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Creighton&#13;
U.&#13;
Jr. MEMBER- Montgomery-Young-Hall&#13;
Attornies&#13;
&#13;
BOOKV&#13;
C.W. BRITTON-A.B.&#13;
CASHIER&#13;
&#13;
VERNON PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Security Natl BK. WEST Point&#13;
Cadet&#13;
Sioux City, SCHOOLBOARD&#13;
CAPT ARMY FOOT-BALL&#13;
&#13;
J.W. Kindig- LLB&#13;
' A SST. CO.ATTORNEY&#13;
&#13;
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Working for an Answer&#13;
' 18&#13;
&#13;
MARION JOHNSON,&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, Gee!&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
blazed much.&#13;
&#13;
I'd wire if I didn't need the 'coin' so&#13;
&#13;
Even postage stamps are a scarcity around here.&#13;
&#13;
But I'll write, and,&#13;
&#13;
paying my respects to the honorable debaters of her dear Jackson College, I'll inform&#13;
her that we intend to beat their glorious team."&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
I'll have to write to 'sis' sure.&#13;
&#13;
Hudson Randall was relieving himself of some of his exuberant spirits as he and&#13;
his room·mate, Guy Cameron, swung home from the hard debate tryout, in the crisp&#13;
night air.&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
"Better save some of your enthusiasm for the siege ahead, Randall," was the reply&#13;
of the big, calm fellow at his side, the "Debate Guy" as he was called, for he had&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
already brought honors to the State "U" and had won first place in the tryout. I'm&#13;
&#13;
p&#13;
&#13;
glad, old man, that you came in second, though.&#13;
&#13;
You deserved it and now with that fifth&#13;
&#13;
man we ought to work it down till we can easily bring back victory from Jackson's star&#13;
team. I'm surprised that Brown chose our team so quickly, but I suppose he knows his&#13;
mind and, as he said, we can get right to business tomorrow?"&#13;
No one was more aware of or more concerned in the hard work which the team at&#13;
the "U" was putting in than Elizabeth Randall.&#13;
&#13;
Ever since the morning that she re-&#13;
&#13;
ceived the letter from her brother telling of his victory, she had almost bombarded the&#13;
post office with letters of ecstacy and encouragement.&#13;
&#13;
No one knew as well as she how&#13;
&#13;
Hudson had worked, with law always in his mind, to become a proficient debater.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
had come up slowly, but finally in his last year he had been given second place in the&#13;
great University tryout.&#13;
&#13;
Nothing could now occupy her thought and ambition other than&#13;
&#13;
that his team should win, even though it would be at Jackson's loss.&#13;
&#13;
All this she confided, the night after the first announcement, to her chum and admirer, Lisle Greyson.&#13;
&#13;
Greyson was one of those "big" fellows-big hearted and big&#13;
&#13;
souled-the kind that star themselves through college.&#13;
&#13;
He had worked through the&#13;
&#13;
football season leaving a trail of glory behind him, had starred in the basketball tournament and now had won first place in the debate tryout.&#13;
Elizabeth was aware that, despite the frankness of this friend of hers, he had some&#13;
&#13;
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"TO take you seriously, Beth, you misjudge me.&#13;
&#13;
conceit over his successes and therefore perhaps a bit too much self-confidence for his&#13;
own good, and so it. was her great desire to eradicate this small evil.&#13;
&#13;
work afterward.&#13;
&#13;
I have my good times and then&#13;
&#13;
I came over here tonight just for an inspiration for work.&#13;
&#13;
It is early&#13;
&#13;
and I'm intending some good work yet tonight."&#13;
That first evening, when she repeated so unfeelingly to him her brother's praise of&#13;
the merits of the "U" team, he had been surprised.&#13;
&#13;
teasing him until she spoke of her brother and her ambition for him.&#13;
the seriousness of it and continued to worry little over the debate.&#13;
in the team that had won over the university before?&#13;
. done his best.&#13;
&#13;
Beth knew that she had said enough, for Listle was serious .&#13;
&#13;
He had thought that she was merely&#13;
But he soon forgot&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
that she had greatly strengthened his weak intention to leave her early and "grind" till&#13;
midnight.&#13;
&#13;
For had he not been&#13;
&#13;
But she did not know&#13;
&#13;
She wanted to spur him on with the statement that the men at the University&#13;
&#13;
had not been out any night excepting Sundays since the work began.&#13;
&#13;
Of course, he admitted, he hadn't&#13;
&#13;
But that would be&#13;
&#13;
breaking confidence; so she was silent.&#13;
&#13;
But then, if he could win and have a good time too, what were the odds?&#13;
&#13;
They had reached the dormitory steps and the beauty of the night caused them to&#13;
Such was his attitude as he hastened over one evening, about two weeks later, to&#13;
go for a walk with Elizabeth.&#13;
&#13;
The evening had been so different from that which Greyson had planned.&#13;
&#13;
linger there.&#13;
&#13;
She thought for a moment and then consented · with a&#13;
&#13;
He had hoped to win the answer to the question he had asked Elizabeth a week ago .&#13;
&#13;
look in her eyes which said, "There's method in my madness."&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth had known then, in her heart, that she loved Lisle Greyson, but to tell&#13;
They were strolling through the walks of the campus, delighting in the balminess&#13;
&#13;
him so then she felt was not the thing.&#13;
&#13;
of the air when the conversation lagged and Greyson in his humorous way broke . out in&#13;
dramatic style: "Oh Jackson, fairest college of the West! Great is thy name and&#13;
greater thy glories!"&#13;
&#13;
might open his eyes to himself.&#13;
she was happy.&#13;
&#13;
She felt that she had wakened his worthy self a bit and&#13;
&#13;
Greyson could feel her wistful eyes upon him as he stood in deep thought.&#13;
&#13;
The night, with her presence, was so perfect that his big heart thrilled with the anticipation&#13;
of her answer.&#13;
&#13;
"Is fair Jackson counting on you for her glories, Lisle?" Elizabeth's voice held&#13;
some meanmg which Greyson could not interpret.&#13;
said it.&#13;
&#13;
She had hoped that perhaps in this affair she&#13;
&#13;
Yes, he must have it.&#13;
&#13;
"Beth, you've set me thinking and, though I guess I don't deserve it, I believe&#13;
&#13;
He wanted to watch her while she&#13;
&#13;
your answer would set me working .&#13;
&#13;
Beth dear, do you love me?" His voice was&#13;
&#13;
passionate, deep and tender.&#13;
"Pardon me, Miss 'Beth, but would you mind repeating that question?&#13;
get the significance of it."&#13;
Uh, you mean to say that I am hard to understand.&#13;
&#13;
equally so.&#13;
&#13;
I do not&#13;
&#13;
It was Elizabeth's turn to feel a wistful gaze, and oh, how her heart fluttered&#13;
beneath it!&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps I am, but you are&#13;
&#13;
hadn't opened them enough yet.&#13;
&#13;
You sing the praises of a school for which you would not sacrifice one&#13;
&#13;
is now two weeks before the debate and since the tryout you haven't left out three good&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
You told Helen so the other day, and she, in talking, happened to repeat&#13;
&#13;
it in my hearing.&#13;
&#13;
I began to think.&#13;
&#13;
No, she must not give way to that crying call within&#13;
&#13;
"I said I would wait and see, Lisle; I guess I'll not be sure until after the debate."&#13;
&#13;
wrongly.&#13;
&#13;
debate and, I knew that the other men were working; so I could figure it out only in this&#13;
&#13;
He removed his hat and took her hand.&#13;
&#13;
He was gone and through the dormitory hall passed a fleet girlish figure.&#13;
&#13;
I decided that you did not know that it was a sin to hold a talent and not deIt's easy enough to give what's been given to you, but it's what you've worked&#13;
&#13;
strain in a flood of tears.&#13;
&#13;
The story followed soon and all was well, for these girls knew&#13;
&#13;
each others hearts.&#13;
&#13;
This speech had been an effort for Elizabeth, but her voice, though low, was&#13;
&#13;
That night Lisle Greyson entered the frat house a different man.&#13;
&#13;
earnest and Lisle's usual jesting reply was not forthcoming.&#13;
&#13;
indeed opened.&#13;
&#13;
- 208-&#13;
&#13;
His eyes were&#13;
&#13;
It was not yet nine o'clock when he entered the debate study room and&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
Straight&#13;
&#13;
to her room she went and into the arms of her room-mate, Helen, where she relieved the&#13;
&#13;
for that's valuable to you and means a sacrifice in the giving."&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
"May God help you to know best.&#13;
&#13;
Good night."&#13;
&#13;
way-that you were counting upon your natural abilities and not your effort to put it&#13;
velop it.&#13;
&#13;
But she knew that she&#13;
&#13;
Greyson was all disappointment, and yet he did not feel that she had acted&#13;
&#13;
I knew that you were counting on winning the&#13;
&#13;
through.&#13;
&#13;
It was the evil spirit which&#13;
&#13;
You have opened his eyes."&#13;
&#13;
her, not tonight.&#13;
&#13;
good time." Greyson looked astonished and a bit guilty. Mut 'Miss Beth' continued: "It&#13;
times to work.&#13;
&#13;
How her whole soul cried out to answer it!&#13;
&#13;
was saying to her, "It's all right.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
- 209-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
got together his notes and books.&#13;
studying debate, Greyson?&#13;
'Grey?'"&#13;
&#13;
The other men looked up in surprise.&#13;
&#13;
"Thinking&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Beauties, containing Lisle Greyson's card .&#13;
&#13;
It'll be kind of dry after 'peaches and cream' won't it&#13;
&#13;
On the back was written the significant&#13;
&#13;
word, "tonight."&#13;
Elizabeth reasoned a dozen things that "tonight" could mean, that time of testing,&#13;
and yet she was confident of the powers of Lisle for she had read it all in his face and acts.&#13;
&#13;
These were some of the parenthetical remarks of the fellows as they discussed&#13;
various points in their work.&#13;
&#13;
But they all liked Greyson and his good humored silence&#13;
&#13;
That night in the great chapel room Elizabeth sat by Helen.&#13;
&#13;
was not particularly noticed till eleven o'clock, when the rest began to drop off.&#13;
Greyson did not appear to notice them.&#13;
&#13;
her cheeks vied in color with the roses she wore, as the debaters filed upon the platform .&#13;
&#13;
The fellows looked inquiringly at each other,&#13;
&#13;
Cheer upon cheer was given. Then the chairman of the evening announced the speakers.&#13;
&#13;
but, thinking it best, said nothing.&#13;
&#13;
The debate was warm from the beginning.&#13;
&#13;
The first four men had spoken.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Jackson team was doing well, but now all looked to G reyson, for the teams were, so far,&#13;
&#13;
When night after night, succeeding the first late hours, Greyson "ground" away on&#13;
debate till the small hours had come again, and he was missed at all the social functions,&#13;
people began to inquire the meaning of his unusual ambition.&#13;
&#13;
Her eyes shone and&#13;
&#13;
an even match.&#13;
&#13;
But only three people&#13;
&#13;
Lisle stepped to the middle of the platform.&#13;
&#13;
knew.&#13;
&#13;
but held its breath instead.&#13;
&#13;
The audience was going to cheer,&#13;
&#13;
This wasn't the carefree Greyson of past debates.&#13;
&#13;
carried an air of determination rather than an air of confidence.&#13;
&#13;
It was a week later that the program of debaters came to the debate room of the&#13;
&#13;
He now&#13;
&#13;
The thought of the&#13;
&#13;
frat house. Greyson did not even notice it, for Elizabeth had already informed him of the-&#13;
&#13;
audience was "The boy Greyson has become a man."&#13;
&#13;
team that was coming.&#13;
&#13;
as he stood in masterful grace and poured out such a wonderful argument that the people&#13;
&#13;
But one of the other men picked it up.&#13;
&#13;
" I notice that Elizabeth&#13;
&#13;
sat spellbound.&#13;
&#13;
Randall's brother is on the Affirmative team."&#13;
Greyson looked up.&#13;
&#13;
"I think you're mistaken, Mac.&#13;
&#13;
His references, his clear logic, and his splendid delivery left an im-&#13;
&#13;
pression which cheer upon cheer could not lessen.&#13;
&#13;
Randall comes here."&#13;
&#13;
But his opponent was his match.&#13;
"Well contradict this if you wish.&#13;
&#13;
Here are the names of the teams."&#13;
&#13;
as&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Work&#13;
&#13;
now progressing much better."&#13;
Well that explains&#13;
&#13;
it.&#13;
&#13;
forceful.&#13;
&#13;
He too had worked and his arguments were just&#13;
&#13;
Everyone said the debate was a tie and waited for the rebuttals. They were&#13;
&#13;
equally even. Greyson was well aware of this, and from the appeal in her eyes, felt that&#13;
&#13;
"Look in the University Scout and see what it says."&#13;
Mac found in the head lines- "Debate coach decides a change in teams.&#13;
&#13;
And such he proved himself,&#13;
&#13;
the wearer of his roses was as deeply conscious of it.&#13;
forth for the last rebuttal.&#13;
&#13;
The crowd waited.&#13;
&#13;
He pitched himself again and went&#13;
&#13;
No, they were not to be disappointed .&#13;
&#13;
The rebuttal came like a miniature oration, so clear, so concise, so conclusive.&#13;
So Randall isn't coming after all!"&#13;
&#13;
the judges would be slow over such a debate.&#13;
&#13;
" Interested are you?"&#13;
&#13;
not slow.&#13;
&#13;
"Slightly!"&#13;
And Beth hadn't told him.&#13;
&#13;
How could they wait!&#13;
&#13;
O f course&#13;
&#13;
But they were&#13;
&#13;
Greyson' s rebuttal had tipped the scales and they were quick.&#13;
&#13;
Then the house came down with applause, and G reyson, striving to get one look&#13;
Strange! She didn't want her brother beaten and yet•&#13;
&#13;
at Elizabeth's face was caught and carried away on the shoulders of his friends.&#13;
&#13;
she wanted him to work. He hadn't known what she had expected of him except the&#13;
&#13;
begged for release and finally managed to slip away.&#13;
&#13;
development of his talent and that was the thing for which he had been working.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
at that moment, it was one word fro m Beth.&#13;
&#13;
But&#13;
&#13;
now he could work for something else- for Jackson's glories and for "Her!"&#13;
For the next week Greyson fairly lived d ebate.&#13;
dreamed it!&#13;
&#13;
The fellows eyes stuck out in wonder.&#13;
&#13;
He ran to the dormitory and rang the bell.&#13;
&#13;
He knew of only one thing in life&#13;
&#13;
The matron answered, looking surHe felt like he had been&#13;
&#13;
He ate it, breathed it, drank it, and&#13;
&#13;
prised, when, with little ceremony, he asked for Elizabeth.&#13;
&#13;
Surely Greyson would win this time&#13;
&#13;
doused in ice water when in reply she started to close the door, with "It's after hours and&#13;
the girls are in their rooms."&#13;
&#13;
for he had never really worked before.&#13;
He had not seen Elizabeth since the eventful night except to exchange about three&#13;
words in the halls, but the day before the debate there came to her a box of American&#13;
&#13;
-210-&#13;
&#13;
"After hours!&#13;
affair!&#13;
&#13;
After hours!&#13;
&#13;
What does a matron know about the hours of a love&#13;
&#13;
But I'm desperate and I must see Beth."&#13;
&#13;
-211-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth, in one of the other rooms, was unaware of all this, but not so her roommate. She had heard the bell, and, guessing the purport, had listened to all the proceedings. She was all alert, so that when she heard a voice at the window calling&#13;
"Beth," she was there.&#13;
Would that she could summon Beth, but the matron was too likely to suspect and&#13;
she knew that this affair was important. There was only one thing to do. She leaned&#13;
out of the window. Love is blind and unsuspecting, Greyson whispered, "Beth, I must&#13;
have your answer tonight. Do you love me, Beth?"&#13;
Helen knew the heart of Beth and knew the answer she would give. She considered only a moment, then drawing from the vase on the table at her side, one beautiful&#13;
rose she dropped it down to him and said " Your Beth whispers to you-yes!"&#13;
The figure was gone from the window. Picking up the rose, Greyson bowed his&#13;
head and bending beneath the window held the flower to his lips. He had heard a&#13;
voice, no matter whose; it had come, he knew, from a heart which answered the&#13;
question of his soul.&#13;
&#13;
A Song of Praise&#13;
To Thee we sing O Morningside,&#13;
With heart and voice atune,&#13;
To tell the praise afar and wide&#13;
O f our dear old Maroon.&#13;
For never shall our praises end,&#13;
Though o'er the world we roam .&#13;
In memory forever dear,&#13;
Our college home, sweet home.&#13;
0 hear the joyous shouts that tell&#13;
The news of vict'ry won.&#13;
And ringing of the Vict'ry Bell&#13;
Proclaiming what is done.&#13;
How eagerly all gather round&#13;
To join the cheer of praise&#13;
As nine rahs for the varsity&#13;
Unitedly we raise .&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
When far away in future days,&#13;
Still thinking of the past,&#13;
Sweet memories that never die&#13;
While thot and vigor last&#13;
Will steal like music o'er the soul&#13;
In tender soothing strain&#13;
"To lure us gently from our care,&#13;
And give us heart again."&#13;
&#13;
R. L.&#13;
&#13;
-212-&#13;
&#13;
-213-&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL.&#13;
&#13;
Stubb's Chagrin&#13;
EARL BARKS, ' 18&#13;
&#13;
The pompous individual, Stub Stanley, a freckled-faced boy of twelve, hands in&#13;
his pockets, . chest thrown out and shrill notes issuing from his lips, was on his way&#13;
home from school. The defiant note of his whistle was a signal of triumph. He had· at&#13;
last accomplished the seemingly impossible task of whistling through his teeth, a feat&#13;
which Sam and his chum had taught him. Suddenly he caught sight of a flutter of&#13;
white, and looking more closely discerned it to be a girl. This caused him to throw his&#13;
shoulders still further back and assume a superior air, for he was a confirmed girl-hater,&#13;
and took every occasion possible to express himself as such before his comrades who&#13;
,would invariably express some sign of awe.&#13;
While in truth witnessing her approach from the corner of his eye he apparently&#13;
became engaged in watching something on the opposite side of the street. O wing to&#13;
this indifference he did not notice the slight rise in the sidewalk ahead of him and failure&#13;
to lift his feet the required height at the proper time caused his downfall. While in an&#13;
undignified position on his hands and knees, he heard a titter, and, looking up, beheld&#13;
a girl of about his own age actually laughing at him. Greatly embarrassed and blushing&#13;
profusely, Stub quickly rose and beat a hasty retreat. On the way home his mind was&#13;
a kaleidoscope of horrible pictures of himself on his hands and knees before dozens of ,&#13;
laughing girls. All kinds of fantastic schemes for making that girl respect him. entered&#13;
his mind, but he was helpless in view of the fact that he had appeared before a girl as&#13;
a clumsy gawk.&#13;
Walking seemed to be the best remedy for his state of mind and so he continued&#13;
past his own gate on down the road. Not noticing where he was going, he came to a&#13;
foot bridge spanning a small stream. The bridge was protected by a railing on both sides ·&#13;
Lifting his eyes from the ground he was horrified to see that girl, who had already caused&#13;
him so much discomfiture, approaching him. Glancing hastily around, he sought a place&#13;
of refuge, but could find none. He must meet her. In some inconceivable way she&#13;
reached the bridge first. As there was not room enough to pass, Stub must wait until&#13;
she crossed. The idea of having to give way to a girl, and to her especially, was un-&#13;
&#13;
step and just as he had about decided to ignore her his foot missed the railing. Stub&#13;
made frantic efforts to recover his equilibrium, but all in vain. He made an unceremonious&#13;
descent into the brook in anything but a graceful manner. The stream was not deep and&#13;
he easily touched bottom. Seeing an old culvert he hid himself for about fifteen minutes&#13;
endeavoring to summon enough courage to make his appearance.&#13;
He scurried across lots to his home, carefully avoiding familiar districts and streets .&#13;
He had carefully planned his entrance to the house in order to avoid any inquiring members of the family. Just as he was about to make a final dash he caught a glimpse of a&#13;
figure in white talking to G enet, a girl who lived next door to him. The girl in white&#13;
seemed to be telling a story which was often interrupted by shouts of laughter. Stub&#13;
hid in the barn and waited for the intruder to go away. It seemed ages, however, before&#13;
she departed and he had plenty of time to reflect upon his recent adventures. He could&#13;
vividly see himself on that bridge awkardly trying to secure his balance, and, yes, he&#13;
remembered distinctly that he had uttered a cry, and before a girl too. Now she was&#13;
telling Genet who was continually making fun of him anyway. Oh, he couldn' t stand it,&#13;
he would run away, or, he would get a revolver and shoot the first person that dared to&#13;
laugh at him. Just then a chance came and he dashed into the house. The scolding&#13;
from his mother for being so late made no impression on him. His whole mind was&#13;
engaged in deciding just how to punish those who laughed at him. All night he rolled&#13;
and tossed upon his pillow, but went to school the next morning with his course of action&#13;
still undecided.&#13;
When he reached school he saw a new girl with Genet whom he immediately&#13;
recognized as the girl who had contributed to his chagrin of the day before. W hen Genet&#13;
saw him she made a rush for him bringing the stranger along. There was no escape; he&#13;
must bear the awful humiliation. Then G enet presented her friend. S he was really&#13;
very pretty. He also beheld with joy that there was no look of recognition in her eyes,&#13;
his school clothes had changed his entire appearance. A short visit ensued in which&#13;
Stub regained his old self-confidence.&#13;
As he ambled home at noon, the old swagger was very prominent, the whistle had&#13;
an even more defiant ring, but not of contempt. No, whats the use? he might as well&#13;
admit that there ought to be girls in the world, and maybe they did help a fellow at&#13;
times, even if they could make him feel mightily embarrassed .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
bearable.&#13;
Then a brilliant idea came to him. He had walked on top of this railing many&#13;
times; here was a great opportunity to recover his lost dignity. Surely a daring feat&#13;
would attract her rapt attention and accomplish the desired result. So mounting to the&#13;
top of the railing he balanced himself carefully and started across. Then the trouble&#13;
started. Should he absolutely ignore her or should he give her a haughty stare as he&#13;
passed her? He became so engrossed in this weighty matter that he did not watch his&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-214-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-215-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zet&#13;
&#13;
Nobelette&#13;
&#13;
"Sunbeam arrives in Leeds"&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER I&#13;
W RITTEN BY F ERN BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
The crimson sun of morning&#13;
Came peeping o'er a hill,&#13;
With radiance adorning&#13;
A temple, white and still,&#13;
A fane we thought immortal,&#13;
So ·solidly it stood,&#13;
Inscribed above its portal:&#13;
" The Beautiful, the Good "&#13;
&#13;
But as the night descended,&#13;
The toilers, standing by,&#13;
Saw all their labors ended&#13;
In flames, which leaping high,&#13;
'Mid roars and lurid crashes,&#13;
Devoured it where it stood,&#13;
And left in smoking ashes :&#13;
" The Beautiful, the Good "&#13;
&#13;
"Everybody off," shouted Harry Clark as the train slowed down at the station.&#13;
"Let's get off and see the sights in this wonderful metropolis."&#13;
Everyone made a dive for the door. Although they were in the "Sunbeam" they&#13;
had been riding all d ay and were anxious for a little excitement and rest.&#13;
Buster and M erril were the last ones off, for they were in another car flirting with&#13;
some pretty girls. F or this very reason they were usually late for everything.&#13;
D ick Butler, the manager, went immediately to the opera house to make the final&#13;
preparations for the evening's concert, while the other "stars" sauntered around town&#13;
taking in the "huge buildings," exclaiming over the "sky-scrapers," viewing the famous&#13;
"Zoological Gardens" and the other wonders of which the city boasted.&#13;
C hick A nderson, Fletch, Clarence and L eon Johnson, as they were returning to the&#13;
car, noticed a man in one of the parks throwing stones up in a tree. Chick, with mischief&#13;
sparkling in his eyes inquired :&#13;
"My dear, kind sir, pray tell me just why you are gazing so intently at the marvels&#13;
of the heavens."&#13;
&#13;
" I am not watchin the stars," he replied, "I am trying to get my Ford."&#13;
But as new suns ascended&#13;
Behind the selfsame hill,&#13;
Behold, a vision splendid!&#13;
A fairer temple still !&#13;
A temple ever growing,&#13;
E xpanding as it should,&#13;
To all the nations showing :&#13;
" The Beautiful, the Good "&#13;
-JAMES JUVE NAL HAYES.&#13;
&#13;
"Your F ord?"&#13;
"Well, that's what I said, wasn't it ?"&#13;
" But what would a sedate Ford be doing up m a tree?"&#13;
"Well, I'll tell you if you are so inquisitive. I tried to crank the crazy thing and it&#13;
slipped out of my hand and landed upon the topmost branch of this tree," said the&#13;
none too sweet-tempered gentleman.&#13;
"Now I'll tell you what I'll do if you'll give us&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
ride," said Chic.&#13;
&#13;
" W hat ?"&#13;
&#13;
"I'll climb up and get it fo r you, since I'm quite like a monkey."&#13;
"All right, I d do anything to get it back again.&#13;
plied the man.&#13;
&#13;
Be quick about it though," re-&#13;
&#13;
In a few minutes Chic had scrambled down to "terra firma" again with the little&#13;
F ord clutched safely under his arm. H e placed it carefully by the curbing and they&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 216-&#13;
&#13;
-2 17-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"We will now have the pleasure of hearing Samanthy Jones sing her latest original&#13;
&#13;
climbed in and were off for a spin, away from the city's noise and thunder.&#13;
They flew along at a Ford's pace until they were three miles away from the&#13;
city limits .&#13;
&#13;
production."&#13;
Dick sat staring at the charming girl down in front.&#13;
&#13;
He didn't so much as move&#13;
&#13;
Leon was gazing at the "roof gardens" through a microscope and the others were&#13;
looking at an aeroplane, when CRASH!!! they struck a bump, and the next thing the&#13;
young sports knew, they were sitting in the middle of the road covered with dust.&#13;
&#13;
an eyelid.&#13;
&#13;
Fletch, with his nose scratched and bleeding, his mouth full of dust, slowly arose .&#13;
spluttering:&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
"Perhaps I can assist Miss Jones in getting up here"-and with that, the indignant&#13;
instructor set about to pull the pensive Dick from his seat, and taking the "dunce cap"&#13;
from its accustomed placed proceeded to place it upon his head. Now had he fallen&#13;
from the platform Dick would not have been more mortified. He met the situation well&#13;
and started out bravely-but lo! it wasn't the "Mary had a little Lamp" which had&#13;
been his "original production," that he sang, but in its stead he gushed out, "Put your&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, my lovely polished finger nails are all dirty and I won't have time to manicure&#13;
them before the concert. What shall I do?"&#13;
· .&#13;
When they had picked themselves up they looked around for the car, but lo. and&#13;
behold, all they saw of said Ford and driver was a tiny speck in the distance continually&#13;
getting smaller.&#13;
&#13;
No answer, Dick still sat gazing into the audience.&#13;
&#13;
arms around me honey, hold me tight."&#13;
Chic gigled out loud and Buster twisted his little gloved hands in an endeavor to&#13;
suppress his glee.· Dick, however, failed to see the fun, but realized that he had made a&#13;
bone-head of himself and tried his best to play a good farce.&#13;
&#13;
"I wonder where we can find a car," said Clarence.&#13;
"Oh let's walk; it's a good reducing exercise," growled Leon.&#13;
&#13;
In the meanwhile the rest of the fellows had returned from their various expeditions&#13;
and could not imagine what had happened to their more adventurous comrades.&#13;
were not to be found.&#13;
&#13;
"Is Miss Samanthy Jones present?" asked the teacher.&#13;
&#13;
They&#13;
&#13;
At seven-thirty they were ready for the concert and still the wanderers had not&#13;
returned. Just as they were ready to leave the "Sunbeam" in despair, they saw four&#13;
dusty, smeary looking figures coming up the "asphalt" with a look on their "beaming"&#13;
(?) faces that did not speak of entire bliss.&#13;
&#13;
When school was dismissed and the platform was empty a storm of hisses and&#13;
exclamations greeted Dick:&#13;
"Say, whose the girl?"&#13;
"Say, you bone-head, did you think this was a moonlight picnic?"&#13;
"Pretty soft."&#13;
"Disgusting" (Fletcher.)&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER II&#13;
WRITTEN BY ELEANOR W INKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
The evening's concert was on.&#13;
&#13;
They were singing their best, f or th e audience was&#13;
· ·&#13;
·&#13;
a very appreciative one, when Dick, who was the leading baritone, saw someone in the&#13;
audience who attracted his attention. The face seemed so familiar, but he could not remember where he had seen that fair feminine creation. One thing he was sure of, that&#13;
she was most interesting and he could not keep his eyes away from her. Suddenly it&#13;
dawned upon him that she was the charming Betty Fitch that he met that afternoon&#13;
while completing arrangements at the opera house. Why was it that he kept looking&#13;
at her all the time? Why couldn't he get her off his mind? He didn't like girls at all,&#13;
and never cared for them, except as jolly good friends.&#13;
Everything went off beautifully, even though the baritone did sing in an absentminded way until they came to the "rural school." Then, as usual, there was some&#13;
The program was progressing as well as the "dear teacher" could expect, when the time&#13;
came for Dick to sing his original song.&#13;
&#13;
-2 18-&#13;
&#13;
Dick, in dismay, demanded all "sushing" to be cut out.&#13;
Dick sang a solo in the last group of songs. The Fates were against him for it was&#13;
a love song and he forgot the crowd and the other fellows. None was there but the&#13;
"girl" and himself--"Here's to the day when mine she'll be, Heres to the girl I love"&#13;
-rang out with more fervor than those closing lines were accustomed to. The fellows&#13;
nudged each other and vowed to make it hotter than ever for their manager next time they&#13;
got behind the curtains.&#13;
Sure enough they did make it lively for the lovesick Dick, so lively in fact that he&#13;
decided to cut the Epworth League reception and beat it for the car. Yes he started&#13;
heroically for the car, but turned shortly and went back to the church. There he stood&#13;
for fully an hour peering into the window with eyes for one alone.&#13;
So absorbed was he that he didn't notice Jimmy Dolliver, Prof. MacCollin and Mr.&#13;
Ruth come out-but good luck-they noticed him. Prof. Mac and Ruth offered him&#13;
married man's advice while Jimmy offered him of the Sandburr department and the&#13;
Annual Jokes. But Dick grabbed his suit-case and made a dash. 'Twas the car for&#13;
him sure enough this time, no more fooling, he'd never hear the last of this, even now.&#13;
&#13;
-2 19-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
WRITTEN BY HELEN WARFIELD&#13;
&#13;
The "Sunbeam" was now preparing for the trip home. The boys h.ad all arrived&#13;
at last, though it was feared for some time that "Kewpie" and Buster would surely be&#13;
left. However, they sauntered along at the last moment and were now all speeding&#13;
back to their dear Alma Mater. Dick was unusually quiet all the way, in spite of the&#13;
fact that the fellows pestered him nearly to death with their clever remarks of what would&#13;
happen on their return. He sat gazing out of the window, not paying the slightest attention to any of them till he caught one of Merril' s remarks:&#13;
"Say, Miss Samanthy, are you dreaming of the day when 'mine she'll be?'"&#13;
"No," snarled Dick, for not for anything would he have them suspect that he had&#13;
even met her.&#13;
Dick turned again to the window, seemmg to take more interest than ever in the&#13;
field after field of growing grain.&#13;
It was not long after that the "Sunbeam" arrived in Sioux City and the boys made&#13;
their way to the various rooming places. The events of this trip still fresh in their minds&#13;
for future use .&#13;
&#13;
old friend of mine, we used to go to school together-anyway when he asked me to help&#13;
carry out their plan I was only too glad to get a chance for a little excitement, so readily&#13;
consented. But I'm dreadfully sorry it's gone so far, really I am, · if you'll only forgive&#13;
me for the part I've had in it. By the way, have you seen these?" And with that she&#13;
opened the "Reporter" which she held, to the "Sandburrs" and offered it to him .&#13;
"No, if you don't mind I'd a little rather not read the Sandburrs this week.&#13;
should I'm afraid something might happen. But"-he hesitated.&#13;
"Well?"&#13;
"I was about to say that if you would like to help turn the tables now you-willmay-1 mean, would you like to go to the home concert with me?"&#13;
"Oh yes, indeed, I surely would enjoy it and would also enjoy "turning the tables."&#13;
The night of the home concert Dick was really the star of the evening. He sang&#13;
his "original production" so well that the boys were actually astounded, and when he&#13;
sang "Here's to the girl I love," he put his whole heart into it.&#13;
&#13;
In fact we're a little inclined to believe that it wasn't the last time he sang that song&#13;
to the one person.&#13;
&#13;
About a week later Dick sat in the library laboriously pondering over books and&#13;
occasionally taking a few seconds off to write a sentence or two in his History note book.&#13;
It must have been instinct that caused him to look up suddenly and see Kewpie .standing&#13;
beside him.&#13;
However, it was not Kewpie he stared at, but the fair girl with him, who was&#13;
thoroughly enjoying the situation, though trying hard not to laugh. Dick appeared&#13;
awkward, very much so, and the worst of it was he felt it deeply. Yet what was there&#13;
for him to do? Evidently nothing, for he still stared. After what seemed to him an&#13;
hour Kewpie in a tantalizing way remarked:&#13;
"You know Dickit would&#13;
give me the greatest of pleasure to introduce you to&#13;
Miss Fitch, but after the threat you made to the fellows on the way home I'm afraid&#13;
I'll have to make the rounds of the club first, otherwise some of them might not get to&#13;
meet her at all. And I'm determined she shall meet everyone," and before the astonished&#13;
Dick had time to say a word Kewpie and Betty had turned and were making their way&#13;
to another table.&#13;
They had not been sitting there long when someone called Kewpie from the library,&#13;
and as he left he cautioned Betty not to even glance in Dick's direction. But the fun&#13;
loving Betty thought that matters were becoming altogether one sided and a minute later&#13;
she was slowly walking over to where Dick sat.&#13;
"It's been lots of fun I know" she began apologetically, "But I couldn't help&#13;
noticing how you looked at me the night of the concert, and I knew I must have met you&#13;
somewhere, though I couldn't think for some time, so when Kewpie--you know he's an&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
- 220 -&#13;
&#13;
If I&#13;
&#13;
I 9&#13;
&#13;
I 6&#13;
&#13;
-221-&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Traffic Cop&#13;
The traffic cop stands in the street,&#13;
Despair his heart is rending:&#13;
For tumbling toward him down he sees&#13;
An aeroplane descending.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
In vain he tries to step aside,He' d like to dodge it neatly.Whichever way he tries to run,&#13;
The way is blocked completely.&#13;
At all the windows round about&#13;
Appear excited faces.&#13;
The traffic cop seems doomed to death.Of hope there are no traces .&#13;
&#13;
"The Glory of the Conquered'&#13;
Our ears are filled with the victor's cry .&#13;
&#13;
From one way comes a plunging truck,&#13;
'Tis loaded high with bundles;&#13;
The driver does not heed the cop&#13;
As on his way he trundles .&#13;
&#13;
As it floats on the morning air,&#13;
For old M. C. has won agamA fig for toil and care!&#13;
&#13;
The other way he quickly sees,&#13;
Along the car-track banging,&#13;
A ladder-truck, in mad career,&#13;
With all its fearsome clanging.&#13;
&#13;
But what of the morning after defeat?&#13;
Do we hear the same strong cheer;&#13;
&#13;
He looks to see if he may reach&#13;
The "elevated" landing ;&#13;
But, no, alas! before him there&#13;
The autos thick are standing.&#13;
&#13;
Do the men who tried and failed to win&#13;
Take heart from what they hear?&#13;
And is the victory all in the score?&#13;
&#13;
He's surely doomed, there is no hope;&#13;
The scene, indeed, is tragic.&#13;
He cannot possibly escape&#13;
Unless it be by magic.&#13;
&#13;
Does fair play count for nought?&#13;
No !&#13;
&#13;
Who fail in a battle well fought.&#13;
&#13;
But when it seems he must be crushed,&#13;
A plan he does discover :&#13;
He sees before his feet a ring&#13;
Upon a manhole cover.&#13;
&#13;
Then here's to the day in old M . C.&#13;
When the flag aloft shall sail,&#13;
Not alone for those who win the day&#13;
&#13;
He seizes it ; he tugs and pulls&#13;
With wild and frantic lunges ;&#13;
'Tis lifted up and tossed aside,&#13;
And in the hole he plunges.&#13;
But ah! again he is too late&#13;
(Alas! for human blunders!) :&#13;
A subway train comes rushing by,&#13;
And him in two it sunders!&#13;
&#13;
There's honor and praise for the men&#13;
&#13;
But for those who try.&#13;
&#13;
AL. B.&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
But do not feel too good a grief&#13;
And sympathy does not extend&#13;
To moving-picture actors.&#13;
&#13;
-·&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
and fail.&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
1 6&#13;
&#13;
- 222-223-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
BOOK VI&#13;
"The Spirit of Jest"&#13;
&#13;
-224-&#13;
&#13;
-225-&#13;
&#13;
Students and Fellow Alumni&#13;
We are always glad to welcome the new students&#13;
and have the old ones call&#13;
&#13;
for a&#13;
&#13;
chat about old times.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·Headquarters for&#13;
&#13;
College Books and Supplies&#13;
Spalding Athletic Goods&#13;
"M" Blankets and Pennants&#13;
Pillow Tops (leather and felt)&#13;
Society Stationery. and pennants&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Agents&#13;
&#13;
for College Seal Goods&#13;
&#13;
The College Bookstore&#13;
G. T. PENDELL, Proprietor&#13;
· 22 6&#13;
-227-&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
We Lead in Morningside when it comes to Variety · and Prices .&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY IS OUR MOTTO&#13;
&#13;
We are Exclusive A gents in&#13;
&#13;
for the&#13;
&#13;
Woolson Spice Co. line of Teas, Coffees and Spices&#13;
&#13;
Five Different Blends of Coffees - One for You&#13;
. -228-&#13;
&#13;
-229-&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON'S STOCK OF NEW&#13;
HOME FITTINGS&#13;
IS BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER&#13;
&#13;
OLYMPIA, th&#13;
&#13;
PALACE of&#13;
&#13;
SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
•.&#13;
&#13;
The finest line of Candies, Sundaes, Ices,&#13;
Fruits and Luncheonettes in the city. Our&#13;
service pleases.&#13;
&#13;
Olympia Candy Co.&#13;
FIVE FLOORS FULL OF NEW FURNITURE;&#13;
RUGS AND DRAPERIES&#13;
&#13;
5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City 's&#13;
Biggest and&#13;
Busiest Studio&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE&#13;
&#13;
an Incorporated Bank under Iowa State Laws for the&#13;
Purpose of Operating a Savings and Commercial Bank.&#13;
&#13;
O FFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
W . S. Snyder&#13;
&#13;
E . M . Corbett&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Len O'Harrow&#13;
Vice President&#13;
C. A. N orrbom&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
W . C. Johnson&#13;
H. Galinsky&#13;
0 . L. Johnson&#13;
H . A Meyer&#13;
Geo. C. Call&#13;
&#13;
American Savings&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
"SAVE WITH US AND THOU SHALT HA VE"&#13;
-23 0-&#13;
&#13;
-231-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Apparel of Ultra&#13;
Distinction&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
-for Young Women&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
-Suits, Coats, Dresses, Millinery , Footwear and Lingerie that appeal.&#13;
strongly to young women who wish the utmost in Style Combined with&#13;
Practicability.&#13;
- Our selections of Modish Apparel for College Women are particularly&#13;
large and of an extensiveness that gives a wide range of choice.&#13;
&#13;
-232-&#13;
&#13;
-233-&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE MEN&#13;
Want Clothes that are&#13;
Specially Designed for&#13;
the Younger Fellows&#13;
&#13;
. .&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
particular type of clothes&#13;
we recommend and feature&#13;
are made expressly for us,&#13;
and expressly for young men.&#13;
They type youth and strength to&#13;
the utmost degree. Not in a single&#13;
item are they common or usual.&#13;
Not in a single stitch are they&#13;
mediocre. They embody that particular quality of workmanship&#13;
which has made E. &amp; W. Clothes&#13;
famous thoughout this section.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Our showing of High Grade Furnishings, Hats, Caps, Shoes, etc., 1s very&#13;
complete and the assortments are so&#13;
varied that we can please every young&#13;
man.&#13;
&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR YOUNG MENS TOGS&#13;
-235-234-&#13;
&#13;
''Meet Me at&#13;
&#13;
That's where I always do&#13;
shopping.&#13;
The reason that I make Martin's mv shopping headquarters is because they carry the&#13;
best grade of materials in everv line. Their&#13;
ready made suits, dress goods, millinery,&#13;
gloves, shoes and in fact everything that you&#13;
want are of the best that is possible to be had.&#13;
Another reason whv I prefer Martin, s, is&#13;
because their employees treat me kinaly.&#13;
They always have time to wait on me. "&#13;
A SATISFIED CUSTOMER&#13;
&#13;
A Mail Order House As Well&#13;
Besides satisfying the best Sioux City trade, we are&#13;
accommodating thousands of out-of-town customers. Our&#13;
" Same Day" mail order system has enabled us to reach&#13;
people who are desirous of the best. We pay transportation&#13;
charges on all out of town purchases.&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Established in 18 80&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
-236-&#13;
&#13;
- 237-&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
You&#13;
&#13;
can have your&#13;
College Days with&#13;
you always, if you&#13;
have a Kodak while here. We have everything in Kodaking and will do your finishing.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PHARMACY&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
-238-&#13;
&#13;
-239-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
THE Ungrudging Measure&#13;
in which the public has responded to our efforts is a revelation of how unmistakably men register their appreciation&#13;
of a store that renders them the service. of&#13;
giving them a greater money's worth.&#13;
&#13;
HERE in this LiveisStore&#13;
"More Value"&#13;
the&#13;
watch word---it's the biggest word in business and&#13;
the dominant factor in our&#13;
'•&#13;
success.&#13;
&#13;
WE offer Kuppenheimer Clothes in a&#13;
score of new models and hundreds of&#13;
fabrics and patterns - Suits and Light Overcoats, which, price for price, prove conclusively the truthfulness of our statements.&#13;
&#13;
$18, $20, $22.50 $25, $30 AND $35&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Moore Special Clothes&#13;
&#13;
$15&#13;
&#13;
are the result of tremendous, spot cash buying&#13;
power, to you they mean $3 to $5&#13;
more value than you're accustomed&#13;
to getting at . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
"Star'' Shirts, "Knox,'' "Stetson,''&#13;
"Moore Special'' Hats, "Superior' '&#13;
Underwear, "Fownes '' Gloves,&#13;
"WayneKnit' ' Hose, '' Carter and&#13;
Holmes'' Neckwear.&#13;
Boys' Clothes in our "Big Boys' Store"&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
-240-&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Man&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
had the seven-year itch and an automobile, and when he was not working&#13;
on the auto he was paying attention to the itch.&#13;
&#13;
We are not too busy to give the best of our skill and time to even your&#13;
smallest printing job. STUDENTS, make our shop your headquarters.&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING AND STATIONERY&#13;
" GO NOR TH"&#13;
&#13;
Interstate Publishing Company&#13;
''The Home of Good Printing,"&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Phone Auto 62 1 1&#13;
&#13;
3631 Peters Ave&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOTEL&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A year's work of remodeling and refurnishing the West Hotel from the top floo r&#13;
to the basement is now completed. The result is gratifying to us and pleasing to our&#13;
patrons. We now have 230 rooms, 144 with private bath, 40 sample rooms with&#13;
bath. First-Class Cafe, Rathskeller and private dining rooms in connection.&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN PLAN&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
RATES-&#13;
&#13;
Single, Without Bath, $1.00 Per Day&#13;
&#13;
With Bath, $1.50 to $3.00 Per D ay&#13;
&#13;
FRANK DONOHOEProprietor&#13;
&#13;
JAY&#13;
&#13;
-242-&#13;
&#13;
MACLARTY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
' ' THE&#13;
&#13;
BIG STORE ''&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Will Always Be First&#13;
in the&#13;
Hearts of&#13;
the Students&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'' The Store with the College Spirit"&#13;
THE CREATEST&#13;
DEPARTMENT STORE&#13;
IN IOWA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY IOWA&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WHERE A WELCOME ALWAYS AWAITS YOU&#13;
&#13;
-244-&#13;
&#13;
-245-&#13;
&#13;
Kodak Developing and Printing of Pic-tures in this Annual By Us ·&#13;
We&#13;
guarantee you the best possible&#13;
results from your negatives. Our&#13;
department is complete and strictly&#13;
modern in every particular. We are&#13;
exclusive dealers in Kodak Supplies&#13;
&#13;
THE PIECE O' PIPE&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
608 PIERCE STREET&#13;
NEW&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON&#13;
&#13;
BLDG.&#13;
&#13;
INTEREST PAID ON CERTIFICATES&#13;
OF DEPOSIT&#13;
&#13;
"Where Quality is as Represented"&#13;
&#13;
OPEN ACCOUNTS INVITED&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Two BITS ON THE CORNER&#13;
&#13;
Established I 889&#13;
W. P.&#13;
T . A.&#13;
C. W.&#13;
C. G.&#13;
&#13;
410 PIERCE STREET&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Manley Pres.&#13;
Blach, V. Pres.&#13;
Britton, Cash.&#13;
Cummins, Asst. Cash.&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive CChings&#13;
IN HIS CHARIOT&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $500,000.00&#13;
&#13;
-246-&#13;
&#13;
-247-&#13;
&#13;
....._&#13;
&#13;
IN SEP ARABLES&#13;
&#13;
MATTERS OF SPEECH&#13;
Don't forget that, because ·you are a&#13;
college "stude," you are not . supposed to&#13;
use good English freely .'&#13;
&#13;
Lois Crouch and her note book.&#13;
George Washington Pratt, his little&#13;
wagon and his ambling gait.&#13;
&#13;
Don't say "fool" when you mean&#13;
"Idiot."&#13;
&#13;
Bess Shannon and her rosy cheeks.&#13;
Lois Russel, her tatting and Ewart&#13;
. Williams.&#13;
&#13;
" Don't say "Yep" for "yes."&#13;
Don't&#13;
say " get me" for " did you&#13;
catch the drift of the avalanche that detached itself from my storehouse of information and rolled its&#13;
ponderous&#13;
course down the steep incline of my sharpened lingual member?''&#13;
&#13;
Herbert .French and his Chemistry.&#13;
Kuhns and his smile.&#13;
Ethel Olsen and "A" grades.&#13;
Allan Kline and sarcasm.&#13;
Elsie Johnson and her Philo pin.&#13;
&#13;
She-" Lets tell ghost stories."&#13;
Kuhns-"Can you tell hair-raising&#13;
ghost stories?"&#13;
&#13;
Jas. Reistrup and a bored · expression&#13;
in chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Why were the Freshmen mustaches&#13;
like faith? Answer See Hebrews&#13;
&#13;
We foreshadow the inseparability,&#13;
hence-forth forever, of Luella and her K.&#13;
A frat pin.&#13;
&#13;
XI-I.&#13;
&#13;
DIAMONDS&#13;
The Hotel Martin&#13;
Absolutely Fireproof&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Our continuous progress in this department is largely&#13;
due to the constant personal efforts and close application&#13;
of the Members of our Firm, to our good understanding&#13;
of this particular commodity, and to our ability to offer the&#13;
best in quality and value.&#13;
&#13;
N ew goods recently&#13;
purchased in addition to our usual&#13;
supply afford a wide assortment.&#13;
&#13;
City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Will H Beck Co.&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Parties a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
IOWA'S LEADING JEWELERS AND DIAMOND ME RCHANTS&#13;
&#13;
Established 1877&#13;
-248-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
-249-&#13;
&#13;
Quality .&#13;
Photographs&#13;
WEGOT IT&#13;
&#13;
BA RKS TALKS TO&#13;
&#13;
Studio&#13;
&#13;
407 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
- 250-&#13;
&#13;
M. PURDY&#13;
&#13;
FOR 1 3/4 HOURS&#13;
&#13;
SALUTE&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
"HOD&#13;
&#13;
CHICK AND HIS&#13;
BASKET&#13;
&#13;
-251-&#13;
&#13;
I/&#13;
&#13;
PLACING HER&#13;
&#13;
UNHEARD-OF-THINGS&#13;
&#13;
If she goes with all the -boys, she is a&#13;
"coquette." If she goes with one, she is&#13;
"married," or can't get anyone else.&#13;
If she majors in Chemistry or Biology,&#13;
she is queer. If she does not, she is looking for snappy courses.&#13;
If she's athletic, she loses her "maidenenly charms." If she is not-well "girls&#13;
can't do very much anyway."&#13;
If she asserts herself in class, she is&#13;
"strong-headed."&#13;
If she doesn't, she&#13;
"hasn't any brains."&#13;
If she doesn't talk much, she'.s "uninteresting." If she does, she's a " Bore."&#13;
So how is a girl to please.&#13;
EXCHANGES&#13;
' They walked among the shredded wheat&#13;
When grape-nuts were in season.&#13;
He asked her why she was so sweet,&#13;
She answered, "There's a reason."&#13;
Don't try to drive a nail with a sponge.&#13;
You can't do it, no matter how much you&#13;
soak it.&#13;
"What becomes of the righteous?"&#13;
"Eternal bliss."&#13;
"What becomes of the unrighteous?"&#13;
. "Eternal blister."&#13;
Who&#13;
western&#13;
The&#13;
creeping&#13;
&#13;
was the builder of the NorthRailroad?&#13;
Bible says, "God created all&#13;
things."&#13;
&#13;
43 Years a Resident of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman-chewing gum.&#13;
&#13;
I Know Values and Locations&#13;
&#13;
M.C.PETERS&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College-without a fire.&#13;
Prof. Hayes-giving a chapel talk.&#13;
&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDE REAL ESTATE MAN&#13;
&#13;
The library- being used for study.&#13;
Write me-Phon·e me, 6464 or 6567&#13;
or Better Yet&#13;
COME AND SEE ME&#13;
&#13;
Shelley-pulling off a bone-head.&#13;
The campus-with side walks.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
PETERS PARK STATION&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Bob Vernon-missing the train.&#13;
Eng. I -without an Orpheum skit by&#13;
Hayes.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
"Chick" Anderson-with a civilized·&#13;
laugh.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•.&#13;
&#13;
$4.00&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Carson- breaking a faculty for&#13;
a date with Luella.&#13;
&#13;
TELL TALES&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
$6.00 Values&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal&#13;
Good Measure&#13;
And Good Service&#13;
&#13;
$2.95&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dutton-keeping a date book.&#13;
Unmarried faculty members-being&#13;
hilarious at ravine picnics.&#13;
&#13;
PHONE US YOUR COAL ORDER&#13;
We Will Take Care of You&#13;
When the Time Comes&#13;
&#13;
Shoes for Young Men&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig-at ease.&#13;
&#13;
The H. E. Haakinson Coal Co.&#13;
&#13;
The Sample Shoe Store&#13;
&#13;
3 I 2 Jackson Street&#13;
Auto Phone 2 I 7 4&#13;
&#13;
Over Beck's&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 5 7 2&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
"She told me you told her that secret I&#13;
told you not to tell her."&#13;
"The mean thing! I told her not to&#13;
tell you I told her. I promised her I&#13;
wouldn't tell you she told me so don't tell ·&#13;
her I told you."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Leading Florists&#13;
FRESH CUT FLOWERS-All kinds of floral emblems made up by us. We&#13;
know how. American Beauties, Roses and Carnations always on hand. Positively the&#13;
finest and largest display in town. Our prices are right.&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
ROCKLIN &amp; LEHMAN&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING FLORISTS&#13;
NEW STORE :&#13;
&#13;
402 Fourth Street; one of the Finest in the West&#13;
Auto 4199-3112; Iowa 3112&#13;
TOM DEALTRY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
-252- 253-&#13;
&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
Flowers convey best the glad or the sad or the particular&#13;
story you wish to tell&#13;
Let us handle your requirements from the rarest and choicest assortment&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY AND SERVICE UNEQUALLED&#13;
&#13;
J. R. ELDER&#13;
HOME-GROWN FLOWERS&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
Greenhouses at Riverside&#13;
&#13;
5 12 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Students in need of Glasses will find our OPTOMETRISTS&#13;
competent eye examiners and specialists in fitting nose glasses.&#13;
Ask any of the thousands we have fitted. All glasses made&#13;
in our own shop.&#13;
Corner 5th&#13;
and&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
Streets&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 3730&#13;
&#13;
605 FIFTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST BLOOM&#13;
TAILOR&#13;
Also Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing&#13;
BETWEEN JACKSON AND NEBRASKA STREETS&#13;
&#13;
-254-&#13;
&#13;
- 255-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
(Left out of the College Catalogue)&#13;
&#13;
T HE D E P A R TMENT O F HUMAN NATUR E&#13;
·. Professor, Dr. Wallace Carson&#13;
Dr. James Hayes, Ass't.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
We carry a complete line of&#13;
Up-to-Date Clothing and Furnishing Goods at very lowest&#13;
prices. Visit our store when m&#13;
need of clothing.&#13;
&#13;
COURSES IN&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MA NUFACTURER OF&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FINE FUits&#13;
&#13;
Ten per cent discount to&#13;
F acuity and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
FussoL OGY AND CORRIDOROLOGY&#13;
&#13;
I. ELEMENTARY COURSE-Ir regular class periods with various subjects, pursuing differen t bran ches of study, such as t he Princess or Grand, auto rides, short walks&#13;
and other equally entertaining courses. Open to all those who are undecided as to&#13;
what permanent subject to. pursue. Especially desirable for Freshmen.&#13;
II.&#13;
SEMI-ADVANCED COURSE (A continuation of course I)-The aim of this&#13;
course is to make the laboratory -method more prominent and encourage original work&#13;
as much as possible. Long field trips are required&#13;
on moonlight nights to interesting&#13;
points of th.e suburb, such as Floyd's Monument, South Ravine, Graceland Cemetery,&#13;
etc., also short s picy trips are offered during the regular chapel hours, tete tetes between classes and various at.her similar lines of work ( ?) Conference hours a r e held&#13;
in the library for individual ins truction intended to develop an appreciation of an d love&#13;
for human nature in the concrete.&#13;
III. ADVANCED COURSE~This course is a preparation course for the future.&#13;
Open only to t hose who are majoring in this department and intending to follow it as a&#13;
life work. This course is conducted entirely without text books, stress being laid on&#13;
lengthy conversations on personal topics. Research work in waist-line measurement&#13;
a nd standards of osculatorology required. Special credit given for field trips and&#13;
laboratory work completed in Course II.&#13;
.&#13;
IV. CORRESPONDENCE COURSE-Special ·c ourse offered in letter writing. The&#13;
intensive pursuit of the different s teps in its developmen t will entitle the student the&#13;
same credit as cou rse III.&#13;
*In the spring time Campis try i s substituted for Corridorology&#13;
especially attractive and desirable.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson&#13;
&#13;
310 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
710-712 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
CITY,&#13;
&#13;
STUD ENTS ENR OLL E D&#13;
•'Moxey" Hicks&#13;
"Bill" Wedgwood&#13;
" Bi ll" Payne&#13;
Merril 1 Stevens&#13;
"Turk"&#13;
&#13;
Eiffert&#13;
•'Sappy" DeWalt&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
COUR SE II&#13;
&#13;
COUU SE I&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
"OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
and is considered&#13;
&#13;
Marie Anderson&#13;
Alice Jeffery&#13;
Louise Hansen&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Charmion Holbert&#13;
Lucille Me tcalfe&#13;
&#13;
••'Jim" Kolp&#13;
*R. Overholser&#13;
*D. Shelmidine&#13;
*Undecided w h at cou r se to pursue&#13;
&#13;
z - ''Bisho p" Buehler Irene Chapin&#13;
Marion Metcalfe&#13;
"Ed" Harrington&#13;
Cornelia McBurn ney&#13;
''Herbie" French&#13;
"Chuck"&#13;
Hutton&#13;
'•Bill" Will iams&#13;
Al. Hornney&#13;
x-Wendell Curry&#13;
&#13;
June Bowen&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
&#13;
MArg Cu mmings&#13;
Bes&#13;
Howell&#13;
x-F lorence Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Archer&#13;
z-Receiving onl y hal f credi t.&#13;
x - Conflict w i th course IV.&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
&#13;
COUR SE III&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHERS&#13;
&#13;
827 Fourth Street; Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Service&#13;
&#13;
Courtesy Safety&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Convenience&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
&#13;
E. L. KIRK, Gen'! Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Harrison Kil b ourne Ruth Blackman&#13;
z- Glen Patrick&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
z -Joh n Kolp&#13;
z -Lysle Hosford&#13;
Winnie&#13;
Wood&#13;
z-Arthur Lindsay&#13;
Lois Russel&#13;
Ewart Williams&#13;
L eone C lou gh&#13;
Stanley Bashaw&#13;
Gladys Long&#13;
Glen Oxford&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
Clair Cooper&#13;
Mabel Irwin&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
Marie Devit t&#13;
H e r bert Dunh a m&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
Wayne Coster&#13;
Marion Heikes&#13;
Herman L ueder&#13;
Anna vVilliams&#13;
Tyler Williams&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
*Lee Barks&#13;
*Prof. Carson&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Robert Verno n&#13;
Bess Johnson&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Lol a Williamso n&#13;
Vivian Lavel y&#13;
Leona Wheatley&#13;
Walter Hel d&#13;
Mary Royse&#13;
x-Elihu Shoemaker x-Lovice Str obel&#13;
z-Receiving o nl y half credi t.&#13;
x-Conflict with course IV.&#13;
*Post graduate.&#13;
&#13;
COURSE&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth James (Ames)&#13;
Ruth Gill ies (Drake)&#13;
MAry Ordway (Castana)&#13;
E leanor Winkleman (N orthwestern U.)&#13;
M arie Easthouse (So. Dakota)&#13;
Ethel Ordway (Castana and Ames)&#13;
Bonnie Robinson (Wisconsin)&#13;
Glen Mille r (Spencer)&#13;
Ethel Coom e r (Kingsley)&#13;
Burrel Evans (Cedar Falls)&#13;
Elsie Johnson (Dixon, Mon t.)&#13;
Leone Lange (Nebraska U).&#13;
Frances Kolp (Jacksonville, Ill.)&#13;
Elihu Sh oemak er (Danbury, e tc.)&#13;
Lo vice Strobel (AMes)&#13;
-257-&#13;
&#13;
-256-&#13;
&#13;
IV&#13;
&#13;
Florence Bull (Ames)&#13;
&#13;
BRINK'S MEAT MARKET&#13;
WE SUPPLY THE LEADING BOARDING HOUSES OF&#13;
MORNINGSIDE WITH ALL KINDS OF FRESH MEATS&#13;
PHONE US YOUR ORDER&#13;
AND OUR DELIVERY WILL REACH YOU PROMPTLY&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6284&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
K&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
Everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles,&#13;
Rubber Goods, Trusses, etc.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
Supplies and Finishing&#13;
High Grade Candies- All Popular&#13;
Brands&#13;
VISIT OUR&#13;
&#13;
TEA ROOM&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
The most popular refreshment place in&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
ELIASON&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
Two STORES&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Home Portrait Photography&#13;
He Pleases&#13;
&#13;
Galinsky Bros. Company&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES--The lowest.&#13;
QUALITY- The highest&#13;
GooDs-The freshest.&#13;
SERVICE-The promptest&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
- 258-&#13;
&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
N&#13;
E&#13;
T&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
HARPERS&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
PIPER &amp; LARSON&#13;
&#13;
FAULTLESS&#13;
FASCINATING&#13;
FASHIONABLE&#13;
are the adjectives that best describe our SHOES and HOSIERY&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
&#13;
H. &amp; H. SHOE CO.&#13;
512 Fourth Street ·&#13;
&#13;
FIRST CLASS WORK AT&#13;
&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES&#13;
&#13;
WANTED&#13;
-An&#13;
&#13;
.unattached, suitable&#13;
companion to take the place of Luella.&#13;
Christine Haas.&#13;
&#13;
WANT ADS&#13;
&#13;
ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE. CHEAP-several slightly damaged text books, commenceGuy McKinney&#13;
ment week.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
19 17 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 1227&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE-The art of bluffing. Not&#13;
in very good repair, but might be of&#13;
use to Greek students.&#13;
Vivian Lavely.&#13;
FOR SALE-Annuals of all kinds and&#13;
descriptions.&#13;
John V. Madison.&#13;
&#13;
FORSBERG&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
IN CITY OR COUNTRY&#13;
&#13;
CO.&#13;
&#13;
K. &amp; K . G rocery&#13;
&#13;
All Know the&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE-Latest book-"How to&#13;
avoid accident when alighting from an&#13;
Ames street car."&#13;
"Tommy" James.&#13;
&#13;
Buy Your Groceries of Us&#13;
and Get the Best and the&#13;
Most for Your Money&#13;
&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
CUTLERY&#13;
AND STOVES&#13;
&#13;
Sell your produce to us&#13;
and Get All That Is Coming&#13;
to You.&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Furnace and Tin Work&#13;
Give Us a Trial for&#13;
Anything in Hardware&#13;
&#13;
K. &amp; K . Grocery&#13;
&#13;
WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1832-305 7; Iowa 942&#13;
&#13;
10 10- 10 12 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
522-524 Fifth St.&#13;
- 260-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FOR R ENT-Nice brown freckles. In&#13;
good condition by June-Easy terms.&#13;
Marion Metcalfe.&#13;
FOR RENT-A popular laugh. Guaranteed to "Take" in any crowd.&#13;
"Chick" Anderson.&#13;
FOR RENT-All of my books during&#13;
the evening, at your own price.&#13;
Herman Lueder.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED&#13;
&#13;
C. F. MANHOLD, Mngr.&#13;
&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
FOR R ENT -A good grouch. Will&#13;
prove satisfactory on any and all oc"Chuck" Hutton.&#13;
casions.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-A steady girl. Will receive considerable attention, including&#13;
best plays, Princess and auto rides, if she&#13;
can appreciate my ability and position.&#13;
Arthur Payne.&#13;
&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
LOSTAda Beans.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-Cement walks on the campus.&#13;
Student Body.&#13;
&#13;
FOUND- In Kingsley, one very nice&#13;
agreeable man.&#13;
Ethel Coomer.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-A patented, guaranteed&#13;
contraption that will bring Miss Strobel&#13;
to class on time.&#13;
Prof. Macmillan.&#13;
&#13;
FOUND-A good opinion of myself.&#13;
Glen Miller.&#13;
&#13;
WANTED-A monopoly on Winnie&#13;
Wood.&#13;
Arthur Lindsay.&#13;
WANTED-Lessons on how to become&#13;
J. G. Herbster.&#13;
graceful.&#13;
WANTED-Someone to take care of&#13;
me.&#13;
"Uppie."&#13;
- 26 1-&#13;
&#13;
LOST- The last remnant of my bash"Ike" Breckenridge.&#13;
fulness.&#13;
DON'TS FOR MEN&#13;
Upon meeting a lady, don't bother to&#13;
raise your hat-it takes too much energy&#13;
to take your hand out of your pocket.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN PLAN&#13;
&#13;
RATES 75c AND UP&#13;
&#13;
125 Rooms-&#13;
&#13;
CAFE IN CONNECTION&#13;
&#13;
Fortywith Bath&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
SIOUX C ITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
CORNER FIFTH AND JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
PEEK-A-BOO&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BARBER SHOP&#13;
C. D. KELLOGG, Proprietor&#13;
Under Dierkin's Market&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S CANDY PALACE&#13;
Hom e of&#13;
PETE 'S HAND ROLLED BITTER SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Choicest Qualities in Confections&#13;
&#13;
Ross M . CooMER, MEM. AM. soc. c. E.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL&#13;
ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS&#13;
We Rebuilt Main Hall, Morningside College&#13;
We Built the Alumni Gymnasium&#13;
&#13;
JIM&#13;
&#13;
MORE&#13;
&#13;
FUSSERS&#13;
&#13;
311-312 United Bank Building, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ask Our C lients About Us&#13;
Auto Phone 3719&#13;
&#13;
AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
CORRECT DRESS FOR WOMEN&#13;
EXCLUSIVE LADIES' SUITS, COATS, FURS, WAISTS,&#13;
MUSLIN UNDERWEAR, CORSETS AND MILLINERY&#13;
&#13;
DOMESTICS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S MOST APPRECIATED STORE&#13;
509-11-13 FOURTH STREET&#13;
-262263-&#13;
&#13;
TAILORIN·G&#13;
SUITS AND OVERCOATS&#13;
&#13;
$15.00, $18.00, $20,00, $22.00&#13;
OVER 400 PATTERNS TO SELECT FROM&#13;
&#13;
A Tailor for 24 Years Solicits Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
W. A. WORTH, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
404 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
STUNG&#13;
&#13;
Engineers&#13;
Contractors&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing&#13;
Heating&#13;
&#13;
Orr &amp; Graves Co.&#13;
We did the heating and plumbing in all the&#13;
College Buildings&#13;
S 13 JACKSON STREET&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 15 44&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
First Class in Every Respect&#13;
&#13;
The Hess Music House&#13;
&#13;
West Barber Shop&#13;
and Bath Rooms&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Street&#13;
264-&#13;
&#13;
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF ALL KINDS&#13;
Sheet Music and Music Supplies&#13;
FREDERICK E . H ESS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
LORD, Proprietor&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
508 Fifth Street&#13;
- 26 5-&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
The whole store&#13;
&#13;
breathing the atmosphere&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
"Smart Style"&#13;
&#13;
The Stanley Company&#13;
OUTFITTERS for LADIES and MISSES&#13;
&#13;
DONT'S FOR MEN (Cont.)&#13;
&#13;
TABLE DON'TS&#13;
&#13;
Don't open a door for a lady unless&#13;
you want to go inside yourself-then always pass in first.&#13;
&#13;
Don't surprise the table by being&#13;
time.&#13;
&#13;
Don't overload your fork. You can&#13;
hold a great deal more food on your&#13;
knife and it requires much more dexterity&#13;
to manage it.&#13;
&#13;
Don't exert yourself or soil your hands&#13;
by putting on or taking off a ladies rubbers.&#13;
Don't burden yourself down by carrying any girls books.&#13;
Don't ask for a date until the last&#13;
minute-you may change your mind and&#13;
then a girl always enjoys the suspense of&#13;
uncertainty.&#13;
Don't offer your seat to a lady standing in a street car; it is a reflection on&#13;
your college training.&#13;
Don't bother to wear a collar and tie&#13;
to breakfast; a sweater · looks just as well&#13;
and gives you more time to sleep.&#13;
Don't think it a mark of ill-breeding&#13;
to use a tooth pick at the table ; in high&#13;
society it is considered quite •comme ii&#13;
faut.&#13;
Don't shave too often; its such a waste&#13;
of time, for whiskers only grow out again,&#13;
besides they serve as a protection to the&#13;
face .&#13;
Don't, above all things, be fussy about&#13;
your personal appearance on the campus.&#13;
Wear anything for comfort. Even house&#13;
slippers have been seen.&#13;
Don't tell one girl what you think of&#13;
the others. Better tel-a-phone.&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
Don't let your spoon stand in your cup.&#13;
Be polite, and ask it to " Be seated."&#13;
Don't become embarrassed if you should&#13;
happen to get a spot on the table cloth.&#13;
Absent-mindedly place a piece of bread&#13;
over it-butter side down- this keeps the&#13;
spot from the public eye beautifully.&#13;
Don't cause a scene if you spill your&#13;
coffee in your neighbor's lap. Smooth the&#13;
matter over by telling him that you really&#13;
didn't care for the coffee anyway.&#13;
Don't take your soup from the side of&#13;
the spoon, but sip it from the end, making&#13;
a cute noise like a leaky faucet. The&#13;
sound of a good soup is as music to the&#13;
ear.&#13;
Don't hesitate to drink much water at&#13;
a meal. When doing so, remember that&#13;
it is considered quite a feat to make a&#13;
noise like a soda fountain.&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"Now Mr. Omer, just&#13;
what does Grace mean to you?" It is&#13;
reported that Omer blushed and acted as&#13;
if too full for words.&#13;
Joke Editor-"Know any jokes Carl?"&#13;
Carl Sass-No. What have I to do&#13;
with the evanescent effervescences of temperamental imbecility, or the transient ebullitions of scurrility?"&#13;
&#13;
-266-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Most Complete Line of Sporting&#13;
and Athletic Goods&#13;
IN THIS PART OF THE COUNTRY&#13;
W E CARRY&#13;
&#13;
REACH, COLDSMITH &amp; SPAULDIN G ATHLETIC GOODS&#13;
IF IT IS TO BE FOUND IN SIOUX CITY IT IS HERE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College and its Students use Our&#13;
ATHLETIC AND KNIT GOODS, SO IT MUST BE THE BEST&#13;
-2 67-&#13;
&#13;
I .&#13;
&#13;
The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company&#13;
OF MILWAUKEE, WIS.&#13;
WHAT IT DID IN IOWA IN 1914IT WROTE MORE INSURANCE THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY&#13;
IT GAINED MORE INSURANCE THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY&#13;
WHAT IT HAS IN IOWA-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
,.,&#13;
&#13;
IT HAS IN FORCE A LARGER AMOUNT OF INSURANCE THAN ·&#13;
ANY OTHER COMPANY ON THE LEGAL RESERVE PLAN&#13;
IT HAS OVER $26,000,000 LOANED ON&#13;
&#13;
!OWA REAL ESTATE&#13;
College Men Wanted for Agents&#13;
&#13;
310-311-312-313 Davidson Building&#13;
&#13;
W . M . McKERCHER General Agent&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
CLEANING&#13;
&#13;
RELINING&#13;
&#13;
.PETERS PARK TAILOR SHOP&#13;
SUITS MADE TO MEASURE&#13;
Auto 6336&#13;
&#13;
PRESSING&#13;
&#13;
NEAR THE RESTAURANT&#13;
&#13;
REMODELING&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STATIONERY CO.&#13;
NEW LOCATION&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
NEW MARTIN BLOCK&#13;
&#13;
BUY YOUR TRUNKS AND SUIT CASES WHERE&#13;
THEY ARE MADE AND SAVE MONEY&#13;
REPAIRING NEATLY DONE&#13;
&#13;
ANTHONY TRUNK FACTORY&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
&#13;
21 08&#13;
&#13;
Fifth St., Near Pierce&#13;
-268-&#13;
&#13;
-269-&#13;
&#13;
·' .&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC SCREENED COAL&#13;
THE PERFECT FUEL&#13;
&#13;
Brown Coal Company&#13;
UNITED BANK BUILDING&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
IN THE STEADY GROWTH AND SUBSTANTIAL&#13;
DEVELOPMENT OF THIS SUBURB&#13;
we are indeed g lad to be a live factor . From the day our Bank opened for business,&#13;
n early three years ago, we have endeavored to keep in touch with and assist in every way&#13;
possible along conserva ti ve lin es in the upbuilding and advancement of Morningside and&#13;
the a dj ace nt farming commu nit y. We are espec ially grateful to the College Faculty and&#13;
students fo r the busin ess entrusted to us, and sha ll a l ways use our best efforts in the&#13;
h andl in g of th ei r accounts.&#13;
&#13;
MUD-HENS&#13;
&#13;
·MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
E. C.&#13;
C. J.&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
Full Line in Following Departments:&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
GROCERY DEPT.&#13;
MEAT DEPT.&#13;
DRY GOODS DEPT.&#13;
HARDWARE DEPT.&#13;
PAINT DEPT .&#13;
FEED AND FUEL DEPT.&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
"LITTLE BROWN JUG"&#13;
&#13;
RESPONSIBILITY $100,000.00&#13;
]OHN SCOTT,&#13;
Cash.&#13;
GEO. E. WARD, V. Pres.&#13;
F. w. LOHR&#13;
C. w. PAYN :':&#13;
&#13;
PETERS, Pres.&#13;
MILLIGAN&#13;
&#13;
All Goods Sold at Prices&#13;
Competition&#13;
PLEASE&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
"I. W. W'S&#13;
&#13;
FORGET&#13;
&#13;
Auto&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
NUMBERS&#13;
&#13;
670 and 671 ;&#13;
69 and 691 1&#13;
4102-4-6-8&#13;
&#13;
-270-&#13;
&#13;
Meet Cit;y&#13;
&#13;
Phones&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
To MARKET&#13;
&#13;
DON'T&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Ave.&#13;
-271-&#13;
&#13;
LET LINDHOLM FURNISH YouR HOME COMPLETE&#13;
ACRES OF FURNITURE TO CHOOSE FROM&#13;
&#13;
Lindholm Furniture Co.&#13;
51 3-15-1 7 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
4 I 2- I 4- I 6 SIXTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
MODERN CLOTHES MAKERS FOR MEN&#13;
&#13;
Glasgow Tailors&#13;
&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
UP&#13;
&#13;
Suit or Overcoat to order&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
$15.00&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR BETTER MAKES&#13;
&#13;
5 I I Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; Co.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
GOING UP&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR&#13;
&#13;
Mother's Bread&#13;
Out-of-Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
&#13;
ROUGH NECKS -&#13;
&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
Auto Phone I I 9 7&#13;
Bell Phone I 9 7&#13;
&#13;
DOWN&#13;
&#13;
408-4 I O Iowa Street&#13;
-272-&#13;
&#13;
-273-&#13;
&#13;
TREE TAG&#13;
&#13;
SUPERB BRAND&#13;
·FOOD PRODUCTS&#13;
&#13;
Mabel I. goes to make personal application for position. Earl goes to the car&#13;
to meet her.&#13;
Uppie-"Hello, Earl-Where's everybody?"&#13;
Earl-"She'll be out on the next car."&#13;
Cora Dutton-"What did I make in&#13;
my French exam, Miss Lutz?"&#13;
Miss Lutz- " Mistakes."&#13;
A DRAMA IN THREE ACTS&#13;
ACT. I&#13;
Guy McKinney sizes up the F reshmen girls and picks out a neat one for an&#13;
early season fussing venture. He makes&#13;
a date for that evening.&#13;
ACT. II&#13;
Since Act. I., "Mac" has forgotten the&#13;
girl's name and isn't sure that he knows&#13;
where she lives, but recalling that a&#13;
" faint heart ne'er won a fair lady," he&#13;
&#13;
ARE NOT ONLY SUPERB I N QUALITY, BUT&#13;
ARE&#13;
&#13;
DEPENDABLE&#13;
&#13;
UNIFORMITY.&#13;
&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
THEIR&#13;
&#13;
SOLD STRICTLY ON MERIT&#13;
&#13;
AND C ONTAIN NO PREMIUMS OR COUPONS&#13;
&#13;
ACT. Ill.&#13;
"Mac" calls his forces for a consultation for a time to locate the place and&#13;
the girl.&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"No really, I am not&#13;
saving my money for anything serious."&#13;
Comment-We are glad you take it&#13;
with a light heart.&#13;
Prof. Carson-waiting impatiently for&#13;
an answer from the rear of the room"Well, I would think that you could&#13;
answer that question with all the help that&#13;
you are getting."&#13;
just&#13;
the&#13;
Leon Johnson-"That's&#13;
trouble, there seems to be a difference of&#13;
opinion back here."&#13;
First F reshie-"What is the synonym&#13;
for accrue?''&#13;
Second F reshie- " A gang."&#13;
&#13;
Established 1890&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
calls at Cobbs and asks for the lady with&#13;
whom he has a date&#13;
&#13;
D epository of the United&#13;
States.&#13;
D epository of the · County&#13;
of Woodbury&#13;
D epository of the City of&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
D epository of the Sioux&#13;
City School&#13;
District.&#13;
Is it Y O U R depository?&#13;
&#13;
rowA&#13;
&#13;
Four th and LafayetteSts.&#13;
&#13;
LEADING GROCERS ARE CLAD&#13;
TO SUPPLY YOU&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete&#13;
stock of building material in&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
&#13;
the city.&#13;
DISTRIBUTED BY&#13;
&#13;
Tolerlon &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Fourth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
General Banking&#13;
Safety D eposit Boxes&#13;
Savings D epartment Open Saturday&#13;
Evenings&#13;
&#13;
Do not fail to let us figure&#13;
your lumber bill.&#13;
&#13;
J. A&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE M . JORDAN, Mngr.&#13;
Phones: Auto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
-274-&#13;
&#13;
-275-&#13;
&#13;
MAGOUN, President&#13;
B . H . KINGSBURY, Vice-Pres.&#13;
I. M. LYON, Cahier&#13;
&#13;
HAMILTON SOFT WATER LAUNDRY&#13;
Dyers and Dry Cleaners&#13;
613 - 615 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
YOUTH&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Livery, Feed and Sale Stable&#13;
(Blue Barn)&#13;
FANCY DRIVERS A N D SADDLERS&#13;
HEAVY HAULING&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Shipman's Grocery&#13;
and Resturant&#13;
&#13;
W. R. SHIPMAN, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
YD&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phones 6126-6453, Bell 1811&#13;
2101-2 121 Lakeport, Morningside&#13;
Blue G arage&#13;
Blacksmith and Machine Shop&#13;
All Work Guaranteed&#13;
Automobile Accessories and Repairing. Auto Livery. Never Closed.&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
P&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
THE OLD FOLKS&#13;
&#13;
SAFETY FIRST&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BAKERY&#13;
GOODS OF QUA LITY&#13;
AN EVENIN GS ENTERTAINMENT&#13;
&#13;
A Service Augmented Through&#13;
Y EARS OF EXPERIENCE&#13;
&#13;
A VARIETY OF&#13;
&#13;
REFINED PHOTO PLAYS&#13;
&#13;
10c Park Theatre&#13;
FACULTY -&#13;
&#13;
LOCATED&#13;
&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
NEW&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
PARK BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
5c&#13;
&#13;
FRED B. PHIPPS&#13;
&#13;
BEFORE&#13;
TEN PER CENT DISCOUNT GIVEN TO FACULTY AND STUDENTS&#13;
FROM REGULAR PRICES&#13;
&#13;
Quality and&#13;
Service&#13;
&#13;
The Sign&#13;
of&#13;
3 15&#13;
&#13;
AFTER THE CEREMONY&#13;
NURSERYMAN&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH S TREET&#13;
&#13;
LANDSCAPE GARDENER&#13;
-277-&#13;
&#13;
- 276-&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
XTENDS A HEARTY WELCOME TO YOU,&#13;
WHO ARE AMBITIOUS FOR AN EDUCATION. EDUCATION MEANS PREPARATION.&#13;
THE BETTER THE PREPARATION,&#13;
THE BETTER THE SERVICE; THE LARGER&#13;
THE REW ARDS; REWARDS IN TERMS OF&#13;
"MONEY," IN TERMS OF "HAPPINESS" AND&#13;
IN TERMS OF "REAL LIFE." YOU NEED THE&#13;
COLLEGE FOR YOUR PREPARATION.&#13;
&#13;
For further particulars,&#13;
catalog or illustrated bulletin,&#13;
address the President,&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, PH. D.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
-278-&#13;
&#13;
-279-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Auto Livery- New Cars At Your Service&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ORA Y AND AUTO CO.&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
D A R LIN G, P rop.&#13;
&#13;
Reciprocity Stimulates Cordiality&#13;
&#13;
I WILL&#13;
&#13;
We are the only Laundry West of Chicago Washing Your Linen in Distilled&#13;
Water.&#13;
ABSOLUTELY SAN ITARY&#13;
&#13;
Should be ·your life's motto-it breathes the spirit of accomplishment. Successful&#13;
business · men have invariably laid the foundation of their success to the Savings Bank&#13;
habit. You cannot do better than follow their example by · opening an account with&#13;
this bank at the earliest moment and putting yourself in line.&#13;
&#13;
We invite you to call any day and examine the plant&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE AGENT. HENRY COTTAM&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN LAUNDRY CO.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
Security Building&#13;
&#13;
Phones 1638-333&#13;
&#13;
ThreeRahs and&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Tiger&#13;
&#13;
For the Table Set With&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
CLEAN GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
FROM THE -&#13;
&#13;
Model Grocery&#13;
_&#13;
"Good Groceries for L ess Money"&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS&#13;
Auto 6625, Iowa 945&#13;
&#13;
$720,000.00&#13;
&#13;
2101 St. Mary's St.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Stephens, in Biology, has a bad&#13;
cold and asks Mr. D e L app if he has&#13;
anything to say on the lesson.&#13;
DeLapp-"No."&#13;
D r. Stevens- "I thought I might draw&#13;
something out by hearing you talk."&#13;
D eLapp-"There's nothing in."&#13;
Spec. Hambleton says the reason why&#13;
Clair Sherwood wears ear flappers is to&#13;
keep his ears from flapping his brains out.&#13;
Fletcher Pollock-"Miss Stevens, why&#13;
do you wear two pair of glasses?"&#13;
Miss Stevens-"! need these strong&#13;
ones when I record the grades."&#13;
Why didn't Marie and Herb go to&#13;
Lois' party?&#13;
Because of an accident - Herb fell&#13;
asleep.&#13;
We learn that Carson is inquiring&#13;
about the best kind of furnaces. He won't&#13;
have to ask about dishes, he bought some&#13;
for the Agora club.&#13;
&#13;
Fletch. Pollock on the glee club trip&#13;
staid with a Quaker family. Not being&#13;
accustomed to silent prayer, he offers&#13;
thanks.&#13;
Stranger comes into the hall and asks&#13;
a loiterer for Royal JurgesonLoiterer-"Is he a Freshman?"&#13;
Stranger-"No, he's a Dutchman."&#13;
P rof. Hayes-"Morgan Wallace, now&#13;
at the Princess, unbuttons one button of&#13;
his vest, and so does P rof. Carson. That&#13;
style is sure to pass. Now if you want&#13;
to be conservative, button up every button&#13;
you've got!"&#13;
Prof. Brown in Education III, when&#13;
the class was unusually slow in responding&#13;
lo questions, "This is a Methodist institution, and in Methodist churches and institutions it is customary to give prompt testimony."&#13;
Prof. Campbell, sitting in his home one&#13;
evening, feels a draft and , rising, closes&#13;
the book case door.&#13;
&#13;
-281--&#13;
&#13;
-28 0-&#13;
&#13;
CLASSPINS&#13;
&#13;
''GOOD COAL''&#13;
&#13;
MEDALS&#13;
&#13;
EMBLEMS&#13;
&#13;
MA DE . TO O RDE R&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
"Lumber of Quality"&#13;
&#13;
Expert&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds and Solid Gold J ewelry&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lbr. Co.&#13;
RETAIL COAL&#13;
15 04 East Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Watch and J ewelry Repairing&#13;
&#13;
OLSON-EHLERMAN CO.&#13;
&#13;
RETAIL LUMBER&#13;
600 W. Seventh St.&#13;
&#13;
51 0 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Patton &amp; Smith&#13;
&#13;
Art Publishing Co.&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Auto P hone 61 36&#13;
LEADING&#13;
MORNINGSIDE R EAL EST A TE&#13;
DEALERS&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY PRI NTING&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
&#13;
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES&#13;
FRESH FRUI TS AND CON FECTION S&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE AT PETERS&#13;
&#13;
PARK&#13;
&#13;
ST UDENTS LET US FURNISH YOUR PICN IC SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
52 1 Douglas Street, Oxford H otel Building, opposite City Hall&#13;
Auto Phone 2588&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Agency for&#13;
HA RTFORD INSURANCE CO.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ST, AUBINS STATION&#13;
&#13;
SCHULEIN&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Undertaking Parlors&#13;
J. D. ROSE,&#13;
&#13;
HOME OF GOOD SHOES AND HOSIERY&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
A COMPLETE LIN E AT ALL TIMES FOR THE E NTIRE FAMILY&#13;
&#13;
4202 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
5 08 4th Street&#13;
Telephone Auto 6721&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
YES WE DO SHOE REPAIRING&#13;
&#13;
Residence P hone&#13;
-283-&#13;
&#13;
282-&#13;
&#13;
The Class of Work We Turn Out&#13;
Pleases the Most Particular&#13;
&#13;
We Can Convince You&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
CO LLEGE&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
&#13;
The Motto of Millions&#13;
of thrifty, indus trious, happy citizens of {he&#13;
United States is, "Live R espectably and&#13;
Save a Little."&#13;
This is an excellent rule, _&#13;
and if you can&#13;
save a good deal, so much the better. ..&#13;
This Bank Provides P erfect Safety for&#13;
Sioux City Savers and Pays Them Compound Interest on Th eir Savings.&#13;
&#13;
New Method&#13;
Soft Water&#13;
Laundry&#13;
31 3 Pearl Street&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank ·&#13;
Southeast Corner Fourth and&#13;
&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Sts&#13;
&#13;
Under the Supervision of the State of Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
CHIEF-GROWERS&#13;
&#13;
OH&#13;
&#13;
Open Saturday Evenings- 7 to 9 o'clock.&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
Ice&#13;
&#13;
Eat More&#13;
&#13;
WH&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
Cream&#13;
&#13;
KE&#13;
&#13;
IT'S GOOD · FOR YOU&#13;
The more sense we get the longer we live. We are nearly all killed&#13;
by ignorance. Very few of us die of old age.&#13;
What the human race has learned abou t food values in the last generation has increased the average length of life by fift een years.&#13;
We have found, for example, that Ice Cream makes for a long life.&#13;
There are two reasons for this: First, being made of sugar and cream, it&#13;
has one of the highest food values known. Second, being so easy to digest,&#13;
it puts the least amount of effort on our digestive organs.&#13;
We have learned these facts and as a consequence we are eating&#13;
&#13;
FIVE HUNDRED PER CENT MORE IC E CREAM THAN WE&#13;
DID FOUR YEARS AGO.&#13;
Try it. Eat it oftener and you'll live longer.&#13;
&#13;
HANFORD PRODUCE COMPANY&#13;
Auto Phone 49 5 1 ,&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 4 2 1&#13;
&#13;
RS&#13;
&#13;
AFTERTHE&#13;
&#13;
SCRAP.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
CO&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
PL&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
JOKES&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dimmit-"During your stay&#13;
abroad did you meet any old ruins?"&#13;
Ruby Flinn-"I was proposed to by&#13;
three!"&#13;
Class in Physics- Prof. Styles"Will you define phosphoresence, Mr.&#13;
Sass?"&#13;
Sass-"It is a continuation of a sensation of radiation after a cessation of&#13;
the stimulation."&#13;
English Nine-Hamlet holds his lady&#13;
friend at arms length and looks intently&#13;
at her"Bee" Wright-"! don't see anything&#13;
unusual iri that."&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"Why, are you used to&#13;
having such things happen?"&#13;
Laughter by Coster.&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in'· Brick&#13;
&#13;
Hoody and " Dot" Owen start the&#13;
second semester by arousing the librarian's&#13;
wrath for playing Romeo and Juliet in&#13;
the stack room.&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRICK&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Campbell-"Mr. Arthur Johnson, what does our author say about the&#13;
pugnacity instinct in the English and do ·&#13;
you agree with him?"&#13;
Johnson- "I don't believe I know what · .&#13;
the author says, but I agree with him.".&#13;
&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
The Practicability and stability of brick-its value as an&#13;
&#13;
Advice to Mr. Christ-Never marry&#13;
a girl named Anne, for the dictionary says&#13;
"an" is an indefinite article.&#13;
Burgess, at a mass meeting- "Now we .·&#13;
will hear from the other side of the&#13;
house.'' Calls on Mable.&#13;
Guy-"Yes,"- I fell for her the first&#13;
time I saw her."&#13;
Bogard-"Did you break any bones?" ·&#13;
Guy- "Yes every bone in my pocket' •&#13;
book."&#13;
&#13;
investment-as a thing of . beauty which will be a joy forever.&#13;
&#13;
Thoughts concerning these matters we would like to&#13;
&#13;
submit for consideration.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BRICK &amp; TILE CO.&#13;
N o. 9 W est Third Street&#13;
&#13;
Office and Display Room,&#13;
&#13;
C. J. Milligan,&#13;
&#13;
HEADQU ARTERS&#13;
&#13;
Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
OR CUTTS HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
FOR THE - -&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
FAMOUS&#13;
WRIGHT &amp;&#13;
DITSON&#13;
TENN IS RACKETS&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
' H . W.&#13;
&#13;
Milligan,&#13;
&#13;
v.-P.&#13;
&#13;
Sh i pp i ng O r ders Promptly Fi lled&#13;
M e m ber Board of Trade&#13;
&#13;
OUTDOORS- AFIELD OR AFLOAT&#13;
SPALDINGS&#13;
BASEBALL, TEN NIS AND GOLF GOODS,&#13;
LEES SLOTTED THROAT RACKETS, AYERS TENNIS BALLS,&#13;
FISHING TACKLE, VACUUM BOTTLES, VACATION GOODS&#13;
&#13;
Any Style&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLIGAN&#13;
&#13;
CO.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
HAY&#13;
&#13;
COMMISSION&#13;
&#13;
MERCHANTS&#13;
&#13;
Receive r s a n d shippers of H ay, Grain and&#13;
Mi ll Feed. H ay bought an d s old i n large&#13;
quantities&#13;
A u t o T el. 2361, I o w a. T el. 819.&#13;
Consign m e n t s sol icited.&#13;
Reference s: Live Stock National&#13;
Bank,&#13;
Si oux Ci ty; F i r st National B an k, O'Neill ,&#13;
N eb.; Brads t ree t 's Commercial A ge n cy.&#13;
301 Virgini a Street&#13;
S IOUX CI TY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ALSO&#13;
&#13;
3 12-14 Nebraska Street&#13;
DRAPER &amp;&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
THE OR I GI NAL&#13;
NON-LEAKABLE&#13;
&#13;
FOR SALE AT ALL COLLEGE&#13;
BOOKSTORES and DEALERS&#13;
Every Moore Non-Leakable&#13;
Fountain Pen carries with it&#13;
the most unconditiunal guar-&#13;
&#13;
~ antee.&#13;
&#13;
D escriptive circulars&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN FOUNTAIN PEN CO.&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
GOOD EATS&#13;
&#13;
USED EXC L USIVE LY&#13;
-BY-&#13;
&#13;
For Students and Teachers Alike&#13;
&#13;
HARVARD&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
Commutation Tickets Sold at a Discount.&#13;
ALWAYS READY FOR TRANSIE NT S&#13;
&#13;
HUNT &amp; SCHUETZ&#13;
&#13;
Park Restuarant&#13;
&#13;
MANUFACTURERS&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Pearl Sts.&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS, CUSHING &amp; FOSTER, Selling Agents&#13;
&#13;
168 Devonshire St.,&#13;
&#13;
Boston, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
T wo Doors South of P eters P ark Station&#13;
MORN I NGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Save the Difference&#13;
-286-&#13;
&#13;
-287-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
- - MANUFACTURERS OF - -&#13;
&#13;
BANK, STORE, OFFICE FIXTURES&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Robinson at one time pondered&#13;
over the question "college or not?" but&#13;
decided~"college first and then the&#13;
(k) not."&#13;
Kuhns, entering a barber shop, planted&#13;
himself in the chair.&#13;
Barber-"Bright or dull shine?"&#13;
&#13;
AND INTERIOR FINISH&#13;
507 -509- 5 II WATER STREET&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock&#13;
"HOME MARKET FOR THE GREAT NORTHWEST"&#13;
The Live Stock Business is one of the Most Important&#13;
Industries of the Country.&#13;
&#13;
After Harry Clark announces the Glee&#13;
Club concert Pres. Craig said "I just want&#13;
to add, I have heard the concert and have&#13;
never heard anything like it."&#13;
Editorial Comment-Poor advertising.&#13;
Prof. Brown-assigning work for the&#13;
future, " Give full account of some scientists life, and, secondly, of some lady womans life."&#13;
&#13;
Miss Fischer- "Give ind'eclinable and&#13;
declinable indefinites!"&#13;
Ula Beck-"One begin·s with 'jeder,'&#13;
I know."&#13;
Miss Fischer-"Well, that is surely indefinite."&#13;
&#13;
In Educ. V. The question was asked&#13;
"If Calvin was called the accusative&#13;
Calvin, would "Shoey" be called the&#13;
Dative .&#13;
&#13;
Chas. Hutton, phoning from a farm&#13;
house to the garage-"I guess you will&#13;
have to come and get me, I've turned&#13;
turtle."&#13;
The Reply-"This is a garage. You&#13;
want the aquarium."&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Hayes- Explaining Carlyle's domestic troubles. "They' re not hard to&#13;
explain: He was a dyspeptic and it would&#13;
have taken an angel to get along with him,&#13;
while his wife had black hair and black&#13;
snappy eyes."&#13;
&#13;
Bob Vernon-"I was just crazy this&#13;
morning until I saw Bess in Bib. Lit.-"&#13;
&#13;
Deduction-She who has light hair is&#13;
an angel.&#13;
&#13;
See how the business is carried on at one of the large&#13;
stock yards.&#13;
STUDENTS will be given a cordial welcome at any&#13;
time. Special effort will be made to see that every minute&#13;
of your time spent at the yards will be "full of interest."&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
THE BEST AND PUREST IN THE CITY&#13;
WHOLESALERS AND RETAILERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards·&#13;
&#13;
SWEET CREAM, MILK AND LACTONE BUTTERMILK&#13;
OUR CREAM IS SERVED AT&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PHARMACY AND CECELIA PARK DRU G STORE&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
707 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
SUPERIOR&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
Residence Phone Auto 6190&#13;
&#13;
Office Phone Auto 6694&#13;
&#13;
The Place for Quality and Right Prices&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
GUY N. PILLSBURY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTA TE AND INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
THE BIG WHITE SHED&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
Old Phone 1995&#13;
&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
OUR AUTO SERVICE IS AT YOUR DISPOSAL FOR THE INSPECTION OF PROPERTIES&#13;
&#13;
- 288-28 9-&#13;
&#13;
STATIONERS&#13;
LITHOGRAPHERS&#13;
PRINTERS&#13;
ARTISTS&#13;
PHOTO.ENGRAVERS&#13;
BINDERS&#13;
&#13;
Room-Mates&#13;
&#13;
THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers of Advertising Specialties, Badges,&#13;
Pennants, Leather Goods, Celluloid Novelties,&#13;
Buttons, Pocket Mirrors, Printed Pencils,&#13;
Rubber Stamps&#13;
&#13;
FIFTH and DOUGLAS STREETS&#13;
&#13;
-290-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
291-&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
"THOROUGHLY&#13;
SATISFACTORY SERVICE&#13;
SUPERB QUALITY&#13;
OF ENGRAVINGS :&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
COURTEOUS CO-OPERATION AND IMMENSE IDEAS"&#13;
is the typical expression&#13;
of Business&#13;
and Editors&#13;
served.&#13;
&#13;
Managers&#13;
we have&#13;
&#13;
Write for our ·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Big 1916 Plan-get your&#13;
name on our Mailing List!&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING,&#13;
Incorporated&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
&#13;
MINNESOTA •&#13;
&#13;
By Making Drawing for National Advertiser.&#13;
Our faculty trained him. Millions of dollars spent for&#13;
Commercial Designs. Com'l Designing mastered at&#13;
home by our practical Correspondence Method.&#13;
Takes only part of your time. Increase&#13;
your Income. Book entitled Your Future&#13;
and Folio of Commercial Illustrations&#13;
mailed free.&#13;
&#13;
FEDERAL SCHOOL OF&#13;
COMMERCIAL DESIGNING&#13;
&#13;
-292-&#13;
&#13;
-293-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Adelphian Society ...... . ......... 162-163&#13;
Aesthesian Soc i et y .... . ... . ...... 160 - 161&#13;
Agora Club .......... . ........... 173-174&#13;
Aletheia Society ... . ............ . 147-150&#13;
Allen, Howard A.50, 80, 86, 93, 144, 175, 183&#13;
A l umni Association ......... . ... . 191-204&#13;
Ames, Clara ............... . ... . ...... 70&#13;
Anderson, Anna ......... , .... 65, 78, 148&#13;
Anderson, Julia ..... . ......... . . . .. 68, 78&#13;
Anderson, Marie ......... .. .. . ........ 68&#13;
Annual Board ...... . ............... 183&#13;
April Calendar ......... .. ........ . ... 227&#13;
Archer,Thomas&#13;
.&#13;
.. . ..... 50, 80, 83, 144&#13;
A Song of Praise&#13;
.. . . ....... . ....... 213&#13;
Athenaeum Soci ety .......... .. ... 151-154&#13;
Ausman, S i byl .................. . .. 68, 78&#13;
Ba 1&#13;
.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69, 136&#13;
B a ck, George&#13;
com,&#13;
enev1eve . .. , ......... . . . 39, 152&#13;
Barrett, Walter .... . .............. 68, 136&#13;
Barrett, Pauline ........ . .. ... .. . .... 164&#13;
Bartz, F . Otto ................... .. 33, 185&#13;
Barks, Earl . ....... . ............. 71, 136&#13;
Baseball ............................ 91 - 94&#13;
Baseball Seaso n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92&#13;
Baseball Schedule .... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 92&#13;
Bashaw, Stanl ey .................. 68, 156&#13;
Basketball .. ... . ... . ............. 107-110&#13;
Basketball Schedu l es . ................ 108&#13;
Bates, Raymond ...................... 166&#13;
Beacham, Fern ........ . .. . ........ 64-132&#13;
Beard, Anna ......... 50, 152, 170, 183, 185&#13;
Beck, Axel ....... . .............. 126, 166&#13;
Beck,&#13;
Ula .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... , 160&#13;
Bell , Orrin ........ . ........... .. . 71, 156&#13;
Blackman, Ruth ................. . 73, 140&#13;
Bleakl ey, David ......... .. ... . ..... 166&#13;
Bleakley, Lewis ..................... 166&#13;
Bogard, Herman ...... . ... . 39, 80 , 84., 156&#13;
Bogard, Joe ........ . . . ............ 71, 156&#13;
Bondhus, Francis .... . ... . ....... . . 64, 156&#13;
Boodagh, Paul ........... . 39, 121, 144, 184&#13;
Booher, Florence ..... . .............. 68&#13;
Book I ............. . ............. . . 25 - 36&#13;
Book II . .......... . . . ..... . . .. ... 37-78&#13;
Book III ....... , .... . .. . .... .. .... 79-128&#13;
Book IV .. ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 129 - 204&#13;
Book V . ...... . ..... . ..... , ...... 205-224&#13;
Book VI ... .. ... . ..... . ... . .. . .. 225-292&#13;
Boyd, Frances ............ ... . . .... 68 , 78&#13;
Brand, Margaret R. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 30&#13;
Breaw, Walter ......... . ...... . . . 39, 136&#13;
Breckenri dge, Ida .. . . . ................ 70&#13;
B r ethorse, M. . ..... . .......... . ...... 70&#13;
Broome, Ray .... .. . . ................ 126&#13;
Brown, G . . . . . . . . . . . ................. 70&#13;
Brown, Ru th .. . ........... , .... . .. 71 - 76&#13;
Brown, Carrie ............... . ... .. .. 199&#13;
Brown, Ephenor A ... . ...... . .......... 26&#13;
B r own, Mabel E. . . . . . . . ............•. 30&#13;
Buehler, Harold .. . . . .... . ....... 126-162&#13;
Bull, Florence ........ . .. .. .. . ..... 51-140&#13;
Burgess, F. Earl ......... 123, 156, 186, 187&#13;
Burgstahler, Susie ... . ............ 39, 185&#13;
Burpee, Ruth . . .. .. . .. ...... . ......... 71&#13;
Burrows, Hazel ...... . . . ............ 110&#13;
Campbell, Herbert G ............. . .. ... 26&#13;
Carson, Wm. Wallace .. . . . . . ........... 28&#13;
Carlson , H. Dorothy . ..... . ... . 40, 117, 132&#13;
Carl son, Oscar B .. . ...... . ........ . 69, 156&#13;
Case. Wayland .. .. . ...... .... . . .. 70, 136&#13;
Chall man, Bernice ... . .. , . ... , . . .. . ... 51&#13;
Chapin, Irene .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 68, 76&#13;
Chemistry Club . . ..... .. . . ........ . .. 190&#13;
C h rist, Jay F .... . . .. ... , ... . ...... 70, 144&#13;
Clark, Wilson .............. 65, 80, 85, 156&#13;
Cl ark, Gladys . ......... . .............. 73&#13;
Clark, Harry . ... . .. . ..... . ..... 156, 187&#13;
C lasses .... . ........ .. ... . ... . ..... 37-74&#13;
C l ass Scrap&#13;
............... . ...... 66&#13;
Clough, Martin . .............. . . 65, SO, 93&#13;
C l ough, Leone .......... ... ...... 68, 110&#13;
Cobbs. Irene .. . . . . .. ... , . .... . . .. . . .. 160&#13;
Coe Conference Meet .......... . ..... . . 101&#13;
Co l eman, Morda . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68, 78&#13;
College Band .... .. ....... . .......... 182&#13;
College Glee Club . . .. . ...... . . ... 178, 179&#13;
College Special ..... . ................. 7 3&#13;
Collier, Ethel M .... . . .. ........ . ... 40 - 140&#13;
Collins, Stanley B .... . ...... . ....... 198&#13;
Coombs, Arthur ....... .. ... . ...... 69, 144&#13;
Coomer, Ethel . . . ................. 73, 132&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Comoli,, Verna ..... . .............. 76, 160&#13;
Conners, Floyd . . ...... . . . . . . . . . . 68, 156&#13;
Cooper, Clair .. . . .. .. . .. .. ........ 51, 156&#13;
Corbett, Edward M ....... . .. , ........ 199&#13;
Corneliussen, Millie ... ... . . ....... 64, 148&#13;
Corr, Mildred ....... . ... . ......... 70, 78&#13;
Corr, Ethel ........ . .......... .. .. . .. 68&#13;
Corssen, Mab e l ..... . ...... .. . . .. . . 71, 78&#13;
Coss, James A ........................ 27&#13;
Costar, Way ne B. ........ .. . . . . .. . 40, 136&#13;
Cottam, Henry .. ......... . 65, 87, 109, 136&#13;
Crai g, Alfred E. ...... . ................. 26&#13;
Craig, Clarence T ... . .... . .. . ... . ... .&#13;
........ . . 40, 121, 124, 144, 176, 171, 184&#13;
Craig, Frances ........ 52, 78, 140, 170, 183&#13;
Crescent Society ......... . ....... 164 - 165&#13;
Crouch, Lois ..... . ............... 132, 176&#13;
Crowther, Sarah .......... 40, 148, 170, 184&#13;
Cummings, Marguerite .. . ........ . 64, 152&#13;
Curry, Wendell ... . .. . . . 68, 80, 97, 109, 136&#13;
Darville, Olive ....... . .... .. ........ 41&#13;
Day, Hazel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 52, 116, 132_ ·&#13;
Day, Mabel ...... . ........... . . . .. .&#13;
. 69&#13;
Day, Esther ........... . ........&#13;
, 164&#13;
Day, Winifred ....... .. ......... · .... . 166&#13;
December Calendar&#13;
........ . ..... 239.&#13;
DeLapp, Ambrose C . .. 52, 122, 156, 175, 183&#13;
Departments ............. . ..... .. .. 7 4-78&#13;
Devitt, Marie . . . ... . .. . . .. . . ... . .. 41 - 132&#13;
De Walt, Horace .......... . ........ 68-144&#13;
Dimmit, Lillian E. ....... . ............. 28&#13;
Dolliver, Margaret G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31&#13;
Dolliver, James I. ................... . .&#13;
.. . ....... 41, 118, 121, 144, 176,. 171, 175&#13;
Down, Vivian . ......... . . . ...... . .. . .. 70&#13;
Drake Relay Meet ........... . ..... . ... 98&#13;
Duesenberg, Wesley .... . ......... 166, 184&#13;
Dutton, George B. .. . .. .. ... . .. . ... 53, 136&#13;
Dutton, Cora . . ...... . ............ 70, 184&#13;
Dunham, Herbert ......... . . . .. . .... .&#13;
........ 41, 80, 93, 121, 125, 136, 171, 184&#13;
Dunn, George .... . ............ 73, 126, 166&#13;
Dunn, Walter ............. . .. . ...... 166&#13;
East house, Marie ..... .. ....... 65, 116 , 152&#13;
Edge, Beth ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65., 148&#13;
Eiffert, Paul .... .. . .. ...... 80, 82, 93, 156&#13;
Engle, John ........ . . .. ............... 98&#13;
English, Daisy E .. . ........ .. ........ . 41&#13;
Ertel, Floyd . . ... . . .. ....... .. ..... . . 166&#13;
Evans, Burrell. ..... , ............. 42, 136&#13;
Evans, Anna Mae . . .. ..... . ........ 53, 132&#13;
Faculty, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26-33&#13;
Fair, Florence .. . . .. ..... . . . ...... . .. 164&#13;
February Calendar ...... . . . . . ...... . . 243&#13;
Feller, Viola ....... . .............. 64, 152&#13;
Ferguson , Agnes B ........... , . . ...... 29&#13;
Fischer, Laura C ....... .. .............. 30&#13;
Flint, Cla r a .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200&#13;
Football . . ... . .... .. ....... . . ....... 81 - 90&#13;
Football Season ............ .. . . . . . . . . 89&#13;
Football Schedu l e .... . . .... . .. . ... . ... 89&#13;
Forbes, Wiilis ...... . . . . , . . .. . 70, 144, 187&#13;
Forensics ....... . ... . .. ... . . .... 115 - 127&#13;
Forensic League ... . ... . . . ... . ....... 187&#13;
Former Students who are Leaders .... 204&#13;
Fowler, Harry . . . . . . ... . ....... ... . 53, 144&#13;
Frary, Guy Griffin . . ... . . . ..... . ... . .. 196&#13;
Freeman, Alta F ... . ..... . ........ . . . .. 32&#13;
Freshmen . ..... .. ..... . .. .. ....... 67-71&#13;
French, Herbe1·t ............. . .. . . 42 , 156&#13;
French, Ruth E. ..... . . . .. . .... 42 , 76, 148&#13;
French, Merle.. .&#13;
. .......... . .. . . 65, 136&#13;
Frost, Roland .. . ..... . .. . ..... . ... 65, 144&#13;
Fry, Minnie ........ . ...... ... 64, 152, 170&#13;
Fry, Agnes ........ . ........ . ...... 69, 117&#13;
Fry, Charles ........ . ...... . .. . ... 68, 136&#13;
Galinsky, Anne ......... .. ........... 64.&#13;
Garlock, Charles ...... 65, 123, 136, 175, 187&#13;
G i llies, Ruth . . .... ... ............. 65, 152&#13;
Gillies, Olive ........ . ............. 73 , 160&#13;
G i ngerich, LeRoy ........ . ... . .... . 54, 136&#13;
Girls Glee Club .. ....... .. . . . . ..... . .. 177&#13;
G i rls Gym Cl asses . . ... . . .. ......... . 13 3&#13;
G i r l s Intercollegiate Debate ... .. ... 116 - 17&#13;
Goudie, George . . .. .. ..... . ..... . .. 70-156&#13;
Graham, Doroth y . .. . .. ....... ... . . .. 164&#13;
Greene, Pearl S .. ... ... . .... . . . . . . . . . . 30&#13;
Griffith, Earl ............. .. ............ 73&#13;
Haas, Christine ........... . ....... 42, 185,&#13;
Hadley, Edith .... . .. . . , .. . . . . . . . .... 29&#13;
&#13;
-294-&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Haegili, H. . ......... . ... . ............ 73&#13;
Hambleton, Sarah ........ . ........ .. .. 71&#13;
Hambleton, Francis ..........&#13;
, . . 71, 136&#13;
Hanson, Louise ...... . ..... . .... . . . ... 70&#13;
Harrington., Ray . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 109, 144&#13;
Harrington, Edmund . . ....... . .. ... 71, 144&#13;
Har tle y , Haro l d .. . .............. . .... 162&#13;
Hartzell, Olive ..... .. ..... 42, 132, 170, 175&#13;
Hartzell, Ruth . . ..... .. ... . ........ 54, 132&#13;
Haskins, Luella . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .... 64, 132&#13;
Hay, Francis . ........ . ...... . ..... 69, 136&#13;
Hayes, James J . ........... . ...... . ... 28&#13;
Haynes, Fred Emory ...... . .... . .. . .... 26&#13;
Hays, Victor Josiah ...... . . . . . ........ 195&#13;
Hawkeye, Soc iety ..... .. .... . .... 166-167&#13;
Heilman, Ralph E. ....... .. . . . . . . . . . . 196&#13;
Held, Walter ....... .. .. .... ... 54, 98, 144&#13;
Hemstreet, Fern .......... . ... .. · . . ... 160&#13;
Herbster, John Geo . .. .. . .. . 43, 80, 84, 144&#13;
Hicks, Earl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 65, 136&#13;
H i ett, Earl E ....... . .. .. .......... 43, 156&#13;
H ill , D r ucie .................... .. .. . .. 73&#13;
Hi l mer, William C .. . ......... . .... 26, 185&#13;
Histor i cal Section .. .. ....... .. .. . .. . 9-24&#13;
Holbert, Charm ion ......... . ... 73, 78, 152&#13;
Ho l mes, C l eo ............. . .......... 69&#13;
Holmes, Cora ......... . .. .. .... .. ..... 73&#13;
Home Meet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .......... 97&#13;
Home Oratorical Con t e st .............. 118&#13;
Horn, G ladys . . . ...... . . ..... . .. .. . 55, 140&#13;
Hornney, Alvin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 156&#13;
Hovda, Olaf ................ , ....... . .. 27&#13;
Houk, Nola . ...... .. .. . ......... . . 64, 152&#13;
Houk , Neva .. .. . . ..... .. ... . .... . ..... 71&#13;
Mable ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164&#13;
Houk,&#13;
Howell, Bess ... . .. . ........... 64, 152, 170&#13;
Hoyt, Ra l ph . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70&#13;
Huchendorf, Clara ... . ............. 73, 164&#13;
Hutton, Char l es . .. . .. 65, 122, 125 , 144, 187&#13;
Ihde, Clifford . .. . . ... . ............ . 64, 156&#13;
Intercollegite Debate ... . . 116 - 117, 124 - 125&#13;
Inter-Society Debate (Academy) ...... 126&#13;
Inter-Society Debate ............ . 121 - 123&#13;
Ionian Society ... . ................ 143 - 146&#13;
Irw i n, Mabe l .. . ......... . ... · . . 43, 132, 17 5&#13;
I rwin, M i lton . . ................. . ... 64, 136&#13;
Jackson, Hi l da ...... . ..... . ... . ....... 68&#13;
Jackson, Go ldia ......... . ........... . 70&#13;
James, Elizabeth .. . . ... . ... 73., 77, 116, 132&#13;
January Calendar . ... , ......... . ..... 241&#13;
Jeffery, Alci e . . . ... ... . ............. 70, 78&#13;
Johns, Ethel .... . ... . ........... . ... . 68&#13;
Johns, Rubetta ... . ... . .......... . .. 70, 76&#13;
Jo h nson, E l sie .. . .. .. . ........ 43; 140, 175&#13;
Jo h nson, Leon ... .. ..... 64, 80, 83, 109, 156&#13;
Johnson , Arthur . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64, 136&#13;
Johnson, Allan ............ . .. .. . . . 64, 144&#13;
Johnson, Mar ion . . .. . .... . .... . ...... 71&#13;
Johnson, Mildred . ... . . . .... . ......... 160&#13;
Jones, Olive ......... . .. . ... . ..... . 43, 148&#13;
Jones, Clifford . ... . . , ........... . . 68, 144&#13;
Jones, Marine ... . . . .. . . .. . . . ........ : . 73&#13;
June Calendar .. . ......... .. ........ 231&#13;
Jurgenson, Royal . .. .. .. ... .. . ..... 69, 136&#13;
Kantlehner, Henry F ........ , ... .. .... . 27&#13;
Keck, Herbert A .............. .. ...... 191&#13;
Keefe, Anna ..... . .. . ............. 68, 117&#13;
Kee n e , Louis ................ .. .... 68, 156&#13;
K i lbourne, Harrison .. . . .. 64, 144, 176 , 187&#13;
King, Mabel R. ..... . . . ... . . .. .... 44, 132&#13;
Kingsbury, Franci s ................ 68, 136&#13;
Kl i ne, Allan ............ . .. . ...... . .. . 44&#13;
Kline, Ruth ... . ........ , ...... . ... 70, 78&#13;
Kl i ppel, Charles . . ... .............. 70, 136&#13;
Knudson, Ruby .. . .. , . .. . . . ....... . .. 69&#13;
Ko l b, Z . . . . . . .. . ......... ... ......... 164&#13;
Kolp, James .......... . . . . . . . . . . . 64, 136&#13;
Ko l p, Frances . . ........ , . . . . . .. .. . 68, 110&#13;
Kuhns, Ellis V ................ 44, 136, 186&#13;
Lakeside Laboratory ... . .. .. ..... 188-189&#13;
Lange, Leone ............... . ... . . . .. . 70&#13;
Langford, F l orence .......... . .... 76, 160&#13;
Lavely, V i vian . . ... . .. . . 44, 80, 97, 105, 144&#13;
Leahn, Lloyd ......... . .. . ... . ..... 64, 144&#13;
Leazer, Kathryn .............. 55, 148, 184&#13;
Lewis, Clara ..... . .... . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 140&#13;
Lewis, Ida Belle . . . . .. . .... . .......... 198&#13;
Liming, Oran .. .... . .. .... . .......... 70&#13;
Lindsay, Arthur ....... , . .. ... ..... 55, 144&#13;
L i pton, William ... , .... . .. ... . . .. .. ... 70&#13;
Literary Secti on ......... . ........ 205 - 224&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas ......... , .. . .... 71, 87, 156&#13;
Locke, Arthur . . ... .. .............. 71, 136&#13;
Logan, Lesl i e ....... . ......... 56, 136, 186&#13;
Long, Gladys ............. . . . ........ 73&#13;
Long, Ralph ............ . . . . .. . . .. 126, 162&#13;
Loveland, Helen I ........ . .. . .. . ........ 31&#13;
Ludlum, Lou ise ........ . .. . .... .. .. 70, 176&#13;
Lueder, Herman .... 44, 80, 97, 122, 125, 144&#13;
Lutz, Gretchen .. . ..... .. . . ............ 2S&#13;
Lyles, Edith E ..... . . ... ........ 45, 76, 152&#13;
"M" Meet, The .. .. .. . . .. . . . ....... 103-104&#13;
McBride, Robert . .......... , ....... 68, 156&#13;
McBride, Thomas .. . ...... . . , . . . .. . 70, 156&#13;
McBurnney, Cornelia . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 140&#13;
Mcconkey, Blye ................. . .. . 105&#13;
Mccreery, Lydia . .. . . .............. 45, 152&#13;
McKenzie, Catherine . .. . .... . .......... 45&#13;
McKinney, Guy .. . .. .... 45, 80, 8 3, 136, 176&#13;
McKinney, Del b ert. .. ...... .. . 56, 121, 136&#13;
McKinney, Fern . ........ .. ..... . .... 70, 78&#13;
McLane, Lura . . . . ........... . . 53, 132, 183&#13;
McNary, Martina .. . ..... . . . . . . . . . . 70, 78&#13;
MacCollin, Paul . . . . . . .&#13;
. ......... 32&#13;
MacCollin , Elizabeth N ....... . ......... 32&#13;
Macdonald, Janet .... . ... .. . . .......... 30&#13;
Macmillan, John D ... . . . . ..... . . ........ 29&#13;
Macomber, Mabel. ... . ..... . ........ 73, 77&#13;
Mad i son, John V .. 57, 123, 124, 156, 183 187&#13;
Mahood, R. Earl . . ............... 68, 80, S5&#13;
Mahood, Ruth .... .. . . . . ...... . .&#13;
160&#13;
Mandol i n Orchestra . .. . . . .. . . ..... 180-181&#13;
Markham, Ellis ....... ... . . .......... . . 166&#13;
March Calendar ... . ... . .. . , .......... 245&#13;
Marcy, Merril .. . ....... . . . . .. ...... . . 33&#13;
Marsh, Char l es A .... . , . ........ .. ... .. . 29&#13;
Martin , Frances ..... . ............ 65, 132&#13;
May Calendar ..... . . . . .. ........ .. . .. 229&#13;
May-Day Festival ..... . .... , . .. . .. . ... 7 4&#13;
Maynard, Carl W ...... . , ........ . ..... 195&#13;
Mens Gym Classes .. . . .... ... ........ 112&#13;
Merry, Myrtle ........ , ...... . .. . ...... 70&#13;
Metcalfe, Lucille .. .. . . . . . .......... 45, 140&#13;
Metcal fe, Marion ...... . .... .. . 57, 140, 183&#13;
Metcalf, Carl . . ........ . . .. . .. ....... . . 68&#13;
Metcalfe, Isabel ........ . .............. 70&#13;
Mi ll er, Glen.. . . . . . . . . .. . ..... . .. . 71, 136&#13;
M i tchell, Richard L ........ . ... 57, 119, 186&#13;
Montgome r y, Esther .... . . . .. . .. . . . ... 68&#13;
Monument Run, The .... .. .......... . 105&#13;
Moore, St. Clair ............... 64, 144 , 176&#13;
Morley, Maynard ........... 46, 98, 156, 171&#13;
Morningside&#13;
.............. . ........ . 216&#13;
Morn i ngside Forensic Records .... . .... 127&#13;
Morn i ngside Men at Iowa U..&#13;
. .. 202&#13;
Morningside Track Records ........... 106&#13;
Morr is, E. . .......... . . . ............... 73&#13;
Morse,Orwin A ..................... . .. 31&#13;
Mossman,Frank E . . . . . .. .. ........... 200&#13;
Mu n son, Vincent ... . ....... .. ... , .... 73&#13;
Murphy, Lilah .... .... . . ........... . ... 68&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan Meet.....&#13;
. . . .. 99&#13;
Newland, Kathryn . .. .. . . . ....... . . 46, 140&#13;
Noe, Glen .. . ............. . .. . .... 68, 144&#13;
Northrup, Car l ... . .... , .... 80, S5, 93, 162&#13;
November Calendar .. . .... .... .... . .. 237&#13;
Obrecht, C l arence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71, 136&#13;
October, Calendar . . . . ................ 235&#13;
Olsen, Ethel ......... ... ... . ...... 46, 152&#13;
Olson, Ruth ...... . ......... . . . .. . 65 , 132&#13;
Omer, Gailord .......... . . . . . .. ... . 70, 162&#13;
Ordway, Mary . . ..... . .... . . , . .... 65, 132&#13;
Ordway, Ethel .. . .. . .. .. . . ......... 68, 148&#13;
Osborne, Garner ...... . .... .... ....... 166&#13;
Othonian Society ... . .. . ... , . .. . . . 135, 138&#13;
Overho l ser, Ralph . . . , . . . .. . .. . .. . . 69, 136&#13;
Parkinson, Elma ..... .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 1&#13;
Patton, Beryl ... . .. .. .... . ....... . ... 29&#13;
Patterson, Harr i et ... . .......... . .. 65, 140&#13;
Patrick, Gle n ........ . .. . . 58, 136, 171 183&#13;
Patrick Lydia . . .. .. . . . ....... . .... .. 68&#13;
Payne, C . W.................... . ...... 34&#13;
Payne, William H. .. 46, 80, 84, 136, 171, 176&#13;
Payne, Arthur .......... . .. . .. . .... 64, 144&#13;
Payne, V i ctor . . ... . . . . .. . . ........ 71, 136&#13;
Pa y ne, Harold ................ . ...... lRR&#13;
Peace Oratorical Contest. . . ........... 120&#13;
Pecaut, Mildred ....... . .............. . 71&#13;
Perry, Helen .............. . ... .. . 65, 152&#13;
Phelps, Floyd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65, 156&#13;
Philomathean Society . . . .. .. ... . . 155-158&#13;
&#13;
-295-&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Steele, Lawrence ........ . .. . ..... . 73, 162&#13;
Stenseth, Vernon&#13;
.......... 69, 120, 144&#13;
Stephens, Thomas C.................... 27&#13;
Stevens, Anna M .. .. . . • .. .. . .......... . 33&#13;
Stevens, Merrill . . ..... .. ...... 65, 136, 176&#13;
Stiles, Edward ..... . .. . ..... . .. . .. 70, 136&#13;
Still, Alberta ..... . ... . .. ... ....... . . 71&#13;
Stonebrook, Earl .. . ............... 69, 156&#13;
Strobel, Lovice ..... . ... . . . 60, 77, 132, 183&#13;
•'Stubb's Chagrin" . . .. . ... . .. . .. . .. . .. 214&#13;
Student Volunteer Band ... .. .. .. ... . .. 184&#13;
Swanson, Myrtle ........... . ... . ..... 164&#13;
Symonds, Walter .. . .............. 64, 136&#13;
Tackaberry, Mildred ......... . ..... . .. 60&#13;
Teutonia Club ..... . ................ 185&#13;
''The Glory of the Conquered" ....... . 223&#13;
The Spirit of Contest (Cartoon) ........ 79&#13;
The Spirit of Conquest (Cartoon) ...... 37&#13;
The Spirit of Fellowship (Cartoon) ... . 129&#13;
The Spirit of Jest (Cartoon) .. .. . . .... 225&#13;
The Spirit of the Muse (Cartoon) .... . 205&#13;
The Spirit of Learning (Cartoon) ...... 25&#13;
The Traffic Cop ................. .. .. . . 222&#13;
The Varsity Football Team . ... . . . . . . :·. 88&#13;
Thornburg, Opal .. . .................. 69&#13;
Royce, Mary ....... ... .. . .. .. ........ 71&#13;
Towner, 0. W . (In Memoriam) ......... 35&#13;
Rudy, Carlson ........ . . . . . .. . ........ 68&#13;
Track ..... . ............ . .......... 95-106&#13;
Ruskell, Gladys .... .. ... . ...... .. . .. .. 71&#13;
Track Season ............ . . . .... . .... 9G&#13;
Russel, Lo is .................. .. .. 69, 78&#13;
Track Schedule . . .. . ...... . . . ... . .. . . . 96&#13;
Ruthven, Alexander ...... . ........... 193&#13;
Trefz, James ... .. .... . . . . ... 105, 162, 185&#13;
Trenary, Mabel ......... . ......... 48, 152&#13;
Sampson, Ernest. ..... . .. .. .. .. . . 166, 184&#13;
Trimble, J. B. . . ... . .... .. .... . .. .. .. . . l 97&#13;
Sanborn, Martha .. . .. . ... ... ......... 31&#13;
Trimble, Lydia .... . ................. 197&#13;
Sandvold, Conrad ...... . ..... . 64. 109. 156&#13;
Trustees, Officers and Committees . . .. . . 36&#13;
Sass, Carl W. H .. . ......... .. . 47, 122, 144&#13;
Upham, Cyrl B . . .. .. . . 48, 80, 122, 156, 171&#13;
Saunders, Lida .. . .. . ....... . .... 69, 11.0&#13;
Saunderson, Jason M ............&#13;
. .. 31, 82&#13;
Van Horne, Robert N .... .. . .. . .. .. 27, 194&#13;
Schaub, Frederick .... .. ... . ... . .. 28 185&#13;
Van Horne, Don ....... . ....... . .... . 105&#13;
Van Slyke, Adah . .... .......... .. .. 69, 78&#13;
Scheider, George . . ........ . ....... 65, 185&#13;
Schmoker, Cecil .. .. ...... . .. . ......... 69&#13;
Vernon, Robert. . . ......... ......... .&#13;
.......... 48, 80, 82, 97, 121, 136, 171,&#13;
175&#13;
Sc h reiver. Willima ...... . .......... 58, 156&#13;
Seaver, Fred J....... . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. 193&#13;
Walker, Herald ...... .. . ... ... 69, 156, 175&#13;
Sebern, Marie . . .. . .......... ·... 64,&#13;
78, 132&#13;
Wall, Lloyd .... . . .. ............... 69, 156&#13;
Seniors . .. . .... . .... . .............. . 39-48&#13;
Walton, Donald .... . ..... 64, 123, 136, 187&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
.&#13;
....&#13;
. .... 73&#13;
Weed, Lillian .. . . . .......... . ... . ... 71&#13;
Senjor Expression . .. . ........&#13;
.....77 Wedgwood, Mary ... . .. . . . .. . . ... . . 60, 132&#13;
Senior Music . . . . . . . . .. . . . ... . . .. . . .. . 76&#13;
Wedgwood,&#13;
William . .. . .. . . . 76, 80, 136&#13;
...&#13;
September Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233&#13;
Wessel., Emil . . ........... . .... 73, 162, 185&#13;
S h aboz, Jacob .. ...... , . ..........&#13;
... 166&#13;
Wetmore, Frances ................... 71&#13;
Shade, Chloris ........ . ... . .... . .. 68, 110&#13;
Wheatley, Leona . .. .. . ......... 64, 76, 152&#13;
Whittemore, Villa .. .. .... . ............ 68&#13;
Shannon, Bess . ...... . .. . , .... . 59, 78 152&#13;
WicKens, May . . ................ . . 64, 132&#13;
Shelmidine, Donald .... . .... . ..... 69, 136&#13;
Wiese, .Emma .. . .. . .... .. . . ... . ....... 69&#13;
Sherwood, Clair . . . . . . .&#13;
. ... 70, 136&#13;
Williams, F. Earl .... . .. .. .. . .... .. . . . .&#13;
Shoemaker, C. Elihu ..... .. 47, 86, 122, 156&#13;
.......... 61, 80, 87, 93, 156, 171, 175, 183&#13;
Shumaker, Florence F&#13;
........ 48, l 52&#13;
Williams,&#13;
C. Tyler ................. 64, 136&#13;
S t mme, Marion.. . .. . ...... 59, 78, 140, 183&#13;
Williams, Ewart ... . ....... 65, 86, 136, 176&#13;
Singer, Ernest . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. .... . .... 185&#13;
Williams, Glen . .. .. . .. . ........... 69, 156&#13;
Sipe, Vera..... ... .. .. . . . . .&#13;
64, 148&#13;
Wi lliams, Noel .... . .. . .. . ............ 97&#13;
Winkelman, Eleanor .......... .. ..... .&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61, 77, 132, l 70, 183, 184&#13;
Smith, Irene . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
160&#13;
Woelfer, R ......... ... .......... .. . 185&#13;
Societies&#13;
....... .. .. . . ....&#13;
.· 130- 168&#13;
Wolcott, Aney . .. . .. . ......... . . .. .... 71&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
..&#13;
. . . . . . . . 63-65&#13;
Wolfe, Muriel . .. . ....... . . .. . .. ...... 71&#13;
South Dakota Meet. ............. . ... 99&#13;
Woodford, Fai th F . . . .. ....... . ... . ... 32&#13;
Speer, Cora .............. . .. . .... 64, 152&#13;
Wood, Win ifred .. . .... .. .... . .... 69, 176&#13;
Speer, Bernice . . .. .. .. . . ...... . ....... 69&#13;
\Voodsife, Cli fton ... . .............. 71, 144&#13;
Speer, Grace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .... . . 69&#13;
Woo le, William ........... 69, 136, l 76, 175&#13;
Spiecker, · Emory . . . .. . . . . . .... . .... 69, 156&#13;
"Working&#13;
for an Answer" ...... . ..... 207&#13;
Spry, Katharine . . ............. 59, 170, l 83&#13;
Wright Beatrice . . . . .&#13;
. ..... . .... 152&#13;
Starr, Gaylord ...... .. ......... . . .. ... 65&#13;
Y. M . C. A ...........................&#13;
170&#13;
Starr. Delano .. .............. .. .. . ... 65&#13;
Y. W. C . A...&#13;
. .. . ............. . 171&#13;
Starr, Victor .. . ......... .. .. . , . . ..... 166&#13;
Zetalethean Society ....... . ... . .. 131-134&#13;
State Meet ....... . ................ . 102&#13;
Zet Novelette ......... . .. . ...... . .... 217&#13;
Stee le, Dorothy . ...... . .. .. . .... . . 64, 152&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Physical Training .. . ...... . . . .. . . 111-113&#13;
Pieria Society ... .. . .. ............ 139-142&#13;
Pike, Cladius ............ . ... . . 69, 126, 156&#13;
Pollock, Harold C. (ln Memoriam) .. ... 38&#13;
Pollock, J. Fletcher ................ 46, 136&#13;
Prentice&#13;
Ruth .... . . ...... ......... 47, 132&#13;
Prichard Ralph.... . . .&#13;
. .. . ....... .&#13;
........... .. 47, so. 93, 123, 156, 176, 175&#13;
Pro hi bi tion League .................. 186&#13;
Prohibit ion Oratorical Contest .... . : .. 119&#13;
Purdy, Elizabeth May .............. 71, 78&#13;
Reilly, Marie . . . .. .. . .. . .......... 65, 140&#13;
Reistrup, James ......... . ... . ......... 32&#13;
Richardson, Noble . ... . .&#13;
. ...... 71, 136&#13;
Riddle, Gladys .. . .... . ............... 69&#13;
Riner, Benjamin .. 58, 123, 124, 136, 183 187&#13;
Roberts, Glen ... . ... . . ... .......... .' .. 70&#13;
Robinson, Bonnie ......... . .... . 47, 77, 152&#13;
Robinson, Laura ............ . . 65, 140, 176&#13;
Rodin, David ......... .. . . ...... . .. 71, 156&#13;
Roost, Amanda .. . . .... . ... 65, 78, 140, 185&#13;
Root, Ralph Eugene . . .. .. ............ 194&#13;
&#13;
· ::&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-296-&#13;
&#13;
Howard A. Allen&#13;
Clara Ames&#13;
Anna Anderson&#13;
Julia Anderson&#13;
Marie Anderson&#13;
Thomas Archer&#13;
Sibyl Ausman&#13;
George Back&#13;
Genevieve Balcom&#13;
Walter Barrett&#13;
Pauline Barrett&#13;
F. Otto Bartz&#13;
Earl Barks&#13;
Stanley Bashaw&#13;
Raymond Bates&#13;
Fern Beacham&#13;
Anna Beard&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
Ula Beck&#13;
Orrin Bell&#13;
Ruth Blackman&#13;
David Bleakley&#13;
Lewis Bleakley&#13;
Herman Bogard&#13;
Joe Bogard&#13;
Francis Bondhus&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
Florence Booher&#13;
Frances Boyd&#13;
Margaret R. Brand&#13;
Walter Breaw&#13;
Ida Breckenridge&#13;
M. Brethorse&#13;
Ray Broome&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
Ruth Brown&#13;
Carrie Brown&#13;
Ephenor A. Brown&#13;
Mabel E. Brown&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
Florence Bull&#13;
F. Earl Burgess&#13;
Susie Burgstahler&#13;
Ruth Burpee&#13;
Hazel Burrows&#13;
Herbert G. Campbell&#13;
Wm. Wallace Carson&#13;
H. Dorothy Carlson&#13;
Oscar B. Carlson&#13;
Wayland Case&#13;
Bernice Challman&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
Jay F. Christ&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Gladys Clark&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Martin Clough&#13;
Leone Clough&#13;
Irene Cobbs&#13;
Morda Coleman&#13;
Ethel M. Collier&#13;
Stanley B. Collins&#13;
Arthur Coombs&#13;
Ethel Coomer&#13;
Verna Comoli&#13;
Floyd Conners&#13;
Clair Cooper&#13;
Edward M. Corbett&#13;
Millie Corneliussen&#13;
Mildred Corr&#13;
Ethel Corr&#13;
Mabel Corssen&#13;
James A. Coss&#13;
Wayne B. Costar&#13;
Henry Cottam&#13;
Alfred E. Craig&#13;
Clarence T. Craig&#13;
Frances Craig&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Sarah Crowther&#13;
Marguerite Cummings&#13;
Wendell Curry&#13;
Olive Darville&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
Mabel Day&#13;
Esther Day&#13;
Winifred Day&#13;
Ambrose C. DeLapp&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Horace DeWalt&#13;
Lillian E. Dimmitt&#13;
Margaret G. Dolliver&#13;
James I. Dolliver&#13;
Vivian Down&#13;
Wesley Duesenberg&#13;
George B. Dutton&#13;
Cora Dutton&#13;
Herbert Dunham&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Walter Dunn&#13;
Marie Easthouse&#13;
Beth Edge&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
John Engle&#13;
Daisy E. English&#13;
Floyd Ertel&#13;
Burrell Evans&#13;
Anna Mae Evans&#13;
Florence Fair&#13;
Viola Feller&#13;
Agnes B. Ferguson&#13;
Laura C. Fischer&#13;
Clara Flint&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Harry Fowler&#13;
Guy Griffin Frary&#13;
Alta F. Freeman&#13;
Herbert French&#13;
Ruth E. French&#13;
Merle French&#13;
Roland Frost&#13;
Minnie Fry&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
Anne Galinsky&#13;
Charles Garlock&#13;
Ruth Gillies&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
LeRoy Gingerich&#13;
George Goudie&#13;
Dorothy Graham&#13;
Pearl S. Greene&#13;
Earl Griffith&#13;
Christine Haas&#13;
Edith Hadley&#13;
H. Haegili&#13;
Sarah Hambleton&#13;
Francis Hambleton&#13;
Louise Hanson&#13;
Ray Harrington&#13;
Edmund Harrington&#13;
Harold Hartley&#13;
Olive Hartzell&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Francis Hay&#13;
James J. Hayes&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes&#13;
Victor Josiah Hays&#13;
Ralph E. Heilman&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
Fern  Hemstreet&#13;
John Geo Herbster&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Earl E. Hiett&#13;
Drucie Hill&#13;
William C. Hilmer&#13;
Charmion Holbert&#13;
Cleo Holmes&#13;
Cora Holmes&#13;
Gladys Horn&#13;
Alvin Hornney&#13;
Olaf Hovda&#13;
Nola Houk&#13;
Neva Houk&#13;
Mable Houk&#13;
Bess Howell&#13;
Ralph Hoyt&#13;
Clara Huchendorf&#13;
Charles Hutton&#13;
Clifford Ihde&#13;
Mabel Irwin&#13;
Milton Irwin&#13;
Hilda Jackson&#13;
Goldia Jackson&#13;
Elizabeth James&#13;
Alcie Jeffery&#13;
Ethel Johns&#13;
Rubetta Johns&#13;
Elsie Johnson&#13;
Leon Johnson&#13;
Arthur Johnson&#13;
Allan Johnson&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
Olive Jones&#13;
Clifford Jones&#13;
Marine Jones&#13;
Royal Jurgenson&#13;
Henry F. Kantlehner&#13;
Herbert A. Keck&#13;
Anna Keefe&#13;
Louis Keene&#13;
Harrison Kilbourne&#13;
Mabel R. King&#13;
Francis Kingsbury&#13;
Allan Kline&#13;
Ruth Kline&#13;
Charles Klippel&#13;
Ruby Knudson&#13;
Z. Kolb&#13;
James Kolp&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
Ellis V. Kuhns&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
Florence Langford&#13;
Vivian Lavely&#13;
Lloyd Leahn&#13;
Kathryn Leazer&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
Ida Belle Lewis&#13;
Oran Liming&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
William Lipton&#13;
Thomas Lloyd&#13;
Arthur Locke&#13;
Leslie Logan&#13;
Gladys Long&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
Helen I. Loveland&#13;
Louise Ludlum&#13;
Herman Lueder&#13;
Gretchen Lutz&#13;
Edith E. Lyles&#13;
Robert McBride&#13;
Thomas McBride&#13;
Cornelia McBurnney&#13;
Blye McConkey&#13;
Lydia McCreery&#13;
Catherine McKenzie&#13;
Guy McKinney&#13;
Delbert McKinney&#13;
Fern McKinney&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Martina McNary&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
Elizabeth N. MacCollin&#13;
Janet Macdonald&#13;
John D. Macmillan&#13;
Mabel Macomber&#13;
John V. Madison&#13;
R. Earl Mahood&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Ellis Markham&#13;
Merril Marcy&#13;
Charles A. Marsh&#13;
Frances Martin&#13;
Carl W. Maynard&#13;
Myrtle Merry&#13;
Lucille Metcalfe&#13;
Marion Metcalfe&#13;
Carl Metcalf&#13;
Isabel Metcalfe&#13;
Glen Miller&#13;
Richard L. Mitchell&#13;
Esther Montgomery&#13;
St. Clair Moore&#13;
Maynard Morley&#13;
E. Morris&#13;
Orwin A. Morse&#13;
Frank E, Mossman&#13;
Vincent Munson&#13;
Lilah Murphy&#13;
Kathryn Newland&#13;
Glen Noe&#13;
Carl Northrup&#13;
Clarence Obrecht&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
Ruth Olson&#13;
Gailord Omer&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
Ethel Ordway&#13;
Garner Osborne&#13;
Ralph Overholser&#13;
Elma Parkinson&#13;
Beryl Patton&#13;
Harriet Patterson&#13;
Glen Patrick&#13;
Lydia Patrick&#13;
C. W. Payne&#13;
William H. Payne&#13;
Arthur Payne&#13;
Victor Payne&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
Mildred Pecaut&#13;
Helen Perry&#13;
Floyd Phelps&#13;
Claudius Pike&#13;
Harold C. Pollock&#13;
J. Fletcher Pollock&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
Ralph Prichard&#13;
Elizabeth May Purdy&#13;
Marie Reilly&#13;
James Reistrup&#13;
Noble Richardson&#13;
Gladys Riddle&#13;
Benjamin Riner&#13;
Glen Roberts&#13;
Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Laura Robinson&#13;
David Rodin&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Ralph Eugene Root&#13;
Harry Rosene&#13;
Harry A. Ross&#13;
Mary Royce&#13;
Carlson Rudy&#13;
Gladys Ruskell&#13;
Lois Russel&#13;
Alexander Ruthven&#13;
Ernest Sampson&#13;
Martha Sanborn&#13;
Conrad Sandvold&#13;
Carl W. H. Sass&#13;
Lida Saunders&#13;
Jason M. Saunderson&#13;
Frederick Schaub&#13;
George Scheider &#13;
Cecil Schmoker&#13;
William Schreiver&#13;
Fred J. Seaver&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
Jacob Shaboz&#13;
Chloris Shade&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
Donald Shelmidine&#13;
Clair Sherwood&#13;
C. Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
Florence F, Shumaker&#13;
Marion Simme&#13;
Ernest Singer&#13;
Vera Sipe&#13;
J. Smith&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Irene Smith&#13;
Cora Speer&#13;
Bernice Speer&#13;
Grace Speer&#13;
Emory Spiecker&#13;
Katharine Spry&#13;
Gaylord Starr&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
Victor Starr&#13;
Dorothy Steele&#13;
Lawrence Steele&#13;
Vernon Stenseth&#13;
Thomas C. Stephens&#13;
Anna M. Stevens&#13;
Merrill Stevens&#13;
Edward Stiles&#13;
Alberta Still&#13;
Earl Stonebrook&#13;
Lovice Strobel&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
Walter Symonds&#13;
Mildred Tackaberry&#13;
Opal Thornburg&#13;
O. W. Towner&#13;
James Trefz&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
J. B. Trimble&#13;
Lydia Trimble&#13;
Cyrl B. Upham&#13;
Robert N. Van Horne&#13;
Don Van Horne&#13;
Adah Van Slyke&#13;
Robert Vernon&#13;
Herald Walker&#13;
Lloyd Wall&#13;
Donald Walton&#13;
Lillian Weed&#13;
Mary Wedgwood&#13;
William Wedgwood&#13;
Emil Wessel&#13;
Frances Wetmore&#13;
Leona Wheatley&#13;
Dilla Whittemore&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
Emma Wiese&#13;
F. Earl Williams&#13;
C. Tyler Williams&#13;
Ewart Williams&#13;
Glen Williams&#13;
Noel Williams&#13;
Eleanor Winkelman&#13;
R. Woelfer&#13;
Aney Wolcott&#13;
Muriel Wolfe&#13;
Faith F. Woodford&#13;
Winifred Wood&#13;
Clifton Woodsife&#13;
William Woole&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>JUNE 6 6 10&#13;
- 10&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce&#13;
&#13;
SOUVENIR PROGRAM 25&#13;
&#13;
�A. W. BUCKINGHAM&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN CHRISTIANSEN&#13;
&#13;
Representative N. A. I. A.&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
DON&#13;
&#13;
PROTEXTER&#13;
&#13;
R. G. "Honie" ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
Tourney Manager&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. SCOVILLE&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
President of Century Club&#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS .STOCK&#13;
&#13;
General Chairman&#13;
&#13;
Publicity&#13;
&#13;
WESLEY S. RINKER&#13;
&#13;
Public Relations&#13;
&#13;
�ANDY ROBAK&#13;
&#13;
DON PETRUCCELLI&#13;
&#13;
LOREN RHUDE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. ROGERS, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
A DIVISION OF ZALE'S JEWELERS&#13;
&#13;
• Fifth and Pierce&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
�By John J. Knight&#13;
Past President N NAIA&#13;
&#13;
The only justifica,t ion for a na tional&#13;
athletic or ganization must be found&#13;
in the s,e rvice it can render its. membe,r institutions. Because of the keen&#13;
awareness of the leaders of the problems, of the small coHeges in prom oting a good pr,o gram of intercollegiate athletics under t he banner of&#13;
NAIA, the services of the organization h ave been greatly expanded over&#13;
the past few years&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
sa ry to adopt certain s.t andards and&#13;
pass rules to guide the individua,l&#13;
programs . These have been g,e nerally&#13;
accepted as a means for equalizing&#13;
competitio·n and not as a way of curtailing competition.&#13;
Much ,e ffort has b een exerted to&#13;
bring athletic coaches and directors&#13;
professional recognition. This has reresultedin r a ther g,eneTal recognition&#13;
of athletic personnel as responsible&#13;
facu lty persons. A cceptance as m embers of the college educaitional staff&#13;
has brought with it edu cational re• ,p cnsibilities. It ' has become increass&#13;
ingly necessary for the intercollegiate&#13;
staff to recognize these responsibUities and exert e,v ery effort to fulfill&#13;
them&#13;
&#13;
In the expansion program of the&#13;
National&#13;
A ssociat ion: of Intecollegiate&#13;
At hlet ics a broad national&#13;
events program began to take shape.&#13;
Track and field, t ennis, and golf were&#13;
first promoted with the national&#13;
tournament in each at Abilene, T exas&#13;
An outstanding example of an&#13;
in the spring of 19,52. By 1956 there&#13;
,e ffort to bring better understanding&#13;
was a great demand for football to&#13;
among persons responsible for instibe included in national compet ition&#13;
tutional con trol of athletics was the&#13;
and this demand was m et. Swimming Workshop on Intercollegiate Athletics&#13;
ming, baseball and cross country were&#13;
he,l d February 16 and 17, 1960 at&#13;
included in the national competition&#13;
Indiana&#13;
Pennsylvania. This workin 19'57. The· n ext year wrestling&#13;
of t he&#13;
sh cp was largely the result&#13;
cam e into the p, cture as a sponsored&#13;
i&#13;
labor of Dr. W ill Orr, Chtairman of&#13;
event. The last sport .to come under&#13;
the Presidents Advisory Comrnitte,e,&#13;
the sponsorship of NAIA was soccer&#13;
Al Duer, and Ross Merrick. Througih&#13;
in the fall of 1959, with the m eet&#13;
their excellent planning and effective&#13;
conducted at Slippery R'ock, Pennsylleadership the workshop was m os t&#13;
vania.&#13;
successful. It proved invaluable , in&#13;
The National Association of Intercollegiate . Athletics h as ,e ncouraged&#13;
its . member institutions to broaden&#13;
their&#13;
sports· p, ograms, so that they&#13;
r&#13;
may give an opportunity for m ore&#13;
students with diversified interests&#13;
and special abilities t o compete in&#13;
intercollegiate athletics. It h as been&#13;
the aim of the or gani zation to encourage the dev·elopment of athletic programs on a sound educational basis.&#13;
Only on the principle that athletics&#13;
makes 1 contribution to edu cation,&#13;
a&#13;
can the intercollegiate program be&#13;
justified.&#13;
To assist in bringing athletics in,t o&#13;
proper perspective it has been nece,s -&#13;
&#13;
Year&#13;
1957&#13;
&#13;
Champion&#13;
&#13;
Many person s render invaluable&#13;
service to the organiz,ation on a part&#13;
time basis. Without the, service of&#13;
the Execu t ive Committee members&#13;
and the m embers o.f many standing&#13;
and special committees the work&#13;
could n ot be accomplished. The asassociationion is deeply indebted t o, these&#13;
t&#13;
men for the great service rendered&#13;
without any thought of remun eration .&#13;
The annual meeting held at the&#13;
t ime of the nation al basketball t ournament in Kansa,s City furnishes an&#13;
,opportunity for&#13;
the d,i,s tr ict representatives&#13;
to meet, discuss and p1ass&#13;
on issues con sidered essential to the&#13;
program of NAIA. The understanding&#13;
ing gained fr om meeting with district&#13;
chairmen and the various national&#13;
committees forms&#13;
the basis for most&#13;
E xecut ive, Committee action.&#13;
&#13;
explaining the philoso,phy of the Nation.al Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Presidents, trustees, deans&#13;
of instruction and athletic personnel&#13;
from 28 instit utions came together to&#13;
discuss common problems and the reIt is the responsibility of the national&#13;
sults of their deliberation s was a&#13;
organization to create a prog eneral acceptance by each institution&#13;
g ram at the national level which is in&#13;
of its r·esponsibility for a just administration&#13;
conformance with the des, res of th e&#13;
i&#13;
of the athletic pr ogram . It&#13;
majority of the membership. It is&#13;
is hope,d that t he Pennsylvania work only through the active participation&#13;
1&#13;
shop will ,s erve as a model for other&#13;
of the membership in the program&#13;
districts to emulate.&#13;
a nd the pres,e nting of ideas and sugFrom the early days of NAIB,&#13;
c,&#13;
g,estions that this 1 a n be accomwhen Emi,l Liston wa s able to run the&#13;
plished . Much h1 been done in the&#13;
as&#13;
affairs of the organization from his&#13;
past. More remains to be done in&#13;
"vest pocket" to to day when there is&#13;
the future.&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up&#13;
&#13;
Most Valuable Player&#13;
&#13;
Rollins (Florida)&#13;
&#13;
Frank Willis&#13;
&#13;
1958 San Diego (Calif.) State&#13;
&#13;
Southwest Oklahoma St.&#13;
&#13;
Al Miranda (Sul Ross)&#13;
&#13;
1959 Southern University (La.)&#13;
&#13;
Omaha University (Neb.)&#13;
&#13;
Roger Repoz&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Sul Ross (Texas) State&#13;
&#13;
ever increasing need for most detailed&#13;
organization t o . furnish the service&#13;
essential for t he program great adrninistrativ·e changes. have been made&#13;
T o meet the demand of the rapidly&#13;
expanding organization the office was&#13;
moved to I{;ansas City in 1957, personnel was a dded to the headquarters&#13;
staff&#13;
and more persons became ininvolved on the various committees&#13;
The staff in the national office is&#13;
under t he able leadership of Al Duer,&#13;
Executive&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer and&#13;
Ed .,Garich,, Director of Public Relations. Much of the detail of the office&#13;
·&#13;
is conducted&#13;
by Madeline Ramsey, the&#13;
very efficient secretary&#13;
&#13;
(Rollins)&#13;
&#13;
(W. Wash.)&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
Proudly We Host the 1960&#13;
NAIA National Baseball&#13;
Competiton&#13;
Morningside college accepts the premise that intercollegiate competition&#13;
can have a positive value for higher&#13;
education in general. We believe the&#13;
principles on which N AIA is based and&#13;
for which it stands offer the best promise for making this potential value&#13;
real. We are proud to be host to the&#13;
1960 National Intercollegiate Baseball&#13;
Championship.&#13;
&#13;
A top-flight faculty, a&#13;
Christian educational purpose&#13;
and the backing of a solid&#13;
municipal constituency have&#13;
made Morningside college one&#13;
of the leading independent institutions of higher education&#13;
in the midwest. Between 300&#13;
and 400 freshmen begin their&#13;
college careers here each&#13;
year. They are becoming part&#13;
of an increasingly select student body.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
�Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
S·t ate Farm Insuranee&#13;
&#13;
Poulson' s Colonial House&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
COLONIAL and PROVINCIAL&#13;
FURNITURE and ACCESSORIES&#13;
Open each Evening 'till 9 :00&#13;
&#13;
707 Rebecca&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING COMPANY, INC.&#13;
516 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
&#13;
�ELAINE CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Judy&#13;
&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
MARY LYNN MOSSENGREN&#13;
&#13;
DONNA COCKRELL&#13;
&#13;
JUDY LARSEN&#13;
&#13;
SHEILA WALKER&#13;
&#13;
JUDY JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
PATTY HARTE&#13;
&#13;
LYNDA WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
�MONDAY&#13;
JUNE 6&#13;
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY-11 a.m.&#13;
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
JUNE 8&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
JUNE 7&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF 1&#13;
,5&#13;
~&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF I&#13;
&#13;
THURSDAY"&#13;
JUNE 9&#13;
&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
JUNE 10&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY-11 a .m .&#13;
&#13;
,-----------LOSER OF 2.&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 5&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
p.m&#13;
____________ ,.&#13;
&#13;
Top team of first round is visiting team. Bottom team of first round is home team. Home&#13;
Team Dugout is 3rd Base. Home Team takes&#13;
infield first. After First Round - toss of coin&#13;
determines home team.&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY-2.&#13;
LOSER OF8&#13;
&#13;
INDIANA STATE&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF I&#13;
&#13;
2 MONDAY- 2 p.m.&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
7 TUESDAY-6:00p.m.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF9&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
THURSDAY - 8:30 p.m .&#13;
&#13;
SAM HOUSTON&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF- II&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF2&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 13&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 7&#13;
&#13;
([! WEDNESDAY - 8:30pm&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WINNE.ROF8&#13;
OMAHA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY - 6:00p.m&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA SOUTHERN&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
W\NNEROFl'2.&#13;
LOSER OF 11&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY-8:30p.m&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
FRIDAY-8:30 p.m&#13;
&#13;
12 THURSDAY - 6:00p.m.&#13;
&#13;
----------10&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 10&#13;
&#13;
L0SER OF7&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY - 6:00p.m.&#13;
WINNEROF6&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
4 MONDAYWHITWORTH&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF 3&#13;
&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
____________ .,&#13;
TUESDAY-&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF 4&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - WINNERS&#13;
LOSERS&#13;
&#13;
------------&#13;
&#13;
If&#13;
15 games&#13;
&#13;
three teams remain after Thursday night's&#13;
a drawing will be held at home plate to&#13;
see which two teams play Friday night and which&#13;
team draws the Bye.&#13;
No team plays 2 games in one day unless&#13;
Tournament Committee deems it necessary due&#13;
to rain.&#13;
&#13;
�WHITWORTH COLLEGE, Spokane, Washington&#13;
&#13;
(Record 13-7)&#13;
&#13;
Representing N AIA Area 1,&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
(Washing ton, Oregon, I daho&#13;
California, Nevada, Montana&#13;
Wyoming )&#13;
Left to Righ t: Front Row: W alt Grosvenor,&#13;
Bill Trenbeath, Jerry M cCracken, Don&#13;
Lee Arch er, Tom Ingram.&#13;
Second Row: Dean McGuire, Jim Glennon, Farrel Romig, Norm Ha rding, Dennis&#13;
Rieger, Abe Roberts.&#13;
Back Row: Pau l M erke l, Bob Huber, Jerry Breymeyer, Ray Washburn, Ron Lince,&#13;
Ass't. Coach Kent Wittenberg.&#13;
Cox,&#13;
&#13;
SAM HOUSTON STATE, Huntsville, Texas (Record 21-9)&#13;
&#13;
Representing N AI A Ar ea 2,&#13;
(T exas,&#13;
&#13;
A rizona,&#13;
&#13;
Colorado,&#13;
&#13;
N ew Me xico, Utah, Oklahoma)&#13;
&#13;
Squad Members:&#13;
Haney, Womack, Davis, Walling, Gray, Campise, ,Leatherwood,&#13;
Tacker, Sterns, Ce ntilli, Arno ld, Dyer, Makowski, Martinec, Richarddson, Murray, Frye&#13;
Ingram, Indelicato, Gonzales, Bickley, Rimm er, Abbey, Saurage.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY&#13;
Carbondale, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
Salutes the 1960&#13;
National&#13;
Intercollegiate&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Championships&#13;
At Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�OMAHA UNIVERSITY, Omaha, Nebraska (Record 21-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Ar ea 3,&#13;
(Kansas, Nebraska, N . Dakota,&#13;
S . Dakota )&#13;
&#13;
Left to right: Front Row: Swand, Bill; Gilica, Henry; Schneck, Bob; Aden, Dave;;&#13;
Ritner, John; Wachtler, Bill; Kutilek, Tom; Vacarro, Jack.&#13;
Second Row: 'Siebler, Bob; Casper, George; Gilmore, Al; Fehrman, Ray; Coughlin,&#13;
Mike; Kozeny, Larry; Wentworth, Gary; McCormack, Bob; Miller, Barry.&#13;
Third Row: Assistant Coach Don Claussen; Dick Moore, Student Manager; Neuberger, Joe; Turner, Larry; Dostal, Bob; Smith, Ken; Grafton, Ario; Swanson, Larry;&#13;
Marsh, Morgan; Coach-Virg Yelkin.&#13;
&#13;
ARCHIE G. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
JAY HAMMER&#13;
&#13;
Restaurant - Cocktail Lounge&#13;
422 Dakota A venue&#13;
&#13;
Phone 4-3733&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH SIOUX CITY, NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
�OMAHA UNIVERSITY, Omaha, Nebraska (Record 21-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 3,&#13;
(Kansas, N ebraska, N . Dakota,&#13;
S. Dakota)&#13;
&#13;
Left to right: Front Row: Swand, Bill; Gilica, Henry; Schneck, Bob; Aden, Dave;;&#13;
Ritner, John; Wachtler, Bill; Kutilek, Tom; Vacarro, Jack.&#13;
Second Row: Siebler, Bob ; Casper, George; Gilmore, Al ; Fehrman, Ray; Coughlin,&#13;
Mike; Kozeny, Larry; Wentworth, Gary; McCormack, Bob; Miller, Barry.&#13;
Third Row: Assistant Coach Don Claussen; Dick Moore, Student Manager; Neu•&#13;
berger, Joe; Turner, Larry; Dostal, Bob; Smith, Ken; Grafton, Ario; Swanson, Larry;&#13;
Marsh, Morgan; Coach-Virg Yelkin .&#13;
&#13;
A RCHIE G. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
JAY HAMMER&#13;
&#13;
Restaurant - Cocktail Lounge&#13;
422 Dakota A venue&#13;
&#13;
Phone 4-3733&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH SIOUX CITY, NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE, Sioux City, Iowa (Recordl5-4)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 4,&#13;
&#13;
(Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa,&#13;
Missouri)&#13;
&#13;
Squad members: Bob Garretson, Jae Johnson, Ken Stripling, Jim Stodden, Jim&#13;
Anfinson, Wendell Hansen, Gary Wardlow, Jerry Black, Ken Goecke, Dennis Metcalf,&#13;
Dave Mulder, Harold Poppen, Lloyd ,DeMoss, Daryl Kohnke, Don Miller, Paul TeStroete.&#13;
&#13;
NOW-NEW&#13;
LIQUID FERTILIZER&#13;
SIDE DRESS growing corn with fast acting long lasting Nutro-Flo liquid&#13;
Nitrogen. Returns up to $3.00 for every $1.00 spent. One of your best&#13;
investments in your future.&#13;
&#13;
See Your Nutra-Flow Dealer NOW!&#13;
&#13;
NUTRA-FLO LIQUID FERTILIZER CO.&#13;
Stockyards District&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
�I 2 3 4 5 6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
V V V V V V vv IV&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
SCORING&#13;
All players are numbered and all plays recorded by symbols.&#13;
&#13;
NUMBER PLAYERS AS FOLLOWS&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Catcher&#13;
First Baseman&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Second Baseman&#13;
Third Baseman&#13;
Shortstop&#13;
&#13;
I 2 3 4&#13;
&#13;
5 6&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Left Fielder&#13;
Center Fielder&#13;
Right Fielder&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
&#13;
V V V fV V V V V IV&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
�I 2 3 4 5 6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
I/ V I/&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
SYMBOLS FOR PLAYS&#13;
Single&#13;
Double&#13;
Triple&#13;
Home Run&#13;
&#13;
Reached base on error E Stolen&#13;
Fielder's Choice&#13;
FC Sacrifice Hi t&#13;
Hit by Pitcher&#13;
HP Passed Ball&#13;
Wild Pitch&#13;
WP Bal k&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
S Base on Balls&#13;
SH Struck Out&#13;
PB Force Out&#13;
&#13;
BB&#13;
K&#13;
FO&#13;
&#13;
BK&#13;
&#13;
The lower left hand corner of the scoring block should be cons idered as home plate.&#13;
Progress is counter-c lockwise with progress to first base indica ted in lower right hand&#13;
corner and to home in lower left.&#13;
&#13;
I 2 3 4 5 6&#13;
&#13;
-,&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
I/V V I/I/I// V I/&#13;
&#13;
�SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY, Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Record 21-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 5,&#13;
(A rkansas, Louisiana, Ala-&#13;
&#13;
bama, Mississippi, K entucky )&#13;
&#13;
Squad Members: Robert Williams, Roy McGriff, L C. Brock, Wiley McMillon, Harry&#13;
.&#13;
Levy, Alvin: Woods, Hermon Rhodes, Henry Triplett, Bill Sarten, 'Charles Gray, Sargeant&#13;
Douglas, Lee Green, Jerry Kimball, McVea Griffin, Fred Jackson, Paul Lewis, Irving&#13;
Sams, Sanford Isom, Bill Maris, Herman ·James.&#13;
&#13;
Dwight Constable Insurance Agency&#13;
712 Jackson&#13;
&#13;
AUTO&#13;
&#13;
LIFE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FIRE - TRUCK&#13;
Fast Claim Service&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
Office 2-2791&#13;
&#13;
Res. 6-3132&#13;
&#13;
Fae Ganty&#13;
STEAKHOUSE&#13;
Featuring&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEA FOODS&#13;
1222 Pierce Street&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
For Reservat ion Call 2-0589&#13;
&#13;
�SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, Carbondale, Illinois (Record 16-6)&#13;
&#13;
R epresenting NAIA Area 6,&#13;
NO&#13;
&#13;
TEAM PHOTO OF&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN&#13;
&#13;
ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
(Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan)&#13;
&#13;
Squad Members: Richard (Itchy) Jones, Dave, Leonard, Larry Harris, Gerald Marting,&#13;
Charles (Duke) Sutton, Dennis Creech, Harry Gurley, Warren Barty, Roger McKnight,&#13;
Carroll (Rocky) Bridges, Ron Schaeffer, Bob Hardcastle, Larry Tucker, Gary Williams,&#13;
Larry Patton, Jim Woods.&#13;
&#13;
Fairmont Foods&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
�GEORGIA SOUTHERN, Statesboro, Georgia (Record 10-2)&#13;
&#13;
R epresenting NAIA Area. 7,&#13;
&#13;
( Georgia, Florida, N . Caro lina,&#13;
South Car olina, T ennessee, W .&#13;
Virginia)&#13;
&#13;
Squad membe rs:&#13;
Tom Moody, John McMillan, Bill Mallard (co-c), Bill Griffin,&#13;
Tommy How land, Miller Finley, Dan Stipe, J. E. Rowe, Ray Mims (co-c), . Tracy Rivers,&#13;
Curt Chambers, Wayne Smith, Clyde 'Miller, Ed Brown, Pierce Blanchard, Bill Robinson,&#13;
Bo Altman, Coach, J. I. Clements, Manager, Dahl McDermitt.&#13;
&#13;
INDIAN A STATE COLLEGE, Indiana, Pa. (Record 12-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 8,&#13;
&#13;
(P ennsylvania, Ne&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Yo r k,&#13;
&#13;
New J ersey, Maryland, Washington D. C., New England)&#13;
&#13;
Squad members: John Miller, manager, Tom Gnibus, Duane Lingenfelter, Joe&#13;
Saffron, John Holsberger, .Richard Murray, Dave Ogurkis, manager; Dave Aikey, Steve&#13;
Popich, Larry Maraf ka, Bill Hoffman, Ray Bosetti, Tony Catanese, Jim Willi'ams, Ray&#13;
Gaul, Coach Owen Dougherty, Ted Holz, Richard Zane, All Leberknight, Jim Johnson,&#13;
Paul Pfatt, Bre nt Lingenfelter, William Bichsel, Tom Parsha, Coach Sam Smith.&#13;
&#13;
TH E&#13;
&#13;
INCOMPARABLE&#13;
&#13;
B r a i l e r ThePenthouse&#13;
WHERE A MEAL IS A MEMORY&#13;
Phone 2-1942&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
610 Fourth Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�BAXTERS WELCOMES&#13;
&#13;
The N AIA CHAMPIONS&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S HOST FOR&#13;
&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SHRIMP&#13;
SEA FOOD&#13;
&#13;
BAXTERS&#13;
&#13;
CAFE&#13;
&#13;
215 So. Fairmount&#13;
Phone 5-0195&#13;
&#13;
�Radio&#13;
Dial 620&#13;
Your Exclusive N. A. I. A. Station&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
Brennan and Cohen&#13;
MASTER CRAFT CLEANERS&#13;
718 Jackson Street&#13;
Phone 2-3244&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�What Kids Baseball Means to Sioux City&#13;
Baseball is all of these and m ore.&#13;
In Sioux City the beginning of&#13;
baseball is the Sioux City Kids Baseball Program (probably better known&#13;
as Little League). This program&#13;
was organized in Sioux City in 1954&#13;
under the sponsorship of the, Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce. The Little&#13;
League program has s teadily . grown&#13;
from 10 teams with 125 boys ages 10&#13;
through 12 in 1954 to 40· t eams with&#13;
750 boys in 1960. The number of&#13;
teams this year had to be limited to&#13;
40 due to the lack of available playing fields. During the week only five&#13;
diamonds are available : two at Leif&#13;
E'rickson Park, and one each at Morningside Lutheran Church, K elly Park&#13;
and Sioux City Air Base. On Saturday afternoons, double headers are&#13;
played on all of t hese fi elds plus&#13;
Gilman terrace, R edington Park, Hubbard Park, Morningside Athletic&#13;
Field&#13;
and Lyons Park. This allows&#13;
each team to play two games per&#13;
week. The City Council has recognized this inadequacy and are in the&#13;
process of building nine Little League&#13;
diamonds and four Babe Ruth diam onds, which should be ready for use&#13;
about the 1st of July this year.&#13;
&#13;
In October 1959 the Little League&#13;
changed it's name to the Sioux City&#13;
Kids Baseball As• ociation, and bes&#13;
came an irudependent organization no&#13;
longer under t he spons·o rship of the&#13;
Junior Chamber of Commerce.&#13;
&#13;
Millions of people can't be wrong,&#13;
at least, not about baseball being the&#13;
national sport.&#13;
Baseball stands for a mushrooming&#13;
phenomenon that is • ore than a colm&#13;
lege or professional sport, as parents&#13;
all over the nation ameshed in it's&#13;
toils have become, to know ' through&#13;
the various· baseball programs.&#13;
The official rule book states :&#13;
"Baseball is a game between two&#13;
teams of nine players, each with sufficient substitutes and coaches under&#13;
the direction of a manager played in&#13;
agreement with these, rules under the&#13;
authority of an umpire and umpires&#13;
on a regulation field." Is t hat all&#13;
t here is to baseball, or is it a professional team playing under t he&#13;
lights or before a T. V. Camera, or&#13;
·&#13;
1s it a farm boy · throwinga ball&#13;
oy&#13;
'&#13;
against a farm building or is it a&#13;
small boy and his father playing'&#13;
catch in the playing&#13;
&#13;
played the game." The managers&#13;
also double as League Officers. The&#13;
managers job is not an easy one and&#13;
is not over in August, but continues&#13;
thToug,h the winter monrths as, there&#13;
is always a great deal to be done&#13;
between August and May of each&#13;
year in order to have a succe,s sful&#13;
program. Mia ny managers, have given&#13;
up their vacations to be with their&#13;
t eams and keep the program going.&#13;
The manage,rs wives also play a big&#13;
part in this prog ram and a lot of&#13;
credit must be given to them as they&#13;
help out as assist ant managers, score&#13;
keepers, etc. or become baseball&#13;
widows during the summer months.&#13;
&#13;
All of these people togetheT not&#13;
just the teams, managers, coaches&#13;
and umpires make up the Sioux City&#13;
Kids Baseball prograim.&#13;
&#13;
The Little League or Sioux City&#13;
Kids Baseball program in Sioux City&#13;
owes its existence to the team managers, parents, and business men who&#13;
sponsor the teams.&#13;
The team managers are the backbone of the organization; The managers and coaches are m en and women who donate their time to teach&#13;
the boys the fundamentals of baseball, the discipline of baseball and ·&#13;
knit the, boys together as a team&#13;
instead of individual ball players.&#13;
Many boys, have to be taught the art&#13;
of losing as well as winming, using&#13;
the old adage, "It is not wh ether you&#13;
won or lost that counts, but h ow you&#13;
&#13;
The parents part in this program&#13;
is more than washing dirty uniforms.&#13;
They must get the boys to practice&#13;
and games on time, drive t he boys&#13;
to the games and support their team s.&#13;
The sponsors are business men&#13;
who pay a fee which buys the uniform,s for the t eam s. In return t hey&#13;
not only receive the advertising by&#13;
having their names on the uniforms,&#13;
but also receive the satisfaction t hat&#13;
they have a part in making this program for the boys possible.&#13;
&#13;
If you have had a part in this program no matter how small someday&#13;
when you are watching a T. V. broadcast&#13;
of a major league game you&#13;
may be able to point to one of the&#13;
players with pride and say, "I had&#13;
a part in making him a big leaguer.&#13;
I sponsored his team where he learned&#13;
to play ba·seball, or I drove him to&#13;
several ball games, or I did my part&#13;
in building a ball park in Sioux City&#13;
for him to play, or I was, t he manager of the team where h e learned&#13;
to play the game." You can say&#13;
this with just as much pride as a&#13;
parent in the stands says, " That's&#13;
my boy".&#13;
That to u s of the Sioux City Kids&#13;
Baseball As,sociation is BASEBALL.&#13;
&#13;
The officers of the Sioux City Kids Baseball Association for 1960 are:&#13;
President,&#13;
&#13;
Vice&#13;
&#13;
Arthur N. Fulton&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
President, Dr. Lee Meis&#13;
Treasurer, J ohn Nyberg&#13;
Secretary, Orlyn Aadland&#13;
&#13;
Trustees&#13;
&#13;
League Chairmen&#13;
&#13;
G. A. (Stub ) Beaubein P aul W. Deck&#13;
Elmer Chartier&#13;
Lyle W. Garrels&#13;
Robert D. Godfrey&#13;
William M. Haley&#13;
H enry Kuhlken&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
�ASizzler!&#13;
That's the story of your gr.owing use of gas and&#13;
electricity and why it's necessary to invest another&#13;
$25 MILLION in the next 5 years to keep up with you!&#13;
&#13;
Every time you buy a new appliance and plug&#13;
it in you are ordering extra electricity! The same&#13;
is true for gas. And everyone, it seems, is buying&#13;
more and more help-giving appliances.&#13;
Our records show the use of electricity has&#13;
actually DOUBLED in the last ten years. But&#13;
that's nothing compared with the future. In&#13;
another ten years you'll be using TWICE AS&#13;
MUCH ELECTRICITY AS YOU USE TODAY.&#13;
That's why we at IPS must continually plan&#13;
ahead and build for your gas and electric future&#13;
. . . to the tune of about $25 MILLION in the&#13;
next five years!&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Public Service&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
iJ Company&#13;
&#13;
�The N. A. I. A. Baseball Championships were inaugurated in 1957 on an invitational basis.&#13;
Sul Ross State College in Alphine, Texas, was host to the first tournament and has - continued&#13;
to render this · :Service to N. A. I. A. each year since.&#13;
&#13;
A club to be known as The Century Club was incorporated March 10, 1960 for the purpose of&#13;
underwriting the N. A. I. A. National Baseball Tournament. R. G. "Honie" Rogers was elected&#13;
president of the newly form!ed club. Joe Weir, Treasurer, and A. W. Buckingham, Secretary.&#13;
Some $16,000 in pledges were signed by business and professional men. These pledges were&#13;
$100.00 each or multiples of $100. It is hoped that the tournament will be a success so that none&#13;
of the money pledged will have to be used.&#13;
The following are m. mbers of the Century Club:&#13;
e&#13;
David Albert&#13;
Arcadia Cafe&#13;
Assoc. Wholesalers Service&#13;
Arkin and Smith&#13;
Beane Plumbing and Heating&#13;
Bearce, Charles&#13;
Merle Bergeson *&#13;
G. R. Batcheller Company&#13;
Beuttler, W. L.&#13;
Blankenship Painting &amp; Decorating&#13;
Bolstein Company&#13;
Bomgaars Auto&#13;
Booth Fisheries&#13;
Bourrett's Tin and Furnace · Shop&#13;
A. W. Buckingham *&#13;
Briggs, .Ernie&#13;
Burroughs Corporation&#13;
Byers, Dwight L.&#13;
Carlson Machine Works&#13;
Chesterfield Restaurant&#13;
Chesterman Company&#13;
Cinnamon, H. H., Company&#13;
Container Corporation&#13;
Cook Paint and Varnish&#13;
Corbett and Corbett&#13;
Coles, W. 0.&#13;
Cummins Nursing Home&#13;
Cusack-Harmon Company&#13;
Les Davis *&#13;
De Maranville, W. V.&#13;
Erickson and Jones&#13;
Farner-Boeken&#13;
First Federal Savings and ·Loan&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
·Forney, Major Don&#13;
Frenchick-Runsvold Agency&#13;
Geelan,, Tom&#13;
Gerkin Companies&#13;
Getman, Richard, Dr.&#13;
Goldberg, Nathan&#13;
Graham Brake&#13;
Grandy-Pratt Company&#13;
Green Gables&#13;
Grueskin, Earle&#13;
Hall Piano Company&#13;
Hansen Glass and Paint&#13;
Harmon, Doyle&#13;
Hatfield, D. A.&#13;
Dwight Hauff *&#13;
Drs. Hicks and Howard&#13;
&#13;
Holdcroft Transportation&#13;
Home Fed, ral Savings and Loan&#13;
a&#13;
Horseshoe Club, Inc.&#13;
Hruska, L.&#13;
Hutchison, E. A.&#13;
Hutton-Tufty&#13;
I-Go Moving and Storage&#13;
Iowa Public Service&#13;
Kaplan, Eddie&#13;
Kaplan Wholesale Grocery&#13;
John Kelly *&#13;
Kelsey, Donald&#13;
Kern Advertising Company&#13;
Kimball Sporting Goods&#13;
Koerner, Jack&#13;
Leo Hassenger Insurance Agency&#13;
Live Stock National Bank&#13;
Maddison, C. C. *&#13;
Mayfair Hotel&#13;
McBride, Dr. R. M&#13;
Michael Seeds&#13;
Mid West Livestock Commission Co.&#13;
Moore, T. R.&#13;
Morningside Savings Bank&#13;
Morningside State Bank&#13;
Mutual Trust Life Insurance&#13;
N. B. T. College&#13;
Nelson, H. D.&#13;
B. C. Noonan and Sons&#13;
Nu-Way Drug&#13;
Nu-Way Sporting Goods&#13;
Olson, Ernest L.&#13;
Palmer, Dr. R.&#13;
Park, B. W., Dr.&#13;
Pecaut, S. F.&#13;
Pepsi-Cola Bottling&#13;
Perkins Seed Store&#13;
Perrazzo, A. R.&#13;
Peterson, Helseth and Raby&#13;
Plaza Bowl&#13;
&#13;
Potts, Doyle&#13;
Power Engineering Company&#13;
&#13;
Protexter, Donald&#13;
Prudential Life Insurance&#13;
Ray Moore Pontiac&#13;
&#13;
Roe Dairy Company&#13;
R. G. Rogers *&#13;
Rosenberger, F. 0. "Whitey"&#13;
&#13;
Roto Rooter Sewer Service&#13;
Rinker, Wesley S.&#13;
S. S. Coe&#13;
Sanitary Plumbing&#13;
Schmo lier-Mueller&#13;
Schreiber, Walter&#13;
Scoville, Robert *&#13;
Seco-Scoville Equipment Company&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
Shapiro, Samuel N.&#13;
Sioux City Cashway Lumber Store&#13;
Sioux City Crockery&#13;
Sioux City Dressed Pork&#13;
Sioux City Journal-Tribune&#13;
Sioux City Junior Chamber of Comm.&#13;
Sioux City Livestock Exchange&#13;
Sioux City Stationary Company&#13;
Sioux City Bottling Works&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards Company&#13;
Sioux City Tent &amp; Awning&#13;
Sioux Distributing Company&#13;
Sioux Transportation&#13;
Slotsky, L. S.&#13;
Soo Thrifty Drugs Company&#13;
Sportman's, Inc.&#13;
Sports Associates&#13;
Standard Office Equipment Company&#13;
Stock, Douglas C.&#13;
Sunset Plaza, Inc.&#13;
Swenson, R. A.&#13;
Swift and Company&#13;
Toller Drugs&#13;
Topp Drug Store&#13;
Toy National Bank&#13;
Van Buskirk and Sons&#13;
Van Eaton, C. S.&#13;
Yennard Nursery&#13;
Wagner, Garrison and Abbott&#13;
Wagner, Dr. R. G.&#13;
Ward, W. A.&#13;
Warner, Darrel&#13;
Webb Insurance Agency&#13;
Weatherwax&#13;
Joe Weir *&#13;
Wells Blue Bunny Ice Cream&#13;
Williges Furs&#13;
Woodbury Bank and Trust&#13;
Wooldridge, J. Watt, Insurance&#13;
Wright Building Company&#13;
Youngberg Studio&#13;
&#13;
* Board of ·Directors 21&#13;
&#13;
�Greetings from the National Association&#13;
&#13;
The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and its 460 member Universities and Colleges wishes to extend its greetings to Sioux City, its Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commercl:.', and its Century Club, along with the other leaders and&#13;
·workers who have done so much to make it the wonderful city it is. We have&#13;
been looking forward with keen anticipation to this N. A. I. A. baseball tournament and to the associations attached thereto. N. A. I. A. is grateful to the civicminded citizens of the City for their interest in our organization and in baseball&#13;
as a sport.&#13;
Changing the site of the tournament has resulted in greatly increased interest in&#13;
baseball, and this should have the effect of raising even further the quality of&#13;
the teams entered, giving the people of Sioux City an opportunity to ·witness&#13;
some of the best baseball played at the collegiate level in the United States.&#13;
N. A. I. A. hopes sincerely that this event will mark the beginning of along and&#13;
mutually beneficial relationship with Sioux City, the Junior Chamber of Commerce&#13;
and the Century Club.&#13;
&#13;
We feel that your people share with us the desire to&#13;
&#13;
promote amateur athletics on a sound basis for the young men of the United&#13;
States, and ·we hope that this N. A. I. A. Baseball Championship Tournament will&#13;
become an even more effective tool in the accomplishment of this most worthy&#13;
objective.&#13;
&#13;
Play ball!&#13;
&#13;
St. Bernard College&#13;
St. Bernard (Cullman), Alabama&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
�KIMBALL SPORTING GOODS&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
RAWLINGS ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT&#13;
"Finest in The Field"&#13;
Phone 6-7816&#13;
&#13;
1953 So. St. Aubin&#13;
&#13;
VOLKSWAGEN&#13;
SALES&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HASSENGER IMPORT MOTORS&#13;
3224 Gordon Drive&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME TO SIOUX CITY&#13;
Welcome to College World Series&#13;
&#13;
"The Friendly ·City"&#13;
&#13;
N. A. I. A.&#13;
&#13;
Complete Office Outfitters&#13;
&#13;
Make Your Reservations Now&#13;
At SIOUX CITY'S FINEST HOTELS&#13;
&#13;
Sheraton-Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Standard Office Equipment Co.&#13;
410 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
Rates $6.00 and up&#13;
Air conditioning, free T. V., radio, overnight parking&#13;
Excellent food at pune-pleasing prices&#13;
Sioux City Room - 11 :30 a. m.-2:00 p. m.&#13;
5:30 p. m.-8:30 p. m.&#13;
Minute Chef (R) 6:30 la. m.-11 :30 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Sheraton-Warrior Hotel&#13;
Rates $6.85 and up&#13;
Air conditioning, free T. V., radio, overnight parking&#13;
Free laundry facilit1es&#13;
Free rumpus room&#13;
Free ice - cubers on each floor&#13;
Soft-drink dispensen on each floor&#13;
Fine food served 7:30 a. m. to 8:30 p. m. in the&#13;
Coffee Shop&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
For a GRAND-SLAM Time Stay At Your&#13;
BOB DAVIS&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-0543&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
SHERATON HOTELS&#13;
"The Proudest Name in Hotels"&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
�0MEGA PRESS CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
2806 Ravine Park Drive&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-8256&#13;
&#13;
Promotional Sales&#13;
Printing&#13;
Mail Order&#13;
Direct Mail&#13;
Advertising&#13;
&#13;
HELPING TO BRING BIGGER AND BETTER NATIONAL EVENTS TO SIOUX CITY&#13;
THROUGH CIVIC FELLOWSHIP AND UNITY&#13;
OF SERVICE.&#13;
&#13;
AL CHRISTIANSEN&#13;
MEMBER SR . CHAMBER OF COMMERCE&#13;
JR. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE&#13;
EXCHANGE CLUB&#13;
CENTURY CLUB, INC.&#13;
N. A. I. A. STEERING COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME -&#13;
&#13;
ALL COLLEGE BASEBALL CHAMPIONS&#13;
&#13;
Sterring Committee &#13;
&#13;
A. W. BUCKINGHAM, Representative N. A. I. A. Executive Committee &#13;
&#13;
ALLEN CHRISTIANSEN, Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
DON PROXTER, Tourney Manager&#13;
&#13;
R. G. "Honie" ROGERS, President of Century Club&#13;
&#13;
WESLEY S. RINKER, Public Relations &#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. SCOVILLE, General Chairman &#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS STOCK, Publicty&#13;
&#13;
ANDY ROBAK &#13;
&#13;
DON PETRUCCELLI&#13;
&#13;
LOREN RHUDE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. ROGERS, Jr. &#13;
&#13;
Compliments of Crescent, A DIVISION OF ZALE'S JEWELERS&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
&#13;
The National Intercollegiate Baseball Story&#13;
&#13;
Wes Rinker&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Belle and Sweethearts&#13;
&#13;
Harmer's Fine Food&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
�</text>
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              <text>JUNE 6 6 10&#13;
- 10&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
Sponsored&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce&#13;
&#13;
SOUVENIR PROGRAM 25&#13;
&#13;
A. W. BUCKINGHAM&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN CHRISTIANSEN&#13;
&#13;
Representative N. A. I. A.&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
DON&#13;
&#13;
PROTEXTER&#13;
&#13;
R. G. "Honie" ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
Tourney Manager&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. SCOVILLE&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
President of Century Club&#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS .STOCK&#13;
&#13;
General Chairman&#13;
&#13;
Publicity&#13;
&#13;
WESLEY S. RINKER&#13;
&#13;
Public Relations&#13;
&#13;
ANDY ROBAK&#13;
&#13;
DON PETRUCCELLI&#13;
&#13;
LOREN RHUDE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. ROGERS, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
A DIVISION OF ZALE'S JEWELERS&#13;
&#13;
• Fifth and Pierce&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
By John J. Knight&#13;
Past President N NAIA&#13;
&#13;
The only justifica,t ion for a na tional&#13;
athletic or ganization must be found&#13;
in the s,e rvice it can render its. membe,r institutions. Because of the keen&#13;
awareness of the leaders of the problems, of the small coHeges in prom oting a good pr,o gram of intercollegiate athletics under t he banner of&#13;
NAIA, the services of the organization h ave been greatly expanded over&#13;
the past few years&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
sa ry to adopt certain s.t andards and&#13;
pass rules to guide the individua,l&#13;
programs . These have been g,e nerally&#13;
accepted as a means for equalizing&#13;
competitio·n and not as a way of curtailing competition.&#13;
Much ,e ffort has b een exerted to&#13;
bring athletic coaches and directors&#13;
professional recognition. This has reresultedin r a ther g,eneTal recognition&#13;
of athletic personnel as responsible&#13;
facu lty persons. A cceptance as m embers of the college educaitional staff&#13;
has brought with it edu cational re• ,p cnsibilities. It ' has become increass&#13;
ingly necessary for the intercollegiate&#13;
staff to recognize these responsibUities and exert e,v ery effort to fulfill&#13;
them&#13;
&#13;
In the expansion program of the&#13;
National&#13;
A ssociat ion: of Intecollegiate&#13;
At hlet ics a broad national&#13;
events program began to take shape.&#13;
Track and field, t ennis, and golf were&#13;
first promoted with the national&#13;
tournament in each at Abilene, T exas&#13;
An outstanding example of an&#13;
in the spring of 19,52. By 1956 there&#13;
,e ffort to bring better understanding&#13;
was a great demand for football to&#13;
among persons responsible for instibe included in national compet ition&#13;
tutional con trol of athletics was the&#13;
and this demand was m et. Swimming Workshop on Intercollegiate Athletics&#13;
ming, baseball and cross country were&#13;
he,l d February 16 and 17, 1960 at&#13;
included in the national competition&#13;
Indiana&#13;
Pennsylvania. This workin 19'57. The· n ext year wrestling&#13;
of t he&#13;
sh cp was largely the result&#13;
cam e into the p, cture as a sponsored&#13;
i&#13;
labor of Dr. W ill Orr, Chtairman of&#13;
event. The last sport .to come under&#13;
the Presidents Advisory Comrnitte,e,&#13;
the sponsorship of NAIA was soccer&#13;
Al Duer, and Ross Merrick. Througih&#13;
in the fall of 1959, with the m eet&#13;
their excellent planning and effective&#13;
conducted at Slippery R'ock, Pennsylleadership the workshop was m os t&#13;
vania.&#13;
successful. It proved invaluable , in&#13;
The National Association of Intercollegiate . Athletics h as ,e ncouraged&#13;
its . member institutions to broaden&#13;
their&#13;
sports· p, ograms, so that they&#13;
r&#13;
may give an opportunity for m ore&#13;
students with diversified interests&#13;
and special abilities t o compete in&#13;
intercollegiate athletics. It h as been&#13;
the aim of the or gani zation to encourage the dev·elopment of athletic programs on a sound educational basis.&#13;
Only on the principle that athletics&#13;
makes 1 contribution to edu cation,&#13;
a&#13;
can the intercollegiate program be&#13;
justified.&#13;
To assist in bringing athletics in,t o&#13;
proper perspective it has been nece,s -&#13;
&#13;
Year&#13;
1957&#13;
&#13;
Champion&#13;
&#13;
Many person s render invaluable&#13;
service to the organiz,ation on a part&#13;
time basis. Without the, service of&#13;
the Execu t ive Committee members&#13;
and the m embers o.f many standing&#13;
and special committees the work&#13;
could n ot be accomplished. The asassociationion is deeply indebted t o, these&#13;
t&#13;
men for the great service rendered&#13;
without any thought of remun eration .&#13;
The annual meeting held at the&#13;
t ime of the nation al basketball t ournament in Kansa,s City furnishes an&#13;
,opportunity for&#13;
the d,i,s tr ict representatives&#13;
to meet, discuss and p1ass&#13;
on issues con sidered essential to the&#13;
program of NAIA. The understanding&#13;
ing gained fr om meeting with district&#13;
chairmen and the various national&#13;
committees forms&#13;
the basis for most&#13;
E xecut ive, Committee action.&#13;
&#13;
explaining the philoso,phy of the Nation.al Association of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Presidents, trustees, deans&#13;
of instruction and athletic personnel&#13;
from 28 instit utions came together to&#13;
discuss common problems and the reIt is the responsibility of the national&#13;
sults of their deliberation s was a&#13;
organization to create a prog eneral acceptance by each institution&#13;
g ram at the national level which is in&#13;
of its r·esponsibility for a just administration&#13;
conformance with the des, res of th e&#13;
i&#13;
of the athletic pr ogram . It&#13;
majority of the membership. It is&#13;
is hope,d that t he Pennsylvania work only through the active participation&#13;
1&#13;
shop will ,s erve as a model for other&#13;
of the membership in the program&#13;
districts to emulate.&#13;
a nd the pres,e nting of ideas and sugFrom the early days of NAIB,&#13;
c,&#13;
g,estions that this 1 a n be accomwhen Emi,l Liston wa s able to run the&#13;
plished . Much h1 been done in the&#13;
as&#13;
affairs of the organization from his&#13;
past. More remains to be done in&#13;
"vest pocket" to to day when there is&#13;
the future.&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up&#13;
&#13;
Most Valuable Player&#13;
&#13;
Rollins (Florida)&#13;
&#13;
Frank Willis&#13;
&#13;
1958 San Diego (Calif.) State&#13;
&#13;
Southwest Oklahoma St.&#13;
&#13;
Al Miranda (Sul Ross)&#13;
&#13;
1959 Southern University (La.)&#13;
&#13;
Omaha University (Neb.)&#13;
&#13;
Roger Repoz&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Sul Ross (Texas) State&#13;
&#13;
ever increasing need for most detailed&#13;
organization t o . furnish the service&#13;
essential for t he program great adrninistrativ·e changes. have been made&#13;
T o meet the demand of the rapidly&#13;
expanding organization the office was&#13;
moved to I{;ansas City in 1957, personnel was a dded to the headquarters&#13;
staff&#13;
and more persons became ininvolved on the various committees&#13;
The staff in the national office is&#13;
under t he able leadership of Al Duer,&#13;
Executive&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer and&#13;
Ed .,Garich,, Director of Public Relations. Much of the detail of the office&#13;
·&#13;
is conducted&#13;
by Madeline Ramsey, the&#13;
very efficient secretary&#13;
&#13;
(Rollins)&#13;
&#13;
(W. Wash.)&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
Proudly We Host the 1960&#13;
NAIA National Baseball&#13;
Competiton&#13;
Morningside college accepts the premise that intercollegiate competition&#13;
can have a positive value for higher&#13;
education in general. We believe the&#13;
principles on which N AIA is based and&#13;
for which it stands offer the best promise for making this potential value&#13;
real. We are proud to be host to the&#13;
1960 National Intercollegiate Baseball&#13;
Championship.&#13;
&#13;
A top-flight faculty, a&#13;
Christian educational purpose&#13;
and the backing of a solid&#13;
municipal constituency have&#13;
made Morningside college one&#13;
of the leading independent institutions of higher education&#13;
in the midwest. Between 300&#13;
and 400 freshmen begin their&#13;
college careers here each&#13;
year. They are becoming part&#13;
of an increasingly select student body.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
S·t ate Farm Insuranee&#13;
&#13;
Poulson' s Colonial House&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
COLONIAL and PROVINCIAL&#13;
FURNITURE and ACCESSORIES&#13;
Open each Evening 'till 9 :00&#13;
&#13;
707 Rebecca&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING COMPANY, INC.&#13;
516 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
&#13;
ELAINE CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Judy&#13;
&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
MARY LYNN MOSSENGREN&#13;
&#13;
DONNA COCKRELL&#13;
&#13;
JUDY LARSEN&#13;
&#13;
SHEILA WALKER&#13;
&#13;
JUDY JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
PATTY HARTE&#13;
&#13;
LYNDA WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
JUNE 6&#13;
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY-11 a.m.&#13;
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
JUNE 8&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
JUNE 7&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF 1&#13;
,5&#13;
~&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF I&#13;
&#13;
THURSDAY"&#13;
JUNE 9&#13;
&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
JUNE 10&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY-11 a .m .&#13;
&#13;
,-----------LOSER OF 2.&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 5&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
p.m&#13;
____________ ,.&#13;
&#13;
Top team of first round is visiting team. Bottom team of first round is home team. Home&#13;
Team Dugout is 3rd Base. Home Team takes&#13;
infield first. After First Round - toss of coin&#13;
determines home team.&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY-2.&#13;
LOSER OF8&#13;
&#13;
INDIANA STATE&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF I&#13;
&#13;
2 MONDAY- 2 p.m.&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
7 TUESDAY-6:00p.m.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF9&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
THURSDAY - 8:30 p.m .&#13;
&#13;
SAM HOUSTON&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF- II&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF2&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 13&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 7&#13;
&#13;
([! WEDNESDAY - 8:30pm&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WINNE.ROF8&#13;
OMAHA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
MONDAY - 6:00p.m&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA SOUTHERN&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
W\NNEROFl'2.&#13;
LOSER OF 11&#13;
&#13;
TUESDAY-8:30p.m&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
FRIDAY-8:30 p.m&#13;
&#13;
12 THURSDAY - 6:00p.m.&#13;
&#13;
----------10&#13;
&#13;
WINNER OF 10&#13;
&#13;
L0SER OF7&#13;
&#13;
WEDNESDAY - 6:00p.m.&#13;
WINNEROF6&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
4 MONDAYWHITWORTH&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF 3&#13;
&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
2 p.m.&#13;
____________ .,&#13;
TUESDAY-&#13;
&#13;
LOSER OF 4&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - WINNERS&#13;
LOSERS&#13;
&#13;
------------&#13;
&#13;
If&#13;
15 games&#13;
&#13;
three teams remain after Thursday night's&#13;
a drawing will be held at home plate to&#13;
see which two teams play Friday night and which&#13;
team draws the Bye.&#13;
No team plays 2 games in one day unless&#13;
Tournament Committee deems it necessary due&#13;
to rain.&#13;
&#13;
WHITWORTH COLLEGE, Spokane, Washington&#13;
&#13;
(Record 13-7)&#13;
&#13;
Representing N AIA Area 1,&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
(Washing ton, Oregon, I daho&#13;
California, Nevada, Montana&#13;
Wyoming )&#13;
Left to Righ t: Front Row: W alt Grosvenor,&#13;
Bill Trenbeath, Jerry M cCracken, Don&#13;
Lee Arch er, Tom Ingram.&#13;
Second Row: Dean McGuire, Jim Glennon, Farrel Romig, Norm Ha rding, Dennis&#13;
Rieger, Abe Roberts.&#13;
Back Row: Pau l M erke l, Bob Huber, Jerry Breymeyer, Ray Washburn, Ron Lince,&#13;
Ass't. Coach Kent Wittenberg.&#13;
Cox,&#13;
&#13;
SAM HOUSTON STATE, Huntsville, Texas (Record 21-9)&#13;
&#13;
Representing N AI A Ar ea 2,&#13;
(T exas,&#13;
&#13;
A rizona,&#13;
&#13;
Colorado,&#13;
&#13;
N ew Me xico, Utah, Oklahoma)&#13;
&#13;
Squad Members:&#13;
Haney, Womack, Davis, Walling, Gray, Campise, ,Leatherwood,&#13;
Tacker, Sterns, Ce ntilli, Arno ld, Dyer, Makowski, Martinec, Richarddson, Murray, Frye&#13;
Ingram, Indelicato, Gonzales, Bickley, Rimm er, Abbey, Saurage.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY&#13;
Carbondale, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
Salutes the 1960&#13;
National&#13;
Intercollegiate&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Championships&#13;
At Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
OMAHA UNIVERSITY, Omaha, Nebraska (Record 21-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Ar ea 3,&#13;
(Kansas, Nebraska, N . Dakota,&#13;
S . Dakota )&#13;
&#13;
Left to right: Front Row: Swand, Bill; Gilica, Henry; Schneck, Bob; Aden, Dave;;&#13;
Ritner, John; Wachtler, Bill; Kutilek, Tom; Vacarro, Jack.&#13;
Second Row: 'Siebler, Bob; Casper, George; Gilmore, Al; Fehrman, Ray; Coughlin,&#13;
Mike; Kozeny, Larry; Wentworth, Gary; McCormack, Bob; Miller, Barry.&#13;
Third Row: Assistant Coach Don Claussen; Dick Moore, Student Manager; Neuberger, Joe; Turner, Larry; Dostal, Bob; Smith, Ken; Grafton, Ario; Swanson, Larry;&#13;
Marsh, Morgan; Coach-Virg Yelkin.&#13;
&#13;
ARCHIE G. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
JAY HAMMER&#13;
&#13;
Restaurant - Cocktail Lounge&#13;
422 Dakota A venue&#13;
&#13;
Phone 4-3733&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH SIOUX CITY, NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
OMAHA UNIVERSITY, Omaha, Nebraska (Record 21-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 3,&#13;
(Kansas, N ebraska, N . Dakota,&#13;
S. Dakota)&#13;
&#13;
Left to right: Front Row: Swand, Bill; Gilica, Henry; Schneck, Bob; Aden, Dave;;&#13;
Ritner, John; Wachtler, Bill; Kutilek, Tom; Vacarro, Jack.&#13;
Second Row: Siebler, Bob ; Casper, George; Gilmore, Al ; Fehrman, Ray; Coughlin,&#13;
Mike; Kozeny, Larry; Wentworth, Gary; McCormack, Bob; Miller, Barry.&#13;
Third Row: Assistant Coach Don Claussen; Dick Moore, Student Manager; Neu•&#13;
berger, Joe; Turner, Larry; Dostal, Bob; Smith, Ken; Grafton, Ario; Swanson, Larry;&#13;
Marsh, Morgan; Coach-Virg Yelkin .&#13;
&#13;
A RCHIE G. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
JAY HAMMER&#13;
&#13;
Restaurant - Cocktail Lounge&#13;
422 Dakota A venue&#13;
&#13;
Phone 4-3733&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH SIOUX CITY, NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE, Sioux City, Iowa (Recordl5-4)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 4,&#13;
&#13;
(Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa,&#13;
Missouri)&#13;
&#13;
Squad members: Bob Garretson, Jae Johnson, Ken Stripling, Jim Stodden, Jim&#13;
Anfinson, Wendell Hansen, Gary Wardlow, Jerry Black, Ken Goecke, Dennis Metcalf,&#13;
Dave Mulder, Harold Poppen, Lloyd ,DeMoss, Daryl Kohnke, Don Miller, Paul TeStroete.&#13;
&#13;
NOW-NEW&#13;
LIQUID FERTILIZER&#13;
SIDE DRESS growing corn with fast acting long lasting Nutro-Flo liquid&#13;
Nitrogen. Returns up to $3.00 for every $1.00 spent. One of your best&#13;
investments in your future.&#13;
&#13;
See Your Nutra-Flow Dealer NOW!&#13;
&#13;
NUTRA-FLO LIQUID FERTILIZER CO.&#13;
Stockyards District&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
I 2 3 4 5 6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
V V V V V V vv IV&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
SCORING&#13;
All players are numbered and all plays recorded by symbols.&#13;
&#13;
NUMBER PLAYERS AS FOLLOWS&#13;
Pitcher&#13;
Catcher&#13;
First Baseman&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Second Baseman&#13;
Third Baseman&#13;
Shortstop&#13;
&#13;
I 2 3 4&#13;
&#13;
5 6&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Left Fielder&#13;
Center Fielder&#13;
Right Fielder&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
&#13;
V V V fV V V V V IV&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
I 2 3 4 5 6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
I/ V I/&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
SYMBOLS FOR PLAYS&#13;
Single&#13;
Double&#13;
Triple&#13;
Home Run&#13;
&#13;
Reached base on error E Stolen&#13;
Fielder's Choice&#13;
FC Sacrifice Hi t&#13;
Hit by Pitcher&#13;
HP Passed Ball&#13;
Wild Pitch&#13;
WP Bal k&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
S Base on Balls&#13;
SH Struck Out&#13;
PB Force Out&#13;
&#13;
BB&#13;
K&#13;
FO&#13;
&#13;
BK&#13;
&#13;
The lower left hand corner of the scoring block should be cons idered as home plate.&#13;
Progress is counter-c lockwise with progress to first base indica ted in lower right hand&#13;
corner and to home in lower left.&#13;
&#13;
I 2 3 4 5 6&#13;
&#13;
-,&#13;
&#13;
8 9 R H E&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
I/V V I/I/I// V I/&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY, Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Record 21-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 5,&#13;
(A rkansas, Louisiana, Ala-&#13;
&#13;
bama, Mississippi, K entucky )&#13;
&#13;
Squad Members: Robert Williams, Roy McGriff, L C. Brock, Wiley McMillon, Harry&#13;
.&#13;
Levy, Alvin: Woods, Hermon Rhodes, Henry Triplett, Bill Sarten, 'Charles Gray, Sargeant&#13;
Douglas, Lee Green, Jerry Kimball, McVea Griffin, Fred Jackson, Paul Lewis, Irving&#13;
Sams, Sanford Isom, Bill Maris, Herman ·James.&#13;
&#13;
Dwight Constable Insurance Agency&#13;
712 Jackson&#13;
&#13;
AUTO&#13;
&#13;
LIFE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FIRE - TRUCK&#13;
Fast Claim Service&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
Office 2-2791&#13;
&#13;
Res. 6-3132&#13;
&#13;
Fae Ganty&#13;
STEAKHOUSE&#13;
Featuring&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SEA FOODS&#13;
1222 Pierce Street&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
For Reservat ion Call 2-0589&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY, Carbondale, Illinois (Record 16-6)&#13;
&#13;
R epresenting NAIA Area 6,&#13;
NO&#13;
&#13;
TEAM PHOTO OF&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN&#13;
&#13;
ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
(Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan)&#13;
&#13;
Squad Members: Richard (Itchy) Jones, Dave, Leonard, Larry Harris, Gerald Marting,&#13;
Charles (Duke) Sutton, Dennis Creech, Harry Gurley, Warren Barty, Roger McKnight,&#13;
Carroll (Rocky) Bridges, Ron Schaeffer, Bob Hardcastle, Larry Tucker, Gary Williams,&#13;
Larry Patton, Jim Woods.&#13;
&#13;
Fairmont Foods&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA SOUTHERN, Statesboro, Georgia (Record 10-2)&#13;
&#13;
R epresenting NAIA Area. 7,&#13;
&#13;
( Georgia, Florida, N . Caro lina,&#13;
South Car olina, T ennessee, W .&#13;
Virginia)&#13;
&#13;
Squad membe rs:&#13;
Tom Moody, John McMillan, Bill Mallard (co-c), Bill Griffin,&#13;
Tommy How land, Miller Finley, Dan Stipe, J. E. Rowe, Ray Mims (co-c), . Tracy Rivers,&#13;
Curt Chambers, Wayne Smith, Clyde 'Miller, Ed Brown, Pierce Blanchard, Bill Robinson,&#13;
Bo Altman, Coach, J. I. Clements, Manager, Dahl McDermitt.&#13;
&#13;
INDIAN A STATE COLLEGE, Indiana, Pa. (Record 12-3)&#13;
&#13;
Representing NAIA Area 8,&#13;
&#13;
(P ennsylvania, Ne&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Yo r k,&#13;
&#13;
New J ersey, Maryland, Washington D. C., New England)&#13;
&#13;
Squad members: John Miller, manager, Tom Gnibus, Duane Lingenfelter, Joe&#13;
Saffron, John Holsberger, .Richard Murray, Dave Ogurkis, manager; Dave Aikey, Steve&#13;
Popich, Larry Maraf ka, Bill Hoffman, Ray Bosetti, Tony Catanese, Jim Willi'ams, Ray&#13;
Gaul, Coach Owen Dougherty, Ted Holz, Richard Zane, All Leberknight, Jim Johnson,&#13;
Paul Pfatt, Bre nt Lingenfelter, William Bichsel, Tom Parsha, Coach Sam Smith.&#13;
&#13;
TH E&#13;
&#13;
INCOMPARABLE&#13;
&#13;
B r a i l e r ThePenthouse&#13;
WHERE A MEAL IS A MEMORY&#13;
Phone 2-1942&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
610 Fourth Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
BAXTERS WELCOMES&#13;
&#13;
The N AIA CHAMPIONS&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S HOST FOR&#13;
&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SHRIMP&#13;
SEA FOOD&#13;
&#13;
BAXTERS&#13;
&#13;
CAFE&#13;
&#13;
215 So. Fairmount&#13;
Phone 5-0195&#13;
&#13;
Radio&#13;
Dial 620&#13;
Your Exclusive N. A. I. A. Station&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
Brennan and Cohen&#13;
MASTER CRAFT CLEANERS&#13;
718 Jackson Street&#13;
Phone 2-3244&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
What Kids Baseball Means to Sioux City&#13;
Baseball is all of these and m ore.&#13;
In Sioux City the beginning of&#13;
baseball is the Sioux City Kids Baseball Program (probably better known&#13;
as Little League). This program&#13;
was organized in Sioux City in 1954&#13;
under the sponsorship of the, Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce. The Little&#13;
League program has s teadily . grown&#13;
from 10 teams with 125 boys ages 10&#13;
through 12 in 1954 to 40· t eams with&#13;
750 boys in 1960. The number of&#13;
teams this year had to be limited to&#13;
40 due to the lack of available playing fields. During the week only five&#13;
diamonds are available : two at Leif&#13;
E'rickson Park, and one each at Morningside Lutheran Church, K elly Park&#13;
and Sioux City Air Base. On Saturday afternoons, double headers are&#13;
played on all of t hese fi elds plus&#13;
Gilman terrace, R edington Park, Hubbard Park, Morningside Athletic&#13;
Field&#13;
and Lyons Park. This allows&#13;
each team to play two games per&#13;
week. The City Council has recognized this inadequacy and are in the&#13;
process of building nine Little League&#13;
diamonds and four Babe Ruth diam onds, which should be ready for use&#13;
about the 1st of July this year.&#13;
&#13;
In October 1959 the Little League&#13;
changed it's name to the Sioux City&#13;
Kids Baseball As• ociation, and bes&#13;
came an irudependent organization no&#13;
longer under t he spons·o rship of the&#13;
Junior Chamber of Commerce.&#13;
&#13;
Millions of people can't be wrong,&#13;
at least, not about baseball being the&#13;
national sport.&#13;
Baseball stands for a mushrooming&#13;
phenomenon that is • ore than a colm&#13;
lege or professional sport, as parents&#13;
all over the nation ameshed in it's&#13;
toils have become, to know ' through&#13;
the various· baseball programs.&#13;
The official rule book states :&#13;
"Baseball is a game between two&#13;
teams of nine players, each with sufficient substitutes and coaches under&#13;
the direction of a manager played in&#13;
agreement with these, rules under the&#13;
authority of an umpire and umpires&#13;
on a regulation field." Is t hat all&#13;
t here is to baseball, or is it a professional team playing under t he&#13;
lights or before a T. V. Camera, or&#13;
·&#13;
1s it a farm boy · throwinga ball&#13;
oy&#13;
'&#13;
against a farm building or is it a&#13;
small boy and his father playing'&#13;
catch in the playing&#13;
&#13;
played the game." The managers&#13;
also double as League Officers. The&#13;
managers job is not an easy one and&#13;
is not over in August, but continues&#13;
thToug,h the winter monrths as, there&#13;
is always a great deal to be done&#13;
between August and May of each&#13;
year in order to have a succe,s sful&#13;
program. Mia ny managers, have given&#13;
up their vacations to be with their&#13;
t eams and keep the program going.&#13;
The manage,rs wives also play a big&#13;
part in this prog ram and a lot of&#13;
credit must be given to them as they&#13;
help out as assist ant managers, score&#13;
keepers, etc. or become baseball&#13;
widows during the summer months.&#13;
&#13;
All of these people togetheT not&#13;
just the teams, managers, coaches&#13;
and umpires make up the Sioux City&#13;
Kids Baseball prograim.&#13;
&#13;
The Little League or Sioux City&#13;
Kids Baseball program in Sioux City&#13;
owes its existence to the team managers, parents, and business men who&#13;
sponsor the teams.&#13;
The team managers are the backbone of the organization; The managers and coaches are m en and women who donate their time to teach&#13;
the boys the fundamentals of baseball, the discipline of baseball and ·&#13;
knit the, boys together as a team&#13;
instead of individual ball players.&#13;
Many boys, have to be taught the art&#13;
of losing as well as winming, using&#13;
the old adage, "It is not wh ether you&#13;
won or lost that counts, but h ow you&#13;
&#13;
The parents part in this program&#13;
is more than washing dirty uniforms.&#13;
They must get the boys to practice&#13;
and games on time, drive t he boys&#13;
to the games and support their team s.&#13;
The sponsors are business men&#13;
who pay a fee which buys the uniform,s for the t eam s. In return t hey&#13;
not only receive the advertising by&#13;
having their names on the uniforms,&#13;
but also receive the satisfaction t hat&#13;
they have a part in making this program for the boys possible.&#13;
&#13;
If you have had a part in this program no matter how small someday&#13;
when you are watching a T. V. broadcast&#13;
of a major league game you&#13;
may be able to point to one of the&#13;
players with pride and say, "I had&#13;
a part in making him a big leaguer.&#13;
I sponsored his team where he learned&#13;
to play ba·seball, or I drove him to&#13;
several ball games, or I did my part&#13;
in building a ball park in Sioux City&#13;
for him to play, or I was, t he manager of the team where h e learned&#13;
to play the game." You can say&#13;
this with just as much pride as a&#13;
parent in the stands says, " That's&#13;
my boy".&#13;
That to u s of the Sioux City Kids&#13;
Baseball As,sociation is BASEBALL.&#13;
&#13;
The officers of the Sioux City Kids Baseball Association for 1960 are:&#13;
President,&#13;
&#13;
Vice&#13;
&#13;
Arthur N. Fulton&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
President, Dr. Lee Meis&#13;
Treasurer, J ohn Nyberg&#13;
Secretary, Orlyn Aadland&#13;
&#13;
Trustees&#13;
&#13;
League Chairmen&#13;
&#13;
G. A. (Stub ) Beaubein P aul W. Deck&#13;
Elmer Chartier&#13;
Lyle W. Garrels&#13;
Robert D. Godfrey&#13;
William M. Haley&#13;
H enry Kuhlken&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
ASizzler!&#13;
That's the story of your gr.owing use of gas and&#13;
electricity and why it's necessary to invest another&#13;
$25 MILLION in the next 5 years to keep up with you!&#13;
&#13;
Every time you buy a new appliance and plug&#13;
it in you are ordering extra electricity! The same&#13;
is true for gas. And everyone, it seems, is buying&#13;
more and more help-giving appliances.&#13;
Our records show the use of electricity has&#13;
actually DOUBLED in the last ten years. But&#13;
that's nothing compared with the future. In&#13;
another ten years you'll be using TWICE AS&#13;
MUCH ELECTRICITY AS YOU USE TODAY.&#13;
That's why we at IPS must continually plan&#13;
ahead and build for your gas and electric future&#13;
. . . to the tune of about $25 MILLION in the&#13;
next five years!&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Public Service&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
iJ Company&#13;
&#13;
The N. A. I. A. Baseball Championships were inaugurated in 1957 on an invitational basis.&#13;
Sul Ross State College in Alphine, Texas, was host to the first tournament and has - continued&#13;
to render this · :Service to N. A. I. A. each year since.&#13;
&#13;
A club to be known as The Century Club was incorporated March 10, 1960 for the purpose of&#13;
underwriting the N. A. I. A. National Baseball Tournament. R. G. "Honie" Rogers was elected&#13;
president of the newly form!ed club. Joe Weir, Treasurer, and A. W. Buckingham, Secretary.&#13;
Some $16,000 in pledges were signed by business and professional men. These pledges were&#13;
$100.00 each or multiples of $100. It is hoped that the tournament will be a success so that none&#13;
of the money pledged will have to be used.&#13;
The following are m. mbers of the Century Club:&#13;
e&#13;
David Albert&#13;
Arcadia Cafe&#13;
Assoc. Wholesalers Service&#13;
Arkin and Smith&#13;
Beane Plumbing and Heating&#13;
Bearce, Charles&#13;
Merle Bergeson *&#13;
G. R. Batcheller Company&#13;
Beuttler, W. L.&#13;
Blankenship Painting &amp; Decorating&#13;
Bolstein Company&#13;
Bomgaars Auto&#13;
Booth Fisheries&#13;
Bourrett's Tin and Furnace · Shop&#13;
A. W. Buckingham *&#13;
Briggs, .Ernie&#13;
Burroughs Corporation&#13;
Byers, Dwight L.&#13;
Carlson Machine Works&#13;
Chesterfield Restaurant&#13;
Chesterman Company&#13;
Cinnamon, H. H., Company&#13;
Container Corporation&#13;
Cook Paint and Varnish&#13;
Corbett and Corbett&#13;
Coles, W. 0.&#13;
Cummins Nursing Home&#13;
Cusack-Harmon Company&#13;
Les Davis *&#13;
De Maranville, W. V.&#13;
Erickson and Jones&#13;
Farner-Boeken&#13;
First Federal Savings and ·Loan&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
·Forney, Major Don&#13;
Frenchick-Runsvold Agency&#13;
Geelan,, Tom&#13;
Gerkin Companies&#13;
Getman, Richard, Dr.&#13;
Goldberg, Nathan&#13;
Graham Brake&#13;
Grandy-Pratt Company&#13;
Green Gables&#13;
Grueskin, Earle&#13;
Hall Piano Company&#13;
Hansen Glass and Paint&#13;
Harmon, Doyle&#13;
Hatfield, D. A.&#13;
Dwight Hauff *&#13;
Drs. Hicks and Howard&#13;
&#13;
Holdcroft Transportation&#13;
Home Fed, ral Savings and Loan&#13;
a&#13;
Horseshoe Club, Inc.&#13;
Hruska, L.&#13;
Hutchison, E. A.&#13;
Hutton-Tufty&#13;
I-Go Moving and Storage&#13;
Iowa Public Service&#13;
Kaplan, Eddie&#13;
Kaplan Wholesale Grocery&#13;
John Kelly *&#13;
Kelsey, Donald&#13;
Kern Advertising Company&#13;
Kimball Sporting Goods&#13;
Koerner, Jack&#13;
Leo Hassenger Insurance Agency&#13;
Live Stock National Bank&#13;
Maddison, C. C. *&#13;
Mayfair Hotel&#13;
McBride, Dr. R. M&#13;
Michael Seeds&#13;
Mid West Livestock Commission Co.&#13;
Moore, T. R.&#13;
Morningside Savings Bank&#13;
Morningside State Bank&#13;
Mutual Trust Life Insurance&#13;
N. B. T. College&#13;
Nelson, H. D.&#13;
B. C. Noonan and Sons&#13;
Nu-Way Drug&#13;
Nu-Way Sporting Goods&#13;
Olson, Ernest L.&#13;
Palmer, Dr. R.&#13;
Park, B. W., Dr.&#13;
Pecaut, S. F.&#13;
Pepsi-Cola Bottling&#13;
Perkins Seed Store&#13;
Perrazzo, A. R.&#13;
Peterson, Helseth and Raby&#13;
Plaza Bowl&#13;
&#13;
Potts, Doyle&#13;
Power Engineering Company&#13;
&#13;
Protexter, Donald&#13;
Prudential Life Insurance&#13;
Ray Moore Pontiac&#13;
&#13;
Roe Dairy Company&#13;
R. G. Rogers *&#13;
Rosenberger, F. 0. "Whitey"&#13;
&#13;
Roto Rooter Sewer Service&#13;
Rinker, Wesley S.&#13;
S. S. Coe&#13;
Sanitary Plumbing&#13;
Schmo lier-Mueller&#13;
Schreiber, Walter&#13;
Scoville, Robert *&#13;
Seco-Scoville Equipment Company&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
Shapiro, Samuel N.&#13;
Sioux City Cashway Lumber Store&#13;
Sioux City Crockery&#13;
Sioux City Dressed Pork&#13;
Sioux City Journal-Tribune&#13;
Sioux City Junior Chamber of Comm.&#13;
Sioux City Livestock Exchange&#13;
Sioux City Stationary Company&#13;
Sioux City Bottling Works&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards Company&#13;
Sioux City Tent &amp; Awning&#13;
Sioux Distributing Company&#13;
Sioux Transportation&#13;
Slotsky, L. S.&#13;
Soo Thrifty Drugs Company&#13;
Sportman's, Inc.&#13;
Sports Associates&#13;
Standard Office Equipment Company&#13;
Stock, Douglas C.&#13;
Sunset Plaza, Inc.&#13;
Swenson, R. A.&#13;
Swift and Company&#13;
Toller Drugs&#13;
Topp Drug Store&#13;
Toy National Bank&#13;
Van Buskirk and Sons&#13;
Van Eaton, C. S.&#13;
Yennard Nursery&#13;
Wagner, Garrison and Abbott&#13;
Wagner, Dr. R. G.&#13;
Ward, W. A.&#13;
Warner, Darrel&#13;
Webb Insurance Agency&#13;
Weatherwax&#13;
Joe Weir *&#13;
Wells Blue Bunny Ice Cream&#13;
Williges Furs&#13;
Woodbury Bank and Trust&#13;
Wooldridge, J. Watt, Insurance&#13;
Wright Building Company&#13;
Youngberg Studio&#13;
&#13;
* Board of ·Directors 21&#13;
&#13;
Greetings from the National Association&#13;
&#13;
The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics and its 460 member Universities and Colleges wishes to extend its greetings to Sioux City, its Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commercl:.', and its Century Club, along with the other leaders and&#13;
·workers who have done so much to make it the wonderful city it is. We have&#13;
been looking forward with keen anticipation to this N. A. I. A. baseball tournament and to the associations attached thereto. N. A. I. A. is grateful to the civicminded citizens of the City for their interest in our organization and in baseball&#13;
as a sport.&#13;
Changing the site of the tournament has resulted in greatly increased interest in&#13;
baseball, and this should have the effect of raising even further the quality of&#13;
the teams entered, giving the people of Sioux City an opportunity to ·witness&#13;
some of the best baseball played at the collegiate level in the United States.&#13;
N. A. I. A. hopes sincerely that this event will mark the beginning of along and&#13;
mutually beneficial relationship with Sioux City, the Junior Chamber of Commerce&#13;
and the Century Club.&#13;
&#13;
We feel that your people share with us the desire to&#13;
&#13;
promote amateur athletics on a sound basis for the young men of the United&#13;
States, and ·we hope that this N. A. I. A. Baseball Championship Tournament will&#13;
become an even more effective tool in the accomplishment of this most worthy&#13;
objective.&#13;
&#13;
Play ball!&#13;
&#13;
St. Bernard College&#13;
St. Bernard (Cullman), Alabama&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
KIMBALL SPORTING GOODS&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
RAWLINGS ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT&#13;
"Finest in The Field"&#13;
Phone 6-7816&#13;
&#13;
1953 So. St. Aubin&#13;
&#13;
VOLKSWAGEN&#13;
SALES&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HASSENGER IMPORT MOTORS&#13;
3224 Gordon Drive&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME TO SIOUX CITY&#13;
Welcome to College World Series&#13;
&#13;
"The Friendly ·City"&#13;
&#13;
N. A. I. A.&#13;
&#13;
Complete Office Outfitters&#13;
&#13;
Make Your Reservations Now&#13;
At SIOUX CITY'S FINEST HOTELS&#13;
&#13;
Sheraton-Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Standard Office Equipment Co.&#13;
410 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
Rates $6.00 and up&#13;
Air conditioning, free T. V., radio, overnight parking&#13;
Excellent food at pune-pleasing prices&#13;
Sioux City Room - 11 :30 a. m.-2:00 p. m.&#13;
5:30 p. m.-8:30 p. m.&#13;
Minute Chef (R) 6:30 la. m.-11 :30 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Sheraton-Warrior Hotel&#13;
Rates $6.85 and up&#13;
Air conditioning, free T. V., radio, overnight parking&#13;
Free laundry facilit1es&#13;
Free rumpus room&#13;
Free ice - cubers on each floor&#13;
Soft-drink dispensen on each floor&#13;
Fine food served 7:30 a. m. to 8:30 p. m. in the&#13;
Coffee Shop&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
For a GRAND-SLAM Time Stay At Your&#13;
BOB DAVIS&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-0543&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
SHERATON HOTELS&#13;
"The Proudest Name in Hotels"&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
0MEGA PRESS CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
2806 Ravine Park Drive&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-8256&#13;
&#13;
Promotional Sales&#13;
Printing&#13;
Mail Order&#13;
Direct Mail&#13;
Advertising&#13;
&#13;
HELPING TO BRING BIGGER AND BETTER NATIONAL EVENTS TO SIOUX CITY&#13;
THROUGH CIVIC FELLOWSHIP AND UNITY&#13;
OF SERVICE.&#13;
&#13;
AL CHRISTIANSEN&#13;
MEMBER SR . CHAMBER OF COMMERCE&#13;
JR. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE&#13;
EXCHANGE CLUB&#13;
CENTURY CLUB, INC.&#13;
N. A. I. A. STEERING COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME -&#13;
&#13;
ALL COLLEGE BASEBALL CHAMPIONS&#13;
&#13;
Sterring Committee &#13;
&#13;
A. W. BUCKINGHAM, Representative N. A. I. A. Executive Committee &#13;
&#13;
ALLEN CHRISTIANSEN, Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
DON PROXTER, Tourney Manager&#13;
&#13;
R. G. "Honie" ROGERS, President of Century Club&#13;
&#13;
WESLEY S. RINKER, Public Relations &#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. SCOVILLE, General Chairman &#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS STOCK, Publicty&#13;
&#13;
ANDY ROBAK &#13;
&#13;
DON PETRUCCELLI&#13;
&#13;
LOREN RHUDE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT G. ROGERS, Jr. &#13;
&#13;
Compliments of Crescent, A DIVISION OF ZALE'S JEWELERS&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
&#13;
The National Intercollegiate Baseball Story&#13;
&#13;
Wes Rinker&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Belle and Sweethearts&#13;
&#13;
Harmer's Fine Food&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>�RUTH M. WEDGWOOD&#13;
1324 S. Newton Street&#13;
Sioux City 6, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE ' 2 0&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�20&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
T HE S TAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
ADA G. CARTER&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
BERGESON&#13;
HAROLD RAUN Assistant Business Manager&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL&#13;
&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
PERCY MICKELSON&#13;
VETA CLARK&#13;
CLARENCE KLATT&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
ALVERDA MONTGOMERY&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Military&#13;
Military&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Organizations&#13;
.&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Art&#13;
Snaps&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX&#13;
A College Annual&#13;
published by the Class&#13;
of 1920 in its Junior&#13;
Year, which contains&#13;
a record of our deeds,&#13;
both wise and otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
Photographs&#13;
Jokes&#13;
Calendai·&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�o tbe one whom we&#13;
have all learned to&#13;
admire and respect,&#13;
to the one who is&#13;
doing so much to make Morningside a leader in the Northwest, to a man among men,&#13;
our own Dr. Hirsch, we, the&#13;
Class of 1920, respectfully&#13;
dedicate this Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
To those who have never&#13;
known Morningside as a&#13;
college home, we have tried&#13;
to bring some idea of our&#13;
college life, ideals and&#13;
spirit; to those who are&#13;
now Morningsiders, we&#13;
have given a permanent&#13;
record of one year's enjoyment at the college on&#13;
the Sioux; and to our&#13;
Alumni we have brought&#13;
greetings from their Alma&#13;
Mater. We have tried to&#13;
do our best,- there have&#13;
been mistakes we know,&#13;
but we leave this book in&#13;
your hands as a result&#13;
of our honest endeavors.&#13;
&#13;
of Books&#13;
&#13;
Order&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Our College&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
® our Activities&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
Features&#13;
&#13;
�ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS&#13;
are deeply grateful to&#13;
all who have helped in the&#13;
making of this book, and&#13;
especially to Dorothy Eyers,&#13;
'19, and Wilson Smith, '22,&#13;
tor their printing; to Harold&#13;
Winter, 22, for his cartooning, and to Professor J. J.&#13;
Hayes for his kindly advice.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�[a1-------------------------h&#13;
&#13;
Alma Mater&#13;
I&#13;
Sing the praises of Dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her heroes bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices,&#13;
The chorus swelling,&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
(Refrain)&#13;
Then cheer for Dear Old Morningside.&#13;
To thee we pledge anew&#13;
Hearats faithful love&#13;
of&#13;
Now forever&#13;
and&#13;
Thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
We love thy halls of learning,&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
We'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought us Fair Morningside! Our home!&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
Hear our vow, 0 Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee&#13;
All we have,&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
For the glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
01-----------------------0&#13;
&#13;
�Song of Victory&#13;
I&#13;
Come, let us sing a song of victory ;&#13;
Make the hills and campus ring;&#13;
Strong valiant sons of Old M . C.,&#13;
Once more our trophies bring.&#13;
(Refrain)&#13;
Fair Morningside, our mother!&#13;
At thy call we'll dare and do;&#13;
Then we'll sing a song of victory&#13;
For the Pride of the Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
Hark to the sound of many marching feet;&#13;
See thy colors waving high;&#13;
Cheer long and loud for "Varsity"Dare to do, nay more, to die.&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
Here's to the warriors from our "Heap Big School",&#13;
Bold and fearless ever be;&#13;
Once more that ringing Ky-yi-yi&#13;
Telling of victory.&#13;
&#13;
THE MAIN HALL&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside&#13;
I&#13;
Home of our college days,&#13;
Hark to our song of praise,&#13;
While we our voices raise&#13;
For Morningside.&#13;
Thou queen of all the land,&#13;
Loyal to thee we stand,&#13;
Thy sons a faithful band Dear Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
Bright are the hours we spend,&#13;
Dear is each college friend,&#13;
Sweet is the charm they lend&#13;
To Morningside.&#13;
Brothers in heart are we,&#13;
Joyous and light and free,&#13;
Joined by our love for thee Dear Morningside.&#13;
THE CONSERVATORY&#13;
&#13;
�n-------------------------6]&#13;
&#13;
In the Hole&#13;
Biff ! Boom! Bang! our boys are marching,&#13;
Down towards South Dakota goal.&#13;
And beneath the old Maroon,&#13;
We shall sing our college tune,&#13;
While we put South Dakota in the hole.&#13;
CHORUS:&#13;
&#13;
In the Hole, in the Hole,&#13;
And we'll put South Dakota in the Hole.&#13;
In the Hole, in the Hole,&#13;
And we'll put South Dakota in the Hole.&#13;
&#13;
T HE GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
�College Ties Can Ne'er Be Broken&#13;
I&#13;
College ties can ne'er be broken,&#13;
Formed at old M. C.&#13;
Far surpassing wealth unspoken&#13;
They'll forever be.&#13;
M. C. ! M. C. ! Hail to thee!&#13;
Thou hast been kind to us.&#13;
Ever shall we cherish for thee&#13;
Thoughts of love and trust.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
When our college days are over,&#13;
And our ways shall part,&#13;
Still by thee we'll be united&#13;
Still be one in heart.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
Now pledge we by word and deed,&#13;
Our Alma Mater, dear,&#13;
Loyalty, and praise, and love,&#13;
For all thy fost'ring care.&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
�T HE LIBRARY&#13;
THE PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
�SCENE ON THE CAMPUS&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIM MITT,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
and&#13;
Professor of Ancient Languages&#13;
&#13;
ELMER ELLSWORTH LYMER, PH.D. , LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
FRANK E. MOSSMAN D. D.&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
We greet you, Dr. Mossman, as an alumnus of our future&#13;
Alma Mater and as our .honored President. May your years&#13;
at Morningside be filled with rich blessings, is our wish&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
HILMER&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President and R egistrar&#13;
&#13;
�EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY VAN HORNE,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICH SCHAUB,&#13;
&#13;
A. B., D. D.&#13;
&#13;
*HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL , A.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biblical and Religious&#13;
Literature&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR HENRY HIRSCH, PH.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDERICH KANTHLENER, A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Romance Languages&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
�CHARLES ALMER MARSH,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
Principal of the Academy&#13;
and&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
LA U RA C. FISCHER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages&#13;
&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD,&#13;
JASON McCoLLOUGH SAUNDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte and Organ&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
MABEL ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
PAUL MAC COLLIN,&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Director of Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
&#13;
�ELIZABETH NEWTON MacCOLLIN,&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
Instructor&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
NAOMI GooD,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M .&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
]. MRYS LILLARD,&#13;
]ESSIE&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Home Economics&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Avis&#13;
DELMAR CLAIRE COOPER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics and Science&#13;
&#13;
BAKER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
�ALUMNI&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS LAUX, A. M.&#13;
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages&#13;
&#13;
RALPH B .&#13;
&#13;
w AITE,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
J. HAYES, A. M., Professor of English and Secretary of the Faculty.&#13;
HELEN ISABELLE LOVELAND, A. B., Professor of English.&#13;
JAMES Austin Coss, M. S., Professor of Chemistry.&#13;
AvERY L. CARLSON, A. M., Acting Professor of Economics and Sociology.&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS, A. B., M. D., Professor of Biology.&#13;
CHARLES J. Faust&#13;
A. M ., Assistant Professor of History.&#13;
HAROLD BucK, Instructor in Violin.&#13;
ERNA ZEIHLSDORF, Instructor in Piano and Organ.&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP, Instructor in Pianoforte.&#13;
MRS. BERTHA Bosley, Assistant Professor of English.&#13;
CLARA LEWIS, Assistant in Expression.&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
�Alumni Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Ruby A. FLINN, '06 __ .......................................... President&#13;
FLORENCE E. ANTHONY, '12 ...................... Vice-President&#13;
Ross P. BROWN, '02 ............................................Treasurer&#13;
MABEL PECA UT T ACKABERRY, '14.................... Secretary&#13;
&#13;
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE&#13;
B. P. MAHONEY, '12&#13;
IDA ELSIE Kilboone,&#13;
'07&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD, '07&#13;
RALPH T ACKABERRY, '11&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY, '18&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College has shown its worth by the deeds of the men and women&#13;
who have gone out from their Alma Mater to take up a share of the burdens in the&#13;
work of the world. While students here, they became inspired with ideals similar&#13;
to those of our day: "To attain high scholarship, to maintain clean athletics, to&#13;
preserve pure morals, to inspire lofty living, to urge a fine conservation of talents to&#13;
the service of the best."&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside alumni may be found all over the world. Some of them spent many&#13;
hours of their lives while in college, dreaming of the wonderful things they were&#13;
going to accomplish when they received their degrees. Some may have thought of the&#13;
public platform and how they would sway the people with their forensic oratory and&#13;
logic. Many may have dreamed of entering the commercial world as banker, manufacturer, or tradesman. Others desired to achieve success in field of Christian service,&#13;
where they could spread the ideals of democracy and help in bringing about a true&#13;
international brotherhood.&#13;
The Alumni have had an unusual privilege of showing forth the spirit of Morningside during the recent World War. This opportunity had not been in the scope of their&#13;
college dreams, but they met it bravely. The many names on our honor roll show that&#13;
they were willing to make the supreme sacrifice. These men carried with them the&#13;
spirit which makes our Alma Mater a living and essential force in the lives of every&#13;
one in our college. They carried this spirit with them in every battle.&#13;
What we may accomplish along any given line depends on our ability, our opportunity, and our power of application. As the first of these is a fixed quantity, our&#13;
natural ability is determined before we could exercise any choice. Over our ability&#13;
we have a large determining power to make our lives the best we can. As the past&#13;
was the time to prepare for the present, so the present is the time to prepare for the&#13;
future; therefore, we should be laying a good foundation for our future lives.&#13;
&#13;
�THE SOUTH RAVINE&#13;
&#13;
�CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Philomathean President ' 19&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet '19&#13;
Collegian Reporter Staff ' 19&#13;
Philo Gold Medal Debate ' 18&#13;
M. C. Band ' 17-'18&#13;
"Su ccess comes on with ra pid gait&#13;
To the f ellow who goes to m eet it."&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL BERGH&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
President and Secretary of Athenaeums&#13;
Agora Vice-President&#13;
Agora Executive Board&#13;
Inter-society Committee&#13;
&#13;
Senior Class Officers&#13;
President ---------------------------------------------------- LEONE LANGE&#13;
Vice-President --------------------------·-·· A UR ELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ·-····--··-·--·····-·-···--·LEN A McDonald&#13;
Student Council Representative __________________ MJRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
"Just the airiest, fairiest slip of a thing,&#13;
She's up and she's off,&#13;
With a smile and a laugh,&#13;
Carelessly giving her books a fling."&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BERRY&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Secretary of Athenaeums&#13;
Agora Executive Board&#13;
Red Cross Committee&#13;
Collegian Reporter '17-' 18&#13;
"A careful student she has been."&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Duet Dance in May Fete&#13;
"Zealous but modest."&#13;
&#13;
�GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
RUTH BURPEE&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Chairman Girls' Banquet Committee '19&#13;
&#13;
"When&#13;
&#13;
I have a thing to do, I go and do it."&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS CLARK&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
Expression Graduate&#13;
"Blessed with a pleasing smile and a cheery&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer and Vice-President of&#13;
Zetaletheans&#13;
Agora Executive Board '18&#13;
Glee Club ' 17-'18-'19&#13;
&#13;
" Fin e inspired earn estness her inmost being fills&#13;
And eager self-forgetfulness that sp eaks not&#13;
what it wills."&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
President of Zetalethean Society '19&#13;
&#13;
"Hang sorrow! Care will kill a cat.&#13;
So, therefore, let's be merry."&#13;
&#13;
manner."&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
IRENE COOPER&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
President and Treasurer of Athenaeums&#13;
Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
Conservatory Graduate in Piano 1915&#13;
Inter-society Committee&#13;
&#13;
"Her heart&#13;
&#13;
is not altogether in her work."&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Glee Club ' 15-'16-'17&#13;
College Band '15-'16-'17&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Secretary ' 17, President '18&#13;
Inter-society Debate '17&#13;
Student Volunteer Band&#13;
Class Treasurer '16&#13;
Class President '17-' 18&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate '19&#13;
&#13;
"Skillful alik e with tongue and pen, he preached&#13;
to all men everywhere."&#13;
&#13;
BURNETTE COOPER&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
" B e go ne, dull care, thou and I shall never&#13;
agree."&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY EYERS&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Athenaeum Vice-President&#13;
Buena Vista College ' 16-' 17-'18&#13;
&#13;
Although she only cam e to us this y ear, we&#13;
have learn ed to love her and respect her artistic&#13;
ability.&#13;
&#13;
�MIRIAM FISH&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Pieria President '18, Secretary '17&#13;
Vice-President Freshman Class&#13;
Collegian Reporter Staff&#13;
College Orchestra ' 16&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Student Council ' 19&#13;
Expression&#13;
&#13;
HELEN GULLICKSON&#13;
Pieria&#13;
" Thos e graceful acts,&#13;
Those thousand decencies that daily flow&#13;
From all her words and actions."&#13;
&#13;
"Sweet and smiling are thy ways."&#13;
&#13;
MABEL FRANCHERE&#13;
Pieria&#13;
" Her ways bespeak a cultured mind."&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet '17-'18&#13;
President Student Volunteer Band '17-'18&#13;
President Chemistry Club '17-'18&#13;
"He did the utmost bounds of knowledge find,&#13;
&#13;
MABEL GUSTESON&#13;
"And keeps that palace of the soul serene."&#13;
&#13;
MYNNIE GUSTESON&#13;
"Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her&#13;
paths are peace."&#13;
&#13;
Y et found them not so large as was his mind."&#13;
&#13;
RUTH REID FRY&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
President Zetaletheans '19&#13;
President Agora '18&#13;
Annual Board ' 18&#13;
&#13;
"Active doer, strong to labor, sure to conquer."&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE HAITZ&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Pieria Treasurer&#13;
Collegian Reporter Staff&#13;
Expression&#13;
&#13;
"She hath a merry twinkle in her ey e,&#13;
They're tinged the hue of bluish sky;&#13;
Many talents she possesses,&#13;
Not all of which she e'er confesses."&#13;
&#13;
0------------------r&#13;
&#13;
�_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___&#13;
_ __&#13;
&#13;
MABLE LARSON&#13;
"A math shark-and with all that a mighty nice&#13;
girl."&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
Ionian&#13;
President of Ionians&#13;
Track '17-'18-'19, Captain Track Team&#13;
'19&#13;
Class Basket Ball&#13;
Secretary of Chemistry Club&#13;
2nd in Monument Run '18&#13;
1st in Monument Run '19&#13;
Forensic League&#13;
"I'm just a long, lean country gink&#13;
And I can surely run, by jink!"'&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Vice-President of Pierias&#13;
Y. W. C. A. President '18, Vice-President '19&#13;
Madrigal Club '16-'17-'18-'19&#13;
President of Madrigal Club '18&#13;
Vice-President of Sophomore Class&#13;
Captain Junior Basket Ball&#13;
Captain Harvard Basket Ball Team '18&#13;
Captain Yale Basket Ball Team '19&#13;
Winner of Tennis Tournament '18&#13;
Junior Annual Board&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Student Council&#13;
President Freshman Girls' Club&#13;
&#13;
FENTON C. JONES&#13;
Huron College 1916&#13;
Morningside College Band '17-'18-'19&#13;
&#13;
"A type of senior rarely foundHe is smart but does not advertise the fact."&#13;
&#13;
"And there never was a minute that Hoodie&#13;
wasn't in it."&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Intercollegiate Orator '16&#13;
Interstate '17&#13;
Annual Board 18&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet '15-'16-'17&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
"If speech were golden, he'd be a millionaire."&#13;
&#13;
AGNES McCREERY&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Vice-President of Athenaeums '19&#13;
Editor Girls' Collegian Reporter '19&#13;
&#13;
"Sweetness, truth and every grace,&#13;
Are read distinctly in her face."&#13;
&#13;
LENA McDONALD&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Treasurer of Athenaeums&#13;
Treasurer of Senior Class&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
President of Zetalethcans&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Annual Board&#13;
Student Council&#13;
Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
President of Senior Class&#13;
"A real, true-blue girl."&#13;
&#13;
"Those about her, from her shall read the perfect ways of honor."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�_&#13;
&#13;
HELEN MEEKS&#13;
&#13;
"Works&#13;
&#13;
hard and gets 'A's' as a reward."&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE POYZER&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
President Athenaeums '19&#13;
Y . W. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
" Fine people like fin e deeds need no trumpets."&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
Othonian&#13;
President of Othonians '18&#13;
President Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
President Student Body '18-'19&#13;
Inter-society Debate&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
Captain Football&#13;
Captain Baseball&#13;
Captain Basket Ball&#13;
"A man in all the world's new fashion planted,&#13;
That hath a mint of phrases in his brain."&#13;
&#13;
FRANK OLSON&#13;
&#13;
"A stur.d y man and true."&#13;
&#13;
ELSIESAV ONELL&#13;
"A combination of admirable industry and quiet&#13;
fri endliness."&#13;
&#13;
AURELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Glee Club '16-'17-'18-' 19&#13;
&#13;
" She'd be cheerful and chirrupy under a mountain of trouble."&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRITCHARD&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
President of Philos '19&#13;
Editor-in-chief Sioux '19&#13;
President Forensic League '18-'19&#13;
Inter-society Debate '17-'18&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate '19&#13;
&#13;
"No sinner and no saint perhaps,&#13;
But, well, the very best of chaps."&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE THARP&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Treasurer of Athenaeums&#13;
I nter-society Committee&#13;
&#13;
" Little she asks, her wants are few,&#13;
But she is a comrade that always is true."&#13;
&#13;
�RAY TROUTMAN&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Othonian President '19&#13;
Class President '16&#13;
Track and Drake Relays '18-'19&#13;
"A merrier man, within the limit of becoming&#13;
mirth,&#13;
I never spent an hour's talk withal."&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Secretary of Pieria Society '17&#13;
Pieria President '18&#13;
Madrigal Club '16&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Inter-society Committee President '18&#13;
Class '19 Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
Chairman May Fete '18&#13;
Biology Assistant&#13;
"Persuasivespeech and more persuasive sighsSilence that spoke and eloquence of eyes."&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
"Ausie" hails from the "Sunshine State" and is duly proud of&#13;
it. He is quite a stepper and the ladies and he seem to enjoy&#13;
each other's company immensely. Although he is a little hard&#13;
to get acquainted with at first, once your friend, he shows you&#13;
that he is a jolly good fellow and you're sorry you didn't discover him before.&#13;
HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
Junior Class Officers&#13;
President ........................................................ FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
Vice.President ...................................... BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
&#13;
Hazel is our standby. Whenever anybody else has failed,&#13;
Hazel is there, steady and calm, ready to help. As business&#13;
manager of this Annual she has demonstrated her capabilities.&#13;
In athletics she excels-we can say without hesitation that she is&#13;
the star athlete of the Junior girls.&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ................................ LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
Student Council Representative ........ HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
Here is a girl of a very artistic temperament of which we have&#13;
seen many evidences in striking posters and in her clever ideas&#13;
of decoration.&#13;
Elizabeth has a good disposition. She is always ready with a&#13;
smile and is always pleasing to look upon.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
VETA CLARK&#13;
HAROLD BUTLER&#13;
Harold's college career was interfered with by the war but&#13;
we are glad to say he liked his class well enough to come back&#13;
to it. Butler is a coming poet of the age. He is a man we admire and respect for his cleverness and his braininess.&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
Ada, the busy editor of our annual, really does the work of&#13;
two people-she is possessed of untiring energy and this coupled&#13;
with her ability along all lines of college activity makes her a&#13;
most efficient girl. She is in her glory when she is doing things&#13;
-editing a paper, or an annual, for instance, are mere play for&#13;
her.&#13;
BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
Beatrice is so good at a number of things that it is hard to&#13;
find her specialty among them. She is a student, loves a good&#13;
time, and has a good deal of practical common sense.&#13;
Although she is full of pep, she has a reserve that everyone&#13;
admires. She is one of our most popular girls.&#13;
&#13;
Veta is one of the Junior basket-tossers. She is a loyal&#13;
booster for her college and is always ready to do her part on&#13;
committees or wherever she is placed to work. Her eyes are&#13;
always dancing with suppressed energy which, when expressed,&#13;
always makes something doing.&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
The very essence of capability is found in Flossie-and my,&#13;
how she does put things across! Nothing is too difficult for her&#13;
to attempt and the best part of it all is that she does everything she sets out to do. In respect for her ability such positions as the Junior class president and Y. W. C. A. president&#13;
have been given to her.&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
Mary is always bubbling over with pep and enthusiasm. A ll&#13;
blues vanish when she comes in sight. She is prominent in all&#13;
college activities from Glee Club to Agora. A true college girl&#13;
whom everyone admires. Although gifted in m any lines, perhaps the most appreciated talent is her beautiful voice. Mary is&#13;
always out for a good time fo r she says,&#13;
" I like fun, and I like jokes&#13;
'Bout as well as most of fo lks."&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
�-------------------------6]&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
VERLE HART&#13;
McKINLEYE RIKSSON&#13;
&#13;
In spite of his apparent lamb-like disposition, Verle can, in&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" is one of the number of our sol di er boys who has just&#13;
recently rejoined his class, but " M ac" simply coul dn't stay away.&#13;
H e h as brains enough fo r two ordinary people and knows how&#13;
to use them.&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
Alice is a peach.&#13;
Original, conscientious, a hard thinker and a h ard worker.&#13;
You will find her always true to h er work an d her fri ends.&#13;
Although very modest and unassuming, you would be surprised&#13;
at the astonishing number of things she has accomplished during&#13;
her three yea rs here. Her fi rst thought is always for others.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
Another one of the Odebolt gang. T hey all seem to fall in&#13;
the same direction. Mae dreams of future days on the farm&#13;
where she expects to be perfectly happy. When we think of&#13;
M ae we can't help recalling that giggle that belongs to her&#13;
alone.&#13;
&#13;
case of necessity, develop a streak of stubbornness. Verle doesn't&#13;
like to back down on a proposition after he has started it. He&#13;
likes to do things and especially when he is helping someone else.&#13;
AMOS HARTMAN&#13;
He has the trust and confidence of everyone with whom he&#13;
has ever come in contact. " If you want a thing well done,"&#13;
leave it to Amos. We are glad he saw fit to rejoin our class&#13;
after the armistice was signed because we liked him and we&#13;
needed him.&#13;
WAYNE HILMER&#13;
Wayne is a boy for whom college has done much in the way&#13;
of bringing out latent possibilities. He has developed into a&#13;
forceful speaker as well as quite a " stepper" .&#13;
There is one thing w e must say about Wayne and that is that&#13;
" he makes a powerfully good looking woman."&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE LANG&#13;
A very sweet and demure miss w hose modesty doesn't keep&#13;
her from doing things. College, with her, is a means to an end.&#13;
She has a wide world vision of things. We expect to hear&#13;
great, good things of her.&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
Marguerite has gone through college with a steady purpose m&#13;
view-namely, to do her work and do it well. She has worked&#13;
at her music with ceaseless energy and has made rapid strides&#13;
towards all that a college woman should be.&#13;
&#13;
Harriet has a very strong personality. She is the kind of a&#13;
girl you like to know because she is always your friend. She&#13;
has that trying experience of that daily trip out from town and&#13;
yet manages to keep cheerful and get " A" grades through it all.&#13;
&#13;
DAVE KLATT&#13;
A Sergeant in the S. A. T . C. and came out of it with a&#13;
normal sized head and with everybody liking him! He has the&#13;
reputation of being bashful but he doesn't live up to his reputation very well if all reports are true. The girls all th ink he&#13;
makes a first cl ass waiter.&#13;
MILTON KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
JOHN McBURNEY&#13;
Although rather bashful and modest John is a staunch supporter of every activity which makes for the good of the school.&#13;
He has always gone about his work quietly bu t can be counted&#13;
upon to "get there" .&#13;
&#13;
Milton is a conscientious worker who applies himself with all&#13;
his energy-he is generous, helpful and willing-seems to have&#13;
a mania for taking pictures of all the pretty girls on the campus&#13;
on Sunday afternoons.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
PERCY MICKELSON&#13;
Percy is a jolly good fellow, full to the brim with pep for old&#13;
" M. C." His ready wit, his hearty laugh and his quick smile&#13;
all make him a pleasant person to have around. Underneath all&#13;
his fun and jollity we feel a true manliness and a fine spirit&#13;
which we all greatly admire.&#13;
ALVERDA MONTGOMERY&#13;
A faithful member of our cl ass is she-we fear however that&#13;
her affections are not all for her classmates but we rather suspect she bestows at least a good half of them elsewhere.&#13;
HAROLD RAUN&#13;
" Hap" is our " blues killer." H e is a sure cure for any case&#13;
of the blues, no matter how serious it is. He has a heart as big&#13;
as he is and that surely is saying a lot.&#13;
Versatile may be used to characterize " Hap" for h e takes any&#13;
part that may be given to him from the infant class to a&#13;
politician.&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
Minnie has had quite a time deciding what to do, but it is&#13;
all decided now. She has tried her hand at music and domestic&#13;
science and is proficient at both- w ith these accomplishments,&#13;
what more could a man ask?&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
"Jake" has been with Morningside since any of us can remember, starting in the Academy and working consistently to&#13;
acquire a comp lete education. Through all the time he has&#13;
been active in debate, and oratory, this year winning the Dewey&#13;
prize contest. In athletics he specializes in monument runs and&#13;
wrestling. This natural ability coupled with a g reat capacity&#13;
for h a rd work wil l win fo r him success in w hatever he attempts.&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
Eva is one of those g irls who is able to make " A " grades and&#13;
yet take part in college activ ities. She is a gi rl who bears&#13;
friendship-the longer you know her, the better you like her.&#13;
She speaks in a sweet voice in keeping with her disposition.&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
BASIL TRUSCOTT&#13;
Truscott is a man who has the sin ce re admiration of a ll who&#13;
know him. H e is a most interesting man to talk with. His&#13;
deep and wide culture, together with a tru e Christian spirit,&#13;
combine to make him an ideal friend and student.&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
Here is a girl always on the job-what job? Oh! she has&#13;
a dozen different ones, such as fussing with the man from home,&#13;
playing basket ball, etc. And if she hasn't anything especial&#13;
to do, she makes something.&#13;
&#13;
SAM HUTCHINSON&#13;
Sam is the fellow with the lyric tenor voice, the pink hair&#13;
and that broad grin. Good nature fairly radiates from him.&#13;
We like to have him around no matter which one of his numerous accomplishments he entertains us with.&#13;
G RACE WISHARD&#13;
Grace has finall y decided to finish college in the best class.&#13;
W hy the d elay? We ca n' t decid e, but perhaps it's because she&#13;
isn't a bit worried fo r fear he won't wait.&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomore Class Officers&#13;
President ---- ----- ------ ----··--------------------···········--EDNA BEKINS&#13;
Vice-President -- ····--·------ -- · ·· ·-····-··-··- · ·---FAYE Rorapaugh&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer --·-· ··- -- ---- ------·-· ··-·-· --·-· EvAN ENGBERG&#13;
Student Council Representative .. ·-·-··---·Bernice&#13;
Scoville&#13;
&#13;
G. Leonard&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
J. niffen&#13;
&#13;
�M. Champ&#13;
&#13;
G. Yeaman&#13;
&#13;
M. Fowler&#13;
&#13;
E. Wang&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
What&#13;
&#13;
kind of an&#13;
&#13;
insect&#13;
&#13;
would YOU call&#13;
&#13;
this ?&#13;
&#13;
�Freshman Class Officers&#13;
President .............................................. HAROLD WINTERS&#13;
Vice-President ............................................ RHODA WALIN&#13;
Secretary .................................................... Mary&#13;
DECKER&#13;
Treasurer .................................................. Wilson&#13;
SMITH&#13;
Student Council Representative................ HARRY FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
�.r&#13;
&#13;
a------------------------1&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
L.Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Z. Stanford&#13;
&#13;
.,i,&#13;
&#13;
��F.Chapman&#13;
&#13;
W. Hatchinson&#13;
&#13;
M.Reaber&#13;
&#13;
L. Wolcott&#13;
&#13;
Expression&#13;
B. Spangler&#13;
I. Johnstone&#13;
&#13;
E. Murphy&#13;
&#13;
F. Woodraff&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
Students&#13;
EvaTre&#13;
remar&#13;
&#13;
1--------==----------------------0&#13;
&#13;
�TENNIS COURTS&#13;
&#13;
Our Activities&#13;
&#13;
�Athletics&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Coach Jason M. Saunderson&#13;
Coach Saunderson, while attending Albion College&#13;
made a remarkable record in athletics. He represented his school your years in football , playing&#13;
quarter-back, and was chosen captain in 1907, while&#13;
the same year was picked as "All Michigan" quarterback. For three years he played third base on the&#13;
baseball team, and held down a forward position&#13;
on the basket ball quintet during four seasons. In&#13;
track he made several foot records, running the&#13;
100-yard in 10: 1, the 200 in 22 :1, and the 220&#13;
hurdles in 25 :4.&#13;
After graduating, he was athletic director at&#13;
South Dakota State College for three years, 19081911, and at the University of the South fo r one&#13;
year, 1911-1912. Mr. Saunderson soon took up the&#13;
duties of athletic director at Morningside during the&#13;
fall of 1912, from which time he has continued his&#13;
work here with great success.&#13;
He has built up football teams that have gone&#13;
against such universities as Notre Dame, Iowa,&#13;
Ames, and South Dakota. He has built a two-mile&#13;
relay team that has won the two-mile event at the&#13;
Drake Relays for six consecutive years. The baseball team has been so carefully whipped into form&#13;
that we have had the classiest team in the state for&#13;
several years.&#13;
H e has won the love and friendship of all the&#13;
athletes in Morningside, and his work will never be&#13;
forgot ten by the "M" Club and the other members&#13;
of the institution.&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
Our Coach&#13;
&#13;
�Athletics in Morningside&#13;
It is needless to say that among the various activities in&#13;
our institution, athletics have come to play a very prominent part; perhaps more so than any other phase of collegiate life. It is here where every man in school has an&#13;
opportunity to take part, and if he shows any ability he is&#13;
sure _ f a place on the varsity.&#13;
o&#13;
In looking through the archives we find that Morningside played other schools in football as far back as 1898.&#13;
We were then only an institution in the making, consequently it took all of these years of ceaseless effort to&#13;
build up a reputation. Our repeated success in all these&#13;
branches of athletics in recent years has fully brought us&#13;
in the limelight. No other one factor has contributed as&#13;
much to our athletic standing as Coach Saunderson. He&#13;
is known down the state for his ability to build up winning teams from absolutely raw material. It is through&#13;
his efforts that our football teams have gained recognition&#13;
of being on a par with any in the Middle West.&#13;
Geographically, we are unfortunate in being located on&#13;
the boundary line of three different states. It is this fact&#13;
that frequently makes it difficult to arrange a profitable&#13;
schedule, and due to this fact, Morningside has been&#13;
handicapped in not belonging to any athletic conferences,&#13;
such as any other Iowa schools. It has thus become our&#13;
lot to divide our athletic contests among three different&#13;
states, for which reason we always meet the strongest&#13;
teams in this section of the country, such as Nebraska U,&#13;
Iowa, Ames, and South Dakota U.&#13;
With the large gymnasium on our campus, with its indoor track_and various other modern facilities, and with&#13;
our modern Bass Field and outdoor track, ·we stand&#13;
in position to see even greater things happen in the&#13;
future than we have witnessed in the past about Morningside Athletics.&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
M�ORNINGSIDE, this year with its two&#13;
game season, was a complete success.&#13;
The State Teachers were defeated in&#13;
the first game of the season. Owing to&#13;
the fact that only four of the old veterans&#13;
were back in the lineup, many of the new&#13;
men were able to make the varsity. The&#13;
score resulted in a 20 to O victory over&#13;
pedagogues.&#13;
The one feature that made it possible&#13;
to call the Maroon season a success was&#13;
the defeat of South Dakota "U". Last&#13;
year the ball was set rolling, and for the&#13;
first time in the history of the school, we&#13;
were able to defeat the coyotes. Like history repeats itself, so did our actions on&#13;
the gridiron this year. The score resulted in a 7 to O victory for us.&#13;
The team and the college felt disappointed in the fact that they were unable&#13;
to secure more games on the schedule.&#13;
The "flu" epidemic was largely responsible, coming just at the time when the football season was to begin it forced all the&#13;
colleges to postpone their games and later&#13;
to cancel them. Coach Saunderson had a&#13;
complete schedule of strong university and&#13;
college teams, but only two of these could&#13;
play their games, and the Maroons were&#13;
unable to schedule others.&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
&#13;
" SKINNEY" NORTON&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
Captain&#13;
Left Tackle&#13;
&#13;
ORA EMERICK&#13;
&#13;
"Skinny" wea rs th ree stripes and a star on his sweater. He&#13;
is a big man who has been filled with vim and courage, and a&#13;
never end ing su pply of common sense which has won for him a&#13;
place on th e honor roll of Morningside. As C aptain of the&#13;
Maroon s, he displayed great head work, and his ability of&#13;
handling men has won for him the esteem of each player. His&#13;
work in the line proved to be very dangerous to the opposition.&#13;
&#13;
Emerick is a new man in M orningside but everyon e knows&#13;
him just the same. He played right hal f and was a tower of&#13;
strength in that position. He was sh ifty, and could hit the line&#13;
when occasion demanded it. His tackling was good, never al lowing his ma n to get away from him.&#13;
&#13;
R ight Half&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
Right End&#13;
'·No rdy" played his last game of football against S. D . U.&#13;
where he showed real old time form. Last yea r he captained&#13;
one of the best teams Morningsid e ever had. His ability at&#13;
smashing the interference, boxing plays and recei ving forward&#13;
passes, has won for him the honor of being the best end in the&#13;
state for two yea rs. He is a real fighter and has never been&#13;
stopped. He is the hard est tackler on the team, and hits like a&#13;
ton of brick.&#13;
&#13;
DONALD MONTGOMERY&#13;
Quarter&#13;
"Bud" was chosen the best High School quarter in the state&#13;
in his sen ior year, and lived up to his past record with the&#13;
Maroons last fal l. As a field general he is unsu rpassed, and it&#13;
was hi s head-work combined w ith the punch of the team that&#13;
took the " Coyotes" to a drubbing the second time.&#13;
&#13;
ORIN GOODRICH&#13;
Captain-Elect&#13;
Left Half&#13;
Because of his wonderful work in the back-field "Goody" was&#13;
chosen to lead the Sioux warriors for next yea r. H e is a shifty&#13;
runn er, an d gets a pass anywhere near his reach. He is exceptionally good at carrying the ball and running back punts.&#13;
&#13;
FAYE RORAPAUGH&#13;
Right Tackle&#13;
"Ror" was chosen by some of the football coaches as the best&#13;
tackler in the state. He tops the scale at 195 pounds, and his&#13;
punch is dangerous. He made some awful holes in the line&#13;
when ca ll ed upon to do so, and if anyone got his man " Ror"&#13;
did. H e looks to be a world-beater, and w ill be back in the&#13;
line next fall.&#13;
&#13;
�ROBERT QUINN&#13;
Full&#13;
If there was any fighting to be done "Bob" was always ready&#13;
to mix. "Bob" used to be the star on the scrub, and now that&#13;
he has moved up a notch, he still retains that same degree.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HILMER&#13;
End&#13;
Harold was a real fighter who didn't show it until nearly the&#13;
end of the season when he was put out on end to stop the S. D.&#13;
U. back. In the game he proved to be able to stop anything&#13;
regardless of his size. He stopped every play that came around&#13;
his end.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM ELLYSON&#13;
Center&#13;
Ellyson could play any position on the team, but he took a&#13;
fancy to center because he could be the first one to "bust" 'em&#13;
there. He is a red blooded Sioux Warrior who never stops&#13;
fighting. His passes were good and he never was outplayed in&#13;
a game.&#13;
ALBERT BALKEMA&#13;
End&#13;
"Bud" was used in the back field and on the end. He was a&#13;
consistent player, who never stopped until he was down. With&#13;
some more experience "Bud" will be a great football man.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM KOCK&#13;
Guard&#13;
"Bill" playing at guard never left anything undone; on offense&#13;
he always got his man out of the way, and on defense plunged&#13;
through the line and got the man or blocked the punt. "Bill"&#13;
had a friend in the dummy, he never wanted to hurt it.&#13;
&#13;
ANNIES MARSELLE&#13;
Guard&#13;
Talk about your "Tanks", well, they weren't in it with M a rselle. He could handle the biggest man on the team with the&#13;
least effort. Breaking through the line and throwing the runner&#13;
seemed an easy matter for him.&#13;
&#13;
�SMITH&#13;
Smith started the season with flying colors. He was a scrappy&#13;
player, but was injured and kept out of the last game.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HUNTER&#13;
Sub&#13;
"Bob" promises to make a good football man. He is fast and&#13;
heavy, which are the qualifications of football material. With&#13;
some more experience, he should land a regular berth.&#13;
&#13;
1918 Schedule&#13;
State Teachers vs. Morningside, at Cedar Falls&#13;
South Dakota U. vs. Morningside, at Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
O'CONNOR&#13;
End&#13;
" Sap" was well liked by all the men on the squad. His injuries kept him from doing what he was able to do, but regardless of this he fought like a tiger.&#13;
&#13;
�State Teachers vs. Morningside&#13;
This being the first game of the season, many of the new&#13;
men were tried out. Only four of last year's veterans were in the&#13;
lineup, of which three were line men and the fourth a half. Captain&#13;
Norton, Northrup, Rorapaugh, and Goodrich were the old veterans&#13;
who kept the Teachers from scoring. The new back played together&#13;
very well for the first time. Montgomery called the plays systematically and with good judgment. The Maroons were never in danger,&#13;
although at times its was necessary for the Captain to talk threateningly&#13;
to his men.&#13;
The Maroon line held the Teachers very easily, tackling the Backs&#13;
in their tracks. Our backs proved to be too much for the pedagogues'&#13;
line, and time after time they would make long gains through it.&#13;
When the final whistle blew the score stood 20-0 for us.&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota U. vs. Morningside&#13;
The second and last game of the season was played at Sioux City,&#13;
in Mizzou Park, with the University of South Dakota. Vermilion has&#13;
always been our most bitter rival, due, possibly, to the fact that both&#13;
teams have been so evenly matched.&#13;
Last year we scalped the Coyotes and hung it on our belts. This&#13;
year we repeated the process with the same result. Both teams played&#13;
consistent football from beginning to end. The old-style game was used&#13;
more successfully than the aerial game. Northrup, doing the punting&#13;
for the Maroons, outpunted his opponent by several yards.&#13;
Penalties were frequent on both sides, and at times it seemed as though&#13;
there would be arguments arising during the procedure of the· game.&#13;
The Morningside team worked together with an undivided spirit and&#13;
determination which seemed to be too much for the boys across the line.&#13;
Captain Norton and Northrup played their last game for Morningside&#13;
against S. D., and were glad to close the season as well as their football&#13;
career with a victory.&#13;
Morningside, 7; South Dakota, 0.&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside's First Basket Ball Team&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's first basket ball team was organized in the winter of 1898. The&#13;
team showed speed and good team work which won for them many games. The&#13;
captain for the first two years has come back to us with his old "pep" and enthusiasm&#13;
as our president.&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE BROWN&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
�This&#13;
&#13;
being the second year of inter-collegiate basket ball for several years, our&#13;
material in this branch of athletics doesn't&#13;
stand out as prominently as it might.&#13;
However, after several weeks of elementary training and some scrimmaging,&#13;
Coach Saunderson picked out ten men&#13;
that looked like a varsity squad. The&#13;
signing of the armistice brought back some&#13;
of the old men, among whom was our&#13;
last year star and this year captain.&#13;
With this help and the effort of the rest&#13;
of the men to establish a record, Coach&#13;
Saunderson built up a team that held the&#13;
best of them.&#13;
We are indeed proud to say that our&#13;
team showed real "stuff" and were hard&#13;
fighters . Although we didn't win more&#13;
than half of the games, we consider our&#13;
season a very successful one, and the fact&#13;
that every team we battled had to fight for&#13;
what they got leads us to believe we are&#13;
just building up a reputation . With our&#13;
experience in this branch of athletics equal&#13;
to our opposition, we anticipate a good&#13;
future of basket ball.&#13;
&#13;
o-------------------~o&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball Team 1918,-19&#13;
&#13;
1---------------------------0&#13;
&#13;
�GEORGE BROWN&#13;
&#13;
FAYE RORAPAUGH&#13;
&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
This is "Ror's" first year at basket ball, but he broke into the&#13;
game in fine form. He plays an excellent game at standing&#13;
guard.&#13;
He never allows a man to get back of him and always gets&#13;
the ball within his reach.&#13;
&#13;
George has played with us two years. He .is fast, a good&#13;
basket shooter, and his teamwork is the best. Usually the best&#13;
man on the team is put on his trail but George makes a&#13;
monkey out of him. When in a real game he has fight to spare.&#13;
He made the third highest number of points with a score of&#13;
forty-one points.&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
MERYLE SHAFENBERG&#13;
&#13;
" Skinney" was the only man on the team that played every&#13;
minute of every game. Nobody ever ran over " Skin" but he&#13;
usuall y sneaked up and tossed in a few ringers himself, making&#13;
eighty-two points, the highest number of points scored by any&#13;
member of the team.&#13;
"Skinney" graduates this year and his place will be hard&#13;
to fill.&#13;
&#13;
" Shaf" was the fastest center we had and oh, how he could&#13;
jump! He outjumped his man in nearly every game. "Shaf"&#13;
played a more defensive than offensive game.&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BALKEMA&#13;
ORA EMERICK&#13;
Ora, the Spirit Lake phenomenon, could dribble through most&#13;
anything. He has a keen eye for the basket and is exceptionally&#13;
good on the long shots.&#13;
He made second highest number of points with a score of&#13;
forty-seven to his credit.&#13;
&#13;
"Bud" played consistent ball all season although playing under&#13;
a handicap after being injured early in the season. "Bud"&#13;
could play center or guard, but his regular place was center.&#13;
&#13;
�PERCY MICKELSON&#13;
Handicapped by his size "Mike" had odds to work against.&#13;
He was a hard fighter and usually held his man to a few points.&#13;
He has to take many steps to go the distance of the floor.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES LEE&#13;
"Jim" could play forward or center. His long shots took the&#13;
"pep" out of the other gang. "Jim" was fast and always&#13;
worked hard in a game. He will be back at them again next&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
BASKET BALL SCHEDULE&#13;
CURTIS CASSILL&#13;
Curtis was the "scrub" star to start with but because of his&#13;
consistent playing was put on the varsity where he developed&#13;
very rapidly. He could reach across the floor. The only way to&#13;
get behind him was to crawl under.&#13;
&#13;
Feb. 1 - Nebraska Wesleyan ................&#13;
Feb. 4 - South Dakota "U" ..................&#13;
Feb. 8 - Creighton ''U''----- ------------ ------Feb. 22 - South Dakota State ................&#13;
Feb. 26 - Creighton -------------------------------Feb. 28 - Camp Dodge -------------------------Mar. 1 -Drake -------------------------------------Mar. 7-Drake ---------------- --------- ------------Mar. 8-Drake -------------------- -- ---- ----- -------&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
24&#13;
28&#13;
10&#13;
32&#13;
15&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Omaha&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Camp Dodge&#13;
At Drake&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
14&#13;
3&#13;
11&#13;
8&#13;
31&#13;
23&#13;
20&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN v·s. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
HAROLD HILMER&#13;
After playing running guard on the scrubs, Harold was shifted&#13;
to center on the varsity where he displayed remarkable ability&#13;
as a basket ball player.&#13;
He is a fighter from "A to Z" but at the same time always&#13;
wears a smile.&#13;
&#13;
This was the first game of the season played on the home floor. Every man went&#13;
into the game eager to win. The game was evenly matched, Morningside taking the&#13;
lead from the first and holding it throughout the game.&#13;
The new men, Emerick, Balkema, Rorapaugh, and Shafenberg, did good work.&#13;
Brown hit his stride in the second half. Norton played a very good offensive game,&#13;
making eleven of the nineteen points.&#13;
&#13;
�SOUTH DAKOTA "U" vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The Coyotes came down here with a determination to win. The spirit of the old&#13;
rivalry was shown as soon as the whistle was blown.&#13;
Morningside started the scoring when Brown made the most sensational shot ever&#13;
made on our floor. Captain Lynch was the only one of the Coyotes that was able&#13;
to hit the loop, making nine field goals from the middle of the floor.&#13;
Both teams guarded closely and many personals were committed.&#13;
CREIGHTON vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Two games were played with fast aggregation at Creighton. They won every&#13;
game of the season, having played together through high school and college. Our&#13;
men were outclassed in team work and basket shooting, but our defense was good.&#13;
Creighton made most of their shots outside the foul circle. Kearney, their center,&#13;
starred in both games. Emerick, Brown, and Norton did good work for the Maroons.&#13;
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
This was one of the closest games played on the home floor. Close guarding was&#13;
the feature of the game. Many personal fouls were committed on both sides. Norton&#13;
held his man to two points, making seven himself .&#13;
Morningside made the only field goal the second half, South Dakota making only&#13;
three foul goals.&#13;
CAMP DODGE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
THE NORTHWEST IOWA BASKET BALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
In this game Brown hit his old form, shooting baskets from all angles, making 14&#13;
out of the 32 points. Emerick, Norton, and Shafenberg did fine work also, outclassing&#13;
&#13;
For a number of years Morningside College has had as its guests the high schools&#13;
of northwest Iowa at the annual Northwest Iowa Basket Ball Tournament. This&#13;
district was organized in 1916 by the local "M" Club, which has done a great deal&#13;
towards making the tournament a success.&#13;
The first year only sixteen teams were entered, but since then the entrance has&#13;
increased with twenty-nine teams playing for the honors this year.&#13;
Previously the tournament has been held for the elimination of high schools for the&#13;
state tournament held at Ames, but this year no state tournament was held, making&#13;
this the final one of the season.&#13;
Many of the teams entered were among the fastest in the state. Remarkable basket&#13;
shooting, teamwork and floorwork was displayed. Spencer won first place, playing&#13;
its final game with Luverne. The final score was: Spencer, 22; Luverne, 11.&#13;
&#13;
the soldiers from the start.&#13;
DRAKE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Played in the Drake Gym, with a house full of spectators, Morningside lost its&#13;
second game down state. The game was close all the way though , but we were&#13;
unable to get the lead.&#13;
The games played at Morningside, March 7 and 8, were split evenly, Morningside&#13;
winning the first, Drake the second game. Good teamwork and consistent playing&#13;
was the feature of both games. In the first game, Norton scored 11 of the 20 points,&#13;
and in the second 7 of the 9.&#13;
Drake made only two field goals and eleven foul goals in the first game.&#13;
games were hotly contested.&#13;
&#13;
Both&#13;
&#13;
�NORTHWEST IOWA TOURNAMENT RESULTS&#13;
FIRST ROUND&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center, 45; Merrill, 2.&#13;
Spencer, 22; Modale, 9.&#13;
Battle Creek, 19; Sanborn, 13.&#13;
Storm Lake, 10; Remsen, 8.&#13;
Luverne, 46; Smithland, 4.&#13;
Spirit Lake, 30; Wessington Springs, 14.&#13;
Castana, 16; Rock Valley, 4.&#13;
Farnhamville, 9; Holly Springs, 8.&#13;
Hornick, 10; Orange City, 8.&#13;
Ireton, 8; Paullina, 4.&#13;
Churdan, 14; Hartley, 5.&#13;
Correctionville, 10; Lohrville, 2.&#13;
Lake Mills, 12; Primghar, 10.&#13;
SECOND ROUND .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center, 41 ; Ireton, 2.&#13;
Luverne, 30; Cherokee, 5.&#13;
Churdan, 24; Farnhamville, 7.&#13;
Storm Lake, 32; Anthon, 11.&#13;
Spencer, 34; Battle Creek, 7.&#13;
Correctionville, 12; Castana, 10.&#13;
Lake Mills, 16; Hornick, 11.&#13;
Spirit Lake, 19; Sioux City, 10.&#13;
THIRD ROUND&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center, 21; Storm Lake, 9.&#13;
Luverne, 24; Churdan, 18.&#13;
Spirit Lake, 19; Lake Mills, 16.&#13;
Spencer, 53, Correctionville, 10.&#13;
SEMI-FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Luverne, 34; Spirit Lake, 18.&#13;
Spencer, 26; Sioux Center, 16.&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Spencer, 22; Luverne, 11.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�rl-----------------------6]&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
GAIN the Morningside baseball team kept&#13;
its record on the diamond. It was probably one of the shortest seasons we ever&#13;
went through. Only four games could be&#13;
scheduled, three of which were out of&#13;
town. The other was a practice game&#13;
with the Packers, of the Sioux City Western League.&#13;
For two years Morningside has held the&#13;
state championship in inter-collegiate baseball, and our trip across the state proved&#13;
to be a repetition of the past. The three&#13;
regular games were won by our team.&#13;
The only defeat was a 12 to 6 score, suffered at the hands of the Packers, of the&#13;
Wes tern League.&#13;
Coach Saunderson has developed a&#13;
winning team by watching the plays from&#13;
all angles, developing the weaker points&#13;
by insistent practice and giving each man&#13;
who will apply himself in the right spirit&#13;
an equal chance.&#13;
•&#13;
Captain Lloyd and Northrup did a&#13;
great deal in assisting Coach Saunderson,&#13;
and much credit is due these old Sioux&#13;
Warriors.&#13;
&#13;
TOM LLOYD&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
�THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
T. K. has played three years of baseball for Morningside,&#13;
leading this team as captain. "Tom" is a ball player with&#13;
exceptional ability, a fast base runner, and leads his team at the&#13;
bat with an average of .538.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR HINKLEY&#13;
" Hink" was one of the most consistent players on the team.&#13;
As a back stop he excelled any one in the state. His low whip&#13;
to second caught most of them. At the bat he was among the&#13;
best.&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
" Nordy's" chief aim is to fuss the other guy stealing bases&#13;
and to worry the man of the bag. He circles the bases faster&#13;
than any man on the team and is known to drive out a home&#13;
tun occasionally. " Nordy'' covers a lot of ground in the field&#13;
and never makes an error.&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE D. KLATT&#13;
"Dave" has held down the second bag for two years. His&#13;
work in the infield has been very satisfactory. "Dave" never&#13;
misses a peg from home and from time to time he would catch&#13;
the runner napping on second.&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE J. OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
"Jerry" proved his worth as a ball player, being able to step&#13;
back of the bat when necessary. His regular place was third&#13;
base, but he was put in the back stop position when Hinkley&#13;
was laid out. He is one of Morningside's athletes who has won&#13;
four sweaters in four different branches of athletics.&#13;
&#13;
"Phoebe", the old reliable South paw, has the meanest hook&#13;
there is. He is one of the headiest players on the team. He&#13;
never lacks nerve and is always cool and steady. When not&#13;
in the box he performs most creditably in the out field.&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
�JAMES P. LEE&#13;
"Jim" is one of our Freshman hurlers who received his experience with the fast Danbury High School team. Nothing&#13;
would excite him and it was hi s steadiness that shut the State&#13;
Teachers out with a no hit game.&#13;
&#13;
SAM HUTCHISON&#13;
Sam broke into the game in short order. H is position is short&#13;
stop, which play he holds down most creditably. He is always&#13;
" up and at 'em," and worries the life out of a runner on second.&#13;
Hi s peg. is sure and he plays a fast game.&#13;
&#13;
Team Batting Average, .260&#13;
T he men who had the highest batting average are as follows:&#13;
Lloyd ............................ .538&#13;
Hinkley ........................ .365&#13;
Northrup .................... .315&#13;
Engle ........................... 312&#13;
Hutchinson ................... 294&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
" Hoot's" a utility. He p lays out fie ld as well as in field.&#13;
H e likes to kid the boys out of a hit and judging from his line,&#13;
he seems to have come fr om Laurens. He plays his position&#13;
with all due credit. His work in the la st two games proved to&#13;
be of high standard.&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE ENGLE&#13;
Engle came from Luverne where he played with the fast town&#13;
team. H e stepped into the box this year with all the qualities&#13;
of a good pitcher. His speed combined with his curves baffled&#13;
more than one. He pitched good ball al l season and allowed&#13;
only four sca ttered hits against the fast Dubuque team.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's Schedule&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
21 13 14- 15 -&#13;
&#13;
Packers .............. 13&#13;
Ellsworth .......... 2&#13;
State Teachers .... 0&#13;
Dubuque ............ 2&#13;
&#13;
Morningsid e.......... 6&#13;
Morningside .......... 13&#13;
Morningside .......... 3&#13;
Morningside .......... 8&#13;
&#13;
Opponents, 17&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, 30&#13;
&#13;
TOTAL,&#13;
&#13;
�PACKERS vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Early in the season a practice game was arranged with the Packers&#13;
of the Sioux City Western League, in which both teams showed up fairly&#13;
well. Engle started the game in the box, and displayed good pitching&#13;
material. He was relieved in the eighth inning by Obrecht, who also&#13;
did good work. The Packers used several of their pitchers and other&#13;
substitutions were made. Morningside got six hits, the Packers thirteen.&#13;
&#13;
ELLSWORTH vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
This was the first game on the trip across the state. Obrecht was put&#13;
the box, and allowed only two scattered hits. The infield had it on&#13;
the opponents in every way. They played a fast game and kept the Ellsworth nine on a jump all the time. Our little southpaw deserves much&#13;
credit for his head work and the way he put the ball across.&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
STATE TEACHERS vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The Teachers were the second aggregation on the trip to get in on the&#13;
small end of the score. Lee was in the box that day and held his opponents down to no hits. He was showing good form and wasn't afraid&#13;
to exert himself. In the sixth inning, Hinkley and Johnson collided&#13;
while chasing a foul strike.&#13;
Both men were knocked down. Hinkley's face was bruised so badly&#13;
he had to discontinue the game. "Jerry" was shifted from third base&#13;
to the catching position, and Norton took his place.&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
This was the last and hardest game on the trip, because many of their&#13;
players were old men. Engle stepped into the box with all the pep and&#13;
enthusiasm he had for winning the game. He held the Catholics to&#13;
three hits and pitched consistent ball. Engle's work on the mound,&#13;
combined with the excellent work of the rest of the players, proved to&#13;
be the best combination we had.&#13;
&#13;
�!&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
track season was a success in spite of&#13;
the fact that many men had left school to&#13;
enlist in the army. Under the coaching&#13;
of Saunderson a relay team was sent to the&#13;
Drake Relays, and returned with the twomile relay banner, for the fifth consecutive&#13;
year. The race was run in a snow storm&#13;
and the time made was slow.&#13;
A dual meet with Yankton was held on&#13;
Bass Field on May 4, which proved an&#13;
easy victory for the Sioux runners. Out&#13;
of the eleven events, Morningside took&#13;
nine firsts.&#13;
In the state meet two men form Morninside&#13;
Walker and Pearce&#13;
were able&#13;
to place in three events: the hurdles,&#13;
discus, and half mile.&#13;
During the years that Coach Saunderson has been directing the athletics at&#13;
Morningside, they have taken a leading&#13;
place in track among the colleges of Iowa,&#13;
South Dakota, and Nebraska, and are&#13;
maintaining a high standard of which the&#13;
school may be proud. This year, with a&#13;
number of old men back and others returning from the army, we look forward to a&#13;
successful season on the cinder path.&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
"JERRY" Johnson&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Drake Relays&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
This is the fourth branch of athletics in which "Jerry" has&#13;
won his letters. He is a weight man, particularly throwing the&#13;
discus, in which branch he has a record of 115 feet.&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
Hunt runs the half or the mile equally well. He won the&#13;
mile run in the dual meet with a time of 4: 43 2/3. He was a&#13;
member of the Drake Relay team, also captured the honors at&#13;
Drake.&#13;
&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Shafenberg&#13;
&#13;
Troutman&#13;
&#13;
The Drake Relays, held annually at the Drake Stadium&#13;
in Des Moines, one of the largest relays of the Middle&#13;
West, has become a prominent feature of Morningside&#13;
athletics.&#13;
For the fourth consecutive year our two-mile relay&#13;
team captured first honors in the two-mile relay race.&#13;
This year the team, composed of Walker, Hunt, Troutman, and Shafenberg, completed the race very near record&#13;
time, in spite of the fact that the track was covered with&#13;
snow.&#13;
The race was a feature, as another team was in the&#13;
lead up to the last 220 yards, when Walker, our captain,&#13;
dashed ahead like a race horse, and finished with a ten-yard&#13;
lead.&#13;
Morningside holds a record of the Drake Relays, with&#13;
a time of 8:15.&#13;
&#13;
Walker&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER&#13;
"Steve" is a four year track man, one of the fastest half-milers&#13;
in the state. He is the only man in college that has been on the&#13;
two mile track relay team for its four consecutive years in his&#13;
stay here.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�RAY TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MEYERS&#13;
&#13;
This was "Fish's" first yea r out for the Drake Relays and his&#13;
consistent training proved worthy of giving him a berth on the&#13;
team. He made good time in his half at Des Moines. He also&#13;
placed in the discus throw and shot put.&#13;
&#13;
"Herb" was one of the men that won his place on the Drake&#13;
Relay team but because of the misfortune of getting spiked was&#13;
unable to make the trip to Des M oines. H owever he showed&#13;
us real stuff in the dual meet with Yankton. He is the smallest&#13;
man out for track but shows good stuff.&#13;
&#13;
MERLE SHAFENBERG&#13;
The Sargeant Bluffs phenomenon is one of the most promising&#13;
record breakers. He was the only Freshman on the Drake Relay&#13;
team, and with three more years " Shaf" will undoubtedly be a&#13;
" marvel" . In the home meet he proved himself a real track&#13;
man, winning second honors.&#13;
&#13;
McKINLEY EVAS&#13;
"Mac" was handicapped ea rly in&#13;
and couldn't try out for the Drake&#13;
two mile race in which he made a&#13;
is a good long distance runner and&#13;
mile man.&#13;
&#13;
the season&#13;
Relay but&#13;
wonderful&#13;
shows real&#13;
&#13;
because of illness&#13;
later took up the&#13;
showing. " Mac"&#13;
"stuff" for a two&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT SEEMAN&#13;
"Al" was our sprinter. He is fast and a conscientious trainer&#13;
and with three years more of track w ork he will develop very&#13;
much and pull down a few medals.&#13;
LAWRENCE PEARCE&#13;
"Fonda" was the best all round track man in college. . He&#13;
won more points than any one else. He could shoot the p ill out&#13;
a reasonable distance, could high jump, got second in the broad&#13;
jump, won the pole vault, and won the high hurdl es but was&#13;
disqualified. He won individual honors at the home meet, and&#13;
came within one point of winning the honors in the dual meet&#13;
with Yankton.&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE ALT&#13;
" Alt" is another yea rling who has w on his letter. He h as&#13;
developed a great deal of speed this year. He appears to be a&#13;
promising hurdler a nd his sprinting is nothing slow.&#13;
&#13;
�Home Meet&#13;
April 5, 1918&#13;
RECORDS FOR THE HOME MEET&#13;
The following are the results of the different events of the home meet :&#13;
100-yard dash-Seeman, Freshman, first; Miller, Freshman, second; Alt, Freshman, third.&#13;
Time, 11: 1.&#13;
440-yard dash-Shaffenberg, Freshman, first; Sal tow, Senior, second; Burpee, Sophomore, third.&#13;
Time, 54: 2.&#13;
220-yard low hurdles-Shaffenberg, first; Meyer, Freshman, second. Time, 29: 2.&#13;
120-yard high hurdles-Pearce, Sophomore, first. Time, 18: 1.&#13;
Pole vault-Pearce, first; Jones, Freshman, second. Height, 9 f t., 6 in.&#13;
880-yard run- Walker, Senior, first; Troutman, Junior, second. Time, 2-5 .&#13;
• Mile run- Hunt, Junior, first; Meyer, second. Time, 4-48.&#13;
220-yard dash-Shaffen berg, first; Seeman, second; Meyers, third. Time, 25 : 1.&#13;
Two mile run-Evans, Junior, first; Scheerer, Academy, second; Hartman, Sophomore, third.&#13;
Time, 10-58.&#13;
Discus throw-Johnson, Senior, first; Pearce, second; Troutman, third. Distance, 114 ft., 6 in.&#13;
Shot put-Pearce, first; Troutman, second; Johnson, third. Distance, 3 5 ft., 2 in.&#13;
High jump- Pearce, first; Jones, second. Height, 4 ft., 6 in.&#13;
Broad jump- Alt, first; Pearce, second; Shafenberg, third. Distance, 18 ft., 5 in.&#13;
Freshmen, Class of 1921, first, 45 points.&#13;
Sophomores, Class of 1920, second, 28 points.&#13;
Juniors, Class of 1919, third, 17 points.&#13;
Seniors, Class of 1918, fourth, 14 points.&#13;
&#13;
Dual Meet&#13;
YANKTON VS. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The following are the results of the dual meet held with Yankton, May 4, 1918.&#13;
220-yard hurdles- Turnbull, Yankton, first; Shaffen berg, M. S., second. Time, 28 fl at.&#13;
880-yard hurdles-Walker, M. S., first; Troutman, M. S., second. Time, 1 : 59 2/5.&#13;
220-yard d ash-Cleeworth, Yankton, first; Seeman, M. S., second. Time, : 23 4/5.&#13;
Pole v ault- Pea rce M. S., first; Jon es, M. S., second. H eight, 10 ft., 6 in.&#13;
High jump-Stephens, Yankton, first; Pearce, M. S., second. Height, 5 ft., 4 in.&#13;
Broad jump-Cleeworth, Yankton, first; Pearce, M. S., second. Distance, 20 ft., 6 in.&#13;
Discus throw-Johnson, M. S., first; Pearce, M. S., second. Distance,· 107 ft., 9 in.&#13;
Shot put- Pearce, M. S., first; Johnson, M. S., second Distance, 34 f t., 7 in.&#13;
Two-mile run-Evans, M. S., first; Scheerer, M. S., second. Time, 11 minutes, 6 seconds.&#13;
Mile relay-Won by M eye r, Troutman, Shaffenberg, Walker of Morningside. Time, 3 : 31 2/5.&#13;
Eiffert of Yankton, starter.&#13;
Ll oyd, Horney, a nd Hinkl ey, timekeepers.&#13;
&#13;
"M" M eet&#13;
The ann ual "M" M eet hel d on Bass Field May 3 proved to be the best in recent years. The&#13;
track was in fine condition and the weather favorable for record breaking time. Competition&#13;
was v ery keen in all races w hich w as the ca use of seve ral new records. Sioux City won the&#13;
meet with ni neteen points. Storm Lake won second w ith thirteen points. Parker, South D akota,&#13;
with a one ma n tea m w on thi rd with twelve points. Patrick of Parker was the individ ual star.&#13;
Webb low ered th e fo rmer "M " Meet record in the 440-yard d ash by two-fifths of a second.&#13;
Three othe r records lowered in the meet were made by M cK anna of Sheldon w ho broke t he&#13;
record in the mile by three-fifths of a second. T he C herokee mile relay team chipped off four&#13;
second s from the former reco rd in this meet. Adamson of Co.rrectionv ille established a n ew mark&#13;
in the discus throw by heaving the platter 118 feet.&#13;
Good talent is shown in this meet each year th rough which we usually gain v aluable material&#13;
for ou r track squad by men who later attend M orn ingside.&#13;
The following are the results of the records.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY WINS FIRST IN "M " MEET&#13;
The following are the results :&#13;
100-ya rd dash-Eli, Hudson, first; Allen, Laurens, second ; Campbell, Sioux City, th ird.&#13;
Time, 10 4/5.&#13;
120-yard hurdles-Patrick, Parker, first; Kelly, Fonda, second ; Knitt, Sioux City, third.&#13;
Time, 18 1/5.&#13;
220-yard d ash-Steffen, Holstein, first ; Cooper, Correctionville, second ; Eli, Hudson, third.&#13;
Time, 25 1/5.&#13;
Mile run-McKenna, Sheldon, first ; Goodrich, Paulsen, second; Schuett, Holstein, thi rd.&#13;
Time, 4:47 4/5.&#13;
H a lf-mi le rel ay-Laurens, first ; Sioux City, second ; Yan kton, third. Time, : 43 2/5.&#13;
440-yard dash-Webb, Storm Lake, first ; Test, Paulina, second ; Taylor, Sioux City, t hird.&#13;
Time, 54 fla t.&#13;
880-ya rd run-McKenna, Sheldon, first ; Lorey, Sioux City, second ; Giehm, Sioux City, t hird.&#13;
Time, 2: 15 4/5.&#13;
220-yard hurdl es-Knott, Sioux City, first; Kelly, Fonda, second; Scott, Paulina, third. T ime,&#13;
28 flat.&#13;
Mil e relay- Cherokee, fi rst ; Sioux City, second ; Yankton, third. T ime, 3: 43.&#13;
P ole Vault-Bell, Storm Lake, first; Kelly, Fond a, second ; Patrick, Parker, third. H eight,&#13;
10 feet.&#13;
High jump-Patrick, Parker, first; Conn, Hartley, second ; D ahl, Sioux City, third. Height,&#13;
5 feet, 9 inches.&#13;
B road jump-Karr, Yankton, first; Bagge, Fond a, second ; Patrick, Parker, third. Distance,&#13;
18 fe et, 4 inches.&#13;
Discus-Adamson, Correctionville, first; Windler, Paulina, second ; Chort, Correctionville, t hird.&#13;
Dista nee, 118 feet.&#13;
Shot put- Doolittle, Milford, first ; Gaffing, Storm Lake, second; Windler, Paullina, and&#13;
Jongewaard, Hurley, tied fo r third pl ace. Distance, 38 feet, 7 inches.&#13;
Coach Saunderson acted as starter. Other officials were chiefly members of the "M" club.&#13;
M ed als were g iven to the ind ividuals taking first in the va rious events. There we re t wo large&#13;
cups given this year. The "M " cup w as g iven to Sioux City fo r obtaining the h ighest number&#13;
of points in the meet, w hi le the Phi lo cup went to C herokee fo r winning the mile relay.&#13;
&#13;
�WRESTLING&#13;
&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Pitstick&#13;
&#13;
Lory&#13;
&#13;
The Annual Monument Run takes place on the after- noon of February 22. Albert Hunt won the race this&#13;
year, 21 :22. He had the edge on the rest of the men&#13;
with a big lead.&#13;
Pitstickvon second, with Hillis Lory as a close contender for that place.&#13;
Three medals are given for this event 111 the college,.&#13;
and the Academy medal was won this year by Harold&#13;
Harding.&#13;
&#13;
o----------------------0&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
�The Wrest ling Tournament&#13;
Wrestling is a comparatively new sport in Morningside&#13;
athletics. Its initial class was introduced this year by&#13;
Coach Saunderson, who, after several weeks coaching,&#13;
staged a tournament.&#13;
The preliminaries were held April 25 with two bouts&#13;
in the heavy-weight class, and two in the light-weight&#13;
class. In the heavy-weight class, Tom McBride succeeded in obtaining a fall from Evan Ausman . Following "this was a light-weight bout between Orin Bell and&#13;
Charles Fry, in which Fry secured a fall in about fifteen&#13;
minutes. Next was another heavy-weight bout between&#13;
Jacob Trefz and Clair Sherwood, Trefz proving his superiority over "Deak". T he last bout of the preliminaries&#13;
was won by "Rusty" McBride over Burnett Cooper.&#13;
On the following Monday afternoon, April 29, the&#13;
semi-finals were held . They consisted of two bouts, one&#13;
between the two heavy-weights, Tom McBride and Jacob&#13;
Trefz, and the other between the two light-weights,&#13;
"Rusty" McBride and Charles Fry. After thirty minutes of gruelling contest, Trefz succeeded in getting McBride's shoulders pinned to the mat, thus winning the&#13;
heavy-weight title. Following this "Rusty" obtained a&#13;
fall from "Chick", giving him the light-weight title.&#13;
' The final bout came off that evening, when Trefz met&#13;
McBride for the championship. Trefz was able to get&#13;
the fall , because of his superior weight.&#13;
The winner of the tournament received a medal, donated by the Morningside Wrestlers Association. Coach&#13;
Saunderson, instructor of the class, acted as referee.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Girls' Athletic Committee&#13;
&#13;
N. Moss, General Chan man; C Hauswold, Hockey,Chairman,&#13;
L. Winde11, Volley Ball Chairm an; R. Mahood,&#13;
Baseball Chairma n ; L. Williams, Tennis Chairman; V. Cla rk , Track and Field Cha irm an;&#13;
E. Stallard , Hike Chai rm a n: M. Jacobs, Basket Ball Chairman&#13;
&#13;
MISS NAOMI GOOD&#13;
PHYSICAL DIRECTOR FOR WOMEN&#13;
&#13;
"Loving, well composed, with gifts of nature flowing&#13;
And swelling o'er with arts and exercise."&#13;
&#13;
This year, for the first time in the history of Girls' Athletics at Morningside&#13;
College, sweaters are being awarded to two girls in the Senior class.&#13;
Ruth Mahood and Aurelia Sturtevant, having obtained the required number of&#13;
points and having been graded on personal presence, athletic accomplishments, spirit,&#13;
and scholarship, will receive their "M" sweaters.&#13;
&#13;
�May Fete&#13;
"Come and trip it as you go,&#13;
On the light fantistic toe."&#13;
&#13;
Last year hundreds of people witnessed one of the cleverest and most&#13;
aesthetic exhibitions ever staged on&#13;
Bass Field.&#13;
The costumes were Grecian, and&#13;
the dances represented scenes taken&#13;
from Greek mythology.&#13;
The queen and her attendants came&#13;
down the cinder path and took their&#13;
places beneath a bower of foliage.&#13;
Jupiter and Juno then arrived, bringing gifts to the new queen.&#13;
The mist maidens, shimmering in&#13;
green and gold, and carrying their&#13;
long golden horns, dancing gaily before their queen.&#13;
Then followed the daughters of the&#13;
dawn, Cupid · and Psyche, and the&#13;
Graces and Peacocks.&#13;
The Warrior maidens, bearing&#13;
shields and spears, battled after the&#13;
ancient Grecian manner. The wood&#13;
nymphs scattered their flowers over&#13;
the field and quickly disappeared into&#13;
the darkness, after which the searchlight directed its blinding rays on&#13;
"Echo", the Jittle solo dancer.&#13;
GLADYS KNAPP, May Queen&#13;
MARION HEIKES LEUDER, Retiring Queen&#13;
&#13;
The Fountain, the Winds and Pleiades with Diana ,followed in turn, and were&#13;
artistically performed.&#13;
All was concluded by the winding of the Maypole, during which the flags of the&#13;
Allies were planted before the enthusiastic audience.&#13;
&#13;
�Basket Ball&#13;
HARVARD TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: M. Jacobs, B. Scoville.&#13;
Bottom Row: F. Day, N. Moss (Capt.), L. Williams, Z. Baldwin, L. U lman.&#13;
YALE TEAM&#13;
R. Mahood (Capt.}, E. Stallard, H. Bergeson, C. Hauswold, I. Stevens, V. Clark, E. Bradley.&#13;
SCORE&#13;
Harvard 4, Yale 3&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
"ECHO"&#13;
&#13;
B. Scoville, E. Balkema, C. Hauswold, L. Williams (Capt.), I. Stevens, B. Radley, Z. Baldwin&#13;
Winners in Class Tournament&#13;
&#13;
�Class Teams&#13;
FRESHMAN TEAM&#13;
&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
Top Row .. ..E. Stallard,&#13;
Bottom Row.. P. Brown,&#13;
&#13;
tamper, N. Moss, I . Knight.&#13;
Berry.&#13;
Pitstick, s G.Capt. '&#13;
. Jacob ( S&#13;
&#13;
E. Lang, H. Bergson, M · Reuber, F. Day, V . Clark, L. Ullman (Capt.)&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
�State Oratorical Contest&#13;
Friday, March 71 1919, at Coe College, Cedar Rapids&#13;
&#13;
ABRAM M. DEVAUL&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
To whose untiring efforts&#13;
Morningside College owes its&#13;
splendid record in forensics.&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
"A Struggle Centuries Old" (second) _______________ __________ PERCY L. EDWARDS&#13;
"World Peace"------------------------------------------- ----- ------------------HUYETT H. GAINES&#13;
"Pitfalls of Peace" ( firstl---------------------- ----------·----------: ______ WM. C. PERDEW&#13;
"The Safe Democracy" (third) ______________________________ ABRAM M. DE VAUL&#13;
" The Land That God Forgot"------------------------------------AGNES G. WALKER&#13;
"The Light of the World"-----------LESTER&#13;
L. SHULDT&#13;
COLLEGES REPRESENTED&#13;
Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
Cornell&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Coe&#13;
Buena Vista&#13;
&#13;
Parsons&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
�Home Prohibition Contest&#13;
March 28, 1919&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debates&#13;
&#13;
R. Hunter&#13;
&#13;
E. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
D . Norton&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
Th at the F ederal Government should require at least one year of military&#13;
training of all able-bodied men between th e ages of sixteen and twenty-on e,&#13;
constitutionally conceded.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan Negative&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
" Our Own Battle" .............................................................. ANDREW STOUFFER&#13;
"The Brewer and Hi s Cure" ................................................ DONALD NISSEN&#13;
'' International Prohibition' ' ....................... ........................ ARTHUR SCHULDT&#13;
" Our Present Duty" ................................................................ E. M. ERIKSSON&#13;
" The New World Ideali sm" ( fir st ) ........................................ JACOB TREFZ&#13;
"The Supreme Task" .................................. ....................... CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
"The Cigarette and the B oy" ...................................................... PAuL. ZIEKE&#13;
&#13;
District O ratorical Contest&#13;
"The Safe Democracy" ........................ ABRAM M . DE VAUL, Morningside&#13;
"The Light of the World " ...................... LESTER L. SCHULDT, Buena Vista&#13;
"The Efficient Man" .......................................... CLARENCE BOND, Ellsworth&#13;
"The Land That God Forgot" .................................... AGNES WALKER, Coe&#13;
" America's N eed of Art" ............... ............................. B ESSIE SHORE, Simpson&#13;
"The Tyranny of the Majority" ........................ MARGARET HoovER, Penn&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, April 25, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 1, Negative 0&#13;
&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan· Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Morningside Negative&#13;
Mitchell April 25, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 0, Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian Gold Medal Series&#13;
WOODRUFF&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debates&#13;
&#13;
WINTER&#13;
&#13;
ANDREWS&#13;
FLYNN&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
MARQUART&#13;
&#13;
CASSIL&#13;
MYERS&#13;
&#13;
CASSIL&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
MYERS&#13;
&#13;
FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
SHELDON&#13;
&#13;
WOODRUFF&#13;
&#13;
DYKE&#13;
HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
MOORHEAD&#13;
&#13;
DEJONG&#13;
&#13;
MOORHEAD&#13;
&#13;
DEBRIEN&#13;
&#13;
BARRICK&#13;
&#13;
JONGEWAARD&#13;
VAN PEURSEM&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
MARSH H.&#13;
&#13;
BEDELL&#13;
MARSH&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
DOWN&#13;
&#13;
RANKIN&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
VAN PEURSEM&#13;
&#13;
WINKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
BALKEMA&#13;
&#13;
HART&#13;
DOWN&#13;
&#13;
BUTLER&#13;
&#13;
RANKIN&#13;
&#13;
BEDELL&#13;
&#13;
HART&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Gold Medal Series&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
&#13;
S. Stouffer&#13;
&#13;
L. Hickman&#13;
&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
G. OLIVER&#13;
A. HARTMAN&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
E. OTTO&#13;
C. OELFKE&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
P. ZIEKE&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
Tlzat the Federal Government should require at least one year of military&#13;
training of all able-bodied men between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one,&#13;
constitutionally conceded.&#13;
&#13;
P. ZIEKE&#13;
&#13;
C. OELFKE&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
C. NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED :&#13;
&#13;
PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
A. SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
W. SMITH&#13;
&#13;
C. KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
SCHULDT&#13;
HARTMAN&#13;
&#13;
C. KENNEDY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Yankton Negative&#13;
Yankton, May 1, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 1, Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
W. SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
C. NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
H. HILMER&#13;
&#13;
C. OELFKE&#13;
&#13;
C. NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
M . ERIKSSON&#13;
&#13;
M. ERIKSSON&#13;
&#13;
H. BRUSWITZ&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
GLAZIER&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
D. NISSEN&#13;
&#13;
Yankton Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Morningside Negative&#13;
Morningside May 1, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 0, Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
H . LORY&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SCHEERER&#13;
&#13;
E. ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
H. LORY&#13;
&#13;
H. BENZ&#13;
&#13;
M. ERIKSSON&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
V. PITSTICK&#13;
&#13;
H. BRUSWITZ&#13;
&#13;
R. WILSON&#13;
&#13;
E. ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SCHEERER&#13;
&#13;
D. KLATT&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
C. 0ELRICH&#13;
H. BRUSWITZ&#13;
&#13;
SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
H. BENZ&#13;
&#13;
BENZ&#13;
&#13;
�Men's Inter-Collegiate Debate&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Gold Medal Series&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
&#13;
1902 1903 1904 -&#13;
&#13;
M . EVANS&#13;
J. MCBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
BROW N&#13;
&#13;
A. OLSON&#13;
&#13;
J. M CBURNEY&#13;
A. OLSON&#13;
vs&#13;
&#13;
J. LEE&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
Q. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
A . OLSON&#13;
&#13;
Q, JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
A. OLSON&#13;
J. MCBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
'VS,&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
C. CORBETT&#13;
'VS,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
C. EICHERLY&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
AUSMAN&#13;
vs&#13;
&#13;
C. EICHERLY&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
C. EICHERLY&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
'VS,&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
DAY&#13;
&#13;
J. MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1900-J. A. DAVIES, Ninth&#13;
1901- H. A. KECK, Seventh&#13;
1902 - A. R. TOOTHAKER, Eliminated&#13;
1903 - D. C. HALL, Fourth&#13;
1904 - R. E. HEILMAN&#13;
1905 - G . J. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
1906 -A. G . CUSHMAN&#13;
1907 -A. G. CUSHMAN, Fifth&#13;
1908 - F . W. BACKEMEYER, Second&#13;
1909 - F. W. BACKEMEYER, First&#13;
1910 - H . S. HAMILTON, Second&#13;
1911 - F. P. JOHNSON, Second&#13;
1912 - F . P. JOHNSON, Second&#13;
1913 - F . P. JOHNSON, Second&#13;
1914- R . H . McVICKER, Second&#13;
1915-J. I. DOLLIVER, Third&#13;
1916 - R. L . MITCHELL, Eliminated&#13;
1917 - C. E. ALBERTSON, Second&#13;
1918 - LEE SALTOW, Second&#13;
1919-ABRAM M. DEVAUL, Third&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1905 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1906 - Morningside&#13;
1907 - Morningside&#13;
1908 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1910- Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1911 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1912- Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1913 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1914 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1015 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1916 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1917 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1918- Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1919 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3-1&#13;
0- 2&#13;
0- 0&#13;
1- 1&#13;
1-1&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Baker University&#13;
Simpson&#13;
Baker University&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Baker University&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Simpson ·&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Dakota&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Coe&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Coe&#13;
Southwestern&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Coe&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
St. Olaf&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Hamlin&#13;
St. Viateur&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
Yankton College&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0-2&#13;
3-1&#13;
1-1&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-2&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATES&#13;
1915- Morningside ........................&#13;
1916- Morningside ........................&#13;
Morningside........................&#13;
1917 - Morningside ........................&#13;
Morningside ........................&#13;
&#13;
0- 0&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Simpson ....................&#13;
Huron ........................&#13;
Yankton ....................&#13;
South Dakota U ........&#13;
Huron ........................&#13;
&#13;
3-3&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
�Military&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�ment. Our Commandant, First Lieutenant Harry H. Brown, is conceded to be one&#13;
of the finest disciplinarians and drill masters in this district. He is a graduate of&#13;
the first Fort Snelling Officers' Training Camp.&#13;
The Personnel Adjutant was a former Morningside student, Second Lieutenant&#13;
Arthur Hopkinson. He performed his duties as adjutant in a splendid manner, and&#13;
every member of the unit felt that they had a real friend in Lieutenant Hopkinson.&#13;
Tht small arms instructor was Second Lieutenant Charles Richards. In the short&#13;
time he was here he won the admiration and respect of all. He was a graduate of the&#13;
Camp Perry 0. T . C.&#13;
With the demobilization of the S. A. T. C., in December, came the organization of&#13;
an R. 0. T. C., under the command of Lieutenant Brown. Three mornings a week&#13;
one may see these future officers drilling over Bass Field or doing calisthenics. Some&#13;
splendid officer material is being developed.&#13;
&#13;
C. D. K., '20.&#13;
&#13;
LIEUTENANT BROWN&#13;
&#13;
S. A. T. C.&#13;
Morningside started the year on a distinctly war basis. At the request of the War&#13;
Department, the College instigated a Student Army Training Corps. This unit was&#13;
to be a part of the U. S. Army, to receive the basis of military training here, with the&#13;
end in view of transferring them to the particular branch of the army for which they&#13;
were best fitted .&#13;
Two particular aims were constantly worked for : First, to obtain officer material,&#13;
and, second, to secure specialists for various branches of the service, as chemical warfare, engineers, surveyors, artillerymen, etc. While the unit did not exist long enough&#13;
to really accomplish its end in either, it certainly was developing material which&#13;
would have been of inestimable value had the war continued through the summer of&#13;
1919. It certainly speaks well for the Commandant, and the candidates as well, that&#13;
thirty-five men out of a total strength of 170 were recommended for Officers, Training&#13;
Camps. There were also about fifty men specializing in the sciences.&#13;
We ere unusually fortunate in the assignment of officers by the War Departw&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Men in the Service&#13;
&#13;
Gold Stars&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE MEN IN THE SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
Albert Behmer was killed in action on March 9th, 191 8, "Somew here in France".&#13;
Charles Fry died of influen za at Camp Dodge on October 13th, 1918.&#13;
Major Frank Jude Gary was decorated by King George for organ izing and executing an attack on Lens, France. He di ed of wounds received in this attack on September 2nd, 1918.&#13;
Alvin J . Hilker died of influenza somewhere in England on October 9th, 1918.&#13;
Harry E. Kilts died of influenza in the S. A. T. C. hospital at Morningside on October 21st,&#13;
1918.&#13;
Alfred Walter Leazer died of influenza at Camp Dodge on October 16th, 1918.&#13;
William Lehman died of influenza at Camp Pike on October 13th, 1918.&#13;
Frank Oliver died of injuries received in an airplane accident at Waco, Texas, on September&#13;
13th, 1918.&#13;
Jesse Smith died of influenza in the S. A. T. C. hospital at Morningside on October 26th, 1918.&#13;
&#13;
(In the Camps)&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE MEN IN THE SERVICE&#13;
(Overseas)&#13;
ACHESON, R. D.&#13;
ANDERSON, LIEUT. FRED&#13;
ANDERSON, LT. (DR . ) T. C.&#13;
BARKS, EARL&#13;
BASHAW, SGT. STANLEY&#13;
BENNETT, VERNON&#13;
&#13;
BERKSTRESSER, WM., CHAP.&#13;
BRIDENBAUGH, DR. J. H., LT.&#13;
BROOKS, LT. CLEVELAND&#13;
BREGGLE, LESTER&#13;
BROOME, RAY, LT.&#13;
BROWN, BERNARD&#13;
BROTHER, CAPT. (DR.) H. N.&#13;
BRUNELLE, CHAP. A. H.&#13;
BURROWS, RI CHARD&#13;
CAMPBELL, PROF. H. C.&#13;
CHANDLER, PROF. S. L.&#13;
COLLINS, LEROY&#13;
COOMB_ ARTHUR J.&#13;
S,&#13;
DAVIES, JAS. A.&#13;
DICKSON, CAPT. CHAS. WM,&#13;
DODSLEY, LT. HOMER&#13;
DOLLIVER, BARRETT&#13;
DOLLIVER, GARRETT&#13;
DUNHAM, HERBERT&#13;
EASTON, GEORGE, SGT.&#13;
EVANS, McKINLEY&#13;
FAIR, SGT. WM.&#13;
FELLER, JOHN E.&#13;
FERGUSON, CLAUDE&#13;
&#13;
FOUKE, HUGH&#13;
FOWLER, LOWELL&#13;
FREAR, CAPT. (DR.) CHAS.&#13;
FREEMAN, MA NSFIELD&#13;
FRANK, WALTER CHRIST&#13;
GETHMAN WLATER&#13;
GOUDIE, GEORGE&#13;
GREYNALD, EDWARD&#13;
HALVERSON, HILMER&#13;
HARTLEY, HAROLD&#13;
HAY, FRANCIS&#13;
HAYS, JOSEPH&#13;
HECKAMAN, HARRISON&#13;
HILL, BYRON&#13;
HOR NEY, LEE&#13;
HOWARD, MAJ. DR. WILL&#13;
HUTTON, CHAP. CHAS.&#13;
JOHNSTON, ROBT.&#13;
JOHNSON, LT. ARTHUR&#13;
KENNEY, TH.&#13;
KINGSBURY, CORP. FRANCIS&#13;
KUDRLE, CLYDE&#13;
LEAZER, GEORGE .&#13;
LEWIS, JOHN&#13;
LOFT, WM .&#13;
LLOYD, TH.&#13;
MCCONKEY, HOMER B.&#13;
MACOUN, LT. CARLETON&#13;
MAHOOD, SGT. CECIL&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD, HEBERT&#13;
MAYNARD ORVILLE&#13;
MALIE, WILLARD&#13;
MATHEWS, W. R. LT.&#13;
MERTEN, LT. ELMER&#13;
MERTEN, HORACE&#13;
MONTGOMERY, PAUL&#13;
MOORE, ST. CLAIR, LT.&#13;
MOSSMAN, SGT. MARION&#13;
OSTLING, RALPH ALLEN&#13;
PAYNE, VICTOR&#13;
PAYNE, LT. W. H.&#13;
PICKERSGILL, Jos.&#13;
*PIKE, CHAP. STILLMAN&#13;
POSTIN, FRED W.&#13;
PRICHARD, LT. GEORGE&#13;
PRICHARD, MAJOR VERNON&#13;
RINER, LT. BEN&#13;
SANGER, EARNEST&#13;
SAYLOR, DR. HERBERT, LT.&#13;
SAWYER, MAJ . PRINCE&#13;
STEELE, SGT. LAWRENCE&#13;
WALTON, DONALD&#13;
WATLAND, W. ALTER&#13;
WEDGEWOOD, SGT. WM.&#13;
WELLS, GLEN&#13;
*White, LT. (DR. ) MARCH&#13;
WOOLHISER,&#13;
JOHN L.&#13;
WILHOITE, CHAS. DONALD&#13;
Wulf,&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
RED CROSS NURSES&#13;
DUDLEY, MYRNE&#13;
&#13;
EWER, BERTHA&#13;
&#13;
GETHMAN,&#13;
&#13;
JULIa&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN IN Y. M. C. A. HUTS&#13;
FALL, RUTH&#13;
&#13;
KIFER, MARY&#13;
&#13;
CAMPBELL, MRS.&#13;
&#13;
H.G.&#13;
&#13;
ENGBERG, SGT. R. R.&#13;
ERIKSSON, McKINLEY&#13;
ERSKINE, M. L.&#13;
EVANS, BURRELL, SGT.&#13;
EVANS, KEITH&#13;
EVELETH, DR. M.&#13;
FARNSWORTH, HAROLD&#13;
FAIR, JOHN, LT.&#13;
FEINSTEIN, I. l.&#13;
FICKLING, D. F.&#13;
FINKE, MERRILL&#13;
FINKE, WILBUR&#13;
&#13;
HERBSTER, J. G.&#13;
HICKMAN, L. E.&#13;
HIGGINS, E. C.&#13;
HILMER, E. W.&#13;
HILMER, H. J.&#13;
HICKS, LT. EARL&#13;
HILL, FURMAN&#13;
HILL, J. E.&#13;
HILL, LEON&#13;
*HILKER, ALVIN&#13;
HINKLEY, ARTHUR&#13;
HOLCOMB, F.&#13;
HOPKINSON, LT. ARTHUR&#13;
FLYNN, EDWARD&#13;
FORBES, SERGT. WILLIS&#13;
HORN, JOHN&#13;
HORNEY, ENSIGN ALVIN&#13;
FOWLER, HARRY&#13;
FREEMAN, HAROLD&#13;
HUDSON, TH.&#13;
FRENCH, MERLE&#13;
HOLCOMB, F.&#13;
HUNT, A. N.&#13;
FRIEST, TH.&#13;
·* FRY, CHARLES&#13;
HUNTER, R. L.&#13;
HUNTING, R. C.&#13;
FULBROOK, EARL&#13;
COFFIE, B. L.&#13;
GANTT, SERGT. ED. J.&#13;
HUTCHINSON, SGT. SAM&#13;
COLLINS, P. L.&#13;
BARTLETT, ALLAN&#13;
*GARY, MAJOR FRANK&#13;
HIGTON, HARRY&#13;
COONEN, HOWARD&#13;
BARTLETT, FOSTER&#13;
HORNEY, VICTOR, ENSIGN&#13;
COOPER, LT. BURNETT&#13;
JUDE&#13;
BASSETT, LT. BROWN&#13;
GASSER,&#13;
M.&#13;
HYDE, CARLTON F.&#13;
CONNER, CLARK&#13;
BECK, ER IC&#13;
GEHRING, W.&#13;
F.&#13;
IRWI N, MILTON&#13;
COPELAND, LLOYD&#13;
BECK, LT. AXEL&#13;
GERKIN, VERGIL&#13;
JACOBSON, C. F.&#13;
CORNER, I VAN&#13;
BEDELL, R. R.&#13;
JACOBSON, E. W.&#13;
CORNER, LT. PAUL&#13;
GETHMAN, JACK&#13;
BENZ, H. E.&#13;
GEHRING, LT. ARTHUR&#13;
JAMISON, E. J.&#13;
COSTAR, WAYNE&#13;
BERGESON, M. V.&#13;
GLASGOW, JULIUS&#13;
JEEP, ADELBERT&#13;
COWAN, CLINTON&#13;
BERRY, G.&#13;
GLASGOW, H. W.&#13;
CRAIG, LAWRENCE&#13;
JENKINS, J. J.&#13;
*BEHMER, AL&#13;
JENKINSON, GARNET&#13;
GOODRICH, 0. C.&#13;
CRAIK, LT. OSCAR&#13;
BELL, ORIN&#13;
CORDER, ROY&#13;
JEPSON, MAJOR DR. WM.&#13;
CRARY, CLARENCE&#13;
BEPPLER, PAUL&#13;
GORDER, HAROLD&#13;
JOH NSON, W. S.&#13;
CROUCH, GEORGE&#13;
BERG, ABE&#13;
GOLDER, CALMAN&#13;
JOHNSON, AXEL&#13;
CROWL, 0. F.&#13;
BERKSTRESSER, CHAS.&#13;
ROLAND&#13;
JOHNSON, EMMONS&#13;
BERKSTRESSER, LT. ALLAN CUSHMAN, ARTHUR&#13;
GRAY, NEVILLE&#13;
JOHNSON, LEON, ENSIGN&#13;
DAY, EDWARD&#13;
BJORGEN, D. E.&#13;
GRUESKIN, E.&#13;
JOHNSON, LINDER&#13;
DAILY, CHAS. B., SGT.&#13;
BJORK, D. L.&#13;
JOHNSON, LT. PHILIP&#13;
GWINN, I. J.&#13;
DALE, HANS&#13;
BLEAKLY, DAVID&#13;
HALE, JOHN D.&#13;
DASKOVSKY, A.&#13;
JOHNSON, ROYE&#13;
BLEAKLY, FRANCIS&#13;
HALLAM, CECIL&#13;
JOHNSTON, ROBT.&#13;
DEHAAN, A. F.&#13;
BOGARD, HERMAN,&#13;
HANSON, WM. A.&#13;
JONES, CLIFFORD&#13;
DEJONG, E. G.&#13;
ENSIGN&#13;
HANLON, 0. T.&#13;
JONES, CAPT. IR A&#13;
DEVAUL, A. M., SGT.&#13;
BOGARD, JOSEPH, LT.&#13;
HARPER, CLIFFORD&#13;
JONES, CAPT. 0. G.&#13;
BOLAND, H. M.&#13;
DEAN, Jo&#13;
HART, OSCAR&#13;
JONES, PAUL&#13;
DOERINGSFELDT, H. G.&#13;
BORCHARDT, N. W.&#13;
HART, C. I., SGT.&#13;
JOHNSO N, FRANK&#13;
DOLLIVER, JAMES&#13;
BOYD, H. M.&#13;
HART, V. A.&#13;
JONGEWAARD, H. G.&#13;
DONOHUE, J. H.&#13;
BOYD, J. L.&#13;
HARTMAN, AMOS&#13;
JURGENSON, ROYAL&#13;
DOWNS, FAYETTE&#13;
BURPEE, S. M.&#13;
HARRINGTON, RAY&#13;
JOH NS, ERWIN&#13;
DUBEL, LT. MARCUS&#13;
BUTCHER, B. F.&#13;
HARRINGTON, ED.&#13;
KECKLER, LEE ROY&#13;
DUNN, H. G.&#13;
BLODGETT, GEO. W.&#13;
HARTZELL, CORP.&#13;
KEENE, R.&#13;
DUTTON, GEORGE&#13;
BOND, LAFE&#13;
DUTTON WINFRED&#13;
CLIFFORD&#13;
KENNEDY, C. J.&#13;
BONDHUS, SGT. FRANCIS&#13;
HAUSWALD, ERNEST, SGT. KINGSBURY, CORP. H. L.&#13;
DYE, LESLIE&#13;
L.&#13;
HAY, WALTER&#13;
KIRBY, C. H.&#13;
DYKE, C. G.&#13;
BOOKHART, DR. E.&#13;
HAYS, VICTOR&#13;
*KILTS, HARRY E.&#13;
DEAKIN, CHAP. SAMUEL&#13;
BRENNER, MILTON&#13;
HELD, LT. WALTER&#13;
KITCHEN, J. E.&#13;
EARNEST, G. H.&#13;
BRIDENBAUGH, LEONARD&#13;
KLIPPEL, LT. CHARLES&#13;
HENDERSON, GEORGE&#13;
EARNEST, E. W.&#13;
BROWN, EDWIN M.&#13;
HENDERSON, ROBT.&#13;
KLAUS, C. F.&#13;
EICHERLY, C. G.&#13;
BROWN, DAN HEDGES,&#13;
KLAUS, M.&#13;
ELLYSON, W. ~ W.&#13;
HENKE, HAROLD&#13;
LT.&#13;
HENKE, ARTHUR&#13;
KLATT, C. D.&#13;
ENGBERG, C. E.&#13;
BROWN, GEORGE&#13;
BROWN, Guy&#13;
BROWN, MAJ. JOE D.&#13;
BROWN, LARNED&#13;
BROWN, NELSON&#13;
BROCKMEYER, JOHN&#13;
ALT, L. R.&#13;
BURGESS, F. E.&#13;
ANDERSON, HENRY&#13;
BIGGLESTONE, HARRY&#13;
ANDREWS, RALPH&#13;
BURRELL, LOWELL&#13;
ANDREWS, R. S.&#13;
BREWSTER, EARL&#13;
APPEL, FRED&#13;
CAINE, THOMAS&#13;
ARCHER, THos.&#13;
CALL  LIEUT. GEO. R.&#13;
ARMBRUSTER, DAVID&#13;
CARLSON, OSCAR B.&#13;
AUGHENBAUGH, FLOYD&#13;
CARTER, PEARL SCOTT&#13;
AUSMAN, E. L.&#13;
CARTER, ROSCOE&#13;
BACK, GEO. I.&#13;
CASSILL, C. H.&#13;
BACKEMEYER, FRED&#13;
CASTLE, LYNN&#13;
BARKS, LEE&#13;
CHRIST, JAY FINLEY&#13;
BALKEMA, B.&#13;
CLARK, LT. WILSON&#13;
BARRICK, H. L.&#13;
BARRETT, WALTER, CHAP. CLOUGH, MARTIN&#13;
ABEL, ARTHUR&#13;
ABEL, FRANK&#13;
ALBERTSON, CYRUS&#13;
ALINGH, R. A.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
*Ki lled in action&#13;
&#13;
�KLESATH, J. L&#13;
KLINE, SGT.&#13;
KLOCK, G.&#13;
KLUTZ, D. M.&#13;
KOCH, FRED&#13;
KOLP, LT. JOHN D.&#13;
KocH, HERMAN&#13;
KNOX, H.J.&#13;
KOCH, W. F .&#13;
KRIGSTEN, D.&#13;
LANCASTER, HAROLD&#13;
LAVENDER, LT. R OBERT&#13;
LARKIN, L D.&#13;
LARSON, H. F .&#13;
LAUGHLIN, A. C .&#13;
LAWRENCE, HARVEY&#13;
LEHAN, LLOYD&#13;
* LEHMAN, WM.&#13;
LE DUE, C. J.&#13;
LEE,&#13;
F.&#13;
LEHAN, J. L&#13;
LEWIS, JAMES&#13;
LINDSAY, ARTHUR&#13;
* LEAZER, A . W.&#13;
LAUN, CHAS.&#13;
LIMING, 0. L&#13;
LOHMANN, P. D.&#13;
LONG, GLEN&#13;
LONG, RALPH&#13;
LORY, LT. MILTON&#13;
LUEDER, HERMAN&#13;
McBRIDE, LT. THos.&#13;
McBRIDE, ROBT.&#13;
McBRIDE, J. S.&#13;
McCLEARY, D. C .&#13;
McGRAW, C. D.&#13;
McLEAN, H. D.&#13;
McDONALD, MARK&#13;
McKINNEY, DELBERT&#13;
McKINNEY, LT. Guy&#13;
MAGEE, J. R.&#13;
MAGOUN GEORGE&#13;
MAGOUN, LT. CHASE.&#13;
MAHOOD, EARL&#13;
MAHOOD, DR. H. W. L&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
MANNING,&#13;
&#13;
C. G.&#13;
&#13;
MASTERS, H AROLD&#13;
MASKELL, NEAL&#13;
MAYNE, KENNETH&#13;
MARQUART, E . W.&#13;
MARSELL, ANNIES&#13;
MARSH, W. L&#13;
MASON, H. E.&#13;
&#13;
MEYER, EWALD&#13;
MEYER, H . C.&#13;
MENGES, 0. E.&#13;
MESMER, W. J .&#13;
MERTEN, H OWARD, LT.&#13;
MICKELSON, PERCY, SGT.&#13;
MILLER,&#13;
F.&#13;
MONTGOMERY, VINCENT&#13;
MONTGOMERY, D. C .&#13;
K.&#13;
MONTGOMERY,&#13;
MORGAN, CHAP. HORACE&#13;
MORLEY, LT. MAYNARD I&#13;
&#13;
PYNCHEON, MAJOR E. A. TANGEMAN, N. E .&#13;
QUINN, R. M.&#13;
TEMPLE, W. L&#13;
RAMBO, CAPT. ELI&#13;
THOMPSON, D . C.&#13;
RANKIN, E. F.&#13;
TIBBETS, H. V.&#13;
RAUN, L T. H AROLD&#13;
TOLEDO, B. R.&#13;
REYMAN, HOWARD&#13;
TOMPKINS, C .&#13;
RICHARDSON, CHAP.&#13;
TONE, L. F.&#13;
NOBLE&#13;
TREFZ, JACOB&#13;
RIPP EY, RALPH&#13;
TROUTMAN, LT.&#13;
ROBBINS, LT. FORD D.&#13;
RAYMOND&#13;
ROBERTSON, CHESTER&#13;
TROUSTROM, C. L&#13;
ROGERS, FRED&#13;
TUCKER, R. L&#13;
ROOST, DR. FRED., MA J .&#13;
UPHAM, LT. CYRIL&#13;
MOORHEAD, P. W.&#13;
ROREM, HE NRY&#13;
VAN CLEVE, WM. JOYCE&#13;
RORAPAUGH, E. F.&#13;
MULFORD, GRANT&#13;
VAN PEURSEM, J. E.&#13;
MULFORD, MORTON&#13;
Ross, C. A.&#13;
VERNON, R OBERT&#13;
NELSON, D. P .&#13;
RUGG, R. N.&#13;
WALIN, R EUBEN&#13;
NELSON, G.&#13;
RUNDLE, F.&#13;
WALKER, HERALD&#13;
NISSEN, C. D.&#13;
RYERSON, PAUL&#13;
WARD, ARTHUR&#13;
NIXON, G. C.&#13;
SAMPSON, EARNEST&#13;
WARNES,&#13;
H.&#13;
NORTHRUP, C. R.&#13;
SAMPSON, A. H.&#13;
WATLAND&#13;
MAURICE&#13;
NORTON, SGT. D. E.&#13;
SANDVOLD, C. E.&#13;
WAGGONER&#13;
G. H.&#13;
O'BRECHT SGT.&#13;
SANEM, SGT. E. G.&#13;
WALKER&#13;
LT. H. L&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
SASS, CARL W. H.&#13;
WATSON&#13;
W. W.&#13;
O'DONOGHUE, CAPT. DR. SAVARY, R. J.&#13;
WELD&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
SCHULDT, A. F.&#13;
WEATHERLY,&#13;
R. N.&#13;
O 'CONNOR, C. V.&#13;
SHAFENBERG, M. V.&#13;
WEAVER, V. H.&#13;
OELFKE, C. L.&#13;
SHAPIRO, J.&#13;
WENIG, SGT. ERVINE&#13;
SMITH, A.&#13;
OGLESBY, LEONARD&#13;
WERTZ, WALTER&#13;
OLDS, SAMUEL&#13;
SMITH, E. F.&#13;
WESSEL, SGT. EMIL&#13;
'OLIVER,&#13;
FRANK&#13;
SMITH, M. G .&#13;
WHYTE, HARRY&#13;
OLSON, A. C.&#13;
SMITH, M.&#13;
WICK, H.F.&#13;
OMAR, GAYLORD&#13;
SMITH,&#13;
H.&#13;
WICKETT,&#13;
V. A.&#13;
OTTO, E.&#13;
SCHEERER, LLOYD&#13;
WILLIAMS,&#13;
G. R.&#13;
OSTLING, EVERT&#13;
SCHELLINGER, ROY&#13;
WILSON, R. N.&#13;
OVERHOLSER, R ALPH&#13;
SCHRIEVER, WM.&#13;
WINKELMAN, E. C.&#13;
PARADISANOS, GEORGE&#13;
SCHRIEM, FRED&#13;
WINTER, G. H.&#13;
PATRiCK, GLENN&#13;
SCHWARTZ, CHAS.&#13;
WINTER, H. P.&#13;
PAUL, VERNE&#13;
WICKENS,&#13;
LAWRENCE&#13;
SEEMAN, AL.&#13;
PAYNE, ARTHUR&#13;
SHERWOOD, CLAIRE&#13;
WILLIAMS, LT. EARL&#13;
PERSINGER, EVERETT&#13;
SHULL, DELOSS&#13;
WILLIAMS, NOEL&#13;
PERSINGER , A. L&#13;
SMITH, R USSELL&#13;
WILLIAMS,&#13;
TYLER&#13;
PETERSON, LEONARD&#13;
WILSON, DR. HAROLD&#13;
SOLTOW, L&#13;
PEETE FRANK&#13;
SPEERS, G. R.&#13;
WOLLE, WM.&#13;
PETERSON, B. C .&#13;
STOUFFER, S. A.&#13;
WooD, H . L.&#13;
PETERSO N, B. A.&#13;
STARR, LT. GA I LO RD&#13;
WOODS, K. L&#13;
WOODSIDE,&#13;
PHE LPS, FLOYD&#13;
STENSETH, VERNON&#13;
ENSIGN&#13;
PIERSON, L. E .&#13;
STEVENS, LEO&#13;
CLIFTON&#13;
PITM AN, SGT. R ALPH&#13;
STONEBROOK, EARL&#13;
WATLAND, WM.&#13;
HENRY&#13;
PITST ICK, V. I.&#13;
* SMITH, JESSE&#13;
VENNINK, G . A.&#13;
PRI CHARD, LT. ELBERT&#13;
SHERR, SAM&#13;
YOCKEY, RE X&#13;
PRI CHARD, LT. G. W.&#13;
STROBEL, H AROLD&#13;
YouDE, L. H.&#13;
PRITCHARD, L T. R ALPH&#13;
SWARTZ, C. H.&#13;
ZITTLEMAN, C. W.&#13;
SYMONDS, WALTER&#13;
&#13;
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FINCH, NELLIE&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
ROBAR, IRENE&#13;
&#13;
C ROSS NURSES&#13;
BROWER, ELLA&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
FOUKE, RUTH&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
WATTS, BLANCHE&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
service&#13;
&#13;
SLAUGHTER, Z OLE&#13;
&#13;
RECONSTRUCTION AIDE&#13;
&#13;
FERGUSON, PROF. AGNES B.&#13;
&#13;
*Died&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Society&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
1st Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
&#13;
McKINLEY EVANS&#13;
&#13;
AMOS HARTMAN&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
2nd Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
&#13;
PAUL }ONES&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
SAMUEL STOUFFER&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
HILLIS LORY&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
3rd Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
RALPH LONG&#13;
&#13;
RONALD WILSON&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
W. HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
DAVE KLATT&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
DAVE KLATT&#13;
&#13;
HARRY BENZ&#13;
&#13;
First Critic&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
RONALD WILSON&#13;
&#13;
EVAN ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
LAFAYETTE BOND&#13;
&#13;
EVAN ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR HINKLEY&#13;
&#13;
ORA EMERICK&#13;
DONALD NISSEN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
I9I8&#13;
March I8-Philo-Athenaeum Grand Public.&#13;
March 20-Dedication of Service Flag.&#13;
April I I-Musical Programme.&#13;
April 22-Philo-Athenaeum Picnic at Stone Park.&#13;
May 9-Final Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
May 20-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
May 27-Joint Commencement.&#13;
November 22-Athenaeums entertain Philos, in S. A. T. C .&#13;
December 16-Joint Christmas Party.&#13;
&#13;
I 9 19&#13;
January 9-Philo Rush Stag.&#13;
January 24-Philo-Athenaeum Joint Party.&#13;
February 20-Closed Door Program.&#13;
March 5-Philo Initiation.&#13;
March 13-Closed Door Program.&#13;
March 29-Joint Open Door.&#13;
April 5-Philo-Athenaeum Hard Times Party.&#13;
&#13;
�Athenaeum Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Term&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Second Term&#13;
&#13;
Third Term&#13;
NELLIE POYZER&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL BERGH&#13;
&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN COOPER&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
AURELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY EYRES&#13;
&#13;
AGNES MCCREERY&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET STOLT&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
&#13;
EVA DUNAGAN&#13;
&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
MINNIE EPPELSHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
RUBY MCCREERY&#13;
&#13;
BERRY&#13;
&#13;
1st Critic&#13;
&#13;
HAZE L BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
EVA T REMAN&#13;
&#13;
2nd Critic&#13;
&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HAMILTON&#13;
&#13;
EVA DUNAGAN&#13;
&#13;
1st Directress&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE POYZER&#13;
&#13;
AG N ES MCCREERY&#13;
&#13;
LENA McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
2nd Directress&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS LEONARD&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE HAUSWALD&#13;
&#13;
1st Usher&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET STOLT&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE HAUSWALD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HAMILTON&#13;
&#13;
2nd Usher&#13;
&#13;
LENA McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY EYRES&#13;
&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET STOLT&#13;
&#13;
ATHENAEUM CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
19 18&#13;
May 2-Tea for Pierians and Z etaletheans.&#13;
May 18-Mother's Banquet.&#13;
May 28-Alumnae Breakfast.&#13;
September 28-Reception for New Members.&#13;
November 14-Informal Initiation.&#13;
November 22-Dinner for Philos in S. A. T . C.&#13;
November 30- Reception of Mid-semester Pledges.&#13;
December 9-Senior Athenaeums entertain at Irene Chapin Cooper's.&#13;
December 16-Annual Christmas Party.&#13;
191 9&#13;
January 17-Formal Initiation.&#13;
January 24- Philo-Athenaeum Joint.&#13;
January 25-0pen Door. "How the Story Grew."&#13;
February 8-Athenaeums entertain New Members of the Faculty.&#13;
February 31-Fudge Party.&#13;
March 9-Athenaeum Banquet at the West.&#13;
March 22-Lu ncheon for Visiting Athenaeums.&#13;
March 29-Philo-Athenaeums Open Door "A Case of Suspension".&#13;
April 5-Philo-Athenaeum Hard Times Party.&#13;
April 10-New Athenaeums entertain Old at Kathryn Holmes'.&#13;
&#13;
�Corporal&#13;
&#13;
�Ionian Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term 1918&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
First Sen.&#13;
Second Sen.&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
Financial Manager&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term 1919&#13;
&#13;
LEE SALTOW&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE HART&#13;
&#13;
SCOTT BURPEE&#13;
&#13;
GEO. CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
PAUL RYERSON&#13;
&#13;
GEO. CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
FRANK VALIQUETTE&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MCBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
GEO. BROWN&#13;
&#13;
J. P.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
E. FAYE RORAPAUGH&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
19 18&#13;
.April 30-Pi-Ionian Joint.&#13;
&#13;
191 9&#13;
January 13-Rush Stag&#13;
January 20-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
February 22-Pi-Ionian Party&#13;
March 22-Pi-Ionian Dinner.&#13;
&#13;
LEE&#13;
&#13;
�Pierian Literary Society&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
Felicitei, Foitilei, Fidelei, (Happy, brave and faithful)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fir st Semester&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Critic&#13;
Chairman Social Committee&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Finance Officer&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE HAITZ&#13;
&#13;
HELEN RINKER&#13;
&#13;
MARY .COLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
&#13;
RUTHMAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED SABIN&#13;
&#13;
HELEN GULLICKSON&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BURPEE&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE BOWE&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
&#13;
FAYE CHAPMAN&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE HAITZ&#13;
&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY DUBEL&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY DUBEL&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
19 18&#13;
May 20-Pieria Up River Trip to Stone Park.&#13;
May 21-Installation of Officers&#13;
May 28-Pieria Alumnae Breakfast.&#13;
September 28-Reception for new pledges.&#13;
October 1-Tea for new pledges.&#13;
October 4-Tenth Anniversary.&#13;
November 8-Pieria Initiation.&#13;
Birthday Dinner at Clara Lewis'.&#13;
November 30-Reception for new pledges.&#13;
December 2-Lilah Thompson entertains Morningside Pi's.&#13;
December 3-Tea for new members of Faculty.&#13;
December 6-Party for Ionians in S. A. T. C.&#13;
December 14-Pi Christmas Party.&#13;
December 19-Grace Wishard entertains Pi's.&#13;
&#13;
19 19&#13;
January 7-Dinner for Ruth Blackman Kilbourne, Marion Heikes Leuder and&#13;
Mildred Wood Naughton.&#13;
January 11-Pieria Initiation-dinner at Helen Gullickson's.&#13;
January 18-0pen Door by New Girls.&#13;
January 30-Pi-Ionian Joint.&#13;
February 4-Installation of Officers.&#13;
February 17-Mrs. Truesdell entertains Pi's for Alice and Frances Boyd .&#13;
February 22-Mrs. Kellog entertains Pi's and Ionians.&#13;
March 8-Reception for new P ledge.&#13;
March l ]-Japanese Tea for Honorary members.&#13;
March 22-Pieria dinner for Ionians.&#13;
March 29-Reception for new Pledges.&#13;
April 12-Pieria initiation and dinner.&#13;
April 25-Pieria-Ionian Grand Public-"It Pays To Advertise".&#13;
&#13;
��Othonian Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Term 1918&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term 1918&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
RAY TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
Term 1919&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DUNN&#13;
&#13;
D ALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT JOHNSTON&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
ADELBERT JEEP&#13;
&#13;
SAM HUTCHISON&#13;
&#13;
First Critic&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DUNN&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER KIRBY&#13;
&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER KIRBY&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE BERGQUIST&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT MARQUART&#13;
HOWARD DOWN&#13;
&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD DUNN&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MEYER&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT SEEMAN&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT SEEMAN&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD RAUN&#13;
&#13;
Janitor&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT MARQUART&#13;
&#13;
EWART WINKLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
19 18&#13;
&#13;
May 10-Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 24-Final D ebate (Open Door ) .&#13;
December 19-0tho Dinner.&#13;
19 19&#13;
January 17-0tho Rush Stag.&#13;
January 24-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
February 8-Zet-Otho Joint ( Orpheum) .&#13;
February 27-Closed D oor.&#13;
March 14-Otho Banquet.&#13;
April 5- Zet-Otho Joint (Riverside) .&#13;
April 15-Closed Door.&#13;
&#13;
t--------------------------0&#13;
&#13;
�Zetalethean Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term 1918&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
First Critic&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
First Directress&#13;
Second Directress&#13;
Librarian&#13;
First Usher&#13;
Second Usher&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term 1918&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term 1919&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON&#13;
&#13;
MABLE DAY&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
&#13;
BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BELEW&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER GOODSITE&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WEIR&#13;
&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
ELMA PARKINSON&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
EDNA BEKINS&#13;
&#13;
RUTHREID&#13;
&#13;
AGNETTA FLOM&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE HINKHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WEIR&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WILSON&#13;
&#13;
MERLIN SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
RUBY HILL&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET KIDDER&#13;
&#13;
BERYL BURNS&#13;
&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
&#13;
BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE REID&#13;
&#13;
GRACE BAGLEY&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PYNCHEON&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BELEW&#13;
&#13;
RUTH REID FRY&#13;
&#13;
GRACE HOFLUND&#13;
&#13;
MAE PURDY&#13;
&#13;
PATIENCE SKINNER&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS GROOM&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
191 8&#13;
May 10-Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 17-New Zets entertain Old Zets at Six O'clock Dinner.&#13;
May 20-Talbot Farm Picnic.&#13;
June 3-Reunion Breakfast.&#13;
September 3-Reception for Pledges.&#13;
Formal Initiation.&#13;
November 16-Zet Open Door.&#13;
December 19-Dinner for Otho's and Freshmen men .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
191 9&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
11-Seven O'clock breakfast.&#13;
11-0pen Door.&#13;
16-Party at Bernice Scoville's.&#13;
18-Dinner for Alumnae and Honorary members.&#13;
Private Initiation.&#13;
January 24-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
January 25-Theatre Party.&#13;
February 8-0pen Door.&#13;
February 14-Valentine Party.&#13;
February 27-Tea for Athenaeums and Pierias.&#13;
February 29-Zet Banquet.&#13;
April 5-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
&#13;
�(&#13;
&#13;
�\&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
�Y. W. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
Y . M. C. A . Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
First R o w: McCreery, Dykstra, Day, Carpenter, Stevens.&#13;
S ECOND R o w: Poyzer , Scoville, Mahood , Kidder , Carter&#13;
&#13;
FIR ST Row: Wilson, Winters, Benz, Baldwin , Hickman&#13;
Second Row: Trefz, Engberg, Marsh, Freeman 1 DeVaul&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
S. A. T. C. Secretary ............ PROF. CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
President .................................................. ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
Vice President ........................................ ABRAM DEVAUL&#13;
Secretary ...................................................... HARRY BENZ&#13;
Treasurer ................................................ LEON HICKMAN&#13;
DEPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
Religious Meetings .................................. RONALD WILSON&#13;
Community Service ................................ HAROLD WINTER&#13;
Campus Service .................................. CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
Gospel Teams .................................... HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
Bible Study .................................................. JACOB TREFZ&#13;
On account of the establishment of the S. A. T. C. in&#13;
Morningside last fall the Y. M. C. A. was placed on the&#13;
Secretary basis with Prof. Marsh acting in the capacity&#13;
of Secretary. Rev. W . H . Spence took the Bible work&#13;
and the splendid results of the first semester's work must&#13;
be credited to the efforts of these two men.&#13;
The second semester marked the return to the Cabinet&#13;
system. A new cabinet was appointed since only one of&#13;
the elected members was in school, and the regular&#13;
schedule was begun . The local budget was raised in&#13;
April for the coming year, that being the practice of&#13;
most associations.&#13;
&#13;
R. E. '19&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ..................·................................ R UTH MAHOOD&#13;
Vice President .............................................. FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
Secretary ......... ................................ MARGARET KIDDER&#13;
Treasurer ......................................................ADA CARTER&#13;
DEPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
Association News ................................AGNES McCREERY&#13;
Bible Study .......................................... BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
Devotional ................................................ NELLIE POYSER&#13;
World Fellowship .............................. NELLIE CARPENTER&#13;
Social .......................................................... IRMA STEVENS&#13;
Social Service .................................... GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
Every year some of Morningside's Y. W. C . A. girls go&#13;
to the Geneva Conference and every year they come back&#13;
and say, just as the girls said the year before, "Girls, don't&#13;
miss it. It's just wonderful-that's all." They can't explain or describe what it is. "It's just wonderful." It&#13;
certainly is a wonderful experience.&#13;
Last year Morningside had one whole tent to herself&#13;
and made herself known by means of all sorts of pennants&#13;
as well as by yells and songs when the opportunity was&#13;
afforded.&#13;
The Christian fellowship and Spirit and the broadening&#13;
effect upon us of meeting so many more Christian girls&#13;
make a Geneva trip an essential part of every college girl's&#13;
life.&#13;
A. M . H . '20.&#13;
&#13;
�Agora Club&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
Student Council&#13;
&#13;
Row : Dykstra, Johnson, Day, Sturtevant, Fry, R euber&#13;
Bergeson, Carver, Kidder&#13;
&#13;
SECONDRow: Fowler, Hanson, Wishard,&#13;
Holmes, Treman,&#13;
THIRD Row: Fish, Fry, Mahood, Bergh, Carter, Lange&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ---------------------------------------------------------- RUTH FRY&#13;
Vice President _________ ___ __ __ _____ _ _____ HAZEL BERGH&#13;
__ _____ _____&#13;
___&#13;
Treasurer _ __ _ _ ___________ _ ____ ___ _ _ MARGARET KIDDER&#13;
__ ____ &#13;
__ __ _____ __&#13;
&#13;
FIRSTR o w: Lawrence, Mahood, Scoville, Fish&#13;
&#13;
SECOND Row: Boyd, Carpenter , Lange, Day, Bekins&#13;
THIRD&#13;
R o w: Engberg, Flynn, Norton, Winter&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE RS&#13;
&#13;
Secret ar y ··--··········--··················--····················FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
C OM M ITTEE C HAIRM EN&#13;
Athletics ······-··········--·--···········-----··AURELIA ST URTEVANT&#13;
Auditing --·······-···-········--·-······················BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
Forensics ----········-············-··-··········-············-·ADA CARTER&#13;
Finance ~--·········-·······················-···-···········-········ALICE FRY&#13;
Self Government ··--·······----·············---···········MIRIAM FISH&#13;
Social ··········-···-·······----······--·--···········--···· RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
The A go ra C lub is an organization w ith a definite&#13;
purpose in view , namely that of creating a fin e democratic&#13;
spirit among the g irls of our school. Every girl in the&#13;
school belongs to this club and ever y g irl is a booster fo r&#13;
Agora activities. These acti vities include such things as&#13;
girl's athletics, fore nsics and social act ivit ies. This year&#13;
an interesting department has been organized, the vocational training department, from which m uch benefit w ill&#13;
be derived.&#13;
&#13;
President ········-··-··--···---·-··························DALEN ORTON&#13;
Vice Presiden t ····························--····--··-··-······ RUTH FRY&#13;
Secret ary-Treasurer ----·-----························FRANCES BOYD&#13;
D ALE NORTON&#13;
RUTH F RY&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
.ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
EDNA BEKINS&#13;
HAROLD WINTER&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
HARRY FLYNN&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
T his council is made up of the st uden t-body officers and&#13;
a represen tative from each college orga nizat ion includi ng&#13;
the classes. Through this organ ization the stu dent-body&#13;
helps to gove rn itself in the affairs of the college and&#13;
assists in many w ays for the betterment of the school.&#13;
&#13;
�Forensic League&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Committee&#13;
&#13;
STANDING: Trefz, Freeman , B aldwin , Hunt, Norton&#13;
SEATED: Ausman, Prichard, Flynn,&#13;
&#13;
Engberg&#13;
&#13;
STANDING: Ullman, Brodkey, Lange, Day, Rinker&#13;
Walker , Knudson, Bergh&#13;
&#13;
SEATED:&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ............................................ ELBERT PRITCHARD&#13;
Vice President ............................................ ALBERT HUNT&#13;
Secretary .................................................... HARRY FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
President .......................................... ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
Secretary ................................................ HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
]ACOB TREFZ&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
HARRY FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
This is an organization w hich has as its prime motive&#13;
the furthering of debate and oratory. U nder its supervision a series of Inter-Societ y debates are held from which&#13;
the Inter-Collegiate representatives are chosen.&#13;
&#13;
ATHE NAEUM&#13;
HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
HAZEL BERGH&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
PIERIAN&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
HELEN RINKER&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
&#13;
ZETALETHEAN&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
MATILDA BRODKEY&#13;
&#13;
This committee is a representative group from all the&#13;
girls' societies. It regulat es the rule governing O pen&#13;
Doors, rushing, and other m atters.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
M - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -0&#13;
&#13;
�lshkoodah&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Sergeant-at-arms&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
FIRST TERM&#13;
JEAN WOODRUFF&#13;
IRIS KNIGHT&#13;
RUTH WEDGEWOOD&#13;
BEATRICE SPANGLER&#13;
ZAZEL KANE&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TERM&#13;
HAZEL REED&#13;
DOROTHY SKEWIS&#13;
IRENE WOODARD&#13;
VERA WEED&#13;
ESTHER LANGE&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
1918&#13;
Sept. 27-0 ld Girls entertain the New Girls&#13;
Oct. 4-0rganization of Club&#13;
Nov. 16-Initiation&#13;
Dec. 18-0pen Door&#13;
1919&#13;
Jan. 17-Club Dinner&#13;
Feb. 14-Valentihe Party&#13;
March 28-"Weine" Roast&#13;
This is the third year of the Freshman Girl's Club.&#13;
It has been very successful notwithstanding the many&#13;
interruptions during the first semester. T he purpose of&#13;
the club, which is to furnish a medium for social and&#13;
literary development during the first year of college life,&#13;
has certainly been fu lfilled. It is with regret that every&#13;
girl realizes that with the passing of her freshman days,&#13;
her membership in the club ceases.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ·--------------- ---------·-·-·-··-··-·-··········--·---- ELSIE LANG&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ······-···-·-·-·-·-·-····-·········---] UNE PIP PET&#13;
Vice-President ------- ·-·-······----------·-···-· MYNNIE GusTESON&#13;
The Student Volunteer Band of Morningside College is&#13;
a branch of the National movement founded July, 1896.&#13;
This band makes a systematic study of some of the great&#13;
World Problems and endeavors to show young men and&#13;
women how they may be instrumental in helping to solve&#13;
these problems.&#13;
The World War was a demonstration of the World 's&#13;
supreme need for the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The aim of&#13;
the Student Volunteers is to do and get others to do all&#13;
possible that that need may be met.&#13;
OBJECT: The world for Christ in this generation.&#13;
DECLARATION: It is my purpose, if God permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
&#13;
�Madrigal Club&#13;
"M" Club&#13;
&#13;
FIRST Row:&#13;
SECOND Row:&#13;
THIRD Row:&#13;
&#13;
Treynor, Balkema , Dykstra, Johnson , Sturtevant , Bekins, Wedgwood , Dawson , Sabin,&#13;
Broughton&#13;
Wilson,&#13;
Scoville, Stallard, Dolliver, Hofland, Haas, R euber, Eppelsheimer, Lawrence,&#13;
Stevens, Hofland&#13;
Dunagan, Williams,&#13;
Boland , Dubel, Mahood, Woodard,&#13;
Groom, Yeaman&#13;
&#13;
MADRIGAL CLUB&#13;
President . --- -- ---------------- ---------------- ---------- -RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
Vice President ____ _____ _____________________ AURELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ____________ __ ______________ _____ __ _&#13;
EDNA BEKINS&#13;
Librarian _&#13;
____________ ___ ____ ____ _________ _ __ ______ EVELYN BALKEMA&#13;
____&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ------- ------------------- ---------- ------CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ------------- ----- --------- -----------DAVE KLATT&#13;
&#13;
Student Manager ------- --------- ------· ·····-·-··-BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
Soloist ___ _____ _ _&#13;
_ __________ __ _&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON MacCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
FOOTBALL, 1918&#13;
&#13;
Eva Dunagan&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Evelyn Stallard&#13;
Evelyn Balkema&#13;
Edna Dawson&#13;
Marie Broughton&#13;
Marie Hofland&#13;
SECOND ALTO&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Lorene Wifliams&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
Ruth Wedgewood&#13;
Irene Woodard&#13;
FIRST ALTO&#13;
Harriet Lawrence&#13;
Grace Hoflund&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
Gertrude Dykstra&#13;
Irene Johnstone&#13;
Gladys Groom&#13;
Bernice Scoville&#13;
GRACE WILSON, ACCOMPANIST&#13;
PAUL MAcCoLLIN, Manager, Director&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SOPRANO&#13;
Irma Stevens&#13;
Dorothy Dubel&#13;
Gertrude Treynor&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Mildred Sabin&#13;
Minnie Eppelsheimer&#13;
Gladys Yeaman&#13;
Olive Boland&#13;
SECOND SOPRANO&#13;
Lois Haas&#13;
&#13;
This organization is one of which Morningside may be&#13;
justly proud. The girls have just completed a ten-day&#13;
trip over Northwest Iowa, bringing much credit to themselves and to Morningside as well . The Home Concert,&#13;
May 5, was well attended and very much appreciated&#13;
by all. May the Madrigal . Club do much in the future&#13;
for Morningside is our wish.&#13;
&#13;
Norton, Dale, Captain&#13;
Northrup, Carroll&#13;
Rorapaugh , Faye&#13;
Goodrich, Orin&#13;
Lory, Milton&#13;
Emerick, Oro&#13;
Montgomery, Donald&#13;
Ellyson, William&#13;
Marsell, Annies&#13;
Koch, William&#13;
Quinn, Robert&#13;
BASKET BALL, 1918&#13;
Brown , George, Captain&#13;
Norton, Dale&#13;
Rorapaugh ; Faye&#13;
Shafenberg, Merle&#13;
Balkema, Albert&#13;
Cassel, Curtis&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Hunt, Albert&#13;
Shafenberg, Merle&#13;
Troutman, Raymond&#13;
Alt, Leslie&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Northrup, Carroll&#13;
Norton, Dale&#13;
Klatt, Dave&#13;
Hutchinson, Samuel&#13;
Friest, Tom&#13;
Lee, James&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
Coach J. M. Saunderson&#13;
Prof. J. J. Hayes&#13;
Prof. R . N. Van Horne&#13;
&#13;
�Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ....................................................DALE NORTON&#13;
Vice President ................................................ADA CARTER&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ................................ GLADYS CLARK&#13;
&#13;
In May, 1917, a Pi Kappa Delta Chapter was organized&#13;
at Morningside. For two years it was maintained as one&#13;
of the strongest organizations in the school, but, as the&#13;
membership is restricted to only inter-collegiate debaters&#13;
and orators and as many of our men entered army life&#13;
and as there were no Women's Inter-Collegiate debates&#13;
in 1918, the Local Chapter has been very weak this year.&#13;
It is hoped, however, that in the coming year it may again&#13;
regain its place in furthering debate and oratory at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
�"M" Minstrel&#13;
MARCH 15, 1919&#13;
A few days before March 15th, the husky athletes of the school dragged from&#13;
their dusty hiding place the time worn implements of torture. All the week before&#13;
this memorial date, a strange restlessness was fel t in the atmosphere around our&#13;
beloved campus. The men in the maroon sweaters began to exhibit strange activities&#13;
while bustling around and holding mysterious whispered conversations. Finally the&#13;
mystery was solved, when one morning in chapel we learned from "Nordy", in a&#13;
few well-chosen words, that on March fifteenth there was to occur the annual "M"&#13;
carnival, w hich this year, wasn't to be a carnival at all but a sure enough minstrel,&#13;
black-faced comedians and all. Also this year the "M" Club was to be assisted&#13;
by the Agora Club in putting on the performance and incidentally the girls were to&#13;
get one-half the proceeds, which was to be used for athletic equipment and sweaters.&#13;
"Nordy", of course, emphasized particularly the matter of attendance and by very&#13;
pursuasive arguments and vague threats as to the consequences of not going, he&#13;
succeeded in securing the interest of everyone. He spoke of a certain "Kangaroo&#13;
Court", which some of us had heard of before and a mode of punishment that they&#13;
would resort to, but not until the fatal day, March 13, did we all fully realize the&#13;
truth of what he said.&#13;
On that day there appeared in the lower hall a pair of time-worn stocks and in&#13;
one of the society halls was established a court presided over by Judge Bishop Beuhler,&#13;
whose dignity was upheld by twelve husky policemen, half of whom were college&#13;
women and who supplied the victims for the court from the members of the student&#13;
body and faculty, who up to that date had failed to purchase tickets to the big&#13;
"show." Taking it as a whole, the court proceedings were very orderly and the&#13;
guilty meekly acceded to the verdicts of the judge. It was thot at first that the stocks&#13;
would surely remain idle, but finally one poor victim, who refused to hand over the&#13;
necessary cash, was seized.&#13;
At nine o'clock the curtains were drawn, disclosing a circle which contained a&#13;
collection of color and avoirdupois, consisting of four belles of Darktown, and five&#13;
colored gentlemen. After the hilarious audience had somewhat subsided the colored&#13;
ring first entertained us with a number of rousing choruses. Then "Nordy" the&#13;
interlocutor, took charge of the company and with the end men, George Brown and&#13;
"Skinney" Norton, together w ith Dave Klatt and Faye Rorapaugh , furnished a sidesplitting entertainment. This was interspersed with feature specialities given by the&#13;
following belles,: Mary Dolliver, Harriet Lawrence, Grace Bagley, and Irma Stevens.&#13;
The second part of the program was furnished by the Girls' Glee Club, together&#13;
with Sam Hutchinson, who sang several popular songs, and Jean Woodruff, reader.&#13;
This was likewise greatly enjoyed by the enthusiastic audience.&#13;
&#13;
�The Men's Banquet&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Banquet&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps the event looked forward to most eagerly by Morningside men, is the&#13;
Annual Men's Banquet. Since the year of its inception and establishment as a tradition of the college, it has grown in significance and has become one of the finest&#13;
events of the college year. It is the place where are met together the past, present,&#13;
and&#13;
future of the manhood of the college. Alumni come back to renew their associations and receive a new inspiration and rejuvenation in the free, buoyant spirit which&#13;
characterizes&#13;
the Men's Banquet. Those who are in school have opportunity to give&#13;
vent to their wildest enthusiasm, "spring" the jokes on each other, which have been&#13;
accumulating all year; and, besides this lighter side, the y meet and hear advice from&#13;
those who have gone out to join the alumni. The banquet also gives to a number of&#13;
visiting high school men their first-impression of Morningside "pep". This feature has&#13;
been enlarged until men from many of the larger high schools in Northwest Iowa come&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
&#13;
Every Morningside girl, from the academy to the seniors, many of the mothers&#13;
high school friends, and alumnae, and the faculty, gathered in the basement of the&#13;
Grace church, March first, to hold the ninth annual Agora banquet.&#13;
The room was beautifully decorated with flowers and butterflies. The decorations of each table gave due credit to each class. Needless to say, the Juniors won&#13;
the cup for the most artistic table.&#13;
This year a new feature was added to the program. The president recognized&#13;
the two daughters of our alumnae by presenting each with a bouquet of roses, tied&#13;
with maroon and white ribbons.&#13;
The following toast program was then given:&#13;
&#13;
TOASTS&#13;
&#13;
as the guests of the college.&#13;
The Men's Banquet is a trul y festive occasion, where the best fellowship holds&#13;
sway, and where each man gets a larger conception of the thought and spirit of&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
Added interest has been given to the event by the presentation each year of loving&#13;
cups, for the most cleverly decorated tables, and for the largest percent of attendance&#13;
by the classes. Into the large troph y cup are placed the names of the sons of Morningside-men born during the preceding year, "future Morningsiders", they are in reality.&#13;
This past year, abnormal as it was by necessity because so many of the men were&#13;
called into the service, the Banquet was not so largely attended, though it was characterized by the same spirit and animated by the knowledge that Morningside's sons&#13;
had fought and died on the fields of France. The toast program was especially good,&#13;
each class being represented by a speaker-P. Scott Carter for the Academy, Leon&#13;
Hickman for the Freshmen, Abe DeVaul for the Sophomores, Jacob Trefz for the&#13;
Juniors, and Royce Engberg for the Seniors, Mr. E. M. Corbett for the Alumni, and&#13;
the college was very ably represented by President Mossman, a member of the Class of&#13;
1903. The trophy cups, both the large one and the smaller one, given to the class&#13;
having the best decorated table, were awarded to the Class of 1919. This is the&#13;
second year that class has won the double honor. Lee Soltow, of the Class of 1918,&#13;
presided as toastmaster, and handled the position well.&#13;
With the return of normal conditions, another year will doubtless find the Annual&#13;
Men's Banquet occupying again the foremost position among the events of the college&#13;
year. Again we will gather around the festive board and in that best of fellowship&#13;
sing:&#13;
&#13;
1, 1919&#13;
&#13;
"Ring out, wild bells of the wild sky,&#13;
Ring out the thousand y ears of old,&#13;
Ring in the thousand y ears of pea ce.&#13;
&#13;
"Ring i11 the valiant man and free,&#13;
The larger heart, the kindlier hand&#13;
Ring out the darkness of the land&#13;
Ring in the&#13;
Christ that is to be."&#13;
&#13;
The League of Classes&#13;
"Our cause is just, let our union&#13;
be perfect,&#13;
The Councillors and the statesmen at h er council met&#13;
Who knew&#13;
the seasons, when to take&#13;
Occasion by the hand and make&#13;
The bonds of freedom wider yet."&#13;
&#13;
Academy ················································-·······················································································VERA MOORE&#13;
"They only saw a ragged child with blanched&#13;
and twitching fac e.&#13;
Th ey did not see within&#13;
his ey es, th e glory of his race.&#13;
Th e glory of a million&#13;
men&#13;
who for B elgium have died.&#13;
Th e splendor of self-sa crifice that will not be d e11ied."&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ................................................................................................................................RuTH HIRLEMAN&#13;
U&#13;
" Italy, my Italy,&#13;
Queen Mary's saying serves for me,&#13;
Open my h eart and you will see,&#13;
Graved inside of it, 'Italy'."&#13;
&#13;
.......................................................................................................................... PAUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
" This England never did nor never shall&#13;
Lie at th e proud foot of a conqueror."&#13;
&#13;
Junior .............................................................................................................................................. ADA CARTER&#13;
"Ye sons of Fran ce, awake to glory,&#13;
Hark, hark, what myriads bid you rise!&#13;
Your children, wives and grandsires hoary,&#13;
B ehold th eir tears and h ear th eir cries."&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors........................................................... ............................................................. Marion HEIKES LEUDER&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
" My country,&#13;
&#13;
'tis of th ee."&#13;
&#13;
Selection Alumnae&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
"C heer for dear old Morningside,&#13;
To th ee we pledge anew,&#13;
Hearts of faithful love, now and for ever,&#13;
Thy loyal sons and tru e."&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Forever we'll stand, united as one&#13;
In our love for th e d ear old Maroon.&#13;
&#13;
Miss NAOMI GOOD&#13;
&#13;
" To seek the best thru the whole union."&#13;
HUGH FOUKE.&#13;
&#13;
This was a most successful banquet.&#13;
standard.&#13;
&#13;
May those of the future years be up to this&#13;
&#13;
A. M. H. '20 .&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
These Sioux City Business M en&#13;
L ent their Financial Support&#13;
Toward the Production of the&#13;
&#13;
"1920 SIOUX"&#13;
Patronize. Them&#13;
and be Loyally Treated by&#13;
Loyal Supporters of&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Boost Them, They Boosted Us !&#13;
&#13;
Macbride Lakeside Laboratory&#13;
In the spring the budding biologists' fancy turns fondly to thoughts of Lake Okoboji&#13;
and the attending joys of a summer there as a student at the Lakeside Laboratory.&#13;
From the very first day when you land at the grounds, the fun begins. Of course,&#13;
you may have to help put the dining tent up, or mow the lawn, but every one helps&#13;
at the lake and affairs are soon in progress.&#13;
Then comes the field trips, the trips on the boat, days in the laboratory w hen the&#13;
weather does not permit out-of-door work, the jolly times at mess, and the long&#13;
evenings spent by the fire if it is cool, or on the lake, or perhaps down by ye old willow&#13;
spnng.&#13;
Nor the least of the joys of spending six weeks at the laboratory is the opportunity&#13;
one has to either learn to swim or to perfect that art if one has already the rudiments.&#13;
Four o'clock is a popular time of the day with all, for that is the time when the&#13;
whole camp turns out for a plunge. For beginners the first st ruggles are always more&#13;
or less painful, but with the help and instruction of everyone in the camp, regardless&#13;
of w hether they themselves can swim, everybody comes home more or less accomplished.&#13;
And, oh, that home coming ! Of course, you're glad to see the folks and the old&#13;
home town, but you do miss the hikes and the swims and the good bracing lake air so&#13;
much that you immediately wish for more work and more fun at the lake the following&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
�Our Alma Mater&#13;
There is a place named College Hill,&#13;
Where many a soul has come to dwell;&#13;
We often wonder, and with pride,&#13;
We turn our face toward Morningside.&#13;
Who is this clamoring throng we hear,&#13;
That crowds its way from far and near?&#13;
They're hungry souls who've come to drink,&#13;
From journey's far at wisdom's brink.&#13;
And as we name each pedagogue,&#13;
There comes a verse true monologue;&#13;
They're seers who with prophetic tongue,&#13;
Proclaim true wisdom's uttermost rung.&#13;
Year in year out, from fall till June,&#13;
Old Solomon's mill grinds keen and small;&#13;
Each nerve, each fibre's kept in tune,&#13;
With watchful care he grinds them all.&#13;
_&#13;
Behold the warriors of our school,&#13;
They've made themselves a repWith bodies keen, their minds are cool,&#13;
Whene'er they go they go with PEP.&#13;
And as we near those college halls,&#13;
We catch the thrill of argument;&#13;
Our hearts o'erwhelm with joyful calls,&#13;
For Morningside on victory's bent.&#13;
It matters not how strong the foe ,&#13;
Nor with what method he attacks,&#13;
He soon retreats, his gains are slow,&#13;
For Morningside no courage lacks.&#13;
'Tis Morningside who never fails&#13;
Though odds against her gravely stand;&#13;
Her ship, though tossed by stormy sails,&#13;
Ne'er in defeat it goes astrand.&#13;
'Tis not her stature we adore&#13;
In song about our Heap Big School,&#13;
Her metal true is deeper ore,&#13;
Than outward form is pledged to rule.&#13;
Fair Morningside, earth's paradise,&#13;
From thee we claim our treasures all:&#13;
Truth, knowledge, friends with no disguise,&#13;
&#13;
Earth's richest gifts us here befall.&#13;
From north and south, from east and west,&#13;
Ten thousand heart beats sound to thee.&#13;
With ideals high, our life's own test,&#13;
Thy beacon lights beam free.&#13;
And as each day earth's goal we near,&#13;
We search our memories and we hear,&#13;
A hoard of voices shout with pride,&#13;
"Long live our home, dear Morningside."&#13;
Sail on thou pilot of our soul&#13;
With colors streaming high,&#13;
May ne'er a cloud betray thy goal,&#13;
And not a storm thy ship draw nigh.&#13;
Fair Morningside, thou spirit true,&#13;
To thee we lend our hand,&#13;
Our hearts and souls we pledge anew,&#13;
United by thy fate we stand.&#13;
J. H.T.&#13;
&#13;
�It H appens Every Day&#13;
Morningside Spirit&#13;
Our college is a melting pot&#13;
Takes men from every walk in life&#13;
Mixes them in and brings them out&#13;
Seasoned with peppy Morningside spice.&#13;
What is this Morningside spirit&#13;
We are told so much about&#13;
From the day we enter college&#13;
Until we have been ushered out?&#13;
It is something down in our hearts&#13;
Which grips a man from head to sole&#13;
It sticks and it never departs&#13;
Though he travels from pole to pole.&#13;
The fighting soldier's devotion&#13;
For the homeland which he defends&#13;
Is like the student's emotion&#13;
For this institution of friends.&#13;
Like the babe's love of its mother&#13;
This spirit of love in old M. C .&#13;
Makes students sisters and brothers&#13;
All in a great big family.&#13;
Then its pep, love and devotion&#13;
Now I believe you have it straight&#13;
I feel it's a great big something&#13;
Greater than anything however great.&#13;
&#13;
C. D. N., '22.&#13;
&#13;
Back home come our darling brothers&#13;
Home from across the sea.&#13;
They've been making democrats&#13;
From the tyrants in Germany.&#13;
It must take a lot of science&#13;
For ladies to walk down the street&#13;
Yes, when their only reliance&#13;
Is high heels and toes of their feet.&#13;
Just once in a while, professor,&#13;
I become discouraged you know.&#13;
T o get fifty-five I swear, Sir,&#13;
Is what makes the gray hairs grow.&#13;
Alone she stands, pale and weary&#13;
On street cars in our city&#13;
In seats sit, strong and cheery&#13;
Excuses for men I guess.&#13;
Whenever I see a bald-headed man&#13;
A beautiful picture enters my mind&#13;
Flat-irons, wife, and a frying pan&#13;
The same world-wide for all mankind.&#13;
And paint and powder on her face&#13;
Which she thinks makes her look so fair&#13;
I think it's really a disgrace&#13;
I 'd tell her so if only I'd dare.&#13;
Hello there, dear little snowflakes&#13;
Sailing through the air&#13;
Where, oh where are you from?&#13;
It seems without a thought of care.&#13;
If you were as big as I am&#13;
I've reason to suppose&#13;
You'd have just about as much trouble&#13;
As the biggest man who grows.&#13;
I wonder now w hat sidewalks are for&#13;
All covered with slipp'ry ice and snow&#13;
&#13;
�A slip, a fall, a place so sore&#13;
Isn't this right ?-I'd like to know.&#13;
I'd say it takes some nerve&#13;
To ask of some lady you know&#13;
To kindly her sad yarns reserve&#13;
'Cause it spoils your disposition so.&#13;
Did you ever stop to wonder&#13;
Then just sit down and think&#13;
Why all folks are sure to blunder&#13;
And just why we eat, sleep and drink?&#13;
With some parting advice I'm through&#13;
It relates both to me and you&#13;
Wonder, blunder, but don't make fun&#13;
'Cause you' re kind of funny too.&#13;
&#13;
C. D. N., '22.&#13;
&#13;
Zet Novelette&#13;
FOR THE GOOD OF THE ARMY&#13;
CHAPTER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I never was much of a writer. In fact all of my literary ambitions fled in my&#13;
early high school days. I contested th at I was the best story teller of my class.&#13;
I wrote a story and my teacher admitted that my boast was true. However, I was&#13;
the only failu re. I have never w ritten anything but letters since, but I have done&#13;
a great deal of observation.&#13;
I love happy people. I love mischievous people. I love good-looking people.&#13;
For this reason I will tell you of Martha Lynn, a girl in whom all of these qualities&#13;
are combined. When I t hink of her now it seems fu tile to try to describe her. I&#13;
always thought that she was the best girl in our town, and when I have finished&#13;
I think that my readers will agree.&#13;
Martha and her brother and sister lived with their father in a big dingy house&#13;
at the edge of town. Mrs. L ynn had been such a pretty woman. She and her&#13;
husband moved here with their two children when M r. Lynn was made manager&#13;
of the Milling House. Martha was the only child that was born to them in our&#13;
town and she w as the only one we ever claimed as our daughter. T he other two&#13;
child ren were not the kind that would w in old folks' hearts. The oldest was a girl&#13;
who should have worn long dresses at eight and old lace and lavender at twenty.&#13;
Her name was Mary, but there was nothing merry about her. From the moment&#13;
she stepped from the t rain she seemed to dislike the town and its people. She stepped&#13;
deliberately, ignoring anyone's assistance ; her time ·was given to steering Ber tie, her&#13;
brother, into the wait ing cab. After she had him perfectly seated, she arranged her&#13;
hat and dress, and then seated herself. Apparently, it was Mrs. Lynn's custom to&#13;
leave the children to themselves, for she leaned back in the carriage and closed her&#13;
eyes and waited for her husband to make some eleventh-hour arrangements. Only&#13;
once did Bertie w himper, and then he was speedily silenced by on glance from Mary.&#13;
T hese were the " new folks" w ho had come to live in Mill Manor. In a short&#13;
time M rs. Lynn had receved visits from all of the town's professional visitors, but they&#13;
learned nothing except that Mrs. Lynn was in poor health and that both the children&#13;
were very ladylike. W hen it was time for the truly friendly to call, M rs. Smith and&#13;
myself went, and, to my great disappointment , we learned no more.&#13;
Every Sunday Mary took Herbert to church. Every Sunday Herbert went home&#13;
with Mary. H e was never naughty, because she made him good. About two years&#13;
after the Lynn family moved to Millville, Martha was born. E ven this did not make&#13;
Mary and Bertie happier. They led the same life together. So Mary grew up in&#13;
a world of her own. I believe she was the only natural one in the group. She often&#13;
ran from home to play with the other children on our street.&#13;
Time passed, and soon Mary returned from college and became one of our high&#13;
school teachers. Several years before, Bertie had become sort of a bookkeeper in his&#13;
father's office. Mrs. Lynn lived just one year after Mary's graduation. After this,&#13;
Martha, who was just entering high school, spent more time away from home than&#13;
&#13;
�ever, because it became unbearable under the supervision of her starchy sister. The&#13;
two men had long since ceased to question Mary's decisions.&#13;
Martha had never cared for learning as Mary did, but she went to college so that&#13;
she might be away from home. In the beginning of her junior year, she was called&#13;
home by the sudden death of her father.&#13;
Immediately she was given to understand that she was dependent and that she&#13;
would be expected to earn her living. Martha meekly consented and went to work&#13;
in the stock room of the mill, where she checked out supplies for the salesmen.&#13;
Martha's best girl chum, Amy, had gone out of town to school, but had entered the&#13;
office of the mill two years before. After the first day's work, Martha spoke very&#13;
enthusiastically about her commercial plunge.&#13;
"You know, Amy, I never realized how nice it is to work. I'm just like old Prof.,&#13;
'My realizations exceed my expectations'."&#13;
"Wait until you have been at it two years, as I have, and it won't be so novel."&#13;
"Oh, no, no! I'm going to learn the stock and learn the sales routes and soon they&#13;
won't be able to get along without me."&#13;
Some weeks later at lunch Amy, after reminding her of her early plans, said: "I&#13;
guess you're going to know one salesman better than the stock, aren't you, Lynnie ?"&#13;
Quite a friendship had sprung up between the salesman and Martha. She was&#13;
eager to hear their experiences, and they were eager for her witty conversation. The&#13;
route of most interest to Martha was that of Washington state and the coast towns of&#13;
Oregon. Lawrence Holt was the tall, dark, good-natured individual who covered this&#13;
route every spring and fall. Some people told Bertie that he wasn't to have his&#13;
sister with him long, but whenever anyone ovearheard the two talking, it was always&#13;
about his work. So we contented ourselves thinking that Martha would be with us&#13;
for a long while. Then the war broke out - - GRACE BAGLEY.&#13;
CHAPTER II&#13;
Lawrence Holt, like all good American lads, felt the call to arms. It was with a&#13;
sad heart that he left his salesman job, but was happy to know that his vacancy was&#13;
to be filled by such an interesting and competent girl as Martha.&#13;
Before Lawrence went away, Martha had a good talk with him. She gathered&#13;
from his talk such pointers as she would need in carrying on the business and showed&#13;
him her ambition to serve her country as best she could.&#13;
Time passed and Lawrence rose higher and higher in army rank. As an influential&#13;
man he received permission to send to America refugees from France and Belgium to&#13;
be educated in American schools.&#13;
Martha, hearing of this and feeling that she was not doing her bit as a patriot,&#13;
asked permission to teach in a school for these war refugees which Lawrence sent over.&#13;
It was with a great deal of reluctance that she was dismissed from the mill, for she&#13;
was their foremost saleswoman at this time; but permission was hastily given her to ·&#13;
teach in school, for no better suited teacher could be found.&#13;
Day by day :M artha became more and more interested in her pupils. Letter after&#13;
letter was sent to Lawrence, telling of the progress of little Ikey and Paul. She never&#13;
&#13;
tired of telling about her "children", as she called them, and they loved no one better&#13;
than their "dear teacher".&#13;
November eleventh came, and with it the good news that Germany had signed the&#13;
armistice. It was good news for all, especially the pupils in Martha's school. She&#13;
helped them celebrate and helped them make plans of what they would do when "the&#13;
big man", namely, Lawrence, came home.&#13;
It happened that Lawrence was not of the favored who came back as soon as transportation could be obtained, for he was transferred to the army of occupation, which&#13;
meant that he would remain over there for some length of time. Although Martha&#13;
was a bit disappointed, yet she was made of "sterner stuff" and kept a cheerful heart.&#13;
A year and a half later Martha received word that within another month Lawrence&#13;
would be home.&#13;
She was at a loss to know what to do. Her pupils were not through the grades&#13;
and she could not think of giving up her school. What she would do when Lawrence returned was a question in her mind. Whether she should give up her school&#13;
and marry him, marry him and still keep her school, or keep her school and not marry&#13;
him, were the questions.&#13;
AGNETTA FLOM&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
The month passed rapidly. It seemed so to Martha, for every day brought Lawrence's corning that much nearer. Yet she was no nearer the solution of her problem&#13;
than she had been before.&#13;
Teachers were very scarce; especially teachers who were suited for that particular&#13;
work. Martha fully realized what it would mean to these Belgian children to give&#13;
her up. She had won their confidence and love in those first dreadful days of homesickness and loneliness. It would be difficult, indeed, for them to confide in a strange&#13;
teacher as they did in their dear "Miss Martha".&#13;
On the other hand, there was Lawrence Holt to be considered. There was no&#13;
doubt in Martha's mind as to her feelings toward him and it would cause her a&#13;
struggle to give him up entirely. But she did not think it would be quite fair to&#13;
him to marry him and continue teaching.&#13;
The little refugees were always eager to hear any news from the "big man".&#13;
When Martha received the cable saying that Lawrence had sailed, she shared the&#13;
good news with her pupils. They were almost overjoyed at the thought of seeing&#13;
once more the "big man", who had been so kind to them and who had sent them&#13;
to this wonderful land of America and to their beloved "Miss Martha". They&#13;
wanted to show their appreciation in some way, so they immediately began to carry out&#13;
the plans which had been working for some time ..&#13;
About a fortnight later, on a bright sunny afternoon in May, everything was in&#13;
readiness. The children were dressed in their best attire and there was a festive and&#13;
expectant air about the whole place. The "big man" was to arrive in a few hours.&#13;
Lawrence Holt arrived at the appointed time. Few, indeed , are the people who&#13;
receive a reception such as he received from these Belgian children, whom he had befriended. It was a gay and happy party that sat around the dinner table that night .&#13;
&#13;
�Yet, in spite of her happy face, Martha's heart was filled with conflicting emotions&#13;
of joy and sadness; joy in her love for Lawrence and for the children; sadness in the&#13;
thought of giving up either.&#13;
Several weeks had passed. Yet, nothwithstanding Lawrence's pleadings, Martha&#13;
still thought that it was her duty to remain with "her children". Lawrence had&#13;
tried in vain to convince her that it was just as much her duty to marry him and&#13;
help hm carry out his plans as to remain in this school. There was yet much to be&#13;
done in the reconstruction work in France and Belgium. Lawrence Holt had been&#13;
offered a good position in Belgium and he knew that with Martha's help and encouragement he could do much more and better work.&#13;
It did not take long for the keen eyes of the children to see that something was&#13;
troubling their "Miss Martha". She was just as sweet and kind to them as everperhaps more so. They noticed that many times when she spoke to them or looked&#13;
at them, her eyes would fill with t ears. One day an incident occurred which made&#13;
the children desperate. Albert, a bright little lad of about ten years of age and a&#13;
favorite with everyone, chanced to find "Miss Martha" crying in the school room.&#13;
He softly closed the door and hurried to find the other children. Something had to&#13;
be done, they all agreed. They could not bear to see "Miss Martha" so unhappy.&#13;
But what could they do?&#13;
"Let's ask the 'Big man' to help us," suggested Albert. "We know him better&#13;
than onyone else and he loves Miss Martha, too."&#13;
Lawrence Holt was called to the conference and the case was put before him.&#13;
" Do you know what the trouble is?" and "What can we do?" were some of the&#13;
questions asked him.&#13;
"Yes, children, I think I know what is troubling Miss Martha," answered Lawrence; "and I believe you can do something; in fact, I believe you are the only ones&#13;
who can help her out of her difficulty."&#13;
" Oh, tell us all about it, Mr. Lawrence," demanded the eager children.&#13;
Lawrence Holt realizing how much depended on his words, told his story well. He&#13;
told them that he knew how much they needed "Miss Martha", but he told also,&#13;
how much he needed her in his great work of reconstruction in their own homeland&#13;
across the sea, and that for them to give up "Miss Martha" would be for the good of&#13;
that great army of workers of which he was the leader.&#13;
When he had finished speaking, there was a deep silence for a moment. Then&#13;
Albert, the spokesman of the little group, said gravely: "Miss Martha must go with&#13;
you, Mr. Lawrence. Helena, go bring her here."&#13;
Helena needed no second bidding and in almost an instant, it seemed, she had returned, bringing Martha wth her. Martha, noticing their sober faces, glanced&#13;
around the group a trifle bewildered. Then Albert solemnly advanced, took her hand&#13;
and placed it in that of Lawrence Holt, saying, "Dear Miss Martha, as much as we&#13;
want you here, you must go with the .big man. He needs you , and Belgium needs you·&#13;
even more than we do. It is for Belgium and the army."&#13;
"For Belgium and the army," echoed the chorus of childish voices.&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Match Fact ory Inc.&#13;
Incorporated February 14, 1492, under the International Law of Fussology.&#13;
HoN. DAN Cupid,&#13;
&#13;
Manager.&#13;
&#13;
(Every time he shoots at his mark he Mrs. it)&#13;
President ...................................................... Harold Butler&#13;
Vice-President ............................................ Florence Palm&#13;
Secretary ...................................................... Bert Pritchard&#13;
Treasurer ..................................................... Mary Dolliver&#13;
Official Knot Tier ......................................Bishop Buehler&#13;
Business Manager ...................................... Professor Hayes&#13;
Floor Walker ................... .............................. Mrs. Jackson&#13;
Assistants......Tom Friest, Fenton Jones, Lorene Williams&#13;
Advisory Board ...................... Chas. Klippel, Irene Cooper&#13;
PUBLICATION BUREAU&#13;
Chairman ........................................................Miss Dimitt&#13;
Dave Klatt&#13;
Herb. Mahood&#13;
Department of Foreign Exchange .......... Lieutenant Brown&#13;
&#13;
A ssistants&#13;
Mae Hanson&#13;
Clifford Kenned y&#13;
Eva Maxwell&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Hurlbert&#13;
Glen Glazier&#13;
Pearl Brown&#13;
&#13;
WALL STREET SPECULATORS&#13;
Harold Raun&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
Beatrice Spangler&#13;
Herman Bruswitz&#13;
Gertrude Overacker&#13;
Francis Kingsbury&#13;
Esther Lange&#13;
Hugh Fouke&#13;
Wilson Smith&#13;
Percy Mickelson&#13;
Evelyn Terry&#13;
TRUSTEES&#13;
Evelyn Balkema&#13;
Ray Troutman&#13;
Tom McBride&#13;
Dorothy Knudson&#13;
John Miller&#13;
Miriam Fish&#13;
Lee Barks&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
Evan Engberg&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
BOND HOLDER-Herb Meyer&#13;
STOCK HOLDERS&#13;
Helen &amp; George&#13;
Warner &amp; Norma&#13;
&#13;
John McB. &amp; Gladys&#13;
Wayne &amp; Evelyn&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
�FASHIONS&#13;
&#13;
FASHIONS&#13;
&#13;
up-to-the-minute&#13;
&#13;
at moderate prices&#13;
&#13;
Smart debonair modes for&#13;
college young women&#13;
FASHIONS designed particularly to bejewel the fancies and charm the desires of&#13;
women of college ages.&#13;
THRU the diligent research&#13;
of our New York representative, the modes preferred by&#13;
Eastern debutantes and society circles are almost simultaneously depicted at the&#13;
Pelletier store.&#13;
&#13;
NEW,&#13;
&#13;
sprightly, youthful&#13;
modes enhanced by Pelletier&#13;
value-giving invite the selection of all college young&#13;
women wishing something&#13;
different, individual and piquant in toggery.&#13;
COSTUMES&#13;
GOWNS&#13;
&#13;
FROCKS&#13;
SKI RT S&#13;
&#13;
- and all the pertinent accessories that go to make the&#13;
discerning wardrobe delightfully arrayed and comprehensively assembled in Pelletier's&#13;
Apparel Sections.&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
�1&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
1918&#13;
"Girl's Gossip" out.&#13;
The girls sure can put out some R eporter.&#13;
Erwin gets "hot-handed" at Sunshine.&#13;
"Why"?&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
High School Track Meet. Sioux City&#13;
High wins.&#13;
Sunshine Inn picnic at Riverside.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Soph picnic at North Riverside.&#13;
Prof. Thompson views the "natural&#13;
scenery."&#13;
Bob Brown would like to know why&#13;
" he" doesn't go home.&#13;
&#13;
7 Harrison Heckman's mustache reaches&#13;
the first degree.&#13;
slow."&#13;
14-&#13;
&#13;
" It seems to grow so&#13;
&#13;
Madrigal Club A nnual Home Concert.&#13;
"Some band ".&#13;
Prof. MacCollin makes SOME leader.&#13;
&#13;
16 May Fete.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Best one ever given in&#13;
spite of the wind . "Come again Cupid."&#13;
Philo Up-river T rip.&#13;
Frances did&#13;
you enjoy that row down-stream?&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Just examinations.&#13;
them so much.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
More exams.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
Senior Play, "All of a Sudden Peggy."&#13;
Reunion of the classes and literary soFarewell chapel service. Glad to see&#13;
the "has beens".&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
We all enjoyed&#13;
&#13;
Commencement exercises&#13;
Church.&#13;
Goodbye Seniors.&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Davidson's-Sioux City's Largest&#13;
Department Store&#13;
ARGEST not only in actual amount of floor&#13;
space, but greatest by far in p oint of service&#13;
rendered to the public. Du ring thirty-five&#13;
years of progressive retailing under the same&#13;
management which established this business,&#13;
D avidson's has earned fo r itself, and is sustaining, an enviable reputation- a reputation which places it&#13;
high in the list of those institutions which have proved themselves very real and very necessary facto rs in the growth and&#13;
well-being of our city.&#13;
&#13;
Grace&#13;
THE BIG STORE&#13;
&#13;
�Snappy Spring&#13;
Neckwear&#13;
for the particular dresser.&#13;
Our lines display the season's&#13;
&#13;
SEPTEMBER&#13;
&#13;
style&#13;
&#13;
de•&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE HABERDASHERY SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
1918&#13;
24-&#13;
&#13;
complete&#13;
&#13;
mands in our exclusive&#13;
showings of Cutter and&#13;
Crossette Cravats.&#13;
&#13;
THE DISTINCTIVE&#13;
OUTFITTER FOR&#13;
PARTICULAR MEN&#13;
&#13;
Back at old M.C. again.&#13;
"Glad to see you old sport."&#13;
&#13;
25 Y. w. Party in the old Association&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Y. M. Stag in the Gym.&#13;
&#13;
26 Classes begin again.&#13;
Can you tell me where French I&#13;
meets?&#13;
"Buy your chapel seats early."&#13;
&#13;
27 Y. M. and Y. W. Joint. Freshman&#13;
girls all step home.&#13;
&#13;
28 Girls taken into society.&#13;
"This suspense is awful!"&#13;
&#13;
29 First Sunday away from home. I'm&#13;
homesick.&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
"Boo-hoo !"&#13;
&#13;
Our first Monday classes.&#13;
pared."&#13;
&#13;
"Not pre-&#13;
&#13;
For the Man Who Appreciates Distinction in Haberdashery&#13;
That Man Will Appreciate Our New Displays which&#13;
Are Now Ready&#13;
We've Aimed for Distinction and We've Hit Our Mark&#13;
And We've Expressed Our Ideas of Quality&#13;
in a Splendid Manner&#13;
Specializing on Shirts, Collars,&#13;
Neckwear, Hosiery, Pajamas, Underwear, Gloves, Bath Robes, and&#13;
Full Dress Requisites.&#13;
Phone 9345&#13;
&#13;
617 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
�OCTOBER&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
S. A. T. C. men inducted into the&#13;
service. Quarantine immediately follows. "Remember the 'Silent Six'."&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Junior girls decide to publish THE&#13;
SIOUX alone.&#13;
"Fools rush in where angels fear to&#13;
tread."&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY"S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH and&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Juniors dine at the West and go to the&#13;
theater. "Some class to us."&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
"Flu" scare. School closes for one&#13;
week. Loveland Annex fitted up as a&#13;
hospital.&#13;
Serenades are popular. Ask Mary for&#13;
particulars.&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
THE GOOD OLD DAYS ONCE MORE&#13;
With the passing of the war clouds come the good times,&#13;
the jolly parties, and sport activities yo ung chaps like so well,&#13;
and in which smart clothes play so&#13;
prominent a part.&#13;
We specialize in Young Men's&#13;
Clothes- our style hits of the season&#13;
bear the Kuppenheimer label. If&#13;
you haven't seen&#13;
the new ideas in&#13;
suits, the clever&#13;
seam effects, the&#13;
welt belts, the&#13;
square&#13;
p at ch&#13;
pockets, and other&#13;
exclusive sty 1 e&#13;
features, come in&#13;
tomorrow - don't&#13;
put it off.&#13;
Silk Shirts, fine&#13;
.Madras Shirts,&#13;
Nightwear,&#13;
Beautiful Neckwear, Felt Hats,&#13;
Straw Hats,&#13;
Genuine Leather&#13;
Luggage, of the&#13;
Finest Kind.&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
&#13;
�NOVEMBER&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
School opens after four weeks of vacation because of the "flu". We are&#13;
saddened by the loss of three of our&#13;
boys.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
We pledge $4,000 for the United War&#13;
Work Fund .&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
"Beat Vermilion." Big pep meeting&#13;
at chapel, for we play South Dakota&#13;
tomorrow. "Skinny" introduced as&#13;
football captain.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
"It has been done." We beat Vermilion again.&#13;
S. A. T. C . men receive their first&#13;
over-Sunday passes.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Reception . Just as thrilling&#13;
as ever.&#13;
Omar Adams stepped.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Boys sent to chapel to study.&#13;
"Grand" party.&#13;
&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S and MISSES&#13;
&#13;
SUITS, COATS and&#13;
AFTERNOON DRESSES&#13;
&#13;
Peace announced at 2 :40 A. M. Big&#13;
celebration ; whistles and bells for&#13;
hours; immense crowds; big parade.&#13;
"No more 'War Aims' for me."&#13;
&#13;
]5&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Creations&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Coach and Mrs. Saunderson entertained the football men . Orin Goodrich elected captain for next year.&#13;
&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
&#13;
Agora party for the S. A. T. C. men&#13;
and all the college girls.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Smart College Footwear&#13;
&#13;
First "Student Sing" led by Professor&#13;
McCollin. Shall we have one each&#13;
week? "YEA, Bo."&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
DISTRIBUTORS OF&#13;
&#13;
Collegian R eporter makes its first appearance this year. Nellie Carpenter&#13;
is editor and Henry Marsh the business manager.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Also&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Thanksgiving Day. All the army men&#13;
invited out for dinner. "Where was&#13;
the Lieut.?&#13;
&#13;
The H ouse of Quality, Style and Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
�1&#13;
&#13;
DON'T GUESS-BE SURE&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Boys came to chapel masked.&#13;
Posters? What does it all mean?&#13;
&#13;
5 Commercial Club and the Trustees&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
lunch at the barracks.&#13;
fine."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
"The pie was&#13;
&#13;
That's an important&#13;
point about this store;&#13;
you can alway s be&#13;
certain of correct, au-&#13;
&#13;
Posters! Now we know what it's all&#13;
about. Y. W. County Fair advertised&#13;
in the chapel.&#13;
&#13;
thentic style; the best&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
S. A. T. C. quarantined again. County Fair called off.&#13;
&#13;
wear; good fit; fine&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Must have your temperature taken&#13;
once a day. "Don't bite the end off,&#13;
Ruth."&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
possible values; long&#13;
quality fabrics. These&#13;
things are guaranteed&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Demobilization of the S. A. T. C.&#13;
"Hot-hand" Association active. "Look&#13;
out, Sergeant, they're getting even&#13;
now."&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Society Christmas Joints. Frolics on&#13;
the third floor.&#13;
" How did those dish towels get into&#13;
the Edison?"&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
the clothes we sell&#13;
&#13;
Christmas vacation begins.&#13;
" I'm going back to the farm."&#13;
&#13;
We Specialize on&#13;
Young Men's Wear&#13;
&#13;
The home of Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx clothes&#13;
&#13;
.I&#13;
&#13;
�JANUARY&#13;
1919&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
School again.&#13;
Our soldiers are coming back.&#13;
looks like old M. C. again.&#13;
&#13;
14-&#13;
&#13;
Elections for the men's societies out.&#13;
Almost as exciting for the girls as for&#13;
the boys.&#13;
Prof. Faust steps to the Auditorium&#13;
with Miss Baker. "She's so fond of&#13;
.&#13;
music. "&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
17 Lecture Course. Ralph Parlette, "The&#13;
University of the Hard Knocks".&#13;
"You can't keep a good man down."&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Society Joints. The first of the year.&#13;
Frolics and fun on the third floor.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Freshies have the chapel period. "Some&#13;
faculty."&#13;
&#13;
Anhotel thataimsto&#13;
Please each patron&#13;
regard less of the&#13;
extent o f patronage&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Devitts serve soapsuds and Sunshine&#13;
has salt in the pie.&#13;
"Variety is the spice of life."&#13;
"May I sit next to you?"&#13;
Exams make our lives miserable again.&#13;
&#13;
Serves all alike -&#13;
&#13;
with promptness and&#13;
&#13;
unfaltering courtesy&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN&#13;
&#13;
$1 .50 and up&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
B. HARRIS&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
&#13;
1 Post-exam Jubilee.&#13;
Who ate all the ice-cream?&#13;
Morningside beat Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
19-13, in basket ball.&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Agora elections. How many votes did&#13;
you buy, Hank?&#13;
Criterion Quartette on the Lecture&#13;
Course.&#13;
&#13;
Same place, same force, same service.&#13;
We are vain enough to feel that this is&#13;
all that we need say to bring our old&#13;
friends back, and new comers will follow the crowd.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
PETER S PARK&#13;
&#13;
Abe De Vaul won the oratorical contest for Morningside. Reception in&#13;
the Society Hall for the orators.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen delegates sent to Cornell.&#13;
Did you meet your uncle, Hoody?&#13;
Monument Run. Hunt comes in first&#13;
and Lory second.&#13;
&#13;
27- New locks on the attic door, and bean&#13;
showers all in the same day.&#13;
could it happen?&#13;
Creighton beat M. C., 30- 10.&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
How&#13;
&#13;
With the college books under our roof&#13;
we can supply most all your wants. If&#13;
we don't have what you want we will&#13;
get it.&#13;
We sell Houston Fountain Pens on a&#13;
positive guarantee, if you are not suited&#13;
tell us.&#13;
Everything in the Kodak line with&#13;
twenty-four hour finishing service.&#13;
Your college days picture book will be&#13;
one of your greatest sources of pleasure in years to come. Let us help&#13;
you make it.&#13;
&#13;
Men's Banquet. Theodore Engberg&#13;
and Joshua Norton were there.&#13;
&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Pro p.&#13;
&#13;
�MARCH&#13;
&#13;
1 Women's Banquet.&#13;
the cup.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Junior girls win&#13;
But what could you expect?&#13;
&#13;
Something wrong with the piano.&#13;
it beans or paper?&#13;
&#13;
Is&#13;
&#13;
Drake beat Morningside 20-15.&#13;
Freshies tied up the Sophmen , but&#13;
still they got to the party in time.&#13;
Beulah Edgington wins the Waffle contest; 21 waffles. Oh, Beulah!&#13;
Hawkeye Banquet. Florence didn't&#13;
know his name and he didn't know&#13;
hers.&#13;
Alarm clocks come to chapel. We&#13;
knew it was dry, but we didn't know&#13;
that anyone would have to be wakened&#13;
up.&#13;
Basket ball tournament. Spencer wins.&#13;
M Carnival. Mary's song moved the&#13;
entire house "which way"?&#13;
"Lorene, shut that window so the car&#13;
will start."&#13;
Sophs win the basket ball tournament.&#13;
"That wasn't much."&#13;
Sophs have charge of chapel. Pep&#13;
meeting for the Yale-Harvard games.&#13;
"Herb, where's your powder puff?"&#13;
Junior-Senior Banquet in the Society&#13;
Halls. Some folks seated by request.&#13;
Fresh Party in the Gym. Their lungs&#13;
are well developed.&#13;
Harvard beats Yale 4-3.&#13;
How would you like to be girls all the&#13;
time?&#13;
&#13;
There are few newspapers in the United States giving their&#13;
readers the variety of good news and features printed each&#13;
evening in&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Tribune&#13;
"More than a newspaper"&#13;
50,000 Evening Circulation&#13;
Following are some of the reasons why The Tribune has&#13;
a larger circulation than any morning or evening newspaper&#13;
published in a city of 100,000 population or less.&#13;
Full 24-hour Associated Press Telegraph&#13;
Service.&#13;
&#13;
Daily birthday feature of historical interest.&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive&#13;
Service.&#13;
&#13;
Daily comic by Fox-Toonerville Trolley, Powerful Katrinka and Terrible&#13;
Tempered Mr. Bang.&#13;
&#13;
United&#13;
&#13;
Press&#13;
&#13;
Telegraph&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive London Times and Public&#13;
Ledger European Service.&#13;
&#13;
Daily comics, "Say, Pop," and "The&#13;
Card Players."&#13;
&#13;
Washington news from Tribune Bureau.&#13;
Peace Conference stories by William&#13;
Allen White, brilliant Kansas Editor.&#13;
&#13;
"My Soldier Husband," daily story of&#13;
gripping interest.&#13;
"Young Lady Across the Way," amusing daily paragraph.&#13;
&#13;
Unexcelled Market reports.&#13;
Two colored comic pages each Saturday&#13;
"Polly and Her Pals" and "Say, Pop."&#13;
&#13;
Abe Martin-daily bit of humor.&#13;
Walt Mason, Rippling Rhyme-daily.&#13;
&#13;
Two feature pages of interesting world&#13;
events each Saturday.&#13;
Weekly letter by T. P. O'Conner, eminent member of British parliament.&#13;
"The Abandoned Room," daily mystery&#13;
story of fascinating interest.&#13;
Daily health talks by Dr. W. A. Evans,&#13;
recognized authority.&#13;
&#13;
Editorial page-reprints gleaned from&#13;
the country's best newspapers.&#13;
"From the Telegraph&#13;
items in brief.&#13;
&#13;
Table"-news&#13;
&#13;
" A Guide to Good Manners'·-daily&#13;
feature.&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
Hundreds of special correspondents in&#13;
Iowa, South Dakota and Nebraska assures&#13;
all state news.&#13;
&#13;
Daily "Good Night Stories" for . children.&#13;
&#13;
Editorial policy-independent, unhampered by any influence except the welfare&#13;
of the people of this territory.&#13;
&#13;
Daily&#13;
Forbes.&#13;
&#13;
Beauty&#13;
&#13;
Chats,&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
Edna&#13;
&#13;
No other newspaper in Iowa, Nebraska, or South D akota&#13;
buys the three great international telegraph reports for its&#13;
readers.&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Tribune&#13;
More News&#13;
&#13;
More Views&#13;
&#13;
�APRIL&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Soph Annual Board election.&#13;
"Now be democratic."&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Nellie Carpenter's sixteenth birthday.&#13;
Dinner party down in the Reporter&#13;
room. Some feed, judging from what&#13;
we saw through the window. "Oh,&#13;
you bottle."&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Junior chapel day to boost for the Annual. Everybody wants one, after seeing the sample of the best Annual ever&#13;
published.&#13;
Who says so?&#13;
We all say so.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Miss Bennet is here for a Vocational&#13;
Conference. "Some girls get married,&#13;
and some don't. There is many a slip&#13;
in the best laid plans."&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho Joint at Riverside.&#13;
"Be careful, Flynn; we may want to&#13;
skate on this floor again."&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
sends greetings&#13;
to her many friends&#13;
&#13;
in all arts&#13;
p&#13;
the world&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
REV. FRANKE. MOSSMAN,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
D.D.&#13;
&#13;
�B. Spangler: Wait a minute; I have to put my on my veil.&#13;
De Vaul: Oh, you don't need it.&#13;
Beatrice: I always have to wear it when I go out with you.&#13;
&#13;
Long &amp; Hansen Commission&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
Evan E.: It seems funny that when Edna and I are together, we never talk-we&#13;
just sit, and--think.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Winnipeg&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
So. St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
Herchy ( calling Dollivers) : Hello! Say! is the street light in front of your house&#13;
burning? This is the electric company.&#13;
Mrs. D.: I don't know, but I'll go and see. (Returning to phone): Yes, it is.&#13;
Herchey: Will you please blow it out?&#13;
&#13;
Your Satisfaction, Our Success"&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
We will be pleased to furnish you with information&#13;
regarding the market or live stock conditions at any time.&#13;
&#13;
Now the ears, so I always had thunk,&#13;
Should bear sounds to the top of the trunk.&#13;
But from Some, I observe,&#13;
They seem merely to serve&#13;
As racks for the Jooler-man's junk.&#13;
&#13;
THEY ARE BUILDERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Energy, Health and Endurance&#13;
&#13;
Miss Lillard: Are there any in this class who do not expect to teach?&#13;
Grace Wishard: I don't.&#13;
&#13;
So Necessary for your School Work&#13;
LET US DONATE&#13;
&#13;
A Prof. to beat Van Horne.&#13;
&#13;
La Fama Chocolates&#13;
&#13;
Stevens, a new style collar.&#13;
Morningside, a Science Hall and Dormatory.&#13;
Biology Department, some odorless specimens.&#13;
1920 Sioux, a graveyard.&#13;
Third Floor, a kitchenette.&#13;
Cornie Dyke, a new "case".&#13;
A way to work Hirsch.&#13;
The Joke Editor, some new jokes.&#13;
&#13;
MADE BY&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
Sioux City, U.S. A.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Laux surely has good intentions, for she announced to her French I Class that&#13;
she wished to be good and not too dear.&#13;
&#13;
•·&#13;
&#13;
�Rapalee Marble &amp; Granite Works&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LARGEST MONUMENT&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
&#13;
You ·will always see the greatest variety of high grade&#13;
monuments priced as low as the lowest, quality considered. You are not paying some agent a commission when&#13;
you place an order with us.&#13;
Auto Phone 2370&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
605-7-9 West Seventh St.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS PINS&#13;
&#13;
EmBLEmS&#13;
&#13;
MEDALS&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
&#13;
WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING&#13;
&#13;
Jonas Olson&#13;
&#13;
&amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1895&#13;
MANUFACTURING JEWELERS AND&#13;
DIAM0ND M0UNTERS&#13;
&#13;
510 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3211&#13;
&#13;
�Arthur Schuldt (passing the cookies to Jennie Kniffen ) :&#13;
&#13;
Will you have some,&#13;
&#13;
sweetness?&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
"I hope your father doesn't object to my staying so late," said Bob, as the clock&#13;
struck twelve.&#13;
"Oh, dear, no," replied Verna, with difficulty suppressing a yawn.&#13;
save him the expense of a night watchman."&#13;
&#13;
Pearl B.:&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE A D RETAIL&#13;
&#13;
"He says you&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
What do you call Harry MacFayden, the man who stages the plays&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Mother for&#13;
&#13;
at the Grand?&#13;
Ruth P.: Why, stage coach, of course.&#13;
&#13;
BUTTERNUT BREA D&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
&#13;
Zordee Stanford: Why, we can hear the cattle in the stock yards lowing. (But&#13;
on listening more closely, she decided it was the fellows at Stonebreakers, entertaining&#13;
the neighborhood with the usual evening musical program.)&#13;
&#13;
408-410 Iowa Street&#13;
Teacher:&#13;
&#13;
What?&#13;
&#13;
Forgotten your pencil again?&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 197&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1197&#13;
&#13;
What would you think of a&#13;
&#13;
soldier who went to war without a gun?&#13;
Tommy: I'd think he was an officer, sir.&#13;
&#13;
EVERYBODY'S DESSERT!&#13;
&#13;
Harold Raun ( at M . minstrel show) : I'm going to sit in the bald headed row.&#13;
H. B.: Any row you'd sit in would be the bald headed row, wouldn't it?&#13;
&#13;
The reason our pure Ice Cream is " Everybody's Dessert"&#13;
is that it is the one dessert everybody likes and never tires of.&#13;
A bunch of girls were discussing the properness of putting the elbows on the table.&#13;
Eva Treman: It is all right to put your elbows on the table, if you can do it gracefully.&#13;
&#13;
And just think! This favorite dish is absolutely purecannot harm the most delicate system.&#13;
&#13;
I often do.&#13;
&#13;
Eat a plate of Ice Cream every day! It is good for youand always be sure that it is&#13;
&#13;
Evan Ausman ( in Psych class) : It is impossible to reach the other side of the&#13;
street. No sooner than you reach the other side, the other side is the other side.&#13;
&#13;
"HANFORD'S"&#13;
The Cream of Quality&#13;
&#13;
All the concrete isn't in the pavements, nor is all the mahogany used for chiffoniers.&#13;
&#13;
Made by&#13;
&#13;
HANFORD PRODUCE CO.&#13;
&#13;
Lives of editors all remind us,&#13;
That our lives are not sublime,&#13;
For they have to work like thunder,&#13;
To get this copy out on time.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�A COLLEGE DICTIONARY&#13;
Bluff: To cover a deficit of brains with an issue of brass.&#13;
Cut : A cruel attempt to deprive the class of the pleasure of one's company and the&#13;
benefit of his recitation.&#13;
English: Our mother tongue; father seldom uses it.&#13;
Faculty: An organization to furnish jokes for the students.&#13;
Flunk: The process by which one becomes a special.&#13;
Period : Fifty minutes of torture.&#13;
Quiz: Means by which students recall how little they know.&#13;
Recitation: A game of bluff.&#13;
Study: An obsolete term.&#13;
Dorothy D.: Say, Hugh, how did you get that wound stripe?&#13;
Hugh Fouke: My heart broke when we didn't march to Berlin.&#13;
&#13;
Mother: Johnny, you said you'd been to Sunday School.&#13;
Johnny: Yes, mamma.&#13;
Mother: How does it happen your hands smell of fish?&#13;
Johnny: Why, I carried the Sunday School papers and the outside is all about&#13;
&#13;
Everything&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade, Any Style&#13;
&#13;
Building with Brick&#13;
AT A MODERATE COST&#13;
&#13;
The Practicability and Stability of Brick-its value as an&#13;
investment-as a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever.&#13;
Thoughts concerning these matters we would like to submit&#13;
for consideration.&#13;
SIOUX CITY BRICK &amp; TILE CO .&#13;
Office and Display Room, No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
Jonah and the whale.&#13;
The Physiology class was studying the lungs. Here's a description of them:&#13;
The lungs, situated on the mezzanine beneath the air-shaft, are the headquarters of&#13;
the fresh-air mission, supported entirely by involuntary contributions, as in other&#13;
charitable organizations; donations from questionable sources are accepted w ithout&#13;
comment-for the greater good that may result.&#13;
&#13;
JUST IMAGINE&#13;
Bob Brown, without Verna.&#13;
Professor Hayes, weighing 300 pounds&#13;
Bert Pritchard quiet.&#13;
Frances Boyd without a smile.&#13;
Ray Troutman with a joke.&#13;
Ruth Mahood with nothing to do.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt a toe dancer.&#13;
Dave Klatt in a hurry.&#13;
Flossie Day loafing.&#13;
The boys at the Yale-Harvard game.&#13;
Rhoda Walin without a man.&#13;
John Miller without Miriam Fish.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Place to buy&#13;
&#13;
GOOD&#13;
COAL&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lumber Co.&#13;
RETAIL COAL&#13;
1604 East Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
�A Bank Owes the Community Something&#13;
Weconsider&#13;
&#13;
Ask Evan Engberg, Edna Bekins, Neva Norton, or Park Moorhead if they had&#13;
a good time the night they went to Onawa to get Park's car, and didn't find the car,&#13;
but had to come back to Sioux City on the midnight train! !&#13;
&#13;
it a plain matter of duty for every bank in&#13;
the coun try to take up th e THRIFT propaganda where the&#13;
Government leaves off.&#13;
For our part we purpose to hammer away, day in and day&#13;
out, on th e vice of extravagance, whether we get a cent's worth&#13;
of new Savings business or not. If our advertising starts you&#13;
to save, we will be satisfied. If it sta rts you saving with us,&#13;
we will be doubly satisfied.&#13;
&#13;
Adam, they say, must have been a happy man; he had no mother-in-law.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Henry Marsh's policy: It is better to be a climber with scarred shins and tibial&#13;
exastases than to have callosities over the eschial tuberosities from being boosted.&#13;
&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
Th e National Bank for Savings&#13;
&#13;
4 Per Cent. Interest Paid&#13;
Perhaps these jokes are very old ,&#13;
And should be on the shelf;&#13;
But if you want some better ones,&#13;
Make up a few yourself.&#13;
When Inspiration lends her aid,&#13;
And you wish to break into type,&#13;
Try something funny, then you'll find&#13;
That comics are no pipe.&#13;
If you read these jests, do not get sore,&#13;
For empty is our bowl;&#13;
Your name in spite was not employed,&#13;
But only to complete the scroll.&#13;
&#13;
Open Monday Evenings&#13;
&#13;
Headquarters For Dependable&#13;
&#13;
FURNITURE&#13;
AND RUGS&#13;
In buying Furni ture and Home Furn ishin gs&#13;
there a re many ways th at you can test th e merits&#13;
of the store with which you deal. We abide&#13;
cheerfu lly by th e test that our values show&#13;
throu gh compari son with others, an d urge our&#13;
custome rs to satisfy their doubts, how ever slight,&#13;
in that conclusive way. You will find that our&#13;
prices a re not on ly the fairest, but in many cases&#13;
the lowest in town.&#13;
&#13;
Quality : Service : Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
�SECURITY NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Capital and Surplus, $600,000&#13;
W . P. MANLEY, President&#13;
A. B. DARLING, Vice-President&#13;
L. R. MANLEY, Cashier&#13;
C. A . PATCH, Asst. Cashier&#13;
R. E. BROWN, Asst. Cashier&#13;
For thirty-five years this bank has been identified with&#13;
Sioux City and its trade territory.&#13;
With resources of over Seven :M illion Dollars and thoroughly modern equipment this institution is in position to&#13;
render you high class service and invites your business.&#13;
&#13;
C. J. MILLIGAN, Inc.&#13;
304 Wall Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Quality Feeds and Graded Hay&#13;
Alfalfa, Molasses Feeds, D airy Feeds, Hog Fat Feeds,&#13;
Horse Feed&#13;
Poultry and Chick Feeds Made in Sioux City, under&#13;
C. J. M. Brand&#13;
Make Fat Horses, Steers, Hogs, Sheep and Poultry&#13;
Everything for the Feeder&#13;
M0RNINGSIDE ELEVATOR AN D COAL CO.&#13;
Clean Coal&#13;
All Kinds&#13;
For Furnace,&#13;
Stoves or&#13;
Hot Water Plants&#13;
Also Wood and Kindling&#13;
Feed All Kinds&#13;
&#13;
Morningside owned&#13;
and ope rated.&#13;
The profits are spent&#13;
here and not in&#13;
some other town.&#13;
Help Morningside&#13;
and you he! p yourself.&#13;
&#13;
East Morningside&#13;
Retail D eliveries in :M orningside&#13;
Bell 1139&#13;
&#13;
Auto 66451&#13;
&#13;
�SUGGESTIONS TO THE 1921 SIOUX JOKE EDITOR&#13;
1. Take at least two classes under Professor Van Horne, and al ways come prepared&#13;
with a note-book and soft lead pencil.&#13;
2. Never cut the Orpheum-the bill you miss might have something funny.&#13;
3. Impress all your friends into the service-the more the merrier.&#13;
4. If your work is to be crowned with success, "bawl out" as many as possible.&#13;
&#13;
W here Quality is&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
Cornie Dyke ( taking Florence Palm to the train) : Here's your pocket book and&#13;
keys. Is that all?&#13;
Florence: Yes, I believe so, thank you.&#13;
Porter (interrupting): No, sah; no, sah; that ain't all.&#13;
Dyke: Why, what else is there?&#13;
Porter ( edging away) : You'd better give back what she give you last night, suh.&#13;
&#13;
Bill Smith: Each hour I spend with you is like a pearl to me.&#13;
Esther L.: Quit stringing me.&#13;
&#13;
There was a little dog who had a broken tail.&#13;
but this dog had his weak end.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
(This applies to faculty as&#13;
&#13;
You know, every dog has his day,&#13;
&#13;
410 Pierce St.&#13;
&#13;
One Quality- The Best&#13;
Plants and Cut Flowers&#13;
&#13;
AT MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
as well.)&#13;
2. Chapel attendance is compulsory unless the monitors like "Hersheys".&#13;
3. Every student must attend one service at least, at his own church on Sunday.&#13;
"Movies" do not count.&#13;
4. Gambling by students is strictly contrary to the rules of the school. "Matching" in&#13;
the drug store is prohibited by this regulation.&#13;
5. As far as it is possible, it is desirable that no work shall be done by students on the&#13;
Sabbath. It interferes with Sunday dates.&#13;
6. Playing cards is a waste of time and money. If you find it necessary to spend your&#13;
"roll", get a "steady" and you'll get rid of it fast enough.&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Things&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
SPORTING AND ATHLETIC GOODS&#13;
Outdoors, Afield, Afloat&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C. Lees Tennis, Golf, Baseball&#13;
Goods, Ladies' Kampit Outing and Riding Suits&#13;
Camp and Vacation Goods&#13;
ORCUTTS HARDWARE&#13;
Nebraska 312-15&#13;
&#13;
REVISED REGULATIONS FOR THE GUIDANCE OF STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
1. Smoking is forbidden on the campus-in the daytime.&#13;
&#13;
as Represented&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
Floral Artists&#13;
510 Pierce St.&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
"Success after forty, comes from working like sixty" ob'&#13;
serves one of our famous editors.&#13;
And we will add that- Success after a boy gets into long&#13;
trousers is largely a matter of how hard he works the credit&#13;
column of his Savings Book and his Head.&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
We Pay 4 % Interest&#13;
&#13;
�Spring 1919&#13;
&#13;
Now R eady&#13;
&#13;
HOW ARD CLOTHING CO.&#13;
MEN'S&#13;
&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
Out of the Ordinary&#13;
&#13;
Is Out of the Rut&#13;
+20 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
LEROY BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
Cattle Salesman&#13;
&#13;
Hogs and Sheep&#13;
&#13;
"We&#13;
&#13;
Work and Win"&#13;
&#13;
BUYERS&#13;
&#13;
SELLERS&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
CATTLE&#13;
&#13;
STOCKERS&#13;
FEEDERS&#13;
&#13;
HOGS&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
SHEEP&#13;
&#13;
BREEDERS&#13;
&#13;
E. L. BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
CARRIE C. L ARSON&#13;
Accountant&#13;
&#13;
Solicitor&#13;
&#13;
Bell 316&#13;
&#13;
Au to 1460&#13;
&#13;
Snyder-McFadden Co.&#13;
Lighting Fixtures&#13;
602-604 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�TO THE GRINDS&#13;
Under the shaded study lamp,&#13;
The college grind is found ;&#13;
He digs, and digs, and concentrates,&#13;
Until his head goes 'round.&#13;
The grinds, their lessons always have,&#13;
(They've no wasted hours to rue);&#13;
They pass their work right cheerfully on&#13;
That others have theirs, too.&#13;
So, here's a word for all of them;&#13;
Thanks that they're here with us;&#13;
The grinds their evenings spend at home&#13;
So the rest of the bunch can fuss.&#13;
&#13;
You need a FOUNTAIN PEN -&#13;
&#13;
-thats's evident&#13;
You want the BEST-&#13;
&#13;
-that's natural&#13;
See the Jiffy 3 in one pen. Self Filling. Tablet Ink Filling and Dropper Filling. ALL&#13;
&#13;
IN ONE -&#13;
&#13;
-that's it&#13;
Eat, drink and be merry, for sometime one must get married.&#13;
Prof's absence makes the heart grow fonder.&#13;
A pretty face often causes a mu ltitude of poor recitations.&#13;
&#13;
Manufactured by JIFFY PEN COMPANY, salesroom and office at 406 Pierce&#13;
Street, Sioux City, Iowa -&#13;
&#13;
- that's the place&#13;
&#13;
THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENED -"ONCE"&#13;
Professor Brown was twelve minutes late to Education V class, and his class had&#13;
all departed.&#13;
Bill Smith took the same girl to two different shows.&#13;
The boys saw the Yale-Harvard game.&#13;
Cornie Dyke and Florence Palm stepped to chapel.&#13;
Professor Reistrup came to chapel-( when he gave several musical numbers).&#13;
Miss Dimitt attended a dance at the high school.&#13;
&#13;
If your dealer fails to carry them, we will&#13;
sell y ou direct.&#13;
W. A. HOUSTON, the&#13;
old pen man, is manager -&#13;
&#13;
-that's all&#13;
Time is too short to be wasted&#13;
With your nose inside of a book.&#13;
When nature is loudly calling you&#13;
To the shade of some leafy nook.&#13;
&#13;
Remember-We, as manufacturers, guarantee each and every Jiffy Pen made-no&#13;
matter where purchased.&#13;
We have the right kind of point for every hand or business.&#13;
All makes of pens repaired.&#13;
&#13;
Try us.&#13;
&#13;
�EXPERT SHOE SHINING AND HAT CLEANING&#13;
13 Years Experience&#13;
We clean all kinds of fancy Shoes and dye old Shoes, Black,&#13;
Brown, or Bronze, and make them look like new. We also&#13;
clean and reblock all kinds of Hats. We sell all kinds of&#13;
Dressings for fancy Shoes.&#13;
"Quality, Service and Art," Our Motto&#13;
KASCOUTAS COMPANY&#13;
504 5th St.&#13;
&#13;
THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY&#13;
You realize when you stop to think seriously for a moment&#13;
that your chance of doing better than the average person does&#13;
in the world depends wholly upon the preparation that you&#13;
make for the doing of some one thing in a superior way.&#13;
WE FIT THE COURSE TO THE STUDENT&#13;
&#13;
We cordially invite you to enter our Summer School for&#13;
the purpose of making this preparation and of course it goes&#13;
without saying that the sooner you start the sooner you will&#13;
begin to cash in on your education. Let us know what your&#13;
plans are, and don't fail to give us the opportunity to tell you&#13;
more about our School if you have any interest whatever in a&#13;
business education. Individual progress. A position the moment you graduate. Write for information.&#13;
NATIONAL BUSINESS TRAINING SCHOOL&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING, Distributor of&#13;
&#13;
MAXWELL&#13;
BRISCOE&#13;
GRANT SIX&#13;
&#13;
�Ada and Beatrice S. sure had a good time at Cedar R apids. They were very congenial, as each had a common interest in the De V aul family-namely, Abe and his&#13;
brother. They went to movies, shows, n'everything. Ada says that she and her&#13;
man got lost on their way from town to their rooming pl ace, but we are inclined to&#13;
think that they did not purposely, thinking of the old saying, "The longest way 'round&#13;
is the sweetest way home" .&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
biggest Eater in College .............. ] ohn Montgomery&#13;
most Popular girL .................................. Norma Kent&#13;
most Modern man ..............................Amos Hartman&#13;
Quietest man ...................................... Henry Marsh&#13;
best Stud ent ............................................ Ora Emrich&#13;
college Fool champion ............................ Frank Olson&#13;
Basket Ball star. ...................................Wilson Smith&#13;
biggest Grind .................................. Carroll Northrup&#13;
biggest Fusser.. ......................................Omar Adams&#13;
Happiest man .................................. ] ohn M cBurney&#13;
biggest Liar.. ........................................ Lavina Dragoo&#13;
biggest Grafter.. ..................................Jennie Kniffen&#13;
biggest Nuisance .................................. Hazel Bradley&#13;
greatest Flirt .................................... Agnes McCreery&#13;
&#13;
Percy M. ( calling Morningside drug store) : Have you any carbolic acid?&#13;
Hreschey: Yes, sir; we have.&#13;
Percy M.: Wouldn 't that kill you? Goodbye.&#13;
Before: What kind of a man is this man Bishop Buehler?&#13;
After: Well , did you ever see two men talking together and one of them looks&#13;
bored to death ? The other is Buehler.&#13;
&#13;
"Out of the High Rent District"&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON &amp; CO.&#13;
Tailors, Clothiers, Hatters and Men's Furnishings&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner of Jennings&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST WILLIGES&#13;
and making the most of your time? If so, you&#13;
are bound to succeed in your chosen&#13;
vocation.&#13;
BUT, WAIT A MOMENT !&#13;
What are you doing w ith the fruits&#13;
of your labor?&#13;
Are you SAVING ANY MONEY,&#13;
or, do you allow it to slip away almost&#13;
without knowing what becomes of 1t?&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
What's the answer?&#13;
R efl ection,&#13;
Determination, Action, and then a&#13;
SAVINGS ACCO UNT in&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY&#13;
SA VIN GS BANK&#13;
&#13;
310 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"THE SAFE HOME FOR SAVINGS"&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Security Bank Building&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
List of Exam Questions. May be modified for personal use by any professor.&#13;
Guaranteed to flunk at least half of the class.&#13;
1. Why is it?&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
6.&#13;
7.&#13;
8.&#13;
&#13;
When is it? When not?&#13;
Give ten examples.&#13;
State clearly and concisely in one sentence.&#13;
If not, why not?&#13;
If so, where?&#13;
Give practical application.&#13;
Why are we built so close to the grou nd ?&#13;
&#13;
WM. B EUTTLER&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
BEUTTLER &amp; ARNOLD&#13;
ARCHITECTS&#13;
This Firm Designed the Alumni Gymnasium and&#13;
Rebuilt the Conservatory&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
Auto Phone 4240&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�Prof. Hirsch: Ehen was the rival of learning?&#13;
Emrick: The night before exams.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 80&#13;
&#13;
Auto 4981&#13;
President (praying in chapel): Oh Lord, bless those called upon to teach.&#13;
Voice ( from center section) : Oh dear Lord, don't forget those that are called&#13;
upon to recite.&#13;
What&#13;
&#13;
is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Wounded Tommy (in hospital) : Yes, mum; I was shot right through here (pointing to his left side) .&#13;
Visitor: Oh, but that is impossible; the bullet would have gone straight through&#13;
your heart.&#13;
Wounded Tommy: Me heart was in me mouth, Mum.&#13;
&#13;
"You'll get run in", said the pedestrian to the cyclist, "if you ride without a light."&#13;
"You'll get run into", responded the rider as he knocked the other down.&#13;
"You'll get run in too," said the policeman, as he stepped forward and siezed the&#13;
cyclist.&#13;
Just then another scorcher came along without a light, so the policeman was run&#13;
into, too, and had to run in two.&#13;
Faust (lecturing) : Sedentary work tends to lessen the endurance.&#13;
Henry Marsh: In other words, the more one sets, the less one can stand.&#13;
Faust : Exactly, and if one lies a great deal, one's standing is lost completely.&#13;
&#13;
FUEL&#13;
We ask the privilege&#13;
of taking care of your needs&#13;
in our line&#13;
&#13;
TRY US&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
RED HEADED CLUB&#13;
Motto: So shines a good deed in a naughty world.&#13;
Chief Headlight: Vera Hatfield.&#13;
High Priest of the Flaming Locks: Bishop Buehler.&#13;
Radiant Keeper of Records: Ruth Hamilton.&#13;
Gacaen Beauty: Mary Ann Daniels.&#13;
Knights of Faded Glow: Jack DeJ ang, "Red" Day.&#13;
Faculty Light: Miss Ziehlsdorf.&#13;
&#13;
WELLS CO AL CO., Inc.&#13;
Established 1880&#13;
&#13;
RELIABLE&#13;
Third Street, Near Water&#13;
&#13;
�O ur New Modern Studio&#13;
will be completed about June first&#13;
with increased facilities&#13;
&#13;
Two full floors&#13;
With two posing rooms&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
Two Doors West of&#13;
The Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
�THE HARD BOILED CLUB&#13;
Not long ago a woman came into the store to look at linens. First she explained,&#13;
"I do not wish to buy any lin ens today. I j ust boug ht some at another store and I&#13;
want to know if I received good v alue; so I came here to find out." O ur saleslady&#13;
showed our stock, to the satisfaction of the customer, and later we sold the lady a&#13;
good bill of linens.&#13;
The story illustrates the confi dence people have in us and explains our growth and&#13;
why we are m.aking so many frie nds.&#13;
Merely sell ing goods is not enough; we a re here to serve y ou.&#13;
&#13;
Club Emblem: The Tidy Red Tin.&#13;
Club Song: Roll Dem Bones.&#13;
Club Color: Hazy Blue&#13;
Club Motto: Merrily we Roll Along.&#13;
Omar Adams:&#13;
President.&#13;
Verle Hart: Treasurer.&#13;
Wayne Hilmer: Secretary.&#13;
Milton Klaus: Porter.&#13;
&#13;
SWAN-ANDERSON CO.&#13;
Quality Dry Goods&#13;
&#13;
4 13-415-41 7 J ackson St.&#13;
&#13;
CHARTER MEMBERS&#13;
Arthur Schuldt&#13;
Charles Sweet&#13;
Clarence Tompkins&#13;
J ames Van Peursem&#13;
&#13;
Loans&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
H om es not Hou ses&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS NOT FULLY QUALIFIED&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
D ale Norton&#13;
Meryle Schafenberg&#13;
P ark Moorhead&#13;
D ave Klatt&#13;
John Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
Pilchard Building Co.&#13;
P . H . PILCHARD, President&#13;
Quarter Million C ap ital&#13;
Second Floor, Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
She: I consider, John, that sheep are the stupidest things living.&#13;
He ( absent mindedly) : Yes, Lamb.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
G RAN D OPERA MASTERPIECES&#13;
Stars Found in M. C.&#13;
&#13;
"Madam Butterfly"- Helen Rinker.&#13;
"Love's Labor Lost"-Royce Engberg.&#13;
" In the Land of Nod"-Wayne Hilmer.&#13;
"The Strollers"- Florence P alm, Cornie Dyke.&#13;
"The G ibson Girl."- Esther Lange.&#13;
"The Social W hirl"- Bert Pritchard, Elsie Bennington.&#13;
"Peck's Bad Boy"- Henry Marsh.&#13;
"The Woman Hater"- Clarence O elfke.&#13;
"The Spenders"-Wilson&#13;
Smith, Park Moorhead.&#13;
&#13;
N ew methods increasing the efficiency of our&#13;
work are being discovered daily. We keep ourselves thoroughly informed a nd can always give&#13;
you the benefi t of th e latest and best methods&#13;
and optical merchandise.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Optical Co.&#13;
&#13;
"M akers of G lasses T hat Fit"&#13;
Corner Fifth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
�What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Freshie ( at end of first semester) : I don't believe I ever w ill catch on to things&#13;
here. Who are: Norty, Skinny, H ap, Fish, Sam?&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLE WE KNOW&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
Wood B ros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
Why They Are Conspicuous.&#13;
&#13;
0. G.&#13;
&#13;
]ONES _______ ___ ________ ____ ____ __________ __ Capt. in the Army&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG ________ ______&#13;
_________ _________ ______y, M. C. A.&#13;
_____ _&#13;
H AROLD HILMER__________&#13;
____________________ _ O ccasional fussing&#13;
_ ____&#13;
&#13;
W AYNE HILMER ---------- ___&#13;
__________________________ Frequent naps&#13;
_________&#13;
__________________________ _ _________________&#13;
_&#13;
Racket&#13;
CHAS. SWEET ____&#13;
F ERN FICKLING -·--------------------·---------------------------------Styles&#13;
CORNIE DYKE ----------------·----------------------------------- Stepping&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
TOM D EALTRY, .Manager&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
"I asked her if I could see her home," sad Cornie Dike.&#13;
&#13;
GOODYEAR SHOE&#13;
REPAIR CO.&#13;
&#13;
"Caesar sic dicat unde cur, gessi lictum."&#13;
Latin Shark ( translating) : "Caesar sicked the cat on the cur ; I guess he licked&#13;
him."&#13;
&#13;
Brutus met his friend Julius on the steps of the Forum.&#13;
how many pies did you eat yesterday?"&#13;
"Et tu , Brute?"&#13;
&#13;
THE TRIANGLE&#13;
&#13;
518 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
" What did she say ?" asked Boland.&#13;
"She said she would send me a picture of it."&#13;
&#13;
Serves a Satisfying&#13;
· Student's Lunch&#13;
F air Prices Prevail&#13;
Parties and Special Orders&#13;
Cared F or&#13;
&#13;
Biggest, Best, and Busiest&#13;
Repairing D one While&#13;
You W ait&#13;
Mail O rders Prepaid&#13;
J. F. MEIRSTEIN&#13;
&#13;
Entrance&#13;
&#13;
" Hail, Caesar old scout;&#13;
&#13;
Sign in front of a Tailor shop on 4th St. :&#13;
"Pants pressed; five cents a leg ; seats free."&#13;
&#13;
A lthough our imprint does&#13;
not appear on all our work&#13;
buyers of printing are able&#13;
to recognize our p roduct&#13;
by the quality.&#13;
S. B. P. PRINTING CO.&#13;
North End of Campus&#13;
3631 Peters Ave.&#13;
A uto Phone 66211&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Opposite the College&#13;
&#13;
O'LEARY'S&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
G ood Things to Eat&#13;
JOHN O'LEARY, Prop.&#13;
902 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
�It has been a pleasure to this bank for the past six years to&#13;
serve College Faculty and Students.&#13;
In our new modern banking home we are fully equipped&#13;
to care for your banking needs in every detail.&#13;
Correspondence invited from parents or guardians in reference to this College Suburb and will have our cheerful and.&#13;
prompt attention.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
JOHN SCOTT, Jr., President&#13;
W . L. AYERS, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Located at Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
-·-&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
YARDS\ P,..&#13;
&#13;
L. G. EVERIST INC.&#13;
Instant Service&#13;
on&#13;
Clean Coal&#13;
Builders' Supplies&#13;
Call 2600&#13;
&#13;
�WHY YOU SHOULD INSIST ON&#13;
&#13;
SUPERB BRAND&#13;
FOOD&#13;
products&#13;
Look for the Rose on&#13;
Every Package&#13;
&#13;
THE REASON IS THIS&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand is the result of many years of&#13;
persistent effort to assemble under one brand&#13;
a complete line of Food Products of the very&#13;
highest quality at the most reasonable prices&#13;
You Always Get the Best When You Insist on&#13;
&#13;
SUPERB BRAND FOOD PRODUCTS&#13;
DISTRIBUTED BY&#13;
&#13;
TOLERTON &amp; WARFIELD CO.&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
The following selection of mistakes in examinations may convince almost anyone&#13;
that there are some peaks of ignorance which he has yet to climb:&#13;
Wolsey saved his life by dying on the way from York to London.&#13;
Tennyson wrote a poem called "Grave's Energy."&#13;
The plural of spouse is spice.&#13;
The law allowing one wife, is Monotony.&#13;
Landscapes is what you run down the side of the house on when the house is afire.&#13;
A Bishop without a diocese is called a suffragette.&#13;
The liver is an infernal organ of the body.&#13;
A schoolmaster is called a pedagree.&#13;
The modern name for Gaul is vinegar.&#13;
Louis XVI was gelatined during the French Revolution.&#13;
&#13;
H. G. KITCHEN &amp; SON&#13;
REAL E S TATE&#13;
Office 2000 St. Aubin St.&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
Auto 66694, R esidence Phone 66376&#13;
&#13;
F or Excellent Fills and Highest Market&#13;
We cannot choose our faces but we can pick our teeth.&#13;
&#13;
SOME POPULAR LIES&#13;
&#13;
P rices&#13;
&#13;
Try&#13;
&#13;
HUDSON COMMISSION CO.&#13;
&#13;
I'm crazy about you.&#13;
I'll drop in and pay you back next week.&#13;
I shall never love another.&#13;
I told her just what I thought of her.&#13;
I never would dream that it wasn't your hair.&#13;
I am quite unprepared to make a speech.&#13;
&#13;
210 Live Stock Exch ange Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
O U R PLUMBING&#13;
Has Its Own Pa rticular College Yell&#13;
&#13;
Miss Loveland : Why were you late, Miss Pratt.&#13;
Louise Pratt : I didn't start from home in time to get here.&#13;
&#13;
Q uality and Exp erience&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAVES CO.&#13;
Auto 1837&#13;
With best wishes to&#13;
:M orningside College and its&#13;
host of Students who&#13;
pass through its portals&#13;
out onto the Sea of Life&#13;
May theirs be a prosperous voyage&#13;
GRABER DRY GOOD S CO.&#13;
Everything for the College Miss&#13;
Sioux City, I a.&#13;
On Fourth at Jackson&#13;
&#13;
513 J ackson St.&#13;
&#13;
Steele-Siman&#13;
&#13;
&amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Cattle, Hogs and Sheep&#13;
Paid Up Capital $50,000&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
Correct Dress For Women&#13;
SIO UX CITY'S MOST APPRECIATIVE STORE&#13;
&#13;
D. C. KITSELMAN&#13;
&#13;
J W. BALDWIN&#13;
\.1.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. TIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, KITSELMAN &amp; TIMMEL&#13;
LIVE STOCK COM1&#13;
V1ISSI0N MERCHANTS&#13;
S. E . Babcock, R. S. Skillings, H enry S. Payer, J ohn H.&#13;
Anthony, Alice Kreutz&#13;
Bell Phone 397&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1443&#13;
217-219 Exchange Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
G EO. C. CALL, President&#13;
E. M. CORBETT, Vice-President&#13;
G EORGE R. CALL, Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Call Bond and Mortgage Co.&#13;
C apital $500,000.00&#13;
Incorporated&#13;
&#13;
under&#13;
&#13;
THE LAW S OF IOWA)&#13;
&#13;
Dealers in High Grade Securities ·&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�You should store up knowledge in the head, but choose&#13;
some safe place for your money.&#13;
Try the&#13;
&#13;
Continental National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
· TODD-BECKFR CO.&#13;
KODAKS AN D FINISHING&#13;
DRUGS, CANDIES&#13;
CUT FLOWERS AN D DESIGNS&#13;
Enjoy R efreshments or Lunch in Our Fountain Room&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bldg., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
All patrons of "M. S." should arrange for their farm and&#13;
city loans and insurance through, and buy their investments&#13;
from the&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE THAT SERVES&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL M0RTGAGE COMPANY&#13;
M. F. McDowell,&#13;
"Class '03," Manager&#13;
Frances Building, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
A Guarantee of Satisfaction&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
One morning a clergyman was conducting the services in chapel. He asked President Mossman how long he should speak. President Mossman replied:&#13;
"There is no limit, Doctor, upon the time you speak; but I may tell you that there&#13;
is a tradition here that most souls are saved during the first twenty-five minutes."&#13;
&#13;
Successful Sellers of Cattle, Hogs and Sheep&#13;
Ship Us for Best R esu lts&#13;
&#13;
STOCK YARDS, SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Recipe for Multi-Millionaires:&#13;
Take a boy with bare feet as a starter&#13;
Add theft and sobriety-mixedFlavor with quarts of religion,&#13;
And see that the tariff is fixed.&#13;
&#13;
Little drops in water,&#13;
Little drops on land,&#13;
Make the aviator&#13;
Join the heavenly band.&#13;
&#13;
Look for Our Signs Before Ordering&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman Co.&#13;
Makers of Beverages That Reduce Thirst&#13;
&#13;
�Lieut. Hopkinson: "I have so many promising couples in my audience that I&#13;
think it very strange that I have never been called upon to perform marriage ceremonies for students since I have been here."&#13;
Warner Marsh: "I agree to help you out all I can."&#13;
&#13;
Modern Fireside Comfort!&#13;
&#13;
A series of three lectures on marriage and divorce.&#13;
"The Elements of Ideal Courtship."&#13;
"Marrying the Wrong Man."&#13;
"Making the Best of a Bad Bargain."&#13;
&#13;
Nature never makes any blunders; when she makes a fool she means it.&#13;
&#13;
Some things we take at Morningside that are not on our cards; Flu, puppy love,&#13;
spring fever, flunks, measles, smallpox, mumps, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Vera Hatfield:&#13;
Curtis Cassell:&#13;
&#13;
Bert Pritchard:&#13;
&#13;
A mosquito bit me on the lip last night.&#13;
It has bad taste.&#13;
&#13;
These exams and lectures interfere terribly with my college work.&#13;
&#13;
At Glee Club Practice:&#13;
Bernice Scoville: Why do you wrinkle your brow when you take a high note?&#13;
Irma Stevens : Oh, those are the added lines above the staff.&#13;
&#13;
Education&#13;
Is a sensation&#13;
Of having crammed&#13;
And firmly jammed&#13;
Into one head&#13;
Of densest lead&#13;
The workings of some wondrous minds&#13;
That now become the daily grinds&#13;
Of various college students.&#13;
&#13;
Picture in your Library this cheerful,&#13;
comfortable, glowing O pen Fire-always ready for the match-free from&#13;
th e trouble of carrying wood and ashes&#13;
-free from smoke and sparks.&#13;
&#13;
The Humphrey Radiantfire&#13;
has all the charm and fascination of the wood&#13;
blaze-with the convenience of gas. It floods&#13;
you with strong Radiant Heat and Firelight. It&#13;
is cozy, cheerful, satisfying and ornamental. It is&#13;
inexpensive and economical.&#13;
&#13;
Come and see it !&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
r&gt;:-&#13;
&#13;
TODAY!&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City G as &amp; Electric Co.&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Failure to save is an admission of lack of p rogressiveness.&#13;
A Savings Account is the mainstay of many a successful career. Why wait until some time later? Open your Savings&#13;
Account today.&#13;
&#13;
NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Corner F ourth and Pierce Streets&#13;
We Pay F our Per Cent Interest&#13;
&#13;
FRANK S. WAGNER. W. A. FREDER ICKSON. Hog and Sheep Salesmen&#13;
CHARLES F. ABBO&#13;
TT. Office M&#13;
anager&#13;
OTIS P. GARRISON E. L. FITZSIMMONS. Cattle Salesmen&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WAGNER. GARRISON &amp; ABBOTT&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merch ants&#13;
206-208 Exch ange Building, Stock Y ards&#13;
Night Phones 4013-5783-5034-5024&#13;
Phones-Bell 455, Auto 2305&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
TAC-CUT&#13;
&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
A BLEND-Not a Mixture!&#13;
BLENDED AND PACKED BY&#13;
&#13;
Wm. ackaberry Co.&#13;
T&#13;
SI OUX C IT Y. I O WA&#13;
&#13;
�YOUNG MAN&#13;
Try Us for Your Next Suit, Hat, Shoes and Furnishings&#13;
Our Guarantee with Every Article That Leaves&#13;
Our Store&#13;
Styles Always the Latest&#13;
Prices the Lowest&#13;
STANDARD CLOTHING CO.&#13;
710-712 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
Tune:&#13;
&#13;
Rock-a-bye my Baby With A Dixie Melody&#13;
&#13;
Rock-a-bye my Freshmen to the Junior melody,&#13;
You're as green as grass, but you will pass&#13;
Some day into the Junior class.&#13;
The Sophs-they think they know a lot,&#13;
But they're a lot of tommy-rot&#13;
The Seniors soon to leave us&#13;
The fact that they are gone will never grieve us.&#13;
We're the class of "20"&#13;
And we'll set you all a pace&#13;
If you will do what we've gone through&#13;
You'll have a careworn face.&#13;
So come across and buy a "sioux"&#13;
For in it you'll find a lot of jokes on you&#13;
Then buy a "sioux" and take it with you&#13;
For we're all for Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
FORD LUMBER CO.&#13;
Owned in Sioux City&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
"The Only Lumber Yard&#13;
Owned in Sioux City"&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1338&#13;
Bell Phone 338&#13;
100 Third St.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
When you wade into&#13;
business life you will&#13;
need financial boots.&#13;
A Bank Account will&#13;
supply this need.&#13;
Education only puts&#13;
the polish on.&#13;
Both are necessary to&#13;
Success.&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL BANK OF&#13;
Commerce&#13;
&#13;
S. W. Corner 4th and&#13;
Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
THE HAAS AND SMITH CO.&#13;
Morningside Real Estate Dealers&#13;
Properties of All Kinds Rented or Sold&#13;
Loans and Insurance&#13;
Office at Peters Park&#13;
Office Phone 66136&#13;
Residence Phones 66657 and 66034&#13;
&#13;
�SHOES&#13;
0' Harrow's QualityShoes for young&#13;
people at prices you will appreciate&#13;
GIVE US A TRIAL&#13;
&#13;
L. O'Harrow Co.&#13;
We 'll Get You Yet&#13;
&#13;
902 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
It's an E stablished F act that&#13;
Good J ewelry is to be F ound at the Store of the&#13;
W ILL H. BECK COMPANY&#13;
E stablished in 1877 and M aintaining a P olicy D uring T h ese&#13;
Years Which Now Bespeaks fo r I tself&#13;
&#13;
"Makes Life Sweeter "&#13;
&#13;
Delicious&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
FARM TRACTORS and A UTOMOBILES&#13;
Parrett, - art-Parr&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
Lexington&#13;
&#13;
Watson Automobile 'Campany&#13;
DIST RIBUTORS&#13;
&#13;
SIO UX C ITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�A 'TOAST&#13;
A toast to thee fair Morningside,&#13;
A toast if thou wilt but abide.&#13;
The class of "20" lift to thee&#13;
A toast made reverent and free.&#13;
We've formed a wealth of memories&#13;
From thee as boundless as the seas.&#13;
With care, and very patiently&#13;
Thy work hath sealed our hearts to thee.&#13;
Thou hast survived the trials of youth&#13;
And now exalted stand, forsooth!&#13;
From this thy anniversary&#13;
Sail on to full maturity!&#13;
We marvel, yea, to behold thee&#13;
Endowed anew and setteth free.&#13;
We toast thee far, we toast thee wide&#13;
A toast to thee, fair Morningside!&#13;
&#13;
Famous for its Fine Eats&#13;
Excellent Service&#13;
R easonable R ates&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
5 14 Fifth St.&#13;
M. GANTZ, Proprietor&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
::I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
F U LLE RTON Lumber&#13;
CO.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
F ou rth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
Largest and Most Complete Stock of Building Material&#13;
th e City. D o N ot F ail to L et Us Figure on Your Bill&#13;
H . T. W ALENSKY, Mgr.&#13;
Phones: A uto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
�Everything for the Athlete and&#13;
Outdoor Man&#13;
"From the cheapest that is good, to the best that is made"&#13;
THE COLLEGE&#13;
A path untrodden by footsteps,&#13;
Where oft glad feet have trod;&#13;
A door undarkened by figures&#13;
Once gay with laughter and nod;&#13;
A hall unlighted by faces,&#13;
U nwarmed by fellowship bright,&#13;
A college without its studentsA lantern without its light.&#13;
Far off in the front line trenches&#13;
That college has sent its men,&#13;
Bold out from the field and gridiron,&#13;
Swift out from the club and den&#13;
To fight for the truths it taught them,&#13;
Firm men, to the last recruit;&#13;
A college without its studentsA branch that has borne its fruit.&#13;
Glad back to their Alma Mater&#13;
Her soldiers are gathering now,&#13;
The light of a high encounter&#13;
Yet shines on each face and brow.&#13;
To shoulder earth's mightiest burdens,&#13;
Soon out they will march again;&#13;
A college of changing studentsA mill with its grist of-men!&#13;
LYNN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Being specialists in this field we carry at all times&#13;
a complete and comprehensive stock. Our merchandise appeals at once to the discriminating&#13;
patron.&#13;
No Matter What You Need We Can Serve You Best&#13;
&#13;
The Olson Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
M. J. FELT&#13;
.&#13;
Manager and Cattle Salesman&#13;
&#13;
BOOGE CO E&#13;
Hog Salesman&#13;
&#13;
INGWERSEN BROTHERS&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
Room 209 Exchange Building&#13;
Auto Phone 1322&#13;
Iowa Phone 396&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�WHEN IN&#13;
M0RNINGSIDE&#13;
Get Your Meals or&#13;
Lunches at&#13;
PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
Student Help&#13;
&#13;
Phone Us Your Coal Order&#13;
We Will Take Care of You&#13;
When the Time Comes&#13;
Good Coal and&#13;
Building Material&#13;
&#13;
H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
Third and Clark Streets&#13;
Auto Phone 2174 Be ll Phone 254&#13;
&#13;
Kleeblatt Barber's Supply Co.&#13;
INCORPORATED&#13;
&#13;
I mporters of and Wholesale Dealers in&#13;
&#13;
Barbers' Supplies, Cutlery and Furniture&#13;
See Us for High Grade Razors, Strops, Hair Tonics, T oilet&#13;
Waters, After Shaving L otions, Creams, Etc.&#13;
618 Pierce Street&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Bekins Van ·and Storage Co.&#13;
Did You Ever Eat at&#13;
&#13;
Our B usiness I s Moving&#13;
&#13;
PROP'S CAFE&#13;
&#13;
STORAGE, PACKING, SHIPPING&#13;
&#13;
Try Us Once-We'll Risk the Rest&#13;
&#13;
HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND PIANOS&#13;
&#13;
Lunches and Meals for Everyone&#13;
A. M. PROPS, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
114-120 Riverside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
HEADINGTON&#13;
AN D&#13;
HEDENBERGH&#13;
&#13;
IDEAL SOFT WATER LAUNDRY&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Fruits and Produce&#13;
&#13;
Automatic, 1346&#13;
Iowa, 899&#13;
&#13;
0. W. HARVEY, Mgr.&#13;
414-416 Court St.&#13;
&#13;
?&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
411 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
Wholesalers and Retaile rs of Sweet Cream, Milk and&#13;
L actone Buttermilk&#13;
Our Cream is Served at Morningside Pharmacy and&#13;
Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
707 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
�We Are the Original "Cut Price" D entists of Sioux City&#13;
"When better dental work is done you will&#13;
.&#13;
find us doing it."&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Jewelers&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK DENTISTS&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
"Home Market for the Great Northwest"&#13;
&#13;
502 Fourth St.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Res. Phone 6265&#13;
Shop Phone 6306&#13;
Res. 4217 M. S. Ave.&#13;
All Work Guaranteed&#13;
HARTLEY L . LARSON&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Ave.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MO R NINGSI DE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
GORDON&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate and Loans&#13;
&#13;
705 -708 Frances Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
DRAY &amp; TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
STATIONERY CO.&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Packing and Storage&#13;
&#13;
Students Are Cordially Invited to Visit Us&#13;
&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
D. W . NOURSE, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
WHEN PACKING TIME&#13;
COMES&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
Bank, Store, Office Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
Our .M otto is Quality&#13;
&#13;
507-509-5 l l Water Street&#13;
&#13;
and you are getting ready for your sum mer vacation&#13;
or trip abroad, the question of trunks is an all important one. If you need a new trunk or bag we invite&#13;
you to visit our store. We have them in all shapes&#13;
and sizes. Come in and make your choice and go&#13;
away happy.&#13;
&#13;
D.S. ANTHONY&#13;
Prop. Sioux City Trunk Factory&#13;
Retail Manufacturer of Trunks and Valises&#13;
Trunks and Sample Cases to Order&#13;
Repai ring Done&#13;
Phone 2108&#13;
5th St. Near Pierce&#13;
&#13;
�J.&#13;
&#13;
F. EGGERS&#13;
&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
CARTER, BRACKNEY&#13;
&amp; CARTER&#13;
&#13;
The Place of Quality and Right Prices&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW&#13;
Suite 707-708-709 Security Bank Bldg.&#13;
P h ones, Auto 1522, Bell 1065&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Get Your Groceries and Meats from&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG, McGILL,&#13;
STEWART &amp;&#13;
HATFIELD&#13;
&#13;
THE M . &amp; B. CO .&#13;
1421 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
GENERAL MERCHANDISE&#13;
Four Phones&#13;
Iowa, 670 - 67&#13;
4102-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
AND TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW&#13;
721 -726 Frances Building&#13;
•&#13;
Auto Phone 85988 Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SHULL, GILL,&#13;
SAMMIS &amp;&#13;
STILLWELL&#13;
&#13;
SUPREMACY&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
625-626 Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
For the past fifteen years the Educational Department of the Bureau of&#13;
Engraving, Inc., has been collecting a&#13;
vast fund of information from the experiences of hundreds of editors and&#13;
managers of Annuals.&#13;
This data covering organization, financ·&#13;
ing, , advertising construction, selli 1ng an d&#13;
'&#13;
hasbeen systematically&#13;
original features&#13;
tabulated and forms the subiect matter&#13;
for our series of reference books. These&#13;
securing&#13;
"Bureau" co-operation in the making&#13;
of engravings for their books.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. HUBBARD&#13;
&#13;
All kinds of&#13;
Heavy Hauling and&#13;
Dray Work&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Attorney and Counsellor at Law&#13;
327 Davidson Building&#13;
6th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FRED GAGNON&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS.&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
Loans and Rentals&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
&#13;
Auto 67246&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
Rooms 622-25 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
John B. McCormick&#13;
&#13;
BRINK'S MEAT&#13;
MARKET&#13;
&#13;
William A. McCormick&#13;
&#13;
McCORMICK &amp;&#13;
McCormick&#13;
&#13;
Ph one us your ord er an d our d elivery will reach you promptly.&#13;
Auto 6284&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
503-504 Iowa Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
Auto Phone 1739&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
GEO. W. FINCH&#13;
&#13;
O. B. McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
LA WYER&#13;
Suite 527-28 Trimble Bldg.&#13;
Auto Phone 86886&#13;
&#13;
BUICKS&#13;
G. M. C. TRUCKS&#13;
4008 Morningside Ave.&#13;
Tel., Auto 66780&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
&#13;
KELLOGG BARBER&#13;
SHOP&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Auto Phone 3785&#13;
&#13;
605 Frances Bldg.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
50c Hair Cuts, 25c; 25c Shaves, 15c&#13;
P eters Park&#13;
&#13;
Begin where others have left off. Profit&#13;
by their experience and assure success&#13;
for your Annual.&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH SIXTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�WAS A TIME&#13;
NOT SO VERY LONG&#13;
ago, when all printing&#13;
looked alike to most of&#13;
us; it wasjust printing;&#13;
but that time is past and a&#13;
new day has dawned.&#13;
Most everyone today has a&#13;
very highly developed sense&#13;
of what is right and proper&#13;
in all manner of printing.&#13;
It is one thing to appreciate&#13;
superior quality and another&#13;
to produce it.&#13;
To produce it requires men&#13;
of skill, industry and zeal&#13;
and a good equipment.&#13;
We have a corps of efficient&#13;
craftsmen who are schooled&#13;
in what is right and how to&#13;
get the best results.&#13;
We have a master printer&#13;
who will give your work his&#13;
personal attention.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa City&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Well, now, what do you think? Are there&#13;
enough snaps? Doesn't your photograph&#13;
do you full justice? or, possibly, the joke&#13;
section isn't to your liking! Cheer up;&#13;
maybe we don't like to be slammed, either!&#13;
But whatever you think, it's too late now,&#13;
and we most respectfully bequeath all expected criticisms to the "1921" board.&#13;
We do wish to express our appreciation,&#13;
however, of the kindly help we have received from the student body in general,&#13;
and the excellent cooperative service of our&#13;
engravers and printers.&#13;
THE "1920" BOARD.&#13;
&#13;
Our equipment is of the best.&#13;
There is a glowing sense of&#13;
satisfaction in dealing with&#13;
people in whom you have absolute faith.&#13;
&#13;
Dependability&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
��•&#13;
&#13;
��</text>
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              <text>RUTH M. WEDGWOOD&#13;
1324 S. Newton Street&#13;
Sioux City 6, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ' 2 0&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
S IOUX&#13;
1920&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
T HE S TAFF&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
ADA G. CARTER&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
BERGESON&#13;
HAROLD RAUN Assistant Business Manager&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL&#13;
&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
PERCY MICKELSON&#13;
VETA CLARK&#13;
CLARENCE KLATT&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
ALVERDA MONTGOMERY&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Military&#13;
Military&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Organizations&#13;
.&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Art&#13;
Snaps&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX&#13;
A College Annual&#13;
published by the Class&#13;
of 1920 in its Junior&#13;
Year, which contains&#13;
a record of our deeds,&#13;
both wise and otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
Photographs&#13;
Jokes&#13;
Calendai·&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
o tbe one whom we&#13;
have all learned to&#13;
admire and respect,&#13;
to the one who is&#13;
doing so much to make Morningside a leader in the Northwest, to a man among men,&#13;
our own Dr. Hirsch, we, the&#13;
Class of 1920, respectfully&#13;
dedicate this Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
To those who have never&#13;
known Morningside as a&#13;
college home, we have tried&#13;
to bring some idea of our&#13;
college life, ideals and&#13;
spirit; to those who are&#13;
now Morningsiders, we&#13;
have given a permanent&#13;
record of one year's enjoyment at the college on&#13;
the Sioux; and to our&#13;
Alumni we have brought&#13;
greetings from their Alma&#13;
Mater. We have tried to&#13;
do our best,- there have&#13;
been mistakes we know,&#13;
but we leave this book in&#13;
your hands as a result&#13;
of our honest endeavors.&#13;
&#13;
of Books&#13;
&#13;
Order&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Our College&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
® our Activities&#13;
BOOK&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
Features&#13;
&#13;
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS&#13;
are deeply grateful to&#13;
all who have helped in the&#13;
making of this book, and&#13;
especially to Dorothy Eyers,&#13;
'19, and Wilson Smith, '22,&#13;
tor their printing; to Harold&#13;
Winter, 22, for his cartooning, and to Professor J. J.&#13;
Hayes for his kindly advice.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
[a1-------------------------h&#13;
&#13;
Alma Mater&#13;
I&#13;
Sing the praises of Dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her heroes bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices,&#13;
The chorus swelling,&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
(Refrain)&#13;
Then cheer for Dear Old Morningside.&#13;
To thee we pledge anew&#13;
Hearats faithful love&#13;
of&#13;
Now forever&#13;
and&#13;
Thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
We love thy halls of learning,&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
We'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought us Fair Morningside! Our home!&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
Hear our vow, 0 Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee&#13;
All we have,&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
For the glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
01-----------------------0&#13;
&#13;
Song of Victory&#13;
I&#13;
Come, let us sing a song of victory ;&#13;
Make the hills and campus ring;&#13;
Strong valiant sons of Old M . C.,&#13;
Once more our trophies bring.&#13;
(Refrain)&#13;
Fair Morningside, our mother!&#13;
At thy call we'll dare and do;&#13;
Then we'll sing a song of victory&#13;
For the Pride of the Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
Hark to the sound of many marching feet;&#13;
See thy colors waving high;&#13;
Cheer long and loud for "Varsity"Dare to do, nay more, to die.&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
Here's to the warriors from our "Heap Big School",&#13;
Bold and fearless ever be;&#13;
Once more that ringing Ky-yi-yi&#13;
Telling of victory.&#13;
&#13;
THE MAIN HALL&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
I&#13;
Home of our college days,&#13;
Hark to our song of praise,&#13;
While we our voices raise&#13;
For Morningside.&#13;
Thou queen of all the land,&#13;
Loyal to thee we stand,&#13;
Thy sons a faithful band Dear Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
Bright are the hours we spend,&#13;
Dear is each college friend,&#13;
Sweet is the charm they lend&#13;
To Morningside.&#13;
Brothers in heart are we,&#13;
Joyous and light and free,&#13;
Joined by our love for thee Dear Morningside.&#13;
THE CONSERVATORY&#13;
&#13;
n-------------------------6]&#13;
&#13;
In the Hole&#13;
Biff ! Boom! Bang! our boys are marching,&#13;
Down towards South Dakota goal.&#13;
And beneath the old Maroon,&#13;
We shall sing our college tune,&#13;
While we put South Dakota in the hole.&#13;
CHORUS:&#13;
&#13;
In the Hole, in the Hole,&#13;
And we'll put South Dakota in the Hole.&#13;
In the Hole, in the Hole,&#13;
And we'll put South Dakota in the Hole.&#13;
&#13;
T HE GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
College Ties Can Ne'er Be Broken&#13;
I&#13;
College ties can ne'er be broken,&#13;
Formed at old M. C.&#13;
Far surpassing wealth unspoken&#13;
They'll forever be.&#13;
M. C. ! M. C. ! Hail to thee!&#13;
Thou hast been kind to us.&#13;
Ever shall we cherish for thee&#13;
Thoughts of love and trust.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
When our college days are over,&#13;
And our ways shall part,&#13;
Still by thee we'll be united&#13;
Still be one in heart.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
III&#13;
Now pledge we by word and deed,&#13;
Our Alma Mater, dear,&#13;
Loyalty, and praise, and love,&#13;
For all thy fost'ring care.&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
T HE LIBRARY&#13;
THE PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
SCENE ON THE CAMPUS&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIM MITT,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
and&#13;
Professor of Ancient Languages&#13;
&#13;
ELMER ELLSWORTH LYMER, PH.D. , LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
FRANK E. MOSSMAN D. D.&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
We greet you, Dr. Mossman, as an alumnus of our future&#13;
Alma Mater and as our .honored President. May your years&#13;
at Morningside be filled with rich blessings, is our wish&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
HILMER&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President and R egistrar&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY VAN HORNE,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICH SCHAUB,&#13;
&#13;
A. B., D. D.&#13;
&#13;
*HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL , A.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biblical and Religious&#13;
Literature&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR HENRY HIRSCH, PH.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDERICH KANTHLENER, A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Romance Languages&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES ALMER MARSH,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
Principal of the Academy&#13;
and&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
LA U RA C. FISCHER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages&#13;
&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD,&#13;
JASON McCoLLOUGH SAUNDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte and Organ&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
MABEL ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
PAUL MAC COLLIN,&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Director of Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON MacCOLLIN,&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
Instructor&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
NAOMI GooD,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M .&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
]. MRYS LILLARD,&#13;
]ESSIE&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Home Economics&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Avis&#13;
DELMAR CLAIRE COOPER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics and Science&#13;
&#13;
BAKER,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS LAUX, A. M.&#13;
Assistant Professor of Romance Languages&#13;
&#13;
RALPH B .&#13;
&#13;
w AITE,&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
J. HAYES, A. M., Professor of English and Secretary of the Faculty.&#13;
HELEN ISABELLE LOVELAND, A. B., Professor of English.&#13;
JAMES Austin Coss, M. S., Professor of Chemistry.&#13;
AvERY L. CARLSON, A. M., Acting Professor of Economics and Sociology.&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS, A. B., M. D., Professor of Biology.&#13;
CHARLES J. Faust&#13;
A. M ., Assistant Professor of History.&#13;
HAROLD BucK, Instructor in Violin.&#13;
ERNA ZEIHLSDORF, Instructor in Piano and Organ.&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP, Instructor in Pianoforte.&#13;
MRS. BERTHA Bosley, Assistant Professor of English.&#13;
CLARA LEWIS, Assistant in Expression.&#13;
]AMES&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Ruby A. FLINN, '06 __ .......................................... President&#13;
FLORENCE E. ANTHONY, '12 ...................... Vice-President&#13;
Ross P. BROWN, '02 ............................................Treasurer&#13;
MABEL PECA UT T ACKABERRY, '14.................... Secretary&#13;
&#13;
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE&#13;
B. P. MAHONEY, '12&#13;
IDA ELSIE Kilboone,&#13;
'07&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD, '07&#13;
RALPH T ACKABERRY, '11&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY, '18&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College has shown its worth by the deeds of the men and women&#13;
who have gone out from their Alma Mater to take up a share of the burdens in the&#13;
work of the world. While students here, they became inspired with ideals similar&#13;
to those of our day: "To attain high scholarship, to maintain clean athletics, to&#13;
preserve pure morals, to inspire lofty living, to urge a fine conservation of talents to&#13;
the service of the best."&#13;
&#13;
Morningside alumni may be found all over the world. Some of them spent many&#13;
hours of their lives while in college, dreaming of the wonderful things they were&#13;
going to accomplish when they received their degrees. Some may have thought of the&#13;
public platform and how they would sway the people with their forensic oratory and&#13;
logic. Many may have dreamed of entering the commercial world as banker, manufacturer, or tradesman. Others desired to achieve success in field of Christian service,&#13;
where they could spread the ideals of democracy and help in bringing about a true&#13;
international brotherhood.&#13;
The Alumni have had an unusual privilege of showing forth the spirit of Morningside during the recent World War. This opportunity had not been in the scope of their&#13;
college dreams, but they met it bravely. The many names on our honor roll show that&#13;
they were willing to make the supreme sacrifice. These men carried with them the&#13;
spirit which makes our Alma Mater a living and essential force in the lives of every&#13;
one in our college. They carried this spirit with them in every battle.&#13;
What we may accomplish along any given line depends on our ability, our opportunity, and our power of application. As the first of these is a fixed quantity, our&#13;
natural ability is determined before we could exercise any choice. Over our ability&#13;
we have a large determining power to make our lives the best we can. As the past&#13;
was the time to prepare for the present, so the present is the time to prepare for the&#13;
future; therefore, we should be laying a good foundation for our future lives.&#13;
&#13;
THE SOUTH RAVINE&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Philomathean President ' 19&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet '19&#13;
Collegian Reporter Staff ' 19&#13;
Philo Gold Medal Debate ' 18&#13;
M. C. Band ' 17-'18&#13;
"Su ccess comes on with ra pid gait&#13;
To the f ellow who goes to m eet it."&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL BERGH&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
President and Secretary of Athenaeums&#13;
Agora Vice-President&#13;
Agora Executive Board&#13;
Inter-society Committee&#13;
&#13;
Senior Class Officers&#13;
President ---------------------------------------------------- LEONE LANGE&#13;
Vice-President --------------------------·-·· A UR ELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ·-····--··-·--·····-·-···--·LEN A McDonald&#13;
Student Council Representative __________________ MJRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
"Just the airiest, fairiest slip of a thing,&#13;
She's up and she's off,&#13;
With a smile and a laugh,&#13;
Carelessly giving her books a fling."&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BERRY&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Secretary of Athenaeums&#13;
Agora Executive Board&#13;
Red Cross Committee&#13;
Collegian Reporter '17-' 18&#13;
"A careful student she has been."&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Duet Dance in May Fete&#13;
"Zealous but modest."&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
RUTH BURPEE&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Chairman Girls' Banquet Committee '19&#13;
&#13;
"When&#13;
&#13;
I have a thing to do, I go and do it."&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS CLARK&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
Expression Graduate&#13;
"Blessed with a pleasing smile and a cheery&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer and Vice-President of&#13;
Zetaletheans&#13;
Agora Executive Board '18&#13;
Glee Club ' 17-'18-'19&#13;
&#13;
" Fin e inspired earn estness her inmost being fills&#13;
And eager self-forgetfulness that sp eaks not&#13;
what it wills."&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
President of Zetalethean Society '19&#13;
&#13;
"Hang sorrow! Care will kill a cat.&#13;
So, therefore, let's be merry."&#13;
&#13;
manner."&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
IRENE COOPER&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
President and Treasurer of Athenaeums&#13;
Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
Conservatory Graduate in Piano 1915&#13;
Inter-society Committee&#13;
&#13;
"Her heart&#13;
&#13;
is not altogether in her work."&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Glee Club ' 15-'16-'17&#13;
College Band '15-'16-'17&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Secretary ' 17, President '18&#13;
Inter-society Debate '17&#13;
Student Volunteer Band&#13;
Class Treasurer '16&#13;
Class President '17-' 18&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate '19&#13;
&#13;
"Skillful alik e with tongue and pen, he preached&#13;
to all men everywhere."&#13;
&#13;
BURNETTE COOPER&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
" B e go ne, dull care, thou and I shall never&#13;
agree."&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY EYERS&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Athenaeum Vice-President&#13;
Buena Vista College ' 16-' 17-'18&#13;
&#13;
Although she only cam e to us this y ear, we&#13;
have learn ed to love her and respect her artistic&#13;
ability.&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Pieria President '18, Secretary '17&#13;
Vice-President Freshman Class&#13;
Collegian Reporter Staff&#13;
College Orchestra ' 16&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Student Council ' 19&#13;
Expression&#13;
&#13;
HELEN GULLICKSON&#13;
Pieria&#13;
" Thos e graceful acts,&#13;
Those thousand decencies that daily flow&#13;
From all her words and actions."&#13;
&#13;
"Sweet and smiling are thy ways."&#13;
&#13;
MABEL FRANCHERE&#13;
Pieria&#13;
" Her ways bespeak a cultured mind."&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet '17-'18&#13;
President Student Volunteer Band '17-'18&#13;
President Chemistry Club '17-'18&#13;
"He did the utmost bounds of knowledge find,&#13;
&#13;
MABEL GUSTESON&#13;
"And keeps that palace of the soul serene."&#13;
&#13;
MYNNIE GUSTESON&#13;
"Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her&#13;
paths are peace."&#13;
&#13;
Y et found them not so large as was his mind."&#13;
&#13;
RUTH REID FRY&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
President Zetaletheans '19&#13;
President Agora '18&#13;
Annual Board ' 18&#13;
&#13;
"Active doer, strong to labor, sure to conquer."&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE HAITZ&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Pieria Treasurer&#13;
Collegian Reporter Staff&#13;
Expression&#13;
&#13;
"She hath a merry twinkle in her ey e,&#13;
They're tinged the hue of bluish sky;&#13;
Many talents she possesses,&#13;
Not all of which she e'er confesses."&#13;
&#13;
0------------------r&#13;
&#13;
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___&#13;
_ __&#13;
&#13;
MABLE LARSON&#13;
"A math shark-and with all that a mighty nice&#13;
girl."&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
Ionian&#13;
President of Ionians&#13;
Track '17-'18-'19, Captain Track Team&#13;
'19&#13;
Class Basket Ball&#13;
Secretary of Chemistry Club&#13;
2nd in Monument Run '18&#13;
1st in Monument Run '19&#13;
Forensic League&#13;
"I'm just a long, lean country gink&#13;
And I can surely run, by jink!"'&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Vice-President of Pierias&#13;
Y. W. C. A. President '18, Vice-President '19&#13;
Madrigal Club '16-'17-'18-'19&#13;
President of Madrigal Club '18&#13;
Vice-President of Sophomore Class&#13;
Captain Junior Basket Ball&#13;
Captain Harvard Basket Ball Team '18&#13;
Captain Yale Basket Ball Team '19&#13;
Winner of Tennis Tournament '18&#13;
Junior Annual Board&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Student Council&#13;
President Freshman Girls' Club&#13;
&#13;
FENTON C. JONES&#13;
Huron College 1916&#13;
Morningside College Band '17-'18-'19&#13;
&#13;
"A type of senior rarely foundHe is smart but does not advertise the fact."&#13;
&#13;
"And there never was a minute that Hoodie&#13;
wasn't in it."&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES KLIPPEL&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Intercollegiate Orator '16&#13;
Interstate '17&#13;
Annual Board 18&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet '15-'16-'17&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
"If speech were golden, he'd be a millionaire."&#13;
&#13;
AGNES McCREERY&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Vice-President of Athenaeums '19&#13;
Editor Girls' Collegian Reporter '19&#13;
&#13;
"Sweetness, truth and every grace,&#13;
Are read distinctly in her face."&#13;
&#13;
LENA McDONALD&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Treasurer of Athenaeums&#13;
Treasurer of Senior Class&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
President of Zetalethcans&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Annual Board&#13;
Student Council&#13;
Y. VV. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
President of Senior Class&#13;
"A real, true-blue girl."&#13;
&#13;
"Those about her, from her shall read the perfect ways of honor."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
HELEN MEEKS&#13;
&#13;
"Works&#13;
&#13;
hard and gets 'A's' as a reward."&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE POYZER&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
President Athenaeums '19&#13;
Y . W. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
" Fine people like fin e deeds need no trumpets."&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
Othonian&#13;
President of Othonians '18&#13;
President Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
President Student Body '18-'19&#13;
Inter-society Debate&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
Captain Football&#13;
Captain Baseball&#13;
Captain Basket Ball&#13;
"A man in all the world's new fashion planted,&#13;
That hath a mint of phrases in his brain."&#13;
&#13;
FRANK OLSON&#13;
&#13;
"A stur.d y man and true."&#13;
&#13;
ELSIESAV ONELL&#13;
"A combination of admirable industry and quiet&#13;
fri endliness."&#13;
&#13;
AURELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Glee Club '16-'17-'18-' 19&#13;
&#13;
" She'd be cheerful and chirrupy under a mountain of trouble."&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRITCHARD&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
President of Philos '19&#13;
Editor-in-chief Sioux '19&#13;
President Forensic League '18-'19&#13;
Inter-society Debate '17-'18&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate '19&#13;
&#13;
"No sinner and no saint perhaps,&#13;
But, well, the very best of chaps."&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE THARP&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Treasurer of Athenaeums&#13;
I nter-society Committee&#13;
&#13;
" Little she asks, her wants are few,&#13;
But she is a comrade that always is true."&#13;
&#13;
RAY TROUTMAN&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Othonian President '19&#13;
Class President '16&#13;
Track and Drake Relays '18-'19&#13;
"A merrier man, within the limit of becoming&#13;
mirth,&#13;
I never spent an hour's talk withal."&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Secretary of Pieria Society '17&#13;
Pieria President '18&#13;
Madrigal Club '16&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
Inter-society Committee President '18&#13;
Class '19 Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
Chairman May Fete '18&#13;
Biology Assistant&#13;
"Persuasivespeech and more persuasive sighsSilence that spoke and eloquence of eyes."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
"Ausie" hails from the "Sunshine State" and is duly proud of&#13;
it. He is quite a stepper and the ladies and he seem to enjoy&#13;
each other's company immensely. Although he is a little hard&#13;
to get acquainted with at first, once your friend, he shows you&#13;
that he is a jolly good fellow and you're sorry you didn't discover him before.&#13;
HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
Junior Class Officers&#13;
President ........................................................ FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
Vice.President ...................................... BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
&#13;
Hazel is our standby. Whenever anybody else has failed,&#13;
Hazel is there, steady and calm, ready to help. As business&#13;
manager of this Annual she has demonstrated her capabilities.&#13;
In athletics she excels-we can say without hesitation that she is&#13;
the star athlete of the Junior girls.&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ................................ LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
Student Council Representative ........ HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
Here is a girl of a very artistic temperament of which we have&#13;
seen many evidences in striking posters and in her clever ideas&#13;
of decoration.&#13;
Elizabeth has a good disposition. She is always ready with a&#13;
smile and is always pleasing to look upon.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
VETA CLARK&#13;
HAROLD BUTLER&#13;
Harold's college career was interfered with by the war but&#13;
we are glad to say he liked his class well enough to come back&#13;
to it. Butler is a coming poet of the age. He is a man we admire and respect for his cleverness and his braininess.&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
Ada, the busy editor of our annual, really does the work of&#13;
two people-she is possessed of untiring energy and this coupled&#13;
with her ability along all lines of college activity makes her a&#13;
most efficient girl. She is in her glory when she is doing things&#13;
-editing a paper, or an annual, for instance, are mere play for&#13;
her.&#13;
BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
Beatrice is so good at a number of things that it is hard to&#13;
find her specialty among them. She is a student, loves a good&#13;
time, and has a good deal of practical common sense.&#13;
Although she is full of pep, she has a reserve that everyone&#13;
admires. She is one of our most popular girls.&#13;
&#13;
Veta is one of the Junior basket-tossers. She is a loyal&#13;
booster for her college and is always ready to do her part on&#13;
committees or wherever she is placed to work. Her eyes are&#13;
always dancing with suppressed energy which, when expressed,&#13;
always makes something doing.&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
The very essence of capability is found in Flossie-and my,&#13;
how she does put things across! Nothing is too difficult for her&#13;
to attempt and the best part of it all is that she does everything she sets out to do. In respect for her ability such positions as the Junior class president and Y. W. C. A. president&#13;
have been given to her.&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
Mary is always bubbling over with pep and enthusiasm. A ll&#13;
blues vanish when she comes in sight. She is prominent in all&#13;
college activities from Glee Club to Agora. A true college girl&#13;
whom everyone admires. Although gifted in m any lines, perhaps the most appreciated talent is her beautiful voice. Mary is&#13;
always out for a good time fo r she says,&#13;
" I like fun, and I like jokes&#13;
'Bout as well as most of fo lks."&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
-------------------------6]&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
VERLE HART&#13;
McKINLEYE RIKSSON&#13;
&#13;
In spite of his apparent lamb-like disposition, Verle can, in&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" is one of the number of our sol di er boys who has just&#13;
recently rejoined his class, but " M ac" simply coul dn't stay away.&#13;
H e h as brains enough fo r two ordinary people and knows how&#13;
to use them.&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
Alice is a peach.&#13;
Original, conscientious, a hard thinker and a h ard worker.&#13;
You will find her always true to h er work an d her fri ends.&#13;
Although very modest and unassuming, you would be surprised&#13;
at the astonishing number of things she has accomplished during&#13;
her three yea rs here. Her fi rst thought is always for others.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
Another one of the Odebolt gang. T hey all seem to fall in&#13;
the same direction. Mae dreams of future days on the farm&#13;
where she expects to be perfectly happy. When we think of&#13;
M ae we can't help recalling that giggle that belongs to her&#13;
alone.&#13;
&#13;
case of necessity, develop a streak of stubbornness. Verle doesn't&#13;
like to back down on a proposition after he has started it. He&#13;
likes to do things and especially when he is helping someone else.&#13;
AMOS HARTMAN&#13;
He has the trust and confidence of everyone with whom he&#13;
has ever come in contact. " If you want a thing well done,"&#13;
leave it to Amos. We are glad he saw fit to rejoin our class&#13;
after the armistice was signed because we liked him and we&#13;
needed him.&#13;
WAYNE HILMER&#13;
Wayne is a boy for whom college has done much in the way&#13;
of bringing out latent possibilities. He has developed into a&#13;
forceful speaker as well as quite a " stepper" .&#13;
There is one thing w e must say about Wayne and that is that&#13;
" he makes a powerfully good looking woman."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE LANG&#13;
A very sweet and demure miss w hose modesty doesn't keep&#13;
her from doing things. College, with her, is a means to an end.&#13;
She has a wide world vision of things. We expect to hear&#13;
great, good things of her.&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
Marguerite has gone through college with a steady purpose m&#13;
view-namely, to do her work and do it well. She has worked&#13;
at her music with ceaseless energy and has made rapid strides&#13;
towards all that a college woman should be.&#13;
&#13;
Harriet has a very strong personality. She is the kind of a&#13;
girl you like to know because she is always your friend. She&#13;
has that trying experience of that daily trip out from town and&#13;
yet manages to keep cheerful and get " A" grades through it all.&#13;
&#13;
DAVE KLATT&#13;
A Sergeant in the S. A. T . C. and came out of it with a&#13;
normal sized head and with everybody liking him! He has the&#13;
reputation of being bashful but he doesn't live up to his reputation very well if all reports are true. The girls all th ink he&#13;
makes a first cl ass waiter.&#13;
MILTON KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
JOHN McBURNEY&#13;
Although rather bashful and modest John is a staunch supporter of every activity which makes for the good of the school.&#13;
He has always gone about his work quietly bu t can be counted&#13;
upon to "get there" .&#13;
&#13;
Milton is a conscientious worker who applies himself with all&#13;
his energy-he is generous, helpful and willing-seems to have&#13;
a mania for taking pictures of all the pretty girls on the campus&#13;
on Sunday afternoons.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
PERCY MICKELSON&#13;
Percy is a jolly good fellow, full to the brim with pep for old&#13;
" M. C." His ready wit, his hearty laugh and his quick smile&#13;
all make him a pleasant person to have around. Underneath all&#13;
his fun and jollity we feel a true manliness and a fine spirit&#13;
which we all greatly admire.&#13;
ALVERDA MONTGOMERY&#13;
A faithful member of our cl ass is she-we fear however that&#13;
her affections are not all for her classmates but we rather suspect she bestows at least a good half of them elsewhere.&#13;
HAROLD RAUN&#13;
" Hap" is our " blues killer." H e is a sure cure for any case&#13;
of the blues, no matter how serious it is. He has a heart as big&#13;
as he is and that surely is saying a lot.&#13;
Versatile may be used to characterize " Hap" for h e takes any&#13;
part that may be given to him from the infant class to a&#13;
politician.&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
Minnie has had quite a time deciding what to do, but it is&#13;
all decided now. She has tried her hand at music and domestic&#13;
science and is proficient at both- w ith these accomplishments,&#13;
what more could a man ask?&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
"Jake" has been with Morningside since any of us can remember, starting in the Academy and working consistently to&#13;
acquire a comp lete education. Through all the time he has&#13;
been active in debate, and oratory, this year winning the Dewey&#13;
prize contest. In athletics he specializes in monument runs and&#13;
wrestling. This natural ability coupled with a g reat capacity&#13;
for h a rd work wil l win fo r him success in w hatever he attempts.&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
Eva is one of those g irls who is able to make " A " grades and&#13;
yet take part in college activ ities. She is a gi rl who bears&#13;
friendship-the longer you know her, the better you like her.&#13;
She speaks in a sweet voice in keeping with her disposition.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
BASIL TRUSCOTT&#13;
Truscott is a man who has the sin ce re admiration of a ll who&#13;
know him. H e is a most interesting man to talk with. His&#13;
deep and wide culture, together with a tru e Christian spirit,&#13;
combine to make him an ideal friend and student.&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
Here is a girl always on the job-what job? Oh! she has&#13;
a dozen different ones, such as fussing with the man from home,&#13;
playing basket ball, etc. And if she hasn't anything especial&#13;
to do, she makes something.&#13;
&#13;
SAM HUTCHINSON&#13;
Sam is the fellow with the lyric tenor voice, the pink hair&#13;
and that broad grin. Good nature fairly radiates from him.&#13;
We like to have him around no matter which one of his numerous accomplishments he entertains us with.&#13;
G RACE WISHARD&#13;
Grace has finall y decided to finish college in the best class.&#13;
W hy the d elay? We ca n' t decid e, but perhaps it's because she&#13;
isn't a bit worried fo r fear he won't wait.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Class Officers&#13;
President ---- ----- ------ ----··--------------------···········--EDNA BEKINS&#13;
Vice-President -- ····--·------ -- · ·· ·-····-··-··- · ·---FAYE Rorapaugh&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer --·-· ··- -- ---- ------·-· ··-·-· --·-· EvAN ENGBERG&#13;
Student Council Representative .. ·-·-··---·Bernice&#13;
Scoville&#13;
&#13;
G. Leonard&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
J. niffen&#13;
&#13;
M. Champ&#13;
&#13;
G. Yeaman&#13;
&#13;
M. Fowler&#13;
&#13;
E. Wang&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
What&#13;
&#13;
kind of an&#13;
&#13;
insect&#13;
&#13;
would YOU call&#13;
&#13;
this ?&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Class Officers&#13;
President .............................................. HAROLD WINTERS&#13;
Vice-President ............................................ RHODA WALIN&#13;
Secretary .................................................... Mary&#13;
DECKER&#13;
Treasurer .................................................. Wilson&#13;
SMITH&#13;
Student Council Representative................ HARRY FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
.r&#13;
&#13;
a------------------------1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
L.Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Z. Stanford&#13;
&#13;
.,i,&#13;
&#13;
F.Chapman&#13;
&#13;
W. Hatchinson&#13;
&#13;
M.Reaber&#13;
&#13;
L. Wolcott&#13;
&#13;
Expression&#13;
B. Spangler&#13;
I. Johnstone&#13;
&#13;
E. Murphy&#13;
&#13;
F. Woodraff&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
Students&#13;
EvaTre&#13;
remar&#13;
&#13;
1--------==----------------------0&#13;
&#13;
TENNIS COURTS&#13;
&#13;
Our Activities&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Coach Jason M. Saunderson&#13;
Coach Saunderson, while attending Albion College&#13;
made a remarkable record in athletics. He represented his school your years in football , playing&#13;
quarter-back, and was chosen captain in 1907, while&#13;
the same year was picked as "All Michigan" quarterback. For three years he played third base on the&#13;
baseball team, and held down a forward position&#13;
on the basket ball quintet during four seasons. In&#13;
track he made several foot records, running the&#13;
100-yard in 10: 1, the 200 in 22 :1, and the 220&#13;
hurdles in 25 :4.&#13;
After graduating, he was athletic director at&#13;
South Dakota State College for three years, 19081911, and at the University of the South fo r one&#13;
year, 1911-1912. Mr. Saunderson soon took up the&#13;
duties of athletic director at Morningside during the&#13;
fall of 1912, from which time he has continued his&#13;
work here with great success.&#13;
He has built up football teams that have gone&#13;
against such universities as Notre Dame, Iowa,&#13;
Ames, and South Dakota. He has built a two-mile&#13;
relay team that has won the two-mile event at the&#13;
Drake Relays for six consecutive years. The baseball team has been so carefully whipped into form&#13;
that we have had the classiest team in the state for&#13;
several years.&#13;
H e has won the love and friendship of all the&#13;
athletes in Morningside, and his work will never be&#13;
forgot ten by the "M" Club and the other members&#13;
of the institution.&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
Our Coach&#13;
&#13;
Athletics in Morningside&#13;
It is needless to say that among the various activities in&#13;
our institution, athletics have come to play a very prominent part; perhaps more so than any other phase of collegiate life. It is here where every man in school has an&#13;
opportunity to take part, and if he shows any ability he is&#13;
sure _ f a place on the varsity.&#13;
o&#13;
In looking through the archives we find that Morningside played other schools in football as far back as 1898.&#13;
We were then only an institution in the making, consequently it took all of these years of ceaseless effort to&#13;
build up a reputation. Our repeated success in all these&#13;
branches of athletics in recent years has fully brought us&#13;
in the limelight. No other one factor has contributed as&#13;
much to our athletic standing as Coach Saunderson. He&#13;
is known down the state for his ability to build up winning teams from absolutely raw material. It is through&#13;
his efforts that our football teams have gained recognition&#13;
of being on a par with any in the Middle West.&#13;
Geographically, we are unfortunate in being located on&#13;
the boundary line of three different states. It is this fact&#13;
that frequently makes it difficult to arrange a profitable&#13;
schedule, and due to this fact, Morningside has been&#13;
handicapped in not belonging to any athletic conferences,&#13;
such as any other Iowa schools. It has thus become our&#13;
lot to divide our athletic contests among three different&#13;
states, for which reason we always meet the strongest&#13;
teams in this section of the country, such as Nebraska U,&#13;
Iowa, Ames, and South Dakota U.&#13;
With the large gymnasium on our campus, with its indoor track_and various other modern facilities, and with&#13;
our modern Bass Field and outdoor track, ·we stand&#13;
in position to see even greater things happen in the&#13;
future than we have witnessed in the past about Morningside Athletics.&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, this year with its two&#13;
game season, was a complete success.&#13;
The State Teachers were defeated in&#13;
the first game of the season. Owing to&#13;
the fact that only four of the old veterans&#13;
were back in the lineup, many of the new&#13;
men were able to make the varsity. The&#13;
score resulted in a 20 to O victory over&#13;
pedagogues.&#13;
The one feature that made it possible&#13;
to call the Maroon season a success was&#13;
the defeat of South Dakota "U". Last&#13;
year the ball was set rolling, and for the&#13;
first time in the history of the school, we&#13;
were able to defeat the coyotes. Like history repeats itself, so did our actions on&#13;
the gridiron this year. The score resulted in a 7 to O victory for us.&#13;
The team and the college felt disappointed in the fact that they were unable&#13;
to secure more games on the schedule.&#13;
The "flu" epidemic was largely responsible, coming just at the time when the football season was to begin it forced all the&#13;
colleges to postpone their games and later&#13;
to cancel them. Coach Saunderson had a&#13;
complete schedule of strong university and&#13;
college teams, but only two of these could&#13;
play their games, and the Maroons were&#13;
unable to schedule others.&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
&#13;
" SKINNEY" NORTON&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
Captain&#13;
Left Tackle&#13;
&#13;
ORA EMERICK&#13;
&#13;
"Skinny" wea rs th ree stripes and a star on his sweater. He&#13;
is a big man who has been filled with vim and courage, and a&#13;
never end ing su pply of common sense which has won for him a&#13;
place on th e honor roll of Morningside. As C aptain of the&#13;
Maroon s, he displayed great head work, and his ability of&#13;
handling men has won for him the esteem of each player. His&#13;
work in the line proved to be very dangerous to the opposition.&#13;
&#13;
Emerick is a new man in M orningside but everyon e knows&#13;
him just the same. He played right hal f and was a tower of&#13;
strength in that position. He was sh ifty, and could hit the line&#13;
when occasion demanded it. His tackling was good, never al lowing his ma n to get away from him.&#13;
&#13;
R ight Half&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
Right End&#13;
'·No rdy" played his last game of football against S. D . U.&#13;
where he showed real old time form. Last yea r he captained&#13;
one of the best teams Morningsid e ever had. His ability at&#13;
smashing the interference, boxing plays and recei ving forward&#13;
passes, has won for him the honor of being the best end in the&#13;
state for two yea rs. He is a real fighter and has never been&#13;
stopped. He is the hard est tackler on the team, and hits like a&#13;
ton of brick.&#13;
&#13;
DONALD MONTGOMERY&#13;
Quarter&#13;
"Bud" was chosen the best High School quarter in the state&#13;
in his sen ior year, and lived up to his past record with the&#13;
Maroons last fal l. As a field general he is unsu rpassed, and it&#13;
was hi s head-work combined w ith the punch of the team that&#13;
took the " Coyotes" to a drubbing the second time.&#13;
&#13;
ORIN GOODRICH&#13;
Captain-Elect&#13;
Left Half&#13;
Because of his wonderful work in the back-field "Goody" was&#13;
chosen to lead the Sioux warriors for next yea r. H e is a shifty&#13;
runn er, an d gets a pass anywhere near his reach. He is exceptionally good at carrying the ball and running back punts.&#13;
&#13;
FAYE RORAPAUGH&#13;
Right Tackle&#13;
"Ror" was chosen by some of the football coaches as the best&#13;
tackler in the state. He tops the scale at 195 pounds, and his&#13;
punch is dangerous. He made some awful holes in the line&#13;
when ca ll ed upon to do so, and if anyone got his man " Ror"&#13;
did. H e looks to be a world-beater, and w ill be back in the&#13;
line next fall.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT QUINN&#13;
Full&#13;
If there was any fighting to be done "Bob" was always ready&#13;
to mix. "Bob" used to be the star on the scrub, and now that&#13;
he has moved up a notch, he still retains that same degree.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HILMER&#13;
End&#13;
Harold was a real fighter who didn't show it until nearly the&#13;
end of the season when he was put out on end to stop the S. D.&#13;
U. back. In the game he proved to be able to stop anything&#13;
regardless of his size. He stopped every play that came around&#13;
his end.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM ELLYSON&#13;
Center&#13;
Ellyson could play any position on the team, but he took a&#13;
fancy to center because he could be the first one to "bust" 'em&#13;
there. He is a red blooded Sioux Warrior who never stops&#13;
fighting. His passes were good and he never was outplayed in&#13;
a game.&#13;
ALBERT BALKEMA&#13;
End&#13;
"Bud" was used in the back field and on the end. He was a&#13;
consistent player, who never stopped until he was down. With&#13;
some more experience "Bud" will be a great football man.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM KOCK&#13;
Guard&#13;
"Bill" playing at guard never left anything undone; on offense&#13;
he always got his man out of the way, and on defense plunged&#13;
through the line and got the man or blocked the punt. "Bill"&#13;
had a friend in the dummy, he never wanted to hurt it.&#13;
&#13;
ANNIES MARSELLE&#13;
Guard&#13;
Talk about your "Tanks", well, they weren't in it with M a rselle. He could handle the biggest man on the team with the&#13;
least effort. Breaking through the line and throwing the runner&#13;
seemed an easy matter for him.&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
Smith started the season with flying colors. He was a scrappy&#13;
player, but was injured and kept out of the last game.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HUNTER&#13;
Sub&#13;
"Bob" promises to make a good football man. He is fast and&#13;
heavy, which are the qualifications of football material. With&#13;
some more experience, he should land a regular berth.&#13;
&#13;
1918 Schedule&#13;
State Teachers vs. Morningside, at Cedar Falls&#13;
South Dakota U. vs. Morningside, at Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
O'CONNOR&#13;
End&#13;
" Sap" was well liked by all the men on the squad. His injuries kept him from doing what he was able to do, but regardless of this he fought like a tiger.&#13;
&#13;
State Teachers vs. Morningside&#13;
This being the first game of the season, many of the new&#13;
men were tried out. Only four of last year's veterans were in the&#13;
lineup, of which three were line men and the fourth a half. Captain&#13;
Norton, Northrup, Rorapaugh, and Goodrich were the old veterans&#13;
who kept the Teachers from scoring. The new back played together&#13;
very well for the first time. Montgomery called the plays systematically and with good judgment. The Maroons were never in danger,&#13;
although at times its was necessary for the Captain to talk threateningly&#13;
to his men.&#13;
The Maroon line held the Teachers very easily, tackling the Backs&#13;
in their tracks. Our backs proved to be too much for the pedagogues'&#13;
line, and time after time they would make long gains through it.&#13;
When the final whistle blew the score stood 20-0 for us.&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota U. vs. Morningside&#13;
The second and last game of the season was played at Sioux City,&#13;
in Mizzou Park, with the University of South Dakota. Vermilion has&#13;
always been our most bitter rival, due, possibly, to the fact that both&#13;
teams have been so evenly matched.&#13;
Last year we scalped the Coyotes and hung it on our belts. This&#13;
year we repeated the process with the same result. Both teams played&#13;
consistent football from beginning to end. The old-style game was used&#13;
more successfully than the aerial game. Northrup, doing the punting&#13;
for the Maroons, outpunted his opponent by several yards.&#13;
Penalties were frequent on both sides, and at times it seemed as though&#13;
there would be arguments arising during the procedure of the· game.&#13;
The Morningside team worked together with an undivided spirit and&#13;
determination which seemed to be too much for the boys across the line.&#13;
Captain Norton and Northrup played their last game for Morningside&#13;
against S. D., and were glad to close the season as well as their football&#13;
career with a victory.&#13;
Morningside, 7; South Dakota, 0.&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's First Basket Ball Team&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's first basket ball team was organized in the winter of 1898. The&#13;
team showed speed and good team work which won for them many games. The&#13;
captain for the first two years has come back to us with his old "pep" and enthusiasm&#13;
as our president.&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE BROWN&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
This&#13;
&#13;
being the second year of inter-collegiate basket ball for several years, our&#13;
material in this branch of athletics doesn't&#13;
stand out as prominently as it might.&#13;
However, after several weeks of elementary training and some scrimmaging,&#13;
Coach Saunderson picked out ten men&#13;
that looked like a varsity squad. The&#13;
signing of the armistice brought back some&#13;
of the old men, among whom was our&#13;
last year star and this year captain.&#13;
With this help and the effort of the rest&#13;
of the men to establish a record, Coach&#13;
Saunderson built up a team that held the&#13;
best of them.&#13;
We are indeed proud to say that our&#13;
team showed real "stuff" and were hard&#13;
fighters . Although we didn't win more&#13;
than half of the games, we consider our&#13;
season a very successful one, and the fact&#13;
that every team we battled had to fight for&#13;
what they got leads us to believe we are&#13;
just building up a reputation . With our&#13;
experience in this branch of athletics equal&#13;
to our opposition, we anticipate a good&#13;
future of basket ball.&#13;
&#13;
o-------------------~o&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball Team 1918,-19&#13;
&#13;
1---------------------------0&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE BROWN&#13;
&#13;
FAYE RORAPAUGH&#13;
&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
This is "Ror's" first year at basket ball, but he broke into the&#13;
game in fine form. He plays an excellent game at standing&#13;
guard.&#13;
He never allows a man to get back of him and always gets&#13;
the ball within his reach.&#13;
&#13;
George has played with us two years. He .is fast, a good&#13;
basket shooter, and his teamwork is the best. Usually the best&#13;
man on the team is put on his trail but George makes a&#13;
monkey out of him. When in a real game he has fight to spare.&#13;
He made the third highest number of points with a score of&#13;
forty-one points.&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
MERYLE SHAFENBERG&#13;
&#13;
" Skinney" was the only man on the team that played every&#13;
minute of every game. Nobody ever ran over " Skin" but he&#13;
usuall y sneaked up and tossed in a few ringers himself, making&#13;
eighty-two points, the highest number of points scored by any&#13;
member of the team.&#13;
"Skinney" graduates this year and his place will be hard&#13;
to fill.&#13;
&#13;
" Shaf" was the fastest center we had and oh, how he could&#13;
jump! He outjumped his man in nearly every game. "Shaf"&#13;
played a more defensive than offensive game.&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT BALKEMA&#13;
ORA EMERICK&#13;
Ora, the Spirit Lake phenomenon, could dribble through most&#13;
anything. He has a keen eye for the basket and is exceptionally&#13;
good on the long shots.&#13;
He made second highest number of points with a score of&#13;
forty-seven to his credit.&#13;
&#13;
"Bud" played consistent ball all season although playing under&#13;
a handicap after being injured early in the season. "Bud"&#13;
could play center or guard, but his regular place was center.&#13;
&#13;
PERCY MICKELSON&#13;
Handicapped by his size "Mike" had odds to work against.&#13;
He was a hard fighter and usually held his man to a few points.&#13;
He has to take many steps to go the distance of the floor.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES LEE&#13;
"Jim" could play forward or center. His long shots took the&#13;
"pep" out of the other gang. "Jim" was fast and always&#13;
worked hard in a game. He will be back at them again next&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
BASKET BALL SCHEDULE&#13;
CURTIS CASSILL&#13;
Curtis was the "scrub" star to start with but because of his&#13;
consistent playing was put on the varsity where he developed&#13;
very rapidly. He could reach across the floor. The only way to&#13;
get behind him was to crawl under.&#13;
&#13;
Feb. 1 - Nebraska Wesleyan ................&#13;
Feb. 4 - South Dakota "U" ..................&#13;
Feb. 8 - Creighton ''U''----- ------------ ------Feb. 22 - South Dakota State ................&#13;
Feb. 26 - Creighton -------------------------------Feb. 28 - Camp Dodge -------------------------Mar. 1 -Drake -------------------------------------Mar. 7-Drake ---------------- --------- ------------Mar. 8-Drake -------------------- -- ---- ----- -------&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
24&#13;
28&#13;
10&#13;
32&#13;
15&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Omaha&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Camp Dodge&#13;
At Drake&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
14&#13;
3&#13;
11&#13;
8&#13;
31&#13;
23&#13;
20&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN v·s. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
HAROLD HILMER&#13;
After playing running guard on the scrubs, Harold was shifted&#13;
to center on the varsity where he displayed remarkable ability&#13;
as a basket ball player.&#13;
He is a fighter from "A to Z" but at the same time always&#13;
wears a smile.&#13;
&#13;
This was the first game of the season played on the home floor. Every man went&#13;
into the game eager to win. The game was evenly matched, Morningside taking the&#13;
lead from the first and holding it throughout the game.&#13;
The new men, Emerick, Balkema, Rorapaugh, and Shafenberg, did good work.&#13;
Brown hit his stride in the second half. Norton played a very good offensive game,&#13;
making eleven of the nineteen points.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH DAKOTA "U" vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The Coyotes came down here with a determination to win. The spirit of the old&#13;
rivalry was shown as soon as the whistle was blown.&#13;
Morningside started the scoring when Brown made the most sensational shot ever&#13;
made on our floor. Captain Lynch was the only one of the Coyotes that was able&#13;
to hit the loop, making nine field goals from the middle of the floor.&#13;
Both teams guarded closely and many personals were committed.&#13;
CREIGHTON vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Two games were played with fast aggregation at Creighton. They won every&#13;
game of the season, having played together through high school and college. Our&#13;
men were outclassed in team work and basket shooting, but our defense was good.&#13;
Creighton made most of their shots outside the foul circle. Kearney, their center,&#13;
starred in both games. Emerick, Brown, and Norton did good work for the Maroons.&#13;
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
This was one of the closest games played on the home floor. Close guarding was&#13;
the feature of the game. Many personal fouls were committed on both sides. Norton&#13;
held his man to two points, making seven himself .&#13;
Morningside made the only field goal the second half, South Dakota making only&#13;
three foul goals.&#13;
CAMP DODGE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
THE NORTHWEST IOWA BASKET BALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
In this game Brown hit his old form, shooting baskets from all angles, making 14&#13;
out of the 32 points. Emerick, Norton, and Shafenberg did fine work also, outclassing&#13;
&#13;
For a number of years Morningside College has had as its guests the high schools&#13;
of northwest Iowa at the annual Northwest Iowa Basket Ball Tournament. This&#13;
district was organized in 1916 by the local "M" Club, which has done a great deal&#13;
towards making the tournament a success.&#13;
The first year only sixteen teams were entered, but since then the entrance has&#13;
increased with twenty-nine teams playing for the honors this year.&#13;
Previously the tournament has been held for the elimination of high schools for the&#13;
state tournament held at Ames, but this year no state tournament was held, making&#13;
this the final one of the season.&#13;
Many of the teams entered were among the fastest in the state. Remarkable basket&#13;
shooting, teamwork and floorwork was displayed. Spencer won first place, playing&#13;
its final game with Luverne. The final score was: Spencer, 22; Luverne, 11.&#13;
&#13;
the soldiers from the start.&#13;
DRAKE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Played in the Drake Gym, with a house full of spectators, Morningside lost its&#13;
second game down state. The game was close all the way though , but we were&#13;
unable to get the lead.&#13;
The games played at Morningside, March 7 and 8, were split evenly, Morningside&#13;
winning the first, Drake the second game. Good teamwork and consistent playing&#13;
was the feature of both games. In the first game, Norton scored 11 of the 20 points,&#13;
and in the second 7 of the 9.&#13;
Drake made only two field goals and eleven foul goals in the first game.&#13;
games were hotly contested.&#13;
&#13;
Both&#13;
&#13;
NORTHWEST IOWA TOURNAMENT RESULTS&#13;
FIRST ROUND&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center, 45; Merrill, 2.&#13;
Spencer, 22; Modale, 9.&#13;
Battle Creek, 19; Sanborn, 13.&#13;
Storm Lake, 10; Remsen, 8.&#13;
Luverne, 46; Smithland, 4.&#13;
Spirit Lake, 30; Wessington Springs, 14.&#13;
Castana, 16; Rock Valley, 4.&#13;
Farnhamville, 9; Holly Springs, 8.&#13;
Hornick, 10; Orange City, 8.&#13;
Ireton, 8; Paullina, 4.&#13;
Churdan, 14; Hartley, 5.&#13;
Correctionville, 10; Lohrville, 2.&#13;
Lake Mills, 12; Primghar, 10.&#13;
SECOND ROUND .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center, 41 ; Ireton, 2.&#13;
Luverne, 30; Cherokee, 5.&#13;
Churdan, 24; Farnhamville, 7.&#13;
Storm Lake, 32; Anthon, 11.&#13;
Spencer, 34; Battle Creek, 7.&#13;
Correctionville, 12; Castana, 10.&#13;
Lake Mills, 16; Hornick, 11.&#13;
Spirit Lake, 19; Sioux City, 10.&#13;
THIRD ROUND&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center, 21; Storm Lake, 9.&#13;
Luverne, 24; Churdan, 18.&#13;
Spirit Lake, 19; Lake Mills, 16.&#13;
Spencer, 53, Correctionville, 10.&#13;
SEMI-FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Luverne, 34; Spirit Lake, 18.&#13;
Spencer, 26; Sioux Center, 16.&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Spencer, 22; Luverne, 11.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
rl-----------------------6]&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
GAIN the Morningside baseball team kept&#13;
its record on the diamond. It was probably one of the shortest seasons we ever&#13;
went through. Only four games could be&#13;
scheduled, three of which were out of&#13;
town. The other was a practice game&#13;
with the Packers, of the Sioux City Western League.&#13;
For two years Morningside has held the&#13;
state championship in inter-collegiate baseball, and our trip across the state proved&#13;
to be a repetition of the past. The three&#13;
regular games were won by our team.&#13;
The only defeat was a 12 to 6 score, suffered at the hands of the Packers, of the&#13;
Wes tern League.&#13;
Coach Saunderson has developed a&#13;
winning team by watching the plays from&#13;
all angles, developing the weaker points&#13;
by insistent practice and giving each man&#13;
who will apply himself in the right spirit&#13;
an equal chance.&#13;
•&#13;
Captain Lloyd and Northrup did a&#13;
great deal in assisting Coach Saunderson,&#13;
and much credit is due these old Sioux&#13;
Warriors.&#13;
&#13;
TOM LLOYD&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS LLOYD&#13;
T. K. has played three years of baseball for Morningside,&#13;
leading this team as captain. "Tom" is a ball player with&#13;
exceptional ability, a fast base runner, and leads his team at the&#13;
bat with an average of .538.&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR HINKLEY&#13;
" Hink" was one of the most consistent players on the team.&#13;
As a back stop he excelled any one in the state. His low whip&#13;
to second caught most of them. At the bat he was among the&#13;
best.&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
" Nordy's" chief aim is to fuss the other guy stealing bases&#13;
and to worry the man of the bag. He circles the bases faster&#13;
than any man on the team and is known to drive out a home&#13;
tun occasionally. " Nordy'' covers a lot of ground in the field&#13;
and never makes an error.&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE D. KLATT&#13;
"Dave" has held down the second bag for two years. His&#13;
work in the infield has been very satisfactory. "Dave" never&#13;
misses a peg from home and from time to time he would catch&#13;
the runner napping on second.&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE J. OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
"Jerry" proved his worth as a ball player, being able to step&#13;
back of the bat when necessary. His regular place was third&#13;
base, but he was put in the back stop position when Hinkley&#13;
was laid out. He is one of Morningside's athletes who has won&#13;
four sweaters in four different branches of athletics.&#13;
&#13;
"Phoebe", the old reliable South paw, has the meanest hook&#13;
there is. He is one of the headiest players on the team. He&#13;
never lacks nerve and is always cool and steady. When not&#13;
in the box he performs most creditably in the out field.&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
JAMES P. LEE&#13;
"Jim" is one of our Freshman hurlers who received his experience with the fast Danbury High School team. Nothing&#13;
would excite him and it was hi s steadiness that shut the State&#13;
Teachers out with a no hit game.&#13;
&#13;
SAM HUTCHISON&#13;
Sam broke into the game in short order. H is position is short&#13;
stop, which play he holds down most creditably. He is always&#13;
" up and at 'em," and worries the life out of a runner on second.&#13;
Hi s peg. is sure and he plays a fast game.&#13;
&#13;
Team Batting Average, .260&#13;
T he men who had the highest batting average are as follows:&#13;
Lloyd ............................ .538&#13;
Hinkley ........................ .365&#13;
Northrup .................... .315&#13;
Engle ........................... 312&#13;
Hutchinson ................... 294&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
" Hoot's" a utility. He p lays out fie ld as well as in field.&#13;
H e likes to kid the boys out of a hit and judging from his line,&#13;
he seems to have come fr om Laurens. He plays his position&#13;
with all due credit. His work in the la st two games proved to&#13;
be of high standard.&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE ENGLE&#13;
Engle came from Luverne where he played with the fast town&#13;
team. H e stepped into the box this year with all the qualities&#13;
of a good pitcher. His speed combined with his curves baffled&#13;
more than one. He pitched good ball al l season and allowed&#13;
only four sca ttered hits against the fast Dubuque team.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's Schedule&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
21 13 14- 15 -&#13;
&#13;
Packers .............. 13&#13;
Ellsworth .......... 2&#13;
State Teachers .... 0&#13;
Dubuque ............ 2&#13;
&#13;
Morningsid e.......... 6&#13;
Morningside .......... 13&#13;
Morningside .......... 3&#13;
Morningside .......... 8&#13;
&#13;
Opponents, 17&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, 30&#13;
&#13;
TOTAL,&#13;
&#13;
PACKERS vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Early in the season a practice game was arranged with the Packers&#13;
of the Sioux City Western League, in which both teams showed up fairly&#13;
well. Engle started the game in the box, and displayed good pitching&#13;
material. He was relieved in the eighth inning by Obrecht, who also&#13;
did good work. The Packers used several of their pitchers and other&#13;
substitutions were made. Morningside got six hits, the Packers thirteen.&#13;
&#13;
ELLSWORTH vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
This was the first game on the trip across the state. Obrecht was put&#13;
the box, and allowed only two scattered hits. The infield had it on&#13;
the opponents in every way. They played a fast game and kept the Ellsworth nine on a jump all the time. Our little southpaw deserves much&#13;
credit for his head work and the way he put the ball across.&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
STATE TEACHERS vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The Teachers were the second aggregation on the trip to get in on the&#13;
small end of the score. Lee was in the box that day and held his opponents down to no hits. He was showing good form and wasn't afraid&#13;
to exert himself. In the sixth inning, Hinkley and Johnson collided&#13;
while chasing a foul strike.&#13;
Both men were knocked down. Hinkley's face was bruised so badly&#13;
he had to discontinue the game. "Jerry" was shifted from third base&#13;
to the catching position, and Norton took his place.&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE vs. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
This was the last and hardest game on the trip, because many of their&#13;
players were old men. Engle stepped into the box with all the pep and&#13;
enthusiasm he had for winning the game. He held the Catholics to&#13;
three hits and pitched consistent ball. Engle's work on the mound,&#13;
combined with the excellent work of the rest of the players, proved to&#13;
be the best combination we had.&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
track season was a success in spite of&#13;
the fact that many men had left school to&#13;
enlist in the army. Under the coaching&#13;
of Saunderson a relay team was sent to the&#13;
Drake Relays, and returned with the twomile relay banner, for the fifth consecutive&#13;
year. The race was run in a snow storm&#13;
and the time made was slow.&#13;
A dual meet with Yankton was held on&#13;
Bass Field on May 4, which proved an&#13;
easy victory for the Sioux runners. Out&#13;
of the eleven events, Morningside took&#13;
nine firsts.&#13;
In the state meet two men form Morninside&#13;
Walker and Pearce&#13;
were able&#13;
to place in three events: the hurdles,&#13;
discus, and half mile.&#13;
During the years that Coach Saunderson has been directing the athletics at&#13;
Morningside, they have taken a leading&#13;
place in track among the colleges of Iowa,&#13;
South Dakota, and Nebraska, and are&#13;
maintaining a high standard of which the&#13;
school may be proud. This year, with a&#13;
number of old men back and others returning from the army, we look forward to a&#13;
successful season on the cinder path.&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
"JERRY" Johnson&#13;
CAPTAIN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Drake Relays&#13;
&#13;
LEON JOHNSON&#13;
This is the fourth branch of athletics in which "Jerry" has&#13;
won his letters. He is a weight man, particularly throwing the&#13;
discus, in which branch he has a record of 115 feet.&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
Hunt runs the half or the mile equally well. He won the&#13;
mile run in the dual meet with a time of 4: 43 2/3. He was a&#13;
member of the Drake Relay team, also captured the honors at&#13;
Drake.&#13;
&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Shafenberg&#13;
&#13;
Troutman&#13;
&#13;
The Drake Relays, held annually at the Drake Stadium&#13;
in Des Moines, one of the largest relays of the Middle&#13;
West, has become a prominent feature of Morningside&#13;
athletics.&#13;
For the fourth consecutive year our two-mile relay&#13;
team captured first honors in the two-mile relay race.&#13;
This year the team, composed of Walker, Hunt, Troutman, and Shafenberg, completed the race very near record&#13;
time, in spite of the fact that the track was covered with&#13;
snow.&#13;
The race was a feature, as another team was in the&#13;
lead up to the last 220 yards, when Walker, our captain,&#13;
dashed ahead like a race horse, and finished with a ten-yard&#13;
lead.&#13;
Morningside holds a record of the Drake Relays, with&#13;
a time of 8:15.&#13;
&#13;
Walker&#13;
&#13;
HERALD WALKER&#13;
"Steve" is a four year track man, one of the fastest half-milers&#13;
in the state. He is the only man in college that has been on the&#13;
two mile track relay team for its four consecutive years in his&#13;
stay here.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
RAY TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MEYERS&#13;
&#13;
This was "Fish's" first yea r out for the Drake Relays and his&#13;
consistent training proved worthy of giving him a berth on the&#13;
team. He made good time in his half at Des Moines. He also&#13;
placed in the discus throw and shot put.&#13;
&#13;
"Herb" was one of the men that won his place on the Drake&#13;
Relay team but because of the misfortune of getting spiked was&#13;
unable to make the trip to Des M oines. H owever he showed&#13;
us real stuff in the dual meet with Yankton. He is the smallest&#13;
man out for track but shows good stuff.&#13;
&#13;
MERLE SHAFENBERG&#13;
The Sargeant Bluffs phenomenon is one of the most promising&#13;
record breakers. He was the only Freshman on the Drake Relay&#13;
team, and with three more years " Shaf" will undoubtedly be a&#13;
" marvel" . In the home meet he proved himself a real track&#13;
man, winning second honors.&#13;
&#13;
McKINLEY EVAS&#13;
"Mac" was handicapped ea rly in&#13;
and couldn't try out for the Drake&#13;
two mile race in which he made a&#13;
is a good long distance runner and&#13;
mile man.&#13;
&#13;
the season&#13;
Relay but&#13;
wonderful&#13;
shows real&#13;
&#13;
because of illness&#13;
later took up the&#13;
showing. " Mac"&#13;
"stuff" for a two&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT SEEMAN&#13;
"Al" was our sprinter. He is fast and a conscientious trainer&#13;
and with three years more of track w ork he will develop very&#13;
much and pull down a few medals.&#13;
LAWRENCE PEARCE&#13;
"Fonda" was the best all round track man in college. . He&#13;
won more points than any one else. He could shoot the p ill out&#13;
a reasonable distance, could high jump, got second in the broad&#13;
jump, won the pole vault, and won the high hurdl es but was&#13;
disqualified. He won individual honors at the home meet, and&#13;
came within one point of winning the honors in the dual meet&#13;
with Yankton.&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE ALT&#13;
" Alt" is another yea rling who has w on his letter. He h as&#13;
developed a great deal of speed this year. He appears to be a&#13;
promising hurdler a nd his sprinting is nothing slow.&#13;
&#13;
Home Meet&#13;
April 5, 1918&#13;
RECORDS FOR THE HOME MEET&#13;
The following are the results of the different events of the home meet :&#13;
100-yard dash-Seeman, Freshman, first; Miller, Freshman, second; Alt, Freshman, third.&#13;
Time, 11: 1.&#13;
440-yard dash-Shaffenberg, Freshman, first; Sal tow, Senior, second; Burpee, Sophomore, third.&#13;
Time, 54: 2.&#13;
220-yard low hurdles-Shaffenberg, first; Meyer, Freshman, second. Time, 29: 2.&#13;
120-yard high hurdles-Pearce, Sophomore, first. Time, 18: 1.&#13;
Pole vault-Pearce, first; Jones, Freshman, second. Height, 9 f t., 6 in.&#13;
880-yard run- Walker, Senior, first; Troutman, Junior, second. Time, 2-5 .&#13;
• Mile run- Hunt, Junior, first; Meyer, second. Time, 4-48.&#13;
220-yard dash-Shaffen berg, first; Seeman, second; Meyers, third. Time, 25 : 1.&#13;
Two mile run-Evans, Junior, first; Scheerer, Academy, second; Hartman, Sophomore, third.&#13;
Time, 10-58.&#13;
Discus throw-Johnson, Senior, first; Pearce, second; Troutman, third. Distance, 114 ft., 6 in.&#13;
Shot put-Pearce, first; Troutman, second; Johnson, third. Distance, 3 5 ft., 2 in.&#13;
High jump- Pearce, first; Jones, second. Height, 4 ft., 6 in.&#13;
Broad jump- Alt, first; Pearce, second; Shafenberg, third. Distance, 18 ft., 5 in.&#13;
Freshmen, Class of 1921, first, 45 points.&#13;
Sophomores, Class of 1920, second, 28 points.&#13;
Juniors, Class of 1919, third, 17 points.&#13;
Seniors, Class of 1918, fourth, 14 points.&#13;
&#13;
Dual Meet&#13;
YANKTON VS. MORNINGSIDE&#13;
The following are the results of the dual meet held with Yankton, May 4, 1918.&#13;
220-yard hurdles- Turnbull, Yankton, first; Shaffen berg, M. S., second. Time, 28 fl at.&#13;
880-yard hurdles-Walker, M. S., first; Troutman, M. S., second. Time, 1 : 59 2/5.&#13;
220-yard d ash-Cleeworth, Yankton, first; Seeman, M. S., second. Time, : 23 4/5.&#13;
Pole v ault- Pea rce M. S., first; Jon es, M. S., second. H eight, 10 ft., 6 in.&#13;
High jump-Stephens, Yankton, first; Pearce, M. S., second. Height, 5 ft., 4 in.&#13;
Broad jump-Cleeworth, Yankton, first; Pearce, M. S., second. Distance, 20 ft., 6 in.&#13;
Discus throw-Johnson, M. S., first; Pearce, M. S., second. Distance,· 107 ft., 9 in.&#13;
Shot put- Pearce, M. S., first; Johnson, M. S., second Distance, 34 f t., 7 in.&#13;
Two-mile run-Evans, M. S., first; Scheerer, M. S., second. Time, 11 minutes, 6 seconds.&#13;
Mile relay-Won by M eye r, Troutman, Shaffenberg, Walker of Morningside. Time, 3 : 31 2/5.&#13;
Eiffert of Yankton, starter.&#13;
Ll oyd, Horney, a nd Hinkl ey, timekeepers.&#13;
&#13;
"M" M eet&#13;
The ann ual "M" M eet hel d on Bass Field May 3 proved to be the best in recent years. The&#13;
track was in fine condition and the weather favorable for record breaking time. Competition&#13;
was v ery keen in all races w hich w as the ca use of seve ral new records. Sioux City won the&#13;
meet with ni neteen points. Storm Lake won second w ith thirteen points. Parker, South D akota,&#13;
with a one ma n tea m w on thi rd with twelve points. Patrick of Parker was the individ ual star.&#13;
Webb low ered th e fo rmer "M " Meet record in the 440-yard d ash by two-fifths of a second.&#13;
Three othe r records lowered in the meet were made by M cK anna of Sheldon w ho broke t he&#13;
record in the mile by three-fifths of a second. T he C herokee mile relay team chipped off four&#13;
second s from the former reco rd in this meet. Adamson of Co.rrectionv ille established a n ew mark&#13;
in the discus throw by heaving the platter 118 feet.&#13;
Good talent is shown in this meet each year th rough which we usually gain v aluable material&#13;
for ou r track squad by men who later attend M orn ingside.&#13;
The following are the results of the records.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY WINS FIRST IN "M " MEET&#13;
The following are the results :&#13;
100-ya rd dash-Eli, Hudson, first; Allen, Laurens, second ; Campbell, Sioux City, th ird.&#13;
Time, 10 4/5.&#13;
120-yard hurdles-Patrick, Parker, first; Kelly, Fonda, second ; Knitt, Sioux City, third.&#13;
Time, 18 1/5.&#13;
220-yard d ash-Steffen, Holstein, first ; Cooper, Correctionville, second ; Eli, Hudson, third.&#13;
Time, 25 1/5.&#13;
Mile run-McKenna, Sheldon, first ; Goodrich, Paulsen, second; Schuett, Holstein, thi rd.&#13;
Time, 4:47 4/5.&#13;
H a lf-mi le rel ay-Laurens, first ; Sioux City, second ; Yan kton, third. Time, : 43 2/5.&#13;
440-yard dash-Webb, Storm Lake, first ; Test, Paulina, second ; Taylor, Sioux City, t hird.&#13;
Time, 54 fla t.&#13;
880-ya rd run-McKenna, Sheldon, first ; Lorey, Sioux City, second ; Giehm, Sioux City, t hird.&#13;
Time, 2: 15 4/5.&#13;
220-yard hurdl es-Knott, Sioux City, first; Kelly, Fonda, second; Scott, Paulina, third. T ime,&#13;
28 flat.&#13;
Mil e relay- Cherokee, fi rst ; Sioux City, second ; Yankton, third. T ime, 3: 43.&#13;
P ole Vault-Bell, Storm Lake, first; Kelly, Fond a, second ; Patrick, Parker, third. H eight,&#13;
10 feet.&#13;
High jump-Patrick, Parker, first; Conn, Hartley, second ; D ahl, Sioux City, third. Height,&#13;
5 feet, 9 inches.&#13;
B road jump-Karr, Yankton, first; Bagge, Fond a, second ; Patrick, Parker, third. Distance,&#13;
18 fe et, 4 inches.&#13;
Discus-Adamson, Correctionville, first; Windler, Paulina, second ; Chort, Correctionville, t hird.&#13;
Dista nee, 118 feet.&#13;
Shot put- Doolittle, Milford, first ; Gaffing, Storm Lake, second; Windler, Paullina, and&#13;
Jongewaard, Hurley, tied fo r third pl ace. Distance, 38 feet, 7 inches.&#13;
Coach Saunderson acted as starter. Other officials were chiefly members of the "M" club.&#13;
M ed als were g iven to the ind ividuals taking first in the va rious events. There we re t wo large&#13;
cups given this year. The "M " cup w as g iven to Sioux City fo r obtaining the h ighest number&#13;
of points in the meet, w hi le the Phi lo cup went to C herokee fo r winning the mile relay.&#13;
&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Pitstick&#13;
&#13;
Lory&#13;
&#13;
The Annual Monument Run takes place on the after- noon of February 22. Albert Hunt won the race this&#13;
year, 21 :22. He had the edge on the rest of the men&#13;
with a big lead.&#13;
Pitstickvon second, with Hillis Lory as a close contender for that place.&#13;
Three medals are given for this event 111 the college,.&#13;
and the Academy medal was won this year by Harold&#13;
Harding.&#13;
&#13;
o----------------------0&#13;
&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
&#13;
The Wrest ling Tournament&#13;
Wrestling is a comparatively new sport in Morningside&#13;
athletics. Its initial class was introduced this year by&#13;
Coach Saunderson, who, after several weeks coaching,&#13;
staged a tournament.&#13;
The preliminaries were held April 25 with two bouts&#13;
in the heavy-weight class, and two in the light-weight&#13;
class. In the heavy-weight class, Tom McBride succeeded in obtaining a fall from Evan Ausman . Following "this was a light-weight bout between Orin Bell and&#13;
Charles Fry, in which Fry secured a fall in about fifteen&#13;
minutes. Next was another heavy-weight bout between&#13;
Jacob Trefz and Clair Sherwood, Trefz proving his superiority over "Deak". T he last bout of the preliminaries&#13;
was won by "Rusty" McBride over Burnett Cooper.&#13;
On the following Monday afternoon, April 29, the&#13;
semi-finals were held . They consisted of two bouts, one&#13;
between the two heavy-weights, Tom McBride and Jacob&#13;
Trefz, and the other between the two light-weights,&#13;
"Rusty" McBride and Charles Fry. After thirty minutes of gruelling contest, Trefz succeeded in getting McBride's shoulders pinned to the mat, thus winning the&#13;
heavy-weight title. Following this "Rusty" obtained a&#13;
fall from "Chick", giving him the light-weight title.&#13;
' The final bout came off that evening, when Trefz met&#13;
McBride for the championship. Trefz was able to get&#13;
the fall , because of his superior weight.&#13;
The winner of the tournament received a medal, donated by the Morningside Wrestlers Association. Coach&#13;
Saunderson, instructor of the class, acted as referee.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Athletic Committee&#13;
&#13;
N. Moss, General Chan man; C Hauswold, Hockey,Chairman,&#13;
L. Winde11, Volley Ball Chairm an; R. Mahood,&#13;
Baseball Chairma n ; L. Williams, Tennis Chairman; V. Cla rk , Track and Field Cha irm an;&#13;
E. Stallard , Hike Chai rm a n: M. Jacobs, Basket Ball Chairman&#13;
&#13;
MISS NAOMI GOOD&#13;
PHYSICAL DIRECTOR FOR WOMEN&#13;
&#13;
"Loving, well composed, with gifts of nature flowing&#13;
And swelling o'er with arts and exercise."&#13;
&#13;
This year, for the first time in the history of Girls' Athletics at Morningside&#13;
College, sweaters are being awarded to two girls in the Senior class.&#13;
Ruth Mahood and Aurelia Sturtevant, having obtained the required number of&#13;
points and having been graded on personal presence, athletic accomplishments, spirit,&#13;
and scholarship, will receive their "M" sweaters.&#13;
&#13;
May Fete&#13;
"Come and trip it as you go,&#13;
On the light fantistic toe."&#13;
&#13;
Last year hundreds of people witnessed one of the cleverest and most&#13;
aesthetic exhibitions ever staged on&#13;
Bass Field.&#13;
The costumes were Grecian, and&#13;
the dances represented scenes taken&#13;
from Greek mythology.&#13;
The queen and her attendants came&#13;
down the cinder path and took their&#13;
places beneath a bower of foliage.&#13;
Jupiter and Juno then arrived, bringing gifts to the new queen.&#13;
The mist maidens, shimmering in&#13;
green and gold, and carrying their&#13;
long golden horns, dancing gaily before their queen.&#13;
Then followed the daughters of the&#13;
dawn, Cupid · and Psyche, and the&#13;
Graces and Peacocks.&#13;
The Warrior maidens, bearing&#13;
shields and spears, battled after the&#13;
ancient Grecian manner. The wood&#13;
nymphs scattered their flowers over&#13;
the field and quickly disappeared into&#13;
the darkness, after which the searchlight directed its blinding rays on&#13;
"Echo", the Jittle solo dancer.&#13;
GLADYS KNAPP, May Queen&#13;
MARION HEIKES LEUDER, Retiring Queen&#13;
&#13;
The Fountain, the Winds and Pleiades with Diana ,followed in turn, and were&#13;
artistically performed.&#13;
All was concluded by the winding of the Maypole, during which the flags of the&#13;
Allies were planted before the enthusiastic audience.&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball&#13;
HARVARD TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Top Row: M. Jacobs, B. Scoville.&#13;
Bottom Row: F. Day, N. Moss (Capt.), L. Williams, Z. Baldwin, L. U lman.&#13;
YALE TEAM&#13;
R. Mahood (Capt.}, E. Stallard, H. Bergeson, C. Hauswold, I. Stevens, V. Clark, E. Bradley.&#13;
SCORE&#13;
Harvard 4, Yale 3&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
"ECHO"&#13;
&#13;
B. Scoville, E. Balkema, C. Hauswold, L. Williams (Capt.), I. Stevens, B. Radley, Z. Baldwin&#13;
Winners in Class Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Class Teams&#13;
FRESHMAN TEAM&#13;
&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
Top Row .. ..E. Stallard,&#13;
Bottom Row.. P. Brown,&#13;
&#13;
tamper, N. Moss, I . Knight.&#13;
Berry.&#13;
Pitstick, s G.Capt. '&#13;
. Jacob ( S&#13;
&#13;
E. Lang, H. Bergson, M · Reuber, F. Day, V . Clark, L. Ullman (Capt.)&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
State Oratorical Contest&#13;
Friday, March 71 1919, at Coe College, Cedar Rapids&#13;
&#13;
ABRAM M. DEVAUL&#13;
In appreciation of&#13;
CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
To whose untiring efforts&#13;
Morningside College owes its&#13;
splendid record in forensics.&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
"A Struggle Centuries Old" (second) _______________ __________ PERCY L. EDWARDS&#13;
"World Peace"------------------------------------------- ----- ------------------HUYETT H. GAINES&#13;
"Pitfalls of Peace" ( firstl---------------------- ----------·----------: ______ WM. C. PERDEW&#13;
"The Safe Democracy" (third) ______________________________ ABRAM M. DE VAUL&#13;
" The Land That God Forgot"------------------------------------AGNES G. WALKER&#13;
"The Light of the World"-----------LESTER&#13;
L. SHULDT&#13;
COLLEGES REPRESENTED&#13;
Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
Cornell&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Coe&#13;
Buena Vista&#13;
&#13;
Parsons&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Home Prohibition Contest&#13;
March 28, 1919&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debates&#13;
&#13;
R. Hunter&#13;
&#13;
E. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
D . Norton&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
Th at the F ederal Government should require at least one year of military&#13;
training of all able-bodied men between th e ages of sixteen and twenty-on e,&#13;
constitutionally conceded.&#13;
&#13;
R ESOLVED:&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan Negative&#13;
JACOB TREFZ&#13;
" Our Own Battle" .............................................................. ANDREW STOUFFER&#13;
"The Brewer and Hi s Cure" ................................................ DONALD NISSEN&#13;
'' International Prohibition' ' ....................... ........................ ARTHUR SCHULDT&#13;
" Our Present Duty" ................................................................ E. M. ERIKSSON&#13;
" The New World Ideali sm" ( fir st ) ........................................ JACOB TREFZ&#13;
"The Supreme Task" .................................. ....................... CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
"The Cigarette and the B oy" ...................................................... PAuL. ZIEKE&#13;
&#13;
District O ratorical Contest&#13;
"The Safe Democracy" ........................ ABRAM M . DE VAUL, Morningside&#13;
"The Light of the World " ...................... LESTER L. SCHULDT, Buena Vista&#13;
"The Efficient Man" .......................................... CLARENCE BOND, Ellsworth&#13;
"The Land That God Forgot" .................................... AGNES WALKER, Coe&#13;
" America's N eed of Art" ............... ............................. B ESSIE SHORE, Simpson&#13;
"The Tyranny of the Majority" ........................ MARGARET HoovER, Penn&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, April 25, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 1, Negative 0&#13;
&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan· Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Morningside Negative&#13;
Mitchell April 25, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 0, Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Gold Medal Series&#13;
WOODRUFF&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debates&#13;
&#13;
WINTER&#13;
&#13;
ANDREWS&#13;
FLYNN&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
MARQUART&#13;
&#13;
CASSIL&#13;
MYERS&#13;
&#13;
CASSIL&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
MYERS&#13;
&#13;
FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
SHELDON&#13;
&#13;
WOODRUFF&#13;
&#13;
DYKE&#13;
HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
MOORHEAD&#13;
&#13;
DEJONG&#13;
&#13;
MOORHEAD&#13;
&#13;
DEBRIEN&#13;
&#13;
BARRICK&#13;
&#13;
JONGEWAARD&#13;
VAN PEURSEM&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
MARSH H.&#13;
&#13;
BEDELL&#13;
MARSH&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
DOWN&#13;
&#13;
RANKIN&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
VAN PEURSEM&#13;
&#13;
WINKELMAN&#13;
&#13;
BALKEMA&#13;
&#13;
HART&#13;
DOWN&#13;
&#13;
BUTLER&#13;
&#13;
RANKIN&#13;
&#13;
BEDELL&#13;
&#13;
HART&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Gold Medal Series&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
&#13;
S. Stouffer&#13;
&#13;
L. Hickman&#13;
&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
G. OLIVER&#13;
A. HARTMAN&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
E. OTTO&#13;
C. OELFKE&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
P. ZIEKE&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
Tlzat the Federal Government should require at least one year of military&#13;
training of all able-bodied men between the ages of sixteen and twenty-one,&#13;
constitutionally conceded.&#13;
&#13;
P. ZIEKE&#13;
&#13;
C. OELFKE&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
C. NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
RESOLVED :&#13;
&#13;
PERSINGER&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
A. SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
W. SMITH&#13;
&#13;
C. KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
SCHULDT&#13;
HARTMAN&#13;
&#13;
C. KENNEDY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Yankton Negative&#13;
Yankton, May 1, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 1, Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
W. SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
C. NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
H. HILMER&#13;
&#13;
C. OELFKE&#13;
&#13;
C. NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
M . ERIKSSON&#13;
&#13;
M. ERIKSSON&#13;
&#13;
H. BRUSWITZ&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
GLAZIER&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
D. NISSEN&#13;
&#13;
Yankton Affirmative&#13;
vs&#13;
Morningside Negative&#13;
Morningside May 1, 1919&#13;
Affirmative 0, Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
H . LORY&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SCHEERER&#13;
&#13;
E. ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
H. LORY&#13;
&#13;
H. BENZ&#13;
&#13;
M. ERIKSSON&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
V. PITSTICK&#13;
&#13;
H. BRUSWITZ&#13;
&#13;
R. WILSON&#13;
&#13;
E. ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SCHEERER&#13;
&#13;
D. KLATT&#13;
'VS.&#13;
&#13;
C. 0ELRICH&#13;
H. BRUSWITZ&#13;
&#13;
SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
H. BENZ&#13;
&#13;
BENZ&#13;
&#13;
Men's Inter-Collegiate Debate&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Gold Medal Series&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
&#13;
1902 1903 1904 -&#13;
&#13;
M . EVANS&#13;
J. MCBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
BROW N&#13;
&#13;
A. OLSON&#13;
&#13;
J. M CBURNEY&#13;
A. OLSON&#13;
vs&#13;
&#13;
J. LEE&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
Q. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
A . OLSON&#13;
&#13;
Q, JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
A. OLSON&#13;
J. MCBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
'VS,&#13;
&#13;
E. AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
KLAUS&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
C. CORBETT&#13;
'VS,&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
C. EICHERLY&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
AUSMAN&#13;
vs&#13;
&#13;
C. EICHERLY&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
C. EICHERLY&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
'VS,&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
DAY&#13;
&#13;
J. MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1900-J. A. DAVIES, Ninth&#13;
1901- H. A. KECK, Seventh&#13;
1902 - A. R. TOOTHAKER, Eliminated&#13;
1903 - D. C. HALL, Fourth&#13;
1904 - R. E. HEILMAN&#13;
1905 - G . J. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
1906 -A. G . CUSHMAN&#13;
1907 -A. G. CUSHMAN, Fifth&#13;
1908 - F . W. BACKEMEYER, Second&#13;
1909 - F. W. BACKEMEYER, First&#13;
1910 - H . S. HAMILTON, Second&#13;
1911 - F. P. JOHNSON, Second&#13;
1912 - F . P. JOHNSON, Second&#13;
1913 - F . P. JOHNSON, Second&#13;
1914- R . H . McVICKER, Second&#13;
1915-J. I. DOLLIVER, Third&#13;
1916 - R. L . MITCHELL, Eliminated&#13;
1917 - C. E. ALBERTSON, Second&#13;
1918 - LEE SALTOW, Second&#13;
1919-ABRAM M. DEVAUL, Third&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1905 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1906 - Morningside&#13;
1907 - Morningside&#13;
1908 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1910- Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1911 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1912- Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1913 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1914 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1015 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1916 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1917 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1918- Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
1919 - Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3-1&#13;
0- 2&#13;
0- 0&#13;
1- 1&#13;
1-1&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Baker University&#13;
Simpson&#13;
Baker University&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Baker University&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Simpson ·&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
Dakota&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Coe&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Coe&#13;
Southwestern&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Coe&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
St. Olaf&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
Hamlin&#13;
St. Viateur&#13;
Iowa State Teachers&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
Yankton College&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0-2&#13;
3-1&#13;
1-1&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-2&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATES&#13;
1915- Morningside ........................&#13;
1916- Morningside ........................&#13;
Morningside........................&#13;
1917 - Morningside ........................&#13;
Morningside ........................&#13;
&#13;
0- 0&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Simpson ....................&#13;
Huron ........................&#13;
Yankton ....................&#13;
South Dakota U ........&#13;
Huron ........................&#13;
&#13;
3-3&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Military&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ment. Our Commandant, First Lieutenant Harry H. Brown, is conceded to be one&#13;
of the finest disciplinarians and drill masters in this district. He is a graduate of&#13;
the first Fort Snelling Officers' Training Camp.&#13;
The Personnel Adjutant was a former Morningside student, Second Lieutenant&#13;
Arthur Hopkinson. He performed his duties as adjutant in a splendid manner, and&#13;
every member of the unit felt that they had a real friend in Lieutenant Hopkinson.&#13;
Tht small arms instructor was Second Lieutenant Charles Richards. In the short&#13;
time he was here he won the admiration and respect of all. He was a graduate of the&#13;
Camp Perry 0. T . C.&#13;
With the demobilization of the S. A. T. C., in December, came the organization of&#13;
an R. 0. T. C., under the command of Lieutenant Brown. Three mornings a week&#13;
one may see these future officers drilling over Bass Field or doing calisthenics. Some&#13;
splendid officer material is being developed.&#13;
&#13;
C. D. K., '20.&#13;
&#13;
LIEUTENANT BROWN&#13;
&#13;
S. A. T. C.&#13;
Morningside started the year on a distinctly war basis. At the request of the War&#13;
Department, the College instigated a Student Army Training Corps. This unit was&#13;
to be a part of the U. S. Army, to receive the basis of military training here, with the&#13;
end in view of transferring them to the particular branch of the army for which they&#13;
were best fitted .&#13;
Two particular aims were constantly worked for : First, to obtain officer material,&#13;
and, second, to secure specialists for various branches of the service, as chemical warfare, engineers, surveyors, artillerymen, etc. While the unit did not exist long enough&#13;
to really accomplish its end in either, it certainly was developing material which&#13;
would have been of inestimable value had the war continued through the summer of&#13;
1919. It certainly speaks well for the Commandant, and the candidates as well, that&#13;
thirty-five men out of a total strength of 170 were recommended for Officers, Training&#13;
Camps. There were also about fifty men specializing in the sciences.&#13;
We ere unusually fortunate in the assignment of officers by the War Departw&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Men in the Service&#13;
&#13;
Gold Stars&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE MEN IN THE SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
Albert Behmer was killed in action on March 9th, 191 8, "Somew here in France".&#13;
Charles Fry died of influen za at Camp Dodge on October 13th, 1918.&#13;
Major Frank Jude Gary was decorated by King George for organ izing and executing an attack on Lens, France. He di ed of wounds received in this attack on September 2nd, 1918.&#13;
Alvin J . Hilker died of influenza somewhere in England on October 9th, 1918.&#13;
Harry E. Kilts died of influenza in the S. A. T. C. hospital at Morningside on October 21st,&#13;
1918.&#13;
Alfred Walter Leazer died of influenza at Camp Dodge on October 16th, 1918.&#13;
William Lehman died of influenza at Camp Pike on October 13th, 1918.&#13;
Frank Oliver died of injuries received in an airplane accident at Waco, Texas, on September&#13;
13th, 1918.&#13;
Jesse Smith died of influenza in the S. A. T. C. hospital at Morningside on October 26th, 1918.&#13;
&#13;
(In the Camps)&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE MEN IN THE SERVICE&#13;
(Overseas)&#13;
ACHESON, R. D.&#13;
ANDERSON, LIEUT. FRED&#13;
ANDERSON, LT. (DR . ) T. C.&#13;
BARKS, EARL&#13;
BASHAW, SGT. STANLEY&#13;
BENNETT, VERNON&#13;
&#13;
BERKSTRESSER, WM., CHAP.&#13;
BRIDENBAUGH, DR. J. H., LT.&#13;
BROOKS, LT. CLEVELAND&#13;
BREGGLE, LESTER&#13;
BROOME, RAY, LT.&#13;
BROWN, BERNARD&#13;
BROTHER, CAPT. (DR.) H. N.&#13;
BRUNELLE, CHAP. A. H.&#13;
BURROWS, RI CHARD&#13;
CAMPBELL, PROF. H. C.&#13;
CHANDLER, PROF. S. L.&#13;
COLLINS, LEROY&#13;
COOMB_ ARTHUR J.&#13;
S,&#13;
DAVIES, JAS. A.&#13;
DICKSON, CAPT. CHAS. WM,&#13;
DODSLEY, LT. HOMER&#13;
DOLLIVER, BARRETT&#13;
DOLLIVER, GARRETT&#13;
DUNHAM, HERBERT&#13;
EASTON, GEORGE, SGT.&#13;
EVANS, McKINLEY&#13;
FAIR, SGT. WM.&#13;
FELLER, JOHN E.&#13;
FERGUSON, CLAUDE&#13;
&#13;
FOUKE, HUGH&#13;
FOWLER, LOWELL&#13;
FREAR, CAPT. (DR.) CHAS.&#13;
FREEMAN, MA NSFIELD&#13;
FRANK, WALTER CHRIST&#13;
GETHMAN WLATER&#13;
GOUDIE, GEORGE&#13;
GREYNALD, EDWARD&#13;
HALVERSON, HILMER&#13;
HARTLEY, HAROLD&#13;
HAY, FRANCIS&#13;
HAYS, JOSEPH&#13;
HECKAMAN, HARRISON&#13;
HILL, BYRON&#13;
HOR NEY, LEE&#13;
HOWARD, MAJ. DR. WILL&#13;
HUTTON, CHAP. CHAS.&#13;
JOHNSTON, ROBT.&#13;
JOHNSON, LT. ARTHUR&#13;
KENNEY, TH.&#13;
KINGSBURY, CORP. FRANCIS&#13;
KUDRLE, CLYDE&#13;
LEAZER, GEORGE .&#13;
LEWIS, JOHN&#13;
LOFT, WM .&#13;
LLOYD, TH.&#13;
MCCONKEY, HOMER B.&#13;
MACOUN, LT. CARLETON&#13;
MAHOOD, SGT. CECIL&#13;
&#13;
MAHOOD, HEBERT&#13;
MAYNARD ORVILLE&#13;
MALIE, WILLARD&#13;
MATHEWS, W. R. LT.&#13;
MERTEN, LT. ELMER&#13;
MERTEN, HORACE&#13;
MONTGOMERY, PAUL&#13;
MOORE, ST. CLAIR, LT.&#13;
MOSSMAN, SGT. MARION&#13;
OSTLING, RALPH ALLEN&#13;
PAYNE, VICTOR&#13;
PAYNE, LT. W. H.&#13;
PICKERSGILL, Jos.&#13;
*PIKE, CHAP. STILLMAN&#13;
POSTIN, FRED W.&#13;
PRICHARD, LT. GEORGE&#13;
PRICHARD, MAJOR VERNON&#13;
RINER, LT. BEN&#13;
SANGER, EARNEST&#13;
SAYLOR, DR. HERBERT, LT.&#13;
SAWYER, MAJ . PRINCE&#13;
STEELE, SGT. LAWRENCE&#13;
WALTON, DONALD&#13;
WATLAND, W. ALTER&#13;
WEDGEWOOD, SGT. WM.&#13;
WELLS, GLEN&#13;
*White, LT. (DR. ) MARCH&#13;
WOOLHISER,&#13;
JOHN L.&#13;
WILHOITE, CHAS. DONALD&#13;
Wulf,&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
RED CROSS NURSES&#13;
DUDLEY, MYRNE&#13;
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EWER, BERTHA&#13;
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GETHMAN,&#13;
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JULIa&#13;
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WOMEN IN Y. M. C. A. HUTS&#13;
FALL, RUTH&#13;
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KIFER, MARY&#13;
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CAMPBELL, MRS.&#13;
&#13;
H.G.&#13;
&#13;
ENGBERG, SGT. R. R.&#13;
ERIKSSON, McKINLEY&#13;
ERSKINE, M. L.&#13;
EVANS, BURRELL, SGT.&#13;
EVANS, KEITH&#13;
EVELETH, DR. M.&#13;
FARNSWORTH, HAROLD&#13;
FAIR, JOHN, LT.&#13;
FEINSTEIN, I. l.&#13;
FICKLING, D. F.&#13;
FINKE, MERRILL&#13;
FINKE, WILBUR&#13;
&#13;
HERBSTER, J. G.&#13;
HICKMAN, L. E.&#13;
HIGGINS, E. C.&#13;
HILMER, E. W.&#13;
HILMER, H. J.&#13;
HICKS, LT. EARL&#13;
HILL, FURMAN&#13;
HILL, J. E.&#13;
HILL, LEON&#13;
*HILKER, ALVIN&#13;
HINKLEY, ARTHUR&#13;
HOLCOMB, F.&#13;
HOPKINSON, LT. ARTHUR&#13;
FLYNN, EDWARD&#13;
FORBES, SERGT. WILLIS&#13;
HORN, JOHN&#13;
HORNEY, ENSIGN ALVIN&#13;
FOWLER, HARRY&#13;
FREEMAN, HAROLD&#13;
HUDSON, TH.&#13;
FRENCH, MERLE&#13;
HOLCOMB, F.&#13;
HUNT, A. N.&#13;
FRIEST, TH.&#13;
·* FRY, CHARLES&#13;
HUNTER, R. L.&#13;
HUNTING, R. C.&#13;
FULBROOK, EARL&#13;
COFFIE, B. L.&#13;
GANTT, SERGT. ED. J.&#13;
HUTCHINSON, SGT. SAM&#13;
COLLINS, P. L.&#13;
BARTLETT, ALLAN&#13;
*GARY, MAJOR FRANK&#13;
HIGTON, HARRY&#13;
COONEN, HOWARD&#13;
BARTLETT, FOSTER&#13;
HORNEY, VICTOR, ENSIGN&#13;
COOPER, LT. BURNETT&#13;
JUDE&#13;
BASSETT, LT. BROWN&#13;
GASSER,&#13;
M.&#13;
HYDE, CARLTON F.&#13;
CONNER, CLARK&#13;
BECK, ER IC&#13;
GEHRING, W.&#13;
F.&#13;
IRWI N, MILTON&#13;
COPELAND, LLOYD&#13;
BECK, LT. AXEL&#13;
GERKIN, VERGIL&#13;
JACOBSON, C. F.&#13;
CORNER, I VAN&#13;
BEDELL, R. R.&#13;
JACOBSON, E. W.&#13;
CORNER, LT. PAUL&#13;
GETHMAN, JACK&#13;
BENZ, H. E.&#13;
GEHRING, LT. ARTHUR&#13;
JAMISON, E. J.&#13;
COSTAR, WAYNE&#13;
BERGESON, M. V.&#13;
GLASGOW, JULIUS&#13;
JEEP, ADELBERT&#13;
COWAN, CLINTON&#13;
BERRY, G.&#13;
GLASGOW, H. W.&#13;
CRAIG, LAWRENCE&#13;
JENKINS, J. J.&#13;
*BEHMER, AL&#13;
JENKINSON, GARNET&#13;
GOODRICH, 0. C.&#13;
CRAIK, LT. OSCAR&#13;
BELL, ORIN&#13;
CORDER, ROY&#13;
JEPSON, MAJOR DR. WM.&#13;
CRARY, CLARENCE&#13;
BEPPLER, PAUL&#13;
GORDER, HAROLD&#13;
JOH NSON, W. S.&#13;
CROUCH, GEORGE&#13;
BERG, ABE&#13;
GOLDER, CALMAN&#13;
JOHNSON, AXEL&#13;
CROWL, 0. F.&#13;
BERKSTRESSER, CHAS.&#13;
ROLAND&#13;
JOHNSON, EMMONS&#13;
BERKSTRESSER, LT. ALLAN CUSHMAN, ARTHUR&#13;
GRAY, NEVILLE&#13;
JOHNSON, LEON, ENSIGN&#13;
DAY, EDWARD&#13;
BJORGEN, D. E.&#13;
GRUESKIN, E.&#13;
JOHNSON, LINDER&#13;
DAILY, CHAS. B., SGT.&#13;
BJORK, D. L.&#13;
JOHNSON, LT. PHILIP&#13;
GWINN, I. J.&#13;
DALE, HANS&#13;
BLEAKLY, DAVID&#13;
HALE, JOHN D.&#13;
DASKOVSKY, A.&#13;
JOHNSON, ROYE&#13;
BLEAKLY, FRANCIS&#13;
HALLAM, CECIL&#13;
JOHNSTON, ROBT.&#13;
DEHAAN, A. F.&#13;
BOGARD, HERMAN,&#13;
HANSON, WM. A.&#13;
JONES, CLIFFORD&#13;
DEJONG, E. G.&#13;
ENSIGN&#13;
HANLON, 0. T.&#13;
JONES, CAPT. IR A&#13;
DEVAUL, A. M., SGT.&#13;
BOGARD, JOSEPH, LT.&#13;
HARPER, CLIFFORD&#13;
JONES, CAPT. 0. G.&#13;
BOLAND, H. M.&#13;
DEAN, Jo&#13;
HART, OSCAR&#13;
JONES, PAUL&#13;
DOERINGSFELDT, H. G.&#13;
BORCHARDT, N. W.&#13;
HART, C. I., SGT.&#13;
JOHNSO N, FRANK&#13;
DOLLIVER, JAMES&#13;
BOYD, H. M.&#13;
HART, V. A.&#13;
JONGEWAARD, H. G.&#13;
DONOHUE, J. H.&#13;
BOYD, J. L.&#13;
HARTMAN, AMOS&#13;
JURGENSON, ROYAL&#13;
DOWNS, FAYETTE&#13;
BURPEE, S. M.&#13;
HARRINGTON, RAY&#13;
JOH NS, ERWIN&#13;
DUBEL, LT. MARCUS&#13;
BUTCHER, B. F.&#13;
HARRINGTON, ED.&#13;
KECKLER, LEE ROY&#13;
DUNN, H. G.&#13;
BLODGETT, GEO. W.&#13;
HARTZELL, CORP.&#13;
KEENE, R.&#13;
DUTTON, GEORGE&#13;
BOND, LAFE&#13;
DUTTON WINFRED&#13;
CLIFFORD&#13;
KENNEDY, C. J.&#13;
BONDHUS, SGT. FRANCIS&#13;
HAUSWALD, ERNEST, SGT. KINGSBURY, CORP. H. L.&#13;
DYE, LESLIE&#13;
L.&#13;
HAY, WALTER&#13;
KIRBY, C. H.&#13;
DYKE, C. G.&#13;
BOOKHART, DR. E.&#13;
HAYS, VICTOR&#13;
*KILTS, HARRY E.&#13;
DEAKIN, CHAP. SAMUEL&#13;
BRENNER, MILTON&#13;
HELD, LT. WALTER&#13;
KITCHEN, J. E.&#13;
EARNEST, G. H.&#13;
BRIDENBAUGH, LEONARD&#13;
KLIPPEL, LT. CHARLES&#13;
HENDERSON, GEORGE&#13;
EARNEST, E. W.&#13;
BROWN, EDWIN M.&#13;
HENDERSON, ROBT.&#13;
KLAUS, C. F.&#13;
EICHERLY, C. G.&#13;
BROWN, DAN HEDGES,&#13;
KLAUS, M.&#13;
ELLYSON, W. ~ W.&#13;
HENKE, HAROLD&#13;
LT.&#13;
HENKE, ARTHUR&#13;
KLATT, C. D.&#13;
ENGBERG, C. E.&#13;
BROWN, GEORGE&#13;
BROWN, Guy&#13;
BROWN, MAJ. JOE D.&#13;
BROWN, LARNED&#13;
BROWN, NELSON&#13;
BROCKMEYER, JOHN&#13;
ALT, L. R.&#13;
BURGESS, F. E.&#13;
ANDERSON, HENRY&#13;
BIGGLESTONE, HARRY&#13;
ANDREWS, RALPH&#13;
BURRELL, LOWELL&#13;
ANDREWS, R. S.&#13;
BREWSTER, EARL&#13;
APPEL, FRED&#13;
CAINE, THOMAS&#13;
ARCHER, THos.&#13;
CALL  LIEUT. GEO. R.&#13;
ARMBRUSTER, DAVID&#13;
CARLSON, OSCAR B.&#13;
AUGHENBAUGH, FLOYD&#13;
CARTER, PEARL SCOTT&#13;
AUSMAN, E. L.&#13;
CARTER, ROSCOE&#13;
BACK, GEO. I.&#13;
CASSILL, C. H.&#13;
BACKEMEYER, FRED&#13;
CASTLE, LYNN&#13;
BARKS, LEE&#13;
CHRIST, JAY FINLEY&#13;
BALKEMA, B.&#13;
CLARK, LT. WILSON&#13;
BARRICK, H. L.&#13;
BARRETT, WALTER, CHAP. CLOUGH, MARTIN&#13;
ABEL, ARTHUR&#13;
ABEL, FRANK&#13;
ALBERTSON, CYRUS&#13;
ALINGH, R. A.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
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w.&#13;
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KLESATH, J. L&#13;
KLINE, SGT.&#13;
KLOCK, G.&#13;
KLUTZ, D. M.&#13;
KOCH, FRED&#13;
KOLP, LT. JOHN D.&#13;
KocH, HERMAN&#13;
KNOX, H.J.&#13;
KOCH, W. F .&#13;
KRIGSTEN, D.&#13;
LANCASTER, HAROLD&#13;
LAVENDER, LT. R OBERT&#13;
LARKIN, L D.&#13;
LARSON, H. F .&#13;
LAUGHLIN, A. C .&#13;
LAWRENCE, HARVEY&#13;
LEHAN, LLOYD&#13;
* LEHMAN, WM.&#13;
LE DUE, C. J.&#13;
LEE,&#13;
F.&#13;
LEHAN, J. L&#13;
LEWIS, JAMES&#13;
LINDSAY, ARTHUR&#13;
* LEAZER, A . W.&#13;
LAUN, CHAS.&#13;
LIMING, 0. L&#13;
LOHMANN, P. D.&#13;
LONG, GLEN&#13;
LONG, RALPH&#13;
LORY, LT. MILTON&#13;
LUEDER, HERMAN&#13;
McBRIDE, LT. THos.&#13;
McBRIDE, ROBT.&#13;
McBRIDE, J. S.&#13;
McCLEARY, D. C .&#13;
McGRAW, C. D.&#13;
McLEAN, H. D.&#13;
McDONALD, MARK&#13;
McKINNEY, DELBERT&#13;
McKINNEY, LT. Guy&#13;
MAGEE, J. R.&#13;
MAGOUN GEORGE&#13;
MAGOUN, LT. CHASE.&#13;
MAHOOD, EARL&#13;
MAHOOD, DR. H. W. L&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
MANNING,&#13;
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C. G.&#13;
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MASTERS, H AROLD&#13;
MASKELL, NEAL&#13;
MAYNE, KENNETH&#13;
MARQUART, E . W.&#13;
MARSELL, ANNIES&#13;
MARSH, W. L&#13;
MASON, H. E.&#13;
&#13;
MEYER, EWALD&#13;
MEYER, H . C.&#13;
MENGES, 0. E.&#13;
MESMER, W. J .&#13;
MERTEN, H OWARD, LT.&#13;
MICKELSON, PERCY, SGT.&#13;
MILLER,&#13;
F.&#13;
MONTGOMERY, VINCENT&#13;
MONTGOMERY, D. C .&#13;
K.&#13;
MONTGOMERY,&#13;
MORGAN, CHAP. HORACE&#13;
MORLEY, LT. MAYNARD I&#13;
&#13;
PYNCHEON, MAJOR E. A. TANGEMAN, N. E .&#13;
QUINN, R. M.&#13;
TEMPLE, W. L&#13;
RAMBO, CAPT. ELI&#13;
THOMPSON, D . C.&#13;
RANKIN, E. F.&#13;
TIBBETS, H. V.&#13;
RAUN, L T. H AROLD&#13;
TOLEDO, B. R.&#13;
REYMAN, HOWARD&#13;
TOMPKINS, C .&#13;
RICHARDSON, CHAP.&#13;
TONE, L. F.&#13;
NOBLE&#13;
TREFZ, JACOB&#13;
RIPP EY, RALPH&#13;
TROUTMAN, LT.&#13;
ROBBINS, LT. FORD D.&#13;
RAYMOND&#13;
ROBERTSON, CHESTER&#13;
TROUSTROM, C. L&#13;
ROGERS, FRED&#13;
TUCKER, R. L&#13;
ROOST, DR. FRED., MA J .&#13;
UPHAM, LT. CYRIL&#13;
MOORHEAD, P. W.&#13;
ROREM, HE NRY&#13;
VAN CLEVE, WM. JOYCE&#13;
RORAPAUGH, E. F.&#13;
MULFORD, GRANT&#13;
VAN PEURSEM, J. E.&#13;
MULFORD, MORTON&#13;
Ross, C. A.&#13;
VERNON, R OBERT&#13;
NELSON, D. P .&#13;
RUGG, R. N.&#13;
WALIN, R EUBEN&#13;
NELSON, G.&#13;
RUNDLE, F.&#13;
WALKER, HERALD&#13;
NISSEN, C. D.&#13;
RYERSON, PAUL&#13;
WARD, ARTHUR&#13;
NIXON, G. C.&#13;
SAMPSON, EARNEST&#13;
WARNES,&#13;
H.&#13;
NORTHRUP, C. R.&#13;
SAMPSON, A. H.&#13;
WATLAND&#13;
MAURICE&#13;
NORTON, SGT. D. E.&#13;
SANDVOLD, C. E.&#13;
WAGGONER&#13;
G. H.&#13;
O'BRECHT SGT.&#13;
SANEM, SGT. E. G.&#13;
WALKER&#13;
LT. H. L&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
SASS, CARL W. H.&#13;
WATSON&#13;
W. W.&#13;
O'DONOGHUE, CAPT. DR. SAVARY, R. J.&#13;
WELD&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
SCHULDT, A. F.&#13;
WEATHERLY,&#13;
R. N.&#13;
O 'CONNOR, C. V.&#13;
SHAFENBERG, M. V.&#13;
WEAVER, V. H.&#13;
OELFKE, C. L.&#13;
SHAPIRO, J.&#13;
WENIG, SGT. ERVINE&#13;
SMITH, A.&#13;
OGLESBY, LEONARD&#13;
WERTZ, WALTER&#13;
OLDS, SAMUEL&#13;
SMITH, E. F.&#13;
WESSEL, SGT. EMIL&#13;
'OLIVER,&#13;
FRANK&#13;
SMITH, M. G .&#13;
WHYTE, HARRY&#13;
OLSON, A. C.&#13;
SMITH, M.&#13;
WICK, H.F.&#13;
OMAR, GAYLORD&#13;
SMITH,&#13;
H.&#13;
WICKETT,&#13;
V. A.&#13;
OTTO, E.&#13;
SCHEERER, LLOYD&#13;
WILLIAMS,&#13;
G. R.&#13;
OSTLING, EVERT&#13;
SCHELLINGER, ROY&#13;
WILSON, R. N.&#13;
OVERHOLSER, R ALPH&#13;
SCHRIEVER, WM.&#13;
WINKELMAN, E. C.&#13;
PARADISANOS, GEORGE&#13;
SCHRIEM, FRED&#13;
WINTER, G. H.&#13;
PATRiCK, GLENN&#13;
SCHWARTZ, CHAS.&#13;
WINTER, H. P.&#13;
PAUL, VERNE&#13;
WICKENS,&#13;
LAWRENCE&#13;
SEEMAN, AL.&#13;
PAYNE, ARTHUR&#13;
SHERWOOD, CLAIRE&#13;
WILLIAMS, LT. EARL&#13;
PERSINGER, EVERETT&#13;
SHULL, DELOSS&#13;
WILLIAMS, NOEL&#13;
PERSINGER , A. L&#13;
SMITH, R USSELL&#13;
WILLIAMS,&#13;
TYLER&#13;
PETERSON, LEONARD&#13;
WILSON, DR. HAROLD&#13;
SOLTOW, L&#13;
PEETE FRANK&#13;
SPEERS, G. R.&#13;
WOLLE, WM.&#13;
PETERSON, B. C .&#13;
STOUFFER, S. A.&#13;
WooD, H . L.&#13;
PETERSO N, B. A.&#13;
STARR, LT. GA I LO RD&#13;
WOODS, K. L&#13;
WOODSIDE,&#13;
PHE LPS, FLOYD&#13;
STENSETH, VERNON&#13;
ENSIGN&#13;
PIERSON, L. E .&#13;
STEVENS, LEO&#13;
CLIFTON&#13;
PITM AN, SGT. R ALPH&#13;
STONEBROOK, EARL&#13;
WATLAND, WM.&#13;
HENRY&#13;
PITST ICK, V. I.&#13;
* SMITH, JESSE&#13;
VENNINK, G . A.&#13;
PRI CHARD, LT. ELBERT&#13;
SHERR, SAM&#13;
YOCKEY, RE X&#13;
PRI CHARD, LT. G. W.&#13;
STROBEL, H AROLD&#13;
YouDE, L. H.&#13;
PRITCHARD, L T. R ALPH&#13;
SWARTZ, C. H.&#13;
ZITTLEMAN, C. W.&#13;
SYMONDS, WALTER&#13;
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ROBAR, IRENE&#13;
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C ROSS NURSES&#13;
BROWER, ELLA&#13;
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SPECIAL SERVICE&#13;
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FOUKE, RUTH&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
WATTS, BLANCHE&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
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service&#13;
&#13;
SLAUGHTER, Z OLE&#13;
&#13;
RECONSTRUCTION AIDE&#13;
&#13;
FERGUSON, PROF. AGNES B.&#13;
&#13;
*Died&#13;
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J.&#13;
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Society&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall T erm&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
EARL STONEBROOK&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
1st Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
&#13;
McKINLEY EVANS&#13;
&#13;
AMOS HARTMAN&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
2nd Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
&#13;
PAUL }ONES&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
SAMUEL STOUFFER&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
HILLIS LORY&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
3rd Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
RALPH LONG&#13;
&#13;
RONALD WILSON&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
W. HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
DAVE KLATT&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
DAVE KLATT&#13;
&#13;
HARRY BENZ&#13;
&#13;
First Critic&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
RONALD WILSON&#13;
&#13;
EVAN ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
LAFAYETTE BOND&#13;
&#13;
EVAN ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR HINKLEY&#13;
&#13;
ORA EMERICK&#13;
DONALD NISSEN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
I9I8&#13;
March I8-Philo-Athenaeum Grand Public.&#13;
March 20-Dedication of Service Flag.&#13;
April I I-Musical Programme.&#13;
April 22-Philo-Athenaeum Picnic at Stone Park.&#13;
May 9-Final Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
May 20-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
May 27-Joint Commencement.&#13;
November 22-Athenaeums entertain Philos, in S. A. T. C .&#13;
December 16-Joint Christmas Party.&#13;
&#13;
I 9 19&#13;
January 9-Philo Rush Stag.&#13;
January 24-Philo-Athenaeum Joint Party.&#13;
February 20-Closed Door Program.&#13;
March 5-Philo Initiation.&#13;
March 13-Closed Door Program.&#13;
March 29-Joint Open Door.&#13;
April 5-Philo-Athenaeum Hard Times Party.&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Term&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Second Term&#13;
&#13;
Third Term&#13;
NELLIE POYZER&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL BERGH&#13;
&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN COOPER&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
AURELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY EYRES&#13;
&#13;
AGNES MCCREERY&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET STOLT&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
&#13;
EVA DUNAGAN&#13;
&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
&#13;
MAE HANSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
MINNIE EPPELSHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
RUBY MCCREERY&#13;
&#13;
BERRY&#13;
&#13;
1st Critic&#13;
&#13;
HAZE L BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
EVA T REMAN&#13;
&#13;
2nd Critic&#13;
&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HAMILTON&#13;
&#13;
EVA DUNAGAN&#13;
&#13;
1st Directress&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE POYZER&#13;
&#13;
AG N ES MCCREERY&#13;
&#13;
LENA McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
2nd Directress&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS LEONARD&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE HAUSWALD&#13;
&#13;
1st Usher&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET STOLT&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE HAUSWALD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HAMILTON&#13;
&#13;
2nd Usher&#13;
&#13;
LENA McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE REUBER&#13;
&#13;
ADA CARTER&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY EYRES&#13;
&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
EVA TREMAN&#13;
&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET STOLT&#13;
&#13;
ATHENAEUM CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
19 18&#13;
May 2-Tea for Pierians and Z etaletheans.&#13;
May 18-Mother's Banquet.&#13;
May 28-Alumnae Breakfast.&#13;
September 28-Reception for New Members.&#13;
November 14-Informal Initiation.&#13;
November 22-Dinner for Philos in S. A. T . C.&#13;
November 30- Reception of Mid-semester Pledges.&#13;
December 9-Senior Athenaeums entertain at Irene Chapin Cooper's.&#13;
December 16-Annual Christmas Party.&#13;
191 9&#13;
January 17-Formal Initiation.&#13;
January 24- Philo-Athenaeum Joint.&#13;
January 25-0pen Door. "How the Story Grew."&#13;
February 8-Athenaeums entertain New Members of the Faculty.&#13;
February 31-Fudge Party.&#13;
March 9-Athenaeum Banquet at the West.&#13;
March 22-Lu ncheon for Visiting Athenaeums.&#13;
March 29-Philo-Athenaeums Open Door "A Case of Suspension".&#13;
April 5-Philo-Athenaeum Hard Times Party.&#13;
April 10-New Athenaeums entertain Old at Kathryn Holmes'.&#13;
&#13;
Corporal&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term 1918&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
First Sen.&#13;
Second Sen.&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
Financial Manager&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term 1919&#13;
&#13;
LEE SALTOW&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE HART&#13;
&#13;
SCOTT BURPEE&#13;
&#13;
GEO. CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
PAUL RYERSON&#13;
&#13;
GEO. CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
FRANK VALIQUETTE&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MCBURNEY&#13;
&#13;
GEO. BROWN&#13;
&#13;
J. P.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
&#13;
E. FAYE RORAPAUGH&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
19 18&#13;
.April 30-Pi-Ionian Joint.&#13;
&#13;
191 9&#13;
January 13-Rush Stag&#13;
January 20-Pi-Ionian Joint&#13;
February 22-Pi-Ionian Party&#13;
March 22-Pi-Ionian Dinner.&#13;
&#13;
LEE&#13;
&#13;
Pierian Literary Society&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
Felicitei, Foitilei, Fidelei, (Happy, brave and faithful)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fir st Semester&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Critic&#13;
Chairman Social Committee&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Finance Officer&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARY DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE HAITZ&#13;
&#13;
HELEN RINKER&#13;
&#13;
MARY .COLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
&#13;
RUTHMAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED SABIN&#13;
&#13;
HELEN GULLICKSON&#13;
&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BURPEE&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE BOWE&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BRADLEY&#13;
&#13;
FAYE CHAPMAN&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
&#13;
LUCYLE HAITZ&#13;
&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
&#13;
GRACE WISHARD&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY DUBEL&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY DUBEL&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
19 18&#13;
May 20-Pieria Up River Trip to Stone Park.&#13;
May 21-Installation of Officers&#13;
May 28-Pieria Alumnae Breakfast.&#13;
September 28-Reception for new pledges.&#13;
October 1-Tea for new pledges.&#13;
October 4-Tenth Anniversary.&#13;
November 8-Pieria Initiation.&#13;
Birthday Dinner at Clara Lewis'.&#13;
November 30-Reception for new pledges.&#13;
December 2-Lilah Thompson entertains Morningside Pi's.&#13;
December 3-Tea for new members of Faculty.&#13;
December 6-Party for Ionians in S. A. T. C.&#13;
December 14-Pi Christmas Party.&#13;
December 19-Grace Wishard entertains Pi's.&#13;
&#13;
19 19&#13;
January 7-Dinner for Ruth Blackman Kilbourne, Marion Heikes Leuder and&#13;
Mildred Wood Naughton.&#13;
January 11-Pieria Initiation-dinner at Helen Gullickson's.&#13;
January 18-0pen Door by New Girls.&#13;
January 30-Pi-Ionian Joint.&#13;
February 4-Installation of Officers.&#13;
February 17-Mrs. Truesdell entertains Pi's for Alice and Frances Boyd .&#13;
February 22-Mrs. Kellog entertains Pi's and Ionians.&#13;
March 8-Reception for new P ledge.&#13;
March l ]-Japanese Tea for Honorary members.&#13;
March 22-Pieria dinner for Ionians.&#13;
March 29-Reception for new Pledges.&#13;
April 12-Pieria initiation and dinner.&#13;
April 25-Pieria-Ionian Grand Public-"It Pays To Advertise".&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Term 1918&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term 1918&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
EARL BARKS&#13;
&#13;
RAY TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
Term 1919&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE OBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DUNN&#13;
&#13;
D ALE NORTON&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT JOHNSTON&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
ADELBERT JEEP&#13;
&#13;
SAM HUTCHISON&#13;
&#13;
First Critic&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DUNN&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER KIRBY&#13;
&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER KIRBY&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE BERGQUIST&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT MARQUART&#13;
HOWARD DOWN&#13;
&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD DUNN&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MEYER&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT SEEMAN&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT SEEMAN&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD RAUN&#13;
&#13;
Janitor&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT MARQUART&#13;
&#13;
EWART WINKLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
19 18&#13;
&#13;
May 10-Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 24-Final D ebate (Open Door ) .&#13;
December 19-0tho Dinner.&#13;
19 19&#13;
January 17-0tho Rush Stag.&#13;
January 24-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
February 8-Zet-Otho Joint ( Orpheum) .&#13;
February 27-Closed D oor.&#13;
March 14-Otho Banquet.&#13;
April 5- Zet-Otho Joint (Riverside) .&#13;
April 15-Closed Door.&#13;
&#13;
t--------------------------0&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Literary Society&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term 1918&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
First Critic&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
First Directress&#13;
Second Directress&#13;
Librarian&#13;
First Usher&#13;
Second Usher&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term 1918&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term 1919&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
MARIE EDGINGTON&#13;
&#13;
MABLE DAY&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
&#13;
BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BELEW&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER GOODSITE&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WEIR&#13;
&#13;
ALICE FRY&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES BEACHAM&#13;
&#13;
ELMA PARKINSON&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
EDNA BEKINS&#13;
&#13;
RUTHREID&#13;
&#13;
AGNETTA FLOM&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE HINKHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WEIR&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WILSON&#13;
&#13;
MERLIN SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
RUBY HILL&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET KIDDER&#13;
&#13;
BERYL BURNS&#13;
&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
&#13;
BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE REID&#13;
&#13;
GRACE BAGLEY&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BACK&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PYNCHEON&#13;
&#13;
RUTH BELEW&#13;
&#13;
RUTH REID FRY&#13;
&#13;
GRACE HOFLUND&#13;
&#13;
MAE PURDY&#13;
&#13;
PATIENCE SKINNER&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS GROOM&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
191 8&#13;
May 10-Zet-Otho Breakfast.&#13;
May 17-New Zets entertain Old Zets at Six O'clock Dinner.&#13;
May 20-Talbot Farm Picnic.&#13;
June 3-Reunion Breakfast.&#13;
September 3-Reception for Pledges.&#13;
Formal Initiation.&#13;
November 16-Zet Open Door.&#13;
December 19-Dinner for Otho's and Freshmen men .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
191 9&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
11-Seven O'clock breakfast.&#13;
11-0pen Door.&#13;
16-Party at Bernice Scoville's.&#13;
18-Dinner for Alumnae and Honorary members.&#13;
Private Initiation.&#13;
January 24-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
January 25-Theatre Party.&#13;
February 8-0pen Door.&#13;
February 14-Valentine Party.&#13;
February 27-Tea for Athenaeums and Pierias.&#13;
February 29-Zet Banquet.&#13;
April 5-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A. Cabinet&#13;
Y . M. C. A . Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
First R o w: McCreery, Dykstra, Day, Carpenter, Stevens.&#13;
S ECOND R o w: Poyzer , Scoville, Mahood , Kidder , Carter&#13;
&#13;
FIR ST Row: Wilson, Winters, Benz, Baldwin , Hickman&#13;
Second Row: Trefz, Engberg, Marsh, Freeman 1 DeVaul&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
S. A. T. C. Secretary ............ PROF. CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
President .................................................. ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
Vice President ........................................ ABRAM DEVAUL&#13;
Secretary ...................................................... HARRY BENZ&#13;
Treasurer ................................................ LEON HICKMAN&#13;
DEPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
Religious Meetings .................................. RONALD WILSON&#13;
Community Service ................................ HAROLD WINTER&#13;
Campus Service .................................. CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
Gospel Teams .................................... HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
Bible Study .................................................. JACOB TREFZ&#13;
On account of the establishment of the S. A. T. C. in&#13;
Morningside last fall the Y. M. C. A. was placed on the&#13;
Secretary basis with Prof. Marsh acting in the capacity&#13;
of Secretary. Rev. W . H . Spence took the Bible work&#13;
and the splendid results of the first semester's work must&#13;
be credited to the efforts of these two men.&#13;
The second semester marked the return to the Cabinet&#13;
system. A new cabinet was appointed since only one of&#13;
the elected members was in school, and the regular&#13;
schedule was begun . The local budget was raised in&#13;
April for the coming year, that being the practice of&#13;
most associations.&#13;
&#13;
R. E. '19&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ..................·................................ R UTH MAHOOD&#13;
Vice President .............................................. FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
Secretary ......... ................................ MARGARET KIDDER&#13;
Treasurer ......................................................ADA CARTER&#13;
DEPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
Association News ................................AGNES McCREERY&#13;
Bible Study .......................................... BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
Devotional ................................................ NELLIE POYSER&#13;
World Fellowship .............................. NELLIE CARPENTER&#13;
Social .......................................................... IRMA STEVENS&#13;
Social Service .................................... GERTRUDE DYKSTRA&#13;
Every year some of Morningside's Y. W. C . A. girls go&#13;
to the Geneva Conference and every year they come back&#13;
and say, just as the girls said the year before, "Girls, don't&#13;
miss it. It's just wonderful-that's all." They can't explain or describe what it is. "It's just wonderful." It&#13;
certainly is a wonderful experience.&#13;
Last year Morningside had one whole tent to herself&#13;
and made herself known by means of all sorts of pennants&#13;
as well as by yells and songs when the opportunity was&#13;
afforded.&#13;
The Christian fellowship and Spirit and the broadening&#13;
effect upon us of meeting so many more Christian girls&#13;
make a Geneva trip an essential part of every college girl's&#13;
life.&#13;
A. M . H . '20.&#13;
&#13;
Agora Club&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
Student Council&#13;
&#13;
Row : Dykstra, Johnson, Day, Sturtevant, Fry, R euber&#13;
Bergeson, Carver, Kidder&#13;
&#13;
SECONDRow: Fowler, Hanson, Wishard,&#13;
Holmes, Treman,&#13;
THIRD Row: Fish, Fry, Mahood, Bergh, Carter, Lange&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ---------------------------------------------------------- RUTH FRY&#13;
Vice President _________ ___ __ __ _____ _ _____ HAZEL BERGH&#13;
__ _____ _____&#13;
___&#13;
Treasurer _ __ _ _ ___________ _ ____ ___ _ _ MARGARET KIDDER&#13;
__ ____ &#13;
__ __ _____ __&#13;
&#13;
FIRSTR o w: Lawrence, Mahood, Scoville, Fish&#13;
&#13;
SECOND Row: Boyd, Carpenter , Lange, Day, Bekins&#13;
THIRD&#13;
R o w: Engberg, Flynn, Norton, Winter&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE RS&#13;
&#13;
Secret ar y ··--··········--··················--····················FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
C OM M ITTEE C HAIRM EN&#13;
Athletics ······-··········--·--···········-----··AURELIA ST URTEVANT&#13;
Auditing --·······-···-········--·-······················BEATRICE CARVER&#13;
Forensics ----········-············-··-··········-············-·ADA CARTER&#13;
Finance ~--·········-·······················-···-···········-········ALICE FRY&#13;
Self Government ··--·······----·············---···········MIRIAM FISH&#13;
Social ··········-···-·······----······--·--···········--···· RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
The A go ra C lub is an organization w ith a definite&#13;
purpose in view , namely that of creating a fin e democratic&#13;
spirit among the g irls of our school. Every girl in the&#13;
school belongs to this club and ever y g irl is a booster fo r&#13;
Agora activities. These acti vities include such things as&#13;
girl's athletics, fore nsics and social act ivit ies. This year&#13;
an interesting department has been organized, the vocational training department, from which m uch benefit w ill&#13;
be derived.&#13;
&#13;
President ········-··-··--···---·-··························DALEN ORTON&#13;
Vice Presiden t ····························--····--··-··-······ RUTH FRY&#13;
Secret ary-Treasurer ----·-----························FRANCES BOYD&#13;
D ALE NORTON&#13;
RUTH F RY&#13;
RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
.ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
EDNA BEKINS&#13;
HAROLD WINTER&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
FRANCES BOYD&#13;
HARRIET LAWRENCE&#13;
BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
MIRIAM FISH&#13;
HARRY FLYNN&#13;
CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
&#13;
T his council is made up of the st uden t-body officers and&#13;
a represen tative from each college orga nizat ion includi ng&#13;
the classes. Through this organ ization the stu dent-body&#13;
helps to gove rn itself in the affairs of the college and&#13;
assists in many w ays for the betterment of the school.&#13;
&#13;
Forensic League&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Committee&#13;
&#13;
STANDING: Trefz, Freeman , B aldwin , Hunt, Norton&#13;
SEATED: Ausman, Prichard, Flynn,&#13;
&#13;
Engberg&#13;
&#13;
STANDING: Ullman, Brodkey, Lange, Day, Rinker&#13;
Walker , Knudson, Bergh&#13;
&#13;
SEATED:&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ............................................ ELBERT PRITCHARD&#13;
Vice President ............................................ ALBERT HUNT&#13;
Secretary .................................................... HARRY FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
President .......................................... ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
Secretary ................................................ HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
ALBERT HUNT&#13;
]ACOB TREFZ&#13;
EVAN AUSMAN&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT PRICHARD&#13;
CLAUDE BALDWIN&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
HAROLD FREEMAN&#13;
DALE NORTON&#13;
HARRY FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
This is an organization w hich has as its prime motive&#13;
the furthering of debate and oratory. U nder its supervision a series of Inter-Societ y debates are held from which&#13;
the Inter-Collegiate representatives are chosen.&#13;
&#13;
ATHE NAEUM&#13;
HAZEL BERGESON&#13;
HAZEL BERGH&#13;
DOROTHY KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
PIERIAN&#13;
ISABELLE WALKER&#13;
HELEN RINKER&#13;
LEONE ULLMAN&#13;
&#13;
ZETALETHEAN&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
FLOSSIE DAY&#13;
MATILDA BRODKEY&#13;
&#13;
This committee is a representative group from all the&#13;
girls' societies. It regulat es the rule governing O pen&#13;
Doors, rushing, and other m atters.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
M - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -0&#13;
&#13;
lshkoodah&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Sergeant-at-arms&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
FIRST TERM&#13;
JEAN WOODRUFF&#13;
IRIS KNIGHT&#13;
RUTH WEDGEWOOD&#13;
BEATRICE SPANGLER&#13;
ZAZEL KANE&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TERM&#13;
HAZEL REED&#13;
DOROTHY SKEWIS&#13;
IRENE WOODARD&#13;
VERA WEED&#13;
ESTHER LANGE&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
1918&#13;
Sept. 27-0 ld Girls entertain the New Girls&#13;
Oct. 4-0rganization of Club&#13;
Nov. 16-Initiation&#13;
Dec. 18-0pen Door&#13;
1919&#13;
Jan. 17-Club Dinner&#13;
Feb. 14-Valentihe Party&#13;
March 28-"Weine" Roast&#13;
This is the third year of the Freshman Girl's Club.&#13;
It has been very successful notwithstanding the many&#13;
interruptions during the first semester. T he purpose of&#13;
the club, which is to furnish a medium for social and&#13;
literary development during the first year of college life,&#13;
has certainly been fu lfilled. It is with regret that every&#13;
girl realizes that with the passing of her freshman days,&#13;
her membership in the club ceases.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ·--------------- ---------·-·-·-··-··-·-··········--·---- ELSIE LANG&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ······-···-·-·-·-·-·-····-·········---] UNE PIP PET&#13;
Vice-President ------- ·-·-······----------·-···-· MYNNIE GusTESON&#13;
The Student Volunteer Band of Morningside College is&#13;
a branch of the National movement founded July, 1896.&#13;
This band makes a systematic study of some of the great&#13;
World Problems and endeavors to show young men and&#13;
women how they may be instrumental in helping to solve&#13;
these problems.&#13;
The World War was a demonstration of the World 's&#13;
supreme need for the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The aim of&#13;
the Student Volunteers is to do and get others to do all&#13;
possible that that need may be met.&#13;
OBJECT: The world for Christ in this generation.&#13;
DECLARATION: It is my purpose, if God permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
&#13;
Madrigal Club&#13;
"M" Club&#13;
&#13;
FIRST Row:&#13;
SECOND Row:&#13;
THIRD Row:&#13;
&#13;
Treynor, Balkema , Dykstra, Johnson , Sturtevant , Bekins, Wedgwood , Dawson , Sabin,&#13;
Broughton&#13;
Wilson,&#13;
Scoville, Stallard, Dolliver, Hofland, Haas, R euber, Eppelsheimer, Lawrence,&#13;
Stevens, Hofland&#13;
Dunagan, Williams,&#13;
Boland , Dubel, Mahood, Woodard,&#13;
Groom, Yeaman&#13;
&#13;
MADRIGAL CLUB&#13;
President . --- -- ---------------- ---------------- ---------- -RUTH MAHOOD&#13;
Vice President ____ _____ _____________________ AURELIA STURTEVANT&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ____________ __ ______________ _____ __ _&#13;
EDNA BEKINS&#13;
Librarian _&#13;
____________ ___ ____ ____ _________ _ __ ______ EVELYN BALKEMA&#13;
____&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ------- ------------------- ---------- ------CARROLL NORTHRUP&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ------------- ----- --------- -----------DAVE KLATT&#13;
&#13;
Student Manager ------- --------- ------· ·····-·-··-BERNICE SCOVILLE&#13;
Soloist ___ _____ _ _&#13;
_ __________ __ _&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON MacCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
FOOTBALL, 1918&#13;
&#13;
Eva Dunagan&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Evelyn Stallard&#13;
Evelyn Balkema&#13;
Edna Dawson&#13;
Marie Broughton&#13;
Marie Hofland&#13;
SECOND ALTO&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Lorene Wifliams&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
Ruth Wedgewood&#13;
Irene Woodard&#13;
FIRST ALTO&#13;
Harriet Lawrence&#13;
Grace Hoflund&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
Gertrude Dykstra&#13;
Irene Johnstone&#13;
Gladys Groom&#13;
Bernice Scoville&#13;
GRACE WILSON, ACCOMPANIST&#13;
PAUL MAcCoLLIN, Manager, Director&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SOPRANO&#13;
Irma Stevens&#13;
Dorothy Dubel&#13;
Gertrude Treynor&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Mildred Sabin&#13;
Minnie Eppelsheimer&#13;
Gladys Yeaman&#13;
Olive Boland&#13;
SECOND SOPRANO&#13;
Lois Haas&#13;
&#13;
This organization is one of which Morningside may be&#13;
justly proud. The girls have just completed a ten-day&#13;
trip over Northwest Iowa, bringing much credit to themselves and to Morningside as well . The Home Concert,&#13;
May 5, was well attended and very much appreciated&#13;
by all. May the Madrigal . Club do much in the future&#13;
for Morningside is our wish.&#13;
&#13;
Norton, Dale, Captain&#13;
Northrup, Carroll&#13;
Rorapaugh , Faye&#13;
Goodrich, Orin&#13;
Lory, Milton&#13;
Emerick, Oro&#13;
Montgomery, Donald&#13;
Ellyson, William&#13;
Marsell, Annies&#13;
Koch, William&#13;
Quinn, Robert&#13;
BASKET BALL, 1918&#13;
Brown , George, Captain&#13;
Norton, Dale&#13;
Rorapaugh ; Faye&#13;
Shafenberg, Merle&#13;
Balkema, Albert&#13;
Cassel, Curtis&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Hunt, Albert&#13;
Shafenberg, Merle&#13;
Troutman, Raymond&#13;
Alt, Leslie&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Northrup, Carroll&#13;
Norton, Dale&#13;
Klatt, Dave&#13;
Hutchinson, Samuel&#13;
Friest, Tom&#13;
Lee, James&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
Coach J. M. Saunderson&#13;
Prof. J. J. Hayes&#13;
Prof. R . N. Van Horne&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ....................................................DALE NORTON&#13;
Vice President ................................................ADA CARTER&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ................................ GLADYS CLARK&#13;
&#13;
In May, 1917, a Pi Kappa Delta Chapter was organized&#13;
at Morningside. For two years it was maintained as one&#13;
of the strongest organizations in the school, but, as the&#13;
membership is restricted to only inter-collegiate debaters&#13;
and orators and as many of our men entered army life&#13;
and as there were no Women's Inter-Collegiate debates&#13;
in 1918, the Local Chapter has been very weak this year.&#13;
It is hoped, however, that in the coming year it may again&#13;
regain its place in furthering debate and oratory at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
"M" Minstrel&#13;
MARCH 15, 1919&#13;
A few days before March 15th, the husky athletes of the school dragged from&#13;
their dusty hiding place the time worn implements of torture. All the week before&#13;
this memorial date, a strange restlessness was fel t in the atmosphere around our&#13;
beloved campus. The men in the maroon sweaters began to exhibit strange activities&#13;
while bustling around and holding mysterious whispered conversations. Finally the&#13;
mystery was solved, when one morning in chapel we learned from "Nordy", in a&#13;
few well-chosen words, that on March fifteenth there was to occur the annual "M"&#13;
carnival, w hich this year, wasn't to be a carnival at all but a sure enough minstrel,&#13;
black-faced comedians and all. Also this year the "M" Club was to be assisted&#13;
by the Agora Club in putting on the performance and incidentally the girls were to&#13;
get one-half the proceeds, which was to be used for athletic equipment and sweaters.&#13;
"Nordy", of course, emphasized particularly the matter of attendance and by very&#13;
pursuasive arguments and vague threats as to the consequences of not going, he&#13;
succeeded in securing the interest of everyone. He spoke of a certain "Kangaroo&#13;
Court", which some of us had heard of before and a mode of punishment that they&#13;
would resort to, but not until the fatal day, March 13, did we all fully realize the&#13;
truth of what he said.&#13;
On that day there appeared in the lower hall a pair of time-worn stocks and in&#13;
one of the society halls was established a court presided over by Judge Bishop Beuhler,&#13;
whose dignity was upheld by twelve husky policemen, half of whom were college&#13;
women and who supplied the victims for the court from the members of the student&#13;
body and faculty, who up to that date had failed to purchase tickets to the big&#13;
"show." Taking it as a whole, the court proceedings were very orderly and the&#13;
guilty meekly acceded to the verdicts of the judge. It was thot at first that the stocks&#13;
would surely remain idle, but finally one poor victim, who refused to hand over the&#13;
necessary cash, was seized.&#13;
At nine o'clock the curtains were drawn, disclosing a circle which contained a&#13;
collection of color and avoirdupois, consisting of four belles of Darktown, and five&#13;
colored gentlemen. After the hilarious audience had somewhat subsided the colored&#13;
ring first entertained us with a number of rousing choruses. Then "Nordy" the&#13;
interlocutor, took charge of the company and with the end men, George Brown and&#13;
"Skinney" Norton, together w ith Dave Klatt and Faye Rorapaugh , furnished a sidesplitting entertainment. This was interspersed with feature specialities given by the&#13;
following belles,: Mary Dolliver, Harriet Lawrence, Grace Bagley, and Irma Stevens.&#13;
The second part of the program was furnished by the Girls' Glee Club, together&#13;
with Sam Hutchinson, who sang several popular songs, and Jean Woodruff, reader.&#13;
This was likewise greatly enjoyed by the enthusiastic audience.&#13;
&#13;
The Men's Banquet&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Banquet&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps the event looked forward to most eagerly by Morningside men, is the&#13;
Annual Men's Banquet. Since the year of its inception and establishment as a tradition of the college, it has grown in significance and has become one of the finest&#13;
events of the college year. It is the place where are met together the past, present,&#13;
and&#13;
future of the manhood of the college. Alumni come back to renew their associations and receive a new inspiration and rejuvenation in the free, buoyant spirit which&#13;
characterizes&#13;
the Men's Banquet. Those who are in school have opportunity to give&#13;
vent to their wildest enthusiasm, "spring" the jokes on each other, which have been&#13;
accumulating all year; and, besides this lighter side, the y meet and hear advice from&#13;
those who have gone out to join the alumni. The banquet also gives to a number of&#13;
visiting high school men their first-impression of Morningside "pep". This feature has&#13;
been enlarged until men from many of the larger high schools in Northwest Iowa come&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
&#13;
Every Morningside girl, from the academy to the seniors, many of the mothers&#13;
high school friends, and alumnae, and the faculty, gathered in the basement of the&#13;
Grace church, March first, to hold the ninth annual Agora banquet.&#13;
The room was beautifully decorated with flowers and butterflies. The decorations of each table gave due credit to each class. Needless to say, the Juniors won&#13;
the cup for the most artistic table.&#13;
This year a new feature was added to the program. The president recognized&#13;
the two daughters of our alumnae by presenting each with a bouquet of roses, tied&#13;
with maroon and white ribbons.&#13;
The following toast program was then given:&#13;
&#13;
TOASTS&#13;
&#13;
as the guests of the college.&#13;
The Men's Banquet is a trul y festive occasion, where the best fellowship holds&#13;
sway, and where each man gets a larger conception of the thought and spirit of&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
Added interest has been given to the event by the presentation each year of loving&#13;
cups, for the most cleverly decorated tables, and for the largest percent of attendance&#13;
by the classes. Into the large troph y cup are placed the names of the sons of Morningside-men born during the preceding year, "future Morningsiders", they are in reality.&#13;
This past year, abnormal as it was by necessity because so many of the men were&#13;
called into the service, the Banquet was not so largely attended, though it was characterized by the same spirit and animated by the knowledge that Morningside's sons&#13;
had fought and died on the fields of France. The toast program was especially good,&#13;
each class being represented by a speaker-P. Scott Carter for the Academy, Leon&#13;
Hickman for the Freshmen, Abe DeVaul for the Sophomores, Jacob Trefz for the&#13;
Juniors, and Royce Engberg for the Seniors, Mr. E. M. Corbett for the Alumni, and&#13;
the college was very ably represented by President Mossman, a member of the Class of&#13;
1903. The trophy cups, both the large one and the smaller one, given to the class&#13;
having the best decorated table, were awarded to the Class of 1919. This is the&#13;
second year that class has won the double honor. Lee Soltow, of the Class of 1918,&#13;
presided as toastmaster, and handled the position well.&#13;
With the return of normal conditions, another year will doubtless find the Annual&#13;
Men's Banquet occupying again the foremost position among the events of the college&#13;
year. Again we will gather around the festive board and in that best of fellowship&#13;
sing:&#13;
&#13;
1, 1919&#13;
&#13;
"Ring out, wild bells of the wild sky,&#13;
Ring out the thousand y ears of old,&#13;
Ring in the thousand y ears of pea ce.&#13;
&#13;
"Ring i11 the valiant man and free,&#13;
The larger heart, the kindlier hand&#13;
Ring out the darkness of the land&#13;
Ring in the&#13;
Christ that is to be."&#13;
&#13;
The League of Classes&#13;
"Our cause is just, let our union&#13;
be perfect,&#13;
The Councillors and the statesmen at h er council met&#13;
Who knew&#13;
the seasons, when to take&#13;
Occasion by the hand and make&#13;
The bonds of freedom wider yet."&#13;
&#13;
Academy ················································-·······················································································VERA MOORE&#13;
"They only saw a ragged child with blanched&#13;
and twitching fac e.&#13;
Th ey did not see within&#13;
his ey es, th e glory of his race.&#13;
Th e glory of a million&#13;
men&#13;
who for B elgium have died.&#13;
Th e splendor of self-sa crifice that will not be d e11ied."&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ................................................................................................................................RuTH HIRLEMAN&#13;
U&#13;
" Italy, my Italy,&#13;
Queen Mary's saying serves for me,&#13;
Open my h eart and you will see,&#13;
Graved inside of it, 'Italy'."&#13;
&#13;
.......................................................................................................................... PAUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
" This England never did nor never shall&#13;
Lie at th e proud foot of a conqueror."&#13;
&#13;
Junior .............................................................................................................................................. ADA CARTER&#13;
"Ye sons of Fran ce, awake to glory,&#13;
Hark, hark, what myriads bid you rise!&#13;
Your children, wives and grandsires hoary,&#13;
B ehold th eir tears and h ear th eir cries."&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors........................................................... ............................................................. Marion HEIKES LEUDER&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
" My country,&#13;
&#13;
'tis of th ee."&#13;
&#13;
Selection Alumnae&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
"C heer for dear old Morningside,&#13;
To th ee we pledge anew,&#13;
Hearts of faithful love, now and for ever,&#13;
Thy loyal sons and tru e."&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Forever we'll stand, united as one&#13;
In our love for th e d ear old Maroon.&#13;
&#13;
Miss NAOMI GOOD&#13;
&#13;
" To seek the best thru the whole union."&#13;
HUGH FOUKE.&#13;
&#13;
This was a most successful banquet.&#13;
standard.&#13;
&#13;
May those of the future years be up to this&#13;
&#13;
A. M. H. '20 .&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
These Sioux City Business M en&#13;
L ent their Financial Support&#13;
Toward the Production of the&#13;
&#13;
"1920 SIOUX"&#13;
Patronize. Them&#13;
and be Loyally Treated by&#13;
Loyal Supporters of&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Boost Them, They Boosted Us !&#13;
&#13;
Macbride Lakeside Laboratory&#13;
In the spring the budding biologists' fancy turns fondly to thoughts of Lake Okoboji&#13;
and the attending joys of a summer there as a student at the Lakeside Laboratory.&#13;
From the very first day when you land at the grounds, the fun begins. Of course,&#13;
you may have to help put the dining tent up, or mow the lawn, but every one helps&#13;
at the lake and affairs are soon in progress.&#13;
Then comes the field trips, the trips on the boat, days in the laboratory w hen the&#13;
weather does not permit out-of-door work, the jolly times at mess, and the long&#13;
evenings spent by the fire if it is cool, or on the lake, or perhaps down by ye old willow&#13;
spnng.&#13;
Nor the least of the joys of spending six weeks at the laboratory is the opportunity&#13;
one has to either learn to swim or to perfect that art if one has already the rudiments.&#13;
Four o'clock is a popular time of the day with all, for that is the time when the&#13;
whole camp turns out for a plunge. For beginners the first st ruggles are always more&#13;
or less painful, but with the help and instruction of everyone in the camp, regardless&#13;
of w hether they themselves can swim, everybody comes home more or less accomplished.&#13;
And, oh, that home coming ! Of course, you're glad to see the folks and the old&#13;
home town, but you do miss the hikes and the swims and the good bracing lake air so&#13;
much that you immediately wish for more work and more fun at the lake the following&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
Our Alma Mater&#13;
There is a place named College Hill,&#13;
Where many a soul has come to dwell;&#13;
We often wonder, and with pride,&#13;
We turn our face toward Morningside.&#13;
Who is this clamoring throng we hear,&#13;
That crowds its way from far and near?&#13;
They're hungry souls who've come to drink,&#13;
From journey's far at wisdom's brink.&#13;
And as we name each pedagogue,&#13;
There comes a verse true monologue;&#13;
They're seers who with prophetic tongue,&#13;
Proclaim true wisdom's uttermost rung.&#13;
Year in year out, from fall till June,&#13;
Old Solomon's mill grinds keen and small;&#13;
Each nerve, each fibre's kept in tune,&#13;
With watchful care he grinds them all.&#13;
_&#13;
Behold the warriors of our school,&#13;
They've made themselves a repWith bodies keen, their minds are cool,&#13;
Whene'er they go they go with PEP.&#13;
And as we near those college halls,&#13;
We catch the thrill of argument;&#13;
Our hearts o'erwhelm with joyful calls,&#13;
For Morningside on victory's bent.&#13;
It matters not how strong the foe ,&#13;
Nor with what method he attacks,&#13;
He soon retreats, his gains are slow,&#13;
For Morningside no courage lacks.&#13;
'Tis Morningside who never fails&#13;
Though odds against her gravely stand;&#13;
Her ship, though tossed by stormy sails,&#13;
Ne'er in defeat it goes astrand.&#13;
'Tis not her stature we adore&#13;
In song about our Heap Big School,&#13;
Her metal true is deeper ore,&#13;
Than outward form is pledged to rule.&#13;
Fair Morningside, earth's paradise,&#13;
From thee we claim our treasures all:&#13;
Truth, knowledge, friends with no disguise,&#13;
&#13;
Earth's richest gifts us here befall.&#13;
From north and south, from east and west,&#13;
Ten thousand heart beats sound to thee.&#13;
With ideals high, our life's own test,&#13;
Thy beacon lights beam free.&#13;
And as each day earth's goal we near,&#13;
We search our memories and we hear,&#13;
A hoard of voices shout with pride,&#13;
"Long live our home, dear Morningside."&#13;
Sail on thou pilot of our soul&#13;
With colors streaming high,&#13;
May ne'er a cloud betray thy goal,&#13;
And not a storm thy ship draw nigh.&#13;
Fair Morningside, thou spirit true,&#13;
To thee we lend our hand,&#13;
Our hearts and souls we pledge anew,&#13;
United by thy fate we stand.&#13;
J. H.T.&#13;
&#13;
It H appens Every Day&#13;
Morningside Spirit&#13;
Our college is a melting pot&#13;
Takes men from every walk in life&#13;
Mixes them in and brings them out&#13;
Seasoned with peppy Morningside spice.&#13;
What is this Morningside spirit&#13;
We are told so much about&#13;
From the day we enter college&#13;
Until we have been ushered out?&#13;
It is something down in our hearts&#13;
Which grips a man from head to sole&#13;
It sticks and it never departs&#13;
Though he travels from pole to pole.&#13;
The fighting soldier's devotion&#13;
For the homeland which he defends&#13;
Is like the student's emotion&#13;
For this institution of friends.&#13;
Like the babe's love of its mother&#13;
This spirit of love in old M. C .&#13;
Makes students sisters and brothers&#13;
All in a great big family.&#13;
Then its pep, love and devotion&#13;
Now I believe you have it straight&#13;
I feel it's a great big something&#13;
Greater than anything however great.&#13;
&#13;
C. D. N., '22.&#13;
&#13;
Back home come our darling brothers&#13;
Home from across the sea.&#13;
They've been making democrats&#13;
From the tyrants in Germany.&#13;
It must take a lot of science&#13;
For ladies to walk down the street&#13;
Yes, when their only reliance&#13;
Is high heels and toes of their feet.&#13;
Just once in a while, professor,&#13;
I become discouraged you know.&#13;
T o get fifty-five I swear, Sir,&#13;
Is what makes the gray hairs grow.&#13;
Alone she stands, pale and weary&#13;
On street cars in our city&#13;
In seats sit, strong and cheery&#13;
Excuses for men I guess.&#13;
Whenever I see a bald-headed man&#13;
A beautiful picture enters my mind&#13;
Flat-irons, wife, and a frying pan&#13;
The same world-wide for all mankind.&#13;
And paint and powder on her face&#13;
Which she thinks makes her look so fair&#13;
I think it's really a disgrace&#13;
I 'd tell her so if only I'd dare.&#13;
Hello there, dear little snowflakes&#13;
Sailing through the air&#13;
Where, oh where are you from?&#13;
It seems without a thought of care.&#13;
If you were as big as I am&#13;
I've reason to suppose&#13;
You'd have just about as much trouble&#13;
As the biggest man who grows.&#13;
I wonder now w hat sidewalks are for&#13;
All covered with slipp'ry ice and snow&#13;
&#13;
A slip, a fall, a place so sore&#13;
Isn't this right ?-I'd like to know.&#13;
I'd say it takes some nerve&#13;
To ask of some lady you know&#13;
To kindly her sad yarns reserve&#13;
'Cause it spoils your disposition so.&#13;
Did you ever stop to wonder&#13;
Then just sit down and think&#13;
Why all folks are sure to blunder&#13;
And just why we eat, sleep and drink?&#13;
With some parting advice I'm through&#13;
It relates both to me and you&#13;
Wonder, blunder, but don't make fun&#13;
'Cause you' re kind of funny too.&#13;
&#13;
C. D. N., '22.&#13;
&#13;
Zet Novelette&#13;
FOR THE GOOD OF THE ARMY&#13;
CHAPTER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I never was much of a writer. In fact all of my literary ambitions fled in my&#13;
early high school days. I contested th at I was the best story teller of my class.&#13;
I wrote a story and my teacher admitted that my boast was true. However, I was&#13;
the only failu re. I have never w ritten anything but letters since, but I have done&#13;
a great deal of observation.&#13;
I love happy people. I love mischievous people. I love good-looking people.&#13;
For this reason I will tell you of Martha Lynn, a girl in whom all of these qualities&#13;
are combined. When I t hink of her now it seems fu tile to try to describe her. I&#13;
always thought that she was the best girl in our town, and when I have finished&#13;
I think that my readers will agree.&#13;
Martha and her brother and sister lived with their father in a big dingy house&#13;
at the edge of town. Mrs. L ynn had been such a pretty woman. She and her&#13;
husband moved here with their two children when M r. Lynn was made manager&#13;
of the Milling House. Martha was the only child that was born to them in our&#13;
town and she w as the only one we ever claimed as our daughter. T he other two&#13;
child ren were not the kind that would w in old folks' hearts. The oldest was a girl&#13;
who should have worn long dresses at eight and old lace and lavender at twenty.&#13;
Her name was Mary, but there was nothing merry about her. From the moment&#13;
she stepped from the t rain she seemed to dislike the town and its people. She stepped&#13;
deliberately, ignoring anyone's assistance ; her time ·was given to steering Ber tie, her&#13;
brother, into the wait ing cab. After she had him perfectly seated, she arranged her&#13;
hat and dress, and then seated herself. Apparently, it was Mrs. Lynn's custom to&#13;
leave the children to themselves, for she leaned back in the carriage and closed her&#13;
eyes and waited for her husband to make some eleventh-hour arrangements. Only&#13;
once did Bertie w himper, and then he was speedily silenced by on glance from Mary.&#13;
T hese were the " new folks" w ho had come to live in Mill Manor. In a short&#13;
time M rs. Lynn had receved visits from all of the town's professional visitors, but they&#13;
learned nothing except that Mrs. Lynn was in poor health and that both the children&#13;
were very ladylike. W hen it was time for the truly friendly to call, M rs. Smith and&#13;
myself went, and, to my great disappointment , we learned no more.&#13;
Every Sunday Mary took Herbert to church. Every Sunday Herbert went home&#13;
with Mary. H e was never naughty, because she made him good. About two years&#13;
after the Lynn family moved to Millville, Martha was born. E ven this did not make&#13;
Mary and Bertie happier. They led the same life together. So Mary grew up in&#13;
a world of her own. I believe she was the only natural one in the group. She often&#13;
ran from home to play with the other children on our street.&#13;
Time passed, and soon Mary returned from college and became one of our high&#13;
school teachers. Several years before, Bertie had become sort of a bookkeeper in his&#13;
father's office. Mrs. Lynn lived just one year after Mary's graduation. After this,&#13;
Martha, who was just entering high school, spent more time away from home than&#13;
&#13;
ever, because it became unbearable under the supervision of her starchy sister. The&#13;
two men had long since ceased to question Mary's decisions.&#13;
Martha had never cared for learning as Mary did, but she went to college so that&#13;
she might be away from home. In the beginning of her junior year, she was called&#13;
home by the sudden death of her father.&#13;
Immediately she was given to understand that she was dependent and that she&#13;
would be expected to earn her living. Martha meekly consented and went to work&#13;
in the stock room of the mill, where she checked out supplies for the salesmen.&#13;
Martha's best girl chum, Amy, had gone out of town to school, but had entered the&#13;
office of the mill two years before. After the first day's work, Martha spoke very&#13;
enthusiastically about her commercial plunge.&#13;
"You know, Amy, I never realized how nice it is to work. I'm just like old Prof.,&#13;
'My realizations exceed my expectations'."&#13;
"Wait until you have been at it two years, as I have, and it won't be so novel."&#13;
"Oh, no, no! I'm going to learn the stock and learn the sales routes and soon they&#13;
won't be able to get along without me."&#13;
Some weeks later at lunch Amy, after reminding her of her early plans, said: "I&#13;
guess you're going to know one salesman better than the stock, aren't you, Lynnie ?"&#13;
Quite a friendship had sprung up between the salesman and Martha. She was&#13;
eager to hear their experiences, and they were eager for her witty conversation. The&#13;
route of most interest to Martha was that of Washington state and the coast towns of&#13;
Oregon. Lawrence Holt was the tall, dark, good-natured individual who covered this&#13;
route every spring and fall. Some people told Bertie that he wasn't to have his&#13;
sister with him long, but whenever anyone ovearheard the two talking, it was always&#13;
about his work. So we contented ourselves thinking that Martha would be with us&#13;
for a long while. Then the war broke out - - GRACE BAGLEY.&#13;
CHAPTER II&#13;
Lawrence Holt, like all good American lads, felt the call to arms. It was with a&#13;
sad heart that he left his salesman job, but was happy to know that his vacancy was&#13;
to be filled by such an interesting and competent girl as Martha.&#13;
Before Lawrence went away, Martha had a good talk with him. She gathered&#13;
from his talk such pointers as she would need in carrying on the business and showed&#13;
him her ambition to serve her country as best she could.&#13;
Time passed and Lawrence rose higher and higher in army rank. As an influential&#13;
man he received permission to send to America refugees from France and Belgium to&#13;
be educated in American schools.&#13;
Martha, hearing of this and feeling that she was not doing her bit as a patriot,&#13;
asked permission to teach in a school for these war refugees which Lawrence sent over.&#13;
It was with a great deal of reluctance that she was dismissed from the mill, for she&#13;
was their foremost saleswoman at this time; but permission was hastily given her to ·&#13;
teach in school, for no better suited teacher could be found.&#13;
Day by day :M artha became more and more interested in her pupils. Letter after&#13;
letter was sent to Lawrence, telling of the progress of little Ikey and Paul. She never&#13;
&#13;
tired of telling about her "children", as she called them, and they loved no one better&#13;
than their "dear teacher".&#13;
November eleventh came, and with it the good news that Germany had signed the&#13;
armistice. It was good news for all, especially the pupils in Martha's school. She&#13;
helped them celebrate and helped them make plans of what they would do when "the&#13;
big man", namely, Lawrence, came home.&#13;
It happened that Lawrence was not of the favored who came back as soon as transportation could be obtained, for he was transferred to the army of occupation, which&#13;
meant that he would remain over there for some length of time. Although Martha&#13;
was a bit disappointed, yet she was made of "sterner stuff" and kept a cheerful heart.&#13;
A year and a half later Martha received word that within another month Lawrence&#13;
would be home.&#13;
She was at a loss to know what to do. Her pupils were not through the grades&#13;
and she could not think of giving up her school. What she would do when Lawrence returned was a question in her mind. Whether she should give up her school&#13;
and marry him, marry him and still keep her school, or keep her school and not marry&#13;
him, were the questions.&#13;
AGNETTA FLOM&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
The month passed rapidly. It seemed so to Martha, for every day brought Lawrence's corning that much nearer. Yet she was no nearer the solution of her problem&#13;
than she had been before.&#13;
Teachers were very scarce; especially teachers who were suited for that particular&#13;
work. Martha fully realized what it would mean to these Belgian children to give&#13;
her up. She had won their confidence and love in those first dreadful days of homesickness and loneliness. It would be difficult, indeed, for them to confide in a strange&#13;
teacher as they did in their dear "Miss Martha".&#13;
On the other hand, there was Lawrence Holt to be considered. There was no&#13;
doubt in Martha's mind as to her feelings toward him and it would cause her a&#13;
struggle to give him up entirely. But she did not think it would be quite fair to&#13;
him to marry him and continue teaching.&#13;
The little refugees were always eager to hear any news from the "big man".&#13;
When Martha received the cable saying that Lawrence had sailed, she shared the&#13;
good news with her pupils. They were almost overjoyed at the thought of seeing&#13;
once more the "big man", who had been so kind to them and who had sent them&#13;
to this wonderful land of America and to their beloved "Miss Martha". They&#13;
wanted to show their appreciation in some way, so they immediately began to carry out&#13;
the plans which had been working for some time ..&#13;
About a fortnight later, on a bright sunny afternoon in May, everything was in&#13;
readiness. The children were dressed in their best attire and there was a festive and&#13;
expectant air about the whole place. The "big man" was to arrive in a few hours.&#13;
Lawrence Holt arrived at the appointed time. Few, indeed , are the people who&#13;
receive a reception such as he received from these Belgian children, whom he had befriended. It was a gay and happy party that sat around the dinner table that night .&#13;
&#13;
Yet, in spite of her happy face, Martha's heart was filled with conflicting emotions&#13;
of joy and sadness; joy in her love for Lawrence and for the children; sadness in the&#13;
thought of giving up either.&#13;
Several weeks had passed. Yet, nothwithstanding Lawrence's pleadings, Martha&#13;
still thought that it was her duty to remain with "her children". Lawrence had&#13;
tried in vain to convince her that it was just as much her duty to marry him and&#13;
help hm carry out his plans as to remain in this school. There was yet much to be&#13;
done in the reconstruction work in France and Belgium. Lawrence Holt had been&#13;
offered a good position in Belgium and he knew that with Martha's help and encouragement he could do much more and better work.&#13;
It did not take long for the keen eyes of the children to see that something was&#13;
troubling their "Miss Martha". She was just as sweet and kind to them as everperhaps more so. They noticed that many times when she spoke to them or looked&#13;
at them, her eyes would fill with t ears. One day an incident occurred which made&#13;
the children desperate. Albert, a bright little lad of about ten years of age and a&#13;
favorite with everyone, chanced to find "Miss Martha" crying in the school room.&#13;
He softly closed the door and hurried to find the other children. Something had to&#13;
be done, they all agreed. They could not bear to see "Miss Martha" so unhappy.&#13;
But what could they do?&#13;
"Let's ask the 'Big man' to help us," suggested Albert. "We know him better&#13;
than onyone else and he loves Miss Martha, too."&#13;
Lawrence Holt was called to the conference and the case was put before him.&#13;
" Do you know what the trouble is?" and "What can we do?" were some of the&#13;
questions asked him.&#13;
"Yes, children, I think I know what is troubling Miss Martha," answered Lawrence; "and I believe you can do something; in fact, I believe you are the only ones&#13;
who can help her out of her difficulty."&#13;
" Oh, tell us all about it, Mr. Lawrence," demanded the eager children.&#13;
Lawrence Holt realizing how much depended on his words, told his story well. He&#13;
told them that he knew how much they needed "Miss Martha", but he told also,&#13;
how much he needed her in his great work of reconstruction in their own homeland&#13;
across the sea, and that for them to give up "Miss Martha" would be for the good of&#13;
that great army of workers of which he was the leader.&#13;
When he had finished speaking, there was a deep silence for a moment. Then&#13;
Albert, the spokesman of the little group, said gravely: "Miss Martha must go with&#13;
you, Mr. Lawrence. Helena, go bring her here."&#13;
Helena needed no second bidding and in almost an instant, it seemed, she had returned, bringing Martha wth her. Martha, noticing their sober faces, glanced&#13;
around the group a trifle bewildered. Then Albert solemnly advanced, took her hand&#13;
and placed it in that of Lawrence Holt, saying, "Dear Miss Martha, as much as we&#13;
want you here, you must go with the .big man. He needs you , and Belgium needs you·&#13;
even more than we do. It is for Belgium and the army."&#13;
"For Belgium and the army," echoed the chorus of childish voices.&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Match Fact ory Inc.&#13;
Incorporated February 14, 1492, under the International Law of Fussology.&#13;
HoN. DAN Cupid,&#13;
&#13;
Manager.&#13;
&#13;
(Every time he shoots at his mark he Mrs. it)&#13;
President ...................................................... Harold Butler&#13;
Vice-President ............................................ Florence Palm&#13;
Secretary ...................................................... Bert Pritchard&#13;
Treasurer ..................................................... Mary Dolliver&#13;
Official Knot Tier ......................................Bishop Buehler&#13;
Business Manager ...................................... Professor Hayes&#13;
Floor Walker ................... .............................. Mrs. Jackson&#13;
Assistants......Tom Friest, Fenton Jones, Lorene Williams&#13;
Advisory Board ...................... Chas. Klippel, Irene Cooper&#13;
PUBLICATION BUREAU&#13;
Chairman ........................................................Miss Dimitt&#13;
Dave Klatt&#13;
Herb. Mahood&#13;
Department of Foreign Exchange .......... Lieutenant Brown&#13;
&#13;
A ssistants&#13;
Mae Hanson&#13;
Clifford Kenned y&#13;
Eva Maxwell&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Hurlbert&#13;
Glen Glazier&#13;
Pearl Brown&#13;
&#13;
WALL STREET SPECULATORS&#13;
Harold Raun&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
Beatrice Spangler&#13;
Herman Bruswitz&#13;
Gertrude Overacker&#13;
Francis Kingsbury&#13;
Esther Lange&#13;
Hugh Fouke&#13;
Wilson Smith&#13;
Percy Mickelson&#13;
Evelyn Terry&#13;
TRUSTEES&#13;
Evelyn Balkema&#13;
Ray Troutman&#13;
Tom McBride&#13;
Dorothy Knudson&#13;
John Miller&#13;
Miriam Fish&#13;
Lee Barks&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
Evan Engberg&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
BOND HOLDER-Herb Meyer&#13;
STOCK HOLDERS&#13;
Helen &amp; George&#13;
Warner &amp; Norma&#13;
&#13;
John McB. &amp; Gladys&#13;
Wayne &amp; Evelyn&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FASHIONS&#13;
&#13;
FASHIONS&#13;
&#13;
up-to-the-minute&#13;
&#13;
at moderate prices&#13;
&#13;
Smart debonair modes for&#13;
college young women&#13;
FASHIONS designed particularly to bejewel the fancies and charm the desires of&#13;
women of college ages.&#13;
THRU the diligent research&#13;
of our New York representative, the modes preferred by&#13;
Eastern debutantes and society circles are almost simultaneously depicted at the&#13;
Pelletier store.&#13;
&#13;
NEW,&#13;
&#13;
sprightly, youthful&#13;
modes enhanced by Pelletier&#13;
value-giving invite the selection of all college young&#13;
women wishing something&#13;
different, individual and piquant in toggery.&#13;
COSTUMES&#13;
GOWNS&#13;
&#13;
FROCKS&#13;
SKI RT S&#13;
&#13;
- and all the pertinent accessories that go to make the&#13;
discerning wardrobe delightfully arrayed and comprehensively assembled in Pelletier's&#13;
Apparel Sections.&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
1918&#13;
"Girl's Gossip" out.&#13;
The girls sure can put out some R eporter.&#13;
Erwin gets "hot-handed" at Sunshine.&#13;
"Why"?&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
High School Track Meet. Sioux City&#13;
High wins.&#13;
Sunshine Inn picnic at Riverside.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Soph picnic at North Riverside.&#13;
Prof. Thompson views the "natural&#13;
scenery."&#13;
Bob Brown would like to know why&#13;
" he" doesn't go home.&#13;
&#13;
7 Harrison Heckman's mustache reaches&#13;
the first degree.&#13;
slow."&#13;
14-&#13;
&#13;
" It seems to grow so&#13;
&#13;
Madrigal Club A nnual Home Concert.&#13;
"Some band ".&#13;
Prof. MacCollin makes SOME leader.&#13;
&#13;
16 May Fete.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Best one ever given in&#13;
spite of the wind . "Come again Cupid."&#13;
Philo Up-river T rip.&#13;
Frances did&#13;
you enjoy that row down-stream?&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Just examinations.&#13;
them so much.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
More exams.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
Senior Play, "All of a Sudden Peggy."&#13;
Reunion of the classes and literary soFarewell chapel service. Glad to see&#13;
the "has beens".&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
We all enjoyed&#13;
&#13;
Commencement exercises&#13;
Church.&#13;
Goodbye Seniors.&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Davidson's-Sioux City's Largest&#13;
Department Store&#13;
ARGEST not only in actual amount of floor&#13;
space, but greatest by far in p oint of service&#13;
rendered to the public. Du ring thirty-five&#13;
years of progressive retailing under the same&#13;
management which established this business,&#13;
D avidson's has earned fo r itself, and is sustaining, an enviable reputation- a reputation which places it&#13;
high in the list of those institutions which have proved themselves very real and very necessary facto rs in the growth and&#13;
well-being of our city.&#13;
&#13;
Grace&#13;
THE BIG STORE&#13;
&#13;
Snappy Spring&#13;
Neckwear&#13;
for the particular dresser.&#13;
Our lines display the season's&#13;
&#13;
SEPTEMBER&#13;
&#13;
style&#13;
&#13;
de•&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE HABERDASHERY SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
1918&#13;
24-&#13;
&#13;
complete&#13;
&#13;
mands in our exclusive&#13;
showings of Cutter and&#13;
Crossette Cravats.&#13;
&#13;
THE DISTINCTIVE&#13;
OUTFITTER FOR&#13;
PARTICULAR MEN&#13;
&#13;
Back at old M.C. again.&#13;
"Glad to see you old sport."&#13;
&#13;
25 Y. w. Party in the old Association&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Y. M. Stag in the Gym.&#13;
&#13;
26 Classes begin again.&#13;
Can you tell me where French I&#13;
meets?&#13;
"Buy your chapel seats early."&#13;
&#13;
27 Y. M. and Y. W. Joint. Freshman&#13;
girls all step home.&#13;
&#13;
28 Girls taken into society.&#13;
"This suspense is awful!"&#13;
&#13;
29 First Sunday away from home. I'm&#13;
homesick.&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
"Boo-hoo !"&#13;
&#13;
Our first Monday classes.&#13;
pared."&#13;
&#13;
"Not pre-&#13;
&#13;
For the Man Who Appreciates Distinction in Haberdashery&#13;
That Man Will Appreciate Our New Displays which&#13;
Are Now Ready&#13;
We've Aimed for Distinction and We've Hit Our Mark&#13;
And We've Expressed Our Ideas of Quality&#13;
in a Splendid Manner&#13;
Specializing on Shirts, Collars,&#13;
Neckwear, Hosiery, Pajamas, Underwear, Gloves, Bath Robes, and&#13;
Full Dress Requisites.&#13;
Phone 9345&#13;
&#13;
617 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
OCTOBER&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
S. A. T. C. men inducted into the&#13;
service. Quarantine immediately follows. "Remember the 'Silent Six'."&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Junior girls decide to publish THE&#13;
SIOUX alone.&#13;
"Fools rush in where angels fear to&#13;
tread."&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY"S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH and&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Juniors dine at the West and go to the&#13;
theater. "Some class to us."&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
"Flu" scare. School closes for one&#13;
week. Loveland Annex fitted up as a&#13;
hospital.&#13;
Serenades are popular. Ask Mary for&#13;
particulars.&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
THE GOOD OLD DAYS ONCE MORE&#13;
With the passing of the war clouds come the good times,&#13;
the jolly parties, and sport activities yo ung chaps like so well,&#13;
and in which smart clothes play so&#13;
prominent a part.&#13;
We specialize in Young Men's&#13;
Clothes- our style hits of the season&#13;
bear the Kuppenheimer label. If&#13;
you haven't seen&#13;
the new ideas in&#13;
suits, the clever&#13;
seam effects, the&#13;
welt belts, the&#13;
square&#13;
p at ch&#13;
pockets, and other&#13;
exclusive sty 1 e&#13;
features, come in&#13;
tomorrow - don't&#13;
put it off.&#13;
Silk Shirts, fine&#13;
.Madras Shirts,&#13;
Nightwear,&#13;
Beautiful Neckwear, Felt Hats,&#13;
Straw Hats,&#13;
Genuine Leather&#13;
Luggage, of the&#13;
Finest Kind.&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
School opens after four weeks of vacation because of the "flu". We are&#13;
saddened by the loss of three of our&#13;
boys.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
We pledge $4,000 for the United War&#13;
Work Fund .&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
"Beat Vermilion." Big pep meeting&#13;
at chapel, for we play South Dakota&#13;
tomorrow. "Skinny" introduced as&#13;
football captain.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
"It has been done." We beat Vermilion again.&#13;
S. A. T. C . men receive their first&#13;
over-Sunday passes.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Reception . Just as thrilling&#13;
as ever.&#13;
Omar Adams stepped.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Boys sent to chapel to study.&#13;
"Grand" party.&#13;
&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S and MISSES&#13;
&#13;
SUITS, COATS and&#13;
AFTERNOON DRESSES&#13;
&#13;
Peace announced at 2 :40 A. M. Big&#13;
celebration ; whistles and bells for&#13;
hours; immense crowds; big parade.&#13;
"No more 'War Aims' for me."&#13;
&#13;
]5&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Creations&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Coach and Mrs. Saunderson entertained the football men . Orin Goodrich elected captain for next year.&#13;
&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
&#13;
Agora party for the S. A. T. C. men&#13;
and all the college girls.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Smart College Footwear&#13;
&#13;
First "Student Sing" led by Professor&#13;
McCollin. Shall we have one each&#13;
week? "YEA, Bo."&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
DISTRIBUTORS OF&#13;
&#13;
Collegian R eporter makes its first appearance this year. Nellie Carpenter&#13;
is editor and Henry Marsh the business manager.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Also&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Thanksgiving Day. All the army men&#13;
invited out for dinner. "Where was&#13;
the Lieut.?&#13;
&#13;
The H ouse of Quality, Style and Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
DON'T GUESS-BE SURE&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Boys came to chapel masked.&#13;
Posters? What does it all mean?&#13;
&#13;
5 Commercial Club and the Trustees&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
lunch at the barracks.&#13;
fine."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
"The pie was&#13;
&#13;
That's an important&#13;
point about this store;&#13;
you can alway s be&#13;
certain of correct, au-&#13;
&#13;
Posters! Now we know what it's all&#13;
about. Y. W. County Fair advertised&#13;
in the chapel.&#13;
&#13;
thentic style; the best&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
S. A. T. C. quarantined again. County Fair called off.&#13;
&#13;
wear; good fit; fine&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Must have your temperature taken&#13;
once a day. "Don't bite the end off,&#13;
Ruth."&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
possible values; long&#13;
quality fabrics. These&#13;
things are guaranteed&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Demobilization of the S. A. T. C.&#13;
"Hot-hand" Association active. "Look&#13;
out, Sergeant, they're getting even&#13;
now."&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Society Christmas Joints. Frolics on&#13;
the third floor.&#13;
" How did those dish towels get into&#13;
the Edison?"&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
the clothes we sell&#13;
&#13;
Christmas vacation begins.&#13;
" I'm going back to the farm."&#13;
&#13;
We Specialize on&#13;
Young Men's Wear&#13;
&#13;
The home of Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx clothes&#13;
&#13;
.I&#13;
&#13;
JANUARY&#13;
1919&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
School again.&#13;
Our soldiers are coming back.&#13;
looks like old M. C. again.&#13;
&#13;
14-&#13;
&#13;
Elections for the men's societies out.&#13;
Almost as exciting for the girls as for&#13;
the boys.&#13;
Prof. Faust steps to the Auditorium&#13;
with Miss Baker. "She's so fond of&#13;
.&#13;
music. "&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
17 Lecture Course. Ralph Parlette, "The&#13;
University of the Hard Knocks".&#13;
"You can't keep a good man down."&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Society Joints. The first of the year.&#13;
Frolics and fun on the third floor.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Freshies have the chapel period. "Some&#13;
faculty."&#13;
&#13;
Anhotel thataimsto&#13;
Please each patron&#13;
regard less of the&#13;
extent o f patronage&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Devitts serve soapsuds and Sunshine&#13;
has salt in the pie.&#13;
"Variety is the spice of life."&#13;
"May I sit next to you?"&#13;
Exams make our lives miserable again.&#13;
&#13;
Serves all alike -&#13;
&#13;
with promptness and&#13;
&#13;
unfaltering courtesy&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN&#13;
&#13;
$1 .50 and up&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
B. HARRIS&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
&#13;
1 Post-exam Jubilee.&#13;
Who ate all the ice-cream?&#13;
Morningside beat Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
19-13, in basket ball.&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Agora elections. How many votes did&#13;
you buy, Hank?&#13;
Criterion Quartette on the Lecture&#13;
Course.&#13;
&#13;
Same place, same force, same service.&#13;
We are vain enough to feel that this is&#13;
all that we need say to bring our old&#13;
friends back, and new comers will follow the crowd.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
PETER S PARK&#13;
&#13;
Abe De Vaul won the oratorical contest for Morningside. Reception in&#13;
the Society Hall for the orators.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen delegates sent to Cornell.&#13;
Did you meet your uncle, Hoody?&#13;
Monument Run. Hunt comes in first&#13;
and Lory second.&#13;
&#13;
27- New locks on the attic door, and bean&#13;
showers all in the same day.&#13;
could it happen?&#13;
Creighton beat M. C., 30- 10.&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
How&#13;
&#13;
With the college books under our roof&#13;
we can supply most all your wants. If&#13;
we don't have what you want we will&#13;
get it.&#13;
We sell Houston Fountain Pens on a&#13;
positive guarantee, if you are not suited&#13;
tell us.&#13;
Everything in the Kodak line with&#13;
twenty-four hour finishing service.&#13;
Your college days picture book will be&#13;
one of your greatest sources of pleasure in years to come. Let us help&#13;
you make it.&#13;
&#13;
Men's Banquet. Theodore Engberg&#13;
and Joshua Norton were there.&#13;
&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Pro p.&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
&#13;
1 Women's Banquet.&#13;
the cup.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Junior girls win&#13;
But what could you expect?&#13;
&#13;
Something wrong with the piano.&#13;
it beans or paper?&#13;
&#13;
Is&#13;
&#13;
Drake beat Morningside 20-15.&#13;
Freshies tied up the Sophmen , but&#13;
still they got to the party in time.&#13;
Beulah Edgington wins the Waffle contest; 21 waffles. Oh, Beulah!&#13;
Hawkeye Banquet. Florence didn't&#13;
know his name and he didn't know&#13;
hers.&#13;
Alarm clocks come to chapel. We&#13;
knew it was dry, but we didn't know&#13;
that anyone would have to be wakened&#13;
up.&#13;
Basket ball tournament. Spencer wins.&#13;
M Carnival. Mary's song moved the&#13;
entire house "which way"?&#13;
"Lorene, shut that window so the car&#13;
will start."&#13;
Sophs win the basket ball tournament.&#13;
"That wasn't much."&#13;
Sophs have charge of chapel. Pep&#13;
meeting for the Yale-Harvard games.&#13;
"Herb, where's your powder puff?"&#13;
Junior-Senior Banquet in the Society&#13;
Halls. Some folks seated by request.&#13;
Fresh Party in the Gym. Their lungs&#13;
are well developed.&#13;
Harvard beats Yale 4-3.&#13;
How would you like to be girls all the&#13;
time?&#13;
&#13;
There are few newspapers in the United States giving their&#13;
readers the variety of good news and features printed each&#13;
evening in&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Tribune&#13;
"More than a newspaper"&#13;
50,000 Evening Circulation&#13;
Following are some of the reasons why The Tribune has&#13;
a larger circulation than any morning or evening newspaper&#13;
published in a city of 100,000 population or less.&#13;
Full 24-hour Associated Press Telegraph&#13;
Service.&#13;
&#13;
Daily birthday feature of historical interest.&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive&#13;
Service.&#13;
&#13;
Daily comic by Fox-Toonerville Trolley, Powerful Katrinka and Terrible&#13;
Tempered Mr. Bang.&#13;
&#13;
United&#13;
&#13;
Press&#13;
&#13;
Telegraph&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive London Times and Public&#13;
Ledger European Service.&#13;
&#13;
Daily comics, "Say, Pop," and "The&#13;
Card Players."&#13;
&#13;
Washington news from Tribune Bureau.&#13;
Peace Conference stories by William&#13;
Allen White, brilliant Kansas Editor.&#13;
&#13;
"My Soldier Husband," daily story of&#13;
gripping interest.&#13;
"Young Lady Across the Way," amusing daily paragraph.&#13;
&#13;
Unexcelled Market reports.&#13;
Two colored comic pages each Saturday&#13;
"Polly and Her Pals" and "Say, Pop."&#13;
&#13;
Abe Martin-daily bit of humor.&#13;
Walt Mason, Rippling Rhyme-daily.&#13;
&#13;
Two feature pages of interesting world&#13;
events each Saturday.&#13;
Weekly letter by T. P. O'Conner, eminent member of British parliament.&#13;
"The Abandoned Room," daily mystery&#13;
story of fascinating interest.&#13;
Daily health talks by Dr. W. A. Evans,&#13;
recognized authority.&#13;
&#13;
Editorial page-reprints gleaned from&#13;
the country's best newspapers.&#13;
"From the Telegraph&#13;
items in brief.&#13;
&#13;
Table"-news&#13;
&#13;
" A Guide to Good Manners'·-daily&#13;
feature.&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
Hundreds of special correspondents in&#13;
Iowa, South Dakota and Nebraska assures&#13;
all state news.&#13;
&#13;
Daily "Good Night Stories" for . children.&#13;
&#13;
Editorial policy-independent, unhampered by any influence except the welfare&#13;
of the people of this territory.&#13;
&#13;
Daily&#13;
Forbes.&#13;
&#13;
Beauty&#13;
&#13;
Chats,&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
Edna&#13;
&#13;
No other newspaper in Iowa, Nebraska, or South D akota&#13;
buys the three great international telegraph reports for its&#13;
readers.&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Tribune&#13;
More News&#13;
&#13;
More Views&#13;
&#13;
APRIL&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Soph Annual Board election.&#13;
"Now be democratic."&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Nellie Carpenter's sixteenth birthday.&#13;
Dinner party down in the Reporter&#13;
room. Some feed, judging from what&#13;
we saw through the window. "Oh,&#13;
you bottle."&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Junior chapel day to boost for the Annual. Everybody wants one, after seeing the sample of the best Annual ever&#13;
published.&#13;
Who says so?&#13;
We all say so.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Miss Bennet is here for a Vocational&#13;
Conference. "Some girls get married,&#13;
and some don't. There is many a slip&#13;
in the best laid plans."&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho Joint at Riverside.&#13;
"Be careful, Flynn; we may want to&#13;
skate on this floor again."&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
sends greetings&#13;
to her many friends&#13;
&#13;
in all arts&#13;
p&#13;
the world&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
REV. FRANKE. MOSSMAN,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
D.D.&#13;
&#13;
B. Spangler: Wait a minute; I have to put my on my veil.&#13;
De Vaul: Oh, you don't need it.&#13;
Beatrice: I always have to wear it when I go out with you.&#13;
&#13;
Long &amp; Hansen Commission&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
Evan E.: It seems funny that when Edna and I are together, we never talk-we&#13;
just sit, and--think.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Winnipeg&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
So. St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
Herchy ( calling Dollivers) : Hello! Say! is the street light in front of your house&#13;
burning? This is the electric company.&#13;
Mrs. D.: I don't know, but I'll go and see. (Returning to phone): Yes, it is.&#13;
Herchey: Will you please blow it out?&#13;
&#13;
Your Satisfaction, Our Success"&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
We will be pleased to furnish you with information&#13;
regarding the market or live stock conditions at any time.&#13;
&#13;
Now the ears, so I always had thunk,&#13;
Should bear sounds to the top of the trunk.&#13;
But from Some, I observe,&#13;
They seem merely to serve&#13;
As racks for the Jooler-man's junk.&#13;
&#13;
THEY ARE BUILDERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Energy, Health and Endurance&#13;
&#13;
Miss Lillard: Are there any in this class who do not expect to teach?&#13;
Grace Wishard: I don't.&#13;
&#13;
So Necessary for your School Work&#13;
LET US DONATE&#13;
&#13;
A Prof. to beat Van Horne.&#13;
&#13;
La Fama Chocolates&#13;
&#13;
Stevens, a new style collar.&#13;
Morningside, a Science Hall and Dormatory.&#13;
Biology Department, some odorless specimens.&#13;
1920 Sioux, a graveyard.&#13;
Third Floor, a kitchenette.&#13;
Cornie Dyke, a new "case".&#13;
A way to work Hirsch.&#13;
The Joke Editor, some new jokes.&#13;
&#13;
MADE BY&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
Sioux City, U.S. A.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Laux surely has good intentions, for she announced to her French I Class that&#13;
she wished to be good and not too dear.&#13;
&#13;
•·&#13;
&#13;
Rapalee Marble &amp; Granite Works&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LARGEST MONUMENT&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
&#13;
You ·will always see the greatest variety of high grade&#13;
monuments priced as low as the lowest, quality considered. You are not paying some agent a commission when&#13;
you place an order with us.&#13;
Auto Phone 2370&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
605-7-9 West Seventh St.&#13;
&#13;
CLASS PINS&#13;
&#13;
EmBLEmS&#13;
&#13;
MEDALS&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
&#13;
WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING&#13;
&#13;
Jonas Olson&#13;
&#13;
&amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1895&#13;
MANUFACTURING JEWELERS AND&#13;
DIAM0ND M0UNTERS&#13;
&#13;
510 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3211&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Schuldt (passing the cookies to Jennie Kniffen ) :&#13;
&#13;
Will you have some,&#13;
&#13;
sweetness?&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
"I hope your father doesn't object to my staying so late," said Bob, as the clock&#13;
struck twelve.&#13;
"Oh, dear, no," replied Verna, with difficulty suppressing a yawn.&#13;
save him the expense of a night watchman."&#13;
&#13;
Pearl B.:&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE A D RETAIL&#13;
&#13;
"He says you&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
What do you call Harry MacFayden, the man who stages the plays&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Mother for&#13;
&#13;
at the Grand?&#13;
Ruth P.: Why, stage coach, of course.&#13;
&#13;
BUTTERNUT BREA D&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
&#13;
Zordee Stanford: Why, we can hear the cattle in the stock yards lowing. (But&#13;
on listening more closely, she decided it was the fellows at Stonebreakers, entertaining&#13;
the neighborhood with the usual evening musical program.)&#13;
&#13;
408-410 Iowa Street&#13;
Teacher:&#13;
&#13;
What?&#13;
&#13;
Forgotten your pencil again?&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 197&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1197&#13;
&#13;
What would you think of a&#13;
&#13;
soldier who went to war without a gun?&#13;
Tommy: I'd think he was an officer, sir.&#13;
&#13;
EVERYBODY'S DESSERT!&#13;
&#13;
Harold Raun ( at M . minstrel show) : I'm going to sit in the bald headed row.&#13;
H. B.: Any row you'd sit in would be the bald headed row, wouldn't it?&#13;
&#13;
The reason our pure Ice Cream is " Everybody's Dessert"&#13;
is that it is the one dessert everybody likes and never tires of.&#13;
A bunch of girls were discussing the properness of putting the elbows on the table.&#13;
Eva Treman: It is all right to put your elbows on the table, if you can do it gracefully.&#13;
&#13;
And just think! This favorite dish is absolutely purecannot harm the most delicate system.&#13;
&#13;
I often do.&#13;
&#13;
Eat a plate of Ice Cream every day! It is good for youand always be sure that it is&#13;
&#13;
Evan Ausman ( in Psych class) : It is impossible to reach the other side of the&#13;
street. No sooner than you reach the other side, the other side is the other side.&#13;
&#13;
"HANFORD'S"&#13;
The Cream of Quality&#13;
&#13;
All the concrete isn't in the pavements, nor is all the mahogany used for chiffoniers.&#13;
&#13;
Made by&#13;
&#13;
HANFORD PRODUCE CO.&#13;
&#13;
Lives of editors all remind us,&#13;
That our lives are not sublime,&#13;
For they have to work like thunder,&#13;
To get this copy out on time.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
A COLLEGE DICTIONARY&#13;
Bluff: To cover a deficit of brains with an issue of brass.&#13;
Cut : A cruel attempt to deprive the class of the pleasure of one's company and the&#13;
benefit of his recitation.&#13;
English: Our mother tongue; father seldom uses it.&#13;
Faculty: An organization to furnish jokes for the students.&#13;
Flunk: The process by which one becomes a special.&#13;
Period : Fifty minutes of torture.&#13;
Quiz: Means by which students recall how little they know.&#13;
Recitation: A game of bluff.&#13;
Study: An obsolete term.&#13;
Dorothy D.: Say, Hugh, how did you get that wound stripe?&#13;
Hugh Fouke: My heart broke when we didn't march to Berlin.&#13;
&#13;
Mother: Johnny, you said you'd been to Sunday School.&#13;
Johnny: Yes, mamma.&#13;
Mother: How does it happen your hands smell of fish?&#13;
Johnny: Why, I carried the Sunday School papers and the outside is all about&#13;
&#13;
Everything&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade, Any Style&#13;
&#13;
Building with Brick&#13;
AT A MODERATE COST&#13;
&#13;
The Practicability and Stability of Brick-its value as an&#13;
investment-as a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever.&#13;
Thoughts concerning these matters we would like to submit&#13;
for consideration.&#13;
SIOUX CITY BRICK &amp; TILE CO .&#13;
Office and Display Room, No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
Jonah and the whale.&#13;
The Physiology class was studying the lungs. Here's a description of them:&#13;
The lungs, situated on the mezzanine beneath the air-shaft, are the headquarters of&#13;
the fresh-air mission, supported entirely by involuntary contributions, as in other&#13;
charitable organizations; donations from questionable sources are accepted w ithout&#13;
comment-for the greater good that may result.&#13;
&#13;
JUST IMAGINE&#13;
Bob Brown, without Verna.&#13;
Professor Hayes, weighing 300 pounds&#13;
Bert Pritchard quiet.&#13;
Frances Boyd without a smile.&#13;
Ray Troutman with a joke.&#13;
Ruth Mahood with nothing to do.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt a toe dancer.&#13;
Dave Klatt in a hurry.&#13;
Flossie Day loafing.&#13;
The boys at the Yale-Harvard game.&#13;
Rhoda Walin without a man.&#13;
John Miller without Miriam Fish.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Place to buy&#13;
&#13;
GOOD&#13;
COAL&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lumber Co.&#13;
RETAIL COAL&#13;
1604 East Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
A Bank Owes the Community Something&#13;
Weconsider&#13;
&#13;
Ask Evan Engberg, Edna Bekins, Neva Norton, or Park Moorhead if they had&#13;
a good time the night they went to Onawa to get Park's car, and didn't find the car,&#13;
but had to come back to Sioux City on the midnight train! !&#13;
&#13;
it a plain matter of duty for every bank in&#13;
the coun try to take up th e THRIFT propaganda where the&#13;
Government leaves off.&#13;
For our part we purpose to hammer away, day in and day&#13;
out, on th e vice of extravagance, whether we get a cent's worth&#13;
of new Savings business or not. If our advertising starts you&#13;
to save, we will be satisfied. If it sta rts you saving with us,&#13;
we will be doubly satisfied.&#13;
&#13;
Adam, they say, must have been a happy man; he had no mother-in-law.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Henry Marsh's policy: It is better to be a climber with scarred shins and tibial&#13;
exastases than to have callosities over the eschial tuberosities from being boosted.&#13;
&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
Th e National Bank for Savings&#13;
&#13;
4 Per Cent. Interest Paid&#13;
Perhaps these jokes are very old ,&#13;
And should be on the shelf;&#13;
But if you want some better ones,&#13;
Make up a few yourself.&#13;
When Inspiration lends her aid,&#13;
And you wish to break into type,&#13;
Try something funny, then you'll find&#13;
That comics are no pipe.&#13;
If you read these jests, do not get sore,&#13;
For empty is our bowl;&#13;
Your name in spite was not employed,&#13;
But only to complete the scroll.&#13;
&#13;
Open Monday Evenings&#13;
&#13;
Headquarters For Dependable&#13;
&#13;
FURNITURE&#13;
AND RUGS&#13;
In buying Furni ture and Home Furn ishin gs&#13;
there a re many ways th at you can test th e merits&#13;
of the store with which you deal. We abide&#13;
cheerfu lly by th e test that our values show&#13;
throu gh compari son with others, an d urge our&#13;
custome rs to satisfy their doubts, how ever slight,&#13;
in that conclusive way. You will find that our&#13;
prices a re not on ly the fairest, but in many cases&#13;
the lowest in town.&#13;
&#13;
Quality : Service : Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
SECURITY NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Capital and Surplus, $600,000&#13;
W . P. MANLEY, President&#13;
A. B. DARLING, Vice-President&#13;
L. R. MANLEY, Cashier&#13;
C. A . PATCH, Asst. Cashier&#13;
R. E. BROWN, Asst. Cashier&#13;
For thirty-five years this bank has been identified with&#13;
Sioux City and its trade territory.&#13;
With resources of over Seven :M illion Dollars and thoroughly modern equipment this institution is in position to&#13;
render you high class service and invites your business.&#13;
&#13;
C. J. MILLIGAN, Inc.&#13;
304 Wall Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Quality Feeds and Graded Hay&#13;
Alfalfa, Molasses Feeds, D airy Feeds, Hog Fat Feeds,&#13;
Horse Feed&#13;
Poultry and Chick Feeds Made in Sioux City, under&#13;
C. J. M. Brand&#13;
Make Fat Horses, Steers, Hogs, Sheep and Poultry&#13;
Everything for the Feeder&#13;
M0RNINGSIDE ELEVATOR AN D COAL CO.&#13;
Clean Coal&#13;
All Kinds&#13;
For Furnace,&#13;
Stoves or&#13;
Hot Water Plants&#13;
Also Wood and Kindling&#13;
Feed All Kinds&#13;
&#13;
Morningside owned&#13;
and ope rated.&#13;
The profits are spent&#13;
here and not in&#13;
some other town.&#13;
Help Morningside&#13;
and you he! p yourself.&#13;
&#13;
East Morningside&#13;
Retail D eliveries in :M orningside&#13;
Bell 1139&#13;
&#13;
Auto 66451&#13;
&#13;
SUGGESTIONS TO THE 1921 SIOUX JOKE EDITOR&#13;
1. Take at least two classes under Professor Van Horne, and al ways come prepared&#13;
with a note-book and soft lead pencil.&#13;
2. Never cut the Orpheum-the bill you miss might have something funny.&#13;
3. Impress all your friends into the service-the more the merrier.&#13;
4. If your work is to be crowned with success, "bawl out" as many as possible.&#13;
&#13;
W here Quality is&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
Cornie Dyke ( taking Florence Palm to the train) : Here's your pocket book and&#13;
keys. Is that all?&#13;
Florence: Yes, I believe so, thank you.&#13;
Porter (interrupting): No, sah; no, sah; that ain't all.&#13;
Dyke: Why, what else is there?&#13;
Porter ( edging away) : You'd better give back what she give you last night, suh.&#13;
&#13;
Bill Smith: Each hour I spend with you is like a pearl to me.&#13;
Esther L.: Quit stringing me.&#13;
&#13;
There was a little dog who had a broken tail.&#13;
but this dog had his weak end.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
(This applies to faculty as&#13;
&#13;
You know, every dog has his day,&#13;
&#13;
410 Pierce St.&#13;
&#13;
One Quality- The Best&#13;
Plants and Cut Flowers&#13;
&#13;
AT MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
as well.)&#13;
2. Chapel attendance is compulsory unless the monitors like "Hersheys".&#13;
3. Every student must attend one service at least, at his own church on Sunday.&#13;
"Movies" do not count.&#13;
4. Gambling by students is strictly contrary to the rules of the school. "Matching" in&#13;
the drug store is prohibited by this regulation.&#13;
5. As far as it is possible, it is desirable that no work shall be done by students on the&#13;
Sabbath. It interferes with Sunday dates.&#13;
6. Playing cards is a waste of time and money. If you find it necessary to spend your&#13;
"roll", get a "steady" and you'll get rid of it fast enough.&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Things&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
SPORTING AND ATHLETIC GOODS&#13;
Outdoors, Afield, Afloat&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C. Lees Tennis, Golf, Baseball&#13;
Goods, Ladies' Kampit Outing and Riding Suits&#13;
Camp and Vacation Goods&#13;
ORCUTTS HARDWARE&#13;
Nebraska 312-15&#13;
&#13;
REVISED REGULATIONS FOR THE GUIDANCE OF STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
1. Smoking is forbidden on the campus-in the daytime.&#13;
&#13;
as Represented&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
Floral Artists&#13;
510 Pierce St.&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
"Success after forty, comes from working like sixty" ob'&#13;
serves one of our famous editors.&#13;
And we will add that- Success after a boy gets into long&#13;
trousers is largely a matter of how hard he works the credit&#13;
column of his Savings Book and his Head.&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
We Pay 4 % Interest&#13;
&#13;
Spring 1919&#13;
&#13;
Now R eady&#13;
&#13;
HOW ARD CLOTHING CO.&#13;
MEN'S&#13;
&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
Out of the Ordinary&#13;
&#13;
Is Out of the Rut&#13;
+20 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
LEROY BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
Cattle Salesman&#13;
&#13;
Hogs and Sheep&#13;
&#13;
"We&#13;
&#13;
Work and Win"&#13;
&#13;
BUYERS&#13;
&#13;
SELLERS&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
CATTLE&#13;
&#13;
STOCKERS&#13;
FEEDERS&#13;
&#13;
HOGS&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
SHEEP&#13;
&#13;
BREEDERS&#13;
&#13;
E. L. BERGESON&#13;
&#13;
CARRIE C. L ARSON&#13;
Accountant&#13;
&#13;
Solicitor&#13;
&#13;
Bell 316&#13;
&#13;
Au to 1460&#13;
&#13;
Snyder-McFadden Co.&#13;
Lighting Fixtures&#13;
602-604 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
TO THE GRINDS&#13;
Under the shaded study lamp,&#13;
The college grind is found ;&#13;
He digs, and digs, and concentrates,&#13;
Until his head goes 'round.&#13;
The grinds, their lessons always have,&#13;
(They've no wasted hours to rue);&#13;
They pass their work right cheerfully on&#13;
That others have theirs, too.&#13;
So, here's a word for all of them;&#13;
Thanks that they're here with us;&#13;
The grinds their evenings spend at home&#13;
So the rest of the bunch can fuss.&#13;
&#13;
You need a FOUNTAIN PEN -&#13;
&#13;
-thats's evident&#13;
You want the BEST-&#13;
&#13;
-that's natural&#13;
See the Jiffy 3 in one pen. Self Filling. Tablet Ink Filling and Dropper Filling. ALL&#13;
&#13;
IN ONE -&#13;
&#13;
-that's it&#13;
Eat, drink and be merry, for sometime one must get married.&#13;
Prof's absence makes the heart grow fonder.&#13;
A pretty face often causes a mu ltitude of poor recitations.&#13;
&#13;
Manufactured by JIFFY PEN COMPANY, salesroom and office at 406 Pierce&#13;
Street, Sioux City, Iowa -&#13;
&#13;
- that's the place&#13;
&#13;
THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENED -"ONCE"&#13;
Professor Brown was twelve minutes late to Education V class, and his class had&#13;
all departed.&#13;
Bill Smith took the same girl to two different shows.&#13;
The boys saw the Yale-Harvard game.&#13;
Cornie Dyke and Florence Palm stepped to chapel.&#13;
Professor Reistrup came to chapel-( when he gave several musical numbers).&#13;
Miss Dimitt attended a dance at the high school.&#13;
&#13;
If your dealer fails to carry them, we will&#13;
sell y ou direct.&#13;
W. A. HOUSTON, the&#13;
old pen man, is manager -&#13;
&#13;
-that's all&#13;
Time is too short to be wasted&#13;
With your nose inside of a book.&#13;
When nature is loudly calling you&#13;
To the shade of some leafy nook.&#13;
&#13;
Remember-We, as manufacturers, guarantee each and every Jiffy Pen made-no&#13;
matter where purchased.&#13;
We have the right kind of point for every hand or business.&#13;
All makes of pens repaired.&#13;
&#13;
Try us.&#13;
&#13;
EXPERT SHOE SHINING AND HAT CLEANING&#13;
13 Years Experience&#13;
We clean all kinds of fancy Shoes and dye old Shoes, Black,&#13;
Brown, or Bronze, and make them look like new. We also&#13;
clean and reblock all kinds of Hats. We sell all kinds of&#13;
Dressings for fancy Shoes.&#13;
"Quality, Service and Art," Our Motto&#13;
KASCOUTAS COMPANY&#13;
504 5th St.&#13;
&#13;
THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY&#13;
You realize when you stop to think seriously for a moment&#13;
that your chance of doing better than the average person does&#13;
in the world depends wholly upon the preparation that you&#13;
make for the doing of some one thing in a superior way.&#13;
WE FIT THE COURSE TO THE STUDENT&#13;
&#13;
We cordially invite you to enter our Summer School for&#13;
the purpose of making this preparation and of course it goes&#13;
without saying that the sooner you start the sooner you will&#13;
begin to cash in on your education. Let us know what your&#13;
plans are, and don't fail to give us the opportunity to tell you&#13;
more about our School if you have any interest whatever in a&#13;
business education. Individual progress. A position the moment you graduate. Write for information.&#13;
NATIONAL BUSINESS TRAINING SCHOOL&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING, Distributor of&#13;
&#13;
MAXWELL&#13;
BRISCOE&#13;
GRANT SIX&#13;
&#13;
Ada and Beatrice S. sure had a good time at Cedar R apids. They were very congenial, as each had a common interest in the De V aul family-namely, Abe and his&#13;
brother. They went to movies, shows, n'everything. Ada says that she and her&#13;
man got lost on their way from town to their rooming pl ace, but we are inclined to&#13;
think that they did not purposely, thinking of the old saying, "The longest way 'round&#13;
is the sweetest way home" .&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
biggest Eater in College .............. ] ohn Montgomery&#13;
most Popular girL .................................. Norma Kent&#13;
most Modern man ..............................Amos Hartman&#13;
Quietest man ...................................... Henry Marsh&#13;
best Stud ent ............................................ Ora Emrich&#13;
college Fool champion ............................ Frank Olson&#13;
Basket Ball star. ...................................Wilson Smith&#13;
biggest Grind .................................. Carroll Northrup&#13;
biggest Fusser.. ......................................Omar Adams&#13;
Happiest man .................................. ] ohn M cBurney&#13;
biggest Liar.. ........................................ Lavina Dragoo&#13;
biggest Grafter.. ..................................Jennie Kniffen&#13;
biggest Nuisance .................................. Hazel Bradley&#13;
greatest Flirt .................................... Agnes McCreery&#13;
&#13;
Percy M. ( calling Morningside drug store) : Have you any carbolic acid?&#13;
Hreschey: Yes, sir; we have.&#13;
Percy M.: Wouldn 't that kill you? Goodbye.&#13;
Before: What kind of a man is this man Bishop Buehler?&#13;
After: Well , did you ever see two men talking together and one of them looks&#13;
bored to death ? The other is Buehler.&#13;
&#13;
"Out of the High Rent District"&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON &amp; CO.&#13;
Tailors, Clothiers, Hatters and Men's Furnishings&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner of Jennings&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST WILLIGES&#13;
and making the most of your time? If so, you&#13;
are bound to succeed in your chosen&#13;
vocation.&#13;
BUT, WAIT A MOMENT !&#13;
What are you doing w ith the fruits&#13;
of your labor?&#13;
Are you SAVING ANY MONEY,&#13;
or, do you allow it to slip away almost&#13;
without knowing what becomes of 1t?&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
What's the answer?&#13;
R efl ection,&#13;
Determination, Action, and then a&#13;
SAVINGS ACCO UNT in&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY&#13;
SA VIN GS BANK&#13;
&#13;
310 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"THE SAFE HOME FOR SAVINGS"&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Security Bank Building&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
List of Exam Questions. May be modified for personal use by any professor.&#13;
Guaranteed to flunk at least half of the class.&#13;
1. Why is it?&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
6.&#13;
7.&#13;
8.&#13;
&#13;
When is it? When not?&#13;
Give ten examples.&#13;
State clearly and concisely in one sentence.&#13;
If not, why not?&#13;
If so, where?&#13;
Give practical application.&#13;
Why are we built so close to the grou nd ?&#13;
&#13;
WM. B EUTTLER&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
BEUTTLER &amp; ARNOLD&#13;
ARCHITECTS&#13;
This Firm Designed the Alumni Gymnasium and&#13;
Rebuilt the Conservatory&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
Auto Phone 4240&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Hirsch: Ehen was the rival of learning?&#13;
Emrick: The night before exams.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 80&#13;
&#13;
Auto 4981&#13;
President (praying in chapel): Oh Lord, bless those called upon to teach.&#13;
Voice ( from center section) : Oh dear Lord, don't forget those that are called&#13;
upon to recite.&#13;
What&#13;
&#13;
is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Wounded Tommy (in hospital) : Yes, mum; I was shot right through here (pointing to his left side) .&#13;
Visitor: Oh, but that is impossible; the bullet would have gone straight through&#13;
your heart.&#13;
Wounded Tommy: Me heart was in me mouth, Mum.&#13;
&#13;
"You'll get run in", said the pedestrian to the cyclist, "if you ride without a light."&#13;
"You'll get run into", responded the rider as he knocked the other down.&#13;
"You'll get run in too," said the policeman, as he stepped forward and siezed the&#13;
cyclist.&#13;
Just then another scorcher came along without a light, so the policeman was run&#13;
into, too, and had to run in two.&#13;
Faust (lecturing) : Sedentary work tends to lessen the endurance.&#13;
Henry Marsh: In other words, the more one sets, the less one can stand.&#13;
Faust : Exactly, and if one lies a great deal, one's standing is lost completely.&#13;
&#13;
FUEL&#13;
We ask the privilege&#13;
of taking care of your needs&#13;
in our line&#13;
&#13;
TRY US&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
RED HEADED CLUB&#13;
Motto: So shines a good deed in a naughty world.&#13;
Chief Headlight: Vera Hatfield.&#13;
High Priest of the Flaming Locks: Bishop Buehler.&#13;
Radiant Keeper of Records: Ruth Hamilton.&#13;
Gacaen Beauty: Mary Ann Daniels.&#13;
Knights of Faded Glow: Jack DeJ ang, "Red" Day.&#13;
Faculty Light: Miss Ziehlsdorf.&#13;
&#13;
WELLS CO AL CO., Inc.&#13;
Established 1880&#13;
&#13;
RELIABLE&#13;
Third Street, Near Water&#13;
&#13;
O ur New Modern Studio&#13;
will be completed about June first&#13;
with increased facilities&#13;
&#13;
Two full floors&#13;
With two posing rooms&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
Two Doors West of&#13;
The Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
THE HARD BOILED CLUB&#13;
Not long ago a woman came into the store to look at linens. First she explained,&#13;
"I do not wish to buy any lin ens today. I j ust boug ht some at another store and I&#13;
want to know if I received good v alue; so I came here to find out." O ur saleslady&#13;
showed our stock, to the satisfaction of the customer, and later we sold the lady a&#13;
good bill of linens.&#13;
The story illustrates the confi dence people have in us and explains our growth and&#13;
why we are m.aking so many frie nds.&#13;
Merely sell ing goods is not enough; we a re here to serve y ou.&#13;
&#13;
Club Emblem: The Tidy Red Tin.&#13;
Club Song: Roll Dem Bones.&#13;
Club Color: Hazy Blue&#13;
Club Motto: Merrily we Roll Along.&#13;
Omar Adams:&#13;
President.&#13;
Verle Hart: Treasurer.&#13;
Wayne Hilmer: Secretary.&#13;
Milton Klaus: Porter.&#13;
&#13;
SWAN-ANDERSON CO.&#13;
Quality Dry Goods&#13;
&#13;
4 13-415-41 7 J ackson St.&#13;
&#13;
CHARTER MEMBERS&#13;
Arthur Schuldt&#13;
Charles Sweet&#13;
Clarence Tompkins&#13;
J ames Van Peursem&#13;
&#13;
Loans&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
H om es not Hou ses&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS NOT FULLY QUALIFIED&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
D ale Norton&#13;
Meryle Schafenberg&#13;
P ark Moorhead&#13;
D ave Klatt&#13;
John Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
Pilchard Building Co.&#13;
P . H . PILCHARD, President&#13;
Quarter Million C ap ital&#13;
Second Floor, Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
She: I consider, John, that sheep are the stupidest things living.&#13;
He ( absent mindedly) : Yes, Lamb.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
G RAN D OPERA MASTERPIECES&#13;
Stars Found in M. C.&#13;
&#13;
"Madam Butterfly"- Helen Rinker.&#13;
"Love's Labor Lost"-Royce Engberg.&#13;
" In the Land of Nod"-Wayne Hilmer.&#13;
"The Strollers"- Florence P alm, Cornie Dyke.&#13;
"The G ibson Girl."- Esther Lange.&#13;
"The Social W hirl"- Bert Pritchard, Elsie Bennington.&#13;
"Peck's Bad Boy"- Henry Marsh.&#13;
"The Woman Hater"- Clarence O elfke.&#13;
"The Spenders"-Wilson&#13;
Smith, Park Moorhead.&#13;
&#13;
N ew methods increasing the efficiency of our&#13;
work are being discovered daily. We keep ourselves thoroughly informed a nd can always give&#13;
you the benefi t of th e latest and best methods&#13;
and optical merchandise.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Optical Co.&#13;
&#13;
"M akers of G lasses T hat Fit"&#13;
Corner Fifth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Freshie ( at end of first semester) : I don't believe I ever w ill catch on to things&#13;
here. Who are: Norty, Skinny, H ap, Fish, Sam?&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLE WE KNOW&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
Wood B ros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
Why They Are Conspicuous.&#13;
&#13;
0. G.&#13;
&#13;
]ONES _______ ___ ________ ____ ____ __________ __ Capt. in the Army&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG ________ ______&#13;
_________ _________ ______y, M. C. A.&#13;
_____ _&#13;
H AROLD HILMER__________&#13;
____________________ _ O ccasional fussing&#13;
_ ____&#13;
&#13;
W AYNE HILMER ---------- ___&#13;
__________________________ Frequent naps&#13;
_________&#13;
__________________________ _ _________________&#13;
_&#13;
Racket&#13;
CHAS. SWEET ____&#13;
F ERN FICKLING -·--------------------·---------------------------------Styles&#13;
CORNIE DYKE ----------------·----------------------------------- Stepping&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
TOM D EALTRY, .Manager&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
"I asked her if I could see her home," sad Cornie Dike.&#13;
&#13;
GOODYEAR SHOE&#13;
REPAIR CO.&#13;
&#13;
"Caesar sic dicat unde cur, gessi lictum."&#13;
Latin Shark ( translating) : "Caesar sicked the cat on the cur ; I guess he licked&#13;
him."&#13;
&#13;
Brutus met his friend Julius on the steps of the Forum.&#13;
how many pies did you eat yesterday?"&#13;
"Et tu , Brute?"&#13;
&#13;
THE TRIANGLE&#13;
&#13;
518 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
" What did she say ?" asked Boland.&#13;
"She said she would send me a picture of it."&#13;
&#13;
Serves a Satisfying&#13;
· Student's Lunch&#13;
F air Prices Prevail&#13;
Parties and Special Orders&#13;
Cared F or&#13;
&#13;
Biggest, Best, and Busiest&#13;
Repairing D one While&#13;
You W ait&#13;
Mail O rders Prepaid&#13;
J. F. MEIRSTEIN&#13;
&#13;
Entrance&#13;
&#13;
" Hail, Caesar old scout;&#13;
&#13;
Sign in front of a Tailor shop on 4th St. :&#13;
"Pants pressed; five cents a leg ; seats free."&#13;
&#13;
A lthough our imprint does&#13;
not appear on all our work&#13;
buyers of printing are able&#13;
to recognize our p roduct&#13;
by the quality.&#13;
S. B. P. PRINTING CO.&#13;
North End of Campus&#13;
3631 Peters Ave.&#13;
A uto Phone 66211&#13;
&#13;
What is your excuse for living?&#13;
&#13;
Opposite the College&#13;
&#13;
O'LEARY'S&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
G ood Things to Eat&#13;
JOHN O'LEARY, Prop.&#13;
902 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
It has been a pleasure to this bank for the past six years to&#13;
serve College Faculty and Students.&#13;
In our new modern banking home we are fully equipped&#13;
to care for your banking needs in every detail.&#13;
Correspondence invited from parents or guardians in reference to this College Suburb and will have our cheerful and.&#13;
prompt attention.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
JOHN SCOTT, Jr., President&#13;
W . L. AYERS, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Located at Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
-·-&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
YARDS\ P,..&#13;
&#13;
L. G. EVERIST INC.&#13;
Instant Service&#13;
on&#13;
Clean Coal&#13;
Builders' Supplies&#13;
Call 2600&#13;
&#13;
WHY YOU SHOULD INSIST ON&#13;
&#13;
SUPERB BRAND&#13;
FOOD&#13;
products&#13;
Look for the Rose on&#13;
Every Package&#13;
&#13;
THE REASON IS THIS&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand is the result of many years of&#13;
persistent effort to assemble under one brand&#13;
a complete line of Food Products of the very&#13;
highest quality at the most reasonable prices&#13;
You Always Get the Best When You Insist on&#13;
&#13;
SUPERB BRAND FOOD PRODUCTS&#13;
DISTRIBUTED BY&#13;
&#13;
TOLERTON &amp; WARFIELD CO.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The following selection of mistakes in examinations may convince almost anyone&#13;
that there are some peaks of ignorance which he has yet to climb:&#13;
Wolsey saved his life by dying on the way from York to London.&#13;
Tennyson wrote a poem called "Grave's Energy."&#13;
The plural of spouse is spice.&#13;
The law allowing one wife, is Monotony.&#13;
Landscapes is what you run down the side of the house on when the house is afire.&#13;
A Bishop without a diocese is called a suffragette.&#13;
The liver is an infernal organ of the body.&#13;
A schoolmaster is called a pedagree.&#13;
The modern name for Gaul is vinegar.&#13;
Louis XVI was gelatined during the French Revolution.&#13;
&#13;
H. G. KITCHEN &amp; SON&#13;
REAL E S TATE&#13;
Office 2000 St. Aubin St.&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
Auto 66694, R esidence Phone 66376&#13;
&#13;
F or Excellent Fills and Highest Market&#13;
We cannot choose our faces but we can pick our teeth.&#13;
&#13;
SOME POPULAR LIES&#13;
&#13;
P rices&#13;
&#13;
Try&#13;
&#13;
HUDSON COMMISSION CO.&#13;
&#13;
I'm crazy about you.&#13;
I'll drop in and pay you back next week.&#13;
I shall never love another.&#13;
I told her just what I thought of her.&#13;
I never would dream that it wasn't your hair.&#13;
I am quite unprepared to make a speech.&#13;
&#13;
210 Live Stock Exch ange Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
O U R PLUMBING&#13;
Has Its Own Pa rticular College Yell&#13;
&#13;
Miss Loveland : Why were you late, Miss Pratt.&#13;
Louise Pratt : I didn't start from home in time to get here.&#13;
&#13;
Q uality and Exp erience&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAVES CO.&#13;
Auto 1837&#13;
With best wishes to&#13;
:M orningside College and its&#13;
host of Students who&#13;
pass through its portals&#13;
out onto the Sea of Life&#13;
May theirs be a prosperous voyage&#13;
GRABER DRY GOOD S CO.&#13;
Everything for the College Miss&#13;
Sioux City, I a.&#13;
On Fourth at Jackson&#13;
&#13;
513 J ackson St.&#13;
&#13;
Steele-Siman&#13;
&#13;
&amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Cattle, Hogs and Sheep&#13;
Paid Up Capital $50,000&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
Correct Dress For Women&#13;
SIO UX CITY'S MOST APPRECIATIVE STORE&#13;
&#13;
D. C. KITSELMAN&#13;
&#13;
J W. BALDWIN&#13;
\.1.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. TIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, KITSELMAN &amp; TIMMEL&#13;
LIVE STOCK COM1&#13;
V1ISSI0N MERCHANTS&#13;
S. E . Babcock, R. S. Skillings, H enry S. Payer, J ohn H.&#13;
Anthony, Alice Kreutz&#13;
Bell Phone 397&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1443&#13;
217-219 Exchange Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
G EO. C. CALL, President&#13;
E. M. CORBETT, Vice-President&#13;
G EORGE R. CALL, Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Call Bond and Mortgage Co.&#13;
C apital $500,000.00&#13;
Incorporated&#13;
&#13;
under&#13;
&#13;
THE LAW S OF IOWA)&#13;
&#13;
Dealers in High Grade Securities ·&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
You should store up knowledge in the head, but choose&#13;
some safe place for your money.&#13;
Try the&#13;
&#13;
Continental National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
· TODD-BECKFR CO.&#13;
KODAKS AN D FINISHING&#13;
DRUGS, CANDIES&#13;
CUT FLOWERS AN D DESIGNS&#13;
Enjoy R efreshments or Lunch in Our Fountain Room&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bldg., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
All patrons of "M. S." should arrange for their farm and&#13;
city loans and insurance through, and buy their investments&#13;
from the&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE THAT SERVES&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL M0RTGAGE COMPANY&#13;
M. F. McDowell,&#13;
"Class '03," Manager&#13;
Frances Building, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
A Guarantee of Satisfaction&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
One morning a clergyman was conducting the services in chapel. He asked President Mossman how long he should speak. President Mossman replied:&#13;
"There is no limit, Doctor, upon the time you speak; but I may tell you that there&#13;
is a tradition here that most souls are saved during the first twenty-five minutes."&#13;
&#13;
Successful Sellers of Cattle, Hogs and Sheep&#13;
Ship Us for Best R esu lts&#13;
&#13;
STOCK YARDS, SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Recipe for Multi-Millionaires:&#13;
Take a boy with bare feet as a starter&#13;
Add theft and sobriety-mixedFlavor with quarts of religion,&#13;
And see that the tariff is fixed.&#13;
&#13;
Little drops in water,&#13;
Little drops on land,&#13;
Make the aviator&#13;
Join the heavenly band.&#13;
&#13;
Look for Our Signs Before Ordering&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman Co.&#13;
Makers of Beverages That Reduce Thirst&#13;
&#13;
Lieut. Hopkinson: "I have so many promising couples in my audience that I&#13;
think it very strange that I have never been called upon to perform marriage ceremonies for students since I have been here."&#13;
Warner Marsh: "I agree to help you out all I can."&#13;
&#13;
Modern Fireside Comfort!&#13;
&#13;
A series of three lectures on marriage and divorce.&#13;
"The Elements of Ideal Courtship."&#13;
"Marrying the Wrong Man."&#13;
"Making the Best of a Bad Bargain."&#13;
&#13;
Nature never makes any blunders; when she makes a fool she means it.&#13;
&#13;
Some things we take at Morningside that are not on our cards; Flu, puppy love,&#13;
spring fever, flunks, measles, smallpox, mumps, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Vera Hatfield:&#13;
Curtis Cassell:&#13;
&#13;
Bert Pritchard:&#13;
&#13;
A mosquito bit me on the lip last night.&#13;
It has bad taste.&#13;
&#13;
These exams and lectures interfere terribly with my college work.&#13;
&#13;
At Glee Club Practice:&#13;
Bernice Scoville: Why do you wrinkle your brow when you take a high note?&#13;
Irma Stevens : Oh, those are the added lines above the staff.&#13;
&#13;
Education&#13;
Is a sensation&#13;
Of having crammed&#13;
And firmly jammed&#13;
Into one head&#13;
Of densest lead&#13;
The workings of some wondrous minds&#13;
That now become the daily grinds&#13;
Of various college students.&#13;
&#13;
Picture in your Library this cheerful,&#13;
comfortable, glowing O pen Fire-always ready for the match-free from&#13;
th e trouble of carrying wood and ashes&#13;
-free from smoke and sparks.&#13;
&#13;
The Humphrey Radiantfire&#13;
has all the charm and fascination of the wood&#13;
blaze-with the convenience of gas. It floods&#13;
you with strong Radiant Heat and Firelight. It&#13;
is cozy, cheerful, satisfying and ornamental. It is&#13;
inexpensive and economical.&#13;
&#13;
Come and see it !&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
r&gt;:-&#13;
&#13;
TODAY!&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City G as &amp; Electric Co.&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Failure to save is an admission of lack of p rogressiveness.&#13;
A Savings Account is the mainstay of many a successful career. Why wait until some time later? Open your Savings&#13;
Account today.&#13;
&#13;
NORTHWESTERN NATIONAL BANK&#13;
Corner F ourth and Pierce Streets&#13;
We Pay F our Per Cent Interest&#13;
&#13;
FRANK S. WAGNER. W. A. FREDER ICKSON. Hog and Sheep Salesmen&#13;
CHARLES F. ABBO&#13;
TT. Office M&#13;
anager&#13;
OTIS P. GARRISON E. L. FITZSIMMONS. Cattle Salesmen&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WAGNER. GARRISON &amp; ABBOTT&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merch ants&#13;
206-208 Exch ange Building, Stock Y ards&#13;
Night Phones 4013-5783-5034-5024&#13;
Phones-Bell 455, Auto 2305&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
TAC-CUT&#13;
&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
A BLEND-Not a Mixture!&#13;
BLENDED AND PACKED BY&#13;
&#13;
Wm. ackaberry Co.&#13;
T&#13;
SI OUX C IT Y. I O WA&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG MAN&#13;
Try Us for Your Next Suit, Hat, Shoes and Furnishings&#13;
Our Guarantee with Every Article That Leaves&#13;
Our Store&#13;
Styles Always the Latest&#13;
Prices the Lowest&#13;
STANDARD CLOTHING CO.&#13;
710-712 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
Tune:&#13;
&#13;
Rock-a-bye my Baby With A Dixie Melody&#13;
&#13;
Rock-a-bye my Freshmen to the Junior melody,&#13;
You're as green as grass, but you will pass&#13;
Some day into the Junior class.&#13;
The Sophs-they think they know a lot,&#13;
But they're a lot of tommy-rot&#13;
The Seniors soon to leave us&#13;
The fact that they are gone will never grieve us.&#13;
We're the class of "20"&#13;
And we'll set you all a pace&#13;
If you will do what we've gone through&#13;
You'll have a careworn face.&#13;
So come across and buy a "sioux"&#13;
For in it you'll find a lot of jokes on you&#13;
Then buy a "sioux" and take it with you&#13;
For we're all for Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
FORD LUMBER CO.&#13;
Owned in Sioux City&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
"The Only Lumber Yard&#13;
Owned in Sioux City"&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1338&#13;
Bell Phone 338&#13;
100 Third St.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
When you wade into&#13;
business life you will&#13;
need financial boots.&#13;
A Bank Account will&#13;
supply this need.&#13;
Education only puts&#13;
the polish on.&#13;
Both are necessary to&#13;
Success.&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL BANK OF&#13;
Commerce&#13;
&#13;
S. W. Corner 4th and&#13;
Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
THE HAAS AND SMITH CO.&#13;
Morningside Real Estate Dealers&#13;
Properties of All Kinds Rented or Sold&#13;
Loans and Insurance&#13;
Office at Peters Park&#13;
Office Phone 66136&#13;
Residence Phones 66657 and 66034&#13;
&#13;
SHOES&#13;
0' Harrow's QualityShoes for young&#13;
people at prices you will appreciate&#13;
GIVE US A TRIAL&#13;
&#13;
L. O'Harrow Co.&#13;
We 'll Get You Yet&#13;
&#13;
902 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
It's an E stablished F act that&#13;
Good J ewelry is to be F ound at the Store of the&#13;
W ILL H. BECK COMPANY&#13;
E stablished in 1877 and M aintaining a P olicy D uring T h ese&#13;
Years Which Now Bespeaks fo r I tself&#13;
&#13;
"Makes Life Sweeter "&#13;
&#13;
Delicious&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
FARM TRACTORS and A UTOMOBILES&#13;
Parrett, - art-Parr&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
Lexington&#13;
&#13;
Watson Automobile 'Campany&#13;
DIST RIBUTORS&#13;
&#13;
SIO UX C ITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
A 'TOAST&#13;
A toast to thee fair Morningside,&#13;
A toast if thou wilt but abide.&#13;
The class of "20" lift to thee&#13;
A toast made reverent and free.&#13;
We've formed a wealth of memories&#13;
From thee as boundless as the seas.&#13;
With care, and very patiently&#13;
Thy work hath sealed our hearts to thee.&#13;
Thou hast survived the trials of youth&#13;
And now exalted stand, forsooth!&#13;
From this thy anniversary&#13;
Sail on to full maturity!&#13;
We marvel, yea, to behold thee&#13;
Endowed anew and setteth free.&#13;
We toast thee far, we toast thee wide&#13;
A toast to thee, fair Morningside!&#13;
&#13;
Famous for its Fine Eats&#13;
Excellent Service&#13;
R easonable R ates&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
5 14 Fifth St.&#13;
M. GANTZ, Proprietor&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
::I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
F U LLE RTON Lumber&#13;
CO.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
F ou rth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
Largest and Most Complete Stock of Building Material&#13;
th e City. D o N ot F ail to L et Us Figure on Your Bill&#13;
H . T. W ALENSKY, Mgr.&#13;
Phones: A uto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the Athlete and&#13;
Outdoor Man&#13;
"From the cheapest that is good, to the best that is made"&#13;
THE COLLEGE&#13;
A path untrodden by footsteps,&#13;
Where oft glad feet have trod;&#13;
A door undarkened by figures&#13;
Once gay with laughter and nod;&#13;
A hall unlighted by faces,&#13;
U nwarmed by fellowship bright,&#13;
A college without its studentsA lantern without its light.&#13;
Far off in the front line trenches&#13;
That college has sent its men,&#13;
Bold out from the field and gridiron,&#13;
Swift out from the club and den&#13;
To fight for the truths it taught them,&#13;
Firm men, to the last recruit;&#13;
A college without its studentsA branch that has borne its fruit.&#13;
Glad back to their Alma Mater&#13;
Her soldiers are gathering now,&#13;
The light of a high encounter&#13;
Yet shines on each face and brow.&#13;
To shoulder earth's mightiest burdens,&#13;
Soon out they will march again;&#13;
A college of changing studentsA mill with its grist of-men!&#13;
LYNN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Being specialists in this field we carry at all times&#13;
a complete and comprehensive stock. Our merchandise appeals at once to the discriminating&#13;
patron.&#13;
No Matter What You Need We Can Serve You Best&#13;
&#13;
The Olson Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
M. J. FELT&#13;
.&#13;
Manager and Cattle Salesman&#13;
&#13;
BOOGE CO E&#13;
Hog Salesman&#13;
&#13;
INGWERSEN BROTHERS&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
Room 209 Exchange Building&#13;
Auto Phone 1322&#13;
Iowa Phone 396&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
WHEN IN&#13;
M0RNINGSIDE&#13;
Get Your Meals or&#13;
Lunches at&#13;
PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
Student Help&#13;
&#13;
Phone Us Your Coal Order&#13;
We Will Take Care of You&#13;
When the Time Comes&#13;
Good Coal and&#13;
Building Material&#13;
&#13;
H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
Third and Clark Streets&#13;
Auto Phone 2174 Be ll Phone 254&#13;
&#13;
Kleeblatt Barber's Supply Co.&#13;
INCORPORATED&#13;
&#13;
I mporters of and Wholesale Dealers in&#13;
&#13;
Barbers' Supplies, Cutlery and Furniture&#13;
See Us for High Grade Razors, Strops, Hair Tonics, T oilet&#13;
Waters, After Shaving L otions, Creams, Etc.&#13;
618 Pierce Street&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Bekins Van ·and Storage Co.&#13;
Did You Ever Eat at&#13;
&#13;
Our B usiness I s Moving&#13;
&#13;
PROP'S CAFE&#13;
&#13;
STORAGE, PACKING, SHIPPING&#13;
&#13;
Try Us Once-We'll Risk the Rest&#13;
&#13;
HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND PIANOS&#13;
&#13;
Lunches and Meals for Everyone&#13;
A. M. PROPS, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
114-120 Riverside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
HEADINGTON&#13;
AN D&#13;
HEDENBERGH&#13;
&#13;
IDEAL SOFT WATER LAUNDRY&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Fruits and Produce&#13;
&#13;
Automatic, 1346&#13;
Iowa, 899&#13;
&#13;
0. W. HARVEY, Mgr.&#13;
414-416 Court St.&#13;
&#13;
?&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
411 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
Wholesalers and Retaile rs of Sweet Cream, Milk and&#13;
L actone Buttermilk&#13;
Our Cream is Served at Morningside Pharmacy and&#13;
Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
707 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
We Are the Original "Cut Price" D entists of Sioux City&#13;
"When better dental work is done you will&#13;
.&#13;
find us doing it."&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Jewelers&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK DENTISTS&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
"Home Market for the Great Northwest"&#13;
&#13;
502 Fourth St.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Res. Phone 6265&#13;
Shop Phone 6306&#13;
Res. 4217 M. S. Ave.&#13;
All Work Guaranteed&#13;
HARTLEY L . LARSON&#13;
Plumbing and Heating&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Ave.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MO R NINGSI DE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
GORDON&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate and Loans&#13;
&#13;
705 -708 Frances Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
DRAY &amp; TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
STATIONERY CO.&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
505 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Packing and Storage&#13;
&#13;
Students Are Cordially Invited to Visit Us&#13;
&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
D. W . NOURSE, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
WHEN PACKING TIME&#13;
COMES&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
Bank, Store, Office Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
Our .M otto is Quality&#13;
&#13;
507-509-5 l l Water Street&#13;
&#13;
and you are getting ready for your sum mer vacation&#13;
or trip abroad, the question of trunks is an all important one. If you need a new trunk or bag we invite&#13;
you to visit our store. We have them in all shapes&#13;
and sizes. Come in and make your choice and go&#13;
away happy.&#13;
&#13;
D.S. ANTHONY&#13;
Prop. Sioux City Trunk Factory&#13;
Retail Manufacturer of Trunks and Valises&#13;
Trunks and Sample Cases to Order&#13;
Repai ring Done&#13;
Phone 2108&#13;
5th St. Near Pierce&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
F. EGGERS&#13;
&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
CARTER, BRACKNEY&#13;
&amp; CARTER&#13;
&#13;
The Place of Quality and Right Prices&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW&#13;
Suite 707-708-709 Security Bank Bldg.&#13;
P h ones, Auto 1522, Bell 1065&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Get Your Groceries and Meats from&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG, McGILL,&#13;
STEWART &amp;&#13;
HATFIELD&#13;
&#13;
THE M . &amp; B. CO .&#13;
1421 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
GENERAL MERCHANDISE&#13;
Four Phones&#13;
Iowa, 670 - 67&#13;
4102-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
AND TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW&#13;
721 -726 Frances Building&#13;
•&#13;
Auto Phone 85988 Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SHULL, GILL,&#13;
SAMMIS &amp;&#13;
STILLWELL&#13;
&#13;
SUPREMACY&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS&#13;
625-626 Frances Building&#13;
&#13;
For the past fifteen years the Educational Department of the Bureau of&#13;
Engraving, Inc., has been collecting a&#13;
vast fund of information from the experiences of hundreds of editors and&#13;
managers of Annuals.&#13;
This data covering organization, financ·&#13;
ing, , advertising construction, selli 1ng an d&#13;
'&#13;
hasbeen systematically&#13;
original features&#13;
tabulated and forms the subiect matter&#13;
for our series of reference books. These&#13;
securing&#13;
"Bureau" co-operation in the making&#13;
of engravings for their books.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. HUBBARD&#13;
&#13;
All kinds of&#13;
Heavy Hauling and&#13;
Dray Work&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Attorney and Counsellor at Law&#13;
327 Davidson Building&#13;
6th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FRED GAGNON&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS.&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
Loans and Rentals&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
&#13;
Auto 67246&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
Rooms 622-25 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
John B. McCormick&#13;
&#13;
BRINK'S MEAT&#13;
MARKET&#13;
&#13;
William A. McCormick&#13;
&#13;
McCORMICK &amp;&#13;
McCormick&#13;
&#13;
Ph one us your ord er an d our d elivery will reach you promptly.&#13;
Auto 6284&#13;
Cecelia Park&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
503-504 Iowa Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
Auto Phone 1739&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
GEO. W. FINCH&#13;
&#13;
O. B. McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
LA WYER&#13;
Suite 527-28 Trimble Bldg.&#13;
Auto Phone 86886&#13;
&#13;
BUICKS&#13;
G. M. C. TRUCKS&#13;
4008 Morningside Ave.&#13;
Tel., Auto 66780&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
&#13;
KELLOGG BARBER&#13;
SHOP&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Auto Phone 3785&#13;
&#13;
605 Frances Bldg.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
50c Hair Cuts, 25c; 25c Shaves, 15c&#13;
P eters Park&#13;
&#13;
Begin where others have left off. Profit&#13;
by their experience and assure success&#13;
for your Annual.&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH SIXTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WAS A TIME&#13;
NOT SO VERY LONG&#13;
ago, when all printing&#13;
looked alike to most of&#13;
us; it wasjust printing;&#13;
but that time is past and a&#13;
new day has dawned.&#13;
Most everyone today has a&#13;
very highly developed sense&#13;
of what is right and proper&#13;
in all manner of printing.&#13;
It is one thing to appreciate&#13;
superior quality and another&#13;
to produce it.&#13;
To produce it requires men&#13;
of skill, industry and zeal&#13;
and a good equipment.&#13;
We have a corps of efficient&#13;
craftsmen who are schooled&#13;
in what is right and how to&#13;
get the best results.&#13;
We have a master printer&#13;
who will give your work his&#13;
personal attention.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa City&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Well, now, what do you think? Are there&#13;
enough snaps? Doesn't your photograph&#13;
do you full justice? or, possibly, the joke&#13;
section isn't to your liking! Cheer up;&#13;
maybe we don't like to be slammed, either!&#13;
But whatever you think, it's too late now,&#13;
and we most respectfully bequeath all expected criticisms to the "1921" board.&#13;
We do wish to express our appreciation,&#13;
however, of the kindly help we have received from the student body in general,&#13;
and the excellent cooperative service of our&#13;
engravers and printers.&#13;
THE "1920" BOARD.&#13;
&#13;
Our equipment is of the best.&#13;
There is a glowing sense of&#13;
satisfaction in dealing with&#13;
people in whom you have absolute faith.&#13;
&#13;
Dependability&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>�MR&#13;
&#13;
A. H. Schatz&#13;
2900 Jennings Street&#13;
Sioux City 4, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�The Sioux of '08&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Being the Year Book of&#13;
Morningside College for&#13;
the Year 1906-0 7&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
t,&#13;
&#13;
PRESS OF THE&#13;
STAR PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
322 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Published by the&#13;
Members of the Junior Class&#13;
in the Spring of 1907&#13;
&#13;
�Greeting&#13;
H E members of the Annual Board, as representatives of the Junior&#13;
Class, wish to present&#13;
this book to the Students, faculty, board of trustees and&#13;
friends of Morningside College, in the&#13;
hope that here those friends may find&#13;
recorded some of the things which&#13;
tend to make life happier,&#13;
brighter and better&#13;
&#13;
.:&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
�JOHN B. TRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
�Probably no member of the Northwest Iowa Coonference&#13;
has done more for the cause of clean life and true religious&#13;
thought and experience than Dr. Trimble.&#13;
&#13;
He has labored for&#13;
&#13;
those of his own neighborhood, but has never confined his gaze&#13;
to the horizon of home life.&#13;
&#13;
The entire world has been in his&#13;
&#13;
mind, and the foreign mission cause has never had a more&#13;
earnest friend than he.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. John B. Trimble, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
He looks to the conquest of the world&#13;
&#13;
for Christianity, and never doubts the ultimate success of the&#13;
cause.&#13;
&#13;
The inspiration that comes from the faith of such a man&#13;
&#13;
is the best equipment that the students can take with them as&#13;
N the thought that it is entirely fitting and&#13;
proper to&#13;
select from the friends of Morningside College one, to whom this Annual might&#13;
&#13;
failure, but who can doubt that in the great work of the ages the&#13;
&#13;
be dedicated, who has done much for the&#13;
establishment of the institution, no name has&#13;
&#13;
final triumph will come?&#13;
It is to such a man, and in such a faith, that the members of&#13;
&#13;
seemed more prominent than that of Dr.&#13;
Trimble.&#13;
&#13;
they go out from the College to the great battlefield of . life.&#13;
There may be many failures, as the world measures success and&#13;
&#13;
the Class of 1908 dedicate this Annual.&#13;
&#13;
The present prosperous condition of the College, and&#13;
&#13;
the fact that all uncertainty of its future success has been laid to&#13;
rest, only emphasizes the toil and sacrifice which were so freely&#13;
given in its establishment.&#13;
&#13;
It was a great undertaking, and the&#13;
&#13;
"faith of the fathers" was the only tangible asset of the time. Dr.&#13;
Trimble furnished a large portion of that faith, and at the same&#13;
time he supplied what was absolutely necessary for the final&#13;
fruition of the labor, money and credit, without which the&#13;
enterprise must inevitably have ended in failure.&#13;
That he was one of the first graduates of the College, or&#13;
perhaps more properly speaking, of the University of the Northwest, the immediate predecessor of the College, may have stimulated him with a pride in his Alma Mater, but this was only&#13;
one of the things in the economy and plan of the Master which&#13;
worked in the unfolding of His great purpose.&#13;
&#13;
To those who&#13;
&#13;
are acquainted with Dr. Trimble, it is needless to say that he is&#13;
a man of unquestionable faith.&#13;
&#13;
The bank of Providence is to&#13;
&#13;
him an institution of unlimited resources, and he never hesitates&#13;
to draw upon its funds.&#13;
&#13;
As one of the leaders in the movement&#13;
&#13;
for the establishment and building of the College he applied his&#13;
faith and business ability, and inspired all his co-workers in the&#13;
same direction.&#13;
&#13;
It would be untrue and without justification to&#13;
&#13;
say that he was the main builder of the College, but it is entirely within bouhds to say that without him the College would&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
never have been built.&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
�Board of Trustees&#13;
TERM EXPIRES 1907&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Hon. J. P. Dolliver, Fort Dodge&#13;
0. W. Towner, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. Robt. E. Smylie, D. D., Sioux City&#13;
Rev. Geo. C. Fort, Fort Dodge&#13;
Rev. D. A McBurney, Fort Dodge&#13;
J. G. Shumaker, Sioux City&#13;
Hon. P. A Sawyer, Sioux City&#13;
F. H. Skewis, Inwood&#13;
N. R. Hathaway, Sioux City&#13;
E. A. Morling, Emmetsburg&#13;
D. Montgomery, Ireton&#13;
W. R. Jameson, Clarion&#13;
TERM EXPIRES 1908&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Rev. J. W. Southwell, Ida Grove&#13;
Rev. Walter T orbet, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. Hugh Hay, Sioux City&#13;
L. J. Haskins, Sioux City&#13;
Scott M. Ladd, Des Moines&#13;
Rev. J. W. Lothian, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. G. W. Pratt, L. L. D., Rock Rapids&#13;
Rev. H. G. Pittenger, Sloan&#13;
C. W. Payne, West Side&#13;
Rev. O. K. Maynard, Algona&#13;
C. D. Killam, Sioux City&#13;
O. B. Harding, Sioux City&#13;
TERM EXPIRES 1909&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Rev. W. T. McDonald, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. J. B. Trimble, D. D., Kansas City&#13;
J. P. Negus, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. G. W. Carr, Seattle&#13;
Rev. B. Mitchell, D. D., Sioux City&#13;
John Metcalf, Paullina&#13;
C. P. Kilborne, Sioux City&#13;
W. P. Manley, Sioux City&#13;
H. B. Pierce, Rock Rapids&#13;
Rev. E. S. Johnson, Ida Grove&#13;
Isaac Garmoe, Fort Dodge&#13;
]. C. Lockin, Aurelia&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
�Annual Board&#13;
CLARE D. HORNER&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
&#13;
FRANK B. HEILMAN&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE CLARK&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE BENNETT JOHNS&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
Harry J. RICHARDS&#13;
Cartoons&#13;
&#13;
LURA MATTESON&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WILSON&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR J. WESTCOTT&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL JANE HASKINS&#13;
Literary&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
�CLARE D. HORNER, "JACK II&#13;
LIKE his " Mother Goose n&#13;
ancestor who in h is boyhood days always had a finger in the pie pulling out&#13;
plums, Jack is always around&#13;
about the time the pie is taken&#13;
from the oven, and seems to&#13;
have a knack of getting his&#13;
share of the filling. Perhaps&#13;
it is because of his marked&#13;
ability that he is never given&#13;
a chance to get into a corner&#13;
to eat his plums, but is always&#13;
kept busy winning honors for&#13;
his class, his society and his&#13;
school.&#13;
Second place home oratorica I contest; Philo secretary;&#13;
class president; Philo gold&#13;
and silver medal debates ( 1);&#13;
Collegian Reporter staff ( 1)&#13;
(2); Inter-society debate team;&#13;
First place home prohibition&#13;
contest; Third place prohibition state contest (2); Philo Public&#13;
(2) (3); Student Congress; Editor-in-Chief Sioux of 108 (3).&#13;
&#13;
GRACE EVELYN RO REM&#13;
&#13;
FAIR, sweet womanliness,&#13;
Where virtue with true&#13;
beauty dwells,&#13;
Where eyes speak love and&#13;
sympathy,&#13;
Where lips speak truth and&#13;
purity,&#13;
Where voice speaks mirth and&#13;
melody,&#13;
Where carriage speaks of dignity,&#13;
ls this fair maid of Morningside.&#13;
Enthusiastic jollity&#13;
Insures her popularity.&#13;
Vice president Y. W. C. A&#13;
( 1); Queen Dido, Zetalethean&#13;
Public; President Choral Union (2); Second soprano&#13;
Ladies Chorus (2) (3); Enoch&#13;
Arden, Zetalethean Public; Student Volunteer; President Junior&#13;
Class (3).&#13;
&#13;
FRANK B. HEILMAN&#13;
Fulle&#13;
rich he is of holy&#13;
thoughte and werk,&#13;
He never yet no helpful task&#13;
did shirk,&#13;
Of twenty yeer of age he is, I&#13;
gesse&#13;
And lookes well in padded&#13;
football dress.&#13;
His eyes are wonderly, and&#13;
. · lighte up his face,&#13;
They seem to pleade for some&#13;
lady's grace,&#13;
Impulsive, and it hath full&#13;
ofte been told&#13;
That he makes many pretty&#13;
speeches bold.&#13;
By good ensample IS all&#13;
lucke his;&#13;
A bettre man I trow that&#13;
nonne IS.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES AVERY RICHARDS&#13;
&#13;
Pessimists&#13;
have dreams;&#13;
optimists have visions; 11&#13;
and while he can see the&#13;
beauty of Nature smiling in&#13;
the brooks of her valleys or&#13;
sparkling in Winter's crystal&#13;
forms, he can also see the&#13;
great promise of the future,&#13;
the will of the Infinite revealed in the blossoming buds,&#13;
the w:arbling birds and flowing waters. Happy that people whose II young men see&#13;
visions; 11 and seeing are moved to action. Charlie's dreams&#13;
are fraught with power and&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Vice-President; College M's in Football and&#13;
Track ( 1); Othonian Secretary ; Science Club; Joint Winner of&#13;
Football Trophy Cup; Football Captain for '07; Business Manager of Annual (3).&#13;
• 12&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate; Freshman President; Sand burr No.&#13;
1 ( 1); Student Volunteer; Sandburr No. 2 (2).&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
�MABEL CHAMBERLAIN&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR ]. WESTCOTT "IKE II&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
who has the ability to&#13;
make friends and is a&#13;
ready mixer. Being of a mischevious disposition he plays&#13;
many jokes and is himself the&#13;
joke of the college. His reputation for saying more funny&#13;
things than any other fellow&#13;
in school is not to be denied.&#13;
A ready and fluent speaker,&#13;
and when called upon in class&#13;
he never fails to have an answer, though seldom bearing&#13;
on the subject. A good type&#13;
of the genial college athlete&#13;
and student&#13;
&#13;
YES, you can know her&#13;
presence by her laugh.&#13;
She is one of those industrious girls, who never know&#13;
when they have reached the&#13;
limit in the number of hours&#13;
they ought to carry, and still&#13;
not interfere with their college&#13;
education. One thing is evidently lacking, and that she&#13;
must acquire before that solemn commencement time, for&#13;
she knows not the art of&#13;
"scribbling."&#13;
Zetalethean Secretary; Zetalethean Public; Volunteer&#13;
Band (2); Instructor in Penmanship (3).&#13;
&#13;
College M's in every athletic department except footQjill (I) (2) (3); College pole&#13;
vaulting record ; Basket Ball&#13;
captain (I) (2) (3).&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE CLARK,&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
FLOSSIE"&#13;
&#13;
A VERY frank&#13;
can tell you&#13;
&#13;
JULIA ALICE ROYCE&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
ULIA is generally known&#13;
among her classmates as&#13;
the girl who thinks. Never&#13;
in a hurry to express her&#13;
thought; when she does, what&#13;
she says usually counts. Sunny&#13;
disposition and blue eyes,&#13;
Never neglects her books nor&#13;
her beloved music. She seems&#13;
to have taken for her guide&#13;
Fletcher's motto:&#13;
"Value deserve, and virtue. •&#13;
they are jewels ;&#13;
Fit for your worth and wearing."&#13;
Zetalethean Chorus; Choral&#13;
Union; Junior Secretary (3).&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
girl, who&#13;
what she&#13;
thinks very quickly, and she&#13;
would hardly care whether&#13;
you took offense or not. Not&#13;
the kind to worry. Her lessons don't come hard; any-·&#13;
way, who would stay at home&#13;
digging away in books when&#13;
there is something better to&#13;
do? It is easy for her to forget the serious in her enthusiasm over some social affair.&#13;
Here, however, her talents&#13;
are revealed. A voice trained&#13;
for song and recitation, you&#13;
will remember her by these&#13;
distinctive qualities, and admire the easy, natural grace&#13;
of her every act.&#13;
A truly&#13;
American College girl.&#13;
Freshman secretary Centre, Girls' Basket Ball (I); Zetalethean Secretary; Sophomore Vices President; Zethalethean Public-Dido Chorus (2); Annual Board, Reporter Staff; Choral&#13;
Union (3).&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
�HORACE ENSIGN GROOM,&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
JIMMY BRITT&#13;
&#13;
OLIVIA HELEN WILSON&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
REAL genuine product&#13;
of the Hawkeye state.&#13;
Devotes his entire time to&#13;
chemistry and II resting a minute." His favorite gem is the&#13;
Opal, and one especially he&#13;
has always with him. He has&#13;
become famous as a walking&#13;
delegate for II Going! Going !!&#13;
Gone!!! 11 , and this may account for the enormous sales&#13;
of the well known hair tonic&#13;
at the Morningside pharmacy.&#13;
He is an excellent type of the&#13;
small boy at college.&#13;
Othonian Vice-President ;&#13;
First Tenor, Glee Club ; Othonian Public ( 2 ) ; Assistant&#13;
Chemistry {2); Choral Union&#13;
&#13;
(2) (3).&#13;
&#13;
UST a maiden, plain, neat,&#13;
simple and sincere; an eye&#13;
that reflects the truth in color&#13;
and expression, a clear countenance over which a shadow&#13;
may now and then pass as a&#13;
cloud in June. Gentle, kind,&#13;
and still decisive, with a mind&#13;
all her own. A seriousness&#13;
at times indicates thoughts&#13;
deeper than the words express.&#13;
An ardent lover of&#13;
nature and a hearty participator in the activities of college&#13;
life.&#13;
Freshman Secretary ; Zetalethean Secretary ; Delegate&#13;
to Waterloo Conference ( 1);&#13;
Y. W. C. A. Secretary; Collegian Reporter staff; Zetalethean Public-Dido Chorus (2);&#13;
Firs(Soprano Ladies' Chorus (2) (3); Choral Union ( 1) (2) {3);&#13;
Junior Vice-President; Annual Board (3).&#13;
&#13;
BLANCH VIOLA WATTS&#13;
SHE is rather tall and slender&#13;
With hair of darkish hue,&#13;
Whose bright blue eyes so&#13;
tender&#13;
Betoken a heart kind and&#13;
true.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
Issions having come topossesone of our new&#13;
Morningside this year from Upper&#13;
Iowa University.&#13;
Short of&#13;
stature, quick of mind and of&#13;
a retiring disposition. Being&#13;
fond of his dictionary, he is&#13;
able to use more words from&#13;
it than any other fellow in&#13;
school, although he is not always sure of their meaning.&#13;
When he rises to speak all&#13;
others sit down, for he has a&#13;
way of making himself felt&#13;
and kno"¥m. Surely he will&#13;
be a great man some day if&#13;
he doesn't run out of material.&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
bearing so quiet and&#13;
modest,&#13;
One faithful her tasks to&#13;
fulfill,&#13;
But never can be persuaded&#13;
To act against her will.&#13;
&#13;
Is&#13;
&#13;
patient, industrious- and&#13;
candid,&#13;
For Tabby her fondness is&#13;
clear;&#13;
Is beloved by all her classmates&#13;
As a friend most truly sincere.&#13;
Delegate to the Waterloo Conference ; Zetalethean Treasurer (2); Vice-President of the Y. W. C. A. {3); Librarian (2) (3).&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
Member Science Club; Student Volunteer; Philomathean&#13;
Public (3).&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
II ANDY II&#13;
&#13;
�E. J. WINTERSTEIN,&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Jim II&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE BENNETT JOHNS, "Johnny"&#13;
&#13;
"RIGHT"&#13;
ALWAYS the ever obliging,&#13;
ever pleasant "Johnny. 11&#13;
helpful and kind to all her&#13;
friends, whether it be to translate Deutch or find a library&#13;
book. Her congenial and sociable disposition makes her&#13;
popular not only among the&#13;
girls, but she is much admired&#13;
by all our college men who&#13;
see kindness personified in&#13;
the depths of her trusting&#13;
blue eyes.&#13;
&#13;
HE'S Irish. A deep thinker&#13;
and good student, with a&#13;
re markable ability of expression. Bears a close resemblance to Ex-President Cleveland in some ways and promises to duplicate that man's&#13;
career. Has decided to be a&#13;
lawyer's wife's husband.&#13;
Looks solemn, but isn't. Just&#13;
yell, 11 Jimmie," and he'll answer. ls a firm believer in the&#13;
theory of brotherly love ; hasn't much time for girls, but--T AKES time. Always happy,&#13;
always cheerful, " Our Irish&#13;
Jim. 11&#13;
II RIGHT."&#13;
&#13;
Atheneum Secretary ( 1);&#13;
Sophomore Secretary ; Atheneum Public (2); Assistant&#13;
Librarian ; Annual Board;&#13;
Student Congress (3).&#13;
&#13;
Choral Union ( 1) (2) (3); Othonian Secretary (3).&#13;
&#13;
LOUIE MIRAH MILLS&#13;
ALBERT A HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
A RE you looking for Mirah ? W atch for the girl&#13;
with the rosy English cheeks.&#13;
She will talk but little, though&#13;
she may ask you to Y.W.C.A.&#13;
She will wear an Atheneum&#13;
star and may then be on her&#13;
way to a Junior class meeting.&#13;
You must be early if you&#13;
would see her, no matter&#13;
what the occasion. A half&#13;
hour is not too soon if going&#13;
to a train, fifteen minutes if it&#13;
is a class. She is a girl slow&#13;
to seek honors, for she " envieth not and is not puffed up II&#13;
She has no enemies for she&#13;
II thinketh no evil."&#13;
She is a&#13;
friend who will never fail you&#13;
for she II seeketh not her own. 11&#13;
&#13;
BORN and raised in the&#13;
country, he is accustomed&#13;
to hard work. This is demonstrated by his industry as a&#13;
student and a pastor. A man&#13;
loyal to his society and to his&#13;
college. Steady, consistent,&#13;
slow in action, but always&#13;
sure. He has a purpose in&#13;
life, and will make the world&#13;
better wherever his work may&#13;
be. Two words characterize&#13;
his daily life and conduct,&#13;
diligence and faithfulness.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Y.&#13;
C. A. Treasurer (1); Atheneum Secretary ; Nashville&#13;
Delegate (2); Y. W . C. A President (3).&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Philo gold a nd silver medal debates ; Philo Treasurer;&#13;
Freshman President ( 1); Philo&#13;
Secretary; Philo Public; 11 Old&#13;
Gobbo II in The Merchant of&#13;
Venice (2).&#13;
&#13;
�JOHN G. WATERMAN, "J-o-h-n"&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL JANE HASKINS, "Ethel Jane"&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SINGLE glance at Ethel&#13;
Jane reveals one of Momingside's&#13;
fairest maidens.&#13;
Soft brown hair, glowing&#13;
complexion and bright eyes&#13;
filled with laughter (and a&#13;
trace of the Rash which would&#13;
dart forth should a storm&#13;
arise) help to make up the&#13;
picture. The tilt of her head&#13;
shows to a good advantage&#13;
both the graceful curve of her&#13;
chin, and that she has a mind&#13;
of her own, which, however,&#13;
is never asserte d until II Ethel&#13;
Jane" arrives at the conclusion that she is right. Giving&#13;
due credit to the fact that she&#13;
is a splendid student and of a&#13;
philosophical turn of mind,&#13;
we must admit that she is&#13;
usually right.&#13;
&#13;
A says hewho, yotmger, he&#13;
MAN&#13;
though&#13;
is&#13;
is&#13;
thought to be about thirty.&#13;
Short and stout, but not stout&#13;
enough to hold his hair which&#13;
is rapidly clearing the way&#13;
for him to rise to the fame&#13;
and usefulness that awaits&#13;
him. A deep thinker, ready&#13;
speaker and good conversationalist. His familiarity with&#13;
many subjects makes him a&#13;
favorite among the fellows,&#13;
and their girls. Still a single&#13;
man he gives the reason that&#13;
II she could not get ready in&#13;
such a short time," it now&#13;
being but three years ince&#13;
preparations were begun.&#13;
Delegate to state Y. M. C. A convention ( 1); Choral Union&#13;
(2); President of Prohibition League, President of Oratorical&#13;
Association (3).&#13;
&#13;
Cupid, Zetalethean Public ( 1); Secretary of Student Body;&#13;
Annual Board (3).&#13;
&#13;
MAUDE FAIR&#13;
&#13;
H. ]. RICHARDS, "Flib"&#13;
YES, she's Fair, but dark;&#13;
has the Irish blue eye behind which lurks well plotted&#13;
schemes for a good joke,&#13;
though the sober countenance&#13;
would not so indicate. Jovial&#13;
and kind in disposition, ready&#13;
at any moment to help some&#13;
one near at hand. She is a&#13;
firm believer in ghosts, and&#13;
can give convincing evidence&#13;
for her belief. Can successfully interpret dreams and tell&#13;
fortunes. ls a great friend of&#13;
the broom and can nowhere&#13;
be excelled as a tidy housekeeper. Knows:&#13;
All about the candy,&#13;
All about traveling,&#13;
All about how to meet the&#13;
assessor,&#13;
All about the history of Morningside college smce its first&#13;
corner-stone was laid.&#13;
&#13;
BORN in the midst of Wisconsin timber, he is by&#13;
nature a dreamer. He inherited a roving disposition and&#13;
because of this has travelled&#13;
extensively, often going as&#13;
far as fifteen miles from home&#13;
at one time. Clean of character, always striving to help&#13;
someone to a better life, he&#13;
lives each day the principles&#13;
of the Galilean, and plans to&#13;
make the ministry his life&#13;
work. He has marked ability&#13;
as a platform man, having&#13;
won honors at Ellsworth College prior to oming to Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Secretary ( 1); Second place Home Oratorical&#13;
contest ( 1) (2); Delegate to State Oratorical contest ; Othonian&#13;
Public (2); Annual Board; Student Congress (3).&#13;
&#13;
Winner girls' SO-yard dash (3); Delegate to Geneva conference (3).&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�LURA GRACE Matteson&#13;
&#13;
"BOB"&#13;
&#13;
SHE is known by her peculiar manner of saying&#13;
things. For; with her sense&#13;
of fitting humor, her conversation is full of suggestions&#13;
and witticisms. She fills the&#13;
place of society clown as&#13;
none else could. Possesses a&#13;
pleasing cordiality, which is&#13;
due to her training in a parsonage, and she thoroughly&#13;
enjoys the varied experiences&#13;
of a minister's daughter. Serious moments come to her&#13;
as the many duties of college&#13;
life weigh more heavily. A&#13;
girl liked by everyone, always&#13;
busy, but congenial and companionable.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Choral Union; Zetalethean Public; Student Congress;&#13;
Treasurer Y. W. C. A.; Annual Boaad (3).&#13;
&#13;
"(&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
�Wilson Seeley Lewis,A. M.,D.D.&#13;
President&#13;
Professor of Christian Ethics&#13;
&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Student St. Lawrence University,&#13;
1875-1881 ; A B., Cornell College,&#13;
1889; A M., ibid., 1892; D: D.,&#13;
Upper Iowa University, 1895;&#13;
Travel and Study in Europe, 1896;&#13;
Principal Public Schools, Center&#13;
Point, Iowa, 1881-3; Superintendent City Schools, Belle Plaine,&#13;
Iowa, 1883-5 ; Ministerial Work,&#13;
1885-8; Principal of Epworth Seminary, 1888-9 7; President, Morningside College, 189 7.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Illinois Wesleyan University, 1888; A M., ibid., 1890 ;&#13;
Graduate Student, University of&#13;
Chicago, Summer Quarters, 1894&#13;
and 1897; Student in the American School of Classical Studies,&#13;
Rome, 1903-4; Instructor in English, Illinois Wesleyan University,&#13;
1888-90; Instructor in Greek and&#13;
Latin, Morningside College, 1894-7;&#13;
Professor of Latin, ibid., 189 7---.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
Herbert Grant Campbell, A. M.&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
Helen Isabella Loveland, A. 8.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
A B., Smith College, 1889; Student, Oxford University, England,&#13;
1902-3; Instructor in History and&#13;
English, Epworth Seminary, 1892-5;&#13;
Professor of Modern Languages,&#13;
Upper Iowa University, 1896-7;&#13;
Professor of English Language and&#13;
Literature, Morningside College,&#13;
1897-1902; Professor of English&#13;
Literature, ibid., 1902---.&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B., Cornell College, 1896 ;&#13;
Assistant Principal of Epworth&#13;
Seminary, 1896-7 ; Pastor at Akron&#13;
and Sheldon, Iowa, 1897-1901 ;&#13;
Graduate student, Columbia University, 1901-3; Scholar in Philosophy, ibid., 1901-2; A M., ibid.,&#13;
1902; Union Theological Seminary,&#13;
1902-3; Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and Vice-President, Morningside&#13;
College, 1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gay Dolliver, A. B.&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
A. B., Cincinnati Wesleyan College, 1886 ; Teacher in Fort Dodge&#13;
Public Schools, 1886-90; Graduate&#13;
Student Northwestern University,&#13;
1905-6; Dean of Women, Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Frank Harmon Garver, A. B.&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
and Politics&#13;
A. B. Upper Iowa University,&#13;
1898; Fellow in History, University of Iowa, 1901-2; Professor of&#13;
History and Ecqnomics, Morningside College, 1898- 1900; Professor&#13;
of History and Politics, ibid.,&#13;
1900---.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
�Fred Emory Haynes, Ph.&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Registrar&#13;
Professor of Economics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Reynard Greynald, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Harvard University, 1889;&#13;
A. M., ibid., 1890 ; Ph. D., ibid.,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of French&#13;
&#13;
1891 ; Student, University of Berlin&#13;
and Cambridge University, 1891-2;&#13;
Instructor in History, University of&#13;
California, 1892-5 ; Head of South&#13;
Park Settlement, San Francisco,&#13;
1894-5 ; Assistant in United States&#13;
History, Harvard University, 18967 ; Resident of South End House,&#13;
Boston, 1895-1900; Professor of&#13;
Economics and Sociology, Morningside College, 1900---.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of Paris, 18 74;&#13;
A. M., ibid., 1880 ; Professor of&#13;
Latin, Chatenu Gontre, F ranee,&#13;
18 76-8 ; Professor of French, Morningside College, 1896---.&#13;
&#13;
Agnes Beveridge Ferguson,&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sc. M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Pedagogy&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
A. B., DePauw University, 1884;&#13;
A. M., ibid., 1887; Superintendent&#13;
&#13;
Sc. B., Cornell College, 1894 ; Sc.&#13;
M., ibid., 1895 ; using libraries and&#13;
hearing lectures, Dresden and Berlin, Summer, 1902; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, Summer, 1904 ; Professor of Modern&#13;
Languages, Fort Worth University,&#13;
1896-7; Professor of German&#13;
Morningside College, 1901---.&#13;
&#13;
of Schools, Woodbury County,&#13;
1894-1900, 1902-5; Professor of&#13;
Mathematics and Pedagogy, Morningside College, 1900-2 ; Professor&#13;
of Pedagogy, Morningside College,&#13;
1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener,&#13;
&#13;
A.M.&#13;
Professor of Greek&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cornell College, 1896 ; A.&#13;
M., Harvard University, 1899;&#13;
Graduate Student, Harvard University, 189 7-9 and 1902-3; Instructor in Latin and Greek, Epworth Seminary, 1896-7; Instructor&#13;
in Latin, Wilbraham Academy,&#13;
1899-1900 ; Professor of Greek,&#13;
Morningside College, 1900---.&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Robert Van Horne, Ph. B.&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College,&#13;
1900; Graduate Student, Johns&#13;
Hopkins University, 1900-1 ; Instructor in Mathematics, Morningside College, 1901-2; Professor of&#13;
Mathematics, ibid., 1902---.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
�Judson Waldo Mather&#13;
Director and Professor of Music&#13;
in the College&#13;
Graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory, 1896; Instructor in Piano,&#13;
Organ and Harmony, Cornell College, 1895-8; Organist, Union Park&#13;
Church, Chicago, 1898-9; Instructor&#13;
in Music, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1898-9; Professor of Music&#13;
and Director of Conservatory,Yankton College, 1899-1904. Pupil of&#13;
Ernst Jedliezka, Berlin, 1902; Professor of Music and Director of&#13;
Conservatory, Morningside College, 1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Millard Fillmore McDowell&#13;
Sc. B.&#13;
Instructor in Physics&#13;
Sc. B., Morningside College,&#13;
1903; Fellow in Physics, University of Nebraska, 1903-4; Instructor&#13;
in Physics, Morningside College,&#13;
1904---.&#13;
&#13;
John Lorenzo Griffith, A. B.&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude F. Mather&#13;
&#13;
Director of Physical Training and&#13;
Instructor in Oral Debate&#13;
A B., Beloit College, 1902 ; Director of Athletics and Instructor in&#13;
History, Yankton College, 1902-5 ;&#13;
Director of Physical Training and&#13;
Instructor in English, Morningside&#13;
College, 1905; Director of Physical&#13;
Training and Instructor in Oral Debate, ibid., 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
Violin and Cornet&#13;
Pupil of Charles Heydler, 188990; Instructor in Violin, Cornell&#13;
College, 1896-8; Pupil of Adolf&#13;
Weidig, 1898-9, 1904 ; Instructor&#13;
in Violin and Cornet, Yankton&#13;
College, 1899-1904; Instructor in&#13;
Violin and Cornet, Morningside&#13;
College, 1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Wilfred W elday Scott, A. M.&#13;
Clara Booth Davidson&#13;
Professor of Elocution&#13;
National School of Oratory, Philadelphia, 1880-2 ; Professor of Elocution, Morningside College, 18991902, 1903---.&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of Chemistry&#13;
A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1897;A.M. ibid., 1901; Graduate&#13;
Student in Chemistry, Cornell University, Summer, 1903 and 1903-5;&#13;
Instructor in Philander Smith College, N aina T al, India, 1898- 1900 ;&#13;
Instructor in Claflin University,&#13;
1902-3; Professor of Chemistry&#13;
and Physics, ibid., 1905-6; Acting&#13;
Professor of Chemistry, Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
�Thomas Calderwood Stephens,&#13;
A. B., M. D.&#13;
acting Professor of Biology&#13;
Student, Adrian College, 1894-6;&#13;
University of Chicago, 1900- 1 ; A&#13;
B., Kansas City University, 1901 ;&#13;
M. D., Kansas State University,&#13;
1904 ; Student Marine Biological&#13;
Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.,&#13;
Summer, 1901 ; Instructor in Kansas City University, 1901-2 ; Student in Neurology, Illinois Medical&#13;
College, Summer, 1902 ; Fellow in&#13;
Zoology, University of Chicago,&#13;
1904-6; Assistant in Embryology,&#13;
ibid., Summer Quarter, 1905 and&#13;
1906; Acting Professor of Biology,&#13;
Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
Ida Nolan Reynolds&#13;
Instructor in Primary Methods&#13;
and Drawing&#13;
G rad u ate , Drake University&#13;
Training School, 1903 ; Student,&#13;
School of Education, University of&#13;
Chicago, Summer quarter 1905 ;&#13;
Principal West Ward School and&#13;
Teacher in Primary Grade, Rockwell City, Iowa, 1903-4; Principal,&#13;
High School, Victor, Iowa, 1904-5 ;&#13;
Director, Summer School of Manual Training, Rockwell City, Iowa,&#13;
1904 · Instructor in Primary Methods and Drawing, Morningsid e&#13;
College, 1905---.&#13;
&#13;
Pearl Alice Woodford, Ph. B.&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College,&#13;
1903; Graduate Student in English,&#13;
University of Chicago, Summer,&#13;
1906; Instructor in English and&#13;
Latin, Lake Mills High School,&#13;
1903-5 ; Instructor in English and&#13;
Mathematics, Hartley High School,&#13;
1905-6; Instructor in English, Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
Faith Fester Woodford&#13;
Assistant in Piano&#13;
Graduate Morningside College&#13;
Conservatory, 1902 ; Pupil of Emil&#13;
Liebling, Chicago, 1903-4.&#13;
&#13;
Birdie Laura Bunting&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
Pupil of H erm an W a Iker, 1899 ;&#13;
Pupil of A Devin Duvivier, 19004; Graduate of the Chicago Piano&#13;
College, 1903; Pupil of H erman&#13;
Watt, 1904 ; Instructor in Voice&#13;
Culture a nd Pianoforte, Cornell&#13;
College, 1904-5 ; Instructor in Voice&#13;
Culture, Morningside C o 11 e g e&#13;
1905---.&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Florence Louise Wiley, Mus. B.&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
Mus. B., Oberlin Conservatory,&#13;
1906; pupil of Dr. George W.&#13;
Andrews and Professor W . T. Upton, 1902-6; Craduate, Oberlin&#13;
Conservatory, 1906 ; Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte, Morningside College,&#13;
1906---.&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
�Katherine Ellen Nurse&#13;
Stenography&#13;
&#13;
Holman&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Reister&#13;
Bookkeeping&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
�The Senior's Lament&#13;
&#13;
,I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
AME old college&#13;
As of yore,&#13;
&#13;
Same old crowd hangs&#13;
Round the door,&#13;
Same old campus,&#13;
Same green trees,&#13;
Same old summerhouse,&#13;
Same old squeeze,&#13;
Same mosquitos,&#13;
Same old bites,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Same old gang stays&#13;
Out o' nights,&#13;
Same old faculty,&#13;
Same old class,&#13;
Same gang a' lolling&#13;
On the grass,&#13;
Same old noises&#13;
In the air,&#13;
Same old sameness&#13;
Everywhere.&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�190 7 Seniors -- Scientific&#13;
Encyclopedia --Addenda&#13;
the past year the foremost scientists of the&#13;
world have been engaged in painstaking endeavor to classify some thirty-three unknowns&#13;
submitted to them from various parts of the&#13;
world. The results have not in all cases been&#13;
entirely satisfactory, but they are the best that&#13;
the present scientific world can furnish. In&#13;
hopes that the work may be of value as an addenda to the new&#13;
Scientific Encyclopedia and to previous records, the results of&#13;
the classifications are herewith set forth:&#13;
IN THE ANIMAL KINGDOM&#13;
Elsie Kilborne---Avis Cantans Celeritas or mocking-bird. Of&#13;
medium size, sunny disposition and easily taught to perform&#13;
wonderful vocal gymnastics.&#13;
Martha Macdonald---Anglibus Acutis or bookworm. An uncommon species, most generally found in libraries or digging away in mathematical books.&#13;
.&#13;
Clarence G. Manning --- Perpetuus K ickabus or Rocky Mountain&#13;
burro. A beast which, despite its sunny nature, likes to&#13;
splash cold water. No relation to Maude.&#13;
Earl J.Fry---Avis Stupendum lmportans or blue bird. 11 Sports&#13;
around the orchard like he owned the premises." Noted&#13;
for its red tracks on quiz papers.&#13;
Horace E. Groom---Lengthens Abreviatibus or black French&#13;
poodle ; a very cute pet, wonderfully popular with the&#13;
fair sex.&#13;
E. A. Bennett---Crusta Timidibus or shrimp.&#13;
Seldom seen&#13;
swimming on the surface of the sea. Splendid for seasoning.&#13;
W. H. Lease --- Grouchiferous Molluscus or Clam. A pudgy&#13;
beast of which little is known. More there than the outside&#13;
would indicate. Noted for its silence.&#13;
Jay Whitaker --- Cyanocitta Cristata or Blue Jay. A permanent&#13;
resident. Has a large top-not. Mischevious and destructive. Has a harsh voice; screams, shrieks and is extremely&#13;
unsociable.&#13;
Mable Chamberlain---Garrulus Chatteridre or Magpie. Noted&#13;
for its continual Buttering and its persistent though not unpleasant chattering.&#13;
Faith Woodford---Pianissimor Manipulator or Key Pounder.&#13;
An ever-present, accommodating bird. Dispenses much&#13;
sweet music.&#13;
Mable T owner---Elephantibus Gigantic us or Elephant. An&#13;
enormous specimen, noted for its intelligence, quiet habits&#13;
and A grades.&#13;
G. A. Tumbleson --- Bookae T yrranus or Book Agent. A species&#13;
which is persistent in its attacks upon unprotected householders.&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
36&#13;
&#13;
�Corwin Taylor --- Billibus Puttinibus or Mosquito. A long legged, carnivorous insect which emphasizes its presence with&#13;
aloud"hum! 11 •&#13;
J. C. Bass ---Aqua Energetica or Fish. A species of microbe&#13;
which is usually into most everything, often Blood.&#13;
H. N. Staples --- Principalis Girlibus or Raven. A long, slender&#13;
bird with a black crest. Voracious ; devours everything.&#13;
An erratic wanderer; very sociable.&#13;
S. B. Collins --- Vocis Giganticus or Mighty Spouter. Talks long,&#13;
loud and freely on every subject. Imitates the human voice&#13;
quite perfectly.&#13;
Ella Dickson --- Chatteridae or Cricket. Noted for its continual&#13;
drawling, chirping noise. Not dangerous to those acquainted with its habits, but an awful tease.&#13;
Cora Frear --- Pietus Riparia or Swallow. A summer resident.&#13;
Slender, graceful, voracious. Eats three kinds of pie and&#13;
likes them all.&#13;
IN THE PLANT WORLD&#13;
D. Ford Robbins --- Yulaka Melaka Ahlaka or Bamboo Tree.&#13;
An old familiar growth. Never found alone; usually in&#13;
groups of two.&#13;
J. R. Tumbleson --- Cab bag ens Vulgariis or Sauerkraut. A well&#13;
known and well liked product. Thought to be a German&#13;
import.&#13;
Nellie A. Taylor --- Sanctissimus Patens or Lily. A rare flower&#13;
used quite often at religious services and ceremonies.&#13;
Chester N. Rissler --- Trifolium Hibernium or Shamrock. A&#13;
bright green 'plant which probably can be traced back to&#13;
Irish soil.&#13;
Henry Taylor--- Weedibus Verdans or Celery A farm product,&#13;
green in its natural state, but which bleached out on exposure.&#13;
Genevieve Howard --- F airis Complexio or Bachelor's Button.&#13;
Ornamental as well as revivifying.&#13;
Leonie M. De Lay --- Palidus Frail um. A delicate plant which&#13;
thrives best by the student's lamp.&#13;
,&#13;
Alice Cole --- Pastoribus Cloverium or Clover. A very modest&#13;
little plant. May be related to certain Irish growths.&#13;
H. E. Jones --- Punnibus Energeticus or Wild Turnip. A small,&#13;
very pungent vegetable very often accompanied by a growth&#13;
of whiskers.&#13;
P. E. F redendoll --- Puff ae Meerchaumae or Smokeweed. A tall&#13;
weed with a peculiar top which is usually encircled by a&#13;
cloud of smoke.&#13;
CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS, ETC.&#13;
W. Vance McCay --- Aqua Effervescens or Bromo Seltzer. An&#13;
unstable compound which foams strongly when excited.&#13;
Glenn M. Squires --- An unknown compound of some sort.&#13;
Probably a high oxide. Red in color. Flames brilliantly&#13;
when exposed to the sun.&#13;
R. C. Nichols/--- (A) or Argon. A very stable, valuable element.&#13;
Very rare and seldom found in combination.&#13;
Florence Davidson --- Aqua Regina or Nitric Acid (HN03 ), possessing one Bond or valence. An acid of strong and independent action.&#13;
Mabel E. Haskins --- Brillians Spasmodicus (NH3 ); a lively compound useful to certain medics.&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
�Ye Brave T aille of Ye Gallant Fight Between, Ye&#13;
Unsavorie Freshmen Varlets and Ye&#13;
Vulgar Sophomore Caitiffs&#13;
OW it befel that certaine strangers coming in a&#13;
new country in ye autumn time and reeking&#13;
stoutely about them of springe, were sore&#13;
sette upon by sundrie unsavorie caitiffs who&#13;
done unto them much vile contumlie. And&#13;
ye unsophisticated gat them together and&#13;
tooke counsel and hanged in ye talle toppe&#13;
of ye sunflower tree a foulle ragge of sorrie colour and exceeding uncleane. Straightway ye caitiff knightes cryed out to ye&#13;
vulgar varlets for it to come down.&#13;
Then charged they them&#13;
upon ye vulgar varlets and there arose high an evil scent and&#13;
sound. Full foulle fell ye caitiff horde upon ye verdant varlets&#13;
and smote ye earth along their heads untill ye faded autumn&#13;
grasse looked green again. And with hands unsanctified sealed&#13;
they the varlets in heavy chains tied fast with divers padlocks&#13;
and tidy pins.&#13;
Then from their captivity came the vanquished varlets' wail&#13;
to their women to smite and save, and pale gat ye faces and&#13;
bare ye pates of ye tyrants before such an awful onslaught. And&#13;
a certaine knighte sitting in bondage hadde ye strength of ye&#13;
Sampson, notte in ye hair, but in ye feet, and his chaines felle&#13;
away. But still haughte and high hanged ye varlet standard in&#13;
ye tree. But a certaine graceless caitiff with evil in his heart&#13;
and a hatchet in his bosom gat him uppe ye tree. Down crashed&#13;
ye shattered staff like ye haughty senior upon ye slippery pavement. And ye knighte of ye hatchet tore ye trophy from ye&#13;
shattered staff and gathered in unto his bosom. And when he&#13;
would be no longer parted from it several of ye caitiffs felle&#13;
upon him and beat sore his bones with cudgels. Soon he applied foule and murderous kicks upon them and they desisted.&#13;
And ye varlet dismounted ye tree and with his fellow clansmen&#13;
they rente the ragge asunder that they might hand it down as&#13;
trophies unto their ( ancestors). Now ye lorde of ye countrie&#13;
drew nigh and demanded of them who had done foulle assault&#13;
and batterie upon his goodlie tree. But they knew not ye talle&#13;
storie of George, ye cherrie tree and ye hatchet, and said hothing.&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
�And Here Bigynneth Ye T aille which is Ye&#13;
Taille of ye&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
:;§&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
A classe ther was and that a worthy one,&#13;
That fro the tyme that they first beganne&#13;
To studie hokes at Morningside&#13;
Was noted for their virtue far and wide.&#13;
And of this classe I shall great thinges telle,&#13;
For alien thinges tried they did full well;&#13;
Of studie tooke they much care and heede,&#13;
Nought played .they more than weren ther neede,&#13;
In all this world ther nas no 1on ther like,&#13;
For gladly would they' learn and also fyght,&#13;
And each they did with delight and fairness,&#13;
To set a good ensample was ther business.&#13;
This ilka class let olden thinges pace,&#13;
And held afte r the newe world the trace;&#13;
For whan that classe wanton for to scrap,&#13;
They hung ther colors on a pole to flap.&#13;
Nor nas this done by anyone, I guess,&#13;
Beforn the class '09 did thus their zeal express,&#13;
And yet another tyme ther was,&#13;
Befel it that the freshmen set their jaws&#13;
And hung ther colours in a great high tree,&#13;
But when the S ophs that yellow flag did see,&#13;
They all with one accord did y-ronne&#13;
And chained every freshman up in fonne,&#13;
Then tooke that big yellow flagge downe&#13;
And ronne away with it clear out of town,&#13;
So after that the freshmen tooken heede,&#13;
And bothered them no more than nas their neede .&#13;
And whan that debates weeren to be wonne&#13;
Methinketh they ther full share y-donne;&#13;
For in the past year that they were herre,&#13;
Did four of them on the platform right well appear.&#13;
And more of them hadde beene in oratory,&#13;
Almost a dozen did thus seeken glory;&#13;
And alle of them hadde for honors y-strivven,&#13;
Upon the athletic fieldes driven;&#13;
And to what ever classe they y-coupled were,&#13;
They could them overmate I dare we! sware,&#13;
And ever more they hadde the Doctors' prize,&#13;
And/ though that they were worthy they were wize,&#13;
And of ther part as meek as they were maydes,&#13;
They never yet no villaine ne sayde;&#13;
In all ther life unto each man they passe,&#13;
They were a very parfit gentle class.&#13;
&#13;
. 43&#13;
&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
�Warning Freshmen!!&#13;
Sophs on Warpath ! Freshmen be on the&#13;
Lookout! President Whealen must be&#13;
Closely · Guarded. Johnson and&#13;
Winterstein are Traitors! Report Immediately Any&#13;
Sophs Seen After&#13;
Dark to&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
1/&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PENDELL&#13;
Minutes of the Freshman Meeting&#13;
Place---Whealen's Residence. Curtains down; entrance&#13;
back door. Called at 8;30 p. m. by President Whealen.&#13;
Roll Call---F ull house. Remarks by Pendell applauded.&#13;
Discussion of class colors. Green and yellow suggested.&#13;
Green favorable; yellow unnecessary. Pendell moves&#13;
that old colors be retained; carried. Bell rings, five men&#13;
sent to the door. Remarks by Pendell on the general&#13;
good (applause). Pendell declares Barrick II good II for&#13;
Freshies.&#13;
"Jim II and Johnson traitors.&#13;
Remarks by&#13;
Rogers (feminine applause).&#13;
Freshmen will have to&#13;
have seats removed to avoid contact with Johnson.&#13;
Remarks by Berkstress&lt;;:!r, also by Pendell (Nigger heaven in&#13;
ecstasy). Steps are reported for prompt rallying of all&#13;
Freshmen forces, should the Sophs break from their reservation. Remarks by Pendell (continuous applause).&#13;
Reading of members with addresses and phones&#13;
&#13;
PENDELL, Vine Street, one block north of College.&#13;
WOOD &amp; ROYSE, North Hall.&#13;
CHAPMAN, Main Hall, New Phone.&#13;
ROGERS, at Straub's, Old Phone.&#13;
ETTA MAHOOD, at home, both phones.&#13;
MISS GLANDSMAN, at Campbell's.&#13;
PRICHARD, eight blocks south of Park in the cornfield.&#13;
MISS BLOOM, at Blood's.&#13;
ENGLE, at Pierce's.&#13;
&#13;
By Courtesy of Sophs for Benefit&#13;
of Freshmen Not Present.&#13;
44&#13;
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�Freshmen&#13;
HE following clippings from leading newspapers all over the country, both in&#13;
America and Europe, show the prominence of the class of 1910, Morningside&#13;
College, Sioux City, Iowa :&#13;
"Morningside is a scene of great activity. The entrance of&#13;
the class of 1910 marks the beginning of a new and brilliant&#13;
epoch in the history of the institution. This class, composed of&#13;
men and women of brilliant intellect, superior judgment, strong&#13;
character and eminent ability, is without doubt the most remarkable that ever invaded the sacred halls at Morningside. 11 --- Sioux&#13;
City Journal.&#13;
"College spirit manifested itself quite forcibly this morning&#13;
at Morningside when the Sophomores attacked a crowd of&#13;
Freshmen, who were guarding a flagpole on which floated the&#13;
Freshman banner. In the desperate hand to hand encounter&#13;
which ensued the Sophs finally succeeded in cutting down the&#13;
flag, and dropping it to their classmen at the foot of the tree.&#13;
In the midst of the continuation of the battle upon terra firma&#13;
President Lewis appeared, and declared a truce by inviting all&#13;
of the students in to chapel. 11 ---Sioux City Tribune.&#13;
n The class of 191 0 at Morningside College has developed&#13;
some of the most promising athletes yet seen in the middle west.&#13;
The winning of a place in the college indoor meet March 2&#13;
stamps this class as one possessing peculiar athletic ability. It&#13;
might be well for those having the selection of the next allAmerican team for the Olympic championship to keep a weather&#13;
eye on this dass. 11 ---The Sportsman.&#13;
n M. Reynard Greynald, autrefois professeur de langues&#13;
modernes a I I Universite de Paris et maintenant professeur de&#13;
F rancais au college Morningside (Etats Unis) ecrit a son ami le&#13;
Comte de Nivelle que !es Americans ont beaucoup d I aptitude&#13;
pour 11 etude du Francois. M. Greynald declare que !es etudiants&#13;
de la classe 191 0 ont un desire tellement prononce pour I I etude&#13;
du Francais, que M. Greynald est oblige de finir ses classe avant&#13;
I I heure pour empecher ses eleves d I employer tout leur temps&#13;
a 1 I 1 etude de cette langue. 11 ---Le Temps, Paris.&#13;
&#13;
Is ift berichtet, dab in dem Studium der deu iden Sprache und lite&#13;
ratur die ameritanitcheii Studenten unfere Eignen iibertreffen. Uuf der&#13;
morgenteite univerfiat etnerUnioerfitiit fur Wanner unb frousn der&#13;
Bereinigten etaaten, befleikigen tich bie Studenten der Rlaff e bes fab=&#13;
res 1910 mit. tolchem fifer bes studiums berielben, dab beobachter bebaupten, biete studenten feiett echt beutich berlin boht eifrig dab diete&#13;
jungen ueute yu ihrer meiteren Uusbildung nach Deuthchland tommen&#13;
werden. unfere Lehrer Brufung Merden fie leicht befiehen und hoffentlidy&#13;
balb auch brofeff ocen an unferen uniberfitat w rben&#13;
(total Unzeiger, Berlin. )&#13;
47&#13;
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�Alma ·Mater&#13;
To the Tune --- " College Ties Can Ne'er Be Broken "&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
Far above Missouri's waters,&#13;
And the river Sioux,&#13;
Stands our noble Alma Mater,&#13;
Dear to me and you.&#13;
CHORUS.&#13;
&#13;
Lift the chorus, speed it onward,&#13;
With every rising tide;&#13;
Hail to· thee, our Alma Mater,&#13;
Hail thee, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
Far above Sioux City's traffic,&#13;
Toward the rising sun ;&#13;
Raised against the blue of heaven,&#13;
Looks she proudly down.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
Let us voice her praises ever,&#13;
Her "&#13;
tame spread far and wide;&#13;
And by our strength hold high her standard,&#13;
Hail thee, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
w.w.s.&#13;
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EAR A THENEUM GIRLS : --Since the day when as a gosling I came&#13;
to Morningside, I have never before been permitted to tell you the things that were in my&#13;
heart. I could not tell you how I appreciated&#13;
your loving care over me. Even though in&#13;
spirit I was permitted to witness your feast at&#13;
which I was the center, I readily forgave you when l heard your&#13;
glowing tributes over my broken bones. Seeing the Atheneum&#13;
in college life, gave me a desire to see her in the world's activities. I found her in the school room ministering to the little&#13;
crowd of knowledge seekers. I saw her when the peal of the&#13;
wedding bell had scarce died away, starting on a honeymoon&#13;
which was to last a lifetime. I saw her spending weary hours&#13;
in the preparation for brightening the world's cares with Heavenly music. I saw her tender guidance of the little tots with eyes&#13;
like her own. And then far across the ocean I saw her again,&#13;
living the life for one who loves us all.&#13;
But after all, the Atheneums of today are the ones I love&#13;
the most. I am happy in the midst of those who were so kind&#13;
to me. I delight in you, not as individuals, but as one united&#13;
body, working in harmony for a common end --- that of character building. May your ideals ever reach higher, your sphere&#13;
of usefulness ever widen, and may you ever attain more nearly&#13;
to the beauty, the perfection of your ideals.&#13;
With kind remembrances to your honorary members, and&#13;
especially to Miss Dolliver, who interceded in my behalf and&#13;
made it possible for me to remain from now on in Atheneum&#13;
hall, I am your affectionate&#13;
SILVER - LEAF.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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Zetalethean&#13;
( Founded 1897 )&#13;
&#13;
CLIPPINGS FROM THE SCRAP BOOK&#13;
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EDNESDAY afternoon ( May 2, 1 06) the Zetaletheans were guests at a delightful five o'clock&#13;
luncheon given by the Atheneums at the&#13;
home of Mrs.]. B. Frye, Fifth Avenue.&#13;
The Zets. gave their annual German program last Saturday evening ( May 26). "Zerstreut,11 an amusing comedy in one act,was presented.&#13;
The annual reunion of the Zetalethean Literary Society&#13;
was held Wednesday afternoon ( June I 3) in the Zet-Otho hall.&#13;
Addresses were made by several former Zets., and diplomas&#13;
were presented to three graduating members. Refreshments&#13;
were served during the informal social hour which followed.&#13;
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The Zets. had their annual Fourth of July picnic at the&#13;
home of Miss Davidson.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt was the guest of&#13;
honor .&#13;
Wednesday afternoon ( October 28) the Zets. gave their&#13;
annual party in North Ravine to about twenty invited guests.&#13;
After a bounteous supper, college songs were sung around the&#13;
camp fire.&#13;
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:g&#13;
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A large number of the faculty and students attended the&#13;
eighth annual Zet - Otho Prom which was given Monday evening ( September 24 ). The halls were tastefully decorated with&#13;
palms, and refreshments were served throughout the evening in&#13;
the second corridor&#13;
Sassano, the harpist, furnished the music.&#13;
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The Zets. held a public initiation Saturday evening (November I 7) in Zet-Otho hall. Fourteen new members were received with a beautiful, impressive ceremony, taking the pledge under the society colors, scarlet and black.&#13;
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The annual Zetalethean Public took place Saturday evening ( December 8) in the auditorium. An excellent literary&#13;
program was Jven, closing with the singing of the " Lost Chord "&#13;
by the Zetalethean chorus.&#13;
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The Zets. and Atheneums gave a very successful Jomt program Saturday evening ( December 16 ), presenting Kate Douglas&#13;
Wiggins' famous story, "The Birds' Christmas Carol."&#13;
53&#13;
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�u&#13;
"Vestigia, Nulla Retrorsum II&#13;
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54&#13;
&#13;
Y constant effort to fulfill the sentiment of this&#13;
motto, the Philomathean society has attained&#13;
the position of prominence that it now holds.&#13;
The objects of the society are not intellectual&#13;
developrr:ent nor social interests alone. Consideration of these ideas is important, but to&#13;
bring about the development of the highest&#13;
types of manhood is the ultimate aim of Philo association .&#13;
Nor do we believe that our efforts have been in vain. 11 By&#13;
their fruits ye shall know them. 11 As this is true of individuals&#13;
it is equally true of associations of individuals. Among the&#13;
alumni of this society are two lawyers, five college professors, a&#13;
college president, a college vice-president, a number of ministers, one Y. M. C. A. secretary and one state representative .&#13;
From these, our alumni, who represent us in in the actual fight&#13;
of life, it may be seen that the principles of success are fostered&#13;
and encouraged along all lines in the work of the society. In&#13;
the active affairs of college life the members of this society have&#13;
always taken a prominent part. The college paper origina ted&#13;
in the mind of a Philo.&#13;
Inter-collegiate debate was first proposed by the Philos, and in the first venture of this kind a team&#13;
composed entirely of Philos won a victory for Morningside.&#13;
That athletics receive hearty support among our members is&#13;
shown by the fact that of the captains of four athletic te ams,&#13;
three are Philos.&#13;
It is our purpose to back every enterprise that tends toward&#13;
the greatest success of Morningside. There have been periods&#13;
of brightness and periods of gloom in the history of our society,&#13;
but through it all there has been a constant and unfaltering&#13;
hope for the success that the future always promises. We stand&#13;
today firmly established and striving for those ideals that are&#13;
held out to ~ in the highest development of soul and mind.&#13;
us&#13;
With these .'ends in view, we enter into a hearty co-operation&#13;
with all those who seek to attain the same goal.&#13;
55&#13;
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�0&#13;
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:a&#13;
co&#13;
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;.:::q&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
EMBLEM --- The Shield&#13;
COLOR --- Royal Purple&#13;
HERE are many phases to the history of a literary· society and there are many ways in&#13;
which that .. history could be written under&#13;
favorable circumstances, but we do not feel&#13;
that this is the place for the Othonian Literary&#13;
Society to boast of its past ach'evements or&#13;
enumerate the many events which have transpired since its organization, but rather that we&#13;
set forth in the short space alloted to us the basis of the&#13;
society and the hopes for the future.&#13;
Believing young men's organizations beneficial to the individual and to the institution, and feeling the need of another&#13;
society, fourteen men in the autumn of 1891 met in North Hall&#13;
and after due deliberation there came forth what has since been&#13;
known as the Othonian Literary Society. Organized by men&#13;
who were firm believers in the highest development of the intelectual, the physical and the moral nature, we find this to be the&#13;
aim of the society and basis of its constitution.&#13;
During the sixteen years since its organization the society&#13;
has endeavored to give to each and every member some training in intellectual, social and moral culture, and not forgetting&#13;
that a strong body is necessary to a strong mind, it urges as a&#13;
duty of each man to himself and to the institution the participa·tion, when possible, in some form of athletics. In this field it is&#13;
felt that its members have succeeded to a favorable degree, a·nd&#13;
those who would know of their successes may examine the&#13;
records of .the college.&#13;
In debate and oratory the society has endeavored to maintain a standing which while training its members, will also aid&#13;
in maintaining the standard of the college in this work. The&#13;
college records of inter-society and inter-collegiate debate, and&#13;
of collegiate and inter-collegiate oratory will show that they&#13;
have not failed in this work so necessary to society and college.&#13;
The members of the Othonian Literary Society are trying to&#13;
maintain that social and religious standard of which the world&#13;
has such great need. For the success of its members in this&#13;
work the society would refer you to the people whom they serve.&#13;
The Othonians, while believing in strong society work, hold&#13;
that the intertists of the college should be paramount to those of&#13;
the society, and they hope and propose that in the future the&#13;
spirit which has been detrimental to the best interests of the&#13;
college shall be checked in so far as this society has the power&#13;
of furthering the spirit of unity. The hall is always open to the&#13;
students and patrons of the college, realizing that the existence&#13;
of any organization is conditioned on its ability to do good.&#13;
&#13;
57&#13;
56&#13;
&#13;
�1&#13;
&#13;
'THE BIRDS' CHRISTMAS CAROL'&#13;
&#13;
'THE MERCHANT OF VENICE •&#13;
&#13;
'OLD COLONIAL DAYS'&#13;
&#13;
58&#13;
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�•&#13;
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Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
\,.,&#13;
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PRESIDENT --- Philip De Grisselles&#13;
SECRETARY --- Miss Grace Whealen&#13;
&#13;
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:5&#13;
·-&#13;
&#13;
T the close of the school year of 1905 - 1906,&#13;
we, the class of worthies formerly known to&#13;
the world at large as II Middlers, 11 determined&#13;
to put away childish things, and at least make&#13;
a fair pretense to become a man. So with the&#13;
consent of the faculty we took for our own&#13;
the name Senior Academy. This name we&#13;
have bravely attempted to uphold .&#13;
Since taking the name senior and the dignity and show of&#13;
knowledge which that cognomen carries with it, we have been&#13;
able to distinguish ourselves in a number of ways. In the class&#13;
room we have shown much genius, in fact so much so that we&#13;
are already looking forward to the time when we shall no longer&#13;
be leaders of prepdom, but shall assume the right and title now&#13;
held by the mighty Freshmen.&#13;
But not alone in the class room has glory been ours. In&#13;
football the vainglorious II Middlers II were weak, and went down&#13;
to defeat before our mighty athletes in a one sided struggle.&#13;
The Senior Academy Class of 1907 is the first class from&#13;
the academy to capture the basket ball championship, winning&#13;
over all other classes in school by a goodly lead in points. The&#13;
class is well represented among the regular basket ball men of&#13;
the school.&#13;
With such a good beginning, there seems to be no reason&#13;
why our future should not be as bright, if not brighter than the&#13;
past. We are now at the foothills , but with time we will show&#13;
the quality of which we are made .&#13;
&#13;
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60&#13;
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&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
COLOR--- Cerise&#13;
&#13;
MOTIO --- Carpe Diem&#13;
YELL&#13;
Wah Hoo, Wah,&#13;
Ta, Rah, Boom,&#13;
Ri, Rah, Zip,&#13;
Ripity Boom,&#13;
&#13;
Ripity, Ripity, Ripity, Ride,&#13;
We're the Adelphians of Morningside!&#13;
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HE Adelphian Literary Society is an organization of men of academic standing, the purpose&#13;
of which is to foster those qualities in its&#13;
members, that can be developed only by the&#13;
training of a literary society.&#13;
In the Autumn of 190 I , a number of men&#13;
met and framed the constitution for this literary association&#13;
Around this constitution have grown the customs and practices of the Adelphians. At the business meetings,&#13;
fine points in parliamentary law are thoroughly threshed out. In&#13;
the open and closed door programs, the young Cicero accustoms&#13;
himself to the critical stare of his stern auditors, grapples with&#13;
his antagonist in debate, or strikes a responding chord in the&#13;
heedless hearts of his distressed listeners. An occasional social&#13;
jollification adds polish and elegance to the deep thinking Adelphian. A silver cup series of debates has been recently instituted by the society, and interest along this line has been vigorously quickened. The activity of the society is shown by the&#13;
fact that the hall, once a bare, uninviting room, has been tastefully furnished and made into a pleasant home for the organization.&#13;
A certain keen spirit pervades all the activities of the society. From the time the new member hears the blat of the old&#13;
shaggy goat, he becomes a true Adelphian, and may be depended&#13;
upon every time.&#13;
63&#13;
&#13;
62&#13;
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�HAWKEYE&#13;
MOTTO&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma,Sine Pulvere&#13;
&#13;
Gold and Silver&#13;
&#13;
YELL&#13;
Hi Ki Haw Ki My!&#13;
Whee Zip Boom Ba Zo !&#13;
Rah Rah IO Wah!&#13;
Wah Ho Hi and a Bazoo Bum,&#13;
Animus, Animus, Dictus Sum,&#13;
Haw Haw Haw, Ki Ki Ki,&#13;
Haw Ki, Haw Ki, Rah Rah Rah !&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
INE years ago an academy literary society was&#13;
christened in the name of the mighty commonwealth, dedicated to the development&#13;
among its members of the social, mental and&#13;
ethical ideal of manhood .&#13;
In the annual inter-society debate between&#13;
the Hawkeye and Adelphian Literary societies&#13;
the Hawkeyes have won three out of four decisions. If you are&#13;
unable in parliamentary drill to confound the chairman and to&#13;
put stars in his vision, if you do not know on what side of a&#13;
question you stand in debating, if you cannot write and read a&#13;
paper or deliver an address that will hush the conversation in&#13;
the back seats, take the elevator to the third floor of Main Hall,&#13;
and there every Monday and Wednesday evening in the northwest corner you may behold how these things are done. The&#13;
social side of the members is quite perfectly developed. The&#13;
system of programmes given from time to time is inigue&#13;
The&#13;
practice in parliamentary drill prepares the members to meet&#13;
and weigh in a systematic manner the great problems of life.&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
64&#13;
&#13;
�AESTHESIAN&#13;
UR last journey has been indeed a profitable&#13;
one. Our aim, to obtain the aesthetic has&#13;
&#13;
mast-head.&#13;
she was.&#13;
&#13;
been high, but we have done our best to realize it, and we believe that our efforts have&#13;
been amply repaid. Tell about our journey?&#13;
Well, we sailed out with our colors, olive&#13;
green and white, floating proudly from the&#13;
We were under Captain Laura and a brave captain&#13;
&#13;
One morning, shortly after embarking, longing for a little&#13;
recreation; we laid aside our duties and long before sunrise we&#13;
gathered in a beautiful place called Campus, from whence we&#13;
set out for that historical spot known as the Floyd monument.&#13;
Just as the sun was peering over the hills we sat down to a&#13;
bountiful breakfast. It was a delightful repast. At eight o'clock&#13;
the signal sounded and we marched back and resumed our&#13;
voyage.&#13;
At the end of two months we had reached a warm sunny&#13;
climate and our crew bade each other farewell, and started for&#13;
various beautiful places where they expected to spend three&#13;
months. On the appointed day our crew came cheerfully back,&#13;
and this time under the new commander, Captain Hazel. All&#13;
of the former crew, of course, were not there. Some of them&#13;
had not come back, for which we were all very · sorry. Still&#13;
there were a number of new sailors who were eager to board&#13;
our vessel, and we gladly welcomed them. We now turned our&#13;
faces northward. There were a number of treacherous places,&#13;
but with our noble captain at the helm we passed them all safely.&#13;
Just before entering Port Semester, we sent an invitation to&#13;
our brother adelphians to join us on board. That evening of&#13;
merriment will not soon be forgotten. A few days later we&#13;
entered port and took on several new passengers. Turning&#13;
southward under the guidance of Captain Elizabeth we are&#13;
steering safely homeward. We will all be glad to arrive there,&#13;
but none of us intend to stay. All will be ready and all look&#13;
forward with pleasant anticipations to the start on our seventh&#13;
voyage.&#13;
66&#13;
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67&#13;
&#13;
�CRESCENT&#13;
PRESIDENT--- Mabel Moulin&#13;
SECRETARY---Elsie Stevens&#13;
COLORS--- Green and White&#13;
YELL&#13;
Boom a linger bow,&#13;
Ching a linger chee,&#13;
Tu laku wah,&#13;
Tu laku wee,&#13;
Crescents, Crescents, Whee!&#13;
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u&#13;
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68&#13;
&#13;
the eleventh of June, six years ago, a number&#13;
of girls met and organized the Crescent Literary Society under a charter granted by the&#13;
president of Morningside College.&#13;
Every Friday afternoon they met in a&#13;
large, well lighted hall, used jointly by them&#13;
and their brother society, the Hawkeyes, to&#13;
discuss and transact the business of the society. Although the&#13;
charter members have graduated and are making their mark in&#13;
the world, we still keep the same afternoon for our business&#13;
meetings and are still developing true womanly characters by&#13;
which the society is known. A number of programs well attended&#13;
by the public have been given. The success of these programs&#13;
is due to the talent and originality of the society members.&#13;
There is, however, another side to the Crescent Literary Society. This is the social side. Not only have their many social&#13;
gatherings given during the past ·year afforded great pleasure,&#13;
but they hav been a means of promoting among the coworkers a spir'it of good will and fellowship. The society hall&#13;
is_furnished in dark green and the society members endeavor to&#13;
make it always appear neat and attractive. All of these things&#13;
go to accomplish the purpose of the society---the forming of&#13;
true character.&#13;
69&#13;
&#13;
�THE GRAFTERS&#13;
Or The Way Morningside Students Spend&#13;
Their Summer Vacations&#13;
&#13;
" If all the men were two foot, six,&#13;
And all the women six foot, two ;&#13;
And all the men kissed all the girls,&#13;
I I d sell stepladders, wouldn I t you? n&#13;
Good afternoon, Mrs. E. Z. Mark, my name is George Adolphus Moir, and, as I have a little spare time this afternoon, I&#13;
&#13;
70&#13;
&#13;
have kindly consented to devote about 1&#13;
steen minutes of it to your&#13;
edification. As perhaps you do not know that I am the only&#13;
and original agent for the Twentieth Century Book of Facts, I&#13;
shall tell you. This book is absolutely unique in the way it is&#13;
gotten up. It contains valuable information of all kinds, some&#13;
of which you may never have dreamed of. It gives sure cures&#13;
for warts, burns, scald head, bald head, chapped hands and&#13;
dirty feet.&#13;
As I entered I noticed two children on the porch, whom I&#13;
take it are little E. Z. Marks. Now the county superintendent,&#13;
Mr. Ephenor Adrastus Brown, highly recommends this book&#13;
and states that it is his desire that a copy of it should be in every&#13;
home where there are little children. Remembering this and&#13;
the fact that you have undoubtedly heard of me before, you can&#13;
easily see that I am doing a sort of a missionary work in this&#13;
community of misguided people. I am here to fill a long felt&#13;
want (in the region of my pocket book). But, to return to the&#13;
book. The prospectus which you see here is but a few pages&#13;
selected at random from the entire work. My friend, Shakespeare, highly recommends this book. Cicero truly said, when&#13;
he looked it over last winter, "Not to know what has been transacted in the past is to be considered always as a child." Hence,&#13;
not to have one of these books is to have attained perpetual&#13;
childhood. Other learned men have recommended the book.&#13;
Dr. H. G. Campbell, when I told him that l had disposed of&#13;
over three hundred copies, remarked, "That's fine," and offered&#13;
to buy a partnership in my business. Professor Griffith thinks&#13;
highly of the work and Dr. Haynes said that it was a very brilliant book. Binding? Oh ! Yes ! "The Twentieth Century Book&#13;
of Facts, it costs but $3.90 in leather backs." Leather is always&#13;
to be preferred. Pardon me, Mrs. E. Z. Mark, but would you&#13;
kindly place your name on this line here as a guarantee to&#13;
yourself that I will deliver the book. Here is my pencil. Yes,&#13;
right there. Good "buy," Mrs. E. Z. Mark.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�72&#13;
&#13;
�The Co - ordinate Woman's&#13;
College&#13;
President W . S. Lewis&#13;
HE law of development operates in education&#13;
as well as in other human activities&#13;
In an&#13;
age and country when change in methods of&#13;
husbandry, transportation, manufacture and&#13;
methods of living is the rule and adherence&#13;
to old ways and customs the exception, we&#13;
might expect equally rapid changes in the development of educational ideals. The young men and women of today are called&#13;
upon to catch the spirit of the age in which they live, and those&#13;
who are responsible for their education should be able in a&#13;
sense to read the signs of the times and seek to prepare them&#13;
for the activities of tomorrow. The real spirit of our republic&#13;
is crystalize d in our educational institutions, and our Christian&#13;
colle ges stand for the expression of the highest ideals of the republic. Of all public institutions influencing the homes of the&#13;
people, none, in our judgment, is more important than the&#13;
college. The public school has the child for its problem ; the&#13;
university, the developed man and woman; the college has to&#13;
deal with young men and women in that most important time&#13;
when the ir ideals will take deepest root and will influence all&#13;
their subsequent lives. It is, therefore, of the utmost importance&#13;
that those who have the opportunity of establishing and maintaining colleges should hav.e constantly in mind the relation of&#13;
the home to the problem of the commonwealth.&#13;
The separate institutions of learning for the education of&#13;
men and women have b e en inherited from Europe. The idea&#13;
had its deepest root in the Roman Catholic Church, and is based&#13;
upon the peculiar notions of that organism which had from&#13;
earliest times found their expression in the monastery and nunnery. A thought takes deeper root than the institutions which&#13;
express it and is often maintained in another form when these&#13;
institutions have bee n discontinued. The development of separate institutions for the education of young men and women is&#13;
a most striking illustration of the truth.&#13;
The co-educational idea is purely American and is consequently of very recent origin. But little more than half a century has passed since a woman first stood upon the same rostrum&#13;
with her brothers and received the same academic degree. This&#13;
is but another way of saying that while co-education is in our&#13;
judgment in harmony with the spirit of the republic, yet it is&#13;
74&#13;
&#13;
very largely an experiment. In the years serious problems have&#13;
arisen which claim the most earnest thought on the part of those&#13;
best able to give it. We believe that the principle of co-education is right and is founded upon the most excellent conception&#13;
of the relations of man and woman. But we also believe that&#13;
there are certain defects in the system which ought by all means&#13;
to be remedied.&#13;
The great work of education is to increase the efficiency of&#13;
man and woman for service. Efficiency of service by hand, by&#13;
brain, by heart is the key note. The sphere of man and woman&#13;
in the economy of society is not the same. A kind Providence&#13;
recognizes this and by the very act of creation sets its seal upon&#13;
the differentiation of their natures. The woman is different by&#13;
nature from the man and this essential fact should be recognized&#13;
in the problem of education. There are some subjects which&#13;
should be emphasized in the education of women that ought&#13;
not to be emphasized in the education of men. The reverse is&#13;
equally true. There are some subjects which ought to be emphasized in the education of a woman that ought not to be&#13;
mentioned in the presence of her brothers. The men, too,&#13;
have problems peculiar to their sex which if ignored can not&#13;
but work to the disadvantage of the individual, the home and&#13;
the commonwealth. Appreciating these facts and seeking to&#13;
realize the best in the education of our sons and daughters, even&#13;
though this should be attained by sacrifice, we are committed&#13;
to the establishment of a co-ordinate college for the education&#13;
of women.&#13;
The Garretson Place is a beautiful plot of ground consisting&#13;
of four acres just across the avenue from the southeast corner of&#13;
the campus. Here was erected at a cost of $60,000 a magnificent dwelling so large and commodious that with slight changes it&#13;
may be adapted to the service of a central administration building. A wing could be extended to the north at reasonable expense so that in this home there might be accommodated&#13;
seventy young women.&#13;
There is plenty of room for the erection of other homes, a&#13;
gymnasium, and such other buildings as might be required. A&#13;
more desirable place could scarcely be imagined. Convenient&#13;
to college buildings, secluded by a fine growth of shrubbery,&#13;
the appointments in every particular are very inviting. This&#13;
spot has now been dedicated to the service of the daughters of&#13;
Sioux City and of its contiguous territory. Here it is hoped will&#13;
be realized the noblest ideas of education, physical, intellectual&#13;
and moral, which contribute to the upbuilding of the home.&#13;
Fortunate indeed are those who shall have part in this noble&#13;
work. Their sacrifice and service will contribute to the wellbeing of all the generations.&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
�SAT by my study fire late one afternoon in January, thinking over college days and listening&#13;
to the moaning of the wind as it blew the snow&#13;
in great white drifts against the windows.&#13;
And as I sat there musing, a sudden burst of&#13;
flame from the smouldering log lighted up the&#13;
fast gathering twilight in the room, casting a&#13;
ruddy glow over the dim shapes round about. Yonder in the&#13;
corner I could see the old black clock which has stood a faithful&#13;
monitor, for many years; and a faded pennant hanging over the&#13;
mantel seemed to glow once more with the old familiar colors.&#13;
Nearby I noticed a little shelf of books, their titles gleaming&#13;
faintly in the firelight---" Bumblebee 11 ---"Maroon"--- The rest&#13;
were lost in the shadow, but I knew them all, and jumping up I&#13;
gathered the whole well worn pile in my arms. I put them&#13;
gently down upon the hearth, in the open glare of the fire; and&#13;
flinging myself upon the rug beside them I straightway forgot&#13;
the w ind and the storm, feasting again on the memories of other&#13;
days.&#13;
I picked up a little tattered book in paper covers. Dear old&#13;
and White! Dedicated II to our beloved president, Dr. W.&#13;
S. Lewis. 11 How long ago it seemed, and what a venture the&#13;
publication of this first annual must have been.&#13;
I could not but&#13;
admire the courage of the class of I 902 as I turned the pages of&#13;
this little book which typifies so well the early period of our college and breathes the very spirit of those days of toil and&#13;
struggle.&#13;
&#13;
The others as I read them over seemed very much alike in&#13;
plan. The "Maroon, 11 published in 1904 by the 105 1s, is dedicated to Dr. Bennett Mitchell, president of the board of trustees;&#13;
the "Whoops of the Sioux " of the following year, bears this inscription, "To you who have departed from Morningside College and find that sometimes during life's journey you are&#13;
sad and lonely"; while the book published by the class of I 90 7&#13;
is dedicated to the much beloved Latin teacher, Miss Dimmitt,&#13;
and is the first to bear the permanent title, "The Sioux"&#13;
Just five little books. The careless reader might hurriedly&#13;
scan their pages, read a joke or two perhaps, laugh at a cartoon,&#13;
and think that he had gotten all which they had to give. But,&#13;
Ah ! I thought, how much they signify to one who has known&#13;
and lived the years that they represent. An annual is more than&#13;
a mere jest book; it is a rare store-house of memory, the preserved spice and ·sweetness of college life.&#13;
And as I lay there before the fireplace, idly turning the&#13;
pages of those cherished books, dreaming of other days, there&#13;
came to me the memory of my own junior year, when we were&#13;
toiling on one of these same books. What ambitions, what aspirations. Aye, with apologies to Longfellow,---" In what a forge&#13;
and what a heat, 11 were shaped the pages of that book. Perhaps&#13;
we learned little of Greek or Latin, but we learned much of literary critit ism and high finance. We dabbled in the craft of&#13;
the news reporter; we even acquired the art of the vendor of&#13;
books; and all the social obligations which we perforce paid our&#13;
upperclassmen, only served to broaden and extend this ne'er&#13;
to be forgotten course in practical experience.&#13;
Verily, I thought, to be a college junior means more than to&#13;
occupy a seat mid way between the sophomores and the seniors;&#13;
for "to have been a junior is to have acquired a liberal education."&#13;
M. T., '07.&#13;
&#13;
II Blue&#13;
&#13;
Turning to the II Bumblebee of I 903 " I found tokens of increased prosperity, cloth covers, gilt title, and larger pages. "TO&#13;
Y ou, 11 a friendly dedication which gives us all a common interest&#13;
in the book.&#13;
76&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
�78&#13;
&#13;
�The Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
of Music&#13;
HE Conservatory is closely affiliated with the&#13;
College, although under the immediate control&#13;
of the director, who is also professor of music&#13;
in the College. The Conservatory faculty is&#13;
composed of instructors who have had very&#13;
successful teaching experience, and who are&#13;
thorough in their various departments.&#13;
Twice each month conservatory recitals are given m the&#13;
college auditorium, and to these recitals the general public is invited. To the college student and to the student of music the&#13;
hearing of good music is just as vital as the study which is made&#13;
in the various departments in which the students may be enrolled. With this in view it has been the aim of the conservatory to place before the conservatory and college students each&#13;
year a number of the very best things that can be secured along&#13;
musical lines. During the past year a number of good things&#13;
have been appreciated by the students, the best of these being&#13;
the two recitals given by John Hermann Loud, of Boston, at the&#13;
dedication of the new pipe organ, and the concert given by Miss&#13;
Ellen Beach Yaw, soprano, assisted by Maximilian Dick, violinist, and Georgiella Lay, solo pianist. These concerts were in&#13;
addition to the regular musical numbers of the college lecture&#13;
course, and the regular descriptive pipe organ recitals which are&#13;
given throughout the school year by the director of the conservatory.&#13;
Each year a May Music Festival is given under the direction&#13;
of the conservatory, and at this festival some of the best musical&#13;
talent of the United States appears. Besides the concerts of&#13;
the noted artists who are secured for the occasion an oratorio is&#13;
given, for which the choral union, an organization of students,&#13;
assisted by the best Sioux City talent, holds rehearsals weekly&#13;
throughout the school year.&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�The&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Pipe&#13;
Organ&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
OPENING&#13;
RECITA LS&#13;
ON&#13;
THE&#13;
AUDITORIUM&#13;
ORGAN&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
Given by JOHN HERMANN LOUD, of Boston&#13;
PROGRAMMES&#13;
I.&#13;
II.&#13;
Ill.&#13;
IV.&#13;
V.&#13;
VI.&#13;
VII.&#13;
VIII.&#13;
IX.&#13;
X.&#13;
I.&#13;
II.&#13;
Ill.&#13;
IV.&#13;
V.&#13;
VI.&#13;
VII.&#13;
VIII.&#13;
IX.&#13;
X.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday Evening, November 14, 1906&#13;
Bach&#13;
F antasie and Fugue in G minor .&#13;
Capocci&#13;
Allegretto in E flat&#13;
Shelley&#13;
Melodie du Soir .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. Guilmant&#13;
Fourth Organ Sonata in D Minor .&#13;
c. Menuetto&#13;
a. Allegro Assai&#13;
d. Finale&#13;
b. Andante&#13;
Parker&#13;
Romanza, Opus 17, No. 3&#13;
Callaerts&#13;
Capriccio, Opus 33&#13;
. Hollins&#13;
Intermezzo in D flat&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Rheinberger&#13;
Aspiration and Contemplation&#13;
Improvisation&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Whiting&#13;
Concert Etude in B flat .&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
:r:&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
Thursday evening, November 15, 1906&#13;
Bach&#13;
Prelude and Fugue in A minor .&#13;
. Widor&#13;
Contes D'Avril (Marche Nuptiale)&#13;
Boellmann&#13;
Duexieme Suite Pour Orgue&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
c. Andantino&#13;
a. Prelude Pastoral&#13;
b. Allegro con moto&#13;
d . Final Marche&#13;
Guilmant&#13;
Priere et Bercuese&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. Faulkes&#13;
Allegro Symphonique in F minor&#13;
Ferrata&#13;
Nocturne in A flat.&#13;
Wheeldon&#13;
Canzona in D&#13;
.&#13;
Wolstenholme&#13;
Romance and Allegretto&#13;
. .&#13;
Improvisation&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. Mendelssohn&#13;
Second Sonata ( Maestoso and Fugue) .&#13;
82&#13;
&#13;
83&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
84&#13;
&#13;
A GROUP OF STUDIOS&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
85&#13;
&#13;
THE AUDITORIUM (FROM THE STAGE)&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College School of&#13;
Expression&#13;
"Kentucky Cardinal"&#13;
Florence B. Davidson&#13;
Reader&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Department of Expression&#13;
June 9th, College Auditorium, Eight o I clock&#13;
Class of 1906&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
How Dot Heard " The Messiah II&#13;
&#13;
2. Scene from II The Second Mrs. Jim"&#13;
3. "Audrey"&#13;
&#13;
4. Naughty Zell&#13;
5. " The Famine "&#13;
6. The Colonel I s Experiment&#13;
7. Scene from II Evangeline"&#13;
8. The Book Agent&#13;
9. II Obstructive Hat in the Pit II&#13;
10. The Bells&#13;
BEN HUR&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
TOWNER&#13;
&#13;
LEW WALLACE&#13;
&#13;
The Three Wise Men; The Star of Bethlehem ;&#13;
The Angel and The Shepherds&#13;
Miss Baker&#13;
Ben-Hur and Messala; 11 Down Eros, Up Mars! 11&#13;
To the Galleys for Life&#13;
Miss Bartlett&#13;
" On the day that I meet him, help me, thou God of my&#13;
fathers , to some fitting, special vengeance." Miss Davidson&#13;
In the Palace of ldernee&#13;
Miss Bartlett&#13;
The Healing of the Lepers&#13;
Miss Baker&#13;
"If you cannot build temples for the worship of God&#13;
above grpund, then build them below ground." Miss Davidson&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
Miss Davidson&#13;
Miss Platts&#13;
Miss Weary&#13;
Miss Rorem&#13;
Class&#13;
Miss Kilborne&#13;
Miss Platts&#13;
Miss Fletcher&#13;
Miss Davidson&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
�Normal Department, established especially&#13;
for the training of teachers, is fulfilling well its&#13;
purpose, having for several years been constantly increasing in the total enrollment and&#13;
in the efficiency of the work done. The enrollment this year reaches nearly a hundred.&#13;
A much larger number are here during the&#13;
summer sessions, the totals running up nearly to three hundred.&#13;
In addition to the regular normal work 'several courses in&#13;
education are offered for regular college stude nts, thus aiding&#13;
those who, though they are carrying regular college work, intend&#13;
to make teaching a profession. Many graduates and undergraduates of the department are filling important positions in&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
large towns and cities in the territory contiguous to Sioux City.&#13;
The courses offered are both academic and professional,&#13;
the academic courses being taken under the regular college and&#13;
academy faculty. The professional courses are offered under&#13;
experienced and able instructors and the work is thorough. The&#13;
courses are designed to fit teachers for positions in high schools&#13;
and colleges, as well as for primary positions and grade work.&#13;
The primary courses of the department are under the direction of a specialist in primary work and methods, and one who&#13;
has spent several years in both preparation and practice for this&#13;
kind of work. The work that the department is doing is howing most beneficial results in meeting the ever increasing d emand for technically trained primary teachers.&#13;
The graduating class this year will be large r than ever be0&#13;
&#13;
fore. Some of the class are to take up positions for next year,&#13;
and the remainder have announced that they will remain and&#13;
I&#13;
complete the regular college course.&#13;
A well selected normal library will add greatly to the benefits of the department in the near future.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
89 '&#13;
&#13;
88&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�.Jacob S. Wendel '09&#13;
Clair Manning '07&#13;
Ethel Delmage '00&#13;
Ivan Bloom '10&#13;
Florence Clark '08&#13;
&#13;
ed:&#13;
&#13;
an&#13;
&#13;
Address all business&#13;
commu&#13;
make all subscrl ptlons&#13;
. Morningside Printing Co.&#13;
If you do not receive your paper regularly, or&#13;
if you changeyour address you will confer&#13;
a favor by notifying the Business Manager&#13;
at once. 'l'HE collegian&#13;
REPORTER will be&#13;
sent toSubscribers until ordered stopped and&#13;
all arrearagesare paid.&#13;
&#13;
fro&#13;
&#13;
We wish to Invite the attention or our readers.&#13;
especially our students. to the advertise·&#13;
mrnts !n our columns. We solicit for each&#13;
firm herein represented a share or your pat&#13;
&#13;
en&#13;
ur&#13;
&#13;
ecnage&#13;
&#13;
editorial&#13;
Style does not mean patterning&#13;
after others.&#13;
There is a difference between&#13;
and jokes of revnege&#13;
90&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
�Cushman&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Chapman&#13;
&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
&#13;
Inter -Society Debate&#13;
Inter -Society Debate&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
"Resolved that a commercial policy based upon reciprocity&#13;
would be better for the people of the United States&#13;
in the future than a continuation of the&#13;
present high protective&#13;
policy II&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE --- Philomathean&#13;
Corwin Tay !or&#13;
Edwin M. Brown&#13;
Jacob Wendel&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE --- Othonian&#13;
Stanley Collins&#13;
A. L. Miller&#13;
A. G. Cushman&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
" Resolved that an income tax is a desirable part in the scheme&#13;
of federal taxation "&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE---Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE --- Hawkeye&#13;
Paul Carson&#13;
L. Hamren&#13;
L. R. Chapman&#13;
&#13;
George R. Day&#13;
Ross Phelps&#13;
Charles Cushman&#13;
&#13;
DECISION---Three for the negative&#13;
&#13;
DECISION---One for the affirmative, two for the negative&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
&#13;
Wendel&#13;
92&#13;
&#13;
Taylor&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Phelps&#13;
93&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
�Home Oratorical Contest&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Taylor&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
lnter--Collegiate Debate&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE vs. UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
Program&#13;
&#13;
To be held at Fayette, Iowa, May 17, 1907&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Constitutionality Granted; Resolved that the Federal&#13;
Government should levy a progressive&#13;
Inheritance Tax "&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE--- Upper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE--- Morningside&#13;
&#13;
The Man for the Age&#13;
The American Way&#13;
The Foreign Invader&#13;
In Unity There is strength&#13;
Our Heritage and Our Duty&#13;
The Crisis of the Twentieth Century&#13;
&#13;
. Frank Wood&#13;
. Jay Whitaker&#13;
Percy W. Brown&#13;
. H. H. Sawyer&#13;
Walter H. Johnson&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE TEAM&#13;
Corwin Taylor 107&#13;
Stanley Collins '07&#13;
A. G. Cushman 109&#13;
&#13;
First Place&#13;
Second Place&#13;
. Third Place&#13;
&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
H.1H. Sawyer&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Prizes, $50.00, $15.00 and $10.00&#13;
&#13;
94&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
�Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
Science&#13;
PPRECIATING the need of an organization m&#13;
Morningside College to promote interest m&#13;
the study of scientific subjects, and to keep in&#13;
touch with the most recent developments in&#13;
the world of science, Professors Scott, Stephens and McDowell, with a number of the students in the science departments, organized the&#13;
College Society of Science on December 18, 1906. The original&#13;
membership consisted of the professors who are at the heads of&#13;
the departments of Biology, Chemistry and Physics, and five&#13;
students from each of these departments. Membership is open&#13;
not only to department majors, but to Sophomores and Freshmen as well.&#13;
At each bi-weekly meeting a program is given consisting of&#13;
papers or talks by the members of the club upon scientific subjects of general interest. Some of the papers already given are:&#13;
&#13;
Ida Lewis&#13;
&#13;
In Physics: --- 11 Instruments Used by the Weather Bureau."&#13;
" Block System, As Used by Railroads."&#13;
" Wireless Telegraphy, with Demonstrations."&#13;
&#13;
Program&#13;
L. R. Keckler&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
Arthur Tumbleson&#13;
Ida Lewis&#13;
Edwin Brown&#13;
Silas Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Republic or Monarchy --- Which&#13;
The Problem of Progress&#13;
A Plea for Action&#13;
The Conflict of Today&#13;
A Stride in National Progress&#13;
Guardians of Our Flag&#13;
&#13;
First Place&#13;
Second Place&#13;
&#13;
Ida Lewis&#13;
Jay Whitaker .&#13;
&#13;
Dewey Prizes, $25.00, $15.00&#13;
&#13;
In Chemistry: --- " Liquefaction of Gases."&#13;
" Explosives."&#13;
" Modern Assaying Methods."&#13;
II History of Chemistry from the earliest&#13;
Times Through the Period of Alchemy. 11&#13;
In Biology: --- " Habits and Longevity of Ants. 11&#13;
" Spontaneous Generation."&#13;
" Prehistoric Man. 11&#13;
" Pathogenic Protozoa."&#13;
II Pathogenic Bacteria."&#13;
The charter members and officers of the society are:&#13;
&#13;
R. C. Nichols, President; H. E. Groom, Vice-President ;&#13;
Cora Frear, Se cretary; C. E. Magoun, Treasurer; P. E . F redendoll, C. F. Brooks, W. H. Clary, Martha Macdonald, M. C. McConkey, AG. Tumbleson, E . J. Fry, Allen P . Berkstresser,]. R.&#13;
Day, D. F. Robbins, H. N. Staples.&#13;
Executive Board : --- W. W. Scott, Chemistry ; T. C. Stephens, Biology; M. F. McDowell, Physics.&#13;
97&#13;
&#13;
96&#13;
&#13;
�z&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
98&#13;
&#13;
HE Student Congress is one of Morningside 1s&#13;
most recent organizations. Being entirely&#13;
without precedent its establishment presented&#13;
a problem of no little consideration. The&#13;
present members are endeavoring to complete the permanent organization of the congress, and at the same time deal with the&#13;
work already mapped out for them. The scope of their work is&#13;
to be gradually broadened. There are sixteen members, each&#13;
class electing a representative from each of the four college&#13;
literary societies.&#13;
The purpose of the congress may best be expressed by the&#13;
following, taken from the constitution : "The chief function of&#13;
the American college is to train citizens. The first requisite for&#13;
excellence in a citizen is the ability to conform to high moral&#13;
standards. To be able to govern one's self under provocation&#13;
is esteemed a virtue, but to bring one's whole life into subjugation to the golden rule should be the aim of every genuine&#13;
student. The genius of our republic is that the citizens shall&#13;
control themselves by laws made by their representatives. Representative government is therefore germane to all of those institutions whose chief function is the making of citizens."&#13;
The purposes of the Student Congress of Morningside College are:&#13;
I. To furnish a medium through which the student body&#13;
may express its desires on those matters which directly affect&#13;
student life.&#13;
II. To formulate expressions of convictions and purposes&#13;
regarding the habits and customs of the student body, especially&#13;
those pertaining to classes and societies.&#13;
III. T O co-operate with the president and faculty of the institution in formulating such rules and regulations with regard&#13;
to the government of the student body as pertain especially_ to&#13;
student privileges, recognizing always that the president and&#13;
faculty are responsible for the discipline and government of the&#13;
college.&#13;
99&#13;
&#13;
�The Volunteer Band&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
OMING almost as a New Year resolution in&#13;
1901, the plan for a student volunteer band&#13;
was brought to a reality in the spring term of&#13;
the same year, when the Morningside College&#13;
Student Volunteer Band was first formed .&#13;
The seven original members immediately&#13;
sought affiliation with the National Student&#13;
Volunteer movement under its motto, " It is my purpose, if God&#13;
permits, to become a foreign missionary."&#13;
In November of the same year, two Morningsiders, the first&#13;
to go to the foreign field, sailed for India. III health has since&#13;
necessitated their return to the home land. Since the first organization eleven have made the trip to foreign fields, and of&#13;
these seven are still in the service.&#13;
To China: --- Miss Bartlett, Lydia Trimble, Fred Trimble&#13;
Stanley Carson, Grace Darling Carson, Rena Bowker Trimble,&#13;
Mable Sia.&#13;
To India: --- Mr. and Mrs. W.&#13;
count of ill health.&#13;
&#13;
B. Empey. ( Home on ac-&#13;
&#13;
To the Phillipine Islands : --- Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
( Hom e on account of ill health.)&#13;
&#13;
C. F .&#13;
&#13;
Hartzell.&#13;
&#13;
To the Maderia Islands: --- Herbert ]. Calkins.&#13;
The band has yearly increased in size until now, six years&#13;
since it was first organized, the membership has increased from&#13;
the original $even to twenty-one.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
101&#13;
100&#13;
&#13;
�The Young Men I s Christian Ass I n&#13;
&#13;
P. Brown&#13;
Wendel&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
S. Collins&#13;
&#13;
Chapman&#13;
&#13;
P. Collins&#13;
&#13;
The Young Women I s Christian Ass I n&#13;
&#13;
Dickson&#13;
&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
Watts&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Woodford&#13;
Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Haskins&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
President, Stanley B. Collins&#13;
Vice-President, Alva Miller&#13;
Secretary, Percy Brown&#13;
Treasurer, Paul Collins&#13;
&#13;
President, Mirah Mills&#13;
Vice-President, Blanche Watts&#13;
Secretary, Etta Mahood&#13;
Treasurer, Lura Matteson&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
Glenn M. Squires&#13;
. C. G . Manning&#13;
Edwm M. Brown&#13;
Paul Collins&#13;
Alva Miller&#13;
Jacob Wendel&#13;
&#13;
Bible Study .&#13;
Mission Study&#13;
Social&#13;
Finance&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Membership&#13;
&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Matteson&#13;
&#13;
Mable Haskins&#13;
Blanche Watts&#13;
Faith Woodford&#13;
Ella Dickson&#13;
Lura Matteson&#13;
Martie Swem&#13;
Jeannette Bartlett&#13;
&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Membership&#13;
Social&#13;
Missionary&#13;
Finance&#13;
Intercollegiate&#13;
Bible Study .&#13;
&#13;
The Y. M. C. A. Lecture Course&#13;
Dr. Austen K. DuBlois&#13;
Isabel Garghill Beecher&#13;
Leonora Jackson Concert Company&#13;
Reno W elbourne&#13;
The Dunbar Quartette&#13;
Dr. ]. Merritte Driver&#13;
102&#13;
&#13;
Functions Given Under Auspices of Y. W. C. A.&#13;
April 6--- Red Ribbon-Green Ribbon Banquet&#13;
September 15 --- Y. W. C. A. Lawn Party at Garretson Place&#13;
September 17---General Informal Reception for New Students&#13;
January 20--- Reception for Miss Henshaw&#13;
103&#13;
&#13;
�In the Memory of&#13;
Our Student&#13;
Dead&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
JESSE ALDEN DUBOIS, of the Class of 1907.&#13;
LAURETIA JOSEPHINE NAUGHTON,&#13;
of the Normal Department.&#13;
&#13;
104&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
�Commencement Week&#13;
Morningside College,,June 7 to 14, 1906&#13;
Auditorium, College Hall&#13;
&#13;
Oration&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Know Thyself&#13;
&#13;
Catherine T reischmann&#13;
Oration ·&#13;
&#13;
Edmund Burke&#13;
G. A. Moir&#13;
&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday, June 12&#13;
&#13;
Thursday, June 7, 8: 15 p. m.&#13;
Graduating Exercises of Normal Department.&#13;
Address by Supt. M. W. Stevens, Sioux City Schools.&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas.&#13;
&#13;
9:00 a. m. Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees.&#13;
12:30 p . m. Examinations close.&#13;
3:00 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Senior Class Play,&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
Comedy of Errors. "&#13;
&#13;
Saturday, June 9&#13;
Graduating Exercises of the Department of Elocution.&#13;
4 p. m. Recital by Martha L. Whitaker, assisted by the class&#13;
Glad to See You&#13;
Cooke&#13;
Little Mary's Wish&#13;
Blinn&#13;
The Famine (Class)&#13;
Longfellow&#13;
A Martyr to the Cause&#13;
Conrad&#13;
The Bells ( Class)&#13;
Poe&#13;
Her Cuban Tea&#13;
Phelps&#13;
Greek Posing&#13;
Hazel Platts&#13;
Too Late for the Train&#13;
Anon&#13;
The Lost Chord&#13;
Proctor&#13;
Part I.&#13;
Introduction&#13;
.&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
The Burning of Rome&#13;
A. G. Cushman&#13;
Vinicius I Search for Lygia&#13;
Miss Rorem&#13;
Martyrdom of the Christians&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
Lygia1s Imprisonment&#13;
Miss Kilborne&#13;
The Inspiration of Ursus&#13;
Miss Fletcher&#13;
Part II.&#13;
The Kentucky Cardinal ( Arranged by Miss Davidson)&#13;
James Lane Allen Miss Davidson&#13;
&#13;
Sunday, June IO&#13;
9:30 a. m . Love Feast, led by Rev. W. T. Macdonald.&#13;
10:30 a. m. Baccalaureate Services.&#13;
Address by President W. S. Lewis.&#13;
Annual Services Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A.&#13;
Address by Rev. George Soltau.&#13;
8:15 p. m. Annual Sermon--- Rev. Robert Bagnell, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Monday, June 11, 8: 15 p. m.&#13;
Graduating Exercises of the Academy.&#13;
Serenade&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Lieb ling&#13;
&#13;
Miss Pearl Mason.&#13;
Oration&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
A Woman's Intuition&#13;
&#13;
Laura Cushman.&#13;
Oration&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Modern Life Insurance&#13;
&#13;
F. H . Klippel.&#13;
Twilight Bells&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
C. A. White&#13;
&#13;
Ladies I Chorus&#13;
Oration&#13;
Oration&#13;
Piano Solo&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Alexander the Great&#13;
Etta Mahood&#13;
.&#13;
The Strength of the Nation&#13;
Will F. Hay&#13;
Miss Faith Woodford&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
Solinus, Duke of Ephesus&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
C. F. Hartzell&#13;
Aegeon, A Merchant of Syracuse .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. 0. M. Foote&#13;
Ant\pholus of Ephesus Twin Brothers Sons to&#13;
G. E. Milner&#13;
Ant1pholus of Syracuse Amelia and Aegeon R. E. Heilman&#13;
Dromio of Ephesus Twin Brothers, Servants]&#13;
A L. Brower&#13;
Dromio of Syracuse to the two Antipholuses&#13;
Glenn Minkler&#13;
Balthazar, A Merchant&#13;
Estie Boddy&#13;
Angelo, A Goldsmith&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
H. ]. Calkins&#13;
First Merchant, Friend of Antipholus of Syracuse, Ruby Flinn&#13;
Second Merchant, Trading with Angelo .&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson&#13;
Pinch, A Conjurer&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Ruby Flinn&#13;
Aemelia, the Abbess, Wife of Aegeon&#13;
Evva Erskine&#13;
Adriana, Wife of Antipholus of Ephesus&#13;
. Ruby Trimble&#13;
Luciana, Her Sister .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Gertrude Crossan&#13;
Gaolers, Attendants and Others.&#13;
8: 15 p . m. Graduating Exercises of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
Concerto in E flat&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Miss Mossman&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Shattuck&#13;
At Evening&#13;
Male Quartet&#13;
Wagner-Bendel&#13;
Ballade from the II Flying Dutchman "&#13;
I&#13;
Miss Gilmon&#13;
Mascheroni&#13;
For All Eternity&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Miss Smylie&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Concerto in D Minor, Andante-Presto&#13;
Miss Ritz&#13;
Buck&#13;
Where the Lindens Bloom&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Mr. Herbert Calkins&#13;
107&#13;
&#13;
�Concertstuck, Finale&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Weber&#13;
&#13;
Miss Williams&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Arditi&#13;
Miss Whinery&#13;
Concerto in F sharp Minor, Andante Finale&#13;
Hiller&#13;
Miss Mason&#13;
The Lost Chord&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
Sullivan&#13;
Ladies I Chorus&#13;
Awarding of Diplomas&#13;
President W. S. Lewis&#13;
Parla&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday, June 13&#13;
9:30 a. m.&#13;
11:00 a. m.&#13;
12:00 m.&#13;
1:30 p.m.&#13;
3:30 p. m.&#13;
8:15 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Students' Farewell Chapel.&#13;
Marking Out of New Athletic Park.&#13;
Alumni Business Meeting.&#13;
Annual Alumni Banquet.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Atheneum Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Zetalethean Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Philomathean Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Othonian Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Lecture, Rev. Robert BagneII, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday, June 14, Commencement Day&#13;
10:30 a. m. Graduating Exercises.&#13;
Processional&#13;
Hymn 612&#13;
Invocation&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Piano Solo, Rigoletto F antasie .&#13;
.&#13;
Verdi - Liszt&#13;
Miss Nina Wheeler&#13;
Commencement Address, Rev. W. H. Jordan, D. D., Minneapolis&#13;
Trio, Lift Thine Eyes (Elijah) .&#13;
.&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Ladies I Chorus&#13;
Chorus, Be Not Afraid (Elijah)&#13;
.&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Conferring of Degrees&#13;
President W. S. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
IN THE SUMMER HOUSE&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
109&#13;
&#13;
�The Alumni&#13;
1891&#13;
Alvah R. Toothaker, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
J. 8. Trimble, Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Pearl A. Woodford, Sergeant Bluff, Ia.&#13;
T. F. Warner, Osage, Iowa.&#13;
1904&#13;
1893&#13;
John K. Ackenback, Peoria, Illinois.&#13;
Ira R. Aldrich, Hartley, Iowa.&#13;
Ed. Mahood, St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
J. H. O'Donoghue, Storm Lake, Iowa. Fred S. Carson. Hinghua, China.&#13;
1894&#13;
Grace Darling, Hinghua, China.&#13;
E. M. Corbett, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
(Mrs. F. .S Carson) .&#13;
1895&#13;
George W. Finch Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Fred J. Plondke, Minneapolis, Minn. David E. Hadden Alta, Iowa.&#13;
E. L. Benedict, Hoquiam, Wn.&#13;
Mabel A. Killam, Ocheyedan, Iowa.&#13;
1896&#13;
(Mrs. A H. Maynard.)&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Junius Ralph Magee, Paullina, Iowa.&#13;
James H. Benedict Hoquiam, Wn.&#13;
Albert H. Maynard, Ocheyedan. Iowa,&#13;
Dora A. Eisentraut _Seattle, Wn.&#13;
Narcissa P. Miller, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Frank D. Empey, Hmton, Iowa.&#13;
(Mrs. A. R. Toothaker.)&#13;
1897&#13;
Wm. Edgar Sanders.&#13;
.&#13;
Frank Mitchell, Early, Iowa.&#13;
Lydia Trimble, Foo Chou, China.&#13;
1899&#13;
1905&#13;
Sidney L. Chandler, Ida Grove, Ia.&#13;
William A. Blackwell, Iowa City, Ia.&#13;
Asbury Dean Sioux City, la.&#13;
Carrie Brown, Chicago. Illinois.&#13;
Jacob E1sentraut, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Rena Nellie Bowker, Hinghua, China.&#13;
Walter B. Empey Schaller. Iowa.&#13;
(Mrs. Fred Trimble.)&#13;
Adams R. Hastings.&#13;
Charles Eden Carroll, Creston, Neb.&#13;
Ernest C. Richards Newell, Iowa.&#13;
Myrtilla Mae Cook Chicago Illinois&#13;
1900&#13;
'&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. H&#13;
C .&#13;
(Mrs. W. Lee Lewis.)&#13;
Carne M. Bartlett Hmg ua, hma. William H. Debenham, Ottumwa, Ia.&#13;
James A. Davies, Thompson, Iowa.&#13;
Mabel E. Ellerbroek, Yankton, S. D.&#13;
Hattie B. Empey, Schaller, Iowa.&#13;
Emma J. Fair, Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
Edna B. Hatheway, Byers, I. T.&#13;
(Mrs. D. L. Young.)&#13;
(Mrs. Byrne Boylan)&#13;
Virginia Maude Fair, Galva, Iowa.&#13;
Alfred H. Jastram, Remsen, Iowa.&#13;
Cyrus Lloyd Gilbert, South Park, Wn.&#13;
Clarence E. Van Horne..&#13;
.&#13;
Anna Goodall.&#13;
Robert N. Van Horne, Sioux City, Ia. Earl Wesley Hanna, Terril, Iowa.&#13;
Clara J. Yetter, Brooklyn, N. Y.&#13;
Charles Elmer Harding.&#13;
1901&#13;
Anna Lou Hollingworth, Ames, Iowa.&#13;
Arthur L. haines&#13;
(Mrs. J. W. Green.)&#13;
Harry H. Adair, Dakota City, Neb. Edward H . Hulser, Univ. of Chicago.&#13;
Arthur J. Folson.&#13;
Maude Emma Kling, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Herbert A. Keck, Boston Mass.&#13;
(Mrs. R. N. Darling.)&#13;
Anna C. Marsh, Mobile Ala.&#13;
Clara Harriet Killam, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
(Mrs. Oscar Reinhart)&#13;
Coraiinn Lockm Aurelia Iowa.&#13;
Augustus. J. Quirin. Germania, Ia.&#13;
J. N. Hamilton Mccary, West Side, Ia.&#13;
Oscar Reinhart, Mobile, Ala.&#13;
John Waldo McCarthy, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Jennie R. Skewis. Inwood, Iowa.&#13;
Alice Marsh, Mobile, Alaba ma.&#13;
1902&#13;
Carl Wesley Maynard, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Ross P. Brown, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
William John Morgan, Iowa City, Ia.&#13;
Bessie May Carr, South Park, Wn. Geo. John Poppenheimer, Renwick, la.&#13;
(Mrs. C. L. Gilbert.)&#13;
Ralph Eugene Root, Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
Florence M. Cate, Winfield, Kans.&#13;
Simon Diedrick Stulken.&#13;
Charles F. Eberly.&#13;
David Laurance Young, Iowa City, Ia.&#13;
Emma A. Flathers, Fort North, Tex.&#13;
19( 6&#13;
Estie Terissa Boddy, Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
(Mrs . Guy G. Frary.)&#13;
Guy G. Frary, Fort North, Texas.&#13;
Herbert J. Calkins, Maderia Islands.&#13;
Ethel M. Gantt, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Asa Lee Brower, Ann Arbor, Mich.&#13;
Samuel Knoer. Moorhead, Iowa.&#13;
Emma G. Crossan, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
George A Platts, Winfield. Kans.&#13;
Frank Vincent DuBois, Univ. of Pa.&#13;
F, J. Seaver, Columbia Univ .. N. Y. Evva Celestia Erskine, Ottumwa, Ia.&#13;
Ethel Walker, Los Angeles, Calif.&#13;
(Mrs. W. H. Debenham.)&#13;
(Mrs Trimble.)&#13;
Edgar Mccay Everhart, Tyndall, S . D.&#13;
1903&#13;
Ruby Amelia Flinn Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
George Barsalou, Mason City. la.&#13;
0. Merril Foote, Armour, S. D.&#13;
Albert B. Gilbert, Hawarden, Iowa. Mary Margaret Gilbert, Churdan, Ia.&#13;
George R. Gilbert, Merrill, Iowa.&#13;
Corwin F. Hartzell, Cedar Rapids, Ia.&#13;
Sophia May Hieby, DeSmet, S . D.&#13;
Lon Adrian Hawkins, Ohio State Un iv.&#13;
M. F. McDowell, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Ralph E. Heilman, Evanston, Ill.&#13;
Robert J. Mcisaac, Portland, Ore.&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson, Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
Frank E. Mossman, Winfield, Kans. Berthemia McCarthy. Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Hans Nissen, Lehigh, Iowa.&#13;
Geo. Ethan Millner, Univ. of Chicago.&#13;
A. Grant Ruthven, Ruthven, Iowa.&#13;
Roy Glenn Minkler, Superior, Iowa.&#13;
David M. Simpson, Thornton, Iowa. Ruby Lillian Trimble, Kansas City.&#13;
Lorne F. Smylie, Sioux City, Iowa. John William Wunn, Whiting, Iowa.&#13;
110&#13;
&#13;
�That II Human Interest " Story&#13;
EE Whiz, Guy, you ought to be working on a&#13;
desk in St. Louis if you want to get up a page&#13;
of human interest stories," said Maurice Almy&#13;
as he came out of the busy telegraph room&#13;
into the day room of the Evening Telegraph.&#13;
"Just your remark about a page of local short&#13;
stories that made me think of it, 11 he continued&#13;
as he sat down, lit a cigarette and hoisted his feet onto one side&#13;
of a big square waste basket which stood by the city editor's&#13;
desk.&#13;
The city editor paused a moment in his work, but said nothing, apparently waiting for the telegraph man to explain&#13;
himself.&#13;
II I'll tell you the incident, and maybe some of the boys can&#13;
work it off as a local story. It happened when I was working&#13;
there and is a peach of a story. It runs like this: 11&#13;
II Big Hal Henderson, commonly known to the boys I round&#13;
the Dispatch office as I Happy Hal,' on account of his genial&#13;
nature, had just turned in his last piece of copy for the noon&#13;
edition, and, after taking a look at the assignment book, turned&#13;
to Harry Davis, the desk man, with the remark: 11 What the&#13;
blazes is the meaning of this assignment? 11&#13;
II What is it, Hal?" queried the city editor.&#13;
II Oh, this assigning me a sad human interest story for the&#13;
Sunday edition. What do you think I am anyway, a sort of a&#13;
second Edgar Allen Poe? "&#13;
II Hardly that, Harry, 11 smiled the man at the table as he&#13;
looked up from under the rim of his eye shade into the face of&#13;
the happy-go-lucky reporter standing before him. 11 But, you&#13;
see, I am going to get up a page of local human interest stories.&#13;
Just the ordinary things which happen every day, but which go&#13;
unnoticed by the busy world. Something which you may meet&#13;
on your run that has a touch of human woe in it and which is&#13;
of sufficient local color. All of the other fellows are going to&#13;
bring in humorous stories but Ed. and you. 11&#13;
The city editor's eyes wandered back to the type written&#13;
page which he held in his hand, and he absentmindedly ran his&#13;
pencil through a blur on the sheet. Seizing a blank sheet of&#13;
paper he ran it into the typewriter, and his eyes assumed a far112&#13;
&#13;
away look as he mapped out in his mind the heading for the&#13;
article.&#13;
The reporter lingered a moment at the table, gazing blankly&#13;
at the assignment book, which read: 11 Local Human Interest&#13;
Story --- Sad --- Henderson." 11 Thunder, Harry! 11 he ejaculated.&#13;
II I don't know what I can find on my run that will fill the bill "&#13;
and he strode across the room, seize d his hat from the peg and&#13;
slipped into his light top coat. Taking several sheets of copy&#13;
paper, he rolled them up, thrust them into his pocket and disappeared down the stairway, whistling as he went, "John&#13;
Dough, John Dough------."&#13;
Hal dropped off the uptown car in the darkness and swung&#13;
around the corner on the run, wondering at the absence of the&#13;
accustomed light which was wont to welcome him from the big&#13;
bay window of his cozy little home.&#13;
Everything was strange ly quiet as he bounded up the frcnt&#13;
steps and pushed open the door. Hardly had he crossed the&#13;
threshold when a neighbor woman halted him with a low"Hush!"&#13;
The only light came through the half closed door which&#13;
opened into the little sleeping room to the right.&#13;
"Why! What! 11 was all the startled reporter could utter.&#13;
n t you get t he message we sent you? 11 she whispered&#13;
1n answer.&#13;
"didn't&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Message? No! What do you mean? 11 he asked, a feeling&#13;
of impending evil creeping over him, while the woman only&#13;
pointed to the adjoining room.&#13;
He passed quickly in to find his wife kneeling beside a&#13;
little cot. The coverlet pulled back exposed the charred and&#13;
blackene d face of his only daughter.&#13;
II Theatre fire! 11 sobbed the wife, and she clung to him for&#13;
support.&#13;
&#13;
The next day all the men at the office wondered at the sud' den reticence of the city hall man. Hal was indeed strangely&#13;
quiet and subdued. As the thirty call went out for the last edition he paused beside the city editor's desk long enough to&#13;
hand him a couple of closely written sheets.&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
I think I have found your story, 11 was all that he said.&#13;
And, continued Almy, 11 The story that Henderson turned in&#13;
is the story that I have just told you. 11&#13;
&#13;
113&#13;
&#13;
�The Power of The Will&#13;
T was an undisputed fact that Herbert Graves&#13;
was the jolliest fellow in the college. Despite&#13;
the fact that he was an irrepressible mischief&#13;
maker he had the happy faculty of knowing&#13;
when to stop. Herbert had been sitting in a&#13;
great arm chair before the grate fire and trying vainly to interest himself in Prof. Loona&#13;
Ticks'&#13;
new book, 11 The Power of The Will. 11&#13;
After a half hour his patience gave out and, throwing the&#13;
book on the floor, he turned to his room mate, saying : 11 Honestly, Bob, it is positively fierce what fool notions get into print&#13;
now-a-days. Now here this old fogy tries to make one believe&#13;
that merely by focusing all your mental powers on a picture you&#13;
can .will yourself to be one of the figures and to feel all of the&#13;
emotions of that figure. lt1s all rot! 11&#13;
11 Well," chuckled his chum, "Why don 1t you try?&#13;
Now,&#13;
for instance, will yourself to be that young lady, 11 and he pointed&#13;
to a picture on the mantel, " and you will soon know what she&#13;
thinks of Herbert Graves, 11 and he dodged the book which the&#13;
irate Herbert hurled at him.&#13;
II That would not be a bad idea,11 said Graves.&#13;
11 See that&#13;
picture up there of the Lewis and Clark expedition. Well, I'm&#13;
going to draw a cabin on it and will myself into the cabin. W e 1ll&#13;
put the cabin here on the hill overlooking the river. 11 With that&#13;
Herbert secured his drawing materials and soon had a log cabin&#13;
perched on the hill.&#13;
Placing the picture over the mantel place, he concentrated&#13;
all of his mental powers on the thought that he was in the cabin.&#13;
He remained thus motionless for fully fifteen minutes, and then&#13;
he sprang to his feet with the startled expression, " Great Scott,&#13;
where am I? "&#13;
No longer was he inside the beautifully furnished room,&#13;
but now a huge square room of rough hewn logs, the cracks&#13;
plastered with yellow clay, and in the place of windows were&#13;
two holes in the side of the building covered with what appeared to be oiled skin of some sort. Then he remembered how he&#13;
came there--- that he had willed himself into the cabin which he&#13;
had drawn on the picture.&#13;
He paused a moment in wonderment over the unique situation. Then he turned toward the door to go out for a look&#13;
around the cabin.&#13;
" But the door --- why --- where was the door, anyway? 11 and&#13;
then he remembered that he had drawn no door in the cabin on&#13;
the picture. Hence, logically there was no door in this cabin.&#13;
" Well, thank goodness, he had drawn windows, 11 he thought to&#13;
himself, and, tearing the skin off of the window, he crawled&#13;
through the narrow opening into the outer world.&#13;
All around him was a wild tangle of timber and hills. As&#13;
he stood there the sound of a wierd chant broke on his ears&#13;
and he turned to see a canoe, and then a second and a third,&#13;
come into view around the point of land below him. He watch114&#13;
&#13;
ed them in wonderment as they came nearer and nearer. As&#13;
the string of canoes were nearly past him he saw the man in the&#13;
bow of the first one move his arm as a signal and the canoes all&#13;
shot in toward the shore. Quickly all of the canoes drew up to&#13;
the bank and the occupants landed. As Herbert watched, he&#13;
noted that from one of the canoes a man was carried ashore.&#13;
As the party came up the slope Herbert hurried down to meet&#13;
them, for if his memory did not serve him wrongly he recognized the faces of Lewis and Clarke and that Sergeant Floyd&#13;
was the man who was carried ashore.&#13;
II How do you do, Mr. Clarke? " he said as he stepped up to&#13;
them, and a similar greeting to Lewis was met by a look of&#13;
amazement from both of the men. 11 Who are you? Whence&#13;
came you? 11 and similar questions were fired at him in a volley.&#13;
11 Oh, I'm H erbert Graves, a student at Morningside College,&#13;
S10ux City, lowa, 11 answered Herbert easily. Clarke turned to&#13;
Lewis. 11 Is Sioux City marked on the map ? " Lewis only shook&#13;
his head. 11 Where is Iowa ? 11 politely asked Clarke.&#13;
" This is lowa, 11 answered Herbert with a sweep of his arm.&#13;
II And that is South Dakota, and yonder across the river lies&#13;
Nebraska. 11&#13;
The men tapped their foreheads significently, but Herbert&#13;
only smiled. 11 How did you know we were here? 11 asked&#13;
Lewis. And Herbert told them all about their expedition. 11 And&#13;
Floyd will die on the 8th of August, 1804,11 he said. Then he&#13;
told them how Floyd a night or two before had danced and&#13;
'after becoming overheated had lain down upon the cold, wet&#13;
sand of the river 1s edge. This only convinced the men all the&#13;
more that he was crazy.&#13;
II Secure him, 11 said Clarke, 11 and place him under guard in&#13;
the cabin yonder. 11 So they hustled him off to the cabin.&#13;
II Where is the door? 11 asked the guard.&#13;
' II Why, I forgot to draw it on the picture," said Herbert, and&#13;
the men were sure that he was demented.&#13;
So they put Herbert back through the window by which he&#13;
had made his egress. While he was confined Clarke came over&#13;
to say that Floyd was d ead . Later Clarke came again to say&#13;
that they would break camp. In the bustle that followed, Herbert managed to break loose, and, closely followed by his pursuers, he started on a run through the underbrush. As he was&#13;
tearing along he came to the brink of the river. One of the&#13;
Indians who had been closely following made a grab for Herbert and the lad struck at him, only to lose his balance and fall&#13;
over the edge of the clay bank. With a splash he struck the&#13;
water and as he did so made a grab at a big log which was&#13;
floating near by------ to awake and find that he had caught his&#13;
room mate by the hair, in the very act of casting another tumbler full of water in his face.&#13;
R. K . Gellatley.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
�The Spirit Lake Massacre&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
HE Sioux! What terror the name of this cunning, treacherous, blood-thirsty tribe of redskins brought to the early settler of northwest&#13;
Iowa. No other tribe has shown such savage&#13;
characteristics nor appalled humanity by such&#13;
indiscriminate slaughter. Among the most&#13;
cunning, most faithless of these savages was&#13;
lnkpaduta. He, a chief, had been declared a government outlaw, but for fear of his taking revenge he was still paid his portion. With a band of followers from fifty to a hundred in number this wily savage wandered over the northwest country,&#13;
supporting himself by plundering. Among his own people&#13;
lnkpaduta was a hero. A big chief because of his successes m&#13;
war, the ferocity of hi.s revenge and his implacable hatred of&#13;
the white m_&#13;
an. .&#13;
The horrible massacre at Okoboji had its inception near&#13;
Smithland. Here the Indians became insolent and agressive,&#13;
and in self protection the settlers disarmed them. During the&#13;
night the little band quietly stole away, following the Little&#13;
Sioux river north, their hearts filled with revenge. As they progressed their depredations increased in number and violence.&#13;
In Cherokee county much property was destroyed and near&#13;
Peterson several most horrible atrocities were committed, one&#13;
man being so hacked to pieces that he never regained his right&#13;
mind. Thence the Indians marched eastward to Gillett 1s Grove&#13;
where arms and ammunition were taken from the settlers, and&#13;
thence north along the Indian trail to the beautiful Okoboji&#13;
lake region.&#13;
On the south shores of West Okoboji lake a number of&#13;
pioneers had come in the preceeding summer. Here in peace&#13;
and quiet Mr. Rowland Gardner, leader of the little band, hoped&#13;
to spend the evening of his days. As the long winter drew to a&#13;
close these settlers looked forward to the planting of their crops.&#13;
They had neither heard nor seen aught of Indians, and had not&#13;
the slightest presentiment of evil. On the morning of March 8,&#13;
185 7, as the family were about to seat themselves at the table,&#13;
a solitary Indian stalked into the cabin. He was followed by&#13;
another and another until lnkpaduta and fourteen of his warriors&#13;
in the guise of friendship had asked for food. The reds soon&#13;
116&#13;
&#13;
became insolent and demanded ammunition. About noon the&#13;
Indians went off in the direction of the cabin of Mr. Mattock,&#13;
another settler. Fearing evil, Gardner, Luce and Clark, the men&#13;
at the Gardner cabin, held a consultation and decided that Luce&#13;
and Clark should go to warn the other settlers and Gardner&#13;
should stay to guard the cabin. About three in the afternoon&#13;
the firing of guns was heard in the direction of the Mattock&#13;
cabin and after two hours of suspense Gardner started to reconnoiter, but soon returned saying that the Indians were coming.&#13;
The reds came and demanded flour. As Mr. Gardner turned to&#13;
get it he was shot through the heart. Mrs. Luce and Mrs. Gardner were next killed and two little children were taken out of&#13;
doors and their lives beat out with pieces of stove wood. Abbie&#13;
Gardner was roughly seized by the arm and made to understand&#13;
that she was a prisoner. The cabin was ransacked and after&#13;
the scalp knife had finished its cruel work the Indians ce lebrated&#13;
their victory with the horrible revelry of the war dance.&#13;
The following day the bloody work was continued. Feigning friendship the Indians gained the advantage and then mercilessly killed the victims. During the second day's slaughter two&#13;
more women, Mrs. Noble and Mrs.Thatcher,were taken prisoners.&#13;
On the morning of the tenth the Indians crossed the lake on the&#13;
ice and proceeded northward to the shore of Spirit Lake where&#13;
they accidently discovered the cabin of the Marbles. In their&#13;
usual treacherous manner they gained entrance to the cabin and&#13;
shot Mr. Marble dead, taking the wife captive. The settlement&#13;
at Springfield, now Jackson, Minn., was attacked but the Indians&#13;
were repulsed.&#13;
Though Mr. Marble was the only person killed near Spirit&#13;
Lake the massacre has always been known by that name. Soldiers from Fort Ridgely pursued the Indians.&#13;
Of the four women taken captives, two were killed and the&#13;
other two, Mrs. Marble and Abbie Gardner, were ransomed .&#13;
The Gardner cabin still stands on the shores of West Okoboji.&#13;
Within a stone's throw of the massive monument which has&#13;
been erected to commemorate the terrible event lives Mrs. Abigail Gardner Sharp, one of the last of the brave pioneers who&#13;
felt the sting of the Indian's vengeance during those early days&#13;
when Iowa was as yet a wild, uncivilized region.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
117&#13;
&#13;
�Chief Black Hawk&#13;
O the great mass of the American people Black&#13;
Hawk, the best type of the American Indian,&#13;
is known only as the central figure in what is&#13;
termed the II Black Hawk II war. Born on the&#13;
Rock River nearly ten years before the Declaration of Independence was signed, the young&#13;
buck assumed his father's position as leader&#13;
of the tribe at the age of nineteen. As a mere&#13;
youth he had been admitted to the councils of the. tribe by virtue of the daring courage shown in war. With the chieftainship&#13;
came the old medicine bag of the tribe, which Pyesa, Black&#13;
Hawk's father, had received from the Thunder. As the medicine bag symbolized the soul of the nation, with it came the instruction to keep it "forever unsullied." After five years of&#13;
contemplation and prayer in the fastnesses of the forest Black&#13;
Hawk came forth determined that his hands should be clean in&#13;
the sight of the Great Spirit.&#13;
The Black Hawk War was the result of the avarice of the&#13;
early settlers and of the misunderstandings between them and&#13;
the Indians and the failure to keep the government treaties. An&#13;
army under General Gaines drove the Indians across the river&#13;
and then made treaty with them in which it was agreed that&#13;
neither Black Hawk nor his people were ever to recross the&#13;
Mississippi.&#13;
Disheartened over their ruined cornfields and the near approach of winter Black Hawk called a council of the wise men&#13;
of his tribe. As a last resort a hunt was decided upon. But&#13;
game was scarce and when the winter came there was but little&#13;
food in the wigwam of the red man. To avoid the starvation&#13;
which threatened, Black Hawk decided to accept the advice of&#13;
a . wild Indian prophet and medicine man and so broke the&#13;
treaty which he had made with the white man by starting to seek&#13;
supplies from his friends, the Winnebagos.&#13;
The settlers lost no time, and an army was soon on the trail&#13;
of Black Hawk and his band. By virtue of superior numbers&#13;
the whites gradually forced the red men back to the river again.&#13;
Here Black Hawk stood calmly directing the retreat back across&#13;
the river. This was perhaps the most brilliant exhibition of&#13;
military skill ever performed on the American continent. It&#13;
was a feat of most consumate management, military tactics and&#13;
bravery in the face of an enemy of overwhelming numbers. Nothing in American history compares with it, and had it been performed by a white, by a member of the Anglo-Saxon race, it would&#13;
have long ago been immortalized as one of the most splendid&#13;
achievements in military annals. In this perilous undertaking&#13;
Black Hawk lost but six braves. In truth it may well be said&#13;
that Black Hawk was among the greatest of his tribe. He was&#13;
a leader of his people in battle and a father to his tribe in times&#13;
of peace. He loved his old home, he said that the Great Spirit&#13;
never intended that the land should be sold to white men. When&#13;
118&#13;
&#13;
he saw the free hunting grounds of the Indians being covered&#13;
by the farm houses of the white men his wild spirit could not be&#13;
quieted. He must fight. So great was this chief that he never&#13;
drank the white man's fire-water, and so great was his hatred of&#13;
it that he used every means in his power to prevent the traders&#13;
from selling it to the others of his tribe.&#13;
Kind at heart, Ma-ha-tai-me-she-kai-kiah, as he was known&#13;
in his own tongue, did not delight in the torture of captives.&#13;
What this great chief might have done for the western country&#13;
had not his acts been so misunderstood and had not he died so&#13;
early in life, no one can tell.&#13;
Black Hawk held his last great council with the white man&#13;
shortly before his death, at a Fourth of July celebration in 1838&#13;
at Madison, Wis. This toast was given in his honor by the&#13;
toast-master: 11 To our illustrious friend, Black Hawk. May his&#13;
declining years be as calm and serene as his previous life has&#13;
been boisterous and warlike."&#13;
To this the great war chief responded: 11 It has pleased the&#13;
Great Spirit that I am here today. I have eaten with my white&#13;
friends. It is good. A few summers ago I was fighting with the&#13;
white man. I may have been wrong, but that is past. Let it be&#13;
forgotten. The Rock River valley is a beautiful country. I loved&#13;
my villages, my cornfields and my people. I fought for them.&#13;
They are now yours. I was once a great warrior. Now I am&#13;
old and poor. I have looked upon the Mississippi since I was&#13;
a child. I loved the great river. I have always dwelt upon its&#13;
banks. I look upon it now and am sad. I shake hands with&#13;
you friends; I may never see you again. F arewell. 11&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
119&#13;
&#13;
�A T ouching Personality&#13;
HERE is no character in natural history by&#13;
whom the feelings of mankind have been so&#13;
harrowed as by the mosquito. Now that he&#13;
is again establishing himself among us a few&#13;
moments may well be devoted to the most&#13;
infernal bloodsucker and man eater that ever&#13;
lived upon this planet.&#13;
In vain have ages of speculation and research essayed to tell&#13;
from whence the first mosquito came. It is well known that&#13;
the Great Cristopher was welcomed to the world of the western&#13;
sea by a reception committee of American mosquitos. And it&#13;
is also known that long before the pyramids had begun to loom&#13;
along the Nile this great parasite was abroad in the land of the&#13;
Ptolmeys, for even after a hundred centuries have passed there&#13;
can still be discerned upon the skin of man embalmed in that&#13;
early day the trace of the autobiography of the mosquito.&#13;
The more of these monsters that die, the greater seems to&#13;
be the total number living, and at every funeral millions begin&#13;
existence and throng about the bier of him who has gone to join&#13;
the great minority. The frailty of his person seems to suggest&#13;
the vegetarian, but once let him alight upon the neck of a&#13;
human being and that view is suddenly dissipated. Cowardice&#13;
has often been imputed to him because he assails his victim by&#13;
night. His sincerity, too, has been impugned, and justly so, for&#13;
he fascinates his prey with a subtle siren song and then makes&#13;
of him a carnal banquet. But, however great his infirmity and&#13;
crime, he is undefiled with that transending sin, ingratitude. He&#13;
will never forsake a friend, even after his poor relatives have&#13;
cast him off. Nor is he in any sense provincial. His home is&#13;
everywhere, on the tops of fog hung mountains or along the&#13;
smoky deserts waste. He abounds among the mighty snows of&#13;
polar lands and infests ague charged air of the torrid zone.&#13;
Theodore the Thunderer brings the glad tidings that all mosquitos on the Isthmus of Panama have been put to death, except&#13;
two who have experienced a change of heart. Yet, could man&#13;
go there in some future day when the great president, his canal&#13;
and his country are forgotten, it is likely that he would hear the&#13;
wail of the winged mosquito echoing among the ruins of what&#13;
was once the waterway of nations.&#13;
His preference for human prey is said to date back to the&#13;
days before the Rood. According to tradition, when all things&#13;
save the ark and her seasick crew had sunk beneath the waters&#13;
of the great rain, Noah, being tempted by his wife, threw the&#13;
mosquito overboard. Somehow the mosquito survived, but the&#13;
treatment he received so wrought up his evil passions that he&#13;
pledged himself and all his race to an inveterate and eternal&#13;
hatred toward mankind.&#13;
H. E., Academy 108.&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
H&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
c&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
�J&#13;
&#13;
The New Park&#13;
·Athletics&#13;
ORNINGSIDE College aims in her athletics to&#13;
develop well rounded men. It is believed&#13;
that inter-collegiate and class contests best&#13;
make possible this development. The criticism often made against inter-collegiate athletics that only a few are benefitted by the&#13;
training does not apply to Morningside. Carefully kept records prove the contrary, for before the year shall&#13;
have closed in June over two thirds of all the men in school&#13;
will have trained for or participated in inter-collegiate contests.&#13;
The one-third includes men not physically fit for vigorous exercise and those who have extra duties.&#13;
The new plan of financial support of athletics has been of&#13;
inestimable value both in carrying on an enlarged policy in&#13;
the way of schedules and in securing improved equipment.&#13;
Much credit is due those who worked out the details of the&#13;
plan and those who successfully managed the financial work of&#13;
the year.&#13;
With improved financial support, an athletic park and&#13;
steady improvement in the quality of athletic performances for&#13;
the last five years, Morningside has gradually expanded. While&#13;
formerly her schedules included games with a few neighboring&#13;
schools in South Dakota and Northwest Iowa, she now has athletic relations with Brookings and Hamline on the north, Ames,&#13;
Simpson and Drake on the east and Bellevue, Creighton and&#13;
Nebraska University on the south. Furthermore, this year she&#13;
sent three men to the great western winter classics, viz., the&#13;
A. A. U. indoor meet in Chicago, and in response to an invitation of the state games committee will send a team to the state&#13;
meet at Des Moines.&#13;
Expansion means added responsibilities and requires increased effort. In order that the growth may be steady and&#13;
continuous internal organization must keep pace with external&#13;
achievement. The unwavering spirit of Morningside men and&#13;
women will make a name for the institution in athletics and will&#13;
enable her to maintain .the standards for which she stands. If&#13;
she is to make and maintain a place for herself in Iowa athletics&#13;
however, she must have, in addition to the united efforts of the&#13;
student body, the continued support of an already loyal alumni&#13;
and the financial and moral support of a friendly city.&#13;
&#13;
122&#13;
&#13;
BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF THE NEW ATHLETIC FIELD&#13;
&#13;
a number of years past the proposition of&#13;
locating an athletic field in the natural amphitheatre just west of Main Hall had been&#13;
talked over and planned, but it remained for&#13;
the students of the institution to make the initial move during commencement week of&#13;
1906. A number of mass meetings were&#13;
held, committees appointed and the necessary&#13;
details gone through with, and on the Wednesday morning of&#13;
farewell chapel the pledging of the money with which to build&#13;
the park was commenced. Over a thousand dollars was pledged&#13;
by the different classes of the school in that one meeting. The&#13;
work of grading and building the&#13;
park was then turned over to the&#13;
Board of Control of Athletics.&#13;
With President Lewis to hold&#13;
the plow handles the student body&#13;
went en masse to the site of the&#13;
new park and there proceeded to&#13;
turn the first furrow on what was&#13;
to be the magnificent athletic field&#13;
which Morningside now has.&#13;
This spring Mr. John C. Bass,&#13;
a senior, offered to assume the cost&#13;
of grading if the students would&#13;
apply the money raised on the securing of bleachers. Cement bleachers 150 feet long and ten tiers&#13;
high, seating 1500 people, have&#13;
been erected, adding materially to&#13;
JOHN C. BASS&#13;
the appearance of the field.&#13;
123&#13;
&#13;
�E. M. BROWN&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
C. N. RISSLER&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
JOHN L. GRIFFITH&#13;
Athletic Director&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JOHN C. BASS&#13;
FootbaU&#13;
&#13;
C. J. WESTCOTI&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
124&#13;
&#13;
�Football&#13;
_§&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
...!&lt;I&#13;
&#13;
September 22 at Sioux City&#13;
Morningside 47, Sheldon High School&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
September 29 at Sioux City --Morningside 22, Ida Grove High School&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
October 6 at Sioux City&#13;
Morningside I 8, Creighton University&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
13 at Ames --Morningside 0, Ames&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
October 23 at Mitchell --Morningside 0, South Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
November IO at Sioux City --Morningside 8, Drake University&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
November 29 at Sioux City--Morningside 4, Nebraska Freshman&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TEAM GAMES&#13;
November 2 at Sioux City --Morningside 27, Sioux City High School&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
November I 7 at Alton --Morningside 17, Alton town team&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
127&#13;
&#13;
126&#13;
&#13;
�"THE TEAM"&#13;
&#13;
"THE SQUAD"&#13;
&#13;
JOHN C. BASS&#13;
&#13;
F. B. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
Winners of&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Toothaker Trophy Cup&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
129&#13;
&#13;
"THE FAITHFUL"&#13;
128&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
�'OFF FOR ALTON '&#13;
&#13;
WHISMAN&#13;
&#13;
PRICE&#13;
&#13;
MARKING OUT THE PARK&#13;
&#13;
130&#13;
&#13;
ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
�Basketball&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
20,&#13;
26,&#13;
28,&#13;
2,&#13;
5,&#13;
8,&#13;
11,&#13;
15,&#13;
18,&#13;
2 1,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
44, Sioux City High School&#13;
20, Sioux City High School&#13;
45, Warriner I s&#13;
40, Little Giants&#13;
34, Univ. of South Dakota&#13;
44, Univ. of South Dakota&#13;
31, Univ. of South Dakota&#13;
50, Y. M. C. A&#13;
24, Business Men&#13;
30, Sioux City High School&#13;
&#13;
37, at&#13;
24, at&#13;
22, at&#13;
11, at&#13;
12, at&#13;
22, at&#13;
14, at&#13;
16, at&#13;
21, at&#13;
3 1, at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Vermillion&#13;
Morning side&#13;
Vermillion&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
THE CLASS TOURNEYS&#13;
First Series&#13;
Senior Acad.&#13;
34&#13;
vs.&#13;
Senior Acad.&#13;
Middle Acad. 10&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sub Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Sub Juniors&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
.I Senior Academy&#13;
. by&#13;
I&#13;
Forfeit&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
18 Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
Senior College&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Junior College&#13;
vs.&#13;
Senior College 24&#13;
Senior College 56&#13;
Second Series&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sub Juniors&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Junior Academy&#13;
&#13;
29 Sophomores&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Middlers&#13;
vs.&#13;
Junior College&#13;
Westcott&#13;
Patton&#13;
Elliott&#13;
Wendel&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
132&#13;
&#13;
Berkstresser&#13;
Robbins&#13;
&#13;
133&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Elliott&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
134&#13;
&#13;
Hackett&#13;
&#13;
�Track&#13;
April 17, Home Meet, Freshmen 85 1/2 of possible 133 points.&#13;
April 21, Morningside 88, S. C. High School 34, at Woodlawn.&#13;
May I, Morningside 41, Brookings 79, at Brookings.&#13;
May 14, Morningside 78 ~~ , Yankton 46 1/2 at Woodlawn.&#13;
May 25. Morningside 63, South Dakota 61 1-2, Beuna Vista 9 1-2,&#13;
at Woodlawn.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
&#13;
THE RELAY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Events&#13;
I 00-yard dash&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
880-yard run&#13;
I-mile run&#13;
2-mile run&#13;
120-yard hurdles&#13;
220-yard hurdles&#13;
High jump&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
Shot-put&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
Discus throw&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
Cross country to Floyd&#13;
monum 1t and return&#13;
&#13;
Record&#13;
IO 2-5 seconds&#13;
22 1-5 seconds&#13;
52 seconds&#13;
2 min., 7 2-5 sec.&#13;
5 minutes&#13;
IO min., 45 sec.&#13;
16 1-5 seconds&#13;
26 2-5 seconds&#13;
5 feet, 7 inches&#13;
20 feet, 6 inches&#13;
38 feet, 7 inches&#13;
I 05 feet&#13;
I 07 feet&#13;
I O feet, 6 inches&#13;
&#13;
Holder&#13;
Hall&#13;
Hall&#13;
Winn&#13;
Ro rem&#13;
Debenham&#13;
Debenham&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Dowdy&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Hall&#13;
Hall&#13;
Hall&#13;
Westcott&#13;
&#13;
20 min., 50 sec.&#13;
&#13;
Berkstresser&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE-BROOKINGS MEET&#13;
Brookings, S. D., May _1, 1906 1&#13;
Score:&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
BEFORE THE MEET"&#13;
&#13;
Event&#13;
I 00-yard dash&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
880-yard dash&#13;
One mile&#13;
Two mile ·&#13;
120-yd. hurdles&#13;
220-yd. hurdles&#13;
Shot-put&#13;
High jump&#13;
Discus&#13;
Pole vault J&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
Relay&#13;
&#13;
Brookings, 79 ; Morningside, 4 I.&#13;
&#13;
First Place&#13;
Collar, B.&#13;
Collar, B.&#13;
Lockhart, B.&#13;
Rorem, M.&#13;
J. Sperb, B.&#13;
Chapman, M.&#13;
E. Brown, M.&#13;
Alten, B.&#13;
Riche, B.&#13;
Kirk, B.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Chilcothe, B.&#13;
McCordic, B.&#13;
Collar, B.&#13;
Brookings&#13;
&#13;
Second Place&#13;
Wendel, M.&#13;
Smith, B.&#13;
Carcuff, M.&#13;
Brownell, B.&#13;
Brownell, B.&#13;
F. Sperb, B.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
McCordic, B.&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
Riche, B.&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
Riche, B.&#13;
Lockhart, B.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
137&#13;
&#13;
TRACK TEAM ON FIELD&#13;
&#13;
136&#13;
&#13;
Record&#13;
IO 1-5 seconds&#13;
23:2&#13;
55 : I&#13;
2: 12 2-5&#13;
4:59 1-5&#13;
11 :02 2-5&#13;
16 1-5&#13;
29 1-5&#13;
36 ft., 5 in.&#13;
5 ft., 4 1-2 in.&#13;
99 ft., 3 in.&#13;
10 ft., 3 1-2 in.&#13;
118 ft., 8 in.&#13;
21 ft., 11 in.&#13;
I :37 4-5&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE-YANKTON MEET&#13;
May 14, 1906&#13;
Score: Morningside 78 1-2; Yankton 46 1-2&#13;
First Place&#13;
Second Place&#13;
Record&#13;
Event&#13;
Armin, Y.&#13;
Wendel, M.&#13;
5 3-5&#13;
SO-yard dash&#13;
Allen, Y.&#13;
DeGrisselles, M.&#13;
11 2-5&#13;
100-yard dash&#13;
F. Heilman, M.&#13;
24 2-5&#13;
Allen, Y.&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
F. Heilman, M. Carcuff, M.&#13;
54 2-5&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
Rorem, M.&#13;
LeCount, Y.&#13;
2: 07 2-5&#13;
880-yard run&#13;
Chapman, M.&#13;
4: 52 4-5&#13;
Dunn, Y.&#13;
Mile run&#13;
Dunn, Y.&#13;
Chapman, M.&#13;
10: 35 3-5&#13;
Two mile run&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Warren, Y.&#13;
17 1-5&#13;
120-yd. hurdles&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
26 2-5&#13;
220-yd. hurdles&#13;
Brewster, M. DeGrisselles, M. 88 ft., 9 in.&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
Thompson, M. Dowdy, M. 33 ft., 5 1-2 in.&#13;
Shot put&#13;
DeGrisselles, M. 102 ft., 2 in.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Discus&#13;
Warren, Y.&#13;
Brown-Staples, M. 9 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
Pier, Y.&#13;
5 ft., 7 in.&#13;
High jump&#13;
Pier, Y.&#13;
Wendell, M.&#13;
20 ft., 4 in.&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
Divided&#13;
Relay&#13;
MORNINGSIDE - UNIV. OF S. D. - BUENA VISTA MEET&#13;
May 25, 1906&#13;
Score: Morningside 63; U. of S. D. 61 1-2; Buena Vista 9.&#13;
100-yard dash, record 10 1-5 --1st, Fowler, S. D.; 2nd, Stoland, S. D.; 3rd, Wendel, M.&#13;
220-yard dash, record 23 --1st, Stoland, S. D.; 2nd, Fowler, S. D.; 3rd, DeGrisselles, M.&#13;
440-yard dash, record 5 5 --1st, Stoland, S. D.; 2nd, Fowler, S. D.; 3rd, F. Heilman, M.&#13;
880-yard run, record 2 : 12 --1st, R orem, M.; 2nd, Chapman, M.; 3rd, R. Heilman, M.&#13;
Mile run, record 4 : 48 1-5 --1st, Turney, S. D.; 2nd, P. Brown, M.; 3rd, Puckett, S. D.&#13;
Two mile run, record 10 : 3 7 --1st, Turney, S. D.; 2nd, Chapman, M.; 3rd, Puckett, S. D.&#13;
120-yard hurdles, record 16 1-5 --1st, Brown, M.; 2nd, Meyers, S. D.; 3rd, Dowdy, M.&#13;
220-yard hurdles, record 2 7 1-5 --1st, Meyers, S. D.; 2nd, Dowdy, M.; 3rd, Brown, M.&#13;
Broad jump, record 20 ft., 3 in.--1st, Hupp, S. D.; 2nd, Wendel, M.; 3rd, Rorem, M.&#13;
Discus throw, record 96 ft., 10 1-2 in.--1st, Dowdy, M.; 2nd, Thompson, M.; 3rd, DeGrisselles, M.&#13;
Shot put, record 36 ft., 9 in.--1st, Lattin, S. D.; 2nd, Dowdy, M.; 3rd, Brisbine, S. D.&#13;
Pole vault, record 10 feet--1st, Westcott, M.; 2nd, Goodner, S. D.; 3rd McEwen, 8. V.&#13;
Hammer throw, record 100 ft., 9 in.--1st, Steig, 8. V.; 2nd, Brewster, M.; 3rd, Thompson, M.&#13;
High jump, record 5 ft., 5 in.--1st, Brown, M.; 2nd, McEwen, B. V.; 3rd, Hyzer, B. V.&#13;
Relay--- 1st, Morningside ; 2nd, South Dakota.&#13;
138&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Base Ball&#13;
April 2 at Sioux City --Morningside 0, Sioux City Packers (Western League) 10&#13;
April 7 at Morningside --Morningside 17, Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
April 16 at Morningside --Morningside 28, Western Union College&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
April 25 at LeMars --Morningside 2, Western Union College&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
April 26 at Fort Dodge --Morningside 2, Fort Dodge (Iowa League)&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
April 2 7 at Fort Dodge --Morningside 0, Fort Dodge (Iowa League)&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
May 2 at Morningside --Morningside 15, Sioux City High School&#13;
&#13;
Patton&#13;
&#13;
Gary&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
May 18 at Storm Lake --Morningside 8, Storm Lake&#13;
June 4 at Sanborn--Morningside 1, Sanborn&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
June 5 at Primghar --Morningside 12, Primghar&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
The Men Who Played&#13;
Gary&#13;
&#13;
140&#13;
&#13;
G. Squires&#13;
Westcott&#13;
Rissler&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Jones&#13;
Patton&#13;
Whisman&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Beers&#13;
Elliott&#13;
J&#13;
K. Squires&#13;
Ewer&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
�0&#13;
&#13;
WYLIE PITCHING&#13;
&#13;
THE FACULTY - SENIOR GAME&#13;
May 22, 1906&#13;
Score:&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Faculty 27; Seniors 7.&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Hartzell, catcher&#13;
Milner, pitcher&#13;
Everhart, first baseman&#13;
Hawkins, second baseman&#13;
Calkins, short-stop&#13;
Minkler, third base&#13;
Brower, left field&#13;
Heilman, center field&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Griffith, catcher&#13;
Wylie, pitcher&#13;
Garver, forst baseman&#13;
McDowell, second baseman&#13;
Van Horne, short-stop&#13;
Lee Lewis, third base&#13;
Brown, left field&#13;
Greynald, center field&#13;
Kanthlener, center field&#13;
Campbell, right field&#13;
&#13;
Foote, right field&#13;
&#13;
Senior Girl --- "What are those fellows stand ing on the corners? 11&#13;
Friend --- " Those are first, second and third bases."&#13;
Senior Girl --- "Then is the fellow in the center the soprano? 11&#13;
&#13;
Cl.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MILNER PITCHING&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
143&#13;
&#13;
�The "M" Club&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
ELIEVING that an organization of all the athletes who had won the official college II M"&#13;
would be beneficial to the best interests of&#13;
athletics at Morningside, some of the older&#13;
men of the school founded the II M II Club.&#13;
The purpose of this organization is to further in every way the interest in athletics at&#13;
Morningside and to boost for the school and the school's athletes at every opportunity. Membership in the club can only&#13;
be gained through the winning of the official college letter. A&#13;
number of meetings of the club have been held this year and&#13;
several plans are on foot for the benefit of athletics in general.&#13;
The big burlesque carnival planned for May 3rd and 4th is the&#13;
work of the " M II Club.&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS OF THE II m"&#13;
April 1st, 1906, to April 1st, 1907&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
C. N. Rissler&#13;
C. J. Westcott&#13;
B. Elliott&#13;
F. J. Gary&#13;
C. Beers&#13;
L. Jones&#13;
A. Patton&#13;
G. Squires&#13;
R. Whisman&#13;
0. Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
E. M. Brown&#13;
W. 0. Dowdy&#13;
J. Wendel&#13;
0 . Thompson&#13;
L. Chapman&#13;
S. 0. Rorem&#13;
P. DeGrisselles&#13;
F. B. Heilman&#13;
T. I. Brewster&#13;
C. J. Westcott&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
145&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Football&#13;
C. J. Westcott&#13;
J.C. Bass&#13;
R. Whisman· A Tumbleson&#13;
B. Elliott&#13;
C. Bone&#13;
E. M. Brown R. D. Robbins&#13;
J. Wendel&#13;
G. Stiles&#13;
A. Berkstresser&#13;
J. Price&#13;
G. Stiles&#13;
I. Jones&#13;
T. I. Brewster&#13;
L. Erickson&#13;
F. B. Heilman&#13;
W. 0. Dowdy&#13;
B. Elliott&#13;
&#13;
�IN tHE CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT&#13;
&#13;
'STACKED'&#13;
&#13;
'JUST A FEW POSTERS'&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL SESSION OF TRUSTEES&#13;
&#13;
147&#13;
&#13;
146&#13;
&#13;
�THE RETURN FROM NEW YORK&#13;
&#13;
"EVERYBODY WORKS AT OUR H OUSE"&#13;
&#13;
SCENE ON THE FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
148&#13;
&#13;
�April&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
1 All Fools' Day.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
First baseball game of the&#13;
season. Morningside loses&#13;
to the Packers 10 to 0 .&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Brown loses his hat.&#13;
Later the same day Prof.&#13;
Kanthlener is seen wearing&#13;
a new hat.&#13;
&#13;
defeats Western Union college 27 to 5. Philomatheans&#13;
give II The Merchant of&#13;
Venice. 11&#13;
&#13;
Spring term opens.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
f 6 Baseball game, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis goes to New York.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A. reception . Red&#13;
ribbon girls entertain green&#13;
ribbon girls at a mock banquet.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Home field meet.&#13;
men win.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' chorus goes to South&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
19.&#13;
&#13;
Professor&#13;
shave.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
State prohibition oratorical&#13;
contest. Drake first, Simpson second, and Clare D.&#13;
Horner, of Morningside&#13;
third place.&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Miss Shontz lectures to an&#13;
audience composed of H.&#13;
H. Sawyer and the representatives from Cornell&#13;
Drake and Simpson.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Sunday excursions to the&#13;
Floyd monument begin.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
Skiddoo ! ! ! !&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Reception for Choral Union&#13;
in the Society halls.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Athletic benefit program.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Baseball, Morningside&#13;
Fort Dodge 8 .&#13;
&#13;
7 Baseball---Morningside 17,&#13;
Stock Yards 0.&#13;
&#13;
8 Miss Henshaw leads Y. W.&#13;
c. A.&#13;
9 Ladies' cross country club&#13;
is organized.&#13;
10 Seniors appear in chapel in&#13;
caps and gowns. Heilman&#13;
and Foote are missing.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson absent-mindedly goes to chapel at the&#13;
beginning of the 9 :25 period. German Ill. takes a&#13;
vacation.&#13;
&#13;
Fresh-&#13;
&#13;
Garver gets a&#13;
&#13;
2,&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Prof. MacBride, of the state&#13;
university of Iowa, delivers&#13;
a chapel address.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Morningside-Fayette debate.&#13;
Fayette wins again.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Ralph P. Smith, of St.&#13;
Thomas Episcopal church&#13;
leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Boarding houses order an&#13;
extra supply of eggs.&#13;
&#13;
Chapel announcement by&#13;
Dean Campbell that the endowment fund has been&#13;
raised. Great rejoicing.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Easter Sunday. Fine millinery display at Grace M . E .&#13;
church.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Rain. Only three couples&#13;
brave the weather for a&#13;
stroll to the monument.&#13;
&#13;
30 Track team&#13;
Brookings.&#13;
&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
leaves&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
�May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
Mass meeting of students is&#13;
held to plan celebration and&#13;
and reception for Dr. Lewis.&#13;
&#13;
17 Dr. Riechell, of Boston Uni-&#13;
&#13;
2 Atheneums entertain Zets.&#13;
&#13;
versity, gives chapel address.&#13;
&#13;
at May luncheon. Miss Elva Chrysler's recital. Baseball, Morningside I 5, High&#13;
School 0.&#13;
&#13;
18 Dr. Lewis entertains seniors.&#13;
19 Miss Pearl Mason's gradua-&#13;
&#13;
3 Dr. Lewis returns from New&#13;
&#13;
20 Miss Lester, of city, leads&#13;
Y. W. C. A&#13;
2 1 F acuity begin training.&#13;
&#13;
York.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
General celebration.&#13;
&#13;
$50,-&#13;
&#13;
000 souvenir checks.&#13;
&#13;
Park&#13;
place girls get a ducking&#13;
and lose a valuable piece of&#13;
chinaware.&#13;
&#13;
5 Atheneum gosling, "Silverleaf,11 takes up its abode in&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
6 Silver leaf begins to fatten.&#13;
7 Silverleaf is fatter.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
ting recital.&#13;
&#13;
22 Faculty - Sen i or baseball&#13;
game. F acuity wins. Score&#13;
&#13;
27 to 7.&#13;
23 Opening day of the May&#13;
Musical Festival.&#13;
&#13;
24 May Music Festival. Theodore Thomas Orchestra.&#13;
&#13;
25 Martha Macdonald teaches&#13;
"Trig" class. Three present.&#13;
Rest of class get flunked.&#13;
&#13;
8 Prof. Garver climbs telephone pole to amuse little&#13;
children.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Adelphians and Aesthesians hold picnic breakfast at&#13;
Floyd monument at 4 a . m .&#13;
&#13;
10 Opening of the soda fountain and " fizz II water season.&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Morningside and Grinnell&#13;
academies debate. Morningside wins championship of&#13;
Iowa academic debating&#13;
league.&#13;
&#13;
Baseball team leaves for&#13;
Storm Lake.&#13;
&#13;
26 Chapel announcement b y&#13;
Dr. H. G. Campbell of 11 T riangular field meet at the&#13;
Riverside pavilion." Morningside wins, University of&#13;
South Dakota second, Buena&#13;
Vista third. Score, 63 to&#13;
61 1-2 to 9.&#13;
- 2 7 Bert Elliott reads II lngersollia II in bible class.&#13;
28 Coach and Mrs. Griffith to&#13;
breakfast on time .&#13;
&#13;
12 Soph - Zets give diabolical&#13;
program.&#13;
&#13;
29 Sioux of 107 makes its bow&#13;
to the general public.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
30 Decoration day. Miss Fem&#13;
Ritz' graduating recital.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Loveland leads Y. W.&#13;
&#13;
C. A&#13;
I4&#13;
&#13;
152&#13;
&#13;
Yankton - Morningside field&#13;
meet. Morningside wms.&#13;
Score, 78 1-2 to 46 1-2.&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Juniors entertain se niors.&#13;
&#13;
153&#13;
&#13;
�June&#13;
Miss Gilman 1s recital. Misses Trimble, Swem, Garver&#13;
and Hart drive to Salix.&#13;
Midnight the same young&#13;
ladies plus Mr. Manning&#13;
make return drive from&#13;
Salix.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Philo trip up the river.&#13;
Ed Brown takes semi-annual bath. Ike loses silk&#13;
umbrella, ring, revolver and&#13;
breaks his watch.&#13;
Total&#13;
damage $15.98.&#13;
Minkler&#13;
and Rorem row twenty-five&#13;
miles up the nver in six&#13;
hours.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Otho graduating program.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
1111 II&#13;
&#13;
Minkler gets a substitute&#13;
for his charge.&#13;
Prof. Haynes drives small&#13;
boys off the campus.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Students begin to cram for&#13;
final exams.&#13;
&#13;
7 Miss Mossman 1s recital.&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Graduation exercises of the&#13;
Normal department.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Elocution students receive&#13;
their diplomas.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Baccalaureate Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Academy commencement.&#13;
Exams close. General rejoicing over the fact.&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Graduating recital of music&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Final chapel services. Money&#13;
raised to build new athletic&#13;
park.&#13;
Annual reunion of&#13;
Collegiate societies. Dr. Bagnell lectures while II Jigger II&#13;
Fry kicks an inquisitive canine down two Rights of&#13;
stairs.&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Vacation begins and the&#13;
grafters commence to graft.&#13;
&#13;
Positively the only really truly&#13;
&#13;
Good II&#13;
&#13;
in existence&#13;
a number of single concerns have mutually agreed to band themselv.e s together in&#13;
combines of two for mutual enjoyment and&#13;
the elimination of undue competition. The&#13;
board of directors believe the affair in many&#13;
cases to be a sure go.&#13;
ASSETS: --- Monday and Saturday nights&#13;
until ten o'clock. Wednesdays until eight. The Floyd monument and North Ravine. Summer houses on the campus when&#13;
the moon is overcast. Front porches when at the electric light&#13;
a brick has been cast.&#13;
LIABILITIES: --- Livery bills, theatre tickets, boxes of " Palmers,11 season tickets, etc.&#13;
11 This may look like a I F armers' Alliance,' but it is NOT."&#13;
Several members of the faculty are interested. One or two&#13;
have already become life members and it is understood that&#13;
there is a possibility of several more following the good example. Several seniors are so interested as to be looking at the&#13;
proposition with an eye to business.&#13;
The present board of directors :&#13;
Cushman, Johnson&#13;
Robbins, Rorem&#13;
Westcott, Garretson&#13;
Squires, Whealen&#13;
Bass, Delmage&#13;
Brown, Correll&#13;
Ewer, Shideler&#13;
Heilman, Clark&#13;
Mossman, Wilson&#13;
Horner, Johns&#13;
Brown, Ullman&#13;
Bender, Shotz&#13;
Winterstein, Cole&#13;
Rogers, Swem&#13;
Miller, Hall&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
155&#13;
&#13;
154&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
TRUST&#13;
&#13;
Commencement address.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
The Match Combine&#13;
&#13;
�September&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
Last Sunday of vacation.&#13;
&#13;
18 More rain. More homesick.&#13;
&#13;
10 The melon - colic days have&#13;
come. Inter - state fair opens.&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
College opens.&#13;
Registration begins. More fair. Few&#13;
students.&#13;
Preachers go to see Dan&#13;
Patch. Evva Erskine and&#13;
Will Debenham married.&#13;
Archie Cook married.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Registration closes. Archie&#13;
Cook buys a lot of cheap&#13;
silver spoons.&#13;
&#13;
14 First chapel service of the&#13;
year. Dr. Lewis gives advice to new students.&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A&#13;
&#13;
girls give a&#13;
lawn party at Garretson&#13;
place.&#13;
&#13;
16 Annual homesick day.&#13;
17 Y. M. C. A.and Y. W.C.A&#13;
reception to new students.&#13;
Rain. New students homesick.&#13;
&#13;
19 Mass meeting.&#13;
20 Sophomores attend a freshman class meeting and publish minutes.&#13;
2 1 F reshies picnic at Riverside&#13;
unmolested by the sophomores.&#13;
22 First football game of the&#13;
season.&#13;
Morningside 4 7,&#13;
Sheldon High School 0.&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
New students go to church&#13;
and Sunday School.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Zet - Otho promenade.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Beatty, of First M. E.&#13;
church, leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Lee Lewis and Miss&#13;
Cook married.&#13;
&#13;
2 7 Dr. Lewis and Miss Dolliver set the students bad example by sitting in the summer house.&#13;
28 Miss Dimmitt only eight&#13;
minutes late to breakfast.&#13;
29 Atheneum annual hay rack&#13;
ride. Football game. Morningside 22, Ida Grove 0.&#13;
30 Third Sunday of term. New&#13;
students&#13;
forget&#13;
Sunday&#13;
School.&#13;
&#13;
157&#13;
156&#13;
&#13;
�October&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
Bass and Miss Delmage eat&#13;
watermelon in northeast&#13;
corner of athletic park.&#13;
Thermometer registers 20&#13;
above.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Ideal picnic weather.&#13;
&#13;
19 Dr. Gwylim, of New York,&#13;
&#13;
3 Zetalethean ravine party.&#13;
&#13;
gives a chapel address.&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Freshman - Sophomore annual class scrap. Residents&#13;
of Morningside endeavor to&#13;
scrub "I 9 IO II off of their&#13;
walks.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Football game, Morningside&#13;
I 8, Creighton 0. Zets and&#13;
Atheneums entertain new&#13;
girls at a mock wedding.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Special academy class meet.&#13;
mg at G arretson I s. "lk e II&#13;
attends, but not for long.&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Ford Robbins and his lantern take the II Loving II family to church.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Rain and snow. Football&#13;
team goes to Mitchell.&#13;
&#13;
F acuity reception.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Damp weather keeps students from church.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
ALL of FACULTY attend&#13;
Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
23 Skiddoo for we. It never&#13;
rains but it pours. Dakota&#13;
Wesleyan 6, Morningside 0.&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Letters postmarked II Mitchell " and addressed to Miss&#13;
Delmage are held for postage.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson gets ring in&#13;
cake at Nettie F ry 1s wedding.&#13;
Zet-Otho reception.&#13;
&#13;
Gas man comes to Lovelands, but runs when girls&#13;
give nine II Rahs. 11&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
IO Mass meeting.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
To Ames&#13;
&#13;
or Bust. 11&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Football men get acquainted&#13;
with new rules.&#13;
&#13;
I2&#13;
&#13;
Rooters and football men&#13;
leave for Ames. Y. M. and&#13;
Y. W. C. A hand-book appears.&#13;
&#13;
I3&#13;
&#13;
Football at Ames, Ames 32,&#13;
Morningside 0.&#13;
&#13;
I4&#13;
&#13;
Rooters who went to Ames&#13;
cut classes and stay home&#13;
to sleep.&#13;
&#13;
I6&#13;
&#13;
Those who were not in the&#13;
habit of attending chapel&#13;
visit the Dean.&#13;
Most of&#13;
them resolve to attend.&#13;
&#13;
I7&#13;
&#13;
First meeting of Junior annual board.&#13;
&#13;
26 Westcott bids lady friend ,&#13;
from Brookings II good-bye II&#13;
through glass door of car.&#13;
2 7 Atheneums entertain Philos.&#13;
28 Challman, Elliott and Whisman visit lady friends at&#13;
Correctionville.&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Pipe organ arrives. Chapel&#13;
11 Ike&#13;
discontinued.&#13;
and&#13;
Jumbo II Westcott&#13;
return&#13;
from Galva.&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Younglove calls on Miss&#13;
Ritz, loses hat and misses&#13;
last car to town.&#13;
&#13;
3I&#13;
&#13;
Football, Morningside second team 26, Sioux City&#13;
High School 0. Hallowe 1en&#13;
ghosts play havoc with&#13;
girls' rooms.&#13;
&#13;
Football team attends church&#13;
at Webster City.&#13;
&#13;
I5&#13;
&#13;
158&#13;
&#13;
Bass receives long distance&#13;
telephone from Mitchell.&#13;
Girl at other end is told&#13;
that Bass is out strolling&#13;
with girl at this end.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
159&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
�November&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
Y. W. C. A . delegates leave&#13;
for state convention at Grinnell.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Delegates' room mates wear&#13;
old clothes to classes.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista calls football&#13;
game off.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Rough house at the Brewster club.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Gratian fires D e an out&#13;
of cha pel.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
John Day makes a heroic&#13;
attempt to lower a curtain&#13;
in German class.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Elliott, Thornton and Bone&#13;
go to see II F aust 11 and come&#13;
home sorry that they " slept&#13;
while hell was going on. 11&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Mass meeting. Dr. Lewis&#13;
introducrd students to new&#13;
pipe organ.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Football boys picnic in&#13;
North Ravine. Another mass&#13;
meeting.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Football. Morningside 8,&#13;
Drake 8. Whisman remarks&#13;
that his nose is II not what it&#13;
is cracked up to be. 11&#13;
Miss Ferguson leads Y. W.&#13;
&#13;
C. A&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Janitor oils the floors.&#13;
&#13;
13 Si Ro rem and Helen Wakefield entertain the Normals&#13;
with shadow pictures.&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Dedication of pipe organ.&#13;
Recital by John Hermann&#13;
Loud.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Second pipe organ recital.&#13;
Painting of Dr. Lewis is unveiled.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Campbell announces in&#13;
chapel that II there will be a&#13;
joint meeting of the Y. and&#13;
&#13;
W. C. A&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Bellevue game cancelled by&#13;
Nebraskans.&#13;
&#13;
18 Joint meeting of the Y. M.&#13;
and Y. W. C. A&#13;
&#13;
160&#13;
&#13;
19 Skating begins.&#13;
turns Baptist.&#13;
20 College coal&#13;
No classes.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Collins&#13;
bin&#13;
&#13;
empty.&#13;
&#13;
2 1 A mysterious gentleman at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
Full attendance.&#13;
Football men discard sweaters and wear white collars.&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
McMasters mails his letters&#13;
in the Y. M. C. A deposit&#13;
box.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
Bostonian Sextette fail to&#13;
" skiddo "&#13;
and miss their&#13;
train. No concert.&#13;
&#13;
24 Dean attends chapel with&#13;
same whiskers he usually&#13;
wears.&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
College Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Yankton calls football game&#13;
off. Griffith uses telephone&#13;
and telegraph.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
Home oratorical contest.&#13;
Arthur Cushman wins.&#13;
&#13;
28 Students go home to eat&#13;
turkey. Last practice before Thanksgiving.&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Final football game of' season. Morningside 4 ; Nebraska freshmen 0.&#13;
&#13;
30 Girls receive Thanksgiving&#13;
boxes from home.&#13;
&#13;
�December&#13;
1 Atheneum goose party.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Everybody thankful for a&#13;
day of rest.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Students return.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Cole, of Estherville,&#13;
conducts chapel.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Organ recital by&#13;
Prof.&#13;
Mather. First meeting advisory board of Coordinate&#13;
Women's college.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Lady members of faculty&#13;
are absent from chapel.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean grand public.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Elliott o r d e rs II chicken&#13;
frizzy II at Frank's cafe.&#13;
&#13;
Words The Wise&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Jumbo II Westcott returns&#13;
to Galva.&#13;
&#13;
10 Dr. DuBlois lecture.&#13;
11 Rogers buys new&#13;
&#13;
book&#13;
Graustark II to send lady&#13;
friend for Xmas.&#13;
&#13;
Some people are bald headed on the inside.- Dr. Lewis.&#13;
&#13;
If some people don1t watch out they'll get two half moons&#13;
hitched together at the points for a Christmas present.- Van&#13;
Horne.&#13;
&#13;
The chief functions of the assembly in Greece was to disseminate news. This is now the duty of the Ladies' Aid Society.- Garver.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
12 Miss Lockin calls on dean.&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Some men are just dull enough to get rich.- Kanthlener.&#13;
&#13;
Girls are sore. 11&#13;
&#13;
Girls call on dean&#13;
quest."&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
by re-&#13;
&#13;
14 Hawkeye - Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
de-&#13;
&#13;
People embrace the idear of getting something for nothing&#13;
with a good deal of enthusiasm.- Haynes.&#13;
&#13;
bate.&#13;
&#13;
15 Men of faculty&#13;
&#13;
banquet&#13;
&#13;
football men.&#13;
&#13;
16 Girls do all the rec1tmg.&#13;
Boys not recovered from&#13;
banquet.&#13;
&#13;
17 Philo-Otho joint program.&#13;
18 First meeting of Student&#13;
Congress.&#13;
&#13;
The Athenians met on the Campus Martius, metaphorically&#13;
the field of war, and had peace. College men meet on the&#13;
campus, make it literally a field of war and have pieces.-Garver.&#13;
&#13;
A lie is an abomination unto the Lord and a very present&#13;
help in time of trouble. - Miss Ferguson.&#13;
&#13;
19 Closed&#13;
&#13;
door session of&#13;
Rah, Rah II girls at dean's&#13;
office.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
20 Vacation begins.&#13;
&#13;
Women,&#13;
Griffith.&#13;
&#13;
generally speaking,&#13;
&#13;
are generally speaking.-&#13;
&#13;
Fortune smiles on the few and grins at the many.- Brown.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
A ring 1s something round with a hole in it.- Stephens.&#13;
&#13;
If dirt were trumps what hands I'd have.- Peter Drake's lab.&#13;
soliloquy.&#13;
163&#13;
&#13;
�January&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Vacation over. Dr. Henderson begins senes of&#13;
students' meetings.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Everybody works- dad mcluded.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Smallpox scare. Jesse Ewer&#13;
to the hospital.&#13;
&#13;
10 Miss Edra&#13;
vaccinated.&#13;
&#13;
Shideler&#13;
&#13;
gets&#13;
&#13;
16 College students visit photographer.&#13;
I 7 More college students to see&#13;
Wilcox. More pictures for&#13;
annual.&#13;
I8&#13;
&#13;
Phelps, his camera and&#13;
flashlight. But no picture,&#13;
as usual.&#13;
&#13;
I9&#13;
&#13;
Street cars fail to run. Anderson walks to town and&#13;
freezes ears. Girls of college give a II chestnut roast."&#13;
&#13;
11 Dr. Lewis runs a race with&#13;
the street car.&#13;
12 Last four verses of No . 1 at&#13;
chapel for a change.&#13;
&#13;
20 Miss Henshaw leads Y. W .&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
2 I Chem. class again pose for&#13;
a picture. Street cars run&#13;
once every three hours.&#13;
" Preps II walk to town to&#13;
have pictures taken.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Henderson leads joint&#13;
association meeting.&#13;
&#13;
14 Fire in Hawkeye hall. Aesthesian -Adelphian&#13;
tion.&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
recep-&#13;
&#13;
Chemistry class visits gas&#13;
plant. Phelps takes picture.&#13;
&#13;
C. A&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
First pie day for Cora Frear.&#13;
Apple pie.&#13;
&#13;
23 Se cond pie day for Cora&#13;
Frear. She devours onehalf of a lemon pie.&#13;
24 Third and last pie day for&#13;
· Cora Frear. One-half of a&#13;
mince pie. Cora receives&#13;
five-pound box of 11 Palmer 1s.11&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Peter Drake falls off of stool&#13;
in chemistry class. Isabel&#13;
Garghill Beecher gives, 11 As&#13;
You Like It II and II The Lion&#13;
and the Mouse."&#13;
&#13;
26 Smallpox patients back in&#13;
school.&#13;
2 7 Garney Trimble has pest&#13;
house all of his own.&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Mid-year exams. begin.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Leonora Jackson Concert&#13;
Company.&#13;
&#13;
30 Thermometer registers 20&#13;
below.&#13;
3I&#13;
&#13;
Day of Prayer.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
Whisman wears a&#13;
collar.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis leads Y. W. C. A.&#13;
Prof. Van Horne leads Y.&#13;
M . C. A. First Vesper service.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho bob ride. 11 Jigger II loses his sky-piece.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Second pipe organ recital&#13;
by Prof. Mather.&#13;
&#13;
vention is held at the college. Girls serve Baltimore&#13;
lunch. Dunbar quartette.&#13;
&#13;
17 Dr. Willis, of Milwaukee,&#13;
preaches at Grace M. E.&#13;
church.&#13;
18 Convention delegates return&#13;
home.&#13;
&#13;
Semester closes.&#13;
Exams&#13;
end. Students have vacation of twelve hours.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
19 Basketball, Morningside 44,&#13;
Sioux City high school 38.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
20 Basketball game with Vermillion called off on account of ice gorge .&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
First taste of spring.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Rev. George C . Fort gives&#13;
Washington's birthday address. Seniors of 107 appear in caps and gowns.&#13;
Men banquet.&#13;
&#13;
Reno W elbourne gives illustrated lecture.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
_____________&#13;
&#13;
Announcement of $50,000&#13;
more endowment.&#13;
9 Atheneum annual public.&#13;
Collins and Miss Matteson&#13;
buy furniture. Dean&#13;
bell teaches ethics class&#13;
from table.&#13;
10 Rev. Beatty preaches at&#13;
Grace M. E. church.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Seniors sulk.&#13;
ball game.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Hunn, of Des Moines,&#13;
talks to students.&#13;
&#13;
16 Session of Y. M . C. A. con-&#13;
&#13;
Ground hog sees his shadow. Bass and Heilman are&#13;
awarded trophy cup. Football men are awarded their&#13;
M's.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
white&#13;
&#13;
2 3 Spring is forced to skiddoodle before the return of&#13;
Old Man Winter.&#13;
24 Miss Topping, of city, leads&#13;
&#13;
Y.&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
w. c. A.&#13;
&#13;
City basketball to urn e y&#13;
opens.&#13;
&#13;
No basket-&#13;
&#13;
26 Basketball game, high school&#13;
wins.&#13;
&#13;
12 Chapel address by D. C.&#13;
Shull. Senior academy wins&#13;
basketball championship.&#13;
Ike Westcott gets kidnap ed.&#13;
&#13;
2 7 Prof. Brown takes charge of&#13;
chapel services on account&#13;
of Dr. Campbell's absence.&#13;
&#13;
13 Mass meeting. New chairs&#13;
for association hall.&#13;
&#13;
28 Dr. Bennett Mitchell leads&#13;
chapel.&#13;
&#13;
14 St. Valentine's day. First&#13;
day of Y . M . C. A. convention.&#13;
&#13;
167&#13;
&#13;
�March&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Weather man predicts more&#13;
weather. Looks like a lion.&#13;
Rev. Cully, of Morningside&#13;
Presbyterian church, conducts chapel.&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
band goes to city to hear&#13;
lecture on " Cannibals, Before and After."&#13;
Secretary Ross Hadley leads&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Dr. Willits and&#13;
W. ]. Bryan lecture.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Heilman and Wintersteen&#13;
try "phys1log1cal" effects of&#13;
ether.&#13;
5 Prof. Scott leads chapel.&#13;
Basketball at Vermillion.&#13;
Morningside 34, University&#13;
of South Dakota 12.&#13;
6 Dr. Fellows, of Upper Iowa&#13;
University, visits chapel.&#13;
"Rain! 11&#13;
7 Pipe organ recital by Prof.&#13;
]. W. Mather. 11 Ice l ! n&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Othonian banquet. Basketball game. Morningside 44;&#13;
University of South Dakota&#13;
22.&#13;
9 City indoor meet. Morningside 36 ; combined city&#13;
teams 18. 11 Two cups of&#13;
beer, 11 for Van Buskirk and&#13;
Day, 11 Please, Mr. Clerk."&#13;
10 Entirely too muddy to go to&#13;
church.&#13;
11 Philomathean Grand public. Basketball at Vermillion. Morningside 3 1; University of South Dakota 14.&#13;
&#13;
026&#13;
&#13;
12 Katherine Ridgeway Concert Company. Track m e n&#13;
leave for Chicago.&#13;
13 Ladies' Chorus postpone&#13;
tour until April.&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Lecture by Merritte ]. Driver.&#13;
15 Miss Dimmitt entertains seniors.&#13;
16 Class cross country run.&#13;
17 Jim Wintersteen celebrates&#13;
&#13;
St. Patrick's day.&#13;
18 Ellen Beach Yaw concert.&#13;
Hawkeye - Crescent banquet.&#13;
19 Glee Club is organized.&#13;
20 Term concert of conservatory.&#13;
2 1 Annual board for II Sioux of&#13;
109 11 elected.&#13;
22 Calendar committee II Sioux&#13;
of 109 11 gets busy. Easter&#13;
vacation begins.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
168&#13;
&#13;
169&#13;
&#13;
�College Jingles by "Jing"&#13;
College jingles,&#13;
Hardly verse,&#13;
All of them bad,&#13;
Some of them worse.&#13;
THE SENIOR STONE&#13;
A stone was planted on the campus,&#13;
By the senior class serene;&#13;
A freshman looked upon that stone,&#13;
And now that stone is green.&#13;
POISON&#13;
Said the prof., a Ph. D.&#13;
To his class in chemistree,&#13;
"With this acid be as careful as you can;&#13;
For a drop of this grog,&#13;
On the tongue of a dog,&#13;
ls enough to kill most any living man."&#13;
TO A 8., A M., P . D . Q.&#13;
"y ou can't go through college as fast as you please,&#13;
For getting education is a matter of degrees."&#13;
WHERE SILENCE RAINS&#13;
I stepped into the library,&#13;
Where all was still as death,&#13;
I saw a student clutch her throat,&#13;
While on paper she drew her breath.&#13;
A STUDY IN DERIVATION&#13;
Y-i-r" from the Latin means man,&#13;
"G-i-n" from the same means trap;&#13;
"V-i-r-g-i-n" spells virgin,&#13;
ThereforeVirgin means man-trap.&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
BOTANEE&#13;
Said Reuben to his teacher,&#13;
" Please, sir,&#13;
What kind of a tree&#13;
ls a T rigonometree, sir?"&#13;
&#13;
"A MATIER OF BRAINS II&#13;
"Shall I brain him," cried the hazer,&#13;
And the ivctim's courage Red;&#13;
"No, you cannot, he's a freshman,&#13;
So just hit him on the head. 11&#13;
ON CO-EDUCATION&#13;
"I believe in Co-education,&#13;
I count it America's salvation,&#13;
But yet I sometimes, think, you know,&#13;
That we are apt to overwork the Co.&#13;
170&#13;
&#13;
�------ HOW TO EDIT AN ANNUAL&#13;
When a student makes a hunk&#13;
Keep 1t out.&#13;
When a chapel song is punk,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When two friends in anger clash,&#13;
When a student wins the dash,&#13;
Or somebody donates cash,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
&#13;
If they quarrel when at church,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When the prof. should wield the birch,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When nine co-eds fair to see,&#13;
Whisper something over tea,&#13;
Print it? Goodness gracious me,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When there1s something really good,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
For you know you really should,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
Stories thin and stories tall,&#13;
Good and bad and big and small,&#13;
Anything that1s fun at all,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
- Adapted.&#13;
&#13;
Should you ask me whence these stories,&#13;
Whence these poems&#13;
&#13;
and quotations,&#13;
&#13;
With the spirit of the college,&#13;
With the life and mirth of school days,&#13;
With the laughing words of students,&#13;
With the tumult of great conflicts,&#13;
With their frequent repetitions,&#13;
And their wild reverberations,&#13;
As the sound of rooters cheering,&#13;
I should answer, I should tell you,&#13;
From the campus and the street cars,&#13;
From the lecture halls and class rooms,&#13;
From the stair-ways and the hall-ways,&#13;
From the corridors and chapel,&#13;
From the wise words of the seniors,&#13;
From the mishaps of the freshmen,&#13;
&#13;
AND THE SOPHS HAD IT!&#13;
Tumbleson - 11 Freshmen are too green to have small pox."&#13;
F redendoll - 11 The seniors are too wise."&#13;
Alice Cole - "The juniors are too busy. 11&#13;
And the sick were Jesse Ewer, Cleveland Brooks, Garney&#13;
Trimble and Mae Fry.&#13;
Kate T ackaberry ( in biology lab.) - 11 I wonder if this animal has a mouth. If it has I wish it were big enough so that a&#13;
person could find it. Why, anyone could find mine in the dark."&#13;
&#13;
From the cleverness of juniors,&#13;
From the big-heads of the sophomores,&#13;
From academy and normal,&#13;
As they all together mingled,&#13;
I repeat them as I heard them,&#13;
From the lips of all these people.&#13;
&#13;
172&#13;
&#13;
PROHIBITION CONTEST OF 1906&#13;
In Unity There is Strength," said II John Gough," so by&#13;
' The Will of the People, 11 we will have 11 A Square Deal in the&#13;
Liquor Traffic,11 and thus reach II The Promised Land."&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
WHAT'S IN A NAME?&#13;
Minnie Brown - 11 Mr. Squires, will you please bring me a&#13;
plate? 11&#13;
Squires - " I can't"&#13;
Minnie Brown - 11 I'm sure I could if my name was Squires."&#13;
173&#13;
&#13;
�A STORY WITHOUT WORDS&#13;
&#13;
Carcuff eating fresh bologna,&#13;
Found it had a splinter in it;&#13;
"I don't mind the dog," said Carcuff,&#13;
"But the dog-house, I'm agin it."&#13;
&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
(From Prof. Carver's blackboard )&#13;
If you owe the history department anything, please pay.&#13;
The family needs bread.&#13;
Miss Royse - " I can't take the exam. Monday.&#13;
Analytics."&#13;
Dean Campbell - "What's that? Algebra?"&#13;
(j[&#13;
&#13;
I have&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR WISDOM&#13;
Perry F redendoll ( to librarian) - " I want a biology of Martin Luther."&#13;
A Marcus girl not long ago,&#13;
In some way or another,&#13;
Got stuck on Mr. William Bass,&#13;
Mr. John C. Bass' brother.&#13;
She wrote a letter to ]. C.'s girl,&#13;
And asked if she would tell,&#13;
The secret of her great success,&#13;
In landing John so well.&#13;
&#13;
A FOND HOPE&#13;
Elva Chrysler, on hearing of Bryan's remark that Miss Bunting had " touched the hearts of a thousand men,11 was heard to&#13;
exclaim, "I'd be thankful to touch the heart of one."&#13;
AND HE DIDN'T&#13;
Robbins - " This school life makes one weary. I'm gomg&#13;
off in the woods and write poetry."&#13;
Cora Frear - " It's not good for a man to go alone."&#13;
On the evening before the inter-socie ty debate Alvah Miller&#13;
was requested to return thanks. Bowing his head he started,&#13;
"So far in this debate the negative have proven - "&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Now Ethel is a helpful girl,&#13;
Who's gained a lot of knowledge,&#13;
Aside from what she's learned in books&#13;
While here attending college.&#13;
Said she, "The way to catch a Bass,&#13;
ls the way I landed mine,&#13;
It's all in staying by the game,&#13;
And using hook and line.&#13;
&#13;
w. H.J.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dimmitt - "Miss Loveland, why is it you e mploye d so&#13;
many old bachelors and widowers to work on your new house? "&#13;
Miss Loveland - "They're not so frivolous, and stay by their&#13;
job better."&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dolliver has great faith in the girls of Morningside.&#13;
She says they are not so bad as they are painted.&#13;
&#13;
174&#13;
&#13;
175&#13;
&#13;
�TO BE RE-FILLED&#13;
One of the suburbs of Sioux City is the site of a well known&#13;
college, from which go out each week-end many students to try&#13;
their voices as " s upplies."&#13;
A passenger on a Monday morning train was surprised at&#13;
the number of the m who got off at the station.&#13;
II What are all those chaps getting off here ? " he asked the&#13;
brakeman.&#13;
"Them? 11 asked the brakemen. 11 Oh, they're returned empties, for the college." ~ Y outh 1s Companion.&#13;
&#13;
" THE DOCTOR TRIES HIS STEED "&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH STUDENTS TO CONFERENCE&#13;
( At roll call )&#13;
Greynald - 11 Mr. Eggleston 11 ( No response).&#13;
II Mr. Jones 11&#13;
II Mr. Waterman"&#13;
II Eh, whair are zees gentlemen ? 11&#13;
Class - 11 Gone to conference."&#13;
Greynald - 11 Mr. Thornton 11 ( No response).&#13;
II Ah ! Ees Mr. Thornton gone to conference, too?"&#13;
&#13;
THE GARVER CLUB&#13;
In a certain Iowa college a professor named Garver attempted to teach his young son a few of the college yells, hoping to thus instill college spirit and local patriotism. The results were unsatisfactory as far as the memorizing was concerned.&#13;
Hoping to get a start the professor invented a simpler rhyme,&#13;
running as follows: 11 Rub-i-dub-dub, Rub-i-dub-dub, we are&#13;
the members of the Garve r club." A few days later the professor, accompanied by several members of the board of trustees,&#13;
was met at the door by the youngster, who proclaimed loudly :&#13;
" Papa, papa, I can say it now!&#13;
1 Rub-i-dub-dub, rub-i-dub-dub,&#13;
we are the members of the garbage club.' 11 - Record-Herald.&#13;
176&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Campbell's toast at athletic banquet: 11 Dr. Lewis is in the&#13;
East, performing arduous duties."&#13;
177&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMAN THEMES&#13;
" LAST NIGHT WHEN I WAS SNUG IN BED "&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
Last night when I was snug in bed,&#13;
A sweet dream came to me;&#13;
I dreamed we were the faculty,&#13;
And the faculty were we.&#13;
&#13;
IV.&#13;
We made them grind, but all in vain,&#13;
We made them flunk beside;&#13;
And when the profs. perceived their fate,&#13;
The little fellows cried.&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
CHORUS,&#13;
&#13;
And the faculty were we,&#13;
And the faculty were we,&#13;
I dreamed we were the faculty,&#13;
And the faculty were we.&#13;
&#13;
In the morning when I wakeFreshman themes;&#13;
I remember what I saw&#13;
In my dreams;&#13;
And the critic, in her glee,&#13;
Marks a joyful C or D;&#13;
Still before my eyes I see&#13;
Freshman themes.&#13;
&#13;
There's a subject near my heartFreshman themes;&#13;
And it forms a constant part&#13;
In my dreams;&#13;
Every day and every night&#13;
We just write and write and write&#13;
And we never get them rightFreshman themes.&#13;
&#13;
On Friday night we met at five,&#13;
To talk the students o'er;&#13;
And when we'd granted one small thing,&#13;
That day we'd grant no more.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
In chapel we had seats on high,&#13;
While they sat down below;&#13;
And while we often stayed away,&#13;
We always made them go.&#13;
&#13;
VI.&#13;
The profs. in somber cap and gown'&#13;
Came pleading for their class;&#13;
We read petitions by the score,&#13;
But would not let them pass.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
In recitations every day,&#13;
We listened with a frown;&#13;
When e'er a prof. stood up to speak,&#13;
We put a zero down.&#13;
&#13;
VII.&#13;
But just to keep our dignity,&#13;
And see what they would do,&#13;
When it was time to graduate&#13;
We would not let them through.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
And however hard I dig&#13;
On those themes,&#13;
They don't seem to care a fig&#13;
What it means&#13;
When I get my papers back;&#13;
Of red ink there is no lack,&#13;
They're artistic for a factAll my themes.&#13;
&#13;
CHORUS.&#13;
&#13;
Daily themes, nightly dreams,&#13;
Nightly dreams, daily themes,&#13;
They're the trouble of my life,&#13;
As it seems;&#13;
They are with me everywhere&#13;
And I swear and swear and swear;&#13;
You can see them in the airDaily themes.&#13;
&#13;
IV.&#13;
When the sunset tints the westFreshman themes;&#13;
Still I find no place for rest&#13;
From those themes;&#13;
But I am consoled to think,&#13;
When I cross the shining brink,&#13;
Then at last my cares I'll sinkFreshman themes.&#13;
&#13;
178&#13;
&#13;
179&#13;
&#13;
�Stranger - 11 Is that Lewis? 11&#13;
Student - "No, that's Rogers."&#13;
Stranger - 11 Isn't the president's name Lewis? 11&#13;
Student - " Yes, but that chap is only a freshman."&#13;
Poor John R. Day,&#13;
Must have a girl,&#13;
For six he'd made a try,&#13;
And now at last,&#13;
He fondly hopes.&#13;
To find one in the sky.&#13;
&#13;
AN EASY MISTAKE&#13;
Stranger, sitting opposite Squires and Miss Whealen : "Are&#13;
they married ? "&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Are they soon to be? 11&#13;
"?&#13;
&#13;
n&#13;
&#13;
Johnson - 11 How do you spell it? 11&#13;
Garver- 11 Correctly."&#13;
&#13;
A NUISANCE&#13;
Edwin Brown - "Who's Jay's girl now? 11&#13;
Johnnie Torbet - 11 I don 1t know; ain't got none, I guess. 11&#13;
Brown - 11 I thought Harriet was. 11&#13;
Young T orbet - 11 Nope, pa said he was too big a nuisance&#13;
around the house."&#13;
Miss Woodford - "Respond to roll call with a quotation."&#13;
Bert Elliott- 11 'Give me your hand'- Shakespeare. 11&#13;
A LOST OPPORTUNITY&#13;
Alva Miller and - - - - -, sleighing on North Jackson&#13;
street, met Corwin Tay !or and asked : 11 Where does Dr. Lewis&#13;
live? 11 Since they both looked ready, Rev.Taylor might have- .&#13;
Those whiskers which Harry Jones wears&#13;
Are mostly composed of fine hairs ;&#13;
If 1tis true, as they say,&#13;
Then we hope that some day&#13;
He'll shave them and answer our prayers.&#13;
&#13;
Memoranda, from Si Rorem 1s&#13;
note book: 11 To be committed.&#13;
Ja, lch komme, eure edle T ochter&#13;
um ihre Herze und Hande zu&#13;
bitten. 11&#13;
&#13;
Mable Haskins' problem of II College or Not? 11 has been&#13;
answered by a friend, who said, 11 College first and then the&#13;
knot. 11&#13;
The question, 11 Why does the earth move ? 11 has finally&#13;
been settled by Prof. Scott's physical geography class with the&#13;
answer that II It's cheaper to move than to pay rent. 11&#13;
&#13;
Erick ( at Creighton game) - " Have we won? "&#13;
Coach - 11 I don't know. We made twelve that half. 11&#13;
Erick - " How many halves do we play? 11&#13;
180&#13;
&#13;
181&#13;
&#13;
�?"&#13;
Girl - "Is your name Waterman.&#13;
&#13;
Man&#13;
G. I&#13;
&#13;
ny es.&#13;
&#13;
n Did you&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
n y e-e-s-s.&#13;
an&#13;
Girl - "Do you&#13;
&#13;
1·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
at Aurelia.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
know&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Hench ? n&#13;
She is my fat h 's&#13;
M an&#13;
" Yes.&#13;
d d ughter-m&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
w1es mothers g ran&#13;
law."&#13;
&#13;
Spasm I.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
h dder im the grass,&#13;
,Catch a s a&#13;
them pass,&#13;
k&#13;
to see&#13;
And loo up&#13;
h e glory is,&#13;
d' w er&#13;
In the sha es&#13;
I'd like to do,&#13;
, · t what&#13;
Thats JUS&#13;
or two.&#13;
Stiddy f or a year&#13;
182&#13;
&#13;
G . 1 to the front o' me,&#13;
Girls to the s1'd e o me,&#13;
11 round me,&#13;
Girls c a b b l e&#13;
ble hd clatter.&#13;
Gab ea&#13;
er&#13;
'd tall that m,&#13;
Vainly m1&#13;
t to sin,&#13;
I har no&#13;
.&#13;
all my laugther m,&#13;
An&#13;
eep .&#13;
1 hatter.&#13;
At&#13;
c&#13;
183&#13;
&#13;
I I.&#13;
&#13;
�Manning, at the banquet - 11 I have not yet received all of&#13;
my education, but I hope to get the other half soon. 11&#13;
&#13;
Fire At The College!!&#13;
&#13;
Great&#13;
&#13;
C OACH&#13;
&#13;
Excitement, etc.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0/0 17 With&#13;
&#13;
My&#13;
&#13;
AN APRIL FOOL&#13;
On April 1st, Miller, waiting for a car, was heard to smg :&#13;
II I'm getting ready for my mother-in-law."&#13;
A SURE SIGN&#13;
When you take the last piece of bread it is a sure sign that&#13;
you will get a good husband.&#13;
Grace - "I'm so glad I took it - I mean the bread."&#13;
Miss Ferguson - " How do you inflect feminine nouns? "&#13;
Student - 11 On the end. 11&#13;
HARD ON THE TEETOTALER&#13;
Prof. McDowell, picking himself out of the mud where he had&#13;
fallen, was approached by a&#13;
bright little youngster who said:&#13;
II Lemme help you up, mister. 11&#13;
II You help me up ? 11 responded the professor somewhat disgustedly, 11 Why you're too small&#13;
to help anybody up. 11&#13;
II Oh, no, I ain't II responded&#13;
the urchin, 11 Why, I've helped&#13;
dad up lots of times, and you&#13;
ain't half as drunk as he was."&#13;
&#13;
ETHICAL PRINCIPLES&#13;
&#13;
COMMENCEMENT WEEK&#13;
II WERE THEY? II&#13;
Miss Whealen - 11 Don't you see it up there by that telephone wire ? 11&#13;
Squires - 11 No. 11&#13;
Tumbleson, passing - "What are you looking for, sparks? 11&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Buton - 11 Yes, I'm&#13;
going to join the Eastern Star if I&#13;
don't get high-balled."&#13;
&#13;
HOW STRANGE&#13;
Momingsider - " Which way do the stairs run m your&#13;
building? 11&#13;
Drake Student - 11 When you are on the third floor they run&#13;
down and when you are in the basement they run up. 11&#13;
184&#13;
&#13;
CRAM FOR EXAM.&#13;
&#13;
SPRING FEVER MICROBE&#13;
185&#13;
&#13;
�THE Day&#13;
&#13;
After&#13;
&#13;
Annual&#13;
/5&#13;
&#13;
ISSUED&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
�INDEX&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
Faculty . ... .. . .. ... . ... 23&#13;
&#13;
Academy .... ... .. .. . . . 59&#13;
Alma Mater ( song ) . . . . . 48&#13;
Alumni ........ . . . . . . 109&#13;
Athletics . . ... ....... ... 12 1&#13;
Football . . . . . . . .. . .. 125&#13;
Basketball . .... .. . .. . . 13 1&#13;
Track.. . . . .. ... . .. 135&#13;
Baseball . . . . . . . . . ... 139&#13;
Classes .. .· .. . . . .... . .. .&#13;
Junior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11&#13;
Senior . .. .. . . ........ 35&#13;
Sophomores . . . . . . . . . . 4 1&#13;
Freshman ..... . ..... 45&#13;
Calendar . .. . . . ......... 149&#13;
April . .. .. . . . . . . ... 150&#13;
May . ... . . . . . . . ...... 152&#13;
June . ... . .... . . . . . . 154&#13;
September . . . . . . .. 156&#13;
October . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158&#13;
November ...... . .... 160&#13;
December . .......... . l 62&#13;
January . ... . . . . . . . . . 164&#13;
February ...... ...... 166&#13;
March .. .... . .. . ..... 168&#13;
Christian Associations ... 102&#13;
Collegian Reporter. . . . . . 90&#13;
Commencement . . . . . . . 105&#13;
. Dedication. . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
4&#13;
John B. Trimble.. . . . .&#13;
6&#13;
Debate .. ..... ......... 92&#13;
Inter-society, college . . 92&#13;
Inter-society, academy. 93&#13;
Morningside, Upper la. 94&#13;
Elocution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86&#13;
Frontispiece, The Sioux&#13;
of '08...... . ... . .. . .. 3&#13;
&#13;
F acuity Assistants . . . . . . 33&#13;
Greeting.. . . . ... . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Grafters, The. . . . . . . . . . 70&#13;
Historical . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
The Garretson Place . .&#13;
Co-ordinate College. . .&#13;
Morningside Annuals .&#13;
&#13;
73&#13;
72&#13;
74&#13;
76&#13;
&#13;
Jokes . .. .... . . . . . . .. .. 171&#13;
Literary ... . ......... .. . 111&#13;
Human Interest Story . . 112&#13;
Power of the Will .... 114&#13;
Spirit Lake Massacre .. 11 6&#13;
Chief Black Hawk . . .. 118&#13;
ATouching Personality 119&#13;
Miscellaneous Pictures .. 146&#13;
"M" Club ............ . . 144&#13;
Memorial page ...... . .. 104&#13;
Music ............. . . . . . 79&#13;
Normal . .. . . . .. . ... . . .. 88&#13;
Oratory ........ .. ..... 95&#13;
Societies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Atheneum ...... . ....&#13;
Zetalethian ....... . ...&#13;
Philomathean . . . . . . . .&#13;
Othonian ......... ...&#13;
Adelphian . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Hawkeye ... . ... . . .. .&#13;
Aesthesian ......... . .&#13;
Crescent . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Of Science . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
50&#13;
52&#13;
54&#13;
56&#13;
&#13;
63&#13;
64&#13;
66&#13;
68&#13;
97&#13;
&#13;
Student Congress . . . . . . . 98&#13;
Volunteer Band ... . .. . . 100&#13;
&#13;
188&#13;
&#13;
�Special Rates to Students at&#13;
&#13;
Clements &amp; Company&#13;
Staple and fancy&#13;
&#13;
Groceries&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT&#13;
At Prices That Are Down-to-Date&#13;
407 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
If Our Goods and Treatment Please You, Tell Your Friends ;&#13;
Not, Tell Us.&#13;
Our Motto: "A Satisfied Customer ls Our Best Advertisement."&#13;
&#13;
We Invite Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
The Junior, Senior&#13;
&#13;
and Group-*&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOS&#13;
used in the&#13;
publication&#13;
of this annual were&#13;
made Bby&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
St. Aubin Station&#13;
&#13;
I WANT YOUR BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
Calvin Hook&#13;
Real&#13;
Estate&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Dentist&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
Located at Peters Park&#13;
Auto Phone 6167&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WILCOX&#13;
190&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE..&#13;
IOWA&#13;
191&#13;
&#13;
�to rent at $3&#13;
per month&#13;
&#13;
PRESCRIPTION&#13;
DRUGGISTS&#13;
&#13;
FOR MEN ONLY&#13;
-AT-&#13;
&#13;
The Peters Park Barber Shop&#13;
SERVICES DAILY, except&#13;
Sunday, from 7 a. m. until 8&#13;
p. m. ( Satm:·day 11 :00 p. m.)&#13;
Services conducted by R. S.&#13;
Bridges, Tonsorial Artist. Best&#13;
in his line in the city.&#13;
TOPICS: "A Clean Shave,"&#13;
"Electric Face Massage," "A&#13;
Neat Hair Cut," "Shampoos&#13;
and Tonics." (The usual collection after each service.)&#13;
A GREAT OPPORTUNITY for college men to keep&#13;
their faces clean. Don't miss&#13;
it, men; it's a part of your education to look neat.&#13;
STRANGERS - WELCOME&#13;
&#13;
are the largest&#13;
dealers and carry&#13;
the largest stock&#13;
of fine pianos in&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Hardware&#13;
Tools and Cutlery&#13;
Furnace&#13;
and Tin Work&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
and Baseball Goods&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Fine Perfumes and Toilet Goods of All Kinds in&#13;
Gunther's and Allegretti Candies&#13;
Endless Variety.&#13;
&#13;
509 Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS&#13;
&#13;
Headquarters for ...&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC GOODS, BASEBALL SUPPLIES,&#13;
HUNTERS' OUTFITS, GUNS, BICYCLES,&#13;
GYMNASIUM GOODS.&#13;
I make a specialty of safe work and changing combinations.&#13;
Lock and key work and all kinds of light machine repairing.&#13;
&#13;
408~ 10 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
T he&#13;
First National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
SINGER&#13;
IIARDVVARE&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Schmoller &amp;&#13;
Mueller&#13;
&#13;
614&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
STREET&#13;
&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
AUTO 2775&#13;
IOWA 408&#13;
&#13;
T odd~Baker Drug Co.&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fourth and Jackson Sts .&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
408 PEARL STREET.&#13;
W . M. WELLMAN, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 2604&#13;
Lakeport Ave., Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Capital and _ urplus $3 70,000&#13;
S&#13;
Deposits&#13;
$3,250,000&#13;
&#13;
Lumber Co.&#13;
&#13;
We always accord the small&#13;
account the same welcome&#13;
and consideration as the largest deposit, and our first-class&#13;
facilities are at your disposal&#13;
for every banking service required.&#13;
&#13;
Dealers in Building Material of All Kinds. Hard and Soft&#13;
Coal and Wood. Don't pass us by; we are here among&#13;
you. Don't forget to patronize those who patronize&#13;
you. Our prices are RIGHT. FAIR DEALING&#13;
is our motto. Remember, we are at&#13;
I&#13;
Morningside&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GIVE US YOUR BUSINESS,&#13;
WHETHER LARGE OR&#13;
SMALL, AND TELL US&#13;
YOUR NEEDS.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
192&#13;
&#13;
OLD PHONE 5 19M.&#13;
&#13;
NEW PHONE 6122&#13;
193&#13;
&#13;
�The Friend That Never Fails&#13;
IN TIME OF ADVERSITY IS A BANK ACCOUNT&#13;
Have you such a friend to call upon if necessary? If not,&#13;
open an account with us today. Twenty-five cents will start&#13;
you. We pay three per cent. compound interest on savings.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank&#13;
405 Pearl Street&#13;
SATURDAY EVENINGS we are OPEN until 8:30 O'CLOCK&#13;
Special Attention to STUDENTS and BOARDING HOUSES&#13;
&#13;
PETER'S PARK GROCERY&#13;
M. R. McDONALD. Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Fresh and Cured Meats&#13;
All Kinds of Feed&#13;
Fish and Oysters in Season&#13;
&#13;
Just sit still a moment&#13;
&#13;
OLD PHONE 953-J&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 614 3&#13;
&#13;
and think what&#13;
&#13;
Photographs&#13;
Of the Finest Quality&#13;
at nedium Prices&#13;
&#13;
"Kodakery" means&#13;
&#13;
T means the making of fine pictures&#13;
easily Cheaply and Surely.&#13;
THE FORMULA:&#13;
First, buy a Kodak.&#13;
Next, a daylight develop-&#13;
&#13;
ing outfit.&#13;
&#13;
Youngberg&#13;
Studio&#13;
611 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Then go make your pictures at any old place and&#13;
any old time.&#13;
All such things are kept in in great profusion at&#13;
&#13;
The Kodak Store&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros&#13;
Fifth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
Every Photo Guaranteed TO PLEASE&#13;
&#13;
194&#13;
&#13;
We do Finishing, too, and will teach&#13;
you the how for the asking&#13;
)95&#13;
&#13;
�Electric Lighted&#13;
&#13;
Cafe In Connection&#13;
Open All Night&#13;
&#13;
Steam Heat&#13;
&#13;
Forsberg Hardware Co.&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Howard&#13;
&#13;
HARDWARE, CUTLERY AND STOVES&#13;
&#13;
P.H. LEADER, Manager&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Furnace and Tin Work&#13;
&#13;
American and European Plans&#13;
One Block from Depots&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Third and Nebraska Streets&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Auto Phone 1981&#13;
&#13;
1010-ro12 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Devoted to the Interests of the Better Grades of Printing&#13;
Guess what they are.&#13;
&#13;
- Patches.&#13;
&#13;
W&#13;
&#13;
HEN you want anything neat&#13;
in cards, catalogues or fine&#13;
stationery, call on the Morningside Printery.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 62 1 1&#13;
&#13;
If they are clean they are respectable.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. E. EVANS, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
We want your business but we do not give discounts&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
Moore Clothing Co.&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
A dollar's worth for every dollar, or every dollar back&#13;
&#13;
The Students I Pantorium&#13;
delights in cleaning, repairing and pressing&#13;
your clothing. We can help you to look&#13;
better. You can help us to rest better. :-: :-:&#13;
&#13;
1708 St. Louis Ave.&#13;
&#13;
RAY D. ROBBINS&#13;
&#13;
Patronize&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
I LIVERY&#13;
2 0 0 9 Lakeport Avenue&#13;
&#13;
We always will furnish first-class rigs at reasonable prices.&#13;
We make special rates for students.&#13;
Good service is our hobby.&#13;
If you are figuring on a party ride, come to us.&#13;
A feed barn in connection, where horses receive best of care.&#13;
&#13;
J. A.&#13;
&#13;
WEATHERS, Prop.&#13;
197&#13;
&#13;
GUESS WHO&#13;
196&#13;
&#13;
�everyone knows our name to a&#13;
&#13;
The Engravings&#13;
in This Book Were&#13;
Made by the&#13;
&#13;
photograph&#13;
is a sign of merit&#13;
and excellence in&#13;
portaiture&#13;
&#13;
Electric City&#13;
Engraving Co&#13;
&#13;
Studio&#13;
&#13;
Buffalo, New York&#13;
513 Fourthstreet&#13;
Largest engraving&#13;
house for college&#13;
plates in the States&#13;
Our work is endorsed by 2 0 0&#13;
business managers&#13;
of college annuals&#13;
&#13;
Huntetr&#13;
&#13;
longdistance&#13;
&#13;
phone 2528&#13;
&#13;
Omaha, Neb&#13;
&#13;
Write for Prices and Samples&#13;
&#13;
A STUDENT'S ROOM&#13;
198&#13;
&#13;
199&#13;
&#13;
�The State University of Iowa&#13;
IOWA CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Co Please&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
OVR&#13;
Study&#13;
A SCIENTIFIC&#13;
COURSE combined with up-todate B us i n e s s&#13;
Methods have&#13;
made our reputat i o n throughout&#13;
this whole western country as&#13;
Dealers of High&#13;
&#13;
Class Jewel=&#13;
ry, Watches&#13;
and Diamonds&#13;
&#13;
Will H. Beck Co.&#13;
The Sioux City Jewelers&#13;
&#13;
Furnaces&#13;
&#13;
Cutlery&#13;
&#13;
Steel Ranges&#13;
&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Refrigerators&#13;
&#13;
Sporting Goods&#13;
&#13;
Stoves&#13;
House Furnishings&#13;
Builders' Hardware&#13;
&#13;
If you are seeking the BEST for the&#13;
MONEY you will become a customer of ours&#13;
&#13;
The University Embraces the Following Departments;&#13;
The College of Liberal Arts&#13;
to the degree of B. s. in c E.. E. E.&#13;
M. E., etc. Cou rses are offered in&#13;
This college offers a four year's&#13;
Civil E ngineering,, Sanitary Engineercourse leading to the degree of B. A.&#13;
ing, Mech a nical Engineering, Electrical&#13;
Instruction is provided in Astronomy,&#13;
Engineering, Mining Engineering,&#13;
Botany, Chemistry , Classical ArchaeChemical Engineering, Chemistry and&#13;
ology, Education, English (including&#13;
Forest Engineering. Large and well&#13;
Public Speaking), Fine Arts, Geology,&#13;
equipped laboratories and shops are&#13;
German, Greek, History, Latin, Matheavailable for elementary and advanced&#13;
matics, Philosophy and Psychology,&#13;
work.&#13;
Physics, Politics, Political Economy&#13;
The College of Law&#13;
and Sociology, Political Science, Romance Languages ( French, Italian,&#13;
The College of Law offers a three&#13;
Spanish), Sanskrit, Scandinavian( Norse,&#13;
years' course leading to the degree of&#13;
Swedish, Danish), and Zoology; also in&#13;
LL. B. The case method of instrucMilitary Science and Tactics and in&#13;
tion is employed. Five resident proPhysical Training.&#13;
The college has&#13;
fessors and a n umbe r of special lectabout one hundred professors, inurers have the work in charge. A&#13;
structors, and assistants. Large and&#13;
large law library is available.&#13;
well equipped libraries, laboratories,&#13;
The College of Medicine&#13;
and museums supply material for a&#13;
This college p rovides a four year's&#13;
high grade of work.&#13;
course leading to the degree of M. D.&#13;
Combined Liberal Arts and ProfesFire-proof, stone buildings for laborsional courses lead to the degree of B.&#13;
atorie~ and a large hospital, a ll well&#13;
A. and L. L. B., B. S and M. D., and&#13;
equipped with modern appliances,&#13;
of B. S. and D. D. S.&#13;
secure superior faci lities for medical&#13;
The Graduate College&#13;
work, including opportunity for reInstruction is offered, leading to the&#13;
search in the various helds.&#13;
degrees of M. A , M. S., and Ph. D.,&#13;
The College of Homeopathic Medicine&#13;
in tlie fields mentioned above and also&#13;
A four yea r s' co urse leads to the dein physiology, histology and embryolgree of M. D. Large and fully equipogy, ophthalmology, otology and rhinoped laboratories and a special hospital ,&#13;
laryngoiogy, pathology and bacteriology,&#13;
with abundance of material for clinical&#13;
theory of medicine, and electrical and&#13;
and other purposes, afford· opportunity&#13;
mechanical engineering. Special defor elementary and advanced work under&#13;
partmental libraries, laboratories, etc.,&#13;
competent instruction and super vision.&#13;
give ample opportunity for individual&#13;
research.&#13;
&#13;
The School of Political and Social Science&#13;
This school supplies instruction in&#13;
history, economics, sociology, pol itical&#13;
science, and allied subjects for elemenrary and advanced students of commerce, finance, the various branches of&#13;
public service, etc.&#13;
&#13;
The Summer Session&#13;
The Summer Session offers instruction for both elementar y and advanced&#13;
work in most of the lines mentioned&#13;
above, to apply directly, if desired, on&#13;
the requirements for the bachelor's,&#13;
master's, and doctor's degrees. Special&#13;
professional courses are provided for&#13;
teachers in the public schools.&#13;
The Summer School for Library&#13;
Training, under the auspices of the&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
the Quality Store&#13;
&#13;
Library Commission,&#13;
&#13;
is an integral part of the Summer Session.&#13;
&#13;
The College of Applled Science&#13;
This college g, ves instruction leading&#13;
&#13;
Weld Hardware Co.&#13;
407-409 Pierce Street&#13;
200&#13;
&#13;
The College of Dentistry&#13;
&#13;
The College of Dentistry offers a&#13;
three years' course leading to the degree&#13;
of D. D. S., and a combined course&#13;
leading to the degrees of D . D . S.&#13;
and M. D. The Hall of Dentistr y,&#13;
used exclusively by this college, is&#13;
supplied with modern apparatus of every&#13;
description for a high grade of work.&#13;
&#13;
The College of Pharmacy&#13;
This college has a two years' course&#13;
leading to the degree of Ph. G. and a&#13;
three years' course leading to the degree of Ph. C.; and offers advanced&#13;
work for gradua te students. Laboratories and museums are large and&#13;
supplied with abundant material for all&#13;
lines of study.&#13;
&#13;
The School of Music&#13;
The School of Music, affiliated with&#13;
the University , affords complete facilties for study of organ, pianoforte, voice,&#13;
and orchestral instruments, as well as&#13;
of history, counterpoint, etc.&#13;
&#13;
The TUITION FEES of t he University are as follows: for the College of liberal Arts, the&#13;
school of politicaland Social science and the college of Applied S cien ce. $20.00 a year; for the&#13;
Graduate College, free; for the Summer Session, $5.00; for the Library Training S chool, $J0.00; for&#13;
the Co11eges of Law, Medicin e, Homeopathic Medicine, Dentistry, and P harm acy, $ 50.00 a year; for&#13;
the S chool of Music, varying according to the amount of work. S cholarships and remissions of tuition&#13;
are provided for impecunious students&#13;
The fee for marticulation is $ J0.00, which is paid only once.&#13;
Other expenses of living are very low.&#13;
&#13;
The special announcement of any College or School of the University, giving&#13;
full information in regard to entrance requirements, courses of study, etc., is supplied, free of charge to any one who desires it. Address&#13;
&#13;
President George E . McLean. Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
201&#13;
&#13;
�The Drug Store of Quality&#13;
&#13;
ENTIRELY IND.EPENDENT&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
We carry a full line of the best drugs. Our line of&#13;
fine candies is unequalled in the city. Toilet articles, stationery, in fact, everything that you are accustomed to find in a first class drug store is here.&#13;
In our new location we will install a fine new soda&#13;
fountain and will thus be able to give the very&#13;
best service.&#13;
&#13;
Korona Cameras&#13;
Turner Reich Lenses&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Perfection Flash Lights&#13;
Kruxo Developing Paper&#13;
Cramer Plates&#13;
Century chemicals and Willis&#13;
&amp; Clements Platinum Paper&#13;
&#13;
WE GUARANTEE personal attention to&#13;
prescriptions.&#13;
&#13;
Only the purest drugs used&#13;
&#13;
PROP.&#13;
&#13;
We always have in stock a large assortment of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Souvenirs&#13;
Pennants&#13;
Pillow Tops&#13;
Etc.&#13;
We also carry a&#13;
medium priced&#13;
line of pennants&#13;
of all the Iowa&#13;
colleges. Send&#13;
75c for any one&#13;
you want.&#13;
&#13;
" The Best Photograph Supplies Are Not&#13;
Controlled by the Trust II&#13;
NOTICE - We challenge anyone to disprove this statement, and in support of this&#13;
fact we ask every serious-minded amateur&#13;
to write for our catalogue and latest price&#13;
list. You will find our prices the lowest&#13;
and the results highly superior.&#13;
&#13;
I. P. CUMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
Our finishing department is under expert management&#13;
and all your work is earnestly solicite d and we guarantee perfect satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
JUST WRITE&#13;
&#13;
I,_ _ _ __&#13;
&#13;
R.W. PHELPS&#13;
JOBBER OF PHOTOGRAPH SUPPLIES&#13;
1 712 ST. LOUIS A VENUE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Agent for Moore's Non-Leakable Fountain Pens&#13;
&#13;
J. H. QUEAL &amp; CO.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Lumber and&#13;
Ph&#13;
Building&#13;
ones&#13;
Material&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1118&#13;
Old 118&#13;
&#13;
Professional photographers enclose card for discount sheet&#13;
&#13;
H. T. WALENSKY, Mgr.&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
203&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�SHOES&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE LOTS&#13;
On the Avenue&#13;
One Block from Avenue&#13;
Two Blocks from Avenue&#13;
Easy terms.&#13;
&#13;
$500.00&#13;
300.00&#13;
200.00&#13;
&#13;
For&#13;
&#13;
Geo. C. Call, :-: Iowa Bldg., :-: Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
Man&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
Specialty&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1884&#13;
Capital&#13;
&#13;
Surplus&#13;
&#13;
$250,000&#13;
&#13;
$125,000&#13;
&#13;
We solicit your business and promise satisfactory tre atment.&#13;
W. P . Manley, President&#13;
C. L. Wright, Vice-President&#13;
C. N. Lukes, Cashier&#13;
T. A Black, Vice-Preside nt&#13;
C. W. Britton, Assistant Casl ier&#13;
&#13;
Convery &amp; Seney&#13;
421 Pierce St. C!1 927 Fourth St.&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Newest, Largest and Best Stock&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Pierce Streets&#13;
Students Welcome&#13;
&#13;
August Williges&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
609 fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
PRIMARY METHODS&#13;
&#13;
204&#13;
&#13;
205&#13;
&#13;
�ISioux City&#13;
&#13;
College Clothes&#13;
&#13;
Brick and&#13;
Tile Works&#13;
&#13;
&lt;SPECIALIZED )&#13;
&#13;
Mfrs. of Face&#13;
Common,Hol&#13;
low and Side&#13;
walk Brick.&#13;
Hollow&#13;
Blocks and&#13;
Drain Tile&#13;
Jobbers of Sewer Pipe, Fire Brick and Fire Clay&#13;
&#13;
office&#13;
&#13;
420 Fifth St.&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
E.G. STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
A few years ago no college man would&#13;
think of wearing "ready mades." They&#13;
lacked individuality. They were stiff.&#13;
They were graceless, They were averaged wrong- that is- a clothing designer&#13;
cut a coat and had to have the same&#13;
lines please a cabbage grower in Chicago&#13;
subarbs and the bank clerk in New&#13;
York. It had to fit a veterinary surgeon&#13;
of thirty and a lawyer at fifty, The&#13;
same coat, mind you, the same size, bear&#13;
in mind. Now, how in the world could&#13;
such clothes possibly be exactly suited to&#13;
any man, the young fellow, the college&#13;
man particularly? Our college style&#13;
clothes don't take into account anybody&#13;
but the college man, the young man or&#13;
men who would like to be young. They&#13;
are built to fit young athletic physiques.&#13;
If the cabbage grower don't like them, if&#13;
they don't suit the veterinary surgeon,&#13;
well and good, they were not made for&#13;
them, If you want to hit the bull's eye&#13;
you must aim at the black spot. You&#13;
can't shoot at more than one target at the&#13;
same time and ring the bell. The designer of our college style clothes aimed&#13;
only at one spot, and his aim was truehe hit the bell,&#13;
COLLEGE STYLE SUITS - $12.50&#13;
$13.50, $15.00, $17.50, 20.00 and $25.00&#13;
&#13;
z&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
z&#13;
z&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
GCOMPANY&#13;
&#13;
E. S. STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
(Incorporated )&#13;
&#13;
z&#13;
&#13;
STRAUB BROTHERS&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
&#13;
1893&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
707 FOURTH STREET&#13;
phone&#13;
&#13;
704-J&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
WM.GORDON&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
&#13;
northwestern Nat'l Bank&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Loans&#13;
Insurance&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $130,000&#13;
Fire Proof Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Interest Paid on Time Deposits&#13;
206&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUILDING&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
207&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
�The Reliable&#13;
Dry Goods House&#13;
T. S. Martin (cf! Co.&#13;
Sioux City. Iowa&#13;
Open Day and Night&#13;
&#13;
Fine Cafe in Connection&#13;
&#13;
THE NEW&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
&#13;
The place to buy&#13;
&#13;
Trunks&#13;
Is where TRUNKS&#13;
are made&#13;
Sample Cases to&#13;
Order&#13;
&#13;
Repairing Done&#13;
WE CAN PLEASE YOU WITH A BAG OR TRUNK&#13;
AT THE RIGHT PRICE&#13;
&#13;
D. S. ANTHONY,&#13;
MAJlo!'UFACTURE.R&#13;
&#13;
LESSENICH &amp; NATION, Props.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fourth and Jones Sts.&#13;
&#13;
413 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Morningside and&#13;
C&#13;
College Dray Line&#13;
Students' Work a Spec:alty&#13;
&#13;
We meet all&#13;
trains. Special rates to&#13;
students ..&#13;
Our Laundry Boy&#13;
&#13;
Clapsaddle vs. Hamren&#13;
&#13;
C. M. FOSBERG, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
"JUMBO"&#13;
&#13;
DOTH PHONES&#13;
&#13;
208&#13;
&#13;
209&#13;
&#13;
�WELL KNOWN Pianos&#13;
&#13;
Nineteen Years Under&#13;
Same Management&#13;
&#13;
In calling attention to our line of&#13;
Pianos, we wish to emphasize th e&#13;
fact that we are not offering anything in the way of experiments.&#13;
A. B. Chas'e , Crown, Poole, Haines,&#13;
Doll Inside Player Piano, Werner and Smith &amp; Barnes have been&#13;
before the public for many years.&#13;
their great durability and musical&#13;
excellence have earned world-wide&#13;
reputations for Being str&#13;
grade, standard Pianos. Thousands&#13;
of these splendid instruments are in&#13;
the best homes in Iowa, Nebraska&#13;
and South Dakota, giving the best&#13;
of satisfaction.&#13;
A Word About Our Prices&#13;
We are making ve ry low prices for&#13;
Our&#13;
cash or short time sales.&#13;
Method is cash or short time,&#13;
quick sales, small profits No agents&#13;
commissions. We sell direct from&#13;
factory. Correspondence solicited.&#13;
High Grade Church Organs&#13;
a Specialty. Col umbia, Edison and&#13;
Victor Talking Machines, small&#13;
Musical Goods, Sheet Music. etc.&#13;
Tuning Repairing and Refinishing&#13;
Pianos.&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
The Merchants&#13;
National Bank&#13;
Capital $100,000&#13;
&#13;
Public&#13;
see at least three roads&#13;
before you, viz:&#13;
Day Labor&#13;
College and&#13;
Business&#13;
YOU may reach SUCCESS by any of these&#13;
roads, but the shortest,&#13;
most direct, surest and&#13;
cheapest leads through&#13;
&#13;
The National Business Training School&#13;
OFFICERS &amp; DIRECTORS&#13;
E. W. RICE&#13;
President&#13;
E. B. SPALDING Vice-Pres.&#13;
GEO. P. DAY&#13;
Cashier&#13;
G. N. SWAN . Asst. Cashier&#13;
]. D. SPALDING&#13;
W.B.LOWER&#13;
&#13;
W. A. DEAN CO.&#13;
&#13;
All young people who have selected this road have reached&#13;
SUCCESS, and are now fillin g good situations at salaries ranging from $600.00 to $1 500.00 per year&#13;
If you want a good situation and a Business Education that&#13;
will fit you for a successful life come to this school.&#13;
What we have done for others we will do for YOU.&#13;
A Week's Trial Before Enrolling&#13;
&#13;
N. B. T. School,&#13;
&#13;
309 Nebrask.a St.&#13;
&#13;
315 Fourth St., SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
1885&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
ATTEND THE BEST&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Dayhoff&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp;&#13;
Aronson ....&#13;
&#13;
MORTICIAN&#13;
Lady Assistant&#13;
Open Day and Night&#13;
&#13;
The Old Reliable&#13;
(Form e rly Brown s.)&#13;
&#13;
Business m e n are calling for more&#13;
Warriner graduates.&#13;
Shorthand&#13;
and Bookkee ping will give you a&#13;
splendid Start promote you, and&#13;
help you out a thousa nd times in&#13;
common life .&#13;
Send for information.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. WARRINER, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Phones Auto 247r&#13;
Iowa 71&#13;
&#13;
Tailors and Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
4 1 5 Sixth St.&#13;
&#13;
Carry a Complete L ine of&#13;
Up-to-date&#13;
&#13;
J. M. PINCKNEY, Pres and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Clothing and Furnishing Goods&#13;
At Very Lowest Prices&#13;
&#13;
J. M~ Pickney Co.&#13;
&#13;
Ten Per 1Cent Discount&#13;
to Professors and Students&#13;
of College&#13;
&#13;
Books, Stationery, Blank&#13;
Books and Office Supplies&#13;
Wall Paper, Paints, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
710-712 Fourth Street&#13;
210&#13;
&#13;
6ro Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
211&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2407&#13;
&#13;
�Ship Your Live Stock To&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City College of Medicine&#13;
&#13;
Baldwin, Kitselman &amp; Timmel&#13;
&#13;
= == =MEMBER OF THE,= = = =&#13;
&#13;
Association of American Medical Colleges&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
M. W, Baldwin&#13;
D. C. Kitselman&#13;
W, H. T1'mmel&#13;
&#13;
F our Years' G ra d e d Course. Each&#13;
Session Nine Months.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
C. C. Smith&#13;
Mary Dyer&#13;
&#13;
BUYING ORDERS SOLICITED&#13;
&#13;
Students. Twenty-two Professors:Six Instructors.&#13;
&#13;
ROOMS 217 and 219 EXCHANGE BLDG.&#13;
IOWA PHONE 397, AUTO PHONE 1443&#13;
Bank References: Iowa State National Bank, Live Stock National Bank&#13;
Business Reference: "Our Customers"&#13;
&#13;
best Advantages Given to Students.&#13;
S · y U&#13;
d a e M e th o d s Used&#13;
to Impart Knowledge.&#13;
Building and Apparatus Ample.&#13;
Clinical Advantages the BeQ.&#13;
School Opens Monday, Sept. 17th,&#13;
1907.&#13;
Holiday Vacation Begins Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 24, 1907.&#13;
Holiday Vacation Closes Thursday,&#13;
Jan. 2, 1908.&#13;
Session Closes June 4, 1908.&#13;
&#13;
Life Insurance&#13;
At Cost&#13;
Let us show you&#13;
o ur brand new&#13;
&#13;
Renewable Term Policies&#13;
Issued for the first&#13;
time April r907&#13;
&#13;
The BeQ Life Insurance of its&#13;
Kind on the American&#13;
Market Today&#13;
&#13;
For Particulars Write to&#13;
&#13;
DR. J. N. WARREN&#13;
&#13;
DR.F.E.FRANCHERE&#13;
&#13;
Dean&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
H. N. Brothers, M. D.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
212&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Anthony&#13;
&#13;
National Life Insurance Co.&#13;
Montpieler,&#13;
&#13;
Vt.&#13;
&#13;
(Organized 1850)&#13;
&#13;
Address M. J, DILLON, Gen. Mgr.,&#13;
223-4-5 Iowa B ldg., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Office and&#13;
Residence&#13;
&#13;
Peters' Park, Morningside&#13;
Hawkeye Land&#13;
Company&#13;
Real Estate and Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Home Builders&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
Building&#13;
Iowa Phone r99&#13;
Automatic Phone ro99&#13;
&#13;
�CLAY, ROBINSON &amp;&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock&#13;
Commission&#13;
Salesmen&#13;
&#13;
College Annuals&#13;
Job Printing&#13;
&#13;
Fully Equipped with Highest Class Salesmen&#13;
and Competent Men in Every Department&#13;
OFFICES A T - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
"&#13;
Chicago, 111.&#13;
&#13;
So.&#13;
&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
Make Your Money&#13;
Work for You&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Steam&#13;
Dye Works&#13;
&#13;
The accumulators of great&#13;
fortunes have only attained&#13;
their wealth by taking advantage of every opportunity for&#13;
saving money and then making the money work for them.&#13;
What others have accomplished is possible for you.&#13;
The first essential is to save.&#13;
BEGIN NOW.&#13;
Every day&#13;
that your savings are with us&#13;
they are working for you.&#13;
&#13;
322 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
J. B. HUMPHREY&#13;
Proprietor&#13;
Special attention given&#13;
to Cleaning and Dyeing&#13;
All Kinds of Clothing.&#13;
French Dry Cleaning&#13;
the Best Process in the&#13;
World.&#13;
Bring Us&#13;
Your Clothing, we will&#13;
do the rest.&#13;
Every&#13;
Garment Turned&#13;
Out Like&#13;
New&#13;
&#13;
We accept accounts of ONE&#13;
DOLLAR or any larger sum.&#13;
p&#13;
n d Interest&#13;
3 % C o m ono uSavings Depaid&#13;
posits&#13;
&#13;
So Omaha Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Numbering ·M achines&#13;
Rubber Stamps&#13;
Stamp Supplies&#13;
Numbering Machine and&#13;
Rubber Stamp Ink&#13;
&#13;
or Time Certificates.&#13;
&#13;
517 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury Co. Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 240&#13;
Automatic 2780&#13;
&#13;
405-407 Nebraska Street&#13;
214&#13;
&#13;
A GIRL'S ROOM&#13;
215&#13;
&#13;
�Index of Advertisers&#13;
Barber&#13;
Bridges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . .. 192&#13;
Banks&#13;
First National.. .. .. . . . . . . . .. .. 192&#13;
Merchant's National ............. 210&#13;
Iowa State Savings ....... . ... .. 194&#13;
Northwestern National. .......... 206&#13;
Security National. ........ .. .. .. . 204&#13;
Woodbury County Savings ........ 214&#13;
Book Store&#13;
. ............. 203&#13;
&#13;
R. H . Darling ...&#13;
&#13;
Brick and Tile Works&#13;
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Business Colleges&#13;
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Warriner's .... .... ...... . . .... ... 2l0&#13;
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Iowa State University .. . ....... 201&#13;
Commission Firms&#13;
Baldwin. Kitselman &amp; Timmel. ... 213&#13;
Clay, Robinson &amp; Co .. . ..... .... 214&#13;
Clothing Firms&#13;
Dow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 207&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson .&#13;
. ... 2l l&#13;
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Dentists&#13;
Straub Bros.....&#13;
. ...... .... 206&#13;
Westwood ...................... 191&#13;
Doctors&#13;
H. N. Brothers ................... 213&#13;
Dray Lines&#13;
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Drug Stores&#13;
Cummings .. ... . ..... ..... ... .... 203&#13;
Todd-Baker Drug Co ............ 193&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Davidson Bros ............ .. .... 204&#13;
T. S . Martin ................... 208&#13;
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Engravers&#13;
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Electric City..... . . .......... . .. 198&#13;
Furrier&#13;
August Williges ............ . .. . 204&#13;
&#13;
Grocers&#13;
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M. R. McDonald ... ... ........... 194&#13;
Gun Store&#13;
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Hardware&#13;
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Forsberg Hardware Co .......... 197&#13;
Singer Hardware Co . . ........... 192&#13;
Hotels&#13;
Chicago ............. .. ......... 208&#13;
Howard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . 196&#13;
Insurance&#13;
National Life Insurance Co........ 213&#13;
Jewelers&#13;
W. H. Beck Co .... . ........&#13;
200&#13;
Livery&#13;
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Lumber&#13;
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Queal Lumber Co ................ 203&#13;
Mortician&#13;
Dayhoff, W. H .................... 211&#13;
Photo Supplies&#13;
R. W. Phelps ... .. .............. . 202&#13;
Zimmerman Bros ................ 195&#13;
Pantorium&#13;
Robbins ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Genelli .................. ........ 199&#13;
Wilcox ......... . ......... . ...... 190&#13;
Youngberg. . . . .. .. . ............ 194&#13;
Pianos&#13;
W. A. Dean Co ....... .. .......... 210&#13;
Schmoller &amp; Mueller ... . . ........ 192&#13;
Printers&#13;
College Printery ..... ... . ....... . 196'&#13;
Star Printing Co........... . . . ... 215&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Wm. Gordon ..................... 207&#13;
Hawkeye Land Co ............... 213&#13;
Hook. . . . . . . . . .................. 191&#13;
Shoes&#13;
. C onv e ry &amp; Seney .. ..... ... . .. .. 205&#13;
trunks&#13;
D. S. Anthony. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209&#13;
Wall Paper, Paints, Books and&#13;
School Supplies&#13;
J. M. Pinckney Co ........ .. .... . . 211&#13;
&#13;
�Mr.&#13;
&#13;
A. H. SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
2900 Jennings Street&#13;
Sioux City 4, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>MR&#13;
&#13;
A. H. Schatz&#13;
2900 Jennings Street&#13;
Sioux City 4, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux of '08&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Being the Year Book of&#13;
Morningside College for&#13;
the Year 1906-0 7&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
t,&#13;
&#13;
PRESS OF THE&#13;
STAR PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
322 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Published by the&#13;
Members of the Junior Class&#13;
in the Spring of 1907&#13;
&#13;
Greeting&#13;
H E members of the Annual Board, as representatives of the Junior&#13;
Class, wish to present&#13;
this book to the Students, faculty, board of trustees and&#13;
friends of Morningside College, in the&#13;
hope that here those friends may find&#13;
recorded some of the things which&#13;
tend to make life happier,&#13;
brighter and better&#13;
&#13;
.:&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
JOHN B. TRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Probably no member of the Northwest Iowa Coonference&#13;
has done more for the cause of clean life and true religious&#13;
thought and experience than Dr. Trimble.&#13;
&#13;
He has labored for&#13;
&#13;
those of his own neighborhood, but has never confined his gaze&#13;
to the horizon of home life.&#13;
&#13;
The entire world has been in his&#13;
&#13;
mind, and the foreign mission cause has never had a more&#13;
earnest friend than he.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. John B. Trimble, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
He looks to the conquest of the world&#13;
&#13;
for Christianity, and never doubts the ultimate success of the&#13;
cause.&#13;
&#13;
The inspiration that comes from the faith of such a man&#13;
&#13;
is the best equipment that the students can take with them as&#13;
N the thought that it is entirely fitting and&#13;
proper to&#13;
select from the friends of Morningside College one, to whom this Annual might&#13;
&#13;
failure, but who can doubt that in the great work of the ages the&#13;
&#13;
be dedicated, who has done much for the&#13;
establishment of the institution, no name has&#13;
&#13;
final triumph will come?&#13;
It is to such a man, and in such a faith, that the members of&#13;
&#13;
seemed more prominent than that of Dr.&#13;
Trimble.&#13;
&#13;
they go out from the College to the great battlefield of . life.&#13;
There may be many failures, as the world measures success and&#13;
&#13;
the Class of 1908 dedicate this Annual.&#13;
&#13;
The present prosperous condition of the College, and&#13;
&#13;
the fact that all uncertainty of its future success has been laid to&#13;
rest, only emphasizes the toil and sacrifice which were so freely&#13;
given in its establishment.&#13;
&#13;
It was a great undertaking, and the&#13;
&#13;
"faith of the fathers" was the only tangible asset of the time. Dr.&#13;
Trimble furnished a large portion of that faith, and at the same&#13;
time he supplied what was absolutely necessary for the final&#13;
fruition of the labor, money and credit, without which the&#13;
enterprise must inevitably have ended in failure.&#13;
That he was one of the first graduates of the College, or&#13;
perhaps more properly speaking, of the University of the Northwest, the immediate predecessor of the College, may have stimulated him with a pride in his Alma Mater, but this was only&#13;
one of the things in the economy and plan of the Master which&#13;
worked in the unfolding of His great purpose.&#13;
&#13;
To those who&#13;
&#13;
are acquainted with Dr. Trimble, it is needless to say that he is&#13;
a man of unquestionable faith.&#13;
&#13;
The bank of Providence is to&#13;
&#13;
him an institution of unlimited resources, and he never hesitates&#13;
to draw upon its funds.&#13;
&#13;
As one of the leaders in the movement&#13;
&#13;
for the establishment and building of the College he applied his&#13;
faith and business ability, and inspired all his co-workers in the&#13;
same direction.&#13;
&#13;
It would be untrue and without justification to&#13;
&#13;
say that he was the main builder of the College, but it is entirely within bouhds to say that without him the College would&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
never have been built.&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Board of Trustees&#13;
TERM EXPIRES 1907&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Hon. J. P. Dolliver, Fort Dodge&#13;
0. W. Towner, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. Robt. E. Smylie, D. D., Sioux City&#13;
Rev. Geo. C. Fort, Fort Dodge&#13;
Rev. D. A McBurney, Fort Dodge&#13;
J. G. Shumaker, Sioux City&#13;
Hon. P. A Sawyer, Sioux City&#13;
F. H. Skewis, Inwood&#13;
N. R. Hathaway, Sioux City&#13;
E. A. Morling, Emmetsburg&#13;
D. Montgomery, Ireton&#13;
W. R. Jameson, Clarion&#13;
TERM EXPIRES 1908&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Rev. J. W. Southwell, Ida Grove&#13;
Rev. Walter T orbet, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. Hugh Hay, Sioux City&#13;
L. J. Haskins, Sioux City&#13;
Scott M. Ladd, Des Moines&#13;
Rev. J. W. Lothian, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. G. W. Pratt, L. L. D., Rock Rapids&#13;
Rev. H. G. Pittenger, Sloan&#13;
C. W. Payne, West Side&#13;
Rev. O. K. Maynard, Algona&#13;
C. D. Killam, Sioux City&#13;
O. B. Harding, Sioux City&#13;
TERM EXPIRES 1909&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Rev. W. T. McDonald, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. J. B. Trimble, D. D., Kansas City&#13;
J. P. Negus, Sioux City&#13;
Rev. G. W. Carr, Seattle&#13;
Rev. B. Mitchell, D. D., Sioux City&#13;
John Metcalf, Paullina&#13;
C. P. Kilborne, Sioux City&#13;
W. P. Manley, Sioux City&#13;
H. B. Pierce, Rock Rapids&#13;
Rev. E. S. Johnson, Ida Grove&#13;
Isaac Garmoe, Fort Dodge&#13;
]. C. Lockin, Aurelia&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Annual Board&#13;
CLARE D. HORNER&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
&#13;
FRANK B. HEILMAN&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE CLARK&#13;
Societies&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE BENNETT JOHNS&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
Harry J. RICHARDS&#13;
Cartoons&#13;
&#13;
LURA MATTESON&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WILSON&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR J. WESTCOTT&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL JANE HASKINS&#13;
Literary&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
CLARE D. HORNER, "JACK II&#13;
LIKE his " Mother Goose n&#13;
ancestor who in h is boyhood days always had a finger in the pie pulling out&#13;
plums, Jack is always around&#13;
about the time the pie is taken&#13;
from the oven, and seems to&#13;
have a knack of getting his&#13;
share of the filling. Perhaps&#13;
it is because of his marked&#13;
ability that he is never given&#13;
a chance to get into a corner&#13;
to eat his plums, but is always&#13;
kept busy winning honors for&#13;
his class, his society and his&#13;
school.&#13;
Second place home oratorica I contest; Philo secretary;&#13;
class president; Philo gold&#13;
and silver medal debates ( 1);&#13;
Collegian Reporter staff ( 1)&#13;
(2); Inter-society debate team;&#13;
First place home prohibition&#13;
contest; Third place prohibition state contest (2); Philo Public&#13;
(2) (3); Student Congress; Editor-in-Chief Sioux of 108 (3).&#13;
&#13;
GRACE EVELYN RO REM&#13;
&#13;
FAIR, sweet womanliness,&#13;
Where virtue with true&#13;
beauty dwells,&#13;
Where eyes speak love and&#13;
sympathy,&#13;
Where lips speak truth and&#13;
purity,&#13;
Where voice speaks mirth and&#13;
melody,&#13;
Where carriage speaks of dignity,&#13;
ls this fair maid of Morningside.&#13;
Enthusiastic jollity&#13;
Insures her popularity.&#13;
Vice president Y. W. C. A&#13;
( 1); Queen Dido, Zetalethean&#13;
Public; President Choral Union (2); Second soprano&#13;
Ladies Chorus (2) (3); Enoch&#13;
Arden, Zetalethean Public; Student Volunteer; President Junior&#13;
Class (3).&#13;
&#13;
FRANK B. HEILMAN&#13;
Fulle&#13;
rich he is of holy&#13;
thoughte and werk,&#13;
He never yet no helpful task&#13;
did shirk,&#13;
Of twenty yeer of age he is, I&#13;
gesse&#13;
And lookes well in padded&#13;
football dress.&#13;
His eyes are wonderly, and&#13;
. · lighte up his face,&#13;
They seem to pleade for some&#13;
lady's grace,&#13;
Impulsive, and it hath full&#13;
ofte been told&#13;
That he makes many pretty&#13;
speeches bold.&#13;
By good ensample IS all&#13;
lucke his;&#13;
A bettre man I trow that&#13;
nonne IS.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES AVERY RICHARDS&#13;
&#13;
Pessimists&#13;
have dreams;&#13;
optimists have visions; 11&#13;
and while he can see the&#13;
beauty of Nature smiling in&#13;
the brooks of her valleys or&#13;
sparkling in Winter's crystal&#13;
forms, he can also see the&#13;
great promise of the future,&#13;
the will of the Infinite revealed in the blossoming buds,&#13;
the w:arbling birds and flowing waters. Happy that people whose II young men see&#13;
visions; 11 and seeing are moved to action. Charlie's dreams&#13;
are fraught with power and&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Vice-President; College M's in Football and&#13;
Track ( 1); Othonian Secretary ; Science Club; Joint Winner of&#13;
Football Trophy Cup; Football Captain for '07; Business Manager of Annual (3).&#13;
• 12&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate; Freshman President; Sand burr No.&#13;
1 ( 1); Student Volunteer; Sandburr No. 2 (2).&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
MABEL CHAMBERLAIN&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR ]. WESTCOTT "IKE II&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
who has the ability to&#13;
make friends and is a&#13;
ready mixer. Being of a mischevious disposition he plays&#13;
many jokes and is himself the&#13;
joke of the college. His reputation for saying more funny&#13;
things than any other fellow&#13;
in school is not to be denied.&#13;
A ready and fluent speaker,&#13;
and when called upon in class&#13;
he never fails to have an answer, though seldom bearing&#13;
on the subject. A good type&#13;
of the genial college athlete&#13;
and student&#13;
&#13;
YES, you can know her&#13;
presence by her laugh.&#13;
She is one of those industrious girls, who never know&#13;
when they have reached the&#13;
limit in the number of hours&#13;
they ought to carry, and still&#13;
not interfere with their college&#13;
education. One thing is evidently lacking, and that she&#13;
must acquire before that solemn commencement time, for&#13;
she knows not the art of&#13;
"scribbling."&#13;
Zetalethean Secretary; Zetalethean Public; Volunteer&#13;
Band (2); Instructor in Penmanship (3).&#13;
&#13;
College M's in every athletic department except footQjill (I) (2) (3); College pole&#13;
vaulting record ; Basket Ball&#13;
captain (I) (2) (3).&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE CLARK,&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
FLOSSIE"&#13;
&#13;
A VERY frank&#13;
can tell you&#13;
&#13;
JULIA ALICE ROYCE&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
ULIA is generally known&#13;
among her classmates as&#13;
the girl who thinks. Never&#13;
in a hurry to express her&#13;
thought; when she does, what&#13;
she says usually counts. Sunny&#13;
disposition and blue eyes,&#13;
Never neglects her books nor&#13;
her beloved music. She seems&#13;
to have taken for her guide&#13;
Fletcher's motto:&#13;
"Value deserve, and virtue. •&#13;
they are jewels ;&#13;
Fit for your worth and wearing."&#13;
Zetalethean Chorus; Choral&#13;
Union; Junior Secretary (3).&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
girl, who&#13;
what she&#13;
thinks very quickly, and she&#13;
would hardly care whether&#13;
you took offense or not. Not&#13;
the kind to worry. Her lessons don't come hard; any-·&#13;
way, who would stay at home&#13;
digging away in books when&#13;
there is something better to&#13;
do? It is easy for her to forget the serious in her enthusiasm over some social affair.&#13;
Here, however, her talents&#13;
are revealed. A voice trained&#13;
for song and recitation, you&#13;
will remember her by these&#13;
distinctive qualities, and admire the easy, natural grace&#13;
of her every act.&#13;
A truly&#13;
American College girl.&#13;
Freshman secretary Centre, Girls' Basket Ball (I); Zetalethean Secretary; Sophomore Vices President; Zethalethean Public-Dido Chorus (2); Annual Board, Reporter Staff; Choral&#13;
Union (3).&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
HORACE ENSIGN GROOM,&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
JIMMY BRITT&#13;
&#13;
OLIVIA HELEN WILSON&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
REAL genuine product&#13;
of the Hawkeye state.&#13;
Devotes his entire time to&#13;
chemistry and II resting a minute." His favorite gem is the&#13;
Opal, and one especially he&#13;
has always with him. He has&#13;
become famous as a walking&#13;
delegate for II Going! Going !!&#13;
Gone!!! 11 , and this may account for the enormous sales&#13;
of the well known hair tonic&#13;
at the Morningside pharmacy.&#13;
He is an excellent type of the&#13;
small boy at college.&#13;
Othonian Vice-President ;&#13;
First Tenor, Glee Club ; Othonian Public ( 2 ) ; Assistant&#13;
Chemistry {2); Choral Union&#13;
&#13;
(2) (3).&#13;
&#13;
UST a maiden, plain, neat,&#13;
simple and sincere; an eye&#13;
that reflects the truth in color&#13;
and expression, a clear countenance over which a shadow&#13;
may now and then pass as a&#13;
cloud in June. Gentle, kind,&#13;
and still decisive, with a mind&#13;
all her own. A seriousness&#13;
at times indicates thoughts&#13;
deeper than the words express.&#13;
An ardent lover of&#13;
nature and a hearty participator in the activities of college&#13;
life.&#13;
Freshman Secretary ; Zetalethean Secretary ; Delegate&#13;
to Waterloo Conference ( 1);&#13;
Y. W. C. A. Secretary; Collegian Reporter staff; Zetalethean Public-Dido Chorus (2);&#13;
Firs(Soprano Ladies' Chorus (2) (3); Choral Union ( 1) (2) {3);&#13;
Junior Vice-President; Annual Board (3).&#13;
&#13;
BLANCH VIOLA WATTS&#13;
SHE is rather tall and slender&#13;
With hair of darkish hue,&#13;
Whose bright blue eyes so&#13;
tender&#13;
Betoken a heart kind and&#13;
true.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
Issions having come topossesone of our new&#13;
Morningside this year from Upper&#13;
Iowa University.&#13;
Short of&#13;
stature, quick of mind and of&#13;
a retiring disposition. Being&#13;
fond of his dictionary, he is&#13;
able to use more words from&#13;
it than any other fellow in&#13;
school, although he is not always sure of their meaning.&#13;
When he rises to speak all&#13;
others sit down, for he has a&#13;
way of making himself felt&#13;
and kno"¥m. Surely he will&#13;
be a great man some day if&#13;
he doesn't run out of material.&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
bearing so quiet and&#13;
modest,&#13;
One faithful her tasks to&#13;
fulfill,&#13;
But never can be persuaded&#13;
To act against her will.&#13;
&#13;
Is&#13;
&#13;
patient, industrious- and&#13;
candid,&#13;
For Tabby her fondness is&#13;
clear;&#13;
Is beloved by all her classmates&#13;
As a friend most truly sincere.&#13;
Delegate to the Waterloo Conference ; Zetalethean Treasurer (2); Vice-President of the Y. W. C. A. {3); Librarian (2) (3).&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
Member Science Club; Student Volunteer; Philomathean&#13;
Public (3).&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
II ANDY II&#13;
&#13;
E. J. WINTERSTEIN,&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Jim II&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE BENNETT JOHNS, "Johnny"&#13;
&#13;
"RIGHT"&#13;
ALWAYS the ever obliging,&#13;
ever pleasant "Johnny. 11&#13;
helpful and kind to all her&#13;
friends, whether it be to translate Deutch or find a library&#13;
book. Her congenial and sociable disposition makes her&#13;
popular not only among the&#13;
girls, but she is much admired&#13;
by all our college men who&#13;
see kindness personified in&#13;
the depths of her trusting&#13;
blue eyes.&#13;
&#13;
HE'S Irish. A deep thinker&#13;
and good student, with a&#13;
re markable ability of expression. Bears a close resemblance to Ex-President Cleveland in some ways and promises to duplicate that man's&#13;
career. Has decided to be a&#13;
lawyer's wife's husband.&#13;
Looks solemn, but isn't. Just&#13;
yell, 11 Jimmie," and he'll answer. ls a firm believer in the&#13;
theory of brotherly love ; hasn't much time for girls, but--T AKES time. Always happy,&#13;
always cheerful, " Our Irish&#13;
Jim. 11&#13;
II RIGHT."&#13;
&#13;
Atheneum Secretary ( 1);&#13;
Sophomore Secretary ; Atheneum Public (2); Assistant&#13;
Librarian ; Annual Board;&#13;
Student Congress (3).&#13;
&#13;
Choral Union ( 1) (2) (3); Othonian Secretary (3).&#13;
&#13;
LOUIE MIRAH MILLS&#13;
ALBERT A HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
A RE you looking for Mirah ? W atch for the girl&#13;
with the rosy English cheeks.&#13;
She will talk but little, though&#13;
she may ask you to Y.W.C.A.&#13;
She will wear an Atheneum&#13;
star and may then be on her&#13;
way to a Junior class meeting.&#13;
You must be early if you&#13;
would see her, no matter&#13;
what the occasion. A half&#13;
hour is not too soon if going&#13;
to a train, fifteen minutes if it&#13;
is a class. She is a girl slow&#13;
to seek honors, for she " envieth not and is not puffed up II&#13;
She has no enemies for she&#13;
II thinketh no evil."&#13;
She is a&#13;
friend who will never fail you&#13;
for she II seeketh not her own. 11&#13;
&#13;
BORN and raised in the&#13;
country, he is accustomed&#13;
to hard work. This is demonstrated by his industry as a&#13;
student and a pastor. A man&#13;
loyal to his society and to his&#13;
college. Steady, consistent,&#13;
slow in action, but always&#13;
sure. He has a purpose in&#13;
life, and will make the world&#13;
better wherever his work may&#13;
be. Two words characterize&#13;
his daily life and conduct,&#13;
diligence and faithfulness.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Y.&#13;
C. A. Treasurer (1); Atheneum Secretary ; Nashville&#13;
Delegate (2); Y. W . C. A President (3).&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Philo gold a nd silver medal debates ; Philo Treasurer;&#13;
Freshman President ( 1); Philo&#13;
Secretary; Philo Public; 11 Old&#13;
Gobbo II in The Merchant of&#13;
Venice (2).&#13;
&#13;
JOHN G. WATERMAN, "J-o-h-n"&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL JANE HASKINS, "Ethel Jane"&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SINGLE glance at Ethel&#13;
Jane reveals one of Momingside's&#13;
fairest maidens.&#13;
Soft brown hair, glowing&#13;
complexion and bright eyes&#13;
filled with laughter (and a&#13;
trace of the Rash which would&#13;
dart forth should a storm&#13;
arise) help to make up the&#13;
picture. The tilt of her head&#13;
shows to a good advantage&#13;
both the graceful curve of her&#13;
chin, and that she has a mind&#13;
of her own, which, however,&#13;
is never asserte d until II Ethel&#13;
Jane" arrives at the conclusion that she is right. Giving&#13;
due credit to the fact that she&#13;
is a splendid student and of a&#13;
philosophical turn of mind,&#13;
we must admit that she is&#13;
usually right.&#13;
&#13;
A says hewho, yotmger, he&#13;
MAN&#13;
though&#13;
is&#13;
is&#13;
thought to be about thirty.&#13;
Short and stout, but not stout&#13;
enough to hold his hair which&#13;
is rapidly clearing the way&#13;
for him to rise to the fame&#13;
and usefulness that awaits&#13;
him. A deep thinker, ready&#13;
speaker and good conversationalist. His familiarity with&#13;
many subjects makes him a&#13;
favorite among the fellows,&#13;
and their girls. Still a single&#13;
man he gives the reason that&#13;
II she could not get ready in&#13;
such a short time," it now&#13;
being but three years ince&#13;
preparations were begun.&#13;
Delegate to state Y. M. C. A convention ( 1); Choral Union&#13;
(2); President of Prohibition League, President of Oratorical&#13;
Association (3).&#13;
&#13;
Cupid, Zetalethean Public ( 1); Secretary of Student Body;&#13;
Annual Board (3).&#13;
&#13;
MAUDE FAIR&#13;
&#13;
H. ]. RICHARDS, "Flib"&#13;
YES, she's Fair, but dark;&#13;
has the Irish blue eye behind which lurks well plotted&#13;
schemes for a good joke,&#13;
though the sober countenance&#13;
would not so indicate. Jovial&#13;
and kind in disposition, ready&#13;
at any moment to help some&#13;
one near at hand. She is a&#13;
firm believer in ghosts, and&#13;
can give convincing evidence&#13;
for her belief. Can successfully interpret dreams and tell&#13;
fortunes. ls a great friend of&#13;
the broom and can nowhere&#13;
be excelled as a tidy housekeeper. Knows:&#13;
All about the candy,&#13;
All about traveling,&#13;
All about how to meet the&#13;
assessor,&#13;
All about the history of Morningside college smce its first&#13;
corner-stone was laid.&#13;
&#13;
BORN in the midst of Wisconsin timber, he is by&#13;
nature a dreamer. He inherited a roving disposition and&#13;
because of this has travelled&#13;
extensively, often going as&#13;
far as fifteen miles from home&#13;
at one time. Clean of character, always striving to help&#13;
someone to a better life, he&#13;
lives each day the principles&#13;
of the Galilean, and plans to&#13;
make the ministry his life&#13;
work. He has marked ability&#13;
as a platform man, having&#13;
won honors at Ellsworth College prior to oming to Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Secretary ( 1); Second place Home Oratorical&#13;
contest ( 1) (2); Delegate to State Oratorical contest ; Othonian&#13;
Public (2); Annual Board; Student Congress (3).&#13;
&#13;
Winner girls' SO-yard dash (3); Delegate to Geneva conference (3).&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
LURA GRACE Matteson&#13;
&#13;
"BOB"&#13;
&#13;
SHE is known by her peculiar manner of saying&#13;
things. For; with her sense&#13;
of fitting humor, her conversation is full of suggestions&#13;
and witticisms. She fills the&#13;
place of society clown as&#13;
none else could. Possesses a&#13;
pleasing cordiality, which is&#13;
due to her training in a parsonage, and she thoroughly&#13;
enjoys the varied experiences&#13;
of a minister's daughter. Serious moments come to her&#13;
as the many duties of college&#13;
life weigh more heavily. A&#13;
girl liked by everyone, always&#13;
busy, but congenial and companionable.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Choral Union; Zetalethean Public; Student Congress;&#13;
Treasurer Y. W. C. A.; Annual Boaad (3).&#13;
&#13;
"(&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Wilson Seeley Lewis,A. M.,D.D.&#13;
President&#13;
Professor of Christian Ethics&#13;
&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Student St. Lawrence University,&#13;
1875-1881 ; A B., Cornell College,&#13;
1889; A M., ibid., 1892; D: D.,&#13;
Upper Iowa University, 1895;&#13;
Travel and Study in Europe, 1896;&#13;
Principal Public Schools, Center&#13;
Point, Iowa, 1881-3; Superintendent City Schools, Belle Plaine,&#13;
Iowa, 1883-5 ; Ministerial Work,&#13;
1885-8; Principal of Epworth Seminary, 1888-9 7; President, Morningside College, 189 7.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Illinois Wesleyan University, 1888; A M., ibid., 1890 ;&#13;
Graduate Student, University of&#13;
Chicago, Summer Quarters, 1894&#13;
and 1897; Student in the American School of Classical Studies,&#13;
Rome, 1903-4; Instructor in English, Illinois Wesleyan University,&#13;
1888-90; Instructor in Greek and&#13;
Latin, Morningside College, 1894-7;&#13;
Professor of Latin, ibid., 189 7---.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
Herbert Grant Campbell, A. M.&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
Helen Isabella Loveland, A. 8.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
A B., Smith College, 1889; Student, Oxford University, England,&#13;
1902-3; Instructor in History and&#13;
English, Epworth Seminary, 1892-5;&#13;
Professor of Modern Languages,&#13;
Upper Iowa University, 1896-7;&#13;
Professor of English Language and&#13;
Literature, Morningside College,&#13;
1897-1902; Professor of English&#13;
Literature, ibid., 1902---.&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B., Cornell College, 1896 ;&#13;
Assistant Principal of Epworth&#13;
Seminary, 1896-7 ; Pastor at Akron&#13;
and Sheldon, Iowa, 1897-1901 ;&#13;
Graduate student, Columbia University, 1901-3; Scholar in Philosophy, ibid., 1901-2; A M., ibid.,&#13;
1902; Union Theological Seminary,&#13;
1902-3; Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and Vice-President, Morningside&#13;
College, 1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gay Dolliver, A. B.&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
A. B., Cincinnati Wesleyan College, 1886 ; Teacher in Fort Dodge&#13;
Public Schools, 1886-90; Graduate&#13;
Student Northwestern University,&#13;
1905-6; Dean of Women, Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Frank Harmon Garver, A. B.&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
and Politics&#13;
A. B. Upper Iowa University,&#13;
1898; Fellow in History, University of Iowa, 1901-2; Professor of&#13;
History and Ecqnomics, Morningside College, 1898- 1900; Professor&#13;
of History and Politics, ibid.,&#13;
1900---.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes, Ph.&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
Registrar&#13;
Professor of Economics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Reynard Greynald, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Harvard University, 1889;&#13;
A. M., ibid., 1890 ; Ph. D., ibid.,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of French&#13;
&#13;
1891 ; Student, University of Berlin&#13;
and Cambridge University, 1891-2;&#13;
Instructor in History, University of&#13;
California, 1892-5 ; Head of South&#13;
Park Settlement, San Francisco,&#13;
1894-5 ; Assistant in United States&#13;
History, Harvard University, 18967 ; Resident of South End House,&#13;
Boston, 1895-1900; Professor of&#13;
Economics and Sociology, Morningside College, 1900---.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of Paris, 18 74;&#13;
A. M., ibid., 1880 ; Professor of&#13;
Latin, Chatenu Gontre, F ranee,&#13;
18 76-8 ; Professor of French, Morningside College, 1896---.&#13;
&#13;
Agnes Beveridge Ferguson,&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sc. M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Pedagogy&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
A. B., DePauw University, 1884;&#13;
A. M., ibid., 1887; Superintendent&#13;
&#13;
Sc. B., Cornell College, 1894 ; Sc.&#13;
M., ibid., 1895 ; using libraries and&#13;
hearing lectures, Dresden and Berlin, Summer, 1902; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, Summer, 1904 ; Professor of Modern&#13;
Languages, Fort Worth University,&#13;
1896-7; Professor of German&#13;
Morningside College, 1901---.&#13;
&#13;
of Schools, Woodbury County,&#13;
1894-1900, 1902-5; Professor of&#13;
Mathematics and Pedagogy, Morningside College, 1900-2 ; Professor&#13;
of Pedagogy, Morningside College,&#13;
1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener,&#13;
&#13;
A.M.&#13;
Professor of Greek&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cornell College, 1896 ; A.&#13;
M., Harvard University, 1899;&#13;
Graduate Student, Harvard University, 189 7-9 and 1902-3; Instructor in Latin and Greek, Epworth Seminary, 1896-7; Instructor&#13;
in Latin, Wilbraham Academy,&#13;
1899-1900 ; Professor of Greek,&#13;
Morningside College, 1900---.&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Robert Van Horne, Ph. B.&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College,&#13;
1900; Graduate Student, Johns&#13;
Hopkins University, 1900-1 ; Instructor in Mathematics, Morningside College, 1901-2; Professor of&#13;
Mathematics, ibid., 1902---.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
Judson Waldo Mather&#13;
Director and Professor of Music&#13;
in the College&#13;
Graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory, 1896; Instructor in Piano,&#13;
Organ and Harmony, Cornell College, 1895-8; Organist, Union Park&#13;
Church, Chicago, 1898-9; Instructor&#13;
in Music, Chicago Theological Seminary, 1898-9; Professor of Music&#13;
and Director of Conservatory,Yankton College, 1899-1904. Pupil of&#13;
Ernst Jedliezka, Berlin, 1902; Professor of Music and Director of&#13;
Conservatory, Morningside College, 1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Millard Fillmore McDowell&#13;
Sc. B.&#13;
Instructor in Physics&#13;
Sc. B., Morningside College,&#13;
1903; Fellow in Physics, University of Nebraska, 1903-4; Instructor&#13;
in Physics, Morningside College,&#13;
1904---.&#13;
&#13;
John Lorenzo Griffith, A. B.&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude F. Mather&#13;
&#13;
Director of Physical Training and&#13;
Instructor in Oral Debate&#13;
A B., Beloit College, 1902 ; Director of Athletics and Instructor in&#13;
History, Yankton College, 1902-5 ;&#13;
Director of Physical Training and&#13;
Instructor in English, Morningside&#13;
College, 1905; Director of Physical&#13;
Training and Instructor in Oral Debate, ibid., 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
Violin and Cornet&#13;
Pupil of Charles Heydler, 188990; Instructor in Violin, Cornell&#13;
College, 1896-8; Pupil of Adolf&#13;
Weidig, 1898-9, 1904 ; Instructor&#13;
in Violin and Cornet, Yankton&#13;
College, 1899-1904; Instructor in&#13;
Violin and Cornet, Morningside&#13;
College, 1904---.&#13;
&#13;
Wilfred W elday Scott, A. M.&#13;
Clara Booth Davidson&#13;
Professor of Elocution&#13;
National School of Oratory, Philadelphia, 1880-2 ; Professor of Elocution, Morningside College, 18991902, 1903---.&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of Chemistry&#13;
A. B., Ohio Wesleyan University, 1897;A.M. ibid., 1901; Graduate&#13;
Student in Chemistry, Cornell University, Summer, 1903 and 1903-5;&#13;
Instructor in Philander Smith College, N aina T al, India, 1898- 1900 ;&#13;
Instructor in Claflin University,&#13;
1902-3; Professor of Chemistry&#13;
and Physics, ibid., 1905-6; Acting&#13;
Professor of Chemistry, Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Calderwood Stephens,&#13;
A. B., M. D.&#13;
acting Professor of Biology&#13;
Student, Adrian College, 1894-6;&#13;
University of Chicago, 1900- 1 ; A&#13;
B., Kansas City University, 1901 ;&#13;
M. D., Kansas State University,&#13;
1904 ; Student Marine Biological&#13;
Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.,&#13;
Summer, 1901 ; Instructor in Kansas City University, 1901-2 ; Student in Neurology, Illinois Medical&#13;
College, Summer, 1902 ; Fellow in&#13;
Zoology, University of Chicago,&#13;
1904-6; Assistant in Embryology,&#13;
ibid., Summer Quarter, 1905 and&#13;
1906; Acting Professor of Biology,&#13;
Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
Ida Nolan Reynolds&#13;
Instructor in Primary Methods&#13;
and Drawing&#13;
G rad u ate , Drake University&#13;
Training School, 1903 ; Student,&#13;
School of Education, University of&#13;
Chicago, Summer quarter 1905 ;&#13;
Principal West Ward School and&#13;
Teacher in Primary Grade, Rockwell City, Iowa, 1903-4; Principal,&#13;
High School, Victor, Iowa, 1904-5 ;&#13;
Director, Summer School of Manual Training, Rockwell City, Iowa,&#13;
1904 · Instructor in Primary Methods and Drawing, Morningsid e&#13;
College, 1905---.&#13;
&#13;
Pearl Alice Woodford, Ph. B.&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College,&#13;
1903; Graduate Student in English,&#13;
University of Chicago, Summer,&#13;
1906; Instructor in English and&#13;
Latin, Lake Mills High School,&#13;
1903-5 ; Instructor in English and&#13;
Mathematics, Hartley High School,&#13;
1905-6; Instructor in English, Morningside College, 1906---.&#13;
&#13;
Faith Fester Woodford&#13;
Assistant in Piano&#13;
Graduate Morningside College&#13;
Conservatory, 1902 ; Pupil of Emil&#13;
Liebling, Chicago, 1903-4.&#13;
&#13;
Birdie Laura Bunting&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
Pupil of H erm an W a Iker, 1899 ;&#13;
Pupil of A Devin Duvivier, 19004; Graduate of the Chicago Piano&#13;
College, 1903; Pupil of H erman&#13;
Watt, 1904 ; Instructor in Voice&#13;
Culture a nd Pianoforte, Cornell&#13;
College, 1904-5 ; Instructor in Voice&#13;
Culture, Morningside C o 11 e g e&#13;
1905---.&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Florence Louise Wiley, Mus. B.&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
Mus. B., Oberlin Conservatory,&#13;
1906; pupil of Dr. George W.&#13;
Andrews and Professor W . T. Upton, 1902-6; Craduate, Oberlin&#13;
Conservatory, 1906 ; Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte, Morningside College,&#13;
1906---.&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Katherine Ellen Nurse&#13;
Stenography&#13;
&#13;
Holman&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Reister&#13;
Bookkeeping&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
The Senior's Lament&#13;
&#13;
,I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
AME old college&#13;
As of yore,&#13;
&#13;
Same old crowd hangs&#13;
Round the door,&#13;
Same old campus,&#13;
Same green trees,&#13;
Same old summerhouse,&#13;
Same old squeeze,&#13;
Same mosquitos,&#13;
Same old bites,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Same old gang stays&#13;
Out o' nights,&#13;
Same old faculty,&#13;
Same old class,&#13;
Same gang a' lolling&#13;
On the grass,&#13;
Same old noises&#13;
In the air,&#13;
Same old sameness&#13;
Everywhere.&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
190 7 Seniors -- Scientific&#13;
Encyclopedia --Addenda&#13;
the past year the foremost scientists of the&#13;
world have been engaged in painstaking endeavor to classify some thirty-three unknowns&#13;
submitted to them from various parts of the&#13;
world. The results have not in all cases been&#13;
entirely satisfactory, but they are the best that&#13;
the present scientific world can furnish. In&#13;
hopes that the work may be of value as an addenda to the new&#13;
Scientific Encyclopedia and to previous records, the results of&#13;
the classifications are herewith set forth:&#13;
IN THE ANIMAL KINGDOM&#13;
Elsie Kilborne---Avis Cantans Celeritas or mocking-bird. Of&#13;
medium size, sunny disposition and easily taught to perform&#13;
wonderful vocal gymnastics.&#13;
Martha Macdonald---Anglibus Acutis or bookworm. An uncommon species, most generally found in libraries or digging away in mathematical books.&#13;
.&#13;
Clarence G. Manning --- Perpetuus K ickabus or Rocky Mountain&#13;
burro. A beast which, despite its sunny nature, likes to&#13;
splash cold water. No relation to Maude.&#13;
Earl J.Fry---Avis Stupendum lmportans or blue bird. 11 Sports&#13;
around the orchard like he owned the premises." Noted&#13;
for its red tracks on quiz papers.&#13;
Horace E. Groom---Lengthens Abreviatibus or black French&#13;
poodle ; a very cute pet, wonderfully popular with the&#13;
fair sex.&#13;
E. A. Bennett---Crusta Timidibus or shrimp.&#13;
Seldom seen&#13;
swimming on the surface of the sea. Splendid for seasoning.&#13;
W. H. Lease --- Grouchiferous Molluscus or Clam. A pudgy&#13;
beast of which little is known. More there than the outside&#13;
would indicate. Noted for its silence.&#13;
Jay Whitaker --- Cyanocitta Cristata or Blue Jay. A permanent&#13;
resident. Has a large top-not. Mischevious and destructive. Has a harsh voice; screams, shrieks and is extremely&#13;
unsociable.&#13;
Mable Chamberlain---Garrulus Chatteridre or Magpie. Noted&#13;
for its continual Buttering and its persistent though not unpleasant chattering.&#13;
Faith Woodford---Pianissimor Manipulator or Key Pounder.&#13;
An ever-present, accommodating bird. Dispenses much&#13;
sweet music.&#13;
Mable T owner---Elephantibus Gigantic us or Elephant. An&#13;
enormous specimen, noted for its intelligence, quiet habits&#13;
and A grades.&#13;
G. A. Tumbleson --- Bookae T yrranus or Book Agent. A species&#13;
which is persistent in its attacks upon unprotected householders.&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
36&#13;
&#13;
Corwin Taylor --- Billibus Puttinibus or Mosquito. A long legged, carnivorous insect which emphasizes its presence with&#13;
aloud"hum! 11 •&#13;
J. C. Bass ---Aqua Energetica or Fish. A species of microbe&#13;
which is usually into most everything, often Blood.&#13;
H. N. Staples --- Principalis Girlibus or Raven. A long, slender&#13;
bird with a black crest. Voracious ; devours everything.&#13;
An erratic wanderer; very sociable.&#13;
S. B. Collins --- Vocis Giganticus or Mighty Spouter. Talks long,&#13;
loud and freely on every subject. Imitates the human voice&#13;
quite perfectly.&#13;
Ella Dickson --- Chatteridae or Cricket. Noted for its continual&#13;
drawling, chirping noise. Not dangerous to those acquainted with its habits, but an awful tease.&#13;
Cora Frear --- Pietus Riparia or Swallow. A summer resident.&#13;
Slender, graceful, voracious. Eats three kinds of pie and&#13;
likes them all.&#13;
IN THE PLANT WORLD&#13;
D. Ford Robbins --- Yulaka Melaka Ahlaka or Bamboo Tree.&#13;
An old familiar growth. Never found alone; usually in&#13;
groups of two.&#13;
J. R. Tumbleson --- Cab bag ens Vulgariis or Sauerkraut. A well&#13;
known and well liked product. Thought to be a German&#13;
import.&#13;
Nellie A. Taylor --- Sanctissimus Patens or Lily. A rare flower&#13;
used quite often at religious services and ceremonies.&#13;
Chester N. Rissler --- Trifolium Hibernium or Shamrock. A&#13;
bright green 'plant which probably can be traced back to&#13;
Irish soil.&#13;
Henry Taylor--- Weedibus Verdans or Celery A farm product,&#13;
green in its natural state, but which bleached out on exposure.&#13;
Genevieve Howard --- F airis Complexio or Bachelor's Button.&#13;
Ornamental as well as revivifying.&#13;
Leonie M. De Lay --- Palidus Frail um. A delicate plant which&#13;
thrives best by the student's lamp.&#13;
,&#13;
Alice Cole --- Pastoribus Cloverium or Clover. A very modest&#13;
little plant. May be related to certain Irish growths.&#13;
H. E. Jones --- Punnibus Energeticus or Wild Turnip. A small,&#13;
very pungent vegetable very often accompanied by a growth&#13;
of whiskers.&#13;
P. E. F redendoll --- Puff ae Meerchaumae or Smokeweed. A tall&#13;
weed with a peculiar top which is usually encircled by a&#13;
cloud of smoke.&#13;
CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS, ETC.&#13;
W. Vance McCay --- Aqua Effervescens or Bromo Seltzer. An&#13;
unstable compound which foams strongly when excited.&#13;
Glenn M. Squires --- An unknown compound of some sort.&#13;
Probably a high oxide. Red in color. Flames brilliantly&#13;
when exposed to the sun.&#13;
R. C. Nichols/--- (A) or Argon. A very stable, valuable element.&#13;
Very rare and seldom found in combination.&#13;
Florence Davidson --- Aqua Regina or Nitric Acid (HN03 ), possessing one Bond or valence. An acid of strong and independent action.&#13;
Mabel E. Haskins --- Brillians Spasmodicus (NH3 ); a lively compound useful to certain medics.&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
Ye Brave T aille of Ye Gallant Fight Between, Ye&#13;
Unsavorie Freshmen Varlets and Ye&#13;
Vulgar Sophomore Caitiffs&#13;
OW it befel that certaine strangers coming in a&#13;
new country in ye autumn time and reeking&#13;
stoutely about them of springe, were sore&#13;
sette upon by sundrie unsavorie caitiffs who&#13;
done unto them much vile contumlie. And&#13;
ye unsophisticated gat them together and&#13;
tooke counsel and hanged in ye talle toppe&#13;
of ye sunflower tree a foulle ragge of sorrie colour and exceeding uncleane. Straightway ye caitiff knightes cryed out to ye&#13;
vulgar varlets for it to come down.&#13;
Then charged they them&#13;
upon ye vulgar varlets and there arose high an evil scent and&#13;
sound. Full foulle fell ye caitiff horde upon ye verdant varlets&#13;
and smote ye earth along their heads untill ye faded autumn&#13;
grasse looked green again. And with hands unsanctified sealed&#13;
they the varlets in heavy chains tied fast with divers padlocks&#13;
and tidy pins.&#13;
Then from their captivity came the vanquished varlets' wail&#13;
to their women to smite and save, and pale gat ye faces and&#13;
bare ye pates of ye tyrants before such an awful onslaught. And&#13;
a certaine knighte sitting in bondage hadde ye strength of ye&#13;
Sampson, notte in ye hair, but in ye feet, and his chaines felle&#13;
away. But still haughte and high hanged ye varlet standard in&#13;
ye tree. But a certaine graceless caitiff with evil in his heart&#13;
and a hatchet in his bosom gat him uppe ye tree. Down crashed&#13;
ye shattered staff like ye haughty senior upon ye slippery pavement. And ye knighte of ye hatchet tore ye trophy from ye&#13;
shattered staff and gathered in unto his bosom. And when he&#13;
would be no longer parted from it several of ye caitiffs felle&#13;
upon him and beat sore his bones with cudgels. Soon he applied foule and murderous kicks upon them and they desisted.&#13;
And ye varlet dismounted ye tree and with his fellow clansmen&#13;
they rente the ragge asunder that they might hand it down as&#13;
trophies unto their ( ancestors). Now ye lorde of ye countrie&#13;
drew nigh and demanded of them who had done foulle assault&#13;
and batterie upon his goodlie tree. But they knew not ye talle&#13;
storie of George, ye cherrie tree and ye hatchet, and said hothing.&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
And Here Bigynneth Ye T aille which is Ye&#13;
Taille of ye&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
:;§&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
A classe ther was and that a worthy one,&#13;
That fro the tyme that they first beganne&#13;
To studie hokes at Morningside&#13;
Was noted for their virtue far and wide.&#13;
And of this classe I shall great thinges telle,&#13;
For alien thinges tried they did full well;&#13;
Of studie tooke they much care and heede,&#13;
Nought played .they more than weren ther neede,&#13;
In all this world ther nas no 1on ther like,&#13;
For gladly would they' learn and also fyght,&#13;
And each they did with delight and fairness,&#13;
To set a good ensample was ther business.&#13;
This ilka class let olden thinges pace,&#13;
And held afte r the newe world the trace;&#13;
For whan that classe wanton for to scrap,&#13;
They hung ther colors on a pole to flap.&#13;
Nor nas this done by anyone, I guess,&#13;
Beforn the class '09 did thus their zeal express,&#13;
And yet another tyme ther was,&#13;
Befel it that the freshmen set their jaws&#13;
And hung ther colours in a great high tree,&#13;
But when the S ophs that yellow flag did see,&#13;
They all with one accord did y-ronne&#13;
And chained every freshman up in fonne,&#13;
Then tooke that big yellow flagge downe&#13;
And ronne away with it clear out of town,&#13;
So after that the freshmen tooken heede,&#13;
And bothered them no more than nas their neede .&#13;
And whan that debates weeren to be wonne&#13;
Methinketh they ther full share y-donne;&#13;
For in the past year that they were herre,&#13;
Did four of them on the platform right well appear.&#13;
And more of them hadde beene in oratory,&#13;
Almost a dozen did thus seeken glory;&#13;
And alle of them hadde for honors y-strivven,&#13;
Upon the athletic fieldes driven;&#13;
And to what ever classe they y-coupled were,&#13;
They could them overmate I dare we! sware,&#13;
And ever more they hadde the Doctors' prize,&#13;
And/ though that they were worthy they were wize,&#13;
And of ther part as meek as they were maydes,&#13;
They never yet no villaine ne sayde;&#13;
In all ther life unto each man they passe,&#13;
They were a very parfit gentle class.&#13;
&#13;
. 43&#13;
&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
Warning Freshmen!!&#13;
Sophs on Warpath ! Freshmen be on the&#13;
Lookout! President Whealen must be&#13;
Closely · Guarded. Johnson and&#13;
Winterstein are Traitors! Report Immediately Any&#13;
Sophs Seen After&#13;
Dark to&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
1/&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PENDELL&#13;
Minutes of the Freshman Meeting&#13;
Place---Whealen's Residence. Curtains down; entrance&#13;
back door. Called at 8;30 p. m. by President Whealen.&#13;
Roll Call---F ull house. Remarks by Pendell applauded.&#13;
Discussion of class colors. Green and yellow suggested.&#13;
Green favorable; yellow unnecessary. Pendell moves&#13;
that old colors be retained; carried. Bell rings, five men&#13;
sent to the door. Remarks by Pendell on the general&#13;
good (applause). Pendell declares Barrick II good II for&#13;
Freshies.&#13;
"Jim II and Johnson traitors.&#13;
Remarks by&#13;
Rogers (feminine applause).&#13;
Freshmen will have to&#13;
have seats removed to avoid contact with Johnson.&#13;
Remarks by Berkstress&lt;;:!r, also by Pendell (Nigger heaven in&#13;
ecstasy). Steps are reported for prompt rallying of all&#13;
Freshmen forces, should the Sophs break from their reservation. Remarks by Pendell (continuous applause).&#13;
Reading of members with addresses and phones&#13;
&#13;
PENDELL, Vine Street, one block north of College.&#13;
WOOD &amp; ROYSE, North Hall.&#13;
CHAPMAN, Main Hall, New Phone.&#13;
ROGERS, at Straub's, Old Phone.&#13;
ETTA MAHOOD, at home, both phones.&#13;
MISS GLANDSMAN, at Campbell's.&#13;
PRICHARD, eight blocks south of Park in the cornfield.&#13;
MISS BLOOM, at Blood's.&#13;
ENGLE, at Pierce's.&#13;
&#13;
By Courtesy of Sophs for Benefit&#13;
of Freshmen Not Present.&#13;
44&#13;
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Freshmen&#13;
HE following clippings from leading newspapers all over the country, both in&#13;
America and Europe, show the prominence of the class of 1910, Morningside&#13;
College, Sioux City, Iowa :&#13;
"Morningside is a scene of great activity. The entrance of&#13;
the class of 1910 marks the beginning of a new and brilliant&#13;
epoch in the history of the institution. This class, composed of&#13;
men and women of brilliant intellect, superior judgment, strong&#13;
character and eminent ability, is without doubt the most remarkable that ever invaded the sacred halls at Morningside. 11 --- Sioux&#13;
City Journal.&#13;
"College spirit manifested itself quite forcibly this morning&#13;
at Morningside when the Sophomores attacked a crowd of&#13;
Freshmen, who were guarding a flagpole on which floated the&#13;
Freshman banner. In the desperate hand to hand encounter&#13;
which ensued the Sophs finally succeeded in cutting down the&#13;
flag, and dropping it to their classmen at the foot of the tree.&#13;
In the midst of the continuation of the battle upon terra firma&#13;
President Lewis appeared, and declared a truce by inviting all&#13;
of the students in to chapel. 11 ---Sioux City Tribune.&#13;
n The class of 191 0 at Morningside College has developed&#13;
some of the most promising athletes yet seen in the middle west.&#13;
The winning of a place in the college indoor meet March 2&#13;
stamps this class as one possessing peculiar athletic ability. It&#13;
might be well for those having the selection of the next allAmerican team for the Olympic championship to keep a weather&#13;
eye on this dass. 11 ---The Sportsman.&#13;
n M. Reynard Greynald, autrefois professeur de langues&#13;
modernes a I I Universite de Paris et maintenant professeur de&#13;
F rancais au college Morningside (Etats Unis) ecrit a son ami le&#13;
Comte de Nivelle que !es Americans ont beaucoup d I aptitude&#13;
pour 11 etude du Francois. M. Greynald declare que !es etudiants&#13;
de la classe 191 0 ont un desire tellement prononce pour I I etude&#13;
du Francais, que M. Greynald est oblige de finir ses classe avant&#13;
I I heure pour empecher ses eleves d I employer tout leur temps&#13;
a 1 I 1 etude de cette langue. 11 ---Le Temps, Paris.&#13;
&#13;
Is ift berichtet, dab in dem Studium der deu iden Sprache und lite&#13;
ratur die ameritanitcheii Studenten unfere Eignen iibertreffen. Uuf der&#13;
morgenteite univerfiat etnerUnioerfitiit fur Wanner unb frousn der&#13;
Bereinigten etaaten, befleikigen tich bie Studenten der Rlaff e bes fab=&#13;
res 1910 mit. tolchem fifer bes studiums berielben, dab beobachter bebaupten, biete studenten feiett echt beutich berlin boht eifrig dab diete&#13;
jungen ueute yu ihrer meiteren Uusbildung nach Deuthchland tommen&#13;
werden. unfere Lehrer Brufung Merden fie leicht befiehen und hoffentlidy&#13;
balb auch brofeff ocen an unferen uniberfitat w rben&#13;
(total Unzeiger, Berlin. )&#13;
47&#13;
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Alma ·Mater&#13;
To the Tune --- " College Ties Can Ne'er Be Broken "&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
Far above Missouri's waters,&#13;
And the river Sioux,&#13;
Stands our noble Alma Mater,&#13;
Dear to me and you.&#13;
CHORUS.&#13;
&#13;
Lift the chorus, speed it onward,&#13;
With every rising tide;&#13;
Hail to· thee, our Alma Mater,&#13;
Hail thee, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
Far above Sioux City's traffic,&#13;
Toward the rising sun ;&#13;
Raised against the blue of heaven,&#13;
Looks she proudly down.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
Let us voice her praises ever,&#13;
Her "&#13;
tame spread far and wide;&#13;
And by our strength hold high her standard,&#13;
Hail thee, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
w.w.s.&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
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EAR A THENEUM GIRLS : --Since the day when as a gosling I came&#13;
to Morningside, I have never before been permitted to tell you the things that were in my&#13;
heart. I could not tell you how I appreciated&#13;
your loving care over me. Even though in&#13;
spirit I was permitted to witness your feast at&#13;
which I was the center, I readily forgave you when l heard your&#13;
glowing tributes over my broken bones. Seeing the Atheneum&#13;
in college life, gave me a desire to see her in the world's activities. I found her in the school room ministering to the little&#13;
crowd of knowledge seekers. I saw her when the peal of the&#13;
wedding bell had scarce died away, starting on a honeymoon&#13;
which was to last a lifetime. I saw her spending weary hours&#13;
in the preparation for brightening the world's cares with Heavenly music. I saw her tender guidance of the little tots with eyes&#13;
like her own. And then far across the ocean I saw her again,&#13;
living the life for one who loves us all.&#13;
But after all, the Atheneums of today are the ones I love&#13;
the most. I am happy in the midst of those who were so kind&#13;
to me. I delight in you, not as individuals, but as one united&#13;
body, working in harmony for a common end --- that of character building. May your ideals ever reach higher, your sphere&#13;
of usefulness ever widen, and may you ever attain more nearly&#13;
to the beauty, the perfection of your ideals.&#13;
With kind remembrances to your honorary members, and&#13;
especially to Miss Dolliver, who interceded in my behalf and&#13;
made it possible for me to remain from now on in Atheneum&#13;
hall, I am your affectionate&#13;
SILVER - LEAF.&#13;
&#13;
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Zetalethean&#13;
( Founded 1897 )&#13;
&#13;
CLIPPINGS FROM THE SCRAP BOOK&#13;
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EDNESDAY afternoon ( May 2, 1 06) the Zetaletheans were guests at a delightful five o'clock&#13;
luncheon given by the Atheneums at the&#13;
home of Mrs.]. B. Frye, Fifth Avenue.&#13;
The Zets. gave their annual German program last Saturday evening ( May 26). "Zerstreut,11 an amusing comedy in one act,was presented.&#13;
The annual reunion of the Zetalethean Literary Society&#13;
was held Wednesday afternoon ( June I 3) in the Zet-Otho hall.&#13;
Addresses were made by several former Zets., and diplomas&#13;
were presented to three graduating members. Refreshments&#13;
were served during the informal social hour which followed.&#13;
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The Zets. had their annual Fourth of July picnic at the&#13;
home of Miss Davidson.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt was the guest of&#13;
honor .&#13;
Wednesday afternoon ( October 28) the Zets. gave their&#13;
annual party in North Ravine to about twenty invited guests.&#13;
After a bounteous supper, college songs were sung around the&#13;
camp fire.&#13;
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:g&#13;
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A large number of the faculty and students attended the&#13;
eighth annual Zet - Otho Prom which was given Monday evening ( September 24 ). The halls were tastefully decorated with&#13;
palms, and refreshments were served throughout the evening in&#13;
the second corridor&#13;
Sassano, the harpist, furnished the music.&#13;
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The Zets. held a public initiation Saturday evening (November I 7) in Zet-Otho hall. Fourteen new members were received with a beautiful, impressive ceremony, taking the pledge under the society colors, scarlet and black.&#13;
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The annual Zetalethean Public took place Saturday evening ( December 8) in the auditorium. An excellent literary&#13;
program was Jven, closing with the singing of the " Lost Chord "&#13;
by the Zetalethean chorus.&#13;
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The Zets. and Atheneums gave a very successful Jomt program Saturday evening ( December 16 ), presenting Kate Douglas&#13;
Wiggins' famous story, "The Birds' Christmas Carol."&#13;
53&#13;
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u&#13;
"Vestigia, Nulla Retrorsum II&#13;
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54&#13;
&#13;
Y constant effort to fulfill the sentiment of this&#13;
motto, the Philomathean society has attained&#13;
the position of prominence that it now holds.&#13;
The objects of the society are not intellectual&#13;
developrr:ent nor social interests alone. Consideration of these ideas is important, but to&#13;
bring about the development of the highest&#13;
types of manhood is the ultimate aim of Philo association .&#13;
Nor do we believe that our efforts have been in vain. 11 By&#13;
their fruits ye shall know them. 11 As this is true of individuals&#13;
it is equally true of associations of individuals. Among the&#13;
alumni of this society are two lawyers, five college professors, a&#13;
college president, a college vice-president, a number of ministers, one Y. M. C. A. secretary and one state representative .&#13;
From these, our alumni, who represent us in in the actual fight&#13;
of life, it may be seen that the principles of success are fostered&#13;
and encouraged along all lines in the work of the society. In&#13;
the active affairs of college life the members of this society have&#13;
always taken a prominent part. The college paper origina ted&#13;
in the mind of a Philo.&#13;
Inter-collegiate debate was first proposed by the Philos, and in the first venture of this kind a team&#13;
composed entirely of Philos won a victory for Morningside.&#13;
That athletics receive hearty support among our members is&#13;
shown by the fact that of the captains of four athletic te ams,&#13;
three are Philos.&#13;
It is our purpose to back every enterprise that tends toward&#13;
the greatest success of Morningside. There have been periods&#13;
of brightness and periods of gloom in the history of our society,&#13;
but through it all there has been a constant and unfaltering&#13;
hope for the success that the future always promises. We stand&#13;
today firmly established and striving for those ideals that are&#13;
held out to ~ in the highest development of soul and mind.&#13;
us&#13;
With these .'ends in view, we enter into a hearty co-operation&#13;
with all those who seek to attain the same goal.&#13;
55&#13;
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0&#13;
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:a&#13;
co&#13;
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;.:::q&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
EMBLEM --- The Shield&#13;
COLOR --- Royal Purple&#13;
HERE are many phases to the history of a literary· society and there are many ways in&#13;
which that .. history could be written under&#13;
favorable circumstances, but we do not feel&#13;
that this is the place for the Othonian Literary&#13;
Society to boast of its past ach'evements or&#13;
enumerate the many events which have transpired since its organization, but rather that we&#13;
set forth in the short space alloted to us the basis of the&#13;
society and the hopes for the future.&#13;
Believing young men's organizations beneficial to the individual and to the institution, and feeling the need of another&#13;
society, fourteen men in the autumn of 1891 met in North Hall&#13;
and after due deliberation there came forth what has since been&#13;
known as the Othonian Literary Society. Organized by men&#13;
who were firm believers in the highest development of the intelectual, the physical and the moral nature, we find this to be the&#13;
aim of the society and basis of its constitution.&#13;
During the sixteen years since its organization the society&#13;
has endeavored to give to each and every member some training in intellectual, social and moral culture, and not forgetting&#13;
that a strong body is necessary to a strong mind, it urges as a&#13;
duty of each man to himself and to the institution the participa·tion, when possible, in some form of athletics. In this field it is&#13;
felt that its members have succeeded to a favorable degree, a·nd&#13;
those who would know of their successes may examine the&#13;
records of .the college.&#13;
In debate and oratory the society has endeavored to maintain a standing which while training its members, will also aid&#13;
in maintaining the standard of the college in this work. The&#13;
college records of inter-society and inter-collegiate debate, and&#13;
of collegiate and inter-collegiate oratory will show that they&#13;
have not failed in this work so necessary to society and college.&#13;
The members of the Othonian Literary Society are trying to&#13;
maintain that social and religious standard of which the world&#13;
has such great need. For the success of its members in this&#13;
work the society would refer you to the people whom they serve.&#13;
The Othonians, while believing in strong society work, hold&#13;
that the intertists of the college should be paramount to those of&#13;
the society, and they hope and propose that in the future the&#13;
spirit which has been detrimental to the best interests of the&#13;
college shall be checked in so far as this society has the power&#13;
of furthering the spirit of unity. The hall is always open to the&#13;
students and patrons of the college, realizing that the existence&#13;
of any organization is conditioned on its ability to do good.&#13;
&#13;
57&#13;
56&#13;
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1&#13;
&#13;
'THE BIRDS' CHRISTMAS CAROL'&#13;
&#13;
'THE MERCHANT OF VENICE •&#13;
&#13;
'OLD COLONIAL DAYS'&#13;
&#13;
58&#13;
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Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
\,.,&#13;
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PRESIDENT --- Philip De Grisselles&#13;
SECRETARY --- Miss Grace Whealen&#13;
&#13;
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T the close of the school year of 1905 - 1906,&#13;
we, the class of worthies formerly known to&#13;
the world at large as II Middlers, 11 determined&#13;
to put away childish things, and at least make&#13;
a fair pretense to become a man. So with the&#13;
consent of the faculty we took for our own&#13;
the name Senior Academy. This name we&#13;
have bravely attempted to uphold .&#13;
Since taking the name senior and the dignity and show of&#13;
knowledge which that cognomen carries with it, we have been&#13;
able to distinguish ourselves in a number of ways. In the class&#13;
room we have shown much genius, in fact so much so that we&#13;
are already looking forward to the time when we shall no longer&#13;
be leaders of prepdom, but shall assume the right and title now&#13;
held by the mighty Freshmen.&#13;
But not alone in the class room has glory been ours. In&#13;
football the vainglorious II Middlers II were weak, and went down&#13;
to defeat before our mighty athletes in a one sided struggle.&#13;
The Senior Academy Class of 1907 is the first class from&#13;
the academy to capture the basket ball championship, winning&#13;
over all other classes in school by a goodly lead in points. The&#13;
class is well represented among the regular basket ball men of&#13;
the school.&#13;
With such a good beginning, there seems to be no reason&#13;
why our future should not be as bright, if not brighter than the&#13;
past. We are now at the foothills , but with time we will show&#13;
the quality of which we are made .&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
COLOR--- Cerise&#13;
&#13;
MOTIO --- Carpe Diem&#13;
YELL&#13;
Wah Hoo, Wah,&#13;
Ta, Rah, Boom,&#13;
Ri, Rah, Zip,&#13;
Ripity Boom,&#13;
&#13;
Ripity, Ripity, Ripity, Ride,&#13;
We're the Adelphians of Morningside!&#13;
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HE Adelphian Literary Society is an organization of men of academic standing, the purpose&#13;
of which is to foster those qualities in its&#13;
members, that can be developed only by the&#13;
training of a literary society.&#13;
In the Autumn of 190 I , a number of men&#13;
met and framed the constitution for this literary association&#13;
Around this constitution have grown the customs and practices of the Adelphians. At the business meetings,&#13;
fine points in parliamentary law are thoroughly threshed out. In&#13;
the open and closed door programs, the young Cicero accustoms&#13;
himself to the critical stare of his stern auditors, grapples with&#13;
his antagonist in debate, or strikes a responding chord in the&#13;
heedless hearts of his distressed listeners. An occasional social&#13;
jollification adds polish and elegance to the deep thinking Adelphian. A silver cup series of debates has been recently instituted by the society, and interest along this line has been vigorously quickened. The activity of the society is shown by the&#13;
fact that the hall, once a bare, uninviting room, has been tastefully furnished and made into a pleasant home for the organization.&#13;
A certain keen spirit pervades all the activities of the society. From the time the new member hears the blat of the old&#13;
shaggy goat, he becomes a true Adelphian, and may be depended&#13;
upon every time.&#13;
63&#13;
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HAWKEYE&#13;
MOTTO&#13;
&#13;
COLORS&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma,Sine Pulvere&#13;
&#13;
Gold and Silver&#13;
&#13;
YELL&#13;
Hi Ki Haw Ki My!&#13;
Whee Zip Boom Ba Zo !&#13;
Rah Rah IO Wah!&#13;
Wah Ho Hi and a Bazoo Bum,&#13;
Animus, Animus, Dictus Sum,&#13;
Haw Haw Haw, Ki Ki Ki,&#13;
Haw Ki, Haw Ki, Rah Rah Rah !&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
INE years ago an academy literary society was&#13;
christened in the name of the mighty commonwealth, dedicated to the development&#13;
among its members of the social, mental and&#13;
ethical ideal of manhood .&#13;
In the annual inter-society debate between&#13;
the Hawkeye and Adelphian Literary societies&#13;
the Hawkeyes have won three out of four decisions. If you are&#13;
unable in parliamentary drill to confound the chairman and to&#13;
put stars in his vision, if you do not know on what side of a&#13;
question you stand in debating, if you cannot write and read a&#13;
paper or deliver an address that will hush the conversation in&#13;
the back seats, take the elevator to the third floor of Main Hall,&#13;
and there every Monday and Wednesday evening in the northwest corner you may behold how these things are done. The&#13;
social side of the members is quite perfectly developed. The&#13;
system of programmes given from time to time is inigue&#13;
The&#13;
practice in parliamentary drill prepares the members to meet&#13;
and weigh in a systematic manner the great problems of life.&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
64&#13;
&#13;
AESTHESIAN&#13;
UR last journey has been indeed a profitable&#13;
one. Our aim, to obtain the aesthetic has&#13;
&#13;
mast-head.&#13;
she was.&#13;
&#13;
been high, but we have done our best to realize it, and we believe that our efforts have&#13;
been amply repaid. Tell about our journey?&#13;
Well, we sailed out with our colors, olive&#13;
green and white, floating proudly from the&#13;
We were under Captain Laura and a brave captain&#13;
&#13;
One morning, shortly after embarking, longing for a little&#13;
recreation; we laid aside our duties and long before sunrise we&#13;
gathered in a beautiful place called Campus, from whence we&#13;
set out for that historical spot known as the Floyd monument.&#13;
Just as the sun was peering over the hills we sat down to a&#13;
bountiful breakfast. It was a delightful repast. At eight o'clock&#13;
the signal sounded and we marched back and resumed our&#13;
voyage.&#13;
At the end of two months we had reached a warm sunny&#13;
climate and our crew bade each other farewell, and started for&#13;
various beautiful places where they expected to spend three&#13;
months. On the appointed day our crew came cheerfully back,&#13;
and this time under the new commander, Captain Hazel. All&#13;
of the former crew, of course, were not there. Some of them&#13;
had not come back, for which we were all very · sorry. Still&#13;
there were a number of new sailors who were eager to board&#13;
our vessel, and we gladly welcomed them. We now turned our&#13;
faces northward. There were a number of treacherous places,&#13;
but with our noble captain at the helm we passed them all safely.&#13;
Just before entering Port Semester, we sent an invitation to&#13;
our brother adelphians to join us on board. That evening of&#13;
merriment will not soon be forgotten. A few days later we&#13;
entered port and took on several new passengers. Turning&#13;
southward under the guidance of Captain Elizabeth we are&#13;
steering safely homeward. We will all be glad to arrive there,&#13;
but none of us intend to stay. All will be ready and all look&#13;
forward with pleasant anticipations to the start on our seventh&#13;
voyage.&#13;
66&#13;
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67&#13;
&#13;
CRESCENT&#13;
PRESIDENT--- Mabel Moulin&#13;
SECRETARY---Elsie Stevens&#13;
COLORS--- Green and White&#13;
YELL&#13;
Boom a linger bow,&#13;
Ching a linger chee,&#13;
Tu laku wah,&#13;
Tu laku wee,&#13;
Crescents, Crescents, Whee!&#13;
&#13;
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68&#13;
&#13;
the eleventh of June, six years ago, a number&#13;
of girls met and organized the Crescent Literary Society under a charter granted by the&#13;
president of Morningside College.&#13;
Every Friday afternoon they met in a&#13;
large, well lighted hall, used jointly by them&#13;
and their brother society, the Hawkeyes, to&#13;
discuss and transact the business of the society. Although the&#13;
charter members have graduated and are making their mark in&#13;
the world, we still keep the same afternoon for our business&#13;
meetings and are still developing true womanly characters by&#13;
which the society is known. A number of programs well attended&#13;
by the public have been given. The success of these programs&#13;
is due to the talent and originality of the society members.&#13;
There is, however, another side to the Crescent Literary Society. This is the social side. Not only have their many social&#13;
gatherings given during the past ·year afforded great pleasure,&#13;
but they hav been a means of promoting among the coworkers a spir'it of good will and fellowship. The society hall&#13;
is_furnished in dark green and the society members endeavor to&#13;
make it always appear neat and attractive. All of these things&#13;
go to accomplish the purpose of the society---the forming of&#13;
true character.&#13;
69&#13;
&#13;
THE GRAFTERS&#13;
Or The Way Morningside Students Spend&#13;
Their Summer Vacations&#13;
&#13;
" If all the men were two foot, six,&#13;
And all the women six foot, two ;&#13;
And all the men kissed all the girls,&#13;
I I d sell stepladders, wouldn I t you? n&#13;
Good afternoon, Mrs. E. Z. Mark, my name is George Adolphus Moir, and, as I have a little spare time this afternoon, I&#13;
&#13;
70&#13;
&#13;
have kindly consented to devote about 1&#13;
steen minutes of it to your&#13;
edification. As perhaps you do not know that I am the only&#13;
and original agent for the Twentieth Century Book of Facts, I&#13;
shall tell you. This book is absolutely unique in the way it is&#13;
gotten up. It contains valuable information of all kinds, some&#13;
of which you may never have dreamed of. It gives sure cures&#13;
for warts, burns, scald head, bald head, chapped hands and&#13;
dirty feet.&#13;
As I entered I noticed two children on the porch, whom I&#13;
take it are little E. Z. Marks. Now the county superintendent,&#13;
Mr. Ephenor Adrastus Brown, highly recommends this book&#13;
and states that it is his desire that a copy of it should be in every&#13;
home where there are little children. Remembering this and&#13;
the fact that you have undoubtedly heard of me before, you can&#13;
easily see that I am doing a sort of a missionary work in this&#13;
community of misguided people. I am here to fill a long felt&#13;
want (in the region of my pocket book). But, to return to the&#13;
book. The prospectus which you see here is but a few pages&#13;
selected at random from the entire work. My friend, Shakespeare, highly recommends this book. Cicero truly said, when&#13;
he looked it over last winter, "Not to know what has been transacted in the past is to be considered always as a child." Hence,&#13;
not to have one of these books is to have attained perpetual&#13;
childhood. Other learned men have recommended the book.&#13;
Dr. H. G. Campbell, when I told him that l had disposed of&#13;
over three hundred copies, remarked, "That's fine," and offered&#13;
to buy a partnership in my business. Professor Griffith thinks&#13;
highly of the work and Dr. Haynes said that it was a very brilliant book. Binding? Oh ! Yes ! "The Twentieth Century Book&#13;
of Facts, it costs but $3.90 in leather backs." Leather is always&#13;
to be preferred. Pardon me, Mrs. E. Z. Mark, but would you&#13;
kindly place your name on this line here as a guarantee to&#13;
yourself that I will deliver the book. Here is my pencil. Yes,&#13;
right there. Good "buy," Mrs. E. Z. Mark.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
72&#13;
&#13;
The Co - ordinate Woman's&#13;
College&#13;
President W . S. Lewis&#13;
HE law of development operates in education&#13;
as well as in other human activities&#13;
In an&#13;
age and country when change in methods of&#13;
husbandry, transportation, manufacture and&#13;
methods of living is the rule and adherence&#13;
to old ways and customs the exception, we&#13;
might expect equally rapid changes in the development of educational ideals. The young men and women of today are called&#13;
upon to catch the spirit of the age in which they live, and those&#13;
who are responsible for their education should be able in a&#13;
sense to read the signs of the times and seek to prepare them&#13;
for the activities of tomorrow. The real spirit of our republic&#13;
is crystalize d in our educational institutions, and our Christian&#13;
colle ges stand for the expression of the highest ideals of the republic. Of all public institutions influencing the homes of the&#13;
people, none, in our judgment, is more important than the&#13;
college. The public school has the child for its problem ; the&#13;
university, the developed man and woman; the college has to&#13;
deal with young men and women in that most important time&#13;
when the ir ideals will take deepest root and will influence all&#13;
their subsequent lives. It is, therefore, of the utmost importance&#13;
that those who have the opportunity of establishing and maintaining colleges should hav.e constantly in mind the relation of&#13;
the home to the problem of the commonwealth.&#13;
The separate institutions of learning for the education of&#13;
men and women have b e en inherited from Europe. The idea&#13;
had its deepest root in the Roman Catholic Church, and is based&#13;
upon the peculiar notions of that organism which had from&#13;
earliest times found their expression in the monastery and nunnery. A thought takes deeper root than the institutions which&#13;
express it and is often maintained in another form when these&#13;
institutions have bee n discontinued. The development of separate institutions for the education of young men and women is&#13;
a most striking illustration of the truth.&#13;
The co-educational idea is purely American and is consequently of very recent origin. But little more than half a century has passed since a woman first stood upon the same rostrum&#13;
with her brothers and received the same academic degree. This&#13;
is but another way of saying that while co-education is in our&#13;
judgment in harmony with the spirit of the republic, yet it is&#13;
74&#13;
&#13;
very largely an experiment. In the years serious problems have&#13;
arisen which claim the most earnest thought on the part of those&#13;
best able to give it. We believe that the principle of co-education is right and is founded upon the most excellent conception&#13;
of the relations of man and woman. But we also believe that&#13;
there are certain defects in the system which ought by all means&#13;
to be remedied.&#13;
The great work of education is to increase the efficiency of&#13;
man and woman for service. Efficiency of service by hand, by&#13;
brain, by heart is the key note. The sphere of man and woman&#13;
in the economy of society is not the same. A kind Providence&#13;
recognizes this and by the very act of creation sets its seal upon&#13;
the differentiation of their natures. The woman is different by&#13;
nature from the man and this essential fact should be recognized&#13;
in the problem of education. There are some subjects which&#13;
should be emphasized in the education of women that ought&#13;
not to be emphasized in the education of men. The reverse is&#13;
equally true. There are some subjects which ought to be emphasized in the education of a woman that ought not to be&#13;
mentioned in the presence of her brothers. The men, too,&#13;
have problems peculiar to their sex which if ignored can not&#13;
but work to the disadvantage of the individual, the home and&#13;
the commonwealth. Appreciating these facts and seeking to&#13;
realize the best in the education of our sons and daughters, even&#13;
though this should be attained by sacrifice, we are committed&#13;
to the establishment of a co-ordinate college for the education&#13;
of women.&#13;
The Garretson Place is a beautiful plot of ground consisting&#13;
of four acres just across the avenue from the southeast corner of&#13;
the campus. Here was erected at a cost of $60,000 a magnificent dwelling so large and commodious that with slight changes it&#13;
may be adapted to the service of a central administration building. A wing could be extended to the north at reasonable expense so that in this home there might be accommodated&#13;
seventy young women.&#13;
There is plenty of room for the erection of other homes, a&#13;
gymnasium, and such other buildings as might be required. A&#13;
more desirable place could scarcely be imagined. Convenient&#13;
to college buildings, secluded by a fine growth of shrubbery,&#13;
the appointments in every particular are very inviting. This&#13;
spot has now been dedicated to the service of the daughters of&#13;
Sioux City and of its contiguous territory. Here it is hoped will&#13;
be realized the noblest ideas of education, physical, intellectual&#13;
and moral, which contribute to the upbuilding of the home.&#13;
Fortunate indeed are those who shall have part in this noble&#13;
work. Their sacrifice and service will contribute to the wellbeing of all the generations.&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
SAT by my study fire late one afternoon in January, thinking over college days and listening&#13;
to the moaning of the wind as it blew the snow&#13;
in great white drifts against the windows.&#13;
And as I sat there musing, a sudden burst of&#13;
flame from the smouldering log lighted up the&#13;
fast gathering twilight in the room, casting a&#13;
ruddy glow over the dim shapes round about. Yonder in the&#13;
corner I could see the old black clock which has stood a faithful&#13;
monitor, for many years; and a faded pennant hanging over the&#13;
mantel seemed to glow once more with the old familiar colors.&#13;
Nearby I noticed a little shelf of books, their titles gleaming&#13;
faintly in the firelight---" Bumblebee 11 ---"Maroon"--- The rest&#13;
were lost in the shadow, but I knew them all, and jumping up I&#13;
gathered the whole well worn pile in my arms. I put them&#13;
gently down upon the hearth, in the open glare of the fire; and&#13;
flinging myself upon the rug beside them I straightway forgot&#13;
the w ind and the storm, feasting again on the memories of other&#13;
days.&#13;
I picked up a little tattered book in paper covers. Dear old&#13;
and White! Dedicated II to our beloved president, Dr. W.&#13;
S. Lewis. 11 How long ago it seemed, and what a venture the&#13;
publication of this first annual must have been.&#13;
I could not but&#13;
admire the courage of the class of I 902 as I turned the pages of&#13;
this little book which typifies so well the early period of our college and breathes the very spirit of those days of toil and&#13;
struggle.&#13;
&#13;
The others as I read them over seemed very much alike in&#13;
plan. The "Maroon, 11 published in 1904 by the 105 1s, is dedicated to Dr. Bennett Mitchell, president of the board of trustees;&#13;
the "Whoops of the Sioux " of the following year, bears this inscription, "To you who have departed from Morningside College and find that sometimes during life's journey you are&#13;
sad and lonely"; while the book published by the class of I 90 7&#13;
is dedicated to the much beloved Latin teacher, Miss Dimmitt,&#13;
and is the first to bear the permanent title, "The Sioux"&#13;
Just five little books. The careless reader might hurriedly&#13;
scan their pages, read a joke or two perhaps, laugh at a cartoon,&#13;
and think that he had gotten all which they had to give. But,&#13;
Ah ! I thought, how much they signify to one who has known&#13;
and lived the years that they represent. An annual is more than&#13;
a mere jest book; it is a rare store-house of memory, the preserved spice and ·sweetness of college life.&#13;
And as I lay there before the fireplace, idly turning the&#13;
pages of those cherished books, dreaming of other days, there&#13;
came to me the memory of my own junior year, when we were&#13;
toiling on one of these same books. What ambitions, what aspirations. Aye, with apologies to Longfellow,---" In what a forge&#13;
and what a heat, 11 were shaped the pages of that book. Perhaps&#13;
we learned little of Greek or Latin, but we learned much of literary critit ism and high finance. We dabbled in the craft of&#13;
the news reporter; we even acquired the art of the vendor of&#13;
books; and all the social obligations which we perforce paid our&#13;
upperclassmen, only served to broaden and extend this ne'er&#13;
to be forgotten course in practical experience.&#13;
Verily, I thought, to be a college junior means more than to&#13;
occupy a seat mid way between the sophomores and the seniors;&#13;
for "to have been a junior is to have acquired a liberal education."&#13;
M. T., '07.&#13;
&#13;
II Blue&#13;
&#13;
Turning to the II Bumblebee of I 903 " I found tokens of increased prosperity, cloth covers, gilt title, and larger pages. "TO&#13;
Y ou, 11 a friendly dedication which gives us all a common interest&#13;
in the book.&#13;
76&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
78&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
of Music&#13;
HE Conservatory is closely affiliated with the&#13;
College, although under the immediate control&#13;
of the director, who is also professor of music&#13;
in the College. The Conservatory faculty is&#13;
composed of instructors who have had very&#13;
successful teaching experience, and who are&#13;
thorough in their various departments.&#13;
Twice each month conservatory recitals are given m the&#13;
college auditorium, and to these recitals the general public is invited. To the college student and to the student of music the&#13;
hearing of good music is just as vital as the study which is made&#13;
in the various departments in which the students may be enrolled. With this in view it has been the aim of the conservatory to place before the conservatory and college students each&#13;
year a number of the very best things that can be secured along&#13;
musical lines. During the past year a number of good things&#13;
have been appreciated by the students, the best of these being&#13;
the two recitals given by John Hermann Loud, of Boston, at the&#13;
dedication of the new pipe organ, and the concert given by Miss&#13;
Ellen Beach Yaw, soprano, assisted by Maximilian Dick, violinist, and Georgiella Lay, solo pianist. These concerts were in&#13;
addition to the regular musical numbers of the college lecture&#13;
course, and the regular descriptive pipe organ recitals which are&#13;
given throughout the school year by the director of the conservatory.&#13;
Each year a May Music Festival is given under the direction&#13;
of the conservatory, and at this festival some of the best musical&#13;
talent of the United States appears. Besides the concerts of&#13;
the noted artists who are secured for the occasion an oratorio is&#13;
given, for which the choral union, an organization of students,&#13;
assisted by the best Sioux City talent, holds rehearsals weekly&#13;
throughout the school year.&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Pipe&#13;
Organ&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
OPENING&#13;
RECITA LS&#13;
ON&#13;
THE&#13;
AUDITORIUM&#13;
ORGAN&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
Given by JOHN HERMANN LOUD, of Boston&#13;
PROGRAMMES&#13;
I.&#13;
II.&#13;
Ill.&#13;
IV.&#13;
V.&#13;
VI.&#13;
VII.&#13;
VIII.&#13;
IX.&#13;
X.&#13;
I.&#13;
II.&#13;
Ill.&#13;
IV.&#13;
V.&#13;
VI.&#13;
VII.&#13;
VIII.&#13;
IX.&#13;
X.&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday Evening, November 14, 1906&#13;
Bach&#13;
F antasie and Fugue in G minor .&#13;
Capocci&#13;
Allegretto in E flat&#13;
Shelley&#13;
Melodie du Soir .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. Guilmant&#13;
Fourth Organ Sonata in D Minor .&#13;
c. Menuetto&#13;
a. Allegro Assai&#13;
d. Finale&#13;
b. Andante&#13;
Parker&#13;
Romanza, Opus 17, No. 3&#13;
Callaerts&#13;
Capriccio, Opus 33&#13;
. Hollins&#13;
Intermezzo in D flat&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Rheinberger&#13;
Aspiration and Contemplation&#13;
Improvisation&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Whiting&#13;
Concert Etude in B flat .&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
:r:&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
Thursday evening, November 15, 1906&#13;
Bach&#13;
Prelude and Fugue in A minor .&#13;
. Widor&#13;
Contes D'Avril (Marche Nuptiale)&#13;
Boellmann&#13;
Duexieme Suite Pour Orgue&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
c. Andantino&#13;
a. Prelude Pastoral&#13;
b. Allegro con moto&#13;
d . Final Marche&#13;
Guilmant&#13;
Priere et Bercuese&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. Faulkes&#13;
Allegro Symphonique in F minor&#13;
Ferrata&#13;
Nocturne in A flat.&#13;
Wheeldon&#13;
Canzona in D&#13;
.&#13;
Wolstenholme&#13;
Romance and Allegretto&#13;
. .&#13;
Improvisation&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. Mendelssohn&#13;
Second Sonata ( Maestoso and Fugue) .&#13;
82&#13;
&#13;
83&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
84&#13;
&#13;
A GROUP OF STUDIOS&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
85&#13;
&#13;
THE AUDITORIUM (FROM THE STAGE)&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College School of&#13;
Expression&#13;
"Kentucky Cardinal"&#13;
Florence B. Davidson&#13;
Reader&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Department of Expression&#13;
June 9th, College Auditorium, Eight o I clock&#13;
Class of 1906&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
How Dot Heard " The Messiah II&#13;
&#13;
2. Scene from II The Second Mrs. Jim"&#13;
3. "Audrey"&#13;
&#13;
4. Naughty Zell&#13;
5. " The Famine "&#13;
6. The Colonel I s Experiment&#13;
7. Scene from II Evangeline"&#13;
8. The Book Agent&#13;
9. II Obstructive Hat in the Pit II&#13;
10. The Bells&#13;
BEN HUR&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
TOWNER&#13;
&#13;
LEW WALLACE&#13;
&#13;
The Three Wise Men; The Star of Bethlehem ;&#13;
The Angel and The Shepherds&#13;
Miss Baker&#13;
Ben-Hur and Messala; 11 Down Eros, Up Mars! 11&#13;
To the Galleys for Life&#13;
Miss Bartlett&#13;
" On the day that I meet him, help me, thou God of my&#13;
fathers , to some fitting, special vengeance." Miss Davidson&#13;
In the Palace of ldernee&#13;
Miss Bartlett&#13;
The Healing of the Lepers&#13;
Miss Baker&#13;
"If you cannot build temples for the worship of God&#13;
above grpund, then build them below ground." Miss Davidson&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
Miss Davidson&#13;
Miss Platts&#13;
Miss Weary&#13;
Miss Rorem&#13;
Class&#13;
Miss Kilborne&#13;
Miss Platts&#13;
Miss Fletcher&#13;
Miss Davidson&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Normal Department, established especially&#13;
for the training of teachers, is fulfilling well its&#13;
purpose, having for several years been constantly increasing in the total enrollment and&#13;
in the efficiency of the work done. The enrollment this year reaches nearly a hundred.&#13;
A much larger number are here during the&#13;
summer sessions, the totals running up nearly to three hundred.&#13;
In addition to the regular normal work 'several courses in&#13;
education are offered for regular college stude nts, thus aiding&#13;
those who, though they are carrying regular college work, intend&#13;
to make teaching a profession. Many graduates and undergraduates of the department are filling important positions in&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
large towns and cities in the territory contiguous to Sioux City.&#13;
The courses offered are both academic and professional,&#13;
the academic courses being taken under the regular college and&#13;
academy faculty. The professional courses are offered under&#13;
experienced and able instructors and the work is thorough. The&#13;
courses are designed to fit teachers for positions in high schools&#13;
and colleges, as well as for primary positions and grade work.&#13;
The primary courses of the department are under the direction of a specialist in primary work and methods, and one who&#13;
has spent several years in both preparation and practice for this&#13;
kind of work. The work that the department is doing is howing most beneficial results in meeting the ever increasing d emand for technically trained primary teachers.&#13;
The graduating class this year will be large r than ever be0&#13;
&#13;
fore. Some of the class are to take up positions for next year,&#13;
and the remainder have announced that they will remain and&#13;
I&#13;
complete the regular college course.&#13;
A well selected normal library will add greatly to the benefits of the department in the near future.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
89 '&#13;
&#13;
88&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
.Jacob S. Wendel '09&#13;
Clair Manning '07&#13;
Ethel Delmage '00&#13;
Ivan Bloom '10&#13;
Florence Clark '08&#13;
&#13;
ed:&#13;
&#13;
an&#13;
&#13;
Address all business&#13;
commu&#13;
make all subscrl ptlons&#13;
. Morningside Printing Co.&#13;
If you do not receive your paper regularly, or&#13;
if you changeyour address you will confer&#13;
a favor by notifying the Business Manager&#13;
at once. 'l'HE collegian&#13;
REPORTER will be&#13;
sent toSubscribers until ordered stopped and&#13;
all arrearagesare paid.&#13;
&#13;
fro&#13;
&#13;
We wish to Invite the attention or our readers.&#13;
especially our students. to the advertise·&#13;
mrnts !n our columns. We solicit for each&#13;
firm herein represented a share or your pat&#13;
&#13;
en&#13;
ur&#13;
&#13;
ecnage&#13;
&#13;
editorial&#13;
Style does not mean patterning&#13;
after others.&#13;
There is a difference between&#13;
and jokes of revnege&#13;
90&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Chapman&#13;
&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
&#13;
Inter -Society Debate&#13;
Inter -Society Debate&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
"Resolved that a commercial policy based upon reciprocity&#13;
would be better for the people of the United States&#13;
in the future than a continuation of the&#13;
present high protective&#13;
policy II&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE --- Philomathean&#13;
Corwin Tay !or&#13;
Edwin M. Brown&#13;
Jacob Wendel&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE --- Othonian&#13;
Stanley Collins&#13;
A. L. Miller&#13;
A. G. Cushman&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
" Resolved that an income tax is a desirable part in the scheme&#13;
of federal taxation "&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE---Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE --- Hawkeye&#13;
Paul Carson&#13;
L. Hamren&#13;
L. R. Chapman&#13;
&#13;
George R. Day&#13;
Ross Phelps&#13;
Charles Cushman&#13;
&#13;
DECISION---Three for the negative&#13;
&#13;
DECISION---One for the affirmative, two for the negative&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
&#13;
Wendel&#13;
92&#13;
&#13;
Taylor&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Phelps&#13;
93&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Taylor&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
lnter--Collegiate Debate&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE vs. UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
Program&#13;
&#13;
To be held at Fayette, Iowa, May 17, 1907&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Constitutionality Granted; Resolved that the Federal&#13;
Government should levy a progressive&#13;
Inheritance Tax "&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE--- Upper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE--- Morningside&#13;
&#13;
The Man for the Age&#13;
The American Way&#13;
The Foreign Invader&#13;
In Unity There is strength&#13;
Our Heritage and Our Duty&#13;
The Crisis of the Twentieth Century&#13;
&#13;
. Frank Wood&#13;
. Jay Whitaker&#13;
Percy W. Brown&#13;
. H. H. Sawyer&#13;
Walter H. Johnson&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE TEAM&#13;
Corwin Taylor 107&#13;
Stanley Collins '07&#13;
A. G. Cushman 109&#13;
&#13;
First Place&#13;
Second Place&#13;
. Third Place&#13;
&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
H.1H. Sawyer&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Prizes, $50.00, $15.00 and $10.00&#13;
&#13;
94&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
Science&#13;
PPRECIATING the need of an organization m&#13;
Morningside College to promote interest m&#13;
the study of scientific subjects, and to keep in&#13;
touch with the most recent developments in&#13;
the world of science, Professors Scott, Stephens and McDowell, with a number of the students in the science departments, organized the&#13;
College Society of Science on December 18, 1906. The original&#13;
membership consisted of the professors who are at the heads of&#13;
the departments of Biology, Chemistry and Physics, and five&#13;
students from each of these departments. Membership is open&#13;
not only to department majors, but to Sophomores and Freshmen as well.&#13;
At each bi-weekly meeting a program is given consisting of&#13;
papers or talks by the members of the club upon scientific subjects of general interest. Some of the papers already given are:&#13;
&#13;
Ida Lewis&#13;
&#13;
In Physics: --- 11 Instruments Used by the Weather Bureau."&#13;
" Block System, As Used by Railroads."&#13;
" Wireless Telegraphy, with Demonstrations."&#13;
&#13;
Program&#13;
L. R. Keckler&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
Arthur Tumbleson&#13;
Ida Lewis&#13;
Edwin Brown&#13;
Silas Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Republic or Monarchy --- Which&#13;
The Problem of Progress&#13;
A Plea for Action&#13;
The Conflict of Today&#13;
A Stride in National Progress&#13;
Guardians of Our Flag&#13;
&#13;
First Place&#13;
Second Place&#13;
&#13;
Ida Lewis&#13;
Jay Whitaker .&#13;
&#13;
Dewey Prizes, $25.00, $15.00&#13;
&#13;
In Chemistry: --- " Liquefaction of Gases."&#13;
" Explosives."&#13;
" Modern Assaying Methods."&#13;
II History of Chemistry from the earliest&#13;
Times Through the Period of Alchemy. 11&#13;
In Biology: --- " Habits and Longevity of Ants. 11&#13;
" Spontaneous Generation."&#13;
" Prehistoric Man. 11&#13;
" Pathogenic Protozoa."&#13;
II Pathogenic Bacteria."&#13;
The charter members and officers of the society are:&#13;
&#13;
R. C. Nichols, President; H. E. Groom, Vice-President ;&#13;
Cora Frear, Se cretary; C. E. Magoun, Treasurer; P. E . F redendoll, C. F. Brooks, W. H. Clary, Martha Macdonald, M. C. McConkey, AG. Tumbleson, E . J. Fry, Allen P . Berkstresser,]. R.&#13;
Day, D. F. Robbins, H. N. Staples.&#13;
Executive Board : --- W. W. Scott, Chemistry ; T. C. Stephens, Biology; M. F. McDowell, Physics.&#13;
97&#13;
&#13;
96&#13;
&#13;
z&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
98&#13;
&#13;
HE Student Congress is one of Morningside 1s&#13;
most recent organizations. Being entirely&#13;
without precedent its establishment presented&#13;
a problem of no little consideration. The&#13;
present members are endeavoring to complete the permanent organization of the congress, and at the same time deal with the&#13;
work already mapped out for them. The scope of their work is&#13;
to be gradually broadened. There are sixteen members, each&#13;
class electing a representative from each of the four college&#13;
literary societies.&#13;
The purpose of the congress may best be expressed by the&#13;
following, taken from the constitution : "The chief function of&#13;
the American college is to train citizens. The first requisite for&#13;
excellence in a citizen is the ability to conform to high moral&#13;
standards. To be able to govern one's self under provocation&#13;
is esteemed a virtue, but to bring one's whole life into subjugation to the golden rule should be the aim of every genuine&#13;
student. The genius of our republic is that the citizens shall&#13;
control themselves by laws made by their representatives. Representative government is therefore germane to all of those institutions whose chief function is the making of citizens."&#13;
The purposes of the Student Congress of Morningside College are:&#13;
I. To furnish a medium through which the student body&#13;
may express its desires on those matters which directly affect&#13;
student life.&#13;
II. To formulate expressions of convictions and purposes&#13;
regarding the habits and customs of the student body, especially&#13;
those pertaining to classes and societies.&#13;
III. T O co-operate with the president and faculty of the institution in formulating such rules and regulations with regard&#13;
to the government of the student body as pertain especially_ to&#13;
student privileges, recognizing always that the president and&#13;
faculty are responsible for the discipline and government of the&#13;
college.&#13;
99&#13;
&#13;
The Volunteer Band&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
OMING almost as a New Year resolution in&#13;
1901, the plan for a student volunteer band&#13;
was brought to a reality in the spring term of&#13;
the same year, when the Morningside College&#13;
Student Volunteer Band was first formed .&#13;
The seven original members immediately&#13;
sought affiliation with the National Student&#13;
Volunteer movement under its motto, " It is my purpose, if God&#13;
permits, to become a foreign missionary."&#13;
In November of the same year, two Morningsiders, the first&#13;
to go to the foreign field, sailed for India. III health has since&#13;
necessitated their return to the home land. Since the first organization eleven have made the trip to foreign fields, and of&#13;
these seven are still in the service.&#13;
To China: --- Miss Bartlett, Lydia Trimble, Fred Trimble&#13;
Stanley Carson, Grace Darling Carson, Rena Bowker Trimble,&#13;
Mable Sia.&#13;
To India: --- Mr. and Mrs. W.&#13;
count of ill health.&#13;
&#13;
B. Empey. ( Home on ac-&#13;
&#13;
To the Phillipine Islands : --- Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
( Hom e on account of ill health.)&#13;
&#13;
C. F .&#13;
&#13;
Hartzell.&#13;
&#13;
To the Maderia Islands: --- Herbert ]. Calkins.&#13;
The band has yearly increased in size until now, six years&#13;
since it was first organized, the membership has increased from&#13;
the original $even to twenty-one.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
101&#13;
100&#13;
&#13;
The Young Men I s Christian Ass I n&#13;
&#13;
P. Brown&#13;
Wendel&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
S. Collins&#13;
&#13;
Chapman&#13;
&#13;
P. Collins&#13;
&#13;
The Young Women I s Christian Ass I n&#13;
&#13;
Dickson&#13;
&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
Watts&#13;
Mills&#13;
&#13;
Woodford&#13;
Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Haskins&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
President, Stanley B. Collins&#13;
Vice-President, Alva Miller&#13;
Secretary, Percy Brown&#13;
Treasurer, Paul Collins&#13;
&#13;
President, Mirah Mills&#13;
Vice-President, Blanche Watts&#13;
Secretary, Etta Mahood&#13;
Treasurer, Lura Matteson&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
Glenn M. Squires&#13;
. C. G . Manning&#13;
Edwm M. Brown&#13;
Paul Collins&#13;
Alva Miller&#13;
Jacob Wendel&#13;
&#13;
Bible Study .&#13;
Mission Study&#13;
Social&#13;
Finance&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Membership&#13;
&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Matteson&#13;
&#13;
Mable Haskins&#13;
Blanche Watts&#13;
Faith Woodford&#13;
Ella Dickson&#13;
Lura Matteson&#13;
Martie Swem&#13;
Jeannette Bartlett&#13;
&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Membership&#13;
Social&#13;
Missionary&#13;
Finance&#13;
Intercollegiate&#13;
Bible Study .&#13;
&#13;
The Y. M. C. A. Lecture Course&#13;
Dr. Austen K. DuBlois&#13;
Isabel Garghill Beecher&#13;
Leonora Jackson Concert Company&#13;
Reno W elbourne&#13;
The Dunbar Quartette&#13;
Dr. ]. Merritte Driver&#13;
102&#13;
&#13;
Functions Given Under Auspices of Y. W. C. A.&#13;
April 6--- Red Ribbon-Green Ribbon Banquet&#13;
September 15 --- Y. W. C. A. Lawn Party at Garretson Place&#13;
September 17---General Informal Reception for New Students&#13;
January 20--- Reception for Miss Henshaw&#13;
103&#13;
&#13;
In the Memory of&#13;
Our Student&#13;
Dead&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
JESSE ALDEN DUBOIS, of the Class of 1907.&#13;
LAURETIA JOSEPHINE NAUGHTON,&#13;
of the Normal Department.&#13;
&#13;
104&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Commencement Week&#13;
Morningside College,,June 7 to 14, 1906&#13;
Auditorium, College Hall&#13;
&#13;
Oration&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Know Thyself&#13;
&#13;
Catherine T reischmann&#13;
Oration ·&#13;
&#13;
Edmund Burke&#13;
G. A. Moir&#13;
&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas&#13;
&#13;
Tuesday, June 12&#13;
&#13;
Thursday, June 7, 8: 15 p. m.&#13;
Graduating Exercises of Normal Department.&#13;
Address by Supt. M. W. Stevens, Sioux City Schools.&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas.&#13;
&#13;
9:00 a. m. Annual Meeting of the Board of Trustees.&#13;
12:30 p . m. Examinations close.&#13;
3:00 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Senior Class Play,&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
Comedy of Errors. "&#13;
&#13;
Saturday, June 9&#13;
Graduating Exercises of the Department of Elocution.&#13;
4 p. m. Recital by Martha L. Whitaker, assisted by the class&#13;
Glad to See You&#13;
Cooke&#13;
Little Mary's Wish&#13;
Blinn&#13;
The Famine (Class)&#13;
Longfellow&#13;
A Martyr to the Cause&#13;
Conrad&#13;
The Bells ( Class)&#13;
Poe&#13;
Her Cuban Tea&#13;
Phelps&#13;
Greek Posing&#13;
Hazel Platts&#13;
Too Late for the Train&#13;
Anon&#13;
The Lost Chord&#13;
Proctor&#13;
Part I.&#13;
Introduction&#13;
.&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
The Burning of Rome&#13;
A. G. Cushman&#13;
Vinicius I Search for Lygia&#13;
Miss Rorem&#13;
Martyrdom of the Christians&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
Lygia1s Imprisonment&#13;
Miss Kilborne&#13;
The Inspiration of Ursus&#13;
Miss Fletcher&#13;
Part II.&#13;
The Kentucky Cardinal ( Arranged by Miss Davidson)&#13;
James Lane Allen Miss Davidson&#13;
&#13;
Sunday, June IO&#13;
9:30 a. m . Love Feast, led by Rev. W. T. Macdonald.&#13;
10:30 a. m. Baccalaureate Services.&#13;
Address by President W. S. Lewis.&#13;
Annual Services Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A.&#13;
Address by Rev. George Soltau.&#13;
8:15 p. m. Annual Sermon--- Rev. Robert Bagnell, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
4:00 p. m.&#13;
&#13;
Monday, June 11, 8: 15 p. m.&#13;
Graduating Exercises of the Academy.&#13;
Serenade&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Lieb ling&#13;
&#13;
Miss Pearl Mason.&#13;
Oration&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
A Woman's Intuition&#13;
&#13;
Laura Cushman.&#13;
Oration&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Modern Life Insurance&#13;
&#13;
F. H . Klippel.&#13;
Twilight Bells&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
C. A. White&#13;
&#13;
Ladies I Chorus&#13;
Oration&#13;
Oration&#13;
Piano Solo&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Alexander the Great&#13;
Etta Mahood&#13;
.&#13;
The Strength of the Nation&#13;
Will F. Hay&#13;
Miss Faith Woodford&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
Cast of Characters&#13;
Solinus, Duke of Ephesus&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
C. F. Hartzell&#13;
Aegeon, A Merchant of Syracuse .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. 0. M. Foote&#13;
Ant\pholus of Ephesus Twin Brothers Sons to&#13;
G. E. Milner&#13;
Ant1pholus of Syracuse Amelia and Aegeon R. E. Heilman&#13;
Dromio of Ephesus Twin Brothers, Servants]&#13;
A L. Brower&#13;
Dromio of Syracuse to the two Antipholuses&#13;
Glenn Minkler&#13;
Balthazar, A Merchant&#13;
Estie Boddy&#13;
Angelo, A Goldsmith&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
H. ]. Calkins&#13;
First Merchant, Friend of Antipholus of Syracuse, Ruby Flinn&#13;
Second Merchant, Trading with Angelo .&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson&#13;
Pinch, A Conjurer&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Ruby Flinn&#13;
Aemelia, the Abbess, Wife of Aegeon&#13;
Evva Erskine&#13;
Adriana, Wife of Antipholus of Ephesus&#13;
. Ruby Trimble&#13;
Luciana, Her Sister .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Gertrude Crossan&#13;
Gaolers, Attendants and Others.&#13;
8: 15 p . m. Graduating Exercises of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
Concerto in E flat&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
Beethoven&#13;
Miss Mossman&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Shattuck&#13;
At Evening&#13;
Male Quartet&#13;
Wagner-Bendel&#13;
Ballade from the II Flying Dutchman "&#13;
I&#13;
Miss Gilmon&#13;
Mascheroni&#13;
For All Eternity&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Miss Smylie&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Concerto in D Minor, Andante-Presto&#13;
Miss Ritz&#13;
Buck&#13;
Where the Lindens Bloom&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Mr. Herbert Calkins&#13;
107&#13;
&#13;
Concertstuck, Finale&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Weber&#13;
&#13;
Miss Williams&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Arditi&#13;
Miss Whinery&#13;
Concerto in F sharp Minor, Andante Finale&#13;
Hiller&#13;
Miss Mason&#13;
The Lost Chord&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
Sullivan&#13;
Ladies I Chorus&#13;
Awarding of Diplomas&#13;
President W. S. Lewis&#13;
Parla&#13;
&#13;
Wednesday, June 13&#13;
9:30 a. m.&#13;
11:00 a. m.&#13;
12:00 m.&#13;
1:30 p.m.&#13;
3:30 p. m.&#13;
8:15 p.m.&#13;
&#13;
Students' Farewell Chapel.&#13;
Marking Out of New Athletic Park.&#13;
Alumni Business Meeting.&#13;
Annual Alumni Banquet.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Atheneum Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Zetalethean Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Philomathean Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Reunion of Othonian Literary Society.&#13;
Annual Lecture, Rev. Robert BagneII, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
Thursday, June 14, Commencement Day&#13;
10:30 a. m. Graduating Exercises.&#13;
Processional&#13;
Hymn 612&#13;
Invocation&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Piano Solo, Rigoletto F antasie .&#13;
.&#13;
Verdi - Liszt&#13;
Miss Nina Wheeler&#13;
Commencement Address, Rev. W. H. Jordan, D. D., Minneapolis&#13;
Trio, Lift Thine Eyes (Elijah) .&#13;
.&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Ladies I Chorus&#13;
Chorus, Be Not Afraid (Elijah)&#13;
.&#13;
Mendelssohn&#13;
Conferring of Degrees&#13;
President W. S. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
IN THE SUMMER HOUSE&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
109&#13;
&#13;
The Alumni&#13;
1891&#13;
Alvah R. Toothaker, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
J. 8. Trimble, Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Pearl A. Woodford, Sergeant Bluff, Ia.&#13;
T. F. Warner, Osage, Iowa.&#13;
1904&#13;
1893&#13;
John K. Ackenback, Peoria, Illinois.&#13;
Ira R. Aldrich, Hartley, Iowa.&#13;
Ed. Mahood, St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
J. H. O'Donoghue, Storm Lake, Iowa. Fred S. Carson. Hinghua, China.&#13;
1894&#13;
Grace Darling, Hinghua, China.&#13;
E. M. Corbett, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
(Mrs. F. .S Carson) .&#13;
1895&#13;
George W. Finch Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Fred J. Plondke, Minneapolis, Minn. David E. Hadden Alta, Iowa.&#13;
E. L. Benedict, Hoquiam, Wn.&#13;
Mabel A. Killam, Ocheyedan, Iowa.&#13;
1896&#13;
(Mrs. A H. Maynard.)&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Junius Ralph Magee, Paullina, Iowa.&#13;
James H. Benedict Hoquiam, Wn.&#13;
Albert H. Maynard, Ocheyedan. Iowa,&#13;
Dora A. Eisentraut _Seattle, Wn.&#13;
Narcissa P. Miller, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Frank D. Empey, Hmton, Iowa.&#13;
(Mrs. A. R. Toothaker.)&#13;
1897&#13;
Wm. Edgar Sanders.&#13;
.&#13;
Frank Mitchell, Early, Iowa.&#13;
Lydia Trimble, Foo Chou, China.&#13;
1899&#13;
1905&#13;
Sidney L. Chandler, Ida Grove, Ia.&#13;
William A. Blackwell, Iowa City, Ia.&#13;
Asbury Dean Sioux City, la.&#13;
Carrie Brown, Chicago. Illinois.&#13;
Jacob E1sentraut, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Rena Nellie Bowker, Hinghua, China.&#13;
Walter B. Empey Schaller. Iowa.&#13;
(Mrs. Fred Trimble.)&#13;
Adams R. Hastings.&#13;
Charles Eden Carroll, Creston, Neb.&#13;
Ernest C. Richards Newell, Iowa.&#13;
Myrtilla Mae Cook Chicago Illinois&#13;
1900&#13;
'&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. H&#13;
C .&#13;
(Mrs. W. Lee Lewis.)&#13;
Carne M. Bartlett Hmg ua, hma. William H. Debenham, Ottumwa, Ia.&#13;
James A. Davies, Thompson, Iowa.&#13;
Mabel E. Ellerbroek, Yankton, S. D.&#13;
Hattie B. Empey, Schaller, Iowa.&#13;
Emma J. Fair, Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
Edna B. Hatheway, Byers, I. T.&#13;
(Mrs. D. L. Young.)&#13;
(Mrs. Byrne Boylan)&#13;
Virginia Maude Fair, Galva, Iowa.&#13;
Alfred H. Jastram, Remsen, Iowa.&#13;
Cyrus Lloyd Gilbert, South Park, Wn.&#13;
Clarence E. Van Horne..&#13;
.&#13;
Anna Goodall.&#13;
Robert N. Van Horne, Sioux City, Ia. Earl Wesley Hanna, Terril, Iowa.&#13;
Clara J. Yetter, Brooklyn, N. Y.&#13;
Charles Elmer Harding.&#13;
1901&#13;
Anna Lou Hollingworth, Ames, Iowa.&#13;
Arthur L. haines&#13;
(Mrs. J. W. Green.)&#13;
Harry H. Adair, Dakota City, Neb. Edward H . Hulser, Univ. of Chicago.&#13;
Arthur J. Folson.&#13;
Maude Emma Kling, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Herbert A. Keck, Boston Mass.&#13;
(Mrs. R. N. Darling.)&#13;
Anna C. Marsh, Mobile Ala.&#13;
Clara Harriet Killam, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
(Mrs. Oscar Reinhart)&#13;
Coraiinn Lockm Aurelia Iowa.&#13;
Augustus. J. Quirin. Germania, Ia.&#13;
J. N. Hamilton Mccary, West Side, Ia.&#13;
Oscar Reinhart, Mobile, Ala.&#13;
John Waldo McCarthy, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Jennie R. Skewis. Inwood, Iowa.&#13;
Alice Marsh, Mobile, Alaba ma.&#13;
1902&#13;
Carl Wesley Maynard, Chicago, Ill.&#13;
Ross P. Brown, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
William John Morgan, Iowa City, Ia.&#13;
Bessie May Carr, South Park, Wn. Geo. John Poppenheimer, Renwick, la.&#13;
(Mrs. C. L. Gilbert.)&#13;
Ralph Eugene Root, Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
Florence M. Cate, Winfield, Kans.&#13;
Simon Diedrick Stulken.&#13;
Charles F. Eberly.&#13;
David Laurance Young, Iowa City, Ia.&#13;
Emma A. Flathers, Fort North, Tex.&#13;
19( 6&#13;
Estie Terissa Boddy, Chicago, Illinois.&#13;
(Mrs . Guy G. Frary.)&#13;
Guy G. Frary, Fort North, Texas.&#13;
Herbert J. Calkins, Maderia Islands.&#13;
Ethel M. Gantt, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Asa Lee Brower, Ann Arbor, Mich.&#13;
Samuel Knoer. Moorhead, Iowa.&#13;
Emma G. Crossan, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
George A Platts, Winfield. Kans.&#13;
Frank Vincent DuBois, Univ. of Pa.&#13;
F, J. Seaver, Columbia Univ .. N. Y. Evva Celestia Erskine, Ottumwa, Ia.&#13;
Ethel Walker, Los Angeles, Calif.&#13;
(Mrs. W. H. Debenham.)&#13;
(Mrs Trimble.)&#13;
Edgar Mccay Everhart, Tyndall, S . D.&#13;
1903&#13;
Ruby Amelia Flinn Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
George Barsalou, Mason City. la.&#13;
0. Merril Foote, Armour, S. D.&#13;
Albert B. Gilbert, Hawarden, Iowa. Mary Margaret Gilbert, Churdan, Ia.&#13;
George R. Gilbert, Merrill, Iowa.&#13;
Corwin F. Hartzell, Cedar Rapids, Ia.&#13;
Sophia May Hieby, DeSmet, S . D.&#13;
Lon Adrian Hawkins, Ohio State Un iv.&#13;
M. F. McDowell, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Ralph E. Heilman, Evanston, Ill.&#13;
Robert J. Mcisaac, Portland, Ore.&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson, Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
Frank E. Mossman, Winfield, Kans. Berthemia McCarthy. Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Hans Nissen, Lehigh, Iowa.&#13;
Geo. Ethan Millner, Univ. of Chicago.&#13;
A. Grant Ruthven, Ruthven, Iowa.&#13;
Roy Glenn Minkler, Superior, Iowa.&#13;
David M. Simpson, Thornton, Iowa. Ruby Lillian Trimble, Kansas City.&#13;
Lorne F. Smylie, Sioux City, Iowa. John William Wunn, Whiting, Iowa.&#13;
110&#13;
&#13;
That II Human Interest " Story&#13;
EE Whiz, Guy, you ought to be working on a&#13;
desk in St. Louis if you want to get up a page&#13;
of human interest stories," said Maurice Almy&#13;
as he came out of the busy telegraph room&#13;
into the day room of the Evening Telegraph.&#13;
"Just your remark about a page of local short&#13;
stories that made me think of it, 11 he continued&#13;
as he sat down, lit a cigarette and hoisted his feet onto one side&#13;
of a big square waste basket which stood by the city editor's&#13;
desk.&#13;
The city editor paused a moment in his work, but said nothing, apparently waiting for the telegraph man to explain&#13;
himself.&#13;
II I'll tell you the incident, and maybe some of the boys can&#13;
work it off as a local story. It happened when I was working&#13;
there and is a peach of a story. It runs like this: 11&#13;
II Big Hal Henderson, commonly known to the boys I round&#13;
the Dispatch office as I Happy Hal,' on account of his genial&#13;
nature, had just turned in his last piece of copy for the noon&#13;
edition, and, after taking a look at the assignment book, turned&#13;
to Harry Davis, the desk man, with the remark: 11 What the&#13;
blazes is the meaning of this assignment? 11&#13;
II What is it, Hal?" queried the city editor.&#13;
II Oh, this assigning me a sad human interest story for the&#13;
Sunday edition. What do you think I am anyway, a sort of a&#13;
second Edgar Allen Poe? "&#13;
II Hardly that, Harry, 11 smiled the man at the table as he&#13;
looked up from under the rim of his eye shade into the face of&#13;
the happy-go-lucky reporter standing before him. 11 But, you&#13;
see, I am going to get up a page of local human interest stories.&#13;
Just the ordinary things which happen every day, but which go&#13;
unnoticed by the busy world. Something which you may meet&#13;
on your run that has a touch of human woe in it and which is&#13;
of sufficient local color. All of the other fellows are going to&#13;
bring in humorous stories but Ed. and you. 11&#13;
The city editor's eyes wandered back to the type written&#13;
page which he held in his hand, and he absentmindedly ran his&#13;
pencil through a blur on the sheet. Seizing a blank sheet of&#13;
paper he ran it into the typewriter, and his eyes assumed a far112&#13;
&#13;
away look as he mapped out in his mind the heading for the&#13;
article.&#13;
The reporter lingered a moment at the table, gazing blankly&#13;
at the assignment book, which read: 11 Local Human Interest&#13;
Story --- Sad --- Henderson." 11 Thunder, Harry! 11 he ejaculated.&#13;
II I don't know what I can find on my run that will fill the bill "&#13;
and he strode across the room, seize d his hat from the peg and&#13;
slipped into his light top coat. Taking several sheets of copy&#13;
paper, he rolled them up, thrust them into his pocket and disappeared down the stairway, whistling as he went, "John&#13;
Dough, John Dough------."&#13;
Hal dropped off the uptown car in the darkness and swung&#13;
around the corner on the run, wondering at the absence of the&#13;
accustomed light which was wont to welcome him from the big&#13;
bay window of his cozy little home.&#13;
Everything was strange ly quiet as he bounded up the frcnt&#13;
steps and pushed open the door. Hardly had he crossed the&#13;
threshold when a neighbor woman halted him with a low"Hush!"&#13;
The only light came through the half closed door which&#13;
opened into the little sleeping room to the right.&#13;
"Why! What! 11 was all the startled reporter could utter.&#13;
n t you get t he message we sent you? 11 she whispered&#13;
1n answer.&#13;
"didn't&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Message? No! What do you mean? 11 he asked, a feeling&#13;
of impending evil creeping over him, while the woman only&#13;
pointed to the adjoining room.&#13;
He passed quickly in to find his wife kneeling beside a&#13;
little cot. The coverlet pulled back exposed the charred and&#13;
blackene d face of his only daughter.&#13;
II Theatre fire! 11 sobbed the wife, and she clung to him for&#13;
support.&#13;
&#13;
The next day all the men at the office wondered at the sud' den reticence of the city hall man. Hal was indeed strangely&#13;
quiet and subdued. As the thirty call went out for the last edition he paused beside the city editor's desk long enough to&#13;
hand him a couple of closely written sheets.&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
I think I have found your story, 11 was all that he said.&#13;
And, continued Almy, 11 The story that Henderson turned in&#13;
is the story that I have just told you. 11&#13;
&#13;
113&#13;
&#13;
The Power of The Will&#13;
T was an undisputed fact that Herbert Graves&#13;
was the jolliest fellow in the college. Despite&#13;
the fact that he was an irrepressible mischief&#13;
maker he had the happy faculty of knowing&#13;
when to stop. Herbert had been sitting in a&#13;
great arm chair before the grate fire and trying vainly to interest himself in Prof. Loona&#13;
Ticks'&#13;
new book, 11 The Power of The Will. 11&#13;
After a half hour his patience gave out and, throwing the&#13;
book on the floor, he turned to his room mate, saying : 11 Honestly, Bob, it is positively fierce what fool notions get into print&#13;
now-a-days. Now here this old fogy tries to make one believe&#13;
that merely by focusing all your mental powers on a picture you&#13;
can .will yourself to be one of the figures and to feel all of the&#13;
emotions of that figure. lt1s all rot! 11&#13;
11 Well," chuckled his chum, "Why don 1t you try?&#13;
Now,&#13;
for instance, will yourself to be that young lady, 11 and he pointed&#13;
to a picture on the mantel, " and you will soon know what she&#13;
thinks of Herbert Graves, 11 and he dodged the book which the&#13;
irate Herbert hurled at him.&#13;
II That would not be a bad idea,11 said Graves.&#13;
11 See that&#13;
picture up there of the Lewis and Clark expedition. Well, I'm&#13;
going to draw a cabin on it and will myself into the cabin. W e 1ll&#13;
put the cabin here on the hill overlooking the river. 11 With that&#13;
Herbert secured his drawing materials and soon had a log cabin&#13;
perched on the hill.&#13;
Placing the picture over the mantel place, he concentrated&#13;
all of his mental powers on the thought that he was in the cabin.&#13;
He remained thus motionless for fully fifteen minutes, and then&#13;
he sprang to his feet with the startled expression, " Great Scott,&#13;
where am I? "&#13;
No longer was he inside the beautifully furnished room,&#13;
but now a huge square room of rough hewn logs, the cracks&#13;
plastered with yellow clay, and in the place of windows were&#13;
two holes in the side of the building covered with what appeared to be oiled skin of some sort. Then he remembered how he&#13;
came there--- that he had willed himself into the cabin which he&#13;
had drawn on the picture.&#13;
He paused a moment in wonderment over the unique situation. Then he turned toward the door to go out for a look&#13;
around the cabin.&#13;
" But the door --- why --- where was the door, anyway? 11 and&#13;
then he remembered that he had drawn no door in the cabin on&#13;
the picture. Hence, logically there was no door in this cabin.&#13;
" Well, thank goodness, he had drawn windows, 11 he thought to&#13;
himself, and, tearing the skin off of the window, he crawled&#13;
through the narrow opening into the outer world.&#13;
All around him was a wild tangle of timber and hills. As&#13;
he stood there the sound of a wierd chant broke on his ears&#13;
and he turned to see a canoe, and then a second and a third,&#13;
come into view around the point of land below him. He watch114&#13;
&#13;
ed them in wonderment as they came nearer and nearer. As&#13;
the string of canoes were nearly past him he saw the man in the&#13;
bow of the first one move his arm as a signal and the canoes all&#13;
shot in toward the shore. Quickly all of the canoes drew up to&#13;
the bank and the occupants landed. As Herbert watched, he&#13;
noted that from one of the canoes a man was carried ashore.&#13;
As the party came up the slope Herbert hurried down to meet&#13;
them, for if his memory did not serve him wrongly he recognized the faces of Lewis and Clarke and that Sergeant Floyd&#13;
was the man who was carried ashore.&#13;
II How do you do, Mr. Clarke? " he said as he stepped up to&#13;
them, and a similar greeting to Lewis was met by a look of&#13;
amazement from both of the men. 11 Who are you? Whence&#13;
came you? 11 and similar questions were fired at him in a volley.&#13;
11 Oh, I'm H erbert Graves, a student at Morningside College,&#13;
S10ux City, lowa, 11 answered Herbert easily. Clarke turned to&#13;
Lewis. 11 Is Sioux City marked on the map ? " Lewis only shook&#13;
his head. 11 Where is Iowa ? 11 politely asked Clarke.&#13;
" This is lowa, 11 answered Herbert with a sweep of his arm.&#13;
II And that is South Dakota, and yonder across the river lies&#13;
Nebraska. 11&#13;
The men tapped their foreheads significently, but Herbert&#13;
only smiled. 11 How did you know we were here? 11 asked&#13;
Lewis. And Herbert told them all about their expedition. 11 And&#13;
Floyd will die on the 8th of August, 1804,11 he said. Then he&#13;
told them how Floyd a night or two before had danced and&#13;
'after becoming overheated had lain down upon the cold, wet&#13;
sand of the river 1s edge. This only convinced the men all the&#13;
more that he was crazy.&#13;
II Secure him, 11 said Clarke, 11 and place him under guard in&#13;
the cabin yonder. 11 So they hustled him off to the cabin.&#13;
II Where is the door? 11 asked the guard.&#13;
' II Why, I forgot to draw it on the picture," said Herbert, and&#13;
the men were sure that he was demented.&#13;
So they put Herbert back through the window by which he&#13;
had made his egress. While he was confined Clarke came over&#13;
to say that Floyd was d ead . Later Clarke came again to say&#13;
that they would break camp. In the bustle that followed, Herbert managed to break loose, and, closely followed by his pursuers, he started on a run through the underbrush. As he was&#13;
tearing along he came to the brink of the river. One of the&#13;
Indians who had been closely following made a grab for Herbert and the lad struck at him, only to lose his balance and fall&#13;
over the edge of the clay bank. With a splash he struck the&#13;
water and as he did so made a grab at a big log which was&#13;
floating near by------ to awake and find that he had caught his&#13;
room mate by the hair, in the very act of casting another tumbler full of water in his face.&#13;
R. K . Gellatley.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
The Spirit Lake Massacre&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
HE Sioux! What terror the name of this cunning, treacherous, blood-thirsty tribe of redskins brought to the early settler of northwest&#13;
Iowa. No other tribe has shown such savage&#13;
characteristics nor appalled humanity by such&#13;
indiscriminate slaughter. Among the most&#13;
cunning, most faithless of these savages was&#13;
lnkpaduta. He, a chief, had been declared a government outlaw, but for fear of his taking revenge he was still paid his portion. With a band of followers from fifty to a hundred in number this wily savage wandered over the northwest country,&#13;
supporting himself by plundering. Among his own people&#13;
lnkpaduta was a hero. A big chief because of his successes m&#13;
war, the ferocity of hi.s revenge and his implacable hatred of&#13;
the white m_&#13;
an. .&#13;
The horrible massacre at Okoboji had its inception near&#13;
Smithland. Here the Indians became insolent and agressive,&#13;
and in self protection the settlers disarmed them. During the&#13;
night the little band quietly stole away, following the Little&#13;
Sioux river north, their hearts filled with revenge. As they progressed their depredations increased in number and violence.&#13;
In Cherokee county much property was destroyed and near&#13;
Peterson several most horrible atrocities were committed, one&#13;
man being so hacked to pieces that he never regained his right&#13;
mind. Thence the Indians marched eastward to Gillett 1s Grove&#13;
where arms and ammunition were taken from the settlers, and&#13;
thence north along the Indian trail to the beautiful Okoboji&#13;
lake region.&#13;
On the south shores of West Okoboji lake a number of&#13;
pioneers had come in the preceeding summer. Here in peace&#13;
and quiet Mr. Rowland Gardner, leader of the little band, hoped&#13;
to spend the evening of his days. As the long winter drew to a&#13;
close these settlers looked forward to the planting of their crops.&#13;
They had neither heard nor seen aught of Indians, and had not&#13;
the slightest presentiment of evil. On the morning of March 8,&#13;
185 7, as the family were about to seat themselves at the table,&#13;
a solitary Indian stalked into the cabin. He was followed by&#13;
another and another until lnkpaduta and fourteen of his warriors&#13;
in the guise of friendship had asked for food. The reds soon&#13;
116&#13;
&#13;
became insolent and demanded ammunition. About noon the&#13;
Indians went off in the direction of the cabin of Mr. Mattock,&#13;
another settler. Fearing evil, Gardner, Luce and Clark, the men&#13;
at the Gardner cabin, held a consultation and decided that Luce&#13;
and Clark should go to warn the other settlers and Gardner&#13;
should stay to guard the cabin. About three in the afternoon&#13;
the firing of guns was heard in the direction of the Mattock&#13;
cabin and after two hours of suspense Gardner started to reconnoiter, but soon returned saying that the Indians were coming.&#13;
The reds came and demanded flour. As Mr. Gardner turned to&#13;
get it he was shot through the heart. Mrs. Luce and Mrs. Gardner were next killed and two little children were taken out of&#13;
doors and their lives beat out with pieces of stove wood. Abbie&#13;
Gardner was roughly seized by the arm and made to understand&#13;
that she was a prisoner. The cabin was ransacked and after&#13;
the scalp knife had finished its cruel work the Indians ce lebrated&#13;
their victory with the horrible revelry of the war dance.&#13;
The following day the bloody work was continued. Feigning friendship the Indians gained the advantage and then mercilessly killed the victims. During the second day's slaughter two&#13;
more women, Mrs. Noble and Mrs.Thatcher,were taken prisoners.&#13;
On the morning of the tenth the Indians crossed the lake on the&#13;
ice and proceeded northward to the shore of Spirit Lake where&#13;
they accidently discovered the cabin of the Marbles. In their&#13;
usual treacherous manner they gained entrance to the cabin and&#13;
shot Mr. Marble dead, taking the wife captive. The settlement&#13;
at Springfield, now Jackson, Minn., was attacked but the Indians&#13;
were repulsed.&#13;
Though Mr. Marble was the only person killed near Spirit&#13;
Lake the massacre has always been known by that name. Soldiers from Fort Ridgely pursued the Indians.&#13;
Of the four women taken captives, two were killed and the&#13;
other two, Mrs. Marble and Abbie Gardner, were ransomed .&#13;
The Gardner cabin still stands on the shores of West Okoboji.&#13;
Within a stone's throw of the massive monument which has&#13;
been erected to commemorate the terrible event lives Mrs. Abigail Gardner Sharp, one of the last of the brave pioneers who&#13;
felt the sting of the Indian's vengeance during those early days&#13;
when Iowa was as yet a wild, uncivilized region.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
117&#13;
&#13;
Chief Black Hawk&#13;
O the great mass of the American people Black&#13;
Hawk, the best type of the American Indian,&#13;
is known only as the central figure in what is&#13;
termed the II Black Hawk II war. Born on the&#13;
Rock River nearly ten years before the Declaration of Independence was signed, the young&#13;
buck assumed his father's position as leader&#13;
of the tribe at the age of nineteen. As a mere&#13;
youth he had been admitted to the councils of the. tribe by virtue of the daring courage shown in war. With the chieftainship&#13;
came the old medicine bag of the tribe, which Pyesa, Black&#13;
Hawk's father, had received from the Thunder. As the medicine bag symbolized the soul of the nation, with it came the instruction to keep it "forever unsullied." After five years of&#13;
contemplation and prayer in the fastnesses of the forest Black&#13;
Hawk came forth determined that his hands should be clean in&#13;
the sight of the Great Spirit.&#13;
The Black Hawk War was the result of the avarice of the&#13;
early settlers and of the misunderstandings between them and&#13;
the Indians and the failure to keep the government treaties. An&#13;
army under General Gaines drove the Indians across the river&#13;
and then made treaty with them in which it was agreed that&#13;
neither Black Hawk nor his people were ever to recross the&#13;
Mississippi.&#13;
Disheartened over their ruined cornfields and the near approach of winter Black Hawk called a council of the wise men&#13;
of his tribe. As a last resort a hunt was decided upon. But&#13;
game was scarce and when the winter came there was but little&#13;
food in the wigwam of the red man. To avoid the starvation&#13;
which threatened, Black Hawk decided to accept the advice of&#13;
a . wild Indian prophet and medicine man and so broke the&#13;
treaty which he had made with the white man by starting to seek&#13;
supplies from his friends, the Winnebagos.&#13;
The settlers lost no time, and an army was soon on the trail&#13;
of Black Hawk and his band. By virtue of superior numbers&#13;
the whites gradually forced the red men back to the river again.&#13;
Here Black Hawk stood calmly directing the retreat back across&#13;
the river. This was perhaps the most brilliant exhibition of&#13;
military skill ever performed on the American continent. It&#13;
was a feat of most consumate management, military tactics and&#13;
bravery in the face of an enemy of overwhelming numbers. Nothing in American history compares with it, and had it been performed by a white, by a member of the Anglo-Saxon race, it would&#13;
have long ago been immortalized as one of the most splendid&#13;
achievements in military annals. In this perilous undertaking&#13;
Black Hawk lost but six braves. In truth it may well be said&#13;
that Black Hawk was among the greatest of his tribe. He was&#13;
a leader of his people in battle and a father to his tribe in times&#13;
of peace. He loved his old home, he said that the Great Spirit&#13;
never intended that the land should be sold to white men. When&#13;
118&#13;
&#13;
he saw the free hunting grounds of the Indians being covered&#13;
by the farm houses of the white men his wild spirit could not be&#13;
quieted. He must fight. So great was this chief that he never&#13;
drank the white man's fire-water, and so great was his hatred of&#13;
it that he used every means in his power to prevent the traders&#13;
from selling it to the others of his tribe.&#13;
Kind at heart, Ma-ha-tai-me-she-kai-kiah, as he was known&#13;
in his own tongue, did not delight in the torture of captives.&#13;
What this great chief might have done for the western country&#13;
had not his acts been so misunderstood and had not he died so&#13;
early in life, no one can tell.&#13;
Black Hawk held his last great council with the white man&#13;
shortly before his death, at a Fourth of July celebration in 1838&#13;
at Madison, Wis. This toast was given in his honor by the&#13;
toast-master: 11 To our illustrious friend, Black Hawk. May his&#13;
declining years be as calm and serene as his previous life has&#13;
been boisterous and warlike."&#13;
To this the great war chief responded: 11 It has pleased the&#13;
Great Spirit that I am here today. I have eaten with my white&#13;
friends. It is good. A few summers ago I was fighting with the&#13;
white man. I may have been wrong, but that is past. Let it be&#13;
forgotten. The Rock River valley is a beautiful country. I loved&#13;
my villages, my cornfields and my people. I fought for them.&#13;
They are now yours. I was once a great warrior. Now I am&#13;
old and poor. I have looked upon the Mississippi since I was&#13;
a child. I loved the great river. I have always dwelt upon its&#13;
banks. I look upon it now and am sad. I shake hands with&#13;
you friends; I may never see you again. F arewell. 11&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
119&#13;
&#13;
A T ouching Personality&#13;
HERE is no character in natural history by&#13;
whom the feelings of mankind have been so&#13;
harrowed as by the mosquito. Now that he&#13;
is again establishing himself among us a few&#13;
moments may well be devoted to the most&#13;
infernal bloodsucker and man eater that ever&#13;
lived upon this planet.&#13;
In vain have ages of speculation and research essayed to tell&#13;
from whence the first mosquito came. It is well known that&#13;
the Great Cristopher was welcomed to the world of the western&#13;
sea by a reception committee of American mosquitos. And it&#13;
is also known that long before the pyramids had begun to loom&#13;
along the Nile this great parasite was abroad in the land of the&#13;
Ptolmeys, for even after a hundred centuries have passed there&#13;
can still be discerned upon the skin of man embalmed in that&#13;
early day the trace of the autobiography of the mosquito.&#13;
The more of these monsters that die, the greater seems to&#13;
be the total number living, and at every funeral millions begin&#13;
existence and throng about the bier of him who has gone to join&#13;
the great minority. The frailty of his person seems to suggest&#13;
the vegetarian, but once let him alight upon the neck of a&#13;
human being and that view is suddenly dissipated. Cowardice&#13;
has often been imputed to him because he assails his victim by&#13;
night. His sincerity, too, has been impugned, and justly so, for&#13;
he fascinates his prey with a subtle siren song and then makes&#13;
of him a carnal banquet. But, however great his infirmity and&#13;
crime, he is undefiled with that transending sin, ingratitude. He&#13;
will never forsake a friend, even after his poor relatives have&#13;
cast him off. Nor is he in any sense provincial. His home is&#13;
everywhere, on the tops of fog hung mountains or along the&#13;
smoky deserts waste. He abounds among the mighty snows of&#13;
polar lands and infests ague charged air of the torrid zone.&#13;
Theodore the Thunderer brings the glad tidings that all mosquitos on the Isthmus of Panama have been put to death, except&#13;
two who have experienced a change of heart. Yet, could man&#13;
go there in some future day when the great president, his canal&#13;
and his country are forgotten, it is likely that he would hear the&#13;
wail of the winged mosquito echoing among the ruins of what&#13;
was once the waterway of nations.&#13;
His preference for human prey is said to date back to the&#13;
days before the Rood. According to tradition, when all things&#13;
save the ark and her seasick crew had sunk beneath the waters&#13;
of the great rain, Noah, being tempted by his wife, threw the&#13;
mosquito overboard. Somehow the mosquito survived, but the&#13;
treatment he received so wrought up his evil passions that he&#13;
pledged himself and all his race to an inveterate and eternal&#13;
hatred toward mankind.&#13;
H. E., Academy 108.&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
H&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
c&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
The New Park&#13;
·Athletics&#13;
ORNINGSIDE College aims in her athletics to&#13;
develop well rounded men. It is believed&#13;
that inter-collegiate and class contests best&#13;
make possible this development. The criticism often made against inter-collegiate athletics that only a few are benefitted by the&#13;
training does not apply to Morningside. Carefully kept records prove the contrary, for before the year shall&#13;
have closed in June over two thirds of all the men in school&#13;
will have trained for or participated in inter-collegiate contests.&#13;
The one-third includes men not physically fit for vigorous exercise and those who have extra duties.&#13;
The new plan of financial support of athletics has been of&#13;
inestimable value both in carrying on an enlarged policy in&#13;
the way of schedules and in securing improved equipment.&#13;
Much credit is due those who worked out the details of the&#13;
plan and those who successfully managed the financial work of&#13;
the year.&#13;
With improved financial support, an athletic park and&#13;
steady improvement in the quality of athletic performances for&#13;
the last five years, Morningside has gradually expanded. While&#13;
formerly her schedules included games with a few neighboring&#13;
schools in South Dakota and Northwest Iowa, she now has athletic relations with Brookings and Hamline on the north, Ames,&#13;
Simpson and Drake on the east and Bellevue, Creighton and&#13;
Nebraska University on the south. Furthermore, this year she&#13;
sent three men to the great western winter classics, viz., the&#13;
A. A. U. indoor meet in Chicago, and in response to an invitation of the state games committee will send a team to the state&#13;
meet at Des Moines.&#13;
Expansion means added responsibilities and requires increased effort. In order that the growth may be steady and&#13;
continuous internal organization must keep pace with external&#13;
achievement. The unwavering spirit of Morningside men and&#13;
women will make a name for the institution in athletics and will&#13;
enable her to maintain .the standards for which she stands. If&#13;
she is to make and maintain a place for herself in Iowa athletics&#13;
however, she must have, in addition to the united efforts of the&#13;
student body, the continued support of an already loyal alumni&#13;
and the financial and moral support of a friendly city.&#13;
&#13;
122&#13;
&#13;
BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF THE NEW ATHLETIC FIELD&#13;
&#13;
a number of years past the proposition of&#13;
locating an athletic field in the natural amphitheatre just west of Main Hall had been&#13;
talked over and planned, but it remained for&#13;
the students of the institution to make the initial move during commencement week of&#13;
1906. A number of mass meetings were&#13;
held, committees appointed and the necessary&#13;
details gone through with, and on the Wednesday morning of&#13;
farewell chapel the pledging of the money with which to build&#13;
the park was commenced. Over a thousand dollars was pledged&#13;
by the different classes of the school in that one meeting. The&#13;
work of grading and building the&#13;
park was then turned over to the&#13;
Board of Control of Athletics.&#13;
With President Lewis to hold&#13;
the plow handles the student body&#13;
went en masse to the site of the&#13;
new park and there proceeded to&#13;
turn the first furrow on what was&#13;
to be the magnificent athletic field&#13;
which Morningside now has.&#13;
This spring Mr. John C. Bass,&#13;
a senior, offered to assume the cost&#13;
of grading if the students would&#13;
apply the money raised on the securing of bleachers. Cement bleachers 150 feet long and ten tiers&#13;
high, seating 1500 people, have&#13;
been erected, adding materially to&#13;
JOHN C. BASS&#13;
the appearance of the field.&#13;
123&#13;
&#13;
E. M. BROWN&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
C. N. RISSLER&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
JOHN L. GRIFFITH&#13;
Athletic Director&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JOHN C. BASS&#13;
FootbaU&#13;
&#13;
C. J. WESTCOTI&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
124&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
_§&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
...!&lt;I&#13;
&#13;
September 22 at Sioux City&#13;
Morningside 47, Sheldon High School&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
September 29 at Sioux City --Morningside 22, Ida Grove High School&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
October 6 at Sioux City&#13;
Morningside I 8, Creighton University&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
13 at Ames --Morningside 0, Ames&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
October 23 at Mitchell --Morningside 0, South Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
November IO at Sioux City --Morningside 8, Drake University&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
November 29 at Sioux City--Morningside 4, Nebraska Freshman&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TEAM GAMES&#13;
November 2 at Sioux City --Morningside 27, Sioux City High School&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
November I 7 at Alton --Morningside 17, Alton town team&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
127&#13;
&#13;
126&#13;
&#13;
"THE TEAM"&#13;
&#13;
"THE SQUAD"&#13;
&#13;
JOHN C. BASS&#13;
&#13;
F. B. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
Winners of&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Toothaker Trophy Cup&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
129&#13;
&#13;
"THE FAITHFUL"&#13;
128&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
'OFF FOR ALTON '&#13;
&#13;
WHISMAN&#13;
&#13;
PRICE&#13;
&#13;
MARKING OUT THE PARK&#13;
&#13;
130&#13;
&#13;
ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
20,&#13;
26,&#13;
28,&#13;
2,&#13;
5,&#13;
8,&#13;
11,&#13;
15,&#13;
18,&#13;
2 1,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
44, Sioux City High School&#13;
20, Sioux City High School&#13;
45, Warriner I s&#13;
40, Little Giants&#13;
34, Univ. of South Dakota&#13;
44, Univ. of South Dakota&#13;
31, Univ. of South Dakota&#13;
50, Y. M. C. A&#13;
24, Business Men&#13;
30, Sioux City High School&#13;
&#13;
37, at&#13;
24, at&#13;
22, at&#13;
11, at&#13;
12, at&#13;
22, at&#13;
14, at&#13;
16, at&#13;
21, at&#13;
3 1, at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Vermillion&#13;
Morning side&#13;
Vermillion&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
THE CLASS TOURNEYS&#13;
First Series&#13;
Senior Acad.&#13;
34&#13;
vs.&#13;
Senior Acad.&#13;
Middle Acad. 10&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sub Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Sub Juniors&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
.I Senior Academy&#13;
. by&#13;
I&#13;
Forfeit&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
18 Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
Senior College&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Junior College&#13;
vs.&#13;
Senior College 24&#13;
Senior College 56&#13;
Second Series&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sub Juniors&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Junior Academy&#13;
&#13;
29 Sophomores&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Middlers&#13;
vs.&#13;
Junior College&#13;
Westcott&#13;
Patton&#13;
Elliott&#13;
Wendel&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
132&#13;
&#13;
Berkstresser&#13;
Robbins&#13;
&#13;
133&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Elliott&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
134&#13;
&#13;
Hackett&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
April 17, Home Meet, Freshmen 85 1/2 of possible 133 points.&#13;
April 21, Morningside 88, S. C. High School 34, at Woodlawn.&#13;
May I, Morningside 41, Brookings 79, at Brookings.&#13;
May 14, Morningside 78 ~~ , Yankton 46 1/2 at Woodlawn.&#13;
May 25. Morningside 63, South Dakota 61 1-2, Beuna Vista 9 1-2,&#13;
at Woodlawn.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
&#13;
THE RELAY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Events&#13;
I 00-yard dash&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
880-yard run&#13;
I-mile run&#13;
2-mile run&#13;
120-yard hurdles&#13;
220-yard hurdles&#13;
High jump&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
Shot-put&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
Discus throw&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
Cross country to Floyd&#13;
monum 1t and return&#13;
&#13;
Record&#13;
IO 2-5 seconds&#13;
22 1-5 seconds&#13;
52 seconds&#13;
2 min., 7 2-5 sec.&#13;
5 minutes&#13;
IO min., 45 sec.&#13;
16 1-5 seconds&#13;
26 2-5 seconds&#13;
5 feet, 7 inches&#13;
20 feet, 6 inches&#13;
38 feet, 7 inches&#13;
I 05 feet&#13;
I 07 feet&#13;
I O feet, 6 inches&#13;
&#13;
Holder&#13;
Hall&#13;
Hall&#13;
Winn&#13;
Ro rem&#13;
Debenham&#13;
Debenham&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Dowdy&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Hall&#13;
Hall&#13;
Hall&#13;
Westcott&#13;
&#13;
20 min., 50 sec.&#13;
&#13;
Berkstresser&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE-BROOKINGS MEET&#13;
Brookings, S. D., May _1, 1906 1&#13;
Score:&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
BEFORE THE MEET"&#13;
&#13;
Event&#13;
I 00-yard dash&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
880-yard dash&#13;
One mile&#13;
Two mile ·&#13;
120-yd. hurdles&#13;
220-yd. hurdles&#13;
Shot-put&#13;
High jump&#13;
Discus&#13;
Pole vault J&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
Relay&#13;
&#13;
Brookings, 79 ; Morningside, 4 I.&#13;
&#13;
First Place&#13;
Collar, B.&#13;
Collar, B.&#13;
Lockhart, B.&#13;
Rorem, M.&#13;
J. Sperb, B.&#13;
Chapman, M.&#13;
E. Brown, M.&#13;
Alten, B.&#13;
Riche, B.&#13;
Kirk, B.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Chilcothe, B.&#13;
McCordic, B.&#13;
Collar, B.&#13;
Brookings&#13;
&#13;
Second Place&#13;
Wendel, M.&#13;
Smith, B.&#13;
Carcuff, M.&#13;
Brownell, B.&#13;
Brownell, B.&#13;
F. Sperb, B.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
McCordic, B.&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
Riche, B.&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
Riche, B.&#13;
Lockhart, B.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
137&#13;
&#13;
TRACK TEAM ON FIELD&#13;
&#13;
136&#13;
&#13;
Record&#13;
IO 1-5 seconds&#13;
23:2&#13;
55 : I&#13;
2: 12 2-5&#13;
4:59 1-5&#13;
11 :02 2-5&#13;
16 1-5&#13;
29 1-5&#13;
36 ft., 5 in.&#13;
5 ft., 4 1-2 in.&#13;
99 ft., 3 in.&#13;
10 ft., 3 1-2 in.&#13;
118 ft., 8 in.&#13;
21 ft., 11 in.&#13;
I :37 4-5&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE-YANKTON MEET&#13;
May 14, 1906&#13;
Score: Morningside 78 1-2; Yankton 46 1-2&#13;
First Place&#13;
Second Place&#13;
Record&#13;
Event&#13;
Armin, Y.&#13;
Wendel, M.&#13;
5 3-5&#13;
SO-yard dash&#13;
Allen, Y.&#13;
DeGrisselles, M.&#13;
11 2-5&#13;
100-yard dash&#13;
F. Heilman, M.&#13;
24 2-5&#13;
Allen, Y.&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
F. Heilman, M. Carcuff, M.&#13;
54 2-5&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
Rorem, M.&#13;
LeCount, Y.&#13;
2: 07 2-5&#13;
880-yard run&#13;
Chapman, M.&#13;
4: 52 4-5&#13;
Dunn, Y.&#13;
Mile run&#13;
Dunn, Y.&#13;
Chapman, M.&#13;
10: 35 3-5&#13;
Two mile run&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Warren, Y.&#13;
17 1-5&#13;
120-yd. hurdles&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
26 2-5&#13;
220-yd. hurdles&#13;
Brewster, M. DeGrisselles, M. 88 ft., 9 in.&#13;
Hammer throw&#13;
Thompson, M. Dowdy, M. 33 ft., 5 1-2 in.&#13;
Shot put&#13;
DeGrisselles, M. 102 ft., 2 in.&#13;
Dowdy, M.&#13;
Discus&#13;
Warren, Y.&#13;
Brown-Staples, M. 9 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
Brown, M.&#13;
Pier, Y.&#13;
5 ft., 7 in.&#13;
High jump&#13;
Pier, Y.&#13;
Wendell, M.&#13;
20 ft., 4 in.&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
Divided&#13;
Relay&#13;
MORNINGSIDE - UNIV. OF S. D. - BUENA VISTA MEET&#13;
May 25, 1906&#13;
Score: Morningside 63; U. of S. D. 61 1-2; Buena Vista 9.&#13;
100-yard dash, record 10 1-5 --1st, Fowler, S. D.; 2nd, Stoland, S. D.; 3rd, Wendel, M.&#13;
220-yard dash, record 23 --1st, Stoland, S. D.; 2nd, Fowler, S. D.; 3rd, DeGrisselles, M.&#13;
440-yard dash, record 5 5 --1st, Stoland, S. D.; 2nd, Fowler, S. D.; 3rd, F. Heilman, M.&#13;
880-yard run, record 2 : 12 --1st, R orem, M.; 2nd, Chapman, M.; 3rd, R. Heilman, M.&#13;
Mile run, record 4 : 48 1-5 --1st, Turney, S. D.; 2nd, P. Brown, M.; 3rd, Puckett, S. D.&#13;
Two mile run, record 10 : 3 7 --1st, Turney, S. D.; 2nd, Chapman, M.; 3rd, Puckett, S. D.&#13;
120-yard hurdles, record 16 1-5 --1st, Brown, M.; 2nd, Meyers, S. D.; 3rd, Dowdy, M.&#13;
220-yard hurdles, record 2 7 1-5 --1st, Meyers, S. D.; 2nd, Dowdy, M.; 3rd, Brown, M.&#13;
Broad jump, record 20 ft., 3 in.--1st, Hupp, S. D.; 2nd, Wendel, M.; 3rd, Rorem, M.&#13;
Discus throw, record 96 ft., 10 1-2 in.--1st, Dowdy, M.; 2nd, Thompson, M.; 3rd, DeGrisselles, M.&#13;
Shot put, record 36 ft., 9 in.--1st, Lattin, S. D.; 2nd, Dowdy, M.; 3rd, Brisbine, S. D.&#13;
Pole vault, record 10 feet--1st, Westcott, M.; 2nd, Goodner, S. D.; 3rd McEwen, 8. V.&#13;
Hammer throw, record 100 ft., 9 in.--1st, Steig, 8. V.; 2nd, Brewster, M.; 3rd, Thompson, M.&#13;
High jump, record 5 ft., 5 in.--1st, Brown, M.; 2nd, McEwen, B. V.; 3rd, Hyzer, B. V.&#13;
Relay--- 1st, Morningside ; 2nd, South Dakota.&#13;
138&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Base Ball&#13;
April 2 at Sioux City --Morningside 0, Sioux City Packers (Western League) 10&#13;
April 7 at Morningside --Morningside 17, Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
April 16 at Morningside --Morningside 28, Western Union College&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
April 25 at LeMars --Morningside 2, Western Union College&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
April 26 at Fort Dodge --Morningside 2, Fort Dodge (Iowa League)&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
April 2 7 at Fort Dodge --Morningside 0, Fort Dodge (Iowa League)&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
May 2 at Morningside --Morningside 15, Sioux City High School&#13;
&#13;
Patton&#13;
&#13;
Gary&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
May 18 at Storm Lake --Morningside 8, Storm Lake&#13;
June 4 at Sanborn--Morningside 1, Sanborn&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
June 5 at Primghar --Morningside 12, Primghar&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
The Men Who Played&#13;
Gary&#13;
&#13;
140&#13;
&#13;
G. Squires&#13;
Westcott&#13;
Rissler&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Jones&#13;
Patton&#13;
Whisman&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Beers&#13;
Elliott&#13;
J&#13;
K. Squires&#13;
Ewer&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
WYLIE PITCHING&#13;
&#13;
THE FACULTY - SENIOR GAME&#13;
May 22, 1906&#13;
Score:&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Faculty 27; Seniors 7.&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Hartzell, catcher&#13;
Milner, pitcher&#13;
Everhart, first baseman&#13;
Hawkins, second baseman&#13;
Calkins, short-stop&#13;
Minkler, third base&#13;
Brower, left field&#13;
Heilman, center field&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Griffith, catcher&#13;
Wylie, pitcher&#13;
Garver, forst baseman&#13;
McDowell, second baseman&#13;
Van Horne, short-stop&#13;
Lee Lewis, third base&#13;
Brown, left field&#13;
Greynald, center field&#13;
Kanthlener, center field&#13;
Campbell, right field&#13;
&#13;
Foote, right field&#13;
&#13;
Senior Girl --- "What are those fellows stand ing on the corners? 11&#13;
Friend --- " Those are first, second and third bases."&#13;
Senior Girl --- "Then is the fellow in the center the soprano? 11&#13;
&#13;
Cl.&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MILNER PITCHING&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
143&#13;
&#13;
The "M" Club&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
ELIEVING that an organization of all the athletes who had won the official college II M"&#13;
would be beneficial to the best interests of&#13;
athletics at Morningside, some of the older&#13;
men of the school founded the II M II Club.&#13;
The purpose of this organization is to further in every way the interest in athletics at&#13;
Morningside and to boost for the school and the school's athletes at every opportunity. Membership in the club can only&#13;
be gained through the winning of the official college letter. A&#13;
number of meetings of the club have been held this year and&#13;
several plans are on foot for the benefit of athletics in general.&#13;
The big burlesque carnival planned for May 3rd and 4th is the&#13;
work of the " M II Club.&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS OF THE II m"&#13;
April 1st, 1906, to April 1st, 1907&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
C. N. Rissler&#13;
C. J. Westcott&#13;
B. Elliott&#13;
F. J. Gary&#13;
C. Beers&#13;
L. Jones&#13;
A. Patton&#13;
G. Squires&#13;
R. Whisman&#13;
0. Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
E. M. Brown&#13;
W. 0. Dowdy&#13;
J. Wendel&#13;
0 . Thompson&#13;
L. Chapman&#13;
S. 0. Rorem&#13;
P. DeGrisselles&#13;
F. B. Heilman&#13;
T. I. Brewster&#13;
C. J. Westcott&#13;
&#13;
(:::&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
145&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Football&#13;
C. J. Westcott&#13;
J.C. Bass&#13;
R. Whisman· A Tumbleson&#13;
B. Elliott&#13;
C. Bone&#13;
E. M. Brown R. D. Robbins&#13;
J. Wendel&#13;
G. Stiles&#13;
A. Berkstresser&#13;
J. Price&#13;
G. Stiles&#13;
I. Jones&#13;
T. I. Brewster&#13;
L. Erickson&#13;
F. B. Heilman&#13;
W. 0. Dowdy&#13;
B. Elliott&#13;
&#13;
IN tHE CHEMISTRY DEPARTMENT&#13;
&#13;
'STACKED'&#13;
&#13;
'JUST A FEW POSTERS'&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL SESSION OF TRUSTEES&#13;
&#13;
147&#13;
&#13;
146&#13;
&#13;
THE RETURN FROM NEW YORK&#13;
&#13;
"EVERYBODY WORKS AT OUR H OUSE"&#13;
&#13;
SCENE ON THE FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
148&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
1 All Fools' Day.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
First baseball game of the&#13;
season. Morningside loses&#13;
to the Packers 10 to 0 .&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Brown loses his hat.&#13;
Later the same day Prof.&#13;
Kanthlener is seen wearing&#13;
a new hat.&#13;
&#13;
defeats Western Union college 27 to 5. Philomatheans&#13;
give II The Merchant of&#13;
Venice. 11&#13;
&#13;
Spring term opens.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
f 6 Baseball game, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis goes to New York.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A. reception . Red&#13;
ribbon girls entertain green&#13;
ribbon girls at a mock banquet.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Home field meet.&#13;
men win.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' chorus goes to South&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
19.&#13;
&#13;
Professor&#13;
shave.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
State prohibition oratorical&#13;
contest. Drake first, Simpson second, and Clare D.&#13;
Horner, of Morningside&#13;
third place.&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Miss Shontz lectures to an&#13;
audience composed of H.&#13;
H. Sawyer and the representatives from Cornell&#13;
Drake and Simpson.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Sunday excursions to the&#13;
Floyd monument begin.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
Skiddoo ! ! ! !&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Reception for Choral Union&#13;
in the Society halls.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Athletic benefit program.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Baseball, Morningside&#13;
Fort Dodge 8 .&#13;
&#13;
7 Baseball---Morningside 17,&#13;
Stock Yards 0.&#13;
&#13;
8 Miss Henshaw leads Y. W.&#13;
c. A.&#13;
9 Ladies' cross country club&#13;
is organized.&#13;
10 Seniors appear in chapel in&#13;
caps and gowns. Heilman&#13;
and Foote are missing.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson absent-mindedly goes to chapel at the&#13;
beginning of the 9 :25 period. German Ill. takes a&#13;
vacation.&#13;
&#13;
Fresh-&#13;
&#13;
Garver gets a&#13;
&#13;
2,&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Prof. MacBride, of the state&#13;
university of Iowa, delivers&#13;
a chapel address.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Morningside-Fayette debate.&#13;
Fayette wins again.&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Ralph P. Smith, of St.&#13;
Thomas Episcopal church&#13;
leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Boarding houses order an&#13;
extra supply of eggs.&#13;
&#13;
Chapel announcement by&#13;
Dean Campbell that the endowment fund has been&#13;
raised. Great rejoicing.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Easter Sunday. Fine millinery display at Grace M . E .&#13;
church.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Rain. Only three couples&#13;
brave the weather for a&#13;
stroll to the monument.&#13;
&#13;
30 Track team&#13;
Brookings.&#13;
&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
leaves&#13;
&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
Mass meeting of students is&#13;
held to plan celebration and&#13;
and reception for Dr. Lewis.&#13;
&#13;
17 Dr. Riechell, of Boston Uni-&#13;
&#13;
2 Atheneums entertain Zets.&#13;
&#13;
versity, gives chapel address.&#13;
&#13;
at May luncheon. Miss Elva Chrysler's recital. Baseball, Morningside I 5, High&#13;
School 0.&#13;
&#13;
18 Dr. Lewis entertains seniors.&#13;
19 Miss Pearl Mason's gradua-&#13;
&#13;
3 Dr. Lewis returns from New&#13;
&#13;
20 Miss Lester, of city, leads&#13;
Y. W. C. A&#13;
2 1 F acuity begin training.&#13;
&#13;
York.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
General celebration.&#13;
&#13;
$50,-&#13;
&#13;
000 souvenir checks.&#13;
&#13;
Park&#13;
place girls get a ducking&#13;
and lose a valuable piece of&#13;
chinaware.&#13;
&#13;
5 Atheneum gosling, "Silverleaf,11 takes up its abode in&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
6 Silver leaf begins to fatten.&#13;
7 Silverleaf is fatter.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
ting recital.&#13;
&#13;
22 Faculty - Sen i or baseball&#13;
game. F acuity wins. Score&#13;
&#13;
27 to 7.&#13;
23 Opening day of the May&#13;
Musical Festival.&#13;
&#13;
24 May Music Festival. Theodore Thomas Orchestra.&#13;
&#13;
25 Martha Macdonald teaches&#13;
"Trig" class. Three present.&#13;
Rest of class get flunked.&#13;
&#13;
8 Prof. Garver climbs telephone pole to amuse little&#13;
children.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Adelphians and Aesthesians hold picnic breakfast at&#13;
Floyd monument at 4 a . m .&#13;
&#13;
10 Opening of the soda fountain and " fizz II water season.&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Morningside and Grinnell&#13;
academies debate. Morningside wins championship of&#13;
Iowa academic debating&#13;
league.&#13;
&#13;
Baseball team leaves for&#13;
Storm Lake.&#13;
&#13;
26 Chapel announcement b y&#13;
Dr. H. G. Campbell of 11 T riangular field meet at the&#13;
Riverside pavilion." Morningside wins, University of&#13;
South Dakota second, Buena&#13;
Vista third. Score, 63 to&#13;
61 1-2 to 9.&#13;
- 2 7 Bert Elliott reads II lngersollia II in bible class.&#13;
28 Coach and Mrs. Griffith to&#13;
breakfast on time .&#13;
&#13;
12 Soph - Zets give diabolical&#13;
program.&#13;
&#13;
29 Sioux of 107 makes its bow&#13;
to the general public.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
30 Decoration day. Miss Fem&#13;
Ritz' graduating recital.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Loveland leads Y. W.&#13;
&#13;
C. A&#13;
I4&#13;
&#13;
152&#13;
&#13;
Yankton - Morningside field&#13;
meet. Morningside wms.&#13;
Score, 78 1-2 to 46 1-2.&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Juniors entertain se niors.&#13;
&#13;
153&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
Miss Gilman 1s recital. Misses Trimble, Swem, Garver&#13;
and Hart drive to Salix.&#13;
Midnight the same young&#13;
ladies plus Mr. Manning&#13;
make return drive from&#13;
Salix.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Philo trip up the river.&#13;
Ed Brown takes semi-annual bath. Ike loses silk&#13;
umbrella, ring, revolver and&#13;
breaks his watch.&#13;
Total&#13;
damage $15.98.&#13;
Minkler&#13;
and Rorem row twenty-five&#13;
miles up the nver in six&#13;
hours.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Otho graduating program.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
1111 II&#13;
&#13;
Minkler gets a substitute&#13;
for his charge.&#13;
Prof. Haynes drives small&#13;
boys off the campus.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Students begin to cram for&#13;
final exams.&#13;
&#13;
7 Miss Mossman 1s recital.&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Graduation exercises of the&#13;
Normal department.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Elocution students receive&#13;
their diplomas.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Baccalaureate Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Academy commencement.&#13;
Exams close. General rejoicing over the fact.&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Graduating recital of music&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Final chapel services. Money&#13;
raised to build new athletic&#13;
park.&#13;
Annual reunion of&#13;
Collegiate societies. Dr. Bagnell lectures while II Jigger II&#13;
Fry kicks an inquisitive canine down two Rights of&#13;
stairs.&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Vacation begins and the&#13;
grafters commence to graft.&#13;
&#13;
Positively the only really truly&#13;
&#13;
Good II&#13;
&#13;
in existence&#13;
a number of single concerns have mutually agreed to band themselv.e s together in&#13;
combines of two for mutual enjoyment and&#13;
the elimination of undue competition. The&#13;
board of directors believe the affair in many&#13;
cases to be a sure go.&#13;
ASSETS: --- Monday and Saturday nights&#13;
until ten o'clock. Wednesdays until eight. The Floyd monument and North Ravine. Summer houses on the campus when&#13;
the moon is overcast. Front porches when at the electric light&#13;
a brick has been cast.&#13;
LIABILITIES: --- Livery bills, theatre tickets, boxes of " Palmers,11 season tickets, etc.&#13;
11 This may look like a I F armers' Alliance,' but it is NOT."&#13;
Several members of the faculty are interested. One or two&#13;
have already become life members and it is understood that&#13;
there is a possibility of several more following the good example. Several seniors are so interested as to be looking at the&#13;
proposition with an eye to business.&#13;
The present board of directors :&#13;
Cushman, Johnson&#13;
Robbins, Rorem&#13;
Westcott, Garretson&#13;
Squires, Whealen&#13;
Bass, Delmage&#13;
Brown, Correll&#13;
Ewer, Shideler&#13;
Heilman, Clark&#13;
Mossman, Wilson&#13;
Horner, Johns&#13;
Brown, Ullman&#13;
Bender, Shotz&#13;
Winterstein, Cole&#13;
Rogers, Swem&#13;
Miller, Hall&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
155&#13;
&#13;
154&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
TRUST&#13;
&#13;
Commencement address.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
The Match Combine&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
Last Sunday of vacation.&#13;
&#13;
18 More rain. More homesick.&#13;
&#13;
10 The melon - colic days have&#13;
come. Inter - state fair opens.&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
College opens.&#13;
Registration begins. More fair. Few&#13;
students.&#13;
Preachers go to see Dan&#13;
Patch. Evva Erskine and&#13;
Will Debenham married.&#13;
Archie Cook married.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Registration closes. Archie&#13;
Cook buys a lot of cheap&#13;
silver spoons.&#13;
&#13;
14 First chapel service of the&#13;
year. Dr. Lewis gives advice to new students.&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A&#13;
&#13;
girls give a&#13;
lawn party at Garretson&#13;
place.&#13;
&#13;
16 Annual homesick day.&#13;
17 Y. M. C. A.and Y. W.C.A&#13;
reception to new students.&#13;
Rain. New students homesick.&#13;
&#13;
19 Mass meeting.&#13;
20 Sophomores attend a freshman class meeting and publish minutes.&#13;
2 1 F reshies picnic at Riverside&#13;
unmolested by the sophomores.&#13;
22 First football game of the&#13;
season.&#13;
Morningside 4 7,&#13;
Sheldon High School 0.&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
New students go to church&#13;
and Sunday School.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Zet - Otho promenade.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Beatty, of First M. E.&#13;
church, leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Lee Lewis and Miss&#13;
Cook married.&#13;
&#13;
2 7 Dr. Lewis and Miss Dolliver set the students bad example by sitting in the summer house.&#13;
28 Miss Dimmitt only eight&#13;
minutes late to breakfast.&#13;
29 Atheneum annual hay rack&#13;
ride. Football game. Morningside 22, Ida Grove 0.&#13;
30 Third Sunday of term. New&#13;
students&#13;
forget&#13;
Sunday&#13;
School.&#13;
&#13;
157&#13;
156&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
Bass and Miss Delmage eat&#13;
watermelon in northeast&#13;
corner of athletic park.&#13;
Thermometer registers 20&#13;
above.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Ideal picnic weather.&#13;
&#13;
19 Dr. Gwylim, of New York,&#13;
&#13;
3 Zetalethean ravine party.&#13;
&#13;
gives a chapel address.&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Freshman - Sophomore annual class scrap. Residents&#13;
of Morningside endeavor to&#13;
scrub "I 9 IO II off of their&#13;
walks.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Football game, Morningside&#13;
I 8, Creighton 0. Zets and&#13;
Atheneums entertain new&#13;
girls at a mock wedding.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Special academy class meet.&#13;
mg at G arretson I s. "lk e II&#13;
attends, but not for long.&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Ford Robbins and his lantern take the II Loving II family to church.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Rain and snow. Football&#13;
team goes to Mitchell.&#13;
&#13;
F acuity reception.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Damp weather keeps students from church.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
ALL of FACULTY attend&#13;
Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
23 Skiddoo for we. It never&#13;
rains but it pours. Dakota&#13;
Wesleyan 6, Morningside 0.&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Letters postmarked II Mitchell " and addressed to Miss&#13;
Delmage are held for postage.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson gets ring in&#13;
cake at Nettie F ry 1s wedding.&#13;
Zet-Otho reception.&#13;
&#13;
Gas man comes to Lovelands, but runs when girls&#13;
give nine II Rahs. 11&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
IO Mass meeting.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
To Ames&#13;
&#13;
or Bust. 11&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Football men get acquainted&#13;
with new rules.&#13;
&#13;
I2&#13;
&#13;
Rooters and football men&#13;
leave for Ames. Y. M. and&#13;
Y. W. C. A hand-book appears.&#13;
&#13;
I3&#13;
&#13;
Football at Ames, Ames 32,&#13;
Morningside 0.&#13;
&#13;
I4&#13;
&#13;
Rooters who went to Ames&#13;
cut classes and stay home&#13;
to sleep.&#13;
&#13;
I6&#13;
&#13;
Those who were not in the&#13;
habit of attending chapel&#13;
visit the Dean.&#13;
Most of&#13;
them resolve to attend.&#13;
&#13;
I7&#13;
&#13;
First meeting of Junior annual board.&#13;
&#13;
26 Westcott bids lady friend ,&#13;
from Brookings II good-bye II&#13;
through glass door of car.&#13;
2 7 Atheneums entertain Philos.&#13;
28 Challman, Elliott and Whisman visit lady friends at&#13;
Correctionville.&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Pipe organ arrives. Chapel&#13;
11 Ike&#13;
discontinued.&#13;
and&#13;
Jumbo II Westcott&#13;
return&#13;
from Galva.&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Younglove calls on Miss&#13;
Ritz, loses hat and misses&#13;
last car to town.&#13;
&#13;
3I&#13;
&#13;
Football, Morningside second team 26, Sioux City&#13;
High School 0. Hallowe 1en&#13;
ghosts play havoc with&#13;
girls' rooms.&#13;
&#13;
Football team attends church&#13;
at Webster City.&#13;
&#13;
I5&#13;
&#13;
158&#13;
&#13;
Bass receives long distance&#13;
telephone from Mitchell.&#13;
Girl at other end is told&#13;
that Bass is out strolling&#13;
with girl at this end.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
159&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
Y. W. C. A . delegates leave&#13;
for state convention at Grinnell.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Delegates' room mates wear&#13;
old clothes to classes.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista calls football&#13;
game off.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Rough house at the Brewster club.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Gratian fires D e an out&#13;
of cha pel.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
John Day makes a heroic&#13;
attempt to lower a curtain&#13;
in German class.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Elliott, Thornton and Bone&#13;
go to see II F aust 11 and come&#13;
home sorry that they " slept&#13;
while hell was going on. 11&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Mass meeting. Dr. Lewis&#13;
introducrd students to new&#13;
pipe organ.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Football boys picnic in&#13;
North Ravine. Another mass&#13;
meeting.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Football. Morningside 8,&#13;
Drake 8. Whisman remarks&#13;
that his nose is II not what it&#13;
is cracked up to be. 11&#13;
Miss Ferguson leads Y. W.&#13;
&#13;
C. A&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Janitor oils the floors.&#13;
&#13;
13 Si Ro rem and Helen Wakefield entertain the Normals&#13;
with shadow pictures.&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Dedication of pipe organ.&#13;
Recital by John Hermann&#13;
Loud.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Second pipe organ recital.&#13;
Painting of Dr. Lewis is unveiled.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Campbell announces in&#13;
chapel that II there will be a&#13;
joint meeting of the Y. and&#13;
&#13;
W. C. A&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
Bellevue game cancelled by&#13;
Nebraskans.&#13;
&#13;
18 Joint meeting of the Y. M.&#13;
and Y. W. C. A&#13;
&#13;
160&#13;
&#13;
19 Skating begins.&#13;
turns Baptist.&#13;
20 College coal&#13;
No classes.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Collins&#13;
bin&#13;
&#13;
empty.&#13;
&#13;
2 1 A mysterious gentleman at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
Full attendance.&#13;
Football men discard sweaters and wear white collars.&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
McMasters mails his letters&#13;
in the Y. M. C. A deposit&#13;
box.&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
Bostonian Sextette fail to&#13;
" skiddo "&#13;
and miss their&#13;
train. No concert.&#13;
&#13;
24 Dean attends chapel with&#13;
same whiskers he usually&#13;
wears.&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
College Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Yankton calls football game&#13;
off. Griffith uses telephone&#13;
and telegraph.&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
Home oratorical contest.&#13;
Arthur Cushman wins.&#13;
&#13;
28 Students go home to eat&#13;
turkey. Last practice before Thanksgiving.&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Final football game of' season. Morningside 4 ; Nebraska freshmen 0.&#13;
&#13;
30 Girls receive Thanksgiving&#13;
boxes from home.&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
1 Atheneum goose party.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Everybody thankful for a&#13;
day of rest.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Students return.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Rev. Cole, of Estherville,&#13;
conducts chapel.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Organ recital by&#13;
Prof.&#13;
Mather. First meeting advisory board of Coordinate&#13;
Women's college.&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Lady members of faculty&#13;
are absent from chapel.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean grand public.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Elliott o r d e rs II chicken&#13;
frizzy II at Frank's cafe.&#13;
&#13;
Words The Wise&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Jumbo II Westcott returns&#13;
to Galva.&#13;
&#13;
10 Dr. DuBlois lecture.&#13;
11 Rogers buys new&#13;
&#13;
book&#13;
Graustark II to send lady&#13;
friend for Xmas.&#13;
&#13;
Some people are bald headed on the inside.- Dr. Lewis.&#13;
&#13;
If some people don1t watch out they'll get two half moons&#13;
hitched together at the points for a Christmas present.- Van&#13;
Horne.&#13;
&#13;
The chief functions of the assembly in Greece was to disseminate news. This is now the duty of the Ladies' Aid Society.- Garver.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
12 Miss Lockin calls on dean.&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Some men are just dull enough to get rich.- Kanthlener.&#13;
&#13;
Girls are sore. 11&#13;
&#13;
Girls call on dean&#13;
quest."&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
by re-&#13;
&#13;
14 Hawkeye - Adelphian&#13;
&#13;
de-&#13;
&#13;
People embrace the idear of getting something for nothing&#13;
with a good deal of enthusiasm.- Haynes.&#13;
&#13;
bate.&#13;
&#13;
15 Men of faculty&#13;
&#13;
banquet&#13;
&#13;
football men.&#13;
&#13;
16 Girls do all the rec1tmg.&#13;
Boys not recovered from&#13;
banquet.&#13;
&#13;
17 Philo-Otho joint program.&#13;
18 First meeting of Student&#13;
Congress.&#13;
&#13;
The Athenians met on the Campus Martius, metaphorically&#13;
the field of war, and had peace. College men meet on the&#13;
campus, make it literally a field of war and have pieces.-Garver.&#13;
&#13;
A lie is an abomination unto the Lord and a very present&#13;
help in time of trouble. - Miss Ferguson.&#13;
&#13;
19 Closed&#13;
&#13;
door session of&#13;
Rah, Rah II girls at dean's&#13;
office.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
20 Vacation begins.&#13;
&#13;
Women,&#13;
Griffith.&#13;
&#13;
generally speaking,&#13;
&#13;
are generally speaking.-&#13;
&#13;
Fortune smiles on the few and grins at the many.- Brown.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
A ring 1s something round with a hole in it.- Stephens.&#13;
&#13;
If dirt were trumps what hands I'd have.- Peter Drake's lab.&#13;
soliloquy.&#13;
163&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Vacation over. Dr. Henderson begins senes of&#13;
students' meetings.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Everybody works- dad mcluded.&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Smallpox scare. Jesse Ewer&#13;
to the hospital.&#13;
&#13;
10 Miss Edra&#13;
vaccinated.&#13;
&#13;
Shideler&#13;
&#13;
gets&#13;
&#13;
16 College students visit photographer.&#13;
I 7 More college students to see&#13;
Wilcox. More pictures for&#13;
annual.&#13;
I8&#13;
&#13;
Phelps, his camera and&#13;
flashlight. But no picture,&#13;
as usual.&#13;
&#13;
I9&#13;
&#13;
Street cars fail to run. Anderson walks to town and&#13;
freezes ears. Girls of college give a II chestnut roast."&#13;
&#13;
11 Dr. Lewis runs a race with&#13;
the street car.&#13;
12 Last four verses of No . 1 at&#13;
chapel for a change.&#13;
&#13;
20 Miss Henshaw leads Y. W .&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
2 I Chem. class again pose for&#13;
a picture. Street cars run&#13;
once every three hours.&#13;
" Preps II walk to town to&#13;
have pictures taken.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Henderson leads joint&#13;
association meeting.&#13;
&#13;
14 Fire in Hawkeye hall. Aesthesian -Adelphian&#13;
tion.&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
recep-&#13;
&#13;
Chemistry class visits gas&#13;
plant. Phelps takes picture.&#13;
&#13;
C. A&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
First pie day for Cora Frear.&#13;
Apple pie.&#13;
&#13;
23 Se cond pie day for Cora&#13;
Frear. She devours onehalf of a lemon pie.&#13;
24 Third and last pie day for&#13;
· Cora Frear. One-half of a&#13;
mince pie. Cora receives&#13;
five-pound box of 11 Palmer 1s.11&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Peter Drake falls off of stool&#13;
in chemistry class. Isabel&#13;
Garghill Beecher gives, 11 As&#13;
You Like It II and II The Lion&#13;
and the Mouse."&#13;
&#13;
26 Smallpox patients back in&#13;
school.&#13;
2 7 Garney Trimble has pest&#13;
house all of his own.&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Mid-year exams. begin.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Leonora Jackson Concert&#13;
Company.&#13;
&#13;
30 Thermometer registers 20&#13;
below.&#13;
3I&#13;
&#13;
Day of Prayer.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
Whisman wears a&#13;
collar.&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis leads Y. W. C. A.&#13;
Prof. Van Horne leads Y.&#13;
M . C. A. First Vesper service.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho bob ride. 11 Jigger II loses his sky-piece.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Second pipe organ recital&#13;
by Prof. Mather.&#13;
&#13;
vention is held at the college. Girls serve Baltimore&#13;
lunch. Dunbar quartette.&#13;
&#13;
17 Dr. Willis, of Milwaukee,&#13;
preaches at Grace M. E.&#13;
church.&#13;
18 Convention delegates return&#13;
home.&#13;
&#13;
Semester closes.&#13;
Exams&#13;
end. Students have vacation of twelve hours.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
19 Basketball, Morningside 44,&#13;
Sioux City high school 38.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
20 Basketball game with Vermillion called off on account of ice gorge .&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
First taste of spring.&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Rev. George C . Fort gives&#13;
Washington's birthday address. Seniors of 107 appear in caps and gowns.&#13;
Men banquet.&#13;
&#13;
Reno W elbourne gives illustrated lecture.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
_____________&#13;
&#13;
Announcement of $50,000&#13;
more endowment.&#13;
9 Atheneum annual public.&#13;
Collins and Miss Matteson&#13;
buy furniture. Dean&#13;
bell teaches ethics class&#13;
from table.&#13;
10 Rev. Beatty preaches at&#13;
Grace M. E. church.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Seniors sulk.&#13;
ball game.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Hunn, of Des Moines,&#13;
talks to students.&#13;
&#13;
16 Session of Y. M . C. A. con-&#13;
&#13;
Ground hog sees his shadow. Bass and Heilman are&#13;
awarded trophy cup. Football men are awarded their&#13;
M's.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
white&#13;
&#13;
2 3 Spring is forced to skiddoodle before the return of&#13;
Old Man Winter.&#13;
24 Miss Topping, of city, leads&#13;
&#13;
Y.&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
w. c. A.&#13;
&#13;
City basketball to urn e y&#13;
opens.&#13;
&#13;
No basket-&#13;
&#13;
26 Basketball game, high school&#13;
wins.&#13;
&#13;
12 Chapel address by D. C.&#13;
Shull. Senior academy wins&#13;
basketball championship.&#13;
Ike Westcott gets kidnap ed.&#13;
&#13;
2 7 Prof. Brown takes charge of&#13;
chapel services on account&#13;
of Dr. Campbell's absence.&#13;
&#13;
13 Mass meeting. New chairs&#13;
for association hall.&#13;
&#13;
28 Dr. Bennett Mitchell leads&#13;
chapel.&#13;
&#13;
14 St. Valentine's day. First&#13;
day of Y . M . C. A. convention.&#13;
&#13;
167&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Weather man predicts more&#13;
weather. Looks like a lion.&#13;
Rev. Cully, of Morningside&#13;
Presbyterian church, conducts chapel.&#13;
Volunteer&#13;
band goes to city to hear&#13;
lecture on " Cannibals, Before and After."&#13;
Secretary Ross Hadley leads&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Dr. Willits and&#13;
W. ]. Bryan lecture.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Heilman and Wintersteen&#13;
try "phys1log1cal" effects of&#13;
ether.&#13;
5 Prof. Scott leads chapel.&#13;
Basketball at Vermillion.&#13;
Morningside 34, University&#13;
of South Dakota 12.&#13;
6 Dr. Fellows, of Upper Iowa&#13;
University, visits chapel.&#13;
"Rain! 11&#13;
7 Pipe organ recital by Prof.&#13;
]. W. Mather. 11 Ice l ! n&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Othonian banquet. Basketball game. Morningside 44;&#13;
University of South Dakota&#13;
22.&#13;
9 City indoor meet. Morningside 36 ; combined city&#13;
teams 18. 11 Two cups of&#13;
beer, 11 for Van Buskirk and&#13;
Day, 11 Please, Mr. Clerk."&#13;
10 Entirely too muddy to go to&#13;
church.&#13;
11 Philomathean Grand public. Basketball at Vermillion. Morningside 3 1; University of South Dakota 14.&#13;
&#13;
026&#13;
&#13;
12 Katherine Ridgeway Concert Company. Track m e n&#13;
leave for Chicago.&#13;
13 Ladies' Chorus postpone&#13;
tour until April.&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Lecture by Merritte ]. Driver.&#13;
15 Miss Dimmitt entertains seniors.&#13;
16 Class cross country run.&#13;
17 Jim Wintersteen celebrates&#13;
&#13;
St. Patrick's day.&#13;
18 Ellen Beach Yaw concert.&#13;
Hawkeye - Crescent banquet.&#13;
19 Glee Club is organized.&#13;
20 Term concert of conservatory.&#13;
2 1 Annual board for II Sioux of&#13;
109 11 elected.&#13;
22 Calendar committee II Sioux&#13;
of 109 11 gets busy. Easter&#13;
vacation begins.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
168&#13;
&#13;
169&#13;
&#13;
College Jingles by "Jing"&#13;
College jingles,&#13;
Hardly verse,&#13;
All of them bad,&#13;
Some of them worse.&#13;
THE SENIOR STONE&#13;
A stone was planted on the campus,&#13;
By the senior class serene;&#13;
A freshman looked upon that stone,&#13;
And now that stone is green.&#13;
POISON&#13;
Said the prof., a Ph. D.&#13;
To his class in chemistree,&#13;
"With this acid be as careful as you can;&#13;
For a drop of this grog,&#13;
On the tongue of a dog,&#13;
ls enough to kill most any living man."&#13;
TO A 8., A M., P . D . Q.&#13;
"y ou can't go through college as fast as you please,&#13;
For getting education is a matter of degrees."&#13;
WHERE SILENCE RAINS&#13;
I stepped into the library,&#13;
Where all was still as death,&#13;
I saw a student clutch her throat,&#13;
While on paper she drew her breath.&#13;
A STUDY IN DERIVATION&#13;
Y-i-r" from the Latin means man,&#13;
"G-i-n" from the same means trap;&#13;
"V-i-r-g-i-n" spells virgin,&#13;
ThereforeVirgin means man-trap.&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
BOTANEE&#13;
Said Reuben to his teacher,&#13;
" Please, sir,&#13;
What kind of a tree&#13;
ls a T rigonometree, sir?"&#13;
&#13;
"A MATIER OF BRAINS II&#13;
"Shall I brain him," cried the hazer,&#13;
And the ivctim's courage Red;&#13;
"No, you cannot, he's a freshman,&#13;
So just hit him on the head. 11&#13;
ON CO-EDUCATION&#13;
"I believe in Co-education,&#13;
I count it America's salvation,&#13;
But yet I sometimes, think, you know,&#13;
That we are apt to overwork the Co.&#13;
170&#13;
&#13;
------ HOW TO EDIT AN ANNUAL&#13;
When a student makes a hunk&#13;
Keep 1t out.&#13;
When a chapel song is punk,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When two friends in anger clash,&#13;
When a student wins the dash,&#13;
Or somebody donates cash,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
&#13;
If they quarrel when at church,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When the prof. should wield the birch,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When nine co-eds fair to see,&#13;
Whisper something over tea,&#13;
Print it? Goodness gracious me,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
When there1s something really good,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
For you know you really should,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
Stories thin and stories tall,&#13;
Good and bad and big and small,&#13;
Anything that1s fun at all,&#13;
Keep it out.&#13;
- Adapted.&#13;
&#13;
Should you ask me whence these stories,&#13;
Whence these poems&#13;
&#13;
and quotations,&#13;
&#13;
With the spirit of the college,&#13;
With the life and mirth of school days,&#13;
With the laughing words of students,&#13;
With the tumult of great conflicts,&#13;
With their frequent repetitions,&#13;
And their wild reverberations,&#13;
As the sound of rooters cheering,&#13;
I should answer, I should tell you,&#13;
From the campus and the street cars,&#13;
From the lecture halls and class rooms,&#13;
From the stair-ways and the hall-ways,&#13;
From the corridors and chapel,&#13;
From the wise words of the seniors,&#13;
From the mishaps of the freshmen,&#13;
&#13;
AND THE SOPHS HAD IT!&#13;
Tumbleson - 11 Freshmen are too green to have small pox."&#13;
F redendoll - 11 The seniors are too wise."&#13;
Alice Cole - "The juniors are too busy. 11&#13;
And the sick were Jesse Ewer, Cleveland Brooks, Garney&#13;
Trimble and Mae Fry.&#13;
Kate T ackaberry ( in biology lab.) - 11 I wonder if this animal has a mouth. If it has I wish it were big enough so that a&#13;
person could find it. Why, anyone could find mine in the dark."&#13;
&#13;
From the cleverness of juniors,&#13;
From the big-heads of the sophomores,&#13;
From academy and normal,&#13;
As they all together mingled,&#13;
I repeat them as I heard them,&#13;
From the lips of all these people.&#13;
&#13;
172&#13;
&#13;
PROHIBITION CONTEST OF 1906&#13;
In Unity There is Strength," said II John Gough," so by&#13;
' The Will of the People, 11 we will have 11 A Square Deal in the&#13;
Liquor Traffic,11 and thus reach II The Promised Land."&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
WHAT'S IN A NAME?&#13;
Minnie Brown - 11 Mr. Squires, will you please bring me a&#13;
plate? 11&#13;
Squires - " I can't"&#13;
Minnie Brown - 11 I'm sure I could if my name was Squires."&#13;
173&#13;
&#13;
A STORY WITHOUT WORDS&#13;
&#13;
Carcuff eating fresh bologna,&#13;
Found it had a splinter in it;&#13;
"I don't mind the dog," said Carcuff,&#13;
"But the dog-house, I'm agin it."&#13;
&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
(From Prof. Carver's blackboard )&#13;
If you owe the history department anything, please pay.&#13;
The family needs bread.&#13;
Miss Royse - " I can't take the exam. Monday.&#13;
Analytics."&#13;
Dean Campbell - "What's that? Algebra?"&#13;
(j[&#13;
&#13;
I have&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR WISDOM&#13;
Perry F redendoll ( to librarian) - " I want a biology of Martin Luther."&#13;
A Marcus girl not long ago,&#13;
In some way or another,&#13;
Got stuck on Mr. William Bass,&#13;
Mr. John C. Bass' brother.&#13;
She wrote a letter to ]. C.'s girl,&#13;
And asked if she would tell,&#13;
The secret of her great success,&#13;
In landing John so well.&#13;
&#13;
A FOND HOPE&#13;
Elva Chrysler, on hearing of Bryan's remark that Miss Bunting had " touched the hearts of a thousand men,11 was heard to&#13;
exclaim, "I'd be thankful to touch the heart of one."&#13;
AND HE DIDN'T&#13;
Robbins - " This school life makes one weary. I'm gomg&#13;
off in the woods and write poetry."&#13;
Cora Frear - " It's not good for a man to go alone."&#13;
On the evening before the inter-socie ty debate Alvah Miller&#13;
was requested to return thanks. Bowing his head he started,&#13;
"So far in this debate the negative have proven - "&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Now Ethel is a helpful girl,&#13;
Who's gained a lot of knowledge,&#13;
Aside from what she's learned in books&#13;
While here attending college.&#13;
Said she, "The way to catch a Bass,&#13;
ls the way I landed mine,&#13;
It's all in staying by the game,&#13;
And using hook and line.&#13;
&#13;
w. H.J.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dimmitt - "Miss Loveland, why is it you e mploye d so&#13;
many old bachelors and widowers to work on your new house? "&#13;
Miss Loveland - "They're not so frivolous, and stay by their&#13;
job better."&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dolliver has great faith in the girls of Morningside.&#13;
She says they are not so bad as they are painted.&#13;
&#13;
174&#13;
&#13;
175&#13;
&#13;
TO BE RE-FILLED&#13;
One of the suburbs of Sioux City is the site of a well known&#13;
college, from which go out each week-end many students to try&#13;
their voices as " s upplies."&#13;
A passenger on a Monday morning train was surprised at&#13;
the number of the m who got off at the station.&#13;
II What are all those chaps getting off here ? " he asked the&#13;
brakeman.&#13;
"Them? 11 asked the brakemen. 11 Oh, they're returned empties, for the college." ~ Y outh 1s Companion.&#13;
&#13;
" THE DOCTOR TRIES HIS STEED "&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH STUDENTS TO CONFERENCE&#13;
( At roll call )&#13;
Greynald - 11 Mr. Eggleston 11 ( No response).&#13;
II Mr. Jones 11&#13;
II Mr. Waterman"&#13;
II Eh, whair are zees gentlemen ? 11&#13;
Class - 11 Gone to conference."&#13;
Greynald - 11 Mr. Thornton 11 ( No response).&#13;
II Ah ! Ees Mr. Thornton gone to conference, too?"&#13;
&#13;
THE GARVER CLUB&#13;
In a certain Iowa college a professor named Garver attempted to teach his young son a few of the college yells, hoping to thus instill college spirit and local patriotism. The results were unsatisfactory as far as the memorizing was concerned.&#13;
Hoping to get a start the professor invented a simpler rhyme,&#13;
running as follows: 11 Rub-i-dub-dub, Rub-i-dub-dub, we are&#13;
the members of the Garve r club." A few days later the professor, accompanied by several members of the board of trustees,&#13;
was met at the door by the youngster, who proclaimed loudly :&#13;
" Papa, papa, I can say it now!&#13;
1 Rub-i-dub-dub, rub-i-dub-dub,&#13;
we are the members of the garbage club.' 11 - Record-Herald.&#13;
176&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Campbell's toast at athletic banquet: 11 Dr. Lewis is in the&#13;
East, performing arduous duties."&#13;
177&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMAN THEMES&#13;
" LAST NIGHT WHEN I WAS SNUG IN BED "&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
Last night when I was snug in bed,&#13;
A sweet dream came to me;&#13;
I dreamed we were the faculty,&#13;
And the faculty were we.&#13;
&#13;
IV.&#13;
We made them grind, but all in vain,&#13;
We made them flunk beside;&#13;
And when the profs. perceived their fate,&#13;
The little fellows cried.&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
CHORUS,&#13;
&#13;
And the faculty were we,&#13;
And the faculty were we,&#13;
I dreamed we were the faculty,&#13;
And the faculty were we.&#13;
&#13;
In the morning when I wakeFreshman themes;&#13;
I remember what I saw&#13;
In my dreams;&#13;
And the critic, in her glee,&#13;
Marks a joyful C or D;&#13;
Still before my eyes I see&#13;
Freshman themes.&#13;
&#13;
There's a subject near my heartFreshman themes;&#13;
And it forms a constant part&#13;
In my dreams;&#13;
Every day and every night&#13;
We just write and write and write&#13;
And we never get them rightFreshman themes.&#13;
&#13;
On Friday night we met at five,&#13;
To talk the students o'er;&#13;
And when we'd granted one small thing,&#13;
That day we'd grant no more.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
In chapel we had seats on high,&#13;
While they sat down below;&#13;
And while we often stayed away,&#13;
We always made them go.&#13;
&#13;
VI.&#13;
The profs. in somber cap and gown'&#13;
Came pleading for their class;&#13;
We read petitions by the score,&#13;
But would not let them pass.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
In recitations every day,&#13;
We listened with a frown;&#13;
When e'er a prof. stood up to speak,&#13;
We put a zero down.&#13;
&#13;
VII.&#13;
But just to keep our dignity,&#13;
And see what they would do,&#13;
When it was time to graduate&#13;
We would not let them through.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
And however hard I dig&#13;
On those themes,&#13;
They don't seem to care a fig&#13;
What it means&#13;
When I get my papers back;&#13;
Of red ink there is no lack,&#13;
They're artistic for a factAll my themes.&#13;
&#13;
CHORUS.&#13;
&#13;
Daily themes, nightly dreams,&#13;
Nightly dreams, daily themes,&#13;
They're the trouble of my life,&#13;
As it seems;&#13;
They are with me everywhere&#13;
And I swear and swear and swear;&#13;
You can see them in the airDaily themes.&#13;
&#13;
IV.&#13;
When the sunset tints the westFreshman themes;&#13;
Still I find no place for rest&#13;
From those themes;&#13;
But I am consoled to think,&#13;
When I cross the shining brink,&#13;
Then at last my cares I'll sinkFreshman themes.&#13;
&#13;
178&#13;
&#13;
179&#13;
&#13;
Stranger - 11 Is that Lewis? 11&#13;
Student - "No, that's Rogers."&#13;
Stranger - 11 Isn't the president's name Lewis? 11&#13;
Student - " Yes, but that chap is only a freshman."&#13;
Poor John R. Day,&#13;
Must have a girl,&#13;
For six he'd made a try,&#13;
And now at last,&#13;
He fondly hopes.&#13;
To find one in the sky.&#13;
&#13;
AN EASY MISTAKE&#13;
Stranger, sitting opposite Squires and Miss Whealen : "Are&#13;
they married ? "&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Are they soon to be? 11&#13;
"?&#13;
&#13;
n&#13;
&#13;
Johnson - 11 How do you spell it? 11&#13;
Garver- 11 Correctly."&#13;
&#13;
A NUISANCE&#13;
Edwin Brown - "Who's Jay's girl now? 11&#13;
Johnnie Torbet - 11 I don 1t know; ain't got none, I guess. 11&#13;
Brown - 11 I thought Harriet was. 11&#13;
Young T orbet - 11 Nope, pa said he was too big a nuisance&#13;
around the house."&#13;
Miss Woodford - "Respond to roll call with a quotation."&#13;
Bert Elliott- 11 'Give me your hand'- Shakespeare. 11&#13;
A LOST OPPORTUNITY&#13;
Alva Miller and - - - - -, sleighing on North Jackson&#13;
street, met Corwin Tay !or and asked : 11 Where does Dr. Lewis&#13;
live? 11 Since they both looked ready, Rev.Taylor might have- .&#13;
Those whiskers which Harry Jones wears&#13;
Are mostly composed of fine hairs ;&#13;
If 1tis true, as they say,&#13;
Then we hope that some day&#13;
He'll shave them and answer our prayers.&#13;
&#13;
Memoranda, from Si Rorem 1s&#13;
note book: 11 To be committed.&#13;
Ja, lch komme, eure edle T ochter&#13;
um ihre Herze und Hande zu&#13;
bitten. 11&#13;
&#13;
Mable Haskins' problem of II College or Not? 11 has been&#13;
answered by a friend, who said, 11 College first and then the&#13;
knot. 11&#13;
The question, 11 Why does the earth move ? 11 has finally&#13;
been settled by Prof. Scott's physical geography class with the&#13;
answer that II It's cheaper to move than to pay rent. 11&#13;
&#13;
Erick ( at Creighton game) - " Have we won? "&#13;
Coach - 11 I don't know. We made twelve that half. 11&#13;
Erick - " How many halves do we play? 11&#13;
180&#13;
&#13;
181&#13;
&#13;
?"&#13;
Girl - "Is your name Waterman.&#13;
&#13;
Man&#13;
G. I&#13;
&#13;
ny es.&#13;
&#13;
n Did you&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
n y e-e-s-s.&#13;
an&#13;
Girl - "Do you&#13;
&#13;
1·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
at Aurelia.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
know&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Hench ? n&#13;
She is my fat h 's&#13;
M an&#13;
" Yes.&#13;
d d ughter-m&#13;
•&#13;
'&#13;
w1es mothers g ran&#13;
law."&#13;
&#13;
Spasm I.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
h dder im the grass,&#13;
,Catch a s a&#13;
them pass,&#13;
k&#13;
to see&#13;
And loo up&#13;
h e glory is,&#13;
d' w er&#13;
In the sha es&#13;
I'd like to do,&#13;
, · t what&#13;
Thats JUS&#13;
or two.&#13;
Stiddy f or a year&#13;
182&#13;
&#13;
G . 1 to the front o' me,&#13;
Girls to the s1'd e o me,&#13;
11 round me,&#13;
Girls c a b b l e&#13;
ble hd clatter.&#13;
Gab ea&#13;
er&#13;
'd tall that m,&#13;
Vainly m1&#13;
t to sin,&#13;
I har no&#13;
.&#13;
all my laugther m,&#13;
An&#13;
eep .&#13;
1 hatter.&#13;
At&#13;
c&#13;
183&#13;
&#13;
I I.&#13;
&#13;
Manning, at the banquet - 11 I have not yet received all of&#13;
my education, but I hope to get the other half soon. 11&#13;
&#13;
Fire At The College!!&#13;
&#13;
Great&#13;
&#13;
C OACH&#13;
&#13;
Excitement, etc.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0/0 17 With&#13;
&#13;
My&#13;
&#13;
AN APRIL FOOL&#13;
On April 1st, Miller, waiting for a car, was heard to smg :&#13;
II I'm getting ready for my mother-in-law."&#13;
A SURE SIGN&#13;
When you take the last piece of bread it is a sure sign that&#13;
you will get a good husband.&#13;
Grace - "I'm so glad I took it - I mean the bread."&#13;
Miss Ferguson - " How do you inflect feminine nouns? "&#13;
Student - 11 On the end. 11&#13;
HARD ON THE TEETOTALER&#13;
Prof. McDowell, picking himself out of the mud where he had&#13;
fallen, was approached by a&#13;
bright little youngster who said:&#13;
II Lemme help you up, mister. 11&#13;
II You help me up ? 11 responded the professor somewhat disgustedly, 11 Why you're too small&#13;
to help anybody up. 11&#13;
II Oh, no, I ain't II responded&#13;
the urchin, 11 Why, I've helped&#13;
dad up lots of times, and you&#13;
ain't half as drunk as he was."&#13;
&#13;
ETHICAL PRINCIPLES&#13;
&#13;
COMMENCEMENT WEEK&#13;
II WERE THEY? II&#13;
Miss Whealen - 11 Don't you see it up there by that telephone wire ? 11&#13;
Squires - 11 No. 11&#13;
Tumbleson, passing - "What are you looking for, sparks? 11&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Buton - 11 Yes, I'm&#13;
going to join the Eastern Star if I&#13;
don't get high-balled."&#13;
&#13;
HOW STRANGE&#13;
Momingsider - " Which way do the stairs run m your&#13;
building? 11&#13;
Drake Student - 11 When you are on the third floor they run&#13;
down and when you are in the basement they run up. 11&#13;
184&#13;
&#13;
CRAM FOR EXAM.&#13;
&#13;
SPRING FEVER MICROBE&#13;
185&#13;
&#13;
THE Day&#13;
&#13;
After&#13;
&#13;
Annual&#13;
/5&#13;
&#13;
ISSUED&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
INDEX&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
Faculty . ... .. . .. ... . ... 23&#13;
&#13;
Academy .... ... .. .. . . . 59&#13;
Alma Mater ( song ) . . . . . 48&#13;
Alumni ........ . . . . . . 109&#13;
Athletics . . ... ....... ... 12 1&#13;
Football . . . . . . . .. . .. 125&#13;
Basketball . .... .. . .. . . 13 1&#13;
Track.. . . . .. ... . .. 135&#13;
Baseball . . . . . . . . . ... 139&#13;
Classes .. .· .. . . . .... . .. .&#13;
Junior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11&#13;
Senior . .. .. . . ........ 35&#13;
Sophomores . . . . . . . . . . 4 1&#13;
Freshman ..... . ..... 45&#13;
Calendar . .. . . . ......... 149&#13;
April . .. .. . . . . . . ... 150&#13;
May . ... . . . . . . . ...... 152&#13;
June . ... . .... . . . . . . 154&#13;
September . . . . . . .. 156&#13;
October . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158&#13;
November ...... . .... 160&#13;
December . .......... . l 62&#13;
January . ... . . . . . . . . . 164&#13;
February ...... ...... 166&#13;
March .. .... . .. . ..... 168&#13;
Christian Associations ... 102&#13;
Collegian Reporter. . . . . . 90&#13;
Commencement . . . . . . . 105&#13;
. Dedication. . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
4&#13;
John B. Trimble.. . . . .&#13;
6&#13;
Debate .. ..... ......... 92&#13;
Inter-society, college . . 92&#13;
Inter-society, academy. 93&#13;
Morningside, Upper la. 94&#13;
Elocution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86&#13;
Frontispiece, The Sioux&#13;
of '08...... . ... . .. . .. 3&#13;
&#13;
F acuity Assistants . . . . . . 33&#13;
Greeting.. . . . ... . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Grafters, The. . . . . . . . . . 70&#13;
Historical . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
The Garretson Place . .&#13;
Co-ordinate College. . .&#13;
Morningside Annuals .&#13;
&#13;
73&#13;
72&#13;
74&#13;
76&#13;
&#13;
Jokes . .. .... . . . . . . .. .. 171&#13;
Literary ... . ......... .. . 111&#13;
Human Interest Story . . 112&#13;
Power of the Will .... 114&#13;
Spirit Lake Massacre .. 11 6&#13;
Chief Black Hawk . . .. 118&#13;
ATouching Personality 119&#13;
Miscellaneous Pictures .. 146&#13;
"M" Club ............ . . 144&#13;
Memorial page ...... . .. 104&#13;
Music ............. . . . . . 79&#13;
Normal . .. . . . .. . ... . . .. 88&#13;
Oratory ........ .. ..... 95&#13;
Societies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Atheneum ...... . ....&#13;
Zetalethian ....... . ...&#13;
Philomathean . . . . . . . .&#13;
Othonian ......... ...&#13;
Adelphian . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Hawkeye ... . ... . . .. .&#13;
Aesthesian ......... . .&#13;
Crescent . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Of Science . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
50&#13;
52&#13;
54&#13;
56&#13;
&#13;
63&#13;
64&#13;
66&#13;
68&#13;
97&#13;
&#13;
Student Congress . . . . . . . 98&#13;
Volunteer Band ... . .. . . 100&#13;
&#13;
188&#13;
&#13;
Special Rates to Students at&#13;
&#13;
Clements &amp; Company&#13;
Staple and fancy&#13;
&#13;
Groceries&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT&#13;
At Prices That Are Down-to-Date&#13;
407 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
If Our Goods and Treatment Please You, Tell Your Friends ;&#13;
Not, Tell Us.&#13;
Our Motto: "A Satisfied Customer ls Our Best Advertisement."&#13;
&#13;
We Invite Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
The Junior, Senior&#13;
&#13;
and Group-*&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOS&#13;
used in the&#13;
publication&#13;
of this annual were&#13;
made Bby&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
St. Aubin Station&#13;
&#13;
I WANT YOUR BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
Calvin Hook&#13;
Real&#13;
Estate&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Dentist&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
Located at Peters Park&#13;
Auto Phone 6167&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WILCOX&#13;
190&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE..&#13;
IOWA&#13;
191&#13;
&#13;
to rent at $3&#13;
per month&#13;
&#13;
PRESCRIPTION&#13;
DRUGGISTS&#13;
&#13;
FOR MEN ONLY&#13;
-AT-&#13;
&#13;
The Peters Park Barber Shop&#13;
SERVICES DAILY, except&#13;
Sunday, from 7 a. m. until 8&#13;
p. m. ( Satm:·day 11 :00 p. m.)&#13;
Services conducted by R. S.&#13;
Bridges, Tonsorial Artist. Best&#13;
in his line in the city.&#13;
TOPICS: "A Clean Shave,"&#13;
"Electric Face Massage," "A&#13;
Neat Hair Cut," "Shampoos&#13;
and Tonics." (The usual collection after each service.)&#13;
A GREAT OPPORTUNITY for college men to keep&#13;
their faces clean. Don't miss&#13;
it, men; it's a part of your education to look neat.&#13;
STRANGERS - WELCOME&#13;
&#13;
are the largest&#13;
dealers and carry&#13;
the largest stock&#13;
of fine pianos in&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Hardware&#13;
Tools and Cutlery&#13;
Furnace&#13;
and Tin Work&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
and Baseball Goods&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Fine Perfumes and Toilet Goods of All Kinds in&#13;
Gunther's and Allegretti Candies&#13;
Endless Variety.&#13;
&#13;
509 Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS&#13;
&#13;
Headquarters for ...&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC GOODS, BASEBALL SUPPLIES,&#13;
HUNTERS' OUTFITS, GUNS, BICYCLES,&#13;
GYMNASIUM GOODS.&#13;
I make a specialty of safe work and changing combinations.&#13;
Lock and key work and all kinds of light machine repairing.&#13;
&#13;
408~ 10 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
T he&#13;
First National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
SINGER&#13;
IIARDVVARE&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Schmoller &amp;&#13;
Mueller&#13;
&#13;
614&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
STREET&#13;
&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
AUTO 2775&#13;
IOWA 408&#13;
&#13;
T odd~Baker Drug Co.&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fourth and Jackson Sts .&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
408 PEARL STREET.&#13;
W . M. WELLMAN, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 2604&#13;
Lakeport Ave., Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Capital and _ urplus $3 70,000&#13;
S&#13;
Deposits&#13;
$3,250,000&#13;
&#13;
Lumber Co.&#13;
&#13;
We always accord the small&#13;
account the same welcome&#13;
and consideration as the largest deposit, and our first-class&#13;
facilities are at your disposal&#13;
for every banking service required.&#13;
&#13;
Dealers in Building Material of All Kinds. Hard and Soft&#13;
Coal and Wood. Don't pass us by; we are here among&#13;
you. Don't forget to patronize those who patronize&#13;
you. Our prices are RIGHT. FAIR DEALING&#13;
is our motto. Remember, we are at&#13;
I&#13;
Morningside&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GIVE US YOUR BUSINESS,&#13;
WHETHER LARGE OR&#13;
SMALL, AND TELL US&#13;
YOUR NEEDS.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
192&#13;
&#13;
OLD PHONE 5 19M.&#13;
&#13;
NEW PHONE 6122&#13;
193&#13;
&#13;
The Friend That Never Fails&#13;
IN TIME OF ADVERSITY IS A BANK ACCOUNT&#13;
Have you such a friend to call upon if necessary? If not,&#13;
open an account with us today. Twenty-five cents will start&#13;
you. We pay three per cent. compound interest on savings.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank&#13;
405 Pearl Street&#13;
SATURDAY EVENINGS we are OPEN until 8:30 O'CLOCK&#13;
Special Attention to STUDENTS and BOARDING HOUSES&#13;
&#13;
PETER'S PARK GROCERY&#13;
M. R. McDONALD. Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Fresh and Cured Meats&#13;
All Kinds of Feed&#13;
Fish and Oysters in Season&#13;
&#13;
Just sit still a moment&#13;
&#13;
OLD PHONE 953-J&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 614 3&#13;
&#13;
and think what&#13;
&#13;
Photographs&#13;
Of the Finest Quality&#13;
at nedium Prices&#13;
&#13;
"Kodakery" means&#13;
&#13;
T means the making of fine pictures&#13;
easily Cheaply and Surely.&#13;
THE FORMULA:&#13;
First, buy a Kodak.&#13;
Next, a daylight develop-&#13;
&#13;
ing outfit.&#13;
&#13;
Youngberg&#13;
Studio&#13;
611 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Then go make your pictures at any old place and&#13;
any old time.&#13;
All such things are kept in in great profusion at&#13;
&#13;
The Kodak Store&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Zimmerman Bros&#13;
Fifth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
Every Photo Guaranteed TO PLEASE&#13;
&#13;
194&#13;
&#13;
We do Finishing, too, and will teach&#13;
you the how for the asking&#13;
)95&#13;
&#13;
Electric Lighted&#13;
&#13;
Cafe In Connection&#13;
Open All Night&#13;
&#13;
Steam Heat&#13;
&#13;
Forsberg Hardware Co.&#13;
&#13;
Hotel Howard&#13;
&#13;
HARDWARE, CUTLERY AND STOVES&#13;
&#13;
P.H. LEADER, Manager&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Furnace and Tin Work&#13;
&#13;
American and European Plans&#13;
One Block from Depots&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Third and Nebraska Streets&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Auto Phone 1981&#13;
&#13;
1010-ro12 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Devoted to the Interests of the Better Grades of Printing&#13;
Guess what they are.&#13;
&#13;
- Patches.&#13;
&#13;
W&#13;
&#13;
HEN you want anything neat&#13;
in cards, catalogues or fine&#13;
stationery, call on the Morningside Printery.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 62 1 1&#13;
&#13;
If they are clean they are respectable.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. E. EVANS, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
We want your business but we do not give discounts&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
Moore Clothing Co.&#13;
Sioux City, la.&#13;
A dollar's worth for every dollar, or every dollar back&#13;
&#13;
The Students I Pantorium&#13;
delights in cleaning, repairing and pressing&#13;
your clothing. We can help you to look&#13;
better. You can help us to rest better. :-: :-:&#13;
&#13;
1708 St. Louis Ave.&#13;
&#13;
RAY D. ROBBINS&#13;
&#13;
Patronize&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
I LIVERY&#13;
2 0 0 9 Lakeport Avenue&#13;
&#13;
We always will furnish first-class rigs at reasonable prices.&#13;
We make special rates for students.&#13;
Good service is our hobby.&#13;
If you are figuring on a party ride, come to us.&#13;
A feed barn in connection, where horses receive best of care.&#13;
&#13;
J. A.&#13;
&#13;
WEATHERS, Prop.&#13;
197&#13;
&#13;
GUESS WHO&#13;
196&#13;
&#13;
everyone knows our name to a&#13;
&#13;
The Engravings&#13;
in This Book Were&#13;
Made by the&#13;
&#13;
photograph&#13;
is a sign of merit&#13;
and excellence in&#13;
portaiture&#13;
&#13;
Electric City&#13;
Engraving Co&#13;
&#13;
Studio&#13;
&#13;
Buffalo, New York&#13;
513 Fourthstreet&#13;
Largest engraving&#13;
house for college&#13;
plates in the States&#13;
Our work is endorsed by 2 0 0&#13;
business managers&#13;
of college annuals&#13;
&#13;
Huntetr&#13;
&#13;
longdistance&#13;
&#13;
phone 2528&#13;
&#13;
Omaha, Neb&#13;
&#13;
Write for Prices and Samples&#13;
&#13;
A STUDENT'S ROOM&#13;
198&#13;
&#13;
199&#13;
&#13;
The State University of Iowa&#13;
IOWA CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Co Please&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
OVR&#13;
Study&#13;
A SCIENTIFIC&#13;
COURSE combined with up-todate B us i n e s s&#13;
Methods have&#13;
made our reputat i o n throughout&#13;
this whole western country as&#13;
Dealers of High&#13;
&#13;
Class Jewel=&#13;
ry, Watches&#13;
and Diamonds&#13;
&#13;
Will H. Beck Co.&#13;
The Sioux City Jewelers&#13;
&#13;
Furnaces&#13;
&#13;
Cutlery&#13;
&#13;
Steel Ranges&#13;
&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Refrigerators&#13;
&#13;
Sporting Goods&#13;
&#13;
Stoves&#13;
House Furnishings&#13;
Builders' Hardware&#13;
&#13;
If you are seeking the BEST for the&#13;
MONEY you will become a customer of ours&#13;
&#13;
The University Embraces the Following Departments;&#13;
The College of Liberal Arts&#13;
to the degree of B. s. in c E.. E. E.&#13;
M. E., etc. Cou rses are offered in&#13;
This college offers a four year's&#13;
Civil E ngineering,, Sanitary Engineercourse leading to the degree of B. A.&#13;
ing, Mech a nical Engineering, Electrical&#13;
Instruction is provided in Astronomy,&#13;
Engineering, Mining Engineering,&#13;
Botany, Chemistry , Classical ArchaeChemical Engineering, Chemistry and&#13;
ology, Education, English (including&#13;
Forest Engineering. Large and well&#13;
Public Speaking), Fine Arts, Geology,&#13;
equipped laboratories and shops are&#13;
German, Greek, History, Latin, Matheavailable for elementary and advanced&#13;
matics, Philosophy and Psychology,&#13;
work.&#13;
Physics, Politics, Political Economy&#13;
The College of Law&#13;
and Sociology, Political Science, Romance Languages ( French, Italian,&#13;
The College of Law offers a three&#13;
Spanish), Sanskrit, Scandinavian( Norse,&#13;
years' course leading to the degree of&#13;
Swedish, Danish), and Zoology; also in&#13;
LL. B. The case method of instrucMilitary Science and Tactics and in&#13;
tion is employed. Five resident proPhysical Training.&#13;
The college has&#13;
fessors and a n umbe r of special lectabout one hundred professors, inurers have the work in charge. A&#13;
structors, and assistants. Large and&#13;
large law library is available.&#13;
well equipped libraries, laboratories,&#13;
The College of Medicine&#13;
and museums supply material for a&#13;
This college p rovides a four year's&#13;
high grade of work.&#13;
course leading to the degree of M. D.&#13;
Combined Liberal Arts and ProfesFire-proof, stone buildings for laborsional courses lead to the degree of B.&#13;
atorie~ and a large hospital, a ll well&#13;
A. and L. L. B., B. S and M. D., and&#13;
equipped with modern appliances,&#13;
of B. S. and D. D. S.&#13;
secure superior faci lities for medical&#13;
The Graduate College&#13;
work, including opportunity for reInstruction is offered, leading to the&#13;
search in the various helds.&#13;
degrees of M. A , M. S., and Ph. D.,&#13;
The College of Homeopathic Medicine&#13;
in tlie fields mentioned above and also&#13;
A four yea r s' co urse leads to the dein physiology, histology and embryolgree of M. D. Large and fully equipogy, ophthalmology, otology and rhinoped laboratories and a special hospital ,&#13;
laryngoiogy, pathology and bacteriology,&#13;
with abundance of material for clinical&#13;
theory of medicine, and electrical and&#13;
and other purposes, afford· opportunity&#13;
mechanical engineering. Special defor elementary and advanced work under&#13;
partmental libraries, laboratories, etc.,&#13;
competent instruction and super vision.&#13;
give ample opportunity for individual&#13;
research.&#13;
&#13;
The School of Political and Social Science&#13;
This school supplies instruction in&#13;
history, economics, sociology, pol itical&#13;
science, and allied subjects for elemenrary and advanced students of commerce, finance, the various branches of&#13;
public service, etc.&#13;
&#13;
The Summer Session&#13;
The Summer Session offers instruction for both elementar y and advanced&#13;
work in most of the lines mentioned&#13;
above, to apply directly, if desired, on&#13;
the requirements for the bachelor's,&#13;
master's, and doctor's degrees. Special&#13;
professional courses are provided for&#13;
teachers in the public schools.&#13;
The Summer School for Library&#13;
Training, under the auspices of the&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
the Quality Store&#13;
&#13;
Library Commission,&#13;
&#13;
is an integral part of the Summer Session.&#13;
&#13;
The College of Applled Science&#13;
This college g, ves instruction leading&#13;
&#13;
Weld Hardware Co.&#13;
407-409 Pierce Street&#13;
200&#13;
&#13;
The College of Dentistry&#13;
&#13;
The College of Dentistry offers a&#13;
three years' course leading to the degree&#13;
of D. D. S., and a combined course&#13;
leading to the degrees of D . D . S.&#13;
and M. D. The Hall of Dentistr y,&#13;
used exclusively by this college, is&#13;
supplied with modern apparatus of every&#13;
description for a high grade of work.&#13;
&#13;
The College of Pharmacy&#13;
This college has a two years' course&#13;
leading to the degree of Ph. G. and a&#13;
three years' course leading to the degree of Ph. C.; and offers advanced&#13;
work for gradua te students. Laboratories and museums are large and&#13;
supplied with abundant material for all&#13;
lines of study.&#13;
&#13;
The School of Music&#13;
The School of Music, affiliated with&#13;
the University , affords complete facilties for study of organ, pianoforte, voice,&#13;
and orchestral instruments, as well as&#13;
of history, counterpoint, etc.&#13;
&#13;
The TUITION FEES of t he University are as follows: for the College of liberal Arts, the&#13;
school of politicaland Social science and the college of Applied S cien ce. $20.00 a year; for the&#13;
Graduate College, free; for the Summer Session, $5.00; for the Library Training S chool, $J0.00; for&#13;
the Co11eges of Law, Medicin e, Homeopathic Medicine, Dentistry, and P harm acy, $ 50.00 a year; for&#13;
the S chool of Music, varying according to the amount of work. S cholarships and remissions of tuition&#13;
are provided for impecunious students&#13;
The fee for marticulation is $ J0.00, which is paid only once.&#13;
Other expenses of living are very low.&#13;
&#13;
The special announcement of any College or School of the University, giving&#13;
full information in regard to entrance requirements, courses of study, etc., is supplied, free of charge to any one who desires it. Address&#13;
&#13;
President George E . McLean. Iowa City, Iowa.&#13;
201&#13;
&#13;
The Drug Store of Quality&#13;
&#13;
ENTIRELY IND.EPENDENT&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
We carry a full line of the best drugs. Our line of&#13;
fine candies is unequalled in the city. Toilet articles, stationery, in fact, everything that you are accustomed to find in a first class drug store is here.&#13;
In our new location we will install a fine new soda&#13;
fountain and will thus be able to give the very&#13;
best service.&#13;
&#13;
Korona Cameras&#13;
Turner Reich Lenses&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Perfection Flash Lights&#13;
Kruxo Developing Paper&#13;
Cramer Plates&#13;
Century chemicals and Willis&#13;
&amp; Clements Platinum Paper&#13;
&#13;
WE GUARANTEE personal attention to&#13;
prescriptions.&#13;
&#13;
Only the purest drugs used&#13;
&#13;
PROP.&#13;
&#13;
We always have in stock a large assortment of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Souvenirs&#13;
Pennants&#13;
Pillow Tops&#13;
Etc.&#13;
We also carry a&#13;
medium priced&#13;
line of pennants&#13;
of all the Iowa&#13;
colleges. Send&#13;
75c for any one&#13;
you want.&#13;
&#13;
" The Best Photograph Supplies Are Not&#13;
Controlled by the Trust II&#13;
NOTICE - We challenge anyone to disprove this statement, and in support of this&#13;
fact we ask every serious-minded amateur&#13;
to write for our catalogue and latest price&#13;
list. You will find our prices the lowest&#13;
and the results highly superior.&#13;
&#13;
I. P. CUMMINGS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
Our finishing department is under expert management&#13;
and all your work is earnestly solicite d and we guarantee perfect satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
JUST WRITE&#13;
&#13;
I,_ _ _ __&#13;
&#13;
R.W. PHELPS&#13;
JOBBER OF PHOTOGRAPH SUPPLIES&#13;
1 712 ST. LOUIS A VENUE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Agent for Moore's Non-Leakable Fountain Pens&#13;
&#13;
J. H. QUEAL &amp; CO.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Lumber and&#13;
Ph&#13;
Building&#13;
ones&#13;
Material&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1118&#13;
Old 118&#13;
&#13;
Professional photographers enclose card for discount sheet&#13;
&#13;
H. T. WALENSKY, Mgr.&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
203&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SHOES&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE LOTS&#13;
On the Avenue&#13;
One Block from Avenue&#13;
Two Blocks from Avenue&#13;
Easy terms.&#13;
&#13;
$500.00&#13;
300.00&#13;
200.00&#13;
&#13;
For&#13;
&#13;
Geo. C. Call, :-: Iowa Bldg., :-: Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
Man&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
Specialty&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1884&#13;
Capital&#13;
&#13;
Surplus&#13;
&#13;
$250,000&#13;
&#13;
$125,000&#13;
&#13;
We solicit your business and promise satisfactory tre atment.&#13;
W. P . Manley, President&#13;
C. L. Wright, Vice-President&#13;
C. N. Lukes, Cashier&#13;
T. A Black, Vice-Preside nt&#13;
C. W. Britton, Assistant Casl ier&#13;
&#13;
Convery &amp; Seney&#13;
421 Pierce St. C!1 927 Fourth St.&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Newest, Largest and Best Stock&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Pierce Streets&#13;
Students Welcome&#13;
&#13;
August Williges&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
609 fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
PRIMARY METHODS&#13;
&#13;
204&#13;
&#13;
205&#13;
&#13;
ISioux City&#13;
&#13;
College Clothes&#13;
&#13;
Brick and&#13;
Tile Works&#13;
&#13;
&lt;SPECIALIZED )&#13;
&#13;
Mfrs. of Face&#13;
Common,Hol&#13;
low and Side&#13;
walk Brick.&#13;
Hollow&#13;
Blocks and&#13;
Drain Tile&#13;
Jobbers of Sewer Pipe, Fire Brick and Fire Clay&#13;
&#13;
office&#13;
&#13;
420 Fifth St.&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
E.G. STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
A few years ago no college man would&#13;
think of wearing "ready mades." They&#13;
lacked individuality. They were stiff.&#13;
They were graceless, They were averaged wrong- that is- a clothing designer&#13;
cut a coat and had to have the same&#13;
lines please a cabbage grower in Chicago&#13;
subarbs and the bank clerk in New&#13;
York. It had to fit a veterinary surgeon&#13;
of thirty and a lawyer at fifty, The&#13;
same coat, mind you, the same size, bear&#13;
in mind. Now, how in the world could&#13;
such clothes possibly be exactly suited to&#13;
any man, the young fellow, the college&#13;
man particularly? Our college style&#13;
clothes don't take into account anybody&#13;
but the college man, the young man or&#13;
men who would like to be young. They&#13;
are built to fit young athletic physiques.&#13;
If the cabbage grower don't like them, if&#13;
they don't suit the veterinary surgeon,&#13;
well and good, they were not made for&#13;
them, If you want to hit the bull's eye&#13;
you must aim at the black spot. You&#13;
can't shoot at more than one target at the&#13;
same time and ring the bell. The designer of our college style clothes aimed&#13;
only at one spot, and his aim was truehe hit the bell,&#13;
COLLEGE STYLE SUITS - $12.50&#13;
$13.50, $15.00, $17.50, 20.00 and $25.00&#13;
&#13;
z&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
z&#13;
z&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
GCOMPANY&#13;
&#13;
E. S. STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
(Incorporated )&#13;
&#13;
z&#13;
&#13;
STRAUB BROTHERS&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
&#13;
1893&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
707 FOURTH STREET&#13;
phone&#13;
&#13;
704-J&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
WM.GORDON&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
&#13;
northwestern Nat'l Bank&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Loans&#13;
Insurance&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $130,000&#13;
Fire Proof Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Interest Paid on Time Deposits&#13;
206&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUILDING&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
207&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable&#13;
Dry Goods House&#13;
T. S. Martin (cf! Co.&#13;
Sioux City. Iowa&#13;
Open Day and Night&#13;
&#13;
Fine Cafe in Connection&#13;
&#13;
THE NEW&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
&#13;
The place to buy&#13;
&#13;
Trunks&#13;
Is where TRUNKS&#13;
are made&#13;
Sample Cases to&#13;
Order&#13;
&#13;
Repairing Done&#13;
WE CAN PLEASE YOU WITH A BAG OR TRUNK&#13;
AT THE RIGHT PRICE&#13;
&#13;
D. S. ANTHONY,&#13;
MAJlo!'UFACTURE.R&#13;
&#13;
LESSENICH &amp; NATION, Props.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fourth and Jones Sts.&#13;
&#13;
413 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Morningside and&#13;
C&#13;
College Dray Line&#13;
Students' Work a Spec:alty&#13;
&#13;
We meet all&#13;
trains. Special rates to&#13;
students ..&#13;
Our Laundry Boy&#13;
&#13;
Clapsaddle vs. Hamren&#13;
&#13;
C. M. FOSBERG, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
"JUMBO"&#13;
&#13;
DOTH PHONES&#13;
&#13;
208&#13;
&#13;
209&#13;
&#13;
WELL KNOWN Pianos&#13;
&#13;
Nineteen Years Under&#13;
Same Management&#13;
&#13;
In calling attention to our line of&#13;
Pianos, we wish to emphasize th e&#13;
fact that we are not offering anything in the way of experiments.&#13;
A. B. Chas'e , Crown, Poole, Haines,&#13;
Doll Inside Player Piano, Werner and Smith &amp; Barnes have been&#13;
before the public for many years.&#13;
their great durability and musical&#13;
excellence have earned world-wide&#13;
reputations for Being str&#13;
grade, standard Pianos. Thousands&#13;
of these splendid instruments are in&#13;
the best homes in Iowa, Nebraska&#13;
and South Dakota, giving the best&#13;
of satisfaction.&#13;
A Word About Our Prices&#13;
We are making ve ry low prices for&#13;
Our&#13;
cash or short time sales.&#13;
Method is cash or short time,&#13;
quick sales, small profits No agents&#13;
commissions. We sell direct from&#13;
factory. Correspondence solicited.&#13;
High Grade Church Organs&#13;
a Specialty. Col umbia, Edison and&#13;
Victor Talking Machines, small&#13;
Musical Goods, Sheet Music. etc.&#13;
Tuning Repairing and Refinishing&#13;
Pianos.&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
The Merchants&#13;
National Bank&#13;
Capital $100,000&#13;
&#13;
Public&#13;
see at least three roads&#13;
before you, viz:&#13;
Day Labor&#13;
College and&#13;
Business&#13;
YOU may reach SUCCESS by any of these&#13;
roads, but the shortest,&#13;
most direct, surest and&#13;
cheapest leads through&#13;
&#13;
The National Business Training School&#13;
OFFICERS &amp; DIRECTORS&#13;
E. W. RICE&#13;
President&#13;
E. B. SPALDING Vice-Pres.&#13;
GEO. P. DAY&#13;
Cashier&#13;
G. N. SWAN . Asst. Cashier&#13;
]. D. SPALDING&#13;
W.B.LOWER&#13;
&#13;
W. A. DEAN CO.&#13;
&#13;
All young people who have selected this road have reached&#13;
SUCCESS, and are now fillin g good situations at salaries ranging from $600.00 to $1 500.00 per year&#13;
If you want a good situation and a Business Education that&#13;
will fit you for a successful life come to this school.&#13;
What we have done for others we will do for YOU.&#13;
A Week's Trial Before Enrolling&#13;
&#13;
N. B. T. School,&#13;
&#13;
309 Nebrask.a St.&#13;
&#13;
315 Fourth St., SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
1885&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
ATTEND THE BEST&#13;
&#13;
1907&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Dayhoff&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp;&#13;
Aronson ....&#13;
&#13;
MORTICIAN&#13;
Lady Assistant&#13;
Open Day and Night&#13;
&#13;
The Old Reliable&#13;
(Form e rly Brown s.)&#13;
&#13;
Business m e n are calling for more&#13;
Warriner graduates.&#13;
Shorthand&#13;
and Bookkee ping will give you a&#13;
splendid Start promote you, and&#13;
help you out a thousa nd times in&#13;
common life .&#13;
Send for information.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. WARRINER, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Phones Auto 247r&#13;
Iowa 71&#13;
&#13;
Tailors and Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
4 1 5 Sixth St.&#13;
&#13;
Carry a Complete L ine of&#13;
Up-to-date&#13;
&#13;
J. M. PINCKNEY, Pres and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Clothing and Furnishing Goods&#13;
At Very Lowest Prices&#13;
&#13;
J. M~ Pickney Co.&#13;
&#13;
Ten Per 1Cent Discount&#13;
to Professors and Students&#13;
of College&#13;
&#13;
Books, Stationery, Blank&#13;
Books and Office Supplies&#13;
Wall Paper, Paints, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
710-712 Fourth Street&#13;
210&#13;
&#13;
6ro Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
211&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2407&#13;
&#13;
Ship Your Live Stock To&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City College of Medicine&#13;
&#13;
Baldwin, Kitselman &amp; Timmel&#13;
&#13;
= == =MEMBER OF THE,= = = =&#13;
&#13;
Association of American Medical Colleges&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
M. W, Baldwin&#13;
D. C. Kitselman&#13;
W, H. T1'mmel&#13;
&#13;
F our Years' G ra d e d Course. Each&#13;
Session Nine Months.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
C. C. Smith&#13;
Mary Dyer&#13;
&#13;
BUYING ORDERS SOLICITED&#13;
&#13;
Students. Twenty-two Professors:Six Instructors.&#13;
&#13;
ROOMS 217 and 219 EXCHANGE BLDG.&#13;
IOWA PHONE 397, AUTO PHONE 1443&#13;
Bank References: Iowa State National Bank, Live Stock National Bank&#13;
Business Reference: "Our Customers"&#13;
&#13;
best Advantages Given to Students.&#13;
S · y U&#13;
d a e M e th o d s Used&#13;
to Impart Knowledge.&#13;
Building and Apparatus Ample.&#13;
Clinical Advantages the BeQ.&#13;
School Opens Monday, Sept. 17th,&#13;
1907.&#13;
Holiday Vacation Begins Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 24, 1907.&#13;
Holiday Vacation Closes Thursday,&#13;
Jan. 2, 1908.&#13;
Session Closes June 4, 1908.&#13;
&#13;
Life Insurance&#13;
At Cost&#13;
Let us show you&#13;
o ur brand new&#13;
&#13;
Renewable Term Policies&#13;
Issued for the first&#13;
time April r907&#13;
&#13;
The BeQ Life Insurance of its&#13;
Kind on the American&#13;
Market Today&#13;
&#13;
For Particulars Write to&#13;
&#13;
DR. J. N. WARREN&#13;
&#13;
DR.F.E.FRANCHERE&#13;
&#13;
Dean&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
H. N. Brothers, M. D.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
212&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Anthony&#13;
&#13;
National Life Insurance Co.&#13;
Montpieler,&#13;
&#13;
Vt.&#13;
&#13;
(Organized 1850)&#13;
&#13;
Address M. J, DILLON, Gen. Mgr.,&#13;
223-4-5 Iowa B ldg., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Office and&#13;
Residence&#13;
&#13;
Peters' Park, Morningside&#13;
Hawkeye Land&#13;
Company&#13;
Real Estate and Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Home Builders&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
Building&#13;
Iowa Phone r99&#13;
Automatic Phone ro99&#13;
&#13;
CLAY, ROBINSON &amp;&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock&#13;
Commission&#13;
Salesmen&#13;
&#13;
College Annuals&#13;
Job Printing&#13;
&#13;
Fully Equipped with Highest Class Salesmen&#13;
and Competent Men in Every Department&#13;
OFFICES A T - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
"&#13;
Chicago, 111.&#13;
&#13;
So.&#13;
&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
Make Your Money&#13;
Work for You&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Steam&#13;
Dye Works&#13;
&#13;
The accumulators of great&#13;
fortunes have only attained&#13;
their wealth by taking advantage of every opportunity for&#13;
saving money and then making the money work for them.&#13;
What others have accomplished is possible for you.&#13;
The first essential is to save.&#13;
BEGIN NOW.&#13;
Every day&#13;
that your savings are with us&#13;
they are working for you.&#13;
&#13;
322 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
J. B. HUMPHREY&#13;
Proprietor&#13;
Special attention given&#13;
to Cleaning and Dyeing&#13;
All Kinds of Clothing.&#13;
French Dry Cleaning&#13;
the Best Process in the&#13;
World.&#13;
Bring Us&#13;
Your Clothing, we will&#13;
do the rest.&#13;
Every&#13;
Garment Turned&#13;
Out Like&#13;
New&#13;
&#13;
We accept accounts of ONE&#13;
DOLLAR or any larger sum.&#13;
p&#13;
n d Interest&#13;
3 % C o m ono uSavings Depaid&#13;
posits&#13;
&#13;
So Omaha Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Numbering ·M achines&#13;
Rubber Stamps&#13;
Stamp Supplies&#13;
Numbering Machine and&#13;
Rubber Stamp Ink&#13;
&#13;
or Time Certificates.&#13;
&#13;
517 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury Co. Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 240&#13;
Automatic 2780&#13;
&#13;
405-407 Nebraska Street&#13;
214&#13;
&#13;
A GIRL'S ROOM&#13;
215&#13;
&#13;
Index of Advertisers&#13;
Barber&#13;
Bridges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . .. 192&#13;
Banks&#13;
First National.. .. .. . . . . . . . .. .. 192&#13;
Merchant's National ............. 210&#13;
Iowa State Savings ....... . ... .. 194&#13;
Northwestern National. .......... 206&#13;
Security National. ........ .. .. .. . 204&#13;
Woodbury County Savings ........ 214&#13;
Book Store&#13;
. ............. 203&#13;
&#13;
R. H . Darling ...&#13;
&#13;
Brick and Tile Works&#13;
Sioux City ............. .. ....... 2C6&#13;
Business Colleges&#13;
National Training School .... . .. 211&#13;
Warriner's .... .... ...... . . .... ... 2l0&#13;
Colleges and Universities&#13;
Sioux City College of Medicine .... 212&#13;
Iowa State University .. . ....... 201&#13;
Commission Firms&#13;
Baldwin. Kitselman &amp; Timmel. ... 213&#13;
Clay, Robinson &amp; Co .. . ..... .... 214&#13;
Clothing Firms&#13;
Dow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 207&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson .&#13;
. ... 2l l&#13;
Moore ....... ...... .. .. . .... .... 196&#13;
Dentists&#13;
Straub Bros.....&#13;
. ...... .... 206&#13;
Westwood ...................... 191&#13;
Doctors&#13;
H. N. Brothers ................... 213&#13;
Dray Lines&#13;
Morningside &amp; College ...... . ... 209&#13;
Drug Stores&#13;
Cummings .. ... . ..... ..... ... .... 203&#13;
Todd-Baker Drug Co ............ 193&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Davidson Bros ............ .. .... 204&#13;
T. S . Martin ................... 208&#13;
Dye Works&#13;
Humphrey's . ..... . . ............. 214&#13;
Engravers&#13;
Baker Bros. . . . . . . . . . . ......... 199&#13;
Electric City..... . . .......... . .. 198&#13;
Furrier&#13;
August Williges ............ . .. . 204&#13;
&#13;
Grocers&#13;
Clements &amp; Co................. .. 191&#13;
M. R. McDonald ... ... ........... 194&#13;
Gun Store&#13;
Phillips . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 193&#13;
Hardware&#13;
Weld Hardware Co .......... .. .. 200&#13;
Forsberg Hardware Co .......... 197&#13;
Singer Hardware Co . . ........... 192&#13;
Hotels&#13;
Chicago ............. .. ......... 208&#13;
Howard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . 196&#13;
Insurance&#13;
National Life Insurance Co........ 213&#13;
Jewelers&#13;
W. H. Beck Co .... . ........&#13;
200&#13;
Livery&#13;
Morningside. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197&#13;
Lumber&#13;
Morningside Lumber Co .... .. ... 193&#13;
Queal Lumber Co ................ 203&#13;
Mortician&#13;
Dayhoff, W. H .................... 211&#13;
Photo Supplies&#13;
R. W. Phelps ... .. .............. . 202&#13;
Zimmerman Bros ................ 195&#13;
Pantorium&#13;
Robbins ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Genelli .................. ........ 199&#13;
Wilcox ......... . ......... . ...... 190&#13;
Youngberg. . . . .. .. . ............ 194&#13;
Pianos&#13;
W. A. Dean Co ....... .. .......... 210&#13;
Schmoller &amp; Mueller ... . . ........ 192&#13;
Printers&#13;
College Printery ..... ... . ....... . 196'&#13;
Star Printing Co........... . . . ... 215&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Wm. Gordon ..................... 207&#13;
Hawkeye Land Co ............... 213&#13;
Hook. . . . . . . . . .................. 191&#13;
Shoes&#13;
. C onv e ry &amp; Seney .. ..... ... . .. .. 205&#13;
trunks&#13;
D. S. Anthony. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209&#13;
Wall Paper, Paints, Books and&#13;
School Supplies&#13;
J. M. Pinckney Co ........ .. .... . . 211&#13;
&#13;
Mr.&#13;
&#13;
A. H. SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
2900 Jennings Street&#13;
Sioux City 4, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Doolittle&#13;
Johnston&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Denkman&#13;
Fosberg&#13;
Belt&#13;
Hall&#13;
Burton&#13;
Squires&#13;
Berkstresser&#13;
Burton&#13;
Blood&#13;
Goodchild&#13;
Leland&#13;
Fallein&#13;
Fitz&#13;
Whealen&#13;
Bass&#13;
Brown&#13;
Engle&#13;
Wiseman&#13;
Swem&#13;
Rogers&#13;
Welch&#13;
Chapman&#13;
Sloan&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Jordan&#13;
Lockin&#13;
Magoun&#13;
McConkey&#13;
Glanzman&#13;
Mahood&#13;
Bloom&#13;
Dudley&#13;
Shull&#13;
Whisman&#13;
Stiles&#13;
Phelps&#13;
Rodine&#13;
McConkey&#13;
Drake&#13;
Gray&#13;
Wendel&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Hook&#13;
Murray&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Miller&#13;
Rorem&#13;
P. Brown&#13;
Brooks&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Correll&#13;
Fry&#13;
Day&#13;
Collins&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Ewer&#13;
Clare D. Horner&#13;
Frank B. Heilman&#13;
Grace Evelyn Rorem&#13;
Charles Avery Richards&#13;
Clair J. Westcott&#13;
Mabel Chamberlain&#13;
Julia Alice Royce&#13;
Florence Clark&#13;
Horace Ensign Groom&#13;
Olivia Helen Wilson&#13;
Blanch Viola Watts&#13;
T.C. Anderson&#13;
E.J. Winterstein&#13;
Blanche Bennett Johns&#13;
Louie Mirah Mills&#13;
Albert A. Hartzell&#13;
John G. Waterman&#13;
Ethel Jane Haskins&#13;
Maude Fair&#13;
H. J. Richards&#13;
Lura Grace Matteson&#13;
Wilson Seeley Lewis, A.M., D.D.&#13;
Herbert Grant Campbell, A.M.&#13;
Margaret Gay Dolliver, A. B.&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt, A. M.&#13;
Helen Isabella Loveland, A. B.&#13;
Frank Harmon Garver, A. B.&#13;
Reynard Greynald, A.M.&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes, Ph. D.&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown, A. M.&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener, A. M,&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes, Ph. D.&#13;
Agnes Beveridge Ferguson, Sc. M.&#13;
Robert Van Horne, Ph. B.&#13;
Judson Waldo Mather&#13;
Gertrude F. Mather&#13;
Clara Booth Davidson&#13;
Millard Fillmore McDowell, Sc. B.&#13;
John Lorenzo Griffith, A. B.&#13;
Wilfred Welday Scott, A. M.&#13;
Thomas Calderwood Stephens, A. B., M. D.&#13;
Ida Nolan Reynolds&#13;
Faith Foster Woodford&#13;
Birdie Laura Bunting&#13;
Pearl Alice Woodford, Ph. B.&#13;
Florence Louise Wiley, Mus. B.&#13;
Katherine Ellen Nurse&#13;
H. E. Reister&#13;
Elsie Kilborne&#13;
Martha Macdonald&#13;
Clarence G. Manning&#13;
Earl J. Fry&#13;
Horace E. Groom&#13;
E. A. Bennett&#13;
W. H. Lease&#13;
Jay Whitaker&#13;
Mable Chamberlain&#13;
Faith Woodford&#13;
Mable Towner&#13;
G. A. Tumbleson&#13;
Corwin Taylor&#13;
J. C. Bass&#13;
H. N. Staples&#13;
S. B. Collins&#13;
Ella Dickson&#13;
Cora Frear&#13;
D. Ford Robbins&#13;
J. R. Tumbleson&#13;
Nellie A. Taylor&#13;
Chester N. Rissler&#13;
Henry Taylor&#13;
Genevieve Howard&#13;
Leonie M. De Lay&#13;
Alice Cole&#13;
H. E. Jones&#13;
P. E. Fredendoll&#13;
W. Vance McCay&#13;
Glenn M. Squires&#13;
R. C. Nichols&#13;
Florence Davidson&#13;
Mabel E. Haskins&#13;
</text>
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&#13;
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                <text>Beckmann, Danielle: Cataloger</text>
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                    <text>The Sioux&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF&#13;
&#13;
1919&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT M . PRICHARD&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
The annual year book of Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
I. HART&#13;
&#13;
published by the Junior Class&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Volume Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�1.&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
6.&#13;
7.&#13;
&#13;
THE CAMP&#13;
THE OFFICERS&#13;
THE SOLDIERS&#13;
THE ARTILLERY&#13;
THE BALLOON CORPS&#13;
CAMP LIFE&#13;
A SOLDIER'S DIARY&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
To those students, alumni&#13;
and former students of&#13;
Morningside College who&#13;
are now offering their lives&#13;
in the active service of our&#13;
country to restore justice,&#13;
democracy and peace to the&#13;
world, this book is humbly&#13;
and respectfully dedicated&#13;
by the class of Nineteen&#13;
Nineteen.&#13;
&#13;
IN MEMORY OF ALBERT E. BEHMER&#13;
&#13;
WHO SO WILLINGLY GAVE UP&#13;
HIS LIFE FOR THE CAUSE&#13;
OF HUMANITY&#13;
&#13;
�A&#13;
&#13;
ANOTHER year has passed&#13;
and the cycle of months&#13;
has witnessed our country engaged in a struggle of momentuous import to all the world. To&#13;
give a picture of Morningside College, during this, our first year in&#13;
the war- to put into some permanent form the record of our work,&#13;
our activities and our organizations, this has been the opportunity and the purpose of this Sioux.&#13;
Our thoughts, our plannings, and&#13;
our efforts have gone into it. We&#13;
leave it in your hands-for your&#13;
criticism, for your approval.&#13;
&#13;
�THE CAMPUS&#13;
&#13;
�A&#13;
&#13;
Review&#13;
&#13;
of the Year&#13;
&#13;
(By Pres. A. E. Craig)&#13;
&#13;
The state of war in which our country finds itself has dominated the&#13;
life of all our Colleges during the year 1917-1918. A large number of our&#13;
men, especially of the upper classes, have responded to their country's call&#13;
for service. This has had its depressing effect, nevertheless the attendance&#13;
of Morningside College has been maintained at our unusually high level.&#13;
Our loss in the Collegiate Department has been only about 5 per cent.&#13;
When we learn that the average loss of Colleges in our section of the country has been over 17 per cent we have reason for congratulation. Our&#13;
Freshman class was the largest in the history of the College.&#13;
The cultivation of a warm and yet discriminating patriotism has been&#13;
one of the foremost purposes of the College. To this end addresses by rep·&#13;
resentative men have been given at the Chapel almost weekly. Classes in&#13;
the study of patriotism were organized among both the students and faculty. These classes enrolled more than 75 per cent of the College and produced very satisfactory results. Classes in First Aid, Nursing and Food&#13;
Conservation were organized and did much systematic work.&#13;
In spite of the war activities, College life proceeded much as usual.&#13;
Morningside enjoyed the most successful year in athletics in its history.&#13;
The game with Notre Dame drew large attention, while the defeat of South&#13;
Dakota University our historic rival, was an event of great interest. In&#13;
Forensics, we captured first place in the State Prohibition contest and second in the State Oratorical. While no especial activity in financial matters&#13;
has been put forth it should not be concluded that the College is at a standstill. It is laying its plans for the greatest "drive" in its career. A campaign for $750,000 was launched at the meeting of the Board of Trustees in&#13;
May. Towards this amount the General Education Board has contributed&#13;
$150,000. This is perhaps the largest sum that Board has contributed at&#13;
one time to an institution the size of Morningside. It is planned to com·&#13;
plete this campaign in the summer of 1919.&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
MAIN HALL&#13;
&#13;
Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�Athletics&#13;
(By J.M. Saunderson)&#13;
&#13;
This is an age when all expenditures of time and money are weighed in&#13;
the public mind and the non-vital placed under the ban. War time causes&#13;
us to discard the non-essential. I believe in the great value of athletics in&#13;
the life of the individual and the nation. I believe every boy and every&#13;
girl has a right to a good constitution. If they have not been blessed with&#13;
such by birth it is the duty of our educational system to give every one a&#13;
chance to acquire strong bodies. This doctrine is now so nearly universally&#13;
accepted that most Colleges furnish such facilities. Athletic glory must&#13;
never be put ahead of good health for athletics are good just so far as they&#13;
tend toward physical efficiency. Athletic sports have a peculiar value to&#13;
the young. We are apt to forget the value, in modern life, of the quick&#13;
eye, the steady nerve, and the firm hand. Athletics are the best possible&#13;
training for these qualities, perhaps more valuable today than they ever&#13;
were. The rules and ethics of competition present a constant opportunity to&#13;
fill the receptive mind of the boy with high ideals. The playing field is a&#13;
great training ground for youthful manners and morals. The boy's ideals&#13;
of fair play and sportsmanlike conduct learned here will be carried later&#13;
into business life.&#13;
Today, in our National Army Camps, athletic games are being used to&#13;
promote physical fitness. The war department has created a Department of&#13;
of Athletics in the Army. National officials, including President Wilson,&#13;
have given their endorsement to war time athletics in the Colleges, both because of the benefit to the public morale, and because participation in sports&#13;
has a real value in preparing our young men to do, when their time comes&#13;
their part in this great conflict.&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�Religious Activities&#13;
(By Vice Pres. W. C. Hilmer)&#13;
The denominational or Christian College has only one real excuse for&#13;
its existence: Christian education. State and private institutions generally&#13;
furnish all possible advantages in scholastic and social ways, but do not, as&#13;
a rule, particularly emphasize the Spiritual Life. This is the definite mission of the Church school; not at the expense of scholarship and social&#13;
standing, however, but rather coupled with these, so as to develop the character harmoniously and symmetrically into broad and intelligent Christian manhood and womanhood. It is a well recognized fact that man's&#13;
relationship to his God must be taken into account as a very important factor in determining the governing ideals for time and eternity.&#13;
Morningside College has not lost sight of its duty and privilege. For,&#13;
as the Christian ideals in education were uppermost in the minds of its&#13;
founders, so to this day these ideals are cherished by every true . Morningsider. The Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. are important organizations&#13;
in working out these College ideals. The weekly devotional meetings, led&#13;
by students, faculty members, or visiting friends, are often moments of&#13;
real profit and inspiration. The Bible study classes, conducted by these organizations, have contributed largely toward clarifying minds and inspiring&#13;
faith in the Holy Scriptures. Early in February, Dr. Ream, of the Methodist Board of Education, conducted a four days' special meeting for the&#13;
College men; while Miss Ludgate, pastor and evangelist, conducted similar&#13;
meetings for the College women. Immediately thereafter the Evangelists,&#13;
Mathis and Vessey, conducted a series of revival services in Grace Church.&#13;
The permanent results of such special efforts, together with the regular&#13;
and daily influences, can scarcely be estimated. But the fact that our&#13;
young people have been brought face to face with life's largest issues,&#13;
stands to the credit of any Christian College.&#13;
Morningside regularly has a representative delegation at the students'&#13;
conference at Geneva. The leavening effect of the Geneva delegates upon&#13;
the student body is practically perpetual. Our own City Missions furnish&#13;
splendid opportunities to young people directly interested in religious work.&#13;
Here they find real life problems and may lend-a-hand in solving them.&#13;
Last, but not least, I would mention Grace Church, the "College Church."&#13;
The splendid music, the helpful sermons, the spirit of devotion, the inspiring League meetings, the Sunday School, with its youthful cheer and&#13;
life, are not easily forgotten by any one who has formed even a slight acquaintance at Morningside. 0 Morningside, hail to Thee and Thy Spirit!&#13;
May it never die!&#13;
&#13;
Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
GRACE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�The Conservatory of Music&#13;
(By Director Paul McCollins)&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory of Music at Morningside will begin its 25th year in&#13;
the fall of 1918. During this period it has grown from a small department&#13;
of the College to a large and well organized school of the art of music,&#13;
with departments for the study of pianoforte, singing, pipe organ, violin,&#13;
orchestral and band instruments, history of music, musical appreciation,&#13;
public school music, normal methods, harmony, counterpoint and composition. It is recognized throughout a large part of the Middle West as a&#13;
thoroughly modern, progressive school of music and of equal rank in point&#13;
of attendance and standards with any institution of its kind.&#13;
The position of a Conservatory of Music in connection with a College&#13;
of Liberal Arts is a logical one. Here is provided the inspiration of numbers, systematically planned courses of study, literary and social advantages&#13;
-all of which tend to promote a broad and thorough rather than a one-sided&#13;
development of the musical faculties.&#13;
The fact that nearly all Colleges include the study of music as an elective subject in the regular curriculum is evidence of the increased recognition which the art is gaining. No longer is music considered for its cultural&#13;
value alone, but also for its practical value in the home, the Church, in social&#13;
life, and at this time of national crisis, for its powerful influence in creating&#13;
patriotic sentiment. The well trained and competent musician of today has&#13;
a wonderful opportunity at hand for it is generally recognized that music of&#13;
the right sort, as much as any other factor, is going to keep up the morale&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
that will win the war.&#13;
Morningside Conservatory aims to extend the influence of the art of&#13;
music not only to its own students, but to the student body at large and the&#13;
entire community surrounding it. With exceptionally fine equipment and&#13;
a corps of loyal and efficient teachers who give their entire time to the&#13;
work of the school the Conservatory looks forward to enlarged opportunities&#13;
and a greater usefulness in the future.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-One&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Two&#13;
&#13;
�OUR PRESIDENT&#13;
Alfred E. Craig&#13;
To whom is due in large measure the posit ion&#13;
that Morningside holds among t he Colleges of&#13;
t he country.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�(1) William Charles Hilmer-Master of Arts, Baldwin Wallace College,&#13;
&#13;
Vice President, Registrar, Professor of German Literature.&#13;
(2) Lillian English Dimitt-Master of Arts, Columbia U., Dean of Women,&#13;
Professor of Ancient Languages.&#13;
(3) Ephenor Adrastus Brown-Master of Arts, Columbia U., Director of&#13;
Summer School, Professor of Education.&#13;
&#13;
(1) Arthur Henry Hirsch-Doctor of Philosophy, Chicago U., Professor of&#13;
&#13;
History and Politics.&#13;
(2) *Agnes Beveridge Ferguson-Master of Arts, Columbia U., Professor&#13;
of German Language.&#13;
(3) Charles Almer Marsh-Bachelor of Science, New Lynne Institute, Principle of Academy, Professor of Public Speaking.&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Six&#13;
&#13;
(1) James Juvenal Hayes-Master of Arts, Harvard, Professor of English.&#13;
(2) Helen Isabelle Loveland-Bachelor of Arts, Smith College Professor&#13;
&#13;
of English.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
(3) Frederick Schaub-Doctor of Divinity, Central Wesleyan College, Pro-&#13;
&#13;
fessor of Biblical and Religious Literature.&#13;
&#13;
(1) *Henry Frederick Kantlehner-Master of Arts, Harvard Professor of&#13;
Romance Languages.&#13;
(2) F. Otto Barz-Financial Secretary.&#13;
(3) *Herbert Grant Campbell-Master of Arts, Columbia, Professor of&#13;
Philosophy.&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�(1) Salome Luechauer-Bachelor of Arts, Oberlin College, Director of Phy-&#13;
&#13;
sical Training for Women.&#13;
Jason McCollough Saunderson-Bachelor of Arts, Albion College, Pro(2)&#13;
fessor of Physical Education.&#13;
(3) Mabel Elizabeth Brown-Graduate, Columbia College of Expression, Instructor of Expression.&#13;
&#13;
(1) Harold Ryder Harvey-Musical B, Oberlin College, Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
and Theory.&#13;
(2) Helen W. Lund-Graduate New England Conservatory, Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte and Normal Course in Piano.&#13;
(3) Merle Raymond Thompson-Doctor of Philosophy, Iowa U., Acting&#13;
Professor of Economics and Sociology.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
(1) Laura C. Fischer-Master of Arts, Carleton College, Assistant Profes-&#13;
&#13;
sor of Ancient Languages.&#13;
(2) Callie May Bliss-Bachelor of Science, Iowa State College, Professor of&#13;
&#13;
Home Economics.&#13;
(3) Faith Foster Woodford-Bachelor of Arts, Morningside, Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte.&#13;
&#13;
(1) Jessie H. Jackson-Student Chicago U., Librarian.&#13;
(2) Delmar Clair Cooper, Bachelor of Arts, Morningside, Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
Mathematics and Science.&#13;
(3) Elizabeth Newton MacCollin-Musical B, Oberlin College, Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�f&#13;
&#13;
(1) Paul MacCollin-Bachelor of Arts, Oberlin College, Acting Director of&#13;
Conservatory, Instructor in Voice Culture.&#13;
(2) Robert Negley Van Horne-Bachelor of Philosophy, Morningside, Professor of Mathematics.&#13;
&#13;
Olaf&#13;
&#13;
Hovda-Doctor&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Cecilia C. Stenger- Bachelor of Arts,&#13;
&#13;
Philosophy,&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Goettinger U., Secretary of the FacS.&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Calderwood Stephens-Doctor&#13;
&#13;
Professor&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Steinbrenner-Master&#13;
&#13;
of Arts,&#13;
&#13;
Charles City College, Assistant Pro-&#13;
&#13;
of Medicine, Kansas U ., Professor of _&#13;
&#13;
fessor of Romance Languages.&#13;
James Reistrup- Instructor in Piano-&#13;
&#13;
James Austin Coss- Master of Science,&#13;
Illinois U., Professor of Chemistry.&#13;
&#13;
Acting&#13;
&#13;
French.&#13;
&#13;
ulty, Professor of Physics.&#13;
&#13;
Biology.&#13;
&#13;
U.,&#13;
&#13;
forte.&#13;
Mildred Chesbro Brown-Bachelor of&#13;
Arts, Morningside, Instructor in Eng-&#13;
&#13;
*Ossie Garfield Jones- Bachelor of Science, Ohio Wesleyan, Professor of&#13;
&#13;
lish.&#13;
&#13;
Economics.&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
�Thirty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Ida Julia Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Andy is a good scout. For four&#13;
years she has toiled tirelessly, making a record worthy of being proud&#13;
of. Her strongest foil is her ability to&#13;
pull down these much desired "A"&#13;
grades that we hear so much about.&#13;
The Class of '18 are indeed fortunate&#13;
in having her among their number.&#13;
George Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Othonian President, Pi Kappa Delta,&#13;
Editor of Reporter '18, Editor of&#13;
Sioux '18.&#13;
From the foregoing one can readily&#13;
see that Earl is one of the best and&#13;
busiest seniors. Aside from his official duties he also finds time and inclination for the more frivolous side&#13;
of life.&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Orin Westly Bell&#13;
Philomathian, Student Council, Y.&#13;
M. C. A. President. Another shining&#13;
light of the Class of '18 is Orin. He is&#13;
quiet and modest, but exceedingly interesting and capable.&#13;
&#13;
Vivian Lucile Down&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, Madrigal Club, Sioux&#13;
'18 Board, President Y. W. C. A. '18.&#13;
"Viv" can truly be called one of the&#13;
most conscientious and capable girls&#13;
of our school. She excells in her&#13;
classes, stands high in her Society, is&#13;
enthusiastic in our social activities&#13;
and is loved and respected by all who&#13;
know her.&#13;
Cora Dutton&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Since "Dick" has gone, Cora has&#13;
turned with renewed energy to her&#13;
college work, attacking her studies&#13;
with untiring strength, and working&#13;
with great ability in Oratory and in&#13;
her place as a Student Volunteer.&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria Treasurer, Agora Board, Inter-Society&#13;
Committee,&#13;
Madrigal&#13;
Club, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Ruth finished her school work early in order&#13;
to take her place as Miss Dolliver's&#13;
Secretary while she is in France. We&#13;
envy her opportunity for new experiences and her chance to be really helpful in this Great World War.&#13;
Willis Floyd Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
Mabel Clare Day&#13;
Vice President Zetaletheans, Reporter Staff Agora Board, Basketball,&#13;
Hockey. 'Mabel wears an Ionian pin&#13;
and is specializing in Domestic Science. Of course we don't mean to say&#13;
that there is any connection, but one&#13;
can never be sure.&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Vice President Ionians, Pi Kappa&#13;
Delta, Editor in Chief of Collegian Reporter '17. Bill is a distinguished&#13;
newspaper man. He got his start by&#13;
having a hunch all by himself that he&#13;
was good, and now he has succeeded&#13;
in convincing everyone else of his ability-as that was not hard to do. At&#13;
present he holds down a position on&#13;
the "Journal" and produces some of&#13;
the rarest stories known to civilization.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Four&#13;
Thirty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Archie L. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
College Orchestra, Collegian Reporter Staff, Leader of College Band '18,&#13;
Philomathian. From the top of his&#13;
head to the soles of his feet-which is&#13;
some distance, believe me-Archie is&#13;
musical ability personified. Since his&#13;
coming, musical affairs have taken a&#13;
new lease on life, for he is always behind them with his ability and enthusiasm.&#13;
Agnes M. Fry&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, Agora Board, Basketball, Vice President of Senior Class, Pi&#13;
Kappa Delta. Agnes is a decided&#13;
booster for her college. Ever since&#13;
her first year she has done her part&#13;
in trying to make it come up to her&#13;
idea of it as the best school on earth.&#13;
With no small ability she makes toward this end.&#13;
Charles D. Fry&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Merrill&#13;
Milton G. Irwin&#13;
Othonian, Biology Assistant, Student and Stepper extraordinary. As&#13;
far as Milton is concerned every day&#13;
life this year is a dreary waste for&#13;
him, for the star of his sky, the dream&#13;
of his life, the ideal of his heart is&#13;
gone. A little ray of hope, however,&#13;
gleams in the fact that said Ideal&#13;
wore an Otho pin away with herand that may sustain him in his present situation.&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
Goldia C. Jackson&#13;
Chairman of World Fellowship&#13;
Committee Y. W. C. A., Member Prohibition League, Basketball. Goldia&#13;
is a hustler. Her special line is the&#13;
Y. W., where her cordial spirit and&#13;
Christian enthusiasm win many girls&#13;
to the better things of life. She is a&#13;
c'ear thinker, a quick actor, and a brilliant student.&#13;
Leon Julius Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
Othonian President '17, President&#13;
of Class '17, Sioux '18 Board, Glee&#13;
Club '18, Band, Student Body President '18. "Chic" is in direct line for&#13;
distinguished service in the world-if&#13;
his career in college is anything to go&#13;
by. As any one can see his specialty&#13;
is being President of something, so&#13;
we may yet live to see him ruling&#13;
these United States with his ·iron&#13;
hand.&#13;
&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Cleo Dulcia Holmes&#13;
President Athenaeums, Vice President Agora Club, Inter-Society Committee, Madrigal Club, Treasurer Y.&#13;
W. C. A. Cleo is of the practical, capable type which is best suited for&#13;
this practical life of ours. She never&#13;
starts anything that she can't finish,&#13;
and her finished products proclaim&#13;
her a most talented girl.&#13;
&#13;
Vice President and President Pierias, Agora Board, Forensic Chairman, Collegian Reporter Staff, Y. W.&#13;
C. A. Treasurer '16, Pi Kappa Delta.&#13;
When "Johnny" goes there will be&#13;
less in the hearts of many of us-a&#13;
gap which cannot be filled by anyone.&#13;
She is perhaps the truest friend and&#13;
most congenial companion we have.&#13;
Her going will be keenly felt by everyone.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian, Varsity Baseball,&#13;
Basketball, Track and Football, AllIowa Football, "M" Club President,&#13;
'16, Business Manager Reporter '18,&#13;
Sioux '18 Board. Jerry is verily the&#13;
versatile kid. Perhaps he is strongest in Athletics, but we also find&#13;
traces of him in many other activities, particularly in "Fussing."&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Frances Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean President, President&#13;
Madrigal Club '18, Agora Board, Student Councll. "Fran" came all the way&#13;
from Illinois just to come to Morninghelp but say that she showed most&#13;
side and in view of that fact, we can't&#13;
excellent taste. And now that she's&#13;
here we too, can show most excellent&#13;
taste in our vast appreciation of her&#13;
remar kability.&#13;
Lloyd D. Lehan&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Secretary and President Ionians,&#13;
Basketball, Tennis Champion, President of Tennis Association, Biology&#13;
Assistant. "Skinny" made such tracks&#13;
while here in College that he was able&#13;
to acquire the regular number of credits by the end of the first semester of&#13;
this year. How did you do it, Skinny?&#13;
We know your failing for "Fussing."&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria President, Sioux '18 Board,&#13;
Agora Board, Secretary and Treasurer of Seniors, President of Red&#13;
Cross Committee. This year Clara&#13;
has certainly had her capable hands&#13;
full in engineering the Red Cross&#13;
work that the girls have taken up.&#13;
We recommend her for the untiring&#13;
effort and great ability she has&#13;
shown.&#13;
Arthur Preston Locke&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer Othonians, President Chemistry&#13;
Club Assistant in Chemistry. Art is&#13;
a most brilliant student. A little study&#13;
makes him master of most things&#13;
that others have to dig for. His success is due to his clear thinking and&#13;
his enthusiasm for his work.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian President '18, President of Class of '18, Vice President&#13;
Y. M. C. A., Assistant Yell Leader,&#13;
Sioux '18 Board, Inter-Society and Inter-Collegiate Debate. Rusty is always cheerful and is ever ready to&#13;
help a friend in trouble. Indeed, he 1s&#13;
such a helpful little soul that he has&#13;
been given the entire charge of the&#13;
innocent Freshmen. It can truly be&#13;
said of him that he discharges his&#13;
duties with thoroughness if not with&#13;
compassion.&#13;
Thomas H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
Hubbard&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian President '18, Secretary and Treasurer Y. M. C. A., Prohibition League. Tom's irish smile&#13;
and winsome way have won great victories for him in the past and his latest conquest fell an easy victim to his&#13;
wiles (she being an unsuspectmg&#13;
Freshman) and now they are both&#13;
"very happy!"&#13;
Alice S. Miller&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Holding the record for efficiency&#13;
and power of study is Alice, who is a&#13;
recent aquisition to the Class of '18.&#13;
For her the joy of life lies in a lesson&#13;
well learned and a task well done. She&#13;
is a credit to her Class and a valuable&#13;
asset to her College.&#13;
Esther P. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
President Zetaletheans, Reporter&#13;
Staff, Agora Board, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Basketball. Esther is a cheery&#13;
individual who doesn't care a bit&#13;
about dividing her light heartedness&#13;
with those around her. It's an impossibility for "the glooms" to get you&#13;
when she is about, for she is nothing&#13;
less than the original little sunbeam&#13;
herself.&#13;
&#13;
Thirt y-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
Belmont&#13;
&#13;
Clarence J. Obrecht&#13;
Othonian, President of "M" Club,&#13;
Varsity Baseball, Student Council,&#13;
College Band, Debate, Glee Club, Yell&#13;
Leader '18. Buster is our boaster. As&#13;
a yell leader he is a howling success&#13;
to say the least, as a baseball player h e&#13;
is a sure hit, and as Glee Club warbler&#13;
and a cornetest he has no equal. Buster's world is a lively one.&#13;
Elma Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, President of Inter-Society Committee '18, Member of Y. W.&#13;
C. A. Cabinet. Sincere and conscientious in all her dealings with her fellow students is Elma. She is a friend&#13;
to every one and proves her friendship by her whole hearted sympathy&#13;
and general attitude of helpfulness toward those who need her.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Mildred L. Pecaut&#13;
Zetalethean, Secretary of Agora&#13;
Board, Sioux '18 Board, Basketball,&#13;
Expression. Mildred is a clever and&#13;
original girl. Her ideas, and they are&#13;
many, bear a stamp all t heir own. Her&#13;
aid is eagerly solicited by her society&#13;
and her Class in their affairs, and&#13;
when she helps the affair is an assured success.&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Riddle&#13;
Onawa&#13;
"Happy" is one of those persons&#13;
most fortunate in having a sunbeam&#13;
for a soul. Anywhere and at any t ime&#13;
she is just her happy, merry self. For&#13;
t his we all like her, and those who&#13;
know her best can recognize a deeper&#13;
something which makes them love&#13;
her. She is a member of the Pieria&#13;
girls and is greatly loved and appreciated by them.&#13;
Grace Ruskell&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
On the surface one is inclined to regard Grace as being a very quiet, demure young person, but in reality she&#13;
is just t he reverse. She is a lively and&#13;
congenial companion among friends,&#13;
contributing much to the fun in a&#13;
crowd. She was t he Athenaeum President this year, and fulfilled her position with all t he ability and dignity&#13;
due it.&#13;
Lida L. Saunders&#13;
&#13;
Manilla&#13;
President Zetaletheans '17, Student&#13;
Council, Agora Board, Sioux '18, Collegian Reporter Staff '18. Lida is one&#13;
of our most charming Senior girls,&#13;
for, added to her natural good nature,&#13;
sh e is so terrifically good looking that&#13;
t he combination is irresistable. Is it&#13;
any wonder that Jim has surrendered&#13;
completely?&#13;
Merlin L. Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
Howard Reyman&#13;
Howard is another of those capable&#13;
Othos who combine a true and sincere spirit with a noble and talented&#13;
mind. His major is Philosophy which&#13;
proves the depths of his thinking.&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, Mandolin Orchestra,&#13;
Class Basketball. In answer to the cry&#13;
for cooks Merlin has enlisted her services in the field of Domestic Science.&#13;
She is a most capable manager and a&#13;
wonder with eat s. So it is safe to say&#13;
she surely has not missed her calling.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-One&#13;
&#13;
�Claire I. Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
Secretary and President of Othos,&#13;
Sioux '18 Board, Reporter Staff, Class&#13;
Basketball. "Deak" is decidedly distinguished as one of the most popular&#13;
Seniors. He holds this place because&#13;
of his easy wit and his natural good&#13;
humor. He is also a regular cyclone&#13;
among the ladies, breaking hearts to&#13;
right and left in that fair sex.&#13;
Ruth C. Smith&#13;
&#13;
Arthur&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Treasurer '16, Class&#13;
Secretary '15, Student Council, President of Agora Club '18. One of Ruth's&#13;
chief charms is her ability to talk&#13;
easily and well. She is an expression&#13;
student of noted ability and an after&#13;
dinner speaker of great brilliancy.&#13;
&#13;
Alice Helen Swan&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Alice is a girl of great ability. In&#13;
every thing she attempts she excells.&#13;
Her faithfulness on committees is a&#13;
recognized fact . She is a hard worker and a generous helper, a constant&#13;
source of delight and inspiration to&#13;
her friends.&#13;
Harold Walker&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Philomathian,&#13;
Track&#13;
Captain,&#13;
Drake Relay Team, Student Council,&#13;
President of Class in '16. Hitherto&#13;
Harold has ever been regarded as a&#13;
trifler, but this year he has concentrated his efforts until he is about to&#13;
wipe out his dark past. Of course she&#13;
is a Freshman, and that is true to&#13;
form, but his utter absence from promiscuous fussing is quite unfathomable.&#13;
Frances Neff Whetmore&#13;
&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
&#13;
Clear Lake&#13;
Secretary and President of Ionians,&#13;
Inter-Society and Inter-Collegiate Debate, Oratory. Perhaps the thing that&#13;
Lee loves best to . o after debating is&#13;
d&#13;
appearing in a play or in stunts. His&#13;
superior ability along this line easily&#13;
shows us why.&#13;
Earl G. Stonebrook&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
Philomathian President, Vice President Seniors, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Reporter Staff, Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
Stoney is another one of our constant&#13;
steppers. For three years he has been&#13;
fidelity personified, remaining true to&#13;
Grace through every trial and tribulation.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Vice President and President Atheneums, Madrigal Club, Agora Board.&#13;
Frankie has the happy faculty of combining study and fun. We don't see&#13;
how she does it, but with the least&#13;
apparent effort she makes an envyable record in her work and enjoys&#13;
herself at t he same time. She has&#13;
been a member of the Madrigal Club&#13;
smce her Freshman days, and is a&#13;
warbler of some merit.&#13;
Sue M. Wormley&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
A girl of moods is Sue. At times&#13;
she is sunny and at other times she is&#13;
sad,at times she is happy and at other times-mad, but whatever mood&#13;
she is in she is still the same clever&#13;
Sue. She is a member of the Zetalethean Society and is well liked by all&#13;
her friends.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Senior Class Roll&#13;
ANDERSON, IDA JULIA------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BARKS, GEORGE EARL -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BELL, ORIN WESLEY ----- --- -------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
CARPENTER, MRS. LESLIE------------------------------------ ---Sioux City.&#13;
CHRIST, JAY FINLEY ----- --- ---- ---- ------- --- ----- ----- -- --- - Chicago, Ill.&#13;
DAY, MABEL CLARE -- --- --- -- ---------- -- - - - -- --- --- - - - ---- - -Gilmore City&#13;
DOWN, VIVIAN LUCILE-------------------------------- - - --------Sioux City&#13;
DUTTON, CORA TAYLOR ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
FORBES, WILLIS FLOYD -----------------·-----------------------Sioux City&#13;
FOUKE, RUTH __________________________________________________ Sioux City&#13;
FREEMAN, ARCHIE L. --------------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
FRY, AGNES M. ------ -- -------- ------ ---- ----- --- --------------Hawarden&#13;
FRY CHARLES D. ----------------------- - --------------- ------ -- Sioux City&#13;
HOLMES, CLEO DULCIE ________ ________ ______ _____ _ __ ______ ___ __ Sioux City&#13;
IRWIN, MILTON G. ----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JACKSON, CLARA GOLDIA ________________________________________ Kingsley&#13;
JOHNSON, LEON JULIUS ---------------------------------------Lynn Grove&#13;
JOHNSON, MARION - --- ---------- -- ---------------- -- -------- --Storm Lake&#13;
KENYON, MRS. CLYDE ------'-------------------------------- -- -- Sioux City&#13;
KOLP, SARAH FRANCES _ ____________________________ __ ____ Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
LANCASTER, HAROLD ______________ ___ _________ Natland, Westmorland, Eng.&#13;
LEHAN, LLOYD D. - ---------------------- - ----------------------Sioux City&#13;
LEWIS, CLARA _____ -------- ____________ - - - - - - - - -- ---- - --- - - - - - Sioux City&#13;
LOCKE, ARTHUR PRESTON -------------------------------------Fort Dodge&#13;
McBRIDE, ROBERT HOLMES -----------------------------------------Alden&#13;
McBRIDE, THOMAS HALE ---- --- --- -- --- --------- - - -- ----- --- -- ---Hubbard&#13;
MILLER, ALICE SHEPPARD -------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
MONTGOMERY, ESTHER P. -- ------------ ---- -------- -- ---------- Sioux City&#13;
OBRECHT, CLARENCE J. ------- ----------------------------------Belmond&#13;
PARKINSON, ELMA D. ---------------------- -- --------- -- ---- - --Lake V i ew&#13;
PECAUT, MILDRED LUCILE ----------------------------------- ---Sioux City&#13;
REYMAN, HOWARD ALVIN ____________ _ ____________________________ LeMars&#13;
RIDDLE, GLADYS ----------------------------------------------- --Onawa&#13;
RUSKELL, GRACE ----- -- - ---- --- ---- -- ----------- ------ - --- --- -Sioux City&#13;
SAUNDERS, LIDA HAZEL -------- - __ _________ .___ __ _ ______ ___ _______ Manilla&#13;
SAWYER, MERLIN LULA ---------- ------ ---------------- --------Sioux Ci ty&#13;
SHERWOOD, CLAIR IVAN --- -- --- -- ------------- ----- ------------Belmond&#13;
SMITH, RUTH CLAIRE -------- -- --------------------- ----- ---------Art hur&#13;
SOLTOW, LEE ------------------------ -- -----------------------Clear Lake&#13;
STONEBROOK, EARL GRANT --- ---- - --- --- ------------- --- --------Sac City&#13;
SWAN, ALICE HELEN __ ___ -- - ___ -·- _ - --- - - - __ -- - - - - - - - -- -- - - -----Sioux City&#13;
WALKER, HAROLD _ - - - - - - - - - - --- - - - - - -- -- - - - - -- -- ---- _________ _ Sioux City&#13;
WETMORE, FRANCES NEFF - ------------- - -------------- ---- - ---Sioux City&#13;
WORMLEY, SUE MARIAN -- -- ------------- - --------- --- ------ - ----Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Claude William Baldwin&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Frances Boyd&#13;
&#13;
Dennison&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. To introduce us, we&#13;
present, with just pride, our newly acquired member, Mr. Claude William&#13;
Baldwin. Although he has only been&#13;
one of us since Christmas he has already caught the spirit of '19, and&#13;
supports his Class with all his might.&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. Hello, Folks! That's what&#13;
"Fran"would probably say if she were&#13;
really here. For that's her naturean airy, breezy, hail-fellow-well-met&#13;
sort of a person who greets us all with&#13;
the same friendly smile and wide-open&#13;
heart.&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Bergh&#13;
&#13;
Ruth I. Brady&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. Whenever I think of&#13;
Hazel I'm sure to think of work, for,&#13;
oh, how that girl does study! And&#13;
results? Well, I don't mind telling&#13;
you that she's nothing less than the&#13;
brightest girl in school-and no one&#13;
will say but what that's some result.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth E. Berry&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Ah, what a poor thing&#13;
is one's vocabulary! Under ordinary&#13;
circumstances it serves very well, but&#13;
when one endeavors to stretch it over&#13;
the many good qualities of Ruth the&#13;
attempt is a dismal failure. She's&#13;
clever, she's chic, she's quiet but&#13;
quick, she's learned and beautiful&#13;
she's-but words fail me.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. Ruth Berry is one of&#13;
the "Old Guard." Through all the&#13;
trials and tribulations of the Class&#13;
and School, she always stands pat,&#13;
keeps the middle course, and comes&#13;
out on top. Ruth's main interest is in&#13;
French, but in addition to this allabsorbing subject, she finds time for&#13;
all the many little social things which&#13;
prove just what a charming person&#13;
she is.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Akron&#13;
&#13;
Lime Springs&#13;
Beryl F. Burns&#13;
Zetalethean. In establishing herself quickly in the hearts of her fellow students, Beryl has broken all&#13;
records. She came to us just this year&#13;
from Carlton, but already she has&#13;
shown herself to be a true Classmate,&#13;
a loyal society sister, and ideal College&#13;
girl.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�George Wesley Dunn&#13;
Gladys M. Clark&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gladys is one of the kind that makes&#13;
the wheels go 'round. On committees,&#13;
in supporting her class, in Expression&#13;
and Debate, she attacks her problems&#13;
with the same enthusiasm and ability&#13;
that characterize all of her actions.&#13;
&#13;
Burnett Cooper&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Close on the heels of&#13;
"Coop" comes George, who also aspires to wear a Van Dyke and have an&#13;
office door marked "Private," George&#13;
Crouch, M. D." We know he will get&#13;
both the title and the Van Dyke-our&#13;
only regard is when.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. And now for our English representative. Maybe you don't&#13;
think we're glad we're an ally of&#13;
George's, but we are. In fact, we&#13;
couldn't help ourselves, for there is&#13;
something so appealing, something so&#13;
compelling about him, even if he is&#13;
slow on a joke, we can't help but be&#13;
glad. And what's there in being slow&#13;
at the start, anyhow? It's always the&#13;
finish that counts, and George is certainly strong on the home stretch.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. "Coop" doesn't look&#13;
like a doctor, and to tell the truth,&#13;
he isn't one yet, but if taking all the&#13;
biology in the school and aspiring to&#13;
go on until he will be able to tack an&#13;
M. D. on the back of his name, will&#13;
make him one, it won't be long until&#13;
we'll be calling him "Doctor Cooper,"&#13;
instead of the old familiar "Coop."&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude Dykstra&#13;
Running Water, S. D.&#13;
Zetalethean. And speaking of home&#13;
stretches, there is one other that may&#13;
always be found in the same place. In&#13;
everything she does, Gertrude places&#13;
at the finish. Perhaps the reason is&#13;
that she has the happy faculty of&#13;
pushing all burdens before her instead&#13;
of wearing her strength by pulling.&#13;
&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. All along the path&#13;
of his three years at College, lie the&#13;
victories which our illustrious Class&#13;
President has won. In Forensics, in&#13;
the Glee Club, in the Y. M., among the&#13;
students in any capacity he is the&#13;
never ering, always winning Royce.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
Early&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. Representative of&#13;
his Class is McKinley Evans, who&#13;
hails from the progressive hamlet of&#13;
Early. Like his home town, "Kin,"&#13;
too, is progressive. He is a prominent&#13;
man in his Society, a member of the&#13;
Sioux '19 Board for his Class, and a&#13;
booster for his College.&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Ferguson&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. Talk about reliability! Talk&#13;
about steadiness! Why, Miriam was&#13;
so steady she made the Rocky Mountains look wobbly. Did you notice the&#13;
past tense? Well, that is quite right.&#13;
She used to be steady, but this year&#13;
she has plunged so madly into gay&#13;
frivolity that the past tense is surely&#13;
applicable.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. Florence is one of our&#13;
shining lights, and we are truly proud&#13;
that we can claim her. It is whispered that we won't have her with us&#13;
next year, for the leading man of a&#13;
certain play, the most popular man in&#13;
school, is said to have established a&#13;
superior claim to that of mere classmates.&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Our list of the Class&#13;
of '19 would not be complete without&#13;
the name of Margaret in it. She was&#13;
with us the first semester and we&#13;
know that she is thinking of us now&#13;
and wishing that she were back, and&#13;
we can only say that we, too, wish it&#13;
many times over.&#13;
&#13;
Miriam R. Fish&#13;
&#13;
Florence Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
Harold S. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
Craig, Nebr.&#13;
Othonian. Paralleling the course of&#13;
our President is the course of the Vice&#13;
President of our Class. He, too, has&#13;
won distinction throughout his College course in his many College activities. We can justly praise him as one&#13;
of our most capable, most popular Juniors.&#13;
&#13;
Mable Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
True to the standards set and maintained by all the students who come to&#13;
us from the High School, Mable has&#13;
proved her worth and ability in fitting in with the general scheme of&#13;
things. In her quiet way she works&#13;
along on the truly worthy things, winning in the end.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-One&#13;
&#13;
�Mynnie Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Friendship that makes the least&#13;
noise is often the most useful and&#13;
friendship of this brand is the kind&#13;
offered by Mynnie. To all she gives&#13;
her helpful, cheery smile, to all she&#13;
offers her quiet assistance and to all&#13;
she stands as a true, helpful industrious friend.&#13;
&#13;
Lucyle D. Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Pierian. Lucyle, alias Sally, leads&#13;
a very talented, easy going and adorable existence. We envy her the talents, which make her popular everywhere, her easy going personality&#13;
which puts her at ease even among&#13;
strangers, and the charms of her&#13;
which makes her adored by all of her&#13;
friends.&#13;
&#13;
Clarence I. Hart&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Ionian. With the enlistment of our&#13;
former business manager a real difficulty arose in the path of the Sioux&#13;
'19. Distress signals were hailed by&#13;
our frantic editor and fear crept into&#13;
the hearts of the staff. And then a&#13;
gleaming ray of hope (Clarence camouflaged) appeared upon our horizon, the real difficulty diminished&#13;
conceivably and the Sioux sailed on&#13;
to success, buoyed up by the tireless&#13;
energy and excellent executive ability&#13;
of our new business manager.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Two&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
Lee C. Horney&#13;
Philomathian. If it is true that&#13;
snaps make an annual and it must be,&#13;
for our editor says so-then some of&#13;
the credit for this volume must be&#13;
given to our emminent snap-shot editor, Lee. I know of no one quite so deserving as this self same person of&#13;
our praise. Tirelessly through the&#13;
year he has taken pictures himself,&#13;
begged pictures from others and has&#13;
even stolen pictures, it has been said,&#13;
just to make our annual a snappy one.&#13;
&#13;
Livermore&#13;
Albert N. Hunt&#13;
Ionian. This year Albert has literally leaped into fame as one of the&#13;
members of the Drake Relay Team.&#13;
In his other years at College he has&#13;
also pulled down his share of honors&#13;
on the cinder path and now his efforts&#13;
have been more than rewarded by&#13;
winning a place, which he filled with&#13;
honor on the invincible Relay Team of&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Fenton C. Jones, Jr.&#13;
Leeds&#13;
Carlyle has slipped through his College career thus far without making&#13;
much fuss or noise about it. He is&#13;
always in his place, doing the duty&#13;
which lies nearest him with the minimum of friction and a maximum of&#13;
efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Clifford Jones&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Among the many "Ologies"&#13;
and "Isms" which Skinny indulges in,&#13;
the subject of "Fussology" is the one&#13;
most interesting to him. He has given&#13;
the matter intensive study, both in&#13;
the foreign and home fields, and is&#13;
qualified to judge in all matters of the&#13;
heart. To love or not to love has long&#13;
been the question with Skinny.&#13;
&#13;
Grace Fall Kellog&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. If it were our policy&#13;
to follow the example of our immediate predecessors we would be tempted&#13;
to say, a la Sioux '18, that Leone is a&#13;
rare girl who has waited a year just&#13;
on purpose to join the best Class in&#13;
the history of the institution. But,&#13;
since that is not our policy, we will&#13;
merely say that Leone is a rare girl&#13;
and we're truly glad that she liked us&#13;
well enough to want to join us.&#13;
&#13;
Mable Larson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
To the casual observer Mable appears to be rather reserved and serious minded, but in addition to this&#13;
there is that other side which we who&#13;
know her best recognize and admire&#13;
so much. She goes her own way and&#13;
goes quietly, but with it all, she is a&#13;
live, light hearted, enjoyable girl.&#13;
&#13;
Westfield&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. As the most popular&#13;
girl in the Class and one most suited&#13;
for the position, Gladys was chosen&#13;
this year by the student body, for our&#13;
May Queen. Her quiet dignity, her&#13;
poignant beauty, and that indefinable&#13;
something about her which is called&#13;
"class," made our Maye Fete an assured success in the very beginning.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Homer, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. Light and happy heads live&#13;
long it has been said, and, if that is&#13;
the case, Mrs. Kellog will surely be&#13;
rewarded for her optimism, her light&#13;
hearted manner and inexpressible&#13;
charm, by a ripe old age.&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
&#13;
Ruth E. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. "Hoody"is our live wire.&#13;
Trust her to stir things up. And&#13;
when they're stirred the rest of us&#13;
just fall in line behind her as a matter of course. She is a real live girl&#13;
up to the minute in her Class, in Y.&#13;
W., in the Madrigal Club, and in&#13;
everything she attempts, and far&#13;
ahead of the moment in athletics, her&#13;
specialty.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City&#13;
Lena C. McDonald&#13;
Athenaeum. She is just the quiet&#13;
kind whose nature never varies. Always the same, Lena McDonald goes&#13;
her way, seeking diligently after&#13;
knowledge, the thought of what she&#13;
must do and not what people think,&#13;
the only thing concerning her.·&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Helen Meeks&#13;
"Good nature and good sense must&#13;
ever join," some dry old bird once remarked, having in mind, I have no&#13;
doubt, the time when Helen would&#13;
prove his statement true, for that is&#13;
just the happy combination we find&#13;
in her, a happy, sunny manner and a&#13;
bushel of good sense.&#13;
&#13;
Laurens&#13;
Dale E. Norton&#13;
Othonian. "Skinny" is, both literally and figuratively a very tower of&#13;
strength for his Class and his College.&#13;
His most stellar performances are in&#13;
the athletic line, where he shines out&#13;
in great glory, besides being a good&#13;
right guard. "Skinny" also excels in&#13;
pep speeches, class politics and the&#13;
like-which shows him to be a typical&#13;
Junior.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Gladys G. Orr&#13;
A sweet and gentle grace and unassuming mein are among t he many&#13;
virtues possessed by our classmate,&#13;
Gladys. Day by day she goes through&#13;
the necessary routine of h er work always gracious, always gentle and always modest in her manner.&#13;
&#13;
Elva Persinger&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. I think that Elva's motto&#13;
must be "To make life pleasant here&#13;
below," for her whole nature reflect s&#13;
that spirit . When a friend and helper. is needed Elva is t h ere, ready and&#13;
willing to lend h er capability and willingness t o t he solution of the problem&#13;
or the removal of the difficult y.&#13;
&#13;
Nellie J. Poyzer&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
Athenaeum. Nellie is a ''standby."&#13;
We have h ad her with us for only this&#13;
one year, but already we have come to&#13;
learn her value as a fellow classmate&#13;
and a friend.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean. Bert is a busy man.&#13;
As Editor in Chief of the Sioux 1919,&#13;
he works night and day, sacrificing&#13;
his time, his energy and his brain to&#13;
the gigantic task of steering our annual to success. We are proud of Bert&#13;
and his ability and are glad to recognize him as a classmate and friend.&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Sandvig&#13;
&#13;
Canton, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. And now we present our&#13;
fair companion "Tupa." Her fairylike beauty deprives us of all words&#13;
to express it. Had we her training&#13;
we could better express what a lively&#13;
irresponsible, irresistible person she&#13;
really is.&#13;
&#13;
Elsa M. Savonell&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Mae is characterized&#13;
by her light hearted, happy, willing&#13;
way. Whenever you see her, she always has some new joke, some clever&#13;
story or some cheery remark to drive&#13;
the glooms away.&#13;
&#13;
Quiet, but noticed, Elsa has spent&#13;
the first three years of her College&#13;
life. Never presuming, she has remained rather in the background of&#13;
what some people term the "limelight," but nevertheless, for all those&#13;
who know her 'tis an easy thing to&#13;
love her.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Elizabeth Reid&#13;
&#13;
Roy Schellinger&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth Mae Purdy&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Ruth is a live wire&#13;
and a good mixer. Whenever called&#13;
upon to "put a thing through" she&#13;
works with all her might, and she is&#13;
rewarded by the recognition she receives from her fellow students for&#13;
her services. This year she has been&#13;
given the honor of being Agora President and also the honor (along with&#13;
the hard work) of being Assistant&#13;
Editor of the Sioux '19.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Just lately has our class&#13;
been deprived of the inspiring presence of "Skelly," who has gone to&#13;
work and boost for Uncle Sam. If&#13;
he makes as good a soldier as he has&#13;
made a good classmate he can well expect a place at the front in the service of his country.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Nine&#13;
Fifty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
�Aurelia Sturdevant&#13;
&#13;
Tyndall, S. D.&#13;
Athenaeum. Aurelia is one of the&#13;
species whose distinguished characteristic is pep. In our many activities she is always right among the&#13;
first, "shaking the old pepper box"&#13;
for her College. We envy her cheerful spirit and boundless enthusiasm.&#13;
&#13;
Katherine Tharp&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Athenaeum.· True character so honestly won as that of Katherine's acquires many friends. In the daily&#13;
grind she has found time to ripen and&#13;
deepen in the ways that count until&#13;
the number of her friends has mounted inconceivably.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Isabelle Walker&#13;
Pieria. Isabelle is about the busiest&#13;
person imaginable. In her Society,&#13;
she is a leader, in her Class she holds&#13;
a prominent place, in College affairs&#13;
in general she is an enthusiastic&#13;
worker, and in her studies she still&#13;
maintains her early dream of a clean&#13;
"A" record. And besides all this she&#13;
still has time to step quite considerably. Ah, marvelous is the . endurance of woman.&#13;
Grace E . Wishard&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. How doth the little busy&#13;
bee? Ask Grace. For, in her, the little bee has surely met his match. It&#13;
is true, her endeavors have been rather divided, but even at that, neither&#13;
her work nor Earl have suffered&#13;
materially .&#13;
&#13;
Horace Ferdinand Wulf&#13;
Ray D. Troutman&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. Isn't he funny? If you&#13;
don't think he is, just read that excrutiating joke section he has worked&#13;
on all year for you. Of course, knowing Fish, some may think it was nothing for him to do, but this year, it has&#13;
been reported, his mind has taken a&#13;
decidedly serious turn so the jokes&#13;
were a real trial.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. 'Tis with deep regret and sincere emotions that we&#13;
look back upon the bright and&#13;
smiling face of our erstwhile Business Manager. We had hoped to have&#13;
him till the last, but, alas ! he was&#13;
destined for a nobler work and we&#13;
are deprived of all the glory his efforts would have shed upon us.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-One&#13;
&#13;
�The Junior Class Roll&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, CLAUDE WILLIAM -------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
BERGH, HAZEL IRENE -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BERRY, RUTH ELLA --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BISHOP, MARY ELIZABETH -------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BOYD , FRANCES --- -- - - - - - - -- - ___ - _______________________________ Denison&#13;
BRADY, RUTH I. ---------------------------------------------------Akron&#13;
BRODKEY, SARAH ---------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BURNS, BERYL FRANCES ------------------------------------Lime Springs&#13;
BURPEE, RUTH ------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
CLARK, GLADYS MARIE ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
COOPER, BURNETT --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
CROUCH, GEORGE ----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
DUBEL, MARCUS G. ---------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
DUNN, GEORGE WESLEY ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
DYKSTRA, GERTRUDE ---------------------·-----------Running Water, S. D.&#13;
ENGBERG, ROYCE RAYMOND ------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
EVANS, McKINLEY -------------------------------------------------Early&#13;
FISH, MIRIAM ROENA -------------------------------------------Ida Grove&#13;
FORSBERG, FLORENCE -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
FRANCHERE, MABEL CATLIN -----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
FREEMAN, HAROLD S. ----------------------------------------Craig, Nebr.&#13;
GULLICKSON, HELEN M. ________________________________________ Sioux City&#13;
GUSTESON, MABEL A. ------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
GUSTESON, WYNNIE --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
HAITZ, LUCYLE D. ----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
HART, CLARENCE I. --------------------------------------------Sioux&#13;
City&#13;
HORNNEY, LEE C. ------------------------------------------------LeMars&#13;
HUNT, ALBERT N. ----------------------------------------------Livermore&#13;
JONES, CLIFFORD F. --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JONES, FENTON CARLYLE, JR. ----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
KELLOGG, MRS . GRACE _____________________ ___________________ Sioux City&#13;
KNAPP, GLADYS ____________________ - - - -- -- -- - - - - --- ---- - -------Westfield&#13;
LANGE, LEONE MAE -----------------------------------------Homer, Nebr.&#13;
LARSON, MABEL HOPE -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
LLOYD, THOMAS K. --------------------------------------------Linn Grove&#13;
MAHOOD, RUTH EVELYN ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
McDONALD, LENA C. -------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
MEEKS, HELEN ------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
NORTON, DALE EVERITT -----------------------------------------Laurens&#13;
ORR, GLADYS GERTRUDE ___________________________ south Sioux City, Nebr.&#13;
PERSINGER, ELVA ZELMA -----------------------------------------Onawa&#13;
POYZER, NELLIE JEWELL -------------------------------------Spirit Lake&#13;
PRATT, GEORGE W. --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
PRICHARD, ELBERT M. --------------------------------------------Onawa&#13;
PURDY, ELIZABETH MAY --------------------------·-------------Sioux City&#13;
SANDVIG, LILLIAN MARCELLA _______________________________ canton, s. D.&#13;
SAVONELL, ELSIE MARIANNE -----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
SCHELLINGER, ROY --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
STARR, CLEO B. --------------------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
STURTEVANT, AURELIA MAY --------------------------------Tyndall, S. D.&#13;
THARP, KATHERINE -------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
TROUTMAN, RAY D. --------------------------------------------Hawarden&#13;
WALKER, ISABELLE J. -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
WHITTEMORE, DILLA --------------------- ---------------------Sioux City&#13;
WISHARD, GRACE ELIZABETH ----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
WULF, HORACE FERDINAND ------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomores&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�R. RASMUSSEN&#13;
&#13;
E. GOODSITE&#13;
&#13;
M. EPPELSHIEMER&#13;
&#13;
B. RADLEY&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
E. LICHTENBERG&#13;
&#13;
M. HEATHMAN&#13;
&#13;
Z. BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
R. SCHOLES&#13;
C. KOETHER&#13;
&#13;
E. ANDERSON&#13;
A. TURNER&#13;
&#13;
L.WINTERFIELD&#13;
J. LEE&#13;
&#13;
M. SABIN&#13;
&#13;
C. KURZ&#13;
C. CONN&#13;
&#13;
A HILL&#13;
G. ARMBRIGHT&#13;
&#13;
H.GILBERT&#13;
G. BERRY&#13;
&#13;
C. KIRBY&#13;
&#13;
C. STODDARD&#13;
&#13;
E.KELLAND&#13;
&#13;
E.WANG&#13;
D. WEINTZ&#13;
&#13;
J. LEYAN&#13;
F. CHAPMAN&#13;
&#13;
R. WILSON&#13;
&#13;
M. STOLT&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
H. ALBRO&#13;
&#13;
G. LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
K. HOLMES&#13;
B. LAMBERT&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-One&#13;
&#13;
�BANG&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Two&#13;
&#13;
�The past athletic season of Morningside College can truly be said to&#13;
have been the greatest that she has ever seen. Out of a season of 23 contests the Maroons went down to defeat but twice. In the spring of 1917&#13;
Coach Saunderson was able to obtain a heavy schedule of eight games for&#13;
his baseball men, four of which were down State. The team went through&#13;
this entire schedule without a single defeat, making a total of 79 runs to&#13;
their opponents' 20. Wenig done stellar work on the mound for the Maroons, winning five of the games, three of which were shutouts. The season was featured by the heavy hitting of the Maroons, the work of Johnson, Northrup and Eiffert being especially remarkable. The batting average of the team was over .300, which, in 'part, accounts for the large scores&#13;
that were run up.&#13;
In track "Saundy," for the third consecutive year, sent a two-mile&#13;
relay team to the Drake Relays and returned with the banner. Curry, finishing last for Morningside, was over fifty yards in the lead of his nearest&#13;
competitor. Two dual meets, one with Nebraska Wesleyan and the other&#13;
with Yankton, were won by wide margins.&#13;
These meets were featured by the fact that several men who have&#13;
had all of their track training under "Saundy" were able to win their events&#13;
against some of the best men in Dakota and Nebraska.&#13;
In football Morningside tackled the stiffest schedule that she had ever&#13;
prepared for herself. The two Wesleyans and South Dakota University&#13;
should have been enough for anyone, but "Saundy" took out his jack-knife,&#13;
hitched up his trousers, and took Notre Dame on as a dessert. The loss of&#13;
Wenig, Gantt, Behmer, Bashaw and Warnes through enlistment was keenly&#13;
felt. We were fortunate in having a backfield that did not need any particular coaching so that Saunderson could spend his time on the line. The&#13;
result of his work was shown when our line held the famous Notre Dame&#13;
line, allowing them to make but six first downs. The season would have&#13;
been a highly successful one from a Morningside standpoint if we had won&#13;
from no one but Vermillion. The fact that we also won from the two Wesleyans and held Notre Dame makes our victory doubly sweet.&#13;
Morningside took up basketball again in the winter of 1918, after a&#13;
period of five years in which we did not participate in Inter-Collegiate bas-·&#13;
ketball. While it was Saunderson's first attempt to coach a basketball&#13;
team since his stay at Morningside he did wonders with the raw material&#13;
which he had. The team showed remarkable progress as the season advanced and from now on we can expect big things from our basketball men.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Coach Saunderson&#13;
Our Coach&#13;
&#13;
Coach Jason M. Saunderson is the man who is recognized as having&#13;
put Morningside College on the map athletically. Saunderson is a graduate&#13;
of Albion College, where he was a star in all branches of athletics. In football he played quarterback on the offensive and end on the defensive, the&#13;
two most difficult positions on a football team. In 1907 he captained his&#13;
team and was chosen as "All-Michigan" quarterback. In baseball he played&#13;
third base and was noted for his hard hitting. In track he has a record of&#13;
10.1 in the hundred and 22.1 in the two-twenty. He also ran the hurdles&#13;
for his college.&#13;
Since graduation he has been Director of Athletics at South Dakota&#13;
State College and at the University of the South.&#13;
"Saundy" came to Morningside in the fall of 1912 and each year of his&#13;
stay with us has been a little more successful than the previous one. He has&#13;
turned out from a very limited amount of material football teams that have&#13;
defeated schools four or five times as large. Last year, out of a student&#13;
body of about 150 men he was able to turn out a football team that threw&#13;
a scare into the mighty Notre Dame. This same team later in the season&#13;
was able to defeat South Dakota University for the first time in history.&#13;
But not only does Coach Saunderson develop great football teams, his work&#13;
in track and baseball being just as noticeable. Year after year he has&#13;
sent two-mile relay teams to the Drake Relays and has won so often that the&#13;
down State schools have come to concede us this event. In baseball his&#13;
teams have met and defeated the best in Iowa, Minnesota and South Dakota.&#13;
This year he turned his hand to basketball and was able to develop a&#13;
team from wholly raw material that went through the season with only one&#13;
defeat. Morningside's splendid record in athletics is most certainly largely&#13;
due to the work of Coach Saunderson.&#13;
"Saundy" is recognized throughout the athletic world as an exponent&#13;
of clean athletics. All who have had any relations with him know him to be&#13;
a man who always plays clean and as one who is always ready to go more&#13;
than half way in order to be fair to an opponent. It is because of this trait&#13;
that he is so highly respected and loved by his players and the student&#13;
body at large. Here's to "Saundy," the greatest coach we ever had and may&#13;
he see fit to remain with us long .enough to wipe out the long string of defeats that we have suffered at the hands of our ancient rival-a work&#13;
which he has so nobly started.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Six&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Standing- Northrup,&#13;
Pearce, Hunt, Rorapaugh, Swartz,&#13;
Hornney, Wulf, Walker,&#13;
Seated-Obrecht, Hinkley, Norton, Johnson, Lloyd , Meneffee,&#13;
Klatt.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer-Horace Wulf President-Clarence Obrecht&#13;
FOOTBALL 191 7&#13;
Beck, Axel, '20&#13;
Goodrich, Orin, '20&#13;
Hornney, L ee ' 19&#13;
Lory, Milton, '20&#13;
Northrup, Carroll , '19&#13;
Rorapaugh, Fay, '21&#13;
&#13;
Clough, Martin, '19&#13;
Freist, Thomas, '19&#13;
Hinkley, Arthur, '20&#13;
Klatt, Clarence, '20&#13;
Northrup, Carroll, '19&#13;
&#13;
Swartz, Charles, '20&#13;
&#13;
Dubel , Marcus, '20&#13;
Hinkley, Arthur, '20&#13;
Johnson, Leon, ' 18&#13;
Meneffee, Victor, '2 1&#13;
Norton, Dale, '19&#13;
Wulf, Horace, '19&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL 1917&#13;
&#13;
Obrecht, Clarence, '18&#13;
&#13;
Eiffert, Paul , '1 7&#13;
Himmel, Carl , '19&#13;
Johnson, Leon, '18&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas, '19&#13;
Wenig, Erwin, '18&#13;
&#13;
TRACK 1917&#13;
Curry, Wend ell, '17&#13;
Harrington, Ed, '18&#13;
Hornney, Alvin , '17&#13;
Johnson, Leon, ' 1 8&#13;
McKonk ey, Bly, '19&#13;
Pearce, Laurence, '20&#13;
&#13;
Brown, George '20&#13;
Johnson , L eon, '18&#13;
Pearce, Laurence, '20&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Harold, '18&#13;
&#13;
Gantt, Ed, '20&#13;
Harrington, Ray, '17&#13;
Hunt, Albert, '19&#13;
Kenny, Thomas, '20&#13;
Omar, Gaylord, '20&#13;
Wenig, Erwin, '18&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL 1918&#13;
Hinkley, Arthur, '20&#13;
Meneffee, Victor, '21&#13;
Thompson, David, '21&#13;
&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
Coach J . M. Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
Prof. J. J. Hayes&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�The Football Season&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 62; TRINITY, 7&#13;
Morningside opened her football season by an overwhelming victory&#13;
over Trinity. Except during the last few minutes of play when Agnes, of&#13;
Trinity, received a forward pass and dashed for a touchdown, the Maroon's&#13;
goal was not in danger. The Maroons showed rare form for so early in&#13;
the season, displaying all brands of football, from the open style of play&#13;
to th e old method of line plunging, outclassing their opponents in every department of the game. Goodrich, making his first appearance for the Maroons, shared honors with Johnson as the stars of the game, while the&#13;
work of Dubel at quarter was very promising. Morningside scored two&#13;
touchdowns in the first five minutes of play and from then on it was simply a question of how large the score would be. The game was clean and&#13;
hard fought, and was a fine exhibition to watch despite the large score.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE,79; NEBRASKA WESLEYAN, 0&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
THAT&#13;
&#13;
BEAT&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
Upper Row- Beck, L. G.; Rorapaugh, R.T.; Swartz, C.; Hornney, C.; Wulf, CaptainElect, L. T. ; Coach Saunderson.&#13;
·&#13;
Middle Row- Norton, R. G.; Lory, R. G.; Dubel, Q. B.; Northrup, Captain, R. E.; Johnson, R. H.; Pitman, H.; Meneffee, L. E.&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Front&#13;
&#13;
Row- Pearce,H. B.; Hinkley,&#13;
&#13;
F. B.; Hays, Q. B.; Goodrich, L. H.; Mickelson,&#13;
&#13;
H. B.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside easily trounced the much feared team from Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan. The first touchdown came after three minutes of play. Goodrich received a punt, returned it forty yards and on the next play Hinkley&#13;
advanced it twenty more. Johnson had little trouble in carrying it ·over.&#13;
From then on the romping, raring and fighting Maroons were never in doubt&#13;
as to the final outcome and they proceeded to get revenge for previous victories, by giving them the worst defeat that we ever handed them. Usually&#13;
it is a battle to the finish with honors about even, but this year the Nebraska Methodists were entirely outclassed. The entire Maroon backfield&#13;
starred in this game, Johnson having a little the best of it with six touchdowns to his credit. The game was marred by the poor sportsmanship of&#13;
a few of the Nebraska players.&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 33; DAKOTA WESLEYAN, 0&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 13- Trinity - ------ --- ---------------- -- - 7 M. C. 62 at Sioux City&#13;
Oct. 20-Nebraska Wesleyan _________ __ ·-- ---- OM. C. 79 at Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Hampered to a great degree by overconfidence the Maroons put up&#13;
their poorest game of the season against Dakota Wesleyan. Wesleyan&#13;
kicked off to Morningside and Goodrich receiving the ball on his own fiveyard line raced through the entire Dakota team for a touchdown. The Maroons immediately had visions of another easy 112 to O victory and the result was that the confidence of the Maroons was more in their way than&#13;
were the fighting Wesleyans, who were determined to hold Morningside to&#13;
a low score. When the final whistle blew Dakota Wesleyan had again bowed&#13;
to old M. C. , and once again we had defeated both Wesleyans in the same&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 27-Dakota Wesleyan --- - - - ----- - ----- --- OM. C. 33 at Mitchell&#13;
Nov. 10-University of Notre Dame _______ _____ l3 M. C. Oat Sioux City&#13;
Nov. 17-Dubuque ____ ____________ ___ ___ ___ _ OM. C. 19 at Dubuque&#13;
Nov. 29-South Dakota University __ ___ _____ ___ 7 M. C. 14 at Sioux City&#13;
Total-Opponents, 27; Morningside, · 207.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-One&#13;
&#13;
�The Football Season&#13;
&#13;
The Football Season&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 0; NOTRE DAME, 13&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 14; SOUTH DAKOTA UNIVERSITY, 7&#13;
&#13;
On November 10, 1917, occurred one of the two greatest even ts in Morningside's football history. Although defeated by two touchdowns the showing that the Maroons made against one of the best football teams in the&#13;
country will never be forgotten by the largest crowd that ever saw a football game in Sioux City. The score cannot in any measure indicate how&#13;
heroically Coach Saunderson's men fought their more experienced opponents only to taste defeat as a result of two intercepted passes. It was the&#13;
first defeat the Maroons have suffered on their home field for three years.&#13;
The game was a battle royal between the two lines. Pitted against men&#13;
who were used to battering and hammering their opponents the Maroon&#13;
line was able to hold its own, Notre Dame making but six first downs&#13;
throughout the game, while Morningside made fifteen. Time and again&#13;
Beck and Swartz broke through and stopped plays before they were started.&#13;
Northrup, although handicapped by his two dislocated shoulders put up his&#13;
characteristic smashing game. Meneffee played the best game he ever&#13;
played, breaking up play after play aimed at his end. The Notre Dame&#13;
players could not praise too highly the work of Meneffee and Johnson and&#13;
classed them with the best in the country. Dubel, Goodrich and Hinkley&#13;
also done sensational work in puncturing the Notre Dame line and in open&#13;
field running. The Notre Dame first score came in the second quarter&#13;
when Rydsewski, the big Catholic captain, intercepted a Maroon forward&#13;
pass and raced down the field forty yards for a touchdown. Their other&#13;
touchdown came near the end of the third quarter after a Notre Dame man&#13;
had carried another intercepted pass to the Maroon twenty-five-yard line.&#13;
A lucky pass to King netted them twenty more. After three attempts&#13;
Brandy managed to squirm through the line for a touchdown. From every&#13;
aspect it was the finest game of football ever seen in Sioux City, and Morningsiders have a right to feel proud of their team that really outplayed the&#13;
team "that b_ the Army."&#13;
eat&#13;
&#13;
On Thanksgiving Day occurred the other big event in football history&#13;
at Morningside. "We beat South Dakota!" This was an event that we&#13;
had looked forward to for over twenty years. Three times we had played&#13;
them to a scoreless tie, but it was for "Saundy" and the team of 1917 to&#13;
bring us a victory. At last "Van" can change his "It must be done" to "It&#13;
has been done." Although the Coyotes were outclassed in every department they battled like bulldogs and it looked for a time as if history would&#13;
repeat itself and give South Dakota a victory. In the first quarter the&#13;
Maroons were in possession of the ball on their twenty-yard line. On a&#13;
punt formation Johnson missed a bad pass from Swartz and Patrick, of&#13;
South Dakota, scooped it up and ran five yards for a touchdown. The rest&#13;
of the quarter was spent in going up and down the field without either&#13;
having any marked advantage. In the second quarter Dubelcame into&#13;
prominence by a wonderful display of coolness and ability in diagnosing the&#13;
defense which enabled the Maroons to march nearly half the length of the&#13;
field. Then "Dux" in the most spectacular feat of the game carried the ball&#13;
for forty-five yards for a touchdown. Johnson kicked the goal and evened&#13;
up the score. Fine work by Goodrich and Hinkley in this quarter almost resulted in another score, but the half was over before they could accomplish it. Morningside lost another chance to score early in the second half.&#13;
Commencing on their own twenty-yard line the Maroons slowly, steadily and&#13;
surely moved the ball to South Dakota's thirty-yard line. Here Morningside was halted and Johnson attempted a drop kick. It was from a difficult angle, but the ball hit the crossbar squarely in the middle, missing a&#13;
goal by inches only. The Coyotes were forced to kick and the Maroons&#13;
started another march toward the Dakota goal, with Johnson and Dubel doing the major share of work. On the seven-yard line the Maroon backs&#13;
were held three times, when Goodrich saved the day by leaping in the air&#13;
and grabbing a forward pass, although he was surrounded by a number of&#13;
Coyote players. This put the ball on the two-yard line and Hinkley had little trouble in smashing it over, Johnson kicking goal. The Maroons were&#13;
well on their way to another touchdown when the whistle blew and the game&#13;
&#13;
MORNINSIDE, 19; DUBUQUE, 0.&#13;
The Maroons went to Dubuque, hailed as a great football team, and&#13;
they attempted to live on their reputation. The result was a listless game&#13;
on their part, while the fighting Irish threw many a scare into the Maroon&#13;
team. Dubel was unable to start in this game and the poor showing was due&#13;
to some degree to the discord in the backfield. At times the Maroons&#13;
gained their old-time form and marched down the field only to lose a touchdown through poor playing when near the goal or through poor headwork.&#13;
Dubuque had a team of hard fighters who deserve a great deal of credit for&#13;
the showing that they made.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Two&#13;
&#13;
was over.&#13;
Are we proud of the team that has buried the Coyote Jinx? Yea, Bo!&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Northrup, Right End, Captain.&#13;
"Norty" is a Morningside made man.&#13;
&#13;
He has learned&#13;
&#13;
Dubel, Quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
all of his football on old Bass Field and his record shows how&#13;
&#13;
"Dux" was the brainest quarterback that has appeared&#13;
&#13;
well. "Norty" is one of those hard hitting, smashing ends,&#13;
&#13;
on Bass field in years. There may be others who could beat&#13;
&#13;
breaking up play after play before it is started.&#13;
&#13;
him carrying the ball or tackling, but when it came to run-&#13;
&#13;
He is a&#13;
&#13;
good receiver of passes and is fast on covering punts. In all&#13;
respects "Norty" was the right man to lead Morningside's&#13;
greatest team in their initial victory over South Dakota. He&#13;
was the gamest fighter on the gamest team M. C. ever had.&#13;
&#13;
ning a football team he had no peer. He was always cool, always directing the attack at the opponent's weakest point&#13;
and getting the greatest efficiency from his own team. His&#13;
55-yard run for a touchdown against Vermillion was one of&#13;
the sensations of the year.&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
Wulf, Left Tackle, Captain-Elect.&#13;
"Halligan" is so called, because he is like the man&#13;
who bore that name. He is a big and burly tackle, who&#13;
tears up the line and stops all of the opponents' plays&#13;
which are directed his way. He is Captain-elect of next&#13;
year's team, and under the leadership of a man of his&#13;
ability the team should have a very successful season&#13;
if the war does not affect the schedule.&#13;
&#13;
Hinkley, Fullback.&#13;
"Art" was t he most consistent man on the team.&#13;
&#13;
ways the same, he could be depended on to do his part&#13;
whether it was carrying the ball, receiving, or breaking up a&#13;
forward pass. While he never does anything sensational, he&#13;
was one of the most important cogs in the team. His touchdown against Vermillion was probably his most notable performance of t he year.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Right Halfback, Ex.-Captain.&#13;
"Jerry" is one of the greatest halfbacks that ever wore&#13;
a Maroon uniform. For the second time he and Capt. North-&#13;
&#13;
Goodrich, Left Half Back.&#13;
"Goody" was the smallest man on the team, but a more&#13;
&#13;
rup were given berths on the All-State team, and has even&#13;
been mentioned for an All-American halfback. "Jerry" is&#13;
&#13;
game and a harder little scrapper never donned a football&#13;
suit. He made the longest runs of the year. Against Da-&#13;
&#13;
big, shifty, hard hitting, an end runner as well as a line&#13;
&#13;
kota Wesleyan he carried the ball for the initial touchdown,&#13;
&#13;
plunger, and is recognized as the best punter in the State.&#13;
&#13;
95 yards, through the whole field, and from that time on no&#13;
&#13;
"Jerry" is a hard worker and a consistent player, although&#13;
&#13;
one was in doubt as to the outcome of the game. He was&#13;
troubled part of the season with a lame shoulder, but in&#13;
&#13;
he was at his best in the Notre Dame game, at times tearing&#13;
big holes in their famous line.&#13;
&#13;
spite of this handicap his showing was good enough to put&#13;
him on the All-State second team.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Al-&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Meneffe, Left End.&#13;
"Vic," our big left end, probably made more improvement during the year than any man on the team. Before&#13;
this he was good enough to be captain of the Sioux City&#13;
High School team and he was the All-State High School end.&#13;
With this backing it is easy to see that he was one of the ·&#13;
stars of the season. His and Johnson's playing on the AllState team against Camp Dodge was pronounced by authorities to be the best exhibition of good playing of any of the&#13;
men gathered for this event.&#13;
&#13;
Swartz, Center.&#13;
"Red" played a great game at center and few were the&#13;
gains that were made over him. He is a wizard at solving&#13;
the other side's offense and gets through it time and again&#13;
to break up the play. He goes to West Point this summer&#13;
and he will be greatly missed when Saunderson next gathers&#13;
his "pigskin chasers" together.&#13;
&#13;
Norton, Right Guard.&#13;
&#13;
Beck, Left Guard.&#13;
"Swede," the big Viking, was the hardest fighter and the&#13;
most consistent man on the line. Me charged hard and low&#13;
and carried everything before him. He still has some time&#13;
in College and if not taken into the army should develop into&#13;
one of the greatest line men Morningside has ever had. He&#13;
was not outplayed by an opponent during the season.&#13;
&#13;
"Skinny," although a veteran of last year, was slow to&#13;
develop his old-time fight and pep. He was hard pushed to&#13;
hold a regular berth during the first of the season, but later&#13;
developed into one of the most aggressive and effective of&#13;
t he line men.&#13;
&#13;
Norton was one of the few line men who&#13;
&#13;
played consistently in the South Dakota game, being a big&#13;
factor in bringing us our victory.&#13;
&#13;
Lory, Right Guard.&#13;
"Sam" is both big and aggressive. He played his best&#13;
&#13;
Rorapaugh, Right Tackle.&#13;
"Ror" was the biggest man on the team.&#13;
&#13;
He played&#13;
&#13;
right tackle during most of the season. His playing at times&#13;
was spectacular, although not as consistent as some others.&#13;
He played his best in the Notre Dame game. As this is his&#13;
first year with us the future should hold great things for&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
games during the early part of the season.&#13;
&#13;
He played&#13;
&#13;
through the entire season this year after having his leg broken last year, and that was something which is seldom done.&#13;
This was his first year as a letter man and he should develop&#13;
rapidly this next year. Like the rest of the line his best&#13;
performance was against Notre Dame, when they held their&#13;
own against some of the best line men in the west.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Mickelson, Half Back.&#13;
Percy is small, but a real fighter; a fellow who tries and&#13;
works all the time, early and late, and from one end of the&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Center.&#13;
Lee played at center and guard this year.&#13;
&#13;
He is fine&#13;
&#13;
season to the other.&#13;
&#13;
He hails from Eagle Grove, where he&#13;
&#13;
at getting through and breaking up plays of the opposition.&#13;
&#13;
played with a fast High SchooI team. He is one of the best&#13;
&#13;
Although handicapped by sickness, he played when he could,&#13;
&#13;
all-around boosters we have. Although he has not yet made&#13;
&#13;
and made a fine showing for himself and the team, getting&#13;
into enough games to win his "M."&#13;
&#13;
his letter in athletics he is one of the men who has helped&#13;
to build up and make good teams for old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
Pitman, Half Back&#13;
Brown, Sub Quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
"Pit" was the first sub in the backfield and while he&#13;
&#13;
George was a green hand at the game this&#13;
&#13;
did not win his letter, he missed it only by a small margin.&#13;
He is one of the most promising men on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
year, but he quickly showed that he could play&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
played in the line while in High School, but"Saundy"switched&#13;
&#13;
football.&#13;
&#13;
him to backfield, where he developed rapidly both in speed&#13;
&#13;
second team in scrimmage and promises to be varsity material next year.&#13;
&#13;
and line hitting ability. He is a hard and steady worker and&#13;
&#13;
He made a good showing&#13;
&#13;
deserves everything he gets.&#13;
&#13;
Pearce, Full Back.&#13;
Lawrence played half and full back with the second string&#13;
backfield this year.&#13;
&#13;
Hays, Quarterback.&#13;
Joe played with the second team during the early part&#13;
&#13;
He is a man with wonderful possibili-&#13;
&#13;
of the year. His ability as a quarterback to out guess the&#13;
&#13;
ties on the gridiron, if he will only apply himself. He came&#13;
&#13;
varsity as well as to carry the ball for many long gains soon&#13;
&#13;
to us from Fonda, where he had had considerable football&#13;
&#13;
won him a position on the varsity squad. While he appeared&#13;
&#13;
experience. He is big and fast and there is no reason why&#13;
&#13;
in but one game, against Dubuque, he gave a good account&#13;
&#13;
he will not make a fine half back in another season.&#13;
&#13;
of himself and bids fair to become a heady and clever&#13;
quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
against the&#13;
&#13;
�Statistics of Notre Dame Game&#13;
-------------------------1st Half&#13;
II 2nd h a lf II Totals.&#13;
=----c------c---c-c-----,---c-c-----~-----------D.&#13;
Yards ball was advanced&#13;
b y runs and pass es____ --------1&#13;
Yards gained on runs from scrimmage ____________________ l l J -67 JJ-60 J-f211---186 1-99&#13;
26&#13;
Yards kicks were r e turn e d -------------------------------1&#13;
Yards gained through forward p a sse s ______________________ J&#13;
Number of tim es fir s t clown was made-------------------~-1&#13;
Num ber of times held for clowns __________________________ J&#13;
Number of forward passes attempted ---------------------1&#13;
11 1&#13;
111&#13;
61&#13;
17 1&#13;
7&#13;
Number of comp leted passes --- --------- - -----------------1&#13;
l JI&#13;
4&#13;
Number of passes that team had intercepted ______________ l&#13;
40 11&#13;
OI 20 11&#13;
OJ 60&#13;
Yards gained through intercepted passes __________________ l&#13;
Number of yards ball was kicked __________________________ J 135 1 302ll147l---l185~21487&#13;
Number of times ball was kicked __________________________ J&#13;
31&#13;
Number of yards team was thrown for loss----------------201&#13;
Number of yards penalized --------------------------------1&#13;
30 1&#13;
OIi&#13;
&#13;
Top&#13;
Row- Crail, Swartz,&#13;
Wulf,&#13;
Goodrich, Cowan, Rorapaugh.&#13;
Third Row- Raun,&#13;
McBride,&#13;
Scheerer, Hackett,&#13;
Hilmer,&#13;
Long, Copeland.&#13;
Seco nd Row- Brown, Pitman, Mickelson,&#13;
Pitstick, Hays, Dubel, Johnson.&#13;
Front Row- Pearce, Meneffee,&#13;
Lory, Norton, Northrup, (Capt.), Hinkley, Hornney, Beck.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-One&#13;
&#13;
�The baseball season of 1917 was a series of continuous victories, the&#13;
team winning all of the eight games on the schedule. The team was composed almost wholly of veterans, with a wealth of new material for the few&#13;
vacant positions. On the annual down State trip the team defeated the&#13;
best Collegiate teams in the State by large scores. In no game of the entire season were the Maroons ever in danger of being defeated, some of the&#13;
games being so one-sided that they were not interesting from a spectator's&#13;
standpoint.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 7; HIGHLAND PARK, 0.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Upper&#13;
Row- Friest,&#13;
P.; Engle, P.&#13;
Middle&#13;
Row- Prichard, Sub.; Bashaw, Sub.; Klatt, 2d; Clough, S. S., Capt.; Saunderson,&#13;
Couch.&#13;
Front Row--Lloyd, 1st; Johnson, 3rd; Eiffert, C.; Wenig,&#13;
P.; Hinkley, R. F.&#13;
&#13;
MAROON BATTING AVERAGES&#13;
Johnson, third base-------------------------------------------Northrup, left field-------------------------------------------Eiffert, catcher ______________________ _: ________________________&#13;
Hinkley, right field-------------------------------------------Clough, short stop, captain ------------------------------------Wenig, pitcher-----------------------------------------------Himmel, center field------------------------------------------Lloyd, first base ---------------------------------------------Klatt, second base---------------------------------------------&#13;
&#13;
Highland Park opened the Maroon season with a game on Bass Field&#13;
on May 1. Our veteran "Obe" held them to two hits and no scores, striking&#13;
out sixteen of their batters. The heavy hitting of the Maroons secured&#13;
eleven hits off Laurence, of Highland Park. The hitting of Northrup, Himmel and Wenig accounted for the Maroon scores.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 11; HIGHLAND PARK, 2&#13;
&#13;
.469&#13;
.384&#13;
.367&#13;
.324&#13;
.293&#13;
.280&#13;
.280&#13;
.219&#13;
.187&#13;
&#13;
Team Average _____ _______________________________________ .305&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
May 1-Highland Park ---------------------------------- 0 M. C. 7&#13;
May 2-Highland Park ----------------------------------- 2 M. C. 11&#13;
May 14-Ellsworth --------------------------------------- 1 M. C. 7&#13;
May 15-State Teachers --------------------------------- - 3 M. C. 6&#13;
May 15-Highland Park ---------------------------------- 6 M. C. 18&#13;
May 17-Highland Park---------------------------------- 0 M. C. 5&#13;
May 30-Dubuque --------------------------------------- 8 M. C. 15&#13;
June 1-Anthon ______ . --------------------------------- 0 M. C. 10&#13;
&#13;
On the next day "Lefty" Obrecht went in against them and held them&#13;
to six scattered hits which resulted in two runs. The game was featured by&#13;
extra base drives by Lloyd, Eiffert, Northrup, Johnson and Clough, of&#13;
Morningside. Highland Park was rated as one of the best teams in the&#13;
State and the two Maroon victories gave promise of a good season.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 7; ELLSWORTH, 1&#13;
&#13;
The Maroons opened their annual down State trip with a game at&#13;
Ellsworth on May 14. Wenig, for Morningside, allowed but four hits and&#13;
was given errorless support. The Maroons obtained on 1y six hits, but poor&#13;
support gave them seven runs.&#13;
&#13;
Total-Opponents, 20; Morningside, 79.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Two&#13;
&#13;
Nine ty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Clough, Capt., Short Stop.&#13;
"Marty," at short, put up a steady and consistent game&#13;
throughout the year.&#13;
&#13;
He is one of the fastest infielders that&#13;
&#13;
has donned a Maroon suit for many years.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 6; STATE TEACHERS, 3&#13;
&#13;
noted as being much of a talker, but his actions speak for&#13;
themselves.&#13;
&#13;
On the 15th the team journeyed to Cedar Falls, where they crossed bats&#13;
with the fast team from State Teachers. Obrecht, on the mound for the&#13;
Maroons, held the Teachers to six hits and three scores, while his teammates piled up six scores. While the Maroons were hitting in the pinches&#13;
in these two games the team was far below its standard.&#13;
&#13;
"Marty" is not&#13;
&#13;
He was highly respected by all of the men&#13;
&#13;
on the team and made a very successful captain.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 18; HIGHLAND PARK, 6&#13;
&#13;
On the 16th the team again met Highland Park at Des Moines. In the&#13;
first game, Friest, a new man, pitched and won his first College game.&#13;
Friest allowed but six hits, although erratic support gave Highland Park&#13;
six scores. In this game the Maroon sluggers again hit their stride, every&#13;
man getting at least one hit. Eiffert, Northrup, Johnson and Himmel were&#13;
the leading hitters.&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd, Capt.-Elect, First Base.&#13;
"T. K.," the southpaw first baseman, served his second&#13;
year on the nine and made good in every sense of the word.&#13;
Tom played outfield last year, but rapidly rounded into a&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 5; HIGHLAND PARK, 0&#13;
&#13;
first class infielder this season .&#13;
&#13;
In the second game the Highland Park team came back strong and&#13;
put up a stiff game. "Obe," for the Maroons, held them scoreless, while&#13;
the timely hitting of Johnson and Hinkley accounted for the Maroon scores&#13;
The game was marked for nearly errorless ball on both sides.&#13;
·MORNINGSIDE, 15; DUBUQUE, 8&#13;
&#13;
Dubuque came to Sioux City on the 30th and were defeated in a loosely played game, which was featured by the heavy hitting of the Maroons.&#13;
Wenig, for Morningside was given poor support which was the cause of&#13;
Dubuque's large score. Johnson, Northrup and Eiffert done the best hitting for the Maroons in this game.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 10; ANTHON, 0&#13;
&#13;
On the 1st of June the team met and defeated the fast town team of&#13;
Anthon. Wenig allowed but three hits and struck out fourteen men. This&#13;
game, like the majority of the season, was featured by the fast fielding and&#13;
heavy hitting of the Maroons. Clough, Wenig, Hinkley and Johnson secured three hits apiece, several of which were for extra bases.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Four&#13;
&#13;
Eiffert, Catcher.&#13;
"Turk" is a College baseball player extraordinary. He&#13;
is a phenomenal catcher, a hard hitter and a clever base runner.&#13;
&#13;
"Turk" can be counted on to get the most out of a&#13;
&#13;
pitcher and to keep the entire team steady.&#13;
&#13;
When on the&#13;
&#13;
bases he always keeps his opponents wondering what he&#13;
will do next.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Wenig, Pitcher.&#13;
"Obe's" great speed and fast breaking courves made him&#13;
the most effective College pitcher in the State this year.&#13;
"Obe" pitched and won five of the eight games on the Maroon schedule.&#13;
&#13;
He always remained cool and was always&#13;
&#13;
willing to give the best he had.&#13;
&#13;
Obrecht, Pitcher.&#13;
"Lefty," our little southpaw pitcher, has a quick hook&#13;
and also a good fast ball. This was his second year with the&#13;
Maroons and under the direction of Eiffert he had no trouble in winning both of his games. Phoebe is a hard worker&#13;
and showed considerable improvement over last year.&#13;
&#13;
Klatt, Second Base.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, third base.&#13;
"Jerry had an exceptional year at the bat this season,&#13;
&#13;
"Dave managed to land a regular berth at second this&#13;
&#13;
His timely hitting helped put many a game&#13;
&#13;
year over a large field of candidates for the only open in-&#13;
&#13;
"on ice" for the Maroons. He fielded his position well and&#13;
&#13;
field position. He ably plugged up the hole in the infield&#13;
&#13;
made good use of his great throwing ability.&#13;
&#13;
caused by the enlistment of Behmer, and was noted for his&#13;
&#13;
hitting .469.&#13;
&#13;
sharp fielding.&#13;
&#13;
Hinkley, Right Field.&#13;
Although this was "Art's" first year on the team he&#13;
soon proved himself to be a veteran ball player. "Art" was&#13;
the most consistent hitter on the team and could be counted&#13;
on in a pinch. Besides being a sure fielder he often assisted&#13;
Eiffert behind the bat and proved to be a very valuable&#13;
&#13;
Friest, Pitcher.&#13;
Tom, another left hander, succeeded in winning his&#13;
"M" this year by winning his game against Highland Park,&#13;
and allowing only six hits. With a little more training and&#13;
experience he promises to develop into a wonderful pitcher.&#13;
&#13;
catcher.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Engle, Pitcher.&#13;
Clarence failed to win his "M" this year only because of&#13;
the abundance of veteran pitchers.&#13;
&#13;
Besides being a fine&#13;
&#13;
pitcher he showed exceptional ability in the outfield, and he&#13;
promises to be a mainstay this spring.&#13;
&#13;
ETBALL&#13;
&#13;
Bashaw, Utility Outfielder.&#13;
"Bush" missed getting his "M" by the narrow margin&#13;
of one game.&#13;
&#13;
He was a good fielder and a fair hitter and&#13;
&#13;
had it not been for his enlistment he would have landed a&#13;
regular berth this year.&#13;
&#13;
Northrup, Left Field.&#13;
"Norty," our veteran pitcher, was used in the outfield&#13;
this year because of a dislocated shoulder. "Norty" was the&#13;
most able man on the team in getting hits when they meant&#13;
runs. He drove in more runs than any other man on the team&#13;
Himmel, Center Field.&#13;
Carl, a new man, easily outclassed all candidates for&#13;
center field. With his big stick he made many a long drive&#13;
that meant scores for the Maroons at a time when they were&#13;
needed.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�The basketball season was a decided success, despite the fact that it had&#13;
been five years since we had participated in inter-collegiate basketball. Although only six games were played, five of which resulted in victories for&#13;
the Maroon five, the team showed remarkable development under Saunderson's able coaching.&#13;
&#13;
And next year with Pearce as captain, a longer&#13;
&#13;
schedule, and with the experience gained this year, Morningside will be prepared to take the place in basketball that she holds in every other sport.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 21; ABERDEEN NORMAL, 12.&#13;
The opening game of the season was played with the Aberdeen Normal&#13;
team on the local floor. At the end of the first half the score stood 8 to 3&#13;
in favor of the teachers, but the Maroons showed a real come back spirit&#13;
and won, 21 to 12.&#13;
&#13;
The game was hard fought all the way and the Ma-&#13;
&#13;
roons had to extent themselves to win.&#13;
the star for the visitors.&#13;
Upper Row- Saunderson, Coach; Brown,&#13;
Lower Row- Pearce, Hinkley, Thompson.&#13;
&#13;
Menefee,&#13;
&#13;
John s on, Lloyd, Norton.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 19; YANKTON, 35.&#13;
&#13;
Aberdeen Normal __ ___ __ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ 12 M. C. 21&#13;
Yankton ____ ___ __ __ __ ___ ____ ___ ______ ___ ___35 M. C. 19&#13;
&#13;
Huron _____ ________ ______ __ ____ _____ __ ____ ll M. C. 20&#13;
Yankton _______ ___ ___ _______ __ ____ ___ ______ 16 M. C. 33&#13;
Total-Opponents, 103; Morningside, 140.&#13;
&#13;
For the Maroons there was no particular star,&#13;
&#13;
the whole team doing stellar work for the opening game.&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
&#13;
Trinity - ------ -- - - ------ ----- - - -- ----- - - -- -16 M. C. 17&#13;
Western Union __ _____ __ ______ ______ _____ ___ 13 M. C. 17&#13;
&#13;
Capt. Corey, playing center, was&#13;
&#13;
In the second game of the year the Maroons received their only defeat.&#13;
&#13;
The game was played at Yankton on a small and very poor floor.&#13;
&#13;
The game was exceedingly rough and little real basketball was displayed.&#13;
Not being used to such a floor the Maroons were at a great handicap. The&#13;
score was 35 to 19 in favor of Yankton. Although the Maroons outplayed&#13;
them in the second half they were unable to overcome the big lead that&#13;
Yankton had gained in the first period.&#13;
&#13;
One Il un d r ed&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred One&#13;
&#13;
�Hinkley, Capt., Left Forward.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 17; TRINITY, 16.&#13;
&#13;
"Art" was the best floor man on the team and worked&#13;
&#13;
The game with Trinity, played on the home floor, resulted in a 17 to&#13;
&#13;
the ball up the floor continually. He was also a good shot&#13;
&#13;
16 victory for the Maroons. It was a great game to watch as neither team&#13;
&#13;
for the basket, and a hard and consistent player, who made&#13;
&#13;
was able to gain a commanding lead at any point, the score see-sawing&#13;
back and forth. The first half ended in a tie and Capt. Hinkley hung up&#13;
&#13;
good as captain.&#13;
&#13;
the basket that won the game just before time was out. The game was featured by close guarding. Johnson played a great game for the Maroons,&#13;
breaking up play after play.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 30; Western Union, 13.&#13;
Pearce, Right Guard.&#13;
&#13;
The next game with Western Union was also played on the home&#13;
At no time was&#13;
&#13;
Pearce, at running guard, proved to be t he most sen-&#13;
&#13;
the game in doubt, the final score being Morningside, 30; Western Union,&#13;
&#13;
sational basket shooter. He rung basket after basket from&#13;
the middle of t he floor when the basket was closely guarded.&#13;
&#13;
floor and resulted in an easy victory for the Maroons.&#13;
13.&#13;
&#13;
Pearce and Brown did some sensational basket shooting in this game.&#13;
&#13;
He shared with Brown the point winning honors of the&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 20; HURON, 11.&#13;
&#13;
squad.&#13;
&#13;
Huron College proved another easy victim and went down to defeat&#13;
by a 20 to 11 score. The Maroons did not play with their customary punch&#13;
in this game or the score might have been much larger. Pearce and Brown&#13;
again made the majority of the baskets.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 33; YANKTON, 16.&#13;
In the closing game of the season Yankton was defeated, 33 to 16. Morningside gained an early lead and maintained it throughout. Yankton put&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Left Guard.&#13;
"Jerry," because of his size and shiftness, developed&#13;
&#13;
up a good fight, but were seemingly outclassed by the Maroons, who by&#13;
&#13;
into a fine standing guard. He did his best work in breaking&#13;
&#13;
this time had developed into a splendid organizatoin, with good team work&#13;
&#13;
up the passing of opposing teams and forced them to shoot&#13;
&#13;
and excellent basket shooting. Pearce and Brown made six field goals&#13;
apiece. Thompson, playing in place of Capt. Hinkley, who was out with&#13;
&#13;
before they reached the basket.&#13;
&#13;
an injury, made four field goals and played a good game.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Two&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Three&#13;
&#13;
�Brown, Right Forward.&#13;
&#13;
Norton, Forward.&#13;
&#13;
George was the best under the basket shot on the team.&#13;
The team had great confidence in feeding the ball to him and&#13;
&#13;
over the floor with him, was the pepiest man on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
he could be depended on to make the points. He was a very&#13;
hard man to guard.&#13;
&#13;
He was a hard worker and forced the varsity to do their utmost to keep their regular positions on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
"Strangler," in spite of his 190 pounds that he carried&#13;
&#13;
Meneffee, Center.&#13;
&#13;
Swartz, Center.&#13;
&#13;
"Vic" was a good floor man, but a rather poor basket&#13;
shooter. He is big and fast, handles the ball well and was a&#13;
&#13;
"Red" was often used at center, where his size told to&#13;
good advantage. Although rather slow in floor work he&#13;
&#13;
big factor in the teamwork.&#13;
&#13;
proved to be a valuable man in shooting baskets.&#13;
&#13;
Although not an exceptional&#13;
&#13;
jumper he was able to secure his share of the tip-offs.&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd, Guard.&#13;
Thompson, Guard.&#13;
"Bud," although handicapped by his size, was the only&#13;
man besides the regulars to win an "M." He often substi-&#13;
&#13;
While Tom did not join the squad until the second semester he was not slow in getting into shape and proving&#13;
that he could still play basketball.&#13;
&#13;
He played in several&#13;
&#13;
games and always gave a good account of himself.&#13;
&#13;
tuted at guard and proved to be very effective at breaking&#13;
up plays before they were well started.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Five&#13;
&#13;
�Inter- Class Basketball Tournament&#13;
Class Standing.&#13;
Class of 1920, Sophomores_&#13;
&#13;
Won.&#13;
___________________________ 4&#13;
&#13;
Lost.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1921, Freshmen _______________________ ___ ___ __ 3&#13;
&#13;
·o&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1918, Seniors ______________ _________________________ 2&#13;
2&#13;
Class of 1919, Juniors _________________________________ 1&#13;
4&#13;
Academy ------------------------------------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
HINKLEY&#13;
&#13;
PIERCE&#13;
&#13;
The Class Teams&#13;
&#13;
Scores of Games.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
21 Juniors&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
24 Academy&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
21 Seniors&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
16 Academy&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
13 Seniors&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
46 Academy&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
28 Juniors&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
25 Academy&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
20 Juniors&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
26 Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Officials.&#13;
Referees: J. J. Hayes, Coach Saunderson&#13;
Umpires: T. McBride, D. Norton, R. Smith&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores.&#13;
Smith ________ L.&#13;
Goodrich ______ R.&#13;
Swartz ________&#13;
Pearce ________ L.&#13;
Mickelson (c) __ R.&#13;
Freshmen.&#13;
L. Copeland ______ L.&#13;
P. Jones _________ R.&#13;
J. Lee ____________&#13;
D. Thompson _____ L.&#13;
R. Pitman ________ R.&#13;
M. Shafenberg (c) _&#13;
Seniors.&#13;
C. Sherwood ______ L.&#13;
L. Johnson _______ R.&#13;
L. Lehan _________&#13;
T. McBride (c) ____ L.&#13;
R. McBride ______ R&#13;
Juniors.&#13;
D. Norton (c) _____ L.&#13;
B. Cooper -------R.&#13;
M. Evans --------R.&#13;
A. Hunt __________&#13;
R. Schellenger ----L.&#13;
R. Troutman _____ R.&#13;
Academy.&#13;
H. Dale __________ L.&#13;
L. Shearer (c) ____ R.&#13;
C. Hartzell _______&#13;
R. Webb ____ ____ L.&#13;
H. Harding _______ R.&#13;
D. Reifsteck ______ R.&#13;
R.&#13;
0.&#13;
C.&#13;
L.&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
C.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
SWARTZ&#13;
&#13;
MICKELSON&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Northwest Iowa Basketball Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
Paullina&#13;
Hospers&#13;
Milford&#13;
Holstein&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Pisgah&#13;
Galva&#13;
&#13;
Second Round&#13;
&#13;
First Round&#13;
14 Orange City&#13;
13 Rock Valley&#13;
14 Modale&#13;
22 Castana&#13;
14 Ireton&#13;
40 Merrill&#13;
8 Lake Park&#13;
.28 Magnolia&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
10&#13;
7&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
9&#13;
6&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Remsen&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Milford&#13;
Hospers&#13;
Paullina&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
14&#13;
24&#13;
14&#13;
30&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Pierson&#13;
·10&#13;
Holstein&#13;
6&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
10&#13;
Hartley&#13;
13&#13;
Pisgah&#13;
8&#13;
Galva&#13;
9&#13;
Sloan&#13;
13&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Third Round&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
Milford&#13;
Paullina&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
9&#13;
16&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Remsen&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Hospers&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
7&#13;
14&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Paullina&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
&#13;
44&#13;
&#13;
Officials&#13;
&#13;
Referee-Coach J . M. Saunderson&#13;
Umpire-Prof. J. J. Hayes&#13;
Time Keepers-Tom Lloyd, Lee Hornney&#13;
SIOUX CITY TRIBUNE'S ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
First Team&#13;
&#13;
Deiters, Sioux Center,&#13;
Torstenson, Milford&#13;
Burgett, Spencer (Capt.),&#13;
Dows, Sioux Center,&#13;
Hollenbeck, Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Position&#13;
&#13;
Forward&#13;
Forward&#13;
Center&#13;
Guard&#13;
Guard&#13;
&#13;
Second Team&#13;
&#13;
Ford,&#13;
Conn,&#13;
Van Rocke},&#13;
Ottipoly&#13;
Emerick,&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eight&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d Nine&#13;
&#13;
�Monument Run&#13;
&#13;
SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd Schearer, First.&#13;
April 21, 1917&#13;
Morningside's two-mile relay team won this event at the Drake Stadium on April 21 for the third consecutive year. McConkey, in starting&#13;
the race for Morningside, ran the best race of his life and handed the stick&#13;
to Omar in third place. Omar started out at full speed and near the end&#13;
of the first quarter passed. into the lead. He maintained this lead until the&#13;
turn on the last quarter when he sprained his ankle, making it well nigh&#13;
impossible for him to finish. Walker started the race under a great handicap and was not able to catch up with the leaders until the last lap. With&#13;
a fine burst of speed in the last 200 yards he was able to give Curry a lead&#13;
of fifteen yards. Curry immediately set out to widen his lead and finished a good fifty yards in the lead of his nearest competitor. But for the&#13;
disaster to Omar the team probably would have lowered the record of&#13;
8 :15, which is held by the 1916 Morningside team.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ten&#13;
     &#13;
Albert Hunt, Second.&#13;
Merle Shafenberg, Third.&#13;
Lloyd Schearer, First, Academy.&#13;
On the 22nd of February, over a course made very slippery by a thin&#13;
layer of snow, Lloyd Schearer broke all precedent at Morningside by finishing first in the annual Monument run. He was the first Academy man&#13;
that ever won this race, thereby winning two medals. The Monument run&#13;
is the only cross country event of the year at Morningside. It consists of a&#13;
trip to the Floyd Monument, of about two miles, and return, and is always&#13;
run on Washington's birthday, regardless of the weather.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred El even&#13;
&#13;
�Yankton-Morningside Dual&#13;
May 5, 1917, at Morningside&#13;
May 11, 1917, at University Place&#13;
SUMMARY OF MEET&#13;
&#13;
100-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Fetz W Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
10:2&#13;
&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Fetz W Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
23:2&#13;
&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Curry M Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
53:2&#13;
&#13;
Half-mile run&#13;
&#13;
Walker M McConkey M&#13;
&#13;
2:06:2&#13;
&#13;
Mile-run&#13;
&#13;
Kinney M Hunt M&#13;
&#13;
4:52:2&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington M Fetz W&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
120-yard hurdles&#13;
220-yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
Horney M E. Harrington M&#13;
&#13;
High jump&#13;
&#13;
Haworth W Waddell W&#13;
&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
&#13;
Wenig M Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
&#13;
Pearce M Kahn, E. Odgen W&#13;
&#13;
Shot put&#13;
Discus&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington M Johnson M&#13;
Gorham W WenigM&#13;
&#13;
Gantt M Best Y&#13;
&#13;
100-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF MEET&#13;
&#13;
28:4&#13;
5:7&#13;
20:11&#13;
10:1&#13;
37 :1 1/2&#13;
110:8&#13;
&#13;
Best Y Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Curry M Cutts Y&#13;
&#13;
880-yard run&#13;
&#13;
Walker M Rogers Y&#13;
Hunt M Wayard Y&#13;
&#13;
Mile-run&#13;
Two-mile run&#13;
&#13;
Van Horne M E. Williams M&#13;
&#13;
120-yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington M Garable Y&#13;
&#13;
220-yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington M A. Hornney M&#13;
&#13;
Shot put&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington M Johnson M&#13;
&#13;
Discus&#13;
&#13;
Johnson M Cutts Y&#13;
&#13;
High jump&#13;
&#13;
Wenig M Leitch M, tied&#13;
&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
&#13;
Wenig M Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
&#13;
Rogers y Troutman and Pearce M&#13;
&#13;
Mile relay, Yankton 3 :34 :1&#13;
Total-M. C., 67; Nebraska, 29.&#13;
Total-M. C., 76; Yankton, 33.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twelve&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirteen.&#13;
&#13;
10:2&#13;
23:4&#13;
52&#13;
2:01:2&#13;
4:44&#13;
10:40&#13;
17:3&#13;
29&#13;
36 :10 1/2&#13;
100 :8 1/2&#13;
5:4&#13;
20:7&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
�Summary of Home Meet--1917&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Gantt, '20; Hyde, '20; H. Mahood, '19, 11:&#13;
220-Yard Dash-Curry, '17; Hyde, '20; D. Bleakly, Academy, 24 :4.&#13;
440-Yard Dash-Curry, '17; Gantt, '20; C. Mahood, Academy, 53.4.&#13;
Half-Mile Run-McConkey, '18; Walker, '18, 2 :11.&#13;
Mile Run- Kenny, '20; Hunt, '19; Sherwood, '18, 4 :52.&#13;
Two-Mile Run-Van Horne, '17; E. Williams, '17; Trefz, '20, 10 :49.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles-Connor, Academy; E; Harrington, '18; A. Horney,&#13;
'17,18:1.&#13;
220- Yard Hurdles-Curry, '17; Hyde, '20; D. Bleakly, Academy, 27 :4.&#13;
High Jump-Leitch, '20; Pearce, '20; Wenig, '18; Himmel, '20; E. Harrington, '18, 5 :4.&#13;
Broad Jump-Wenig, '18; E. Harrington, 18; Gantt, '20, 19 :2.&#13;
Freshmen-Class of 1920, first, 32 1-3 points.&#13;
Seniors-Class of 1917, second, 24 points.&#13;
Juniors-Class of 1918, third, 20 2-3 points.&#13;
Academy-Fourth, 2 points.&#13;
Sophomores-Class of 1919, fifth, 4 points.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Track Records&#13;
JOO-Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908, :10.&#13;
220-Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903, :22.1.&#13;
440-Yard Dash-V. E. Montgomery, 1913, :51.4.&#13;
880-Yard Run-W. E. Curry, 1915, 2 :01.1.&#13;
Mile Run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1908,&#13;
N. J. Williams, 1914, 4 :40.&#13;
Two-Mile Run-L. R. Chapman, 1908, 10 :05.&#13;
220-Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910, :25 :1.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911, :15 :4.&#13;
High Jump-W. McIntosh, 1914, 5 feet, 7 1/2 inches.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E. West, 1911, 21 feet, 2 inches.&#13;
Shot Put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912, 39 feet, 1/ 2 inch.&#13;
Hammer Throw-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911, 121 feet, 3 1/2 inches.&#13;
Discus-R. R. Vernon, 1915, 128 feet, 6 inches.&#13;
Pole Vault-Herman Leuder, 1915, 11 feet, 10 inches.&#13;
Mile Relay-V. E. Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser,&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, F. E. Burns, 1909, 3 :36.2.&#13;
Two-Mile Relay-H. Walker, V. Lavely,&#13;
M. Morley, W. Curry, 1915, 8 :15.&#13;
Monument Run-V. Lavely, 1914, 18 :01.2.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
"M"&#13;
&#13;
Meet&#13;
&#13;
May 4, 1917&#13;
1.00-Yard Dash-Gates, Sioux City; Slipe, Hawarden; Clarke, Lemars, 10: 1.&#13;
Mile Run-Henry, Hawarden; C. Roberts, Storm Lake; Senkey, Cherokee,&#13;
4:55.&#13;
Half-Mile Relay-Sioux City, Hawarden, LeMars, 1 :39.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles-McKee, Sioux City; Kock, LeMars, Knott, Sioux City,&#13;
19:.&#13;
440-Yard Run-Shafenburg, Sergeant Bluffs; Winter, Sioux City; Coffee,&#13;
Sioux City, 54 :2.&#13;
220-Yard Hurdles-Munro, LeMars; Knott, Sioux City; Norman, Elk Point,&#13;
29:4.&#13;
Half-Mile Run-Henry, Hawarden; Bergquist, Sioux City; Kircher, Hawarden, 2 :11.&#13;
220-Yard Dash-McKee, Sioux City; Bedell, LeMars; Slipe, Hawarden, 24: 1.&#13;
Mile Relay-Sioux City, Cherokee, Hawarden, 3 :49.&#13;
Pole Vault-Duhinski, Cherokee; Smythe, Elk Point, Jones, Sioux City, 9&#13;
feet, 9 inches.&#13;
High Jump-J. Coffie, Sergeant Bluffs; Coffie, Sioux City; Smythe, Elk&#13;
Point; Conn, Hartley, 5 feet 4 inches.&#13;
Broad Jump-Gates, Sioux City; Slipe, Hawarden; J. Coffie, Sergeant&#13;
Bluffs, 19 feet, 7 inches.&#13;
Discus-Brucker, LeMars; Winters, Sioux City; Mickelson, Battle Creek,&#13;
109 feet, 8 inches.&#13;
Shot Put-Brucker, LeMars; Winter, Sioux City; Mickelson, Battle Creek,&#13;
40 feet, 6 inches.&#13;
Sioux City-36 points.&#13;
LeMars-23 points.&#13;
Hawarden-22 points.&#13;
Sergeant Bluffs-11 points.&#13;
"M" MEET RECORDS&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Foel, Storm Lake, 1909; Osborne, LeMars, 1911, :10.&#13;
220-Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee, 1911, :23.&#13;
440-Yard Dash-Shafenberg, Sergeant Bluffs, 1916 and 1917, 54:2.&#13;
880-Yard Run-Rogers. Yankton, 1914, 2.07.&#13;
Mile Run-L. Larson, Sioux City, Swancutt, SiouxFalls, 1916, 4.48.1.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles, Vernon, Hawarden, 1911, :17.&#13;
220-Yard Hurdles-Quigley, Hawarden, 1911, :27 :4.&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, Cherokee; Peterson, Centerville; Wilkins, Correctionville, 1911, 11 feet.&#13;
High Jump-Aldrich, Sioux, 1911, 5 feet, 8 inches.&#13;
12-Pound Hammer-Gilliland, Storm Lake, 1911.&#13;
12-Pound Shot-Elliott, Hurley, S. D., 1909, 43 feet, 8 1/4 inches.&#13;
Discus-Knapp, Cherokee, 1911, 110 feet.&#13;
Half-Mile Relay-LeMars, 1915, 1 :37 :3.&#13;
Mile Relay-LeMars, 1915, 3 :45 :2.&#13;
Teams That Have Won&#13;
1914-LeMars.&#13;
1909-Storm Lake.&#13;
1910-Sioux City.&#13;
1915-Sioux Falls.&#13;
1911-Cherokee.&#13;
1916-Sioux City.&#13;
1912-Sioux City.&#13;
1917-Sioux City.&#13;
1913-Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�Walker was the most consistent and hard working man&#13;
&#13;
Wenig is an almost sure point winner in the high jump&#13;
&#13;
on the squad. He finished first in the half-mile in our two&#13;
&#13;
in any meet he enters.&#13;
&#13;
dual meets. "Steve," as captain for this spring, will make a&#13;
&#13;
the broad jump and in the discus. "Obe" was expected to set&#13;
up a new record this spring, but he was called into the Army.&#13;
&#13;
fine leader.&#13;
&#13;
He also won points last spring in&#13;
&#13;
Harrington is another of the veteran track men who&#13;
&#13;
Johnson decided he wanted an "M" in track and picked&#13;
the weights for his event. He surprised even himself and&#13;
&#13;
made a good showing last spring. Ed ran both the high and&#13;
&#13;
proved to be an easy point winner in the two dual meets.&#13;
&#13;
low hurdles and big things were expected of him this spring,&#13;
but he failed to return to school.&#13;
&#13;
Capt. Curry is one of the best all around track men that&#13;
was ever developed at Morningside. Not satisfied with be-&#13;
&#13;
Harrington is one of the veterans of the track squad.&#13;
&#13;
ing one of the best half-milers in the State he runs the hun-&#13;
&#13;
Ray is a consistent worker and has added over a foot to his&#13;
&#13;
dred in 10 :2 and came close to the record in the Monument&#13;
&#13;
record in the shot put each year since he has been in school.&#13;
&#13;
run last year.&#13;
captain.&#13;
&#13;
He was an easy winner in this event in both dual meets.&#13;
&#13;
Wendell made a hard working and likable&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Sixteen,&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�Gantt, although a new man in track work for the Maroons last year, proved to be the best point winner on the&#13;
squad in the dual meets.&#13;
&#13;
"Ted" succeeded in winning one&#13;
&#13;
first and two seconds in one, and four seconds in the other.&#13;
His enlistment was a serious blow to our track prospects for&#13;
this spring.&#13;
&#13;
McConkey won his letter by running the first lap of the&#13;
relay at the Drake Stadium.&#13;
&#13;
Bly was a hard worker and&#13;
&#13;
showed considerable improvement throughout t he season.&#13;
His enlistment lost us a good man for this spring.&#13;
&#13;
Hunt secured his "M" last spring by winning the mile&#13;
against Yankton. Albert had a hard fight with Kenny for&#13;
Hornney at last achieved his heart's desire, and is now&#13;
entitled to wear an "M." "Al" put in four hard years down&#13;
on the cinder path in order to win the low hurdles against&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan.&#13;
&#13;
first honors in the mile and between them they were able to&#13;
divide t he points in both duel meets.&#13;
&#13;
Kenny pushed Hunt hard all year for honors in the&#13;
mile. Tom made his "M" after a spirited fight with Hunt all&#13;
the way around in the Nebraska Wesleyan meet . Kenny&#13;
was also lost to us this year because of his enlistment.&#13;
Omar won his letter in track last spring by being a&#13;
member of the Drake Relay team.&#13;
&#13;
Although handicapped&#13;
&#13;
by a bad ankle and forced to limp his last quarter "Frogie"&#13;
finished his half in 2 :03. He also was lost to us this year&#13;
because of enlistment in the Navy.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
Pearce was one of t he best all around men on the squad,&#13;
participating in the jumps, the pole vault, the weights and&#13;
the hurdles. He won his "M" in t he pole vault.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�GIRLS' ATHLETIC COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
Track and Field Chairman, Aurelia Sturtevant; Hockey Chairman, Mildred&#13;
Wolfe;&#13;
Chairman, Agnes Fry; Tennis Chairman,&#13;
Ruth Mahood; Hike Chairman, Hazel Bergeson;&#13;
Basketball Chairman, Ruth Belew.&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Club, on the proposal of Miss Luechauer and&#13;
Agnes Fry, has formulated a plan by which "M" sweaters can&#13;
be worn by the girls. These sweaters will be white with a&#13;
maroon "M" and white "C" monogram. A girl playing basketball may win ten points, and the Yale-Harvard players are&#13;
awarded five extra points. The class champions in tennis wins&#13;
ten points, and the College champion wins five extra points.&#13;
Each girl taking three five-mile hikes a semester is given five&#13;
points. The five best players on each hockey team earn ten&#13;
points, all others on the hockey teams win five points. The&#13;
girl taking first place in the track meet wins five points. For&#13;
the first ten points that a girl earns she is awarded a class&#13;
numeral, and when she earns forty points she is awarded the&#13;
"M. C." monogram, and when seventy points are earned she is&#13;
awarded the white sweater with an "M. C." monogram. Only&#13;
twenty points a year will count toward honors. Members of&#13;
1918 Class earn a monogram with twenty points, members of&#13;
1919 Class with thirty points and a sweater with forty-five&#13;
points. In eligibility for final honors the following points will&#13;
be taken into consideration: Personal presence, athletic accomplishment, spirit, service and scholarship.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Mahood-1919&#13;
&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
Sturtevant-1919&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS OF "A" MEDALS&#13;
Ruth Mahood, by earning the greatest number of points in the track meet, by&#13;
making the Yale basketball team, and by winning the tennis tournament, was awarded first medal. Aurelia Sturtevant, by winning second place in the track meet, by&#13;
making the Yale basketball team, and by being a runner-up In her class tennis tournament received second medal. These "A" medals are awarded by the Agora Club , but&#13;
now are to be replaced by the "M. C." monograms and the "M. C." sweaters.&#13;
&#13;
TRACK MEET RESULTS&#13;
220-yard dash -----------------------R.&#13;
440-yard dash -----------------------A,&#13;
Half mile --------------------- --- ---R.&#13;
Standing Broad Jump ----------------H.&#13;
High Jump -------------------------R.&#13;
tied for second.&#13;
Traveling rings _________ ________ ___ __ H.&#13;
Chinning ___________________________ M.&#13;
&#13;
Mahood, first; M. Walker', second.&#13;
Sturtevant, first; H . Bergeson, second.&#13;
Mahood, first ; A. Sturtevant, second.&#13;
Bergeson, first; A. Sturtevant, second.&#13;
Mahood, first; A. Wolcott, M. Walker,&#13;
Carter, first; M. Walker, second.&#13;
Walker, first; H. Bergeson, second.&#13;
&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
Ruth Mahood _______________________ 21 points&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant ---------------- ---16 points&#13;
Merle Walker ------ --- ------------- 15 points&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-On e&#13;
&#13;
�Ruth Mahood-1919&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Fouke-1918&#13;
&#13;
TENNIS TOURNAMENT OF SPRING OF 1917.&#13;
Winner - -- - - ---- ________ ------ ______________________________ Ruth Mahood&#13;
&#13;
YALE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up - . ----------------------- ---- -----------------------Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Back Row-C. Hauswald, E. Payne, M. J ohnson, E. Balkema.&#13;
Front Row-A. L ong, H. B ergeson, A. Fry (Capt.), z. B aldwin.&#13;
&#13;
Results-&#13;
&#13;
YALE-HARVARD TEAMS&#13;
Score:&#13;
Yale&#13;
------- ------ -------- ________ __ 18&#13;
Harvard -------- - -------- __________ 14&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
6: 1, 6: O&#13;
&#13;
CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
&#13;
Academy winner&#13;
&#13;
M. Champ&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Academy runner-up&#13;
&#13;
D. Champ&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
-------------------------Freshman winner -------------Freshman runner-up -----------Sophomore winner ------------Sophomore runner-up ----------Junior-Senior winner -----------&#13;
&#13;
F. Weir&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
H. Bergeson&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
R. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
G Knapp&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
R. Fouke&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Junior-Senior runner-up -- ---- --- G . Riddle&#13;
&#13;
INTER-CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
&#13;
Junior-Senior -- --- ------------- R. Fouke&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
:Freshman -- ---- --------·------- F. Weir&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore -------------------- R. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Academy -------------------- - M. Champ&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Junior-Senior ----- --- -- -- ---- - - R. Fouke&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
R. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Twenty-Two&#13;
&#13;
HARVARD TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Back Row- I. Stevens. N. Moss, A. Sturtevant, U . Madsen.&#13;
Front Row- E. Day, R. Mahood (Capt.), L. W illiams, G. Knapp.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�VOLLEY BALL&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS-FRESHMAN TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Back Row--C. Hauswald, E. Bekins, Z Baldwin, J. Stevens.&#13;
Front How- L. Williams, A. Long (Capt.), B. Scoville.&#13;
BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
Win.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ______________ --------- ________ 4&#13;
Junior s --------------------------------- 3&#13;
Sophomores _____________________________ 2&#13;
Academy&#13;
__________ ------- -----_____ l&#13;
Seniors ---------------------------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
WINNING&#13;
&#13;
TEAM- FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Row- G. Hoflund, G. Twogood,&#13;
R. McCreery,&#13;
I. Stevens, G. Armbright.&#13;
Front Row- U. Madsen&#13;
E. Day, L. Wendell,&#13;
F. Connor (Capt.), B. Scoville,&#13;
A. Schuler,&#13;
BAck&#13;
&#13;
Lose&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
LOSING TEAM- SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
RUNNER-UP- JUNIOR TEAM&#13;
Back Row-A. Sturtevant, G. Knapp. G.Clarl,,B.Burns.&#13;
Front Uow-R. Mahood (Capt.), H. Bergh.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Back Row- F. Day, M. Pecaut,&#13;
.Jackson, G. Ruskell.&#13;
Front&#13;
Row- A. Fry, G. Wishard,&#13;
(Capt.),&#13;
A. Anderson.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-Five&#13;
&#13;
E. Montgomery,&#13;
F. Weir,&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
M. Walker&#13;
&#13;
�Sports and Athletics at Morningside&#13;
It's a Great Game If You Don't Weaken&#13;
&#13;
Daily Dual Meets&#13;
Jerry Johnson&#13;
Phoebe Obrecht&#13;
Tom Lloyd&#13;
Harold Walker&#13;
*Ross Hartley&#13;
Lee Freeman&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
Deak Sherwood&#13;
Happy Raun&#13;
Evans Engberg&#13;
McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
Sue Wormley&#13;
Genevieve Young&#13;
Florence Forsberg&#13;
Joy Horton&#13;
Grace Hoflund&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
Blue Grass Girl&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
Clara Back&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
Gladys Twogood&#13;
&#13;
*Disqualified.&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS&#13;
Story&#13;
Chick&#13;
xBus&#13;
zMac&#13;
xRalph&#13;
Clint&#13;
xxIrwin&#13;
xMerle&#13;
&#13;
Grace&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Florence&#13;
Dorothy&#13;
Nellie&#13;
Beryl&#13;
Van Ness&#13;
Marvel&#13;
Ullman&#13;
Hanson&#13;
Brady&#13;
Haskell&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
zAll records broken.&#13;
xBegan in High School .&#13;
xxWe doubt if he finishes.&#13;
*Foreign men, unknowns.&#13;
&#13;
One H undre d T wenty-Six&#13;
&#13;
�CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
To whom is due in large measure all our&#13;
forensic success, and whose untiring efforts&#13;
have resulted in giving Morningside a leading&#13;
place among the Colleges of the Middle West.&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundre d Twen ty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
Seated- Johnson,&#13;
&#13;
Back, Fry, Carter.&#13;
&#13;
Forensic League&#13;
&#13;
Standing- Prichard, Engberg,&#13;
Stonebrook, Treftz,&#13;
Seated-Dunn, Beck, Marsh, Forbes, Soltow.&#13;
&#13;
Barks.&#13;
&#13;
Standing- Marsh, Barks, Soltow, Forbes.&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
President, Allan Bartlett&#13;
Vice President, Marion Johnson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, Clara Back&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Membership&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Advisor&#13;
&#13;
Charles A. Marsh&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Oratory&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Clara Back&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks&#13;
Robert McBride&#13;
Gladys Clark&#13;
Clarence Obrecht Dale Norton&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Jacob Treftz&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debate&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Earl Stonebrook&#13;
&#13;
Allan Bartlett&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
&#13;
The Forensic League is composed of representatives from each of the men's&#13;
literary societies.&#13;
&#13;
The league forms compacts with other Colleges for inter-col-&#13;
&#13;
legiate forensic contests, selects the question for inter-society debates, supervises oratorical contests of the colege and, in fact, has under its control all matters relating to&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Members&#13;
Charles A. Marsh&#13;
&#13;
the forensics of the College.&#13;
&#13;
Lee I. Barks&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-One&#13;
&#13;
�Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Oratory&#13;
&#13;
DUAL INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATES&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
Morningside College, March 1, 1918&#13;
Miss Dewey Deal, first, Buena Vista&#13;
"The Policy That Failed"&#13;
Lee Soltow, second,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
"The Medium of Purchase"&#13;
Robert Julian, third,&#13;
&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Our Responsibility"&#13;
Dale Norton&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORI-&#13;
&#13;
Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
CAL CONTEST&#13;
Western Union, LeMars, March&#13;
19, 1918&#13;
George Dunn, first, Morningside&#13;
"The Demand of the Hour"&#13;
Howard Kuist, second,&#13;
Western Union&#13;
"A Challenge to College Men"&#13;
&#13;
G. Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
Benjamin Hamilton, third, Simpson&#13;
"A Federal Amendment"&#13;
&#13;
Willis J. Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
March 15 1918 I · S. T. C. at Cedar Falls.&#13;
.&#13;
Affirmative 0; Negative, 3.&#13;
March 22, 1918,Dakota Wesleyan at Morningside Judge), Negative.&#13;
(one&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Two&#13;
&#13;
March. 15, 1918, I. S. T. C. at Morningside.&#13;
Negative, 2; Affirmative, 1.&#13;
March 22, 1918, Dakota Wesleya n at Mitche ll (one judge), Affirmative.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�OTHONIAN&#13;
Affirmative, 0&#13;
&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Jan. 14, 1918&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Negative, 3&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Affirmative, 2&#13;
&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Jan. 15, 1918&#13;
&#13;
C. J. Obrecht&#13;
Ralph Pitman&#13;
Lee Saltow&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Trefz&#13;
Scott Purbee&#13;
Robert McBride&#13;
&#13;
G. Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
J. Finley Christ&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
&#13;
Questionthe administration be given absolute censor ·&#13;
That in time of war ,&#13;
Resolved&#13;
s h ip of the press, constitutionality&#13;
g r a nte d a n d co n g r ess io n a l action waived.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Four&#13;
&#13;
One H undred T hir ty-Five&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
Negative, 1&#13;
&#13;
�PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
Affirmative, 1&#13;
&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Jan. 16, 1918&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
Negative, 2&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest Nov. 25, 1917&#13;
"The Awakening" (first)&#13;
&#13;
Lee Saltow&#13;
&#13;
"The Determining Factor "&#13;
&#13;
(second)&#13;
&#13;
"Th e Fruits of Victory" (third )&#13;
&#13;
J.Paul Jones&#13;
&#13;
Allan Bartlett&#13;
Clarence J. Obrecht&#13;
&#13;
"Th e Challenge of the Time to American&#13;
"Eomanhood"&#13;
&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
&#13;
"The Martyrdom of Belgium"&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Hopkin son&#13;
&#13;
"The Crucial Hou r " (first)&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
"The Call of the Hour" (second)&#13;
&#13;
Robert K. Johnston&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dutton.&#13;
&#13;
"The Demand of the Age"&#13;
&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
&#13;
"The Mandate of the People" (third)&#13;
&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
&#13;
"Prohibition Triumphant"&#13;
&#13;
McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Hopkinson&#13;
&#13;
"Our Nationa l Foe"&#13;
&#13;
Ernest Sanger&#13;
&#13;
"The Tribunal of the War"&#13;
&#13;
George Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
"Prohibition and Patriotism"&#13;
&#13;
Axel J. Beck&#13;
&#13;
Robert Johnston.&#13;
&#13;
"The Hidden Task"&#13;
&#13;
Goldia Jackson&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
State Oratorical Association&#13;
1900 J . A . Davies, ninth&#13;
&#13;
Dale Norton&#13;
&#13;
1 91 0 H. S. Hamilton , second&#13;
&#13;
1901 H. A . Keck, seventh&#13;
&#13;
1911 F . P. Johnson, second&#13;
&#13;
1902 A. R. Toothaker , eliminated&#13;
&#13;
1903 D. C. Hall, fourth&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
191 3 F. P . Johnson, secon d&#13;
&#13;
1904 R. E. Heilman&#13;
1905 G. J. Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
1915 J. I. Dolliver , third&#13;
&#13;
1914 R. H. McVicker, sixt h&#13;
&#13;
1906 A.G. Cushman&#13;
1907 A. G. Cushman, fifth&#13;
19 08 F. W. Backemeyer, second&#13;
1909 F. W. Backemeyer , first&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Six&#13;
&#13;
1912 F . P. Johnson, second&#13;
&#13;
1 91 6 R. L . Mitchell, eliminated&#13;
1917 C. E . Albertson , second&#13;
1918 Lee Soltow, second&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Thirty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian Gold Medal Debates&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Gold Medal Debate&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
J. Lee&#13;
P. Ryerson&#13;
vs.&#13;
J. McBurney&#13;
J. Lehan&#13;
J. Miller&#13;
E. Ausman&#13;
vs.&#13;
M. Shafenberg&#13;
C. Swartz&#13;
&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
vs.&#13;
F. Valiquette&#13;
R. Schellenger&#13;
J. Hays&#13;
F. Rorapaugh&#13;
vs.&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
L. Alt&#13;
&#13;
L. Copeland&#13;
L. Bond&#13;
F. Evans&#13;
vs.&#13;
C. Baldwin&#13;
V. Pitstick&#13;
E. Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
Winners&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
Ryerson&#13;
Lehan&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Ausman&#13;
Valiquette&#13;
&#13;
Hays&#13;
&#13;
Ausman&#13;
Swartz&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Valiquette&#13;
Crouch&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
Hays&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Hays&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Bond&#13;
Balwin&#13;
Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Valiquette&#13;
&#13;
Seeman&#13;
Berry&#13;
Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
C. Fry&#13;
A. Jeep&#13;
vs.&#13;
H. Meyers&#13;
V. Hart&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
P. Moorhead&#13;
A. Seeman&#13;
vs.&#13;
G. Berry&#13;
G. Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
Fry&#13;
Jeep&#13;
Meyers&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Bergquist&#13;
Meyers&#13;
Jeep&#13;
First&#13;
A. Jeep&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
H. Dunn&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
vs.&#13;
F. Marquart&#13;
C. Kirby&#13;
&#13;
C. Kirby&#13;
Dunn&#13;
Marquart&#13;
Kirby&#13;
&#13;
H. Down&#13;
W. Marsh&#13;
vs.&#13;
H. Butler&#13;
V. Hart&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Down&#13;
Butler&#13;
&#13;
Kirby&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Butler&#13;
G. Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records in State Prohibition&#13;
Oratorical Association&#13;
First&#13;
Baldwin&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
1901 G. W . Finch,&#13;
&#13;
first ;&#13;
&#13;
Interstate, first ;&#13;
&#13;
National, third&#13;
&#13;
1902 J . N, McKay, second&#13;
&#13;
A. Hartman&#13;
E. Hickman&#13;
R. Wilson&#13;
vs.&#13;
C. Northrup&#13;
D. Thompson&#13;
B. Cooper&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
Bond&#13;
&#13;
1912 C. E . Smith, third&#13;
&#13;
190 6 C. D. Horner, third&#13;
&#13;
1913 J. L. Ralston , third&#13;
&#13;
190 7 Ida Lewis, fifth&#13;
&#13;
1914&#13;
&#13;
1908 G. W . Barrett, third&#13;
&#13;
1915 R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
&#13;
1909&#13;
&#13;
Hartman&#13;
Cooper&#13;
Wilson&#13;
&#13;
1916 C. H. Klippel, second&#13;
&#13;
H. H . Gill, second&#13;
&#13;
191 0 F. P . Johnson, first&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
R. L. Mitchell , second&#13;
&#13;
1 917 C. H . Klippel, first; Interstate, 2d&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Records&#13;
Men's Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
1902 Morningside, 3; Nebraska Wesleyan, 0&#13;
1903 Morningside, 2; Baker U., 1&#13;
1904 Morningside, 3; Simpson, 0&#13;
Morningside, 1; Baker U., 2&#13;
1905 Morningside, 1; Upper Iowa, 2&#13;
Morningside, 1; Baker U., 2&#13;
1906 Morningside, 1 ; Upper Iowa, 2&#13;
1907 Morningside, 1; Upper Iowa, 2&#13;
1908 Morningside, 3; Upper Iowa, 0&#13;
Morningside, 3; Nebraska Wesleyan, 0&#13;
1910 Morningside, 3; Simpson, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2; Upper Iowa, 1&#13;
1911 Morningside, 2; Upper Iowa, 1&#13;
Morningside, 0 ; Upper Iowa, 3&#13;
1912 Morningside, 2; Nebraska Wesleyan, 1&#13;
Morningside, 1 ; Dakota Wesleyan, 2&#13;
1913 Morningside, 1; Iowa State Teachers, 2&#13;
Morningside, 2; Coe, 1&#13;
1914 Morningside, 3; Iowa State Teachers, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2 ; Coe, 1&#13;
1915 Morningside, 0; Southwestern, 3&#13;
Morningside, 3 ; Iowa State Teachers, 0&#13;
Morningside, 1 ; Coe, 2&#13;
1916 Morningside, 3; Dakota Wesleyan, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2; St. Olaf, 1&#13;
1917 Morningside, 3; Upper Iowa, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2; Hamline, 1&#13;
Morningside, 3, 1; St. Viateur, 0, 2&#13;
1918 Morningside, 0, 2; Iowa State Teachers, 3, 1&#13;
Morningside, 0, 0; Dakota Wesleyan, 1, 1&#13;
&#13;
1915 Morningside, 0, 0; Simpson, 3, 3&#13;
1916 Morningside, 2; Huron, 1&#13;
Morningside, 2; South Dakota U., 1&#13;
1917 Morningside, 3; Huron, 0&#13;
Morningside, 1 ; Yankton, 2&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty&#13;
&#13;
�Society Spirit in Morningside&#13;
"By friendship we mean, the greatest love, the greatest&#13;
usefulness, the most open communication, the noblest sufferings, the severest truth, the heartiest counsel, and the greatest union of minds of which brave men and women are capable."&#13;
Our Literary Societies satisfy this definition in all its&#13;
phases. The greatest love-whose love can surpass that of&#13;
John and Marie Sebern Kolp, Herman and Marion Heikes&#13;
Leuder, Harry and Ruth Gillies Warnes.&#13;
The greatest usefulness-all hail to our boys in the army&#13;
s&#13;
cantonments. We are justly proud of our boys·in the service.&#13;
To them we have dedicated our annual, and to them we give&#13;
our annual, and to them we give our promise to back them&#13;
to the limit.&#13;
The most open communication-here let us place our good&#13;
times together, our literary programs and business meetings.&#13;
We have formed friendships here that will outlive our residence&#13;
as students. We "get next to" people in times of recreation&#13;
and learn to admire them for their "pep" and good sportsmanship. Here also we mention the debates. They keep the spirit&#13;
of friendly rivalry alive and broaden and clear the intellect.&#13;
The noblest sufferings-we pay tribute to Al Behmer.&#13;
Our hearts are grieved, but our heads are held high, proud that&#13;
he gave his life for freedom and democracy.&#13;
The severest truths-here we have our critics and set&#13;
standards of behavior. In our business meetings we are criticised for all forms of misdemeanors, social and individual. It&#13;
is all done in a spirit of friendliness and for mutual help and&#13;
advancement.&#13;
The heartiest counsel-we bow to our alumni and former&#13;
members. From them we derive our ideals and to them we&#13;
go for advice or help. They are never too busy to help, never&#13;
too busy to listen, and never too busy to give counsel.&#13;
The greatest union of minds-we cite here the attraction&#13;
and stimulation of kindred minds. Our contemporaries are not&#13;
inferior to former members. We have faith to believe that we,&#13;
as present active members, will serve as freely and as wisely&#13;
as our predecessors, and help to weld the golden chain of&#13;
friendship, connecting the past with the future.&#13;
RUTH I. BRADY.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undr ed Forty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Organized October 14, 1892 .&#13;
&#13;
Colors: Olive Green and Maroon.&#13;
Motto: Vestigia Nulla Rectorsum (No Slipping Backward ).&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
1st Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
2nd Mem . Ex. Board&#13;
3rd Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
First Critic&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
P. Eiffert&#13;
E. Stonebrook&#13;
E . Prichard&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
F . Hackett&#13;
C. Klatt&#13;
C. J orstad&#13;
J . Bogard&#13;
T . McBride&#13;
L. Castle&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
R. McBride&#13;
E. Prichard&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
M. Evans&#13;
H . Hackett&#13;
R. Wilson&#13;
R. Smith&#13;
P . Mickelson&#13;
M. Erickson&#13;
0. Bell&#13;
&#13;
W inter Term&#13;
T. McBride&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
M. Evans&#13;
P. Jones&#13;
C. Klatt&#13;
A. Hartman&#13;
E . Prichard&#13;
R. Smith&#13;
0 . Bell&#13;
R. Long&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1917 March 26-Joint Open Door, "Up to Freddie."&#13;
April 16-Special Initiation of New Members.&#13;
April 19-Closed Door.&#13;
April 23-Philo-Athenaeum Joint.&#13;
April 30-Philo Breakfast.&#13;
May 7-Musical Program.&#13;
May 22- Philo-Athenaeum Breakfast .&#13;
May 28- Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 9-Joint Commencement.&#13;
October 29-Philos Entertain Athenaeums.&#13;
November 2-Philo Ravine Party.&#13;
November 24-Joint Open Door.&#13;
December 17-Initiation of New Members.&#13;
December 20-Joint Christmas Party.&#13;
1918January 21-Athenaeums Enter tain Philo Debaters.&#13;
January 28-Athenaeums Banquet for Philo Debaters.&#13;
March 4-Freshman Programme.&#13;
March 11-Sophomore Programme.&#13;
March 18-Grand Public.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fort y-Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Athenaeums&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
Cor Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
First Critic&#13;
Second Crictic&#13;
First Directoress&#13;
Second Directoress&#13;
First Usher&#13;
Second Usher&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Historian&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
Marguerite Brethorst Cleo Holmes&#13;
Margueriate Cummings&#13;
Vera Sipe&#13;
Hazel Bergh&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
Grace Rusk ell&#13;
Hazel Hunter&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Dorothy Steele&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
Esther Bonson&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
Lenna Herron&#13;
Florence Forsbery&#13;
Edith Morris&#13;
Una Madson&#13;
Florence Forsberg&#13;
Laura Engberg&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Doris Utterback&#13;
Lena MacDonald&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
Ruth Berry&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Kathrine Tharp&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
Grace Ruskell&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
Marguerite .Johnson&#13;
Hazel Bergh&#13;
Hazel Bergeson&#13;
Lena MacDonald&#13;
Myrell Walker&#13;
Anna Rhinehart&#13;
Lila Stone&#13;
Ruth Berry&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Edith Morris&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
March 26-Joint Open Door. "Up to Freddie"&#13;
April 19-Faculty tea.&#13;
April 23-Philo-Athenaeum Joint.&#13;
May 10-Mothers' Day.&#13;
May 22-Philo-Athenaeum breakfast.&#13;
February 9-Reception for pledges at Mrs. Coopers.&#13;
June 9-Joint commencement.&#13;
June 11-Alumnae breakfast.&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
September 15-Reception for pledges.&#13;
September 22-New Athenaeums entertain old girls.&#13;
October 5-Hard Time party.&#13;
October 18-Faculty tea.&#13;
October 20-0pen Door.&#13;
October 29-Philos entertain Athenaeums.&#13;
November 4-Informal initiation.&#13;
November 24-Joint open door.&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
December 1-New girls entertain old.&#13;
December 13-Formal initiation.&#13;
December 20-Christmas joint.&#13;
January 12-Closed door for Philo debaters.&#13;
January 28-Debaters' dinner at Myrrill Walker's.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Philo-Athenaeum Snaps&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Athenaeum&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
Snaps&#13;
&#13;
�Ionian&#13;
Officers&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
First Senator&#13;
Second Senator&#13;
Sergeant at Arms&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
L. Lehan&#13;
&#13;
L. Soltow&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
&#13;
C. Jones&#13;
&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
&#13;
S. Burpee&#13;
C. Swartz&#13;
&#13;
H. Smith&#13;
C. Swartz&#13;
&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
&#13;
H. Lawrence&#13;
E. Harrington&#13;
&#13;
B. McConkey&#13;
&#13;
E. Ausman&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
&#13;
P. Ryerson&#13;
F. Valiquette&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
&#13;
J. Hays&#13;
&#13;
J. Miller&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
March 29, 1917-Joint Open Door.&#13;
April 12-Closed Door Programme.&#13;
April 28-Pi-Ionian Gym Party.&#13;
May 12-Party Held at South Ravine.&#13;
October 2-Stag Party.&#13;
October 6-Initiation of New Members.&#13;
October 15-Pi-Ionian Joint at Walker's.&#13;
October 29-Ionian Hallowe'en Party at Lehan's.&#13;
November 18-First Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
December 6-Musical Programme by Pi-Ionian Orchestra.&#13;
January 28-Debate Dinner Held at President Craig's.&#13;
February 7-Dedication of Service Flag.&#13;
March 24-Gold Star Placed on Service Flag in Memory of Corporal&#13;
Albert E. Behmer.&#13;
April 3-Picnic at Stone Park.&#13;
April 29-Pi-Ionian Joint at Kilbourne's.&#13;
May 21-Farewell Party.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-One&#13;
&#13;
�PIERIA LITERARY SOCIETY&#13;
&#13;
Pierian&#13;
&#13;
Motto: Felicitei, Foitilei, Fidelitei (Happy, Brave and Faithful)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Lillian Sandvig&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Elva Persinger&#13;
Miriam Fish&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Corresponding Secretary Ruth Burpee&#13;
Critic&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Chairman Social ComMildred Wood&#13;
mittee&#13;
Helen Gullickson&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Isabelle Walker&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Grace Wishard&#13;
Finance Officer&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Grace Wishard&#13;
Isabelle Walker&#13;
Gladys Riddle&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
Lucile Wendt&#13;
Lucyle Haitz&#13;
Myrtle Heathman&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
PIERIA CALENDAR 1917&#13;
&#13;
March 19-Pieria Grand Public, "The&#13;
Dragon's Claw."&#13;
March 24-Pieria Initiation.&#13;
April 21-Pieria Open Door, Miscellaneous Program.&#13;
April 28-Pi-Ionian Gym · Party.&#13;
May 1-Pieria Patriotic Tea for Athenaeums.&#13;
May 8-Pie Tea for Zets.&#13;
May 14-Pieria All-Day Picnic at Stone&#13;
Park.&#13;
May 21-Shower for Marie Mahood Van&#13;
Horne.&#13;
May 26-Farewell Closed Door.&#13;
May 30-Ionian Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 1-Grace Wishard entertains the&#13;
Pis.&#13;
June 2-Zenana Osborne hostess to Pieria Girls.&#13;
June 12- Pieria Alumnae Breakfast.&#13;
June 14-23- Pi Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
&#13;
September 15- Reception&#13;
for&#13;
New&#13;
Pledges.&#13;
September 29- Pieria Initiation.&#13;
October&#13;
6- Pieria Birthday Banquet&#13;
at West.&#13;
October 9- Alumnae Entertain Active&#13;
Members at Tea.&#13;
October 15-Pi-Ionian Joint at Isabelle&#13;
Walker's.&#13;
October 29- Ionian Halloween Party&#13;
at Lehan's.&#13;
November 10-0pen Door by New Girls.&#13;
November 24- Reception&#13;
for&#13;
New&#13;
Pledges.&#13;
December 4- Tea for Ionians.&#13;
December 8- Pieria Initiation.&#13;
December 15-Pieria Open Door.&#13;
December 18-Pi Christmas Party.&#13;
December 20-Pieria 6 O'Clock dinner&#13;
at Margaret Goudie's.&#13;
&#13;
PlERIA CALENDER 1918&#13;
&#13;
January 26- Mrs. Kellogg Entertains&#13;
Pi's.&#13;
January 28- Pieria Debate Dinner for&#13;
Ionians at President Craig's.&#13;
February 8- Installation of Officers.&#13;
April 1- Pieria Open Door. "A Musical Evening."&#13;
April 6- Stunt Night.&#13;
April 12- Farewell Party for Ruth&#13;
Fouke at Dolliver's.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Two&#13;
&#13;
April 13-Reception for New Pledges&#13;
at Helen Gullickson's.&#13;
April 2 0-Pieria Open Door. Readings.&#13;
April 29-Pi-Ionian&#13;
bourne's.&#13;
.&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
Joint&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Kil-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
April 30-Pieria Initiation.&#13;
May 2- Entertained at Tea by Athenaeums.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Pi-Ionian Snaps&#13;
&#13;
Pi-Ionian Snaps&#13;
&#13;
Some of the bunch&#13;
&#13;
The Cooks&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�OTHONIAN LITERARY SOCIETY&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
C. Fry&#13;
&#13;
C. Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Barks&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Barks&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Barks&#13;
&#13;
C. Obrecht&#13;
&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
&#13;
C. Fry&#13;
&#13;
R. John son&#13;
&#13;
S. Hutchinson&#13;
&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
&#13;
A. P. Locke&#13;
&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
&#13;
A. Locke&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
H. HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
First Critic&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
&#13;
C. Kirby&#13;
&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
&#13;
A. Seeman&#13;
&#13;
H. Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
E. BARKS&#13;
&#13;
D. Norton&#13;
&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
H. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
H. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
A. Seeman&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
G. BERQUIST&#13;
&#13;
Otho Rush Stag ___________________________________ September 27, '17&#13;
Otho-Ionian Inter-Society Debate ______________________ January 14, '18&#13;
Otho-Philo Inter-Society Debate ______________________ January 16, '18&#13;
Otho Banquet ______________________________________ February 4, '18&#13;
"Cousin Gene," Open Door __________________________ December 14, '17&#13;
Costume Party, Joint _______________________________ December 17, '17&#13;
Zet Reception _______________________________________ January 28, '18&#13;
&#13;
R. JOHNSTON&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Closed Door ____ _________________________ November 31, '17&#13;
Closed Door Program ------------- -- ----------- - -------~April 15, '18&#13;
Spring Stag _______________________________ ___________ April 22, '18&#13;
Final Debate, Open Door ________________________________ May&#13;
&#13;
R. TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
6, '18&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho May Breakfast __________ _____________________ May 13, '18&#13;
Senior Graduation Exercises _____________________________ May 20, '18&#13;
&#13;
C. KUDRLE&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
M.IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
South Ravine Picnic __________________________________ October 27, 17&#13;
Alumni Reunion ________________________________________ May 27, '18&#13;
H. REYMAN&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho Joint ______________________________________ October 13. '17&#13;
Monument Picnic ______________________________________ April&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
4, '17&#13;
&#13;
�Zetalathean&#13;
Motto: Esse, Quam Videri (To be rather than to seem)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring Term, 1917&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Term, 1917&#13;
&#13;
Winter Te1·m, 1918&#13;
&#13;
Lida Saunders&#13;
&#13;
Clara Swain&#13;
&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
DYKSTRA&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
&#13;
Sue Wormley&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
Mabel Day&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
&#13;
Mabel Day&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
April 20-Zet Hen Party at Esther Montgomery's.&#13;
May 8-Pi Tea for Zets.&#13;
May 16-Reception for Mothers.&#13;
June 14-Reunion at Ruth Reid's.&#13;
September 15-Reception for New Pledges.&#13;
October 6-Public Initiation.&#13;
October 17-0pen Door.&#13;
October 27-Ravine Party-Joint.&#13;
November 17-Reception for Pledges.&#13;
December 8- Zet Banquet.&#13;
December 17-Joint Costume Party.&#13;
1918January 28-Zet Reception for Otho Debaters.&#13;
March 26-0pen Door.&#13;
May 13-Zet-Otho May Breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�Zet-Otho Snaps&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho Snaps&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-One&#13;
&#13;
�Crescent&#13;
&#13;
E. DAY&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President&#13;
Milton Brenner&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Hans Dale&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Roy Cox&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
President&#13;
Hans Dale&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Roy Cox&#13;
Secretary&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
William Hanson&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
1917.&#13;
October 8 ___ _____ __Hawkeye and Crescent reception to new students.&#13;
October 22 _______ ___ Joint basket social.&#13;
October 29 _______ ___ Annual joint Halloween party.&#13;
December 14 ____ ____ Annual stag banquet, West Hotel.&#13;
1918&#13;
January 7 ___ _____ __ Joint social.&#13;
February. 8 _____ ____ Annual joint Valentine party.&#13;
April 8 _____ _______ Annual Hawkeye banquet, Martin Hotel.&#13;
April 12 __ ___ _____ __ Ravine picnic.&#13;
May 6 _____ __ _____ __ Annual Crescent and Hawkeye up-river trip.&#13;
&#13;
One H undr ed Sixt y-Two&#13;
&#13;
CRESCENT OFFICERS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President-June Pippett&#13;
Vice President-Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
Rec. Secretary-Nona Moss&#13;
Cor. Secretary-Flora Wixon.&#13;
Treasurer-Lorene Williams&#13;
First Critic-Kathryn Johnson&#13;
Second Critic-Hallie Blair&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
President-Nona Moss.&#13;
Vice President-Esther Day&#13;
Rec. Secretary-Fern Connor&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary-Lorene Levitt&#13;
Treasurer-Florence Fair.&#13;
First Critic-Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
Second Critc-Doris Appleton&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
President-Esther Day&#13;
Vice President-Christine Peterson&#13;
Rec. Secreary-Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
Cor. Secretary-Ruth Rasmussen&#13;
Treasurer-Nona Moss&#13;
First Critic-Lorene Levitt&#13;
Second Critic-Florence Fair&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
October 2, 1917-Tea to new girls.&#13;
October 8, 1917-Hawkeye-Crescent reception at Flora Wixon's for new&#13;
students.&#13;
October 22, 1917-Hawkeye-Crescent basket social.&#13;
October 29, 1917-Hawkeye-Crescent Halloween party.&#13;
November 24, 1917-Farewell spread for Hallie Blair.&#13;
January 7, 1918-Hawkeye-Crescent spread.&#13;
February 8, 1918-Valentine party at home of Florence Fair.&#13;
March 23, 1918-Crescent initiation.&#13;
April 12, 1918-Hawkeye-Crescent picnic at South ravine.&#13;
May 6, 1918-Crescent-Hawkeye up-river trip, Blue Grass pasture.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixt y-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Lewis, Rhinehart, Long.&#13;
&#13;
KEEPING THE HOME FIRES BURNING&#13;
There are more than 180 Morningside College men enlisted in the&#13;
service of Uncle Sam in order that the brotherhood of the nations might&#13;
he accomplished. An equal number of Morningside girls are devoting a&#13;
large amount of their time, which might be spent digging "A" grades,&#13;
working in one or more kinds of Red Cross work.&#13;
Morningside can well be proud of the spirit her girls have manifested&#13;
in "helping win the war," for there are now five Morningside women on&#13;
the honor roll. The girls at home are working hard, faithfully and eagerly.&#13;
The first semester the girls worked with the Morningside Ladies'&#13;
Auxiliary in the Hospital Garments Class, and knitted sweaters, socks and&#13;
wristlets. During October they filled and sent twenty-five Christmas&#13;
cheer bags to the boys in the training camps.&#13;
At the opening of the second semester the girls, realizing their responsibility as a group, determined to form a separate auxiliary. Resolutions&#13;
were made and unanimously accepted on February 19th to establish a war&#13;
program which embodies the following:&#13;
1. Obedience to the regulations of the United States Food Administration.&#13;
2. Economy in dress.&#13;
3. The wearing of warm clothing to help solve the fuel problem.&#13;
4. Elimination of needless expense.&#13;
.&#13;
On Washington's birthday, the Red Cross work was effectively&#13;
launched. Most of the time was devoted to the sewing of hospital garments&#13;
and French and Belgian layettes. Splendid work was done in both departments.&#13;
The Surgical Dressing Classes were started the last week in February,&#13;
under the excellent direction of Mrs. 0. B. McDonald, of Morningside, who&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Four&#13;
&#13;
is a graduate in the work. Under her efficient supervision the girls expect to reach the goal of 10,000 surgical dressings before the semester&#13;
closes.&#13;
The knitters have also contributed their share in making over 200&#13;
sweaters and a large number of helmets, scarfs, socks and wristlets.&#13;
The Morningside College Girls' Red Cross Auxiliary was officially recognized on March 7, 1918, with the following officers:&#13;
President-Clara Lewis.&#13;
Secretary-Anna Rhinehart.&#13;
Treasurer-Ada Long.&#13;
The girls have sent their Collegian Reporters to the Morningside boys,&#13;
made and sent them boxes of candy, and mailed books and magazines to&#13;
them.&#13;
The spirit of the College was effectively expressed by the way in which&#13;
the students and faculty subscribed to the Y. M. C. A. Student Friendship&#13;
Fund. reaching a total of $3,000, which was double their quota.&#13;
The work of the Red Cross has only just begun, but will continue during the summer months as well as through the school year until the war is&#13;
ended. The girls are "in the game" with the same splendid spirit which&#13;
has characterized our boys, so that&#13;
Every time our thoughts turn to our boys over there,&#13;
And the women and children and maimed,&#13;
We will feel we are doing our utmost with grit,&#13;
And we'll feel we are playing things square.&#13;
And we'll know we are not merely doing our bit,&#13;
But-thank God-we are doing OUR SHARE.&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d Sixty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Freshman&#13;
&#13;
CARPENTER&#13;
&#13;
Girl's Club&#13;
&#13;
CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
WILLITS&#13;
&#13;
McDOWELL&#13;
&#13;
Student&#13;
&#13;
KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Standing- Fry,&#13;
&#13;
McBRide,&#13;
&#13;
Bell, Engberg,&#13;
&#13;
Seated- Willets, Saunders,&#13;
&#13;
SCOVILLE&#13;
&#13;
LICHTENBERG&#13;
&#13;
HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
Council&#13;
&#13;
Smith,&#13;
&#13;
Long, Cox, Hartzell,&#13;
&#13;
Barks, Obrecht,&#13;
&#13;
Dolliver, Downs.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
EPPELSHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
ISHKOODAH&#13;
&#13;
Kolp,&#13;
&#13;
President-Charles Fry, President of the Student Body.&#13;
Vice President-Ruth Smith, President of the Agora Club.&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer-Lida Saunders, Secretary-Treasurer of Student Body.&#13;
&#13;
Motto: "Be Square."&#13;
Purpose: To offer opportunity for closer fellowship among the Freshmen girls; to foster the spirit of democracy in the College, whereby each&#13;
girl may attain her highest development; to promote literary activity&#13;
among the Freshmen girls; and to aid in establishing and maintaining high&#13;
ideals among the Freshmen.&#13;
Through this organization the girls of the Freshman Class become&#13;
acquainted with each other very soon after coming to College, and it is&#13;
in the meetings of this Club that the first seeds of College friendship&#13;
which ripen into life-long ones, are sown. This year has been very successful and the girls have been well represented in every movement for the betterment of the College.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
President of Y. M. C. A.-Orin Bell.&#13;
&#13;
Junior Representative- Dale Norton.&#13;
&#13;
President of Y. W. C. A.-Vivian Down.&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore President-Clinton Cowan.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Representative- Mary Dolli-&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
"M"&#13;
&#13;
Club-Clarence&#13;
&#13;
Obrecht.&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
ver.&#13;
Collegian&#13;
&#13;
Reporter-Earl&#13;
&#13;
Barks.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
FIRST TERM&#13;
President ___________ Nellie Carpenter&#13;
Vice President_ __________ Ruth Willits&#13;
Secretary ______________ Doris Champ&#13;
Treasurer _________ Frances McDowell&#13;
Sergeant at Arms ____ Dorothy Knudson&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TERM&#13;
Bernice Scoville&#13;
Elizabeth Lichtenberg&#13;
Kathryn Holmes&#13;
Ada Long&#13;
Minnie Epplesheimer&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Freshman President- Ralph Long.&#13;
Freshman&#13;
&#13;
Senior President-Robert McBride.&#13;
&#13;
Representative-Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Willits.&#13;
&#13;
Senior Representative-Frances Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
Academy President-Dick Burrows.&#13;
&#13;
Junior President-Royce Engberg.&#13;
&#13;
Academy Representative- Roy Cox.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Agora Board&#13;
&#13;
Row- M. Kidder, C. Holmes,&#13;
V. Down, L. Engberg,&#13;
A.. Rhinehart, H. Bergeson, A. Carter.&#13;
Middle Row- H. Bergh,&#13;
R. Berry,&#13;
F . Beacham, M. Evans,M. Johnson, M. Champ,&#13;
A. Fry,&#13;
L. Saunders, B. Burns.&#13;
Seated- N.Moss, F. Kolp, F. Wetmore, H. Lawrence, R. Smith, C . Peterson, R. Reid.&#13;
&#13;
Top&#13;
&#13;
Officers of the Executive Board&#13;
&#13;
Vice President-Cleo Holmes&#13;
Treasurer-Laura Engberg&#13;
&#13;
President-Ruth Smith&#13;
Secretary-Ruth Reid&#13;
&#13;
Committee Chairmen&#13;
&#13;
Social-Leone Lange&#13;
Auditing-Marvel E vans&#13;
&#13;
Standing- I. Walker, K. Tharp, R. Fouke, lU. Evans.&#13;
Sitting-C . Holmes,&#13;
H. Bergeson, E. Parkinson, B. Reed.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic-Hazel Fry&#13;
Forensic-Marion Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Self-Government-Lida Saunders&#13;
Y. W. C. A. President-Vivian&#13;
Down&#13;
&#13;
Census- Cleo Holmes&#13;
Reporter-Agnes Fry&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Club is a democratic organization, composed of all the College girls and the lady members of the faculty. Its business is conducted&#13;
by an Executive Board which is representative of t h e girls' student body.&#13;
The Club takes charge of the girls' athletics, forensic and social activities in&#13;
the College.&#13;
During the past year the time has been devoted largely to Red Cross&#13;
work.&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
President-Elma Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
Pierian-Isabelle Walker&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Ruth Brady&#13;
&#13;
Marvel Evans&#13;
&#13;
Membership&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum-Cleo Holmes&#13;
Hazel Bergeson&#13;
Katherine Tharp&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean-Elma Parkinson&#13;
Ruth Brady&#13;
Bessie Reed&#13;
&#13;
This committee is a representative group of girls' societies. It has&#13;
charge of all matters concerning t he societies, such as the rushing rules,&#13;
open door programs and the like. Since this committee was formed t here&#13;
seems to be a better feeling between the various societies.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Eight&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- B. Reed, G. Knapp,&#13;
N. Poyser, B. Carver,&#13;
R. Mahood,&#13;
Seated- G. Jackson, V. Brown, C. Holmes,&#13;
G. Wishard.&#13;
&#13;
E. Parkinson.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
Bessie Reed, Devotional&#13;
Beatrice Carver, Social&#13;
Grace Wishard, Social Service&#13;
Nellie Poyser, Publicity&#13;
Goldia Jackson , World Fellowship&#13;
Elma Parkinson, Bible&#13;
&#13;
Vivia n Down, President&#13;
Ruth Mahood, Vice President&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- J. Treftz, C. Fry, E . S tonebrook, T. M. Bride, R. McBride,&#13;
Seated-0. Bell, H. Freeman, R. Engberg.&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp, Secretary&#13;
Cleo Holmes, Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
The very nature of the College environment demands some kind of a&#13;
meeting ground for religious activities. The Y. W. C. A. supplies this&#13;
meeting ground. "To guard, convert, develop, enlist and train every girl&#13;
in school"-that is the purpose of the Association. Many opportunities are&#13;
found through the medium of the Y. W. C. A. for faithful service and for&#13;
developing moral responsibility. This, in turn, raises each girl's ideals and&#13;
leads her to face the demands of Christ upon her life.&#13;
Our Association receives great inspiration from inter-collegiate relationships through the various conferences. Local College interests then&#13;
give way to the larger demands, and Christianity is viewed from the worldstandpoint.&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
DEPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
&#13;
President -Orin W. Bell&#13;
Vice President-Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
Life Work Guidance-G. Earl&#13;
Barks&#13;
Community Service-Harold S.&#13;
Freeman&#13;
Administration-Jacob H. Trefz&#13;
Campus Service-Charles D. Fry&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Royce R. Engberg&#13;
Treasurer-Thomas H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
When school opened last fall it was found that several of our cabinet&#13;
members, including the President, had answered the call of Uncle Sam,&#13;
while one or two others were unable to return to us for other reasons. We&#13;
have missed t hese men and their influence cont inually, but neverth eless we&#13;
have tried to do our best without them.&#13;
The program for the past year has included such things as the sending of nine men to Lake Geneva in June, the raising of $300.00 for our&#13;
local budget, boosting for the friendship campaign, conducting t h e special&#13;
religious meetings in February, boosting for the Northfield plan of study,&#13;
and preparing the field here in our College for a more extended work for&#13;
next year.&#13;
ORIN W. BELL&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-One&#13;
&#13;
�MADRIGAL CLUB&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- L. Williams, R. Fouke, G. Devitt, G. Yeaman,&#13;
G. Dykstra, H, Lawrence,&#13;
Second Row- M.&#13;
Broughton, B. Scoville, G. Hofflund, A Sturtevant, M. Heathman. R.&#13;
..&#13;
Mahood, I. Stevens, E. Bekins, 0. Barton, F. Wetmore.&#13;
Seated-E. Payne, F. Kolp,&#13;
M. Eppelsheimer,&#13;
M. Reuber, M. Sabin, L. Engberg, M. Dolliver, C Holmes.&#13;
&#13;
Girls Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President, Frances Kolp.&#13;
Secretary, Aurelia Sturtevant.&#13;
&#13;
Librarian, Laura Engberg.&#13;
Student Manager, Mary Dolliver&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SOPRANO&#13;
&#13;
FIRST ALTO&#13;
&#13;
Glyde Devitt&#13;
Minnie Eppelsheimer&#13;
Myrtle Heathman&#13;
Cleo Holmes&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Mildred Sabin&#13;
Irma Stevens&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Gladys Yeaman&#13;
&#13;
Marie Broughton&#13;
Opal Barton&#13;
Laura Engberg&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Bernice Scoville&#13;
SECOND ALTO&#13;
&#13;
SECOND SOPRANO&#13;
Evelyn Balkema&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
Gertrude Dykstra&#13;
Grace Hoflund&#13;
Lorene Williams&#13;
&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
Harriet Lawrence&#13;
Eva Payne&#13;
Frances Wetmore&#13;
&#13;
Each year since its organization, in the fall of 1914, the Girls' Glee&#13;
Club has made a concert tour during the Easter vacation. On the trip in&#13;
the spring of 1917, concerts were given at the following towns in Iowa:&#13;
Cushing, Alta, Ireton, Sheldon and Cherokee.&#13;
The Club owes much of its success to the training it receives under the&#13;
direction of Prof. MacCollin.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Two&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- W. Hilmer, R. Engber,&#13;
W. Malsie,&#13;
L. Scheerer, M. Lory, R. Wilson, V. Hart,&#13;
H. Hartley, G. Brown, J. Lee, Prof MacCollin.&#13;
Bottom Row- H.Dale, R .. Whitehill,&#13;
C . Kirby, C. Fry, D. Thompson,&#13;
0. Adams, W. Orr,&#13;
J. Hays, S. Burpee, C. Crary.&#13;
&#13;
ITINERARY-EASTER TOUR&#13;
Iroquois, S. D.; Miller, S. D.; Hot&#13;
Springs, S. D.; Gordon, Nebr.; Ainsworth, Nebr.; Norfolk, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
Harold Hartley&#13;
J. P. Lee&#13;
C. N . Crary&#13;
Joseph Hays&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
0. D. Adams&#13;
Scott Burpee&#13;
Lloyd Scheerer&#13;
W. C. Orr&#13;
Wayne Hilmer&#13;
Willard Malsie&#13;
BASS&#13;
C. N. Kirby&#13;
Evan Engberg&#13;
Roy Whitehill&#13;
Allan Bartlett&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
George Brown&#13;
Hans Dale&#13;
Ronald Wilson&#13;
David Thompson&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
Verle Hart&#13;
&#13;
PIANIST&#13;
Milton Lory&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS:&#13;
PROF. PAUL MAC COLLIN, DIR.&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG, PRES.&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT, BUS. MGR.&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY, SEC .-TREAS.&#13;
&#13;
·one Hundred Seventy-Three&#13;
&#13;
�The Annual Board&#13;
&#13;
Standing-Reid, Knapp,&#13;
&#13;
Seated- Prichard,&#13;
&#13;
Barks,&#13;
&#13;
Johnson,&#13;
&#13;
Stonebrook.&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks ___ --- ___ ___________ ____ ___ __ ___________________ Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Earl Stonebrook __ _______ _____ ____ ______ ____ ___ ______ ___ ____ Assistant Editor&#13;
Leon Johnson _ -- --- __________________ __ _______________ __ __ Business Mauager&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Lange, Sandvig,&#13;
&#13;
Engberg,&#13;
&#13;
Wulf,&#13;
&#13;
MAhood,&#13;
&#13;
Brady, Wishard.&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Norton, Evans.&#13;
&#13;
THE STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard ---------------------------------------------Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Ruth Reid _______________ ___________________ ___ _______ ____ Assistant Editor&#13;
Horace Wulf&#13;
Clarence Hart&#13;
&#13;
___________________________________ _ _____ Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch _________ ___________ _________ ______ Assistant Business Manager&#13;
George Dunn ______________ __ _ ___ _ _____________________ _________ _ __ Alumni&#13;
&#13;
Associate Editors&#13;
&#13;
Jess Lang _______________________ ____________________________ -· _____ Artist&#13;
George Bergquist&#13;
Scott Burpee&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
Jay Christ&#13;
Laura Engberg&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Chester Kirby&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Lang&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Esther Montgomery&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
Lida Saunders&#13;
Clair Sherwood&#13;
Jacob Treftz&#13;
Lucille Wendt&#13;
Ronald Wilson&#13;
Horace Wulf&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
&#13;
___ ____ ____________________________________________ Athletics&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp ------- - ---- -- --------------------------------------Calendar&#13;
Isabel Walker ________ __ ___ _______ __ __ _ ___ ___ _____ ----- -- -- -- -- --- _C lasses&#13;
Leone Lange _ ___ ___ ___ __ ____ __ ______________ __ __ __ __ ___ ____ _______ Faculty&#13;
Royce Engberg --------------------------------------------------Forensics&#13;
Ray Troutman ______________________________________________________ Jokes&#13;
Lillian Sandvig ____ _ ___________________________________________ Organization&#13;
Lee Hornney _________________ _ _______ _ ___ __ _______________ ____ Photography&#13;
Ruth Brady ------- - ---- - ---- - --------- - --- - ---- - ------------------Society&#13;
Grace Wishard _ ____ _ _ ______ _ __ ___ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- --- ------- - -- - - _Snaps&#13;
McKinley Evans __ __ __ _ _______ __ __ _ ____ _ _________ __ ____ ___ _ Specia l Occasions&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Locke, Freeman,&#13;
&#13;
Hunt, McBride&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
President-Arthur Locke.&#13;
Vice President-Harold Freeman.&#13;
Secretary-Albert Hunt.&#13;
Treasurer-Robert McBride.&#13;
Faculty Advisor-Prof. James A. Coss.&#13;
STUDENT VOLUNTEERS&#13;
&#13;
ARCHIE FREEMAN, DIRECTOR&#13;
&#13;
CORNETS&#13;
&#13;
ALTOS&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
C.&#13;
L.&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Michelson&#13;
Obrecht&#13;
Schearer&#13;
Hartley&#13;
R. Cox&#13;
S. Carter&#13;
&#13;
C. Baldwin&#13;
H. Reyman&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
BASS&#13;
J. Lee&#13;
&#13;
CLARINETS&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
C. F. Jon es&#13;
H. Harding&#13;
&#13;
C. Cowan&#13;
PICCOLO&#13;
G. Berry&#13;
H. Meyers&#13;
&#13;
TROMBONES&#13;
C. Kuderle&#13;
R. Carrigan&#13;
E. Marquart&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Six&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
L. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Harold Freeman, President.&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Elva Persinger&#13;
Minnie Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Elsie Lang, Secretary-Treasurer.&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Cora Dutton&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
June Pippett&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Seven&#13;
&#13;
��Our Advertisers&#13;
The Sioux 1919 Management express their&#13;
appreciation of the loyal support&#13;
given to the Annual of Morningside College, by the&#13;
Business Men of Sioux&#13;
City, who are responsible for making this book&#13;
a success.&#13;
&#13;
Patronize Them!&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty&#13;
&#13;
�,.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�ATHENAEUM-PHILOMATHEAN GRAND PUBLIC&#13;
&#13;
Monument Day&#13;
&#13;
"The Shepherd of the Hills," College Auditorium, March 18, 1918&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTERS&#13;
Mrs. Grant Mathews, Aunt Mollie _____________________ _ ____________ Ada Carter&#13;
Ollie Stewart, Fiance of Sammy Lane ______________________________ Paul Jones&#13;
&#13;
With the return of the baseball men with four victories in t heir down-&#13;
&#13;
Preachin' Bill, Everyone's Friend ____ ______ ____________________ Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
State trip and having won two duel meets the students decided t o take May&#13;
17th as their annual holiday and go to the Monument. The band men were&#13;
&#13;
Grant Matthews, Sr., Old Matt ________________________________ Lloyd Copeland&#13;
Miss Sammy L a n e, Ward of the Matthews ___________ _________ Florence Forsberg&#13;
Grant Matthews, Jr. , Young Matt ______________________ _____ ____ Thomas Lloyd&#13;
&#13;
sent after their instruments and instead of going to Chapel we held a&#13;
&#13;
Daniel Howitt, Dad, "The Shepherd of the Hills" __________________ Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
big pep meeting out near the Spoon Holder. From here the whole student&#13;
&#13;
Pete, a Child of Nature______&#13;
&#13;
_ _________________________________ Hazel Bergh&#13;
&#13;
body, and several faculty members, journeyed t o Floyd Monument. After&#13;
&#13;
Wash Gibbs, Leader of Lawless Element _____ _ _______________ Carroll Northrup&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
''Buster" and "Rusty" had lead us in several yells, Jim took charge of the&#13;
&#13;
Hank Briggs, a Mountainer -------------------------------------Lee Hornney&#13;
Lem Wheeler, a Mountaineer ________________________________ Thomas McBride&#13;
&#13;
meeting and we had several pep speeches from t he students. After a vaude-&#13;
&#13;
Howard, Son of Daniel Howitt ____________ ____________________ McKinley Evans&#13;
Directed by Miss Elizabeth Brown.&#13;
"The Shepherd of the Hills" was also played at the High School Auditorium on&#13;
April 5 for Red Cross Benefit.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Four&#13;
&#13;
ville sketch by George Pratt and a few more yells t h e crowd divided into&#13;
small groups and started for t heir belated dinners. While many were fortunate enough to reach home in ample time it was reported t hat several&#13;
who chose t he path through the South ravine were late for their 1 :30&#13;
classes.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred E ighty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Agora Banquet&#13;
March 23, 1918&#13;
On the 23d of March, the basement of Grace Church was&#13;
the scene of much merriment, for the Agora Club was holding&#13;
its annual banquet. Many of the Alumnae were present and&#13;
were welcomed with open arms, many mothers caught their&#13;
first ·glimpse of the social life of Morningside College, and&#13;
many new girls were initiated into another College activity.&#13;
There were several outsiders present, among them being High&#13;
School girls and girls from other Colleges, and they were giveu&#13;
an exhibition of true Morningside pep.&#13;
This pep originated from various sources. There was the&#13;
interest in the tables which were decorated by the various&#13;
classes, the interest being at its height when a silver cup was&#13;
awarded to the Class of '21 for the most artistic table and the&#13;
highest percentage in attendance. There was the interest in&#13;
the appetizing menu, which was so well prepared by the ladies&#13;
of the Church and so skilfully served by the College men. We&#13;
might even say that there was an interest taken in the waiters,&#13;
although they preserved their dignity very well as polite waiters should. The most marked enthusiasm was shown in the&#13;
complimentary ( ?) remarks passed by one class upon another,&#13;
in which were shown the exuberance of the Freshmen with&#13;
their outburst of uncontrolled enthusiasm, the meekness of the&#13;
Sophomores in their remarks, the super-knowledge of the Juniors with their "We knowed it," and the dignified wisdom of&#13;
the Seniors, Alumnae and Faculty in the friendly advice given&#13;
to the younger generation.&#13;
The toast program was one of especial interest with Miss&#13;
Mabel Elizabeth Brown as toastmistress. The life of a soldier&#13;
was cleverly depicted bythe representatives of the various&#13;
Classes. "The Recruits" was given by Miss Elizabeth Hick·&#13;
man, of the Academy; "In Training," by Miss Anna Coughlan, of the Freshman Class; "On Parade," by Miss Laura Engberg, of the Sophomore Class; "Drill," by Miss Miriam Fish,&#13;
of the Junior Class; "Retreat," by Miss Lida Saunders, of the&#13;
Senior Class; "Taps," by Miss Gladys Little, of the Alumnae,&#13;
and "Commissioned Officers," by Miss Helen Lund, of the Faculty. The evening closed with the singing of College songs.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Six&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S BANQUET&#13;
March 29, 1918&#13;
Away back in the dim distant past, some twelve years ago, an idea was&#13;
born and thrown upon the uncertain mercies of Morningside's male students.&#13;
Strange to say this idea survived the rude buffeting of inexperienced hands;&#13;
not only survived, but grew and flourished to such an extent t hat today it&#13;
has become a firmly established custom. This idea that materialized and&#13;
became a tradition is the annual Men's Banquet. Its first years were not&#13;
balmy ones, but it gained steadily in import ance until in 1912 there was&#13;
Introduced an innovation in t he form of Class competition for the best table&#13;
decorations and the most perfect attendance. The prizes were at first nondescript silken pennants, but in 1916 they rose to the dignity of handsome&#13;
and expensive trophy cups.&#13;
For the men, this banquet is the great get-together event of the year.&#13;
High School students from t he surrounding t erritory are invited here to&#13;
catch a glimpse of the College spirit that has made Morningside, and that&#13;
last fall spread her name from coast to coast as a doughty opponent of&#13;
Notre Dame. Alumni come from all parts of the United States and even&#13;
from the far corners of the world to participate again in that jolly affair&#13;
and to get anew the inspirat ion that in the past has stood them in good&#13;
stead. Some times parents insist on coming also, but we place them at a&#13;
table by themselves, where for at least a time t hey cannot ask embarrassing&#13;
questions. But it is the students that are the spirit of the whole thing. With&#13;
that jolly-good-fellow spirit t he Classes hurl mighty insults at each other&#13;
and bandy choice bits of flagrant scandal. With glorious conceit they boastfully chant of the virtues they possess and t he victories they have won.&#13;
The parlors of Grace Church ring with songs and yells. Practically every&#13;
man in College is there. The fellow who does not go is looked upon with&#13;
scorn by the whole student body and for months bears the weight of deep&#13;
suspicion and distrust.&#13;
·&#13;
This year there seemed to be an undercurrent of seriousness. Though&#13;
our jokes were as numerous and our unearthed scandal as rich and varied&#13;
as ever, we all felt the heavy shadow and grim responsibilities of this war&#13;
that hangs over our nation. The toasts, the addresses, the table decorations all brought it home to us. Even the substantial fare that was served&#13;
was a war meal. We had but to look around us to see many empty places&#13;
whose occupants are now offering their lives on the plaines of France. Letters were read from students and faculty members in the service, men that&#13;
but one short year ago were here with us. Every man realized the tremendous duty he owes to t hese men; every student made a secret vow to&#13;
work as he had never worked before and in some measure to justify this&#13;
noble sacrifice.&#13;
When the last toast was given and the last handshake was over; we&#13;
parted-many of us never again to banquet together. When another year&#13;
rolls around and Morningside men again gather to banquet there will be&#13;
many more vacant places, some of which shall never be filled. But though&#13;
we are scattered to the ends of the earth, though we ar falling in far off&#13;
France we shall never forget. our beloved Alma Mater, and old Ki Yi shall&#13;
ring out over the fields of Germany as we carry Old Glory to the very walls&#13;
of Berlin.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Just as the Queen was being crowned it started to rain and as the&#13;
sky was pretty black and it kept on raining harder, the dancers fled to the&#13;
various tents back of the field. The crowd also dispersed and thus ended&#13;
the program of the first day.&#13;
The program was again postponed and when the evening came, no one&#13;
could have asked for a nicer one.&#13;
Again the procession came down the cinder path, and, after the Queen&#13;
had taken her place on the throne, the dancers began the dances which&#13;
were representative of various birds and flowers. First came the grand&#13;
march in which all of the girls took part. This was followed by the dance&#13;
of the Fairies. The Fairies were frightened away by the three elements.&#13;
After the elements disappeared, the Spring Beauties took their place, followed by Violets and the Jack-in-the~Pulpit and Wild Roses. These were well&#13;
received by the Queen and her attendants. After the Wild Rose dance came&#13;
the Blue Bird dance, whose place was taken by the Buttercups. Then the&#13;
Clover, Black-Eyed Susan and the Lily-of-the-Valley dances were given and&#13;
all was concluded by the winding of the Maypole. · Again the long procession formed and marched off of the field the way it had come. Another&#13;
May day was ended, the prettiest and best we had ever had.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Gillies, Retiring Queen&#13;
&#13;
Marion Heikes, Queen&#13;
&#13;
Under the Direction of Miss Salome Luechauer.&#13;
The third annual May Day program was given by the Agora Club on&#13;
Bass Field. Each year the exhibition is bigger and better than before and&#13;
so it was last year.&#13;
&#13;
It was an evening performance _&#13;
and due to a rainstorm on the first&#13;
night that had been set, the program was postponed until a later date.&#13;
The day came and it was warm and cloudy. About 6 o'clock it looked as&#13;
though it would clear off and so before the scheduled time people began to&#13;
arrive. The bleachers were crowded and automobiles were lined up several&#13;
deep back of the bleachers ready to use their headlights on the field when&#13;
the signal was given.&#13;
Then the procession came down the cinder path. The Queen of the&#13;
year before led the procession and was followed by the new Queen and her&#13;
attendants. Next came all the dancers in bright colored costumes. The&#13;
Queen was escorted to her throne and was crowned by the retiring Queen&#13;
while the court dancers stood facing the throne.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�The Store for Men&#13;
YOUNG MEN'S IDEAS and young men's&#13;
demands cleverly wrought into clothes of&#13;
vigorous, snappy line- is the theme of our&#13;
&#13;
Men's Clothes&#13;
Tailored at Fashion&#13;
&#13;
Park ."&#13;
&#13;
Dear Folks : I have decided to keep a diary of&#13;
the daily happenings here at our Cantonment on&#13;
the Sioux, in order that you may .understand why&#13;
it is that we do not find time for the less important work of keeping up with our studies and&#13;
thereby gaining promotion. It may also serve in&#13;
after years to refreshen my memory and help me&#13;
in recalling t he numerous events that aid in mak-&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS WHO FOR YEARS have fashioned clothes pleasingly, satisfactorily for&#13;
men of exacting tastes design the clothes&#13;
Tailored at Fashion Park.&#13;
ALWAYS- in Pelletier's Men's Storeyoung men will find clothes of good judgment, clothes of dependability, clothes that&#13;
aptly reflect the personality of the wearer.&#13;
FASHION PARK CLOTHES are good&#13;
clothes, designed r ight, tailored .e xpertly,&#13;
modeled in keeping with the t imes. A comprehensive selection with intelligent, knowing salesmen always at your command.&#13;
&#13;
--$20&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
$40&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety&#13;
&#13;
ing my stay in this Training Camp so pleasant.&#13;
1 O. The first thing t hat happened after the spring&#13;
furloughs was, a lecture course number at Grace Church.&#13;
Burns spoke on the southern mountaineers. It is rumored that Rusty stepped again that night, but we have&#13;
no proof.&#13;
11. An awful epidemic of d iamond rings and Otho&#13;
pins has broken out in camp. Th e latest count shows&#13;
ten victims. We do not know w heth e r this is catching&#13;
or not, but they say it is fatal for those stricken.&#13;
12 . Any one passing by the Conservatory tonight and&#13;
hearing the heartrendering sobs of Buster and the stammery ravings of Chick would have thought terrible tragedy was being enacted. However, it was only an expression r ecital.&#13;
14. The thunder roared and th e lightening flashed.&#13;
The new Annual Board has gone to smash. Well, "Let&#13;
the dead bury its past." We have an Annual Board now,&#13;
which is going to put out the best in spite of the high&#13;
cost of living.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-One&#13;
&#13;
�15. A breath of spring and the tennis sharks are out.&#13;
They elected officers for the Association today.&#13;
1 7. The first victims of the afore mentioned epidemic&#13;
succumed today. Claire and Irene were married. They&#13;
have been under quarantine for some time so it did not&#13;
come as a shock to their friends.&#13;
19. Military drill this morning at 6 A. M. Some of&#13;
the rookies were on time. It shows that Morningside pep&#13;
can become Morningside patriotism. This morning in&#13;
chapel we had a big booster meeting for the Drake Relays. Sounds of victory in the air. This afternoon the&#13;
Faculty ladies put on their new spring growns and enjoyed the Athenaeum vio let tea.&#13;
21. Morningside as usual wins the two-mile event at&#13;
the Drake Relays. The Pi's gave an interesting open&#13;
door, "An evening with modern comp.o sers and writers."&#13;
23. This morning the Philos and Athenaeums had a&#13;
picnic at South ravine. After the eats an intense botanical and biological research took place.&#13;
2 7. In conclusion then , honorable judges, we maintain that the Coeds are some debaters. The girls' annual&#13;
debates took place tonight. Sure we won.&#13;
28. Something doing for everyone tonight.&#13;
and Ionians had a good old frolic in the gym.&#13;
of u s went to the Zet-Otho open door and&#13;
"movies." After that we went into the Philo&#13;
saw them give "Up to Freddie."&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
saw&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
Pi's&#13;
rest&#13;
the&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
30. The home meet on Bass Field, Curry won individual honors.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Two&#13;
&#13;
Fit&#13;
Style&#13;
Tailoring&#13;
Individuality&#13;
&#13;
HlRSH-WlCKWlRE&#13;
Clothing&#13;
Featured Exclusively&#13;
&#13;
SHARTS&#13;
Martin Hotel Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Three&#13;
&#13;
�CLOTHES FOR YOU&#13;
The Fit-Form--the Stein-Bloch&#13;
The young man who possesses as much&#13;
snap, whim and go as you, should wear&#13;
clothes that reflect his personality. Such&#13;
clothes can be obtained at Davidson&#13;
Bros. Company, and they are the&#13;
&#13;
Fit-Form Clothes for Young Men&#13;
As their name implies, they fit to the&#13;
form, bringing out the natural, graceful&#13;
outlines of the youthful figure. The&#13;
tailoring, the finishing, the quality of&#13;
materials, the colors and patterns of&#13;
these clothes, too, are such that please&#13;
the young taste. And we recommend&#13;
them highly.&#13;
&#13;
Priced 22. 50 to $40&#13;
&#13;
1 Some of the boys received May baskets this morning. This afternoon the Athenaeums were entertained by&#13;
the Pi's at a tea. Afterward everyone went to the baseball game and saw Morningside beat Highland Park, 7-0.&#13;
2. Morningside again defeated Highland Park in,&#13;
baseball, 11-2.&#13;
4. A " rearin tearin" crowd of High School people as&#13;
sembled on the bleachers this afternoon to cheer for&#13;
their representatives in the annual "M" meet. Sioux&#13;
City won the meet.&#13;
5. Another victory for the Maroons today. Yankton&#13;
defeated in dual meet.&#13;
6. The Othos and Zets woke all the little birdies in&#13;
South ravine this morning. The breakfast was fine&#13;
(Mrs. Perry was cook), and, of course, someone had to&#13;
keep up tradition, so fell in the creek.&#13;
11. My goodness! Lots of things happened today,&#13;
M. c. won the dual meet from Nebraska Wesleyan. Klippel won first in the oratorical contest. This evening the&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta held their first annual banquet.&#13;
12. The Athenaeums entertained their mothers today at a 6 o'clock dinner, and an open door afterwards.&#13;
13. Mothers' Day.&#13;
14. The Pi's and Ionians enjoyed a joint picnic at&#13;
Stone Park today.&#13;
1 7. The Zets entertained t heir mothers at a tea this&#13;
afternoon. My, but the eats looked good.&#13;
18. Morningside entered into a double debate with&#13;
St. Viateur College. As a result we r e port a victory and&#13;
a loss for Morningside. Our track team won fourth&#13;
place in the State meet.&#13;
21. Zet hen party at Esther Montgomery's.&#13;
22 . Dr. Hilmer sprang a new song in Chapel this&#13;
morning which didn't go with the music. It was very&#13;
entertaining, if not m elodious.&#13;
26. One grand rush for the Sioux '18 which appeared&#13;
today.&#13;
31. After several vain attempts on account of the&#13;
rain the May festival finally took place this evening.&#13;
Miss Leucheaur's trained troops made a pretty picture&#13;
as they froliced at dusk on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
THE BIG STORE&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Five&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Four&#13;
&#13;
�JOE MORTON,&#13;
Vice Pre s.&#13;
&#13;
GO. G. MOORE,&#13;
Pres. a n d T reas.&#13;
&#13;
F o urth a nd N ebraska.&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE in peace-time or war-time&#13;
means giving your best to the end in view.&#13;
9. This week th e Seniors r eigned supreme. Graduating exercises of the school of expression this evening.&#13;
10. Baccalau r eate Ser mon at Grace Ch urch .&#13;
11. Class play th is afternoon in the Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
This&#13;
&#13;
ing progress is due alone to the earnestness with which we follow our business&#13;
ideal---to give, always---&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
Dollar for Every Dollar, or Every Dollar Back&#13;
&#13;
evening th e graduating exercises of the Conse rvat ory of&#13;
Music.&#13;
12. A busy day for ever yone. 9 : 00 A. M. A reunion of&#13;
classes and Literary Socie ties. 11: 0 0 A. M. Farewell studen t assembly.&#13;
&#13;
12:30 P .· M. Alu mn i luncheon.&#13;
&#13;
6 : 00&#13;
&#13;
P. M. Alu mni banquet. 8: 30 P. M. President's annual r eception .&#13;
13 . At 10 : 00 this morning th e Senior Class becam e&#13;
alumni. The ·commencement exer cise s were given by R ev.&#13;
VACATION&#13;
&#13;
Charles B urn s , of Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Have a good time during furlough.&#13;
&#13;
Goodby everybo dy.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
Moore&#13;
C1othing&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Copyright 1918&#13;
&#13;
The House Kuppenheimer&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d Nine t y-Six&#13;
&#13;
One Hu ndred Ninety-Seven&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�Exclusive Creations&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Women's and Misses'&#13;
Suits, Coats&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Afternoon Dresses&#13;
Also&#13;
&#13;
Distributors&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Smart College Footwear&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
Men and Women&#13;
&#13;
11. Hello, Everybody! You bet we are glad to be&#13;
back. We are sorry, though, that so many familiar faces&#13;
are missing. So many of our soldiers have been called&#13;
into service. Enlistment here began today with the&#13;
largest bunch of rookies we have ever had.&#13;
12. Tonight we had our annual Y. W. reception up&#13;
in the halls. Everyone was happy until the boys stole&#13;
our melons. The Y. W . held their reception in the gym.&#13;
13. It seemed good to be back in Chapel this morning and have one of our old-time pep meetings again.&#13;
14. Y. W. and Y. M. joint reception tonight.&#13;
Freshmen all stepped out.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
15. Lots of excitement this evening over the annual&#13;
society scrap. Never mind, it was ever thus.&#13;
16. President Craig preached the Matriculation Sermon today. Subject, "Challenge of the Times to the&#13;
Youth of Today.''&#13;
17. Everyone went to the Epworth League reception&#13;
at Grace Church tonight. A howling success.&#13;
18. Classes elected captains for the new year.&#13;
24. Morningside band was organized this morning&#13;
with Archie Freeman as director.&#13;
25. Ethel Leginska appeared on the first number of&#13;
the Sioux City Concert course at the Auditorium.&#13;
26. Harvey-Leuchauer engagement was announced&#13;
this evening at a party given by Mrs. J. J. Hayes. Time&#13;
to start in saving for those dining room chairs. The "M"&#13;
Club held their initiation in the gym tonight. Oh, my,&#13;
you boys play so rough.&#13;
&#13;
Thehouse of Quality, Style and Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Eight&#13;
&#13;
27. Suffrage speech by Miss Vernon in Chapel this&#13;
morning. "The poor suffering wom en."&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ni nety-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�You'll know how you'll ''come&#13;
out" if you'll come here&#13;
1. The new Zets entertained their older sistes at Clara&#13;
Back's this evening.&#13;
4. Lots of us went down to the Auditorium to hear&#13;
McAdoo speak this afternoon. This evening the men's&#13;
societies welcomed their new members.&#13;
6. First football game of the season. M. C. drubbed&#13;
Trinity, 62 to 7. This evening while the Pi's were enjoying their annual banquet at the West Hotel, the new&#13;
Zets and Athenaeum pledges were enjoying ? informal&#13;
initiation.&#13;
8. The Crescents and Hawkeyes enjoyed one of their&#13;
good old-time parties tonight.&#13;
9. The Athenaeums were entertained at Murell Walker's this evening. The new pledges were hostesses.&#13;
,&#13;
11. Poli tics ran wild in the main hall this morning&#13;
After a hard battle the wets won over the drys in a&#13;
straw vote and Jerry was appointed to measure off a&#13;
space for the bar at one end of the hall. Skinney Norton&#13;
says "One Barz enough." We all agree.&#13;
15. Two by two they strolled by. The first bunch&#13;
were Zets and Othos on their way to a picnic at South&#13;
ravine. The second bunch were the Pi's and Ionians going to Isabel Walker's for a joint.&#13;
&#13;
Buying clothes is a dollars and cents proposition with most young fellows. You want to&#13;
know how you'll "come out" before you "go&#13;
in."&#13;
When you come to this store you'll get just&#13;
exactly the things you fellows want; we make&#13;
it our business to have them for you. And&#13;
the clothes we sell are&#13;
&#13;
20 . This afternoon the Maroons were again victorious&#13;
over the Nebraska. Coyotes, to the tune of 79 to 0. The&#13;
Athenaeums gave the first open door of the year. They&#13;
presented a play, "The Virginia Heroine."&#13;
22. Everyone had a real dinner with a toast programme. The Juniors were holding a banquet, the Hawkeyes and Crescents had a party in the Philo Hall, while&#13;
farther on down the corridor the Sophomores entertained&#13;
the Freshmen. Maybe you think the upper floor wasn't&#13;
a nice quiet place.&#13;
25. The Hula Hula band made their first appearance&#13;
in Chapel this morning. My, but those red middies were&#13;
classy.&#13;
&#13;
They're all-wool-the smartest styles you've&#13;
ever looked at. You know how you'll "come&#13;
out" when you buy them for we guarantee&#13;
you absolute satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
27. Same old story, Morningside beats Dakota Wesleyan, 33 to 0.&#13;
30. From lighter amusements we turn to real war&#13;
work. M. C. raised $3,000 for the Y. M. C. A. war relief&#13;
fund.&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W . Clothing Company&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX CLOTHES.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred One&#13;
&#13;
�SILK&#13;
&#13;
SHIRTS&#13;
&#13;
EXCLUSIVELY !&#13;
&#13;
That's the secret of Washing-&#13;
&#13;
7. The girls begin to play hockey down on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
ton Shirts&#13;
&#13;
It is rumored that a number of t he boys have purchased&#13;
&#13;
Superiority in Workmanship&#13;
in Quality,&#13;
&#13;
in Value&#13;
&#13;
and in Service.&#13;
&#13;
opera g lasses.&#13;
8. Many are the h earts that are weary tonigh t . The&#13;
poor girls were so immodest as t o expect to march in the&#13;
parades downtown.&#13;
9. Anyway, the boys had a real parade tonigh t. Pajamas and n ight shirts. Oh , horror s! Girls all look the&#13;
other way as they go by.&#13;
10. Times h ave changed . It is no more unmaidenly&#13;
fo r the M. C. gi rls to march in the parade. All morning&#13;
we marched. Men, Coeds and the band . The occasion?&#13;
Why, Morningside played Notre Dame in football. The&#13;
biggest team we have ever met. Notre Dame won, but&#13;
we held them to two touchdowns.&#13;
&#13;
Through Specialization We Always Have&#13;
Up-to-the-Minute Information As To The&#13;
Latest Style Trend.&#13;
&#13;
3. All the girls had a grand old frolic at the Agora&#13;
party tonight. Weird Gypsies' g hosts and shadows inhab ited the upper floor.&#13;
&#13;
We Get First Choice&#13;
&#13;
20. The Senior Expression Department gave a r ecital&#13;
this evening.&#13;
&#13;
of the Newest Patterns and Colorings.&#13;
&#13;
2 4. Soltow won the home oratorical contest.&#13;
sure a real speechmaker.&#13;
&#13;
25. A "Box of Monkeys," given by the Philo a nd&#13;
Athenaeum Societies. A real good laugh for every one.&#13;
&#13;
THE ONLY REAL HABERDASHER IN THE CJTY&#13;
AUTO&#13;
&#13;
617&#13;
&#13;
PHONE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
9345&#13;
&#13;
ST,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Two&#13;
&#13;
Lee is&#13;
&#13;
29. A big pep meeting was he ld in Chapel this morning for the Vermillion game.&#13;
30. Such a grand and glorious feeling. We beat&#13;
S. D. U. for the first time. How the flames leaped and&#13;
sparkled as the victorious Sioux fr ied coyotes out on Bass&#13;
Field this evening.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Three&#13;
&#13;
�VISITING TEAMS&#13;
WELCOMED&#13;
3. The Chicago Orchestral Choir appeared as the first&#13;
&#13;
= = =AT= = =&#13;
&#13;
n u mber of the College lecture course.&#13;
7. The Freshmen fo llowed the nob le example of the&#13;
Seniors and both classes h e ld parties in t h e Society Halls&#13;
t h is evening.&#13;
8. The banquet room at the Mar tin Hotel was the&#13;
&#13;
The Martinrt,ote l&#13;
ABSOLUTELY&#13;
&#13;
FIREPROOF&#13;
&#13;
scene of the Zet annua l banquet tonight.&#13;
12 . All th is week has been agony fo r the girls.&#13;
&#13;
De-&#13;
&#13;
bate tryou ts you know.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
13. Ng Poom Chew appeared in the second number&#13;
of t h e College lecture co u rse.&#13;
&#13;
It was a d isappointment&#13;
&#13;
that he wore no pigtail.&#13;
17. The Othos have an open door.&#13;
&#13;
Some of the scenes&#13;
&#13;
were very thrilling.&#13;
20. The Athen aeums a n d Philos had their last gettogeth er party before Christmas vacation. T h e Othos and&#13;
Zets, down in their hall , were having a "rearin" good&#13;
time, too.&#13;
&#13;
21.&#13;
&#13;
Christmas vacation begins.&#13;
&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Partys&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Four&#13;
Two Hundred Five&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
In spite of the war and the high cost of living our fountain is still dispensing the same&#13;
&#13;
7. School begins.&#13;
11. First social event of the new year.&#13;
&#13;
generous servings and the crowds are coming&#13;
&#13;
entertained the Seniors at R uth Reid's.&#13;
&#13;
to the place where the principal advertising is&#13;
the good word of satisfied patrons.&#13;
&#13;
ment over Som e'r'set.&#13;
&#13;
The Junior s&#13;
&#13;
Lots of excite-&#13;
&#13;
The Y. W . C. A. President said,&#13;
&#13;
"I thought th er e were 52 cards in a deck."&#13;
14, 15, 16. Inter-society debates.&#13;
&#13;
The Ionians won&#13;
&#13;
the series.&#13;
1 8. Some of us heard Joseph Hofmann at the Auditorium tonight.&#13;
&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
Another memoriable evening.&#13;
&#13;
1 9. A fiery d ebate in Chapel over 6-day a week plan.&#13;
20, 24. Midnight oil-cold cloths on our fever ed brows&#13;
-exam s.&#13;
26. Everything is over now, but th e funeral.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
celebrated by going to the post exam jubilee.&#13;
&#13;
P. S. Don't forget we do your Photo work&#13;
promptly and guarantee satisfaction. We&#13;
have everything in the Kodak line.&#13;
&#13;
28. The three girls' societies entertained in the honor&#13;
of t h e ir broth er&#13;
&#13;
debaters tonight.&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeums and&#13;
&#13;
Philos at Murr e ll Walker's; Zets and Othos at Harriet&#13;
Lawrence's, and the Pi's· and Ionians at Francis Craig's.&#13;
31. Morningside played her first inter-collegiate game&#13;
of basketball this evening, beating Aberdeen, 21-12.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seven&#13;
&#13;
�The Tribune Dominates Its&#13;
Field In Advertising and&#13;
Circulation&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
4. Great excitement in the gym this morning. The&#13;
girls basketball tournament started. Freshies beat the&#13;
Seniors and the Juniors beat the Sophs. This evening the&#13;
Othos held their annual banquet at the Martin Hotel.&#13;
Some feed and some time.&#13;
9. Why did -Ruth Mahood receive Fullbrooks laundry&#13;
in the mail this morning? Such mistakes must be explained.&#13;
13. Morningside service flag was unfurled this morning in Chapel. The 150 stars is proof of Morningside&#13;
spirit carried out into the world. This evening the Fresh_ en and Junior Coeds scrapped for the championship .&#13;
n&#13;
The preps winning by a close score.&#13;
18. Morningside again victorious. We beat Western&#13;
Union in basketball, 30 to 13.&#13;
20. Did we beat Huron? Yea, Bo.&#13;
21. Athenaeums hold their annual banquet at the&#13;
West Hotel.&#13;
22. Lloyd Sheerer - wins the annual Monument run.&#13;
Camouflage&#13;
Club have important meeting in Philo Hall.&#13;
Everybody reports an excellent time.&#13;
24. Morningside Coeds again on the firing line. A&#13;
Red Cross Society is organized, with Clara Lewis as&#13;
President.&#13;
25. M. C. plays Yankton tonight. Oh, yes, of course&#13;
we beat, 33 to 16.&#13;
1. March certainly rushed in like a lion. Lee Soltow&#13;
won second place in the divisional oratorical contest. It&#13;
was real oratory, too.&#13;
12. George Dunn wins the annual prohibition contest.&#13;
16. For the first time we feel the real touch of the&#13;
war cloud as we place a gold star on our service flag. Al&#13;
Behmer, our little "Methodist general," killed in action&#13;
somewhere in France.&#13;
15. One victory and one defeat are reported from the&#13;
dual debate clash with State Normal.&#13;
18. "The Shepherd of the Hills" was presented by the&#13;
Philo-Athenaeum Societies as their grand public.&#13;
2 3. The grandest night of the whole year??? The&#13;
annual woman's banquet took place this evening.&#13;
2 5. A patriotic address was given in Chapel this&#13;
evening by Governor Harding.&#13;
2 6. Oh, that grand and glorious feeling. Don't you&#13;
boys wish you could have been there and witnessed that&#13;
Yale-Hardvard game? After the struggle the score stood&#13;
18 to 14 in favor of Yale. Hooray, for Yale.&#13;
29. The Annual Men's Banquet was held tonight.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eight&#13;
&#13;
51,000 people buy The Tribune because they like it better than any&#13;
other paper in this part of the country. They like it because it furnishes&#13;
more news and better features than other papers do. Both Sioux City papers&#13;
are members of the Associated Press, only The Tribune is a member of the&#13;
United Press Association.&#13;
The Evening Tribune's circulation of 51,000 is 69 % more than that of&#13;
the other Sioux City evening newspaper; 145 % more than that of the morning newspaper and 130 % more than the only Sunday newspaper.&#13;
Tribune mail subscribers are 100 % cash paid in advance. Do you know&#13;
of another newspaper with so valid a claim to quality circulation?&#13;
In 1917 The Tribune carried in six evening issues a week, 665,426 agate&#13;
lines or 2 9 % more display advertising than the second Sioux City newspaper&#13;
carried in its six combined morning and evening issues.&#13;
The Tribune carried 198 ,279 agate lines or 2 2 % more national display&#13;
advertising, and 467,201 agate lines or 29 % more local display advertising&#13;
than the six combined morning and evening issues of the second paper.&#13;
The first choice of both local and national advertisers in Sioux City is&#13;
evidenced by these comparisons.&#13;
The Tribune offers quantity, quality and prestige.&#13;
John C. Kelly, Editor.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1884 by&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Tribune&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Nine&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
The following 210 Alumni, Faculty and former students of Morningside&#13;
College are at present offering their lives in the service of their country :&#13;
&#13;
The best place to buy.&#13;
&#13;
Corporal Albert E. Behmer-Killed&#13;
in action in France March 17,&#13;
1918.&#13;
&#13;
The finest of fruits&#13;
And vegetables,&#13;
Fancy cakes&#13;
&#13;
Anderson, Lieut. Thomas Carlyle,&#13;
'08-Naval Medical Station, Honolulu, Hawaii.&#13;
&#13;
And all sorts&#13;
of pickles&#13;
For Their&#13;
&#13;
Appel Fred, Ex. '19-Army.&#13;
&#13;
Spreads&#13;
&#13;
Basset, Brown,&#13;
Jackson, S. C.&#13;
&#13;
Ex.&#13;
&#13;
'14-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Beck, Eric, Acad., '18-Camp Lewis, Wash.&#13;
Bell, Orin, '18-Camp Dodge, Des&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Archer, Thomas, '16-Dundeedy&#13;
Institute, Minneapolis Minn.&#13;
&#13;
Bennett, Vernon W., Ex. '20-Medical Detachment , 314th Ammunition Train, Camp Funston, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
Aughenbaugh,&#13;
Maine.&#13;
&#13;
And picnics.&#13;
&#13;
Beppler, Paul, Ex. '21-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Floyd-Battleship&#13;
&#13;
Back, Lieut . George Irving, Ex. '19&#13;
-Radio Signal Corps, Maryland&#13;
State College, Md.&#13;
Backemeyer, Fred-Military Pastor Camp Hancock, Augusta, Ga.&#13;
For the&#13;
College Students.&#13;
The "Big" Store.&#13;
&#13;
Barks, G. Earl, '18-0rdnance Department.&#13;
Barrett, Walter, Ex: '18-Co. A,&#13;
338 Mac. Gun Bat., Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Bartlett, Allan, Ex. '19-Radio&#13;
Service, Co. D, 7th Regiment,&#13;
Camp Perry, Great Lake.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
Around the corner off the Campus.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Ten&#13;
&#13;
Bashaw, Corporal Stanley, Ex. '18&#13;
-Co. B, 126 Mac. Gun Bat., 17th&#13;
Brigade, 34th Division, Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Berg, Abe, Ex. '21-Radio School,&#13;
Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
Berkstresser, William, Ex. '20-Co.&#13;
F, 3rd Supply Train, 551 Book&#13;
Bldg., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Bigglestone, Harry, '14-Y. M. C.&#13;
A., Great Lakes, 111.&#13;
Bogard, Herman, '15-Merchant&#13;
Marine, U.S. S.S. Gopher.&#13;
Bogard, Sergeant Joseph, Ex. '18126th Mac. Gun Bat ., Camp Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
Bondhus, Francis Leonard-Medical Corps, Fort Riley, Kan.&#13;
Bridenbaugh, Lieut . J. H.-Medical Corps.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eleven&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
Fresh cut daily.&#13;
A choice assortment of fresh cut roses always on hand, American Beauties, Russell's Ophelia, Aaron Ward, Richmond, Killarney and many others.&#13;
Dainty Corsages.&#13;
&#13;
Choice Baskets of Flowers.&#13;
&#13;
WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION.&#13;
NOTICE: A discount of 10 per cent allowed to all classes of&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
ART FLOWER SHOP&#13;
512 Fifth Street.&#13;
Bell Phone 466.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1734.&#13;
&#13;
Broome, Lieut. Ray R.-Aviation&#13;
Corps, Fort Omaha, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Campbell, Prof. H. G.-Y. M. C. A.,&#13;
31 Ave. Montigue, Paris, France.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Corporal Bernard-Sec.&#13;
583, N. S. 99 S., A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Carlson, Oscar B.-Fort Logan,&#13;
Colo.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Dan H., Ex. '16-0. T. C.,&#13;
Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Carter, Pearl Scott, Ex. '21.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Edwin M., '09-Y. M. C. A.,&#13;
12 Rue d' Aguessean, Paris,&#13;
France.&#13;
Brown, George, Ex. '20-Navy,&#13;
Newport, R. I.&#13;
Brown, Guy, Ex. '19-Co. L, 6th&#13;
Reg., Camp Perry, Great Lakes.&#13;
Brown, Capt. Joe D., Ex. '09-Fortress Monroe, Va.&#13;
&#13;
WE MAKE THEM&#13;
YOU SHOULD EAT THEM&#13;
&#13;
LA FAMA · CHOCOLATES&#13;
Made By&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Co., Sioux City, U.S.A.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Nelson, Acad., 1917-Co. J,&#13;
3rd Reg., Bar 729, Camp Dewey,&#13;
Great Lakes.&#13;
Brunelle, A. H.-Ordnance, A. E.&#13;
F., France.&#13;
Burrows, Richard, Ex. '23-Co. H,&#13;
79th Reg., Winnepeg, Canada.&#13;
Caine, Thos. L., Ex. 21-168 Inf.,&#13;
84th Brig.&#13;
Call, George, Ex. '19-0. T. C.,&#13;
Camp Sheridan, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twelve&#13;
&#13;
Carter, Roscoe, '12-0rdnance Department, Dover, N. J.&#13;
Chandler, L. L.-Educational Sec.,&#13;
Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill.&#13;
Clark, Wilson, '17-Aviation Corps,&#13;
Austin, Tex.&#13;
Clough, Martin, Ex. '18.&#13;
Collins, LeRoy, Ex. '13-Canadian&#13;
Army, France.&#13;
Coombs, Arthur J.-U. S. Marines,&#13;
France.&#13;
Coonen, Howard-Marine Corps.&#13;
Cooper, Burnett, Ex. '19-Radio&#13;
Work.&#13;
Corner, Ivan-U. S. S. Pittsburgh.&#13;
Corner, Lieut. Paul, '12-Signal&#13;
Corps, Camp Hancock, Augusta,&#13;
Ga.&#13;
&#13;
T wo Hundred Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�HAWKEYE&#13;
MOTOR TRUCKS&#13;
&#13;
Cowan, Clinton, Ex. '20-Great&#13;
Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Craig, Laurence, Ex. '21-Commonwwealth Pier, Boston, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
1 1/2 and 2 T on Capacities&#13;
Made in Sioux City.&#13;
Guaranteed Service.&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye Truck Company&#13;
R. A. BENNETT, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor&#13;
&#13;
Craik, Lieut. Oscar W.-Aviation&#13;
Corps, Camp McArthur, Tex.&#13;
Daily, Corporal Charles B, Ex. '17&#13;
-396th Motor Truck Co., Camp&#13;
Joseph Johnson, Jacksonville,&#13;
Fla.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
Dodsley, Lieut. Homer, Ex. '20Camp Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Class Pins&#13;
&#13;
Medals&#13;
&#13;
Emblems&#13;
&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING&#13;
&#13;
Jonas Olson &amp; Co.&#13;
Established 1895&#13;
&#13;
MANUFACTURING JEWELERS AND&#13;
&#13;
510 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3211&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
Evans, Keith M.-Co. G, Camp&#13;
Ross, Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Evans, McKinley, Ex. '19-Sanitary Squadron B, Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Eveleth, Major J. M., Acad., '00Dental Reserve Corps, Douglas,&#13;
Ariz.&#13;
Fair, Lieut. John-Aviation Corps,&#13;
Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Lewis,&#13;
&#13;
Fair, William-0. T.&#13;
Springs, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
Downs, Fayette, Ex. '20-168 Inf.,&#13;
A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Feller, John E. Ex. '19.&#13;
&#13;
Dolliver,&#13;
Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Barrett-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Donohue, Lieut. James H., Ex. '18&#13;
-168th Inf., A. E. F., France.&#13;
Dubel, Marcus, Ex. '19-Aerial&#13;
Gunner Squadron, Dallas, Tex.&#13;
Dunham, Herbert-Marine&#13;
racks, Paris Island, S. C.&#13;
&#13;
Bar-&#13;
&#13;
Dye, Leslie, Ex. '21-Cavalry.&#13;
&#13;
DIAMOND MOUNTERS&#13;
&#13;
Roll&#13;
&#13;
Evans, Burrell-Co. A, 109th Hq.&#13;
Trn., Camp Cody, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
C.,&#13;
&#13;
Leon&#13;
&#13;
Ferguson, Sergeant Claude-22nd&#13;
Aerial Squadron, A. E. F.,&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Fouke, Hugh, Ex. '19-2nd Replacement Reg., Quantico, Va.&#13;
Fowler, Lowell, Ex. '20-Co. C., 1st&#13;
Bat. Signal Corps, A. E. F.,&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�A. R. Johnson &amp; Co.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
Ask your mother for&#13;
&#13;
VICTORY BREAD&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
Aut of Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
Auto Phone 1197&#13;
408-410 IOWA STREET&#13;
Bell Phone 197&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor&#13;
Johnson, Leon, '18-Navy.&#13;
Johnson, Lieut. Philip-Veterinary&#13;
Dept., Med. Reserve Corps, Fort&#13;
Oglethorpe, Ga.&#13;
Johnson, Roye, Ex. '19-Vancouver Barracks, Vancouver, Wash.&#13;
Jones, Lieut. Ira, Ex. '11-14th&#13;
Inf., Camp Lewis, Tacoma,&#13;
Wash.&#13;
Jones, Capt. 0. Garfield-Fort&#13;
Monroe, W. Va.&#13;
Jones, John Paul, Ex. '21-Naval&#13;
Radio Service, Newport, R. I.&#13;
Jurgenson, Royal, Ex. '18-Schofield Barracks, Honolulu, HaWaii.&#13;
Keckler, Rev. Lee Roy-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Hanford's Jee Cream&#13;
The Every Day&#13;
Desert!&#13;
Our pure Ice Cream is more than a dessert. Its food value exceeds that of most table foods.&#13;
Besides being pure it is wholesome and delicious.&#13;
On all occasions it is the ideal refreshment. It always pleases.&#13;
Try our Ice Cream in your home. Be sure to get HANFORD'S.&#13;
&#13;
Kenney, Thomas, Ex. '20-0ffice&#13;
of Div. Surgeon, 34th Div., Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Kingsbury, Sergeant Francis, Ex.&#13;
'18-Co. G, 134th Inf., Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Klippel, Corporal Charles, Ex. '18&#13;
-Camp Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
Koch, Fred, Acad., 1912-Iowa&#13;
Field Hospital No. 2, Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Kolp, Lieut. John D.-Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind.&#13;
Lewis, James H.-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
"Eat Ice Cream every day-It's good for you."&#13;
&#13;
Lancaster, Harold, '18-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Roll&#13;
&#13;
Lindsey, Arthur, '16.&#13;
Lavender, Robert, Ex. '12-Radio&#13;
Service, Washington, D. C.&#13;
Lawrence, Lieut. Harvey-Co. 32d,&#13;
C. A. C., Fort Terry, Long Island Sound, N. Y.&#13;
Leazer, George, Ex. '21-Camp&#13;
Perry, Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas K., Ex. '19-Marine&#13;
Corps, Paris Island, S. C.&#13;
Loft, William, Ex. '20-133rd Inf.,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Lueder, Herman-Engineering Department, Navy.&#13;
Lory, Milton, Ex. '20 - Camp&#13;
Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
McConkey, Homer Bly, Ex. '19109th Engineers Hospital Squad,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
McDonald, Mark, Ex. '19-Fort&#13;
Winifred Scott, San Francisco,&#13;
Cal.&#13;
McKinney, Sergeant Delbert C., '16&#13;
-Co. F, 351st Reb., Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
McKinney, Lieut . Guy - 302nd&#13;
Field Artillery, Camp Devens,&#13;
Ayre, Mass.&#13;
Magoun, Lieut. Carleton, Ex. '14Co. E, 351st Inf., Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Mahood, Sergeant Cecil H., Ex. '20&#13;
-21st Am. Co. M., A. E. F.,&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixteen&#13;
Two Hundred Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade.&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
Any Style&#13;
&#13;
WITH BRICK&#13;
&#13;
Frear, Lieut. Charles E .-Sanitary&#13;
Squad, 34th Div., Camp Cody,&#13;
&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
&#13;
Forbes, Willis, '18-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Gondie,&#13;
&#13;
The Practicability and Stability of Brick-its value as an investment-as&#13;
a thing of beauty which will be a joy former&#13;
&#13;
Thoughts concerning these&#13;
&#13;
matters we would like to submit for consideration.&#13;
&#13;
Freeman, Mansfield, Ex. '14-A. E.&#13;
F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Brick &amp; Tile Co.&#13;
&#13;
Freeman, Harold, Ex. '19-Camp&#13;
&#13;
George, Ex. '19-134th&#13;
&#13;
Ambulance Corps, CamJ! Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Greynold,&#13;
&#13;
Edward-187th&#13;
&#13;
Aero&#13;
&#13;
Squadron, A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
Office and Disply&#13;
&#13;
Glasgow, Julius, Ex. '20-0ffice of&#13;
Div. Surgeon, 34th Div., Camp&#13;
&#13;
Room, No. 9 West Third Street.&#13;
&#13;
Freist, Thomas, Ex. '19-8lst Co.,&#13;
&#13;
Hanson, William A ..&#13;
&#13;
8th Reg., Great Lakes, Ill . .&#13;
&#13;
The Place to Buy&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal&#13;
SERVI CE&#13;
&#13;
Retail Lumber&#13;
600 W. Seventh&#13;
&#13;
Gary, Major Franklin Jude, Ex.&#13;
'09-102nd Canadian Inf. Bat.,&#13;
&#13;
Hart, Oscar, Ex. '19-Co. 5, Ordnance Dept., Camp, Sheridan,&#13;
Montgomery, Ala.&#13;
&#13;
Gerkin, Vergil, Ex. '19-109 Engineers, Camp Cody, Deming&#13;
N.M.&#13;
&#13;
Gethmann, Walter B., '06-Y. M.&#13;
C. A., Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
Hale, Lieut. John D., Ex. '15-Co.&#13;
B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat., Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lumber Co.&#13;
Retail Coal&#13;
1604 East Fourth St&#13;
&#13;
Gantt, Corporal Ed J., Ex. '20-Co.&#13;
B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat., Camp&#13;
&#13;
Housnald, Ernest, Ex. '20-Aviation, Madison, Wis.&#13;
Held, Walter, '17-133rd Inf.,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
CULTIVATE THE&#13;
FIVE YEAR VISION&#13;
Men who cultivate business vision first equip themselves with dependable inforinatoin. They couple their business foresight with&#13;
the sound financial judgment of experienced bankers. Their plans&#13;
are adjusted to anticipate conditions of the future. As depositors&#13;
in the First National, such men broaden the expanse of their business horizon.&#13;
&#13;
Henderson, George, Ex. '20-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Section, Sec. 1, Co. 2, Reg. 2,&#13;
&#13;
Miller, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
Charleston, S. C.&#13;
Herbster, J. G.-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Lee, Ex. '19-Marines,&#13;
Paris Island, S. C.&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Alvin G.. '17-Aviation&#13;
&#13;
Hicks, Corporal Earl E., Ex. '1916th U. S. Ambulance Co., Fort&#13;
&#13;
Honard, Major William-Medical&#13;
Reserve, Camp Funston, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
Riley, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
N. W. Corner 5th and Pierce Streets.&#13;
Capital and Surplus, $720,000.00.&#13;
Hickman, Edwin, Ex. '20-Camp&#13;
Dodge.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR DEPENDABLE&#13;
&#13;
FURNITURE&#13;
AND RUGS&#13;
In buying Furniture and Home Furnishings there a r e many ways that you can test&#13;
the merits of the store with which you deal.&#13;
We abide cheer fully by the test that our&#13;
values show through comparison with others, and urge our customers to satisfy their&#13;
doubts, however slight, in that conclusive&#13;
way. You will find that our prices are not&#13;
only the fa irest, but in many case sthe lowest in town.&#13;
&#13;
Hill, Byron, Ex. '20168th Inf., A. E.&#13;
F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Hutton, Charles-Ordnance Dept.,&#13;
A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Hill, Freeman, Ex. '20-Battery B,&#13;
Field Art ., Fort Sill, Okla.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Art hur-Tank Service,&#13;
Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
&#13;
Hill, Rev. J. E.-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Quality Service Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
Horn, John, Ex. '20-Co. 12, Coast&#13;
Art., Fort Baker, Cal.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Hudson, Sergeant Thomas, Acad.,&#13;
1911- Co. B, Mounted Police,&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Frank, '13.&#13;
Johnson, Emmons, Ex. '20-Great&#13;
Lakes, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twen ty-One&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
You should store up KNOWLEDGE in the HEAD, but choose some&#13;
SAFE place for your MONEY.&#13;
&#13;
Try the&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL NATIONAL&#13;
BANK&#13;
Iowa Bldg., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
All Patrons of "M.-S." should arrange for their FARM and CITY&#13;
LOANS and INSURANCE through the CONTINENTAL MORTGAGE COMPANY.&#13;
M. F. McDowell, "Class 03," Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Mahood, Rev. H. W. L., Ex. '02Y. M. C. A. Secretary, Louisville, Ky.&#13;
&#13;
Morley, Maynard L., '15.&#13;
Mossman, Sergeant Marion-Head-&#13;
&#13;
Mahood, Herbert, Ex. '19-0ffice&#13;
&#13;
quarters Co., 13th Field Artillery,&#13;
Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. C.&#13;
&#13;
of Div. Surgeon, 34th Div., Camp&#13;
&#13;
Mulfort, Grant-Co. M., 133rd Inf.,&#13;
&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Malsie, Willard, Ex. '21-0rdnance&#13;
Dept., Camp Fremont, Palo Alto,&#13;
&#13;
Mulford, Morton, Acad., 1916-Co.&#13;
L., 133rd Inf., Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Cal.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bldg., Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
O'Donaghue, Lieut. J. H.-South&#13;
&#13;
Maskell, Neal, Ex. '21.&#13;
&#13;
Bend, Wash.&#13;
Maynard, Orville-29th Artillery,&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY FEEDS&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
GRADED HAY&#13;
Alfalfa, Molasses Feeds, Dairy Feeds, Hog Fat Feeds, Horse Feed.&#13;
Poultry and Chick Feeds made in Sioux City, under C. J.M. brand.&#13;
Make fat horses, steers, hogs, sheep and poultry.&#13;
Everything for the feeder&#13;
&#13;
C.J. MILLIGAN, Inc.&#13;
304 Wall Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Established 1899. Member&#13;
Students are invited&#13;
of National Hay Associato inspect our plant&#13;
tion and Sioux City Board&#13;
of Trade.&#13;
at any time.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Feed &amp; Elevator Co.&#13;
East Morningside&#13;
Retail deliveries in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Camp Upton, Long Island, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
Waco, Tex.&#13;
Mayne,&#13;
&#13;
Lieut.&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth,&#13;
&#13;
Acad.,&#13;
&#13;
1913-132 Inf. Headquarters Co.,&#13;
&#13;
Overholser, Ralph-Aviati:o n Corps,&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Logan, Houston, Fla.&#13;
Omar, Gaylord, Ex. '20-Co. 81,&#13;
Montgomery, Paul, Ex. '16-168th&#13;
Inf. Headquarters Co., 42nd Div.,&#13;
A. E. F., France.&#13;
Moore, Lieut. St. Clair, Ex. '18Co. A, Iowa Engineers, Camp Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
8th Reg., Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Patrick, Glenn, '16-Harvard Radio School, Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
Payne, Arthur, '17-Co. M, Camp&#13;
A. A. Humphrey, Washington,&#13;
&#13;
D. C.&#13;
&#13;
Morgan, Horace, '14-Co. 10, 339th&#13;
Mac. Gun Bat., Camp Dodge, Des&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Oliver, Lieut. Frank, Ex. '17-&#13;
&#13;
Payne, Victor, Ex. '19-109th Engineers, Camp Cody, Deming,&#13;
N.M.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College&#13;
WHERE QUALITY IS&#13;
&#13;
Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
AS REPRESENTED&#13;
&#13;
Payne, Lieut. William H, '15-Co.&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
&#13;
Roost, Capt. Fred, Ex. '02-134th&#13;
&#13;
1, Coast Artillery, Fort San Jacin-&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Things&#13;
&#13;
Ambulance Corps, Camp Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
to, Galveston, Tex.&#13;
410 Pierce St.,&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
JEW ELER&#13;
&#13;
Peete, Frank-Camp Sheridan, Ala.&#13;
&#13;
Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
Outdoors, Afield and Afloat&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C. Lees Tennis, Golf,&#13;
Baseball Goods, Ladies' Kampit Outing and Riding Suits.&#13;
Camp and Vacation&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
312-15&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
Orcutts Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Pike, Stillman, Ex.&#13;
&#13;
'18-Battery&#13;
&#13;
E, 147th Field Artillery, A. E.&#13;
F ., France.&#13;
Pitman,&#13;
&#13;
Ralph,&#13;
&#13;
Ex.&#13;
&#13;
'21-Radio&#13;
&#13;
Service, Newport, R. I.&#13;
Prichard, Lieut. George W. '13Co. D., 338th Mac. Gun Bat.,&#13;
Camp Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Spring 1918&#13;
Howard Clothing Co.&#13;
MEN'S STORE&#13;
Out of the Ordinary&#13;
Is Out of the Rut&#13;
&#13;
420 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
Ptichard, Lieut. Ralph, '16-Co. G.,&#13;
350th Infantry, Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
MORNlNGSlDE BANK&#13;
Located at Peters Park.&#13;
John Scott, Jr., President.&#13;
&#13;
W. L. Ayers, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
-Senior Aid de Camp 2nd Div.,&#13;
&#13;
Richardson, Noble, Ex. '18-Aviation Corps, Fort Logan, Colo.&#13;
Schearer,&#13;
Navy.&#13;
Schriener,&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd,&#13;
&#13;
Acad.,&#13;
&#13;
William-Radio&#13;
&#13;
1918-&#13;
&#13;
Div.,&#13;
&#13;
Fort Leavenworth, Kan.&#13;
Sampson, Ernest, Ex. '19-Philippine Islands.&#13;
Sanem, Sergeant E. G.-Fort Riley,&#13;
Kan.&#13;
&#13;
Depot, Camp Doniphan, Fort Sill,&#13;
Okla.&#13;
&#13;
A. P. 0. 710, A. E. F., France.&#13;
Sawyer, Capt. Prince E..&#13;
Pyncheon, Capt. E. A., Ex. '14Fort Sill, Okla.&#13;
Rippey, Ralph, Ex. 'l 7-133rd Inf.,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Mac. Gun Bat., Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sass, Sergeant Carl W.-Ordnance&#13;
Prichard, Capt. Vernon E., Ex. '12&#13;
&#13;
It has been a pleasure to this bank for the past five years to serve College&#13;
Faculty and Students.&#13;
In our n ew modern banking home we are fully equipped to care for your&#13;
banking needs in every detail.&#13;
Correspondence invited from parents or guardians in reference to this College&#13;
Suburb and will have our cheerful and prompt attention.&#13;
&#13;
Rambo, Eli, Ex. '17-Co. B., 127th&#13;
&#13;
Saylor, Lieut. Herbert, '05-Field&#13;
Hospital No. 16, Fort Riley, Kan.&#13;
Schellinger, Roy, Ex. '19-Radio&#13;
Service, Newport, R. I.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
THE TEST OF TIME&#13;
This bank has the d isti n ction of twenty-five yea r s of u seful service b ehind it, which is the record for a Savings Bank in Sioux City.&#13;
Its material r eso urces have grown from year to year and it has&#13;
also grown as a part of the characte r of the co mmunity. A successful&#13;
twenty-five-year-old savings ba nk should be a good bank to ti e to, and we invite you to call and becom e a m emb er of our eve r-growing family.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
The Safe Home for Savings.&#13;
Security&#13;
Bank Buliding.&#13;
&#13;
Starr, Gaylord. A.-Battery D,&#13;
335th Field Artillery, Camp Pike,&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS AND DESIGNS&#13;
&#13;
Ward, Corporal Arthur, Ex. '1230th Aero Squadron, A. E. F.,&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Harold, '18-Radio Service.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Seeman, Albert, '21-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Enjoy Refreshments or Lunch in Our Fountain Room&#13;
Stenseth, Vernon, Ex. '19-133rd&#13;
Ambulance Co., Camp Cody,&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO&#13;
&#13;
Engin-&#13;
&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Steele, Sergeant Lawrence, Ex. '19&#13;
-Co. B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat.,&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS AND FINISHING&#13;
&#13;
Walton, Donald, '17-109th&#13;
&#13;
eers, Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Ark.&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
DRUGS, CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
Sanger, Ernest, Ex. '20-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Watland, Maurice, Acad., 1914133rd Field Hospital, Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
Watlant, Walter, Ex. '21.&#13;
&#13;
Never Before Have There Been Such&#13;
Opportunities for Young People&#13;
Are you conserving your leisure time? You work eight hours. Sleep&#13;
eight hours, that makes sixteen. Where are the other eight? You&#13;
can account for part of them. So much time for eating and recreation. A College student can use part of his spare time to very&#13;
good advantage by taking a Business Training Course under our&#13;
individual plan of instruction. Day and Night School.&#13;
&#13;
Stevens, Leo, Ex. '15-Mac. Gun&#13;
Detachment, Navy Yards, Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Symonds, Corporal Walter, Ex. '17&#13;
-Co. B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat.,&#13;
&#13;
Seventh and Nebraska Streets.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Ga.&#13;
Wells, Glen-Gas Reg., Engineers'&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Div., Fort Meyer, Va.&#13;
Upham,&#13;
&#13;
Cyril,&#13;
&#13;
'15-University&#13;
&#13;
Heights, New York City.&#13;
Van Cleve, William Joyce, Ex. '20&#13;
-Radio Service, Austin, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
National Business Training School&#13;
&#13;
Wedgewood, William&#13;
Aviation&#13;
Corps, Camp Hancock, Augusta,&#13;
&#13;
Vernon, Robert, '15-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Camp&#13;
&#13;
Dodge,&#13;
&#13;
Des&#13;
&#13;
Wenig, Ervine, Ex. '18-Co. C,&#13;
313th Engineers, Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Wertz,&#13;
&#13;
Walter-33rd&#13;
&#13;
Aviation,&#13;
Waco, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
Two H undred Twenty-Seven&#13;
Two H undr ed Twenty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Fort&#13;
&#13;
Squadron&#13;
&#13;
McCutcheon,&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
"OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHINGS&#13;
824 Fourth Street: Corner of Jennings&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
All School Supply and Equipment Needs Handled with Care.&#13;
&#13;
Capital School Supply Company&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Send for Catalog.&#13;
&#13;
M. W. Baldwin&#13;
&#13;
D. C. Kitselman&#13;
&#13;
Wessel, Corporal Emil, Ex. '19-Alcatraz Island, Cal.&#13;
Williams, Sergeant Forest Earl,&#13;
'16-lOth Co., Coast Artillery,&#13;
Fort Barry, Cal.&#13;
Wilson, Lieut. Harold-Dental&#13;
Corps.&#13;
Wolle, William C., Ex. '18-Co 3,&#13;
Wessahickson Barracks, Cape&#13;
May, N. J.&#13;
Woodside,&#13;
Clifton&#13;
Ordnance&#13;
School, Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Woolhiser, Sergeant J. L., Ex. '12&#13;
-Co. B, 3rd Reg., Coast Artillery, A. E. F., France.&#13;
Wulf Horace F., Ex. '19-Medical&#13;
corps,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming,&#13;
N.M.&#13;
In Government Service.&#13;
Ferguson, Prof. Agnes B.&#13;
Kanthlehner, Prof. H.F.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Timmel&#13;
&#13;
Red Cross Nurses.&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, KITSELMAN &amp; TIMMEL&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS&#13;
S. E. Babcock&#13;
&#13;
Dudley, Ulynie.&#13;
Ewer, Bertha.&#13;
Robar, Irene.&#13;
Dutton, Winifred.&#13;
&#13;
Women in Y. W. C. A. Huts.&#13;
&#13;
Campbell, Mrs. H. G.&#13;
Dolliver, Margaret Gay.&#13;
Fouke, Ruth.&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Kitselman&#13;
&#13;
R. S. Skillings&#13;
&#13;
Henry S. Payer&#13;
&#13;
Alice Kreutz&#13;
&#13;
John H. Anthony&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 397.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1443 .&#13;
&#13;
.217-219 Exchange Building.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Nine&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's&#13;
&#13;
Biggest&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Busiest&#13;
STUDIO&#13;
&#13;
1-Wessel, 2-Horney, 3-Kolp,&#13;
&#13;
Tw.o .Hundreel Thirty .&#13;
&#13;
4-Gantt, 5-Burrows, 6-Wenig,•&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-One&#13;
&#13;
�M. c. Men in Service&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
NEW BABY!!&#13;
&#13;
JIFFY&#13;
HAS PERFECT WEIGHT,&#13;
PERFECT BALANCE&#13;
PERFECT SHAPE &amp;&#13;
&#13;
PERFECT FORM !!&#13;
&#13;
JIFFY&#13;
Is BUILT ON&#13;
GRACEFUL LINES, AND&#13;
IS DESIGNED FOR&#13;
SPEED!!&#13;
&#13;
406 PIERCE ST.&#13;
SHE WILL BE GLAD TO SEE YOU !!&#13;
&#13;
REMEMBER-We, as manufacturers, guarantee each and every&#13;
Jiffy Pen made-no matter where purchased.&#13;
We have the right kind of point for every hand or business. Try us.&#13;
All makes of pens repaired.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
1-Mahood,&#13;
2-Payne, 3-Kenny,&#13;
Steele.&#13;
&#13;
4-Gantt,&#13;
&#13;
Bashaw,&#13;
&#13;
Steele, 5-Gantt, Bashaw, Bogard,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Two&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�M. C. Men in Service&#13;
&#13;
Consumer's&#13;
&#13;
Coal co.&#13;
&#13;
2020-2030 4th St.&#13;
Auto 2486&#13;
&#13;
Bell 73&#13;
&#13;
The Better Grades of Coal--Buy Early&#13;
&#13;
1-Mahood,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Four&#13;
&#13;
2-Broome,&#13;
&#13;
3-Mahood,&#13;
&#13;
Glasgow,&#13;
&#13;
4-Clark, 5-Sass&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�M. C. Men in Service&#13;
&#13;
WHY&#13;
You Should Insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand&#13;
&#13;
Food Products&#13;
Look f or the Rose on&#13;
Every Package&#13;
&#13;
The Reason is This--Superb Brand is the result of many&#13;
years of persistent effort to assemble&#13;
under one Brand. a complete line of&#13;
Food Products . of the very highest&#13;
quality at the most reasonable prices&#13;
You always get the best when you insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand Food Products&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
&#13;
Tolerton &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
1-McKinney, 2-Bennett,&#13;
&#13;
3-Evans,&#13;
4-Henderson,&#13;
&#13;
5-Bridenbaugh, 6-Steele&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Six&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty -Seven&#13;
&#13;
�\&#13;
&#13;
You will never know anything about&#13;
&#13;
F. T.LEEDER&#13;
&#13;
the High Cost of Eating if you eat on&#13;
our ticket plan at&#13;
&#13;
Reinforced Concrete Smoke Stacks.&#13;
&#13;
Park Restaurant&#13;
&#13;
Service Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Safety Convenience&#13;
&#13;
He drooped his head, he dropped the&#13;
cane,&#13;
Emotion filled his breast.&#13;
"Forgive me, 0 Thou God of Love,&#13;
Who gave me days so blest."&#13;
&#13;
"FUSSING"&#13;
&#13;
He left his home at 8 o'clock.&#13;
He did not say farewell.&#13;
He met his rival at her door,&#13;
And beat him all to h- -1.&#13;
&#13;
0 fathers, from his grief take heed,&#13;
&#13;
When yours shall fall in love.&#13;
Let a father's blessing not his cane,&#13;
Fall on them from above.&#13;
- H . R.H.&#13;
&#13;
He entered with a how'y kid,&#13;
By Jove, you'r swell tonight.&#13;
Said she to him, "Lay off your lid,&#13;
The fire is burning bright."&#13;
Before the bright and cherry blaze,&#13;
The comfy sofa brought.&#13;
They settled down to fuss and gaze,&#13;
And 'dulge in dreamy thought.&#13;
They thought that papa was in bed.&#13;
They thought they heard him snore.&#13;
"We need not be alarmed," they said,&#13;
And never locked the door.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
E. L. K JRK, G en' l Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
Ralph Arnold&#13;
&#13;
Wm. Beuttler&#13;
&#13;
Beuttler &amp; Arnold&#13;
This Firm Designed the Alumni Gymnasium and&#13;
Rebuilt the Conservatory.&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
RAY DARLING&#13;
Distributor of&#13;
&#13;
Grant Six, Maxwell, Columbia and Dixie Flyer&#13;
Bennett Auto Block.&#13;
&#13;
The romance of his years gone by,&#13;
Had vanished from his mind.&#13;
His heart was hardened and he was,&#13;
A cruel one of his kind.&#13;
He saw the lovers there in twined,&#13;
Within each others' arms.&#13;
He heard the whispered melodies,&#13;
Of love that's not alarmed.&#13;
&#13;
ARCHITECTS&#13;
Auto Phone 4240.&#13;
&#13;
Unto the scene with mighty tread&#13;
At 12 o'clock he came.&#13;
He paused a moment in the hall,&#13;
And there secured a cane.&#13;
&#13;
0 Cupid, thy work, you did it well.&#13;
&#13;
The arrow still is there,&#13;
It brings to mind the days of yore,&#13;
When SHE gave joy for care.&#13;
&#13;
HOW TO GET AN "A"&#13;
1. Get a front seat and look intelli( If possible.)&#13;
2. Ask all the questions in class that&#13;
&#13;
gent.&#13;
&#13;
you can think of. (Do not have them&#13;
apply too close to the subject you are&#13;
studying on or you will be forced to&#13;
show your ignorance.)&#13;
3. Drive all your points home with&#13;
well selected gestures. (The same set&#13;
of gestures will do for all classes.)&#13;
4. Near the end of the period always&#13;
claim that your pen is dry and borrow a&#13;
pencil. (This shows that you are taking&#13;
lots of notes. )&#13;
5. Be sure and visit the Prof's. office&#13;
the night before exams and get a look&#13;
at the question.&#13;
(Write out the answers and carry them to class. Do not&#13;
trust your memory.)&#13;
6. A little work might be well, but&#13;
why make mountains out of mole hills&#13;
and work when it is not expected of&#13;
you.&#13;
Merle (speaking from experience)"Too sudden a curbing of young enthusiasm results in a shock-and a repair&#13;
bill."&#13;
&#13;
Goodyear Shoe Repair Co.&#13;
518 Fifth St.&#13;
Biggest, Best and Busiest. Repairing done while you wait. Mail orders prepaid.&#13;
E.T. Jossem&#13;
&#13;
J. F. Meierstein&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Nine&#13;
·Two Hundred Thirty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
�When you figure&#13;
the wear and tear on&#13;
your clothes on account of the terrific&#13;
washboard-rubbing ·&#13;
wear, you will find&#13;
that the item of the weekly wash&#13;
is too high-much too high.&#13;
Clothes washed with a&#13;
&#13;
Western Electric&#13;
Washer and Wringer&#13;
last longer because they are gently rocked into&#13;
cleanliness- not beaten into it. Warm, soapy&#13;
water is gently forced through all fabricscleaning heavy and fine alike- quickly without&#13;
wear. Every item of expense in connection with&#13;
your weekly washing is reduced-the additional cost is three cents for electricity.&#13;
Wash Electrically.&#13;
&#13;
Let Us Explain.&#13;
&#13;
TODAY!&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Gas &amp; Electric Co .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty- One&#13;
&#13;
�If you want to buy a real good Suit with lots of style, come right h er e, you&#13;
will find a beautiful assortment, a lso a very large and nifty line of Shirts,&#13;
Ties, Hats, Caps, Shoes, everythin g for the young men .&#13;
&#13;
Standard Clothing Co.&#13;
710-712 Fourth Street.&#13;
10 % to the College Students.&#13;
&#13;
PURITY&#13;
&#13;
ICE&#13;
&#13;
MADE IN SIOUX CITY BY&#13;
&#13;
HUTCHINSON'S&#13;
The Ice Cream That's All Cream&#13;
ADVICE (AND WHERE&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
IT CAN BE OBTAINED)&#13;
&#13;
On Watch Winding and Settin g _____________ _ _____________________ Joy Horton&#13;
Concerning 10 O'Clock Rule _______________________________________ Dr. Hilmer&#13;
&#13;
When You Wade Into&#13;
Business Life you will&#13;
need Financial Boots&#13;
A Bank Account will&#13;
supply this need&#13;
Education only puts&#13;
the polish on&#13;
Both are necessary to&#13;
Success&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of Commerce&#13;
310 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
CREAM&#13;
&#13;
4th and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
To the Lovelorn --------------------- --- ------------------------Dr. Schaub&#13;
On Selecting Fowl (squacking eliminated) ________ ______________ A. L. Freeman&#13;
On "Slickening" and " Jiping" ------------------ -------- -------Rusty McBride&#13;
On the Latest Dance Steps ______________________________________ Harold Butler&#13;
Why You Should Not Work on Sunday ___ ____ _____________________ Ernest Sanger&#13;
On Catching the Last Car Out _____ _ _________________________ McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
G. ADOLPH OLSON, Pres. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
OLSON'S&#13;
Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 Pearl Street, SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
One Quality- The Best&#13;
&#13;
J.C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
&#13;
PLANTS AND&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
FLORAL ARTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the Sportsman and Athlete&#13;
&#13;
Store Sixth and P ierce Sts.&#13;
Bell Phone 13 O&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
Factor y Representatives&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundre d Forty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Only Exclusive Sporting Goods Store&#13;
Always Ready to Supply&#13;
&#13;
Agents&#13;
&#13;
A. S. Reach Co., P. Goldsmith's Sons&#13;
&#13;
A.G. Spalding &amp; Bros.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�Work Delivered When Promised&#13;
Monotype &amp; Linotype Composition&#13;
&#13;
This Book Was Printed and Bound by&#13;
&#13;
W. H. BASTIAN PRINTING CO.&#13;
410-412 Fifth Street.&#13;
&#13;
Printers&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Binders&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones 1390&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fort y-Five&#13;
&#13;
�BROWN COAL COMPANY&#13;
H. H. Krummann, P resident .&#13;
&#13;
Bureau&#13;
&#13;
Main Office : 201-202 United Bank Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
SupremacyCommands Attention&#13;
LOOK&#13;
&#13;
back over the past years and ask yourself what other&#13;
Engraving Institution, specializing in college annuals, has&#13;
wielded so wide an Influence over the College Annual Field?&#13;
Ask yourself if College and University Annuals are not better today because of BUREAU PROGRESSIVENESS and BUREAU&#13;
INITIATIVE?&#13;
You know the BUREAU OF ENGRAVING Inc. inaug,&#13;
that&#13;
urated the system of Closer Co,operation with college annual&#13;
boards in planning and constructing books from cover to cover.&#13;
Our marked progress in this field commands attention. Our&#13;
establishment is one of the largest of its kind in this country.&#13;
Our Modem Art Department of noted Commercial Art Experts&#13;
is developing Artistic Features that are making "Bureau" Annuals&#13;
Famous for Originality and Beauty.&#13;
And again, the help of our experienced College Annual Depart,&#13;
ment is of invaluable aid. Our up-to-the-minutesystem, which we&#13;
give you, and our Instructive Books will surely lighten your Burden.&#13;
&#13;
A proposition from the Natural Leaders in the College Annual&#13;
Engraving field from an organization of over 150 people, founded&#13;
over 17 years ago, and enjoying the Confidence and Good Will&#13;
of the foremost Universities of this country, is certainly worth&#13;
your while.&#13;
Is not the BUREAU OF ENGRAVING Inc., Deserving of&#13;
the Opportunity of showing what it can do for&#13;
YOU?&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU of ENGRAVING, INC.&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS - MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Phones, Auto 1391, Bell 291.&#13;
Storage Yards, First and Nebraska Sts., Fourth and Morgan Sts.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Park Mooreh ead- "How can I make&#13;
myself popular with the girls at Morningside?"&#13;
Answer- Leave at once for another&#13;
school.&#13;
Heckaman- "Why was it I got turned&#13;
down w h en I asked for a date to the&#13;
men's banquet?"&#13;
Answer-You w ill have to ask the&#13;
girl.&#13;
Harold Freeman- "Is it proper to&#13;
take a gi r l boat rid ing?"&#13;
Answer-Yes, it is perfectly a ll right,&#13;
b u t h ug a lon g the shore, Harold, hug&#13;
a long the shore.&#13;
Leone Ullman-"Is&#13;
it proper for a&#13;
yo u ng lady to inv ite a ge ntleman friend&#13;
to sit on t h e front porch after a party&#13;
when a light snow has j u st fa ll en?"&#13;
Answer-It is proper, b u t it wo ul d&#13;
have been better if you had cleaned off&#13;
the who le porch rat h er than two spots&#13;
close together.&#13;
Archie Freeman- " Ca n yo u tell me&#13;
who swiped the phonograph the night&#13;
&#13;
w e held a barn danc e at the monument?"&#13;
Answer- If you had made a closer&#13;
search of the editor's room you might&#13;
have found it. Perhaps not.&#13;
Nellie Whittemore- "How can a girl&#13;
get a fe llow at Morningside?"&#13;
Answer-Keep on the way you are&#13;
doing, Nellie, you should succeed in&#13;
landing one after a wh ile.&#13;
Helen R inker- "I am having difficulty in keep ing two men on the string at&#13;
t h e same t ime . Can you advise me as&#13;
to how this is done?"&#13;
Answer-Ask Leone Ull man, she&#13;
seems to be succeeding very well.&#13;
Percy- "How can I keep a g irl downtown ; a girl in Morningside and a girl&#13;
in my home town?"&#13;
Answer- Better try con centra tion ,&#13;
Percy, it is safer .&#13;
Bill Forbes- "How can I incr ease my&#13;
height?"&#13;
Answ er- Keep your mind on high&#13;
things.&#13;
&#13;
HOOVERIZE ON SHOES&#13;
New Shoes never wer e so high.&#13;
&#13;
Let the&#13;
&#13;
Ideal Shoe Repair Shop&#13;
Make Your Old Shoes Like New.&#13;
506 Nebraska St., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Auto Phone 1508.&#13;
S. A. Storer, Mgr .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hund r e d Forty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
Correct Dress for Women&#13;
Sioux City's Most Appreciative Store&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
TOM DEALTRY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
"FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION"&#13;
You will make money.&#13;
But&#13;
How much will you Save?&#13;
That is the question,&#13;
And not&#13;
How much you will make&#13;
Begin today, with a small savings account ot this bank.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Southeast Corner Fourth and Jackson.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�WE ARE THE ORIGINAL "CUT PRICE" DENTISTS OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
"When better dental work is done you will&#13;
find us doing it."&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
T. S. Shortley, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
PRINCESS THEATRE&#13;
The Pick of the Pictures&#13;
&#13;
41 5 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
BRIGHT SAYINGS BY "DEAK"&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
Capital and Surplus, $600,000.&#13;
W. P. Manley, President.&#13;
T. A. Black, Vice President.&#13;
C. W. Britton, Cashier.&#13;
L. R. Manley, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
C. A. Patch, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
R. E. Brown, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
For thirty-four years this bank has been identified with Sioux City&#13;
and its trade territory.&#13;
With resources of over Seven Million Dollars and thoroughly modern equipment the institution is in position to render you high class&#13;
service and invites your business.&#13;
&#13;
Look for our signs before ordering.&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Makers of Beverage that reduce thirst.&#13;
&#13;
"Roll calls are unnecessary and&#13;
should be discontinued in all classes, as&#13;
it is logical to s uppose that the students&#13;
are always ther e anyway."&#13;
"When anybody tells you you hain't&#13;
ch anged a bit it's u su a lly ' cause they&#13;
can't think of n othin ' else t' say."&#13;
"Absence from classes makes the&#13;
m a rks g r ow rounder."&#13;
"It must have been an awfully slippery day when the prodigal son came&#13;
back, because the Bible says that when&#13;
his father came out to welcome him , h e&#13;
fell on his neck."&#13;
"You can always tell a self-m ade&#13;
man if you keep your ears open."&#13;
"Just because a person has lots of&#13;
crust and dough, is no sign that he is&#13;
a rough cookie."&#13;
"Archie gets his tuition and a great&#13;
deal of honor for being the leader of&#13;
ba nd, like Kelly does."&#13;
"Noteriety is the spice of life ."&#13;
"He laughs best who la u ghs w hen the&#13;
P r of. laughs."&#13;
" I gnorance is its own r eward ."&#13;
"A word to the wise is useless."&#13;
"Blessed is h e that expects nothing&#13;
for h e shall not be disappointed."&#13;
"Some people have a habit of wink-&#13;
&#13;
ing the · eye oftener t han is absolutely&#13;
necessa ry."&#13;
"If a Prof. asks you a question at&#13;
least let on that you k now something&#13;
about it."&#13;
"Eve ry boarding h ouse has its dog&#13;
day."&#13;
FAMOUS TRIOS&#13;
&#13;
Butler, Jeep, H a rt.&#13;
Soltow, Forbes , Burpee .&#13;
Lloyd, Hornney, Klatt.&#13;
Baldwin, Doeringsfeld, Lock e.&#13;
Barz, Hilmer, Sch a u b.&#13;
Walker, Freeman , Troutman.&#13;
Hayes, Van Horne, Saundy.&#13;
In Histor y Exam Hesita tingly-"Prof.&#13;
H. Haven't you u sed one of Dr . Steven's ornithology questions by mistake? "&#13;
Prof. H {puzzle d )-"Which one,&#13;
Miss Wolf?"&#13;
"Why, that one abou t the Die t of&#13;
Worms."&#13;
Visitor- "Peters P ark, Peters Park,&#13;
is there  any anima ls t here?"&#13;
President-"Only a few students running around."&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
MANUFACTURERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Bank, Store, Office Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO IS QUALITY&#13;
507-507-511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
T wo Hundred Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-One&#13;
&#13;
�GALINSKY BROS. COMPANY&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES-The Lowest&#13;
GOODS-The Freshest&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY-The Highest&#13;
SERVICE-The Promptest&#13;
&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells.&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Tops&#13;
Cushions and&#13;
Upholstery&#13;
&#13;
HICKS-FULLER-PIERSON CO.&#13;
Wholesale Dry Goods&#13;
SELL TO MERCHANTS ONLY&#13;
Ask retail dealers to show you our&#13;
&#13;
Manufactured and Repaired&#13;
JOBBERS OF&#13;
&#13;
"Merit Make"&#13;
&#13;
HEAVY HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Blacksmith, Mechanic's and Garage&#13;
Supplies&#13;
Automobile Accesories&#13;
Implement· Specialties&#13;
&#13;
"Westland"&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX CITY&#13;
IRON COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Lines of&#13;
&#13;
Furnishing Goods&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The Haas and Smith Co.&#13;
Morningside Real Estate Dealers.&#13;
Properties of all kinds rented or sold&#13;
Office at&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Office Phone 6136 .&#13;
Residence Phones 6657&#13;
and 6034 .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�WHEN IS THE WAR GOING TO END?&#13;
&#13;
C. A . HOLLENBECK&#13;
Ta i lor&#13;
SHOP FLOOR- .F'RANCES BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 25655&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
TAC-CUT&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
A Blend Not a Mixture&#13;
&#13;
35c a Pound&#13;
&#13;
Absolute knowledge have I none,&#13;
. But my aunt's washerwoman's son&#13;
Heard a policeman on his beat&#13;
Say to a laborer on the street&#13;
That he had a letter just last week,&#13;
Written in the finest Greek,&#13;
From a Chinese coolie in Timbucktoo,&#13;
Who said the niggers in Cuba knew&#13;
Of a colored man in a Texas town,&#13;
Who got it straight from a circus clown,&#13;
That a man in Klondike h eard the news&#13;
From a gang of South American Jews,&#13;
About somebody in Borneo&#13;
Who h ear d of a man who claimed to&#13;
know&#13;
Of a swell society dame,&#13;
Whose mother-in-law will undertake&#13;
To prove that her seventh husband's&#13;
sister's niece&#13;
Has stated in a printed piece&#13;
That she has a son who has a friend&#13;
Who knows when the war is going to&#13;
end.&#13;
-Ex.&#13;
Fish-"Why do they paint the inside&#13;
of a chicken coop?"&#13;
Rusty-"To keep the hens from picking the grain out of the wood."&#13;
&#13;
Dave Klatt, in ordering seat s for the&#13;
Orpheum : "Now listen ; we want two&#13;
seats together about half way down, as&#13;
near front as possible, not too far back,&#13;
but back fa r enough so we won't be too&#13;
near the front. Understand? "&#13;
&#13;
Joe Bogard bringin g in a suspect:&#13;
"Sir, I found this man sitting in a TurnVerein, eating limburger cheese and&#13;
drinking kulmbacher, while he read&#13;
Nietsche. He says his name is O'Brien."&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Supplies for All Makes of Cars.&#13;
Firestone Tires&#13;
"Most Miles per Dollar."&#13;
WM. WARN OCK CO.,&#13;
&#13;
607-9-11 Douglas Street.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
Hundred Fifty-Four&#13;
&#13;
GAYETY&#13;
&#13;
HEARD . ABOUT THE CAMPUS.&#13;
&#13;
My Tuesdays are meatless,&#13;
My Wednesdays are wheatless ,&#13;
I'm getting more eatless&#13;
Each day.&#13;
My home it is heatless, '&#13;
My bed it is sheetless,&#13;
They're all sent to the&#13;
Y. M. C. A.&#13;
The cafe's are treatless,&#13;
My coffee is sweetless,&#13;
Each day I get poorer&#13;
And wiser.&#13;
My stockings are feetless,&#13;
My trousers are seatless,&#13;
My! How I do hate the&#13;
Kaiser.&#13;
-Ex.&#13;
&#13;
· Soph-"What's the rush?"&#13;
Kirby-"Prof. Coss is overcome with&#13;
gas."&#13;
Soph-"Are you going after a doctor ?"&#13;
Chester-"No, more gas."&#13;
&#13;
Pearce says he broke all records for&#13;
a quarter mile the night he walked out&#13;
from town and met u p with the crazy&#13;
man with the butcher knife.&#13;
&#13;
Hirsch-"Can anyone tell me what&#13;
makes the Tower of Pisa lean?"&#13;
Crary-"By J ove, I wish I knew that&#13;
one."&#13;
Ruth Scholes says it is sure tough&#13;
luck when a girl gets her dates mixed.&#13;
For particulars ask Albert Hunt.&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phon e 3500.&#13;
( Formerly Orpheum, 615 F ifth Street.)&#13;
- - o - - Now Playi ng - - o - -&#13;
&#13;
VAUDEVILLE&#13;
&#13;
5-Good Acts Al ways-5&#13;
- -Latest News Weeklie s - 3 -Shows Daily-3&#13;
2:30 , 7 :30, 9:00 P. M.&#13;
Nigh ts, 15 and 2 5c.&#13;
Matinees, 1 O and 15c.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�EVENTS THAT SHOULD HAVE HAPPENED AND THEIR TIME&#13;
Event&#13;
&#13;
Koken's Dandruff Exterminator&#13;
Is&#13;
&#13;
positively guaranteed to cleanse the scalp from all dandruff, if used as&#13;
instructed or your money is refunded. Applications at leading barber shops&#13;
or for sale at our store.&#13;
Also see us for High Grade Razors, Strops, Hair Tonics Toilet Waters After&#13;
Shavi ng Lotions, Cream s, Etc.&#13;
'&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Kleeblatt Barber's Supply Co.&#13;
618 Pierce Street.&#13;
&#13;
HEADINGTON&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
HEDENBERGH&#13;
&#13;
Hickman Electric&#13;
Company&#13;
Electrical Supplies and Fixtures.&#13;
519 Fifth Street.&#13;
Auto Phone 2345 .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Time.&#13;
&#13;
A fake hurry up call to Prexy. S. 0. S.&#13;
&#13;
During ,. Yale-Harvard&#13;
'basketball&#13;
game.&#13;
Fake police r aid.&#13;
Thanksgiving night when boxes were&#13;
coming from all directions for our bonfire.&#13;
Prexy entering Philo hall.&#13;
Forenoon of Washington's birthday.&#13;
Bean shower.&#13;
When Marsh was requested to take&#13;
the names of five men one day in chapel.&#13;
Abundance of light on the third floor&#13;
When upper classmen were looting&#13;
of main hall.&#13;
Kitchenette night of Freshy party.&#13;
When chemicals were mixed in chap Bargain sale of gas masks.&#13;
el.&#13;
When girls began practicing hockey&#13;
Miss Dimitt ordering a fence around&#13;
and volley ball.&#13;
Bass field.&#13;
Gladys arguing for conservative candidate in politics. "Well-er-er,&#13;
when&#13;
both th e President and Mr. Hoover ask&#13;
the aid of the people in the conservation&#13;
movement, oughtn't we to vote for the&#13;
conservative candidate? "&#13;
Freshie No. 1 (Reminescently)-Armageddon! Armageddon! What do I&#13;
know about Armageddon?&#13;
Freshie No. 2-Why, you nut! We&#13;
studied about him in the e ighth grade.&#13;
He's t hat little burrowing animal from&#13;
S. A. that's covered with scales and eats&#13;
ants.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1 883&#13;
&#13;
William Gordon&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
&#13;
FRUITS and&#13;
PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
The Real Estate Man&#13;
7 0 5-7 0 8 Frances Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Freshman English- example of formal&#13;
invitation: Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Cowan are requested to be present at the&#13;
golden wedd ing ceremony of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Thos. McBride on Wednesday,&#13;
June 25, 1968 .&#13;
R. S. V. P.&#13;
Which one of you girls did it?&#13;
Favdrite e jaculation among M. C.&#13;
Coeds-"For the love of Mike!"&#13;
&#13;
Proudly showing a visitor about the&#13;
Domestic Science k itchen. "This is the&#13;
College cookery."&#13;
Visitor, tapping loaf of substitute&#13;
bread thoughtfully, "Oh, . I thought it&#13;
was a brick kiln. "&#13;
Alice (knitting)-"Does Florence expect to get a band to wear on h er arm&#13;
when she finishes that sweater?"&#13;
Agnes- "Huh-uh, one to wear on her&#13;
finger."&#13;
Coed-"He wrote that he was getting&#13;
anxious to go over t h e top and see red !"&#13;
Isabel (galvanized into attention) "Red isn't over the top. He's at West&#13;
Point!"&#13;
Freshman (late of S. D. Ag. College,&#13;
answering Miss Loveland's question a s&#13;
to u se of "so")-"&#13;
'So' is used adverbially indicating degree, and as a conjunction. It is a lso used to mean 'stand&#13;
still ' -generally when speaking to a&#13;
cow."&#13;
&#13;
OUR PLUMBING&#13;
Has its own particular College Yell&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY AND EXPERIENCE&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAVES CO.&#13;
Auto 1837.&#13;
&#13;
513 Jackson St.&#13;
&#13;
(.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred F ifty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�It's An Established Fact&#13;
THAT GOOD .JEWELRY IS TO BE&#13;
FOUND AT THE STORE OF THE&#13;
&#13;
WILL H. BECK COMPANY&#13;
Established in 1877 and maintaining a&#13;
policy during these years which now&#13;
bespeaks for itself.&#13;
&#13;
WHEN WE MOVE ·&#13;
&#13;
You&#13;
&#13;
your furniture we are always on&#13;
guard to see that it is not damaged in any way. We are experienced piano movers and you&#13;
can safely trust your valuable instrument to our care. Look up&#13;
our reputation and then look up&#13;
our telephone number.&#13;
&#13;
SHOULD&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
BE ON&#13;
&#13;
GUARD&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Seven Vans at your service, besides a number of trucks.&#13;
BEKINS VAN &amp; STORAGE CO.,&#13;
&#13;
114-120 Riverside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
New Methods increasing the efficiency of our work are being discovered daily. We keep ourselves&#13;
thoroughly informed and can always give you the benefit of the&#13;
latest and best methods and optical&#13;
merchandise.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Optical Co.&#13;
&#13;
"Makers of Glasses that fit."&#13;
Corner Fifth and Nebraska Streets.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�COMMENCEMENT&#13;
&#13;
The melancholy days have come&#13;
The sadest of the year.&#13;
At last the bills that I let run&#13;
Come home to daddy dear.&#13;
&#13;
THE PLAZA&#13;
The Theatre Most Beautiful.&#13;
with Best Music.&#13;
&#13;
The Theatre Best Ventilated.&#13;
&#13;
The Theatre&#13;
&#13;
The Best in Motion Pictures.&#13;
"When in doubt go to the Plaza."&#13;
&#13;
Kimball Pipe Organ, Miss Lamson, Organist.&#13;
Plaza Amusement Co.,&#13;
&#13;
J. C. Duncan, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Extract from a letter from Hackett.&#13;
in Florida-"The country is abounding&#13;
in beautiful and interesting things. I&#13;
met two new ones today."&#13;
Prichard-The acoustics at the New&#13;
Orpheum are poor, aren't they?&#13;
Tom McBride-I don't know. Haven't&#13;
seen 'em yet. What's their act?&#13;
Johnston-"I have all but the last&#13;
verse of my debate learned."&#13;
&#13;
RAPALEE MARBLE &amp;&#13;
GRANITE WORKS&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LARGEST MONUMENT HOUSE.&#13;
You will always see the greatest variety of high grade monuments&#13;
priced as low as the lowest, quality considered. You are not paying&#13;
some agent a commission wh en you place an order with us.&#13;
Auto Phone 2370.&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
605-7-9 West Seventh St.&#13;
&#13;
Heard in Psychology-When scared,&#13;
standing on t he end of the hair follows.&#13;
Schellenger-"I don't deserve an&#13;
'E' grade in Politics."&#13;
Prof. Hirsch-"! know, but that is&#13;
the lowest grade I can give you."&#13;
Stony in Epworth League-"! am so&#13;
glad to say that I have been saved by&#13;
Grace."&#13;
He wondered why they all&#13;
snickered.&#13;
Rusty, Archie and Walker were in&#13;
deep conversation when Walker was&#13;
heard· to remark, "If I ever find the&#13;
guy that swiped that angel food cake,&#13;
I'll fix him so that one clean collar will&#13;
last him the rest of his life."&#13;
Seems to me, Walker, that you would&#13;
have to fix a whole regiment.&#13;
Prof. Coss- "I told you to notice&#13;
when the solution burned over."&#13;
Freshie-"I did. It was a quarter to&#13;
four."&#13;
&#13;
D. S. Anthony&#13;
Prop. Sioux City Trunk Factory.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Feminine Voice Over Phone-"Hello,&#13;
are you Harry?"&#13;
"The Clerk"-"Not especially, lady,&#13;
but I'm not very bald."&#13;
Student-"If it's heads, we go to bed.&#13;
If it's tails we stay up, and (nervously)&#13;
if it stands on edge, we study."&#13;
Pearce-"The paper in my room is&#13;
patterned after streaks of lightning."&#13;
Percy-"Yes, it looks like thunder."&#13;
Harry Black recommends that in future years all parties be held in the gym,&#13;
because there are no posts. He says&#13;
that he had an "awfully" large dentist&#13;
bill to pay.&#13;
Scott-"Say, Lee, how did you ever&#13;
become such a wonderful orator."&#13;
Soltow-"Oh, I got my start addressing envelops. "&#13;
Swartz (in Spanish class)-"Women&#13;
and nobody are in the same class."&#13;
Prof. Brown, calling roll in Educ. V.,&#13;
"Miss Bergh," Hazel, reading Reporter:&#13;
"Hello!"&#13;
The 49ers held a business meeting a&#13;
short time ago and decided that the&#13;
$50,000 (Sh! they are supposed to have&#13;
that much), should be used in buying&#13;
schooners for the Jewish navy in the&#13;
Dead sea.&#13;
&#13;
CLYDE H. TENNIS&#13;
330-331 Davidson Building.&#13;
&#13;
Retail manufacturer of Trunks and&#13;
Valises. Trunks and Sample Cases to&#13;
order. Repairing done. Phone 2108.&#13;
5th St. near Pierce.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"George, use 'laid' correctly in a sentence."&#13;
G. Brown-"I laid in bed until 10&#13;
o'clock.&#13;
Prof. H.-"Correct. Use it in another&#13;
sentence."&#13;
. George-"I laid in bed until 11&#13;
o'clock."&#13;
&#13;
INVESTMENTS&#13;
EXCHANGES&#13;
&#13;
FARM LANDS&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-One&#13;
&#13;
�SUCCESS IN LIFE&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
Start now.&#13;
&#13;
Don't wait.&#13;
&#13;
MUST&#13;
&#13;
SAVE&#13;
&#13;
No account too small.&#13;
&#13;
Call and see us.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
Corner Fourth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
Savings Department open Saturday evening, 7-9.&#13;
&#13;
DID YOU EVER EAT AT&#13;
&#13;
PROP'S CAFE&#13;
Try Us Once---We'll Risk the Rest&#13;
&#13;
Lunches and Meals for Everyone&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M. PROPS, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
4 11 Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
L.O'HAR· OW Co.&#13;
R&#13;
For good Shoes and a good fit come in and v isit&#13;
u s.&#13;
W e shoe whole fam ilies.&#13;
We'll get yo u ye t.&#13;
902 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixt y-Three&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Two&#13;
&#13;
�CONSERVATION&#13;
&#13;
Think it Over---&#13;
&#13;
7%&#13;
Investment&#13;
&#13;
There is no reason why you should&#13;
not use the Automatic Telephone exclusivelyThere is every reason why you&#13;
should.&#13;
&#13;
Think it Over.&#13;
&#13;
Preferred Stock of&#13;
&#13;
Moore-Shenkberg&#13;
Grocery Co.&#13;
Established 1882.&#13;
&#13;
If you are looking for&#13;
&#13;
Quality and Service&#13;
Capital -------------$&#13;
Surplus, Dec. 31, 1917&#13;
Total capitaL&#13;
&#13;
Call both Phones&#13;
&#13;
800,000.00&#13;
314,437.56&#13;
&#13;
2512&#13;
&#13;
$l,114.437.56&#13;
&#13;
H.B. Freerks, Manager&#13;
&#13;
CAMOUFLAGE&#13;
&#13;
Heard at Devitt's-"Why Lida you&#13;
shouldn't use so much white floor, this&#13;
is war times, you know."&#13;
&#13;
Sue-"Why are you putting on so&#13;
much rouge, dear? "&#13;
Pat-"Oh, Vic, is taking me to the&#13;
'Passing Show,' and I want him to think&#13;
I'm blushing."&#13;
&#13;
We have been reminded several times&#13;
during the past year by speakers in&#13;
chapel that t h ere is still a spirit of vandalism prevailing among certain students.&#13;
Vandalism in its pure state was shown&#13;
by:&#13;
Taking the Freshmen girls' eats.&#13;
P . S.-No Tilly it was not ice cream,&#13;
it was good old lemon ice.&#13;
&#13;
Walker finds himself carrying a&#13;
home for the first time during the&#13;
"My, how absent minded of me.&#13;
well, I might as well take it home&#13;
perhaps someone at the house may&#13;
to use it."&#13;
&#13;
book&#13;
year.&#13;
Oh,&#13;
now,&#13;
want&#13;
&#13;
Speaking of petitions to the trustees,&#13;
we move that one be handed them advocating an increase in wages for Jimmy&#13;
Hayes. You can't run a fam ily on hot&#13;
air and cold pancakes.&#13;
&#13;
Demolishing and breaking veranda&#13;
furniture as well as the proverbial 10&#13;
o'clock rule. We hate to say anything&#13;
about this, but we will give some initials. Dale, Skinny, Annanious, Hootman, Strangler Norton and Mr. Park&#13;
Moorhead are the vandals sure enough.&#13;
This should be reported to the committee on discipline.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Craig (at the Senior dinner ) "I'm so sorry the lights are off."&#13;
Ruth Smith (trying to be nice)-"Oh,&#13;
that's all right. We're used to that."&#13;
G. Earl Barks reported to be still&#13;
blushing when the lights came on aagin.&#13;
&#13;
Stealing angel food birthday cake&#13;
from H. Walker , A. L . Freeman, Rusty&#13;
McBride and company. Just as company come in the front door the cake&#13;
goes out the back door. Cleverity, or&#13;
rather vandalism, again demonstrated.&#13;
&#13;
J eep-"How can I cure myself of&#13;
walking in my sleep? "&#13;
Butler-"Take car fare to bed with&#13;
you."&#13;
&#13;
0. J. MOORE, President.&#13;
Hampering motions and maneuvers&#13;
of Private Steinbrenner's efficient and&#13;
highly pepped war machine. On-On&#13;
brave lads. Hoop la.&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS:&#13;
John C. Kelly, Publisher Tribune.&#13;
John A. Magoun, Pres. N. W. Nat'l.&#13;
W. S. Gilman, Director Security Nat'l.&#13;
M. L. Flinn, Director First Natoinal.&#13;
This stock is well secured and we&#13;
fully recommend its purchase. Certificates $100, $500 or $1,000. Interest payable Septembe1 15 and March&#13;
15. Taxes paid by corporation.&#13;
Fixed and Constant Income.&#13;
&#13;
SCHOENEMAN-JENSON&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
Phone us your Coal Order&#13;
We will take care of you&#13;
when the time comes&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal &amp;Bui Iding Material&#13;
&#13;
Capital, $500,000.00.&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Haakinson&#13;
&#13;
W. L. Frost, Sec,&#13;
&#13;
413 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Hothanding an engaged Senior for&#13;
neglecting to recognize and accommodate members of 1705.&#13;
&#13;
Sue-"How did you get such a good&#13;
costume for that Hawaiian act in the&#13;
'M' minstrels?"&#13;
Jerry-"Simple. The 'M' Club merely stuck cockleburs on me and chased&#13;
me through a haystack."&#13;
&#13;
Girls marching in a College parade&#13;
with the men, previous to some minor&#13;
College activity. Such as the Morningside-Notre Dame football game, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Call Bond &amp; Mortgage Co.&#13;
Geo. C. Call, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Skinny Norton and Tom McBride are&#13;
offering $2.00 to the person that will&#13;
break the electric light just across the&#13;
street from the Farnham house. We&#13;
suggest that this matter be handed to&#13;
the committee on vandalism.&#13;
&#13;
Coal Co.&#13;
Third and Clark Streets&#13;
Auto Phone 2174&#13;
Bell Phone 254&#13;
&#13;
Greater value and more extras&#13;
are g iven because 98% is manufactured in our own factory.&#13;
&#13;
See the EXTRA FEATURES&#13;
&#13;
WATSON AUTOMOBILE CO.&#13;
8th &amp; Pierce,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Five&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, la.&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term Begins September the Twenty-Fourth&#13;
Though one of the youngest Colleges in the State it is one of the leading Colleges in the West.&#13;
ATTRACTIVE&#13;
LOCATION&#13;
&#13;
Twenty minutes from the heart of Sioux City in a .&#13;
beautiful , healthful College suburb.&#13;
&#13;
ENTRANCE RE- Rigid eno ugh to maintain the highest standards; sufficiQUIREMENTS&#13;
ently elastic to meet varying needs.&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
&#13;
A half million dollar endowment; another half million&#13;
dollars invested in buildings and grounds; only fireproof&#13;
buildings, modern throughout, adequate laboratory and&#13;
library facilities; one of the best gymnasiums in the State.&#13;
&#13;
INSTRUCTION&#13;
&#13;
A faculty selected w ith g r eat care and trained in the l eading universities of Europe and America. The major system of instruction. Wide elective system. Preparation for&#13;
law, medicine, teach ing, mechanical professions, etc. Highest ideal in scholarship and morals.&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC AND&#13;
ORATORY&#13;
&#13;
Facilities among the best in the Middle West. Opportunity&#13;
to pursue music and oratory in connection with the College co ur se.&#13;
&#13;
EXPENSES&#13;
&#13;
Expenses are kept as low as it consistent with high quality.&#13;
&#13;
SELF HELP&#13;
&#13;
Many opportunities to earn money while pursuing studies.&#13;
Self Help Bureau conducted .free to students.&#13;
&#13;
SOCIAL&#13;
LIFE&#13;
&#13;
Social&#13;
tures.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
life exceptionally&#13;
&#13;
free&#13;
&#13;
from&#13;
&#13;
objectionable&#13;
&#13;
fea-&#13;
&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS A limited number of scholarships offered to worthy and&#13;
meritorious stud en ts.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�Slickered Members&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON ·LUMBER CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA, Fourth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Largest and Most Complete Stock of Building Material in the&#13;
City, Do Not Fail to Let Us Figure on Your Bill.&#13;
GEORGE M. JORDAN, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
PHONES: Auto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
Loans&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
HOMES .&#13;
&#13;
not&#13;
&#13;
HOUSES&#13;
&#13;
PILCHARD BUILDING CO.&#13;
&#13;
of the Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Van Horne was jipped by vandals and nearly lost all of his high&#13;
standing in the community during the&#13;
third Liberty Loan drive. His position&#13;
offered a great opportunity for vandals&#13;
to work. George W. would not buy, but&#13;
it was not because of lack of persistance&#13;
on Van's part.&#13;
College student calls up Vice President and reprimands him for not having&#13;
the flag in its proper place on the campus. Five minutes later the flag was&#13;
flying from the flag pole. Good work,&#13;
Rusty, you certainly are a good secret&#13;
service man.&#13;
Jerry-What is meant by the "Call&#13;
of the Wild?"&#13;
Norty-Take him out of the box.&#13;
&#13;
"What a letter,'' wailed Beryl. "He&#13;
tells me he loves me only thirty-seven&#13;
times."&#13;
"Don't blame Clint for that," suggested an older head. "Somebody probably censored it."&#13;
&#13;
P.H. PILCHARD, President&#13;
&#13;
QUARTER MILLION&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL&#13;
&#13;
Second Floor Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Bill Forbes, getting acquainted. "You&#13;
were somewhere last Christmas weren't&#13;
you?"&#13;
Freshie-"Why, of course; what do&#13;
you mean?"&#13;
Bill-"Well, so was I. We must have&#13;
met."&#13;
Prof. Hirsch- "A fool can ask more&#13;
question in a minute than a wise man&#13;
can answer in an hour."&#13;
Buster (under his breath) - "No wonder we all flunked that Politics exam."&#13;
&#13;
HEARD ON THE BASEBALL TRIP&#13;
&#13;
Norty stole second with the ball in&#13;
the pitcher's hand in one of the games.&#13;
When the pitcher got to the bench the&#13;
coach jumped him with: "Why didn't&#13;
you watch that man on first, was you&#13;
asleep?"&#13;
Weak response: "I didn't know there&#13;
was anyone on bases."&#13;
Coach turning to other players:&#13;
"Here, what's the matter with you fellows? You tell this pitcher after this&#13;
when men get on bases. We can't have&#13;
any secrets on this ball club."&#13;
Of all the beautiful pictures&#13;
That hang on memories wall,&#13;
That of my dear old sheepskin&#13;
It seemeth the best of all.&#13;
Not for the honor it brings me,&#13;
Though of that I am fully aware,&#13;
But the thought of the years of bluffing&#13;
It required to get the thing there.&#13;
-Harold Walker, 20 Years Later .&#13;
Freshie , looking for janitor on third&#13;
floor. "Have you seen Henry? I just&#13;
looked in the chickenette and he isn't&#13;
there."&#13;
Lee-"I'm in good with Mrs. Devitt.&#13;
Although I got in late for Sunday dinner she saved me the tenderest part of&#13;
the chicken."&#13;
Cope-"You sure were lucky. What&#13;
did she save you?"&#13;
Lee- "Some of the gravy."&#13;
Prof. Thompson-"Do you think this&#13;
class is a joke, Mr. Norton?"&#13;
Skinny-"No, sir. I'm not laughing&#13;
at the class."&#13;
&#13;
Paul Revere Had Only a Horse!&#13;
Paul's tremendous ride would have been easy and much more effective could&#13;
&#13;
Dodge Brothers· Motor Cars&#13;
&#13;
he have driven a Ford.&#13;
&#13;
De Harty &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Ford&#13;
&#13;
THOMPSON-DEJARNETTE (Inc.)&#13;
&#13;
Sales and Service.&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Auto 6999.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
525 Sixth Street.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�SOFT SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
UNCLE SAM WANTS&#13;
YOU TO SAVE&#13;
WHERE YOU CAN&#13;
We a r e in a position to help you save a&#13;
g r eat deal on your c lothes made-to-measure.&#13;
You n o doubt a r e aware of t he fact that there&#13;
is a 'great scarcity of wool in our country;&#13;
in fact, so mu c h so that for t he first tim e in&#13;
the hi story of our country Uncle Sam has&#13;
b ee n forced to u se about 25 per cent co tton&#13;
in some of th e soldiers' uniforms and blankets.&#13;
Notwithstanding this fact, Geo. A. Strief&#13;
and t h e hou se h e h as back o f him who are&#13;
known in thi s secti.on as produci n g the b est&#13;
fitting, ni ces t lookin g and longest wearing&#13;
m a d e t o order _garme nts in America from $20&#13;
upwards, rea lized this situation over two&#13;
years ago and contracte d woolens and trimmings in quantities s ufficien t to take care of&#13;
their trade in good s h ape and at the sam e&#13;
time give th e p eople the best quality for th e&#13;
mon ey that has ever b een s h own in this country.&#13;
.&#13;
U n cle Sam has prohibite d the use of unnec essary adornm e n ts in men's c lothi n g to conserve wool. We are ri ght in lin e with our&#13;
government's id ea that men 's clothes mad e&#13;
to m easure should be c ut and made so they&#13;
would look m asculin e a nd not feminine.&#13;
Th e hi g hest c lass m e r chant tailors of New&#13;
York and Chicago&#13;
have n ever f avo r e d fancy&#13;
f 1eak o r s issy sty les and have not robbed the&#13;
gar:m e n ts of their linin gs t o make the trade&#13;
believe&#13;
that a skeleton lin ed coat is a good&#13;
thing eve n in winter.&#13;
&#13;
Our garments&#13;
are c ut under the personal&#13;
supervision of Mr. Mark G. Harrit, who knows&#13;
how to give eve ry c ustom er's clothes that&#13;
natura l, e legant, manly appearance that all&#13;
r eal m e n like so we ll a nd that e veryone admires so much. Besides being c ut right, our&#13;
garments are mad e a nd trimmed to g ive absolute serv ice and satisfac ti on-they are d e pendabl e in wear, retain the ir shape until&#13;
they are worn out.&#13;
. In these d ays of high prices a nd poor quality it pays to trade with a man who for fiftee n years h as bee n giving the people a&#13;
square deal by co urteo u s treatment honest&#13;
d ealin g a nd d e li vering the best all a round&#13;
made to. m easure garments in America at&#13;
pri ces within&#13;
th e r each of all.&#13;
this is a g·ood time to order. You h ave a&#13;
selection of 500 of the prettiest patte rn s in&#13;
th e best valu es of reliable&#13;
woo le n s th a t a r e&#13;
hon e.st and pract ical in weight and th e b est&#13;
quality eve r s hown to the tai lorin g publi c&#13;
and you will n e ve r buy cheaper than right&#13;
now .&#13;
. You take no chances whatever, there are no&#13;
ifs and ands nor maybes when you place your&#13;
order w it h m e. Your garments will fit a nd&#13;
please you.&#13;
Orde r now and you will get the&#13;
b est quality a nd lowest price.&#13;
Geo. A. Stri e t Tailorin g , 508 Fourth str eet&#13;
seco nd f loor.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Grocery&#13;
Home of&#13;
Good Things to Eat.&#13;
John O'Leary, Prop.&#13;
902 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
Ford Lumber Co.&#13;
Owned in Sioux City&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
"The Only Lumber Yard Owned&#13;
in Sioux City."&#13;
&#13;
Getting an "A" grade under Hirsch.&#13;
Getting your monitor to mark you&#13;
present while enjoying a nice stroll on&#13;
the campus. (O r meeting with the Smokers' Club.)&#13;
Finding the heart of an angle worm&#13;
in Biology Lab.&#13;
Getting mail from a male.&#13;
Finding time to study.&#13;
Writing a joke section.&#13;
&#13;
Tom Lloyd in telling of his experiences in Montana, recalled vividly one&#13;
night that he spent in company with several others in an old tumble-down&#13;
shack. About 2 o'clock. a polecat made&#13;
its presence known to Tom. He sat up&#13;
and noticed that all of h is comrades&#13;
were asleep. Tom says, "And there I&#13;
had to smell the whole thing all alone."&#13;
&#13;
Dave-"I've got a good story to tell&#13;
you. I don't think I ever told it to you&#13;
before."&#13;
Lee-"Is it really funny?"&#13;
Dave-"Yes, indeed , it is."&#13;
Lee-"Then you never told it to me&#13;
before."&#13;
&#13;
Youngberg-"Will you have something to drink?"&#13;
"With pleasure," Dux replied.&#13;
The photograph was taken and Dux&#13;
said, "But what about that little invitation?"&#13;
"Oh, that's just a professional ruse&#13;
of mine to give a natural, interested expression to the face."&#13;
It worked fine.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Steele-"Does Prichard live in&#13;
the fear of the Lord?"&#13;
Hackett-"I'm not real sure, but I&#13;
know that when he is home he always&#13;
takes a gun with h im when he goes out&#13;
on Sundays."&#13;
&#13;
Neighbor-"Got much money in your&#13;
bank now, Bobby?"&#13;
Bobby- "Gee no since sister went to&#13;
College the depositors have fall en off&#13;
somethin' fierce."&#13;
&#13;
Florence-"Well, at any rate, a woman always gets the last word."&#13;
Russell-"Not always, she might be&#13;
talking with another woman."&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
338&#13;
&#13;
A Service augmented through years&#13;
&#13;
"Skinney" Lehan certainly was right&#13;
at home the day he rose in chapel t o&#13;
speak after "Chick " had asked for an&#13;
expression from the girls side of t he&#13;
h ouse.&#13;
&#13;
Stranger- "Who is that funny a cting&#13;
couple over there?"&#13;
Student-"Oh, that is Dorot hy Knudson and h e r 'Bride.' "&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
100 Third St.&#13;
1338&#13;
&#13;
Miss Stenger-"Mr. Johnson , why do&#13;
you not write out your sentences?"&#13;
Jerry-"My pen is empty."&#13;
Miss Stenger-"I am afraid t hat your&#13;
pen is not all that is empty."&#13;
&#13;
When "Sol" Butler was caught dancing in the Otho hall with a chair in his&#13;
arm he stated that he was inventing a&#13;
new step all his own.&#13;
&#13;
of Experien ce.&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
&#13;
Park Barber Shop&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALERS AND RETAILERS OF SWEET CREAM, MILK&#13;
AND LACTONE BUTTERMILK&#13;
&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy&#13;
&#13;
Fred B. Phipps.&#13;
&#13;
Our Cream is served at Morningside Pha rm acy and Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO., 707 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-One&#13;
&#13;
�KING' ·S LUNCH&#13;
Famous for its fine eats. Excellent service. Reasonable rates.&#13;
514 Fifth St.&#13;
J.M. GANTZ, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY&#13;
is the Watch Word here.&#13;
&#13;
GENELLI&#13;
Established 32 Years.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
STUDIO&#13;
&#13;
711 Pierce Street.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-T wo&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Three&#13;
&#13;
�WONDERS IN DOMESTIC SCIENCE.&#13;
&#13;
KASCOUTAS SHINING PARLORS&#13;
Ladies and Gentlemen.&#13;
The best Shine in the city.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Bliss-"Ruth, I think you had&#13;
better make some chicken croquettes&#13;
out of that left-over prok and calves&#13;
liver we had for luncheon.&#13;
R. Reid-"There was a little bread&#13;
dressing that went with the pork left,&#13;
too. Shall I make some apple sauce&#13;
out of it?"&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Kascoutas, Manager.&#13;
New Orpheum Bldg., 416 Nebraska St.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
"The Home Market for the Great Northwest"&#13;
SEE HOW THE BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED AT A&#13;
LARGE MARKET&#13;
Come and see the best all steel and concrete double deck&#13;
&#13;
Miss Lund, explaining "parcheesi" to&#13;
Prof. Thompson: "But now if you sit&#13;
down beside me I won't send you&#13;
home!"&#13;
Lee-"I understand there has been a&#13;
new change in the Blue Book rules and&#13;
that no student can have a date on&#13;
Tuesday."&#13;
Tom-"Why did they make that&#13;
rule?"&#13;
.&#13;
Lee-"Because Tuesday is meatless .&#13;
On the Soph picnic Prof. Thompson&#13;
and Miss Bliss were rowing, Miss Bliss&#13;
seated opposite Prof. Thompson.&#13;
Soph-"Having a good time, Professor?"&#13;
.&#13;
"Why yes; I'm enjoying the beauties&#13;
of nature."&#13;
I wonder what he meant?&#13;
&#13;
hog house in the world, and many other improvements.&#13;
Students will be given a cordial welcome at any time.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
New Orpheum Theatre&#13;
Nebraska St.. between 4th and 5th, Sioux. City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Beck- "I know where you can get&#13;
big chicken dinner for 15 cents tonight."&#13;
Wulf- "Where?"&#13;
· Axel-"At the feed store."&#13;
McKinley Evans writes that Camp&#13;
Dodge has been having her share of illness. One hundred and six cases of&#13;
Bevo having been reported in one week.&#13;
&#13;
AN EULOGY TO JIMMY HAYES.&#13;
I.&#13;
The thinnest man I ever knew,&#13;
He lived down in Hoboken.&#13;
He was so thin that you may think&#13;
That I am only jokin'.&#13;
He was as thin as a postage stamp,&#13;
And as skinny as an old potater;&#13;
For exercise he'd take a dive&#13;
Thru a hole in a nutmeg grater.&#13;
&#13;
Chorus.&#13;
Oh my!&#13;
Goodbye!&#13;
Just like a frog&#13;
he'd hop.&#13;
He once made a fortune being a model&#13;
in a macaroni shop.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
He came to lead our minstrel show,&#13;
He walked among the trees;&#13;
He stubbed his toe against many a trunk&#13;
And the tree-tops brushed his knees.&#13;
Chorus.&#13;
Oh my! Goodbye! To the telephone&#13;
man he'd hire,&#13;
And when they lacked a pole or two,&#13;
why, he'd hold up the wire.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
He never went out on windy nights,&#13;
He never went out alone,&#13;
For fear some lean and hungry hound&#13;
Would take him for a bone.&#13;
One night as he was sitting alone,&#13;
The light was burning dimly,&#13;
A bedbug grabbed him by the nape of&#13;
the&#13;
Neck and snatched him up the chimney.&#13;
Chorus.&#13;
Oh my! Goodbye! He often lost his&#13;
breath;&#13;
.&#13;
He fell thru a hole in the seat of his&#13;
pants&#13;
And choked himself to death.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. EVERIST&#13;
&#13;
The Best of Vaudeville&#13;
SIX BIG ACTS&#13;
&#13;
Instant Service&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
ENTIRE NEW SHOW EVERY SUNDAY AND THURSDAY.&#13;
Every night at 8: 15. Saturday, Sunday and Holiday Nights,&#13;
Two shows-7: 30 and 9: 15.&#13;
&#13;
CLEAN COAL&#13;
BUILDERS SUPPLIES&#13;
Call 2600 .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Five&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�BOBBY BLACK,&#13;
&#13;
Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Ice Cream and Candies&#13;
509 Fourth Street.&#13;
Under Authier's Style Shop.&#13;
&#13;
Chandler, Chevrolet, Scripps&#13;
Booth and Velie Cars&#13;
These cars make up the most complete line shown in Sioux&#13;
City.&#13;
.&#13;
See them at our new show room, Seventh and Pearl Streets.&#13;
Call or phone for demonstration.&#13;
1498 Bell.&#13;
9155 Auto .&#13;
&#13;
Hanson &amp; Tyler Auto Co.&#13;
S. E. Daily, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Branches, Fort Dodge, Webster City, Ia. Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Make Life Sweeter and&#13;
&#13;
Eat Palmers&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Seven&#13;
&#13;
�A FRESHMAN GIRL'S LAMENT&#13;
&#13;
Quality is our Motto, the lowest of prices and the highest of quality&#13;
Come and pay cash and you get the benefit.&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK CASH&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
&#13;
Anyone desiring recipes for negro&#13;
delicacies can obtain them f rom Miss&#13;
Esther Montgomery. It is understood&#13;
that she is well informed concerning the&#13;
management, trade, menus and prices&#13;
of a negro restaurant, and that she is&#13;
perfectly willing to pass this information along.&#13;
&#13;
The careful dresser finds complete satisfaction&#13;
in Mayer Honorbilt Shoes. This is because these&#13;
famous Shoes are made in proper styles and patterns and are always strictly abreast with the&#13;
times.&#13;
For style, fit, comfort and long&#13;
wear, Mayer Honorbilt Shoes are&#13;
unequaled.&#13;
They are made for Men, Women&#13;
and Children in all styles, sizes&#13;
and leathers.&#13;
Sold by all leading dealers.&#13;
&#13;
HONORBILT&#13;
SHOES&#13;
&#13;
"Will you tell me how a Freshman&#13;
girl can make and keep a smile on the&#13;
face of the 'man in the case' and on the&#13;
faces of the college authorities at one&#13;
and the same time? This seems impossible to me, and I would be very&#13;
thankful if you would suggest a method&#13;
to do this and have it patented at once."&#13;
We will take this matter up with Miss&#13;
Dimitt and see what can b e done.&#13;
&#13;
Marie-"If you were out with a fellow and he insisted upon putting his&#13;
arm around you after you had taken it&#13;
away several times, what would you&#13;
do?"&#13;
Dot- "Why, I would get disgusted&#13;
and leave it alone."&#13;
&#13;
F. Mayer Boot &amp;&#13;
Shoe Co.&#13;
Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
&#13;
The following story is told on Prof.&#13;
MacCollin. One cold and stormy night&#13;
whe n he was about the age of 12 he was&#13;
found shivering out in the rain. When&#13;
asked what he was doing he replied:&#13;
" I have to sing bass in the choir in the&#13;
mosning and I am trying to catch a&#13;
cold.&#13;
Harold Hartley wants to know ho w&#13;
long a chinchilla overcoat would last if&#13;
a girl took a little Knapp off it each&#13;
night.&#13;
Another year has passed.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Bell 316.&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1460.&#13;
&#13;
Electric Engineering Co.&#13;
6 0 2 Pierce Street.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Two H undred Seventy-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Have you ?&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE ROY AL&#13;
"The House of Quality"&#13;
Exclusive first-run Paramount and&#13;
Artcraft pictures, Arbuckle and Mack&#13;
Sennett&#13;
comedies.&#13;
Hearst-Pathe&#13;
News shown every day .&#13;
Magee's Royal Orchestra.&#13;
Adults 15c,&#13;
Children 10c.&#13;
Plus War Tax.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MACCOLLIN.&#13;
I.&#13;
Sing t he praises ·of Dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her hero es bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices,&#13;
The chorus swelling,&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
Refrain.&#13;
Then cheer for Dear Old Morningside,&#13;
To thee we pledge anew,&#13;
Hearts of faithful love,&#13;
Now and forever,&#13;
Thy loyal sons are t r ue.&#13;
II.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning,&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
We'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought usFair Morningside! Our home!&#13;
III.&#13;
Hear our vow, 0 Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee.&#13;
All we have&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
For t he Glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
South Carolina is noted for its old&#13;
men, but we do not vouch for the truth&#13;
of this one.&#13;
One time a man was traveling&#13;
through Carolina and he saw an old&#13;
man standing up against a woodshed&#13;
crying. He took pity on him and said:&#13;
"Old man, why a r e you crying. "&#13;
"Oh," he said , weeping violently,&#13;
"my fath er gave me a licking for sassing my grandfather."&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber Shop&#13;
35c Hair Cuts, 25c; 20c Shaves,&#13;
15c&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundre d Seventy-Nine&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Res. Phon e 6265. Shop P h on e 63 06.&#13;
Res., 4217 M. S. Ave.&#13;
. All work g ua r a n teed.&#13;
&#13;
Hartley L. Larson&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Dray&#13;
&amp; Transfer Co.&#13;
Packin g and Storage.&#13;
&#13;
P lumbing a n d Heating .&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Ave.,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
D. W . Nourse, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE BOOKSTORE&#13;
Stationery, Music and Golf Supplies.&#13;
Clare J. Pendell, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Chica g o, Ills.&#13;
K ansas City, Mo.&#13;
E ast Buffa lo, N . Y.&#13;
&#13;
South St. J oseph, Mo.&#13;
South St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
Fort Wo r t h , Tex.&#13;
E l Paso, T ex.&#13;
&#13;
Den ver , Colo.&#13;
Sou t h Omaha, Neb.&#13;
East St. Lo uis, Ills.&#13;
&#13;
Clay Robinson &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Sioux City, lowa&#13;
&#13;
Here is a correspondence which is&#13;
r eported to h ave been carried on between one of ou r illust rious Academy&#13;
students and his father during the f irst&#13;
fe w weeks of h is College career. We&#13;
cannot vouch for its veracity.&#13;
Dear Father : This College game is&#13;
certainly expensive. I can't stay in it&#13;
without more cash. It is hard to get&#13;
good results w ithou t the necessary money. I am a stranger here and my credit&#13;
is not good .. You r loving son,&#13;
DEWEY.&#13;
By next mail he receive d the following:&#13;
My Dear Boy: Quit the game. Your&#13;
father could never play poker, so I don 't&#13;
see any use of you r trying to learn .&#13;
Your loving.&#13;
FATHER.&#13;
Father's advice to Freshman s on: Beware, m y son, of the woman who purreth, I love the smell of tobacco." And&#13;
as for the w o man who murmurs, "My&#13;
hands are cold," run from h er like the&#13;
ver y devil:&#13;
Gladys Trena r y-"Do you believe in&#13;
signs? "&#13;
Milton Brenner-"Why, yes, of cou rse&#13;
I do."&#13;
Gladys-"We ll , there is a sign which&#13;
says 'Ice Cream for Sale Here.'&#13;
Prof. Hirsch, r eferring to a h istory&#13;
reference book by Schwill, said, "You&#13;
will find this Schwill very f ine."&#13;
&#13;
P LAYING THE GAME&#13;
&#13;
Barks-"Hello !&#13;
Say, busy tomorrow?"&#13;
Ruth-"Yes."&#13;
Barks-"Gee , I'm sorry! I had a great&#13;
idea.'',&#13;
&#13;
Ruth--"What was it?"&#13;
Barks-"Oh, nothing ; goodby."&#13;
Ruth-"Hello! Hello!! E arl !!!"&#13;
Salvation Army Worker-"Young&#13;
man, are you a Christian?"&#13;
P aul Jones-"No, I am a student.&#13;
H appy-"What is worse than raining pitchforks?"&#13;
Earl-"I bite."&#13;
R aun-"Hailing street cars."&#13;
Clarence Hart, while o ut selling groceries to the farmers last summer addressed a pretty farmer 's g irl who was&#13;
m il king:&#13;
"How is the pretty milk&#13;
maid?"&#13;
"Why, you poor student, it isn't&#13;
m ade. The cow gives it."&#13;
Father-"They put up a p r etty good&#13;
table at your boarding club don't they? "&#13;
Student-"Oh, yes, the tab le is fin e.&#13;
The board is also excellent, but you&#13;
ought to see what we get to eat."&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Van Horne-"There are thirty&#13;
odd m emb ers in the facu l ty."&#13;
Hickman-" Yes, mostly odd."&#13;
&#13;
Skinny-"Mrs. J ackson has certainly&#13;
pu t a crimp in mat rimony since she has&#13;
come to Morningside."&#13;
Sam-"How's that?"&#13;
Skinny-"Since she has come, couples&#13;
are unable to go through 'Life' together."&#13;
&#13;
Norty, before th e Vermillion game:&#13;
"I don't wan t to kill anyone, b ut we&#13;
have got to win that game."&#13;
&#13;
We sincerely hope that all jokes in&#13;
this book will meet with t he approbation of the Ministerial Association.&#13;
&#13;
THE BEST STORE TO BUY&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' R eady-to-Wear&#13;
&#13;
P r ograms our Specialty, All kinds of Job Print ing, Note Books,&#13;
Note Book Fillers, All Kinds of School Supplies.&#13;
S. B. P. PRINTING CO.,&#13;
North End of Campus .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eigh ty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
504 FourthStreet&#13;
SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred E ighty-One&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Compliments to&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
5 05 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
A Reminiscense&#13;
&#13;
rom&#13;
&#13;
Barish Bros. Coal Co.&#13;
&#13;
The last page of copy has been blue penciled and given to the linotype man, the&#13;
last bit of engraving has arrived from our engraver, th e surplus (?) con t ributions&#13;
have b een t ransferred to the waste basket and for t h e "steenth" and last time we&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
Cash Meat Market.&#13;
The place of quality and right prices.&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Get your Groceries and Meats from&#13;
&#13;
THE M. &amp; B. CO.&#13;
1421 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK A. FOWLES&#13;
CECELIA PARK DRAY AND&#13;
TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
have answered the question , "When will the Sioux be out?"&#13;
Now, at last, it is all over, and we are thankful.&#13;
&#13;
Beginning tomorrow we will&#13;
&#13;
begin to r ealize again what it means to live in "the land of the free " and be able to&#13;
&#13;
Furnace and Sheet Metal Work.&#13;
2014 St. Aubin Avenue.&#13;
Shop Phone 6350 Auto&#13;
&#13;
have a few minutes that we may call our own.&#13;
&#13;
W. D. Riner, Prop. Auto Phone 6583.&#13;
&#13;
we r egarded the production of a year-book merely as child's play, we could do it&#13;
&#13;
CECELIA PARK DRAY AND&#13;
TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
with ease.&#13;
&#13;
Heavy hauling and all kinds of dray&#13;
work.&#13;
Cecelia Park.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
There was a time when the Sioux '19 seemed far from being a reality.&#13;
&#13;
At firs t&#13;
&#13;
Later, when work began, and we met with several disappointments we&#13;
&#13;
were very apprehensive that it would b e necessary to give up our Annual for this year.&#13;
It was our Business Manager and t he Business men of Sioux City that made this book&#13;
&#13;
possible.&#13;
There are many to whom we are grateful for the work that has been done on&#13;
&#13;
B. H. Silver&#13;
We handle a complete stock in these&#13;
lines: Grocery, Meat, Dry Goods and&#13;
Shoes, Hardware, Paint and Glass.&#13;
Four Phones,&#13;
Iowa, 670-67.&#13;
410 2-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
A. E. Anderson,&#13;
Treas.&#13;
&#13;
V. A. Swan,&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
SW AN-ANDERSON CO.&#13;
(Inc .)&#13;
&#13;
We cannot m ention as many as we should like, but to the folowing we&#13;
&#13;
wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation :&#13;
&#13;
Mr. J. J . Sher, of the Bureau&#13;
&#13;
of Engraving, whose suggestions and advice has been of great value; Mr. W . H .&#13;
Bastian, for the fine way he has co-operated with us to make this book a success;&#13;
&#13;
DRY GOODS,&#13;
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S&#13;
FURNISHINGS.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1882 .&#13;
&#13;
this book.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. J . J. Hayes, Dr. A. E. Craig, Dr . W. C. Hilmer, Coach J . M. Saunderson and Prof.&#13;
P. MacCollin for their willing contributions.&#13;
&#13;
Each and every member of the staff&#13;
&#13;
is to b e commended for the splendid manne r in which they handled their particular&#13;
department. I wish to especially praise Mr. J ess Lang for the excellent drawings that&#13;
appear throughout the book and to thank him for h is interest in this work.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1243&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 243&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Ideal Soft Water Laundry&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp, Miss Isabelle Walker, Miss Ruth Mahood and Mr. Dale Norton deserve&#13;
&#13;
Gard Brothers&#13;
&#13;
0. W. HARVEY, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
special commendation for the work that they have don e. The h elp and work of Miss&#13;
&#13;
Coal, Grain, Hay, Feed and Building&#13;
Material.&#13;
&#13;
414-416 Co urt St.&#13;
&#13;
1013-15-17 West Seventh St.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Automatic, 1346&#13;
&#13;
Iowa, 899&#13;
&#13;
Ruth R e id will b e appreciated always as she never refused to help out with a n y work&#13;
that was asked of her.&#13;
To all these and more we are grateful.&#13;
&#13;
The past year has been one of pleasur-&#13;
&#13;
able associations and hard work, and if we have been forced to give up other things&#13;
for the Sioux, it has been eminently worth while.-The Editor.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighty-Three&#13;
&#13;
�DR. J. A. BLISS&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Auto Phone 85686&#13;
Suite 61 5-6 1 6 Frances Bldg.&#13;
1&#13;
5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. HUBBARD&#13;
&#13;
Attorney an d Counsellor at Law&#13;
327 Davidson Building&#13;
6th and Pierce Sts. Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Page&#13;
&#13;
Introduction&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
&#13;
Ex Libris --------------------&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Athletics -- --- ---------- 120&#13;
&#13;
Sub Title ----------- ------- -&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Book V, Forensics ---------------127&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
Title ------------- ----------&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Professor Marsh --------------129&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 622-25 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Dedication ------------------&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta ------ ---------13 0&#13;
&#13;
Memorial --------------------&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Forensic League --------------131&#13;
&#13;
Foreword ------ -- ----------- 9&#13;
Order of Books ________________ 10&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Or atory ________ 132&#13;
&#13;
Book I, The Campus __ _________ _ 11&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate _________ __ l 34&#13;
&#13;
The Campus -- ---- - ------ - -- 13&#13;
A R eview of th e Year_ _________ 14&#13;
&#13;
Gold Medal Debates ________ __.__ 138&#13;
&#13;
C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Auto Phone 3785&#13;
605 Frances Bldg&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS.&#13;
&#13;
Carter-Brackney-Carter&#13;
Attorneys at Law&#13;
Suite 707-708-709 Security Bank Biel.&#13;
Phones, Auto 1522, Bell 1065&#13;
Sioux City, lowa&#13;
&#13;
GEO W. FINCH&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
Suite 527-28 Trimble Bldg&#13;
&#13;
Iriter-Collegiate Debate _________ 133&#13;
&#13;
Book VI, Organizations ___________ l41&#13;
Society Spirit ________________ 143&#13;
&#13;
City Property- Farms&#13;
Investments&#13;
604 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
Phone us your order and our d elivery&#13;
will reach your promptly.&#13;
Auto 6284.&#13;
Cecelia .Park.&#13;
&#13;
J . A, &amp; 0. S. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia ·Park Barber Shop-Baths.&#13;
"Good Service" our-watchword. Cleanliness is n ext to Godliness .&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
3 0 8 Davidson Building&#13;
&#13;
"Get Religion ."&#13;
906 Morningside Ave.&#13;
R. H. Co nkiln, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1870&#13;
&#13;
J . W . Kindig. Arthur C. McGill.&#13;
D. W. Stewart. R . H. Hatfield.&#13;
KINDIG, McGILL, STEWART &amp;&#13;
HATFIELD.&#13;
Attorneys&#13;
and Counsellor-at-,aw.&#13;
721-726 Frances&#13;
,Building.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa. Auto Phone&#13;
&#13;
Shull, Gill, Sammis&#13;
&amp; Stillwell&#13;
Attorneys&#13;
400-418 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
Buy War Savings Sta mps.&#13;
O. B. McDONALD&#13;
Buicks&#13;
Oldsmobiles&#13;
4008 Morningside Ave.&#13;
T e l. , Auto 6780.&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Society __________ 144&#13;
&#13;
Gymnasium _____ __ _____ _____ 17&#13;
&#13;
A thenaeum Society ___ _______ _ 14 6&#13;
Ionian Society ________________ 150&#13;
&#13;
Grace Church---------------- 1 9&#13;
&#13;
Brink's Meat M ark et&#13;
&#13;
Main Hall ------------------- 1 5&#13;
Athletics _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 6&#13;
&#13;
R eligious Activities --------- - - 1 8&#13;
&#13;
H. R. DEALY&#13;
&#13;
Pierian Society _______________ 152&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory (write up) ____ 20&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Society _____________ 156&#13;
&#13;
The Conser vatory ------------- 21&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Society ___________ 158&#13;
&#13;
President's Home ------------- 22&#13;
Book II, The Faculty ____________ 23&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye Society ___ _________ _ _ 162&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Red Cross Auxiliary __________ 164&#13;
&#13;
Seniors --------------------- 33&#13;
&#13;
I shkoodah Cl ub ______________ 166&#13;
&#13;
Book III, The Classes ---------Auto Phone 3730&#13;
&#13;
606 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
Scharles T ailoring Co.&#13;
Tailors&#13;
Between Jackson and&#13;
Nebraska Streets&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Work&#13;
&#13;
Guaranteed.&#13;
&#13;
Prices Right&#13;
&#13;
L. H. Masters&#13;
Morn in gside Electric ian.&#13;
Wiring and Repairing a Spec ialty.&#13;
Res. Auto 6443.&#13;
3932 Orleans Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
J. E. ,DE WALT&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
315-316 Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Crescent Society ___________ ___ 1 63&#13;
&#13;
Juniors --------------------- 45&#13;
&#13;
S t udent Council ______________ 167&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ------------------ 6 3&#13;
&#13;
Agora Board ________ _ _______ _ 16 8&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ------------------- 67&#13;
&#13;
In ter-Society Cornmit tee ___ _____ 169&#13;
&#13;
Academy-------------------- 72&#13;
&#13;
Y . W. C. A. Cabinet ___________ l 70&#13;
&#13;
Book IV, Athletics ----- ------- -- 73&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet ___________ 171&#13;
&#13;
The Athletic Season ____________ 75&#13;
&#13;
Madrigal Club __ _ ___ ____ _____ _ 172&#13;
&#13;
Coach Saunderson------------ 76&#13;
&#13;
Men's Glee Club ___ ___________ l 73&#13;
&#13;
The "M" Club -- - ------------ 78&#13;
&#13;
Collegian Reporte r ____ ___ ___ __ 17 4&#13;
&#13;
Football-------- ---- --------- 79&#13;
&#13;
Annual Board _ _______________ 175&#13;
&#13;
Baseball - ---------- - --- ---91&#13;
Basketball --- -------- ---- ---- 99&#13;
&#13;
The College Band ______________ l 76&#13;
&#13;
Track -----------------------109&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
Chemistry Club ______________ l 77&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Five&#13;
&#13;
�Page&#13;
Volunteer Band ____________ __ l 77&#13;
&#13;
Women's Banquet ------------186&#13;
&#13;
s. __________ l 78&#13;
&#13;
Men's Banquet ----- ----- -----187&#13;
&#13;
Conservation at M.&#13;
&#13;
Alumni _____________________ l 79&#13;
Book VII, Calendar and Jokes _____ 181&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
&#13;
May Day--------------· _____ 188&#13;
Calendar ____________________ 191&#13;
&#13;
Special Occasions -------------183&#13;
Philo-Athenaeum Grand Public __ 184&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's Honor Roll ______ 211&#13;
&#13;
Monument Day --------------185&#13;
&#13;
M. S. Men in Service ----------231&#13;
&#13;
Jokes -----------------------243&#13;
&#13;
Snaps -----------------------241&#13;
&#13;
THE END&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighty-Six&#13;
&#13;
���</text>
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              <text>The Sioux&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF&#13;
&#13;
1919&#13;
&#13;
ELBERT M . PRICHARD&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
The annual year book of Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
I. HART&#13;
&#13;
published by the Junior Class&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Volume Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
3.&#13;
4.&#13;
5.&#13;
6.&#13;
7.&#13;
&#13;
THE CAMP&#13;
THE OFFICERS&#13;
THE SOLDIERS&#13;
THE ARTILLERY&#13;
THE BALLOON CORPS&#13;
CAMP LIFE&#13;
A SOLDIER'S DIARY&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
To those students, alumni&#13;
and former students of&#13;
Morningside College who&#13;
are now offering their lives&#13;
in the active service of our&#13;
country to restore justice,&#13;
democracy and peace to the&#13;
world, this book is humbly&#13;
and respectfully dedicated&#13;
by the class of Nineteen&#13;
Nineteen.&#13;
&#13;
IN MEMORY OF ALBERT E. BEHMER&#13;
&#13;
WHO SO WILLINGLY GAVE UP&#13;
HIS LIFE FOR THE CAUSE&#13;
OF HUMANITY&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
ANOTHER year has passed&#13;
and the cycle of months&#13;
has witnessed our country engaged in a struggle of momentuous import to all the world. To&#13;
give a picture of Morningside College, during this, our first year in&#13;
the war- to put into some permanent form the record of our work,&#13;
our activities and our organizations, this has been the opportunity and the purpose of this Sioux.&#13;
Our thoughts, our plannings, and&#13;
our efforts have gone into it. We&#13;
leave it in your hands-for your&#13;
criticism, for your approval.&#13;
&#13;
THE CAMPUS&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Review&#13;
&#13;
of the Year&#13;
&#13;
(By Pres. A. E. Craig)&#13;
&#13;
The state of war in which our country finds itself has dominated the&#13;
life of all our Colleges during the year 1917-1918. A large number of our&#13;
men, especially of the upper classes, have responded to their country's call&#13;
for service. This has had its depressing effect, nevertheless the attendance&#13;
of Morningside College has been maintained at our unusually high level.&#13;
Our loss in the Collegiate Department has been only about 5 per cent.&#13;
When we learn that the average loss of Colleges in our section of the country has been over 17 per cent we have reason for congratulation. Our&#13;
Freshman class was the largest in the history of the College.&#13;
The cultivation of a warm and yet discriminating patriotism has been&#13;
one of the foremost purposes of the College. To this end addresses by rep·&#13;
resentative men have been given at the Chapel almost weekly. Classes in&#13;
the study of patriotism were organized among both the students and faculty. These classes enrolled more than 75 per cent of the College and produced very satisfactory results. Classes in First Aid, Nursing and Food&#13;
Conservation were organized and did much systematic work.&#13;
In spite of the war activities, College life proceeded much as usual.&#13;
Morningside enjoyed the most successful year in athletics in its history.&#13;
The game with Notre Dame drew large attention, while the defeat of South&#13;
Dakota University our historic rival, was an event of great interest. In&#13;
Forensics, we captured first place in the State Prohibition contest and second in the State Oratorical. While no especial activity in financial matters&#13;
has been put forth it should not be concluded that the College is at a standstill. It is laying its plans for the greatest "drive" in its career. A campaign for $750,000 was launched at the meeting of the Board of Trustees in&#13;
May. Towards this amount the General Education Board has contributed&#13;
$150,000. This is perhaps the largest sum that Board has contributed at&#13;
one time to an institution the size of Morningside. It is planned to com·&#13;
plete this campaign in the summer of 1919.&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
MAIN HALL&#13;
&#13;
Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
(By J.M. Saunderson)&#13;
&#13;
This is an age when all expenditures of time and money are weighed in&#13;
the public mind and the non-vital placed under the ban. War time causes&#13;
us to discard the non-essential. I believe in the great value of athletics in&#13;
the life of the individual and the nation. I believe every boy and every&#13;
girl has a right to a good constitution. If they have not been blessed with&#13;
such by birth it is the duty of our educational system to give every one a&#13;
chance to acquire strong bodies. This doctrine is now so nearly universally&#13;
accepted that most Colleges furnish such facilities. Athletic glory must&#13;
never be put ahead of good health for athletics are good just so far as they&#13;
tend toward physical efficiency. Athletic sports have a peculiar value to&#13;
the young. We are apt to forget the value, in modern life, of the quick&#13;
eye, the steady nerve, and the firm hand. Athletics are the best possible&#13;
training for these qualities, perhaps more valuable today than they ever&#13;
were. The rules and ethics of competition present a constant opportunity to&#13;
fill the receptive mind of the boy with high ideals. The playing field is a&#13;
great training ground for youthful manners and morals. The boy's ideals&#13;
of fair play and sportsmanlike conduct learned here will be carried later&#13;
into business life.&#13;
Today, in our National Army Camps, athletic games are being used to&#13;
promote physical fitness. The war department has created a Department of&#13;
of Athletics in the Army. National officials, including President Wilson,&#13;
have given their endorsement to war time athletics in the Colleges, both because of the benefit to the public morale, and because participation in sports&#13;
has a real value in preparing our young men to do, when their time comes&#13;
their part in this great conflict.&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
ALUMNI GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
Religious Activities&#13;
(By Vice Pres. W. C. Hilmer)&#13;
The denominational or Christian College has only one real excuse for&#13;
its existence: Christian education. State and private institutions generally&#13;
furnish all possible advantages in scholastic and social ways, but do not, as&#13;
a rule, particularly emphasize the Spiritual Life. This is the definite mission of the Church school; not at the expense of scholarship and social&#13;
standing, however, but rather coupled with these, so as to develop the character harmoniously and symmetrically into broad and intelligent Christian manhood and womanhood. It is a well recognized fact that man's&#13;
relationship to his God must be taken into account as a very important factor in determining the governing ideals for time and eternity.&#13;
Morningside College has not lost sight of its duty and privilege. For,&#13;
as the Christian ideals in education were uppermost in the minds of its&#13;
founders, so to this day these ideals are cherished by every true . Morningsider. The Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. are important organizations&#13;
in working out these College ideals. The weekly devotional meetings, led&#13;
by students, faculty members, or visiting friends, are often moments of&#13;
real profit and inspiration. The Bible study classes, conducted by these organizations, have contributed largely toward clarifying minds and inspiring&#13;
faith in the Holy Scriptures. Early in February, Dr. Ream, of the Methodist Board of Education, conducted a four days' special meeting for the&#13;
College men; while Miss Ludgate, pastor and evangelist, conducted similar&#13;
meetings for the College women. Immediately thereafter the Evangelists,&#13;
Mathis and Vessey, conducted a series of revival services in Grace Church.&#13;
The permanent results of such special efforts, together with the regular&#13;
and daily influences, can scarcely be estimated. But the fact that our&#13;
young people have been brought face to face with life's largest issues,&#13;
stands to the credit of any Christian College.&#13;
Morningside regularly has a representative delegation at the students'&#13;
conference at Geneva. The leavening effect of the Geneva delegates upon&#13;
the student body is practically perpetual. Our own City Missions furnish&#13;
splendid opportunities to young people directly interested in religious work.&#13;
Here they find real life problems and may lend-a-hand in solving them.&#13;
Last, but not least, I would mention Grace Church, the "College Church."&#13;
The splendid music, the helpful sermons, the spirit of devotion, the inspiring League meetings, the Sunday School, with its youthful cheer and&#13;
life, are not easily forgotten by any one who has formed even a slight acquaintance at Morningside. 0 Morningside, hail to Thee and Thy Spirit!&#13;
May it never die!&#13;
&#13;
Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
GRACE CHURCH&#13;
&#13;
Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory of Music&#13;
(By Director Paul McCollins)&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory of Music at Morningside will begin its 25th year in&#13;
the fall of 1918. During this period it has grown from a small department&#13;
of the College to a large and well organized school of the art of music,&#13;
with departments for the study of pianoforte, singing, pipe organ, violin,&#13;
orchestral and band instruments, history of music, musical appreciation,&#13;
public school music, normal methods, harmony, counterpoint and composition. It is recognized throughout a large part of the Middle West as a&#13;
thoroughly modern, progressive school of music and of equal rank in point&#13;
of attendance and standards with any institution of its kind.&#13;
The position of a Conservatory of Music in connection with a College&#13;
of Liberal Arts is a logical one. Here is provided the inspiration of numbers, systematically planned courses of study, literary and social advantages&#13;
-all of which tend to promote a broad and thorough rather than a one-sided&#13;
development of the musical faculties.&#13;
The fact that nearly all Colleges include the study of music as an elective subject in the regular curriculum is evidence of the increased recognition which the art is gaining. No longer is music considered for its cultural&#13;
value alone, but also for its practical value in the home, the Church, in social&#13;
life, and at this time of national crisis, for its powerful influence in creating&#13;
patriotic sentiment. The well trained and competent musician of today has&#13;
a wonderful opportunity at hand for it is generally recognized that music of&#13;
the right sort, as much as any other factor, is going to keep up the morale&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
that will win the war.&#13;
Morningside Conservatory aims to extend the influence of the art of&#13;
music not only to its own students, but to the student body at large and the&#13;
entire community surrounding it. With exceptionally fine equipment and&#13;
a corps of loyal and efficient teachers who give their entire time to the&#13;
work of the school the Conservatory looks forward to enlarged opportunities&#13;
and a greater usefulness in the future.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-One&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENT'S HOME&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Two&#13;
&#13;
OUR PRESIDENT&#13;
Alfred E. Craig&#13;
To whom is due in large measure the posit ion&#13;
that Morningside holds among t he Colleges of&#13;
t he country.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Five&#13;
&#13;
(1) William Charles Hilmer-Master of Arts, Baldwin Wallace College,&#13;
&#13;
Vice President, Registrar, Professor of German Literature.&#13;
(2) Lillian English Dimitt-Master of Arts, Columbia U., Dean of Women,&#13;
Professor of Ancient Languages.&#13;
(3) Ephenor Adrastus Brown-Master of Arts, Columbia U., Director of&#13;
Summer School, Professor of Education.&#13;
&#13;
(1) Arthur Henry Hirsch-Doctor of Philosophy, Chicago U., Professor of&#13;
&#13;
History and Politics.&#13;
(2) *Agnes Beveridge Ferguson-Master of Arts, Columbia U., Professor&#13;
of German Language.&#13;
(3) Charles Almer Marsh-Bachelor of Science, New Lynne Institute, Principle of Academy, Professor of Public Speaking.&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Six&#13;
&#13;
(1) James Juvenal Hayes-Master of Arts, Harvard, Professor of English.&#13;
(2) Helen Isabelle Loveland-Bachelor of Arts, Smith College Professor&#13;
&#13;
of English.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
(3) Frederick Schaub-Doctor of Divinity, Central Wesleyan College, Pro-&#13;
&#13;
fessor of Biblical and Religious Literature.&#13;
&#13;
(1) *Henry Frederick Kantlehner-Master of Arts, Harvard Professor of&#13;
Romance Languages.&#13;
(2) F. Otto Barz-Financial Secretary.&#13;
(3) *Herbert Grant Campbell-Master of Arts, Columbia, Professor of&#13;
Philosophy.&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
(1) Salome Luechauer-Bachelor of Arts, Oberlin College, Director of Phy-&#13;
&#13;
sical Training for Women.&#13;
Jason McCollough Saunderson-Bachelor of Arts, Albion College, Pro(2)&#13;
fessor of Physical Education.&#13;
(3) Mabel Elizabeth Brown-Graduate, Columbia College of Expression, Instructor of Expression.&#13;
&#13;
(1) Harold Ryder Harvey-Musical B, Oberlin College, Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
and Theory.&#13;
(2) Helen W. Lund-Graduate New England Conservatory, Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte and Normal Course in Piano.&#13;
(3) Merle Raymond Thompson-Doctor of Philosophy, Iowa U., Acting&#13;
Professor of Economics and Sociology.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
(1) Laura C. Fischer-Master of Arts, Carleton College, Assistant Profes-&#13;
&#13;
sor of Ancient Languages.&#13;
(2) Callie May Bliss-Bachelor of Science, Iowa State College, Professor of&#13;
&#13;
Home Economics.&#13;
(3) Faith Foster Woodford-Bachelor of Arts, Morningside, Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte.&#13;
&#13;
(1) Jessie H. Jackson-Student Chicago U., Librarian.&#13;
(2) Delmar Clair Cooper, Bachelor of Arts, Morningside, Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
Mathematics and Science.&#13;
(3) Elizabeth Newton MacCollin-Musical B, Oberlin College, Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
(1) Paul MacCollin-Bachelor of Arts, Oberlin College, Acting Director of&#13;
Conservatory, Instructor in Voice Culture.&#13;
(2) Robert Negley Van Horne-Bachelor of Philosophy, Morningside, Professor of Mathematics.&#13;
&#13;
Olaf&#13;
&#13;
Hovda-Doctor&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Cecilia C. Stenger- Bachelor of Arts,&#13;
&#13;
Philosophy,&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Goettinger U., Secretary of the FacS.&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Calderwood Stephens-Doctor&#13;
&#13;
Professor&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Steinbrenner-Master&#13;
&#13;
of Arts,&#13;
&#13;
Charles City College, Assistant Pro-&#13;
&#13;
of Medicine, Kansas U ., Professor of _&#13;
&#13;
fessor of Romance Languages.&#13;
James Reistrup- Instructor in Piano-&#13;
&#13;
James Austin Coss- Master of Science,&#13;
Illinois U., Professor of Chemistry.&#13;
&#13;
Acting&#13;
&#13;
French.&#13;
&#13;
ulty, Professor of Physics.&#13;
&#13;
Biology.&#13;
&#13;
U.,&#13;
&#13;
forte.&#13;
Mildred Chesbro Brown-Bachelor of&#13;
Arts, Morningside, Instructor in Eng-&#13;
&#13;
*Ossie Garfield Jones- Bachelor of Science, Ohio Wesleyan, Professor of&#13;
&#13;
lish.&#13;
&#13;
Economics.&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on Leave.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Ida Julia Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Andy is a good scout. For four&#13;
years she has toiled tirelessly, making a record worthy of being proud&#13;
of. Her strongest foil is her ability to&#13;
pull down these much desired "A"&#13;
grades that we hear so much about.&#13;
The Class of '18 are indeed fortunate&#13;
in having her among their number.&#13;
George Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Othonian President, Pi Kappa Delta,&#13;
Editor of Reporter '18, Editor of&#13;
Sioux '18.&#13;
From the foregoing one can readily&#13;
see that Earl is one of the best and&#13;
busiest seniors. Aside from his official duties he also finds time and inclination for the more frivolous side&#13;
of life.&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Orin Westly Bell&#13;
Philomathian, Student Council, Y.&#13;
M. C. A. President. Another shining&#13;
light of the Class of '18 is Orin. He is&#13;
quiet and modest, but exceedingly interesting and capable.&#13;
&#13;
Vivian Lucile Down&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, Madrigal Club, Sioux&#13;
'18 Board, President Y. W. C. A. '18.&#13;
"Viv" can truly be called one of the&#13;
most conscientious and capable girls&#13;
of our school. She excells in her&#13;
classes, stands high in her Society, is&#13;
enthusiastic in our social activities&#13;
and is loved and respected by all who&#13;
know her.&#13;
Cora Dutton&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Since "Dick" has gone, Cora has&#13;
turned with renewed energy to her&#13;
college work, attacking her studies&#13;
with untiring strength, and working&#13;
with great ability in Oratory and in&#13;
her place as a Student Volunteer.&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria Treasurer, Agora Board, Inter-Society&#13;
Committee,&#13;
Madrigal&#13;
Club, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Ruth finished her school work early in order&#13;
to take her place as Miss Dolliver's&#13;
Secretary while she is in France. We&#13;
envy her opportunity for new experiences and her chance to be really helpful in this Great World War.&#13;
Willis Floyd Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
Mabel Clare Day&#13;
Vice President Zetaletheans, Reporter Staff Agora Board, Basketball,&#13;
Hockey. 'Mabel wears an Ionian pin&#13;
and is specializing in Domestic Science. Of course we don't mean to say&#13;
that there is any connection, but one&#13;
can never be sure.&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Vice President Ionians, Pi Kappa&#13;
Delta, Editor in Chief of Collegian Reporter '17. Bill is a distinguished&#13;
newspaper man. He got his start by&#13;
having a hunch all by himself that he&#13;
was good, and now he has succeeded&#13;
in convincing everyone else of his ability-as that was not hard to do. At&#13;
present he holds down a position on&#13;
the "Journal" and produces some of&#13;
the rarest stories known to civilization.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Four&#13;
Thirty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Archie L. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
College Orchestra, Collegian Reporter Staff, Leader of College Band '18,&#13;
Philomathian. From the top of his&#13;
head to the soles of his feet-which is&#13;
some distance, believe me-Archie is&#13;
musical ability personified. Since his&#13;
coming, musical affairs have taken a&#13;
new lease on life, for he is always behind them with his ability and enthusiasm.&#13;
Agnes M. Fry&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, Agora Board, Basketball, Vice President of Senior Class, Pi&#13;
Kappa Delta. Agnes is a decided&#13;
booster for her college. Ever since&#13;
her first year she has done her part&#13;
in trying to make it come up to her&#13;
idea of it as the best school on earth.&#13;
With no small ability she makes toward this end.&#13;
Charles D. Fry&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Merrill&#13;
Milton G. Irwin&#13;
Othonian, Biology Assistant, Student and Stepper extraordinary. As&#13;
far as Milton is concerned every day&#13;
life this year is a dreary waste for&#13;
him, for the star of his sky, the dream&#13;
of his life, the ideal of his heart is&#13;
gone. A little ray of hope, however,&#13;
gleams in the fact that said Ideal&#13;
wore an Otho pin away with herand that may sustain him in his present situation.&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
Goldia C. Jackson&#13;
Chairman of World Fellowship&#13;
Committee Y. W. C. A., Member Prohibition League, Basketball. Goldia&#13;
is a hustler. Her special line is the&#13;
Y. W., where her cordial spirit and&#13;
Christian enthusiasm win many girls&#13;
to the better things of life. She is a&#13;
c'ear thinker, a quick actor, and a brilliant student.&#13;
Leon Julius Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
Othonian President '17, President&#13;
of Class '17, Sioux '18 Board, Glee&#13;
Club '18, Band, Student Body President '18. "Chic" is in direct line for&#13;
distinguished service in the world-if&#13;
his career in college is anything to go&#13;
by. As any one can see his specialty&#13;
is being President of something, so&#13;
we may yet live to see him ruling&#13;
these United States with his ·iron&#13;
hand.&#13;
&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Cleo Dulcia Holmes&#13;
President Athenaeums, Vice President Agora Club, Inter-Society Committee, Madrigal Club, Treasurer Y.&#13;
W. C. A. Cleo is of the practical, capable type which is best suited for&#13;
this practical life of ours. She never&#13;
starts anything that she can't finish,&#13;
and her finished products proclaim&#13;
her a most talented girl.&#13;
&#13;
Vice President and President Pierias, Agora Board, Forensic Chairman, Collegian Reporter Staff, Y. W.&#13;
C. A. Treasurer '16, Pi Kappa Delta.&#13;
When "Johnny" goes there will be&#13;
less in the hearts of many of us-a&#13;
gap which cannot be filled by anyone.&#13;
She is perhaps the truest friend and&#13;
most congenial companion we have.&#13;
Her going will be keenly felt by everyone.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian, Varsity Baseball,&#13;
Basketball, Track and Football, AllIowa Football, "M" Club President,&#13;
'16, Business Manager Reporter '18,&#13;
Sioux '18 Board. Jerry is verily the&#13;
versatile kid. Perhaps he is strongest in Athletics, but we also find&#13;
traces of him in many other activities, particularly in "Fussing."&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean President, President&#13;
Madrigal Club '18, Agora Board, Student Councll. "Fran" came all the way&#13;
from Illinois just to come to Morninghelp but say that she showed most&#13;
side and in view of that fact, we can't&#13;
excellent taste. And now that she's&#13;
here we too, can show most excellent&#13;
taste in our vast appreciation of her&#13;
remar kability.&#13;
Lloyd D. Lehan&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Secretary and President Ionians,&#13;
Basketball, Tennis Champion, President of Tennis Association, Biology&#13;
Assistant. "Skinny" made such tracks&#13;
while here in College that he was able&#13;
to acquire the regular number of credits by the end of the first semester of&#13;
this year. How did you do it, Skinny?&#13;
We know your failing for "Fussing."&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria President, Sioux '18 Board,&#13;
Agora Board, Secretary and Treasurer of Seniors, President of Red&#13;
Cross Committee. This year Clara&#13;
has certainly had her capable hands&#13;
full in engineering the Red Cross&#13;
work that the girls have taken up.&#13;
We recommend her for the untiring&#13;
effort and great ability she has&#13;
shown.&#13;
Arthur Preston Locke&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer Othonians, President Chemistry&#13;
Club Assistant in Chemistry. Art is&#13;
a most brilliant student. A little study&#13;
makes him master of most things&#13;
that others have to dig for. His success is due to his clear thinking and&#13;
his enthusiasm for his work.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian President '18, President of Class of '18, Vice President&#13;
Y. M. C. A., Assistant Yell Leader,&#13;
Sioux '18 Board, Inter-Society and Inter-Collegiate Debate. Rusty is always cheerful and is ever ready to&#13;
help a friend in trouble. Indeed, he 1s&#13;
such a helpful little soul that he has&#13;
been given the entire charge of the&#13;
innocent Freshmen. It can truly be&#13;
said of him that he discharges his&#13;
duties with thoroughness if not with&#13;
compassion.&#13;
Thomas H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
Hubbard&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian President '18, Secretary and Treasurer Y. M. C. A., Prohibition League. Tom's irish smile&#13;
and winsome way have won great victories for him in the past and his latest conquest fell an easy victim to his&#13;
wiles (she being an unsuspectmg&#13;
Freshman) and now they are both&#13;
"very happy!"&#13;
Alice S. Miller&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Holding the record for efficiency&#13;
and power of study is Alice, who is a&#13;
recent aquisition to the Class of '18.&#13;
For her the joy of life lies in a lesson&#13;
well learned and a task well done. She&#13;
is a credit to her Class and a valuable&#13;
asset to her College.&#13;
Esther P. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
President Zetaletheans, Reporter&#13;
Staff, Agora Board, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Basketball. Esther is a cheery&#13;
individual who doesn't care a bit&#13;
about dividing her light heartedness&#13;
with those around her. It's an impossibility for "the glooms" to get you&#13;
when she is about, for she is nothing&#13;
less than the original little sunbeam&#13;
herself.&#13;
&#13;
Thirt y-Nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
Belmont&#13;
&#13;
Clarence J. Obrecht&#13;
Othonian, President of "M" Club,&#13;
Varsity Baseball, Student Council,&#13;
College Band, Debate, Glee Club, Yell&#13;
Leader '18. Buster is our boaster. As&#13;
a yell leader he is a howling success&#13;
to say the least, as a baseball player h e&#13;
is a sure hit, and as Glee Club warbler&#13;
and a cornetest he has no equal. Buster's world is a lively one.&#13;
Elma Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, President of Inter-Society Committee '18, Member of Y. W.&#13;
C. A. Cabinet. Sincere and conscientious in all her dealings with her fellow students is Elma. She is a friend&#13;
to every one and proves her friendship by her whole hearted sympathy&#13;
and general attitude of helpfulness toward those who need her.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Mildred L. Pecaut&#13;
Zetalethean, Secretary of Agora&#13;
Board, Sioux '18 Board, Basketball,&#13;
Expression. Mildred is a clever and&#13;
original girl. Her ideas, and they are&#13;
many, bear a stamp all t heir own. Her&#13;
aid is eagerly solicited by her society&#13;
and her Class in their affairs, and&#13;
when she helps the affair is an assured success.&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Riddle&#13;
Onawa&#13;
"Happy" is one of those persons&#13;
most fortunate in having a sunbeam&#13;
for a soul. Anywhere and at any t ime&#13;
she is just her happy, merry self. For&#13;
t his we all like her, and those who&#13;
know her best can recognize a deeper&#13;
something which makes them love&#13;
her. She is a member of the Pieria&#13;
girls and is greatly loved and appreciated by them.&#13;
Grace Ruskell&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
On the surface one is inclined to regard Grace as being a very quiet, demure young person, but in reality she&#13;
is just t he reverse. She is a lively and&#13;
congenial companion among friends,&#13;
contributing much to the fun in a&#13;
crowd. She was t he Athenaeum President this year, and fulfilled her position with all t he ability and dignity&#13;
due it.&#13;
Lida L. Saunders&#13;
&#13;
Manilla&#13;
President Zetaletheans '17, Student&#13;
Council, Agora Board, Sioux '18, Collegian Reporter Staff '18. Lida is one&#13;
of our most charming Senior girls,&#13;
for, added to her natural good nature,&#13;
sh e is so terrifically good looking that&#13;
t he combination is irresistable. Is it&#13;
any wonder that Jim has surrendered&#13;
completely?&#13;
Merlin L. Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
Howard Reyman&#13;
Howard is another of those capable&#13;
Othos who combine a true and sincere spirit with a noble and talented&#13;
mind. His major is Philosophy which&#13;
proves the depths of his thinking.&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean, Mandolin Orchestra,&#13;
Class Basketball. In answer to the cry&#13;
for cooks Merlin has enlisted her services in the field of Domestic Science.&#13;
She is a most capable manager and a&#13;
wonder with eat s. So it is safe to say&#13;
she surely has not missed her calling.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-One&#13;
&#13;
Claire I. Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
Secretary and President of Othos,&#13;
Sioux '18 Board, Reporter Staff, Class&#13;
Basketball. "Deak" is decidedly distinguished as one of the most popular&#13;
Seniors. He holds this place because&#13;
of his easy wit and his natural good&#13;
humor. He is also a regular cyclone&#13;
among the ladies, breaking hearts to&#13;
right and left in that fair sex.&#13;
Ruth C. Smith&#13;
&#13;
Arthur&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Treasurer '16, Class&#13;
Secretary '15, Student Council, President of Agora Club '18. One of Ruth's&#13;
chief charms is her ability to talk&#13;
easily and well. She is an expression&#13;
student of noted ability and an after&#13;
dinner speaker of great brilliancy.&#13;
&#13;
Alice Helen Swan&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Alice is a girl of great ability. In&#13;
every thing she attempts she excells.&#13;
Her faithfulness on committees is a&#13;
recognized fact . She is a hard worker and a generous helper, a constant&#13;
source of delight and inspiration to&#13;
her friends.&#13;
Harold Walker&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Philomathian,&#13;
Track&#13;
Captain,&#13;
Drake Relay Team, Student Council,&#13;
President of Class in '16. Hitherto&#13;
Harold has ever been regarded as a&#13;
trifler, but this year he has concentrated his efforts until he is about to&#13;
wipe out his dark past. Of course she&#13;
is a Freshman, and that is true to&#13;
form, but his utter absence from promiscuous fussing is quite unfathomable.&#13;
Frances Neff Whetmore&#13;
&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
&#13;
Clear Lake&#13;
Secretary and President of Ionians,&#13;
Inter-Society and Inter-Collegiate Debate, Oratory. Perhaps the thing that&#13;
Lee loves best to . o after debating is&#13;
d&#13;
appearing in a play or in stunts. His&#13;
superior ability along this line easily&#13;
shows us why.&#13;
Earl G. Stonebrook&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
Philomathian President, Vice President Seniors, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Reporter Staff, Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
Stoney is another one of our constant&#13;
steppers. For three years he has been&#13;
fidelity personified, remaining true to&#13;
Grace through every trial and tribulation.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Vice President and President Atheneums, Madrigal Club, Agora Board.&#13;
Frankie has the happy faculty of combining study and fun. We don't see&#13;
how she does it, but with the least&#13;
apparent effort she makes an envyable record in her work and enjoys&#13;
herself at t he same time. She has&#13;
been a member of the Madrigal Club&#13;
smce her Freshman days, and is a&#13;
warbler of some merit.&#13;
Sue M. Wormley&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
A girl of moods is Sue. At times&#13;
she is sunny and at other times she is&#13;
sad,at times she is happy and at other times-mad, but whatever mood&#13;
she is in she is still the same clever&#13;
Sue. She is a member of the Zetalethean Society and is well liked by all&#13;
her friends.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Senior Class Roll&#13;
ANDERSON, IDA JULIA------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BARKS, GEORGE EARL -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BELL, ORIN WESLEY ----- --- -------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
CARPENTER, MRS. LESLIE------------------------------------ ---Sioux City.&#13;
CHRIST, JAY FINLEY ----- --- ---- ---- ------- --- ----- ----- -- --- - Chicago, Ill.&#13;
DAY, MABEL CLARE -- --- --- -- ---------- -- - - - -- --- --- - - - ---- - -Gilmore City&#13;
DOWN, VIVIAN LUCILE-------------------------------- - - --------Sioux City&#13;
DUTTON, CORA TAYLOR ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
FORBES, WILLIS FLOYD -----------------·-----------------------Sioux City&#13;
FOUKE, RUTH __________________________________________________ Sioux City&#13;
FREEMAN, ARCHIE L. --------------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
FRY, AGNES M. ------ -- -------- ------ ---- ----- --- --------------Hawarden&#13;
FRY CHARLES D. ----------------------- - --------------- ------ -- Sioux City&#13;
HOLMES, CLEO DULCIE ________ ________ ______ _____ _ __ ______ ___ __ Sioux City&#13;
IRWIN, MILTON G. ----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JACKSON, CLARA GOLDIA ________________________________________ Kingsley&#13;
JOHNSON, LEON JULIUS ---------------------------------------Lynn Grove&#13;
JOHNSON, MARION - --- ---------- -- ---------------- -- -------- --Storm Lake&#13;
KENYON, MRS. CLYDE ------'-------------------------------- -- -- Sioux City&#13;
KOLP, SARAH FRANCES _ ____________________________ __ ____ Jacksonville, Ill.&#13;
LANCASTER, HAROLD ______________ ___ _________ Natland, Westmorland, Eng.&#13;
LEHAN, LLOYD D. - ---------------------- - ----------------------Sioux City&#13;
LEWIS, CLARA _____ -------- ____________ - - - - - - - - -- ---- - --- - - - - - Sioux City&#13;
LOCKE, ARTHUR PRESTON -------------------------------------Fort Dodge&#13;
McBRIDE, ROBERT HOLMES -----------------------------------------Alden&#13;
McBRIDE, THOMAS HALE ---- --- --- -- --- --------- - - -- ----- --- -- ---Hubbard&#13;
MILLER, ALICE SHEPPARD -------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
MONTGOMERY, ESTHER P. -- ------------ ---- -------- -- ---------- Sioux City&#13;
OBRECHT, CLARENCE J. ------- ----------------------------------Belmond&#13;
PARKINSON, ELMA D. ---------------------- -- --------- -- ---- - --Lake V i ew&#13;
PECAUT, MILDRED LUCILE ----------------------------------- ---Sioux City&#13;
REYMAN, HOWARD ALVIN ____________ _ ____________________________ LeMars&#13;
RIDDLE, GLADYS ----------------------------------------------- --Onawa&#13;
RUSKELL, GRACE ----- -- - ---- --- ---- -- ----------- ------ - --- --- -Sioux City&#13;
SAUNDERS, LIDA HAZEL -------- - __ _________ .___ __ _ ______ ___ _______ Manilla&#13;
SAWYER, MERLIN LULA ---------- ------ ---------------- --------Sioux Ci ty&#13;
SHERWOOD, CLAIR IVAN --- -- --- -- ------------- ----- ------------Belmond&#13;
SMITH, RUTH CLAIRE -------- -- --------------------- ----- ---------Art hur&#13;
SOLTOW, LEE ------------------------ -- -----------------------Clear Lake&#13;
STONEBROOK, EARL GRANT --- ---- - --- --- ------------- --- --------Sac City&#13;
SWAN, ALICE HELEN __ ___ -- - ___ -·- _ - --- - - - __ -- - - - - - - - -- -- - - -----Sioux City&#13;
WALKER, HAROLD _ - - - - - - - - - - --- - - - - - -- -- - - - - -- -- ---- _________ _ Sioux City&#13;
WETMORE, FRANCES NEFF - ------------- - -------------- ---- - ---Sioux City&#13;
WORMLEY, SUE MARIAN -- -- ------------- - --------- --- ------ - ----Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Claude William Baldwin&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Frances Boyd&#13;
&#13;
Dennison&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. To introduce us, we&#13;
present, with just pride, our newly acquired member, Mr. Claude William&#13;
Baldwin. Although he has only been&#13;
one of us since Christmas he has already caught the spirit of '19, and&#13;
supports his Class with all his might.&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. Hello, Folks! That's what&#13;
"Fran"would probably say if she were&#13;
really here. For that's her naturean airy, breezy, hail-fellow-well-met&#13;
sort of a person who greets us all with&#13;
the same friendly smile and wide-open&#13;
heart.&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Bergh&#13;
&#13;
Ruth I. Brady&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. Whenever I think of&#13;
Hazel I'm sure to think of work, for,&#13;
oh, how that girl does study! And&#13;
results? Well, I don't mind telling&#13;
you that she's nothing less than the&#13;
brightest girl in school-and no one&#13;
will say but what that's some result.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth E. Berry&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Ah, what a poor thing&#13;
is one's vocabulary! Under ordinary&#13;
circumstances it serves very well, but&#13;
when one endeavors to stretch it over&#13;
the many good qualities of Ruth the&#13;
attempt is a dismal failure. She's&#13;
clever, she's chic, she's quiet but&#13;
quick, she's learned and beautiful&#13;
she's-but words fail me.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. Ruth Berry is one of&#13;
the "Old Guard." Through all the&#13;
trials and tribulations of the Class&#13;
and School, she always stands pat,&#13;
keeps the middle course, and comes&#13;
out on top. Ruth's main interest is in&#13;
French, but in addition to this allabsorbing subject, she finds time for&#13;
all the many little social things which&#13;
prove just what a charming person&#13;
she is.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Akron&#13;
&#13;
Lime Springs&#13;
Beryl F. Burns&#13;
Zetalethean. In establishing herself quickly in the hearts of her fellow students, Beryl has broken all&#13;
records. She came to us just this year&#13;
from Carlton, but already she has&#13;
shown herself to be a true Classmate,&#13;
a loyal society sister, and ideal College&#13;
girl.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
George Wesley Dunn&#13;
Gladys M. Clark&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gladys is one of the kind that makes&#13;
the wheels go 'round. On committees,&#13;
in supporting her class, in Expression&#13;
and Debate, she attacks her problems&#13;
with the same enthusiasm and ability&#13;
that characterize all of her actions.&#13;
&#13;
Burnett Cooper&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Close on the heels of&#13;
"Coop" comes George, who also aspires to wear a Van Dyke and have an&#13;
office door marked "Private," George&#13;
Crouch, M. D." We know he will get&#13;
both the title and the Van Dyke-our&#13;
only regard is when.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. And now for our English representative. Maybe you don't&#13;
think we're glad we're an ally of&#13;
George's, but we are. In fact, we&#13;
couldn't help ourselves, for there is&#13;
something so appealing, something so&#13;
compelling about him, even if he is&#13;
slow on a joke, we can't help but be&#13;
glad. And what's there in being slow&#13;
at the start, anyhow? It's always the&#13;
finish that counts, and George is certainly strong on the home stretch.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. "Coop" doesn't look&#13;
like a doctor, and to tell the truth,&#13;
he isn't one yet, but if taking all the&#13;
biology in the school and aspiring to&#13;
go on until he will be able to tack an&#13;
M. D. on the back of his name, will&#13;
make him one, it won't be long until&#13;
we'll be calling him "Doctor Cooper,"&#13;
instead of the old familiar "Coop."&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude Dykstra&#13;
Running Water, S. D.&#13;
Zetalethean. And speaking of home&#13;
stretches, there is one other that may&#13;
always be found in the same place. In&#13;
everything she does, Gertrude places&#13;
at the finish. Perhaps the reason is&#13;
that she has the happy faculty of&#13;
pushing all burdens before her instead&#13;
of wearing her strength by pulling.&#13;
&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. All along the path&#13;
of his three years at College, lie the&#13;
victories which our illustrious Class&#13;
President has won. In Forensics, in&#13;
the Glee Club, in the Y. M., among the&#13;
students in any capacity he is the&#13;
never ering, always winning Royce.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
Early&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. Representative of&#13;
his Class is McKinley Evans, who&#13;
hails from the progressive hamlet of&#13;
Early. Like his home town, "Kin,"&#13;
too, is progressive. He is a prominent&#13;
man in his Society, a member of the&#13;
Sioux '19 Board for his Class, and a&#13;
booster for his College.&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Ferguson&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. Talk about reliability! Talk&#13;
about steadiness! Why, Miriam was&#13;
so steady she made the Rocky Mountains look wobbly. Did you notice the&#13;
past tense? Well, that is quite right.&#13;
She used to be steady, but this year&#13;
she has plunged so madly into gay&#13;
frivolity that the past tense is surely&#13;
applicable.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. Florence is one of our&#13;
shining lights, and we are truly proud&#13;
that we can claim her. It is whispered that we won't have her with us&#13;
next year, for the leading man of a&#13;
certain play, the most popular man in&#13;
school, is said to have established a&#13;
superior claim to that of mere classmates.&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Our list of the Class&#13;
of '19 would not be complete without&#13;
the name of Margaret in it. She was&#13;
with us the first semester and we&#13;
know that she is thinking of us now&#13;
and wishing that she were back, and&#13;
we can only say that we, too, wish it&#13;
many times over.&#13;
&#13;
Miriam R. Fish&#13;
&#13;
Florence Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
Harold S. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
Craig, Nebr.&#13;
Othonian. Paralleling the course of&#13;
our President is the course of the Vice&#13;
President of our Class. He, too, has&#13;
won distinction throughout his College course in his many College activities. We can justly praise him as one&#13;
of our most capable, most popular Juniors.&#13;
&#13;
Mable Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
True to the standards set and maintained by all the students who come to&#13;
us from the High School, Mable has&#13;
proved her worth and ability in fitting in with the general scheme of&#13;
things. In her quiet way she works&#13;
along on the truly worthy things, winning in the end.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-One&#13;
&#13;
Mynnie Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Friendship that makes the least&#13;
noise is often the most useful and&#13;
friendship of this brand is the kind&#13;
offered by Mynnie. To all she gives&#13;
her helpful, cheery smile, to all she&#13;
offers her quiet assistance and to all&#13;
she stands as a true, helpful industrious friend.&#13;
&#13;
Lucyle D. Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Pierian. Lucyle, alias Sally, leads&#13;
a very talented, easy going and adorable existence. We envy her the talents, which make her popular everywhere, her easy going personality&#13;
which puts her at ease even among&#13;
strangers, and the charms of her&#13;
which makes her adored by all of her&#13;
friends.&#13;
&#13;
Clarence I. Hart&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Ionian. With the enlistment of our&#13;
former business manager a real difficulty arose in the path of the Sioux&#13;
'19. Distress signals were hailed by&#13;
our frantic editor and fear crept into&#13;
the hearts of the staff. And then a&#13;
gleaming ray of hope (Clarence camouflaged) appeared upon our horizon, the real difficulty diminished&#13;
conceivably and the Sioux sailed on&#13;
to success, buoyed up by the tireless&#13;
energy and excellent executive ability&#13;
of our new business manager.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Two&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
Lee C. Horney&#13;
Philomathian. If it is true that&#13;
snaps make an annual and it must be,&#13;
for our editor says so-then some of&#13;
the credit for this volume must be&#13;
given to our emminent snap-shot editor, Lee. I know of no one quite so deserving as this self same person of&#13;
our praise. Tirelessly through the&#13;
year he has taken pictures himself,&#13;
begged pictures from others and has&#13;
even stolen pictures, it has been said,&#13;
just to make our annual a snappy one.&#13;
&#13;
Livermore&#13;
Albert N. Hunt&#13;
Ionian. This year Albert has literally leaped into fame as one of the&#13;
members of the Drake Relay Team.&#13;
In his other years at College he has&#13;
also pulled down his share of honors&#13;
on the cinder path and now his efforts&#13;
have been more than rewarded by&#13;
winning a place, which he filled with&#13;
honor on the invincible Relay Team of&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Fenton C. Jones, Jr.&#13;
Leeds&#13;
Carlyle has slipped through his College career thus far without making&#13;
much fuss or noise about it. He is&#13;
always in his place, doing the duty&#13;
which lies nearest him with the minimum of friction and a maximum of&#13;
efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Clifford Jones&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Among the many "Ologies"&#13;
and "Isms" which Skinny indulges in,&#13;
the subject of "Fussology" is the one&#13;
most interesting to him. He has given&#13;
the matter intensive study, both in&#13;
the foreign and home fields, and is&#13;
qualified to judge in all matters of the&#13;
heart. To love or not to love has long&#13;
been the question with Skinny.&#13;
&#13;
Grace Fall Kellog&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. If it were our policy&#13;
to follow the example of our immediate predecessors we would be tempted&#13;
to say, a la Sioux '18, that Leone is a&#13;
rare girl who has waited a year just&#13;
on purpose to join the best Class in&#13;
the history of the institution. But,&#13;
since that is not our policy, we will&#13;
merely say that Leone is a rare girl&#13;
and we're truly glad that she liked us&#13;
well enough to want to join us.&#13;
&#13;
Mable Larson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
To the casual observer Mable appears to be rather reserved and serious minded, but in addition to this&#13;
there is that other side which we who&#13;
know her best recognize and admire&#13;
so much. She goes her own way and&#13;
goes quietly, but with it all, she is a&#13;
live, light hearted, enjoyable girl.&#13;
&#13;
Westfield&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum. As the most popular&#13;
girl in the Class and one most suited&#13;
for the position, Gladys was chosen&#13;
this year by the student body, for our&#13;
May Queen. Her quiet dignity, her&#13;
poignant beauty, and that indefinable&#13;
something about her which is called&#13;
"class," made our Maye Fete an assured success in the very beginning.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Homer, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. Light and happy heads live&#13;
long it has been said, and, if that is&#13;
the case, Mrs. Kellog will surely be&#13;
rewarded for her optimism, her light&#13;
hearted manner and inexpressible&#13;
charm, by a ripe old age.&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
&#13;
Ruth E. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. "Hoody"is our live wire.&#13;
Trust her to stir things up. And&#13;
when they're stirred the rest of us&#13;
just fall in line behind her as a matter of course. She is a real live girl&#13;
up to the minute in her Class, in Y.&#13;
W., in the Madrigal Club, and in&#13;
everything she attempts, and far&#13;
ahead of the moment in athletics, her&#13;
specialty.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Lena C. McDonald&#13;
Athenaeum. She is just the quiet&#13;
kind whose nature never varies. Always the same, Lena McDonald goes&#13;
her way, seeking diligently after&#13;
knowledge, the thought of what she&#13;
must do and not what people think,&#13;
the only thing concerning her.·&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Helen Meeks&#13;
"Good nature and good sense must&#13;
ever join," some dry old bird once remarked, having in mind, I have no&#13;
doubt, the time when Helen would&#13;
prove his statement true, for that is&#13;
just the happy combination we find&#13;
in her, a happy, sunny manner and a&#13;
bushel of good sense.&#13;
&#13;
Laurens&#13;
Dale E. Norton&#13;
Othonian. "Skinny" is, both literally and figuratively a very tower of&#13;
strength for his Class and his College.&#13;
His most stellar performances are in&#13;
the athletic line, where he shines out&#13;
in great glory, besides being a good&#13;
right guard. "Skinny" also excels in&#13;
pep speeches, class politics and the&#13;
like-which shows him to be a typical&#13;
Junior.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Gladys G. Orr&#13;
A sweet and gentle grace and unassuming mein are among t he many&#13;
virtues possessed by our classmate,&#13;
Gladys. Day by day she goes through&#13;
the necessary routine of h er work always gracious, always gentle and always modest in her manner.&#13;
&#13;
Elva Persinger&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. I think that Elva's motto&#13;
must be "To make life pleasant here&#13;
below," for her whole nature reflect s&#13;
that spirit . When a friend and helper. is needed Elva is t h ere, ready and&#13;
willing to lend h er capability and willingness t o t he solution of the problem&#13;
or the removal of the difficult y.&#13;
&#13;
Nellie J. Poyzer&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
Athenaeum. Nellie is a ''standby."&#13;
We have h ad her with us for only this&#13;
one year, but already we have come to&#13;
learn her value as a fellow classmate&#13;
and a friend.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean. Bert is a busy man.&#13;
As Editor in Chief of the Sioux 1919,&#13;
he works night and day, sacrificing&#13;
his time, his energy and his brain to&#13;
the gigantic task of steering our annual to success. We are proud of Bert&#13;
and his ability and are glad to recognize him as a classmate and friend.&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Sandvig&#13;
&#13;
Canton, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. And now we present our&#13;
fair companion "Tupa." Her fairylike beauty deprives us of all words&#13;
to express it. Had we her training&#13;
we could better express what a lively&#13;
irresponsible, irresistible person she&#13;
really is.&#13;
&#13;
Elsa M. Savonell&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Mae is characterized&#13;
by her light hearted, happy, willing&#13;
way. Whenever you see her, she always has some new joke, some clever&#13;
story or some cheery remark to drive&#13;
the glooms away.&#13;
&#13;
Quiet, but noticed, Elsa has spent&#13;
the first three years of her College&#13;
life. Never presuming, she has remained rather in the background of&#13;
what some people term the "limelight," but nevertheless, for all those&#13;
who know her 'tis an easy thing to&#13;
love her.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Elizabeth Reid&#13;
&#13;
Roy Schellinger&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth Mae Purdy&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean. Ruth is a live wire&#13;
and a good mixer. Whenever called&#13;
upon to "put a thing through" she&#13;
works with all her might, and she is&#13;
rewarded by the recognition she receives from her fellow students for&#13;
her services. This year she has been&#13;
given the honor of being Agora President and also the honor (along with&#13;
the hard work) of being Assistant&#13;
Editor of the Sioux '19.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Just lately has our class&#13;
been deprived of the inspiring presence of "Skelly," who has gone to&#13;
work and boost for Uncle Sam. If&#13;
he makes as good a soldier as he has&#13;
made a good classmate he can well expect a place at the front in the service of his country.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-Nine&#13;
Fifty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Aurelia Sturdevant&#13;
&#13;
Tyndall, S. D.&#13;
Athenaeum. Aurelia is one of the&#13;
species whose distinguished characteristic is pep. In our many activities she is always right among the&#13;
first, "shaking the old pepper box"&#13;
for her College. We envy her cheerful spirit and boundless enthusiasm.&#13;
&#13;
Katherine Tharp&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Athenaeum.· True character so honestly won as that of Katherine's acquires many friends. In the daily&#13;
grind she has found time to ripen and&#13;
deepen in the ways that count until&#13;
the number of her friends has mounted inconceivably.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Isabelle Walker&#13;
Pieria. Isabelle is about the busiest&#13;
person imaginable. In her Society,&#13;
she is a leader, in her Class she holds&#13;
a prominent place, in College affairs&#13;
in general she is an enthusiastic&#13;
worker, and in her studies she still&#13;
maintains her early dream of a clean&#13;
"A" record. And besides all this she&#13;
still has time to step quite considerably. Ah, marvelous is the . endurance of woman.&#13;
Grace E . Wishard&#13;
&#13;
Pieria. How doth the little busy&#13;
bee? Ask Grace. For, in her, the little bee has surely met his match. It&#13;
is true, her endeavors have been rather divided, but even at that, neither&#13;
her work nor Earl have suffered&#13;
materially .&#13;
&#13;
Horace Ferdinand Wulf&#13;
Ray D. Troutman&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. Isn't he funny? If you&#13;
don't think he is, just read that excrutiating joke section he has worked&#13;
on all year for you. Of course, knowing Fish, some may think it was nothing for him to do, but this year, it has&#13;
been reported, his mind has taken a&#13;
decidedly serious turn so the jokes&#13;
were a real trial.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Philomathian. 'Tis with deep regret and sincere emotions that we&#13;
look back upon the bright and&#13;
smiling face of our erstwhile Business Manager. We had hoped to have&#13;
him till the last, but, alas ! he was&#13;
destined for a nobler work and we&#13;
are deprived of all the glory his efforts would have shed upon us.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-One&#13;
&#13;
The Junior Class Roll&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, CLAUDE WILLIAM -------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
BERGH, HAZEL IRENE -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BERRY, RUTH ELLA --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BISHOP, MARY ELIZABETH -------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BOYD , FRANCES --- -- - - - - - - -- - ___ - _______________________________ Denison&#13;
BRADY, RUTH I. ---------------------------------------------------Akron&#13;
BRODKEY, SARAH ---------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
BURNS, BERYL FRANCES ------------------------------------Lime Springs&#13;
BURPEE, RUTH ------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
CLARK, GLADYS MARIE ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
COOPER, BURNETT --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
CROUCH, GEORGE ----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
DUBEL, MARCUS G. ---------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
DUNN, GEORGE WESLEY ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
DYKSTRA, GERTRUDE ---------------------·-----------Running Water, S. D.&#13;
ENGBERG, ROYCE RAYMOND ------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
EVANS, McKINLEY -------------------------------------------------Early&#13;
FISH, MIRIAM ROENA -------------------------------------------Ida Grove&#13;
FORSBERG, FLORENCE -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
FRANCHERE, MABEL CATLIN -----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
FREEMAN, HAROLD S. ----------------------------------------Craig, Nebr.&#13;
GULLICKSON, HELEN M. ________________________________________ Sioux City&#13;
GUSTESON, MABEL A. ------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
GUSTESON, WYNNIE --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
HAITZ, LUCYLE D. ----------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
HART, CLARENCE I. --------------------------------------------Sioux&#13;
City&#13;
HORNNEY, LEE C. ------------------------------------------------LeMars&#13;
HUNT, ALBERT N. ----------------------------------------------Livermore&#13;
JONES, CLIFFORD F. --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JONES, FENTON CARLYLE, JR. ----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
KELLOGG, MRS . GRACE _____________________ ___________________ Sioux City&#13;
KNAPP, GLADYS ____________________ - - - -- -- -- - - - - --- ---- - -------Westfield&#13;
LANGE, LEONE MAE -----------------------------------------Homer, Nebr.&#13;
LARSON, MABEL HOPE -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
LLOYD, THOMAS K. --------------------------------------------Linn Grove&#13;
MAHOOD, RUTH EVELYN ----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
McDONALD, LENA C. -------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
MEEKS, HELEN ------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
NORTON, DALE EVERITT -----------------------------------------Laurens&#13;
ORR, GLADYS GERTRUDE ___________________________ south Sioux City, Nebr.&#13;
PERSINGER, ELVA ZELMA -----------------------------------------Onawa&#13;
POYZER, NELLIE JEWELL -------------------------------------Spirit Lake&#13;
PRATT, GEORGE W. --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
PRICHARD, ELBERT M. --------------------------------------------Onawa&#13;
PURDY, ELIZABETH MAY --------------------------·-------------Sioux City&#13;
SANDVIG, LILLIAN MARCELLA _______________________________ canton, s. D.&#13;
SAVONELL, ELSIE MARIANNE -----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
SCHELLINGER, ROY --------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
STARR, CLEO B. --------------------------------------------------Spencer&#13;
STURTEVANT, AURELIA MAY --------------------------------Tyndall, S. D.&#13;
THARP, KATHERINE -------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
TROUTMAN, RAY D. --------------------------------------------Hawarden&#13;
WALKER, ISABELLE J. -----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
WHITTEMORE, DILLA --------------------- ---------------------Sioux City&#13;
WISHARD, GRACE ELIZABETH ----------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
WULF, HORACE FERDINAND ------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
R. RASMUSSEN&#13;
&#13;
E. GOODSITE&#13;
&#13;
M. EPPELSHIEMER&#13;
&#13;
B. RADLEY&#13;
&#13;
J. MILLER&#13;
&#13;
E. LICHTENBERG&#13;
&#13;
M. HEATHMAN&#13;
&#13;
Z. BALDWIN&#13;
&#13;
R. SCHOLES&#13;
C. KOETHER&#13;
&#13;
E. ANDERSON&#13;
A. TURNER&#13;
&#13;
L.WINTERFIELD&#13;
J. LEE&#13;
&#13;
M. SABIN&#13;
&#13;
C. KURZ&#13;
C. CONN&#13;
&#13;
A HILL&#13;
G. ARMBRIGHT&#13;
&#13;
H.GILBERT&#13;
G. BERRY&#13;
&#13;
C. KIRBY&#13;
&#13;
C. STODDARD&#13;
&#13;
E.KELLAND&#13;
&#13;
E.WANG&#13;
D. WEINTZ&#13;
&#13;
J. LEYAN&#13;
F. CHAPMAN&#13;
&#13;
R. WILSON&#13;
&#13;
M. STOLT&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
H. ALBRO&#13;
&#13;
G. LEAZER&#13;
&#13;
K. HOLMES&#13;
B. LAMBERT&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-One&#13;
&#13;
BANG&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Two&#13;
&#13;
The past athletic season of Morningside College can truly be said to&#13;
have been the greatest that she has ever seen. Out of a season of 23 contests the Maroons went down to defeat but twice. In the spring of 1917&#13;
Coach Saunderson was able to obtain a heavy schedule of eight games for&#13;
his baseball men, four of which were down State. The team went through&#13;
this entire schedule without a single defeat, making a total of 79 runs to&#13;
their opponents' 20. Wenig done stellar work on the mound for the Maroons, winning five of the games, three of which were shutouts. The season was featured by the heavy hitting of the Maroons, the work of Johnson, Northrup and Eiffert being especially remarkable. The batting average of the team was over .300, which, in 'part, accounts for the large scores&#13;
that were run up.&#13;
In track "Saundy," for the third consecutive year, sent a two-mile&#13;
relay team to the Drake Relays and returned with the banner. Curry, finishing last for Morningside, was over fifty yards in the lead of his nearest&#13;
competitor. Two dual meets, one with Nebraska Wesleyan and the other&#13;
with Yankton, were won by wide margins.&#13;
These meets were featured by the fact that several men who have&#13;
had all of their track training under "Saundy" were able to win their events&#13;
against some of the best men in Dakota and Nebraska.&#13;
In football Morningside tackled the stiffest schedule that she had ever&#13;
prepared for herself. The two Wesleyans and South Dakota University&#13;
should have been enough for anyone, but "Saundy" took out his jack-knife,&#13;
hitched up his trousers, and took Notre Dame on as a dessert. The loss of&#13;
Wenig, Gantt, Behmer, Bashaw and Warnes through enlistment was keenly&#13;
felt. We were fortunate in having a backfield that did not need any particular coaching so that Saunderson could spend his time on the line. The&#13;
result of his work was shown when our line held the famous Notre Dame&#13;
line, allowing them to make but six first downs. The season would have&#13;
been a highly successful one from a Morningside standpoint if we had won&#13;
from no one but Vermillion. The fact that we also won from the two Wesleyans and held Notre Dame makes our victory doubly sweet.&#13;
Morningside took up basketball again in the winter of 1918, after a&#13;
period of five years in which we did not participate in Inter-Collegiate bas-·&#13;
ketball. While it was Saunderson's first attempt to coach a basketball&#13;
team since his stay at Morningside he did wonders with the raw material&#13;
which he had. The team showed remarkable progress as the season advanced and from now on we can expect big things from our basketball men.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Five&#13;
&#13;
Coach Saunderson&#13;
Our Coach&#13;
&#13;
Coach Jason M. Saunderson is the man who is recognized as having&#13;
put Morningside College on the map athletically. Saunderson is a graduate&#13;
of Albion College, where he was a star in all branches of athletics. In football he played quarterback on the offensive and end on the defensive, the&#13;
two most difficult positions on a football team. In 1907 he captained his&#13;
team and was chosen as "All-Michigan" quarterback. In baseball he played&#13;
third base and was noted for his hard hitting. In track he has a record of&#13;
10.1 in the hundred and 22.1 in the two-twenty. He also ran the hurdles&#13;
for his college.&#13;
Since graduation he has been Director of Athletics at South Dakota&#13;
State College and at the University of the South.&#13;
"Saundy" came to Morningside in the fall of 1912 and each year of his&#13;
stay with us has been a little more successful than the previous one. He has&#13;
turned out from a very limited amount of material football teams that have&#13;
defeated schools four or five times as large. Last year, out of a student&#13;
body of about 150 men he was able to turn out a football team that threw&#13;
a scare into the mighty Notre Dame. This same team later in the season&#13;
was able to defeat South Dakota University for the first time in history.&#13;
But not only does Coach Saunderson develop great football teams, his work&#13;
in track and baseball being just as noticeable. Year after year he has&#13;
sent two-mile relay teams to the Drake Relays and has won so often that the&#13;
down State schools have come to concede us this event. In baseball his&#13;
teams have met and defeated the best in Iowa, Minnesota and South Dakota.&#13;
This year he turned his hand to basketball and was able to develop a&#13;
team from wholly raw material that went through the season with only one&#13;
defeat. Morningside's splendid record in athletics is most certainly largely&#13;
due to the work of Coach Saunderson.&#13;
"Saundy" is recognized throughout the athletic world as an exponent&#13;
of clean athletics. All who have had any relations with him know him to be&#13;
a man who always plays clean and as one who is always ready to go more&#13;
than half way in order to be fair to an opponent. It is because of this trait&#13;
that he is so highly respected and loved by his players and the student&#13;
body at large. Here's to "Saundy," the greatest coach we ever had and may&#13;
he see fit to remain with us long .enough to wipe out the long string of defeats that we have suffered at the hands of our ancient rival-a work&#13;
which he has so nobly started.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Six&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Standing- Northrup,&#13;
Pearce, Hunt, Rorapaugh, Swartz,&#13;
Hornney, Wulf, Walker,&#13;
Seated-Obrecht, Hinkley, Norton, Johnson, Lloyd , Meneffee,&#13;
Klatt.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer-Horace Wulf President-Clarence Obrecht&#13;
FOOTBALL 191 7&#13;
Beck, Axel, '20&#13;
Goodrich, Orin, '20&#13;
Hornney, L ee ' 19&#13;
Lory, Milton, '20&#13;
Northrup, Carroll , '19&#13;
Rorapaugh, Fay, '21&#13;
&#13;
Clough, Martin, '19&#13;
Freist, Thomas, '19&#13;
Hinkley, Arthur, '20&#13;
Klatt, Clarence, '20&#13;
Northrup, Carroll, '19&#13;
&#13;
Swartz, Charles, '20&#13;
&#13;
Dubel , Marcus, '20&#13;
Hinkley, Arthur, '20&#13;
Johnson, Leon, ' 18&#13;
Meneffee, Victor, '2 1&#13;
Norton, Dale, '19&#13;
Wulf, Horace, '19&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL 1917&#13;
&#13;
Obrecht, Clarence, '18&#13;
&#13;
Eiffert, Paul , '1 7&#13;
Himmel, Carl , '19&#13;
Johnson, Leon, '18&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas, '19&#13;
Wenig, Erwin, '18&#13;
&#13;
TRACK 1917&#13;
Curry, Wend ell, '17&#13;
Harrington, Ed, '18&#13;
Hornney, Alvin , '17&#13;
Johnson, Leon, ' 1 8&#13;
McKonk ey, Bly, '19&#13;
Pearce, Laurence, '20&#13;
&#13;
Brown, George '20&#13;
Johnson , L eon, '18&#13;
Pearce, Laurence, '20&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Harold, '18&#13;
&#13;
Gantt, Ed, '20&#13;
Harrington, Ray, '17&#13;
Hunt, Albert, '19&#13;
Kenny, Thomas, '20&#13;
Omar, Gaylord, '20&#13;
Wenig, Erwin, '18&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL 1918&#13;
Hinkley, Arthur, '20&#13;
Meneffee, Victor, '21&#13;
Thompson, David, '21&#13;
&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
Coach J . M. Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
Prof. J. J. Hayes&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-Nine&#13;
&#13;
The Football Season&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 62; TRINITY, 7&#13;
Morningside opened her football season by an overwhelming victory&#13;
over Trinity. Except during the last few minutes of play when Agnes, of&#13;
Trinity, received a forward pass and dashed for a touchdown, the Maroon's&#13;
goal was not in danger. The Maroons showed rare form for so early in&#13;
the season, displaying all brands of football, from the open style of play&#13;
to th e old method of line plunging, outclassing their opponents in every department of the game. Goodrich, making his first appearance for the Maroons, shared honors with Johnson as the stars of the game, while the&#13;
work of Dubel at quarter was very promising. Morningside scored two&#13;
touchdowns in the first five minutes of play and from then on it was simply a question of how large the score would be. The game was clean and&#13;
hard fought, and was a fine exhibition to watch despite the large score.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE,79; NEBRASKA WESLEYAN, 0&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
THAT&#13;
&#13;
BEAT&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
Upper Row- Beck, L. G.; Rorapaugh, R.T.; Swartz, C.; Hornney, C.; Wulf, CaptainElect, L. T. ; Coach Saunderson.&#13;
·&#13;
Middle Row- Norton, R. G.; Lory, R. G.; Dubel, Q. B.; Northrup, Captain, R. E.; Johnson, R. H.; Pitman, H.; Meneffee, L. E.&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Front&#13;
&#13;
Row- Pearce,H. B.; Hinkley,&#13;
&#13;
F. B.; Hays, Q. B.; Goodrich, L. H.; Mickelson,&#13;
&#13;
H. B.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside easily trounced the much feared team from Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan. The first touchdown came after three minutes of play. Goodrich received a punt, returned it forty yards and on the next play Hinkley&#13;
advanced it twenty more. Johnson had little trouble in carrying it ·over.&#13;
From then on the romping, raring and fighting Maroons were never in doubt&#13;
as to the final outcome and they proceeded to get revenge for previous victories, by giving them the worst defeat that we ever handed them. Usually&#13;
it is a battle to the finish with honors about even, but this year the Nebraska Methodists were entirely outclassed. The entire Maroon backfield&#13;
starred in this game, Johnson having a little the best of it with six touchdowns to his credit. The game was marred by the poor sportsmanship of&#13;
a few of the Nebraska players.&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 33; DAKOTA WESLEYAN, 0&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 13- Trinity - ------ --- ---------------- -- - 7 M. C. 62 at Sioux City&#13;
Oct. 20-Nebraska Wesleyan _________ __ ·-- ---- OM. C. 79 at Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Hampered to a great degree by overconfidence the Maroons put up&#13;
their poorest game of the season against Dakota Wesleyan. Wesleyan&#13;
kicked off to Morningside and Goodrich receiving the ball on his own fiveyard line raced through the entire Dakota team for a touchdown. The Maroons immediately had visions of another easy 112 to O victory and the result was that the confidence of the Maroons was more in their way than&#13;
were the fighting Wesleyans, who were determined to hold Morningside to&#13;
a low score. When the final whistle blew Dakota Wesleyan had again bowed&#13;
to old M. C. , and once again we had defeated both Wesleyans in the same&#13;
year.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 27-Dakota Wesleyan --- - - - ----- - ----- --- OM. C. 33 at Mitchell&#13;
Nov. 10-University of Notre Dame _______ _____ l3 M. C. Oat Sioux City&#13;
Nov. 17-Dubuque ____ ____________ ___ ___ ___ _ OM. C. 19 at Dubuque&#13;
Nov. 29-South Dakota University __ ___ _____ ___ 7 M. C. 14 at Sioux City&#13;
Total-Opponents, 27; Morningside, · 207.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-One&#13;
&#13;
The Football Season&#13;
&#13;
The Football Season&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 0; NOTRE DAME, 13&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 14; SOUTH DAKOTA UNIVERSITY, 7&#13;
&#13;
On November 10, 1917, occurred one of the two greatest even ts in Morningside's football history. Although defeated by two touchdowns the showing that the Maroons made against one of the best football teams in the&#13;
country will never be forgotten by the largest crowd that ever saw a football game in Sioux City. The score cannot in any measure indicate how&#13;
heroically Coach Saunderson's men fought their more experienced opponents only to taste defeat as a result of two intercepted passes. It was the&#13;
first defeat the Maroons have suffered on their home field for three years.&#13;
The game was a battle royal between the two lines. Pitted against men&#13;
who were used to battering and hammering their opponents the Maroon&#13;
line was able to hold its own, Notre Dame making but six first downs&#13;
throughout the game, while Morningside made fifteen. Time and again&#13;
Beck and Swartz broke through and stopped plays before they were started.&#13;
Northrup, although handicapped by his two dislocated shoulders put up his&#13;
characteristic smashing game. Meneffee played the best game he ever&#13;
played, breaking up play after play aimed at his end. The Notre Dame&#13;
players could not praise too highly the work of Meneffee and Johnson and&#13;
classed them with the best in the country. Dubel, Goodrich and Hinkley&#13;
also done sensational work in puncturing the Notre Dame line and in open&#13;
field running. The Notre Dame first score came in the second quarter&#13;
when Rydsewski, the big Catholic captain, intercepted a Maroon forward&#13;
pass and raced down the field forty yards for a touchdown. Their other&#13;
touchdown came near the end of the third quarter after a Notre Dame man&#13;
had carried another intercepted pass to the Maroon twenty-five-yard line.&#13;
A lucky pass to King netted them twenty more. After three attempts&#13;
Brandy managed to squirm through the line for a touchdown. From every&#13;
aspect it was the finest game of football ever seen in Sioux City, and Morningsiders have a right to feel proud of their team that really outplayed the&#13;
team "that b_ the Army."&#13;
eat&#13;
&#13;
On Thanksgiving Day occurred the other big event in football history&#13;
at Morningside. "We beat South Dakota!" This was an event that we&#13;
had looked forward to for over twenty years. Three times we had played&#13;
them to a scoreless tie, but it was for "Saundy" and the team of 1917 to&#13;
bring us a victory. At last "Van" can change his "It must be done" to "It&#13;
has been done." Although the Coyotes were outclassed in every department they battled like bulldogs and it looked for a time as if history would&#13;
repeat itself and give South Dakota a victory. In the first quarter the&#13;
Maroons were in possession of the ball on their twenty-yard line. On a&#13;
punt formation Johnson missed a bad pass from Swartz and Patrick, of&#13;
South Dakota, scooped it up and ran five yards for a touchdown. The rest&#13;
of the quarter was spent in going up and down the field without either&#13;
having any marked advantage. In the second quarter Dubelcame into&#13;
prominence by a wonderful display of coolness and ability in diagnosing the&#13;
defense which enabled the Maroons to march nearly half the length of the&#13;
field. Then "Dux" in the most spectacular feat of the game carried the ball&#13;
for forty-five yards for a touchdown. Johnson kicked the goal and evened&#13;
up the score. Fine work by Goodrich and Hinkley in this quarter almost resulted in another score, but the half was over before they could accomplish it. Morningside lost another chance to score early in the second half.&#13;
Commencing on their own twenty-yard line the Maroons slowly, steadily and&#13;
surely moved the ball to South Dakota's thirty-yard line. Here Morningside was halted and Johnson attempted a drop kick. It was from a difficult angle, but the ball hit the crossbar squarely in the middle, missing a&#13;
goal by inches only. The Coyotes were forced to kick and the Maroons&#13;
started another march toward the Dakota goal, with Johnson and Dubel doing the major share of work. On the seven-yard line the Maroon backs&#13;
were held three times, when Goodrich saved the day by leaping in the air&#13;
and grabbing a forward pass, although he was surrounded by a number of&#13;
Coyote players. This put the ball on the two-yard line and Hinkley had little trouble in smashing it over, Johnson kicking goal. The Maroons were&#13;
well on their way to another touchdown when the whistle blew and the game&#13;
&#13;
MORNINSIDE, 19; DUBUQUE, 0.&#13;
The Maroons went to Dubuque, hailed as a great football team, and&#13;
they attempted to live on their reputation. The result was a listless game&#13;
on their part, while the fighting Irish threw many a scare into the Maroon&#13;
team. Dubel was unable to start in this game and the poor showing was due&#13;
to some degree to the discord in the backfield. At times the Maroons&#13;
gained their old-time form and marched down the field only to lose a touchdown through poor playing when near the goal or through poor headwork.&#13;
Dubuque had a team of hard fighters who deserve a great deal of credit for&#13;
the showing that they made.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Two&#13;
&#13;
was over.&#13;
Are we proud of the team that has buried the Coyote Jinx? Yea, Bo!&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Northrup, Right End, Captain.&#13;
"Norty" is a Morningside made man.&#13;
&#13;
He has learned&#13;
&#13;
Dubel, Quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
all of his football on old Bass Field and his record shows how&#13;
&#13;
"Dux" was the brainest quarterback that has appeared&#13;
&#13;
well. "Norty" is one of those hard hitting, smashing ends,&#13;
&#13;
on Bass field in years. There may be others who could beat&#13;
&#13;
breaking up play after play before it is started.&#13;
&#13;
him carrying the ball or tackling, but when it came to run-&#13;
&#13;
He is a&#13;
&#13;
good receiver of passes and is fast on covering punts. In all&#13;
respects "Norty" was the right man to lead Morningside's&#13;
greatest team in their initial victory over South Dakota. He&#13;
was the gamest fighter on the gamest team M. C. ever had.&#13;
&#13;
ning a football team he had no peer. He was always cool, always directing the attack at the opponent's weakest point&#13;
and getting the greatest efficiency from his own team. His&#13;
55-yard run for a touchdown against Vermillion was one of&#13;
the sensations of the year.&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
Wulf, Left Tackle, Captain-Elect.&#13;
"Halligan" is so called, because he is like the man&#13;
who bore that name. He is a big and burly tackle, who&#13;
tears up the line and stops all of the opponents' plays&#13;
which are directed his way. He is Captain-elect of next&#13;
year's team, and under the leadership of a man of his&#13;
ability the team should have a very successful season&#13;
if the war does not affect the schedule.&#13;
&#13;
Hinkley, Fullback.&#13;
"Art" was t he most consistent man on the team.&#13;
&#13;
ways the same, he could be depended on to do his part&#13;
whether it was carrying the ball, receiving, or breaking up a&#13;
forward pass. While he never does anything sensational, he&#13;
was one of the most important cogs in the team. His touchdown against Vermillion was probably his most notable performance of t he year.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Right Halfback, Ex.-Captain.&#13;
"Jerry" is one of the greatest halfbacks that ever wore&#13;
a Maroon uniform. For the second time he and Capt. North-&#13;
&#13;
Goodrich, Left Half Back.&#13;
"Goody" was the smallest man on the team, but a more&#13;
&#13;
rup were given berths on the All-State team, and has even&#13;
been mentioned for an All-American halfback. "Jerry" is&#13;
&#13;
game and a harder little scrapper never donned a football&#13;
suit. He made the longest runs of the year. Against Da-&#13;
&#13;
big, shifty, hard hitting, an end runner as well as a line&#13;
&#13;
kota Wesleyan he carried the ball for the initial touchdown,&#13;
&#13;
plunger, and is recognized as the best punter in the State.&#13;
&#13;
95 yards, through the whole field, and from that time on no&#13;
&#13;
"Jerry" is a hard worker and a consistent player, although&#13;
&#13;
one was in doubt as to the outcome of the game. He was&#13;
troubled part of the season with a lame shoulder, but in&#13;
&#13;
he was at his best in the Notre Dame game, at times tearing&#13;
big holes in their famous line.&#13;
&#13;
spite of this handicap his showing was good enough to put&#13;
him on the All-State second team.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Al-&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Meneffe, Left End.&#13;
"Vic," our big left end, probably made more improvement during the year than any man on the team. Before&#13;
this he was good enough to be captain of the Sioux City&#13;
High School team and he was the All-State High School end.&#13;
With this backing it is easy to see that he was one of the ·&#13;
stars of the season. His and Johnson's playing on the AllState team against Camp Dodge was pronounced by authorities to be the best exhibition of good playing of any of the&#13;
men gathered for this event.&#13;
&#13;
Swartz, Center.&#13;
"Red" played a great game at center and few were the&#13;
gains that were made over him. He is a wizard at solving&#13;
the other side's offense and gets through it time and again&#13;
to break up the play. He goes to West Point this summer&#13;
and he will be greatly missed when Saunderson next gathers&#13;
his "pigskin chasers" together.&#13;
&#13;
Norton, Right Guard.&#13;
&#13;
Beck, Left Guard.&#13;
"Swede," the big Viking, was the hardest fighter and the&#13;
most consistent man on the line. Me charged hard and low&#13;
and carried everything before him. He still has some time&#13;
in College and if not taken into the army should develop into&#13;
one of the greatest line men Morningside has ever had. He&#13;
was not outplayed by an opponent during the season.&#13;
&#13;
"Skinny," although a veteran of last year, was slow to&#13;
develop his old-time fight and pep. He was hard pushed to&#13;
hold a regular berth during the first of the season, but later&#13;
developed into one of the most aggressive and effective of&#13;
t he line men.&#13;
&#13;
Norton was one of the few line men who&#13;
&#13;
played consistently in the South Dakota game, being a big&#13;
factor in bringing us our victory.&#13;
&#13;
Lory, Right Guard.&#13;
"Sam" is both big and aggressive. He played his best&#13;
&#13;
Rorapaugh, Right Tackle.&#13;
"Ror" was the biggest man on the team.&#13;
&#13;
He played&#13;
&#13;
right tackle during most of the season. His playing at times&#13;
was spectacular, although not as consistent as some others.&#13;
He played his best in the Notre Dame game. As this is his&#13;
first year with us the future should hold great things for&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
games during the early part of the season.&#13;
&#13;
He played&#13;
&#13;
through the entire season this year after having his leg broken last year, and that was something which is seldom done.&#13;
This was his first year as a letter man and he should develop&#13;
rapidly this next year. Like the rest of the line his best&#13;
performance was against Notre Dame, when they held their&#13;
own against some of the best line men in the west.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Mickelson, Half Back.&#13;
Percy is small, but a real fighter; a fellow who tries and&#13;
works all the time, early and late, and from one end of the&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Center.&#13;
Lee played at center and guard this year.&#13;
&#13;
He is fine&#13;
&#13;
season to the other.&#13;
&#13;
He hails from Eagle Grove, where he&#13;
&#13;
at getting through and breaking up plays of the opposition.&#13;
&#13;
played with a fast High SchooI team. He is one of the best&#13;
&#13;
Although handicapped by sickness, he played when he could,&#13;
&#13;
all-around boosters we have. Although he has not yet made&#13;
&#13;
and made a fine showing for himself and the team, getting&#13;
into enough games to win his "M."&#13;
&#13;
his letter in athletics he is one of the men who has helped&#13;
to build up and make good teams for old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
Pitman, Half Back&#13;
Brown, Sub Quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
"Pit" was the first sub in the backfield and while he&#13;
&#13;
George was a green hand at the game this&#13;
&#13;
did not win his letter, he missed it only by a small margin.&#13;
He is one of the most promising men on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
year, but he quickly showed that he could play&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
played in the line while in High School, but"Saundy"switched&#13;
&#13;
football.&#13;
&#13;
him to backfield, where he developed rapidly both in speed&#13;
&#13;
second team in scrimmage and promises to be varsity material next year.&#13;
&#13;
and line hitting ability. He is a hard and steady worker and&#13;
&#13;
He made a good showing&#13;
&#13;
deserves everything he gets.&#13;
&#13;
Pearce, Full Back.&#13;
Lawrence played half and full back with the second string&#13;
backfield this year.&#13;
&#13;
Hays, Quarterback.&#13;
Joe played with the second team during the early part&#13;
&#13;
He is a man with wonderful possibili-&#13;
&#13;
of the year. His ability as a quarterback to out guess the&#13;
&#13;
ties on the gridiron, if he will only apply himself. He came&#13;
&#13;
varsity as well as to carry the ball for many long gains soon&#13;
&#13;
to us from Fonda, where he had had considerable football&#13;
&#13;
won him a position on the varsity squad. While he appeared&#13;
&#13;
experience. He is big and fast and there is no reason why&#13;
&#13;
in but one game, against Dubuque, he gave a good account&#13;
&#13;
he will not make a fine half back in another season.&#13;
&#13;
of himself and bids fair to become a heady and clever&#13;
quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
against the&#13;
&#13;
Statistics of Notre Dame Game&#13;
-------------------------1st Half&#13;
II 2nd h a lf II Totals.&#13;
=----c------c---c-c-----,---c-c-----~-----------D.&#13;
Yards ball was advanced&#13;
b y runs and pass es____ --------1&#13;
Yards gained on runs from scrimmage ____________________ l l J -67 JJ-60 J-f211---186 1-99&#13;
26&#13;
Yards kicks were r e turn e d -------------------------------1&#13;
Yards gained through forward p a sse s ______________________ J&#13;
Number of tim es fir s t clown was made-------------------~-1&#13;
Num ber of times held for clowns __________________________ J&#13;
Number of forward passes attempted ---------------------1&#13;
11 1&#13;
111&#13;
61&#13;
17 1&#13;
7&#13;
Number of comp leted passes --- --------- - -----------------1&#13;
l JI&#13;
4&#13;
Number of passes that team had intercepted ______________ l&#13;
40 11&#13;
OI 20 11&#13;
OJ 60&#13;
Yards gained through intercepted passes __________________ l&#13;
Number of yards ball was kicked __________________________ J 135 1 302ll147l---l185~21487&#13;
Number of times ball was kicked __________________________ J&#13;
31&#13;
Number of yards team was thrown for loss----------------201&#13;
Number of yards penalized --------------------------------1&#13;
30 1&#13;
OIi&#13;
&#13;
Top&#13;
Row- Crail, Swartz,&#13;
Wulf,&#13;
Goodrich, Cowan, Rorapaugh.&#13;
Third Row- Raun,&#13;
McBride,&#13;
Scheerer, Hackett,&#13;
Hilmer,&#13;
Long, Copeland.&#13;
Seco nd Row- Brown, Pitman, Mickelson,&#13;
Pitstick, Hays, Dubel, Johnson.&#13;
Front Row- Pearce, Meneffee,&#13;
Lory, Norton, Northrup, (Capt.), Hinkley, Hornney, Beck.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-One&#13;
&#13;
The baseball season of 1917 was a series of continuous victories, the&#13;
team winning all of the eight games on the schedule. The team was composed almost wholly of veterans, with a wealth of new material for the few&#13;
vacant positions. On the annual down State trip the team defeated the&#13;
best Collegiate teams in the State by large scores. In no game of the entire season were the Maroons ever in danger of being defeated, some of the&#13;
games being so one-sided that they were not interesting from a spectator's&#13;
standpoint.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 7; HIGHLAND PARK, 0.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Upper&#13;
Row- Friest,&#13;
P.; Engle, P.&#13;
Middle&#13;
Row- Prichard, Sub.; Bashaw, Sub.; Klatt, 2d; Clough, S. S., Capt.; Saunderson,&#13;
Couch.&#13;
Front Row--Lloyd, 1st; Johnson, 3rd; Eiffert, C.; Wenig,&#13;
P.; Hinkley, R. F.&#13;
&#13;
MAROON BATTING AVERAGES&#13;
Johnson, third base-------------------------------------------Northrup, left field-------------------------------------------Eiffert, catcher ______________________ _: ________________________&#13;
Hinkley, right field-------------------------------------------Clough, short stop, captain ------------------------------------Wenig, pitcher-----------------------------------------------Himmel, center field------------------------------------------Lloyd, first base ---------------------------------------------Klatt, second base---------------------------------------------&#13;
&#13;
Highland Park opened the Maroon season with a game on Bass Field&#13;
on May 1. Our veteran "Obe" held them to two hits and no scores, striking&#13;
out sixteen of their batters. The heavy hitting of the Maroons secured&#13;
eleven hits off Laurence, of Highland Park. The hitting of Northrup, Himmel and Wenig accounted for the Maroon scores.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 11; HIGHLAND PARK, 2&#13;
&#13;
.469&#13;
.384&#13;
.367&#13;
.324&#13;
.293&#13;
.280&#13;
.280&#13;
.219&#13;
.187&#13;
&#13;
Team Average _____ _______________________________________ .305&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
May 1-Highland Park ---------------------------------- 0 M. C. 7&#13;
May 2-Highland Park ----------------------------------- 2 M. C. 11&#13;
May 14-Ellsworth --------------------------------------- 1 M. C. 7&#13;
May 15-State Teachers --------------------------------- - 3 M. C. 6&#13;
May 15-Highland Park ---------------------------------- 6 M. C. 18&#13;
May 17-Highland Park---------------------------------- 0 M. C. 5&#13;
May 30-Dubuque --------------------------------------- 8 M. C. 15&#13;
June 1-Anthon ______ . --------------------------------- 0 M. C. 10&#13;
&#13;
On the next day "Lefty" Obrecht went in against them and held them&#13;
to six scattered hits which resulted in two runs. The game was featured by&#13;
extra base drives by Lloyd, Eiffert, Northrup, Johnson and Clough, of&#13;
Morningside. Highland Park was rated as one of the best teams in the&#13;
State and the two Maroon victories gave promise of a good season.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 7; ELLSWORTH, 1&#13;
&#13;
The Maroons opened their annual down State trip with a game at&#13;
Ellsworth on May 14. Wenig, for Morningside, allowed but four hits and&#13;
was given errorless support. The Maroons obtained on 1y six hits, but poor&#13;
support gave them seven runs.&#13;
&#13;
Total-Opponents, 20; Morningside, 79.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Two&#13;
&#13;
Nine ty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Clough, Capt., Short Stop.&#13;
"Marty," at short, put up a steady and consistent game&#13;
throughout the year.&#13;
&#13;
He is one of the fastest infielders that&#13;
&#13;
has donned a Maroon suit for many years.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 6; STATE TEACHERS, 3&#13;
&#13;
noted as being much of a talker, but his actions speak for&#13;
themselves.&#13;
&#13;
On the 15th the team journeyed to Cedar Falls, where they crossed bats&#13;
with the fast team from State Teachers. Obrecht, on the mound for the&#13;
Maroons, held the Teachers to six hits and three scores, while his teammates piled up six scores. While the Maroons were hitting in the pinches&#13;
in these two games the team was far below its standard.&#13;
&#13;
"Marty" is not&#13;
&#13;
He was highly respected by all of the men&#13;
&#13;
on the team and made a very successful captain.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 18; HIGHLAND PARK, 6&#13;
&#13;
On the 16th the team again met Highland Park at Des Moines. In the&#13;
first game, Friest, a new man, pitched and won his first College game.&#13;
Friest allowed but six hits, although erratic support gave Highland Park&#13;
six scores. In this game the Maroon sluggers again hit their stride, every&#13;
man getting at least one hit. Eiffert, Northrup, Johnson and Himmel were&#13;
the leading hitters.&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd, Capt.-Elect, First Base.&#13;
"T. K.," the southpaw first baseman, served his second&#13;
year on the nine and made good in every sense of the word.&#13;
Tom played outfield last year, but rapidly rounded into a&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 5; HIGHLAND PARK, 0&#13;
&#13;
first class infielder this season .&#13;
&#13;
In the second game the Highland Park team came back strong and&#13;
put up a stiff game. "Obe," for the Maroons, held them scoreless, while&#13;
the timely hitting of Johnson and Hinkley accounted for the Maroon scores&#13;
The game was marked for nearly errorless ball on both sides.&#13;
·MORNINGSIDE, 15; DUBUQUE, 8&#13;
&#13;
Dubuque came to Sioux City on the 30th and were defeated in a loosely played game, which was featured by the heavy hitting of the Maroons.&#13;
Wenig, for Morningside was given poor support which was the cause of&#13;
Dubuque's large score. Johnson, Northrup and Eiffert done the best hitting for the Maroons in this game.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 10; ANTHON, 0&#13;
&#13;
On the 1st of June the team met and defeated the fast town team of&#13;
Anthon. Wenig allowed but three hits and struck out fourteen men. This&#13;
game, like the majority of the season, was featured by the fast fielding and&#13;
heavy hitting of the Maroons. Clough, Wenig, Hinkley and Johnson secured three hits apiece, several of which were for extra bases.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Four&#13;
&#13;
Eiffert, Catcher.&#13;
"Turk" is a College baseball player extraordinary. He&#13;
is a phenomenal catcher, a hard hitter and a clever base runner.&#13;
&#13;
"Turk" can be counted on to get the most out of a&#13;
&#13;
pitcher and to keep the entire team steady.&#13;
&#13;
When on the&#13;
&#13;
bases he always keeps his opponents wondering what he&#13;
will do next.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Five&#13;
&#13;
Wenig, Pitcher.&#13;
"Obe's" great speed and fast breaking courves made him&#13;
the most effective College pitcher in the State this year.&#13;
"Obe" pitched and won five of the eight games on the Maroon schedule.&#13;
&#13;
He always remained cool and was always&#13;
&#13;
willing to give the best he had.&#13;
&#13;
Obrecht, Pitcher.&#13;
"Lefty," our little southpaw pitcher, has a quick hook&#13;
and also a good fast ball. This was his second year with the&#13;
Maroons and under the direction of Eiffert he had no trouble in winning both of his games. Phoebe is a hard worker&#13;
and showed considerable improvement over last year.&#13;
&#13;
Klatt, Second Base.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, third base.&#13;
"Jerry had an exceptional year at the bat this season,&#13;
&#13;
"Dave managed to land a regular berth at second this&#13;
&#13;
His timely hitting helped put many a game&#13;
&#13;
year over a large field of candidates for the only open in-&#13;
&#13;
"on ice" for the Maroons. He fielded his position well and&#13;
&#13;
field position. He ably plugged up the hole in the infield&#13;
&#13;
made good use of his great throwing ability.&#13;
&#13;
caused by the enlistment of Behmer, and was noted for his&#13;
&#13;
hitting .469.&#13;
&#13;
sharp fielding.&#13;
&#13;
Hinkley, Right Field.&#13;
Although this was "Art's" first year on the team he&#13;
soon proved himself to be a veteran ball player. "Art" was&#13;
the most consistent hitter on the team and could be counted&#13;
on in a pinch. Besides being a sure fielder he often assisted&#13;
Eiffert behind the bat and proved to be a very valuable&#13;
&#13;
Friest, Pitcher.&#13;
Tom, another left hander, succeeded in winning his&#13;
"M" this year by winning his game against Highland Park,&#13;
and allowing only six hits. With a little more training and&#13;
experience he promises to develop into a wonderful pitcher.&#13;
&#13;
catcher.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Engle, Pitcher.&#13;
Clarence failed to win his "M" this year only because of&#13;
the abundance of veteran pitchers.&#13;
&#13;
Besides being a fine&#13;
&#13;
pitcher he showed exceptional ability in the outfield, and he&#13;
promises to be a mainstay this spring.&#13;
&#13;
ETBALL&#13;
&#13;
Bashaw, Utility Outfielder.&#13;
"Bush" missed getting his "M" by the narrow margin&#13;
of one game.&#13;
&#13;
He was a good fielder and a fair hitter and&#13;
&#13;
had it not been for his enlistment he would have landed a&#13;
regular berth this year.&#13;
&#13;
Northrup, Left Field.&#13;
"Norty," our veteran pitcher, was used in the outfield&#13;
this year because of a dislocated shoulder. "Norty" was the&#13;
most able man on the team in getting hits when they meant&#13;
runs. He drove in more runs than any other man on the team&#13;
Himmel, Center Field.&#13;
Carl, a new man, easily outclassed all candidates for&#13;
center field. With his big stick he made many a long drive&#13;
that meant scores for the Maroons at a time when they were&#13;
needed.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-Nine&#13;
&#13;
The basketball season was a decided success, despite the fact that it had&#13;
been five years since we had participated in inter-collegiate basketball. Although only six games were played, five of which resulted in victories for&#13;
the Maroon five, the team showed remarkable development under Saunderson's able coaching.&#13;
&#13;
And next year with Pearce as captain, a longer&#13;
&#13;
schedule, and with the experience gained this year, Morningside will be prepared to take the place in basketball that she holds in every other sport.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 21; ABERDEEN NORMAL, 12.&#13;
The opening game of the season was played with the Aberdeen Normal&#13;
team on the local floor. At the end of the first half the score stood 8 to 3&#13;
in favor of the teachers, but the Maroons showed a real come back spirit&#13;
and won, 21 to 12.&#13;
&#13;
The game was hard fought all the way and the Ma-&#13;
&#13;
roons had to extent themselves to win.&#13;
the star for the visitors.&#13;
Upper Row- Saunderson, Coach; Brown,&#13;
Lower Row- Pearce, Hinkley, Thompson.&#13;
&#13;
Menefee,&#13;
&#13;
John s on, Lloyd, Norton.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 19; YANKTON, 35.&#13;
&#13;
Aberdeen Normal __ ___ __ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ 12 M. C. 21&#13;
Yankton ____ ___ __ __ __ ___ ____ ___ ______ ___ ___35 M. C. 19&#13;
&#13;
Huron _____ ________ ______ __ ____ _____ __ ____ ll M. C. 20&#13;
Yankton _______ ___ ___ _______ __ ____ ___ ______ 16 M. C. 33&#13;
Total-Opponents, 103; Morningside, 140.&#13;
&#13;
For the Maroons there was no particular star,&#13;
&#13;
the whole team doing stellar work for the opening game.&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
&#13;
Trinity - ------ -- - - ------ ----- - - -- ----- - - -- -16 M. C. 17&#13;
Western Union __ _____ __ ______ ______ _____ ___ 13 M. C. 17&#13;
&#13;
Capt. Corey, playing center, was&#13;
&#13;
In the second game of the year the Maroons received their only defeat.&#13;
&#13;
The game was played at Yankton on a small and very poor floor.&#13;
&#13;
The game was exceedingly rough and little real basketball was displayed.&#13;
Not being used to such a floor the Maroons were at a great handicap. The&#13;
score was 35 to 19 in favor of Yankton. Although the Maroons outplayed&#13;
them in the second half they were unable to overcome the big lead that&#13;
Yankton had gained in the first period.&#13;
&#13;
One Il un d r ed&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred One&#13;
&#13;
Hinkley, Capt., Left Forward.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 17; TRINITY, 16.&#13;
&#13;
"Art" was the best floor man on the team and worked&#13;
&#13;
The game with Trinity, played on the home floor, resulted in a 17 to&#13;
&#13;
the ball up the floor continually. He was also a good shot&#13;
&#13;
16 victory for the Maroons. It was a great game to watch as neither team&#13;
&#13;
for the basket, and a hard and consistent player, who made&#13;
&#13;
was able to gain a commanding lead at any point, the score see-sawing&#13;
back and forth. The first half ended in a tie and Capt. Hinkley hung up&#13;
&#13;
good as captain.&#13;
&#13;
the basket that won the game just before time was out. The game was featured by close guarding. Johnson played a great game for the Maroons,&#13;
breaking up play after play.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 30; Western Union, 13.&#13;
Pearce, Right Guard.&#13;
&#13;
The next game with Western Union was also played on the home&#13;
At no time was&#13;
&#13;
Pearce, at running guard, proved to be t he most sen-&#13;
&#13;
the game in doubt, the final score being Morningside, 30; Western Union,&#13;
&#13;
sational basket shooter. He rung basket after basket from&#13;
the middle of t he floor when the basket was closely guarded.&#13;
&#13;
floor and resulted in an easy victory for the Maroons.&#13;
13.&#13;
&#13;
Pearce and Brown did some sensational basket shooting in this game.&#13;
&#13;
He shared with Brown the point winning honors of the&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 20; HURON, 11.&#13;
&#13;
squad.&#13;
&#13;
Huron College proved another easy victim and went down to defeat&#13;
by a 20 to 11 score. The Maroons did not play with their customary punch&#13;
in this game or the score might have been much larger. Pearce and Brown&#13;
again made the majority of the baskets.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, 33; YANKTON, 16.&#13;
In the closing game of the season Yankton was defeated, 33 to 16. Morningside gained an early lead and maintained it throughout. Yankton put&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Left Guard.&#13;
"Jerry," because of his size and shiftness, developed&#13;
&#13;
up a good fight, but were seemingly outclassed by the Maroons, who by&#13;
&#13;
into a fine standing guard. He did his best work in breaking&#13;
&#13;
this time had developed into a splendid organizatoin, with good team work&#13;
&#13;
up the passing of opposing teams and forced them to shoot&#13;
&#13;
and excellent basket shooting. Pearce and Brown made six field goals&#13;
apiece. Thompson, playing in place of Capt. Hinkley, who was out with&#13;
&#13;
before they reached the basket.&#13;
&#13;
an injury, made four field goals and played a good game.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Two&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Three&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Right Forward.&#13;
&#13;
Norton, Forward.&#13;
&#13;
George was the best under the basket shot on the team.&#13;
The team had great confidence in feeding the ball to him and&#13;
&#13;
over the floor with him, was the pepiest man on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
he could be depended on to make the points. He was a very&#13;
hard man to guard.&#13;
&#13;
He was a hard worker and forced the varsity to do their utmost to keep their regular positions on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
"Strangler," in spite of his 190 pounds that he carried&#13;
&#13;
Meneffee, Center.&#13;
&#13;
Swartz, Center.&#13;
&#13;
"Vic" was a good floor man, but a rather poor basket&#13;
shooter. He is big and fast, handles the ball well and was a&#13;
&#13;
"Red" was often used at center, where his size told to&#13;
good advantage. Although rather slow in floor work he&#13;
&#13;
big factor in the teamwork.&#13;
&#13;
proved to be a valuable man in shooting baskets.&#13;
&#13;
Although not an exceptional&#13;
&#13;
jumper he was able to secure his share of the tip-offs.&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd, Guard.&#13;
Thompson, Guard.&#13;
"Bud," although handicapped by his size, was the only&#13;
man besides the regulars to win an "M." He often substi-&#13;
&#13;
While Tom did not join the squad until the second semester he was not slow in getting into shape and proving&#13;
that he could still play basketball.&#13;
&#13;
He played in several&#13;
&#13;
games and always gave a good account of himself.&#13;
&#13;
tuted at guard and proved to be very effective at breaking&#13;
up plays before they were well started.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Five&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Class Basketball Tournament&#13;
Class Standing.&#13;
Class of 1920, Sophomores_&#13;
&#13;
Won.&#13;
___________________________ 4&#13;
&#13;
Lost.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1921, Freshmen _______________________ ___ ___ __ 3&#13;
&#13;
·o&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1918, Seniors ______________ _________________________ 2&#13;
2&#13;
Class of 1919, Juniors _________________________________ 1&#13;
4&#13;
Academy ------------------------------------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
HINKLEY&#13;
&#13;
PIERCE&#13;
&#13;
The Class Teams&#13;
&#13;
Scores of Games.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
21 Juniors&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
24 Academy&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
21 Seniors&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
16 Academy&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
13 Seniors&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
46 Academy&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
28 Juniors&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
25 Academy&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
20 Juniors&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
26 Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Officials.&#13;
Referees: J. J. Hayes, Coach Saunderson&#13;
Umpires: T. McBride, D. Norton, R. Smith&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores.&#13;
Smith ________ L.&#13;
Goodrich ______ R.&#13;
Swartz ________&#13;
Pearce ________ L.&#13;
Mickelson (c) __ R.&#13;
Freshmen.&#13;
L. Copeland ______ L.&#13;
P. Jones _________ R.&#13;
J. Lee ____________&#13;
D. Thompson _____ L.&#13;
R. Pitman ________ R.&#13;
M. Shafenberg (c) _&#13;
Seniors.&#13;
C. Sherwood ______ L.&#13;
L. Johnson _______ R.&#13;
L. Lehan _________&#13;
T. McBride (c) ____ L.&#13;
R. McBride ______ R&#13;
Juniors.&#13;
D. Norton (c) _____ L.&#13;
B. Cooper -------R.&#13;
M. Evans --------R.&#13;
A. Hunt __________&#13;
R. Schellenger ----L.&#13;
R. Troutman _____ R.&#13;
Academy.&#13;
H. Dale __________ L.&#13;
L. Shearer (c) ____ R.&#13;
C. Hartzell _______&#13;
R. Webb ____ ____ L.&#13;
H. Harding _______ R.&#13;
D. Reifsteck ______ R.&#13;
R.&#13;
0.&#13;
C.&#13;
L.&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
C.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
F.&#13;
F.&#13;
C.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
SWARTZ&#13;
&#13;
MICKELSON&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seven&#13;
&#13;
Northwest Iowa Basketball Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
Paullina&#13;
Hospers&#13;
Milford&#13;
Holstein&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Pisgah&#13;
Galva&#13;
&#13;
Second Round&#13;
&#13;
First Round&#13;
14 Orange City&#13;
13 Rock Valley&#13;
14 Modale&#13;
22 Castana&#13;
14 Ireton&#13;
40 Merrill&#13;
8 Lake Park&#13;
.28 Magnolia&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
10&#13;
7&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
9&#13;
6&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Remsen&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Milford&#13;
Hospers&#13;
Paullina&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
14&#13;
24&#13;
14&#13;
30&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Pierson&#13;
·10&#13;
Holstein&#13;
6&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
10&#13;
Hartley&#13;
13&#13;
Pisgah&#13;
8&#13;
Galva&#13;
9&#13;
Sloan&#13;
13&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Third Round&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
Milford&#13;
Paullina&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
9&#13;
16&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Remsen&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Hospers&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
7&#13;
14&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Paullina&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
&#13;
44&#13;
&#13;
Officials&#13;
&#13;
Referee-Coach J . M. Saunderson&#13;
Umpire-Prof. J. J. Hayes&#13;
Time Keepers-Tom Lloyd, Lee Hornney&#13;
SIOUX CITY TRIBUNE'S ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAMS&#13;
First Team&#13;
&#13;
Deiters, Sioux Center,&#13;
Torstenson, Milford&#13;
Burgett, Spencer (Capt.),&#13;
Dows, Sioux Center,&#13;
Hollenbeck, Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Position&#13;
&#13;
Forward&#13;
Forward&#13;
Center&#13;
Guard&#13;
Guard&#13;
&#13;
Second Team&#13;
&#13;
Ford,&#13;
Conn,&#13;
Van Rocke},&#13;
Ottipoly&#13;
Emerick,&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eight&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
Hartley&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Sioux Center&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d Nine&#13;
&#13;
Monument Run&#13;
&#13;
SHEARER&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd Schearer, First.&#13;
April 21, 1917&#13;
Morningside's two-mile relay team won this event at the Drake Stadium on April 21 for the third consecutive year. McConkey, in starting&#13;
the race for Morningside, ran the best race of his life and handed the stick&#13;
to Omar in third place. Omar started out at full speed and near the end&#13;
of the first quarter passed. into the lead. He maintained this lead until the&#13;
turn on the last quarter when he sprained his ankle, making it well nigh&#13;
impossible for him to finish. Walker started the race under a great handicap and was not able to catch up with the leaders until the last lap. With&#13;
a fine burst of speed in the last 200 yards he was able to give Curry a lead&#13;
of fifteen yards. Curry immediately set out to widen his lead and finished a good fifty yards in the lead of his nearest competitor. But for the&#13;
disaster to Omar the team probably would have lowered the record of&#13;
8 :15, which is held by the 1916 Morningside team.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ten&#13;
     &#13;
Albert Hunt, Second.&#13;
Merle Shafenberg, Third.&#13;
Lloyd Schearer, First, Academy.&#13;
On the 22nd of February, over a course made very slippery by a thin&#13;
layer of snow, Lloyd Schearer broke all precedent at Morningside by finishing first in the annual Monument run. He was the first Academy man&#13;
that ever won this race, thereby winning two medals. The Monument run&#13;
is the only cross country event of the year at Morningside. It consists of a&#13;
trip to the Floyd Monument, of about two miles, and return, and is always&#13;
run on Washington's birthday, regardless of the weather.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred El even&#13;
&#13;
Yankton-Morningside Dual&#13;
May 5, 1917, at Morningside&#13;
May 11, 1917, at University Place&#13;
SUMMARY OF MEET&#13;
&#13;
100-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Fetz W Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
10:2&#13;
&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Fetz W Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
23:2&#13;
&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Curry M Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
53:2&#13;
&#13;
Half-mile run&#13;
&#13;
Walker M McConkey M&#13;
&#13;
2:06:2&#13;
&#13;
Mile-run&#13;
&#13;
Kinney M Hunt M&#13;
&#13;
4:52:2&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington M Fetz W&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
120-yard hurdles&#13;
220-yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
Horney M E. Harrington M&#13;
&#13;
High jump&#13;
&#13;
Haworth W Waddell W&#13;
&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
&#13;
Wenig M Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
&#13;
Pearce M Kahn, E. Odgen W&#13;
&#13;
Shot put&#13;
Discus&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington M Johnson M&#13;
Gorham W WenigM&#13;
&#13;
Gantt M Best Y&#13;
&#13;
100-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF MEET&#13;
&#13;
28:4&#13;
5:7&#13;
20:11&#13;
10:1&#13;
37 :1 1/2&#13;
110:8&#13;
&#13;
Best Y Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
220-yard dash&#13;
440-yard dash&#13;
&#13;
Curry M Cutts Y&#13;
&#13;
880-yard run&#13;
&#13;
Walker M Rogers Y&#13;
Hunt M Wayard Y&#13;
&#13;
Mile-run&#13;
Two-mile run&#13;
&#13;
Van Horne M E. Williams M&#13;
&#13;
120-yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington M Garable Y&#13;
&#13;
220-yard hurdles&#13;
&#13;
E. Harrington M A. Hornney M&#13;
&#13;
Shot put&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington M Johnson M&#13;
&#13;
Discus&#13;
&#13;
Johnson M Cutts Y&#13;
&#13;
High jump&#13;
&#13;
Wenig M Leitch M, tied&#13;
&#13;
Broad jump&#13;
&#13;
Wenig M Gantt M&#13;
&#13;
Pole vault&#13;
&#13;
Rogers y Troutman and Pearce M&#13;
&#13;
Mile relay, Yankton 3 :34 :1&#13;
Total-M. C., 67; Nebraska, 29.&#13;
Total-M. C., 76; Yankton, 33.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twelve&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirteen.&#13;
&#13;
10:2&#13;
23:4&#13;
52&#13;
2:01:2&#13;
4:44&#13;
10:40&#13;
17:3&#13;
29&#13;
36 :10 1/2&#13;
100 :8 1/2&#13;
5:4&#13;
20:7&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Summary of Home Meet--1917&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Gantt, '20; Hyde, '20; H. Mahood, '19, 11:&#13;
220-Yard Dash-Curry, '17; Hyde, '20; D. Bleakly, Academy, 24 :4.&#13;
440-Yard Dash-Curry, '17; Gantt, '20; C. Mahood, Academy, 53.4.&#13;
Half-Mile Run-McConkey, '18; Walker, '18, 2 :11.&#13;
Mile Run- Kenny, '20; Hunt, '19; Sherwood, '18, 4 :52.&#13;
Two-Mile Run-Van Horne, '17; E. Williams, '17; Trefz, '20, 10 :49.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles-Connor, Academy; E; Harrington, '18; A. Horney,&#13;
'17,18:1.&#13;
220- Yard Hurdles-Curry, '17; Hyde, '20; D. Bleakly, Academy, 27 :4.&#13;
High Jump-Leitch, '20; Pearce, '20; Wenig, '18; Himmel, '20; E. Harrington, '18, 5 :4.&#13;
Broad Jump-Wenig, '18; E. Harrington, 18; Gantt, '20, 19 :2.&#13;
Freshmen-Class of 1920, first, 32 1-3 points.&#13;
Seniors-Class of 1917, second, 24 points.&#13;
Juniors-Class of 1918, third, 20 2-3 points.&#13;
Academy-Fourth, 2 points.&#13;
Sophomores-Class of 1919, fifth, 4 points.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Track Records&#13;
JOO-Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908, :10.&#13;
220-Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903, :22.1.&#13;
440-Yard Dash-V. E. Montgomery, 1913, :51.4.&#13;
880-Yard Run-W. E. Curry, 1915, 2 :01.1.&#13;
Mile Run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1908,&#13;
N. J. Williams, 1914, 4 :40.&#13;
Two-Mile Run-L. R. Chapman, 1908, 10 :05.&#13;
220-Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910, :25 :1.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911, :15 :4.&#13;
High Jump-W. McIntosh, 1914, 5 feet, 7 1/2 inches.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E. West, 1911, 21 feet, 2 inches.&#13;
Shot Put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912, 39 feet, 1/ 2 inch.&#13;
Hammer Throw-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911, 121 feet, 3 1/2 inches.&#13;
Discus-R. R. Vernon, 1915, 128 feet, 6 inches.&#13;
Pole Vault-Herman Leuder, 1915, 11 feet, 10 inches.&#13;
Mile Relay-V. E. Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser,&#13;
E. G. Quarnstrom, F. E. Burns, 1909, 3 :36.2.&#13;
Two-Mile Relay-H. Walker, V. Lavely,&#13;
M. Morley, W. Curry, 1915, 8 :15.&#13;
Monument Run-V. Lavely, 1914, 18 :01.2.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
"M"&#13;
&#13;
Meet&#13;
&#13;
May 4, 1917&#13;
1.00-Yard Dash-Gates, Sioux City; Slipe, Hawarden; Clarke, Lemars, 10: 1.&#13;
Mile Run-Henry, Hawarden; C. Roberts, Storm Lake; Senkey, Cherokee,&#13;
4:55.&#13;
Half-Mile Relay-Sioux City, Hawarden, LeMars, 1 :39.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles-McKee, Sioux City; Kock, LeMars, Knott, Sioux City,&#13;
19:.&#13;
440-Yard Run-Shafenburg, Sergeant Bluffs; Winter, Sioux City; Coffee,&#13;
Sioux City, 54 :2.&#13;
220-Yard Hurdles-Munro, LeMars; Knott, Sioux City; Norman, Elk Point,&#13;
29:4.&#13;
Half-Mile Run-Henry, Hawarden; Bergquist, Sioux City; Kircher, Hawarden, 2 :11.&#13;
220-Yard Dash-McKee, Sioux City; Bedell, LeMars; Slipe, Hawarden, 24: 1.&#13;
Mile Relay-Sioux City, Cherokee, Hawarden, 3 :49.&#13;
Pole Vault-Duhinski, Cherokee; Smythe, Elk Point, Jones, Sioux City, 9&#13;
feet, 9 inches.&#13;
High Jump-J. Coffie, Sergeant Bluffs; Coffie, Sioux City; Smythe, Elk&#13;
Point; Conn, Hartley, 5 feet 4 inches.&#13;
Broad Jump-Gates, Sioux City; Slipe, Hawarden; J. Coffie, Sergeant&#13;
Bluffs, 19 feet, 7 inches.&#13;
Discus-Brucker, LeMars; Winters, Sioux City; Mickelson, Battle Creek,&#13;
109 feet, 8 inches.&#13;
Shot Put-Brucker, LeMars; Winter, Sioux City; Mickelson, Battle Creek,&#13;
40 feet, 6 inches.&#13;
Sioux City-36 points.&#13;
LeMars-23 points.&#13;
Hawarden-22 points.&#13;
Sergeant Bluffs-11 points.&#13;
"M" MEET RECORDS&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Foel, Storm Lake, 1909; Osborne, LeMars, 1911, :10.&#13;
220-Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee, 1911, :23.&#13;
440-Yard Dash-Shafenberg, Sergeant Bluffs, 1916 and 1917, 54:2.&#13;
880-Yard Run-Rogers. Yankton, 1914, 2.07.&#13;
Mile Run-L. Larson, Sioux City, Swancutt, SiouxFalls, 1916, 4.48.1.&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles, Vernon, Hawarden, 1911, :17.&#13;
220-Yard Hurdles-Quigley, Hawarden, 1911, :27 :4.&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, Cherokee; Peterson, Centerville; Wilkins, Correctionville, 1911, 11 feet.&#13;
High Jump-Aldrich, Sioux, 1911, 5 feet, 8 inches.&#13;
12-Pound Hammer-Gilliland, Storm Lake, 1911.&#13;
12-Pound Shot-Elliott, Hurley, S. D., 1909, 43 feet, 8 1/4 inches.&#13;
Discus-Knapp, Cherokee, 1911, 110 feet.&#13;
Half-Mile Relay-LeMars, 1915, 1 :37 :3.&#13;
Mile Relay-LeMars, 1915, 3 :45 :2.&#13;
Teams That Have Won&#13;
1914-LeMars.&#13;
1909-Storm Lake.&#13;
1910-Sioux City.&#13;
1915-Sioux Falls.&#13;
1911-Cherokee.&#13;
1916-Sioux City.&#13;
1912-Sioux City.&#13;
1917-Sioux City.&#13;
1913-Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
Walker was the most consistent and hard working man&#13;
&#13;
Wenig is an almost sure point winner in the high jump&#13;
&#13;
on the squad. He finished first in the half-mile in our two&#13;
&#13;
in any meet he enters.&#13;
&#13;
dual meets. "Steve," as captain for this spring, will make a&#13;
&#13;
the broad jump and in the discus. "Obe" was expected to set&#13;
up a new record this spring, but he was called into the Army.&#13;
&#13;
fine leader.&#13;
&#13;
He also won points last spring in&#13;
&#13;
Harrington is another of the veteran track men who&#13;
&#13;
Johnson decided he wanted an "M" in track and picked&#13;
the weights for his event. He surprised even himself and&#13;
&#13;
made a good showing last spring. Ed ran both the high and&#13;
&#13;
proved to be an easy point winner in the two dual meets.&#13;
&#13;
low hurdles and big things were expected of him this spring,&#13;
but he failed to return to school.&#13;
&#13;
Capt. Curry is one of the best all around track men that&#13;
was ever developed at Morningside. Not satisfied with be-&#13;
&#13;
Harrington is one of the veterans of the track squad.&#13;
&#13;
ing one of the best half-milers in the State he runs the hun-&#13;
&#13;
Ray is a consistent worker and has added over a foot to his&#13;
&#13;
dred in 10 :2 and came close to the record in the Monument&#13;
&#13;
record in the shot put each year since he has been in school.&#13;
&#13;
run last year.&#13;
captain.&#13;
&#13;
He was an easy winner in this event in both dual meets.&#13;
&#13;
Wendell made a hard working and likable&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Sixteen,&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
Gantt, although a new man in track work for the Maroons last year, proved to be the best point winner on the&#13;
squad in the dual meets.&#13;
&#13;
"Ted" succeeded in winning one&#13;
&#13;
first and two seconds in one, and four seconds in the other.&#13;
His enlistment was a serious blow to our track prospects for&#13;
this spring.&#13;
&#13;
McConkey won his letter by running the first lap of the&#13;
relay at the Drake Stadium.&#13;
&#13;
Bly was a hard worker and&#13;
&#13;
showed considerable improvement throughout t he season.&#13;
His enlistment lost us a good man for this spring.&#13;
&#13;
Hunt secured his "M" last spring by winning the mile&#13;
against Yankton. Albert had a hard fight with Kenny for&#13;
Hornney at last achieved his heart's desire, and is now&#13;
entitled to wear an "M." "Al" put in four hard years down&#13;
on the cinder path in order to win the low hurdles against&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan.&#13;
&#13;
first honors in the mile and between them they were able to&#13;
divide t he points in both duel meets.&#13;
&#13;
Kenny pushed Hunt hard all year for honors in the&#13;
mile. Tom made his "M" after a spirited fight with Hunt all&#13;
the way around in the Nebraska Wesleyan meet . Kenny&#13;
was also lost to us this year because of his enlistment.&#13;
Omar won his letter in track last spring by being a&#13;
member of the Drake Relay team.&#13;
&#13;
Although handicapped&#13;
&#13;
by a bad ankle and forced to limp his last quarter "Frogie"&#13;
finished his half in 2 :03. He also was lost to us this year&#13;
because of enlistment in the Navy.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
Pearce was one of t he best all around men on the squad,&#13;
participating in the jumps, the pole vault, the weights and&#13;
the hurdles. He won his "M" in t he pole vault.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' ATHLETIC COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
Track and Field Chairman, Aurelia Sturtevant; Hockey Chairman, Mildred&#13;
Wolfe;&#13;
Chairman, Agnes Fry; Tennis Chairman,&#13;
Ruth Mahood; Hike Chairman, Hazel Bergeson;&#13;
Basketball Chairman, Ruth Belew.&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Club, on the proposal of Miss Luechauer and&#13;
Agnes Fry, has formulated a plan by which "M" sweaters can&#13;
be worn by the girls. These sweaters will be white with a&#13;
maroon "M" and white "C" monogram. A girl playing basketball may win ten points, and the Yale-Harvard players are&#13;
awarded five extra points. The class champions in tennis wins&#13;
ten points, and the College champion wins five extra points.&#13;
Each girl taking three five-mile hikes a semester is given five&#13;
points. The five best players on each hockey team earn ten&#13;
points, all others on the hockey teams win five points. The&#13;
girl taking first place in the track meet wins five points. For&#13;
the first ten points that a girl earns she is awarded a class&#13;
numeral, and when she earns forty points she is awarded the&#13;
"M. C." monogram, and when seventy points are earned she is&#13;
awarded the white sweater with an "M. C." monogram. Only&#13;
twenty points a year will count toward honors. Members of&#13;
1918 Class earn a monogram with twenty points, members of&#13;
1919 Class with thirty points and a sweater with forty-five&#13;
points. In eligibility for final honors the following points will&#13;
be taken into consideration: Personal presence, athletic accomplishment, spirit, service and scholarship.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Mahood-1919&#13;
&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
Sturtevant-1919&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS OF "A" MEDALS&#13;
Ruth Mahood, by earning the greatest number of points in the track meet, by&#13;
making the Yale basketball team, and by winning the tennis tournament, was awarded first medal. Aurelia Sturtevant, by winning second place in the track meet, by&#13;
making the Yale basketball team, and by being a runner-up In her class tennis tournament received second medal. These "A" medals are awarded by the Agora Club , but&#13;
now are to be replaced by the "M. C." monograms and the "M. C." sweaters.&#13;
&#13;
TRACK MEET RESULTS&#13;
220-yard dash -----------------------R.&#13;
440-yard dash -----------------------A,&#13;
Half mile --------------------- --- ---R.&#13;
Standing Broad Jump ----------------H.&#13;
High Jump -------------------------R.&#13;
tied for second.&#13;
Traveling rings _________ ________ ___ __ H.&#13;
Chinning ___________________________ M.&#13;
&#13;
Mahood, first; M. Walker', second.&#13;
Sturtevant, first; H . Bergeson, second.&#13;
Mahood, first ; A. Sturtevant, second.&#13;
Bergeson, first; A. Sturtevant, second.&#13;
Mahood, first; A. Wolcott, M. Walker,&#13;
Carter, first; M. Walker, second.&#13;
Walker, first; H. Bergeson, second.&#13;
&#13;
TOTALS&#13;
Ruth Mahood _______________________ 21 points&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant ---------------- ---16 points&#13;
Merle Walker ------ --- ------------- 15 points&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-On e&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Mahood-1919&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Fouke-1918&#13;
&#13;
TENNIS TOURNAMENT OF SPRING OF 1917.&#13;
Winner - -- - - ---- ________ ------ ______________________________ Ruth Mahood&#13;
&#13;
YALE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up - . ----------------------- ---- -----------------------Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Back Row-C. Hauswald, E. Payne, M. J ohnson, E. Balkema.&#13;
Front Row-A. L ong, H. B ergeson, A. Fry (Capt.), z. B aldwin.&#13;
&#13;
Results-&#13;
&#13;
YALE-HARVARD TEAMS&#13;
Score:&#13;
Yale&#13;
------- ------ -------- ________ __ 18&#13;
Harvard -------- - -------- __________ 14&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
6: 1, 6: O&#13;
&#13;
CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
&#13;
Academy winner&#13;
&#13;
M. Champ&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Academy runner-up&#13;
&#13;
D. Champ&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
-------------------------Freshman winner -------------Freshman runner-up -----------Sophomore winner ------------Sophomore runner-up ----------Junior-Senior winner -----------&#13;
&#13;
F. Weir&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
H. Bergeson&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
R. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
G Knapp&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
R. Fouke&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Junior-Senior runner-up -- ---- --- G . Riddle&#13;
&#13;
INTER-CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
&#13;
Junior-Senior -- --- ------------- R. Fouke&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
:Freshman -- ---- --------·------- F. Weir&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore -------------------- R. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Academy -------------------- - M. Champ&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Junior-Senior ----- --- -- -- ---- - - R. Fouke&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
R. Mahood&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Twenty-Two&#13;
&#13;
HARVARD TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Back Row- I. Stevens. N. Moss, A. Sturtevant, U . Madsen.&#13;
Front Row- E. Day, R. Mahood (Capt.), L. W illiams, G. Knapp.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-Three&#13;
&#13;
VOLLEY BALL&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS-FRESHMAN TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Back Row--C. Hauswald, E. Bekins, Z Baldwin, J. Stevens.&#13;
Front How- L. Williams, A. Long (Capt.), B. Scoville.&#13;
BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT&#13;
Win.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ______________ --------- ________ 4&#13;
Junior s --------------------------------- 3&#13;
Sophomores _____________________________ 2&#13;
Academy&#13;
__________ ------- -----_____ l&#13;
Seniors ---------------------------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
WINNING&#13;
&#13;
TEAM- FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Row- G. Hoflund, G. Twogood,&#13;
R. McCreery,&#13;
I. Stevens, G. Armbright.&#13;
Front Row- U. Madsen&#13;
E. Day, L. Wendell,&#13;
F. Connor (Capt.), B. Scoville,&#13;
A. Schuler,&#13;
BAck&#13;
&#13;
Lose&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
LOSING TEAM- SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
RUNNER-UP- JUNIOR TEAM&#13;
Back Row-A. Sturtevant, G. Knapp. G.Clarl,,B.Burns.&#13;
Front Uow-R. Mahood (Capt.), H. Bergh.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Back Row- F. Day, M. Pecaut,&#13;
.Jackson, G. Ruskell.&#13;
Front&#13;
Row- A. Fry, G. Wishard,&#13;
(Capt.),&#13;
A. Anderson.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-Five&#13;
&#13;
E. Montgomery,&#13;
F. Weir,&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
M. Walker&#13;
&#13;
Sports and Athletics at Morningside&#13;
It's a Great Game If You Don't Weaken&#13;
&#13;
Daily Dual Meets&#13;
Jerry Johnson&#13;
Phoebe Obrecht&#13;
Tom Lloyd&#13;
Harold Walker&#13;
*Ross Hartley&#13;
Lee Freeman&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
Deak Sherwood&#13;
Happy Raun&#13;
Evans Engberg&#13;
McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
Sue Wormley&#13;
Genevieve Young&#13;
Florence Forsberg&#13;
Joy Horton&#13;
Grace Hoflund&#13;
Marie Edgington&#13;
Blue Grass Girl&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
Clara Back&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
Gladys Twogood&#13;
&#13;
*Disqualified.&#13;
&#13;
WINNERS&#13;
Story&#13;
Chick&#13;
xBus&#13;
zMac&#13;
xRalph&#13;
Clint&#13;
xxIrwin&#13;
xMerle&#13;
&#13;
Grace&#13;
Ruth&#13;
Florence&#13;
Dorothy&#13;
Nellie&#13;
Beryl&#13;
Van Ness&#13;
Marvel&#13;
Ullman&#13;
Hanson&#13;
Brady&#13;
Haskell&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
zAll records broken.&#13;
xBegan in High School .&#13;
xxWe doubt if he finishes.&#13;
*Foreign men, unknowns.&#13;
&#13;
One H undre d T wenty-Six&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
To whom is due in large measure all our&#13;
forensic success, and whose untiring efforts&#13;
have resulted in giving Morningside a leading&#13;
place among the Colleges of the Middle West.&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundre d Twen ty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
Seated- Johnson,&#13;
&#13;
Back, Fry, Carter.&#13;
&#13;
Forensic League&#13;
&#13;
Standing- Prichard, Engberg,&#13;
Stonebrook, Treftz,&#13;
Seated-Dunn, Beck, Marsh, Forbes, Soltow.&#13;
&#13;
Barks.&#13;
&#13;
Standing- Marsh, Barks, Soltow, Forbes.&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
President, Allan Bartlett&#13;
Vice President, Marion Johnson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, Clara Back&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Membership&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Advisor&#13;
&#13;
Charles A. Marsh&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Oratory&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Clara Back&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks&#13;
Robert McBride&#13;
Gladys Clark&#13;
Clarence Obrecht Dale Norton&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Jacob Treftz&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debate&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Earl Stonebrook&#13;
&#13;
Allan Bartlett&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
&#13;
The Forensic League is composed of representatives from each of the men's&#13;
literary societies.&#13;
&#13;
The league forms compacts with other Colleges for inter-col-&#13;
&#13;
legiate forensic contests, selects the question for inter-society debates, supervises oratorical contests of the colege and, in fact, has under its control all matters relating to&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Members&#13;
Charles A. Marsh&#13;
&#13;
the forensics of the College.&#13;
&#13;
Lee I. Barks&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-One&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Oratory&#13;
&#13;
DUAL INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATES&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
Morningside College, March 1, 1918&#13;
Miss Dewey Deal, first, Buena Vista&#13;
"The Policy That Failed"&#13;
Lee Soltow, second,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
"The Medium of Purchase"&#13;
Robert Julian, third,&#13;
&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"Our Responsibility"&#13;
Dale Norton&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORI-&#13;
&#13;
Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
CAL CONTEST&#13;
Western Union, LeMars, March&#13;
19, 1918&#13;
George Dunn, first, Morningside&#13;
"The Demand of the Hour"&#13;
Howard Kuist, second,&#13;
Western Union&#13;
"A Challenge to College Men"&#13;
&#13;
G. Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
Benjamin Hamilton, third, Simpson&#13;
"A Federal Amendment"&#13;
&#13;
Willis J. Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Lee Soltow&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
March 15 1918 I · S. T. C. at Cedar Falls.&#13;
.&#13;
Affirmative 0; Negative, 3.&#13;
March 22, 1918,Dakota Wesleyan at Morningside Judge), Negative.&#13;
(one&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Two&#13;
&#13;
March. 15, 1918, I. S. T. C. at Morningside.&#13;
Negative, 2; Affirmative, 1.&#13;
March 22, 1918, Dakota Wesleya n at Mitche ll (one judge), Affirmative.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Three&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
Affirmative, 0&#13;
&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Jan. 14, 1918&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Negative, 3&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Affirmative, 2&#13;
&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Jan. 15, 1918&#13;
&#13;
C. J. Obrecht&#13;
Ralph Pitman&#13;
Lee Saltow&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Trefz&#13;
Scott Purbee&#13;
Robert McBride&#13;
&#13;
G. Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
J. Finley Christ&#13;
Willis Forbes&#13;
Ralph Long&#13;
&#13;
Questionthe administration be given absolute censor ·&#13;
That in time of war ,&#13;
Resolved&#13;
s h ip of the press, constitutionality&#13;
g r a nte d a n d co n g r ess io n a l action waived.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Four&#13;
&#13;
One H undred T hir ty-Five&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
Negative, 1&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
Affirmative, 1&#13;
&#13;
INTER-SOCIETY DEBATES&#13;
Jan. 16, 1918&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
Negative, 2&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest Nov. 25, 1917&#13;
"The Awakening" (first)&#13;
&#13;
Lee Saltow&#13;
&#13;
"The Determining Factor "&#13;
&#13;
(second)&#13;
&#13;
"Th e Fruits of Victory" (third )&#13;
&#13;
J.Paul Jones&#13;
&#13;
Allan Bartlett&#13;
Clarence J. Obrecht&#13;
&#13;
"Th e Challenge of the Time to American&#13;
"Eomanhood"&#13;
&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
&#13;
"The Martyrdom of Belgium"&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Hopkin son&#13;
&#13;
"The Crucial Hou r " (first)&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
"The Call of the Hour" (second)&#13;
&#13;
Robert K. Johnston&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dutton.&#13;
&#13;
"The Demand of the Age"&#13;
&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
&#13;
"The Mandate of the People" (third)&#13;
&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
&#13;
"Prohibition Triumphant"&#13;
&#13;
McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Hopkinson&#13;
&#13;
"Our Nationa l Foe"&#13;
&#13;
Ernest Sanger&#13;
&#13;
"The Tribunal of the War"&#13;
&#13;
George Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
"Prohibition and Patriotism"&#13;
&#13;
Axel J. Beck&#13;
&#13;
Robert Johnston.&#13;
&#13;
"The Hidden Task"&#13;
&#13;
Goldia Jackson&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
State Oratorical Association&#13;
1900 J . A . Davies, ninth&#13;
&#13;
Dale Norton&#13;
&#13;
1 91 0 H. S. Hamilton , second&#13;
&#13;
1901 H. A . Keck, seventh&#13;
&#13;
1911 F . P. Johnson, second&#13;
&#13;
1902 A. R. Toothaker , eliminated&#13;
&#13;
1903 D. C. Hall, fourth&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
191 3 F. P . Johnson, secon d&#13;
&#13;
1904 R. E. Heilman&#13;
1905 G. J. Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
1915 J. I. Dolliver , third&#13;
&#13;
1914 R. H. McVicker, sixt h&#13;
&#13;
1906 A.G. Cushman&#13;
1907 A. G. Cushman, fifth&#13;
19 08 F. W. Backemeyer, second&#13;
1909 F. W. Backemeyer , first&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Six&#13;
&#13;
1912 F . P. Johnson, second&#13;
&#13;
1 91 6 R. L . Mitchell, eliminated&#13;
1917 C. E . Albertson , second&#13;
1918 Lee Soltow, second&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Thirty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Gold Medal Debates&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Gold Medal Debate&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
J. Lee&#13;
P. Ryerson&#13;
vs.&#13;
J. McBurney&#13;
J. Lehan&#13;
J. Miller&#13;
E. Ausman&#13;
vs.&#13;
M. Shafenberg&#13;
C. Swartz&#13;
&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
vs.&#13;
F. Valiquette&#13;
R. Schellenger&#13;
J. Hays&#13;
F. Rorapaugh&#13;
vs.&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
L. Alt&#13;
&#13;
L. Copeland&#13;
L. Bond&#13;
F. Evans&#13;
vs.&#13;
C. Baldwin&#13;
V. Pitstick&#13;
E. Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
Winners&#13;
Semi-Finals&#13;
&#13;
Preliminaries&#13;
Ryerson&#13;
Lehan&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Ausman&#13;
Valiquette&#13;
&#13;
Hays&#13;
&#13;
Ausman&#13;
Swartz&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Valiquette&#13;
Crouch&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
Hays&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Hays&#13;
Hunt&#13;
&#13;
Bond&#13;
Balwin&#13;
Engberg&#13;
&#13;
Valiquette&#13;
&#13;
Seeman&#13;
Berry&#13;
Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
C. Fry&#13;
A. Jeep&#13;
vs.&#13;
H. Meyers&#13;
V. Hart&#13;
&#13;
First&#13;
&#13;
P. Moorhead&#13;
A. Seeman&#13;
vs.&#13;
G. Berry&#13;
G. Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
Finals&#13;
&#13;
Fry&#13;
Jeep&#13;
Meyers&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
Bergquist&#13;
Meyers&#13;
Jeep&#13;
First&#13;
A. Jeep&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
H. Dunn&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
vs.&#13;
F. Marquart&#13;
C. Kirby&#13;
&#13;
C. Kirby&#13;
Dunn&#13;
Marquart&#13;
Kirby&#13;
&#13;
H. Down&#13;
W. Marsh&#13;
vs.&#13;
H. Butler&#13;
V. Hart&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Down&#13;
Butler&#13;
&#13;
Kirby&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Butler&#13;
G. Bergquist&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records in State Prohibition&#13;
Oratorical Association&#13;
First&#13;
Baldwin&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
1901 G. W . Finch,&#13;
&#13;
first ;&#13;
&#13;
Interstate, first ;&#13;
&#13;
National, third&#13;
&#13;
1902 J . N, McKay, second&#13;
&#13;
A. Hartman&#13;
E. Hickman&#13;
R. Wilson&#13;
vs.&#13;
C. Northrup&#13;
D. Thompson&#13;
B. Cooper&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
Bond&#13;
&#13;
1912 C. E . Smith, third&#13;
&#13;
190 6 C. D. Horner, third&#13;
&#13;
1913 J. L. Ralston , third&#13;
&#13;
190 7 Ida Lewis, fifth&#13;
&#13;
1914&#13;
&#13;
1908 G. W . Barrett, third&#13;
&#13;
1915 R. L. Mitchell, second&#13;
&#13;
1909&#13;
&#13;
Hartman&#13;
Cooper&#13;
Wilson&#13;
&#13;
1916 C. H. Klippel, second&#13;
&#13;
H. H . Gill, second&#13;
&#13;
191 0 F. P . Johnson, first&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
R. L. Mitchell , second&#13;
&#13;
1 917 C. H . Klippel, first; Interstate, 2d&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
Men's Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
1902 Morningside, 3; Nebraska Wesleyan, 0&#13;
1903 Morningside, 2; Baker U., 1&#13;
1904 Morningside, 3; Simpson, 0&#13;
Morningside, 1; Baker U., 2&#13;
1905 Morningside, 1; Upper Iowa, 2&#13;
Morningside, 1; Baker U., 2&#13;
1906 Morningside, 1 ; Upper Iowa, 2&#13;
1907 Morningside, 1; Upper Iowa, 2&#13;
1908 Morningside, 3; Upper Iowa, 0&#13;
Morningside, 3; Nebraska Wesleyan, 0&#13;
1910 Morningside, 3; Simpson, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2; Upper Iowa, 1&#13;
1911 Morningside, 2; Upper Iowa, 1&#13;
Morningside, 0 ; Upper Iowa, 3&#13;
1912 Morningside, 2; Nebraska Wesleyan, 1&#13;
Morningside, 1 ; Dakota Wesleyan, 2&#13;
1913 Morningside, 1; Iowa State Teachers, 2&#13;
Morningside, 2; Coe, 1&#13;
1914 Morningside, 3; Iowa State Teachers, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2 ; Coe, 1&#13;
1915 Morningside, 0; Southwestern, 3&#13;
Morningside, 3 ; Iowa State Teachers, 0&#13;
Morningside, 1 ; Coe, 2&#13;
1916 Morningside, 3; Dakota Wesleyan, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2; St. Olaf, 1&#13;
1917 Morningside, 3; Upper Iowa, 0&#13;
Morningside, 2; Hamline, 1&#13;
Morningside, 3, 1; St. Viateur, 0, 2&#13;
1918 Morningside, 0, 2; Iowa State Teachers, 3, 1&#13;
Morningside, 0, 0; Dakota Wesleyan, 1, 1&#13;
&#13;
1915 Morningside, 0, 0; Simpson, 3, 3&#13;
1916 Morningside, 2; Huron, 1&#13;
Morningside, 2; South Dakota U., 1&#13;
1917 Morningside, 3; Huron, 0&#13;
Morningside, 1 ; Yankton, 2&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty&#13;
&#13;
Society Spirit in Morningside&#13;
"By friendship we mean, the greatest love, the greatest&#13;
usefulness, the most open communication, the noblest sufferings, the severest truth, the heartiest counsel, and the greatest union of minds of which brave men and women are capable."&#13;
Our Literary Societies satisfy this definition in all its&#13;
phases. The greatest love-whose love can surpass that of&#13;
John and Marie Sebern Kolp, Herman and Marion Heikes&#13;
Leuder, Harry and Ruth Gillies Warnes.&#13;
The greatest usefulness-all hail to our boys in the army&#13;
s&#13;
cantonments. We are justly proud of our boys·in the service.&#13;
To them we have dedicated our annual, and to them we give&#13;
our annual, and to them we give our promise to back them&#13;
to the limit.&#13;
The most open communication-here let us place our good&#13;
times together, our literary programs and business meetings.&#13;
We have formed friendships here that will outlive our residence&#13;
as students. We "get next to" people in times of recreation&#13;
and learn to admire them for their "pep" and good sportsmanship. Here also we mention the debates. They keep the spirit&#13;
of friendly rivalry alive and broaden and clear the intellect.&#13;
The noblest sufferings-we pay tribute to Al Behmer.&#13;
Our hearts are grieved, but our heads are held high, proud that&#13;
he gave his life for freedom and democracy.&#13;
The severest truths-here we have our critics and set&#13;
standards of behavior. In our business meetings we are criticised for all forms of misdemeanors, social and individual. It&#13;
is all done in a spirit of friendliness and for mutual help and&#13;
advancement.&#13;
The heartiest counsel-we bow to our alumni and former&#13;
members. From them we derive our ideals and to them we&#13;
go for advice or help. They are never too busy to help, never&#13;
too busy to listen, and never too busy to give counsel.&#13;
The greatest union of minds-we cite here the attraction&#13;
and stimulation of kindred minds. Our contemporaries are not&#13;
inferior to former members. We have faith to believe that we,&#13;
as present active members, will serve as freely and as wisely&#13;
as our predecessors, and help to weld the golden chain of&#13;
friendship, connecting the past with the future.&#13;
RUTH I. BRADY.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undr ed Forty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Organized October 14, 1892 .&#13;
&#13;
Colors: Olive Green and Maroon.&#13;
Motto: Vestigia Nulla Rectorsum (No Slipping Backward ).&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
1st Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
2nd Mem . Ex. Board&#13;
3rd Mem. Ex. Board&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
First Critic&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
P. Eiffert&#13;
E. Stonebrook&#13;
E . Prichard&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
F . Hackett&#13;
C. Klatt&#13;
C. J orstad&#13;
J . Bogard&#13;
T . McBride&#13;
L. Castle&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
R. McBride&#13;
E. Prichard&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
M. Evans&#13;
H . Hackett&#13;
R. Wilson&#13;
R. Smith&#13;
P . Mickelson&#13;
M. Erickson&#13;
0. Bell&#13;
&#13;
W inter Term&#13;
T. McBride&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
M. Evans&#13;
P. Jones&#13;
C. Klatt&#13;
A. Hartman&#13;
E . Prichard&#13;
R. Smith&#13;
0 . Bell&#13;
R. Long&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
1917 March 26-Joint Open Door, "Up to Freddie."&#13;
April 16-Special Initiation of New Members.&#13;
April 19-Closed Door.&#13;
April 23-Philo-Athenaeum Joint.&#13;
April 30-Philo Breakfast.&#13;
May 7-Musical Program.&#13;
May 22- Philo-Athenaeum Breakfast .&#13;
May 28- Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 9-Joint Commencement.&#13;
October 29-Philos Entertain Athenaeums.&#13;
November 2-Philo Ravine Party.&#13;
November 24-Joint Open Door.&#13;
December 17-Initiation of New Members.&#13;
December 20-Joint Christmas Party.&#13;
1918January 21-Athenaeums Enter tain Philo Debaters.&#13;
January 28-Athenaeums Banquet for Philo Debaters.&#13;
March 4-Freshman Programme.&#13;
March 11-Sophomore Programme.&#13;
March 18-Grand Public.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fort y-Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeums&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
Cor Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
First Critic&#13;
Second Crictic&#13;
First Directoress&#13;
Second Directoress&#13;
First Usher&#13;
Second Usher&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Historian&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
Marguerite Brethorst Cleo Holmes&#13;
Margueriate Cummings&#13;
Vera Sipe&#13;
Hazel Bergh&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
Grace Rusk ell&#13;
Hazel Hunter&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Dorothy Steele&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
Esther Bonson&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
Lenna Herron&#13;
Florence Forsbery&#13;
Edith Morris&#13;
Una Madson&#13;
Florence Forsberg&#13;
Laura Engberg&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Doris Utterback&#13;
Lena MacDonald&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
Ruth Berry&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Kathrine Tharp&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
Grace Ruskell&#13;
Gladys Knapp&#13;
Marguerite .Johnson&#13;
Hazel Bergh&#13;
Hazel Bergeson&#13;
Lena MacDonald&#13;
Myrell Walker&#13;
Anna Rhinehart&#13;
Lila Stone&#13;
Ruth Berry&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Edith Morris&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
March 26-Joint Open Door. "Up to Freddie"&#13;
April 19-Faculty tea.&#13;
April 23-Philo-Athenaeum Joint.&#13;
May 10-Mothers' Day.&#13;
May 22-Philo-Athenaeum breakfast.&#13;
February 9-Reception for pledges at Mrs. Coopers.&#13;
June 9-Joint commencement.&#13;
June 11-Alumnae breakfast.&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
September 15-Reception for pledges.&#13;
September 22-New Athenaeums entertain old girls.&#13;
October 5-Hard Time party.&#13;
October 18-Faculty tea.&#13;
October 20-0pen Door.&#13;
October 29-Philos entertain Athenaeums.&#13;
November 4-Informal initiation.&#13;
November 24-Joint open door.&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
December 1-New girls entertain old.&#13;
December 13-Formal initiation.&#13;
December 20-Christmas joint.&#13;
January 12-Closed door for Philo debaters.&#13;
January 28-Debaters' dinner at Myrrill Walker's.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Athenaeum Snaps&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Athenaeum&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
Snaps&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Officers&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
First Senator&#13;
Second Senator&#13;
Sergeant at Arms&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
L. Lehan&#13;
&#13;
L. Soltow&#13;
&#13;
R. Harrington&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
&#13;
C. Jones&#13;
&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
&#13;
S. Burpee&#13;
C. Swartz&#13;
&#13;
H. Smith&#13;
C. Swartz&#13;
&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
&#13;
C. Hart&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
&#13;
H. Lawrence&#13;
E. Harrington&#13;
&#13;
B. McConkey&#13;
&#13;
E. Ausman&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
&#13;
P. Ryerson&#13;
F. Valiquette&#13;
G. Brown&#13;
&#13;
J. Hays&#13;
&#13;
J. Miller&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
March 29, 1917-Joint Open Door.&#13;
April 12-Closed Door Programme.&#13;
April 28-Pi-Ionian Gym Party.&#13;
May 12-Party Held at South Ravine.&#13;
October 2-Stag Party.&#13;
October 6-Initiation of New Members.&#13;
October 15-Pi-Ionian Joint at Walker's.&#13;
October 29-Ionian Hallowe'en Party at Lehan's.&#13;
November 18-First Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
December 6-Musical Programme by Pi-Ionian Orchestra.&#13;
January 28-Debate Dinner Held at President Craig's.&#13;
February 7-Dedication of Service Flag.&#13;
March 24-Gold Star Placed on Service Flag in Memory of Corporal&#13;
Albert E. Behmer.&#13;
April 3-Picnic at Stone Park.&#13;
April 29-Pi-Ionian Joint at Kilbourne's.&#13;
May 21-Farewell Party.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-One&#13;
&#13;
PIERIA LITERARY SOCIETY&#13;
&#13;
Pierian&#13;
&#13;
Motto: Felicitei, Foitilei, Fidelitei (Happy, Brave and Faithful)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Lillian Sandvig&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Elva Persinger&#13;
Miriam Fish&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Corresponding Secretary Ruth Burpee&#13;
Critic&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Chairman Social ComMildred Wood&#13;
mittee&#13;
Helen Gullickson&#13;
Reporter&#13;
Isabelle Walker&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
Grace Wishard&#13;
Finance Officer&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Fine Officer&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Grace Wishard&#13;
Isabelle Walker&#13;
Gladys Riddle&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
Lucile Wendt&#13;
Lucyle Haitz&#13;
Myrtle Heathman&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
PIERIA CALENDAR 1917&#13;
&#13;
March 19-Pieria Grand Public, "The&#13;
Dragon's Claw."&#13;
March 24-Pieria Initiation.&#13;
April 21-Pieria Open Door, Miscellaneous Program.&#13;
April 28-Pi-Ionian Gym · Party.&#13;
May 1-Pieria Patriotic Tea for Athenaeums.&#13;
May 8-Pie Tea for Zets.&#13;
May 14-Pieria All-Day Picnic at Stone&#13;
Park.&#13;
May 21-Shower for Marie Mahood Van&#13;
Horne.&#13;
May 26-Farewell Closed Door.&#13;
May 30-Ionian Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 1-Grace Wishard entertains the&#13;
Pis.&#13;
June 2-Zenana Osborne hostess to Pieria Girls.&#13;
June 12- Pieria Alumnae Breakfast.&#13;
June 14-23- Pi Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
&#13;
September 15- Reception&#13;
for&#13;
New&#13;
Pledges.&#13;
September 29- Pieria Initiation.&#13;
October&#13;
6- Pieria Birthday Banquet&#13;
at West.&#13;
October 9- Alumnae Entertain Active&#13;
Members at Tea.&#13;
October 15-Pi-Ionian Joint at Isabelle&#13;
Walker's.&#13;
October 29- Ionian Halloween Party&#13;
at Lehan's.&#13;
November 10-0pen Door by New Girls.&#13;
November 24- Reception&#13;
for&#13;
New&#13;
Pledges.&#13;
December 4- Tea for Ionians.&#13;
December 8- Pieria Initiation.&#13;
December 15-Pieria Open Door.&#13;
December 18-Pi Christmas Party.&#13;
December 20-Pieria 6 O'Clock dinner&#13;
at Margaret Goudie's.&#13;
&#13;
PlERIA CALENDER 1918&#13;
&#13;
January 26- Mrs. Kellogg Entertains&#13;
Pi's.&#13;
January 28- Pieria Debate Dinner for&#13;
Ionians at President Craig's.&#13;
February 8- Installation of Officers.&#13;
April 1- Pieria Open Door. "A Musical Evening."&#13;
April 6- Stunt Night.&#13;
April 12- Farewell Party for Ruth&#13;
Fouke at Dolliver's.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Two&#13;
&#13;
April 13-Reception for New Pledges&#13;
at Helen Gullickson's.&#13;
April 2 0-Pieria Open Door. Readings.&#13;
April 29-Pi-Ionian&#13;
bourne's.&#13;
.&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
Joint&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Kil-&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
April 30-Pieria Initiation.&#13;
May 2- Entertained at Tea by Athenaeums.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Pi-Ionian Snaps&#13;
&#13;
Pi-Ionian Snaps&#13;
&#13;
Some of the bunch&#13;
&#13;
The Cooks&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Five&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN LITERARY SOCIETY&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
C. Fry&#13;
&#13;
C. Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Barks&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Barks&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Barks&#13;
&#13;
C. Obrecht&#13;
&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
&#13;
C. Fry&#13;
&#13;
R. John son&#13;
&#13;
S. Hutchinson&#13;
&#13;
H. Hartley&#13;
&#13;
A. P. Locke&#13;
&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
&#13;
A. Locke&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
H. HARTLEY&#13;
&#13;
First Critic&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Sherwood&#13;
&#13;
Second Critic&#13;
&#13;
A. Beck&#13;
&#13;
C. Kirby&#13;
&#13;
G. Dunn&#13;
&#13;
A. Seeman&#13;
&#13;
H. Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
E. BARKS&#13;
&#13;
D. Norton&#13;
&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
H. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
H. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
A. Seeman&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
G. BERQUIST&#13;
&#13;
Otho Rush Stag ___________________________________ September 27, '17&#13;
Otho-Ionian Inter-Society Debate ______________________ January 14, '18&#13;
Otho-Philo Inter-Society Debate ______________________ January 16, '18&#13;
Otho Banquet ______________________________________ February 4, '18&#13;
"Cousin Gene," Open Door __________________________ December 14, '17&#13;
Costume Party, Joint _______________________________ December 17, '17&#13;
Zet Reception _______________________________________ January 28, '18&#13;
&#13;
R. JOHNSTON&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Closed Door ____ _________________________ November 31, '17&#13;
Closed Door Program ------------- -- ----------- - -------~April 15, '18&#13;
Spring Stag _______________________________ ___________ April 22, '18&#13;
Final Debate, Open Door ________________________________ May&#13;
&#13;
R. TROUTMAN&#13;
&#13;
6, '18&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho May Breakfast __________ _____________________ May 13, '18&#13;
Senior Graduation Exercises _____________________________ May 20, '18&#13;
&#13;
C. KUDRLE&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
M.IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
South Ravine Picnic __________________________________ October 27, 17&#13;
Alumni Reunion ________________________________________ May 27, '18&#13;
H. REYMAN&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho Joint ______________________________________ October 13. '17&#13;
Monument Picnic ______________________________________ April&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
4, '17&#13;
&#13;
Zetalathean&#13;
Motto: Esse, Quam Videri (To be rather than to seem)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring Term, 1917&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Term, 1917&#13;
&#13;
Winter Te1·m, 1918&#13;
&#13;
Lida Saunders&#13;
&#13;
Clara Swain&#13;
&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
Rec. Secretary&#13;
&#13;
DYKSTRA&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Leone Lange&#13;
&#13;
Sue Wormley&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
Mabel Day&#13;
Mary Ordway&#13;
&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
&#13;
Mabel Day&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
April 20-Zet Hen Party at Esther Montgomery's.&#13;
May 8-Pi Tea for Zets.&#13;
May 16-Reception for Mothers.&#13;
June 14-Reunion at Ruth Reid's.&#13;
September 15-Reception for New Pledges.&#13;
October 6-Public Initiation.&#13;
October 17-0pen Door.&#13;
October 27-Ravine Party-Joint.&#13;
November 17-Reception for Pledges.&#13;
December 8- Zet Banquet.&#13;
December 17-Joint Costume Party.&#13;
1918January 28-Zet Reception for Otho Debaters.&#13;
March 26-0pen Door.&#13;
May 13-Zet-Otho May Breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fifty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho Snaps&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Zet-Otho Snaps&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-One&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
&#13;
E. DAY&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President&#13;
Milton Brenner&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Hans Dale&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Roy Cox&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
President&#13;
Hans Dale&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Roy Cox&#13;
Secretary&#13;
George Paradisanos&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
William Hanson&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
1917.&#13;
October 8 ___ _____ __Hawkeye and Crescent reception to new students.&#13;
October 22 _______ ___ Joint basket social.&#13;
October 29 _______ ___ Annual joint Halloween party.&#13;
December 14 ____ ____ Annual stag banquet, West Hotel.&#13;
1918&#13;
January 7 ___ _____ __ Joint social.&#13;
February. 8 _____ ____ Annual joint Valentine party.&#13;
April 8 _____ _______ Annual Hawkeye banquet, Martin Hotel.&#13;
April 12 __ ___ _____ __ Ravine picnic.&#13;
May 6 _____ __ _____ __ Annual Crescent and Hawkeye up-river trip.&#13;
&#13;
One H undr ed Sixt y-Two&#13;
&#13;
CRESCENT OFFICERS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
President-June Pippett&#13;
Vice President-Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
Rec. Secretary-Nona Moss&#13;
Cor. Secretary-Flora Wixon.&#13;
Treasurer-Lorene Williams&#13;
First Critic-Kathryn Johnson&#13;
Second Critic-Hallie Blair&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
President-Nona Moss.&#13;
Vice President-Esther Day&#13;
Rec. Secretary-Fern Connor&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Secretary-Lorene Levitt&#13;
Treasurer-Florence Fair.&#13;
First Critic-Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
Second Critc-Doris Appleton&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
President-Esther Day&#13;
Vice President-Christine Peterson&#13;
Rec. Secreary-Elizabeth Hickman&#13;
Cor. Secretary-Ruth Rasmussen&#13;
Treasurer-Nona Moss&#13;
First Critic-Lorene Levitt&#13;
Second Critic-Florence Fair&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
October 2, 1917-Tea to new girls.&#13;
October 8, 1917-Hawkeye-Crescent reception at Flora Wixon's for new&#13;
students.&#13;
October 22, 1917-Hawkeye-Crescent basket social.&#13;
October 29, 1917-Hawkeye-Crescent Halloween party.&#13;
November 24, 1917-Farewell spread for Hallie Blair.&#13;
January 7, 1918-Hawkeye-Crescent spread.&#13;
February 8, 1918-Valentine party at home of Florence Fair.&#13;
March 23, 1918-Crescent initiation.&#13;
April 12, 1918-Hawkeye-Crescent picnic at South ravine.&#13;
May 6, 1918-Crescent-Hawkeye up-river trip, Blue Grass pasture.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixt y-Three&#13;
&#13;
Lewis, Rhinehart, Long.&#13;
&#13;
KEEPING THE HOME FIRES BURNING&#13;
There are more than 180 Morningside College men enlisted in the&#13;
service of Uncle Sam in order that the brotherhood of the nations might&#13;
he accomplished. An equal number of Morningside girls are devoting a&#13;
large amount of their time, which might be spent digging "A" grades,&#13;
working in one or more kinds of Red Cross work.&#13;
Morningside can well be proud of the spirit her girls have manifested&#13;
in "helping win the war," for there are now five Morningside women on&#13;
the honor roll. The girls at home are working hard, faithfully and eagerly.&#13;
The first semester the girls worked with the Morningside Ladies'&#13;
Auxiliary in the Hospital Garments Class, and knitted sweaters, socks and&#13;
wristlets. During October they filled and sent twenty-five Christmas&#13;
cheer bags to the boys in the training camps.&#13;
At the opening of the second semester the girls, realizing their responsibility as a group, determined to form a separate auxiliary. Resolutions&#13;
were made and unanimously accepted on February 19th to establish a war&#13;
program which embodies the following:&#13;
1. Obedience to the regulations of the United States Food Administration.&#13;
2. Economy in dress.&#13;
3. The wearing of warm clothing to help solve the fuel problem.&#13;
4. Elimination of needless expense.&#13;
.&#13;
On Washington's birthday, the Red Cross work was effectively&#13;
launched. Most of the time was devoted to the sewing of hospital garments&#13;
and French and Belgian layettes. Splendid work was done in both departments.&#13;
The Surgical Dressing Classes were started the last week in February,&#13;
under the excellent direction of Mrs. 0. B. McDonald, of Morningside, who&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Four&#13;
&#13;
is a graduate in the work. Under her efficient supervision the girls expect to reach the goal of 10,000 surgical dressings before the semester&#13;
closes.&#13;
The knitters have also contributed their share in making over 200&#13;
sweaters and a large number of helmets, scarfs, socks and wristlets.&#13;
The Morningside College Girls' Red Cross Auxiliary was officially recognized on March 7, 1918, with the following officers:&#13;
President-Clara Lewis.&#13;
Secretary-Anna Rhinehart.&#13;
Treasurer-Ada Long.&#13;
The girls have sent their Collegian Reporters to the Morningside boys,&#13;
made and sent them boxes of candy, and mailed books and magazines to&#13;
them.&#13;
The spirit of the College was effectively expressed by the way in which&#13;
the students and faculty subscribed to the Y. M. C. A. Student Friendship&#13;
Fund. reaching a total of $3,000, which was double their quota.&#13;
The work of the Red Cross has only just begun, but will continue during the summer months as well as through the school year until the war is&#13;
ended. The girls are "in the game" with the same splendid spirit which&#13;
has characterized our boys, so that&#13;
Every time our thoughts turn to our boys over there,&#13;
And the women and children and maimed,&#13;
We will feel we are doing our utmost with grit,&#13;
And we'll feel we are playing things square.&#13;
And we'll know we are not merely doing our bit,&#13;
But-thank God-we are doing OUR SHARE.&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d Sixty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Freshman&#13;
&#13;
CARPENTER&#13;
&#13;
Girl's Club&#13;
&#13;
CHAMP&#13;
&#13;
WILLITS&#13;
&#13;
McDOWELL&#13;
&#13;
Student&#13;
&#13;
KNUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Standing- Fry,&#13;
&#13;
McBRide,&#13;
&#13;
Bell, Engberg,&#13;
&#13;
Seated- Willets, Saunders,&#13;
&#13;
SCOVILLE&#13;
&#13;
LICHTENBERG&#13;
&#13;
HOLMES&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
Council&#13;
&#13;
Smith,&#13;
&#13;
Long, Cox, Hartzell,&#13;
&#13;
Barks, Obrecht,&#13;
&#13;
Dolliver, Downs.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
EPPELSHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
ISHKOODAH&#13;
&#13;
Kolp,&#13;
&#13;
President-Charles Fry, President of the Student Body.&#13;
Vice President-Ruth Smith, President of the Agora Club.&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer-Lida Saunders, Secretary-Treasurer of Student Body.&#13;
&#13;
Motto: "Be Square."&#13;
Purpose: To offer opportunity for closer fellowship among the Freshmen girls; to foster the spirit of democracy in the College, whereby each&#13;
girl may attain her highest development; to promote literary activity&#13;
among the Freshmen girls; and to aid in establishing and maintaining high&#13;
ideals among the Freshmen.&#13;
Through this organization the girls of the Freshman Class become&#13;
acquainted with each other very soon after coming to College, and it is&#13;
in the meetings of this Club that the first seeds of College friendship&#13;
which ripen into life-long ones, are sown. This year has been very successful and the girls have been well represented in every movement for the betterment of the College.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
President of Y. M. C. A.-Orin Bell.&#13;
&#13;
Junior Representative- Dale Norton.&#13;
&#13;
President of Y. W. C. A.-Vivian Down.&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore President-Clinton Cowan.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Representative- Mary Dolli-&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
"M"&#13;
&#13;
Club-Clarence&#13;
&#13;
Obrecht.&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
ver.&#13;
Collegian&#13;
&#13;
Reporter-Earl&#13;
&#13;
Barks.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
FIRST TERM&#13;
President ___________ Nellie Carpenter&#13;
Vice President_ __________ Ruth Willits&#13;
Secretary ______________ Doris Champ&#13;
Treasurer _________ Frances McDowell&#13;
Sergeant at Arms ____ Dorothy Knudson&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TERM&#13;
Bernice Scoville&#13;
Elizabeth Lichtenberg&#13;
Kathryn Holmes&#13;
Ada Long&#13;
Minnie Epplesheimer&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Freshman President- Ralph Long.&#13;
Freshman&#13;
&#13;
Senior President-Robert McBride.&#13;
&#13;
Representative-Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Willits.&#13;
&#13;
Senior Representative-Frances Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
Academy President-Dick Burrows.&#13;
&#13;
Junior President-Royce Engberg.&#13;
&#13;
Academy Representative- Roy Cox.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Agora Board&#13;
&#13;
Row- M. Kidder, C. Holmes,&#13;
V. Down, L. Engberg,&#13;
A.. Rhinehart, H. Bergeson, A. Carter.&#13;
Middle Row- H. Bergh,&#13;
R. Berry,&#13;
F . Beacham, M. Evans,M. Johnson, M. Champ,&#13;
A. Fry,&#13;
L. Saunders, B. Burns.&#13;
Seated- N.Moss, F. Kolp, F. Wetmore, H. Lawrence, R. Smith, C . Peterson, R. Reid.&#13;
&#13;
Top&#13;
&#13;
Officers of the Executive Board&#13;
&#13;
Vice President-Cleo Holmes&#13;
Treasurer-Laura Engberg&#13;
&#13;
President-Ruth Smith&#13;
Secretary-Ruth Reid&#13;
&#13;
Committee Chairmen&#13;
&#13;
Social-Leone Lange&#13;
Auditing-Marvel E vans&#13;
&#13;
Standing- I. Walker, K. Tharp, R. Fouke, lU. Evans.&#13;
Sitting-C . Holmes,&#13;
H. Bergeson, E. Parkinson, B. Reed.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic-Hazel Fry&#13;
Forensic-Marion Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Self-Government-Lida Saunders&#13;
Y. W. C. A. President-Vivian&#13;
Down&#13;
&#13;
Census- Cleo Holmes&#13;
Reporter-Agnes Fry&#13;
&#13;
The Agora Club is a democratic organization, composed of all the College girls and the lady members of the faculty. Its business is conducted&#13;
by an Executive Board which is representative of t h e girls' student body.&#13;
The Club takes charge of the girls' athletics, forensic and social activities in&#13;
the College.&#13;
During the past year the time has been devoted largely to Red Cross&#13;
work.&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
President-Elma Parkinson&#13;
&#13;
Pierian-Isabelle Walker&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Ruth Brady&#13;
&#13;
Marvel Evans&#13;
&#13;
Membership&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum-Cleo Holmes&#13;
Hazel Bergeson&#13;
Katherine Tharp&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean-Elma Parkinson&#13;
Ruth Brady&#13;
Bessie Reed&#13;
&#13;
This committee is a representative group of girls' societies. It has&#13;
charge of all matters concerning t he societies, such as the rushing rules,&#13;
open door programs and the like. Since this committee was formed t here&#13;
seems to be a better feeling between the various societies.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Eight&#13;
One Hundred Sixty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- B. Reed, G. Knapp,&#13;
N. Poyser, B. Carver,&#13;
R. Mahood,&#13;
Seated- G. Jackson, V. Brown, C. Holmes,&#13;
G. Wishard.&#13;
&#13;
E. Parkinson.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
Bessie Reed, Devotional&#13;
Beatrice Carver, Social&#13;
Grace Wishard, Social Service&#13;
Nellie Poyser, Publicity&#13;
Goldia Jackson , World Fellowship&#13;
Elma Parkinson, Bible&#13;
&#13;
Vivia n Down, President&#13;
Ruth Mahood, Vice President&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- J. Treftz, C. Fry, E . S tonebrook, T. M. Bride, R. McBride,&#13;
Seated-0. Bell, H. Freeman, R. Engberg.&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp, Secretary&#13;
Cleo Holmes, Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
The very nature of the College environment demands some kind of a&#13;
meeting ground for religious activities. The Y. W. C. A. supplies this&#13;
meeting ground. "To guard, convert, develop, enlist and train every girl&#13;
in school"-that is the purpose of the Association. Many opportunities are&#13;
found through the medium of the Y. W. C. A. for faithful service and for&#13;
developing moral responsibility. This, in turn, raises each girl's ideals and&#13;
leads her to face the demands of Christ upon her life.&#13;
Our Association receives great inspiration from inter-collegiate relationships through the various conferences. Local College interests then&#13;
give way to the larger demands, and Christianity is viewed from the worldstandpoint.&#13;
VIVIAN DOWN.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
DEPARTMENT HEADS&#13;
&#13;
President -Orin W. Bell&#13;
Vice President-Robert H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
Life Work Guidance-G. Earl&#13;
Barks&#13;
Community Service-Harold S.&#13;
Freeman&#13;
Administration-Jacob H. Trefz&#13;
Campus Service-Charles D. Fry&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Royce R. Engberg&#13;
Treasurer-Thomas H. McBride&#13;
&#13;
When school opened last fall it was found that several of our cabinet&#13;
members, including the President, had answered the call of Uncle Sam,&#13;
while one or two others were unable to return to us for other reasons. We&#13;
have missed t hese men and their influence cont inually, but neverth eless we&#13;
have tried to do our best without them.&#13;
The program for the past year has included such things as the sending of nine men to Lake Geneva in June, the raising of $300.00 for our&#13;
local budget, boosting for the friendship campaign, conducting t h e special&#13;
religious meetings in February, boosting for the Northfield plan of study,&#13;
and preparing the field here in our College for a more extended work for&#13;
next year.&#13;
ORIN W. BELL&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-One&#13;
&#13;
MADRIGAL CLUB&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- L. Williams, R. Fouke, G. Devitt, G. Yeaman,&#13;
G. Dykstra, H, Lawrence,&#13;
Second Row- M.&#13;
Broughton, B. Scoville, G. Hofflund, A Sturtevant, M. Heathman. R.&#13;
..&#13;
Mahood, I. Stevens, E. Bekins, 0. Barton, F. Wetmore.&#13;
Seated-E. Payne, F. Kolp,&#13;
M. Eppelsheimer,&#13;
M. Reuber, M. Sabin, L. Engberg, M. Dolliver, C Holmes.&#13;
&#13;
Girls Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President, Frances Kolp.&#13;
Secretary, Aurelia Sturtevant.&#13;
&#13;
Librarian, Laura Engberg.&#13;
Student Manager, Mary Dolliver&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SOPRANO&#13;
&#13;
FIRST ALTO&#13;
&#13;
Glyde Devitt&#13;
Minnie Eppelsheimer&#13;
Myrtle Heathman&#13;
Cleo Holmes&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Mildred Sabin&#13;
Irma Stevens&#13;
Aurelia Sturtevant&#13;
Gladys Yeaman&#13;
&#13;
Marie Broughton&#13;
Opal Barton&#13;
Laura Engberg&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Minnie Reuber&#13;
Bernice Scoville&#13;
SECOND ALTO&#13;
&#13;
SECOND SOPRANO&#13;
Evelyn Balkema&#13;
Edna Bekins&#13;
Gertrude Dykstra&#13;
Grace Hoflund&#13;
Lorene Williams&#13;
&#13;
Mary Dolliver&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
Harriet Lawrence&#13;
Eva Payne&#13;
Frances Wetmore&#13;
&#13;
Each year since its organization, in the fall of 1914, the Girls' Glee&#13;
Club has made a concert tour during the Easter vacation. On the trip in&#13;
the spring of 1917, concerts were given at the following towns in Iowa:&#13;
Cushing, Alta, Ireton, Sheldon and Cherokee.&#13;
The Club owes much of its success to the training it receives under the&#13;
direction of Prof. MacCollin.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Two&#13;
&#13;
Top Row- W. Hilmer, R. Engber,&#13;
W. Malsie,&#13;
L. Scheerer, M. Lory, R. Wilson, V. Hart,&#13;
H. Hartley, G. Brown, J. Lee, Prof MacCollin.&#13;
Bottom Row- H.Dale, R .. Whitehill,&#13;
C . Kirby, C. Fry, D. Thompson,&#13;
0. Adams, W. Orr,&#13;
J. Hays, S. Burpee, C. Crary.&#13;
&#13;
ITINERARY-EASTER TOUR&#13;
Iroquois, S. D.; Miller, S. D.; Hot&#13;
Springs, S. D.; Gordon, Nebr.; Ainsworth, Nebr.; Norfolk, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
Harold Hartley&#13;
J. P. Lee&#13;
C. N . Crary&#13;
Joseph Hays&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
0. D. Adams&#13;
Scott Burpee&#13;
Lloyd Scheerer&#13;
W. C. Orr&#13;
Wayne Hilmer&#13;
Willard Malsie&#13;
BASS&#13;
C. N. Kirby&#13;
Evan Engberg&#13;
Roy Whitehill&#13;
Allan Bartlett&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
George Brown&#13;
Hans Dale&#13;
Ronald Wilson&#13;
David Thompson&#13;
Charles Fry&#13;
Verle Hart&#13;
&#13;
PIANIST&#13;
Milton Lory&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS:&#13;
PROF. PAUL MAC COLLIN, DIR.&#13;
ROYCE ENGBERG, PRES.&#13;
ALLAN BARTLETT, BUS. MGR.&#13;
HAROLD HARTLEY, SEC .-TREAS.&#13;
&#13;
·one Hundred Seventy-Three&#13;
&#13;
The Annual Board&#13;
&#13;
Standing-Reid, Knapp,&#13;
&#13;
Seated- Prichard,&#13;
&#13;
Barks,&#13;
&#13;
Johnson,&#13;
&#13;
Stonebrook.&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks ___ --- ___ ___________ ____ ___ __ ___________________ Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Earl Stonebrook __ _______ _____ ____ ______ ____ ___ ______ ___ ____ Assistant Editor&#13;
Leon Johnson _ -- --- __________________ __ _______________ __ __ Business Mauager&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Lange, Sandvig,&#13;
&#13;
Engberg,&#13;
&#13;
Wulf,&#13;
&#13;
MAhood,&#13;
&#13;
Brady, Wishard.&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Norton, Evans.&#13;
&#13;
THE STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Elbert Prichard ---------------------------------------------Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Ruth Reid _______________ ___________________ ___ _______ ____ Assistant Editor&#13;
Horace Wulf&#13;
Clarence Hart&#13;
&#13;
___________________________________ _ _____ Business Manager&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch _________ ___________ _________ ______ Assistant Business Manager&#13;
George Dunn ______________ __ _ ___ _ _____________________ _________ _ __ Alumni&#13;
&#13;
Associate Editors&#13;
&#13;
Jess Lang _______________________ ____________________________ -· _____ Artist&#13;
George Bergquist&#13;
Scott Burpee&#13;
Ada Carter&#13;
Jay Christ&#13;
Laura Engberg&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
Agnes Fry&#13;
Marion Johnson&#13;
Chester Kirby&#13;
Frances Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Lang&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
Esther Montgomery&#13;
Elbert Prichard&#13;
Lida Saunders&#13;
Clair Sherwood&#13;
Jacob Treftz&#13;
Lucille Wendt&#13;
Ronald Wilson&#13;
Horace Wulf&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Mahood&#13;
&#13;
___ ____ ____________________________________________ Athletics&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp ------- - ---- -- --------------------------------------Calendar&#13;
Isabel Walker ________ __ ___ _______ __ __ _ ___ ___ _____ ----- -- -- -- -- --- _C lasses&#13;
Leone Lange _ ___ ___ ___ __ ____ __ ______________ __ __ __ __ ___ ____ _______ Faculty&#13;
Royce Engberg --------------------------------------------------Forensics&#13;
Ray Troutman ______________________________________________________ Jokes&#13;
Lillian Sandvig ____ _ ___________________________________________ Organization&#13;
Lee Hornney _________________ _ _______ _ ___ __ _______________ ____ Photography&#13;
Ruth Brady ------- - ---- - ---- - --------- - --- - ---- - ------------------Society&#13;
Grace Wishard _ ____ _ _ ______ _ __ ___ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- --- ------- - -- - - _Snaps&#13;
McKinley Evans __ __ __ _ _______ __ __ _ ____ _ _________ __ ____ ___ _ Specia l Occasions&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Five&#13;
&#13;
Locke, Freeman,&#13;
&#13;
Hunt, McBride&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
President-Arthur Locke.&#13;
Vice President-Harold Freeman.&#13;
Secretary-Albert Hunt.&#13;
Treasurer-Robert McBride.&#13;
Faculty Advisor-Prof. James A. Coss.&#13;
STUDENT VOLUNTEERS&#13;
&#13;
ARCHIE FREEMAN, DIRECTOR&#13;
&#13;
CORNETS&#13;
&#13;
ALTOS&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
C.&#13;
L.&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Michelson&#13;
Obrecht&#13;
Schearer&#13;
Hartley&#13;
R. Cox&#13;
S. Carter&#13;
&#13;
C. Baldwin&#13;
H. Reyman&#13;
A. Hunt&#13;
BASS&#13;
J. Lee&#13;
&#13;
CLARINETS&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
&#13;
R. Engberg&#13;
C. F. Jon es&#13;
H. Harding&#13;
&#13;
C. Cowan&#13;
PICCOLO&#13;
G. Berry&#13;
H. Meyers&#13;
&#13;
TROMBONES&#13;
C. Kuderle&#13;
R. Carrigan&#13;
E. Marquart&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Six&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
G. Crouch&#13;
L. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Harold Freeman, President.&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Elva Persinger&#13;
Minnie Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Elsie Lang, Secretary-Treasurer.&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Cora Dutton&#13;
Royce Engberg&#13;
June Pippett&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seventy-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Our Advertisers&#13;
The Sioux 1919 Management express their&#13;
appreciation of the loyal support&#13;
given to the Annual of Morningside College, by the&#13;
Business Men of Sioux&#13;
City, who are responsible for making this book&#13;
a success.&#13;
&#13;
Patronize Them!&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Three&#13;
&#13;
ATHENAEUM-PHILOMATHEAN GRAND PUBLIC&#13;
&#13;
Monument Day&#13;
&#13;
"The Shepherd of the Hills," College Auditorium, March 18, 1918&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTERS&#13;
Mrs. Grant Mathews, Aunt Mollie _____________________ _ ____________ Ada Carter&#13;
Ollie Stewart, Fiance of Sammy Lane ______________________________ Paul Jones&#13;
&#13;
With the return of the baseball men with four victories in t heir down-&#13;
&#13;
Preachin' Bill, Everyone's Friend ____ ______ ____________________ Elbert Prichard&#13;
&#13;
State trip and having won two duel meets the students decided t o take May&#13;
17th as their annual holiday and go to the Monument. The band men were&#13;
&#13;
Grant Matthews, Sr., Old Matt ________________________________ Lloyd Copeland&#13;
Miss Sammy L a n e, Ward of the Matthews ___________ _________ Florence Forsberg&#13;
Grant Matthews, Jr. , Young Matt ______________________ _____ ____ Thomas Lloyd&#13;
&#13;
sent after their instruments and instead of going to Chapel we held a&#13;
&#13;
Daniel Howitt, Dad, "The Shepherd of the Hills" __________________ Royce Engberg&#13;
&#13;
big pep meeting out near the Spoon Holder. From here the whole student&#13;
&#13;
Pete, a Child of Nature______&#13;
&#13;
_ _________________________________ Hazel Bergh&#13;
&#13;
body, and several faculty members, journeyed t o Floyd Monument. After&#13;
&#13;
Wash Gibbs, Leader of Lawless Element _____ _ _______________ Carroll Northrup&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
''Buster" and "Rusty" had lead us in several yells, Jim took charge of the&#13;
&#13;
Hank Briggs, a Mountainer -------------------------------------Lee Hornney&#13;
Lem Wheeler, a Mountaineer ________________________________ Thomas McBride&#13;
&#13;
meeting and we had several pep speeches from t he students. After a vaude-&#13;
&#13;
Howard, Son of Daniel Howitt ____________ ____________________ McKinley Evans&#13;
Directed by Miss Elizabeth Brown.&#13;
"The Shepherd of the Hills" was also played at the High School Auditorium on&#13;
April 5 for Red Cross Benefit.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Four&#13;
&#13;
ville sketch by George Pratt and a few more yells t h e crowd divided into&#13;
small groups and started for t heir belated dinners. While many were fortunate enough to reach home in ample time it was reported t hat several&#13;
who chose t he path through the South ravine were late for their 1 :30&#13;
classes.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred E ighty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Agora Banquet&#13;
March 23, 1918&#13;
On the 23d of March, the basement of Grace Church was&#13;
the scene of much merriment, for the Agora Club was holding&#13;
its annual banquet. Many of the Alumnae were present and&#13;
were welcomed with open arms, many mothers caught their&#13;
first ·glimpse of the social life of Morningside College, and&#13;
many new girls were initiated into another College activity.&#13;
There were several outsiders present, among them being High&#13;
School girls and girls from other Colleges, and they were giveu&#13;
an exhibition of true Morningside pep.&#13;
This pep originated from various sources. There was the&#13;
interest in the tables which were decorated by the various&#13;
classes, the interest being at its height when a silver cup was&#13;
awarded to the Class of '21 for the most artistic table and the&#13;
highest percentage in attendance. There was the interest in&#13;
the appetizing menu, which was so well prepared by the ladies&#13;
of the Church and so skilfully served by the College men. We&#13;
might even say that there was an interest taken in the waiters,&#13;
although they preserved their dignity very well as polite waiters should. The most marked enthusiasm was shown in the&#13;
complimentary ( ?) remarks passed by one class upon another,&#13;
in which were shown the exuberance of the Freshmen with&#13;
their outburst of uncontrolled enthusiasm, the meekness of the&#13;
Sophomores in their remarks, the super-knowledge of the Juniors with their "We knowed it," and the dignified wisdom of&#13;
the Seniors, Alumnae and Faculty in the friendly advice given&#13;
to the younger generation.&#13;
The toast program was one of especial interest with Miss&#13;
Mabel Elizabeth Brown as toastmistress. The life of a soldier&#13;
was cleverly depicted bythe representatives of the various&#13;
Classes. "The Recruits" was given by Miss Elizabeth Hick·&#13;
man, of the Academy; "In Training," by Miss Anna Coughlan, of the Freshman Class; "On Parade," by Miss Laura Engberg, of the Sophomore Class; "Drill," by Miss Miriam Fish,&#13;
of the Junior Class; "Retreat," by Miss Lida Saunders, of the&#13;
Senior Class; "Taps," by Miss Gladys Little, of the Alumnae,&#13;
and "Commissioned Officers," by Miss Helen Lund, of the Faculty. The evening closed with the singing of College songs.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Six&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S BANQUET&#13;
March 29, 1918&#13;
Away back in the dim distant past, some twelve years ago, an idea was&#13;
born and thrown upon the uncertain mercies of Morningside's male students.&#13;
Strange to say this idea survived the rude buffeting of inexperienced hands;&#13;
not only survived, but grew and flourished to such an extent t hat today it&#13;
has become a firmly established custom. This idea that materialized and&#13;
became a tradition is the annual Men's Banquet. Its first years were not&#13;
balmy ones, but it gained steadily in import ance until in 1912 there was&#13;
Introduced an innovation in t he form of Class competition for the best table&#13;
decorations and the most perfect attendance. The prizes were at first nondescript silken pennants, but in 1916 they rose to the dignity of handsome&#13;
and expensive trophy cups.&#13;
For the men, this banquet is the great get-together event of the year.&#13;
High School students from t he surrounding t erritory are invited here to&#13;
catch a glimpse of the College spirit that has made Morningside, and that&#13;
last fall spread her name from coast to coast as a doughty opponent of&#13;
Notre Dame. Alumni come from all parts of the United States and even&#13;
from the far corners of the world to participate again in that jolly affair&#13;
and to get anew the inspirat ion that in the past has stood them in good&#13;
stead. Some times parents insist on coming also, but we place them at a&#13;
table by themselves, where for at least a time t hey cannot ask embarrassing&#13;
questions. But it is the students that are the spirit of the whole thing. With&#13;
that jolly-good-fellow spirit t he Classes hurl mighty insults at each other&#13;
and bandy choice bits of flagrant scandal. With glorious conceit they boastfully chant of the virtues they possess and t he victories they have won.&#13;
The parlors of Grace Church ring with songs and yells. Practically every&#13;
man in College is there. The fellow who does not go is looked upon with&#13;
scorn by the whole student body and for months bears the weight of deep&#13;
suspicion and distrust.&#13;
·&#13;
This year there seemed to be an undercurrent of seriousness. Though&#13;
our jokes were as numerous and our unearthed scandal as rich and varied&#13;
as ever, we all felt the heavy shadow and grim responsibilities of this war&#13;
that hangs over our nation. The toasts, the addresses, the table decorations all brought it home to us. Even the substantial fare that was served&#13;
was a war meal. We had but to look around us to see many empty places&#13;
whose occupants are now offering their lives on the plaines of France. Letters were read from students and faculty members in the service, men that&#13;
but one short year ago were here with us. Every man realized the tremendous duty he owes to t hese men; every student made a secret vow to&#13;
work as he had never worked before and in some measure to justify this&#13;
noble sacrifice.&#13;
When the last toast was given and the last handshake was over; we&#13;
parted-many of us never again to banquet together. When another year&#13;
rolls around and Morningside men again gather to banquet there will be&#13;
many more vacant places, some of which shall never be filled. But though&#13;
we are scattered to the ends of the earth, though we ar falling in far off&#13;
France we shall never forget. our beloved Alma Mater, and old Ki Yi shall&#13;
ring out over the fields of Germany as we carry Old Glory to the very walls&#13;
of Berlin.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Just as the Queen was being crowned it started to rain and as the&#13;
sky was pretty black and it kept on raining harder, the dancers fled to the&#13;
various tents back of the field. The crowd also dispersed and thus ended&#13;
the program of the first day.&#13;
The program was again postponed and when the evening came, no one&#13;
could have asked for a nicer one.&#13;
Again the procession came down the cinder path, and, after the Queen&#13;
had taken her place on the throne, the dancers began the dances which&#13;
were representative of various birds and flowers. First came the grand&#13;
march in which all of the girls took part. This was followed by the dance&#13;
of the Fairies. The Fairies were frightened away by the three elements.&#13;
After the elements disappeared, the Spring Beauties took their place, followed by Violets and the Jack-in-the~Pulpit and Wild Roses. These were well&#13;
received by the Queen and her attendants. After the Wild Rose dance came&#13;
the Blue Bird dance, whose place was taken by the Buttercups. Then the&#13;
Clover, Black-Eyed Susan and the Lily-of-the-Valley dances were given and&#13;
all was concluded by the winding of the Maypole. · Again the long procession formed and marched off of the field the way it had come. Another&#13;
May day was ended, the prettiest and best we had ever had.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Gillies, Retiring Queen&#13;
&#13;
Marion Heikes, Queen&#13;
&#13;
Under the Direction of Miss Salome Luechauer.&#13;
The third annual May Day program was given by the Agora Club on&#13;
Bass Field. Each year the exhibition is bigger and better than before and&#13;
so it was last year.&#13;
&#13;
It was an evening performance _&#13;
and due to a rainstorm on the first&#13;
night that had been set, the program was postponed until a later date.&#13;
The day came and it was warm and cloudy. About 6 o'clock it looked as&#13;
though it would clear off and so before the scheduled time people began to&#13;
arrive. The bleachers were crowded and automobiles were lined up several&#13;
deep back of the bleachers ready to use their headlights on the field when&#13;
the signal was given.&#13;
Then the procession came down the cinder path. The Queen of the&#13;
year before led the procession and was followed by the new Queen and her&#13;
attendants. Next came all the dancers in bright colored costumes. The&#13;
Queen was escorted to her throne and was crowned by the retiring Queen&#13;
while the court dancers stood facing the throne.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eighty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
The Store for Men&#13;
YOUNG MEN'S IDEAS and young men's&#13;
demands cleverly wrought into clothes of&#13;
vigorous, snappy line- is the theme of our&#13;
&#13;
Men's Clothes&#13;
Tailored at Fashion&#13;
&#13;
Park ."&#13;
&#13;
Dear Folks : I have decided to keep a diary of&#13;
the daily happenings here at our Cantonment on&#13;
the Sioux, in order that you may .understand why&#13;
it is that we do not find time for the less important work of keeping up with our studies and&#13;
thereby gaining promotion. It may also serve in&#13;
after years to refreshen my memory and help me&#13;
in recalling t he numerous events that aid in mak-&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS WHO FOR YEARS have fashioned clothes pleasingly, satisfactorily for&#13;
men of exacting tastes design the clothes&#13;
Tailored at Fashion Park.&#13;
ALWAYS- in Pelletier's Men's Storeyoung men will find clothes of good judgment, clothes of dependability, clothes that&#13;
aptly reflect the personality of the wearer.&#13;
FASHION PARK CLOTHES are good&#13;
clothes, designed r ight, tailored .e xpertly,&#13;
modeled in keeping with the t imes. A comprehensive selection with intelligent, knowing salesmen always at your command.&#13;
&#13;
--$20&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
$40&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety&#13;
&#13;
ing my stay in this Training Camp so pleasant.&#13;
1 O. The first thing t hat happened after the spring&#13;
furloughs was, a lecture course number at Grace Church.&#13;
Burns spoke on the southern mountaineers. It is rumored that Rusty stepped again that night, but we have&#13;
no proof.&#13;
11. An awful epidemic of d iamond rings and Otho&#13;
pins has broken out in camp. Th e latest count shows&#13;
ten victims. We do not know w heth e r this is catching&#13;
or not, but they say it is fatal for those stricken.&#13;
12 . Any one passing by the Conservatory tonight and&#13;
hearing the heartrendering sobs of Buster and the stammery ravings of Chick would have thought terrible tragedy was being enacted. However, it was only an expression r ecital.&#13;
14. The thunder roared and th e lightening flashed.&#13;
The new Annual Board has gone to smash. Well, "Let&#13;
the dead bury its past." We have an Annual Board now,&#13;
which is going to put out the best in spite of the high&#13;
cost of living.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-One&#13;
&#13;
15. A breath of spring and the tennis sharks are out.&#13;
They elected officers for the Association today.&#13;
1 7. The first victims of the afore mentioned epidemic&#13;
succumed today. Claire and Irene were married. They&#13;
have been under quarantine for some time so it did not&#13;
come as a shock to their friends.&#13;
19. Military drill this morning at 6 A. M. Some of&#13;
the rookies were on time. It shows that Morningside pep&#13;
can become Morningside patriotism. This morning in&#13;
chapel we had a big booster meeting for the Drake Relays. Sounds of victory in the air. This afternoon the&#13;
Faculty ladies put on their new spring growns and enjoyed the Athenaeum vio let tea.&#13;
21. Morningside as usual wins the two-mile event at&#13;
the Drake Relays. The Pi's gave an interesting open&#13;
door, "An evening with modern comp.o sers and writers."&#13;
23. This morning the Philos and Athenaeums had a&#13;
picnic at South ravine. After the eats an intense botanical and biological research took place.&#13;
2 7. In conclusion then , honorable judges, we maintain that the Coeds are some debaters. The girls' annual&#13;
debates took place tonight. Sure we won.&#13;
28. Something doing for everyone tonight.&#13;
and Ionians had a good old frolic in the gym.&#13;
of u s went to the Zet-Otho open door and&#13;
"movies." After that we went into the Philo&#13;
saw them give "Up to Freddie."&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
saw&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
Pi's&#13;
rest&#13;
the&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
30. The home meet on Bass Field, Curry won individual honors.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Two&#13;
&#13;
Fit&#13;
Style&#13;
Tailoring&#13;
Individuality&#13;
&#13;
HlRSH-WlCKWlRE&#13;
Clothing&#13;
Featured Exclusively&#13;
&#13;
SHARTS&#13;
Martin Hotel Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Three&#13;
&#13;
CLOTHES FOR YOU&#13;
The Fit-Form--the Stein-Bloch&#13;
The young man who possesses as much&#13;
snap, whim and go as you, should wear&#13;
clothes that reflect his personality. Such&#13;
clothes can be obtained at Davidson&#13;
Bros. Company, and they are the&#13;
&#13;
Fit-Form Clothes for Young Men&#13;
As their name implies, they fit to the&#13;
form, bringing out the natural, graceful&#13;
outlines of the youthful figure. The&#13;
tailoring, the finishing, the quality of&#13;
materials, the colors and patterns of&#13;
these clothes, too, are such that please&#13;
the young taste. And we recommend&#13;
them highly.&#13;
&#13;
Priced 22. 50 to $40&#13;
&#13;
1 Some of the boys received May baskets this morning. This afternoon the Athenaeums were entertained by&#13;
the Pi's at a tea. Afterward everyone went to the baseball game and saw Morningside beat Highland Park, 7-0.&#13;
2. Morningside again defeated Highland Park in,&#13;
baseball, 11-2.&#13;
4. A " rearin tearin" crowd of High School people as&#13;
sembled on the bleachers this afternoon to cheer for&#13;
their representatives in the annual "M" meet. Sioux&#13;
City won the meet.&#13;
5. Another victory for the Maroons today. Yankton&#13;
defeated in dual meet.&#13;
6. The Othos and Zets woke all the little birdies in&#13;
South ravine this morning. The breakfast was fine&#13;
(Mrs. Perry was cook), and, of course, someone had to&#13;
keep up tradition, so fell in the creek.&#13;
11. My goodness! Lots of things happened today,&#13;
M. c. won the dual meet from Nebraska Wesleyan. Klippel won first in the oratorical contest. This evening the&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta held their first annual banquet.&#13;
12. The Athenaeums entertained their mothers today at a 6 o'clock dinner, and an open door afterwards.&#13;
13. Mothers' Day.&#13;
14. The Pi's and Ionians enjoyed a joint picnic at&#13;
Stone Park today.&#13;
1 7. The Zets entertained t heir mothers at a tea this&#13;
afternoon. My, but the eats looked good.&#13;
18. Morningside entered into a double debate with&#13;
St. Viateur College. As a result we r e port a victory and&#13;
a loss for Morningside. Our track team won fourth&#13;
place in the State meet.&#13;
21. Zet hen party at Esther Montgomery's.&#13;
22 . Dr. Hilmer sprang a new song in Chapel this&#13;
morning which didn't go with the music. It was very&#13;
entertaining, if not m elodious.&#13;
26. One grand rush for the Sioux '18 which appeared&#13;
today.&#13;
31. After several vain attempts on account of the&#13;
rain the May festival finally took place this evening.&#13;
Miss Leucheaur's trained troops made a pretty picture&#13;
as they froliced at dusk on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
THE BIG STORE&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Five&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Four&#13;
&#13;
JOE MORTON,&#13;
Vice Pre s.&#13;
&#13;
GO. G. MOORE,&#13;
Pres. a n d T reas.&#13;
&#13;
F o urth a nd N ebraska.&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE in peace-time or war-time&#13;
means giving your best to the end in view.&#13;
9. This week th e Seniors r eigned supreme. Graduating exercises of the school of expression this evening.&#13;
10. Baccalau r eate Ser mon at Grace Ch urch .&#13;
11. Class play th is afternoon in the Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
This&#13;
&#13;
ing progress is due alone to the earnestness with which we follow our business&#13;
ideal---to give, always---&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
Dollar for Every Dollar, or Every Dollar Back&#13;
&#13;
evening th e graduating exercises of the Conse rvat ory of&#13;
Music.&#13;
12. A busy day for ever yone. 9 : 00 A. M. A reunion of&#13;
classes and Literary Socie ties. 11: 0 0 A. M. Farewell studen t assembly.&#13;
&#13;
12:30 P .· M. Alu mn i luncheon.&#13;
&#13;
6 : 00&#13;
&#13;
P. M. Alu mni banquet. 8: 30 P. M. President's annual r eception .&#13;
13 . At 10 : 00 this morning th e Senior Class becam e&#13;
alumni. The ·commencement exer cise s were given by R ev.&#13;
VACATION&#13;
&#13;
Charles B urn s , of Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Have a good time during furlough.&#13;
&#13;
Goodby everybo dy.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
Moore&#13;
C1othing&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Copyright 1918&#13;
&#13;
The House Kuppenheimer&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
One Hundre d Nine t y-Six&#13;
&#13;
One Hu ndred Ninety-Seven&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Creations&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Women's and Misses'&#13;
Suits, Coats&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Afternoon Dresses&#13;
Also&#13;
&#13;
Distributors&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Smart College Footwear&#13;
for&#13;
&#13;
Men and Women&#13;
&#13;
11. Hello, Everybody! You bet we are glad to be&#13;
back. We are sorry, though, that so many familiar faces&#13;
are missing. So many of our soldiers have been called&#13;
into service. Enlistment here began today with the&#13;
largest bunch of rookies we have ever had.&#13;
12. Tonight we had our annual Y. W. reception up&#13;
in the halls. Everyone was happy until the boys stole&#13;
our melons. The Y. W . held their reception in the gym.&#13;
13. It seemed good to be back in Chapel this morning and have one of our old-time pep meetings again.&#13;
14. Y. W. and Y. M. joint reception tonight.&#13;
Freshmen all stepped out.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
15. Lots of excitement this evening over the annual&#13;
society scrap. Never mind, it was ever thus.&#13;
16. President Craig preached the Matriculation Sermon today. Subject, "Challenge of the Times to the&#13;
Youth of Today.''&#13;
17. Everyone went to the Epworth League reception&#13;
at Grace Church tonight. A howling success.&#13;
18. Classes elected captains for the new year.&#13;
24. Morningside band was organized this morning&#13;
with Archie Freeman as director.&#13;
25. Ethel Leginska appeared on the first number of&#13;
the Sioux City Concert course at the Auditorium.&#13;
26. Harvey-Leuchauer engagement was announced&#13;
this evening at a party given by Mrs. J. J. Hayes. Time&#13;
to start in saving for those dining room chairs. The "M"&#13;
Club held their initiation in the gym tonight. Oh, my,&#13;
you boys play so rough.&#13;
&#13;
Thehouse of Quality, Style and Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ninety-Eight&#13;
&#13;
27. Suffrage speech by Miss Vernon in Chapel this&#13;
morning. "The poor suffering wom en."&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Ni nety-Nine&#13;
&#13;
You'll know how you'll ''come&#13;
out" if you'll come here&#13;
1. The new Zets entertained their older sistes at Clara&#13;
Back's this evening.&#13;
4. Lots of us went down to the Auditorium to hear&#13;
McAdoo speak this afternoon. This evening the men's&#13;
societies welcomed their new members.&#13;
6. First football game of the season. M. C. drubbed&#13;
Trinity, 62 to 7. This evening while the Pi's were enjoying their annual banquet at the West Hotel, the new&#13;
Zets and Athenaeum pledges were enjoying ? informal&#13;
initiation.&#13;
8. The Crescents and Hawkeyes enjoyed one of their&#13;
good old-time parties tonight.&#13;
9. The Athenaeums were entertained at Murell Walker's this evening. The new pledges were hostesses.&#13;
,&#13;
11. Poli tics ran wild in the main hall this morning&#13;
After a hard battle the wets won over the drys in a&#13;
straw vote and Jerry was appointed to measure off a&#13;
space for the bar at one end of the hall. Skinney Norton&#13;
says "One Barz enough." We all agree.&#13;
15. Two by two they strolled by. The first bunch&#13;
were Zets and Othos on their way to a picnic at South&#13;
ravine. The second bunch were the Pi's and Ionians going to Isabel Walker's for a joint.&#13;
&#13;
Buying clothes is a dollars and cents proposition with most young fellows. You want to&#13;
know how you'll "come out" before you "go&#13;
in."&#13;
When you come to this store you'll get just&#13;
exactly the things you fellows want; we make&#13;
it our business to have them for you. And&#13;
the clothes we sell are&#13;
&#13;
20 . This afternoon the Maroons were again victorious&#13;
over the Nebraska. Coyotes, to the tune of 79 to 0. The&#13;
Athenaeums gave the first open door of the year. They&#13;
presented a play, "The Virginia Heroine."&#13;
22. Everyone had a real dinner with a toast programme. The Juniors were holding a banquet, the Hawkeyes and Crescents had a party in the Philo Hall, while&#13;
farther on down the corridor the Sophomores entertained&#13;
the Freshmen. Maybe you think the upper floor wasn't&#13;
a nice quiet place.&#13;
25. The Hula Hula band made their first appearance&#13;
in Chapel this morning. My, but those red middies were&#13;
classy.&#13;
&#13;
They're all-wool-the smartest styles you've&#13;
ever looked at. You know how you'll "come&#13;
out" when you buy them for we guarantee&#13;
you absolute satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
27. Same old story, Morningside beats Dakota Wesleyan, 33 to 0.&#13;
30. From lighter amusements we turn to real war&#13;
work. M. C. raised $3,000 for the Y. M. C. A. war relief&#13;
fund.&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W . Clothing Company&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX CLOTHES.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred One&#13;
&#13;
SILK&#13;
&#13;
SHIRTS&#13;
&#13;
EXCLUSIVELY !&#13;
&#13;
That's the secret of Washing-&#13;
&#13;
7. The girls begin to play hockey down on Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
ton Shirts&#13;
&#13;
It is rumored that a number of t he boys have purchased&#13;
&#13;
Superiority in Workmanship&#13;
in Quality,&#13;
&#13;
in Value&#13;
&#13;
and in Service.&#13;
&#13;
opera g lasses.&#13;
8. Many are the h earts that are weary tonigh t . The&#13;
poor girls were so immodest as t o expect to march in the&#13;
parades downtown.&#13;
9. Anyway, the boys had a real parade tonigh t. Pajamas and n ight shirts. Oh , horror s! Girls all look the&#13;
other way as they go by.&#13;
10. Times h ave changed . It is no more unmaidenly&#13;
fo r the M. C. gi rls to march in the parade. All morning&#13;
we marched. Men, Coeds and the band . The occasion?&#13;
Why, Morningside played Notre Dame in football. The&#13;
biggest team we have ever met. Notre Dame won, but&#13;
we held them to two touchdowns.&#13;
&#13;
Through Specialization We Always Have&#13;
Up-to-the-Minute Information As To The&#13;
Latest Style Trend.&#13;
&#13;
3. All the girls had a grand old frolic at the Agora&#13;
party tonight. Weird Gypsies' g hosts and shadows inhab ited the upper floor.&#13;
&#13;
We Get First Choice&#13;
&#13;
20. The Senior Expression Department gave a r ecital&#13;
this evening.&#13;
&#13;
of the Newest Patterns and Colorings.&#13;
&#13;
2 4. Soltow won the home oratorical contest.&#13;
sure a real speechmaker.&#13;
&#13;
25. A "Box of Monkeys," given by the Philo a nd&#13;
Athenaeum Societies. A real good laugh for every one.&#13;
&#13;
THE ONLY REAL HABERDASHER IN THE CJTY&#13;
AUTO&#13;
&#13;
617&#13;
&#13;
PHONE&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
9345&#13;
&#13;
ST,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Two&#13;
&#13;
Lee is&#13;
&#13;
29. A big pep meeting was he ld in Chapel this morning for the Vermillion game.&#13;
30. Such a grand and glorious feeling. We beat&#13;
S. D. U. for the first time. How the flames leaped and&#13;
sparkled as the victorious Sioux fr ied coyotes out on Bass&#13;
Field this evening.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Three&#13;
&#13;
VISITING TEAMS&#13;
WELCOMED&#13;
3. The Chicago Orchestral Choir appeared as the first&#13;
&#13;
= = =AT= = =&#13;
&#13;
n u mber of the College lecture course.&#13;
7. The Freshmen fo llowed the nob le example of the&#13;
Seniors and both classes h e ld parties in t h e Society Halls&#13;
t h is evening.&#13;
8. The banquet room at the Mar tin Hotel was the&#13;
&#13;
The Martinrt,ote l&#13;
ABSOLUTELY&#13;
&#13;
FIREPROOF&#13;
&#13;
scene of the Zet annua l banquet tonight.&#13;
12 . All th is week has been agony fo r the girls.&#13;
&#13;
De-&#13;
&#13;
bate tryou ts you know.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
13. Ng Poom Chew appeared in the second number&#13;
of t h e College lecture co u rse.&#13;
&#13;
It was a d isappointment&#13;
&#13;
that he wore no pigtail.&#13;
17. The Othos have an open door.&#13;
&#13;
Some of the scenes&#13;
&#13;
were very thrilling.&#13;
20. The Athen aeums a n d Philos had their last gettogeth er party before Christmas vacation. T h e Othos and&#13;
Zets, down in their hall , were having a "rearin" good&#13;
time, too.&#13;
&#13;
21.&#13;
&#13;
Christmas vacation begins.&#13;
&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Partys&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Four&#13;
Two Hundred Five&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
In spite of the war and the high cost of living our fountain is still dispensing the same&#13;
&#13;
7. School begins.&#13;
11. First social event of the new year.&#13;
&#13;
generous servings and the crowds are coming&#13;
&#13;
entertained the Seniors at R uth Reid's.&#13;
&#13;
to the place where the principal advertising is&#13;
the good word of satisfied patrons.&#13;
&#13;
ment over Som e'r'set.&#13;
&#13;
The Junior s&#13;
&#13;
Lots of excite-&#13;
&#13;
The Y. W . C. A. President said,&#13;
&#13;
"I thought th er e were 52 cards in a deck."&#13;
14, 15, 16. Inter-society debates.&#13;
&#13;
The Ionians won&#13;
&#13;
the series.&#13;
1 8. Some of us heard Joseph Hofmann at the Auditorium tonight.&#13;
&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
Another memoriable evening.&#13;
&#13;
1 9. A fiery d ebate in Chapel over 6-day a week plan.&#13;
20, 24. Midnight oil-cold cloths on our fever ed brows&#13;
-exam s.&#13;
26. Everything is over now, but th e funeral.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
celebrated by going to the post exam jubilee.&#13;
&#13;
P. S. Don't forget we do your Photo work&#13;
promptly and guarantee satisfaction. We&#13;
have everything in the Kodak line.&#13;
&#13;
28. The three girls' societies entertained in the honor&#13;
of t h e ir broth er&#13;
&#13;
debaters tonight.&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeums and&#13;
&#13;
Philos at Murr e ll Walker's; Zets and Othos at Harriet&#13;
Lawrence's, and the Pi's· and Ionians at Francis Craig's.&#13;
31. Morningside played her first inter-collegiate game&#13;
of basketball this evening, beating Aberdeen, 21-12.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seven&#13;
&#13;
The Tribune Dominates Its&#13;
Field In Advertising and&#13;
Circulation&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
4. Great excitement in the gym this morning. The&#13;
girls basketball tournament started. Freshies beat the&#13;
Seniors and the Juniors beat the Sophs. This evening the&#13;
Othos held their annual banquet at the Martin Hotel.&#13;
Some feed and some time.&#13;
9. Why did -Ruth Mahood receive Fullbrooks laundry&#13;
in the mail this morning? Such mistakes must be explained.&#13;
13. Morningside service flag was unfurled this morning in Chapel. The 150 stars is proof of Morningside&#13;
spirit carried out into the world. This evening the Fresh_ en and Junior Coeds scrapped for the championship .&#13;
n&#13;
The preps winning by a close score.&#13;
18. Morningside again victorious. We beat Western&#13;
Union in basketball, 30 to 13.&#13;
20. Did we beat Huron? Yea, Bo.&#13;
21. Athenaeums hold their annual banquet at the&#13;
West Hotel.&#13;
22. Lloyd Sheerer - wins the annual Monument run.&#13;
Camouflage&#13;
Club have important meeting in Philo Hall.&#13;
Everybody reports an excellent time.&#13;
24. Morningside Coeds again on the firing line. A&#13;
Red Cross Society is organized, with Clara Lewis as&#13;
President.&#13;
25. M. C. plays Yankton tonight. Oh, yes, of course&#13;
we beat, 33 to 16.&#13;
1. March certainly rushed in like a lion. Lee Soltow&#13;
won second place in the divisional oratorical contest. It&#13;
was real oratory, too.&#13;
12. George Dunn wins the annual prohibition contest.&#13;
16. For the first time we feel the real touch of the&#13;
war cloud as we place a gold star on our service flag. Al&#13;
Behmer, our little "Methodist general," killed in action&#13;
somewhere in France.&#13;
15. One victory and one defeat are reported from the&#13;
dual debate clash with State Normal.&#13;
18. "The Shepherd of the Hills" was presented by the&#13;
Philo-Athenaeum Societies as their grand public.&#13;
2 3. The grandest night of the whole year??? The&#13;
annual woman's banquet took place this evening.&#13;
2 5. A patriotic address was given in Chapel this&#13;
evening by Governor Harding.&#13;
2 6. Oh, that grand and glorious feeling. Don't you&#13;
boys wish you could have been there and witnessed that&#13;
Yale-Hardvard game? After the struggle the score stood&#13;
18 to 14 in favor of Yale. Hooray, for Yale.&#13;
29. The Annual Men's Banquet was held tonight.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eight&#13;
&#13;
51,000 people buy The Tribune because they like it better than any&#13;
other paper in this part of the country. They like it because it furnishes&#13;
more news and better features than other papers do. Both Sioux City papers&#13;
are members of the Associated Press, only The Tribune is a member of the&#13;
United Press Association.&#13;
The Evening Tribune's circulation of 51,000 is 69 % more than that of&#13;
the other Sioux City evening newspaper; 145 % more than that of the morning newspaper and 130 % more than the only Sunday newspaper.&#13;
Tribune mail subscribers are 100 % cash paid in advance. Do you know&#13;
of another newspaper with so valid a claim to quality circulation?&#13;
In 1917 The Tribune carried in six evening issues a week, 665,426 agate&#13;
lines or 2 9 % more display advertising than the second Sioux City newspaper&#13;
carried in its six combined morning and evening issues.&#13;
The Tribune carried 198 ,279 agate lines or 2 2 % more national display&#13;
advertising, and 467,201 agate lines or 29 % more local display advertising&#13;
than the six combined morning and evening issues of the second paper.&#13;
The first choice of both local and national advertisers in Sioux City is&#13;
evidenced by these comparisons.&#13;
The Tribune offers quantity, quality and prestige.&#13;
John C. Kelly, Editor.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1884 by&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Tribune&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Nine&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
The following 210 Alumni, Faculty and former students of Morningside&#13;
College are at present offering their lives in the service of their country :&#13;
&#13;
The best place to buy.&#13;
&#13;
Corporal Albert E. Behmer-Killed&#13;
in action in France March 17,&#13;
1918.&#13;
&#13;
The finest of fruits&#13;
And vegetables,&#13;
Fancy cakes&#13;
&#13;
Anderson, Lieut. Thomas Carlyle,&#13;
'08-Naval Medical Station, Honolulu, Hawaii.&#13;
&#13;
And all sorts&#13;
of pickles&#13;
For Their&#13;
&#13;
Appel Fred, Ex. '19-Army.&#13;
&#13;
Spreads&#13;
&#13;
Basset, Brown,&#13;
Jackson, S. C.&#13;
&#13;
Ex.&#13;
&#13;
'14-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Beck, Eric, Acad., '18-Camp Lewis, Wash.&#13;
Bell, Orin, '18-Camp Dodge, Des&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Archer, Thomas, '16-Dundeedy&#13;
Institute, Minneapolis Minn.&#13;
&#13;
Bennett, Vernon W., Ex. '20-Medical Detachment , 314th Ammunition Train, Camp Funston, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
Aughenbaugh,&#13;
Maine.&#13;
&#13;
And picnics.&#13;
&#13;
Beppler, Paul, Ex. '21-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Floyd-Battleship&#13;
&#13;
Back, Lieut . George Irving, Ex. '19&#13;
-Radio Signal Corps, Maryland&#13;
State College, Md.&#13;
Backemeyer, Fred-Military Pastor Camp Hancock, Augusta, Ga.&#13;
For the&#13;
College Students.&#13;
The "Big" Store.&#13;
&#13;
Barks, G. Earl, '18-0rdnance Department.&#13;
Barrett, Walter, Ex: '18-Co. A,&#13;
338 Mac. Gun Bat., Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Bartlett, Allan, Ex. '19-Radio&#13;
Service, Co. D, 7th Regiment,&#13;
Camp Perry, Great Lake.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
Around the corner off the Campus.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Ten&#13;
&#13;
Bashaw, Corporal Stanley, Ex. '18&#13;
-Co. B, 126 Mac. Gun Bat., 17th&#13;
Brigade, 34th Division, Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Berg, Abe, Ex. '21-Radio School,&#13;
Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
Berkstresser, William, Ex. '20-Co.&#13;
F, 3rd Supply Train, 551 Book&#13;
Bldg., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Bigglestone, Harry, '14-Y. M. C.&#13;
A., Great Lakes, 111.&#13;
Bogard, Herman, '15-Merchant&#13;
Marine, U.S. S.S. Gopher.&#13;
Bogard, Sergeant Joseph, Ex. '18126th Mac. Gun Bat ., Camp Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
Bondhus, Francis Leonard-Medical Corps, Fort Riley, Kan.&#13;
Bridenbaugh, Lieut . J. H.-Medical Corps.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eleven&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
Fresh cut daily.&#13;
A choice assortment of fresh cut roses always on hand, American Beauties, Russell's Ophelia, Aaron Ward, Richmond, Killarney and many others.&#13;
Dainty Corsages.&#13;
&#13;
Choice Baskets of Flowers.&#13;
&#13;
WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION.&#13;
NOTICE: A discount of 10 per cent allowed to all classes of&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
ART FLOWER SHOP&#13;
512 Fifth Street.&#13;
Bell Phone 466.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1734.&#13;
&#13;
Broome, Lieut. Ray R.-Aviation&#13;
Corps, Fort Omaha, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Campbell, Prof. H. G.-Y. M. C. A.,&#13;
31 Ave. Montigue, Paris, France.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Corporal Bernard-Sec.&#13;
583, N. S. 99 S., A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Carlson, Oscar B.-Fort Logan,&#13;
Colo.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Dan H., Ex. '16-0. T. C.,&#13;
Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Carter, Pearl Scott, Ex. '21.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Edwin M., '09-Y. M. C. A.,&#13;
12 Rue d' Aguessean, Paris,&#13;
France.&#13;
Brown, George, Ex. '20-Navy,&#13;
Newport, R. I.&#13;
Brown, Guy, Ex. '19-Co. L, 6th&#13;
Reg., Camp Perry, Great Lakes.&#13;
Brown, Capt. Joe D., Ex. '09-Fortress Monroe, Va.&#13;
&#13;
WE MAKE THEM&#13;
YOU SHOULD EAT THEM&#13;
&#13;
LA FAMA · CHOCOLATES&#13;
Made By&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Co., Sioux City, U.S.A.&#13;
&#13;
Brown, Nelson, Acad., 1917-Co. J,&#13;
3rd Reg., Bar 729, Camp Dewey,&#13;
Great Lakes.&#13;
Brunelle, A. H.-Ordnance, A. E.&#13;
F., France.&#13;
Burrows, Richard, Ex. '23-Co. H,&#13;
79th Reg., Winnepeg, Canada.&#13;
Caine, Thos. L., Ex. 21-168 Inf.,&#13;
84th Brig.&#13;
Call, George, Ex. '19-0. T. C.,&#13;
Camp Sheridan, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twelve&#13;
&#13;
Carter, Roscoe, '12-0rdnance Department, Dover, N. J.&#13;
Chandler, L. L.-Educational Sec.,&#13;
Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill.&#13;
Clark, Wilson, '17-Aviation Corps,&#13;
Austin, Tex.&#13;
Clough, Martin, Ex. '18.&#13;
Collins, LeRoy, Ex. '13-Canadian&#13;
Army, France.&#13;
Coombs, Arthur J.-U. S. Marines,&#13;
France.&#13;
Coonen, Howard-Marine Corps.&#13;
Cooper, Burnett, Ex. '19-Radio&#13;
Work.&#13;
Corner, Ivan-U. S. S. Pittsburgh.&#13;
Corner, Lieut. Paul, '12-Signal&#13;
Corps, Camp Hancock, Augusta,&#13;
Ga.&#13;
&#13;
T wo Hundred Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
MOTOR TRUCKS&#13;
&#13;
Cowan, Clinton, Ex. '20-Great&#13;
Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Craig, Laurence, Ex. '21-Commonwwealth Pier, Boston, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
1 1/2 and 2 T on Capacities&#13;
Made in Sioux City.&#13;
Guaranteed Service.&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye Truck Company&#13;
R. A. BENNETT, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor&#13;
&#13;
Craik, Lieut. Oscar W.-Aviation&#13;
Corps, Camp McArthur, Tex.&#13;
Daily, Corporal Charles B, Ex. '17&#13;
-396th Motor Truck Co., Camp&#13;
Joseph Johnson, Jacksonville,&#13;
Fla.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
Dodsley, Lieut. Homer, Ex. '20Camp Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Class Pins&#13;
&#13;
Medals&#13;
&#13;
Emblems&#13;
&#13;
Made to Order&#13;
WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING&#13;
&#13;
Jonas Olson &amp; Co.&#13;
Established 1895&#13;
&#13;
MANUFACTURING JEWELERS AND&#13;
&#13;
510 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3211&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
Evans, Keith M.-Co. G, Camp&#13;
Ross, Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Evans, McKinley, Ex. '19-Sanitary Squadron B, Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Eveleth, Major J. M., Acad., '00Dental Reserve Corps, Douglas,&#13;
Ariz.&#13;
Fair, Lieut. John-Aviation Corps,&#13;
Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Lewis,&#13;
&#13;
Fair, William-0. T.&#13;
Springs, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
Downs, Fayette, Ex. '20-168 Inf.,&#13;
A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Feller, John E. Ex. '19.&#13;
&#13;
Dolliver,&#13;
Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Barrett-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Donohue, Lieut. James H., Ex. '18&#13;
-168th Inf., A. E. F., France.&#13;
Dubel, Marcus, Ex. '19-Aerial&#13;
Gunner Squadron, Dallas, Tex.&#13;
Dunham, Herbert-Marine&#13;
racks, Paris Island, S. C.&#13;
&#13;
Bar-&#13;
&#13;
Dye, Leslie, Ex. '21-Cavalry.&#13;
&#13;
DIAMOND MOUNTERS&#13;
&#13;
Roll&#13;
&#13;
Evans, Burrell-Co. A, 109th Hq.&#13;
Trn., Camp Cody, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
C.,&#13;
&#13;
Leon&#13;
&#13;
Ferguson, Sergeant Claude-22nd&#13;
Aerial Squadron, A. E. F.,&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Fouke, Hugh, Ex. '19-2nd Replacement Reg., Quantico, Va.&#13;
Fowler, Lowell, Ex. '20-Co. C., 1st&#13;
Bat. Signal Corps, A. E. F.,&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
A. R. Johnson &amp; Co.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
Ask your mother for&#13;
&#13;
VICTORY BREAD&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
Aut of Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
Auto Phone 1197&#13;
408-410 IOWA STREET&#13;
Bell Phone 197&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor&#13;
Johnson, Leon, '18-Navy.&#13;
Johnson, Lieut. Philip-Veterinary&#13;
Dept., Med. Reserve Corps, Fort&#13;
Oglethorpe, Ga.&#13;
Johnson, Roye, Ex. '19-Vancouver Barracks, Vancouver, Wash.&#13;
Jones, Lieut. Ira, Ex. '11-14th&#13;
Inf., Camp Lewis, Tacoma,&#13;
Wash.&#13;
Jones, Capt. 0. Garfield-Fort&#13;
Monroe, W. Va.&#13;
Jones, John Paul, Ex. '21-Naval&#13;
Radio Service, Newport, R. I.&#13;
Jurgenson, Royal, Ex. '18-Schofield Barracks, Honolulu, HaWaii.&#13;
Keckler, Rev. Lee Roy-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Hanford's Jee Cream&#13;
The Every Day&#13;
Desert!&#13;
Our pure Ice Cream is more than a dessert. Its food value exceeds that of most table foods.&#13;
Besides being pure it is wholesome and delicious.&#13;
On all occasions it is the ideal refreshment. It always pleases.&#13;
Try our Ice Cream in your home. Be sure to get HANFORD'S.&#13;
&#13;
Kenney, Thomas, Ex. '20-0ffice&#13;
of Div. Surgeon, 34th Div., Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Kingsbury, Sergeant Francis, Ex.&#13;
'18-Co. G, 134th Inf., Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Klippel, Corporal Charles, Ex. '18&#13;
-Camp Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
Koch, Fred, Acad., 1912-Iowa&#13;
Field Hospital No. 2, Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Kolp, Lieut. John D.-Fort Benjamin Harrison, Ind.&#13;
Lewis, James H.-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
"Eat Ice Cream every day-It's good for you."&#13;
&#13;
Lancaster, Harold, '18-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Roll&#13;
&#13;
Lindsey, Arthur, '16.&#13;
Lavender, Robert, Ex. '12-Radio&#13;
Service, Washington, D. C.&#13;
Lawrence, Lieut. Harvey-Co. 32d,&#13;
C. A. C., Fort Terry, Long Island Sound, N. Y.&#13;
Leazer, George, Ex. '21-Camp&#13;
Perry, Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Lloyd, Thomas K., Ex. '19-Marine&#13;
Corps, Paris Island, S. C.&#13;
Loft, William, Ex. '20-133rd Inf.,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Lueder, Herman-Engineering Department, Navy.&#13;
Lory, Milton, Ex. '20 - Camp&#13;
Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
McConkey, Homer Bly, Ex. '19109th Engineers Hospital Squad,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
McDonald, Mark, Ex. '19-Fort&#13;
Winifred Scott, San Francisco,&#13;
Cal.&#13;
McKinney, Sergeant Delbert C., '16&#13;
-Co. F, 351st Reb., Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
McKinney, Lieut . Guy - 302nd&#13;
Field Artillery, Camp Devens,&#13;
Ayre, Mass.&#13;
Magoun, Lieut. Carleton, Ex. '14Co. E, 351st Inf., Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Mahood, Sergeant Cecil H., Ex. '20&#13;
-21st Am. Co. M., A. E. F.,&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixteen&#13;
Two Hundred Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any Shade.&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
Any Style&#13;
&#13;
WITH BRICK&#13;
&#13;
Frear, Lieut. Charles E .-Sanitary&#13;
Squad, 34th Div., Camp Cody,&#13;
&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
&#13;
Forbes, Willis, '18-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Gondie,&#13;
&#13;
The Practicability and Stability of Brick-its value as an investment-as&#13;
a thing of beauty which will be a joy former&#13;
&#13;
Thoughts concerning these&#13;
&#13;
matters we would like to submit for consideration.&#13;
&#13;
Freeman, Mansfield, Ex. '14-A. E.&#13;
F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Brick &amp; Tile Co.&#13;
&#13;
Freeman, Harold, Ex. '19-Camp&#13;
&#13;
George, Ex. '19-134th&#13;
&#13;
Ambulance Corps, CamJ! Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Greynold,&#13;
&#13;
Edward-187th&#13;
&#13;
Aero&#13;
&#13;
Squadron, A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
Office and Disply&#13;
&#13;
Glasgow, Julius, Ex. '20-0ffice of&#13;
Div. Surgeon, 34th Div., Camp&#13;
&#13;
Room, No. 9 West Third Street.&#13;
&#13;
Freist, Thomas, Ex. '19-8lst Co.,&#13;
&#13;
Hanson, William A ..&#13;
&#13;
8th Reg., Great Lakes, Ill . .&#13;
&#13;
The Place to Buy&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal&#13;
SERVI CE&#13;
&#13;
Retail Lumber&#13;
600 W. Seventh&#13;
&#13;
Gary, Major Franklin Jude, Ex.&#13;
'09-102nd Canadian Inf. Bat.,&#13;
&#13;
Hart, Oscar, Ex. '19-Co. 5, Ordnance Dept., Camp, Sheridan,&#13;
Montgomery, Ala.&#13;
&#13;
Gerkin, Vergil, Ex. '19-109 Engineers, Camp Cody, Deming&#13;
N.M.&#13;
&#13;
Gethmann, Walter B., '06-Y. M.&#13;
C. A., Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
Hale, Lieut. John D., Ex. '15-Co.&#13;
B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat., Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford Lumber Co.&#13;
Retail Coal&#13;
1604 East Fourth St&#13;
&#13;
Gantt, Corporal Ed J., Ex. '20-Co.&#13;
B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat., Camp&#13;
&#13;
Housnald, Ernest, Ex. '20-Aviation, Madison, Wis.&#13;
Held, Walter, '17-133rd Inf.,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
CULTIVATE THE&#13;
FIVE YEAR VISION&#13;
Men who cultivate business vision first equip themselves with dependable inforinatoin. They couple their business foresight with&#13;
the sound financial judgment of experienced bankers. Their plans&#13;
are adjusted to anticipate conditions of the future. As depositors&#13;
in the First National, such men broaden the expanse of their business horizon.&#13;
&#13;
Henderson, George, Ex. '20-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Section, Sec. 1, Co. 2, Reg. 2,&#13;
&#13;
Miller, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
Charleston, S. C.&#13;
Herbster, J. G.-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Lee, Ex. '19-Marines,&#13;
Paris Island, S. C.&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Hornney, Alvin G.. '17-Aviation&#13;
&#13;
Hicks, Corporal Earl E., Ex. '1916th U. S. Ambulance Co., Fort&#13;
&#13;
Honard, Major William-Medical&#13;
Reserve, Camp Funston, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
Riley, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
N. W. Corner 5th and Pierce Streets.&#13;
Capital and Surplus, $720,000.00.&#13;
Hickman, Edwin, Ex. '20-Camp&#13;
Dodge.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR DEPENDABLE&#13;
&#13;
FURNITURE&#13;
AND RUGS&#13;
In buying Furniture and Home Furnishings there a r e many ways that you can test&#13;
the merits of the store with which you deal.&#13;
We abide cheer fully by the test that our&#13;
values show through comparison with others, and urge our customers to satisfy their&#13;
doubts, however slight, in that conclusive&#13;
way. You will find that our prices are not&#13;
only the fa irest, but in many case sthe lowest in town.&#13;
&#13;
Hill, Byron, Ex. '20168th Inf., A. E.&#13;
F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Hutton, Charles-Ordnance Dept.,&#13;
A. E. F., France.&#13;
&#13;
Hill, Freeman, Ex. '20-Battery B,&#13;
Field Art ., Fort Sill, Okla.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Art hur-Tank Service,&#13;
Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
&#13;
Hill, Rev. J. E.-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Quality Service Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
Horn, John, Ex. '20-Co. 12, Coast&#13;
Art., Fort Baker, Cal.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Hudson, Sergeant Thomas, Acad.,&#13;
1911- Co. B, Mounted Police,&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Frank, '13.&#13;
Johnson, Emmons, Ex. '20-Great&#13;
Lakes, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twen ty-One&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
You should store up KNOWLEDGE in the HEAD, but choose some&#13;
SAFE place for your MONEY.&#13;
&#13;
Try the&#13;
&#13;
CONTINENTAL NATIONAL&#13;
BANK&#13;
Iowa Bldg., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
All Patrons of "M.-S." should arrange for their FARM and CITY&#13;
LOANS and INSURANCE through the CONTINENTAL MORTGAGE COMPANY.&#13;
M. F. McDowell, "Class 03," Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Mahood, Rev. H. W. L., Ex. '02Y. M. C. A. Secretary, Louisville, Ky.&#13;
&#13;
Morley, Maynard L., '15.&#13;
Mossman, Sergeant Marion-Head-&#13;
&#13;
Mahood, Herbert, Ex. '19-0ffice&#13;
&#13;
quarters Co., 13th Field Artillery,&#13;
Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. C.&#13;
&#13;
of Div. Surgeon, 34th Div., Camp&#13;
&#13;
Mulfort, Grant-Co. M., 133rd Inf.,&#13;
&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Malsie, Willard, Ex. '21-0rdnance&#13;
Dept., Camp Fremont, Palo Alto,&#13;
&#13;
Mulford, Morton, Acad., 1916-Co.&#13;
L., 133rd Inf., Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Cal.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Bldg., Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
O'Donaghue, Lieut. J. H.-South&#13;
&#13;
Maskell, Neal, Ex. '21.&#13;
&#13;
Bend, Wash.&#13;
Maynard, Orville-29th Artillery,&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY FEEDS&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
GRADED HAY&#13;
Alfalfa, Molasses Feeds, Dairy Feeds, Hog Fat Feeds, Horse Feed.&#13;
Poultry and Chick Feeds made in Sioux City, under C. J.M. brand.&#13;
Make fat horses, steers, hogs, sheep and poultry.&#13;
Everything for the feeder&#13;
&#13;
C.J. MILLIGAN, Inc.&#13;
304 Wall Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Established 1899. Member&#13;
Students are invited&#13;
of National Hay Associato inspect our plant&#13;
tion and Sioux City Board&#13;
of Trade.&#13;
at any time.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Feed &amp; Elevator Co.&#13;
East Morningside&#13;
Retail deliveries in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Camp Upton, Long Island, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
Waco, Tex.&#13;
Mayne,&#13;
&#13;
Lieut.&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth,&#13;
&#13;
Acad.,&#13;
&#13;
1913-132 Inf. Headquarters Co.,&#13;
&#13;
Overholser, Ralph-Aviati:o n Corps,&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Logan, Houston, Fla.&#13;
Omar, Gaylord, Ex. '20-Co. 81,&#13;
Montgomery, Paul, Ex. '16-168th&#13;
Inf. Headquarters Co., 42nd Div.,&#13;
A. E. F., France.&#13;
Moore, Lieut. St. Clair, Ex. '18Co. A, Iowa Engineers, Camp Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
8th Reg., Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Patrick, Glenn, '16-Harvard Radio School, Cambridge, Mass.&#13;
Payne, Arthur, '17-Co. M, Camp&#13;
A. A. Humphrey, Washington,&#13;
&#13;
D. C.&#13;
&#13;
Morgan, Horace, '14-Co. 10, 339th&#13;
Mac. Gun Bat., Camp Dodge, Des&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Oliver, Lieut. Frank, Ex. '17-&#13;
&#13;
Payne, Victor, Ex. '19-109th Engineers, Camp Cody, Deming,&#13;
N.M.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
WHERE QUALITY IS&#13;
&#13;
Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
AS REPRESENTED&#13;
&#13;
Payne, Lieut. William H, '15-Co.&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
&#13;
Roost, Capt. Fred, Ex. '02-134th&#13;
&#13;
1, Coast Artillery, Fort San Jacin-&#13;
&#13;
Exclusive Things&#13;
&#13;
Ambulance Corps, Camp Cody,&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
to, Galveston, Tex.&#13;
410 Pierce St.,&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
JEW ELER&#13;
&#13;
Peete, Frank-Camp Sheridan, Ala.&#13;
&#13;
Sporting and Athletic Goods&#13;
Outdoors, Afield and Afloat&#13;
A. G. Spalding Bros. and H. C. Lees Tennis, Golf,&#13;
Baseball Goods, Ladies' Kampit Outing and Riding Suits.&#13;
Camp and Vacation&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
312-15&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
Orcutts Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Pike, Stillman, Ex.&#13;
&#13;
'18-Battery&#13;
&#13;
E, 147th Field Artillery, A. E.&#13;
F ., France.&#13;
Pitman,&#13;
&#13;
Ralph,&#13;
&#13;
Ex.&#13;
&#13;
'21-Radio&#13;
&#13;
Service, Newport, R. I.&#13;
Prichard, Lieut. George W. '13Co. D., 338th Mac. Gun Bat.,&#13;
Camp Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Spring 1918&#13;
Howard Clothing Co.&#13;
MEN'S STORE&#13;
Out of the Ordinary&#13;
Is Out of the Rut&#13;
&#13;
420 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
Ptichard, Lieut. Ralph, '16-Co. G.,&#13;
350th Infantry, Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
MORNlNGSlDE BANK&#13;
Located at Peters Park.&#13;
John Scott, Jr., President.&#13;
&#13;
W. L. Ayers, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
-Senior Aid de Camp 2nd Div.,&#13;
&#13;
Richardson, Noble, Ex. '18-Aviation Corps, Fort Logan, Colo.&#13;
Schearer,&#13;
Navy.&#13;
Schriener,&#13;
&#13;
Lloyd,&#13;
&#13;
Acad.,&#13;
&#13;
William-Radio&#13;
&#13;
1918-&#13;
&#13;
Div.,&#13;
&#13;
Fort Leavenworth, Kan.&#13;
Sampson, Ernest, Ex. '19-Philippine Islands.&#13;
Sanem, Sergeant E. G.-Fort Riley,&#13;
Kan.&#13;
&#13;
Depot, Camp Doniphan, Fort Sill,&#13;
Okla.&#13;
&#13;
A. P. 0. 710, A. E. F., France.&#13;
Sawyer, Capt. Prince E..&#13;
Pyncheon, Capt. E. A., Ex. '14Fort Sill, Okla.&#13;
Rippey, Ralph, Ex. 'l 7-133rd Inf.,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Mac. Gun Bat., Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sass, Sergeant Carl W.-Ordnance&#13;
Prichard, Capt. Vernon E., Ex. '12&#13;
&#13;
It has been a pleasure to this bank for the past five years to serve College&#13;
Faculty and Students.&#13;
In our n ew modern banking home we are fully equipped to care for your&#13;
banking needs in every detail.&#13;
Correspondence invited from parents or guardians in reference to this College&#13;
Suburb and will have our cheerful and prompt attention.&#13;
&#13;
Rambo, Eli, Ex. '17-Co. B., 127th&#13;
&#13;
Saylor, Lieut. Herbert, '05-Field&#13;
Hospital No. 16, Fort Riley, Kan.&#13;
Schellinger, Roy, Ex. '19-Radio&#13;
Service, Newport, R. I.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
&#13;
THE TEST OF TIME&#13;
This bank has the d isti n ction of twenty-five yea r s of u seful service b ehind it, which is the record for a Savings Bank in Sioux City.&#13;
Its material r eso urces have grown from year to year and it has&#13;
also grown as a part of the characte r of the co mmunity. A successful&#13;
twenty-five-year-old savings ba nk should be a good bank to ti e to, and we invite you to call and becom e a m emb er of our eve r-growing family.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
The Safe Home for Savings.&#13;
Security&#13;
Bank Buliding.&#13;
&#13;
Starr, Gaylord. A.-Battery D,&#13;
335th Field Artillery, Camp Pike,&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS AND DESIGNS&#13;
&#13;
Ward, Corporal Arthur, Ex. '1230th Aero Squadron, A. E. F.,&#13;
&#13;
Walker, Harold, '18-Radio Service.&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
Seeman, Albert, '21-Navy.&#13;
&#13;
Enjoy Refreshments or Lunch in Our Fountain Room&#13;
Stenseth, Vernon, Ex. '19-133rd&#13;
Ambulance Co., Camp Cody,&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO&#13;
&#13;
Engin-&#13;
&#13;
France.&#13;
&#13;
Steele, Sergeant Lawrence, Ex. '19&#13;
-Co. B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat.,&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS AND FINISHING&#13;
&#13;
Walton, Donald, '17-109th&#13;
&#13;
eers, Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Dodge, Des Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Ark.&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
DRUGS, CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
Sanger, Ernest, Ex. '20-Camp&#13;
&#13;
Watland, Maurice, Acad., 1914133rd Field Hospital, Camp&#13;
Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Deming, N. M.&#13;
Watlant, Walter, Ex. '21.&#13;
&#13;
Never Before Have There Been Such&#13;
Opportunities for Young People&#13;
Are you conserving your leisure time? You work eight hours. Sleep&#13;
eight hours, that makes sixteen. Where are the other eight? You&#13;
can account for part of them. So much time for eating and recreation. A College student can use part of his spare time to very&#13;
good advantage by taking a Business Training Course under our&#13;
individual plan of instruction. Day and Night School.&#13;
&#13;
Stevens, Leo, Ex. '15-Mac. Gun&#13;
Detachment, Navy Yards, Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Symonds, Corporal Walter, Ex. '17&#13;
-Co. B, 126th Mac. Gun Bat.,&#13;
&#13;
Seventh and Nebraska Streets.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Ga.&#13;
Wells, Glen-Gas Reg., Engineers'&#13;
&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming, N. M.&#13;
&#13;
Div., Fort Meyer, Va.&#13;
Upham,&#13;
&#13;
Cyril,&#13;
&#13;
'15-University&#13;
&#13;
Heights, New York City.&#13;
Van Cleve, William Joyce, Ex. '20&#13;
-Radio Service, Austin, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
National Business Training School&#13;
&#13;
Wedgewood, William&#13;
Aviation&#13;
Corps, Camp Hancock, Augusta,&#13;
&#13;
Vernon, Robert, '15-Y. M. C. A.&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
Moines.&#13;
&#13;
Camp&#13;
&#13;
Dodge,&#13;
&#13;
Des&#13;
&#13;
Wenig, Ervine, Ex. '18-Co. C,&#13;
313th Engineers, Camp Dodge,&#13;
Des Moines.&#13;
Wertz,&#13;
&#13;
Walter-33rd&#13;
&#13;
Aviation,&#13;
Waco, Tex.&#13;
&#13;
Two H undred Twenty-Seven&#13;
Two H undr ed Twenty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Fort&#13;
&#13;
Squadron&#13;
&#13;
McCutcheon,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Honor Roll&#13;
"OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHINGS&#13;
824 Fourth Street: Corner of Jennings&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
All School Supply and Equipment Needs Handled with Care.&#13;
&#13;
Capital School Supply Company&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Send for Catalog.&#13;
&#13;
M. W. Baldwin&#13;
&#13;
D. C. Kitselman&#13;
&#13;
Wessel, Corporal Emil, Ex. '19-Alcatraz Island, Cal.&#13;
Williams, Sergeant Forest Earl,&#13;
'16-lOth Co., Coast Artillery,&#13;
Fort Barry, Cal.&#13;
Wilson, Lieut. Harold-Dental&#13;
Corps.&#13;
Wolle, William C., Ex. '18-Co 3,&#13;
Wessahickson Barracks, Cape&#13;
May, N. J.&#13;
Woodside,&#13;
Clifton&#13;
Ordnance&#13;
School, Great Lakes, Ill.&#13;
Woolhiser, Sergeant J. L., Ex. '12&#13;
-Co. B, 3rd Reg., Coast Artillery, A. E. F., France.&#13;
Wulf Horace F., Ex. '19-Medical&#13;
corps,&#13;
Camp Cody, Deming,&#13;
N.M.&#13;
In Government Service.&#13;
Ferguson, Prof. Agnes B.&#13;
Kanthlehner, Prof. H.F.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Timmel&#13;
&#13;
Red Cross Nurses.&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, KITSELMAN &amp; TIMMEL&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS&#13;
S. E. Babcock&#13;
&#13;
Dudley, Ulynie.&#13;
Ewer, Bertha.&#13;
Robar, Irene.&#13;
Dutton, Winifred.&#13;
&#13;
Women in Y. W. C. A. Huts.&#13;
&#13;
Campbell, Mrs. H. G.&#13;
Dolliver, Margaret Gay.&#13;
Fouke, Ruth.&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Kitselman&#13;
&#13;
R. S. Skillings&#13;
&#13;
Henry S. Payer&#13;
&#13;
Alice Kreutz&#13;
&#13;
John H. Anthony&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 397.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1443 .&#13;
&#13;
.217-219 Exchange Building.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Nine&#13;
Two Hundred Twenty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's&#13;
&#13;
Biggest&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Busiest&#13;
STUDIO&#13;
&#13;
1-Wessel, 2-Horney, 3-Kolp,&#13;
&#13;
Tw.o .Hundreel Thirty .&#13;
&#13;
4-Gantt, 5-Burrows, 6-Wenig,•&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-One&#13;
&#13;
M. c. Men in Service&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
NEW BABY!!&#13;
&#13;
JIFFY&#13;
HAS PERFECT WEIGHT,&#13;
PERFECT BALANCE&#13;
PERFECT SHAPE &amp;&#13;
&#13;
PERFECT FORM !!&#13;
&#13;
JIFFY&#13;
Is BUILT ON&#13;
GRACEFUL LINES, AND&#13;
IS DESIGNED FOR&#13;
SPEED!!&#13;
&#13;
406 PIERCE ST.&#13;
SHE WILL BE GLAD TO SEE YOU !!&#13;
&#13;
REMEMBER-We, as manufacturers, guarantee each and every&#13;
Jiffy Pen made-no matter where purchased.&#13;
We have the right kind of point for every hand or business. Try us.&#13;
All makes of pens repaired.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
1-Mahood,&#13;
2-Payne, 3-Kenny,&#13;
Steele.&#13;
&#13;
4-Gantt,&#13;
&#13;
Bashaw,&#13;
&#13;
Steele, 5-Gantt, Bashaw, Bogard,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Two&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Three&#13;
&#13;
M. C. Men in Service&#13;
&#13;
Consumer's&#13;
&#13;
Coal co.&#13;
&#13;
2020-2030 4th St.&#13;
Auto 2486&#13;
&#13;
Bell 73&#13;
&#13;
The Better Grades of Coal--Buy Early&#13;
&#13;
1-Mahood,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Four&#13;
&#13;
2-Broome,&#13;
&#13;
3-Mahood,&#13;
&#13;
Glasgow,&#13;
&#13;
4-Clark, 5-Sass&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Five&#13;
&#13;
M. C. Men in Service&#13;
&#13;
WHY&#13;
You Should Insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand&#13;
&#13;
Food Products&#13;
Look f or the Rose on&#13;
Every Package&#13;
&#13;
The Reason is This--Superb Brand is the result of many&#13;
years of persistent effort to assemble&#13;
under one Brand. a complete line of&#13;
Food Products . of the very highest&#13;
quality at the most reasonable prices&#13;
You always get the best when you insist on&#13;
&#13;
Superb Brand Food Products&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
&#13;
Tolerton &amp; Warfield Co.&#13;
1-McKinney, 2-Bennett,&#13;
&#13;
3-Evans,&#13;
4-Henderson,&#13;
&#13;
5-Bridenbaugh, 6-Steele&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Six&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty -Seven&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
You will never know anything about&#13;
&#13;
F. T.LEEDER&#13;
&#13;
the High Cost of Eating if you eat on&#13;
our ticket plan at&#13;
&#13;
Reinforced Concrete Smoke Stacks.&#13;
&#13;
Park Restaurant&#13;
&#13;
Service Courtesy&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Safety Convenience&#13;
&#13;
He drooped his head, he dropped the&#13;
cane,&#13;
Emotion filled his breast.&#13;
"Forgive me, 0 Thou God of Love,&#13;
Who gave me days so blest."&#13;
&#13;
"FUSSING"&#13;
&#13;
He left his home at 8 o'clock.&#13;
He did not say farewell.&#13;
He met his rival at her door,&#13;
And beat him all to h- -1.&#13;
&#13;
0 fathers, from his grief take heed,&#13;
&#13;
When yours shall fall in love.&#13;
Let a father's blessing not his cane,&#13;
Fall on them from above.&#13;
- H . R.H.&#13;
&#13;
He entered with a how'y kid,&#13;
By Jove, you'r swell tonight.&#13;
Said she to him, "Lay off your lid,&#13;
The fire is burning bright."&#13;
Before the bright and cherry blaze,&#13;
The comfy sofa brought.&#13;
They settled down to fuss and gaze,&#13;
And 'dulge in dreamy thought.&#13;
They thought that papa was in bed.&#13;
They thought they heard him snore.&#13;
"We need not be alarmed," they said,&#13;
And never locked the door.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
X&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
E. L. K JRK, G en' l Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
e&#13;
Ralph Arnold&#13;
&#13;
Wm. Beuttler&#13;
&#13;
Beuttler &amp; Arnold&#13;
This Firm Designed the Alumni Gymnasium and&#13;
Rebuilt the Conservatory.&#13;
609-610 Security Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
RAY DARLING&#13;
Distributor of&#13;
&#13;
Grant Six, Maxwell, Columbia and Dixie Flyer&#13;
Bennett Auto Block.&#13;
&#13;
The romance of his years gone by,&#13;
Had vanished from his mind.&#13;
His heart was hardened and he was,&#13;
A cruel one of his kind.&#13;
He saw the lovers there in twined,&#13;
Within each others' arms.&#13;
He heard the whispered melodies,&#13;
Of love that's not alarmed.&#13;
&#13;
ARCHITECTS&#13;
Auto Phone 4240.&#13;
&#13;
Unto the scene with mighty tread&#13;
At 12 o'clock he came.&#13;
He paused a moment in the hall,&#13;
And there secured a cane.&#13;
&#13;
0 Cupid, thy work, you did it well.&#13;
&#13;
The arrow still is there,&#13;
It brings to mind the days of yore,&#13;
When SHE gave joy for care.&#13;
&#13;
HOW TO GET AN "A"&#13;
1. Get a front seat and look intelli( If possible.)&#13;
2. Ask all the questions in class that&#13;
&#13;
gent.&#13;
&#13;
you can think of. (Do not have them&#13;
apply too close to the subject you are&#13;
studying on or you will be forced to&#13;
show your ignorance.)&#13;
3. Drive all your points home with&#13;
well selected gestures. (The same set&#13;
of gestures will do for all classes.)&#13;
4. Near the end of the period always&#13;
claim that your pen is dry and borrow a&#13;
pencil. (This shows that you are taking&#13;
lots of notes. )&#13;
5. Be sure and visit the Prof's. office&#13;
the night before exams and get a look&#13;
at the question.&#13;
(Write out the answers and carry them to class. Do not&#13;
trust your memory.)&#13;
6. A little work might be well, but&#13;
why make mountains out of mole hills&#13;
and work when it is not expected of&#13;
you.&#13;
Merle (speaking from experience)"Too sudden a curbing of young enthusiasm results in a shock-and a repair&#13;
bill."&#13;
&#13;
Goodyear Shoe Repair Co.&#13;
518 Fifth St.&#13;
Biggest, Best and Busiest. Repairing done while you wait. Mail orders prepaid.&#13;
E.T. Jossem&#13;
&#13;
J. F. Meierstein&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Thirty-Nine&#13;
·Two Hundred Thirty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
When you figure&#13;
the wear and tear on&#13;
your clothes on account of the terrific&#13;
washboard-rubbing ·&#13;
wear, you will find&#13;
that the item of the weekly wash&#13;
is too high-much too high.&#13;
Clothes washed with a&#13;
&#13;
Western Electric&#13;
Washer and Wringer&#13;
last longer because they are gently rocked into&#13;
cleanliness- not beaten into it. Warm, soapy&#13;
water is gently forced through all fabricscleaning heavy and fine alike- quickly without&#13;
wear. Every item of expense in connection with&#13;
your weekly washing is reduced-the additional cost is three cents for electricity.&#13;
Wash Electrically.&#13;
&#13;
Let Us Explain.&#13;
&#13;
TODAY!&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Gas &amp; Electric Co .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty- One&#13;
&#13;
If you want to buy a real good Suit with lots of style, come right h er e, you&#13;
will find a beautiful assortment, a lso a very large and nifty line of Shirts,&#13;
Ties, Hats, Caps, Shoes, everythin g for the young men .&#13;
&#13;
Standard Clothing Co.&#13;
710-712 Fourth Street.&#13;
10 % to the College Students.&#13;
&#13;
PURITY&#13;
&#13;
ICE&#13;
&#13;
MADE IN SIOUX CITY BY&#13;
&#13;
HUTCHINSON'S&#13;
The Ice Cream That's All Cream&#13;
ADVICE (AND WHERE&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST&#13;
WILLIGES&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
IT CAN BE OBTAINED)&#13;
&#13;
On Watch Winding and Settin g _____________ _ _____________________ Joy Horton&#13;
Concerning 10 O'Clock Rule _______________________________________ Dr. Hilmer&#13;
&#13;
When You Wade Into&#13;
Business Life you will&#13;
need Financial Boots&#13;
A Bank Account will&#13;
supply this need&#13;
Education only puts&#13;
the polish on&#13;
Both are necessary to&#13;
Success&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of Commerce&#13;
310 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
CREAM&#13;
&#13;
4th and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
To the Lovelorn --------------------- --- ------------------------Dr. Schaub&#13;
On Selecting Fowl (squacking eliminated) ________ ______________ A. L. Freeman&#13;
On "Slickening" and " Jiping" ------------------ -------- -------Rusty McBride&#13;
On the Latest Dance Steps ______________________________________ Harold Butler&#13;
Why You Should Not Work on Sunday ___ ____ _____________________ Ernest Sanger&#13;
On Catching the Last Car Out _____ _ _________________________ McKinley Evans&#13;
&#13;
G. ADOLPH OLSON, Pres. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
OLSON'S&#13;
Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 Pearl Street, SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
One Quality- The Best&#13;
&#13;
J.C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
&#13;
PLANTS AND&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
FLORAL ARTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Everything for the Sportsman and Athlete&#13;
&#13;
Store Sixth and P ierce Sts.&#13;
Bell Phone 13 O&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
Factor y Representatives&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundre d Forty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Only Exclusive Sporting Goods Store&#13;
Always Ready to Supply&#13;
&#13;
Agents&#13;
&#13;
A. S. Reach Co., P. Goldsmith's Sons&#13;
&#13;
A.G. Spalding &amp; Bros.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Three&#13;
&#13;
Work Delivered When Promised&#13;
Monotype &amp; Linotype Composition&#13;
&#13;
This Book Was Printed and Bound by&#13;
&#13;
W. H. BASTIAN PRINTING CO.&#13;
410-412 Fifth Street.&#13;
&#13;
Printers&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Binders&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones 1390&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fort y-Five&#13;
&#13;
BROWN COAL COMPANY&#13;
H. H. Krummann, P resident .&#13;
&#13;
Bureau&#13;
&#13;
Main Office : 201-202 United Bank Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
SupremacyCommands Attention&#13;
LOOK&#13;
&#13;
back over the past years and ask yourself what other&#13;
Engraving Institution, specializing in college annuals, has&#13;
wielded so wide an Influence over the College Annual Field?&#13;
Ask yourself if College and University Annuals are not better today because of BUREAU PROGRESSIVENESS and BUREAU&#13;
INITIATIVE?&#13;
You know the BUREAU OF ENGRAVING Inc. inaug,&#13;
that&#13;
urated the system of Closer Co,operation with college annual&#13;
boards in planning and constructing books from cover to cover.&#13;
Our marked progress in this field commands attention. Our&#13;
establishment is one of the largest of its kind in this country.&#13;
Our Modem Art Department of noted Commercial Art Experts&#13;
is developing Artistic Features that are making "Bureau" Annuals&#13;
Famous for Originality and Beauty.&#13;
And again, the help of our experienced College Annual Depart,&#13;
ment is of invaluable aid. Our up-to-the-minutesystem, which we&#13;
give you, and our Instructive Books will surely lighten your Burden.&#13;
&#13;
A proposition from the Natural Leaders in the College Annual&#13;
Engraving field from an organization of over 150 people, founded&#13;
over 17 years ago, and enjoying the Confidence and Good Will&#13;
of the foremost Universities of this country, is certainly worth&#13;
your while.&#13;
Is not the BUREAU OF ENGRAVING Inc., Deserving of&#13;
the Opportunity of showing what it can do for&#13;
YOU?&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU of ENGRAVING, INC.&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS - MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Phones, Auto 1391, Bell 291.&#13;
Storage Yards, First and Nebraska Sts., Fourth and Morgan Sts.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Park Mooreh ead- "How can I make&#13;
myself popular with the girls at Morningside?"&#13;
Answer- Leave at once for another&#13;
school.&#13;
Heckaman- "Why was it I got turned&#13;
down w h en I asked for a date to the&#13;
men's banquet?"&#13;
Answer-You w ill have to ask the&#13;
girl.&#13;
Harold Freeman- "Is it proper to&#13;
take a gi r l boat rid ing?"&#13;
Answer-Yes, it is perfectly a ll right,&#13;
b u t h ug a lon g the shore, Harold, hug&#13;
a long the shore.&#13;
Leone Ullman-"Is&#13;
it proper for a&#13;
yo u ng lady to inv ite a ge ntleman friend&#13;
to sit on t h e front porch after a party&#13;
when a light snow has j u st fa ll en?"&#13;
Answer-It is proper, b u t it wo ul d&#13;
have been better if you had cleaned off&#13;
the who le porch rat h er than two spots&#13;
close together.&#13;
Archie Freeman- " Ca n yo u tell me&#13;
who swiped the phonograph the night&#13;
&#13;
w e held a barn danc e at the monument?"&#13;
Answer- If you had made a closer&#13;
search of the editor's room you might&#13;
have found it. Perhaps not.&#13;
Nellie Whittemore- "How can a girl&#13;
get a fe llow at Morningside?"&#13;
Answer-Keep on the way you are&#13;
doing, Nellie, you should succeed in&#13;
landing one after a wh ile.&#13;
Helen R inker- "I am having difficulty in keep ing two men on the string at&#13;
t h e same t ime . Can you advise me as&#13;
to how this is done?"&#13;
Answer-Ask Leone Ull man, she&#13;
seems to be succeeding very well.&#13;
Percy- "How can I keep a g irl downtown ; a girl in Morningside and a girl&#13;
in my home town?"&#13;
Answer- Better try con centra tion ,&#13;
Percy, it is safer .&#13;
Bill Forbes- "How can I incr ease my&#13;
height?"&#13;
Answ er- Keep your mind on high&#13;
things.&#13;
&#13;
HOOVERIZE ON SHOES&#13;
New Shoes never wer e so high.&#13;
&#13;
Let the&#13;
&#13;
Ideal Shoe Repair Shop&#13;
Make Your Old Shoes Like New.&#13;
506 Nebraska St., Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Auto Phone 1508.&#13;
S. A. Storer, Mgr .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hund r e d Forty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
AUTHIER STYLE SHOP&#13;
Correct Dress for Women&#13;
Sioux City's Most Appreciative Store&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
&#13;
TOM DEALTRY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
"FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION"&#13;
You will make money.&#13;
But&#13;
How much will you Save?&#13;
That is the question,&#13;
And not&#13;
How much you will make&#13;
Begin today, with a small savings account ot this bank.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Southeast Corner Fourth and Jackson.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Forty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE THE ORIGINAL "CUT PRICE" DENTISTS OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
"When better dental work is done you will&#13;
find us doing it."&#13;
&#13;
NEW YORK DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
T. S. Shortley, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
PRINCESS THEATRE&#13;
The Pick of the Pictures&#13;
&#13;
41 5 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
BRIGHT SAYINGS BY "DEAK"&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
Capital and Surplus, $600,000.&#13;
W. P. Manley, President.&#13;
T. A. Black, Vice President.&#13;
C. W. Britton, Cashier.&#13;
L. R. Manley, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
C. A. Patch, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
R. E. Brown, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
For thirty-four years this bank has been identified with Sioux City&#13;
and its trade territory.&#13;
With resources of over Seven Million Dollars and thoroughly modern equipment the institution is in position to render you high class&#13;
service and invites your business.&#13;
&#13;
Look for our signs before ordering.&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Makers of Beverage that reduce thirst.&#13;
&#13;
"Roll calls are unnecessary and&#13;
should be discontinued in all classes, as&#13;
it is logical to s uppose that the students&#13;
are always ther e anyway."&#13;
"When anybody tells you you hain't&#13;
ch anged a bit it's u su a lly ' cause they&#13;
can't think of n othin ' else t' say."&#13;
"Absence from classes makes the&#13;
m a rks g r ow rounder."&#13;
"It must have been an awfully slippery day when the prodigal son came&#13;
back, because the Bible says that when&#13;
his father came out to welcome him , h e&#13;
fell on his neck."&#13;
"You can always tell a self-m ade&#13;
man if you keep your ears open."&#13;
"Just because a person has lots of&#13;
crust and dough, is no sign that he is&#13;
a rough cookie."&#13;
"Archie gets his tuition and a great&#13;
deal of honor for being the leader of&#13;
ba nd, like Kelly does."&#13;
"Noteriety is the spice of life ."&#13;
"He laughs best who la u ghs w hen the&#13;
P r of. laughs."&#13;
" I gnorance is its own r eward ."&#13;
"A word to the wise is useless."&#13;
"Blessed is h e that expects nothing&#13;
for h e shall not be disappointed."&#13;
"Some people have a habit of wink-&#13;
&#13;
ing the · eye oftener t han is absolutely&#13;
necessa ry."&#13;
"If a Prof. asks you a question at&#13;
least let on that you k now something&#13;
about it."&#13;
"Eve ry boarding h ouse has its dog&#13;
day."&#13;
FAMOUS TRIOS&#13;
&#13;
Butler, Jeep, H a rt.&#13;
Soltow, Forbes , Burpee .&#13;
Lloyd, Hornney, Klatt.&#13;
Baldwin, Doeringsfeld, Lock e.&#13;
Barz, Hilmer, Sch a u b.&#13;
Walker, Freeman , Troutman.&#13;
Hayes, Van Horne, Saundy.&#13;
In Histor y Exam Hesita tingly-"Prof.&#13;
H. Haven't you u sed one of Dr . Steven's ornithology questions by mistake? "&#13;
Prof. H {puzzle d )-"Which one,&#13;
Miss Wolf?"&#13;
"Why, that one abou t the Die t of&#13;
Worms."&#13;
Visitor- "Peters P ark, Peters Park,&#13;
is there  any anima ls t here?"&#13;
President-"Only a few students running around."&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
MANUFACTURERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Bank, Store, Office Fixtures and Interior Finish&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO IS QUALITY&#13;
507-507-511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
T wo Hundred Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-One&#13;
&#13;
GALINSKY BROS. COMPANY&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES-The Lowest&#13;
GOODS-The Freshest&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY-The Highest&#13;
SERVICE-The Promptest&#13;
&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells.&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Tops&#13;
Cushions and&#13;
Upholstery&#13;
&#13;
HICKS-FULLER-PIERSON CO.&#13;
Wholesale Dry Goods&#13;
SELL TO MERCHANTS ONLY&#13;
Ask retail dealers to show you our&#13;
&#13;
Manufactured and Repaired&#13;
JOBBERS OF&#13;
&#13;
"Merit Make"&#13;
&#13;
HEAVY HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Blacksmith, Mechanic's and Garage&#13;
Supplies&#13;
Automobile Accesories&#13;
Implement· Specialties&#13;
&#13;
"Westland"&#13;
&#13;
THE SIOUX CITY&#13;
IRON COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Lines of&#13;
&#13;
Furnishing Goods&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The Haas and Smith Co.&#13;
Morningside Real Estate Dealers.&#13;
Properties of all kinds rented or sold&#13;
Office at&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Office Phone 6136 .&#13;
Residence Phones 6657&#13;
and 6034 .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Three&#13;
&#13;
WHEN IS THE WAR GOING TO END?&#13;
&#13;
C. A . HOLLENBECK&#13;
Ta i lor&#13;
SHOP FLOOR- .F'RANCES BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 25655&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
TAC-CUT&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
A Blend Not a Mixture&#13;
&#13;
35c a Pound&#13;
&#13;
Absolute knowledge have I none,&#13;
. But my aunt's washerwoman's son&#13;
Heard a policeman on his beat&#13;
Say to a laborer on the street&#13;
That he had a letter just last week,&#13;
Written in the finest Greek,&#13;
From a Chinese coolie in Timbucktoo,&#13;
Who said the niggers in Cuba knew&#13;
Of a colored man in a Texas town,&#13;
Who got it straight from a circus clown,&#13;
That a man in Klondike h eard the news&#13;
From a gang of South American Jews,&#13;
About somebody in Borneo&#13;
Who h ear d of a man who claimed to&#13;
know&#13;
Of a swell society dame,&#13;
Whose mother-in-law will undertake&#13;
To prove that her seventh husband's&#13;
sister's niece&#13;
Has stated in a printed piece&#13;
That she has a son who has a friend&#13;
Who knows when the war is going to&#13;
end.&#13;
-Ex.&#13;
Fish-"Why do they paint the inside&#13;
of a chicken coop?"&#13;
Rusty-"To keep the hens from picking the grain out of the wood."&#13;
&#13;
Dave Klatt, in ordering seat s for the&#13;
Orpheum : "Now listen ; we want two&#13;
seats together about half way down, as&#13;
near front as possible, not too far back,&#13;
but back fa r enough so we won't be too&#13;
near the front. Understand? "&#13;
&#13;
Joe Bogard bringin g in a suspect:&#13;
"Sir, I found this man sitting in a TurnVerein, eating limburger cheese and&#13;
drinking kulmbacher, while he read&#13;
Nietsche. He says his name is O'Brien."&#13;
&#13;
Automobile Supplies for All Makes of Cars.&#13;
Firestone Tires&#13;
"Most Miles per Dollar."&#13;
WM. WARN OCK CO.,&#13;
&#13;
607-9-11 Douglas Street.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
Hundred Fifty-Four&#13;
&#13;
GAYETY&#13;
&#13;
HEARD . ABOUT THE CAMPUS.&#13;
&#13;
My Tuesdays are meatless,&#13;
My Wednesdays are wheatless ,&#13;
I'm getting more eatless&#13;
Each day.&#13;
My home it is heatless, '&#13;
My bed it is sheetless,&#13;
They're all sent to the&#13;
Y. M. C. A.&#13;
The cafe's are treatless,&#13;
My coffee is sweetless,&#13;
Each day I get poorer&#13;
And wiser.&#13;
My stockings are feetless,&#13;
My trousers are seatless,&#13;
My! How I do hate the&#13;
Kaiser.&#13;
-Ex.&#13;
&#13;
· Soph-"What's the rush?"&#13;
Kirby-"Prof. Coss is overcome with&#13;
gas."&#13;
Soph-"Are you going after a doctor ?"&#13;
Chester-"No, more gas."&#13;
&#13;
Pearce says he broke all records for&#13;
a quarter mile the night he walked out&#13;
from town and met u p with the crazy&#13;
man with the butcher knife.&#13;
&#13;
Hirsch-"Can anyone tell me what&#13;
makes the Tower of Pisa lean?"&#13;
Crary-"By J ove, I wish I knew that&#13;
one."&#13;
Ruth Scholes says it is sure tough&#13;
luck when a girl gets her dates mixed.&#13;
For particulars ask Albert Hunt.&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phon e 3500.&#13;
( Formerly Orpheum, 615 F ifth Street.)&#13;
- - o - - Now Playi ng - - o - -&#13;
&#13;
VAUDEVILLE&#13;
&#13;
5-Good Acts Al ways-5&#13;
- -Latest News Weeklie s - 3 -Shows Daily-3&#13;
2:30 , 7 :30, 9:00 P. M.&#13;
Nigh ts, 15 and 2 5c.&#13;
Matinees, 1 O and 15c.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Five&#13;
&#13;
EVENTS THAT SHOULD HAVE HAPPENED AND THEIR TIME&#13;
Event&#13;
&#13;
Koken's Dandruff Exterminator&#13;
Is&#13;
&#13;
positively guaranteed to cleanse the scalp from all dandruff, if used as&#13;
instructed or your money is refunded. Applications at leading barber shops&#13;
or for sale at our store.&#13;
Also see us for High Grade Razors, Strops, Hair Tonics Toilet Waters After&#13;
Shavi ng Lotions, Cream s, Etc.&#13;
'&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Kleeblatt Barber's Supply Co.&#13;
618 Pierce Street.&#13;
&#13;
HEADINGTON&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
HEDENBERGH&#13;
&#13;
Hickman Electric&#13;
Company&#13;
Electrical Supplies and Fixtures.&#13;
519 Fifth Street.&#13;
Auto Phone 2345 .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Time.&#13;
&#13;
A fake hurry up call to Prexy. S. 0. S.&#13;
&#13;
During ,. Yale-Harvard&#13;
'basketball&#13;
game.&#13;
Fake police r aid.&#13;
Thanksgiving night when boxes were&#13;
coming from all directions for our bonfire.&#13;
Prexy entering Philo hall.&#13;
Forenoon of Washington's birthday.&#13;
Bean shower.&#13;
When Marsh was requested to take&#13;
the names of five men one day in chapel.&#13;
Abundance of light on the third floor&#13;
When upper classmen were looting&#13;
of main hall.&#13;
Kitchenette night of Freshy party.&#13;
When chemicals were mixed in chap Bargain sale of gas masks.&#13;
el.&#13;
When girls began practicing hockey&#13;
Miss Dimitt ordering a fence around&#13;
and volley ball.&#13;
Bass field.&#13;
Gladys arguing for conservative candidate in politics. "Well-er-er,&#13;
when&#13;
both th e President and Mr. Hoover ask&#13;
the aid of the people in the conservation&#13;
movement, oughtn't we to vote for the&#13;
conservative candidate? "&#13;
Freshie No. 1 (Reminescently)-Armageddon! Armageddon! What do I&#13;
know about Armageddon?&#13;
Freshie No. 2-Why, you nut! We&#13;
studied about him in the e ighth grade.&#13;
He's t hat little burrowing animal from&#13;
S. A. that's covered with scales and eats&#13;
ants.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1 883&#13;
&#13;
William Gordon&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale&#13;
&#13;
FRUITS and&#13;
PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
The Real Estate Man&#13;
7 0 5-7 0 8 Frances Building&#13;
Fifth and Pierce Streets&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Freshman English- example of formal&#13;
invitation: Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Cowan are requested to be present at the&#13;
golden wedd ing ceremony of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Thos. McBride on Wednesday,&#13;
June 25, 1968 .&#13;
R. S. V. P.&#13;
Which one of you girls did it?&#13;
Favdrite e jaculation among M. C.&#13;
Coeds-"For the love of Mike!"&#13;
&#13;
Proudly showing a visitor about the&#13;
Domestic Science k itchen. "This is the&#13;
College cookery."&#13;
Visitor, tapping loaf of substitute&#13;
bread thoughtfully, "Oh, . I thought it&#13;
was a brick kiln. "&#13;
Alice (knitting)-"Does Florence expect to get a band to wear on h er arm&#13;
when she finishes that sweater?"&#13;
Agnes- "Huh-uh, one to wear on her&#13;
finger."&#13;
Coed-"He wrote that he was getting&#13;
anxious to go over t h e top and see red !"&#13;
Isabel (galvanized into attention) "Red isn't over the top. He's at West&#13;
Point!"&#13;
Freshman (late of S. D. Ag. College,&#13;
answering Miss Loveland's question a s&#13;
to u se of "so")-"&#13;
'So' is used adverbially indicating degree, and as a conjunction. It is a lso used to mean 'stand&#13;
still ' -generally when speaking to a&#13;
cow."&#13;
&#13;
OUR PLUMBING&#13;
Has its own particular College Yell&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY AND EXPERIENCE&#13;
&#13;
ORR &amp; GRAVES CO.&#13;
Auto 1837.&#13;
&#13;
513 Jackson St.&#13;
&#13;
(.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred F ifty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
It's An Established Fact&#13;
THAT GOOD .JEWELRY IS TO BE&#13;
FOUND AT THE STORE OF THE&#13;
&#13;
WILL H. BECK COMPANY&#13;
Established in 1877 and maintaining a&#13;
policy during these years which now&#13;
bespeaks for itself.&#13;
&#13;
WHEN WE MOVE ·&#13;
&#13;
You&#13;
&#13;
your furniture we are always on&#13;
guard to see that it is not damaged in any way. We are experienced piano movers and you&#13;
can safely trust your valuable instrument to our care. Look up&#13;
our reputation and then look up&#13;
our telephone number.&#13;
&#13;
SHOULD&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
BE ON&#13;
&#13;
GUARD&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Seven Vans at your service, besides a number of trucks.&#13;
BEKINS VAN &amp; STORAGE CO.,&#13;
&#13;
114-120 Riverside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
New Methods increasing the efficiency of our work are being discovered daily. We keep ourselves&#13;
thoroughly informed and can always give you the benefit of the&#13;
latest and best methods and optical&#13;
merchandise.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Optical Co.&#13;
&#13;
"Makers of Glasses that fit."&#13;
Corner Fifth and Nebraska Streets.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Fifty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
COMMENCEMENT&#13;
&#13;
The melancholy days have come&#13;
The sadest of the year.&#13;
At last the bills that I let run&#13;
Come home to daddy dear.&#13;
&#13;
THE PLAZA&#13;
The Theatre Most Beautiful.&#13;
with Best Music.&#13;
&#13;
The Theatre Best Ventilated.&#13;
&#13;
The Theatre&#13;
&#13;
The Best in Motion Pictures.&#13;
"When in doubt go to the Plaza."&#13;
&#13;
Kimball Pipe Organ, Miss Lamson, Organist.&#13;
Plaza Amusement Co.,&#13;
&#13;
J. C. Duncan, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Extract from a letter from Hackett.&#13;
in Florida-"The country is abounding&#13;
in beautiful and interesting things. I&#13;
met two new ones today."&#13;
Prichard-The acoustics at the New&#13;
Orpheum are poor, aren't they?&#13;
Tom McBride-I don't know. Haven't&#13;
seen 'em yet. What's their act?&#13;
Johnston-"I have all but the last&#13;
verse of my debate learned."&#13;
&#13;
RAPALEE MARBLE &amp;&#13;
GRANITE WORKS&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LARGEST MONUMENT HOUSE.&#13;
You will always see the greatest variety of high grade monuments&#13;
priced as low as the lowest, quality considered. You are not paying&#13;
some agent a commission wh en you place an order with us.&#13;
Auto Phone 2370.&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
605-7-9 West Seventh St.&#13;
&#13;
Heard in Psychology-When scared,&#13;
standing on t he end of the hair follows.&#13;
Schellenger-"I don't deserve an&#13;
'E' grade in Politics."&#13;
Prof. Hirsch-"! know, but that is&#13;
the lowest grade I can give you."&#13;
Stony in Epworth League-"! am so&#13;
glad to say that I have been saved by&#13;
Grace."&#13;
He wondered why they all&#13;
snickered.&#13;
Rusty, Archie and Walker were in&#13;
deep conversation when Walker was&#13;
heard· to remark, "If I ever find the&#13;
guy that swiped that angel food cake,&#13;
I'll fix him so that one clean collar will&#13;
last him the rest of his life."&#13;
Seems to me, Walker, that you would&#13;
have to fix a whole regiment.&#13;
Prof. Coss- "I told you to notice&#13;
when the solution burned over."&#13;
Freshie-"I did. It was a quarter to&#13;
four."&#13;
&#13;
D. S. Anthony&#13;
Prop. Sioux City Trunk Factory.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Feminine Voice Over Phone-"Hello,&#13;
are you Harry?"&#13;
"The Clerk"-"Not especially, lady,&#13;
but I'm not very bald."&#13;
Student-"If it's heads, we go to bed.&#13;
If it's tails we stay up, and (nervously)&#13;
if it stands on edge, we study."&#13;
Pearce-"The paper in my room is&#13;
patterned after streaks of lightning."&#13;
Percy-"Yes, it looks like thunder."&#13;
Harry Black recommends that in future years all parties be held in the gym,&#13;
because there are no posts. He says&#13;
that he had an "awfully" large dentist&#13;
bill to pay.&#13;
Scott-"Say, Lee, how did you ever&#13;
become such a wonderful orator."&#13;
Soltow-"Oh, I got my start addressing envelops. "&#13;
Swartz (in Spanish class)-"Women&#13;
and nobody are in the same class."&#13;
Prof. Brown, calling roll in Educ. V.,&#13;
"Miss Bergh," Hazel, reading Reporter:&#13;
"Hello!"&#13;
The 49ers held a business meeting a&#13;
short time ago and decided that the&#13;
$50,000 (Sh! they are supposed to have&#13;
that much), should be used in buying&#13;
schooners for the Jewish navy in the&#13;
Dead sea.&#13;
&#13;
CLYDE H. TENNIS&#13;
330-331 Davidson Building.&#13;
&#13;
Retail manufacturer of Trunks and&#13;
Valises. Trunks and Sample Cases to&#13;
order. Repairing done. Phone 2108.&#13;
5th St. near Pierce.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Hayes-"George, use 'laid' correctly in a sentence."&#13;
G. Brown-"I laid in bed until 10&#13;
o'clock.&#13;
Prof. H.-"Correct. Use it in another&#13;
sentence."&#13;
. George-"I laid in bed until 11&#13;
o'clock."&#13;
&#13;
INVESTMENTS&#13;
EXCHANGES&#13;
&#13;
FARM LANDS&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-One&#13;
&#13;
SUCCESS IN LIFE&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
Start now.&#13;
&#13;
Don't wait.&#13;
&#13;
MUST&#13;
&#13;
SAVE&#13;
&#13;
No account too small.&#13;
&#13;
Call and see us.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
Corner Fourth and Pierce Sts.&#13;
Savings Department open Saturday evening, 7-9.&#13;
&#13;
DID YOU EVER EAT AT&#13;
&#13;
PROP'S CAFE&#13;
Try Us Once---We'll Risk the Rest&#13;
&#13;
Lunches and Meals for Everyone&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
M. PROPS, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
4 11 Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
L.O'HAR· OW Co.&#13;
R&#13;
For good Shoes and a good fit come in and v isit&#13;
u s.&#13;
W e shoe whole fam ilies.&#13;
We'll get yo u ye t.&#13;
902 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixt y-Three&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Two&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATION&#13;
&#13;
Think it Over---&#13;
&#13;
7%&#13;
Investment&#13;
&#13;
There is no reason why you should&#13;
not use the Automatic Telephone exclusivelyThere is every reason why you&#13;
should.&#13;
&#13;
Think it Over.&#13;
&#13;
Preferred Stock of&#13;
&#13;
Moore-Shenkberg&#13;
Grocery Co.&#13;
Established 1882.&#13;
&#13;
If you are looking for&#13;
&#13;
Quality and Service&#13;
Capital -------------$&#13;
Surplus, Dec. 31, 1917&#13;
Total capitaL&#13;
&#13;
Call both Phones&#13;
&#13;
800,000.00&#13;
314,437.56&#13;
&#13;
2512&#13;
&#13;
$l,114.437.56&#13;
&#13;
H.B. Freerks, Manager&#13;
&#13;
CAMOUFLAGE&#13;
&#13;
Heard at Devitt's-"Why Lida you&#13;
shouldn't use so much white floor, this&#13;
is war times, you know."&#13;
&#13;
Sue-"Why are you putting on so&#13;
much rouge, dear? "&#13;
Pat-"Oh, Vic, is taking me to the&#13;
'Passing Show,' and I want him to think&#13;
I'm blushing."&#13;
&#13;
We have been reminded several times&#13;
during the past year by speakers in&#13;
chapel that t h ere is still a spirit of vandalism prevailing among certain students.&#13;
Vandalism in its pure state was shown&#13;
by:&#13;
Taking the Freshmen girls' eats.&#13;
P . S.-No Tilly it was not ice cream,&#13;
it was good old lemon ice.&#13;
&#13;
Walker finds himself carrying a&#13;
home for the first time during the&#13;
"My, how absent minded of me.&#13;
well, I might as well take it home&#13;
perhaps someone at the house may&#13;
to use it."&#13;
&#13;
book&#13;
year.&#13;
Oh,&#13;
now,&#13;
want&#13;
&#13;
Speaking of petitions to the trustees,&#13;
we move that one be handed them advocating an increase in wages for Jimmy&#13;
Hayes. You can't run a fam ily on hot&#13;
air and cold pancakes.&#13;
&#13;
Demolishing and breaking veranda&#13;
furniture as well as the proverbial 10&#13;
o'clock rule. We hate to say anything&#13;
about this, but we will give some initials. Dale, Skinny, Annanious, Hootman, Strangler Norton and Mr. Park&#13;
Moorhead are the vandals sure enough.&#13;
This should be reported to the committee on discipline.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Craig (at the Senior dinner ) "I'm so sorry the lights are off."&#13;
Ruth Smith (trying to be nice)-"Oh,&#13;
that's all right. We're used to that."&#13;
G. Earl Barks reported to be still&#13;
blushing when the lights came on aagin.&#13;
&#13;
Stealing angel food birthday cake&#13;
from H. Walker , A. L . Freeman, Rusty&#13;
McBride and company. Just as company come in the front door the cake&#13;
goes out the back door. Cleverity, or&#13;
rather vandalism, again demonstrated.&#13;
&#13;
J eep-"How can I cure myself of&#13;
walking in my sleep? "&#13;
Butler-"Take car fare to bed with&#13;
you."&#13;
&#13;
0. J. MOORE, President.&#13;
Hampering motions and maneuvers&#13;
of Private Steinbrenner's efficient and&#13;
highly pepped war machine. On-On&#13;
brave lads. Hoop la.&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS:&#13;
John C. Kelly, Publisher Tribune.&#13;
John A. Magoun, Pres. N. W. Nat'l.&#13;
W. S. Gilman, Director Security Nat'l.&#13;
M. L. Flinn, Director First Natoinal.&#13;
This stock is well secured and we&#13;
fully recommend its purchase. Certificates $100, $500 or $1,000. Interest payable Septembe1 15 and March&#13;
15. Taxes paid by corporation.&#13;
Fixed and Constant Income.&#13;
&#13;
SCHOENEMAN-JENSON&#13;
LUMBER CO.&#13;
Phone us your Coal Order&#13;
We will take care of you&#13;
when the time comes&#13;
&#13;
Good Coal &amp;Bui Iding Material&#13;
&#13;
Capital, $500,000.00.&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Haakinson&#13;
&#13;
W. L. Frost, Sec,&#13;
&#13;
413 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Hothanding an engaged Senior for&#13;
neglecting to recognize and accommodate members of 1705.&#13;
&#13;
Sue-"How did you get such a good&#13;
costume for that Hawaiian act in the&#13;
'M' minstrels?"&#13;
Jerry-"Simple. The 'M' Club merely stuck cockleburs on me and chased&#13;
me through a haystack."&#13;
&#13;
Girls marching in a College parade&#13;
with the men, previous to some minor&#13;
College activity. Such as the Morningside-Notre Dame football game, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Call Bond &amp; Mortgage Co.&#13;
Geo. C. Call, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Skinny Norton and Tom McBride are&#13;
offering $2.00 to the person that will&#13;
break the electric light just across the&#13;
street from the Farnham house. We&#13;
suggest that this matter be handed to&#13;
the committee on vandalism.&#13;
&#13;
Coal Co.&#13;
Third and Clark Streets&#13;
Auto Phone 2174&#13;
Bell Phone 254&#13;
&#13;
Greater value and more extras&#13;
are g iven because 98% is manufactured in our own factory.&#13;
&#13;
See the EXTRA FEATURES&#13;
&#13;
WATSON AUTOMOBILE CO.&#13;
8th &amp; Pierce,&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-Five&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, la.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term Begins September the Twenty-Fourth&#13;
Though one of the youngest Colleges in the State it is one of the leading Colleges in the West.&#13;
ATTRACTIVE&#13;
LOCATION&#13;
&#13;
Twenty minutes from the heart of Sioux City in a .&#13;
beautiful , healthful College suburb.&#13;
&#13;
ENTRANCE RE- Rigid eno ugh to maintain the highest standards; sufficiQUIREMENTS&#13;
ently elastic to meet varying needs.&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
&#13;
A half million dollar endowment; another half million&#13;
dollars invested in buildings and grounds; only fireproof&#13;
buildings, modern throughout, adequate laboratory and&#13;
library facilities; one of the best gymnasiums in the State.&#13;
&#13;
INSTRUCTION&#13;
&#13;
A faculty selected w ith g r eat care and trained in the l eading universities of Europe and America. The major system of instruction. Wide elective system. Preparation for&#13;
law, medicine, teach ing, mechanical professions, etc. Highest ideal in scholarship and morals.&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC AND&#13;
ORATORY&#13;
&#13;
Facilities among the best in the Middle West. Opportunity&#13;
to pursue music and oratory in connection with the College co ur se.&#13;
&#13;
EXPENSES&#13;
&#13;
Expenses are kept as low as it consistent with high quality.&#13;
&#13;
SELF HELP&#13;
&#13;
Many opportunities to earn money while pursuing studies.&#13;
Self Help Bureau conducted .free to students.&#13;
&#13;
SOCIAL&#13;
LIFE&#13;
&#13;
Social&#13;
tures.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
life exceptionally&#13;
&#13;
free&#13;
&#13;
from&#13;
&#13;
objectionable&#13;
&#13;
fea-&#13;
&#13;
SCHOLARSHIPS A limited number of scholarships offered to worthy and&#13;
meritorious stud en ts.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Seven&#13;
&#13;
Slickered Members&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON ·LUMBER CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA, Fourth and Lafayette Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Largest and Most Complete Stock of Building Material in the&#13;
City, Do Not Fail to Let Us Figure on Your Bill.&#13;
GEORGE M. JORDAN, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
PHONES: Auto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
Loans&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
HOMES .&#13;
&#13;
not&#13;
&#13;
HOUSES&#13;
&#13;
PILCHARD BUILDING CO.&#13;
&#13;
of the Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Van Horne was jipped by vandals and nearly lost all of his high&#13;
standing in the community during the&#13;
third Liberty Loan drive. His position&#13;
offered a great opportunity for vandals&#13;
to work. George W. would not buy, but&#13;
it was not because of lack of persistance&#13;
on Van's part.&#13;
College student calls up Vice President and reprimands him for not having&#13;
the flag in its proper place on the campus. Five minutes later the flag was&#13;
flying from the flag pole. Good work,&#13;
Rusty, you certainly are a good secret&#13;
service man.&#13;
Jerry-What is meant by the "Call&#13;
of the Wild?"&#13;
Norty-Take him out of the box.&#13;
&#13;
"What a letter,'' wailed Beryl. "He&#13;
tells me he loves me only thirty-seven&#13;
times."&#13;
"Don't blame Clint for that," suggested an older head. "Somebody probably censored it."&#13;
&#13;
P.H. PILCHARD, President&#13;
&#13;
QUARTER MILLION&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL&#13;
&#13;
Second Floor Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Bill Forbes, getting acquainted. "You&#13;
were somewhere last Christmas weren't&#13;
you?"&#13;
Freshie-"Why, of course; what do&#13;
you mean?"&#13;
Bill-"Well, so was I. We must have&#13;
met."&#13;
Prof. Hirsch- "A fool can ask more&#13;
question in a minute than a wise man&#13;
can answer in an hour."&#13;
Buster (under his breath) - "No wonder we all flunked that Politics exam."&#13;
&#13;
HEARD ON THE BASEBALL TRIP&#13;
&#13;
Norty stole second with the ball in&#13;
the pitcher's hand in one of the games.&#13;
When the pitcher got to the bench the&#13;
coach jumped him with: "Why didn't&#13;
you watch that man on first, was you&#13;
asleep?"&#13;
Weak response: "I didn't know there&#13;
was anyone on bases."&#13;
Coach turning to other players:&#13;
"Here, what's the matter with you fellows? You tell this pitcher after this&#13;
when men get on bases. We can't have&#13;
any secrets on this ball club."&#13;
Of all the beautiful pictures&#13;
That hang on memories wall,&#13;
That of my dear old sheepskin&#13;
It seemeth the best of all.&#13;
Not for the honor it brings me,&#13;
Though of that I am fully aware,&#13;
But the thought of the years of bluffing&#13;
It required to get the thing there.&#13;
-Harold Walker, 20 Years Later .&#13;
Freshie , looking for janitor on third&#13;
floor. "Have you seen Henry? I just&#13;
looked in the chickenette and he isn't&#13;
there."&#13;
Lee-"I'm in good with Mrs. Devitt.&#13;
Although I got in late for Sunday dinner she saved me the tenderest part of&#13;
the chicken."&#13;
Cope-"You sure were lucky. What&#13;
did she save you?"&#13;
Lee- "Some of the gravy."&#13;
Prof. Thompson-"Do you think this&#13;
class is a joke, Mr. Norton?"&#13;
Skinny-"No, sir. I'm not laughing&#13;
at the class."&#13;
&#13;
Paul Revere Had Only a Horse!&#13;
Paul's tremendous ride would have been easy and much more effective could&#13;
&#13;
Dodge Brothers· Motor Cars&#13;
&#13;
he have driven a Ford.&#13;
&#13;
De Harty &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Ford&#13;
&#13;
THOMPSON-DEJARNETTE (Inc.)&#13;
&#13;
Sales and Service.&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Auto 6999.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
525 Sixth Street.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Sixty-Nine&#13;
&#13;
SOFT SNAPS&#13;
&#13;
UNCLE SAM WANTS&#13;
YOU TO SAVE&#13;
WHERE YOU CAN&#13;
We a r e in a position to help you save a&#13;
g r eat deal on your c lothes made-to-measure.&#13;
You n o doubt a r e aware of t he fact that there&#13;
is a 'great scarcity of wool in our country;&#13;
in fact, so mu c h so that for t he first tim e in&#13;
the hi story of our country Uncle Sam has&#13;
b ee n forced to u se about 25 per cent co tton&#13;
in some of th e soldiers' uniforms and blankets.&#13;
Notwithstanding this fact, Geo. A. Strief&#13;
and t h e hou se h e h as back o f him who are&#13;
known in thi s secti.on as produci n g the b est&#13;
fitting, ni ces t lookin g and longest wearing&#13;
m a d e t o order _garme nts in America from $20&#13;
upwards, rea lized this situation over two&#13;
years ago and contracte d woolens and trimmings in quantities s ufficien t to take care of&#13;
their trade in good s h ape and at the sam e&#13;
time give th e p eople the best quality for th e&#13;
mon ey that has ever b een s h own in this country.&#13;
.&#13;
U n cle Sam has prohibite d the use of unnec essary adornm e n ts in men's c lothi n g to conserve wool. We are ri ght in lin e with our&#13;
government's id ea that men 's clothes mad e&#13;
to m easure should be c ut and made so they&#13;
would look m asculin e a nd not feminine.&#13;
Th e hi g hest c lass m e r chant tailors of New&#13;
York and Chicago&#13;
have n ever f avo r e d fancy&#13;
f 1eak o r s issy sty les and have not robbed the&#13;
gar:m e n ts of their linin gs t o make the trade&#13;
believe&#13;
that a skeleton lin ed coat is a good&#13;
thing eve n in winter.&#13;
&#13;
Our garments&#13;
are c ut under the personal&#13;
supervision of Mr. Mark G. Harrit, who knows&#13;
how to give eve ry c ustom er's clothes that&#13;
natura l, e legant, manly appearance that all&#13;
r eal m e n like so we ll a nd that e veryone admires so much. Besides being c ut right, our&#13;
garments are mad e a nd trimmed to g ive absolute serv ice and satisfac ti on-they are d e pendabl e in wear, retain the ir shape until&#13;
they are worn out.&#13;
. In these d ays of high prices a nd poor quality it pays to trade with a man who for fiftee n years h as bee n giving the people a&#13;
square deal by co urteo u s treatment honest&#13;
d ealin g a nd d e li vering the best all a round&#13;
made to. m easure garments in America at&#13;
pri ces within&#13;
th e r each of all.&#13;
this is a g·ood time to order. You h ave a&#13;
selection of 500 of the prettiest patte rn s in&#13;
th e best valu es of reliable&#13;
woo le n s th a t a r e&#13;
hon e.st and pract ical in weight and th e b est&#13;
quality eve r s hown to the tai lorin g publi c&#13;
and you will n e ve r buy cheaper than right&#13;
now .&#13;
. You take no chances whatever, there are no&#13;
ifs and ands nor maybes when you place your&#13;
order w it h m e. Your garments will fit a nd&#13;
please you.&#13;
Orde r now and you will get the&#13;
b est quality a nd lowest price.&#13;
Geo. A. Stri e t Tailorin g , 508 Fourth str eet&#13;
seco nd f loor.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Grocery&#13;
Home of&#13;
Good Things to Eat.&#13;
John O'Leary, Prop.&#13;
902 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Not a Line Yard&#13;
&#13;
Ford Lumber Co.&#13;
Owned in Sioux City&#13;
Complete Stock&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
"The Only Lumber Yard Owned&#13;
in Sioux City."&#13;
&#13;
Getting an "A" grade under Hirsch.&#13;
Getting your monitor to mark you&#13;
present while enjoying a nice stroll on&#13;
the campus. (O r meeting with the Smokers' Club.)&#13;
Finding the heart of an angle worm&#13;
in Biology Lab.&#13;
Getting mail from a male.&#13;
Finding time to study.&#13;
Writing a joke section.&#13;
&#13;
Tom Lloyd in telling of his experiences in Montana, recalled vividly one&#13;
night that he spent in company with several others in an old tumble-down&#13;
shack. About 2 o'clock. a polecat made&#13;
its presence known to Tom. He sat up&#13;
and noticed that all of h is comrades&#13;
were asleep. Tom says, "And there I&#13;
had to smell the whole thing all alone."&#13;
&#13;
Dave-"I've got a good story to tell&#13;
you. I don't think I ever told it to you&#13;
before."&#13;
Lee-"Is it really funny?"&#13;
Dave-"Yes, indeed , it is."&#13;
Lee-"Then you never told it to me&#13;
before."&#13;
&#13;
Youngberg-"Will you have something to drink?"&#13;
"With pleasure," Dux replied.&#13;
The photograph was taken and Dux&#13;
said, "But what about that little invitation?"&#13;
"Oh, that's just a professional ruse&#13;
of mine to give a natural, interested expression to the face."&#13;
It worked fine.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Steele-"Does Prichard live in&#13;
the fear of the Lord?"&#13;
Hackett-"I'm not real sure, but I&#13;
know that when he is home he always&#13;
takes a gun with h im when he goes out&#13;
on Sundays."&#13;
&#13;
Neighbor-"Got much money in your&#13;
bank now, Bobby?"&#13;
Bobby- "Gee no since sister went to&#13;
College the depositors have fall en off&#13;
somethin' fierce."&#13;
&#13;
Florence-"Well, at any rate, a woman always gets the last word."&#13;
Russell-"Not always, she might be&#13;
talking with another woman."&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
338&#13;
&#13;
A Service augmented through years&#13;
&#13;
"Skinney" Lehan certainly was right&#13;
at home the day he rose in chapel t o&#13;
speak after "Chick " had asked for an&#13;
expression from the girls side of t he&#13;
h ouse.&#13;
&#13;
Stranger- "Who is that funny a cting&#13;
couple over there?"&#13;
Student-"Oh, that is Dorot hy Knudson and h e r 'Bride.' "&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
100 Third St.&#13;
1338&#13;
&#13;
Miss Stenger-"Mr. Johnson , why do&#13;
you not write out your sentences?"&#13;
Jerry-"My pen is empty."&#13;
Miss Stenger-"I am afraid t hat your&#13;
pen is not all that is empty."&#13;
&#13;
When "Sol" Butler was caught dancing in the Otho hall with a chair in his&#13;
arm he stated that he was inventing a&#13;
new step all his own.&#13;
&#13;
of Experien ce.&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
&#13;
Park Barber Shop&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALERS AND RETAILERS OF SWEET CREAM, MILK&#13;
AND LACTONE BUTTERMILK&#13;
&#13;
The Best and Purest in the City&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy&#13;
&#13;
Fred B. Phipps.&#13;
&#13;
Our Cream is served at Morningside Pha rm acy and Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO., 707 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-One&#13;
&#13;
KING' ·S LUNCH&#13;
Famous for its fine eats. Excellent service. Reasonable rates.&#13;
514 Fifth St.&#13;
J.M. GANTZ, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY&#13;
is the Watch Word here.&#13;
&#13;
GENELLI&#13;
Established 32 Years.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
STUDIO&#13;
&#13;
711 Pierce Street.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-T wo&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Three&#13;
&#13;
WONDERS IN DOMESTIC SCIENCE.&#13;
&#13;
KASCOUTAS SHINING PARLORS&#13;
Ladies and Gentlemen.&#13;
The best Shine in the city.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Bliss-"Ruth, I think you had&#13;
better make some chicken croquettes&#13;
out of that left-over prok and calves&#13;
liver we had for luncheon.&#13;
R. Reid-"There was a little bread&#13;
dressing that went with the pork left,&#13;
too. Shall I make some apple sauce&#13;
out of it?"&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Kascoutas, Manager.&#13;
New Orpheum Bldg., 416 Nebraska St.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
"The Home Market for the Great Northwest"&#13;
SEE HOW THE BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED AT A&#13;
LARGE MARKET&#13;
Come and see the best all steel and concrete double deck&#13;
&#13;
Miss Lund, explaining "parcheesi" to&#13;
Prof. Thompson: "But now if you sit&#13;
down beside me I won't send you&#13;
home!"&#13;
Lee-"I understand there has been a&#13;
new change in the Blue Book rules and&#13;
that no student can have a date on&#13;
Tuesday."&#13;
Tom-"Why did they make that&#13;
rule?"&#13;
.&#13;
Lee-"Because Tuesday is meatless .&#13;
On the Soph picnic Prof. Thompson&#13;
and Miss Bliss were rowing, Miss Bliss&#13;
seated opposite Prof. Thompson.&#13;
Soph-"Having a good time, Professor?"&#13;
.&#13;
"Why yes; I'm enjoying the beauties&#13;
of nature."&#13;
I wonder what he meant?&#13;
&#13;
hog house in the world, and many other improvements.&#13;
Students will be given a cordial welcome at any time.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
New Orpheum Theatre&#13;
Nebraska St.. between 4th and 5th, Sioux. City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Beck- "I know where you can get&#13;
big chicken dinner for 15 cents tonight."&#13;
Wulf- "Where?"&#13;
· Axel-"At the feed store."&#13;
McKinley Evans writes that Camp&#13;
Dodge has been having her share of illness. One hundred and six cases of&#13;
Bevo having been reported in one week.&#13;
&#13;
AN EULOGY TO JIMMY HAYES.&#13;
I.&#13;
The thinnest man I ever knew,&#13;
He lived down in Hoboken.&#13;
He was so thin that you may think&#13;
That I am only jokin'.&#13;
He was as thin as a postage stamp,&#13;
And as skinny as an old potater;&#13;
For exercise he'd take a dive&#13;
Thru a hole in a nutmeg grater.&#13;
&#13;
Chorus.&#13;
Oh my!&#13;
Goodbye!&#13;
Just like a frog&#13;
he'd hop.&#13;
He once made a fortune being a model&#13;
in a macaroni shop.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
He came to lead our minstrel show,&#13;
He walked among the trees;&#13;
He stubbed his toe against many a trunk&#13;
And the tree-tops brushed his knees.&#13;
Chorus.&#13;
Oh my! Goodbye! To the telephone&#13;
man he'd hire,&#13;
And when they lacked a pole or two,&#13;
why, he'd hold up the wire.&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
He never went out on windy nights,&#13;
He never went out alone,&#13;
For fear some lean and hungry hound&#13;
Would take him for a bone.&#13;
One night as he was sitting alone,&#13;
The light was burning dimly,&#13;
A bedbug grabbed him by the nape of&#13;
the&#13;
Neck and snatched him up the chimney.&#13;
Chorus.&#13;
Oh my! Goodbye! He often lost his&#13;
breath;&#13;
.&#13;
He fell thru a hole in the seat of his&#13;
pants&#13;
And choked himself to death.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. EVERIST&#13;
&#13;
The Best of Vaudeville&#13;
SIX BIG ACTS&#13;
&#13;
Instant Service&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
ENTIRE NEW SHOW EVERY SUNDAY AND THURSDAY.&#13;
Every night at 8: 15. Saturday, Sunday and Holiday Nights,&#13;
Two shows-7: 30 and 9: 15.&#13;
&#13;
CLEAN COAL&#13;
BUILDERS SUPPLIES&#13;
Call 2600 .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Five&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
BOBBY BLACK,&#13;
&#13;
Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Ice Cream and Candies&#13;
509 Fourth Street.&#13;
Under Authier's Style Shop.&#13;
&#13;
Chandler, Chevrolet, Scripps&#13;
Booth and Velie Cars&#13;
These cars make up the most complete line shown in Sioux&#13;
City.&#13;
.&#13;
See them at our new show room, Seventh and Pearl Streets.&#13;
Call or phone for demonstration.&#13;
1498 Bell.&#13;
9155 Auto .&#13;
&#13;
Hanson &amp; Tyler Auto Co.&#13;
S. E. Daily, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Branches, Fort Dodge, Webster City, Ia. Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Make Life Sweeter and&#13;
&#13;
Eat Palmers&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Six&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Seventy-Seven&#13;
&#13;
A FRESHMAN GIRL'S LAMENT&#13;
&#13;
Quality is our Motto, the lowest of prices and the highest of quality&#13;
Come and pay cash and you get the benefit.&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK CASH&#13;
GROCERY&#13;
&#13;
Anyone desiring recipes for negro&#13;
delicacies can obtain them f rom Miss&#13;
Esther Montgomery. It is understood&#13;
that she is well informed concerning the&#13;
management, trade, menus and prices&#13;
of a negro restaurant, and that she is&#13;
perfectly willing to pass this information along.&#13;
&#13;
The careful dresser finds complete satisfaction&#13;
in Mayer Honorbilt Shoes. This is because these&#13;
famous Shoes are made in proper styles and patterns and are always strictly abreast with the&#13;
times.&#13;
For style, fit, comfort and long&#13;
wear, Mayer Honorbilt Shoes are&#13;
unequaled.&#13;
They are made for Men, Women&#13;
and Children in all styles, sizes&#13;
and leathers.&#13;
Sold by all leading dealers.&#13;
&#13;
HONORBILT&#13;
SHOES&#13;
&#13;
"Will you tell me how a Freshman&#13;
girl can make and keep a smile on the&#13;
face of the 'man in the case' and on the&#13;
faces of the college authorities at one&#13;
and the same time? This seems impossible to me, and I would be very&#13;
thankful if you would suggest a method&#13;
to do this and have it patented at once."&#13;
We will take this matter up with Miss&#13;
Dimitt and see what can b e done.&#13;
&#13;
Marie-"If you were out with a fellow and he insisted upon putting his&#13;
arm around you after you had taken it&#13;
away several times, what would you&#13;
do?"&#13;
Dot- "Why, I would get disgusted&#13;
and leave it alone."&#13;
&#13;
F. Mayer Boot &amp;&#13;
Shoe Co.&#13;
Milwaukee, Wis.&#13;
&#13;
The following story is told on Prof.&#13;
MacCollin. One cold and stormy night&#13;
whe n he was about the age of 12 he was&#13;
found shivering out in the rain. When&#13;
asked what he was doing he replied:&#13;
" I have to sing bass in the choir in the&#13;
mosning and I am trying to catch a&#13;
cold.&#13;
Harold Hartley wants to know ho w&#13;
long a chinchilla overcoat would last if&#13;
a girl took a little Knapp off it each&#13;
night.&#13;
Another year has passed.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Bell 316.&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1460.&#13;
&#13;
Electric Engineering Co.&#13;
6 0 2 Pierce Street.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Two H undred Seventy-Eight&#13;
&#13;
Have you ?&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE ROY AL&#13;
"The House of Quality"&#13;
Exclusive first-run Paramount and&#13;
Artcraft pictures, Arbuckle and Mack&#13;
Sennett&#13;
comedies.&#13;
Hearst-Pathe&#13;
News shown every day .&#13;
Magee's Royal Orchestra.&#13;
Adults 15c,&#13;
Children 10c.&#13;
Plus War Tax.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MACCOLLIN.&#13;
I.&#13;
Sing t he praises ·of Dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her hero es bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices,&#13;
The chorus swelling,&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
Refrain.&#13;
Then cheer for Dear Old Morningside,&#13;
To thee we pledge anew,&#13;
Hearts of faithful love,&#13;
Now and forever,&#13;
Thy loyal sons are t r ue.&#13;
II.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning,&#13;
And where'er we roam&#13;
We'll cherish the friendship&#13;
Which thou hast brought usFair Morningside! Our home!&#13;
III.&#13;
Hear our vow, 0 Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee.&#13;
All we have&#13;
In grateful remembrance bringing,&#13;
For t he Glory of Old M. C.&#13;
&#13;
South Carolina is noted for its old&#13;
men, but we do not vouch for the truth&#13;
of this one.&#13;
One time a man was traveling&#13;
through Carolina and he saw an old&#13;
man standing up against a woodshed&#13;
crying. He took pity on him and said:&#13;
"Old man, why a r e you crying. "&#13;
"Oh," he said , weeping violently,&#13;
"my fath er gave me a licking for sassing my grandfather."&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber Shop&#13;
35c Hair Cuts, 25c; 20c Shaves,&#13;
15c&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundre d Seventy-Nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Res. Phon e 6265. Shop P h on e 63 06.&#13;
Res., 4217 M. S. Ave.&#13;
. All work g ua r a n teed.&#13;
&#13;
Hartley L. Larson&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Dray&#13;
&amp; Transfer Co.&#13;
Packin g and Storage.&#13;
&#13;
P lumbing a n d Heating .&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Ave.,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
D. W . Nourse, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE BOOKSTORE&#13;
Stationery, Music and Golf Supplies.&#13;
Clare J. Pendell, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Chica g o, Ills.&#13;
K ansas City, Mo.&#13;
E ast Buffa lo, N . Y.&#13;
&#13;
South St. J oseph, Mo.&#13;
South St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
Fort Wo r t h , Tex.&#13;
E l Paso, T ex.&#13;
&#13;
Den ver , Colo.&#13;
Sou t h Omaha, Neb.&#13;
East St. Lo uis, Ills.&#13;
&#13;
Clay Robinson &amp; Co.&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
Sioux City, lowa&#13;
&#13;
Here is a correspondence which is&#13;
r eported to h ave been carried on between one of ou r illust rious Academy&#13;
students and his father during the f irst&#13;
fe w weeks of h is College career. We&#13;
cannot vouch for its veracity.&#13;
Dear Father : This College game is&#13;
certainly expensive. I can't stay in it&#13;
without more cash. It is hard to get&#13;
good results w ithou t the necessary money. I am a stranger here and my credit&#13;
is not good .. You r loving son,&#13;
DEWEY.&#13;
By next mail he receive d the following:&#13;
My Dear Boy: Quit the game. Your&#13;
father could never play poker, so I don 't&#13;
see any use of you r trying to learn .&#13;
Your loving.&#13;
FATHER.&#13;
Father's advice to Freshman s on: Beware, m y son, of the woman who purreth, I love the smell of tobacco." And&#13;
as for the w o man who murmurs, "My&#13;
hands are cold," run from h er like the&#13;
ver y devil:&#13;
Gladys Trena r y-"Do you believe in&#13;
signs? "&#13;
Milton Brenner-"Why, yes, of cou rse&#13;
I do."&#13;
Gladys-"We ll , there is a sign which&#13;
says 'Ice Cream for Sale Here.'&#13;
Prof. Hirsch, r eferring to a h istory&#13;
reference book by Schwill, said, "You&#13;
will find this Schwill very f ine."&#13;
&#13;
P LAYING THE GAME&#13;
&#13;
Barks-"Hello !&#13;
Say, busy tomorrow?"&#13;
Ruth-"Yes."&#13;
Barks-"Gee , I'm sorry! I had a great&#13;
idea.'',&#13;
&#13;
Ruth--"What was it?"&#13;
Barks-"Oh, nothing ; goodby."&#13;
Ruth-"Hello! Hello!! E arl !!!"&#13;
Salvation Army Worker-"Young&#13;
man, are you a Christian?"&#13;
P aul Jones-"No, I am a student.&#13;
H appy-"What is worse than raining pitchforks?"&#13;
Earl-"I bite."&#13;
R aun-"Hailing street cars."&#13;
Clarence Hart, while o ut selling groceries to the farmers last summer addressed a pretty farmer 's g irl who was&#13;
m il king:&#13;
"How is the pretty milk&#13;
maid?"&#13;
"Why, you poor student, it isn't&#13;
m ade. The cow gives it."&#13;
Father-"They put up a p r etty good&#13;
table at your boarding club don't they? "&#13;
Student-"Oh, yes, the tab le is fin e.&#13;
The board is also excellent, but you&#13;
ought to see what we get to eat."&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Van Horne-"There are thirty&#13;
odd m emb ers in the facu l ty."&#13;
Hickman-" Yes, mostly odd."&#13;
&#13;
Skinny-"Mrs. J ackson has certainly&#13;
pu t a crimp in mat rimony since she has&#13;
come to Morningside."&#13;
Sam-"How's that?"&#13;
Skinny-"Since she has come, couples&#13;
are unable to go through 'Life' together."&#13;
&#13;
Norty, before th e Vermillion game:&#13;
"I don't wan t to kill anyone, b ut we&#13;
have got to win that game."&#13;
&#13;
We sincerely hope that all jokes in&#13;
this book will meet with t he approbation of the Ministerial Association.&#13;
&#13;
THE BEST STORE TO BUY&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' R eady-to-Wear&#13;
&#13;
P r ograms our Specialty, All kinds of Job Print ing, Note Books,&#13;
Note Book Fillers, All Kinds of School Supplies.&#13;
S. B. P. PRINTING CO.,&#13;
North End of Campus .&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eigh ty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
504 FourthStreet&#13;
SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred E ighty-One&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Compliments to&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
New Location&#13;
5 05 and 507 Fifth Street&#13;
Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
A Reminiscense&#13;
&#13;
rom&#13;
&#13;
Barish Bros. Coal Co.&#13;
&#13;
The last page of copy has been blue penciled and given to the linotype man, the&#13;
last bit of engraving has arrived from our engraver, th e surplus (?) con t ributions&#13;
have b een t ransferred to the waste basket and for t h e "steenth" and last time we&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
Cash Meat Market.&#13;
The place of quality and right prices.&#13;
Peters Park.&#13;
&#13;
Get your Groceries and Meats from&#13;
&#13;
THE M. &amp; B. CO.&#13;
1421 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK A. FOWLES&#13;
CECELIA PARK DRAY AND&#13;
TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
have answered the question , "When will the Sioux be out?"&#13;
Now, at last, it is all over, and we are thankful.&#13;
&#13;
Beginning tomorrow we will&#13;
&#13;
begin to r ealize again what it means to live in "the land of the free " and be able to&#13;
&#13;
Furnace and Sheet Metal Work.&#13;
2014 St. Aubin Avenue.&#13;
Shop Phone 6350 Auto&#13;
&#13;
have a few minutes that we may call our own.&#13;
&#13;
W. D. Riner, Prop. Auto Phone 6583.&#13;
&#13;
we r egarded the production of a year-book merely as child's play, we could do it&#13;
&#13;
CECELIA PARK DRAY AND&#13;
TRANSFER&#13;
&#13;
with ease.&#13;
&#13;
Heavy hauling and all kinds of dray&#13;
work.&#13;
Cecelia Park.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
There was a time when the Sioux '19 seemed far from being a reality.&#13;
&#13;
At firs t&#13;
&#13;
Later, when work began, and we met with several disappointments we&#13;
&#13;
were very apprehensive that it would b e necessary to give up our Annual for this year.&#13;
It was our Business Manager and t he Business men of Sioux City that made this book&#13;
&#13;
possible.&#13;
There are many to whom we are grateful for the work that has been done on&#13;
&#13;
B. H. Silver&#13;
We handle a complete stock in these&#13;
lines: Grocery, Meat, Dry Goods and&#13;
Shoes, Hardware, Paint and Glass.&#13;
Four Phones,&#13;
Iowa, 670-67.&#13;
410 2-4-6-8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
A. E. Anderson,&#13;
Treas.&#13;
&#13;
V. A. Swan,&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
SW AN-ANDERSON CO.&#13;
(Inc .)&#13;
&#13;
We cannot m ention as many as we should like, but to the folowing we&#13;
&#13;
wish to express our sincere thanks and appreciation :&#13;
&#13;
Mr. J. J . Sher, of the Bureau&#13;
&#13;
of Engraving, whose suggestions and advice has been of great value; Mr. W . H .&#13;
Bastian, for the fine way he has co-operated with us to make this book a success;&#13;
&#13;
DRY GOODS,&#13;
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S&#13;
FURNISHINGS.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1882 .&#13;
&#13;
this book.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. J . J. Hayes, Dr. A. E. Craig, Dr . W. C. Hilmer, Coach J . M. Saunderson and Prof.&#13;
P. MacCollin for their willing contributions.&#13;
&#13;
Each and every member of the staff&#13;
&#13;
is to b e commended for the splendid manne r in which they handled their particular&#13;
department. I wish to especially praise Mr. J ess Lang for the excellent drawings that&#13;
appear throughout the book and to thank him for h is interest in this work.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1243&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 243&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Ideal Soft Water Laundry&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Knapp, Miss Isabelle Walker, Miss Ruth Mahood and Mr. Dale Norton deserve&#13;
&#13;
Gard Brothers&#13;
&#13;
0. W. HARVEY, Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
special commendation for the work that they have don e. The h elp and work of Miss&#13;
&#13;
Coal, Grain, Hay, Feed and Building&#13;
Material.&#13;
&#13;
414-416 Co urt St.&#13;
&#13;
1013-15-17 West Seventh St.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Automatic, 1346&#13;
&#13;
Iowa, 899&#13;
&#13;
Ruth R e id will b e appreciated always as she never refused to help out with a n y work&#13;
that was asked of her.&#13;
To all these and more we are grateful.&#13;
&#13;
The past year has been one of pleasur-&#13;
&#13;
able associations and hard work, and if we have been forced to give up other things&#13;
for the Sioux, it has been eminently worth while.-The Editor.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighty-Two&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighty-Three&#13;
&#13;
DR. J. A. BLISS&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Auto Phone 85686&#13;
Suite 61 5-6 1 6 Frances Bldg.&#13;
1&#13;
5th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. HUBBARD&#13;
&#13;
Attorney an d Counsellor at Law&#13;
327 Davidson Building&#13;
6th and Pierce Sts. Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Page&#13;
&#13;
Introduction&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
&#13;
Ex Libris --------------------&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Girls' Athletics -- --- ---------- 120&#13;
&#13;
Sub Title ----------- ------- -&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Book V, Forensics ---------------127&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
Title ------------- ----------&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Professor Marsh --------------129&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 622-25 Davidson Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Dedication ------------------&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta ------ ---------13 0&#13;
&#13;
Memorial --------------------&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Forensic League --------------131&#13;
&#13;
Foreword ------ -- ----------- 9&#13;
Order of Books ________________ 10&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Or atory ________ 132&#13;
&#13;
Book I, The Campus __ _________ _ 11&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate _________ __ l 34&#13;
&#13;
The Campus -- ---- - ------ - -- 13&#13;
A R eview of th e Year_ _________ 14&#13;
&#13;
Gold Medal Debates ________ __.__ 138&#13;
&#13;
C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
Auto Phone 3785&#13;
605 Frances Bldg&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
KASS BROS.&#13;
&#13;
Carter-Brackney-Carter&#13;
Attorneys at Law&#13;
Suite 707-708-709 Security Bank Biel.&#13;
Phones, Auto 1522, Bell 1065&#13;
Sioux City, lowa&#13;
&#13;
GEO W. FINCH&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
Suite 527-28 Trimble Bldg&#13;
&#13;
Iriter-Collegiate Debate _________ 133&#13;
&#13;
Book VI, Organizations ___________ l41&#13;
Society Spirit ________________ 143&#13;
&#13;
City Property- Farms&#13;
Investments&#13;
604 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
Phone us your order and our d elivery&#13;
will reach your promptly.&#13;
Auto 6284.&#13;
Cecelia .Park.&#13;
&#13;
J . A, &amp; 0. S. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia ·Park Barber Shop-Baths.&#13;
"Good Service" our-watchword. Cleanliness is n ext to Godliness .&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
3 0 8 Davidson Building&#13;
&#13;
"Get Religion ."&#13;
906 Morningside Ave.&#13;
R. H. Co nkiln, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
Established 1870&#13;
&#13;
J . W . Kindig. Arthur C. McGill.&#13;
D. W. Stewart. R . H. Hatfield.&#13;
KINDIG, McGILL, STEWART &amp;&#13;
HATFIELD.&#13;
Attorneys&#13;
and Counsellor-at-,aw.&#13;
721-726 Frances&#13;
,Building.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa. Auto Phone&#13;
&#13;
Shull, Gill, Sammis&#13;
&amp; Stillwell&#13;
Attorneys&#13;
400-418 Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
Buy War Savings Sta mps.&#13;
O. B. McDONALD&#13;
Buicks&#13;
Oldsmobiles&#13;
4008 Morningside Ave.&#13;
T e l. , Auto 6780.&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Society __________ 144&#13;
&#13;
Gymnasium _____ __ _____ _____ 17&#13;
&#13;
A thenaeum Society ___ _______ _ 14 6&#13;
Ionian Society ________________ 150&#13;
&#13;
Grace Church---------------- 1 9&#13;
&#13;
Brink's Meat M ark et&#13;
&#13;
Main Hall ------------------- 1 5&#13;
Athletics _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 6&#13;
&#13;
R eligious Activities --------- - - 1 8&#13;
&#13;
H. R. DEALY&#13;
&#13;
Pierian Society _______________ 152&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory (write up) ____ 20&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Society _____________ 156&#13;
&#13;
The Conser vatory ------------- 21&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Society ___________ 158&#13;
&#13;
President's Home ------------- 22&#13;
Book II, The Faculty ____________ 23&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye Society ___ _________ _ _ 162&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Red Cross Auxiliary __________ 164&#13;
&#13;
Seniors --------------------- 33&#13;
&#13;
I shkoodah Cl ub ______________ 166&#13;
&#13;
Book III, The Classes ---------Auto Phone 3730&#13;
&#13;
606 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
Scharles T ailoring Co.&#13;
Tailors&#13;
Between Jackson and&#13;
Nebraska Streets&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Work&#13;
&#13;
Guaranteed.&#13;
&#13;
Prices Right&#13;
&#13;
L. H. Masters&#13;
Morn in gside Electric ian.&#13;
Wiring and Repairing a Spec ialty.&#13;
Res. Auto 6443.&#13;
3932 Orleans Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
J. E. ,DE WALT&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
315-316 Frances Building&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Four&#13;
&#13;
Crescent Society ___________ ___ 1 63&#13;
&#13;
Juniors --------------------- 45&#13;
&#13;
S t udent Council ______________ 167&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ------------------ 6 3&#13;
&#13;
Agora Board ________ _ _______ _ 16 8&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ------------------- 67&#13;
&#13;
In ter-Society Cornmit tee ___ _____ 169&#13;
&#13;
Academy-------------------- 72&#13;
&#13;
Y . W. C. A. Cabinet ___________ l 70&#13;
&#13;
Book IV, Athletics ----- ------- -- 73&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet ___________ 171&#13;
&#13;
The Athletic Season ____________ 75&#13;
&#13;
Madrigal Club __ _ ___ ____ _____ _ 172&#13;
&#13;
Coach Saunderson------------ 76&#13;
&#13;
Men's Glee Club ___ ___________ l 73&#13;
&#13;
The "M" Club -- - ------------ 78&#13;
&#13;
Collegian Reporte r ____ ___ ___ __ 17 4&#13;
&#13;
Football-------- ---- --------- 79&#13;
&#13;
Annual Board _ _______________ 175&#13;
&#13;
Baseball - ---------- - --- ---91&#13;
Basketball --- -------- ---- ---- 99&#13;
&#13;
The College Band ______________ l 76&#13;
&#13;
Track -----------------------109&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred&#13;
&#13;
Chemistry Club ______________ l 77&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-Five&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
Volunteer Band ____________ __ l 77&#13;
&#13;
Women's Banquet ------------186&#13;
&#13;
s. __________ l 78&#13;
&#13;
Men's Banquet ----- ----- -----187&#13;
&#13;
Conservation at M.&#13;
&#13;
Alumni _____________________ l 79&#13;
Book VII, Calendar and Jokes _____ 181&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
&#13;
May Day--------------· _____ 188&#13;
Calendar ____________________ 191&#13;
&#13;
Special Occasions -------------183&#13;
Philo-Athenaeum Grand Public __ 184&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's Honor Roll ______ 211&#13;
&#13;
Monument Day --------------185&#13;
&#13;
M. S. Men in Service ----------231&#13;
&#13;
Jokes -----------------------243&#13;
&#13;
Snaps -----------------------241&#13;
&#13;
THE END&#13;
&#13;
Two Hundred Eighty-Six&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>���Sioux&#13;
Nineteen Fifteen&#13;
A portrayal of the student life&#13;
and its achievements at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
Published by the&#13;
&#13;
Junior Class&#13;
&#13;
�FOREWORD&#13;
&#13;
Published by&#13;
FREDERICK&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
WILLIAM HENRY PAYNE&#13;
Sioux City, I owa&#13;
&#13;
Engraved by&#13;
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Printed by&#13;
THE MONARCH&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
Cou n c il Bluffs, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CO.&#13;
&#13;
Another year has passed in the history of&#13;
Morningside College, and we dare to call it,&#13;
the best.&#13;
The largest enrollment m our&#13;
history, bears testimony to our fo rward&#13;
march in the College world.&#13;
A dream of years has at last been realized and there stands on our fair campus a&#13;
Gymnasium, the Glory and P ride of all&#13;
Morningsiders.&#13;
The Morningside of Tomorrow, you may&#13;
think a hopeless dream, yet with the faith of&#13;
a Lewis and the ability of a Craig, she will&#13;
greet us ere we are aware. To those who&#13;
dare to dream and work and lift, all things&#13;
are possible.&#13;
The task of presenting you this record has&#13;
been a pleasure. Mistakes? Yes. Triumphs?&#13;
We leave to your judgment. If we would&#13;
make the Morningside of Tomorrow a reality, let us go forth loyal Sons and Daughters&#13;
of our Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
��w&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
2 3 45 6-&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC FIELD&#13;
7 MEN'S COMMONS&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
8 CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC 9 -&#13;
&#13;
MAIN HALL&#13;
FLAG&#13;
POLE&#13;
SPOON HOLDER&#13;
&#13;
GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
HEATING PLANT&#13;
&#13;
10 - SCIENCE HALL&#13;
ll - GRACE M.E. CHURCH&#13;
12 - WOMEN'S DORMITORIES&#13;
13 - PRESIDENT'S&#13;
HOME&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�Dedication&#13;
Oh, Morningside, "Thou Pride of the&#13;
Sioux." Thou hast been a tender Mother&#13;
to us all. We glory in thy strength, while&#13;
thou art so young and fair. Thou indeed&#13;
hast inspired the hearts of all who have&#13;
felt thy touch.&#13;
In thy boundless future, we see thee&#13;
templed with mighty halls-filled with eager&#13;
life, as the sands of the ocean-lifting the&#13;
cup of learning to all who would partake&#13;
of thy wisdom.&#13;
To thee, Our Alma Mater of the future,&#13;
we lovingly dedicate this, our book.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
�"He who the nois to win&#13;
blest success in the world of&#13;
affairs, must continually educate himself for a larger grasp&#13;
of principal&#13;
and broader&#13;
grasp of condition."&#13;
-Hamilton Wright Mabie.&#13;
&#13;
�1 915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Editorials&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Nine&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
A Review of the Year&#13;
(By Pres. A&#13;
The collegiate year of 191 3-1914&#13;
has been .one of the most prosperous&#13;
in the history of Morningside College.&#13;
The fire which occurred two years ago&#13;
brought with it much inconvenience and&#13;
some depression.&#13;
But the vigor with&#13;
which the loss was repaired gave confidence to all the friends of the school&#13;
and put fresh spirit into its activities.&#13;
With a fresh rebound every interest of&#13;
the institution has assumed new vitality.&#13;
While it is not always possible to satisfactorily tabulate advances, yet the increase of registration is some index to the&#13;
real conditions. The registration of the&#13;
college advanced from 504 of last year&#13;
to 638 this year. This increase is shared&#13;
by every department of the institution,&#13;
but is very noticeable in the collegiate&#13;
department. An increase of forty men&#13;
in the four college classes marks a&#13;
healthy forward movement.&#13;
The outstanding event of the present year has&#13;
been the successful completion of the&#13;
fine fifty thousand dollar gymnasium.&#13;
This is one of the most complete buildings devoted to physical education to be&#13;
found in any college in the land. Its&#13;
proportions are I 20x60, with an approach of 36x 18 devoted to offices of&#13;
the physical directors. Coach Saunderson has assumed charge of the physical&#13;
work for men in addition to his work&#13;
&#13;
E. Craig.)&#13;
as coach. Miss Brand, a graduate of&#13;
Oberlin College, has efficiently directed&#13;
the activities of the young women. This&#13;
addition to our equipment has met a longfelt desire on the part of the students,&#13;
and is greatly appreciated.&#13;
Provision&#13;
has been made for the installation of a&#13;
compl ete department of Domestic Science. Miss Pearl Stuart Greene of Chicago has been secured to take charge of&#13;
this department. Miss Greene is a graduate of the Northwestern University and&#13;
of the Lewis Institute of Chicago, and&#13;
brings to the work of this department&#13;
high ideals and genuine college spirit.&#13;
The course in this department will be&#13;
given full college recognition. The Conservatory of Music has had a year of&#13;
remarkable success. Nearly three hundred students have been enrolled for instruction.&#13;
This department will be&#13;
strengthened next year by the addition&#13;
of several new instructors. In our Inter-Collegiate contests the year has been&#13;
up to our usual high record.&#13;
Our debaters won both decisions, winning over Coe College and Teachers'&#13;
College. Our representative at the state&#13;
Prohibition contest gained second place.&#13;
Athletic conditions are healthy and hopeful. Every evidence points to the fact&#13;
that Morningside College is entering upon&#13;
a period of real prosperity and unusual&#13;
expansion.&#13;
&#13;
Religious Activity&#13;
(By Rev. H. A&#13;
One of the distinctive things about a&#13;
Christian College is what may be called&#13;
its atmosphere. It might not be an easy&#13;
thing to define what we mean by atmosphere, but we all know what it signifies.&#13;
&#13;
Keck.)&#13;
&#13;
We know that it is a potent thing in&#13;
fashioning the character and determining the ideals of young folk.&#13;
I write&#13;
from intimate knowledge of the facts&#13;
when I say that the atmosphere of Morn-&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
T en&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
ingside College has never been· more intensely religious than at the present time.&#13;
The past year has witnessed · a remarkable toning up in the spiritual life of the&#13;
student body. In December "Dad" Elliot, one of the greatest workers among&#13;
college men in the country, came to&#13;
Morningside for a three days' meeting.&#13;
The results were satisfactory in every&#13;
way. Thirty of the young men mad e&#13;
decision for the Christian life, and there&#13;
was a pronounced deepening in religious&#13;
interest.&#13;
During the Elliott meetings&#13;
Miss Burner held services among the&#13;
young women with gratifying results . In&#13;
February a union meeting between Grace&#13;
Church and Morningside College was&#13;
held under the leadership of Hugh E.&#13;
Smith of Los Angeles, Calif. With the&#13;
sweetness of a St. John, Mr. Smith won&#13;
all hearts. Some of the scenes witnessed&#13;
during these meetings were most extraordinary. The solicitude of the Christian&#13;
students for the conversion of their companions was beautiful to behold. Students were converted during the meetings and many life-work decisions were&#13;
made. The Y. M. C. A and the Y.&#13;
W. C. A. have had a splendid year.&#13;
The weekly devotional meetings, led by&#13;
students or ministers in the city, have been&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
very helpful. The Association hall on&#13;
the third floor has been completely refurnished and affords a fine home for all&#13;
Association activities. The College was&#13;
represented at the National Students' Volunteer Convention in Kansas City early in&#13;
January by thirteen students, headed by&#13;
President Craig. The reflex influence&#13;
from the work of this convention has been&#13;
decidedly uplifting. As Pastor of the&#13;
College Church it is only proper that I&#13;
should acknowledge the loyalty of the&#13;
students to the services of Grace Church.&#13;
In our Sunday School, Epworth League,&#13;
and Public Worship, the presence of the&#13;
students has been an inspiration and encouragement. There is only one reason&#13;
for the existence of Morningside College&#13;
and that is a religious reason. The founders of this institution were animated by&#13;
spiritual motives. They believed a Christion College was necessary on the soil of&#13;
Northwest Iowa for the production of a&#13;
symmetrical Christian Manhood and&#13;
Womanhood.&#13;
"Let knowledge grow from more to more,&#13;
But more of reverence in us dwell,&#13;
That mind and soul according well,&#13;
May make one music as before&#13;
But vaster."&#13;
&#13;
Departmentof Public Speaking&#13;
(Prof. C. A Marsh.)&#13;
&#13;
"In these days, whether we like it or&#13;
not, power is with the tongue, power is&#13;
with those who can speak." These words,&#13;
uttered by the great English statesman,&#13;
Premier Salisbury, express a truth that&#13;
is becoming more generally recognized in&#13;
educational circles.&#13;
Today much emphasis is being placed upon service. It&#13;
is evident, therefore, that any training&#13;
which better equips a man to serve his&#13;
&#13;
fellowmen is fundamental. The ability&#13;
to express one's thought clearly and effectively, whether in conversation or upon the&#13;
public platform, is not only an accomplishment, but is today coming to be recognized as a prime requisite to a successful&#13;
career. Mr. Gladstone said: "All time&#13;
and money spent in training the voice and&#13;
body is an investment that pays larger&#13;
interest than any other. Many a profes-&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eleven&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
sional man now in obscurity might rise&#13;
to the highest rank if he were far-seeing&#13;
enough to train his voice and body as&#13;
well as his mind." Dr. Edward Everett&#13;
Hale contends that "The young American, with common school education, who&#13;
cannot• make a speech on any ordinary&#13;
subject at a moment's notice, is wanting&#13;
in one of the most important attributes of&#13;
the American make-up."&#13;
It has frequently been said that training&#13;
for citizenship is the ultimate aim of all&#13;
education. But what are the requisites of&#13;
good citizenship?&#13;
First, an intelligent&#13;
interest in the public questions of the day,&#13;
and second, the ability to discuss these&#13;
questions intelligently, and thus contribute&#13;
to the forming of a safe and sane public&#13;
opinion. The department of public speaking, using for material topics pertaining to&#13;
public questions, and training students in&#13;
clear, vigorous thinking and effective&#13;
speaking, contributes to the making of&#13;
good citizens.&#13;
It is the aim to make the work of the&#13;
Department of Public Speaking of a very&#13;
practical nature; to afford real prepara-&#13;
&#13;
tion for the activities of life. It matters&#13;
not for what occupation or profession a&#13;
student may be preparing, he will have&#13;
abundant opportunities to use the training&#13;
which he has received in Public Speaking. This is especially true of the work&#13;
in debate. The student is trained in independent and constructive thinking. He&#13;
forms the habit of looking deeply into&#13;
questions and seeing both sides of propositions. He learns to discover the vital&#13;
issues, and he is not easily misled by minor&#13;
points. H e develops a spirit of fairmindedness, of consideration for the opinions of others. He learns that there are&#13;
two sides to ·all questions.&#13;
Again, training in public speaking developes self-reliance and self-confidence.&#13;
The student comes to a realization of the&#13;
powers which he possesses. H e learns&#13;
how to make use of the knowledge which&#13;
he has, for he is trained in the art of selfexpression. After all, this is the great art,&#13;
for as some one has well said: "He alone&#13;
can give life to knowledge who has&#13;
learned the art of communicating it to&#13;
others.''&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory of Music&#13;
(By Prof, 0. A Morse.)&#13;
The CONSERVATORY OF Music at&#13;
Morningside will enter on its twenty-first&#13;
year in the fall of 1914. During this&#13;
time it has grown from an unimportant department to a large and well organized&#13;
school of the art of music, with departments for the study of the Pianoforte,&#13;
Singing, Pipe Organ, Violin, Banjo,&#13;
Guitar, Mandolin, Orchestral and Band&#13;
Instruments, History of Music, Public&#13;
School Music, Harmony, Counterpoint&#13;
and Composition. In point of attendance, only one other music school in the&#13;
state, and that in Des Moines is larger,&#13;
&#13;
and between Minneapolis on the north&#13;
and Lincoln on the south, it is unequalled.&#13;
Over three hundred students have received instruction during the year of&#13;
&#13;
1913- 14.&#13;
The position of a Conservatory in connection with a College of Liberal Arts&#13;
is a unique one. More and more it is&#13;
being realized that education means more&#13;
than the mere securing of valuable information, or even the ability to do things.&#13;
Culture of character is by far the most&#13;
important thing in obtaining a training for&#13;
life. The aesthetic features of life are&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE:&#13;
&#13;
Twelve&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
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much more than mere ornamental appendages; they have a decided value in the&#13;
building of individuality, and in this work&#13;
the fine arts have a great and valuable&#13;
place. This has been recognized to a&#13;
great extent in the study of literature, and&#13;
after literature, music has the most universal appeal of all the fine arts. This&#13;
accounts for the fact that, whereas fifty&#13;
years ago music was not thought of as a&#13;
study worthy of recognition in the College&#13;
curriculum, it now has an honored place,&#13;
indeed, many Colleges grant the Bachelors degree for a College course with&#13;
music, even including in some cases the&#13;
practical study of the art, as a major.&#13;
This is indeed a far cry from the day,&#13;
not very many years ago, when a prominent musician offered his services as instructor in music to Harvard University&#13;
without salary.&#13;
The Conservatory at Morningside seeks&#13;
first to extend the influence of the a rt to&#13;
the student body at large ; secondly to&#13;
the community surrounding it; and lastly,&#13;
but not least, to its own body of earnest&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
The courses of study are organized on&#13;
the same general basis as the courses in&#13;
the College of Liberal Arts. A certain&#13;
amount of preliminary training is required for entrance on the regular collegiate course of four years, which is arranged in Freshman, Sophomore, Junior&#13;
and Senior years. These four years of&#13;
training embrace thorough study of at&#13;
least one practical branch, such as the&#13;
piano, singing, violin, etc., also four years&#13;
training in the theory of music, harmony,&#13;
counterpoint, history of music, etc., also&#13;
attendance during the period of study on&#13;
one College or Academy subject to be&#13;
selected according to the needs of the&#13;
student.&#13;
As to the standards required of the&#13;
graduates, they are based on the recognized standards adopted by the most noted music schools of America and Europe.&#13;
The study of music has made rapid and&#13;
substantial progress during the last few&#13;
years, and we feel that Morningside may&#13;
be justly proud that its Conservatory holds&#13;
a place in the very front rank.&#13;
&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
(By Miss Margaret Brand.)&#13;
Throughout all history the attitude toward physical training has been constantly changing: In the earliest times&#13;
brute strength was rated as the greatest&#13;
of all virtues. The strongest man of&#13;
the tribe was the leader and the weakling&#13;
was soon weeded out. Down until the&#13;
Christian era we find this same emphasis&#13;
laid on physical development, but with&#13;
the growth of the early Christian Church&#13;
there came a strong reaction. Men began to think that the only way to acq uire&#13;
merit was through the denial of all physical needs and pleasures, so, led by the&#13;
monks, they practised the most hideous&#13;
&#13;
tortures upon themselves, thinking that by&#13;
thus "mortifying the flesh" they would&#13;
grow spiritually.&#13;
But with the advance in Science, this&#13;
morbid asceticism&#13;
also&#13;
disappeared.&#13;
Slowly men discovered that the mind&#13;
could not do its best work without efficient&#13;
tools. T he body was developed as the&#13;
servant · of the mind, and we find the pioneers of modern physical training beginning their work with this idea, especially&#13;
in Germany and Sweden. More recently still, we find yet another attitude prevailing with regard to physical development. We now know that not only does&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
the mind need a sound body as a means&#13;
of expression, but the mind itself can never reach its highest efficiency unless the&#13;
body is well trained. When one remembers how large a proportion of the surface&#13;
of the brain is taken up by the nerve cells&#13;
which govern our movements, it is easy&#13;
to see that the brain cannot be well developed if the muscles are untrained. As&#13;
a result of this modern point of view, we&#13;
find everywhere gymnasiums in connection-and in logical connection-with the&#13;
schools and universities. Physical training should be a part of every College&#13;
course, not simply for hygienic purposes,&#13;
but as an integral part of one's education.&#13;
There should be a noticeable improvement in the scholarship of Morningside&#13;
students, now that their dream of a modem, well-equipped gymnasium has at last&#13;
been realized, not simply because of improved health, important as that is, but&#13;
because of better trained minds.&#13;
Morningside now has a fine, large gymnasium, fitted out with all the best modern equipment, and containing, besides the&#13;
main floor, a running track, dressing&#13;
rooms, shower baths, team rooms, offices,&#13;
a trophy room, a room for physical examinations, and a swimming pool which will&#13;
be finished off in the near future. It is a&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
gymnasium which can compare favorably&#13;
with any in the country, and it should&#13;
play a large part in the life of the school.&#13;
On account of its importance, two years&#13;
of physical training work will be required&#13;
during the College course, and other elective work will be offered to those who&#13;
desire it. The building is well adapted&#13;
for basketball, volley-ball, indoor tennis,&#13;
indoor baseball, and other games.&#13;
There are then, roughly, three large&#13;
aims in our physical training work. The&#13;
educational aim should come first, although it is not so clearly recognized by&#13;
the student as are the other two. Agility,&#13;
skill, courage, physical judgment, and&#13;
grace are the results of careful training of&#13;
muscles and brain, while true sportsmanship, love of fair play, and willingness to&#13;
sacrifice oneself in the interests of the&#13;
team, come through athletics. The next&#13;
aim should be hygienic. Health is fundamental if one is to make his life count as&#13;
it might, and the sedentary habits of the&#13;
student must be counteracted by vigorous&#13;
exercise.&#13;
Finally, through the use of&#13;
games, rythmic, work, outdoor sports and&#13;
athletics of all kinds, the work is made&#13;
pleasurable, for exercise must be enjoyed&#13;
if it is to give all that it is capable of givmg.&#13;
&#13;
What Morningside Most Needs&#13;
( Dr. Wall ace Carson.)&#13;
The editor of the Sioux has asked me&#13;
to write in a few words and in a spirit of&#13;
frankness what, in my opinion, Morningside College most needs.&#13;
Now the&#13;
building up of our College is at once in&#13;
the hands of the President, the Faculty,&#13;
the Board of Trustees, the friends of the&#13;
College, and the Students. I am only&#13;
interested here in the way in which the&#13;
students may help their College-and&#13;
themselves.&#13;
&#13;
The most vital force bearing on the mdividual student is that intangible thing&#13;
called, "the spirit of the college." It is&#13;
a result of the reaction of a material&#13;
equipment, a F acuity, and students on&#13;
each other under the conditions of a&#13;
College course. This reaction expresses&#13;
itself among the students in a philosophy&#13;
of College life that becomes the principal&#13;
guiding force of the student body. It is&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
the one vital element in the College. It&#13;
is so strong that no College generation can&#13;
warp its purpose, and so sensitive that it&#13;
responds to the impress of the most obscure Freshman. It is so real that it affects the mental and moral tone of every&#13;
student, and so intangible that no Senior&#13;
can say where or what it is.&#13;
Without analyzing exhaustively the&#13;
spirit of Morningsiqe, I wish to call attention to one phase in which there is&#13;
need for a change. Morningside College&#13;
is in a transition period. We have the&#13;
virtues and weaknesses of youth, but we&#13;
are trying desperately hard to slough our&#13;
swaddling clothes.&#13;
New buildings, increased library and laboratory facilities,&#13;
additional instructors, new courses, and&#13;
a general stiffening of the whole curriculum mark the change. In a word Morningside is realizing itself as a College from&#13;
the standpoint of the administration. Is&#13;
student sentiment changing to meet the&#13;
new order?&#13;
The esprit de coeur of the student body&#13;
is an inheritance from the past. T raditions are handed down from class to class&#13;
and students accept an intellectual and&#13;
social code evolved under conditions at&#13;
variance with the present. As the College goes forward, the philosophy of the&#13;
student body must advance-and this in&#13;
the face of established custom and tradition.&#13;
Students must realize that they&#13;
come to Morningside better prepared than&#13;
ever before, that they graduate later in&#13;
life, that they must do more and better&#13;
scholastic work than in former years, and&#13;
&#13;
that they are expected to deport themselves in accord with these conditions.&#13;
It is natural for the students to accept&#13;
the old standards and traditions, and&#13;
equally difficult for them to realize that&#13;
the old order is changing and that they&#13;
must change with it. This is the great&#13;
need of Morningside students just now.&#13;
More of the traits of men and women,&#13;
and less of the characteristics of the High&#13;
School age, are necessary to meet the enlarging demands of our College life. We&#13;
must advance along the following three&#13;
lines unless the student body is satisfied to&#13;
fall behind in the forward march of the&#13;
College.&#13;
The cultivation of a more generous&#13;
spirit of real scholarship in the student&#13;
body, and more students who are not satisfied with C and D grades.&#13;
More students in legitimate College activities other than athletics, and more genuine student recognition and support of&#13;
such activities, for instance, the field of&#13;
forensics, the Collegian Reporter, and the&#13;
Sioux.&#13;
A healthily readjustment of our College political and social life leading to a&#13;
more democratic recognition of individual&#13;
worth regardless of society affiliation, and,&#13;
for the members of the girls' societies, a&#13;
lowering of the unchristian and uncharitable membership bar now applying to so&#13;
many of our students.&#13;
Around these suggestions, it seems to&#13;
me, the student body can build better and&#13;
saner student ideals than those in force&#13;
at the present.&#13;
&#13;
What I Want My Son to Get from Morningside&#13;
(By Prominent Men in the Conference.)&#13;
I want my son to get from his College&#13;
course that modification of himself, which&#13;
shall set him at his best, in right relations&#13;
to the world in which he lives. Not the&#13;
&#13;
present world only, but the world of all&#13;
time. The events of today are but the&#13;
leaves on the tree which has its roots&#13;
deep down in the past. When the frost&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
F i fte en&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
comes the leaves will fall, but trunk and&#13;
limb remain to welcome the master transformer "Chlorophyll," each recurring&#13;
The College student there&#13;
springtime.&#13;
will find special emphasis placed on those&#13;
simple lines of study marked out by the&#13;
trunk line of the years. The great storehouse of history will be opened to him&#13;
and his view of events will not be confused by speculative theorizing or superficial splitting of the subject into drawfish&#13;
and freakish electives. The language in&#13;
which he speaks will become manifold in&#13;
its meaning when he has found and feels&#13;
its relation to that in which Homer wrote&#13;
and Cicero spoke. The season's "Best&#13;
Seller" will find no place in an estimate of&#13;
literature. The stars will become familiar&#13;
in constant Constellations rather than by&#13;
the midnight presence of a stray comet.&#13;
Euclid will prove to be a true friend to&#13;
him. He will be taught to walk and talk&#13;
with Plato and Kant, how to find much&#13;
&#13;
good in Herbert Spencer and Dr. Huxley,&#13;
and will leave posterity to pass judgment&#13;
on, or forget, Bernard Shaw. His year&#13;
of Science will be chosen for its own sake&#13;
and not for future credits at the "University." His College course then will be&#13;
&#13;
unlike:&#13;
"The Angels of Wind and of Fire,"&#13;
who "Chant only one hymn and expire,"&#13;
The appeal to save him from the Frivolous&#13;
incidental in study applies equally to the&#13;
atmosphere and associations of the four&#13;
years. His athletic ability will be cultivated with a view of keeping him out of&#13;
mischief, but a more earnest attempt will&#13;
be made to discover his Aesthetic nature.&#13;
A number will suffice for his room, but&#13;
he will be known by name in the class&#13;
room. Tuition has a right to claim a&#13;
larger share of the students' expenses than&#13;
any demand of superficial social extravagance. Closer to the ideal than any other&#13;
College will be MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside from a Father's Standpoint&#13;
The most important question, we as&#13;
fathers, ask of the College of today, is&#13;
what kind of a boy or girl has your College training made of them?&#13;
As a father who has watched carefully&#13;
the progress of his sons through College,&#13;
I have become convinced that this question is all there is to consider or to look&#13;
into. I have little concern for his Latin,&#13;
Mathematics, or the balance of his College curriculum, whether it is good or bad.&#13;
If bad, there remains plenty of time to&#13;
correct it ( as occasion demands). But&#13;
my sons' or daughters' moral training cannot be so treated. If not looked after at&#13;
this time ( while in College) then the&#13;
Phychological time is surely past. This is&#13;
the time and this is the place that it must&#13;
be done. It matters not whether it has&#13;
&#13;
been don e before or not. The question I&#13;
would more seriously consider than all&#13;
others, would be, What College will give&#13;
&#13;
my boy or girl the best moral training.&#13;
And when this question was decided&#13;
that is the College they would most likely&#13;
attend. To express my thought in a few&#13;
words, it would be this: If I am sure&#13;
that my child's moral training is right, I&#13;
am willing to take all chances on his Latin,&#13;
Mathematics, etc., or shorter yet, the College that sends my boy or girl home&#13;
Christian, is the one I prefer to send them&#13;
to.&#13;
A young man's or girl's moral training&#13;
very correctly indicates to me more than&#13;
all things else, the sort of a life of future&#13;
usefulness his will be.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Tradition&#13;
(From the Viewpoint of a Senior.)&#13;
Perhaps there are institutions of learning where iconoclastic methods are needed to rid them of a host of useless traditions and customs, which inhibit individualism and preclude progress. However,&#13;
Morningside is not of these. The iconoclast is not wanted here. Traditions are&#13;
necessary to the modern College and&#13;
Morningside lacks traditions.&#13;
It will be recalled that the more conservative statesmen of 1787 recognized&#13;
the danger that this government, drunk&#13;
with its newly gotten power and latent&#13;
democracy, might run to excess unless&#13;
checks could be placed upon it. And so&#13;
a system of checks was devised,-of the&#13;
Nation upon the States, of the Senate upon the House, of the President upon Congress, of the Senate upon the President,&#13;
of the Judiciary upon the Legislature,all for the purpose of restraining when&#13;
feeling should run high or action become&#13;
ill-advised. That they . have aided materially in keeping the .Ship of State upon&#13;
the general course mapped out for it by&#13;
the men of '87 is, of course, not open to&#13;
dispute. It was the first of these checks&#13;
which held the Union together in 1832&#13;
and which should have done so again in&#13;
1860. The second prevented the disgrace of a conviction after the impeachment of a President in '68. So the repeated application of each of them could&#13;
be noted in the attempts to maintain the&#13;
character and dignity of this ne,w world&#13;
experiment in democracy.&#13;
Tradition, when strengthened by the&#13;
accumulated prestige of years, is as potent&#13;
as law, civil or natural. It restrains the&#13;
hand of wild excess. It lays down principles of moral and aesthetic action impossible for the State to call law and&#13;
impolitic for the institution to call rule.&#13;
&#13;
It is not so much the nature of the regulation which hurts, it is the character of&#13;
the power that imposes it. The stamp&#13;
acts of 1765 and 1898 were little different, but the former was levied by a foreign power ·and caused rebellion, while&#13;
the latter was levied by ourselves and&#13;
was not opposed.&#13;
Thus, if the State&#13;
should say that every student who is apprehended in the act of making a path&#13;
across his campus should be expelled&#13;
from his College the law would be thrown&#13;
out by the courts. If the administration&#13;
of the institution should make such a&#13;
regulation the students would rebel. But&#13;
if the students themselves make such a&#13;
rule tradition, and back it up with consistent action, it will be obeyed and honored. A rule providing for the expulsion of all students found cheating at examinations would hardly come within the&#13;
purview of State legislation, nor would&#13;
it be politic for the school to put such a&#13;
statement in its catalogue, but the students, through tradition, can make it as&#13;
imprudent for anyone to cheat at examinations as to make a bold robbery on&#13;
the open street at high noon.&#13;
But tradition is not only a potent deterrant from riotous acts, it is equipollent&#13;
as an incitant of that vague something&#13;
called "College Spirit." Who has not&#13;
been inspired to deeper, truer, nobler action by the recital of the traditions of his&#13;
family, of his country, yes, and of his&#13;
school? The custom that a holiday be&#13;
granted after any notable victory, be it&#13;
forensic or athletic, is an illustration in&#13;
point.&#13;
The reiteration of the College&#13;
records, songs, yells, foolishness, on such&#13;
occasions increase the pleasure of going&#13;
to school, and because of that, if for no&#13;
other reason, they are beneficial. The&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
student body should refuse to give over&#13;
the tradition that classes be called off&#13;
and College spirit be allowed to bubble&#13;
over for a few hours when a considerable&#13;
victory has been gained. During the present school year one such circumstance&#13;
has occurred-the immediate raison d'etre&#13;
was the winning of the triangular debate&#13;
-when the F acuity refused to grant the&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
request of the students for the usual holiday, and when the students took by force&#13;
what they had been refused upon request.&#13;
Probably no one event during the school&#13;
year has resulted so satisfactorily from&#13;
the standpoint of College spirit.&#13;
But there were individuals who looked&#13;
with disfavor upon that action! Morningside has no place for the iconoclast!&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
(As a Senior Sees It.)&#13;
&#13;
It is becoming more and more evident&#13;
that the time has come when the educated&#13;
man is recognized as a leader in the various activities of life. Because of this&#13;
the courses of instruction now emphasize&#13;
those subjects which will best equip a&#13;
man for his life work.&#13;
The man or&#13;
woman with a good sound education basis&#13;
is given the preference in the keen competition, for the survival of the fittest.&#13;
At the present day there are many different kinds of educational institutions&#13;
aside from Liberal Arts, such as Protessional, Technical and Agriculture Schools&#13;
where the finishing touches are given the&#13;
student in the special branch of work to&#13;
be followed . But the person who attends such a school is one who has definitely decided in his or her own mind with&#13;
respect to the special line of work to be&#13;
followed. And a certain amount of College work is required before one can enter&#13;
many of these institutions.&#13;
What concerns us most is the true value&#13;
and place of the small Liberal Arts College with reference to the average man&#13;
and woman of today. The vast number&#13;
of such schools scattered throughout our&#13;
great nation speaks for itself. But many&#13;
times the question is asked, "Of what real&#13;
value is the school where one merely acquires a small amount of knowledge on a&#13;
&#13;
along several lines instead of any particular one. But an opportunity is also given&#13;
to specialize along some one line by the&#13;
use of the major and minor system which&#13;
in many cases forms a basis for future&#13;
work.&#13;
Again the so-called outside work, such&#13;
as practical sociology, journalistic and literary work, athletic and the Christian organizations, is of great benefit to the student, since it brings him in contact with&#13;
many different personalities and trying&#13;
circumstances. The small size of the student body affords everyone a chance to&#13;
&#13;
branch out along different lines of work&#13;
and to receive personal attention from the&#13;
instructors, and also to receive experiences&#13;
which may be used later on in life.&#13;
In College the youth has to decide a&#13;
great many matters for himself and as a&#13;
result a stronger will-power and thoughtful personality is developed. Because of&#13;
this thorough and broadening preparation&#13;
a liberal education is essential to both men&#13;
and women in practically every walk of&#13;
life. There is no doubt but that the Liberal Arts course occupies one of the prominent places in the educational world today.&#13;
&#13;
large number of subjects, as compared to&#13;
the already mentioned vocational schools&#13;
where the student receives perfect training&#13;
along one line." In attempting to give a&#13;
brief answer to this question let us first&#13;
glance at the average boy or girl who&#13;
graduates from our High Schools and&#13;
Preparatory Schools. The average age&#13;
of these students is about 18 years. The&#13;
greater majority have been dependent&#13;
upon the home for support and guidance&#13;
Many also have far fetched, pre-conceived&#13;
ideas along certain lines which are merely&#13;
characteristic of youth. They are at that&#13;
age where their entire life can be swung&#13;
one way or the other by the environment&#13;
within which they are placed. These&#13;
High school graduates, as we see them,&#13;
are full of life and vim ready to jump in&#13;
and make good. Again, and in the great&#13;
majority of cases, they have no idea of&#13;
what to prepare for as they are at an&#13;
irresponsible age and have given practically no thought to their life work. So it is&#13;
for this class of boys and girls that the Liberal Arts College of today means so much.&#13;
The general College course is peculiarly&#13;
adapted to the training of these youthful&#13;
characteristics. The curriculum which is&#13;
composed of a variety of subiects, has a&#13;
broadening effect upon the student, in that&#13;
a certain amount of knowledge is gained&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eig ht een&#13;
&#13;
1915 S I OUX&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"Should auld acquaintance&#13;
be forgot and never&#13;
brought to mind&#13;
Should auld acquaintance&#13;
be for got and days of&#13;
auld lang syne. ••&#13;
&#13;
Faculty and&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIOE&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,)&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, D. D. P H . D.&#13;
Presiden t&#13;
B ibical Literature&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
&#13;
University&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GAY DOLLIVER. A B&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
Cin cinnati Wesleyan&#13;
Northwestern U ni ver s ity&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLA&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STYLES, PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
LOVELAND. A. B.&#13;
&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
P h ysics&#13;
&#13;
Smi t h College&#13;
Oxford University&#13;
&#13;
Kenyon College&#13;
Harvard Un iversi ty&#13;
Sigma X i&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
ii,&#13;
&#13;
FRED&#13;
&#13;
EMO RY HAYNES, PH. D.&#13;
Registrar&#13;
&#13;
Economics&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT A. M.&#13;
Acting Dean of W omen&#13;
Lat i n&#13;
&#13;
S ociology&#13;
&#13;
Harvard Univer sity&#13;
&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan Univer sity&#13;
Col umbia U nivers ity&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
HENRY&#13;
&#13;
F. KANTHLENER,&#13;
Greek&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College&#13;
Harvard Universi t y&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
NEGLEY VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
John Hopkins University ,&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
GRETCHENK. LUTZ, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERTG. CAMPBELL, PH. B&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
French&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College&#13;
Columbia&#13;
University&#13;
&#13;
Albion&#13;
College&#13;
University&#13;
of Il linois&#13;
Delta Gamma&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
ALMER MARSH,&#13;
&#13;
Public&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
Speaking&#13;
&#13;
New Lyme&#13;
Colum bia College&#13;
&#13;
Institute&#13;
&#13;
Biology&#13;
Ad r ian College&#13;
University f Chicago&#13;
o&#13;
Sigma X i&#13;
Alpha Tau Omega&#13;
&#13;
of Expression&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
C. STEPHENS, A . B. M. D .&#13;
..&#13;
Secretary of Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
,·&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR&#13;
&#13;
A. BROWN,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AUSTIN&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
D e P a u w University&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
&#13;
Illino is Wesleyan&#13;
University&#13;
University&#13;
of Illinois&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
T wenty-four&#13;
&#13;
COSS. M. S.&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADLEY, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
JANET&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Olivet College&#13;
University&#13;
of Michigan&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
M. McDONALD&#13;
A . M.&#13;
Latin&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
University&#13;
of Illinois&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD.&#13;
&#13;
PH. .&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
...&#13;
Expression&#13;
Pillsbury Acade my&#13;
&#13;
Columbia&#13;
&#13;
University of Chi cago&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
BRAND,&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
of Expression&#13;
&#13;
JASON&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Physical Direct or&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Albion College&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Grinnell College&#13;
Library School&#13;
W estern Reserve University&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Physical Director for Women&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin College&#13;
&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Wofford College&#13;
Trinity&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
University&#13;
of Wi sconsin&#13;
Kappa Alpha&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA C. SANBORN&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE CARSON, PH. D.&#13;
History and Politics&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN ALLISON MORSE, A. A. G. 0.&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Pupil of Miss Emma Sage&#13;
Pupil of J . Erich Schmaal&#13;
Rudolph&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
Toronto Co ll ege of Mu sic&#13;
&#13;
Ganz and Fritz Voegely, Berlin&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
PAUL&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
MacCOLLIN, A. B.&#13;
Oberlin&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin&#13;
&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
&#13;
O be rlin Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
N. MacCOLLIN, MUS. B .&#13;
Vo i ce Culture&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
CECILBURLEIGH&#13;
&#13;
BAnjoBAnjo,Mandolin, Guitar&#13;
&#13;
Violin&#13;
&#13;
of Music&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
MAEEDITH&#13;
&#13;
WOOD. A . B .&#13;
&#13;
FAITH&#13;
&#13;
FOSTER WOOD FORD , A. B .&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
Mo rnin gs ide Co ll ege&#13;
of Emil Liebling&#13;
Pupil of Alber to Jonas,&#13;
Berlin&#13;
Pupil&#13;
&#13;
*LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
E. ROBERTS,&#13;
A. B.&#13;
Latin&#13;
Io wa Co ll ege&#13;
Wellesley&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
U ni ve r s ity of Chi cago&#13;
&#13;
*AGNES B. FERGUSON,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Co rnell Co ll ege&#13;
Co lum bia University&#13;
Uni ve rs ity of H eide lberg&#13;
&#13;
*Absen t on leave.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
T wen t y-n i n e&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
EDNA ALLEN&#13;
'' lnfini te riches&#13;
&#13;
AMELIA&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
PIRIE BRIGGS&#13;
LeMars&#13;
"He co uld distinguish an d decide&#13;
A hair 'twixt south and so u t hwest s ide."&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
in a little room.''&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Craig, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE&#13;
&#13;
BRITTON&#13;
&#13;
"A ca ref ul student s h e ha s been.' '&#13;
&#13;
"Hence,&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Lee Barks&#13;
"Time !&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
ADA LOUIE&#13;
"Rare&#13;
&#13;
LOLA GWENDOLYN&#13;
BROWNELL&#13;
"We needn't te ll -&#13;
&#13;
I dare thee to discover such&#13;
&#13;
youth&#13;
&#13;
such&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
com pound of oddity . frolic and&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
joke and&#13;
&#13;
rejoiced&#13;
&#13;
lover."&#13;
&#13;
AUGUSTUS&#13;
"He&#13;
&#13;
fun ,&#13;
&#13;
Who relished&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
his mind.' '&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
HAROLD MARTIN COBBS&#13;
&#13;
S iou x C i ty&#13;
"O n e of those quiet, yet talkative&#13;
dull, yet brilliant. st udi ous. yet lazy&#13;
fellows&#13;
&#13;
BIGGLESTONE&#13;
&#13;
Laurens&#13;
&#13;
MARGIE&#13;
&#13;
t h at&#13;
&#13;
beggar all&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
&#13;
BOWMAN&#13;
&#13;
" O t h ere' s nothing half so sweet&#13;
In life as love's young drea m."&#13;
&#13;
class ifi cat ion."&#13;
&#13;
DOOLITTLE&#13;
&#13;
"I'm sorry for me.&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
of kn ow l-&#13;
&#13;
Yet fo und t h em not so large as was&#13;
&#13;
"Or li g ht or dark or short or ta ll&#13;
S h e se t s a s n a re to catch them a ll. "&#13;
&#13;
HARRY CL IN TON&#13;
&#13;
BRUNELLE&#13;
&#13;
d id t h e utmost bounds&#13;
edge find ,&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
pun."&#13;
&#13;
LAURA LUCILLE BELT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
We liked yo u well-&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
BELEW&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
loath ed melancholy.''&#13;
&#13;
Sibley&#13;
&#13;
I ain'tso awfu l. "&#13;
&#13;
Grove&#13;
JOHN HENRY&#13;
&#13;
ENGLE&#13;
"In&#13;
&#13;
Ainsworth,&#13;
&#13;
Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
love, man lives.''&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
EARL FULLBROOK&#13;
"To kneel at many a shrine,&#13;
Yet lay the heart on none."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
LISLE&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND&#13;
&#13;
HOSFORD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
GIEHM&#13;
&#13;
MYRONOTISINSKO&#13;
&#13;
"ln s ko ! He's&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
"He&#13;
&#13;
Springfield, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
" I s it for fear to wet a w idow's eye&#13;
Th at t h ou consum'st thyself in s ing le&#13;
life?''&#13;
&#13;
Knierim&#13;
&#13;
a man for a'that&#13;
&#13;
Moorhead&#13;
&#13;
GORDER&#13;
&#13;
ha s imitators in scores&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WILLIAM JOHNS&#13;
&#13;
who omit&#13;
&#13;
Kings ley&#13;
&#13;
"And tho· he promi se to hi s loss,&#13;
&#13;
No part of the man but h is wisdom."&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
makes his promise good."&#13;
&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
HAWCOTT&#13;
&#13;
"A fin e. inspired ea rn est ness her&#13;
being fil l s:&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
eage r&#13;
&#13;
se lf&#13;
&#13;
inmost&#13;
&#13;
forgetfu lness&#13;
&#13;
ALICE&#13;
&#13;
speaks not w h at it wil ls."&#13;
&#13;
Plover&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
LULU KLIPPLE&#13;
"Marks,&#13;
h er aim.''&#13;
&#13;
that&#13;
&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
&#13;
JOHN DIMMITT KOLP&#13;
"No&#13;
&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
no t men , have a lw ays been&#13;
&#13;
sin er nor no saint&#13;
&#13;
.J acksonv ille, Ill.&#13;
perhap s,&#13;
&#13;
b u t very best of chaps.'' e l l ,&#13;
well , t h e&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
IDA MAE&#13;
"Hang&#13;
&#13;
Siou x Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
HOOD&#13;
sorrow&#13;
&#13;
care&#13;
&#13;
will&#13;
&#13;
kill&#13;
&#13;
a cat,&#13;
&#13;
Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
"A clever, clashing youth who might&#13;
cut hi s way thro' the world as if it&#13;
&#13;
were a cheese .. ,&#13;
&#13;
ADELLA&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Her&#13;
w ays a re ways of pl easa ntness&#13;
and a ll h er path s a re peace."&#13;
&#13;
So therefore let's be merry."&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR WESLEY HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM ALBERT McCURDY. Two H arbors, Minn.&#13;
''F illing each moment w ith a nobl e act;&#13;
Doing his duty to hi s fel lowmen."&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HORACE PIERCEMORGAN&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
"And what of t hi s boy'! 'Tis hard&#13;
to tell whether he will be a g reat&#13;
a rti st. a vaudeville c lown or a min -&#13;
&#13;
"His&#13;
&#13;
ISOBEL&#13;
LUCILLE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux,&#13;
&#13;
EMMA MORGAN&#13;
leave my ch aracte r behind&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
"Fine peo pl e. like fine deeds,&#13;
trumpets."&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
AUREL&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
''Active&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
s tr o ng&#13;
&#13;
o&#13;
&#13;
labo r . sure&#13;
&#13;
need no&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
LUCIAN&#13;
&#13;
WRIGHT&#13;
Britt&#13;
kn ow you n ot that l am in love?"&#13;
&#13;
"Why&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
ROY HARRISON&#13;
&#13;
McVICKER&#13;
&#13;
rare&#13;
&#13;
universal&#13;
&#13;
GENEVA&#13;
&#13;
WEBB&#13;
doer,&#13;
&#13;
conq ne r ."&#13;
&#13;
"Tis&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
me.' '&#13;
&#13;
"I&#13;
&#13;
ZENANA&#13;
&#13;
Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
VENNINK&#13;
&#13;
h ea r t was in hi s work."&#13;
&#13;
that&#13;
&#13;
respect&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
m an&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
receives&#13;
&#13;
such&#13;
&#13;
admiration."&#13;
&#13;
Kings ley&#13;
&#13;
RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
"Grace wa s in a ll her ste ps.&#13;
Heaven in her eye,&#13;
In eve ry gesture, dignity and love."&#13;
&#13;
Dakota&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
VERN&#13;
&#13;
"True&#13;
&#13;
City, Neb r.&#13;
&#13;
FRED SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
WM. HUNT&#13;
&#13;
as&#13;
&#13;
HULSE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
the dial to the sun."&#13;
&#13;
EISENMAN&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
"0, what m en dare d o! what m en&#13;
may do! wha t me n dai ly do. not kn o w-&#13;
&#13;
ing what t h ey do."&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE&#13;
&#13;
GRACE&#13;
&#13;
R oyal&#13;
&#13;
UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
"Thosedark eyes-&#13;
&#13;
so dark . so cl eep ."&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD&#13;
" Bogy"'&#13;
GENEVIEVE&#13;
&#13;
MAE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Athenaenm-Treasurer.&#13;
"Stupid&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Cupid&#13;
&#13;
BALCOM&#13;
&#13;
P ella, I a .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
Vice President&#13;
never ca ll s on&#13;
&#13;
PAUL&#13;
&#13;
me."&#13;
&#13;
BOODAGH&#13;
&#13;
Persia&#13;
&#13;
Uirmia&#13;
&#13;
Ionian-Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
'13, second&#13;
&#13;
in Peace Contest.&#13;
&#13;
" Amba ssado r to be, from lands beyond t h e sea."&#13;
&#13;
SUSIE&#13;
BURGSTAHLER&#13;
"Sue"&#13;
T yndall. S. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
Tyndall&#13;
&#13;
"Serious- almost&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
&#13;
embalmed."&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICK&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
Pierson Hig h&#13;
Pi erson . I a.&#13;
Philo.-Treasurer&#13;
Vice President, Go ld Medal Debate '13. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet· (1) ( 2 ) ( 3) . Glee Cl ub&#13;
(l) (2) (3). Prattle r Club (3) . Vice Presiden t Sl·ate&#13;
Philo. Associa tion. Vice Presiden t Forens ic League,&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Sioux '15.&#13;
"Ea rl once fe ll in love with a. lovely maid .&#13;
And a lovely maid w as she:&#13;
He lovi n gly loved t his lovely maid.&#13;
Now a lovesick&#13;
lover is h e."&#13;
&#13;
Central College&#13;
Philo, Inter-SocietyD ebate '13, Football ' 13, "M"&#13;
Club.&#13;
" Bogy doesn· t like t h e girls:&#13;
He wil l not make a mash,&#13;
For when the girls come flock ing ·round&#13;
Young Bogy makes a dash."&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL MARY COLLIER&#13;
"Cudge"&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux C ity H igh&#13;
Pie ria, S tudent Council, V ice Presid en t Agora, Literary Editor S ioux .&#13;
'· A brilliant s t uden t; i f you don't beli eve it, ask&#13;
&#13;
MARY LOIS CROUCH&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Zet alethean Treasurer&#13;
Collegian Staff, Ex. Boa rd&#13;
Agora, Ch. Girls Ranquet.&#13;
&#13;
' "Like A tlas, sh e seems to bear the w eight of the&#13;
whole world on h e r s h ou lders."'&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE B. COSTAR&#13;
Hawarden High&#13;
Alclester, S . D ak.&#13;
O thon ian&#13;
"A happy lad , whose studies seem to be all&#13;
Wright."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Helen Dorothy Carlson&#13;
CLARENCE TUCKER&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Wilmington Fri ends&#13;
Ionian-Vice&#13;
President,&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Deba te '12-'13, inter-CollegiateDebate '14, Winne,·&#13;
l'ea ce Contest '14, Co ll eg ian Staff. Glee Club, Band .&#13;
' ·All the great men are dying and I don't feel very&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
MARIE ALTA DEVITT&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Zet.-V ice-Pr es id ent. Trea s urer .&#13;
"Sarcastic?&#13;
We ll rather- there is no livin g with&#13;
thee nor without thee."&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT DUNHAM&#13;
"Sleepy''&#13;
Early, Ia.&#13;
Early High&#13;
Otho.- Secretary. Inter-Soc iety Debate ' 13, Coll eg ian Staff. Baseball ' 13, " M" Club, Studen t Employment Manager&#13;
" O what a fusser he'd make if he only had th e&#13;
nerv e."&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
OLIVE&#13;
&#13;
FAY DARVILLE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
"Ain't I the sp ick and s pan littl e kid ."&#13;
&#13;
HARRY MILLER CLARK&#13;
"Champ"&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Streator, Ill., High&#13;
G lee Club, Student Manager, Class Basketball,&#13;
Sioux Board Artist,&#13;
Yell L eader .&#13;
"A big noi se don e up in a s mall package ."&#13;
&#13;
"Jimmie''&#13;
&#13;
Hot Springs, S. D.&#13;
Ionian . Gold Medal D ebate, Inte r-Society Debate&#13;
(2) (3), Inte r-Co llegiate Debate (3), Sioux Board&#13;
Forensics, Y. M. Cabinet (3), G lee Club (2) (3).&#13;
'' I th ink I s mell s mok e."&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
DAISY ETHEL ENGLISH&#13;
Desmet, S. D.&#13;
'' Night by night sh e sat and bl ea r ed he r eyes with&#13;
books.''&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
ISAA C DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty -three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT&#13;
"Turk"&#13;
&#13;
W est Side, Ia.&#13;
W est Side High&#13;
Philo, Football&#13;
(1) (2) (3) , Basketball (2), Baseball (2) (3), "M" Club. Glee Cu b ( 1 ) ( 2).&#13;
&#13;
"We don't&#13;
&#13;
dare&#13;
&#13;
tell all&#13;
&#13;
we know-the&#13;
&#13;
folks&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
home may see this book."&#13;
&#13;
BURRELL&#13;
&#13;
Omaha High&#13;
&#13;
Otho.-Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Assistant&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Zet . President, Vice Presiclent, Y. W.&#13;
clent .&#13;
&#13;
Vice Presi-&#13;
&#13;
" Yet led a stray by Cupid's Deligh t."&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTINE&#13;
&#13;
EDGAR EVANS&#13;
"beans"&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE IDA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Business&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET HAAS&#13;
"Steen"&#13;
Woodbine&#13;
Morningside A caclern y&#13;
"Dash i t all : I wan t a man."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT&#13;
&#13;
EPHRAIM&#13;
"Herb"&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
Philo&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club Pianist, Chemistry Assistant&#13;
&#13;
"Wise from&#13;
&#13;
the top of his head, up."&#13;
&#13;
EARL LESTER&#13;
"Heavy"&#13;
&#13;
HIETT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Philo,&#13;
Scrubs.&#13;
&#13;
E x.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Board&#13;
&#13;
" H is devious&#13;
&#13;
Vice&#13;
&#13;
( 2 ),&#13;
&#13;
way&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
lined&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
President ,&#13;
like&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
Mississippi&#13;
&#13;
river- by bluffs."&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
RUTH EVA FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
IRENE&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
"Mibs"&#13;
&#13;
Lake View&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake High&#13;
Zet. Secretary. Agora C lub. Secreta1·y ( 2 ) , Pres iclen t (3), Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2 ) (3 ), Stud ent&#13;
Counci l Vice Presiden t .&#13;
"Can't&#13;
&#13;
sl am her- her "man's"&#13;
&#13;
editing this book."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty -five&#13;
&#13;
�1 91 5&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH ANN JAMES&#13;
"Tommy"&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Vice President, Sioux Board, Classes.&#13;
" Three- fifth s of her genuine: two-fifths of her pure&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
MABEL ROSE KING&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
Secretary&#13;
"Mabel said s he'd cut us off her ca lling li st if we&#13;
slammed her. so Here's&#13;
to you Mabel." ''&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
fudge."&#13;
&#13;
OLICE&#13;
&#13;
ALVIRA JONES&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
Manson. la.&#13;
Aletheia Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
&#13;
LAURINE .JOHNSON&#13;
"S unset"&#13;
Wall Lake High&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake, Ia.&#13;
Pieria Secretary.&#13;
" With all h er faults we love h er still- th e stiller&#13;
the better."&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET EVA KIFER&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Pie ria Secretary.&#13;
"'Tis well to be off with the old love before you&#13;
are on with the ne w."&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN BLAIR KLINE&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
"His main object in attending Co ll ege is to obtain&#13;
knowledge-how&#13;
funny."&#13;
&#13;
ELLIS VICTOR KUHNS&#13;
Ross vill e, Ind ., High&#13;
Otho Sec reta ry, Inter -Society Debate '13.&#13;
"Still a chance for Herpicide."&#13;
&#13;
Frankfort,&#13;
&#13;
EDITH EHLE LYLES&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Athenaeum , Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
in three years- Help"&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
lnd.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN&#13;
&#13;
HINMAN LEUDER&#13;
"Herm"&#13;
Cherokee lligh&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee, Ia.&#13;
Ionian , Vice President, Inter-Soci e ty Debate '12,&#13;
President Class (1), Student Council, Track (2) (3),&#13;
"M" Club.&#13;
"A worker among men and of women"&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN LAVELY&#13;
Crookston, Minn.&#13;
Upper Iowa-Ce ntral College&#13;
Ionian, Winner of Monument Run '14.&#13;
" Our Mellins Food Boy. "&#13;
&#13;
GUY DOANE McKINNEY&#13;
"Mac"&#13;
&#13;
Ft.&#13;
&#13;
Dodge, Ia.&#13;
Ft. Dodge High&#13;
Othonian , Treasurer Class, Class Basketball , Football (1) (2) (3) , "M" Club, S iou x Board, Jokes&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD L. MORLEY&#13;
Onawa, la.&#13;
Philomathean, Band.&#13;
"He plays to beat the band."&#13;
&#13;
Onawa High&#13;
&#13;
LYDIA EVELYN McCREERY&#13;
Early Ia.&#13;
Early Hi gh&#13;
Atheneaum Yi ce l'rcs id cnt.&#13;
"My home is in heaven; I'm just here on a visit.''&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MIRIAM McCANDLISS&#13;
Hoihow, Hainan,Ch in a&#13;
Atheneaum.&#13;
&#13;
"O sc isso rs, bow you do cut up."&#13;
&#13;
FERN&#13;
&#13;
ISABEL MARQUART&#13;
"S lim"'&#13;
Manson High-Drake&#13;
&#13;
Manson , Ia.&#13;
Aletheia Secretary, Treasurer.&#13;
"Grind, grind, frind,&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE McKENZIE&#13;
Hartington , Neb., High&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Agora Executive Board.&#13;
"You can manufacture blondes but red hair jus t&#13;
comes natural. "&#13;
&#13;
will she never be sharp?"&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE MARGARET METCALF&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
Sioux Board. Societies .&#13;
"Don't&#13;
&#13;
take&#13;
&#13;
my lovin'&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD CHATHAM&#13;
ROLLOCK&#13;
Grand Rapids Mich.&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Othonian, Glee Club (1) ( 2 ) ( 3 ) .. Sioux Board&#13;
A thlet ics, Assistant in Bio l., Class Basketball ( 1 ) ( 2 )&#13;
93).&#13;
&#13;
man away.''&#13;
&#13;
"A self-made&#13;
ator."&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE MARGARET NEWLAND&#13;
Galva, Ia.&#13;
Galva High&#13;
Picria.&#13;
"The kandy kid."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
man? Yes,&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
PRENTICE&#13;
Al ta High&#13;
&#13;
"She concealed a deal of rowdyism&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ENGLISH OLSEN&#13;
Sioux City High-Neb.&#13;
&#13;
U.&#13;
&#13;
University and is still a&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HENRY PAYNE&#13;
"B ill"&#13;
Milnor, N. Dak.&#13;
S to rm Lake, Ia., High&#13;
Othonian. Y. M. Cabinet, Sioux Board, Business&#13;
Manager, Col legian Staff (2), Class Basketball (1)&#13;
(2) (3), Football&#13;
(2) (3), "M '' Club.&#13;
"Busy- aye&#13;
sir-none so busy as t his man , yet&#13;
what ' tis all about ne'er could I tell."&#13;
&#13;
.JOLIN FLETCHER&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mi ch .&#13;
&#13;
beneath a calm&#13;
&#13;
POLLOCK&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. Glee Club ( 2 ) (3).&#13;
"Dainty. of the pink tea va riety-an authority on&#13;
ladies· fashions. and he's going to make i t pay, too."&#13;
&#13;
RALPH&#13;
&#13;
CEDRICPRICHARD&#13;
"Prit''&#13;
&#13;
Hornick,Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
I -Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Acad.&#13;
&#13;
Philo.&#13;
i&#13;
Secretary- Vice Presidentt.&#13;
·· If&#13;
&#13;
buck ing is what&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
Al ta, la.&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
Atheneaum Secretary .&#13;
"Hails&#13;
from Nebraska&#13;
perfect lady."&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
and he worships his cre-&#13;
&#13;
we are&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
t hi s world for&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE BLANCH E ROBINSON&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
S iou x Ci t y&#13;
At h en ean m P resident, Colle g ian Reporter&#13;
Staff,&#13;
Stude n t Counc il, S ioux Board, Assistan t E d itor .&#13;
'·Ye Gods ! Ann ihilate bu t t ime a nd s pace and&#13;
ma ke t wo lovers ha ppy.''&#13;
&#13;
Sio ux City&#13;
I oni a n Vice&#13;
&#13;
CARL W . H. SASS&#13;
"Whitehead"&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Academy&#13;
President In te r-Society De bate '13,&#13;
&#13;
MABEL LEONA TRENARY&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
Atheneaum&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
"Exercise?&#13;
fast."&#13;
&#13;
W hy I peeled an orange&#13;
&#13;
for break-&#13;
&#13;
CYRIL BRICE UPHAM&#13;
"Uppie''&#13;
Roya l, Ia.&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
P h ilomathean , Si ou x Board. Alumni.&#13;
"One of the members of t h e S ioux Board to whom&#13;
t hi s book will be a del igh tful surprise."&#13;
&#13;
Studen t Council , Forensic L eague President&#13;
&#13;
"Lad ies and gentle me n- and f e llow s t uden ts."&#13;
"Bob"&#13;
&#13;
or "Pinkey"&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden High&#13;
Ot h on ia n , In t er-Collegia te P eace Contest ' 12, Mandolin Orch estra, Y. M. Vice President, P r es iden t Class&#13;
( 2 ), Editor Coll egia n Reporter&#13;
(3), Football ( 1 ) ( 2 )&#13;
(3), T r ack (1) . ( 2 ) . (' lass Basketball ( 1 ) ( 2 ) (3),&#13;
Baseball (2), "M" Club President&#13;
"S low music ?? '??.' '&#13;
Hawarden,Ia .&#13;
&#13;
ELIHU&#13;
Inwood , I a .&#13;
Philo Secretary,&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD&#13;
SHOEMAKER&#13;
'' S hoie''&#13;
I n wood High&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
&#13;
Socia list Club President.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES SHUMAKER&#13;
"Flossie"&#13;
Morn ingside Aca de my&#13;
&#13;
S io ux City&#13;
Ath en ea u m.&#13;
"I may do some thing sensationa l ye t."&#13;
&#13;
ELINOR&#13;
&#13;
BEATRICE&#13;
" Bee"&#13;
&#13;
WRIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Sio ux Ci ty&#13;
Atheneaum&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
&#13;
Agora&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Ci ty High&#13;
Board,&#13;
&#13;
Execut i ve&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Boa1·d, Calcn cla ,·.&#13;
" She never lets h er studi es in terfere wit h her College education."'&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
WEDGEWOOD&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT&#13;
" Bi l l''&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Ci ty&#13;
Ot h on ian.&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Board,&#13;
&#13;
Madison,&#13;
Photographer,&#13;
&#13;
S . D ., High&#13;
Mandolin&#13;
&#13;
"The sunshine is red, wh en it shines on h is h ead."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fif ty- t wo&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1 91 5&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
·1&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nin e&#13;
Fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
�Special Classes&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
�1 91 5&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Macbride Lakeside&#13;
&#13;
LAboratory&#13;
&#13;
Every year more Morningside students attend the Macbride Lakeside Laboratory.&#13;
To the scientifically inclined, the laboratory offers opportunities for pleasurable work&#13;
hard to resist.&#13;
&#13;
Situated high on the shores of Iowa's most beautiful lake, it is surrounded&#13;
&#13;
by a landscape, both varied and interesting-cliffs and sandy shore lines that are bordered by woods, are, in turn, succeeded by morainic hills and upland prairies, with&#13;
here and there an unexpected pond or marshy kettle-hole.&#13;
&#13;
Tiny creeks,&#13;
&#13;
from cool, hillside springs, trickle down wooded ravines to the lake.&#13;
&#13;
the overflow&#13;
&#13;
The lake itself is,&#13;
&#13;
of course, the greatest attraction, whither its deep waters are blue and quiet, or a restless,&#13;
foam-tipped green.&#13;
&#13;
Besides, it is an inexhaustible storehouse of specimens.&#13;
&#13;
The region&#13;
&#13;
surrounding the laboratory, as a whole, presents every type of fauna and flora and&#13;
geological formation to be found in Iowa.&#13;
The laboratory is named in honor of Dr. Thomas H. Macbride, former head of&#13;
the department of Botany at Iowa University, and now its President.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Macbride&#13;
&#13;
personally directs work at the laboratory and his presence there is one of its greatest attractions.&#13;
&#13;
One may never meet a more kindly, scholarly gentleman, nor a more lovable&#13;
&#13;
personality, combined with such wide learning and high scientific attainment.&#13;
The buildings of the laboratory, grouped upon a high wooded cliff at the extreme&#13;
west end of the lake, are only such as are necessary to scientific work, and comfortable&#13;
living during the hot part of the year.&#13;
&#13;
A large H-shaped laboratory with lecture rooms&#13;
&#13;
and offices, and a seven-room cottage are the principal ones.&#13;
&#13;
The cottage is always a&#13;
&#13;
gathering place, because of its big fire-place on chilly days, and wide screened porch on&#13;
hot ones.&#13;
temptation.&#13;
&#13;
The view from this porch is splendid, its hammock and rocking chairs are a&#13;
The students are housed in comfortable tents and bunk houses., The teach-&#13;
&#13;
ing staff-five or six leading professors, selected from Iowa Colleges, have rooms in the&#13;
cottage.&#13;
The students at the laboratory, coming from all the state, present a great variety&#13;
of types and ages.&#13;
congenial group.&#13;
&#13;
However, they have always a love of science in common and form a&#13;
Whether they are teachers learning something of the natural history&#13;
&#13;
of Iowa, or College students of graduate or undergraduate rank, conducting scientific&#13;
research in the field, they may be counted on to stalk a red-eyed vireo in the wet, quiet&#13;
woods in the chill of sunrise, or to chase a rare butterfly up a steep and stony kame in&#13;
the blazing heat of noon, with equal enthusiasm.&#13;
To those who have tasted the zest of life at the laboratory, its summons to return&#13;
come as clearly as the call of the mountains to the mountain born.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Si x ty-thr ee&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
"He that wrestles with us&#13;
strengthens our nerves, and&#13;
sharpens our skill&#13;
"Our antagonist is our&#13;
helper."&#13;
&#13;
Senior Music&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
In February, 1914, the Gymnasium, erected at a cost of nearly $50,000, was&#13;
opened.&#13;
&#13;
The building stands just south of College Hall, facing Morningside avenue.&#13;
&#13;
It is of the modified renaissance type of architecture, constructed of dark brown pressed&#13;
brick, with red tile roof, and is fireproof.&#13;
oak.&#13;
&#13;
The interior woodwork is of quarter-sawed&#13;
&#13;
The building has two stories and an elevated basement.&#13;
&#13;
skylight let in an abundance of light.&#13;
&#13;
The large windows and&#13;
&#13;
It is steam-heated, electric lighted, and well&#13;
&#13;
ventilated.&#13;
The basement is divided into two parts, one for men and the other for women.&#13;
Each part contains a dressing room and locker room, team room and shower room.&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
addition there is a swimming-pool room 26 by 78 feet.&#13;
On the main floor is a large exercise room 60 by 120 feet.&#13;
&#13;
Here are two basket-&#13;
&#13;
ball courts, tennis court, and place for volley ball and indoor baseball.&#13;
&#13;
The apparatus&#13;
&#13;
is abundant and of the best grade, consisting of horses, bucks, parallel bars, vaulting&#13;
bars, steel bars, traveling rings, Indian clubs, jumping standards, spring boards, and&#13;
medicine balls.&#13;
On each side of the entrance is an office room for the physical directors.&#13;
&#13;
On the&#13;
&#13;
second floor, suspended over the exercise room, is a running track, correctly banked,&#13;
covered with cork, eighteen laps to the mile.&#13;
&#13;
Opening off this balcony is the physical&#13;
&#13;
examination room, a trophy room, and a rest room.&#13;
Beginning with the new year physical training will be required.&#13;
&#13;
The work is under&#13;
&#13;
the direction of two competent directors, one for men· and one for women.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
I&#13;
Sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 . SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
A Resume of the Football&#13;
&#13;
Season&#13;
&#13;
The fact that next season's football schedule finds the University of South D akota&#13;
and the University of Nebraska included among Morningside's opponents is a criterion&#13;
of the success which our gridiron warriors achieved in 1913.&#13;
&#13;
The schedule of 1913&#13;
&#13;
was perhaps the heaviest that Morningside ever participated in, yet we were returned a&#13;
winner in five of the seven intercollegiate contests.&#13;
&#13;
The two defeats were administered&#13;
&#13;
by schools of University caliber, one by St. Thomas College, conceded to be the peer&#13;
of Minnesota University, and the other by the Haskell Indians, who had practically tied&#13;
the University of N ebraska, the week previous.&#13;
At the beginning of the season every indication pointed toward the development of&#13;
a team which would eclipse in ability that of any other team in the history of the institution.&#13;
&#13;
The pre-season camp at Blue Lake near Onawa, Iowa, was resumed this year,&#13;
&#13;
and the fact that only four of last year's veterans were lost by graduation augured well&#13;
for success on the gridiron.&#13;
&#13;
The first three collegiate games fulfilled the expectations of&#13;
&#13;
the most sanguine supporters of the Maroons, Yankton, Buena Vista and Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan, were met in succession and decisively defeated.&#13;
&#13;
However, the Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Wesleyan game proved a collusive victory for injuries sustained by Capt. Holbert,&#13;
McCurdy and Behmer, were such as to seriously handicap them in their play during the&#13;
succeeding games.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
BEN. HOLBERT,.JR.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
In the next game St. Thomas, one of the strongest in the West,&#13;
&#13;
overwhelmed the Maroons, but on the following week they came back and defeated the&#13;
fast Simpson eleven.&#13;
&#13;
The next contest was a defeat at the hands of Haskell University,&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence, Kan., but the Maroon showing was entirely satisfactory, considering the&#13;
strength of the visitors.&#13;
&#13;
The season closed with a victory over South Dakota Wesleyan. ·&#13;
&#13;
The success of the team cannot be attributed to any individual players, but such stars as&#13;
Holbert, Vernon, Eiffert and McCurdy formed a nucleus for a great machine.&#13;
&#13;
Too&#13;
&#13;
much praise cannot be given to Coach Saunderson for his untiring efforts and optimism&#13;
in the face of adverse and discouraging conditions.&#13;
Under the guidance of Coach Saunderson and Captaincy of the great player,&#13;
"Turk" Eiffert, any prognostication other than that the coming season will be a great&#13;
success would be unwarranted.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
4-Morningside, 32;&#13;
October 11-Morningside, 31;&#13;
October 18-Morningside, 32;&#13;
October 24-Morningside, O;&#13;
November I -Morningside, 6;&#13;
November 8-Morningside, O;&#13;
November 15-Morningside, 6;&#13;
&#13;
Yankton . ...... 0&#13;
Buena Vista . .. . 0&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan 0&#13;
St. Thomas ... .. 61&#13;
Simpson .. .. . .. . 0&#13;
Haskell Indians .. 28&#13;
D akota Wesleyan. 0&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
Seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"Ben"-The big fullback came to us four years ago.&#13;
No one can discount his ability at playing football.&#13;
&#13;
"Turk"&#13;
&#13;
Morn-&#13;
&#13;
Everyone knows "Turk" because everyone is his friend.&#13;
&#13;
ingside has not had a man on the team who could punt or&#13;
throw a forward pass like Holbert.&#13;
always tending to business.&#13;
&#13;
He has worked consistently at football and has won let-&#13;
&#13;
Ben is a quiet fellow,&#13;
&#13;
ters in baseball and basketball.&#13;
&#13;
For a sure gain thru the line&#13;
&#13;
the quarter called on the big fullback.&#13;
&#13;
in the backfield.&#13;
&#13;
His playing ability&#13;
&#13;
western Iowa, where he made his start in the athletic world.&#13;
Injuries prevented his playing the first year, but rarely&#13;
does a man get by the end now.&#13;
&#13;
In the forward pass he is&#13;
&#13;
the most skillful of all the team.&#13;
&#13;
Vernon has shown him-&#13;
&#13;
self capable of handling other issues in respect to College&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
"Bill"-Appeared on the scene three years ago a&#13;
green country lad.&#13;
&#13;
He was stout and husky so was intro-&#13;
&#13;
duced to football.&#13;
&#13;
He made steady improvement and be-&#13;
&#13;
came qualified for varsity at center.&#13;
worker and d eserves all he gets.&#13;
&#13;
Payne is a hard&#13;
&#13;
He has many friends at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Everybody knows "Red" and is his friend.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGS•IDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
He is a tower of strength&#13;
&#13;
Failure to make a gain when carrying&#13;
&#13;
the ball is rare for him.&#13;
&#13;
brought to his honor the position of captaincy for two years.&#13;
&#13;
"Red"-Vernon came from a little town in North-&#13;
&#13;
once all Morningside students are wise.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
"Mac"-The left tackle who is invincible.&#13;
should have been all western tackle.&#13;
saved many a game.&#13;
man with the ball.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
"Rusty"-The old standby has played varsity for two&#13;
&#13;
His headwork has&#13;
&#13;
years and has proven himself a wonder, being small but&#13;
&#13;
He is always in the play after the&#13;
&#13;
mighty.&#13;
&#13;
This being "Mac's" last year we wish&#13;
&#13;
He is not only good in Athletics, but also in his&#13;
&#13;
studies, using his head in whatever he undertakes.&#13;
&#13;
him success in the game of life.&#13;
&#13;
"Al"-A Freshman this year who demonstrated his&#13;
football ability by guiding the attack of our machine.&#13;
Behmer plays a good quarter-back position and handles the&#13;
ball well on the forward pass.&#13;
&#13;
His fame in the High&#13;
&#13;
"Nordie"-Northrup held down the position of right&#13;
tackle with great skill.&#13;
&#13;
His work stopped any onslaught of&#13;
&#13;
the enemy and was in the midst of every play.&#13;
&#13;
Northrup&#13;
&#13;
School realm as a star quarter-back preceded him, and he&#13;
&#13;
has a few years in school yet and will do his best for old&#13;
&#13;
has made good.&#13;
&#13;
M. C.&#13;
&#13;
We hope he stays with us during his Col-&#13;
&#13;
lege career.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
MOANINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"Bogy"-Bogard came to us this year from Central&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
"Herm"-Koch, who played guard, was the big man&#13;
&#13;
Not only his work on the gridiron, but also in the&#13;
&#13;
that found holes in the line and broke up the enemies' play.&#13;
&#13;
class room has won him the respect and friendship of all.&#13;
&#13;
Quiet, yet always in the game, we find him one of the&#13;
&#13;
We welcome him to our ranks.&#13;
&#13;
silent, yet indispensible parts of an efficient machine.&#13;
&#13;
"Mac"-Was considered one of the fastest ends in&#13;
Northwest Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
His work was par-excellent.&#13;
&#13;
Mac-&#13;
&#13;
Kinney could always be depended upon for making good&#13;
gains.&#13;
&#13;
H e hails from Fort Dodge and has one more year&#13;
&#13;
in which much is expected of him.&#13;
&#13;
Dodging interference&#13;
&#13;
and his nervy tackles has won him a place in the hearts of&#13;
&#13;
"Wright"-The man who hails from Britt, la., played&#13;
both center and guard on the varsity the past year.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
enemy knew of at least one man who would scrap all the&#13;
way with them.&#13;
&#13;
Wright is noted for putting as much&#13;
&#13;
energy into other things as in football.&#13;
&#13;
the students.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sevent y -seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
Seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
CAP. BE N HOLBERT, JR.&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
An intensely interesting game with the University of Hawaii opened the season of&#13;
191 3. Their pre-season advantages gave them the edge on us and they took the long end&#13;
of the score.&#13;
&#13;
But with the five new men showing up well and with the old "pep" we&#13;
&#13;
came back and took four of the five next games played.&#13;
The schedule was somewhat short, due to the fact that Ames and St. Thomas&#13;
cancelled their games and the weather interfered at St. Joe.&#13;
&#13;
Taking into consideration&#13;
&#13;
the cold weather at the beginning of the season and the subsequent lack of early training, the season was pretty successful.&#13;
&#13;
At its close "Rusty" was elected to head next&#13;
&#13;
year's team.&#13;
&#13;
MORN ING SIDE&#13;
Eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
THE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
30-Morningside, 1;&#13;
10- Morningside, 25;&#13;
19-Morningside, 12;&#13;
22-Morningside, 6;&#13;
24-Morningside, 6;&#13;
26-Morningside, 3;&#13;
28-Morningside, 14;&#13;
2-Morningside, 8;&#13;
3-Morningside, O;&#13;
&#13;
Hawaii University . . . . .. . . . ... 7&#13;
0&#13;
Commercial Travelers&#13;
Omaha University . .. ....... . . 10&#13;
South Dakota School of Mines ....&#13;
Le Mars Semi-Pro. .. . . .. . . ... 5&#13;
Le Mars Semi-Pro. ... . . . ..... 5&#13;
Buena Vista ... ......... . ... 1&#13;
Buena Vista . . .. .. .... .... ... 0&#13;
Sacred Heart ... . . .. ... . . . ... 6&#13;
•••&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908 . . .. . . . .. . .. ........ . . ...... 10 :&#13;
0&#13;
220 Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903 ............ .. . .. .......... .. 22 1-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-V. E. Montgomery, 1913 . .. ...... . ... . . .. ..... . 51 4-5&#13;
880 · Yard Run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1909 ... . ......... . .. . ..... 2 :03 2-5&#13;
Mile Run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1908 ..... . .......... .. . . ... . · · 4 :40&#13;
Two Mile Run-L. R. Chapman, 1908 . .......... . ......... . . 10:05&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
25 2-5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
15 4-5&#13;
High Jump-E. M. Brown, 1906 .. .... . . .. . ......... .. . . ....... 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E. West, 1911 .. . .............. . .. ... .. . .. .. 21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912 ... . .. ..... . . ............. · · 39 ft. 1/2 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-£. G. Quarnstrom, 191 1 . . . . ....... . .. .. . ... 121 ft. 3 1/2 in.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
A. C. L E MO N&#13;
&#13;
Discus-D. L. Wickens, 1911 ......... .. . . . . ... ........... · · · · · · 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay- V. E. Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser, E. G. Quarnstrom,&#13;
F. E. Burns, 1909 . .. . ... .... . . . . . .... . .. . .. . ........ . .. 3 :36 2-5&#13;
Two Mile Relay-A. C. Lemon, W. H. Bowker, L. H. Kingsbury,&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, 1912 ...... ... .. . ..................... 8 :28 4-5&#13;
Monument Run-V. Lavely, 1914 . . . ... ..... . . .. . .. . . .. . .. .... 18:01 2-5&#13;
Pole Vault- Herman&#13;
Leuder, 1913 ..... . . ... ................ . . 11 ft. 1 in.&#13;
&#13;
The track season opened with bright prospects, many men working for permanent&#13;
places on the team. Following weeks of hard, consistent training came the home meet,&#13;
which was a decided success. While no fast time was recorded, yet some individual&#13;
showing augured well for the future.&#13;
In the Drake relays our men carried off their share of the honors, and a week later&#13;
copped third place in the old State M eet at Grinnell, on May 1 7. Montgomery won&#13;
the quarter mile at Grinnell in 51 4-5, cutting the College record 1 2-5 seconds. One&#13;
of the most interesting and successful meets occurred on May 30th, Morningside vs.&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan. This being the first time for the schools to meet on the track,&#13;
their strength was an unknown quantity, but W esleyan, however, carried off the honors&#13;
by a narrow margin. A new College record was also established by Leuder in the&#13;
Pole Vault, 11 ft. 1 in.&#13;
The annual Inter-State High School Meet was also a decided success. This is&#13;
one of the big events of the Athletic season and we hope to interest more schools in&#13;
the future.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eigh t y -n ine&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
DRAKE RELAY TEAMS&#13;
&#13;
Home Meet&#13;
Saturday, April 26, 191 3&#13;
SUMMARY OF EVENTS&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Senior; Lemon, Senior . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
10 :03&#13;
220· Yard Dash-Kingsbury, Senior; Lemon, Senior . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
25 :&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Montgomery, Senior ; Vernon, Soph.. .........&#13;
27:02&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Vernon, Soph.; Montgomery, Senior. . . . . . . . . .&#13;
18 :04&#13;
m&#13;
16 Lb. Shot-Put-Holbert, Jr.; Eiffert, Soph .. .. ... . .... .. .. ... . 34 ft. 7 1/2.&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Sr.; Lemon, Sr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
5 3:&#13;
Mile Run-N. Williams, Freshman; Armbruster, Acd. . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 :01 :03&#13;
Two Mile Run-Deakin, Freshman; Brunelle, Junior .... . ....... . 10:59&#13;
Half Mile-Kingsbury, Senior; N. Williams, Freshman . . . . . . . . . . . 2: 13 :03&#13;
Discus-Vernon, Soph. ; Wickens, Sr ........... .. .. ... ...... 110 ft. 11 1/2 m.&#13;
Broad Jump-Vernon, Soph ; Montgomery, Sr. ... ......... . .. ... 19 ft. 10 m.&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, Soph., and Brown, Acd., tied ................. . . .. 10 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay-Braley, Kingsbury, Lemon, Montgomery, Seniors . . . . . . 3 :52&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Prichard, Wickens, Braley, Montgomery, Seniors. . . 1:40&#13;
&#13;
DrakeRElay&#13;
SUMMARY&#13;
&#13;
Four Mile Relay-Coe, Cornell, Morningside .................... . 19 :51 :04&#13;
One Mile Relay-Hamline, Coe, Brookings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 :31 :04&#13;
One Half Mile Relay-Hamline, Coe, Highland Park. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 :33&#13;
&#13;
Seniors Challenged School&#13;
Seniors 5 3-School 59&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
STATE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Summary, Nebraska Wesleyan Meet&#13;
Sioux City, May 30, 1913&#13;
&#13;
Grinnell, May 17, 1913&#13;
&#13;
10:2&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Werner, W es.; Lemon, M . C . ........... · · · · · · ·&#13;
Mile Run-N. Williams, M. C.; Gillilan, Wes .. ... .. . ...... .. .. ... 4:44:1&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, M. C., and Wilson, Wes., tied ............... 10 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Half Mile Run-Chamberlain, Wes.; Montgomery, M . C ............ 2 :05: 1&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- McCandliss, Wes.; Vernon, M . C .......... . . · .&#13;
16 :4&#13;
High Jump-Wilson, Wes. ; McCandliss, Wes .. ................... 5 ft. 9 in.&#13;
220 Hurdles-McCandliss, Wes.; Montgomery, M. C ....... .... · · · ·&#13;
27 :4&#13;
Broad Jump-Wilson, Wes.; McKinney, M. C ... .......... . ... 20 ft. 9 1/2 in.&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Chamberlain, Wes. ; Lemon, M . C ... ......... · · · ·&#13;
5 4: 1&#13;
Discus-Vernon, M . C.; Wickens, M. C ........... .... .. ..... 114 ft. 11 in.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-McCandliss, Wes.; Werner, Wes .. . ... . . .. . .. · ···&#13;
24:&#13;
Shot-Put-Holbert, M. C.; Johnson, Wes .............. ........ 38 ft. 4 1/2 in.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Werner, Wright, Chamberlain, McCandliss, Neb. Wes. 1 :35:4&#13;
Mile Relay- Wedgewood, King, Montgomery, Braley, M. C .. .... . .. · 3:45&#13;
&#13;
I 00 Yard Dash-Lynch, Grinnell; Wilson, Simpson, Groves, Simpson . . : IO 2-5&#13;
Mile Run-Schulter, I. S. T. C.; Balcar, Coe; Williams, Morningside . . 4:372-5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Clinton, Cornell; Rusk, Simpson; Drier, Des M . . : 16 3-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Montgomery, M. C.; Bailey, Coe; Lemon, Morningside :51 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Lighter, Coe; Lusted, Cornell; Drier, D . M ... ..&#13;
:26 3-5&#13;
Half Mile Run-Mapes, Simpson; Kingsbury, M. C.; McCauley, Coe .. 2 :05 3-5&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Wilson, Simpson; Lynch, Grinnell; Groves, Simpson ..&#13;
:23 4-5&#13;
Mile Relay-Morningside, Cornell, Simpson . ...... ....... .... . .. . 3:38&#13;
Pole Vault-Verink, Coe; Leuder, M. C.; Miller, Simpson, Fearing,&#13;
I. S. T. C. ; W ellits and Winters, Grinnell, tied for third . .... ... . . 11 ft. 1 in.&#13;
High Jump-Drier, Des M.; Jones, Grinnell; Verink, Coe; tied for second . . 5 ft. 8 in.&#13;
Discus-Knapp, Coe; Rusk, Simpson; Marquardt, Grinnell .... . ... 121 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Shot-Put-Verink, Coe; Holbert, M. C.; Hunter, Grinnell, and Wilson,&#13;
Simpson, tied for third . ........... . . . .. .. . .... .. .. . .. ... 39 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run-McGuire, Coe; Griffen, H. P.; Deakin, Morningside .. 10:43 3-5&#13;
Broad Jump-Jones, Grinnell; Clinton, Cornell; Lighter, Coe and Middleton, Grinnell, tied for third . . .. ......... . .. . . . .......... . 20 ft. 11 m.&#13;
Summary-Coe, 33 5-6; Simpson, 24 1/2;Morningside, 23; Grinnell, 21 5-6 ;&#13;
Cornell, 15; Des Moines, 7; Highland Park, 6; I. S. T. C., 5 1/2&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan, 61;&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, 45&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Inter-State High School Meet is held each year under the management of the&#13;
This gives Morningside a chance to see the best High School Athletes&#13;
from the three surrounding states in action-a large array of medals equal to those given&#13;
at any meet of its kind are put up. They include gold, silver, and bronze medals&#13;
for the winners in the first three events, together with individual silver loving cups for&#13;
the members of winning relay teams. The three cups offered are: The Tribune Cup, the&#13;
Palmer Cup, and the Philo Society Cup. The Philo Society cup is put for the school&#13;
that wins the mile relay-this must be won for three years for permanent ownership.&#13;
Cherokee High School and Sioux City High School have each been able to affix their&#13;
signatures to the cup twice, insuring great competition between the schools at the next&#13;
meet for its final possession.&#13;
Last year despite of the cold, dismal day that Nature had provided for the meet,&#13;
a large crowd assembled on the bleachers to see the young athletes perform. The competition between the leading schools was very strong. It was not until the last event had&#13;
been pulled off that the winner of the meet was decided. It is safe to say that if the&#13;
track had been fast, and a favorable day provided by Nature, many old records of&#13;
previous meets would have been broken.&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club.&#13;
&#13;
INTER-ST ATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
May 10, 1913&#13;
100 Yard Dash-French, Hawarden; Hart, LeMars; Hilker, Paullina . .&#13;
: 11&#13;
Mile Run-Elannery, Elk Point; Kraber, LeMars; H. Gregg, Hawarden . 5 :06 :03&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Hawarden, Sioux City, Paullina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 :42 :03&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Dubel, Sioux City; Hornney, LeMars; Sedgwick, S. C.&#13;
: 18 1-5&#13;
440 Yard Run-Wilson, Cher.; Bender, LeMars; Sedgwick, S. C . . . . . .&#13;
:5 7 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Dubel, S. C.; Nearman, Elk P.; Walrod, Hawarden.&#13;
:28 4-5&#13;
Half Mile Run-Knapp, Sunnyside; G. Omer, Paullina; Smith, Cher. . . . 2 :22 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Rust, Elk Point; Beard, Hawarden; French, Hawarden .&#13;
:24 4-5&#13;
Mile Relay-Sioux City, Haward en, Storm Lake. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3: 5 7&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, Cher.; Taylor and Holems, Storm L., tied for 2d . . .. . . . 10 ft.&#13;
High Jump-Hart, LeMars; Osterman and Russell, Fonda; Paulson,&#13;
Vermillion ; tied for second .. . ........... . .. . .. . . .. ... .. . .. 5 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Taylor, Pomeroy; Dubel, S. C.; Hilker, Paullina . . .. .. . 19 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus-Paulson, Vermillion; R. Harrington, Paullina; T roeger, Storm L. 100 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Shot-Put-Paulson, Vermil.; Troeger, Storm L.; D. Gregg, Hawarden 41 ft. 5 1/2 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Paulson, Vermillion; Rust, Elk Point; D. Gregg, Hawarden 145 ft.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY :-Sioux City, 22; Hawarden, 21 ; LeMars, 17; Vermillion, 16 1-3;&#13;
Elk Point, 16; Cherokee, 10; Paullina, 9; Pomeroy, 9; Storm Lake, 6; Sunnyside, 5;&#13;
Fonda, 2 2-3 ; Kingsley, 1.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
N inety-four&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
�1 915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
LAVELY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Cross Country Run&#13;
&#13;
This branch of Athletics was added in 1906, the course being to and from the&#13;
Floyd Monument, a distance of two and four-fifths miles.&#13;
&#13;
Since that time it has become&#13;
&#13;
one of the most popular events of the year, twenty to thirty entering.&#13;
&#13;
It is the custom&#13;
&#13;
to hold the race on the 22d of February, regardless of the weather conditions.&#13;
Four medals are given, the· first man receiving a gold medal; second, silver, and&#13;
the third, bronze; also a gold medal is given to the first Academy man finishing.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
medals are given by Fred Trimble of the class of 1911 .&#13;
&#13;
In 1906 the race was won by Chapman, who held the state record in the twomile event for several years.&#13;
&#13;
The next three years Berkstresser won, finishing in 20:50&#13;
&#13;
in 1907; 20:5 in '08, and 19:5 in '09, which record stood until 1911.&#13;
&#13;
Bob Smylie&#13;
&#13;
was returned winner in 1910 and in 1911 Montgomery returned in 18 :46.&#13;
was the first Academy man to win the gold medal.&#13;
&#13;
year by Lavely a Junior, who covered the course in 18 : 1 :3 .&#13;
the old record.&#13;
&#13;
C. Huck&#13;
&#13;
A new record was established this&#13;
Four men finishing under&#13;
&#13;
Knapp was the first Academy man in winning fifth place.&#13;
&#13;
Training&#13;
&#13;
for the race starts in the fall and continues through the year.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
"Let every man beoccupied, and occupied in the&#13;
highest employment of which&#13;
his nature is capable, and die&#13;
with the sonsciousness he&#13;
that&#13;
has done his best."&#13;
-Sidney Smith&#13;
&#13;
"VI NCE"&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred one&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest&#13;
For a long time it has been felt that Forensics at Morningside were in a rather disorganized condition.&#13;
&#13;
took care of the various Forensic events.&#13;
&#13;
The Oratorical League, the Prohibition Asso-&#13;
&#13;
ciation, the Peace Association, the Inter-Society Committee; these four separate organizations formerly had control of their respective fields, which were not very clearly defined.&#13;
&#13;
Last fall there was organized what is to be henceforth known as the Forensic&#13;
&#13;
League.&#13;
&#13;
November 7, 1913&#13;
&#13;
This was on account of the multiplicity of organizations which&#13;
&#13;
It will have charge of all Forensic events taking place in the school.&#13;
&#13;
Roy H. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
The Heart of America, Second&#13;
&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Coming Day, Third&#13;
&#13;
R. L. Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
Our Present Judicial Oligarchy&#13;
&#13;
Walter Symonds&#13;
&#13;
It is com-&#13;
&#13;
posed of three men from each of the men's societies, and three Faculty members.&#13;
&#13;
Under&#13;
&#13;
its unified regime, Morningside Forensics, we are sure, are to come forth to greater and&#13;
more permanent leadership.&#13;
&#13;
The Invisible Government, First&#13;
&#13;
State Oratorical Contest&#13;
Des Moines, March 6, 1914&#13;
Morningside was awarded sixth place in the finals.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
R. L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
Home Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
R. L. Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
The Coming Day, First&#13;
&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
T he Issue of Today, Second&#13;
&#13;
Myron Insko&#13;
&#13;
Individual R esponsibility, Third&#13;
&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
Our Imperiled Democracy&#13;
&#13;
C. Albertson&#13;
&#13;
Modern Reformation&#13;
Morningside was awarded Second Place in the State&#13;
&#13;
Home Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
Inevitable Peace, First&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
&#13;
A Plea for International Peace&#13;
&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
&#13;
Morningside was awarded Fifth Place in the State&#13;
Peace Oratorical Contest.&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
On e hundred f our&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred five&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
StOUX&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1900-J. A Davies .. .. .. ... ... . .. .. Ninth&#13;
1901-H. A Keck . . . . . .. .... .. . .. Seventh&#13;
1902- A. R. Toothaker ... ... . . .. ... Eliminated on thought&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall ........... ...... Fourth&#13;
1904- R. E. Heilman ... ..... .. . . . . .&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer ... ... .. .. .&#13;
1906- A. G. Cushman .. ... . ..... . . .&#13;
1907-A. G. Cushman . . .... .. ... . .. Fifth&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer ... ... . . ... . Second&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer . . .. .. ..... . First; Interstate, Eighth&#13;
191 0-H. S. Hamilton ... .. ... .. . .. . Second&#13;
1911-F. P . Johnson .. . ... . .... ... . Second&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson ...... . . .. .... . . Second&#13;
1913-F. P. Johnson ... .... . ... .. ... Second&#13;
1914- R. H. McVicker. . . .. . .. . . .. .. Sixth&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch ... ... .. ... . ... First; Interstate, First; National , Third&#13;
1902-J. N. H. McCay .... .... . ... Second&#13;
1906-C. D . Horner ... ...... .. .. . .Third&#13;
1907-lda Lewis .. .... .... ... . .. . Fifth&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett ..... . .. . .. .. . Third&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill. . . ... . . . . . ... . . Second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson .. ... . . ... . . ... First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1911-W. A McCurdy .. ...... . .. . Sixth&#13;
1912-C. E. Smith .. .. . ... .... .. .. Fifth&#13;
191 3-J. L. Ralston ...... . . .... . . Third&#13;
191 4-R. L. Mitchell .. ... . . ....... Second&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson . .... . .... . .. . . First&#13;
191 2-R. R. Vernon .......... . . .. . Fifth&#13;
191 3-D. L. Wickens . . .. . .. ... . . . . . First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1914-C. T. Craig ..... . .. . .. . .. . . . Fifth&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker University 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2,&#13;
191 l-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2. Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, M orningside 2. Dakota Wesleyan 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
Iowa State Teachers 3, Morningside 0. Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
191 3-lowa State Teachers 2, Morningside 1. Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
six&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
H&#13;
G&#13;
A&#13;
R&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, April 11 , 191 3&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
K&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE TEACHERS' COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
K&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That Federal Legislation be&#13;
enacted, embodying the Principles of the&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Industrial Accident Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Law, for the compensation of Industrial&#13;
Accidents in the United States. Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeM&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
N&#13;
T&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
M&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
I. S. T. C.&#13;
DECISION&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That State Commissions having power to fix Minimum Wage Scales&#13;
should be established in the several States.&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
December 1, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Coe, April 11, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
G&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
&#13;
COE&#13;
&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
December 2, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
V&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That Federal Legislation be&#13;
December 3, 1913&#13;
&#13;
enacted, embodying the P.rinciples of the&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Industrial Accident&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Law, for the compensation of Industrial&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
Negative 5&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 0&#13;
&#13;
Accidents in the United States. Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Academy Inter-Society Debate&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
L&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
December 4, 1913&#13;
&#13;
Coe&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That the Panama Canal should be neutralized.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
NEGATICE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fourteen&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Y.M.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
L. L. WRIGHT&#13;
R. R. VERNON&#13;
JAMES I. DOLLIVER&#13;
F. E. BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Lake Geneva&#13;
To attend at least one Student Conference at Lake G eneva, is one of the ambitions&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker ... . ... .. ............ . . ...... .. ... . .. . .. .. Bible Study&#13;
R. R. Vernon ... ... .. . ..... ·. .. . .. ... .. . . ......... .. . . ..... Devotional&#13;
L. 0 . Ginerich .. . ..... . ....... .. .. ..... .. ... ...... .. .. .. .. Missionary&#13;
C. T. Craig .. .. .... ... ... ... ...... ........ . .. . .......... Membership&#13;
R. W . Henderson . . .. .. . .... ......... ... ..... . .. .. . .. . . ...... Finance&#13;
W. H. Payne . . . .. .. . . ... . . .... .. .... . ...... . ....... . . Personal Work&#13;
W. A. McCurdy . .. .. . . ..... ... ... . .. . ...... .. ... . . ... ..... Extension&#13;
C. T. Craig .... . .. ... . . .. .. ... .. .. . . . . . .. ..... . ... .. . .. New Students&#13;
V . W. Hornney ... .... .. . ....... ..... . ... . . . .. .... .. ...... , . · · Social&#13;
&#13;
of almost every College M an in the middle west, and especially those interested directly&#13;
in Christian work.&#13;
The inspiration gained thru contact with other College men and the great life&#13;
work addresses by big men of all walks of life, give one a vision of the world as never&#13;
before, and he goes away deepened intellectually, and spiritually, facing his opportunities to serve the world and Jesus Christ with renewed life and power.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Y. . C. A. Cabinet&#13;
W&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
NELLIE UPHAM&#13;
ALICE KLIPPEL&#13;
LULU HAWCOTT&#13;
ELSIE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
Edna Allen . . .... . .. . .... . . .. ...... . . ........ .. . .... . .... Bible Study&#13;
Olive Hartzell .... ... ... .. . ......... . .. .... ... ..... . . ... . .. Devotional&#13;
Mabel Irwin ................. . .. . . .... . ........ .. . . .... . ... . , . Social&#13;
Ruth McCandliss ... .. .. .. . . . . ........ .. .... . ... .. ... . ... .. . , Missions&#13;
Loleta Wood .. . ....... . . .. .. . . . ... ... . . . . .. . . ... . . . . .. . Social Service&#13;
Florence Bull ...... . . ............. . . . . ..... . ..... . .. . Association News&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
eighteen&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian Reporter&#13;
It is the College newspaper.&#13;
&#13;
It is published by the students.&#13;
It tells all the College news weekly.&#13;
It is the official all-round College booster.&#13;
&#13;
It boosts always for healthy student sentiment.&#13;
It boosts for real College spirit in victory or defeat.&#13;
&#13;
It tells the truth, the whole truth, and sometimes a little more.&#13;
&#13;
It causes many merry peals of laughter by causing moans of distress.&#13;
It does this through the department called Sandburrs ( on page 7), By Gum.&#13;
Incidentally, it is the best, the livest, the literaryest, the rippingest College paper in&#13;
the west.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Agora Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
P resident&#13;
&#13;
MABEL IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Student Council&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
The life of any College is made up by the presence of a Student Body and Student&#13;
Sentiment.&#13;
&#13;
Vice P resident&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COLLIER&#13;
&#13;
TAC KABERRY&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
LAURA ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
Realizing the need of harmonious thought and action these two factors were&#13;
&#13;
crystallized into what is known as the Student Council.&#13;
tives of all classes and walks of College life.&#13;
&#13;
In its make-up are representa-&#13;
&#13;
The wisdom of thus organizing our Student&#13;
&#13;
Body is evidenced by the successful year · thru which we have just passed.&#13;
&#13;
Working&#13;
&#13;
with the Faculty for Morningside's best interests, it has assumed the management of such&#13;
student activities as class scraps, games, and holiday celebrations, which have been systematically and successfully carried on.&#13;
&#13;
Through its efforts a series of life work talks&#13;
&#13;
have been given during the chapel hour, and many other activities relative to College life&#13;
have been under their jurisdiction.&#13;
&#13;
Let us not under-estimate the value of our Student&#13;
&#13;
To the girls of Morningside College the Agora&#13;
second year of its existence, already is rich with meaning.&#13;
&#13;
Club,&#13;
&#13;
tho&#13;
&#13;
only in the&#13;
&#13;
It suggests a common meeting&#13;
&#13;
ground where all the interests of the women students are duly considered and the spirit&#13;
of democracy prevails.&#13;
The carefully laid plans are promptly executed and result in delightful social&#13;
gatherings, entertaining and instructive talks on social observances, conducted excursions&#13;
to points of interest, and healthful sports for the athletic girl, all of which not only&#13;
enrich the lives of the girls but bind them together in loyalty to Our College.&#13;
&#13;
Council in our boost for a Greater Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
Student-Manager&#13;
&#13;
WM. McCuRDY&#13;
WESLEY HENDERSON&#13;
PAUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
Claire Lawton&#13;
Harold Gorder&#13;
Delbert McKinney&#13;
Wm. MacDonald&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
Arthur Johnson&#13;
Myron Insko&#13;
Samuel Deakin&#13;
Augustus Brunelle&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
Harold Pollock&#13;
Mitchell Briggs&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Fletcher Pollock&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
Merrill Stevens&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
&#13;
Herbert French, Pianist.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred twenty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
1 915&#13;
&#13;
&gt;&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Mandolin Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
JOHN KOLP&#13;
ALICE KLOEK&#13;
C. A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST MANDOLIN&#13;
Mr. Templeman&#13;
Wm. Wedgewood&#13;
Alice Kloek&#13;
&#13;
SECOND MANDOLIN&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
Horace Morgan&#13;
Bessie Howell&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT VERNON&#13;
HORACE MORGAN&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
MANDOLA-John Kolp&#13;
MANDO-CELLO-Mrs. Templeman&#13;
MANDO-BAss-Robert V ernon&#13;
GUITAR-Verna Comoli&#13;
PIANO-Irene Chapin&#13;
Reader&#13;
Cartoonist&#13;
Accompanist&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Mandolin Club was organized two years ago by Prof. Charles&#13;
A. Templeman. Its success has been phenomenal, the title "Best in the West, " clearly&#13;
defines its position with similar organizations in the middle west, where it is the first club&#13;
to introduce correct Mandolin orchestral instrumentation.&#13;
Large and appreciative&#13;
audiences greeted them on the concert tour, both at Christmas and Easter Vacations,&#13;
when they visited Onawa, Mapleton, Ida Grove, Sac City, Sanborn, Paullina, and other&#13;
towns. It has become one of the leading Musical organizations of the College and is a&#13;
worthy representative of our Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hu n dred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred t w enty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Band&#13;
EDWIN GOULD&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
R. HARRINGTON&#13;
CLIFFORD REIKE&#13;
FRANCIS BoNDHUS&#13;
&#13;
Personnel of the "M" Club&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
CORNET&#13;
Stevens&#13;
Reike&#13;
Phelps&#13;
Starr&#13;
Robertson&#13;
&#13;
ALTO&#13;
Wallen&#13;
Rippey&#13;
J. Kolp&#13;
Beebe&#13;
SAXAPHONE&#13;
Harrington&#13;
&#13;
TROMBONE&#13;
Gorder&#13;
Hicks&#13;
Kettle&#13;
Johnson&#13;
PICCOLO&#13;
Craig&#13;
&#13;
CLARINET&#13;
Morley&#13;
Bondhus&#13;
&#13;
TUBA&#13;
Gould&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
Payne&#13;
&#13;
Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Clad in Maroon and White, our infant stepped forth this year, forever banishing our&#13;
dream of a Band, leaving it in the stern world of reality. Upon its present basis, however, we do not fear for a successful career. Arousing spirit and enthusiasm as no&#13;
one else can, it has been a dominant influence on the campus, in all our student activities.&#13;
We of the student body thoroughly appreciate the fidelity and hard work of&#13;
the men, also the able leadership of Prof. Templeman, that has made our Band such&#13;
a success, and heartily pledge them our support.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Herman Bogard&#13;
A. L. Behmer&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Herman Koch&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Guy McKinney&#13;
&#13;
Wm. Payne&#13;
Robert R. Vernon&#13;
Paul Weatherby&#13;
Lucian Wright&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Earl Williams&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
&#13;
Howard Allen&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs&#13;
Herbert Dunham&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Samuel Deakin&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
Herman Leuder&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
Noel Williams&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Student Volunteer Band&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
MYRON&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
INSKO&#13;
&#13;
TRACIA BREGMAN&#13;
ALICE DEWEY&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Paul Boodgah&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman&#13;
Samuel Deakin&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
&#13;
Myron 0. Insko&#13;
Tracia Bregman&#13;
Alice Dewey&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Cyrus Albertson&#13;
John Engle&#13;
&#13;
In July, 1886, two hundred and fifty-one student delegates, representing eighty-nine&#13;
different Universities and Colleges, met at Mt. Herman, Massachusetts, in a conference&#13;
and the Student Volunteer Movement was formed at that meeting. Since then over five&#13;
thousand students of North America have gone out as Student Volunteers under the&#13;
regular missionary societies to the foreign mission fields. The local Volunteer Band was&#13;
installed in Morningside College in 1900. Since then about twenty students have gone&#13;
to foreign lands. Morningside has representatives in South America, Korea, India,&#13;
China, Japan, and several other countries. The present membership of the band is eleven.&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
VICTOR&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
ELLIS KUHNS&#13;
CYRIL UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
The local Association is affiliated with the National Association, and has as its&#13;
purpose the study of the Liquor Traffic, its degrading influence upon the nation, and such&#13;
remedies as may seem best able to combat and remove it from the land. It is hoped&#13;
that by interesting college men and sending trained leaders into the field that this accursed&#13;
traffic may be banished forever.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundr ed thi rty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Organized November 1 1, 189 7&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Scarlet and Black&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Esse Quam Videre (To be rather than to seem)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ...... · .. EDNA SIMON&#13;
MABEL PECAUT&#13;
Vice President ... . LORNA DISTAD&#13;
OLIVE HARTZELL&#13;
Secretary ...... ... .ELLA CAMPBELL&#13;
ELEANOR WINKLEMAN&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. . . . H ELEN WEDGEWOOD MARIE D EVITT&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ADA BELEW&#13;
MARIE DEVITT&#13;
MABEL IRWIN&#13;
DORA CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS HIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Mabel Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
Ada Belew&#13;
]UNIORS&#13;
Dora Carlson&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Mabel Irwin&#13;
&#13;
Mabel King&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Olive Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth James&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
Anna Williams&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Mary Wedgewood&#13;
&#13;
Anna Mae Evans&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Lovice Strobel&#13;
&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman&#13;
Alice Thornberg&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Franees Martin&#13;
Helen Warfield&#13;
&#13;
Vera Lunbom&#13;
Ethel Coomer&#13;
&#13;
PLEDGES&#13;
Mina Lynch&#13;
&#13;
Louise McGraw&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Pettit&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Calendar&#13;
April I 2-0tho reception to Zets.&#13;
April 2 1-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
April 28-Zet Grand Public.&#13;
May 3-Zets entertained by Gazettes.&#13;
May 12-0tho Breakfast.&#13;
May I 7- Zet Hen Party.&#13;
May 2 1-Pi' s entertain us.&#13;
M ay 30-Zet Talbot Farm Picnic.&#13;
June I 0-Reunion.&#13;
October 4-Barlow Hall Party.&#13;
October 16- Tally-ho Ride.&#13;
October 18-Reception for "Pledges."&#13;
O ctober 20-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
October 25-Zet Open Door.&#13;
November 10-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
D ecember 13-X-mas Party.&#13;
D ecember 15- Zet Reception for Otho D ebaters.&#13;
January 24-Closed Door Program on England.&#13;
February 28-Public Initiation.&#13;
March 2-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
March 7-Closed Door Program on Scotland.&#13;
March 4-Athenaeums Entertain Us.&#13;
M arch 2 1- Zet Spring Opening.&#13;
March 2 7-lnstallation of Officers.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Organized November 7, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in Re (Gentle in Manner, Resolute in Deed)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
President .. ..... .H. C. BIGGLESTONE&#13;
Vice-President ... L. L. WRIGHT&#13;
Secretary ....... S. B. REYNOLDS&#13;
Treasurer ....... H. A. Go RD ER&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
W. A. McCuRDY&#13;
]. D. KOLP&#13;
LYSLE HOSFORD&#13;
H. A. GORDER&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
C. L. BARKS&#13;
H. A. GORDER&#13;
N. L. WILLIAMS&#13;
H. L. DUNHAM&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
L. R. Hosford&#13;
H. A. Gorder&#13;
&#13;
J. D. Kolp&#13;
H. C. Bigglestone&#13;
W. A. McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
H. P. Morgan&#13;
L. L. Wright&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
W. B. Costar&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
H . L. Dunham&#13;
&#13;
G. D. McKinney&#13;
B. E. Evans&#13;
W. H. Payne&#13;
H. C. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
J. F. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
W. A. Wedgewood&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
L. 0. Gingerich&#13;
S. B. Reynolds&#13;
N. L. Williams&#13;
&#13;
C. V. Lawton&#13;
B. W. Riner&#13;
P. H. Woodke&#13;
&#13;
G. B. Patrick&#13;
P. C. Weatherby&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
K. H. Burdick&#13;
R. Dott&#13;
] . R. Kolp&#13;
M. E. Stevens&#13;
E. W. Curry&#13;
M . R. French&#13;
&#13;
D. C. McKinney&#13;
H. D. Strobel&#13;
W . R. Cottam&#13;
M . G. Irwin&#13;
H. A. Reyman&#13;
W. P. Symonds&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
E.&#13;
E.&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
J. Walton&#13;
&#13;
R. Williams&#13;
&#13;
E. Hicks&#13;
L. Williams&#13;
C. T. Williams&#13;
Chas. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Calendar&#13;
April 12, 1913-R eception to Zets.&#13;
April 21 , 191 3-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
May 12, 191 3-0tho Breakfast to Zets.&#13;
May 21 , 191 3-Final Debate of G old Medal Series.&#13;
June 2, 191 3-Graduating Exercises.&#13;
June 11 , 19 13-Reunion.&#13;
October 3, 191 3-Annual Otho Stag.&#13;
October 4, 1913-Zets Entertain Othos at Barlow H all.&#13;
November 10, 1913-Zet-Otho P rom.&#13;
December 2, 1913-Inter-Society Debate with Philos.&#13;
December 3, 1913- Inter-Society Debate with lonians.&#13;
December 10, 191 3- G old Medal Men's Banquet at the West.&#13;
December 15, 191 3-Zets Entertain Othos at Crouche' s.&#13;
February 7, 191 4-Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
March 2, 191 4-Joint Closed Door in the H all.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirt y -nin e&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Organized October&#13;
&#13;
4, 1908&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
Mollo&#13;
&#13;
Feliciler, Fortiter, Fideliter (Happy, Brave, Faithful)&#13;
&#13;
OFFIC ERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ........ JEAN wHITTEMORE&#13;
Vice-President .... EDNA ALLEN&#13;
Secretary .. ..... . .MARGARET KIFER&#13;
Treasurer ........ CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
LAURA BELT&#13;
BERNICE BOWMAN&#13;
ELSIE JOHNSON&#13;
LUCILE MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
HELEN GIEHM&#13;
LOLA BROWNELL&#13;
LUCILE METCALF&#13;
RUTH BAILEY&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Edna Allen&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Bernice Bowman&#13;
&#13;
Lola Brownell&#13;
Helen Giehm&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Morgan&#13;
Zenana Osborn&#13;
Nellie Upham&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
Elsie Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Kifer&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Metcalf&#13;
Katherine Newland&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ruth Bailey&#13;
Ethel Brown&#13;
Frances Craig&#13;
Marion Simme&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Helen Laub&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Florence Bull&#13;
Margaret Lockin&#13;
Marion Metcalf&#13;
Harriet Newland&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ruth Blackman&#13;
Marion Davis&#13;
Gladys Horn&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Manley&#13;
Doris Struble&#13;
&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Cornelia McBurney&#13;
Laura Robinson&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Pieria Calendar&#13;
April 19, 1913-Grand Public.&#13;
April 26, 19 I 3-Kitchen Shower.&#13;
May 17, 1913-Pi Closed Door Program and Spread.&#13;
May 24, 1913-Dinner at Ethel Collier's.&#13;
May 28, 1913-I's entertain P's on UP-River Trip.&#13;
June 9, 1913--Pieria Picnic at Talbot's.&#13;
June 10, 191 3- Senior Breakfast.&#13;
June 10, 191 3-Re-union.&#13;
June 12-26, 1913-Pieria Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 3, 19 13-Ionian-Pieria Party at Ionian House.&#13;
September 4, 19 13-Dinner at Shoreacre Club.&#13;
October 4, 1913-Birthday Party.&#13;
October 10, 191 3- I' s to P's a Wienie Roast Gave.&#13;
October 11, 191 3-Taffy Pull at Belt's.&#13;
October 17, 191 3-Coonville Wedding at Craig's.&#13;
October 18, 191 3-Reception for Pledges.&#13;
November 1, 191 3-I's entertain P's at Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
November 19, 1913- Dutch Tea for Ladies of the F acuity.&#13;
December 3, 191 3- Japanese T ea.&#13;
December 13, 1913-Progressive Dinner for Ionian Debaters.&#13;
December 15, 191 3-X-mas Party.&#13;
January 24, 19 14-Mother Goose Party.&#13;
January 31, 19 14-Joint Masquerade Party.&#13;
February 23, 1913- Joint Washington Party.&#13;
February 28, 19 14- F ormal Initiation.&#13;
March 4, 191 4-Athenaeums Entertain.&#13;
March 4, 19 14- I's and Pi's entertained at Moore's.&#13;
April 5, 191 4-Stunt Night.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty- three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Organized January 6, 1909&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Possuntqoud Cred ere Possunt (They are able because they believe)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
P resident ..... R. H. G ARLOCK&#13;
V ice-P res ident . E. S . FuLL BROOK&#13;
Secretary ... .. HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
Treasurer ... . . R. H . HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
E . S . FULLBROOK&#13;
CLARENCE CRAIG&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
AUGUSTUS BRUNELLE&#13;
HERMAN LUEDER&#13;
RAYMOND HARRINGTON&#13;
CLARENCE CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
S ENIORS&#13;
Augustus Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
&#13;
Earl Fullbrook&#13;
&#13;
JUNI ORS&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
Herman Lueder&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Carl Sass&#13;
&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
Vivien Lavely&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Howard Allen&#13;
Harrison Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Charles Berkstresser&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Lindsey&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Al Behmer&#13;
Raymond Harrington&#13;
St. C lair Moore&#13;
Donald Van Horn&#13;
&#13;
Calvin Besore&#13;
Alvin Hilker&#13;
Harold Masters&#13;
&#13;
C. Schon&#13;
Edwin Gould&#13;
Charles Hutton&#13;
Arthur Payne&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
April 7-Second Semi-Final Debate.&#13;
May 3-Pierias entertain.&#13;
May 28-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 2-Final Gold-Medal Debate.&#13;
September 26-lonian Rush Stag.&#13;
October 24-Pi Birthday Party.&#13;
October 28-Stag at Masters.&#13;
November 1-Hallowe'en Party to Pi's.&#13;
November 6-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
1-Beat the Philos.&#13;
&#13;
December 3-Beat the Othos.&#13;
December 11 --Semi-Final Debate.&#13;
December 13-Pi Reception to Debaters.&#13;
January 22-First Preliminary Extempo Series.&#13;
January 3 1-Joint Masquerade Party.&#13;
February 5-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
February 23-Washington Birthday Party.&#13;
February 28-Stag at Ionian House.&#13;
March 4-St. Clair Moore Entertains Pi's and lonians.&#13;
March 12-Semi-Final Debate.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty -seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Aletheia&#13;
Organized February 12, 19 10&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Champagne and Chocolate Brown&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Ariste Philain (Lovers of the best)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
P resident. .. .. . ... Joey CARTER&#13;
Vice-President . .. .. ,FLORENCE LONG&#13;
Secretary .... ..... FLORA SEARLS&#13;
Treasurer ....... .. RUTH FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
FLORENCE LONG&#13;
LULU HAWCOTT&#13;
FERN MARQUART&#13;
KITTIE NURSE&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
LULU HAWCOTT&#13;
KITTIE NURSE&#13;
OLIVE ]ONES&#13;
LILA WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS HIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Myrtle Britton&#13;
&#13;
Lulu Hawcott&#13;
&#13;
Florence Long&#13;
&#13;
J UNIORS&#13;
Ruth French&#13;
&#13;
Olive Jones&#13;
&#13;
Fern Marquart&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Anna Anderson&#13;
Millie Corneliussen&#13;
Alice Kloek&#13;
Lena McDonald&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Ordway&#13;
Marie Edge&#13;
Bessie Howell&#13;
&#13;
Esther Larsen&#13;
Lillian McLaughlin&#13;
Vera Sipe&#13;
Lila Woodford&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty -eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
May 8--Breakfast at French's.&#13;
June 10-Re-union at the North Ravine.&#13;
October 4-F udge Party at French's.&#13;
October 13-Party of the "Seasons" at Leazer's.&#13;
October I 8-Elections and Spread in the Hall.&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
1-Closed Door and Spread.&#13;
&#13;
November 15-District School Program.&#13;
December 3-Aletheias Entertained by Pierias.&#13;
December 13-X-mas Party.&#13;
January 24-Closed Door and Spread.&#13;
February 7-Closed Door and Spread in Miss Lutz's Room.&#13;
March 4-Athenaeums Entertain Us.&#13;
March 16-lnitiation.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Organized November 4, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Light Blue and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Utile Dulce (The useful with the pleasing)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ...... HAZEL SHUMAKER&#13;
Vice-President . . MARIE WOOD&#13;
Secretary ...... SARA WHITEHOUSE&#13;
Treasurer . ..... BEATRICE WRIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
RUTH RIEKE&#13;
GENEVIEVE BALCOM&#13;
BONNIE ROBINSON&#13;
RUTH MCCANDLISS&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ISOBEL WEBB&#13;
LYDIA McCREERY&#13;
MABEL TRENARY&#13;
GENEVIEVE BALCOM&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Ruth Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Isobel Webb&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Genevieve Balcom&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
&#13;
Florence Shumaker&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
Cordelia Colburn&#13;
&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Lydia McCreery&#13;
Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Flossie Williams&#13;
&#13;
Helen Roe&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
&#13;
Viola Feller&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ruth Gillies&#13;
Enid Derr&#13;
Dorothy Steele&#13;
Vera Harding&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
Leona Wheatly&#13;
Lucile McDade&#13;
Minnie Fry&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Cathcart&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
Eva Styles&#13;
Charmion Holbert&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum Calendar&#13;
April I I-Reception for Mothers .&#13;
April 23-Violet Luncheon.&#13;
May 12-Grand Public "Madame Butterfly."&#13;
M ay 2 1-Athenaeums entertained by Pierias.&#13;
June 3-Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 5- Senior Athenaeums entertained in honor of Marie Wood.&#13;
J une I 0-Society Re-union Breakfast.&#13;
September 30-Masquerade Party for the New Girls.&#13;
October 4- Athenaeums entertained by Marie Wood Green.&#13;
October 11-Eleventh Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
October 18-Reception for New Pledges.&#13;
October 27-Philos Entertained for Athenaeums.&#13;
October 31-Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
November 15-Closed Door Program on the Modern Drama.&#13;
December 6-Reception Philo Debaters.&#13;
for&#13;
December I 3-Athenaeum X-mas Party.&#13;
January 2-Ethel Olsen Entertained at Holiday Party.&#13;
January 17-Reception in honor of Two New Pledges.&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
7-Closed Door Program and Spread.&#13;
&#13;
February 14-Patriotic Party with Philos.&#13;
February 28-Farewell Party for&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
Ruth, McCandliss at Colburn's.&#13;
&#13;
4-Athenaeums Entertained Girls of Other Societies.&#13;
&#13;
March 5-Formal Initiation.&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
7-Informal Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
March 14-Spread in Hall.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fi f ty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hu ndred fifty -five&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Organized October 14th, 1892&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and Maroon&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Vestigia Nulla Rectrorsum (No slipping backwards)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President .......... .H. WINTERRINGER&#13;
Vice President. ..... JOHN BRIGGS&#13;
Secretary ...........C. UPHAM&#13;
Treasurer ... . ...... EARL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
HAROLD COBBS&#13;
ERWIN JOHNS&#13;
CLIFFORD REIKE&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
MYRON INSKO&#13;
RoY McVICKER&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
HAROLD COBBS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
H. M. Cobbs&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
Victor Hornney&#13;
M. 0. Insko&#13;
&#13;
E. W. Johns&#13;
&#13;
M. P. Briggs&#13;
A. Vennink&#13;
Fred Schriever&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
Herman Bogard&#13;
Herbert French&#13;
&#13;
Cyril Upham&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Maynard Morley&#13;
&#13;
Earl Heitt&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
Ralph Prichard&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
V. Madison&#13;
William Schriever&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
D. C. Cooper&#13;
Clifford Reike&#13;
&#13;
A. C. DeLapp&#13;
N. C. Gray&#13;
Earl Williams&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ralph Rippey&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Alvin Hornney&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
Chester Robertson&#13;
Clifford Ihde&#13;
Martin Clough&#13;
Conrad Sandvold&#13;
&#13;
Bernard Brown&#13;
Floyd Phelps&#13;
Cyrus Kettle&#13;
Francis Bondhus&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
April 7, 1913- Philo Annual Trial. .&#13;
May 19, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Athenaeums.&#13;
May 31, 1913-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 2, 191 3-Final Gold Medal Debate Series.&#13;
June 5, 1913-Inter-Sociely Debaters Elected.&#13;
June l 0, 191 3-Reunion.&#13;
September 19, 1913-Philo Stag at the Jackson Hotel.&#13;
October 6, 191 3-F arewcll for Rev. Cully.&#13;
October 2 7, 191 3-Reception to Athenaeums.&#13;
November 3. 1913-Initiation.&#13;
December I , 191 3-Lost to Ionians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
December 2, 191 3-Won from Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
December 5, 191 3-Athenaeum reception for Philos.&#13;
December 15 , 1913-0pen Door, The Panama Canal of Today.&#13;
February 19, 1914-Prattler "Doo" at Cobb's.&#13;
February 23, 19 14-Joint Closed Door with Athenaeums.&#13;
March 6, 1914-Philo State Congress, Des Moines.&#13;
March 16, 191 4-Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-nin e&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Academy Societies&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Organized February, 1902&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
To Possess the Aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
IDA ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
MARY HARDING&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
September 20-J apanese Party at Ida Robertson's.&#13;
September 27-Progressive Party at Irene Chapin's.&#13;
October 4-Chafing Dish Party.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
October I I- Joint Wienie Roast at R avine.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Belew&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Robinson&#13;
&#13;
Grace Johns&#13;
&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
&#13;
Mary Harding&#13;
&#13;
Merlin Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Haddock&#13;
&#13;
Edith Black&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Smith&#13;
&#13;
Florence Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Luick&#13;
&#13;
Fem Hemstreet&#13;
&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
&#13;
Irene Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Davies&#13;
&#13;
Florence Langford&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Cummings&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Wood&#13;
&#13;
October 18- Joint Hayrack Ride.&#13;
October 2 7-Joint Joy Ride to Florence Sloan's.&#13;
October 3 1-Joint Hallowe'en Masquerade in Hall.&#13;
November 15-Tableau.&#13;
November 29- Spread for Debaters.&#13;
December 13-X-mas Grab Bag.&#13;
January 24-Closed Door for Alumni.&#13;
February 12-Taffy Pull at Gillies.&#13;
February 16-Valentine Party for Adelphians.&#13;
March 16- Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
0 ne hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
Organized June 18, 1903&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Cerise and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Carpe Diem (Sieze the Opportunity)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
GEORGE CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
BERNARD BROWN&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD BUEHLER&#13;
&#13;
April 28-Adelphian-Aesthesian Party at Bridenbaugh's.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
May 15-Adelphian-Aesthesian Spring Picnic.&#13;
&#13;
Cyrus Albertson&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence Steele&#13;
&#13;
Louis Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Glenn Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Edison Fowler&#13;
&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Rice&#13;
&#13;
Maurice Watland&#13;
&#13;
September 29-Stag at Crouch's.&#13;
&#13;
Gailord Omer&#13;
&#13;
Paul Chipperfield&#13;
&#13;
O ctober 8-Adelphian-Aesthesian Picnic at R avine.&#13;
&#13;
Carl Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
Harold Hartley&#13;
&#13;
O ctober 31-Adelphian-Aesthesian H allowe' en Party.&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Abel&#13;
&#13;
Edmund Ralston&#13;
&#13;
November 10-Joint Open Door.&#13;
&#13;
George Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Albion Berger&#13;
&#13;
December 4-Hawkeye-Adelphian Debate.&#13;
&#13;
Rueben Walin&#13;
&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
&#13;
Milton Lory&#13;
&#13;
Donald Gillin&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Merrill Patton&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
June 9- Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 12-Final Gold-Medal Debate.&#13;
&#13;
March 9-Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
�1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 S I O UX&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
Organized June 1 1, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Nile&#13;
&#13;
Green and&#13;
&#13;
White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
We Su cceed by&#13;
&#13;
Doing&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
ALICE KLOEK&#13;
&#13;
WILLA WELDON&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ADA WALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May 19, 1913-Hawkeye-Crescent Picnic North Ravine.&#13;
May 30, 1913-Hawkeye-Crescent Up-River Trip.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
June 9, 1913--Breakfast for Aesthesians.&#13;
&#13;
Willa Weldon&#13;
&#13;
Jenette Walcotte&#13;
&#13;
Alice Hallet&#13;
&#13;
Estelle McFarland&#13;
&#13;
Lorene Williams&#13;
&#13;
Thalia Fredell&#13;
&#13;
Florence Fair&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Brown&#13;
&#13;
November 24, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Harwood&#13;
&#13;
Marion DuBois&#13;
&#13;
December 6, 1913-Joint Closed Door.&#13;
&#13;
Fern Curry&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Carter&#13;
&#13;
December 15, 1913-Crescent Reception to Hawkeye Debaters.&#13;
&#13;
Nathalie Allen&#13;
&#13;
Emma Hough&#13;
&#13;
January 20, 1914-Tea for New Girls at Graham's.&#13;
&#13;
Claudia Hambright&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Lehan&#13;
&#13;
Ada Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dietrich&#13;
&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
&#13;
Josephine Erickson&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
September 26, 1913-Joint Reception at Alice Kloek's.&#13;
October 30, 191 3-Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
Joint Thanksgiving Party at Stella Miller's.&#13;
&#13;
February 14, 1914-Valentine Party at Lehan's.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1 915&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye&#13;
Organized September 2 7, 1899&#13;
&#13;
Gold&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Silver&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma Sine Pulvere (No Victory Without Dust)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
OSCAR CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DUNN&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
GARNER OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May 19, 1913-Picnic to Crescents at North Ravine.&#13;
May 30, 191 3-Hawkeye-Crescent Up-River Trip.&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
June 2, 191 3-Final Debate of Gold-Medal Series.&#13;
&#13;
Garner Osborne&#13;
&#13;
Leon Hill&#13;
&#13;
September 19. 1913-Hawkeye-Crescent Reception to New Academy Students.&#13;
&#13;
Claude Pike&#13;
&#13;
Roy Snyder&#13;
&#13;
September 29. 1913-Picnic at North Ravine.&#13;
&#13;
Lewis Bleakly&#13;
&#13;
John Lehan&#13;
&#13;
Orin Bell&#13;
&#13;
Fay Knapp&#13;
&#13;
Furman Hill&#13;
&#13;
Gaylord Starr&#13;
&#13;
John Barr&#13;
&#13;
Gabriel Wilch&#13;
&#13;
Robert Anderson&#13;
&#13;
David Bleakly&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Smith&#13;
&#13;
February 16, 1914-Hawkeye-Crescent Valentine Party.&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
William Fair&#13;
&#13;
March 2, 1914-Annual Banquet at West Hotel.&#13;
&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
&#13;
Harold Knepper&#13;
&#13;
March 21 , 1914-Hawkeye-Crescent Party at Home of Vera and Mabel Hauswald&#13;
&#13;
October 31, 1913-Hallowe'en Party.&#13;
December 4, 191 3-Won from Adelphians in Debate.&#13;
December 15, 1913-Crescent Reception to Hawkeye Debaters.&#13;
&#13;
at Merrill.&#13;
&#13;
Fred Koch&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
October 6, 191 3-Annual Hawkeye Stag.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"The world is good, and the&#13;
people are good.&#13;
And we're all good fellows&#13;
together."&#13;
&#13;
"So they willed it. and so it&#13;
has been done."&#13;
&#13;
Calendar and&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred seventy&#13;
&#13;
��GUSSIEBRUNELLE To Joey CARTER&#13;
&#13;
2-Student genius has triumphed over the opposing efforts of the&#13;
FAculty and successfully executed the third annual bean&#13;
shower yesterday at the first chapel service since spring vacation. I'll bet the Dean wished he hadn't had a hair cut&#13;
Miss Ferguson took the Agora Club to the Monument this&#13;
afternoon on their first walking trip.&#13;
HELEN ROE AND LEE BARKS, AT PHILO TRIAL&#13;
&#13;
7-The kids had a linen shower for Sarah and Si yesterday. Miss&#13;
Ferguson had Mrs. Devitt fix some codfish stuff, which she&#13;
seemed to enjoy but the rest of us couldn't eat. The Glee&#13;
Club is going to give a concert at the Grand tomorrow&#13;
evening but the College kids don't seem to be going to support it very well.&#13;
ISOBEL WEBB TO ZE FRENCHMAN .&#13;
&#13;
12-What was that indignation meeting for, Mr. Greynald? Well,&#13;
most of ze students didn't know there was a debate last&#13;
night and they say that is ze reason that we lost to Cedar&#13;
Falls. Well, my goodness, I couldn't come out because&#13;
the snow was so deep that the cars haven't been running right&#13;
for the last two days . . . . I think I'll take a black mark&#13;
off from Mr. Montgomery's record-Well, anyway we won&#13;
away from home, Wickens won the State Peace Contest and&#13;
we won from Coe.&#13;
&#13;
BILL WEDGEWOOD TO DUNHAM&#13;
&#13;
5-I haven't seen you since you came back, did you hear about&#13;
Wick getting third in the Inter-State Peace Contest Friday?&#13;
. . . No, I was wondering how he came out while we were&#13;
on our trip, we won from Beuna Vista Friday and lost to&#13;
Prairie Du Chien Saturday . . . And you missed some&#13;
more excitement while you were away. I tried to get some&#13;
fellows to go up and scare the Atheneaums, a bunch of them&#13;
had a house party up in the hall.&#13;
JOCYCARTER AND HERBERT FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
10-What' s that good looking pin, I never saw that before?&#13;
Oh, that's our new Glee Club pin, we just got them today.&#13;
Every one had a swell time at the German picnic and we&#13;
all got the cutest little volume of Goethe's poems. Yes&#13;
Sioux City won the annual High School Meet yesterday by&#13;
just a few points . . . all right you'll go to the Atheneaum&#13;
Public Monday night, good night.&#13;
AT LOVELAND'S&#13;
&#13;
19-When are we going to have our picnic, Cobb's had their's&#13;
Wednesday, and the Sunshine Inn had their's today. Well&#13;
we don't want to pick a day like the Sunshine did and&#13;
have to take off our shoes and wade home. Didn't the&#13;
fellows do fine to get third at the State Meet Friday.&#13;
&#13;
J. BRIGGS WRITING UP HIS DIARY&#13;
&#13;
"MAC" AND RUTH oN THE R1vER&#13;
&#13;
25-Say, Lemon, when did the fellows go down to the Drake relays? Oh, yes, that was the 18th, the night of the Farland&#13;
recital, I remember I took Linda Damerow and the 19th&#13;
was the Pi Public, yes it was Helen Roe . . . . . and the&#13;
21st, the Zet-Otho-Prom-Pug Eads . . . . . . . .&#13;
. And what happened the 24th, nothing I guess, only the&#13;
15 Annual Board had a meeting. Well, I left out the&#13;
23d, that was the night that Dr. Haynes entertained his&#13;
major students.&#13;
&#13;
24-Well, I'm pretty sure of a "Dutch" grade after digging&#13;
holes to plant the Linden trees for Miss Ferguson. . . Hello&#13;
Johnson, want something to eat? well paddle over here&#13;
and get it. Look out, splash! ! ! blame your old cookie.&#13;
I wouldn't care if you were not sure&#13;
I won't eat it now .&#13;
to tell it.&#13;
11:30 ON THE CAMPUS&#13;
29-Well, I wish you guys would quit talking over that Neb.&#13;
Wesleyan dual meet, we lost and that's all there is to it.&#13;
Do you fellows know that Miss Ferguson sails today for&#13;
Berlin? Gee, I'm so stiff from that tennis tournament that&#13;
I can't go to sleep. Say, the Annuals ought to be out pretty&#13;
soon, hadn't they . . . Yes they're coming out sure Saturday.&#13;
&#13;
GEO. PRICHARD TO LUCILE METCALF&#13;
&#13;
30-Well, we \ost our game to the Chinese University, seems like&#13;
I m gettmg beaten all around. The Seniors lost their home&#13;
meet challenge Saturday, but I have some speed at least&#13;
for I was in both ends of that picture that was taken.&#13;
&#13;
�AUDRIE DAVIE AND MINNIE NELSON&#13;
&#13;
4- There is one consolation in being a Senior, we don't have to&#13;
take any exam's. Watch those Juniors work, our trials&#13;
come soon though. I'm sure I'll forget to move my tassle&#13;
over after I receive my sheepskin . . . Have you a copy of&#13;
the program for the next few days? Yes, here it is, I'll read&#13;
it to you if you want to take it down: June 5th, Coburn&#13;
Players; June 6th, Rally of Volunteer Band; June 7th,&#13;
Expression Graduating exercises; June 8th, Baccalaureate&#13;
Sermon and annual vesper service; June 9th, D edication&#13;
of Class Gift, Class Play and Music Graduating Exercises;&#13;
June 10th, Alumni day; June 11th, Commencement Exercises. There surely are enough things crowded into those&#13;
few days, I sort of dread leaving school, but I'll be relieved when it's all over.&#13;
&#13;
Fashionable Clothes&#13;
Our store is the local distributing point for the most fashionable clothes---it's the gathering&#13;
point for dressy young men&#13;
WHAT&#13;
&#13;
Men's Head&#13;
to Foot&#13;
Outfitters&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' Fine&#13;
Footwear&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
WE DID&#13;
&#13;
LAST&#13;
&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
&#13;
�The balance is in the&#13;
favor.&#13;
&#13;
paper.&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
Not a&#13;
Houston&#13;
Used For&#13;
Comparison&#13;
&#13;
HOUSTON PEN.&#13;
&#13;
OLD STUDENT TALKING TO NEW STUDENT&#13;
&#13;
19-1 suppose you arrived Tuesday with the rest of the students,&#13;
you probably met a lot of the fellows Tuesday night at the&#13;
Y. M. stag. The Y. W. girls entertain for the new girls&#13;
Wednesday night; are you going to try out for the Glee&#13;
Club? I see they elected officers today.&#13;
]OHN KOLP AND LAURA BELT, AT CLASS FOOTBALL GAME&#13;
&#13;
26-There's Jimmie now, just carrying the ball . . . . Well the&#13;
Freshies are beaten but they put up a pretty good game at&#13;
that. If they could have run as fast as Deakin and Riner in&#13;
the scrap this morning, they might have stood more chance of&#13;
winning. I see by the Collegian, "Prit spent the week end&#13;
at Hornick." I suppose they'll keep the type set the rest&#13;
of the year for that. We're going to organize a Mandolin&#13;
Orchestra this afternoon, wouldn't it be nice if you were&#13;
to be the accompanist?&#13;
MERRILL STEVENS AND HAROLD GORDER&#13;
&#13;
27- 1 hate to interrupt you just as you're going to have your fortune told, but I wanted to tell you to be sure and come out&#13;
Monday. We are going to organize a College Band.&#13;
Look out, Mike will run right over you with that old horse&#13;
he's got . . . Who? Uppie, well he sure does deserve to&#13;
win the baby contest.&#13;
&#13;
To the Readers of the 1915 "SIOUX"&#13;
The convenience of always having with you an instrument for writing down in ink-class notes for the&#13;
student, memorandums for the business man, correspondence for everybody, etc.-this convenience is one to be&#13;
desired.&#13;
Before purchasing a Houston Pen I always had&#13;
trouble keeping a pen and if I did not lose it, it was&#13;
always hard to find, but the neat gold chain attached to&#13;
the cap of the Houston does away with that trouble and&#13;
now my pen is always handy. When I am through with&#13;
the pen I instinctively turn the cap on and then it is&#13;
attached to my coat or vest.&#13;
In addition to the chain attachment, the Houston&#13;
Pen has balance-no clubby cap on one end while writing-a 14-karat gold pen with iridium point, and a&#13;
feed that gives a steady flow of ink.&#13;
When you lose your next pen or when you need&#13;
to get a new one, get a Houston.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
&#13;
R. R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON.&#13;
&#13;
�Todd-Becker Co..&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
Everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles, Rubber Goods, Trusses, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
J. C. KENNISON CO.&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
, ,&#13;
&#13;
Supplies and Finishing&#13;
High Grade Candies-All Popular&#13;
Brands&#13;
&#13;
I!&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
VISIT OUR&#13;
&#13;
TEA ROOM&#13;
&#13;
Palms and Plants for Decorations&#13;
&#13;
The most popular refreshment place in&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Special attention to funeral orders&#13;
Emblems made on short&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
Two STORES&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
notice&#13;
&#13;
You are invited to visit our store&#13;
&#13;
SIXTH AND PIERCE STREETS&#13;
&#13;
WEALTH&#13;
STATE&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
BANK&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHEAST CORNER FOURTH and JACKSON STREETS&#13;
Under the Supervision of the State of Iowa&#13;
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY FOR POSTAL SAVINGS FUNDS&#13;
&#13;
The Hess Music House&#13;
Musical Instruments of All Kinds&#13;
SHEET MUSIC AND MUSIC SUPPLIES&#13;
FREDERICK E. HESS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
508 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
AT DAVIE'S (Ruth McCandliss and Keith Burdick)&#13;
12-Doctor Hamilton sure preached a great sermon tonight.&#13;
&#13;
Is obtained by labor, preserved by saving, and increased by diligence and&#13;
compound interest. We invite you to transact your banking business with us.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
AT HARPER'S&#13;
1- That Sandburr idea is quite an addition to the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
2-Say, Mitchell, did you know they are gomg to organize a&#13;
Forensic League tomorrow?&#13;
4-The fellows showed up Yankton in the game today, didn't&#13;
they, beating them 3 3 to O? Yes, but 1t was too bad some&#13;
of the fellows had to leave the Otho stag last night Just as&#13;
the fun was beginning.&#13;
6-Jimmie Dolliver was elected President of the Juniors, I guess&#13;
all the classes elected officers today.&#13;
7-Paul, I hear that you and Bob Dott have made application&#13;
for an A. F . degree. Too bad Bill flunked out and can t&#13;
be in your classes.&#13;
.•&#13;
10-Have&#13;
you got everything&#13;
needs? Yes,. and remem_&#13;
ber, it s&#13;
your job to fix that swing at Abernathy s. Well, if Dunk&#13;
gets to that lecture course tonight I'll miss my guess.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, 12.&#13;
J 3- The fellows are sure doing fine, they won that game ,at Buena&#13;
Vista 31 to 3. Morningside always had a good team.&#13;
CHAPEL MASS MEETING&#13;
15-Vernon certainly clinched his claim to the title "Boob." Now&#13;
it depends upon the support we receive whether or not the&#13;
boys get their band suits . . . How many, two, McKmney ? Those other fellows are too optomistic, I can't bank on&#13;
my dates that far ahead.&#13;
DEAKIN (Reading "Collegian Reporter" in History Two. )&#13;
Who is that blooming Guy who writes this and signs it the&#13;
Spectator? We'll beat those Wesleyan dubs Saturday those&#13;
soft ducks can't play football.-Say, Boob, did you know&#13;
that Bishop Bristol was going to lay the cornerstone for the&#13;
new Gym tomorrow?&#13;
BESS SHANNON AND EARL WILLIAMS AT "SEVEN OAKS"&#13;
24-Yes I think that Professor M arsh is fine, but I'm too tired to&#13;
listen.&#13;
I about killed myself in that game with W estern&#13;
Union, and that 60 to O score in favor of St. Thomas is&#13;
enough to put anyone to sleep.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I\&#13;
&#13;
�FLETCHER TALKING TO H. MASTERS&#13;
&#13;
30- I think it was quite nice to elect Beans ringer of the Victory&#13;
Bell. D idn't some of the girls wear frightful combinations&#13;
at the lecture Tuesday night, they just grated on my nerves.&#13;
I notice Clare Cooper changed his rooming place the other&#13;
day in order to learn a new embroidery stitch. He does&#13;
such lovely work.&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
B. BROWN AND&#13;
&#13;
The College Grocery&#13;
Groceries&#13;
Vegetables&#13;
&#13;
Fresh Fruits&#13;
Confectionery&#13;
&#13;
Let us supply the eats for your&#13;
picnics and social affairs&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON&#13;
Corner of Morningside and Peters Street&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
RIPPEY&#13;
&#13;
7-Well, Mac sure deserved to win that contest tonight. You're&#13;
mistaken, Brownie, in thinking that you have the only Ruth&#13;
in school, there are eight others and they organized a new&#13;
club yesterday. I hope that we have as good success tomorrow, against the Haskell Indians as we did last Saturday when we beat Simpson 6 to 0.&#13;
MITCHELL AND Miss SARAH BLEAKLY AT OTHO PROM&#13;
&#13;
I 0-You missed it not being at the Agora Reception yesterday.&#13;
The Haskell Indians were a little too much for our boys,&#13;
although 28 to 0, compared with their other scores this&#13;
year, isn't bad. We Soph boys are going to spring our new&#13;
class sweaters tomorrow. Don't Bonnie and Mr. Insko&#13;
make a nice looking couple? They were here together last&#13;
year, too.&#13;
TOMMY JAMES TALKING TO HERSEL F&#13;
&#13;
18-Pickles ! Van missed connection last Sunday, but then I&#13;
guess there is enough going on to keep me busy, Mrs.&#13;
McCoy Friday, and the Junior " B ackward" Monday.&#13;
I'm getting so sick of this Institution, just the same thing&#13;
year in and year out. That M cKinney man is still pulling&#13;
off his Freshman jokes, posted a notice for football practice&#13;
this afternoon, dated Sept. 20th, 1914, and Rube Wallin&#13;
bit. 0 ! well, we won our last football game with Dakota&#13;
Wesleyan, 6 to 0, last Saturday.&#13;
"UPPIE" AND LOLA BROWNELLE IN THE LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
28-Hello everybody, what you all over-working for? Did you&#13;
all have a good feed yesterday? Isn't it dead around here&#13;
with everyone home? Let's have a lonesome party tomorrow night, you get the fellows together Uppie and I'll phone&#13;
the girls and we'll just have candy and apples in the&#13;
society halls.&#13;
&#13;
�He Profits Most&#13;
Who Serves Best&#13;
Even the most liberally educated man, when&#13;
entering into the commercial world, will find that in&#13;
the above sentence lies the fundamental principles of&#13;
success.&#13;
Every employee of our firm has been thoroughly&#13;
schooled to apply this rule to every transaction, whether&#13;
large or small, with our customers.&#13;
&#13;
It is for this reason that our city retail depart-&#13;
&#13;
A Good&#13;
Place to&#13;
Trade&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
6--Well, I'm just dead, haven't had any sleep for a week. Beginning with Monday, there were the four debates and last&#13;
night the Zeellner Quartet, and I suppose tonight we'll have&#13;
a closed door. Did you go to chapel yesterday and hear&#13;
Dr. Gunsaulus speak on Personalities?&#13;
I'm surely glad&#13;
that I didn't cut for he was just fine.&#13;
MARIE DEVITT AND MABEL PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
9-1 think these class entertainments for Miss Burner are a good&#13;
idea.&#13;
they?&#13;
racing&#13;
getting&#13;
&#13;
ments have made good.&#13;
&#13;
E. H. BACKEMEYER&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALF AND MARGARET KIFER&#13;
&#13;
Both she and "Dad" Elliott came yesterday didn' t&#13;
Oh, you should have seen Jean Johns this noon&#13;
a street car clear to the car barns. I suppose he's&#13;
in shape for spring track work.&#13;
&#13;
13-Haven't the meetings been fine and the boys seem to like&#13;
"Dad" Elliott as well as we like Miss Burner. I'm glad&#13;
vacation starts next Friday so we can get a rest.&#13;
&#13;
AXEL F. JENSEN&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford&#13;
Lumber Co.&#13;
&#13;
�"SUN&#13;
SHINE&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
JAN.&#13;
&#13;
TERRIBLE&#13;
TURK&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIALS .&#13;
&#13;
MAC AND ELEANOR&#13;
14- Bob Vernon was elected President of the "M" Club today.&#13;
Yes, you know "Turk" was elected captain of the football&#13;
team last Saturday. We thought Campbell would forget&#13;
his Bibical Literature class today, but he didn't and we had&#13;
to explain our tardiness. Prof. Campbell denies the implication that he is absent-minded. Did you hear Gov. Clark&#13;
and Lieut. Gov. Harding in chapel yesterday?&#13;
( 11 :30 P. M .) : It doesn't seem like we've been back a&#13;
week does it? It's just eight days since school started .&#13;
MASTERS AND&#13;
&#13;
High Grade Photographs&#13;
at All Times&#13;
&#13;
JIM&#13;
&#13;
KOLP- 12:30A M .&#13;
&#13;
23-This is the longest walk I've had since I've been in Morningside. Well, the Glee Club Concert was fine, but I'm not&#13;
keen on this after walk. I think that Marsh made a good&#13;
choice in choosing the debaters. That was a good joke&#13;
Saturday in chapel-A Faculty Chorus. Where were the&#13;
song books? I have forgotten why they were taken out.&#13;
That lecture, "Sour Grapes," by Dr. Ott, was certainly&#13;
line. We'll be busy with Hugh E. Smith here, beginning&#13;
with Sunday and we will get to see what College Exams are&#13;
like Wed. and all the rest of the week.&#13;
&#13;
We Made the Photographs for the 1915 "SIOUX"&#13;
CENTRALLY LOCATED&#13;
&#13;
Above Authier's Style Shop&#13;
&#13;
BACK AGAIN&#13;
&#13;
�In a long race the ath lete saves his strength for the finish. The principle is the same in&#13;
the race you are in for material success and comfort. Save-for the finish. O ur bank&#13;
welcomes your account.&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of Commerce&#13;
. Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
BURGESS AND MABEL IRWIN&#13;
5- The class prayer meetings were certainly fine, the leaders were&#13;
well chosen I think. That was a good joke on Bob, they&#13;
had the Faculty detectives and police force searching for&#13;
him . Bill Payne gave them all the available information&#13;
but how could he know that Bob only went home to work&#13;
his brother for a new suit to wear to the Otho Banquet Saturday night. Well, when did this happen? Oh, it was&#13;
the third, the same day that you were elected President of&#13;
the Agoras. Then Earl you'll have to go home at ten&#13;
o'clock every night, the girls have adopted the Proctor&#13;
system.&#13;
MARIE DEVITT AND HORACE MORGAN&#13;
15-It's too bad Horace we have to stay on the porch while Mac&#13;
and Eleanor are having a closed door program. I wonde r&#13;
if Eleanor fully appreciated M rs. McCollin' s talk to the&#13;
Agoras last night?&#13;
RusTY AND GLADYS CATHCART AT "PRATTLER Doo"&#13;
19-The girls did pretty well, I think, in getting out the paper this&#13;
week. The Annual Board for the '16 Sioux was elected&#13;
Tuesday for the first time without any society spirit. Tomorrow will sure be a busy day, there's the Monument Run&#13;
in the afternoon, the Men's Banquet in the evening, and I&#13;
understand the Loveland Bunch are planning to have their&#13;
annual Colonial wedding. I am anxious to see what these&#13;
banquets are like. The Agoras have their's Saturday.&#13;
Guy M c KINNEY AT 0RPHEUM ( In Nigger Heaven)&#13;
28-He! He! That's almost as bad as Ken and Lucile when they&#13;
were having a prolonged good night at the gate. If that had&#13;
only happened a few days before Bill would certainly have&#13;
had them in the Boomerang he is so proudly exhibiting&#13;
around the Institution.&#13;
&#13;
ALWAYS KEEP YOUR MIND ON H. &amp; H. SHOES&#13;
THEY SATISFY&#13;
&#13;
H, &amp; H, SHOE CO,&#13;
512 4th Street&#13;
&#13;
Authier Style Shop&#13;
C ORRECT DRESS F OR W OM EN&#13;
ExcLUSIVE LADIES' Suits, COATS, FuRs, WAISTS,&#13;
M USLIN UNDERWEAR, CORSETS AND MI LLINERY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Most Appreciated Store&#13;
509- 11 - 13 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
THE RELIABLE CLOTHIERS&#13;
Kaufman P re-Shrunk Campus Togs-Also Student-Craft Clothes&#13;
Our Specialties&#13;
10 P er Cent D iscount to Students&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON &amp;&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
ARONSON,&#13;
&#13;
Park&#13;
&#13;
702-712&#13;
&#13;
Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
&#13;
IS ALWAYS R EAD Y T O GIVE R ATES TO THE STUD ENTS&#13;
&#13;
�Jewelry&#13;
When purchasing Jewelry for important occasions or for&#13;
simple Gifts, it is most satisfactory to go to a shop that&#13;
is thoroughly accustomed to attending to all these needsCapable salespeople who are able to give helpful suggestions concerning selections.&#13;
&#13;
WILL&#13;
IOWA'S&#13;
&#13;
H. BECK&#13;
&#13;
LEADING&#13;
&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Established 18 77&#13;
&#13;
Corner 4th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
BANK, STORE. OFFICE FIXTURES&#13;
AND INTERIOR FINISH&#13;
507;509;511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
A Match and a Cents Worth of Gas&#13;
That is the approximate cost of a good, hot bath if you&#13;
have a Gas Water Heater in your home.&#13;
Investigate at the Gas Office or ask us to send a representative to your home.&#13;
-PHONES406 Bell&#13;
&#13;
4586 Auto&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY GAS&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
ADA AND BEANS AT MANDOLIN CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
6-What is everybody looking at? Why Carson has two strange&#13;
women with him and they are trying to find out who they&#13;
are. There is Crook Grey, Campbell asked if he was sick&#13;
or in jail. Did you hear about Bigg in Ethics class? He&#13;
denied Campbell's statement that it is usual for men to propose. I don't know why Ruth should blush . Well they&#13;
spent last Sunday together at Kingsley, so I guess it's fixed&#13;
up all right.&#13;
Earl is gone, so Mabel Irwin thinks she will go home over&#13;
Sunday since there is no attraction left in Morningside. The&#13;
Coach was sure peeved at me the other night at the first&#13;
game of the basketball series, when I kicked the bucket and&#13;
spilled the whitewash. He made me blot it up with a&#13;
gunny sack; I wish you'd been there to help me.&#13;
BoGARD AND LOVICE&#13;
IN LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
1 3-Say Bogie, do you remember when Henderson called for Mina&#13;
last night? He is trying already to get an early date for the&#13;
Coburn players. Say Bogie, I hope you don't get the&#13;
mumps, although it seems pretty popular this week. Say&#13;
Lovice, I got my contract from Vauter' s chautauqua today&#13;
-35 per week, I guess that beats Ames-I'm glad we&#13;
didn't cut chapel as we had planned yesterday, Schull's&#13;
talk was sure good. Well, even if the Sophs did postpone&#13;
their game, we Juniors trimmed them for the championship&#13;
just the same.&#13;
IDA MARY HooD IN THE HALL&#13;
&#13;
20-Say what were you fined for at the "M" Carnival today? They&#13;
accused me of wasting natural gas in the library. Lucile&#13;
Metcalf sure did look fine in the stocks. Say, I'm going&#13;
to have a bunch of the Pi' s out to our house tomorrow.&#13;
I want you to come.&#13;
INSKO AND His LADY&#13;
&#13;
28-Did you see Lucile Metcalf fall on the floor in the library?&#13;
It was almost as gracefully done as when Beans fainted a&#13;
while ago. I'm surely glad you could come to my debate,&#13;
guess we didn't frog them.&#13;
April I st-Dictagraph Operator&#13;
Well there comes Eleanor, I'm glad I'm through carrymg&#13;
this dictagraph around.&#13;
&#13;
�You don't care to read an ad.&#13;
We haven't time to write one,&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
so we are just going to give&#13;
you a picture of the place in&#13;
which you all like to spend a&#13;
part of each hot summer evening.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
�Our Annual Joke&#13;
Cracked by Junior Would-be Wits&#13;
&#13;
Being a Truthful Account of Affairs in Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
A Welcome&#13;
to the Co-Eds&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
ERE'S a store that makes special preparation to supply the needs of the college girls and where the. sort&#13;
of things young women like are to be found m great diversity.&#13;
handsome&#13;
DAINTY dresses, modish suits, all with the coats,&#13;
stylish hats, pretty shoes, and&#13;
fash-&#13;
&#13;
TABLE OF CONTENTS&#13;
&#13;
ion touches admired and demanded by the Co-Eds.&#13;
F acuity&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
that give&#13;
A ND the smaller things attire-the the distinctive&#13;
ribbons, laces,&#13;
feminine touch to the&#13;
&#13;
Literary&#13;
Forensics&#13;
&#13;
embroideries, neckwear, and all the rest are here to&#13;
be found in alluring displays.&#13;
&#13;
Society&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
And, so, a welcome&#13;
to you, Co-Eds!&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
MAY you find your way is atthis store often-Our&#13;
incomparable service&#13;
your command and&#13;
&#13;
DEDICATION&#13;
To Wesley Deakin, I. B., who is already distinguished as&#13;
the "Falstaff" of Morningside College, and in whom we&#13;
look for that sort of inspiration which makes us laugh&#13;
and grow fat, we unqualifiedly dedicate&#13;
&#13;
these jokes.&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO&#13;
&#13;
"If It's Agin the Faculty, We're For It."&#13;
&#13;
it is our sincere aim to aid you in every manner&#13;
possible.&#13;
&#13;
�DR. STEVENS-If every man loved birds as well as Doc. there would be no worms left&#13;
&#13;
FOREWORD&#13;
&#13;
for his biology department.&#13;
&#13;
To those, if aught there be&#13;
Who yet are unaware,&#13;
For only jokes they hate&#13;
Do others care.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES-Disc. Committee. Likes to crack his little joke about raising the&#13;
devil. We'd ought to have a Faculty Bible study class, how about it Bunny?&#13;
BROWN-Faculty wit.&#13;
&#13;
Practices what he preaches.&#13;
&#13;
We apologize to all we left out.&#13;
Those we left out were not in chapel the day we took the census.&#13;
"Beware and don't be late on the last day."&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
(As We Know Them.)&#13;
PREXY CRAIG The main squeeze, ask the outlaws! "You can tell them it will be&#13;
done in the fall." Has been accused of using Morningside as a stepping stone to&#13;
a bishop's seat, but we don't believe it.&#13;
EMORY HAYNES-Looks like the Emory had been working on him. A student wrote&#13;
to Harvard once for information and received this answer: Why don't you ask&#13;
Prof. Haynes, he's the best authority west of the Mississippi. He don't give&#13;
grades, he substracts them.&#13;
DR. CARSON-Idle Spectator. If history runs out why then make a bit yourself. The&#13;
most entertained man on the Faculty&#13;
Has a real tango stride. Did you mention women, yes, I'm still following my usual tactics.&#13;
&#13;
"For if a coed's not to fuss, then pray why is a coed?"&#13;
COACH SAUNDERSON-"Sandy." "A fine business." All he has to do is physical&#13;
training, coaching all forms of athletics, and teaching algebra on the side. His&#13;
football team says he is the fiercest orator in school.&#13;
MARGARET BRAND-She's teaching the girls something; that alone would give her&#13;
respect.&#13;
HELEN LOVELAND-She ought to have studied engineering, then she could have kept&#13;
her grades on a level.&#13;
HERBERT CAMPBELL-His students think he hasn't had a drink for seven days-better&#13;
see Carson. As he grades them, do they love him.&#13;
AGNES FERGUSON-She's gone this year but we love her just the same.&#13;
&#13;
C. A. MARSH-Faculty exponent of the Rooseveltian doctrine.&#13;
speak of any man in College.&#13;
&#13;
Has the best right to&#13;
&#13;
CHERISHED MEMORY&#13;
of&#13;
the Late&#13;
Miss BALCOM&#13;
MR. CLAIRE LAWTON&#13;
Who were never on time.&#13;
Better not be late on the last day.&#13;
&#13;
CLASSES&#13;
Who Is Who&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Clark, Wilson-Wears pumps to school to draw the water away from his brain.&#13;
Rippey, Ralph-Has a windmill attachment to his pumps.&#13;
Robinson, Laura-Capable and likes to have other people tell her so.&#13;
Curry, Wendell-Our Freshman Athlete.&#13;
Hornney, Alvin-Al is alright but he has his short-Cummings.&#13;
Dott, Bob-Not as insignificant as his name implies.&#13;
Sebern, Marie-"Pat' s" best girl.&#13;
Brown, Bernard-Still he's a student in Morningside College.&#13;
Masters, Harold-An understudy of Fletcher's.&#13;
Moore, St. Clair-A real lady in gentlemen's clothes.&#13;
Burdick, Kieth-Studying for the ministry but he never goes to church.&#13;
Starrs, Delano and Gaylord--The Starrs that Brownie and Ding could not put out.&#13;
Lynch, Mina-Makes every fellow think her first name is Personal to them.&#13;
Harrington, Ray-The only Freshman that remained true to his girl at home.&#13;
Derr, Enid-The champion girl basketball player.&#13;
Roost, Amanda-She has established her residence on Garretson avenue and&#13;
Harold Strobel says it is a great advantage.&#13;
Long, Gladys-She talks,-----how she talks.&#13;
&#13;
�SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE&#13;
&#13;
Grey, Nevillie-Cubeb reporter. Carson's only pet, he bit the hand that fed him,&#13;
with "E" grades.&#13;
Deakin, Sammy-His hair is gone, but not forgotten.&#13;
Lockin, Margaret-"Sally." She seems to have a cinch on a Senior.&#13;
Allen, Howard-Business manager of the I 9 I 5 Sioux. What Bernice preys for.&#13;
Madison, John-Howard's partner in misery. Besides his other engagements he&#13;
expects to hold his claim on Newland.&#13;
&#13;
AN INCORPORATED BANK UNDER IOWA STATE LAWS FOR THE&#13;
PURPOSE OF OPERATING A SAVINGS and COMMERCIAL BANKING&#13;
&#13;
Lawton, Clare-Another Sophomore who has yet to find out that he does not&#13;
know anything.&#13;
Lindsay, Arthur-A bird shark yet the Freshmen can beat him finding Roosts.&#13;
Cooper, Clair-Undecided whether to major in domestic science or biology.&#13;
Winkleman, Eleanor-The first Sophomore to get an Otho medal.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
W. S. SNYDER&#13;
E. M. Corbett&#13;
President&#13;
W. C. Johnson&#13;
LEN O'HARROW&#13;
H. Galinsky&#13;
Vice President&#13;
0. L. Johnson&#13;
0. W. Towner&#13;
C. A . NoRRBOM&#13;
Cashier&#13;
Geo. C. Call&#13;
"SAVE WITH US AND THOU SHALT HAVE"&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
BANK&#13;
Cut Flowers&#13;
Plants&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
James, Tommy-Living example of hang sorrow, care will kill a cat, let's be&#13;
merry.&#13;
Pollock, F.-Looks forward to the day when he'll have designs on every woman.&#13;
Crouch, Lois-May Queen. Saves many a rube idea from being used.&#13;
Vernon, Boob-How to star in everything but classes. Famous for his chapel&#13;
addresses. Author of "Jeans is Jeans."&#13;
Bogard, Herman-"Bismark." "None but myself can be my parallel."&#13;
Dolliver, James-"I smell smoke." Speaks whenever he gets a chance.&#13;
Heitt, Earl-One knight who remained true to his lady in the Agora relay.&#13;
Kifer, Margaret-"Who says she has a worm's heart." Maybe that accounts for&#13;
all the suckers she attracts.&#13;
Mitchell, R.-Junior orator. His next oration will be, "Mitchell the Man."&#13;
Payne, Bill-A disciple of the man who said: "Open the window so I can throw&#13;
my chest out."&#13;
&#13;
Bridal Boquets&#13;
Floral Decorations&#13;
&#13;
J. W. DUNFORD&#13;
Florist, Nurseryman, Landscape Gardener&#13;
I STAND FOR QUALITY&#13;
Auto 4212&#13;
-PHONESBell 930&#13;
NURSERY OFFICE, 19TH AND CLARK STREETS&#13;
PHONEUSYOURCOALORDER&#13;
We Will Take Care of You When the Time Comes&#13;
GOOD COAL, GOOD MEASURE, AND GOOD SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
THE H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
Auto Phone 2174&#13;
&#13;
312 JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 572&#13;
&#13;
Metcalf, Lucile-Recipient of a notice, that Ken. Wilson was taking up too much&#13;
of her time.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
C. D. KELLOGG, Proprietor&#13;
South of Park Theatre&#13;
&#13;
Belew, Ada-The girl with the longing look.&#13;
Barks, Lee-Give him a DAY and he'll do anything.&#13;
Belt, Laura-Some call me fickle, yet I can't go with all of them.&#13;
Bigglestone, H.-Every student to Ruth Reike.&#13;
Bowman, B.-Have I an ocular diEplay?&#13;
Brownelle, L.-She'll make a HEAVYWEIGHT yet.&#13;
Brunelle, A-Ask the Glee Club.&#13;
Doolittle, M.-But say much.&#13;
Insko, Myron-A lot of wind, and yet, if well controlled, will get there yet.&#13;
Kolp, John-"Leaf," the best-hearted man in school.&#13;
&#13;
Galinsky Bros, Company&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES-The lowest.&#13;
QUALITY-The highest.&#13;
Gooos-The freshest.&#13;
SERVICE-The promptest.&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
�Hood, I. M .-Says she would rather be a big duck in a small puddle than a small&#13;
·&#13;
duckin a large one. She ran the Senior Class Play.&#13;
M cVicker, R oy-Stayed out of school one year so he could buy her a diamond.&#13;
D EBATE AND D RAMATICS&#13;
&#13;
Any shade.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any style&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRICK&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
&#13;
Successful plays of the season.&#13;
A LOGICAL TRAGEDY&#13;
&#13;
Setting-Mid-Semester Grades P osted. Members of the Logic Class R eceives a D Plus,&#13;
Much to Their Indignation.&#13;
&#13;
The practicability and stability of brick-its value as an&#13;
investment-as a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever.&#13;
&#13;
ACT I.-Carl Sass -When a man, has sixty-nine hrs. of A's and nothing lower&#13;
than a B, I think a D plus is a reflection on the teacher rather than on the student.&#13;
ACT II.- I ought to have a C, if I am to be on the track team.&#13;
AcT III.-Loleta Wood, weeping,- I don't deserve exactly the same grade.&#13;
ACTIV.-Insko-This is the first D grade I ever received since I took Trig. in&#13;
my Freshman year.&#13;
AcT V.-Campbell-Well children, I thought that if I gave you all the same&#13;
gra_ no one could complain of being slighted and a D would make you work. That is&#13;
de,&#13;
logical. A Senior P roduct.&#13;
Pantomime.&#13;
&#13;
Setting-Girls P laying Basketball on the Gym Floor.&#13;
Hero-Coach Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
AcT I.-Smush, a lo_ g hairy objects strikes the floor, writhes a moment, and then&#13;
n&#13;
is still. The girls form a circle around the mysterious object, which every girl recognizes&#13;
as a switch.&#13;
ACT II-Silence.&#13;
neighbor.&#13;
&#13;
submit for consideration.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BRICK &amp; TILE CO.&#13;
No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
Office and D isplay Room,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING&#13;
&#13;
CAUGHT AT THE SWITCH&#13;
Or&#13;
SHE THOUGHT SHE HAD P INNED IT BUT SHE HADN'T&#13;
&#13;
P rincipal Lady, Missing, Like H er Switch&#13;
&#13;
Thoughts concerning these matters we would like to&#13;
&#13;
Every girl feels of her hair, and looks accusingly at her&#13;
&#13;
AcT III.-R edhaired girl and Coach look happy, rest are worried.&#13;
ACT IV.-Climax. Coach picks up switch and lays it on the radiator. Breathmg becomes easier. Girls shoot baskets again.&#13;
AcT V.- Stage in darkness. A small figure stealthy crosses the stage, gropes in&#13;
the darkness. T hen a muttered exclamation is heard. Silence. Slowly the sun fills the&#13;
building with light, the switch is gone.&#13;
&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
F R ESH CUT FLOWER S-All kinds of floral emblems made up by us. We&#13;
know how. American Beauties, Roses and Carnations always on hand. Positively the&#13;
finest and largest display in town. Our prices are right.&#13;
NEW STORE&#13;
402 4 th Street&#13;
O ne of the&#13;
Finest in&#13;
the West.&#13;
&#13;
Rocklin &amp; Lehman&#13;
&#13;
BRANCH STORES&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel and&#13;
&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
405 Douglas St.&#13;
&#13;
F IVE PHONES:&#13;
&#13;
Auto 4199-3 1 12-2931; Iowa 3112-801&#13;
&#13;
RATES 75c AND UP&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN P LAN&#13;
125 R ooms-Forty with Bath&#13;
&#13;
MODERATE PRICES&#13;
One-hal f Block from Orpheum&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
COR NER FIFTH AND JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�I WILL&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY&#13;
WHAT MORNINGSIDE MOST NEEDS&#13;
The students who use the library need an editorial and here it is, by Miss Sanborn.&#13;
&#13;
Should be your life's motto--it breathes the spirit of accomplishment. Successful&#13;
business men have invariably laid the foundation of their success to the Savings Bank&#13;
habit. You cannot do better than follow their example by opening an account with&#13;
this bank at the earliest moment and putting yourself in line.&#13;
&#13;
Say! you, you with that smirk and those killing ways, you who use up so much&#13;
of some girl's time in the library that they don't go in only when they have to to escape&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
the honey buggish antics of some of your ilk in the halls, you mutts who are suffering from&#13;
&#13;
Security Building&#13;
&#13;
an overgrowth of animal tissue in the region nature intended for your brain-say, you,&#13;
just for a change, why don't you stop and if you haven't enough intelligence to see what&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST WILLIGES&#13;
&#13;
a fool you are making of yourself, ask someone then take their advice and cultivate a&#13;
little ingrowing respect for other people's time and rights and win the everlasting gratitude&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
of an already over-worked librarian, to say nothing concerning the thankfulness of your&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dimmitt's Opinion-The above is a pessimistic view of the situation.&#13;
must be understood that there are two sides to the proposiion.&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
By talking to a young&#13;
&#13;
FIND YouR WAY To-&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
lady in the library you change ideas and clash personalities and these are some of the&#13;
things that mold and fashion your life.&#13;
&#13;
Furs&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
310 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
victims.&#13;
&#13;
FRED B. PHIPS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
As it is against the rules of the College for&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
the girls to be talking to the boys after dark, where is there a better place to talk than&#13;
in the library?&#13;
&#13;
Fine&#13;
&#13;
It is here in the library that everyone is under the public eye and the&#13;
&#13;
association is of the highest and noblest kind.&#13;
&#13;
May we have more of it.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
WHAT MORNINGSIDE MOST NEEDS ACCORDINGTOGrey-More appreciation for my reportorial ability.&#13;
James Kolp-More nights to fuss and more pretty girls.&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
St. Clair Moore-More card parties and a dancing club.&#13;
Vernon-A few more lines of activity and less attention paid to studies.&#13;
Bill Payne-A few more good business men like me.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
Bob Dott-A class in appreciation so they could appreciate a good man when&#13;
they see him.&#13;
Janitor-More sidewalks for Morningside.&#13;
McVicker-More men's hanquets.&#13;
Uncle Jimmy Reistrup--A little less ragtime.&#13;
&#13;
Tom Dealtry&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�FORENSICS AND ORATORY&#13;
Dolliver Wins Humorous Contest With the Following Selection.&#13;
"SHOEMAKER TO THE FUSSERS"&#13;
&#13;
It had been a day of sorrow in Morningside; the Faculty returning from a summer's vacation had decreed that there should be no more fussing in Morningside, a decree, hither unknown even in that Methodist Institution. The cries of the fussers had&#13;
died, the last teacher had slowly slunk away and the lights of the College building were&#13;
extinguished.&#13;
The moon rising in sorrow over old Bass field cast its dewy rays thru the windows&#13;
of the new Gym and lengthened the shadows of the dormitories. Near the bleachers of&#13;
old Bass field a band of students had congregated, their clothes brushed smooth for the&#13;
Orpheum, the shine still fresh upon their shoes, the scowls of anger still set upon their&#13;
faces. Suddenly Shoemaker stepped forth from the gang on the bleachers and spoke&#13;
thusly : "Ye call me fusser, and you do well to call him fusser, who for three long years&#13;
has fussed every form _ maid or coed the broad expanse of Morningside could furnish&#13;
of&#13;
and never never yet lowered his arm. If there be one among you who dare say that&#13;
ever in class room or on the campus my actions did belie my word, let them step forth and&#13;
say it, if there be one who dare meet me on the old church steps let her come on. But&#13;
yet, I was not always thus, a tired fusser of still more tired Janes, my early life ran&#13;
quiet as a teacher's dream, and when at noon I threw my books aside and gathered beneath the trees to take my rest, there was a friend, ·the daughter of a neighbor, to share&#13;
my lunch.&#13;
&#13;
said:&#13;
'Let him do his worst.'&#13;
you and so must I fuss no more.&#13;
&#13;
This is no place for fussers, and so fellow fussers must&#13;
&#13;
"Oh Morningside! Oh Morningside! T hou has't been a willing teacher to me,&#13;
thou has't given to that simple farmer boy who never knew a later hour than eight, the&#13;
eyes of an owl and a heart of rubber. Taught him, after nights of sleepless fussing,&#13;
to bluff his way thru morning classes, taught him to gaze into limpid eyes of flirting&#13;
Freshmen, even as Marion upon Al. Aye, and I shall pay thee back, until the&#13;
pathless campus shall be filled with fussing coeds.&#13;
"Ye stand here now like fussers that ye are, the lock of some maiden's hair still&#13;
upon your coatsleeve, that blotch of powder still upon your shoulder. But tomorrow&#13;
some coyote, breathing Herpicide from his flowing pompadour, shall take your Jane to&#13;
the Colonial and bet his Frat pin that he will cut you out. Hark, hear ye coyote&#13;
boasting, 'tis three days since he has had a Jane, and tomorrow he will be fussing yours.&#13;
And a fine piece of cheese it will be. If ye are yellow, then stand there like Sophs waiting for the F reshies' ropes, if ye are fussers follow me, gain the boats of old Riverside&#13;
and there do as good work as did old Engle down by the old Church tower.&#13;
"Is Morningside dead, is the old spirit frozen in your veins, that ye do cringe and&#13;
cower like a henpecked husband 'neath his matron's tongue?&#13;
"Oh Morningsiders, Students, F ussers, if we must work let us work the F acuity;&#13;
if we would fuss, let us defy this vile prohib1ition, if we must be canned, let it be under&#13;
the open sky in the old boats of Riverside!"&#13;
&#13;
One evening after the chores were done and we were seated on the old front&#13;
porch, my uncle, a city man, was telling of the good old days, of how it had been his&#13;
boast that he had kissed every girl in the village. I did not know then what love was,&#13;
but my heart leaped-I knew not why, and I clasped our neighbor's daughter until my&#13;
mother grabbing me by the hair of my head, sent me to bed and bade me cut out&#13;
the mush. That night my sister's beau came, and I saw the one who had admonished&#13;
and advised me, hugged by this son of Adam, until my father's No. 10 landed him in&#13;
the street by our dwelling.&#13;
Last night I kissed a girl in the spoonholder, and when I broke my clasp I saw&#13;
her dad, the same dark frown on his face that I had noted when in adventurous childhood I plucked his daughter's first green kiss and dashed away in childish triumph. I&#13;
told the Prexy that he was my enemy, irascable and mean, and I begged that I might&#13;
consign him to Miss Ferguson's German Class and watch him sweat. Aye, upon my&#13;
knees amidst the dirt and litter of the campus, I begged to be excused while all the assembled Faculty and the dirty dozen whom they call disciples, jeered and laughed,&#13;
deeming it rare sport to see Morningside' s fiercest fusser turn pale and cringe with fear&#13;
before that terrible man. And then Prexy drew back as if I were a coyote and sternly&#13;
&#13;
TIME&#13;
&#13;
WiLL TELL&#13;
&#13;
�BUSINESS CARDS&#13;
]. W.&#13;
&#13;
HALLAM&#13;
&#13;
GEO. W.&#13;
&#13;
FINCH&#13;
&#13;
HALLAM AND FINCH&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
Suite 603-605 Iowa Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
DR. C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
&#13;
500 F. L. &amp; T. Bldg.&#13;
Corner Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW&#13;
&#13;
The Place for Quality and Right Prices&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
409-41 0 Security Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
]. E. DE WALT&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE TAILOR SHOP&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
&#13;
SAM MYERS, Prop.&#13;
CLEANING AND PRESSING&#13;
&#13;
Room 7 Iowa Bldg.&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
Auto 1731 Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Rear of Darling's Store&#13;
3921 Transit Avenue&#13;
&#13;
MUNGER, ROBINSON &amp; KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
H. N. BOTHERS, M. D.&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE AT&#13;
&#13;
621 Iowa Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Station&#13;
&#13;
The Hotel Martin&#13;
ABSOLUTELY FIRE-PROOF&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA ·&#13;
&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Parties a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
RESULTS OF THE WILSON ADMINISTRATION&#13;
&#13;
�SOCIETY&#13;
Are ye ready for Society Amalgamation?&#13;
ing solution of the Society question.&#13;
Pies.&#13;
&#13;
To Miss Dimmit, we offer the follow-&#13;
&#13;
Just what would happen if the athenaeumzetalathea&#13;
&#13;
If that wouldn't be Society Amalgamation, then the College could get along&#13;
The only trouble would come as to whether they could keep&#13;
&#13;
without the F acuity.&#13;
&#13;
ReliabilitY&#13;
&#13;
You will find it first, last and&#13;
always at MAR TIN'S&#13;
&#13;
the Pies down.&#13;
CAUGHT ON THE CAR&#13;
&#13;
H. Clark-"-Well, when am I going to have that photograph?"&#13;
&#13;
Patrons demand more than promises from&#13;
us. The fact that we fuljill our promises&#13;
has built up a thorough-going respect for&#13;
our word, which we appreciate.&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Lehan-"Why-never-I might as well be truthful."&#13;
&#13;
We're 34 Years Young in Enthusiasm&#13;
We're 34 Years Old in Experience&#13;
&#13;
H. C.-"But I want something to remember you by."&#13;
B. L.-"Well, I might give you a hug and a kiss instead if"-H . C .-"But I want something more lasting."&#13;
(Interval while car goes over bridge.)&#13;
B. L.-"Gee, Harry, I'm going to have a good time this summer while I'm away."_&#13;
H. C.-"Oh, don't go, my brother and I are going to belong to the boat club this&#13;
&#13;
willingness and the abilbetter&#13;
every day.&#13;
&#13;
summer, and we'll take you to some"-B. L.-"Now don't you expect me to stick around this burg all summer and give&#13;
up a perfectly good vacation expecting you to take me any place."&#13;
H. C.-"Well, see here, don't you believe I would come around if I knew you&#13;
were here this summer?&#13;
&#13;
You know I would."&#13;
&#13;
B. L.-"Well, you might come around but you'd never take me any place.&#13;
know you too well.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I've stuck around all winter and you haven't taken me a single&#13;
&#13;
H. C.- "Well, but"-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
B. L.-"Gee, I wish you would take me to just one swell dance before school is&#13;
out.&#13;
&#13;
The Fastest Growing Ready-tow ear House in the Middle West&#13;
&#13;
Don't you think you could fix it?" (The car stops for the College and the subject&#13;
&#13;
Women's and Misses Suits&#13;
and Dresses Our Life Study&#13;
&#13;
is left to be more fully discussed at chapel time.)&#13;
&#13;
PIPER &amp;&#13;
PLUMBING &amp;&#13;
&#13;
LARSON&#13;
&#13;
College Shoes&#13;
for College Men&#13;
&#13;
'Tis a feat to&#13;
fit feet-try us&#13;
&#13;
HEATING&#13;
&#13;
188 0&#13;
&#13;
1914&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Oldest Dry Goods House&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
�Plumbing&#13;
Heating&#13;
&#13;
Engineers&#13;
Contractors&#13;
&#13;
Orr &amp; Graves Co.&#13;
&#13;
HI&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
&#13;
We did the heating and plumbing in all the&#13;
College Buildings&#13;
UNITED BANK BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
HEAP&#13;
BIG&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
KI&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Ross M. CooMER, Assoc. M. AM. soc. c. E.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
Coomer &amp; Small&#13;
&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
&#13;
ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS&#13;
&#13;
RED&#13;
SKIN&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
212 United Bank Building, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Auto Phone 3 719&#13;
Ask Our Clients About Us&#13;
We Rebuilt Main Hall, Morningside College&#13;
We Built the New Gymnasium&#13;
&#13;
YIP&#13;
&#13;
KI ·&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
The most complete line of Sporting and Athletic Goods in this part of the country.&#13;
We carry Spaldings, Reach and Goldsmith's Athletic Goods, and if it is to be&#13;
found in Sioux City, it is here.&#13;
&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
D&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College and its students use a· good supply of our Athletic and Knit&#13;
Goods, so it must be the best.&#13;
&#13;
The Phillips Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
�Interest Paid On&#13;
Certificates of Deposit&#13;
&#13;
Open Accounts Invited&#13;
&#13;
Clements '&amp; Co.&#13;
Sample and Fancy&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Which need not be overlooked, and many&#13;
valuable lessons can be learned by simply&#13;
carrying a checking account with this bank&#13;
during your school year. We will gladly&#13;
help you solve these problems which you&#13;
will find very profitable to you later on.&#13;
F acuity and students are welcome to use&#13;
us in any and all banking matters.&#13;
&#13;
·GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
Established 1884&#13;
FRESH FRUIT&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President&#13;
&#13;
AND CONFECTIONS&#13;
&#13;
T. A . BLACK, Vice President&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ban k&#13;
&#13;
C. W . BRITTON, Cashier&#13;
C. G. CUMMINS, Assistant Cashier&#13;
&#13;
$500,000.00&#13;
&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR THE BEST OF CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S&#13;
&#13;
Responsibility, $100,000.00&#13;
4 Per Cent Interest on D eposits&#13;
&#13;
Satisfaction guaranteed. Students, let&#13;
us furnish your picnic supplies.&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS,&#13;
&#13;
THERE IS THE BANKING&#13;
FEATURE OF YO&#13;
UR&#13;
EDUCATIO&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
REFRESHMENTS AND LUNCHEONETTS&#13;
&#13;
St. Aubins Station&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
E. C. Peters, President&#13;
Geo. E. Ward, Vice President&#13;
John Scott, Jr., Cashier&#13;
F . W. Lohr&#13;
C. J. Milligan&#13;
C. W. Payne&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOT EL&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
Candy Palace&#13;
607 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Brink's Meat Market&#13;
&#13;
A year's work of remodeling and refurnishing the West Hotel from the top floor&#13;
to the basement is now completed. The result is gratifying to us and pleasing to our&#13;
patrons. We now have 230 rooms, 144 with private bath, 40 sample rooms with&#13;
bath. First-Class Cafe, Rathskeller and private dining rooms in connection.&#13;
&#13;
Europe a n&#13;
&#13;
P lan&#13;
&#13;
- RATESWe supply the leading boarding houses of Morningside with all kinds of fresh&#13;
meats.&#13;
Phone us your order and our delivery will reach you promptly.&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6284&#13;
&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
Single, Without Bath, $1.00 Per D ay&#13;
FRANK DONOHUE, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
With Bath, $1 .50 to $3.00 Per Day&#13;
JAY MACLARTY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
�ATHLETICS&#13;
FOREMOST&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
CLOTHES&#13;
&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKI&#13;
&#13;
you men and young men of Sioux City will all be&#13;
&#13;
glad to know that this "Live Store" will re-open it's doors&#13;
for business September 1st in its new store at the same&#13;
location.&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA STREETS&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
You'll also be glad to know that no effort is be-&#13;
&#13;
ing spared to make it the pride of Sioux City-no stone left&#13;
HE CAN'T GET AWA Y FROM IT&#13;
&#13;
unturne d to ma ke Iit a store you'll be proud of and glad&#13;
to give your patronage.&#13;
&#13;
AMONG THE TRACK DREAMERS&#13;
&#13;
Gussie Brunelle dreamed that he had won the two-mile.&#13;
Heavy Hiett woke up after he had won the hundred in ten flat.&#13;
The Joke Editor went to sleep cursing just after he broke his shin at the end of a&#13;
twenty-two foot leap.&#13;
&#13;
3.&#13;
sold&#13;
&#13;
The same sterling quality of merchandise will be&#13;
the same high principles of merchandising followed&#13;
&#13;
that has characterized this store in the past with the big&#13;
added advantage of superior service possible through the&#13;
&#13;
Beans Evans woke up in the bath tub, while taking a bath just after finishing the&#13;
mile in four minutes and fifteen seconds.&#13;
&#13;
adoption of the most modern methods of merchandising.&#13;
&#13;
The landlady woke up Vennink with a pail of cold water just as he was giving the&#13;
last whirl to the family cat on the end of a 168-foot hammer-throw.&#13;
&#13;
May we count you as one of the first to see the new&#13;
store September 1st.&#13;
&#13;
AGORA ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Classic.&#13;
Still in progress with Margaret Kifer leading the field and running strong. Mina&#13;
Lynch, Frances Martin, Marian Davis and Ruth Blackman have either given up or are&#13;
far in the rear.&#13;
Discus-The discussion is still going on but Ida Mary Hood has a strong bid&#13;
for first honors.&#13;
Auto Race-Wilson wins first with one of Darling's Winton Six's.&#13;
&#13;
The Moore Clothing Co,&#13;
&#13;
�A. R. Johnson &amp; Co.&#13;
Wholesale. and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
The Offer of the Colleg&#13;
"To BE AT HOME in all lands and ages; to count Nature a familiar acquaintance, and Art an intimate friend; to gain a standard for the appreciation of other men's&#13;
work and the criticism of your own; to carry the keys of the world's library in your&#13;
pocket, and feel its resource behind you in whatever task you undertake; to make hosts&#13;
of friends among the men of your own age who are to be leaders in all walks of life;&#13;
to lose yourself in generous enthusiasms and co-operate with others for common ends;&#13;
to learn manners from students who are gentlemen, and form character under professors&#13;
who are Christians-this is the offer of the college for the best four years of your life."&#13;
-WILLIAM D EWITT HYDE.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Grocer for MOTHER'S BREAD&#13;
Out-of-Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Auto Phone I 19 7&#13;
Bell Phone I 9 7&#13;
&#13;
ST ANDS FOR THIS IDEAL&#13;
&#13;
408-410 Iowa Street&#13;
&#13;
LET LINDHOLM FURNISH YouR HOME COMPLETE&#13;
ACRES OF FURNITURE TO CHOOSE FROM&#13;
&#13;
A gain this year of 4 3 per cent of men in the four college classes&#13;
&#13;
Lindholm Furniture Co.&#13;
5 I 3-15-1 7 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
A gain this year of 1 7 per cent of students in the four college classes&#13;
&#13;
This year I 30 Freshmen.&#13;
412-14-16 SIXTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
BEAN SHOWER ARTISTS DISCOVERED&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The boy who goes out with one arm or one foot to compete with those who have&#13;
two is not as much at a disadvantage as a young man who goes out half educated to&#13;
compete with the boys who are educated.&#13;
-WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN.&#13;
&#13;
Write President A E. Craig, Ph. D., D . D.&#13;
&#13;
�ALL IS NOT GOLD THAT GLITTERS&#13;
OR WHAT KIND OF COFFEE Do THEY DRINK&#13;
&#13;
A Sensational Three-Act Drama.&#13;
&#13;
Staged by the Bird Class Monday Morning.&#13;
&#13;
Setting-Twelve O'Clock Class on Bird Trip in North Ravine&#13;
Atmosphere, One-fourth Per Cent Civet Cat.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS. CO.&#13;
''THE BIG STORE"&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Greatest Attraction&#13;
&#13;
AcT I-Stevens grows hungry and suggests lunch.&#13;
AcT II-Miss Hood sniffs the air knowingly, and says do, I can smell coffee now.&#13;
AcT III.-No dinner there, they proceed one-half mile against the wind.&#13;
&#13;
EASOP's FABLES&#13;
&#13;
Up-to-Date&#13;
(Taken from the new College Catalogue)&#13;
Only&#13;
&#13;
I 5 chapel absences a&#13;
&#13;
semester are permitted.&#13;
Students are required to attend at least one service of&#13;
Public Worship on the Sabbath at the Church the student may&#13;
&#13;
prefer.&#13;
&#13;
( Rippey&#13;
&#13;
and Wilson prefer the Orpheum.)&#13;
The heating&#13;
&#13;
plant&#13;
&#13;
"fur-&#13;
&#13;
"Everything Under the Sun"&#13;
''A Store that Outshines in Styles-in Selection-in VALUES"&#13;
"The Store that Shows the New Things First."&#13;
&#13;
nishes heat" "for the College&#13;
Hall and Conservatory.·•&#13;
&#13;
"The Store that Serves All the People from&#13;
Kindergarten to College and afterwards."&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHS&#13;
&#13;
If you're grouchy at your pic-&#13;
&#13;
"Everybody's Going to the Big Store"&#13;
&#13;
ture,&#13;
Just remember that it's true&#13;
As you gazed into the camera&#13;
&#13;
It has pictured back to you.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS. COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
Money at interest in our Savings D epartment is at work for you both day&#13;
and night.&#13;
We help you to save and pay interest&#13;
on your Savings.&#13;
The Government watches your account&#13;
with this bank.&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Stock Yards extends a cordial invitation to students attending Morningside College to call&#13;
at the yards. Let us show you how business is conducted at a stock yards.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
Capital and Surplus $200,000.00&#13;
&#13;
The knowledge obtained will be of benefit whether&#13;
you take up farming and live stock raising, or some other&#13;
occupation.&#13;
&#13;
We are thoroughly equipped to serve&#13;
you in any department of banking.&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT&#13;
OPEN SAT. EVENINGS&#13;
&#13;
'ELIASON&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fourth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
J. A&#13;
&#13;
MAGOUN, JR., President&#13;
B . H. KINGSBURY, V. Pres.&#13;
I. M. LYON, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
First-Classin Every Respec t&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1544.&#13;
&#13;
LORD'S&#13;
Barber Shop&#13;
&#13;
Home Portrait Photography&#13;
He Pleases&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON'S STOCK OF NEW&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
HOME FITTINGS&#13;
&#13;
Art Publishing Co.&#13;
&#13;
Is Bigger and Better Than Ever&#13;
&#13;
Athletic and Sporting&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY PRINT ING&#13;
&#13;
Bath Rooms&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
&#13;
SPALDING-GOLDSMITH&#13;
&#13;
ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
&#13;
A. J. LORD, Proprietor&#13;
31 Nebraska Street,&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL, TENNIS, GOLF, SPALDING&#13;
RACKETS, SLOTTED THROAT RACKETS&#13;
&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
AYERS, SPALDING HAND MADE&#13;
TENNIS BALLS&#13;
FISHING TACKLE. RIFLES AND GUNS&#13;
&#13;
521 Douglas Street&#13;
&#13;
Patronize the Advertisers&#13;
&#13;
Oxford Hotel Building&#13;
Opposite City Hall&#13;
&#13;
in the&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2588&#13;
&#13;
1915 Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt' s Hardware&#13;
312-14 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
FIVE FLOORS FULL OF NEW&#13;
FURNITURE, Rues AND&#13;
&#13;
DRAPERIES&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�SENTIMENTAL&#13;
&#13;
"Say! Did You Hear the News?''&#13;
"No, What?"&#13;
"Dad's Book-Store is the Only Book-Store&#13;
Advertising in The. Sioux"&#13;
When the moments that you're with her&#13;
Go like Ty Cobb over first,&#13;
And the minutes you are absent&#13;
Like the hours of the accursed.&#13;
When the faces once tho't pretty&#13;
Pass unnoticed down the street&#13;
&#13;
And your heart begins to flutter&#13;
Every time you chance to meetY es-when everything you look at&#13;
Is illumined by her face,&#13;
Then you're pretty safe in guessing&#13;
That you've almost got a case.&#13;
&#13;
AN ODE TO M ARGARET&#13;
I want a&#13;
Just a&#13;
Come on&#13;
About&#13;
&#13;
little, oh a little,&#13;
little love,&#13;
my dear and tell me&#13;
the wonderous stars above.&#13;
&#13;
Let's get started now for&#13;
I don't know how long it'll last,&#13;
Just look at the clock, my dear,&#13;
You know time flies so fast.&#13;
ADVERTISEMENT&#13;
Let a successful love letter writer help&#13;
you. My private suggestive methods leads&#13;
the victim by a series of logical steps&#13;
straight to a natural and looked for proposal. Reference library of 14 volumes&#13;
accessible to paid-up students.&#13;
(Myron 0. Insko.)&#13;
&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
"Well! Is That So?"&#13;
&#13;
]IMME&#13;
&#13;
Come and hold me in your arms&#13;
And hug me a little, too,&#13;
For you see no one's around&#13;
And you know that I love you.&#13;
The day is long, the evening short,&#13;
See, there's no time to lose ;&#13;
Come and sit beside me now,&#13;
I know you won't refuse.&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker wants to know how&#13;
long a chinchilla overcoat would last if&#13;
a girl took a little NAP off it each night.&#13;
&#13;
Beck: Say, where is the best place to&#13;
hold the world's fair?&#13;
Dunn : Around her waist, you chump.&#13;
&#13;
"Yes, and whats more The Morningside Printing&#13;
Company do all kinds of fancy society printing. You&#13;
better buy your books and supplies there after this."&#13;
&#13;
"What Do They Sell Besides Books?"&#13;
"Oh! they keep all kinds of students' supplies, such&#13;
as Fountain Pens, Note Books, Stationery, Pennants,&#13;
College Jewelry, etc.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
AGORA CLUB&#13;
&#13;
C. Patton &amp; Company carry a full line of&#13;
&#13;
Canned goods, Groceries&#13;
&#13;
Fruits and Vegetables&#13;
We Aim to&#13;
&#13;
Please our customers at all times.&#13;
&#13;
Your&#13;
&#13;
Attention is called to our quick service&#13;
Phone Orders&#13;
are given&#13;
&#13;
To all parts of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
An Agora-Cultural Club organized for the betterment of the girls physically and&#13;
mentally. It fills a long felt want. It originally was only a walking club but Miss&#13;
Ferguson didn't like the solitude when she chaperoned them, besides the members&#13;
themselves expressed themselves as favoring gentlemen chaperones. This year, feeling&#13;
the need for a society shine, they invited prominent women to explain certain _ rinciples&#13;
p&#13;
of etiquette common to ordinary social parisites. The only good thing they had this&#13;
year was a joint "doo" with the boys. Nuf ced. Lately they have been deluding&#13;
themselves into believing that they do have good times until they have reached the stage&#13;
where they really do enjoy themselves. The only practical farm work they are doing&#13;
is taking care of the Morningside chickens. They cannot expect to do much until we&#13;
get our new chicken house. This is to be the next building in the building campaign.&#13;
SMOKER'S CLUB&#13;
&#13;
The best attention.&#13;
&#13;
We hope to make you&#13;
&#13;
0 ur customer by the quality of our groceries&#13;
Not one dissatisfied customer is our aim&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Call at our store at Peters' Park.&#13;
Our central Iocat1·on ma k es ourservicepossible&#13;
to all&#13;
&#13;
Morning side.&#13;
Phones.&#13;
&#13;
All&#13;
&#13;
Phone your orders.&#13;
&#13;
A u t o 6143, I owa 761.&#13;
&#13;
Both&#13;
&#13;
We Aim to&#13;
Please&#13;
&#13;
particular people.&#13;
&#13;
Now is the time for our acquaintance.&#13;
Your patronage desired.&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Leading&#13;
&#13;
Grocers&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Meets every day during the chapel period. Generally at Larson's store. Matters&#13;
of deep import are discussed . Ways and means of explaining chapel absences to the&#13;
Faculty committee the most important topic.&#13;
0FFICERS:-Grand Chief Smoke Blower, Kenneth Wilson; High Mogul Inhaler,&#13;
Harrison Kilborn.&#13;
M EMBERS:-Ralph Rippey, Bernard Brown, Will Fair, Wilson Clark.&#13;
PROBATION ERS :-Chester Robinson, Neville Gray, Paul Woodke.&#13;
TRUTH CLUB&#13;
EMBLEM :-A hatchet.&#13;
MoTTO :-"I cannot tell a lie."&#13;
PURPOSE:-To give to the world the truth regarding newspaper reporters at&#13;
Morningside and to clear Gray of the charge of being a prevaricator, and to show that&#13;
he really was benefactor to the school.&#13;
RECOMMENDATION TO THE FACULTY :-Give honor to whom honor is due.&#13;
Instead of condemning Gray for what he did write, give him a vote of thanks for suppressing the things that he did suppress.&#13;
FACULTY STIRRED TO ITS VERY ROOTS&#13;
Sensational Prize Fight Pulled Off By Prominent Members of Morningside Faculty.&#13;
Threatens to Disrupt Organization.&#13;
Gory with their own blood, their hair disheveled, their faces twitching with rage,&#13;
their breath coming in short, sharp gasps, Harold Stiles and Ronald Stevens fought desperately, while their parents, frenzied with excitement, urged them on from the ringside.&#13;
Such was the gruesome sight that met the eyes of our brave Ole as he paused horrified&#13;
at the window before rushing in to separate them. Ole was silenced with an "X"&#13;
and Stiles and Stevens soon made it right with the Discipline Committee. The popular&#13;
decision was given to Ronald.&#13;
&#13;
�THE"^ U^M^I BEES&#13;
HONEY&#13;
^eft\o\x.%\(&#13;
(Apologies to Wordsworth's Daffodils.)&#13;
I wandered as a student' B's,&#13;
Who'se sought in vain for A's and does,&#13;
TAILORED TO MEASURE&#13;
When suddenly I heard a buzz,&#13;
A swarm of buzzing honey air,&#13;
Upon the ground and in&#13;
Settling and stinging in my hair. the bees@&#13;
Continuous as the to hum&#13;
And bother us in English that&#13;
That swarm of bees beganthemeshere, come,&#13;
YOUR CHOICEto Fit and Please You or No Sale&#13;
Along the my coat and my ear@&#13;
Ten thousand saw me at&#13;
And settled on margin ofpants. a glance,&#13;
We Guarantee OF 500 ALL WOOL FABRICS&#13;
My dog that howling&#13;
me scorched,town;&#13;
Out-run beside not butdog spry I&#13;
to but&#13;
A fellow could&#13;
be&#13;
With such a stinging bunchthought&#13;
404 Fourth Street&#13;
EBR; around@&#13;
I howled and in me the bees&#13;
What change ran, but little had wrought.&#13;
FAVORITE&#13;
And oft when like a bed I'd lie, Ruth&#13;
All swelled upon my Senior's head,AdaBailey@"By Gum." SAYINGS OF MORNINGSIDERS&#13;
They'd flash a where themy eye, HoraceBelew@"0 Beans."&#13;
in&#13;
And showI'dthose honey bees.bees had tread,Day@"Mr. Barks worse than my bite."&#13;
me mirror in the trees Hazel Morgan@"Aw Heck."&#13;
And then&#13;
And curse again gaze up&#13;
Wayne Costar@"Believe me kid, I've got some Dame."&#13;
"Turk" Eiffert@(?)&#13;
Prof. Carson@"Or what not."&#13;
To be chapel cuts@Lovice Strobel. WANTED&#13;
More Wright at all times@Alice Thornburg.&#13;
Agirl just like the one I used to have@H. Morgan.&#13;
Elastic Currency@Morningside Students.&#13;
A corner on Beans@Ada Belew.&#13;
&#13;
SUIT OR OVERC&#13;
AND&#13;
UP&#13;
&#13;
$15 Tailors&#13;
The Guarantee&#13;
More time to laugh at my Briggs.&#13;
Morecars@Wright, McKinney, jokes@Guy McKinney.&#13;
girls to fuss@Mike own Costar, Kolp and the girls.&#13;
Owl&#13;
&#13;
�The class of work we turn out pleases&#13;
the most particular.&#13;
We can convince you.&#13;
Representative.&#13;
&#13;
See our College&#13;
&#13;
New Method Soft Water Laundry&#13;
313 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
LET US CHEER FOR OUR COLLEGE&#13;
S-s-s-s-sis ! Boom! Whee! Maroon!&#13;
Come all ye loyal with your choo choo rah rah&#13;
Choo choo rah rah, choo choo rah rah rah rah rah;&#13;
Come all ye loyal with your choo choo rah rah&#13;
Choo choo rah rah for Morningside.&#13;
RAH! RAH! RAH!&#13;
(Repeat)&#13;
For it's Morningside! Morningside!&#13;
Wouldn't think of bragging 'bout our Morningside.&#13;
Boastful pride is petrified,&#13;
Ain't no use denyin' what can't be denied;&#13;
Morningside! Morningside!&#13;
Greatest seat of wisdom since Solomon died;&#13;
We abide satisfied&#13;
No fairer school in schooling than our Morningside !&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
A "WHO'S WHO"&#13;
Of the Morningside F ussers for the benefit of would-be fussers, so that none need&#13;
trespass. Order does not necessarily signify intensity or durability. Under no&#13;
conditions will we be responsible for the&#13;
veracity of this list, for women are notorious for changing their minds and some&#13;
men never get their minds made up.&#13;
Cobbs .. . .. .... . ............. ·.&#13;
Wilson . . .. .. ... . ... Metcalf Sisters&#13;
Heavy .. . .. ...... . . Lola Brownelle&#13;
*Jimmy . .. . .. . ...... .. .. Margaret&#13;
Hicks . . ... ... . .. ... High Schoolers&#13;
* Pat .. . ..... . .. .......... Mane&#13;
Mike Briggs .. ... . .... Pearl Wilson&#13;
Riner .... ... . . . . . .. Vera Hauswald&#13;
C. A Payne . . . .. . ......Clara Lewis&#13;
Brownie . ... ... ... ..... Ruth Gillies&#13;
Fully . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sally&#13;
Allen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bernice&#13;
Walton ... .... .. . .. . . .. . . . Briggs&#13;
......... ... . . . Luella Haskins&#13;
Guy McKinney . .. . . . ... Ruth Bailey&#13;
Costar . . . ... . .... .. . .. . B. Wright&#13;
Wright . . . . . .. ... .... A Thornburg&#13;
Barks . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . . . H. D ay&#13;
**Burgess&#13;
... ....... .. Mabel Irwin&#13;
**Bigg . . . .. . ... .. ..... .... Ruth&#13;
** Mac. . . .... . . . . .... . . . Eleanore&#13;
*Subject to change without notice.&#13;
**Standbys.&#13;
&#13;
Another year has passed, have you?&#13;
Insko and Starr won the forty-two&#13;
tournament during the Glee Club trip&#13;
speaks well for the Ministerial Association.&#13;
I don't care what color my hair is,&#13;
No matter how thick or how thin.&#13;
Just so there's enough of the confounded&#13;
stuff&#13;
To cover my head and my chin.&#13;
&#13;
If you wish to see something swell take&#13;
BEANS and SOAKEM.&#13;
Someone asked Alice Thornburg what&#13;
she was doing at the men's banquet.&#13;
"Guess I've got a WRIGHT here," she&#13;
replied.&#13;
Earl Williams says he wishes they&#13;
had a crew here, for he likes to take a little ROE now and then.&#13;
J. Madison says he's going to take up&#13;
a claim before all the NEWLANDS are&#13;
gone.&#13;
News Item-Heavy Heitt went fussing last Sunday night.&#13;
Did you ever stop to notice,&#13;
When you're laughing fit to croak,&#13;
That the GUY who laughs the loudest&#13;
Is the GUY that cracks the joke?&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�"A VOW"&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Oh Morningside, thou art the "Pride of the Sioux"&#13;
And we'll honor thy name ever more,&#13;
To thy standard we'll ever be loyal and true .&#13;
As thy sons ever have been before.&#13;
We shall sing of the honor and fame thou hast won,&#13;
With our hearts and our voices attune,&#13;
And forever we'll stand united as one&#13;
In our love for the dear old Maroon.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
Printing and BOOK Making&#13;
&#13;
We are glad for the days that we've spent on thy hills&#13;
And the friendships we formed in thy halls,&#13;
And for dear Alma Mater our hearts shall beat still,&#13;
When at last we shall turn from thy walls.&#13;
'Till the waters have dried in the "Rolling Mizzou"&#13;
And all love in the old world has died,&#13;
We shall stand by our College, "The Pride of the Sioux"&#13;
And we'll cheer for our old Morningside.&#13;
ALMA MATER&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
Sing the praises of dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her hero's bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices the chorus raising&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
Then cheer for dear old Morningside,&#13;
To thee we pledge anew&#13;
Hearts of faithful love, now and forever&#13;
Thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning&#13;
And where ere we roam&#13;
We will cherish the friendship which thou&#13;
Hast brought us, Fair Morningside our home.&#13;
&#13;
College and School Annuals&#13;
Given Careful and Prompt Attention&#13;
&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
Hear our vow, Oh! Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee,&#13;
All we have in loving remembrance bringing&#13;
For the glory of old M. C.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
We Printed and Bound this Book&#13;
&#13;
The Monarch Printing Co.&#13;
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�Commencement Program&#13;
&#13;
( P as te P rogra m H ere )&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
���</text>
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                    <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College Annual Yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The 1915 yearbook contains pictures, short articles, sporting results, and other college news and events related to this particular year. This PDF file is a digital copy of the original physical yearbook.&#13;
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A number of yearbooks do not have people's names index in this database. Those yearbooks will have a PDF index of the people's names in that particular year with a reference to the page(s) that they appear on.</text>
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                  <text>Fullerton, Adam: Cataloger</text>
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              <text>Sioux&#13;
Nineteen Fifteen&#13;
A portrayal of the student life&#13;
and its achievements at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
Published by the&#13;
&#13;
Junior Class&#13;
&#13;
FOREWORD&#13;
&#13;
Published by&#13;
FREDERICK&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
WILLIAM HENRY PAYNE&#13;
Sioux City, I owa&#13;
&#13;
Engraved by&#13;
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Printed by&#13;
THE MONARCH&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
Cou n c il Bluffs, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CO.&#13;
&#13;
Another year has passed in the history of&#13;
Morningside College, and we dare to call it,&#13;
the best.&#13;
The largest enrollment m our&#13;
history, bears testimony to our fo rward&#13;
march in the College world.&#13;
A dream of years has at last been realized and there stands on our fair campus a&#13;
Gymnasium, the Glory and P ride of all&#13;
Morningsiders.&#13;
The Morningside of Tomorrow, you may&#13;
think a hopeless dream, yet with the faith of&#13;
a Lewis and the ability of a Craig, she will&#13;
greet us ere we are aware. To those who&#13;
dare to dream and work and lift, all things&#13;
are possible.&#13;
The task of presenting you this record has&#13;
been a pleasure. Mistakes? Yes. Triumphs?&#13;
We leave to your judgment. If we would&#13;
make the Morningside of Tomorrow a reality, let us go forth loyal Sons and Daughters&#13;
of our Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
2 3 45 6-&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC FIELD&#13;
7 MEN'S COMMONS&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
8 CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC 9 -&#13;
&#13;
MAIN HALL&#13;
FLAG&#13;
POLE&#13;
SPOON HOLDER&#13;
&#13;
GYMNASIUM&#13;
&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
HEATING PLANT&#13;
&#13;
10 - SCIENCE HALL&#13;
ll - GRACE M.E. CHURCH&#13;
12 - WOMEN'S DORMITORIES&#13;
13 - PRESIDENT'S&#13;
HOME&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
Oh, Morningside, "Thou Pride of the&#13;
Sioux." Thou hast been a tender Mother&#13;
to us all. We glory in thy strength, while&#13;
thou art so young and fair. Thou indeed&#13;
hast inspired the hearts of all who have&#13;
felt thy touch.&#13;
In thy boundless future, we see thee&#13;
templed with mighty halls-filled with eager&#13;
life, as the sands of the ocean-lifting the&#13;
cup of learning to all who would partake&#13;
of thy wisdom.&#13;
To thee, Our Alma Mater of the future,&#13;
we lovingly dedicate this, our book.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
"He who the nois to win&#13;
blest success in the world of&#13;
affairs, must continually educate himself for a larger grasp&#13;
of principal&#13;
and broader&#13;
grasp of condition."&#13;
-Hamilton Wright Mabie.&#13;
&#13;
1 915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Editorials&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Nine&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
A Review of the Year&#13;
(By Pres. A&#13;
The collegiate year of 191 3-1914&#13;
has been .one of the most prosperous&#13;
in the history of Morningside College.&#13;
The fire which occurred two years ago&#13;
brought with it much inconvenience and&#13;
some depression.&#13;
But the vigor with&#13;
which the loss was repaired gave confidence to all the friends of the school&#13;
and put fresh spirit into its activities.&#13;
With a fresh rebound every interest of&#13;
the institution has assumed new vitality.&#13;
While it is not always possible to satisfactorily tabulate advances, yet the increase of registration is some index to the&#13;
real conditions. The registration of the&#13;
college advanced from 504 of last year&#13;
to 638 this year. This increase is shared&#13;
by every department of the institution,&#13;
but is very noticeable in the collegiate&#13;
department. An increase of forty men&#13;
in the four college classes marks a&#13;
healthy forward movement.&#13;
The outstanding event of the present year has&#13;
been the successful completion of the&#13;
fine fifty thousand dollar gymnasium.&#13;
This is one of the most complete buildings devoted to physical education to be&#13;
found in any college in the land. Its&#13;
proportions are I 20x60, with an approach of 36x 18 devoted to offices of&#13;
the physical directors. Coach Saunderson has assumed charge of the physical&#13;
work for men in addition to his work&#13;
&#13;
E. Craig.)&#13;
as coach. Miss Brand, a graduate of&#13;
Oberlin College, has efficiently directed&#13;
the activities of the young women. This&#13;
addition to our equipment has met a longfelt desire on the part of the students,&#13;
and is greatly appreciated.&#13;
Provision&#13;
has been made for the installation of a&#13;
compl ete department of Domestic Science. Miss Pearl Stuart Greene of Chicago has been secured to take charge of&#13;
this department. Miss Greene is a graduate of the Northwestern University and&#13;
of the Lewis Institute of Chicago, and&#13;
brings to the work of this department&#13;
high ideals and genuine college spirit.&#13;
The course in this department will be&#13;
given full college recognition. The Conservatory of Music has had a year of&#13;
remarkable success. Nearly three hundred students have been enrolled for instruction.&#13;
This department will be&#13;
strengthened next year by the addition&#13;
of several new instructors. In our Inter-Collegiate contests the year has been&#13;
up to our usual high record.&#13;
Our debaters won both decisions, winning over Coe College and Teachers'&#13;
College. Our representative at the state&#13;
Prohibition contest gained second place.&#13;
Athletic conditions are healthy and hopeful. Every evidence points to the fact&#13;
that Morningside College is entering upon&#13;
a period of real prosperity and unusual&#13;
expansion.&#13;
&#13;
Religious Activity&#13;
(By Rev. H. A&#13;
One of the distinctive things about a&#13;
Christian College is what may be called&#13;
its atmosphere. It might not be an easy&#13;
thing to define what we mean by atmosphere, but we all know what it signifies.&#13;
&#13;
Keck.)&#13;
&#13;
We know that it is a potent thing in&#13;
fashioning the character and determining the ideals of young folk.&#13;
I write&#13;
from intimate knowledge of the facts&#13;
when I say that the atmosphere of Morn-&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
T en&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
ingside College has never been· more intensely religious than at the present time.&#13;
The past year has witnessed · a remarkable toning up in the spiritual life of the&#13;
student body. In December "Dad" Elliot, one of the greatest workers among&#13;
college men in the country, came to&#13;
Morningside for a three days' meeting.&#13;
The results were satisfactory in every&#13;
way. Thirty of the young men mad e&#13;
decision for the Christian life, and there&#13;
was a pronounced deepening in religious&#13;
interest.&#13;
During the Elliott meetings&#13;
Miss Burner held services among the&#13;
young women with gratifying results . In&#13;
February a union meeting between Grace&#13;
Church and Morningside College was&#13;
held under the leadership of Hugh E.&#13;
Smith of Los Angeles, Calif. With the&#13;
sweetness of a St. John, Mr. Smith won&#13;
all hearts. Some of the scenes witnessed&#13;
during these meetings were most extraordinary. The solicitude of the Christian&#13;
students for the conversion of their companions was beautiful to behold. Students were converted during the meetings and many life-work decisions were&#13;
made. The Y. M. C. A and the Y.&#13;
W. C. A. have had a splendid year.&#13;
The weekly devotional meetings, led by&#13;
students or ministers in the city, have been&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
very helpful. The Association hall on&#13;
the third floor has been completely refurnished and affords a fine home for all&#13;
Association activities. The College was&#13;
represented at the National Students' Volunteer Convention in Kansas City early in&#13;
January by thirteen students, headed by&#13;
President Craig. The reflex influence&#13;
from the work of this convention has been&#13;
decidedly uplifting. As Pastor of the&#13;
College Church it is only proper that I&#13;
should acknowledge the loyalty of the&#13;
students to the services of Grace Church.&#13;
In our Sunday School, Epworth League,&#13;
and Public Worship, the presence of the&#13;
students has been an inspiration and encouragement. There is only one reason&#13;
for the existence of Morningside College&#13;
and that is a religious reason. The founders of this institution were animated by&#13;
spiritual motives. They believed a Christion College was necessary on the soil of&#13;
Northwest Iowa for the production of a&#13;
symmetrical Christian Manhood and&#13;
Womanhood.&#13;
"Let knowledge grow from more to more,&#13;
But more of reverence in us dwell,&#13;
That mind and soul according well,&#13;
May make one music as before&#13;
But vaster."&#13;
&#13;
Departmentof Public Speaking&#13;
(Prof. C. A Marsh.)&#13;
&#13;
"In these days, whether we like it or&#13;
not, power is with the tongue, power is&#13;
with those who can speak." These words,&#13;
uttered by the great English statesman,&#13;
Premier Salisbury, express a truth that&#13;
is becoming more generally recognized in&#13;
educational circles.&#13;
Today much emphasis is being placed upon service. It&#13;
is evident, therefore, that any training&#13;
which better equips a man to serve his&#13;
&#13;
fellowmen is fundamental. The ability&#13;
to express one's thought clearly and effectively, whether in conversation or upon the&#13;
public platform, is not only an accomplishment, but is today coming to be recognized as a prime requisite to a successful&#13;
career. Mr. Gladstone said: "All time&#13;
and money spent in training the voice and&#13;
body is an investment that pays larger&#13;
interest than any other. Many a profes-&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eleven&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
sional man now in obscurity might rise&#13;
to the highest rank if he were far-seeing&#13;
enough to train his voice and body as&#13;
well as his mind." Dr. Edward Everett&#13;
Hale contends that "The young American, with common school education, who&#13;
cannot• make a speech on any ordinary&#13;
subject at a moment's notice, is wanting&#13;
in one of the most important attributes of&#13;
the American make-up."&#13;
It has frequently been said that training&#13;
for citizenship is the ultimate aim of all&#13;
education. But what are the requisites of&#13;
good citizenship?&#13;
First, an intelligent&#13;
interest in the public questions of the day,&#13;
and second, the ability to discuss these&#13;
questions intelligently, and thus contribute&#13;
to the forming of a safe and sane public&#13;
opinion. The department of public speaking, using for material topics pertaining to&#13;
public questions, and training students in&#13;
clear, vigorous thinking and effective&#13;
speaking, contributes to the making of&#13;
good citizens.&#13;
It is the aim to make the work of the&#13;
Department of Public Speaking of a very&#13;
practical nature; to afford real prepara-&#13;
&#13;
tion for the activities of life. It matters&#13;
not for what occupation or profession a&#13;
student may be preparing, he will have&#13;
abundant opportunities to use the training&#13;
which he has received in Public Speaking. This is especially true of the work&#13;
in debate. The student is trained in independent and constructive thinking. He&#13;
forms the habit of looking deeply into&#13;
questions and seeing both sides of propositions. He learns to discover the vital&#13;
issues, and he is not easily misled by minor&#13;
points. H e develops a spirit of fairmindedness, of consideration for the opinions of others. He learns that there are&#13;
two sides to ·all questions.&#13;
Again, training in public speaking developes self-reliance and self-confidence.&#13;
The student comes to a realization of the&#13;
powers which he possesses. H e learns&#13;
how to make use of the knowledge which&#13;
he has, for he is trained in the art of selfexpression. After all, this is the great art,&#13;
for as some one has well said: "He alone&#13;
can give life to knowledge who has&#13;
learned the art of communicating it to&#13;
others.''&#13;
&#13;
The Conservatory of Music&#13;
(By Prof, 0. A Morse.)&#13;
The CONSERVATORY OF Music at&#13;
Morningside will enter on its twenty-first&#13;
year in the fall of 1914. During this&#13;
time it has grown from an unimportant department to a large and well organized&#13;
school of the art of music, with departments for the study of the Pianoforte,&#13;
Singing, Pipe Organ, Violin, Banjo,&#13;
Guitar, Mandolin, Orchestral and Band&#13;
Instruments, History of Music, Public&#13;
School Music, Harmony, Counterpoint&#13;
and Composition. In point of attendance, only one other music school in the&#13;
state, and that in Des Moines is larger,&#13;
&#13;
and between Minneapolis on the north&#13;
and Lincoln on the south, it is unequalled.&#13;
Over three hundred students have received instruction during the year of&#13;
&#13;
1913- 14.&#13;
The position of a Conservatory in connection with a College of Liberal Arts&#13;
is a unique one. More and more it is&#13;
being realized that education means more&#13;
than the mere securing of valuable information, or even the ability to do things.&#13;
Culture of character is by far the most&#13;
important thing in obtaining a training for&#13;
life. The aesthetic features of life are&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE:&#13;
&#13;
Twelve&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
much more than mere ornamental appendages; they have a decided value in the&#13;
building of individuality, and in this work&#13;
the fine arts have a great and valuable&#13;
place. This has been recognized to a&#13;
great extent in the study of literature, and&#13;
after literature, music has the most universal appeal of all the fine arts. This&#13;
accounts for the fact that, whereas fifty&#13;
years ago music was not thought of as a&#13;
study worthy of recognition in the College&#13;
curriculum, it now has an honored place,&#13;
indeed, many Colleges grant the Bachelors degree for a College course with&#13;
music, even including in some cases the&#13;
practical study of the art, as a major.&#13;
This is indeed a far cry from the day,&#13;
not very many years ago, when a prominent musician offered his services as instructor in music to Harvard University&#13;
without salary.&#13;
The Conservatory at Morningside seeks&#13;
first to extend the influence of the a rt to&#13;
the student body at large ; secondly to&#13;
the community surrounding it; and lastly,&#13;
but not least, to its own body of earnest&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
The courses of study are organized on&#13;
the same general basis as the courses in&#13;
the College of Liberal Arts. A certain&#13;
amount of preliminary training is required for entrance on the regular collegiate course of four years, which is arranged in Freshman, Sophomore, Junior&#13;
and Senior years. These four years of&#13;
training embrace thorough study of at&#13;
least one practical branch, such as the&#13;
piano, singing, violin, etc., also four years&#13;
training in the theory of music, harmony,&#13;
counterpoint, history of music, etc., also&#13;
attendance during the period of study on&#13;
one College or Academy subject to be&#13;
selected according to the needs of the&#13;
student.&#13;
As to the standards required of the&#13;
graduates, they are based on the recognized standards adopted by the most noted music schools of America and Europe.&#13;
The study of music has made rapid and&#13;
substantial progress during the last few&#13;
years, and we feel that Morningside may&#13;
be justly proud that its Conservatory holds&#13;
a place in the very front rank.&#13;
&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
(By Miss Margaret Brand.)&#13;
Throughout all history the attitude toward physical training has been constantly changing: In the earliest times&#13;
brute strength was rated as the greatest&#13;
of all virtues. The strongest man of&#13;
the tribe was the leader and the weakling&#13;
was soon weeded out. Down until the&#13;
Christian era we find this same emphasis&#13;
laid on physical development, but with&#13;
the growth of the early Christian Church&#13;
there came a strong reaction. Men began to think that the only way to acq uire&#13;
merit was through the denial of all physical needs and pleasures, so, led by the&#13;
monks, they practised the most hideous&#13;
&#13;
tortures upon themselves, thinking that by&#13;
thus "mortifying the flesh" they would&#13;
grow spiritually.&#13;
But with the advance in Science, this&#13;
morbid asceticism&#13;
also&#13;
disappeared.&#13;
Slowly men discovered that the mind&#13;
could not do its best work without efficient&#13;
tools. T he body was developed as the&#13;
servant · of the mind, and we find the pioneers of modern physical training beginning their work with this idea, especially&#13;
in Germany and Sweden. More recently still, we find yet another attitude prevailing with regard to physical development. We now know that not only does&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
the mind need a sound body as a means&#13;
of expression, but the mind itself can never reach its highest efficiency unless the&#13;
body is well trained. When one remembers how large a proportion of the surface&#13;
of the brain is taken up by the nerve cells&#13;
which govern our movements, it is easy&#13;
to see that the brain cannot be well developed if the muscles are untrained. As&#13;
a result of this modern point of view, we&#13;
find everywhere gymnasiums in connection-and in logical connection-with the&#13;
schools and universities. Physical training should be a part of every College&#13;
course, not simply for hygienic purposes,&#13;
but as an integral part of one's education.&#13;
There should be a noticeable improvement in the scholarship of Morningside&#13;
students, now that their dream of a modem, well-equipped gymnasium has at last&#13;
been realized, not simply because of improved health, important as that is, but&#13;
because of better trained minds.&#13;
Morningside now has a fine, large gymnasium, fitted out with all the best modern equipment, and containing, besides the&#13;
main floor, a running track, dressing&#13;
rooms, shower baths, team rooms, offices,&#13;
a trophy room, a room for physical examinations, and a swimming pool which will&#13;
be finished off in the near future. It is a&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
gymnasium which can compare favorably&#13;
with any in the country, and it should&#13;
play a large part in the life of the school.&#13;
On account of its importance, two years&#13;
of physical training work will be required&#13;
during the College course, and other elective work will be offered to those who&#13;
desire it. The building is well adapted&#13;
for basketball, volley-ball, indoor tennis,&#13;
indoor baseball, and other games.&#13;
There are then, roughly, three large&#13;
aims in our physical training work. The&#13;
educational aim should come first, although it is not so clearly recognized by&#13;
the student as are the other two. Agility,&#13;
skill, courage, physical judgment, and&#13;
grace are the results of careful training of&#13;
muscles and brain, while true sportsmanship, love of fair play, and willingness to&#13;
sacrifice oneself in the interests of the&#13;
team, come through athletics. The next&#13;
aim should be hygienic. Health is fundamental if one is to make his life count as&#13;
it might, and the sedentary habits of the&#13;
student must be counteracted by vigorous&#13;
exercise.&#13;
Finally, through the use of&#13;
games, rythmic, work, outdoor sports and&#13;
athletics of all kinds, the work is made&#13;
pleasurable, for exercise must be enjoyed&#13;
if it is to give all that it is capable of givmg.&#13;
&#13;
What Morningside Most Needs&#13;
( Dr. Wall ace Carson.)&#13;
The editor of the Sioux has asked me&#13;
to write in a few words and in a spirit of&#13;
frankness what, in my opinion, Morningside College most needs.&#13;
Now the&#13;
building up of our College is at once in&#13;
the hands of the President, the Faculty,&#13;
the Board of Trustees, the friends of the&#13;
College, and the Students. I am only&#13;
interested here in the way in which the&#13;
students may help their College-and&#13;
themselves.&#13;
&#13;
The most vital force bearing on the mdividual student is that intangible thing&#13;
called, "the spirit of the college." It is&#13;
a result of the reaction of a material&#13;
equipment, a F acuity, and students on&#13;
each other under the conditions of a&#13;
College course. This reaction expresses&#13;
itself among the students in a philosophy&#13;
of College life that becomes the principal&#13;
guiding force of the student body. It is&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
the one vital element in the College. It&#13;
is so strong that no College generation can&#13;
warp its purpose, and so sensitive that it&#13;
responds to the impress of the most obscure Freshman. It is so real that it affects the mental and moral tone of every&#13;
student, and so intangible that no Senior&#13;
can say where or what it is.&#13;
Without analyzing exhaustively the&#13;
spirit of Morningsiqe, I wish to call attention to one phase in which there is&#13;
need for a change. Morningside College&#13;
is in a transition period. We have the&#13;
virtues and weaknesses of youth, but we&#13;
are trying desperately hard to slough our&#13;
swaddling clothes.&#13;
New buildings, increased library and laboratory facilities,&#13;
additional instructors, new courses, and&#13;
a general stiffening of the whole curriculum mark the change. In a word Morningside is realizing itself as a College from&#13;
the standpoint of the administration. Is&#13;
student sentiment changing to meet the&#13;
new order?&#13;
The esprit de coeur of the student body&#13;
is an inheritance from the past. T raditions are handed down from class to class&#13;
and students accept an intellectual and&#13;
social code evolved under conditions at&#13;
variance with the present. As the College goes forward, the philosophy of the&#13;
student body must advance-and this in&#13;
the face of established custom and tradition.&#13;
Students must realize that they&#13;
come to Morningside better prepared than&#13;
ever before, that they graduate later in&#13;
life, that they must do more and better&#13;
scholastic work than in former years, and&#13;
&#13;
that they are expected to deport themselves in accord with these conditions.&#13;
It is natural for the students to accept&#13;
the old standards and traditions, and&#13;
equally difficult for them to realize that&#13;
the old order is changing and that they&#13;
must change with it. This is the great&#13;
need of Morningside students just now.&#13;
More of the traits of men and women,&#13;
and less of the characteristics of the High&#13;
School age, are necessary to meet the enlarging demands of our College life. We&#13;
must advance along the following three&#13;
lines unless the student body is satisfied to&#13;
fall behind in the forward march of the&#13;
College.&#13;
The cultivation of a more generous&#13;
spirit of real scholarship in the student&#13;
body, and more students who are not satisfied with C and D grades.&#13;
More students in legitimate College activities other than athletics, and more genuine student recognition and support of&#13;
such activities, for instance, the field of&#13;
forensics, the Collegian Reporter, and the&#13;
Sioux.&#13;
A healthily readjustment of our College political and social life leading to a&#13;
more democratic recognition of individual&#13;
worth regardless of society affiliation, and,&#13;
for the members of the girls' societies, a&#13;
lowering of the unchristian and uncharitable membership bar now applying to so&#13;
many of our students.&#13;
Around these suggestions, it seems to&#13;
me, the student body can build better and&#13;
saner student ideals than those in force&#13;
at the present.&#13;
&#13;
What I Want My Son to Get from Morningside&#13;
(By Prominent Men in the Conference.)&#13;
I want my son to get from his College&#13;
course that modification of himself, which&#13;
shall set him at his best, in right relations&#13;
to the world in which he lives. Not the&#13;
&#13;
present world only, but the world of all&#13;
time. The events of today are but the&#13;
leaves on the tree which has its roots&#13;
deep down in the past. When the frost&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
F i fte en&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
comes the leaves will fall, but trunk and&#13;
limb remain to welcome the master transformer "Chlorophyll," each recurring&#13;
The College student there&#13;
springtime.&#13;
will find special emphasis placed on those&#13;
simple lines of study marked out by the&#13;
trunk line of the years. The great storehouse of history will be opened to him&#13;
and his view of events will not be confused by speculative theorizing or superficial splitting of the subject into drawfish&#13;
and freakish electives. The language in&#13;
which he speaks will become manifold in&#13;
its meaning when he has found and feels&#13;
its relation to that in which Homer wrote&#13;
and Cicero spoke. The season's "Best&#13;
Seller" will find no place in an estimate of&#13;
literature. The stars will become familiar&#13;
in constant Constellations rather than by&#13;
the midnight presence of a stray comet.&#13;
Euclid will prove to be a true friend to&#13;
him. He will be taught to walk and talk&#13;
with Plato and Kant, how to find much&#13;
&#13;
good in Herbert Spencer and Dr. Huxley,&#13;
and will leave posterity to pass judgment&#13;
on, or forget, Bernard Shaw. His year&#13;
of Science will be chosen for its own sake&#13;
and not for future credits at the "University." His College course then will be&#13;
&#13;
unlike:&#13;
"The Angels of Wind and of Fire,"&#13;
who "Chant only one hymn and expire,"&#13;
The appeal to save him from the Frivolous&#13;
incidental in study applies equally to the&#13;
atmosphere and associations of the four&#13;
years. His athletic ability will be cultivated with a view of keeping him out of&#13;
mischief, but a more earnest attempt will&#13;
be made to discover his Aesthetic nature.&#13;
A number will suffice for his room, but&#13;
he will be known by name in the class&#13;
room. Tuition has a right to claim a&#13;
larger share of the students' expenses than&#13;
any demand of superficial social extravagance. Closer to the ideal than any other&#13;
College will be MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside from a Father's Standpoint&#13;
The most important question, we as&#13;
fathers, ask of the College of today, is&#13;
what kind of a boy or girl has your College training made of them?&#13;
As a father who has watched carefully&#13;
the progress of his sons through College,&#13;
I have become convinced that this question is all there is to consider or to look&#13;
into. I have little concern for his Latin,&#13;
Mathematics, or the balance of his College curriculum, whether it is good or bad.&#13;
If bad, there remains plenty of time to&#13;
correct it ( as occasion demands). But&#13;
my sons' or daughters' moral training cannot be so treated. If not looked after at&#13;
this time ( while in College) then the&#13;
Phychological time is surely past. This is&#13;
the time and this is the place that it must&#13;
be done. It matters not whether it has&#13;
&#13;
been don e before or not. The question I&#13;
would more seriously consider than all&#13;
others, would be, What College will give&#13;
&#13;
my boy or girl the best moral training.&#13;
And when this question was decided&#13;
that is the College they would most likely&#13;
attend. To express my thought in a few&#13;
words, it would be this: If I am sure&#13;
that my child's moral training is right, I&#13;
am willing to take all chances on his Latin,&#13;
Mathematics, etc., or shorter yet, the College that sends my boy or girl home&#13;
Christian, is the one I prefer to send them&#13;
to.&#13;
A young man's or girl's moral training&#13;
very correctly indicates to me more than&#13;
all things else, the sort of a life of future&#13;
usefulness his will be.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Tradition&#13;
(From the Viewpoint of a Senior.)&#13;
Perhaps there are institutions of learning where iconoclastic methods are needed to rid them of a host of useless traditions and customs, which inhibit individualism and preclude progress. However,&#13;
Morningside is not of these. The iconoclast is not wanted here. Traditions are&#13;
necessary to the modern College and&#13;
Morningside lacks traditions.&#13;
It will be recalled that the more conservative statesmen of 1787 recognized&#13;
the danger that this government, drunk&#13;
with its newly gotten power and latent&#13;
democracy, might run to excess unless&#13;
checks could be placed upon it. And so&#13;
a system of checks was devised,-of the&#13;
Nation upon the States, of the Senate upon the House, of the President upon Congress, of the Senate upon the President,&#13;
of the Judiciary upon the Legislature,all for the purpose of restraining when&#13;
feeling should run high or action become&#13;
ill-advised. That they . have aided materially in keeping the .Ship of State upon&#13;
the general course mapped out for it by&#13;
the men of '87 is, of course, not open to&#13;
dispute. It was the first of these checks&#13;
which held the Union together in 1832&#13;
and which should have done so again in&#13;
1860. The second prevented the disgrace of a conviction after the impeachment of a President in '68. So the repeated application of each of them could&#13;
be noted in the attempts to maintain the&#13;
character and dignity of this ne,w world&#13;
experiment in democracy.&#13;
Tradition, when strengthened by the&#13;
accumulated prestige of years, is as potent&#13;
as law, civil or natural. It restrains the&#13;
hand of wild excess. It lays down principles of moral and aesthetic action impossible for the State to call law and&#13;
impolitic for the institution to call rule.&#13;
&#13;
It is not so much the nature of the regulation which hurts, it is the character of&#13;
the power that imposes it. The stamp&#13;
acts of 1765 and 1898 were little different, but the former was levied by a foreign power ·and caused rebellion, while&#13;
the latter was levied by ourselves and&#13;
was not opposed.&#13;
Thus, if the State&#13;
should say that every student who is apprehended in the act of making a path&#13;
across his campus should be expelled&#13;
from his College the law would be thrown&#13;
out by the courts. If the administration&#13;
of the institution should make such a&#13;
regulation the students would rebel. But&#13;
if the students themselves make such a&#13;
rule tradition, and back it up with consistent action, it will be obeyed and honored. A rule providing for the expulsion of all students found cheating at examinations would hardly come within the&#13;
purview of State legislation, nor would&#13;
it be politic for the school to put such a&#13;
statement in its catalogue, but the students, through tradition, can make it as&#13;
imprudent for anyone to cheat at examinations as to make a bold robbery on&#13;
the open street at high noon.&#13;
But tradition is not only a potent deterrant from riotous acts, it is equipollent&#13;
as an incitant of that vague something&#13;
called "College Spirit." Who has not&#13;
been inspired to deeper, truer, nobler action by the recital of the traditions of his&#13;
family, of his country, yes, and of his&#13;
school? The custom that a holiday be&#13;
granted after any notable victory, be it&#13;
forensic or athletic, is an illustration in&#13;
point.&#13;
The reiteration of the College&#13;
records, songs, yells, foolishness, on such&#13;
occasions increase the pleasure of going&#13;
to school, and because of that, if for no&#13;
other reason, they are beneficial. The&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
student body should refuse to give over&#13;
the tradition that classes be called off&#13;
and College spirit be allowed to bubble&#13;
over for a few hours when a considerable&#13;
victory has been gained. During the present school year one such circumstance&#13;
has occurred-the immediate raison d'etre&#13;
was the winning of the triangular debate&#13;
-when the F acuity refused to grant the&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
request of the students for the usual holiday, and when the students took by force&#13;
what they had been refused upon request.&#13;
Probably no one event during the school&#13;
year has resulted so satisfactorily from&#13;
the standpoint of College spirit.&#13;
But there were individuals who looked&#13;
with disfavor upon that action! Morningside has no place for the iconoclast!&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
(As a Senior Sees It.)&#13;
&#13;
It is becoming more and more evident&#13;
that the time has come when the educated&#13;
man is recognized as a leader in the various activities of life. Because of this&#13;
the courses of instruction now emphasize&#13;
those subjects which will best equip a&#13;
man for his life work.&#13;
The man or&#13;
woman with a good sound education basis&#13;
is given the preference in the keen competition, for the survival of the fittest.&#13;
At the present day there are many different kinds of educational institutions&#13;
aside from Liberal Arts, such as Protessional, Technical and Agriculture Schools&#13;
where the finishing touches are given the&#13;
student in the special branch of work to&#13;
be followed . But the person who attends such a school is one who has definitely decided in his or her own mind with&#13;
respect to the special line of work to be&#13;
followed. And a certain amount of College work is required before one can enter&#13;
many of these institutions.&#13;
What concerns us most is the true value&#13;
and place of the small Liberal Arts College with reference to the average man&#13;
and woman of today. The vast number&#13;
of such schools scattered throughout our&#13;
great nation speaks for itself. But many&#13;
times the question is asked, "Of what real&#13;
value is the school where one merely acquires a small amount of knowledge on a&#13;
&#13;
along several lines instead of any particular one. But an opportunity is also given&#13;
to specialize along some one line by the&#13;
use of the major and minor system which&#13;
in many cases forms a basis for future&#13;
work.&#13;
Again the so-called outside work, such&#13;
as practical sociology, journalistic and literary work, athletic and the Christian organizations, is of great benefit to the student, since it brings him in contact with&#13;
many different personalities and trying&#13;
circumstances. The small size of the student body affords everyone a chance to&#13;
&#13;
branch out along different lines of work&#13;
and to receive personal attention from the&#13;
instructors, and also to receive experiences&#13;
which may be used later on in life.&#13;
In College the youth has to decide a&#13;
great many matters for himself and as a&#13;
result a stronger will-power and thoughtful personality is developed. Because of&#13;
this thorough and broadening preparation&#13;
a liberal education is essential to both men&#13;
and women in practically every walk of&#13;
life. There is no doubt but that the Liberal Arts course occupies one of the prominent places in the educational world today.&#13;
&#13;
large number of subjects, as compared to&#13;
the already mentioned vocational schools&#13;
where the student receives perfect training&#13;
along one line." In attempting to give a&#13;
brief answer to this question let us first&#13;
glance at the average boy or girl who&#13;
graduates from our High Schools and&#13;
Preparatory Schools. The average age&#13;
of these students is about 18 years. The&#13;
greater majority have been dependent&#13;
upon the home for support and guidance&#13;
Many also have far fetched, pre-conceived&#13;
ideas along certain lines which are merely&#13;
characteristic of youth. They are at that&#13;
age where their entire life can be swung&#13;
one way or the other by the environment&#13;
within which they are placed. These&#13;
High school graduates, as we see them,&#13;
are full of life and vim ready to jump in&#13;
and make good. Again, and in the great&#13;
majority of cases, they have no idea of&#13;
what to prepare for as they are at an&#13;
irresponsible age and have given practically no thought to their life work. So it is&#13;
for this class of boys and girls that the Liberal Arts College of today means so much.&#13;
The general College course is peculiarly&#13;
adapted to the training of these youthful&#13;
characteristics. The curriculum which is&#13;
composed of a variety of subiects, has a&#13;
broadening effect upon the student, in that&#13;
a certain amount of knowledge is gained&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eig ht een&#13;
&#13;
1915 S I OUX&#13;
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MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Nineteen&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"Should auld acquaintance&#13;
be forgot and never&#13;
brought to mind&#13;
Should auld acquaintance&#13;
be for got and days of&#13;
auld lang syne. ••&#13;
&#13;
Faculty and&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIOE&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,)&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, D. D. P H . D.&#13;
Presiden t&#13;
B ibical Literature&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
&#13;
University&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GAY DOLLIVER. A B&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
Cin cinnati Wesleyan&#13;
Northwestern U ni ver s ity&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
ISABELLA&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STYLES, PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
LOVELAND. A. B.&#13;
&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
P h ysics&#13;
&#13;
Smi t h College&#13;
Oxford University&#13;
&#13;
Kenyon College&#13;
Harvard Un iversi ty&#13;
Sigma X i&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
ii,&#13;
&#13;
FRED&#13;
&#13;
EMO RY HAYNES, PH. D.&#13;
Registrar&#13;
&#13;
Economics&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT A. M.&#13;
Acting Dean of W omen&#13;
Lat i n&#13;
&#13;
S ociology&#13;
&#13;
Harvard Univer sity&#13;
&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan Univer sity&#13;
Col umbia U nivers ity&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
HENRY&#13;
&#13;
F. KANTHLENER,&#13;
Greek&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College&#13;
Harvard Universi t y&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
NEGLEY VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
John Hopkins University ,&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
GRETCHENK. LUTZ, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERTG. CAMPBELL, PH. B&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
French&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College&#13;
Columbia&#13;
University&#13;
&#13;
Albion&#13;
College&#13;
University&#13;
of Il linois&#13;
Delta Gamma&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES&#13;
&#13;
ALMER MARSH,&#13;
&#13;
Public&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
Speaking&#13;
&#13;
New Lyme&#13;
Colum bia College&#13;
&#13;
Institute&#13;
&#13;
Biology&#13;
Ad r ian College&#13;
University f Chicago&#13;
o&#13;
Sigma X i&#13;
Alpha Tau Omega&#13;
&#13;
of Expression&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
C. STEPHENS, A . B. M. D .&#13;
..&#13;
Secretary of Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
,·&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR&#13;
&#13;
A. BROWN,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AUSTIN&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
D e P a u w University&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
&#13;
Illino is Wesleyan&#13;
University&#13;
University&#13;
of Illinois&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
T wenty-four&#13;
&#13;
COSS. M. S.&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADLEY, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
JANET&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Olivet College&#13;
University&#13;
of Michigan&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
M. McDONALD&#13;
A . M.&#13;
Latin&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
University&#13;
of Illinois&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD.&#13;
&#13;
PH. .&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
...&#13;
Expression&#13;
Pillsbury Acade my&#13;
&#13;
Columbia&#13;
&#13;
University of Chi cago&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
BRAND,&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
of Expression&#13;
&#13;
JASON&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Physical Direct or&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Albion College&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Grinnell College&#13;
Library School&#13;
W estern Reserve University&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Physical Director for Women&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin College&#13;
&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Wofford College&#13;
Trinity&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
University&#13;
of Wi sconsin&#13;
Kappa Alpha&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA C. SANBORN&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE CARSON, PH. D.&#13;
History and Politics&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN ALLISON MORSE, A. A. G. 0.&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Pupil of Miss Emma Sage&#13;
Pupil of J . Erich Schmaal&#13;
Rudolph&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
Toronto Co ll ege of Mu sic&#13;
&#13;
Ganz and Fritz Voegely, Berlin&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
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1915&#13;
&#13;
SI OUX&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
PAUL&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
MacCOLLIN, A. B.&#13;
Oberlin&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin&#13;
&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
&#13;
O be rlin Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
N. MacCOLLIN, MUS. B .&#13;
Vo i ce Culture&#13;
&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
CECILBURLEIGH&#13;
&#13;
BAnjoBAnjo,Mandolin, Guitar&#13;
&#13;
Violin&#13;
&#13;
of Music&#13;
&#13;
Music&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
MAEEDITH&#13;
&#13;
WOOD. A . B .&#13;
&#13;
FAITH&#13;
&#13;
FOSTER WOOD FORD , A. B .&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
Mo rnin gs ide Co ll ege&#13;
of Emil Liebling&#13;
Pupil of Alber to Jonas,&#13;
Berlin&#13;
Pupil&#13;
&#13;
*LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
E. ROBERTS,&#13;
A. B.&#13;
Latin&#13;
Io wa Co ll ege&#13;
Wellesley&#13;
Co ll ege&#13;
U ni ve r s ity of Chi cago&#13;
&#13;
*AGNES B. FERGUSON,&#13;
&#13;
A. M.&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Co rnell Co ll ege&#13;
Co lum bia University&#13;
Uni ve rs ity of H eide lberg&#13;
&#13;
*Absen t on leave.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
T wen t y-n i n e&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
EDNA ALLEN&#13;
'' lnfini te riches&#13;
&#13;
AMELIA&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
PIRIE BRIGGS&#13;
LeMars&#13;
"He co uld distinguish an d decide&#13;
A hair 'twixt south and so u t hwest s ide."&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
in a little room.''&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Craig, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE&#13;
&#13;
BRITTON&#13;
&#13;
"A ca ref ul student s h e ha s been.' '&#13;
&#13;
"Hence,&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Lee Barks&#13;
"Time !&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
ADA LOUIE&#13;
"Rare&#13;
&#13;
LOLA GWENDOLYN&#13;
BROWNELL&#13;
"We needn't te ll -&#13;
&#13;
I dare thee to discover such&#13;
&#13;
youth&#13;
&#13;
such&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
com pound of oddity . frolic and&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
joke and&#13;
&#13;
rejoiced&#13;
&#13;
lover."&#13;
&#13;
AUGUSTUS&#13;
"He&#13;
&#13;
fun ,&#13;
&#13;
Who relished&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
his mind.' '&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
HAROLD MARTIN COBBS&#13;
&#13;
S iou x C i ty&#13;
"O n e of those quiet, yet talkative&#13;
dull, yet brilliant. st udi ous. yet lazy&#13;
fellows&#13;
&#13;
BIGGLESTONE&#13;
&#13;
Laurens&#13;
&#13;
MARGIE&#13;
&#13;
t h at&#13;
&#13;
beggar all&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
&#13;
BOWMAN&#13;
&#13;
" O t h ere' s nothing half so sweet&#13;
In life as love's young drea m."&#13;
&#13;
class ifi cat ion."&#13;
&#13;
DOOLITTLE&#13;
&#13;
"I'm sorry for me.&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
of kn ow l-&#13;
&#13;
Yet fo und t h em not so large as was&#13;
&#13;
"Or li g ht or dark or short or ta ll&#13;
S h e se t s a s n a re to catch them a ll. "&#13;
&#13;
HARRY CL IN TON&#13;
&#13;
BRUNELLE&#13;
&#13;
d id t h e utmost bounds&#13;
edge find ,&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
pun."&#13;
&#13;
LAURA LUCILLE BELT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
We liked yo u well-&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
BELEW&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
loath ed melancholy.''&#13;
&#13;
Sibley&#13;
&#13;
I ain'tso awfu l. "&#13;
&#13;
Grove&#13;
JOHN HENRY&#13;
&#13;
ENGLE&#13;
"In&#13;
&#13;
Ainsworth,&#13;
&#13;
Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
love, man lives.''&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
EARL FULLBROOK&#13;
"To kneel at many a shrine,&#13;
Yet lay the heart on none."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
LISLE&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND&#13;
&#13;
HOSFORD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
GIEHM&#13;
&#13;
MYRONOTISINSKO&#13;
&#13;
"ln s ko ! He's&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD&#13;
"He&#13;
&#13;
Springfield, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
" I s it for fear to wet a w idow's eye&#13;
Th at t h ou consum'st thyself in s ing le&#13;
life?''&#13;
&#13;
Knierim&#13;
&#13;
a man for a'that&#13;
&#13;
Moorhead&#13;
&#13;
GORDER&#13;
&#13;
ha s imitators in scores&#13;
&#13;
ERWIN WILLIAM JOHNS&#13;
&#13;
who omit&#13;
&#13;
Kings ley&#13;
&#13;
"And tho· he promi se to hi s loss,&#13;
&#13;
No part of the man but h is wisdom."&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
makes his promise good."&#13;
&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
HAWCOTT&#13;
&#13;
"A fin e. inspired ea rn est ness her&#13;
being fil l s:&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
eage r&#13;
&#13;
se lf&#13;
&#13;
inmost&#13;
&#13;
forgetfu lness&#13;
&#13;
ALICE&#13;
&#13;
speaks not w h at it wil ls."&#13;
&#13;
Plover&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
LULU KLIPPLE&#13;
"Marks,&#13;
h er aim.''&#13;
&#13;
that&#13;
&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
&#13;
JOHN DIMMITT KOLP&#13;
"No&#13;
&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
no t men , have a lw ays been&#13;
&#13;
sin er nor no saint&#13;
&#13;
.J acksonv ille, Ill.&#13;
perhap s,&#13;
&#13;
b u t very best of chaps.'' e l l ,&#13;
well , t h e&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
IDA MAE&#13;
"Hang&#13;
&#13;
Siou x Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
HOOD&#13;
sorrow&#13;
&#13;
care&#13;
&#13;
will&#13;
&#13;
kill&#13;
&#13;
a cat,&#13;
&#13;
Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
"A clever, clashing youth who might&#13;
cut hi s way thro' the world as if it&#13;
&#13;
were a cheese .. ,&#13;
&#13;
ADELLA&#13;
&#13;
LONG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Her&#13;
w ays a re ways of pl easa ntness&#13;
and a ll h er path s a re peace."&#13;
&#13;
So therefore let's be merry."&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR WESLEY HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM ALBERT McCURDY. Two H arbors, Minn.&#13;
''F illing each moment w ith a nobl e act;&#13;
Doing his duty to hi s fel lowmen."&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HORACE PIERCEMORGAN&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
"And what of t hi s boy'! 'Tis hard&#13;
to tell whether he will be a g reat&#13;
a rti st. a vaudeville c lown or a min -&#13;
&#13;
"His&#13;
&#13;
ISOBEL&#13;
LUCILLE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux,&#13;
&#13;
EMMA MORGAN&#13;
leave my ch aracte r behind&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
"Fine peo pl e. like fine deeds,&#13;
trumpets."&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
AUREL&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
''Active&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
s tr o ng&#13;
&#13;
o&#13;
&#13;
labo r . sure&#13;
&#13;
need no&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
LUCIAN&#13;
&#13;
WRIGHT&#13;
Britt&#13;
kn ow you n ot that l am in love?"&#13;
&#13;
"Why&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
ROY HARRISON&#13;
&#13;
McVICKER&#13;
&#13;
rare&#13;
&#13;
universal&#13;
&#13;
GENEVA&#13;
&#13;
WEBB&#13;
doer,&#13;
&#13;
conq ne r ."&#13;
&#13;
"Tis&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
me.' '&#13;
&#13;
"I&#13;
&#13;
ZENANA&#13;
&#13;
Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
VENNINK&#13;
&#13;
h ea r t was in hi s work."&#13;
&#13;
that&#13;
&#13;
respect&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
m an&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
receives&#13;
&#13;
such&#13;
&#13;
admiration."&#13;
&#13;
Kings ley&#13;
&#13;
RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
"Grace wa s in a ll her ste ps.&#13;
Heaven in her eye,&#13;
In eve ry gesture, dignity and love."&#13;
&#13;
Dakota&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
VERN&#13;
&#13;
"True&#13;
&#13;
City, Neb r.&#13;
&#13;
FRED SCHRIEVER&#13;
&#13;
WM. HUNT&#13;
&#13;
as&#13;
&#13;
HULSE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
the dial to the sun."&#13;
&#13;
EISENMAN&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
"0, what m en dare d o! what m en&#13;
may do! wha t me n dai ly do. not kn o w-&#13;
&#13;
ing what t h ey do."&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE&#13;
&#13;
GRACE&#13;
&#13;
R oyal&#13;
&#13;
UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
"Thosedark eyes-&#13;
&#13;
so dark . so cl eep ."&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN BOGARD&#13;
" Bogy"'&#13;
GENEVIEVE&#13;
&#13;
MAE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Athenaenm-Treasurer.&#13;
"Stupid&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Cupid&#13;
&#13;
BALCOM&#13;
&#13;
P ella, I a .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
Vice President&#13;
never ca ll s on&#13;
&#13;
PAUL&#13;
&#13;
me."&#13;
&#13;
BOODAGH&#13;
&#13;
Persia&#13;
&#13;
Uirmia&#13;
&#13;
Ionian-Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
'13, second&#13;
&#13;
in Peace Contest.&#13;
&#13;
" Amba ssado r to be, from lands beyond t h e sea."&#13;
&#13;
SUSIE&#13;
BURGSTAHLER&#13;
"Sue"&#13;
T yndall. S. Dak.&#13;
&#13;
Tyndall&#13;
&#13;
"Serious- almost&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
&#13;
embalmed."&#13;
&#13;
FREDERICK&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
Pierson Hig h&#13;
Pi erson . I a.&#13;
Philo.-Treasurer&#13;
Vice President, Go ld Medal Debate '13. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet· (1) ( 2 ) ( 3) . Glee Cl ub&#13;
(l) (2) (3). Prattle r Club (3) . Vice Presiden t Sl·ate&#13;
Philo. Associa tion. Vice Presiden t Forens ic League,&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Sioux '15.&#13;
"Ea rl once fe ll in love with a. lovely maid .&#13;
And a lovely maid w as she:&#13;
He lovi n gly loved t his lovely maid.&#13;
Now a lovesick&#13;
lover is h e."&#13;
&#13;
Central College&#13;
Philo, Inter-SocietyD ebate '13, Football ' 13, "M"&#13;
Club.&#13;
" Bogy doesn· t like t h e girls:&#13;
He wil l not make a mash,&#13;
For when the girls come flock ing ·round&#13;
Young Bogy makes a dash."&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL MARY COLLIER&#13;
"Cudge"&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Sioux C ity H igh&#13;
Pie ria, S tudent Council, V ice Presid en t Agora, Literary Editor S ioux .&#13;
'· A brilliant s t uden t; i f you don't beli eve it, ask&#13;
&#13;
MARY LOIS CROUCH&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Zet alethean Treasurer&#13;
Collegian Staff, Ex. Boa rd&#13;
Agora, Ch. Girls Ranquet.&#13;
&#13;
' "Like A tlas, sh e seems to bear the w eight of the&#13;
whole world on h e r s h ou lders."'&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE B. COSTAR&#13;
Hawarden High&#13;
Alclester, S . D ak.&#13;
O thon ian&#13;
"A happy lad , whose studies seem to be all&#13;
Wright."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Helen Dorothy Carlson&#13;
CLARENCE TUCKER&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Wilmington Fri ends&#13;
Ionian-Vice&#13;
President,&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Deba te '12-'13, inter-CollegiateDebate '14, Winne,·&#13;
l'ea ce Contest '14, Co ll eg ian Staff. Glee Club, Band .&#13;
' ·All the great men are dying and I don't feel very&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
MARIE ALTA DEVITT&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Zet.-V ice-Pr es id ent. Trea s urer .&#13;
"Sarcastic?&#13;
We ll rather- there is no livin g with&#13;
thee nor without thee."&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT DUNHAM&#13;
"Sleepy''&#13;
Early, Ia.&#13;
Early High&#13;
Otho.- Secretary. Inter-Soc iety Debate ' 13, Coll eg ian Staff. Baseball ' 13, " M" Club, Studen t Employment Manager&#13;
" O what a fusser he'd make if he only had th e&#13;
nerv e."&#13;
&#13;
JAMES&#13;
OLIVE&#13;
&#13;
FAY DARVILLE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
"Ain't I the sp ick and s pan littl e kid ."&#13;
&#13;
HARRY MILLER CLARK&#13;
"Champ"&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Streator, Ill., High&#13;
G lee Club, Student Manager, Class Basketball,&#13;
Sioux Board Artist,&#13;
Yell L eader .&#13;
"A big noi se don e up in a s mall package ."&#13;
&#13;
"Jimmie''&#13;
&#13;
Hot Springs, S. D.&#13;
Ionian . Gold Medal D ebate, Inte r-Society Debate&#13;
(2) (3), Inte r-Co llegiate Debate (3), Sioux Board&#13;
Forensics, Y. M. Cabinet (3), G lee Club (2) (3).&#13;
'' I th ink I s mell s mok e."&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
DAISY ETHEL ENGLISH&#13;
Desmet, S. D.&#13;
'' Night by night sh e sat and bl ea r ed he r eyes with&#13;
books.''&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
ISAA C DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty -three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT&#13;
"Turk"&#13;
&#13;
W est Side, Ia.&#13;
W est Side High&#13;
Philo, Football&#13;
(1) (2) (3) , Basketball (2), Baseball (2) (3), "M" Club. Glee Cu b ( 1 ) ( 2).&#13;
&#13;
"We don't&#13;
&#13;
dare&#13;
&#13;
tell all&#13;
&#13;
we know-the&#13;
&#13;
folks&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
home may see this book."&#13;
&#13;
BURRELL&#13;
&#13;
Omaha High&#13;
&#13;
Otho.-Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Assistant&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Zet . President, Vice Presiclent, Y. W.&#13;
clent .&#13;
&#13;
Vice Presi-&#13;
&#13;
" Yet led a stray by Cupid's Deligh t."&#13;
&#13;
CHRISTINE&#13;
&#13;
EDGAR EVANS&#13;
"beans"&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE IDA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Business&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET HAAS&#13;
"Steen"&#13;
Woodbine&#13;
Morningside A caclern y&#13;
"Dash i t all : I wan t a man."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT&#13;
&#13;
EPHRAIM&#13;
"Herb"&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
Philo&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club Pianist, Chemistry Assistant&#13;
&#13;
"Wise from&#13;
&#13;
the top of his head, up."&#13;
&#13;
EARL LESTER&#13;
"Heavy"&#13;
&#13;
HIETT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Philo,&#13;
Scrubs.&#13;
&#13;
E x.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Board&#13;
&#13;
" H is devious&#13;
&#13;
Vice&#13;
&#13;
( 2 ),&#13;
&#13;
way&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
lined&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
President ,&#13;
like&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
Mississippi&#13;
&#13;
river- by bluffs."&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
RUTH EVA FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
IRENE&#13;
&#13;
IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
"Mibs"&#13;
&#13;
Lake View&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake High&#13;
Zet. Secretary. Agora C lub. Secreta1·y ( 2 ) , Pres iclen t (3), Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2 ) (3 ), Stud ent&#13;
Counci l Vice Presiden t .&#13;
"Can't&#13;
&#13;
sl am her- her "man's"&#13;
&#13;
editing this book."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty -five&#13;
&#13;
1 91 5&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH ANN JAMES&#13;
"Tommy"&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Vice President, Sioux Board, Classes.&#13;
" Three- fifth s of her genuine: two-fifths of her pure&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
MABEL ROSE KING&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
Secretary&#13;
"Mabel said s he'd cut us off her ca lling li st if we&#13;
slammed her. so Here's&#13;
to you Mabel." ''&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
fudge."&#13;
&#13;
OLICE&#13;
&#13;
ALVIRA JONES&#13;
&#13;
Manson&#13;
&#13;
Manson. la.&#13;
Aletheia Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
&#13;
LAURINE .JOHNSON&#13;
"S unset"&#13;
Wall Lake High&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake, Ia.&#13;
Pieria Secretary.&#13;
" With all h er faults we love h er still- th e stiller&#13;
the better."&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET EVA KIFER&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Pie ria Secretary.&#13;
"'Tis well to be off with the old love before you&#13;
are on with the ne w."&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN BLAIR KLINE&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
"His main object in attending Co ll ege is to obtain&#13;
knowledge-how&#13;
funny."&#13;
&#13;
ELLIS VICTOR KUHNS&#13;
Ross vill e, Ind ., High&#13;
Otho Sec reta ry, Inter -Society Debate '13.&#13;
"Still a chance for Herpicide."&#13;
&#13;
Frankfort,&#13;
&#13;
EDITH EHLE LYLES&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Athenaeum , Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
in three years- Help"&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
lnd.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN&#13;
&#13;
HINMAN LEUDER&#13;
"Herm"&#13;
Cherokee lligh&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee, Ia.&#13;
Ionian , Vice President, Inter-Soci e ty Debate '12,&#13;
President Class (1), Student Council, Track (2) (3),&#13;
"M" Club.&#13;
"A worker among men and of women"&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN LAVELY&#13;
Crookston, Minn.&#13;
Upper Iowa-Ce ntral College&#13;
Ionian, Winner of Monument Run '14.&#13;
" Our Mellins Food Boy. "&#13;
&#13;
GUY DOANE McKINNEY&#13;
"Mac"&#13;
&#13;
Ft.&#13;
&#13;
Dodge, Ia.&#13;
Ft. Dodge High&#13;
Othonian , Treasurer Class, Class Basketball , Football (1) (2) (3) , "M" Club, S iou x Board, Jokes&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD L. MORLEY&#13;
Onawa, la.&#13;
Philomathean, Band.&#13;
"He plays to beat the band."&#13;
&#13;
Onawa High&#13;
&#13;
LYDIA EVELYN McCREERY&#13;
Early Ia.&#13;
Early Hi gh&#13;
Atheneaum Yi ce l'rcs id cnt.&#13;
"My home is in heaven; I'm just here on a visit.''&#13;
&#13;
RUTH MIRIAM McCANDLISS&#13;
Hoihow, Hainan,Ch in a&#13;
Atheneaum.&#13;
&#13;
"O sc isso rs, bow you do cut up."&#13;
&#13;
FERN&#13;
&#13;
ISABEL MARQUART&#13;
"S lim"'&#13;
Manson High-Drake&#13;
&#13;
Manson , Ia.&#13;
Aletheia Secretary, Treasurer.&#13;
"Grind, grind, frind,&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE McKENZIE&#13;
Hartington , Neb., High&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Agora Executive Board.&#13;
"You can manufacture blondes but red hair jus t&#13;
comes natural. "&#13;
&#13;
will she never be sharp?"&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE MARGARET METCALF&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
Sioux Board. Societies .&#13;
"Don't&#13;
&#13;
take&#13;
&#13;
my lovin'&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD CHATHAM&#13;
ROLLOCK&#13;
Grand Rapids Mich.&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
Othonian, Glee Club (1) ( 2 ) ( 3 ) .. Sioux Board&#13;
A thlet ics, Assistant in Bio l., Class Basketball ( 1 ) ( 2 )&#13;
93).&#13;
&#13;
man away.''&#13;
&#13;
"A self-made&#13;
ator."&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE MARGARET NEWLAND&#13;
Galva, Ia.&#13;
Galva High&#13;
Picria.&#13;
"The kandy kid."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
man? Yes,&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
PRENTICE&#13;
Al ta High&#13;
&#13;
"She concealed a deal of rowdyism&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL ENGLISH OLSEN&#13;
Sioux City High-Neb.&#13;
&#13;
U.&#13;
&#13;
University and is still a&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM HENRY PAYNE&#13;
"B ill"&#13;
Milnor, N. Dak.&#13;
S to rm Lake, Ia., High&#13;
Othonian. Y. M. Cabinet, Sioux Board, Business&#13;
Manager, Col legian Staff (2), Class Basketball (1)&#13;
(2) (3), Football&#13;
(2) (3), "M '' Club.&#13;
"Busy- aye&#13;
sir-none so busy as t his man , yet&#13;
what ' tis all about ne'er could I tell."&#13;
&#13;
.JOLIN FLETCHER&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mi ch .&#13;
&#13;
beneath a calm&#13;
&#13;
POLLOCK&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. Glee Club ( 2 ) (3).&#13;
"Dainty. of the pink tea va riety-an authority on&#13;
ladies· fashions. and he's going to make i t pay, too."&#13;
&#13;
RALPH&#13;
&#13;
CEDRICPRICHARD&#13;
"Prit''&#13;
&#13;
Hornick,Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
High&#13;
I -Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Acad.&#13;
&#13;
Philo.&#13;
i&#13;
Secretary- Vice Presidentt.&#13;
·· If&#13;
&#13;
buck ing is what&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH&#13;
&#13;
Al ta, la.&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
&#13;
Atheneaum Secretary .&#13;
"Hails&#13;
from Nebraska&#13;
perfect lady."&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
and he worships his cre-&#13;
&#13;
we are&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
t hi s world for&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE BLANCH E ROBINSON&#13;
Sioux City High&#13;
S iou x Ci t y&#13;
At h en ean m P resident, Colle g ian Reporter&#13;
Staff,&#13;
Stude n t Counc il, S ioux Board, Assistan t E d itor .&#13;
'·Ye Gods ! Ann ihilate bu t t ime a nd s pace and&#13;
ma ke t wo lovers ha ppy.''&#13;
&#13;
Sio ux City&#13;
I oni a n Vice&#13;
&#13;
CARL W . H. SASS&#13;
"Whitehead"&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Academy&#13;
President In te r-Society De bate '13,&#13;
&#13;
MABEL LEONA TRENARY&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
Atheneaum&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
"Exercise?&#13;
fast."&#13;
&#13;
W hy I peeled an orange&#13;
&#13;
for break-&#13;
&#13;
CYRIL BRICE UPHAM&#13;
"Uppie''&#13;
Roya l, Ia.&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
P h ilomathean , Si ou x Board. Alumni.&#13;
"One of the members of t h e S ioux Board to whom&#13;
t hi s book will be a del igh tful surprise."&#13;
&#13;
Studen t Council , Forensic L eague President&#13;
&#13;
"Lad ies and gentle me n- and f e llow s t uden ts."&#13;
"Bob"&#13;
&#13;
or "Pinkey"&#13;
&#13;
Hawarden High&#13;
Ot h on ia n , In t er-Collegia te P eace Contest ' 12, Mandolin Orch estra, Y. M. Vice President, P r es iden t Class&#13;
( 2 ), Editor Coll egia n Reporter&#13;
(3), Football ( 1 ) ( 2 )&#13;
(3), T r ack (1) . ( 2 ) . (' lass Basketball ( 1 ) ( 2 ) (3),&#13;
Baseball (2), "M" Club President&#13;
"S low music ?? '??.' '&#13;
Hawarden,Ia .&#13;
&#13;
ELIHU&#13;
Inwood , I a .&#13;
Philo Secretary,&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD&#13;
SHOEMAKER&#13;
'' S hoie''&#13;
I n wood High&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
&#13;
Socia list Club President.&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES SHUMAKER&#13;
"Flossie"&#13;
Morn ingside Aca de my&#13;
&#13;
S io ux City&#13;
Ath en ea u m.&#13;
"I may do some thing sensationa l ye t."&#13;
&#13;
ELINOR&#13;
&#13;
BEATRICE&#13;
" Bee"&#13;
&#13;
WRIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Sio ux Ci ty&#13;
Atheneaum&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
&#13;
Agora&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Ci ty High&#13;
Board,&#13;
&#13;
Execut i ve&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Boa1·d, Calcn cla ,·.&#13;
" She never lets h er studi es in terfere wit h her College education."'&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM&#13;
&#13;
WEDGEWOOD&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT&#13;
" Bi l l''&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Ci ty&#13;
Ot h on ian.&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Board,&#13;
&#13;
Madison,&#13;
Photographer,&#13;
&#13;
S . D ., High&#13;
Mandolin&#13;
&#13;
"The sunshine is red, wh en it shines on h is h ead."&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fif ty- t wo&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1 91 5&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
·1&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nin e&#13;
Fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Special Classes&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
1 91 5&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Macbride Lakeside&#13;
&#13;
LAboratory&#13;
&#13;
Every year more Morningside students attend the Macbride Lakeside Laboratory.&#13;
To the scientifically inclined, the laboratory offers opportunities for pleasurable work&#13;
hard to resist.&#13;
&#13;
Situated high on the shores of Iowa's most beautiful lake, it is surrounded&#13;
&#13;
by a landscape, both varied and interesting-cliffs and sandy shore lines that are bordered by woods, are, in turn, succeeded by morainic hills and upland prairies, with&#13;
here and there an unexpected pond or marshy kettle-hole.&#13;
&#13;
Tiny creeks,&#13;
&#13;
from cool, hillside springs, trickle down wooded ravines to the lake.&#13;
&#13;
the overflow&#13;
&#13;
The lake itself is,&#13;
&#13;
of course, the greatest attraction, whither its deep waters are blue and quiet, or a restless,&#13;
foam-tipped green.&#13;
&#13;
Besides, it is an inexhaustible storehouse of specimens.&#13;
&#13;
The region&#13;
&#13;
surrounding the laboratory, as a whole, presents every type of fauna and flora and&#13;
geological formation to be found in Iowa.&#13;
The laboratory is named in honor of Dr. Thomas H. Macbride, former head of&#13;
the department of Botany at Iowa University, and now its President.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Macbride&#13;
&#13;
personally directs work at the laboratory and his presence there is one of its greatest attractions.&#13;
&#13;
One may never meet a more kindly, scholarly gentleman, nor a more lovable&#13;
&#13;
personality, combined with such wide learning and high scientific attainment.&#13;
The buildings of the laboratory, grouped upon a high wooded cliff at the extreme&#13;
west end of the lake, are only such as are necessary to scientific work, and comfortable&#13;
living during the hot part of the year.&#13;
&#13;
A large H-shaped laboratory with lecture rooms&#13;
&#13;
and offices, and a seven-room cottage are the principal ones.&#13;
&#13;
The cottage is always a&#13;
&#13;
gathering place, because of its big fire-place on chilly days, and wide screened porch on&#13;
hot ones.&#13;
temptation.&#13;
&#13;
The view from this porch is splendid, its hammock and rocking chairs are a&#13;
The students are housed in comfortable tents and bunk houses., The teach-&#13;
&#13;
ing staff-five or six leading professors, selected from Iowa Colleges, have rooms in the&#13;
cottage.&#13;
The students at the laboratory, coming from all the state, present a great variety&#13;
of types and ages.&#13;
congenial group.&#13;
&#13;
However, they have always a love of science in common and form a&#13;
Whether they are teachers learning something of the natural history&#13;
&#13;
of Iowa, or College students of graduate or undergraduate rank, conducting scientific&#13;
research in the field, they may be counted on to stalk a red-eyed vireo in the wet, quiet&#13;
woods in the chill of sunrise, or to chase a rare butterfly up a steep and stony kame in&#13;
the blazing heat of noon, with equal enthusiasm.&#13;
To those who have tasted the zest of life at the laboratory, its summons to return&#13;
come as clearly as the call of the mountains to the mountain born.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Si x ty-thr ee&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
"He that wrestles with us&#13;
strengthens our nerves, and&#13;
sharpens our skill&#13;
"Our antagonist is our&#13;
helper."&#13;
&#13;
Senior Music&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
In February, 1914, the Gymnasium, erected at a cost of nearly $50,000, was&#13;
opened.&#13;
&#13;
The building stands just south of College Hall, facing Morningside avenue.&#13;
&#13;
It is of the modified renaissance type of architecture, constructed of dark brown pressed&#13;
brick, with red tile roof, and is fireproof.&#13;
oak.&#13;
&#13;
The interior woodwork is of quarter-sawed&#13;
&#13;
The building has two stories and an elevated basement.&#13;
&#13;
skylight let in an abundance of light.&#13;
&#13;
The large windows and&#13;
&#13;
It is steam-heated, electric lighted, and well&#13;
&#13;
ventilated.&#13;
The basement is divided into two parts, one for men and the other for women.&#13;
Each part contains a dressing room and locker room, team room and shower room.&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
addition there is a swimming-pool room 26 by 78 feet.&#13;
On the main floor is a large exercise room 60 by 120 feet.&#13;
&#13;
Here are two basket-&#13;
&#13;
ball courts, tennis court, and place for volley ball and indoor baseball.&#13;
&#13;
The apparatus&#13;
&#13;
is abundant and of the best grade, consisting of horses, bucks, parallel bars, vaulting&#13;
bars, steel bars, traveling rings, Indian clubs, jumping standards, spring boards, and&#13;
medicine balls.&#13;
On each side of the entrance is an office room for the physical directors.&#13;
&#13;
On the&#13;
&#13;
second floor, suspended over the exercise room, is a running track, correctly banked,&#13;
covered with cork, eighteen laps to the mile.&#13;
&#13;
Opening off this balcony is the physical&#13;
&#13;
examination room, a trophy room, and a rest room.&#13;
Beginning with the new year physical training will be required.&#13;
&#13;
The work is under&#13;
&#13;
the direction of two competent directors, one for men· and one for women.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
I&#13;
Sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 . SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
A Resume of the Football&#13;
&#13;
Season&#13;
&#13;
The fact that next season's football schedule finds the University of South D akota&#13;
and the University of Nebraska included among Morningside's opponents is a criterion&#13;
of the success which our gridiron warriors achieved in 1913.&#13;
&#13;
The schedule of 1913&#13;
&#13;
was perhaps the heaviest that Morningside ever participated in, yet we were returned a&#13;
winner in five of the seven intercollegiate contests.&#13;
&#13;
The two defeats were administered&#13;
&#13;
by schools of University caliber, one by St. Thomas College, conceded to be the peer&#13;
of Minnesota University, and the other by the Haskell Indians, who had practically tied&#13;
the University of N ebraska, the week previous.&#13;
At the beginning of the season every indication pointed toward the development of&#13;
a team which would eclipse in ability that of any other team in the history of the institution.&#13;
&#13;
The pre-season camp at Blue Lake near Onawa, Iowa, was resumed this year,&#13;
&#13;
and the fact that only four of last year's veterans were lost by graduation augured well&#13;
for success on the gridiron.&#13;
&#13;
The first three collegiate games fulfilled the expectations of&#13;
&#13;
the most sanguine supporters of the Maroons, Yankton, Buena Vista and Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan, were met in succession and decisively defeated.&#13;
&#13;
However, the Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Wesleyan game proved a collusive victory for injuries sustained by Capt. Holbert,&#13;
McCurdy and Behmer, were such as to seriously handicap them in their play during the&#13;
succeeding games.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
BEN. HOLBERT,.JR.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
In the next game St. Thomas, one of the strongest in the West,&#13;
&#13;
overwhelmed the Maroons, but on the following week they came back and defeated the&#13;
fast Simpson eleven.&#13;
&#13;
The next contest was a defeat at the hands of Haskell University,&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence, Kan., but the Maroon showing was entirely satisfactory, considering the&#13;
strength of the visitors.&#13;
&#13;
The season closed with a victory over South Dakota Wesleyan. ·&#13;
&#13;
The success of the team cannot be attributed to any individual players, but such stars as&#13;
Holbert, Vernon, Eiffert and McCurdy formed a nucleus for a great machine.&#13;
&#13;
Too&#13;
&#13;
much praise cannot be given to Coach Saunderson for his untiring efforts and optimism&#13;
in the face of adverse and discouraging conditions.&#13;
Under the guidance of Coach Saunderson and Captaincy of the great player,&#13;
"Turk" Eiffert, any prognostication other than that the coming season will be a great&#13;
success would be unwarranted.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
4-Morningside, 32;&#13;
October 11-Morningside, 31;&#13;
October 18-Morningside, 32;&#13;
October 24-Morningside, O;&#13;
November I -Morningside, 6;&#13;
November 8-Morningside, O;&#13;
November 15-Morningside, 6;&#13;
&#13;
Yankton . ...... 0&#13;
Buena Vista . .. . 0&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan 0&#13;
St. Thomas ... .. 61&#13;
Simpson .. .. . .. . 0&#13;
Haskell Indians .. 28&#13;
D akota Wesleyan. 0&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
Seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"Ben"-The big fullback came to us four years ago.&#13;
No one can discount his ability at playing football.&#13;
&#13;
"Turk"&#13;
&#13;
Morn-&#13;
&#13;
Everyone knows "Turk" because everyone is his friend.&#13;
&#13;
ingside has not had a man on the team who could punt or&#13;
throw a forward pass like Holbert.&#13;
always tending to business.&#13;
&#13;
He has worked consistently at football and has won let-&#13;
&#13;
Ben is a quiet fellow,&#13;
&#13;
ters in baseball and basketball.&#13;
&#13;
For a sure gain thru the line&#13;
&#13;
the quarter called on the big fullback.&#13;
&#13;
in the backfield.&#13;
&#13;
His playing ability&#13;
&#13;
western Iowa, where he made his start in the athletic world.&#13;
Injuries prevented his playing the first year, but rarely&#13;
does a man get by the end now.&#13;
&#13;
In the forward pass he is&#13;
&#13;
the most skillful of all the team.&#13;
&#13;
Vernon has shown him-&#13;
&#13;
self capable of handling other issues in respect to College&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
"Bill"-Appeared on the scene three years ago a&#13;
green country lad.&#13;
&#13;
He was stout and husky so was intro-&#13;
&#13;
duced to football.&#13;
&#13;
He made steady improvement and be-&#13;
&#13;
came qualified for varsity at center.&#13;
worker and d eserves all he gets.&#13;
&#13;
Payne is a hard&#13;
&#13;
He has many friends at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Everybody knows "Red" and is his friend.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGS•IDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
He is a tower of strength&#13;
&#13;
Failure to make a gain when carrying&#13;
&#13;
the ball is rare for him.&#13;
&#13;
brought to his honor the position of captaincy for two years.&#13;
&#13;
"Red"-Vernon came from a little town in North-&#13;
&#13;
once all Morningside students are wise.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
"Mac"-The left tackle who is invincible.&#13;
should have been all western tackle.&#13;
saved many a game.&#13;
man with the ball.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
"Rusty"-The old standby has played varsity for two&#13;
&#13;
His headwork has&#13;
&#13;
years and has proven himself a wonder, being small but&#13;
&#13;
He is always in the play after the&#13;
&#13;
mighty.&#13;
&#13;
This being "Mac's" last year we wish&#13;
&#13;
He is not only good in Athletics, but also in his&#13;
&#13;
studies, using his head in whatever he undertakes.&#13;
&#13;
him success in the game of life.&#13;
&#13;
"Al"-A Freshman this year who demonstrated his&#13;
football ability by guiding the attack of our machine.&#13;
Behmer plays a good quarter-back position and handles the&#13;
ball well on the forward pass.&#13;
&#13;
His fame in the High&#13;
&#13;
"Nordie"-Northrup held down the position of right&#13;
tackle with great skill.&#13;
&#13;
His work stopped any onslaught of&#13;
&#13;
the enemy and was in the midst of every play.&#13;
&#13;
Northrup&#13;
&#13;
School realm as a star quarter-back preceded him, and he&#13;
&#13;
has a few years in school yet and will do his best for old&#13;
&#13;
has made good.&#13;
&#13;
M. C.&#13;
&#13;
We hope he stays with us during his Col-&#13;
&#13;
lege career.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
MOANINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"Bogy"-Bogard came to us this year from Central&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
"Herm"-Koch, who played guard, was the big man&#13;
&#13;
Not only his work on the gridiron, but also in the&#13;
&#13;
that found holes in the line and broke up the enemies' play.&#13;
&#13;
class room has won him the respect and friendship of all.&#13;
&#13;
Quiet, yet always in the game, we find him one of the&#13;
&#13;
We welcome him to our ranks.&#13;
&#13;
silent, yet indispensible parts of an efficient machine.&#13;
&#13;
"Mac"-Was considered one of the fastest ends in&#13;
Northwest Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
His work was par-excellent.&#13;
&#13;
Mac-&#13;
&#13;
Kinney could always be depended upon for making good&#13;
gains.&#13;
&#13;
H e hails from Fort Dodge and has one more year&#13;
&#13;
in which much is expected of him.&#13;
&#13;
Dodging interference&#13;
&#13;
and his nervy tackles has won him a place in the hearts of&#13;
&#13;
"Wright"-The man who hails from Britt, la., played&#13;
both center and guard on the varsity the past year.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
enemy knew of at least one man who would scrap all the&#13;
way with them.&#13;
&#13;
Wright is noted for putting as much&#13;
&#13;
energy into other things as in football.&#13;
&#13;
the students.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Sevent y -seven&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
Seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
CAP. BE N HOLBERT, JR.&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
An intensely interesting game with the University of Hawaii opened the season of&#13;
191 3. Their pre-season advantages gave them the edge on us and they took the long end&#13;
of the score.&#13;
&#13;
But with the five new men showing up well and with the old "pep" we&#13;
&#13;
came back and took four of the five next games played.&#13;
The schedule was somewhat short, due to the fact that Ames and St. Thomas&#13;
cancelled their games and the weather interfered at St. Joe.&#13;
&#13;
Taking into consideration&#13;
&#13;
the cold weather at the beginning of the season and the subsequent lack of early training, the season was pretty successful.&#13;
&#13;
At its close "Rusty" was elected to head next&#13;
&#13;
year's team.&#13;
&#13;
MORN ING SIDE&#13;
Eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
THE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
30-Morningside, 1;&#13;
10- Morningside, 25;&#13;
19-Morningside, 12;&#13;
22-Morningside, 6;&#13;
24-Morningside, 6;&#13;
26-Morningside, 3;&#13;
28-Morningside, 14;&#13;
2-Morningside, 8;&#13;
3-Morningside, O;&#13;
&#13;
Hawaii University . . . . .. . . . ... 7&#13;
0&#13;
Commercial Travelers&#13;
Omaha University . .. ....... . . 10&#13;
South Dakota School of Mines ....&#13;
Le Mars Semi-Pro. .. . . .. . . ... 5&#13;
Le Mars Semi-Pro. ... . . . ..... 5&#13;
Buena Vista ... ......... . ... 1&#13;
Buena Vista . . .. .. .... .... ... 0&#13;
Sacred Heart ... . . .. ... . . . ... 6&#13;
•••&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908 . . .. . . . .. . .. ........ . . ...... 10 :&#13;
0&#13;
220 Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903 ............ .. . .. .......... .. 22 1-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-V. E. Montgomery, 1913 . .. ...... . ... . . .. ..... . 51 4-5&#13;
880 · Yard Run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1909 ... . ......... . .. . ..... 2 :03 2-5&#13;
Mile Run-A. P. Berkstresser, 1908 ..... . .......... .. . . ... . · · 4 :40&#13;
Two Mile Run-L. R. Chapman, 1908 . .......... . ......... . . 10:05&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1910 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
25 2-5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
15 4-5&#13;
High Jump-E. M. Brown, 1906 .. .... . . .. . ......... .. . . ....... 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E. West, 1911 .. . .............. . .. ... .. . .. .. 21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Ben Holbert, Jr., 1912 ... . .. ..... . . ............. · · 39 ft. 1/2 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-£. G. Quarnstrom, 191 1 . . . . ....... . .. .. . ... 121 ft. 3 1/2 in.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
A. C. L E MO N&#13;
&#13;
Discus-D. L. Wickens, 1911 ......... .. . . . . ... ........... · · · · · · 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay- V. E. Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser, E. G. Quarnstrom,&#13;
F. E. Burns, 1909 . .. . ... .... . . . . . .... . .. . .. . ........ . .. 3 :36 2-5&#13;
Two Mile Relay-A. C. Lemon, W. H. Bowker, L. H. Kingsbury,&#13;
V. E. Montgomery, 1912 ...... ... .. . ..................... 8 :28 4-5&#13;
Monument Run-V. Lavely, 1914 . . . ... ..... . . .. . .. . . .. . .. .... 18:01 2-5&#13;
Pole Vault- Herman&#13;
Leuder, 1913 ..... . . ... ................ . . 11 ft. 1 in.&#13;
&#13;
The track season opened with bright prospects, many men working for permanent&#13;
places on the team. Following weeks of hard, consistent training came the home meet,&#13;
which was a decided success. While no fast time was recorded, yet some individual&#13;
showing augured well for the future.&#13;
In the Drake relays our men carried off their share of the honors, and a week later&#13;
copped third place in the old State M eet at Grinnell, on May 1 7. Montgomery won&#13;
the quarter mile at Grinnell in 51 4-5, cutting the College record 1 2-5 seconds. One&#13;
of the most interesting and successful meets occurred on May 30th, Morningside vs.&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan. This being the first time for the schools to meet on the track,&#13;
their strength was an unknown quantity, but W esleyan, however, carried off the honors&#13;
by a narrow margin. A new College record was also established by Leuder in the&#13;
Pole Vault, 11 ft. 1 in.&#13;
The annual Inter-State High School Meet was also a decided success. This is&#13;
one of the big events of the Athletic season and we hope to interest more schools in&#13;
the future.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Eigh t y -n ine&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
DRAKE RELAY TEAMS&#13;
&#13;
Home Meet&#13;
Saturday, April 26, 191 3&#13;
SUMMARY OF EVENTS&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Senior; Lemon, Senior . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
10 :03&#13;
220· Yard Dash-Kingsbury, Senior; Lemon, Senior . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
25 :&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Montgomery, Senior ; Vernon, Soph.. .........&#13;
27:02&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Vernon, Soph.; Montgomery, Senior. . . . . . . . . .&#13;
18 :04&#13;
m&#13;
16 Lb. Shot-Put-Holbert, Jr.; Eiffert, Soph .. .. ... . .... .. .. ... . 34 ft. 7 1/2.&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Sr.; Lemon, Sr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
5 3:&#13;
Mile Run-N. Williams, Freshman; Armbruster, Acd. . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 :01 :03&#13;
Two Mile Run-Deakin, Freshman; Brunelle, Junior .... . ....... . 10:59&#13;
Half Mile-Kingsbury, Senior; N. Williams, Freshman . . . . . . . . . . . 2: 13 :03&#13;
Discus-Vernon, Soph. ; Wickens, Sr ........... .. .. ... ...... 110 ft. 11 1/2 m.&#13;
Broad Jump-Vernon, Soph ; Montgomery, Sr. ... ......... . .. ... 19 ft. 10 m.&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, Soph., and Brown, Acd., tied ................. . . .. 10 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay-Braley, Kingsbury, Lemon, Montgomery, Seniors . . . . . . 3 :52&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Prichard, Wickens, Braley, Montgomery, Seniors. . . 1:40&#13;
&#13;
DrakeRElay&#13;
SUMMARY&#13;
&#13;
Four Mile Relay-Coe, Cornell, Morningside .................... . 19 :51 :04&#13;
One Mile Relay-Hamline, Coe, Brookings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 :31 :04&#13;
One Half Mile Relay-Hamline, Coe, Highland Park. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 :33&#13;
&#13;
Seniors Challenged School&#13;
Seniors 5 3-School 59&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
STATE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Summary, Nebraska Wesleyan Meet&#13;
Sioux City, May 30, 1913&#13;
&#13;
Grinnell, May 17, 1913&#13;
&#13;
10:2&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Werner, W es.; Lemon, M . C . ........... · · · · · · ·&#13;
Mile Run-N. Williams, M. C.; Gillilan, Wes .. ... .. . ...... .. .. ... 4:44:1&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, M. C., and Wilson, Wes., tied ............... 10 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Half Mile Run-Chamberlain, Wes.; Montgomery, M . C ............ 2 :05: 1&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- McCandliss, Wes.; Vernon, M . C .......... . . · .&#13;
16 :4&#13;
High Jump-Wilson, Wes. ; McCandliss, Wes .. ................... 5 ft. 9 in.&#13;
220 Hurdles-McCandliss, Wes.; Montgomery, M. C ....... .... · · · ·&#13;
27 :4&#13;
Broad Jump-Wilson, Wes.; McKinney, M. C ... .......... . ... 20 ft. 9 1/2 in.&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Chamberlain, Wes. ; Lemon, M . C ... ......... · · · ·&#13;
5 4: 1&#13;
Discus-Vernon, M . C.; Wickens, M. C ........... .... .. ..... 114 ft. 11 in.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-McCandliss, Wes.; Werner, Wes .. . ... . . .. . .. · ···&#13;
24:&#13;
Shot-Put-Holbert, M. C.; Johnson, Wes .............. ........ 38 ft. 4 1/2 in.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Werner, Wright, Chamberlain, McCandliss, Neb. Wes. 1 :35:4&#13;
Mile Relay- Wedgewood, King, Montgomery, Braley, M. C .. .... . .. · 3:45&#13;
&#13;
I 00 Yard Dash-Lynch, Grinnell; Wilson, Simpson, Groves, Simpson . . : IO 2-5&#13;
Mile Run-Schulter, I. S. T. C.; Balcar, Coe; Williams, Morningside . . 4:372-5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Clinton, Cornell; Rusk, Simpson; Drier, Des M . . : 16 3-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Montgomery, M. C.; Bailey, Coe; Lemon, Morningside :51 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Lighter, Coe; Lusted, Cornell; Drier, D . M ... ..&#13;
:26 3-5&#13;
Half Mile Run-Mapes, Simpson; Kingsbury, M. C.; McCauley, Coe .. 2 :05 3-5&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Wilson, Simpson; Lynch, Grinnell; Groves, Simpson ..&#13;
:23 4-5&#13;
Mile Relay-Morningside, Cornell, Simpson . ...... ....... .... . .. . 3:38&#13;
Pole Vault-Verink, Coe; Leuder, M. C.; Miller, Simpson, Fearing,&#13;
I. S. T. C. ; W ellits and Winters, Grinnell, tied for third . .... ... . . 11 ft. 1 in.&#13;
High Jump-Drier, Des M.; Jones, Grinnell; Verink, Coe; tied for second . . 5 ft. 8 in.&#13;
Discus-Knapp, Coe; Rusk, Simpson; Marquardt, Grinnell .... . ... 121 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Shot-Put-Verink, Coe; Holbert, M. C.; Hunter, Grinnell, and Wilson,&#13;
Simpson, tied for third . ........... . . . .. .. . .... .. .. . .. ... 39 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run-McGuire, Coe; Griffen, H. P.; Deakin, Morningside .. 10:43 3-5&#13;
Broad Jump-Jones, Grinnell; Clinton, Cornell; Lighter, Coe and Middleton, Grinnell, tied for third . . .. ......... . .. . . . .......... . 20 ft. 11 m.&#13;
Summary-Coe, 33 5-6; Simpson, 24 1/2;Morningside, 23; Grinnell, 21 5-6 ;&#13;
Cornell, 15; Des Moines, 7; Highland Park, 6; I. S. T. C., 5 1/2&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan, 61;&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, 45&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Inter-State High School Meet is held each year under the management of the&#13;
This gives Morningside a chance to see the best High School Athletes&#13;
from the three surrounding states in action-a large array of medals equal to those given&#13;
at any meet of its kind are put up. They include gold, silver, and bronze medals&#13;
for the winners in the first three events, together with individual silver loving cups for&#13;
the members of winning relay teams. The three cups offered are: The Tribune Cup, the&#13;
Palmer Cup, and the Philo Society Cup. The Philo Society cup is put for the school&#13;
that wins the mile relay-this must be won for three years for permanent ownership.&#13;
Cherokee High School and Sioux City High School have each been able to affix their&#13;
signatures to the cup twice, insuring great competition between the schools at the next&#13;
meet for its final possession.&#13;
Last year despite of the cold, dismal day that Nature had provided for the meet,&#13;
a large crowd assembled on the bleachers to see the young athletes perform. The competition between the leading schools was very strong. It was not until the last event had&#13;
been pulled off that the winner of the meet was decided. It is safe to say that if the&#13;
track had been fast, and a favorable day provided by Nature, many old records of&#13;
previous meets would have been broken.&#13;
&#13;
"M" Club.&#13;
&#13;
INTER-ST ATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
May 10, 1913&#13;
100 Yard Dash-French, Hawarden; Hart, LeMars; Hilker, Paullina . .&#13;
: 11&#13;
Mile Run-Elannery, Elk Point; Kraber, LeMars; H. Gregg, Hawarden . 5 :06 :03&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Hawarden, Sioux City, Paullina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 :42 :03&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Dubel, Sioux City; Hornney, LeMars; Sedgwick, S. C.&#13;
: 18 1-5&#13;
440 Yard Run-Wilson, Cher.; Bender, LeMars; Sedgwick, S. C . . . . . .&#13;
:5 7 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Dubel, S. C.; Nearman, Elk P.; Walrod, Hawarden.&#13;
:28 4-5&#13;
Half Mile Run-Knapp, Sunnyside; G. Omer, Paullina; Smith, Cher. . . . 2 :22 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Rust, Elk Point; Beard, Hawarden; French, Hawarden .&#13;
:24 4-5&#13;
Mile Relay-Sioux City, Haward en, Storm Lake. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3: 5 7&#13;
Pole Vault-Leuder, Cher.; Taylor and Holems, Storm L., tied for 2d . . .. . . . 10 ft.&#13;
High Jump-Hart, LeMars; Osterman and Russell, Fonda; Paulson,&#13;
Vermillion ; tied for second .. . ........... . .. . .. . . .. ... .. . .. 5 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Taylor, Pomeroy; Dubel, S. C.; Hilker, Paullina . . .. .. . 19 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus-Paulson, Vermillion; R. Harrington, Paullina; T roeger, Storm L. 100 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Shot-Put-Paulson, Vermil.; Troeger, Storm L.; D. Gregg, Hawarden 41 ft. 5 1/2 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Paulson, Vermillion; Rust, Elk Point; D. Gregg, Hawarden 145 ft.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY :-Sioux City, 22; Hawarden, 21 ; LeMars, 17; Vermillion, 16 1-3;&#13;
Elk Point, 16; Cherokee, 10; Paullina, 9; Pomeroy, 9; Storm Lake, 6; Sunnyside, 5;&#13;
Fonda, 2 2-3 ; Kingsley, 1.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
N inety-four&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
1 915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
LAVELY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Cross Country Run&#13;
&#13;
This branch of Athletics was added in 1906, the course being to and from the&#13;
Floyd Monument, a distance of two and four-fifths miles.&#13;
&#13;
Since that time it has become&#13;
&#13;
one of the most popular events of the year, twenty to thirty entering.&#13;
&#13;
It is the custom&#13;
&#13;
to hold the race on the 22d of February, regardless of the weather conditions.&#13;
Four medals are given, the· first man receiving a gold medal; second, silver, and&#13;
the third, bronze; also a gold medal is given to the first Academy man finishing.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
medals are given by Fred Trimble of the class of 1911 .&#13;
&#13;
In 1906 the race was won by Chapman, who held the state record in the twomile event for several years.&#13;
&#13;
The next three years Berkstresser won, finishing in 20:50&#13;
&#13;
in 1907; 20:5 in '08, and 19:5 in '09, which record stood until 1911.&#13;
&#13;
Bob Smylie&#13;
&#13;
was returned winner in 1910 and in 1911 Montgomery returned in 18 :46.&#13;
was the first Academy man to win the gold medal.&#13;
&#13;
year by Lavely a Junior, who covered the course in 18 : 1 :3 .&#13;
the old record.&#13;
&#13;
C. Huck&#13;
&#13;
A new record was established this&#13;
Four men finishing under&#13;
&#13;
Knapp was the first Academy man in winning fifth place.&#13;
&#13;
Training&#13;
&#13;
for the race starts in the fall and continues through the year.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
"Let every man beoccupied, and occupied in the&#13;
highest employment of which&#13;
his nature is capable, and die&#13;
with the sonsciousness he&#13;
that&#13;
has done his best."&#13;
-Sidney Smith&#13;
&#13;
"VI NCE"&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred one&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest&#13;
For a long time it has been felt that Forensics at Morningside were in a rather disorganized condition.&#13;
&#13;
took care of the various Forensic events.&#13;
&#13;
The Oratorical League, the Prohibition Asso-&#13;
&#13;
ciation, the Peace Association, the Inter-Society Committee; these four separate organizations formerly had control of their respective fields, which were not very clearly defined.&#13;
&#13;
Last fall there was organized what is to be henceforth known as the Forensic&#13;
&#13;
League.&#13;
&#13;
November 7, 1913&#13;
&#13;
This was on account of the multiplicity of organizations which&#13;
&#13;
It will have charge of all Forensic events taking place in the school.&#13;
&#13;
Roy H. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
The Heart of America, Second&#13;
&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Coming Day, Third&#13;
&#13;
R. L. Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
Our Present Judicial Oligarchy&#13;
&#13;
Walter Symonds&#13;
&#13;
It is com-&#13;
&#13;
posed of three men from each of the men's societies, and three Faculty members.&#13;
&#13;
Under&#13;
&#13;
its unified regime, Morningside Forensics, we are sure, are to come forth to greater and&#13;
more permanent leadership.&#13;
&#13;
The Invisible Government, First&#13;
&#13;
State Oratorical Contest&#13;
Des Moines, March 6, 1914&#13;
Morningside was awarded sixth place in the finals.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE&#13;
&#13;
R. L. MITCHELL&#13;
&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
Home Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
R. L. Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
The Coming Day, First&#13;
&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
T he Issue of Today, Second&#13;
&#13;
Myron Insko&#13;
&#13;
Individual R esponsibility, Third&#13;
&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
Our Imperiled Democracy&#13;
&#13;
C. Albertson&#13;
&#13;
Modern Reformation&#13;
Morningside was awarded Second Place in the State&#13;
&#13;
Home Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
Inevitable Peace, First&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
&#13;
A Plea for International Peace&#13;
&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
&#13;
Morningside was awarded Fifth Place in the State&#13;
Peace Oratorical Contest.&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
On e hundred f our&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred five&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
StOUX&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1900-J. A Davies .. .. .. ... ... . .. .. Ninth&#13;
1901-H. A Keck . . . . . .. .... .. . .. Seventh&#13;
1902- A. R. Toothaker ... ... . . .. ... Eliminated on thought&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall ........... ...... Fourth&#13;
1904- R. E. Heilman ... ..... .. . . . . .&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer ... ... .. .. .&#13;
1906- A. G. Cushman .. ... . ..... . . .&#13;
1907-A. G. Cushman . . .... .. ... . .. Fifth&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer ... ... . . ... . Second&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer . . .. .. ..... . First; Interstate, Eighth&#13;
191 0-H. S. Hamilton ... .. ... .. . .. . Second&#13;
1911-F. P . Johnson .. . ... . .... ... . Second&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson ...... . . .. .... . . Second&#13;
1913-F. P. Johnson ... .... . ... .. ... Second&#13;
1914- R. H. McVicker. . . .. . .. . . .. .. Sixth&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch ... ... .. ... . ... First; Interstate, First; National , Third&#13;
1902-J. N. H. McCay .... .... . ... Second&#13;
1906-C. D . Horner ... ...... .. .. . .Third&#13;
1907-lda Lewis .. .... .... ... . .. . Fifth&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett ..... . .. . .. .. . Third&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill. . . ... . . . . . ... . . Second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson .. ... . . ... . . ... First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1911-W. A McCurdy .. ...... . .. . Sixth&#13;
1912-C. E. Smith .. .. . ... .... .. .. Fifth&#13;
191 3-J. L. Ralston ...... . . .... . . Third&#13;
191 4-R. L. Mitchell .. ... . . ....... Second&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson . .... . .... . .. . . First&#13;
191 2-R. R. Vernon .......... . . .. . Fifth&#13;
191 3-D. L. Wickens . . .. . .. ... . . . . . First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1914-C. T. Craig ..... . .. . .. . .. . . . Fifth&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker University 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2,&#13;
191 l-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2. Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, M orningside 2. Dakota Wesleyan 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
Iowa State Teachers 3, Morningside 0. Iowa State Teachers 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
191 3-lowa State Teachers 2, Morningside 1. Coe 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
six&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
H&#13;
G&#13;
A&#13;
R&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, April 11 , 191 3&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
K&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE TEACHERS' COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
K&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
u&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That Federal Legislation be&#13;
enacted, embodying the Principles of the&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Industrial Accident Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Law, for the compensation of Industrial&#13;
Accidents in the United States. Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeM&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
N&#13;
T&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
M&#13;
E&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
I. S. T. C.&#13;
DECISION&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
seven&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That State Commissions having power to fix Minimum Wage Scales&#13;
should be established in the several States.&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
December 1, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Coe, April 11, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
G&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
&#13;
COE&#13;
&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
December 2, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
E&#13;
V&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That Federal Legislation be&#13;
December 3, 1913&#13;
&#13;
enacted, embodying the P.rinciples of the&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
Industrial Accident&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Law, for the compensation of Industrial&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
Negative 5&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 0&#13;
&#13;
Accidents in the United States. Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Academy Inter-Society Debate&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
L&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
December 4, 1913&#13;
&#13;
Coe&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That the Panama Canal should be neutralized.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
Negative&#13;
&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
NEGATICE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter-Society Debaters&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fourteen&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fifteen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Y.M.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
A. Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
L. L. WRIGHT&#13;
R. R. VERNON&#13;
JAMES I. DOLLIVER&#13;
F. E. BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Lake Geneva&#13;
To attend at least one Student Conference at Lake G eneva, is one of the ambitions&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker ... . ... .. ............ . . ...... .. ... . .. . .. .. Bible Study&#13;
R. R. Vernon ... ... .. . ..... ·. .. . .. ... .. . . ......... .. . . ..... Devotional&#13;
L. 0 . Ginerich .. . ..... . ....... .. .. ..... .. ... ...... .. .. .. .. Missionary&#13;
C. T. Craig .. .. .... ... ... ... ...... ........ . .. . .......... Membership&#13;
R. W . Henderson . . .. .. . .... ......... ... ..... . .. .. . .. . . ...... Finance&#13;
W. H. Payne . . . .. .. . . ... . . .... .. .... . ...... . ....... . . Personal Work&#13;
W. A. McCurdy . .. .. . . ..... ... ... . .. . ...... .. ... . . ... ..... Extension&#13;
C. T. Craig .... . .. ... . . .. .. ... .. .. . . . . . .. ..... . ... .. . .. New Students&#13;
V . W. Hornney ... .... .. . ....... ..... . ... . . . .. .... .. ...... , . · · Social&#13;
&#13;
of almost every College M an in the middle west, and especially those interested directly&#13;
in Christian work.&#13;
The inspiration gained thru contact with other College men and the great life&#13;
work addresses by big men of all walks of life, give one a vision of the world as never&#13;
before, and he goes away deepened intellectually, and spiritually, facing his opportunities to serve the world and Jesus Christ with renewed life and power.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Y. . C. A. Cabinet&#13;
W&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
NELLIE UPHAM&#13;
ALICE KLIPPEL&#13;
LULU HAWCOTT&#13;
ELSIE JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
Edna Allen . . .... . .. . .... . . .. ...... . . ........ .. . .... . .... Bible Study&#13;
Olive Hartzell .... ... ... .. . ......... . .. .... ... ..... . . ... . .. Devotional&#13;
Mabel Irwin ................. . .. . . .... . ........ .. . . .... . ... . , . Social&#13;
Ruth McCandliss ... .. .. .. . . . . ........ .. .... . ... .. ... . ... .. . , Missions&#13;
Loleta Wood .. . ....... . . .. .. . . . ... ... . . . . .. . . ... . . . . .. . Social Service&#13;
Florence Bull ...... . . ............. . . . . ..... . ..... . .. . Association News&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
eighteen&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian Reporter&#13;
It is the College newspaper.&#13;
&#13;
It is published by the students.&#13;
It tells all the College news weekly.&#13;
It is the official all-round College booster.&#13;
&#13;
It boosts always for healthy student sentiment.&#13;
It boosts for real College spirit in victory or defeat.&#13;
&#13;
It tells the truth, the whole truth, and sometimes a little more.&#13;
&#13;
It causes many merry peals of laughter by causing moans of distress.&#13;
It does this through the department called Sandburrs ( on page 7), By Gum.&#13;
Incidentally, it is the best, the livest, the literaryest, the rippingest College paper in&#13;
the west.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Agora Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
P resident&#13;
&#13;
MABEL IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Student Council&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED&#13;
&#13;
The life of any College is made up by the presence of a Student Body and Student&#13;
Sentiment.&#13;
&#13;
Vice P resident&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL COLLIER&#13;
&#13;
TAC KABERRY&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
LAURA ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
Realizing the need of harmonious thought and action these two factors were&#13;
&#13;
crystallized into what is known as the Student Council.&#13;
tives of all classes and walks of College life.&#13;
&#13;
In its make-up are representa-&#13;
&#13;
The wisdom of thus organizing our Student&#13;
&#13;
Body is evidenced by the successful year · thru which we have just passed.&#13;
&#13;
Working&#13;
&#13;
with the Faculty for Morningside's best interests, it has assumed the management of such&#13;
student activities as class scraps, games, and holiday celebrations, which have been systematically and successfully carried on.&#13;
&#13;
Through its efforts a series of life work talks&#13;
&#13;
have been given during the chapel hour, and many other activities relative to College life&#13;
have been under their jurisdiction.&#13;
&#13;
Let us not under-estimate the value of our Student&#13;
&#13;
To the girls of Morningside College the Agora&#13;
second year of its existence, already is rich with meaning.&#13;
&#13;
Club,&#13;
&#13;
tho&#13;
&#13;
only in the&#13;
&#13;
It suggests a common meeting&#13;
&#13;
ground where all the interests of the women students are duly considered and the spirit&#13;
of democracy prevails.&#13;
The carefully laid plans are promptly executed and result in delightful social&#13;
gatherings, entertaining and instructive talks on social observances, conducted excursions&#13;
to points of interest, and healthful sports for the athletic girl, all of which not only&#13;
enrich the lives of the girls but bind them together in loyalty to Our College.&#13;
&#13;
Council in our boost for a Greater Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
Student-Manager&#13;
&#13;
WM. McCuRDY&#13;
WESLEY HENDERSON&#13;
PAUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
Claire Lawton&#13;
Harold Gorder&#13;
Delbert McKinney&#13;
Wm. MacDonald&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
Arthur Johnson&#13;
Myron Insko&#13;
Samuel Deakin&#13;
Augustus Brunelle&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
Harold Pollock&#13;
Mitchell Briggs&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Fletcher Pollock&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
Merrill Stevens&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
&#13;
Herbert French, Pianist.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred twenty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
1 915&#13;
&#13;
&gt;&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Mandolin Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
JOHN KOLP&#13;
ALICE KLOEK&#13;
C. A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
FIRST MANDOLIN&#13;
Mr. Templeman&#13;
Wm. Wedgewood&#13;
Alice Kloek&#13;
&#13;
SECOND MANDOLIN&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
Horace Morgan&#13;
Bessie Howell&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT VERNON&#13;
HORACE MORGAN&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
MANDOLA-John Kolp&#13;
MANDO-CELLO-Mrs. Templeman&#13;
MANDO-BAss-Robert V ernon&#13;
GUITAR-Verna Comoli&#13;
PIANO-Irene Chapin&#13;
Reader&#13;
Cartoonist&#13;
Accompanist&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Mandolin Club was organized two years ago by Prof. Charles&#13;
A. Templeman. Its success has been phenomenal, the title "Best in the West, " clearly&#13;
defines its position with similar organizations in the middle west, where it is the first club&#13;
to introduce correct Mandolin orchestral instrumentation.&#13;
Large and appreciative&#13;
audiences greeted them on the concert tour, both at Christmas and Easter Vacations,&#13;
when they visited Onawa, Mapleton, Ida Grove, Sac City, Sanborn, Paullina, and other&#13;
towns. It has become one of the leading Musical organizations of the College and is a&#13;
worthy representative of our Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hu n dred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred t w enty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Band&#13;
EDWIN GOULD&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
R. HARRINGTON&#13;
CLIFFORD REIKE&#13;
FRANCIS BoNDHUS&#13;
&#13;
Personnel of the "M" Club&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
CORNET&#13;
Stevens&#13;
Reike&#13;
Phelps&#13;
Starr&#13;
Robertson&#13;
&#13;
ALTO&#13;
Wallen&#13;
Rippey&#13;
J. Kolp&#13;
Beebe&#13;
SAXAPHONE&#13;
Harrington&#13;
&#13;
TROMBONE&#13;
Gorder&#13;
Hicks&#13;
Kettle&#13;
Johnson&#13;
PICCOLO&#13;
Craig&#13;
&#13;
CLARINET&#13;
Morley&#13;
Bondhus&#13;
&#13;
TUBA&#13;
Gould&#13;
&#13;
DRUMS&#13;
Payne&#13;
&#13;
Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Clad in Maroon and White, our infant stepped forth this year, forever banishing our&#13;
dream of a Band, leaving it in the stern world of reality. Upon its present basis, however, we do not fear for a successful career. Arousing spirit and enthusiasm as no&#13;
one else can, it has been a dominant influence on the campus, in all our student activities.&#13;
We of the student body thoroughly appreciate the fidelity and hard work of&#13;
the men, also the able leadership of Prof. Templeman, that has made our Band such&#13;
a success, and heartily pledge them our support.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Herman Bogard&#13;
A. L. Behmer&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Herman Koch&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Guy McKinney&#13;
&#13;
Wm. Payne&#13;
Robert R. Vernon&#13;
Paul Weatherby&#13;
Lucian Wright&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Earl Williams&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
&#13;
Howard Allen&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs&#13;
Herbert Dunham&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Samuel Deakin&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
Herman Leuder&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
Noel Williams&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Student Volunteer Band&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
MYRON&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
INSKO&#13;
&#13;
TRACIA BREGMAN&#13;
ALICE DEWEY&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
Paul Boodgah&#13;
Wm. McCurdy&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman&#13;
Samuel Deakin&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
&#13;
Myron 0. Insko&#13;
Tracia Bregman&#13;
Alice Dewey&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Cyrus Albertson&#13;
John Engle&#13;
&#13;
In July, 1886, two hundred and fifty-one student delegates, representing eighty-nine&#13;
different Universities and Colleges, met at Mt. Herman, Massachusetts, in a conference&#13;
and the Student Volunteer Movement was formed at that meeting. Since then over five&#13;
thousand students of North America have gone out as Student Volunteers under the&#13;
regular missionary societies to the foreign mission fields. The local Volunteer Band was&#13;
installed in Morningside College in 1900. Since then about twenty students have gone&#13;
to foreign lands. Morningside has representatives in South America, Korea, India,&#13;
China, Japan, and several other countries. The present membership of the band is eleven.&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
VICTOR&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
ELLIS KUHNS&#13;
CYRIL UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
The local Association is affiliated with the National Association, and has as its&#13;
purpose the study of the Liquor Traffic, its degrading influence upon the nation, and such&#13;
remedies as may seem best able to combat and remove it from the land. It is hoped&#13;
that by interesting college men and sending trained leaders into the field that this accursed&#13;
traffic may be banished forever.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundr ed thi rty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Organized November 1 1, 189 7&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Scarlet and Black&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Esse Quam Videre (To be rather than to seem)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ...... · .. EDNA SIMON&#13;
MABEL PECAUT&#13;
Vice President ... . LORNA DISTAD&#13;
OLIVE HARTZELL&#13;
Secretary ...... ... .ELLA CAMPBELL&#13;
ELEANOR WINKLEMAN&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. . . . H ELEN WEDGEWOOD MARIE D EVITT&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ADA BELEW&#13;
MARIE DEVITT&#13;
MABEL IRWIN&#13;
DORA CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS HIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Mabel Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
Ada Belew&#13;
]UNIORS&#13;
Dora Carlson&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Mabel Irwin&#13;
&#13;
Mabel King&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Olive Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth James&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
Anna Williams&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Mary Wedgewood&#13;
&#13;
Anna Mae Evans&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Lovice Strobel&#13;
&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman&#13;
Alice Thornberg&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Marie Sebern&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Franees Martin&#13;
Helen Warfield&#13;
&#13;
Vera Lunbom&#13;
Ethel Coomer&#13;
&#13;
PLEDGES&#13;
Mina Lynch&#13;
&#13;
Louise McGraw&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Pettit&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Calendar&#13;
April I 2-0tho reception to Zets.&#13;
April 2 1-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
April 28-Zet Grand Public.&#13;
May 3-Zets entertained by Gazettes.&#13;
May 12-0tho Breakfast.&#13;
May I 7- Zet Hen Party.&#13;
May 2 1-Pi' s entertain us.&#13;
M ay 30-Zet Talbot Farm Picnic.&#13;
June I 0-Reunion.&#13;
October 4-Barlow Hall Party.&#13;
October 16- Tally-ho Ride.&#13;
October 18-Reception for "Pledges."&#13;
O ctober 20-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
October 25-Zet Open Door.&#13;
November 10-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
D ecember 13-X-mas Party.&#13;
D ecember 15- Zet Reception for Otho D ebaters.&#13;
January 24-Closed Door Program on England.&#13;
February 28-Public Initiation.&#13;
March 2-Zet-Otho Joint.&#13;
March 7-Closed Door Program on Scotland.&#13;
March 4-Athenaeums Entertain Us.&#13;
M arch 2 1- Zet Spring Opening.&#13;
March 2 7-lnstallation of Officers.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Organized November 7, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in Re (Gentle in Manner, Resolute in Deed)&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
President .. ..... .H. C. BIGGLESTONE&#13;
Vice-President ... L. L. WRIGHT&#13;
Secretary ....... S. B. REYNOLDS&#13;
Treasurer ....... H. A. Go RD ER&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
W. A. McCuRDY&#13;
]. D. KOLP&#13;
LYSLE HOSFORD&#13;
H. A. GORDER&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
C. L. BARKS&#13;
H. A. GORDER&#13;
N. L. WILLIAMS&#13;
H. L. DUNHAM&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
L. R. Hosford&#13;
H. A. Gorder&#13;
&#13;
J. D. Kolp&#13;
H. C. Bigglestone&#13;
W. A. McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
H. P. Morgan&#13;
L. L. Wright&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
W. B. Costar&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
H . L. Dunham&#13;
&#13;
G. D. McKinney&#13;
B. E. Evans&#13;
W. H. Payne&#13;
H. C. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
J. F. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
W. A. Wedgewood&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
L. 0. Gingerich&#13;
S. B. Reynolds&#13;
N. L. Williams&#13;
&#13;
C. V. Lawton&#13;
B. W. Riner&#13;
P. H. Woodke&#13;
&#13;
G. B. Patrick&#13;
P. C. Weatherby&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
K. H. Burdick&#13;
R. Dott&#13;
] . R. Kolp&#13;
M. E. Stevens&#13;
E. W. Curry&#13;
M . R. French&#13;
&#13;
D. C. McKinney&#13;
H. D. Strobel&#13;
W . R. Cottam&#13;
M . G. Irwin&#13;
H. A. Reyman&#13;
W. P. Symonds&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
E.&#13;
E.&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
J. Walton&#13;
&#13;
R. Williams&#13;
&#13;
E. Hicks&#13;
L. Williams&#13;
C. T. Williams&#13;
Chas. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Calendar&#13;
April 12, 1913-R eception to Zets.&#13;
April 21 , 191 3-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
May 12, 191 3-0tho Breakfast to Zets.&#13;
May 21 , 191 3-Final Debate of G old Medal Series.&#13;
June 2, 191 3-Graduating Exercises.&#13;
June 11 , 19 13-Reunion.&#13;
October 3, 191 3-Annual Otho Stag.&#13;
October 4, 1913-Zets Entertain Othos at Barlow H all.&#13;
November 10, 1913-Zet-Otho P rom.&#13;
December 2, 1913-Inter-Society Debate with Philos.&#13;
December 3, 1913- Inter-Society Debate with lonians.&#13;
December 10, 191 3- G old Medal Men's Banquet at the West.&#13;
December 15, 191 3-Zets Entertain Othos at Crouche' s.&#13;
February 7, 191 4-Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
March 2, 191 4-Joint Closed Door in the H all.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirt y -nin e&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Organized October&#13;
&#13;
4, 1908&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
Mollo&#13;
&#13;
Feliciler, Fortiter, Fideliter (Happy, Brave, Faithful)&#13;
&#13;
OFFIC ERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ........ JEAN wHITTEMORE&#13;
Vice-President .... EDNA ALLEN&#13;
Secretary .. ..... . .MARGARET KIFER&#13;
Treasurer ........ CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
LAURA BELT&#13;
BERNICE BOWMAN&#13;
ELSIE JOHNSON&#13;
LUCILE MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
HELEN GIEHM&#13;
LOLA BROWNELL&#13;
LUCILE METCALF&#13;
RUTH BAILEY&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Edna Allen&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Bernice Bowman&#13;
&#13;
Lola Brownell&#13;
Helen Giehm&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Morgan&#13;
Zenana Osborn&#13;
Nellie Upham&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
Elsie Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Kifer&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Metcalf&#13;
Katherine Newland&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ruth Bailey&#13;
Ethel Brown&#13;
Frances Craig&#13;
Marion Simme&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Helen Laub&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Florence Bull&#13;
Margaret Lockin&#13;
Marion Metcalf&#13;
Harriet Newland&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ruth Blackman&#13;
Marion Davis&#13;
Gladys Horn&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Manley&#13;
Doris Struble&#13;
&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Cornelia McBurney&#13;
Laura Robinson&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Pieria Calendar&#13;
April 19, 1913-Grand Public.&#13;
April 26, 19 I 3-Kitchen Shower.&#13;
May 17, 1913-Pi Closed Door Program and Spread.&#13;
May 24, 1913-Dinner at Ethel Collier's.&#13;
May 28, 1913-I's entertain P's on UP-River Trip.&#13;
June 9, 1913--Pieria Picnic at Talbot's.&#13;
June 10, 191 3- Senior Breakfast.&#13;
June 10, 191 3-Re-union.&#13;
June 12-26, 1913-Pieria Camp at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 3, 19 13-Ionian-Pieria Party at Ionian House.&#13;
September 4, 19 13-Dinner at Shoreacre Club.&#13;
October 4, 1913-Birthday Party.&#13;
October 10, 191 3- I' s to P's a Wienie Roast Gave.&#13;
October 11, 191 3-Taffy Pull at Belt's.&#13;
October 17, 191 3-Coonville Wedding at Craig's.&#13;
October 18, 191 3-Reception for Pledges.&#13;
November 1, 191 3-I's entertain P's at Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
November 19, 1913- Dutch Tea for Ladies of the F acuity.&#13;
December 3, 191 3- Japanese T ea.&#13;
December 13, 1913-Progressive Dinner for Ionian Debaters.&#13;
December 15, 191 3-X-mas Party.&#13;
January 24, 19 14-Mother Goose Party.&#13;
January 31, 19 14-Joint Masquerade Party.&#13;
February 23, 1913- Joint Washington Party.&#13;
February 28, 19 14- F ormal Initiation.&#13;
March 4, 191 4-Athenaeums Entertain.&#13;
March 4, 19 14- I's and Pi's entertained at Moore's.&#13;
April 5, 191 4-Stunt Night.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty- three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Organized January 6, 1909&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Possuntqoud Cred ere Possunt (They are able because they believe)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
P resident ..... R. H. G ARLOCK&#13;
V ice-P res ident . E. S . FuLL BROOK&#13;
Secretary ... .. HOWARD ALLEN&#13;
Treasurer ... . . R. H . HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
E . S . FULLBROOK&#13;
CLARENCE CRAIG&#13;
WALTER HELD&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
AUGUSTUS BRUNELLE&#13;
HERMAN LUEDER&#13;
RAYMOND HARRINGTON&#13;
CLARENCE CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
S ENIORS&#13;
Augustus Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
&#13;
Earl Fullbrook&#13;
&#13;
JUNI ORS&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
Herman Lueder&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Carl Sass&#13;
&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
Vivien Lavely&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Howard Allen&#13;
Harrison Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Charles Berkstresser&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Lindsey&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Al Behmer&#13;
Raymond Harrington&#13;
St. C lair Moore&#13;
Donald Van Horn&#13;
&#13;
Calvin Besore&#13;
Alvin Hilker&#13;
Harold Masters&#13;
&#13;
C. Schon&#13;
Edwin Gould&#13;
Charles Hutton&#13;
Arthur Payne&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-five&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
April 7-Second Semi-Final Debate.&#13;
May 3-Pierias entertain.&#13;
May 28-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 2-Final Gold-Medal Debate.&#13;
September 26-lonian Rush Stag.&#13;
October 24-Pi Birthday Party.&#13;
October 28-Stag at Masters.&#13;
November 1-Hallowe'en Party to Pi's.&#13;
November 6-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
1-Beat the Philos.&#13;
&#13;
December 3-Beat the Othos.&#13;
December 11 --Semi-Final Debate.&#13;
December 13-Pi Reception to Debaters.&#13;
January 22-First Preliminary Extempo Series.&#13;
January 3 1-Joint Masquerade Party.&#13;
February 5-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
February 23-Washington Birthday Party.&#13;
February 28-Stag at Ionian House.&#13;
March 4-St. Clair Moore Entertains Pi's and lonians.&#13;
March 12-Semi-Final Debate.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-six&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty -seven&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Aletheia&#13;
Organized February 12, 19 10&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Champagne and Chocolate Brown&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Ariste Philain (Lovers of the best)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
P resident. .. .. . ... Joey CARTER&#13;
Vice-President . .. .. ,FLORENCE LONG&#13;
Secretary .... ..... FLORA SEARLS&#13;
Treasurer ....... .. RUTH FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
FLORENCE LONG&#13;
LULU HAWCOTT&#13;
FERN MARQUART&#13;
KITTIE NURSE&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
LULU HAWCOTT&#13;
KITTIE NURSE&#13;
OLIVE ]ONES&#13;
LILA WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS HIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Myrtle Britton&#13;
&#13;
Lulu Hawcott&#13;
&#13;
Florence Long&#13;
&#13;
J UNIORS&#13;
Ruth French&#13;
&#13;
Olive Jones&#13;
&#13;
Fern Marquart&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Anna Anderson&#13;
Millie Corneliussen&#13;
Alice Kloek&#13;
Lena McDonald&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Ordway&#13;
Marie Edge&#13;
Bessie Howell&#13;
&#13;
Esther Larsen&#13;
Lillian McLaughlin&#13;
Vera Sipe&#13;
Lila Woodford&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred forty -eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
May 8--Breakfast at French's.&#13;
June 10-Re-union at the North Ravine.&#13;
October 4-F udge Party at French's.&#13;
October 13-Party of the "Seasons" at Leazer's.&#13;
October I 8-Elections and Spread in the Hall.&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
1-Closed Door and Spread.&#13;
&#13;
November 15-District School Program.&#13;
December 3-Aletheias Entertained by Pierias.&#13;
December 13-X-mas Party.&#13;
January 24-Closed Door and Spread.&#13;
February 7-Closed Door and Spread in Miss Lutz's Room.&#13;
March 4-Athenaeums Entertain Us.&#13;
March 16-lnitiation.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Organized November 4, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Light Blue and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Utile Dulce (The useful with the pleasing)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ...... HAZEL SHUMAKER&#13;
Vice-President . . MARIE WOOD&#13;
Secretary ...... SARA WHITEHOUSE&#13;
Treasurer . ..... BEATRICE WRIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
RUTH RIEKE&#13;
GENEVIEVE BALCOM&#13;
BONNIE ROBINSON&#13;
RUTH MCCANDLISS&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ISOBEL WEBB&#13;
LYDIA McCREERY&#13;
MABEL TRENARY&#13;
GENEVIEVE BALCOM&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Ruth Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Isobel Webb&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Genevieve Balcom&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
&#13;
Florence Shumaker&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
Cordelia Colburn&#13;
&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Lydia McCreery&#13;
Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Flossie Williams&#13;
&#13;
Helen Roe&#13;
Bess Shannon&#13;
&#13;
Viola Feller&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ruth Gillies&#13;
Enid Derr&#13;
Dorothy Steele&#13;
Vera Harding&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
Leona Wheatly&#13;
Lucile McDade&#13;
Minnie Fry&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Cathcart&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
Eva Styles&#13;
Charmion Holbert&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum Calendar&#13;
April I I-Reception for Mothers .&#13;
April 23-Violet Luncheon.&#13;
May 12-Grand Public "Madame Butterfly."&#13;
M ay 2 1-Athenaeums entertained by Pierias.&#13;
June 3-Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 5- Senior Athenaeums entertained in honor of Marie Wood.&#13;
J une I 0-Society Re-union Breakfast.&#13;
September 30-Masquerade Party for the New Girls.&#13;
October 4- Athenaeums entertained by Marie Wood Green.&#13;
October 11-Eleventh Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
October 18-Reception for New Pledges.&#13;
October 27-Philos Entertained for Athenaeums.&#13;
October 31-Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
November 15-Closed Door Program on the Modern Drama.&#13;
December 6-Reception Philo Debaters.&#13;
for&#13;
December I 3-Athenaeum X-mas Party.&#13;
January 2-Ethel Olsen Entertained at Holiday Party.&#13;
January 17-Reception in honor of Two New Pledges.&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
7-Closed Door Program and Spread.&#13;
&#13;
February 14-Patriotic Party with Philos.&#13;
February 28-Farewell Party for&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
Ruth, McCandliss at Colburn's.&#13;
&#13;
4-Athenaeums Entertained Girls of Other Societies.&#13;
&#13;
March 5-Formal Initiation.&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
7-Informal Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
March 14-Spread in Hall.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fi f ty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hu ndred fifty -five&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Organized October 14th, 1892&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and Maroon&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Vestigia Nulla Rectrorsum (No slipping backwards)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President .......... .H. WINTERRINGER&#13;
Vice President. ..... JOHN BRIGGS&#13;
Secretary ...........C. UPHAM&#13;
Treasurer ... . ...... EARL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
HAROLD COBBS&#13;
ERWIN JOHNS&#13;
CLIFFORD REIKE&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
MYRON INSKO&#13;
RoY McVICKER&#13;
EARL WILLIAMS&#13;
HAROLD COBBS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
H. M. Cobbs&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
Victor Hornney&#13;
M. 0. Insko&#13;
&#13;
E. W. Johns&#13;
&#13;
M. P. Briggs&#13;
A. Vennink&#13;
Fred Schriever&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
Herman Bogard&#13;
Herbert French&#13;
&#13;
Cyril Upham&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Maynard Morley&#13;
&#13;
Earl Heitt&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
Ralph Prichard&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
V. Madison&#13;
William Schriever&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
D. C. Cooper&#13;
Clifford Reike&#13;
&#13;
A. C. DeLapp&#13;
N. C. Gray&#13;
Earl Williams&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ralph Rippey&#13;
Wilson Clark&#13;
Alvin Hornney&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
Chester Robertson&#13;
Clifford Ihde&#13;
Martin Clough&#13;
Conrad Sandvold&#13;
&#13;
Bernard Brown&#13;
Floyd Phelps&#13;
Cyrus Kettle&#13;
Francis Bondhus&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
April 7, 1913- Philo Annual Trial. .&#13;
May 19, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Athenaeums.&#13;
May 31, 1913-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 2, 191 3-Final Gold Medal Debate Series.&#13;
June 5, 1913-Inter-Sociely Debaters Elected.&#13;
June l 0, 191 3-Reunion.&#13;
September 19, 1913-Philo Stag at the Jackson Hotel.&#13;
October 6, 191 3-F arewcll for Rev. Cully.&#13;
October 2 7, 191 3-Reception to Athenaeums.&#13;
November 3. 1913-Initiation.&#13;
December I , 191 3-Lost to Ionians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
December 2, 191 3-Won from Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
December 5, 191 3-Athenaeum reception for Philos.&#13;
December 15 , 1913-0pen Door, The Panama Canal of Today.&#13;
February 19, 1914-Prattler "Doo" at Cobb's.&#13;
February 23, 19 14-Joint Closed Door with Athenaeums.&#13;
March 6, 1914-Philo State Congress, Des Moines.&#13;
March 16, 191 4-Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-nin e&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Academy Societies&#13;
at&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Organized February, 1902&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
To Possess the Aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
IDA ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
IRENE CHAPIN&#13;
&#13;
MARY HARDING&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
September 20-J apanese Party at Ida Robertson's.&#13;
September 27-Progressive Party at Irene Chapin's.&#13;
October 4-Chafing Dish Party.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
October I I- Joint Wienie Roast at R avine.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Belew&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Robinson&#13;
&#13;
Grace Johns&#13;
&#13;
Olive Gillies&#13;
&#13;
Mary Harding&#13;
&#13;
Merlin Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Haddock&#13;
&#13;
Edith Black&#13;
&#13;
Lillian Smith&#13;
&#13;
Florence Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Luick&#13;
&#13;
Fem Hemstreet&#13;
&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
&#13;
Irene Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bonnie Davies&#13;
&#13;
Florence Langford&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Cummings&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Wood&#13;
&#13;
October 18- Joint Hayrack Ride.&#13;
October 2 7-Joint Joy Ride to Florence Sloan's.&#13;
October 3 1-Joint Hallowe'en Masquerade in Hall.&#13;
November 15-Tableau.&#13;
November 29- Spread for Debaters.&#13;
December 13-X-mas Grab Bag.&#13;
January 24-Closed Door for Alumni.&#13;
February 12-Taffy Pull at Gillies.&#13;
February 16-Valentine Party for Adelphians.&#13;
March 16- Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
0 ne hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
Organized June 18, 1903&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Cerise and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Carpe Diem (Sieze the Opportunity)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
GEORGE CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
BERNARD BROWN&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD BUEHLER&#13;
&#13;
April 28-Adelphian-Aesthesian Party at Bridenbaugh's.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
May 15-Adelphian-Aesthesian Spring Picnic.&#13;
&#13;
Cyrus Albertson&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence Steele&#13;
&#13;
Louis Haitz&#13;
&#13;
Glenn Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Edison Fowler&#13;
&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Rice&#13;
&#13;
Maurice Watland&#13;
&#13;
September 29-Stag at Crouch's.&#13;
&#13;
Gailord Omer&#13;
&#13;
Paul Chipperfield&#13;
&#13;
O ctober 8-Adelphian-Aesthesian Picnic at R avine.&#13;
&#13;
Carl Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
Harold Hartley&#13;
&#13;
O ctober 31-Adelphian-Aesthesian H allowe' en Party.&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Abel&#13;
&#13;
Edmund Ralston&#13;
&#13;
November 10-Joint Open Door.&#13;
&#13;
George Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Albion Berger&#13;
&#13;
December 4-Hawkeye-Adelphian Debate.&#13;
&#13;
Rueben Walin&#13;
&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
&#13;
Milton Lory&#13;
&#13;
Donald Gillin&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Merrill Patton&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
June 9- Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 12-Final Gold-Medal Debate.&#13;
&#13;
March 9-Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
1915 SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
1915 S I O UX&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
Organized June 1 1, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Nile&#13;
&#13;
Green and&#13;
&#13;
White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
We Su cceed by&#13;
&#13;
Doing&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
ALICE KLOEK&#13;
&#13;
WILLA WELDON&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ADA WALLEN&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May 19, 1913-Hawkeye-Crescent Picnic North Ravine.&#13;
May 30, 1913-Hawkeye-Crescent Up-River Trip.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
June 9, 1913--Breakfast for Aesthesians.&#13;
&#13;
Willa Weldon&#13;
&#13;
Jenette Walcotte&#13;
&#13;
Alice Hallet&#13;
&#13;
Estelle McFarland&#13;
&#13;
Lorene Williams&#13;
&#13;
Thalia Fredell&#13;
&#13;
Florence Fair&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Brown&#13;
&#13;
November 24, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Harwood&#13;
&#13;
Marion DuBois&#13;
&#13;
December 6, 1913-Joint Closed Door.&#13;
&#13;
Fern Curry&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Carter&#13;
&#13;
December 15, 1913-Crescent Reception to Hawkeye Debaters.&#13;
&#13;
Nathalie Allen&#13;
&#13;
Emma Hough&#13;
&#13;
January 20, 1914-Tea for New Girls at Graham's.&#13;
&#13;
Claudia Hambright&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Lehan&#13;
&#13;
Ada Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dietrich&#13;
&#13;
Myrtle Swanson&#13;
&#13;
Josephine Erickson&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
September 26, 1913-Joint Reception at Alice Kloek's.&#13;
October 30, 191 3-Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
Joint Thanksgiving Party at Stella Miller's.&#13;
&#13;
February 14, 1914-Valentine Party at Lehan's.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1 915&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye&#13;
Organized September 2 7, 1899&#13;
&#13;
Gold&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Silver&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma Sine Pulvere (No Victory Without Dust)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
OSCAR CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DUNN&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
GARNER OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May 19, 1913-Picnic to Crescents at North Ravine.&#13;
May 30, 191 3-Hawkeye-Crescent Up-River Trip.&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
June 2, 191 3-Final Debate of Gold-Medal Series.&#13;
&#13;
Garner Osborne&#13;
&#13;
Leon Hill&#13;
&#13;
September 19. 1913-Hawkeye-Crescent Reception to New Academy Students.&#13;
&#13;
Claude Pike&#13;
&#13;
Roy Snyder&#13;
&#13;
September 29. 1913-Picnic at North Ravine.&#13;
&#13;
Lewis Bleakly&#13;
&#13;
John Lehan&#13;
&#13;
Orin Bell&#13;
&#13;
Fay Knapp&#13;
&#13;
Furman Hill&#13;
&#13;
Gaylord Starr&#13;
&#13;
John Barr&#13;
&#13;
Gabriel Wilch&#13;
&#13;
Robert Anderson&#13;
&#13;
David Bleakly&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Smith&#13;
&#13;
February 16, 1914-Hawkeye-Crescent Valentine Party.&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
William Fair&#13;
&#13;
March 2, 1914-Annual Banquet at West Hotel.&#13;
&#13;
Harold Payne&#13;
&#13;
Harold Knepper&#13;
&#13;
March 21 , 1914-Hawkeye-Crescent Party at Home of Vera and Mabel Hauswald&#13;
&#13;
October 31, 1913-Hallowe'en Party.&#13;
December 4, 191 3-Won from Adelphians in Debate.&#13;
December 15, 1913-Crescent Reception to Hawkeye Debaters.&#13;
&#13;
at Merrill.&#13;
&#13;
Fred Koch&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
October 6, 191 3-Annual Hawkeye Stag.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
1915&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
"The world is good, and the&#13;
people are good.&#13;
And we're all good fellows&#13;
together."&#13;
&#13;
"So they willed it. and so it&#13;
has been done."&#13;
&#13;
Calendar and&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
One hundred seventy&#13;
&#13;
GUSSIEBRUNELLE To Joey CARTER&#13;
&#13;
2-Student genius has triumphed over the opposing efforts of the&#13;
FAculty and successfully executed the third annual bean&#13;
shower yesterday at the first chapel service since spring vacation. I'll bet the Dean wished he hadn't had a hair cut&#13;
Miss Ferguson took the Agora Club to the Monument this&#13;
afternoon on their first walking trip.&#13;
HELEN ROE AND LEE BARKS, AT PHILO TRIAL&#13;
&#13;
7-The kids had a linen shower for Sarah and Si yesterday. Miss&#13;
Ferguson had Mrs. Devitt fix some codfish stuff, which she&#13;
seemed to enjoy but the rest of us couldn't eat. The Glee&#13;
Club is going to give a concert at the Grand tomorrow&#13;
evening but the College kids don't seem to be going to support it very well.&#13;
ISOBEL WEBB TO ZE FRENCHMAN .&#13;
&#13;
12-What was that indignation meeting for, Mr. Greynald? Well,&#13;
most of ze students didn't know there was a debate last&#13;
night and they say that is ze reason that we lost to Cedar&#13;
Falls. Well, my goodness, I couldn't come out because&#13;
the snow was so deep that the cars haven't been running right&#13;
for the last two days . . . . I think I'll take a black mark&#13;
off from Mr. Montgomery's record-Well, anyway we won&#13;
away from home, Wickens won the State Peace Contest and&#13;
we won from Coe.&#13;
&#13;
BILL WEDGEWOOD TO DUNHAM&#13;
&#13;
5-I haven't seen you since you came back, did you hear about&#13;
Wick getting third in the Inter-State Peace Contest Friday?&#13;
. . . No, I was wondering how he came out while we were&#13;
on our trip, we won from Beuna Vista Friday and lost to&#13;
Prairie Du Chien Saturday . . . And you missed some&#13;
more excitement while you were away. I tried to get some&#13;
fellows to go up and scare the Atheneaums, a bunch of them&#13;
had a house party up in the hall.&#13;
JOCYCARTER AND HERBERT FRENCH&#13;
&#13;
10-What' s that good looking pin, I never saw that before?&#13;
Oh, that's our new Glee Club pin, we just got them today.&#13;
Every one had a swell time at the German picnic and we&#13;
all got the cutest little volume of Goethe's poems. Yes&#13;
Sioux City won the annual High School Meet yesterday by&#13;
just a few points . . . all right you'll go to the Atheneaum&#13;
Public Monday night, good night.&#13;
AT LOVELAND'S&#13;
&#13;
19-When are we going to have our picnic, Cobb's had their's&#13;
Wednesday, and the Sunshine Inn had their's today. Well&#13;
we don't want to pick a day like the Sunshine did and&#13;
have to take off our shoes and wade home. Didn't the&#13;
fellows do fine to get third at the State Meet Friday.&#13;
&#13;
J. BRIGGS WRITING UP HIS DIARY&#13;
&#13;
"MAC" AND RUTH oN THE R1vER&#13;
&#13;
25-Say, Lemon, when did the fellows go down to the Drake relays? Oh, yes, that was the 18th, the night of the Farland&#13;
recital, I remember I took Linda Damerow and the 19th&#13;
was the Pi Public, yes it was Helen Roe . . . . . and the&#13;
21st, the Zet-Otho-Prom-Pug Eads . . . . . . . .&#13;
. And what happened the 24th, nothing I guess, only the&#13;
15 Annual Board had a meeting. Well, I left out the&#13;
23d, that was the night that Dr. Haynes entertained his&#13;
major students.&#13;
&#13;
24-Well, I'm pretty sure of a "Dutch" grade after digging&#13;
holes to plant the Linden trees for Miss Ferguson. . . Hello&#13;
Johnson, want something to eat? well paddle over here&#13;
and get it. Look out, splash! ! ! blame your old cookie.&#13;
I wouldn't care if you were not sure&#13;
I won't eat it now .&#13;
to tell it.&#13;
11:30 ON THE CAMPUS&#13;
29-Well, I wish you guys would quit talking over that Neb.&#13;
Wesleyan dual meet, we lost and that's all there is to it.&#13;
Do you fellows know that Miss Ferguson sails today for&#13;
Berlin? Gee, I'm so stiff from that tennis tournament that&#13;
I can't go to sleep. Say, the Annuals ought to be out pretty&#13;
soon, hadn't they . . . Yes they're coming out sure Saturday.&#13;
&#13;
GEO. PRICHARD TO LUCILE METCALF&#13;
&#13;
30-Well, we \ost our game to the Chinese University, seems like&#13;
I m gettmg beaten all around. The Seniors lost their home&#13;
meet challenge Saturday, but I have some speed at least&#13;
for I was in both ends of that picture that was taken.&#13;
&#13;
AUDRIE DAVIE AND MINNIE NELSON&#13;
&#13;
4- There is one consolation in being a Senior, we don't have to&#13;
take any exam's. Watch those Juniors work, our trials&#13;
come soon though. I'm sure I'll forget to move my tassle&#13;
over after I receive my sheepskin . . . Have you a copy of&#13;
the program for the next few days? Yes, here it is, I'll read&#13;
it to you if you want to take it down: June 5th, Coburn&#13;
Players; June 6th, Rally of Volunteer Band; June 7th,&#13;
Expression Graduating exercises; June 8th, Baccalaureate&#13;
Sermon and annual vesper service; June 9th, D edication&#13;
of Class Gift, Class Play and Music Graduating Exercises;&#13;
June 10th, Alumni day; June 11th, Commencement Exercises. There surely are enough things crowded into those&#13;
few days, I sort of dread leaving school, but I'll be relieved when it's all over.&#13;
&#13;
Fashionable Clothes&#13;
Our store is the local distributing point for the most fashionable clothes---it's the gathering&#13;
point for dressy young men&#13;
WHAT&#13;
&#13;
Men's Head&#13;
to Foot&#13;
Outfitters&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' Fine&#13;
Footwear&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
WE DID&#13;
&#13;
LAST&#13;
&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
&#13;
The balance is in the&#13;
favor.&#13;
&#13;
paper.&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
Not a&#13;
Houston&#13;
Used For&#13;
Comparison&#13;
&#13;
HOUSTON PEN.&#13;
&#13;
OLD STUDENT TALKING TO NEW STUDENT&#13;
&#13;
19-1 suppose you arrived Tuesday with the rest of the students,&#13;
you probably met a lot of the fellows Tuesday night at the&#13;
Y. M. stag. The Y. W. girls entertain for the new girls&#13;
Wednesday night; are you going to try out for the Glee&#13;
Club? I see they elected officers today.&#13;
]OHN KOLP AND LAURA BELT, AT CLASS FOOTBALL GAME&#13;
&#13;
26-There's Jimmie now, just carrying the ball . . . . Well the&#13;
Freshies are beaten but they put up a pretty good game at&#13;
that. If they could have run as fast as Deakin and Riner in&#13;
the scrap this morning, they might have stood more chance of&#13;
winning. I see by the Collegian, "Prit spent the week end&#13;
at Hornick." I suppose they'll keep the type set the rest&#13;
of the year for that. We're going to organize a Mandolin&#13;
Orchestra this afternoon, wouldn't it be nice if you were&#13;
to be the accompanist?&#13;
MERRILL STEVENS AND HAROLD GORDER&#13;
&#13;
27- 1 hate to interrupt you just as you're going to have your fortune told, but I wanted to tell you to be sure and come out&#13;
Monday. We are going to organize a College Band.&#13;
Look out, Mike will run right over you with that old horse&#13;
he's got . . . Who? Uppie, well he sure does deserve to&#13;
win the baby contest.&#13;
&#13;
To the Readers of the 1915 "SIOUX"&#13;
The convenience of always having with you an instrument for writing down in ink-class notes for the&#13;
student, memorandums for the business man, correspondence for everybody, etc.-this convenience is one to be&#13;
desired.&#13;
Before purchasing a Houston Pen I always had&#13;
trouble keeping a pen and if I did not lose it, it was&#13;
always hard to find, but the neat gold chain attached to&#13;
the cap of the Houston does away with that trouble and&#13;
now my pen is always handy. When I am through with&#13;
the pen I instinctively turn the cap on and then it is&#13;
attached to my coat or vest.&#13;
In addition to the chain attachment, the Houston&#13;
Pen has balance-no clubby cap on one end while writing-a 14-karat gold pen with iridium point, and a&#13;
feed that gives a steady flow of ink.&#13;
When you lose your next pen or when you need&#13;
to get a new one, get a Houston.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
&#13;
R. R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON.&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Becker Co..&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
Everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles, Rubber Goods, Trusses, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
J. C. KENNISON CO.&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
, ,&#13;
&#13;
Supplies and Finishing&#13;
High Grade Candies-All Popular&#13;
Brands&#13;
&#13;
I!&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
VISIT OUR&#13;
&#13;
TEA ROOM&#13;
&#13;
Palms and Plants for Decorations&#13;
&#13;
The most popular refreshment place in&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Special attention to funeral orders&#13;
Emblems made on short&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
Two STORES&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
notice&#13;
&#13;
You are invited to visit our store&#13;
&#13;
SIXTH AND PIERCE STREETS&#13;
&#13;
WEALTH&#13;
STATE&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
BANK&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHEAST CORNER FOURTH and JACKSON STREETS&#13;
Under the Supervision of the State of Iowa&#13;
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY FOR POSTAL SAVINGS FUNDS&#13;
&#13;
The Hess Music House&#13;
Musical Instruments of All Kinds&#13;
SHEET MUSIC AND MUSIC SUPPLIES&#13;
FREDERICK E. HESS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
508 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
AT DAVIE'S (Ruth McCandliss and Keith Burdick)&#13;
12-Doctor Hamilton sure preached a great sermon tonight.&#13;
&#13;
Is obtained by labor, preserved by saving, and increased by diligence and&#13;
compound interest. We invite you to transact your banking business with us.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
AT HARPER'S&#13;
1- That Sandburr idea is quite an addition to the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
2-Say, Mitchell, did you know they are gomg to organize a&#13;
Forensic League tomorrow?&#13;
4-The fellows showed up Yankton in the game today, didn't&#13;
they, beating them 3 3 to O? Yes, but 1t was too bad some&#13;
of the fellows had to leave the Otho stag last night Just as&#13;
the fun was beginning.&#13;
6-Jimmie Dolliver was elected President of the Juniors, I guess&#13;
all the classes elected officers today.&#13;
7-Paul, I hear that you and Bob Dott have made application&#13;
for an A. F . degree. Too bad Bill flunked out and can t&#13;
be in your classes.&#13;
.•&#13;
10-Have&#13;
you got everything&#13;
needs? Yes,. and remem_&#13;
ber, it s&#13;
your job to fix that swing at Abernathy s. Well, if Dunk&#13;
gets to that lecture course tonight I'll miss my guess.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, Ding, 12.&#13;
J 3- The fellows are sure doing fine, they won that game ,at Buena&#13;
Vista 31 to 3. Morningside always had a good team.&#13;
CHAPEL MASS MEETING&#13;
15-Vernon certainly clinched his claim to the title "Boob." Now&#13;
it depends upon the support we receive whether or not the&#13;
boys get their band suits . . . How many, two, McKmney ? Those other fellows are too optomistic, I can't bank on&#13;
my dates that far ahead.&#13;
DEAKIN (Reading "Collegian Reporter" in History Two. )&#13;
Who is that blooming Guy who writes this and signs it the&#13;
Spectator? We'll beat those Wesleyan dubs Saturday those&#13;
soft ducks can't play football.-Say, Boob, did you know&#13;
that Bishop Bristol was going to lay the cornerstone for the&#13;
new Gym tomorrow?&#13;
BESS SHANNON AND EARL WILLIAMS AT "SEVEN OAKS"&#13;
24-Yes I think that Professor M arsh is fine, but I'm too tired to&#13;
listen.&#13;
I about killed myself in that game with W estern&#13;
Union, and that 60 to O score in favor of St. Thomas is&#13;
enough to put anyone to sleep.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I\&#13;
&#13;
FLETCHER TALKING TO H. MASTERS&#13;
&#13;
30- I think it was quite nice to elect Beans ringer of the Victory&#13;
Bell. D idn't some of the girls wear frightful combinations&#13;
at the lecture Tuesday night, they just grated on my nerves.&#13;
I notice Clare Cooper changed his rooming place the other&#13;
day in order to learn a new embroidery stitch. He does&#13;
such lovely work.&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
B. BROWN AND&#13;
&#13;
The College Grocery&#13;
Groceries&#13;
Vegetables&#13;
&#13;
Fresh Fruits&#13;
Confectionery&#13;
&#13;
Let us supply the eats for your&#13;
picnics and social affairs&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON&#13;
Corner of Morningside and Peters Street&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
RIPPEY&#13;
&#13;
7-Well, Mac sure deserved to win that contest tonight. You're&#13;
mistaken, Brownie, in thinking that you have the only Ruth&#13;
in school, there are eight others and they organized a new&#13;
club yesterday. I hope that we have as good success tomorrow, against the Haskell Indians as we did last Saturday when we beat Simpson 6 to 0.&#13;
MITCHELL AND Miss SARAH BLEAKLY AT OTHO PROM&#13;
&#13;
I 0-You missed it not being at the Agora Reception yesterday.&#13;
The Haskell Indians were a little too much for our boys,&#13;
although 28 to 0, compared with their other scores this&#13;
year, isn't bad. We Soph boys are going to spring our new&#13;
class sweaters tomorrow. Don't Bonnie and Mr. Insko&#13;
make a nice looking couple? They were here together last&#13;
year, too.&#13;
TOMMY JAMES TALKING TO HERSEL F&#13;
&#13;
18-Pickles ! Van missed connection last Sunday, but then I&#13;
guess there is enough going on to keep me busy, Mrs.&#13;
McCoy Friday, and the Junior " B ackward" Monday.&#13;
I'm getting so sick of this Institution, just the same thing&#13;
year in and year out. That M cKinney man is still pulling&#13;
off his Freshman jokes, posted a notice for football practice&#13;
this afternoon, dated Sept. 20th, 1914, and Rube Wallin&#13;
bit. 0 ! well, we won our last football game with Dakota&#13;
Wesleyan, 6 to 0, last Saturday.&#13;
"UPPIE" AND LOLA BROWNELLE IN THE LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
28-Hello everybody, what you all over-working for? Did you&#13;
all have a good feed yesterday? Isn't it dead around here&#13;
with everyone home? Let's have a lonesome party tomorrow night, you get the fellows together Uppie and I'll phone&#13;
the girls and we'll just have candy and apples in the&#13;
society halls.&#13;
&#13;
He Profits Most&#13;
Who Serves Best&#13;
Even the most liberally educated man, when&#13;
entering into the commercial world, will find that in&#13;
the above sentence lies the fundamental principles of&#13;
success.&#13;
Every employee of our firm has been thoroughly&#13;
schooled to apply this rule to every transaction, whether&#13;
large or small, with our customers.&#13;
&#13;
It is for this reason that our city retail depart-&#13;
&#13;
A Good&#13;
Place to&#13;
Trade&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
6--Well, I'm just dead, haven't had any sleep for a week. Beginning with Monday, there were the four debates and last&#13;
night the Zeellner Quartet, and I suppose tonight we'll have&#13;
a closed door. Did you go to chapel yesterday and hear&#13;
Dr. Gunsaulus speak on Personalities?&#13;
I'm surely glad&#13;
that I didn't cut for he was just fine.&#13;
MARIE DEVITT AND MABEL PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
9-1 think these class entertainments for Miss Burner are a good&#13;
idea.&#13;
they?&#13;
racing&#13;
getting&#13;
&#13;
ments have made good.&#13;
&#13;
E. H. BACKEMEYER&#13;
&#13;
MARION METCALF AND MARGARET KIFER&#13;
&#13;
Both she and "Dad" Elliott came yesterday didn' t&#13;
Oh, you should have seen Jean Johns this noon&#13;
a street car clear to the car barns. I suppose he's&#13;
in shape for spring track work.&#13;
&#13;
13-Haven't the meetings been fine and the boys seem to like&#13;
"Dad" Elliott as well as we like Miss Burner. I'm glad&#13;
vacation starts next Friday so we can get a rest.&#13;
&#13;
AXEL F. JENSEN&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
Edwards &amp; Bradford&#13;
Lumber Co.&#13;
&#13;
"SUN&#13;
SHINE&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
JAN.&#13;
&#13;
TERRIBLE&#13;
TURK&#13;
&#13;
OFFICIALS .&#13;
&#13;
MAC AND ELEANOR&#13;
14- Bob Vernon was elected President of the "M" Club today.&#13;
Yes, you know "Turk" was elected captain of the football&#13;
team last Saturday. We thought Campbell would forget&#13;
his Bibical Literature class today, but he didn't and we had&#13;
to explain our tardiness. Prof. Campbell denies the implication that he is absent-minded. Did you hear Gov. Clark&#13;
and Lieut. Gov. Harding in chapel yesterday?&#13;
( 11 :30 P. M .) : It doesn't seem like we've been back a&#13;
week does it? It's just eight days since school started .&#13;
MASTERS AND&#13;
&#13;
High Grade Photographs&#13;
at All Times&#13;
&#13;
JIM&#13;
&#13;
KOLP- 12:30A M .&#13;
&#13;
23-This is the longest walk I've had since I've been in Morningside. Well, the Glee Club Concert was fine, but I'm not&#13;
keen on this after walk. I think that Marsh made a good&#13;
choice in choosing the debaters. That was a good joke&#13;
Saturday in chapel-A Faculty Chorus. Where were the&#13;
song books? I have forgotten why they were taken out.&#13;
That lecture, "Sour Grapes," by Dr. Ott, was certainly&#13;
line. We'll be busy with Hugh E. Smith here, beginning&#13;
with Sunday and we will get to see what College Exams are&#13;
like Wed. and all the rest of the week.&#13;
&#13;
We Made the Photographs for the 1915 "SIOUX"&#13;
CENTRALLY LOCATED&#13;
&#13;
Above Authier's Style Shop&#13;
&#13;
BACK AGAIN&#13;
&#13;
In a long race the ath lete saves his strength for the finish. The principle is the same in&#13;
the race you are in for material success and comfort. Save-for the finish. O ur bank&#13;
welcomes your account.&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of Commerce&#13;
. Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
BURGESS AND MABEL IRWIN&#13;
5- The class prayer meetings were certainly fine, the leaders were&#13;
well chosen I think. That was a good joke on Bob, they&#13;
had the Faculty detectives and police force searching for&#13;
him . Bill Payne gave them all the available information&#13;
but how could he know that Bob only went home to work&#13;
his brother for a new suit to wear to the Otho Banquet Saturday night. Well, when did this happen? Oh, it was&#13;
the third, the same day that you were elected President of&#13;
the Agoras. Then Earl you'll have to go home at ten&#13;
o'clock every night, the girls have adopted the Proctor&#13;
system.&#13;
MARIE DEVITT AND HORACE MORGAN&#13;
15-It's too bad Horace we have to stay on the porch while Mac&#13;
and Eleanor are having a closed door program. I wonde r&#13;
if Eleanor fully appreciated M rs. McCollin' s talk to the&#13;
Agoras last night?&#13;
RusTY AND GLADYS CATHCART AT "PRATTLER Doo"&#13;
19-The girls did pretty well, I think, in getting out the paper this&#13;
week. The Annual Board for the '16 Sioux was elected&#13;
Tuesday for the first time without any society spirit. Tomorrow will sure be a busy day, there's the Monument Run&#13;
in the afternoon, the Men's Banquet in the evening, and I&#13;
understand the Loveland Bunch are planning to have their&#13;
annual Colonial wedding. I am anxious to see what these&#13;
banquets are like. The Agoras have their's Saturday.&#13;
Guy M c KINNEY AT 0RPHEUM ( In Nigger Heaven)&#13;
28-He! He! That's almost as bad as Ken and Lucile when they&#13;
were having a prolonged good night at the gate. If that had&#13;
only happened a few days before Bill would certainly have&#13;
had them in the Boomerang he is so proudly exhibiting&#13;
around the Institution.&#13;
&#13;
ALWAYS KEEP YOUR MIND ON H. &amp; H. SHOES&#13;
THEY SATISFY&#13;
&#13;
H, &amp; H, SHOE CO,&#13;
512 4th Street&#13;
&#13;
Authier Style Shop&#13;
C ORRECT DRESS F OR W OM EN&#13;
ExcLUSIVE LADIES' Suits, COATS, FuRs, WAISTS,&#13;
M USLIN UNDERWEAR, CORSETS AND MI LLINERY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Most Appreciated Store&#13;
509- 11 - 13 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
THE RELIABLE CLOTHIERS&#13;
Kaufman P re-Shrunk Campus Togs-Also Student-Craft Clothes&#13;
Our Specialties&#13;
10 P er Cent D iscount to Students&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON &amp;&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
ARONSON,&#13;
&#13;
Park&#13;
&#13;
702-712&#13;
&#13;
Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
&#13;
IS ALWAYS R EAD Y T O GIVE R ATES TO THE STUD ENTS&#13;
&#13;
Jewelry&#13;
When purchasing Jewelry for important occasions or for&#13;
simple Gifts, it is most satisfactory to go to a shop that&#13;
is thoroughly accustomed to attending to all these needsCapable salespeople who are able to give helpful suggestions concerning selections.&#13;
&#13;
WILL&#13;
IOWA'S&#13;
&#13;
H. BECK&#13;
&#13;
LEADING&#13;
&#13;
JEWELERS&#13;
Established 18 77&#13;
&#13;
Corner 4th and Pierce Sts.&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL WOOD WORKS&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
&#13;
BANK, STORE. OFFICE FIXTURES&#13;
AND INTERIOR FINISH&#13;
507;509;511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
A Match and a Cents Worth of Gas&#13;
That is the approximate cost of a good, hot bath if you&#13;
have a Gas Water Heater in your home.&#13;
Investigate at the Gas Office or ask us to send a representative to your home.&#13;
-PHONES406 Bell&#13;
&#13;
4586 Auto&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY GAS&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&#13;
ELECTRIC COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
ADA AND BEANS AT MANDOLIN CONCERT&#13;
&#13;
6-What is everybody looking at? Why Carson has two strange&#13;
women with him and they are trying to find out who they&#13;
are. There is Crook Grey, Campbell asked if he was sick&#13;
or in jail. Did you hear about Bigg in Ethics class? He&#13;
denied Campbell's statement that it is usual for men to propose. I don't know why Ruth should blush . Well they&#13;
spent last Sunday together at Kingsley, so I guess it's fixed&#13;
up all right.&#13;
Earl is gone, so Mabel Irwin thinks she will go home over&#13;
Sunday since there is no attraction left in Morningside. The&#13;
Coach was sure peeved at me the other night at the first&#13;
game of the basketball series, when I kicked the bucket and&#13;
spilled the whitewash. He made me blot it up with a&#13;
gunny sack; I wish you'd been there to help me.&#13;
BoGARD AND LOVICE&#13;
IN LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
1 3-Say Bogie, do you remember when Henderson called for Mina&#13;
last night? He is trying already to get an early date for the&#13;
Coburn players. Say Bogie, I hope you don't get the&#13;
mumps, although it seems pretty popular this week. Say&#13;
Lovice, I got my contract from Vauter' s chautauqua today&#13;
-35 per week, I guess that beats Ames-I'm glad we&#13;
didn't cut chapel as we had planned yesterday, Schull's&#13;
talk was sure good. Well, even if the Sophs did postpone&#13;
their game, we Juniors trimmed them for the championship&#13;
just the same.&#13;
IDA MARY HooD IN THE HALL&#13;
&#13;
20-Say what were you fined for at the "M" Carnival today? They&#13;
accused me of wasting natural gas in the library. Lucile&#13;
Metcalf sure did look fine in the stocks. Say, I'm going&#13;
to have a bunch of the Pi' s out to our house tomorrow.&#13;
I want you to come.&#13;
INSKO AND His LADY&#13;
&#13;
28-Did you see Lucile Metcalf fall on the floor in the library?&#13;
It was almost as gracefully done as when Beans fainted a&#13;
while ago. I'm surely glad you could come to my debate,&#13;
guess we didn't frog them.&#13;
April I st-Dictagraph Operator&#13;
Well there comes Eleanor, I'm glad I'm through carrymg&#13;
this dictagraph around.&#13;
&#13;
You don't care to read an ad.&#13;
We haven't time to write one,&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
so we are just going to give&#13;
you a picture of the place in&#13;
which you all like to spend a&#13;
part of each hot summer evening.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Our Annual Joke&#13;
Cracked by Junior Would-be Wits&#13;
&#13;
Being a Truthful Account of Affairs in Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
A Welcome&#13;
to the Co-Eds&#13;
H&#13;
&#13;
ERE'S a store that makes special preparation to supply the needs of the college girls and where the. sort&#13;
of things young women like are to be found m great diversity.&#13;
handsome&#13;
DAINTY dresses, modish suits, all with the coats,&#13;
stylish hats, pretty shoes, and&#13;
fash-&#13;
&#13;
TABLE OF CONTENTS&#13;
&#13;
ion touches admired and demanded by the Co-Eds.&#13;
F acuity&#13;
Classes&#13;
&#13;
that give&#13;
A ND the smaller things attire-the the distinctive&#13;
ribbons, laces,&#13;
feminine touch to the&#13;
&#13;
Literary&#13;
Forensics&#13;
&#13;
embroideries, neckwear, and all the rest are here to&#13;
be found in alluring displays.&#13;
&#13;
Society&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
And, so, a welcome&#13;
to you, Co-Eds!&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
MAY you find your way is atthis store often-Our&#13;
incomparable service&#13;
your command and&#13;
&#13;
DEDICATION&#13;
To Wesley Deakin, I. B., who is already distinguished as&#13;
the "Falstaff" of Morningside College, and in whom we&#13;
look for that sort of inspiration which makes us laugh&#13;
and grow fat, we unqualifiedly dedicate&#13;
&#13;
these jokes.&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO&#13;
&#13;
"If It's Agin the Faculty, We're For It."&#13;
&#13;
it is our sincere aim to aid you in every manner&#13;
possible.&#13;
&#13;
DR. STEVENS-If every man loved birds as well as Doc. there would be no worms left&#13;
&#13;
FOREWORD&#13;
&#13;
for his biology department.&#13;
&#13;
To those, if aught there be&#13;
Who yet are unaware,&#13;
For only jokes they hate&#13;
Do others care.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES-Disc. Committee. Likes to crack his little joke about raising the&#13;
devil. We'd ought to have a Faculty Bible study class, how about it Bunny?&#13;
BROWN-Faculty wit.&#13;
&#13;
Practices what he preaches.&#13;
&#13;
We apologize to all we left out.&#13;
Those we left out were not in chapel the day we took the census.&#13;
"Beware and don't be late on the last day."&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
(As We Know Them.)&#13;
PREXY CRAIG The main squeeze, ask the outlaws! "You can tell them it will be&#13;
done in the fall." Has been accused of using Morningside as a stepping stone to&#13;
a bishop's seat, but we don't believe it.&#13;
EMORY HAYNES-Looks like the Emory had been working on him. A student wrote&#13;
to Harvard once for information and received this answer: Why don't you ask&#13;
Prof. Haynes, he's the best authority west of the Mississippi. He don't give&#13;
grades, he substracts them.&#13;
DR. CARSON-Idle Spectator. If history runs out why then make a bit yourself. The&#13;
most entertained man on the Faculty&#13;
Has a real tango stride. Did you mention women, yes, I'm still following my usual tactics.&#13;
&#13;
"For if a coed's not to fuss, then pray why is a coed?"&#13;
COACH SAUNDERSON-"Sandy." "A fine business." All he has to do is physical&#13;
training, coaching all forms of athletics, and teaching algebra on the side. His&#13;
football team says he is the fiercest orator in school.&#13;
MARGARET BRAND-She's teaching the girls something; that alone would give her&#13;
respect.&#13;
HELEN LOVELAND-She ought to have studied engineering, then she could have kept&#13;
her grades on a level.&#13;
HERBERT CAMPBELL-His students think he hasn't had a drink for seven days-better&#13;
see Carson. As he grades them, do they love him.&#13;
AGNES FERGUSON-She's gone this year but we love her just the same.&#13;
&#13;
C. A. MARSH-Faculty exponent of the Rooseveltian doctrine.&#13;
speak of any man in College.&#13;
&#13;
Has the best right to&#13;
&#13;
CHERISHED MEMORY&#13;
of&#13;
the Late&#13;
Miss BALCOM&#13;
MR. CLAIRE LAWTON&#13;
Who were never on time.&#13;
Better not be late on the last day.&#13;
&#13;
CLASSES&#13;
Who Is Who&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Clark, Wilson-Wears pumps to school to draw the water away from his brain.&#13;
Rippey, Ralph-Has a windmill attachment to his pumps.&#13;
Robinson, Laura-Capable and likes to have other people tell her so.&#13;
Curry, Wendell-Our Freshman Athlete.&#13;
Hornney, Alvin-Al is alright but he has his short-Cummings.&#13;
Dott, Bob-Not as insignificant as his name implies.&#13;
Sebern, Marie-"Pat' s" best girl.&#13;
Brown, Bernard-Still he's a student in Morningside College.&#13;
Masters, Harold-An understudy of Fletcher's.&#13;
Moore, St. Clair-A real lady in gentlemen's clothes.&#13;
Burdick, Kieth-Studying for the ministry but he never goes to church.&#13;
Starrs, Delano and Gaylord--The Starrs that Brownie and Ding could not put out.&#13;
Lynch, Mina-Makes every fellow think her first name is Personal to them.&#13;
Harrington, Ray-The only Freshman that remained true to his girl at home.&#13;
Derr, Enid-The champion girl basketball player.&#13;
Roost, Amanda-She has established her residence on Garretson avenue and&#13;
Harold Strobel says it is a great advantage.&#13;
Long, Gladys-She talks,-----how she talks.&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE&#13;
&#13;
Grey, Nevillie-Cubeb reporter. Carson's only pet, he bit the hand that fed him,&#13;
with "E" grades.&#13;
Deakin, Sammy-His hair is gone, but not forgotten.&#13;
Lockin, Margaret-"Sally." She seems to have a cinch on a Senior.&#13;
Allen, Howard-Business manager of the I 9 I 5 Sioux. What Bernice preys for.&#13;
Madison, John-Howard's partner in misery. Besides his other engagements he&#13;
expects to hold his claim on Newland.&#13;
&#13;
AN INCORPORATED BANK UNDER IOWA STATE LAWS FOR THE&#13;
PURPOSE OF OPERATING A SAVINGS and COMMERCIAL BANKING&#13;
&#13;
Lawton, Clare-Another Sophomore who has yet to find out that he does not&#13;
know anything.&#13;
Lindsay, Arthur-A bird shark yet the Freshmen can beat him finding Roosts.&#13;
Cooper, Clair-Undecided whether to major in domestic science or biology.&#13;
Winkleman, Eleanor-The first Sophomore to get an Otho medal.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
W. S. SNYDER&#13;
E. M. Corbett&#13;
President&#13;
W. C. Johnson&#13;
LEN O'HARROW&#13;
H. Galinsky&#13;
Vice President&#13;
0. L. Johnson&#13;
0. W. Towner&#13;
C. A . NoRRBOM&#13;
Cashier&#13;
Geo. C. Call&#13;
"SAVE WITH US AND THOU SHALT HAVE"&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
BANK&#13;
Cut Flowers&#13;
Plants&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
James, Tommy-Living example of hang sorrow, care will kill a cat, let's be&#13;
merry.&#13;
Pollock, F.-Looks forward to the day when he'll have designs on every woman.&#13;
Crouch, Lois-May Queen. Saves many a rube idea from being used.&#13;
Vernon, Boob-How to star in everything but classes. Famous for his chapel&#13;
addresses. Author of "Jeans is Jeans."&#13;
Bogard, Herman-"Bismark." "None but myself can be my parallel."&#13;
Dolliver, James-"I smell smoke." Speaks whenever he gets a chance.&#13;
Heitt, Earl-One knight who remained true to his lady in the Agora relay.&#13;
Kifer, Margaret-"Who says she has a worm's heart." Maybe that accounts for&#13;
all the suckers she attracts.&#13;
Mitchell, R.-Junior orator. His next oration will be, "Mitchell the Man."&#13;
Payne, Bill-A disciple of the man who said: "Open the window so I can throw&#13;
my chest out."&#13;
&#13;
Bridal Boquets&#13;
Floral Decorations&#13;
&#13;
J. W. DUNFORD&#13;
Florist, Nurseryman, Landscape Gardener&#13;
I STAND FOR QUALITY&#13;
Auto 4212&#13;
-PHONESBell 930&#13;
NURSERY OFFICE, 19TH AND CLARK STREETS&#13;
PHONEUSYOURCOALORDER&#13;
We Will Take Care of You When the Time Comes&#13;
GOOD COAL, GOOD MEASURE, AND GOOD SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
THE H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
Auto Phone 2174&#13;
&#13;
312 JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 572&#13;
&#13;
Metcalf, Lucile-Recipient of a notice, that Ken. Wilson was taking up too much&#13;
of her time.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
C. D. KELLOGG, Proprietor&#13;
South of Park Theatre&#13;
&#13;
Belew, Ada-The girl with the longing look.&#13;
Barks, Lee-Give him a DAY and he'll do anything.&#13;
Belt, Laura-Some call me fickle, yet I can't go with all of them.&#13;
Bigglestone, H.-Every student to Ruth Reike.&#13;
Bowman, B.-Have I an ocular diEplay?&#13;
Brownelle, L.-She'll make a HEAVYWEIGHT yet.&#13;
Brunelle, A-Ask the Glee Club.&#13;
Doolittle, M.-But say much.&#13;
Insko, Myron-A lot of wind, and yet, if well controlled, will get there yet.&#13;
Kolp, John-"Leaf," the best-hearted man in school.&#13;
&#13;
Galinsky Bros, Company&#13;
OUR MOTTO&#13;
PRICES-The lowest.&#13;
QUALITY-The highest.&#13;
Gooos-The freshest.&#13;
SERVICE-The promptest.&#13;
The House Where QUALITY Tells-PRICE Sells&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE FRUITS AND PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
Hood, I. M .-Says she would rather be a big duck in a small puddle than a small&#13;
·&#13;
duckin a large one. She ran the Senior Class Play.&#13;
M cVicker, R oy-Stayed out of school one year so he could buy her a diamond.&#13;
D EBATE AND D RAMATICS&#13;
&#13;
Any shade.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Brick&#13;
&#13;
Any style&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING WITH BRICK&#13;
At a Moderate Cost&#13;
&#13;
Successful plays of the season.&#13;
A LOGICAL TRAGEDY&#13;
&#13;
Setting-Mid-Semester Grades P osted. Members of the Logic Class R eceives a D Plus,&#13;
Much to Their Indignation.&#13;
&#13;
The practicability and stability of brick-its value as an&#13;
investment-as a thing of beauty which will be a joy forever.&#13;
&#13;
ACT I.-Carl Sass -When a man, has sixty-nine hrs. of A's and nothing lower&#13;
than a B, I think a D plus is a reflection on the teacher rather than on the student.&#13;
ACT II.- I ought to have a C, if I am to be on the track team.&#13;
AcT III.-Loleta Wood, weeping,- I don't deserve exactly the same grade.&#13;
ACTIV.-Insko-This is the first D grade I ever received since I took Trig. in&#13;
my Freshman year.&#13;
AcT V.-Campbell-Well children, I thought that if I gave you all the same&#13;
gra_ no one could complain of being slighted and a D would make you work. That is&#13;
de,&#13;
logical. A Senior P roduct.&#13;
Pantomime.&#13;
&#13;
Setting-Girls P laying Basketball on the Gym Floor.&#13;
Hero-Coach Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
AcT I.-Smush, a lo_ g hairy objects strikes the floor, writhes a moment, and then&#13;
n&#13;
is still. The girls form a circle around the mysterious object, which every girl recognizes&#13;
as a switch.&#13;
ACT II-Silence.&#13;
neighbor.&#13;
&#13;
submit for consideration.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY BRICK &amp; TILE CO.&#13;
No. 9 West Third Street&#13;
&#13;
Office and D isplay Room,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING&#13;
&#13;
CAUGHT AT THE SWITCH&#13;
Or&#13;
SHE THOUGHT SHE HAD P INNED IT BUT SHE HADN'T&#13;
&#13;
P rincipal Lady, Missing, Like H er Switch&#13;
&#13;
Thoughts concerning these matters we would like to&#13;
&#13;
Every girl feels of her hair, and looks accusingly at her&#13;
&#13;
AcT III.-R edhaired girl and Coach look happy, rest are worried.&#13;
ACT IV.-Climax. Coach picks up switch and lays it on the radiator. Breathmg becomes easier. Girls shoot baskets again.&#13;
AcT V.- Stage in darkness. A small figure stealthy crosses the stage, gropes in&#13;
the darkness. T hen a muttered exclamation is heard. Silence. Slowly the sun fills the&#13;
building with light, the switch is gone.&#13;
&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
F R ESH CUT FLOWER S-All kinds of floral emblems made up by us. We&#13;
know how. American Beauties, Roses and Carnations always on hand. Positively the&#13;
finest and largest display in town. Our prices are right.&#13;
NEW STORE&#13;
402 4 th Street&#13;
O ne of the&#13;
Finest in&#13;
the West.&#13;
&#13;
Rocklin &amp; Lehman&#13;
&#13;
BRANCH STORES&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S LEADING&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel and&#13;
&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
405 Douglas St.&#13;
&#13;
F IVE PHONES:&#13;
&#13;
Auto 4199-3 1 12-2931; Iowa 3112-801&#13;
&#13;
RATES 75c AND UP&#13;
&#13;
EUROPEAN P LAN&#13;
125 R ooms-Forty with Bath&#13;
&#13;
MODERATE PRICES&#13;
One-hal f Block from Orpheum&#13;
&#13;
HOTEL JACKSON&#13;
OSCAR W. GUSTAFSON, Proprietor&#13;
COR NER FIFTH AND JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
I WILL&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY&#13;
WHAT MORNINGSIDE MOST NEEDS&#13;
The students who use the library need an editorial and here it is, by Miss Sanborn.&#13;
&#13;
Should be your life's motto--it breathes the spirit of accomplishment. Successful&#13;
business men have invariably laid the foundation of their success to the Savings Bank&#13;
habit. You cannot do better than follow their example by opening an account with&#13;
this bank at the earliest moment and putting yourself in line.&#13;
&#13;
Say! you, you with that smirk and those killing ways, you who use up so much&#13;
of some girl's time in the library that they don't go in only when they have to to escape&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
the honey buggish antics of some of your ilk in the halls, you mutts who are suffering from&#13;
&#13;
Security Building&#13;
&#13;
an overgrowth of animal tissue in the region nature intended for your brain-say, you,&#13;
just for a change, why don't you stop and if you haven't enough intelligence to see what&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST WILLIGES&#13;
&#13;
a fool you are making of yourself, ask someone then take their advice and cultivate a&#13;
little ingrowing respect for other people's time and rights and win the everlasting gratitude&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
of an already over-worked librarian, to say nothing concerning the thankfulness of your&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dimmitt's Opinion-The above is a pessimistic view of the situation.&#13;
must be understood that there are two sides to the proposiion.&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
By talking to a young&#13;
&#13;
FIND YouR WAY To-&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
lady in the library you change ideas and clash personalities and these are some of the&#13;
things that mold and fashion your life.&#13;
&#13;
Furs&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
310 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
victims.&#13;
&#13;
FRED B. PHIPS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
As it is against the rules of the College for&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
the girls to be talking to the boys after dark, where is there a better place to talk than&#13;
in the library?&#13;
&#13;
Fine&#13;
&#13;
It is here in the library that everyone is under the public eye and the&#13;
&#13;
association is of the highest and noblest kind.&#13;
&#13;
May we have more of it.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Omaha&#13;
&#13;
WHAT MORNINGSIDE MOST NEEDS ACCORDINGTOGrey-More appreciation for my reportorial ability.&#13;
James Kolp-More nights to fuss and more pretty girls.&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
St. Clair Moore-More card parties and a dancing club.&#13;
Vernon-A few more lines of activity and less attention paid to studies.&#13;
Bill Payne-A few more good business men like me.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
&#13;
Bob Dott-A class in appreciation so they could appreciate a good man when&#13;
they see him.&#13;
Janitor-More sidewalks for Morningside.&#13;
McVicker-More men's hanquets.&#13;
Uncle Jimmy Reistrup--A little less ragtime.&#13;
&#13;
Tom Dealtry&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
FORENSICS AND ORATORY&#13;
Dolliver Wins Humorous Contest With the Following Selection.&#13;
"SHOEMAKER TO THE FUSSERS"&#13;
&#13;
It had been a day of sorrow in Morningside; the Faculty returning from a summer's vacation had decreed that there should be no more fussing in Morningside, a decree, hither unknown even in that Methodist Institution. The cries of the fussers had&#13;
died, the last teacher had slowly slunk away and the lights of the College building were&#13;
extinguished.&#13;
The moon rising in sorrow over old Bass field cast its dewy rays thru the windows&#13;
of the new Gym and lengthened the shadows of the dormitories. Near the bleachers of&#13;
old Bass field a band of students had congregated, their clothes brushed smooth for the&#13;
Orpheum, the shine still fresh upon their shoes, the scowls of anger still set upon their&#13;
faces. Suddenly Shoemaker stepped forth from the gang on the bleachers and spoke&#13;
thusly : "Ye call me fusser, and you do well to call him fusser, who for three long years&#13;
has fussed every form _ maid or coed the broad expanse of Morningside could furnish&#13;
of&#13;
and never never yet lowered his arm. If there be one among you who dare say that&#13;
ever in class room or on the campus my actions did belie my word, let them step forth and&#13;
say it, if there be one who dare meet me on the old church steps let her come on. But&#13;
yet, I was not always thus, a tired fusser of still more tired Janes, my early life ran&#13;
quiet as a teacher's dream, and when at noon I threw my books aside and gathered beneath the trees to take my rest, there was a friend, ·the daughter of a neighbor, to share&#13;
my lunch.&#13;
&#13;
said:&#13;
'Let him do his worst.'&#13;
you and so must I fuss no more.&#13;
&#13;
This is no place for fussers, and so fellow fussers must&#13;
&#13;
"Oh Morningside! Oh Morningside! T hou has't been a willing teacher to me,&#13;
thou has't given to that simple farmer boy who never knew a later hour than eight, the&#13;
eyes of an owl and a heart of rubber. Taught him, after nights of sleepless fussing,&#13;
to bluff his way thru morning classes, taught him to gaze into limpid eyes of flirting&#13;
Freshmen, even as Marion upon Al. Aye, and I shall pay thee back, until the&#13;
pathless campus shall be filled with fussing coeds.&#13;
"Ye stand here now like fussers that ye are, the lock of some maiden's hair still&#13;
upon your coatsleeve, that blotch of powder still upon your shoulder. But tomorrow&#13;
some coyote, breathing Herpicide from his flowing pompadour, shall take your Jane to&#13;
the Colonial and bet his Frat pin that he will cut you out. Hark, hear ye coyote&#13;
boasting, 'tis three days since he has had a Jane, and tomorrow he will be fussing yours.&#13;
And a fine piece of cheese it will be. If ye are yellow, then stand there like Sophs waiting for the F reshies' ropes, if ye are fussers follow me, gain the boats of old Riverside&#13;
and there do as good work as did old Engle down by the old Church tower.&#13;
"Is Morningside dead, is the old spirit frozen in your veins, that ye do cringe and&#13;
cower like a henpecked husband 'neath his matron's tongue?&#13;
"Oh Morningsiders, Students, F ussers, if we must work let us work the F acuity;&#13;
if we would fuss, let us defy this vile prohib1ition, if we must be canned, let it be under&#13;
the open sky in the old boats of Riverside!"&#13;
&#13;
One evening after the chores were done and we were seated on the old front&#13;
porch, my uncle, a city man, was telling of the good old days, of how it had been his&#13;
boast that he had kissed every girl in the village. I did not know then what love was,&#13;
but my heart leaped-I knew not why, and I clasped our neighbor's daughter until my&#13;
mother grabbing me by the hair of my head, sent me to bed and bade me cut out&#13;
the mush. That night my sister's beau came, and I saw the one who had admonished&#13;
and advised me, hugged by this son of Adam, until my father's No. 10 landed him in&#13;
the street by our dwelling.&#13;
Last night I kissed a girl in the spoonholder, and when I broke my clasp I saw&#13;
her dad, the same dark frown on his face that I had noted when in adventurous childhood I plucked his daughter's first green kiss and dashed away in childish triumph. I&#13;
told the Prexy that he was my enemy, irascable and mean, and I begged that I might&#13;
consign him to Miss Ferguson's German Class and watch him sweat. Aye, upon my&#13;
knees amidst the dirt and litter of the campus, I begged to be excused while all the assembled Faculty and the dirty dozen whom they call disciples, jeered and laughed,&#13;
deeming it rare sport to see Morningside' s fiercest fusser turn pale and cringe with fear&#13;
before that terrible man. And then Prexy drew back as if I were a coyote and sternly&#13;
&#13;
TIME&#13;
&#13;
WiLL TELL&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS&#13;
]. W.&#13;
&#13;
HALLAM&#13;
&#13;
GEO. W.&#13;
&#13;
FINCH&#13;
&#13;
HALLAM AND FINCH&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
Suite 603-605 Iowa Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
DR. C. E. WESTWOOD&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
&#13;
500 F. L. &amp; T. Bldg.&#13;
Corner Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
L. G. DIERKING&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
CASH MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW&#13;
&#13;
The Place for Quality and Right Prices&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
409-41 0 Security Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
]. E. DE WALT&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE TAILOR SHOP&#13;
&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
&#13;
SAM MYERS, Prop.&#13;
CLEANING AND PRESSING&#13;
&#13;
Room 7 Iowa Bldg.&#13;
Fifth and Pierce&#13;
Auto 1731 Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Rear of Darling's Store&#13;
3921 Transit Avenue&#13;
&#13;
MUNGER, ROBINSON &amp; KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
H. N. BOTHERS, M. D.&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE AT&#13;
&#13;
621 Iowa Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Station&#13;
&#13;
The Hotel Martin&#13;
ABSOLUTELY FIRE-PROOF&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA ·&#13;
&#13;
Banquet and Dinner Parties a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
RESULTS OF THE WILSON ADMINISTRATION&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY&#13;
Are ye ready for Society Amalgamation?&#13;
ing solution of the Society question.&#13;
Pies.&#13;
&#13;
To Miss Dimmit, we offer the follow-&#13;
&#13;
Just what would happen if the athenaeumzetalathea&#13;
&#13;
If that wouldn't be Society Amalgamation, then the College could get along&#13;
The only trouble would come as to whether they could keep&#13;
&#13;
without the F acuity.&#13;
&#13;
ReliabilitY&#13;
&#13;
You will find it first, last and&#13;
always at MAR TIN'S&#13;
&#13;
the Pies down.&#13;
CAUGHT ON THE CAR&#13;
&#13;
H. Clark-"-Well, when am I going to have that photograph?"&#13;
&#13;
Patrons demand more than promises from&#13;
us. The fact that we fuljill our promises&#13;
has built up a thorough-going respect for&#13;
our word, which we appreciate.&#13;
&#13;
Bernice Lehan-"Why-never-I might as well be truthful."&#13;
&#13;
We're 34 Years Young in Enthusiasm&#13;
We're 34 Years Old in Experience&#13;
&#13;
H. C.-"But I want something to remember you by."&#13;
B. L.-"Well, I might give you a hug and a kiss instead if"-H . C .-"But I want something more lasting."&#13;
(Interval while car goes over bridge.)&#13;
B. L.-"Gee, Harry, I'm going to have a good time this summer while I'm away."_&#13;
H. C.-"Oh, don't go, my brother and I are going to belong to the boat club this&#13;
&#13;
willingness and the abilbetter&#13;
every day.&#13;
&#13;
summer, and we'll take you to some"-B. L.-"Now don't you expect me to stick around this burg all summer and give&#13;
up a perfectly good vacation expecting you to take me any place."&#13;
H. C.-"Well, see here, don't you believe I would come around if I knew you&#13;
were here this summer?&#13;
&#13;
You know I would."&#13;
&#13;
B. L.-"Well, you might come around but you'd never take me any place.&#13;
know you too well.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I've stuck around all winter and you haven't taken me a single&#13;
&#13;
H. C.- "Well, but"-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
B. L.-"Gee, I wish you would take me to just one swell dance before school is&#13;
out.&#13;
&#13;
The Fastest Growing Ready-tow ear House in the Middle West&#13;
&#13;
Don't you think you could fix it?" (The car stops for the College and the subject&#13;
&#13;
Women's and Misses Suits&#13;
and Dresses Our Life Study&#13;
&#13;
is left to be more fully discussed at chapel time.)&#13;
&#13;
PIPER &amp;&#13;
PLUMBING &amp;&#13;
&#13;
LARSON&#13;
&#13;
College Shoes&#13;
for College Men&#13;
&#13;
'Tis a feat to&#13;
fit feet-try us&#13;
&#13;
HEATING&#13;
&#13;
188 0&#13;
&#13;
1914&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Oldest Dry Goods House&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Plumbing&#13;
Heating&#13;
&#13;
Engineers&#13;
Contractors&#13;
&#13;
Orr &amp; Graves Co.&#13;
&#13;
HI&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
&#13;
We did the heating and plumbing in all the&#13;
College Buildings&#13;
UNITED BANK BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
HEAP&#13;
BIG&#13;
SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
KI&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Ross M. CooMER, Assoc. M. AM. soc. c. E.&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
Coomer &amp; Small&#13;
&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
&#13;
ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS&#13;
&#13;
RED&#13;
SKIN&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
212 United Bank Building, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Auto Phone 3 719&#13;
Ask Our Clients About Us&#13;
We Rebuilt Main Hall, Morningside College&#13;
We Built the New Gymnasium&#13;
&#13;
YIP&#13;
&#13;
KI ·&#13;
YI&#13;
YI&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
0&#13;
R&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
The most complete line of Sporting and Athletic Goods in this part of the country.&#13;
We carry Spaldings, Reach and Goldsmith's Athletic Goods, and if it is to be&#13;
found in Sioux City, it is here.&#13;
&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
D&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College and its students use a· good supply of our Athletic and Knit&#13;
Goods, so it must be the best.&#13;
&#13;
The Phillips Sporting Goods Co.&#13;
406 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
Interest Paid On&#13;
Certificates of Deposit&#13;
&#13;
Open Accounts Invited&#13;
&#13;
Clements '&amp; Co.&#13;
Sample and Fancy&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Which need not be overlooked, and many&#13;
valuable lessons can be learned by simply&#13;
carrying a checking account with this bank&#13;
during your school year. We will gladly&#13;
help you solve these problems which you&#13;
will find very profitable to you later on.&#13;
F acuity and students are welcome to use&#13;
us in any and all banking matters.&#13;
&#13;
·GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
Established 1884&#13;
FRESH FRUIT&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President&#13;
&#13;
AND CONFECTIONS&#13;
&#13;
T. A . BLACK, Vice President&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Ban k&#13;
&#13;
C. W . BRITTON, Cashier&#13;
C. G. CUMMINS, Assistant Cashier&#13;
&#13;
$500,000.00&#13;
&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR THE BEST OF CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S&#13;
&#13;
Responsibility, $100,000.00&#13;
4 Per Cent Interest on D eposits&#13;
&#13;
Satisfaction guaranteed. Students, let&#13;
us furnish your picnic supplies.&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS,&#13;
&#13;
THERE IS THE BANKING&#13;
FEATURE OF YO&#13;
UR&#13;
EDUCATIO&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
REFRESHMENTS AND LUNCHEONETTS&#13;
&#13;
St. Aubins Station&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
E. C. Peters, President&#13;
Geo. E. Ward, Vice President&#13;
John Scott, Jr., Cashier&#13;
F . W. Lohr&#13;
C. J. Milligan&#13;
C. W. Payne&#13;
&#13;
WEST HOT EL&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
Candy Palace&#13;
607 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Brink's Meat Market&#13;
&#13;
A year's work of remodeling and refurnishing the West Hotel from the top floor&#13;
to the basement is now completed. The result is gratifying to us and pleasing to our&#13;
patrons. We now have 230 rooms, 144 with private bath, 40 sample rooms with&#13;
bath. First-Class Cafe, Rathskeller and private dining rooms in connection.&#13;
&#13;
Europe a n&#13;
&#13;
P lan&#13;
&#13;
- RATESWe supply the leading boarding houses of Morningside with all kinds of fresh&#13;
meats.&#13;
Phone us your order and our delivery will reach you promptly.&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6284&#13;
&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
Single, Without Bath, $1.00 Per D ay&#13;
FRANK DONOHUE, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
With Bath, $1 .50 to $3.00 Per Day&#13;
JAY MACLARTY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETICS&#13;
FOREMOST&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
CLOTHES&#13;
&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKI&#13;
&#13;
you men and young men of Sioux City will all be&#13;
&#13;
glad to know that this "Live Store" will re-open it's doors&#13;
for business September 1st in its new store at the same&#13;
location.&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA STREETS&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
You'll also be glad to know that no effort is be-&#13;
&#13;
ing spared to make it the pride of Sioux City-no stone left&#13;
HE CAN'T GET AWA Y FROM IT&#13;
&#13;
unturne d to ma ke Iit a store you'll be proud of and glad&#13;
to give your patronage.&#13;
&#13;
AMONG THE TRACK DREAMERS&#13;
&#13;
Gussie Brunelle dreamed that he had won the two-mile.&#13;
Heavy Hiett woke up after he had won the hundred in ten flat.&#13;
The Joke Editor went to sleep cursing just after he broke his shin at the end of a&#13;
twenty-two foot leap.&#13;
&#13;
3.&#13;
sold&#13;
&#13;
The same sterling quality of merchandise will be&#13;
the same high principles of merchandising followed&#13;
&#13;
that has characterized this store in the past with the big&#13;
added advantage of superior service possible through the&#13;
&#13;
Beans Evans woke up in the bath tub, while taking a bath just after finishing the&#13;
mile in four minutes and fifteen seconds.&#13;
&#13;
adoption of the most modern methods of merchandising.&#13;
&#13;
The landlady woke up Vennink with a pail of cold water just as he was giving the&#13;
last whirl to the family cat on the end of a 168-foot hammer-throw.&#13;
&#13;
May we count you as one of the first to see the new&#13;
store September 1st.&#13;
&#13;
AGORA ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Classic.&#13;
Still in progress with Margaret Kifer leading the field and running strong. Mina&#13;
Lynch, Frances Martin, Marian Davis and Ruth Blackman have either given up or are&#13;
far in the rear.&#13;
Discus-The discussion is still going on but Ida Mary Hood has a strong bid&#13;
for first honors.&#13;
Auto Race-Wilson wins first with one of Darling's Winton Six's.&#13;
&#13;
The Moore Clothing Co,&#13;
&#13;
A. R. Johnson &amp; Co.&#13;
Wholesale. and Retail&#13;
&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
The Offer of the Colleg&#13;
"To BE AT HOME in all lands and ages; to count Nature a familiar acquaintance, and Art an intimate friend; to gain a standard for the appreciation of other men's&#13;
work and the criticism of your own; to carry the keys of the world's library in your&#13;
pocket, and feel its resource behind you in whatever task you undertake; to make hosts&#13;
of friends among the men of your own age who are to be leaders in all walks of life;&#13;
to lose yourself in generous enthusiasms and co-operate with others for common ends;&#13;
to learn manners from students who are gentlemen, and form character under professors&#13;
who are Christians-this is the offer of the college for the best four years of your life."&#13;
-WILLIAM D EWITT HYDE.&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ask Your Grocer for MOTHER'S BREAD&#13;
Out-of-Town Orders Given Prompt Attention&#13;
Our Customers Are Our Best Reference&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Auto Phone I 19 7&#13;
Bell Phone I 9 7&#13;
&#13;
ST ANDS FOR THIS IDEAL&#13;
&#13;
408-410 Iowa Street&#13;
&#13;
LET LINDHOLM FURNISH YouR HOME COMPLETE&#13;
ACRES OF FURNITURE TO CHOOSE FROM&#13;
&#13;
A gain this year of 4 3 per cent of men in the four college classes&#13;
&#13;
Lindholm Furniture Co.&#13;
5 I 3-15-1 7 PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
A gain this year of 1 7 per cent of students in the four college classes&#13;
&#13;
This year I 30 Freshmen.&#13;
412-14-16 SIXTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
BEAN SHOWER ARTISTS DISCOVERED&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The boy who goes out with one arm or one foot to compete with those who have&#13;
two is not as much at a disadvantage as a young man who goes out half educated to&#13;
compete with the boys who are educated.&#13;
-WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN.&#13;
&#13;
Write President A E. Craig, Ph. D., D . D.&#13;
&#13;
ALL IS NOT GOLD THAT GLITTERS&#13;
OR WHAT KIND OF COFFEE Do THEY DRINK&#13;
&#13;
A Sensational Three-Act Drama.&#13;
&#13;
Staged by the Bird Class Monday Morning.&#13;
&#13;
Setting-Twelve O'Clock Class on Bird Trip in North Ravine&#13;
Atmosphere, One-fourth Per Cent Civet Cat.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS. CO.&#13;
''THE BIG STORE"&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's Greatest Attraction&#13;
&#13;
AcT I-Stevens grows hungry and suggests lunch.&#13;
AcT II-Miss Hood sniffs the air knowingly, and says do, I can smell coffee now.&#13;
AcT III.-No dinner there, they proceed one-half mile against the wind.&#13;
&#13;
EASOP's FABLES&#13;
&#13;
Up-to-Date&#13;
(Taken from the new College Catalogue)&#13;
Only&#13;
&#13;
I 5 chapel absences a&#13;
&#13;
semester are permitted.&#13;
Students are required to attend at least one service of&#13;
Public Worship on the Sabbath at the Church the student may&#13;
&#13;
prefer.&#13;
&#13;
( Rippey&#13;
&#13;
and Wilson prefer the Orpheum.)&#13;
The heating&#13;
&#13;
plant&#13;
&#13;
"fur-&#13;
&#13;
"Everything Under the Sun"&#13;
''A Store that Outshines in Styles-in Selection-in VALUES"&#13;
"The Store that Shows the New Things First."&#13;
&#13;
nishes heat" "for the College&#13;
Hall and Conservatory.·•&#13;
&#13;
"The Store that Serves All the People from&#13;
Kindergarten to College and afterwards."&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHS&#13;
&#13;
If you're grouchy at your pic-&#13;
&#13;
"Everybody's Going to the Big Store"&#13;
&#13;
ture,&#13;
Just remember that it's true&#13;
As you gazed into the camera&#13;
&#13;
It has pictured back to you.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS. COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
Money at interest in our Savings D epartment is at work for you both day&#13;
and night.&#13;
We help you to save and pay interest&#13;
on your Savings.&#13;
The Government watches your account&#13;
with this bank.&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Stock Yards extends a cordial invitation to students attending Morningside College to call&#13;
at the yards. Let us show you how business is conducted at a stock yards.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern National Bank&#13;
Capital and Surplus $200,000.00&#13;
&#13;
The knowledge obtained will be of benefit whether&#13;
you take up farming and live stock raising, or some other&#13;
occupation.&#13;
&#13;
We are thoroughly equipped to serve&#13;
you in any department of banking.&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT&#13;
OPEN SAT. EVENINGS&#13;
&#13;
'ELIASON&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fourth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
J. A&#13;
&#13;
MAGOUN, JR., President&#13;
B . H. KINGSBURY, V. Pres.&#13;
I. M. LYON, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
First-Classin Every Respec t&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1544.&#13;
&#13;
LORD'S&#13;
Barber Shop&#13;
&#13;
Home Portrait Photography&#13;
He Pleases&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON'S STOCK OF NEW&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
HOME FITTINGS&#13;
&#13;
Art Publishing Co.&#13;
&#13;
Is Bigger and Better Than Ever&#13;
&#13;
Athletic and Sporting&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY PRINT ING&#13;
&#13;
Bath Rooms&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
&#13;
SPALDING-GOLDSMITH&#13;
&#13;
ANNOUNCEMENTS&#13;
&#13;
A. J. LORD, Proprietor&#13;
31 Nebraska Street,&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL, TENNIS, GOLF, SPALDING&#13;
RACKETS, SLOTTED THROAT RACKETS&#13;
&#13;
INVITATIONS&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
AYERS, SPALDING HAND MADE&#13;
TENNIS BALLS&#13;
FISHING TACKLE. RIFLES AND GUNS&#13;
&#13;
521 Douglas Street&#13;
&#13;
Patronize the Advertisers&#13;
&#13;
Oxford Hotel Building&#13;
Opposite City Hall&#13;
&#13;
in the&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2588&#13;
&#13;
1915 Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt' s Hardware&#13;
312-14 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
FIVE FLOORS FULL OF NEW&#13;
FURNITURE, Rues AND&#13;
&#13;
DRAPERIES&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
SENTIMENTAL&#13;
&#13;
"Say! Did You Hear the News?''&#13;
"No, What?"&#13;
"Dad's Book-Store is the Only Book-Store&#13;
Advertising in The. Sioux"&#13;
When the moments that you're with her&#13;
Go like Ty Cobb over first,&#13;
And the minutes you are absent&#13;
Like the hours of the accursed.&#13;
When the faces once tho't pretty&#13;
Pass unnoticed down the street&#13;
&#13;
And your heart begins to flutter&#13;
Every time you chance to meetY es-when everything you look at&#13;
Is illumined by her face,&#13;
Then you're pretty safe in guessing&#13;
That you've almost got a case.&#13;
&#13;
AN ODE TO M ARGARET&#13;
I want a&#13;
Just a&#13;
Come on&#13;
About&#13;
&#13;
little, oh a little,&#13;
little love,&#13;
my dear and tell me&#13;
the wonderous stars above.&#13;
&#13;
Let's get started now for&#13;
I don't know how long it'll last,&#13;
Just look at the clock, my dear,&#13;
You know time flies so fast.&#13;
ADVERTISEMENT&#13;
Let a successful love letter writer help&#13;
you. My private suggestive methods leads&#13;
the victim by a series of logical steps&#13;
straight to a natural and looked for proposal. Reference library of 14 volumes&#13;
accessible to paid-up students.&#13;
(Myron 0. Insko.)&#13;
&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
"Well! Is That So?"&#13;
&#13;
]IMME&#13;
&#13;
Come and hold me in your arms&#13;
And hug me a little, too,&#13;
For you see no one's around&#13;
And you know that I love you.&#13;
The day is long, the evening short,&#13;
See, there's no time to lose ;&#13;
Come and sit beside me now,&#13;
I know you won't refuse.&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker wants to know how&#13;
long a chinchilla overcoat would last if&#13;
a girl took a little NAP off it each night.&#13;
&#13;
Beck: Say, where is the best place to&#13;
hold the world's fair?&#13;
Dunn : Around her waist, you chump.&#13;
&#13;
"Yes, and whats more The Morningside Printing&#13;
Company do all kinds of fancy society printing. You&#13;
better buy your books and supplies there after this."&#13;
&#13;
"What Do They Sell Besides Books?"&#13;
"Oh! they keep all kinds of students' supplies, such&#13;
as Fountain Pens, Note Books, Stationery, Pennants,&#13;
College Jewelry, etc.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
ORGANIZATIONS&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
AGORA CLUB&#13;
&#13;
C. Patton &amp; Company carry a full line of&#13;
&#13;
Canned goods, Groceries&#13;
&#13;
Fruits and Vegetables&#13;
We Aim to&#13;
&#13;
Please our customers at all times.&#13;
&#13;
Your&#13;
&#13;
Attention is called to our quick service&#13;
Phone Orders&#13;
are given&#13;
&#13;
To all parts of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
An Agora-Cultural Club organized for the betterment of the girls physically and&#13;
mentally. It fills a long felt want. It originally was only a walking club but Miss&#13;
Ferguson didn't like the solitude when she chaperoned them, besides the members&#13;
themselves expressed themselves as favoring gentlemen chaperones. This year, feeling&#13;
the need for a society shine, they invited prominent women to explain certain _ rinciples&#13;
p&#13;
of etiquette common to ordinary social parisites. The only good thing they had this&#13;
year was a joint "doo" with the boys. Nuf ced. Lately they have been deluding&#13;
themselves into believing that they do have good times until they have reached the stage&#13;
where they really do enjoy themselves. The only practical farm work they are doing&#13;
is taking care of the Morningside chickens. They cannot expect to do much until we&#13;
get our new chicken house. This is to be the next building in the building campaign.&#13;
SMOKER'S CLUB&#13;
&#13;
The best attention.&#13;
&#13;
We hope to make you&#13;
&#13;
0 ur customer by the quality of our groceries&#13;
Not one dissatisfied customer is our aim&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Call at our store at Peters' Park.&#13;
Our central Iocat1·on ma k es ourservicepossible&#13;
to all&#13;
&#13;
Morning side.&#13;
Phones.&#13;
&#13;
All&#13;
&#13;
Phone your orders.&#13;
&#13;
A u t o 6143, I owa 761.&#13;
&#13;
Both&#13;
&#13;
We Aim to&#13;
Please&#13;
&#13;
particular people.&#13;
&#13;
Now is the time for our acquaintance.&#13;
Your patronage desired.&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Leading&#13;
&#13;
Grocers&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Meets every day during the chapel period. Generally at Larson's store. Matters&#13;
of deep import are discussed . Ways and means of explaining chapel absences to the&#13;
Faculty committee the most important topic.&#13;
0FFICERS:-Grand Chief Smoke Blower, Kenneth Wilson; High Mogul Inhaler,&#13;
Harrison Kilborn.&#13;
M EMBERS:-Ralph Rippey, Bernard Brown, Will Fair, Wilson Clark.&#13;
PROBATION ERS :-Chester Robinson, Neville Gray, Paul Woodke.&#13;
TRUTH CLUB&#13;
EMBLEM :-A hatchet.&#13;
MoTTO :-"I cannot tell a lie."&#13;
PURPOSE:-To give to the world the truth regarding newspaper reporters at&#13;
Morningside and to clear Gray of the charge of being a prevaricator, and to show that&#13;
he really was benefactor to the school.&#13;
RECOMMENDATION TO THE FACULTY :-Give honor to whom honor is due.&#13;
Instead of condemning Gray for what he did write, give him a vote of thanks for suppressing the things that he did suppress.&#13;
FACULTY STIRRED TO ITS VERY ROOTS&#13;
Sensational Prize Fight Pulled Off By Prominent Members of Morningside Faculty.&#13;
Threatens to Disrupt Organization.&#13;
Gory with their own blood, their hair disheveled, their faces twitching with rage,&#13;
their breath coming in short, sharp gasps, Harold Stiles and Ronald Stevens fought desperately, while their parents, frenzied with excitement, urged them on from the ringside.&#13;
Such was the gruesome sight that met the eyes of our brave Ole as he paused horrified&#13;
at the window before rushing in to separate them. Ole was silenced with an "X"&#13;
and Stiles and Stevens soon made it right with the Discipline Committee. The popular&#13;
decision was given to Ronald.&#13;
&#13;
THE"^ U^M^I BEES&#13;
HONEY&#13;
^eft\o\x.%\(&#13;
(Apologies to Wordsworth's Daffodils.)&#13;
I wandered as a student' B's,&#13;
Who'se sought in vain for A's and does,&#13;
TAILORED TO MEASURE&#13;
When suddenly I heard a buzz,&#13;
A swarm of buzzing honey air,&#13;
Upon the ground and in&#13;
Settling and stinging in my hair. the bees@&#13;
Continuous as the to hum&#13;
And bother us in English that&#13;
That swarm of bees beganthemeshere, come,&#13;
YOUR CHOICEto Fit and Please You or No Sale&#13;
Along the my coat and my ear@&#13;
Ten thousand saw me at&#13;
And settled on margin ofpants. a glance,&#13;
We Guarantee OF 500 ALL WOOL FABRICS&#13;
My dog that howling&#13;
me scorched,town;&#13;
Out-run beside not butdog spry I&#13;
to but&#13;
A fellow could&#13;
be&#13;
With such a stinging bunchthought&#13;
404 Fourth Street&#13;
EBR; around@&#13;
I howled and in me the bees&#13;
What change ran, but little had wrought.&#13;
FAVORITE&#13;
And oft when like a bed I'd lie, Ruth&#13;
All swelled upon my Senior's head,AdaBailey@"By Gum." SAYINGS OF MORNINGSIDERS&#13;
They'd flash a where themy eye, HoraceBelew@"0 Beans."&#13;
in&#13;
And showI'dthose honey bees.bees had tread,Day@"Mr. Barks worse than my bite."&#13;
me mirror in the trees Hazel Morgan@"Aw Heck."&#13;
And then&#13;
And curse again gaze up&#13;
Wayne Costar@"Believe me kid, I've got some Dame."&#13;
"Turk" Eiffert@(?)&#13;
Prof. Carson@"Or what not."&#13;
To be chapel cuts@Lovice Strobel. WANTED&#13;
More Wright at all times@Alice Thornburg.&#13;
Agirl just like the one I used to have@H. Morgan.&#13;
Elastic Currency@Morningside Students.&#13;
A corner on Beans@Ada Belew.&#13;
&#13;
SUIT OR OVERC&#13;
AND&#13;
UP&#13;
&#13;
$15 Tailors&#13;
The Guarantee&#13;
More time to laugh at my Briggs.&#13;
Morecars@Wright, McKinney, jokes@Guy McKinney.&#13;
girls to fuss@Mike own Costar, Kolp and the girls.&#13;
Owl&#13;
&#13;
The class of work we turn out pleases&#13;
the most particular.&#13;
We can convince you.&#13;
Representative.&#13;
&#13;
See our College&#13;
&#13;
New Method Soft Water Laundry&#13;
313 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
LET US CHEER FOR OUR COLLEGE&#13;
S-s-s-s-sis ! Boom! Whee! Maroon!&#13;
Come all ye loyal with your choo choo rah rah&#13;
Choo choo rah rah, choo choo rah rah rah rah rah;&#13;
Come all ye loyal with your choo choo rah rah&#13;
Choo choo rah rah for Morningside.&#13;
RAH! RAH! RAH!&#13;
(Repeat)&#13;
For it's Morningside! Morningside!&#13;
Wouldn't think of bragging 'bout our Morningside.&#13;
Boastful pride is petrified,&#13;
Ain't no use denyin' what can't be denied;&#13;
Morningside! Morningside!&#13;
Greatest seat of wisdom since Solomon died;&#13;
We abide satisfied&#13;
No fairer school in schooling than our Morningside !&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
A "WHO'S WHO"&#13;
Of the Morningside F ussers for the benefit of would-be fussers, so that none need&#13;
trespass. Order does not necessarily signify intensity or durability. Under no&#13;
conditions will we be responsible for the&#13;
veracity of this list, for women are notorious for changing their minds and some&#13;
men never get their minds made up.&#13;
Cobbs .. . .. .... . ............. ·.&#13;
Wilson . . .. .. ... . ... Metcalf Sisters&#13;
Heavy .. . .. ...... . . Lola Brownelle&#13;
*Jimmy . .. . .. . ...... .. .. Margaret&#13;
Hicks . . ... ... . .. ... High Schoolers&#13;
* Pat .. . ..... . .. .......... Mane&#13;
Mike Briggs .. ... . .... Pearl Wilson&#13;
Riner .... ... . . . . . .. Vera Hauswald&#13;
C. A Payne . . . .. . ......Clara Lewis&#13;
Brownie . ... ... ... ..... Ruth Gillies&#13;
Fully . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sally&#13;
Allen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bernice&#13;
Walton ... .... .. . .. . . .. . . . Briggs&#13;
......... ... . . . Luella Haskins&#13;
Guy McKinney . .. . . . ... Ruth Bailey&#13;
Costar . . . ... . .... .. . .. . B. Wright&#13;
Wright . . . . . .. ... .... A Thornburg&#13;
Barks . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . . . H. D ay&#13;
**Burgess&#13;
... ....... .. Mabel Irwin&#13;
**Bigg . . . .. . ... .. ..... .... Ruth&#13;
** Mac. . . .... . . . . .... . . . Eleanore&#13;
*Subject to change without notice.&#13;
**Standbys.&#13;
&#13;
Another year has passed, have you?&#13;
Insko and Starr won the forty-two&#13;
tournament during the Glee Club trip&#13;
speaks well for the Ministerial Association.&#13;
I don't care what color my hair is,&#13;
No matter how thick or how thin.&#13;
Just so there's enough of the confounded&#13;
stuff&#13;
To cover my head and my chin.&#13;
&#13;
If you wish to see something swell take&#13;
BEANS and SOAKEM.&#13;
Someone asked Alice Thornburg what&#13;
she was doing at the men's banquet.&#13;
"Guess I've got a WRIGHT here," she&#13;
replied.&#13;
Earl Williams says he wishes they&#13;
had a crew here, for he likes to take a little ROE now and then.&#13;
J. Madison says he's going to take up&#13;
a claim before all the NEWLANDS are&#13;
gone.&#13;
News Item-Heavy Heitt went fussing last Sunday night.&#13;
Did you ever stop to notice,&#13;
When you're laughing fit to croak,&#13;
That the GUY who laughs the loudest&#13;
Is the GUY that cracks the joke?&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
"A VOW"&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Oh Morningside, thou art the "Pride of the Sioux"&#13;
And we'll honor thy name ever more,&#13;
To thy standard we'll ever be loyal and true .&#13;
As thy sons ever have been before.&#13;
We shall sing of the honor and fame thou hast won,&#13;
With our hearts and our voices attune,&#13;
And forever we'll stand united as one&#13;
In our love for the dear old Maroon.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
Printing and BOOK Making&#13;
&#13;
We are glad for the days that we've spent on thy hills&#13;
And the friendships we formed in thy halls,&#13;
And for dear Alma Mater our hearts shall beat still,&#13;
When at last we shall turn from thy walls.&#13;
'Till the waters have dried in the "Rolling Mizzou"&#13;
And all love in the old world has died,&#13;
We shall stand by our College, "The Pride of the Sioux"&#13;
And we'll cheer for our old Morningside.&#13;
ALMA MATER&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
Sing the praises of dear Alma Mater,&#13;
Tell of her hero's bold,&#13;
Lift high your voices the chorus raising&#13;
All her glories now unfold.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
Then cheer for dear old Morningside,&#13;
To thee we pledge anew&#13;
Hearts of faithful love, now and forever&#13;
Thy loyal sons and true.&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
We love thy halls of learning&#13;
And where ere we roam&#13;
We will cherish the friendship which thou&#13;
Hast brought us, Fair Morningside our home.&#13;
&#13;
College and School Annuals&#13;
Given Careful and Prompt Attention&#13;
&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
Hear our vow, Oh! Alma Mater,&#13;
Ever to honor thee,&#13;
All we have in loving remembrance bringing&#13;
For the glory of old M. C.&#13;
CHORUS&#13;
&#13;
We Printed and Bound this Book&#13;
&#13;
The Monarch Printing Co.&#13;
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Commencement Program&#13;
&#13;
( P as te P rogra m H ere )&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Sioux (1915), The</text>
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                <text>Morningside College Yearbook</text>
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                <text>Morningside College Annual</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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                <text>Student Yearbooks</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="8223">
                <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College Annual Yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The 1915 yearbook contains pictures, short articles, sporting results, and other college news and events related to this particular year</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Creator</name>
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                <text>Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="8225">
                <text>Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>�1/&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
&#13;
PRESS OF THE&#13;
&#13;
STAR PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�)&#13;
This Volumeis Affertionately&#13;
dedicated To&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
�LL HONOR AND PRAISE to one whose character entitl es her&#13;
to a place among I owa 's noblest women, whose name will ever&#13;
be proudly m e ntioned in connectio n with Morningsid e College,&#13;
whose sy m path etic interest has end eared he r to the heart of&#13;
every st ud e nt-our beloved professo r, Miss Lillian E. Dimmitt.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt came from Illinois W esleyan University to&#13;
Morningsid e as an ins truct or, in F e bruary, 1893 , be fore those&#13;
most try ing years in th e history of o ur institution . Th en,&#13;
whe n its future was o'ershadowed by financial difficulty , a nd the faculty, disheartened and discouraged, one by one t ook th e ir leave, she re main ed . Through&#13;
all those dark days wh en we were broad in name but nar row in bounds, wh en&#13;
times were t esting, when h ope was low, her e nergy surmounted difficulties , her&#13;
tact and judg ment harmonized conte ntio ns, her sympathy gave ne w courage,&#13;
he r self-sacrifice, new ins piration.&#13;
During th e following years when, thanks to our be loved President and the&#13;
kind assistance of loya l fri en ds, brighter days dawne d, th ese same charac teristics were intensified; and as o ur college has gro wn in numbe rs and reputation,&#13;
she has g rown in u se fuln ess a nd influence. Since 1893 , with the exception of&#13;
the year 1903 -+ which she spent at the American S chool of classical Studie s in&#13;
Rome , Miss Dimmitt has been in our midst- an exa mpl e of id eal womanhood;&#13;
a leading m e mbe r of th e fac ulty, a most loyal promo te r of all _ ol lege inte rests&#13;
c&#13;
and a faithful friend to the st ud ent, one to whom h e could go at any time for&#13;
comfort and advice; and wh e n th e s tudents o f Mornin gs id e College enume rate&#13;
the greatest blessings of th e ir college life , not least among the m is th e privilege&#13;
of knowing Miss Dimmitt. For, as a woman o f noble character, of high prin ciples , of a broad mind, of uns ish motives , of t e nde r kindness and "inseeing&#13;
sympathy," she has seldom been equaled. As a teache r, this s tate has yet to&#13;
produce a professor who is more thorough, more conscientious, more inspirin g,&#13;
or on e who k eeps the s tudent more interested a nd who creates in him a stronger&#13;
love for the classics.&#13;
When we pause to think of what she has done for our college and of her&#13;
far-reaching influence, we find that word s can but feebly express our appreciation of her true worth. As this volum e goes out to our many friends, we know&#13;
that all who have ever known her will join with the Juniors of '06 in th e words:&#13;
"We love he r. "&#13;
&#13;
A morning Lesson&#13;
By&#13;
&#13;
Estie&#13;
&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
The gate to the garden stoo:i open;&#13;
The light softly fell on the trees;&#13;
The sturdy old oak shed its acorns ;&#13;
The leaves played about in the breeze.&#13;
&#13;
A maiden, half mournful, half laugh ing,&#13;
And watching the squirrels at play,&#13;
A rose, having ended the lesson&#13;
She read to her father that day.&#13;
"What troubles my daughter. my Heart's Ease?"&#13;
Her father at length to her said.&#13;
"Why sad, when about you is sunshine?&#13;
What grief to such sighing has led?''&#13;
Long used she had been to expressing&#13;
Her thoughts in a straightforward way.&#13;
All clouded and troubled, the sweet face&#13;
She turned to her father t hat day.&#13;
"You see, l was musing of Autumn,&#13;
T he death of th e beautiful trees.&#13;
How life for us a ll will be ended!&#13;
T he future no t raveller sees.&#13;
We know t hat no one from that country&#13;
Returns, nor can dwell here below,&#13;
But why can we not live forever?&#13;
[ wish Him this boon to bestow.··&#13;
"But, daughter," again said her father,&#13;
"The truth is, we live evermore,&#13;
T he trees do not die, but awaken;&#13;
The S pring will their beauty restore."&#13;
"The S pring is the tree'sresurrection;&#13;
The leaf-buds begin to unfold.&#13;
Our lives, though men speak of our dying,&#13;
Attain then to beauty untold.&#13;
As each bursting leaflet brings to us&#13;
S ome message or truth from His hand,&#13;
Let us live with a present endeavor&#13;
To make our lives useful and grand.&#13;
Let us keep a ll the heart-flowers blooming,&#13;
G entleness, kindness and love,&#13;
Remembering ever, His guidance&#13;
ls leading to H eaven above. "&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�WILSON SEELEY LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF TRUSTEES&#13;
&#13;
�FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
�WILSON SEELEY. LEWIS , A. M., D. D.,&#13;
P RESIDENT,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF CHRISTIAN E THICS.&#13;
St udent St . Lawrence University. 187581; A. B., Cornell College, 1889; A. M.,&#13;
ibid., 1892; D. D., Upper Iowa University,&#13;
1895; D. D., Cornell College, 1904; travel and&#13;
study in Europe, 1896 ; Ministerial work,&#13;
1885- 8; Principal of E pworth Seminary,&#13;
1888-97 ; President, Mornings ide College,&#13;
1897-.&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL, A. M.,&#13;
VICE PRESIDENT,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF P HILOSOPHY.&#13;
Ph. B., Cornell College, 1896; Ass istant&#13;
Principal, Epworth Seminary, 1896-7; Ministerial work, 1897-1901; Graduate Student,&#13;
Columbia University, 1901-3; Scholar in&#13;
Philosophy, ibid., 1901-2; A. M., ibid., 1902;&#13;
Union Theological Seminary, 1902-3 ; Professor of Phi losophy and Vice President,&#13;
Morningside College, 1904-.&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT , A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF LATIN.&#13;
A. B., Illinois Wesleyan University. 1888;&#13;
A. M., ibid .. 1890; Graduate Sutdent, University of Chicago, Summer Quarters, 1894&#13;
and 1897; Student in American S chool of&#13;
Classical St ud ies, Rome, 1903-4; Instrnctor&#13;
in English, Illinois Wesleyan University, 188890; Instructor in Greek and Latin, Morn ingside College, 1894-7 ; P rofessor of Latin,&#13;
ibid., 1897-.&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND, A. B.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH LITERATURE.&#13;
A. B., Smith College, 1889; Student Oxford&#13;
University, England, 1902-3; Instructor in&#13;
History and English, Epworth Seminary,&#13;
1892-5; Professor of Modern Languages,&#13;
Upper Iowa University,1896- 7; P rofessor of&#13;
English Language a nd L iterature, Morningside College, 1897-1902; P rofessor of English Literature, ibid., 1902-.&#13;
FRANK HAR MON GARVE R, A. B.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF HISTORY AND POLITICS.&#13;
A. B., Upper Iowa University, 1898; Fellow in History, University of Iowa, 1901-2;&#13;
Professor of History and Economics, Morningside College. 1898-1900; Professor of&#13;
History and P olitics, ibid., 1900 .&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREYNALD, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF FRENCH.&#13;
A. B., University of Paris, 1874; A. M.,&#13;
ibid., 1880; Professor ·of Latin, Chatenu&#13;
Goutre, France, 1876-8; Professor of French,&#13;
Mornings ide College, 1896-.&#13;
ROBERT BRADFORD WYLIE, PH. D.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF B IOLOGY.&#13;
Sc. B., Upper Iowa University, 1897; Graduate Student, University of Minnesota, Summer, 1898; Graduate Student, University of&#13;
Chicago, S ummer. 1899; Fellow in Botany,&#13;
ibid., 1900- 1, 1902-4 ; Instructor in Natural&#13;
Science, Morningside College, 1897- 99; Instructor in Biology, Eastern Illinoi s Normal&#13;
School, S ummer, 1901; Assistant in Botany,&#13;
University of Chicago, Summer and Autumn&#13;
Quarters, 1902; Instructor in B otany, Marine&#13;
Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.,&#13;
1905; professor of Biology, Morningside&#13;
College, 1900-.&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF PEDAGOGY.&#13;
A. B., DeP auw University, 1884; A. M.,&#13;
ibid., 1887; Superintendent of Schools, Woodbury County, 1894--1900, 1902-5; Professor of&#13;
Mathematics and Pedagogy, Morningside&#13;
College, 1900-2; Professor of Pedagogy,&#13;
Morningside College, 1904-.&#13;
HENRY FREDERICK KANTHLENER, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF GREEK.&#13;
A. B., Cornell College, 1896; A. M., Harvard Univers ity, 1899; Graduate Student,&#13;
Harvard Uni versity, 1897- 9 and 1902-3; Instructor in Latin and G reek, Epworth Seminary, 1896-7 ; Instructor in Latin, Wiibraham&#13;
Academy, 1899-1900 ; Professor of Greek,&#13;
Morningside College, 1900-.&#13;
FRED E MOR Y HA YNES, PH. D.,&#13;
REGISTRAR,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF ECONOM ICS AND S OCIOLOGY.&#13;
A. B., Harvard University, 1889; A. M.&#13;
ibid., 1890 ; Ph.D., ibid., 1891; Student, Uni versity of Berlin and Cambridge University,&#13;
1891- 2; Instructor in History, University of&#13;
California, 1892-5; Head of South Park Settlement, S an Francisco, 1894-5; Assistant in&#13;
&#13;
�United States History, Harvard University,&#13;
1896-7; Resident of South End House, Boston, 1895-1900; Professor of Economics and&#13;
Sociology, Morningside College, 1900--.&#13;
AGNES BEVERIDGE FERGUSON, Sc . M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF GERMAN&#13;
Sc. B., Cornell College, ]894; Sc. M. , ibid.,&#13;
1895; Study in Dresden and Berlin, Summer,&#13;
1902; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, Summer, 1901 Professor of Modern&#13;
Languages, Fort Worth University, 1896-7;&#13;
Professor of German, Morningside College,&#13;
1901- .&#13;
ROBERT VAN HORNE, PH. B.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College, 1900; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University,&#13;
1900- I ; Instructor in Mathematics, Morningside College, 1901-2; Professor of Mathematics, ibid .. 1902- .&#13;
CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF ELOCUTION.&#13;
National School of Oratory, Philadelphia.&#13;
1880-2; Professor of Elocution, Morningside&#13;
College, 1899-1902-1903-.&#13;
WINFORD LEE LEWIS, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY.&#13;
A. B., Stanford University, 1902 ; Graduate&#13;
Student, University of California, Summer,&#13;
1902; Graduate Student, University of Washington, 1902-4; A. M., ibid .. 1904; Assistant&#13;
in Chemistry, University of Washington,&#13;
1902-3; Instructor in Chemistry , ibid., 1903-4;&#13;
Professor of Chemistry, Morningside College,&#13;
1904-.&#13;
MlLLARD FILLMORE McDOWELL, Sc. B.,&#13;
INSTRUCTOR IN PH YSICS&#13;
Sc. B., Morningside College, 1903; Fellow&#13;
in Physics, University of Nebraska, 1903-4;&#13;
Instructor in Physics, Morningside College,&#13;
1904-.&#13;
JUDSON WALDO MATHER,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF Music AND DIRECTOR OF THE&#13;
CONSERVATORY.&#13;
Graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory,&#13;
1896; Instructor in Piano.Organ and Harmony, Cornell College, 1895-8; Organist,&#13;
Union Park Church, Chicago, 1898-9; Instructor in Music, Chicago Theological Seminary,, 1898-9; Professor of Music and Direc-&#13;
&#13;
tor of Conservatory, Yankton College, 18991940; Pupil of Ernst Jedliezka, Berlin, 1902;&#13;
Professor of Music and Director of Conservatory, Morningside College, 1904-.&#13;
GERTRUDE F. MATHER,&#13;
VIOLIN AND CORNET.&#13;
Pupil of Charles Heydler, 1889-90; Instructor in Violin, Cornell College, 1896-8;&#13;
Pupil of Adolph Weidig, 1898-9, 1904; Instructor in Violin and Cornet, Yankton&#13;
College, 1899-1904; Instructor in Violin and&#13;
Cornet, Morningside College, 1904- .&#13;
B. LAURA BUNTING,&#13;
INSTRUCTOR IN VocAL Music.&#13;
Graduate of Chicago Piano College, 1903;&#13;
Pupil of Harmon H . Watt. 1904; Pupil of&#13;
Herman Walker, 1900-.&#13;
Pupil of Prof. A.&#13;
Devin Duvivier, 1900-1903; Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte and Voca[ Music, Cornell College,&#13;
1904-05: Instructor in Vocal Music, Morningside College, 1905- .&#13;
JOHN L. GRIFFITH, A. B.,&#13;
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR.&#13;
A. B., Beloit College, 1902; Director of&#13;
Athletics and Instructor, Yankton College,&#13;
1902-1905; Director of Physical Education&#13;
and Instructor, Morningside College. 1905- .&#13;
ALICE K. GRIFFITH, A. B .,&#13;
A. B., Beloit College, 1901; Instructor in&#13;
Latin, High School, Long Prairie, Minn.,&#13;
1901-2 ; Instructor in Latin and German,&#13;
High School, Edgerton, Wisconsin, 19021904; Assistant in English, Morningside&#13;
College, 1905- .&#13;
IDA NOLAN REYNOLDS,&#13;
Graduate Primary Training School, Drake&#13;
University, 1903; Graduate Student, Chicago&#13;
University, Summer, 1905; Principal West&#13;
Ward School , Rockwell City, Iowa, 1903;&#13;
Principal , High School, Victor, Iowa, 1904;&#13;
Director, Manual Training School , Rockwell&#13;
City, Iowa, Summer, 1904; Instructor in&#13;
Primary Methods and Drawing, Morningside&#13;
College, Summer, 1905; Instructor in Primary&#13;
Methods and Drawing, Morningside College,&#13;
1905- .&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD,&#13;
ASSISTANT IN PIANO.&#13;
Graduate Morningside College Conservatory, 1902; Pupil of Emil Liebling, Chicago,&#13;
1903-4 ; Instructor in Piano, Morningside&#13;
College, 1904-.&#13;
MYRTILLA MAE COOK, Sc. B.,&#13;
INSTRUCTOR IN COMMERCIAL BRANCHES AND&#13;
SECRETARY OF FACULTY.&#13;
Sc. B ., Morningside College, 1905; Instructor, ibid., 1905-.&#13;
&#13;
�HEN THE CLASS OF 1906 first came into prommence&#13;
in the fall of 1900, appearing with their colors, they announced that they were the "Doctors Chicks of 1906."&#13;
Two years later on the night of June 14th, this same&#13;
class, numbering forty, made their debut into Collegiate&#13;
life, when dressed in white, they took their places upon&#13;
the platform for their Academy graduation.&#13;
The following fall, according to a custom then in vogue, the college classes&#13;
entertained on Halloween. These same" Chicks," Freshmen now, gave a reproduction of the Hall of Fame, and an insight into the "lower regions" where&#13;
in effigy a Sophomore lay bound by Pluto's chains much to the consternation of&#13;
the Dean, while the flag of 1906 floated proudly from North Hall.&#13;
In the fall of 1903 occured a battle between this class, now Sophomores,&#13;
and the verdant Freshmen. It arose over a chanticleer who tried his wings in&#13;
Chapel one morning. Coming from the ranks of '06 he was captured by '07, recaptured by'o6 and then secreted in a tool chest. When he was discovered a battle&#13;
ensued, resulting in the dismemberment of the poor victim. His heart, however,&#13;
remained with '06. Hearing of this the Humane society made a hasty investigation, only to find that the chicken had been killed before being hidden in the&#13;
chest.&#13;
Soon after this came the "Farmers' Party in Pumpkin Holler,"and in the&#13;
following spring the trip to the Indian Reservation, when the class, tired of being called "Chicks," adopted the name of "Sioux" and decided to publish the&#13;
'' Whoops of the Sioux."&#13;
This annual occupied most of their Junior year but left some time for oyster stews and sleigh rides.&#13;
What the events of the Senior year have been we will leave to your imagination, having first assured you that the year has been filled with works, spiced&#13;
with jollity.&#13;
Truly, in play, this class has not been chicken-hearted; in works they have&#13;
ever been the early " Chicks " finding the worm.&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
�Fate&#13;
Bv&#13;
&#13;
XE NI A M AE ELLI S&#13;
&#13;
If fate d ecrees, it's use less to contend !&#13;
Or should each eve r strive his lot to m e nd ?&#13;
What is to be, will be , it o ft doth seem ;&#13;
Ye t w e are daily heaping d ream o n d rea m,&#13;
And do they 'e re come true ? P e rhaps th ey may,&#13;
Fate may d ecree to send that bliss our way.&#13;
More oft, it see ms, some future day we wake&#13;
To learn that w e had made s ome sad mistake .&#13;
If y ou be made the violet, not the rose,&#13;
Don 't lon g to rule a s q ueen , jus t keep yo u r p ose.&#13;
The viol et, even ado res old moth er eart hSo each should strive to mak e hi s life of worth.&#13;
The sweete st flowe r is decked with d e wy t ea rs;&#13;
That life the best, which s mil es down cares and fears.&#13;
Thoug h fate d ecrees d ense shadows t o yo u r p lace,&#13;
The darkest cloud can ne'er o b scu re Hi s face .&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Hopkins&#13;
&#13;
�"So gracious in her tact and tenderness. "&#13;
&#13;
OUR PRESIDENT AND BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
"Don't talk anything but business to me."'&#13;
&#13;
"To scorn delight and live laborious days."&#13;
&#13;
"On one she smiled and he was blessed."&#13;
&#13;
A. , F o r d R o b b i n s&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
OUR EDITOR IN CHIEF&#13;
&#13;
"Nowher so bisy a man ther nas,&#13;
And yet he seemed bisier than he was.'·&#13;
&#13;
"Character but half formed till after wedlock. "&#13;
&#13;
�"Two fifths of him genius,&#13;
three fifths of him sheer fudge ."&#13;
&#13;
·' Mathematics cultivate the reason ."&#13;
&#13;
"I cannot play alone.' '&#13;
&#13;
"Wild wit, invention ever new&#13;
And lively cheer of vigor born. "&#13;
&#13;
" Hath wisdom's warrant and wit's own grace. "&#13;
&#13;
'·Music can noble hints impart.&#13;
engender fury , kindle love.''&#13;
&#13;
" Would that there were more like her.''&#13;
"Work never did him any harm.''&#13;
&#13;
�"Strong and athletic in form;&#13;
Is this lad of dilligent nature ...&#13;
&#13;
"One of the few immortal names&#13;
which were not born to die. "&#13;
&#13;
"The woman that deliberates.''&#13;
"Earnest toil hath its reward.' '&#13;
&#13;
·'He draweth out the thread of his verbosity&#13;
finer than the staple of his argument."&#13;
&#13;
"None but himself can be his parallel."&#13;
&#13;
"Great effects come of industry.''&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
"Look before you leap; see before you do.' '&#13;
&#13;
�"Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil&#13;
o'er books consumed the midnight oil?"&#13;
&#13;
"Of studie took he most cure and most hede. "&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
'I'll steal through life in my own quiet way.''&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomore History&#13;
0&#13;
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O WORSHIP AT THE Shrine&#13;
! How these words&#13;
have wrung in our ears from early childhood!&#13;
From time immemorial th is shrine bas been considered sacred. It is situated in the heart of the temple of Wisdom and is reverently called the "Shrine of&#13;
Knowledge." A hove this holy altar is said to hover a spirit, angellike in form, which radiates blessings upon the weary and worthy toilers who with uncovered heads lie prostrate before the shrine.&#13;
How often in our youth have we cast aside our story books and&#13;
sat with shining eyes and faces as our fathers, who in their youth&#13;
chanced to make this eventful journey, related their experiences.&#13;
How eager we were for the time we should follow in their paths .&#13;
The shrine is in a far country, a journey of about four years distance by steady plodding. Many would scorn the rough and weary way&#13;
and rush across the strange, intervening country, not heeding the&#13;
demands of the revered goddess whose temple they would rashly&#13;
enter. But nay, they must follow certain well defined roads as the&#13;
goddess dictates, and obey reverently all her commands&#13;
It is not enough that the pilgTims plod diligently five days of&#13;
the week, but they must trudge patiently along even into the sixth&#13;
day, resting only on the seventh.&#13;
Many a weary one would g·ladly be carried at times, by a stronger&#13;
brother were it not for the ever watchful eye of the guarding one&#13;
who would withhold at last the long· sought for treasure. Alas! how&#13;
often has the wise deity refused to bestow her blessing upon the&#13;
eager and expectant ones before her altar, saying to them, "What&#13;
seek ye here? None but the deserving, the self-reliant receive the&#13;
reward. " More than one pilgrim has failed to understand that to&#13;
reach the shrine does not necessarily mean to receive the blessing .&#13;
As the time has passed this pilgrimage has become each year&#13;
more common and the way easier; for the determined hands of our&#13;
fore-fathers have cleared away many obstacles for those who were&#13;
to follow .&#13;
Each year new bands from every country set out on their great&#13;
quest. One main rendezvous is Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
�It was interesting to note the company which gathered there&#13;
in the fall of 1904, from the farm and city, all with the one great&#13;
purpose.&#13;
Despite the longing for home, which at first tempted some of the&#13;
weaker ones to return, these pilgrims are now marching on their way&#13;
with courage and determination.&#13;
Surely such a valiant band can never lack in strength or purpose, but will move boldly onward to the goal. Our prophecy is that&#13;
the goddess of Wisdom will welcome these into her temple and, as&#13;
they bow reverently before her "Shrine of Knowledge," will breathe&#13;
upon them her divine benediction, sending them out into the world,&#13;
endued with a new life, to be an inspiration and a blessing to their&#13;
fellow men.&#13;
&#13;
FRESHIES&#13;
MEDITATE! MUTTERING MA55 OF meandering, melancholy&#13;
MIDGETS AND MAINTAIN THESE MANDATES Of your&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Ye&#13;
&#13;
you&#13;
&#13;
SMALL, contracted&#13;
&#13;
GO TO bed&#13;
&#13;
romping&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
ritin&#13;
&#13;
AND rithmetic,&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Notice&#13;
tip&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
THAT&#13;
&#13;
nnocent,&#13;
&#13;
RAMBLE NOT IN YON MELON&#13;
&#13;
Bunch&#13;
&#13;
insignigicant&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
locoed&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
PATCH.&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
mavverricks,&#13;
&#13;
NEVER, never&#13;
&#13;
NEVER , NEVER, never,&#13;
&#13;
NEVER, NEVER,&#13;
&#13;
NEVER, NEVER, NE.VER, NEVER NEVER , NEVER, NE VER&#13;
&#13;
OCCUPAIIONS&#13;
FRESHMAN&#13;
&#13;
KEEP&#13;
&#13;
Roving&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
Diversions&#13;
&#13;
SHALL&#13;
&#13;
close&#13;
&#13;
CONTINUAL&#13;
&#13;
BAND OF ruffians,&#13;
&#13;
NDERTAKE&#13;
&#13;
UNDYING CARE&#13;
&#13;
estimate&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
TO reflect&#13;
COST&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
his&#13;
&#13;
door&#13;
&#13;
house&#13;
&#13;
NOTTO 6E&#13;
&#13;
RIGHTFUL&#13;
&#13;
OBEY THESE&#13;
&#13;
YELLING for&#13;
&#13;
PLACE&#13;
&#13;
Shiver&#13;
&#13;
not&#13;
&#13;
TO UNDERSTAND THAT&#13;
&#13;
EFT , loudly&#13;
&#13;
quiet&#13;
&#13;
OPEN&#13;
&#13;
refuse&#13;
&#13;
R RESPECTFUL TO US, YOUR&#13;
re&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
GROW&#13;
&#13;
REACHERS AFTER READING,&#13;
&#13;
INSTANTLY IMITATE THE INTENTIONS of these INSTRUCTIONS&#13;
&#13;
ln1\W YOUR&#13;
E very&#13;
la BUT&#13;
&#13;
U&#13;
&#13;
YOU MAY&#13;
&#13;
TOIT THAT&#13;
&#13;
YOUR 5UPERIORS WHEN YOU pass them&#13;
OF YOUR' sky-piece&#13;
&#13;
ev&#13;
ever&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
EARLY&#13;
&#13;
rushing, rollicking&#13;
&#13;
MIGHTY MASTERS.&#13;
&#13;
see&#13;
&#13;
vision&#13;
&#13;
RULE.RS,&#13;
UNLESS YOU USE&#13;
&#13;
LAW5,YOU WILL BE&#13;
&#13;
RELIEF, IN&#13;
&#13;
some&#13;
&#13;
ON YOUR lax&#13;
&#13;
LONESOME&#13;
&#13;
OBEDIENCE .&#13;
&#13;
rebelliousness&#13;
&#13;
ANO SHAKE,ALL SILLY, SELF-CONCEIT ed&#13;
soreheads, who&#13;
sneer&#13;
at these&#13;
sagac ious&#13;
&#13;
tipulations&#13;
&#13;
Saj&#13;
&#13;
upon&#13;
&#13;
LEST&#13;
&#13;
by the&#13;
&#13;
Ye! Be&#13;
&#13;
surpassing&#13;
&#13;
set upon&#13;
strength&#13;
&#13;
amd severely&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
�ND IT CAME TO PASS in the year of our Lord,&#13;
1905, that the tribe of '09 came to dwell on t he hills&#13;
of Morningside.&#13;
And the tribe was strong in its&#13;
youthfulness, and brave in a new country.&#13;
Now a day was chosen for a great council, and the&#13;
tribe with one voice proclai med Shaw their king.&#13;
so the priest annointed him. then the king made a&#13;
great feast and his people made merry and grew much acquainted.&#13;
Now there was a tribe of barbarians that dwelt also on the hills&#13;
of morningside&#13;
And they were called sophmores&#13;
and were fierce&#13;
but loved not the open battle.&#13;
And Shaw led his warriors forth and challenged the other&#13;
]tribes to battle in football. But they were s ore afraid and ventured&#13;
not u pon the field .&#13;
Moreover it came to pass that Shaw and his warriors encamped&#13;
one night in the house of Miller; and Shaw t ook council among his&#13;
me n, and they went out ·and raised a great high pole and on the top&#13;
of it was the banner of the Freshmen.&#13;
Then did they go to the camp of the chief of the barbarians and&#13;
took his raiment and hung it upon the pole.&#13;
Behold, when the barbarians came out in the morning they were&#13;
exceedingly wroth. And they went away and when the watch was&#13;
few they came again in a great chariot with great clubs and bludgeons and weapons of war.&#13;
Moreover the Freshmen fought valiantly, but the barbarians&#13;
tore down the raiment of their chief.&#13;
And the women of the tribe of '09 came out and cried to their&#13;
brave warriors and the barbarians were routed .&#13;
Behold, their chief was captured and bound to the pole, and the&#13;
wa r riors of Shaw made much mirth about him.&#13;
And it came to pass in the evening that the Freshmen women&#13;
gave a great feast and the warriors feasted much in the glory of their&#13;
prestige.&#13;
Moreover the tribe of '09 showed unto the other tribes of Morningside that they were possessed of much wisdom. For in the great&#13;
discussion between the Philomathians and O thonians did the wisdom&#13;
of Brown and Himmel show itself.&#13;
And again in the great contest of orators did Haskins and Shaw&#13;
and Cushman bring great honors to the tribe of '09 for they won the&#13;
great prize.&#13;
And the days tha the tribe of '09 had dwelt upon the hills of&#13;
Mornmgside were few but their deeds were mighty and brave.&#13;
&#13;
�A Dream ofThe Sioux&#13;
BY A. B. COOK&#13;
WAS sitting in my old arm chair, one in which my grandfather&#13;
had taken so much comfort, musing, for I sat, as&#13;
it were, at the gateway of the&#13;
Great Northwest looking with&#13;
admiration over the vast fields&#13;
and plains of the World's Wonder Land.&#13;
It was one of those rare&#13;
afternoons in June when the&#13;
air is balmy.&#13;
The sun was&#13;
warm and sent its life-giving&#13;
beams to aid the plants and flowers. The silvery clouds played leisurely in the blue sky, while the gentle breeze laden with the songs&#13;
of birds and the perfume of the rose soon lulled me to sleep.&#13;
In a dream I saw the events of a century pass like "a watch in&#13;
the night." I seemed to have been carried back to the time when&#13;
this country was a vast natural garden. There appeared a great&#13;
unknown country, over which the foot of civilized man had never&#13;
trod.&#13;
The buffalo, elk, and deer were in great abundance, while&#13;
thousands of small fur bearing· animals roamed fearlessly where&#13;
they chose. I could see many small lakes and sloughs and around&#13;
them were the wild goose, duck and crane, all rearing their young&#13;
unmolested.&#13;
It seemed that years thus&#13;
passed by, but presently this&#13;
scene of tranquility was changed.&#13;
the red men seemed to be coming from every direction, and&#13;
gathering in countless numbers&#13;
around an old oak tree. In my&#13;
dream, I looked for the cause of&#13;
this, and saw a little band of&#13;
white men who had drawn up&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
their canvas among the willows and&#13;
had encamped on the banks of the "Big&#13;
Muddy."&#13;
My dream now changed. Before&#13;
I had seen the Indian only as a bold,&#13;
fearless hunter, but now fear and&#13;
anxiety seemed stamped on his face.&#13;
In the long council which ensued I&#13;
could understand but little except by&#13;
the gestures. Nevertheless, I was able&#13;
to learn that the1·e had already reached&#13;
the Indian in the west a rumor of the&#13;
cruelty and selfishness of the white&#13;
man in the east, and that when the&#13;
white man came the red man could no&#13;
longer hunt in peace. So it seemed&#13;
that the import of this council was to stop, if possible, any further&#13;
invasion into the territory of the red man. "These pale faces,"&#13;
said the chief, "are but the leaders of many who are to come and&#13;
take our lands from us as they did from our brothers."&#13;
The scene then shifted. When again I saw the red and the&#13;
white man a full half century had passed, and with the passing of&#13;
time all had changed. I now saw boats on the rivers carrying produce up the stream and going back laden with the furs of animals&#13;
which had been purchased from the Indians&#13;
There seemed to pass through the wild e rness a company of&#13;
wanderers, seeking a suitable place for a new home. Finally they&#13;
seemed to agree upon a place, and with fear and trembling lest at&#13;
any time their red enemy should&#13;
attack them, they erected' huts,&#13;
some of sod and some of logs.&#13;
These seemed to be built for&#13;
the double purpose of shelter&#13;
from the cold and • protection&#13;
from the evening during the&#13;
many struggles for supremacy&#13;
which were to follow.&#13;
As I watched the white man&#13;
coming, I saw that he .had much&#13;
&#13;
�with which to contend. But he would be driven back in the&#13;
many fierce contests which ensued and, though many heroes were&#13;
slain on each side till the streams seemed at times to flow with bu-&#13;
&#13;
the reality of the present into one harmonious picture. As I awoke&#13;
I could hardly realize that it was all a dream. Before me extended&#13;
this great Wonder L and. The daylight faded away and when the&#13;
&#13;
lights of the city beamed forth I exclaimed:&#13;
own country! The Sioux!"&#13;
&#13;
man blood, it appeared that the white man was gaining ground and&#13;
was pushing the red man farther and farther away.&#13;
Then my dream again changed. I saw no longer the scenes of&#13;
war and blood-shed, but another c·ouncil around the old tree. Despair seemed heavily stamped on each brow as the old chief, the favorite of his tribe, solemnly announced that they could no longer&#13;
hope to chase the deer and buffalo. "The pale face," said he, "is&#13;
much stronger than we, and now that we can no longer live together&#13;
we must leave our bunting ground and seek refuge in a land where&#13;
our enemy does not live." At the end of this sad scene I saw them&#13;
strike their tepees and depart toward the northwest, leaving their&#13;
history securely locked within the hea1·t of the old oak tree.&#13;
Also I noted many other changes in rapid succession. Soon the&#13;
elk and deer became extinct und e r the fire of the white man's gun;&#13;
the last herd of buffalo, as if loath to leave the old grazing ground,&#13;
slowly wended their way over the western hills, seeking solitude&#13;
from such a bitter foe; the vast prairies were converted into&#13;
fields of grain; cities soon began to appear; the old sod hut and log&#13;
cabin had given way to the familiar frame dwelling; the peaceful ox&#13;
had given way to the rumbling engine.&#13;
These last scenes seemed to blend my visions of the past with&#13;
&#13;
" This is indeed my&#13;
&#13;
�The Voice I Shall&#13;
By&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Hear No Wore&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDS&#13;
&#13;
I strolled one night alone,&#13;
Alone where dark waters glide;&#13;
Alone where the foot steps of man seldom trod;&#13;
All alone by a sobbing tide,&#13;
And I thought that I heard in the murmuring stream,&#13;
A voice I heard long before,&#13;
A voice that had thrilled me for life's battle- strife,&#13;
But a voice I shall hear no more.&#13;
'Twas one night in my dreams, as the city of gold&#13;
Gleamed bright in the morning's red glare.&#13;
There was sung o'er the breezes with harps of pure gold,&#13;
By the voice I shall hear no more:&#13;
"Be strong to brave the bitter strife,&#13;
Be strong to help the weaker life,&#13;
Be strong to bear the battle's rife&#13;
And the voice that you'll hear no more."&#13;
Life may be wild and drear,&#13;
But when the dark moments hang o'er,&#13;
The words of the singer that sang that night&#13;
Echo out from the past once more;&#13;
And my deepest soul thrills to the song that it sangWith a peace from the billowless shore;&#13;
Yet the heaviest burden I carry in life&#13;
ls the voice l shall hear no more;&#13;
For it haunts every breeze, and the sigh of the trees,&#13;
It haunts every breaker's deep roar;&#13;
Still I never have heard since it sang that nig htThe voice I shall hear no more:&#13;
"Be strong to brave the bitter strife,&#13;
Be strong to help the weaker life,&#13;
Be strong to bear the battle's nfe&#13;
And the voice that you'll hear no more.'"&#13;
Although I list for thee,&#13;
For thou wast a voice to my soul,&#13;
Whose echoes still call me to I ife's battle- strife,&#13;
Gall me forth to a selfless goal;&#13;
Though I list to thy words midst appalling strife,&#13;
I bear in the battle's deep roar,&#13;
I bear as I can with the weaker life,&#13;
For thee whom I'll hear no more.&#13;
Still I long for thy voice as the days come and goAn oh, for a message from thee!&#13;
For life will seem void lest those battlements bold&#13;
Ring again with thy voice to me:&#13;
"Be strong to brave the bitter strife,&#13;
Be strong to help the weaker life,&#13;
Be strong to bear the battle's rife,&#13;
And the voice that you'll hear no more.&#13;
&#13;
��Atheneum&#13;
HE SAT near the window.&#13;
The shadows lengthened&#13;
and drew together until she could not make out distinctly the objects around her. Visions arose of her&#13;
childhood and of the little friends who often played&#13;
with her; then of her high-school days and of the&#13;
group of boys and girls of her acquaintance.&#13;
But&#13;
the scenes which interested her most were those of her college&#13;
life. Now she was in the Society Hall surrounded by eager and enthusiastic young women. She saw there the long-headed, slow ones&#13;
who were always appealed to as final authority; she saw the impulsive ones who spoke and acted quickly; and those with tact, that&#13;
common-sense element so rare in the crisis times.&#13;
Beyond the group of young women, she noticed the light blue&#13;
and white over the favorite picture, that of Dr. Lewis. Above, there&#13;
shone the bright star with the monogram A. L. S. in the center. As&#13;
she stood gazing with pleasure, the letters of the well known motto,&#13;
"Utile dulci," appeared. She felt thankful that the teaching of the&#13;
motto is still followed and that the young women undertook "The&#13;
useful as well as the pleasing."&#13;
She looked again and magic figures began to appear.&#13;
In her&#13;
glee, she clapped her hands-but the picture was gone. She always&#13;
thought that had the vision continued, the year of the Atheneurn organization would have appeared or, perchance, the number representing those who wear the star, and won it throug;h the years&#13;
Thinking over and over of the vision, she determined to visit the&#13;
Atheneums at her first opportunity, and was sure she would hear a&#13;
chorus of voices exclaim, " Aspeech! Here is a sister Atheneum."&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
HE OBJECT of the Philomatbean Literary Society is&#13;
and bas been during the thirteen years of its existence, to encourage the search for truth, to develop&#13;
the intellectual faculties, and to keep constantly in&#13;
view the moral and social improvement of its&#13;
members.&#13;
The success of a literary society depends upon three things:&#13;
First, the development it gives to its members. Secondly, the work&#13;
it does for the college, and thirdly, the work its alumni are doing&#13;
for the world.&#13;
In the Philo society every incentive is given for the development of its members. The consitution provides for a literary program each Monday evening, and its policy has been to have each&#13;
member appear on a public program at least twice a term.&#13;
During&#13;
each collegiate year a series of Gold and Silver Medal debates is&#13;
held, the six winners receiving two gold and four silver medals.&#13;
The work of the Philomathean society for the college may be&#13;
partly estimated by their active efforts in inaug·urating collegiate&#13;
and intercollegiate debates. They were the only gentlemen's society&#13;
which supported and represented Morningside in its first intercollegiate debate, a debate in which we were successful. The following year the K. I. N. debate league had its origin in the Philo&#13;
society and furnished four men for the two winning teams against&#13;
Baker and Nebraska Wesleyan University, when Morningside made&#13;
her lasting impression in the Northwest.&#13;
Of her Alumni may the society be justly proud.&#13;
Among them&#13;
will be found five college professors, one college president, one Y.&#13;
M. C. A. secretary, eleven ministers and two lawyers.&#13;
The success of the society in the past and present is assured.&#13;
The success of the society in the future is equally assured for its&#13;
character and policies are firmly established.&#13;
The guide-board of&#13;
the society to success may be found in its motto, "Vestigia N ulla&#13;
Retrorsum," for it is the ceaseless endeavors to keep its pledge by&#13;
going forward, that the Philomathean Literary Society stands for&#13;
what it does today.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian&#13;
Yell&#13;
Emblem&#13;
Th e Shield.&#13;
&#13;
Zip, ki, yah&#13;
Z ip, ki, yah&#13;
Otho ! Oth o&#13;
Otho- ni-ah&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
!&#13;
!&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
Color&#13;
Royal Purple&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Suaviter in Modo, Fortite r in R e."&#13;
HE s uccessful organizations , the ones that live, move and&#13;
have a recognized be ing, are the results of deep fel t need s .&#13;
Th ey are t he substance that satisfy the want, the fulfillment&#13;
of a req uire m ent, the strength to alleviate a weakness . In 189 1&#13;
there was felt the need of a new me n's literary socie ty in Morningside, and a few true hearted you ng m e n met, in the gathering&#13;
shadows of an a utumn even ing, to p u t into tan gible, enduring form, their noble&#13;
purposes, and hig h ideals; and hallowing all with the sple nd or and promi se of&#13;
young man-hood, they organized the " Othonian Literary S ociety ." With a&#13;
faith that moves me n's souls to rig hteousness, with a trust in the Hand divine,&#13;
with a hope whose sun has never set, they gave to us this their golden dream.&#13;
The need of the nobling infl ue nce of virtuous organizations of young m en&#13;
is still with us, and we as a society are en deavoring to help meet that want, with&#13;
a helping hand wh ere needed, with a word of courage where th e path is rugged,&#13;
with a love that would point t he s tumbling one to t he light that failet h n o t.&#13;
To this en d w e ask for strength and wisdom that we may "press forward&#13;
in the right as God gives u s to see the right, " believin g , knowing, that it is&#13;
heart power that th e youth of t o day need ; that it is soul power that th ey must&#13;
take with the m into the world if they are to use the t rained minds and keen intellects of co llege m en , to the uplifting of their fe llow be ings.&#13;
" This is what makes a man a gentle man A heart to feel, a head t o plan;&#13;
G entl e soul and a love sincere,&#13;
With heart to fight our b attles here."&#13;
With this, the n, as the abidi n g p rincip le of our Society life, we feel a joy&#13;
in our successes only as they are th e v isible reward of hard, honest end eavor;&#13;
we meet our failures with fortitude and feel sad only in so far as t hese failures&#13;
are due to lack of endeavor, or lack of hig hest motive.&#13;
W e look at th e past with its successes, not with a feeling of pride , but with&#13;
a deep gratitude that our·s tre ngth in time of ne ed has n ot fa iled, cou p led with&#13;
a feeling of our responsibility in bein g intrusted with the keepin g of t his legacy.&#13;
Our watchful care is that we may hand it down to the Othos yet to fo ll ow, an&#13;
organization they can love, and an entity, which, to preserve , is worthy of their&#13;
most strenuous effort.&#13;
" L e t u s then be up and doing,&#13;
With a heart for any fate;&#13;
Still achieving, still pursuing,&#13;
L earn to labor and to wait. "&#13;
&#13;
�/&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
The FOLLOWING C LIPPI NGS from the Z et Scrap Book&#13;
w ill be sufficient t o convey t o the read er the fact that the&#13;
Zetalethean S ociety is performing the work for which it stands,&#13;
viz: The literary and social advancement of its members .&#13;
June 14. The North East Hall on third floo r, when&#13;
opened to t he public, during Comm encement '05 , presented a&#13;
very satisfactory appearance. The hall had undergone a com·&#13;
p le te change and would scarcely have been Recognizable in its&#13;
new furnis hings a nd decorations, had it not been for t he old well known inscri p tion, Zet·Otho.&#13;
.&#13;
April 21.&#13;
The m e mbers of t he Atheneum L iterary Society were enter·&#13;
tained by the Zetale theans at a ten o'clock breakfast at t he home of Miss&#13;
Killam. The rooms were decorated in the colors of th e Zet Society, while the&#13;
blue and white h yacint hs which graced the tables represented those of the&#13;
Atheneum.&#13;
May 14. The annual German program given in th e spring term was an&#13;
unusually successful one.&#13;
The entire program was in G erman, and special&#13;
mention may be made of the play, "Das Gespenst in der P e nsion," p resented&#13;
by the members.&#13;
June 14. '05. The reunion of the Zetalethean Literary S ociety was distinguished by the fact that in the presentation of Diplomas to eight of her&#13;
members she doubled the number of the Alumnae Zets. Sorry we were t o lose&#13;
the girls, but proud to claim the se co ll ege graduates as sisters.&#13;
October 5. This date is memorable in the h istory of the Zet· Otho. Con·&#13;
flagration or flood ? Which ? We are not prepared to say. Th ere was certainly&#13;
heat, and the re was water-or more properly speaking-- s team. T ogether they&#13;
did their destructive work, and for the time th e beauty of our Society home was&#13;
marred ; but not for long.&#13;
Paint and varnish resto red th e former lustre, and&#13;
again we are proud of our Society hall .&#13;
"There is a tide in the affairs of co-education which, taken at the flood,&#13;
leads straight to m atrimony." Three living examrles from the Z e ts go to prove&#13;
this old quotation during ' 05:&#13;
Mrs. D. L. Young (nee ) Emma Fair.&#13;
Mrs. D. C. Hall (nee) Estella Harding.&#13;
Mrs. Wilbur Greene ( nee ) Anna Hollingsworth .&#13;
February 19. "Dido," an Epic tragedy, a dramatization from the Aeneid&#13;
of Virgil, was presented by the Z etaletheans as th eir Annual Public, in the&#13;
College Auditorium .&#13;
The stage was fittin g ly arranged, showing th e te mpl es of Dido and Venus,&#13;
while in the distance rose the walls of the Mighty city of Carthage, to which&#13;
Queen Dido welcomed Aeneas and his Trojan exiles. Th e Collegian says: "An&#13;
expectant crowd filled the Auditorium at an early hour.&#13;
Nor were they disappointed, for from the first strains of' Arma Virumque Cano' t o the last linger&#13;
ing tones of' Weary L abors O 'er ' the appreciative audience sat with increasing&#13;
inerest&#13;
&#13;
�Crescents&#13;
President, Mabel&#13;
&#13;
MoULIN&#13;
&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
&#13;
AGNE S&#13;
&#13;
DoTT&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Boom a linger bow!&#13;
Ching a linger chee!&#13;
Ta la ku wah!&#13;
Ta la ku wee!&#13;
Crescents, Crescents, w bee!&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"We Succeed&#13;
&#13;
by Doing"&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
White and Light Green&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY was first provided for girls of the academy in 1900, when the" Crescent Literary Society"&#13;
was organized with fifteen charter members.&#13;
The purpose of this society is to develop the&#13;
social and literary qualities of its memhers, and to&#13;
prepare them for the broader fields of after life.&#13;
This is kept before each one by the motto, "We learn to do by doing." · they welcome into their number not only those who have had&#13;
the advantages of life, but also those who have but limited opportunities for development; and during each year the society has grown&#13;
both in membership and efficiency.&#13;
Busin ess meetings are held every week, and freq uent social&#13;
gatherings are among the pleasant features of the organization&#13;
During each term public programs are given which represent&#13;
the best and most loyal efforts of all the girls .&#13;
This society believes that everyone can do some thing, so it e ndeavors to develop the hidden talents of each member. The ideal is&#13;
high, but each Crescent has resol ved and is striving to gain culture&#13;
and grace, purity of heart and nobility of character.&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye&#13;
The Hawkeye Literary Society, the oldest organization&#13;
of Morningside Academy, has fur its purpose the cultivation of those qualities in man which make him a better and more desirable citizen, the moral, the social&#13;
and the literary.&#13;
The attainment of this high standard is furthered&#13;
by thorough discipline in parlimentary law, in the rendering of literary productions, and in debate.&#13;
This last is studied under several phases. First, there are closed&#13;
door debates. Secondly, a series of debates are arranged for open&#13;
programs, in which four teams participate; the winners of the&#13;
first two debates being opponents for the third contest, in which a&#13;
gold medal is awarded each of the winning teams.&#13;
Thirdly, an Inter-Society debate is held annually with the Adelphian Literary Society.&#13;
This has been a decided victory for the&#13;
Hawkeyes -seven out of nine points in the decisions have been in&#13;
their favor.&#13;
The last phase of these debates is the Inter-Academic Debating&#13;
League, formed by the Hawkeyes and Ade,lphians jointly for contests with other Academies, thus giving not only a drill in oratory&#13;
and debate, but also the ability to weigh and argue problems before&#13;
strange audiences.&#13;
Within the last few years, the hall has been repaired and furnished, and is now one of the most beautiful and well equipped in the&#13;
Academy.&#13;
The social and literarv gatherings held jointly with the Crescents&#13;
are worthy of mention. then with the outside world forgotten, the&#13;
Hawkeye yell is often heard:&#13;
Ki, ki, haw ki my!&#13;
Whee zip! boom, ba zoo!&#13;
Rah ; rah, IO wah!&#13;
Wah ho hi, and a bazoo boom!&#13;
Animus, animus, dictus sum!&#13;
Haw Haw Haw, ki ki ki !&#13;
Rah rah rah!&#13;
&#13;
�Adelphian&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Carpe Diem."&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Wah boo wah, ta rah boom!&#13;
Re, rah zip, rip ety boom!&#13;
Ripety, ripety, ripety ride!&#13;
We're the Adelphians of Morningside!&#13;
HE ADELPHIAN LITERARY SOCIETY is an&#13;
organization of young men of Academic standing,&#13;
having for its purpose literar.v and social culture,&#13;
aiming to lead all its members to the highest standard of life, aod to bring out the noblest and best in&#13;
each .&#13;
This society was organized in the fall term of 1901,&#13;
with fifteen charter membe rs.&#13;
It has since grown to an average&#13;
membership of thirty-five or forty&#13;
In their second year tbe Adelphians challenged their rivals, the&#13;
Hawkeyes, to debate.&#13;
This was the beginning of the annual Intersociety Academic debate which was won in '02 by the Hawkeyes, in&#13;
'03 by the Adelphians, and in '04 again by the .Hawkeyes.&#13;
Preparatory to these debates, the Adelphains hold each year, a&#13;
series of challenge debates, in which great interest is always · manifested. The programs show careful and di ligent preparation, and a&#13;
large audience invariably greets them.&#13;
The Society hall, which at the time of orgapization bad no furnishings whatever, with the aid of the Aestbesians, has been made a&#13;
well furnished and attractive hall, where many pleasant social&#13;
gatherings and joint closed door programs are held by the two&#13;
societies.&#13;
Wednesday afternoon is Known to all as the time of the regular&#13;
business meetings, when important questions are decided. At this&#13;
hour, also, new members are received.&#13;
&#13;
�President, MAE WOOD&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
Color&#13;
&#13;
Secretary, HAZEL PLATTS&#13;
&#13;
"Toobtain the Aesthetic"&#13;
&#13;
Emblem-oilve leaf&#13;
&#13;
White&#13;
&#13;
"The Aesthesian Chronicle"&#13;
A D. 1902-SPRING: In this year was the Aesthesian Confederacy&#13;
formed. Myrtilla, of the House of Cook, appointed ruler.&#13;
A D. 1902-FALL: Bessie, the Small, ruled. Period of internal im. provements. Palace furnished.&#13;
Three Adelpbs rode forth to&#13;
meet the Hawks in com bat.&#13;
A D. 1903- WINTER: Maud, of the House of Smoek, ruled.&#13;
A. D. 1903-SPRlNG: Succession of rulers' stable.&#13;
A. D. 1903-FALL: In this year many great and good maidens joined&#13;
the Confederacy. As the Confederacy progressed they found it&#13;
necessary to procure a musical instrument, which they did at a&#13;
great price.&#13;
A D. 1904-WINTER: A reign of peace a nd prospe rity. In the light&#13;
of the third moon, afte r an assembly meeting, the leag ue enjoyed&#13;
a ride over the frozen plains, singing to the the jingle of the&#13;
sleigh bells.&#13;
A. D. 1904-SPRING: Put fo rth social natures. A zeal fo r good literary works springs forth ever after to characterize the Confederacy and many good writers were brought to ligh t .&#13;
A. D. 1904-FALL: Carlotta, of the House of toenjes was ruling&#13;
Monarch. Continued peac·e and prosperity.&#13;
A. D. 1905-WINTER: I da, of the royal family of L ewis, succeeded&#13;
Carlotta to the throne. War s for supremacy. Many battles&#13;
fought and won . Aestbesian Brownies came an d aided in a&#13;
court play.&#13;
A. D. 1905--SPRING: Grace, the Good, was placed on the trone. In&#13;
this year did the famous chorus of Adel phians and Aesthesians r ender before the public a grand concert.&#13;
A. D. 1905 - FALL: The Successful reign of Nina&#13;
Aesthesian Confederacy supreme. Confederacy takes a trip across the waters&#13;
on invitation of one of its members, to a feast. On All Saints&#13;
Eve, all members we nt to the Palace of the Ruler and had their&#13;
future revealed to them bv the Oracle.&#13;
The Confederacy has neve r forgotten the purpose of its creation,&#13;
to develp the literary ability of its members; and has ever striven&#13;
to attarn the good, the true, and the beautiful.&#13;
&#13;
�A. L. How ARTH&#13;
M . E.&#13;
&#13;
McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
ROBT. L UC E&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Academic&#13;
Academy Debaters&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
N THE SPRING of 1903 Morningside&#13;
Academy Societies conceived of a&#13;
debating league, that might consist&#13;
of the academies of U . S. D., Penn, Grinnell&#13;
and Morningside colleg·es. The efforts expended in endeavoring to formulate this&#13;
league resulted in a league between De::;&#13;
Moines, Simpson, Grinnell and Morningside academies.&#13;
During the winter term of 1904 Morningside, in debate with Grinnell, won the&#13;
decision by a unanimous vote. At the same&#13;
time Simpson had defeated Des Moines,&#13;
but because of lack of time Simpson and&#13;
Morningside did not debate in the final.&#13;
In 1905 Grinnell won from Simpson and&#13;
Morningside from Des Moines, and in the&#13;
final at Grinnel Morningside lost by a vote&#13;
of two to one.&#13;
This year Simpson lost to Morningside&#13;
and Des Moines to Grinnell, and in the final&#13;
held at Morningside, Grinnell lost to Morningside by a unanimous vote.&#13;
This gives&#13;
to Morningside academy the championship&#13;
of the three year compact.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Senior Academy&#13;
RIENDS, Students, Faculty, lend us your ears;&#13;
We come to mention the Seniors, not to laud them.&#13;
The mischief classes do, lives after them;&#13;
The good is oft interred within their bones :&#13;
Let it be not so of the Seniors.&#13;
The Middles&#13;
Say that the Seniors are too ambitious :&#13;
If 'twere so, were it a grievous fault?&#13;
And have they suffered for it?&#13;
Here, under leave of the Middles and the rest-For each Middle is an honorable man;&#13;
So are they all, all honorable men Came we to write this history .&#13;
The Seniors are studio us, upright and loyal:&#13;
But the Middles are honorable men .&#13;
Edwards hath brought many honors home to us,&#13;
His praises do the College Annuals fill :&#13;
Was this too great ambition?&#13;
When stern Athletics called, the Seniors answered :&#13;
If 'twere Ambition's fault, were this not worthy?&#13;
Yet, the Middles say we are too ambitious;&#13;
And the Middles are honorable men .&#13;
You all did see upon that high greased pole,&#13;
A Senior pennant bung,&#13;
Which thrice, and thrice again,&#13;
The Middles strove to lower. Small wonder is't&#13;
The Middles say ambition;&#13;
And surely they be honorable men.&#13;
We write not to disprove what they have said,&#13;
But rather, here to write what we do knowYe who in days gone by have trod these self-same halls,&#13;
In garb of Senior Prep's, bear with u s,&#13;
If we were disposed to stir your hearts and minds with&#13;
old-time loyalty,&#13;
We might recount of honors more, but we would the Middles wrong,&#13;
Who, you know, are honorable men.&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Poco a poco."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�The Normal Department&#13;
The Normal De partment occupies a prominent place in the work&#13;
of the college.&#13;
It bas two distinct aims: One, instruction in the&#13;
academic studies; the other, training in strictly professional work.&#13;
The academic work is given by those in charge of the departments&#13;
un der which the work would naturnlly fall, while the professional&#13;
work is in charge of the instructors in the Normal Department.&#13;
It&#13;
is all, howeve1·, under the direction of Prof. E. A. Brown, who&#13;
teaches the strictly pedagogical subjects, and from wbom eme nat.es&#13;
all that makes the department what it is in the school&#13;
The work in&#13;
primary methods is given by Mrs. Ida Reynolds, who has received&#13;
special training in this work at Drake University and at Chicago&#13;
University.&#13;
The growth of the Department may be seen by the graduating&#13;
class of this year, which is especially strong. Its members are:&#13;
Miss Minnie I. Brown, Fort Dodge,&#13;
Mi1:,s Maude I. Fox, Elk Point, S.D.,&#13;
Miss Helen Veline, Akron,&#13;
Miss Opal Hornbeck, Rock Rapids,&#13;
Miss Zilla Deno, Morningside,&#13;
Miss Lillian Mauer, L e Mars.&#13;
A special feature of the Department is that of placingits students&#13;
in positions in the public schools, while its graduates are holding&#13;
some important positions in Iowa, as well as in adjoining states, yet&#13;
it is difficult to meet the ever increasing demands for well qualified&#13;
teachers.&#13;
&#13;
�Sand BurNo. 1&#13;
&#13;
Sand BurNo. 2&#13;
&#13;
SYNOPSIS&#13;
&#13;
It would be impossible to imagine the loneliness of the mountains after&#13;
the scenes which I h ave descn bed. I r emarn e&lt;l m the valley only long enough to&#13;
Lay to r est the body of Cor ella's moth er and to gather together a f ew trinkets&#13;
.&#13;
Which had belonged to h er who had, in a few weeks, becom e so much to m e.&#13;
·&#13;
\\ IIC&#13;
b&#13;
. ·1·&#13;
.&#13;
l 1e .&#13;
,&#13;
Then I left, starting back to c1v1 ization to spend a life rn try m g to orget.&#13;
l knew that I was in gr eat danger from P edro, for I h ad learned to know&#13;
the "cry of th e Wild," and I knew that he h ad only gone for his pack and that&#13;
he would r eturn for revenge.&#13;
I thought it best to follow the stream, b11 t the waters wer e so cold that&#13;
Hey became unbearable, so I concluded to lea ve them and to cross the ridge&#13;
to 'the left, thus getting out of the valley up winch I believed P edro and his&#13;
paek would r eturn.&#13;
'Twas a laborions task, and for m any hours I climbed over loose boulders,&#13;
crawled nn &lt;ler tottering r ocks, tr embled at the edge of precipices, or clung to&#13;
stunted trees and r oots. Finally I r ea ched the clond line an d was enveloped&#13;
in a cloud of mist. I could see but a li ttle way from me. A t that time I was&#13;
on a ledge of r ock, about two f eet . wide, which ran along the mountain side.&#13;
To my left was a wall of rock reaching heaven ward, while to my right ther e&#13;
was nothing-hundreds of feet below l ay the val ley. I got down upon my&#13;
hands and knces and cr ept along this ledge. Af ter going for some distance I&#13;
found tha t th e ledge h ad broaden ed and had turned into the monntain ridge&#13;
and was rnnning between two perpendicular walls.&#13;
I felt my way along this p assage fo r som e distance, nnt il su ddenly I came&#13;
to a place wher e my hands touched nothing butt the sides. B efor,e m e seem ed&#13;
to lay a vast gulf of n othingness. H ere I h ad to lie nntil the cloud had&#13;
passed, when I fonnd that befor e m e was a large hole, through which I&#13;
looked down into a m ost beant ifnl valley below. The r ock on which I lay&#13;
hung ont over the valley.&#13;
As I lay there, lost in the wonder of the scen e before m e, I saw a beast&#13;
picking his way down the m ountain sicl e to my ri ght I looked more closely&#13;
and saw that it was P edro. Ile climbed npon a p ile of rocks below m e, sqn atted upon his haunches, p au sed a mom ent, an d th en broke for th in one of the&#13;
most blood-curdling howls I ever heard. The r ocks snatched at it like hungry&#13;
wolves and threw it over to oth ers which hurled it back again in anger.&#13;
Somehow I had come to love that dog, even though I feared him, and before I r ealized what I was doing, I had placed my fingers to my lips and given&#13;
the whistle with which I had called him when we h ad been together. He&#13;
leaped to his f eet, lashed his sides with hi s tail and, looking on all sides. broke&#13;
forth again into that awful call.&#13;
Again I whistled, and as I did so he turned and, looking up, saw me,&#13;
and with snarls and growls, leaped to war ds me as if he would tear me from&#13;
the rock above him.&#13;
&#13;
My life is haunted by a woman's face, and because of this I leave&#13;
home and wander the · world through, trying to find it among my&#13;
fellow me n.&#13;
I at last give up hope of success in my quest, and&#13;
wande r out to the ruins of the Cliff Dwellers, caring little what becomes of me. Here I m eet Pedro, a wild dog, who seems mysteriously&#13;
subdued by my presence and voice. He seems to wish me to follow&#13;
him, which I do, and he leads me back into the mountains to Corella&#13;
'&#13;
a Mexican maiden, whose face is almost the exact likeness of the one&#13;
which has haunted my life. She b eing unable to speak English leads&#13;
me to a cabin near, in which is a witchy, dried up old woman, her&#13;
mother who seems to recognize in me a person whom she feels has&#13;
done her an injustice, and bas come back to rob her of her child.&#13;
After heaping curses upon me and threatening my life, she drives me&#13;
from the cabin.&#13;
Corella and I meet secretly. After a few weeks her mother comes&#13;
upon us one evening and in a fitofanger throws a knife atCorrella which&#13;
pierees her breast. Pedro leaps at berand before I can stop him, tears&#13;
open her throat and she dies. This rouses in Pedro the wild spirit&#13;
again, and as I carry Corella toacavenear by he tries to kill me. In the&#13;
cave he lies on the opposite side and watches me like a fiend.&#13;
At&#13;
midnight as Corella returns to conciousness, a spector appears who&#13;
reveals to us on a pa,noramic vapor or screen, the past. The face that&#13;
haunted me was that of my_ mother who died at my birth. My father&#13;
left me with frie nds and went irito Mexico where he married a Mexican girl of rank, whose face was almost like my mother's. To them&#13;
was born Corella.&#13;
they at last drifted into the mountains where&#13;
my father was killed by falling while out hunting. His wife never&#13;
finding his body belie ved herself deserted and p e rmitted her heart&#13;
to be eaten out and became witchy and old.&#13;
As the vision passes away Corella dies, and Pedro who during&#13;
this time has lain as if dead, comes to life and starts creeping across&#13;
the cave toward me.&#13;
I try to look him down but he still comes on&#13;
towards me. At last I find my voice and call his name. He leaps&#13;
t o his feet, breaks into a howl and rushes out of the cave and becomes again "king of the wild."&#13;
&#13;
- -&#13;
&#13;
�Gaunt forms began to cr eep in from all sid es and to gather around their&#13;
leader P edro, until ther e stood about him ugly brutes whose tee th were whetted&#13;
for any fray. Th ey had hardly gather ed, however., befor e there came crashing through th e stnntecl brush and crags a clog as large as Pedro. Ile seemed&#13;
to be a stranger. Ile came into their midst fearlessly, not hesitating until he&#13;
saw P ed ro upon the rock. \Var was declarerl imm ediately, and th e two began&#13;
to make preparations for th e battle which would decide which was to be the&#13;
king of the pack. Such battles are fought to the death, and the still quivering&#13;
flesh is soon torn from th e bones of the unfortunate on e by th e hungry, waiting&#13;
pack. Th e two glared into each others' eyes like demons. I conld not resist&#13;
the temptati on, so placing my fingers to my lips again I blew so shrill a whi stle that the valley rang with its echo. Th e strange clog cr ouch ed to the ground.&#13;
The pack started for cover. P edro stood like a piece of stone. Suddenly&#13;
giving a few quick barks he dashed off up the m onntain side, the pack closed in&#13;
behind him, and th e strange dog, believi11g hi s victim wa s getting away from&#13;
him, leaped snarling after th e pack.&#13;
I wa s wondering what I had better do n ext wh en I h eard mnffied snarls&#13;
and yippings and growl s. These became louder each mom ent, when suddenly there burst into the passage those fi en el s incarnate. Th e strange dog&#13;
was pushing his way throngh th e pack to get at P edro. P edro hearing him&#13;
corning turned to meet him, and the two demons&#13;
fell to fighting.&#13;
The fight&#13;
was fierce ! Now one was on top, no w th e oth er. The du st flew in clouds&#13;
ow&#13;
about them. Bits of fur fell beside the fighters, while th e stones were dyed&#13;
with blood . A t th e first rush th e strange cl og had hurled him self beyond Pedro, and as th e fight advanced P edro pushed it down the passage towards me&#13;
and the hole. I pressed back again st th e sid e wall lest I too should be mixed&#13;
in the fight. The strange clog was crowded n earer and n earer to the opening.&#13;
H e fought every inch of the way like a fi end. But P ed ro was more than his&#13;
m atch, and at last th e edge of the hole was r each ed, where, los ing hi s balance, he started to fall. H e had a firm h old upon P edro's n eck at tl1e time&#13;
and his weight bega n to pull P edro out over th e edge. Littl e by little he was&#13;
compelled to yield nntil I saw that they wer e both going to fall to the rocks&#13;
below. Th en ru shing in and catching P edro by th e n eck I braced my feet&#13;
against th e rough r ock s and pulled with all my might. Th e strange dog grew&#13;
tired of hi s hold, and, letting go, fell, a shapeless ma ss, on the rocks below.&#13;
I pulled P edro back and pushed him from m e. H e crouched on the floor&#13;
of th e passage and began crawling towards m e, hi s eyes glaring like balls of&#13;
fire in blood dripping fur&#13;
In the exc itement I h ad entirely fo rgotten my own danger, and n ow that&#13;
it was on I knew not how to m eet it. B ut summing up all th e will power I had&#13;
t&#13;
I caught hi s eye, and, with some unknown power, h eld myself calm as I looked&#13;
into those eyes, gateways to a measureless depth filled with hell's darkest&#13;
hatred and wrath. A s h e came on towards m e I calmly called, "Pedro, P edro,&#13;
would you do that n ow ?" H e paused for a mom ent, still looking at m e like&#13;
a friend, then ther e slowly crept into th ose eyes a strange half-human light, and,&#13;
&#13;
over to me he lifted up his blood-dripping head and whined as if hi s&#13;
ing&#13;
.&#13;
rush&#13;
t wwould break ' and . P edro was mine once more.&#13;
heart ears have passed sm ce then, and P edro ha s been laid away. It was more&#13;
·&#13;
. for him to forget the wild life th an for me, for I never saw after that day&#13;
easy&#13;
.&#13;
that demon's&#13;
glare in his eyes, though we wer e seldom found&#13;
mountains&#13;
In The but even today I cringe as mem ory paints that fight, and&#13;
that :fiend&#13;
apa&#13;
toward s m e bac&#13;
t here m th at 1 1 rnonntam.&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
�Heard In History Class&#13;
Compurgators were mediaeval witnesses&#13;
called to swear with the a ccused . Modern&#13;
witnesses are too often called to swear at&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
Sec'y Shaw says our currenc y should be&#13;
more elastic. If this would cause it to go&#13;
farther I heartily agree with him.&#13;
&#13;
There have been three stages in the development of hospitality: (1 ) The ancient&#13;
Greek stationed a slave down by the roadside with orders to compel all passers by&#13;
to stop over night.&#13;
(2) In our southern&#13;
states before the war, all travellers of a&#13;
certain class were cordially welcomed at&#13;
the plantation. (3) Today we station a bull&#13;
dog at the front gate with orders to help&#13;
the traveller on his way .&#13;
&#13;
It was Rouen before it was captured. and&#13;
ruined after.&#13;
&#13;
Cornwallis was penned up and Yorktown&#13;
was captured by George.&#13;
&#13;
It is not every teacher that serves dates&#13;
with his examinations.&#13;
&#13;
Virginia would have been better off if she&#13;
had had fewer goldsmiths and more John&#13;
Smiths.&#13;
Having been driven out of Boston by&#13;
Washington, Gen. Howe went to Halifax.&#13;
&#13;
Too many of us speak the English slanguage as 1f it were our native tongue.&#13;
&#13;
A statesman is a master of state craft. A&#13;
politician is a master of state graft.&#13;
&#13;
Orthodoxy is my doxy, heterodoxy is your&#13;
doxy.&#13;
With their ordeals of hot water, hot iron,&#13;
etc., the mediaeval student still escaped that&#13;
ordeal of the modern history student, hot air.&#13;
&#13;
A revolution is a successful rebellion.&#13;
rebellion an unsuccessful revolution.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
�The Alumni Association&#13;
of&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
EMPEY&#13;
&#13;
CHANDLER&#13;
&#13;
EISENTRAUT&#13;
&#13;
CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Officers&#13;
w . BR UCE&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Empey,&#13;
&#13;
CORBETT,&#13;
&#13;
'99&#13;
Schaller, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Pres ident&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
'94Sio u x City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SIDNEY L. CHANDLER, '99&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
I da Grove, Iowa&#13;
PEARL Woodford,&#13;
DORA Eisentraut,&#13;
&#13;
'03&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Hartley, Iowa .&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
'96&#13;
Seattle, Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Bitter may have been the years that visited their handfnls of grain upon&#13;
but they are all forgotten now in the joys of memory that remain. The bitof time may have silvered th e hair, b11t th e heart is always glad when we&#13;
think of the days that were.&#13;
standing upon the loess hills of Momingside, looking across toward the&#13;
west at evening, one sees the shimmering light of a lrnrrying stream, ever eager&#13;
to meet the ocean ; al ways hastenin g away from the mists and rolling hills and&#13;
roaring city. when we were there, such was our keenest des ire, the ocean of&#13;
life. but the river tires of the ocean and fain would hide itself again between&#13;
high banks and sec the mists once more roll past the hills and hear the roar of&#13;
the city So do we tire of the life that is and fain would we again come back,&#13;
if only for a time, and breathe once more the air and clasp hands with some&#13;
fresh heart full of hope and inexperi ence. The thread of life sp ins and spins&#13;
and character is not had for th e asking. we c find it within ourselves when we&#13;
find it rightly ; only half do we find it in others. And character is all of life&#13;
worth saving.&#13;
As we look hack npon tl1e past at M orningside and look out upon the present. th ere we see already the sign s of a mellow age that is beginning to ripen&#13;
into the f11ll ear of the life of a school. H ouses that were in our time new&#13;
with pine and paint arc already dull wi th age. The yellow soil ha s given place&#13;
to green lawns. Twigs have become ftately trees. muddy hoard walks have&#13;
gone as if whisked away by some magic hand, and the firm cement echoes and&#13;
re-echoes&#13;
with the click of hurrying heels Th e old north hall is grey with age&#13;
while the main hall is beginning to lo ok staid, and to throw off the signs of&#13;
self-consciousness&#13;
and to take on the garments of mature composure. Lover's&#13;
lane has long since passed in to disrepute.&#13;
with&#13;
all this there ha s come a change in the st11dent life. The dr,e amy&#13;
life of a half active yo11th ha s gone and in its place has come a student life,&#13;
practical, stirring, yet full of beauty and peace. Strength seems to have come&#13;
ty&#13;
to every department, strength not only of talent but of that intangible something tl1at makes for character. The old Morningside ha s ceased to be; the&#13;
present Morningside is an established fact, a fact of life and health . In its place&#13;
on the hill in the garden of the great Northwest, it send s its aroma and its pollen&#13;
to the re,ptest haunts of the garden and new life springs up newly to grace old&#13;
spots, till time shall know all the hills and dales and plains to be a garden indeed for beauty shall be there, and purity, and manhood, and womanhood true;&#13;
and all of these make life. But what has all this to do with us, oh, practical&#13;
alumni ? We look on and smile like elders who have tasted life, but with sometlnng of reverence, as one looks at the face of his mother in her prime and&#13;
&#13;
�wonders if she could have been so beautiful in youth; for there are writ the&#13;
lines of life and love and the consciousness of power. So, fondly, we come&#13;
back home sometimes, all but the wanderers; we come back home and feel&#13;
once more the mother kiss, and as her arms enfold us we feel old heart-beats&#13;
renewed, as the mother life in us, after its contact with the hard world, again&#13;
meets its own. And so again we are strong to take up the tasks of life, feeling&#13;
that it is good to live and work-to work for life and to live for work ; to meet&#13;
and clasp hands and look deep into eyes with joy ; t labor and love in snnshinc and shadow; to drink deep from life's fresh fou n tain as we wipe the&#13;
sweat from our brows; to bask a while in an amber snnset ; and then to go.&#13;
&#13;
�ScienceDepartments&#13;
&#13;
The increased emphasis on the Physical and Biological Sciences&#13;
constitutes perhaps the most striking contrast brought out by a&#13;
comparison of the modern college with that of a generation ago.&#13;
Changes in other departments of knowledge have been rapid and&#13;
improvements many, but educators, yet in the full tide of their powers: can recall the beginnings of real science work in our schools.&#13;
the universities naturally led in this movement, but the smaller institutions quickly recognized the significance of the trend; within&#13;
the last few years all colleges of repute have established laboratories&#13;
and are endeavoring to maintain strong work in at least three or four&#13;
of the fundamental sciences. It is gratifying that these additions&#13;
have been made to the body of cultural studies without subtracting&#13;
in the least from appreciation for the longer recognized subjects of&#13;
the college curriculum.&#13;
Science work in Morningside had its beginningin '97, shor·tly after&#13;
the institution was established, but the work was not differentiated&#13;
until 1900 when the board of trutees granted an appropriation for the&#13;
Chemical Laboratories. The following year the Biology Department&#13;
was established, and at the same time the work in Physics was opened&#13;
up independently. These initial appropriations were most carefully&#13;
expended, and made possible a fairly good working equipment in the&#13;
sciences mentioned. These laboratories have since been maintained&#13;
by fees and some apparatus has been added each year. The general&#13;
development of the College has crowded present quarters, however,&#13;
and there is urgent need for both added room and equipment. A&#13;
science building would not only relieve the cong·estion of Main Hall&#13;
but would make possible added phases of the science work which are&#13;
already a necessity.&#13;
The first Major students in science were graduated in 1902, and&#13;
since then a number have completed either the scientific or premedical course each year. A number of these have pushed on in their&#13;
scientific work and are becoming productive workers. Every Major&#13;
student from these Laboratories who has taken up graduate work&#13;
has been given our appointment as Scholar, Fellow, or Assistant, before entering the university.&#13;
&#13;
�Department Of&#13;
Biology&#13;
On The second floor of Main Hall are the Biology Laboratories.&#13;
There is a lecture room with raised seats, and adjoining is the&#13;
morphology laboratory equipped with wall tabl es, aquarium tables,&#13;
students' lockers and a microscope cabinet. The west la,boratory&#13;
has a similar equipment, and is intended for work in physiology and&#13;
histology. Opening into this are the store room, the dark room and&#13;
a private laboratory. All laboratories are provided with city water,&#13;
gas and electric lights. There is a good equipment of apparatus,&#13;
including twenty-two compound microscopes, and material for&#13;
laboratory work and class demonstration.&#13;
The Freshman year is devoted to a general course in biology,&#13;
dealing with the fundamental principles of the science. In the Sophomore year morphology of plants or of animals is taken up, these&#13;
courses being given on alternate years. Some attention is paid to&#13;
the economic aspects of both botany.and zoology, but the courses are&#13;
primarily pure science courses. the major work is adapted as far&#13;
as possible to the after needs and plans of the major students. There&#13;
is a good working library of standard sets of books, texts, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Department of Physics&#13;
The Physical Department occupies the equivalent of five rooms&#13;
in the basement of main Hall.&#13;
These are a lecture room, a&#13;
large general laboratory 40x60 feet, a dark room, also used as a&#13;
laboratory for students in light, a library. and reading room and&#13;
a small room 10x16, used as a store room and work shop, in which&#13;
many of the pieces of apparatus used 'in the general course in&#13;
physics are constructed.&#13;
The elementary course in physics is extensively illustrated and&#13;
is intended to create a lively interest in pbysica1 phenomena, as well&#13;
as give a knowledge of the physical constants.&#13;
Tbe advanced&#13;
courses are intended to develop accurate and scientific methods and&#13;
to this end the theoretical work in the lecture eourses is suppleme11ted with laboratory courses, in which precision is aimed at. In&#13;
addition to the apparatus used in the general courses, the laboratory&#13;
is s upplied with many instruments of precision in mechanics, light&#13;
&#13;
�and electricity. This year there has been added apparatus for determining the heat and illuminating capacity of gases, which gives&#13;
to the student an idea of the practical side of physical science.&#13;
&#13;
Department OfChemistry&#13;
The Chemistry Laboratories are located on first floor Main Hall&#13;
'&#13;
and include a set of seven rooms. The lecture room, with a seating&#13;
capacity of sixty, is provided with raised seats to facilitate experimental lecture work. The general laboratory is roomy and well&#13;
lighted, and is equipped with oak desks, individual lockers and&#13;
hoods.&#13;
The advanced laboratory is similarly equipped. Other&#13;
rooms are a balance room, private laboratory, supply room, and acid&#13;
store room.&#13;
The first, and the larger part of the second year in Chemistry is&#13;
devoted to broader scientific foundations.&#13;
While the place of this&#13;
subject as a proper complement to a liberal education is duly recognized, its eminently practical side is also emphasized. Students desiring to take up industrial chemistry find opportunity to work unon&#13;
such subjects as the city water supply, municipal gas, fuels, prepared foods, etc. In addition to a full equipment of apparatus for&#13;
ordinary class work the department possesses a good outfit for food&#13;
analysis, both proximate and specific; also a complete set of Hempel's&#13;
gas apparatus. Each month official tests of the city gas are made at&#13;
the College. The chemical library includes bound sets of two of the&#13;
standard chemical journals, together with standard texts and reference works.&#13;
&#13;
�MAJOR STUDENTS FROM SCIENCE DEPARTMENTS OF MORNINGSIDE&#13;
COLLEGE WHO HAVE BEEN GRANTED&#13;
UNIVERSITY APPOINTMENTS.&#13;
&#13;
GUY GRIFFIN FRARY, Sc. B.&#13;
CHEMISTRY, 1902.&#13;
Graduate student, Iowa State University,&#13;
1903- 4; Assistant in Chemistry, Morningside&#13;
College. 1902- 3; Fellow in Chemistry, Iowa&#13;
State University, 1903-4; Professor of Natural Science, Fort Worth University, 1904&#13;
Papers: Bachelor's Thesis: "Derivatives&#13;
of Phenyl Ether IV." American Chemical&#13;
Journal, 27:6 1902.&#13;
FRED J. SEA VER, Sc. B.&#13;
BIOLOGY, 1902&#13;
Graduate student, Iowa State University,&#13;
1902-5; Scholar in Botany, ibid., 1902-3; Fellow in Botany, ibid., 1903-4; Assistant in&#13;
Botany, ibid., 1904--5, also Summer Session&#13;
1903-4; Sc. M. ibid ., 1904; Special Assistant&#13;
on Fur.gi, Pardue University, Spring term,&#13;
1903; Awarded Larabee prize for research,&#13;
June 1903; Member of Botanical Expedition&#13;
to Mexico, may-june, 190 4 Elected Fellow&#13;
in Botany, Columbia University, ($650) April ,&#13;
1906; Professor of Biological Sciences, Iowa&#13;
Wesleyan University, 1905- .&#13;
Papers: "The Discomycetes of Eastern&#13;
Iowa.'· Bulletin of Iowa State University ,&#13;
1904. "A New species of Sphaerosoma:·&#13;
Journal of Mycology, 1904 "An Annotated&#13;
List of Iowa Discomycetes."' Proc. of Iowa&#13;
Academy of Science, 1904.&#13;
"Native Trees&#13;
a nd Shrubs of Henry County, Iowa." Manuscript.&#13;
MILLARD FILLMORE McDOWELL, Sc. B.&#13;
PHYS ICS, 1903.&#13;
Graduate student, the University of Nebraska, 1903-4; Scholar in Physics, ibid., 1903-4;&#13;
Instructor in Physics, Morningside College,&#13;
1904---.&#13;
Papers: ''Circular Dichroism in Natural&#13;
Rotary Solutions.·· Physical Reveiw, 20: No.&#13;
3, March 1905.&#13;
&#13;
ALEXANDER GRANT RUTHVEN, Sc. B.&#13;
BIOLOGY, 1903.&#13;
Graduate student, University of Michigan,&#13;
1903-6; Special Assistant in Zoology, Michigan State Geological Survey, Summer 1903;&#13;
Assistant in Zoology, Uni versity of Michigan, 1903-4; Fellow in Zoology, ibid., 1905-6;&#13;
Ph.D., ibid., June 1906; In charge of Scientific&#13;
Expedition sent to the Porcupine Mountains&#13;
by University of Michigan Museum, Summer&#13;
1904; Under appointment of American Museum for Expedition into Mexico, Summer 1906.&#13;
Papers: " Notes on the Molluscs, Reptiles,&#13;
and Amphibians of Ontonagon County,&#13;
Michigan. " Michigan Academy of Science,&#13;
1904. (2500 words.)&#13;
"Butler's Garter Snake.'' Biol. Bulletin 7,&#13;
No. 5, Nov. 1904.&#13;
"An Ecological Survey of the Porcupine&#13;
Mountains." Bulletin University of Michigan Musuem, 1906; (30,000 words with maps&#13;
and numerous half tones.)&#13;
"Fauna and Flora of the Porcu pine Mountains and Isle of Royal, Michigan.'' Bulletin&#13;
of University of Michigan Museum, 1906.&#13;
(15,000 words.)&#13;
"Geographical Distribution and Genetic&#13;
Relationships of the Species of the Genus&#13;
Thamnophis," (Thesis for Doctorate.)&#13;
&#13;
JOHN WALDO McCARTHY, Sc. B.&#13;
CHEMISTRY, 1905.&#13;
Graduate student, State University of&#13;
Washington, 1905-6; Assistant in Chemistry,&#13;
ibid., 1905- 6- .&#13;
WILLIAM JOHN MORGAN, Sc. B.,&#13;
CH EMISTRY, 1905.&#13;
Graduate student, Iowa State University,&#13;
1905- 6; Assistant in Chemistry, ibid., 1905-6.&#13;
&#13;
�history of the Conserbatory&#13;
The' value and power of music in our midst is somewhnt shown by the rapid growth&#13;
or the convervatory of Morningside College. In the early days of the in·. itution. before it recieved the name of Morningside College, a music department was&#13;
with Mrs. Mallory as Principal Soon after, in 1891 Miss Florence Lewis,&#13;
blis \&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
with the help of Mr. Neidlinger the emin ent song writer. established a conservatory&#13;
in the metropolitan block, in Sioux City; and in connection&#13;
with this Conservatory, the&#13;
work of tlie music department was carried on for some time. Then came Balleshaya German Professor, who. although teaching at this conservatory gave part of his&#13;
time to musical&#13;
interests at Morningside&#13;
in 1894 Morningside had a conservatory which she could call her own. when Mr. T.&#13;
C. Hadley nn excellent voice teacher&#13;
was secured as director of the music department;&#13;
and in this same yenr Mrs. I. A. Schotts assumed the principalship of the Piano Work&#13;
there were also two other instructors- one, a teacher of mandolin and Guitar; the other&#13;
Miss Lemmon, the first violin teacher.&#13;
the&#13;
Convervatory&#13;
was not placed upon a firm foundation, however, until the&#13;
year 1897 when Professor 0. P. Barbour was made director. To him is clue the making of our present conservatory, and under his direction great advancement was&#13;
made.&#13;
among other things. Prof. Barbour organized a glee club. an orchestra, and&#13;
a choral union wl1ich rendered such oratorios as "Be;shazzar" and Haydn's "Creation.'' It was his aim to harmonize the work of the Conservatory with that of the&#13;
music lovers of the city. One step in this direction was taken when, through his influence&#13;
Miss. Florence Lewis became a member of Our Conservatory faculty- a person&#13;
who has always worked faithfully to create in those about her an interest and enthusi&#13;
asm for music, and who was instrumental in organizing the Beethoven C lub, under&#13;
whose supervision many prominent artists have appered in Sioux City.&#13;
during these years other additions weremade to the Conservatory facu lty, among&#13;
whom were i\Iiss Alice K. Barbour and Miss Amanda Larson, who taught voice; Miss&#13;
Sarah .T. Lacy. Mrs. Blanche Palmer Barbour. and Mrs. Alice B. Marshall, Piano ; Miss&#13;
Gertrude Lewis and Mr. Stanislaus Scherzel, violin.&#13;
during the year 1903-4, our Consen·atory was left without a director, but the following year it was greatly strengthened by the coming of Professor .T. W. Mather, our&#13;
present director. and Mrs. Mather, who is doing much for the violin department. Professor Mather's eforts have already raised the tone and grade of work in the Conservatory, besides encournging a higher standard of general culture by requiring the rnusic graduates to be eligible to Freshman rank.&#13;
In many other ways has he increased&#13;
the influence and reputation of our Couservutory.&#13;
During the first year of his work in our college, a second division of the choral union&#13;
was organized in the city. And due to Professor Mather's efforts alone, in the spring&#13;
of 1905 there was held Sioux City's first May Music Festival when Handel's masterpriece, ''The Messiah," was given. For this series of concerts the Chicago Symphony Orchestra was secured and such artisits as Mrs. Genvieve Clark Wilsonand E. C. Town,&#13;
of Chicago; Eleanor Kirkham and Art.bur Beresford, of new York. The festival proved&#13;
so successful that it made possible even more elaborate preparations for the second&#13;
music festival in May, 1906.&#13;
Since 1899 there have been thirty-five graduates from the Consen·atory- twenty-six&#13;
and influence&#13;
&#13;
RITZ&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
MASON&#13;
&#13;
GILLMAN&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Class of '06&#13;
Miss FERN RrTz, Sioux City, Piano .&#13;
Mrss NINA MossMAN, Sioux City, Piano .&#13;
Mrss PEARL MASON, Kingsley, Piano.&#13;
Mrss SARAH GILMAN, Sioux City, Piano .&#13;
Mrss MABEL Williams&#13;
Sioux City, Piano.&#13;
&#13;
�in piano. eight in voice. and one in violin. Two years ago the Conservatory building&#13;
was remodel ed. thus making more convenient music rooms. Since then several new&#13;
pianos have been added. and before the next year a pipe organ will be built in the&#13;
auditorium. with this greater eq uipment and effieiency and the growing friendliness&#13;
between th e conservatory and the music lov ers of the city it is believed that before&#13;
many years th e Morningside Conservatory will be a means of making Sioux City a distinguished musical center.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
A nnual M usic Festival&#13;
SIOUX ClTY, IOWA&#13;
1906&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
May 23.&#13;
May 24.&#13;
May 24.&#13;
&#13;
(Evening) Theodore Thomas Orchestra and Soloists.&#13;
(Afternoon) Theodore Thomas Orchestra and Soloists.&#13;
(Evening) Oratorio of " Elijah.'' - Mendelssohn.&#13;
Choral Union (200 voices.)&#13;
Thomas Orchestra (50 players and soloists.)&#13;
MR. FREDERICK STOCK&#13;
Conductor of Orchestra Concert&#13;
MR. JUDSON MATHER&#13;
Conductor of Oratorio Concert&#13;
SOLOISTS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE MACONDA , Soprano,&#13;
MRS. HERBERT BUTLER, Soprano,&#13;
GRACE MuNSON, Alto,&#13;
GLENN HALL, Tenor,&#13;
HERBERT WITHERSPOON, Bass, BREM VANDEN Burg. Pianist,&#13;
LEOPOLD KRAMER, Violinist,&#13;
BRUNO STEINDEL, 'Cellist,&#13;
&#13;
New York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
New York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
New York&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Cincinnatti&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Chicago&#13;
CONSERVATORY&#13;
&#13;
�A Reminiscence&#13;
Just a word about my history,&#13;
As my picture you behold,&#13;
For my life, 'though clothed in mystery,&#13;
Has choice items to be told.&#13;
&#13;
There I'd many friends discover,&#13;
Who would spread my just renown,&#13;
Also greet the many "masters"&#13;
As they chanced to be in town.&#13;
&#13;
In Chicago's smoky turmoil&#13;
Did I first behold the light,&#13;
years ago, some five and twenty,&#13;
As a "Square Grand" polished bright.&#13;
&#13;
Such fond hopes soon quickly vanished,&#13;
As our wishes sometimes doAnd ten long years of weary travel&#13;
Marred my looks and greatness, too.&#13;
&#13;
I am called a "Root and Cady,"&#13;
A name well honored to this day;&#13;
was carved and modeled neatly&#13;
with much care and pride, they say.&#13;
&#13;
Years were they so dark and tragic,&#13;
That I dare not picture here,&#13;
Else my grief might overcome me&#13;
And my purpose fail, I fear.&#13;
&#13;
Then I stood a thing of beautyNow my keys have yellow turned;&#13;
Now my tones have lost their sweetness,&#13;
And by students I am spurned.&#13;
&#13;
Eut, at last, a ray of sunshine&#13;
Through the darkness seemed to peer;&#13;
Despite my age and worn condition,&#13;
Granted was my wish so dear.&#13;
&#13;
Now they call me so old-fashicned,&#13;
And by names abuse me so,&#13;
That I tell my simple story,&#13;
Hoping sympathy may grow.&#13;
&#13;
Now to tell how 'twas accomplished,&#13;
And the secret true confideIn exchange for a span of mules,&#13;
Am I here in Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Always had I fondly cherished&#13;
A desire supremely sweet,&#13;
To make my home a famous college&#13;
And enjoy its pleasures fleet.&#13;
&#13;
Altho' somewhat disappointed&#13;
In the school so new and queer,&#13;
Yet my work I took up bravely,&#13;
Watching progress year by year.&#13;
&#13;
�I w as place d upon th e p latform&#13;
Of th e chape l in N o rth H a ll ,&#13;
Wh e r e I ke pt my lofty stati o n&#13;
Seve n y ears, I b e li e ve, in a ll.&#13;
&#13;
B ut wh e n a ll so s tra n ge a ppeared,&#13;
Th a t I fail ed to und e rs ta nd,&#13;
I was to ld I n ow d id duty&#13;
In Ma in H a ll, so n ew and gran d.&#13;
&#13;
H e r e th e w eary h o urs I brighte n ed&#13;
For a la dy te ach e r fair,&#13;
who is s till our lo ve d prof es so r ,&#13;
And a fri e nd m ost d ear and rare.&#13;
&#13;
Th e r e I stoo d within th e b asem ent,&#13;
Wh e r e the Physics n o w is taught,&#13;
L ut w hic h th en was u sed f o r chapel,&#13;
And by s tu dents gayly sought.&#13;
&#13;
I was h o nored at t h e progra m s,&#13;
Whe r e bri g ht w o rd s th eir b a ttles&#13;
fought;&#13;
For I furni s h ed inspira ti on,&#13;
Whic h the muse of mus ic brought.&#13;
Y es, how w ell do I r e m·e mb e r&#13;
The ch a p e l hour, wh e n 'twas d ecr eed&#13;
Th a t h e ncef o rth w e 'd b e a coll ege,&#13;
And f rom large r c laims be freed .&#13;
How th e stud e nts f e lt so h a ppy,&#13;
And th e tea c h e rs all loo k ed wise ;&#13;
But I jus t k e pt s tanding proudly,&#13;
F a cing bra v ely c lo ud e d s ki es.&#13;
Some time late r , t o my sorro w,&#13;
Brig ht n ew ins trum e nts cam e in ;&#13;
I w as carrie d o ut of h earin g,&#13;
B eca u se my ton es w e r e h a rsh and thin.&#13;
But, what else could b e exp ect ed&#13;
Fro m the life whi c h I had le d!&#13;
I r ese nte d th e intrusio n,&#13;
B ut my a n ger n o w h as fl ed .&#13;
T o con sol e m y bro k e n . s pirits,&#13;
I was sent to Thoburn H a ll,&#13;
Wh e r e I s p e nt a y ear in serving&#13;
B oys mischievous , one a nd all.&#13;
M ost unha ppy w e r e those minutes,&#13;
And I n early cam e to gri ef;&#13;
I'd like t o t ell you my exp e rie n ce,&#13;
Eut my s tory mus t b e brief.&#13;
On e bright morn in nineteen hundred,&#13;
Stude nts gay b efore m e s tood ;&#13;
I again w as u sed in c h a p el,&#13;
And I served a s b est I could.&#13;
&#13;
Th e re I h ear d the n o te d seni or s&#13;
Try orations to displa y ;&#13;
B ut h ow often in th e soarin g&#13;
Diel th eir wisd om fly a w ay.&#13;
Once so m e b oys by s m a llpox rumo r s,&#13;
Fro m . t h eir b oo k s so rud ely tor n.&#13;
T e n d a y s afte r came to c h a p e l,&#13;
With t h eir fair lock s t ig h t ly s h orn.&#13;
These sam e boys, you 'd scar ce believe il,&#13;
Caps a nd gowns at last h ave d onned;&#13;
And thi s year will leave the ir college&#13;
With th e ir di gn ity profo und.&#13;
Th e r e o n e t ime-now d o b e q uiet&#13;
While a sec r et v e il I r aiseA ll th e stud ents t ruly p r o mi sed&#13;
never m ore new b oys to h aze.&#13;
Y es, t h at year was full of b ri g h tness,&#13;
E ut a ll sce n es of j oy h a d fl ed ,&#13;
Wh e n I f o un d myself d eserted,&#13;
H earing h y mn s a b ove m y h ead.&#13;
Y ears of sorrow t h e n did foll ow,&#13;
A s I r oved from r oo m to room,&#13;
Sco rn ed a nd s li g h ted by th e s tu clen tsWith n o f ri end t o call m y own.&#13;
H o we ve r, n o w fo r prac tice s t eady&#13;
In " Music H a ll " I'm servi n g well;&#13;
E ut h o w lo n g I'll be in ser v ice&#13;
And of u se I cannot t ell.&#13;
If m y tale of interest seem e th,&#13;
&#13;
Nothin g e lse could p lease me mor e ,&#13;
Tha n to h ave you call a n d see m e,&#13;
W h e r e " 1 03" is on t h e door.&#13;
Y es, a lth ou g h I live unnoticed,&#13;
Yet m y life is not in v a in ;&#13;
F o r I h el ped to found a coll ege,&#13;
Whic h w ill live a nd g r ow in fame.&#13;
&#13;
Elocution&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
�Elocution&#13;
Departmnet&#13;
Claas of 06&#13;
&#13;
ROREM&#13;
WHITAKER&#13;
&#13;
FLETCHER&#13;
DAVIDSON&#13;
WHITAKER&#13;
&#13;
KILBORNE&#13;
CUSHMAN&#13;
&#13;
HE ELOCUTION DEPARTMENT is larger this year&#13;
than ever before. As the school enlarges the students&#13;
realize more and more the importance of this branch of&#13;
study. the student of elocution not only learns to&#13;
recite in pu blic, but learns also how to carry himself,&#13;
how to control the muscles, how to talk, read and interpret, bow to use the voice in speaking, and many other things invaluable to a man or woman whether before the public or merely in&#13;
social and business relations.&#13;
This department offers two courses. The prima,·y or certificate&#13;
course. The primary&#13;
or certificate course is open to any and requires two years of work for completion.&#13;
In this coul'se a good&#13;
foundation for future work is laid. The advanced or diploma course&#13;
is open only to those who have completed the primary course and are&#13;
able to class at least Junior, having finished the prescribed work in&#13;
literature. Those graduating from this course receive a diploma&#13;
which certifies that they are capable of. teaching. The certificates are&#13;
awarded this year to a class of six.&#13;
Miss Kilborne is a Junior and has completed the conservatory&#13;
course in both instrumental and vocal music. She has taken with&#13;
much success, the characters of "Dagon," the rich merchant in the&#13;
Greek scene, "Art will have No Rival," and of the " Blind Monk"&#13;
in the "Golden Leg·end," on Atheneum Publics.&#13;
Miss Rorem is a Sophomore and very active in all school interests. She showed much dramatic ability in the title role of Dido, in&#13;
the play presented by the Zetaletheans as their public of this year.&#13;
Mr. Whitaker is a member of the Sophomore class and an active&#13;
member in debate and oratory.&#13;
Mr. Cushman is a Freshman, and represented Morningside in&#13;
the state oratorical contest of this year. He is also a student in the&#13;
conservatory.&#13;
Miss Fletcher spent last year at Buena Vista College, where she&#13;
studied elocution. Sbe excells in Scotch dialect work.&#13;
Women in church and club work are beginning to appreciate&#13;
this branch of study, as shown by Mrs. J. A. Whitaker, who will&#13;
also be awarded a certificate.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�This completes a list of twenty-eight who have finished this&#13;
primary cou rse, some of whom are continuing thei r college work&#13;
that they may be eligible for the advanced course.&#13;
T he first diploma to be awarded from this department is given&#13;
this year to M iss Davidson, a Senior, who completed the certificate&#13;
course in 1902, and has since been actively engaged in pu blic reading&#13;
and in giving instruction.&#13;
&#13;
W ho&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
Who?&#13;
&#13;
foot ball '05&#13;
G. E . MILLNE R, Captain&#13;
H. K. Squires&#13;
Erwin Bre wste r&#13;
G. M. Squires&#13;
Oscar Thom pson&#13;
Frank H e ilman&#13;
P. E . DeGrisselles&#13;
L ou Hawkins&#13;
Harla n Bridenbaugh&#13;
J. C. Bass&#13;
Wyatt 0. Dowdy&#13;
N . J. Smi t h&#13;
Burton Elliott&#13;
E. J. Frye&#13;
L . E . Ed wards&#13;
&#13;
Baseball '05&#13;
VIRGIL. Feay,&#13;
Captain&#13;
A. Tumbleson&#13;
G. M. Sq uires&#13;
F . J. Ga r y&#13;
Heiman Van Dy ke&#13;
&#13;
C. N . Rissler&#13;
C. J . Wescott&#13;
Geo. E veleth&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
C. J. Wescott&#13;
G. A. Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
L onnie J one s&#13;
J . C. B ass&#13;
J esse E we r&#13;
&#13;
'05 06&#13;
&#13;
C. N . RISSLER, Ca ptain&#13;
Burton Elliott&#13;
L onnie Jones&#13;
&#13;
G. E. M illne r&#13;
Osca r Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Track '05&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
A. W. Adams&#13;
G uy A. Crow&#13;
H . N. S taples&#13;
&#13;
H . DEBENHAM, Ca ptain&#13;
C. A. Carcuff&#13;
E H . Eve rhart&#13;
L . R. Cha pma n&#13;
V . C. Feay&#13;
P. E . DeG risselles&#13;
R oy Young&#13;
H . L. Mossman&#13;
S. 0 . Rorem&#13;
&#13;
�Athlectics&#13;
&#13;
Board of Control&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
SQUIRES&#13;
&#13;
CORBETT&#13;
GARVER&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
KANTHLENER&#13;
&#13;
The active management of the Athletics was formerly in the&#13;
hands of the Students' Athle tic Association, guided somewhat by a&#13;
committee of the Faculty; but with the g rowth of the school and the&#13;
increase of its atbletic activities, a more systematic method of management became necessary. The large athletic debts the n existing and&#13;
the heavy expenses incurred during each season a lso necessitated&#13;
this change.&#13;
U nde r the new system the Athletic Association is composed of&#13;
the entire students' body, th ere being no membe1·ship dues. The&#13;
duties of t he association a re ma inly to for mulate the students' opinions, to elect the students membe rs of the Board of Control, and to&#13;
co-operate in carrying out its policies.&#13;
The Board of Control which is the principal feature of the new&#13;
system, represents in its composition, Students' Faculty and Alumni.&#13;
Regular meetings are held monthly and special meetings as needed&#13;
Its officers constitute au executive committee.&#13;
·&#13;
Of the powers and duties of the Board of Control, the constitution says: "The duties of the Board of Control shall be, in general,&#13;
t o superint end all athletics undert ake n by the college and to control&#13;
the :finances thereof, for which the Board of Control shall be understood to have competent powers."&#13;
The Board works largely through a manager appointed by, and&#13;
responsible to itself. Prior to the basket ball season of 1906, this&#13;
manager was chosen from the student body but since then the Physical Director for men has served in that capacity .&#13;
Since its c r eation the Board has aided in paying off one athletic&#13;
debt, has assumed and temporarily financed all deficits, has wo rked&#13;
out a system of reports, has systematized accounts, and has drawn&#13;
rules governing- the awarding of the "M." Among the things now&#13;
being planned is a system of r ecords of athletics, sched ules, meets,&#13;
etc.&#13;
The great pressing needs of our College Athletics a r e a track&#13;
and gymnasium, to secure which the B oard is willing to render any aid&#13;
in its power. It favors the strongest schedules, which seem r easonably sure of paying out; and its ideal is pure college athletics.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
R. E. HEILMAN, BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
�Cup WInner&#13;
John Charles Bass, '07, is for the second&#13;
time the worthy possessor of the football&#13;
trophy cup.&#13;
Of the five best players, selected by a&#13;
vote of the term at the close of the season&#13;
Mr. Bass was found to have made the&#13;
highest average in his studies, and therefore, in accordance with the regulations&#13;
laid down by the donor, Mr. A. R. Toothaker, '03, was awarded the cup.&#13;
Mr. Bass takes a prominent part in all&#13;
student activities; and whether in work of&#13;
class room, Y. M. C. A., society, or athletics he shows the same qualities that&#13;
characterized him as a football man. He&#13;
was faithful in practice, steady and&#13;
reliable in games, never shirked, al ways&#13;
the man to be called on to make the distance on the last down when a gain was&#13;
absolutely necessary, cool and confident&#13;
in a crisis, inspiring thereby confidence in&#13;
others, and thoroughly dependable.&#13;
&#13;
J. 0. BASS&#13;
&#13;
Schedule OfGames&#13;
September Morningside&#13;
College, 47; Sheldon H. S., 0.&#13;
October 7- -Morningside College, 16; Buena Vista, 0.&#13;
October 14-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 7; Creighton U ., 0.&#13;
&#13;
october 23 - Morningside College, 7; Yankton, 0.&#13;
October 30- Morningside College, 10; Bellevue, 8.&#13;
November 13--Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 5; Yankton, 6.&#13;
&#13;
November -Morn ingside College, 27; LeMars&#13;
November 23-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Ct·escents, 5.&#13;
&#13;
College, O; Iowa State Normal, 0.&#13;
&#13;
November 30--- Morningside College; S. Dak. U . (game called off.)&#13;
&#13;
L. E . EDWARDS&#13;
ALL&#13;
&#13;
Iow A 'S CENTER RUSH, '05&#13;
&#13;
��A Letter from College&#13;
"Your Henry's fractured, mother dear,&#13;
Upon the gridiron sporty;&#13;
His feet betwixt the goal post near,&#13;
At fourteen yards he left an ear,&#13;
A collar bone at forty.&#13;
"A doctor now, with loving care,&#13;
His cartilage is tacking;&#13;
They say he will not miss his hair,&#13;
And nearly all his ribs are there,&#13;
Tho several bones are lacking.&#13;
"He holds his thorax with a groan&#13;
And says it hurts a little;&#13;
His coaches say, in awe-struck tone,&#13;
They'd not have done it had they known&#13;
That Henry was so brittle.&#13;
"They say that Henry didn't lack&#13;
The talent and the training;&#13;
At half he was a crackajack(You couldn't make a quarterback&#13;
Of what there is remaining).&#13;
"Alas! he had the proper stuff,&#13;
Tho rather tall and slender;&#13;
And tho his fate is somewhat rough,&#13;
'Tis not because the game's too tough,&#13;
But Henry is too tender."&#13;
&#13;
�Basket Ball Team&#13;
&#13;
Schedule Of Games&#13;
o&lt;n)&#13;
&#13;
March 10---Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 37; Omaha High School, 22.&#13;
&#13;
City Tournament&#13;
Played&#13;
High School . .. ...... . . ... .. .. .. .. ...... 6&#13;
Morningside ........................ . ... 6&#13;
Sioux . . ..... .. . . . . . . ........ .. . .. ... .. .. 6&#13;
Smith's V illa .............. .. ..... . ..... . 6&#13;
Browo's Business College ..... . . ........ . 6&#13;
&#13;
Schedule of Class&#13;
&#13;
Won&#13;
5&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Lost&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
P e r Ct.&#13;
.833&#13;
&#13;
.500&#13;
.500&#13;
.500&#13;
.334&#13;
&#13;
Games&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SERIES&#13;
&#13;
SECOND SERIES&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores .... .. ....... 23&#13;
Specials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32&#13;
&#13;
Juniors . .. . ... ... .... .. 10&#13;
Sophomores ............. 44&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ....... . ...... 39&#13;
Middle acad . ........... 12&#13;
&#13;
Specials . .. ..... ........ 55&#13;
Middle Acad . ........... 18&#13;
&#13;
Juniors ............... . . 43&#13;
Seniors . ................. 9&#13;
&#13;
Senio1·s . .. ....... ... .. .. 26&#13;
Senior acad .... .... . .... 14&#13;
&#13;
Senior Acad . ............ 26&#13;
Junior Acad .......... ... 21&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ........ . ... .. 43&#13;
Junior Acad ....... ...... 15&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen .. . ... . . . ..... 28&#13;
Specials .. . ........ .... . 18&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores. . . . . . . . . . . . 27&#13;
Freshmen . . .. . ..... ... 22&#13;
&#13;
Juniors .. .... . .. .. .... . 47&#13;
senior Acad .. .. .. .. . . ... 19&#13;
&#13;
Specials . .... ... . .. . .... 29&#13;
Seniors . .. .............. 16&#13;
&#13;
Juniors . . ... ...... ... . .. 22&#13;
Freshmen ..... . ..... . .. 29&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ........... . . 25&#13;
Specials . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 28&#13;
&#13;
Sophs Champions.&#13;
&#13;
Specials Champioos.&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Specials . ..... .. .... . ... 29&#13;
Freshmen ... ... ....... . 47&#13;
Freshmen Champions.&#13;
&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
FEAY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
GRIFFITH&#13;
RISSLER&#13;
&#13;
ELLIOTT&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
�THOMPSON&#13;
WENDELL&#13;
&#13;
ROREM IMGR.1&#13;
SHAW (CAPT. I&#13;
&#13;
BRIDENBAUGH&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
F reshmen Class T eam&#13;
Champions of class basket ball Series.&#13;
SCORES&#13;
&#13;
Middle Acad . . ... . ..... .. . .... 12&#13;
Specials .. .. ... ..... . ........ . 18&#13;
Juniors ... . ... . ..... ... . .... . 22&#13;
Junior Acad . . .. .. ............ 15&#13;
Sophomores . ...... ..... ...... 27&#13;
Specials . .. .... ........... .... 29&#13;
&#13;
Freshme n&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Freshme n&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
... .. .... . . . ....... 39&#13;
. . . . . .......... . .. 28&#13;
.... . .. .. . ...... .. . 29&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . 43&#13;
...... .. . . . . ..... . . 22&#13;
. .. ................ 47&#13;
&#13;
�Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
7,&#13;
14,&#13;
19,&#13;
2,&#13;
8,&#13;
20,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
3, Packers 16.&#13;
6, Western Union 4.&#13;
21, Sioux City College of Medicine 7.&#13;
9, University of South Dakota 14.&#13;
9, Western Union 1.&#13;
6, Yankton 4.&#13;
&#13;
Apr. 17, Freshmen 8, Sophomores 7.&#13;
May 5, Seniors ... 13, Faculty . ... 8.&#13;
&#13;
( 6 innings. )&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Team '05&#13;
CAPT. FEAY&#13;
&#13;
A TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
WESCOTT&#13;
GARY&#13;
&#13;
SQUIRES&#13;
RISSLER&#13;
EWER&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
VAN DYKE&#13;
&#13;
�Downin the county&#13;
&#13;
of the Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Now ye wearers of the M, loyal men and true,&#13;
Unfurl the blood-red banner high in the azure blue,&#13;
And join the swelling chorus, and cheer for M. C., too,&#13;
Down in the country of the Sioux.&#13;
CHORUS:&#13;
&#13;
Then for Maroon let's give a cheer!&#13;
Our college spirit can know no fear!&#13;
then all together we'll shout it loud and clear&#13;
To victory, to victory with Maroon.&#13;
Now give a song in cheering, when (other college) enters in&#13;
For she knows the day she looses, and she knows the day&#13;
we win.&#13;
And she knows our College spirit, that it lasts thru thick&#13;
and thin,&#13;
Down in the country of the Sioux.&#13;
CHORUS:&#13;
&#13;
Then altogether lustily, sing it o'er and o'er,&#13;
Let everyone be singing while M . C. makes the score.&#13;
We'll show our visitors what they never saw before,&#13;
Down in the country of the Sioux.&#13;
--A. R. TOOTHAKER.&#13;
&#13;
( Music being prepared by PROF. J. W. MATHER.)&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�records of home meet&#13;
MAY 1st, '06&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen 45 1/2,&#13;
Seniors Sr. Academy 25, Juniors 22 1/2&#13;
26,&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
19, Academy specials 10, Middle Academy 7.&#13;
50 yd.-Crow 1st, Mossman 2nd, Adams 3rd, Debenham 4th. Time,&#13;
5.5 seconds .&#13;
1st, Carcuff 2nd, Crow 3rd, Richards 4th. Time,&#13;
100 yd.-Mossman&#13;
10 4-5 seconds.&#13;
220 yd.-Debenham 1st, Mossman 2nd, Carcuff 3rd, Maynard 4th .&#13;
Time, 24 2-.5. seconds .&#13;
440 vd. --Debenham 1st, Rorem 2nd, Shaw 3rd, Wishard 4th. Time,&#13;
60 seconds.&#13;
220 Hurdle-Mossman 1st, Adams 2nd, Smith 3rd, Cushman 4th.&#13;
Ti me, 28 2-5.&#13;
88 yd. - Debenham 1st., C. F . hartzell&#13;
2nd, Staples 3rd, Day 4th.&#13;
Time, 2:24&#13;
Mile-Debenham 1st, C. F . Hartzell 2nd, Spencer 3rd, L. Jones 4th.&#13;
2 Mile-Chapman 1st, Johnson 2nd, Spencer 3rd, A. Hartzell 4th.&#13;
Pole Vault- Wescott lst, Staples and Millner 2nd, Lewis 4th .&#13;
Height 10 ft.&#13;
Running Broad Jump--Adams 1st, Rorem 2nd, Debenham 3rd Millner 4th. distance 18 ft.&#13;
Running High Jump--Cushman 1st, C. F . Hartzell 2nd, Calkins 3rd,&#13;
Root 4th . Height 5 ft. 1 in.&#13;
Shot Put--Crow 1st, Calkins 2nd, Wescott, 3rd, Reeder 4th.&#13;
Distance 31 ft. 5.5 in.&#13;
Relay One Mile--Senior Academy 1st, Juniors and Sophomores 2d,&#13;
Freshmen 3rd.&#13;
&#13;
CUP WON BY&#13;
FRE SHMEN&#13;
&#13;
H . L. Mossman&#13;
CA FTAIN FRESHMAN&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
May 15, tri-meet:&#13;
Yankton--S. Dakota U . vs. Morningside.&#13;
(Called off on account of rain. )&#13;
&#13;
May 22, Dual Meet:&#13;
Yankton 85, Morningside 24.&#13;
June 6, Tri-State-meet:&#13;
Nebraska U .- -S. Dakota U. --Morningside.&#13;
(Called off on account of rain.)&#13;
&#13;
W . H . DEBENHAM&#13;
CAPTAIN TRACK TEAM&#13;
&#13;
�College Yells&#13;
Hi-ki, Hi-ki, Hi-ki, Yahl&#13;
W a boo, W aboo, Wahoo, Wah!&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
Zip Boom Bah!&#13;
&#13;
M. C. Rah! Rah!&#13;
M. C. Rah! Rab!&#13;
Hoo Rah! Hoo Rah!&#13;
M. C. Rah-Rah!!&#13;
&#13;
Who are, who are, who are we?&#13;
We are we are, old M. C.&#13;
Rush lioes we break,&#13;
Touch downs We make,&#13;
We take the cake,&#13;
Rah-Rah-Rab!&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY RUNNERS&#13;
&#13;
Zip-te picte-picte-poob!&#13;
We're from Morningside, who are you!&#13;
We'll do or die, or die to .do;&#13;
Morningside College on the Sioux!&#13;
&#13;
Oskey wow-wow&#13;
Skinney wow-wow&#13;
Morningside wow&#13;
&#13;
S-s-s-s-s-Boom-whee-Maroon&#13;
&#13;
Whoop-pee!!&#13;
Big injun !!&#13;
Muddy River!!&#13;
Packin' House!!&#13;
Sioux City!!&#13;
Morningside!!&#13;
W he-e-e-e-e-e-e-e !!&#13;
&#13;
Schedule Of Winter Meets&#13;
February 3, Indoor Track Meet.&#13;
Y. M . C. A. 36, Morningside 36.&#13;
February 10, Cross Country Run (two and one half miles.)&#13;
Y. M . C. A. 8, Morningside 28.&#13;
Home Cross Country Run.&#13;
Junior Academy 235.&#13;
Freshmen 191.&#13;
Senior Academy 128.&#13;
Academy Specials 114.&#13;
Middle Academy 62.&#13;
.Juniors 11.&#13;
&#13;
�TENNIS COURTS&#13;
&#13;
T enn is&#13;
C&gt;(fi)&#13;
&#13;
The game of tennis at Morningside is one of increasing interest,&#13;
alike to students and faculty . Two double courts are excellently&#13;
equipped and located just south of the main building. The ladies'&#13;
cou rt is on the south part of the campus, and the girls spend many&#13;
a refreshing hour at this delightful game. From six in tbe morning&#13;
to seven in the evening, these localities are frequented by lovers of&#13;
t he sport. As yet no stars have been developed, but many are on the&#13;
way to perfection in the game, especially professors . Single and&#13;
dou ble tournaments are played each season, in which everyone can&#13;
be accommodated.&#13;
&#13;
Debeating&#13;
&#13;
Oratory&#13;
&#13;
�occicers&#13;
President,&#13;
FAITH WooDFORD&#13;
V. President and Chairman membership Committee&#13;
GENEVIEVE HOWARD&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
HELEN WILSON&#13;
Treasurer and Chairman Finance&#13;
Committee,&#13;
MIRAH MILLS&#13;
Chairman Devotional Committee,&#13;
JEANETTE BARTLETT&#13;
Chairman Social Committee,&#13;
RuBY TRIMBLE&#13;
Chairman Missionary Committee,&#13;
MARIAN MATTHEWS&#13;
Chairman lntercol legiate Committee,&#13;
EsTIE BODDY&#13;
Chairman Bible Study Committee,&#13;
BLANCHE WATTS&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
President,&#13;
GLENN Squires&#13;
V. President and Chairman Devotional Committee,&#13;
HENRY TAYLOR&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
JESSE VAN BusKIRK&#13;
Treasurer and Chairman Finance&#13;
Committee,&#13;
JoHN C. BASS&#13;
Chairman Bible Study Committee,&#13;
OSCAR C. THOMPSON&#13;
Chairman Mission Study Committee,&#13;
H. J. CALKINS&#13;
&#13;
Y. . C.&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
The Young Men's Christian Association was organized for the&#13;
purpose of uniting the Christian&#13;
effort of the young men of the&#13;
College.&#13;
It is non-sectarian, although active membership requires&#13;
affiliation with some Evangelical&#13;
church.&#13;
The work of this movement is of inestimable value to all&#13;
Christian movements.&#13;
It lessens&#13;
denominational strife, interests&#13;
young men in the study of the&#13;
Bible, serves as a recruiting station&#13;
for leadership in the church, both&#13;
for foreign and home fields, and&#13;
aids in developing a well rounded&#13;
type of manhood for all walks of&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
Y.W. C A.&#13;
The Young Women's Christian Association is an organization found in&#13;
colleges throughout the world, seeking&#13;
to further the highest interest of every&#13;
young woman who comes under its influence.&#13;
In Morningside this is accomplished&#13;
by frequent social gatherings, by Bible&#13;
bands, by mission study classes, and by&#13;
weekly devotional meetings, which are&#13;
a source of help and inspiration.&#13;
During the past year the membership&#13;
has been more than doubled, and the&#13;
work has been in every way successful.&#13;
&#13;
�Housekeepers'&#13;
Club&#13;
&#13;
HARLAND L. MOSSMAN&#13;
EDWIN M . BROWN&#13;
CLARE D. HORNER&#13;
&#13;
Constitution&#13;
The purpose of this cl ub shall be the furthering of good house&#13;
keeping methods amoung those co-eds who have definitely decided to&#13;
major in this work.&#13;
This club shall also have charge of the cradle roll, which shall&#13;
consist of those who, for various reasons, such as lack of years, are&#13;
not eligible to active membership.&#13;
Badge of Honor--Matrimonail&#13;
Club Flower-- Campbells&#13;
&#13;
Knot.&#13;
"Best."&#13;
&#13;
Club !Uutto-Kein Home Without a "Homo."&#13;
Execitibe Board&#13;
Evva Erskine.&#13;
Gertrude Crossan .&#13;
E lsie Kilborne.&#13;
Blanche Spratt,.&#13;
Cheif Hustler--M&#13;
&#13;
Question :&#13;
R e solved, That&#13;
party candidates for elective offices&#13;
within the state should be nominated by a direct vote of the parties.&#13;
D ecision : Negative, three vot es.&#13;
&#13;
rs. Erskine.&#13;
&#13;
members&#13;
Mae Wood.&#13;
Elsie W eary.&#13;
&#13;
Helen Wilson.&#13;
Ethel Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Nellie Perry.&#13;
Opal Horn beck.&#13;
Ella Dickson.&#13;
&#13;
Mae Furley.&#13;
Grace Rorem.&#13;
Zula Correll.&#13;
&#13;
Post Graduate -- Mrs. ellie&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Taylor.&#13;
&#13;
Tabled Names&#13;
Genevieve Howard.&#13;
Myrtilla Cook.&#13;
Blanche Johns.&#13;
Members OnTrial&#13;
Ruby Trimble:&#13;
Ida Ullman .&#13;
&#13;
Lura Matteson.&#13;
Hattie Torbet.&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY B . COLLINS&#13;
EDWARD N . HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
J. RAYMOND TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
�Prohibition League&#13;
President . .. . . . . . . . . . . . ........ S. B. COLLINS&#13;
Secretary ........... ........... J. WHITAKER&#13;
Treasurer . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . J. G. WATERMAN&#13;
ARTHUR G. CUSHMAN, WINNER OF HOME CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
Oratory&#13;
MR. E. DEWEY&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Oratorical Association, an organization composed of all the students of the college, is a branch of the State Oratorical Association, which comprises fifteen of the main colleg·es of&#13;
the state.&#13;
At the close of the Annual Oratorical Contest, which occured&#13;
during the fall term of 1905, an announcement was made that prize&#13;
money to the a.mount of $75.00 had been secured for the winners of&#13;
future contests. The names of the donors however, were not made&#13;
public. This money is to be divided into three prizes: $50.00 to go&#13;
to the winner of first place, $15.00 to the the winner of second place,&#13;
and $10.00 to the winner of third place.&#13;
These prizes are given upon the condition that there shall be at&#13;
least six contestants, and that the local contest shallI a lways be consid&#13;
ered preliminary to the state contest which is held iu February of&#13;
each year.&#13;
This offer was made for the period of three years. If at the end&#13;
of this time the prize has had the desired effect of Stimulating oratory in the college, the amounts of the annual Prizes w11l in all probability be increased to $100.00 and the endowment maDE permanent.&#13;
Interest in oratory has been growrng for some .time among the&#13;
students manv of whom have shown marked oratorical ability; and&#13;
with this new hcentive to further efforts, we may confidentially ex&#13;
pect great things in the future, and an Oratorical Association of which&#13;
Morningside may justly be proud.&#13;
&#13;
With a representative membership, the Prohibition League has&#13;
been reorganized for a broad study of the various phases of the&#13;
liquor problem. Under its auspices the first&#13;
annual Dewey Prize Prohibition Oratorical Contest was held on March 16, 1906. Two prizes,&#13;
one $25.00 and the other $15.00 were presented&#13;
to the winners of the first and second places, by&#13;
Mr. E. Dewey, of Sargent Bluff, Iowa. In order&#13;
to encourage the contest, Mr. Dewey has promised to make this prize an annual gift.&#13;
In the&#13;
home contest there were five participants.&#13;
"John B. Gough," by Clare D. Horner winning&#13;
first place, and "In Union there is Strength,"&#13;
by H. herbert Sawyer winning second place.&#13;
the League eutertained the State Contest&#13;
and Convention on april 20 and 21, 1906, and&#13;
Mr. Horner represented Morningside College&#13;
in the Contest, winning third place.&#13;
&#13;
�VAN BUSKIRK&#13;
H . TAYLOR&#13;
HAMILTON&#13;
MINKLER&#13;
BODDY&#13;
&#13;
MATTHEWS&#13;
CALKINS&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDS&#13;
TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
MOIR&#13;
COLLINS&#13;
0 . TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
Early in the history of Morningside College a strong missionary&#13;
spirit was manifest, which resulted in the organization of those who&#13;
desired to learn more of the missionary work in foreign lands. Thus&#13;
the year 1901 became memorable by the birth of the Volunteer&#13;
Band.&#13;
Each year has seen changes in our ranks, some t.emporarily leaving school, while others, hearing the voice of God saying, " Who will&#13;
go for us," like Isaiah of old, have replied, "Here am I Lord, send&#13;
me."&#13;
Their places have been filled by new recruits, who in their&#13;
pledge, promise that if God permit, they too, will spread the tidings&#13;
of great joy among the darkened nations.&#13;
There are now laboring among the Chinese, five of our number,&#13;
Lydia Trimble, Fred Trimble, Grace and Stanley Carson. Hattie and&#13;
Bruce Empey spent some time in India, but were returned on&#13;
account of Mr. Empey's failing health. However, they are now&#13;
anxiously waiting the return to the fields which ,are "white unto the&#13;
harvest."&#13;
Our present enrollment is thirteen. Of those who are still in the&#13;
home land, nine are ministers of the gospel, all are Christian workers&#13;
laboring while they wait.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Staff&#13;
Class of '07&#13;
Business Manager - J oHN c. BAss&#13;
Editor-in-cheif - D. ford RoBBINS&#13;
Historical Editor - MABLE V. TowNER&#13;
Literary Editor - MABLE E. HASKINS&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
CORA E. FREAR&#13;
&#13;
Asst. Business Mgr. - G. M. SQUIRES&#13;
asst. Editor-in-Chief&#13;
- - - - FAITH F. WOODFORD&#13;
Athletic Editor - HARRY N. STAPLES&#13;
Cartoon Editor&#13;
PERRY E. FREDENDOLL&#13;
Joke Editor&#13;
ELSIE I. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside- Fayette Debate&#13;
Our men who represented us in debate against&#13;
Upper Iowa University, upholding the negative.&#13;
&#13;
EDWIN N HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
H. HERBERT SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
''Resolved, That it would be impolitic for&#13;
the United States to suhsidize a merchant&#13;
marine engaged in foreign carrying trade."&#13;
The decision of the judges was: Affi. rmative two, negative one.&#13;
&#13;
GRINDS&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Hopk&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
�l&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
April 8&#13;
April 10&#13;
April 11&#13;
April 13&#13;
&#13;
April 15&#13;
&#13;
April 17&#13;
April 19&#13;
&#13;
Registration day.&#13;
'07 votes to publish a "Junior&#13;
Annual."&#13;
Y. W. C. A. picnic.&#13;
B lanch e&#13;
Spratt&#13;
authorizes&#13;
calendar committee to announce h e r engagem ent.&#13;
Harry Staples' birthday.&#13;
Gruber, after escor ting his&#13;
lady to&#13;
"Viola Allen," is&#13;
obliged to return to Mornings ide after his tickets.&#13;
Ford Robbins' birthday.&#13;
Robbins and J. R. Tumbleson&#13;
go home at 12: 10 at a suggestion from Mr. Frary.&#13;
Soph o m o r e-Fr eshm an&#13;
baseball game, 8 to 8.&#13;
Morningside wins over Sioux&#13;
City Medics in base ball, 21 to&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
7.&#13;
&#13;
April 20&#13;
April 21&#13;
&#13;
April 22&#13;
&#13;
April 23&#13;
April 24&#13;
&#13;
April 25&#13;
&#13;
April 26&#13;
April 27&#13;
April 28&#13;
April 29&#13;
&#13;
Perry asks a lady f riend to g 0&#13;
to Tan nh auser b ut fails to get&#13;
tickets.&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
breakfast&#13;
for&#13;
Atheneums at Killam's. Holid ay on account of the teachers' assoc iatio n. Effie sells her&#13;
seat ticket. Perry is offe ring&#13;
doubl e price for tickets, but&#13;
finds non e .&#13;
A theneums entertain the Aesthesians and Crescents.&#13;
C hapel attendants pose for the&#13;
camera.&#13;
Perry still lookin g for t ic k ets.&#13;
Th e opera " Tannhause r" is&#13;
given.&#13;
Effie buys back her&#13;
ticket and sits in the first balcony. Perry makes a rush.&#13;
Students cease flunking a nd&#13;
look pleasant for a time, while&#13;
the c lass rooms are photograph ed.&#13;
Major H. M. Chittendon, of U.&#13;
S. army, g ives a talk on Yelstone Park.&#13;
Seniors c h a ll e nge faculty to a&#13;
base ball game.&#13;
E ll a T oenj es gives h er violin&#13;
graduatin g recital. Debate at&#13;
Fayette.&#13;
Stockman takes the student&#13;
census in c h apel.&#13;
&#13;
May 10&#13;
May 1 2&#13;
&#13;
May 13&#13;
May 15&#13;
May 16&#13;
&#13;
May 17&#13;
May 18&#13;
May 19&#13;
May 20&#13;
May 22&#13;
&#13;
May 23&#13;
&#13;
May 27&#13;
May 30&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen confirm their relation to the Sparta n s by win ning the prize c up in the home&#13;
field meet.&#13;
Carson and Luce&#13;
w in s ilver medal in Hawkeye&#13;
debating contest.&#13;
Baseball with Vermillion. "In&#13;
absence of all musicians" Miss&#13;
Davidson plays in chapel.&#13;
McCay tells of the debate at&#13;
Fayette.&#13;
Miss L oveland seen&#13;
fanning and&#13;
Miss Dimmitt&#13;
catch in g flies.&#13;
Seniors appear in caps and&#13;
gowns. Lucile Peck and Chas.&#13;
Keller, piano grad u ating recital.&#13;
Rabbi Eugene&#13;
Mannheimer&#13;
uph olds realism an d id ealism in&#13;
a c h apel add r ess.&#13;
Seniors excel faculty In brawn&#13;
if not in brain. Score, 8 to 13.&#13;
Dr. Lewis e ntertains the Senio r s .&#13;
Morningside wins over Western&#13;
Union in base ball, 9 to 1.&#13;
Elsie Kilbourne's birthday.&#13;
Rev. Frizzell speaks at chapel&#13;
on "Our Own Great Problem."&#13;
Claire Wishard e nte rtains class&#13;
of 19 07 and t h eir friends.&#13;
Orchestra and glee club entertainm ent. Dean Campbell put&#13;
precept in to practice by loan i ng&#13;
Mr. Sawyer a quarter to buy a&#13;
ticket.&#13;
Prof. Van Horn planted his potatoes "while the rain came&#13;
drifting clown."&#13;
Manning's birthday.&#13;
Mrs. Bailey addresses women&#13;
of the school. Fi e ld meet at&#13;
Vermillion.&#13;
Junior- Senior banquet.&#13;
William McCay's birthday.&#13;
Miss Woodford falls into Dr.&#13;
Wylie's arms on rising from the&#13;
laboratory table.&#13;
Misses Hart and Bryan gradu ating recital.&#13;
Academy debate with Grinn ell.&#13;
Ch apel address by Miss Whitney, state Y. W. C. A. secretary.&#13;
Student body goes wild ove r&#13;
athletic debt payment.&#13;
Morningsi de 24, vs. Yankton&#13;
25, in field m eet. May festival&#13;
begins. Choral uni on presents&#13;
the Stabat Mater.&#13;
Orch estra concert, and "Mess iah" rendered by choral uni on.&#13;
"Whoops of the Sioux" is out.&#13;
Tri-state meet prevented by&#13;
Father P luvius.&#13;
Memorial day. Some unruly&#13;
students c e lebrate.&#13;
Dr. B lue,&#13;
agitated, l ectures to innocent&#13;
freshmen on stud ents' disregard&#13;
for authority.&#13;
&#13;
�Jun e&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 10&#13;
Puzzle&#13;
find&#13;
&#13;
P icture&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
party&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 11&#13;
June 12&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 13&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 14&#13;
Jun e 1 5&#13;
Jun e 16&#13;
&#13;
Chapel address by Rev. G. w.&#13;
S. Brown, of Indianola.&#13;
Annual inte r-society program,&#13;
"The New H amlet."&#13;
Dean&#13;
e nte rta in s&#13;
patriotc stud en ts&#13;
in honor of their memorial celebration.&#13;
Philomatheans' annual trip up&#13;
the river.&#13;
Faculty picnic a t&#13;
Riverside.&#13;
Prof. Lewis lakes&#13;
the c hildr en on the merry-goround.&#13;
Graduating exerc ises of&#13;
the&#13;
Othonians, and of the P hilom ath ea n s a nd Ath eneums.&#13;
Graduating recital of Lilian&#13;
Shum a k e r&#13;
and Ch as. Hargreaves.&#13;
Rev. Mattison, of&#13;
Sioux Rapids, leads devotions.&#13;
Normal graduating exercises.&#13;
Sophomores go to Riverside.&#13;
Seniors h ave&#13;
picnic-Debby&#13;
and lady wash dish es.&#13;
Graduation of elocution department.&#13;
raccalaureate address.&#13;
Academy&#13;
graduation.&#13;
Ida&#13;
L e wi s, gesturing toward her&#13;
father while d eliv ering her&#13;
o ration: " Let us look back to&#13;
our own h ea th e n ancestry."&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
graduates receive&#13;
th eir dip :omas.&#13;
Miss&#13;
E ancroft, field secreta1 y of W.&#13;
F. M. S., speaks at c h ape l.&#13;
Annual r e union of soc ieties.&#13;
Stanley Collins' birthday.&#13;
Commencement address&#13;
by&#13;
Dr. Geo. E. Vin cent.&#13;
School's o ut .&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
J a nuary&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
J a nuary&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
January 10&#13;
January 11&#13;
January 1 2&#13;
January 14&#13;
January 15&#13;
&#13;
January 17&#13;
January 18&#13;
January 19&#13;
January 20&#13;
January 22&#13;
January 23&#13;
&#13;
January 24&#13;
&#13;
January 26&#13;
&#13;
January 27&#13;
January 28&#13;
&#13;
January 30&#13;
&#13;
e.h&#13;
January, 31&#13;
&#13;
The new y ear finds Sioux&#13;
City just r ecovering from&#13;
the mad clog scare.&#13;
Students return.&#13;
Greynald lin es up the students at the classification&#13;
office.&#13;
Y . W. C. A. "Jim" frolic.&#13;
Z et -Otho promenade.&#13;
Dean starts a n ew chapel&#13;
habit&#13;
by s inging&#13;
three&#13;
v e rses of 61 and 241.&#13;
Dr. Mitchell in a chapel address e ncourages the faculty to matrimony.&#13;
Chemistry students visit the&#13;
br ewery.&#13;
Y. M. C. A. "Mary" frolic.&#13;
Girls get a goodly share of&#13;
the apples.&#13;
Fair-haire d trio of youths&#13;
pass the chapel cards.&#13;
Anniversary of a&#13;
great&#13;
event-the birth of our class&#13;
pres ident.&#13;
Prof. Math er,&#13;
contrary to the dean's instructions, wears his hat in&#13;
th e corridor.&#13;
W. P. Manley's address on&#13;
"Qualities&#13;
of&#13;
Success."&#13;
Sophomore party at Clark's.&#13;
Dr. Shaw addresses the&#13;
school. Genevieve and L ee&#13;
see Ben Hur.&#13;
Myrtilla and her mothe r see&#13;
Ben Hur.&#13;
Song at a Japanese program proves to be Swedish.&#13;
Stanley Collins goes home&#13;
hatl ess from Trimbles at&#13;
11:59 p. m.&#13;
Miss F e rguson very absentmindedly goes to her c lass&#13;
room at 7 a. m . instead of&#13;
going to breakfast. Probably thinking of that German exam.&#13;
W a terman excused from&#13;
physics class. Juniors win&#13;
over Seniors in baske t ball,&#13;
43 to 9. "Foul" on Minkler.&#13;
L ee, Genevieve and MyrtilJa go down town together.&#13;
W escott misses the last car&#13;
out, pawns his overcoat and&#13;
stays down town.&#13;
Genevieve plays role of bottl e washer in chem. Jab.&#13;
"Greens" win in Y. W. C. A.&#13;
m embe rship contest. Heilman takes a short cut clown&#13;
stairs, landing uncere moniously in Mrs. Killam's bedroom.&#13;
"Leaf the Lucky" after&#13;
r eading sign on W est "Piology lab, takes refuge and&#13;
dinner on Chapman's bed.&#13;
Dr. Gwilym begins series of&#13;
Bible talks.&#13;
&#13;
�February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
Giger Fry makes his celebrated analysis of buckwheat flour. Nice to have&#13;
a "chemist" handy when&#13;
the pancakes refuse to be&#13;
light.&#13;
2 Millner and Kilborne talk&#13;
in a round-about way at&#13;
the opera house. Groundhog sees his shadow.&#13;
5 Garver forgets his necktie.&#13;
6 Dr. Gwilym at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
Miss&#13;
Bunting&#13;
conducts&#13;
choral union.&#13;
Fears Mr.&#13;
Eggleston has gone without her.&#13;
8 Mr. Maxwell, soloist, entertains chapel attendants.&#13;
10 Jackson-Sammis&#13;
concert&#13;
con1pany.&#13;
Morningside's&#13;
"cross country men" wni&#13;
over Y. M. C. A., 28 to 8.&#13;
Coldest day of the year.&#13;
12 Westcott and Gary break&#13;
up a spread at Killam's.&#13;
Biology majors work for&#13;
"A" grades by scrubbing&#13;
and cleaning up the lab.&#13;
"Everybody worked&#13;
but&#13;
Robbins. He sat around&#13;
all day."&#13;
Warmest day&#13;
of the winter, and that&#13;
night it rained.&#13;
13 Weather man makes up&#13;
for lost time by sending a&#13;
b lizzard.&#13;
14 St. Valentine's day celebrated; numerous parties&#13;
Middles entertain Seniors.&#13;
Hard times at Millner's.&#13;
15 Senior sleighride.&#13;
16 Morningside wins in Academic debate with Simpson.&#13;
17 Freshman bob party.&#13;
p r e s en t&#13;
19 Zetaletheans&#13;
Queen Dido.&#13;
20 Dr. Lyman Sperry in a&#13;
chapel address defines a&#13;
Freshwater college as a&#13;
western&#13;
co-educational&#13;
school. D. Ford Robbins'&#13;
birthday.&#13;
and Mrs. Perkins,&#13;
21 Mr.&#13;
missionaries from Liberia,&#13;
visit chapel.&#13;
Junior basket ball team&#13;
appears in new white jerseys with maroon Indian&#13;
heads,&#13;
defeating Senior&#13;
preps, 40 to 20.&#13;
washday"&#13;
22 "Birthington's&#13;
address by Hon. Geo. D.&#13;
Perkins.&#13;
23 John Eass again receives&#13;
honor of having his name&#13;
on trophy cup.&#13;
"M's"&#13;
awarded.&#13;
27 Fredendoll goes to chapel.&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Euton signs away&#13;
an express package by signing her name to a gymnasium petition. Consequently&#13;
Gary and Westcott have . a&#13;
spread.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Cora Frear's birthday.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Hilton's&#13;
overcoat&#13;
gets&#13;
a&#13;
streetcar ride. Shadowy creatures from other world take&#13;
Hawkins for a stroll.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Miss Robbins talks on&#13;
Philippines.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Nashviile delegates return.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Faculty concert. Prof. Garver's birthday. according to&#13;
calendar of 1905.&#13;
&#13;
March 10&#13;
&#13;
Basket ball. Morningside 37,&#13;
Omaha 27.&#13;
Dunbar entertainers give the&#13;
last number of the lecture&#13;
course.&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical contest. Clair D. Horner won.&#13;
St. Patrick's day.&#13;
Y. W.&#13;
cabinet&#13;
celebrate&#13;
Faith&#13;
Woodford's birthday at her&#13;
home in Sargeant's Bluffs.&#13;
Mrs. Taylor's birthday.&#13;
"Lohengrin" given at the opera house.&#13;
Miss Eun ting,&#13;
Miss Cook and Prof. Lewis&#13;
wait to see "Elsa" and miss&#13;
the last car out.&#13;
2 a . m.&#13;
Prof. Lewis and&#13;
Miss Cook walking home.&#13;
Miss Bunting, at a hotel,&#13;
thinks it is&#13;
morning and&#13;
dresses to go home.&#13;
Philo&#13;
court assembles to try $100,000 damage case.&#13;
Term&#13;
concert.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
win final game of basket ball&#13;
tournament.&#13;
Prof. Brown entertains the&#13;
normal students.&#13;
Miss Ferguson is stiJl writing&#13;
questions for an 11:35 exam.&#13;
when the 12: 3 0 bells ring.&#13;
Calendar committee resigns&#13;
in favor of "1908."&#13;
&#13;
March 15&#13;
&#13;
March 16&#13;
March 17&#13;
&#13;
March 18&#13;
March 19&#13;
&#13;
March 20&#13;
&#13;
March 21&#13;
March 22&#13;
&#13;
March 23&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
�How do you happen to be here? "&#13;
PERRY: " Oh, just happened in was all."&#13;
(Aside. ) " Why doesn 't she come?"&#13;
(Doors close. No Lillian appears.)&#13;
SCENE 4.&#13;
(Program over. He is properly roasted.)&#13;
He tumbles.&#13;
&#13;
September 4 to 13&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
September&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
AN UNLOOKED FOR CONFESSION&#13;
&#13;
Enforced Vacation,&#13;
A VICTIM OF CIRCUMSTANCES&#13;
SCENE 1- A girl's room, 2 p. m.&#13;
Evva: "Are you girls going to program&#13;
tonight? "&#13;
LILLIAN: "I don't think so."&#13;
ETHEL: "Perry is going, isn't he?"&#13;
LILLIAN:&#13;
"No, for he never goes unless I&#13;
take him."&#13;
EvvA: " I am going to tell him at supper&#13;
time that you sent word for him to meet you&#13;
at program."&#13;
LILLIAN: "Well, all right, but I'll phone&#13;
him not to go."&#13;
S CENE 2- At supper.&#13;
EvvA: (To Perry) Lillian told me to tell&#13;
you to meet her at the program tonight."&#13;
PERRY:&#13;
"Thank you, Evva, for your&#13;
trouble."&#13;
ScENE 3- Atheneum Hall, 8 p. m.&#13;
Perry sits waiting&#13;
(Crowd gathering.&#13;
patiently for Lillian.) "l was so afraid I'd&#13;
be late, but I g uess I'm alright. That dishwashing is certainly a job, especially when&#13;
Mrs. Thom has a dozen and sixty cans&#13;
stacked up. Mighty glad I didn't have to go&#13;
clear over to Shumaker's in the mud this&#13;
night, and by cracky ---."&#13;
Mc. CAY: (Leaning over) "Well, Perry!&#13;
&#13;
E LSIE: " Was Santa Cl a us good to you,&#13;
Ella?"&#13;
ELLA : " Yes, indeed. I got so many nice&#13;
presents. What did you get, Gertie?"&#13;
GERTIE: " Well , my little brother gave&#13;
me a nice silver th imble; the only one I ever&#13;
possessed, - - - :·&#13;
ELSIE: "Why, Gertie, haven't you ever&#13;
sewed much? "&#13;
GERTIE: " No, l never had the time, but&#13;
after school is out this year I'll just have to&#13;
get at it."&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
Septemb er&#13;
&#13;
Septemb er&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
Miss P ERRY:&#13;
(Confidently to a Junior&#13;
friend .) " ls that joke on Miss Bunting and&#13;
Prof. Lewis in the Junior Annua l?"&#13;
JUNIOR : (S ympathetically.) " Which one&#13;
and I 'II tell you?"&#13;
Miss PERRY: "The one about the time&#13;
when he helped her from the car right into&#13;
the mud."&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
Septemb er&#13;
&#13;
After&#13;
&#13;
Johnson and Mathematics are not on Speaking&#13;
Terms,&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Football camp at&#13;
Riverside.&#13;
12 a nd 13 Registr ation.&#13;
1 5 Y. W. C. A. r eception.&#13;
1 9 D ean Campbell, in explaining the order In&#13;
leaving&#13;
ch apel:&#13;
"The&#13;
Seniors retire first."&#13;
2 1 Mass meeting for f ootball.&#13;
Eirth of college&#13;
spirit.&#13;
22 Reception&#13;
for Stanley&#13;
Dr.&#13;
a nd Grace Carson.&#13;
Soltau add resses stud ents.&#13;
23 Miss H enshaw, state sec~&#13;
retary of Y. W. C. A.,&#13;
gives&#13;
chapel&#13;
address.&#13;
Atheneum's annual hayrack ride.&#13;
26&#13;
Mass&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Adelphian-Aesth esia n&#13;
ravine&#13;
party.&#13;
27&#13;
Zetaleth ean picnic. Dr.&#13;
Milton Daily talks on&#13;
"Student's Car e of His&#13;
H ealth. "&#13;
29&#13;
Lecture by Governor La&#13;
F ollette of Wisconsin.&#13;
30 Freshmen ch a llenge any&#13;
c:ass in school to a game&#13;
of football. First yea r&#13;
Norm als accept.&#13;
&#13;
�October&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
October 10&#13;
October 12&#13;
October 14&#13;
October 16&#13;
October 18&#13;
&#13;
October 19&#13;
&#13;
October 20&#13;
October 21&#13;
October 21&#13;
Octobe r 23&#13;
&#13;
October 24&#13;
October 25&#13;
&#13;
October 26&#13;
October 27&#13;
October 28&#13;
&#13;
October 30&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
Octob e r 31&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye-Crescent picnic at&#13;
Riverside.&#13;
Watermelon hunt.&#13;
Miss Gregg tells the students of India.&#13;
Freshmen amuse themselves&#13;
with a stuffed stocking at&#13;
Brown's.&#13;
Suspension.&#13;
Lecture by Dr. Geo. Heber&#13;
Jones.&#13;
Dr. Jones begins series of&#13;
chapel talks lasting till the&#13;
13th.&#13;
Morningside football team&#13;
scores over Eeuna Vista 16&#13;
to 0.&#13;
Dr. Lewis addresses city Y.&#13;
M. C. A.&#13;
Wylie forgets his morphology class.&#13;
Arthur Tumbleson "gets it&#13;
in the neck" at the dining&#13;
hall.&#13;
Mable Haskins' birthday.&#13;
Zet-Otho hall steamed.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
wins&#13;
over&#13;
Creighton 7 to 0. "Suspenders" broken.&#13;
Leona Delays' birthday.&#13;
Recital of Miss Bunting, assisted&#13;
by&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Mather.&#13;
Harry Staples, detained by&#13;
the Othos, disappoints Nellie Perry.&#13;
"All m e mbers of the choral&#13;
union please remain seated&#13;
without marching out."&#13;
Blood and Taylor test the&#13;
properties&#13;
of&#13;
hydrogen.&#13;
First snow of the season.&#13;
Inter-society d e bate.&#13;
No. 136 substituted by a&#13;
new song.&#13;
and 22 Bible institute.&#13;
Morningside vs. Yankton, 7&#13;
to O. Edwards takes clown&#13;
a stove and students in general indulge in "spoons" at&#13;
Yankton.&#13;
Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Campbell entertain the faculty.&#13;
Ice cream stolen.&#13;
Heilman and Horner call&#13;
on Mrs. Campbell for particulars.&#13;
(N. E.-they got them.)&#13;
Librarian carries dogs from&#13;
the library.&#13;
Mass meeting.&#13;
Prof.&#13;
Lewis, while with&#13;
Miss Howard, forgets&#13;
his&#13;
car fare.&#13;
Mr. Davidson&#13;
comes to his rescue.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
wins&#13;
over&#13;
Eellvue, 10 to 8.&#13;
Ghosts&#13;
visit the&#13;
Philo-Atheneum&#13;
hall.&#13;
.&#13;
Prof. Haynes loses his dignity by falling down stairs.&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
Novem ber&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
November 10&#13;
November 11&#13;
&#13;
Mable Towner's birthday.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
bean pole scrap.&#13;
History IV. has a game&#13;
o_ "tit-tat-toe" in which&#13;
f&#13;
Prof. Garver joins.&#13;
Dr. Powell&#13;
talks&#13;
on&#13;
"Care of the Eyes."&#13;
Oratorical contest.&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman won.&#13;
"Mark&#13;
your&#13;
chapel&#13;
seats."&#13;
Glen&#13;
Squires'&#13;
birthday.&#13;
&#13;
November 13&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
against&#13;
Yankton-"'Nuff&#13;
said."&#13;
Thornton&#13;
announcing&#13;
Aclelphian&#13;
program:&#13;
"Next will be a pantorium."&#13;
&#13;
November 14&#13;
&#13;
No music at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
November 15&#13;
&#13;
Senior&#13;
preps attacking&#13;
middle colors in hall are&#13;
scattered by Dr. Wylie.&#13;
Corwin Taylor's birthday.&#13;
Dean waxes eloquent over&#13;
"college habits."&#13;
&#13;
November 16&#13;
November 17&#13;
&#13;
Middles&#13;
entertained at&#13;
Bloocl',s .&#13;
Seniors driven&#13;
out at the point of a gun.&#13;
&#13;
November 18-Atheneum grand&#13;
&#13;
public.&#13;
&#13;
November 20&#13;
&#13;
'IE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside vs. LeMars,&#13;
2 7 to 5.&#13;
Jesse DuBois' birthday.&#13;
&#13;
November 21&#13;
&#13;
Dean appears at chapel&#13;
with a black eye-his&#13;
first appearance since his&#13;
oratorical debut.&#13;
&#13;
November 24&#13;
&#13;
Geography class doesn't&#13;
meet.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
vs.&#13;
State&#13;
Normal, 0 to 0- (in favor&#13;
of Morningside).&#13;
&#13;
November 25&#13;
&#13;
November 26&#13;
&#13;
Col:ege Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
November 29&#13;
&#13;
Big mass meeting. Foot&#13;
ball boys break training.&#13;
&#13;
November 30&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion&#13;
calls&#13;
off&#13;
Thanksgiving game on&#13;
account of "cold feet."&#13;
Mr. Pennett's birthday.&#13;
&#13;
�December&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Decem ber&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
December 11&#13;
&#13;
December 13&#13;
December 15&#13;
December 16&#13;
December 20&#13;
&#13;
December 28&#13;
&#13;
December 31&#13;
&#13;
Isabell Garghill Beecher&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
Fredendoll celebrates his&#13;
? teenth birthday.&#13;
Students try to forget&#13;
turkey, and bury themselves again&#13;
in their&#13;
books.&#13;
Coach Griffith entertains&#13;
the foot ball boys.&#13;
E ll a Dickson's birthday.&#13;
Foot ball team again entertained, at Millner's.&#13;
Hawkins announces his&#13;
life ambition is to be bald&#13;
headed.&#13;
Zets and Atheneums present "Dickens'&#13;
Christmas Carol."&#13;
Term torture begins.&#13;
Mr. Nichol's birthday.&#13;
MacDonald's&#13;
Martha&#13;
birthday.&#13;
Dean Campbell's Christmas presents-grades (A&#13;
for good c hildren).&#13;
Myrtilla_ goes to the train&#13;
with Prof. Lewis.&#13;
Genevieve meets him at&#13;
sac City.&#13;
Edwin Brown, by his&#13;
brilliant conversation detains his lady friend at&#13;
the depot till h er train&#13;
leaves. Mean th in g! he&#13;
made poor e lanche miss&#13;
a whole day of schoo!!&#13;
&#13;
Miss LOVELAND, in Literature class: "Mr.&#13;
Eggleston will you please scan the third&#13;
verse of the poem?"&#13;
MR. E.: "I cannot for the reason that I&#13;
am not clear on my feet."&#13;
STUDENT:&#13;
what if the college would&#13;
burn!"&#13;
JOHNSON : "I hope it won't, I would not be&#13;
able to remove my conditions."&#13;
Early one cold, winter morning.&#13;
Miss Ferguson nearing the coliege.&#13;
"I do hope that class will have those verbs&#13;
good today--.&#13;
"Wonder why the college seems so deserted? Seems queer more window curtains aren't up - - .&#13;
"I guess I'll give a test to-morrow - "Why!! this door is locked !&#13;
"What can be the matter! ! ! !&#13;
"It surely is nearly eight-thirty. (Looking at her watch) It is only seven. No wonder it is dark. I remember now. I was just&#13;
starting out for breakfast. l do hope no one&#13;
saw me up here at this unearthly hour."&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson Will Steal No More Pancakes.&#13;
THE ABSENT MINDED.&#13;
T IME : Registration day.&#13;
P LACE: Dean's office.&#13;
Prof. Haynes enters, but is obliged to wait&#13;
his turn as the office is filled .&#13;
When finally he is allowed to speak, words&#13;
fail him.&#13;
PROF. HAYNES: "Why, Prof. Campbell, I&#13;
forgot what I came for."&#13;
PLACE: The English room.&#13;
Miss Loveland sits half dazed correcting a&#13;
pile of examination papers.&#13;
Someone knocks.&#13;
Miss Loveland goes to the door, instead&#13;
of admitting her company, begins herself to&#13;
knock.&#13;
&#13;
E.H.&#13;
Heilman Falls Thirty-Two, Steps.&#13;
&#13;
PLACE: Miss Dimmitt's room.&#13;
Mr. McCay patiently sits waiting for a&#13;
student to appear.&#13;
Miss DIMMITT (entering): "Come right in,&#13;
Mr. McCay! ! D id you want to see me?"&#13;
McCAY : "Don't you realize that you are&#13;
the one who came in?"&#13;
"Miss DIMMITT, (falling into a seat) laughs&#13;
until end of period.&#13;
&#13;
�QuESTION: "What advantage is there in&#13;
going to a small college?"&#13;
GENEVIEVE : "One gets in closer touch&#13;
with the faculty."&#13;
Prof. Greynald answers a knock in French&#13;
class.&#13;
" Miss Wilson, your neighbor in chapel&#13;
wishes to see you."&#13;
[n college physics.&#13;
STAPLES: " What is that third letter, professor?"&#13;
Mc DOWELL:&#13;
"The kindergarten is on&#13;
the second floor, Mr. Staples."&#13;
A Misunderstanding&#13;
&#13;
Hilton Fools " Con,'' but Looses O vercoat.&#13;
HOW THEY BAWLED H[M OUT.&#13;
SCENE: A boy's room.&#13;
FRANK: "Mrs. Killam will be up to-day&#13;
for the room rent."&#13;
JACK: "I'll be a minus quantity if she&#13;
does."&#13;
RALPH: "Jack, you're treasurer. Here&#13;
she comes; get into the closet."&#13;
DEAN CAMPBELL enters. "How do you do,&#13;
boys?"&#13;
Explanation follows. Jack comes from&#13;
closet.&#13;
Did you hear it?&#13;
can tell you.&#13;
&#13;
LuRA: " Oh, girls! I do wish I could hear&#13;
Katharine Ridgeway tonight!"&#13;
ARCHIE (standing near with some other&#13;
boys): "What would you say if one of us&#13;
should ask you?"&#13;
LuRA: "Turn you down of course."&#13;
ARCHIE: ··would you if I should ask you?"&#13;
LURA (th inking he meant being turned&#13;
down): "Of course."&#13;
Later in the evening she ascended with&#13;
Archi e into a box in the balcony. "All's&#13;
well that ends well."&#13;
EDWARDS \Chemistry exam.): ·'Well, Prof.&#13;
Lewis, here are a few stray thoughts that&#13;
I have jotted down. You can take them for&#13;
what they are worth."&#13;
&#13;
If not, Hattie Tarbet&#13;
&#13;
ON THE DEAN.&#13;
PROF. CAMPBELL:&#13;
"There will be no&#13;
preachers in heaven."&#13;
MR. SAWYER: "Who then can be saved?"&#13;
CAMPBELL: "According to the calling regulations, people who are not engaged are&#13;
supposed to depart at 10 o'clock. Those&#13;
who are engaged are supposed to depart at&#13;
10 too."&#13;
At 10:02 Mr. Shaw bids Miss Ellis goodbye.&#13;
&#13;
AT THE SENIOR PICNIC.&#13;
"Debby and Erskine" went to the brook&#13;
after dinner to wash the dishes (consisting&#13;
of two cups and two teaspoons ), so they&#13;
said. Two hours later they returned.&#13;
Note- An intelligent senior who didn't go&#13;
to the brook discovered later, among the&#13;
pile of dishes, two sticky cups.&#13;
George declares that the earthquake&#13;
shock at Kilborne's was only a case of&#13;
domestic felicity. However, the new window glass cost him $2.50:&#13;
&#13;
MR. HORNBECK (after having searched&#13;
vainly for his umbrellas): " S on, where are&#13;
those two umbrellas of mine?"&#13;
L ITTLE SoN: "Oh, I know where they are!&#13;
Horace took one night before last when it&#13;
was raining and I guess he took the other&#13;
one last night for when he was leaving I&#13;
heard him say, "Give me one more, darling,&#13;
just one more.''&#13;
&#13;
Wickens made a call one evening at the&#13;
genial quarters of McCay and Kleippel, and&#13;
during the course of the evening took young&#13;
Willi am upon his knee. "By the way, Frank,"&#13;
he remarked, "Willie is about as heavy as&#13;
Miss T- -y." Willie's struggles for the next&#13;
half hour to secure his rights as a free A merican citizen may be imagined.&#13;
&#13;
"l have an engagement with ·the map of&#13;
Germany."- SQUIRES.&#13;
i. e.: He didn't have his " Dutch.''&#13;
&#13;
Lights out in 10 Minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Why is it Heilman and Weary always&#13;
have to be told to get off the street car&#13;
when they reach Peters' Park?&#13;
MR. COLLI NS: " Miss Johnson will you&#13;
help make frappe for tomorrow evening?''&#13;
Miss J . : "! guess so, how many will&#13;
there be?"&#13;
MR. C. : "Four girls."&#13;
Miss J.: " Oh ! say, but we'll need some&#13;
boys to do the squeezing."&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude Crossan's little brother, after&#13;
teasi ng to come out to college with her and&#13;
not securing her consent, says as a final resort, "l wont tell them anything about K indig, not even if they would give me a penny."&#13;
&#13;
meeting of R-R-r-r-r tor-r-rcls-ss-s-sbashontoday.&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
The hour of Midnight. A lone woman stands&#13;
near the brink of a mirky pool.&#13;
Three little maids wending their way&#13;
homeward after some festivity, see the figure standing by the pool; vague horrors flit&#13;
through their minds. Perchance some demented creature has escaped from her restraining bands; or it may be that some&#13;
broken heart seeks to drown its sorrows in&#13;
the blackness of the pool!&#13;
SOLUTION- It was only Florence Davidson&#13;
iistening to the croaking of the frogs a nd trying to find out how they did it&#13;
SUGGESTIVE&#13;
HORACE CLASs- (Ray Tumbleson translating) "With you I would love to live, with you&#13;
I would gladly die."&#13;
(To McCay) "Gee whi z, Kid!&#13;
Wouldn't&#13;
that make a dandy proposal? It may come&#13;
in handy some time."&#13;
&#13;
Where Do You Room, Heilman?&#13;
At Home- Pole No. 16745.&#13;
&#13;
�Jay Whitaker's little sister in Sunday&#13;
school class: (Teacher was telling the children that it was wrong to work on Sunday)&#13;
"Say, my brother irons on Sunday! "&#13;
&#13;
WANTED, by Horace Groom- Any kind&#13;
of a job, just so that he can spend his summer evenings at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he&#13;
also reap." If he soweth neg! igence he shall&#13;
reap flunks; if he soweth skips he shall reap&#13;
specials.&#13;
&#13;
AT ROLL CALL&#13;
Miss FERGUSON: "Miss Wilson: "&#13;
Wilson: "Hello!"&#13;
PROF. VAN HORN. " MR. JOHNSON: '&#13;
Ullman: "Here!"&#13;
&#13;
One of the new Normal students, coming&#13;
into the biology lecture room where the&#13;
class in morphology of pteridophytes was&#13;
in session: "Is this the mother tongue&#13;
class?"&#13;
&#13;
SOME MINDS RUN IN SAME CHANNEL.&#13;
(ENGLISH LITERATURE GLASS.)&#13;
Miss L.: " Miss Weary, will you give a&#13;
familiar quotation found in the scene between Romeo and Juliet on the balcony?"&#13;
Miss W.: "'Parting is such sweet sorrow.'"&#13;
Miss L.: " Mr. Heilman, will you give another?' '&#13;
MR. H.: "A thousand times good-night. "&#13;
&#13;
"I am so contented at Morningside- NELLIE&#13;
PERRY.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN LADY: " I know Mr. Taylor is&#13;
not married, for a married man can keep&#13;
his mouth closed."&#13;
&#13;
Miss LOVELAND: " Romeo and Paris were&#13;
very different in nature. Romeo was passionate and went to Juliet to urge his own&#13;
suit, while Paris went to Juliet's father to&#13;
gain his consent to woo his daughter. That&#13;
was alright, wasn't it?"&#13;
MR. HARTZELL: "No, indeed, [ don 't think&#13;
&#13;
R. TUMBLESON: If I found out who scattered those cartoons I'd teli the faculty."&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Roy Barrick, when asked concerning a&#13;
certain consignment of typewriting for the&#13;
annual replied: "Well, really, I've had so&#13;
much outside work to do that I haven 't had&#13;
time to finish it."&#13;
Observers say that his excuse is valid, as&#13;
he seems to have chartered the summer&#13;
house on the campus for the remainder of&#13;
the term.&#13;
&#13;
so."&#13;
&#13;
PITKIN (studying his English in library)&#13;
"Say, McCay , can you tell me the story of&#13;
'Absalom and Achitophel.' l haven't my&#13;
Bible here?"&#13;
McCAY: " [ haven't either, but maybe&#13;
'Welche's English Literature' will do.' '&#13;
&#13;
Percy Brown, in History class asks why&#13;
the popes were requested not to marry.&#13;
PROF. GARVER: "That is the only way to&#13;
keep your temper and to live a holy life.&#13;
(Also added) "Be sure and don't quote&#13;
this, as I might get into trouble.''&#13;
&#13;
chemical&#13;
&#13;
laboratory&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WILSON :&#13;
PLACE: At Woodford farm.&#13;
time:&#13;
When Y. W. C. A . cabinet spent&#13;
day at Sargeant Bluff.&#13;
" O! girls, just see the sun set on those&#13;
cows. "&#13;
&#13;
Nina Mossman, at the grocery store prior&#13;
to commencement: "Please Sir, I'd like a&#13;
yard of beef steak. "&#13;
&#13;
DEAN CAMPBELL, in Psychology class,&#13;
Tuesday morning.&#13;
Addresses class by saying: "l would&#13;
have corrected your papers but I was out of&#13;
town over Sunday.''&#13;
&#13;
THAT'S THE QUESTION&#13;
Harry Jones, in philosophy class: "I don't&#13;
know whether the philosophers ever thought&#13;
of this or not, but suppose there was nothing,&#13;
not even space, what would there be?&#13;
&#13;
Harry Jones is the same person as Father&#13;
Jones, our young priest.&#13;
&#13;
A Little Contriving Turns Package to Wescott&#13;
and Gary.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. VAN HORNE: " To work out a table&#13;
of logarithms is no worse than sea sickness.&#13;
It won't kill you. "&#13;
&#13;
Feay and Elliott Match N o More Pennies&#13;
&#13;
ALL OUT IN TEN MINUTES&#13;
&#13;
A CHURCH MEMBER : "Say, is that young&#13;
lady who sings in the choir and wears a&#13;
light hat with a blue feather on it, Mrs.&#13;
Mossman?"&#13;
A STUDENT (laughing): "No, she isn't&#13;
yet."&#13;
COLLINS (to Miss Shontz, lecturer): "Where&#13;
you fel[ down is that you talked too much of&#13;
yourself.&#13;
BASS (at restaurant ). Eats piece of pie:&#13;
"Say, waiter. which way is it to the cemetery?"&#13;
(Waiter secures platter; Bass vanishes.)&#13;
THE NECESSARY REQUIREMENTS.&#13;
SMITH (talking to a friend): "Well, I don 't&#13;
expect to go to college much longer. My&#13;
father wants me to get married and live on&#13;
the farm."&#13;
FRIEND: 'Smith, who are you going to&#13;
marry? Is it going to be one of the college&#13;
girls?"&#13;
" ! don't know yet who I'll get, but I don't&#13;
think I want a college girl for they are all&#13;
too flip for me. But, - -, I want one that&#13;
knows how to keep house, and, - - and , - one that can make good butter.'' (He boards&#13;
at dining hall. )&#13;
&#13;
�WHO?&#13;
1. Was struck with a pancake platter?&#13;
A. Tumbleson.&#13;
2. Missed the last car and walked out to&#13;
M. C.? Lewis &amp; Cook.&#13;
3. Took Miss Matteson to box in gallery?&#13;
Archie.&#13;
4. Had reasons for visiting Kingsley?&#13;
Mossman.&#13;
5. Pats himself on the back? Horner.&#13;
6. Fell down stairs to emulate Ralph?&#13;
Miss Weary.&#13;
7. Passes for a minister at Paullina?&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
8. Tends chemistry store room? Horace&#13;
and Opal.&#13;
9. On a street car forgot her escort's&#13;
name? Blanch Johns.&#13;
10. Looks lonesome since Will has gone?&#13;
Evva.&#13;
11. Plays with all the small girls? Staples.&#13;
12. Ought to lead chapel? Lady Faculty.&#13;
13. Starts at two to catch five o"clock&#13;
train? Miss Mills.&#13;
14. Was disappointed at Nashville? Minkler.&#13;
15. Al ways bawls you out? Mrs. Erskine.&#13;
16. Is majoring in history for politics&#13;
sake? C. Manning.&#13;
17. Looses hats at Trimble 's? Collins.&#13;
18. Took street car to S outh Soo instead&#13;
of M. C.? Miss Elliott.&#13;
19. Cracks jokes which have their point&#13;
at infinity? Garver.&#13;
20. Was never turned down? Millner.&#13;
21. Says Myrtilla and Gene v_eve can't&#13;
i&#13;
al ways be friends? Juniors.&#13;
&#13;
MR. MINKLER: "Yes, Miss Dickson has all&#13;
but decided to be a missionary. "&#13;
&#13;
,£&#13;
At the 'phone on New Year's night.&#13;
SARAH: ( calling Mr. Minkler at Miss&#13;
Dickson's home) "Hello, is this 1906?"&#13;
MR. M.: (promptly) "No, this is 1053Ll."&#13;
SARAH: "It's 1906 over here, I'm afraid&#13;
you"re not up to date. "&#13;
MR. M.: "Yes, I've been up all day."&#13;
SARAH: ( suppressing her laughter) "Is Mr.&#13;
Harvey C. there?"&#13;
MR. M.: "No."&#13;
SARAH: " Why, I understood he was to be&#13;
there. "&#13;
MR. M.: (excitedly) "Is that so?·,&#13;
Sarah hangs up the receiver and all take&#13;
a good laugh.&#13;
&#13;
During the Christmas vacation Mr. Robbins was floor walker at Martins. A certain&#13;
lady enters the store with her little girl evidently looking for pretty Christmas presents.&#13;
Pointing to our stately friend the little girl&#13;
said, "Mamma buy me that."&#13;
&#13;
o@)&#13;
&#13;
One evening at program, a new student,&#13;
seemingly concerned, leaned over and asked&#13;
her neighbor, "Does that red headed girl go&#13;
with that red cheeked boy ?&#13;
Upon hearing that she did, she said, "Gee,&#13;
I bet they spoon."&#13;
o@)&#13;
&#13;
GERTIE: "What are you going to do next&#13;
year?&#13;
EvvA: "I'm going to be at home."&#13;
&#13;
Students' Viewpoint&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
Xmas Present to Martie and Katherine&#13;
" TWO AGAINST ONE IS NIGGER'S&#13;
FUN."&#13;
Wednesday afternoon Collins and Tnmbleson happened upon a few friends on the&#13;
stair steps. A remark was passed which&#13;
brought the following dare from Ray : "l&#13;
bet we Othos can put up a stronger program&#13;
between now and 'S aturday than you and the&#13;
Atheneums together can give Monday evening." In the hasty preparation for this program the suggestion was dropped that every&#13;
fellow ought to take two girls to insure a&#13;
crowd.&#13;
So it really was'nt Collins' fault, but&#13;
Katherine was just a little surprised when&#13;
Stanley stammered that he had to call at&#13;
Frary's a minute and, a second later produced Miss Martie.&#13;
It was quite unusual too, that these two&#13;
young ladies should take a fancy to that&#13;
much demanded setee. To be sure this did&#13;
prove a little crowded, and much more so&#13;
after the girls, feeling chilly,(?) had had their&#13;
escort assist them in putting on their heavy&#13;
winter coats.&#13;
But the chief surprise came after program,&#13;
when Katherine thought that they ought to&#13;
go down town. Well, Collins couldn"t agree,&#13;
but the two co-eds, half crazy to see the pretty things in the Christmas show windows,&#13;
marched right along to the car line andthey went down town.&#13;
Stanley was expecting to take I the next&#13;
&#13;
car home, of course, but plans seemed to develop differently and the trio walked the&#13;
streets of old Sioux City, "till all was blue,"&#13;
especially their hands. Stanley thought he&#13;
had gotten into the longest cross country run&#13;
of the season and still they walked until finally a restaurant sign reminded Katherine&#13;
that a good hot drink of some kind wouldn't&#13;
go bad. Well, she and Martie went on in,&#13;
even if they had to go alone. It really is remarkable how long two young ladies can&#13;
take to sip a cup of chocolate, especially&#13;
when one is waiting for them out alone in a&#13;
dark cold street of a great city, with no pass&#13;
time but to eat away at a five cent sack of&#13;
peanut candy. But it is fully as remarkable&#13;
how long such a sack of candy will last,&#13;
provided only, you do not share it with your&#13;
companions.&#13;
Mr. Collins told the story nicely on two of&#13;
his Christmas presents.&#13;
o@)&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION- WHERE IS HE?&#13;
Mr. Brower, wishing some information&#13;
about buds, wrote to a noted botanist asking&#13;
him many questions concerning the matter.&#13;
He received this reply:&#13;
Mr. A. L. Brower,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Dear Sir:- Since Dr. B- - has been dead&#13;
four years his address is unknown.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
The letter was returned to the writer.&#13;
&#13;
Chet Rissler Hollers "lke" in Chapel Time&#13;
to His Sorrow&#13;
&#13;
�Chapel Jokes&#13;
MAXWELL : "D id you ever know that&#13;
Caesar married an Irish girl? "&#13;
" Well, he did , for when he came to the&#13;
Rubicon he proposed to Bridget. "&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL: " Matrimony among preachers&#13;
is not restricted now as it was in former&#13;
times. This I say for our encouragement&#13;
and also for the encouragement of SOME of&#13;
the faculty."&#13;
&#13;
BRUSHINCHAM : " Hobson was the victim of&#13;
the Merrimac and also of a merry smack."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
A child, when asked what a republican&#13;
was, answered:&#13;
"A sinner mentioned in the B ible."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
DEAN : " Football is not the end of life, but&#13;
it is a means to the end."&#13;
&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
S PERRY:&#13;
" The western co-educational&#13;
colleges are called fresh water colleges."&#13;
&#13;
A boy was .asked to name the members of&#13;
the human body, and he replied:&#13;
"They are the head, the throat and the&#13;
vowels, and the vowels are a , e, i, o, u."&#13;
When a certain woman, who was a great&#13;
nagger, died, her husband put the following&#13;
inscription on her tombstone:&#13;
"Rest in peace till l come."&#13;
MAC BRIDE: "E ven the dawning of Senior&#13;
g arb does not rea lly remove the impression&#13;
of youthfulness."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
GARVER: "The chapel cards will now be&#13;
passed and marked as usual."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
TH E DEAN: "Six chapel absences are expected each week."&#13;
&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
BRUSHINCHAM: "Did ye hear the news,&#13;
Pat?"&#13;
" What news, Mike?"&#13;
" Phy didn't ye hear that the pope · is&#13;
dead?"&#13;
" [nda de, now, he was a fine man."&#13;
"Do ye think Roosevelt will appint&#13;
anither?"&#13;
&#13;
T HE DEAN: "I hope if any of you ever go&#13;
to a Greek Orthodox church you will stand&#13;
up, a s that is their custom. (They ha ve no&#13;
seats in their church.")&#13;
&#13;
CHIPPERFIELD. "In a sma ll community&#13;
where there a re s ix or seven churches, a&#13;
new family is just like fish bait."&#13;
&#13;
30 Below Zero.&#13;
&#13;
Ike Pays a Wager Jan. 22.&#13;
&#13;
TEACHER: " Wha t is a demagog ue?"&#13;
PUPIL: (Thinking he meant a demijohn. )&#13;
"Something fill ed with whiskey, beer a nd&#13;
other drinks."&#13;
&#13;
�COLLEGE- FROM THE SOUTHEAST&#13;
&#13;
Who?&#13;
&#13;
Who ?&#13;
&#13;
Who are we?&#13;
&#13;
Wee are it,&#13;
&#13;
W e are enough,&#13;
W e are the College with the red hot stuff .&#13;
W h o? Who? Who?&#13;
Morn.ingside College fro m the city on t he Sioux .&#13;
&#13;
Students Patronize " T he Sioux" Advertisers&#13;
(See last page for list of advertisers&#13;
&#13;
�studio leads&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
Methods&#13;
are&#13;
Modern&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
Styles&#13;
Change&#13;
'Demand&#13;
&#13;
'But the&#13;
Quality remains&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
&#13;
Vnparalleled&#13;
&#13;
groups and photos&#13;
for this&#13;
were made at this Studio,&#13;
&#13;
Annual&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
L.1ve s k c . . Mere h&#13;
toe&#13;
omm1ss1on&#13;
&#13;
Offices at&#13;
CHICAGO, KANSAS CITY.&#13;
SOUTH OMAHA, SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
E EMPLOY only sober. honest. energetic&#13;
men with ability and experience. who are&#13;
every ready to rustle for our shippers' interests, and&#13;
give our shippers the best results for the commission they pay us---that is what you pay us a commission for, and we charge no more for "SERVICE&#13;
THAT SERVES" than you pay for ordinary service. We make&#13;
no loans, have no bad accounts on our books, and have to cater to&#13;
no shipper in order to protect a loan. We seII everything on its&#13;
merits, -and we are wiiling to stand or faII by what our customers&#13;
say of us. Ask anyone who ever shipped us stock what they&#13;
think of our "SERVICE THAT SERVES." Write us for our&#13;
am hlet of references from eo le who have shipped to us. It wilI&#13;
be sent you free.&#13;
We also buy cattle on order, and guarantee our selection wilI&#13;
please you. Two thirds of the cattle we buy on order are bought&#13;
for people whom we have never met. They send us their order&#13;
by mail or wire, stating the kind they want, and we never fail to&#13;
please them. We either send the kind they want or none, as our&#13;
pamphlet of testimonials wilI show you. We guarantee to save a&#13;
good deal more than our commission on aII orders, and guarantee&#13;
to please you, or you do not need to accept the cattle.&#13;
Write, wire or phone us at any time; we wilI be glad to hear&#13;
from you.&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
611 fourth Street&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS AT&#13;
&#13;
CLAY, ROBINSON &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION&#13;
&#13;
Staple and Fancy&#13;
&lt;Sroceries&#13;
&#13;
STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
PRICES THAT ARE DOWN-TO-DATE&#13;
&#13;
If Our Goods and Treatment&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
P lease You, Tell Your Friends,&#13;
If Not, Tell Us. :&#13;
&#13;
"A&#13;
&#13;
SATISFIED CUSTOMER IS OuR&#13;
BEST ADVERTISEMENT."&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE YOUR PATRONAGE&#13;
&#13;
Denver, Colo.&#13;
&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
East Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
S outh Omaha, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
South St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
South St. Joseph, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ST. AUBIN STATION&#13;
&#13;
THE MERCHANTS&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
Forthe Latest Creations in&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Capital $100,000&#13;
&#13;
PhotographicArt&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
Baldwin.&#13;
&#13;
E. W. R1 cE&#13;
&#13;
the Up-To-Date Photographer&#13;
&#13;
Successor to Beamer&#13;
&#13;
E. B. SPA LDING&#13;
G EO. P. DAY&#13;
G . N. Swan&#13;
&#13;
415 ForuthStreet&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
J. D. SPALDING&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Cashier&#13;
Asst. Cashier&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LOWER&#13;
&#13;
�MOORE'S N O N -LE A K A BLE&#13;
fountain&#13;
PE N&#13;
The Only Pen&#13;
For Ladies Use&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State College of Agriculture&#13;
and Mechanic Arts&#13;
Twenty-one buildings, large and well selected library,&#13;
extensive laboratories thoroughly equipped, one hundred&#13;
t wenty-two instructors .&#13;
In Agriculture - four yearr&#13;
courses in Agronomy with special departments and laboratories in Soi l , Farm Crops and Agricultural Engineering,&#13;
in Dairying, Animal Husbandry, Horticulture, Science&#13;
and Agriculture, and Agricultural Chemistry. Four year&#13;
courses in Veterinary Medicine. In Mechanic Arts-four&#13;
year courses in Mechanical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mining Engin ee ring, Ceram·&#13;
ics an d Chemical Engineering.&#13;
Two year courses in&#13;
Mining Engineering and Ceramics.&#13;
In Science-fou r&#13;
year cou rses in General Science with freedom of electives,&#13;
and in Domestic Science thoroughly based in knowledge&#13;
of Natural Science. Men and women are admitted alike&#13;
to a ll the privi leges of the institution.&#13;
Margaret Hall&#13;
with modern conveniences for young women.&#13;
&#13;
Sole Age nt For Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
R. H. DARLING&#13;
THE COLLEGE BOOKM AN&#13;
&#13;
for Sale&#13;
I have sold all the lots&#13;
advertised in last year's&#13;
annual except those op&#13;
posite College Campus,&#13;
on morningside A v e.&#13;
size 70x365 feet.&#13;
&#13;
For Catalog Address&#13;
&#13;
PRES I DENT&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
AMES, IOWA&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
STORMS&#13;
&#13;
t. C&#13;
&#13;
Peters&#13;
&#13;
The Educated Person&#13;
Always buys from the firm that has&#13;
made a reputation for honest and upright dealings. Our continued s uccess&#13;
in S io u x City is based upon 23 y ears&#13;
of honest dealings with our patrons.&#13;
We sell only the most reliable Pian os at&#13;
prices from $200 to $600, everyone fully&#13;
guaranteed to be of the finest quality&#13;
of workmanship.&#13;
Reed and P ipe Organ s for home, hall&#13;
and church. All kinds of talking machines, from $7.50 to $100.&#13;
Complete&#13;
stock of records.&#13;
NOT ICE- We make a specialty of instrumental and vocal studies. Also&#13;
standard high grade music. Po pular&#13;
music at popular prices.&#13;
Visitors are al ways welcome at our&#13;
establishment.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. DEAN CO.&#13;
315&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
ST.&#13;
&#13;
BOTH PHONES&#13;
&#13;
Three floors filled with sweet music&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Lumber &amp; fuel Co.&#13;
DEALERS IN&#13;
&#13;
CLEAN&#13;
HEALTHY&#13;
WHITE&#13;
&#13;
TEETH&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
I S POSSIBLE to have th e m if you wi ll visi t our&#13;
thoroughly modern d en tal office. All service is painless and guaranteed, and materia ls best mad e. O ur&#13;
operators are gentle and skillfu l, and take especial care&#13;
with nervous patients. W e keep our work in repair FREE.&#13;
Special discounts to studen ts. Prices:&#13;
&#13;
Let us Figure Your Bill&#13;
&#13;
Plates&#13;
Porcelain Cro wn s&#13;
&#13;
up from $ 5.00&#13;
. ___ . 4.00&#13;
&#13;
Gold Crow ns,&#13;
Gold Filli ngs&#13;
&#13;
EXAMINATION FREE.&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
Telephones&#13;
&#13;
" Our Prices are Right.&#13;
&#13;
Square Dealing that is Square."&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 5 19-L2&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
Lakeport Ave.&#13;
&#13;
NEW System&#13;
&#13;
House • •&#13;
&#13;
$4.00&#13;
1.50&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
THE PEOPLE'S BEST DENTIST S&#13;
&#13;
BLATZ BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Offices in Minneapolis and Duluth.&#13;
&#13;
'Dry Goods&#13;
&#13;
up from&#13;
&#13;
PAINLESS EXTRACTION.&#13;
&#13;
612 FOUR TH STREET&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
'Reliable&#13;
&#13;
22k _________________&#13;
&#13;
Our Guarantee Good in Any of Them.&#13;
&#13;
For Fine Photographs&#13;
&#13;
R.V. WILCOX&#13;
STUDIO&#13;
SUCCESSOR. TO SEYMOUR.&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN &amp;&#13;
CO.&#13;
407 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
At Daybreak&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
�To the Victor&#13;
&#13;
W e are Exclusive Agen ts For&#13;
&#13;
You Can't Study on an Empty&#13;
when that&#13;
&#13;
Hungry Feelin'&#13;
&#13;
Belongs the Spoils&#13;
&#13;
comes.&#13;
&#13;
Victor Sporting Goods are&#13;
winning great victor ies all&#13;
over the country. They have&#13;
recent ly been adopted by our&#13;
own league. We a re agents&#13;
for Victor Sporting Goods,&#13;
and can guarantee satisfaction. We invite inspection of&#13;
our line. The price is always&#13;
rig ht at the old rel iable. :&#13;
&#13;
Weld Hardware&#13;
&#13;
No&#13;
fl'&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park Grocery&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Fine Furnish ing Goods&#13;
&#13;
The place to buy&#13;
&#13;
TRUNKS&#13;
&#13;
DOW CLOTHING CO.&#13;
&#13;
L. s.&#13;
&#13;
407-411 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Stiff flats&#13;
&#13;
$3.50 and $4&#13;
&#13;
'' Good Things to eat.&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CARLTON DUAL ffLT,&#13;
fine fng/ish Stiff flats&#13;
&#13;
You come to&#13;
&#13;
Groceries, Meats, fresh fruits&#13;
and Candies&#13;
&#13;
Soft flATS&#13;
$2.50 to $3&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
sample&#13;
cases to&#13;
Order&#13;
&#13;
516-518-52014th St.&#13;
&#13;
August Williges&#13;
Ma NUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
REPAIRING&#13;
DONE&#13;
We can please you with a.&#13;
Trunk or Bag at the r ight price&#13;
&#13;
D. S. ANTHONY&#13;
MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
The Student's Opportunity .&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
609 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
413 5th St., Sioux .City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux1&#13;
City - - Iowa&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
�"Why in the world doesn 't a man like Jones get down&#13;
to business m ethods when he can buv an American&#13;
Typewriter for $50?"&#13;
"Does he think I am runnin g a puzzle department?"&#13;
"Men who cannot take th e t ime to write p lain ly or&#13;
be up-to-date sufficiently t o use a typewriter in his business co rrespo ndence, ough t not to expect a reply to&#13;
such a scr ibbl ed letter as this."&#13;
( Not an unus ual com ment on the receipt of a hand-written letter.)&#13;
MORAL- Don' t be a "Jonah" (Jones) but buy an American Type-&#13;
&#13;
follow the Lead&#13;
of our most successful men in&#13;
all walks of life. They Planned&#13;
thei r future in early life and&#13;
consistently followed it. If you&#13;
would succeed in business vou&#13;
must do the same. Plan to&#13;
save a dollar at a time if you&#13;
cannot do more; by sticking to&#13;
it you will soon have a fund&#13;
large enough to secure an interest in a business when offered.&#13;
&#13;
writer.&#13;
ESSENTIAL FEATURES&#13;
Universal Keyboard, Du rability, Speed, Manifold·&#13;
ing Power.&#13;
SUPERIOR FEATURES&#13;
Simplest in Mechanism, Best Type Bar Construction, Perfect Alignmeait, Perfect Work, Light Touch,&#13;
Portability, Ball=bearing Carriage, Costs Less to&#13;
Maintain, Will Always Write.&#13;
&#13;
Take the first step by opening an ac •&#13;
count with this bank, the following up&#13;
comes easy&#13;
Interest compounded on&#13;
all savings accounts twice a year.&#13;
&#13;
Sold on easy monthly payments to responsible persons. American No. 7, Price $50.&#13;
Agents and salesmen wanted, write for terms and catalogue .&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
Toledo, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
405-407 NEBR. ST.&#13;
We want your business but&#13;
we do not give discounts&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
FACES&#13;
&#13;
Moore&#13;
Clothing&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Are Our Specialty&#13;
and Your Face is&#13;
Our Fortune.&#13;
&#13;
. Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
Genelli Studio&#13;
&#13;
a dollar's worth for every&#13;
dollar, or every&#13;
dollar ba.ck.&#13;
&#13;
609 4th Street&#13;
]2&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Keep Your&#13;
Face Clean&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt Company&#13;
&#13;
Start tbe day right by&#13;
getting a clean shave&#13;
and massage&#13;
You'll&#13;
feel better, look better,&#13;
study better.&#13;
&#13;
Cutlery&#13;
Manicure Goods&#13;
Gas Lamps and Man&#13;
tles&#13;
&#13;
LET BRIDGES DO THE&#13;
WORK.&#13;
&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
Base Ball Goods&#13;
&#13;
An expert :1t giving&#13;
Massages, Shampoos,&#13;
Tonics, Hair Cuts and&#13;
Shaves .&#13;
&#13;
college Barber&#13;
&#13;
COMP ANY&#13;
&#13;
General Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Shop&#13;
&#13;
312-314 Neb. St.&#13;
&#13;
PETER.S PAR.K&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
�Security National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
R. S. Phillips&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Goods,&#13;
Base Ball Supplies,&#13;
Hunters' Outfits,&#13;
Guns, Bicycles,&#13;
Gymnasium Goods&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
&#13;
Capital . . ........ .. . ..... .. .. $250,000&#13;
Surplus ...... .... .. ... ...... .$125,ooo&#13;
Deposits ....... . . . ....... .. $300,000&#13;
&#13;
We S olicit Your Business and&#13;
Promise Satisfactory Treatment.&#13;
&#13;
Mystic Milling&#13;
&#13;
1906&#13;
&#13;
1883&#13;
&#13;
Co ••••&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Wm. Gordon&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Loans&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers and&#13;
Ex porters of&#13;
&#13;
Flour&#13;
and&#13;
Feed&#13;
&#13;
I make a specialty of safe work and&#13;
changing combinations.&#13;
Lock and key work and a ll kinds of&#13;
light machine repairing.&#13;
&#13;
w. P . MANLEY, PRESIDENT.&#13;
c. L. WRIGHT, VICE PRESIDENT.&#13;
c. N. LUKES, CASHIER.&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS,&#13;
&#13;
T . A. BLACK, VICE PRESIDENT.&#13;
c. w. BRITTON , ASST. CASHIER.&#13;
&#13;
408 Pearl St.&#13;
~uto. Phone 2604&#13;
&#13;
Did You&#13;
Stop to Think&#13;
&#13;
GEO. WEARE&#13;
JOHN M c HUGH&#13;
H.A.GOOCH&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
- Cashier&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Use Mystic Flour&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Will&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Real Estate Office&#13;
&#13;
fl. BfCK CO.&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Jewelers&#13;
United States Depository&#13;
&#13;
That Your Linen is&#13;
Your Trade Mark?&#13;
The condition of your linen reveals more th an any other article&#13;
of dress, yo ur habits of life .&#13;
If.your laundry work is done by&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State&#13;
National Bank&#13;
&#13;
ROCK RAPIDS STEAM&#13;
LAUNDRY&#13;
&#13;
Capital $200,000.00&#13;
Surplus $100,000.00&#13;
&#13;
no q u estions will nee d be asked as&#13;
t o your socia l s tand ing .&#13;
We do Better work at Lower&#13;
pnces. S ee our agent at the college about it.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Merchant Millers&#13;
&#13;
and Diamond Merchants&#13;
&#13;
HAVE. for sale a large&#13;
list of resid ences s uitable&#13;
for HOMES ;also beautifu ll y s ituated b uilding&#13;
lots . Houses of al l desc ripti on for ren t. : : :&#13;
S e nd to us FOR p rices&#13;
and particulars. Always&#13;
a pl eas u re to show o ur&#13;
property. If yo u are interested write us for SALE&#13;
lists and other information&#13;
&#13;
Our Specialties are the Sale of&#13;
Fine Diamonds&#13;
Good Watches&#13;
sterling Silver ware&#13;
c&#13;
glass and&#13;
general Presentation&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
CUSHMAN &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
of School, Colmanufacturers&#13;
leqe and Class Pins and Emblems.&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
�Corn Palace&#13;
&#13;
Wood Works&#13;
Manufacturers&#13;
&#13;
E. G.STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
E.S.STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
of ..•&#13;
&#13;
Office Furniture&#13;
Bank and Store Fixtures&#13;
Interior Finish&#13;
&#13;
STRAUB BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
We make a specialty of&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Bank and Store Fixtures&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Latest Styles of Plate Glass Show&#13;
Cases&#13;
Office and Factory&#13;
507- 509- 511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
707 FOURTH ST.&#13;
PHONE 704 J ,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
- -Phones- Automatic 2890&#13;
Iowa 480&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON &amp;&#13;
ARONSON ....&#13;
===The Old Reliable- - - -&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS AND&#13;
Clothiers&#13;
Carry a Complete line of Up-to-date&#13;
&#13;
Clothing and Furnishing&#13;
Goods&#13;
AT VERY LOWEST PRICES&#13;
&#13;
Ten Per Ce nt Discount to Professors and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
710-712 Fourth Street&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
l7&#13;
&#13;
�Warriner BusinessCollege&#13;
( FormerlyBrown's BusinessCollege)&#13;
&#13;
What Business&#13;
Step Next?&#13;
Attend Warriner&#13;
for a business and&#13;
shorthand course&#13;
and you wil1 be able&#13;
to work your way&#13;
through any college or into any kind of business position&#13;
you want.&#13;
Graduates of Colleges and High Schools,&#13;
Teachers and those who have good educational preparation are preferred by employers. The summer season is a good&#13;
time to enter. Positions for graduates.&#13;
Send for Circulars.&#13;
&#13;
411 Jackson Street.&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Wescott Slips and Unfortunately (?) Falls&#13;
Forward •&#13;
&#13;
Little Tommy, Who Amused the Boys by His Fine Singing.&#13;
&#13;
The Warriner Basket Ball Team 1906&#13;
The Warriner Business College Basket Ball squad contained&#13;
forty men this year·.&#13;
They enjo_ved the best facilities of the&#13;
splendid Sioux City Y. M. C. A. gymnasium. Good system and&#13;
thorough coaching characterized the work and produced a successful team that had the loyal support, of faculty and students.&#13;
In basket ball and all other&#13;
college sports&#13;
mere "winning"&#13;
is not the object&#13;
The main&#13;
objects are physical culture&#13;
and the inculcation of the&#13;
spirit of true sportsmanship.&#13;
The seasoning lessons of defeat. are valuable; victories&#13;
are incidental.&#13;
The Warriner team, on a&#13;
trip through South Dakota&#13;
and Nebraska, traveling 1600&#13;
miles and covering nearly two&#13;
weeks, met with but one defeat in a schedule of six games&#13;
-a percentage of 833.&#13;
Every member of the team was taught&#13;
the game and developed by Warriner coaches.&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
�BUSINESS DIRECTORY&#13;
G . W. BURKHEAD&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCE:&#13;
N. W. National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Architect&#13;
&#13;
EsT. 1888&#13;
&#13;
J. A. BLONDEL&#13;
real&#13;
&#13;
estate&#13;
&#13;
505-6 IOWA BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Metropolitan Blk.&#13;
Auto Phone, 1367&#13;
Sioux CITY&#13;
lowA&#13;
City Property a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. EVERIST&#13;
&#13;
W. L. HARDI NG&#13;
&#13;
LUMP MINE&#13;
RUN&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
P&#13;
&#13;
hones&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 1091&#13;
Auto 1838&#13;
&#13;
STEAM COAL A&#13;
SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
NUT AND STEAM&#13;
&#13;
405-6 Iowa Bldg.&#13;
S ioux CITY, - lowA.&#13;
&#13;
PHONES&#13;
&#13;
DR. ARTHUR SOLVSBERG&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 613&#13;
Auto l 755&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
lowA&#13;
&#13;
DELMAR L. DAVIS, M. D.&#13;
&#13;
DE NTIST&#13;
&#13;
Suite 602-3-4 Metropolitan&#13;
&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
10 to 1 3 to 5: Sundays, 11 to 1&#13;
&#13;
602- 3 Metropolitan Block&#13;
&#13;
evenings&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's Largest Freshmen Class (63) Spring of '04,&#13;
&#13;
by Appointment&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mel. J. Smith&#13;
&#13;
Hallam &amp; Stevenson&#13;
&#13;
A. W. Giehm&#13;
&#13;
Melvin Smith &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTATE , LOANS AND INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 417-418-418 1/2owa Building&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
409-10 S ecurity Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
l ow A&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
H. W. PITKIN&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
205-7 Wright Building&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
413 1/2&#13;
Nebraska Streer&#13;
&#13;
700 Security Ba nk Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Inter-State Live&#13;
Associ ati'on&#13;
&#13;
Stock Fair&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
September IO-ll-12-13-14-15, 1906&#13;
&#13;
Perfect Laundry&#13;
&#13;
Electic&#13;
Supply '-to.&#13;
&#13;
E. S. BUXTON&#13;
Prop.&#13;
No. 414 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
Rederich &amp; DeWalt&#13;
&#13;
PHYSI C I AN &amp; SU RGEON&#13;
&#13;
D EN TISTS&#13;
H.N.B ROTHERS&#13;
509 4t h St.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City, Iowa&#13;
PHON&#13;
E:&#13;
&#13;
Peters' Park&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Phones 1700&#13;
&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Automatic 2049&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
Iowa 330&#13;
&#13;
410 NEBRASKA STREET&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Good Shoes at Meierstein's&#13;
S&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
605 FourthStreet&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
STAR PRINTING&#13;
322&#13;
&#13;
Fourth&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
We make a Specialty of Amateur finishing&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
S treet&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
"We Make Rubber Stamps"&#13;
It'.s daylight all the&#13;
way by the kodak&#13;
&#13;
" We Print"&#13;
&#13;
system&#13;
&#13;
Loading,&#13;
&#13;
unloading. develiping,&#13;
&#13;
printing&#13;
&#13;
aII&#13;
&#13;
without a darkroom&#13;
&#13;
J.H. Queal &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
NORTHWESTERN&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE A N D&#13;
RETAIL DEALERS IN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
--·---·--&#13;
&#13;
:£umber and Building&#13;
Materials&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $130,000&#13;
Phones·&#13;
&#13;
Auto. 1118&#13;
Old 118&#13;
&#13;
H. T. W ALENSKY. Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Interest paid on Time Deposits&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
morning"&#13;
&#13;
THE KODAK&#13;
T he K odak Tank Developer, and V elox Paper, have made the process of finishing the&#13;
pictures as simple as pressing the button.&#13;
Kodaks, $5 to $ I 08. Kodak Tank Developers, $2.50 to $ 7 .50&#13;
&#13;
Fire Proof B uilding&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Io w a.&#13;
&#13;
•• A kodak&#13;
&#13;
ZIM ME R MAN BROS.&#13;
&#13;
W rite for Catalogue&#13;
&#13;
523 Fifth Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
�COMPLIMENTS OF&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
Oldest Bank in Sioux City.&#13;
Organized 1871.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
PRINTERY&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $350 ,000&#13;
&#13;
TO TH E community&#13;
&#13;
Newest, Largest and&#13;
Best Stock&#13;
&#13;
A T LARG E&#13;
&#13;
We extend the accomodations of the Strongest and&#13;
Best Equipped Bank in the&#13;
City.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and P ierce Stree ts&#13;
&#13;
BREFFLE &amp; Shaw Props.&#13;
&#13;
_____&#13;
&#13;
__&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Brick and tile&#13;
Works&#13;
&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
Candy Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
MANUFACTURERS OF&#13;
&#13;
face, common,Hollow&#13;
and Sidewalk Brick&#13;
Hollow Blocks a n d&#13;
Drain tile&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME .&#13;
&#13;
Here is Where You Find a&#13;
Complete Stock of&#13;
&#13;
Nice, clean&#13;
&#13;
Dry Lumber&#13;
try&#13;
&#13;
The only place in the city&#13;
JOBBERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Sewer pipe, fire&#13;
B r i ck and fire&#13;
clay&#13;
Office, 420 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
to get your&#13;
&#13;
ICE.. CREAM AND CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
Us With Your Next Orde r&#13;
&#13;
Fullerton lumber&#13;
W, F. BEAM , Man a ger&#13;
Auto. Phone 1065&#13;
Old Phone 65&#13;
3rd and Jackson Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Everything is Home Made&#13;
&#13;
LIME&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth Street&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
CEMENT&#13;
&#13;
PLASTER&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
J. R. ELDER&#13;
&#13;
College of Medicine&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&#13;
•.•. Member of the .•..&#13;
&#13;
Association of American MedicalColleges&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Corner Garretson Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Auto. Phone 2184&#13;
&#13;
NEWLY FURNISHED&#13;
&#13;
Personal Instruction to Individual Students. Twenty-two&#13;
Professors, Six Instructors.&#13;
&#13;
Four Years' Graded Course.&#13;
Each Session Nine Months.&#13;
&#13;
B e s t Advantages Given to&#13;
&#13;
The Savery Hotel and Cafe&#13;
I. D. BARNARD, Manager&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
618=20 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Students.&#13;
&#13;
Strictly Up-to-date&#13;
&#13;
Methods&#13;
&#13;
Building and Apparatus Ample.&#13;
&#13;
U s e d to Impart Knowledge.&#13;
&#13;
Chemical Advantages the Best.&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 18, l 906, Session Begins.&#13;
May 5, J907, Session Closes.&#13;
&#13;
For Particulars Write to&#13;
Contented With&#13;
&#13;
DR. F. E. Franchere,&#13;
&#13;
DR. H. A. Wheeler,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Dean&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
KOZY STUDIO&#13;
Makes Photos in Stamps. Posta l Cards&#13;
Comics, Cabinets and View Work in a l l sizes&#13;
WE WILL TRY TO PLEASE YOU&#13;
&#13;
J04 Douglas&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
2 blks. s. w . Dav ids on's&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
�The State University of Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Anderson &amp; Abel&#13;
&#13;
Founded in 1847&#13;
&#13;
Iowa City, Iowa&#13;
Great e st Educa t ion a l Instituation Iowa. Strong Faculties. Ninete en B u ildin&#13;
ings, Sple ndidl y Equippe d. First Cla ss L a bora tories.&#13;
Muse ums. Expe nses Low.&#13;
&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Painting- and frescoing&#13;
&#13;
The Gr a du a t e C o llege- Advanced courses, leading to the Master's and Doctor's degrees. Finest of laboratory and library appointments for research work. No tuition&#13;
or laboratory ffees. Scholarships and feJJowships awarded annually.&#13;
&#13;
Art Material&#13;
pictu re framing&#13;
&#13;
The C o lle g e of Lib e r a l Arts- Complete literary and scientific courses leading to the&#13;
Bachelor's degree. Twenty-eight distinct departments, each offering numerous&#13;
strong courses. Free tuition available. Courses combined with professional colleges.&#13;
The C o lle ge of L a w - Three years' course. Excellent law library in same building.&#13;
Special attention paid to practice court work. Students permitted to take work in&#13;
the other departments without additional tuition.&#13;
The Colle g e of M e dicine - Four years' course.&#13;
Splendid new buildings thoroughly&#13;
equipped with the finest laborator ies in the West. A wealth of clinical material furnished by University hospitals located on same campus.&#13;
The C o llege o f Homeopathic Medicine- Four years' course. ExcelJent new laboratories. Fully equipped hospital under faculty control.&#13;
An abundance of material&#13;
for daily clinics.&#13;
&#13;
611 fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux city&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
The C o lle g e o f Applie d Science- Comp lete courses in civil, electrical, mining, mechanical, chemical and sanitary engineeri ng, forestry and chemistry. [nstrudors of&#13;
national repute. Excellent new building just ready for occupancy. Work-shop, experimental and field practice.&#13;
The S : h o ol of Political and S o cial S:ience- Genera l four years' courses in pol itical&#13;
and soc ial science lead ing to the Bachelor's degree. Special courses in commerce,&#13;
modern history, governme nt and administration, and in practical philanthropy.&#13;
The S:hool fo r Nurs es- Three years· courses. Hospitals entirely under faculty control.&#13;
Best of opportunities for experience in surgical and medical nursing. Special courses&#13;
of lecturers given by members of the medical faculty.&#13;
The Summe r S ession- Six weeks' course. Work practically arranged for teachers,&#13;
principals and superintendents. Teaching staff selected from heads of departments.&#13;
All laboratory and library facilities of the University available.&#13;
Excellent library&#13;
school in connection.&#13;
For further information, Address,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa C ity, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
GEO. R. McLEAN, President.&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
O zone Crusaders&#13;
&#13;
james Wooo.&#13;
Vi ce President&#13;
&#13;
E. WOOD,&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
thos&#13;
&#13;
The College of D e ntis try- T hree years' course. Complete and well arranged laboratories. Clinical facilities unsurpassed in quality and quantity of mater ial. Individual operating chair and cabinet provided.&#13;
The C o lle ge of Pharmacy- Two and three years' courses. Largest and most complete laboratories in the West. Training for prescription service, manufacturing&#13;
pharmacy, industrial chemistry, and for the work of the analyst.&#13;
&#13;
- Iowa&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCES: Iowa State Nat Bank, Sioux&#13;
City. Twelfth Ward Bank , New York .&#13;
Mt. Morris Bank. New York.&#13;
&#13;
DEALTRY.&#13;
&#13;
Tr eas., manager&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros.&#13;
&amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Richard Webber&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock&#13;
Com1nission&#13;
&#13;
CASH BUYER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
So . Omaha&#13;
&#13;
Live Poultry&#13;
&#13;
0. L CRAIGHEAD, Cattle Sal es man&#13;
T. DEALTRY, Hc g Salesma n&#13;
R. E. WHITL OC K, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 531. Auto 15 35.&#13;
&#13;
220&#13;
&#13;
Exchan ge Bldg,&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville, Iowa&#13;
Sioux City Ia.&#13;
Mitchell, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
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24&#13;
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�PRESS OF THE&#13;
&#13;
STAR PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
���</text>
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              <text>1/&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
PRESS OF THE&#13;
&#13;
STAR PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
This Volumeis Affertionately&#13;
dedicated To&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
LL HONOR AND PRAISE to one whose character entitl es her&#13;
to a place among I owa 's noblest women, whose name will ever&#13;
be proudly m e ntioned in connectio n with Morningsid e College,&#13;
whose sy m path etic interest has end eared he r to the heart of&#13;
every st ud e nt-our beloved professo r, Miss Lillian E. Dimmitt.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt came from Illinois W esleyan University to&#13;
Morningsid e as an ins truct or, in F e bruary, 1893 , be fore those&#13;
most try ing years in th e history of o ur institution . Th en,&#13;
whe n its future was o'ershadowed by financial difficulty , a nd the faculty, disheartened and discouraged, one by one t ook th e ir leave, she re main ed . Through&#13;
all those dark days wh en we were broad in name but nar row in bounds, wh en&#13;
times were t esting, when h ope was low, her e nergy surmounted difficulties , her&#13;
tact and judg ment harmonized conte ntio ns, her sympathy gave ne w courage,&#13;
he r self-sacrifice, new ins piration.&#13;
During th e following years when, thanks to our be loved President and the&#13;
kind assistance of loya l fri en ds, brighter days dawne d, th ese same charac teristics were intensified; and as o ur college has gro wn in numbe rs and reputation,&#13;
she has g rown in u se fuln ess a nd influence. Since 1893 , with the exception of&#13;
the year 1903 -+ which she spent at the American S chool of classical Studie s in&#13;
Rome , Miss Dimmitt has been in our midst- an exa mpl e of id eal womanhood;&#13;
a leading m e mbe r of th e fac ulty, a most loyal promo te r of all _ ol lege inte rests&#13;
c&#13;
and a faithful friend to the st ud ent, one to whom h e could go at any time for&#13;
comfort and advice; and wh e n th e s tudents o f Mornin gs id e College enume rate&#13;
the greatest blessings of th e ir college life , not least among the m is th e privilege&#13;
of knowing Miss Dimmitt. For, as a woman o f noble character, of high prin ciples , of a broad mind, of uns ish motives , of t e nde r kindness and "inseeing&#13;
sympathy," she has seldom been equaled. As a teache r, this s tate has yet to&#13;
produce a professor who is more thorough, more conscientious, more inspirin g,&#13;
or on e who k eeps the s tudent more interested a nd who creates in him a stronger&#13;
love for the classics.&#13;
When we pause to think of what she has done for our college and of her&#13;
far-reaching influence, we find that word s can but feebly express our appreciation of her true worth. As this volum e goes out to our many friends, we know&#13;
that all who have ever known her will join with the Juniors of '06 in th e words:&#13;
"We love he r. "&#13;
&#13;
A morning Lesson&#13;
By&#13;
&#13;
Estie&#13;
&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
The gate to the garden stoo:i open;&#13;
The light softly fell on the trees;&#13;
The sturdy old oak shed its acorns ;&#13;
The leaves played about in the breeze.&#13;
&#13;
A maiden, half mournful, half laugh ing,&#13;
And watching the squirrels at play,&#13;
A rose, having ended the lesson&#13;
She read to her father that day.&#13;
"What troubles my daughter. my Heart's Ease?"&#13;
Her father at length to her said.&#13;
"Why sad, when about you is sunshine?&#13;
What grief to such sighing has led?''&#13;
Long used she had been to expressing&#13;
Her thoughts in a straightforward way.&#13;
All clouded and troubled, the sweet face&#13;
She turned to her father t hat day.&#13;
"You see, l was musing of Autumn,&#13;
T he death of th e beautiful trees.&#13;
How life for us a ll will be ended!&#13;
T he future no t raveller sees.&#13;
We know t hat no one from that country&#13;
Returns, nor can dwell here below,&#13;
But why can we not live forever?&#13;
[ wish Him this boon to bestow.··&#13;
"But, daughter," again said her father,&#13;
"The truth is, we live evermore,&#13;
T he trees do not die, but awaken;&#13;
The S pring will their beauty restore."&#13;
"The S pring is the tree'sresurrection;&#13;
The leaf-buds begin to unfold.&#13;
Our lives, though men speak of our dying,&#13;
Attain then to beauty untold.&#13;
As each bursting leaflet brings to us&#13;
S ome message or truth from His hand,&#13;
Let us live with a present endeavor&#13;
To make our lives useful and grand.&#13;
Let us keep a ll the heart-flowers blooming,&#13;
G entleness, kindness and love,&#13;
Remembering ever, His guidance&#13;
ls leading to H eaven above. "&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WILSON SEELEY LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF TRUSTEES&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
WILSON SEELEY. LEWIS , A. M., D. D.,&#13;
P RESIDENT,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF CHRISTIAN E THICS.&#13;
St udent St . Lawrence University. 187581; A. B., Cornell College, 1889; A. M.,&#13;
ibid., 1892; D. D., Upper Iowa University,&#13;
1895; D. D., Cornell College, 1904; travel and&#13;
study in Europe, 1896 ; Ministerial work,&#13;
1885- 8; Principal of E pworth Seminary,&#13;
1888-97 ; President, Mornings ide College,&#13;
1897-.&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL, A. M.,&#13;
VICE PRESIDENT,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF P HILOSOPHY.&#13;
Ph. B., Cornell College, 1896; Ass istant&#13;
Principal, Epworth Seminary, 1896-7; Ministerial work, 1897-1901; Graduate Student,&#13;
Columbia University, 1901-3; Scholar in&#13;
Philosophy, ibid., 1901-2; A. M., ibid., 1902;&#13;
Union Theological Seminary, 1902-3 ; Professor of Phi losophy and Vice President,&#13;
Morningside College, 1904-.&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT , A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF LATIN.&#13;
A. B., Illinois Wesleyan University. 1888;&#13;
A. M., ibid .. 1890; Graduate Sutdent, University of Chicago, Summer Quarters, 1894&#13;
and 1897; Student in American S chool of&#13;
Classical St ud ies, Rome, 1903-4; Instrnctor&#13;
in English, Illinois Wesleyan University, 188890; Instructor in Greek and Latin, Morn ingside College, 1894-7 ; P rofessor of Latin,&#13;
ibid., 1897-.&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND, A. B.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH LITERATURE.&#13;
A. B., Smith College, 1889; Student Oxford&#13;
University, England, 1902-3; Instructor in&#13;
History and English, Epworth Seminary,&#13;
1892-5; Professor of Modern Languages,&#13;
Upper Iowa University,1896- 7; P rofessor of&#13;
English Language a nd L iterature, Morningside College, 1897-1902; P rofessor of English Literature, ibid., 1902-.&#13;
FRANK HAR MON GARVE R, A. B.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF HISTORY AND POLITICS.&#13;
A. B., Upper Iowa University, 1898; Fellow in History, University of Iowa, 1901-2;&#13;
Professor of History and Economics, Morningside College. 1898-1900; Professor of&#13;
History and P olitics, ibid., 1900 .&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREYNALD, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF FRENCH.&#13;
A. B., University of Paris, 1874; A. M.,&#13;
ibid., 1880; Professor ·of Latin, Chatenu&#13;
Goutre, France, 1876-8; Professor of French,&#13;
Mornings ide College, 1896-.&#13;
ROBERT BRADFORD WYLIE, PH. D.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF B IOLOGY.&#13;
Sc. B., Upper Iowa University, 1897; Graduate Student, University of Minnesota, Summer, 1898; Graduate Student, University of&#13;
Chicago, S ummer. 1899; Fellow in Botany,&#13;
ibid., 1900- 1, 1902-4 ; Instructor in Natural&#13;
Science, Morningside College, 1897- 99; Instructor in Biology, Eastern Illinoi s Normal&#13;
School, S ummer, 1901; Assistant in Botany,&#13;
University of Chicago, Summer and Autumn&#13;
Quarters, 1902; Instructor in B otany, Marine&#13;
Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass.,&#13;
1905; professor of Biology, Morningside&#13;
College, 1900-.&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF PEDAGOGY.&#13;
A. B., DeP auw University, 1884; A. M.,&#13;
ibid., 1887; Superintendent of Schools, Woodbury County, 1894--1900, 1902-5; Professor of&#13;
Mathematics and Pedagogy, Morningside&#13;
College, 1900-2; Professor of Pedagogy,&#13;
Morningside College, 1904-.&#13;
HENRY FREDERICK KANTHLENER, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF GREEK.&#13;
A. B., Cornell College, 1896; A. M., Harvard Univers ity, 1899; Graduate Student,&#13;
Harvard Uni versity, 1897- 9 and 1902-3; Instructor in Latin and G reek, Epworth Seminary, 1896-7 ; Instructor in Latin, Wiibraham&#13;
Academy, 1899-1900 ; Professor of Greek,&#13;
Morningside College, 1900-.&#13;
FRED E MOR Y HA YNES, PH. D.,&#13;
REGISTRAR,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF ECONOM ICS AND S OCIOLOGY.&#13;
A. B., Harvard University, 1889; A. M.&#13;
ibid., 1890 ; Ph.D., ibid., 1891; Student, Uni versity of Berlin and Cambridge University,&#13;
1891- 2; Instructor in History, University of&#13;
California, 1892-5; Head of South Park Settlement, S an Francisco, 1894-5; Assistant in&#13;
&#13;
United States History, Harvard University,&#13;
1896-7; Resident of South End House, Boston, 1895-1900; Professor of Economics and&#13;
Sociology, Morningside College, 1900--.&#13;
AGNES BEVERIDGE FERGUSON, Sc . M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF GERMAN&#13;
Sc. B., Cornell College, ]894; Sc. M. , ibid.,&#13;
1895; Study in Dresden and Berlin, Summer,&#13;
1902; Graduate Student, University of Chicago, Summer, 1901 Professor of Modern&#13;
Languages, Fort Worth University, 1896-7;&#13;
Professor of German, Morningside College,&#13;
1901- .&#13;
ROBERT VAN HORNE, PH. B.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College, 1900; Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University,&#13;
1900- I ; Instructor in Mathematics, Morningside College, 1901-2; Professor of Mathematics, ibid .. 1902- .&#13;
CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF ELOCUTION.&#13;
National School of Oratory, Philadelphia.&#13;
1880-2; Professor of Elocution, Morningside&#13;
College, 1899-1902-1903-.&#13;
WINFORD LEE LEWIS, A. M.,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY.&#13;
A. B., Stanford University, 1902 ; Graduate&#13;
Student, University of California, Summer,&#13;
1902; Graduate Student, University of Washington, 1902-4; A. M., ibid .. 1904; Assistant&#13;
in Chemistry, University of Washington,&#13;
1902-3; Instructor in Chemistry , ibid., 1903-4;&#13;
Professor of Chemistry, Morningside College,&#13;
1904-.&#13;
MlLLARD FILLMORE McDOWELL, Sc. B.,&#13;
INSTRUCTOR IN PH YSICS&#13;
Sc. B., Morningside College, 1903; Fellow&#13;
in Physics, University of Nebraska, 1903-4;&#13;
Instructor in Physics, Morningside College,&#13;
1904-.&#13;
JUDSON WALDO MATHER,&#13;
PROFESSOR OF Music AND DIRECTOR OF THE&#13;
CONSERVATORY.&#13;
Graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory,&#13;
1896; Instructor in Piano.Organ and Harmony, Cornell College, 1895-8; Organist,&#13;
Union Park Church, Chicago, 1898-9; Instructor in Music, Chicago Theological Seminary,, 1898-9; Professor of Music and Direc-&#13;
&#13;
tor of Conservatory, Yankton College, 18991940; Pupil of Ernst Jedliezka, Berlin, 1902;&#13;
Professor of Music and Director of Conservatory, Morningside College, 1904-.&#13;
GERTRUDE F. MATHER,&#13;
VIOLIN AND CORNET.&#13;
Pupil of Charles Heydler, 1889-90; Instructor in Violin, Cornell College, 1896-8;&#13;
Pupil of Adolph Weidig, 1898-9, 1904; Instructor in Violin and Cornet, Yankton&#13;
College, 1899-1904; Instructor in Violin and&#13;
Cornet, Morningside College, 1904- .&#13;
B. LAURA BUNTING,&#13;
INSTRUCTOR IN VocAL Music.&#13;
Graduate of Chicago Piano College, 1903;&#13;
Pupil of Harmon H . Watt. 1904; Pupil of&#13;
Herman Walker, 1900-.&#13;
Pupil of Prof. A.&#13;
Devin Duvivier, 1900-1903; Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte and Voca[ Music, Cornell College,&#13;
1904-05: Instructor in Vocal Music, Morningside College, 1905- .&#13;
JOHN L. GRIFFITH, A. B.,&#13;
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR.&#13;
A. B., Beloit College, 1902; Director of&#13;
Athletics and Instructor, Yankton College,&#13;
1902-1905; Director of Physical Education&#13;
and Instructor, Morningside College. 1905- .&#13;
ALICE K. GRIFFITH, A. B .,&#13;
A. B., Beloit College, 1901; Instructor in&#13;
Latin, High School, Long Prairie, Minn.,&#13;
1901-2 ; Instructor in Latin and German,&#13;
High School, Edgerton, Wisconsin, 19021904; Assistant in English, Morningside&#13;
College, 1905- .&#13;
IDA NOLAN REYNOLDS,&#13;
Graduate Primary Training School, Drake&#13;
University, 1903; Graduate Student, Chicago&#13;
University, Summer, 1905; Principal West&#13;
Ward School , Rockwell City, Iowa, 1903;&#13;
Principal , High School, Victor, Iowa, 1904;&#13;
Director, Manual Training School , Rockwell&#13;
City, Iowa, Summer, 1904; Instructor in&#13;
Primary Methods and Drawing, Morningside&#13;
College, Summer, 1905; Instructor in Primary&#13;
Methods and Drawing, Morningside College,&#13;
1905- .&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD,&#13;
ASSISTANT IN PIANO.&#13;
Graduate Morningside College Conservatory, 1902; Pupil of Emil Liebling, Chicago,&#13;
1903-4 ; Instructor in Piano, Morningside&#13;
College, 1904-.&#13;
MYRTILLA MAE COOK, Sc. B.,&#13;
INSTRUCTOR IN COMMERCIAL BRANCHES AND&#13;
SECRETARY OF FACULTY.&#13;
Sc. B ., Morningside College, 1905; Instructor, ibid., 1905-.&#13;
&#13;
HEN THE CLASS OF 1906 first came into prommence&#13;
in the fall of 1900, appearing with their colors, they announced that they were the "Doctors Chicks of 1906."&#13;
Two years later on the night of June 14th, this same&#13;
class, numbering forty, made their debut into Collegiate&#13;
life, when dressed in white, they took their places upon&#13;
the platform for their Academy graduation.&#13;
The following fall, according to a custom then in vogue, the college classes&#13;
entertained on Halloween. These same" Chicks," Freshmen now, gave a reproduction of the Hall of Fame, and an insight into the "lower regions" where&#13;
in effigy a Sophomore lay bound by Pluto's chains much to the consternation of&#13;
the Dean, while the flag of 1906 floated proudly from North Hall.&#13;
In the fall of 1903 occured a battle between this class, now Sophomores,&#13;
and the verdant Freshmen. It arose over a chanticleer who tried his wings in&#13;
Chapel one morning. Coming from the ranks of '06 he was captured by '07, recaptured by'o6 and then secreted in a tool chest. When he was discovered a battle&#13;
ensued, resulting in the dismemberment of the poor victim. His heart, however,&#13;
remained with '06. Hearing of this the Humane society made a hasty investigation, only to find that the chicken had been killed before being hidden in the&#13;
chest.&#13;
Soon after this came the "Farmers' Party in Pumpkin Holler,"and in the&#13;
following spring the trip to the Indian Reservation, when the class, tired of being called "Chicks," adopted the name of "Sioux" and decided to publish the&#13;
'' Whoops of the Sioux."&#13;
This annual occupied most of their Junior year but left some time for oyster stews and sleigh rides.&#13;
What the events of the Senior year have been we will leave to your imagination, having first assured you that the year has been filled with works, spiced&#13;
with jollity.&#13;
Truly, in play, this class has not been chicken-hearted; in works they have&#13;
ever been the early " Chicks " finding the worm.&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Fate&#13;
Bv&#13;
&#13;
XE NI A M AE ELLI S&#13;
&#13;
If fate d ecrees, it's use less to contend !&#13;
Or should each eve r strive his lot to m e nd ?&#13;
What is to be, will be , it o ft doth seem ;&#13;
Ye t w e are daily heaping d ream o n d rea m,&#13;
And do they 'e re come true ? P e rhaps th ey may,&#13;
Fate may d ecree to send that bliss our way.&#13;
More oft, it see ms, some future day we wake&#13;
To learn that w e had made s ome sad mistake .&#13;
If y ou be made the violet, not the rose,&#13;
Don 't lon g to rule a s q ueen , jus t keep yo u r p ose.&#13;
The viol et, even ado res old moth er eart hSo each should strive to mak e hi s life of worth.&#13;
The sweete st flowe r is decked with d e wy t ea rs;&#13;
That life the best, which s mil es down cares and fears.&#13;
Thoug h fate d ecrees d ense shadows t o yo u r p lace,&#13;
The darkest cloud can ne'er o b scu re Hi s face .&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Hopkins&#13;
&#13;
"So gracious in her tact and tenderness. "&#13;
&#13;
OUR PRESIDENT AND BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
"Don't talk anything but business to me."'&#13;
&#13;
"To scorn delight and live laborious days."&#13;
&#13;
"On one she smiled and he was blessed."&#13;
&#13;
A. , F o r d R o b b i n s&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
OUR EDITOR IN CHIEF&#13;
&#13;
"Nowher so bisy a man ther nas,&#13;
And yet he seemed bisier than he was.'·&#13;
&#13;
"Character but half formed till after wedlock. "&#13;
&#13;
"Two fifths of him genius,&#13;
three fifths of him sheer fudge ."&#13;
&#13;
·' Mathematics cultivate the reason ."&#13;
&#13;
"I cannot play alone.' '&#13;
&#13;
"Wild wit, invention ever new&#13;
And lively cheer of vigor born. "&#13;
&#13;
" Hath wisdom's warrant and wit's own grace. "&#13;
&#13;
'·Music can noble hints impart.&#13;
engender fury , kindle love.''&#13;
&#13;
" Would that there were more like her.''&#13;
"Work never did him any harm.''&#13;
&#13;
"Strong and athletic in form;&#13;
Is this lad of dilligent nature ...&#13;
&#13;
"One of the few immortal names&#13;
which were not born to die. "&#13;
&#13;
"The woman that deliberates.''&#13;
"Earnest toil hath its reward.' '&#13;
&#13;
·'He draweth out the thread of his verbosity&#13;
finer than the staple of his argument."&#13;
&#13;
"None but himself can be his parallel."&#13;
&#13;
"Great effects come of industry.''&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
"Look before you leap; see before you do.' '&#13;
&#13;
"Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil&#13;
o'er books consumed the midnight oil?"&#13;
&#13;
"Of studie took he most cure and most hede. "&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
'I'll steal through life in my own quiet way.''&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore History&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
::;:&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
::;:&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
O WORSHIP AT THE Shrine&#13;
! How these words&#13;
have wrung in our ears from early childhood!&#13;
From time immemorial th is shrine bas been considered sacred. It is situated in the heart of the temple of Wisdom and is reverently called the "Shrine of&#13;
Knowledge." A hove this holy altar is said to hover a spirit, angellike in form, which radiates blessings upon the weary and worthy toilers who with uncovered heads lie prostrate before the shrine.&#13;
How often in our youth have we cast aside our story books and&#13;
sat with shining eyes and faces as our fathers, who in their youth&#13;
chanced to make this eventful journey, related their experiences.&#13;
How eager we were for the time we should follow in their paths .&#13;
The shrine is in a far country, a journey of about four years distance by steady plodding. Many would scorn the rough and weary way&#13;
and rush across the strange, intervening country, not heeding the&#13;
demands of the revered goddess whose temple they would rashly&#13;
enter. But nay, they must follow certain well defined roads as the&#13;
goddess dictates, and obey reverently all her commands&#13;
It is not enough that the pilgTims plod diligently five days of&#13;
the week, but they must trudge patiently along even into the sixth&#13;
day, resting only on the seventh.&#13;
Many a weary one would g·ladly be carried at times, by a stronger&#13;
brother were it not for the ever watchful eye of the guarding one&#13;
who would withhold at last the long· sought for treasure. Alas! how&#13;
often has the wise deity refused to bestow her blessing upon the&#13;
eager and expectant ones before her altar, saying to them, "What&#13;
seek ye here? None but the deserving, the self-reliant receive the&#13;
reward. " More than one pilgrim has failed to understand that to&#13;
reach the shrine does not necessarily mean to receive the blessing .&#13;
As the time has passed this pilgrimage has become each year&#13;
more common and the way easier; for the determined hands of our&#13;
fore-fathers have cleared away many obstacles for those who were&#13;
to follow .&#13;
Each year new bands from every country set out on their great&#13;
quest. One main rendezvous is Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
It was interesting to note the company which gathered there&#13;
in the fall of 1904, from the farm and city, all with the one great&#13;
purpose.&#13;
Despite the longing for home, which at first tempted some of the&#13;
weaker ones to return, these pilgrims are now marching on their way&#13;
with courage and determination.&#13;
Surely such a valiant band can never lack in strength or purpose, but will move boldly onward to the goal. Our prophecy is that&#13;
the goddess of Wisdom will welcome these into her temple and, as&#13;
they bow reverently before her "Shrine of Knowledge," will breathe&#13;
upon them her divine benediction, sending them out into the world,&#13;
endued with a new life, to be an inspiration and a blessing to their&#13;
fellow men.&#13;
&#13;
FRESHIES&#13;
MEDITATE! MUTTERING MA55 OF meandering, melancholy&#13;
MIDGETS AND MAINTAIN THESE MANDATES Of your&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Ye&#13;
&#13;
you&#13;
&#13;
SMALL, contracted&#13;
&#13;
GO TO bed&#13;
&#13;
romping&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
ritin&#13;
&#13;
AND rithmetic,&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Notice&#13;
tip&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
THAT&#13;
&#13;
nnocent,&#13;
&#13;
RAMBLE NOT IN YON MELON&#13;
&#13;
Bunch&#13;
&#13;
insignigicant&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
locoed&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
PATCH.&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
mavverricks,&#13;
&#13;
NEVER, never&#13;
&#13;
NEVER , NEVER, never,&#13;
&#13;
NEVER, NEVER,&#13;
&#13;
NEVER, NEVER, NE.VER, NEVER NEVER , NEVER, NE VER&#13;
&#13;
OCCUPAIIONS&#13;
FRESHMAN&#13;
&#13;
KEEP&#13;
&#13;
Roving&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
Diversions&#13;
&#13;
SHALL&#13;
&#13;
close&#13;
&#13;
CONTINUAL&#13;
&#13;
BAND OF ruffians,&#13;
&#13;
NDERTAKE&#13;
&#13;
UNDYING CARE&#13;
&#13;
estimate&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
TO reflect&#13;
COST&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
his&#13;
&#13;
door&#13;
&#13;
house&#13;
&#13;
NOTTO 6E&#13;
&#13;
RIGHTFUL&#13;
&#13;
OBEY THESE&#13;
&#13;
YELLING for&#13;
&#13;
PLACE&#13;
&#13;
Shiver&#13;
&#13;
not&#13;
&#13;
TO UNDERSTAND THAT&#13;
&#13;
EFT , loudly&#13;
&#13;
quiet&#13;
&#13;
OPEN&#13;
&#13;
refuse&#13;
&#13;
R RESPECTFUL TO US, YOUR&#13;
re&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
GROW&#13;
&#13;
REACHERS AFTER READING,&#13;
&#13;
INSTANTLY IMITATE THE INTENTIONS of these INSTRUCTIONS&#13;
&#13;
ln1\W YOUR&#13;
E very&#13;
la BUT&#13;
&#13;
U&#13;
&#13;
YOU MAY&#13;
&#13;
TOIT THAT&#13;
&#13;
YOUR 5UPERIORS WHEN YOU pass them&#13;
OF YOUR' sky-piece&#13;
&#13;
ev&#13;
ever&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
EARLY&#13;
&#13;
rushing, rollicking&#13;
&#13;
MIGHTY MASTERS.&#13;
&#13;
see&#13;
&#13;
vision&#13;
&#13;
RULE.RS,&#13;
UNLESS YOU USE&#13;
&#13;
LAW5,YOU WILL BE&#13;
&#13;
RELIEF, IN&#13;
&#13;
some&#13;
&#13;
ON YOUR lax&#13;
&#13;
LONESOME&#13;
&#13;
OBEDIENCE .&#13;
&#13;
rebelliousness&#13;
&#13;
ANO SHAKE,ALL SILLY, SELF-CONCEIT ed&#13;
soreheads, who&#13;
sneer&#13;
at these&#13;
sagac ious&#13;
&#13;
tipulations&#13;
&#13;
Saj&#13;
&#13;
upon&#13;
&#13;
LEST&#13;
&#13;
by the&#13;
&#13;
Ye! Be&#13;
&#13;
surpassing&#13;
&#13;
set upon&#13;
strength&#13;
&#13;
amd severely&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
ND IT CAME TO PASS in the year of our Lord,&#13;
1905, that the tribe of '09 came to dwell on t he hills&#13;
of Morningside.&#13;
And the tribe was strong in its&#13;
youthfulness, and brave in a new country.&#13;
Now a day was chosen for a great council, and the&#13;
tribe with one voice proclai med Shaw their king.&#13;
so the priest annointed him. then the king made a&#13;
great feast and his people made merry and grew much acquainted.&#13;
Now there was a tribe of barbarians that dwelt also on the hills&#13;
of morningside&#13;
And they were called sophmores&#13;
and were fierce&#13;
but loved not the open battle.&#13;
And Shaw led his warriors forth and challenged the other&#13;
]tribes to battle in football. But they were s ore afraid and ventured&#13;
not u pon the field .&#13;
Moreover it came to pass that Shaw and his warriors encamped&#13;
one night in the house of Miller; and Shaw t ook council among his&#13;
me n, and they went out ·and raised a great high pole and on the top&#13;
of it was the banner of the Freshmen.&#13;
Then did they go to the camp of the chief of the barbarians and&#13;
took his raiment and hung it upon the pole.&#13;
Behold, when the barbarians came out in the morning they were&#13;
exceedingly wroth. And they went away and when the watch was&#13;
few they came again in a great chariot with great clubs and bludgeons and weapons of war.&#13;
Moreover the Freshmen fought valiantly, but the barbarians&#13;
tore down the raiment of their chief.&#13;
And the women of the tribe of '09 came out and cried to their&#13;
brave warriors and the barbarians were routed .&#13;
Behold, their chief was captured and bound to the pole, and the&#13;
wa r riors of Shaw made much mirth about him.&#13;
And it came to pass in the evening that the Freshmen women&#13;
gave a great feast and the warriors feasted much in the glory of their&#13;
prestige.&#13;
Moreover the tribe of '09 showed unto the other tribes of Morningside that they were possessed of much wisdom. For in the great&#13;
discussion between the Philomathians and O thonians did the wisdom&#13;
of Brown and Himmel show itself.&#13;
And again in the great contest of orators did Haskins and Shaw&#13;
and Cushman bring great honors to the tribe of '09 for they won the&#13;
great prize.&#13;
And the days tha the tribe of '09 had dwelt upon the hills of&#13;
Mornmgside were few but their deeds were mighty and brave.&#13;
&#13;
A Dream ofThe Sioux&#13;
BY A. B. COOK&#13;
WAS sitting in my old arm chair, one in which my grandfather&#13;
had taken so much comfort, musing, for I sat, as&#13;
it were, at the gateway of the&#13;
Great Northwest looking with&#13;
admiration over the vast fields&#13;
and plains of the World's Wonder Land.&#13;
It was one of those rare&#13;
afternoons in June when the&#13;
air is balmy.&#13;
The sun was&#13;
warm and sent its life-giving&#13;
beams to aid the plants and flowers. The silvery clouds played leisurely in the blue sky, while the gentle breeze laden with the songs&#13;
of birds and the perfume of the rose soon lulled me to sleep.&#13;
In a dream I saw the events of a century pass like "a watch in&#13;
the night." I seemed to have been carried back to the time when&#13;
this country was a vast natural garden. There appeared a great&#13;
unknown country, over which the foot of civilized man had never&#13;
trod.&#13;
The buffalo, elk, and deer were in great abundance, while&#13;
thousands of small fur bearing· animals roamed fearlessly where&#13;
they chose. I could see many small lakes and sloughs and around&#13;
them were the wild goose, duck and crane, all rearing their young&#13;
unmolested.&#13;
It seemed that years thus&#13;
passed by, but presently this&#13;
scene of tranquility was changed.&#13;
the red men seemed to be coming from every direction, and&#13;
gathering in countless numbers&#13;
around an old oak tree. In my&#13;
dream, I looked for the cause of&#13;
this, and saw a little band of&#13;
white men who had drawn up&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
their canvas among the willows and&#13;
had encamped on the banks of the "Big&#13;
Muddy."&#13;
My dream now changed. Before&#13;
I had seen the Indian only as a bold,&#13;
fearless hunter, but now fear and&#13;
anxiety seemed stamped on his face.&#13;
In the long council which ensued I&#13;
could understand but little except by&#13;
the gestures. Nevertheless, I was able&#13;
to learn that the1·e had already reached&#13;
the Indian in the west a rumor of the&#13;
cruelty and selfishness of the white&#13;
man in the east, and that when the&#13;
white man came the red man could no&#13;
longer hunt in peace. So it seemed&#13;
that the import of this council was to stop, if possible, any further&#13;
invasion into the territory of the red man. "These pale faces,"&#13;
said the chief, "are but the leaders of many who are to come and&#13;
take our lands from us as they did from our brothers."&#13;
The scene then shifted. When again I saw the red and the&#13;
white man a full half century had passed, and with the passing of&#13;
time all had changed. I now saw boats on the rivers carrying produce up the stream and going back laden with the furs of animals&#13;
which had been purchased from the Indians&#13;
There seemed to pass through the wild e rness a company of&#13;
wanderers, seeking a suitable place for a new home. Finally they&#13;
seemed to agree upon a place, and with fear and trembling lest at&#13;
any time their red enemy should&#13;
attack them, they erected' huts,&#13;
some of sod and some of logs.&#13;
These seemed to be built for&#13;
the double purpose of shelter&#13;
from the cold and • protection&#13;
from the evening during the&#13;
many struggles for supremacy&#13;
which were to follow.&#13;
As I watched the white man&#13;
coming, I saw that he .had much&#13;
&#13;
with which to contend. But he would be driven back in the&#13;
many fierce contests which ensued and, though many heroes were&#13;
slain on each side till the streams seemed at times to flow with bu-&#13;
&#13;
the reality of the present into one harmonious picture. As I awoke&#13;
I could hardly realize that it was all a dream. Before me extended&#13;
this great Wonder L and. The daylight faded away and when the&#13;
&#13;
lights of the city beamed forth I exclaimed:&#13;
own country! The Sioux!"&#13;
&#13;
man blood, it appeared that the white man was gaining ground and&#13;
was pushing the red man farther and farther away.&#13;
Then my dream again changed. I saw no longer the scenes of&#13;
war and blood-shed, but another c·ouncil around the old tree. Despair seemed heavily stamped on each brow as the old chief, the favorite of his tribe, solemnly announced that they could no longer&#13;
hope to chase the deer and buffalo. "The pale face," said he, "is&#13;
much stronger than we, and now that we can no longer live together&#13;
we must leave our bunting ground and seek refuge in a land where&#13;
our enemy does not live." At the end of this sad scene I saw them&#13;
strike their tepees and depart toward the northwest, leaving their&#13;
history securely locked within the hea1·t of the old oak tree.&#13;
Also I noted many other changes in rapid succession. Soon the&#13;
elk and deer became extinct und e r the fire of the white man's gun;&#13;
the last herd of buffalo, as if loath to leave the old grazing ground,&#13;
slowly wended their way over the western hills, seeking solitude&#13;
from such a bitter foe; the vast prairies were converted into&#13;
fields of grain; cities soon began to appear; the old sod hut and log&#13;
cabin had given way to the familiar frame dwelling; the peaceful ox&#13;
had given way to the rumbling engine.&#13;
These last scenes seemed to blend my visions of the past with&#13;
&#13;
" This is indeed my&#13;
&#13;
The Voice I Shall&#13;
By&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
Hear No Wore&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDS&#13;
&#13;
I strolled one night alone,&#13;
Alone where dark waters glide;&#13;
Alone where the foot steps of man seldom trod;&#13;
All alone by a sobbing tide,&#13;
And I thought that I heard in the murmuring stream,&#13;
A voice I heard long before,&#13;
A voice that had thrilled me for life's battle- strife,&#13;
But a voice I shall hear no more.&#13;
'Twas one night in my dreams, as the city of gold&#13;
Gleamed bright in the morning's red glare.&#13;
There was sung o'er the breezes with harps of pure gold,&#13;
By the voice I shall hear no more:&#13;
"Be strong to brave the bitter strife,&#13;
Be strong to help the weaker life,&#13;
Be strong to bear the battle's rife&#13;
And the voice that you'll hear no more."&#13;
Life may be wild and drear,&#13;
But when the dark moments hang o'er,&#13;
The words of the singer that sang that night&#13;
Echo out from the past once more;&#13;
And my deepest soul thrills to the song that it sangWith a peace from the billowless shore;&#13;
Yet the heaviest burden I carry in life&#13;
ls the voice l shall hear no more;&#13;
For it haunts every breeze, and the sigh of the trees,&#13;
It haunts every breaker's deep roar;&#13;
Still I never have heard since it sang that nig htThe voice I shall hear no more:&#13;
"Be strong to brave the bitter strife,&#13;
Be strong to help the weaker life,&#13;
Be strong to bear the battle's nfe&#13;
And the voice that you'll hear no more.'"&#13;
Although I list for thee,&#13;
For thou wast a voice to my soul,&#13;
Whose echoes still call me to I ife's battle- strife,&#13;
Gall me forth to a selfless goal;&#13;
Though I list to thy words midst appalling strife,&#13;
I bear in the battle's deep roar,&#13;
I bear as I can with the weaker life,&#13;
For thee whom I'll hear no more.&#13;
Still I long for thy voice as the days come and goAn oh, for a message from thee!&#13;
For life will seem void lest those battlements bold&#13;
Ring again with thy voice to me:&#13;
"Be strong to brave the bitter strife,&#13;
Be strong to help the weaker life,&#13;
Be strong to bear the battle's rife,&#13;
And the voice that you'll hear no more.&#13;
&#13;
Atheneum&#13;
HE SAT near the window.&#13;
The shadows lengthened&#13;
and drew together until she could not make out distinctly the objects around her. Visions arose of her&#13;
childhood and of the little friends who often played&#13;
with her; then of her high-school days and of the&#13;
group of boys and girls of her acquaintance.&#13;
But&#13;
the scenes which interested her most were those of her college&#13;
life. Now she was in the Society Hall surrounded by eager and enthusiastic young women. She saw there the long-headed, slow ones&#13;
who were always appealed to as final authority; she saw the impulsive ones who spoke and acted quickly; and those with tact, that&#13;
common-sense element so rare in the crisis times.&#13;
Beyond the group of young women, she noticed the light blue&#13;
and white over the favorite picture, that of Dr. Lewis. Above, there&#13;
shone the bright star with the monogram A. L. S. in the center. As&#13;
she stood gazing with pleasure, the letters of the well known motto,&#13;
"Utile dulci," appeared. She felt thankful that the teaching of the&#13;
motto is still followed and that the young women undertook "The&#13;
useful as well as the pleasing."&#13;
She looked again and magic figures began to appear.&#13;
In her&#13;
glee, she clapped her hands-but the picture was gone. She always&#13;
thought that had the vision continued, the year of the Atheneurn organization would have appeared or, perchance, the number representing those who wear the star, and won it throug;h the years&#13;
Thinking over and over of the vision, she determined to visit the&#13;
Atheneums at her first opportunity, and was sure she would hear a&#13;
chorus of voices exclaim, " Aspeech! Here is a sister Atheneum."&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
HE OBJECT of the Philomatbean Literary Society is&#13;
and bas been during the thirteen years of its existence, to encourage the search for truth, to develop&#13;
the intellectual faculties, and to keep constantly in&#13;
view the moral and social improvement of its&#13;
members.&#13;
The success of a literary society depends upon three things:&#13;
First, the development it gives to its members. Secondly, the work&#13;
it does for the college, and thirdly, the work its alumni are doing&#13;
for the world.&#13;
In the Philo society every incentive is given for the development of its members. The consitution provides for a literary program each Monday evening, and its policy has been to have each&#13;
member appear on a public program at least twice a term.&#13;
During&#13;
each collegiate year a series of Gold and Silver Medal debates is&#13;
held, the six winners receiving two gold and four silver medals.&#13;
The work of the Philomathean society for the college may be&#13;
partly estimated by their active efforts in inaug·urating collegiate&#13;
and intercollegiate debates. They were the only gentlemen's society&#13;
which supported and represented Morningside in its first intercollegiate debate, a debate in which we were successful. The following year the K. I. N. debate league had its origin in the Philo&#13;
society and furnished four men for the two winning teams against&#13;
Baker and Nebraska Wesleyan University, when Morningside made&#13;
her lasting impression in the Northwest.&#13;
Of her Alumni may the society be justly proud.&#13;
Among them&#13;
will be found five college professors, one college president, one Y.&#13;
M. C. A. secretary, eleven ministers and two lawyers.&#13;
The success of the society in the past and present is assured.&#13;
The success of the society in the future is equally assured for its&#13;
character and policies are firmly established.&#13;
The guide-board of&#13;
the society to success may be found in its motto, "Vestigia N ulla&#13;
Retrorsum," for it is the ceaseless endeavors to keep its pledge by&#13;
going forward, that the Philomathean Literary Society stands for&#13;
what it does today.&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Yell&#13;
Emblem&#13;
Th e Shield.&#13;
&#13;
Zip, ki, yah&#13;
Z ip, ki, yah&#13;
Otho ! Oth o&#13;
Otho- ni-ah&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
!&#13;
!&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
Color&#13;
Royal Purple&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Suaviter in Modo, Fortite r in R e."&#13;
HE s uccessful organizations , the ones that live, move and&#13;
have a recognized be ing, are the results of deep fel t need s .&#13;
Th ey are t he substance that satisfy the want, the fulfillment&#13;
of a req uire m ent, the strength to alleviate a weakness . In 189 1&#13;
there was felt the need of a new me n's literary socie ty in Morningside, and a few true hearted you ng m e n met, in the gathering&#13;
shadows of an a utumn even ing, to p u t into tan gible, enduring form, their noble&#13;
purposes, and hig h ideals; and hallowing all with the sple nd or and promi se of&#13;
young man-hood, they organized the " Othonian Literary S ociety ." With a&#13;
faith that moves me n's souls to rig hteousness, with a trust in the Hand divine,&#13;
with a hope whose sun has never set, they gave to us this their golden dream.&#13;
The need of the nobling infl ue nce of virtuous organizations of young m en&#13;
is still with us, and we as a society are en deavoring to help meet that want, with&#13;
a helping hand wh ere needed, with a word of courage where th e path is rugged,&#13;
with a love that would point t he s tumbling one to t he light that failet h n o t.&#13;
To this en d w e ask for strength and wisdom that we may "press forward&#13;
in the right as God gives u s to see the right, " believin g , knowing, that it is&#13;
heart power that th e youth of t o day need ; that it is soul power that th ey must&#13;
take with the m into the world if they are to use the t rained minds and keen intellects of co llege m en , to the uplifting of their fe llow be ings.&#13;
" This is what makes a man a gentle man A heart to feel, a head t o plan;&#13;
G entl e soul and a love sincere,&#13;
With heart to fight our b attles here."&#13;
With this, the n, as the abidi n g p rincip le of our Society life, we feel a joy&#13;
in our successes only as they are th e v isible reward of hard, honest end eavor;&#13;
we meet our failures with fortitude and feel sad only in so far as t hese failures&#13;
are due to lack of endeavor, or lack of hig hest motive.&#13;
W e look at th e past with its successes, not with a feeling of pride , but with&#13;
a deep gratitude that our·s tre ngth in time of ne ed has n ot fa iled, cou p led with&#13;
a feeling of our responsibility in bein g intrusted with the keepin g of t his legacy.&#13;
Our watchful care is that we may hand it down to the Othos yet to fo ll ow, an&#13;
organization they can love, and an entity, which, to preserve , is worthy of their&#13;
most strenuous effort.&#13;
" L e t u s then be up and doing,&#13;
With a heart for any fate;&#13;
Still achieving, still pursuing,&#13;
L earn to labor and to wait. "&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
The FOLLOWING C LIPPI NGS from the Z et Scrap Book&#13;
w ill be sufficient t o convey t o the read er the fact that the&#13;
Zetalethean S ociety is performing the work for which it stands,&#13;
viz: The literary and social advancement of its members .&#13;
June 14. The North East Hall on third floo r, when&#13;
opened to t he public, during Comm encement '05 , presented a&#13;
very satisfactory appearance. The hall had undergone a com·&#13;
p le te change and would scarcely have been Recognizable in its&#13;
new furnis hings a nd decorations, had it not been for t he old well known inscri p tion, Zet·Otho.&#13;
.&#13;
April 21.&#13;
The m e mbers of t he Atheneum L iterary Society were enter·&#13;
tained by the Zetale theans at a ten o'clock breakfast at t he home of Miss&#13;
Killam. The rooms were decorated in the colors of th e Zet Society, while the&#13;
blue and white h yacint hs which graced the tables represented those of the&#13;
Atheneum.&#13;
May 14. The annual German program given in th e spring term was an&#13;
unusually successful one.&#13;
The entire program was in G erman, and special&#13;
mention may be made of the play, "Das Gespenst in der P e nsion," p resented&#13;
by the members.&#13;
June 14. '05. The reunion of the Zetalethean Literary S ociety was distinguished by the fact that in the presentation of Diplomas to eight of her&#13;
members she doubled the number of the Alumnae Zets. Sorry we were t o lose&#13;
the girls, but proud to claim the se co ll ege graduates as sisters.&#13;
October 5. This date is memorable in the h istory of the Zet· Otho. Con·&#13;
flagration or flood ? Which ? We are not prepared to say. Th ere was certainly&#13;
heat, and the re was water-or more properly speaking-- s team. T ogether they&#13;
did their destructive work, and for the time th e beauty of our Society home was&#13;
marred ; but not for long.&#13;
Paint and varnish resto red th e former lustre, and&#13;
again we are proud of our Society hall .&#13;
"There is a tide in the affairs of co-education which, taken at the flood,&#13;
leads straight to m atrimony." Three living examrles from the Z e ts go to prove&#13;
this old quotation during ' 05:&#13;
Mrs. D. L. Young (nee ) Emma Fair.&#13;
Mrs. D. C. Hall (nee) Estella Harding.&#13;
Mrs. Wilbur Greene ( nee ) Anna Hollingsworth .&#13;
February 19. "Dido," an Epic tragedy, a dramatization from the Aeneid&#13;
of Virgil, was presented by the Z etaletheans as th eir Annual Public, in the&#13;
College Auditorium .&#13;
The stage was fittin g ly arranged, showing th e te mpl es of Dido and Venus,&#13;
while in the distance rose the walls of the Mighty city of Carthage, to which&#13;
Queen Dido welcomed Aeneas and his Trojan exiles. Th e Collegian says: "An&#13;
expectant crowd filled the Auditorium at an early hour.&#13;
Nor were they disappointed, for from the first strains of' Arma Virumque Cano' t o the last linger&#13;
ing tones of' Weary L abors O 'er ' the appreciative audience sat with increasing&#13;
inerest&#13;
&#13;
Crescents&#13;
President, Mabel&#13;
&#13;
MoULIN&#13;
&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
&#13;
AGNE S&#13;
&#13;
DoTT&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Boom a linger bow!&#13;
Ching a linger chee!&#13;
Ta la ku wah!&#13;
Ta la ku wee!&#13;
Crescents, Crescents, w bee!&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"We Succeed&#13;
&#13;
by Doing"&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
White and Light Green&#13;
&#13;
SOCIETY was first provided for girls of the academy in 1900, when the" Crescent Literary Society"&#13;
was organized with fifteen charter members.&#13;
The purpose of this society is to develop the&#13;
social and literary qualities of its memhers, and to&#13;
prepare them for the broader fields of after life.&#13;
This is kept before each one by the motto, "We learn to do by doing." · they welcome into their number not only those who have had&#13;
the advantages of life, but also those who have but limited opportunities for development; and during each year the society has grown&#13;
both in membership and efficiency.&#13;
Busin ess meetings are held every week, and freq uent social&#13;
gatherings are among the pleasant features of the organization&#13;
During each term public programs are given which represent&#13;
the best and most loyal efforts of all the girls .&#13;
This society believes that everyone can do some thing, so it e ndeavors to develop the hidden talents of each member. The ideal is&#13;
high, but each Crescent has resol ved and is striving to gain culture&#13;
and grace, purity of heart and nobility of character.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye&#13;
The Hawkeye Literary Society, the oldest organization&#13;
of Morningside Academy, has fur its purpose the cultivation of those qualities in man which make him a better and more desirable citizen, the moral, the social&#13;
and the literary.&#13;
The attainment of this high standard is furthered&#13;
by thorough discipline in parlimentary law, in the rendering of literary productions, and in debate.&#13;
This last is studied under several phases. First, there are closed&#13;
door debates. Secondly, a series of debates are arranged for open&#13;
programs, in which four teams participate; the winners of the&#13;
first two debates being opponents for the third contest, in which a&#13;
gold medal is awarded each of the winning teams.&#13;
Thirdly, an Inter-Society debate is held annually with the Adelphian Literary Society.&#13;
This has been a decided victory for the&#13;
Hawkeyes -seven out of nine points in the decisions have been in&#13;
their favor.&#13;
The last phase of these debates is the Inter-Academic Debating&#13;
League, formed by the Hawkeyes and Ade,lphians jointly for contests with other Academies, thus giving not only a drill in oratory&#13;
and debate, but also the ability to weigh and argue problems before&#13;
strange audiences.&#13;
Within the last few years, the hall has been repaired and furnished, and is now one of the most beautiful and well equipped in the&#13;
Academy.&#13;
The social and literarv gatherings held jointly with the Crescents&#13;
are worthy of mention. then with the outside world forgotten, the&#13;
Hawkeye yell is often heard:&#13;
Ki, ki, haw ki my!&#13;
Whee zip! boom, ba zoo!&#13;
Rah ; rah, IO wah!&#13;
Wah ho hi, and a bazoo boom!&#13;
Animus, animus, dictus sum!&#13;
Haw Haw Haw, ki ki ki !&#13;
Rah rah rah!&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Carpe Diem."&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Wah boo wah, ta rah boom!&#13;
Re, rah zip, rip ety boom!&#13;
Ripety, ripety, ripety ride!&#13;
We're the Adelphians of Morningside!&#13;
HE ADELPHIAN LITERARY SOCIETY is an&#13;
organization of young men of Academic standing,&#13;
having for its purpose literar.v and social culture,&#13;
aiming to lead all its members to the highest standard of life, aod to bring out the noblest and best in&#13;
each .&#13;
This society was organized in the fall term of 1901,&#13;
with fifteen charter membe rs.&#13;
It has since grown to an average&#13;
membership of thirty-five or forty&#13;
In their second year tbe Adelphians challenged their rivals, the&#13;
Hawkeyes, to debate.&#13;
This was the beginning of the annual Intersociety Academic debate which was won in '02 by the Hawkeyes, in&#13;
'03 by the Adelphians, and in '04 again by the .Hawkeyes.&#13;
Preparatory to these debates, the Adelphains hold each year, a&#13;
series of challenge debates, in which great interest is always · manifested. The programs show careful and di ligent preparation, and a&#13;
large audience invariably greets them.&#13;
The Society hall, which at the time of orgapization bad no furnishings whatever, with the aid of the Aestbesians, has been made a&#13;
well furnished and attractive hall, where many pleasant social&#13;
gatherings and joint closed door programs are held by the two&#13;
societies.&#13;
Wednesday afternoon is Known to all as the time of the regular&#13;
business meetings, when important questions are decided. At this&#13;
hour, also, new members are received.&#13;
&#13;
President, MAE WOOD&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
Color&#13;
&#13;
Secretary, HAZEL PLATTS&#13;
&#13;
"Toobtain the Aesthetic"&#13;
&#13;
Emblem-oilve leaf&#13;
&#13;
White&#13;
&#13;
"The Aesthesian Chronicle"&#13;
A D. 1902-SPRING: In this year was the Aesthesian Confederacy&#13;
formed. Myrtilla, of the House of Cook, appointed ruler.&#13;
A D. 1902-FALL: Bessie, the Small, ruled. Period of internal im. provements. Palace furnished.&#13;
Three Adelpbs rode forth to&#13;
meet the Hawks in com bat.&#13;
A D. 1903- WINTER: Maud, of the House of Smoek, ruled.&#13;
A. D. 1903-SPRlNG: Succession of rulers' stable.&#13;
A. D. 1903-FALL: In this year many great and good maidens joined&#13;
the Confederacy. As the Confederacy progressed they found it&#13;
necessary to procure a musical instrument, which they did at a&#13;
great price.&#13;
A D. 1904-WINTER: A reign of peace a nd prospe rity. In the light&#13;
of the third moon, afte r an assembly meeting, the leag ue enjoyed&#13;
a ride over the frozen plains, singing to the the jingle of the&#13;
sleigh bells.&#13;
A. D. 1904-SPRING: Put fo rth social natures. A zeal fo r good literary works springs forth ever after to characterize the Confederacy and many good writers were brought to ligh t .&#13;
A. D. 1904-FALL: Carlotta, of the House of toenjes was ruling&#13;
Monarch. Continued peac·e and prosperity.&#13;
A. D. 1905-WINTER: I da, of the royal family of L ewis, succeeded&#13;
Carlotta to the throne. War s for supremacy. Many battles&#13;
fought and won . Aestbesian Brownies came an d aided in a&#13;
court play.&#13;
A. D. 1905--SPRING: Grace, the Good, was placed on the trone. In&#13;
this year did the famous chorus of Adel phians and Aesthesians r ender before the public a grand concert.&#13;
A. D. 1905 - FALL: The Successful reign of Nina&#13;
Aesthesian Confederacy supreme. Confederacy takes a trip across the waters&#13;
on invitation of one of its members, to a feast. On All Saints&#13;
Eve, all members we nt to the Palace of the Ruler and had their&#13;
future revealed to them bv the Oracle.&#13;
The Confederacy has neve r forgotten the purpose of its creation,&#13;
to develp the literary ability of its members; and has ever striven&#13;
to attarn the good, the true, and the beautiful.&#13;
&#13;
A. L. How ARTH&#13;
M . E.&#13;
&#13;
McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
ROBT. L UC E&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Academic&#13;
Academy Debaters&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
N THE SPRING of 1903 Morningside&#13;
Academy Societies conceived of a&#13;
debating league, that might consist&#13;
of the academies of U . S. D., Penn, Grinnell&#13;
and Morningside colleg·es. The efforts expended in endeavoring to formulate this&#13;
league resulted in a league between De::;&#13;
Moines, Simpson, Grinnell and Morningside academies.&#13;
During the winter term of 1904 Morningside, in debate with Grinnell, won the&#13;
decision by a unanimous vote. At the same&#13;
time Simpson had defeated Des Moines,&#13;
but because of lack of time Simpson and&#13;
Morningside did not debate in the final.&#13;
In 1905 Grinnell won from Simpson and&#13;
Morningside from Des Moines, and in the&#13;
final at Grinnel Morningside lost by a vote&#13;
of two to one.&#13;
This year Simpson lost to Morningside&#13;
and Des Moines to Grinnell, and in the final&#13;
held at Morningside, Grinnell lost to Morningside by a unanimous vote.&#13;
This gives&#13;
to Morningside academy the championship&#13;
of the three year compact.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
RIENDS, Students, Faculty, lend us your ears;&#13;
We come to mention the Seniors, not to laud them.&#13;
The mischief classes do, lives after them;&#13;
The good is oft interred within their bones :&#13;
Let it be not so of the Seniors.&#13;
The Middles&#13;
Say that the Seniors are too ambitious :&#13;
If 'twere so, were it a grievous fault?&#13;
And have they suffered for it?&#13;
Here, under leave of the Middles and the rest-For each Middle is an honorable man;&#13;
So are they all, all honorable men Came we to write this history .&#13;
The Seniors are studio us, upright and loyal:&#13;
But the Middles are honorable men .&#13;
Edwards hath brought many honors home to us,&#13;
His praises do the College Annuals fill :&#13;
Was this too great ambition?&#13;
When stern Athletics called, the Seniors answered :&#13;
If 'twere Ambition's fault, were this not worthy?&#13;
Yet, the Middles say we are too ambitious;&#13;
And the Middles are honorable men .&#13;
You all did see upon that high greased pole,&#13;
A Senior pennant bung,&#13;
Which thrice, and thrice again,&#13;
The Middles strove to lower. Small wonder is't&#13;
The Middles say ambition;&#13;
And surely they be honorable men.&#13;
We write not to disprove what they have said,&#13;
But rather, here to write what we do knowYe who in days gone by have trod these self-same halls,&#13;
In garb of Senior Prep's, bear with u s,&#13;
If we were disposed to stir your hearts and minds with&#13;
old-time loyalty,&#13;
We might recount of honors more, but we would the Middles wrong,&#13;
Who, you know, are honorable men.&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Poco a poco."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Normal Department&#13;
The Normal De partment occupies a prominent place in the work&#13;
of the college.&#13;
It bas two distinct aims: One, instruction in the&#13;
academic studies; the other, training in strictly professional work.&#13;
The academic work is given by those in charge of the departments&#13;
un der which the work would naturnlly fall, while the professional&#13;
work is in charge of the instructors in the Normal Department.&#13;
It&#13;
is all, howeve1·, under the direction of Prof. E. A. Brown, who&#13;
teaches the strictly pedagogical subjects, and from wbom eme nat.es&#13;
all that makes the department what it is in the school&#13;
The work in&#13;
primary methods is given by Mrs. Ida Reynolds, who has received&#13;
special training in this work at Drake University and at Chicago&#13;
University.&#13;
The growth of the Department may be seen by the graduating&#13;
class of this year, which is especially strong. Its members are:&#13;
Miss Minnie I. Brown, Fort Dodge,&#13;
Mi1:,s Maude I. Fox, Elk Point, S.D.,&#13;
Miss Helen Veline, Akron,&#13;
Miss Opal Hornbeck, Rock Rapids,&#13;
Miss Zilla Deno, Morningside,&#13;
Miss Lillian Mauer, L e Mars.&#13;
A special feature of the Department is that of placingits students&#13;
in positions in the public schools, while its graduates are holding&#13;
some important positions in Iowa, as well as in adjoining states, yet&#13;
it is difficult to meet the ever increasing demands for well qualified&#13;
teachers.&#13;
&#13;
Sand BurNo. 1&#13;
&#13;
Sand BurNo. 2&#13;
&#13;
SYNOPSIS&#13;
&#13;
It would be impossible to imagine the loneliness of the mountains after&#13;
the scenes which I h ave descn bed. I r emarn e&lt;l m the valley only long enough to&#13;
Lay to r est the body of Cor ella's moth er and to gather together a f ew trinkets&#13;
.&#13;
Which had belonged to h er who had, in a few weeks, becom e so much to m e.&#13;
·&#13;
\\ IIC&#13;
b&#13;
. ·1·&#13;
.&#13;
l 1e .&#13;
,&#13;
Then I left, starting back to c1v1 ization to spend a life rn try m g to orget.&#13;
l knew that I was in gr eat danger from P edro, for I h ad learned to know&#13;
the "cry of th e Wild," and I knew that he h ad only gone for his pack and that&#13;
he would r eturn for revenge.&#13;
I thought it best to follow the stream, b11 t the waters wer e so cold that&#13;
Hey became unbearable, so I concluded to lea ve them and to cross the ridge&#13;
to 'the left, thus getting out of the valley up winch I believed P edro and his&#13;
paek would r eturn.&#13;
'Twas a laborions task, and for m any hours I climbed over loose boulders,&#13;
crawled nn &lt;ler tottering r ocks, tr embled at the edge of precipices, or clung to&#13;
stunted trees and r oots. Finally I r ea ched the clond line an d was enveloped&#13;
in a cloud of mist. I could see but a li ttle way from me. A t that time I was&#13;
on a ledge of r ock, about two f eet . wide, which ran along the mountain side.&#13;
To my left was a wall of rock reaching heaven ward, while to my right ther e&#13;
was nothing-hundreds of feet below l ay the val ley. I got down upon my&#13;
hands and knces and cr ept along this ledge. Af ter going for some distance I&#13;
found tha t th e ledge h ad broaden ed and had turned into the monntain ridge&#13;
and was rnnning between two perpendicular walls.&#13;
I felt my way along this p assage fo r som e distance, nnt il su ddenly I came&#13;
to a place wher e my hands touched nothing butt the sides. B efor,e m e seem ed&#13;
to lay a vast gulf of n othingness. H ere I h ad to lie nntil the cloud had&#13;
passed, when I fonnd that befor e m e was a large hole, through which I&#13;
looked down into a m ost beant ifnl valley below. The r ock on which I lay&#13;
hung ont over the valley.&#13;
As I lay there, lost in the wonder of the scen e before m e, I saw a beast&#13;
picking his way down the m ountain sicl e to my ri ght I looked more closely&#13;
and saw that it was P edro. Ile climbed npon a p ile of rocks below m e, sqn atted upon his haunches, p au sed a mom ent, an d th en broke for th in one of the&#13;
most blood-curdling howls I ever heard. The r ocks snatched at it like hungry&#13;
wolves and threw it over to oth ers which hurled it back again in anger.&#13;
Somehow I had come to love that dog, even though I feared him, and before I r ealized what I was doing, I had placed my fingers to my lips and given&#13;
the whistle with which I had called him when we h ad been together. He&#13;
leaped to his f eet, lashed his sides with hi s tail and, looking on all sides. broke&#13;
forth again into that awful call.&#13;
Again I whistled, and as I did so he turned and, looking up, saw me,&#13;
and with snarls and growls, leaped to war ds me as if he would tear me from&#13;
the rock above him.&#13;
&#13;
My life is haunted by a woman's face, and because of this I leave&#13;
home and wander the · world through, trying to find it among my&#13;
fellow me n.&#13;
I at last give up hope of success in my quest, and&#13;
wande r out to the ruins of the Cliff Dwellers, caring little what becomes of me. Here I m eet Pedro, a wild dog, who seems mysteriously&#13;
subdued by my presence and voice. He seems to wish me to follow&#13;
him, which I do, and he leads me back into the mountains to Corella&#13;
'&#13;
a Mexican maiden, whose face is almost the exact likeness of the one&#13;
which has haunted my life. She b eing unable to speak English leads&#13;
me to a cabin near, in which is a witchy, dried up old woman, her&#13;
mother who seems to recognize in me a person whom she feels has&#13;
done her an injustice, and bas come back to rob her of her child.&#13;
After heaping curses upon me and threatening my life, she drives me&#13;
from the cabin.&#13;
Corella and I meet secretly. After a few weeks her mother comes&#13;
upon us one evening and in a fitofanger throws a knife atCorrella which&#13;
pierees her breast. Pedro leaps at berand before I can stop him, tears&#13;
open her throat and she dies. This rouses in Pedro the wild spirit&#13;
again, and as I carry Corella toacavenear by he tries to kill me. In the&#13;
cave he lies on the opposite side and watches me like a fiend.&#13;
At&#13;
midnight as Corella returns to conciousness, a spector appears who&#13;
reveals to us on a pa,noramic vapor or screen, the past. The face that&#13;
haunted me was that of my_ mother who died at my birth. My father&#13;
left me with frie nds and went irito Mexico where he married a Mexican girl of rank, whose face was almost like my mother's. To them&#13;
was born Corella.&#13;
they at last drifted into the mountains where&#13;
my father was killed by falling while out hunting. His wife never&#13;
finding his body belie ved herself deserted and p e rmitted her heart&#13;
to be eaten out and became witchy and old.&#13;
As the vision passes away Corella dies, and Pedro who during&#13;
this time has lain as if dead, comes to life and starts creeping across&#13;
the cave toward me.&#13;
I try to look him down but he still comes on&#13;
towards me. At last I find my voice and call his name. He leaps&#13;
t o his feet, breaks into a howl and rushes out of the cave and becomes again "king of the wild."&#13;
&#13;
- -&#13;
&#13;
Gaunt forms began to cr eep in from all sid es and to gather around their&#13;
leader P edro, until ther e stood about him ugly brutes whose tee th were whetted&#13;
for any fray. Th ey had hardly gather ed, however., befor e there came crashing through th e stnntecl brush and crags a clog as large as Pedro. Ile seemed&#13;
to be a stranger. Ile came into their midst fearlessly, not hesitating until he&#13;
saw P ed ro upon the rock. \Var was declarerl imm ediately, and th e two began&#13;
to make preparations for th e battle which would decide which was to be the&#13;
king of the pack. Such battles are fought to the death, and the still quivering&#13;
flesh is soon torn from th e bones of the unfortunate on e by th e hungry, waiting&#13;
pack. Th e two glared into each others' eyes like demons. I conld not resist&#13;
the temptati on, so placing my fingers to my lips again I blew so shrill a whi stle that the valley rang with its echo. Th e strange clog cr ouch ed to the ground.&#13;
The pack started for cover. P edro stood like a piece of stone. Suddenly&#13;
giving a few quick barks he dashed off up the m onntain side, the pack closed in&#13;
behind him, and th e strange dog, believi11g hi s victim wa s getting away from&#13;
him, leaped snarling after th e pack.&#13;
I wa s wondering what I had better do n ext wh en I h eard mnffied snarls&#13;
and yippings and growl s. These became louder each mom ent, when suddenly there burst into the passage those fi en el s incarnate. Th e strange dog&#13;
was pushing his way throngh th e pack to get at P edro. P edro hearing him&#13;
corning turned to meet him, and the two demons&#13;
fell to fighting.&#13;
The fight&#13;
was fierce ! Now one was on top, no w th e oth er. The du st flew in clouds&#13;
ow&#13;
about them. Bits of fur fell beside the fighters, while th e stones were dyed&#13;
with blood . A t th e first rush th e strange cl og had hurled him self beyond Pedro, and as th e fight advanced P edro pushed it down the passage towards me&#13;
and the hole. I pressed back again st th e sid e wall lest I too should be mixed&#13;
in the fight. The strange clog was crowded n earer and n earer to the opening.&#13;
H e fought every inch of the way like a fi end. But P ed ro was more than his&#13;
m atch, and at last th e edge of the hole was r each ed, where, los ing hi s balance, he started to fall. H e had a firm h old upon P edro's n eck at tl1e time&#13;
and his weight bega n to pull P edro out over th e edge. Littl e by little he was&#13;
compelled to yield nntil I saw that they wer e both going to fall to the rocks&#13;
below. Th en ru shing in and catching P edro by th e n eck I braced my feet&#13;
against th e rough r ock s and pulled with all my might. Th e strange dog grew&#13;
tired of hi s hold, and, letting go, fell, a shapeless ma ss, on the rocks below.&#13;
I pulled P edro back and pushed him from m e. H e crouched on the floor&#13;
of th e passage and began crawling towards m e, hi s eyes glaring like balls of&#13;
fire in blood dripping fur&#13;
In the exc itement I h ad entirely fo rgotten my own danger, and n ow that&#13;
it was on I knew not how to m eet it. B ut summing up all th e will power I had&#13;
t&#13;
I caught hi s eye, and, with some unknown power, h eld myself calm as I looked&#13;
into those eyes, gateways to a measureless depth filled with hell's darkest&#13;
hatred and wrath. A s h e came on towards m e I calmly called, "Pedro, P edro,&#13;
would you do that n ow ?" H e paused for a mom ent, still looking at m e like&#13;
a friend, then ther e slowly crept into th ose eyes a strange half-human light, and,&#13;
&#13;
over to me he lifted up his blood-dripping head and whined as if hi s&#13;
ing&#13;
.&#13;
rush&#13;
t wwould break ' and . P edro was mine once more.&#13;
heart ears have passed sm ce then, and P edro ha s been laid away. It was more&#13;
·&#13;
. for him to forget the wild life th an for me, for I never saw after that day&#13;
easy&#13;
.&#13;
that demon's&#13;
glare in his eyes, though we wer e seldom found&#13;
mountains&#13;
In The but even today I cringe as mem ory paints that fight, and&#13;
that :fiend&#13;
apa&#13;
toward s m e bac&#13;
t here m th at 1 1 rnonntam.&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
Heard In History Class&#13;
Compurgators were mediaeval witnesses&#13;
called to swear with the a ccused . Modern&#13;
witnesses are too often called to swear at&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
Sec'y Shaw says our currenc y should be&#13;
more elastic. If this would cause it to go&#13;
farther I heartily agree with him.&#13;
&#13;
There have been three stages in the development of hospitality: (1 ) The ancient&#13;
Greek stationed a slave down by the roadside with orders to compel all passers by&#13;
to stop over night.&#13;
(2) In our southern&#13;
states before the war, all travellers of a&#13;
certain class were cordially welcomed at&#13;
the plantation. (3) Today we station a bull&#13;
dog at the front gate with orders to help&#13;
the traveller on his way .&#13;
&#13;
It was Rouen before it was captured. and&#13;
ruined after.&#13;
&#13;
Cornwallis was penned up and Yorktown&#13;
was captured by George.&#13;
&#13;
It is not every teacher that serves dates&#13;
with his examinations.&#13;
&#13;
Virginia would have been better off if she&#13;
had had fewer goldsmiths and more John&#13;
Smiths.&#13;
Having been driven out of Boston by&#13;
Washington, Gen. Howe went to Halifax.&#13;
&#13;
Too many of us speak the English slanguage as 1f it were our native tongue.&#13;
&#13;
A statesman is a master of state craft. A&#13;
politician is a master of state graft.&#13;
&#13;
Orthodoxy is my doxy, heterodoxy is your&#13;
doxy.&#13;
With their ordeals of hot water, hot iron,&#13;
etc., the mediaeval student still escaped that&#13;
ordeal of the modern history student, hot air.&#13;
&#13;
A revolution is a successful rebellion.&#13;
rebellion an unsuccessful revolution.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
The Alumni Association&#13;
of&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
EMPEY&#13;
&#13;
CHANDLER&#13;
&#13;
EISENTRAUT&#13;
&#13;
CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Officers&#13;
w . BR UCE&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
Empey,&#13;
&#13;
CORBETT,&#13;
&#13;
'99&#13;
Schaller, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Pres ident&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
'94Sio u x City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SIDNEY L. CHANDLER, '99&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
I da Grove, Iowa&#13;
PEARL Woodford,&#13;
DORA Eisentraut,&#13;
&#13;
'03&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Hartley, Iowa .&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
'96&#13;
Seattle, Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Bitter may have been the years that visited their handfnls of grain upon&#13;
but they are all forgotten now in the joys of memory that remain. The bitof time may have silvered th e hair, b11t th e heart is always glad when we&#13;
think of the days that were.&#13;
standing upon the loess hills of Momingside, looking across toward the&#13;
west at evening, one sees the shimmering light of a lrnrrying stream, ever eager&#13;
to meet the ocean ; al ways hastenin g away from the mists and rolling hills and&#13;
roaring city. when we were there, such was our keenest des ire, the ocean of&#13;
life. but the river tires of the ocean and fain would hide itself again between&#13;
high banks and sec the mists once more roll past the hills and hear the roar of&#13;
the city So do we tire of the life that is and fain would we again come back,&#13;
if only for a time, and breathe once more the air and clasp hands with some&#13;
fresh heart full of hope and inexperi ence. The thread of life sp ins and spins&#13;
and character is not had for th e asking. we c find it within ourselves when we&#13;
find it rightly ; only half do we find it in others. And character is all of life&#13;
worth saving.&#13;
As we look hack npon tl1e past at M orningside and look out upon the present. th ere we see already the sign s of a mellow age that is beginning to ripen&#13;
into the f11ll ear of the life of a school. H ouses that were in our time new&#13;
with pine and paint arc already dull wi th age. The yellow soil ha s given place&#13;
to green lawns. Twigs have become ftately trees. muddy hoard walks have&#13;
gone as if whisked away by some magic hand, and the firm cement echoes and&#13;
re-echoes&#13;
with the click of hurrying heels Th e old north hall is grey with age&#13;
while the main hall is beginning to lo ok staid, and to throw off the signs of&#13;
self-consciousness&#13;
and to take on the garments of mature composure. Lover's&#13;
lane has long since passed in to disrepute.&#13;
with&#13;
all this there ha s come a change in the st11dent life. The dr,e amy&#13;
life of a half active yo11th ha s gone and in its place has come a student life,&#13;
practical, stirring, yet full of beauty and peace. Strength seems to have come&#13;
ty&#13;
to every department, strength not only of talent but of that intangible something tl1at makes for character. The old Morningside ha s ceased to be; the&#13;
present Morningside is an established fact, a fact of life and health . In its place&#13;
on the hill in the garden of the great Northwest, it send s its aroma and its pollen&#13;
to the re,ptest haunts of the garden and new life springs up newly to grace old&#13;
spots, till time shall know all the hills and dales and plains to be a garden indeed for beauty shall be there, and purity, and manhood, and womanhood true;&#13;
and all of these make life. But what has all this to do with us, oh, practical&#13;
alumni ? We look on and smile like elders who have tasted life, but with sometlnng of reverence, as one looks at the face of his mother in her prime and&#13;
&#13;
wonders if she could have been so beautiful in youth; for there are writ the&#13;
lines of life and love and the consciousness of power. So, fondly, we come&#13;
back home sometimes, all but the wanderers; we come back home and feel&#13;
once more the mother kiss, and as her arms enfold us we feel old heart-beats&#13;
renewed, as the mother life in us, after its contact with the hard world, again&#13;
meets its own. And so again we are strong to take up the tasks of life, feeling&#13;
that it is good to live and work-to work for life and to live for work ; to meet&#13;
and clasp hands and look deep into eyes with joy ; t labor and love in snnshinc and shadow; to drink deep from life's fresh fou n tain as we wipe the&#13;
sweat from our brows; to bask a while in an amber snnset ; and then to go.&#13;
&#13;
ScienceDepartments&#13;
&#13;
The increased emphasis on the Physical and Biological Sciences&#13;
constitutes perhaps the most striking contrast brought out by a&#13;
comparison of the modern college with that of a generation ago.&#13;
Changes in other departments of knowledge have been rapid and&#13;
improvements many, but educators, yet in the full tide of their powers: can recall the beginnings of real science work in our schools.&#13;
the universities naturally led in this movement, but the smaller institutions quickly recognized the significance of the trend; within&#13;
the last few years all colleges of repute have established laboratories&#13;
and are endeavoring to maintain strong work in at least three or four&#13;
of the fundamental sciences. It is gratifying that these additions&#13;
have been made to the body of cultural studies without subtracting&#13;
in the least from appreciation for the longer recognized subjects of&#13;
the college curriculum.&#13;
Science work in Morningside had its beginningin '97, shor·tly after&#13;
the institution was established, but the work was not differentiated&#13;
until 1900 when the board of trutees granted an appropriation for the&#13;
Chemical Laboratories. The following year the Biology Department&#13;
was established, and at the same time the work in Physics was opened&#13;
up independently. These initial appropriations were most carefully&#13;
expended, and made possible a fairly good working equipment in the&#13;
sciences mentioned. These laboratories have since been maintained&#13;
by fees and some apparatus has been added each year. The general&#13;
development of the College has crowded present quarters, however,&#13;
and there is urgent need for both added room and equipment. A&#13;
science building would not only relieve the cong·estion of Main Hall&#13;
but would make possible added phases of the science work which are&#13;
already a necessity.&#13;
The first Major students in science were graduated in 1902, and&#13;
since then a number have completed either the scientific or premedical course each year. A number of these have pushed on in their&#13;
scientific work and are becoming productive workers. Every Major&#13;
student from these Laboratories who has taken up graduate work&#13;
has been given our appointment as Scholar, Fellow, or Assistant, before entering the university.&#13;
&#13;
Department Of&#13;
Biology&#13;
On The second floor of Main Hall are the Biology Laboratories.&#13;
There is a lecture room with raised seats, and adjoining is the&#13;
morphology laboratory equipped with wall tabl es, aquarium tables,&#13;
students' lockers and a microscope cabinet. The west la,boratory&#13;
has a similar equipment, and is intended for work in physiology and&#13;
histology. Opening into this are the store room, the dark room and&#13;
a private laboratory. All laboratories are provided with city water,&#13;
gas and electric lights. There is a good equipment of apparatus,&#13;
including twenty-two compound microscopes, and material for&#13;
laboratory work and class demonstration.&#13;
The Freshman year is devoted to a general course in biology,&#13;
dealing with the fundamental principles of the science. In the Sophomore year morphology of plants or of animals is taken up, these&#13;
courses being given on alternate years. Some attention is paid to&#13;
the economic aspects of both botany.and zoology, but the courses are&#13;
primarily pure science courses. the major work is adapted as far&#13;
as possible to the after needs and plans of the major students. There&#13;
is a good working library of standard sets of books, texts, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Department of Physics&#13;
The Physical Department occupies the equivalent of five rooms&#13;
in the basement of main Hall.&#13;
These are a lecture room, a&#13;
large general laboratory 40x60 feet, a dark room, also used as a&#13;
laboratory for students in light, a library. and reading room and&#13;
a small room 10x16, used as a store room and work shop, in which&#13;
many of the pieces of apparatus used 'in the general course in&#13;
physics are constructed.&#13;
The elementary course in physics is extensively illustrated and&#13;
is intended to create a lively interest in pbysica1 phenomena, as well&#13;
as give a knowledge of the physical constants.&#13;
Tbe advanced&#13;
courses are intended to develop accurate and scientific methods and&#13;
to this end the theoretical work in the lecture eourses is suppleme11ted with laboratory courses, in which precision is aimed at. In&#13;
addition to the apparatus used in the general courses, the laboratory&#13;
is s upplied with many instruments of precision in mechanics, light&#13;
&#13;
and electricity. This year there has been added apparatus for determining the heat and illuminating capacity of gases, which gives&#13;
to the student an idea of the practical side of physical science.&#13;
&#13;
Department OfChemistry&#13;
The Chemistry Laboratories are located on first floor Main Hall&#13;
'&#13;
and include a set of seven rooms. The lecture room, with a seating&#13;
capacity of sixty, is provided with raised seats to facilitate experimental lecture work. The general laboratory is roomy and well&#13;
lighted, and is equipped with oak desks, individual lockers and&#13;
hoods.&#13;
The advanced laboratory is similarly equipped. Other&#13;
rooms are a balance room, private laboratory, supply room, and acid&#13;
store room.&#13;
The first, and the larger part of the second year in Chemistry is&#13;
devoted to broader scientific foundations.&#13;
While the place of this&#13;
subject as a proper complement to a liberal education is duly recognized, its eminently practical side is also emphasized. Students desiring to take up industrial chemistry find opportunity to work unon&#13;
such subjects as the city water supply, municipal gas, fuels, prepared foods, etc. In addition to a full equipment of apparatus for&#13;
ordinary class work the department possesses a good outfit for food&#13;
analysis, both proximate and specific; also a complete set of Hempel's&#13;
gas apparatus. Each month official tests of the city gas are made at&#13;
the College. The chemical library includes bound sets of two of the&#13;
standard chemical journals, together with standard texts and reference works.&#13;
&#13;
MAJOR STUDENTS FROM SCIENCE DEPARTMENTS OF MORNINGSIDE&#13;
COLLEGE WHO HAVE BEEN GRANTED&#13;
UNIVERSITY APPOINTMENTS.&#13;
&#13;
GUY GRIFFIN FRARY, Sc. B.&#13;
CHEMISTRY, 1902.&#13;
Graduate student, Iowa State University,&#13;
1903- 4; Assistant in Chemistry, Morningside&#13;
College. 1902- 3; Fellow in Chemistry, Iowa&#13;
State University, 1903-4; Professor of Natural Science, Fort Worth University, 1904&#13;
Papers: Bachelor's Thesis: "Derivatives&#13;
of Phenyl Ether IV." American Chemical&#13;
Journal, 27:6 1902.&#13;
FRED J. SEA VER, Sc. B.&#13;
BIOLOGY, 1902&#13;
Graduate student, Iowa State University,&#13;
1902-5; Scholar in Botany, ibid., 1902-3; Fellow in Botany, ibid., 1903-4; Assistant in&#13;
Botany, ibid., 1904--5, also Summer Session&#13;
1903-4; Sc. M. ibid ., 1904; Special Assistant&#13;
on Fur.gi, Pardue University, Spring term,&#13;
1903; Awarded Larabee prize for research,&#13;
June 1903; Member of Botanical Expedition&#13;
to Mexico, may-june, 190 4 Elected Fellow&#13;
in Botany, Columbia University, ($650) April ,&#13;
1906; Professor of Biological Sciences, Iowa&#13;
Wesleyan University, 1905- .&#13;
Papers: "The Discomycetes of Eastern&#13;
Iowa.'· Bulletin of Iowa State University ,&#13;
1904. "A New species of Sphaerosoma:·&#13;
Journal of Mycology, 1904 "An Annotated&#13;
List of Iowa Discomycetes."' Proc. of Iowa&#13;
Academy of Science, 1904.&#13;
"Native Trees&#13;
a nd Shrubs of Henry County, Iowa." Manuscript.&#13;
MILLARD FILLMORE McDOWELL, Sc. B.&#13;
PHYS ICS, 1903.&#13;
Graduate student, the University of Nebraska, 1903-4; Scholar in Physics, ibid., 1903-4;&#13;
Instructor in Physics, Morningside College,&#13;
1904---.&#13;
Papers: ''Circular Dichroism in Natural&#13;
Rotary Solutions.·· Physical Reveiw, 20: No.&#13;
3, March 1905.&#13;
&#13;
ALEXANDER GRANT RUTHVEN, Sc. B.&#13;
BIOLOGY, 1903.&#13;
Graduate student, University of Michigan,&#13;
1903-6; Special Assistant in Zoology, Michigan State Geological Survey, Summer 1903;&#13;
Assistant in Zoology, Uni versity of Michigan, 1903-4; Fellow in Zoology, ibid., 1905-6;&#13;
Ph.D., ibid., June 1906; In charge of Scientific&#13;
Expedition sent to the Porcupine Mountains&#13;
by University of Michigan Museum, Summer&#13;
1904; Under appointment of American Museum for Expedition into Mexico, Summer 1906.&#13;
Papers: " Notes on the Molluscs, Reptiles,&#13;
and Amphibians of Ontonagon County,&#13;
Michigan. " Michigan Academy of Science,&#13;
1904. (2500 words.)&#13;
"Butler's Garter Snake.'' Biol. Bulletin 7,&#13;
No. 5, Nov. 1904.&#13;
"An Ecological Survey of the Porcupine&#13;
Mountains." Bulletin University of Michigan Musuem, 1906; (30,000 words with maps&#13;
and numerous half tones.)&#13;
"Fauna and Flora of the Porcu pine Mountains and Isle of Royal, Michigan.'' Bulletin&#13;
of University of Michigan Museum, 1906.&#13;
(15,000 words.)&#13;
"Geographical Distribution and Genetic&#13;
Relationships of the Species of the Genus&#13;
Thamnophis," (Thesis for Doctorate.)&#13;
&#13;
JOHN WALDO McCARTHY, Sc. B.&#13;
CHEMISTRY, 1905.&#13;
Graduate student, State University of&#13;
Washington, 1905-6; Assistant in Chemistry,&#13;
ibid., 1905- 6- .&#13;
WILLIAM JOHN MORGAN, Sc. B.,&#13;
CH EMISTRY, 1905.&#13;
Graduate student, Iowa State University,&#13;
1905- 6; Assistant in Chemistry, ibid., 1905-6.&#13;
&#13;
history of the Conserbatory&#13;
The' value and power of music in our midst is somewhnt shown by the rapid growth&#13;
or the convervatory of Morningside College. In the early days of the in·. itution. before it recieved the name of Morningside College, a music department was&#13;
with Mrs. Mallory as Principal Soon after, in 1891 Miss Florence Lewis,&#13;
blis \&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
with the help of Mr. Neidlinger the emin ent song writer. established a conservatory&#13;
in the metropolitan block, in Sioux City; and in connection&#13;
with this Conservatory, the&#13;
work of tlie music department was carried on for some time. Then came Balleshaya German Professor, who. although teaching at this conservatory gave part of his&#13;
time to musical&#13;
interests at Morningside&#13;
in 1894 Morningside had a conservatory which she could call her own. when Mr. T.&#13;
C. Hadley nn excellent voice teacher&#13;
was secured as director of the music department;&#13;
and in this same yenr Mrs. I. A. Schotts assumed the principalship of the Piano Work&#13;
there were also two other instructors- one, a teacher of mandolin and Guitar; the other&#13;
Miss Lemmon, the first violin teacher.&#13;
the&#13;
Convervatory&#13;
was not placed upon a firm foundation, however, until the&#13;
year 1897 when Professor 0. P. Barbour was made director. To him is clue the making of our present conservatory, and under his direction great advancement was&#13;
made.&#13;
among other things. Prof. Barbour organized a glee club. an orchestra, and&#13;
a choral union wl1ich rendered such oratorios as "Be;shazzar" and Haydn's "Creation.'' It was his aim to harmonize the work of the Conservatory with that of the&#13;
music lovers of the city. One step in this direction was taken when, through his influence&#13;
Miss. Florence Lewis became a member of Our Conservatory faculty- a person&#13;
who has always worked faithfully to create in those about her an interest and enthusi&#13;
asm for music, and who was instrumental in organizing the Beethoven C lub, under&#13;
whose supervision many prominent artists have appered in Sioux City.&#13;
during these years other additions weremade to the Conservatory facu lty, among&#13;
whom were i\Iiss Alice K. Barbour and Miss Amanda Larson, who taught voice; Miss&#13;
Sarah .T. Lacy. Mrs. Blanche Palmer Barbour. and Mrs. Alice B. Marshall, Piano ; Miss&#13;
Gertrude Lewis and Mr. Stanislaus Scherzel, violin.&#13;
during the year 1903-4, our Consen·atory was left without a director, but the following year it was greatly strengthened by the coming of Professor .T. W. Mather, our&#13;
present director. and Mrs. Mather, who is doing much for the violin department. Professor Mather's eforts have already raised the tone and grade of work in the Conservatory, besides encournging a higher standard of general culture by requiring the rnusic graduates to be eligible to Freshman rank.&#13;
In many other ways has he increased&#13;
the influence and reputation of our Couservutory.&#13;
During the first year of his work in our college, a second division of the choral union&#13;
was organized in the city. And due to Professor Mather's efforts alone, in the spring&#13;
of 1905 there was held Sioux City's first May Music Festival when Handel's masterpriece, ''The Messiah," was given. For this series of concerts the Chicago Symphony Orchestra was secured and such artisits as Mrs. Genvieve Clark Wilsonand E. C. Town,&#13;
of Chicago; Eleanor Kirkham and Art.bur Beresford, of new York. The festival proved&#13;
so successful that it made possible even more elaborate preparations for the second&#13;
music festival in May, 1906.&#13;
Since 1899 there have been thirty-five graduates from the Consen·atory- twenty-six&#13;
and influence&#13;
&#13;
RITZ&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
MASON&#13;
&#13;
GILLMAN&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Class of '06&#13;
Miss FERN RrTz, Sioux City, Piano .&#13;
Mrss NINA MossMAN, Sioux City, Piano .&#13;
Mrss PEARL MASON, Kingsley, Piano.&#13;
Mrss SARAH GILMAN, Sioux City, Piano .&#13;
Mrss MABEL Williams&#13;
Sioux City, Piano.&#13;
&#13;
in piano. eight in voice. and one in violin. Two years ago the Conservatory building&#13;
was remodel ed. thus making more convenient music rooms. Since then several new&#13;
pianos have been added. and before the next year a pipe organ will be built in the&#13;
auditorium. with this greater eq uipment and effieiency and the growing friendliness&#13;
between th e conservatory and the music lov ers of the city it is believed that before&#13;
many years th e Morningside Conservatory will be a means of making Sioux City a distinguished musical center.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
A nnual M usic Festival&#13;
SIOUX ClTY, IOWA&#13;
1906&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
May 23.&#13;
May 24.&#13;
May 24.&#13;
&#13;
(Evening) Theodore Thomas Orchestra and Soloists.&#13;
(Afternoon) Theodore Thomas Orchestra and Soloists.&#13;
(Evening) Oratorio of " Elijah.'' - Mendelssohn.&#13;
Choral Union (200 voices.)&#13;
Thomas Orchestra (50 players and soloists.)&#13;
MR. FREDERICK STOCK&#13;
Conductor of Orchestra Concert&#13;
MR. JUDSON MATHER&#13;
Conductor of Oratorio Concert&#13;
SOLOISTS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE MACONDA , Soprano,&#13;
MRS. HERBERT BUTLER, Soprano,&#13;
GRACE MuNSON, Alto,&#13;
GLENN HALL, Tenor,&#13;
HERBERT WITHERSPOON, Bass, BREM VANDEN Burg. Pianist,&#13;
LEOPOLD KRAMER, Violinist,&#13;
BRUNO STEINDEL, 'Cellist,&#13;
&#13;
New York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
New York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
New York&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Cincinnatti&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Chicago&#13;
CONSERVATORY&#13;
&#13;
A Reminiscence&#13;
Just a word about my history,&#13;
As my picture you behold,&#13;
For my life, 'though clothed in mystery,&#13;
Has choice items to be told.&#13;
&#13;
There I'd many friends discover,&#13;
Who would spread my just renown,&#13;
Also greet the many "masters"&#13;
As they chanced to be in town.&#13;
&#13;
In Chicago's smoky turmoil&#13;
Did I first behold the light,&#13;
years ago, some five and twenty,&#13;
As a "Square Grand" polished bright.&#13;
&#13;
Such fond hopes soon quickly vanished,&#13;
As our wishes sometimes doAnd ten long years of weary travel&#13;
Marred my looks and greatness, too.&#13;
&#13;
I am called a "Root and Cady,"&#13;
A name well honored to this day;&#13;
was carved and modeled neatly&#13;
with much care and pride, they say.&#13;
&#13;
Years were they so dark and tragic,&#13;
That I dare not picture here,&#13;
Else my grief might overcome me&#13;
And my purpose fail, I fear.&#13;
&#13;
Then I stood a thing of beautyNow my keys have yellow turned;&#13;
Now my tones have lost their sweetness,&#13;
And by students I am spurned.&#13;
&#13;
Eut, at last, a ray of sunshine&#13;
Through the darkness seemed to peer;&#13;
Despite my age and worn condition,&#13;
Granted was my wish so dear.&#13;
&#13;
Now they call me so old-fashicned,&#13;
And by names abuse me so,&#13;
That I tell my simple story,&#13;
Hoping sympathy may grow.&#13;
&#13;
Now to tell how 'twas accomplished,&#13;
And the secret true confideIn exchange for a span of mules,&#13;
Am I here in Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Always had I fondly cherished&#13;
A desire supremely sweet,&#13;
To make my home a famous college&#13;
And enjoy its pleasures fleet.&#13;
&#13;
Altho' somewhat disappointed&#13;
In the school so new and queer,&#13;
Yet my work I took up bravely,&#13;
Watching progress year by year.&#13;
&#13;
I w as place d upon th e p latform&#13;
Of th e chape l in N o rth H a ll ,&#13;
Wh e r e I ke pt my lofty stati o n&#13;
Seve n y ears, I b e li e ve, in a ll.&#13;
&#13;
B ut wh e n a ll so s tra n ge a ppeared,&#13;
Th a t I fail ed to und e rs ta nd,&#13;
I was to ld I n ow d id duty&#13;
In Ma in H a ll, so n ew and gran d.&#13;
&#13;
H e r e th e w eary h o urs I brighte n ed&#13;
For a la dy te ach e r fair,&#13;
who is s till our lo ve d prof es so r ,&#13;
And a fri e nd m ost d ear and rare.&#13;
&#13;
Th e r e I stoo d within th e b asem ent,&#13;
Wh e r e the Physics n o w is taught,&#13;
L ut w hic h th en was u sed f o r chapel,&#13;
And by s tu dents gayly sought.&#13;
&#13;
I was h o nored at t h e progra m s,&#13;
Whe r e bri g ht w o rd s th eir b a ttles&#13;
fought;&#13;
For I furni s h ed inspira ti on,&#13;
Whic h the muse of mus ic brought.&#13;
Y es, how w ell do I r e m·e mb e r&#13;
The ch a p e l hour, wh e n 'twas d ecr eed&#13;
Th a t h e ncef o rth w e 'd b e a coll ege,&#13;
And f rom large r c laims be freed .&#13;
How th e stud e nts f e lt so h a ppy,&#13;
And th e tea c h e rs all loo k ed wise ;&#13;
But I jus t k e pt s tanding proudly,&#13;
F a cing bra v ely c lo ud e d s ki es.&#13;
Some time late r , t o my sorro w,&#13;
Brig ht n ew ins trum e nts cam e in ;&#13;
I w as carrie d o ut of h earin g,&#13;
B eca u se my ton es w e r e h a rsh and thin.&#13;
But, what else could b e exp ect ed&#13;
Fro m the life whi c h I had le d!&#13;
I r ese nte d th e intrusio n,&#13;
B ut my a n ger n o w h as fl ed .&#13;
T o con sol e m y bro k e n . s pirits,&#13;
I was sent to Thoburn H a ll,&#13;
Wh e r e I s p e nt a y ear in serving&#13;
B oys mischievous , one a nd all.&#13;
M ost unha ppy w e r e those minutes,&#13;
And I n early cam e to gri ef;&#13;
I'd like t o t ell you my exp e rie n ce,&#13;
Eut my s tory mus t b e brief.&#13;
On e bright morn in nineteen hundred,&#13;
Stude nts gay b efore m e s tood ;&#13;
I again w as u sed in c h a p el,&#13;
And I served a s b est I could.&#13;
&#13;
Th e re I h ear d the n o te d seni or s&#13;
Try orations to displa y ;&#13;
B ut h ow often in th e soarin g&#13;
Diel th eir wisd om fly a w ay.&#13;
Once so m e b oys by s m a llpox rumo r s,&#13;
Fro m . t h eir b oo k s so rud ely tor n.&#13;
T e n d a y s afte r came to c h a p e l,&#13;
With t h eir fair lock s t ig h t ly s h orn.&#13;
These sam e boys, you 'd scar ce believe il,&#13;
Caps a nd gowns at last h ave d onned;&#13;
And thi s year will leave the ir college&#13;
With th e ir di gn ity profo und.&#13;
Th e r e o n e t ime-now d o b e q uiet&#13;
While a sec r et v e il I r aiseA ll th e stud ents t ruly p r o mi sed&#13;
never m ore new b oys to h aze.&#13;
Y es, t h at year was full of b ri g h tness,&#13;
E ut a ll sce n es of j oy h a d fl ed ,&#13;
Wh e n I f o un d myself d eserted,&#13;
H earing h y mn s a b ove m y h ead.&#13;
Y ears of sorrow t h e n did foll ow,&#13;
A s I r oved from r oo m to room,&#13;
Sco rn ed a nd s li g h ted by th e s tu clen tsWith n o f ri end t o call m y own.&#13;
H o we ve r, n o w fo r prac tice s t eady&#13;
In " Music H a ll " I'm servi n g well;&#13;
E ut h o w lo n g I'll be in ser v ice&#13;
And of u se I cannot t ell.&#13;
If m y tale of interest seem e th,&#13;
&#13;
Nothin g e lse could p lease me mor e ,&#13;
Tha n to h ave you call a n d see m e,&#13;
W h e r e " 1 03" is on t h e door.&#13;
Y es, a lth ou g h I live unnoticed,&#13;
Yet m y life is not in v a in ;&#13;
F o r I h el ped to found a coll ege,&#13;
Whic h w ill live a nd g r ow in fame.&#13;
&#13;
Elocution&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Elocution&#13;
Departmnet&#13;
Claas of 06&#13;
&#13;
ROREM&#13;
WHITAKER&#13;
&#13;
FLETCHER&#13;
DAVIDSON&#13;
WHITAKER&#13;
&#13;
KILBORNE&#13;
CUSHMAN&#13;
&#13;
HE ELOCUTION DEPARTMENT is larger this year&#13;
than ever before. As the school enlarges the students&#13;
realize more and more the importance of this branch of&#13;
study. the student of elocution not only learns to&#13;
recite in pu blic, but learns also how to carry himself,&#13;
how to control the muscles, how to talk, read and interpret, bow to use the voice in speaking, and many other things invaluable to a man or woman whether before the public or merely in&#13;
social and business relations.&#13;
This department offers two courses. The prima,·y or certificate&#13;
course. The primary&#13;
or certificate course is open to any and requires two years of work for completion.&#13;
In this coul'se a good&#13;
foundation for future work is laid. The advanced or diploma course&#13;
is open only to those who have completed the primary course and are&#13;
able to class at least Junior, having finished the prescribed work in&#13;
literature. Those graduating from this course receive a diploma&#13;
which certifies that they are capable of. teaching. The certificates are&#13;
awarded this year to a class of six.&#13;
Miss Kilborne is a Junior and has completed the conservatory&#13;
course in both instrumental and vocal music. She has taken with&#13;
much success, the characters of "Dagon," the rich merchant in the&#13;
Greek scene, "Art will have No Rival," and of the " Blind Monk"&#13;
in the "Golden Leg·end," on Atheneum Publics.&#13;
Miss Rorem is a Sophomore and very active in all school interests. She showed much dramatic ability in the title role of Dido, in&#13;
the play presented by the Zetaletheans as their public of this year.&#13;
Mr. Whitaker is a member of the Sophomore class and an active&#13;
member in debate and oratory.&#13;
Mr. Cushman is a Freshman, and represented Morningside in&#13;
the state oratorical contest of this year. He is also a student in the&#13;
conservatory.&#13;
Miss Fletcher spent last year at Buena Vista College, where she&#13;
studied elocution. Sbe excells in Scotch dialect work.&#13;
Women in church and club work are beginning to appreciate&#13;
this branch of study, as shown by Mrs. J. A. Whitaker, who will&#13;
also be awarded a certificate.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
This completes a list of twenty-eight who have finished this&#13;
primary cou rse, some of whom are continuing thei r college work&#13;
that they may be eligible for the advanced course.&#13;
T he first diploma to be awarded from this department is given&#13;
this year to M iss Davidson, a Senior, who completed the certificate&#13;
course in 1902, and has since been actively engaged in pu blic reading&#13;
and in giving instruction.&#13;
&#13;
W ho&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
Who?&#13;
&#13;
foot ball '05&#13;
G. E . MILLNE R, Captain&#13;
H. K. Squires&#13;
Erwin Bre wste r&#13;
G. M. Squires&#13;
Oscar Thom pson&#13;
Frank H e ilman&#13;
P. E . DeGrisselles&#13;
L ou Hawkins&#13;
Harla n Bridenbaugh&#13;
J. C. Bass&#13;
Wyatt 0. Dowdy&#13;
N . J. Smi t h&#13;
Burton Elliott&#13;
E. J. Frye&#13;
L . E . Ed wards&#13;
&#13;
Baseball '05&#13;
VIRGIL. Feay,&#13;
Captain&#13;
A. Tumbleson&#13;
G. M. Sq uires&#13;
F . J. Ga r y&#13;
Heiman Van Dy ke&#13;
&#13;
C. N . Rissler&#13;
C. J . Wescott&#13;
Geo. E veleth&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
C. J. Wescott&#13;
G. A. Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
L onnie J one s&#13;
J . C. B ass&#13;
J esse E we r&#13;
&#13;
'05 06&#13;
&#13;
C. N . RISSLER, Ca ptain&#13;
Burton Elliott&#13;
L onnie Jones&#13;
&#13;
G. E. M illne r&#13;
Osca r Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Track '05&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
A. W. Adams&#13;
G uy A. Crow&#13;
H . N. S taples&#13;
&#13;
H . DEBENHAM, Ca ptain&#13;
C. A. Carcuff&#13;
E H . Eve rhart&#13;
L . R. Cha pma n&#13;
V . C. Feay&#13;
P. E . DeG risselles&#13;
R oy Young&#13;
H . L. Mossman&#13;
S. 0 . Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Athlectics&#13;
&#13;
Board of Control&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
SQUIRES&#13;
&#13;
CORBETT&#13;
GARVER&#13;
&#13;
BROWN&#13;
KANTHLENER&#13;
&#13;
The active management of the Athletics was formerly in the&#13;
hands of the Students' Athle tic Association, guided somewhat by a&#13;
committee of the Faculty; but with the g rowth of the school and the&#13;
increase of its atbletic activities, a more systematic method of management became necessary. The large athletic debts the n existing and&#13;
the heavy expenses incurred during each season a lso necessitated&#13;
this change.&#13;
U nde r the new system the Athletic Association is composed of&#13;
the entire students' body, th ere being no membe1·ship dues. The&#13;
duties of t he association a re ma inly to for mulate the students' opinions, to elect the students membe rs of the Board of Control, and to&#13;
co-operate in carrying out its policies.&#13;
The Board of Control which is the principal feature of the new&#13;
system, represents in its composition, Students' Faculty and Alumni.&#13;
Regular meetings are held monthly and special meetings as needed&#13;
Its officers constitute au executive committee.&#13;
·&#13;
Of the powers and duties of the Board of Control, the constitution says: "The duties of the Board of Control shall be, in general,&#13;
t o superint end all athletics undert ake n by the college and to control&#13;
the :finances thereof, for which the Board of Control shall be understood to have competent powers."&#13;
The Board works largely through a manager appointed by, and&#13;
responsible to itself. Prior to the basket ball season of 1906, this&#13;
manager was chosen from the student body but since then the Physical Director for men has served in that capacity .&#13;
Since its c r eation the Board has aided in paying off one athletic&#13;
debt, has assumed and temporarily financed all deficits, has wo rked&#13;
out a system of reports, has systematized accounts, and has drawn&#13;
rules governing- the awarding of the "M." Among the things now&#13;
being planned is a system of r ecords of athletics, sched ules, meets,&#13;
etc.&#13;
The great pressing needs of our College Athletics a r e a track&#13;
and gymnasium, to secure which the B oard is willing to render any aid&#13;
in its power. It favors the strongest schedules, which seem r easonably sure of paying out; and its ideal is pure college athletics.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
R. E. HEILMAN, BUSINESS MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
Cup WInner&#13;
John Charles Bass, '07, is for the second&#13;
time the worthy possessor of the football&#13;
trophy cup.&#13;
Of the five best players, selected by a&#13;
vote of the term at the close of the season&#13;
Mr. Bass was found to have made the&#13;
highest average in his studies, and therefore, in accordance with the regulations&#13;
laid down by the donor, Mr. A. R. Toothaker, '03, was awarded the cup.&#13;
Mr. Bass takes a prominent part in all&#13;
student activities; and whether in work of&#13;
class room, Y. M. C. A., society, or athletics he shows the same qualities that&#13;
characterized him as a football man. He&#13;
was faithful in practice, steady and&#13;
reliable in games, never shirked, al ways&#13;
the man to be called on to make the distance on the last down when a gain was&#13;
absolutely necessary, cool and confident&#13;
in a crisis, inspiring thereby confidence in&#13;
others, and thoroughly dependable.&#13;
&#13;
J. 0. BASS&#13;
&#13;
Schedule OfGames&#13;
September Morningside&#13;
College, 47; Sheldon H. S., 0.&#13;
October 7- -Morningside College, 16; Buena Vista, 0.&#13;
October 14-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 7; Creighton U ., 0.&#13;
&#13;
october 23 - Morningside College, 7; Yankton, 0.&#13;
October 30- Morningside College, 10; Bellevue, 8.&#13;
November 13--Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 5; Yankton, 6.&#13;
&#13;
November -Morn ingside College, 27; LeMars&#13;
November 23-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Ct·escents, 5.&#13;
&#13;
College, O; Iowa State Normal, 0.&#13;
&#13;
November 30--- Morningside College; S. Dak. U . (game called off.)&#13;
&#13;
L. E . EDWARDS&#13;
ALL&#13;
&#13;
Iow A 'S CENTER RUSH, '05&#13;
&#13;
A Letter from College&#13;
"Your Henry's fractured, mother dear,&#13;
Upon the gridiron sporty;&#13;
His feet betwixt the goal post near,&#13;
At fourteen yards he left an ear,&#13;
A collar bone at forty.&#13;
"A doctor now, with loving care,&#13;
His cartilage is tacking;&#13;
They say he will not miss his hair,&#13;
And nearly all his ribs are there,&#13;
Tho several bones are lacking.&#13;
"He holds his thorax with a groan&#13;
And says it hurts a little;&#13;
His coaches say, in awe-struck tone,&#13;
They'd not have done it had they known&#13;
That Henry was so brittle.&#13;
"They say that Henry didn't lack&#13;
The talent and the training;&#13;
At half he was a crackajack(You couldn't make a quarterback&#13;
Of what there is remaining).&#13;
"Alas! he had the proper stuff,&#13;
Tho rather tall and slender;&#13;
And tho his fate is somewhat rough,&#13;
'Tis not because the game's too tough,&#13;
But Henry is too tender."&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball Team&#13;
&#13;
Schedule Of Games&#13;
o&lt;n)&#13;
&#13;
March 10---Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 37; Omaha High School, 22.&#13;
&#13;
City Tournament&#13;
Played&#13;
High School . .. ...... . . ... .. .. .. .. ...... 6&#13;
Morningside ........................ . ... 6&#13;
Sioux . . ..... .. . . . . . . ........ .. . .. ... .. .. 6&#13;
Smith's V illa .............. .. ..... . ..... . 6&#13;
Browo's Business College ..... . . ........ . 6&#13;
&#13;
Schedule of Class&#13;
&#13;
Won&#13;
5&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Lost&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
P e r Ct.&#13;
.833&#13;
&#13;
.500&#13;
.500&#13;
.500&#13;
.334&#13;
&#13;
Games&#13;
&#13;
FIRST SERIES&#13;
&#13;
SECOND SERIES&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores .... .. ....... 23&#13;
Specials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32&#13;
&#13;
Juniors . .. . ... ... .... .. 10&#13;
Sophomores ............. 44&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ....... . ...... 39&#13;
Middle acad . ........... 12&#13;
&#13;
Specials . .. ..... ........ 55&#13;
Middle Acad . ........... 18&#13;
&#13;
Juniors ............... . . 43&#13;
Seniors . ................. 9&#13;
&#13;
Senio1·s . .. ....... ... .. .. 26&#13;
Senior acad .... .... . .... 14&#13;
&#13;
Senior Acad . ............ 26&#13;
Junior Acad .......... ... 21&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen ........ . ... .. 43&#13;
Junior Acad ....... ...... 15&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen .. . ... . . . ..... 28&#13;
Specials .. . ........ .... . 18&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores. . . . . . . . . . . . 27&#13;
Freshmen . . .. . ..... ... 22&#13;
&#13;
Juniors .. .... . .. .. .... . 47&#13;
senior Acad .. .. .. .. . . ... 19&#13;
&#13;
Specials . .... ... . .. . .... 29&#13;
Seniors . .. .............. 16&#13;
&#13;
Juniors . . ... ...... ... . .. 22&#13;
Freshmen ..... . ..... . .. 29&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ........... . . 25&#13;
Specials . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 28&#13;
&#13;
Sophs Champions.&#13;
&#13;
Specials Champioos.&#13;
FINALS&#13;
&#13;
Specials . ..... .. .... . ... 29&#13;
Freshmen ... ... ....... . 47&#13;
Freshmen Champions.&#13;
&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
FEAY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
GRIFFITH&#13;
RISSLER&#13;
&#13;
ELLIOTT&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
THOMPSON&#13;
WENDELL&#13;
&#13;
ROREM IMGR.1&#13;
SHAW (CAPT. I&#13;
&#13;
BRIDENBAUGH&#13;
BROWN&#13;
&#13;
F reshmen Class T eam&#13;
Champions of class basket ball Series.&#13;
SCORES&#13;
&#13;
Middle Acad . . ... . ..... .. . .... 12&#13;
Specials .. .. ... ..... . ........ . 18&#13;
Juniors ... . ... . ..... ... . .... . 22&#13;
Junior Acad . . .. .. ............ 15&#13;
Sophomores . ...... ..... ...... 27&#13;
Specials . .. .... ........... .... 29&#13;
&#13;
Freshme n&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Freshme n&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
... .. .... . . . ....... 39&#13;
. . . . . .......... . .. 28&#13;
.... . .. .. . ...... .. . 29&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . 43&#13;
...... .. . . . . ..... . . 22&#13;
. .. ................ 47&#13;
&#13;
Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
Apr.&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
7,&#13;
14,&#13;
19,&#13;
2,&#13;
8,&#13;
20,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
3, Packers 16.&#13;
6, Western Union 4.&#13;
21, Sioux City College of Medicine 7.&#13;
9, University of South Dakota 14.&#13;
9, Western Union 1.&#13;
6, Yankton 4.&#13;
&#13;
Apr. 17, Freshmen 8, Sophomores 7.&#13;
May 5, Seniors ... 13, Faculty . ... 8.&#13;
&#13;
( 6 innings. )&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Team '05&#13;
CAPT. FEAY&#13;
&#13;
A TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
WESCOTT&#13;
GARY&#13;
&#13;
SQUIRES&#13;
RISSLER&#13;
EWER&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
VAN DYKE&#13;
&#13;
Downin the county&#13;
&#13;
of the Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Now ye wearers of the M, loyal men and true,&#13;
Unfurl the blood-red banner high in the azure blue,&#13;
And join the swelling chorus, and cheer for M. C., too,&#13;
Down in the country of the Sioux.&#13;
CHORUS:&#13;
&#13;
Then for Maroon let's give a cheer!&#13;
Our college spirit can know no fear!&#13;
then all together we'll shout it loud and clear&#13;
To victory, to victory with Maroon.&#13;
Now give a song in cheering, when (other college) enters in&#13;
For she knows the day she looses, and she knows the day&#13;
we win.&#13;
And she knows our College spirit, that it lasts thru thick&#13;
and thin,&#13;
Down in the country of the Sioux.&#13;
CHORUS:&#13;
&#13;
Then altogether lustily, sing it o'er and o'er,&#13;
Let everyone be singing while M . C. makes the score.&#13;
We'll show our visitors what they never saw before,&#13;
Down in the country of the Sioux.&#13;
--A. R. TOOTHAKER.&#13;
&#13;
( Music being prepared by PROF. J. W. MATHER.)&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
records of home meet&#13;
MAY 1st, '06&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen 45 1/2,&#13;
Seniors Sr. Academy 25, Juniors 22 1/2&#13;
26,&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
19, Academy specials 10, Middle Academy 7.&#13;
50 yd.-Crow 1st, Mossman 2nd, Adams 3rd, Debenham 4th. Time,&#13;
5.5 seconds .&#13;
1st, Carcuff 2nd, Crow 3rd, Richards 4th. Time,&#13;
100 yd.-Mossman&#13;
10 4-5 seconds.&#13;
220 yd.-Debenham 1st, Mossman 2nd, Carcuff 3rd, Maynard 4th .&#13;
Time, 24 2-.5. seconds .&#13;
440 vd. --Debenham 1st, Rorem 2nd, Shaw 3rd, Wishard 4th. Time,&#13;
60 seconds.&#13;
220 Hurdle-Mossman 1st, Adams 2nd, Smith 3rd, Cushman 4th.&#13;
Ti me, 28 2-5.&#13;
88 yd. - Debenham 1st., C. F . hartzell&#13;
2nd, Staples 3rd, Day 4th.&#13;
Time, 2:24&#13;
Mile-Debenham 1st, C. F . Hartzell 2nd, Spencer 3rd, L. Jones 4th.&#13;
2 Mile-Chapman 1st, Johnson 2nd, Spencer 3rd, A. Hartzell 4th.&#13;
Pole Vault- Wescott lst, Staples and Millner 2nd, Lewis 4th .&#13;
Height 10 ft.&#13;
Running Broad Jump--Adams 1st, Rorem 2nd, Debenham 3rd Millner 4th. distance 18 ft.&#13;
Running High Jump--Cushman 1st, C. F . Hartzell 2nd, Calkins 3rd,&#13;
Root 4th . Height 5 ft. 1 in.&#13;
Shot Put--Crow 1st, Calkins 2nd, Wescott, 3rd, Reeder 4th.&#13;
Distance 31 ft. 5.5 in.&#13;
Relay One Mile--Senior Academy 1st, Juniors and Sophomores 2d,&#13;
Freshmen 3rd.&#13;
&#13;
CUP WON BY&#13;
FRE SHMEN&#13;
&#13;
H . L. Mossman&#13;
CA FTAIN FRESHMAN&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
May 15, tri-meet:&#13;
Yankton--S. Dakota U . vs. Morningside.&#13;
(Called off on account of rain. )&#13;
&#13;
May 22, Dual Meet:&#13;
Yankton 85, Morningside 24.&#13;
June 6, Tri-State-meet:&#13;
Nebraska U .- -S. Dakota U. --Morningside.&#13;
(Called off on account of rain.)&#13;
&#13;
W . H . DEBENHAM&#13;
CAPTAIN TRACK TEAM&#13;
&#13;
College Yells&#13;
Hi-ki, Hi-ki, Hi-ki, Yahl&#13;
W a boo, W aboo, Wahoo, Wah!&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
Zip Boom Bah!&#13;
&#13;
M. C. Rah! Rah!&#13;
M. C. Rah! Rab!&#13;
Hoo Rah! Hoo Rah!&#13;
M. C. Rah-Rah!!&#13;
&#13;
Who are, who are, who are we?&#13;
We are we are, old M. C.&#13;
Rush lioes we break,&#13;
Touch downs We make,&#13;
We take the cake,&#13;
Rah-Rah-Rab!&#13;
CROSS COUNTRY RUNNERS&#13;
&#13;
Zip-te picte-picte-poob!&#13;
We're from Morningside, who are you!&#13;
We'll do or die, or die to .do;&#13;
Morningside College on the Sioux!&#13;
&#13;
Oskey wow-wow&#13;
Skinney wow-wow&#13;
Morningside wow&#13;
&#13;
S-s-s-s-s-Boom-whee-Maroon&#13;
&#13;
Whoop-pee!!&#13;
Big injun !!&#13;
Muddy River!!&#13;
Packin' House!!&#13;
Sioux City!!&#13;
Morningside!!&#13;
W he-e-e-e-e-e-e-e !!&#13;
&#13;
Schedule Of Winter Meets&#13;
February 3, Indoor Track Meet.&#13;
Y. M . C. A. 36, Morningside 36.&#13;
February 10, Cross Country Run (two and one half miles.)&#13;
Y. M . C. A. 8, Morningside 28.&#13;
Home Cross Country Run.&#13;
Junior Academy 235.&#13;
Freshmen 191.&#13;
Senior Academy 128.&#13;
Academy Specials 114.&#13;
Middle Academy 62.&#13;
.Juniors 11.&#13;
&#13;
TENNIS COURTS&#13;
&#13;
T enn is&#13;
C&gt;(fi)&#13;
&#13;
The game of tennis at Morningside is one of increasing interest,&#13;
alike to students and faculty . Two double courts are excellently&#13;
equipped and located just south of the main building. The ladies'&#13;
cou rt is on the south part of the campus, and the girls spend many&#13;
a refreshing hour at this delightful game. From six in tbe morning&#13;
to seven in the evening, these localities are frequented by lovers of&#13;
t he sport. As yet no stars have been developed, but many are on the&#13;
way to perfection in the game, especially professors . Single and&#13;
dou ble tournaments are played each season, in which everyone can&#13;
be accommodated.&#13;
&#13;
Debeating&#13;
&#13;
Oratory&#13;
&#13;
occicers&#13;
President,&#13;
FAITH WooDFORD&#13;
V. President and Chairman membership Committee&#13;
GENEVIEVE HOWARD&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
HELEN WILSON&#13;
Treasurer and Chairman Finance&#13;
Committee,&#13;
MIRAH MILLS&#13;
Chairman Devotional Committee,&#13;
JEANETTE BARTLETT&#13;
Chairman Social Committee,&#13;
RubY TRIMBLE&#13;
Chairman Missionary Committee,&#13;
MARIAN MATTHEWS&#13;
Chairman lntercol legiate Committee,&#13;
EsTIE BODDY&#13;
Chairman Bible Study Committee,&#13;
BLANCHE WATTS&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
President,&#13;
GLENN Squires&#13;
V. President and Chairman Devotional Committee,&#13;
HENRY TAYLOR&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
JESSE VAN BusKIRK&#13;
Treasurer and Chairman Finance&#13;
Committee,&#13;
JoHN C. BASS&#13;
Chairman Bible Study Committee,&#13;
OSCAR C. THOMPSON&#13;
Chairman Mission Study Committee,&#13;
H. J. CALKINS&#13;
&#13;
Y. . C.&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
The Young Men's Christian Association was organized for the&#13;
purpose of uniting the Christian&#13;
effort of the young men of the&#13;
College.&#13;
It is non-sectarian, although active membership requires&#13;
affiliation with some Evangelical&#13;
church.&#13;
The work of this movement is of inestimable value to all&#13;
Christian movements.&#13;
It lessens&#13;
denominational strife, interests&#13;
young men in the study of the&#13;
Bible, serves as a recruiting station&#13;
for leadership in the church, both&#13;
for foreign and home fields, and&#13;
aids in developing a well rounded&#13;
type of manhood for all walks of&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
Y.W. C A.&#13;
The Young Women's Christian Association is an organization found in&#13;
colleges throughout the world, seeking&#13;
to further the highest interest of every&#13;
young woman who comes under its influence.&#13;
In Morningside this is accomplished&#13;
by frequent social gatherings, by Bible&#13;
bands, by mission study classes, and by&#13;
weekly devotional meetings, which are&#13;
a source of help and inspiration.&#13;
During the past year the membership&#13;
has been more than doubled, and the&#13;
work has been in every way successful.&#13;
&#13;
Housekeepers'&#13;
Club&#13;
&#13;
HARLAND L. MOSSMAN&#13;
EDWIN M . BROWN&#13;
CLARE D. HORNER&#13;
&#13;
Constitution&#13;
The purpose of this cl ub shall be the furthering of good house&#13;
keeping methods amoung those co-eds who have definitely decided to&#13;
major in this work.&#13;
This club shall also have charge of the cradle roll, which shall&#13;
consist of those who, for various reasons, such as lack of years, are&#13;
not eligible to active membership.&#13;
Badge of Honor--Matrimonail&#13;
Club Flower-- Campbells&#13;
&#13;
Knot.&#13;
"Best."&#13;
&#13;
Club !Uutto-Kein Home Without a "Homo."&#13;
Execitibe Board&#13;
Evva Erskine.&#13;
Gertrude Crossan .&#13;
E lsie Kilborne.&#13;
Blanche Spratt,.&#13;
Cheif Hustler--M&#13;
&#13;
Question :&#13;
R e solved, That&#13;
party candidates for elective offices&#13;
within the state should be nominated by a direct vote of the parties.&#13;
D ecision : Negative, three vot es.&#13;
&#13;
rs. Erskine.&#13;
&#13;
members&#13;
Mae Wood.&#13;
Elsie W eary.&#13;
&#13;
Helen Wilson.&#13;
Ethel Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
Nellie Perry.&#13;
Opal Horn beck.&#13;
Ella Dickson.&#13;
&#13;
Mae Furley.&#13;
Grace Rorem.&#13;
Zula Correll.&#13;
&#13;
Post Graduate -- Mrs. ellie&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
Taylor.&#13;
&#13;
Tabled Names&#13;
Genevieve Howard.&#13;
Myrtilla Cook.&#13;
Blanche Johns.&#13;
Members OnTrial&#13;
Ruby Trimble:&#13;
Ida Ullman .&#13;
&#13;
Lura Matteson.&#13;
Hattie Torbet.&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY B . COLLINS&#13;
EDWARD N . HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
J. RAYMOND TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition League&#13;
President . .. . . . . . . . . . . . ........ S. B. COLLINS&#13;
Secretary ........... ........... J. WHITAKER&#13;
Treasurer . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . J. G. WATERMAN&#13;
ARTHUR G. CUSHMAN, WINNER OF HOME CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
Oratory&#13;
MR. E. DEWEY&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Oratorical Association, an organization composed of all the students of the college, is a branch of the State Oratorical Association, which comprises fifteen of the main colleg·es of&#13;
the state.&#13;
At the close of the Annual Oratorical Contest, which occured&#13;
during the fall term of 1905, an announcement was made that prize&#13;
money to the a.mount of $75.00 had been secured for the winners of&#13;
future contests. The names of the donors however, were not made&#13;
public. This money is to be divided into three prizes: $50.00 to go&#13;
to the winner of first place, $15.00 to the the winner of second place,&#13;
and $10.00 to the winner of third place.&#13;
These prizes are given upon the condition that there shall be at&#13;
least six contestants, and that the local contest shallI a lways be consid&#13;
ered preliminary to the state contest which is held iu February of&#13;
each year.&#13;
This offer was made for the period of three years. If at the end&#13;
of this time the prize has had the desired effect of Stimulating oratory in the college, the amounts of the annual Prizes w11l in all probability be increased to $100.00 and the endowment maDE permanent.&#13;
Interest in oratory has been growrng for some .time among the&#13;
students manv of whom have shown marked oratorical ability; and&#13;
with this new hcentive to further efforts, we may confidentially ex&#13;
pect great things in the future, and an Oratorical Association of which&#13;
Morningside may justly be proud.&#13;
&#13;
With a representative membership, the Prohibition League has&#13;
been reorganized for a broad study of the various phases of the&#13;
liquor problem. Under its auspices the first&#13;
annual Dewey Prize Prohibition Oratorical Contest was held on March 16, 1906. Two prizes,&#13;
one $25.00 and the other $15.00 were presented&#13;
to the winners of the first and second places, by&#13;
Mr. E. Dewey, of Sargent Bluff, Iowa. In order&#13;
to encourage the contest, Mr. Dewey has promised to make this prize an annual gift.&#13;
In the&#13;
home contest there were five participants.&#13;
"John B. Gough," by Clare D. Horner winning&#13;
first place, and "In Union there is Strength,"&#13;
by H. herbert Sawyer winning second place.&#13;
the League eutertained the State Contest&#13;
and Convention on april 20 and 21, 1906, and&#13;
Mr. Horner represented Morningside College&#13;
in the Contest, winning third place.&#13;
&#13;
VAN BUSKIRK&#13;
H . TAYLOR&#13;
HAMILTON&#13;
MINKLER&#13;
BODDY&#13;
&#13;
MATTHEWS&#13;
CALKINS&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDS&#13;
TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
MOIR&#13;
COLLINS&#13;
0 . TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
Early in the history of Morningside College a strong missionary&#13;
spirit was manifest, which resulted in the organization of those who&#13;
desired to learn more of the missionary work in foreign lands. Thus&#13;
the year 1901 became memorable by the birth of the Volunteer&#13;
Band.&#13;
Each year has seen changes in our ranks, some t.emporarily leaving school, while others, hearing the voice of God saying, " Who will&#13;
go for us," like Isaiah of old, have replied, "Here am I Lord, send&#13;
me."&#13;
Their places have been filled by new recruits, who in their&#13;
pledge, promise that if God permit, they too, will spread the tidings&#13;
of great joy among the darkened nations.&#13;
There are now laboring among the Chinese, five of our number,&#13;
Lydia Trimble, Fred Trimble, Grace and Stanley Carson. Hattie and&#13;
Bruce Empey spent some time in India, but were returned on&#13;
account of Mr. Empey's failing health. However, they are now&#13;
anxiously waiting the return to the fields which ,are "white unto the&#13;
harvest."&#13;
Our present enrollment is thirteen. Of those who are still in the&#13;
home land, nine are ministers of the gospel, all are Christian workers&#13;
laboring while they wait.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Staff&#13;
Class of '07&#13;
Business Manager - J oHN c. BAss&#13;
Editor-in-cheif - D. ford RoBBINS&#13;
Historical Editor - MABLE V. TowNER&#13;
Literary Editor - MABLE E. HASKINS&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
CORA E. FREAR&#13;
&#13;
Asst. Business Mgr. - G. M. SQUIRES&#13;
asst. Editor-in-Chief&#13;
- - - - FAITH F. WOODFORD&#13;
Athletic Editor - HARRY N. STAPLES&#13;
Cartoon Editor&#13;
PERRY E. FREDENDOLL&#13;
Joke Editor&#13;
ELSIE I. KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside- Fayette Debate&#13;
Our men who represented us in debate against&#13;
Upper Iowa University, upholding the negative.&#13;
&#13;
EDWIN N HIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
H. HERBERT SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
''Resolved, That it would be impolitic for&#13;
the United States to suhsidize a merchant&#13;
marine engaged in foreign carrying trade."&#13;
The decision of the judges was: Affi. rmative two, negative one.&#13;
&#13;
GRINDS&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
Earl&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Hopk&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
April 8&#13;
April 10&#13;
April 11&#13;
April 13&#13;
&#13;
April 15&#13;
&#13;
April 17&#13;
April 19&#13;
&#13;
Registration day.&#13;
'07 votes to publish a "Junior&#13;
Annual."&#13;
Y. W. C. A. picnic.&#13;
B lanch e&#13;
Spratt&#13;
authorizes&#13;
calendar committee to announce h e r engagem ent.&#13;
Harry Staples' birthday.&#13;
Gruber, after escor ting his&#13;
lady to&#13;
"Viola Allen," is&#13;
obliged to return to Mornings ide after his tickets.&#13;
Ford Robbins' birthday.&#13;
Robbins and J. R. Tumbleson&#13;
go home at 12: 10 at a suggestion from Mr. Frary.&#13;
Soph o m o r e-Fr eshm an&#13;
baseball game, 8 to 8.&#13;
Morningside wins over Sioux&#13;
City Medics in base ball, 21 to&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
7.&#13;
&#13;
April 20&#13;
April 21&#13;
&#13;
April 22&#13;
&#13;
April 23&#13;
April 24&#13;
&#13;
April 25&#13;
&#13;
April 26&#13;
April 27&#13;
April 28&#13;
April 29&#13;
&#13;
Perry asks a lady f riend to g 0&#13;
to Tan nh auser b ut fails to get&#13;
tickets.&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
breakfast&#13;
for&#13;
Atheneums at Killam's. Holid ay on account of the teachers' assoc iatio n. Effie sells her&#13;
seat ticket. Perry is offe ring&#13;
doubl e price for tickets, but&#13;
finds non e .&#13;
A theneums entertain the Aesthesians and Crescents.&#13;
C hapel attendants pose for the&#13;
camera.&#13;
Perry still lookin g for t ic k ets.&#13;
Th e opera " Tannhause r" is&#13;
given.&#13;
Effie buys back her&#13;
ticket and sits in the first balcony. Perry makes a rush.&#13;
Students cease flunking a nd&#13;
look pleasant for a time, while&#13;
the c lass rooms are photograph ed.&#13;
Major H. M. Chittendon, of U.&#13;
S. army, g ives a talk on Yelstone Park.&#13;
Seniors c h a ll e nge faculty to a&#13;
base ball game.&#13;
E ll a T oenj es gives h er violin&#13;
graduatin g recital. Debate at&#13;
Fayette.&#13;
Stockman takes the student&#13;
census in c h apel.&#13;
&#13;
May 10&#13;
May 1 2&#13;
&#13;
May 13&#13;
May 15&#13;
May 16&#13;
&#13;
May 17&#13;
May 18&#13;
May 19&#13;
May 20&#13;
May 22&#13;
&#13;
May 23&#13;
&#13;
May 27&#13;
May 30&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen confirm their relation to the Sparta n s by win ning the prize c up in the home&#13;
field meet.&#13;
Carson and Luce&#13;
w in s ilver medal in Hawkeye&#13;
debating contest.&#13;
Baseball with Vermillion. "In&#13;
absence of all musicians" Miss&#13;
Davidson plays in chapel.&#13;
McCay tells of the debate at&#13;
Fayette.&#13;
Miss L oveland seen&#13;
fanning and&#13;
Miss Dimmitt&#13;
catch in g flies.&#13;
Seniors appear in caps and&#13;
gowns. Lucile Peck and Chas.&#13;
Keller, piano grad u ating recital.&#13;
Rabbi Eugene&#13;
Mannheimer&#13;
uph olds realism an d id ealism in&#13;
a c h apel add r ess.&#13;
Seniors excel faculty In brawn&#13;
if not in brain. Score, 8 to 13.&#13;
Dr. Lewis e ntertains the Senio r s .&#13;
Morningside wins over Western&#13;
Union in base ball, 9 to 1.&#13;
Elsie Kilbourne's birthday.&#13;
Rev. Frizzell speaks at chapel&#13;
on "Our Own Great Problem."&#13;
Claire Wishard e nte rtains class&#13;
of 19 07 and t h eir friends.&#13;
Orchestra and glee club entertainm ent. Dean Campbell put&#13;
precept in to practice by loan i ng&#13;
Mr. Sawyer a quarter to buy a&#13;
ticket.&#13;
Prof. Van Horn planted his potatoes "while the rain came&#13;
drifting clown."&#13;
Manning's birthday.&#13;
Mrs. Bailey addresses women&#13;
of the school. Fi e ld meet at&#13;
Vermillion.&#13;
Junior- Senior banquet.&#13;
William McCay's birthday.&#13;
Miss Woodford falls into Dr.&#13;
Wylie's arms on rising from the&#13;
laboratory table.&#13;
Misses Hart and Bryan gradu ating recital.&#13;
Academy debate with Grinn ell.&#13;
Ch apel address by Miss Whitney, state Y. W. C. A. secretary.&#13;
Student body goes wild ove r&#13;
athletic debt payment.&#13;
Morningsi de 24, vs. Yankton&#13;
25, in field m eet. May festival&#13;
begins. Choral uni on presents&#13;
the Stabat Mater.&#13;
Orch estra concert, and "Mess iah" rendered by choral uni on.&#13;
"Whoops of the Sioux" is out.&#13;
Tri-state meet prevented by&#13;
Father P luvius.&#13;
Memorial day. Some unruly&#13;
students c e lebrate.&#13;
Dr. B lue,&#13;
agitated, l ectures to innocent&#13;
freshmen on stud ents' disregard&#13;
for authority.&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Jun e&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 10&#13;
Puzzle&#13;
find&#13;
&#13;
P icture&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
party&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 11&#13;
June 12&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 13&#13;
&#13;
Jun e 14&#13;
Jun e 1 5&#13;
Jun e 16&#13;
&#13;
Chapel address by Rev. G. w.&#13;
S. Brown, of Indianola.&#13;
Annual inte r-society program,&#13;
"The New H amlet."&#13;
Dean&#13;
e nte rta in s&#13;
patriotc stud en ts&#13;
in honor of their memorial celebration.&#13;
Philomatheans' annual trip up&#13;
the river.&#13;
Faculty picnic a t&#13;
Riverside.&#13;
Prof. Lewis lakes&#13;
the c hildr en on the merry-goround.&#13;
Graduating exerc ises of&#13;
the&#13;
Othonians, and of the P hilom ath ea n s a nd Ath eneums.&#13;
Graduating recital of Lilian&#13;
Shum a k e r&#13;
and Ch as. Hargreaves.&#13;
Rev. Mattison, of&#13;
Sioux Rapids, leads devotions.&#13;
Normal graduating exercises.&#13;
Sophomores go to Riverside.&#13;
Seniors h ave&#13;
picnic-Debby&#13;
and lady wash dish es.&#13;
Graduation of elocution department.&#13;
raccalaureate address.&#13;
Academy&#13;
graduation.&#13;
Ida&#13;
L e wi s, gesturing toward her&#13;
father while d eliv ering her&#13;
o ration: " Let us look back to&#13;
our own h ea th e n ancestry."&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
graduates receive&#13;
th eir dip :omas.&#13;
Miss&#13;
E ancroft, field secreta1 y of W.&#13;
F. M. S., speaks at c h ape l.&#13;
Annual r e union of soc ieties.&#13;
Stanley Collins' birthday.&#13;
Commencement address&#13;
by&#13;
Dr. Geo. E. Vin cent.&#13;
School's o ut .&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
J a nuary&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
J a nuary&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
January 10&#13;
January 11&#13;
January 1 2&#13;
January 14&#13;
January 15&#13;
&#13;
January 17&#13;
January 18&#13;
January 19&#13;
January 20&#13;
January 22&#13;
January 23&#13;
&#13;
January 24&#13;
&#13;
January 26&#13;
&#13;
January 27&#13;
January 28&#13;
&#13;
January 30&#13;
&#13;
e.h&#13;
January, 31&#13;
&#13;
The new y ear finds Sioux&#13;
City just r ecovering from&#13;
the mad clog scare.&#13;
Students return.&#13;
Greynald lin es up the students at the classification&#13;
office.&#13;
Y . W. C. A. "Jim" frolic.&#13;
Z et -Otho promenade.&#13;
Dean starts a n ew chapel&#13;
habit&#13;
by s inging&#13;
three&#13;
v e rses of 61 and 241.&#13;
Dr. Mitchell in a chapel address e ncourages the faculty to matrimony.&#13;
Chemistry students visit the&#13;
br ewery.&#13;
Y. M. C. A. "Mary" frolic.&#13;
Girls get a goodly share of&#13;
the apples.&#13;
Fair-haire d trio of youths&#13;
pass the chapel cards.&#13;
Anniversary of a&#13;
great&#13;
event-the birth of our class&#13;
pres ident.&#13;
Prof. Math er,&#13;
contrary to the dean's instructions, wears his hat in&#13;
th e corridor.&#13;
W. P. Manley's address on&#13;
"Qualities&#13;
of&#13;
Success."&#13;
Sophomore party at Clark's.&#13;
Dr. Shaw addresses the&#13;
school. Genevieve and L ee&#13;
see Ben Hur.&#13;
Myrtilla and her mothe r see&#13;
Ben Hur.&#13;
Song at a Japanese program proves to be Swedish.&#13;
Stanley Collins goes home&#13;
hatl ess from Trimbles at&#13;
11:59 p. m.&#13;
Miss F e rguson very absentmindedly goes to her c lass&#13;
room at 7 a. m . instead of&#13;
going to breakfast. Probably thinking of that German exam.&#13;
W a terman excused from&#13;
physics class. Juniors win&#13;
over Seniors in baske t ball,&#13;
43 to 9. "Foul" on Minkler.&#13;
L ee, Genevieve and MyrtilJa go down town together.&#13;
W escott misses the last car&#13;
out, pawns his overcoat and&#13;
stays down town.&#13;
Genevieve plays role of bottl e washer in chem. Jab.&#13;
"Greens" win in Y. W. C. A.&#13;
m embe rship contest. Heilman takes a short cut clown&#13;
stairs, landing uncere moniously in Mrs. Killam's bedroom.&#13;
"Leaf the Lucky" after&#13;
r eading sign on W est "Piology lab, takes refuge and&#13;
dinner on Chapman's bed.&#13;
Dr. Gwilym begins series of&#13;
Bible talks.&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
&#13;
Giger Fry makes his celebrated analysis of buckwheat flour. Nice to have&#13;
a "chemist" handy when&#13;
the pancakes refuse to be&#13;
light.&#13;
2 Millner and Kilborne talk&#13;
in a round-about way at&#13;
the opera house. Groundhog sees his shadow.&#13;
5 Garver forgets his necktie.&#13;
6 Dr. Gwilym at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
Miss&#13;
Bunting&#13;
conducts&#13;
choral union.&#13;
Fears Mr.&#13;
Eggleston has gone without her.&#13;
8 Mr. Maxwell, soloist, entertains chapel attendants.&#13;
10 Jackson-Sammis&#13;
concert&#13;
con1pany.&#13;
Morningside's&#13;
"cross country men" wni&#13;
over Y. M. C. A., 28 to 8.&#13;
Coldest day of the year.&#13;
12 Westcott and Gary break&#13;
up a spread at Killam's.&#13;
Biology majors work for&#13;
"A" grades by scrubbing&#13;
and cleaning up the lab.&#13;
"Everybody worked&#13;
but&#13;
Robbins. He sat around&#13;
all day."&#13;
Warmest day&#13;
of the winter, and that&#13;
night it rained.&#13;
13 Weather man makes up&#13;
for lost time by sending a&#13;
b lizzard.&#13;
14 St. Valentine's day celebrated; numerous parties&#13;
Middles entertain Seniors.&#13;
Hard times at Millner's.&#13;
15 Senior sleighride.&#13;
16 Morningside wins in Academic debate with Simpson.&#13;
17 Freshman bob party.&#13;
p r e s en t&#13;
19 Zetaletheans&#13;
Queen Dido.&#13;
20 Dr. Lyman Sperry in a&#13;
chapel address defines a&#13;
Freshwater college as a&#13;
western&#13;
co-educational&#13;
school. D. Ford Robbins'&#13;
birthday.&#13;
and Mrs. Perkins,&#13;
21 Mr.&#13;
missionaries from Liberia,&#13;
visit chapel.&#13;
Junior basket ball team&#13;
appears in new white jerseys with maroon Indian&#13;
heads,&#13;
defeating Senior&#13;
preps, 40 to 20.&#13;
washday"&#13;
22 "Birthington's&#13;
address by Hon. Geo. D.&#13;
Perkins.&#13;
23 John Eass again receives&#13;
honor of having his name&#13;
on trophy cup.&#13;
"M's"&#13;
awarded.&#13;
27 Fredendoll goes to chapel.&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Euton signs away&#13;
an express package by signing her name to a gymnasium petition. Consequently&#13;
Gary and Westcott have . a&#13;
spread.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Cora Frear's birthday.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Hilton's&#13;
overcoat&#13;
gets&#13;
a&#13;
streetcar ride. Shadowy creatures from other world take&#13;
Hawkins for a stroll.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Miss Robbins talks on&#13;
Philippines.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Nashviile delegates return.&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Faculty concert. Prof. Garver's birthday. according to&#13;
calendar of 1905.&#13;
&#13;
March 10&#13;
&#13;
Basket ball. Morningside 37,&#13;
Omaha 27.&#13;
Dunbar entertainers give the&#13;
last number of the lecture&#13;
course.&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical contest. Clair D. Horner won.&#13;
St. Patrick's day.&#13;
Y. W.&#13;
cabinet&#13;
celebrate&#13;
Faith&#13;
Woodford's birthday at her&#13;
home in Sargeant's Bluffs.&#13;
Mrs. Taylor's birthday.&#13;
"Lohengrin" given at the opera house.&#13;
Miss Eun ting,&#13;
Miss Cook and Prof. Lewis&#13;
wait to see "Elsa" and miss&#13;
the last car out.&#13;
2 a . m.&#13;
Prof. Lewis and&#13;
Miss Cook walking home.&#13;
Miss Bunting, at a hotel,&#13;
thinks it is&#13;
morning and&#13;
dresses to go home.&#13;
Philo&#13;
court assembles to try $100,000 damage case.&#13;
Term&#13;
concert.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
win final game of basket ball&#13;
tournament.&#13;
Prof. Brown entertains the&#13;
normal students.&#13;
Miss Ferguson is stiJl writing&#13;
questions for an 11:35 exam.&#13;
when the 12: 3 0 bells ring.&#13;
Calendar committee resigns&#13;
in favor of "1908."&#13;
&#13;
March 15&#13;
&#13;
March 16&#13;
March 17&#13;
&#13;
March 18&#13;
March 19&#13;
&#13;
March 20&#13;
&#13;
March 21&#13;
March 22&#13;
&#13;
March 23&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
How do you happen to be here? "&#13;
PERRY: " Oh, just happened in was all."&#13;
(Aside. ) " Why doesn 't she come?"&#13;
(Doors close. No Lillian appears.)&#13;
SCENE 4.&#13;
(Program over. He is properly roasted.)&#13;
He tumbles.&#13;
&#13;
September 4 to 13&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
September&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
AN UNLOOKED FOR CONFESSION&#13;
&#13;
Enforced Vacation,&#13;
A VICTIM OF CIRCUMSTANCES&#13;
SCENE 1- A girl's room, 2 p. m.&#13;
Evva: "Are you girls going to program&#13;
tonight? "&#13;
LILLIAN: "I don't think so."&#13;
ETHEL: "Perry is going, isn't he?"&#13;
LILLIAN:&#13;
"No, for he never goes unless I&#13;
take him."&#13;
EvvA: " I am going to tell him at supper&#13;
time that you sent word for him to meet you&#13;
at program."&#13;
LILLIAN: "Well, all right, but I'll phone&#13;
him not to go."&#13;
S CENE 2- At supper.&#13;
EvvA: (To Perry) Lillian told me to tell&#13;
you to meet her at the program tonight."&#13;
PERRY:&#13;
"Thank you, Evva, for your&#13;
trouble."&#13;
ScENE 3- Atheneum Hall, 8 p. m.&#13;
Perry sits waiting&#13;
(Crowd gathering.&#13;
patiently for Lillian.) "l was so afraid I'd&#13;
be late, but I g uess I'm alright. That dishwashing is certainly a job, especially when&#13;
Mrs. Thom has a dozen and sixty cans&#13;
stacked up. Mighty glad I didn't have to go&#13;
clear over to Shumaker's in the mud this&#13;
night, and by cracky ---."&#13;
Mc. CAY: (Leaning over) "Well, Perry!&#13;
&#13;
E LSIE: " Was Santa Cl a us good to you,&#13;
Ella?"&#13;
ELLA : " Yes, indeed. I got so many nice&#13;
presents. What did you get, Gertie?"&#13;
GERTIE: " Well , my little brother gave&#13;
me a nice silver th imble; the only one I ever&#13;
possessed, - - - :·&#13;
ELSIE: "Why, Gertie, haven't you ever&#13;
sewed much? "&#13;
GERTIE: " No, l never had the time, but&#13;
after school is out this year I'll just have to&#13;
get at it."&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
Septemb er&#13;
&#13;
Septemb er&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
Miss P ERRY:&#13;
(Confidently to a Junior&#13;
friend .) " ls that joke on Miss Bunting and&#13;
Prof. Lewis in the Junior Annua l?"&#13;
JUNIOR : (S ympathetically.) " Which one&#13;
and I 'II tell you?"&#13;
Miss PERRY: "The one about the time&#13;
when he helped her from the car right into&#13;
the mud."&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
Septemb er&#13;
&#13;
After&#13;
&#13;
Johnson and Mathematics are not on Speaking&#13;
Terms,&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Football camp at&#13;
Riverside.&#13;
12 a nd 13 Registr ation.&#13;
1 5 Y. W. C. A. r eception.&#13;
1 9 D ean Campbell, in explaining the order In&#13;
leaving&#13;
ch apel:&#13;
"The&#13;
Seniors retire first."&#13;
2 1 Mass meeting for f ootball.&#13;
Eirth of college&#13;
spirit.&#13;
22 Reception&#13;
for Stanley&#13;
Dr.&#13;
a nd Grace Carson.&#13;
Soltau add resses stud ents.&#13;
23 Miss H enshaw, state sec~&#13;
retary of Y. W. C. A.,&#13;
gives&#13;
chapel&#13;
address.&#13;
Atheneum's annual hayrack ride.&#13;
26&#13;
Mass&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Adelphian-Aesth esia n&#13;
ravine&#13;
party.&#13;
27&#13;
Zetaleth ean picnic. Dr.&#13;
Milton Daily talks on&#13;
"Student's Car e of His&#13;
H ealth. "&#13;
29&#13;
Lecture by Governor La&#13;
F ollette of Wisconsin.&#13;
30 Freshmen ch a llenge any&#13;
c:ass in school to a game&#13;
of football. First yea r&#13;
Norm als accept.&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
October 10&#13;
October 12&#13;
October 14&#13;
October 16&#13;
October 18&#13;
&#13;
October 19&#13;
&#13;
October 20&#13;
October 21&#13;
October 21&#13;
Octobe r 23&#13;
&#13;
October 24&#13;
October 25&#13;
&#13;
October 26&#13;
October 27&#13;
October 28&#13;
&#13;
October 30&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
Octob e r 31&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye-Crescent picnic at&#13;
Riverside.&#13;
Watermelon hunt.&#13;
Miss Gregg tells the students of India.&#13;
Freshmen amuse themselves&#13;
with a stuffed stocking at&#13;
Brown's.&#13;
Suspension.&#13;
Lecture by Dr. Geo. Heber&#13;
Jones.&#13;
Dr. Jones begins series of&#13;
chapel talks lasting till the&#13;
13th.&#13;
Morningside football team&#13;
scores over Eeuna Vista 16&#13;
to 0.&#13;
Dr. Lewis addresses city Y.&#13;
M. C. A.&#13;
Wylie forgets his morphology class.&#13;
Arthur Tumbleson "gets it&#13;
in the neck" at the dining&#13;
hall.&#13;
Mable Haskins' birthday.&#13;
Zet-Otho hall steamed.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
wins&#13;
over&#13;
Creighton 7 to 0. "Suspenders" broken.&#13;
Leona Delays' birthday.&#13;
Recital of Miss Bunting, assisted&#13;
by&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Mather.&#13;
Harry Staples, detained by&#13;
the Othos, disappoints Nellie Perry.&#13;
"All m e mbers of the choral&#13;
union please remain seated&#13;
without marching out."&#13;
Blood and Taylor test the&#13;
properties&#13;
of&#13;
hydrogen.&#13;
First snow of the season.&#13;
Inter-society d e bate.&#13;
No. 136 substituted by a&#13;
new song.&#13;
and 22 Bible institute.&#13;
Morningside vs. Yankton, 7&#13;
to O. Edwards takes clown&#13;
a stove and students in general indulge in "spoons" at&#13;
Yankton.&#13;
Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Campbell entertain the faculty.&#13;
Ice cream stolen.&#13;
Heilman and Horner call&#13;
on Mrs. Campbell for particulars.&#13;
(N. E.-they got them.)&#13;
Librarian carries dogs from&#13;
the library.&#13;
Mass meeting.&#13;
Prof.&#13;
Lewis, while with&#13;
Miss Howard, forgets&#13;
his&#13;
car fare.&#13;
Mr. Davidson&#13;
comes to his rescue.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
wins&#13;
over&#13;
Eellvue, 10 to 8.&#13;
Ghosts&#13;
visit the&#13;
Philo-Atheneum&#13;
hall.&#13;
.&#13;
Prof. Haynes loses his dignity by falling down stairs.&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
Novem ber&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
November 10&#13;
November 11&#13;
&#13;
Mable Towner's birthday.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Sophomore&#13;
bean pole scrap.&#13;
History IV. has a game&#13;
o_ "tit-tat-toe" in which&#13;
f&#13;
Prof. Garver joins.&#13;
Dr. Powell&#13;
talks&#13;
on&#13;
"Care of the Eyes."&#13;
Oratorical contest.&#13;
Arthur G. Cushman won.&#13;
"Mark&#13;
your&#13;
chapel&#13;
seats."&#13;
Glen&#13;
Squires'&#13;
birthday.&#13;
&#13;
November 13&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
against&#13;
Yankton-"'Nuff&#13;
said."&#13;
Thornton&#13;
announcing&#13;
Aclelphian&#13;
program:&#13;
"Next will be a pantorium."&#13;
&#13;
November 14&#13;
&#13;
No music at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
November 15&#13;
&#13;
Senior&#13;
preps attacking&#13;
middle colors in hall are&#13;
scattered by Dr. Wylie.&#13;
Corwin Taylor's birthday.&#13;
Dean waxes eloquent over&#13;
"college habits."&#13;
&#13;
November 16&#13;
November 17&#13;
&#13;
Middles&#13;
entertained at&#13;
Bloocl',s .&#13;
Seniors driven&#13;
out at the point of a gun.&#13;
&#13;
November 18-Atheneum grand&#13;
&#13;
public.&#13;
&#13;
November 20&#13;
&#13;
'IE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside vs. LeMars,&#13;
2 7 to 5.&#13;
Jesse DuBois' birthday.&#13;
&#13;
November 21&#13;
&#13;
Dean appears at chapel&#13;
with a black eye-his&#13;
first appearance since his&#13;
oratorical debut.&#13;
&#13;
November 24&#13;
&#13;
Geography class doesn't&#13;
meet.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
vs.&#13;
State&#13;
Normal, 0 to 0- (in favor&#13;
of Morningside).&#13;
&#13;
November 25&#13;
&#13;
November 26&#13;
&#13;
Col:ege Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
November 29&#13;
&#13;
Big mass meeting. Foot&#13;
ball boys break training.&#13;
&#13;
November 30&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion&#13;
calls&#13;
off&#13;
Thanksgiving game on&#13;
account of "cold feet."&#13;
Mr. Pennett's birthday.&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Decem ber&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
December 11&#13;
&#13;
December 13&#13;
December 15&#13;
December 16&#13;
December 20&#13;
&#13;
December 28&#13;
&#13;
December 31&#13;
&#13;
Isabell Garghill Beecher&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
Fredendoll celebrates his&#13;
? teenth birthday.&#13;
Students try to forget&#13;
turkey, and bury themselves again&#13;
in their&#13;
books.&#13;
Coach Griffith entertains&#13;
the foot ball boys.&#13;
E ll a Dickson's birthday.&#13;
Foot ball team again entertained, at Millner's.&#13;
Hawkins announces his&#13;
life ambition is to be bald&#13;
headed.&#13;
Zets and Atheneums present "Dickens'&#13;
Christmas Carol."&#13;
Term torture begins.&#13;
Mr. Nichol's birthday.&#13;
MacDonald's&#13;
Martha&#13;
birthday.&#13;
Dean Campbell's Christmas presents-grades (A&#13;
for good c hildren).&#13;
Myrtilla_ goes to the train&#13;
with Prof. Lewis.&#13;
Genevieve meets him at&#13;
sac City.&#13;
Edwin Brown, by his&#13;
brilliant conversation detains his lady friend at&#13;
the depot till h er train&#13;
leaves. Mean th in g! he&#13;
made poor e lanche miss&#13;
a whole day of schoo!!&#13;
&#13;
Miss LOVELAND, in Literature class: "Mr.&#13;
Eggleston will you please scan the third&#13;
verse of the poem?"&#13;
MR. E.: "I cannot for the reason that I&#13;
am not clear on my feet."&#13;
STUDENT:&#13;
what if the college would&#13;
burn!"&#13;
JOHNSON : "I hope it won't, I would not be&#13;
able to remove my conditions."&#13;
Early one cold, winter morning.&#13;
Miss Ferguson nearing the coliege.&#13;
"I do hope that class will have those verbs&#13;
good today--.&#13;
"Wonder why the college seems so deserted? Seems queer more window curtains aren't up - - .&#13;
"I guess I'll give a test to-morrow - "Why!! this door is locked !&#13;
"What can be the matter! ! ! !&#13;
"It surely is nearly eight-thirty. (Looking at her watch) It is only seven. No wonder it is dark. I remember now. I was just&#13;
starting out for breakfast. l do hope no one&#13;
saw me up here at this unearthly hour."&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson Will Steal No More Pancakes.&#13;
THE ABSENT MINDED.&#13;
T IME : Registration day.&#13;
P LACE: Dean's office.&#13;
Prof. Haynes enters, but is obliged to wait&#13;
his turn as the office is filled .&#13;
When finally he is allowed to speak, words&#13;
fail him.&#13;
PROF. HAYNES: "Why, Prof. Campbell, I&#13;
forgot what I came for."&#13;
PLACE: The English room.&#13;
Miss Loveland sits half dazed correcting a&#13;
pile of examination papers.&#13;
Someone knocks.&#13;
Miss Loveland goes to the door, instead&#13;
of admitting her company, begins herself to&#13;
knock.&#13;
&#13;
E.H.&#13;
Heilman Falls Thirty-Two, Steps.&#13;
&#13;
PLACE: Miss Dimmitt's room.&#13;
Mr. McCay patiently sits waiting for a&#13;
student to appear.&#13;
Miss DIMMITT (entering): "Come right in,&#13;
Mr. McCay! ! D id you want to see me?"&#13;
McCAY : "Don't you realize that you are&#13;
the one who came in?"&#13;
"Miss DIMMITT, (falling into a seat) laughs&#13;
until end of period.&#13;
&#13;
QuESTION: "What advantage is there in&#13;
going to a small college?"&#13;
GENEVIEVE : "One gets in closer touch&#13;
with the faculty."&#13;
Prof. Greynald answers a knock in French&#13;
class.&#13;
" Miss Wilson, your neighbor in chapel&#13;
wishes to see you."&#13;
[n college physics.&#13;
STAPLES: " What is that third letter, professor?"&#13;
Mc DOWELL:&#13;
"The kindergarten is on&#13;
the second floor, Mr. Staples."&#13;
A Misunderstanding&#13;
&#13;
Hilton Fools " Con,'' but Looses O vercoat.&#13;
HOW THEY BAWLED H[M OUT.&#13;
SCENE: A boy's room.&#13;
FRANK: "Mrs. Killam will be up to-day&#13;
for the room rent."&#13;
JACK: "I'll be a minus quantity if she&#13;
does."&#13;
RALPH: "Jack, you're treasurer. Here&#13;
she comes; get into the closet."&#13;
DEAN CAMPBELL enters. "How do you do,&#13;
boys?"&#13;
Explanation follows. Jack comes from&#13;
closet.&#13;
Did you hear it?&#13;
can tell you.&#13;
&#13;
LuRA: " Oh, girls! I do wish I could hear&#13;
Katharine Ridgeway tonight!"&#13;
ARCHIE (standing near with some other&#13;
boys): "What would you say if one of us&#13;
should ask you?"&#13;
LuRA: "Turn you down of course."&#13;
ARCHIE: ··would you if I should ask you?"&#13;
LURA (th inking he meant being turned&#13;
down): "Of course."&#13;
Later in the evening she ascended with&#13;
Archi e into a box in the balcony. "All's&#13;
well that ends well."&#13;
EDWARDS \Chemistry exam.): ·'Well, Prof.&#13;
Lewis, here are a few stray thoughts that&#13;
I have jotted down. You can take them for&#13;
what they are worth."&#13;
&#13;
If not, Hattie Tarbet&#13;
&#13;
ON THE DEAN.&#13;
PROF. CAMPBELL:&#13;
"There will be no&#13;
preachers in heaven."&#13;
MR. SAWYER: "Who then can be saved?"&#13;
CAMPBELL: "According to the calling regulations, people who are not engaged are&#13;
supposed to depart at 10 o'clock. Those&#13;
who are engaged are supposed to depart at&#13;
10 too."&#13;
At 10:02 Mr. Shaw bids Miss Ellis goodbye.&#13;
&#13;
AT THE SENIOR PICNIC.&#13;
"Debby and Erskine" went to the brook&#13;
after dinner to wash the dishes (consisting&#13;
of two cups and two teaspoons ), so they&#13;
said. Two hours later they returned.&#13;
Note- An intelligent senior who didn't go&#13;
to the brook discovered later, among the&#13;
pile of dishes, two sticky cups.&#13;
George declares that the earthquake&#13;
shock at Kilborne's was only a case of&#13;
domestic felicity. However, the new window glass cost him $2.50:&#13;
&#13;
MR. HORNBECK (after having searched&#13;
vainly for his umbrellas): " S on, where are&#13;
those two umbrellas of mine?"&#13;
L ITTLE SoN: "Oh, I know where they are!&#13;
Horace took one night before last when it&#13;
was raining and I guess he took the other&#13;
one last night for when he was leaving I&#13;
heard him say, "Give me one more, darling,&#13;
just one more.''&#13;
&#13;
Wickens made a call one evening at the&#13;
genial quarters of McCay and Kleippel, and&#13;
during the course of the evening took young&#13;
Willi am upon his knee. "By the way, Frank,"&#13;
he remarked, "Willie is about as heavy as&#13;
Miss T- -y." Willie's struggles for the next&#13;
half hour to secure his rights as a free A merican citizen may be imagined.&#13;
&#13;
"l have an engagement with ·the map of&#13;
Germany."- SQUIRES.&#13;
i. e.: He didn't have his " Dutch.''&#13;
&#13;
Lights out in 10 Minutes.&#13;
&#13;
Why is it Heilman and Weary always&#13;
have to be told to get off the street car&#13;
when they reach Peters' Park?&#13;
MR. COLLI NS: " Miss Johnson will you&#13;
help make frappe for tomorrow evening?''&#13;
Miss J . : "! guess so, how many will&#13;
there be?"&#13;
MR. C. : "Four girls."&#13;
Miss J.: " Oh ! say, but we'll need some&#13;
boys to do the squeezing."&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude Crossan's little brother, after&#13;
teasi ng to come out to college with her and&#13;
not securing her consent, says as a final resort, "l wont tell them anything about K indig, not even if they would give me a penny."&#13;
&#13;
meeting of R-R-r-r-r tor-r-rcls-ss-s-sbashontoday.&#13;
&#13;
SCENE&#13;
The hour of Midnight. A lone woman stands&#13;
near the brink of a mirky pool.&#13;
Three little maids wending their way&#13;
homeward after some festivity, see the figure standing by the pool; vague horrors flit&#13;
through their minds. Perchance some demented creature has escaped from her restraining bands; or it may be that some&#13;
broken heart seeks to drown its sorrows in&#13;
the blackness of the pool!&#13;
SOLUTION- It was only Florence Davidson&#13;
iistening to the croaking of the frogs a nd trying to find out how they did it&#13;
SUGGESTIVE&#13;
HORACE CLASs- (Ray Tumbleson translating) "With you I would love to live, with you&#13;
I would gladly die."&#13;
(To McCay) "Gee whi z, Kid!&#13;
Wouldn't&#13;
that make a dandy proposal? It may come&#13;
in handy some time."&#13;
&#13;
Where Do You Room, Heilman?&#13;
At Home- Pole No. 16745.&#13;
&#13;
Jay Whitaker's little sister in Sunday&#13;
school class: (Teacher was telling the children that it was wrong to work on Sunday)&#13;
"Say, my brother irons on Sunday! "&#13;
&#13;
WANTED, by Horace Groom- Any kind&#13;
of a job, just so that he can spend his summer evenings at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
"Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he&#13;
also reap." If he soweth neg! igence he shall&#13;
reap flunks; if he soweth skips he shall reap&#13;
specials.&#13;
&#13;
AT ROLL CALL&#13;
Miss FERGUSON: "Miss Wilson: "&#13;
Wilson: "Hello!"&#13;
PROF. VAN HORN. " MR. JOHNSON: '&#13;
Ullman: "Here!"&#13;
&#13;
One of the new Normal students, coming&#13;
into the biology lecture room where the&#13;
class in morphology of pteridophytes was&#13;
in session: "Is this the mother tongue&#13;
class?"&#13;
&#13;
SOME MINDS RUN IN SAME CHANNEL.&#13;
(ENGLISH LITERATURE GLASS.)&#13;
Miss L.: " Miss Weary, will you give a&#13;
familiar quotation found in the scene between Romeo and Juliet on the balcony?"&#13;
Miss W.: "'Parting is such sweet sorrow.'"&#13;
Miss L.: " Mr. Heilman, will you give another?' '&#13;
MR. H.: "A thousand times good-night. "&#13;
&#13;
"I am so contented at Morningside- NELLIE&#13;
PERRY.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHERN LADY: " I know Mr. Taylor is&#13;
not married, for a married man can keep&#13;
his mouth closed."&#13;
&#13;
Miss LOVELAND: " Romeo and Paris were&#13;
very different in nature. Romeo was passionate and went to Juliet to urge his own&#13;
suit, while Paris went to Juliet's father to&#13;
gain his consent to woo his daughter. That&#13;
was alright, wasn't it?"&#13;
MR. HARTZELL: "No, indeed, [ don 't think&#13;
&#13;
R. TUMBLESON: If I found out who scattered those cartoons I'd teli the faculty."&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Roy Barrick, when asked concerning a&#13;
certain consignment of typewriting for the&#13;
annual replied: "Well, really, I've had so&#13;
much outside work to do that I haven 't had&#13;
time to finish it."&#13;
Observers say that his excuse is valid, as&#13;
he seems to have chartered the summer&#13;
house on the campus for the remainder of&#13;
the term.&#13;
&#13;
so."&#13;
&#13;
PITKIN (studying his English in library)&#13;
"Say, McCay , can you tell me the story of&#13;
'Absalom and Achitophel.' l haven't my&#13;
Bible here?"&#13;
McCAY: " [ haven't either, but maybe&#13;
'Welche's English Literature' will do.' '&#13;
&#13;
Percy Brown, in History class asks why&#13;
the popes were requested not to marry.&#13;
PROF. GARVER: "That is the only way to&#13;
keep your temper and to live a holy life.&#13;
(Also added) "Be sure and don't quote&#13;
this, as I might get into trouble.''&#13;
&#13;
chemical&#13;
&#13;
laboratory&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WILSON :&#13;
PLACE: At Woodford farm.&#13;
time:&#13;
When Y. W. C. A . cabinet spent&#13;
day at Sargeant Bluff.&#13;
" O! girls, just see the sun set on those&#13;
cows. "&#13;
&#13;
Nina Mossman, at the grocery store prior&#13;
to commencement: "Please Sir, I'd like a&#13;
yard of beef steak. "&#13;
&#13;
DEAN CAMPBELL, in Psychology class,&#13;
Tuesday morning.&#13;
Addresses class by saying: "l would&#13;
have corrected your papers but I was out of&#13;
town over Sunday.''&#13;
&#13;
THAT'S THE QUESTION&#13;
Harry Jones, in philosophy class: "I don't&#13;
know whether the philosophers ever thought&#13;
of this or not, but suppose there was nothing,&#13;
not even space, what would there be?&#13;
&#13;
Harry Jones is the same person as Father&#13;
Jones, our young priest.&#13;
&#13;
A Little Contriving Turns Package to Wescott&#13;
and Gary.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. VAN HORNE: " To work out a table&#13;
of logarithms is no worse than sea sickness.&#13;
It won't kill you. "&#13;
&#13;
Feay and Elliott Match N o More Pennies&#13;
&#13;
ALL OUT IN TEN MINUTES&#13;
&#13;
A CHURCH MEMBER : "Say, is that young&#13;
lady who sings in the choir and wears a&#13;
light hat with a blue feather on it, Mrs.&#13;
Mossman?"&#13;
A STUDENT (laughing): "No, she isn't&#13;
yet."&#13;
COLLINS (to Miss Shontz, lecturer): "Where&#13;
you fel[ down is that you talked too much of&#13;
yourself.&#13;
BASS (at restaurant ). Eats piece of pie:&#13;
"Say, waiter. which way is it to the cemetery?"&#13;
(Waiter secures platter; Bass vanishes.)&#13;
THE NECESSARY REQUIREMENTS.&#13;
SMITH (talking to a friend): "Well, I don 't&#13;
expect to go to college much longer. My&#13;
father wants me to get married and live on&#13;
the farm."&#13;
FRIEND: 'Smith, who are you going to&#13;
marry? Is it going to be one of the college&#13;
girls?"&#13;
" ! don't know yet who I'll get, but I don't&#13;
think I want a college girl for they are all&#13;
too flip for me. But, - -, I want one that&#13;
knows how to keep house, and, - - and , - one that can make good butter.'' (He boards&#13;
at dining hall. )&#13;
&#13;
WHO?&#13;
1. Was struck with a pancake platter?&#13;
A. Tumbleson.&#13;
2. Missed the last car and walked out to&#13;
M. C.? Lewis &amp; Cook.&#13;
3. Took Miss Matteson to box in gallery?&#13;
Archie.&#13;
4. Had reasons for visiting Kingsley?&#13;
Mossman.&#13;
5. Pats himself on the back? Horner.&#13;
6. Fell down stairs to emulate Ralph?&#13;
Miss Weary.&#13;
7. Passes for a minister at Paullina?&#13;
Johnson.&#13;
8. Tends chemistry store room? Horace&#13;
and Opal.&#13;
9. On a street car forgot her escort's&#13;
name? Blanch Johns.&#13;
10. Looks lonesome since Will has gone?&#13;
Evva.&#13;
11. Plays with all the small girls? Staples.&#13;
12. Ought to lead chapel? Lady Faculty.&#13;
13. Starts at two to catch five o"clock&#13;
train? Miss Mills.&#13;
14. Was disappointed at Nashville? Minkler.&#13;
15. Al ways bawls you out? Mrs. Erskine.&#13;
16. Is majoring in history for politics&#13;
sake? C. Manning.&#13;
17. Looses hats at Trimble 's? Collins.&#13;
18. Took street car to S outh Soo instead&#13;
of M. C.? Miss Elliott.&#13;
19. Cracks jokes which have their point&#13;
at infinity? Garver.&#13;
20. Was never turned down? Millner.&#13;
21. Says Myrtilla and Gene v_eve can't&#13;
i&#13;
al ways be friends? Juniors.&#13;
&#13;
MR. MINKLER: "Yes, Miss Dickson has all&#13;
but decided to be a missionary. "&#13;
&#13;
,£&#13;
At the 'phone on New Year's night.&#13;
SARAH: ( calling Mr. Minkler at Miss&#13;
Dickson's home) "Hello, is this 1906?"&#13;
MR. M.: (promptly) "No, this is 1053Ll."&#13;
SARAH: "It's 1906 over here, I'm afraid&#13;
you"re not up to date. "&#13;
MR. M.: "Yes, I've been up all day."&#13;
SARAH: ( suppressing her laughter) "Is Mr.&#13;
Harvey C. there?"&#13;
MR. M.: "No."&#13;
SARAH: " Why, I understood he was to be&#13;
there. "&#13;
MR. M.: (excitedly) "Is that so?·,&#13;
Sarah hangs up the receiver and all take&#13;
a good laugh.&#13;
&#13;
During the Christmas vacation Mr. Robbins was floor walker at Martins. A certain&#13;
lady enters the store with her little girl evidently looking for pretty Christmas presents.&#13;
Pointing to our stately friend the little girl&#13;
said, "Mamma buy me that."&#13;
&#13;
o@)&#13;
&#13;
One evening at program, a new student,&#13;
seemingly concerned, leaned over and asked&#13;
her neighbor, "Does that red headed girl go&#13;
with that red cheeked boy ?&#13;
Upon hearing that she did, she said, "Gee,&#13;
I bet they spoon."&#13;
o@)&#13;
&#13;
GERTIE: "What are you going to do next&#13;
year?&#13;
EvvA: "I'm going to be at home."&#13;
&#13;
Students' Viewpoint&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
Xmas Present to Martie and Katherine&#13;
" TWO AGAINST ONE IS NIGGER'S&#13;
FUN."&#13;
Wednesday afternoon Collins and Tnmbleson happened upon a few friends on the&#13;
stair steps. A remark was passed which&#13;
brought the following dare from Ray : "l&#13;
bet we Othos can put up a stronger program&#13;
between now and 'S aturday than you and the&#13;
Atheneums together can give Monday evening." In the hasty preparation for this program the suggestion was dropped that every&#13;
fellow ought to take two girls to insure a&#13;
crowd.&#13;
So it really was'nt Collins' fault, but&#13;
Katherine was just a little surprised when&#13;
Stanley stammered that he had to call at&#13;
Frary's a minute and, a second later produced Miss Martie.&#13;
It was quite unusual too, that these two&#13;
young ladies should take a fancy to that&#13;
much demanded setee. To be sure this did&#13;
prove a little crowded, and much more so&#13;
after the girls, feeling chilly,(?) had had their&#13;
escort assist them in putting on their heavy&#13;
winter coats.&#13;
But the chief surprise came after program,&#13;
when Katherine thought that they ought to&#13;
go down town. Well, Collins couldn"t agree,&#13;
but the two co-eds, half crazy to see the pretty things in the Christmas show windows,&#13;
marched right along to the car line andthey went down town.&#13;
Stanley was expecting to take I the next&#13;
&#13;
car home, of course, but plans seemed to develop differently and the trio walked the&#13;
streets of old Sioux City, "till all was blue,"&#13;
especially their hands. Stanley thought he&#13;
had gotten into the longest cross country run&#13;
of the season and still they walked until finally a restaurant sign reminded Katherine&#13;
that a good hot drink of some kind wouldn't&#13;
go bad. Well, she and Martie went on in,&#13;
even if they had to go alone. It really is remarkable how long two young ladies can&#13;
take to sip a cup of chocolate, especially&#13;
when one is waiting for them out alone in a&#13;
dark cold street of a great city, with no pass&#13;
time but to eat away at a five cent sack of&#13;
peanut candy. But it is fully as remarkable&#13;
how long such a sack of candy will last,&#13;
provided only, you do not share it with your&#13;
companions.&#13;
Mr. Collins told the story nicely on two of&#13;
his Christmas presents.&#13;
o@)&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION- WHERE IS HE?&#13;
Mr. Brower, wishing some information&#13;
about buds, wrote to a noted botanist asking&#13;
him many questions concerning the matter.&#13;
He received this reply:&#13;
Mr. A. L. Brower,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
Dear Sir:- Since Dr. B- - has been dead&#13;
four years his address is unknown.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
The letter was returned to the writer.&#13;
&#13;
Chet Rissler Hollers "lke" in Chapel Time&#13;
to His Sorrow&#13;
&#13;
Chapel Jokes&#13;
MAXWELL : "D id you ever know that&#13;
Caesar married an Irish girl? "&#13;
" Well, he did , for when he came to the&#13;
Rubicon he proposed to Bridget. "&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
MITCHELL: " Matrimony among preachers&#13;
is not restricted now as it was in former&#13;
times. This I say for our encouragement&#13;
and also for the encouragement of SOME of&#13;
the faculty."&#13;
&#13;
BRUSHINCHAM : " Hobson was the victim of&#13;
the Merrimac and also of a merry smack."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
A child, when asked what a republican&#13;
was, answered:&#13;
"A sinner mentioned in the B ible."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
DEAN : " Football is not the end of life, but&#13;
it is a means to the end."&#13;
&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
S PERRY:&#13;
" The western co-educational&#13;
colleges are called fresh water colleges."&#13;
&#13;
A boy was .asked to name the members of&#13;
the human body, and he replied:&#13;
"They are the head, the throat and the&#13;
vowels, and the vowels are a , e, i, o, u."&#13;
When a certain woman, who was a great&#13;
nagger, died, her husband put the following&#13;
inscription on her tombstone:&#13;
"Rest in peace till l come."&#13;
MAC BRIDE: "E ven the dawning of Senior&#13;
g arb does not rea lly remove the impression&#13;
of youthfulness."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
GARVER: "The chapel cards will now be&#13;
passed and marked as usual."&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
TH E DEAN: "Six chapel absences are expected each week."&#13;
&#13;
O(n)&#13;
&#13;
BRUSHINCHAM: "Did ye hear the news,&#13;
Pat?"&#13;
" What news, Mike?"&#13;
" Phy didn't ye hear that the pope · is&#13;
dead?"&#13;
" [nda de, now, he was a fine man."&#13;
"Do ye think Roosevelt will appint&#13;
anither?"&#13;
&#13;
T HE DEAN: "I hope if any of you ever go&#13;
to a Greek Orthodox church you will stand&#13;
up, a s that is their custom. (They ha ve no&#13;
seats in their church.")&#13;
&#13;
CHIPPERFIELD. "In a sma ll community&#13;
where there a re s ix or seven churches, a&#13;
new family is just like fish bait."&#13;
&#13;
30 Below Zero.&#13;
&#13;
Ike Pays a Wager Jan. 22.&#13;
&#13;
TEACHER: " Wha t is a demagog ue?"&#13;
PUPIL: (Thinking he meant a demijohn. )&#13;
"Something fill ed with whiskey, beer a nd&#13;
other drinks."&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE- FROM THE SOUTHEAST&#13;
&#13;
Who?&#13;
&#13;
Who ?&#13;
&#13;
Who are we?&#13;
&#13;
Wee are it,&#13;
&#13;
W e are enough,&#13;
W e are the College with the red hot stuff .&#13;
W h o? Who? Who?&#13;
Morn.ingside College fro m the city on t he Sioux .&#13;
&#13;
Students Patronize " T he Sioux" Advertisers&#13;
(See last page for list of advertisers&#13;
&#13;
studio leads&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
Methods&#13;
are&#13;
Modern&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
Styles&#13;
Change&#13;
'Demand&#13;
&#13;
'But the&#13;
Quality remains&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE&#13;
&#13;
Vnparalleled&#13;
&#13;
groups and photos&#13;
for this&#13;
were made at this Studio,&#13;
&#13;
Annual&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
L.1ve s k c . . Mere h&#13;
toe&#13;
omm1ss1on&#13;
&#13;
Offices at&#13;
CHICAGO, KANSAS CITY.&#13;
SOUTH OMAHA, SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
E EMPLOY only sober. honest. energetic&#13;
men with ability and experience. who are&#13;
every ready to rustle for our shippers' interests, and&#13;
give our shippers the best results for the commission they pay us---that is what you pay us a commission for, and we charge no more for "SERVICE&#13;
THAT SERVES" than you pay for ordinary service. We make&#13;
no loans, have no bad accounts on our books, and have to cater to&#13;
no shipper in order to protect a loan. We seII everything on its&#13;
merits, -and we are wiiling to stand or faII by what our customers&#13;
say of us. Ask anyone who ever shipped us stock what they&#13;
think of our "SERVICE THAT SERVES." Write us for our&#13;
am hlet of references from eo le who have shipped to us. It wilI&#13;
be sent you free.&#13;
We also buy cattle on order, and guarantee our selection wilI&#13;
please you. Two thirds of the cattle we buy on order are bought&#13;
for people whom we have never met. They send us their order&#13;
by mail or wire, stating the kind they want, and we never fail to&#13;
please them. We either send the kind they want or none, as our&#13;
pamphlet of testimonials wilI show you. We guarantee to save a&#13;
good deal more than our commission on aII orders, and guarantee&#13;
to please you, or you do not need to accept the cattle.&#13;
Write, wire or phone us at any time; we wilI be glad to hear&#13;
from you.&#13;
&#13;
RICE BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
611 fourth Street&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS AT&#13;
&#13;
CLAY, ROBINSON &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION&#13;
&#13;
Staple and Fancy&#13;
&lt;Sroceries&#13;
&#13;
STOCK YARDS&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING GOOD TO EAT&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
PRICES THAT ARE DOWN-TO-DATE&#13;
&#13;
If Our Goods and Treatment&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
P lease You, Tell Your Friends,&#13;
If Not, Tell Us. :&#13;
&#13;
"A&#13;
&#13;
SATISFIED CUSTOMER IS OuR&#13;
BEST ADVERTISEMENT."&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE YOUR PATRONAGE&#13;
&#13;
Denver, Colo.&#13;
&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
East Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
S outh Omaha, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
South St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
South St. Joseph, Mo.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
ST. AUBIN STATION&#13;
&#13;
THE MERCHANTS&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
Forthe Latest Creations in&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Capital $100,000&#13;
&#13;
PhotographicArt&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
Baldwin.&#13;
&#13;
E. W. R1 cE&#13;
&#13;
the Up-To-Date Photographer&#13;
&#13;
Successor to Beamer&#13;
&#13;
E. B. SPA LDING&#13;
G EO. P. DAY&#13;
G . N. Swan&#13;
&#13;
415 ForuthStreet&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
J. D. SPALDING&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Cashier&#13;
Asst. Cashier&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
LOWER&#13;
&#13;
MOORE'S N O N -LE A K A BLE&#13;
fountain&#13;
PE N&#13;
The Only Pen&#13;
For Ladies Use&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State College of Agriculture&#13;
and Mechanic Arts&#13;
Twenty-one buildings, large and well selected library,&#13;
extensive laboratories thoroughly equipped, one hundred&#13;
t wenty-two instructors .&#13;
In Agriculture - four yearr&#13;
courses in Agronomy with special departments and laboratories in Soi l , Farm Crops and Agricultural Engineering,&#13;
in Dairying, Animal Husbandry, Horticulture, Science&#13;
and Agriculture, and Agricultural Chemistry. Four year&#13;
courses in Veterinary Medicine. In Mechanic Arts-four&#13;
year courses in Mechanical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mining Engin ee ring, Ceram·&#13;
ics an d Chemical Engineering.&#13;
Two year courses in&#13;
Mining Engineering and Ceramics.&#13;
In Science-fou r&#13;
year cou rses in General Science with freedom of electives,&#13;
and in Domestic Science thoroughly based in knowledge&#13;
of Natural Science. Men and women are admitted alike&#13;
to a ll the privi leges of the institution.&#13;
Margaret Hall&#13;
with modern conveniences for young women.&#13;
&#13;
Sole Age nt For Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
R. H. DARLING&#13;
THE COLLEGE BOOKM AN&#13;
&#13;
for Sale&#13;
I have sold all the lots&#13;
advertised in last year's&#13;
annual except those op&#13;
posite College Campus,&#13;
on morningside A v e.&#13;
size 70x365 feet.&#13;
&#13;
For Catalog Address&#13;
&#13;
PRES I DENT&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
AMES, IOWA&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
STORMS&#13;
&#13;
t. C&#13;
&#13;
Peters&#13;
&#13;
The Educated Person&#13;
Always buys from the firm that has&#13;
made a reputation for honest and upright dealings. Our continued s uccess&#13;
in S io u x City is based upon 23 y ears&#13;
of honest dealings with our patrons.&#13;
We sell only the most reliable Pian os at&#13;
prices from $200 to $600, everyone fully&#13;
guaranteed to be of the finest quality&#13;
of workmanship.&#13;
Reed and P ipe Organ s for home, hall&#13;
and church. All kinds of talking machines, from $7.50 to $100.&#13;
Complete&#13;
stock of records.&#13;
NOT ICE- We make a specialty of instrumental and vocal studies. Also&#13;
standard high grade music. Po pular&#13;
music at popular prices.&#13;
Visitors are al ways welcome at our&#13;
establishment.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. DEAN CO.&#13;
315&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
ST.&#13;
&#13;
BOTH PHONES&#13;
&#13;
Three floors filled with sweet music&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Lumber &amp; fuel Co.&#13;
DEALERS IN&#13;
&#13;
CLEAN&#13;
HEALTHY&#13;
WHITE&#13;
&#13;
TEETH&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
I S POSSIBLE to have th e m if you wi ll visi t our&#13;
thoroughly modern d en tal office. All service is painless and guaranteed, and materia ls best mad e. O ur&#13;
operators are gentle and skillfu l, and take especial care&#13;
with nervous patients. W e keep our work in repair FREE.&#13;
Special discounts to studen ts. Prices:&#13;
&#13;
Let us Figure Your Bill&#13;
&#13;
Plates&#13;
Porcelain Cro wn s&#13;
&#13;
up from $ 5.00&#13;
. ___ . 4.00&#13;
&#13;
Gold Crow ns,&#13;
Gold Filli ngs&#13;
&#13;
EXAMINATION FREE.&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
Telephones&#13;
&#13;
" Our Prices are Right.&#13;
&#13;
Square Dealing that is Square."&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 5 19-L2&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
Lakeport Ave.&#13;
&#13;
NEW System&#13;
&#13;
House • •&#13;
&#13;
$4.00&#13;
1.50&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
THE PEOPLE'S BEST DENTIST S&#13;
&#13;
BLATZ BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Offices in Minneapolis and Duluth.&#13;
&#13;
'Dry Goods&#13;
&#13;
up from&#13;
&#13;
PAINLESS EXTRACTION.&#13;
&#13;
612 FOUR TH STREET&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
'Reliable&#13;
&#13;
22k _________________&#13;
&#13;
Our Guarantee Good in Any of Them.&#13;
&#13;
For Fine Photographs&#13;
&#13;
R.V. WILCOX&#13;
STUDIO&#13;
SUCCESSOR. TO SEYMOUR.&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN &amp;&#13;
CO.&#13;
407 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
At Daybreak&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
To the Victor&#13;
&#13;
W e are Exclusive Agen ts For&#13;
&#13;
You Can't Study on an Empty&#13;
when that&#13;
&#13;
Hungry Feelin'&#13;
&#13;
Belongs the Spoils&#13;
&#13;
comes.&#13;
&#13;
Victor Sporting Goods are&#13;
winning great victor ies all&#13;
over the country. They have&#13;
recent ly been adopted by our&#13;
own league. We a re agents&#13;
for Victor Sporting Goods,&#13;
and can guarantee satisfaction. We invite inspection of&#13;
our line. The price is always&#13;
rig ht at the old rel iable. :&#13;
&#13;
Weld Hardware&#13;
&#13;
No&#13;
fl'&#13;
&#13;
Peters Park Grocery&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Fine Furnish ing Goods&#13;
&#13;
The place to buy&#13;
&#13;
TRUNKS&#13;
&#13;
DOW CLOTHING CO.&#13;
&#13;
L. s.&#13;
&#13;
407-411 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
Stiff flats&#13;
&#13;
$3.50 and $4&#13;
&#13;
'' Good Things to eat.&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CARLTON DUAL ffLT,&#13;
fine fng/ish Stiff flats&#13;
&#13;
You come to&#13;
&#13;
Groceries, Meats, fresh fruits&#13;
and Candies&#13;
&#13;
Soft flATS&#13;
$2.50 to $3&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
sample&#13;
cases to&#13;
Order&#13;
&#13;
516-518-52014th St.&#13;
&#13;
August Williges&#13;
Ma NUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
&#13;
REPAIRING&#13;
DONE&#13;
We can please you with a.&#13;
Trunk or Bag at the r ight price&#13;
&#13;
D. S. ANTHONY&#13;
MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
The Student's Opportunity .&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
609 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
413 5th St., Sioux .City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux1&#13;
City - - Iowa&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
"Why in the world doesn 't a man like Jones get down&#13;
to business m ethods when he can buv an American&#13;
Typewriter for $50?"&#13;
"Does he think I am runnin g a puzzle department?"&#13;
"Men who cannot take th e t ime to write p lain ly or&#13;
be up-to-date sufficiently t o use a typewriter in his business co rrespo ndence, ough t not to expect a reply to&#13;
such a scr ibbl ed letter as this."&#13;
( Not an unus ual com ment on the receipt of a hand-written letter.)&#13;
MORAL- Don' t be a "Jonah" (Jones) but buy an American Type-&#13;
&#13;
follow the Lead&#13;
of our most successful men in&#13;
all walks of life. They Planned&#13;
thei r future in early life and&#13;
consistently followed it. If you&#13;
would succeed in business vou&#13;
must do the same. Plan to&#13;
save a dollar at a time if you&#13;
cannot do more; by sticking to&#13;
it you will soon have a fund&#13;
large enough to secure an interest in a business when offered.&#13;
&#13;
writer.&#13;
ESSENTIAL FEATURES&#13;
Universal Keyboard, Du rability, Speed, Manifold·&#13;
ing Power.&#13;
SUPERIOR FEATURES&#13;
Simplest in Mechanism, Best Type Bar Construction, Perfect Alignmeait, Perfect Work, Light Touch,&#13;
Portability, Ball=bearing Carriage, Costs Less to&#13;
Maintain, Will Always Write.&#13;
&#13;
Take the first step by opening an ac •&#13;
count with this bank, the following up&#13;
comes easy&#13;
Interest compounded on&#13;
all savings accounts twice a year.&#13;
&#13;
Sold on easy monthly payments to responsible persons. American No. 7, Price $50.&#13;
Agents and salesmen wanted, write for terms and catalogue .&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
Toledo, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
405-407 NEBR. ST.&#13;
We want your business but&#13;
we do not give discounts&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
FACES&#13;
&#13;
Moore&#13;
Clothing&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Are Our Specialty&#13;
and Your Face is&#13;
Our Fortune.&#13;
&#13;
. Sioux City, la.&#13;
&#13;
Genelli Studio&#13;
&#13;
a dollar's worth for every&#13;
dollar, or every&#13;
dollar ba.ck.&#13;
&#13;
609 4th Street&#13;
]2&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Keep Your&#13;
Face Clean&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt Company&#13;
&#13;
Start tbe day right by&#13;
getting a clean shave&#13;
and massage&#13;
You'll&#13;
feel better, look better,&#13;
study better.&#13;
&#13;
Cutlery&#13;
Manicure Goods&#13;
Gas Lamps and Man&#13;
tles&#13;
&#13;
LET BRIDGES DO THE&#13;
WORK.&#13;
&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
Base Ball Goods&#13;
&#13;
An expert :1t giving&#13;
Massages, Shampoos,&#13;
Tonics, Hair Cuts and&#13;
Shaves .&#13;
&#13;
college Barber&#13;
&#13;
COMP ANY&#13;
&#13;
General Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Shop&#13;
&#13;
312-314 Neb. St.&#13;
&#13;
PETER.S PAR.K&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
Security National&#13;
Bank&#13;
&#13;
R. S. Phillips&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Goods,&#13;
Base Ball Supplies,&#13;
Hunters' Outfits,&#13;
Guns, Bicycles,&#13;
Gymnasium Goods&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
&#13;
Capital . . ........ .. . ..... .. .. $250,000&#13;
Surplus ...... .... .. ... ...... .$125,ooo&#13;
Deposits ....... . . . ....... .. $300,000&#13;
&#13;
We S olicit Your Business and&#13;
Promise Satisfactory Treatment.&#13;
&#13;
Mystic Milling&#13;
&#13;
1906&#13;
&#13;
1883&#13;
&#13;
Co ••••&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Wm. Gordon&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Loans&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers and&#13;
Ex porters of&#13;
&#13;
Flour&#13;
and&#13;
Feed&#13;
&#13;
I make a specialty of safe work and&#13;
changing combinations.&#13;
Lock and key work and a ll kinds of&#13;
light machine repairing.&#13;
&#13;
w. P . MANLEY, PRESIDENT.&#13;
c. L. WRIGHT, VICE PRESIDENT.&#13;
c. N. LUKES, CASHIER.&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS,&#13;
&#13;
T . A. BLACK, VICE PRESIDENT.&#13;
c. w. BRITTON , ASST. CASHIER.&#13;
&#13;
408 Pearl St.&#13;
~uto. Phone 2604&#13;
&#13;
Did You&#13;
Stop to Think&#13;
&#13;
GEO. WEARE&#13;
JOHN M c HUGH&#13;
H.A.GOOCH&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
- Cashier&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Use Mystic Flour&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Will&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Real Estate Office&#13;
&#13;
fl. BfCK CO.&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Jewelers&#13;
United States Depository&#13;
&#13;
That Your Linen is&#13;
Your Trade Mark?&#13;
The condition of your linen reveals more th an any other article&#13;
of dress, yo ur habits of life .&#13;
If.your laundry work is done by&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State&#13;
National Bank&#13;
&#13;
ROCK RAPIDS STEAM&#13;
LAUNDRY&#13;
&#13;
Capital $200,000.00&#13;
Surplus $100,000.00&#13;
&#13;
no q u estions will nee d be asked as&#13;
t o your socia l s tand ing .&#13;
We do Better work at Lower&#13;
pnces. S ee our agent at the college about it.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Merchant Millers&#13;
&#13;
and Diamond Merchants&#13;
&#13;
HAVE. for sale a large&#13;
list of resid ences s uitable&#13;
for HOMES ;also beautifu ll y s ituated b uilding&#13;
lots . Houses of al l desc ripti on for ren t. : : :&#13;
S e nd to us FOR p rices&#13;
and particulars. Always&#13;
a pl eas u re to show o ur&#13;
property. If yo u are interested write us for SALE&#13;
lists and other information&#13;
&#13;
Our Specialties are the Sale of&#13;
Fine Diamonds&#13;
Good Watches&#13;
sterling Silver ware&#13;
c&#13;
glass and&#13;
general Presentation&#13;
Goods&#13;
&#13;
CUSHMAN &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
of School, Colmanufacturers&#13;
leqe and Class Pins and Emblems.&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Corn Palace&#13;
&#13;
Wood Works&#13;
Manufacturers&#13;
&#13;
E. G.STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
E.S.STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
of ..•&#13;
&#13;
Office Furniture&#13;
Bank and Store Fixtures&#13;
Interior Finish&#13;
&#13;
STRAUB BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
We make a specialty of&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Bank and Store Fixtures&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Latest Styles of Plate Glass Show&#13;
Cases&#13;
Office and Factory&#13;
507- 509- 511 Water Street&#13;
&#13;
707 FOURTH ST.&#13;
PHONE 704 J ,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
- -Phones- Automatic 2890&#13;
Iowa 480&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON &amp;&#13;
ARONSON ....&#13;
===The Old Reliable- - - -&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS AND&#13;
Clothiers&#13;
Carry a Complete line of Up-to-date&#13;
&#13;
Clothing and Furnishing&#13;
Goods&#13;
AT VERY LOWEST PRICES&#13;
&#13;
Ten Per Ce nt Discount to Professors and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
710-712 Fourth Street&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
l7&#13;
&#13;
Warriner BusinessCollege&#13;
( FormerlyBrown's BusinessCollege)&#13;
&#13;
What Business&#13;
Step Next?&#13;
Attend Warriner&#13;
for a business and&#13;
shorthand course&#13;
and you wil1 be able&#13;
to work your way&#13;
through any college or into any kind of business position&#13;
you want.&#13;
Graduates of Colleges and High Schools,&#13;
Teachers and those who have good educational preparation are preferred by employers. The summer season is a good&#13;
time to enter. Positions for graduates.&#13;
Send for Circulars.&#13;
&#13;
411 Jackson Street.&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
Wescott Slips and Unfortunately (?) Falls&#13;
Forward •&#13;
&#13;
Little Tommy, Who Amused the Boys by His Fine Singing.&#13;
&#13;
The Warriner Basket Ball Team 1906&#13;
The Warriner Business College Basket Ball squad contained&#13;
forty men this year·.&#13;
They enjo_ved the best facilities of the&#13;
splendid Sioux City Y. M. C. A. gymnasium. Good system and&#13;
thorough coaching characterized the work and produced a successful team that had the loyal support, of faculty and students.&#13;
In basket ball and all other&#13;
college sports&#13;
mere "winning"&#13;
is not the object&#13;
The main&#13;
objects are physical culture&#13;
and the inculcation of the&#13;
spirit of true sportsmanship.&#13;
The seasoning lessons of defeat. are valuable; victories&#13;
are incidental.&#13;
The Warriner team, on a&#13;
trip through South Dakota&#13;
and Nebraska, traveling 1600&#13;
miles and covering nearly two&#13;
weeks, met with but one defeat in a schedule of six games&#13;
-a percentage of 833.&#13;
Every member of the team was taught&#13;
the game and developed by Warriner coaches.&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS DIRECTORY&#13;
G . W. BURKHEAD&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCE:&#13;
N. W. National Bank&#13;
&#13;
Architect&#13;
&#13;
EsT. 1888&#13;
&#13;
J. A. BLONDEL&#13;
real&#13;
&#13;
estate&#13;
&#13;
505-6 IOWA BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
Metropolitan Blk.&#13;
Auto Phone, 1367&#13;
Sioux CITY&#13;
lowA&#13;
City Property a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
L. G. EVERIST&#13;
&#13;
W. L. HARDI NG&#13;
&#13;
LUMP MINE&#13;
RUN&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
P&#13;
&#13;
hones&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 1091&#13;
Auto 1838&#13;
&#13;
STEAM COAL A&#13;
SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
NUT AND STEAM&#13;
&#13;
405-6 Iowa Bldg.&#13;
S ioux CITY, - lowA.&#13;
&#13;
PHONES&#13;
&#13;
DR. ARTHUR SOLVSBERG&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 613&#13;
Auto l 755&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
lowA&#13;
&#13;
DELMAR L. DAVIS, M. D.&#13;
&#13;
DE NTIST&#13;
&#13;
Suite 602-3-4 Metropolitan&#13;
&#13;
HOURS:&#13;
10 to 1 3 to 5: Sundays, 11 to 1&#13;
&#13;
602- 3 Metropolitan Block&#13;
&#13;
evenings&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside's Largest Freshmen Class (63) Spring of '04,&#13;
&#13;
by Appointment&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mel. J. Smith&#13;
&#13;
Hallam &amp; Stevenson&#13;
&#13;
A. W. Giehm&#13;
&#13;
Melvin Smith &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
LAWYERS&#13;
&#13;
REAL ESTATE , LOANS AND INSURANCE&#13;
&#13;
Rooms 417-418-418 1/2owa Building&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
409-10 S ecurity Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
l ow A&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
&#13;
H. W. PITKIN&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNEY AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
LAWYER&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
205-7 Wright Building&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
413 1/2&#13;
Nebraska Streer&#13;
&#13;
700 Security Ba nk Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Inter-State Live&#13;
Associ ati'on&#13;
&#13;
Stock Fair&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
September IO-ll-12-13-14-15, 1906&#13;
&#13;
Perfect Laundry&#13;
&#13;
Electic&#13;
Supply '-to.&#13;
&#13;
E. S. BUXTON&#13;
Prop.&#13;
No. 414 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
Rederich &amp; DeWalt&#13;
&#13;
PHYSI C I AN &amp; SU RGEON&#13;
&#13;
D EN TISTS&#13;
H.N.B ROTHERS&#13;
509 4t h St.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City, Iowa&#13;
PHON&#13;
E:&#13;
&#13;
Peters' Park&#13;
&#13;
Auto 1731&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Phones 1700&#13;
&#13;
Phones:&#13;
Automatic 2049&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
Iowa 330&#13;
&#13;
410 NEBRASKA STREET&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Good Shoes at Meierstein's&#13;
S&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
605 FourthStreet&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
STAR PRINTING&#13;
322&#13;
&#13;
Fourth&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
We make a Specialty of Amateur finishing&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
S treet&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
"We Make Rubber Stamps"&#13;
It'.s daylight all the&#13;
way by the kodak&#13;
&#13;
" We Print"&#13;
&#13;
system&#13;
&#13;
Loading,&#13;
&#13;
unloading. develiping,&#13;
&#13;
printing&#13;
&#13;
aII&#13;
&#13;
without a darkroom&#13;
&#13;
J.H. Queal &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
NORTHWESTERN&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
WHOLESALE A N D&#13;
RETAIL DEALERS IN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
--·---·--&#13;
&#13;
:£umber and Building&#13;
Materials&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $130,000&#13;
Phones·&#13;
&#13;
Auto. 1118&#13;
Old 118&#13;
&#13;
H. T. W ALENSKY. Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Interest paid on Time Deposits&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
morning"&#13;
&#13;
THE KODAK&#13;
T he K odak Tank Developer, and V elox Paper, have made the process of finishing the&#13;
pictures as simple as pressing the button.&#13;
Kodaks, $5 to $ I 08. Kodak Tank Developers, $2.50 to $ 7 .50&#13;
&#13;
Fire Proof B uilding&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Io w a.&#13;
&#13;
•• A kodak&#13;
&#13;
ZIM ME R MAN BROS.&#13;
&#13;
W rite for Catalogue&#13;
&#13;
523 Fifth Street, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
Oldest Bank in Sioux City.&#13;
Organized 1871.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
PRINTERY&#13;
&#13;
U. S. DEPOSITORY&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $350 ,000&#13;
&#13;
TO TH E community&#13;
&#13;
Newest, Largest and&#13;
Best Stock&#13;
&#13;
A T LARG E&#13;
&#13;
We extend the accomodations of the Strongest and&#13;
Best Equipped Bank in the&#13;
City.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and P ierce Stree ts&#13;
&#13;
BREFFLE &amp; Shaw Props.&#13;
&#13;
_____&#13;
&#13;
__&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Brick and tile&#13;
Works&#13;
&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
Candy Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
MANUFACTURERS OF&#13;
&#13;
face, common,Hollow&#13;
and Sidewalk Brick&#13;
Hollow Blocks a n d&#13;
Drain tile&#13;
&#13;
WELCOME .&#13;
&#13;
Here is Where You Find a&#13;
Complete Stock of&#13;
&#13;
Nice, clean&#13;
&#13;
Dry Lumber&#13;
try&#13;
&#13;
The only place in the city&#13;
JOBBERS OF&#13;
&#13;
Sewer pipe, fire&#13;
B r i ck and fire&#13;
clay&#13;
Office, 420 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
to get your&#13;
&#13;
ICE.. CREAM AND CANDIES&#13;
&#13;
Us With Your Next Orde r&#13;
&#13;
Fullerton lumber&#13;
W, F. BEAM , Man a ger&#13;
Auto. Phone 1065&#13;
Old Phone 65&#13;
3rd and Jackson Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Everything is Home Made&#13;
&#13;
LIME&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth Street&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
CEMENT&#13;
&#13;
PLASTER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
J. R. ELDER&#13;
&#13;
College of Medicine&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&#13;
•.•. Member of the .•..&#13;
&#13;
Association of American MedicalColleges&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Corner Garretson Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Auto. Phone 2184&#13;
&#13;
NEWLY FURNISHED&#13;
&#13;
Personal Instruction to Individual Students. Twenty-two&#13;
Professors, Six Instructors.&#13;
&#13;
Four Years' Graded Course.&#13;
Each Session Nine Months.&#13;
&#13;
B e s t Advantages Given to&#13;
&#13;
The Savery Hotel and Cafe&#13;
I. D. BARNARD, Manager&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
618=20 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Students.&#13;
&#13;
Strictly Up-to-date&#13;
&#13;
Methods&#13;
&#13;
Building and Apparatus Ample.&#13;
&#13;
U s e d to Impart Knowledge.&#13;
&#13;
Chemical Advantages the Best.&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 18, l 906, Session Begins.&#13;
May 5, J907, Session Closes.&#13;
&#13;
For Particulars Write to&#13;
Contented With&#13;
&#13;
DR. F. E. Franchere,&#13;
&#13;
DR. H. A. Wheeler,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Dean&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
KOZY STUDIO&#13;
Makes Photos in Stamps. Posta l Cards&#13;
Comics, Cabinets and View Work in a l l sizes&#13;
WE WILL TRY TO PLEASE YOU&#13;
&#13;
J04 Douglas&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
2 blks. s. w . Dav ids on's&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
The State University of Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Anderson &amp; Abel&#13;
&#13;
Founded in 1847&#13;
&#13;
Iowa City, Iowa&#13;
Great e st Educa t ion a l Instituation Iowa. Strong Faculties. Ninete en B u ildin&#13;
ings, Sple ndidl y Equippe d. First Cla ss L a bora tories.&#13;
Muse ums. Expe nses Low.&#13;
&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Painting- and frescoing&#13;
&#13;
The Gr a du a t e C o llege- Advanced courses, leading to the Master's and Doctor's degrees. Finest of laboratory and library appointments for research work. No tuition&#13;
or laboratory ffees. Scholarships and feJJowships awarded annually.&#13;
&#13;
Art Material&#13;
pictu re framing&#13;
&#13;
The C o lle g e of Lib e r a l Arts- Complete literary and scientific courses leading to the&#13;
Bachelor's degree. Twenty-eight distinct departments, each offering numerous&#13;
strong courses. Free tuition available. Courses combined with professional colleges.&#13;
The C o lle ge of L a w - Three years' course. Excellent law library in same building.&#13;
Special attention paid to practice court work. Students permitted to take work in&#13;
the other departments without additional tuition.&#13;
The Colle g e of M e dicine - Four years' course.&#13;
Splendid new buildings thoroughly&#13;
equipped with the finest laborator ies in the West. A wealth of clinical material furnished by University hospitals located on same campus.&#13;
The C o llege o f Homeopathic Medicine- Four years' course. ExcelJent new laboratories. Fully equipped hospital under faculty control.&#13;
An abundance of material&#13;
for daily clinics.&#13;
&#13;
611 fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux city&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
The C o lle g e o f Applie d Science- Comp lete courses in civil, electrical, mining, mechanical, chemical and sanitary engineeri ng, forestry and chemistry. [nstrudors of&#13;
national repute. Excellent new building just ready for occupancy. Work-shop, experimental and field practice.&#13;
The S : h o ol of Political and S o cial S:ience- Genera l four years' courses in pol itical&#13;
and soc ial science lead ing to the Bachelor's degree. Special courses in commerce,&#13;
modern history, governme nt and administration, and in practical philanthropy.&#13;
The S:hool fo r Nurs es- Three years· courses. Hospitals entirely under faculty control.&#13;
Best of opportunities for experience in surgical and medical nursing. Special courses&#13;
of lecturers given by members of the medical faculty.&#13;
The Summe r S ession- Six weeks' course. Work practically arranged for teachers,&#13;
principals and superintendents. Teaching staff selected from heads of departments.&#13;
All laboratory and library facilities of the University available.&#13;
Excellent library&#13;
school in connection.&#13;
For further information, Address,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa C ity, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
GEO. R. McLEAN, President.&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
O zone Crusaders&#13;
&#13;
james Wooo.&#13;
Vi ce President&#13;
&#13;
E. WOOD,&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
thos&#13;
&#13;
The College of D e ntis try- T hree years' course. Complete and well arranged laboratories. Clinical facilities unsurpassed in quality and quantity of mater ial. Individual operating chair and cabinet provided.&#13;
The C o lle ge of Pharmacy- Two and three years' courses. Largest and most complete laboratories in the West. Training for prescription service, manufacturing&#13;
pharmacy, industrial chemistry, and for the work of the analyst.&#13;
&#13;
- Iowa&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCES: Iowa State Nat Bank, Sioux&#13;
City. Twelfth Ward Bank , New York .&#13;
Mt. Morris Bank. New York.&#13;
&#13;
DEALTRY.&#13;
&#13;
Tr eas., manager&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros.&#13;
&amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Richard Webber&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock&#13;
Com1nission&#13;
&#13;
CASH BUYER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
So . Omaha&#13;
&#13;
Live Poultry&#13;
&#13;
0. L CRAIGHEAD, Cattle Sal es man&#13;
T. DEALTRY, Hc g Salesma n&#13;
R. E. WHITL OC K, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 531. Auto 15 35.&#13;
&#13;
220&#13;
&#13;
Exchan ge Bldg,&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville, Iowa&#13;
Sioux City Ia.&#13;
Mitchell, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
LIST OF ADVERTISERS&#13;
Architect&#13;
Burkhead _ . __ ___ ___.&#13;
Barber&#13;
Bridges&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
]3&#13;
&#13;
Banks&#13;
Merchants National. ____&#13;
5&#13;
Woodbury County Savings - - - --- --- - - - . 12&#13;
Security National . . . . ---- - - --- - ------- - 14&#13;
Northwestern Nationa l&#13;
22&#13;
First National&#13;
.&#13;
24&#13;
Iowa S tate National ------- -- - - ----]4&#13;
Book Store&#13;
R. H . Dar ling&#13;
·- - -- -- --- --- ·-- - --- - 7&#13;
Brick &amp; Tile Works&#13;
S ioux City __. ___________________ ___ _____ 24&#13;
Business College&#13;
Warriner&#13;
18&#13;
Commission&#13;
R ice B ros.&#13;
.&#13;
. 3&#13;
Clay, Robinson &amp; Co.&#13;
5&#13;
Wood B ros. ______ _____ _.&#13;
29&#13;
Colleges&#13;
A mes Agricultural Coll ege&#13;
6&#13;
S ioux C ity Coll ege of Med ici ne . .&#13;
.&#13;
26&#13;
Iowa S tate Un ivers ity _______ __ __ __ ____ 28&#13;
Clothing&#13;
Moore&#13;
. _ . ___ . _____ .&#13;
.&#13;
12&#13;
Dow __ _&#13;
_. ______ . .&#13;
..&#13;
. . 11&#13;
Joh nson &amp; Aronson&#13;
16&#13;
Coal&#13;
L. G. Everist . ___ __ _.. ___________ ____ . 20&#13;
Dentists&#13;
S trau b B ros.&#13;
_______ _______ __ ____ 16&#13;
.&#13;
9&#13;
New S ystem Dentists&#13;
R ederick &amp; DeWalt. ________ ____ ____ ____ 20&#13;
S olvs berg&#13;
20&#13;
Candy Kitchen- Des Moines&#13;
. 25&#13;
Doctors&#13;
Dav is -- -- -- -- ------- --- -- - - ----- - ------20&#13;
B rothers ... __ . __. .. _.&#13;
20&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
T . S . Martin Co. __________ --- - --- --- ____ 8&#13;
25&#13;
Dav idso n B ros. __ __ __ ___ ___ __ · -Electric Goods&#13;
El ectr ic Su pply Co.&#13;
-- -- -- -- -- - - . 17&#13;
Flowers&#13;
E lder&#13;
.. ___ . . . _&#13;
..&#13;
. ...&#13;
27&#13;
Fair- Interstate Live S tock F air&#13;
. ... 2 l&#13;
Furrier&#13;
Aug ust Willi ges --- - -· -- --- ·&#13;
]1&#13;
Grocery&#13;
L. S . J oh nson &amp; S on&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
10&#13;
Cl ements &amp; Co. .&#13;
.. ----- - -- -- - - ---- · 4&#13;
Gun Store&#13;
Philli ps ____ ____ ______ ____ ______ _____ ___14&#13;
&#13;
Hardware&#13;
Weld H ardware Co.&#13;
... .&#13;
10&#13;
The Orcutt Co . .&#13;
.&#13;
.. __.&#13;
13&#13;
Jewelers&#13;
W . H. Beck .&#13;
.&#13;
15&#13;
Lawyers&#13;
H ard ing.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
20&#13;
.&#13;
. __ ___ _20&#13;
Hall am&#13;
Corbett_&#13;
..&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
20&#13;
Pitkin ____ ___ ________ __ ____ _____ ____ ___20&#13;
Laundry&#13;
Rock Rapids . . ________ - --- ------ - --14&#13;
Perfect.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. _____l 7&#13;
Lumber&#13;
Morningside Lumber Co . . . .. __ · - - - ____ 8&#13;
Fullerton Lumber Co.-- ---- - ----- - 25&#13;
.&#13;
. __ _____ ___22&#13;
Queal Lumber Co.&#13;
millers&#13;
Mystic Mill ing Co&#13;
15&#13;
Paper Hang ers&#13;
A nderson &amp; A bel ------ -- -------------- 29&#13;
Photo Supplies&#13;
Zimmerman Bros . . _. ___ __ ____ __ _______ __23&#13;
Photog raphers&#13;
Youngberg .. _. .. .&#13;
. . . _____ ___ . __ _ 2&#13;
Bald wi n&#13;
. ..&#13;
.&#13;
. . __ ____ 4&#13;
G ene IIi&#13;
.. .&#13;
. .. . __ . __. __ . . _ . 12&#13;
Wilcox . . _. _.&#13;
_. _. .&#13;
..&#13;
_. _ 9&#13;
Koz y . .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
..&#13;
. ___ .&#13;
.. 27&#13;
Pian os&#13;
W. A. Dean . . .&#13;
.&#13;
7&#13;
Poultry&#13;
Webber&#13;
.. ___ . __. 29&#13;
Printe r s&#13;
Star Ptg. Co. _________ _- ----- · _______ . 22&#13;
. __ ____ . 24&#13;
College Pri ntery . .&#13;
real E s tat e&#13;
Cush ma n &amp; Co.&#13;
15&#13;
E . C, peters&#13;
_.&#13;
7&#13;
G ordon&#13;
15&#13;
.&#13;
B londe! ----------- ---- --- ·- -- --- 20&#13;
Sm ith &amp; G iehm&#13;
20&#13;
Restaurant&#13;
S avery . . . . _. . .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. 27&#13;
S hoes&#13;
.. .&#13;
17&#13;
Meierstei n&#13;
Soap&#13;
Haski ns&#13;
.. . .. . . . _. . ____ .&#13;
. 27&#13;
Trunks&#13;
· - ---- - -- -- ll&#13;
D. S . Anthon y&#13;
Typewriters&#13;
Iowa T ypewriter Co. ___________ ____ ___ ] 3&#13;
Wood Works&#13;
Corn P a l ace .&#13;
. .. .&#13;
. _.&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
PRESS OF THE&#13;
&#13;
STAR PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Wilson Seeley Lewis, A. M. D. D.&#13;
Herbert Grant Campbell, A. M.&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt, A.M.&#13;
Helen Isabella Loveland, A. B.&#13;
Frank Harmon Garver, A. B.&#13;
Reynard Greynald, A. M.&#13;
Robert Bradford Wylie, Ph. D.&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown, A. M.&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener, A. M.&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes, Ph. D.&#13;
Agnes Beveridge Ferguson, Sc. M.&#13;
Robert Van Horne, Ph. B.&#13;
Clara Booth Davidson&#13;
Winford Lee Lewis, A. M.&#13;
Millard Fillmore McDowell, Sc. B.&#13;
Judson Waldo Mather&#13;
Gertrude F. Mather&#13;
B. Laura Bunting&#13;
John L. Griffith, A. B.&#13;
Alice K. Griffith, A. B.&#13;
Ida Nolan Reynolds&#13;
Faith Foster Woodford&#13;
Myrtilla Mae Cook, Sc. B. &#13;
John C. Bass&#13;
D. Ford Robbins&#13;
Faith F. Woodford&#13;
J. A. Du Bois&#13;
Nellie A. Taylor&#13;
Connor Taylor&#13;
Martha Macdonald&#13;
Harry N. Staples&#13;
Mabel E. Haskins&#13;
Cora E. Frear&#13;
Mabel Towner&#13;
Elsie Kilborne&#13;
Chet Rissler&#13;
Glenn M. Squires&#13;
Ella M. Dickson&#13;
Perry E. F.&#13;
Ralph E. Heilman&#13;
Harry E. Jones&#13;
Henry C. Taylor&#13;
Robert C. Nichols&#13;
Stanley B. Collins&#13;
E. A. Bennett&#13;
William Vance McCay&#13;
Clair S. Manning&#13;
Leanne M. De Lay&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Clark&#13;
Fair&#13;
Johns&#13;
Groom&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Richards&#13;
Rorem&#13;
Weary&#13;
Squires&#13;
Mills&#13;
Macdonald&#13;
Matteson&#13;
Whitaker&#13;
Horner&#13;
Fry&#13;
Wilson&#13;
Chamberlain&#13;
Collins&#13;
Tackaberry&#13;
Wintersteen&#13;
Hawcett&#13;
Miller&#13;
Bridenbaugh&#13;
Prentice&#13;
Himmel&#13;
Royce&#13;
Brooks&#13;
Cook&#13;
Lewis&#13;
P. Brown&#13;
Correll&#13;
Ewer&#13;
Delmage&#13;
Edwards&#13;
Currier&#13;
Day&#13;
Young&#13;
Hilton&#13;
Hook&#13;
Carcuff&#13;
Shambaugh&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Ullman&#13;
Rorem&#13;
Haskins&#13;
Wendell&#13;
Wolfe&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Swem&#13;
Heilman&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Shaw&#13;
Fry&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Murray&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Haafke&#13;
Flinn&#13;
Frear&#13;
Fox&#13;
Brown&#13;
Correll&#13;
Ullman&#13;
Macdonald&#13;
Matthews&#13;
Cole&#13;
Erskine&#13;
Eifert&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
Gantt&#13;
Pierce&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Held&#13;
Young&#13;
P. Boddy&#13;
E. Boddy&#13;
Murray&#13;
Woodford&#13;
Mills&#13;
Fey&#13;
Mauer&#13;
Melmage&#13;
Whitaker&#13;
Jones&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Nichols&#13;
Brooks&#13;
Du Bois&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Shaw&#13;
Rissler&#13;
Bridenbaugh&#13;
Brower&#13;
E. Brown&#13;
Taylor&#13;
Day&#13;
Wendel&#13;
Minkler&#13;
Taylor&#13;
Carcuff&#13;
Wescott&#13;
P. Brown&#13;
Cook&#13;
Fry&#13;
Johnson&#13;
R. Tumbleson&#13;
Groom&#13;
Staples&#13;
Miller&#13;
Hawkins&#13;
Thompson&#13;
G. Squires&#13;
Rorem&#13;
Wintersteen&#13;
S. Collins&#13;
 Himmel&#13;
 F. Heilman&#13;
McCay&#13;
Ewer&#13;
R. Heilman&#13;
 K. Squires&#13;
 Hilton&#13;
Bass&#13;
Millner&#13;
A. Tumbleson&#13;
Calkins&#13;
Everhart&#13;
Richards&#13;
P. Collins&#13;
Faulk&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
Hart&#13;
Hall&#13;
Valin&#13;
Stephens&#13;
Torp&#13;
Yule&#13;
Ehrp&#13;
Jensen&#13;
Trenary&#13;
Moulin&#13;
Doebler&#13;
Dott&#13;
Hewitt&#13;
Bryant&#13;
Haakinson&#13;
Tadlock&#13;
Fulkrod&#13;
Millet&#13;
Hinde&#13;
Smith&#13;
Tracewell&#13;
McCull&#13;
Wickens&#13;
Klippel&#13;
Branton&#13;
Boyer&#13;
Sage&#13;
Carson&#13;
De Griselles&#13;
Sutherland&#13;
Chapman&#13;
Pitkin&#13;
Hay&#13;
Luce&#13;
Himmell&#13;
Hinde&#13;
Wickens&#13;
Miller&#13;
Lamoreux&#13;
Fair&#13;
Shatz&#13;
Wells&#13;
J. Lewis&#13;
Cushman&#13;
N. Hackett&#13;
Harrison&#13;
Sauer&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Tackaberry&#13;
Held&#13;
Greenway&#13;
Day&#13;
Hammond&#13;
D. Soltou&#13;
Brower&#13;
Barrick&#13;
VanBuskirls&#13;
Blood&#13;
McCurdy&#13;
Patton&#13;
James&#13;
Barckly&#13;
Eggleston&#13;
Phelps&#13;
McDougall&#13;
CliftonSMylie&#13;
Howarth&#13;
Flanders&#13;
Thornton&#13;
S. Hackett&#13;
S. Soltou&#13;
Currier&#13;
John Lewis&#13;
Terry&#13;
Torbet&#13;
Haskell&#13;
Schaffer&#13;
Beaton&#13;
Eliott&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Griggs&#13;
Naylor&#13;
Cave&#13;
Roberts&#13;
Alseph&#13;
Westensee&#13;
Stafford&#13;
Hammond&#13;
Boals&#13;
Day&#13;
Platts&#13;
Wood&#13;
Mercure&#13;
Davenport&#13;
Treischmann&#13;
Bloom&#13;
Furley&#13;
Felber&#13;
Lockin&#13;
Mahood&#13;
Siman&#13;
Rodine&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Jones&#13;
Wright&#13;
March&#13;
Vaugh&#13;
Keckler&#13;
Dewey&#13;
Currier&#13;
Prichard&#13;
Bass&#13;
Gullicson&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>����•&#13;
&#13;
THE WHOOPS OF THE SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHED BY THE&#13;
JUNIOR CLASS OF '06&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�By&#13;
perm ission&#13;
of&#13;
Wa ltermire&#13;
&#13;
MONUMENT MARKING THE SITE OF SERGEANT FLOYD' S GRAVE&#13;
&#13;
�.. D&#13;
&#13;
ediration&#13;
T You who have departed&#13;
from Morningside College and find&#13;
that, sometimes during life's&#13;
journey you are sad or&#13;
lonely this book&#13;
is dedicated&#13;
&#13;
PRESS&#13;
&#13;
S T AR&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
THI!:&#13;
&#13;
PRINT I NG CO&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C I TY,&#13;
&#13;
IOW A&#13;
&#13;
�GEORG,E D. PERKINS&#13;
&#13;
E.H.HUBBARD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's most beloved son. Editor of the Sioux City Journal,&#13;
and Ex-Congressman from the Eleventh District of Iowa. The man&#13;
who deserves to be our next Governor.&#13;
&#13;
Representative from the Eleventh District of Iowa. Sioux City's&#13;
most eminent lawyer. An Iowan, whom, if Providence permits, our&#13;
nation will honor .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�INTRODUCTION&#13;
&#13;
W&#13;
&#13;
HEN undertaking the responsibility of preparing the Junior&#13;
Annual' for presentation to the public, we realized the fact&#13;
·&#13;
that our task was not that of an author, but rather that of a&#13;
compiler. With full appreciation of this fact it has been our&#13;
deepestconcern to receive representative contributions from the various&#13;
departments of Morningside College. We indeed are thankful and&#13;
appreciative for the prompt and willing response given to our solicitations. Deep is our regret that the musical department has not acknowledged our prize offer, but this we believe has been due to a misunderstanding or an oversight. Vigorous has been our effort at all times to&#13;
compile only that which is most peculiar to the many phases ofcollege life.&#13;
To all, we wish to say that at all times nothing but kindness has&#13;
been intended, and we sincerely want our old friendships strengthened&#13;
and new ones formed. Now, hoping that we have made our&#13;
intentions plain, we desire that our book shall be given&#13;
a kind reception and a large patronage.&#13;
&#13;
�HEAP&#13;
&#13;
BIG INJUNS&#13;
&#13;
�In the IndianReservation&#13;
THE beginning of&#13;
making&#13;
SinceOne even t has beentime history has been rapid&#13;
following another&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
succession, provingor disproving that man is the victim&#13;
of circumstances. In the career of every n ation, or individual, th er e has been some event, time, or snggestion, that has&#13;
marked the beginning, cnlmination, or r etrogression of activity and prominence. And, thus, the germ of "THE&#13;
WHOOPS OF THE SIOU X " took definite form, after&#13;
the sophomore class of 'O6 had visited the Indian reservation, lying thirty miles to the son th of Sioux Ci ty. N o&#13;
other class at Morningside&#13;
h ad ever attempted so long&#13;
and arduous a j ourney. Meansf conveyance was the gr eato&#13;
est difficulty, but this was overcome employin g a sixby&#13;
horse tally-ho, a gennine, leather-swung, vehicle of the&#13;
Rocky mountain type.&#13;
On the morning of , April 30th, 1904, each sophomore&#13;
mo&#13;
curtailed the beauty sleep and was rough and r eady at three&#13;
o'clock to bid college duties farewell for th e day. The&#13;
freshmen were sleeping in th eir trundle beds, nn conscious&#13;
of the departure of their class rivals. While passing&#13;
through the city, the bugle calls bronght forth many wondering faces to the windows, each expressing admirati on&#13;
and almost envy for th e happy company&#13;
After filling&#13;
the lunch baskets and succedding in arousing to action two&#13;
&#13;
sophomores, the j ourney was on. The&#13;
sleeping down-city&#13;
first stop occurred at the toll-gate on the . combination&#13;
bridge, wher e a hasty deposit of currency was made f or the&#13;
benefit of public utilities. The rumbling of the tally-ho,&#13;
while crossing the bridge, awoke '' Old Sol" from his dusky&#13;
slumbers behind the hills of Morningside, inspiring confid ence for an ideal day. Some one r emarked that Willie&#13;
and Lon,th e only absent sophs, would long r egret th at they&#13;
allowed other duties to prevent their going. To this day&#13;
we know not, if it was ministerial, material, or matrimonial affairs that robbed them of the pleasure. Cer tainly it&#13;
was not the latter, for only recently Willie had become&#13;
chief am ong devils, while Lon is aspiring to the assistantship. At Dakota City, six mil es on the N ebraska side, the&#13;
only signs of life were small dogs and speckled hens. Had&#13;
not the latter displayed such homelike tend encies, they, too1&#13;
doubtless, would have decided to vi sit th e reservation. It&#13;
r eally was their chi cken-heartedness that made them decline, for they fl ed far beyond the reach of ordin ary persnasion. Such sights as these ( o:ni tting the clogs) and natnral laws began t stir the inner man and the cry for&#13;
breakfast became irresistible. A tent was pitched on the&#13;
green. Here it was that the fair members of th e class had&#13;
spread&#13;
the feast, while the more sturdy ones looked on, each&#13;
for himself, wondering, if perchance some clay his own tepee might he blessed with one of these. And such a breakfa t. Baked potatoes, fried ham and eggs, sandwiches,&#13;
&#13;
�and coffee took dowmvard courses in amazing rapidity.&#13;
The camp-fire burnt low and the company resumed the&#13;
journey. At Homer, Nebraska, eighteen miles from Sioux&#13;
City, the dark, swarthy red men in their government suits&#13;
of bluish-grey and high-cocked hats were m evidence.&#13;
From there to the reservation interest centered about&#13;
these, at one time, proud champions of the plains. Now,&#13;
they are a people artificially located and, as a consequence,&#13;
are degenerating. The old customs of the blanket, the&#13;
pony, and the tepee, still c1ing tenaciously to their habits.&#13;
The younger generation is adopting the white man's ways&#13;
slowly. It seems, that when the true Americans were&#13;
driven from their native haunts, their ambitions would&#13;
turn to nothing else. And, so now, they are scattered upon&#13;
the reserve, living on the farrns the government has given&#13;
them; but only a small per cent till the soil, the majority&#13;
preferring to rent their fields to white settlers, while they&#13;
occupy ( ?) their time smoking the pipe of peace, or rather&#13;
a piece of a pipe. Soon after mid-day the United States&#13;
Winnebago Indian School was reached and camp again&#13;
pitched. Here at the school, living in boarding-house&#13;
fashion, were about one hundred Indian children varying&#13;
in ages from ten to twenty. During five half days of each&#13;
week they attend school; the remainder of the time they&#13;
receive industrial training, such as cooking, laundry work&#13;
and sewing for the girls, and carpentery and blacksmith-&#13;
&#13;
ing for the boys. A number of the children were deformed&#13;
and afflicted in various ways. Diseases unknown among Indians in their wild life, but now very noticeable, are&#13;
factors which are reducing their numbers. The school&#13;
has a staff of nine instrnctors. Rations and clothing are&#13;
furnished by the government. The Indians not attending school receive no rations, as do the Sioux of the Dakotas. A government store is maintained at the agency,&#13;
one mile from the school buildings Here "Lone Tree,"&#13;
"Black-Foot," "Rain-in-the-Face" and others come Saturdays for their supply of clothing. The afternoon was spent&#13;
in taking kodak pictures, making acquaintances and studying Indian life.&#13;
The return trip was accomplished without accident.&#13;
The night was as perfect as the day.&#13;
"The Luft war kuehl und es dunkelt,&#13;
Und ruhig :fliesst der Rhine,"&#13;
"Der Jim war der erste Knabe,&#13;
Zu sagen, "Willst du be mine?"&#13;
Again the tollman hindered progress.&#13;
"Iowa, oh&#13;
Iowa, the fairest state of all the west." The day was over.&#13;
It had been a success. Satisfaction was written on every&#13;
face, and in the night each sophie dreamed that angels on&#13;
feet of diamonds, distributed blue-sky and melted sunshine.&#13;
A CASUAL OBSERVER.&#13;
&#13;
��.&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF-J. W. KINDIG.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER--A. L. BROWER.&#13;
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER-H. J. Calkins&#13;
ASSOCIATE EDITORS&#13;
HISTORY-C. F. HARTZELL.&#13;
LITERARY-GENEVIEVE HOWARD.&#13;
CALENDAR-EVYA ERSKINE.&#13;
SOCIETY -EMMA FAIR.&#13;
ATHLETICS-WM. DEBENHAM.&#13;
&#13;
CARTOON- GEO. MILLNER.&#13;
&#13;
JOKES- L. A. HAWKINS.&#13;
CENSOR BOARD&#13;
&#13;
A. L. BROWER&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE HOWARD&#13;
&#13;
C. F. HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
EMMA FAIR&#13;
&#13;
GEO. MILLN ER&#13;
&#13;
Evva&#13;
&#13;
WM. DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
L. A. HAWKINS&#13;
&#13;
.J. W.&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
�GERTRUDE CROSSAN&#13;
&#13;
CORWIN FRANCIS HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
She was born in the State of the Wild&#13;
Rose, Received her preliminary education in the Hartley High School. Taught&#13;
school in North west Iowa.&#13;
En t ere d&#13;
Morningside College in the fall of 1902;&#13;
became a member of the class of 1906.&#13;
Miss Crossan is loyal to her class and&#13;
consecrated to her society. Energy and&#13;
devotion have won for her proud laurels as&#13;
a student. Friendship she deems valuable&#13;
and has many friends.&#13;
She possesses&#13;
ideals that are high, yet practical, and has&#13;
character that is strong and womanly.&#13;
The J uniors are proud to call her President.&#13;
&#13;
First saw the light of day in Marion&#13;
County, Iowa, some time back in the 19th&#13;
century. Got his star t on the farm , in the&#13;
country school, as pupil and teacher, and&#13;
bahind the counter. Believes in the fair&#13;
sex, for he is the only Junior who has&#13;
tested the joys of wedded life. Is a pastor&#13;
of rare ability. Is a debater of much distinction, having been on two winning intercollegiate and one intersociety teams. Is&#13;
a loyal Philo, a fast man on the track and&#13;
is conscientious, faithful, earnest, a good&#13;
student and a friend worth having. Will&#13;
one day fill the place of his worthy namesake, Bishop Hartzell. Our beloved VicePresident.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. WUNN&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
EMMA JEANETTE FAIR&#13;
&#13;
Born in this country of English-German&#13;
parentage, as is evidenced by his stubborn&#13;
will and strong determination .&#13;
He is a printer by trade, a Philomathean&#13;
by choice, and editor-in-chief of the Collegian Reporter by virtue of ability.&#13;
He is known as an advocate of justice&#13;
and truth and is outspoken against injustice and wrong-doing. His dislikes are&#13;
strong and freely expressed. His friendships strong and abiding.&#13;
He is popular with the girls and not disliked by the boys. In fact. although, he is&#13;
not exactly the whole thing, he is the only&#13;
Wunn (one) among us.&#13;
&#13;
A college educated woman with a special&#13;
preference for history and politics. A&#13;
Senior by recent classification, but a member of the tribe of '06 by nature and inclination.&#13;
A Hedonist in her ethical&#13;
theory. Practical, energetic, yet aspires&#13;
to the ideal. A typical Zet.&#13;
Desirous of the culture which can be obtained from the work of a reader, she completes the Elocution course this year. Has&#13;
few chums, but many good friends. Believes in woman's rights, but believes in&#13;
obtaining her own in her own way. Makes&#13;
grades easily and has made her college&#13;
work a pleasure.&#13;
A student of most&#13;
everything except the newspaper.&#13;
&#13;
�VIRGINIA M. FAIR&#13;
&#13;
0. MERRILL FOOTE&#13;
&#13;
"Her modest answer and graceful air,&#13;
Prove her wise and good as she is Fair."&#13;
&#13;
Merrill Foote, but his class standing is&#13;
not what his name would indicate,-comes&#13;
from the tribe of the Dakota's, Kimball&#13;
having been his camping ground. The&#13;
snows of two winters came and went, while&#13;
he was in the happy hunting grounds of&#13;
knowledge at Dakota Wesleyan University.&#13;
But he wandered from his tribe, and the&#13;
haunts that once knew him know him no&#13;
more. He has allied himself with the tribe&#13;
of the Sioux. A happy. studious young&#13;
buck, the wit of the class and a general&#13;
favorite with the squaws of the Sioux&#13;
Tribe.&#13;
&#13;
Though she graduates with the class of&#13;
'05, she grew up with the "Indians." In&#13;
spite of this she has a strong, sweet,&#13;
womanly personality. She is President of&#13;
the Y. W. C. A. and of the Zetalethean&#13;
Society. She is one of those silent forces&#13;
whose power is, therefore, strongly felt.&#13;
The name of her friends is legion.&#13;
Though she is majoring in English, she&#13;
expects to demonstrate that a college bred&#13;
girl will be a good home-maker.&#13;
&#13;
EVVA ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT JUDSON CALKINS&#13;
Moved into this world at the usual time&#13;
for moving, March rst. Seems to be about&#13;
as long for it as any of the genus homo.&#13;
Reared on Iowa p rairies, and attended a&#13;
little school house near a river, where he&#13;
learned to read and swim, (never played&#13;
hookey). He developed rapidly, as a result&#13;
of plenty of raw turnips and frequent tannings. He attended High School in Ft.&#13;
Dodge and came to Morningside in 1902.&#13;
He always had to attend church regularly&#13;
and in revenge has entered the ministry.&#13;
He is good natured, persevering. a gentleman, a scholar and an Otho.&#13;
&#13;
Illinois' by birth, Iowa's by adoption.&#13;
Brought up amid surroundings conducive&#13;
to purity and strength of character. A&#13;
student of nature, she aspires to the attainment of the best. Carried away the honors of the High School class in Austin,&#13;
winning the Scholarship to the University&#13;
of Chicago, where she spent her Freshman&#13;
year.&#13;
Is characterized by push, vim and vigor.&#13;
She possesses high ideals and a dominant&#13;
will, which insures their fulfillment in&#13;
her life. Enters into any enterprise with&#13;
her whole soul and everything she does is&#13;
done with admirable thoroughness. She&#13;
believes very ardently that "man was not&#13;
made to live alone"-has heard the voice&#13;
of duty and her "Will" now leads her to&#13;
the performance of that duty.&#13;
Enthusiastic in all departments of college life and a faithful Atheneum.&#13;
&#13;
�GEORGE MILLNER&#13;
Here's to the lad, who in early years&#13;
chased swamp-lights, or fought prairie&#13;
fires on the lands of the Blackhawks, and&#13;
at family assemblies made himself famous&#13;
by his art of speech-making.&#13;
Being a son of the soil, there came&#13;
wafted to him on the soft zephyrs, sweet&#13;
melodies from the banks of the Missouri.&#13;
Within his invisible life they struck a&#13;
chord which awakened the sensibilities of&#13;
latent powers beneath the rugged, sturdy&#13;
exterior.&#13;
The doors of M. C. opened to George&#13;
and within her walls he has been learning&#13;
the art of making his life useful to mankind, while his loyalty to athletics won for&#13;
him the captainship of the foot ball team&#13;
of '04.&#13;
He may differ in policy and principles&#13;
from his most intimate friend, yet his&#13;
charity and unselfishness ever secures for&#13;
him a place in the friendship of his associates.&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE HOWARD&#13;
It was after Christmas.&#13;
&#13;
In a little farm&#13;
house there was great joy, for the most&#13;
precious of gifts had been given,-a wee&#13;
baby girl.&#13;
This baby grew and passed through all&#13;
the happy stages of childhood, was spanked&#13;
and kissed in turn, which was a part of the&#13;
training for a strong character. Through&#13;
the long hours of schooldays that followed&#13;
she gathered for herself truth and wisdom,&#13;
adding kindness and courage.&#13;
The duties of young womanhood revealed&#13;
the necessity of wide training and reserve&#13;
force, and created a desire for broader&#13;
knowledge.&#13;
When Genevieve entered college life it&#13;
was with a broad outlook and noble ambition. Whether in the class room, society or&#13;
association work, she tries to judge fairly,&#13;
is open hearted and makes herseif beloved&#13;
by all by her happy disposition and kindness.&#13;
&#13;
BERTHEMIA McCARTHY&#13;
Better known as Bertha McCarthy, is&#13;
known to the students to have a quiet, unassuming personality. Her merit is discovered only by those who know and understand her best.&#13;
She attended school at Rockwell before&#13;
coming to Morningside. She has been in&#13;
school at Morningside for five years; has&#13;
graduated from the Academy and, if she&#13;
perseveres, at her present rate of progress.&#13;
she will finish the college course some day.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. DEBENHAM&#13;
The experience of William Hamilton&#13;
Debenham is bounded by the confines of&#13;
the Hawkeye state. Born in r 88o on a&#13;
farm in Grundy County, at the tender&#13;
age of nine years, he, tired of the rural&#13;
scenes and the barn-yard choruses, advised his parents to retire to the more congenial activities of town life. Accordingly&#13;
he settled in the town of Everly, Clay&#13;
County, in time to participate in its early&#13;
municipal proceedings. In r899 he entered&#13;
the sub-prep class in Morningside and his&#13;
strong athletic tendencies have enabled&#13;
him to jump two years and finish both the&#13;
Academy and College courses in six years.&#13;
"Deby" is short but active, is a Philo, a&#13;
star sprinter, plays football, has served as&#13;
captain of the track team, president of the&#13;
Athletic Association and president of the&#13;
Y. M. C. A. He is now a Senior, but his&#13;
heart is in the Junior class. His affections&#13;
are singular, in that he believes there is&#13;
just one girl. His ethical code may be&#13;
summarized in the following postulate:&#13;
"What-Evva is, is right."&#13;
&#13;
�H. VAN DYKE&#13;
ESTIE BODDY&#13;
As it is not customary to publish the biography of the great before they die, I&#13;
tremble at the consequence of this.&#13;
Nevertheless, it must be told that Estie&#13;
Boddy is a farm product. She was born&#13;
in the last century and has seen the going&#13;
out of one century and the ushering in of&#13;
another. If she continues in her present&#13;
state of health she may see many more.&#13;
While only a child she was called&#13;
"Chub" and "Stick-in-the-Mud" and other&#13;
names even less elegant. But the one that&#13;
has clung to her all through life thus far is&#13;
simply "Body. "&#13;
&#13;
Stands head and shoulders above his&#13;
fellows- a veritable Lincoln.&#13;
Extends&#13;
through degrees of latitude and longitude&#13;
duly proportionate to the degrees of altitude. Has clean-cut features (not a member of the Whiskers Club) and is of medium&#13;
complexion.&#13;
A jolly, good natured fellow, amiable in&#13;
disposition, of Washingtonian veracity and&#13;
good merits&#13;
A painter by trade, a student by occupation, and a Methodist by profession.&#13;
A Philo of good standing and a member&#13;
of the Y. M. C. A ; an all-around athlete&#13;
- bears noble scars received both in domestic and foreign frays.&#13;
Not wholly indifferent to the affectionate and confiding qualities of femininity&#13;
and believes in specialization.&#13;
&#13;
RUBY TRIMBLE&#13;
LON A. HAWKINS&#13;
Born near Independence; while still a&#13;
small boy his parents found it necessary to&#13;
move away, lest he be captured by the&#13;
institution there. Up to his twelfth year&#13;
his career was like that of George Washington, except that he used a saw instead&#13;
of a hatchet. The past four years he has&#13;
been sawing his way through college. His&#13;
present occupation consists in sitting on&#13;
the laboratory table and dispensing biological facts to dull students. Though possessed of a fine vocabulary of the scholarly&#13;
words in science, he occasionally indulges&#13;
in phrases, which, while expressive, can&#13;
hardly be said to apply to the subject in&#13;
hand. (Examples : "By Dads," " Well&#13;
Gee Whiz," " By the Great Horn Spoon,"&#13;
etc")&#13;
&#13;
Canadian by birth and loyal to her king&#13;
- a girl of strong character and high ideals.&#13;
She is a lovel" of out-door sports and is at&#13;
home in the saddle, as well as on the ice.&#13;
She has an abundance of wavy black&#13;
hair, which has a way all its own of&#13;
tumbling gracefully about the face-her&#13;
eyes are blue, a deep, deep blue, which&#13;
look at you in a way that you like and&#13;
love that coveted expressive twinkle. A&#13;
merry smile plays about her mouth, revealing evenly matched pearls, which invite conversation.&#13;
A girl of sense, wit and humor. Underneath the fun-loving exterior there is a&#13;
heart-steadfast, tender, true.&#13;
Makes ''luscious" cherry pies-is a social&#13;
favorite, honored Zetalethean and loyal&#13;
Junior.&#13;
&#13;
�JAMES KINDIG&#13;
A tall angular form, stern of visage, but&#13;
of kind disposition. If he has a motto 1t&#13;
is "To master whatever he undertakes._"&#13;
Thoroughness characterizes his work, logic&#13;
his reasoning, and noble purpose his ambition. He has qualities that fit him _for&#13;
Cross(an)in' the wide sea of difficulties&#13;
that lies between him and fame. His work&#13;
in Inter-society debate, as a representative&#13;
of the Othonian Literary Society, and his&#13;
work in Inter-collegiate debate, as a representative of the College, marks him as a&#13;
clear thinker and reasoner. Also in his&#13;
work as a member of the Collegian Rerorter staff of 1903-4, ne developed some&#13;
proficiency ID the use of the quill,&#13;
and&#13;
in appreciation of his literary ability, the&#13;
Junior Class chose him as ed1tor-in-ch1ef&#13;
of ''The Whoops of the Sioux.··&#13;
&#13;
RUBY A. FLINN&#13;
Born MDCCCLXXXIII Anno Domini&#13;
on the anniversary of the Boston Tea&#13;
Party. The Junior Class feel honored in&#13;
having the birth of one of its members&#13;
connected with so important a date.&#13;
Spent two years in Lake City High&#13;
School, coming here in the fall of 1900.&#13;
She has aroused no jealousies, either as&#13;
a social star, or on account of her activities in the affairs of the school. She has&#13;
been fortunate in that she has taken two&#13;
interesting trips, one to the hills of Vermont and one •to the Rockies. A girl of&#13;
"A" grades, except in Ethics, strong personality, kind disposition, loves the open&#13;
air and is a loyal Atheneum. Merry blue&#13;
eyes and wavy brown hair; when once she&#13;
is your friend she is true .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
ELIZABETH JOHNSON&#13;
A maid of genuine worth. She was&#13;
born in Iowa some time since the civil&#13;
war, hence has no personal recollections&#13;
of Abraham Lincoln.&#13;
Her preliminary education. at the Ft.&#13;
Dodge High School, from which she was&#13;
graduated with highest honors, prepared&#13;
her to be a leader In society and classwork of Morningside College, where she&#13;
entered as a Freshman in the fall of '02.&#13;
The glories of the far-famed 'sophomore&#13;
Class of the following year she 1s proud to&#13;
have shared. In the publication of "The&#13;
Whoops of the Sioux," she has been a&#13;
leading worker.&#13;
A Zet by nature, she counts her lot a&#13;
h appy one. Her personality 1s strongshe knows when to talk and when not to&#13;
talk is frank and keen of judgment, is&#13;
never idle and is thorough in all she does .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
A. L. BROWER&#13;
An Iowa boy.&#13;
Graduated from the&#13;
Academy of Morningside, 1902. Entered&#13;
Morningside College with the Class of&#13;
1906. He is very tall and in many respects resembles Lincoln, especially In&#13;
length of arms and size of feet. His principles are democratic, and good nature&#13;
always prevails. In profession he 1s a&#13;
Forester and will seek a government position. As a student he is determined and&#13;
thorough. The Class has honored him by&#13;
trusting him with the business management of ''The Whoops of the Sioux."&#13;
&#13;
�Class Roll&#13;
R. G. MINKLER&#13;
Born; where? Amid the wolf-roamed&#13;
clay hills of Clayton County, Iowa. He&#13;
has been howling ever since.&#13;
When? My memory fails me; judging&#13;
by the shade of his hair, presumably since&#13;
the end of the dark ages.&#13;
Having at one time in his career followed&#13;
the trade of a sorghum maker, he is naturally "sweet" tempered.&#13;
At another&#13;
time having been an undertaker, he still&#13;
retains his "grave" bearing.&#13;
Is fond of bean soup, a good joke, and&#13;
Ethics.&#13;
Believes in womankind, Philoism and "Ayers Hair Vigor. "&#13;
In fact is so precocious that it was impossible for him to remain any longer with&#13;
the Class of 1907, therefore was adopted&#13;
by the Juniors in the Winter Term.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Debenham&#13;
Virginia Fair&#13;
J. W . Kindig&#13;
C. F. Hartzell&#13;
Emma Fair&#13;
Evva Erskine&#13;
A. L. Brower&#13;
Ruby Flinn&#13;
L. A. H awkins&#13;
Gertrude Crossan&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson&#13;
&#13;
George Millner&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
'' Excelsior"&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
Colors&#13;
B lue and Old G old&#13;
&#13;
Emblem&#13;
&#13;
Ruby Trimble&#13;
&#13;
G len Minkler&#13;
0. M. Foote&#13;
J. W. Wunn&#13;
Bertha McCarthy&#13;
H. J. Calkins&#13;
H. Van Dyke&#13;
Estie Boddy&#13;
G enevieve Howard&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
O MINISTER wisely to the needs of half a thousand&#13;
students is a task not to be faced lightly. No college&#13;
worthy of the name fails to appreciate the tension of our&#13;
times, and the obligation to plan most carefully for all&#13;
coming to her halls. If wasted opportunities are forever&#13;
beyond r ecall, no more can later work or added endeavor&#13;
ever fully make amends for wrong instruction or misdirected effort.&#13;
With the greater complexities of modern life, the task&#13;
of training young men and women has become increasingly difficult. Only a generation ago a small group of&#13;
teachers, representing a few traditional lines of study,&#13;
could offer successfully the work considered necessary for&#13;
the bachelor's degree. The courses of study were fixed;&#13;
all students were subjected to practically a common discipline, irrespective of individual capacity or future field&#13;
of work.&#13;
While doubtless the under-graduate course is still&#13;
looked upon as primarily cultural, the conception of this&#13;
function has broadened. Many new subjects have been&#13;
added to the curriculum and some of the older have undergone radical changes in methods of presentation. The&#13;
development of the physical and biological sciences, the&#13;
increased emphasis on modern language, the freshened interest in histo· y and political science, and such opening&#13;
r&#13;
fields as psychology and sociology, are phases of education&#13;
which have come to supplement the larger recognized&#13;
training in mathematics and the classics. The modern&#13;
co1lege course has not only increased cultural and infor-&#13;
&#13;
mational value, bnt deals as well with subj ects which familiarize the student with the foundation principles of&#13;
practical and industrial affairs. Such training makes for&#13;
the highest success in business as well as professional&#13;
lines.&#13;
The relation of these changes to the college of our&#13;
times is obvious. The college fulfilling its mission today&#13;
must have a much larger teaching force than under the&#13;
old regime. There is also demanded a better individual&#13;
equipment on the part of those engaged in professional&#13;
work; each teacher must be a specialist, and this usually&#13;
involves long and expensive university training. The&#13;
differing tastes and abilities of students and the r elations&#13;
• to work after graduation necessitate some freedom in the&#13;
choice of courses and studies. This elective privilege&#13;
compels the presentation of a wider range of subjects. The&#13;
material equipment in the way of buildings, grounds, libraries, laboratories and apparatus must be extensive.&#13;
Morningside College is making an earnest effort to&#13;
measure up to the demands of the opening century. The&#13;
policy of those in authority has been to provide things&#13;
essential for thorough work, believing that only in this&#13;
way can the institution justify her mission. This plan&#13;
has involved great :financial sacrifice, but the fruits are&#13;
seen in the early efficiency of our college. Though&#13;
Morningside completes this year but the first decade of&#13;
her history, we have an institution comparing favorably&#13;
with others of its kind in the Mississippi valley, most of&#13;
which have celebrated their semi-centennials.&#13;
The teaching force, both in numbers and efficiency, is&#13;
now ranked with those of the leading colleges of the west.&#13;
Division of labor has been carried far enough to allow&#13;
&#13;
�each teacher a distinct department-a condition fundamental to good college work All members of the faculty&#13;
have, by university study or travel, familiarized themselves with the larger aspects of their respective departments. Several have completed the work for the Doctor&#13;
of Philosophy degree. The institutions represented in this&#13;
graduate preparation include the prominent universities&#13;
of America and Europe.&#13;
The courses of study are organized on the major system of instruction. It is believed that this plan wisely&#13;
combines the best phases of elective privilege with the&#13;
most successful anticipation of graduate study and the&#13;
professional school, while insuring to all a liberal culture&#13;
and broad training. Our graduates are recognized by the&#13;
leading universities and several have recently been given&#13;
appointments as scholars, fellows or assistants.&#13;
The buildings of the college are new, clean and modern. Main Hall is one of the largest and finest structures&#13;
of its kind in the state. The first and second floors of&#13;
North Hall recently have been refitted to conform more&#13;
closely to the needs of the Conservatory of Music. the&#13;
Chemistry, Physics and Biology laboratories occupy&#13;
,suites of rooms in Main Hall and are well equipped with&#13;
&#13;
new apparatus. Most of the departments have small libraries of well selected books for the use of major and&#13;
minor students. The general library contains the periodicals, standard works and reference books; this is supplemente'd by the large city library, which is open to all&#13;
students of the school.&#13;
Mention should be made of the various internal organizations and student activities. The literary societies,&#13;
athletic, oratorical and debating associations, musical and&#13;
department clubs, etc., constitute an important part of&#13;
the serious work of the institution and contribute in no&#13;
small measure to the pleasures of college life.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
With the opening of next. school year Morningside enters upon the second decade of her history. We believe&#13;
it will bring even greater progress than the last ten years&#13;
have witnessed. Our college faces the future with hope,&#13;
believing that the years will bring opportunities for service, and that in the fulfillment of her mission to young&#13;
men and women she will have the sympathy and support&#13;
of this great north west.&#13;
ROBERT BRADFORD WYLIE.&#13;
&#13;
�E ARL&#13;
&#13;
Hopkins&#13;
&#13;
�Wilson Seeley Lewis&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
wa s ca lled to the presidency of Morningside College in 1897, coming&#13;
from Epworth Semina ry, in wh ich school he bad given nine years of&#13;
efficient service as principal. Doctor Lewis received the greater part&#13;
of his under-graduate training at St. Lawrence University and has&#13;
since supplemented this preparation by uni ver sity work and private&#13;
study. The year 1896-7 was spent in travel study in Europe.&#13;
President Lewis has accomplish ed much s in ce ta king his place as&#13;
cheif executor of Morningisde College. During th is period of eight&#13;
years the attendance has increased from one hundr ed a nd eighty-seve n&#13;
to an enrollment of nearly six hundred students. The faculty has been&#13;
doubled in numbers and grea tly increased in efficiency. In this period&#13;
Main H a ll has been built and equipped. the chem istry, ph ysics and&#13;
biology laboratories established, North Hall r ebuilt, a nd Park Place,&#13;
with its beautiful ten-acre lawn, added to the campus.&#13;
In addition to these conspicuous evidences of progress, mention&#13;
should be made of old d ebts paid, and large pla ns looking toward an&#13;
adequate endowment fund; of higher educational ideas and attainments; of enlarged student activities along all lines, and the growth&#13;
of th e Inter-Collegiate r elations hips. In brief, these f ew years, under&#13;
his leadership, have witnessed the evolution of a college well equipped to meet the d emands of our opening century.&#13;
It is, how ever, in the t hings unseen that President Lewis has&#13;
given our college his most helpful touch. The new student recalls&#13;
the warmth of his handshake in welcome, and the departing senior&#13;
bears with him memories of cheerful words and kindly acts. The&#13;
one in trouble and discouragement, as well as the one joyful in opening&#13;
opportunities, have alike found in him a friend and counsellor.&#13;
&#13;
�H. G. Campbell A. M.&#13;
Though but a short time with us, Professor H. G. Campbell bas gained a secure place in our hearts&#13;
With the&#13;
strength and vigor of a young man, supplemented by a strong personality, he&#13;
promises to become a large factor in&#13;
moulding the life of the student body.&#13;
Professor Campbell came to us from Columbia Univeristy where be bad just&#13;
completed a three years' course in philosophy. He will carry on the work of the&#13;
department of philosophy in connection&#13;
with his executive duties. He has the&#13;
immediate administration of the school,&#13;
in which capacity he is giving efficient&#13;
service&#13;
&#13;
�MISS HELEN I. LOVELAND, A. M.&#13;
Needs no introduction to our readers. For&#13;
seven years she has been building up the&#13;
department of English literature, having&#13;
in the meantime spent a year at Oxford&#13;
University in research work.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT BRADFORD WYLIE, PH. D.&#13;
After a residence of two years at the&#13;
University of Chicago as fellow and assistant in botany, while continumg his&#13;
graduate study, Professor Wylie is again&#13;
at the head of the department of biology&#13;
of Morningside College.&#13;
Professor Wylie is recongnized as a man&#13;
of unusual ability in his line. Several&#13;
papers written by himself, and others&#13;
written by major students from his clepartment, ha ve been published in the&#13;
leading scientific journals.&#13;
The work offered here in botany is of&#13;
such a standard as to ha ve gained the&#13;
recognition of the leading un iversities&#13;
&#13;
A four-year course is offered, embracing&#13;
a study of the literary movement in England. of the English Novel, of Shakespeare and t he English Drama, the Elizabethian Age, Tennyson's works, and the&#13;
Eighteenth Century Literature.&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, PH. D.&#13;
Professor Haynes, a graduate of Harvard, came to Morningside College in&#13;
1900 to occupy the chair of economics&#13;
and sociology. The year 1892 he spent&#13;
traveling in Europe and studying under&#13;
such men as Gustav Schmoller and Sir&#13;
John Seely. With such an education and&#13;
the experience gained while instructor in&#13;
the University of California and in Harvard College, Morningside is very fortunate in ha ving Professor Haynes as a&#13;
member of her faculty.&#13;
&#13;
�AGNES B. FERGUSON, M. Sc.&#13;
Miss Ferguson began her work as head&#13;
of the German department of Morningside College in 1901. This department&#13;
now offers a six year's course and one&#13;
year in scientific German. Miss Ferguson was educated in this country, but has&#13;
brought herself into fullest touch with&#13;
her work through travel and study&#13;
abroad. Miss Ferguson is well equipped&#13;
for the position she holds in Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
L.A. BLUE, PH. D.&#13;
Leonard A. Blue came to Morningside College in 1902 thoroughly prepared&#13;
for his work as professor of English and&#13;
biblical literature. Dr. Blue graduated&#13;
from Cornell College in 1892. The follow-&#13;
&#13;
ing year he spent in graduate work at the&#13;
University of Chicago. After teaching&#13;
in Iowa Weslyan University, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, he entered the graduate school&#13;
of the University of Pennsylvania&#13;
from&#13;
which institution he received the degree&#13;
of doctor of philosophy in 1902.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK HARMON GARYER, A. B.&#13;
Epworth Seminary, Upper Iowa University and the State University contributed to the education of Frank H. Garver, A. B., who accepted the chair of history and economics in Morningside College in 1898. Under his efficient hand the&#13;
department has grown, until now Morningside offers better facilities and a more&#13;
complete course in history and economics,&#13;
than most colleges. The enlarged department ca lled for a division in 1902, and&#13;
Professor Dr. Haynes accepted the department of economics and sociology,&#13;
while Professor Garver was retained as&#13;
professor of history and politics.&#13;
&#13;
�LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT, A. M.&#13;
Lillian E. Dimmitt has been identified with Morningside College since&#13;
1893. The department of Latin under&#13;
her personal supervision has reached its&#13;
present status. Miss Dimmitt, during the&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDRICK KANTHLENER,A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Kanthlener, who holds the&#13;
chair of Greek in Morningside College,&#13;
completed the college course at Cornell&#13;
College in 189G, spent one year as instructor in Latin and Greek at Epworth&#13;
Seminary. He then spent two years at&#13;
Harvard University, taking the master's&#13;
degree in 1890. During the year 18991900 he was instructor in Latin at Wilburbam Academy, Mass.&#13;
Except one&#13;
year, Professor Kanthlener has been with&#13;
us since that time. The work has been&#13;
enlarging under his leadership a nd he is&#13;
recogniz ed as a capa ble instru ctor and a&#13;
man of sterling character and worth.&#13;
&#13;
vear 1903-4 did research work in Rome,&#13;
returning&#13;
to Morningside in the fall of&#13;
1904, with increased enthusiasm and love&#13;
for her work. Miss Dimmitt is a woman&#13;
of great ability and is much loved by all&#13;
her students.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD B. GRAYNALD, A. M.&#13;
Professor Greynald is a native of&#13;
France and a graduate of the University&#13;
of Paris. He has occupied with great&#13;
success the chair of French in Morningside College since 1896. He came to our&#13;
college thoroughly equipped, and has by&#13;
earnest, persistent effort built up his department to its present flourishing condition. Five courses are offered those who&#13;
wish to study the French language, one&#13;
being practical lessons&#13;
in scientific&#13;
French.&#13;
&#13;
�EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, PH. B.&#13;
&#13;
Epbenor A. Brown, Ph. B., a graduate&#13;
of the DePauw University, needs no&#13;
introduction to the educational circles of&#13;
northwest Iowa, having been heart and&#13;
soul in the work for many years. He&#13;
has held the position of high scbool principal and county superintendent of&#13;
schools of Woodbury County several&#13;
times and college professor.&#13;
Morningside is very fortunate in having&#13;
so able an instructor as Professor Brown&#13;
in charge of the normal department.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON&#13;
Came to Morningside College six years&#13;
ago as instructor in elocution and physical culture. She attended the Philadelphia School of Oratory and has since&#13;
studied under many of the most prominent teachers of Oratory in the United&#13;
sta tes.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Davidson is very popular and has&#13;
attained great success, both as a reader&#13;
and as a teacher of elocution. The elocution&#13;
department is an important&#13;
f actor in the life of Morningside College,&#13;
under the skillful direction of Mrs. Davidson.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT N. VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
ls one of Iowa's most energetic sons. He&#13;
graduated from Mason City High School&#13;
in 1894, and after spending five terms at&#13;
Cornell College, he changed to Morningside College, where he graduated in 1900,&#13;
taking the Ph. B. degree. The following&#13;
year was spent in Johns Hopkins University pursuing a special course in mathematics. Since the fall of 1901. Professor&#13;
Van Horne has built up the department&#13;
of mathematics to its present high standard.&#13;
&#13;
�ELI FRANKLIN PECKUMN, Sc. B.&#13;
Mr. Eli Peckumn is a graduate of&#13;
Northwestern University, and his career&#13;
as scholar and athlete there have well&#13;
qualified him for the position of physical&#13;
&#13;
WINFORD LEE LEWIS, A. M.&#13;
Professor W. Lee Lewis, from Leland&#13;
Stanford University Jr., took charge of&#13;
the department of chemistry at the beginning of this year. Professor Lewis is&#13;
a Young man, well prepared in his department and enthusiastic in his work.&#13;
The instruction in this department is designed to meet the needs of two classes&#13;
of students; those who wish to study&#13;
chemistry for general culture and as a&#13;
necessary compliment to a liberal eclucation, and those who wish to take up&#13;
lines of work in which chemistry is an applied science.&#13;
&#13;
director and athletic coach at Morning side. Mr. Peckunrn has systematized&#13;
both the gymnasium and the outdoor&#13;
work and is raising the grade of all college athletics.&#13;
&#13;
MILLIARD FILLMORE M'DOWELL,Sc.B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor M. F. McDowell, a graduate&#13;
of Morniugsme College, 1903; fellow in&#13;
physics, University of Nebraska, 1903-4;&#13;
took cha rge of the department of physics&#13;
this year and is proving himself an efficient instructor. There are five courses&#13;
offered concerning the entire subject of&#13;
physics in a general way, including kinematics, dynamics, hydrodyamics&#13;
acoustics, heat, light, electricity and magnetism.&#13;
Advance&#13;
labpratory work in light and&#13;
electricity is g iven in the fourth course&#13;
and supplementing this is a course in&#13;
theoretical optics.&#13;
&#13;
�JUDSON WALDO MATHER&#13;
Prof. J. W. Mather, professor of music&#13;
and director of conservatory, came to&#13;
Morningside in the fall of 1904, but has&#13;
already filled his position as few men can.&#13;
A graduate of Oberlin Consenatory, a&#13;
pupil of Ernst Zedliczka, of Berlin, instructor in music at Cornell College&#13;
1895-8 and at Chicago Theological Seminary 1898-9, and director of conservatory&#13;
Yankton College 18899-1904, is evidence&#13;
enough that Professor Mather will make&#13;
the conservatory of Morningside College&#13;
one of the best in the west. Much has&#13;
been accomplished this year and greater&#13;
achievements are in view.&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE F. MATHER&#13;
Mrs. Mather came to Morningside in&#13;
1904 as instructor in violin and cornet.&#13;
She has studied under Charles Heydler&#13;
&#13;
EDITH AMANDA&#13;
&#13;
and Adolph Weidig, and has had nine&#13;
years' experience as instructor in violin,&#13;
and six years in corn et. Truly, Morningside is favored with eminent music instructors.&#13;
&#13;
LARSON.&#13;
&#13;
In 1902 l\Iorningsicle neeclecl an instructor in vocal music and Miss Larson, one&#13;
of ·wisconsin's daughters. responded.&#13;
Success has attended her every effort,&#13;
and Miss Larson is held in high esteem&#13;
by all who know her and her work. After her high school course she spent two&#13;
years at the Chicago Musical College, and&#13;
later studied under Alfred Williams and&#13;
William Nelson Burritt. of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
�MYRTLE&#13;
ALICE BROWN MARSHALL.&#13;
Mrs. Marshall is one of the best instructors in the conservatory and wins the love&#13;
and admiraton of all her pupils. She&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE GERTRUDE LEWIS.&#13;
Since 1900 Miss Lewis has been a member of the music faculty of Morningside&#13;
College. She studied music in Dubugue&#13;
and Minneapolis before going to Boston&#13;
to attend the New England Conservatory&#13;
from which she graduated in 1888. She&#13;
was a pupil under J. C. D. Parker, Geo.&#13;
E. Whiting, Carl Zerraher and Louis C.&#13;
Elson. and has had sixteen years' experience as an instructor. Morningside considers Miss Lewis a valuable member of her&#13;
faculty.&#13;
&#13;
came to Morningside&#13;
ter spending thirteen&#13;
such teachers as A.&#13;
ter and William H.&#13;
&#13;
College in 1902, afyears in study under&#13;
K. Virgil, Carl Ret Sherwood.&#13;
&#13;
M. LOTHIAN.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Lothian is an Iowa girl, educated&#13;
in Iowa schools. She spent two years at&#13;
Cornell College, beginning her course in&#13;
piano there; another year was spent at&#13;
the conservatory of music -of Northwestern University Evanston, Ill. After graduating from our own conservatory she&#13;
spent one year as a pupil of Emil Liebling. After three years of successful&#13;
work as an instructor on piano, Miss Lothian was obliged to leave in search of&#13;
health.&#13;
&#13;
�PROFESSOR W. A. BLACKWELL&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE L. SEARCH.&#13;
&#13;
Professor W. A. Blackwell bas been in&#13;
charge of the commercial department of&#13;
the college for nine years. He is a successful teacher and secretary of the faculty. Mr. Blackwell received his degree of&#13;
"master of accounts'" from the Gem&#13;
City Business College, of Quincy. Ill. He&#13;
also completed a two years' course in the&#13;
Western Normal School. of Buslrnell, Ill..&#13;
in 1896 He is a member of the class of&#13;
&#13;
George L. Search was elected assistant&#13;
secretary of the college in 1901, and secr etary at the meeting of the trustees in&#13;
1903. In 1890 he completed a course in&#13;
&#13;
1905.&#13;
&#13;
MAN-NOT-AFRAID-OF-THE-FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
stenography at the University of the&#13;
Morthwest Mr. Search is an experienced&#13;
accountant and a man of great natural&#13;
business ability. Under his management&#13;
the finances of the college have been&#13;
built up and carefully guarded.&#13;
&#13;
�THE IDEALSTUDENT&#13;
My ideal student is not necessarily the best scholar in&#13;
his class, though that is rather in his favor. But he is&#13;
studious, earnest, faithful. He tries. His Tuesday's&#13;
lessons are as well prepared as those of any other day.&#13;
A little learning doesn't turn his head, ( though a little&#13;
girl may). He doesn't know it all and knows he doesn't.&#13;
A college education will not hurt him.&#13;
Again, my ideal student is frank and honest, always&#13;
to be trusted. He has the confidence of all his fellows.&#13;
He is not a "goody, goody," but enjoys a good time-at&#13;
the proper time.&#13;
He keeps most of the rules of the school. He always&#13;
gets sleepy at 10 p. m., sharp. When not absent, or in&#13;
some other seat, he always occupies his own seat at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
He uses his song-book to sing out of, not to write in. He&#13;
is loyal to friends, always takes his friend's part-especially at dinner.&#13;
He is loyal to his class and society, but his patriotism&#13;
is fo r his college. He has college spirit and shows it. He&#13;
always boosts for the whole school. If a college student,&#13;
he will attend the academy debate. He takes at least one&#13;
course in history, and doesn't whisper,-all the time. He&#13;
laughs at my jokes and, therefore, raises his grade.&#13;
In conclusion, my ideal student would be a composite&#13;
of all the students of Morningside College, were it possible&#13;
to create such a personage.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. F. H. GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
��Hadden&#13;
Acken back&#13;
&#13;
Killam&#13;
Darling&#13;
&#13;
Saunders&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Finch&#13;
Maynard&#13;
&#13;
Magee&#13;
&#13;
Aldrich&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
&#13;
�C lass&#13;
&#13;
of 190 4&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
HE HISTORY of the class of 1904 is so confused wi th romance and astrology, and so interspersed with periods of inactivity, that we did not wish&#13;
to record the legend as historical truth. Kind and earnest invitations&#13;
were extended to several members of the class to furnish a record of facts for the&#13;
gratification of public interest, but silence gave the only response. Now, that&#13;
we may aid those who sincerly wish to investigate the mysteries of the forgotten&#13;
past, we furnish the following references:&#13;
IRA R. ALDRICH, Pastor&#13;
Hull, Iowa&#13;
A. H. MAYNARD, Pastor&#13;
Ocheydan, Iowa&#13;
MRS. MABEL KILLAM MAYNARD, Pastor's Wife, Ocheydan, Iowa&#13;
DR. W. E. SAUNDERS M. D.&#13;
Alta, Iowa&#13;
D. E. HADDON, Druggist&#13;
Alta, Iowa&#13;
G. W. F1i ch&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
N ARCISSA MILLER&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
GRACE DARLING, Sec'y Y. W. C. A.&#13;
Bridgeport, Conn.&#13;
STANLEY CARSON, Boston Theological School, Boston, Mass.&#13;
LYDTA TRIMBLE, Missionary&#13;
Foo Chow, China&#13;
J. R. MAGEE, Pastor&#13;
Paullina, Iowa&#13;
J. A. ACKENBACK, Student, School of Physicians and&#13;
Surgeons&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
�Root&#13;
&#13;
V. Fair&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
&#13;
Ellerbroek&#13;
&#13;
E. Fair&#13;
Bowker&#13;
&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Debenham&#13;
&#13;
Stulken&#13;
McCay&#13;
&#13;
Killam&#13;
Lock in&#13;
&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Harding&#13;
&#13;
Cook&#13;
&#13;
Maynard&#13;
Morgan&#13;
&#13;
Carrol&#13;
Kling&#13;
&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
Goodall&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
Hanna&#13;
&#13;
�THE CLASSof 1905&#13;
BY ONE OF US&#13;
&#13;
MvRTILLA CooK,&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
A. BLACKWELL,&#13;
&#13;
Vice-Pres.&#13;
&#13;
HE SIOUX have requested the Class of 1905 to record a&#13;
few of our whoops along with theirs, but have limited&#13;
our space till we can not do ourselves justice. however, here&#13;
are a few facts from our history.&#13;
The nucleus of our class registered as freshmen in the year&#13;
1901. Although one time early iu our career. ours was the&#13;
smallest class in school, so great was our merit and attractive&#13;
power that all the wise members of '06 hastened to class up and&#13;
join us, and even one member of the faculty could not resist the&#13;
temptation to come off his perch. and he now adorns our front&#13;
row in chapel. With these additions to our forces we expect to&#13;
surpass in numbers any two previous graduating classes combined.&#13;
The greatest crisis in our history was in the spring of our&#13;
sophomore year when we faced the question of a Junior Annual. We decided to publish one and. after a year of hard&#13;
work, we published "The Maroon," of which we think we have&#13;
reason to be proud.&#13;
During our junior year we were learning from experience&#13;
and what we don't know about publishing annuals, we don't&#13;
consider worth knowing. We gained some pointers on business&#13;
methods. some practical experience in politics, amd some interesting information on certain legal points. In connection with&#13;
the last named we might name June 20th, '04, as a memorable&#13;
date&#13;
We broke all records, as to the possible number per clay and&#13;
length of business sessions. At times. for hours, no juniors were&#13;
visible to the outside world, at which times we might have been&#13;
found in some secluded place, settling weighty problems. We&#13;
never experienced any difficulty in securing a full attendance at&#13;
meetings and could gladly give the Sioux sonie advice along this&#13;
line.&#13;
An important social event in our history occurred when we&#13;
entertained the seniors of '04. The evening was ideal (for ducks)&#13;
&#13;
CORA LOCKTN,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ANNA GOODALL,&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
and the seniors came full force. We taught them a few new&#13;
athletic stunts and spent the evening so pleasantly that we&#13;
failed to hear the ten o'clock bell.&#13;
Our first social gathering of the present year took place on&#13;
Hallowe'en The Sioux chanced to have camped just next door&#13;
to us and half a dozen of their&#13;
big Injun" braves reinforced by a couple of squaws, boldly sallied forth and captured&#13;
one of our smallest girls. Our great admiration for their courage dates from that event&#13;
We never found it necessary to label ourselves by wearing&#13;
hideous caps, or baggage checks but have been recognized by&#13;
our dignity and wisdom. We claim the best chapel record of any&#13;
senior class in the history of M. C .. and we, also, claim to have&#13;
smashed some basketball records. We have of late acquired&#13;
the front seat habit so thoroughly that no one need be surprised&#13;
to see us on the front seats in class, or even in church. And&#13;
that reminds me. one of our nccomplishments is our ability to&#13;
sing hymn No. 136 without a book.&#13;
As to the individuals who compose our number, they are of&#13;
various kinds Two are married men and their voyage on the sea&#13;
of matrimony has seemed so prosperous that, according to rumors, other members are preparing to set sail.&#13;
Many of our members have enviable records down where&#13;
the grades are kept; some are talented musicians and elocutionists; some have been prominent in debate and oratory; and have&#13;
won laurels on the athletic field. One has some novel ideas on&#13;
the subject of caps and gowns. One has finished his work and&#13;
is already a High school principal. Some are tall, though many&#13;
are short. Some will be preachers, some lawyers, some teachers.&#13;
But in spite of our differences. we have enjoyed the time&#13;
spent together and it is not without regret that we look forward&#13;
to graduation, for it means that we must part from each other&#13;
and from old M. C. May we always be a credit to our class and&#13;
to our college.&#13;
"heap&#13;
&#13;
�...&#13;
&#13;
Heilman&#13;
&#13;
Wishard&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Towner&#13;
&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Collins&#13;
Woodford&#13;
&#13;
Scheel&#13;
&#13;
Mekkleson&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Spratt&#13;
&#13;
Gantt&#13;
Frear&#13;
&#13;
Fred endoll&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Matthews&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
Taylor&#13;
Cole&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
Holli worth&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
Swem&#13;
&#13;
�A Topic from Professor Carber's Note Book&#13;
Topic 560.&#13;
I. ELECTION AND CANDIDATES&#13;
&#13;
The Reign of '07.&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 14, 1903.&#13;
&#13;
b. FOREIGN&#13;
12. The return of the people.&#13;
1. To forget that '06 ever considered hima. Self appointed.&#13;
I 3· Former Minister Cain deserts and deself a worthy foe.&#13;
clares allegiance to Queen Olive.&#13;
b. Candidates.&#13;
2. To forget that he claimed to have buried&#13;
1. '04 hardly eligible because of old age.&#13;
14· The war with '08.&#13;
a hatchet, which must have been bor2. '05 lost support because of annual disa. PRINCtPAL BATTLES&#13;
rowed for funeral purposes.&#13;
sentions.&#13;
a. Corridor Heights. The enemy severe3. To declare war against the enemy.&#13;
3. '06 would have secured the crown if there&#13;
ly crippled .&#13;
had been no other candidates.&#13;
IV. EVENTS&#13;
b. Siege of Hay-Rack Fort. Many rebels&#13;
4. Faculty not considered.&#13;
fell, and Commander Mossman taken&#13;
I. The usurpation of the crown and the&#13;
5. '07 took it.&#13;
prisoner. Trium phal march under great&#13;
appointment of Prime Minister Cain,&#13;
II. CHARACTER&#13;
Panama arch.&#13;
September, 1903.&#13;
c. B;:,.ttle of Gridiron Plain. Shnrt truce.&#13;
1. Not many sided, but well rounded.&#13;
2. The pigeon flight fortold the glorious&#13;
2. Large head like that of a senior, except&#13;
future of '07.&#13;
d. Haskins Castle. Enemy routed. Commander Horner frigl·.•ened u n ti 1 he&#13;
that 1t contains gray matter.&#13;
3. The chicken flight fortold the decline&#13;
3. Herculean in strength, Napoleonic in&#13;
of 'o6.&#13;
imagined himself afflicted with many maladies, curable only by the Sophomore's&#13;
generalshir, Garverian in wit.&#13;
4 . The highway holdup of the '06 provision&#13;
Soothing Co's. Tonic.&#13;
4. One of the perhaps four faultless chartrain, and the triumph and feast that&#13;
e. Basket Ball Swamp. '08 left in the&#13;
acters in history.&#13;
followed.&#13;
rushes.&#13;
III. POLICY&#13;
5. The National Leap Year Feast. Some&#13;
15. Assembly at Lehman Hall to bid farewell&#13;
a. DOMESTIC&#13;
went up by two's, some by three's, and&#13;
to Lord Trimple and ladies Rorem and&#13;
1. To preserve the power of the House of&#13;
some came down a ladder.&#13;
Cable, who departed to civilize the people&#13;
Lords, there being no Commons.&#13;
6. Pilgrimage to the Floyd Shrine. On the&#13;
of distant countries.&#13;
2. To assemble often.&#13;
return, '05 having revolted and stationed&#13;
15. The check of Morgan's Raid and the&#13;
3. Tobe entirelyindependentof all precedents&#13;
his black personage across the highway,&#13;
persecution of the Morganites.&#13;
and traditions, especially deeming the&#13;
was soon reduced to a red spot.&#13;
pract ices of '06 barbarous and antiquated&#13;
7. The inte rment of the aboriginal '06.&#13;
V. RESULTS&#13;
8. Resignation of Prime Minister Cain, and&#13;
4. To preserve patriotism.&#13;
As to what will be the final outcome of this&#13;
a. By yelling national yells and singing&#13;
appointment of his successor, Young.&#13;
heroic age of '07, present prophets cannot&#13;
national songs.&#13;
9. The message delivered by the Prime Minb. By feas ting often.&#13;
ister, before the na1ions assembled from&#13;
speak fast enough to fortell, future historians&#13;
will not live long enough to record, the&#13;
5. To make news.&#13;
the exalted heights of the gallery, in which&#13;
a. That the court reporters might create&#13;
he reco unted the noble deeds of his&#13;
English language will be unable to express,&#13;
and imagination will be powerless to picture.&#13;
a great sensation&#13;
during Minister Cain's term of office&#13;
b. That Morningside Hill might be known&#13;
ro. Pilgrimages of the people to their mother&#13;
The perioj has its stars in every avenue of&#13;
among Nations of the East, such as Chicnuntry.&#13;
progress. which will develop into moons and&#13;
cago, New York, London and Rome.&#13;
11. The Minister's trip to Waucoma where&#13;
suns in the universe. The warrior, debater,&#13;
histoiran, novelist, scientist, author, granger&#13;
6. To be suoreme over all the tribes of&#13;
negotiations were made that may lead to&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
a foreign alliance.&#13;
and chronic kicker are found among its heroes.&#13;
NOTE:- If there be any thoughts in the above topic that you cannot comprehend, consider yourself an '08 and act accordingly.&#13;
&#13;
�Mark Antony Up-To-Date&#13;
&#13;
F&#13;
&#13;
RIENDS, students, freshmen, lend me your cup. I come to&#13;
have a picture taken of the Sophomore Basketball team&#13;
and to praise the sophomores. The evil that sophs do, lives&#13;
after them, while the good, if there be any, is oft interred with&#13;
their bones. So let it be with the Sophomores.&#13;
The noble Young has told you that Sophomores are ambitious, and, if it is so, it is a grievous fault and grievously have&#13;
they answered for it. Here, under leave of Young, and the rest,&#13;
for Young is an honorable man, so are all Sophomores all honorable men, I come to speak at their funeral. They were their&#13;
own friends, faithful and just to each other. Still. Young says,&#13;
they were ambitious, and is he not a strange-hearted man?&#13;
Hath not his true knave Adams rode many cows home in&#13;
Morningside, and e'en when he did fear that Bossie would bite&#13;
him, and right well, too, for do not all cows like cabbage-heads?&#13;
And did not this Adams seem ambitious'? You all did see that on&#13;
an autumn night the freshmen did twice mount him on a kingly&#13;
throne, which he as oft did ride. And this when fear was quaking in his heart, for was he not unused to railroads? And yet&#13;
he would forsooth have this refused. Was this ambition? Yet&#13;
all sophomores are ambitious. all are honorable men. I speak&#13;
not to disprove what they would say, but rather to correct and&#13;
render to you the truth.&#13;
You all did love this Heilman once, so did a lady friend of&#13;
his, and not without cause, for is he not a "pretty boy" with&#13;
blooming cheek? Still, one eve when he did press too close, she&#13;
bit him on the cheek. Why, then, do you not mourn for him?&#13;
What cause withholds your grief and tears'?&#13;
But a short time ago the word of a sophomore might have&#13;
stood against the world. But now, ah, me. he lies all in a heap&#13;
where the freshmen did put him on the football field. Did he&#13;
&#13;
not say 23 to 0, and was it so? Still he lies there and none so&#13;
poor to do him reverence. Oh! Students! If I were disposed&#13;
to stir your hearts and minds to mutiny and rage, I might but&#13;
tell you how one called Heilman did but bribe a junior prep&#13;
and by the hire and downfall of e'en so base a one as this, seek&#13;
to elevate himself. Still, Heilman is an honorable man, so are&#13;
they all, all honorable men.&#13;
Have patience, gentle friends. it is but meet and right that&#13;
you should know how sophomores love freshmen. And you are&#13;
not wood, not stones, but men, and I will tell you how many&#13;
times their ambitions led them to try to capture the freshman&#13;
president. And how, as oft, his force of will did prevail and he&#13;
was let to go.&#13;
Ah. me! but it is a sad tale. Well do you know this light&#13;
blue suit. Well clo I remember the first time Young clicl put it&#13;
on. He was in Clear Lake and still, kind friends, we heard&#13;
it. Look! see where Cupid ran his dagger through. See what a&#13;
rent the envious Love-Goel made, and as he plucked the steel&#13;
a way, lo, and a sophomore heart did follow it. Judge, oh, ye&#13;
gods how Young did love! And, so, was this not the kindest cut&#13;
of all? Ah, what a mighty fall there was, my classmen, when&#13;
the mighty Everhart (255 pounds) did meet and would have stopped a football-playing freshman. And did not Himmel (140&#13;
pouuds) make him sorely wish that he were e'en from the other&#13;
place? Look, you, how young Manning's pride was wounded.&#13;
Many are the scars which he received in that immortal fight.&#13;
But, good friends, sweet friends, let me not stir you up to&#13;
such a point of laughter and of mirth, for sophomores thought&#13;
these deeds were honorable. ·what private griefs they have I&#13;
know not. yet forsooth they need none-their share in truth&#13;
has been allotted to them in public.&#13;
'l'herefore, they will, no doubt, with reasons answer to you.&#13;
I come not to steal, to steal your hearts away, rather, as you&#13;
know full well, to beg your sympathies for them.&#13;
&#13;
�Heap-Big-Whoopee&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Freshman-papoose-Cry-For-It-Magic-Cure-All&#13;
&#13;
Guaranteed to Cure&#13;
&#13;
LL INFANT complaints and other maladies, that the class&#13;
of 1908 is heir to. including •·crowing, croup, teething,&#13;
crabbidness, vacuous cerebrum, that "weary feeling," mental aberration, excessiye expulsion of incoherent syllables, chickenpox, mumps, measles, spasms, in fact, all varieties of Freshmanities."&#13;
&#13;
WHAT MASTER JACK HORNER OF MOTHER GOOSE FAME&#13;
SAYS OF HEAP-BIG-WHOOPEE-FRESHMAN-PAPOOSECRY-FOR-IT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL&#13;
"I am an itty-boy sometimes called 'The Fweshies' Fweak&#13;
Pwesident.' One day we Fweshies gone to town to get our pictures took. I had to take the class to the gallery, 'cause I is&#13;
Pwesident. My mama said I did look cute in my itty wed-flannel&#13;
blouse! But my eyes touldn't see stwaight and I touldn't find&#13;
Genelli's. The Doctors said I had Infantile Opthalmia vewy&#13;
bad. I went up to a great big machine on the corner and&#13;
sit down in front of a big thing wif a hole in it, like the itty&#13;
birdies come out of an' told the man, 'we wants our pictures&#13;
tooken;' but he says, 'This noey picture-shop, this John Zotues&#13;
peanut-stand.' But mama feel me on HEAP-BIG-WIIOOPEEFreshman-P&#13;
APOOSE-CRY-FOR-IT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL (Gee&#13;
it was good) an' I tan see fine, an' mama lets me go clear to 14th&#13;
and Pearl all by my lonesome. I tells yon it's fine stuff.&#13;
JACK HORNER.&#13;
RECOMMENDED BY AN EXPERT SEAMSTRESS AND MONOGRAM EMBROIDERER&#13;
I used to be weak and pusillanimous, but now I ain't, and it's&#13;
'cause I takes Heap-big-whoopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-itmagic-cure-all regular, without stoppin' every clay. You know&#13;
last winter, when us Fresbies went sleighridin', the man what&#13;
was drivin' told us all to get out at Cooper Schoolhouse 'cause&#13;
he thought there's where we went to school. So we got out,&#13;
'cause we knew the horses couldn't pull such a big people up the&#13;
Hill; an' then the horrid old drivin' man said 'git up,' and away&#13;
the horses went lickety-scoot. So we all had to walk home; and&#13;
my, it's just awful far. Most of the others got so tired they fell&#13;
&#13;
by the wayside. Blanche Johns just thought she never would&#13;
get home. But I, with the help of Harry Boy and Heap-bigw hoopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all, walked clear&#13;
home and stood on the front porch four hours without noticing&#13;
the effects.&#13;
ELSIE MAY WEARY&#13;
(but not if she takes HEAP-BIG-WHOOPEE-FRESHMANPAPOOSE-CRY-FOR-IT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL)&#13;
&#13;
FAMOUS COWBOY USES IT&#13;
IIEAP-BIG-WHOOPEE-FRESHMAN-PAPOOSE-CRY-FORIT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL is jim-dandy for the nerves. Last fall&#13;
the naughty Sophomores clot me and put me on a dweat big cow&#13;
and tied my footsies and my hands to-dedder&#13;
and made me wide&#13;
the horrid old thing and it tompletely broke down my tonstitution. which I 'sposed was iron. My poor itty body was all atwcrnblin' and a-shakin' and I was threatened with nervous&#13;
pwostwation. but Lonnie Jones pulled his bottle of Heap-bigwiloopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all out of his&#13;
potet and give me just one swallow. It braced me all up to stand&#13;
anything; so when the horricl, smart old sophomores took me over&#13;
banks and creeks and lots of other things wif my eyes blindfolded and tied me up to a gweat . big pillar at Florence's house,&#13;
all alone, I wasn't a bit afraid. No, sir! I just stood there tied&#13;
w·ith those big ropes and took it like a itty man; and it's all&#13;
'cause I took that one dose of Heap-big-whoopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all.&#13;
IKE WESCOTT.&#13;
These are only samples of the letters we receive daily from&#13;
grateful little pale-faces, who owe their lives to Heap-big-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all. Many of them have taken&#13;
treatment under learned doctors, have been at Campbell's Sanitarium and tried its sweat-baths, have tried different forms of&#13;
exercise, such as basketball, in fact, have experimented with all&#13;
sorts of remedies, without finding any relief, until, as a last resort. they have tried Heap-big-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magiccure-all, which is rapidly bringing them out of the darkness and&#13;
depths of despair into the sunlight of health and happiness.&#13;
SOPHOMORE SOOTHING SYRUP CO.,&#13;
Manufacturers and Distributor s.&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
Himmel&#13;
Prichard&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
Johns&#13;
&#13;
Babcock&#13;
Groom&#13;
Crow&#13;
&#13;
Hanna Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
Evans&#13;
&#13;
Wilson&#13;
&#13;
Bryan&#13;
Weary&#13;
Pierson&#13;
&#13;
Haskins&#13;
&#13;
Skinner&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Dickson&#13;
&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Watts&#13;
Faulk&#13;
&#13;
Eurer&#13;
&#13;
McDonald&#13;
&#13;
De Lay&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Malada&#13;
&#13;
Horner .Chamberlain Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
Hallam&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Briggle&#13;
&#13;
�F RESHMAN&#13;
BY CLARE D.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
ICE President&#13;
CAMPBELL, of the great M. Railway&#13;
system&#13;
was seated in his private office pondering over a&#13;
cipher telegram just received from the board of directors.&#13;
then in session in the east. The president cf the road was absent&#13;
on important business. and the cares of four great clivisions of&#13;
the system all devolved upon the head of the vice president, who&#13;
was a new man in the position, having come from one of the&#13;
great eastern systems. The telegram, which was causing him so&#13;
much anxiety and study, read as follows:&#13;
.June 13 1904.&#13;
VicePresidentCampbell: "It has been decided by the board of&#13;
directors that a new through service over your four divisions&#13;
must be estalblished not later than the miclclle of Sep tern ber.&#13;
Send orclers to your division superintendents to have everything&#13;
in readiness."&#13;
B. MITCHELL,&#13;
Chairman of Board.&#13;
&#13;
Nearly three months later. or on the 13th September, at&#13;
nine o'clock a. m .. the train for the new schedule backed into&#13;
the great terminal station. According to the orders, which the&#13;
yar,l crew had received from division Superintendent L. A. blue,&#13;
the train was composed of four new Pullmans. The Scientific,&#13;
The Classical, The Philosophical and The Special. These four&#13;
magnificent coaches were drawn by a locomotive of the most&#13;
mo•iern type, "Progress." Engineer Hartzell and fireman&#13;
Thompson composed the engine crew.&#13;
One by one the passengers purchased their tickets of Mr.&#13;
Search, the agent, and, after showing their ticket at the gate,&#13;
were allowed to pass and placed in their respectiYe cars for the&#13;
journey. It was a motley crowd that had gathered, some fresh&#13;
&#13;
HORNER&#13;
&#13;
from the farm with their little carpet bags, others from small&#13;
country villages, others who were High school graduates. A&#13;
few were from the immediate vicinity. One thing was noticeable&#13;
- there were-more young ladies than young men. the train, when&#13;
re ady to depart contained nearly half a hundred of these bright&#13;
yo ung people. some of whom were bound only for the first stop&#13;
on the division&#13;
Others for the division encl. Still others were&#13;
th ere who intended to cross the whole system.&#13;
At each stop. and particularly at each division end, some old&#13;
passengers leave the train and other new ones take their places .&#13;
some transfer from this to other systems, and passengers from&#13;
o1her roads will make connections. Others who have missed&#13;
former trains take this one. The train crew for the first division&#13;
consist of Conductor Mcssman, assisted by Brakeman Clark&#13;
aJ1d Flagman Skinner. At the end of the east divisom the engi ne crew w ere relieved from their duties by Engineer Smith&#13;
a11d Fireman Hallam. The train crew selected for this divisiov&#13;
comprised Conductcr Horner, Brakeman Dickson and Flagman&#13;
Jones&#13;
The last word receiYecl of the train comes direct from Train&#13;
Dispatcher Haynes· office and is to the effect that the train is&#13;
running "on time." this train has been given the right of way&#13;
and is superior in class to any other of the road.&#13;
From the Freshman diYision it will pass on to and over in&#13;
turn to the Sophomore, Junior and Senior divisions and land its&#13;
passengers "on time" at the final terminal station, "Success."&#13;
From here the passengers will wend their way to the business cares of life, and, with tl1e good start gained while traveling over the great M. division, will make their mark not only&#13;
on the history of the nation, but on the history of the world.&#13;
&#13;
�Shaw&#13;
Day&#13;
Prescott&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Currier&#13;
Carkuff&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Hulse&#13;
&#13;
Howlett&#13;
Gary&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Ro rem&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Reeder&#13;
&#13;
Chamberlain&#13;
Fry&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Crummer&#13;
&#13;
Yule&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Gruber&#13;
&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Brooks&#13;
Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
�Senior Academy History&#13;
1.&#13;
HE JUNIOR class of nineteen five.&#13;
Of lads and Lassies which do thrive,&#13;
Was a good-looking&#13;
studious&#13;
class&#13;
But green, as green as fresh-spring grass&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
i\Iid&#13;
And&#13;
And&#13;
Just&#13;
&#13;
7.&#13;
T' e Middles. with their blue and buff,&#13;
&#13;
soon found their places quick enough,&#13;
1Vhile all the Seniors in surprise&#13;
Did from their Chapel seats not rise.&#13;
&#13;
But yet, not slowly did they crawl,&#13;
They plainly showed to one and all&#13;
And let the college know at once,&#13;
Each Junior Prep was not a dunce&#13;
&#13;
8.&#13;
But. when at last the scrap was o'er,&#13;
And all had risen from the floor,&#13;
'Twas plainly seen who'd won the day&#13;
And come out Yictors in the fray.&#13;
&#13;
3.&#13;
For one debater then had we,&#13;
An excellent one of high degree,&#13;
And last, not least, the star athlete,&#13;
1Vho won such honors in field-meet.&#13;
&#13;
9.&#13;
But. oh. I have not time to tell.&#13;
How all the Seniors lowly fell.&#13;
When next their colors they did wear&#13;
Which quickly from them we did tear.&#13;
&#13;
4.&#13;
From Juniors to the middle class,&#13;
Both large and small a ll soon did pass,&#13;
And then what jolly times had we&#13;
For then to scrap each one was free.&#13;
&#13;
10.&#13;
Or when. at last. all scraps were o'er.&#13;
And we all met at Irwin's door,&#13;
And a ll engaged in friendly chat&#13;
And middle by a Senior sat.&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
And&#13;
The&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
5.&#13;
morn 'twas noised thro' all the hall&#13;
reached the l\Iiddles one and all,&#13;
Seniors would their colors wear&#13;
Middles touch 'em not one dare.&#13;
&#13;
6.&#13;
But last, not least, it was not done.&#13;
Yet, all did have their share of fun,&#13;
The Middles met and that's enough.&#13;
They chose their colors blue and buff.&#13;
&#13;
AL VAH L. MILLER, President.&#13;
&#13;
Motto, "Hop to it."&#13;
&#13;
13.&#13;
wind and rain they climbed up high&#13;
every obstacle did defy,&#13;
hung our colors in the breeze,&#13;
fine and dandy, if you please.&#13;
&#13;
14.&#13;
And there our colors hung all day,&#13;
While all the Middles sadly Jay&#13;
And watched them swinging upon high&#13;
But no one of them dared go nigh.&#13;
&#13;
15.&#13;
The l\Iiddles copied after us,&#13;
And with such a terrible fuss,&#13;
Hung colors high upon the tower,&#13;
Which took, indeed, their utmost power.&#13;
16.&#13;
When we awoke next morn, ha! ha!&#13;
And on the tower their colors saw.&#13;
They quickly vanished out of sight,&#13;
The Middles fled in terrible fright.&#13;
17.&#13;
Next. we'll go to the football game&#13;
Where all the Seniors won some fame&#13;
And dravely made a score of five,&#13;
And victory of the Middles deprived.&#13;
&#13;
11.&#13;
But. now, oh, Senior preps are we,&#13;
And a better class you ne'er did see,&#13;
For the Senior class of 1905&#13;
Can Jet you know they are alive&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
And&#13;
For&#13;
.You&#13;
&#13;
12.&#13;
.Just listen and I will relate&#13;
how Senior boys once baffling fate&#13;
Did climb upon the old North Hall&#13;
and run the risk of a down ward fall.&#13;
&#13;
and so with work and study we'll thrive,&#13;
Until the Spring of '05,&#13;
And With high honors graduate&#13;
And wander on to know our fate.&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE DAY, Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Hi-ki-zip&#13;
&#13;
Zis boom ba&#13;
&#13;
Senior Preps. Wah.&#13;
&#13;
18.&#13;
now basketball games we'll play&#13;
last, not least. will win the day&#13;
with our motto. "Hop to it,"&#13;
get a score, well I guess nit.&#13;
&#13;
19.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN R. DAY, Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Blue and Buff.&#13;
&#13;
�ANTLOIPATION&#13;
&#13;
EVAPORATION&#13;
&#13;
��Brigg le&#13;
Stulken&#13;
Scheel&#13;
Robbins&#13;
&#13;
Hanna&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Van Dyke&#13;
&#13;
Root&#13;
&#13;
Wunn&#13;
Minkler&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
&#13;
Wishare&#13;
&#13;
Mekkleson&#13;
Debenham&#13;
&#13;
Horner&#13;
&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Harding&#13;
&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
&#13;
Brower&#13;
&#13;
Taylor&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean&#13;
BY A PHILO&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
IT DOWN, my boy! Sit down ! Busy? Oh, we're never idle,&#13;
you know. Something I can do for you? Oh, that's it.&#13;
Well, let's see. Are you real sure you want to go into the&#13;
wholesale grocery business now? How old are you jsut fin&#13;
ished High school haven't you? Now take an old man's advice and go through college first. Takes time'! Oh, yes, of&#13;
course, it takes some time and I know that just now it seems&#13;
to you, as if getting into business was the essential thing, but&#13;
you've time enough for that, after you have prepared yourself&#13;
as far as possilJle in getting a general education. You mustn't&#13;
think a college education prepares one only for a preacher, or a&#13;
lawyer&#13;
You haven't been there and don't know about the&#13;
things that can be learned outside of books, which are really&#13;
of more practical value to one, after he leaves the college halls.&#13;
than book knowledge. The ability to judge men and to associate&#13;
with men and women with an easy manner is a necessary attainment for a business man that few possess and which is opbtained&#13;
in the easiest manner by taking a college course. There your&#13;
very surroundings bring you in touch with other people in such&#13;
a manner as to put you upon your own rPsources and bring out&#13;
all there is in you.&#13;
How are you fixed for time? anything special on hand'? Well,&#13;
I thought, since I have given you a little sermon on college life,&#13;
you might be interested in hearing some of my recollections of&#13;
my college course. It was away back in the beginning of this&#13;
centur.· that I attended i\Iorningsicle College. Well do I re&#13;
member the football and lJaseball games, the class scraps, the&#13;
college pranks, the class sleigh rides, and, above all, my society&#13;
experiences. I tell you the society is the real practical educator&#13;
after all. I was a member of what I thought was the best so--&#13;
&#13;
ciety in school. the Philomathean. One term especially do I&#13;
remember. It was the winter term of my senior year, '05. I can&#13;
see, as though yesterday. the debates, with which our society&#13;
was always much concernetL We had a system of s11ver medal&#13;
contests running throughout the year.&#13;
Our friend, the&#13;
corporation lawyer, across the street, the pastor of the&#13;
Methodist church on the hill, the judge of this clistrict, the editor of our daily paper. the secretary of the Y. M. C. A. and several other men here in town received their first practical training in those debates. Although a literary society, in which&#13;
much literary work of all kinds was done, yet, we didn't forget&#13;
the social side of college life. Our banquets, receptions and outings were events looked forward to by us boys with great interest. many is the time that we used to lay aside our books&#13;
when lessons became an intolerable bore and when our minds&#13;
seemed bewildered in the maze of learning and would forget all&#13;
in a few hours of jollity and recreation, to go back to our books&#13;
with new vim and enjoyment. Oh, I tell you, those were the clays&#13;
that we really lived, though we didn't realize it at the time.&#13;
Then, too, we aimed as a society to stand for a clean and&#13;
honest manhood, well rounded out in every particular, that went&#13;
to make a man, a man in truth.&#13;
,&#13;
I'll declare, here I am rattling along about my school days&#13;
to you and never noticing what time it is getting to be. Well,&#13;
what do you think about college now? You will never make a&#13;
wiser move and, if you decide to go to Morningside, look up the&#13;
Philos. Although there are other societies in the school that&#13;
are just as good, perhaps, yet, there is none that I can ever&#13;
think so much of.&#13;
Now, my boy, think it over carefully and decide for the right&#13;
and you will never regret it; then after finishing your college&#13;
course, if you still wish to learn the business, come to me and I&#13;
will see what I can clo for you.&#13;
&#13;
�Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Lear&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
Pierson&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Gary&#13;
&#13;
Frear&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
Spratt&#13;
Skinner&#13;
&#13;
Flinn&#13;
Woodford&#13;
&#13;
McDonald&#13;
Johns&#13;
&#13;
Cole&#13;
&#13;
Matthews&#13;
Bryan&#13;
&#13;
Kling&#13;
Bowker&#13;
&#13;
Frear&#13;
Erskine&#13;
Lock in&#13;
&#13;
Correll&#13;
Hallam&#13;
&#13;
Fry&#13;
&#13;
Peirce&#13;
Erskine&#13;
Henry&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
�In the atheneum literary society&#13;
&#13;
Once more, dear friend, to us thy past unveil,&#13;
And may we not forget the days gone by&#13;
Nor, as we look upon thee, ever fail&#13;
To cherish memories that within it lie.&#13;
Well may we bless the day when thou wert born,&#13;
And those who reared thee in thy early days&#13;
And taught thee how thou mightest well adorn&#13;
The lives of maidens in a thousand ways.&#13;
I seem to see them now who fostered thee,&#13;
Oh! how they loved thee, how they hoped for thee,&#13;
Instilled within thee what would surely be&#13;
A power for good in thy maturity.&#13;
Thou art not very old, but twelve at most,&#13;
Yet seemest as strong as one of greater years,&#13;
Fit champion thou to lead a youthful host,&#13;
For thy success we scarce could harbor fears.&#13;
Thou hast about thee a most helpful air,&#13;
And noble work to thee is given here&#13;
To touch and charm those lives within thy care&#13;
With lofty thoughts and gems of light most dear.&#13;
Methinks there are within each human breast&#13;
God-given powers, that for Him shall be used&#13;
&#13;
And rightly trained, that they attain their bestThat not one single gift should be abused.&#13;
Thou canst with thy discerning power reveal&#13;
The dormant gifts, that hid, are lying still&#13;
And let thy influence in upon them steal&#13;
And mould and fashion them as thou shalt will.&#13;
Some choicest spirits proudly bear thy name&#13;
Whom thou hast touched and stirred to richer life;&#13;
Who, now, abroad are spreading for thy fame&#13;
As they engage in the pursuits of life.&#13;
Then there are many still within thy fold&#13;
whom thou dost watch with tender, anxious care,&#13;
And as thou seest those secret powers unfold&#13;
Thou mayest be proud that they thy impress bear.&#13;
In time to come thy memory they will bless&#13;
Because thou hast been unto them a friend,&#13;
And aided them in reaching glad successU pon their love thou ever canst depend.&#13;
Yes, thou hast had a very worthy past&#13;
And one that we would earnestly commend,&#13;
And we shalt covet for thee to the last&#13;
That true success thy way shall e'er attend.&#13;
&#13;
�Howard&#13;
&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Clark&#13;
Marsh&#13;
&#13;
Chamberlain&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Davidson&#13;
&#13;
McDowell&#13;
&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
&#13;
Wilson&#13;
Haskins&#13;
&#13;
Hart&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Faulk&#13;
&#13;
Ellerbroek&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Weary&#13;
&#13;
Swem&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
De Lay&#13;
&#13;
Cook&#13;
&#13;
Dickson&#13;
Towner&#13;
&#13;
Palmer&#13;
&#13;
Watts&#13;
Seaver&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
Eurer&#13;
&#13;
Killian&#13;
Brown&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Crossan&#13;
Thompson&#13;
&#13;
�'O&#13;
&#13;
BY FLORENCE R. DAVIDSON,&#13;
&#13;
'05&#13;
&#13;
H, HELLO. Gertrude. I am so glad to see you Yes, I&#13;
just reached home this morning. fun?&#13;
I should say&#13;
so! But I hope you are not insinuating that that is all&#13;
I went to college for. I tell you, Gertrude. you ought to go to&#13;
Morningside. There is nothing like college Ii. e. It is not only t 1e&#13;
education you get. lmt a touch of life that you get nowhere&#13;
else but in college. Come. go back with me next year won't&#13;
you'?''&#13;
"but, genevieve you know how l hate to study."&#13;
"But it is such fun to study, where everyone else is doing&#13;
the same thing. Then there are midnigl1t spreads, class parties,'&#13;
sleigh-rides, receptions and above all. 'society doings.' I would&#13;
not ta ke anything in the world for the friendships I have&#13;
formed in my society."&#13;
"what society did you belong to ·1 Do tell me about it."&#13;
"well, there are four collegiate societies and four academy&#13;
societies. The third tloor of the main hall is used for society&#13;
halls. When we ha ve our big receptions, we can throw them&#13;
all open into each other, which makes the finest place for receptions you ever saw. The societies are for literary and social&#13;
purposes. They give splendid open door literary programs e,·ery&#13;
two weeks, and I tell you it is just splendid practice to go on the&#13;
program before an audience; there is where you would shine,&#13;
Gertrude, with your literary talent. Then we have closed door&#13;
programs every other week, where we get splendid preliminary&#13;
drill. We always have the closed door programs early and then&#13;
have such a jolly time afterwards.''&#13;
"But what society did you belong to, Genevieve? Tell me&#13;
about the girls.''&#13;
"I belonged to the Zetaletheans. Morningside college has the&#13;
finest girls I ever met anywhere, but I will tell you all about the&#13;
Zets, because I know them best.&#13;
&#13;
"The president of the society in the fall term was a tall,&#13;
slender. light complexioned girl with such a sweet face. Before&#13;
the year was over, however, that pretty face grew stern and a&#13;
line came between the brows. all caused by a naughty first-year&#13;
German class, who took occasion, when the German professor&#13;
was suddenly called home, to test the superior wisdom of the&#13;
senior by asking her questions that would have stunned Solomon,&#13;
(bad he known German). But, of course, being a senior, she&#13;
was equal to the occasion. Then there is a little Brown maiden&#13;
who is a walking Greek and Latin dictionary and such a favorite. There is the little 'giant, who I know you would like. eevry&#13;
one does. She is a learned scientist and a versatile Cook. We boast&#13;
of two Fair maidens, one of whom will never lose her youth, the&#13;
other. who will some day be no longer fair, but change her complexion. One is a living illustration of the adage, 'Silence is&#13;
golden,' and is, therefore, much admired by masculine minds.&#13;
(men, poor things, want to do all the talking themselves)."&#13;
''There is the dark-haired, gentle-voicecl maiden, sweet -Elizabeth, a junior.&#13;
"I didn't tell you all the seniors. One petite young woman is&#13;
very practical and is making a study of domestic chemistry.&#13;
'Tis whispered that it will be put into practical use, ere long.&#13;
The seniors, also, boast another scientist, who is sad and worried&#13;
because of the antics of the Zoology laboratory victims. And&#13;
last, is the small maiden who shows no fear of Morgan, the&#13;
Raider.&#13;
"Then such a , host of naughty freshmen and retaliating&#13;
sophomores. So many of them that I haven't time to name them&#13;
all. But they are as dear as they can be and I know you would&#13;
love them. every one. Gertrude. Come and go back with me,&#13;
please."&#13;
"if father will let me, I shall certainly go. I should love to&#13;
know those girls and I am crazy to see your college."&#13;
"Let's walk down to the river and I will tell you what fun&#13;
our class had getting up the Annual."&#13;
And the two girls, arm in arm, sauntered down to the river&#13;
to talk over dear old college days.&#13;
&#13;
�Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
Heilman&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Groom&#13;
Everhart&#13;
&#13;
Calkins&#13;
&#13;
Kindig&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Evans&#13;
Squires&#13;
&#13;
Davis&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Jones&#13;
Clary&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
Patterson&#13;
Morgan&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Manning&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
�The Othonian Literary Soriety&#13;
Motto :&#13;
&#13;
Color :&#13;
&#13;
"Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in R e."&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple.&#13;
&#13;
Yells&#13;
One-a-zip-a&#13;
Two-a-zip-a&#13;
Three-a-zip-a-zo!&#13;
Ripple, tipple, roly, poly, ki-o-toWhang-a-doodle!&#13;
Hity-tity!&#13;
Whang-a-doodle-whang!&#13;
Otho! Otho! Boomerang! Bang!&#13;
&#13;
Zip, ki, yah!&#13;
Zip, ki, yah!&#13;
Otho! Otho!&#13;
Otho- ni - ah!&#13;
&#13;
History&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
ORNINGSIDE College is like a modern mann&#13;
facturing plant in which every nsable fragment of&#13;
the raw material is worked over into a :finished product&#13;
of the highest possible character. In this process every&#13;
fibre of man's nature is taken into consideration. If the&#13;
means best suited for his complete development are not&#13;
at hand, they are secured for his use.&#13;
Perhaps one of the most potent factors in this educational plant is the literary societies. It is with the bes t&#13;
of good feeling toward onr fellow operators that we take&#13;
this opportunity of calling your attention to th e origin and&#13;
purpose of the Othonian Literary Society.&#13;
On a quiet autumn evening in J 891,fourteen men, zealous to be "Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in Re" met and organized the Othonian ] iterary Society. "Desiring for&#13;
themselves the highest intellectual, 111or al and social culture, and improvement in composition&#13;
oratory, debate&#13;
and parliamentary usage," these men, without the gn ide&#13;
&#13;
I though t I heard my grandmother say&#13;
The Othos gave th ei r yell todayWith a vevo! with a vivo!&#13;
With a vevo! vivo! vum!&#13;
For its just so plain that we can show&#13;
The ones that get there are Othos;&#13;
With a ring-tail!&#13;
With a rat-tail!&#13;
With a ring-tail! rat-tail! bang!&#13;
&#13;
of a precedent, laun ched an organization ·which has ground&#13;
011 t scores of Othos fitted 1.o meet the world as it is.&#13;
Yet, Othos are but men, and, to know us as we are,&#13;
we would wish to have you meet us in our business sessions. As one Otho expressed it, "The greatest thing in&#13;
my life has been the influence of the Othonian Literary&#13;
Society. I have to think qnicker, reach definite conclusions faster, and do things that count for time and eternity, whether I choose to or not. That society is the best&#13;
means of individual development of which I know."&#13;
Yes, Othos are men. Men in process. Ever men.&#13;
Only he who studies lrn rnan nature can comprehend the&#13;
depth of Othonian brotherhood. A brotherhood pure, yet&#13;
unrelenting and steadfast. A brotherhood seeking ever&#13;
the best, and ceasing only when there is no response to&#13;
the best in man.&#13;
H ave the Othos a hom e? Why, yes, the northeast room&#13;
on the third floor of main hall.&#13;
Have the Othos those who share their home? Why,&#13;
yes, the Zets, as loyal a bnnch of Unclc Sam's beauties as&#13;
ever graced American homes.&#13;
&#13;
�BLACKWELL- "Say, George, if you don't come up again&#13;
may I have the boat?"&#13;
&#13;
POST OBITUM&#13;
&#13;
��Himmel&#13;
Gruber&#13;
Patterson&#13;
&#13;
Hamilton&#13;
Reeder&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
Hind&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Klipple&#13;
Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Buck&#13;
Keller&#13;
&#13;
Hind&#13;
De Griselles&#13;
&#13;
Vermilyea&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Winterstein&#13;
Hicks&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Eckerson&#13;
Carson&#13;
&#13;
Chapman&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye Literary Soriety&#13;
&#13;
The Hawkeye Literary Society, having for its emblem&#13;
the outline of the state for which it is named, was organized in the fall term of 1899. The first year we had&#13;
no regular place of meeting, but in the fall term of 1900,&#13;
we located in the northwest corner hall on the third floor&#13;
of the main college building. Since then, with the help&#13;
of our sister society, the Crescents, who occupy the hall&#13;
with us, we have spent over five hundred dollars furnishing and beautifying our hall.&#13;
Every member in the Hawkeye Literary Society is&#13;
given a thorough discipline in parliamentary law, rules of&#13;
order, and is first drilled on the closed door program, before he is given a place on the public program. Many of&#13;
our members have distinguished themselves in debate on&#13;
those open door programs&#13;
From the very first the Hawkeye Literary Society has&#13;
placed special emphasis on debate, and in accordance with&#13;
this spirit, the Hawkeyes effected the establishment of an&#13;
Inter-Society Debating league with the Adelphian Literary Society in the fall term of 1902, and have held a&#13;
-debate each year since. The Hawkeyes won two of the&#13;
debates. As three judges act at each debate, nine judges&#13;
have decided the rank of the two co11testants, and the&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeyes have recived&#13;
the decision of seven of the&#13;
judges.&#13;
In order to equip our men for these contests in the&#13;
future we have planned a series of debates to end with a&#13;
silver medal contest. The four teams are hard at work&#13;
on their subjects, and each team is sure of success.&#13;
Another important phase of the society work this year&#13;
has been the organization of an orchestra among our members. The orchestra has given two public recitals, which&#13;
have been received with enthusiasm by a hrge and appreciative audience.&#13;
Now, if, rerchance, when wandering far or near you&#13;
should see upon the lapel of a man's coat or at the throat&#13;
of one of the fair sex an emblem in the shape of the State&#13;
of Iowa, remember, it is the emblem of the Hawkeye Literary Society; furthermore, do not be surprised, if, when&#13;
quietly poring over your lesson, you are aroused by something like this :&#13;
Ki ! ki ! haw! ki ! mv !&#13;
Whee! zip! boom! ba zo !&#13;
Rah , rah ! I ! 0 ! wal1 !&#13;
W a ho hi and a bazoo boom!&#13;
Animus! animus! dictus sum!&#13;
Haw! haw! haw ! ki ! ki ! ki !&#13;
Haw ! ki ! haw ! ki !&#13;
Rah! rah! rah!&#13;
&#13;
�Stickney&#13;
Joseph&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Yule&#13;
&#13;
Lukes&#13;
Chamberlain&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Wright&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Crum mer&#13;
Pierson&#13;
&#13;
Dow&#13;
&#13;
Bowers&#13;
&#13;
Armour&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Walker&#13;
&#13;
Trenary&#13;
Snell&#13;
&#13;
Molen&#13;
Bender&#13;
&#13;
Stivers&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Joseph&#13;
&#13;
�Crescent&#13;
BY THE CREW&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
ZILLA DENO&#13;
EFFA YULE&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"We succeed by doing."&#13;
&#13;
Boom-a-linger bow,&#13;
Ching-a-linger chee,&#13;
Ta la ku wah&#13;
Ta la ku wee&#13;
Cresent, Cresent, Whee!&#13;
&#13;
Over four years ago a boat was designed in the halls&#13;
of Morningside. Its object was fixed; its intention definite. It was constructed by the girls of that place, with&#13;
great care, for it must be strong, rugged and durable, a&#13;
bark of character designed to plow through surging tides&#13;
and combat swirling billows. Its oars were the ambitions&#13;
and ideals of life; these were to bear it along. The boat&#13;
was christened "The Crescent" and the launching took&#13;
place November 2, 1901. The course chosen was down&#13;
the tributary Preparation out onto the river Success.&#13;
When they set forth, fifteen girls composed the crew.&#13;
Sometimes threatening clouds would appear upon the horizon, storms would come and the boat was in danger of being engulfed by the waves ; sometimes they ran aground&#13;
upon the shoals of Disconragemcnt or struck rocks in the&#13;
channels of Depression. But the rowers were determined&#13;
and by the loyalty and unionism of the crew these diffi-&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
Light Green and White.&#13;
&#13;
cdti es were encom1tcred and conquered, the tides of Circ11:11stance met and breasted. But more often the sky was&#13;
clear and the waters untronbled.&#13;
This cr ew was enconraged by and gave enconragern cn t to another crew, as th ey jonrneyed de by side, both&#13;
bound for th e same port. Oftentimes these two crews disembarked on the shore to welcome new ones, who wished&#13;
to join them, or for spreads and fudgr-parties, or in order&#13;
to celebrate the victories which the Hawkeyes won in the&#13;
races with the Adelphians, such as the noted rowing match&#13;
in the fall of '04-. One evening each week was set aside&#13;
for programs, which they enjoyed giving, sometimes&#13;
among themselves, sometimes to their friends.&#13;
Now we see this boat as it has reached port 1905. The&#13;
crew is in better condition than before and the flag, fluttering in splendor, that all may see, is still unfurled, under which the crew row on to victory and success.&#13;
&#13;
�Mahood&#13;
Gibson&#13;
&#13;
Hammond&#13;
Depew&#13;
&#13;
Klipple&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Lehman&#13;
&#13;
Romans&#13;
&#13;
Lamoreaux&#13;
Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
McCrory&#13;
&#13;
Budlong&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Finch&#13;
Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
Gleason&#13;
Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Griggs&#13;
Currier&#13;
&#13;
Wood&#13;
&#13;
Gooch&#13;
&#13;
Platts&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
Ankeny&#13;
&#13;
Winterstein&#13;
Fry&#13;
&#13;
Felber&#13;
Janes&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
McDougall&#13;
Boals&#13;
&#13;
Kline&#13;
&#13;
�IDA L EWIS,&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
&#13;
Motto, "To obtain the Aesthetic."&#13;
&#13;
Nina&#13;
&#13;
Color.&#13;
&#13;
The Aesthesian&#13;
History&#13;
BY'MABLE GIBSON&#13;
&#13;
It was commencement at Morningside in 1955. The&#13;
Lirds were singing in the leafy branches, the :flowers were&#13;
nodding in the grass, and even the old hills seemed to&#13;
smile in welcome to those whom they had known so inti·&#13;
mately long ago.&#13;
In the southwest corner, on the top-most floor of an ivy&#13;
grown building, a group of girls were waiting in a luxuriously furnished hall. Their attitudes showed them to&#13;
be in a state of expectancy. "0, girls! we have her!"&#13;
called a musical voice from the stairway.&#13;
The doors of the hall were thrown open, and as a bent&#13;
figure tottered down the aisle formed by the girls, the old&#13;
yell,&#13;
"Hip-a-Ka Boom! Hip-a-Ka Bide!&#13;
Aesthesian girls of Morningside!&#13;
'E Pluribus Unum,' well, I guess!&#13;
We're the Aesthesians, Yes! Yes! Yes!"&#13;
&#13;
rang forth with the same fervor that it had in years gone&#13;
by.&#13;
As the girls placed her in the seat of honor, silence fell&#13;
over the group, and they seated themselves around her,&#13;
their last charter member.&#13;
"And, now for the story of the old Aesthesians," said&#13;
one of the girls.&#13;
&#13;
White.&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
Emblem The Olive Leaf.&#13;
&#13;
The old lady smiled and began her story :&#13;
"It was in this very hall fifty-three years ago, that&#13;
nineteen of usorganized the Aesthesian Literary Society.&#13;
We realized to some extent the responsibility we were&#13;
taking upon ourselves, and sought to lay her foundations&#13;
deep and broad. We chose as our emblem the olive leaf,&#13;
the symbol of peace, as our motto, 'To Obtain the Aesthetic!'&#13;
"Our membership rapidly grew until we numbered&#13;
thirty-six at the end of the year. We came often before&#13;
the public on Saturday evening with a program upon&#13;
which every participant had put her best efforts. We had&#13;
also what we called 'closed doors,' to which none but the&#13;
members were present.&#13;
"However, the literary side was not the only one we&#13;
sought to cultivate. The Aesthesians spent many happy&#13;
hours together, when all cares of the past and future were&#13;
forgotten.&#13;
"Then there were times when the deeper desires of&#13;
our nature rose within us and we caught glimpses of the&#13;
great meaning of our motto, and resolved to press onward&#13;
until we should reach our goal.&#13;
"Now, girls, I am glad you have kept up our old&#13;
spirit and I am sure you will be a credit to the dear old&#13;
society, and the school of which you are a part."&#13;
"We will try," chorused the girls, each resolving to be&#13;
faithful to the trust given her.&#13;
&#13;
�Held&#13;
Sauer&#13;
Hackett&#13;
Fulkrod&#13;
Pruden&#13;
Ralston&#13;
Hulse&#13;
Waterman&#13;
Thornton&#13;
Stein&#13;
Johnston&#13;
Brooks&#13;
Eveleth&#13;
Brandon Brower&#13;
Miller&#13;
Eggleston Bridenbaugh&#13;
Budlong&#13;
Mason&#13;
Yule&#13;
Gary&#13;
Eurer&#13;
Sloan&#13;
McDougall Spencer&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Fry&#13;
Faey&#13;
Horton&#13;
Ro rem&#13;
Van Buskirk&#13;
Blood&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Shaw&#13;
Barrick&#13;
Peters&#13;
Beebe&#13;
Smylie&#13;
Hackett&#13;
Bruce&#13;
Carkuff&#13;
Howarth&#13;
&#13;
�Adelphian Literary Society&#13;
Motto&#13;
Cape Diem.&#13;
The youngest literary society in :Morningside college&#13;
known as the "AJelphian," was organized November 13,&#13;
1901. Up to this time there was bnt one society of academic standing for men.&#13;
A small band of enterprising students saw the importance of forming another organization, and accordingly&#13;
met for this purpose. A picture now graces their hall&#13;
showing nineteen charter members. The motto which was&#13;
adopted was "Cape Diem." The struggle of her early existence is known by comparatively few, but they ever kept&#13;
before them the principles they chose, thus grasping every&#13;
opportunity. They battled their way to the front with&#13;
courage and confidence, surmounted all obstacles, and have&#13;
gained recognition as one of the leading societies.&#13;
In the beginning of the second year they challenged&#13;
their rivals, the IIawkeyes, to debate. This resulted in&#13;
the drawing up of a compact, which called for a debate&#13;
to be held annually between the two societies. Thus far&#13;
three debates have been held, in '02 won by the Hawkeyes,&#13;
in '03 by the Adelphian and in '04 the decision of the&#13;
judges favored the Ilawkeyes. These seeming defeats&#13;
have by no means disheartened the Adelphians and they&#13;
aim to have all their members in constant preparation by&#13;
practice in numerous closed and open door programs. They&#13;
may well be proud of their literary attainments for their&#13;
programs show diligent work and careful preparation,&#13;
which is further evidenced by the large attendance at their&#13;
open door programs.&#13;
Their prime motives are to promote literary and so-&#13;
&#13;
Color,&#13;
&#13;
Cherise.&#13;
&#13;
cial culture, to acquaint their members with the usage and&#13;
practice of parliamentary law, and to appeal to the religious and moral side of life, thus developing all that is highest a.n d best in a man.&#13;
The society has had a remarkable development. They&#13;
have at present a membership of fifty. with increasing&#13;
numbers the demands correspondingly increased and by&#13;
constantly adding to the already pleasant hall, they have&#13;
succeeded in making it one of the most attractive. During&#13;
the past year they have added· to the appearance very materially by the purchase of an elegant Vose piano· chairs,&#13;
,&#13;
table and other fixtures, making it a place where the boys&#13;
love to meet.&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
afternoon is known to all as the time&#13;
when important transactions and grave questions are&#13;
probed into, seasoned occasionally by a little wit and&#13;
humor. It is with quivering lip and trembling limb, that&#13;
the new members arise for the first time to address the&#13;
chair. But, it is also of interest to observe how that from&#13;
week to week the voice becomes rounded until i t rings out&#13;
in a clear, positive tone, with no uncertain sonnd.&#13;
This is also the honr, when, led by the hand they&#13;
know not where, amid fear and careful goings, the new&#13;
members take upon themselves the vows of the society,&#13;
after which sharp tones can be heard ringing through the&#13;
corridors:&#13;
Wah hoo wah, ta ra boom&#13;
Re rah zip, richety boom&#13;
Ripety ripety , ripety ride&#13;
We're the Adelphians of Morningside.&#13;
(Committee.)&#13;
&#13;
�HAMILTON&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
Championship Debate Inter-Academic&#13;
&#13;
League&#13;
&#13;
Morningside bs. Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Bs. Grinnell&#13;
&#13;
MORN[NGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
&#13;
MORNlNGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
Alvah L. Miller&#13;
Walter H. Johnson&#13;
Harry S . Hamilton&#13;
&#13;
Harry S. Hamiltcn&#13;
&#13;
Walter H. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Alvah L. Miller&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
That Immigration into the United States should be&#13;
restricted to persons who can read and write the United States Constitution in some language.&#13;
RESOLVED,&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
RESOLVED, That the History of Trades-Unionism in the United&#13;
States for the past twenty years shows a general tendency detrimental&#13;
to the best interests of the country.&#13;
&#13;
Decision was given to Morningside by default.&#13;
&#13;
CONDITION ON THIS QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
Those dependent upon Immigrants are not considered in this&#13;
question.&#13;
This contest will occur at Grinnell, Iowa, May 20, 1905.&#13;
&#13;
�\&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Meyer&#13;
Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
Hargrave&#13;
Bryan&#13;
&#13;
Keller&#13;
Hart&#13;
&#13;
Peck&#13;
&#13;
Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
�T he Conservatory&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
conservatory&#13;
offers to its students a thorough&#13;
course in music and its aim is to teach the art in the truest&#13;
and best sense of the word. Its instructors have enjoyed&#13;
the advantages offered by the best home and foreign schools and&#13;
are fully equipped for 11·ork a long their special lines of teaching.&#13;
Courses are offered in the following branches : Piano. voice&#13;
culture, violin, harmony, counterpoint and musical history.&#13;
The theoretical studies (harmony and counterpoint) and&#13;
musical history require three years in preparation and are requirecl of all candidates for graduation from the conservatory&#13;
The other courses are elective, the completion of which depends&#13;
largely upon the previous attainments and the ability of the&#13;
student. Usually four or five years is required for the completion of the prescribed cou rse.&#13;
In connection with the regular conservatory curriculum,&#13;
there are several organizations under the supervision of the&#13;
conservatory which furnish to the student valuable practice in&#13;
ensemble singing and playing. The Choral Union is composed&#13;
of about two hundred of the best singers in the college and&#13;
city musical circles, and has for its object the giving eacn year&#13;
of one or more of the great masterpieces in oratorio lines. This&#13;
year they plan to give in may, Handers "messiah," with&#13;
chorus, full orchestra, organ and quartet of soloists of high&#13;
merit.&#13;
The conservatory orchestra is a well equipped organization&#13;
of Twenty-Five players. gotten together for the study of the different kinds of orchestralwriting and furnishes to the students&#13;
&#13;
in the string department&#13;
a valuable help in the deYelopment of&#13;
their particular lines of study&#13;
The Men's Glee club of sixteen voices meets twice each week&#13;
and is rapidly getting a reputation as one of the best clubs west&#13;
of Chicago.&#13;
Both this organization and the orchestra are already making&#13;
preparations for extensive concert work during the next year,&#13;
and parties in this and adjoining states wishing concert work&#13;
along these lines will clo well to correspond with the director&#13;
concerning elates for the same.&#13;
The conservatory of music now has a home of its own in the&#13;
remodeled north building lately renamed the Conservatory Hall.&#13;
this building was, during the past summer ancl fall, entirely&#13;
remodeled and refitted at considerable expense and now furnishes to the public a conservatory building unequalled in the&#13;
state ancl the pride of all friends of Morningside.&#13;
The close affiliation of the conservatory and the college work&#13;
is, ancl always will be, a distinct advantage to the student in&#13;
music, who, thus has the opportunity of supplementing his musical stuclies with those along literary and scientific lines. this&#13;
plan furnishes one of the strongest arguments in favor of study&#13;
in a well equipped consen·atory, where the sh1dent comes frequently into touch with many others in his or her practical line&#13;
Of work&#13;
At the close of the present year a special catalogue of the&#13;
cpmservatory will be published.&#13;
&#13;
�Newcom&#13;
&#13;
Armstrong&#13;
&#13;
FAIR&#13;
&#13;
GARY&#13;
HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
malada&#13;
&#13;
HELD&#13;
&#13;
�Elocution&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
of 1905&#13;
&#13;
HE elocution class of 1905 is claiming a place in the&#13;
Junior Annual just because they think th ey are&#13;
"worth while."&#13;
They are seven in number and as&#13;
ambitious of fame as would be consistent with talent only&#13;
partially developed. That any of them will "star" in the&#13;
future is not essential to their success . Their names may&#13;
never appear on the role of fame as great elocutionists;&#13;
that is an honor that, although they might covet, comes to&#13;
the few; but that they are gaining a culture and refinement&#13;
which will render them more pleasing in manner and better&#13;
fitted for society they firmly believe .&#13;
&#13;
Miss Beatrice Gary has a pleasing manner and a graceful carriage well suited for a public reader. Her best work&#13;
is done in monologues. She is capable of success in her&#13;
chosen work.&#13;
Miss Armstrong's forte lies in the dramatic line. She&#13;
is energetic and enjoys the work. She has been chosen&#13;
for leading parts_in several entertainments given near her&#13;
home .&#13;
Miss Malada is one of the hardest workers in the&#13;
class. Humorous selections are her favorites, but she is&#13;
strong in pathetic work as well.&#13;
&#13;
Some of their number have already been acknowledged&#13;
as pleasing entertainers and are raising the standard for&#13;
public reading in their home towns.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Fair, who also completes her college course this&#13;
year, has taken part in several of the Zetalethean grand&#13;
publics. In the "Recognition Scene" from Euripides she&#13;
took the character of Iphigenia. She is now training for&#13;
the part of "Queen Dido" in the senior class play.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Held has always been enthusiastically received in&#13;
her entertainments and her assistance is demanded by the&#13;
young people of Hinton, her home. She is perhaps at her&#13;
best in Zingaretta-the wild Gypsy spirit of the piece suits&#13;
her style. Earlier in her course she took a strong part as&#13;
"] ally" in the presentation of the Greek pantomime, "Art&#13;
will have no Rival," by the Atheneum Literary Society.&#13;
Miss Newcom combines musical ability with her elocutionary training, which will assist very much in her success as an entertainer. She has spent the winter in Los&#13;
Angeles, where she has devoted much of her time to elocution and music.&#13;
&#13;
The class is honored by having for a member the first&#13;
young man to graduate from the department. Mr. Heilman&#13;
has been prominent in oratory and debate during his two&#13;
years in college. He is oratorical in manner and will&#13;
make a strong and polished reader.&#13;
The class has been working during the winter on their&#13;
graduation program, which is one of the chief attractions&#13;
of the commencement season . They are preparing Louise&#13;
de la Renie's military novel, "Under Two Flags," which&#13;
has been cut and arranged espically for the class by Mrs.&#13;
Davidson. In presenting this they aim not simply at an&#13;
intresting program but an artistic presentation.&#13;
&#13;
�MAIN BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
��THE GERMAN CLUB is composed of forty-five students of tbe Ge rman De par tment.&#13;
F eeling the need of a more practical use of the German learned in the class room, tbe&#13;
club was organized by Miss ]{&#13;
'erguson to round out the German education of the students. Aside from the mental attainment gained in learning to speak the language flu ently,&#13;
the organizers sought also, at the same time, to de velop the social side by making the meetings of the club a combination of both.&#13;
Four meetings have been held, at which much interest was manifest. Much credit is&#13;
due Miss Fergus::m, who supervised the organization and workings of the club and brought&#13;
it up to its present high state of efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, A. L . BROWER&#13;
PROGRAM COMMITTEE&#13;
Mrss MABELLE ELLERBROEK&#13;
Mrss CLARA KILLAM&#13;
Mrss IDA BRYAN&#13;
Mrss DE NORA SKINNER&#13;
MRS. H. G. CAMPBELL&#13;
&#13;
�POPPENHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
HORNER&#13;
&#13;
RlCHARDS&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical Association&#13;
Officers&#13;
President, R. G. YOUNG.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary, Evva ERSKINE.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer, J. W. KINDIG.&#13;
&#13;
Contest held December, 1904.&#13;
&#13;
Contestants&#13;
H. J. RICHARDS: "The Latent Powers of the Orient."&#13;
C. D. HORNER: ;The Heroism of the Private Soldier."&#13;
G. J. POPPENHEIMER: ''The Light of a New Intellectual Era."&#13;
First Place, G. J. Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDS and HORNER tie for Second Place.&#13;
&#13;
�Jones&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Matthews&#13;
Minkler&#13;
Welch&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
Darling&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Calkins&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Bowker&#13;
&#13;
Hamilton&#13;
&#13;
The Voulunteer&#13;
Band&#13;
&#13;
N COMMON with such bands in various colleges, the purposes of&#13;
the Volunteer Band of Morningside College are:&#13;
First. To aid in the evangelization of the world-to carry the&#13;
Gospel to those who have never heard of Christ.&#13;
Second. To gain by study a part of the preparation necessary&#13;
for special work and to associate with others who have the same life&#13;
purpose.&#13;
Third. To awaken an interest in Missions among fellow-students&#13;
at home.&#13;
The Band gains:&#13;
First. Intensity in purpose and prayer-life.&#13;
Second. Thoroughness-specific preparation is emphasized.&#13;
Third. efficiency-"in union there is strength."&#13;
Fourth. Aggressiveness- to be gained only by united effort.&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Volunteer Band was organized June rst, 1901,&#13;
with seven members. The number has varied from time to time, but&#13;
has gradually increased.&#13;
Three of those in the picture above are in the field. Fred Trimble&#13;
went in December, 1904, as an industrial missionary to China. His&#13;
aunt, Miss Lydia Trimble, recently resumed her work in Foo Chow,&#13;
China, and Miss Bartlett accompanied her. Mr. and Mrs. W. B.&#13;
Empey, members of the r9or Class, are on leave of absence from their&#13;
work in India, because of Mr. Empey's ill-health. Some of the Volunteers are making further preparation for their work than the College&#13;
course offered.&#13;
Their declaration is : "It is my purpose, if God permit, to become a foreign missionary." It is hoped that students expecting to become missionaries will join the Volunteer Band, as all the members&#13;
agree that it is a source of great help to themselves and others.&#13;
&#13;
�DEBENHAM, PRES,&#13;
&#13;
SQUIRE!":, V. PRES.&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT,&#13;
&#13;
Sec'y&#13;
&#13;
VAN DYKE,&#13;
&#13;
TREAS,&#13;
&#13;
Y.M. C. A.&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
ARLY in THE history of the institution. the Y. M. C. A.&#13;
found its place in the hearts of the young men of our college. From the first the organization has grown finding&#13;
its greatest opportunity for development in the lives of earnest&#13;
Christian young men.&#13;
every institution must show that it has or is something of&#13;
value to the world before it will receive much consideration. the&#13;
Y. M. C. A. appeals not merely to young men to become members and help in its work, it appeals to all to extend to it their&#13;
sympathy, help, encouragement and it must answer to the&#13;
worlcl the questions, "what advantage is there in it? Why not&#13;
let all Christian work be carried on by the denominations iu&#13;
their several churches?"&#13;
The Y. M. C. A. stands as a factor for bringing all classes&#13;
and denominations into more perfect unity.&#13;
every class man, whether he be a senior or preparatory student, will find a welcome in the association. The organization&#13;
tends to lead men out into broader and deeper truths of the&#13;
teachings of Jesus Christ. No man can go through a college&#13;
&#13;
course and claim to be a liberally educated man unless he has&#13;
come in touch with the practical work of the Y. M. C. A. as&#13;
a means of leading men to understand the true principles of life.&#13;
As a m eans to this encl the association holds de,·otional meetings every Sunday morning at 9:15. It has been the policy of&#13;
the devotional committee to secure prominent men from Sioux&#13;
City to present to the college man the basis for success in the&#13;
Various lines of business as well as Christian life. The strong&#13;
spirituality of these meetings enables a man to find the weak&#13;
spots in his character and at the same time help him to battle&#13;
for reality in his life.&#13;
Annual conferences are held in some part of the state. Lake&#13;
Geneva is well known among Y. M. C. A. men as the "battling&#13;
ground" for reality.&#13;
Chairmen of Committees: Devotional- Glenn Squires; Missionary-R. G. Minkler; Membership-R. G. Young; Bible Study&#13;
-N. Mccay&#13;
Employment Bureau-G. J. Poppenheimer; Information-A. B. Cook; Finance--H. Van Dyke: Train-G. E. Millner; Social-C. L. Gilbert; Inter-Collegiate-F. H. Trimble.&#13;
&#13;
�FAIR,&#13;
&#13;
PRES.&#13;
&#13;
GOODALL,&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE.&#13;
&#13;
SEC'Y&#13;
&#13;
Y. . C.&#13;
W&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
HE YOUNG WOMEN'S Christian Association is an organization which has as its aim the development of Christian&#13;
character in its members and the prosecution of active&#13;
Christian work, particularly among the young women of the institution.&#13;
In the association there is an opportunity for Christian girls&#13;
to work together, regardless of church or society relationships,&#13;
for higher ideals of life and a richer experience in Christ.&#13;
At 9:15 each Sunday morning the girls gather for a devotional meeting, and only those who have been privileged to attend&#13;
them can testify of the rich blessings and help received in their&#13;
spiritual lives. The devotional committee, who have charge of&#13;
the meetings, provide leaders, who help very much to make clear&#13;
those things which the Master would have His children know.&#13;
The membership committee meets the new students at the&#13;
train and from the first try to show them that the Y. W. 0. A.&#13;
has an interest in them and solicits their help for the same.&#13;
While it emphasizes the spiritual department, the association&#13;
does not forget that the girls have a social nature that must be&#13;
cultivated. The social committee arranges for a reception,&#13;
usually in connection with the Y. M. C. A. at the opening of the&#13;
fall term. An effort is then made to have the new students be-&#13;
&#13;
TREAS&#13;
&#13;
ROREM, V .&#13;
&#13;
PRES.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
come acquainted and make them feel at home in the college.&#13;
Other social gatherings are held throughout the year, thus uniting the students in Christian work through the social nature.&#13;
The finance committee, at the beginning of each association&#13;
year, arranges a budget for the year. Some of the funds go to&#13;
the state work, the national work, world's work and missions.&#13;
One of the most important departments is the missionary.&#13;
The missionary committee works in connection with the Y. M.&#13;
0. A. They plan joint meetings at which the work and the&#13;
needs of the foreign field are presented. They also have charge&#13;
of mission study classes.&#13;
Besides these departments, others are, a bible study committee and a committee on inter-collegiate relations.&#13;
Toward the end of the summer vacation there is held at&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, a conference of the Y. W. 0. A.&#13;
girls of the middle west. The beauty of the place and the&#13;
spiritual uplift received from the conference affords a rare treat&#13;
to those who attend. The association has sent each year since&#13;
its organization delegates to this convention.&#13;
The motto of the Young Women's Christian Association is&#13;
found in Zechariah iv: 6. "Not by might, nor by power, but by&#13;
i\Iy spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts."&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
�MANNING&#13;
&#13;
HECLMAN&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
OTHON!AN vs. PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
0THONIAN DEBATERS&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN DEBATERS&#13;
J . R. Tumbleson C. G. Manning&#13;
H. L. Mossman&#13;
C. F. Hartzell&#13;
R. E. Heilman&#13;
C. L. Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the present concentration of capital in the United States, in&#13;
single manufacturing corporations is inimical to our welfare.&#13;
Interpretation.&#13;
1. These corporations shall not include monopolized industries.&#13;
2. A monopolized industry shall beonein which practically no competition exists&#13;
3. These corporations shall not include those corporations operating under&#13;
franchises by municipal corporations.&#13;
4. Manufacturing shall mean the process or one of the processes of converting raw material into the finished product.&#13;
Affirmati ve-OTHONIANS&#13;
Negati ve-PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
Rev. J. F. Watts, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Prof. E.C. Perisho,Vermillion, S.D.&#13;
Attorney G. C. Scott, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Decision, Affirmative one; Negative two.&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
GILBERT&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE · vs . BAKER&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved,&#13;
&#13;
That party candidates for elective offices within the state Shoouldbe nominated by a direct vote of the parties.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
&#13;
H. L. MOSSMAN&#13;
J. R. TUMBLESON&#13;
R. G. YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Young, Vermillion, S. D.&#13;
Rev. Dr.S. W. McFadden, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Rev. J. L. Blanchard, LeMars, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Baker.&#13;
&#13;
Negative-Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
DECISION-Affirmative two; Negative one.&#13;
&#13;
�SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
MANNING&#13;
&#13;
MoOAY&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debate&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE vs . UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
This deabte will be held at Fayette, Iowa, April 28, 1905&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved,&#13;
&#13;
That we should have compulsory adjustment of labor disputes, where corporations of quasi-public nature are&#13;
involved.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
C. G. MANNING&#13;
N. McCAY&#13;
H. H. SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
UPPER lowA-Affirmative&#13;
MoRNINGSIDE- N egative&#13;
&#13;
�The Order of EternalRutters&#13;
Consitutuion&#13;
PREAMBLE&#13;
Believing it to be the solemn obligation of everybody in Morningside College to know everything about every one else, we, the students&#13;
of said institutiun, do organize this order and adopt for our government&#13;
the follow ing constituti0n:&#13;
ARTICLE I.&#13;
SECTION I. The name of this order shall be The Order of Eternal&#13;
Butters.&#13;
SEC. 2. The object of this order shall be the discovery of all secrets&#13;
and private matters and the dissemination of the same at the earliest&#13;
opportunity.&#13;
Sec. 3.-MoTTo. The motto of this order shall be: "Where two&#13;
or three are gathered togethet there will I be also."&#13;
ARTICLE IL-MEMBERSHIP.&#13;
SECTION r. The membership of this order shall consist of active&#13;
and honorary members.&#13;
Sec. 2.-ELIGIBILITY. Any student, regardless of race, sex or previous reputation for veracity, shall be eligible to membership, who has&#13;
added at least ten secrets to the common store of the order, or has for&#13;
six consecutive days butted in on at least three private conversations&#13;
daily.&#13;
ARTICLE !IL-OFFICERS.&#13;
The officers of this order shall be Chief Butter and seven Rebutters.&#13;
The business of the officers shall be the performance of all duties which&#13;
cannot be imposed on any one else.&#13;
ARTICLE IV.-EXPULSION.&#13;
Any member retaining a secret more than five minutes shall be&#13;
unconditionally expelled.&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
CHIEF BUTTER-CL ARA KILLAM.&#13;
First R ebutter, RAY MASON.&#13;
In charge of Chemical Department.&#13;
Second Rebutter, MARTHA MACDONALD.&#13;
I n charge of Atheneum Literary Society.&#13;
Third Rebutter, RAY TUMBLESON.&#13;
In charge of Library.&#13;
Fourth Rebutter, c. J. Mekkelson&#13;
Assistant in Li br·ary.&#13;
Fifth Rebutter, CHAS. FULKROD.&#13;
In char ge of Physics Department.&#13;
Sixth Rebutter, R. HEILMAN .&#13;
In charge of Corridors.&#13;
Seventh Rebutter, H. N . STAPLES.&#13;
In charge of Girls.&#13;
&#13;
Members&#13;
MARGUERITE HALLAM&#13;
Isaac&#13;
WESTCOTT&#13;
&#13;
MABEL HASKINS&#13;
D. L. YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Members&#13;
L . F . SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
N ARCISSA MILLER&#13;
MABEL HAY&#13;
&#13;
Members Expelled&#13;
W. H . DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
EvvA ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
�Rubber Band&#13;
Aim&#13;
To rubber at every passer in the halls, into all open doors, to inquire into all but our own business, and never to look into&#13;
our books while anything is left to rubber at.&#13;
&#13;
Rules of Conduct&#13;
1.&#13;
&#13;
Behold our eyes shall be in every place, b eholding the evil and the good.&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
If thy books entice thee, consent thou not.&#13;
&#13;
3. He that rubbereth, let him do it with diligence.&#13;
&#13;
Motto :&#13;
&#13;
Only by rubbering cometh knowledge.&#13;
&#13;
Patron Saint :&#13;
&#13;
Lot's Wife.&#13;
&#13;
Roll of Membership&#13;
*R uby Flinn&#13;
&#13;
POST GRADUATE&#13;
&#13;
*J.&#13;
&#13;
W. McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
*Active members five years.&#13;
&#13;
ACTIVE MEMBERS&#13;
George Millner&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Gantt&#13;
Net tie Pierson&#13;
&#13;
SUSPENDED MEMBERS&#13;
tHattie Hall&#13;
tEffie Yule&#13;
tJ ack Horner&#13;
in&#13;
Suspended to become staircase fixtures.&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Heilman ·&#13;
Flora Hall&#13;
EXPELLED&#13;
Eaton and Snell ( no time to rubber&#13;
at others. )&#13;
Frank Hartzell ( lost his job as bell&#13;
ringer. )&#13;
Cyrus Gilbert (for non-performance&#13;
of duty.)&#13;
&#13;
Alex. Adams&#13;
Blanche Spratt&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude Thompson&#13;
&#13;
REJECTED CANDIDATES&#13;
Anna Goodall ( too industrious.)&#13;
Myrtilla Cook (time demanded in&#13;
chemical laboratory.)&#13;
Charles Harding (not accomplished&#13;
in the art.)&#13;
&#13;
�WAR EAGLE'S GRAVE OVERLOOKING THE MISSOURI RlVER&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�The History of Sioux City&#13;
BY D. L. YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
way&#13;
the&#13;
W ENDING hisa Siouxthrough soughtcrowded streets,&#13;
Spottedtail,&#13;
brave,&#13;
the place where&#13;
the white man would fill his jug. Following closely came&#13;
Jim Crow, the young buck, who marked the way with&#13;
steady, even pace; then came the squaw with papoose&#13;
wrapped upon her back, bound closely and the papoose was&#13;
asleep. The place was found, there stood the man, who&#13;
took Spottedtail's two dollars, and said nothing, but went,&#13;
and when the Sioux brave returned to his wagon, there&#13;
beneath the hay he saw the jug, good, heavy, and wellcorked.&#13;
They piled into the wagon and started toward home.&#13;
Trinkets and Indian delicacies had been bought, but to&#13;
Spottedtail the fire-water in the big jug was all that Injun&#13;
needed. They drove over the big bridge that stretched&#13;
across the muddy Missouri, while beneath the high arches&#13;
of the great span Spottedtail drank from his jug. The&#13;
whisky lit up his spirits. He drank again and again. It&#13;
fired his brain and the old Indian brave soon reeled in a&#13;
swoon of drunkenness.&#13;
The night was darkening fast and the bitter cold&#13;
chilled the red Indians before they could reach the Winnebago reservation, where they were visiting. Old Spottedtail, the Sioux brave, was drunk as a demon. The whoop&#13;
of the Sioux sounded along the highway like a war cry&#13;
of old. Jim Crow was unable to hold him from beating&#13;
and fighting the broncos, who were galloping wildly to* Prize Winner for History of Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ward home. They turned from the road, a crash came&#13;
and Spottedtail was thrown upon his head and shoulders&#13;
onto the frozen ground.&#13;
The maddened Indian raved like a maniac. He&#13;
seemed to be loading and firing his rifle ; he called for his&#13;
chief; he called for more blood. Throughout his whole&#13;
life, Spottedtail had dreamed of the day when the Sioux&#13;
in his might should have power to drive the intruding&#13;
whites from the banks of his favorite stream. In his delirium, this moment seemed to be that supreme day. The&#13;
war cry was on. The whoops of the Sioux filled the air.&#13;
Indian braves thronged every path and Spottedtail was&#13;
next to chief.&#13;
The old brave raised his head, his wild eyes turned&#13;
toward the rolling Missouri, and there he saw the red&#13;
heavens a mass of flame. The war man was burning the&#13;
great Sioux City. The old Sioux brave saw the mighty&#13;
towers of these buildings standing like grim skeletons in&#13;
the living blaze. He looked toward Riverside, where War&#13;
Eagle slept, but there stood War Eagle, risen in the resurrection, waving the scalp of vengeance, calling with the&#13;
whoops of the Sioux, his braves to battle. Spottedtail gave&#13;
one bound toward the call, a pain wrenched his head, he&#13;
fell, biting the cold, frozen dust. The heart fluttered faintly within his bosom and, like the vision that comes to a&#13;
drowning man, there came to Spottedtail, the Indian&#13;
brave, a dream that to his life had been true. In his vision were pictured the days he had spent in this Wonderland and this was his dream :&#13;
When but a papoose Spottedtail sat near the group of&#13;
Sioux, who gathered under the shades of the Council Oak&#13;
at Riverside and there he listened to the great Sioux chief,&#13;
&#13;
�war Eagle, with his braves and medicine men, as they&#13;
counseled concerning the coming of the pale faces. War&#13;
Eagle had seen Lewis and Clark, with their company of&#13;
whites, as they passed the Sioux River on August 21st,&#13;
1804. This was the first coming of a white man to the&#13;
regions where the Sioux braves vied with the buffaloes for&#13;
supremacy. During the next half century the white trappers, few in numbers and following streams, wended their&#13;
way through the fertile prairies of the Sioux domain.&#13;
Miners and scattering bands of squatters followed. War&#13;
Eagle with his tribe hated the coming of the dreaded&#13;
whites, but this hatred was of no avail. The title of the&#13;
land passed from the Sioux to the whites in 1847, and&#13;
War Eagle saw William Thompson drive the first stakes of&#13;
the whites' domain in 1848.&#13;
Spottedtail had heard the stories of Indian myths and&#13;
learned how the first Sioux came into being through the&#13;
incubation of an egg. He had learned the beautiful language of love, so sweet and pure, that animated the Indian's heart with a zeal as true as white ever gave to blushing maid. He had learned to look for the coming of a&#13;
deliverer with signs and wonders, who should forever separate from them the intolerable whites and give back to the&#13;
red man his beautiful hunting ground. Spottedtail, the&#13;
brave, saw War Eagle buried upon the great heig;hts that&#13;
overlooked the whirling waters of the Missouri, in 1851.&#13;
During the next few years he saw the building of two cabins, by Theophile Brughier and Joseph l,eonias; and during the month of December, 1854, ,Joseph Cook came and&#13;
commenced the plat of Sioux City. This was but fifty summers after War Eagle had seen the first coming of 1he&#13;
great white man.&#13;
&#13;
The doings of the next fifty years have been written&#13;
by many, but upon the Indian brave's mind they were&#13;
written with ink indelible. To his eyes all whites&#13;
were one. Upon the favorite campground by the Rivers&#13;
Floyd and Sioux, · the whites had come and come, built&#13;
honses, stores and factories and never left. In the year&#13;
1857, after the war with the Sioux had ceased and the&#13;
Indians thought the whites had all come, there were numbered one thousand and thirty souls. Ten years later a&#13;
revelation came to the war man, when he visited his hunting ground and saw crowded upon it about six thousand&#13;
whites. To his mind there was no place left to the Indians&#13;
in this world. One more decade passed and the Sioux&#13;
chanced to visit the metropolis again. This time he saw&#13;
What the medicine man had told in his myth of Chicago.&#13;
There were heaps and heaps of whites, plowing wide paths&#13;
and building great towers toward the sky. This time the&#13;
man who counted told that there were twenty-eight thousand, and upon hearing this, the Sioux felt that every&#13;
white man must have been made by the great God, that&#13;
this world was his, and the red Indian, squaw and papoose&#13;
must die with the buffalo.&#13;
This was the first time the thought of the domineering&#13;
white ever crushed the heart of the brave Spottedtail.&#13;
Never again did he visit the haunts of his boyhood until&#13;
this day, when he found upon those hills and in those valleys fifty thousand people, who knew not Spottedtail, and&#13;
even stared with curiosity as the war brave walked the&#13;
street among the hustling crowds of Sioux Cityans. There&#13;
was but one balm for this wound, and that the deadly Fires&#13;
water, that would take the war brave to the Happy Hunting Grounds.&#13;
&#13;
�Government to the Indian was a thing of little use.&#13;
The Sioux chief called his braves together beneath the&#13;
Council Oak, which has been the hospitable friend of the&#13;
reel man for a century. The Mayor of Sioux City, the 31st&#13;
of her mayors, now ca1ls his council to meet in the fifth&#13;
story of the magnificent library building, but of enduring&#13;
stone during the years 1891 and 1892. This beautiful&#13;
structure, like the massive Council Oak, for stability and&#13;
beauty is excelled by no other such structure in our fair&#13;
state. Facing the city building across Douglas street,&#13;
stands its companion in architecture, the Government&#13;
building.&#13;
The reel man rode his pony along the winding buffalo&#13;
paths near the banks of the flowing streams. These were&#13;
the highways of his daily life, near the River Floyd and&#13;
Perry Creek, where the early homes of the city were built.&#13;
These paths were the way toward home for his weary feet&#13;
in clays of Spottecltail's childhood, but today when he&#13;
drove from the metropolis, his wagon sounded upon the&#13;
brick and asphalt pavement, which extends along the&#13;
streets for over twenty miles. Those streets that are unpaved run a distance of six hundred miles, dividing and&#13;
sub-dividing the city into places for men's abode. Along&#13;
these public streets men do not wait to walk, but ride upon&#13;
the electric cars that run over the hills, around the clay&#13;
bluffs and through the valleys. It was on the 4th of July,&#13;
1884, that men were in too great a hurry to walk and began to ride upon Sioux City's first street car, the bob-tailed&#13;
car, drawn by a mule, clown West Seventh to Fourth and&#13;
Court streets. In 1890, electricity came to rest the mule,&#13;
for which the mule and we all give thanks. The squaw&#13;
carried water from a rippling brook to her wigwam, while&#13;
&#13;
now the white maid may turn the faucets in ten thousand&#13;
homes, drawing from the deep fountains of artesian wells,&#13;
water clear and pure as the crystal snow.&#13;
Spottecltail learned to follow the trail and go with the&#13;
bucks to the Big Spirit Lake and there get produce to bring&#13;
home. The great highways of travel were open to free&#13;
competition. Indians came and went with the seasons and&#13;
scarcely less often. The big brave had learned of the&#13;
iron horse, breathiug fire and driven only by the white.&#13;
He saw the first steamboat come up the middle of the muddy water in 1856. Twelve years later up the banks of&#13;
the Missouri river came the iron horse, soon after he beat&#13;
his path across the pla ins from the hills of Dubuque. Year&#13;
after yearthesoundof whistles increased, as the twelve railroads centered into Sioux Citv and with them came busineeds of the Sioux&#13;
ness, homes and knowledge.&#13;
might be few, but for the people of Sioux City today, nearly one hundred trains arrive and depart daily, supplying&#13;
her citizens with the necessities of life and taking her produce 1o fathers and brothers beyond the boundaries of&#13;
our state. Of all forces that drive the Indians to secluded&#13;
haunts the iron horse is the greatest. Spottecltail, the&#13;
brave, looked upon these as the works of the devil. In his&#13;
mind the breath of these with steam and smoke would&#13;
sometime turn upon the haughty white and engulf him in&#13;
the bowels of the unknown. In the bosom of the white this&#13;
fear is supplanted by a cherished hope-that the greater&#13;
transportation facilities mean to ns the greater Sioux City.&#13;
No greater romance in fiction is written than that inspired&#13;
by the coming of the railroad, as it in a night builds a&#13;
city and transforms prairies into gardens.&#13;
The two races that fed upon our soil fifty years ago&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
�lived and are dying together. The Sioux and the buffalo&#13;
roamed the prairies with an undisputed air of freedom.&#13;
The arrow of the brave drew the blood from the bison's&#13;
side and drenched the sod upon every hillside in the valleys&#13;
of our noble rivers. The coming of the white broke the sod&#13;
and drew from the same soil the fat of steer and swine.&#13;
The substance that gave food and clothing· to the Sioux,&#13;
now brings a livelihood and wealth to the white. Upon the&#13;
banks of the Floyd the newcomer built his packing house&#13;
thirty-three years ago. During the following years the Indian saw several different plants built, in which to slaughter the beeves that were raised where .his buffaloes used to&#13;
feed. These gigantic slaughter houses grew in ,p roportion&#13;
with the great city. Thousands of cattle, hogs and sheep&#13;
are packed each day Twenty-eight thousand carloads of&#13;
stock from the plains come to this city each year&#13;
f rom&#13;
every hill and dale within sight of the city on the Sioux,&#13;
the red man can now see the smoke and name of Armonr&#13;
and Cudahy.&#13;
In the United States Census of 1900, Sioux City was&#13;
given first rank as a manufacturing center among all Iowa&#13;
cities. The gigantic slaughter houses are not the only industry that disturbed the dreams of the red man, but with&#13;
the scream of the \ can always be heard the hum of machinery in the flour mills and other factories scattered over&#13;
the wide area of the city. The product of these factories&#13;
was mostly unknown to the needs of Spottedtail, but to the&#13;
white they are articles of necessity, such as soap, brooms,&#13;
engines, brick and tile, agricultural implements, furnaces,&#13;
feed mills, binding twine, foundries, harness and saddlery,&#13;
with many other industries employing the skilled labor&#13;
of man's hand and brain. The story of each industry is a&#13;
&#13;
history within itself, but to the departing Indian it was one&#13;
mass of complicated buildings, wheels and belts, with&#13;
noise and smoke increasing with each year, until one hundred and fifty different enterprises are whirling, making&#13;
peace impossible, always rising here and there where the&#13;
prairie chicken used to feed or the wolf used to burrow.&#13;
There were few days that Spottedtail with his braves&#13;
and chief delighted to visit their former abode, but there&#13;
'were times when the white did build a mansion that suited&#13;
his taste. Those days were in the years of corn-palace&#13;
fame. In 1887, and for five succeeding years, immense palaces were built of Indian corn that surpassed in wonder the&#13;
beauty and the temple of Indian dreams that might be&#13;
the temple of gods in the far away hunting ground. These&#13;
magnificent palaces were visited by tens of thousands of&#13;
people, including the humble and the great. When President Cleveland's train stopped in Sioux City to see the&#13;
palace, Spottedtail came with the chief of the war man&#13;
to see the coming of the chief of the pale-faces. The streets&#13;
were crowded and thronged with whites so great that the&#13;
red man's fear kept him in the background. Those were&#13;
days when the white man grew as frantic in his wild chase&#13;
for wealth as the war man grew desperate in his pillage of&#13;
civilized homes. Buildings were raised in a night. Blocks&#13;
were built of massive stone, that could endure the storms&#13;
that would waste a million wigwams.&#13;
This was the spirit of the coming white that built Sioux&#13;
City in a way that was distinctly her own, marking every&#13;
character and feature with the sign of progress. Her citizens have suffered together and will continue to labor&#13;
side by side undaunted by failure and encouraged with&#13;
&#13;
�every success. They enjoy every convenience that applied&#13;
science can bring to an inland city.&#13;
On one occasion Spottentail passed the massive shrine&#13;
in which the whites worship their God. To his mind this ·&#13;
was a wonderful creation and large enough for his whole&#13;
tribe, but the greatest astonishment came when told that&#13;
within the limits of the city of his name there were fifty&#13;
such shrines. The brave's eyes turned toward the shining&#13;
sun which his ancestors worshipped, and to his heart came&#13;
a voice that spoke the excellency of a God that could be seen&#13;
and was always present.&#13;
The society of the pale face had no attraction for the&#13;
red man. Not once had he seen the place that appealed to&#13;
his heart like home, save on one occasion. Spottedtail&#13;
walked down the street and met the coming of the tribe of&#13;
college braves in regalia for a football game. A hope arose&#13;
in his heart that the white had at last joined with the war&#13;
man in doing the stunts of heroism. He followed the&#13;
crowd to the game and peeking through the fence, saw the&#13;
desperate plunge of the giant full-back. This was the only&#13;
story of the white ever welcomed to the ear of the dying&#13;
red man, but it faded into a myth, when upon a summer&#13;
&#13;
day at the reservation, this same college Indian appeared&#13;
in Sophomore's garb and scared the untied horses of the&#13;
lazy brave, spilling squaws and papooses along the trail of&#13;
the frightened broncoes.&#13;
The Sioux has been driven far into Dakota. Upon&#13;
his ground stands Sioux City only resembling his tribe Jn&#13;
name. Spottedtail's dream was a vision called to view by an&#13;
angel of the Great Spirit, who commands the portal where&#13;
all Sioux braves enter the Happy Hunting Ground. This&#13;
angel lifted the soul of the war brave who had been given&#13;
only fire-water, disease and death by the whites and led him&#13;
into the Happy Hunting Ground, where War Eagle roams.&#13;
Sioux City was left to rise from her ashes.&#13;
A city with a history unparalleled. The first white born&#13;
within her limits still lives on the sunny side of fifty years.&#13;
The enterprise of the metropolis is characterized by youth,&#13;
strength, endurance and supremacy. Her history is not&#13;
yet written for it is yet to be made. The events of the past&#13;
abound with fiction that was created in reality and the&#13;
giant builders have laid the foundation of a greater Sioux&#13;
City that we are to build according to their pattern.&#13;
&#13;
�of The F reshmen&#13;
&#13;
THe Revemge&#13;
BY A.&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
O ONE knew just what made them think of it, but the&#13;
seniors were going to give a play. According to the&#13;
announcement it was to be original, the name was "The&#13;
WrongOne," and it was to be given in the Parker opera&#13;
house on the 13th of the next month. But the most interesting part of the announcement was the fact that it was to&#13;
be a secret ; the play, the players and their parts, in fact&#13;
everything in connection with the play, until the curtain&#13;
should rise on them that night.&#13;
Almost any one could see that this was a beautiful&#13;
chance for the juniors to do some mischief and sure enough&#13;
a few of the most energetic formulated a plan which if&#13;
evolved all right would result in the kidnapping of the&#13;
hero of the senior's play. But as usual they had trouble.&#13;
Try as they would for weeks, they could find no sign of any&#13;
rehearsal or anything by means of which they could decide&#13;
whowas to be the leading man. Was it any wonder then&#13;
that they decided upon Frank Jackson, mainly because he&#13;
had acted some before and had been seen of late carrying&#13;
s'1spicious looking papers about?&#13;
In the first announcement it had been stated that all&#13;
students would be admitted free of charge. Just one week&#13;
before the thirteenth came another announcement saying&#13;
that in order to avail themselves of this opportunity to save&#13;
fifty cents the students must get seats in that part of the&#13;
opera house which was assigned to their class.&#13;
The freshmen received tbe brunt of the blow. They&#13;
Prize Winner for Short Story.&#13;
&#13;
bad been assigned the top balcony. The majority of them&#13;
at once decided · to buy their tickets and sit where they&#13;
chose. But after a called indignation meeting which only&#13;
lasted a few minutes they came out bright and smiling and&#13;
suffice to say -there. were no tickets sold to the freshmen.&#13;
Now this happiness seemed to be due to something which&#13;
Bixby, a freshman, had said at the meeting. Bixby had a&#13;
girl. This girl's sister was a senior.&#13;
This might account for the way in which Bixby got his information, acting upon which he might have been seen purchasing a&#13;
ticket to the theater on Wednesday night, the night before&#13;
the play.&#13;
The play that night had no interest for Bixby and&#13;
he could hardly wait till it was over. As he moved toward&#13;
the door among the last to leave he stepped to one side behind some curtains and remained hidden until every one&#13;
was gone and the lights out. Then finding a comfortable&#13;
place to rest he went to sleep dreaming of senior plays and&#13;
the next night. When he awoke it was almost daylight.&#13;
Some men were working on the stage. He waited until&#13;
they had left and then made his way to the stage and was&#13;
soon up in the scenery loft. Here, after eating a small&#13;
lnnch he bad brought in his pocket, he settled himself to&#13;
wait until eleven o'clock for that was the time when Myrtle&#13;
had told him the seniors would be there, and although it&#13;
seemed an age to him it finally came. With it came the&#13;
seniors, who slipped in one or two at a time at side doors.&#13;
Soon they were all on the stage ready to begin. It was&#13;
their first rehearsal in the opera house. Bixby's shorthand&#13;
came into evidence here and as the rehearsal progressed&#13;
there was little said or done but what his pencil traced out&#13;
in his note book. At last it was over and the seniors were&#13;
&#13;
�talking of their success. Bixby was surprised when one&#13;
of them said "Say people, do you know what I heard today? The juniors are going to kidnap Frank Jackson&#13;
and drive him out to Milbank tonight. They think he&#13;
is our leading man." "Well, we won't undeceive them,"&#13;
said another, "because they might pick onto one of us,&#13;
then." "Poor Kate," said another, "she will be awfully disappointed if Frank don't show up about seven thirty."&#13;
So they decided to sacrifice Frank to the cause. In a half&#13;
hour they were all gone and Bixby clambered down. After&#13;
stretching his tired limbs and wishing he had something to&#13;
eat, he started for the door. They were all locked. After&#13;
a brief consideration he made for one of the fire escape&#13;
exits on the second floor. He opened the door and peered&#13;
out. No one was in sight, and he stepped out and was almost to the bottom when he heard a gruff voice behind&#13;
him and turning saw a bluecoat watching him. It was too&#13;
late to turn back, so he continned his way to the ground.&#13;
Against his remonstrances and excuses he was compelled&#13;
to go to the police station two blocks distant and was locked&#13;
up. Bixby was hungry, but that did not bother him half&#13;
so much as the thought that he could not get ont before&#13;
night. After repeated trials, be was allowed to see the&#13;
police judge, who recognized him and upon his promise&#13;
It was now&#13;
to appear in the morning he was released&#13;
after three o'clock. Bixby ran across to the public library&#13;
and seating himself at a table soon had a good synopsis of&#13;
the play made out. Then he hastened to the printers and&#13;
after a good deal of talking, succeeded in getting the printers to promise to have the required number of copies ready&#13;
at seven o'clock. Then at last to supper. Bixby was hun-&#13;
&#13;
gry, and after eating more than was good for him (he did&#13;
not board at a boarding house) he got some help and proceeded to round up the freshmen class.&#13;
By 7 :15 they were all at Irwins and were busy speculating as to what was up when Bixby and some of the boys&#13;
arrived with the printed synopses, (1,000 of them) and&#13;
after giving each member one to read they divided the remainder among some of the boys and all started for the&#13;
opera house. By 7 :45 the opera house was almost full&#13;
and every one was surprised to see slips of paper floating&#13;
from toward the roof. The small slips of paper soon came&#13;
into great demand, and soon every one in the house had&#13;
read a full synopsis of the play, the names of the players&#13;
and the parts they were to play. On the paper was a note&#13;
saying '"It is only own to the untiring efforts of the freshng&#13;
men that these programmes have been prepared and all&#13;
(but the seniors) will join in thanking them."&#13;
It was too bad, after weeks of bard work to keep it&#13;
a close secret, to have everything known just when their&#13;
success was at its climax. Too bad, that the play should&#13;
lose its intended effect on the audience.&#13;
Too bad that five or six husky juniors drove over the&#13;
frozen road toward Milban k with Frank Jackson in their&#13;
midst.&#13;
Too bad that Kate waited and waited for Frank nntil&#13;
hope gave way to despair and she went to sleep on the sofa&#13;
still waiting.&#13;
And is it any wonder that the freshmen all looked so&#13;
happy and all joined in shouting "What's the matter with&#13;
Bix? He's all right."&#13;
&#13;
�Tonkowanda&#13;
BY CHAS, RICHARDS&#13;
&#13;
TOKOW&#13;
ANDA was an Indian girl and&#13;
lived in the foothills of the Rockies. She&#13;
was the most beautiful girl of the tribe.&#13;
There grew up with her two boys, one,&#13;
Dreaming Bull, the son of a brave, and&#13;
the other, Wild Bear, the son of a chief.&#13;
wild Bear was a born warrior, and spent&#13;
his time with his bow and arrows and&#13;
tomahawk. His enemies were the_birds&#13;
and the muskrats and the minks. These&#13;
he tortured, and his whole being thrilled as he saw them&#13;
quivering in their agonies.&#13;
Dreaming Bull was of a very different nature. He&#13;
could throw a tomahawk perfectly and his arrows always&#13;
found their mark, but he made of the birds, the muskrats and the minks friends and spent his time wandering&#13;
in the mountains, watching the sunsets and the starlit&#13;
nights.&#13;
Tokowanda's mother died early, leaving upon the little girl's shoulders the care of the father's wigwam. Wild&#13;
Bear was too busy with his bow and arrows to notice the&#13;
little girl, stooping beneath her burdens, but, often, Dreaming Bull, meeting her, carried the loads of wood and water.&#13;
Together they would blow the stubborn flames into a cheerful blaze, he helping her cook the meat for her father's&#13;
meal.&#13;
He made for her strings of beads and hung them&#13;
&#13;
about her neck, -and with thongs and beads he made a girdle and bound it about her waist. With polished shells&#13;
he made ornaments for her hair and arms, and, as the&#13;
years passed they. were much together.&#13;
One clay when they were out gathering wood for the&#13;
fire, a bear rushed through the brush nearby, and had it&#13;
not been for Dreaming Bull's arrow, shot true and with&#13;
such force, that it found the bear's heart, Tokowanda&#13;
would never have returned to camp. They made of the&#13;
claws a necklace and Dreaming Bull hung it about Tokowanda's neck, as a token of something that had come to&#13;
bind them together with a tie unknown among the people&#13;
of that day, for, the women of that time were slaves. They&#13;
knew nothing of the finer feelings of humanity and served&#13;
the men with the same obedience as a beast; who, accepting it in the same spirit, as they would the service of a&#13;
beast, treated their women like brutes.&#13;
But Dreaming Bull, in his wanderings, had caught a&#13;
new glimpse of life, and he could not look upon Tokowanda&#13;
with the same feelings as he did upon other girls, a fact&#13;
which he did not understand. It pained him to see her&#13;
toil, or to know that she suffered.&#13;
One evening some time later, the chief of the tribe&#13;
came to the wigwam of Tokowanda's father. He sat there&#13;
in silence for a long time. At last he spoke.&#13;
"I have looked long through the wigwams of my people&#13;
for one who is worthy to be the squaw of my son, wild&#13;
Bear, who will one day govern our people, and I find none&#13;
like Tokowanda, your daughter. After twelve moons have&#13;
passed she will enter his home and become his squaw."&#13;
After a long silence, Tokowanda's father answered :&#13;
"The chief of my people has placed this night great&#13;
&#13;
�honor upon his brave. After twelve moons have passed,&#13;
then Tokowanda shall enter the wigwam of the Wild&#13;
Bear."&#13;
When Dreaming Bull heard this he somehow felt sick&#13;
at heart, and one day he left the old haunts and wandered&#13;
far away to the rising sun.&#13;
Tokowanda grew listless after Dreaming Bull had&#13;
gone away, but she still wore the beads and ornaments&#13;
which he had given her. At last the time grew near when&#13;
Wild Bear was to take her as his wife. It was the day&#13;
when he and the young men of the tribe were to be tested&#13;
for their bravery.&#13;
A tall pole had been placed in the ground, from which&#13;
were hanging ropes of rawhide. Loops were cut in the&#13;
young men's breasts and through these loops were run and&#13;
tied the raw-hide thongs. Then leaning back, until the&#13;
cords were tight they danced back and forth before the&#13;
sun, until the weight of their bodies tore loose the loops of&#13;
skin, and those who endured till then, were ever afterwards&#13;
called "Braves."&#13;
The dance was at its height, when there glided noiselessly into the midst of the camp Dreaming Bull. Wild&#13;
Bear saw him and cried out to him, "Ho, thou wandering&#13;
calf, hast thou the courage to join with me in the dance, or&#13;
dost thou fear pain ?" Dreaming Bull stepped before them,&#13;
drew aside his blanket and showed wounds just received&#13;
in battle fought in the land of the Rising Sun, together with the scars of the Sun Dance. and cried, "are&#13;
these wounds the wounds of a calf? Here are the scars of&#13;
the dance long since healed."&#13;
In a few clays there followed a desperate fight with a&#13;
hostile tribe. Wild Bear led the young braves, among&#13;
&#13;
whom was Dreaming Bull. Both performed deeds of daring and at night many prisoners were brought into camp&#13;
to be tortured before the boys and women. As it happened it was the night of the full moon, when Tokowanda&#13;
was to become the wife of Wild Bear.&#13;
Dreaming Bull, although fearless in the fight, shrank&#13;
from all unnecessary torture, and when the victims were&#13;
brought forth for the scalp dance, he wandered away alone&#13;
to the spot where he had killed the bear and saved Tokowanda.&#13;
He had not been there long when Tokowanda stood&#13;
silently at his side.&#13;
"Is the Dreaming Bull a child that he has grown sick&#13;
at the sight of blood?" she said. "Why does he not join his&#13;
people in the camp ?"&#13;
"Such scenes are for the women ; has the Tokowanda&#13;
grown sick at the sight of blood that she wandered away&#13;
alone?"&#13;
"The moon is full tonight and tomorrow I will be in&#13;
the wigwam of the young chief. Is the Dreaming Bull&#13;
not glad?"&#13;
dreaming Bull did not answer, but looked away to the&#13;
mountains dim in the distance, his old friends among&#13;
whom hehaddreamed so long ago ; still there was loneliness&#13;
in his heart. Tokowancla went on and spoke of their&#13;
childhood days, of how good Dreaming Bull had been to&#13;
her, of the gifts be had given her and of the bear from&#13;
which he had saved her on that very spot. Still Dreaming&#13;
Bull did not answer. His sonl was looking into a night in&#13;
which no moon was shining. Soon Tokowancla, too, became silent and both looked into tbe distance.&#13;
At last she took a string of beads from her neck, held&#13;
&#13;
�them a moment and then laid them across the knee of&#13;
Dreaming Bull. These were followed by another and&#13;
another and another and were laid one by one beside the&#13;
first. Dreaming Bull still looked away into the night.&#13;
Then Tokowanda undid the girdle and placed it beside&#13;
the beads; and one by one the shells from her hair and arm&#13;
followed, until all but the necklace of bear's claws had been&#13;
given back to Dreaming Bull. Undoing the thong which&#13;
held the chain of claws about her neck, she toyed with them&#13;
a moment and seemed to be thinking, saying to herself,&#13;
"Must I give up all? Can I not keep these? Why can l&#13;
not forget past moons? Why do I shrink from the chief&#13;
of my people ? He is a great chief, he is brave and fearless, and I am to be his squaw." The chain of bear claws&#13;
started again for its place beside the mother of pearls, but&#13;
ere it reached there it stopped and again to herself she&#13;
spoke, "My blanket is large and I can hide these from&#13;
the eyes of the chief, keeping them to remember the time&#13;
when bear claws were sharp, the flesh was tender, but the&#13;
arrow of Dreaming Bull was sure."&#13;
Quickly the necklace was fastened in its old place.&#13;
Dreaming Bull reached out and drew her towards him.&#13;
He lifted one by one the bracelets and tied them in their&#13;
former places; he bound the girdle about her waist; placed&#13;
the strings of beads one by one about her neck. Then&#13;
Tokowanda cried, "Why do you bring back to me the&#13;
past?"&#13;
"In the tribe where I danced the sun dance," answered&#13;
dreaming Bull, "I had led the people to a great victory,&#13;
and at night the chief of that great people called me to him&#13;
and said: "You shall be my son, indeed; today you have&#13;
&#13;
led my braves to · glory and tonight my daughter shall be&#13;
your squaw."&#13;
I wandered out into the hills; there I remembered that&#13;
bears' claws are sharp, that the flesh of Tokowanda is tender, but that the arrows of Dreaming Bull are sure. The&#13;
chief's daughter came that night to an empty wigwam.&#13;
Tonight I go to the Rising Sun. No more shall I look into&#13;
the face of Tokowanda, but still the memory of it will ever&#13;
be with me." Then he spoke of the plains and the woods&#13;
far away, of the bear and deer in the forest, of the mink&#13;
and muskrat in the streams, of the wolf and fox on the&#13;
prairies, of the grouse and quail in the brush, but he said&#13;
his wigwam would ever be sad and lonely, no papoose&#13;
would ever come to greet him, no squaw would be there&#13;
to cook his meat; but, still, there was a strange tugging at&#13;
his heart, which cried out for her. And he said, if it could&#13;
have been as he wished, he would have taken her to his wigwam; he would have lined it with bearskin and deerskin;&#13;
he would have covered the floor with the hide of the fox&#13;
and the wolf; he would have covered her bosom with beads&#13;
and lined her moccasins with muskrat's fur. Tokowanda's&#13;
breast heaved with emotion, then reaching to him her&#13;
hand, she said: "I, too, would go to the land of the Rising&#13;
Sun."&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
They went over hills and through valleys, out upon&#13;
plains where cactus and sage brush abound, o'er swollen&#13;
streams, through woods carpeted with ferns, over fields of&#13;
powdered lava, on through treacherous swamps, out into&#13;
the alkali land and into the drifting sands. What they&#13;
suffered could not be told, but it only bound them the closer together. They became companions. He carried her&#13;
&#13;
�across streams, pushed from her path the cactus, carried&#13;
water for her parching lips, searched the plains for food .&#13;
He taught her to draw the bow and to throw the axe with&#13;
skill. On, ever on, toward the Rising Sun they went, until&#13;
at last they came to a large river, along whose sides were&#13;
high bluffs.&#13;
with great toil they burrowed back into one of these&#13;
bluffs, making for themselves a home. There a year&#13;
slipped by, a year of happiness. They went everywhere&#13;
together. In the hunt she became almost as accurate w ith&#13;
the how and arrow as he, and the little stone axe which&#13;
she used flew from her hand like a shaft of lightning and&#13;
always f01mcl its mark. At hst there came into the home&#13;
a little stranger, who brought with him an overflowing&#13;
message of joy and poured it into their lives.&#13;
On the night after his arrival, they wandered towards&#13;
the river's bank, as the sun, sinking slowly in the west,&#13;
kissed the low-hanging clouds glowing with reel and gold,&#13;
broke into view between the somber sighing boughs.&#13;
Dreaming Bull's heart was full to overflowing with love&#13;
for these, his own, and reaching the river's bank he broke&#13;
out into a song. The song had in it a word new to his&#13;
mother tongue, which expressed this new feeling that had&#13;
come to him.&#13;
The song rose and fell, over and over he sang it, as the&#13;
purple flush of evening grew darker and darker. At last&#13;
Tokowanda, too, caught the strain and joined in the song&#13;
-the&#13;
song of love and of triumph.&#13;
Wild Bear sought revenge. He followed over valle.v&#13;
and hill, through swamp and sagebrush, across swollen&#13;
streams, until he, too, with his warriors, came to the river&#13;
with its large bluffs and here he saw Dreaming Bull going&#13;
&#13;
to the north in guest of deer. Gathering his men in the&#13;
ravine to the west of where now stands Morningside College, he waited until Dreaming Bull should return. At&#13;
last he came in sight and wild Bear started his braves,&#13;
part of them up the north and part up the south branch&#13;
of the ravine, forming them in the shape of a crescent, thus&#13;
approaching what is now the campus, from three sides. At&#13;
a given signal they broke into the war-whoop of their people, as they rnshed in upon him.&#13;
Being snrrounded, Dreaming Bull was quickly overpowered ancl bound with thongs. Soon fagots were brought&#13;
from the ravine, and tying him to stakes they heaped about&#13;
him the dry woocl.&#13;
well he knew his fate, but his Indian nature gained&#13;
the ascendancy and he met it without flinching or showing&#13;
fear. But, as they piled the fagots about him, he began&#13;
his new song. It had in it a ring of victory, for the new&#13;
experience in life was a triumph to him even in death.&#13;
Tokowanda was standing near a tree throwing her axe&#13;
at a mark. At her feet lay her child. She heard far&#13;
away the war-whoop of her own people and for a moment&#13;
joy leaped to her breast; then it flashed upon her why they&#13;
were there, and a sickening £ear took possession of her.&#13;
Holling her papoose in a fur she placed him in the cave&#13;
and hastened towards the place from whence came the&#13;
cries. She carr. ed with her her bow and arrows and her&#13;
i&#13;
stone axe. As she neared the place she heard, amid the&#13;
cries of the braves, the song of Dreaming Bull. She saw a&#13;
fire being kindled and she broke into a run, knowing too&#13;
well that Dreaming Bull was to be a victim of the flames .&#13;
Bear, seeing her coming,&#13;
· As she · drew near Wild&#13;
started to meet her; but as he came toward her she drew&#13;
&#13;
�her bow and sent an arrow flying into his heart. Then&#13;
rushing to the spot where D.reaming Bull was bound, she&#13;
plunged into the fire, and, cutting the thongs which bound&#13;
him, dragged him from the flames. But the flames licked&#13;
at her hair, and devouring her garment found the flesh&#13;
below, which they left charred and black. Strength was&#13;
gone from both and they fell, still clinging to each other.&#13;
The moon rose that night upon a strange scene. The&#13;
fire, flickering lower and lower, added a ray of light to the&#13;
picture and the wind listened to a song which had in it a&#13;
ring of triumph, even thongh it grew fainter and fainter,&#13;
until at last it ceased, as it was sung by Dreaming Bull&#13;
and Tokowanda, and mingling with the song came cries of&#13;
&#13;
EHH&#13;
&#13;
grief as the braves gathered about their fallen leader, trying .to call him back to life again.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
A strolling Indian passing up the valley of the Missonri the next clay, chanced to see the opening in the hillside now known as "Robber's Cave." Passing within he&#13;
found there a papoose. Strolling further he came upon&#13;
the scene of the night before, and, being an Indian, understood it all. Ile went back to the cave and took the papoose with him back to his wigwam. This same papoose,&#13;
taking with him a maiden from the camp, which had been&#13;
his home, left it, and his children and his children's children became known far and wide as the "Sioux."&#13;
&#13;
�The Old Homestead&#13;
BY EDNA KLINE&#13;
&#13;
Standing in the sunset glory,&#13;
midst the rustling of the leaves,&#13;
I recalled the long past story,&#13;
Over which my spirit grieves;&#13;
In the opening of the oak trees&#13;
Stood tho farm house now bereft;&#13;
All its inmates now forgotten,&#13;
Only memories round it left.&#13;
memories of a happy childhood&#13;
When the world was still untried,&#13;
Life a happy sunny dreamworld&#13;
All unmarred by fear or pride;&#13;
many hours we played there gayly,&#13;
Ere they left the dear old place,&#13;
Left its quiet, peaceful shelter&#13;
For wealth's weary grasping race.&#13;
&#13;
As I stood there in the sunset&#13;
Soft the twilight round me fell,&#13;
Carne the spirits long departed&#13;
Tender messages to tell;&#13;
But my ear had grown too earthly&#13;
Spirit words to comprehend,&#13;
Mingling with the rustling oak leaves&#13;
Soft in silence seem to blend.&#13;
&#13;
But I seem to see them living,&#13;
As they lived there long ago;&#13;
"Now I lay me" softly sounding&#13;
From the chamber rude and low;&#13;
All the cattle in the barnyard,&#13;
Stars soft shining in· the sky,&#13;
Keeping guard above the family&#13;
Who lived there in days gone by.&#13;
* Prize&#13;
&#13;
But this dream is gone forever&#13;
Of those friends so far away ;&#13;
In its solitude the farm house&#13;
Fast is falling in decay;&#13;
Windowless it stands, and doorless,&#13;
Sunshine slanting through the roof;&#13;
Only here a shelf and stairway&#13;
Of its former life give proof.&#13;
&#13;
For relief from pain and longing,&#13;
Prayed I 'neath the oak tree broad,&#13;
And I found it in my duty&#13;
Present duty wrought for God;&#13;
And the mystery and darkness&#13;
When I reach the l1eavenly land&#13;
All life's weariness and heartaches&#13;
Then my soul shall understand.&#13;
&#13;
Winner for Poem.&#13;
&#13;
�Lost Opportunity&#13;
BY A.&#13;
&#13;
W, ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
The day is slowly going now.&#13;
The night as slow appears,&#13;
Another day is gone to join&#13;
Tho fast receding years.&#13;
Within the house the gathering gloom&#13;
Has penetrated all.&#13;
The dying embers of the fire&#13;
Draw pictures on the wall.&#13;
The fitful flashes from the fire&#13;
Light up an old man's face,&#13;
As he sits beside the chimney,&#13;
And gazes into space.&#13;
Upon his furrowed brow is seen&#13;
The grave's thin blossoms, white.&#13;
His eyes reflect but dimly now,&#13;
The fitful, dull reel light.&#13;
His day is slowly going now.&#13;
His night, as slow appears.&#13;
Soon will another mortal join&#13;
The ones of former years.&#13;
The figures on the darkened wall&#13;
Now vanish in the gloom;&#13;
&#13;
Now, with each fitful glare of light,&#13;
They seem to fill the room.&#13;
Among the figures on the wall&#13;
A form he knows appears.&#13;
'Tis but the ghost of one he knew&#13;
Back in his younger years.&#13;
Of one he knew ? Yes, knew full well,&#13;
But only knew by sight.&#13;
'Twas Golden Opportunity,&#13;
Who once had seemed so bright.&#13;
She beckoned him to listen, and,&#13;
With voice so like a sigh,&#13;
"Why did you never grasp me&#13;
When I was always nigh ?"&#13;
"To you, a youth so young and strong,&#13;
I showed a mountain high.&#13;
'Twas crowned with palaces of gold.&#13;
To reach them you must try.&#13;
"But, no; instead you tried to think&#13;
A . means wherewith to fly.&#13;
And meanwhile others, past you climbed&#13;
And mounted to the sky.&#13;
"And now you sit and think in vain&#13;
Of wasted youthful hours&#13;
You should have spent in climbing&#13;
On upwards to those towers.&#13;
&#13;
�T&#13;
&#13;
"No easy task to climb so high.&#13;
Each one must risk a fall.&#13;
I stood and aided where I could,&#13;
The path was free to all."&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
HERE'S a time of doubt and darkness,&#13;
When our friends seem strange and cold ;&#13;
In this mist of lonely heartache,&#13;
Comes the message, sweet, though old.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
The dying embers ceased to burn;&#13;
Outside there was no light.&#13;
The figures grouped upon the wall,&#13;
Now vanished out of sight.&#13;
The old man slept, and as he slept,&#13;
He seemed again to see&#13;
Alas! Too far away for him,&#13;
Bright Opportunity.&#13;
0, Youth, with beauty, strength and mind,&#13;
Take warning from the old.&#13;
The path will close to you some day.&#13;
The rest need not be told.&#13;
&#13;
"Child I would not have thee suffer,&#13;
'Tis no joy to see thy pain;&#13;
Only close to me draw nearer,&#13;
And the sun will shine again."&#13;
Know you not you were created&#13;
For a purpose grand and high ?&#13;
You should live a life of triumph;&#13;
To thy Father, then, draw nigh.&#13;
But 'twas&#13;
That I&#13;
You must&#13;
Closer&#13;
&#13;
not for earthly triumph&#13;
placed thee here below;&#13;
live a life of beauty,&#13;
to the Savior grow.&#13;
-EDNA KLINE.&#13;
&#13;
�Chartography of Iowa&#13;
SOPHOMORE-FRESHMAN PRIZE ESSAY '03-04&#13;
BY LE ROY ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
this essay to present&#13;
I T IS the purpose of and jurisdiction of thebriefly the&#13;
changes of ownership&#13;
territory&#13;
now known as Iowa, showing by means of maps the various changes in the boundaries from 1493 until 1846.&#13;
In his efforts to reach India by sailing westward, Columbus discovered some of the islands southeast of North&#13;
America (1492-1498) and claimed them for the king of&#13;
Spain.&#13;
In 1493 the pope, Alexander VI., issued a bull dividing all the lands in the world not held by any other Christian prince between Spain and Portugal, granting to Spain&#13;
all the lands touched by the great navigator, and all other&#13;
territory west of a line passing from pole to pole 100&#13;
leagues west of the Cape Verde islands. All territory east&#13;
of that line was granted to Portugal. As a result Spain&#13;
received the entire continents of North and South America&#13;
and the adjacent islands, and Portugal received a great&#13;
expanse of water. By a treaty between Spain and Portugal (1494) the line was moved 270 leagues farther to the&#13;
west. Portugal then received a small portion of the continent of South America.&#13;
The other nations refused to recognize this division of&#13;
the world. The English explored and settled along the&#13;
Atlantic coast. The French settled in the St. Lawrence&#13;
valley and the Great Lakes region.&#13;
Jacques Cartier discovered the Gulf of St. Lawrence&#13;
&#13;
in 1534, and the next year sailed up the St. Lawrence&#13;
River as far as the present site of Montreal. He claimed&#13;
the northern part of North America and the St. Lawrence&#13;
basin for the French and called the region New France.&#13;
While here he was told by the Indians of a great river to&#13;
the west.&#13;
More than a century later ( 1673) Marquette and J oliet led a small party to explore western New France. They,&#13;
too, heard of the great river and decided to visit it. They&#13;
reached it June 14th, and sailed down the stream about as&#13;
far as the present southern boundary of Iowa. Here they&#13;
discovered footprints in the mud along the river, and by&#13;
following a path inland for about six miles they reached&#13;
an Indian village upon the banks of a stream. After passing the night among the Indians, they continued their&#13;
journey and proceeded as far south as the Arkansas River,&#13;
when they were compelled to return. Marquette and J oliet were probably the first white men to see what is now&#13;
Iowa or to tread its soil.&#13;
It remained for La Salle to claim the Mississippi valley for France. He, too, had heard of the great river to&#13;
the west and determined to visit it, thinking he might be&#13;
able to reach the Gulf of California. In 1682 he descended the Illinois River to the Mississippi and proceeded&#13;
down that stream. He had not gone far until he saw the&#13;
direction of the river was not west, but south; nevertheless,&#13;
he continued his jonrney until he reached the Gulf of Mexico. At the mouth of the river he built a fort, planted a&#13;
cross, and claimed all the territory drained by the great&#13;
river and all the tributaries for the king of France, and&#13;
.named it Louisiana. · This claim included practically all&#13;
of North America between the Rocky Mountains on the&#13;
&#13;
�west and the Appalachian Mountains on the east, the&#13;
great lakes and the continental divide on the north an&lt;l&#13;
the Gulf of Mexico on the south.&#13;
Twice this vast region was placed under the influence&#13;
of individual enterprise, in 1712 and again in 1718, but&#13;
each venture proved unsuccessful. The French remained&#13;
unmolested in their possession of the Mississippi valley&#13;
until the Ohio Company began to operate in western Pennsylvania, about 1754. The conflicting claims of the English and French to the Ohio valley were largely responsible for the French and Indian war.&#13;
At the close of the war England received, as her portion of North America, all of Canada and all of the present territory of the United States east of the Mississippi&#13;
River and north of Florida (1763). The French territory west of the Mississippi River was ceded to Spain as&#13;
compensation for her loss of Havana.&#13;
This was followed in a few years by tho Revolutionary war, at the close of which the territory east of the&#13;
Mississippi River and north of Florida became independent and assumed the name of the United States of America. The natural outlet for the produce of the region west&#13;
of the Alleghenies was the Mississippi River. The United&#13;
states owned the east bankof theriver as far south as Florida ( 31 N.) and was entitled to free navigation of the&#13;
river to that point. The rest of its course, including the&#13;
mouth of the river, was under the control of Spain.&#13;
Difficulty arose when Spain attempted to levy duties&#13;
on American goods passing through the port of New Orleans. This difficulty was adjusted by a treaty with Spain,&#13;
ratified in 1795, which granted to the United States free&#13;
navigation of the river and the use of New Orleans as a&#13;
&#13;
place of deposit for American goods for a period of three&#13;
years.&#13;
By a secret treaty (1800), known as the treaty of St.&#13;
Ildefonso, Spain transferred the territory, as she had received it, to France in return for an Italian province. This&#13;
transfer met with popular disapproval in the United&#13;
States and President Jefferson immediately authorized&#13;
Robt. R. Livingston, our minister to France, to try to purchase the strip of coast extending eastward from the Mississippi and including New Orleans. At first Livingston's proposal was not received with favor by France, and&#13;
James )lonroe was sent as special envoy to aid him in&#13;
conducting the negotiations. A renewal of the war between France and England seemed imminent and N apoleon not only abandoned his preparations for colonizing&#13;
Louisiana but authorized Barbe Marbois, his director of&#13;
the treasury, to negotiate an immediate sale to the United&#13;
States, not of New Orleans alone, but of the whole territory of Louisiana. An agreement was quickly reached by&#13;
which the United States acquired all of Louisiana by paying 80,000,000 francs, or about $15,000,000, and guaranteeing to its inhabitants full enjoyment of religious liberty&#13;
and the rights as citizens of the United States. The treaty&#13;
was signed April 30, 1803, ratified by the United States&#13;
senate October 17, 1803, and the United States took formal possession of New Orleans December 20, 1803, although it was not until the following spring that upper&#13;
Louisiana was transferred to the United States.&#13;
Shortly after the United States had taken possession&#13;
of the territory congress passed an act (March 26, 1804),&#13;
which was to take effect the following October, dividing&#13;
the territory into two parts on the 33d parallel of north&#13;
&#13;
�latitude. The lower part was called the Territory of Orleans and the upper part was attached to the Territory of&#13;
Indiana for judicial purposes, and called the District of&#13;
Louisiana. It remained attached to Indiana Territory&#13;
but a short time, for in 1805 the district was formed into&#13;
a territory of the first (lowest) grade and the title was&#13;
changed from District of Louisiana to Territory of Louisiana. Seven years later (1812) the Territory of Orleans was admitted into the nnion as the state of Louisiana, and the name of the Territory of Louisiana was&#13;
changed to T erritor.Y of Missouri, and was raised from&#13;
a first to a second grade territory. The extent of the territory remained the same until 1819, when Arkansas Territory was formed.&#13;
In 1817 the legislature of Missouri Territory applied&#13;
to congress for permission to prepare a state constitution&#13;
preliminary to admission into the union. Then followed&#13;
the long debate over the slavery question. The Missouri&#13;
compromise was passed in 1820, and Missouri with its&#13;
present boundaries was admitted into the union August&#13;
10, 1821.&#13;
N o provision was made for the government of the remainder of J\[issouri Territory, and it was ·w ithout courts&#13;
or laws, except those made by the settlers themselves, until lawlessness and crime became so prevalent as to attract&#13;
the attention of congress. On June 28, 1834, the part of&#13;
this territory comprising the present states of Iowa, Minnesota west of the J\Iississippi River and a line from the&#13;
source of the Mississippi to the international boundary&#13;
line, and that portion of the Dakotas which lies east of&#13;
the )fissomi and the White Earth Rivers, became a part&#13;
&#13;
of Michigan Territory. It was here that the word Iowa&#13;
was first applied to a political division, being the name&#13;
given to the county comprising the land north of Illinois&#13;
and between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi River.&#13;
A new territory was formed from a part of Michigan&#13;
Territory in 1836 and known as Wisconsin Territory. It&#13;
consisted of the territory now included in the states of&#13;
\Visconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and the Dakotas east of the&#13;
Missouri and White Earth Rivers. The first legislature&#13;
of Wisconsin Territory met at Belmont in the present&#13;
Iowa County, Wis., in the fall of 1836, but the legislature&#13;
of 1837 met at Flint Hill, now Burlington, Iowa, which&#13;
was then the temporary capital. The territory was not&#13;
only too large to be governed successfully by its officers,&#13;
but the population west of the Mississippi River was rapidly increasing and was spreading out over the entire region,&#13;
until in 1837 there were as many inhabitants in the part&#13;
of the territory west of the Mississippi as there were in&#13;
the part east of it.&#13;
The question of separation from \Visconsin was agitated by the inhabitants west of the river and in the fall of&#13;
1837 (September 16) at a meeting held in Burlington it&#13;
was resolved: "That while we have the utmost confidence&#13;
in the ability and i11tegrity of those who control the destinies of our present territorial government, and our delegate in the congress of the United States, we do, nevertheless, look to a division of the territorial government by&#13;
congress, west of the Mississippi River as the only means&#13;
if immediately and fully securing to the citizens thereof,&#13;
the benefits and immunities of a government of laws."&#13;
This convention also urged the people west of the Mississippi to hold county meetings and select three delegates&#13;
&#13;
�from each county to meet in convention at Burlington on&#13;
the :first Monday in November.&#13;
The delegates chosen met November 6, 1837, at Burlington and organized themselves into a territorial convention. On the second day the governor, members of the&#13;
legislature, judges, and members of the bar at Burlington&#13;
were invited to attend the convention. Resolutions were&#13;
passed and memorials to congress adopted in regard to&#13;
( 1) pre-emption, ( 2) the northern boundary of Missouri,&#13;
and ( 3) the division of the territory. Several reasons for&#13;
desiring a division of the territory were offered, among&#13;
them being the claims that the territory was too large as&#13;
it stood, and that during the sixteen months it had been&#13;
attached to ·Wisconsin Territory only one term of court&#13;
had been held. The territorial legislature approved the&#13;
action taken by the convention and within three weeks prepared a memorial to congress requesting a division.&#13;
By an act passeJ by both houses and approved by President Van Buren, June 12, 1838, the territory was divided. That part between the Mississippi River on the&#13;
east, and the Missouri and White Earth Rivers on the&#13;
west, was organized as Iowa Territory, with Robert Lucas,&#13;
of Ohio, as governor.&#13;
Some difficulty with Missouri over the southern boundary arose. The constitution of Missouri defined her&#13;
northern boundary as the parallel which passed through&#13;
the rapids of the Des Moines River. The territory then&#13;
was held by the Indians, but when their claims were exting11ished, Missouri took steps to establish her exact limits. She appointed a commission in 1836 to locate this&#13;
boundary and invited the United States and the Territory&#13;
of Wisconsin to have representatives on_ this commission.&#13;
&#13;
They both failed to appoint commissioners, and Missouri&#13;
proceeded with the work. Her commission decided in&#13;
1837 that the rapids were the rapids in the Des Moines&#13;
River itself, at the great bend of the river near Keosauqua&#13;
and not the rapids in the Mississippi River just above the&#13;
mouth of the Des Moines River.&#13;
In 1838 congress tried to settle the dispute by providing for a commission consisting of one representative each&#13;
from Iowa territory, Missouri and the United States,&#13;
which was to ascertain and mark the boundary line. Missouri refused to be represented on this commission and&#13;
trouble arose again when the authorities of Clark county,&#13;
Missouri, attempted to collect taxes in what is now Van&#13;
Buren county, Iowa. This action was resented by Governor Lucas, who called out a detachment of 500 troops&#13;
and sent them under Maj. -Gen. Jesse B. Brown to the&#13;
scene of the trouble. They encamped in Van Buren&#13;
county directly opposite 1,000 Missouri soldiers under&#13;
General Allen. Proposals for settlement were sent by&#13;
Missouri to the legislature of Iowa territory then in ses·&#13;
sion at Burlington and the whole matter was referred to&#13;
the United States supreme court. On June 3, 1851, the&#13;
supreme court rendered its decision :fixing the old Indian&#13;
boundary line run by John C. Sullivan in 1816 as the&#13;
southern boundary.&#13;
A law was passed by the legislature in 1840 providing&#13;
that at the annual August elections- the question of calling a constitutional convention should be voted upon.&#13;
When the returns of the election were canvassed, it was&#13;
found that the proposition was defeated by a vote of 937&#13;
to 2,907. The proposition was again defeated in 1842,&#13;
but in 1844 the vote on the proposed convention carried.&#13;
&#13;
�The following August seventy-three delegates were chosen&#13;
and on October 7, 1844, sixty-three delegates met at Iowa&#13;
City and organized themselves as a constitutional convention.&#13;
The boundaries designated by the constitution of 1844&#13;
and adopted by the people, yVere as follows : "Beginning&#13;
in the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi river&#13;
opposite the mouth of the Des Moines river; thence up the&#13;
said river, Des Moines, in the middle of the main channel&#13;
thereof, to a point where it is intersected by the Old Indian boundary line, or line run by John 0. Sullivan in the&#13;
year 1816; thence westwardly along said line to the 'Old&#13;
Northwest corner of the Missouri;' thence due west to&#13;
the middle of the main channel of the Missouri river;&#13;
thence up in the middle of the main channel of the river&#13;
last mentioned to the mouth of the Sioux or Calumet&#13;
river; thence in a direct line to the middle of the main&#13;
channel of the St. Peters river where the Watonwan river,&#13;
( according to Nicollet's map), enters the same; thence&#13;
down the middle of the main channel of said river to the&#13;
middle of the main channel of the Mississippi river;&#13;
thence down the middle of the main channel of said river&#13;
to the place of beginning."&#13;
These boundaries did not meet with favor in congress&#13;
and that body accordingly submitted new ones to the&#13;
people of Iowa. The eastern boundary was to remain as&#13;
proposed by the constitution of 1844, but the western&#13;
boundary was to be a meridian drawn 17 degrees and 30&#13;
minutes west from the meridian of Washington, D. 0.,&#13;
and the state to extend from Missouri on the south to the&#13;
parallel passing through the junction of the St. Peters&#13;
&#13;
(Minnesota) and the Blue Earth rivers on the north. This&#13;
proposed as a western boundary a line that would pass&#13;
near the present boundary between Ringgold and Taylor&#13;
counties on the south, and Kossuth and Emmet counties&#13;
on the north. This change was not accepted by the people.&#13;
They continued to insist on having the Missouri river as&#13;
the western boundary, and congress, on its part, was&#13;
equally unwilling to admit, as a single state, so large an&#13;
extent of territory as was included within the boundaries&#13;
proposed by the constitution of 1844.&#13;
In May, 1846, another territorial convention was&#13;
called to discuss the boundary question, and after about&#13;
two weeks' deliberation the present boundaries were decided upon. The constitution was again submitted to the&#13;
people August 3, 1846, and adopted by a vote of 9,492 to&#13;
9,036. Aside from the change of boundaries the constitution as adopted in 1846 was practically the same as the&#13;
one submitted in 1844. Congress approved these boundaries and on December 28, 1846, Iowa was admitted into&#13;
the Union as the 29th state.&#13;
At this time there were about thirty organized counties, all in the eastern part of the state; since then the number has increased to ninety-nine. The population at the&#13;
time of admission was 102,300, and in 1900 it was 2,231,853. During the last sixty years the development of Iowa&#13;
has been phenomenal. Settlers have poured in from the&#13;
eastern states and from Europe. The Indian land claims&#13;
have been extinguished from time to time, and the land&#13;
has come into the hands of a sturdy class of people who&#13;
have transformed it from a wilderness into one of the most&#13;
prosperous and productive regions in the world.&#13;
&#13;
�Wi Reberie&#13;
nter&#13;
WRITTEN FOR THE ZETALETHEAN ANNUAL PUBLIC&#13;
BY EMMA FAIR&#13;
&#13;
Time&#13;
bird;&#13;
T hehave fallenhas come for the snow leavingthe leaves&#13;
into their winter beds,&#13;
the trees&#13;
gaunt and weird; tho wind blows around the house with&#13;
whirl and gu t; the first snow is in the air; winter is upon&#13;
us. Now is the time for colds, chilblains, the camphor&#13;
bottle and the quinine box; the winter fireside and the&#13;
long, quiet evenings.&#13;
We face the stiffening breath of the northwest wind&#13;
for a half hour, several hundred cubic feet of air enter our&#13;
lungs, imparting to us its pure oxygen to warm us internally while it freezes us extomally, and at length we reach&#13;
our warm rooms and seat ourselves beside our cozy fires&#13;
to dream for an hour or two, while our face gradually&#13;
relaxes its set form and the cold which we hoped to avoid&#13;
settles down upon us, giving only a pleasing sense of inactivity. We are now in a condition for imaginative&#13;
flights and pictures of all sorts of things real or unreal.&#13;
Thus happily situated, our thoughts first turn to ourselves. Air-castles already built are gone over and many&#13;
new ones constructed. But not being entirely selfish, we&#13;
grow weary of this and our thoughts turn to others. We&#13;
wonder if many are as happy and contented tonight as&#13;
ourselves, if others are sitting by cheerful fires seeing their&#13;
futures in the flicker of the blaze. We imagine ourselves&#13;
in many different conditions and we try to picture what&#13;
our thoughts would be if we were in the place of others.&#13;
&#13;
An interesting panorama passes before our vision as our&#13;
thoughts are allowed to take their course. Somber pictures are interwoven with bright visions; trouble and hardship with peace and plenty.&#13;
The country landscape, as ever the home where nature&#13;
is found in her most glorious form, comes before our vision. Hore nature is true, pure and unperverted. The&#13;
school boy comes before ns for of all winter cheer is not&#13;
that of the school boy the most genuine? And with what a&#13;
lusty hurrah he throws his cap into the air as he rushes&#13;
from the school house door and cries with delight, "Boys,&#13;
it's snowing!" Winter! What a charm it holds for him!&#13;
Already the snow falls fast. Soon the roads will be covered, the trees laden and the ice pond frozen. His thoughts&#13;
fly fast to the new sled promised. Already his mind is&#13;
aglow with the vision of gay cap and mittens, the glistening slope covered with boys and sleds, the girls with their&#13;
kitty hoods and eider clown cloaks standing shyly by or&#13;
coaxing for a slide on some boy's new sled; the daring&#13;
dash clown the long slope, the exhibition of skill in avoiding a collision with another boy's sled and the hearty good&#13;
will that pervades all the hour's sport.&#13;
But the bracing air brings indoor thoughts too, and&#13;
with them the savory scent of cooking. Christmas is only&#13;
a few .days distant. The mother compounds plum pudding, cranberry sauce and mince pies, while baby brother&#13;
is toddling around with one shoe off, stocking in hand,&#13;
looking out of the window with wide-open eyes, revolving&#13;
in his mind the possibilities and pleasing impossibilites of&#13;
Santa Claus.&#13;
The country home with ts contented, cheery air pleases&#13;
my fancy, for the country is full of hope, purity and&#13;
&#13;
�simplicity. The laugh of the country child at this time&#13;
of the year has a genuine ring, his sports are realities, his&#13;
dreams are but visions of realities that are to be his. But&#13;
in spite of my pleasure, my mind drifts off to the city.&#13;
Here, it is trne, we find bright visions, dreams that in their&#13;
splendor and gaiety far exceed those that fill the mind of&#13;
the conntry school boy, but dreams which are impossible&#13;
to the dreamer, unreal, extravagant, or if possible, hollow&#13;
and vain. In our reverie we wxpect to find vague longings&#13;
and restless discontent in the soul of the working girl and&#13;
in the heart of the ·woman of fashion as well.&#13;
In imagination we follow the working girl as she goes&#13;
to her home. We find a home not entirely cheerless, but&#13;
luxury is wanting. We find the necessities of life, it is&#13;
true, but much of the home attractiveness is missing. The&#13;
working girl is discontented with her lot. Every day she&#13;
has the opportunity of seeing the sharp contrast between&#13;
her life and that of the richer class. Their handsome carriages roll past her as she trudges home from her work. She&#13;
catches glimpses of costly furs and rich velvets. IIow comfortable they look. Often, on cold winter evenings she&#13;
passes their gaily lighted homes where social events are&#13;
taking place and music and laughter come to her ears. No&#13;
wonder her own home appears to her as bare and unsatisfying. Her dreams tonight, as she sits by the little stove&#13;
mending a worn garment, are dreams that carry her outside of her sphere. She sees herself clad in the richest&#13;
of gowns. She is the queen of a gaily lighted ball room.&#13;
Admirers are hers by the score. Her own home is a mansion and her working days are forgotten. This she thinks&#13;
would be a paradise and of this she dreams. Ah, if we&#13;
could only give her a view of the fashionable woman as she&#13;
&#13;
sits in her luxmious home, as she looks with disappointment upon all that is hers and must for her comfort dwell&#13;
upon gayer costumes than she yet has; more money spent&#13;
for diamonds and extravagance ten-fold. If, on this the&#13;
working girl could look, if she could feel the heart-aches&#13;
and disappointments that come to this, her idol, would she&#13;
not realize that her dream, even if attained, would be vain&#13;
and empty? This is city life, its extremes, its contrasts,&#13;
and- its discontent.&#13;
What a variety of characters comes to my vision as in&#13;
imagination I wander over a great city. Iet us enter one&#13;
of these large buildings where story is piled upon story.&#13;
Here the rich broker sits in his office. Look at his face!&#13;
No vision of Christmas made bright by generous giving,&#13;
or deeds of love are there. That drawn brow indicates&#13;
thoughts of disagreeable :financial problems. IIe thinks&#13;
of the money he is compelled to expend on the repair of his&#13;
tenement houses and he begrudges the few dollars taken&#13;
from his several thousands. His visions are of large investments and of possible gains or losses. If we could&#13;
carry his thoughts to one of his own tenement houses and&#13;
let him look into the heart of that thin, hollow-eyed child&#13;
that stands at the patched window and looks out on a desolate landscape and tottering buildings, would not a vision&#13;
of opportunity for kindness come to him? As he looks&#13;
at the rough floor, the broken plaster, and the bare cupboard, would he not have different thoughts? No, he&#13;
probably would not, for something of this he sees every&#13;
day. It belongs to city life.&#13;
But enough of such visions. Not being in a philosophical mood we would have something more pleasing.&#13;
Ah! now we have it . But where is the place of our rev-&#13;
&#13;
�erie? In the city? Yes, it may be found even in the city.&#13;
Our vision is a home of culture and refinement, yet simplicity and retirement. Our dream happily centers on the&#13;
daughter of the house. Her wedding day is near at hand.&#13;
A pretty vision she is tonight as she stands at the window,&#13;
the curtain half drawn, an expression of thoughtfulness&#13;
in her attitude. She is about to drop the curtain and draw&#13;
the shade. .J ust then a cloud passes the moon. A light,&#13;
fleecy cloud it is; the moon passes behind it only for a&#13;
moment and then shines on again as brightly as before.&#13;
But as she turns from the window a slight sadness r0sts&#13;
upon her features, she has thought of mother, for this is&#13;
a home-loving girl. How kind that mother has been. How&#13;
dear she grows just now, for the daughter realizes that&#13;
she will carry a part of that rnother's life away when she&#13;
leaves tomorrow. She knows she will be missed.&#13;
How cozy her room looks tonight. How dear, old&#13;
memories crowd upon her as she looks upon its familiar&#13;
furnishings and the walls almost covered with pictures.&#13;
See, the fire-light seems to give life to the faces of old&#13;
friends. Her eyes wander from picture to picture, from&#13;
one familiar object to another. Finally her glance falls on&#13;
her little bible. The sacred obligations upon which she is&#13;
about to enter come before her as never before. . Responsibility, yes, all that comes to her. But the little bible is&#13;
well worn and we have reason to believe that a strong character has been built when those pages were read and reread.&#13;
The girlish mind, true to its nature, goes immediately&#13;
from these solemn thoughts to that of her wedding dress.&#13;
In imagination she is clad in its dainty folds. Her dear-&#13;
&#13;
est girl friends are :flitting about her. With important but&#13;
gay faces they assist in the completion of her toilette. Already the carriage is awaiting her at the door. She can&#13;
hear distinctly the silver chime of sleigh-bells as they ring&#13;
through the frosty air, keeping time to the gay, prancing&#13;
of the teams in the wedding party. Hark ! The church bell&#13;
rings. The mellow, golden notes fl.oat out on the clear&#13;
night air. In a few moments she will stand before the&#13;
altar pledging her faith and love to the man of her choice.&#13;
The vision fades. Like a dream but half remembered&#13;
it struggles in my thoughts and mingles for awhile with&#13;
the soft glow of the fire, then is gone. For awhile, I sit&#13;
in meditative reverie watching the shadows as they play&#13;
upon the wall, making gTotesque figures or slender fairy&#13;
forms. Wars, battles, dancing, mi1·th, phantoms and realities succeed each other in rapid succession. As upon a canvas, picture after picture appears before me. Some are&#13;
definite, some vague, some present mighty contests, some&#13;
sweet repose. But tbe night wears on and weariness comes&#13;
and with it the thought of old age, the thought of feeble,&#13;
tottering steps approaching the grave. There comes before me a bent form carrying the burden of years, a hoary&#13;
head, white with the snows of many winters. The darkening shadows speak of gloom and death. But a thread&#13;
of hope is mingled with the feeble step. I peer closer at&#13;
the vanishing form. A smile of triumph rests upon the&#13;
saintly features. A far away look of hope is in the eye&#13;
as the aged pilgrim approaches the close of day. The happy, eager soul waits impatient for the summons to a better&#13;
world. An unseen hand beckons on. A light encircles&#13;
the vanishing form. It is the glory of the Eternal Day.&#13;
&#13;
�An Indian Legand&#13;
BY MARIAN B. MATTHEWS&#13;
&#13;
GANGES, with its sad history, is a&#13;
The RIVER for dreaming. The right bank is studbeautiful spot&#13;
ded with little clusters of trees enriching the white domed&#13;
temples. The dying rays of the glorious sunset linger lovingly on the burnished spires as the bells peal forth the&#13;
call to evening prayer. There is no twilight, the sun sets&#13;
and it is night. Nights such as are not found in our&#13;
western hemisphere; silver nights, lighted up by as glorious moonlight, as the sunset which preceded it. A soft,&#13;
gentle light, hiding the unlovely and bringing out the&#13;
beauty of everything it touched.&#13;
On the bank of this river once dwelt an ristocratic&#13;
Hindu, the pride and joy of whom was his eldest son, Ramdas, a thoughtful, silent boy, who dwelt much in the temple and pondered deeply the ethics of his religion. One&#13;
day the father ·was informed by the priest of the temple&#13;
that his boy had been set apart by the gods for temple&#13;
service and was thinking of taking the vows of celibacy.&#13;
Pride and sorrow struggled in the father's heart, for not&#13;
many boys were chosen this early by the gods.&#13;
Now the gods of the numerous temples were bitter&#13;
enemies; therefore, they devised a plan whereby they&#13;
might turn this young man from his devout ways and thus&#13;
injure the god of that temple. They created Dulasi, a&#13;
most beautiful woman, to wait on him during his devotions. Many were the wiles and artifices used. In vain&#13;
&#13;
did she lay the most beatiful :flowers besiJe him, as he&#13;
meditated upon the grand possibility of being absorbed&#13;
into the Great Spirit.&#13;
One day, however, _ missed his beautiful vision, and,&#13;
he&#13;
try as he might, he could not perform his religious ceremonies as of yore. Wandering down by the river bank,&#13;
he came suddenly upon the fair one of whom he was&#13;
dreaming.&#13;
"Dulasi," he said, a little too tenderly for an austere&#13;
priest, "why have you neglected to assist me at my devotions?" The woman sobbed quietly, making no reply. In&#13;
that moment Ramdas knew the priests had been mistaken,&#13;
for, he argued, the gods could not have planned himself&#13;
for the abstemious life of the priesthood, and had given&#13;
him a heart so full of love for this beautiful woman. Lo,&#13;
throwing aside all scruples he sat down and told her of&#13;
his great love. The woman shrank from him and commanded him to be silent, reminding him of his vow to the&#13;
gods of his temple. He indignantly demanded of her some&#13;
explanation for this strange conduct, reminding her that she&#13;
had taught him to love her. Then she told him her strange&#13;
story. She confessed that she stayed away because she&#13;
loved him and loved him so well that she had dared to&#13;
disobey the gods, rather than make him unhappy.&#13;
They both sat thoughtfully gazing at the river and&#13;
listening to the chime of the faraway temple bells. Ramdas suddenly raised his head. "Woman," said he, "let us&#13;
away to that temple. It is the temple of the Goddess of&#13;
Love, said to be the most powerful of all the goddesses."&#13;
But the woman, less hopeful than he, seemed to be reluctant to follow. "It is not seeming for a woman to go&#13;
through the crowded streets," she objected.&#13;
&#13;
�While hesitating thus, their attention was arrested by&#13;
the swift but noiseless approach of a stranger. Silently&#13;
she came toward them, and gently laying her hand upon&#13;
the timid woman, said reassuringly : "Thy lover is right,&#13;
the Goddess of Love has all power. The War Gods and the&#13;
Gods of Peace are strong, but under my protection yon&#13;
will be safe. I have not the power, however, to insure you&#13;
a peaceful life, as mortals live, but laying aside your mortal bodies, ye may dwell as one spirit in my temple."&#13;
The woman was the first to speak, saying with a gentle&#13;
smile, "It shall be as my lover shall decide." Lovingly&#13;
placing his hand upon her shoulder, he said: "It shall be&#13;
as we both desire. We joyfully accept thy terms."&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
The sun set and it was night. The lamp in the temple&#13;
of the God of Peace was untri111med, and the priests&#13;
searched in vain for the yonng man whose duty it haJ&#13;
been to keep it trimmed and burning.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Now, any beautiful summer evening you may meet a&#13;
man upon that river's bank, with a sweet, tender face, so&#13;
foll of love and sympathy you might think it a woman's.&#13;
There he sits by the sacred river, ready to help young lovers 011t of their difficulties; but if you stay until the temple bells of the Goel of Peace ring out, you will suddenly&#13;
find yourself alone, for, though in the service of the Goddess of Love, he is always in fear of his former gods, while&#13;
he is in his human form.&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
�Alumni Association&#13;
SIDNEY L. CHANDLER, '99&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT, '94&#13;
PEARL A. WOODFORD, '03&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE M. CARR, '02 •&#13;
DORA EISENTRAUT, '97 •&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
J. A. DAVIES, 'oo, BOSTON, MASS.&#13;
&#13;
HISTORY fraught with such ev nts and enriched by such memories as belong to the&#13;
early struggles and triumphs of Morningside College deserves to be rehearsed and recorded.&#13;
Ten years ago God planted this school in Morningside, '' beautiful for situation, the joy of the&#13;
whole earth." He had mapped out this region for&#13;
a college. The climate is favorable for study, the&#13;
cold of winter invigorates, the beauty of summer&#13;
inspires, and the air bathes us by day and by night&#13;
with its own fresh life. Nature is steadfast. The&#13;
same contour of country will remain, to bold fixed&#13;
forever the old associations. God's smile will ever&#13;
play along these valleys, and his angels will rest&#13;
on these hilltops. The same broad fields will open&#13;
upon you with their quiet beauty. We gratefully&#13;
accept our location. The quiet of the country invites repose, and repose is essential to high culture. Easy intellectual growth, free from the&#13;
taint of self-conceit and from the weakness of hurried thought, is best secured apart from the heated&#13;
life of great cities. The student will know man as&#13;
he knows himself, and he will become a saving&#13;
&#13;
power among-men in proportion to the purity and&#13;
loftiness of his ideals, to adopt any other principle, to follow any other method is to substitute&#13;
the arts of vulgar ambition for the innate powers&#13;
of conviction and for the moral force of a symmetrical character.&#13;
Solitude, then, in the months of study and&#13;
society in the weeks of vacation are among the&#13;
chief outward conditions of an ample intellectual&#13;
growth. All these may be secured at Morningside. The school has its distinctive type. As it&#13;
grows from youth to maturity, it will follow the&#13;
idea and law of its own life. Its genus is indicated&#13;
in the close union of culture and of religion. Open&#13;
to all, impartial in its dealings with all, and offering to all a generous course of study. The college&#13;
is yet a child and so represented of the Methodist&#13;
faith. We ought not to disguise from ourselves,&#13;
or from the public, that we have fixed religious&#13;
opinions and that these opinions are in full accord&#13;
with the denomination to which we belong. They&#13;
are not voiced in the class room, but, as convictions they will find utterance in the privacy of&#13;
domestic life, in the freedom of social intercourse,&#13;
and often on occasions incident toa public position.&#13;
In these ways the relig·ious faith of a faculty&#13;
tells for the Christian ideals which it represents.&#13;
There is the unconscious influence of a body of&#13;
&#13;
�men and women, who, however they may differ on&#13;
other points, are one and the same in their Christian relations. Their characters are a standing&#13;
witness to the truth, their united profession constitutes a moral force, silent, continuous and&#13;
potential.&#13;
Morningside Colleg·e is to have a future. Well&#13;
may we join in thanksgiving to God for bis favors&#13;
to these people in their struggles and efforts in&#13;
sustaining and promoting the cause of education&#13;
here. The ordeal through which the school has&#13;
passed is a sure token of divine favor. "It has&#13;
passed the Rubicon" and all is well. Coming&#13;
events cast their shadows before. The tempest&#13;
that once threatened desolation and made this hill&#13;
tremble and the trees to bend, found some whose&#13;
&#13;
faith failed not, but with "eagle eye and eagle&#13;
wing, they rose directly toward the sun."&#13;
"A s some tall cliff, that lifts its awful form,&#13;
Sw e lls from the vale and midway leaves the storm,&#13;
Wh ile round its base the whirling storm is sped,&#13;
Ete rn al sunshine settles on its head."&#13;
&#13;
These storms are sometimes necessary to purify the atmosphere and stir the turbid waters beneath. A calm is sure to follow. Here lies our&#13;
only safet y. Trust in God, fidelity in the discharge of duty and all will end in success and a&#13;
large rewa rd.&#13;
The future&#13;
will witness larger endowments,&#13;
larger fac u lties, larger attendance, higher grades&#13;
of study, and more ample accommodations and&#13;
facilities of instruction. Let us seek to contribute&#13;
to that grand consummation.&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
�- DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
MISS FAIR&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Association&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
1902 the first attempt was made to organize athletics at Morning·&#13;
side College. "The General Athletic Association" was the result&#13;
of these efforts. This organization had charge of all departments&#13;
of athletics undertaken by the student body. Base ball, tennis, basket&#13;
ball, foot ball and track team comprised the various departments.&#13;
&#13;
The season of 1904 marks an era in the history of athletics in&#13;
Morningside College. Finding the previous method of management to&#13;
be unsatisfactory, the student body reorganized the constitution. A&#13;
board of control, consisting of two members each of the faculty, stu-&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
dents and alumni were chosen, to have complete control of all depart·&#13;
ments of athletics and power to choose a general manager or managers,&#13;
as they saw fit. This we believe to be a step toward placing athletics&#13;
upon a firm financial basis. Under the training of Coach Peckumn of&#13;
Northwestern University the "ONE" branch of athletics, football, was&#13;
a decided success this year. Every man supported the team loyally ,&#13;
and although there were only five or six old players on the team, it car·&#13;
ried off a good share of the honors on the " Gridiron." The coming&#13;
years will see a decided improvement in every way, owing to the pros·&#13;
pect of a gymnasium in the near future.&#13;
&#13;
�Foot Ball Trophy Cup&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
TROPHY CUP was presented to the&#13;
Foot Ball Association by Mr. A. R.&#13;
Toothaker, a former athlete and alumnus&#13;
of the college. The cup was given as an annual&#13;
prize to the best foot ball player with the highest standing in his classes. The cup is a beautiful silver piece and stands thirteen inches high,&#13;
J. C. BASS&#13;
mounted upon an ebony base.&#13;
The prize is awarded as follows:&#13;
At the&#13;
close of the football season the men on the&#13;
team winning Ms shall meet and select by ballot the b est five players. The one&#13;
of the five thus se lected having the highest average grade in his studies, of at&#13;
least fifteen hours, shall be declared the winner of the cup and shall hold the&#13;
same for one year.&#13;
Last year ('03 ) the cup was won by H. B. Saylor, now attending Rush&#13;
Medical College. This season ( '04) the cup was awarded to Mr. J. C. Bass.&#13;
&#13;
FOOT BALL THOPHY OUP&#13;
&#13;
�* Peckumn&#13;
Crabb&#13;
Crow&#13;
&#13;
* Coach&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
De Griselles&#13;
Millner&#13;
Debenham&#13;
t Manager&#13;
&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
G. Squires&#13;
tYoung&#13;
Bridenbaugh&#13;
Adams&#13;
Stiles&#13;
Hubbard&#13;
Morrison&#13;
Hawkins&#13;
Hamren&#13;
K. Squires&#13;
&#13;
Clary&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
�Foot Ball&#13;
Positions&#13;
Centre-Fredendoll.&#13;
Right Guard-Hawkins.&#13;
Left Guard-De Griselles.&#13;
Right Tackle-Millner, Capt.&#13;
Le ft Tackle--Morrison.&#13;
Right End - Debenham.&#13;
Left End-K. Squires.&#13;
Right Half-Crow.&#13;
Left Half- -Adams.&#13;
Full Back- Bass.&#13;
Quarter Back-Hubbard.&#13;
&#13;
SUBSTITUTES&#13;
&#13;
Centre- -Stiles.&#13;
Guards- -Cra b b, Bridenbaugh.&#13;
Tackles--G. Squires.&#13;
End s--Olary.&#13;
Half Back--J ones.&#13;
Quarter Back --Hamren.&#13;
&#13;
Games&#13;
&#13;
G. E. MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake 0,&#13;
Yankton&#13;
0,&#13;
o,&#13;
Mitchell&#13;
Storm Lake 5,&#13;
Yankton 11,&#13;
Mitchell&#13;
5,&#13;
Univ. S. D. 23,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College O,&#13;
Morningside College 0,&#13;
Morningside College O,&#13;
Morningside College 0,&#13;
Morningside College 5,&#13;
Morningside College 0,&#13;
Morningside College 5,&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
Yankton .&#13;
Mitchell.&#13;
Storm Lake.&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
�Bass&#13;
Rissler&#13;
Eveleth&#13;
&#13;
* Captain&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
* Squires&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
�Pitcher -- G·Squires, Captain.&#13;
Catcher-G. Eveleth.&#13;
First Base-A. Tumbleson.&#13;
Second Base--C. G. Manning.&#13;
Third Base-- C. Wescott.&#13;
&#13;
Right Field-J. C. Bass, Mgr.&#13;
Short Stop-C. Rissler.&#13;
Left Field-G. E. Millner.&#13;
Center Field-Adams and&#13;
Pierce.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
OPPONENTS&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
G. SQUIRES&#13;
MORNING SIDE COLLEGE ' S NEXT MOVE&#13;
&#13;
�Van Dyke&#13;
*Captain&#13;
&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
t Coach&#13;
&#13;
s:-&#13;
&#13;
Wescott&#13;
&#13;
Faey&#13;
&#13;
Rissler&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
t Peckumn&#13;
&#13;
�Basket Ball&#13;
SINCE the fall term of 1901, when, in a meeting, those few students interested in basket ball organized the Basket Ball&#13;
Association, up to the present day, no sport of any kind has&#13;
gone forward with such leaps and bounds as has basket ball. We&#13;
stand first in all records made by any athletic team Morningside&#13;
has ever produced. The year of 1904-05 has proven exceptionally&#13;
successful for our fast and furious team. Out of nine scheduled&#13;
games we carried away the laurels of eight.&#13;
M.C.&#13;
Ft. Dodge Y. M. C. A................... 83 to 21&#13;
Yankton College ............... . ........ 38 to 19&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan ......... . ........... 48 to 38&#13;
Yankton College ........................ 50 to 28&#13;
Sergeant Bluff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 39 to 30&#13;
Second High School ............. . ....... 35 to 23&#13;
Sioux's Second Y. M . C. A............... 40 to 21&#13;
Co. L ............................ . ...... 25 to 23&#13;
First High School ....................... 28 to 36&#13;
&#13;
C. J. WESCOTT&#13;
&#13;
Our second team needs mention for the fact that they so nearly&#13;
matched our first team that at some times it was hard to determine&#13;
whether they were inferior or superior.&#13;
&#13;
. I&#13;
&#13;
�Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
H. Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Sim an&#13;
&#13;
E. Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Erskine&#13;
&#13;
De Lay&#13;
&#13;
The Girls' Basket Ball Team&#13;
THRE E years ago the powers that be decreed that th e&#13;
coeds of Morningsid e College should meet th e ir&#13;
rivals in athletics in a new field . Accordingly a&#13;
basket ball team was formed, consisting of some of th e&#13;
most energetic young women of the school. At the outse t&#13;
they began with such enthusiasm that much interes t was&#13;
aroused among both the students and faculty.&#13;
After surmounting the many difficulti es of opposing&#13;
&#13;
forces, they finally won for the mse lves a prestige by many&#13;
hard won victories . Within the last year it was d ecid ed&#13;
that they could no longer champion the ir cause on foreign&#13;
fields, but they must confine the mse lves to their own territory. So ended th e hi s tory of th e girls' baske t ball tea m&#13;
of Morningsid e College, but th ey still e ntertain hop es that&#13;
in future years they may have th e ir former privileges.&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomore Basket Ball Team&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Basket Ball Team won the&#13;
silver cup which was presented as a trophy&#13;
for the college and academy class tournament. This · victory entitles them to the championship of the school for the winter of '04 and '05.&#13;
&#13;
Team&#13;
P. Fredendoll, C.&#13;
A. Adams, F.&#13;
A. Tumbleson, G.&#13;
&#13;
C. Wishard, G.&#13;
G. Squires, G.&#13;
C. Rissler, F.&#13;
J. Bass, F.&#13;
&#13;
College Games&#13;
&#13;
Academy Games&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
Middle Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sub Preparatory&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Junior Academy&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Middle Academy&#13;
&#13;
VICTORS OF&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
VICTORS OF&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
SR. ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
Final Contest&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
Adams&#13;
Squires&#13;
Wishard&#13;
Bass&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Rissler&#13;
&#13;
CHAMPIONSHIP-SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
�Track Team&#13;
&#13;
TheTEAM began last season (1904) with only five old&#13;
&#13;
track&#13;
men training for their events. The enterpri8ing work of H.&#13;
L. Mossman (manager) in securing seventeen gold medals for the&#13;
home meet was not lost on the men of athletic ability. Dual meets&#13;
were secured with University of South Dakota, Buena Vista College and Yankton College.&#13;
&#13;
W.H. DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash ................... 10 2-5 seconds&#13;
220 yard dash ....................... 22i seconds&#13;
440 yard dash ......... ............... 52 seconds&#13;
880 yard dash ..... ....... .. ....... 2 min. 10 sec.&#13;
1 mile run ............................ 5 minutes&#13;
2 mile run ........ ....... ........ 10 min. 45 sec.&#13;
Shot put ........................ 38 feet 7 inches&#13;
Hammer throw .......... .... .......... . 105 feet&#13;
Discus ................................. 107 feet&#13;
Pole vault ...................... 10 feet 6 inches&#13;
High jump . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 5 feet 6 inches&#13;
Broad jump . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... 20 feet 6 inches&#13;
120 yard hurdles .................. 20 2-5 seconds&#13;
220 yard hurdles .......... . ... .... 27 2-5 seconds&#13;
&#13;
�Tennis&#13;
· Officers&#13;
FLORENCE DAVIDSON, Vice-President.&#13;
W. A. BLACKWELL, President and Manager.&#13;
C. W. MAYNARD, Secretary and Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
THOSE of our readers who are interested in tennis, and take an active part in this&#13;
branch of athletics, will be glad to learn of its healthy condition in Morning Side&#13;
College. More students are becoming interested in this sport each year. Both&#13;
men and women participate in the tournaments which take place every spring term.&#13;
Plans for tournaments with several colleges and universities have been discussed,&#13;
with good prospects for a strong meet later in the year.&#13;
A small fee of one dollar admits any student or member of the faculty to the tennis&#13;
courts, of which there are three in splendid condition. The Association has nearly completed two additional courts for the use of its members.&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
�CONSERVATORY BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
�Winter Sports&#13;
WITH APOLOGIES To&#13;
WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT&#13;
AND THE CHEMISTRY PROFESSOR&#13;
BY A SENIOR&#13;
&#13;
To him, who, in the love of Nature, holds&#13;
Communion with her visible forms, she speaks&#13;
A various language; in his California home&#13;
She has a voice of gladness, and a smile&#13;
Of eloquence and beauty; and she glides&#13;
Into the coldness of his Iowa winter&#13;
With fresh, invigorating sports, that steal away&#13;
Its sharpness, 'ere he is aware. When thoughts&#13;
Of tomorrow's lecture come like a blight&#13;
Over his spirit, and sad images&#13;
Of the stern agony of tomorrow's lab. work,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The odor of vile bromine and fumes of gas&#13;
Make him to shudder and grow sick-at heart,&#13;
He goes forth under the cold sky and tries&#13;
For the first time, skating; while from all aroundFrom gay students and from impudent small boys&#13;
Come loud voices: Yet a few weeks, and thee&#13;
The jeering crowd shall see no more waving&#13;
Wildly your arms; nor yet on the cold ice,&#13;
Where thy tall form was laid, with many falls,&#13;
Nor in the embrace of passing skaters shall be seen&#13;
Thy image. The girl that skated with thee, shall note&#13;
Thy progress; delight shall seize her and lost&#13;
Shall be her breaking back and aching arms which held up&#13;
Thine individual being, and thou shalt go&#13;
To mix most freely with good skaters,&#13;
To be a gallant to the college girl&#13;
Who skates not well and whom the rude swain&#13;
Refuses to assist and turns against. But thou&#13;
Shall shed thy kindness forth, and help them all.&#13;
Yet not to the deep frozen lake&#13;
Does he repair alway-though hardly could he wish&#13;
Sport more magnificent. But he slides down&#13;
With patriarchs of the small-boy world, with Profs.,&#13;
The powerful of the school, the wise, the good.&#13;
Fair maids of youthful type and age uncertain,&#13;
All on one great bob-sled. The hills&#13;
Smooth worn, and slick as any glass; the vales&#13;
Stretching in pensive quietness between:&#13;
The venerable telegraph poles that rise&#13;
In majesty; the pretty girls, the Prof.,&#13;
Brave, yet very green in coasting methods,&#13;
And poured around it all the moonlight,&#13;
Making diamonds of the snowThese are the accessories all&#13;
Of the coasting parties· of men. The silvery moon,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�The planets, all the infinite host of heaven,&#13;
Shine on those deadly telegraph poles,&#13;
Through the still winter evening. All that slide&#13;
Down safely are but a handful to the tribes&#13;
That bump against those poles. Taking a lady&#13;
Of learning, the Prof. seats her upon the sled&#13;
While he sits down BEHIND her&#13;
To steer the thing. The sled slides on;&#13;
&#13;
They hear no sound save their own laughterYet the poles are there! And millions on that hill&#13;
Since first the sport began, have run into those poles&#13;
In their wild ride; the poles reign there alone.&#13;
So did the Prof. And as he withdrew&#13;
In silence from the mixup, the friends above&#13;
Took note of his calamity. Yet swear not&#13;
Thou unhappy man. For all that coast&#13;
Will share thy destiny. The gay may laugh&#13;
When thou art sorely hurt, the careless, free from pain&#13;
Coast on, yet each one as before will run&#13;
Into those poles; and then all these shall leave&#13;
Their mirth and their gay coasting, and shall come&#13;
And use thy liniment with thee. As the long train&#13;
Of sleds shall glide away, the sons of men,&#13;
The youth in life's green spring, and he who goes&#13;
In the full confidence of his skill, the spectacled Prof.,&#13;
The fresh prep and the wise senior,&#13;
Shall one by one be damaged by those poles,&#13;
As well as those who in their turn shall follow them.&#13;
So take a brace, that when the summons comes tomorrow&#13;
To join the motley crowd of students that moves&#13;
To the smoky realms of the lab. where each shall take&#13;
His desk and try to do his work;&#13;
Thou go not like a vanquished coaster&#13;
Limping to his work, but sustained and soothed&#13;
Ry tonic and liniment, approach thy class&#13;
Like one who coasts all evening without accident,&#13;
Goes home, and then lies down to pleasant dreams.&#13;
&#13;
�C LIPPING FROM CHICAGO AMERICAN&#13;
&#13;
THE COMING OPERATIC STAR&#13;
( Special to the American.)&#13;
Sroux CITY, low A, June 19.-Last night at the Academy of Morningside College graduation occurred the first appearance of Mr. Carl&#13;
Maynard as the leader of the college quartet, and although the other&#13;
members of the quartet were artists of exceptional ability, Mr. Maynard easily excelled. His placing of tones was highly original, and at&#13;
times he had his vast audience almost in tears by his rendering of&#13;
pathetic passages. There is certainly a bright future open for "The&#13;
Boy Singer," and if properly trained he will undoubtedly be one of our&#13;
great operatic stars. We want to congratulate our neighbor city for&#13;
its spirit and enterprise in producing a grade of musicians which can&#13;
compete with the imported article.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. KANTHELENER, at Mrs. Erskine's&#13;
door: "Mr. Debenhan stays here, doesn't he?&#13;
Would you please tell him I would like to see him&#13;
for a moment?"&#13;
MRS. E.: "I'm sorry, Prof., but he ·has just&#13;
gone over to Mr. Cummings."&#13;
0. R. MASON,&#13;
Dept. of Chem.,&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
The Pleasures of the '04s Vacation&#13;
&#13;
There was once a man named Gruber, who sold&#13;
peanuts, candy and gum at Darling's by the Park.&#13;
Now this young man had a forgetful memory; he&#13;
also bad a girl, and taking them both one eve, he&#13;
wended his way cityward by means of the trolley&#13;
car. Arriving here his memory got in its work&#13;
and informed him that if they wanted to see Viola&#13;
Allen in "A Winter's Tale" they must needs obtain those tickets which were in the pocket of his&#13;
other vest, which lay on the bed at Darling's by&#13;
the Park. This they did while Viola Allen talked&#13;
and acted.&#13;
MORAL: Always wear your best vest when&#13;
you go to buy theater tickets.&#13;
&#13;
�Miss&#13;
&#13;
Lobeland'S Letter to&#13;
Her Brother&#13;
&#13;
DWIGHT LOVELAND,&#13;
&#13;
Syracuse, N. Y .&#13;
My Dear Brother: I suppose you are surprised at not having heard from us before, but our&#13;
time has been very much occupied of late. We&#13;
have removed to the Blue cottage for the summer.&#13;
We enjoy everything here so much, but our greatest delight is in the care of Dr. Blue's barnyard&#13;
fowls, f which we have sole charge. They eat&#13;
raw vegetables and grain, but prefer bread and&#13;
cake.&#13;
The saddest thing occured yesterday, toward&#13;
noon. One of the fowls appeared to be very ill.&#13;
Thinking it showed symptoms of pneumonia, we&#13;
carried it into the house, and while sister gave it a&#13;
hot foot bath, I administered a dose of pepper tea,&#13;
after which we wrapped it in hot flannels, wrung&#13;
from boiling water. In spite of our united efforts&#13;
it seemed to grow steadily worse, and about sunset&#13;
it died. The sadness of the occasion was intensified by the fact that Dr. and Mrs. Blue were far&#13;
away and could not share our grief for the decease&#13;
of their pet.&#13;
For the past week my sister and I have spent&#13;
most of our time in eradicating the weeds and&#13;
grasses which have overgrown the little garden .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
After we had completed the task, we found we bad&#13;
two potato vines, five lettuce plants, and another&#13;
large and peculiar plant in one corner, which we&#13;
judged from its fruit to be a squash vine. This&#13;
morning we picked one of the squashes, whieh we&#13;
.destined for our mid-day repast. It was not very&#13;
large as yet, but we thought it would be sufficient&#13;
for our dinner. When we came to eat it, it had a&#13;
very peculiar and disagreeable taste, in so much&#13;
that we were unable to continueourmeal. One of our&#13;
neighbors told us afterwards that it was a pumpkin vine, and that probably we would not find the&#13;
fruit at all delectable until frost.&#13;
The kitten is well, but causes us much anxiety&#13;
by its roving tendencies.&#13;
*&#13;
We will be delighted to hear from you at any&#13;
time.&#13;
Your sister,&#13;
HELEN I. LOVELAND.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
The French-Physics Hunting Trip&#13;
Sunday Under the Six Day Schedule&#13;
&#13;
ZE GRAND CAROUSAL OF Ze FLATBOAT MEN IN&#13;
ZE PETITE CHEMICAL LABRATORY&#13;
Ah, eet was une grande tam. Ze Meester Clair sat at ze bench to&#13;
weigh, and zen Pierpont crawl from ze leetle labratory slowly till he&#13;
be to ze door of ze weigh room, zen he arise and zen- swish ! crack !&#13;
ze beet hit Clair right where ze hear hitch on hees haid. Sacre ! He&#13;
yell, he jump, and say By Gar ! he fix ze man what heet heem. He&#13;
trow ze beet to Pierpont and chase heem in ze little laboratory, and&#13;
Watchdog lock ze door. Parbleu ! ze grande tam begin zen. Ze beeg&#13;
Fredendoll hop in and zey all mingle togezzer in une grande heap&#13;
.around on ze floor, table, window-sill and ceiling. Ze hair was filled&#13;
wiz feet, hair, hands, teeth and uzzer sings. Ze room resound wiz ze&#13;
wild cry of ze pauvre man who is below in ze stack. Zey look· like ze&#13;
beeg drunken riverman fight. Zen ze Professor unlock ze door. Parbleu ! he sink he in a lumber camp on Sunday. He be very indignant&#13;
and say : Har, you fellah, you git out my labratory and git absolution&#13;
from ze Dean before you retournez. And zey git.&#13;
&#13;
UNDOUBTEDLY&#13;
GARVER: "Who were the two kings of&#13;
Athens, Mr. Gruber ?"&#13;
GRUBER: "I can't quite-they began the&#13;
same."&#13;
GARVER: "Yes, they were both babies."&#13;
&#13;
SHORT BUT SWEET&#13;
If a body kiss a Boddy what would Estie do.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Miss CURRIER: "I will remember you sometime."&#13;
Miss JOHNSON: "Yes do. Remember me in your&#13;
prayers."&#13;
Miss CURRIER: "0, I won't wait that long,"&#13;
&#13;
STUDENT:&#13;
"How many hours can one carry, Miss&#13;
Dimmitt."&#13;
Miss D.: "A smart person can carry fifteen hours.&#13;
A fool can carry any number."&#13;
&#13;
( MAN UNLOADING COAL OUTSIDE.)&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Finch&#13;
Frear:&#13;
&#13;
"What's that noise."&#13;
"0, that's only Miss Killian chewing&#13;
&#13;
gum."&#13;
&#13;
A Chemical Precipitate&#13;
&#13;
The Chemical Featherweights&#13;
&#13;
SYMPATHETIC VIBRATIONS&#13;
TIME: 8: 30 a. m.&#13;
PLACE: College Corridors.&#13;
SCENE: Kindig reading a letter postmarked Hornick.&#13;
Enter McCay :&#13;
Say Jim, what you shivering about.&#13;
KINDIG: Great Scott, man! Think of walking a mile&#13;
through snow two feet deep, crawling under three fences,&#13;
and building your own fires in a little dinky barn of a school&#13;
house. Gee Whiz, man! It's enough to make any body&#13;
shiver to think of it.&#13;
&#13;
�Too&#13;
&#13;
BAD&#13;
&#13;
Warm weather and stuffy railway cars affect people in much the&#13;
same way, but considering the fact that R. G. Young was enroute to&#13;
visit his lady love one would think he could have managed to rouse&#13;
himself at least one station past the desired haven, instead of peacewell, never&#13;
fully snoozing until he had been carried&#13;
* *&#13;
*&#13;
mind, the tale is too sad to relate.&#13;
&#13;
Staples Making an "A" Grade in German&#13;
&#13;
Too&#13;
&#13;
Hasty&#13;
( Feb. 10, 1904) MR. MINKLER to young lady: "May I have the&#13;
pleasure of your company to the Philo. picnic?"&#13;
Y. L.: "Let me see, when does that come off, Mr. Minkler?"&#13;
MR. M.: Why, we expect to have it late in the spring term. "&#13;
Y. L.: Oh, Mr. Minkler, this is so sudden."&#13;
&#13;
BLISS&#13;
TIME-Sunday evening, 7:30 p. m.&#13;
PLACE-Lothians.&#13;
CHARACTEHS-Doc Morrison and Miss Howard.&#13;
Door bell rings. Miss H. opens door.&#13;
Mr. M.: "Is Miss Thompson in?"&#13;
Miss H.: "No, but she will be in, in a moment. Won't you come&#13;
in, Mr. Morrison?"&#13;
Morrison enters.&#13;
SCENE II.&#13;
Time 8:30. Miss T. still absent. Chairs in parlor four feet apart.&#13;
SCENE III.&#13;
TIME 9:30. Miss T. still absent. Chairs in parlor two feet apart.&#13;
SCENE IV.&#13;
TIME 10:30. Miss T. still absent. Parlor still occupied.&#13;
SCENE V.&#13;
Mr. M. leaving.&#13;
Miss H.: "Goodnight, Mr. Morrison. Call again. I'm sorry Miss&#13;
Thompson was gone.&#13;
GIRL: "Well, how do you like Morning Side, Mr. Horner?'&#13;
HORNER : "Oh, fairly well; they seem to like me, alright. I'm&#13;
president of the Freshman class, secretary of the Philomathean society, and here's my name among the ushers."&#13;
MR. Brower,&#13;
in class meeting: "There is a little matter that&#13;
ought to come up," ( Then he got up.)&#13;
&#13;
�DR. CAMPBELL INSTRUCTING NEW STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
ON PASSING OUT OF CHAPE L&#13;
"First the Seniors will pass away, then the others will pass&#13;
away in their order, then the faculty will pass away, then I will&#13;
pass away, aud we'll all meet down below."&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
TRUE ENOUGH&#13;
Miss FERGUSON: ·'Wo gehen sie, Herr Crabb?"&#13;
CRABB: "I'm sorry, but I can't answer you with intelligence."&#13;
SAWYER: "Who is that whistling for a dog."&#13;
ROBBINS: "l don't know; you needn't run."&#13;
&#13;
A Moonlight Scene at Frary's&#13;
&#13;
THAT Red SHIRT&#13;
CHEM. LAB.- Robbins sitting at table in shirt sleeves.&#13;
Enter Miss F. (throwing arm around him,) "say dear, ain't you&#13;
O! O! O! Oh! Ah! I beg pardon. I thought it was a Zet. waist."&#13;
&#13;
The S c HOOLMA' AM' S TONGUE&#13;
Miss JOHNSON IN SCHOOLROOM: "Johnny, what are you watching&#13;
me so for?"&#13;
JOHNNY: "! wanted to see you open your mouth."&#13;
Miss J.: " Why ?"&#13;
JoHNNY: '" Cause Katie said your tongue was sharp as a knife,&#13;
and I wanted to see."&#13;
&#13;
The Sophomores Sing "Just One Girl"&#13;
&#13;
�JUDGED OTHERS BY HIMSELF&#13;
Miss LOVELAND: "How did Benvolia know what girl Romeo was&#13;
in love with? "&#13;
MR. DEBENHAM : "Perhaps Romeo talked in his sleep."&#13;
&#13;
LAUGH!&#13;
PROF. BLUE: "What is the meaning of facetious? "&#13;
MR. CALKINS: "Why, it means full of spirits, or something."&#13;
&#13;
Adams Wears the Crown of Thorns&#13;
&#13;
DR. CAMPBELL, in psychology class : " Mr. Foote, what do you&#13;
know about dispersed attention?"&#13;
FooTE : "Only what the books say. I never had any myself."&#13;
&#13;
PROP. GARVER: "Have they got any jokes on&#13;
Bowker? "&#13;
Miss B,: "I don't know. I was in the presence of a&#13;
evening, and every time I opened my mouth he took&#13;
Prof. G.: "What were you doing with his pencil&#13;
Miss Bowker? "&#13;
&#13;
you yet, Miss&#13;
&#13;
DR. BLUE, reading: " 'Exhuberant love,&#13;
delicate? "&#13;
Miss S KINNER : "Accurate."&#13;
&#13;
is it accurate or&#13;
&#13;
DR. CAMPBELL, in chapel : "I believe the musicians are all gone&#13;
this morning. Miss Cook, won't you play? "&#13;
&#13;
Junior the other&#13;
his pencil out."&#13;
in your mouth,&#13;
&#13;
PROF. WYLIE, in biology class: " Now, are there any questions on&#13;
the grasshopper? "&#13;
WESCOTT: "Where did the grasshoppers learn to chew tobacco?"&#13;
&#13;
APRIL&#13;
&#13;
1, 1904&#13;
&#13;
Gertie :&#13;
"My, but I do hate to have him leave next year. I don't&#13;
like to have a different fellow every year."&#13;
NOTE- Jim s tayed in Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
�Ladies, skip this paragraph! It is really unfit for publication. It&#13;
got into our copy by mistake, and we asked the printer to destroy it or&#13;
set lt up wrong side up :&#13;
head. her&#13;
uo stand to had she if •somehow it at get she'd knew e W&#13;
read, already&#13;
she's poem this farthing a to cents ten wager we'll Now ,&#13;
I show a of kind&#13;
least the gets shr if anyhow , out it puy she'll bet you but&#13;
know , 01 not ought&#13;
she something it's woman a worries anything there's is&#13;
&#13;
JOGRAPHY CLASS-SWEDEN AND NORWAY&#13;
&#13;
The klimate of thes too is vary cold the biggest part of the tim it&#13;
is. so cold in the north part that the people live under the grownd&#13;
and some of the folk that live in thes touns have never seen daylite.&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
Said the Senior to the ] uni or girl, '' let's both for&#13;
coasting go, "&#13;
But the Junior girl in ste rn reply , said "No, we&#13;
will not go,&#13;
For coasting thro' the last fo ur years has robbed&#13;
y our brain, y ou know . "&#13;
&#13;
�Queries&#13;
ANN A -&#13;
&#13;
For a simple home wedding in ] une a pre tty dainty&#13;
white dress would be suitable . Your graduating dress&#13;
would answer perfectly.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
I.-&#13;
&#13;
I set a h en two weeks ago today. Would it be wise for&#13;
me to attend church Sunday morning, or will she come off&#13;
before church is out?&#13;
Ans. - You will be safe m attending church, b ut do&#13;
not stay to S. S .&#13;
Jones V isits the Dissecting Room and Discovers a N ew Brand of Chocolates&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
"Cook" -&#13;
&#13;
Ye s, I think yo u will b e justified in re ceiving the Prof.'s&#13;
calls for violin practice , once e ve ry week day and twice on&#13;
Sundays, providing this is agreeable to your moth er.&#13;
&#13;
AT MRS. THOM'S DINNER TABLE&#13;
Mr. HEILMAN: "Say, Mr. Erskine, indications point to a sensation&#13;
in social circles in the near future."&#13;
MR. E.: "That so! What are the signs?"&#13;
MR. H.: "Oh, a certain young lady at this table w ars a diamond."&#13;
&#13;
"vivian" -&#13;
&#13;
MR. E. : "Who can it be? From the illumination aro nd this corner, it must be-Great Scott, Evva, quit kicking me under the table.&#13;
I'm sure I gave my consent. You need'nt inflict punishment on me.&#13;
&#13;
From your question, I should say, that if y o u are as&#13;
amiable and e ntertaining- as stated, your landl ord was&#13;
ce rtainly ha rs h in sending your company home at II: 57&#13;
p . m. It would have been p erfectly proper for him to stay&#13;
until 1 2: 00.&#13;
&#13;
WOULDN'T IT MAKE YOU MAD?&#13;
If you were visiting a young lady you hadn't seen for two days,&#13;
and if it was only 2:30 a. m., and if you had just got to an interesting&#13;
part, when Doc. Dewalt opened a windo w and said "come in Peckumn,&#13;
breakfast will be ready in a little bit," wouldn't it make you wrathy?&#13;
&#13;
�HEARD IN THE LAB.&#13;
MR. BASS: "Which will you have, Miss Bowker, the dorsal or&#13;
ventral portion ot the lower lip?"&#13;
Miss BowKER: "I don't care for either, thank you."&#13;
&#13;
Miss FERGUSON, in German class: " The names of all those who&#13;
who will escape the examination will be posted on the door at noon."&#13;
Miss BRYAN: (sotto voice) "Let us pray."&#13;
&#13;
IN THE SCHOOLROOM&#13;
JOHNNY: (reading) "The man was goin'."&#13;
Miss Fry: "Don't forget the g, Johnny."&#13;
JOHNNY: "Gee, but the man was goin."&#13;
&#13;
ISN'T IT PROVOKING&#13;
- If when you are walking home with your lady friend, and if she&#13;
happens to say "My, Clarence, how cold your hands are" - isn't it&#13;
provoking to have someone overhear it and tell it next morning at&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors wallop Profs.&#13;
In a game replete with brilliant plays on both sides the Seniors&#13;
win 13 to 8 by superior slugging. The game began with the Chinese&#13;
up. Peck in the box for the Faculty, and the Department of Mathematics behind the bat. The first three Chinamen lined up on the&#13;
suburban stations, from whence they easily made grades, when Root&#13;
&#13;
lammed one over t he head of the Purveyor of Rhetoric, which, despite&#13;
of his concentrated gaze, sailed on over his head. Root and Harding&#13;
scored later, and then the side went out, with the Seniors five grades&#13;
to the good.&#13;
The Faculty did business in the same old way, together with&#13;
passes and one timely, but three men over safe, then Physics and the&#13;
Normal Department fanned. Van Horne, next up, constructed a&#13;
tangent to the sphere, which described a parabola, terminated by the&#13;
northwest corner of a brindle cow, a block and a half away. This&#13;
ended the scoring for the inning. After this the Chinese pitcher&#13;
settled down, and the Profs. handled the chopsticks for only ten more&#13;
hits, in the next five innings. Peck for the Profs. was succeded by the&#13;
Department of History, who failed to make it a reign of terror, and&#13;
was followed by the Bugman, who served up such exceedingly complicated question marks that the Chinese flunked with surprising readiiness-one A, three Bs, two Cs, and eight Ds, being the only marks&#13;
the Coolies got, and many of these were flunked in the final exam.&#13;
Features of the game were Blackwell's pocketing of a fly, which&#13;
was the only one dragged down during the game, the tumbles of the&#13;
Constructor of Pedagogue in his frantic efforts to escape the ball&#13;
when it came his way; the exceedingly graceful base running of the&#13;
Chemical Department, the heart breaking attempts of the Frenchmen&#13;
to translate a strike into a hit, Blue's attempt to increase his stature&#13;
a cubit or so, when the ball sailed over his head, are also worthy of&#13;
mention.&#13;
LINEUP&#13;
first base&#13;
Root&#13;
Garver&#13;
Wylie&#13;
pitch&#13;
Maynard&#13;
catch&#13;
Peckumn&#13;
Debenham&#13;
McDowell&#13;
third base&#13;
Stulken&#13;
Brown&#13;
second base&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
Van Horne&#13;
short stop&#13;
Young&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
Lewis&#13;
left field&#13;
Blue&#13;
center field&#13;
Harding&#13;
Greynald&#13;
right field&#13;
Morgan&#13;
Errors- Profs. 47, Seniors 43. Hits-Profs. 12, Seniors 16.&#13;
&#13;
�The F aculty&#13;
AN ALPHABETICAL JINGLE&#13;
A is for all of the College Professors,&#13;
Brown is the head of the normal work here;&#13;
Blackwell, commercial, and Dr Blue, English,&#13;
Campbell, the vice-pres'dent, full of good cheer.&#13;
&#13;
Kanthlener comes with his classical learning;&#13;
L for Miss L ewis, who haunts the North Hall;&#13;
Also for L ewis the I. and the II.,&#13;
Larson and Loveland and Lacy and all.&#13;
&#13;
D is for Davidson, also for Dimmitt,&#13;
Ever beloved by the students and all;&#13;
F is for Ferguson, "mild und sehr gutig,"&#13;
G for grave Garver and Greynald so tall.&#13;
&#13;
M is for Marshall, McDowell and Mather;&#13;
N is for nothing the cloak room class do,&#13;
O for old maids, of whom there are plenty,&#13;
P is for Peckumn and Pied Piper, too.&#13;
&#13;
H is for Haynes, with his little green knapsack,&#13;
I for idears, of which it is full;&#13;
Just sit in the front row and pay close attention,&#13;
If you want an A grade, rememember this rule.&#13;
&#13;
Queer that no one of the College Professors&#13;
A name has beginning with R, S, T, U,&#13;
V for Van Horne, and W for Wylie,&#13;
X, Y and Z we will leave now to you.&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
�Spring Term&#13;
April&#13;
April 1&#13;
April Fool.&#13;
April 2&#13;
Park Place "surprise party."&#13;
April 5&#13;
Spring Term opens.&#13;
April 6&#13;
Dr. Lewis rides to College on top of hog rack.&#13;
April 10-14 Cloudy weather.&#13;
April 16&#13;
Elsie Kilborne entertains Freshmen.&#13;
April&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
pr l 23&#13;
April 28&#13;
April 29&#13;
April 30&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
Ladies Tennis Club formed.&#13;
Atheneums entertain the Zets at 5 o'clock luncheon,&#13;
Tally-Ho engaged for Sophs' Indian trip.&#13;
Home Field Meet. All Sophs absent preparing for Reservation&#13;
trip.&#13;
At 2 o'clock A. M. Kindig and Saylor rise to guard Tally-Ho. At&#13;
4 o'clock all Sophs board Tally-Ho at Jochimsen's store. At 7&#13;
o'clock Freshies waken to find Sophs have outwitted them. At&#13;
12 P. M. Sophs return to Morningside from trip .&#13;
&#13;
�May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
May 14&#13;
May 15&#13;
May r6&#13;
&#13;
Sophs' Sunday clothes mysteriously disappear. Sophs very grateful for extra nap.&#13;
Morningside pavements wear coat of red.&#13;
Chapel announcement: "Milner's Arithmetic lost in girl's cloak room."&#13;
Juniors '05 look for Annuals.&#13;
Vermillion-Morningside Field Meet.&#13;
Chicago book-binders strike.&#13;
Juniors '05 pray for strike settlement.&#13;
Prof. Harvey's botany class chased from&#13;
field by enraged farmer.&#13;
Nothing doing.&#13;
Dr. Lewis forbids students from playing&#13;
on fire escapes.&#13;
Soph business meeeting Name of Annual '06 decided.&#13;
Freshies attend concert at H. H. Sawyer's&#13;
appointment.&#13;
Prof. Harvey's trunk is transferred to&#13;
Mrs. Thom's.&#13;
Prof. Harvey carries his trunk home.&#13;
Bass rises at 4 o'clock to assist the Trimble girls with the washing.&#13;
Otho annual Public.&#13;
&#13;
Debaters leave for Baker.&#13;
Junior Annual '04-'05 appears. Juniors&#13;
assume role of faculty and announce sale&#13;
of "Maroon."&#13;
rg&#13;
Seniors appear in chapel in caps and&#13;
gowns.&#13;
Freshmen announce pow-wow.&#13;
20&#13;
Senior's vacation begins.&#13;
21-23 Rain.&#13;
24&#13;
Alice Marsh goes to sleep in economics&#13;
class.&#13;
C. L . Gilbert makes Chapel speech on&#13;
Baker trip.&#13;
25&#13;
Kindig and Garver give Chapel speeches.&#13;
Seniors go camping.&#13;
26&#13;
First announcement of the "Whoops of&#13;
the Sioux" made in Chapel.&#13;
27&#13;
Y. W. C. A. give picnic supper in Peters'&#13;
Park.&#13;
Field meet with Buena Vista.&#13;
Mr. Wunn fondly embraces a classmate.&#13;
Mr. Finch insists on buying peanuts on&#13;
29&#13;
way to church. Miss Killam helps to&#13;
eat them.&#13;
&#13;
May 17&#13;
May r8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
�June&#13;
&#13;
June 7&#13;
June 8&#13;
June 9&#13;
June IO&#13;
June 13&#13;
June 26&#13;
&#13;
Soph's party.&#13;
Minkler makes date for Philo excursion.&#13;
Freshies bury class of '06 on campus.&#13;
Mr. Carson is the only Senior at Chapel.&#13;
Mr. Carson brings Miss Darling with him.&#13;
Elocution graduating exercises.&#13;
Philo annual excursion up the river.&#13;
Commencement Sunday.&#13;
Field meet at Yankton .&#13;
Carl Maynard and his quartette sing at Academy graduating exercises.&#13;
Class Day exercises. Trustees' meeting.&#13;
Alumni lecture.&#13;
Graduating exercises. School closes.&#13;
Mrs. Thom chaperons camping party to McCook lake.&#13;
Campers return from lakes.&#13;
Heilman bids Ethel Ellerbroek an affectionate farewell in Peters'&#13;
&#13;
July&#13;
&#13;
Park.&#13;
Mr. C. F . Hartzell weds Miss Laura Kennedy.&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
�F all T erm&#13;
September&#13;
September 13&#13;
September 14&#13;
September 15&#13;
&#13;
School opens.&#13;
New enrollment.&#13;
Seniors show desire to assume new honors by occupying front&#13;
seats.&#13;
September 16 Y. W . C. A . reception to new girls. Ten girls fail to secure&#13;
credit on street car and therefore conclude to walk.&#13;
September 17 Y. M. and Y. W. reception.&#13;
September 18 In his sermon Dr. Lewis tells of going ''square in a circle."&#13;
September 19 Peckumn drills awkward squad.&#13;
September 20 Prof. Mather suggests reform of chapel singing by having&#13;
faculty lead it.&#13;
Freshies try to wake Sophs up. Adams rides a cow and&#13;
Westcott is tied to Mr. Clark's porch.&#13;
September 21 Dr. Blue calls joint Bible class for Freshies and Sophs.&#13;
September 23 Faculty reception.&#13;
September 24 Dean Campbell enumerates bargain sales of the year:-·&#13;
Collegian Reporter-$1 .00. ''Good bargain."&#13;
Season foot ball tickets-$r.oo. "Good bargain."&#13;
Y. M. C . A. lecture course-$r.oo. "A very , very good bargain."&#13;
Zet-Otho promenade.&#13;
September 29 Rev. Williams of Buena Vista leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
�October&#13;
October&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Atheneum reception.&#13;
R. G. Young climbs tree near Riverside&#13;
to avoid affectionate greetings of&#13;
''Toots."&#13;
October s First meeting of the German club.&#13;
Miss Hallam receives the honors. Miss&#13;
Lothian the booby prize.&#13;
October 7 Election of officers of Oratorical Association. Miss Cook announces that&#13;
"for benefit of new students, we have&#13;
an oratorical contest every year. "&#13;
October ro Atheneum hay rack party.&#13;
October I I First meeting of Choral Union.&#13;
October 13 Ida Bryan goes to prayer meeting.&#13;
October 14 Freshmen have picnic in Thompson's&#13;
grove.&#13;
D. L. Young makes chapel speech. All&#13;
fear he will never cease speaking.&#13;
October 15 Prof. Wylie announces in chapel that&#13;
Baby Wylie has a tooth. Prof. Wylie&#13;
corrects announcement by stating she&#13;
has three.&#13;
&#13;
October 18&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
October 17&#13;
&#13;
Foot ball boys play Buena Vista and&#13;
break o-o record with 5-0 in favor of&#13;
Buena Vista.&#13;
&#13;
October 19&#13;
October 20&#13;
October 21&#13;
October 22&#13;
October 24&#13;
October 25&#13;
&#13;
October 26&#13;
October 27&#13;
October 28&#13;
October 30&#13;
&#13;
Middles and Senior Preps scrap on&#13;
roof of North Hall. Dean Campbell&#13;
invites them to confine their activities&#13;
to the soil.&#13;
Senator Allison and Editor Perkins&#13;
speak at chapel.&#13;
Mathematical progidy at chapel. Reveals the nothingness of Miss Bowker's&#13;
purse.&#13;
Inter-society debate.&#13;
Dr. Clark of South Dakota speaks at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
Dr. Lewis has new shoes.&#13;
College cow disappears. Great excitement.&#13;
Prof. Mather does not attend chapel.&#13;
Therefore we have a march.&#13;
Sophs hold carnival at the monument&#13;
in the "wee sma' hours."&#13;
Mr. Campbell of Kansas City and&#13;
Judge Wakefield visit chapel.&#13;
Campus cow returns to old haunts&#13;
Great rejoicings.&#13;
Emil Hiebling's concert.&#13;
Foot ball game with Yankton.&#13;
&#13;
�November&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
November 7&#13;
November 8&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
November 10&#13;
November 14&#13;
November 15&#13;
November 16&#13;
November 18&#13;
November 19&#13;
November 22&#13;
November 24&#13;
&#13;
November 26&#13;
November 29&#13;
November 30&#13;
November 31&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson in Explaining the Objective-- "I&#13;
want a more&#13;
cheerful man- but this does not often occur.''&#13;
Hawkins finally concludes that Miss .Johnsou is the hardest proposition of his life.&#13;
Mitchelle - M.C. football game, 5- 0.&#13;
"Shep" Mason attempts to make auto climb telegraph pole&#13;
with disastrous results to auto and purse.&#13;
Misses Loveland and Ferguson represent lady members of&#13;
faculty at chapel.&#13;
Prof. Brown initiates new desk.&#13;
Profs. Haines and Van Horn represent men of faculty at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
McClary lectures on "Mission of mirth."&#13;
Freshie hay rack party. Freshie president serves chicken&#13;
pie to Sophs.&#13;
Garver's moustache disappears.&#13;
Freshies challenge Sophs to Football game.&#13;
Dr. Lewis present. All Seniors attend chapel.&#13;
Freshmen-Soph game 0-0.&#13;
Zetalethean annual public.&#13;
Voice from behind pulpit desk reads scripture lesson. Investigation proves it to be Dr. B lue's.&#13;
Thanksgiving day football game. M C. vs. Vermmion,&#13;
20-5.&#13;
Mr. Clark informs Heilman, Hubbard and Morrison that&#13;
he must rise at 5 o'clock. Boys immediatly tumble.&#13;
Co-eds entertain footba ll boys. Lucille Faulk assists Hubbard to make record breakiug run from Lothian's to Thom's&#13;
for salad dressing (2 hours and 45 m inutes) .&#13;
Double quartet appear at chapel. Silence in the audience.&#13;
Prof. Brown reads-"Ali the daughters of music shall be&#13;
brought low."&#13;
Mr. Henshaw, the traveling secretary for Prohibition Club,&#13;
gives ch apel talk.&#13;
December begins.&#13;
&#13;
�December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Academic inter-society debate.&#13;
&#13;
J. Kindig's birthday.&#13;
&#13;
Students cram until 12 o'clock.&#13;
Geo. Milner begins cutting out talks in the hall.&#13;
Day after yesterday but not the day before day after tomorrow.&#13;
December 9 Geo. Milner fails to visit Kilborne's. Studies until 12 o'clock.&#13;
December 11 Heilman watches anxiously for draft from home.&#13;
December 12 Heilman's draft does not come.&#13;
December 13 Heilman pawus clothes.&#13;
First fluuk.&#13;
Decemberi4 Prof. Green visits chapel and !&#13;
December 15 Prof. Lewis skips class to go skating.&#13;
December 16 Milner flunks.&#13;
Heilman goes home.&#13;
December 18 All students gone. Morningside dead.&#13;
December 23 Big Sioux City fire, which gives Alice Marsh nervous prostration.&#13;
Morgan telegraphs messages of sympathy.&#13;
December 24 Everyone hangs up their stockings.&#13;
December 25 Merry Christmas!&#13;
December 26 Those damdy preseuts!&#13;
&#13;
�January&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
January 11&#13;
January 12&#13;
January 14&#13;
January 16&#13;
January 18&#13;
January 19&#13;
January 20&#13;
January 24&#13;
January 26&#13;
January 28&#13;
&#13;
Happy New Year!&#13;
Turn over a new leaf.&#13;
Harding athletic case postponed.&#13;
Students begin to flock in.&#13;
Norman Smith enrolls for vocal music.&#13;
Y. M. C. A. reception. Profs. tossed in blankets.&#13;
Dean Campbell annotmces in chapel-"Tomorrow you will all&#13;
find your chapel seats on the bulletin board."&#13;
Prof. Garver visits Fagley's fire sale. Gets a bargain and&#13;
appears in a new $5.00 suit.&#13;
Y. W. C . A. reception.&#13;
Freshies go sleighing at the expense of a drunken driver.&#13;
Jones tries to set his room on fire at Lehman's.&#13;
Students begin visiting Genelli's in the interests of the annual.&#13;
Rophs escape the watchful Freshies for the "dance"(?) at&#13;
)Iiss Woodford's home.&#13;
Basket ball l\L C. vs. G iants.&#13;
Van Dyke smashes his nasal bone.&#13;
First year chemistry class take lessons in brewing.&#13;
Dr. Steiner lectures on Tolstoi.&#13;
Mr. Morgan takes mother-in-law to the lecture.&#13;
Frozen weather.&#13;
Day of Prayerfor colleges.&#13;
Junior Indians have their pictures taken .&#13;
&#13;
�February&#13;
Feburary&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Students permitted to sing last two verses of hymn 136.&#13;
It snowed.&#13;
&#13;
February 2 Ground hog's day.&#13;
February 3 Dean Campbell announces that a stick pin and book&#13;
came into the office.&#13;
February 4 More snow.&#13;
February 5 Still snowing&#13;
February 6 Freshie-Soph basket ball game.&#13;
Freshies' jersies disappear. Sophs win. Snow.&#13;
February 8 Dr. Lewis returns from eastern trip with a "message" for&#13;
us.&#13;
February 9 Dr. McFadden leads chapel.&#13;
:B'ebrnnry 10 Seniors appear in caps and gowns. Morgan. McCay and&#13;
Carrol not yet able to assume this clignil,\'.&#13;
on Abraham LinFebruary 12 Congressman Hubbard gives an address&#13;
coln.&#13;
February 11 Baker-M C. debate did not take place. Only had 110 judges.&#13;
February 13 Baker-M. C. debate comes off. Never mind. only after de·&#13;
cision the house did not go wild.&#13;
Sophs win basket ball championship,&#13;
February 14 St. Valentine day.&#13;
Sophs have pi ctures taken with trophy cup.&#13;
February 16 Prof. Kanthlener goes to sleep in chapel.&#13;
18 College ruus out of coa 1.&#13;
February&#13;
F ruary 19 Miss Dimmitt goes to breakfast on time!!!&#13;
February 22 Rev. J. D. 0. Powers. of unity church addresses school on&#13;
"T wentieth Century Man."&#13;
February 23 Fonr Freshies stay to oratorical meeting!&#13;
February 24 Neb. Wesleyan-M. C. basket ball game. M. C. wins.&#13;
February 25 Atheueum aunual public.&#13;
Prof. Lewis comes alone.&#13;
Miss Cook comes with her mother.&#13;
victim)&#13;
Febrnary 26 Prof. Lewis calls on Miss Hollingsworth-(25th&#13;
Sen. Preps. entertain.&#13;
February 28 Last day of February&#13;
&#13;
�march&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
l\farch&#13;
March&#13;
march&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
March 18&#13;
&#13;
March 19&#13;
March 20&#13;
march 24&#13;
&#13;
Spiering Quartet give entertainment&#13;
,&#13;
1&#13;
Prof. Lewis comes alone.&#13;
Mrs. Cook comes with Myrtilla.&#13;
Prof. Lewis and Miss Cook settle quarrell in laboratory.&#13;
Yankton-M. basket ball game. another M. C. Victory.&#13;
C.&#13;
middles entertain senior acad.&#13;
·&#13;
First thaw brings the strollers out.&#13;
Philo annual public.&#13;
.&#13;
Sioux City missionary convention.&#13;
Bishop Thoburn talks on India.&#13;
.&#13;
E&#13;
1&#13;
Geo Eber Jones and Dr. Goucher address students.&#13;
· G&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
·l&#13;
Dr Nichols, of Centra l China talks in c hapel&#13;
h&#13;
Mr. Crow loses his English note oo .&#13;
Cl,are Wescott's father arrives.&#13;
h&#13;
WEscott takes his father to c Ihurch three times.&#13;
adelphians entertain Aesthesians.&#13;
Dr Lewis gets a h air cut.&#13;
.&#13;
· . . Y. :\I. c. A&#13;
state secretary, speaks in c hape ·&#13;
. . . ti e s hamrock.&#13;
wears&#13;
.&#13;
St. Patrick's day. Everyone&#13;
T erm concert.&#13;
Church attendance poor.&#13;
Examination week.&#13;
Morgan begins doing the term's work in German for&#13;
heil&#13;
man&#13;
Term closes&#13;
&#13;
�Class Barometer&#13;
TEMPERATURE&#13;
&#13;
WIND&#13;
&#13;
BAROMETER&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL CONDITION&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG----------------BROWER&#13;
&#13;
98&#13;
&#13;
Northeast Strong&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Volcanic&#13;
&#13;
58 inshade&#13;
&#13;
Gusty&#13;
&#13;
Roily&#13;
&#13;
Threatening&#13;
&#13;
CALKINS----------------&#13;
&#13;
48 c&#13;
&#13;
N'rtheastSqually&#13;
&#13;
Rain&#13;
&#13;
Blustering&#13;
&#13;
200 in shade&#13;
&#13;
Hot&#13;
&#13;
Busted&#13;
&#13;
Dismal&#13;
&#13;
Variable&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
For Better or Worse&#13;
&#13;
HAWKINS_ - - - - - - DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
90&#13;
&#13;
South, in Puffs&#13;
&#13;
Rising&#13;
&#13;
Foreboding&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
Southwest&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Sultry&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
------&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
------------------&#13;
&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
West, Gentle&#13;
&#13;
Clear&#13;
&#13;
Dry and Settled&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL--------------HOWARD&#13;
----&#13;
&#13;
52&#13;
&#13;
East&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Peaceful&#13;
&#13;
59.3&#13;
&#13;
Southeast Brisk&#13;
&#13;
Clear&#13;
&#13;
Light&#13;
&#13;
FAIR-------------------&#13;
&#13;
60&#13;
&#13;
Quiet&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Dead Calm&#13;
&#13;
BODDY_ --- - -----------FOOTE&#13;
&#13;
88 inshade&#13;
&#13;
North and Chilly&#13;
&#13;
Sunshine&#13;
&#13;
Bland&#13;
&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
South, Balmy&#13;
&#13;
Unreliable&#13;
&#13;
Boisterous&#13;
&#13;
McCARTHY--------------&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
Still&#13;
&#13;
Clear&#13;
&#13;
Placid&#13;
&#13;
North&#13;
&#13;
Falling&#13;
&#13;
Painful&#13;
&#13;
Northwest&#13;
&#13;
Frozen&#13;
&#13;
Long Settled&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
Changeable&#13;
&#13;
Snowflakes&#13;
&#13;
WuNN -----------------MINKLER.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
South, Steady&#13;
&#13;
Cloudy&#13;
&#13;
Sleepy&#13;
&#13;
Snow&#13;
&#13;
Bleak&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON -- ----&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
None&#13;
&#13;
Bright&#13;
&#13;
Pleasant&#13;
&#13;
92.5&#13;
&#13;
Zephyrs&#13;
&#13;
Quiet&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
-- - -- -&#13;
&#13;
4 above&#13;
&#13;
Van DYKE - - -- -- - ---- - - TRIMBLE&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
22 below&#13;
&#13;
FLINN - - - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
CROSSAN&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Sunshine and Rain&#13;
Dark, but Not Dangerous&#13;
&#13;
�Some F amiliar&#13;
Chapel Addresses....&#13;
Mrss ToDD: "This is indeed a pleasure&#13;
to come before you in your chapel time. "&#13;
DR. HUGHES: "l did not come here this&#13;
morning to talk. I wanted to look into&#13;
your faces to get an inspiration. "&#13;
PROF. Lu cE: "I came primarily to look&#13;
into your faces, for it is a great pleasure. ·•&#13;
PROF. WILCOX: " It is with a great deal&#13;
of interest that&#13;
speak to you this morning."&#13;
DR . CLARK: "Young ladies and gentlemen, I am glad to look into your faces. "&#13;
DR. McFADDEN: "As I look into your&#13;
faces this morning it takes me back in&#13;
memory twenty years of my own life."&#13;
E. H. HUBBARD: "Fellow students,&#13;
hope you have not come here this morning&#13;
with the idea of hear ing an address."&#13;
REV.&#13;
&#13;
J. D. 0. POWERS: '' Fellow students,&#13;
&#13;
I count myself happy this morning to be&#13;
&#13;
able to come before you on an occasion&#13;
like this."&#13;
DR. GAMEWELL: "I esteem it a great&#13;
privilege this morning to come here, because of what Morningside means to Methodism and Iowa in particular."&#13;
&#13;
The Evi's of Specialization, or Why Wylie F a iled to Distinguish the A sh-Box from the Fire-Box&#13;
&#13;
�FAREWELL&#13;
&#13;
���Good BETTER BEST&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
GOOD PICTURE is always acceptable, a BETTER one is more highly&#13;
prized, but the BEST is that which&#13;
is modern, up-to-date and artistically&#13;
perfect. These are the qualities that&#13;
characterize work of&#13;
&#13;
P. S.: Groups for&#13;
this Annual were&#13;
made from Photograghs taken&#13;
at this Studio&#13;
&#13;
'Studio&#13;
601 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
�Behold!&#13;
Get your old furniture made new by&#13;
sending it to experienced men ........ .&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
UPHOLSTERING&#13;
CO, J. H. Richards, Prop.&#13;
1498 n ornings ide Ave.&#13;
P a ntorium 'Bldg .&#13;
&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
I NEVITABLE VALISE&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
IT'S NOT WHAT WE SAY WE DO&#13;
&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
But what we DO that makes our customers stay with us from year to year.&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
UNITED STATES Depository&#13;
Capital and surplus $350,000.00&#13;
Deposits - - - 2,500,000.00&#13;
&#13;
A Large Bank That Solicits Small Accounts&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
__&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Jewelry is complete, and prices that&#13;
make our customers feel easy in buying&#13;
WHY CAN'T WE SATISFY YOUR. NEEDS?&#13;
&#13;
J. Fleckenstein &amp; Co.&#13;
Phone 956 ....&#13;
&#13;
Let us do your watch&#13;
repairing&#13;
&#13;
.. .406 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
�HIS MASTER'S VOICE&#13;
&#13;
A Special&#13;
Buys&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
Blickens&#13;
r&#13;
typewriter&#13;
&#13;
Offer&#13;
T o any r esponsible reader of th is paper&#13;
who wi ll furn is h us w ith refe r ences if we&#13;
req ues t it, we will ship on FREE TRIAL&#13;
th e la t est m odel of our Vict or Royal&#13;
Talking Machine with S pecial Ex hi·&#13;
biti o n S ou nd Box an d you r choice of an y&#13;
doze n V icto r Reco rd s i n the c atal ogue fo r&#13;
$20. Tr y it fo r a day in your h ome- if it's&#13;
sat i sfacto ry send us $5 an d p ay us t he&#13;
bal an ce&#13;
&#13;
$2.50 A Month&#13;
The handiest, most compact and&#13;
best all-round machine on the&#13;
market today.&#13;
A complete machine with 84 letters and characters, visible writing, perfect alignment at all&#13;
times interchangeable type no&#13;
ribbon, and is portable.&#13;
No typewriter can do better&#13;
work- none more conveniently&#13;
- hundreds of them in use in this&#13;
state. If intrested, write to us&#13;
and we will send full information.&#13;
Easy terms, and entire&#13;
satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
For Si x Months&#13;
&#13;
Special Notice&#13;
every h ome in the West, and we wil l if easy&#13;
terms will do it. You run no risk, NoC. 0. D .&#13;
&#13;
on absolately free trial wit hout any conitions&#13;
wh atever. If it is satisfactory Rnd you decide to&#13;
keep it, si m p ly pay us as agreed.&#13;
&#13;
the Victor Talking&#13;
MachineSt. Louis it was awarded&#13;
Buffalo and again at&#13;
High est Honors-Gold Medal and 1st prize&#13;
we guarantee every machine to&#13;
be a genuine V i ctor and the price we ask for&#13;
Machine and 12 Records the lowest offered anywh ere in th e U . S. Plays either seven or ten&#13;
inch disk records.&#13;
You can have an evening o f th e&#13;
sings&#13;
g r eatest enjoyment listening to&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Talks!&#13;
Plays!&#13;
Comic recirarions r endered perfectly. large&#13;
comp lete illust,·ated catalogue mailed&#13;
f r ee.&#13;
25,000 latest Vic tor records&#13;
to selectfro m .&#13;
&#13;
We Prepay All Charges on Victor&#13;
Records&#13;
Sample packages&#13;
of our new Silver&#13;
T rumpet and Dul·&#13;
cet (sof-tone) need·&#13;
]es mailed free to&#13;
all Victor users.&#13;
&#13;
. HARGER &amp;BLISH&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
General Agents&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Agents&#13;
Wanted&#13;
t o introduce our&#13;
new proposition in&#13;
putting a Victor in&#13;
every home. Write&#13;
at once. Address&#13;
a ll orders to&#13;
&#13;
Harger &amp; Blish,&#13;
Western Victor Distributors.&#13;
&#13;
Dubuque , Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
�Rock Rapids Steam Laundry&#13;
•&#13;
====THE LAUNDRY====&#13;
That pleases the most fastidious $ $&#13;
That gets the student dressers' trade $&#13;
That washes with pure soft water $&#13;
That does the best work at lowest prices&#13;
&#13;
Up-to-Date in Every Respect Dry Cleaning aSpecialty&#13;
A. L. BROWER, Agent at College&#13;
&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Confectionery, Fruit and Stationery Cheapest and Best&#13;
Exclusive Agents of the A. I. C. High Grade Coffees&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 895-L&#13;
St. Aubin Station, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Remembrances of our Sophomore Days&#13;
&#13;
�YOUR EDUCATION.&#13;
Is never complete until you have taken a practical Business Training.&#13;
It does not matter what profession you are going to foIIow, you must be&#13;
a business man and take your place among those who are trained in business methods and principles. The best place to secure&#13;
your business training is at&#13;
&#13;
The N at'l Business Training School&#13;
Where Penmanship, Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typewriting, Telegraphy,&#13;
Accounting, Rapid Calculation and aII Modern Business Methods are&#13;
taught by Experienced Business Men. Individual instruction. We guarantee satisfaction to our students. AII former graduates are now fillinf&#13;
good situations. We can always place more students than we have.&#13;
Address N. B. T. SCHOOL&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Send&#13;
for&#13;
Our&#13;
Catalog&#13;
&#13;
�ER&#13;
TAKE-DOWN REPEATING SHOTGUNS&#13;
The notion that one must pay from fifty dollars upwards in order to get&#13;
a good shotgun has been pretty effectively dispelled since the advent of&#13;
the Winchester Repeating Shotgun. These guns are sold within reach&#13;
of almost everybody' s purse. They are safe, strong, reliable and handy.&#13;
When it comes to shooting qualities no gun made beats them. They&#13;
are made in 12 and 16 gauge. Step into a gun store and examine one.&#13;
lb Winchester&#13;
&#13;
REPEATING ARMS COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
NEW HAVEN, Conn&#13;
&#13;
m&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
3:&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
e!.&#13;
,.;;&#13;
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0&#13;
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-&#13;
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p.&#13;
&#13;
O'&#13;
!:\&#13;
&#13;
�SHO&#13;
ES&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON &amp; ARONSON&#13;
THE OLD RELIABLE&#13;
&#13;
Tailors and Clothiers&#13;
Up-to-Date Clothing and Furnishing Goods&#13;
at th e Very Lowest Prices&#13;
&#13;
THE SHOEMAN&#13;
&#13;
NEW LOCATION AT 710-712 FOURTH STREET&#13;
Ten per cent. Discount to Professors and Students of the College&#13;
&#13;
605 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
�SHIP YOUR LIVE STOCK&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Haykeye Strain Barred&#13;
&#13;
PLYMOUTH&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ROCKS&#13;
&#13;
Lngerson &amp; West Co.&#13;
Live Stock&#13;
Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
M. W . BALDWIN&#13;
D . C. Kitselman&#13;
W . H . TIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
The above strain&#13;
won at Cedar Rapids,&#13;
Mitchelle,&#13;
Mason City&#13;
and Luverne a big&#13;
share of all regular&#13;
and special prizes&#13;
during the season of&#13;
1904 - 1905&#13;
&#13;
J .H. ANTHONY&#13;
J. R . COE&#13;
K . STROCK&#13;
&#13;
Exhibition and Fine&#13;
Stock Birds for sale&#13;
Prices reasonable&#13;
&#13;
Buying Orders Solicited&#13;
Every Department in Charge of&#13;
Capable and Energetic Men&#13;
ROOMS 217 and 219 EXCHANGE BLDG.&#13;
&#13;
A F irst P rize P ullet, 1905&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 397&#13;
&#13;
Yards Located at Morningside, About One flile East of&#13;
Colleg e. Visitors Welcome&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - BANK REFERENCES----Live Stock National Bank&#13;
Iowa State National Bank&#13;
&#13;
MATT W. BALDWIN&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
WHAT?&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PANTORIUM&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WHERE?&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
At Peters' Park, Morningside&#13;
Students and Friends&#13;
We carry a complete line&#13;
of samples for Gents' Clothing, and the work is done by&#13;
the very best tailors in the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Why not order your next&#13;
suit from us and be in line?&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Silks and Woolens&#13;
Cleaned, Dyed, Pressed&#13;
and mended&#13;
AT REASONABLE RATES&#13;
Agents wanted in every&#13;
town within a radius of two&#13;
hundred miles to collect an d&#13;
deliver goods for us .&#13;
&#13;
We Guarantee lo Fit and Please&#13;
You&#13;
this&#13;
&#13;
P rices the Low est, Styles the&#13;
Latest and Quiity the&#13;
Best in the City.&#13;
&#13;
Ul firm&#13;
&#13;
not if equal.&#13;
&#13;
city&#13;
superior&#13;
is method our&#13;
any&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
French Dry Cleaning a Specially&#13;
&#13;
Clothing Called for and Delivered to Any Part of the City&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT BROTHERS, PROPS.&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL CARDS&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT A U ST&#13;
&#13;
Physician&#13;
OFFICE O V &gt;OR U, S . CLOTH I NG STORE&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE ELLERD&#13;
&#13;
for a good TRUNK OR BAG&#13;
&#13;
Artistic Wall Paper and Pictures&#13;
&#13;
GO WHERE THEY ARE MADE&#13;
&#13;
DECORATING DONE ANYWHERE&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
Physician and Surgeon _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __&#13;
H. N. BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
ANTHONY'S TRUNK FACTORY&#13;
REPAIRING DONE&#13;
FACTORY FIFTH STREET, BETWEEN PIERCE AND DOUGLAS&#13;
&#13;
MRS. A. J. TERHORST&#13;
HAIR&#13;
&#13;
DRESSING&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
Office, Peters' Park, Morningside&#13;
Calls Answered Promptly Day or Night&#13;
&#13;
GLASSES FITTED&#13;
To relieve and rest ore&#13;
fa i ling sight, by&#13;
&#13;
DR. MARLENEE'S&#13;
"Common Sense Methods."&#13;
Any one of the thousands I&#13;
&#13;
have titted is my reference.&#13;
Artificial Eyes and all styles&#13;
of Glasses carried in stock.&#13;
OPTICAL PARLORS opp. Mondamin,&#13;
over U. S.Clothing Store. Suite 5&#13;
&#13;
700 Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
P.A. SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
WM. A . TURNER&#13;
&#13;
Telephone 810-L&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
503-504 Metropolitan Blk&#13;
&#13;
0. WERTZ&#13;
&#13;
SA WYER &amp; TURNER&#13;
&#13;
ALL KINDS OF&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNE.YS AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
DRAYING AND TRUNK HAULING&#13;
&#13;
503 Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 6 8 -L4&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - - - - - - B E T T E R THAN E V E R - - - - - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
INTER-STATE Live STOCK FAIR ASSOCIATION&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa, Septem ber 11 , 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16, 1905&#13;
&#13;
�______________&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Dray and&#13;
Transfer Company&#13;
Agency for the United States Express Co. and American Express Co. Money and Packages Received&#13;
for all Parts of the World.&#13;
&#13;
I We make a Specialty of Hay Rack Parties, Picnics, Etc.&#13;
Heilman and Miss Swem discover an inspiring game, Wilhelm Tell&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
The Des Moines Candy Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The Only Place&#13;
in the City to&#13;
get your&#13;
Ice Cream and Candies&#13;
&#13;
II Ever&#13;
&#13;
YTHING IS HOME=MADE I&#13;
607 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
If you want your baggage taken down at student rates&#13;
to the RIGHT DEPOT and ON TIME&#13;
give us a call.&#13;
&#13;
Nothing too Small or Nothing too&#13;
Large but We Can Haul It.&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA PHONE.&#13;
584· L3&#13;
&#13;
�is the fastest and most accurate duck&#13;
gun made. It combines the balance&#13;
and ease of action of the best double&#13;
gun, with the superior shooting and&#13;
sighting of a sing le barrel.&#13;
T he unique marlin&#13;
Breechbolt&#13;
which shuts out rain and water and&#13;
keeps the shells dry makes it the ideal&#13;
bad-weather gun. Made for both&#13;
black and smokeless powders and to take heavy loads easily. A famous gun&#13;
for hard usage.&#13;
There a re a lot o f good d u ck stories in t he Marlin&#13;
E xpe rie nce Book.&#13;
Free, with Cat a logue, fo r 3 sta mps .&#13;
&#13;
I:?&#13;
&#13;
The Marlin Firearms Co.&#13;
&#13;
42 Will ow Street,&#13;
NEW HAVEN, CONN.&#13;
&#13;
C. E. FOGELQUIST&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST WILLIGES&#13;
=====MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
Tailors&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner Jennings&#13;
&#13;
The first impression might have been different if&#13;
you had obtained a rear view&#13;
&#13;
OF===&#13;
&#13;
FIne Fures&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
609 FOUR TH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�GEO.M.LYON &amp;CO.&#13;
LOOK UP THE&#13;
&#13;
DOW CLOTHING CO.&#13;
EVERYTHING NEW AND AT THE&#13;
&#13;
,Guns, B icyc 1es,&#13;
Tennis Goods, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
LOWEST PRICES&#13;
&#13;
416 Pearl St. SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
UNITED STATES DE..POSITORY&#13;
&#13;
Capital&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
PEIRCE &amp; BABCOCK&#13;
&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS&#13;
&#13;
110,000&#13;
&#13;
Deposits .&#13;
&#13;
E . B. B• BCOCK&#13;
&#13;
$250,000&#13;
&#13;
Profits&#13;
&#13;
H. G. PEIRCE&#13;
&#13;
2,200,000&#13;
&#13;
We Solicit Your Business and Promise Satisfactory Treatment&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President&#13;
C. L. WRIGHT, Vice President&#13;
C. N. LUKES, Cashier&#13;
T. A. BLACK, V ice President&#13;
C. W. BRITTON, A s.istant Cashier&#13;
&#13;
ROOM 216 EXCHANGE BUILDING, SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
ENTRANCE FIRST FLOOR EXCHANGE BLOG., UNION STOCK YARDS, CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
�H. BECK CO.&#13;
&#13;
Beamer&#13;
Studio&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Jewelers&#13;
and Diamond Merchants&#13;
- - - - o u R SPECIAL TIES&#13;
&#13;
ARE THE SALE O f&#13;
&#13;
FIne Dimonds good watches, Sterking Silverware, Cut&#13;
Glass and '5eneral Presentation goods.&#13;
- - - - - - MANUFACTURERS&#13;
&#13;
OF - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
school&#13;
&#13;
pins and emblems&#13;
&#13;
college&#13;
&#13;
and class&#13;
&#13;
415 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&gt;Y&#13;
&#13;
J. F. HOPKINS &amp; CO.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
C. F. BALDWIN, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate and Exchange Agents&#13;
Have always handled a large amount of Morningside&#13;
Properties and now have some Fine Bargains&#13;
in improved, unimproved and acre properties.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Highest Grade Work at Moderate Prices&#13;
&#13;
ROOM 212, 413 1-2 NEBRASKA ST.&#13;
AND INVESTIGATE&#13;
&#13;
��LaWelle &amp; Hogan&#13;
PLU MBING&#13;
GAS Fitting&#13;
S T EAM AND HOT Water&#13;
&#13;
HEATING&#13;
Estimates Cheerfully&#13;
Oiyen&#13;
&#13;
Gas Fixtures a&#13;
Specialty&#13;
&#13;
PHO NE 822- L&#13;
513 Fifth&#13;
&#13;
ST.&#13;
&#13;
S I O UX CITY.&#13;
&#13;
ro w A&#13;
&#13;
BRANCH Office&#13;
&#13;
725 MAIN" S T ., LE MA&#13;
&#13;
RS, I OW A&#13;
&#13;
How Oftenhave You heard&#13;
it said?&#13;
" 'When I want anything&#13;
good I Go to Martain's the&#13;
Reliable Dry goods house"&#13;
&#13;
I. S Martin &amp;&#13;
&#13;
CO.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SUMMER SCENES&#13;
&#13;
�Good clean work&#13;
without variation, is&#13;
the result of using .....&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Sent on approval, $35. Strong, easy to operate, very durable. The low priced machine&#13;
of high quality. The only Typewriter that has interchangeable steel type.&#13;
&#13;
========== Send for our&#13;
&#13;
interesting booklet- mailed f r e e = = = = = = = = = =&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO WRITING MACHINE CO.&#13;
90-96 WENDALL STREET&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
. ...&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Latest in&#13;
&#13;
·PHOTOS·&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Special&#13;
Rates&#13;
Made&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
To be had&#13;
at the&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
I Setmour Studio&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
. .. .&#13;
407 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Evans Makes a Flight&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Printery&#13;
RICHARDS &amp; SHAW,&#13;
&#13;
PRO?RIETORS&#13;
&#13;
OUT OF TOWN WORK G 1&#13;
VEN PROM?T ATTENTION&#13;
&#13;
611 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
WE PRINT&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
For Artistic&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
An Exclusive Line of Mounts&#13;
&#13;
letler Heads,Nole Heads, Memo&#13;
Heads, Nole Books, lea!lets, Programs, Pamphlets, Wedding Stationery, Office Stationery, Fancy Stationery, Calling Cards, Posters, Circulars&#13;
&#13;
IF YOU WOULD WIN&#13;
&#13;
In Fact We Print Everything but Money&#13;
&#13;
YO U M U ST ST ART RI G H T&#13;
&#13;
R . G . RICHARDS. MANAGER OF PRINTING DEPARTMENT&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian Reporter&#13;
Devoted to the Interests of&#13;
Students.Teachers, Ministers&#13;
and College Men.&#13;
&#13;
SUBSCRIPTION&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
W. H.&#13;
Shaw. Manager&#13;
&#13;
$1.00&#13;
A YEAR&#13;
&#13;
Photos&#13;
&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
RATES&#13;
REASONABLE&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Almost without exception our successful business men of today laid&#13;
the foundation of their success by starting a savings account,&#13;
YOU cannot do better than follow in their footsteps,&#13;
We furnish the opportunity, You can make the starting deposit what&#13;
you please.&#13;
Interest compounded half-yearly on all savings deposits,&#13;
&#13;
W o COUNTYd b u r y&#13;
o SAVINGS BANK&#13;
405-407&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA STREET&#13;
&#13;
�1883&#13;
&#13;
Film Convenience--Optical Superiority&#13;
&#13;
1905&#13;
&#13;
WM. GORDON&#13;
&#13;
No. 3 Folding&#13;
Film Premo&#13;
&#13;
The Real Estate&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BLDG.&#13;
&#13;
S IOUX ClT Y&#13;
&#13;
Regularly Equipped&#13;
wi t h c3. &amp; L. Autcmatic Shutte r and&#13;
Planatograph Lens.&#13;
Uses daylight loading Premo Film Packs.&#13;
Rack and Pinion FoCusing, also Rack and&#13;
Pinion Rising Front.&#13;
&#13;
THE PRICE&#13;
No. 3 Folding Film Premo, 3 1/4x 4 1/4&#13;
Do., for pictures 3)4' x 5 1/2&#13;
Do., for pictures 4 x 5 .&#13;
&#13;
$18.00&#13;
20.00&#13;
20 . 00&#13;
&#13;
S endfor 'Premo Catalogue&#13;
&#13;
ROCHESTER OPTICAL CO.&#13;
R.OCHFSTER., N. Y.&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
MYSTIC MILLING CO.&#13;
Merchant Millers&#13;
Manufacturers and&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Exporters&#13;
&#13;
Flour and Feed&#13;
&#13;
USE Mystic&#13;
&#13;
FLOUR&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
The State University of Iowa&#13;
O FFERS to the young men and women of the State the very best facilities and opportunities&#13;
for collegiate and professional training.&#13;
In the strength of its faculties, the number and arrangement of its buildings, the resources&#13;
of its laboratories. The xtent&#13;
&#13;
of its Libraries&#13;
&#13;
and museums and the\weal&#13;
th its&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
generalEquip&#13;
&#13;
Your attention is especially called to the superior facilities of the University for teaching-&#13;
&#13;
Science and Mathematics&#13;
Political Science and History&#13;
Education&#13;
Law&#13;
Medicine&#13;
Homeopathic Medicine&#13;
&#13;
English and Other Languages&#13;
Philosophy and Kindred Subjects&#13;
Engineerinq:&#13;
Oivil, Etectrical,&#13;
Mining, Mechanical, Saitary&#13;
D entistry&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
&#13;
Arrangements have been made whereby collegiate and professional courses may be combined so as to save one or two years' time in the completion of the work.&#13;
Free tuition may be had in the College of Liberal Arts.&#13;
If you are contemplating higher education you cannot afford to pass by the superior ad vantages offered by your State University.&#13;
When sending for free catalogues giving full information kindly&#13;
indicate the course in which you are most interested.&#13;
&#13;
Address PRESIDENT GEORGE R. McLEAN, Iowa City, Iowa&#13;
IOWA CITY is a town of beautiful homes and one of the most pleasant places of residence in&#13;
the State. Its social, moral and religious influences equal those of any city in the State.&#13;
&#13;
�A. M. Jackson&#13;
&#13;
J. G. Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
Jackson &amp; Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
The Libe&#13;
Real Estate Men&#13;
705-6 Security Bank Building&#13;
Branch Office- Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
E.G. STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
E. S. STRAUB&#13;
&#13;
STRAUB BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
Dentists&#13;
707 FOURTH STREET&#13;
PHONE 704-J&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Harding: "Gosh, but it's slippery"&#13;
&#13;
�The University&#13;
&#13;
Of Washington&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS F. KANE, Ph. D., President&#13;
&#13;
Founded 1855&#13;
&#13;
OTHER OFFICERS&#13;
HARRY CANBY COFFMAN, A. 8 ., Librarian&#13;
HERBERT T. CONDON, LL 8., Registrar and Secretary of Faculty&#13;
WILLIAM MARKHAM , S ecretary Board of Regents&#13;
ANNIE H owARo, Preceptress&#13;
ELIZABETH P EARL Mc DONNELL.A. 8 . Cataloguer in the Library&#13;
WILLIAM 8. HAMPSON, M. E., University Engmeer and Director&#13;
of S hop Work&#13;
&#13;
School of Mines&#13;
Leading to the degrees of B . S. and E . M.&#13;
Mining&#13;
Courses&#13;
Metallurgical&#13;
( Short Course&#13;
MILNOR ROBERTS, A. B .. E. M. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
School of Pharmacy&#13;
Leading to the degrees of Ph . G. and B. S.&#13;
CHARLES WILLIS JOHNSON , Ph. C., Ph . D., DEAN&#13;
&#13;
College of Liberal Arts&#13;
Leading to the degrees of A. 8. and 8 . S .&#13;
&#13;
Coilege of Engineering&#13;
Leadi ng to the degrees of 8 . S ., C. E ., M. E .. and E . E.&#13;
( Electrical&#13;
I M h&#13;
. l&#13;
Courses&#13;
Civil an1ca&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Organized 1861&#13;
&#13;
Chemical&#13;
ALMON H. FULLE R, M. S ., C . E., DEAN&#13;
&#13;
School of Law&#13;
Leading to the degree of LL. 8. A diploma from this School&#13;
of Law admits to practice in all the courts of Washington&#13;
without the requirement of passing the bar examination.&#13;
( S ession Laws of 1903 )&#13;
JOHN T. CONDON, LL. M. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
Graduate School&#13;
Leading to the degrees of A. M. and M. S .&#13;
J. ALLEN SMITH, PH. D., DEAN&#13;
&#13;
THE FIRST SEMESTER OF THE COLLEGE YEAR f905-06 OPENS SEPTEMBER&#13;
T uition free . Rooms at the University dormotories rent for $12.00 per s emester of four an d a half months.&#13;
at the University Dining Hall is $13.50 per month .&#13;
For complete or departmental catalog ue, apply to&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT T. CONDON, Registrar&#13;
U niversity S tation, S eat tle, Washington&#13;
&#13;
T he cost of table board&#13;
&#13;
�MORNING SIDE REAL ESTATE OFFICE&#13;
&#13;
HAVE&#13;
suitable for&#13;
&#13;
for sale a large list of Residences,&#13;
&#13;
HOMES&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
Lots. Houses of all descriptions for rent. Send&#13;
a pleasure to show our property.&#13;
If you are interested, write us for&#13;
Lists and other information.&#13;
&#13;
prize&#13;
Production OfR. G. Richards&#13;
&#13;
Also beautifully&#13;
.&#13;
id&#13;
situatedB ui mg&#13;
prices and particulars.Always&#13;
&#13;
SALE&#13;
&#13;
CUSHMAN &amp; .M ILLER&#13;
PETER.S PARK, MORNING SIDE&#13;
&#13;
I don't know whether "Yule" go sleigh-riding or not&#13;
&#13;
�������</text>
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                  <text>Fullerton, Adam: Cataloger</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="8397">
              <text>•&#13;
&#13;
THE WHOOPS OF THE SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
PUBLISHED BY THE&#13;
JUNIOR CLASS OF '06&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
By&#13;
perm ission&#13;
of&#13;
Wa ltermire&#13;
&#13;
MONUMENT MARKING THE SITE OF SERGEANT FLOYD' S GRAVE&#13;
&#13;
.. D&#13;
&#13;
ediration&#13;
T You who have departed&#13;
from Morningside College and find&#13;
that, sometimes during life's&#13;
journey you are sad or&#13;
lonely this book&#13;
is dedicated&#13;
&#13;
PRESS&#13;
&#13;
S T AR&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
THI!:&#13;
&#13;
PRINT I NG CO&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C I TY,&#13;
&#13;
IOW A&#13;
&#13;
GEORG,E D. PERKINS&#13;
&#13;
E.H.HUBBARD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City's most beloved son. Editor of the Sioux City Journal,&#13;
and Ex-Congressman from the Eleventh District of Iowa. The man&#13;
who deserves to be our next Governor.&#13;
&#13;
Representative from the Eleventh District of Iowa. Sioux City's&#13;
most eminent lawyer. An Iowan, whom, if Providence permits, our&#13;
nation will honor .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
INTRODUCTION&#13;
&#13;
W&#13;
&#13;
HEN undertaking the responsibility of preparing the Junior&#13;
Annual' for presentation to the public, we realized the fact&#13;
·&#13;
that our task was not that of an author, but rather that of a&#13;
compiler. With full appreciation of this fact it has been our&#13;
deepestconcern to receive representative contributions from the various&#13;
departments of Morningside College. We indeed are thankful and&#13;
appreciative for the prompt and willing response given to our solicitations. Deep is our regret that the musical department has not acknowledged our prize offer, but this we believe has been due to a misunderstanding or an oversight. Vigorous has been our effort at all times to&#13;
compile only that which is most peculiar to the many phases ofcollege life.&#13;
To all, we wish to say that at all times nothing but kindness has&#13;
been intended, and we sincerely want our old friendships strengthened&#13;
and new ones formed. Now, hoping that we have made our&#13;
intentions plain, we desire that our book shall be given&#13;
a kind reception and a large patronage.&#13;
&#13;
HEAP&#13;
&#13;
BIG INJUNS&#13;
&#13;
In the IndianReservation&#13;
THE beginning of&#13;
making&#13;
SinceOne even t has beentime history has been rapid&#13;
following another&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
succession, provingor disproving that man is the victim&#13;
of circumstances. In the career of every n ation, or individual, th er e has been some event, time, or snggestion, that has&#13;
marked the beginning, cnlmination, or r etrogression of activity and prominence. And, thus, the germ of "THE&#13;
WHOOPS OF THE SIOU X " took definite form, after&#13;
the sophomore class of 'O6 had visited the Indian reservation, lying thirty miles to the son th of Sioux Ci ty. N o&#13;
other class at Morningside&#13;
h ad ever attempted so long&#13;
and arduous a j ourney. Meansf conveyance was the gr eato&#13;
est difficulty, but this was overcome employin g a sixby&#13;
horse tally-ho, a gennine, leather-swung, vehicle of the&#13;
Rocky mountain type.&#13;
On the morning of , April 30th, 1904, each sophomore&#13;
mo&#13;
curtailed the beauty sleep and was rough and r eady at three&#13;
o'clock to bid college duties farewell for th e day. The&#13;
freshmen were sleeping in th eir trundle beds, nn conscious&#13;
of the departure of their class rivals. While passing&#13;
through the city, the bugle calls bronght forth many wondering faces to the windows, each expressing admirati on&#13;
and almost envy for th e happy company&#13;
After filling&#13;
the lunch baskets and succedding in arousing to action two&#13;
&#13;
sophomores, the j ourney was on. The&#13;
sleeping down-city&#13;
first stop occurred at the toll-gate on the . combination&#13;
bridge, wher e a hasty deposit of currency was made f or the&#13;
benefit of public utilities. The rumbling of the tally-ho,&#13;
while crossing the bridge, awoke '' Old Sol" from his dusky&#13;
slumbers behind the hills of Morningside, inspiring confid ence for an ideal day. Some one r emarked that Willie&#13;
and Lon,th e only absent sophs, would long r egret th at they&#13;
allowed other duties to prevent their going. To this day&#13;
we know not, if it was ministerial, material, or matrimonial affairs that robbed them of the pleasure. Cer tainly it&#13;
was not the latter, for only recently Willie had become&#13;
chief am ong devils, while Lon is aspiring to the assistantship. At Dakota City, six mil es on the N ebraska side, the&#13;
only signs of life were small dogs and speckled hens. Had&#13;
not the latter displayed such homelike tend encies, they, too1&#13;
doubtless, would have decided to vi sit th e reservation. It&#13;
r eally was their chi cken-heartedness that made them decline, for they fl ed far beyond the reach of ordin ary persnasion. Such sights as these ( o:ni tting the clogs) and natnral laws began t stir the inner man and the cry for&#13;
breakfast became irresistible. A tent was pitched on the&#13;
green. Here it was that the fair members of th e class had&#13;
spread&#13;
the feast, while the more sturdy ones looked on, each&#13;
for himself, wondering, if perchance some clay his own tepee might he blessed with one of these. And such a breakfa t. Baked potatoes, fried ham and eggs, sandwiches,&#13;
&#13;
and coffee took dowmvard courses in amazing rapidity.&#13;
The camp-fire burnt low and the company resumed the&#13;
journey. At Homer, Nebraska, eighteen miles from Sioux&#13;
City, the dark, swarthy red men in their government suits&#13;
of bluish-grey and high-cocked hats were m evidence.&#13;
From there to the reservation interest centered about&#13;
these, at one time, proud champions of the plains. Now,&#13;
they are a people artificially located and, as a consequence,&#13;
are degenerating. The old customs of the blanket, the&#13;
pony, and the tepee, still c1ing tenaciously to their habits.&#13;
The younger generation is adopting the white man's ways&#13;
slowly. It seems, that when the true Americans were&#13;
driven from their native haunts, their ambitions would&#13;
turn to nothing else. And, so now, they are scattered upon&#13;
the reserve, living on the farrns the government has given&#13;
them; but only a small per cent till the soil, the majority&#13;
preferring to rent their fields to white settlers, while they&#13;
occupy ( ?) their time smoking the pipe of peace, or rather&#13;
a piece of a pipe. Soon after mid-day the United States&#13;
Winnebago Indian School was reached and camp again&#13;
pitched. Here at the school, living in boarding-house&#13;
fashion, were about one hundred Indian children varying&#13;
in ages from ten to twenty. During five half days of each&#13;
week they attend school; the remainder of the time they&#13;
receive industrial training, such as cooking, laundry work&#13;
and sewing for the girls, and carpentery and blacksmith-&#13;
&#13;
ing for the boys. A number of the children were deformed&#13;
and afflicted in various ways. Diseases unknown among Indians in their wild life, but now very noticeable, are&#13;
factors which are reducing their numbers. The school&#13;
has a staff of nine instrnctors. Rations and clothing are&#13;
furnished by the government. The Indians not attending school receive no rations, as do the Sioux of the Dakotas. A government store is maintained at the agency,&#13;
one mile from the school buildings Here "Lone Tree,"&#13;
"Black-Foot," "Rain-in-the-Face" and others come Saturdays for their supply of clothing. The afternoon was spent&#13;
in taking kodak pictures, making acquaintances and studying Indian life.&#13;
The return trip was accomplished without accident.&#13;
The night was as perfect as the day.&#13;
"The Luft war kuehl und es dunkelt,&#13;
Und ruhig :fliesst der Rhine,"&#13;
"Der Jim war der erste Knabe,&#13;
Zu sagen, "Willst du be mine?"&#13;
Again the tollman hindered progress.&#13;
"Iowa, oh&#13;
Iowa, the fairest state of all the west." The day was over.&#13;
It had been a success. Satisfaction was written on every&#13;
face, and in the night each sophie dreamed that angels on&#13;
feet of diamonds, distributed blue-sky and melted sunshine.&#13;
A CASUAL OBSERVER.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF-J. W. KINDIG.&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER--A. L. BROWER.&#13;
ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER-H. J. Calkins&#13;
ASSOCIATE EDITORS&#13;
HISTORY-C. F. HARTZELL.&#13;
LITERARY-GENEVIEVE HOWARD.&#13;
CALENDAR-EVYA ERSKINE.&#13;
SOCIETY -EMMA FAIR.&#13;
ATHLETICS-WM. DEBENHAM.&#13;
&#13;
CARTOON- GEO. MILLNER.&#13;
&#13;
JOKES- L. A. HAWKINS.&#13;
CENSOR BOARD&#13;
&#13;
A. L. BROWER&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE HOWARD&#13;
&#13;
C. F. HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
EMMA FAIR&#13;
&#13;
GEO. MILLN ER&#13;
&#13;
Evva&#13;
&#13;
WM. DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
L. A. HAWKINS&#13;
&#13;
.J. W.&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE CROSSAN&#13;
&#13;
CORWIN FRANCIS HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
She was born in the State of the Wild&#13;
Rose, Received her preliminary education in the Hartley High School. Taught&#13;
school in North west Iowa.&#13;
En t ere d&#13;
Morningside College in the fall of 1902;&#13;
became a member of the class of 1906.&#13;
Miss Crossan is loyal to her class and&#13;
consecrated to her society. Energy and&#13;
devotion have won for her proud laurels as&#13;
a student. Friendship she deems valuable&#13;
and has many friends.&#13;
She possesses&#13;
ideals that are high, yet practical, and has&#13;
character that is strong and womanly.&#13;
The J uniors are proud to call her President.&#13;
&#13;
First saw the light of day in Marion&#13;
County, Iowa, some time back in the 19th&#13;
century. Got his star t on the farm , in the&#13;
country school, as pupil and teacher, and&#13;
bahind the counter. Believes in the fair&#13;
sex, for he is the only Junior who has&#13;
tested the joys of wedded life. Is a pastor&#13;
of rare ability. Is a debater of much distinction, having been on two winning intercollegiate and one intersociety teams. Is&#13;
a loyal Philo, a fast man on the track and&#13;
is conscientious, faithful, earnest, a good&#13;
student and a friend worth having. Will&#13;
one day fill the place of his worthy namesake, Bishop Hartzell. Our beloved VicePresident.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. WUNN&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
EMMA JEANETTE FAIR&#13;
&#13;
Born in this country of English-German&#13;
parentage, as is evidenced by his stubborn&#13;
will and strong determination .&#13;
He is a printer by trade, a Philomathean&#13;
by choice, and editor-in-chief of the Collegian Reporter by virtue of ability.&#13;
He is known as an advocate of justice&#13;
and truth and is outspoken against injustice and wrong-doing. His dislikes are&#13;
strong and freely expressed. His friendships strong and abiding.&#13;
He is popular with the girls and not disliked by the boys. In fact. although, he is&#13;
not exactly the whole thing, he is the only&#13;
Wunn (one) among us.&#13;
&#13;
A college educated woman with a special&#13;
preference for history and politics. A&#13;
Senior by recent classification, but a member of the tribe of '06 by nature and inclination.&#13;
A Hedonist in her ethical&#13;
theory. Practical, energetic, yet aspires&#13;
to the ideal. A typical Zet.&#13;
Desirous of the culture which can be obtained from the work of a reader, she completes the Elocution course this year. Has&#13;
few chums, but many good friends. Believes in woman's rights, but believes in&#13;
obtaining her own in her own way. Makes&#13;
grades easily and has made her college&#13;
work a pleasure.&#13;
A student of most&#13;
everything except the newspaper.&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA M. FAIR&#13;
&#13;
0. MERRILL FOOTE&#13;
&#13;
"Her modest answer and graceful air,&#13;
Prove her wise and good as she is Fair."&#13;
&#13;
Merrill Foote, but his class standing is&#13;
not what his name would indicate,-comes&#13;
from the tribe of the Dakota's, Kimball&#13;
having been his camping ground. The&#13;
snows of two winters came and went, while&#13;
he was in the happy hunting grounds of&#13;
knowledge at Dakota Wesleyan University.&#13;
But he wandered from his tribe, and the&#13;
haunts that once knew him know him no&#13;
more. He has allied himself with the tribe&#13;
of the Sioux. A happy. studious young&#13;
buck, the wit of the class and a general&#13;
favorite with the squaws of the Sioux&#13;
Tribe.&#13;
&#13;
Though she graduates with the class of&#13;
'05, she grew up with the "Indians." In&#13;
spite of this she has a strong, sweet,&#13;
womanly personality. She is President of&#13;
the Y. W. C. A. and of the Zetalethean&#13;
Society. She is one of those silent forces&#13;
whose power is, therefore, strongly felt.&#13;
The name of her friends is legion.&#13;
Though she is majoring in English, she&#13;
expects to demonstrate that a college bred&#13;
girl will be a good home-maker.&#13;
&#13;
EVVA ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT JUDSON CALKINS&#13;
Moved into this world at the usual time&#13;
for moving, March rst. Seems to be about&#13;
as long for it as any of the genus homo.&#13;
Reared on Iowa p rairies, and attended a&#13;
little school house near a river, where he&#13;
learned to read and swim, (never played&#13;
hookey). He developed rapidly, as a result&#13;
of plenty of raw turnips and frequent tannings. He attended High School in Ft.&#13;
Dodge and came to Morningside in 1902.&#13;
He always had to attend church regularly&#13;
and in revenge has entered the ministry.&#13;
He is good natured, persevering. a gentleman, a scholar and an Otho.&#13;
&#13;
Illinois' by birth, Iowa's by adoption.&#13;
Brought up amid surroundings conducive&#13;
to purity and strength of character. A&#13;
student of nature, she aspires to the attainment of the best. Carried away the honors of the High School class in Austin,&#13;
winning the Scholarship to the University&#13;
of Chicago, where she spent her Freshman&#13;
year.&#13;
Is characterized by push, vim and vigor.&#13;
She possesses high ideals and a dominant&#13;
will, which insures their fulfillment in&#13;
her life. Enters into any enterprise with&#13;
her whole soul and everything she does is&#13;
done with admirable thoroughness. She&#13;
believes very ardently that "man was not&#13;
made to live alone"-has heard the voice&#13;
of duty and her "Will" now leads her to&#13;
the performance of that duty.&#13;
Enthusiastic in all departments of college life and a faithful Atheneum.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE MILLNER&#13;
Here's to the lad, who in early years&#13;
chased swamp-lights, or fought prairie&#13;
fires on the lands of the Blackhawks, and&#13;
at family assemblies made himself famous&#13;
by his art of speech-making.&#13;
Being a son of the soil, there came&#13;
wafted to him on the soft zephyrs, sweet&#13;
melodies from the banks of the Missouri.&#13;
Within his invisible life they struck a&#13;
chord which awakened the sensibilities of&#13;
latent powers beneath the rugged, sturdy&#13;
exterior.&#13;
The doors of M. C. opened to George&#13;
and within her walls he has been learning&#13;
the art of making his life useful to mankind, while his loyalty to athletics won for&#13;
him the captainship of the foot ball team&#13;
of '04.&#13;
He may differ in policy and principles&#13;
from his most intimate friend, yet his&#13;
charity and unselfishness ever secures for&#13;
him a place in the friendship of his associates.&#13;
&#13;
GENEVIEVE HOWARD&#13;
It was after Christmas.&#13;
&#13;
In a little farm&#13;
house there was great joy, for the most&#13;
precious of gifts had been given,-a wee&#13;
baby girl.&#13;
This baby grew and passed through all&#13;
the happy stages of childhood, was spanked&#13;
and kissed in turn, which was a part of the&#13;
training for a strong character. Through&#13;
the long hours of schooldays that followed&#13;
she gathered for herself truth and wisdom,&#13;
adding kindness and courage.&#13;
The duties of young womanhood revealed&#13;
the necessity of wide training and reserve&#13;
force, and created a desire for broader&#13;
knowledge.&#13;
When Genevieve entered college life it&#13;
was with a broad outlook and noble ambition. Whether in the class room, society or&#13;
association work, she tries to judge fairly,&#13;
is open hearted and makes herseif beloved&#13;
by all by her happy disposition and kindness.&#13;
&#13;
BERTHEMIA McCARTHY&#13;
Better known as Bertha McCarthy, is&#13;
known to the students to have a quiet, unassuming personality. Her merit is discovered only by those who know and understand her best.&#13;
She attended school at Rockwell before&#13;
coming to Morningside. She has been in&#13;
school at Morningside for five years; has&#13;
graduated from the Academy and, if she&#13;
perseveres, at her present rate of progress.&#13;
she will finish the college course some day.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. DEBENHAM&#13;
The experience of William Hamilton&#13;
Debenham is bounded by the confines of&#13;
the Hawkeye state. Born in r 88o on a&#13;
farm in Grundy County, at the tender&#13;
age of nine years, he, tired of the rural&#13;
scenes and the barn-yard choruses, advised his parents to retire to the more congenial activities of town life. Accordingly&#13;
he settled in the town of Everly, Clay&#13;
County, in time to participate in its early&#13;
municipal proceedings. In r899 he entered&#13;
the sub-prep class in Morningside and his&#13;
strong athletic tendencies have enabled&#13;
him to jump two years and finish both the&#13;
Academy and College courses in six years.&#13;
"Deby" is short but active, is a Philo, a&#13;
star sprinter, plays football, has served as&#13;
captain of the track team, president of the&#13;
Athletic Association and president of the&#13;
Y. M. C. A. He is now a Senior, but his&#13;
heart is in the Junior class. His affections&#13;
are singular, in that he believes there is&#13;
just one girl. His ethical code may be&#13;
summarized in the following postulate:&#13;
"What-Evva is, is right."&#13;
&#13;
H. VAN DYKE&#13;
ESTIE BODDY&#13;
As it is not customary to publish the biography of the great before they die, I&#13;
tremble at the consequence of this.&#13;
Nevertheless, it must be told that Estie&#13;
Boddy is a farm product. She was born&#13;
in the last century and has seen the going&#13;
out of one century and the ushering in of&#13;
another. If she continues in her present&#13;
state of health she may see many more.&#13;
While only a child she was called&#13;
"Chub" and "Stick-in-the-Mud" and other&#13;
names even less elegant. But the one that&#13;
has clung to her all through life thus far is&#13;
simply "Body. "&#13;
&#13;
Stands head and shoulders above his&#13;
fellows- a veritable Lincoln.&#13;
Extends&#13;
through degrees of latitude and longitude&#13;
duly proportionate to the degrees of altitude. Has clean-cut features (not a member of the Whiskers Club) and is of medium&#13;
complexion.&#13;
A jolly, good natured fellow, amiable in&#13;
disposition, of Washingtonian veracity and&#13;
good merits&#13;
A painter by trade, a student by occupation, and a Methodist by profession.&#13;
A Philo of good standing and a member&#13;
of the Y. M. C. A ; an all-around athlete&#13;
- bears noble scars received both in domestic and foreign frays.&#13;
Not wholly indifferent to the affectionate and confiding qualities of femininity&#13;
and believes in specialization.&#13;
&#13;
RUBY TRIMBLE&#13;
LON A. HAWKINS&#13;
Born near Independence; while still a&#13;
small boy his parents found it necessary to&#13;
move away, lest he be captured by the&#13;
institution there. Up to his twelfth year&#13;
his career was like that of George Washington, except that he used a saw instead&#13;
of a hatchet. The past four years he has&#13;
been sawing his way through college. His&#13;
present occupation consists in sitting on&#13;
the laboratory table and dispensing biological facts to dull students. Though possessed of a fine vocabulary of the scholarly&#13;
words in science, he occasionally indulges&#13;
in phrases, which, while expressive, can&#13;
hardly be said to apply to the subject in&#13;
hand. (Examples : "By Dads," " Well&#13;
Gee Whiz," " By the Great Horn Spoon,"&#13;
etc")&#13;
&#13;
Canadian by birth and loyal to her king&#13;
- a girl of strong character and high ideals.&#13;
She is a lovel" of out-door sports and is at&#13;
home in the saddle, as well as on the ice.&#13;
She has an abundance of wavy black&#13;
hair, which has a way all its own of&#13;
tumbling gracefully about the face-her&#13;
eyes are blue, a deep, deep blue, which&#13;
look at you in a way that you like and&#13;
love that coveted expressive twinkle. A&#13;
merry smile plays about her mouth, revealing evenly matched pearls, which invite conversation.&#13;
A girl of sense, wit and humor. Underneath the fun-loving exterior there is a&#13;
heart-steadfast, tender, true.&#13;
Makes ''luscious" cherry pies-is a social&#13;
favorite, honored Zetalethean and loyal&#13;
Junior.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES KINDIG&#13;
A tall angular form, stern of visage, but&#13;
of kind disposition. If he has a motto 1t&#13;
is "To master whatever he undertakes._"&#13;
Thoroughness characterizes his work, logic&#13;
his reasoning, and noble purpose his ambition. He has qualities that fit him _for&#13;
Cross(an)in' the wide sea of difficulties&#13;
that lies between him and fame. His work&#13;
in Inter-society debate, as a representative&#13;
of the Othonian Literary Society, and his&#13;
work in Inter-collegiate debate, as a representative of the College, marks him as a&#13;
clear thinker and reasoner. Also in his&#13;
work as a member of the Collegian Rerorter staff of 1903-4, ne developed some&#13;
proficiency ID the use of the quill,&#13;
and&#13;
in appreciation of his literary ability, the&#13;
Junior Class chose him as ed1tor-in-ch1ef&#13;
of ''The Whoops of the Sioux.··&#13;
&#13;
RUBY A. FLINN&#13;
Born MDCCCLXXXIII Anno Domini&#13;
on the anniversary of the Boston Tea&#13;
Party. The Junior Class feel honored in&#13;
having the birth of one of its members&#13;
connected with so important a date.&#13;
Spent two years in Lake City High&#13;
School, coming here in the fall of 1900.&#13;
She has aroused no jealousies, either as&#13;
a social star, or on account of her activities in the affairs of the school. She has&#13;
been fortunate in that she has taken two&#13;
interesting trips, one to the hills of Vermont and one •to the Rockies. A girl of&#13;
"A" grades, except in Ethics, strong personality, kind disposition, loves the open&#13;
air and is a loyal Atheneum. Merry blue&#13;
eyes and wavy brown hair; when once she&#13;
is your friend she is true .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
ELIZABETH JOHNSON&#13;
A maid of genuine worth. She was&#13;
born in Iowa some time since the civil&#13;
war, hence has no personal recollections&#13;
of Abraham Lincoln.&#13;
Her preliminary education. at the Ft.&#13;
Dodge High School, from which she was&#13;
graduated with highest honors, prepared&#13;
her to be a leader In society and classwork of Morningside College, where she&#13;
entered as a Freshman in the fall of '02.&#13;
The glories of the far-famed 'sophomore&#13;
Class of the following year she 1s proud to&#13;
have shared. In the publication of "The&#13;
Whoops of the Sioux," she has been a&#13;
leading worker.&#13;
A Zet by nature, she counts her lot a&#13;
h appy one. Her personality 1s strongshe knows when to talk and when not to&#13;
talk is frank and keen of judgment, is&#13;
never idle and is thorough in all she does .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
A. L. BROWER&#13;
An Iowa boy.&#13;
Graduated from the&#13;
Academy of Morningside, 1902. Entered&#13;
Morningside College with the Class of&#13;
1906. He is very tall and in many respects resembles Lincoln, especially In&#13;
length of arms and size of feet. His principles are democratic, and good nature&#13;
always prevails. In profession he 1s a&#13;
Forester and will seek a government position. As a student he is determined and&#13;
thorough. The Class has honored him by&#13;
trusting him with the business management of ''The Whoops of the Sioux."&#13;
&#13;
Class Roll&#13;
R. G. MINKLER&#13;
Born; where? Amid the wolf-roamed&#13;
clay hills of Clayton County, Iowa. He&#13;
has been howling ever since.&#13;
When? My memory fails me; judging&#13;
by the shade of his hair, presumably since&#13;
the end of the dark ages.&#13;
Having at one time in his career followed&#13;
the trade of a sorghum maker, he is naturally "sweet" tempered.&#13;
At another&#13;
time having been an undertaker, he still&#13;
retains his "grave" bearing.&#13;
Is fond of bean soup, a good joke, and&#13;
Ethics.&#13;
Believes in womankind, Philoism and "Ayers Hair Vigor. "&#13;
In fact is so precocious that it was impossible for him to remain any longer with&#13;
the Class of 1907, therefore was adopted&#13;
by the Juniors in the Winter Term.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. Debenham&#13;
Virginia Fair&#13;
J. W . Kindig&#13;
C. F. Hartzell&#13;
Emma Fair&#13;
Evva Erskine&#13;
A. L. Brower&#13;
Ruby Flinn&#13;
L. A. H awkins&#13;
Gertrude Crossan&#13;
Elizabeth Johnson&#13;
&#13;
George Millner&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
'' Excelsior"&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
Colors&#13;
B lue and Old G old&#13;
&#13;
Emblem&#13;
&#13;
Ruby Trimble&#13;
&#13;
G len Minkler&#13;
0. M. Foote&#13;
J. W. Wunn&#13;
Bertha McCarthy&#13;
H. J. Calkins&#13;
H. Van Dyke&#13;
Estie Boddy&#13;
G enevieve Howard&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
O MINISTER wisely to the needs of half a thousand&#13;
students is a task not to be faced lightly. No college&#13;
worthy of the name fails to appreciate the tension of our&#13;
times, and the obligation to plan most carefully for all&#13;
coming to her halls. If wasted opportunities are forever&#13;
beyond r ecall, no more can later work or added endeavor&#13;
ever fully make amends for wrong instruction or misdirected effort.&#13;
With the greater complexities of modern life, the task&#13;
of training young men and women has become increasingly difficult. Only a generation ago a small group of&#13;
teachers, representing a few traditional lines of study,&#13;
could offer successfully the work considered necessary for&#13;
the bachelor's degree. The courses of study were fixed;&#13;
all students were subjected to practically a common discipline, irrespective of individual capacity or future field&#13;
of work.&#13;
While doubtless the under-graduate course is still&#13;
looked upon as primarily cultural, the conception of this&#13;
function has broadened. Many new subjects have been&#13;
added to the curriculum and some of the older have undergone radical changes in methods of presentation. The&#13;
development of the physical and biological sciences, the&#13;
increased emphasis on modern language, the freshened interest in histo· y and political science, and such opening&#13;
r&#13;
fields as psychology and sociology, are phases of education&#13;
which have come to supplement the larger recognized&#13;
training in mathematics and the classics. The modern&#13;
co1lege course has not only increased cultural and infor-&#13;
&#13;
mational value, bnt deals as well with subj ects which familiarize the student with the foundation principles of&#13;
practical and industrial affairs. Such training makes for&#13;
the highest success in business as well as professional&#13;
lines.&#13;
The relation of these changes to the college of our&#13;
times is obvious. The college fulfilling its mission today&#13;
must have a much larger teaching force than under the&#13;
old regime. There is also demanded a better individual&#13;
equipment on the part of those engaged in professional&#13;
work; each teacher must be a specialist, and this usually&#13;
involves long and expensive university training. The&#13;
differing tastes and abilities of students and the r elations&#13;
• to work after graduation necessitate some freedom in the&#13;
choice of courses and studies. This elective privilege&#13;
compels the presentation of a wider range of subjects. The&#13;
material equipment in the way of buildings, grounds, libraries, laboratories and apparatus must be extensive.&#13;
Morningside College is making an earnest effort to&#13;
measure up to the demands of the opening century. The&#13;
policy of those in authority has been to provide things&#13;
essential for thorough work, believing that only in this&#13;
way can the institution justify her mission. This plan&#13;
has involved great :financial sacrifice, but the fruits are&#13;
seen in the early efficiency of our college. Though&#13;
Morningside completes this year but the first decade of&#13;
her history, we have an institution comparing favorably&#13;
with others of its kind in the Mississippi valley, most of&#13;
which have celebrated their semi-centennials.&#13;
The teaching force, both in numbers and efficiency, is&#13;
now ranked with those of the leading colleges of the west.&#13;
Division of labor has been carried far enough to allow&#13;
&#13;
each teacher a distinct department-a condition fundamental to good college work All members of the faculty&#13;
have, by university study or travel, familiarized themselves with the larger aspects of their respective departments. Several have completed the work for the Doctor&#13;
of Philosophy degree. The institutions represented in this&#13;
graduate preparation include the prominent universities&#13;
of America and Europe.&#13;
The courses of study are organized on the major system of instruction. It is believed that this plan wisely&#13;
combines the best phases of elective privilege with the&#13;
most successful anticipation of graduate study and the&#13;
professional school, while insuring to all a liberal culture&#13;
and broad training. Our graduates are recognized by the&#13;
leading universities and several have recently been given&#13;
appointments as scholars, fellows or assistants.&#13;
The buildings of the college are new, clean and modern. Main Hall is one of the largest and finest structures&#13;
of its kind in the state. The first and second floors of&#13;
North Hall recently have been refitted to conform more&#13;
closely to the needs of the Conservatory of Music. the&#13;
Chemistry, Physics and Biology laboratories occupy&#13;
,suites of rooms in Main Hall and are well equipped with&#13;
&#13;
new apparatus. Most of the departments have small libraries of well selected books for the use of major and&#13;
minor students. The general library contains the periodicals, standard works and reference books; this is supplemente'd by the large city library, which is open to all&#13;
students of the school.&#13;
Mention should be made of the various internal organizations and student activities. The literary societies,&#13;
athletic, oratorical and debating associations, musical and&#13;
department clubs, etc., constitute an important part of&#13;
the serious work of the institution and contribute in no&#13;
small measure to the pleasures of college life.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
With the opening of next. school year Morningside enters upon the second decade of her history. We believe&#13;
it will bring even greater progress than the last ten years&#13;
have witnessed. Our college faces the future with hope,&#13;
believing that the years will bring opportunities for service, and that in the fulfillment of her mission to young&#13;
men and women she will have the sympathy and support&#13;
of this great north west.&#13;
ROBERT BRADFORD WYLIE.&#13;
&#13;
E ARL&#13;
&#13;
Hopkins&#13;
&#13;
Wilson Seeley Lewis&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
wa s ca lled to the presidency of Morningside College in 1897, coming&#13;
from Epworth Semina ry, in wh ich school he bad given nine years of&#13;
efficient service as principal. Doctor Lewis received the greater part&#13;
of his under-graduate training at St. Lawrence University and has&#13;
since supplemented this preparation by uni ver sity work and private&#13;
study. The year 1896-7 was spent in travel study in Europe.&#13;
President Lewis has accomplish ed much s in ce ta king his place as&#13;
cheif executor of Morningisde College. During th is period of eight&#13;
years the attendance has increased from one hundr ed a nd eighty-seve n&#13;
to an enrollment of nearly six hundred students. The faculty has been&#13;
doubled in numbers and grea tly increased in efficiency. In this period&#13;
Main H a ll has been built and equipped. the chem istry, ph ysics and&#13;
biology laboratories established, North Hall r ebuilt, a nd Park Place,&#13;
with its beautiful ten-acre lawn, added to the campus.&#13;
In addition to these conspicuous evidences of progress, mention&#13;
should be made of old d ebts paid, and large pla ns looking toward an&#13;
adequate endowment fund; of higher educational ideas and attainments; of enlarged student activities along all lines, and the growth&#13;
of th e Inter-Collegiate r elations hips. In brief, these f ew years, under&#13;
his leadership, have witnessed the evolution of a college well equipped to meet the d emands of our opening century.&#13;
It is, how ever, in the t hings unseen that President Lewis has&#13;
given our college his most helpful touch. The new student recalls&#13;
the warmth of his handshake in welcome, and the departing senior&#13;
bears with him memories of cheerful words and kindly acts. The&#13;
one in trouble and discouragement, as well as the one joyful in opening&#13;
opportunities, have alike found in him a friend and counsellor.&#13;
&#13;
H. G. Campbell A. M.&#13;
Though but a short time with us, Professor H. G. Campbell bas gained a secure place in our hearts&#13;
With the&#13;
strength and vigor of a young man, supplemented by a strong personality, he&#13;
promises to become a large factor in&#13;
moulding the life of the student body.&#13;
Professor Campbell came to us from Columbia Univeristy where be bad just&#13;
completed a three years' course in philosophy. He will carry on the work of the&#13;
department of philosophy in connection&#13;
with his executive duties. He has the&#13;
immediate administration of the school,&#13;
in which capacity he is giving efficient&#13;
service&#13;
&#13;
MISS HELEN I. LOVELAND, A. M.&#13;
Needs no introduction to our readers. For&#13;
seven years she has been building up the&#13;
department of English literature, having&#13;
in the meantime spent a year at Oxford&#13;
University in research work.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT BRADFORD WYLIE, PH. D.&#13;
After a residence of two years at the&#13;
University of Chicago as fellow and assistant in botany, while continumg his&#13;
graduate study, Professor Wylie is again&#13;
at the head of the department of biology&#13;
of Morningside College.&#13;
Professor Wylie is recongnized as a man&#13;
of unusual ability in his line. Several&#13;
papers written by himself, and others&#13;
written by major students from his clepartment, ha ve been published in the&#13;
leading scientific journals.&#13;
The work offered here in botany is of&#13;
such a standard as to ha ve gained the&#13;
recognition of the leading un iversities&#13;
&#13;
A four-year course is offered, embracing&#13;
a study of the literary movement in England. of the English Novel, of Shakespeare and t he English Drama, the Elizabethian Age, Tennyson's works, and the&#13;
Eighteenth Century Literature.&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, PH. D.&#13;
Professor Haynes, a graduate of Harvard, came to Morningside College in&#13;
1900 to occupy the chair of economics&#13;
and sociology. The year 1892 he spent&#13;
traveling in Europe and studying under&#13;
such men as Gustav Schmoller and Sir&#13;
John Seely. With such an education and&#13;
the experience gained while instructor in&#13;
the University of California and in Harvard College, Morningside is very fortunate in ha ving Professor Haynes as a&#13;
member of her faculty.&#13;
&#13;
AGNES B. FERGUSON, M. Sc.&#13;
Miss Ferguson began her work as head&#13;
of the German department of Morningside College in 1901. This department&#13;
now offers a six year's course and one&#13;
year in scientific German. Miss Ferguson was educated in this country, but has&#13;
brought herself into fullest touch with&#13;
her work through travel and study&#13;
abroad. Miss Ferguson is well equipped&#13;
for the position she holds in Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
L.A. BLUE, PH. D.&#13;
Leonard A. Blue came to Morningside College in 1902 thoroughly prepared&#13;
for his work as professor of English and&#13;
biblical literature. Dr. Blue graduated&#13;
from Cornell College in 1892. The follow-&#13;
&#13;
ing year he spent in graduate work at the&#13;
University of Chicago. After teaching&#13;
in Iowa Weslyan University, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, he entered the graduate school&#13;
of the University of Pennsylvania&#13;
from&#13;
which institution he received the degree&#13;
of doctor of philosophy in 1902.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK HARMON GARYER, A. B.&#13;
Epworth Seminary, Upper Iowa University and the State University contributed to the education of Frank H. Garver, A. B., who accepted the chair of history and economics in Morningside College in 1898. Under his efficient hand the&#13;
department has grown, until now Morningside offers better facilities and a more&#13;
complete course in history and economics,&#13;
than most colleges. The enlarged department ca lled for a division in 1902, and&#13;
Professor Dr. Haynes accepted the department of economics and sociology,&#13;
while Professor Garver was retained as&#13;
professor of history and politics.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT, A. M.&#13;
Lillian E. Dimmitt has been identified with Morningside College since&#13;
1893. The department of Latin under&#13;
her personal supervision has reached its&#13;
present status. Miss Dimmitt, during the&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDRICK KANTHLENER,A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Kanthlener, who holds the&#13;
chair of Greek in Morningside College,&#13;
completed the college course at Cornell&#13;
College in 189G, spent one year as instructor in Latin and Greek at Epworth&#13;
Seminary. He then spent two years at&#13;
Harvard University, taking the master's&#13;
degree in 1890. During the year 18991900 he was instructor in Latin at Wilburbam Academy, Mass.&#13;
Except one&#13;
year, Professor Kanthlener has been with&#13;
us since that time. The work has been&#13;
enlarging under his leadership a nd he is&#13;
recogniz ed as a capa ble instru ctor and a&#13;
man of sterling character and worth.&#13;
&#13;
vear 1903-4 did research work in Rome,&#13;
returning&#13;
to Morningside in the fall of&#13;
1904, with increased enthusiasm and love&#13;
for her work. Miss Dimmitt is a woman&#13;
of great ability and is much loved by all&#13;
her students.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD B. GRAYNALD, A. M.&#13;
Professor Greynald is a native of&#13;
France and a graduate of the University&#13;
of Paris. He has occupied with great&#13;
success the chair of French in Morningside College since 1896. He came to our&#13;
college thoroughly equipped, and has by&#13;
earnest, persistent effort built up his department to its present flourishing condition. Five courses are offered those who&#13;
wish to study the French language, one&#13;
being practical lessons&#13;
in scientific&#13;
French.&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, PH. B.&#13;
&#13;
Epbenor A. Brown, Ph. B., a graduate&#13;
of the DePauw University, needs no&#13;
introduction to the educational circles of&#13;
northwest Iowa, having been heart and&#13;
soul in the work for many years. He&#13;
has held the position of high scbool principal and county superintendent of&#13;
schools of Woodbury County several&#13;
times and college professor.&#13;
Morningside is very fortunate in having&#13;
so able an instructor as Professor Brown&#13;
in charge of the normal department.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON&#13;
Came to Morningside College six years&#13;
ago as instructor in elocution and physical culture. She attended the Philadelphia School of Oratory and has since&#13;
studied under many of the most prominent teachers of Oratory in the United&#13;
sta tes.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Davidson is very popular and has&#13;
attained great success, both as a reader&#13;
and as a teacher of elocution. The elocution&#13;
department is an important&#13;
f actor in the life of Morningside College,&#13;
under the skillful direction of Mrs. Davidson.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT N. VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
ls one of Iowa's most energetic sons. He&#13;
graduated from Mason City High School&#13;
in 1894, and after spending five terms at&#13;
Cornell College, he changed to Morningside College, where he graduated in 1900,&#13;
taking the Ph. B. degree. The following&#13;
year was spent in Johns Hopkins University pursuing a special course in mathematics. Since the fall of 1901. Professor&#13;
Van Horne has built up the department&#13;
of mathematics to its present high standard.&#13;
&#13;
ELI FRANKLIN PECKUMN, Sc. B.&#13;
Mr. Eli Peckumn is a graduate of&#13;
Northwestern University, and his career&#13;
as scholar and athlete there have well&#13;
qualified him for the position of physical&#13;
&#13;
WINFORD LEE LEWIS, A. M.&#13;
Professor W. Lee Lewis, from Leland&#13;
Stanford University Jr., took charge of&#13;
the department of chemistry at the beginning of this year. Professor Lewis is&#13;
a Young man, well prepared in his department and enthusiastic in his work.&#13;
The instruction in this department is designed to meet the needs of two classes&#13;
of students; those who wish to study&#13;
chemistry for general culture and as a&#13;
necessary compliment to a liberal eclucation, and those who wish to take up&#13;
lines of work in which chemistry is an applied science.&#13;
&#13;
director and athletic coach at Morning side. Mr. Peckunrn has systematized&#13;
both the gymnasium and the outdoor&#13;
work and is raising the grade of all college athletics.&#13;
&#13;
MILLIARD FILLMORE M'DOWELL,Sc.B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor M. F. McDowell, a graduate&#13;
of Morniugsme College, 1903; fellow in&#13;
physics, University of Nebraska, 1903-4;&#13;
took cha rge of the department of physics&#13;
this year and is proving himself an efficient instructor. There are five courses&#13;
offered concerning the entire subject of&#13;
physics in a general way, including kinematics, dynamics, hydrodyamics&#13;
acoustics, heat, light, electricity and magnetism.&#13;
Advance&#13;
labpratory work in light and&#13;
electricity is g iven in the fourth course&#13;
and supplementing this is a course in&#13;
theoretical optics.&#13;
&#13;
JUDSON WALDO MATHER&#13;
Prof. J. W. Mather, professor of music&#13;
and director of conservatory, came to&#13;
Morningside in the fall of 1904, but has&#13;
already filled his position as few men can.&#13;
A graduate of Oberlin Consenatory, a&#13;
pupil of Ernst Zedliczka, of Berlin, instructor in music at Cornell College&#13;
1895-8 and at Chicago Theological Seminary 1898-9, and director of conservatory&#13;
Yankton College 18899-1904, is evidence&#13;
enough that Professor Mather will make&#13;
the conservatory of Morningside College&#13;
one of the best in the west. Much has&#13;
been accomplished this year and greater&#13;
achievements are in view.&#13;
&#13;
GERTRUDE F. MATHER&#13;
Mrs. Mather came to Morningside in&#13;
1904 as instructor in violin and cornet.&#13;
She has studied under Charles Heydler&#13;
&#13;
EDITH AMANDA&#13;
&#13;
and Adolph Weidig, and has had nine&#13;
years' experience as instructor in violin,&#13;
and six years in corn et. Truly, Morningside is favored with eminent music instructors.&#13;
&#13;
LARSON.&#13;
&#13;
In 1902 l\Iorningsicle neeclecl an instructor in vocal music and Miss Larson, one&#13;
of ·wisconsin's daughters. responded.&#13;
Success has attended her every effort,&#13;
and Miss Larson is held in high esteem&#13;
by all who know her and her work. After her high school course she spent two&#13;
years at the Chicago Musical College, and&#13;
later studied under Alfred Williams and&#13;
William Nelson Burritt. of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE&#13;
ALICE BROWN MARSHALL.&#13;
Mrs. Marshall is one of the best instructors in the conservatory and wins the love&#13;
and admiraton of all her pupils. She&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE GERTRUDE LEWIS.&#13;
Since 1900 Miss Lewis has been a member of the music faculty of Morningside&#13;
College. She studied music in Dubugue&#13;
and Minneapolis before going to Boston&#13;
to attend the New England Conservatory&#13;
from which she graduated in 1888. She&#13;
was a pupil under J. C. D. Parker, Geo.&#13;
E. Whiting, Carl Zerraher and Louis C.&#13;
Elson. and has had sixteen years' experience as an instructor. Morningside considers Miss Lewis a valuable member of her&#13;
faculty.&#13;
&#13;
came to Morningside&#13;
ter spending thirteen&#13;
such teachers as A.&#13;
ter and William H.&#13;
&#13;
College in 1902, afyears in study under&#13;
K. Virgil, Carl Ret Sherwood.&#13;
&#13;
M. LOTHIAN.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Lothian is an Iowa girl, educated&#13;
in Iowa schools. She spent two years at&#13;
Cornell College, beginning her course in&#13;
piano there; another year was spent at&#13;
the conservatory of music -of Northwestern University Evanston, Ill. After graduating from our own conservatory she&#13;
spent one year as a pupil of Emil Liebling. After three years of successful&#13;
work as an instructor on piano, Miss Lothian was obliged to leave in search of&#13;
health.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR W. A. BLACKWELL&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE L. SEARCH.&#13;
&#13;
Professor W. A. Blackwell bas been in&#13;
charge of the commercial department of&#13;
the college for nine years. He is a successful teacher and secretary of the faculty. Mr. Blackwell received his degree of&#13;
"master of accounts'" from the Gem&#13;
City Business College, of Quincy. Ill. He&#13;
also completed a two years' course in the&#13;
Western Normal School. of Buslrnell, Ill..&#13;
in 1896 He is a member of the class of&#13;
&#13;
George L. Search was elected assistant&#13;
secretary of the college in 1901, and secr etary at the meeting of the trustees in&#13;
1903. In 1890 he completed a course in&#13;
&#13;
1905.&#13;
&#13;
MAN-NOT-AFRAID-OF-THE-FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
stenography at the University of the&#13;
Morthwest Mr. Search is an experienced&#13;
accountant and a man of great natural&#13;
business ability. Under his management&#13;
the finances of the college have been&#13;
built up and carefully guarded.&#13;
&#13;
THE IDEALSTUDENT&#13;
My ideal student is not necessarily the best scholar in&#13;
his class, though that is rather in his favor. But he is&#13;
studious, earnest, faithful. He tries. His Tuesday's&#13;
lessons are as well prepared as those of any other day.&#13;
A little learning doesn't turn his head, ( though a little&#13;
girl may). He doesn't know it all and knows he doesn't.&#13;
A college education will not hurt him.&#13;
Again, my ideal student is frank and honest, always&#13;
to be trusted. He has the confidence of all his fellows.&#13;
He is not a "goody, goody," but enjoys a good time-at&#13;
the proper time.&#13;
He keeps most of the rules of the school. He always&#13;
gets sleepy at 10 p. m., sharp. When not absent, or in&#13;
some other seat, he always occupies his own seat at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
He uses his song-book to sing out of, not to write in. He&#13;
is loyal to friends, always takes his friend's part-especially at dinner.&#13;
He is loyal to his class and society, but his patriotism&#13;
is fo r his college. He has college spirit and shows it. He&#13;
always boosts for the whole school. If a college student,&#13;
he will attend the academy debate. He takes at least one&#13;
course in history, and doesn't whisper,-all the time. He&#13;
laughs at my jokes and, therefore, raises his grade.&#13;
In conclusion, my ideal student would be a composite&#13;
of all the students of Morningside College, were it possible&#13;
to create such a personage.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. F. H. GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
Hadden&#13;
Acken back&#13;
&#13;
Killam&#13;
Darling&#13;
&#13;
Saunders&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Finch&#13;
Maynard&#13;
&#13;
Magee&#13;
&#13;
Aldrich&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
&#13;
C lass&#13;
&#13;
of 190 4&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
HE HISTORY of the class of 1904 is so confused wi th romance and astrology, and so interspersed with periods of inactivity, that we did not wish&#13;
to record the legend as historical truth. Kind and earnest invitations&#13;
were extended to several members of the class to furnish a record of facts for the&#13;
gratification of public interest, but silence gave the only response. Now, that&#13;
we may aid those who sincerly wish to investigate the mysteries of the forgotten&#13;
past, we furnish the following references:&#13;
IRA R. ALDRICH, Pastor&#13;
Hull, Iowa&#13;
A. H. MAYNARD, Pastor&#13;
Ocheydan, Iowa&#13;
MRS. MABEL KILLAM MAYNARD, Pastor's Wife, Ocheydan, Iowa&#13;
DR. W. E. SAUNDERS M. D.&#13;
Alta, Iowa&#13;
D. E. HADDON, Druggist&#13;
Alta, Iowa&#13;
G. W. F1i ch&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
N ARCISSA MILLER&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
GRACE DARLING, Sec'y Y. W. C. A.&#13;
Bridgeport, Conn.&#13;
STANLEY CARSON, Boston Theological School, Boston, Mass.&#13;
LYDTA TRIMBLE, Missionary&#13;
Foo Chow, China&#13;
J. R. MAGEE, Pastor&#13;
Paullina, Iowa&#13;
J. A. ACKENBACK, Student, School of Physicians and&#13;
Surgeons&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Root&#13;
&#13;
V. Fair&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
&#13;
Ellerbroek&#13;
&#13;
E. Fair&#13;
Bowker&#13;
&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Debenham&#13;
&#13;
Stulken&#13;
McCay&#13;
&#13;
Killam&#13;
Lock in&#13;
&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Harding&#13;
&#13;
Cook&#13;
&#13;
Maynard&#13;
Morgan&#13;
&#13;
Carrol&#13;
Kling&#13;
&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
Goodall&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
Hanna&#13;
&#13;
THE CLASSof 1905&#13;
BY ONE OF US&#13;
&#13;
MvRTILLA CooK,&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
Pres.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
A. BLACKWELL,&#13;
&#13;
Vice-Pres.&#13;
&#13;
HE SIOUX have requested the Class of 1905 to record a&#13;
few of our whoops along with theirs, but have limited&#13;
our space till we can not do ourselves justice. however, here&#13;
are a few facts from our history.&#13;
The nucleus of our class registered as freshmen in the year&#13;
1901. Although one time early iu our career. ours was the&#13;
smallest class in school, so great was our merit and attractive&#13;
power that all the wise members of '06 hastened to class up and&#13;
join us, and even one member of the faculty could not resist the&#13;
temptation to come off his perch. and he now adorns our front&#13;
row in chapel. With these additions to our forces we expect to&#13;
surpass in numbers any two previous graduating classes combined.&#13;
The greatest crisis in our history was in the spring of our&#13;
sophomore year when we faced the question of a Junior Annual. We decided to publish one and. after a year of hard&#13;
work, we published "The Maroon," of which we think we have&#13;
reason to be proud.&#13;
During our junior year we were learning from experience&#13;
and what we don't know about publishing annuals, we don't&#13;
consider worth knowing. We gained some pointers on business&#13;
methods. some practical experience in politics, amd some interesting information on certain legal points. In connection with&#13;
the last named we might name June 20th, '04, as a memorable&#13;
date&#13;
We broke all records, as to the possible number per clay and&#13;
length of business sessions. At times. for hours, no juniors were&#13;
visible to the outside world, at which times we might have been&#13;
found in some secluded place, settling weighty problems. We&#13;
never experienced any difficulty in securing a full attendance at&#13;
meetings and could gladly give the Sioux sonie advice along this&#13;
line.&#13;
An important social event in our history occurred when we&#13;
entertained the seniors of '04. The evening was ideal (for ducks)&#13;
&#13;
CORA LOCKTN,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ANNA GOODALL,&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
and the seniors came full force. We taught them a few new&#13;
athletic stunts and spent the evening so pleasantly that we&#13;
failed to hear the ten o'clock bell.&#13;
Our first social gathering of the present year took place on&#13;
Hallowe'en The Sioux chanced to have camped just next door&#13;
to us and half a dozen of their&#13;
big Injun" braves reinforced by a couple of squaws, boldly sallied forth and captured&#13;
one of our smallest girls. Our great admiration for their courage dates from that event&#13;
We never found it necessary to label ourselves by wearing&#13;
hideous caps, or baggage checks but have been recognized by&#13;
our dignity and wisdom. We claim the best chapel record of any&#13;
senior class in the history of M. C .. and we, also, claim to have&#13;
smashed some basketball records. We have of late acquired&#13;
the front seat habit so thoroughly that no one need be surprised&#13;
to see us on the front seats in class, or even in church. And&#13;
that reminds me. one of our nccomplishments is our ability to&#13;
sing hymn No. 136 without a book.&#13;
As to the individuals who compose our number, they are of&#13;
various kinds Two are married men and their voyage on the sea&#13;
of matrimony has seemed so prosperous that, according to rumors, other members are preparing to set sail.&#13;
Many of our members have enviable records down where&#13;
the grades are kept; some are talented musicians and elocutionists; some have been prominent in debate and oratory; and have&#13;
won laurels on the athletic field. One has some novel ideas on&#13;
the subject of caps and gowns. One has finished his work and&#13;
is already a High school principal. Some are tall, though many&#13;
are short. Some will be preachers, some lawyers, some teachers.&#13;
But in spite of our differences. we have enjoyed the time&#13;
spent together and it is not without regret that we look forward&#13;
to graduation, for it means that we must part from each other&#13;
and from old M. C. May we always be a credit to our class and&#13;
to our college.&#13;
"heap&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
Heilman&#13;
&#13;
Wishard&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Towner&#13;
&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Collins&#13;
Woodford&#13;
&#13;
Scheel&#13;
&#13;
Mekkleson&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Spratt&#13;
&#13;
Gantt&#13;
Frear&#13;
&#13;
Fred endoll&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Matthews&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
Taylor&#13;
Cole&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
Holli worth&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
Swem&#13;
&#13;
A Topic from Professor Carber's Note Book&#13;
Topic 560.&#13;
I. ELECTION AND CANDIDATES&#13;
&#13;
The Reign of '07.&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 14, 1903.&#13;
&#13;
b. FOREIGN&#13;
12. The return of the people.&#13;
1. To forget that '06 ever considered hima. Self appointed.&#13;
I 3· Former Minister Cain deserts and deself a worthy foe.&#13;
clares allegiance to Queen Olive.&#13;
b. Candidates.&#13;
2. To forget that he claimed to have buried&#13;
1. '04 hardly eligible because of old age.&#13;
14· The war with '08.&#13;
a hatchet, which must have been bor2. '05 lost support because of annual disa. PRINCtPAL BATTLES&#13;
rowed for funeral purposes.&#13;
sentions.&#13;
a. Corridor Heights. The enemy severe3. To declare war against the enemy.&#13;
3. '06 would have secured the crown if there&#13;
ly crippled .&#13;
had been no other candidates.&#13;
IV. EVENTS&#13;
b. Siege of Hay-Rack Fort. Many rebels&#13;
4. Faculty not considered.&#13;
fell, and Commander Mossman taken&#13;
I. The usurpation of the crown and the&#13;
5. '07 took it.&#13;
prisoner. Trium phal march under great&#13;
appointment of Prime Minister Cain,&#13;
II. CHARACTER&#13;
Panama arch.&#13;
September, 1903.&#13;
c. B;:,.ttle of Gridiron Plain. Shnrt truce.&#13;
1. Not many sided, but well rounded.&#13;
2. The pigeon flight fortold the glorious&#13;
2. Large head like that of a senior, except&#13;
future of '07.&#13;
d. Haskins Castle. Enemy routed. Commander Horner frigl·.•ened u n ti 1 he&#13;
that 1t contains gray matter.&#13;
3. The chicken flight fortold the decline&#13;
3. Herculean in strength, Napoleonic in&#13;
of 'o6.&#13;
imagined himself afflicted with many maladies, curable only by the Sophomore's&#13;
generalshir, Garverian in wit.&#13;
4 . The highway holdup of the '06 provision&#13;
Soothing Co's. Tonic.&#13;
4. One of the perhaps four faultless chartrain, and the triumph and feast that&#13;
e. Basket Ball Swamp. '08 left in the&#13;
acters in history.&#13;
followed.&#13;
rushes.&#13;
III. POLICY&#13;
5. The National Leap Year Feast. Some&#13;
15. Assembly at Lehman Hall to bid farewell&#13;
a. DOMESTIC&#13;
went up by two's, some by three's, and&#13;
to Lord Trimple and ladies Rorem and&#13;
1. To preserve the power of the House of&#13;
some came down a ladder.&#13;
Cable, who departed to civilize the people&#13;
Lords, there being no Commons.&#13;
6. Pilgrimage to the Floyd Shrine. On the&#13;
of distant countries.&#13;
2. To assemble often.&#13;
return, '05 having revolted and stationed&#13;
15. The check of Morgan's Raid and the&#13;
3. Tobe entirelyindependentof all precedents&#13;
his black personage across the highway,&#13;
persecution of the Morganites.&#13;
and traditions, especially deeming the&#13;
was soon reduced to a red spot.&#13;
pract ices of '06 barbarous and antiquated&#13;
7. The inte rment of the aboriginal '06.&#13;
V. RESULTS&#13;
8. Resignation of Prime Minister Cain, and&#13;
4. To preserve patriotism.&#13;
As to what will be the final outcome of this&#13;
a. By yelling national yells and singing&#13;
appointment of his successor, Young.&#13;
heroic age of '07, present prophets cannot&#13;
national songs.&#13;
9. The message delivered by the Prime Minb. By feas ting often.&#13;
ister, before the na1ions assembled from&#13;
speak fast enough to fortell, future historians&#13;
will not live long enough to record, the&#13;
5. To make news.&#13;
the exalted heights of the gallery, in which&#13;
a. That the court reporters might create&#13;
he reco unted the noble deeds of his&#13;
English language will be unable to express,&#13;
and imagination will be powerless to picture.&#13;
a great sensation&#13;
during Minister Cain's term of office&#13;
b. That Morningside Hill might be known&#13;
ro. Pilgrimages of the people to their mother&#13;
The perioj has its stars in every avenue of&#13;
among Nations of the East, such as Chicnuntry.&#13;
progress. which will develop into moons and&#13;
cago, New York, London and Rome.&#13;
11. The Minister's trip to Waucoma where&#13;
suns in the universe. The warrior, debater,&#13;
histoiran, novelist, scientist, author, granger&#13;
6. To be suoreme over all the tribes of&#13;
negotiations were made that may lead to&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
a foreign alliance.&#13;
and chronic kicker are found among its heroes.&#13;
NOTE:- If there be any thoughts in the above topic that you cannot comprehend, consider yourself an '08 and act accordingly.&#13;
&#13;
Mark Antony Up-To-Date&#13;
&#13;
F&#13;
&#13;
RIENDS, students, freshmen, lend me your cup. I come to&#13;
have a picture taken of the Sophomore Basketball team&#13;
and to praise the sophomores. The evil that sophs do, lives&#13;
after them, while the good, if there be any, is oft interred with&#13;
their bones. So let it be with the Sophomores.&#13;
The noble Young has told you that Sophomores are ambitious, and, if it is so, it is a grievous fault and grievously have&#13;
they answered for it. Here, under leave of Young, and the rest,&#13;
for Young is an honorable man, so are all Sophomores all honorable men, I come to speak at their funeral. They were their&#13;
own friends, faithful and just to each other. Still. Young says,&#13;
they were ambitious, and is he not a strange-hearted man?&#13;
Hath not his true knave Adams rode many cows home in&#13;
Morningside, and e'en when he did fear that Bossie would bite&#13;
him, and right well, too, for do not all cows like cabbage-heads?&#13;
And did not this Adams seem ambitious'? You all did see that on&#13;
an autumn night the freshmen did twice mount him on a kingly&#13;
throne, which he as oft did ride. And this when fear was quaking in his heart, for was he not unused to railroads? And yet&#13;
he would forsooth have this refused. Was this ambition? Yet&#13;
all sophomores are ambitious. all are honorable men. I speak&#13;
not to disprove what they would say, but rather to correct and&#13;
render to you the truth.&#13;
You all did love this Heilman once, so did a lady friend of&#13;
his, and not without cause, for is he not a "pretty boy" with&#13;
blooming cheek? Still, one eve when he did press too close, she&#13;
bit him on the cheek. Why, then, do you not mourn for him?&#13;
What cause withholds your grief and tears'?&#13;
But a short time ago the word of a sophomore might have&#13;
stood against the world. But now, ah, me. he lies all in a heap&#13;
where the freshmen did put him on the football field. Did he&#13;
&#13;
not say 23 to 0, and was it so? Still he lies there and none so&#13;
poor to do him reverence. Oh! Students! If I were disposed&#13;
to stir your hearts and minds to mutiny and rage, I might but&#13;
tell you how one called Heilman did but bribe a junior prep&#13;
and by the hire and downfall of e'en so base a one as this, seek&#13;
to elevate himself. Still, Heilman is an honorable man, so are&#13;
they all, all honorable men.&#13;
Have patience, gentle friends. it is but meet and right that&#13;
you should know how sophomores love freshmen. And you are&#13;
not wood, not stones, but men, and I will tell you how many&#13;
times their ambitions led them to try to capture the freshman&#13;
president. And how, as oft, his force of will did prevail and he&#13;
was let to go.&#13;
Ah. me! but it is a sad tale. Well do you know this light&#13;
blue suit. Well clo I remember the first time Young clicl put it&#13;
on. He was in Clear Lake and still, kind friends, we heard&#13;
it. Look! see where Cupid ran his dagger through. See what a&#13;
rent the envious Love-Goel made, and as he plucked the steel&#13;
a way, lo, and a sophomore heart did follow it. Judge, oh, ye&#13;
gods how Young did love! And, so, was this not the kindest cut&#13;
of all? Ah, what a mighty fall there was, my classmen, when&#13;
the mighty Everhart (255 pounds) did meet and would have stopped a football-playing freshman. And did not Himmel (140&#13;
pouuds) make him sorely wish that he were e'en from the other&#13;
place? Look, you, how young Manning's pride was wounded.&#13;
Many are the scars which he received in that immortal fight.&#13;
But, good friends, sweet friends, let me not stir you up to&#13;
such a point of laughter and of mirth, for sophomores thought&#13;
these deeds were honorable. ·what private griefs they have I&#13;
know not. yet forsooth they need none-their share in truth&#13;
has been allotted to them in public.&#13;
'l'herefore, they will, no doubt, with reasons answer to you.&#13;
I come not to steal, to steal your hearts away, rather, as you&#13;
know full well, to beg your sympathies for them.&#13;
&#13;
Heap-Big-Whoopee&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Freshman-papoose-Cry-For-It-Magic-Cure-All&#13;
&#13;
Guaranteed to Cure&#13;
&#13;
LL INFANT complaints and other maladies, that the class&#13;
of 1908 is heir to. including •·crowing, croup, teething,&#13;
crabbidness, vacuous cerebrum, that "weary feeling," mental aberration, excessiye expulsion of incoherent syllables, chickenpox, mumps, measles, spasms, in fact, all varieties of Freshmanities."&#13;
&#13;
WHAT MASTER JACK HORNER OF MOTHER GOOSE FAME&#13;
SAYS OF HEAP-BIG-WHOOPEE-FRESHMAN-PAPOOSECRY-FOR-IT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL&#13;
"I am an itty-boy sometimes called 'The Fweshies' Fweak&#13;
Pwesident.' One day we Fweshies gone to town to get our pictures took. I had to take the class to the gallery, 'cause I is&#13;
Pwesident. My mama said I did look cute in my itty wed-flannel&#13;
blouse! But my eyes touldn't see stwaight and I touldn't find&#13;
Genelli's. The Doctors said I had Infantile Opthalmia vewy&#13;
bad. I went up to a great big machine on the corner and&#13;
sit down in front of a big thing wif a hole in it, like the itty&#13;
birdies come out of an' told the man, 'we wants our pictures&#13;
tooken;' but he says, 'This noey picture-shop, this John Zotues&#13;
peanut-stand.' But mama feel me on HEAP-BIG-WIIOOPEEFreshman-P&#13;
APOOSE-CRY-FOR-IT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL (Gee&#13;
it was good) an' I tan see fine, an' mama lets me go clear to 14th&#13;
and Pearl all by my lonesome. I tells yon it's fine stuff.&#13;
JACK HORNER.&#13;
RECOMMENDED BY AN EXPERT SEAMSTRESS AND MONOGRAM EMBROIDERER&#13;
I used to be weak and pusillanimous, but now I ain't, and it's&#13;
'cause I takes Heap-big-whoopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-itmagic-cure-all regular, without stoppin' every clay. You know&#13;
last winter, when us Fresbies went sleighridin', the man what&#13;
was drivin' told us all to get out at Cooper Schoolhouse 'cause&#13;
he thought there's where we went to school. So we got out,&#13;
'cause we knew the horses couldn't pull such a big people up the&#13;
Hill; an' then the horrid old drivin' man said 'git up,' and away&#13;
the horses went lickety-scoot. So we all had to walk home; and&#13;
my, it's just awful far. Most of the others got so tired they fell&#13;
&#13;
by the wayside. Blanche Johns just thought she never would&#13;
get home. But I, with the help of Harry Boy and Heap-bigw hoopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all, walked clear&#13;
home and stood on the front porch four hours without noticing&#13;
the effects.&#13;
ELSIE MAY WEARY&#13;
(but not if she takes HEAP-BIG-WHOOPEE-FRESHMANPAPOOSE-CRY-FOR-IT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL)&#13;
&#13;
FAMOUS COWBOY USES IT&#13;
IIEAP-BIG-WHOOPEE-FRESHMAN-PAPOOSE-CRY-FORIT-MAGIC-CURE-ALL is jim-dandy for the nerves. Last fall&#13;
the naughty Sophomores clot me and put me on a dweat big cow&#13;
and tied my footsies and my hands to-dedder&#13;
and made me wide&#13;
the horrid old thing and it tompletely broke down my tonstitution. which I 'sposed was iron. My poor itty body was all atwcrnblin' and a-shakin' and I was threatened with nervous&#13;
pwostwation. but Lonnie Jones pulled his bottle of Heap-bigwiloopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all out of his&#13;
potet and give me just one swallow. It braced me all up to stand&#13;
anything; so when the horricl, smart old sophomores took me over&#13;
banks and creeks and lots of other things wif my eyes blindfolded and tied me up to a gweat . big pillar at Florence's house,&#13;
all alone, I wasn't a bit afraid. No, sir! I just stood there tied&#13;
w·ith those big ropes and took it like a itty man; and it's all&#13;
'cause I took that one dose of Heap-big-whoopee-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all.&#13;
IKE WESCOTT.&#13;
These are only samples of the letters we receive daily from&#13;
grateful little pale-faces, who owe their lives to Heap-big-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magic-cure-all. Many of them have taken&#13;
treatment under learned doctors, have been at Campbell's Sanitarium and tried its sweat-baths, have tried different forms of&#13;
exercise, such as basketball, in fact, have experimented with all&#13;
sorts of remedies, without finding any relief, until, as a last resort. they have tried Heap-big-freshman-papoose-cry-for-it-magiccure-all, which is rapidly bringing them out of the darkness and&#13;
depths of despair into the sunlight of health and happiness.&#13;
SOPHOMORE SOOTHING SYRUP CO.,&#13;
Manufacturers and Distributor s.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Himmel&#13;
Prichard&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
Johns&#13;
&#13;
Babcock&#13;
Groom&#13;
Crow&#13;
&#13;
Hanna Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
Evans&#13;
&#13;
Wilson&#13;
&#13;
Bryan&#13;
Weary&#13;
Pierson&#13;
&#13;
Haskins&#13;
&#13;
Skinner&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Dickson&#13;
&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Watts&#13;
Faulk&#13;
&#13;
Eurer&#13;
&#13;
McDonald&#13;
&#13;
De Lay&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Malada&#13;
&#13;
Horner .Chamberlain Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
Hallam&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Briggle&#13;
&#13;
F RESHMAN&#13;
BY CLARE D.&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
ICE President&#13;
CAMPBELL, of the great M. Railway&#13;
system&#13;
was seated in his private office pondering over a&#13;
cipher telegram just received from the board of directors.&#13;
then in session in the east. The president cf the road was absent&#13;
on important business. and the cares of four great clivisions of&#13;
the system all devolved upon the head of the vice president, who&#13;
was a new man in the position, having come from one of the&#13;
great eastern systems. The telegram, which was causing him so&#13;
much anxiety and study, read as follows:&#13;
.June 13 1904.&#13;
VicePresidentCampbell: "It has been decided by the board of&#13;
directors that a new through service over your four divisions&#13;
must be estalblished not later than the miclclle of Sep tern ber.&#13;
Send orclers to your division superintendents to have everything&#13;
in readiness."&#13;
B. MITCHELL,&#13;
Chairman of Board.&#13;
&#13;
Nearly three months later. or on the 13th September, at&#13;
nine o'clock a. m .. the train for the new schedule backed into&#13;
the great terminal station. According to the orders, which the&#13;
yar,l crew had received from division Superintendent L. A. blue,&#13;
the train was composed of four new Pullmans. The Scientific,&#13;
The Classical, The Philosophical and The Special. These four&#13;
magnificent coaches were drawn by a locomotive of the most&#13;
mo•iern type, "Progress." Engineer Hartzell and fireman&#13;
Thompson composed the engine crew.&#13;
One by one the passengers purchased their tickets of Mr.&#13;
Search, the agent, and, after showing their ticket at the gate,&#13;
were allowed to pass and placed in their respectiYe cars for the&#13;
journey. It was a motley crowd that had gathered, some fresh&#13;
&#13;
HORNER&#13;
&#13;
from the farm with their little carpet bags, others from small&#13;
country villages, others who were High school graduates. A&#13;
few were from the immediate vicinity. One thing was noticeable&#13;
- there were-more young ladies than young men. the train, when&#13;
re ady to depart contained nearly half a hundred of these bright&#13;
yo ung people. some of whom were bound only for the first stop&#13;
on the division&#13;
Others for the division encl. Still others were&#13;
th ere who intended to cross the whole system.&#13;
At each stop. and particularly at each division end, some old&#13;
passengers leave the train and other new ones take their places .&#13;
some transfer from this to other systems, and passengers from&#13;
o1her roads will make connections. Others who have missed&#13;
former trains take this one. The train crew for the first division&#13;
consist of Conductor Mcssman, assisted by Brakeman Clark&#13;
aJ1d Flagman Skinner. At the end of the east divisom the engi ne crew w ere relieved from their duties by Engineer Smith&#13;
a11d Fireman Hallam. The train crew selected for this divisiov&#13;
comprised Conductcr Horner, Brakeman Dickson and Flagman&#13;
Jones&#13;
The last word receiYecl of the train comes direct from Train&#13;
Dispatcher Haynes· office and is to the effect that the train is&#13;
running "on time." this train has been given the right of way&#13;
and is superior in class to any other of the road.&#13;
From the Freshman diYision it will pass on to and over in&#13;
turn to the Sophomore, Junior and Senior divisions and land its&#13;
passengers "on time" at the final terminal station, "Success."&#13;
From here the passengers will wend their way to the business cares of life, and, with tl1e good start gained while traveling over the great M. division, will make their mark not only&#13;
on the history of the nation, but on the history of the world.&#13;
&#13;
Shaw&#13;
Day&#13;
Prescott&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Currier&#13;
Carkuff&#13;
Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Hulse&#13;
&#13;
Howlett&#13;
Gary&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Ro rem&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Reeder&#13;
&#13;
Chamberlain&#13;
Fry&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Crummer&#13;
&#13;
Yule&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Gruber&#13;
&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Brooks&#13;
Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy History&#13;
1.&#13;
HE JUNIOR class of nineteen five.&#13;
Of lads and Lassies which do thrive,&#13;
Was a good-looking&#13;
studious&#13;
class&#13;
But green, as green as fresh-spring grass&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
i\Iid&#13;
And&#13;
And&#13;
Just&#13;
&#13;
7.&#13;
T' e Middles. with their blue and buff,&#13;
&#13;
soon found their places quick enough,&#13;
1Vhile all the Seniors in surprise&#13;
Did from their Chapel seats not rise.&#13;
&#13;
But yet, not slowly did they crawl,&#13;
They plainly showed to one and all&#13;
And let the college know at once,&#13;
Each Junior Prep was not a dunce&#13;
&#13;
8.&#13;
But. when at last the scrap was o'er,&#13;
And all had risen from the floor,&#13;
'Twas plainly seen who'd won the day&#13;
And come out Yictors in the fray.&#13;
&#13;
3.&#13;
For one debater then had we,&#13;
An excellent one of high degree,&#13;
And last, not least, the star athlete,&#13;
1Vho won such honors in field-meet.&#13;
&#13;
9.&#13;
But. oh. I have not time to tell.&#13;
How all the Seniors lowly fell.&#13;
When next their colors they did wear&#13;
Which quickly from them we did tear.&#13;
&#13;
4.&#13;
From Juniors to the middle class,&#13;
Both large and small a ll soon did pass,&#13;
And then what jolly times had we&#13;
For then to scrap each one was free.&#13;
&#13;
10.&#13;
Or when. at last. all scraps were o'er.&#13;
And we all met at Irwin's door,&#13;
And a ll engaged in friendly chat&#13;
And middle by a Senior sat.&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
And&#13;
The&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
5.&#13;
morn 'twas noised thro' all the hall&#13;
reached the l\Iiddles one and all,&#13;
Seniors would their colors wear&#13;
Middles touch 'em not one dare.&#13;
&#13;
6.&#13;
But last, not least, it was not done.&#13;
Yet, all did have their share of fun,&#13;
The Middles met and that's enough.&#13;
They chose their colors blue and buff.&#13;
&#13;
AL VAH L. MILLER, President.&#13;
&#13;
Motto, "Hop to it."&#13;
&#13;
13.&#13;
wind and rain they climbed up high&#13;
every obstacle did defy,&#13;
hung our colors in the breeze,&#13;
fine and dandy, if you please.&#13;
&#13;
14.&#13;
And there our colors hung all day,&#13;
While all the Middles sadly Jay&#13;
And watched them swinging upon high&#13;
But no one of them dared go nigh.&#13;
&#13;
15.&#13;
The l\Iiddles copied after us,&#13;
And with such a terrible fuss,&#13;
Hung colors high upon the tower,&#13;
Which took, indeed, their utmost power.&#13;
16.&#13;
When we awoke next morn, ha! ha!&#13;
And on the tower their colors saw.&#13;
They quickly vanished out of sight,&#13;
The Middles fled in terrible fright.&#13;
17.&#13;
Next. we'll go to the football game&#13;
Where all the Seniors won some fame&#13;
And dravely made a score of five,&#13;
And victory of the Middles deprived.&#13;
&#13;
11.&#13;
But. now, oh, Senior preps are we,&#13;
And a better class you ne'er did see,&#13;
For the Senior class of 1905&#13;
Can Jet you know they are alive&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
And&#13;
For&#13;
.You&#13;
&#13;
12.&#13;
.Just listen and I will relate&#13;
how Senior boys once baffling fate&#13;
Did climb upon the old North Hall&#13;
and run the risk of a down ward fall.&#13;
&#13;
and so with work and study we'll thrive,&#13;
Until the Spring of '05,&#13;
And With high honors graduate&#13;
And wander on to know our fate.&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE DAY, Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Hi-ki-zip&#13;
&#13;
Zis boom ba&#13;
&#13;
Senior Preps. Wah.&#13;
&#13;
18.&#13;
now basketball games we'll play&#13;
last, not least. will win the day&#13;
with our motto. "Hop to it,"&#13;
get a score, well I guess nit.&#13;
&#13;
19.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN R. DAY, Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Blue and Buff.&#13;
&#13;
ANTLOIPATION&#13;
&#13;
EVAPORATION&#13;
&#13;
Brigg le&#13;
Stulken&#13;
Scheel&#13;
Robbins&#13;
&#13;
Hanna&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Van Dyke&#13;
&#13;
Root&#13;
&#13;
Wunn&#13;
Minkler&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
&#13;
Wishare&#13;
&#13;
Mekkleson&#13;
Debenham&#13;
&#13;
Horner&#13;
&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Harding&#13;
&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
&#13;
Brower&#13;
&#13;
Taylor&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
BY A PHILO&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
IT DOWN, my boy! Sit down ! Busy? Oh, we're never idle,&#13;
you know. Something I can do for you? Oh, that's it.&#13;
Well, let's see. Are you real sure you want to go into the&#13;
wholesale grocery business now? How old are you jsut fin&#13;
ished High school haven't you? Now take an old man's advice and go through college first. Takes time'! Oh, yes, of&#13;
course, it takes some time and I know that just now it seems&#13;
to you, as if getting into business was the essential thing, but&#13;
you've time enough for that, after you have prepared yourself&#13;
as far as possilJle in getting a general education. You mustn't&#13;
think a college education prepares one only for a preacher, or a&#13;
lawyer&#13;
You haven't been there and don't know about the&#13;
things that can be learned outside of books, which are really&#13;
of more practical value to one, after he leaves the college halls.&#13;
than book knowledge. The ability to judge men and to associate&#13;
with men and women with an easy manner is a necessary attainment for a business man that few possess and which is opbtained&#13;
in the easiest manner by taking a college course. There your&#13;
very surroundings bring you in touch with other people in such&#13;
a manner as to put you upon your own rPsources and bring out&#13;
all there is in you.&#13;
How are you fixed for time? anything special on hand'? Well,&#13;
I thought, since I have given you a little sermon on college life,&#13;
you might be interested in hearing some of my recollections of&#13;
my college course. It was away back in the beginning of this&#13;
centur.· that I attended i\Iorningsicle College. Well do I re&#13;
member the football and lJaseball games, the class scraps, the&#13;
college pranks, the class sleigh rides, and, above all, my society&#13;
experiences. I tell you the society is the real practical educator&#13;
after all. I was a member of what I thought was the best so--&#13;
&#13;
ciety in school. the Philomathean. One term especially do I&#13;
remember. It was the winter term of my senior year, '05. I can&#13;
see, as though yesterday. the debates, with which our society&#13;
was always much concernetL We had a system of s11ver medal&#13;
contests running throughout the year.&#13;
Our friend, the&#13;
corporation lawyer, across the street, the pastor of the&#13;
Methodist church on the hill, the judge of this clistrict, the editor of our daily paper. the secretary of the Y. M. C. A. and several other men here in town received their first practical training in those debates. Although a literary society, in which&#13;
much literary work of all kinds was done, yet, we didn't forget&#13;
the social side of college life. Our banquets, receptions and outings were events looked forward to by us boys with great interest. many is the time that we used to lay aside our books&#13;
when lessons became an intolerable bore and when our minds&#13;
seemed bewildered in the maze of learning and would forget all&#13;
in a few hours of jollity and recreation, to go back to our books&#13;
with new vim and enjoyment. Oh, I tell you, those were the clays&#13;
that we really lived, though we didn't realize it at the time.&#13;
Then, too, we aimed as a society to stand for a clean and&#13;
honest manhood, well rounded out in every particular, that went&#13;
to make a man, a man in truth.&#13;
,&#13;
I'll declare, here I am rattling along about my school days&#13;
to you and never noticing what time it is getting to be. Well,&#13;
what do you think about college now? You will never make a&#13;
wiser move and, if you decide to go to Morningside, look up the&#13;
Philos. Although there are other societies in the school that&#13;
are just as good, perhaps, yet, there is none that I can ever&#13;
think so much of.&#13;
Now, my boy, think it over carefully and decide for the right&#13;
and you will never regret it; then after finishing your college&#13;
course, if you still wish to learn the business, come to me and I&#13;
will see what I can clo for you.&#13;
&#13;
Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Lear&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
Pierson&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Gary&#13;
&#13;
Frear&#13;
Williams&#13;
&#13;
Spratt&#13;
Skinner&#13;
&#13;
Flinn&#13;
Woodford&#13;
&#13;
McDonald&#13;
Johns&#13;
&#13;
Cole&#13;
&#13;
Matthews&#13;
Bryan&#13;
&#13;
Kling&#13;
Bowker&#13;
&#13;
Frear&#13;
Erskine&#13;
Lock in&#13;
&#13;
Correll&#13;
Hallam&#13;
&#13;
Fry&#13;
&#13;
Peirce&#13;
Erskine&#13;
Henry&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
In the atheneum literary society&#13;
&#13;
Once more, dear friend, to us thy past unveil,&#13;
And may we not forget the days gone by&#13;
Nor, as we look upon thee, ever fail&#13;
To cherish memories that within it lie.&#13;
Well may we bless the day when thou wert born,&#13;
And those who reared thee in thy early days&#13;
And taught thee how thou mightest well adorn&#13;
The lives of maidens in a thousand ways.&#13;
I seem to see them now who fostered thee,&#13;
Oh! how they loved thee, how they hoped for thee,&#13;
Instilled within thee what would surely be&#13;
A power for good in thy maturity.&#13;
Thou art not very old, but twelve at most,&#13;
Yet seemest as strong as one of greater years,&#13;
Fit champion thou to lead a youthful host,&#13;
For thy success we scarce could harbor fears.&#13;
Thou hast about thee a most helpful air,&#13;
And noble work to thee is given here&#13;
To touch and charm those lives within thy care&#13;
With lofty thoughts and gems of light most dear.&#13;
Methinks there are within each human breast&#13;
God-given powers, that for Him shall be used&#13;
&#13;
And rightly trained, that they attain their bestThat not one single gift should be abused.&#13;
Thou canst with thy discerning power reveal&#13;
The dormant gifts, that hid, are lying still&#13;
And let thy influence in upon them steal&#13;
And mould and fashion them as thou shalt will.&#13;
Some choicest spirits proudly bear thy name&#13;
Whom thou hast touched and stirred to richer life;&#13;
Who, now, abroad are spreading for thy fame&#13;
As they engage in the pursuits of life.&#13;
Then there are many still within thy fold&#13;
whom thou dost watch with tender, anxious care,&#13;
And as thou seest those secret powers unfold&#13;
Thou mayest be proud that they thy impress bear.&#13;
In time to come thy memory they will bless&#13;
Because thou hast been unto them a friend,&#13;
And aided them in reaching glad successU pon their love thou ever canst depend.&#13;
Yes, thou hast had a very worthy past&#13;
And one that we would earnestly commend,&#13;
And we shalt covet for thee to the last&#13;
That true success thy way shall e'er attend.&#13;
&#13;
Howard&#13;
&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Clark&#13;
Marsh&#13;
&#13;
Chamberlain&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Davidson&#13;
&#13;
McDowell&#13;
&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
&#13;
Wilson&#13;
Haskins&#13;
&#13;
Hart&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Miller&#13;
&#13;
Faulk&#13;
&#13;
Ellerbroek&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Weary&#13;
&#13;
Swem&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
De Lay&#13;
&#13;
Cook&#13;
&#13;
Dickson&#13;
Towner&#13;
&#13;
Palmer&#13;
&#13;
Watts&#13;
Seaver&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
Eurer&#13;
&#13;
Killian&#13;
Brown&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Crossan&#13;
Thompson&#13;
&#13;
'O&#13;
&#13;
BY FLORENCE R. DAVIDSON,&#13;
&#13;
'05&#13;
&#13;
H, HELLO. Gertrude. I am so glad to see you Yes, I&#13;
just reached home this morning. fun?&#13;
I should say&#13;
so! But I hope you are not insinuating that that is all&#13;
I went to college for. I tell you, Gertrude. you ought to go to&#13;
Morningside. There is nothing like college Ii. e. It is not only t 1e&#13;
education you get. lmt a touch of life that you get nowhere&#13;
else but in college. Come. go back with me next year won't&#13;
you'?''&#13;
"but, genevieve you know how l hate to study."&#13;
"But it is such fun to study, where everyone else is doing&#13;
the same thing. Then there are midnigl1t spreads, class parties,'&#13;
sleigh-rides, receptions and above all. 'society doings.' I would&#13;
not ta ke anything in the world for the friendships I have&#13;
formed in my society."&#13;
"what society did you belong to ·1 Do tell me about it."&#13;
"well, there are four collegiate societies and four academy&#13;
societies. The third tloor of the main hall is used for society&#13;
halls. When we ha ve our big receptions, we can throw them&#13;
all open into each other, which makes the finest place for receptions you ever saw. The societies are for literary and social&#13;
purposes. They give splendid open door literary programs e,·ery&#13;
two weeks, and I tell you it is just splendid practice to go on the&#13;
program before an audience; there is where you would shine,&#13;
Gertrude, with your literary talent. Then we have closed door&#13;
programs every other week, where we get splendid preliminary&#13;
drill. We always have the closed door programs early and then&#13;
have such a jolly time afterwards.''&#13;
"But what society did you belong to, Genevieve? Tell me&#13;
about the girls.''&#13;
"I belonged to the Zetaletheans. Morningside college has the&#13;
finest girls I ever met anywhere, but I will tell you all about the&#13;
Zets, because I know them best.&#13;
&#13;
"The president of the society in the fall term was a tall,&#13;
slender. light complexioned girl with such a sweet face. Before&#13;
the year was over, however, that pretty face grew stern and a&#13;
line came between the brows. all caused by a naughty first-year&#13;
German class, who took occasion, when the German professor&#13;
was suddenly called home, to test the superior wisdom of the&#13;
senior by asking her questions that would have stunned Solomon,&#13;
(bad he known German). But, of course, being a senior, she&#13;
was equal to the occasion. Then there is a little Brown maiden&#13;
who is a walking Greek and Latin dictionary and such a favorite. There is the little 'giant, who I know you would like. eevry&#13;
one does. She is a learned scientist and a versatile Cook. We boast&#13;
of two Fair maidens, one of whom will never lose her youth, the&#13;
other. who will some day be no longer fair, but change her complexion. One is a living illustration of the adage, 'Silence is&#13;
golden,' and is, therefore, much admired by masculine minds.&#13;
(men, poor things, want to do all the talking themselves)."&#13;
''There is the dark-haired, gentle-voicecl maiden, sweet -Elizabeth, a junior.&#13;
"I didn't tell you all the seniors. One petite young woman is&#13;
very practical and is making a study of domestic chemistry.&#13;
'Tis whispered that it will be put into practical use, ere long.&#13;
The seniors, also, boast another scientist, who is sad and worried&#13;
because of the antics of the Zoology laboratory victims. And&#13;
last, is the small maiden who shows no fear of Morgan, the&#13;
Raider.&#13;
"Then such a , host of naughty freshmen and retaliating&#13;
sophomores. So many of them that I haven't time to name them&#13;
all. But they are as dear as they can be and I know you would&#13;
love them. every one. Gertrude. Come and go back with me,&#13;
please."&#13;
"if father will let me, I shall certainly go. I should love to&#13;
know those girls and I am crazy to see your college."&#13;
"Let's walk down to the river and I will tell you what fun&#13;
our class had getting up the Annual."&#13;
And the two girls, arm in arm, sauntered down to the river&#13;
to talk over dear old college days.&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
Heilman&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Groom&#13;
Everhart&#13;
&#13;
Calkins&#13;
&#13;
Kindig&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
Mason&#13;
&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Evans&#13;
Squires&#13;
&#13;
Davis&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Jones&#13;
Clary&#13;
&#13;
Squires&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
Patterson&#13;
Morgan&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Manning&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
The Othonian Literary Soriety&#13;
Motto :&#13;
&#13;
Color :&#13;
&#13;
"Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in R e."&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple.&#13;
&#13;
Yells&#13;
One-a-zip-a&#13;
Two-a-zip-a&#13;
Three-a-zip-a-zo!&#13;
Ripple, tipple, roly, poly, ki-o-toWhang-a-doodle!&#13;
Hity-tity!&#13;
Whang-a-doodle-whang!&#13;
Otho! Otho! Boomerang! Bang!&#13;
&#13;
Zip, ki, yah!&#13;
Zip, ki, yah!&#13;
Otho! Otho!&#13;
Otho- ni - ah!&#13;
&#13;
History&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
ORNINGSIDE College is like a modern mann&#13;
facturing plant in which every nsable fragment of&#13;
the raw material is worked over into a :finished product&#13;
of the highest possible character. In this process every&#13;
fibre of man's nature is taken into consideration. If the&#13;
means best suited for his complete development are not&#13;
at hand, they are secured for his use.&#13;
Perhaps one of the most potent factors in this educational plant is the literary societies. It is with the bes t&#13;
of good feeling toward onr fellow operators that we take&#13;
this opportunity of calling your attention to th e origin and&#13;
purpose of the Othonian Literary Society.&#13;
On a quiet autumn evening in J 891,fourteen men, zealous to be "Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in Re" met and organized the Othonian ] iterary Society. "Desiring for&#13;
themselves the highest intellectual, 111or al and social culture, and improvement in composition&#13;
oratory, debate&#13;
and parliamentary usage," these men, without the gn ide&#13;
&#13;
I though t I heard my grandmother say&#13;
The Othos gave th ei r yell todayWith a vevo! with a vivo!&#13;
With a vevo! vivo! vum!&#13;
For its just so plain that we can show&#13;
The ones that get there are Othos;&#13;
With a ring-tail!&#13;
With a rat-tail!&#13;
With a ring-tail! rat-tail! bang!&#13;
&#13;
of a precedent, laun ched an organization ·which has ground&#13;
011 t scores of Othos fitted 1.o meet the world as it is.&#13;
Yet, Othos are but men, and, to know us as we are,&#13;
we would wish to have you meet us in our business sessions. As one Otho expressed it, "The greatest thing in&#13;
my life has been the influence of the Othonian Literary&#13;
Society. I have to think qnicker, reach definite conclusions faster, and do things that count for time and eternity, whether I choose to or not. That society is the best&#13;
means of individual development of which I know."&#13;
Yes, Othos are men. Men in process. Ever men.&#13;
Only he who studies lrn rnan nature can comprehend the&#13;
depth of Othonian brotherhood. A brotherhood pure, yet&#13;
unrelenting and steadfast. A brotherhood seeking ever&#13;
the best, and ceasing only when there is no response to&#13;
the best in man.&#13;
H ave the Othos a hom e? Why, yes, the northeast room&#13;
on the third floor of main hall.&#13;
Have the Othos those who share their home? Why,&#13;
yes, the Zets, as loyal a bnnch of Unclc Sam's beauties as&#13;
ever graced American homes.&#13;
&#13;
BLACKWELL- "Say, George, if you don't come up again&#13;
may I have the boat?"&#13;
&#13;
POST OBITUM&#13;
&#13;
Himmel&#13;
Gruber&#13;
Patterson&#13;
&#13;
Hamilton&#13;
Reeder&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
Hind&#13;
Hamren&#13;
&#13;
Klipple&#13;
Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Buck&#13;
Keller&#13;
&#13;
Hind&#13;
De Griselles&#13;
&#13;
Vermilyea&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Winterstein&#13;
Hicks&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Eckerson&#13;
Carson&#13;
&#13;
Chapman&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye Literary Soriety&#13;
&#13;
The Hawkeye Literary Society, having for its emblem&#13;
the outline of the state for which it is named, was organized in the fall term of 1899. The first year we had&#13;
no regular place of meeting, but in the fall term of 1900,&#13;
we located in the northwest corner hall on the third floor&#13;
of the main college building. Since then, with the help&#13;
of our sister society, the Crescents, who occupy the hall&#13;
with us, we have spent over five hundred dollars furnishing and beautifying our hall.&#13;
Every member in the Hawkeye Literary Society is&#13;
given a thorough discipline in parliamentary law, rules of&#13;
order, and is first drilled on the closed door program, before he is given a place on the public program. Many of&#13;
our members have distinguished themselves in debate on&#13;
those open door programs&#13;
From the very first the Hawkeye Literary Society has&#13;
placed special emphasis on debate, and in accordance with&#13;
this spirit, the Hawkeyes effected the establishment of an&#13;
Inter-Society Debating league with the Adelphian Literary Society in the fall term of 1902, and have held a&#13;
-debate each year since. The Hawkeyes won two of the&#13;
debates. As three judges act at each debate, nine judges&#13;
have decided the rank of the two co11testants, and the&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeyes have recived&#13;
the decision of seven of the&#13;
judges.&#13;
In order to equip our men for these contests in the&#13;
future we have planned a series of debates to end with a&#13;
silver medal contest. The four teams are hard at work&#13;
on their subjects, and each team is sure of success.&#13;
Another important phase of the society work this year&#13;
has been the organization of an orchestra among our members. The orchestra has given two public recitals, which&#13;
have been received with enthusiasm by a hrge and appreciative audience.&#13;
Now, if, rerchance, when wandering far or near you&#13;
should see upon the lapel of a man's coat or at the throat&#13;
of one of the fair sex an emblem in the shape of the State&#13;
of Iowa, remember, it is the emblem of the Hawkeye Literary Society; furthermore, do not be surprised, if, when&#13;
quietly poring over your lesson, you are aroused by something like this :&#13;
Ki ! ki ! haw! ki ! mv !&#13;
Whee! zip! boom! ba zo !&#13;
Rah , rah ! I ! 0 ! wal1 !&#13;
W a ho hi and a bazoo boom!&#13;
Animus! animus! dictus sum!&#13;
Haw! haw! haw ! ki ! ki ! ki !&#13;
Haw ! ki ! haw ! ki !&#13;
Rah! rah! rah!&#13;
&#13;
Stickney&#13;
Joseph&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Yule&#13;
&#13;
Lukes&#13;
Chamberlain&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Wright&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Crum mer&#13;
Pierson&#13;
&#13;
Dow&#13;
&#13;
Bowers&#13;
&#13;
Armour&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Walker&#13;
&#13;
Trenary&#13;
Snell&#13;
&#13;
Molen&#13;
Bender&#13;
&#13;
Stivers&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Joseph&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
BY THE CREW&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
ZILLA DENO&#13;
EFFA YULE&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"We succeed by doing."&#13;
&#13;
Boom-a-linger bow,&#13;
Ching-a-linger chee,&#13;
Ta la ku wah&#13;
Ta la ku wee&#13;
Cresent, Cresent, Whee!&#13;
&#13;
Over four years ago a boat was designed in the halls&#13;
of Morningside. Its object was fixed; its intention definite. It was constructed by the girls of that place, with&#13;
great care, for it must be strong, rugged and durable, a&#13;
bark of character designed to plow through surging tides&#13;
and combat swirling billows. Its oars were the ambitions&#13;
and ideals of life; these were to bear it along. The boat&#13;
was christened "The Crescent" and the launching took&#13;
place November 2, 1901. The course chosen was down&#13;
the tributary Preparation out onto the river Success.&#13;
When they set forth, fifteen girls composed the crew.&#13;
Sometimes threatening clouds would appear upon the horizon, storms would come and the boat was in danger of being engulfed by the waves ; sometimes they ran aground&#13;
upon the shoals of Disconragemcnt or struck rocks in the&#13;
channels of Depression. But the rowers were determined&#13;
and by the loyalty and unionism of the crew these diffi-&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
Light Green and White.&#13;
&#13;
cdti es were encom1tcred and conquered, the tides of Circ11:11stance met and breasted. But more often the sky was&#13;
clear and the waters untronbled.&#13;
This cr ew was enconraged by and gave enconragern cn t to another crew, as th ey jonrneyed de by side, both&#13;
bound for th e same port. Oftentimes these two crews disembarked on the shore to welcome new ones, who wished&#13;
to join them, or for spreads and fudgr-parties, or in order&#13;
to celebrate the victories which the Hawkeyes won in the&#13;
races with the Adelphians, such as the noted rowing match&#13;
in the fall of '04-. One evening each week was set aside&#13;
for programs, which they enjoyed giving, sometimes&#13;
among themselves, sometimes to their friends.&#13;
Now we see this boat as it has reached port 1905. The&#13;
crew is in better condition than before and the flag, fluttering in splendor, that all may see, is still unfurled, under which the crew row on to victory and success.&#13;
&#13;
Mahood&#13;
Gibson&#13;
&#13;
Hammond&#13;
Depew&#13;
&#13;
Klipple&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Lehman&#13;
&#13;
Romans&#13;
&#13;
Lamoreaux&#13;
Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
McCrory&#13;
&#13;
Budlong&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Finch&#13;
Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
Gleason&#13;
Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Griggs&#13;
Currier&#13;
&#13;
Wood&#13;
&#13;
Gooch&#13;
&#13;
Platts&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
Ankeny&#13;
&#13;
Winterstein&#13;
Fry&#13;
&#13;
Felber&#13;
Janes&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
McDougall&#13;
Boals&#13;
&#13;
Kline&#13;
&#13;
IDA L EWIS,&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
&#13;
Motto, "To obtain the Aesthetic."&#13;
&#13;
Nina&#13;
&#13;
Color.&#13;
&#13;
The Aesthesian&#13;
History&#13;
BY'MABLE GIBSON&#13;
&#13;
It was commencement at Morningside in 1955. The&#13;
Lirds were singing in the leafy branches, the :flowers were&#13;
nodding in the grass, and even the old hills seemed to&#13;
smile in welcome to those whom they had known so inti·&#13;
mately long ago.&#13;
In the southwest corner, on the top-most floor of an ivy&#13;
grown building, a group of girls were waiting in a luxuriously furnished hall. Their attitudes showed them to&#13;
be in a state of expectancy. "0, girls! we have her!"&#13;
called a musical voice from the stairway.&#13;
The doors of the hall were thrown open, and as a bent&#13;
figure tottered down the aisle formed by the girls, the old&#13;
yell,&#13;
"Hip-a-Ka Boom! Hip-a-Ka Bide!&#13;
Aesthesian girls of Morningside!&#13;
'E Pluribus Unum,' well, I guess!&#13;
We're the Aesthesians, Yes! Yes! Yes!"&#13;
&#13;
rang forth with the same fervor that it had in years gone&#13;
by.&#13;
As the girls placed her in the seat of honor, silence fell&#13;
over the group, and they seated themselves around her,&#13;
their last charter member.&#13;
"And, now for the story of the old Aesthesians," said&#13;
one of the girls.&#13;
&#13;
White.&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN,&#13;
&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
Emblem The Olive Leaf.&#13;
&#13;
The old lady smiled and began her story :&#13;
"It was in this very hall fifty-three years ago, that&#13;
nineteen of usorganized the Aesthesian Literary Society.&#13;
We realized to some extent the responsibility we were&#13;
taking upon ourselves, and sought to lay her foundations&#13;
deep and broad. We chose as our emblem the olive leaf,&#13;
the symbol of peace, as our motto, 'To Obtain the Aesthetic!'&#13;
"Our membership rapidly grew until we numbered&#13;
thirty-six at the end of the year. We came often before&#13;
the public on Saturday evening with a program upon&#13;
which every participant had put her best efforts. We had&#13;
also what we called 'closed doors,' to which none but the&#13;
members were present.&#13;
"However, the literary side was not the only one we&#13;
sought to cultivate. The Aesthesians spent many happy&#13;
hours together, when all cares of the past and future were&#13;
forgotten.&#13;
"Then there were times when the deeper desires of&#13;
our nature rose within us and we caught glimpses of the&#13;
great meaning of our motto, and resolved to press onward&#13;
until we should reach our goal.&#13;
"Now, girls, I am glad you have kept up our old&#13;
spirit and I am sure you will be a credit to the dear old&#13;
society, and the school of which you are a part."&#13;
"We will try," chorused the girls, each resolving to be&#13;
faithful to the trust given her.&#13;
&#13;
Held&#13;
Sauer&#13;
Hackett&#13;
Fulkrod&#13;
Pruden&#13;
Ralston&#13;
Hulse&#13;
Waterman&#13;
Thornton&#13;
Stein&#13;
Johnston&#13;
Brooks&#13;
Eveleth&#13;
Brandon Brower&#13;
Miller&#13;
Eggleston Bridenbaugh&#13;
Budlong&#13;
Mason&#13;
Yule&#13;
Gary&#13;
Eurer&#13;
Sloan&#13;
McDougall Spencer&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Fry&#13;
Faey&#13;
Horton&#13;
Ro rem&#13;
Van Buskirk&#13;
Blood&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Shaw&#13;
Barrick&#13;
Peters&#13;
Beebe&#13;
Smylie&#13;
Hackett&#13;
Bruce&#13;
Carkuff&#13;
Howarth&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian Literary Society&#13;
Motto&#13;
Cape Diem.&#13;
The youngest literary society in :Morningside college&#13;
known as the "AJelphian," was organized November 13,&#13;
1901. Up to this time there was bnt one society of academic standing for men.&#13;
A small band of enterprising students saw the importance of forming another organization, and accordingly&#13;
met for this purpose. A picture now graces their hall&#13;
showing nineteen charter members. The motto which was&#13;
adopted was "Cape Diem." The struggle of her early existence is known by comparatively few, but they ever kept&#13;
before them the principles they chose, thus grasping every&#13;
opportunity. They battled their way to the front with&#13;
courage and confidence, surmounted all obstacles, and have&#13;
gained recognition as one of the leading societies.&#13;
In the beginning of the second year they challenged&#13;
their rivals, the IIawkeyes, to debate. This resulted in&#13;
the drawing up of a compact, which called for a debate&#13;
to be held annually between the two societies. Thus far&#13;
three debates have been held, in '02 won by the Hawkeyes,&#13;
in '03 by the Adelphian and in '04 the decision of the&#13;
judges favored the Ilawkeyes. These seeming defeats&#13;
have by no means disheartened the Adelphians and they&#13;
aim to have all their members in constant preparation by&#13;
practice in numerous closed and open door programs. They&#13;
may well be proud of their literary attainments for their&#13;
programs show diligent work and careful preparation,&#13;
which is further evidenced by the large attendance at their&#13;
open door programs.&#13;
Their prime motives are to promote literary and so-&#13;
&#13;
Color,&#13;
&#13;
Cherise.&#13;
&#13;
cial culture, to acquaint their members with the usage and&#13;
practice of parliamentary law, and to appeal to the religious and moral side of life, thus developing all that is highest a.n d best in a man.&#13;
The society has had a remarkable development. They&#13;
have at present a membership of fifty. with increasing&#13;
numbers the demands correspondingly increased and by&#13;
constantly adding to the already pleasant hall, they have&#13;
succeeded in making it one of the most attractive. During&#13;
the past year they have added· to the appearance very materially by the purchase of an elegant Vose piano· chairs,&#13;
,&#13;
table and other fixtures, making it a place where the boys&#13;
love to meet.&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
afternoon is known to all as the time&#13;
when important transactions and grave questions are&#13;
probed into, seasoned occasionally by a little wit and&#13;
humor. It is with quivering lip and trembling limb, that&#13;
the new members arise for the first time to address the&#13;
chair. But, it is also of interest to observe how that from&#13;
week to week the voice becomes rounded until i t rings out&#13;
in a clear, positive tone, with no uncertain sonnd.&#13;
This is also the honr, when, led by the hand they&#13;
know not where, amid fear and careful goings, the new&#13;
members take upon themselves the vows of the society,&#13;
after which sharp tones can be heard ringing through the&#13;
corridors:&#13;
Wah hoo wah, ta ra boom&#13;
Re rah zip, richety boom&#13;
Ripety ripety , ripety ride&#13;
We're the Adelphians of Morningside.&#13;
(Committee.)&#13;
&#13;
HAMILTON&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
Championship Debate Inter-Academic&#13;
&#13;
League&#13;
&#13;
Morningside bs. Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Bs. Grinnell&#13;
&#13;
MORN[NGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
&#13;
MORNlNGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
Alvah L. Miller&#13;
Walter H. Johnson&#13;
Harry S . Hamilton&#13;
&#13;
Harry S. Hamiltcn&#13;
&#13;
Walter H. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Alvah L. Miller&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
That Immigration into the United States should be&#13;
restricted to persons who can read and write the United States Constitution in some language.&#13;
RESOLVED,&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION&#13;
RESOLVED, That the History of Trades-Unionism in the United&#13;
States for the past twenty years shows a general tendency detrimental&#13;
to the best interests of the country.&#13;
&#13;
Decision was given to Morningside by default.&#13;
&#13;
CONDITION ON THIS QUESTION&#13;
&#13;
Those dependent upon Immigrants are not considered in this&#13;
question.&#13;
This contest will occur at Grinnell, Iowa, May 20, 1905.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Meyer&#13;
Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
Hargrave&#13;
Bryan&#13;
&#13;
Keller&#13;
Hart&#13;
&#13;
Peck&#13;
&#13;
Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
T he Conservatory&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
conservatory&#13;
offers to its students a thorough&#13;
course in music and its aim is to teach the art in the truest&#13;
and best sense of the word. Its instructors have enjoyed&#13;
the advantages offered by the best home and foreign schools and&#13;
are fully equipped for 11·ork a long their special lines of teaching.&#13;
Courses are offered in the following branches : Piano. voice&#13;
culture, violin, harmony, counterpoint and musical history.&#13;
The theoretical studies (harmony and counterpoint) and&#13;
musical history require three years in preparation and are requirecl of all candidates for graduation from the conservatory&#13;
The other courses are elective, the completion of which depends&#13;
largely upon the previous attainments and the ability of the&#13;
student. Usually four or five years is required for the completion of the prescribed cou rse.&#13;
In connection with the regular conservatory curriculum,&#13;
there are several organizations under the supervision of the&#13;
conservatory which furnish to the student valuable practice in&#13;
ensemble singing and playing. The Choral Union is composed&#13;
of about two hundred of the best singers in the college and&#13;
city musical circles, and has for its object the giving eacn year&#13;
of one or more of the great masterpieces in oratorio lines. This&#13;
year they plan to give in may, Handers "messiah," with&#13;
chorus, full orchestra, organ and quartet of soloists of high&#13;
merit.&#13;
The conservatory orchestra is a well equipped organization&#13;
of Twenty-Five players. gotten together for the study of the different kinds of orchestralwriting and furnishes to the students&#13;
&#13;
in the string department&#13;
a valuable help in the deYelopment of&#13;
their particular lines of study&#13;
The Men's Glee club of sixteen voices meets twice each week&#13;
and is rapidly getting a reputation as one of the best clubs west&#13;
of Chicago.&#13;
Both this organization and the orchestra are already making&#13;
preparations for extensive concert work during the next year,&#13;
and parties in this and adjoining states wishing concert work&#13;
along these lines will clo well to correspond with the director&#13;
concerning elates for the same.&#13;
The conservatory of music now has a home of its own in the&#13;
remodeled north building lately renamed the Conservatory Hall.&#13;
this building was, during the past summer ancl fall, entirely&#13;
remodeled and refitted at considerable expense and now furnishes to the public a conservatory building unequalled in the&#13;
state ancl the pride of all friends of Morningside.&#13;
The close affiliation of the conservatory and the college work&#13;
is, ancl always will be, a distinct advantage to the student in&#13;
music, who, thus has the opportunity of supplementing his musical stuclies with those along literary and scientific lines. this&#13;
plan furnishes one of the strongest arguments in favor of study&#13;
in a well equipped consen·atory, where the sh1dent comes frequently into touch with many others in his or her practical line&#13;
Of work&#13;
At the close of the present year a special catalogue of the&#13;
cpmservatory will be published.&#13;
&#13;
Newcom&#13;
&#13;
Armstrong&#13;
&#13;
FAIR&#13;
&#13;
GARY&#13;
HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
malada&#13;
&#13;
HELD&#13;
&#13;
Elocution&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
of 1905&#13;
&#13;
HE elocution class of 1905 is claiming a place in the&#13;
Junior Annual just because they think th ey are&#13;
"worth while."&#13;
They are seven in number and as&#13;
ambitious of fame as would be consistent with talent only&#13;
partially developed. That any of them will "star" in the&#13;
future is not essential to their success . Their names may&#13;
never appear on the role of fame as great elocutionists;&#13;
that is an honor that, although they might covet, comes to&#13;
the few; but that they are gaining a culture and refinement&#13;
which will render them more pleasing in manner and better&#13;
fitted for society they firmly believe .&#13;
&#13;
Miss Beatrice Gary has a pleasing manner and a graceful carriage well suited for a public reader. Her best work&#13;
is done in monologues. She is capable of success in her&#13;
chosen work.&#13;
Miss Armstrong's forte lies in the dramatic line. She&#13;
is energetic and enjoys the work. She has been chosen&#13;
for leading parts_in several entertainments given near her&#13;
home .&#13;
Miss Malada is one of the hardest workers in the&#13;
class. Humorous selections are her favorites, but she is&#13;
strong in pathetic work as well.&#13;
&#13;
Some of their number have already been acknowledged&#13;
as pleasing entertainers and are raising the standard for&#13;
public reading in their home towns.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Fair, who also completes her college course this&#13;
year, has taken part in several of the Zetalethean grand&#13;
publics. In the "Recognition Scene" from Euripides she&#13;
took the character of Iphigenia. She is now training for&#13;
the part of "Queen Dido" in the senior class play.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Held has always been enthusiastically received in&#13;
her entertainments and her assistance is demanded by the&#13;
young people of Hinton, her home. She is perhaps at her&#13;
best in Zingaretta-the wild Gypsy spirit of the piece suits&#13;
her style. Earlier in her course she took a strong part as&#13;
"] ally" in the presentation of the Greek pantomime, "Art&#13;
will have no Rival," by the Atheneum Literary Society.&#13;
Miss Newcom combines musical ability with her elocutionary training, which will assist very much in her success as an entertainer. She has spent the winter in Los&#13;
Angeles, where she has devoted much of her time to elocution and music.&#13;
&#13;
The class is honored by having for a member the first&#13;
young man to graduate from the department. Mr. Heilman&#13;
has been prominent in oratory and debate during his two&#13;
years in college. He is oratorical in manner and will&#13;
make a strong and polished reader.&#13;
The class has been working during the winter on their&#13;
graduation program, which is one of the chief attractions&#13;
of the commencement season . They are preparing Louise&#13;
de la Renie's military novel, "Under Two Flags," which&#13;
has been cut and arranged espically for the class by Mrs.&#13;
Davidson. In presenting this they aim not simply at an&#13;
intresting program but an artistic presentation.&#13;
&#13;
MAIN BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
THE GERMAN CLUB is composed of forty-five students of tbe Ge rman De par tment.&#13;
F eeling the need of a more practical use of the German learned in the class room, tbe&#13;
club was organized by Miss ]{&#13;
'erguson to round out the German education of the students. Aside from the mental attainment gained in learning to speak the language flu ently,&#13;
the organizers sought also, at the same time, to de velop the social side by making the meetings of the club a combination of both.&#13;
Four meetings have been held, at which much interest was manifest. Much credit is&#13;
due Miss Fergus::m, who supervised the organization and workings of the club and brought&#13;
it up to its present high state of efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer, A. L . BROWER&#13;
PROGRAM COMMITTEE&#13;
Mrss MABELLE ELLERBROEK&#13;
Mrss CLARA KILLAM&#13;
Mrss IDA BRYAN&#13;
Mrss DE NORA SKINNER&#13;
MRS. H. G. CAMPBELL&#13;
&#13;
POPPENHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
HORNER&#13;
&#13;
RlCHARDS&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical Association&#13;
Officers&#13;
President, R. G. YOUNG.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary, Evva ERSKINE.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer, J. W. KINDIG.&#13;
&#13;
Contest held December, 1904.&#13;
&#13;
Contestants&#13;
H. J. RICHARDS: "The Latent Powers of the Orient."&#13;
C. D. HORNER: ;The Heroism of the Private Soldier."&#13;
G. J. POPPENHEIMER: ''The Light of a New Intellectual Era."&#13;
First Place, G. J. Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDS and HORNER tie for Second Place.&#13;
&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Matthews&#13;
Minkler&#13;
Welch&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
Darling&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Calkins&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Bowker&#13;
&#13;
Hamilton&#13;
&#13;
The Voulunteer&#13;
Band&#13;
&#13;
N COMMON with such bands in various colleges, the purposes of&#13;
the Volunteer Band of Morningside College are:&#13;
First. To aid in the evangelization of the world-to carry the&#13;
Gospel to those who have never heard of Christ.&#13;
Second. To gain by study a part of the preparation necessary&#13;
for special work and to associate with others who have the same life&#13;
purpose.&#13;
Third. To awaken an interest in Missions among fellow-students&#13;
at home.&#13;
The Band gains:&#13;
First. Intensity in purpose and prayer-life.&#13;
Second. Thoroughness-specific preparation is emphasized.&#13;
Third. efficiency-"in union there is strength."&#13;
Fourth. Aggressiveness- to be gained only by united effort.&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Volunteer Band was organized June rst, 1901,&#13;
with seven members. The number has varied from time to time, but&#13;
has gradually increased.&#13;
Three of those in the picture above are in the field. Fred Trimble&#13;
went in December, 1904, as an industrial missionary to China. His&#13;
aunt, Miss Lydia Trimble, recently resumed her work in Foo Chow,&#13;
China, and Miss Bartlett accompanied her. Mr. and Mrs. W. B.&#13;
Empey, members of the r9or Class, are on leave of absence from their&#13;
work in India, because of Mr. Empey's ill-health. Some of the Volunteers are making further preparation for their work than the College&#13;
course offered.&#13;
Their declaration is : "It is my purpose, if God permit, to become a foreign missionary." It is hoped that students expecting to become missionaries will join the Volunteer Band, as all the members&#13;
agree that it is a source of great help to themselves and others.&#13;
&#13;
DEBENHAM, PRES,&#13;
&#13;
SQUIRE!":, V. PRES.&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT,&#13;
&#13;
Sec'y&#13;
&#13;
VAN DYKE,&#13;
&#13;
TREAS,&#13;
&#13;
Y.M. C. A.&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
ARLY in THE history of the institution. the Y. M. C. A.&#13;
found its place in the hearts of the young men of our college. From the first the organization has grown finding&#13;
its greatest opportunity for development in the lives of earnest&#13;
Christian young men.&#13;
every institution must show that it has or is something of&#13;
value to the world before it will receive much consideration. the&#13;
Y. M. C. A. appeals not merely to young men to become members and help in its work, it appeals to all to extend to it their&#13;
sympathy, help, encouragement and it must answer to the&#13;
worlcl the questions, "what advantage is there in it? Why not&#13;
let all Christian work be carried on by the denominations iu&#13;
their several churches?"&#13;
The Y. M. C. A. stands as a factor for bringing all classes&#13;
and denominations into more perfect unity.&#13;
every class man, whether he be a senior or preparatory student, will find a welcome in the association. The organization&#13;
tends to lead men out into broader and deeper truths of the&#13;
teachings of Jesus Christ. No man can go through a college&#13;
&#13;
course and claim to be a liberally educated man unless he has&#13;
come in touch with the practical work of the Y. M. C. A. as&#13;
a means of leading men to understand the true principles of life.&#13;
As a m eans to this encl the association holds de,·otional meetings every Sunday morning at 9:15. It has been the policy of&#13;
the devotional committee to secure prominent men from Sioux&#13;
City to present to the college man the basis for success in the&#13;
Various lines of business as well as Christian life. The strong&#13;
spirituality of these meetings enables a man to find the weak&#13;
spots in his character and at the same time help him to battle&#13;
for reality in his life.&#13;
Annual conferences are held in some part of the state. Lake&#13;
Geneva is well known among Y. M. C. A. men as the "battling&#13;
ground" for reality.&#13;
Chairmen of Committees: Devotional- Glenn Squires; Missionary-R. G. Minkler; Membership-R. G. Young; Bible Study&#13;
-N. Mccay&#13;
Employment Bureau-G. J. Poppenheimer; Information-A. B. Cook; Finance--H. Van Dyke: Train-G. E. Millner; Social-C. L. Gilbert; Inter-Collegiate-F. H. Trimble.&#13;
&#13;
FAIR,&#13;
&#13;
PRES.&#13;
&#13;
GOODALL,&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE.&#13;
&#13;
SEC'Y&#13;
&#13;
Y. . C.&#13;
W&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
HE YOUNG WOMEN'S Christian Association is an organization which has as its aim the development of Christian&#13;
character in its members and the prosecution of active&#13;
Christian work, particularly among the young women of the institution.&#13;
In the association there is an opportunity for Christian girls&#13;
to work together, regardless of church or society relationships,&#13;
for higher ideals of life and a richer experience in Christ.&#13;
At 9:15 each Sunday morning the girls gather for a devotional meeting, and only those who have been privileged to attend&#13;
them can testify of the rich blessings and help received in their&#13;
spiritual lives. The devotional committee, who have charge of&#13;
the meetings, provide leaders, who help very much to make clear&#13;
those things which the Master would have His children know.&#13;
The membership committee meets the new students at the&#13;
train and from the first try to show them that the Y. W. 0. A.&#13;
has an interest in them and solicits their help for the same.&#13;
While it emphasizes the spiritual department, the association&#13;
does not forget that the girls have a social nature that must be&#13;
cultivated. The social committee arranges for a reception,&#13;
usually in connection with the Y. M. C. A. at the opening of the&#13;
fall term. An effort is then made to have the new students be-&#13;
&#13;
TREAS&#13;
&#13;
ROREM, V .&#13;
&#13;
PRES.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
come acquainted and make them feel at home in the college.&#13;
Other social gatherings are held throughout the year, thus uniting the students in Christian work through the social nature.&#13;
The finance committee, at the beginning of each association&#13;
year, arranges a budget for the year. Some of the funds go to&#13;
the state work, the national work, world's work and missions.&#13;
One of the most important departments is the missionary.&#13;
The missionary committee works in connection with the Y. M.&#13;
0. A. They plan joint meetings at which the work and the&#13;
needs of the foreign field are presented. They also have charge&#13;
of mission study classes.&#13;
Besides these departments, others are, a bible study committee and a committee on inter-collegiate relations.&#13;
Toward the end of the summer vacation there is held at&#13;
Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, a conference of the Y. W. 0. A.&#13;
girls of the middle west. The beauty of the place and the&#13;
spiritual uplift received from the conference affords a rare treat&#13;
to those who attend. The association has sent each year since&#13;
its organization delegates to this convention.&#13;
The motto of the Young Women's Christian Association is&#13;
found in Zechariah iv: 6. "Not by might, nor by power, but by&#13;
i\Iy spirit, saith the Lord of Hosts."&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
MANNING&#13;
&#13;
HECLMAN&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
OTHON!AN vs. PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
0THONIAN DEBATERS&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN DEBATERS&#13;
J . R. Tumbleson C. G. Manning&#13;
H. L. Mossman&#13;
C. F. Hartzell&#13;
R. E. Heilman&#13;
C. L. Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the present concentration of capital in the United States, in&#13;
single manufacturing corporations is inimical to our welfare.&#13;
Interpretation.&#13;
1. These corporations shall not include monopolized industries.&#13;
2. A monopolized industry shall beonein which practically no competition exists&#13;
3. These corporations shall not include those corporations operating under&#13;
franchises by municipal corporations.&#13;
4. Manufacturing shall mean the process or one of the processes of converting raw material into the finished product.&#13;
Affirmati ve-OTHONIANS&#13;
Negati ve-PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
Rev. J. F. Watts, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Prof. E.C. Perisho,Vermillion, S.D.&#13;
Attorney G. C. Scott, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Decision, Affirmative one; Negative two.&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
GILBERT&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE · vs . BAKER&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved,&#13;
&#13;
That party candidates for elective offices within the state Shoouldbe nominated by a direct vote of the parties.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
&#13;
H. L. MOSSMAN&#13;
J. R. TUMBLESON&#13;
R. G. YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Young, Vermillion, S. D.&#13;
Rev. Dr.S. W. McFadden, Sioux City, Ia.&#13;
Rev. J. L. Blanchard, LeMars, Ia.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Baker.&#13;
&#13;
Negative-Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
DECISION-Affirmative two; Negative one.&#13;
&#13;
SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
MANNING&#13;
&#13;
MoOAY&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debate&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE vs . UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
This deabte will be held at Fayette, Iowa, April 28, 1905&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved,&#13;
&#13;
That we should have compulsory adjustment of labor disputes, where corporations of quasi-public nature are&#13;
involved.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE DEBATERS&#13;
C. G. MANNING&#13;
N. McCAY&#13;
H. H. SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
UPPER lowA-Affirmative&#13;
MoRNINGSIDE- N egative&#13;
&#13;
The Order of EternalRutters&#13;
Consitutuion&#13;
PREAMBLE&#13;
Believing it to be the solemn obligation of everybody in Morningside College to know everything about every one else, we, the students&#13;
of said institutiun, do organize this order and adopt for our government&#13;
the follow ing constituti0n:&#13;
ARTICLE I.&#13;
SECTION I. The name of this order shall be The Order of Eternal&#13;
Butters.&#13;
SEC. 2. The object of this order shall be the discovery of all secrets&#13;
and private matters and the dissemination of the same at the earliest&#13;
opportunity.&#13;
Sec. 3.-MoTTo. The motto of this order shall be: "Where two&#13;
or three are gathered togethet there will I be also."&#13;
ARTICLE IL-MEMBERSHIP.&#13;
SECTION r. The membership of this order shall consist of active&#13;
and honorary members.&#13;
Sec. 2.-ELIGIBILITY. Any student, regardless of race, sex or previous reputation for veracity, shall be eligible to membership, who has&#13;
added at least ten secrets to the common store of the order, or has for&#13;
six consecutive days butted in on at least three private conversations&#13;
daily.&#13;
ARTICLE !IL-OFFICERS.&#13;
The officers of this order shall be Chief Butter and seven Rebutters.&#13;
The business of the officers shall be the performance of all duties which&#13;
cannot be imposed on any one else.&#13;
ARTICLE IV.-EXPULSION.&#13;
Any member retaining a secret more than five minutes shall be&#13;
unconditionally expelled.&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
CHIEF BUTTER-CL ARA KILLAM.&#13;
First R ebutter, RAY MASON.&#13;
In charge of Chemical Department.&#13;
Second Rebutter, MARTHA MACDONALD.&#13;
I n charge of Atheneum Literary Society.&#13;
Third Rebutter, RAY TUMBLESON.&#13;
In charge of Library.&#13;
Fourth Rebutter, c. J. Mekkelson&#13;
Assistant in Li br·ary.&#13;
Fifth Rebutter, CHAS. FULKROD.&#13;
In char ge of Physics Department.&#13;
Sixth Rebutter, R. HEILMAN .&#13;
In charge of Corridors.&#13;
Seventh Rebutter, H. N . STAPLES.&#13;
In charge of Girls.&#13;
&#13;
Members&#13;
MARGUERITE HALLAM&#13;
Isaac&#13;
WESTCOTT&#13;
&#13;
MABEL HASKINS&#13;
D. L. YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Members&#13;
L . F . SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
N ARCISSA MILLER&#13;
MABEL HAY&#13;
&#13;
Members Expelled&#13;
W. H . DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
EvvA ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
Rubber Band&#13;
Aim&#13;
To rubber at every passer in the halls, into all open doors, to inquire into all but our own business, and never to look into&#13;
our books while anything is left to rubber at.&#13;
&#13;
Rules of Conduct&#13;
1.&#13;
&#13;
Behold our eyes shall be in every place, b eholding the evil and the good.&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
If thy books entice thee, consent thou not.&#13;
&#13;
3. He that rubbereth, let him do it with diligence.&#13;
&#13;
Motto :&#13;
&#13;
Only by rubbering cometh knowledge.&#13;
&#13;
Patron Saint :&#13;
&#13;
Lot's Wife.&#13;
&#13;
Roll of Membership&#13;
*R uby Flinn&#13;
&#13;
POST GRADUATE&#13;
&#13;
*J.&#13;
&#13;
W. McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
*Active members five years.&#13;
&#13;
ACTIVE MEMBERS&#13;
George Millner&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Gantt&#13;
Net tie Pierson&#13;
&#13;
SUSPENDED MEMBERS&#13;
tHattie Hall&#13;
tEffie Yule&#13;
tJ ack Horner&#13;
in&#13;
Suspended to become staircase fixtures.&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Heilman ·&#13;
Flora Hall&#13;
EXPELLED&#13;
Eaton and Snell ( no time to rubber&#13;
at others. )&#13;
Frank Hartzell ( lost his job as bell&#13;
ringer. )&#13;
Cyrus Gilbert (for non-performance&#13;
of duty.)&#13;
&#13;
Alex. Adams&#13;
Blanche Spratt&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude Thompson&#13;
&#13;
REJECTED CANDIDATES&#13;
Anna Goodall ( too industrious.)&#13;
Myrtilla Cook (time demanded in&#13;
chemical laboratory.)&#13;
Charles Harding (not accomplished&#13;
in the art.)&#13;
&#13;
WAR EAGLE'S GRAVE OVERLOOKING THE MISSOURI RlVER&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The History of Sioux City&#13;
BY D. L. YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
way&#13;
the&#13;
W ENDING hisa Siouxthrough soughtcrowded streets,&#13;
Spottedtail,&#13;
brave,&#13;
the place where&#13;
the white man would fill his jug. Following closely came&#13;
Jim Crow, the young buck, who marked the way with&#13;
steady, even pace; then came the squaw with papoose&#13;
wrapped upon her back, bound closely and the papoose was&#13;
asleep. The place was found, there stood the man, who&#13;
took Spottedtail's two dollars, and said nothing, but went,&#13;
and when the Sioux brave returned to his wagon, there&#13;
beneath the hay he saw the jug, good, heavy, and wellcorked.&#13;
They piled into the wagon and started toward home.&#13;
Trinkets and Indian delicacies had been bought, but to&#13;
Spottedtail the fire-water in the big jug was all that Injun&#13;
needed. They drove over the big bridge that stretched&#13;
across the muddy Missouri, while beneath the high arches&#13;
of the great span Spottedtail drank from his jug. The&#13;
whisky lit up his spirits. He drank again and again. It&#13;
fired his brain and the old Indian brave soon reeled in a&#13;
swoon of drunkenness.&#13;
The night was darkening fast and the bitter cold&#13;
chilled the red Indians before they could reach the Winnebago reservation, where they were visiting. Old Spottedtail, the Sioux brave, was drunk as a demon. The whoop&#13;
of the Sioux sounded along the highway like a war cry&#13;
of old. Jim Crow was unable to hold him from beating&#13;
and fighting the broncos, who were galloping wildly to* Prize Winner for History of Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ward home. They turned from the road, a crash came&#13;
and Spottedtail was thrown upon his head and shoulders&#13;
onto the frozen ground.&#13;
The maddened Indian raved like a maniac. He&#13;
seemed to be loading and firing his rifle ; he called for his&#13;
chief; he called for more blood. Throughout his whole&#13;
life, Spottedtail had dreamed of the day when the Sioux&#13;
in his might should have power to drive the intruding&#13;
whites from the banks of his favorite stream. In his delirium, this moment seemed to be that supreme day. The&#13;
war cry was on. The whoops of the Sioux filled the air.&#13;
Indian braves thronged every path and Spottedtail was&#13;
next to chief.&#13;
The old brave raised his head, his wild eyes turned&#13;
toward the rolling Missouri, and there he saw the red&#13;
heavens a mass of flame. The war man was burning the&#13;
great Sioux City. The old Sioux brave saw the mighty&#13;
towers of these buildings standing like grim skeletons in&#13;
the living blaze. He looked toward Riverside, where War&#13;
Eagle slept, but there stood War Eagle, risen in the resurrection, waving the scalp of vengeance, calling with the&#13;
whoops of the Sioux, his braves to battle. Spottedtail gave&#13;
one bound toward the call, a pain wrenched his head, he&#13;
fell, biting the cold, frozen dust. The heart fluttered faintly within his bosom and, like the vision that comes to a&#13;
drowning man, there came to Spottedtail, the Indian&#13;
brave, a dream that to his life had been true. In his vision were pictured the days he had spent in this Wonderland and this was his dream :&#13;
When but a papoose Spottedtail sat near the group of&#13;
Sioux, who gathered under the shades of the Council Oak&#13;
at Riverside and there he listened to the great Sioux chief,&#13;
&#13;
war Eagle, with his braves and medicine men, as they&#13;
counseled concerning the coming of the pale faces. War&#13;
Eagle had seen Lewis and Clark, with their company of&#13;
whites, as they passed the Sioux River on August 21st,&#13;
1804. This was the first coming of a white man to the&#13;
regions where the Sioux braves vied with the buffaloes for&#13;
supremacy. During the next half century the white trappers, few in numbers and following streams, wended their&#13;
way through the fertile prairies of the Sioux domain.&#13;
Miners and scattering bands of squatters followed. War&#13;
Eagle with his tribe hated the coming of the dreaded&#13;
whites, but this hatred was of no avail. The title of the&#13;
land passed from the Sioux to the whites in 1847, and&#13;
War Eagle saw William Thompson drive the first stakes of&#13;
the whites' domain in 1848.&#13;
Spottedtail had heard the stories of Indian myths and&#13;
learned how the first Sioux came into being through the&#13;
incubation of an egg. He had learned the beautiful language of love, so sweet and pure, that animated the Indian's heart with a zeal as true as white ever gave to blushing maid. He had learned to look for the coming of a&#13;
deliverer with signs and wonders, who should forever separate from them the intolerable whites and give back to the&#13;
red man his beautiful hunting ground. Spottedtail, the&#13;
brave, saw War Eagle buried upon the great heig;hts that&#13;
overlooked the whirling waters of the Missouri, in 1851.&#13;
During the next few years he saw the building of two cabins, by Theophile Brughier and Joseph l,eonias; and during the month of December, 1854, ,Joseph Cook came and&#13;
commenced the plat of Sioux City. This was but fifty summers after War Eagle had seen the first coming of 1he&#13;
great white man.&#13;
&#13;
The doings of the next fifty years have been written&#13;
by many, but upon the Indian brave's mind they were&#13;
written with ink indelible. To his eyes all whites&#13;
were one. Upon the favorite campground by the Rivers&#13;
Floyd and Sioux, · the whites had come and come, built&#13;
honses, stores and factories and never left. In the year&#13;
1857, after the war with the Sioux had ceased and the&#13;
Indians thought the whites had all come, there were numbered one thousand and thirty souls. Ten years later a&#13;
revelation came to the war man, when he visited his hunting ground and saw crowded upon it about six thousand&#13;
whites. To his mind there was no place left to the Indians&#13;
in this world. One more decade passed and the Sioux&#13;
chanced to visit the metropolis again. This time he saw&#13;
What the medicine man had told in his myth of Chicago.&#13;
There were heaps and heaps of whites, plowing wide paths&#13;
and building great towers toward the sky. This time the&#13;
man who counted told that there were twenty-eight thousand, and upon hearing this, the Sioux felt that every&#13;
white man must have been made by the great God, that&#13;
this world was his, and the red Indian, squaw and papoose&#13;
must die with the buffalo.&#13;
This was the first time the thought of the domineering&#13;
white ever crushed the heart of the brave Spottedtail.&#13;
Never again did he visit the haunts of his boyhood until&#13;
this day, when he found upon those hills and in those valleys fifty thousand people, who knew not Spottedtail, and&#13;
even stared with curiosity as the war brave walked the&#13;
street among the hustling crowds of Sioux Cityans. There&#13;
was but one balm for this wound, and that the deadly Fires&#13;
water, that would take the war brave to the Happy Hunting Grounds.&#13;
&#13;
Government to the Indian was a thing of little use.&#13;
The Sioux chief called his braves together beneath the&#13;
Council Oak, which has been the hospitable friend of the&#13;
reel man for a century. The Mayor of Sioux City, the 31st&#13;
of her mayors, now ca1ls his council to meet in the fifth&#13;
story of the magnificent library building, but of enduring&#13;
stone during the years 1891 and 1892. This beautiful&#13;
structure, like the massive Council Oak, for stability and&#13;
beauty is excelled by no other such structure in our fair&#13;
state. Facing the city building across Douglas street,&#13;
stands its companion in architecture, the Government&#13;
building.&#13;
The reel man rode his pony along the winding buffalo&#13;
paths near the banks of the flowing streams. These were&#13;
the highways of his daily life, near the River Floyd and&#13;
Perry Creek, where the early homes of the city were built.&#13;
These paths were the way toward home for his weary feet&#13;
in clays of Spottecltail's childhood, but today when he&#13;
drove from the metropolis, his wagon sounded upon the&#13;
brick and asphalt pavement, which extends along the&#13;
streets for over twenty miles. Those streets that are unpaved run a distance of six hundred miles, dividing and&#13;
sub-dividing the city into places for men's abode. Along&#13;
these public streets men do not wait to walk, but ride upon&#13;
the electric cars that run over the hills, around the clay&#13;
bluffs and through the valleys. It was on the 4th of July,&#13;
1884, that men were in too great a hurry to walk and began to ride upon Sioux City's first street car, the bob-tailed&#13;
car, drawn by a mule, clown West Seventh to Fourth and&#13;
Court streets. In 1890, electricity came to rest the mule,&#13;
for which the mule and we all give thanks. The squaw&#13;
carried water from a rippling brook to her wigwam, while&#13;
&#13;
now the white maid may turn the faucets in ten thousand&#13;
homes, drawing from the deep fountains of artesian wells,&#13;
water clear and pure as the crystal snow.&#13;
Spottecltail learned to follow the trail and go with the&#13;
bucks to the Big Spirit Lake and there get produce to bring&#13;
home. The great highways of travel were open to free&#13;
competition. Indians came and went with the seasons and&#13;
scarcely less often. The big brave had learned of the&#13;
iron horse, breathiug fire and driven only by the white.&#13;
He saw the first steamboat come up the middle of the muddy water in 1856. Twelve years later up the banks of&#13;
the Missouri river came the iron horse, soon after he beat&#13;
his path across the pla ins from the hills of Dubuque. Year&#13;
after yearthesoundof whistles increased, as the twelve railroads centered into Sioux Citv and with them came busineeds of the Sioux&#13;
ness, homes and knowledge.&#13;
might be few, but for the people of Sioux City today, nearly one hundred trains arrive and depart daily, supplying&#13;
her citizens with the necessities of life and taking her produce 1o fathers and brothers beyond the boundaries of&#13;
our state. Of all forces that drive the Indians to secluded&#13;
haunts the iron horse is the greatest. Spottecltail, the&#13;
brave, looked upon these as the works of the devil. In his&#13;
mind the breath of these with steam and smoke would&#13;
sometime turn upon the haughty white and engulf him in&#13;
the bowels of the unknown. In the bosom of the white this&#13;
fear is supplanted by a cherished hope-that the greater&#13;
transportation facilities mean to ns the greater Sioux City.&#13;
No greater romance in fiction is written than that inspired&#13;
by the coming of the railroad, as it in a night builds a&#13;
city and transforms prairies into gardens.&#13;
The two races that fed upon our soil fifty years ago&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
lived and are dying together. The Sioux and the buffalo&#13;
roamed the prairies with an undisputed air of freedom.&#13;
The arrow of the brave drew the blood from the bison's&#13;
side and drenched the sod upon every hillside in the valleys&#13;
of our noble rivers. The coming of the white broke the sod&#13;
and drew from the same soil the fat of steer and swine.&#13;
The substance that gave food and clothing· to the Sioux,&#13;
now brings a livelihood and wealth to the white. Upon the&#13;
banks of the Floyd the newcomer built his packing house&#13;
thirty-three years ago. During the following years the Indian saw several different plants built, in which to slaughter the beeves that were raised where .his buffaloes used to&#13;
feed. These gigantic slaughter houses grew in ,p roportion&#13;
with the great city. Thousands of cattle, hogs and sheep&#13;
are packed each day Twenty-eight thousand carloads of&#13;
stock from the plains come to this city each year&#13;
f rom&#13;
every hill and dale within sight of the city on the Sioux,&#13;
the red man can now see the smoke and name of Armonr&#13;
and Cudahy.&#13;
In the United States Census of 1900, Sioux City was&#13;
given first rank as a manufacturing center among all Iowa&#13;
cities. The gigantic slaughter houses are not the only industry that disturbed the dreams of the red man, but with&#13;
the scream of the \ can always be heard the hum of machinery in the flour mills and other factories scattered over&#13;
the wide area of the city. The product of these factories&#13;
was mostly unknown to the needs of Spottedtail, but to the&#13;
white they are articles of necessity, such as soap, brooms,&#13;
engines, brick and tile, agricultural implements, furnaces,&#13;
feed mills, binding twine, foundries, harness and saddlery,&#13;
with many other industries employing the skilled labor&#13;
of man's hand and brain. The story of each industry is a&#13;
&#13;
history within itself, but to the departing Indian it was one&#13;
mass of complicated buildings, wheels and belts, with&#13;
noise and smoke increasing with each year, until one hundred and fifty different enterprises are whirling, making&#13;
peace impossible, always rising here and there where the&#13;
prairie chicken used to feed or the wolf used to burrow.&#13;
There were few days that Spottedtail with his braves&#13;
and chief delighted to visit their former abode, but there&#13;
'were times when the white did build a mansion that suited&#13;
his taste. Those days were in the years of corn-palace&#13;
fame. In 1887, and for five succeeding years, immense palaces were built of Indian corn that surpassed in wonder the&#13;
beauty and the temple of Indian dreams that might be&#13;
the temple of gods in the far away hunting ground. These&#13;
magnificent palaces were visited by tens of thousands of&#13;
people, including the humble and the great. When President Cleveland's train stopped in Sioux City to see the&#13;
palace, Spottedtail came with the chief of the war man&#13;
to see the coming of the chief of the pale-faces. The streets&#13;
were crowded and thronged with whites so great that the&#13;
red man's fear kept him in the background. Those were&#13;
days when the white man grew as frantic in his wild chase&#13;
for wealth as the war man grew desperate in his pillage of&#13;
civilized homes. Buildings were raised in a night. Blocks&#13;
were built of massive stone, that could endure the storms&#13;
that would waste a million wigwams.&#13;
This was the spirit of the coming white that built Sioux&#13;
City in a way that was distinctly her own, marking every&#13;
character and feature with the sign of progress. Her citizens have suffered together and will continue to labor&#13;
side by side undaunted by failure and encouraged with&#13;
&#13;
every success. They enjoy every convenience that applied&#13;
science can bring to an inland city.&#13;
On one occasion Spottentail passed the massive shrine&#13;
in which the whites worship their God. To his mind this ·&#13;
was a wonderful creation and large enough for his whole&#13;
tribe, but the greatest astonishment came when told that&#13;
within the limits of the city of his name there were fifty&#13;
such shrines. The brave's eyes turned toward the shining&#13;
sun which his ancestors worshipped, and to his heart came&#13;
a voice that spoke the excellency of a God that could be seen&#13;
and was always present.&#13;
The society of the pale face had no attraction for the&#13;
red man. Not once had he seen the place that appealed to&#13;
his heart like home, save on one occasion. Spottedtail&#13;
walked down the street and met the coming of the tribe of&#13;
college braves in regalia for a football game. A hope arose&#13;
in his heart that the white had at last joined with the war&#13;
man in doing the stunts of heroism. He followed the&#13;
crowd to the game and peeking through the fence, saw the&#13;
desperate plunge of the giant full-back. This was the only&#13;
story of the white ever welcomed to the ear of the dying&#13;
red man, but it faded into a myth, when upon a summer&#13;
&#13;
day at the reservation, this same college Indian appeared&#13;
in Sophomore's garb and scared the untied horses of the&#13;
lazy brave, spilling squaws and papooses along the trail of&#13;
the frightened broncoes.&#13;
The Sioux has been driven far into Dakota. Upon&#13;
his ground stands Sioux City only resembling his tribe Jn&#13;
name. Spottedtail's dream was a vision called to view by an&#13;
angel of the Great Spirit, who commands the portal where&#13;
all Sioux braves enter the Happy Hunting Ground. This&#13;
angel lifted the soul of the war brave who had been given&#13;
only fire-water, disease and death by the whites and led him&#13;
into the Happy Hunting Ground, where War Eagle roams.&#13;
Sioux City was left to rise from her ashes.&#13;
A city with a history unparalleled. The first white born&#13;
within her limits still lives on the sunny side of fifty years.&#13;
The enterprise of the metropolis is characterized by youth,&#13;
strength, endurance and supremacy. Her history is not&#13;
yet written for it is yet to be made. The events of the past&#13;
abound with fiction that was created in reality and the&#13;
giant builders have laid the foundation of a greater Sioux&#13;
City that we are to build according to their pattern.&#13;
&#13;
of The F reshmen&#13;
&#13;
THe Revemge&#13;
BY A.&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
O ONE knew just what made them think of it, but the&#13;
seniors were going to give a play. According to the&#13;
announcement it was to be original, the name was "The&#13;
WrongOne," and it was to be given in the Parker opera&#13;
house on the 13th of the next month. But the most interesting part of the announcement was the fact that it was to&#13;
be a secret ; the play, the players and their parts, in fact&#13;
everything in connection with the play, until the curtain&#13;
should rise on them that night.&#13;
Almost any one could see that this was a beautiful&#13;
chance for the juniors to do some mischief and sure enough&#13;
a few of the most energetic formulated a plan which if&#13;
evolved all right would result in the kidnapping of the&#13;
hero of the senior's play. But as usual they had trouble.&#13;
Try as they would for weeks, they could find no sign of any&#13;
rehearsal or anything by means of which they could decide&#13;
whowas to be the leading man. Was it any wonder then&#13;
that they decided upon Frank Jackson, mainly because he&#13;
had acted some before and had been seen of late carrying&#13;
s'1spicious looking papers about?&#13;
In the first announcement it had been stated that all&#13;
students would be admitted free of charge. Just one week&#13;
before the thirteenth came another announcement saying&#13;
that in order to avail themselves of this opportunity to save&#13;
fifty cents the students must get seats in that part of the&#13;
opera house which was assigned to their class.&#13;
The freshmen received tbe brunt of the blow. They&#13;
Prize Winner for Short Story.&#13;
&#13;
bad been assigned the top balcony. The majority of them&#13;
at once decided · to buy their tickets and sit where they&#13;
chose. But after a called indignation meeting which only&#13;
lasted a few minutes they came out bright and smiling and&#13;
suffice to say -there. were no tickets sold to the freshmen.&#13;
Now this happiness seemed to be due to something which&#13;
Bixby, a freshman, had said at the meeting. Bixby had a&#13;
girl. This girl's sister was a senior.&#13;
This might account for the way in which Bixby got his information, acting upon which he might have been seen purchasing a&#13;
ticket to the theater on Wednesday night, the night before&#13;
the play.&#13;
The play that night had no interest for Bixby and&#13;
he could hardly wait till it was over. As he moved toward&#13;
the door among the last to leave he stepped to one side behind some curtains and remained hidden until every one&#13;
was gone and the lights out. Then finding a comfortable&#13;
place to rest he went to sleep dreaming of senior plays and&#13;
the next night. When he awoke it was almost daylight.&#13;
Some men were working on the stage. He waited until&#13;
they had left and then made his way to the stage and was&#13;
soon up in the scenery loft. Here, after eating a small&#13;
lnnch he bad brought in his pocket, he settled himself to&#13;
wait until eleven o'clock for that was the time when Myrtle&#13;
had told him the seniors would be there, and although it&#13;
seemed an age to him it finally came. With it came the&#13;
seniors, who slipped in one or two at a time at side doors.&#13;
Soon they were all on the stage ready to begin. It was&#13;
their first rehearsal in the opera house. Bixby's shorthand&#13;
came into evidence here and as the rehearsal progressed&#13;
there was little said or done but what his pencil traced out&#13;
in his note book. At last it was over and the seniors were&#13;
&#13;
talking of their success. Bixby was surprised when one&#13;
of them said "Say people, do you know what I heard today? The juniors are going to kidnap Frank Jackson&#13;
and drive him out to Milbank tonight. They think he&#13;
is our leading man." "Well, we won't undeceive them,"&#13;
said another, "because they might pick onto one of us,&#13;
then." "Poor Kate," said another, "she will be awfully disappointed if Frank don't show up about seven thirty."&#13;
So they decided to sacrifice Frank to the cause. In a half&#13;
hour they were all gone and Bixby clambered down. After&#13;
stretching his tired limbs and wishing he had something to&#13;
eat, he started for the door. They were all locked. After&#13;
a brief consideration he made for one of the fire escape&#13;
exits on the second floor. He opened the door and peered&#13;
out. No one was in sight, and he stepped out and was almost to the bottom when he heard a gruff voice behind&#13;
him and turning saw a bluecoat watching him. It was too&#13;
late to turn back, so he continned his way to the ground.&#13;
Against his remonstrances and excuses he was compelled&#13;
to go to the police station two blocks distant and was locked&#13;
up. Bixby was hungry, but that did not bother him half&#13;
so much as the thought that he could not get ont before&#13;
night. After repeated trials, be was allowed to see the&#13;
police judge, who recognized him and upon his promise&#13;
It was now&#13;
to appear in the morning he was released&#13;
after three o'clock. Bixby ran across to the public library&#13;
and seating himself at a table soon had a good synopsis of&#13;
the play made out. Then he hastened to the printers and&#13;
after a good deal of talking, succeeded in getting the printers to promise to have the required number of copies ready&#13;
at seven o'clock. Then at last to supper. Bixby was hun-&#13;
&#13;
gry, and after eating more than was good for him (he did&#13;
not board at a boarding house) he got some help and proceeded to round up the freshmen class.&#13;
By 7 :15 they were all at Irwins and were busy speculating as to what was up when Bixby and some of the boys&#13;
arrived with the printed synopses, (1,000 of them) and&#13;
after giving each member one to read they divided the remainder among some of the boys and all started for the&#13;
opera house. By 7 :45 the opera house was almost full&#13;
and every one was surprised to see slips of paper floating&#13;
from toward the roof. The small slips of paper soon came&#13;
into great demand, and soon every one in the house had&#13;
read a full synopsis of the play, the names of the players&#13;
and the parts they were to play. On the paper was a note&#13;
saying '"It is only own to the untiring efforts of the freshng&#13;
men that these programmes have been prepared and all&#13;
(but the seniors) will join in thanking them."&#13;
It was too bad, after weeks of bard work to keep it&#13;
a close secret, to have everything known just when their&#13;
success was at its climax. Too bad, that the play should&#13;
lose its intended effect on the audience.&#13;
Too bad that five or six husky juniors drove over the&#13;
frozen road toward Milban k with Frank Jackson in their&#13;
midst.&#13;
Too bad that Kate waited and waited for Frank nntil&#13;
hope gave way to despair and she went to sleep on the sofa&#13;
still waiting.&#13;
And is it any wonder that the freshmen all looked so&#13;
happy and all joined in shouting "What's the matter with&#13;
Bix? He's all right."&#13;
&#13;
Tonkowanda&#13;
BY CHAS, RICHARDS&#13;
&#13;
TOKOW&#13;
ANDA was an Indian girl and&#13;
lived in the foothills of the Rockies. She&#13;
was the most beautiful girl of the tribe.&#13;
There grew up with her two boys, one,&#13;
Dreaming Bull, the son of a brave, and&#13;
the other, Wild Bear, the son of a chief.&#13;
wild Bear was a born warrior, and spent&#13;
his time with his bow and arrows and&#13;
tomahawk. His enemies were the_birds&#13;
and the muskrats and the minks. These&#13;
he tortured, and his whole being thrilled as he saw them&#13;
quivering in their agonies.&#13;
Dreaming Bull was of a very different nature. He&#13;
could throw a tomahawk perfectly and his arrows always&#13;
found their mark, but he made of the birds, the muskrats and the minks friends and spent his time wandering&#13;
in the mountains, watching the sunsets and the starlit&#13;
nights.&#13;
Tokowanda's mother died early, leaving upon the little girl's shoulders the care of the father's wigwam. Wild&#13;
Bear was too busy with his bow and arrows to notice the&#13;
little girl, stooping beneath her burdens, but, often, Dreaming Bull, meeting her, carried the loads of wood and water.&#13;
Together they would blow the stubborn flames into a cheerful blaze, he helping her cook the meat for her father's&#13;
meal.&#13;
He made for her strings of beads and hung them&#13;
&#13;
about her neck, -and with thongs and beads he made a girdle and bound it about her waist. With polished shells&#13;
he made ornaments for her hair and arms, and, as the&#13;
years passed they. were much together.&#13;
One clay when they were out gathering wood for the&#13;
fire, a bear rushed through the brush nearby, and had it&#13;
not been for Dreaming Bull's arrow, shot true and with&#13;
such force, that it found the bear's heart, Tokowanda&#13;
would never have returned to camp. They made of the&#13;
claws a necklace and Dreaming Bull hung it about Tokowanda's neck, as a token of something that had come to&#13;
bind them together with a tie unknown among the people&#13;
of that day, for, the women of that time were slaves. They&#13;
knew nothing of the finer feelings of humanity and served&#13;
the men with the same obedience as a beast; who, accepting it in the same spirit, as they would the service of a&#13;
beast, treated their women like brutes.&#13;
But Dreaming Bull, in his wanderings, had caught a&#13;
new glimpse of life, and he could not look upon Tokowanda&#13;
with the same feelings as he did upon other girls, a fact&#13;
which he did not understand. It pained him to see her&#13;
toil, or to know that she suffered.&#13;
One evening some time later, the chief of the tribe&#13;
came to the wigwam of Tokowanda's father. He sat there&#13;
in silence for a long time. At last he spoke.&#13;
"I have looked long through the wigwams of my people&#13;
for one who is worthy to be the squaw of my son, wild&#13;
Bear, who will one day govern our people, and I find none&#13;
like Tokowanda, your daughter. After twelve moons have&#13;
passed she will enter his home and become his squaw."&#13;
After a long silence, Tokowanda's father answered :&#13;
"The chief of my people has placed this night great&#13;
&#13;
honor upon his brave. After twelve moons have passed,&#13;
then Tokowanda shall enter the wigwam of the Wild&#13;
Bear."&#13;
When Dreaming Bull heard this he somehow felt sick&#13;
at heart, and one day he left the old haunts and wandered&#13;
far away to the rising sun.&#13;
Tokowanda grew listless after Dreaming Bull had&#13;
gone away, but she still wore the beads and ornaments&#13;
which he had given her. At last the time grew near when&#13;
Wild Bear was to take her as his wife. It was the day&#13;
when he and the young men of the tribe were to be tested&#13;
for their bravery.&#13;
A tall pole had been placed in the ground, from which&#13;
were hanging ropes of rawhide. Loops were cut in the&#13;
young men's breasts and through these loops were run and&#13;
tied the raw-hide thongs. Then leaning back, until the&#13;
cords were tight they danced back and forth before the&#13;
sun, until the weight of their bodies tore loose the loops of&#13;
skin, and those who endured till then, were ever afterwards&#13;
called "Braves."&#13;
The dance was at its height, when there glided noiselessly into the midst of the camp Dreaming Bull. Wild&#13;
Bear saw him and cried out to him, "Ho, thou wandering&#13;
calf, hast thou the courage to join with me in the dance, or&#13;
dost thou fear pain ?" Dreaming Bull stepped before them,&#13;
drew aside his blanket and showed wounds just received&#13;
in battle fought in the land of the Rising Sun, together with the scars of the Sun Dance. and cried, "are&#13;
these wounds the wounds of a calf? Here are the scars of&#13;
the dance long since healed."&#13;
In a few clays there followed a desperate fight with a&#13;
hostile tribe. Wild Bear led the young braves, among&#13;
&#13;
whom was Dreaming Bull. Both performed deeds of daring and at night many prisoners were brought into camp&#13;
to be tortured before the boys and women. As it happened it was the night of the full moon, when Tokowanda&#13;
was to become the wife of Wild Bear.&#13;
Dreaming Bull, although fearless in the fight, shrank&#13;
from all unnecessary torture, and when the victims were&#13;
brought forth for the scalp dance, he wandered away alone&#13;
to the spot where he had killed the bear and saved Tokowanda.&#13;
He had not been there long when Tokowanda stood&#13;
silently at his side.&#13;
"Is the Dreaming Bull a child that he has grown sick&#13;
at the sight of blood?" she said. "Why does he not join his&#13;
people in the camp ?"&#13;
"Such scenes are for the women ; has the Tokowanda&#13;
grown sick at the sight of blood that she wandered away&#13;
alone?"&#13;
"The moon is full tonight and tomorrow I will be in&#13;
the wigwam of the young chief. Is the Dreaming Bull&#13;
not glad?"&#13;
dreaming Bull did not answer, but looked away to the&#13;
mountains dim in the distance, his old friends among&#13;
whom hehaddreamed so long ago ; still there was loneliness&#13;
in his heart. Tokowancla went on and spoke of their&#13;
childhood days, of how good Dreaming Bull had been to&#13;
her, of the gifts be had given her and of the bear from&#13;
which he had saved her on that very spot. Still Dreaming&#13;
Bull did not answer. His sonl was looking into a night in&#13;
which no moon was shining. Soon Tokowancla, too, became silent and both looked into tbe distance.&#13;
At last she took a string of beads from her neck, held&#13;
&#13;
them a moment and then laid them across the knee of&#13;
Dreaming Bull. These were followed by another and&#13;
another and another and were laid one by one beside the&#13;
first. Dreaming Bull still looked away into the night.&#13;
Then Tokowanda undid the girdle and placed it beside&#13;
the beads; and one by one the shells from her hair and arm&#13;
followed, until all but the necklace of bear's claws had been&#13;
given back to Dreaming Bull. Undoing the thong which&#13;
held the chain of claws about her neck, she toyed with them&#13;
a moment and seemed to be thinking, saying to herself,&#13;
"Must I give up all? Can I not keep these? Why can l&#13;
not forget past moons? Why do I shrink from the chief&#13;
of my people ? He is a great chief, he is brave and fearless, and I am to be his squaw." The chain of bear claws&#13;
started again for its place beside the mother of pearls, but&#13;
ere it reached there it stopped and again to herself she&#13;
spoke, "My blanket is large and I can hide these from&#13;
the eyes of the chief, keeping them to remember the time&#13;
when bear claws were sharp, the flesh was tender, but the&#13;
arrow of Dreaming Bull was sure."&#13;
Quickly the necklace was fastened in its old place.&#13;
Dreaming Bull reached out and drew her towards him.&#13;
He lifted one by one the bracelets and tied them in their&#13;
former places; he bound the girdle about her waist; placed&#13;
the strings of beads one by one about her neck. Then&#13;
Tokowanda cried, "Why do you bring back to me the&#13;
past?"&#13;
"In the tribe where I danced the sun dance," answered&#13;
dreaming Bull, "I had led the people to a great victory,&#13;
and at night the chief of that great people called me to him&#13;
and said: "You shall be my son, indeed; today you have&#13;
&#13;
led my braves to · glory and tonight my daughter shall be&#13;
your squaw."&#13;
I wandered out into the hills; there I remembered that&#13;
bears' claws are sharp, that the flesh of Tokowanda is tender, but that the arrows of Dreaming Bull are sure. The&#13;
chief's daughter came that night to an empty wigwam.&#13;
Tonight I go to the Rising Sun. No more shall I look into&#13;
the face of Tokowanda, but still the memory of it will ever&#13;
be with me." Then he spoke of the plains and the woods&#13;
far away, of the bear and deer in the forest, of the mink&#13;
and muskrat in the streams, of the wolf and fox on the&#13;
prairies, of the grouse and quail in the brush, but he said&#13;
his wigwam would ever be sad and lonely, no papoose&#13;
would ever come to greet him, no squaw would be there&#13;
to cook his meat; but, still, there was a strange tugging at&#13;
his heart, which cried out for her. And he said, if it could&#13;
have been as he wished, he would have taken her to his wigwam; he would have lined it with bearskin and deerskin;&#13;
he would have covered the floor with the hide of the fox&#13;
and the wolf; he would have covered her bosom with beads&#13;
and lined her moccasins with muskrat's fur. Tokowanda's&#13;
breast heaved with emotion, then reaching to him her&#13;
hand, she said: "I, too, would go to the land of the Rising&#13;
Sun."&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
They went over hills and through valleys, out upon&#13;
plains where cactus and sage brush abound, o'er swollen&#13;
streams, through woods carpeted with ferns, over fields of&#13;
powdered lava, on through treacherous swamps, out into&#13;
the alkali land and into the drifting sands. What they&#13;
suffered could not be told, but it only bound them the closer together. They became companions. He carried her&#13;
&#13;
across streams, pushed from her path the cactus, carried&#13;
water for her parching lips, searched the plains for food .&#13;
He taught her to draw the bow and to throw the axe with&#13;
skill. On, ever on, toward the Rising Sun they went, until&#13;
at last they came to a large river, along whose sides were&#13;
high bluffs.&#13;
with great toil they burrowed back into one of these&#13;
bluffs, making for themselves a home. There a year&#13;
slipped by, a year of happiness. They went everywhere&#13;
together. In the hunt she became almost as accurate w ith&#13;
the how and arrow as he, and the little stone axe which&#13;
she used flew from her hand like a shaft of lightning and&#13;
always f01mcl its mark. At hst there came into the home&#13;
a little stranger, who brought with him an overflowing&#13;
message of joy and poured it into their lives.&#13;
On the night after his arrival, they wandered towards&#13;
the river's bank, as the sun, sinking slowly in the west,&#13;
kissed the low-hanging clouds glowing with reel and gold,&#13;
broke into view between the somber sighing boughs.&#13;
Dreaming Bull's heart was full to overflowing with love&#13;
for these, his own, and reaching the river's bank he broke&#13;
out into a song. The song had in it a word new to his&#13;
mother tongue, which expressed this new feeling that had&#13;
come to him.&#13;
The song rose and fell, over and over he sang it, as the&#13;
purple flush of evening grew darker and darker. At last&#13;
Tokowanda, too, caught the strain and joined in the song&#13;
-the&#13;
song of love and of triumph.&#13;
Wild Bear sought revenge. He followed over valle.v&#13;
and hill, through swamp and sagebrush, across swollen&#13;
streams, until he, too, with his warriors, came to the river&#13;
with its large bluffs and here he saw Dreaming Bull going&#13;
&#13;
to the north in guest of deer. Gathering his men in the&#13;
ravine to the west of where now stands Morningside College, he waited until Dreaming Bull should return. At&#13;
last he came in sight and wild Bear started his braves,&#13;
part of them up the north and part up the south branch&#13;
of the ravine, forming them in the shape of a crescent, thus&#13;
approaching what is now the campus, from three sides. At&#13;
a given signal they broke into the war-whoop of their people, as they rnshed in upon him.&#13;
Being snrrounded, Dreaming Bull was quickly overpowered ancl bound with thongs. Soon fagots were brought&#13;
from the ravine, and tying him to stakes they heaped about&#13;
him the dry woocl.&#13;
well he knew his fate, but his Indian nature gained&#13;
the ascendancy and he met it without flinching or showing&#13;
fear. But, as they piled the fagots about him, he began&#13;
his new song. It had in it a ring of victory, for the new&#13;
experience in life was a triumph to him even in death.&#13;
Tokowanda was standing near a tree throwing her axe&#13;
at a mark. At her feet lay her child. She heard far&#13;
away the war-whoop of her own people and for a moment&#13;
joy leaped to her breast; then it flashed upon her why they&#13;
were there, and a sickening £ear took possession of her.&#13;
Holling her papoose in a fur she placed him in the cave&#13;
and hastened towards the place from whence came the&#13;
cries. She carr. ed with her her bow and arrows and her&#13;
i&#13;
stone axe. As she neared the place she heard, amid the&#13;
cries of the braves, the song of Dreaming Bull. She saw a&#13;
fire being kindled and she broke into a run, knowing too&#13;
well that Dreaming Bull was to be a victim of the flames .&#13;
Bear, seeing her coming,&#13;
· As she · drew near Wild&#13;
started to meet her; but as he came toward her she drew&#13;
&#13;
her bow and sent an arrow flying into his heart. Then&#13;
rushing to the spot where D.reaming Bull was bound, she&#13;
plunged into the fire, and, cutting the thongs which bound&#13;
him, dragged him from the flames. But the flames licked&#13;
at her hair, and devouring her garment found the flesh&#13;
below, which they left charred and black. Strength was&#13;
gone from both and they fell, still clinging to each other.&#13;
The moon rose that night upon a strange scene. The&#13;
fire, flickering lower and lower, added a ray of light to the&#13;
picture and the wind listened to a song which had in it a&#13;
ring of triumph, even thongh it grew fainter and fainter,&#13;
until at last it ceased, as it was sung by Dreaming Bull&#13;
and Tokowanda, and mingling with the song came cries of&#13;
&#13;
EHH&#13;
&#13;
grief as the braves gathered about their fallen leader, trying .to call him back to life again.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
A strolling Indian passing up the valley of the Missonri the next clay, chanced to see the opening in the hillside now known as "Robber's Cave." Passing within he&#13;
found there a papoose. Strolling further he came upon&#13;
the scene of the night before, and, being an Indian, understood it all. Ile went back to the cave and took the papoose with him back to his wigwam. This same papoose,&#13;
taking with him a maiden from the camp, which had been&#13;
his home, left it, and his children and his children's children became known far and wide as the "Sioux."&#13;
&#13;
The Old Homestead&#13;
BY EDNA KLINE&#13;
&#13;
Standing in the sunset glory,&#13;
midst the rustling of the leaves,&#13;
I recalled the long past story,&#13;
Over which my spirit grieves;&#13;
In the opening of the oak trees&#13;
Stood tho farm house now bereft;&#13;
All its inmates now forgotten,&#13;
Only memories round it left.&#13;
memories of a happy childhood&#13;
When the world was still untried,&#13;
Life a happy sunny dreamworld&#13;
All unmarred by fear or pride;&#13;
many hours we played there gayly,&#13;
Ere they left the dear old place,&#13;
Left its quiet, peaceful shelter&#13;
For wealth's weary grasping race.&#13;
&#13;
As I stood there in the sunset&#13;
Soft the twilight round me fell,&#13;
Carne the spirits long departed&#13;
Tender messages to tell;&#13;
But my ear had grown too earthly&#13;
Spirit words to comprehend,&#13;
Mingling with the rustling oak leaves&#13;
Soft in silence seem to blend.&#13;
&#13;
But I seem to see them living,&#13;
As they lived there long ago;&#13;
"Now I lay me" softly sounding&#13;
From the chamber rude and low;&#13;
All the cattle in the barnyard,&#13;
Stars soft shining in· the sky,&#13;
Keeping guard above the family&#13;
Who lived there in days gone by.&#13;
* Prize&#13;
&#13;
But this dream is gone forever&#13;
Of those friends so far away ;&#13;
In its solitude the farm house&#13;
Fast is falling in decay;&#13;
Windowless it stands, and doorless,&#13;
Sunshine slanting through the roof;&#13;
Only here a shelf and stairway&#13;
Of its former life give proof.&#13;
&#13;
For relief from pain and longing,&#13;
Prayed I 'neath the oak tree broad,&#13;
And I found it in my duty&#13;
Present duty wrought for God;&#13;
And the mystery and darkness&#13;
When I reach the l1eavenly land&#13;
All life's weariness and heartaches&#13;
Then my soul shall understand.&#13;
&#13;
Winner for Poem.&#13;
&#13;
Lost Opportunity&#13;
BY A.&#13;
&#13;
W, ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
The day is slowly going now.&#13;
The night as slow appears,&#13;
Another day is gone to join&#13;
Tho fast receding years.&#13;
Within the house the gathering gloom&#13;
Has penetrated all.&#13;
The dying embers of the fire&#13;
Draw pictures on the wall.&#13;
The fitful flashes from the fire&#13;
Light up an old man's face,&#13;
As he sits beside the chimney,&#13;
And gazes into space.&#13;
Upon his furrowed brow is seen&#13;
The grave's thin blossoms, white.&#13;
His eyes reflect but dimly now,&#13;
The fitful, dull reel light.&#13;
His day is slowly going now.&#13;
His night, as slow appears.&#13;
Soon will another mortal join&#13;
The ones of former years.&#13;
The figures on the darkened wall&#13;
Now vanish in the gloom;&#13;
&#13;
Now, with each fitful glare of light,&#13;
They seem to fill the room.&#13;
Among the figures on the wall&#13;
A form he knows appears.&#13;
'Tis but the ghost of one he knew&#13;
Back in his younger years.&#13;
Of one he knew ? Yes, knew full well,&#13;
But only knew by sight.&#13;
'Twas Golden Opportunity,&#13;
Who once had seemed so bright.&#13;
She beckoned him to listen, and,&#13;
With voice so like a sigh,&#13;
"Why did you never grasp me&#13;
When I was always nigh ?"&#13;
"To you, a youth so young and strong,&#13;
I showed a mountain high.&#13;
'Twas crowned with palaces of gold.&#13;
To reach them you must try.&#13;
"But, no; instead you tried to think&#13;
A . means wherewith to fly.&#13;
And meanwhile others, past you climbed&#13;
And mounted to the sky.&#13;
"And now you sit and think in vain&#13;
Of wasted youthful hours&#13;
You should have spent in climbing&#13;
On upwards to those towers.&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
"No easy task to climb so high.&#13;
Each one must risk a fall.&#13;
I stood and aided where I could,&#13;
The path was free to all."&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
HERE'S a time of doubt and darkness,&#13;
When our friends seem strange and cold ;&#13;
In this mist of lonely heartache,&#13;
Comes the message, sweet, though old.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
The dying embers ceased to burn;&#13;
Outside there was no light.&#13;
The figures grouped upon the wall,&#13;
Now vanished out of sight.&#13;
The old man slept, and as he slept,&#13;
He seemed again to see&#13;
Alas! Too far away for him,&#13;
Bright Opportunity.&#13;
0, Youth, with beauty, strength and mind,&#13;
Take warning from the old.&#13;
The path will close to you some day.&#13;
The rest need not be told.&#13;
&#13;
"Child I would not have thee suffer,&#13;
'Tis no joy to see thy pain;&#13;
Only close to me draw nearer,&#13;
And the sun will shine again."&#13;
Know you not you were created&#13;
For a purpose grand and high ?&#13;
You should live a life of triumph;&#13;
To thy Father, then, draw nigh.&#13;
But 'twas&#13;
That I&#13;
You must&#13;
Closer&#13;
&#13;
not for earthly triumph&#13;
placed thee here below;&#13;
live a life of beauty,&#13;
to the Savior grow.&#13;
-EDNA KLINE.&#13;
&#13;
Chartography of Iowa&#13;
SOPHOMORE-FRESHMAN PRIZE ESSAY '03-04&#13;
BY LE ROY ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
this essay to present&#13;
I T IS the purpose of and jurisdiction of thebriefly the&#13;
changes of ownership&#13;
territory&#13;
now known as Iowa, showing by means of maps the various changes in the boundaries from 1493 until 1846.&#13;
In his efforts to reach India by sailing westward, Columbus discovered some of the islands southeast of North&#13;
America (1492-1498) and claimed them for the king of&#13;
Spain.&#13;
In 1493 the pope, Alexander VI., issued a bull dividing all the lands in the world not held by any other Christian prince between Spain and Portugal, granting to Spain&#13;
all the lands touched by the great navigator, and all other&#13;
territory west of a line passing from pole to pole 100&#13;
leagues west of the Cape Verde islands. All territory east&#13;
of that line was granted to Portugal. As a result Spain&#13;
received the entire continents of North and South America&#13;
and the adjacent islands, and Portugal received a great&#13;
expanse of water. By a treaty between Spain and Portugal (1494) the line was moved 270 leagues farther to the&#13;
west. Portugal then received a small portion of the continent of South America.&#13;
The other nations refused to recognize this division of&#13;
the world. The English explored and settled along the&#13;
Atlantic coast. The French settled in the St. Lawrence&#13;
valley and the Great Lakes region.&#13;
Jacques Cartier discovered the Gulf of St. Lawrence&#13;
&#13;
in 1534, and the next year sailed up the St. Lawrence&#13;
River as far as the present site of Montreal. He claimed&#13;
the northern part of North America and the St. Lawrence&#13;
basin for the French and called the region New France.&#13;
While here he was told by the Indians of a great river to&#13;
the west.&#13;
More than a century later ( 1673) Marquette and J oliet led a small party to explore western New France. They,&#13;
too, heard of the great river and decided to visit it. They&#13;
reached it June 14th, and sailed down the stream about as&#13;
far as the present southern boundary of Iowa. Here they&#13;
discovered footprints in the mud along the river, and by&#13;
following a path inland for about six miles they reached&#13;
an Indian village upon the banks of a stream. After passing the night among the Indians, they continued their&#13;
journey and proceeded as far south as the Arkansas River,&#13;
when they were compelled to return. Marquette and J oliet were probably the first white men to see what is now&#13;
Iowa or to tread its soil.&#13;
It remained for La Salle to claim the Mississippi valley for France. He, too, had heard of the great river to&#13;
the west and determined to visit it, thinking he might be&#13;
able to reach the Gulf of California. In 1682 he descended the Illinois River to the Mississippi and proceeded&#13;
down that stream. He had not gone far until he saw the&#13;
direction of the river was not west, but south; nevertheless,&#13;
he continued his jonrney until he reached the Gulf of Mexico. At the mouth of the river he built a fort, planted a&#13;
cross, and claimed all the territory drained by the great&#13;
river and all the tributaries for the king of France, and&#13;
.named it Louisiana. · This claim included practically all&#13;
of North America between the Rocky Mountains on the&#13;
&#13;
west and the Appalachian Mountains on the east, the&#13;
great lakes and the continental divide on the north an&lt;l&#13;
the Gulf of Mexico on the south.&#13;
Twice this vast region was placed under the influence&#13;
of individual enterprise, in 1712 and again in 1718, but&#13;
each venture proved unsuccessful. The French remained&#13;
unmolested in their possession of the Mississippi valley&#13;
until the Ohio Company began to operate in western Pennsylvania, about 1754. The conflicting claims of the English and French to the Ohio valley were largely responsible for the French and Indian war.&#13;
At the close of the war England received, as her portion of North America, all of Canada and all of the present territory of the United States east of the Mississippi&#13;
River and north of Florida (1763). The French territory west of the Mississippi River was ceded to Spain as&#13;
compensation for her loss of Havana.&#13;
This was followed in a few years by tho Revolutionary war, at the close of which the territory east of the&#13;
Mississippi River and north of Florida became independent and assumed the name of the United States of America. The natural outlet for the produce of the region west&#13;
of the Alleghenies was the Mississippi River. The United&#13;
states owned the east bankof theriver as far south as Florida ( 31 N.) and was entitled to free navigation of the&#13;
river to that point. The rest of its course, including the&#13;
mouth of the river, was under the control of Spain.&#13;
Difficulty arose when Spain attempted to levy duties&#13;
on American goods passing through the port of New Orleans. This difficulty was adjusted by a treaty with Spain,&#13;
ratified in 1795, which granted to the United States free&#13;
navigation of the river and the use of New Orleans as a&#13;
&#13;
place of deposit for American goods for a period of three&#13;
years.&#13;
By a secret treaty (1800), known as the treaty of St.&#13;
Ildefonso, Spain transferred the territory, as she had received it, to France in return for an Italian province. This&#13;
transfer met with popular disapproval in the United&#13;
States and President Jefferson immediately authorized&#13;
Robt. R. Livingston, our minister to France, to try to purchase the strip of coast extending eastward from the Mississippi and including New Orleans. At first Livingston's proposal was not received with favor by France, and&#13;
James )lonroe was sent as special envoy to aid him in&#13;
conducting the negotiations. A renewal of the war between France and England seemed imminent and N apoleon not only abandoned his preparations for colonizing&#13;
Louisiana but authorized Barbe Marbois, his director of&#13;
the treasury, to negotiate an immediate sale to the United&#13;
States, not of New Orleans alone, but of the whole territory of Louisiana. An agreement was quickly reached by&#13;
which the United States acquired all of Louisiana by paying 80,000,000 francs, or about $15,000,000, and guaranteeing to its inhabitants full enjoyment of religious liberty&#13;
and the rights as citizens of the United States. The treaty&#13;
was signed April 30, 1803, ratified by the United States&#13;
senate October 17, 1803, and the United States took formal possession of New Orleans December 20, 1803, although it was not until the following spring that upper&#13;
Louisiana was transferred to the United States.&#13;
Shortly after the United States had taken possession&#13;
of the territory congress passed an act (March 26, 1804),&#13;
which was to take effect the following October, dividing&#13;
the territory into two parts on the 33d parallel of north&#13;
&#13;
latitude. The lower part was called the Territory of Orleans and the upper part was attached to the Territory of&#13;
Indiana for judicial purposes, and called the District of&#13;
Louisiana. It remained attached to Indiana Territory&#13;
but a short time, for in 1805 the district was formed into&#13;
a territory of the first (lowest) grade and the title was&#13;
changed from District of Louisiana to Territory of Louisiana. Seven years later (1812) the Territory of Orleans was admitted into the nnion as the state of Louisiana, and the name of the Territory of Louisiana was&#13;
changed to T erritor.Y of Missouri, and was raised from&#13;
a first to a second grade territory. The extent of the territory remained the same until 1819, when Arkansas Territory was formed.&#13;
In 1817 the legislature of Missouri Territory applied&#13;
to congress for permission to prepare a state constitution&#13;
preliminary to admission into the union. Then followed&#13;
the long debate over the slavery question. The Missouri&#13;
compromise was passed in 1820, and Missouri with its&#13;
present boundaries was admitted into the union August&#13;
10, 1821.&#13;
N o provision was made for the government of the remainder of J\[issouri Territory, and it was ·w ithout courts&#13;
or laws, except those made by the settlers themselves, until lawlessness and crime became so prevalent as to attract&#13;
the attention of congress. On June 28, 1834, the part of&#13;
this territory comprising the present states of Iowa, Minnesota west of the J\Iississippi River and a line from the&#13;
source of the Mississippi to the international boundary&#13;
line, and that portion of the Dakotas which lies east of&#13;
the )fissomi and the White Earth Rivers, became a part&#13;
&#13;
of Michigan Territory. It was here that the word Iowa&#13;
was first applied to a political division, being the name&#13;
given to the county comprising the land north of Illinois&#13;
and between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi River.&#13;
A new territory was formed from a part of Michigan&#13;
Territory in 1836 and known as Wisconsin Territory. It&#13;
consisted of the territory now included in the states of&#13;
\Visconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and the Dakotas east of the&#13;
Missouri and White Earth Rivers. The first legislature&#13;
of Wisconsin Territory met at Belmont in the present&#13;
Iowa County, Wis., in the fall of 1836, but the legislature&#13;
of 1837 met at Flint Hill, now Burlington, Iowa, which&#13;
was then the temporary capital. The territory was not&#13;
only too large to be governed successfully by its officers,&#13;
but the population west of the Mississippi River was rapidly increasing and was spreading out over the entire region,&#13;
until in 1837 there were as many inhabitants in the part&#13;
of the territory west of the Mississippi as there were in&#13;
the part east of it.&#13;
The question of separation from \Visconsin was agitated by the inhabitants west of the river and in the fall of&#13;
1837 (September 16) at a meeting held in Burlington it&#13;
was resolved: "That while we have the utmost confidence&#13;
in the ability and i11tegrity of those who control the destinies of our present territorial government, and our delegate in the congress of the United States, we do, nevertheless, look to a division of the territorial government by&#13;
congress, west of the Mississippi River as the only means&#13;
if immediately and fully securing to the citizens thereof,&#13;
the benefits and immunities of a government of laws."&#13;
This convention also urged the people west of the Mississippi to hold county meetings and select three delegates&#13;
&#13;
from each county to meet in convention at Burlington on&#13;
the :first Monday in November.&#13;
The delegates chosen met November 6, 1837, at Burlington and organized themselves into a territorial convention. On the second day the governor, members of the&#13;
legislature, judges, and members of the bar at Burlington&#13;
were invited to attend the convention. Resolutions were&#13;
passed and memorials to congress adopted in regard to&#13;
( 1) pre-emption, ( 2) the northern boundary of Missouri,&#13;
and ( 3) the division of the territory. Several reasons for&#13;
desiring a division of the territory were offered, among&#13;
them being the claims that the territory was too large as&#13;
it stood, and that during the sixteen months it had been&#13;
attached to ·Wisconsin Territory only one term of court&#13;
had been held. The territorial legislature approved the&#13;
action taken by the convention and within three weeks prepared a memorial to congress requesting a division.&#13;
By an act passeJ by both houses and approved by President Van Buren, June 12, 1838, the territory was divided. That part between the Mississippi River on the&#13;
east, and the Missouri and White Earth Rivers on the&#13;
west, was organized as Iowa Territory, with Robert Lucas,&#13;
of Ohio, as governor.&#13;
Some difficulty with Missouri over the southern boundary arose. The constitution of Missouri defined her&#13;
northern boundary as the parallel which passed through&#13;
the rapids of the Des Moines River. The territory then&#13;
was held by the Indians, but when their claims were exting11ished, Missouri took steps to establish her exact limits. She appointed a commission in 1836 to locate this&#13;
boundary and invited the United States and the Territory&#13;
of Wisconsin to have representatives on_ this commission.&#13;
&#13;
They both failed to appoint commissioners, and Missouri&#13;
proceeded with the work. Her commission decided in&#13;
1837 that the rapids were the rapids in the Des Moines&#13;
River itself, at the great bend of the river near Keosauqua&#13;
and not the rapids in the Mississippi River just above the&#13;
mouth of the Des Moines River.&#13;
In 1838 congress tried to settle the dispute by providing for a commission consisting of one representative each&#13;
from Iowa territory, Missouri and the United States,&#13;
which was to ascertain and mark the boundary line. Missouri refused to be represented on this commission and&#13;
trouble arose again when the authorities of Clark county,&#13;
Missouri, attempted to collect taxes in what is now Van&#13;
Buren county, Iowa. This action was resented by Governor Lucas, who called out a detachment of 500 troops&#13;
and sent them under Maj. -Gen. Jesse B. Brown to the&#13;
scene of the trouble. They encamped in Van Buren&#13;
county directly opposite 1,000 Missouri soldiers under&#13;
General Allen. Proposals for settlement were sent by&#13;
Missouri to the legislature of Iowa territory then in ses·&#13;
sion at Burlington and the whole matter was referred to&#13;
the United States supreme court. On June 3, 1851, the&#13;
supreme court rendered its decision :fixing the old Indian&#13;
boundary line run by John C. Sullivan in 1816 as the&#13;
southern boundary.&#13;
A law was passed by the legislature in 1840 providing&#13;
that at the annual August elections- the question of calling a constitutional convention should be voted upon.&#13;
When the returns of the election were canvassed, it was&#13;
found that the proposition was defeated by a vote of 937&#13;
to 2,907. The proposition was again defeated in 1842,&#13;
but in 1844 the vote on the proposed convention carried.&#13;
&#13;
The following August seventy-three delegates were chosen&#13;
and on October 7, 1844, sixty-three delegates met at Iowa&#13;
City and organized themselves as a constitutional convention.&#13;
The boundaries designated by the constitution of 1844&#13;
and adopted by the people, yVere as follows : "Beginning&#13;
in the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi river&#13;
opposite the mouth of the Des Moines river; thence up the&#13;
said river, Des Moines, in the middle of the main channel&#13;
thereof, to a point where it is intersected by the Old Indian boundary line, or line run by John 0. Sullivan in the&#13;
year 1816; thence westwardly along said line to the 'Old&#13;
Northwest corner of the Missouri;' thence due west to&#13;
the middle of the main channel of the Missouri river;&#13;
thence up in the middle of the main channel of the river&#13;
last mentioned to the mouth of the Sioux or Calumet&#13;
river; thence in a direct line to the middle of the main&#13;
channel of the St. Peters river where the Watonwan river,&#13;
( according to Nicollet's map), enters the same; thence&#13;
down the middle of the main channel of said river to the&#13;
middle of the main channel of the Mississippi river;&#13;
thence down the middle of the main channel of said river&#13;
to the place of beginning."&#13;
These boundaries did not meet with favor in congress&#13;
and that body accordingly submitted new ones to the&#13;
people of Iowa. The eastern boundary was to remain as&#13;
proposed by the constitution of 1844, but the western&#13;
boundary was to be a meridian drawn 17 degrees and 30&#13;
minutes west from the meridian of Washington, D. 0.,&#13;
and the state to extend from Missouri on the south to the&#13;
parallel passing through the junction of the St. Peters&#13;
&#13;
(Minnesota) and the Blue Earth rivers on the north. This&#13;
proposed as a western boundary a line that would pass&#13;
near the present boundary between Ringgold and Taylor&#13;
counties on the south, and Kossuth and Emmet counties&#13;
on the north. This change was not accepted by the people.&#13;
They continued to insist on having the Missouri river as&#13;
the western boundary, and congress, on its part, was&#13;
equally unwilling to admit, as a single state, so large an&#13;
extent of territory as was included within the boundaries&#13;
proposed by the constitution of 1844.&#13;
In May, 1846, another territorial convention was&#13;
called to discuss the boundary question, and after about&#13;
two weeks' deliberation the present boundaries were decided upon. The constitution was again submitted to the&#13;
people August 3, 1846, and adopted by a vote of 9,492 to&#13;
9,036. Aside from the change of boundaries the constitution as adopted in 1846 was practically the same as the&#13;
one submitted in 1844. Congress approved these boundaries and on December 28, 1846, Iowa was admitted into&#13;
the Union as the 29th state.&#13;
At this time there were about thirty organized counties, all in the eastern part of the state; since then the number has increased to ninety-nine. The population at the&#13;
time of admission was 102,300, and in 1900 it was 2,231,853. During the last sixty years the development of Iowa&#13;
has been phenomenal. Settlers have poured in from the&#13;
eastern states and from Europe. The Indian land claims&#13;
have been extinguished from time to time, and the land&#13;
has come into the hands of a sturdy class of people who&#13;
have transformed it from a wilderness into one of the most&#13;
prosperous and productive regions in the world.&#13;
&#13;
Wi Reberie&#13;
nter&#13;
WRITTEN FOR THE ZETALETHEAN ANNUAL PUBLIC&#13;
BY EMMA FAIR&#13;
&#13;
Time&#13;
bird;&#13;
T hehave fallenhas come for the snow leavingthe leaves&#13;
into their winter beds,&#13;
the trees&#13;
gaunt and weird; tho wind blows around the house with&#13;
whirl and gu t; the first snow is in the air; winter is upon&#13;
us. Now is the time for colds, chilblains, the camphor&#13;
bottle and the quinine box; the winter fireside and the&#13;
long, quiet evenings.&#13;
We face the stiffening breath of the northwest wind&#13;
for a half hour, several hundred cubic feet of air enter our&#13;
lungs, imparting to us its pure oxygen to warm us internally while it freezes us extomally, and at length we reach&#13;
our warm rooms and seat ourselves beside our cozy fires&#13;
to dream for an hour or two, while our face gradually&#13;
relaxes its set form and the cold which we hoped to avoid&#13;
settles down upon us, giving only a pleasing sense of inactivity. We are now in a condition for imaginative&#13;
flights and pictures of all sorts of things real or unreal.&#13;
Thus happily situated, our thoughts first turn to ourselves. Air-castles already built are gone over and many&#13;
new ones constructed. But not being entirely selfish, we&#13;
grow weary of this and our thoughts turn to others. We&#13;
wonder if many are as happy and contented tonight as&#13;
ourselves, if others are sitting by cheerful fires seeing their&#13;
futures in the flicker of the blaze. We imagine ourselves&#13;
in many different conditions and we try to picture what&#13;
our thoughts would be if we were in the place of others.&#13;
&#13;
An interesting panorama passes before our vision as our&#13;
thoughts are allowed to take their course. Somber pictures are interwoven with bright visions; trouble and hardship with peace and plenty.&#13;
The country landscape, as ever the home where nature&#13;
is found in her most glorious form, comes before our vision. Hore nature is true, pure and unperverted. The&#13;
school boy comes before ns for of all winter cheer is not&#13;
that of the school boy the most genuine? And with what a&#13;
lusty hurrah he throws his cap into the air as he rushes&#13;
from the school house door and cries with delight, "Boys,&#13;
it's snowing!" Winter! What a charm it holds for him!&#13;
Already the snow falls fast. Soon the roads will be covered, the trees laden and the ice pond frozen. His thoughts&#13;
fly fast to the new sled promised. Already his mind is&#13;
aglow with the vision of gay cap and mittens, the glistening slope covered with boys and sleds, the girls with their&#13;
kitty hoods and eider clown cloaks standing shyly by or&#13;
coaxing for a slide on some boy's new sled; the daring&#13;
dash clown the long slope, the exhibition of skill in avoiding a collision with another boy's sled and the hearty good&#13;
will that pervades all the hour's sport.&#13;
But the bracing air brings indoor thoughts too, and&#13;
with them the savory scent of cooking. Christmas is only&#13;
a few .days distant. The mother compounds plum pudding, cranberry sauce and mince pies, while baby brother&#13;
is toddling around with one shoe off, stocking in hand,&#13;
looking out of the window with wide-open eyes, revolving&#13;
in his mind the possibilities and pleasing impossibilites of&#13;
Santa Claus.&#13;
The country home with ts contented, cheery air pleases&#13;
my fancy, for the country is full of hope, purity and&#13;
&#13;
simplicity. The laugh of the country child at this time&#13;
of the year has a genuine ring, his sports are realities, his&#13;
dreams are but visions of realities that are to be his. But&#13;
in spite of my pleasure, my mind drifts off to the city.&#13;
Here, it is trne, we find bright visions, dreams that in their&#13;
splendor and gaiety far exceed those that fill the mind of&#13;
the conntry school boy, but dreams which are impossible&#13;
to the dreamer, unreal, extravagant, or if possible, hollow&#13;
and vain. In our reverie we wxpect to find vague longings&#13;
and restless discontent in the soul of the working girl and&#13;
in the heart of the ·woman of fashion as well.&#13;
In imagination we follow the working girl as she goes&#13;
to her home. We find a home not entirely cheerless, but&#13;
luxury is wanting. We find the necessities of life, it is&#13;
true, but much of the home attractiveness is missing. The&#13;
working girl is discontented with her lot. Every day she&#13;
has the opportunity of seeing the sharp contrast between&#13;
her life and that of the richer class. Their handsome carriages roll past her as she trudges home from her work. She&#13;
catches glimpses of costly furs and rich velvets. IIow comfortable they look. Often, on cold winter evenings she&#13;
passes their gaily lighted homes where social events are&#13;
taking place and music and laughter come to her ears. No&#13;
wonder her own home appears to her as bare and unsatisfying. Her dreams tonight, as she sits by the little stove&#13;
mending a worn garment, are dreams that carry her outside of her sphere. She sees herself clad in the richest&#13;
of gowns. She is the queen of a gaily lighted ball room.&#13;
Admirers are hers by the score. Her own home is a mansion and her working days are forgotten. This she thinks&#13;
would be a paradise and of this she dreams. Ah, if we&#13;
could only give her a view of the fashionable woman as she&#13;
&#13;
sits in her luxmious home, as she looks with disappointment upon all that is hers and must for her comfort dwell&#13;
upon gayer costumes than she yet has; more money spent&#13;
for diamonds and extravagance ten-fold. If, on this the&#13;
working girl could look, if she could feel the heart-aches&#13;
and disappointments that come to this, her idol, would she&#13;
not realize that her dream, even if attained, would be vain&#13;
and empty? This is city life, its extremes, its contrasts,&#13;
and- its discontent.&#13;
What a variety of characters comes to my vision as in&#13;
imagination I wander over a great city. Iet us enter one&#13;
of these large buildings where story is piled upon story.&#13;
Here the rich broker sits in his office. Look at his face!&#13;
No vision of Christmas made bright by generous giving,&#13;
or deeds of love are there. That drawn brow indicates&#13;
thoughts of disagreeable :financial problems. IIe thinks&#13;
of the money he is compelled to expend on the repair of his&#13;
tenement houses and he begrudges the few dollars taken&#13;
from his several thousands. His visions are of large investments and of possible gains or losses. If we could&#13;
carry his thoughts to one of his own tenement houses and&#13;
let him look into the heart of that thin, hollow-eyed child&#13;
that stands at the patched window and looks out on a desolate landscape and tottering buildings, would not a vision&#13;
of opportunity for kindness come to him? As he looks&#13;
at the rough floor, the broken plaster, and the bare cupboard, would he not have different thoughts? No, he&#13;
probably would not, for something of this he sees every&#13;
day. It belongs to city life.&#13;
But enough of such visions. Not being in a philosophical mood we would have something more pleasing.&#13;
Ah! now we have it . But where is the place of our rev-&#13;
&#13;
erie? In the city? Yes, it may be found even in the city.&#13;
Our vision is a home of culture and refinement, yet simplicity and retirement. Our dream happily centers on the&#13;
daughter of the house. Her wedding day is near at hand.&#13;
A pretty vision she is tonight as she stands at the window,&#13;
the curtain half drawn, an expression of thoughtfulness&#13;
in her attitude. She is about to drop the curtain and draw&#13;
the shade. .J ust then a cloud passes the moon. A light,&#13;
fleecy cloud it is; the moon passes behind it only for a&#13;
moment and then shines on again as brightly as before.&#13;
But as she turns from the window a slight sadness r0sts&#13;
upon her features, she has thought of mother, for this is&#13;
a home-loving girl. How kind that mother has been. How&#13;
dear she grows just now, for the daughter realizes that&#13;
she will carry a part of that rnother's life away when she&#13;
leaves tomorrow. She knows she will be missed.&#13;
How cozy her room looks tonight. How dear, old&#13;
memories crowd upon her as she looks upon its familiar&#13;
furnishings and the walls almost covered with pictures.&#13;
See, the fire-light seems to give life to the faces of old&#13;
friends. Her eyes wander from picture to picture, from&#13;
one familiar object to another. Finally her glance falls on&#13;
her little bible. The sacred obligations upon which she is&#13;
about to enter come before her as never before. . Responsibility, yes, all that comes to her. But the little bible is&#13;
well worn and we have reason to believe that a strong character has been built when those pages were read and reread.&#13;
The girlish mind, true to its nature, goes immediately&#13;
from these solemn thoughts to that of her wedding dress.&#13;
In imagination she is clad in its dainty folds. Her dear-&#13;
&#13;
est girl friends are :flitting about her. With important but&#13;
gay faces they assist in the completion of her toilette. Already the carriage is awaiting her at the door. She can&#13;
hear distinctly the silver chime of sleigh-bells as they ring&#13;
through the frosty air, keeping time to the gay, prancing&#13;
of the teams in the wedding party. Hark ! The church bell&#13;
rings. The mellow, golden notes fl.oat out on the clear&#13;
night air. In a few moments she will stand before the&#13;
altar pledging her faith and love to the man of her choice.&#13;
The vision fades. Like a dream but half remembered&#13;
it struggles in my thoughts and mingles for awhile with&#13;
the soft glow of the fire, then is gone. For awhile, I sit&#13;
in meditative reverie watching the shadows as they play&#13;
upon the wall, making gTotesque figures or slender fairy&#13;
forms. Wars, battles, dancing, mi1·th, phantoms and realities succeed each other in rapid succession. As upon a canvas, picture after picture appears before me. Some are&#13;
definite, some vague, some present mighty contests, some&#13;
sweet repose. But tbe night wears on and weariness comes&#13;
and with it the thought of old age, the thought of feeble,&#13;
tottering steps approaching the grave. There comes before me a bent form carrying the burden of years, a hoary&#13;
head, white with the snows of many winters. The darkening shadows speak of gloom and death. But a thread&#13;
of hope is mingled with the feeble step. I peer closer at&#13;
the vanishing form. A smile of triumph rests upon the&#13;
saintly features. A far away look of hope is in the eye&#13;
as the aged pilgrim approaches the close of day. The happy, eager soul waits impatient for the summons to a better&#13;
world. An unseen hand beckons on. A light encircles&#13;
the vanishing form. It is the glory of the Eternal Day.&#13;
&#13;
An Indian Legand&#13;
BY MARIAN B. MATTHEWS&#13;
&#13;
GANGES, with its sad history, is a&#13;
The RIVER for dreaming. The right bank is studbeautiful spot&#13;
ded with little clusters of trees enriching the white domed&#13;
temples. The dying rays of the glorious sunset linger lovingly on the burnished spires as the bells peal forth the&#13;
call to evening prayer. There is no twilight, the sun sets&#13;
and it is night. Nights such as are not found in our&#13;
western hemisphere; silver nights, lighted up by as glorious moonlight, as the sunset which preceded it. A soft,&#13;
gentle light, hiding the unlovely and bringing out the&#13;
beauty of everything it touched.&#13;
On the bank of this river once dwelt an ristocratic&#13;
Hindu, the pride and joy of whom was his eldest son, Ramdas, a thoughtful, silent boy, who dwelt much in the temple and pondered deeply the ethics of his religion. One&#13;
day the father ·was informed by the priest of the temple&#13;
that his boy had been set apart by the gods for temple&#13;
service and was thinking of taking the vows of celibacy.&#13;
Pride and sorrow struggled in the father's heart, for not&#13;
many boys were chosen this early by the gods.&#13;
Now the gods of the numerous temples were bitter&#13;
enemies; therefore, they devised a plan whereby they&#13;
might turn this young man from his devout ways and thus&#13;
injure the god of that temple. They created Dulasi, a&#13;
most beautiful woman, to wait on him during his devotions. Many were the wiles and artifices used. In vain&#13;
&#13;
did she lay the most beatiful :flowers besiJe him, as he&#13;
meditated upon the grand possibility of being absorbed&#13;
into the Great Spirit.&#13;
One day, however, _ missed his beautiful vision, and,&#13;
he&#13;
try as he might, he could not perform his religious ceremonies as of yore. Wandering down by the river bank,&#13;
he came suddenly upon the fair one of whom he was&#13;
dreaming.&#13;
"Dulasi," he said, a little too tenderly for an austere&#13;
priest, "why have you neglected to assist me at my devotions?" The woman sobbed quietly, making no reply. In&#13;
that moment Ramdas knew the priests had been mistaken,&#13;
for, he argued, the gods could not have planned himself&#13;
for the abstemious life of the priesthood, and had given&#13;
him a heart so full of love for this beautiful woman. Lo,&#13;
throwing aside all scruples he sat down and told her of&#13;
his great love. The woman shrank from him and commanded him to be silent, reminding him of his vow to the&#13;
gods of his temple. He indignantly demanded of her some&#13;
explanation for this strange conduct, reminding her that she&#13;
had taught him to love her. Then she told him her strange&#13;
story. She confessed that she stayed away because she&#13;
loved him and loved him so well that she had dared to&#13;
disobey the gods, rather than make him unhappy.&#13;
They both sat thoughtfully gazing at the river and&#13;
listening to the chime of the faraway temple bells. Ramdas suddenly raised his head. "Woman," said he, "let us&#13;
away to that temple. It is the temple of the Goddess of&#13;
Love, said to be the most powerful of all the goddesses."&#13;
But the woman, less hopeful than he, seemed to be reluctant to follow. "It is not seeming for a woman to go&#13;
through the crowded streets," she objected.&#13;
&#13;
While hesitating thus, their attention was arrested by&#13;
the swift but noiseless approach of a stranger. Silently&#13;
she came toward them, and gently laying her hand upon&#13;
the timid woman, said reassuringly : "Thy lover is right,&#13;
the Goddess of Love has all power. The War Gods and the&#13;
Gods of Peace are strong, but under my protection yon&#13;
will be safe. I have not the power, however, to insure you&#13;
a peaceful life, as mortals live, but laying aside your mortal bodies, ye may dwell as one spirit in my temple."&#13;
The woman was the first to speak, saying with a gentle&#13;
smile, "It shall be as my lover shall decide." Lovingly&#13;
placing his hand upon her shoulder, he said: "It shall be&#13;
as we both desire. We joyfully accept thy terms."&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
The sun set and it was night. The lamp in the temple&#13;
of the God of Peace was untri111med, and the priests&#13;
searched in vain for the yonng man whose duty it haJ&#13;
been to keep it trimmed and burning.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
Now, any beautiful summer evening you may meet a&#13;
man upon that river's bank, with a sweet, tender face, so&#13;
foll of love and sympathy you might think it a woman's.&#13;
There he sits by the sacred river, ready to help young lovers 011t of their difficulties; but if you stay until the temple bells of the Goel of Peace ring out, you will suddenly&#13;
find yourself alone, for, though in the service of the Goddess of Love, he is always in fear of his former gods, while&#13;
he is in his human form.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Association&#13;
SIDNEY L. CHANDLER, '99&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT, '94&#13;
PEARL A. WOODFORD, '03&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
&#13;
BESSIE M. CARR, '02 •&#13;
DORA EISENTRAUT, '97 •&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
J. A. DAVIES, 'oo, BOSTON, MASS.&#13;
&#13;
HISTORY fraught with such ev nts and enriched by such memories as belong to the&#13;
early struggles and triumphs of Morningside College deserves to be rehearsed and recorded.&#13;
Ten years ago God planted this school in Morningside, '' beautiful for situation, the joy of the&#13;
whole earth." He had mapped out this region for&#13;
a college. The climate is favorable for study, the&#13;
cold of winter invigorates, the beauty of summer&#13;
inspires, and the air bathes us by day and by night&#13;
with its own fresh life. Nature is steadfast. The&#13;
same contour of country will remain, to bold fixed&#13;
forever the old associations. God's smile will ever&#13;
play along these valleys, and his angels will rest&#13;
on these hilltops. The same broad fields will open&#13;
upon you with their quiet beauty. We gratefully&#13;
accept our location. The quiet of the country invites repose, and repose is essential to high culture. Easy intellectual growth, free from the&#13;
taint of self-conceit and from the weakness of hurried thought, is best secured apart from the heated&#13;
life of great cities. The student will know man as&#13;
he knows himself, and he will become a saving&#13;
&#13;
power among-men in proportion to the purity and&#13;
loftiness of his ideals, to adopt any other principle, to follow any other method is to substitute&#13;
the arts of vulgar ambition for the innate powers&#13;
of conviction and for the moral force of a symmetrical character.&#13;
Solitude, then, in the months of study and&#13;
society in the weeks of vacation are among the&#13;
chief outward conditions of an ample intellectual&#13;
growth. All these may be secured at Morningside. The school has its distinctive type. As it&#13;
grows from youth to maturity, it will follow the&#13;
idea and law of its own life. Its genus is indicated&#13;
in the close union of culture and of religion. Open&#13;
to all, impartial in its dealings with all, and offering to all a generous course of study. The college&#13;
is yet a child and so represented of the Methodist&#13;
faith. We ought not to disguise from ourselves,&#13;
or from the public, that we have fixed religious&#13;
opinions and that these opinions are in full accord&#13;
with the denomination to which we belong. They&#13;
are not voiced in the class room, but, as convictions they will find utterance in the privacy of&#13;
domestic life, in the freedom of social intercourse,&#13;
and often on occasions incident toa public position.&#13;
In these ways the relig·ious faith of a faculty&#13;
tells for the Christian ideals which it represents.&#13;
There is the unconscious influence of a body of&#13;
&#13;
men and women, who, however they may differ on&#13;
other points, are one and the same in their Christian relations. Their characters are a standing&#13;
witness to the truth, their united profession constitutes a moral force, silent, continuous and&#13;
potential.&#13;
Morningside Colleg·e is to have a future. Well&#13;
may we join in thanksgiving to God for bis favors&#13;
to these people in their struggles and efforts in&#13;
sustaining and promoting the cause of education&#13;
here. The ordeal through which the school has&#13;
passed is a sure token of divine favor. "It has&#13;
passed the Rubicon" and all is well. Coming&#13;
events cast their shadows before. The tempest&#13;
that once threatened desolation and made this hill&#13;
tremble and the trees to bend, found some whose&#13;
&#13;
faith failed not, but with "eagle eye and eagle&#13;
wing, they rose directly toward the sun."&#13;
"A s some tall cliff, that lifts its awful form,&#13;
Sw e lls from the vale and midway leaves the storm,&#13;
Wh ile round its base the whirling storm is sped,&#13;
Ete rn al sunshine settles on its head."&#13;
&#13;
These storms are sometimes necessary to purify the atmosphere and stir the turbid waters beneath. A calm is sure to follow. Here lies our&#13;
only safet y. Trust in God, fidelity in the discharge of duty and all will end in success and a&#13;
large rewa rd.&#13;
The future&#13;
will witness larger endowments,&#13;
larger fac u lties, larger attendance, higher grades&#13;
of study, and more ample accommodations and&#13;
facilities of instruction. Let us seek to contribute&#13;
to that grand consummation.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
- DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
MISS FAIR&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Association&#13;
&#13;
N&#13;
&#13;
1902 the first attempt was made to organize athletics at Morning·&#13;
side College. "The General Athletic Association" was the result&#13;
of these efforts. This organization had charge of all departments&#13;
of athletics undertaken by the student body. Base ball, tennis, basket&#13;
ball, foot ball and track team comprised the various departments.&#13;
&#13;
The season of 1904 marks an era in the history of athletics in&#13;
Morningside College. Finding the previous method of management to&#13;
be unsatisfactory, the student body reorganized the constitution. A&#13;
board of control, consisting of two members each of the faculty, stu-&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
dents and alumni were chosen, to have complete control of all depart·&#13;
ments of athletics and power to choose a general manager or managers,&#13;
as they saw fit. This we believe to be a step toward placing athletics&#13;
upon a firm financial basis. Under the training of Coach Peckumn of&#13;
Northwestern University the "ONE" branch of athletics, football, was&#13;
a decided success this year. Every man supported the team loyally ,&#13;
and although there were only five or six old players on the team, it car·&#13;
ried off a good share of the honors on the " Gridiron." The coming&#13;
years will see a decided improvement in every way, owing to the pros·&#13;
pect of a gymnasium in the near future.&#13;
&#13;
Foot Ball Trophy Cup&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
TROPHY CUP was presented to the&#13;
Foot Ball Association by Mr. A. R.&#13;
Toothaker, a former athlete and alumnus&#13;
of the college. The cup was given as an annual&#13;
prize to the best foot ball player with the highest standing in his classes. The cup is a beautiful silver piece and stands thirteen inches high,&#13;
J. C. BASS&#13;
mounted upon an ebony base.&#13;
The prize is awarded as follows:&#13;
At the&#13;
close of the football season the men on the&#13;
team winning Ms shall meet and select by ballot the b est five players. The one&#13;
of the five thus se lected having the highest average grade in his studies, of at&#13;
least fifteen hours, shall be declared the winner of the cup and shall hold the&#13;
same for one year.&#13;
Last year ('03 ) the cup was won by H. B. Saylor, now attending Rush&#13;
Medical College. This season ( '04) the cup was awarded to Mr. J. C. Bass.&#13;
&#13;
FOOT BALL THOPHY OUP&#13;
&#13;
* Peckumn&#13;
Crabb&#13;
Crow&#13;
&#13;
* Coach&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
De Griselles&#13;
Millner&#13;
Debenham&#13;
t Manager&#13;
&#13;
Captain&#13;
&#13;
G. Squires&#13;
tYoung&#13;
Bridenbaugh&#13;
Adams&#13;
Stiles&#13;
Hubbard&#13;
Morrison&#13;
Hawkins&#13;
Hamren&#13;
K. Squires&#13;
&#13;
Clary&#13;
Jones&#13;
&#13;
Foot Ball&#13;
Positions&#13;
Centre-Fredendoll.&#13;
Right Guard-Hawkins.&#13;
Left Guard-De Griselles.&#13;
Right Tackle-Millner, Capt.&#13;
Le ft Tackle--Morrison.&#13;
Right End - Debenham.&#13;
Left End-K. Squires.&#13;
Right Half-Crow.&#13;
Left Half- -Adams.&#13;
Full Back- Bass.&#13;
Quarter Back-Hubbard.&#13;
&#13;
SUBSTITUTES&#13;
&#13;
Centre- -Stiles.&#13;
Guards- -Cra b b, Bridenbaugh.&#13;
Tackles--G. Squires.&#13;
End s--Olary.&#13;
Half Back--J ones.&#13;
Quarter Back --Hamren.&#13;
&#13;
Games&#13;
&#13;
G. E. MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake 0,&#13;
Yankton&#13;
0,&#13;
o,&#13;
Mitchell&#13;
Storm Lake 5,&#13;
Yankton 11,&#13;
Mitchell&#13;
5,&#13;
Univ. S. D. 23,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College O,&#13;
Morningside College 0,&#13;
Morningside College O,&#13;
Morningside College 0,&#13;
Morningside College 5,&#13;
Morningside College 0,&#13;
Morningside College 5,&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
Yankton .&#13;
Mitchell.&#13;
Storm Lake.&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
Rissler&#13;
Eveleth&#13;
&#13;
* Captain&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
* Squires&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
Pitcher -- G·Squires, Captain.&#13;
Catcher-G. Eveleth.&#13;
First Base-A. Tumbleson.&#13;
Second Base--C. G. Manning.&#13;
Third Base-- C. Wescott.&#13;
&#13;
Right Field-J. C. Bass, Mgr.&#13;
Short Stop-C. Rissler.&#13;
Left Field-G. E. Millner.&#13;
Center Field-Adams and&#13;
Pierce.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
OPPONENTS&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
G. SQUIRES&#13;
MORNING SIDE COLLEGE ' S NEXT MOVE&#13;
&#13;
Van Dyke&#13;
*Captain&#13;
&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
t Coach&#13;
&#13;
s:-&#13;
&#13;
Wescott&#13;
&#13;
Faey&#13;
&#13;
Rissler&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
t Peckumn&#13;
&#13;
Basket Ball&#13;
SINCE the fall term of 1901, when, in a meeting, those few students interested in basket ball organized the Basket Ball&#13;
Association, up to the present day, no sport of any kind has&#13;
gone forward with such leaps and bounds as has basket ball. We&#13;
stand first in all records made by any athletic team Morningside&#13;
has ever produced. The year of 1904-05 has proven exceptionally&#13;
successful for our fast and furious team. Out of nine scheduled&#13;
games we carried away the laurels of eight.&#13;
M.C.&#13;
Ft. Dodge Y. M. C. A................... 83 to 21&#13;
Yankton College ............... . ........ 38 to 19&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan ......... . ........... 48 to 38&#13;
Yankton College ........................ 50 to 28&#13;
Sergeant Bluff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 39 to 30&#13;
Second High School ............. . ....... 35 to 23&#13;
Sioux's Second Y. M . C. A............... 40 to 21&#13;
Co. L ............................ . ...... 25 to 23&#13;
First High School ....................... 28 to 36&#13;
&#13;
C. J. WESCOTT&#13;
&#13;
Our second team needs mention for the fact that they so nearly&#13;
matched our first team that at some times it was hard to determine&#13;
whether they were inferior or superior.&#13;
&#13;
. I&#13;
&#13;
Toenjes&#13;
&#13;
H. Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Sim an&#13;
&#13;
E. Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Erskine&#13;
&#13;
De Lay&#13;
&#13;
The Girls' Basket Ball Team&#13;
THRE E years ago the powers that be decreed that th e&#13;
coeds of Morningsid e College should meet th e ir&#13;
rivals in athletics in a new field . Accordingly a&#13;
basket ball team was formed, consisting of some of th e&#13;
most energetic young women of the school. At the outse t&#13;
they began with such enthusiasm that much interes t was&#13;
aroused among both the students and faculty.&#13;
After surmounting the many difficulti es of opposing&#13;
&#13;
forces, they finally won for the mse lves a prestige by many&#13;
hard won victories . Within the last year it was d ecid ed&#13;
that they could no longer champion the ir cause on foreign&#13;
fields, but they must confine the mse lves to their own territory. So ended th e hi s tory of th e girls' baske t ball tea m&#13;
of Morningsid e College, but th ey still e ntertain hop es that&#13;
in future years they may have th e ir former privileges.&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Basket Ball Team&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Basket Ball Team won the&#13;
silver cup which was presented as a trophy&#13;
for the college and academy class tournament. This · victory entitles them to the championship of the school for the winter of '04 and '05.&#13;
&#13;
Team&#13;
P. Fredendoll, C.&#13;
A. Adams, F.&#13;
A. Tumbleson, G.&#13;
&#13;
C. Wishard, G.&#13;
G. Squires, G.&#13;
C. Rissler, F.&#13;
J. Bass, F.&#13;
&#13;
College Games&#13;
&#13;
Academy Games&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
Middle Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Sub Preparatory&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Junior Academy&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Middle Academy&#13;
&#13;
VICTORS OF&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
VICTORS OF&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
SR. ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
Final Contest&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
vs.&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
Adams&#13;
Squires&#13;
Wishard&#13;
Bass&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Rissler&#13;
&#13;
CHAMPIONSHIP-SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Track Team&#13;
&#13;
TheTEAM began last season (1904) with only five old&#13;
&#13;
track&#13;
men training for their events. The enterpri8ing work of H.&#13;
L. Mossman (manager) in securing seventeen gold medals for the&#13;
home meet was not lost on the men of athletic ability. Dual meets&#13;
were secured with University of South Dakota, Buena Vista College and Yankton College.&#13;
&#13;
W.H. DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash ................... 10 2-5 seconds&#13;
220 yard dash ....................... 22i seconds&#13;
440 yard dash ......... ............... 52 seconds&#13;
880 yard dash ..... ....... .. ....... 2 min. 10 sec.&#13;
1 mile run ............................ 5 minutes&#13;
2 mile run ........ ....... ........ 10 min. 45 sec.&#13;
Shot put ........................ 38 feet 7 inches&#13;
Hammer throw .......... .... .......... . 105 feet&#13;
Discus ................................. 107 feet&#13;
Pole vault ...................... 10 feet 6 inches&#13;
High jump . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... 5 feet 6 inches&#13;
Broad jump . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... 20 feet 6 inches&#13;
120 yard hurdles .................. 20 2-5 seconds&#13;
220 yard hurdles .......... . ... .... 27 2-5 seconds&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
· Officers&#13;
FLORENCE DAVIDSON, Vice-President.&#13;
W. A. BLACKWELL, President and Manager.&#13;
C. W. MAYNARD, Secretary and Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
THOSE of our readers who are interested in tennis, and take an active part in this&#13;
branch of athletics, will be glad to learn of its healthy condition in Morning Side&#13;
College. More students are becoming interested in this sport each year. Both&#13;
men and women participate in the tournaments which take place every spring term.&#13;
Plans for tournaments with several colleges and universities have been discussed,&#13;
with good prospects for a strong meet later in the year.&#13;
A small fee of one dollar admits any student or member of the faculty to the tennis&#13;
courts, of which there are three in splendid condition. The Association has nearly completed two additional courts for the use of its members.&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORY BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Winter Sports&#13;
WITH APOLOGIES To&#13;
WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT&#13;
AND THE CHEMISTRY PROFESSOR&#13;
BY A SENIOR&#13;
&#13;
To him, who, in the love of Nature, holds&#13;
Communion with her visible forms, she speaks&#13;
A various language; in his California home&#13;
She has a voice of gladness, and a smile&#13;
Of eloquence and beauty; and she glides&#13;
Into the coldness of his Iowa winter&#13;
With fresh, invigorating sports, that steal away&#13;
Its sharpness, 'ere he is aware. When thoughts&#13;
Of tomorrow's lecture come like a blight&#13;
Over his spirit, and sad images&#13;
Of the stern agony of tomorrow's lab. work,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The odor of vile bromine and fumes of gas&#13;
Make him to shudder and grow sick-at heart,&#13;
He goes forth under the cold sky and tries&#13;
For the first time, skating; while from all aroundFrom gay students and from impudent small boys&#13;
Come loud voices: Yet a few weeks, and thee&#13;
The jeering crowd shall see no more waving&#13;
Wildly your arms; nor yet on the cold ice,&#13;
Where thy tall form was laid, with many falls,&#13;
Nor in the embrace of passing skaters shall be seen&#13;
Thy image. The girl that skated with thee, shall note&#13;
Thy progress; delight shall seize her and lost&#13;
Shall be her breaking back and aching arms which held up&#13;
Thine individual being, and thou shalt go&#13;
To mix most freely with good skaters,&#13;
To be a gallant to the college girl&#13;
Who skates not well and whom the rude swain&#13;
Refuses to assist and turns against. But thou&#13;
Shall shed thy kindness forth, and help them all.&#13;
Yet not to the deep frozen lake&#13;
Does he repair alway-though hardly could he wish&#13;
Sport more magnificent. But he slides down&#13;
With patriarchs of the small-boy world, with Profs.,&#13;
The powerful of the school, the wise, the good.&#13;
Fair maids of youthful type and age uncertain,&#13;
All on one great bob-sled. The hills&#13;
Smooth worn, and slick as any glass; the vales&#13;
Stretching in pensive quietness between:&#13;
The venerable telegraph poles that rise&#13;
In majesty; the pretty girls, the Prof.,&#13;
Brave, yet very green in coasting methods,&#13;
And poured around it all the moonlight,&#13;
Making diamonds of the snowThese are the accessories all&#13;
Of the coasting parties· of men. The silvery moon,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The planets, all the infinite host of heaven,&#13;
Shine on those deadly telegraph poles,&#13;
Through the still winter evening. All that slide&#13;
Down safely are but a handful to the tribes&#13;
That bump against those poles. Taking a lady&#13;
Of learning, the Prof. seats her upon the sled&#13;
While he sits down BEHIND her&#13;
To steer the thing. The sled slides on;&#13;
&#13;
They hear no sound save their own laughterYet the poles are there! And millions on that hill&#13;
Since first the sport began, have run into those poles&#13;
In their wild ride; the poles reign there alone.&#13;
So did the Prof. And as he withdrew&#13;
In silence from the mixup, the friends above&#13;
Took note of his calamity. Yet swear not&#13;
Thou unhappy man. For all that coast&#13;
Will share thy destiny. The gay may laugh&#13;
When thou art sorely hurt, the careless, free from pain&#13;
Coast on, yet each one as before will run&#13;
Into those poles; and then all these shall leave&#13;
Their mirth and their gay coasting, and shall come&#13;
And use thy liniment with thee. As the long train&#13;
Of sleds shall glide away, the sons of men,&#13;
The youth in life's green spring, and he who goes&#13;
In the full confidence of his skill, the spectacled Prof.,&#13;
The fresh prep and the wise senior,&#13;
Shall one by one be damaged by those poles,&#13;
As well as those who in their turn shall follow them.&#13;
So take a brace, that when the summons comes tomorrow&#13;
To join the motley crowd of students that moves&#13;
To the smoky realms of the lab. where each shall take&#13;
His desk and try to do his work;&#13;
Thou go not like a vanquished coaster&#13;
Limping to his work, but sustained and soothed&#13;
Ry tonic and liniment, approach thy class&#13;
Like one who coasts all evening without accident,&#13;
Goes home, and then lies down to pleasant dreams.&#13;
&#13;
C LIPPING FROM CHICAGO AMERICAN&#13;
&#13;
THE COMING OPERATIC STAR&#13;
( Special to the American.)&#13;
Sroux CITY, low A, June 19.-Last night at the Academy of Morningside College graduation occurred the first appearance of Mr. Carl&#13;
Maynard as the leader of the college quartet, and although the other&#13;
members of the quartet were artists of exceptional ability, Mr. Maynard easily excelled. His placing of tones was highly original, and at&#13;
times he had his vast audience almost in tears by his rendering of&#13;
pathetic passages. There is certainly a bright future open for "The&#13;
Boy Singer," and if properly trained he will undoubtedly be one of our&#13;
great operatic stars. We want to congratulate our neighbor city for&#13;
its spirit and enterprise in producing a grade of musicians which can&#13;
compete with the imported article.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. KANTHELENER, at Mrs. Erskine's&#13;
door: "Mr. Debenhan stays here, doesn't he?&#13;
Would you please tell him I would like to see him&#13;
for a moment?"&#13;
MRS. E.: "I'm sorry, Prof., but he ·has just&#13;
gone over to Mr. Cummings."&#13;
0. R. MASON,&#13;
Dept. of Chem.,&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
The Pleasures of the '04s Vacation&#13;
&#13;
There was once a man named Gruber, who sold&#13;
peanuts, candy and gum at Darling's by the Park.&#13;
Now this young man had a forgetful memory; he&#13;
also bad a girl, and taking them both one eve, he&#13;
wended his way cityward by means of the trolley&#13;
car. Arriving here his memory got in its work&#13;
and informed him that if they wanted to see Viola&#13;
Allen in "A Winter's Tale" they must needs obtain those tickets which were in the pocket of his&#13;
other vest, which lay on the bed at Darling's by&#13;
the Park. This they did while Viola Allen talked&#13;
and acted.&#13;
MORAL: Always wear your best vest when&#13;
you go to buy theater tickets.&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Lobeland'S Letter to&#13;
Her Brother&#13;
&#13;
DWIGHT LOVELAND,&#13;
&#13;
Syracuse, N. Y .&#13;
My Dear Brother: I suppose you are surprised at not having heard from us before, but our&#13;
time has been very much occupied of late. We&#13;
have removed to the Blue cottage for the summer.&#13;
We enjoy everything here so much, but our greatest delight is in the care of Dr. Blue's barnyard&#13;
fowls, f which we have sole charge. They eat&#13;
raw vegetables and grain, but prefer bread and&#13;
cake.&#13;
The saddest thing occured yesterday, toward&#13;
noon. One of the fowls appeared to be very ill.&#13;
Thinking it showed symptoms of pneumonia, we&#13;
carried it into the house, and while sister gave it a&#13;
hot foot bath, I administered a dose of pepper tea,&#13;
after which we wrapped it in hot flannels, wrung&#13;
from boiling water. In spite of our united efforts&#13;
it seemed to grow steadily worse, and about sunset&#13;
it died. The sadness of the occasion was intensified by the fact that Dr. and Mrs. Blue were far&#13;
away and could not share our grief for the decease&#13;
of their pet.&#13;
For the past week my sister and I have spent&#13;
most of our time in eradicating the weeds and&#13;
grasses which have overgrown the little garden .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
After we had completed the task, we found we bad&#13;
two potato vines, five lettuce plants, and another&#13;
large and peculiar plant in one corner, which we&#13;
judged from its fruit to be a squash vine. This&#13;
morning we picked one of the squashes, whieh we&#13;
.destined for our mid-day repast. It was not very&#13;
large as yet, but we thought it would be sufficient&#13;
for our dinner. When we came to eat it, it had a&#13;
very peculiar and disagreeable taste, in so much&#13;
that we were unable to continueourmeal. One of our&#13;
neighbors told us afterwards that it was a pumpkin vine, and that probably we would not find the&#13;
fruit at all delectable until frost.&#13;
The kitten is well, but causes us much anxiety&#13;
by its roving tendencies.&#13;
*&#13;
We will be delighted to hear from you at any&#13;
time.&#13;
Your sister,&#13;
HELEN I. LOVELAND.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The French-Physics Hunting Trip&#13;
Sunday Under the Six Day Schedule&#13;
&#13;
ZE GRAND CAROUSAL OF Ze FLATBOAT MEN IN&#13;
ZE PETITE CHEMICAL LABRATORY&#13;
Ah, eet was une grande tam. Ze Meester Clair sat at ze bench to&#13;
weigh, and zen Pierpont crawl from ze leetle labratory slowly till he&#13;
be to ze door of ze weigh room, zen he arise and zen- swish ! crack !&#13;
ze beet hit Clair right where ze hear hitch on hees haid. Sacre ! He&#13;
yell, he jump, and say By Gar ! he fix ze man what heet heem. He&#13;
trow ze beet to Pierpont and chase heem in ze little laboratory, and&#13;
Watchdog lock ze door. Parbleu ! ze grande tam begin zen. Ze beeg&#13;
Fredendoll hop in and zey all mingle togezzer in une grande heap&#13;
.around on ze floor, table, window-sill and ceiling. Ze hair was filled&#13;
wiz feet, hair, hands, teeth and uzzer sings. Ze room resound wiz ze&#13;
wild cry of ze pauvre man who is below in ze stack. Zey look· like ze&#13;
beeg drunken riverman fight. Zen ze Professor unlock ze door. Parbleu ! he sink he in a lumber camp on Sunday. He be very indignant&#13;
and say : Har, you fellah, you git out my labratory and git absolution&#13;
from ze Dean before you retournez. And zey git.&#13;
&#13;
UNDOUBTEDLY&#13;
GARVER: "Who were the two kings of&#13;
Athens, Mr. Gruber ?"&#13;
GRUBER: "I can't quite-they began the&#13;
same."&#13;
GARVER: "Yes, they were both babies."&#13;
&#13;
SHORT BUT SWEET&#13;
If a body kiss a Boddy what would Estie do.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Miss CURRIER: "I will remember you sometime."&#13;
Miss JOHNSON: "Yes do. Remember me in your&#13;
prayers."&#13;
Miss CURRIER: "0, I won't wait that long,"&#13;
&#13;
STUDENT:&#13;
"How many hours can one carry, Miss&#13;
Dimmitt."&#13;
Miss D.: "A smart person can carry fifteen hours.&#13;
A fool can carry any number."&#13;
&#13;
( MAN UNLOADING COAL OUTSIDE.)&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
Finch&#13;
Frear:&#13;
&#13;
"What's that noise."&#13;
"0, that's only Miss Killian chewing&#13;
&#13;
gum."&#13;
&#13;
A Chemical Precipitate&#13;
&#13;
The Chemical Featherweights&#13;
&#13;
SYMPATHETIC VIBRATIONS&#13;
TIME: 8: 30 a. m.&#13;
PLACE: College Corridors.&#13;
SCENE: Kindig reading a letter postmarked Hornick.&#13;
Enter McCay :&#13;
Say Jim, what you shivering about.&#13;
KINDIG: Great Scott, man! Think of walking a mile&#13;
through snow two feet deep, crawling under three fences,&#13;
and building your own fires in a little dinky barn of a school&#13;
house. Gee Whiz, man! It's enough to make any body&#13;
shiver to think of it.&#13;
&#13;
Too&#13;
&#13;
BAD&#13;
&#13;
Warm weather and stuffy railway cars affect people in much the&#13;
same way, but considering the fact that R. G. Young was enroute to&#13;
visit his lady love one would think he could have managed to rouse&#13;
himself at least one station past the desired haven, instead of peacewell, never&#13;
fully snoozing until he had been carried&#13;
* *&#13;
*&#13;
mind, the tale is too sad to relate.&#13;
&#13;
Staples Making an "A" Grade in German&#13;
&#13;
Too&#13;
&#13;
Hasty&#13;
( Feb. 10, 1904) MR. MINKLER to young lady: "May I have the&#13;
pleasure of your company to the Philo. picnic?"&#13;
Y. L.: "Let me see, when does that come off, Mr. Minkler?"&#13;
MR. M.: Why, we expect to have it late in the spring term. "&#13;
Y. L.: Oh, Mr. Minkler, this is so sudden."&#13;
&#13;
BLISS&#13;
TIME-Sunday evening, 7:30 p. m.&#13;
PLACE-Lothians.&#13;
CHARACTEHS-Doc Morrison and Miss Howard.&#13;
Door bell rings. Miss H. opens door.&#13;
Mr. M.: "Is Miss Thompson in?"&#13;
Miss H.: "No, but she will be in, in a moment. Won't you come&#13;
in, Mr. Morrison?"&#13;
Morrison enters.&#13;
SCENE II.&#13;
Time 8:30. Miss T. still absent. Chairs in parlor four feet apart.&#13;
SCENE III.&#13;
TIME 9:30. Miss T. still absent. Chairs in parlor two feet apart.&#13;
SCENE IV.&#13;
TIME 10:30. Miss T. still absent. Parlor still occupied.&#13;
SCENE V.&#13;
Mr. M. leaving.&#13;
Miss H.: "Goodnight, Mr. Morrison. Call again. I'm sorry Miss&#13;
Thompson was gone.&#13;
GIRL: "Well, how do you like Morning Side, Mr. Horner?'&#13;
HORNER : "Oh, fairly well; they seem to like me, alright. I'm&#13;
president of the Freshman class, secretary of the Philomathean society, and here's my name among the ushers."&#13;
MR. Brower,&#13;
in class meeting: "There is a little matter that&#13;
ought to come up," ( Then he got up.)&#13;
&#13;
DR. CAMPBELL INSTRUCTING NEW STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
ON PASSING OUT OF CHAPE L&#13;
"First the Seniors will pass away, then the others will pass&#13;
away in their order, then the faculty will pass away, then I will&#13;
pass away, aud we'll all meet down below."&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
TRUE ENOUGH&#13;
Miss FERGUSON: ·'Wo gehen sie, Herr Crabb?"&#13;
CRABB: "I'm sorry, but I can't answer you with intelligence."&#13;
SAWYER: "Who is that whistling for a dog."&#13;
ROBBINS: "l don't know; you needn't run."&#13;
&#13;
A Moonlight Scene at Frary's&#13;
&#13;
THAT Red SHIRT&#13;
CHEM. LAB.- Robbins sitting at table in shirt sleeves.&#13;
Enter Miss F. (throwing arm around him,) "say dear, ain't you&#13;
O! O! O! Oh! Ah! I beg pardon. I thought it was a Zet. waist."&#13;
&#13;
The S c HOOLMA' AM' S TONGUE&#13;
Miss JOHNSON IN SCHOOLROOM: "Johnny, what are you watching&#13;
me so for?"&#13;
JOHNNY: "! wanted to see you open your mouth."&#13;
Miss J.: " Why ?"&#13;
JoHNNY: '" Cause Katie said your tongue was sharp as a knife,&#13;
and I wanted to see."&#13;
&#13;
The Sophomores Sing "Just One Girl"&#13;
&#13;
JUDGED OTHERS BY HIMSELF&#13;
Miss LOVELAND: "How did Benvolia know what girl Romeo was&#13;
in love with? "&#13;
MR. DEBENHAM : "Perhaps Romeo talked in his sleep."&#13;
&#13;
LAUGH!&#13;
PROF. BLUE: "What is the meaning of facetious? "&#13;
MR. CALKINS: "Why, it means full of spirits, or something."&#13;
&#13;
Adams Wears the Crown of Thorns&#13;
&#13;
DR. CAMPBELL, in psychology class : " Mr. Foote, what do you&#13;
know about dispersed attention?"&#13;
FooTE : "Only what the books say. I never had any myself."&#13;
&#13;
PROP. GARVER: "Have they got any jokes on&#13;
Bowker? "&#13;
Miss B,: "I don't know. I was in the presence of a&#13;
evening, and every time I opened my mouth he took&#13;
Prof. G.: "What were you doing with his pencil&#13;
Miss Bowker? "&#13;
&#13;
you yet, Miss&#13;
&#13;
DR. BLUE, reading: " 'Exhuberant love,&#13;
delicate? "&#13;
Miss S KINNER : "Accurate."&#13;
&#13;
is it accurate or&#13;
&#13;
DR. CAMPBELL, in chapel : "I believe the musicians are all gone&#13;
this morning. Miss Cook, won't you play? "&#13;
&#13;
Junior the other&#13;
his pencil out."&#13;
in your mouth,&#13;
&#13;
PROF. WYLIE, in biology class: " Now, are there any questions on&#13;
the grasshopper? "&#13;
WESCOTT: "Where did the grasshoppers learn to chew tobacco?"&#13;
&#13;
APRIL&#13;
&#13;
1, 1904&#13;
&#13;
Gertie :&#13;
"My, but I do hate to have him leave next year. I don't&#13;
like to have a different fellow every year."&#13;
NOTE- Jim s tayed in Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Ladies, skip this paragraph! It is really unfit for publication. It&#13;
got into our copy by mistake, and we asked the printer to destroy it or&#13;
set lt up wrong side up :&#13;
head. her&#13;
uo stand to had she if •somehow it at get she'd knew e W&#13;
read, already&#13;
she's poem this farthing a to cents ten wager we'll Now ,&#13;
I show a of kind&#13;
least the gets shr if anyhow , out it puy she'll bet you but&#13;
know , 01 not ought&#13;
she something it's woman a worries anything there's is&#13;
&#13;
JOGRAPHY CLASS-SWEDEN AND NORWAY&#13;
&#13;
The klimate of thes too is vary cold the biggest part of the tim it&#13;
is. so cold in the north part that the people live under the grownd&#13;
and some of the folk that live in thes touns have never seen daylite.&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
Said the Senior to the ] uni or girl, '' let's both for&#13;
coasting go, "&#13;
But the Junior girl in ste rn reply , said "No, we&#13;
will not go,&#13;
For coasting thro' the last fo ur years has robbed&#13;
y our brain, y ou know . "&#13;
&#13;
Queries&#13;
ANN A -&#13;
&#13;
For a simple home wedding in ] une a pre tty dainty&#13;
white dress would be suitable . Your graduating dress&#13;
would answer perfectly.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
&#13;
I.-&#13;
&#13;
I set a h en two weeks ago today. Would it be wise for&#13;
me to attend church Sunday morning, or will she come off&#13;
before church is out?&#13;
Ans. - You will be safe m attending church, b ut do&#13;
not stay to S. S .&#13;
Jones V isits the Dissecting Room and Discovers a N ew Brand of Chocolates&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
"Cook" -&#13;
&#13;
Ye s, I think yo u will b e justified in re ceiving the Prof.'s&#13;
calls for violin practice , once e ve ry week day and twice on&#13;
Sundays, providing this is agreeable to your moth er.&#13;
&#13;
AT MRS. THOM'S DINNER TABLE&#13;
Mr. HEILMAN: "Say, Mr. Erskine, indications point to a sensation&#13;
in social circles in the near future."&#13;
MR. E.: "That so! What are the signs?"&#13;
MR. H.: "Oh, a certain young lady at this table w ars a diamond."&#13;
&#13;
"vivian" -&#13;
&#13;
MR. E. : "Who can it be? From the illumination aro nd this corner, it must be-Great Scott, Evva, quit kicking me under the table.&#13;
I'm sure I gave my consent. You need'nt inflict punishment on me.&#13;
&#13;
From your question, I should say, that if y o u are as&#13;
amiable and e ntertaining- as stated, your landl ord was&#13;
ce rtainly ha rs h in sending your company home at II: 57&#13;
p . m. It would have been p erfectly proper for him to stay&#13;
until 1 2: 00.&#13;
&#13;
WOULDN'T IT MAKE YOU MAD?&#13;
If you were visiting a young lady you hadn't seen for two days,&#13;
and if it was only 2:30 a. m., and if you had just got to an interesting&#13;
part, when Doc. Dewalt opened a windo w and said "come in Peckumn,&#13;
breakfast will be ready in a little bit," wouldn't it make you wrathy?&#13;
&#13;
HEARD IN THE LAB.&#13;
MR. BASS: "Which will you have, Miss Bowker, the dorsal or&#13;
ventral portion ot the lower lip?"&#13;
Miss BowKER: "I don't care for either, thank you."&#13;
&#13;
Miss FERGUSON, in German class: " The names of all those who&#13;
who will escape the examination will be posted on the door at noon."&#13;
Miss BRYAN: (sotto voice) "Let us pray."&#13;
&#13;
IN THE SCHOOLROOM&#13;
JOHNNY: (reading) "The man was goin'."&#13;
Miss Fry: "Don't forget the g, Johnny."&#13;
JOHNNY: "Gee, but the man was goin."&#13;
&#13;
ISN'T IT PROVOKING&#13;
- If when you are walking home with your lady friend, and if she&#13;
happens to say "My, Clarence, how cold your hands are" - isn't it&#13;
provoking to have someone overhear it and tell it next morning at&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors wallop Profs.&#13;
In a game replete with brilliant plays on both sides the Seniors&#13;
win 13 to 8 by superior slugging. The game began with the Chinese&#13;
up. Peck in the box for the Faculty, and the Department of Mathematics behind the bat. The first three Chinamen lined up on the&#13;
suburban stations, from whence they easily made grades, when Root&#13;
&#13;
lammed one over t he head of the Purveyor of Rhetoric, which, despite&#13;
of his concentrated gaze, sailed on over his head. Root and Harding&#13;
scored later, and then the side went out, with the Seniors five grades&#13;
to the good.&#13;
The Faculty did business in the same old way, together with&#13;
passes and one timely, but three men over safe, then Physics and the&#13;
Normal Department fanned. Van Horne, next up, constructed a&#13;
tangent to the sphere, which described a parabola, terminated by the&#13;
northwest corner of a brindle cow, a block and a half away. This&#13;
ended the scoring for the inning. After this the Chinese pitcher&#13;
settled down, and the Profs. handled the chopsticks for only ten more&#13;
hits, in the next five innings. Peck for the Profs. was succeded by the&#13;
Department of History, who failed to make it a reign of terror, and&#13;
was followed by the Bugman, who served up such exceedingly complicated question marks that the Chinese flunked with surprising readiiness-one A, three Bs, two Cs, and eight Ds, being the only marks&#13;
the Coolies got, and many of these were flunked in the final exam.&#13;
Features of the game were Blackwell's pocketing of a fly, which&#13;
was the only one dragged down during the game, the tumbles of the&#13;
Constructor of Pedagogue in his frantic efforts to escape the ball&#13;
when it came his way; the exceedingly graceful base running of the&#13;
Chemical Department, the heart breaking attempts of the Frenchmen&#13;
to translate a strike into a hit, Blue's attempt to increase his stature&#13;
a cubit or so, when the ball sailed over his head, are also worthy of&#13;
mention.&#13;
LINEUP&#13;
first base&#13;
Root&#13;
Garver&#13;
Wylie&#13;
pitch&#13;
Maynard&#13;
catch&#13;
Peckumn&#13;
Debenham&#13;
McDowell&#13;
third base&#13;
Stulken&#13;
Brown&#13;
second base&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
Van Horne&#13;
short stop&#13;
Young&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
Lewis&#13;
left field&#13;
Blue&#13;
center field&#13;
Harding&#13;
Greynald&#13;
right field&#13;
Morgan&#13;
Errors- Profs. 47, Seniors 43. Hits-Profs. 12, Seniors 16.&#13;
&#13;
The F aculty&#13;
AN ALPHABETICAL JINGLE&#13;
A is for all of the College Professors,&#13;
Brown is the head of the normal work here;&#13;
Blackwell, commercial, and Dr Blue, English,&#13;
Campbell, the vice-pres'dent, full of good cheer.&#13;
&#13;
Kanthlener comes with his classical learning;&#13;
L for Miss L ewis, who haunts the North Hall;&#13;
Also for L ewis the I. and the II.,&#13;
Larson and Loveland and Lacy and all.&#13;
&#13;
D is for Davidson, also for Dimmitt,&#13;
Ever beloved by the students and all;&#13;
F is for Ferguson, "mild und sehr gutig,"&#13;
G for grave Garver and Greynald so tall.&#13;
&#13;
M is for Marshall, McDowell and Mather;&#13;
N is for nothing the cloak room class do,&#13;
O for old maids, of whom there are plenty,&#13;
P is for Peckumn and Pied Piper, too.&#13;
&#13;
H is for Haynes, with his little green knapsack,&#13;
I for idears, of which it is full;&#13;
Just sit in the front row and pay close attention,&#13;
If you want an A grade, rememember this rule.&#13;
&#13;
Queer that no one of the College Professors&#13;
A name has beginning with R, S, T, U,&#13;
V for Van Horne, and W for Wylie,&#13;
X, Y and Z we will leave now to you.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
April&#13;
April 1&#13;
April Fool.&#13;
April 2&#13;
Park Place "surprise party."&#13;
April 5&#13;
Spring Term opens.&#13;
April 6&#13;
Dr. Lewis rides to College on top of hog rack.&#13;
April 10-14 Cloudy weather.&#13;
April 16&#13;
Elsie Kilborne entertains Freshmen.&#13;
April&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
pr l 23&#13;
April 28&#13;
April 29&#13;
April 30&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
Ladies Tennis Club formed.&#13;
Atheneums entertain the Zets at 5 o'clock luncheon,&#13;
Tally-Ho engaged for Sophs' Indian trip.&#13;
Home Field Meet. All Sophs absent preparing for Reservation&#13;
trip.&#13;
At 2 o'clock A. M. Kindig and Saylor rise to guard Tally-Ho. At&#13;
4 o'clock all Sophs board Tally-Ho at Jochimsen's store. At 7&#13;
o'clock Freshies waken to find Sophs have outwitted them. At&#13;
12 P. M. Sophs return to Morningside from trip .&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
May 14&#13;
May 15&#13;
May r6&#13;
&#13;
Sophs' Sunday clothes mysteriously disappear. Sophs very grateful for extra nap.&#13;
Morningside pavements wear coat of red.&#13;
Chapel announcement: "Milner's Arithmetic lost in girl's cloak room."&#13;
Juniors '05 look for Annuals.&#13;
Vermillion-Morningside Field Meet.&#13;
Chicago book-binders strike.&#13;
Juniors '05 pray for strike settlement.&#13;
Prof. Harvey's botany class chased from&#13;
field by enraged farmer.&#13;
Nothing doing.&#13;
Dr. Lewis forbids students from playing&#13;
on fire escapes.&#13;
Soph business meeeting Name of Annual '06 decided.&#13;
Freshies attend concert at H. H. Sawyer's&#13;
appointment.&#13;
Prof. Harvey's trunk is transferred to&#13;
Mrs. Thom's.&#13;
Prof. Harvey carries his trunk home.&#13;
Bass rises at 4 o'clock to assist the Trimble girls with the washing.&#13;
Otho annual Public.&#13;
&#13;
Debaters leave for Baker.&#13;
Junior Annual '04-'05 appears. Juniors&#13;
assume role of faculty and announce sale&#13;
of "Maroon."&#13;
rg&#13;
Seniors appear in chapel in caps and&#13;
gowns.&#13;
Freshmen announce pow-wow.&#13;
20&#13;
Senior's vacation begins.&#13;
21-23 Rain.&#13;
24&#13;
Alice Marsh goes to sleep in economics&#13;
class.&#13;
C. L . Gilbert makes Chapel speech on&#13;
Baker trip.&#13;
25&#13;
Kindig and Garver give Chapel speeches.&#13;
Seniors go camping.&#13;
26&#13;
First announcement of the "Whoops of&#13;
the Sioux" made in Chapel.&#13;
27&#13;
Y. W. C. A. give picnic supper in Peters'&#13;
Park.&#13;
Field meet with Buena Vista.&#13;
Mr. Wunn fondly embraces a classmate.&#13;
Mr. Finch insists on buying peanuts on&#13;
29&#13;
way to church. Miss Killam helps to&#13;
eat them.&#13;
&#13;
May 17&#13;
May r8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
June 7&#13;
June 8&#13;
June 9&#13;
June IO&#13;
June 13&#13;
June 26&#13;
&#13;
Soph's party.&#13;
Minkler makes date for Philo excursion.&#13;
Freshies bury class of '06 on campus.&#13;
Mr. Carson is the only Senior at Chapel.&#13;
Mr. Carson brings Miss Darling with him.&#13;
Elocution graduating exercises.&#13;
Philo annual excursion up the river.&#13;
Commencement Sunday.&#13;
Field meet at Yankton .&#13;
Carl Maynard and his quartette sing at Academy graduating exercises.&#13;
Class Day exercises. Trustees' meeting.&#13;
Alumni lecture.&#13;
Graduating exercises. School closes.&#13;
Mrs. Thom chaperons camping party to McCook lake.&#13;
Campers return from lakes.&#13;
Heilman bids Ethel Ellerbroek an affectionate farewell in Peters'&#13;
&#13;
July&#13;
&#13;
Park.&#13;
Mr. C. F . Hartzell weds Miss Laura Kennedy.&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
F all T erm&#13;
September&#13;
September 13&#13;
September 14&#13;
September 15&#13;
&#13;
School opens.&#13;
New enrollment.&#13;
Seniors show desire to assume new honors by occupying front&#13;
seats.&#13;
September 16 Y. W . C. A . reception to new girls. Ten girls fail to secure&#13;
credit on street car and therefore conclude to walk.&#13;
September 17 Y. M. and Y. W. reception.&#13;
September 18 In his sermon Dr. Lewis tells of going ''square in a circle."&#13;
September 19 Peckumn drills awkward squad.&#13;
September 20 Prof. Mather suggests reform of chapel singing by having&#13;
faculty lead it.&#13;
Freshies try to wake Sophs up. Adams rides a cow and&#13;
Westcott is tied to Mr. Clark's porch.&#13;
September 21 Dr. Blue calls joint Bible class for Freshies and Sophs.&#13;
September 23 Faculty reception.&#13;
September 24 Dean Campbell enumerates bargain sales of the year:-·&#13;
Collegian Reporter-$1 .00. ''Good bargain."&#13;
Season foot ball tickets-$r.oo. "Good bargain."&#13;
Y. M. C . A. lecture course-$r.oo. "A very , very good bargain."&#13;
Zet-Otho promenade.&#13;
September 29 Rev. Williams of Buena Vista leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
October&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Atheneum reception.&#13;
R. G. Young climbs tree near Riverside&#13;
to avoid affectionate greetings of&#13;
''Toots."&#13;
October s First meeting of the German club.&#13;
Miss Hallam receives the honors. Miss&#13;
Lothian the booby prize.&#13;
October 7 Election of officers of Oratorical Association. Miss Cook announces that&#13;
"for benefit of new students, we have&#13;
an oratorical contest every year. "&#13;
October ro Atheneum hay rack party.&#13;
October I I First meeting of Choral Union.&#13;
October 13 Ida Bryan goes to prayer meeting.&#13;
October 14 Freshmen have picnic in Thompson's&#13;
grove.&#13;
D. L. Young makes chapel speech. All&#13;
fear he will never cease speaking.&#13;
October 15 Prof. Wylie announces in chapel that&#13;
Baby Wylie has a tooth. Prof. Wylie&#13;
corrects announcement by stating she&#13;
has three.&#13;
&#13;
October 18&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
October 17&#13;
&#13;
Foot ball boys play Buena Vista and&#13;
break o-o record with 5-0 in favor of&#13;
Buena Vista.&#13;
&#13;
October 19&#13;
October 20&#13;
October 21&#13;
October 22&#13;
October 24&#13;
October 25&#13;
&#13;
October 26&#13;
October 27&#13;
October 28&#13;
October 30&#13;
&#13;
Middles and Senior Preps scrap on&#13;
roof of North Hall. Dean Campbell&#13;
invites them to confine their activities&#13;
to the soil.&#13;
Senator Allison and Editor Perkins&#13;
speak at chapel.&#13;
Mathematical progidy at chapel. Reveals the nothingness of Miss Bowker's&#13;
purse.&#13;
Inter-society debate.&#13;
Dr. Clark of South Dakota speaks at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
Dr. Lewis has new shoes.&#13;
College cow disappears. Great excitement.&#13;
Prof. Mather does not attend chapel.&#13;
Therefore we have a march.&#13;
Sophs hold carnival at the monument&#13;
in the "wee sma' hours."&#13;
Mr. Campbell of Kansas City and&#13;
Judge Wakefield visit chapel.&#13;
Campus cow returns to old haunts&#13;
Great rejoicings.&#13;
Emil Hiebling's concert.&#13;
Foot ball game with Yankton.&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
November 7&#13;
November 8&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
November 10&#13;
November 14&#13;
November 15&#13;
November 16&#13;
November 18&#13;
November 19&#13;
November 22&#13;
November 24&#13;
&#13;
November 26&#13;
November 29&#13;
November 30&#13;
November 31&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson in Explaining the Objective-- "I&#13;
want a more&#13;
cheerful man- but this does not often occur.''&#13;
Hawkins finally concludes that Miss .Johnsou is the hardest proposition of his life.&#13;
Mitchelle - M.C. football game, 5- 0.&#13;
"Shep" Mason attempts to make auto climb telegraph pole&#13;
with disastrous results to auto and purse.&#13;
Misses Loveland and Ferguson represent lady members of&#13;
faculty at chapel.&#13;
Prof. Brown initiates new desk.&#13;
Profs. Haines and Van Horn represent men of faculty at&#13;
chapel.&#13;
McClary lectures on "Mission of mirth."&#13;
Freshie hay rack party. Freshie president serves chicken&#13;
pie to Sophs.&#13;
Garver's moustache disappears.&#13;
Freshies challenge Sophs to Football game.&#13;
Dr. Lewis present. All Seniors attend chapel.&#13;
Freshmen-Soph game 0-0.&#13;
Zetalethean annual public.&#13;
Voice from behind pulpit desk reads scripture lesson. Investigation proves it to be Dr. B lue's.&#13;
Thanksgiving day football game. M C. vs. Vermmion,&#13;
20-5.&#13;
Mr. Clark informs Heilman, Hubbard and Morrison that&#13;
he must rise at 5 o'clock. Boys immediatly tumble.&#13;
Co-eds entertain footba ll boys. Lucille Faulk assists Hubbard to make record breakiug run from Lothian's to Thom's&#13;
for salad dressing (2 hours and 45 m inutes) .&#13;
Double quartet appear at chapel. Silence in the audience.&#13;
Prof. Brown reads-"Ali the daughters of music shall be&#13;
brought low."&#13;
Mr. Henshaw, the traveling secretary for Prohibition Club,&#13;
gives ch apel talk.&#13;
December begins.&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Academic inter-society debate.&#13;
&#13;
J. Kindig's birthday.&#13;
&#13;
Students cram until 12 o'clock.&#13;
Geo. Milner begins cutting out talks in the hall.&#13;
Day after yesterday but not the day before day after tomorrow.&#13;
December 9 Geo. Milner fails to visit Kilborne's. Studies until 12 o'clock.&#13;
December 11 Heilman watches anxiously for draft from home.&#13;
December 12 Heilman's draft does not come.&#13;
December 13 Heilman pawus clothes.&#13;
First fluuk.&#13;
Decemberi4 Prof. Green visits chapel and !&#13;
December 15 Prof. Lewis skips class to go skating.&#13;
December 16 Milner flunks.&#13;
Heilman goes home.&#13;
December 18 All students gone. Morningside dead.&#13;
December 23 Big Sioux City fire, which gives Alice Marsh nervous prostration.&#13;
Morgan telegraphs messages of sympathy.&#13;
December 24 Everyone hangs up their stockings.&#13;
December 25 Merry Christmas!&#13;
December 26 Those damdy preseuts!&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
January 11&#13;
January 12&#13;
January 14&#13;
January 16&#13;
January 18&#13;
January 19&#13;
January 20&#13;
January 24&#13;
January 26&#13;
January 28&#13;
&#13;
Happy New Year!&#13;
Turn over a new leaf.&#13;
Harding athletic case postponed.&#13;
Students begin to flock in.&#13;
Norman Smith enrolls for vocal music.&#13;
Y. M. C. A. reception. Profs. tossed in blankets.&#13;
Dean Campbell annotmces in chapel-"Tomorrow you will all&#13;
find your chapel seats on the bulletin board."&#13;
Prof. Garver visits Fagley's fire sale. Gets a bargain and&#13;
appears in a new $5.00 suit.&#13;
Y. W. C . A. reception.&#13;
Freshies go sleighing at the expense of a drunken driver.&#13;
Jones tries to set his room on fire at Lehman's.&#13;
Students begin visiting Genelli's in the interests of the annual.&#13;
Rophs escape the watchful Freshies for the "dance"(?) at&#13;
)Iiss Woodford's home.&#13;
Basket ball l\L C. vs. G iants.&#13;
Van Dyke smashes his nasal bone.&#13;
First year chemistry class take lessons in brewing.&#13;
Dr. Steiner lectures on Tolstoi.&#13;
Mr. Morgan takes mother-in-law to the lecture.&#13;
Frozen weather.&#13;
Day of Prayerfor colleges.&#13;
Junior Indians have their pictures taken .&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
Feburary&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Students permitted to sing last two verses of hymn 136.&#13;
It snowed.&#13;
&#13;
February 2 Ground hog's day.&#13;
February 3 Dean Campbell announces that a stick pin and book&#13;
came into the office.&#13;
February 4 More snow.&#13;
February 5 Still snowing&#13;
February 6 Freshie-Soph basket ball game.&#13;
Freshies' jersies disappear. Sophs win. Snow.&#13;
February 8 Dr. Lewis returns from eastern trip with a "message" for&#13;
us.&#13;
February 9 Dr. McFadden leads chapel.&#13;
:B'ebrnnry 10 Seniors appear in caps and gowns. Morgan. McCay and&#13;
Carrol not yet able to assume this clignil,\'.&#13;
on Abraham LinFebruary 12 Congressman Hubbard gives an address&#13;
coln.&#13;
February 11 Baker-M C. debate did not take place. Only had 110 judges.&#13;
February 13 Baker-M. C. debate comes off. Never mind. only after de·&#13;
cision the house did not go wild.&#13;
Sophs win basket ball championship,&#13;
February 14 St. Valentine day.&#13;
Sophs have pi ctures taken with trophy cup.&#13;
February 16 Prof. Kanthlener goes to sleep in chapel.&#13;
18 College ruus out of coa 1.&#13;
February&#13;
F ruary 19 Miss Dimmitt goes to breakfast on time!!!&#13;
February 22 Rev. J. D. 0. Powers. of unity church addresses school on&#13;
"T wentieth Century Man."&#13;
February 23 Fonr Freshies stay to oratorical meeting!&#13;
February 24 Neb. Wesleyan-M. C. basket ball game. M. C. wins.&#13;
February 25 Atheueum aunual public.&#13;
Prof. Lewis comes alone.&#13;
Miss Cook comes with her mother.&#13;
victim)&#13;
Febrnary 26 Prof. Lewis calls on Miss Hollingsworth-(25th&#13;
Sen. Preps. entertain.&#13;
February 28 Last day of February&#13;
&#13;
march&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
l\farch&#13;
March&#13;
march&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
March 18&#13;
&#13;
March 19&#13;
March 20&#13;
march 24&#13;
&#13;
Spiering Quartet give entertainment&#13;
,&#13;
1&#13;
Prof. Lewis comes alone.&#13;
Mrs. Cook comes with Myrtilla.&#13;
Prof. Lewis and Miss Cook settle quarrell in laboratory.&#13;
Yankton-M. basket ball game. another M. C. Victory.&#13;
C.&#13;
middles entertain senior acad.&#13;
·&#13;
First thaw brings the strollers out.&#13;
Philo annual public.&#13;
.&#13;
Sioux City missionary convention.&#13;
Bishop Thoburn talks on India.&#13;
.&#13;
E&#13;
1&#13;
Geo Eber Jones and Dr. Goucher address students.&#13;
· G&#13;
.&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
·l&#13;
Dr Nichols, of Centra l China talks in c hapel&#13;
h&#13;
Mr. Crow loses his English note oo .&#13;
Cl,are Wescott's father arrives.&#13;
h&#13;
WEscott takes his father to c Ihurch three times.&#13;
adelphians entertain Aesthesians.&#13;
Dr Lewis gets a h air cut.&#13;
.&#13;
· . . Y. :\I. c. A&#13;
state secretary, speaks in c hape ·&#13;
. . . ti e s hamrock.&#13;
wears&#13;
.&#13;
St. Patrick's day. Everyone&#13;
T erm concert.&#13;
Church attendance poor.&#13;
Examination week.&#13;
Morgan begins doing the term's work in German for&#13;
heil&#13;
man&#13;
Term closes&#13;
&#13;
Class Barometer&#13;
TEMPERATURE&#13;
&#13;
WIND&#13;
&#13;
BAROMETER&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL CONDITION&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG----------------BROWER&#13;
&#13;
98&#13;
&#13;
Northeast Strong&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Volcanic&#13;
&#13;
58 inshade&#13;
&#13;
Gusty&#13;
&#13;
Roily&#13;
&#13;
Threatening&#13;
&#13;
CALKINS----------------&#13;
&#13;
48 c&#13;
&#13;
N'rtheastSqually&#13;
&#13;
Rain&#13;
&#13;
Blustering&#13;
&#13;
200 in shade&#13;
&#13;
Hot&#13;
&#13;
Busted&#13;
&#13;
Dismal&#13;
&#13;
Variable&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
For Better or Worse&#13;
&#13;
HAWKINS_ - - - - - - DEBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
90&#13;
&#13;
South, in Puffs&#13;
&#13;
Rising&#13;
&#13;
Foreboding&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
Southwest&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Sultry&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
------&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
------------------&#13;
&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
West, Gentle&#13;
&#13;
Clear&#13;
&#13;
Dry and Settled&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL--------------HOWARD&#13;
----&#13;
&#13;
52&#13;
&#13;
East&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Peaceful&#13;
&#13;
59.3&#13;
&#13;
Southeast Brisk&#13;
&#13;
Clear&#13;
&#13;
Light&#13;
&#13;
FAIR-------------------&#13;
&#13;
60&#13;
&#13;
Quiet&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Dead Calm&#13;
&#13;
BODDY_ --- - -----------FOOTE&#13;
&#13;
88 inshade&#13;
&#13;
North and Chilly&#13;
&#13;
Sunshine&#13;
&#13;
Bland&#13;
&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
South, Balmy&#13;
&#13;
Unreliable&#13;
&#13;
Boisterous&#13;
&#13;
McCARTHY--------------&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
Still&#13;
&#13;
Clear&#13;
&#13;
Placid&#13;
&#13;
North&#13;
&#13;
Falling&#13;
&#13;
Painful&#13;
&#13;
Northwest&#13;
&#13;
Frozen&#13;
&#13;
Long Settled&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
Changeable&#13;
&#13;
Snowflakes&#13;
&#13;
WuNN -----------------MINKLER.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
South, Steady&#13;
&#13;
Cloudy&#13;
&#13;
Sleepy&#13;
&#13;
Snow&#13;
&#13;
Bleak&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON -- ----&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
None&#13;
&#13;
Bright&#13;
&#13;
Pleasant&#13;
&#13;
92.5&#13;
&#13;
Zephyrs&#13;
&#13;
Quiet&#13;
&#13;
Settled&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
-- - -- -&#13;
&#13;
4 above&#13;
&#13;
Van DYKE - - -- -- - ---- - - TRIMBLE&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
22 below&#13;
&#13;
FLINN - - - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
CROSSAN&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Sunshine and Rain&#13;
Dark, but Not Dangerous&#13;
&#13;
Some F amiliar&#13;
Chapel Addresses....&#13;
Mrss ToDD: "This is indeed a pleasure&#13;
to come before you in your chapel time. "&#13;
DR. HUGHES: "l did not come here this&#13;
morning to talk. I wanted to look into&#13;
your faces to get an inspiration. "&#13;
PROF. Lu cE: "I came primarily to look&#13;
into your faces, for it is a great pleasure. ·•&#13;
PROF. WILCOX: " It is with a great deal&#13;
of interest that&#13;
speak to you this morning."&#13;
DR . CLARK: "Young ladies and gentlemen, I am glad to look into your faces. "&#13;
DR. McFADDEN: "As I look into your&#13;
faces this morning it takes me back in&#13;
memory twenty years of my own life."&#13;
E. H. HUBBARD: "Fellow students,&#13;
hope you have not come here this morning&#13;
with the idea of hear ing an address."&#13;
REV.&#13;
&#13;
J. D. 0. POWERS: '' Fellow students,&#13;
&#13;
I count myself happy this morning to be&#13;
&#13;
able to come before you on an occasion&#13;
like this."&#13;
DR. GAMEWELL: "I esteem it a great&#13;
privilege this morning to come here, because of what Morningside means to Methodism and Iowa in particular."&#13;
&#13;
The Evi's of Specialization, or Why Wylie F a iled to Distinguish the A sh-Box from the Fire-Box&#13;
&#13;
FAREWELL&#13;
&#13;
Good BETTER BEST&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
GOOD PICTURE is always acceptable, a BETTER one is more highly&#13;
prized, but the BEST is that which&#13;
is modern, up-to-date and artistically&#13;
perfect. These are the qualities that&#13;
characterize work of&#13;
&#13;
P. S.: Groups for&#13;
this Annual were&#13;
made from Photograghs taken&#13;
at this Studio&#13;
&#13;
'Studio&#13;
601 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Behold!&#13;
Get your old furniture made new by&#13;
sending it to experienced men ........ .&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
UPHOLSTERING&#13;
CO, J. H. Richards, Prop.&#13;
1498 n ornings ide Ave.&#13;
P a ntorium 'Bldg .&#13;
&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
I NEVITABLE VALISE&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
IT'S NOT WHAT WE SAY WE DO&#13;
&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
But what we DO that makes our customers stay with us from year to year.&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
UNITED STATES Depository&#13;
Capital and surplus $350,000.00&#13;
Deposits - - - 2,500,000.00&#13;
&#13;
A Large Bank That Solicits Small Accounts&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
__&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Jewelry is complete, and prices that&#13;
make our customers feel easy in buying&#13;
WHY CAN'T WE SATISFY YOUR. NEEDS?&#13;
&#13;
J. Fleckenstein &amp; Co.&#13;
Phone 956 ....&#13;
&#13;
Let us do your watch&#13;
repairing&#13;
&#13;
.. .406 4th St.&#13;
&#13;
HIS MASTER'S VOICE&#13;
&#13;
A Special&#13;
Buys&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR&#13;
&#13;
he&#13;
&#13;
Blickens&#13;
r&#13;
typewriter&#13;
&#13;
Offer&#13;
T o any r esponsible reader of th is paper&#13;
who wi ll furn is h us w ith refe r ences if we&#13;
req ues t it, we will ship on FREE TRIAL&#13;
th e la t est m odel of our Vict or Royal&#13;
Talking Machine with S pecial Ex hi·&#13;
biti o n S ou nd Box an d you r choice of an y&#13;
doze n V icto r Reco rd s i n the c atal ogue fo r&#13;
$20. Tr y it fo r a day in your h ome- if it's&#13;
sat i sfacto ry send us $5 an d p ay us t he&#13;
bal an ce&#13;
&#13;
$2.50 A Month&#13;
The handiest, most compact and&#13;
best all-round machine on the&#13;
market today.&#13;
A complete machine with 84 letters and characters, visible writing, perfect alignment at all&#13;
times interchangeable type no&#13;
ribbon, and is portable.&#13;
No typewriter can do better&#13;
work- none more conveniently&#13;
- hundreds of them in use in this&#13;
state. If intrested, write to us&#13;
and we will send full information.&#13;
Easy terms, and entire&#13;
satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
For Si x Months&#13;
&#13;
Special Notice&#13;
every h ome in the West, and we wil l if easy&#13;
terms will do it. You run no risk, NoC. 0. D .&#13;
&#13;
on absolately free trial wit hout any conitions&#13;
wh atever. If it is satisfactory Rnd you decide to&#13;
keep it, si m p ly pay us as agreed.&#13;
&#13;
the Victor Talking&#13;
MachineSt. Louis it was awarded&#13;
Buffalo and again at&#13;
High est Honors-Gold Medal and 1st prize&#13;
we guarantee every machine to&#13;
be a genuine V i ctor and the price we ask for&#13;
Machine and 12 Records the lowest offered anywh ere in th e U . S. Plays either seven or ten&#13;
inch disk records.&#13;
You can have an evening o f th e&#13;
sings&#13;
g r eatest enjoyment listening to&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Talks!&#13;
Plays!&#13;
Comic recirarions r endered perfectly. large&#13;
comp lete illust,·ated catalogue mailed&#13;
f r ee.&#13;
25,000 latest Vic tor records&#13;
to selectfro m .&#13;
&#13;
We Prepay All Charges on Victor&#13;
Records&#13;
Sample packages&#13;
of our new Silver&#13;
T rumpet and Dul·&#13;
cet (sof-tone) need·&#13;
]es mailed free to&#13;
all Victor users.&#13;
&#13;
. HARGER &amp;BLISH&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
General Agents&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Agents&#13;
Wanted&#13;
t o introduce our&#13;
new proposition in&#13;
putting a Victor in&#13;
every home. Write&#13;
at once. Address&#13;
a ll orders to&#13;
&#13;
Harger &amp; Blish,&#13;
Western Victor Distributors.&#13;
&#13;
Dubuque , Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapids Steam Laundry&#13;
•&#13;
====THE LAUNDRY====&#13;
That pleases the most fastidious $ $&#13;
That gets the student dressers' trade $&#13;
That washes with pure soft water $&#13;
That does the best work at lowest prices&#13;
&#13;
Up-to-Date in Every Respect Dry Cleaning aSpecialty&#13;
A. L. BROWER, Agent at College&#13;
&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Confectionery, Fruit and Stationery Cheapest and Best&#13;
Exclusive Agents of the A. I. C. High Grade Coffees&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 895-L&#13;
St. Aubin Station, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Remembrances of our Sophomore Days&#13;
&#13;
YOUR EDUCATION.&#13;
Is never complete until you have taken a practical Business Training.&#13;
It does not matter what profession you are going to foIIow, you must be&#13;
a business man and take your place among those who are trained in business methods and principles. The best place to secure&#13;
your business training is at&#13;
&#13;
The N at'l Business Training School&#13;
Where Penmanship, Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typewriting, Telegraphy,&#13;
Accounting, Rapid Calculation and aII Modern Business Methods are&#13;
taught by Experienced Business Men. Individual instruction. We guarantee satisfaction to our students. AII former graduates are now fillinf&#13;
good situations. We can always place more students than we have.&#13;
Address N. B. T. SCHOOL&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Send&#13;
for&#13;
Our&#13;
Catalog&#13;
&#13;
ER&#13;
TAKE-DOWN REPEATING SHOTGUNS&#13;
The notion that one must pay from fifty dollars upwards in order to get&#13;
a good shotgun has been pretty effectively dispelled since the advent of&#13;
the Winchester Repeating Shotgun. These guns are sold within reach&#13;
of almost everybody' s purse. They are safe, strong, reliable and handy.&#13;
When it comes to shooting qualities no gun made beats them. They&#13;
are made in 12 and 16 gauge. Step into a gun store and examine one.&#13;
lb Winchester&#13;
&#13;
REPEATING ARMS COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
NEW HAVEN, Conn&#13;
&#13;
m&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
3:&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
e!.&#13;
,.;;&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
:::s&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
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Qi:,&#13;
(:'-)&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
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c;,&#13;
c;,&#13;
&#13;
)&gt;&#13;
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c;,&#13;
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.....&#13;
pl&#13;
&#13;
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Qi:,&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
Cl,)&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
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ii{'&#13;
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p.&#13;
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&#13;
SHO&#13;
ES&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON &amp; ARONSON&#13;
THE OLD RELIABLE&#13;
&#13;
Tailors and Clothiers&#13;
Up-to-Date Clothing and Furnishing Goods&#13;
at th e Very Lowest Prices&#13;
&#13;
THE SHOEMAN&#13;
&#13;
NEW LOCATION AT 710-712 FOURTH STREET&#13;
Ten per cent. Discount to Professors and Students of the College&#13;
&#13;
605 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
SHIP YOUR LIVE STOCK&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Haykeye Strain Barred&#13;
&#13;
PLYMOUTH&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ROCKS&#13;
&#13;
Lngerson &amp; West Co.&#13;
Live Stock&#13;
Commission&#13;
Merchants&#13;
M. W . BALDWIN&#13;
D . C. Kitselman&#13;
W . H . TIMMEL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
The above strain&#13;
won at Cedar Rapids,&#13;
Mitchelle,&#13;
Mason City&#13;
and Luverne a big&#13;
share of all regular&#13;
and special prizes&#13;
during the season of&#13;
1904 - 1905&#13;
&#13;
J .H. ANTHONY&#13;
J. R . COE&#13;
K . STROCK&#13;
&#13;
Exhibition and Fine&#13;
Stock Birds for sale&#13;
Prices reasonable&#13;
&#13;
Buying Orders Solicited&#13;
Every Department in Charge of&#13;
Capable and Energetic Men&#13;
ROOMS 217 and 219 EXCHANGE BLDG.&#13;
&#13;
A F irst P rize P ullet, 1905&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 397&#13;
&#13;
Yards Located at Morningside, About One flile East of&#13;
Colleg e. Visitors Welcome&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - BANK REFERENCES----Live Stock National Bank&#13;
Iowa State National Bank&#13;
&#13;
MATT W. BALDWIN&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WHAT?&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PANTORIUM&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
WHERE?&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
At Peters' Park, Morningside&#13;
Students and Friends&#13;
We carry a complete line&#13;
of samples for Gents' Clothing, and the work is done by&#13;
the very best tailors in the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Why not order your next&#13;
suit from us and be in line?&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Silks and Woolens&#13;
Cleaned, Dyed, Pressed&#13;
and mended&#13;
AT REASONABLE RATES&#13;
Agents wanted in every&#13;
town within a radius of two&#13;
hundred miles to collect an d&#13;
deliver goods for us .&#13;
&#13;
We Guarantee lo Fit and Please&#13;
You&#13;
this&#13;
&#13;
P rices the Low est, Styles the&#13;
Latest and Quiity the&#13;
Best in the City.&#13;
&#13;
Ul firm&#13;
&#13;
not if equal.&#13;
&#13;
city&#13;
superior&#13;
is method our&#13;
any&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
French Dry Cleaning a Specially&#13;
&#13;
Clothing Called for and Delivered to Any Part of the City&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT BROTHERS, PROPS.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL CARDS&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT A U ST&#13;
&#13;
Physician&#13;
OFFICE O V &gt;OR U, S . CLOTH I NG STORE&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE ELLERD&#13;
&#13;
for a good TRUNK OR BAG&#13;
&#13;
Artistic Wall Paper and Pictures&#13;
&#13;
GO WHERE THEY ARE MADE&#13;
&#13;
DECORATING DONE ANYWHERE&#13;
&#13;
E. M. CORBETT&#13;
Physician and Surgeon _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __&#13;
H. N. BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
ANTHONY'S TRUNK FACTORY&#13;
REPAIRING DONE&#13;
FACTORY FIFTH STREET, BETWEEN PIERCE AND DOUGLAS&#13;
&#13;
MRS. A. J. TERHORST&#13;
HAIR&#13;
&#13;
DRESSING&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
Office, Peters' Park, Morningside&#13;
Calls Answered Promptly Day or Night&#13;
&#13;
GLASSES FITTED&#13;
To relieve and rest ore&#13;
fa i ling sight, by&#13;
&#13;
DR. MARLENEE'S&#13;
"Common Sense Methods."&#13;
Any one of the thousands I&#13;
&#13;
have titted is my reference.&#13;
Artificial Eyes and all styles&#13;
of Glasses carried in stock.&#13;
OPTICAL PARLORS opp. Mondamin,&#13;
over U. S.Clothing Store. Suite 5&#13;
&#13;
700 Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
P.A. SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
WM. A . TURNER&#13;
&#13;
Telephone 810-L&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
503-504 Metropolitan Blk&#13;
&#13;
0. WERTZ&#13;
&#13;
SA WYER &amp; TURNER&#13;
&#13;
ALL KINDS OF&#13;
&#13;
ATTORNE.YS AT LAW&#13;
&#13;
DRAYING AND TRUNK HAULING&#13;
&#13;
503 Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 6 8 -L4&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - - - - - - B E T T E R THAN E V E R - - - - - - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
INTER-STATE Live STOCK FAIR ASSOCIATION&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa, Septem ber 11 , 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16, 1905&#13;
&#13;
______________&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Dray and&#13;
Transfer Company&#13;
Agency for the United States Express Co. and American Express Co. Money and Packages Received&#13;
for all Parts of the World.&#13;
&#13;
I We make a Specialty of Hay Rack Parties, Picnics, Etc.&#13;
Heilman and Miss Swem discover an inspiring game, Wilhelm Tell&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
The Des Moines Candy Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The Only Place&#13;
in the City to&#13;
get your&#13;
Ice Cream and Candies&#13;
&#13;
II Ever&#13;
&#13;
YTHING IS HOME=MADE I&#13;
607 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
If you want your baggage taken down at student rates&#13;
to the RIGHT DEPOT and ON TIME&#13;
give us a call.&#13;
&#13;
Nothing too Small or Nothing too&#13;
Large but We Can Haul It.&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA PHONE.&#13;
584· L3&#13;
&#13;
is the fastest and most accurate duck&#13;
gun made. It combines the balance&#13;
and ease of action of the best double&#13;
gun, with the superior shooting and&#13;
sighting of a sing le barrel.&#13;
T he unique marlin&#13;
Breechbolt&#13;
which shuts out rain and water and&#13;
keeps the shells dry makes it the ideal&#13;
bad-weather gun. Made for both&#13;
black and smokeless powders and to take heavy loads easily. A famous gun&#13;
for hard usage.&#13;
There a re a lot o f good d u ck stories in t he Marlin&#13;
E xpe rie nce Book.&#13;
Free, with Cat a logue, fo r 3 sta mps .&#13;
&#13;
I:?&#13;
&#13;
The Marlin Firearms Co.&#13;
&#13;
42 Will ow Street,&#13;
NEW HAVEN, CONN.&#13;
&#13;
C. E. FOGELQUIST&#13;
&#13;
G.D. HANSON&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST WILLIGES&#13;
=====MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
Tailors&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner Jennings&#13;
&#13;
The first impression might have been different if&#13;
you had obtained a rear view&#13;
&#13;
OF===&#13;
&#13;
FIne Fures&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
609 FOUR TH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
GEO.M.LYON &amp;CO.&#13;
LOOK UP THE&#13;
&#13;
DOW CLOTHING CO.&#13;
EVERYTHING NEW AND AT THE&#13;
&#13;
,Guns, B icyc 1es,&#13;
Tennis Goods, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
LOWEST PRICES&#13;
&#13;
416 Pearl St. SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank&#13;
UNITED STATES DE..POSITORY&#13;
&#13;
Capital&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
PEIRCE &amp; BABCOCK&#13;
&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS&#13;
&#13;
110,000&#13;
&#13;
Deposits .&#13;
&#13;
E . B. B• BCOCK&#13;
&#13;
$250,000&#13;
&#13;
Profits&#13;
&#13;
H. G. PEIRCE&#13;
&#13;
2,200,000&#13;
&#13;
We Solicit Your Business and Promise Satisfactory Treatment&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President&#13;
C. L. WRIGHT, Vice President&#13;
C. N. LUKES, Cashier&#13;
T. A. BLACK, V ice President&#13;
C. W. BRITTON, A s.istant Cashier&#13;
&#13;
ROOM 216 EXCHANGE BUILDING, SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
ENTRANCE FIRST FLOOR EXCHANGE BLOG., UNION STOCK YARDS, CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
H. BECK CO.&#13;
&#13;
Beamer&#13;
Studio&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Jewelers&#13;
and Diamond Merchants&#13;
- - - - o u R SPECIAL TIES&#13;
&#13;
ARE THE SALE O f&#13;
&#13;
FIne Dimonds good watches, Sterking Silverware, Cut&#13;
Glass and '5eneral Presentation goods.&#13;
- - - - - - MANUFACTURERS&#13;
&#13;
OF - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
school&#13;
&#13;
pins and emblems&#13;
&#13;
college&#13;
&#13;
and class&#13;
&#13;
415 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&gt;Y&#13;
&#13;
J. F. HOPKINS &amp; CO.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
C. F. BALDWIN, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate and Exchange Agents&#13;
Have always handled a large amount of Morningside&#13;
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in improved, unimproved and acre properties.&#13;
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Morningside College Printery&#13;
RICHARDS &amp; SHAW,&#13;
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OUT OF TOWN WORK G 1&#13;
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YO U M U ST ST ART RI G H T&#13;
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R . G . RICHARDS. MANAGER OF PRINTING DEPARTMENT&#13;
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Devoted to the Interests of&#13;
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I&#13;
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The State University of Iowa&#13;
O FFERS to the young men and women of the State the very best facilities and opportunities&#13;
for collegiate and professional training.&#13;
In the strength of its faculties, the number and arrangement of its buildings, the resources&#13;
of its laboratories. The xtent&#13;
&#13;
of its Libraries&#13;
&#13;
and museums and the\weal&#13;
th its&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
generalEquip&#13;
&#13;
Your attention is especially called to the superior facilities of the University for teaching-&#13;
&#13;
Science and Mathematics&#13;
Political Science and History&#13;
Education&#13;
Law&#13;
Medicine&#13;
Homeopathic Medicine&#13;
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English and Other Languages&#13;
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Engineerinq:&#13;
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Mining, Mechanical, Saitary&#13;
D entistry&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
&#13;
Arrangements have been made whereby collegiate and professional courses may be combined so as to save one or two years' time in the completion of the work.&#13;
Free tuition may be had in the College of Liberal Arts.&#13;
If you are contemplating higher education you cannot afford to pass by the superior ad vantages offered by your State University.&#13;
When sending for free catalogues giving full information kindly&#13;
indicate the course in which you are most interested.&#13;
&#13;
Address PRESIDENT GEORGE R. McLEAN, Iowa City, Iowa&#13;
IOWA CITY is a town of beautiful homes and one of the most pleasant places of residence in&#13;
the State. Its social, moral and religious influences equal those of any city in the State.&#13;
&#13;
A. M. Jackson&#13;
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J. G. Shumaker&#13;
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Jackson &amp; Shumaker&#13;
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The Libe&#13;
Real Estate Men&#13;
705-6 Security Bank Building&#13;
Branch Office- Peters Park&#13;
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E.G. STRAUB&#13;
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STRAUB BROTHERS&#13;
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707 FOURTH STREET&#13;
PHONE 704-J&#13;
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SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
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Harding: "Gosh, but it's slippery"&#13;
&#13;
The University&#13;
&#13;
Of Washington&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS F. KANE, Ph. D., President&#13;
&#13;
Founded 1855&#13;
&#13;
OTHER OFFICERS&#13;
HARRY CANBY COFFMAN, A. 8 ., Librarian&#13;
HERBERT T. CONDON, LL 8., Registrar and Secretary of Faculty&#13;
WILLIAM MARKHAM , S ecretary Board of Regents&#13;
ANNIE H owARo, Preceptress&#13;
ELIZABETH P EARL Mc DONNELL.A. 8 . Cataloguer in the Library&#13;
WILLIAM 8. HAMPSON, M. E., University Engmeer and Director&#13;
of S hop Work&#13;
&#13;
School of Mines&#13;
Leading to the degrees of B . S. and E . M.&#13;
Mining&#13;
Courses&#13;
Metallurgical&#13;
( Short Course&#13;
MILNOR ROBERTS, A. B .. E. M. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
School of Pharmacy&#13;
Leading to the degrees of Ph . G. and B. S.&#13;
CHARLES WILLIS JOHNSON , Ph. C., Ph . D., DEAN&#13;
&#13;
College of Liberal Arts&#13;
Leading to the degrees of A. 8. and 8 . S .&#13;
&#13;
Coilege of Engineering&#13;
Leadi ng to the degrees of 8 . S ., C. E ., M. E .. and E . E.&#13;
( Electrical&#13;
I M h&#13;
. l&#13;
Courses&#13;
Civil an1ca&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Organized 1861&#13;
&#13;
Chemical&#13;
ALMON H. FULLE R, M. S ., C . E., DEAN&#13;
&#13;
School of Law&#13;
Leading to the degree of LL. 8. A diploma from this School&#13;
of Law admits to practice in all the courts of Washington&#13;
without the requirement of passing the bar examination.&#13;
( S ession Laws of 1903 )&#13;
JOHN T. CONDON, LL. M. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
Graduate School&#13;
Leading to the degrees of A. M. and M. S .&#13;
J. ALLEN SMITH, PH. D., DEAN&#13;
&#13;
THE FIRST SEMESTER OF THE COLLEGE YEAR f905-06 OPENS SEPTEMBER&#13;
T uition free . Rooms at the University dormotories rent for $12.00 per s emester of four an d a half months.&#13;
at the University Dining Hall is $13.50 per month .&#13;
For complete or departmental catalog ue, apply to&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT T. CONDON, Registrar&#13;
U niversity S tation, S eat tle, Washington&#13;
&#13;
T he cost of table board&#13;
&#13;
MORNING SIDE REAL ESTATE OFFICE&#13;
&#13;
HAVE&#13;
suitable for&#13;
&#13;
for sale a large list of Residences,&#13;
&#13;
HOMES&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
Lots. Houses of all descriptions for rent. Send&#13;
a pleasure to show our property.&#13;
If you are interested, write us for&#13;
Lists and other information.&#13;
&#13;
prize&#13;
Production OfR. G. Richards&#13;
&#13;
Also beautifully&#13;
.&#13;
id&#13;
situatedB ui mg&#13;
prices and particulars.Always&#13;
&#13;
SALE&#13;
&#13;
CUSHMAN &amp; .M ILLER&#13;
PETER.S PARK, MORNING SIDE&#13;
&#13;
I don't know whether "Yule" go sleigh-riding or not&#13;
&#13;
Gertrude Crossan &#13;
Corwin Francis Hartzell&#13;
J, W. Wunn&#13;
Emma Jeanette Fair&#13;
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Herbert Judson Calkins&#13;
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Judson Waldo Mather&#13;
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Florence Gertrude Lewis&#13;
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Prichards&#13;
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Gruber&#13;
Lewis&#13;
Collins&#13;
Lear&#13;
Buck &#13;
Crabb&#13;
Hind</text>
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                    <text>���I&#13;
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The Sioux 1914&#13;
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Annual Year&#13;
Book&#13;
Junior Class&#13;
of&#13;
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Morningside College&#13;
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Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Volume XII&#13;
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BARKS&#13;
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MABEL PECAUT&#13;
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Jean&#13;
&#13;
BIGGLESTONE&#13;
FuLLBROOK&#13;
WHITTEMORE&#13;
&#13;
IsoBEL Webb&#13;
CAROLINE EADS&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
W. HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Editor in Chief&#13;
Business&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Artist&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Classes&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Literary&#13;
Societies&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
LAURA BELT&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
RUTH RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
LOLA BROWNELL&#13;
H. M. COBBS&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Photographer&#13;
Assistant Athletics&#13;
&#13;
�Dedication&#13;
o Alfred Edwin Craig, Ph. D..&#13;
D. D. who has already led&#13;
Morningside College through&#13;
one great crisis, and to whom we look&#13;
for inspiration and leadership in the&#13;
building of the GreaterMorningside&#13;
of the future, the class of 1914 respectfully dedicate this Book.&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College-A&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENT ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Forecast&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
OMPARED with others, Morningside College can boast of but a brief history.&#13;
Founded less than a score of years ago she has not had time to gather those rich&#13;
traditions which form so large an asset in many older institutions. But during&#13;
these few short years of her active career she has had an uninterrupted course of progress.&#13;
A splendid beginning has been made in buildings. Main Hall, rebuilt after the fire, of&#13;
reinforced concrete, perfectly fireproof. stands among the very best college buildings in&#13;
the country. An endowment of $400,000 has been accumulated, which is surely a&#13;
splendid beginning considering the short period in which it has been gathered. A&#13;
splendid body of upwards of five hundred students throngs the halls, which is prophetic&#13;
of the still better things to come when the greater equipment shortly to be realized has&#13;
been secured.&#13;
From the very first a high standard of scholarship has been the determined aim of&#13;
the institution. This purpose has been steadfastly followed, even when it seemed necessary to draw upon future prospects to maintain the same. But the outcome has fully&#13;
vindicated the faith of those who heroically faced deficit and threatened defeat in order&#13;
to hold up the standard which had been set as the ideal of this young institution. The&#13;
vision, the faith, the courage and ultimate triumph of Bishop Lewis will ever have an&#13;
outstanding place among the splendid achievements of our Methodism. His was that&#13;
splendid Christian optimism which "planned great things for God, and expected great&#13;
things from God." The past is secure. But what of the future?&#13;
It cannot be denied that we are in a period of educational transition. Old ideas&#13;
are being challenged, new aims are urgently set before us and amidst this scene of diss.olving views we do well to inquire what reasonable hope we can hold up for continuance.&#13;
Vocational education is becoming the vogue. As a result of this change the fearful are&#13;
beginning to inquire if the day of the small College is not past? Is the time not close&#13;
when we will be required to surrender our educational position and leave the field to&#13;
these greater institutions? Let it be frankly admitted that the independent College, depending upon voluntary gifts for its support, will in but few instances be able to successfully enter into this field of vocational competition. When this concession has been&#13;
made it still remains to inquire whether there is left a place for the College as such. We&#13;
believe there is. To successfully fill such a place is the modest aim of Morningside&#13;
College. Let us ascertain what this implies .&#13;
We must first make a clear distinction between the College and the University. The&#13;
American University is an aggregate of Colleges, only one of which is devoted to strictly&#13;
collegiate training of undergraduate students. Following this undergraduate work is&#13;
the graduate work of a collegiate character which is becoming an increasingly important&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�feature. Then there are the several professional schools, fitting men for life's vocations,&#13;
such as the law, medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, and other related professions. In addition&#13;
to these professional Colleges there is growing up an important group which may be designated technical institutions, where the engineer, the farmer, the mechanic may receive&#13;
expert training to fit them for the deft, the delicate, the scientific demands of our complex&#13;
and highly organized modern civilization. It will be observed that the independent&#13;
College enters but one field of this great scope of educational competition, that of undergraduate collegiate work. Here is the real sphere for such an institution as Morningside&#13;
College aims to be.&#13;
For such an institution there is a most hopeful outlook. It remains for it to preserve the true idealism of education. We believe that we have not yet surrendered to&#13;
that vocational clamor that would reduce education to the low level of merely equipping&#13;
our youth to successfully enter into the commercial competition of the day. We hold&#13;
it is quite as important to make a life as to make a living. When a people is poor, when&#13;
subsistence is hard and living is scant there may be much excuse for negl ecting the&#13;
higher things of thought in the hard struggle to maintain a hold on life at all. But as&#13;
our resources increase there ought to be many who will have ability and the disposition&#13;
to seek that enrichment of life that comes from the broader intimacy with all that is best&#13;
in literature, philosophy and science. When riches have the glamor of newness they may&#13;
seem all satisfying, but when a people has had the time to meditate on real values they&#13;
usually come to the conclusion of John Milton when he said, "No man · is ever truly&#13;
rich with what he carries in his pocket or holds in his hand. Real wealth is of the head&#13;
and the heart." To intensify a love for this higher riches is the mission of the College.&#13;
To do this does not necessarily require enormous physical equipment. It may seem a&#13;
far call from the College of today to that ideal suggested by Garfield when he declared&#13;
that Mark Hopkins on one end of a log and a boy on the other made the ideal College.&#13;
Yet his remark may suggest reflection.&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORYOF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
To meet this ideal the small College is peculiarly well prepared. This is true&#13;
because a genuine education can never be handed out machine made. It must involve&#13;
personality. Intimate contact between the instructor and the student is fundamental.&#13;
This demands small units for its most perfect realization. Immense mobs of students,&#13;
thronging the halls of some great University may make great impression upon the imagination of the bystander, but when we seek individual results a smaller grouping will&#13;
meet the requirements more ideally. Other elements enter into the composition of a&#13;
satisfactory school for immature youth, such as the student graduated from our secondary&#13;
schools is likely to be. The moral and religious atmosphere which surrounds the institution is no small factor in the minds of many careful parents. They do not relish&#13;
the idea of training their children with scrupulous care during the period of childhood,&#13;
and then at the most susceptible and critical time of life turning them over to the cold&#13;
mercies of a state institution where the personal elements are reduced to the vanishing&#13;
point and where such vices as flourish in large groups of unregulated youth are sure to&#13;
&#13;
�run riot. It may be taken for granted that the large University will always fail to meet&#13;
the educational desires of all the people. The place of the small College seems secure.&#13;
This may be a good place to indicate some of the peculiar&#13;
advantages Morningside&#13;
College possesses which become great factors in her future outlook. She has a strategic&#13;
position. Located in a beautiful suburb of a thriving city there are offered the advantages of the quiet retreat and the energetic life of a throbbing center of activity and&#13;
interest. As the city grows, which it is destined to do at a most rapid pace, the College&#13;
cannot help but share in this prosperity. The fact that it will afford a large number of&#13;
young people from Sioux City opportunity to secure a College education and yet to&#13;
remain at home while they do so is an important feature. Surrounding Morningside College is one of the most prosperous sections of country anywhere to be found. The rapid&#13;
advance of land values in the past few years indicates this. The natural result is that&#13;
the children of these wealthy land owners naturally desire something of the culture and&#13;
larger equipment that the College has to offer. The fact that we are so far removed&#13;
from the other institutions of the state has its advantages also. While the southeastern&#13;
part of the state is crowded thick with Colleges, Morningside stands as the solitary&#13;
representative of a first grade College in the northwestern quarter of the state. The&#13;
rapid development of the states west of us will doubtless have an effect upon our future&#13;
and we may hope to attract an increasing number of students from that section.&#13;
&#13;
President's&#13;
&#13;
Home&#13;
&#13;
To meet these growing needs of the College a large program has been adopted.&#13;
The immediate aim is to secure $200,000 for buildings and improvements. This implies&#13;
the payment for the work already done on the fine Main Hall and the new heating&#13;
plant already installed, also the building of a Gymnasium and a Dormitory for women.&#13;
This campaign is already launched and is meeting with such cordial approval by the&#13;
people to whom we have appealed that it is safe at this time to say that it will be carried to a successful completion. The next feature on our program will be a campaign&#13;
for more endowment. The fact that the Rockefeller foundation has helped us in the&#13;
past is enough to assure that when we are ready to undertake another enterprise they&#13;
will come to our assistance. Already the friends of the College are talking of&#13;
doubling the endowment as a suitable celebration of the passage of our first quarter of&#13;
a century milepost, which will occur in 1919. Indeed the more enthusiastic insist that&#13;
the full million dollar mark ought to be our goal. Certain it is that Morningside College is destined to move along a line of progress which will assure a place among the&#13;
foremost institutions of her class.&#13;
&#13;
�Rev.&#13;
GR ACE Methodist&#13;
&#13;
Episcopal&#13;
&#13;
Herbert&#13;
&#13;
A. KECK&#13;
&#13;
Church&#13;
&#13;
Grace Methodist Episcopal Church of Morningside, situated at the south end of&#13;
the campus, may well be called the College Church. It is here that .the larger part of&#13;
the student body finds its church home. It is here that Morningside College has always&#13;
found a friend. Last spring when Main Hall was a mass of ruins and our class rooms&#13;
gone, the trustees of Grace Church tendered us the use of their building and we were&#13;
able to carry on class work without interruption. This plan continued until the completion of our New Main Hall late last fall. We cannot in words express our appreciation of the kindness of the church at every opportunity and especially in this particular&#13;
instance.&#13;
However, we are glad that when Grace Church was searching for a man to take&#13;
the pulpit about to be vacated by Dr. Wasser, Morningside College was able to step&#13;
forward and present one of its graduates for this all-important position. Rev. Herbert&#13;
A. Keck, of the class of 'O 1, although one of the young men of the Conference, was&#13;
chosen for this leading pulpit of Northwest Iowa. The same spirit which was manifest&#13;
in his work in oratory and debate while in College is making itself felt in Grace Church.&#13;
The large auditorium is crowded nearly every Sunday; and residents of Morningside&#13;
and students alike are being inspired and elevated by the earnestness and eloquence of&#13;
this man.&#13;
We are glad that the Church and the C olleg e are thus able to co-operate.&#13;
this spirit of mutuality continue in the days to come.&#13;
Interior&#13;
&#13;
View&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
�Officers&#13;
&#13;
BOOK I&#13;
MEDICINE MEN and PAPOOSES&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
Board&#13;
&#13;
faculty&#13;
&#13;
of Trustees&#13;
&#13;
BOOK II&#13;
&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN , M. D.&#13;
&#13;
C. W. PAYNE&#13;
J. C . LocKIN&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER&#13;
F. D. EMPEY&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
HASKINS&#13;
&#13;
students&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Auditor&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Field Secretary&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCAY&#13;
&#13;
Field Secretary&#13;
&#13;
WARS&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
athletics&#13;
&#13;
WARRIORS&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
&#13;
BOOK III&#13;
CHANTS andLEGENDS&#13;
( literary )&#13;
&#13;
BOOK IV&#13;
&#13;
TRIBES&#13;
&#13;
(Societies)&#13;
&#13;
. BOOK V&#13;
&#13;
COUNCILS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK VI&#13;
POW WOWS&#13;
calendar&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
jokes&#13;
&#13;
�Foreword&#13;
Since the publication of the 191 3 Sioux, we have&#13;
witnessed many changes in Morningside College. We have&#13;
seen our Main Hall swept away in flames and a new fireproof building erected in its place. We have a new heating plant and every expectation of a complete new gymnasium within the coming year. Our record in inter-collegiate&#13;
activities during the past twelve months has never been surpassed.&#13;
&#13;
Surely this has been a year of achievement.&#13;
&#13;
During this period of advancement, the 1914 Sioux has&#13;
tried to keep pace.&#13;
&#13;
We have not tried to excel any prev-&#13;
&#13;
ious efforts, we have simply endeavored to embody some new&#13;
ideas and features in our work in order to make an annual&#13;
worthy of our institution. In so far as we have succeeded&#13;
we leave for you to judge.&#13;
&#13;
Throughout the construction of&#13;
&#13;
the book we have had but one aim in view, to help in the&#13;
realization of a Greater Morningside; and we feel that in this&#13;
great purpose every student of Morningside is with us.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
thank you for your co-operation and support and if in any&#13;
way we have erred we ask your charity.&#13;
&#13;
��ALFRED EDWIN CRAIG, Ph.D .. D. D.&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, Ph. D.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Registrar&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biblical Literature&#13;
Professor of Economics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
SIDNEY LEVI CHANDLER. A M.&#13;
Dean of the&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND. A B.&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
AGNES B. FERGUSON, AM.&#13;
Acting Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
Principal of the Academy&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES. Ph. D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
......,,,,.,,,..................&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�HENRY F. KANTHLEN ER, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL A. M.&#13;
&#13;
P rofessor of Greek&#13;
&#13;
Profesor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT N. VAN HORNE, Ph. B.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AUSTIN COSS, M . S.&#13;
&#13;
Professor. of M Mathemetics&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR A. BROWN, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREYNALD, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
P rofesso r of Education&#13;
&#13;
Professor of French&#13;
&#13;
,,•'&#13;
&#13;
twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�CHARLES ALMER MARSH, B. S.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ESTELLE ROBERTS, A B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS, M. D.&#13;
Secretary of the&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADLEY, A M.&#13;
Instructor in German&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN ALLISON MORSE&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA CLARK SANBORN&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
,,,,&#13;
&#13;
..,··'&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
�MABEL ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON, AB.&#13;
Director of Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
HORACE L. HOUGHTON, Ph.B., B. D.&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE MACMURRAY, AM.&#13;
&#13;
Lecturer in Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD, Ph. B.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAC COLLIN, A B.&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
...,&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
,•'&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�CECIL BURLEIGH&#13;
&#13;
MAE EDITH WOOD, A B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
Teach er in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD, A B.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A TEMPLEMAN&#13;
Teach er of Banjo, Mandolin and C uitar&#13;
&#13;
lnstructor in .Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
BERTHEMIA McCARTHY, AB.&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Academy Latin&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte ' .&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�MARGARET&#13;
&#13;
GAY DOLLIVER, A. B.&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
ENGLISH DIMMITT, A. M.&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
.........,,....................&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�......&#13;
&#13;
SARAH ANN BLEAKLY . . .... . ... .. Galva&#13;
&#13;
Au DREE IRENE DAVIE . . . .. . .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Stenographer&#13;
&#13;
Class Artist&#13;
&#13;
LORNA MARIE DISTAD&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN EDITH BOWER ... . . Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
·.· Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Latin Shark&#13;
&#13;
Class Bachelor M aid&#13;
&#13;
SILAS ALONZO BRALEY ... .. . .. . Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
SUSANA LOIS EADS . . .. . . . T yndall, S. D .&#13;
&#13;
Official Class Yellmaster&#13;
&#13;
Class Ford Automobilist&#13;
&#13;
JOHN ELY BRIGGS .. . .. . . . . . . Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
Genius&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH HENRY EDGE . . . .. . .. . Humboldt&#13;
&#13;
Class Brownstudy&#13;
&#13;
ELLA SEAVER CAMPBELL . .. . .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
 CATHERINE E. ELLIOTT .. . . . Ola the, K an.&#13;
&#13;
Class Conscience&#13;
&#13;
Class Booster&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE ELLEN CAIN .. .. .. . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM CLEVELANDE VANS . . . Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Class English Slave&#13;
&#13;
Class Silent T hinker&#13;
&#13;
JOCY IRENE CARTER ... . ... . . . .. Whiting&#13;
&#13;
ALELIAURSU LAFISH .. . .... . ... Quimby&#13;
&#13;
Class Jester&#13;
&#13;
Class Model Student&#13;
&#13;
................................&#13;
&#13;
.....&#13;
&#13;
,,.,,&#13;
&#13;
thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
.......,,,,,,,,......&#13;
&#13;
,,.,&#13;
&#13;
Th irty -th ree&#13;
&#13;
�...&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
RoY HITT GARLOCK .. . . . . .... Sioux, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
G RACE FLORENCE LOGAN . . . . . . . .. Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Class Grandfather&#13;
&#13;
Class Precise Girl&#13;
&#13;
HowARD GRAHAM . . . . . . . ... .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARYEMIRA McCuTCHEON ... Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Math Shark&#13;
&#13;
Class History Whale&#13;
&#13;
MARY ANNETTA HALL ... . .. . . .. ... Colo&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE MAVIS MONTGOMERY. S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Hard Worker&#13;
&#13;
FRANK PRESTON JOHNSON .. . .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Oratorical Wonder&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE HERBERT KINGSBURY .. Ponca,&#13;
&#13;
"Class Queen"&#13;
EVERET MONTGOMERY . Sio ux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Crack Athlete&#13;
&#13;
HORACE GEORGE MERTEN ... . . .. G arner&#13;
&#13;
Class Prize Fusser&#13;
&#13;
Eva INEZ LEAZER .. .. . . . . . ... Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Modesty&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN CLARKE LEMON . . . .... . Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
MINN IE NELSON . .. .. .. . . W akefield, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Class Insurgent Editor&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
ALICE MoWER . . . .. . . . . . . . . . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Juvenile Expert&#13;
&#13;
,,,,,&#13;
&#13;
Class Memory&#13;
&#13;
Class Minnehaha&#13;
&#13;
.. ,•·'&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
�HAZEL MAGDALENE SHUMAKER . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE WEBSTER PRICHARD . . ... Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Class Sympathetic Sociologist&#13;
&#13;
Class Infant Extraordinary&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ELIZABETH WEDGWOOD . . Sioux City&#13;
Eva WILSON RANDOLPH ..... . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Cheerful Helper&#13;
DAVID LAWRENCE WICKENS ... Avon, S. D.&#13;
]OHN&#13;
&#13;
Class Sturdy Hercules&#13;
&#13;
L. RALSTON . . . . . . . . . . . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
Class Loquacious Benedict&#13;
SARA RACHEL WHITEHOUSE . ... Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
Class Militant&#13;
&#13;
Suffragette&#13;
&#13;
ANNA RIEKE . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Class Substantial Smile&#13;
INEZ WHITNEY .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
Class Optimist&#13;
&#13;
(Spoken for)&#13;
&#13;
VERA ROWE . . . .. . . ..... . .... Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Quizzical Spectator&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
WEED WHITTEMORE&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Busy Member&#13;
LOTTIE Louise SANDE&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
. . . . . . . Sioux City&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class Leading&#13;
&#13;
Lady&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
JACOB HENRY WINTERRINGER . . . . . . . Oto&#13;
&#13;
Class Cardiac Specialist&#13;
EDNA SIMON ... . ... . .. ... .... Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Class C ermaniac&#13;
&#13;
LAVANCHA MARIE Wood . .... . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Engaged Girl (not the only)&#13;
&#13;
,,,,,&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,, ..............&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�'•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,,,.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
LAURA L. BELT&#13;
Vi ce President&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE MORGAN&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
South Sioux City, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
"Beltie" could coax&#13;
the man out of the&#13;
moon . A c lever brain&#13;
and&#13;
dete rmin ed&#13;
will&#13;
hidden behind pleasing&#13;
&#13;
Lucile&#13;
is&#13;
another&#13;
very young lady who&#13;
has attended to busin ess and co ll ected the&#13;
necessary credits to be&#13;
a Junior at the age&#13;
when most of us are&#13;
ente ring college.&#13;
And&#13;
s h e graduated&#13;
from&#13;
Expression last year bes ides.&#13;
Just to show&#13;
&#13;
mann ers.,&#13;
&#13;
distracting&#13;
&#13;
eyes&#13;
a nd&#13;
dimples.&#13;
make a d a n gero us ly effective force. However,&#13;
Laura h as don e nothin g seri o us yet. except&#13;
graduate from Music,&#13;
Expression,&#13;
class h e rself a .J unior- and is&#13;
st ill in her teens. But&#13;
t h e r e is no limit to&#13;
what she may do- -&#13;
&#13;
how&#13;
&#13;
energeti c&#13;
&#13;
she&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
she&#13;
lives&#13;
in&#13;
South&#13;
Sioux and crosses the&#13;
Missouri on th e way to&#13;
classes eve ry morning.&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR W. HORNNEY, President&#13;
Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
L . ALICE KLIPPEL&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Alice&#13;
I&#13;
chosen&#13;
&#13;
I sobel is so me r ela tion of Old King Co le,&#13;
we judge. She Is cer tainly jolly- born and&#13;
been that way&#13;
ever&#13;
s in ce.&#13;
f ro m&#13;
appearances.&#13;
Her laugh is&#13;
frequent,&#13;
whol e-so ul ed&#13;
and infectiou s. It can&#13;
be quench ed only by&#13;
poetry, the Browning&#13;
variety especially. She&#13;
enjoys everything&#13;
else&#13;
in h e r bu sy sch oo l life&#13;
as only a worker can.&#13;
She is an authority&#13;
on&#13;
a ll society matters.&#13;
&#13;
is on e of t h e&#13;
few who&#13;
are&#13;
The&#13;
needs more&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
majoring in Latin&#13;
&#13;
class&#13;
these&#13;
&#13;
courageous&#13;
&#13;
soul s.&#13;
&#13;
Alice h as followed t h e&#13;
fortunes&#13;
of&#13;
"1914"&#13;
through a ll its trials&#13;
a n d stunts. Her friends&#13;
appreciate&#13;
&#13;
her&#13;
&#13;
stead-&#13;
&#13;
fast good nature and&#13;
h e r gentle di spos ition.&#13;
S he co mes to chape l&#13;
regularly and is an acti ve member of the Y.&#13;
W. A worker in anythi ng .&#13;
&#13;
MYRON 0. INSKO&#13;
Knierim&#13;
&#13;
Dear old chubby, pink-cheeked "F izz !" Always jolly, y et&#13;
ser iou s enough for study, society, journalism and about&#13;
·steen hours of fussing a week. A leader in Y. M. and&#13;
rough -houses. Hail s from Le Mars, the birthplace of other&#13;
Morningside notables. Not a n athl et e himse lf, but a peach&#13;
of a rooter. Had a steady girl once but she left schooljust writes lette rs now.&#13;
&#13;
"Yea Verily ," a fr iend to a ll. a printer by trade. a so ldier by occupati on , a preacher by callin g. a debater of no&#13;
littl e sk ill. a biological shark. and may even be found occas ion a ll y at hi s books. A love r of ' la n g uage-ca n utter&#13;
more words in a minute th an any man on the cam pu s . The&#13;
foreign fie ld s are hi s goal.&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�.....&#13;
&#13;
CAROLINE&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
F. EADS&#13;
&#13;
Edna&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Allen&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Harold&#13;
&#13;
Engle&#13;
&#13;
A . Gorder&#13;
&#13;
Tyndall, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
Ainsworth. Neb.&#13;
&#13;
M oorh ead&#13;
&#13;
"Pug"&#13;
pouting,&#13;
or&#13;
"Pug" merry-and&#13;
her&#13;
smile is as quick and&#13;
flashing as her witis an inter esting person to talk to, full of&#13;
vivid life and d ecisive&#13;
of opin i on. Her moods&#13;
and her affections are&#13;
as changeful as March&#13;
&#13;
Take a qu ick brain,&#13;
a sassy t ongue. a mischievous humor, a large&#13;
&#13;
He hails&#13;
from t h e&#13;
sand hills o f Nebraska&#13;
whi ch accou n ts for his&#13;
grit.&#13;
A ha rd worker,&#13;
a steadfast fri end. optimistic. jovia l. serious&#13;
only&#13;
when&#13;
prea ching&#13;
a sermon or r eciting in&#13;
class.&#13;
A fa i thful adheren t of the&#13;
cinder&#13;
path. Chivalrous at all&#13;
times, East End is his&#13;
Mecca.&#13;
Considers duty&#13;
his master and is looking forward to ministry&#13;
in t h e foreign fi eld.&#13;
&#13;
"Gorder"&#13;
may&#13;
be&#13;
small&#13;
of stature, but&#13;
he h as a mighty supply of energy, and a&#13;
&#13;
weather,&#13;
&#13;
now&#13;
&#13;
heart, and much courage, and pack&#13;
th em&#13;
into a small body. and&#13;
you have Edna. But&#13;
don't forget l oyaltyto friends. school and&#13;
religion.&#13;
Optimistic.&#13;
&#13;
too. and such a worker !&#13;
A very Puritan&#13;
&#13;
warm.&#13;
&#13;
now cold. She is very&#13;
energetic. be it work or&#13;
play.&#13;
A&#13;
tennis and&#13;
basketballI enthusiast.&#13;
&#13;
fo r doing he r&#13;
dutywere t h ere more like&#13;
her. li fe would go more&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD M.&#13;
&#13;
COBBS&#13;
&#13;
large capacity for work.&#13;
His&#13;
favori te&#13;
recreation i s dealing wi th&#13;
mathematical problems&#13;
and working&#13;
out new&#13;
chemical properties. A&#13;
firm&#13;
believer&#13;
in&#13;
coeducat ion.&#13;
A promising debater, having acquired skill i n that line&#13;
in hi s academic days.&#13;
His&#13;
aspirations&#13;
rest&#13;
upon the jusges bench.&#13;
&#13;
TRACIA Bregman&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Hull&#13;
&#13;
"Rusty"&#13;
is a good old scout, an athlete and debater, and&#13;
a modest man withal that dislikes to have his picture&#13;
taken. though not afraid to speak up in Psych. His bobby&#13;
is hunting and his favorite and oft repeated command is,&#13;
"Well, shut the door!" Hehas several "M's"&#13;
to his cr edit&#13;
and as many sweaters to his back.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Bregman takes life seriously-more&#13;
seriously than&#13;
n eed be. perhaps. She studi es hard. gets good grades and&#13;
works steadi ly towards her peupose.&#13;
Sb e is going to be a&#13;
missionary.&#13;
Sh e is a very active member&#13;
of Whitfield&#13;
Church and belongs to the Volunteer&#13;
Band.&#13;
We look to&#13;
her to help the class k eep up the Morningsiderecord in&#13;
the fo r eign fie ld .&#13;
&#13;
.............,,•&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
'••,,., ,.,,•'&#13;
&#13;
Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
Forty-three&#13;
&#13;
�FLORENCE A. LONG&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ARGIE DOOLITTLE&#13;
Sibley&#13;
&#13;
G. ALBERT VENNINK&#13;
&#13;
Florence is a Mathematics shark&#13;
- she&#13;
proves it by coming to&#13;
a 7 :40 cla ss four times&#13;
a week. And s till she&#13;
is consi stently ch eerfu l&#13;
and unhurried of aspect. Surely hers are&#13;
ways of peace and of&#13;
no trouble to the faculty.&#13;
Willing&#13;
and&#13;
h elpful at a ll ti mes. we&#13;
think Morningside&#13;
wou ld appl'eciate severa l more like her.&#13;
&#13;
Margie is a worker .&#13;
Sbe works&#13;
first of all&#13;
for Morningside&#13;
sh e&#13;
works for her class. she&#13;
worked on the Junior&#13;
Girls' basketha ll team.&#13;
and on all our&#13;
class&#13;
stun ts. she works, on h er&#13;
studies, sh e works and&#13;
boosts all along t h e&#13;
line!&#13;
She is full of&#13;
loya lty&#13;
and&#13;
school&#13;
s pirit . a ch eerful, pleasant&#13;
companion&#13;
and&#13;
classm ate.&#13;
&#13;
Vennink is a pra ctical sociologist. I n the&#13;
boy scout&#13;
movement&#13;
and other work a mong&#13;
t he boys he is accom plishing much.&#13;
He is&#13;
honest to h imself and&#13;
to his neighbor and absolutely fearless and&#13;
impartial in the discharge of his du ty. As&#13;
Humane Officer h e has&#13;
even been known to&#13;
arrest the Chief of&#13;
Police for driving&#13;
a&#13;
la me horse.&#13;
Received&#13;
a grade in Psych .&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM A. McCurdy&#13;
T wo Harbors, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUSTUS H.&#13;
BRUNELLE&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Gussie"-frank, s incere. caustically honest. The kind of student t h at revels in&#13;
and&#13;
Calculus.&#13;
Greek&#13;
but n ot a mere bookworm . for h e finds t ime&#13;
to run to the monument occasionally.&#13;
&#13;
sides&#13;
&#13;
Be-&#13;
&#13;
being a&#13;
hard&#13;
and loyal, be&#13;
possesses the rare vir1ne of punctuality. He&#13;
always boosts for Morningside and even champions the faculty.&#13;
worker&#13;
&#13;
ALMA H. WILHELM&#13;
Hartley&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" is by allI odds th e busiest m a n in the c lass. H e&#13;
has worn out four pair of s h oes s ince last fall just "getting&#13;
adds&#13;
yet h e h as found time to play football, debate and&#13;
meander about with the Glee Club besides. He is " 1914's"&#13;
most entertaining&#13;
member one of his favorite impersonat ions be ing that of '·Oswald .'' He is a leader in Y. M.,&#13;
absolutely d ep endabl e a n d a steadfast fr iend.&#13;
&#13;
Alma is brown-eyed. short and p lum p, and very wise.&#13;
Plump because s h e enjoys a joke and a good laugh . too.&#13;
And very wise because she s t udies h er lessons until s he&#13;
gets them and t h en she isn't afraid to let the professor's&#13;
know it. She is pe rsi stent in pursui t of any object. which&#13;
accounts for her good guarding on the basketball team this&#13;
winter.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
�JENNIE&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE&#13;
&#13;
A. ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
L . BOWMAN&#13;
&#13;
LOLA G. BROWNELL&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Bernice has so me of&#13;
the peculiarities whi ch&#13;
bel ong to the a r t i sti c&#13;
temperament&#13;
be ing s ubj ect to every kn own&#13;
mood. But how she can&#13;
sing ! She has a voice&#13;
and musica l t alen t that&#13;
are recompense fo r any&#13;
care&#13;
She has enough&#13;
Fren ch b lood i n h er to&#13;
sh ow occasi onall y . and&#13;
enough Y ankee brains to&#13;
get her " A' ' grades. And&#13;
no one ca n have a bett er t ime.&#13;
&#13;
Th er e isn't a more&#13;
hospi tabl e person&#13;
in&#13;
Morningside Lola,&#13;
t han&#13;
n or a more hosp i tabl e&#13;
home t han Lola's h ome.&#13;
They are both famous&#13;
for good times and good&#13;
eats.&#13;
L o la can study&#13;
as well as cook. and&#13;
manage&#13;
a t y pewriter&#13;
skillfull y . She has class&#13;
spirit&#13;
enough for two&#13;
or&#13;
three peop le and&#13;
worked as m uch fo r&#13;
"1914." She has h elped&#13;
&#13;
Ruth i s fair. pretty&#13;
and sweet.&#13;
H er comp lexion and hair are&#13;
f ai r : her face and h er&#13;
ways are pret t y: and&#13;
her voice and h er smiles&#13;
are sweet.&#13;
She sings&#13;
beautifu lly.&#13;
And she&#13;
does very well in school.&#13;
on ly. she has been worried la t ely by- just imagine-jok es. Our only&#13;
co m p la i nt against her&#13;
is that she g i ves just&#13;
on e person m ost al I her&#13;
&#13;
Craig, Neb.&#13;
Miss Adams h as but&#13;
recently&#13;
joined&#13;
our&#13;
c l ass. h av ing com e to us&#13;
from Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan.&#13;
We have always&#13;
h ea r d t ha t it wa s a&#13;
good sch oo l. and sh e h as&#13;
provecl that it turn s out&#13;
good products at l east .&#13;
She&#13;
is quiet&#13;
modest,&#13;
studiou s and loya l- an&#13;
addition&#13;
to&#13;
Morningsi de.&#13;
Her purpose in&#13;
com in g to college is&#13;
unusually&#13;
s impl e&#13;
to&#13;
become cultured.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
time.&#13;
&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
P. MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
JOHN D. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Al gona&#13;
&#13;
,Jacksonville. Ill.&#13;
&#13;
"Morgan&#13;
i s a versatile chap who plays foo t ball. d ebates,&#13;
jokes and d r aws- m ostl y draws.&#13;
Hecan do anyth ing you&#13;
wish in t he way o f portrai ts. design · or cartoons.&#13;
When&#13;
it comes t o stun ts h e and McCurdy&#13;
are a pair hard to beat.&#13;
Horace h as had a worried&#13;
look t his spring, though,been&#13;
illustra t ing and ca rt oon ing for "1914."&#13;
&#13;
"Jawn"&#13;
is rela t ed to the faculty bu t i t hasn't hurt him&#13;
any.&#13;
He has. w on great populari t y by su ccessfully managing the Bobb's beaner y.&#13;
s&#13;
When h e laughs you cannot see&#13;
ey es. h en ce you never&#13;
see t h em.&#13;
He room ed with&#13;
Mahoney first year but has ou t lived i t. A good reliab le&#13;
the&#13;
plugger in football and always a true fr i end .&#13;
&#13;
Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�.......&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Lauren s&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
hard&#13;
&#13;
firm friend,&#13;
ciety&#13;
&#13;
"Bigg"-that&#13;
is, in&#13;
heart mind-other&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
wise slender.&#13;
&#13;
Helen has li tera r y&#13;
aspirations.&#13;
She reports for the "Report-&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
man. a t rue son&#13;
&#13;
He ha s&#13;
&#13;
ever&#13;
&#13;
been&#13;
&#13;
e r.' '&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
that accomplishes&#13;
He&#13;
is working especially&#13;
&#13;
show · upon&#13;
&#13;
works&#13;
&#13;
hair.&#13;
&#13;
yet&#13;
&#13;
overtime&#13;
&#13;
for the Annual. gets&#13;
her lessons and still&#13;
has t ime to play basketball and tennis. She&#13;
is quiet and non-excitab le, in spite of her red&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
humorous chap. but of&#13;
late t he seriousness of&#13;
his pos iti on has begun&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
"Full y"&#13;
has . disting uish ecl himself In t wo&#13;
&#13;
hard in Biology with&#13;
an eve to bei n g a surgeon&#13;
He debates&#13;
seldom misses an athletic&#13;
event. has an enviable&#13;
reputation as a baseball&#13;
&#13;
and- it&#13;
&#13;
worke r,&#13;
&#13;
a loyal so-&#13;
&#13;
of old M. C. is "Fully."&#13;
&#13;
He takes&#13;
&#13;
life- half humorously,&#13;
but on&#13;
occasions can&#13;
apply himself in a way&#13;
&#13;
umpire,&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
GIEHM&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EARL S. FULLBROOK&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HARRY C.&#13;
· BIGGLESTONE&#13;
&#13;
always&#13;
&#13;
jol ly&#13;
&#13;
and ready for a good&#13;
t ime :&#13;
s t udious&#13;
and&#13;
capable. yet wi t·hal modest, in fact. too modest&#13;
to even give herself a&#13;
&#13;
ways -a s&#13;
a&#13;
debater.&#13;
and as a fusse r. h avingearne d great honors in&#13;
&#13;
the latter capa city.&#13;
&#13;
fair&#13;
write-up.&#13;
scientious and&#13;
&#13;
looks&#13;
&#13;
as if he would live happily ever aft er.&#13;
&#13;
Consincere&#13;
&#13;
at all times. she is in-&#13;
&#13;
deed "true blue."&#13;
&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
ROY H. McVICKER&#13;
&#13;
W. WHITTEMORE&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" means energy and is a synonym&#13;
&#13;
esty&#13;
&#13;
.l rn n&#13;
was born&#13;
with th e energy and capacity of two&#13;
people.&#13;
She is finishing the college course in three years;&#13;
and has in that time graduated from Expression serve d on&#13;
innumerable com m it tees and taken part in every school&#13;
&#13;
mod-&#13;
&#13;
by his&#13;
&#13;
map. He missed a year but has re turned to study "that&#13;
blooming Deu tch ."' If i t doesn' t spoil his r eligion he will&#13;
preach eventually .&#13;
&#13;
affair. She is ever the same busy. fun -lo ving. un s poil ed&#13;
Jean, in great demand everywhere for her acting. her bright&#13;
ideas a nd capable hands.&#13;
An idea l college girl.&#13;
&#13;
......................&#13;
&#13;
'•,,&#13;
&#13;
,,,+&#13;
&#13;
,,.,•'&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
for unselfish&#13;
&#13;
Famous for hi s ability to deba te. recognized&#13;
&#13;
everlasting congeniali ty, and loved for h is curl y ha ir. this&#13;
man stands out among those who put Morningside&#13;
on the&#13;
&#13;
�,..&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
BENH OLBERT, JR.&#13;
Greeley&#13;
C. LEE BARKS&#13;
&#13;
"Big&#13;
&#13;
Ben "-big&#13;
&#13;
ing won his "M"&#13;
&#13;
CLARAL. HAWCOTT&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
L. BELEW&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
stature, bigger in heart&#13;
An athlete, traveler a n d&#13;
scholar (&#13;
Won a reputation as a n orator&#13;
a nd debater before coming&#13;
to&#13;
Morningside&#13;
While here he h as d evoted&#13;
h is&#13;
atten t ion&#13;
ch ieflv to athlet ics. h av-&#13;
&#13;
ma n . While efficiently&#13;
carrying&#13;
on t be work&#13;
of Office Secretary of&#13;
the Co llege. h e h as won&#13;
honors in debate a n d&#13;
has had the responsiili ty&#13;
of&#13;
directing&#13;
"1914's" tracks on the&#13;
sands of t ime.&#13;
Occas iona ll y h e goes to&#13;
classes when not t oo&#13;
d eepl y en gaged in office&#13;
a ffairs or work on "The&#13;
Sioux.' '&#13;
B u t with a ll&#13;
his cares, be is a cheerful soul w ith a sm ile&#13;
a nd greeting ever ready.&#13;
&#13;
ADA&#13;
&#13;
in all&#13;
&#13;
four departmen ts. T he&#13;
greatest all around athlete among the I owa&#13;
Colleges&#13;
Pick ed&#13;
by&#13;
cri tics as A ll Missour i&#13;
Valley fullback. Not a&#13;
bit "chestie."&#13;
&#13;
girl&#13;
&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
guard&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
casual&#13;
would never&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
st ar&#13;
&#13;
that&#13;
&#13;
observer&#13;
th ink she&#13;
&#13;
and mi nd&#13;
&#13;
the Junior basketball&#13;
team, an a ll around&#13;
shark, an artist-but&#13;
what isn 't she?&#13;
She&#13;
is in for everything except d elinquen ts. Especially is she fond of&#13;
"'A" grades. Also beans,&#13;
which were ever a fav-&#13;
&#13;
orite&#13;
&#13;
with the intellec-&#13;
&#13;
tual,&#13;
&#13;
w e understand.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
W. HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Plover&#13;
&#13;
" Ze" is famo us for her hospitality as well as her dei&#13;
licious cand y. She has read&#13;
a n y book you can mention,&#13;
a n d can talk on any subject you suggest. Naturally she&#13;
ma kes good grades in everything except but&#13;
who can get&#13;
a grade in Psych? She is as willing as the day is long,&#13;
a t i reless worker and a Jolly companion.&#13;
&#13;
"Hen" is the man · ho. tho' he has ·'never taken a lesw&#13;
son in his life.'' is a sort of a m usi cal prodigy.&#13;
He keeps&#13;
the piano in t he Ionian House going most of the time,&#13;
&#13;
composes parodies in his spare moments. sings in the Gl ee&#13;
Club, and h e even tun es pianos. It takes more than a street&#13;
car acciden t t o worry him, too.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'•,&#13;
&#13;
their&#13;
&#13;
own&#13;
&#13;
bus iness.&#13;
One might&#13;
almost think she wasn·t&#13;
enjoy ing life sh e keeps&#13;
so still. only that the&#13;
most amazing rumors&#13;
about her pranks a nd&#13;
scrapes&#13;
keep&#13;
fl oating&#13;
ont from Loveland's.&#13;
She has traveled more&#13;
than Holbert and is famous besides for gett ing&#13;
ninety-some&#13;
in&#13;
Psych.&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
ZENANA OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
"Lu lu" is&#13;
anoth er&#13;
on e of these people that&#13;
prefer&#13;
to keep q u iet&#13;
&#13;
Ada is such a quiet ,&#13;
unobt rusive&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�LUCIAN L. WRIGHT&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
MABEL A · PECAUT&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Lucian wright&#13;
.&#13;
named than nght is more appropriately&#13;
named than any other man in school.&#13;
g&#13;
being as four-square and upright as they&#13;
·&#13;
make college students.&#13;
He has a characteristic way of throwing his head up&#13;
.&#13;
in the face. He is a proud leader to&#13;
Y.W.' work and .a football player of&#13;
e face&#13;
. . some reputation and experience.&#13;
.&#13;
told&#13;
Besides we are told she has a good position with the firm downtown.&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
society was evidently intended&#13;
sm il es and and was give&#13;
for a&#13;
smiles and talents accordingly&#13;
She is a very agreeable companion.&#13;
.&#13;
She manages to go a lot, and be a fair student&#13;
&#13;
,,,,,,,,,,,, ....................&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-two&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�'••,,,'&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
......,,,,,,,,,................&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Senior Expression&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
Senior Music&#13;
&#13;
CLASS ROLL&#13;
NATHALIE ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN HENDRICKSON&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA RoosT&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS BEEBE&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
MERLIN SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS BONDHUS&#13;
&#13;
IRENE ROBAR&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE BUTTERFIELD&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET SMITH&#13;
&#13;
MABEL CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
IDA ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
DELANO STARR&#13;
&#13;
OSCARCARLSON&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
NEW&#13;
&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE OFFICES&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
��.&#13;
&#13;
COACH J . M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Coach Saunderson while attending Albion College made a most remarkable record&#13;
in athletics. He represented his school four years in football, playing quarter-back, and&#13;
was chosen captain in 1907, while that same year was picked as "All-Michigan" quarterback. For three years he played third base on the baseball team and held down a&#13;
forward position on the basketball quint during four seasons. In track he made several&#13;
fast records, running the 100 yards in 10. 1, the 220 in 22. 1 and the 220 hurdles in&#13;
25.4. After graduating he was Athletic Director at South Dakota State College for&#13;
three years, 1908- 11, and at the University of the South for one year, 1911 - 12.&#13;
Mr. Saunderson took up the duties of Director of Athletics at Morningside during&#13;
the month of September, 1912, and already we have made great progress. Last fall,&#13;
with practically no games scheduled and when the outlook for a successful season&#13;
seemed most doubtful, our coach whipped into shape a combination which will not be&#13;
forgotten by Morningsiders for many years to come. Out of nine games we met&#13;
defeat but once, winning the State Collegiate Championship of Iowa and South&#13;
Dakota. Under such leadership we have every expectation of a successful season m&#13;
track and baseball.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.,,,,,,,,,.,,,,......&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. V. E. MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Committee&#13;
&#13;
R. N.&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Van Horne&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
J. M.&#13;
&#13;
Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
Kanthlener&#13;
F. E. Haynes&#13;
&#13;
The I 9 I 2 track season was one of the most successful and consistent seasons in the&#13;
history of track athletics at Morningside. The cinder path artists made a brilliant&#13;
start by winning the big Kansas City Invitation Indoor Meet. The next event was the&#13;
Drake Relay Carnival in which Morningside took one first and one second out of the&#13;
three relays entered. In the two mile event the maroon team established a new mark,&#13;
breaking the record held by South Dakota University by twelve seconds. The dual&#13;
meet with South Dakota State College at Brookings was close and not decided until&#13;
the last event, the mile relay. In the annual state meet at Grinnell, Morningside, tho'&#13;
unable to duplicate her feet of last year by winning first place, maintained her high&#13;
standard down state by finishing a strong second. In the Missouri Valley meet Holbert&#13;
and Montgomery were able to capture 5 1/2 points in competition with the larger universities. As a fitting climax to the season, Captain Montgomery was sent to the Oylmpic&#13;
tryouts in Chicago where he placed fourth in the 800 meter run in which event such men&#13;
as Davenport of Chicago and Bermond of Missouri were entered.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�KANSAS&#13;
&#13;
CITY SQUAD, 1912&#13;
&#13;
S U MMARY OF KANSAS CITY MEET&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
March 30, 1912&#13;
&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
LEUDER&#13;
&#13;
12 Pound Shot Put-Holbert, M.; Anderson, Mo.; Burnham, Kas . .... 54 ft. 1/4 in.&#13;
16 Pound Shot Put-Talbot, KC.AC.; Thatcher, Mo.; Barnes, K.C.AC.41 ft. 9 in.&#13;
Two Mile Relay-KC. AC.; Drake ... . .. . ........................ 8:27&#13;
50 Yard Dash-Walton, Missouri; Christian, KC.AC.; Stahl, Drake .. . .... 5 3-5&#13;
50 Yard Handicap-Parker, Baker; Schaulis, KC.AC.; Christian, KC.AC .. 5 1-5&#13;
50 Yard Hurdle-Parker, Baker; Hamilton; Martin ......... . .......... 5 4-5&#13;
880 Yard Run- Montgomery, M.; Patterson, Kansas; Kingsbury, M . ... . 2 :03 2-5&#13;
High Jump-Nicholson, Missouri; Hazen, Kansas; Cook, St. Louis ..... 6 ft. 2 1/2in.&#13;
440 Yard Run-Lemon, M.; Davis, Kansas; Martin ... . .... . ......... 53 1-5&#13;
One Mile Run-Murray, Kansas; Taylor, Westport; Redfern, Drake ........ 4:55&#13;
Pole Vault-Cramer, Kansas; Hearst; Sunderland, K.C.A.C ... . .... 10 ft. I 1/2 in.&#13;
Intercollegiate One Mile Relay-Morningside; Baker ............ . ..... 3 :49 1-5&#13;
One Mile Relay- William Jewell; KC.AC . . ..... . .. .. ... . .... . ... 3 :41&#13;
University One Mile Relay- Missouri; Kansas ....... . ....... . ...... 3 :32 2-5&#13;
Morningside, 21 ; Missouri, 20.&#13;
&#13;
"M"&#13;
&#13;
TRACK MEN&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�"VINCE"&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
WINNING&#13;
&#13;
220 YARD HURDLES&#13;
&#13;
SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
April 27, 1912&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF FRESHMAN-HIGH SCHOOL ME ET&#13;
&#13;
May I, 1912&#13;
&#13;
00 Yard Dash-Shelton,_ Fresh.; Lueder, Fresh ..... .. .. ... .... .... .. 10 2-5&#13;
High Hurdles-Vernon, Fresh.; Clarke, H. S .... .......... .. ... ... ... 17 2-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Holmes, H. S. ; Engle, Fresh.; Bridenbaugh, H . S . ....... 56 4-5&#13;
Low Hurdles- Vernon, Fresh.; Dubel, H. S.; Clarke, H. S ... ..... ... ... 28 4-5&#13;
Mile Run-Wedgwood, Fresh.; Bridenbaugh, Fresh.; Robinson, H. S ..... 5: 15 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Dash- Holmes, H. S.; Shelton, Fresh.; Lueder, Fresh .. . . .... .. 23 1-5&#13;
Mile Relay- Freshmen-Shelton, Bridenbaugh, Engle, Lueder ..... .. . .. . 3 :52 1-5&#13;
Shot Put-Holmes, H. S. ; Shelton, Fresh. ; Cochrane, H. S ........... 4 2 ft. 8 in.&#13;
880 Yard Run-Shelton, Fresh.; Engle, Fresh. ; Worth, H. S .. . .... . . .... . 2 :23&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Freshmen-Engle, McKinney, Lueder, Shelton ... . . . . ... .. 2:01&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder, Fresh.; Echert, H. S.; Brown, Fresh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 ft.&#13;
Discus-Vernon, Fresh.; Kuhns, Fresh.; Brown, Fresh ...... . .. . .... . ... 104 ft.&#13;
High Jump- McKoane, H. S.; Vernon, Fresh.; Brown, Fresh ... ...... 5 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Broad Jump---Vernon, Fresh; Miller, H. S.; Shelton, Fresh . . ........ .. 19 ft . 1 in.&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Jr. ; Shelton, Fresh.; Jory, Jr . . .. .. .. . ..... . 10:2&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Montgomery, Jr.; B. Brown, Acad.; Vernon, Fresh ..... 27:3&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Shelton, Fresh.; Lueder, Fresh.; Engle, Fresh . ...... .. . . . 24: 1&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Vernon, Fresh.; Montgomery, Jr.; B. Brown, Acad ..... 18:2&#13;
16 Pound Shot Put-Shelton, Fresh.; D. Brown, Fresh.; Wickens, Jr ... 31 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Payne, Fresh.; Winterringer, Jr.; Wickens, Jr.&#13;
440 Yard Dash- Montgomery, Jr.; Kingsbury, Jr.; Hess, Sr .... .... .. .. .. 57 :2&#13;
Two Mile Run- Bowker, Sr.; Brunelle, Soph.; Mahood, Acad . . . .... . .... 11 :00&#13;
Mile Run-Brunelle, Soph.; Wedgwood, Fresh. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5: 17&#13;
880 Yard Run-Montgomery, Jr. ; Bowker, Sr.; Kingsbury, Jr .. ....... .. 2 :08&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder, Fresh.; Lewis, Sr.; B. Brown, Acad . .... ........... 1O ft.&#13;
Discus Throw-Wickens, Jr.; Vernon, Fresh.; D. Brown, Fresh ...... 106 ft. 7 1/2 in.&#13;
High Jump- Vernon, Fresh., and D . Brown, Fresh., tied; Jory, Jr . . . . .... 5 ft. 3 in.&#13;
Broad Jump- Vernon, Fresh.; Shelton, Fresh.; McKinney, A cad .. . .... . 18 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Freshmen-Engle, G. McKinney, Lueder, Shelton ....... . . 1 :40&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen, 80; High School, 37.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen, 64; Juniors, 39; Seniors, 12 ; Sophomores, 8; Academy, 7.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�-&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
SUM MARY OF BROOKINGS MEET&#13;
&#13;
Brookings, May 6, 1912&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Knox, B.; Montgomery, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 4-5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Vernon, M.; Catlett, B ....... . . ................ 16 3-5&#13;
440 Yard D ash-Knox, B.; Lemon, M . .. .. . ........... .... ........... 55&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Montgomery, M.; Kellet, B .. ... ... . ............. 28 2-5&#13;
One Mlie Run-Montgomery, M.; Strachan, B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:01&#13;
Shot Put-Holbert, M.; Britzius, B .. ..... . . .. ...... . . ...... ... . 36 ft. 8 in.&#13;
High Jump-Bibby, B.; Jory, M . .. .. ................. . ... ... 5 ft. 7 1/2&#13;
in.&#13;
Hammer-Jensen, B.; Holbert, M . ..... . ........... . ..... ..... 111 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Half Mile-Kingsbury, M.; Montgomery, M . ... ..... ..... ... . ........ 2: 15&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Knox, B.; Lemon, M . ... . . . .... ... ..... .... . .... . 23 2-5&#13;
Discus-Wickens, M. ; Vernon, M ........ ........... .... ... 111 ft. 8 1/2 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Catlett, B.; Bibby, B . .. ... . . . ... .. ...... .... .. .. . 21 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run-Strachan, B. ; Bowker, M . .. ........ ...... .... ...... 11 :01&#13;
Pole Va ult-Catlett, B.; Lueder, M . . .. .... ........ . . . . .. . ..... 10 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Mile Relay- Brookings- Catlett, Caldwell, Stearns, Knox ..... . . . ...... .. . 3 :4 3&#13;
Brookings, 60; Morningside, 5 7.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
The Inter-State High School Meet is held each year under the auspices of the&#13;
"M" C lub. Excellent trophies are awarded the winners of the individual events in&#13;
the way of gold, silver, and bronze medals. To the winning team in the half mile relay&#13;
individual cups are given and the Philomathean Literary Society gives a beautiful loving&#13;
cup to the team winning the mile relay, it to become their property if won for three consecutive years. Besides these, a large cup is given to the school winning the meet&#13;
and another to the man winning individual honors.&#13;
Last year, on a field already heavy with the mud of previous rains and with the&#13;
rain still pouring down at intervals, the athletes undaunted by the absence of Old Sol&#13;
and a dry field, made competition so keen, that the inclement weather was forgotten and all encouraged the boys by their hearty approval of their efforts. Had the&#13;
day been warm and the track fast there would have been undoubtedly some fast records&#13;
made in several of the events.&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF THE INTER-STATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
&#13;
May 10, 1912&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Holmes, S. C.; Friedman, C. 8.; Shoemaker, Hawarden .... 11 :2&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Holmes, S. C . ; Friedman, C. 8.; Quigley, Hawarden .. . ... 24 :3&#13;
440 Yard Dasl:- Holmes, S. C.; W. Nigg, Le Mars; Hess, Charter Oak .. ... 60: 1&#13;
Half Mile Run- Lynott, Hawarden; Jacobson, Charter Oak; Scott, Hawarden . 2 :20: 1&#13;
Mile Run- Dean, Sloan; Lynott, Hawarden; Krebler, Le Mars .. ..... . .. . .. 5 : 1 7&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Hawarden (Shoemaker, Ball, Lynott, Quigley) . . .... . .. . . 1 :47&#13;
Mile Relay-Sioux City (Sedgwick, Iloff, Bridenbaugh, Holmes) .. . . . . ... . . . 4 :03&#13;
High Hurdles-Hardy, Fonda; 0. Hart, Le Mars; Dubel, S. C ... ..... ..... 19:4&#13;
Low Hurdles-Quigley, Hawarden; Hardy, Fonda; Dubel, S. C .. ... ..... .. 29: 1&#13;
High Jump-J. Hart, Le Mars; Eaton, Fonda; Lawton, Hawarden .. .. . . 5 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Rust, Elk Point; Campbell, Cherokee; Hilker, Paullina . . .. 18 ft. 6 in.&#13;
16 Pound Hammer Throw-Paulson, Vermillion; Knapp, Cherokee; Gailbraith,&#13;
Fonda ...... . ... . ... . .............. .. ......... . . . .. . . 95 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Holmes, S. C. ; Rust, Elk Point; Jacobson, Charter Oak . .. . 40 ft. 8 1/2 in.&#13;
Discus Throw-Knapp, Cherokee; Holmes, S. C. ; Paulson, Vermillion . 108 ft. 11 1/2 in.&#13;
Pole Vault-Eckert, S. C.; Gailbraith, Fonda; O'Neil, Cherokee . . . . . . . . 8 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Sioux City, 35; Hawarden, 22; Fonda, 15; Cherokee, 12; Le Mars, 12;&#13;
Elk Point, 8; Vermillion, 6; Council Bluffs, 6; Charter Oak, 5; Sloan, 5;&#13;
&#13;
DRAKE&#13;
&#13;
RELAY TEAMS&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF DRAKE INTER COLLEGIATE R E LAYS&#13;
&#13;
April 20, 1912&#13;
Four Mile Relay-Des M oines, Coe, Grinnell . . ... . . ....... . .. . .... 19 :4 7 3-5&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
Two Mile Relay-Morningside, Cornell, Grinnell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 :28 4-5&#13;
One Mile Relay-C oe, Morningside, Cornell. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 :29 4-5&#13;
One Hal f Mile Relay-Coe, Grinnell, Highland Park ...... ... . . .. . .. .... . 1 :36&#13;
&#13;
Paullina, 1.&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
�STATE MEET&#13;
SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF STATE MEET&#13;
&#13;
Grinnell, May l 7, 1912&#13;
TWO MILE RELAY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
New Record-8 :28 4-5, lowered 11 4-5 seconds from the record of South Dakota&#13;
State University.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside feels proud to have&#13;
been represented at the Olympic tryouts in Chicago, 1912, by "Vince"&#13;
Montgomery, who was able to land&#13;
fourth place in the 800 meter run in&#13;
competition with the fastest middle distance runners of the west.&#13;
&#13;
"VINCE"&#13;
&#13;
AT OLYMPICS&#13;
&#13;
l 00&#13;
One&#13;
120&#13;
440&#13;
220&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Wilson, Simpson; Warren, H. P . . . . . ... . . . . l 0&#13;
Mile Run- Durey, Des Moines; Schluter, I.S.T.C.; Ewing, Parsons .... 4 :38&#13;
Yard Hurdles- Stunkard, Coe; Eagen, Grinnell, Drier, Des Moines . . . . 16: I&#13;
Yard Run-Wilson, Coe; Johnson H. P.; Lemon, Morningside .. . ..... 51 :3&#13;
Yard Hurdles-Stunkard, Coe; Lusted, Cornell; Montgomery, Morningside. (breaking state record of 25 :4) . . ... . .... .. ... ...... ... 25 :2&#13;
Hal f M ile Run-Montgomery, M.; Dawkins, Grinnell; Schultz, I.S.T.C .... 2 :05 :4&#13;
Pole Vault- Verink, Coe ; Fearing, Cornell; Ross, I.S.T.C., and Lueder, M.,&#13;
tied for first . . .. . ... .. .. . ... . . . . .. . ......... . . . . . ... . l O ft. 3 in.&#13;
Discus Throw- Wickens, M.; Rusk, Simpson; Holbert, M . . ........ l 14 ft. 6 in.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Wilson, Simpson; Colline, Parsons .. . .. .. ... 22 :2&#13;
One Mile Relay-Cornell, Morningside, Grinnell . ... . . .............. . 3 :35: l&#13;
High Jump- Jones, Grinr.ell; Verink, Coe, Miller, Simpson, tied for second.5 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Holbert, M orningside; Verink, Coe ; Rusk, Simpson ... . . . . .. 38 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run-Durey, Des Moines; Miller, Des Moines; Ewing, Parsons .. l O: 11 :4&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Coe, G rinnell, Cornell.&#13;
Summary: Coe, 38 1/4; Morningside, 23 1/4; Grinnell, 20; Simpson, 15;&#13;
Des Moines, 12 ; Cornell, 11 1/4; Iowa State Teachers, 6 1/4; Parsons, 4.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-ni n e&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
··&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
KANSAS&#13;
&#13;
MISSOURI VALLEY TEAM&#13;
Des Moines, May 25, 1912&#13;
&#13;
CITY SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
1,&#13;
&#13;
1913&#13;
&#13;
Montgomery wins second in the half mile.&#13;
Holbert ties for second in the shot put and makes new Morningside record.&#13;
&#13;
The Kansas City Indoor Meet&#13;
The Kansas City Indoor Invitation M eet, held under the auspices of the Kansas&#13;
City Athletic C lub, is considered the largest athletic event of its kind this side of&#13;
Chicago. Universities, Colleges, Athletic Associations and Y. M . C. A.'s from all&#13;
divisions of the West are here represented.&#13;
Last year with a four-man team, Morningside won first in the quarter mile, first and&#13;
third in the half mile, first in the shot put and the relay from Baker, thus annexing 21&#13;
points and winning first place over Missouri University, who made a total of 20. This&#13;
year the ranking of competitors was abandoned but we again made a fine showing,&#13;
taking two firsts and one second. Montgomery won the half mile in 2 :08 and Kingsbury and Braley took first and second respectively in the quarter mile in 48.&#13;
"MONTY"&#13;
&#13;
SECOND IN HALF&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
MILE&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MONUMENT UN&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
Winners,&#13;
&#13;
F ebrua ry 21, 1913:&#13;
&#13;
Montgomery,&#13;
&#13;
first: Armbuster,&#13;
&#13;
T i me, 20 min.&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
&#13;
second: Williams. t hird .&#13;
&#13;
sec.&#13;
&#13;
M OR NINGSIDE R ECORDS&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908 . ........ .. . . . .. ... . ...... . .. . . . 10 sec.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903 . .. .... . .... . . ......... ... . . 22 1-5 sec.&#13;
440 Yard D ash-A P. Berkstresser, 1909 ......... . . .. . .. . ..... 52 2-5 sec.&#13;
880 Yard Run-A P. Berkstresser, 1909 . . . .. . .. . . .... . .. .. 2 min. 3 2-5 sec.&#13;
Mile Run- A. P. Berkstresser, 1908 .... . . . .. ... . ..... . ........ 4 min. 40 sec.&#13;
Two Mile Run- L. R. Chapman, 1908 .. .. ..... . . . . . ...... .. . 1 0 min. 5 sec.&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- £. G. Quarnstrom, 191 1 . .. .. . .... . ... . . .. . .. 15 4-5 sec.&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-£. G. Quarnstrom, 1910 .. ... .. . . .. . . . . ... .. 25 2-5 sec.&#13;
High Jump-£. M. Brown, 1906 ... .. . . . . . . . . . . . .... .. ... . . . . ... 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E . W est, 1911 . . ... . . ... . . .. .. . .. . . .... ... .. . 21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Shot Put- B. Holbert, Jr. , 1912 .. . .. . ... . . . . .. .... . . . . . .. . . . . 39 ft.&#13;
&#13;
1/4 in.&#13;
&#13;
Hammer T hrow-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911 ... ... . ........ ... .. 121 ft. 3 1/2 in.&#13;
Discus Throw- D. L. Wickens, 1911 . .... ..... .. .... . ...... . . .... . 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay-(V. E. Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser, E. G. Quarnstrom,&#13;
F. E. Burns), 1909 . . .. .. . ... . . . ... . . ... .. . .... . . 3 min. 36 2-5 sec.&#13;
Two Mile Relay- (A C. Lemon, W . H. Bowker, L. H. Kingsbury,&#13;
V. E . Montgomery) , 19 12 .. . ... ....... . .. .... ..... 8 min. 28 4-5 sec.&#13;
Monument Run- V. E. Montgomery, 1911 . .. . . . ... ....... . 18 min. 46 3-5 sec.&#13;
*State Record.&#13;
&#13;
The baseball team of 19 12 was handicapped by the lack of indoor workouts and&#13;
inside baseball which are essentials in building up a winning combination. B ut for all&#13;
this they played winning ball throughout the season.&#13;
The team left on the down-state trip after an all night's excitement of watching our&#13;
College burn and played Highland P ark College of D es M oines the same afternoon in a&#13;
game which was not decided until the last man chalked up the final zero. A like experience was witnessed when the next day at Iowa C ity the crowd left the field in the&#13;
eighth believing their team defeated and outclassed, but they took the score 5-4 in the&#13;
ninth. O ut of the next three games played we won two and lost one.&#13;
The season came to a fitting close by the victory over Vermillion on. Bass field . The&#13;
team put up a fine exhibition of the fighting spirit of old M . C. and outplayed their old&#13;
rivals at all points of the game.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Eighty&#13;
-two&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�CAPT. BEN&#13;
&#13;
HOLBERT&#13;
&#13;
GAMES OF 1912&#13;
April 22-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
1;&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University, 9&#13;
&#13;
April 30-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
7;&#13;
&#13;
Highland Park .. .. .. 8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
4;&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State University, .5&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
2-Morningside, 22;&#13;
&#13;
Central University .. . .. 2&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
3- Morningside, 11;&#13;
&#13;
Parsons .... . . . .. ... 6&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
4;&#13;
&#13;
Simpson ........ .. .. 8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
8-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
6;&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University, 5&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
"M" BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
MEN&#13;
&#13;
�CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
V. K&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
No outside basketball games were played this winter. The heavy dust arising in&#13;
the field house during the track workouts made daily practice very unpleasant. Also&#13;
on account of our location it becomes necessary for the team to take a long trip&#13;
through the state and this year it was impossible to arrange satisfactory dates. It was&#13;
therefore thought best to abandon intercollegiate basketball for this year.&#13;
However, the boys ' annual class tournament was carried out with the Seniors&#13;
taking first honors in a very close series of games. There was also added a new feature&#13;
this year, that of a girls' basketball tournament, which was won by the Senior girls.&#13;
"OLD RELIABLE"&#13;
&#13;
"Consultation"&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�SENIOR&#13;
SENIOR GIRLS&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
B O YS' BASKETBALL TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Winners Cl ass Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Winners Class Tourn ament&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
SUMMARY OF CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
to Seniors ... .. .. .... . 15&#13;
&#13;
Seniors. . . . . . . . . . 8&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Seniors ... . ..... . . 3&#13;
Sophomores . .. ..... 3&#13;
&#13;
Seniors . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . 16&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Forfeited to Sophomores . ....... 12&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
Juniors. . . . . .. .. . 4&#13;
Freshmen . ... . .. . . 1&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen .. ..... . . 5&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
E ig h ty-eig h t&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
... . ..... .. .. . ... . .. . . . . . . . . ..... . ................. ... 1O&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�}&#13;
&#13;
The Football&#13;
&#13;
The football season of 191 2 from the standpoint of games won was the most&#13;
successful ever enjoyed by Morningside. Of the nine collegiate games played, seven&#13;
were victories, one was tied and one ended in defeat and that by the Iowa State College&#13;
at Ames. The "Maroons" recorded 268 points to 33 for their opponents in these&#13;
contests. The hard work of the men, both 'varsity and scrubs, coupled with the coaching of J. M. Saunderson, made the victories possible. Also too much cannot be said&#13;
concerning the work of Captain Ben Holbert, who directed the team play on the field&#13;
and whose all-around work made him the choice for All-Iowa fullback and he was&#13;
placed on the All-Western team by some critics.&#13;
At the opening of the season the prospects looked glum indeed. A new coach had&#13;
been placed in charge of affairs and, as far as was known, outside of Holbert there was&#13;
not an available backfield man in school. The usual pre-season practice camp at Blue&#13;
Lake was done away with, due to certain conditions at the College, and hence the&#13;
coach was given no chance to get a line upon his material before the season started. By&#13;
the time the season had opened, however, Coach Saunderson had whipped into shape a&#13;
strong combination.&#13;
The first collegiate game was won over Yankton on their home field. Next Buena&#13;
Vista and Nebraska Normal were handed the figure naught. Our first hard game&#13;
was with the fast team from Creighton University of Omaha. They had just defeated&#13;
Marquette University and came to Sioux City in force to see Morningside crushed. But&#13;
again the "Maroons" were on the long end of the score. The only defeat of the season&#13;
occurred on State Field at Ames when the cyclones were able to score two touchdowns&#13;
in the last period of play. But, Morningsiders, let us remember that for three quarters&#13;
our boys played the "Aggies" to a standstill, when the Ames rooters were thankful for&#13;
a score from placement, and not until they were reinforced with fresh men were they&#13;
able to gain any advantage. Though we lost the larger score, we compelled recognition&#13;
from the down state school. Then St. Joseph and Bellevue added two more scalps to&#13;
our belt. Next we tied Nebraska Wesleyan, collegiate champions of Nebraska, on&#13;
their home field. The last game of the season was on Thanksgiving day when we overwhelmed Dakota Wesleyan, the collegiate champions of South Dakota.&#13;
The place deserved by Morningside among the other schools of the state has been&#13;
disputed. But by our showing throughout the season and by comparative scores we&#13;
have won the right to claim the state collegiate championship, while at least two men&#13;
are eligible to positions on the All-State T earn.&#13;
The team at all times displayed the most unflinching loyalty to the Coach and to the&#13;
school. It was for M. C. and the good of the team and not for individual glory that&#13;
every member of the champion maroons struggled. It would be difficult to place one&#13;
man above another as they worked like a machine, each with his own part to perform.&#13;
The great player and captain, Ben Holbert, '14, was re-elected to lead the team&#13;
of 1913.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. BEN HOLBERT&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
28-Morningside,&#13;
5-Morningside,&#13;
12- Morningside,&#13;
19-Morningside,&#13;
26-Morningside,&#13;
2-Morningside,&#13;
9-Morningside,&#13;
16-Morningside,&#13;
22- Morningside,&#13;
28-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
13;&#13;
16;&#13;
&#13;
51;&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee High School, 0&#13;
Yankton ............ 0&#13;
Buena Vista .. . ...... 0&#13;
Nebraska Normal .... 0&#13;
Creighton . . ... . .... . . 7&#13;
Ames ... .... ...... 16&#13;
Bellevue ........ . .... 0&#13;
St. Joseph ... . ...... 3&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan .... 0&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan . .. . . 7&#13;
&#13;
281&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
30;&#13;
65;&#13;
26;&#13;
&#13;
3;&#13;
&#13;
33;&#13;
44;&#13;
&#13;
O;&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
Season&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
�,•'&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
�BEN HOLBERT,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
Captain, Fullba ck&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT,&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
Left Half&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
E. MONTGOMERY,&#13;
&#13;
'1 3&#13;
&#13;
Quarterback&#13;
&#13;
H. M.&#13;
&#13;
COBBS,&#13;
&#13;
' 14&#13;
&#13;
Right Half&#13;
&#13;
R. R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON ,&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
Left End&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
�J.&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
WINTERRINGER,&#13;
&#13;
'1 3&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE ,&#13;
&#13;
' 15&#13;
&#13;
WI C KENS,&#13;
&#13;
'1 3&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
McCuRDY,&#13;
&#13;
Right Guard&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
G. D.&#13;
&#13;
McKINNEY,&#13;
&#13;
'1 5&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN KocH ,&#13;
&#13;
' 16&#13;
&#13;
Sub Lineman&#13;
&#13;
Center&#13;
&#13;
W .&#13;
&#13;
'16&#13;
&#13;
R ight End&#13;
&#13;
Left Guard&#13;
&#13;
D. L.&#13;
&#13;
WEATHERBY,&#13;
&#13;
R ight T ackle&#13;
&#13;
L eft Tackle&#13;
&#13;
W. H.&#13;
&#13;
P. C.&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
J. D. KOLP , '14&#13;
&#13;
Sub Back&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
�One hundred&#13;
&#13;
�PROFESSOR CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
FRANK P. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Professor Marsh, as teacher of Public Speaking and trainer of Intercollegiate orators&#13;
and debaters, has had a remarkably successful career. In the ten years he has been&#13;
teaching in Iowa, his students have won three first honors and five second honors in the&#13;
regular State Oratorical Contest, two first places in the State Peace Contest, and first&#13;
place in the State Prohibition Contest,-a total of six first and five second honors in ten&#13;
years. In debate the record is equally good. Since coming to Morningside three years&#13;
ago, the debating teams under his direction have won five out of eight intercollegiate&#13;
debates. These victories are all the more gratifying when it is remembered that the ideal&#13;
which he constantly holds before his students is not the winning of a contest but the&#13;
greatest good to the student. The favorable decision of the judges, he contends, is incidental, the highest possible development of individual is paramount. He will never&#13;
consent to the employment of means which might possibly win a victory, if they will not&#13;
at the same time result in permanent benefit to the student and prepare him for the&#13;
larger activities of life.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has held a place in the front rank in oratory for a number of years. For&#13;
five years she has not fallen below second place in the regular state oratorical contest.&#13;
No small part of the achievement has been due to the efforts of Frank Johnson, who has&#13;
represented our school with increasing merit for the last three years. Perhaps no college&#13;
orator can show a record equal to that of Morningside' s man. In the eleven contests in&#13;
which he has taken part, he has won four home contests, one divisional contest, two state&#13;
contests, second in three state contests, and third in the interstate prohibition contest.&#13;
With such a record behind him, Morningside may well be proud of Frank Johnson.&#13;
He has done much for us, and as he goes out from our halls this year to become an alumnus we must not forget that it is up to someone else to step in and take his place. The&#13;
record of the past must be maintained. However, under the leadership of Professor&#13;
Marsh we are all confident that the name of Morningside College will continue to be&#13;
ranked as a leader in state oratory and that the achievements of the past are simply stepping&#13;
stones to the greater future.&#13;
&#13;
. ......&#13;
&#13;
One hundred- two&#13;
&#13;
0ne hundred- three&#13;
&#13;
�Home Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
November 8, 1912&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
J . L. Ralston&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
J. I. Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Law of the Sea, First&#13;
Julius Caesar, the Benefactor, Second&#13;
United States and Universal P eace, Third&#13;
The Heart of America, Fourth&#13;
&#13;
Divisional Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
Toledo, February 7, 191 3&#13;
The Law of the Sea, First&#13;
F. P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
The True Spirit of P eace, Second&#13;
E. R. Sifert, Des Moines&#13;
W. S. Dudley, Simpson&#13;
T he Social Emphasis, Third&#13;
The Problem of Democracy, Fourth&#13;
R. E. White, Buena Vista&#13;
Beecher and the Union Cause&#13;
H. Risse, Ellsworth&#13;
The Royalty of Knowledge vs. The Sovereignly of War&#13;
J. G. Watson, Ames&#13;
Mrs. Uhlenhopp, Leander Clark&#13;
A Voice from the Underworld&#13;
&#13;
J. L. RALSTON&#13;
&#13;
HOMEProhibition Oratorical&#13;
February 7, 19 13&#13;
Our&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
State Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
J. L. Ralston&#13;
I. Dolliver&#13;
R. L. Mitchell&#13;
C. W . Spry&#13;
&#13;
Present Pre-Eminent Need, First&#13;
Issue of Today, Second&#13;
Task of Duty, Third&#13;
Unheeded Vision, Fourth&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
D es Moines, March 7, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
State Prohibition Oratorical&#13;
Public Opinion, First&#13;
The Law of the Sea, Second&#13;
Democracy and World Peace, Third&#13;
The N ew D emocracy, Fourth&#13;
The True Spirit of Peace&#13;
The Slav&#13;
The Problem of Democracy&#13;
The Social Emphasis&#13;
&#13;
. D . B. Heller, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
F. P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
G. L. Potgetter, Cornell&#13;
A. F. Nickless, Lennox&#13;
E. R. Sifert, Des Moines&#13;
J . 0. Balcar, Coe&#13;
R. E. White, Buena Vista&#13;
W. S. Dudley, Simpson&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
Toledo, April 4, 1913&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
Our&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Legalized Outlaw, First&#13;
Crisis of R eform, Second&#13;
Present Pre-Eminent Need, Third&#13;
Economy of Temperance&#13;
Call of Today&#13;
Dreaded Foe&#13;
&#13;
F . lngvolstad, Simpson&#13;
A . H. Benner, Central Holiness&#13;
J. L. Ralston, Morningside&#13;
G. C. Miller, Leander Clark&#13;
C. F. Wiedenasam, Western Union&#13;
C. C. Ham, Cornell&#13;
&#13;
..,&#13;
One hundred four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred five&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Records&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1900-J. A Davies ....... ..... . Ninth&#13;
A Keck . ........ .. .. . Seventh&#13;
1901 -H.&#13;
1902-A. R. Toothaker .......... .Eliminated on thought&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall .............. Fourth&#13;
1904-R. E. Heilman ........... .&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer ........ .&#13;
1906-A. G. Cushman .. . .... .. . .&#13;
190 7-A. G. Cushman . ........... Fifth&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer .. ....... Second&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer ......... First; Interstate, Eighth&#13;
191 0-H. S. Hamilton ........ .. . .Second&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson ............ .Second&#13;
1912--F. P. Johnson .............Second&#13;
1913-F. P. Johnson ............. Second&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1901 -G. W. Finch .............. . .First; Interstate, First; National, Third&#13;
1902- J. N. H. McCay .. ....... .. ..Second&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner ............... Third&#13;
1907-Ida Lewis . ...... . .... .. .... Fifth&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett. ... .. .. ...... Third&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill ................. Second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson ... ............ .First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1911-W. A McCurdy ............. Sixth&#13;
191 2-C. E. Smith ......... ... .. . .. Fifth&#13;
19 13-J. L. Ralston .... ......... . . Third&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Academic&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, April 12, 1912&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
YANKTON ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Forest and Mineral Land,&#13;
now belonging to the United States, in the several&#13;
States, should be retained by the Federal Government.&#13;
&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL Association&#13;
&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson ................. First&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon ....... .. ......... Fifth&#13;
191 3-D. L. Wickens ................. First&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker University 2, Morningside I.&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside I .&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. I, Morningside 2. Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2. Dakota Wesleyan 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
Iowa State Teachers 3, Morningside 0. Iowa S. Teachers 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred six&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeMorningside Academy&#13;
NegativeYankton Academy&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
H. Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
n.&#13;
&#13;
C. McKinn ey&#13;
&#13;
B. W. Rin e ,·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
�. . .......&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
November 22, 1912&#13;
&#13;
November 13, 1912&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That Federal&#13;
Legislation should be enacted,&#13;
embodying the Principles of&#13;
the German Industrial Accident Insurance Law, for the&#13;
compensation of industrial accid ents in the United States.&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Ques tion&#13;
Resolved, That the Federal Government should own&#13;
and operate the Express Companies of the United States.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeAdelphian&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye&#13;
&#13;
NegativePhilomathean&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Bark s&#13;
G. B . Crouch&#13;
B. H. Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
A. H. Hemmingsen&#13;
O. B. Ca rl son&#13;
L. C. Beebe&#13;
&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
W. A. McCurdy&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
L . H. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eight&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
PHILO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
H. G. Merten&#13;
J. E. Briggs&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
November 14, 1912&#13;
&#13;
November 15, 1912&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATH E AN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That&#13;
&#13;
Federal&#13;
Legislation should be enacted,&#13;
embodying the Principles of&#13;
the German Industrial Accident Insurance Law, for the&#13;
compensation of industrial accidents in the United States.&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Federal&#13;
Legislation should be enacted,&#13;
embodying the Principles of&#13;
the German Industrial Accident Insurance Law, for the&#13;
compensation of industrial accidents in the United States.&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
E. S. Fullbrook&#13;
T. B. Bassett&#13;
R. H. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
One hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
PHILO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
W. C. Evans&#13;
H. C. Bigglestone&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
G. W. Prichard&#13;
H. M. Cobbs&#13;
M. 0. Insko&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative I&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN TEAM&#13;
&#13;
.T. H. Edge&#13;
C. T. Craig&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Debate&#13;
&#13;
April 26, 1912&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, NEBRASKA WESLEYAN, DAKOTA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Tariff of the United States should be determined by a nonpartisan board of tariff experts.&#13;
&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
At Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
M. P. Briggs&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Morningside&#13;
Negative-Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Triangular and Dual&#13;
Debaters&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
Negative-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative I&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative I&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Dual Debate&#13;
&#13;
May 10, 1912&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Tariff Schedules of the United States should be determined by a&#13;
non-partisan board of tariff experts. Constitutionality granted.&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
J. A. Lew is&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
G. Merten&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
At Cedar Falls&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-I. S . T . C.&#13;
Negative-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Morningside&#13;
Negative-I. S. T. C.&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK III&#13;
Chants and Legends&#13;
&#13;
-Sioux 14One hundred fourteen&#13;
&#13;
��.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK PRESTON JOHNSON,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
It was midnight on the North Atlantic and danger was on the deep. The Titanic,&#13;
greatest of ocean liners, had struck an iceberg off Cape Race and was sinking. The&#13;
great arch of sublimely silent stars looked down upon a vast sweep of lonely sea. No&#13;
sister ship was near in the hour of need. The life boats were far too few to carry the&#13;
great ship's human cargo. Precious lives were to be sacrificed. In that terrible crisis&#13;
manhood faced its supreme test, nor did it flinch. "Women and children first, the strong&#13;
must protect the weak,"-this is the unwritten law of the sea and it was not to be violated.&#13;
In the democracy of danger all men were equal. With heroic endurance, with noble&#13;
indifference to death a thousand of the world's heroes found an eternal grave in the&#13;
depths of a lonely sea. History records no nobler sacrifice, Posterity will forever sing&#13;
their praises. Monuments will be erected to their memories. But no word can be&#13;
written, no monument erected to express a nobler sentiment than they themselves have&#13;
carved on the great heart of the race, that "in order to conserve the strength of humanity&#13;
we must ever protect its weakness." Out of the blackness of that terrible night a great&#13;
light has arisen which shall grow brighter with the years. Legislation will make ocean&#13;
travel safer because of their death, but the awful sacrifice has served a higher purpose;&#13;
it has renewed the faith of the race in itself and made life so noble that "immortality&#13;
passes from a hope to a conviction." Our noisy, bustling, commercial age is suddenly&#13;
stilled in the sublime revelation of the "soul of humanity," and our hearts throb with the&#13;
spirit of brotherhood; that spirit which is today transforming political parties, changing&#13;
governments and fixing the meaning of life. That spirit which is destined to grow until&#13;
the law of the sea shall become the law of the land; when the strong shall cease to prey&#13;
upon the weak; when society shall be cleaned of its social and economic diseases.&#13;
A nation's strength should be measured by the degree in which it protects the weak&#13;
from the strong; by the freedom and equality of opportunity it has secured for all people.&#13;
"The realization of freedom is the ultimate destiny of the race." The desire for freedom&#13;
is inherent in the very nature of humanity. Without it history has no meaning; labor no&#13;
purpose; the race no hope. It is eloquent in the writings of the Hebrew prophets; it&#13;
throbs through the teaching of Socrates and Jesus; it wrenched the Magna Charta from&#13;
the hands of a tyrant king; it sent an army of psalm-singing patriots unto the fields of&#13;
Marston Moor and Nasbey; it gave life to the Declaration of Independence and established representative government on a virgin soil; it struck the shackles from an enslaved&#13;
race and wiped from the "Banner of the Stars" its foulest blot. Today that same desire&#13;
for freedom stands at the door of our social and industrial world and demands equality&#13;
of opportunity for all; demands that the law of the sea be made the law of the land.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred s ix teen&#13;
&#13;
The essentials of a national vigor are democracy and opportunity. And yet to&#13;
thousands of our people democracy has no meaning and opportunity they have never had.&#13;
Go into the slums of our cities if you would see the results of modern industry. Note&#13;
the swarming horde of ill-clad, underfed, tubercular beings. Born in the sub-cellar,&#13;
reared in the foul air and sickening steams of the slums. Victims of inequality. Products&#13;
of our laissez-faire policy. Note them well, for we will one day have to deal with&#13;
them. The slums are breeding places for crime. We allow them to exist and then&#13;
spend our substance to punish the criminal. If we sow slums we shall reap crime. If&#13;
we allow people to swarm in foul tenements, we shall reap national weakness. We&#13;
must remove the weight of greed from the backs of these people. We must give them&#13;
light and air and a chance to live. We must apply the law of the sea.&#13;
&#13;
I·&#13;
&#13;
Child labor is another phase of our industrial injustice. Thousands of children are&#13;
locked in mines, factories and mills when they should be at play. Robbed of their&#13;
childhood these little ones are brutalized in the glass works and textile mills. In the&#13;
tobacco factories they fall fainting from the sickening odors. The result of this slavery&#13;
is dwarfed minds, stunted bodies, bad morals; child labor's gift to the nation. Nothing&#13;
is so certain as the revenge of child labor upon the race that tolerates it. We cannot&#13;
afford to build an industry upon the tired little shoulders of the children. Every trade&#13;
involving child labor is a tragedy; a tragedy of children who have never had a play&#13;
time. Children who had the door of opportunity closed in their faces; children robbed&#13;
of the hopes, the desires, the ambitions which were theirs by right divine.&#13;
"Their blood splashes upward, oh, Gold heaper,&#13;
And your purple shows your path;&#13;
But the Child's sob in the silence curses deeper&#13;
Than the strong man in his wrath."&#13;
The object of the law is to make virtue easy and vice hard. Does our law fulfill&#13;
its sacred mission? Why do we legalize the saloon and imprison its products? Why&#13;
license the brothel, share in its profits and then cry, "unclean" at its victims? Why&#13;
scorn the scarlet woman and still permit industry to pay so small a w age to the working&#13;
girl that she cannot live a life of purity? Is three, four or five dollars a week a living&#13;
wage for a working girl? Her virtue becomes a luxury and society buys another slave.&#13;
From whom? From misery, hunger, cold and loneliness. An eternal soul for a crust&#13;
of bread. "Misery makes the offer, society accepts." Fifty thousand of these slaves&#13;
will die this year and fifty thousand more will take their places. The saddest, most&#13;
forlorn, the most hopeless of human creatures; scorned and reviled as the foulest of the&#13;
race. Must they alone bear the blame? Is there not a social responsibility somewhere&#13;
when a girl must sell her · soul for a chance to live ? We must have a minimum wage&#13;
law for women in industry. We must recognize the sisterhood of woman, a sisterhood&#13;
which shall extend to the very lowest member of society. That is the law of the sea.&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
The spirit of social unrest is abroad. It is a universal sign of the times. The&#13;
claim of the people is up for adjustment. It is a claim of justice and mercy. A claim&#13;
of underpaid toilers. A claim of girls forced into lives of shame. It is a claim of&#13;
children who faint from hunger ; children who never had a childhood; whose tired eyes&#13;
have never rested on a field or meadow; whose misshapen little bodies know no rest.&#13;
It is a claim which must be settled. But how?&#13;
"Equality of condition. Make common property of the instruments of production,"&#13;
says the socialist. His remedy is unjust and impossible. The parable of the talents&#13;
teaches us that great capacity deserves more than the mediocre. Capital deserves a&#13;
just compensation. Individual prosperity is the fundamental basis of national prosperity.&#13;
Equalize conditions, make common property of the instruments of production and individual ambition will die. Socialism can never adjust the people's claim.&#13;
A new figure has recently appeared upon the industrial stage, the syndicalist.&#13;
Already industrial workers the world over are accepting the doctrine of this strangerand a dangerous doctrine it is. Syndicalism was begotten of dangerous parentage. It&#13;
had its birth when the anarchists gained control of the French trade unions. The&#13;
philosophy of the syndicalist is one of desperation; his weapon the general strike. He&#13;
proposes to go beyond political or constitutional action and by a general class war&#13;
abolish the wage system and the capitalistic class. Less than a year ago twenty thousand workmen walked out of the textile mills at Lawrence. It was not a carefully&#13;
planned union-ordered strike. They had no organization, no trained leaders, not even&#13;
a common tongue. A congress of nations thrown into a great American melting pot,&#13;
they withstood the fires of industrial persecution until the limit of human endurance was&#13;
reached; the sodden mass stirred, frothed, sputtered and with a hiss and scream boiled&#13;
over. Today fifteen thousand of these strikers are allied with the syndicalists, and who&#13;
can blame them? They did not want class war, but they did want a living wage. They&#13;
were not out against property, but against starvation. They struggled with rising food&#13;
and coal prices, with high rents paid for miserable shacks. Left alone in their hopeless&#13;
struggle they listened to the only voice within their hearing, the voice of the syndicalist.&#13;
He offered higher wages, shorter hours, and eventually ownership-they followed him.&#13;
The Lawrence situation is not unique. It is typical of what may one day be&#13;
produced in every industrial center. Oppressed by industrial conditions the syndicalist&#13;
may one day attempt to realize his dream. That day will mark the beginning of civil&#13;
war, for just beyond the proposed abolition of capital and the wage system we see the&#13;
red flag of the anarchist. There is but one remedy for this unrest, and that is democracy.&#13;
Not equality of condition, but equality of opportunity, is the doctrine of adjustment. The&#13;
law of the sea applied to industry will harmonize labor and capital. An awakened&#13;
public conscience demands the application of that law. We are in the midst of the&#13;
greatest political and social awakening the world has ever known. It marks the beginning of a new age; an age in which industrial problems are to be solved; an age in&#13;
which the reign of special privilege shall cease and the doctrine of equal rights shall&#13;
prevail.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
All over the world we see indications of this new age. Workingrnen are being&#13;
insured against accident, sickness and unemployment. The poorhouse is giving way to&#13;
old age pensions. Life is corning to have a new meaning. The church is turning away&#13;
from dogma to the social and ethical teaching of the Master and the real Christ is being&#13;
revealed. Out from the shadow of Golgatha the thorn-crowned Saviour is "walking&#13;
down the troubled ages" and we see the homeless man, less fortunate than the birds and&#13;
the foxes. We see the compassionate Christ too big in his humanity to judge the woman&#13;
at the well; tender in his love for children; withering in his contempt for a corrupt priesthood. This is the Christ of the twentieth century. He has the solution to our problem;&#13;
"Justice tempered by love"-the law of the sea.&#13;
It is midnight. Nearly a year has passed since the loss of the Titanic. A year&#13;
which marks an epoch in the age-long struggle for human liberty. Midnight, not the&#13;
midnight of despair, but rather that which precedes a glorious dawn. The black clouds&#13;
of hate and misunderstanding are breaking away before the dawn of industrial justice.&#13;
The law which prevailed on the midnight sea is corning to rule in the affairs of men,&#13;
and we who believe in the justice of that law must work for its application. It will&#13;
mean a struggle, but for a glorious cause. Democracy is leagued with the dawn and we&#13;
shall not fail. Our Captain has sounded the watchword, "Bear ye one another's&#13;
burdens."&#13;
"He hath sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;&#13;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat;&#13;
Oh, be swift my soul to answer him, be jubilant my feet,&#13;
Our God is marching on."&#13;
&#13;
College ties can ne'er be broken&#13;
Formed at old M. C.&#13;
Far surpassing wealth unspoken&#13;
They'll forever be.&#13;
&#13;
M . C. ! M. C. ! Hail to thee!&#13;
Thou hast been kind to us.&#13;
Ever shall we cherish for thee&#13;
Thoughts of love and trust.&#13;
When our college days are ended&#13;
And our ways shall part,&#13;
Still with thee we'll be united,&#13;
Still be one in heart.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
�Picture Writing&#13;
&#13;
A merry lass once went to school&#13;
And afterward her love for votes&#13;
Did Lorna's blithesomeness o'errule.&#13;
&#13;
Prophetic Epitaphs&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
Mice live and constitute a lot&#13;
Of that eternal retinue&#13;
That is and-mystically is not.&#13;
There is no matter that is new,&#13;
And, man or mouse, the law's the sameThis life will perish as the dew.&#13;
The only stable thing is name.&#13;
Our records here are lastly weighed&#13;
In halls of perjury or fame.&#13;
So when beneath the sod we're laid,&#13;
A marble slab informs the world&#13;
The kind of game each one has played.&#13;
Now Jacob Henry Winterringer,&#13;
Dissected dogs and cats and folks&#13;
And mixed a dope that was a dinger.&#13;
&#13;
Of all wise men to live and die&#13;
The wisest one without a doubt&#13;
Is Merten, that you can't deny.&#13;
O f course we can't leave Mary out,&#13;
She got so wise in history&#13;
That ere she died she burst about.&#13;
She did the little things in life&#13;
And Eva Randolph's epithet,&#13;
Is simply this- a loving wife.&#13;
&#13;
If all the people lived as well,&#13;
O r were as good, or free from care&#13;
As Anna, there would be no hell.&#13;
Al Lemon started out to teach,&#13;
Then lectured some and ran a "Y",&#13;
But at the end was found to preach.&#13;
She lived right well and loved full hard,&#13;
She took her leap, she landed safe.&#13;
And Hazel bears our fond regard.&#13;
&#13;
Here lies a man of great renown&#13;
He won his "M" and studied law,&#13;
Then married Florence and settled down.&#13;
&#13;
Beware! Beware of too much thrift&#13;
Without alloy of fun or joy,&#13;
F or Ella's recompense was swift.&#13;
&#13;
They lived in bliss without a flaw.&#13;
He took a case for old Jawn D.&#13;
And made his mark as both foresaw.&#13;
&#13;
Now Vince replaced Coach Stagg at Chi,&#13;
And likewise trained the Vassar girls.&#13;
Just now he's singing bass on high.&#13;
&#13;
Ah, Susan Eads, so blithe and gay,&#13;
Could act so true that- sure she died&#13;
While Julius Caesar she did play.&#13;
&#13;
In vain, for man so true as she,&#13;
&#13;
The fourth dimension puzzled men&#13;
And turned their minds until a shark&#13;
Named Graham turned them back again.&#13;
&#13;
A silent girl, she seemed to know&#13;
What most folks don't. She listened, looked,&#13;
Then thought profound, did Vera Rowe.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty&#13;
&#13;
Now Minnie looked and yearned and prayed&#13;
For such a man was never made.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Upon yon hill there is a shaft&#13;
In memory of Sarah Ann,&#13;
For stenographic handicraft.&#13;
&#13;
The lowly places of the earth&#13;
Extol her name, for Edith Bower&#13;
By deeds of kindness proved her worth.&#13;
&#13;
The life of Prit we hate to tell.&#13;
He practiced at the bar they say&#13;
And now he's gone below to dwell.&#13;
&#13;
Now Inez Whitney's claim to fame,&#13;
While it is altogether right,&#13;
Is all tied up in hubby's name.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Cain took English two and three,&#13;
Eleven, nine and eight and five,&#13;
Poor girl, she died for her A B .&#13;
&#13;
She lived, she died, let that suffice,&#13;
So full of mirth was Audree's smile&#13;
We'd all be glad if she lived twice.&#13;
&#13;
We pause a moment here before&#13;
The grave of one whose life was peace;&#13;
We all revered sweet Alice Mower.&#13;
&#13;
Here rests the bones of good old Wick,&#13;
He needs no other word of praise&#13;
Aside from this-he was a brick.&#13;
&#13;
It's said she ran the Ladies' Aid,&#13;
The Kensington and Sunday School,&#13;
She tried to run the Board of Trade.&#13;
&#13;
His Catherine set the world ablaze&#13;
She did so much and judged so well.&#13;
Her works are quite beyond a phrase.&#13;
&#13;
But Si rebelled, the ornery mule,&#13;
And now he spends his entire time&#13;
With needle, thread and reticule.&#13;
&#13;
Upon the far New Zealand shore,&#13;
Bill Evans' tomb bears these good words,&#13;
"To our beloved governor."&#13;
&#13;
Alas for Helen! Cupid's dart&#13;
Did never pierce the one she loved,&#13;
Poor thing, she died of broken heart.&#13;
&#13;
Of fair Marie there's this to say,&#13;
She jumped the gun and married Green,&#13;
To many another guy's dismay.&#13;
&#13;
In pearls and gold we measure worth,&#13;
But Grace demands a higher test The sweetest, nicest girl on earth.&#13;
&#13;
Stop here my friend and make a wish,&#13;
That you may place your aim as high&#13;
As did. this maid they called A Fish.&#13;
&#13;
A vegetarian was Jo.&#13;
She thrived on Herbs to beat the band,&#13;
But through French heels she came to woe.&#13;
&#13;
John Ralston married young, unwise!&#13;
He preached but dreamed a Bishop's dream.&#13;
These things account for his demise.&#13;
&#13;
She traveled here, she acted there,&#13;
Miss Lottie did most everything,&#13;
And on the side imported hair.&#13;
&#13;
There was a girl named Eva Leazer,&#13;
The only one of whom it's writ" And not a man did ever squeeze her."&#13;
&#13;
Beneath this verdant grass, alas,&#13;
The bones of Garlock lie in state,&#13;
The prolix agent of the class.&#13;
&#13;
Some men for great things, some for small&#13;
Were born. It's not been testified&#13;
Just why Joe Edge was born at all.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-t w o&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty- t h r ee&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Upon a foreign strand she strayed.&#13;
She studied Deutch, her native tongue;&#13;
It was too hard, she died a maid.&#13;
&#13;
Kwasind's Tale of Triumph&#13;
&#13;
Through school Miss Hall retained her name&#13;
'Tis true that late in life she died&#13;
But even then it was the same.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUSTUS&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
BRUNELLE,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
"Four-r-r-th down, three-e-e to go," came the stentorian tones of the referee.&#13;
Of diplomats the world has known,&#13;
Of orators since time began,&#13;
Frank Johnson stands out all alone.&#13;
Within Westminster's sepulcher&#13;
The vault of Jean is thus inscribed,&#13;
"Thus all the world doth honor her."&#13;
&#13;
snatch victory from defeat.&#13;
&#13;
Sharp and quick came the signals--"Thirteen, twenty-&#13;
&#13;
seven, seven, eleven, " -snap! the Windsor quarter passed the ball to Staufman, his&#13;
husky fullback, who never failed to gain.&#13;
&#13;
Despair came over the Grandon rooters, for&#13;
&#13;
they were only too well acquainted with Staufman' s prowess.&#13;
&#13;
But this was his first year&#13;
&#13;
of "Varsity," and the fiercely fought game had made unusual demands on his strength.&#13;
Small wonder that he hesitated for a moment.&#13;
&#13;
The annals here contain one blot,&#13;
One only of the class is lost,&#13;
His grave unknown, his face forgot.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
stands were hushed in eager expectancy-only a few seconds remained for Windsor to&#13;
&#13;
But only for a moment; an instant later&#13;
&#13;
his one-hundred-eighty pounds caused the Grandon line to fairly wince.&#13;
All was silent as the mass of arms and legs disentangled itself.&#13;
"They didn't make it, I know," said Dorothy Preston to her brother Jack.&#13;
&#13;
Despite&#13;
&#13;
her tender years, Dorothy was strong in her love for Grandon and good football.&#13;
"Now Dot," counselled Jack, "don't be too"-- But pandemonium had broken&#13;
loose-Staufman lacked a foot of having crossed the goal line.&#13;
&#13;
The Grandon rooters&#13;
&#13;
surged on the field, delirious w ith joy, "Alma Mater" could again proudly lift her head,&#13;
for last year's defeat had been venged.&#13;
"What's the trouble, Dot?" queried Jack as they were leaving the grounds.&#13;
Tell me not in joyful numbers&#13;
That a freshie's life is gay,&#13;
He has many trials and troubles,&#13;
And his sky is often gray.&#13;
&#13;
are you so glum?&#13;
&#13;
" Why&#13;
&#13;
Aren't you glad we won?"&#13;
&#13;
"We-I-I, I guess so.&#13;
&#13;
But, I'd feel lot's better if we'd won because we were stronger,&#13;
&#13;
not beause they had a quitter."&#13;
"Quitter!" Jack stared at his sister in amazement.&#13;
&#13;
"Who quit?"&#13;
&#13;
" Why, that big Dutchman, Staufman, when he had the ball that last time, he was&#13;
'Tis not nice to be so tiny,&#13;
And be told you're green as grass,&#13;
Or when you're lost and lonely wander,&#13;
To hear the scornful senior's laugh.&#13;
&#13;
so scared that he had to wait awhile before he started.&#13;
&#13;
And Dorothy sniffed contempt-&#13;
&#13;
uously.&#13;
"Well, well," laughed her brother.&#13;
&#13;
"Aren't you a little hard on him?&#13;
&#13;
He couldn't&#13;
&#13;
have waited very long, and think how tired he was."&#13;
Lives of freshies all remind us&#13;
We were once as green as they;&#13;
We should leave footprints behind us,&#13;
Their's to follow as we do today.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
"That didn't make any difference.&#13;
&#13;
I'd keep on fighting,&#13;
&#13;
no matter how bad I felt."&#13;
" Jingo," exclaimed Jack delightedly.&#13;
&#13;
"That's the way to talk.&#13;
&#13;
Grandon spirit."&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
One hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy stamped her foot.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twemty-five&#13;
&#13;
T hat's the true&#13;
&#13;
�-&#13;
&#13;
For weeks this incident kept recurring to Jack Preston's mind. "Spunky little girl,"&#13;
he would soliloquize.&#13;
&#13;
"With a sister like that, it would be pretty cheap of me to fall&#13;
&#13;
down in that debate next month.&#13;
at work with redoubled vigor.&#13;
&#13;
Well, I won't."&#13;
&#13;
Whereupon he would set himself&#13;
&#13;
Nor did this escape the attention of his colleagues, Frank&#13;
&#13;
Ryder, and Walter Simmons.&#13;
&#13;
Jack sprang to the 'phone, but no Central answered his call and after repeated&#13;
efforts, he gave up the attempt.&#13;
&#13;
"Guess I'll try Smalley's 'phone," he thought.&#13;
&#13;
here again his efforts were unsuccessful.&#13;
telephone system.&#13;
&#13;
But&#13;
&#13;
Clearly some serious mishap had befallen the&#13;
&#13;
Nothing remained but to hasten to the Doctor's home, which was&#13;
&#13;
three-quarters of a mile distant.&#13;
&#13;
Jack was a good runner when in form; but he had done&#13;
&#13;
"Did you ever see Jack work so hard?" asked Ryder one evening.&#13;
&#13;
little training since the preceding Spring, and found it hard to continue the hot pace he&#13;
&#13;
"Never did," replied Simmons.&#13;
&#13;
set for himself.&#13;
&#13;
"He goes at it systematically, too!"&#13;
&#13;
"He always was a consistent worker, but"-"Hello, fellows!&#13;
&#13;
Speeches finished?"&#13;
&#13;
And the subject of their conversation burst&#13;
&#13;
irto the room.&#13;
a question like that.&#13;
&#13;
"Two weeks before the debate, and you ask&#13;
&#13;
Bet you've finished yours, though.&#13;
&#13;
Say, Jack you'll turn into a&#13;
&#13;
debater's handbook, first thing you know."&#13;
dozen rebuttal cards besides.&#13;
&#13;
" He's probably filled a few&#13;
&#13;
Come on, Jack read it off.&#13;
&#13;
I see it sticking out of your&#13;
&#13;
You can't escape, so ·speak up like a little man, "Ladies and Gentleman,&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Preston will conclude the argument for the Affirmative."&#13;
When the reading had ceased, Simmons drew a long breath.&#13;
Cicero, Adieu!&#13;
&#13;
But Jack was already on his way to D r. Brown, a young medical graduate who&#13;
had recently located in the suburb.&#13;
&#13;
H ere he was not disappointed.&#13;
&#13;
too late ! -pneumonia !-it must not be!&#13;
&#13;
Suppose he should be&#13;
&#13;
Doctor Brown, young man that he was, with&#13;
&#13;
difficulty kept up with Jack's rapid strides.&#13;
An hour later the battle had been won.&#13;
"although it was a close call.&#13;
&#13;
"Shades of Demos-&#13;
&#13;
But, an agony of&#13;
&#13;
"Your sister is safe," assured the doctor,&#13;
&#13;
But you appear pretty fagged yourself.&#13;
&#13;
Jump into bed&#13;
&#13;
right away, or I'll have two patients instead of one."&#13;
&#13;
That's the best speech- Ouch! Don't you think I can learn&#13;
&#13;
anything without having the books thrown at me? "&#13;
picked up the missile.&#13;
&#13;
Could I" - -&#13;
&#13;
suspense filled him as he waited for the Doctor to get his case.&#13;
&#13;
"Of course his speech is finished," agreed Ryder.&#13;
&#13;
thenes!&#13;
&#13;
'Im sorry, sir," said the maid who answered his nng, "but the Doctor left an&#13;
hour ago for a place several miles out in the country.&#13;
&#13;
"Speeches finished ! " gasped Simmons.&#13;
&#13;
coat pocket.&#13;
&#13;
The dampness of the air added to his difficulties, and he arrived at&#13;
&#13;
the Doctor's almost exhausted.&#13;
&#13;
And he sighed reproachfully as he&#13;
&#13;
"What would Bryce say if he saw you slamming his 'American&#13;
&#13;
Commonwealth' around?"&#13;
"He'd say, 'Hit 'im again,'" was the retort.&#13;
&#13;
"It's no use, Walter, you'll have to&#13;
&#13;
Don't worry about me," laughed Jack.&#13;
already begun to affect him.&#13;
&#13;
"Honest, Jack, " interposed Ryder, "That's a fine speech.&#13;
&#13;
If your rebuttal is as&#13;
&#13;
good as that, I don't see how we can lose."&#13;
The debate was to occur on Friday, the 25th.&#13;
&#13;
For several days the weather had&#13;
&#13;
been bright and clear, but early Thursday morning a drizzly, chilling rain set in.&#13;
&#13;
"Fine&#13;
&#13;
He simply must not let anyone think him ill; he could&#13;
&#13;
probably sleep off the unpleasant symptoms, anyway.&#13;
But it proved otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
stop that extravagant language."&#13;
&#13;
"But I'll take your advice, so good night."&#13;
&#13;
He neglected to say that the great exertion and the exposure in the damp night had&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Brown called again the next morning, and as he was&#13;
&#13;
about to leave, Jack took him aside.&#13;
&#13;
" Doc," he said, " I guess I underwent a little too&#13;
&#13;
much exertion last night, for I feel a little under the weather.&#13;
so I can go out tonight? "&#13;
&#13;
Can you fix me up a little&#13;
&#13;
The doctor became all attention; a quick examination revealed the senousness of&#13;
&#13;
chance to catch cold," muttered Jack, looking out of the window.&#13;
&#13;
"And then wouldn't&#13;
&#13;
Jack's condition.&#13;
&#13;
I be in great shape for tomorrow!&#13;
&#13;
And so well did he&#13;
&#13;
debate, you can't be allowed to go out tonight."&#13;
&#13;
I'll have to be pretty careful."&#13;
&#13;
live up to this determination that the usual maternal admonitions as to raincoat, rubbers&#13;
and umbrella were wholly unnecessary.&#13;
" Dorothy caught a bad cold today," she said&#13;
&#13;
anxiously, "and she has such severe pain in her lungs that I'm afraid she's threatened with&#13;
pneumoma.&#13;
&#13;
" Doctor," was the reply.&#13;
&#13;
I wish you would 'phone for Dr. Bartholdt to come at once."&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
me up a little, so to speak, I'll be very grateful.&#13;
one, even Mother.&#13;
&#13;
"Debate or no&#13;
&#13;
"You are a college man, and know how I feel.&#13;
&#13;
is no one who can go on in my place tonight, so I must be there.&#13;
&#13;
By evening the rain had almost ceased, and J ack was just rejoicing over the fact,&#13;
when his mother entered the room.&#13;
&#13;
"You'll be lucky to get out in a week," he declared.&#13;
&#13;
There&#13;
&#13;
But if you can bolster&#13;
&#13;
Remember, please, not a word to any&#13;
&#13;
With father away and Dorothy sick, she has enough to worry about."&#13;
&#13;
Doctor Brown perceived that further argument was useless, but he shook his head&#13;
gravely, as he wrote out a prescription.&#13;
&#13;
" It's a big risk you are taking, a big risk."&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
By a mighty concentration of will power, Jack kept up a cheerful appearance during&#13;
the day; except for a slight paleness, which was attributed to the hard work he had been&#13;
&#13;
Guy D.&#13;
&#13;
doing, even his close friends noticed nothing amiss.&#13;
The long-waited night had arrived at last.&#13;
&#13;
tion of government, with Grandon on the Affirmative. The Auditorium that had been the&#13;
scene of both defeat and victory in years past resounded to such rooting as it had never&#13;
But to Jack, all was as a dream.&#13;
&#13;
He was vaguely conscious that&#13;
&#13;
the noise had finally stopped, and Simmons had launched into his opening speech.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
listened mechanically to his opponents, whose fierce, destructive attack brought doubt&#13;
into the heart of many a loyal son of Grandon.&#13;
But the more knowing ones shook their heads.&#13;
'they counselled sagely.&#13;
&#13;
"Wait till old Jack goes after them,&#13;
&#13;
But in the Jack who spoke tonight; none recognized the Jack of&#13;
&#13;
former years, who could move the most apathetic and persuade the most obstinate.&#13;
"Quitter!" thought some.&#13;
&#13;
But they little knew the suffering that was being under-&#13;
&#13;
gone by the one they so rashly condemned.&#13;
The rebuttals were now almost over.&#13;
&#13;
The closing Windsor speaker in a magnificent&#13;
&#13;
finish, brought his supporters to their feet.&#13;
&#13;
The Jack of the old days could offset even&#13;
&#13;
that; but tonight-As Jack arose, a kaleidoscopic v1s1on passed before his eyes.&#13;
&#13;
He saw his sister&#13;
&#13;
stamping her foot and declaring, ''I'd keep on fighting no matter how bad I felt."&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
saw that same little sister, pale but trusting, bidding him good-bye with the words, "Jack,&#13;
I know you'll win."&#13;
&#13;
What would she say-what would she think if he proved a&#13;
&#13;
"quitter" now? All this took but a moment; but that moment sufficed.&#13;
addressed the chairman and stepped forward.&#13;
was with him.&#13;
&#13;
Confidently he&#13;
&#13;
A few terse sentences, and the audience&#13;
&#13;
Briefly, he disposed of the most important · charges of the Negative; con-&#13;
&#13;
vincingly summarized the argument of the Affirmative, and closed with a passionate appeal&#13;
for the abandonment of prejudice-the acceptance of reason and true progress.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
Grandon and Windsor, old rivals in&#13;
&#13;
forensics as well as in athletics, were to clash this evening on the question of centraliza-&#13;
&#13;
resounded to before.&#13;
&#13;
McKINNEY,&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
"Too bad you had to be carried home, old man," said Simmons, a few days later,&#13;
"it detracted somewhat from the joy of a three to nothing decision."&#13;
&#13;
Should you ask me why this story,&#13;
Why this tale of Sophomore people,&#13;
Why this thirsting after knowledge,&#13;
I should answer, I should tell you,&#13;
As the bow was to the ancient,&#13;
So is knowledge to the modern.&#13;
Should you ask me why these people&#13;
Whence they came and why they're chosen,&#13;
I should answer, I should tell you,&#13;
When the Indian picked his arrow&#13;
Then he chose the best and strongest;&#13;
Thus when picking out our heroes&#13;
Did we pick the best and wisest.&#13;
From the lands of the Dakotas,&#13;
From Nebraska 's plains and meadows,&#13;
From the towns and rising hamlets,&#13;
From the valleys of cloud,&#13;
Came this bunch of warrior people.&#13;
After they had pitched their wigwams,&#13;
After all of them were settled,&#13;
After they had passed the tortures&#13;
That the chiefs had thrust upon them;&#13;
Then within a mighty council&#13;
All the tribe of Freshmen gathered,&#13;
Here they gazed around about them,&#13;
Gazed around to note the warriors,&#13;
And the maidens of their people There was Vernon, the red-haired one,&#13;
Who was yet to be defeated&#13;
In the arts of running, jumping;&#13;
There was Leuder, learned in speaking,&#13;
Who before the council ended&#13;
Had been chosen as our chieftain ;&#13;
There was Shelton, skilled in boasting,&#13;
There was Shoe'y, skilled in fussing,&#13;
There was Bonnie, small but mighty, •&#13;
She, it was, who rising, toldus&#13;
&#13;
That a vote must now be taken&#13;
For as yet we had no chieftain&#13;
Who would lead us in our battle,&#13;
Who would talk for us in councils.&#13;
Then a warrior skilled in speaking,&#13;
Rose up from his place of resting,&#13;
And said: "People, I am Dawson,&#13;
I have looked around about me,&#13;
I have noted all the tribesmen&#13;
And, if we would win in combat&#13;
We must have a mighty chieftain;&#13;
We must have one skilled in speaking,&#13;
Skilled in fighting and in scheming&#13;
For that purpose, for that reason,&#13;
Leuder is the one I've chosen.&#13;
He would make a mighty leader,&#13;
He would bring us lots of honor,&#13;
He will lead us, if we ask him,&#13;
Will you have him for your chieftain?&#13;
Then the Freshmen as one person&#13;
Turned to look at Herman Leuder,&#13;
Saw that he was strong in body,&#13;
Saw that he was good to look at,&#13;
Saw he was a mighty warrior,&#13;
So they chose him for their chieftain.&#13;
After we had picked our ( Leuder)&#13;
Then we turned back to our wigwams,&#13;
There to study and grow wiser,&#13;
There to dwell in peace and quiet.&#13;
But one night the Sophomore people&#13;
Took upon themselves to show us&#13;
That they were the wiser warriors,&#13;
That we were the weaker people,&#13;
So they rounded up our chieftain&#13;
And three other Freshmen warriors,&#13;
Placed them in a mighty engine,&#13;
Fixed up by their men of magic,&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred twenty -eight&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
Then they freed the mighty demon,&#13;
Freed the Demon Gasolinus,&#13;
The most powerful, the most speedy,&#13;
The most speedy of the racers.&#13;
Over hills and stones and valleys,&#13;
Over fields and rushing rivers&#13;
That were fraught with perils deadly,&#13;
Went this engine of the Sophies,&#13;
But they tho't not of the cunning&#13;
Of the wary Freshmen warriors;&#13;
And when they had stopped their engine,&#13;
When they tried to leave their captives,&#13;
Then they found our mighty chieftain&#13;
Had unloosened the bonds that bound him&#13;
And refused to leave the engine&#13;
Till back home it safely bore him.&#13;
Ere the sun had lit the campus&#13;
All the signals had been given,&#13;
And from every Freshman wigwam&#13;
Came a hunter dressed for battle.&#13;
There was Brokaw of the beef trust,&#13;
There was Dunham, once not sleepy,&#13;
Dressed was every loyal Freshie&#13;
For the Sophomores must be punished,&#13;
Must be shown their proper station ;&#13;
And no sooner did the Sophomore&#13;
Set his feet upon the campus&#13;
Than the Freshies jumped upon him,&#13;
Chased him, caught him, bound him tightly&#13;
Threw him helpless on the campus;&#13;
If he struggled then they kicked him,&#13;
Caring not for broken shoulders,&#13;
Caring not for weeping women,&#13;
Caring only just to punish,&#13;
Just to make them beg for mercy.&#13;
If I wished it, I could tell you,&#13;
I could tell you of more triumphs,&#13;
I could tell you of the boat rides,&#13;
Of the times we had together,&#13;
I could tell you of disaster,&#13;
I could tell you of the fever,&#13;
&#13;
How it grasped three of our strong men,&#13;
Burned them till their frames were wasted,&#13;
Till they looked to us like shadows.&#13;
I could tell you of more trouble,&#13;
How our college burned to ashes,&#13;
How we saw our .Alma Mater,&#13;
That we'd learned to love and honor,&#13;
Perish, like the hail in summer.&#13;
Should you ask me, I could tell you&#13;
How we pledged ten hundred eagles&#13;
Just to show we were in earnest,&#13;
Just to show we loved our college.&#13;
When at last the year was ended,&#13;
Then the time had come for hunting,&#13;
Hunting for the mighty dollar,&#13;
For the dollar that would feed us,&#13;
That would pay the great White Father&#13;
For the care that he would give us,&#13;
For the wisdom he imparted.&#13;
Long the hunt was, and the dollars,&#13;
Tho' we caught them, they were slippery,&#13;
And no sooner did we catch one&#13;
Than again it slipped far from us.&#13;
Thus it went the long, long season,&#13;
Till the days of Indian summer&#13;
Warned us we must leave our hunting.&#13;
Some, while searching for the dollar,&#13;
Had far from the college wandered,&#13;
Where their loved ones for them waited,&#13;
And the Juniors often sorrowed&#13;
For the pretty Freshmen maidens,&#13;
Who had failed to keep their promise,&#13;
Who would cheer some other wigwam.&#13;
When our hunting trip was over,&#13;
Then we held a new reunion&#13;
With the words of joy and greeting,&#13;
With the questions for the absent,&#13;
With all kinds of news and gossip.&#13;
After we had said our greetings,&#13;
Then we held another council&#13;
And elected for our cheftain&#13;
&#13;
One whose hair was like the sandstones,&#13;
One whose prowess on the gridiron&#13;
Made him feared by other na tions.&#13;
Now no longer were we Freshies,&#13;
After we had once gone hunting,&#13;
We were now the mighty Sophomores,&#13;
And the F reshies were the new ones,&#13;
Greener than the grass they trod on,&#13;
Yet their tongues were filled with boasting&#13;
And they called themselves red blooded.&#13;
Now, this bunch of Freshmen people&#13;
Trod the halls like earthly princes,&#13;
Trod them like they owned the college,&#13;
No respect had they for others,&#13;
And the Seniors warned us often,&#13;
Saying much and oft repeating,&#13;
"Oh! Beware of more delaying,&#13;
Strike them while they're green and swelling,&#13;
So one night while they were sleeping,&#13;
All the Sophomores came together,&#13;
Got a rack from old Pay-now-us,&#13;
Walked into the Freshmen's wigwams&#13;
And spoke thusly to the yearlings:&#13;
"Look at me, I am Brown Bassett,"&#13;
Spoke another, "I'm Turk Eiffert,"&#13;
And a third said, "I'm R ed Vernon,&#13;
And these are my trusty warriors,&#13;
Who will take you to the torture,&#13;
Who will try your strength and manhood.&#13;
Will you come in peace, or must I&#13;
Drag you like the sons of preachers&#13;
Dragged the skunk from out . the chapel?"&#13;
But the Freshmen's hearts beat quickly&#13;
And their blood it flowed like water,&#13;
And without a single struggle&#13;
They were packed upon the hayrack.&#13;
Here the cold, crisp winds of winter&#13;
Soon brought words of whimpering protest,&#13;
Soon brought cries and lamentations&#13;
Faster than the words of women&#13;
When they talk about the rights&#13;
&#13;
They ought to have, but have not.&#13;
But we heeded not their pleading,&#13;
Only looked at them with pity,&#13;
Only told them they were women.&#13;
So we journeyed westward, westward,&#13;
Left the college far behind us,&#13;
Left the beds of Freshmen empty,&#13;
Crossed the dangerous Milwaukee,&#13;
Crossing the fearful V iaductus,&#13;
Till at last we reached Sioux City.&#13;
Here we stopped our old Pay-now-us,&#13;
Here we bound again our captives,&#13;
Here we made them walk before us,&#13;
As the triumph of our prowess,&#13;
A s the Freshmen ought to journey.&#13;
A fter we had had our triumph,&#13;
Then we shoved our captives from us,&#13;
Made them walk back to the college,&#13;
While we rode back on the hayrack.&#13;
When the sun rose in the morning,&#13;
When the dew had left the shade trees,&#13;
A fter all of our P rofessors&#13;
H ad arisen from their couches,&#13;
Then, the Sophies dressed for fighting,&#13;
Waited for the raging F reshies,&#13;
Waited till the time for classes.&#13;
But the F reshies had no spirit,&#13;
O nly looked at us with sad eyes,&#13;
Like the doe when she is wounded.&#13;
Soon the F reshies had a Pow-wow,&#13;
And their speakers, skilled in boasting,&#13;
Sent a challenge forth to combat.&#13;
Then we had a Sophomore council&#13;
And decided it was fitting&#13;
That we have another battle.&#13;
Now the F reshies were red blooded,&#13;
They were strong in brain and sinew,&#13;
But when our men had suggested&#13;
That we take a rope and stretch it&#13;
Cross the wet and muddy river,&#13;
That ten men from each division&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirt y -one&#13;
&#13;
�Try to pull the other ten men,&#13;
Pull them through the muddy water,&#13;
Then they stepped aside in terror,&#13;
Said the water was infected,&#13;
Said the germs would surely hurt them,&#13;
So we said to them, "Papooses,&#13;
You can choose your own diversion,&#13;
We will beat you, and we beat them.&#13;
After all the scraps were ended,&#13;
After all the Preps were silenced,&#13;
Then the strongest of the warriors&#13;
Gathered with the other strong men,&#13;
On the gridiron by the field house&#13;
There the wise one skilled in hunting&#13;
For the scalps ·of other nations,&#13;
Trained them in the art of running,&#13;
Tackling, diving on the pigskin,&#13;
Until forth from every battle&#13;
Came the warriors home triumphant.&#13;
Thus we lived, we Sophomore people,&#13;
Sometimes fighting, sometimes working,&#13;
Never resting, always busy, always looking&#13;
For some action that would make our&#13;
college better.&#13;
Then one night we held a council,&#13;
And a warrior rich in wisdom,&#13;
Rose up from his place of resting&#13;
And said: "People, I am McCurdy,&#13;
I'm a Junior, but I've watched you,&#13;
I have seen your deeds of prowess,&#13;
I have heard your tongues of silver,&#13;
I have watched you since you entered,&#13;
And this thought it has come to me,&#13;
You should leave behind a record&#13;
So that others who come after&#13;
May remember all your doings."&#13;
As we listened to the message,&#13;
As we heard his words of wisdom,&#13;
Then we saw his words were truthful,&#13;
Saw we ought to leave some record.&#13;
Then the question came before us,&#13;
&#13;
An Irish Tale to Kwasind&#13;
&#13;
Who should write this Indian story,&#13;
Who should be our story tellers,&#13;
When this bunch had to be chosen.&#13;
Then the ones best learned in writing,&#13;
Best in scheming, and in working,&#13;
Were the people that were chosen.&#13;
Burgess was the chief among them,&#13;
He, it was who'd plan the writing,&#13;
Plan the working and the legends,&#13;
But beneath him, only slightly,&#13;
Was Bill Payne, the mighty trader.&#13;
He, it is, who'll chase the dollars,&#13;
Trading for them, just the mention&#13;
We will give them in our record.&#13;
I could tell you, if I wished it,&#13;
Of the festivals and dances,&#13;
I could tell you of the rumpus,&#13;
When the words of our White Father&#13;
Went forth saying to the tribesmen:&#13;
"You must come to every council,&#13;
You must never miss a pow-wow,&#13;
Unless sickness or disaster&#13;
Can excuse your every absence,&#13;
Otherwise if you are absent&#13;
You must pay us two simoleons&#13;
And be tested by your wise meri&#13;
If you wish to stay among us."&#13;
I could tell you other stories,&#13;
But the time is swiftly coming&#13;
When once more will we go seeking&#13;
For the sleek and rolling dollar.&#13;
But before we start our hunting,&#13;
We will have a mighty pow-wow&#13;
And around it we will pledge that&#13;
When the Preps have lost their greenness,&#13;
When the Seniors start to working,&#13;
And the call of our White Father&#13;
Comes to bring us from our hunting,&#13;
We will come unless we're married,&#13;
Or some other great disaster&#13;
Has deprived us of our reason,&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL MARY COLLIER,&#13;
&#13;
"Sure Pat, did ye hear of the doin's,&#13;
That went on in New College Hall?&#13;
Ah, faith and it was a grand openin'&#13;
With everyone there, great and small.&#13;
Yourself should have been to the chapel,&#13;
And heard the foine spaches, and songs;&#13;
The wit of our countryman, Corbett,&#13;
Will remain in our memories long.&#13;
He told how the building committee&#13;
Had labored the long summer thro',&#13;
With many a trial and discussionBut at last they had come safely thro'.&#13;
The walls are of solid concrete,&#13;
Reinforced, absolutely fireproof,&#13;
And because of his friend, Misther Manley,&#13;
Sure and they have a tile roof.&#13;
The Reverend Claudius Spencer,&#13;
Then spoke to the people assembled&#13;
Of the splendid new hall, and the students,&#13;
And the marvellous growth of the college.&#13;
Thin followed the buildin' inspection.&#13;
Faith, we wint from the top to the bottom,&#13;
Yourself should have seen the foin class rooms,&#13;
They're the best that I've sot eyes on.&#13;
But the library's foinest of all.&#13;
With the lamps and its fixin's around,&#13;
And the books that they have there, sure, Pat,&#13;
They number into the thousands.&#13;
The last and the best of the doin's&#13;
Was in the society halls,&#13;
Where we had the frappe and wafers,&#13;
Such splendor ye never saw at all.&#13;
Sure, a splendid success and it was,&#13;
The opening of New College Hall."&#13;
&#13;
•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
One hundred thirt y -tw o&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�A Tribe's Legend&#13;
Zet Nobelette&#13;
C HAPTER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
( Written by Lois Crouch)&#13;
"Dorothy said that last year when she was initiated she had to darn all the sorority&#13;
girl's stockings for two weeks," remarked Helen.&#13;
"Yes, and Catherine said she had to wear a gingham apron to school," added&#13;
Marian, "and Florence could not talk anything but French for two whole days."&#13;
"Our initiation could not be any worse than last year's, so let's not worry," remarked the ever-cheerful Helen.&#13;
"No, of course it couldn't," said Dorothy, entering the room of the Freshman&#13;
girls.&#13;
"What do you want Dorothy, did you come to tell us some more terrible things&#13;
they will do to us?"&#13;
"Oh no, I just called for you girls, aren't you nearly ready?"&#13;
"Don't forget your blind-fold, Marian," said Helen.&#13;
Dorothy had seemed so unconcerned when she called for the girls, that they thought&#13;
perhaps it wouldn't be so bad, but they were mistaken, when they got home, they concluded that there were worse things than talking French or darning stockings, because&#13;
they, as their special stunt had been forbidden to speak for three whole days. In a&#13;
silence that was dismal and unusual, they went to bed. The next morning, as Helen&#13;
opened her eyes she started to call to Marian, but remembered and sank back into bed&#13;
with a groan. As soon as they got up, Marian prepared a pad of paper and some&#13;
pencils because for three days this must be their means of communication.&#13;
"Let's not go down to breakfast," wrote Marian.&#13;
"But I'm hungry," replied Helen.&#13;
"I know but we can make some chocolate in the chafing dish and eat that box of&#13;
crackers, I would rather do that than go to breakfast, because· everybody will know&#13;
that we can't talk and will tease us."&#13;
"Yes, that is so, I'll make the chocolate, if you fix the table," wrote Helen.&#13;
After washing the dishes they took their books and hurried to school. Mathematics&#13;
was their first class and they were both called on to put problems on· the board. Then for&#13;
some unaccountable reason the professor lectured the rest of the hour. Feeling a little&#13;
encouraged they proceeded to their next classes. The poor unfortunate Marian flunked&#13;
in Latin because the teacher did not see the jesture she made toward her pledge ribbon.&#13;
Helen with her usual good luck was not called on in English, but offended one of her&#13;
best friends by not speaking to her. After other like experiences, they went back to&#13;
the dormitory, thoroughly discouraged and wondering if it was really worth while.&#13;
&#13;
The luncheon hour served only to deepen the gloom. The girls laughed at their&#13;
frantic jestures and motions with which they asked for the hash or the butter.&#13;
Again in their room, the unusual silence became so depressing that they began to&#13;
wonder how they could live until Sunday evening. Just then Dorothy came in. " Girls,"&#13;
she said, I'm going home this afternoon to stay over Sunday, I haven't been for six&#13;
weeks."&#13;
Dorothy lived in a great old-fashioned house, in a sleepy, little village not far from&#13;
Westcliffe College. Since Dorothy' s only brother was also away at college, her father&#13;
and mother were alone, so she frequently went home for the week-end.&#13;
"Oh, Dorothy," Marian quickly wrote on the tablet," please take us with you?"&#13;
Dorothy hesitated and said, ''I'd like to, but you know Cedar Crest is such a stupid,&#13;
little place and there will be nothing doing, not even any extra eats, as mother does not&#13;
know I am coming."&#13;
"That is just what we want," wrote Helen.&#13;
"Anything would be better than this place where everybody teases us and we can't&#13;
talk back," wrote Marian.&#13;
"All right," answered Dorothy, ''I'll ask the Dean, if you may go, while you pack&#13;
your suitcases, we'll leave on the three-twenty."&#13;
As she hastened off, the girls eagerly began to get ready. Each girl laid out her&#13;
street suit, ready to put on.&#13;
"Shall we take an evening dress?" wrote Helen.&#13;
"No, because we would have to take a light coat and there will be nothing to go to,&#13;
and we couldn't talk, if we went," answered Marian, with a jesture of despondency.&#13;
"What shall we take?" wrote Helen as suddenly she rushed to the closet and appeared with a yellow crepe and held it up with an inquiring look.&#13;
" It's very unbecoming," wrote Marian.&#13;
"I don't care," answered Helen, " I've got to wear it out and this is a good time&#13;
so I'm going to take it."&#13;
"If you take that I believe I'll take my pink messaline with the darned place in it,"&#13;
wrote Marian, and she laid it out.&#13;
They had packed their suitcases and had begun to dress when D orothy came in with&#13;
the permission from the Dean.&#13;
''I'll be ready in a few minutes and call for you," said Dorothy as she left.&#13;
Silently Helen and Marian waved farewells, while Dorothy called good-bye to the&#13;
girls. Dorothy had to take charge of the tickets, pay the hackman and attend to all of&#13;
the details of the trip, making the girls feel like a pair of irresponsible infants. The trip&#13;
was made without any special incidents and they arrived at 5 o'clock. Since Dorothy&#13;
was not expected there was no one to meet them, so they took the only conveyance that&#13;
the little village .afforded and soon arrived at Dorothy's home.&#13;
On being introduced to Mr. and Mrs. Browning, they could only shake hands and&#13;
bow while Dorothy explained the situation. Then she hastened them off to dress for&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundredthirty-five&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
-.:i·&#13;
&#13;
dinner as the Brownings dined at the unfashionably early hour of 6. When they&#13;
reached their room, Marian got out her pad and wrote, "Shall we dress for dinner, or&#13;
just put on fresh w aists, Helen?"&#13;
"Let's dress because if I don' t put on that yellow crepe, I won't look as gloomy as&#13;
I feel," wrote back Helen.&#13;
"All right, here goes the patched pink messaline. "&#13;
Dorothy in a white lingerie dress knocked at the door, calling, "Are you ready&#13;
girls?" They nodded, and with gloom written large on their faces started down stairs&#13;
with Dorothy leading. As they came to the turn of the stairs, they all looked down into&#13;
the laughing eyes of Harold, Dorothy's brother, and two of his college friends, also just&#13;
arrived for the week-end.&#13;
CHAPTE R&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
&#13;
(By Ada Belew)&#13;
Marian stifled a scream and sat limply down on the top step, but Helen pulled her&#13;
up by the arm, and with her handkerchief held firmly over the patch in the pink messaline,&#13;
bowed with the utmost ceremony to Bob, Jack and Harold, as Dorothy presented them.&#13;
In spite of the two speechless guests the meal was by no means a silent one or at all stiff.&#13;
The boys appreciated too well the possibilities a t hand for amusement.&#13;
When dinner was over the girls fled to their room and nothing could coax them down&#13;
again. Helen seized her pencil and pad and took six pages to write her opinion of&#13;
boys. Then, she tacked it up against the wall and every few moments during the process&#13;
of undressing, she stopped to hammer it with her shoe by way of expressing her feeling.&#13;
Dorothy wisely refrained from mentioning the dinner episode and only stuck her head in&#13;
the door to wish them "Good night and pleasant dreams."&#13;
"If you hear me talking in my sleep," wrote Helen, " for goodness sake, don't slap&#13;
me.&#13;
Saturday dawned a perfect autumn day. When the girls awoke they found on their&#13;
table a damp looking package wrapped in brown paper and tied up with twine. On&#13;
opening it they discovered a great cluster of wild asters laid on damp moss, and a note&#13;
which read:&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
"We say we' re twenty kinds of muts,&#13;
W e'll cut the kiddin' out,&#13;
W e feel that we have grown so good,&#13;
Our winglets soon will sprout.&#13;
&#13;
This is a little offering&#13;
In deep humility,&#13;
We pray that when you look at it&#13;
You then will think of me. "&#13;
&#13;
It was signed Bob, Jack and H arold, with evident signs of a struggle as to whose&#13;
name should stand nearest to the " me."&#13;
The day was to be spent at the home of Flora Martin, a friend of Dorothy's, who&#13;
lived at an old country place, called Woodburn. The white horse and carriage were&#13;
called into use and about 10 o'clock in the forenoon, they reached their destination.&#13;
The rest happened so suddenly that the girls never knew exactly how to explain it. They&#13;
&#13;
were left alone for a moment, while the boys took care of the old horse and Dorothy&#13;
had gone to look for Flo, when Flo herself, catching sight of them, came hurrying&#13;
across the lawn and seizing Helen's hand, shouted in her ear: "It was awfully good of&#13;
you to come so early? You are the girls from the Home aren't you? Nod your head&#13;
if you are." Helen was quick to see the joke and nodded her head violently. Dorothy&#13;
came running up and Marian motioned to her to be quiet, while Flo rambled on unconsciously. "Aren't they dear Dottie, they are going to help me serve this afternoon. I&#13;
sent for them up to the Deaf and Dumb Home. Did I tell you there are some people&#13;
coming, just a few from around here, you know." Dorothy saw that her part of the&#13;
program w as to get the boys and make them keep q uiet.&#13;
T he company a rrived early in the afternoon and the girls dressed in white caps and&#13;
aprons and carrying ear trumpets were set to work. Now was their chance to get even&#13;
with their tormentors of the night before. In spite of frantic shoutings in the ear trumpets, B ob found his coffee flavored with salt and Harold's creamed chicken had a&#13;
sickening sweetness.&#13;
"Serves you right, you dubs," said Jack, assuming an air of lofty virtue. Suddenly&#13;
the party were electrified to hear a familiar shout and see a great red automobile rolling&#13;
up the drive. It was packed fu ll of people from school.&#13;
" D otie," cried Flo, catching her arm, "it's a surprise for you, a surprise party,&#13;
d on't you understand ?"&#13;
When things had fina lly settled down to something like q uiet again, the waitresses&#13;
were missing.&#13;
Shout as they might, they were nowhere to be found . " The poor little&#13;
things,'_ said Flo, "they must have gotten frightened and gone home," and then to&#13;
'&#13;
Flora's consternation, D orothy explained the situation.&#13;
At this time the "poor little things" were sitting on a log in the woods, down by the&#13;
river. " I never could stand all that teasing," wrote Marian. ' 'I'd rather be eaten up&#13;
by the toads," replied Helen, drawing her skirt away from one that threatened to approach. So they sat on the log for it seemed to them, weeks. Finally it began to grow&#13;
dusk and creatures never before seen of man seemed to be creeping about in the underbrush. A long way off they heard shouts which were approaching. T he girls tried to&#13;
go toward them, but only went in a circle and came back again to their log. T he&#13;
shouts grew fa inter in the distance.&#13;
" Shall we answer?" wrote Marian in a shaky hand .&#13;
"Not if they never find anything but our bones!" H elen replied m a bold scrawl&#13;
so that M arian might read it in the fa ding light.&#13;
CHAPTER&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
&#13;
(By Catherine Elliott)&#13;
W hile the girls were having such a miserable time on the disconsolate log, the&#13;
group of gay young people at the house were enjoying themselves immensely, but D orothy&#13;
missed her fri ends and called her brother aside. "Say," she said to him, "those poor&#13;
&#13;
........................&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
One- hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
girls have gone off somewhere by themselves. I don't blame them a bit for not wanting&#13;
to meet the school crowd, so you and Jack go entertain them, won't you?" They&#13;
promised to do their best and hurried off. Just as the crowd was leaving, they returned.&#13;
"Why didn't you bring them back with you?" hailed Dorothy.&#13;
"Didn't find them."&#13;
"Where do you suppose they can have gone to?"&#13;
"Oh, I believe I know," interposed Flora, the maid said she thought she saw&#13;
them go towards the woods. Did you look there, boys?"&#13;
"No, never thought of it."&#13;
"Well, you go look there now. I must go home because mother will be worrymg.&#13;
And you bring the girls there as soon as you can."&#13;
Good-byes were said and the boys set out toward the woods, while Jack helped&#13;
Dorothy into the carriage for the homeward drive. This had been safely accomplished&#13;
and the staid white horse had been nodding in his stall almost an hour when the crunch&#13;
of wheels on the gravel driveway brought the anxious watchers down off the porch at a&#13;
run. Sure enough there they were all in a rather dilapidated looking spring wagon, the&#13;
two girls giggling on the back seat, while the two boys sat in the attitude of military&#13;
coachmen waiving a dilapidated whip over the flinching head of an awkward young&#13;
fellow who was crouched against the dashboard and the unheeding back of a stolid bay&#13;
horse.&#13;
"Well, we're awfully glad to see you back, but where did you get that wagon?"&#13;
asked Dorothy.&#13;
"That's the funny part of it," said Harold as he helped the two girls down from their&#13;
high seat. "You see their Highnesses were being kidnapped by this guy here and we&#13;
arrived just in time to rescue them. Here, you man, here's a dollar, you drive on home&#13;
now and keep mighty still or else you '11 get pinched. May I have the honor?" he asked,&#13;
bowing low before Helen, who took his proffered arm, and led the way to the house.&#13;
"What do you mean by this foolishness?" inquired Dorothy. "Stop laughing and&#13;
tell us."&#13;
"Well," began Bob, "we hurried to the woods and there by a log we found the&#13;
deserted ear-trumpets of our former maids. We heard some kind of a disturbance down&#13;
the road and a girl's distant giggle, so we beat it in that direction. We found that&#13;
fellow with his wagon, the girls in the back seat. We thought it was a clear case of&#13;
girl-napping, so we clipped after him. We made a wild running jump, let out a&#13;
mighty yell, and landing on the wagon steps, poked our flashlights in his eyes. He&#13;
crumpled up like a rag on the bottom of the wagon, then we turned the enterprise right&#13;
about face and here we are," ending with a flourish.&#13;
"Yes, but how did he get the girls?" queried Dorothy.&#13;
"That's easy enough," chimed in Harold. "You see he's the new hired hand at&#13;
the Deaf and Dumb Home and he was sent after those girls who didn't come. Well,&#13;
somehow he wandered around till he found these girls, saw the ear trumpets, didn't know&#13;
he had the wrong parties as they had nothing to say for themselves, , so he up and packs&#13;
them into his wagon. We didn't know this at first and were pretty hard on him, jumping&#13;
on him in good style."&#13;
&#13;
"He stammered and stuttered around awhile and we soon found he was not to&#13;
blame, but it was too good a chance to miss so we stuffed him properly, said these were&#13;
foreign princesses who didn't know our language and he would be in a deuce of a fix&#13;
for treating them so. Say, but I'm hungry. Get something to eat, and I'll answer any&#13;
question you care to ask."&#13;
This plea had been expected and prepared for and after a meal during which the&#13;
boys were too busy to tease the girls, the sufferers wrote out for Dorothy, a rather mixed&#13;
duet of their trials adding details entirely omitted by the boys.&#13;
"Well, you must certainly be tired out, so run on upstairs to your room, for it's&#13;
getting late." This they gladly did and found a note on the table. It was addressed&#13;
to both and read :&#13;
"STRICKEN FRIENDS :-We forgive the doctored eats; will you go for a walk tomorrow morning at seven. Jack is going to ask Dorothy. Answer by a note through&#13;
the window. (We shall act like cherubs). Please come.&#13;
"HAROLD and Bob."&#13;
"Shall we accept?" wrote Helen. "I think that throwing a note out of the window&#13;
IS silly."&#13;
"Of course we shall accept," answered Marian. "I think it is romantic," and she&#13;
suited the action to the word by taking a sheet of paper and promptly writing it. Just&#13;
then came the sound of soft singing from beneath the window. In an instant the light&#13;
was out and the two girls were looking from the window at the moonlight flooded yard&#13;
and the two serenaders. As they finished the concert and moved away singing, "Good&#13;
Night, Ladies," Helen dropped the note, which Harold caught as it fluttered and acknowledged by an upward wave of his hand.&#13;
The soothing quietness seemed to make their enforced silence more bearable and&#13;
they went to bed feeling more contented with their lot than they had for two days past.&#13;
The walk next morning was as great a success as three model young men on their&#13;
best behavior could make it. The girls scarcely missed the power of speech, so entertainingly did their companions carry on the one-sided conversation, seeming satisfied with&#13;
smiling attention and an occasional laugh from their otherwise silent companions. As&#13;
the girls dressed for church, Marian wrote: " I have decided that some boys are rather&#13;
nice to have around some times." Helen nodded her agreement.&#13;
The attitude of their companions of the morning was somewhat changed as they&#13;
walked to church for added to the jolly comradeship, was an air of extreme deference,&#13;
rather incongruous with the usual off-hand manner of the youth. This was soon accounted for by the whispering together of several small boys who passed them of something about princesses.&#13;
"It's that horrid story those foolish boys told that man last night," thought Dorothy.&#13;
As soon as the service was over, the boys whispered, "Let's hurry out or Dorothy will&#13;
proceed to introduce you under your own proper names and so spoil the illusion." Before they knew it they were once more on the way home, feeling like Chinese empresses&#13;
or some such dignitary as the boys strutted proudly beside them.&#13;
"Whatever did those boys tell everybody," wondered Marian. " I do hope noth-&#13;
&#13;
..,,,,,,,,................&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ouc hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�ing else happens to make us conspicuous for I know I should die if I could not say&#13;
something."&#13;
Her fears were groundless because nothing happened to destroy the quiet restfulness&#13;
of a Sunday afternoon, but the inquisitive gazing of a number of small boys through the&#13;
hedge and the 'phoning of gossiping neighbors. As the girls packed their suitcases that&#13;
evening, Helen wrote: "I am glad we are going to travel. I feel like a brute not to&#13;
be able to thank Dorothy's mother."&#13;
"Let's write notes," suggested Marian, and this was soon accomplished.&#13;
"Well," began Harold, as they stood waiting for the train on the station platform,&#13;
"we are extremely glad to have seen you girls, and we feel sure you have charming&#13;
voices. We hope we shall have an opportunity to hear them soon. Now, Dot, please be&#13;
careful with them and don't let the man from the Deaf and Dumb Home get a hold of&#13;
them again. Good-bye, here's the train."&#13;
A swift scramble for seats, a silent journey home, and at last they were back at&#13;
school. They felt as though they would simply burst forth into torrents of speech if they&#13;
stayed down stairs with the girls, so they crawled into bed at a preposterously early&#13;
hour and were soon asleep. The next morning, as soon as they awoke, both started at&#13;
once to shout aloud the beauties of being able to talk again and when Dorothy came in&#13;
they were at it like a pair of magpies.&#13;
"Girls, girls," she exclaimed, "you scold like a cage of monkeys. Do be quiet a&#13;
second and do it one at a time."&#13;
"Oh, say Dorothy," wailed Helen, "do tell us if your mother and brother thought&#13;
we were crazy. We just felt like perfect freaks the whole time, didn't we Marian?"&#13;
"I should say we did," Marian agreed. "I was never in such agony in all my&#13;
life."&#13;
"Well, you needn't to worry," consoled their friend, "because mother felt so sorry&#13;
for you and thought we girls were terrible to ask you to do such a thing and then well,&#13;
don't worry about what the boys think about you, for- well, I know something beautiful."&#13;
"What is it? Can't you tell?" This in ecstatic chorus.&#13;
"Well, if you will keep forever mum, I will tell you, because I think you really&#13;
deserve some reward. Last evening Harold came to me and said he and Bob were&#13;
wondering if you two girls would come up for their annual frat house party at Thanksgiving if they asked you. He said they both would like to have you. Of course I said&#13;
very calmly that I judged you would accept if you did not have any previous arrangements."&#13;
"Accept! Previous arrangements! Why I would keep still for a week for such a&#13;
chance," exclaimed Marian.&#13;
"You'll go with Jack won't you, Dorothy?" queried Helen. "Oh, goody, and do&#13;
you suppose they will really ask us?"&#13;
"Oh, I am sure of it," said Dorothy. "What dresses will you take?"&#13;
"Oh, there's the breakfast bell, let's go. I could endure things a thousand times&#13;
worse than we have had for such a glorious event as that house party," chattered Helen.&#13;
"Three college boys, three college girls, three silent days, three cheers for house&#13;
party," chimed Helen as the trio gayly hurried down stairs.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
��•&#13;
&#13;
Alethia&#13;
Organized February 12, 1910&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
. · Champagne and Chocolate Brown&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Aristo Philain (Lovers of the best)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ....... . NELLIE FLETCHER&#13;
Vice President . . . . HULDA KREUTZ&#13;
Secretary . . . . . . . . . . JOCY&#13;
CARTER&#13;
Treasurer ......... SARA BLEAKLEY&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
ANNETTA HALL&#13;
ALMA WILHELM&#13;
RUTH FRENCH&#13;
GERTRUDE MOSIER&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
SARA BLEAKLEY&#13;
JOCY CARTER&#13;
GERTRUDE MOSIER&#13;
FLORENCE LONG&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Sara Bleakley&#13;
Annetta Hall&#13;
&#13;
Edith Bowers&#13;
Eva Leazer&#13;
&#13;
Joey Carter&#13;
Mary McCutcheon&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Myrtle Britton&#13;
&#13;
Lulu Hawcott&#13;
Alma Wilhelm&#13;
&#13;
Florence Long&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ruth French&#13;
&#13;
Kittie Nurse&#13;
&#13;
Fern Marquart&#13;
Olive Jones&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Ona Marsh&#13;
Gertrude Mosier&#13;
&#13;
Ellen Wan berg&#13;
Grace Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Alice Dewey&#13;
Flora Searls&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
On e hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-three&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�Alethia Calendar&#13;
April 14, 1912-lmpromptu Program.&#13;
April 20, 1912-Spread.&#13;
April 2 7, 1912-0riginal Farce by New Girls.&#13;
May I I, 1912-Senior Aletheias entertain at H. Olmstead's.&#13;
May 17. 1912-Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
May 25, 1912-Senior Program at Ruth French's.&#13;
June I, 1912-Senior Aletheias entertained at F. Long's.&#13;
June 12, 191 2-Society Reunion.&#13;
September 28, 1912-Florence Long and Edith Bowers "At Home."&#13;
October 12, 1912-Spread at Alma Wilhelm's.&#13;
October 24, 191 2-Reception for Mrs. J. A Whitaker.&#13;
November 2, 1912-Hallowe'en Party at Kittie Nurse's.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Closed Door at Ruth French's.&#13;
November 22, 1912-Party for New Girls at Sara Bleakley' s.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Phoenix Society entertained at Long's.&#13;
November 30, 1912-Afternoon Party at Ruth French's.&#13;
December 7, 1912-Annual Banquet at Martin Hotel.&#13;
December 13, 1912-Reception for New Girls at Milligan's.&#13;
January 25, 1913-Spread with Gertrude Mosier.&#13;
February 1, 191 3-Celebration of Third Anniversary.&#13;
February 8, 191 3-Annual Baby Party with Misses Marquart, Marsh and Jones.&#13;
February I 7, 191 3-Mr. and Mrs. Whitaker entertain Phoenix and Aletheias at&#13;
Valentine Party.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Mr. and Mrs. Walter Breaw entertain Aletheias and Phoenix.&#13;
March 7, 191 3-Election of Officers for Spring Term.&#13;
March 15, 1913-St. Patrick Party.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-five&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�Phoenix&#13;
Organized November 1, 1912&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Blue and Gray&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Deeds Not Words&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ..... . . .... . ... FRED HIME BAUCH&#13;
Vice President ... ... . . .. . JOHN RALSTON&#13;
Secretary .. . . . .... ... .. . HOWARD GRAHAM&#13;
Treasurer .... .. . . ....... JOHN ENGLE:&#13;
&#13;
W inter&#13;
JOHN RALSTON&#13;
HOWARD GRAHAM&#13;
WALTER BREAW&#13;
LESLIE LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS HIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Howard Graham&#13;
&#13;
John Ralston&#13;
J UNIORS&#13;
John Engle&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
W alter Breaw&#13;
&#13;
Fred Himebauch&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Leslie Logan&#13;
Clarence Harris&#13;
&#13;
S. Wesley Deakin&#13;
Richard Mitchell&#13;
The Phoenix Literary Society was organized November 1, 1912, because of the&#13;
urgent need that was felt by some for another literary society in which young men could&#13;
come together and secure the benefits of the most helpful intellectual, social and moral&#13;
training to fit them for their life work. They organized on the most democratic basis&#13;
possible because they believe that every student should have the training which literary&#13;
societies give, and that this should be a possible attainment for all, regardless of any&#13;
student's circumstances.&#13;
Although less than a year old, the Phoenix Society is already taking its place in the&#13;
This year orators captured second place in the&#13;
forensic activities of the school.&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest and first and third in the Home Prohibition Contest. This&#13;
is certainly a fine beginning and augurs well for the years to come.&#13;
&#13;
Phoenix Calendar&#13;
November 1, 1912-First Business Meeting.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Guest of Aletheias at M iss Long's.&#13;
January 9, 191 3-Closed D oor.&#13;
January 16, 1913-First Closed Door in N ew H all.&#13;
February 1 7, 191 3-Guests of Mr. and M rs. Whitaker.&#13;
February 24, 1913- Aletheia-Phoenix P arty at Breaw's.&#13;
March 1 3, 1913- First Preliminary D ebate.&#13;
March 20, 191 3-Second P reliminary Debate.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-seven&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
&#13;
�-&#13;
&#13;
Organized November 4, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Light Blue and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Utile Dulce (The useful with the pleasing)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ..... . . . .. RACHEL CooK&#13;
Vice President ..... HAZEL LANE&#13;
Secretary . ..... . .. .ANNA RIEKE&#13;
Treasurer .. . ...... ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
AUDREE DAVIE&#13;
INEZ WHITNEY&#13;
IsoBEL WEBB&#13;
SARA WHITEHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ANNA RIEKE&#13;
MINNIE NELSON&#13;
MARIE WOOD&#13;
BERTHA SATER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Audree Davie&#13;
Hazel Shumaker&#13;
Inez Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Minnie Nelson&#13;
Sara Whitehouse&#13;
&#13;
Anna Rieke&#13;
Marie Wood&#13;
Ruby Flinn&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Ruth Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Isobel&#13;
&#13;
Webb&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Anna Beard&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Florence Shumaker&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
&#13;
Linda Damerow&#13;
Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Bertha Sater&#13;
Doris Wood&#13;
Ida Day&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Beulah Elder&#13;
Blanche Thompson&#13;
Elizabeth Shannon&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Johnson&#13;
Jean Thomson&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
Helen Roe&#13;
Florence Williams&#13;
Viola Feller&#13;
&#13;
�...&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum Calendar&#13;
April 20, 1912-Annual Violet Luncheon for Academy Girls.&#13;
May 28, 1912-Picnic at Riverside Boat Club.&#13;
June 11, 1912-Society Reunion Breakfast.&#13;
September 2 7, 1912-Philomathean Reception to Athenaeums.&#13;
September 28-30, 1912- Annual Rieke House Party.&#13;
October 3, 1912-Four O'clock Luncheon at Beatrice Wright's.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Six O'clock Dinner at Mrs. J. E. Ewer's.&#13;
October 7, 1912- Joint Business Meeting with Philos.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception to the Philos at Isobel Webb's.&#13;
November 2 3, 1912-Bonnie Robinson Entertained Athenaeums at 7 O'clock Dinner.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Presen tation of Athenaeum Queen at Webb's.&#13;
December 2, 1912-Progressive Breakfast at Raw's, Ewer's, Bridenbaugh's and Day's&#13;
December 6, 1912-Tenth Annual Banquet at the Martin Hotel.&#13;
December 13, 1912-Election of N ew Girls.&#13;
December 14, 1912-Reception for New Girls at Ethel Ewer's.&#13;
December 20, 1912-Christmas Party with Philos.&#13;
January 11, 1913-First Gathering of the New Year at Trenary's.&#13;
January 25, 1913-Mattie Bridenbaugh Entertained Athenaeums.&#13;
February 1, 191 3-Bess Shannon entertained Athenaeums.&#13;
February 3, 191 3-Mrs. Kanthlener entertained Athenaeums at Musical.&#13;
February 8, 1913-Philo-Athenaeum Party at Wright's.&#13;
February 15, 191 3-Informal Reception for the Misses McCandliss and Feller.&#13;
February 22, 191 3-Washington Party at Miss Flinn's.&#13;
March 1, 191 3-Mrs. Ed. Backemeyer entertained the Athenaeums.&#13;
March 8, 1913-Dedication of the New Hall with Philo-Athenaeum Alumni.&#13;
March 15, 191 3-N ew Girls entertained in New Hall.&#13;
March 17, 191 3-Formal Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
0 ne hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean&#13;
Organized October 14, 1892&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and Maroon&#13;
&#13;
Motto, Vestigia Nulla Rectrorsum (No slipping backward)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ......... .RAY HESS&#13;
Vice President ..... .EARL BURGESS&#13;
Secretary .. ....... HERBERT FRENCH&#13;
Treasurer ......... HAROLD COBBS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
JOHN BRIGGS&#13;
H. G. MERTEN&#13;
BEN HOLBERT&#13;
M. 0. INSKO&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
HORACE MERTON&#13;
J. H. WINTERRINGER&#13;
R. C. PRICHARD&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
J. E. Briggs&#13;
G. W. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
H. G. Merton&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
H. Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
H. M. Cobbs&#13;
Victor Hornney&#13;
&#13;
H erbert French&#13;
&#13;
M. 0. Insko&#13;
R. N. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
Ben Holbert&#13;
E. W. Johns&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
R. R. Knotts&#13;
&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Ralph Prichard&#13;
Cyril Upham&#13;
&#13;
Earl Hiett&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
J . V. Madison&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
D. C. Cooper •&#13;
Clifford Rieke&#13;
William Shriever&#13;
&#13;
One hundred 'fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
N. C. Gray&#13;
Earl Williams&#13;
&#13;
�Pieria&#13;
Organized October 4, 1908&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
F eliciter, F ortiter, Fideliter ( Happy, Brave, Faithful)&#13;
OFFIC ERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ...... MYRTLE SEIFERT&#13;
VERA ROWE&#13;
Vice President. . JEAN WHITTEMORE. HELEN GIEHM&#13;
Secretary ...... PEARL WILSON&#13;
ED NA ALLEN&#13;
reasurer ... . .. VERA ROWE&#13;
LOLA BROWNELL&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
JEAN WHITTEMORE.&#13;
EDNA ALLEN&#13;
MARGARET KIFER&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Vera Rowe&#13;
&#13;
Susan Eads&#13;
&#13;
Jean Whittemore&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Caroline Eads&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Bernice Bowman&#13;
&#13;
Nellie U pham&#13;
Lola Brownell&#13;
Helen Giehm&#13;
Lucille Morgan&#13;
&#13;
Zenana Osborne&#13;
Edna Allen&#13;
Helen Gullickson&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Kifer&#13;
Elsie Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
.Ruth Bailey&#13;
Florence Wilkinson&#13;
&#13;
Frances Craig&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Helen Laub&#13;
Margaret Lockin&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Ruth Fall&#13;
&#13;
'•,,........&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty -six&#13;
&#13;
One hu ndred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Marion Metcalf&#13;
Ethel Brown&#13;
Marion Simme&#13;
&#13;
�-··.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
Pieria Calendar&#13;
May 27, 1912-Senior Pi's Entertain Society.&#13;
June 1, 1912-Hayrack Party to Melhurst Farm.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Joint Boat Ride up Sioux River.&#13;
June 9, 1912-Banquet to Graduates at Lucille Metcalf's.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Reunion.&#13;
September 2 7, 1912-Ionian-Pieria Party at Helen Gullickson' s.&#13;
October 2, 1912-"Grape Tea" at Lola Brownell's.&#13;
October 14, 1912-Luncheon at the West Hotel in Honor of Fifth Anniversary.&#13;
October 16, 1912-Ravine Party.&#13;
October 21, 1912-lonian-Pi Husking Bee at Ionian House.&#13;
October 31, 1912-Entertained by Mrs. Kanthlener at Hallowe'en Frolic.&#13;
November 2, 1912-Hallowe'en Party at Kifer's.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception for Ionians.&#13;
November 23, 1912-Informal Reception to New Girls.&#13;
December 3, 1912-Yellow Luncheon at Lucille Metcalf's.&#13;
December 5, 1912-Annual Banquet at Martin Hotel.&#13;
December 14, 1912-Reception to New Members.&#13;
December 18, 1912-Christmas Party at Frances Craig's.&#13;
January 28, 1913-New Officers Entertained at Kifer's.&#13;
February 1, 1913-Joint Closed Door at Gullickson's.&#13;
February 14, 191 3- Valentine Tea.&#13;
February 22, 191 3-Formal Initiation.&#13;
February 24, 191 3-"George Washington" Party with lonians.&#13;
March 8, 191 3-Closed Door at Home of Ethel Collier.&#13;
March 15, 1913-Closed Door Program in Hall.&#13;
March 19, 191 3-St. Patrick Tea in Hall.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
.. .&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Organized January 6, 1909&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Possunt quad Credere Possunt (They are able because they believe)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ... . .. . . .A E . KENT&#13;
Vice President .... J. H. EDGE&#13;
Secretary .... .....CLARENCE CRAIG&#13;
Treasurer . ...... . HERMAN LUEDER&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
Fall&#13;
FRANK ]OHNSON&#13;
J. H. EDGE&#13;
R. W. HENDERSON&#13;
RoY GARLOCK&#13;
L. J. BRIDENBAUGH HARRY FOWLER&#13;
A H. BRUNELLE&#13;
]AMES D OLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Joseph H. Edge&#13;
&#13;
Roy&#13;
&#13;
H. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Frank P. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
A H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
Earl S. F ullbrook&#13;
&#13;
R. W. Henderson&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
T. 8. Bassett&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Carl Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
L. Bridenbaugh&#13;
Herman Lueder&#13;
Everett Ostling&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Howard Allen&#13;
Harry Fowler&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty&#13;
&#13;
Charles Berkstresser&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
Frank Oliver&#13;
John Slater&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
Calvin Besore&#13;
Harrison Kilborne&#13;
Carl W. Sass&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Calendar&#13;
April 22, 1912--Grand Public.&#13;
May 7, 1912-Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 4, 1912-Final Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Farewell Reception to Graduates.&#13;
September 16, 1912-Watermelon Feed at the Ionian House.&#13;
September 2 I , 1912-Rush Stag at the Ionian House.&#13;
September 27, 1912-Ionian-Pi Party at Helen Gullickson's.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Joint Business Meeting with Pierias.&#13;
October 14, 1912-Second Degree Initiation.&#13;
October 21, 1912-Husking Bee.&#13;
October 28, 1912-Closed Door Program.&#13;
November 4, 1912-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
November I 4, 191 2-Won from Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 15, 1912-Won from Philos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception for Ionians by Pierias.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
December 9, 1912-Stag Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
December 10, 1912-Closed Door Program.&#13;
January 13, 191 3-Stunt Night at the Ionian House.&#13;
January 27, 1913-Travel Program.&#13;
February 1, 191 3-Joint Closed Door.&#13;
February 10, 191 3-Extempore Program.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Washington's Birthday Party in the New Hall.&#13;
March 7, 1913- First Semi-final Debate.&#13;
March I 7, 191 3-0pen Door Play "Freezing a Mother-in-Law."&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Zetalethean&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
Organized November I I , I 89 7&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Scarlet and Black&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Esse Quam Videre (To be rather than to seem)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President .... FLORENCE ANTHONY&#13;
Vice PresidentMAUDE GILLIN&#13;
Secretary .... MADGE GILLIN&#13;
Treasurer .... RUTH PRENTICE&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
LOTTIE SANDERS&#13;
ELLA CAMPBELL&#13;
HELEN WEDGWOOD&#13;
LOIS CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT&#13;
EvA RANDOLPH&#13;
GRACE LOGAN&#13;
FLORENCE MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Ella Campbell&#13;
Catherine Elliott&#13;
Florence Montgomery&#13;
Lottie Sanders&#13;
&#13;
Florence Cain&#13;
Grace Logan&#13;
Eva Randolph&#13;
&#13;
Lorna Distad&#13;
Alice Mower&#13;
Edna Simon&#13;
Helen Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
] UNIORS&#13;
Ada Belew&#13;
&#13;
Lula Kindlespire&#13;
&#13;
Mabel Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Olive Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth James&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Mabel King&#13;
&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Mabel Irwin&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
Alice Thornburg&#13;
Lovice Strobel&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Mary Wedgwood&#13;
Anna Williams&#13;
&#13;
�Zetalethean Calendar&#13;
April 13, 1912-Zets entertain the Other Society Girls.&#13;
April 16, 1912-Zets Entertain the F acuity Ladies.&#13;
April 19, 1912-Luncheon for High School and Academy Girls.&#13;
April 20, 1912-Annual Hen Party at Hazel Siman's.&#13;
May 11, 1912-Zets entertain their Mothers at Luella Haskins'.&#13;
May 19, 1912-Annual Otho Breakfast for Zets.&#13;
May 30, 1912-Annual Picnic at Talbot's Farm.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Society Reunion.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Annual Tally-Ho Ride.&#13;
October 18, 1912-Joint Party with Othos at Montgomery's.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception for Othos at Luella Haskins'.&#13;
November 29, 1912-Barlow Hall Party.&#13;
December 2, 1912-Luncheon at Eva Randolph's.&#13;
December 9, 1912-Annual Banquet at Martin.&#13;
December 14, 1912-Dinner at Wilma Beam's.&#13;
January 27, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Othos at MacDonald's.&#13;
February 8, 1913-F reshmen Zets Entertain Society at Mary Wedgwood's.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Othos in New Hall.&#13;
February 2 7, 191 3-Reception for Mrs. Catherine 0. McCoy.&#13;
March 8, 191 3-Closed Door in Hall.&#13;
March 14, 1913-Installation of New Officers.&#13;
March 15, 1913-"Spread."&#13;
March 1 7, 191 3-St. Patrick's Day Luncheon.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
One hundred six ty-s ix&#13;
&#13;
sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian&#13;
Organized November 7, I 891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Suaviter in M ado, F ortiter in Re (Gentle in Manner, Resolute in Deed)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ... . .... .L. H. KINGSBURY&#13;
Vice President .... V. E. MONTGOMERY&#13;
Secretary . . .......S. A. BRALEY&#13;
Treasurer ....... . J. D. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
Spring&#13;
V. E. MONTGOMERY F. B. ROGERS&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
w. B. BASS&#13;
H. P. MORGAN&#13;
w. H. BOWKER&#13;
]. D. KOLP&#13;
J. D. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
S. A Braley&#13;
L. H. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
W. C. Evans&#13;
&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
]UNIORS&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
]. D. Kolp&#13;
&#13;
H. C. Bigglestone&#13;
W . A McCurdy&#13;
L. L. Wright .&#13;
&#13;
H. A. Gorder&#13;
H. P. Morgan&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
R. W. Austin&#13;
B . E. Evans&#13;
W. H. Payne&#13;
&#13;
W. B. Costar&#13;
G. D. McKinney&#13;
H. C. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
&#13;
H. V. Dunham&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
]. F . Pollock&#13;
W. A Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
C. A Ellis&#13;
G. B. Patrick&#13;
P. C. Weatherby&#13;
&#13;
L. 0. Gingerich&#13;
B. S. Reynolds&#13;
N. L. Williams&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Lawton&#13;
B. W. Riner&#13;
P. H. Woodke&#13;
&#13;
.....&#13;
&#13;
One hundre d sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
April 30, 1912-Reception to Zets.&#13;
May 19, 1912-0tho Breakfast to Zets.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Finals of First Gold Medal Debate Series.&#13;
June 10, 1912-Graduating Exercises; Finals of Second Gold. Medal Debate Series.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Annual Society Reunion.&#13;
September 30, 1912-Annual Otho Stag.&#13;
October 18, 1912- Joint Party with Zets at Montgomery Home.&#13;
October 25, 1912-0pen Door.&#13;
November 13, 1912-lnter-Society Debate with Philos.&#13;
November 14, 1912-lnter-Society Debate with lonians.&#13;
November 16, 1912- Zets entertain Othos at Haskins Home.&#13;
November 29, 1912-Zets entertain Othos at Barlow Hall Party.&#13;
January 20, 191 3-lnitiation.&#13;
January 27, 1913-Joint. Party with Zets at MacDonald's.&#13;
February 15, 191 3-Annual Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
February 17, 191 3-0pen Door Program.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Joint Closed Door in the New Hall.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
·One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seven ty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
severnty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Organized February, 1902&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and Wh ite&#13;
&#13;
Mott o&#13;
&#13;
To Possess the Aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED WooD&#13;
&#13;
IDA ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Wood&#13;
&#13;
Elda Bridenbaugh&#13;
&#13;
DeVeda Mills&#13;
&#13;
Mary Harding&#13;
&#13;
Jessie Whittlesey&#13;
&#13;
Irene Robar&#13;
&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Byram&#13;
&#13;
Lulu Wiese&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Cummings&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Smith&#13;
&#13;
Olive Scott&#13;
&#13;
Maude Ewer&#13;
&#13;
Anna Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Elvira Widenfeller&#13;
&#13;
Martha Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Harriet Mattson&#13;
&#13;
Caroline Ward&#13;
&#13;
Merlin Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
Florence Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Lyle Chandler&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
May 16, 1912-An nual Aesthesian-Adelphian Picnic.&#13;
May 24, 1912-Chafing Dish Party.&#13;
Septe:nber 20, 1912-Japanese Party at Marion Metcalf's.&#13;
September 28, 1912-Aesthesian-Adelphian Hayrack Ride.&#13;
September 30, 1912-Spread for New Academy Girls.&#13;
October 30, 1912- Aesthesian-Adelphian Hall owe' en Party.&#13;
November 28, 1912- Initiation.&#13;
December 11, 1912-Reception to Adelphian Debaters.&#13;
January 16, 191 3-Joint Closed Door with Adelphians.&#13;
February 17, 1913-Party at Lyle Chandler's Home.&#13;
February 24, 191 3- Closed Door in Society Hall.&#13;
March 15, 1913-St. Patrick Party .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
�Adelphian&#13;
Organized June 18, 1903&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Cerise and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Carpe Diem (Sieze the Opportunity)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
· Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
BERNARD BROWN&#13;
&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
WALTER BERKEY&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
April 15, 1912-Reception to Aesthesians.&#13;
May 6, 1912-Adelphian-Aesthesian Breakfast.&#13;
May 28, 1912- Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
September 20, 1912-Annual Adelphian Stag.&#13;
September 26, 1912-Annual Hayrack Ride.&#13;
Chester Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Merle Worden&#13;
&#13;
Reuben Walin&#13;
&#13;
October 30, 19 12- Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
Edmund Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
&#13;
November 22, 191 2-Won from Hawkeyes in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
&#13;
George Blodgett&#13;
&#13;
Glenn Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Louis Haitz&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Walter Berkey&#13;
&#13;
Lyle Piper&#13;
&#13;
Milton Lory&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Rice&#13;
&#13;
Sherman Potter&#13;
&#13;
December 15, 1912-Adelphian-Aesthesian Vacation Party.&#13;
January 16, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Aesthesians.&#13;
&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
&#13;
Leo Stevens&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
February 24, 19 13- Second Degree Initiation.&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
1, 191 3- Annual Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
&#13;
March 10, 191 3-Closed Door Program.&#13;
&#13;
,..&#13;
&#13;
'."&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Crescent&#13;
Organized June 11, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Nile Green and White&#13;
W e Succeed by Doing&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
AMBER GARLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
ALICE HALLETT&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May 12, 1912-Hawkeye-Crescent Picnic.&#13;
May 25, 1912-House Party at Hauswald's, Merrill, Iowa.&#13;
June 8, 1912-Crescent-Hawkeye Farewell Party at Watson's.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
June 10, 1912-Breakfast.&#13;
Septembe r 14, 1912-Tea for New Girls at Nellie Watson's.&#13;
September 16, 1912-Hawkeye-Crescent Reception for New Academy Girls.&#13;
September 19, 1912-Tea at Alice Hallett's.&#13;
September 28, 1912-Joint Closed Door with Hawkeyes.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Mrs. Pillsbury entertained Crescents.&#13;
October 12, 1912-Japanese Party at Himebaugh's.&#13;
October 19, 1912-Initiation at Watson's.&#13;
October 28, 1912-Hawkeye-Crescent Hall owe' en Party.&#13;
November 23, 1912-Crescent Reception for Hawkeye Debaters.&#13;
January 11 , 191 3-Luncheon in Honor of Miss Watson.&#13;
February 4, 191 3-Crescent Spread.&#13;
February 6, 19 13-Crescent Tea.&#13;
February 15, 191 3-Hawkeye-Crescent Valentine Party at Miss Graham's.&#13;
&#13;
.•.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Organized September 27, I 899&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Cold and Silver&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma Sine Pulvere (No victory without Dust)&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring&#13;
BEN RINER&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
ORIN BELL&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
0. 8.&#13;
&#13;
CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May I 5, I 9 I 2-Annual Hawkeye-Crescent Picnic.&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
May 30, I 9 I 2-Final Gold Medal D ebate Series.&#13;
September I 6, I 9 I 2 -Hawkeye-Crescent Reception to New Academy Students.&#13;
&#13;
David Armburster&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Garner Osborn&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Clark Harris&#13;
&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
&#13;
Orin Bell&#13;
&#13;
Wilber Hickman&#13;
&#13;
Lewis Beebe&#13;
&#13;
Francis Bondhus&#13;
&#13;
Fred Koch&#13;
&#13;
Axel Hemmingsen&#13;
&#13;
Oscar Carlson&#13;
&#13;
Herman Koch&#13;
&#13;
Zebbie Christensen&#13;
&#13;
October I 5, I 9 I 2- Initiation.&#13;
October 3 I, I 9 I 2-Hallowe'en Party.&#13;
November 23, I 9 I 2-Reception to Debaters by Crescents.&#13;
February I 5, I 9 I 3-Hawkeye-Crescent Valentine Party.&#13;
March 3, I 9 I 3-Annual Banquet at West Hotel.&#13;
March I 0, I 9 I 3-Gold Medal Debate Series.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,,•'&#13;
&#13;
, ,,•'&#13;
&#13;
• One hundred eighty-one&#13;
One hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
�....&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
�;&#13;
&#13;
..•&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian&#13;
ALLAN&#13;
V1cToR&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
Reporter Staff&#13;
&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
HELEN GI EH M&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON&#13;
&#13;
LAURA B E LT&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT&#13;
JOSEPH EDGE&#13;
MYRON INSKO&#13;
FRANKIE KNIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Lectures&#13;
A thletics&#13;
Locals&#13;
Social&#13;
Associations&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
This staff constitutes the brains and the brawn of one of the most enterprising college sheets in the Middle West. The Collegian R eporter is purely a student enterprise.&#13;
It was organized in the fall of 1896, though it received its present title some time later.&#13;
From that time it has been record ing the doings and the do' s of students, college and&#13;
vicinity with varying degrees of success. O ccasionally it comes to the rescue of the&#13;
faculty with very timely advice upon such matters as "Suppression of Promiscuous Fussing, " "Conservation of College Spirit," "Inflated Valuation of P edagogical Acumen,"&#13;
"Evils of F acuity Censorship," and many other eq ually important subjects. Altogether&#13;
its history has been one of phenominal progress and it has in these few short years become&#13;
one of the leaders of the state in college journalism.&#13;
&#13;
.....................,,,,,,,•'&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-flve&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
- -&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
JocY CARTER&#13;
Olive HARTZELL&#13;
FLOREN CE MONTGOMERY&#13;
NELLIE UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
Catherine Elliott ... . .. .. ..... ... ....... . . .. ... .... .. .. .... ... . . Social&#13;
Mabel Irwin ... ... ... ...... ... .. ... .. .... .. ..... . ... . . . . ... Extension&#13;
Edna Allen ... ..... . ........ .... .... . ... .. .. .... ... . .... Intercollegiate&#13;
Bertha Sater ..... ... . .. . . . .. .. . . . ... ... . ..... .. .. . . .. . .. . .. Devotional&#13;
Anna Rieke .. . .. . ........ . . . ...... . . . .... . . . . . .......... . . . . . . Bible&#13;
&#13;
Young Men's Christian Association Cabinet&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
W. A&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
McCuRDY&#13;
&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
L. 0. GINGERICH&#13;
S. A BRAILEY&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
F . E. Burgess . ... .. ... . .. . ... ... .. . . . .......... .. .. ... . . . Bible Study&#13;
D. L. Wickens ... . , ...... . . . .... . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. .... Devotional&#13;
C. T. Craig .. . .. .. .. .. . . . . ... .. . .. . . . .. . ... . .. . . . ... ... . . .... Social&#13;
J. E. Briggs . . . . .. .. . ... . .. . . .... .. .. . . . . .. ... ... . .... . . .. Membership&#13;
H. P. Morgan ... .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. . . . . .. . .... . ... ... .... .. . Finance&#13;
A. C. Lemon . .......... . .. . .... . ... . .. ... .. .. .. ..... . ·. .... Extension&#13;
R. R. Vernon ..... .. . ... .. .. . . .. . . . . ... . ... . .. ... ... .. .. New Students&#13;
H. G. Merten . ... . ... . . ... . . .. .. . ..... ... .. ... . . ... ... .... Missionary&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,&#13;
&#13;
,,,,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
O nc hundred&#13;
&#13;
ei g hty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�OFFICERS&#13;
ALLAN LEMON&#13;
HAROLD POLLOCK&#13;
PAUL MacCOLLIN&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
Student Manager&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
Carl Nelson&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Robert Mitchell&#13;
Clare Lawton&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
Allan Lemon&#13;
Roy Garlock&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
Arthur Johnson&#13;
John Madison&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
Harold Pollock&#13;
Fletcher Pollock&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
Lisle Hosford&#13;
&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
William McCurdy&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
Herbert French&#13;
&#13;
Pianist&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club&#13;
The Morningside College Glee Club was organized during the fall of 191 0 by&#13;
Professor 0. A. Morse. The first two years little concert work was done except the&#13;
Annual Home Concert, there being only one or two concerts given outside the city.&#13;
Though the Club did good work considering its youthfulness, the present year is really&#13;
the first time the Club has taken a place in the state as a high class musical organization.&#13;
This success is due largely to the excellent instruction of Professor Paul MacCollin,&#13;
formerly of Oberlin College, and a thorough master of glee club work in all its phases.&#13;
The Club made its first extended tour last Christmas vacation giving twelve concerts.&#13;
During the Easter recess they made another shorter tour visiting a few of the towns in&#13;
the northern part of the state. Thus the Glee Club is taking its place among the other&#13;
student activities and is carrying the interests of old M. C. to the people whose support&#13;
and good will we most need. It is demonstrating to our constituency among other things&#13;
the true college spirit and enthusiasm as found in the modern small college of which&#13;
Morningside is the highest type.&#13;
&#13;
hundred eighty -eight&#13;
One hundred eighty-n i n e&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Agora Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
RUTH RIEKE&#13;
MABEL PECAUT&#13;
MABEL IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
For the past several years, a need has been felt among the girls of Morningside&#13;
College fo r a closer fellowship and co-operation as a student body, in order to gain for&#13;
the body of the girls as a whole all the advantages and opportunities for development&#13;
that should in the nature of things obtain in the pursuance of a college courses. To this&#13;
end, through the patient efforts of Miss Ferguson, the "Agora Club" was organized&#13;
shortly after Christmas vacation. The chief aim of the organization this year is to promote girls' athletics. Walking, tennis and basketball clubs have already been formed&#13;
in which every girl is expected to take part.&#13;
The first banquet of the club was held March 10, 191 3, which filled every girl&#13;
present with a genuine enthusiasm for its future. While the immediate aim of the club is&#13;
for greater fellowship and greater opportunity for every girl in school, deep underneath&#13;
it is another expression on the part of all for a greater and a better Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Mandolin Club&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
INSTRUMENTATION&#13;
Guitar&#13;
Harp Guitar&#13;
Piano&#13;
Flute&#13;
Banjo&#13;
&#13;
First Mandolin&#13;
Second Mandolin&#13;
Mandala&#13;
Mando-Cello&#13;
Mando-Bass&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
MYRON INSKO&#13;
JOHN ENGLE&#13;
ALICE DEWEY&#13;
&#13;
OTHER MEMBERS&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
&#13;
Tracia Bregman&#13;
&#13;
Declaration: It is my purpose, if Cod permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
The Morningside Mandolin Club is the largest and best Concert Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
in the middle west. It was organized by Professor Charles A. Templeman, and is the&#13;
first organization of its kind in Sioux City to use modern correct mandolin orchestra instrumentation. Its growth has been nothing short of phenomenal and it has at present&#13;
thirty-six members, which is the largest mandolin orchestra that has ever been in Sioux&#13;
City. Professor Templeman has built up large classes m mandolin, guitar and banjo&#13;
since coming to Morningside, and the Mandolin Club is one of the results of his&#13;
enthusiastic work.&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of this band is to interest and enlist young men and women in foreign&#13;
missionary work. The organization started in Morningside in 1902, and is a branch of&#13;
a national movement that had its beginning in a Bible Study Conference held at Mt.&#13;
Hermon, Massachusetts, July, 1896. The foreign representatives of this band: Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Fred Trimble, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Carson, Estie Boddy, Ida Lewis,&#13;
Jennie Bridenbaugh, in China; C. F. Hartzell, in South America; C. Taylor, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. C. Taylor, in Korea.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
Personnel of the "M" CLub&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs-Football, Baseball.&#13;
Paul Eiffert-Football, Baseball, Basketball.&#13;
Ben Holbert, J r.-F ootball, Baseball, Basketball, Track.&#13;
Leslie H. Kingsbury- Track.&#13;
Herman Koch-Football.&#13;
John D. Kolp-Football.&#13;
Allan C. Lemon-Track.&#13;
Herman H. Lueder-Track.&#13;
William A McCurdy-F ootball, Baseball.&#13;
Guy D. McKinney- Football.&#13;
Vincent E. Montgomery-Football, Basketball, Track.&#13;
Will H. Payne-Football.&#13;
George W . Prichard-Baseball.&#13;
The "M" Club is an honory organization.&#13;
&#13;
It is composed of those who have been&#13;
&#13;
found worthy to represent the school in intercollegiate athletics on the gridiron, the&#13;
diamond, the track or the basketball floor.&#13;
&#13;
The Club has for its purpose the promotion&#13;
&#13;
of clean athletics in Morningside College and works and boosts to that end.&#13;
we honor those who have honored their Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
Robert R. Vernon-Football, Track.&#13;
Paul C. Weatherby-Football.&#13;
&#13;
D. Lawrence Wickens-Football, Track.&#13;
&#13;
Thus do&#13;
J. Henry Winterringer- Football.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
�REV.&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN M cCAY, '05&#13;
&#13;
P resident Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgome ry&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
A. McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
P. John son&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
G. Merten&#13;
&#13;
The Alumni&#13;
&#13;
Prof. C. A. Marsh&#13;
&#13;
M en of outstanding and commanding worth have builded Northwest Iowa.&#13;
of the leaders among these jointly sought the best means of self interpretation.&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
Some&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
composit result of their dedication to this supreme purpose is Morningside College.&#13;
Widely separated territorially and earnestly pursuing each his chosen vocation, the&#13;
&#13;
This organization is a purely honorary affair and is the first Fraternity at Morningside College. Only those who have represented Morningside in the past in oratory or&#13;
debate and Professor Marsh, the head of the D epartment of Public Speaking, are members; and only those who in the future represent the college in either of these departments&#13;
are eligible to membership.&#13;
&#13;
men constituting the Board of Trustees were each great enough to lend his whole self to&#13;
the laying of the founda tions of a real College.&#13;
&#13;
Just what this has cost in time, in&#13;
&#13;
money, in brain, in sweat, in consecrated devotion, in life, no pen can record.&#13;
Having thus been furnis hed the environment for the best self-development, and being&#13;
&#13;
The local chapter is a member of a national organization that has just been organized in many of the leading colleges of the west. Morningside and Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
are the only chapters in the state. The fraternity has for its name the initial letters of&#13;
the Greek phrase signifying: "The Art of Persuasion, Beautiful and Just." The&#13;
purpose is to promote greater interest in intercollegiate oratory, debate and public&#13;
speaking.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
freely given opportunity to fashion the thinking, mold the purposes and d irect the motives&#13;
of a choice body of students, educators of the first rank have ever made this Faculty&#13;
While persistently sought for some of the most enticing, most desirable, most coveted&#13;
positions within the gift of the educational world, the leaders are yet with us.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
�Among the more thoughtful of those seeking a higher education many finally&#13;
chose Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
The ideal :&#13;
&#13;
"The fitting of the individual to use to the full his&#13;
&#13;
powers" has been the magnet drawing here the choicest product of the homes, the&#13;
schools, the churches of our splendid territory.&#13;
&#13;
Because of Morningside' s ability to&#13;
&#13;
touch immediately the fountain of the individual's worth, wherever you find a person&#13;
who has ever been a student here there you find a life-lover of the Institution.&#13;
This Morningside spirit has given her most enviable standing, and bequeathed to&#13;
her graduates unusual equipment for life's work.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside is not only a miracle in&#13;
&#13;
the accumulation of her property and endowment, but also a miracle in the percentage of&#13;
her graduates who are filling responsible and prominent positions.&#13;
The Alumni thank God for their Alma Mater.&#13;
faced and overcame financial deficits.&#13;
&#13;
She kept faith with us.&#13;
&#13;
She&#13;
&#13;
She did not ask that we assume life-long, never-&#13;
&#13;
to-be-overcome educational deficits.&#13;
As for the returns upon your investment, Lovers of Morningside College, ask Montana, Kentucky, Connecticut, Florida, Colorado, Mississippi, Utah and Indiana in each&#13;
of which commonwealths one of our number labors.&#13;
and Washington where our number is paired.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Wisconsin, Maine, Maryland&#13;
&#13;
Ask New Yark, Missouri, Minnesota&#13;
&#13;
and Washington, D. C., where our number 1s in trios.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Alabama, California and&#13;
&#13;
Massachusetts where we are double paired.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Michigan, Kansas and North Dakota&#13;
&#13;
where we are double paired and a half.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Oregon where we are double double&#13;
&#13;
paired.&#13;
thirteen.&#13;
&#13;
Idaho where we are eleven strong.&#13;
South Dakota of her sixteen.&#13;
&#13;
forty-eight.&#13;
&#13;
Illinois of her twelve.&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska of her&#13;
&#13;
And dear old Iowa of her one hundred and&#13;
&#13;
Then drop in on India, Hawaii and South America and ask each of her&#13;
&#13;
one; Korea of her th_&#13;
ree; Canada of her four, and China of her twelve.&#13;
The Alumni, three hundred five strong, present their greetings to the Class of 1914.&#13;
June 7, 1900, was our Association's natal day.&#13;
by holding open house to you.&#13;
&#13;
June 17, 1914, we shall be honored&#13;
&#13;
All Hail!&#13;
THE PRESIDENT.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
�MR. McCARTHY&#13;
9 -Tuesday. The lucky star hung over the Morningside boys in&#13;
the Kansas City Meet. My observations were interrupted&#13;
by a kimona and nightshirt parade.&#13;
11-Thursday.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors stole Seniors' regalia.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors saw stars.&#13;
&#13;
12-F riday. Saw little Florence Montgomery and her satellite&#13;
under the stairs talking today. Constellations granted Morningside Academy a victory in debate over Yankton.&#13;
13-Saturday.&#13;
night.&#13;
&#13;
Saw Vince Montgomery showing falling stars to-&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR HAYNES&#13;
16-Tuesday. The cost of living is surely growing higha. Last&#13;
night Jory paid $5 for a fancy box containing a few dainty&#13;
mossels. In Morningside one could hardly say this was due&#13;
to unequal distribution of wealth.&#13;
18- Thursday. All of the Junias woa peculia felt hats this moning. A simple idear. Freshmen try to copy Junias in the&#13;
aftanoon.&#13;
19- F riday. Tonight I saw Mr. Bass and Mr. Knouse and Miss&#13;
Whittemore and Miss Shriner going out for a picnic. I feah&#13;
these young people ah often guilty of the evil of congestion&#13;
in small districts.&#13;
HARRY EWING-"Tubby"-"Hippo."&#13;
22- Monday. Coyotes trim us in baseball. They'll have to "cut&#13;
that out." Irma and I went to Ionian Public last night.&#13;
24-W ednesday.&#13;
&#13;
Canned a few cranberries this afternoon for Irma.&#13;
&#13;
26-F riday. Had some disturbances in my classes this morning.&#13;
Morningside won from Nebraska Wesleyan in debate.&#13;
27-Saturday. I ate 22 pancakes for breakfast this morning.&#13;
says I am getting fat. Freshmen win home meet.&#13;
&#13;
Irma&#13;
&#13;
MRS. IRMA EWING&#13;
29-Monday. The Main Hall burned last night. We saved nearly all the books. Harry helped quite a little.&#13;
30-Tuesday. No school today. Big mass meeting this morning.&#13;
True Morningside still lives .&#13;
&#13;
One hundred ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
MRS. IRMA EWING-Continued.&#13;
Classes were held in the church, conservatory&#13;
and chemistry building. Freshmen beat S. C. H. S. without Harry.&#13;
3-F riday. Seniors appear in caps and gowns. Harry's boys&#13;
beat Central yesterday 22-0 and Parsons today 11-3. Won&#13;
from Cedar Falls in debate.&#13;
&#13;
1-Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
BILL BASS&#13;
6-Monday. Senior reception at Craig's. Vince stars in Brookings Meet.&#13;
8-Wednesday. Jean went to the Pieria-Ionian picnic yesterday.&#13;
We beat old Vermillion today. Some mill.&#13;
9-Thursday. Students dug up $5,050 cold cash for new gym.&#13;
Jean and I and the rest of Morningside take a car ride.&#13;
ANDY LARSON&#13;
13-Monday. I saw Lucille Metcalf driving a new Winton Six.&#13;
1 7-F riday. The boys place second in the state meet.&#13;
18-Saturday. Busy day today. Hank and Bill came in early&#13;
this morning to buy eats for a picnic. They chaperoned a&#13;
bunch of girls out on the banks of the Mizz.&#13;
"DAD" EVANS&#13;
20-Monday. When I first got up this morning I saw the Zets and&#13;
Othos trooping off to the south ravine for their annual&#13;
breakfast. The Aesthesians and Adelphians also had a&#13;
picnic.&#13;
21-Tuesday. Printed programs for Ivy F ullbrook' s graduating&#13;
recital. Mrs. Kanthlener entertains German majors.&#13;
22-Saturday. Heard some boys dragging heavy ice cream freezer&#13;
past the store this evening. If they only knew how fat ice&#13;
cream makes one they would never have molested the Athenaeum eats.&#13;
BARNEY&#13;
27-Monday. Juniors and Seniors depart for their annual. picnic.&#13;
30-Thursday. Horace class had party at Renaissance yesterday,&#13;
but neglected to pay their bill or return the packer. Kingsbury came home singing "My wife's gone to Talbot's Farm."&#13;
Zets must be off on annual picnic.&#13;
31-F riday. Hicks Hackett came running in late this evening for&#13;
some blister remedy. He claimed to be champion rower on&#13;
Philo picnic.&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Students and Friends&#13;
PATRONIZE THESE FIRMS.&#13;
&#13;
of Morningside ·&#13;
&#13;
THEY ARE MORNI NGSIDE BOOSTERS&#13;
&#13;
AND MADE THE PUBLICATIO N OF THIS BOOK POSSIBLE.&#13;
BARNEY-Continued.&#13;
&#13;
1-Saturday. Hear that Lemon was elected track captain for next&#13;
year and Florence Montgomery president of the girls' student body. If they do justice to their jobs they'll have to&#13;
cut out some of their fussing.&#13;
BILL BASS&#13;
4 -Tuesday. Jean went to the Pi picnic yesterday and the Ionian&#13;
picnic today. Haven't seen her since Sunday.&#13;
5-Wednesday. Exams begin today. It's a lucky thing I'm a&#13;
student and don't have to take any.&#13;
8- Saturday. Jean graduated in Expression tonight.&#13;
T omorrow' s Baccalaureate, will have to initiate my cap and gown.&#13;
Curses!&#13;
&#13;
I 0-Monday. Inauguration of President Craig ; Conservatory graduation; recital by Miss&#13;
&#13;
Plume;&#13;
&#13;
Morse entertains music&#13;
&#13;
graduates.&#13;
11 - T uesday. Academy graduation; trustee meeting; Alumni banquet; class play; college rally-three Bishops speak.&#13;
12-Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
College graduation; reunion of societies.&#13;
&#13;
hundr ed&#13;
&#13;
Abel-Pederson-Van Riper Co.&#13;
American Savings Bank.&#13;
Anthony's Trunk Factory.&#13;
Authier's Style Shop.&#13;
Will H. Beck Co.&#13;
August Bloom, Tailor.&#13;
Blue Valley Creamery Co.&#13;
Bureau of Engraving.&#13;
Clement &amp; Co.&#13;
Coomer &amp; Small.&#13;
Ray H. Darling.&#13;
Davidson Bros. Co.&#13;
Davie &amp; Patton.&#13;
M. K. Eliason.&#13;
E. &amp; W. Clothing House.&#13;
L. G . Everist.&#13;
Ferguson &amp; Abel Land Co.&#13;
Genelli Studio.&#13;
S. Green, Tailor.&#13;
H. E. Haakinson Coal Co.&#13;
H . &amp; H . Shoe Co.&#13;
Hanford Produce Co.&#13;
Oscar J. Hoberg.&#13;
Houston Pen Co.&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank.&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson.&#13;
A. R. Johnson Bakery.&#13;
A. P. Larson.&#13;
Laurel Music House.&#13;
J. G . Legler Transfer Co.&#13;
The Martin Hotel.&#13;
T. S. Martin Co.&#13;
Monarch Printing C o.&#13;
&#13;
Moore Clothing Co.&#13;
Morningside Bank.&#13;
Morningside Barber Shop.&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy.&#13;
Morningside Printing Co.&#13;
Morningside Real Estate Co.&#13;
Morningside Tailor Shop.&#13;
National Bank of Commerce.&#13;
Nolen Laundry Co.&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance&#13;
Company.&#13;
Olympia Candy Kitchen.&#13;
The Orcutt Company.&#13;
Orr &amp; Graves Co.&#13;
Palmer &amp; Co.&#13;
Park Place Theatre.&#13;
Park Restaurant.&#13;
Pelletier Company.&#13;
Pete's Candy Palace.&#13;
Phillip's Sporting Goods.&#13;
Piper &amp; Larson.&#13;
J. C. Rennison Co.&#13;
Security National Bank.&#13;
Sioux City Optical Co.&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards.&#13;
The Stanley Co.&#13;
Wm. T ackaberry Co.&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank.&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
Youngberg Studio.&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
T w o hundred&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
�VERY "Co-Ed" Desires&#13;
to be Well Dressed&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
why&#13;
&#13;
That'sT'S&#13;
we extend this special invitation to&#13;
them to v1s1t out store where we always have a&#13;
complete and extensive display of the very latest dictates&#13;
of fashion, no matter what the time of year or season.&#13;
&#13;
W e make it our special effort to offer things which appeal to the tastes of the young&#13;
women.&#13;
&#13;
This is true in every department of our store, and we therefore appreciate it&#13;
&#13;
when the "co-eds" come to us for things which a re correct in fem inine wearing apparel.&#13;
&#13;
Our showing of Hats, Dresses,&#13;
Coats, Suits and Shoes is more&#13;
complete now than ever before.&#13;
&#13;
Whether it's to be a tramp through&#13;
the woods or a dance, we are ready to&#13;
supply the correct costume and the style&#13;
will be the latest and the quality the&#13;
best obtainable.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wo&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred three&#13;
&#13;
�IF&#13;
&#13;
• • • •&#13;
You Want Anything in the Line of&#13;
&#13;
MR. McDowELL&#13;
&#13;
Text Books&#13;
&#13;
10-Tuesday. Registration of students began today.&#13;
new college building will soon be finished.&#13;
&#13;
School Supplies&#13;
&#13;
I hope the&#13;
&#13;
11-Wednesday. More registration, and more mud on the steps.&#13;
The boys began footba ll practice today.&#13;
13-Friday. Dr. Craig addressed the students this morning on the&#13;
subject of "Behavior." A word to the wise is sufficient but&#13;
to these Morningside students?&#13;
&#13;
Stationery&#13;
&#13;
14-Saturday. I saw some of the less studious boys wearing coats&#13;
made from horse blankets . They call them Mackinaws.&#13;
&#13;
Pennants&#13;
&#13;
"Fizz" HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
College Pins, Belts, Fobs, Etc.&#13;
Kodak Supplies&#13;
Film Developing&#13;
Etc. Etc. Etc.&#13;
&#13;
16-Monday.&#13;
doing.&#13;
&#13;
Ben Holbert blows in, now there'll be something&#13;
&#13;
17-Tuesday. Hoorah for Woodrow He&#13;
gave us a speech this&#13;
morning. P rexy rode in the police wagon. Class scrapwhat next?&#13;
18-Wednesday-Collegian Reporter appeared this morning. By&#13;
thunder, but it takes time to fold papers, here's where I cast&#13;
my eyes for a congenial assistant.&#13;
&#13;
19-Thursday. Bill and Jean, Big and Ruth, Si and Sara, Barks&#13;
and Hazel, King and Florence attend the fa ir this afternoon&#13;
and had a whale of a time- and Emma at Coe-Curses!&#13;
23-Monday. The girls received little slips today which make them&#13;
some wrathy.&#13;
25-Wednesday. President Craig talked to the girls-told them&#13;
to make it easy for the young men to leave early in the&#13;
evening. Gee! I'm out of it this year. Glee Club organizes.&#13;
&#13;
See "DAD" at&#13;
&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDE PRINTING CO.&#13;
Auto Phone 6211&#13;
&#13;
North of Conservatory Building&#13;
&#13;
26-Thursday. Philo Stag at the Jackson. Afterwards called up&#13;
for not having chaperons. Dean Chandler and Professor&#13;
Van Horne were guests.&#13;
28- Saturday. Maroons beat up Cherokee. Y. M. C. A. stag.&#13;
Rieke's have annual house party at Kingsley, Cliff and I&#13;
carried grips and grips. I feel grippy.&#13;
30-Monday. Othos hold their stag at Bill Wedgwood's.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred four&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
five&#13;
&#13;
�Where Youth and&#13;
Beauty Meet&#13;
ON THE CAMPUS-IN THE CLASS ROOM-UP THE STREETDOWN THE STREET-ALL ABOUT THE TOWN-NOTICE THE&#13;
CLASSY APPEARANCE OF THE CLOTHES FROM THE&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W. Clothing House&#13;
If this store doem't mean anything particular to you it is because you have not given&#13;
us an opportunity of proving the value of our services to you. To most young men and&#13;
any number of older men it is a popular shopping place; one of the most attractive stations&#13;
en route to perfect dress. It is the trysting place of style and quality, of individuality and&#13;
value, of tone and timeliness-of youth and beauty.&#13;
It is here that you will find clothes which embody the best style ideas of London,&#13;
New York and Chicago, skilfully adapted and finely developed. It is here you'll find&#13;
dependable quality walking hand in hand with the most highly perfected degree of selling&#13;
service.&#13;
We welcome you-try us.&#13;
&#13;
N. T. HANSON, Manager&#13;
Two hundred seve n&#13;
&#13;
�HANFORD'S&#13;
ICE CREAM&#13;
THE CREAM of QUALITY&#13;
"Fizz" HoRNNEY-Continued.&#13;
1-Tuesday. Pinchot spoke today. Y. W. C. A tea for Miss&#13;
Morris.&#13;
2-Wednesday. McCurdy rides in singing "I've been working&#13;
on the railroad."&#13;
4- F riday. Hank and Turk skip football practice to attend races.&#13;
5-Saturday. Maroons put it over Yankton 16-0, without Hank&#13;
and Turk. Saw the Zets on their Tally-Ho party having&#13;
a whale of a time.&#13;
SAMUEL WESLEY D EAKIN&#13;
8-Tuesday. I have taken up my abode in Morningside.&#13;
I 0 -Thursday. Bought a chapel seat this morning.&#13;
I 1-Friday. Students elected Wilson president today.&#13;
12-Saturday. Saw my first football game. I didn't understand&#13;
it but they say we beat Buena Vista remarkably.&#13;
14-Monday. Juniors and Seniors had parties tonight. Saw Laura&#13;
Belt, the apple of my eye, going to Pieria .luncheon at the&#13;
West.&#13;
16- Wednesday. Walter Held came up to the drug store tonight&#13;
with a green necktie. He said he had an engagement.&#13;
MR. MACMURRAY.&#13;
21-Monday. The lonians and Pi' s had a husking bee here tonight. Blind Boone gave a recital at the church.&#13;
&#13;
Appreciation of the Unequalled High&#13;
Quality of Hanford's Ice Cream is&#13;
evidenced by it's Achievement of&#13;
Permanent Success and Popularity&#13;
Made in a Modern Sanitary Plant by&#13;
&#13;
The Hanford Produce Co.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3 70 7&#13;
&#13;
S. GREEN&#13;
&#13;
25- F riday. The students played hookey this morning after chapel&#13;
and walked to the monument.&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' and Gents'&#13;
&#13;
26- Saturday. We won from Creighton 26-7.&#13;
atrocious 'jollification.&#13;
&#13;
TAILORING&#13;
&#13;
The boys had an&#13;
&#13;
JOHN ENGLE&#13;
28- Monday. The Freshmen had a delightful picnic at the south&#13;
ra vme. Wesley Henderson, our devoted friend and classmate, was sadly injured in a street car accident.&#13;
29- Tuesday. Junior Annual Board had a party. Also Lola&#13;
Brownell entertained a few friends. We fear there were&#13;
some hen roosts robbed.&#13;
30-Wednesday.&#13;
a "Devil."&#13;
&#13;
I hear that Prof. Greynald called Frank Johnson&#13;
I hope and pray it is not true,&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
Suits of All Kinds Made to Order&#13;
Satisfaction Guaranteed&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
610 FIFTH STREET&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
�Clements &amp; Co.&#13;
Who's&#13;
Who&#13;
&#13;
STAPLE AND FANCY&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
FRESH FRUITS&#13;
AND CONFECTIONS&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
Satisfaction&#13;
&#13;
Guaranteed.&#13;
&#13;
Students,&#13;
&#13;
It's&#13;
ELIASON&#13;
&#13;
let us furnish your picnic supplies.&#13;
&#13;
When it comes to Photography&#13;
&#13;
ST. AUBINS STATION&#13;
&#13;
4 14 Eleventh Street&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2 1 72&#13;
&#13;
THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL&#13;
LIFE INSURANCE CO.&#13;
OF MILWAUKEE, WIS.&#13;
WHAT IT DId IN IOWA IN 1912It wrote more insurance than any other company&#13;
It gained more insurance than any other company&#13;
WHAT IT HAS IN IOWAlt has in force a larger amount of insurance than any other company&#13;
It has $25,500,000 of its assets invested in the State of Iowa&#13;
&#13;
College Men Wanted for Agents&#13;
&#13;
H. E. ROSE, General District Agent.&#13;
&#13;
W. M. McKERCHER, General Agent&#13;
&#13;
Room 310-313 Davidson Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
T w o hundred&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR GREYNALD .&#13;
2-Saturday. Ah, Ames beat us 14-3. I hear ze Newland&#13;
girls are having a week end party at zeir home in Galva.&#13;
5-Tuesday. Saw Mees Ferguson talking to petite Lola Brownell&#13;
zis morning, perhaps she was telling her about ze faculty&#13;
party last night, perhaps not.&#13;
6-Wednesday. Ze big champion, Ben Holbert, goes wolf-hunting today.&#13;
7-Thursday. Johnson won in ze oratorical contest zis evening. I&#13;
will erase one of hees black marks.&#13;
9-Saturday. Professor Raymond lectured last night. Our football team beat ze college of Bellevue 33-0 today.&#13;
PROFESSOR HAYNES.&#13;
11-Monday. The campaign for Morningside money closed today&#13;
with $26,370. That sum should at least buy coal.&#13;
15-F riday. The Ge-man accident insurance system ·has been thooughly discussed these last three evenings. It has been&#13;
found to be altogether inadvisable, as a matter of fact, to&#13;
accept such a plan in the U. S. of Americer.&#13;
REV. MITCHELL.&#13;
19-Tuesday. The Sophomores had a party last night.&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Haynes was elected president of the Iowa State Charities&#13;
today. He is a worthy gentleman.&#13;
20-Wednesday. We announced the organization of our new&#13;
society, the Phoenix, this morning.&#13;
23-Saturday. The Adelphians defeated the Hawkeyes in debate&#13;
last night. Mcrningside tied Nebraska Wesleyan today.&#13;
MR. SKYGACK from Mars.&#13;
2 7-Wednesday. Descended to earth today in time to see Morningside preparing for war with Mitchell. Some yelling.&#13;
28-Thursday. Thanksgiving Day. Saw a big pow wow on&#13;
Mizzou Field and heard something about "There ain't no&#13;
Mitchell" and "57-7." I declined an invitation to faculty&#13;
reception.&#13;
29-Friday. Saw a happy crowd spinning out southeast tonight in&#13;
puffing machines. I heard it was the Zets entertaining the&#13;
Othos at Barlow Hall.&#13;
30-Saturday. Saw many earth beings parading over the city.&#13;
Never such confusion in Mars.&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
eleven&#13;
&#13;
�SOME&#13;
&#13;
REASONS&#13;
&#13;
WHY&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE YOUR BANKING&#13;
Courteous and satisfactory treatment.&#13;
The business is directed by a local board of business men.&#13;
Incorporated under the State Banking Laws and complying with examination and&#13;
publications of statements.&#13;
We pay 4 per cent Compound Interest.&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK&#13;
W . S . SNYDER .&#13;
&#13;
P RESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
L. O'HARROW . VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
C .&#13;
&#13;
A . NORRBOM.&#13;
&#13;
Ross M. COOMER, Assoc. M. Am. Soc. C. E.&#13;
&#13;
CASHIER&#13;
&#13;
CHAS I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL&#13;
Engineers and Contractors&#13;
212 United Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Ask Our Clients About Us-&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3 719&#13;
&#13;
W e R ebuilt Main Hall, M orningside College&#13;
&#13;
The Stanley Company&#13;
WOMEN'S, MISSES'&#13;
AND CHILDREN'S&#13;
OUTFIT'TERS&#13;
504 Fourth Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S MOST BEAUTIFUL AND FASH ~&#13;
IONABLE SHOP FOR WOMEN&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
twelve&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�How Often Have&#13;
You Heard it said--&#13;
&#13;
DEC.&#13;
FLETCHER POLLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
3 -Tuesday. Big Ben was chosen captain of the football team&#13;
for 1913. I saw Joe Edge with a cigar in his pocket today.&#13;
I wonder if they make him as sick as they do me.&#13;
&#13;
"When I Want Anything Good,&#13;
I go to&#13;
&#13;
5- Thursday. The Reporters came out in red ink yesterday, don't&#13;
we see enough of that without having the paper printed in&#13;
it? The Pieria banquet comes off tonight, I just finished&#13;
Miss Ferguson's gown this afternoon.&#13;
6-F riday. The Athenaeum banquet is held tonight and the&#13;
Aletheia' s tomorrow night. I wish I really was a girl so I&#13;
could go to these banquets and get pointers on styles.&#13;
9-Monday. The Zet banquet, the fourth and last, came off tonight. The lonians had a stag, too.&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN'S"&#13;
&#13;
10-Tuesday. The girls of the school were acquainted with Robert's Rules of Order. The Seniors in Expression gave a&#13;
recital this afternoon. We boys enjoyed it immensely from&#13;
the gallery. Special meetings begin tomorrow evening.&#13;
12- Thursday. Bunny Haynes was looking awful happy this&#13;
morning, wasn't sneezing or shivering at all. I found heat&#13;
had been turned into the Conservatory. A bunch of the&#13;
kids went skating this evening.&#13;
13-Friday.&#13;
&#13;
'Twas the night before elections.&#13;
&#13;
WE PAY TRANSPORTATION CHARGES&#13;
On all out-of-town purchases, no matter how large or small the&#13;
order may be, with the exception of goods sent on approval, when&#13;
&#13;
14-Saturday. Girls' rushing has ceased, everybody is happy.&#13;
Three niggers visited the different parties.&#13;
&#13;
we pay return express charges if any selections have been made.&#13;
Every order entrusted to our care will receive the careful attention&#13;
&#13;
MR. MACMURRAY.&#13;
&#13;
of persons trained in Mail Order Work.&#13;
&#13;
17-Tuesday. First day in the new building. It makes me grieved&#13;
to see Miss Sanborn work so hard in the library. The Zetalethean girls all wore white today. Arthur Lindsey told me&#13;
that Caroline Eads wore mistletoe this morning but for some&#13;
reason took it off this afternoon.&#13;
18- Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
The Same Day Mail Order House&#13;
&#13;
Bernice just called up for Howard.&#13;
&#13;
19-Thursday. 11 :45 P. M. Joe Edge isn't in yet.&#13;
speak to Mrs. Empey about this.&#13;
&#13;
I'll have to&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN CO.&#13;
&#13;
THE RELIABLE DRY GOODS HOUSE&#13;
20-Will be home in a few hours .&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred fourteen&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
Everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles,&#13;
Rubber Goods, Trusses, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
Florists&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
Cut Flowers&#13;
&#13;
Supplies and Finishing&#13;
High Grade Candies-All Popular&#13;
Brands&#13;
&#13;
]ANITOR OF THE COLLEGE.&#13;
&#13;
7-T uesday. School began today. These students make more&#13;
tracks and larger ones than any class of people I know.&#13;
9-Thursday. Vince Montgomery, Bill Wedgwood, et al., give&#13;
several people a good wetting this morning. Oh, I'd like to&#13;
tan their bloody hides!&#13;
10-Friday. Glee Club boys return from trip. Mr. Logan whispered that some of them were going to the bad.&#13;
11-Saturday. Heard Weatherby was elected president M Club.&#13;
&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
&#13;
TEA ROOM&#13;
The Most Popular Refreshment&#13;
Place in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Palms and Plants· for D ecorations.&#13;
Special attention to funeral orders.&#13;
Emblems made on short notice.&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR MARSH.&#13;
&#13;
You are invited to visit our store&#13;
&#13;
Two Stores&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
13-Monday. I behold the stork circling over my chimney.&#13;
15 -Wednesday. Seniors wear caps and gowns. They looked fine.&#13;
Exams were posted today. Students look worried.&#13;
16-Thursday. New girls' club named "Agora."&#13;
1 7-Friday. D ean Burney and Dr. Thomson spoke in Chapel.&#13;
18-Saturday. Big chapel service this morning. The Glee Club&#13;
sang and sweaters were awarded to the athletes. Big Ben&#13;
Holbert got four. The Seniors had a big party at Whittemore' s in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
SIXTH AND PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3730&#13;
&#13;
606 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST BLOOM&#13;
&#13;
OLAF W1LLBURG-"Ole."&#13;
&#13;
TAILOR&#13;
&#13;
21-Tuesday. H eard a little disturbance on the avenue this evening and found Kuhns and Himebauch doing a heathenish&#13;
dance. They told me Professor Campbell had told them to&#13;
dance when they felt blue.&#13;
25-Saturday. Saw a crowd of tough looking individuals taking&#13;
the car tonight. They said they were going to a Freshman&#13;
party at Ruth Bailey's.&#13;
&#13;
ALSO CLEANING, PRESSING AND REPAIRING&#13;
Between Jackson and Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Miss SANBORN.&#13;
&#13;
THE LAUREL MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
&#13;
28-Tuesday. The Glee Club gave a very interesting program last&#13;
night. I heard that Shoemaker had left school to teach in&#13;
Merrill. He was such a troublesome boy.&#13;
29- W ednesday. The local chapter of Pi Kappa Delta was organized today. Saw a number of students enter the librarv&#13;
with tennis rackets, tennis season must have begun.&#13;
30-Thursday. Nobody but Dr. Haynes observed today as the&#13;
D ay of P rayer. He had not been informed of the changed&#13;
date.&#13;
&#13;
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF ALL KINDS&#13;
SHEET MUSIC AND MUSIC SUPPLIES&#13;
FREDERICK E. HESS, Prop.&#13;
508 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
six teen&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
��Compare the HOUSTON PEN with&#13;
all others.&#13;
&#13;
MISS SANBORN-Continued,&#13;
3-F riday. Ludwig Becker recital tonight. I had to reprimand&#13;
Earl Hiett this morning for talking too loudly to Lola&#13;
Brownell.&#13;
Miss FERGUSON.&#13;
4 -Tuesday. I wonder why the girls don't hand in their little&#13;
slips. I'm really disappointed in Lottie Sanders and a few&#13;
others. The basketball girls are having their pictures taken&#13;
tonight.&#13;
5-Wednesday. I saw Earl F ullbrook eating a whole pumpkin&#13;
pie. This betting must be stopped.&#13;
7-Friday. Johnson won divisional contest at Toledo tonight and&#13;
Ralston won the D ewey Prize contest here. I called Sarah&#13;
Bleakley on the carpet for keeping her company out too&#13;
late last evening.&#13;
&#13;
Compare the quality and size of the&#13;
gold point.&#13;
Compare workmanship and quality&#13;
of rubber parts.&#13;
Compare the feed---which is really&#13;
the heart of a fountain pen.&#13;
&#13;
ANDY LARSON.&#13;
Saw by the paper there was a socialist club organized at the college. I wonder if they'll blow up my store&#13;
with bombs. Mr. and Mrs. Van Horne stopped in on their&#13;
way to the Junior party.&#13;
&#13;
Compare the chain, with a clip, for&#13;
which we make no charge.&#13;
&#13;
10-Monday.&#13;
&#13;
I I - Tuesday.&#13;
&#13;
2 I -Chapel seats were assigned today. I tried out for the monument run today. The boys said I had good form but my&#13;
legs weren't long enough.&#13;
PROFESSOR CAMPBELL.&#13;
25- T uesday. I have decided to work upon Frank Johnson by suggestion and instill in him the idea of selling tickets for Mrs.&#13;
McCoy's recital. Then other students will fo ll ow his example by imitation. Perhaps as an inducement I might excuse&#13;
them from Psych if they sell enough tickets.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
Compare shape and balance.&#13;
&#13;
Senior girls won basketball championship tonight.&#13;
&#13;
15-Saturday. Saw a bunch of Othos with their girls waiting for a&#13;
car. I suppose they're going to their banquet at the Martin&#13;
tonight.&#13;
GEORGE PRATT.&#13;
I 8 -Tuesday. My mamma sent me over to Larson's for some garbage for the chickens and when I went by the conservatory&#13;
I saw a light. I ambled up the steps to sec w ho was there&#13;
and fo und Kingsbury and his brother M ontgomery smoking.&#13;
They looked pale though and I think the wrath of the gods&#13;
was beginning to descend upon them.&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wenty&#13;
&#13;
RESUL T--NO Comparison--lt stands&#13;
alone.&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Not&#13;
&#13;
HOUSTON&#13;
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A&#13;
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Pen&#13;
&#13;
HOUSTON&#13;
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BY&#13;
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USED IN NEARLY EVERY HOME&#13;
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From Pure Pasteurized Cream shipped direct from the farm.&#13;
quality and flavor-Ask&#13;
&#13;
Talking&#13;
Pictures&#13;
Every photograph which we make 1s&#13;
a speaking likeness.&#13;
&#13;
Butter of the highest&#13;
&#13;
Your Grocer For It.&#13;
&#13;
Knowledge and&#13;
Industry Are&#13;
Good&#13;
But THRIFT is the balance wheel that&#13;
makes them WIN. A Bank Account&#13;
you must have.&#13;
We invite you to start with us.&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of&#13;
Commerce&#13;
ABOVE AUTHIER'S&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR CAMPBELL-Continued.&#13;
I-Saturday. Well, Mrs. Campbell is going to the Faculty&#13;
luncheon today. I wish she'd sew the&#13;
button on my&#13;
coat so I could go for a handout.&#13;
FARMER&#13;
CORN&#13;
TASSEL.&#13;
3- Monday. Willie said in his letter today as how the 1915&#13;
Annual Board was to be elected tonight.&#13;
7-Friday. Will came down with the Glee Club tonight. He&#13;
phoned out to say he'd stay at town till he heard how Johnson came out in the contest. He told us that the State Federation of Philos was organized.&#13;
8-Saturday. Willie had to hurry back for the Philo opening.&#13;
Miss FERGUSON.&#13;
10-Monday. Well, well, here it is 11 o'clock. I'm afraid I'll&#13;
not feel well tomorrow if I don't get to sleep soon, but that&#13;
girls' banquet was surely a success.&#13;
12-Wednesday. Miss Moxcey led another good meeting today.&#13;
Tonight my niece and I went to hear Schumann Heink. I&#13;
noticed that several students attended her concert. I'm&#13;
glad they have such elevated tastes.&#13;
13- Thursday. Surely this Day of Prayer was observed in a new&#13;
and original way. I saw Deakin, Mitchell, Logan and&#13;
Himebauch going to the Orpheum. I just wonder if they&#13;
hadn't better stayed home and played som'r'set.&#13;
Miss SANBORN.&#13;
17- Monday. St. Patrick's Day. The Freshmen looked greener&#13;
than ever today. I was shocked at the way Joey Carter and&#13;
Herbert French carried on this afternoon. They seemed to&#13;
be enjoying each other's company so much though that I&#13;
didn't disturb them.&#13;
18-Tuesday. The library closed at noon today and we girls&#13;
worked dreadfully hard to get it cleaned up for the opening&#13;
tonight.&#13;
20-Thursday. I noticed that Vince Montgomery brought Blanche&#13;
Thompson to the Chapin recital this evening. He is a fickle&#13;
youth, so unlike his sister.&#13;
21-Friday. Heard Joe Edge telling Edna today that he thought&#13;
he'd stay over vacation to see Maude Adams this week. That&#13;
boy has certainly changed this year.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred t wenty-three&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
A High Class Studio&#13;
producing the highest&#13;
standard in photography&#13;
at all times&#13;
&#13;
GEN ELLI&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Bldg.&#13;
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711 Pierce St.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK. VI&#13;
Pow Wows&#13;
-SIOUX&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
r•IF_.r&#13;
&#13;
14-&#13;
&#13;
��Jolly Jokes Jerked by Joking Juniors&#13;
The world is old, yet likes to laugh.&#13;
New jokes are hard to find.&#13;
A whole new editorial staff&#13;
Can't tickle every mind.&#13;
So if you meet some ancient joke,&#13;
Decked out in modern guise,&#13;
Don't frown and call the thing a fake,&#13;
Just laugh-don't be too wise.-Ex.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
He&#13;
He&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
NowHe's got a grudge at Mr. Coss,&#13;
He's got a grudge at Campbell,&#13;
He's got a grudge at Hel---en I&#13;
Can't make this rhyme with Campbell.&#13;
&#13;
Leslie Kingsbury was detected riding home on the Peters Park car line one night.&#13;
When asked for an explanation for riding so far out of his way he said: "Why don't&#13;
you know I am staying at Darling's now?" ( Leslie says that was sure some bonehead.)&#13;
Lory looking at announcement of Volunteer Band meeting-"! wonder if they need&#13;
a cornet player. I used to play the cornet."&#13;
One day William McCurdy had four examinations. He came to school singing,&#13;
"I Don't Know Where I'm Going But I'm On My Way"; at chapel he sang, "Out On&#13;
the Stormy Deep"; at noon, "I Am Slowly Drifting Down"; at 3 :20, "There's One&#13;
More River to Cross"; and at 5 : 10, "Asleep in the Deep."&#13;
&#13;
In Physics class the other day after a long drawn out , proof, Professor Stiles remarked: "And now we get X equals O." A sleepy voice from the back of the room:&#13;
"Gee, all that work for nothing."&#13;
Lovice: "Oh, say but I like Bob parties."&#13;
Guess she's been having her share of them by the looks of things.&#13;
Professor Campbell remarked in his Psych. class that he wished his teachers had&#13;
flunked him more when he was in school. A voice in the back of the room was heard,&#13;
"I wish so too." They say it was John Engle.&#13;
&#13;
got a flunk in Chemistry,&#13;
got a flunk in Psych,&#13;
got a flunk in English III,&#13;
cussed with all his might.&#13;
&#13;
McKinney and Costar&#13;
AT SUNSHINE INN.&#13;
Ethel Brown-"Jimmie, will you give us a lecture on the 'Call to Arms?'"&#13;
Jimmie Dolliver-'TII have to collect my material together first."&#13;
Miss Dolliver-"Will that be an illustrated lecture, James?"&#13;
&#13;
He says:&#13;
captivating."&#13;
&#13;
WHY SAMMY DEACON GOES BARE-HEADED.&#13;
"When he wears a hat he is h-attractive, and when he wears a cap he is&#13;
&#13;
SUNDAY NIGHT AT EMPEY'S.&#13;
ParlorJoe Carter and Herbert French.&#13;
Dining Room-Joe Edge and Ethel Brown.&#13;
Living Room-Joe, the electrician and Ruth Besore.&#13;
Monsieur Greynald, calling the roll: "I notice Mr. Braley's absence because I&#13;
have not been interrupted during the recitation."&#13;
Barks in English II: "May we have our short stories typewritten?&#13;
Miss Loveland, after much thought: "Yes, Mr. Barks, after recalling your handwriting, I deem it advisable that you have your story typewritten."&#13;
Dean Chandler in History I:&#13;
the French Revolution?"&#13;
&#13;
4--&#13;
&#13;
Sophs carry off freezer of water at Freshman party at Hazel Day's.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson:&#13;
&#13;
"Miss Johnson, how did they execute people during&#13;
&#13;
"They killed them, didn't they?"&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
Miss Gravelle correcting a pupil in the Grammar class:&#13;
be Will."&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
"No, in the future it will&#13;
&#13;
�Authier Style Shop&#13;
CORRECT DRESS FOR WOMEN&#13;
ExcLUSIVE LADIES' Suits, CoATS, FuRs, WAISTS&#13;
Muslin UNDERWEAR, CoRSETS, AND MILLINERY&#13;
&#13;
Siou x C ity's M ost Appre ciate d S tore&#13;
509-11-13 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
"O would some pow'r the giftie gie us&#13;
To see oursels as others see us!"&#13;
AS WE THINK&#13;
&#13;
AS THEY THINK&#13;
Guy McKinney-A wit.&#13;
Ada Belew-A great German teacher.&#13;
Gen. Balcom-Leader of Militant suffragettes.&#13;
Bernice Bowman-Grand opera singer.&#13;
Helen Giehm-F amed authoress.&#13;
D oris Wood-To graduate from Morningside College.&#13;
Gussie Brunelle-Man of intellect.&#13;
H . J. Winterringer-Famous doctor.&#13;
Inez Whitney-A coach's wife.&#13;
George Prichard-Brilliant for one so&#13;
young.&#13;
Henderson-Wait till I get that money&#13;
from the street car company.&#13;
Bob Vernon-A second Daniel Webster.&#13;
Ruth Besore-An electrical engineer.&#13;
Frank Johnson-Apollo.&#13;
J ocy Carter-To speak French fluently.&#13;
Bonnie Robinson-The ideal American&#13;
girl.&#13;
&#13;
We would rather go to the Orpheum and&#13;
get it fresh.&#13;
A second Miss Ferguson.&#13;
Does she know what a suffragette is?&#13;
She rolls her eyes beautifully.&#13;
Writes for Collegian Reporter.&#13;
Should think she'd get tired of having her&#13;
picture with the Sophs.&#13;
Teacher's pet.&#13;
Heap big medicine man.&#13;
Wonder when it will happen.&#13;
Ought to be with his mamma.&#13;
Better stick to piano tuning.&#13;
Makes a fine inn-keeper.&#13;
Where does she buy her face powder?&#13;
The ladies of St. Thomas Guild thought&#13;
so too.&#13;
She will laugh about this next week.&#13;
MacMurray thinks so too.&#13;
&#13;
The Hotel Martin&#13;
Pride of Sioux City&#13;
Absolutely Fireproof&#13;
&#13;
SYLLOGISMS&#13;
M. P.-All churches which demand married preachers obtain them.&#13;
Crescent Park demanded a married preacher and Kuhns was appointed.&#13;
Kuhns is married.&#13;
M. P.-All Freshmen are green.&#13;
&#13;
Therefore,&#13;
&#13;
BANQUET and DINNER PARTIES a SPECIALTY&#13;
Gray is a Freshman.&#13;
&#13;
Therefore, Gray is green.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
T w o hundred t wenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
t we nt y-nin e&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
A PSYCHOLOGY PSALM&#13;
Professor Campbell is my teacher, I shall not pass.&#13;
He maketh me to answer in deep embarrassment;&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
He leadeth me into traps of mine own setting,&#13;
He calleth my bluff,.&#13;
He leadeth me into dusty paths among orchards of dates for mine own nourishment, yea, though I walk with James and Angel,&#13;
I cannot recite for they will not help me; their dignity and their laws they crush me.&#13;
He prepareth me for a plucking in the presence of my classmates;&#13;
He raineth on my head his questions.&#13;
He showeth me up.&#13;
Verily, Psychology does haunt me every hour of my life, until I shall dwell in&#13;
the college no more forever.&#13;
FAVO RITE SONGS OF THE FACULTY&#13;
Miss Sanborn-"Put your foot on the soft, soft pedal-Sh! Don't talk so loud. "&#13;
Miss Ferguson- "Who were you with tonight?"&#13;
Miss Hadley-"Ach Du Liber, Augustine."&#13;
Miss Pearl Woodford-"Y ou keep your eyes on me, dear, I'll keep my eyes on you."&#13;
Professor Brown-"School Days."&#13;
Professor Stephens-"Each fish and worm, begins to twist and squirm. "&#13;
Professor Campbell- "Forgotten."&#13;
Miss Dimmitt- "Just a wearying for you."&#13;
&#13;
THE STORE OF&#13;
SATISFACTION&#13;
Men call this "The&#13;
Live Store"--that's&#13;
what they get here&#13;
and nothing less;&#13;
it is the business&#13;
policy of this store&#13;
to see that you get&#13;
it when you come&#13;
here to buy. The&#13;
newest goods,&#13;
better values, and&#13;
efficient service&#13;
are assured, backed by our famous&#13;
guarantee&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dolliver-"I love you truly."&#13;
Miss Roberts-"Whose little girlie are you?"&#13;
Professor Greynald-"T ake back your gold for gold can never buy me."&#13;
Miss Faith Woodford-"! have rings on my fingers and bells on my toes."&#13;
&#13;
Mr. MacMurray- "No wedding bells for me.''&#13;
Miss Brown- "Every little movement has a meaning all its own."&#13;
Bill Payne and Lovice go to Schumann Heink.&#13;
Bill asks Lovice what "lch Liebe Dich" means.&#13;
Lovice: "I love you. Didn't you know that.&#13;
&#13;
KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES&#13;
Why I' ve kn own it for a long&#13;
&#13;
time."&#13;
Professor Brown in Education V:&#13;
&#13;
"I have forgotten my roll book this morning.&#13;
&#13;
Will all those not present please answer?"&#13;
&#13;
A DOLLAR'S&#13;
WORTH FOR EVERY&#13;
DOLLAR OR EVERY&#13;
DOLLAR BACK&#13;
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Are featured because they measure up flush with our Ideals of&#13;
what good clothes ought to be---every accredited style, every fabric&#13;
and color are shown $15 to $35 with especially fine selections at $20&#13;
and $25. MOORE'S SPECIAL CLOTHES---all wool at $10, $12&#13;
and $15. Boys clothing of the best kind in Our Big Boys Store.&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
Two&#13;
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Two&#13;
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hund r ed thirty&#13;
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�TESTIMONIALS&#13;
Otsego Love Co., New York.&#13;
Dear Sirs :-I bought a package of your I. K. Love Powders, placed them in a&#13;
May the Lord bless you and&#13;
young lady's pocket, and in four days she was mine&#13;
prosper you in your heart-uniting work.&#13;
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Fancy GROCERIES, FRUITS&#13;
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KUHNS.&#13;
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Dear Mr. Cerebellum: - Your remedy fo r softening of the brain surpassed all my&#13;
expectations. I have been using it regularly for a month and my brain is now so solid&#13;
Your well-wishing friend,&#13;
you couldn't force a spike into it with a pile driver.&#13;
CYRIL&#13;
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u PHAM .&#13;
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Messrs. Ried and Wright, Omaha, Manufacturers of High Grade L ectures,&#13;
Sermons and Essays.&#13;
Dear Sirs :-I used your anti-expansion lectu re at a political meeting one year ago&#13;
and I have used no other since. Please send a dozen more as per sample. I find&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
your "Addresses to Students" very useful also.&#13;
GUSSI E BRUNELLE .&#13;
&#13;
Nicotine Brothers, St. Louis .&#13;
Dear Sirs :-I have been using your Pick Axe Plug now for a year and find that it&#13;
beats anything.&#13;
Yours thankfully,&#13;
CHARLES SPRY.&#13;
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SHOES THAT SATISFY&#13;
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512 Fourth Street&#13;
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co.&#13;
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DAVIE &amp; PATTON&#13;
Leading Grocers&#13;
of Morningside&#13;
1951 S. ST. AUBIN AVENUE&#13;
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Two hundred t h irty-two&#13;
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PETERS PARK&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
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Our department is complete and strictly mod ern in every&#13;
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Just moved into new quarters and have every-&#13;
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We are exclusive dealers in Kodaks and Kodak Supplies .&#13;
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ZIMMERMAN BROS.&#13;
New Davidson Building&#13;
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Will the Investment Pay?&#13;
The answer to this question. is all important to you young women and young men&#13;
of today, and be careful that the answer is not of more concern to the good parent at&#13;
home furnishing the timely remittances than to yourselves.&#13;
You are fitting yourselves for an age that requires not only a college training but it's&#13;
up to you to take on the many practical ideas and lessons that present themselves from&#13;
day to day to help you round out a successful future.&#13;
This bank recognizes its obligation&#13;
ingside and we desire to do our part&#13;
measure from year to year. F acuity&#13;
matters adding to their convenience or&#13;
&#13;
to Morningside College and the Suburb of Mornin the development and growth, coming in larger&#13;
and students are welcome to use this bank in all&#13;
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&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
4 Per Cent Interest on Deposits -Responsibility $ 100,000&#13;
&#13;
E. C. PETERS, Pres.&#13;
]. G . Shumaker&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
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JOHN S c oTT, JR. , Cash.&#13;
F. W. Lohr&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-five&#13;
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GEO. E. WARD, V. Pres.&#13;
C . J. Milligan&#13;
&#13;
�COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
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BOOK MAKING&#13;
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GIVEN CAREFUL ATTENTION&#13;
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The 1914 Sioux is the third consecutive volume that we have printed and bound. We wiil&#13;
be glad to assist in planning and compiling your&#13;
work. Special attention given to every detail.&#13;
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MlLWAUKE.E&#13;
&#13;
�WITH WHOM DID THESE IDEAS ORIGINATE.&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
Glen Patrick owned the college.&#13;
"Bunny" would be an appropriate name for Professor Haynes.&#13;
the Glee Club were a tough bunch.&#13;
Turk Eiffert was a "Regular Guy."&#13;
Hank Winterringer was a permanent fixture at the college.&#13;
the Girl's Weekly Rooming Place Reports contained nothing but the truth.&#13;
Olive and Lula were rivals.&#13;
Guy McKinney likes to walk out from town.&#13;
the Girl Basketball Players could throw baskets.&#13;
"Baby," alias "Flunkey" looks good in a derby.&#13;
BOOKS THAT HAVE HELPED ME.&#13;
&#13;
Delineator . . . ... ..... . . . .. . .. . ...... . .... ... .... .. . ... Fletcher Pollock&#13;
Winning Hearts ....... .. . . .. .. .......... .. . . ...... . . .. Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
H ow to Appear Dignified . ....... . .... . .... . .. . . . .... . ... . . Dean Chandler&#13;
Wilhelm Tell (English Translation) .. .. .. . .. . ... . . . . .. . .. ... Herman Lueder&#13;
Self-Appreciation ... .......... . .. .. . . ... .. . . . ........ .. ... Neville Gray&#13;
How to Flunk Gracefully . . . . . ...... .... . . .. . ........ . .. .. Tommy James&#13;
Robert's Rules of Order .. ... .. ... ... . ... .. .. ... ..... . ... . .. J. L. Ralston&#13;
H ow to B ecome Beautiful ... . . . . ................. · · · · · · · · .... Helen Laub&#13;
How Not to Forget ........ . . . .. . ..... . ..... . ... .. . . . ..... Miss Ferguson&#13;
Hints to Housekeepers . ....... . . .. ..... . .. . ... . . . ......... . Sara and Jean&#13;
Encyclopedia . . .. .. . . . .. . ... .. ....... . ... . .. . ..... .. Vince Montgomery&#13;
Life . ... ....... . . ..... . .. .. . . .... . . . . ... . . . .. . .. . .. . .. . Fred Shriever&#13;
Professor Greynald: "A fool can ask more questions in a minute than a wise man&#13;
can answer in an hour."&#13;
Kingsbury : "No wonder so many of us flunked m exam.&#13;
J ocy goes down town to buy. an evening dress. The clerk using her m_ st. persuasive&#13;
o&#13;
smile, said: "This yellow one is stunnmg, you would look so F renchy in it.&#13;
J ocy&#13;
wonders how she knew.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
]. A.&#13;
&#13;
PATTEN&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
HOMES IN MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Residences and vacant lots in the beautiful college suburb of Sioux C ity at&#13;
reasonable prices and favorable terms.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6136&#13;
Bell Phone 953&#13;
Two hundred thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Where You Can Get the Best&#13;
&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
FRESH FRUITS&#13;
CONFECTIONERY&#13;
Step in while you wait for the car&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE REAL ESTATE&#13;
Morningside Agency for&#13;
Hartford Insurance Co.&#13;
&#13;
A P. LARSON'S GROCERY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE GROCER&#13;
C orner of Morningside and Peters Streets&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�WE ARE SA YING COUPONS TO BUYA date-Horace Merten.&#13;
A curl of my own-Minnie Nelson.&#13;
"M" sweater-Anna Held.&#13;
Subscription to "Elite Styles"-Fletcher Pollock.&#13;
An invitation to attend meeting of Athletic Committee-Ben Holbert (student&#13;
representative).&#13;
Pedometers--Girls the Walking Club.&#13;
of&#13;
A Gym-Morningside College.&#13;
Some new "Som'r'set" decks-Glee Club.&#13;
A fountain pen of my own-Margaret Kifer.&#13;
Clean collar- Sammy Deakin.&#13;
Dancing lessons-Herman&#13;
Lueder and Frank Johnson.&#13;
Ink eradicator, to take numbers of our infant class off the spoon holder-Studdent Body.&#13;
In Economics-Prof. Haynes : "Tell about the Black Belt of the South."&#13;
Bob Vernon: " I can't tell about the Black Belt, but I can tell an awful lot&#13;
about Laura Belt.&#13;
&#13;
STOP&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE OLYM PIA CANDY KITCHEN&#13;
BECAUSE you get the best service in the city.&#13;
Try Our Special College Sundaes, Candies,&#13;
Dainty Lunches, Ices, Fruits, for That Picnic&#13;
on the Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
'' Condrodendrom Tomentosum&#13;
Eriodictyon Glutinosum&#13;
Physostigma Venenosum&#13;
Bring 'em up and We 'll dose 'em&#13;
&#13;
PI LLS-- ''&#13;
&#13;
CORNER FIFTH AND PIERCE STREETS&#13;
&#13;
The Abel--Pedersen--Van Riper Co.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
&#13;
BEAUTIFIERS OF HOMES&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
OBERG PEDERSEN&#13;
&#13;
ABEL&#13;
&#13;
A H.&#13;
&#13;
VAN R IPER&#13;
&#13;
P ICTURE F R AMI NG A SPECIA L TY&#13;
6 11 Fifth Street&#13;
Sioux City Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Iowa P hone 976&#13;
A uto Phone 25 70&#13;
T wo hundred forty&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty- one&#13;
&#13;
�"Where Quality is as Represented"&#13;
EXCLUSIVE THINGS&#13;
&#13;
WONDERS OF THE COLLEGE.&#13;
&#13;
If D. L. Wickens goes over to Abernathy's to study music.&#13;
&#13;
If Professor Campbell would have the middle button sewed on his coat.&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
&#13;
Dunham sleeps because he likes it or can't help it.&#13;
Lee Barks will take a day off when he gets married.&#13;
the Student Council would become active.&#13;
Bunny Haynes would wear a quiet necktie.&#13;
the Dean wouldn't smile.&#13;
If Miss Hadley would let out a class on time.&#13;
&#13;
WHERE YOU WOULD FIND THEM IF A TELEGRAM SHOULD COME.&#13;
Lula Kindlespire ... .... . .. . .... . ........ .. . .. ..... . . .. .. . In the Library&#13;
Si Braley .. ..... ............. . ............ . . . ....... At the Whitehouse&#13;
Lemon ....... .. ..... . ............... . .... .. ....... . Before the Faculty&#13;
' Dunham . .... .. . . . . ....... . ...... .. .. . . ..... ....... In a chair sleeping&#13;
Tommy James .. ....... . . ...... ........... .... .... . . .... In the corridors&#13;
Morgan ....... .. ....... . ........................ .... ..... At Devitt's&#13;
McCurdy ... ................... . . ...... ..... ... ..... At the same place&#13;
Hank Winterringer ... . . ..... . . .. ... . ....... . .. . .. .. . Talking with the girls&#13;
Bernice Bowman .. ...... . .. . . . ........... .. . . .... At Howard Allen's heels&#13;
Lovice Strobel . .. ............. .. . . .. . In doubt whether to take Bob, Bill or Doc&#13;
Fully and Sally . ..... ....... . .. .......................... . Society Hall&#13;
John Kolp .... . .... .. ............. .. ............. Taking a Music Lesson&#13;
Woodke ... . ........... . . . .. .. .. ' ... . . ... .. .. .. . .. .. ... . .. . At Ewer's&#13;
President Craig . .. . ....... . .. ... . . . ..... . ........ . Planning new buildings&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
JEWELER&#13;
4 I O Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Haakinson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
L. D. Vigen&#13;
&#13;
Office, 3 12 Jackson Street&#13;
Office Phone, Auto 21 74&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
· R ichard Alsop&#13;
&#13;
J . J. Hansen&#13;
&#13;
Yards, First and Jackson Streets&#13;
Yard Phone, Auto 2923&#13;
Old Phone, 5 72&#13;
&#13;
H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
COAL, WOOD, COKE AND FEED,&#13;
SAND, GRAVEL, CEMENT AND ROCK&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
OMAHA&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
The class in astronomy seems to be doing very well, Miss Doolittle thought she had&#13;
found a new "Star" but upon further investigation found that it was only an old one&#13;
out of its orbit.&#13;
In English class, Miss Loveland, desiring to dismiss the class early, inquired the&#13;
time of Mr. Kingsbury. Leslie slowly takes out his watch, blushes and quickly closes&#13;
it. We can't possibly understand his action.&#13;
&#13;
THE GRADUATE&#13;
Has now reached the point where his business future looms large before&#13;
him and a selection of the life calling must be made. Whatever the&#13;
choice, if success is to crown the efforts, system and order must be&#13;
applied. As a developer of system in business, nothing equals a bank&#13;
account. Many have acquired the banking habit with us while in&#13;
school, and now in the larger field we invite you to continue this excellent habit.&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
VVOOD BROS. &amp; CO.&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION&#13;
.... MERCHANTS ....&#13;
TOM DEAL TRY,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred forty -two&#13;
&#13;
forty-three&#13;
&#13;
�No More Cracked Collars&#13;
If Laundered by the Nolen Laundry Co., because we mould them in shape while wet,&#13;
leave an "easy slip" tie space, and finish the top without friction.&#13;
&#13;
Our collars are laundered by an entirely new method and will wear four times as&#13;
long as when done in the old way. Above cut illustrates our new method of finishing&#13;
collars.&#13;
SEND your collars to us.&#13;
SAVE greatly on your collar cost.&#13;
HAVE your tie slip easily.&#13;
Our modern equipment and facilities are the best, and our work is done in the most&#13;
advanced and approved manner.&#13;
Our employes are well trained in their work, which insures you perfect satisfaction&#13;
m all departments.&#13;
Let us have your suit or gown to press or clean.&#13;
Telephone us to call.&#13;
&#13;
We have seven wagons and automobiles in the service.&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN LAUNDRY CO.&#13;
Iowa Phone 3 3 3&#13;
&#13;
4 1 1 Jackson Street&#13;
D. T. STARR, College Agent&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 61 71&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1638&#13;
1320 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-five&#13;
&#13;
�ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENCE&#13;
HEART AND CAMPUS PROBLEMS&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Ella Campbell, Editor&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
Would it B. Wright for a young lady and young gentleman&#13;
&#13;
to sit on the front porch after a Sophomore party when a light snow had fallen ?-Costar.&#13;
( 1)&#13;
&#13;
This would be perfectly proper if you would clean the whole porch instead&#13;
&#13;
of two spots, rather close together.&#13;
&#13;
Ask your Grocer for MOTHER'S BREAD.&#13;
Out of town orders given prompt attention.&#13;
Our customers are our best reference.&#13;
Auto Phone 119 7&#13;
Bell Phone 19 7&#13;
&#13;
408-410 Iowa Street&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
( 1 ) Is it proper to cut chapel and stroll on the campus&#13;
&#13;
with a young man who has been very devoted for three years?&#13;
&#13;
(2) Is it proper for&#13;
&#13;
this same young man to always accompany you to and from classes ?-Florence.&#13;
( 1 ) Perhaps it would be well for you to confer with the President or Dean of&#13;
Women on this subject.&#13;
&#13;
( 2) If the young man in question typewrites your outlines&#13;
&#13;
for you, it is well that you repay him for his kindness by allowing him to accompany you&#13;
to and from classes .&#13;
&#13;
VACATIONS&#13;
Sporting Goods that help make it&#13;
pleasant&#13;
&#13;
PARK PLACE&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
&#13;
Of course, you should not detain him so as to make him very late&#13;
&#13;
to meals, as Mrs. Devitt likes to have her boarders there on time.&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
( l ) How can I keep company with a girl from town, a&#13;
&#13;
girl in college and a girl from Morningside?&#13;
&#13;
(2) Is it proper to wear a dress suit&#13;
&#13;
when calling ?-George Prichard.&#13;
( 1 ) If you would spend all your time with one girl, you could be more sure of&#13;
her. (2) If you have one, wear it when you feel like it.&#13;
&#13;
SPAULDING AND GOLDSMITH&#13;
Affords a pleasant evening's entertain-&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Goods&#13;
&#13;
ment.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Goods&#13;
&#13;
Our pictures are always the very&#13;
&#13;
cleanest and highest grade obtainable.&#13;
&#13;
Slotted Throat Tennis Rackets&#13;
Imported Golf Sticks&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
May I take a young lady boat riding ?-Frank Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
( 1 ) Certainly you may.&#13;
&#13;
But hug along the shore, Frank, hug along the shore.&#13;
&#13;
Pathe's Weekly shows the world's important events and pictures of great men.&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
Would you kindly tell me why Hank wore his Sunday suit&#13;
&#13;
several week days last fall ?-Inquisitive.&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Golf Bags&#13;
&#13;
( 1 ) We cannot advise you in these columns as to the reason for Hank's wearing&#13;
his Sunday suit, but if you will send me a stamped self-addressed envelope I will give&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt' s Hardware&#13;
&#13;
you the desired information .&#13;
&#13;
3 12-1 4 Nebraska St.&#13;
&#13;
T wo hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
f or t y-seven&#13;
&#13;
�MORGAN'S "A" GRADE PSYCH PAPER.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The Young Man&#13;
And His Clothes&#13;
Simply being covered up doesn't mean anything to&#13;
the young man of today.&#13;
erness.&#13;
&#13;
He wants style, polish, clev-&#13;
&#13;
He wants dash to pattern and design.&#13;
&#13;
about yourself?&#13;
some clothes.&#13;
&#13;
What&#13;
&#13;
You're interested in bright and blith-&#13;
&#13;
Aren't you?&#13;
&#13;
Sure you are.&#13;
&#13;
We put before you the products of the best manufacturers in the country.&#13;
&#13;
Not a suit or overcoat but&#13;
&#13;
what has been made right up to our rigid specification,&#13;
which means other good things, that every garment is&#13;
made closest possible to custom-made-only differing in&#13;
cost.&#13;
There's a lot of sentiment attached to tailor-made&#13;
clothes, and that's the only difference between exclusive&#13;
shop-made clothes and ours-with a third less price.&#13;
&#13;
It is for you to choose here from the best, which you&#13;
like the best.&#13;
Barks, McCurdy, Morgan and Kolp come to Junior Annual Board party at Helen&#13;
Giehm' s. D oris Giehm to Caroline Eads: "Who are they?" Caroline tells her.&#13;
D oris: "Why they look like men."&#13;
Caroline: "They are men."&#13;
D oris: "Yes, but I mean married men."&#13;
&#13;
that the whole integrity of this establishment is a warranty that you are dressed in accord w ith fashion.&#13;
We put before you the world's highest grade makes:&#13;
Stein-Bloch, Fit-form, the "L-System," Alfred Benja-&#13;
&#13;
Professor Greynald sees Ben talking to Jean in the hall.&#13;
H e says: "Mr. Holbert, you are interfering with Mr. Bass's Major Study.&#13;
J oey Carter at Lindholm's:&#13;
&#13;
min &amp; Co., and several others.&#13;
Suits $15 to $35-0vercoats, $ 15 to $45&#13;
&#13;
''I'd rather furnish a house than a Y. W. C. A. hall.&#13;
&#13;
Bill Wedgwood says Vince got fined in society for hanging his sign on the wrong&#13;
billboard.&#13;
&#13;
FITFORM&#13;
&#13;
Bros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
Catherine Elliott: "We don't have many chickens at our house.''&#13;
Harold Pollock: "No, they are all old hens."&#13;
J ohn Kolp:&#13;
&#13;
" H ello there.&#13;
&#13;
I see you."&#13;
&#13;
Two hubdred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
You can make your choice in a few&#13;
&#13;
moments, and wear your suit the next day, and know&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred forty- nine&#13;
&#13;
�OPEN ACCOUNTS INVITED&#13;
&#13;
THREE PER CENT PAID ON&#13;
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT&#13;
&#13;
SECURITY.&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1884&#13;
&#13;
$450,000.00&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL AND SUR PLUS&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S&#13;
CANDY PALACE&#13;
&#13;
H eadquarters for the Best of Candies,&#13;
Refreshments and Luncheonetts&#13;
&#13;
607 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Goods&#13;
&#13;
Safe and Lock&#13;
W ork&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PH ILLI PS, Pr0prie1or&#13;
SIOUX CIT Y. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
406 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred fifty .&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�You Believe in Money-Saving&#13;
if it isn't at the Expense&#13;
of Quality ..... .&#13;
&#13;
"Of all the beautiful pictures&#13;
That hang on memories wall,&#13;
That of my dear old sheepskin&#13;
It seemeth the best of all.&#13;
Not for the honor it brings me,&#13;
Though of that I am fully aware,&#13;
But the thought of the years of bluffing&#13;
Young Barks Sees Girls' Basketball Games It required to get the thing there."&#13;
Vince Montgomery, 20 years later.&#13;
&#13;
Our idea is to buy the best you can get and pay&#13;
just what you can afford, and that's what we&#13;
invite you to do here.&#13;
The saving is in the value we give you.&#13;
In quality of materials, in workmanship, and&#13;
styles, the Jewelry we sell is beyond a doubt the&#13;
best offered anywhere.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Greynald's opm1on of Arthur Johnson as expressed in French B . : "Mr.&#13;
Johnson, you are zie worst devil in zie class."&#13;
Joey says the blanks are a perfectly good sanitary plan.&#13;
Miss Whittemore did not answer roll call in History of Ed.&#13;
&#13;
WILL H. BECK CO.&#13;
Iowa's L eading Jewelry Store&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
THE PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Brown: "Did Miss Whittemore go with the baseball team, too? I know&#13;
she used to go last year, but I am not keeping up on social happenings this year."&#13;
Dean Chandler at bonfire after Creighton game: "The police judge promised to&#13;
be lenient with the boys. You know I am well acquainted down there."&#13;
Kingsbury in English 9: "The fun of hunting deer (dear) is just chasing it&#13;
around, whether you get it or not.&#13;
Miss Loveland laughs.&#13;
&#13;
King blushes.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Professor MacMurray: "Now I want you to understand how the drama was&#13;
made modern. They introduced the devil."&#13;
&#13;
MEALS AND LUNCHES AT ALL HOURS&#13;
HOME MADE PIES&#13;
&#13;
Grace Logan wishes that men of today would write love verses to their lady loves&#13;
as did the men of olden times.&#13;
&#13;
WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE&#13;
&#13;
Ben borrows Heavy Hiett's Experiments, and hands a copy of them in. Next day&#13;
Prof. Campbell calls Ben up and informs him that Mr. Hiett is the only one in the&#13;
class who is color blind.&#13;
Students in need of Glasses will find our OPTOMETRISTS&#13;
competent eye examiners and specialists in fitting nose glasses.&#13;
Ask any of the thousands we have fitted. All glasses made&#13;
in our own shop.&#13;
&#13;
Deakin's idea of an American: "An American is a white man; has strong patriotism, is filled with sublime self-conceit; but is always there with the goods.&#13;
&#13;
Corner 5th&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Catherine Elliott borrows Frankie Knight's dress to wear to a fashionable wedding.&#13;
Upon her return Frankie inspects her and says: "Oh! Kathie, you've been going the&#13;
wrong way all evening, you've got the back in the front."&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
Streets&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fi ft y-two&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
The best informed Live Stock Growers and&#13;
Shippers have found that the MOST NET&#13;
MONEY is almost invariably secured by&#13;
shipping their stock to this market.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
McCurdy and Jocy go to see Mr. Keck about special meetings. Mr. Keck, Jr.,&#13;
sees them coming and tells his mother that a couple are coming to get married. Mrs.&#13;
Keck rushes up stairs and helps Rev. Keck into his preacher's coat and white collar and&#13;
tie so that he will be presentable to marry Mac and Jocy.&#13;
&#13;
Ferguson, Abel Land Co., Inc.&#13;
PAID UP CAPITAL $100,000.00&#13;
WILLIGES BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
This winter Bill Evans fixed it up with his girl to take her to the 6:55 train. He&#13;
returned about 3 A. M. as usual Sunday night, or rather Monday morning, to rise at&#13;
5 : 30. But Bill's love of sleep got the best of his love for Miss Gravelle and he woke&#13;
up w. th a guilty conscience at 8 o'clock. Result-buys a Big Ben at Darlings.&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
Dealers in Farm Lands&#13;
&#13;
J. G. LEGLER&#13;
&#13;
Eastern South Dakota,&#13;
W estern Minnesota,&#13;
lowa---Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Dray and Van Line&#13;
Light and Heavy Draying&#13;
Special Attention Given to Packing&#13;
TERMS:&#13;
&#13;
Cash.&#13;
Office Phone 6240&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
Office, 1903 St. Aub.&#13;
Residence Phone 64 1 3&#13;
&#13;
hundred fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
CORN&#13;
&#13;
CLOVER&#13;
&#13;
ALFALFA&#13;
&#13;
Sales made on Easy Terms&#13;
EXCHANGES HANDLED ON EQUITABLE BASIS&#13;
Two hundred fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
�.. .The ...&#13;
Reliable Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
ENGINEERS&#13;
CONTRACTORS&#13;
&#13;
We carry a complete line of up-to-date&#13;
Clothing and Furnishings, at very lowest&#13;
prices. Visit our store when in need of&#13;
clothing.&#13;
&#13;
PLUMBING&#13;
H EATING&#13;
&#13;
Orr &amp;&#13;
Graves&#13;
&#13;
KAUFMAN PRESHRUNK&#13;
CAMPUS TOGS&#13;
OUR SPECIALTY&#13;
IO PER CENT DISCOUNT TO&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
John son &amp;A ronson&#13;
7 l 0-7 l 2 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
United Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
1800&#13;
&#13;
1900&#13;
&#13;
TAILORING&#13;
French Dry Cleaning&#13;
Sanitary Pressing&#13;
Repairing neatly done&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
TAILOR SHOP&#13;
Sam Meyers, Prop.&#13;
Auto P hone 6240&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BARBER SHOP&#13;
C. D. KELLOGG, Prop.&#13;
Basement First Door South of Theatre&#13;
&#13;
L. J. EVERIST- CLEAN COAL&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred fifty-s ix&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�PIPER &amp; LARSON&#13;
PLUMBING&#13;
STEAM AND HoT WATER HEATING&#13;
E STIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Ave.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
The followi ng property will be sold at public auction from the Spoonholder, June&#13;
12th, 10 A. M.&#13;
Auctioneer, Frank Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE&#13;
&#13;
French sentences--F rench A. Class&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE OUTFITTERS&#13;
&#13;
Belt-]. D. Kolp&#13;
BI us hes-Woodke&#13;
Red Cordouroys-John Briggs&#13;
Chapel seats for next year-Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
"M" Sweaters-Ben Holbert&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING NEW INST ATIONERY, PENNANTS,&#13;
JEWELRY, POST CARDS, ETC.&#13;
&#13;
Extra credits-Frank Johnson-Hank Winterringer&#13;
Corsage • Bouquets-Lottie Sanders&#13;
Psych grades-Juniors&#13;
Caps, Gowns and Diplomas-Seniors&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
Beans-Ada Belew&#13;
Dimples-Fully&#13;
Athletic record-Vince&#13;
Someone has said that life is just one blank thing after another.&#13;
Dunham says it's just one snooze after another.&#13;
Montgomery says it's just one bluff after another.&#13;
Barks states that it's just one day after another.&#13;
Susan Eads says it's just one stick of gum after another.&#13;
The Librarian declares it's just one Ruff house after another.&#13;
Miss D'Orsay says it's just one "M" sweater after another.&#13;
Bill Bass contends that it's the same sweater all the time.&#13;
To Kuhns it's one grind after another.&#13;
Kolp says it s one frost after another.&#13;
But all agree it's just one flunk after another.&#13;
We hope that these jokes will meet with the approbation of the ministerial association.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nin e&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, Ph., D., D . D., President&#13;
&#13;
SOME REASONS FOR ATTENDING MORN I NGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
( 1) It is a standard College, whose graduates receive recognition&#13;
in the leading universities.&#13;
(2)&#13;
&#13;
It has an able Faculty who have been trained in the leading universities of America and Europe.&#13;
&#13;
(3) It has an endowment of over $400,000.&#13;
( 4) It is one of the few colleges of Iowa to pass the scrutiny and&#13;
receive the endowment of the General Education Board of&#13;
New York.&#13;
(5) The Scientific work is strong and well equipped. The laboratories are supplied with modern and up-to-date apparatus.&#13;
( 6) In all departments of intercollegiate interests such as athletics,&#13;
debates and oratory, Morningside holds an enviable record.&#13;
( 7) The location in a suburb of a prosperous city of fifty thousand affords many advantages found only m metropolitan&#13;
centers.&#13;
(8) The New Fire Proof Main Hall erected during the past year&#13;
is one of the best college buildings in the state. Steam heated,&#13;
from central heating plant, and electric lighted, the building&#13;
also contains fifteen modern-equipped recitation rooms, spacious library reading room, and four finely furnished Literary&#13;
Society Halls.&#13;
For Catalogue and Other Information, Address&#13;
&#13;
THE PRESIDENT&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Miss Brown&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
NOT IN A CLASS&#13;
THEY ST AND ALONE&#13;
MADE BY&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
����</text>
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              <text>I&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux 1914&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Annual Year&#13;
Book&#13;
Junior Class&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Volume XII&#13;
&#13;
C. L.&#13;
&#13;
BARKS&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
McCuRDY&#13;
&#13;
MABEL PECAUT&#13;
&#13;
L. L.&#13;
&#13;
WRIGHT&#13;
&#13;
H . P. MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
J. D.&#13;
&#13;
KOLP&#13;
&#13;
HELEN GIEHM&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
S.&#13;
&#13;
Jean&#13;
&#13;
BIGGLESTONE&#13;
FuLLBROOK&#13;
WHITTEMORE&#13;
&#13;
IsoBEL Webb&#13;
CAROLINE EADS&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
W. HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Editor in Chief&#13;
Business&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Editor&#13;
Assistant Business Manager&#13;
Artist&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Classes&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Literary&#13;
Societies&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
LAURA BELT&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
&#13;
RUTH RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
&#13;
LOLA BROWNELL&#13;
H. M. COBBS&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Photographer&#13;
Assistant Athletics&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
o Alfred Edwin Craig, Ph. D..&#13;
D. D. who has already led&#13;
Morningside College through&#13;
one great crisis, and to whom we look&#13;
for inspiration and leadership in the&#13;
building of the GreaterMorningside&#13;
of the future, the class of 1914 respectfully dedicate this Book.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College-A&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENT ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Forecast&#13;
CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
OMPARED with others, Morningside College can boast of but a brief history.&#13;
Founded less than a score of years ago she has not had time to gather those rich&#13;
traditions which form so large an asset in many older institutions. But during&#13;
these few short years of her active career she has had an uninterrupted course of progress.&#13;
A splendid beginning has been made in buildings. Main Hall, rebuilt after the fire, of&#13;
reinforced concrete, perfectly fireproof. stands among the very best college buildings in&#13;
the country. An endowment of $400,000 has been accumulated, which is surely a&#13;
splendid beginning considering the short period in which it has been gathered. A&#13;
splendid body of upwards of five hundred students throngs the halls, which is prophetic&#13;
of the still better things to come when the greater equipment shortly to be realized has&#13;
been secured.&#13;
From the very first a high standard of scholarship has been the determined aim of&#13;
the institution. This purpose has been steadfastly followed, even when it seemed necessary to draw upon future prospects to maintain the same. But the outcome has fully&#13;
vindicated the faith of those who heroically faced deficit and threatened defeat in order&#13;
to hold up the standard which had been set as the ideal of this young institution. The&#13;
vision, the faith, the courage and ultimate triumph of Bishop Lewis will ever have an&#13;
outstanding place among the splendid achievements of our Methodism. His was that&#13;
splendid Christian optimism which "planned great things for God, and expected great&#13;
things from God." The past is secure. But what of the future?&#13;
It cannot be denied that we are in a period of educational transition. Old ideas&#13;
are being challenged, new aims are urgently set before us and amidst this scene of diss.olving views we do well to inquire what reasonable hope we can hold up for continuance.&#13;
Vocational education is becoming the vogue. As a result of this change the fearful are&#13;
beginning to inquire if the day of the small College is not past? Is the time not close&#13;
when we will be required to surrender our educational position and leave the field to&#13;
these greater institutions? Let it be frankly admitted that the independent College, depending upon voluntary gifts for its support, will in but few instances be able to successfully enter into this field of vocational competition. When this concession has been&#13;
made it still remains to inquire whether there is left a place for the College as such. We&#13;
believe there is. To successfully fill such a place is the modest aim of Morningside&#13;
College. Let us ascertain what this implies .&#13;
We must first make a clear distinction between the College and the University. The&#13;
American University is an aggregate of Colleges, only one of which is devoted to strictly&#13;
collegiate training of undergraduate students. Following this undergraduate work is&#13;
the graduate work of a collegiate character which is becoming an increasingly important&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
feature. Then there are the several professional schools, fitting men for life's vocations,&#13;
such as the law, medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, and other related professions. In addition&#13;
to these professional Colleges there is growing up an important group which may be designated technical institutions, where the engineer, the farmer, the mechanic may receive&#13;
expert training to fit them for the deft, the delicate, the scientific demands of our complex&#13;
and highly organized modern civilization. It will be observed that the independent&#13;
College enters but one field of this great scope of educational competition, that of undergraduate collegiate work. Here is the real sphere for such an institution as Morningside&#13;
College aims to be.&#13;
For such an institution there is a most hopeful outlook. It remains for it to preserve the true idealism of education. We believe that we have not yet surrendered to&#13;
that vocational clamor that would reduce education to the low level of merely equipping&#13;
our youth to successfully enter into the commercial competition of the day. We hold&#13;
it is quite as important to make a life as to make a living. When a people is poor, when&#13;
subsistence is hard and living is scant there may be much excuse for negl ecting the&#13;
higher things of thought in the hard struggle to maintain a hold on life at all. But as&#13;
our resources increase there ought to be many who will have ability and the disposition&#13;
to seek that enrichment of life that comes from the broader intimacy with all that is best&#13;
in literature, philosophy and science. When riches have the glamor of newness they may&#13;
seem all satisfying, but when a people has had the time to meditate on real values they&#13;
usually come to the conclusion of John Milton when he said, "No man · is ever truly&#13;
rich with what he carries in his pocket or holds in his hand. Real wealth is of the head&#13;
and the heart." To intensify a love for this higher riches is the mission of the College.&#13;
To do this does not necessarily require enormous physical equipment. It may seem a&#13;
far call from the College of today to that ideal suggested by Garfield when he declared&#13;
that Mark Hopkins on one end of a log and a boy on the other made the ideal College.&#13;
Yet his remark may suggest reflection.&#13;
&#13;
CONSERVATORYOF MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
To meet this ideal the small College is peculiarly well prepared. This is true&#13;
because a genuine education can never be handed out machine made. It must involve&#13;
personality. Intimate contact between the instructor and the student is fundamental.&#13;
This demands small units for its most perfect realization. Immense mobs of students,&#13;
thronging the halls of some great University may make great impression upon the imagination of the bystander, but when we seek individual results a smaller grouping will&#13;
meet the requirements more ideally. Other elements enter into the composition of a&#13;
satisfactory school for immature youth, such as the student graduated from our secondary&#13;
schools is likely to be. The moral and religious atmosphere which surrounds the institution is no small factor in the minds of many careful parents. They do not relish&#13;
the idea of training their children with scrupulous care during the period of childhood,&#13;
and then at the most susceptible and critical time of life turning them over to the cold&#13;
mercies of a state institution where the personal elements are reduced to the vanishing&#13;
point and where such vices as flourish in large groups of unregulated youth are sure to&#13;
&#13;
run riot. It may be taken for granted that the large University will always fail to meet&#13;
the educational desires of all the people. The place of the small College seems secure.&#13;
This may be a good place to indicate some of the peculiar&#13;
advantages Morningside&#13;
College possesses which become great factors in her future outlook. She has a strategic&#13;
position. Located in a beautiful suburb of a thriving city there are offered the advantages of the quiet retreat and the energetic life of a throbbing center of activity and&#13;
interest. As the city grows, which it is destined to do at a most rapid pace, the College&#13;
cannot help but share in this prosperity. The fact that it will afford a large number of&#13;
young people from Sioux City opportunity to secure a College education and yet to&#13;
remain at home while they do so is an important feature. Surrounding Morningside College is one of the most prosperous sections of country anywhere to be found. The rapid&#13;
advance of land values in the past few years indicates this. The natural result is that&#13;
the children of these wealthy land owners naturally desire something of the culture and&#13;
larger equipment that the College has to offer. The fact that we are so far removed&#13;
from the other institutions of the state has its advantages also. While the southeastern&#13;
part of the state is crowded thick with Colleges, Morningside stands as the solitary&#13;
representative of a first grade College in the northwestern quarter of the state. The&#13;
rapid development of the states west of us will doubtless have an effect upon our future&#13;
and we may hope to attract an increasing number of students from that section.&#13;
&#13;
President's&#13;
&#13;
Home&#13;
&#13;
To meet these growing needs of the College a large program has been adopted.&#13;
The immediate aim is to secure $200,000 for buildings and improvements. This implies&#13;
the payment for the work already done on the fine Main Hall and the new heating&#13;
plant already installed, also the building of a Gymnasium and a Dormitory for women.&#13;
This campaign is already launched and is meeting with such cordial approval by the&#13;
people to whom we have appealed that it is safe at this time to say that it will be carried to a successful completion. The next feature on our program will be a campaign&#13;
for more endowment. The fact that the Rockefeller foundation has helped us in the&#13;
past is enough to assure that when we are ready to undertake another enterprise they&#13;
will come to our assistance. Already the friends of the College are talking of&#13;
doubling the endowment as a suitable celebration of the passage of our first quarter of&#13;
a century milepost, which will occur in 1919. Indeed the more enthusiastic insist that&#13;
the full million dollar mark ought to be our goal. Certain it is that Morningside College is destined to move along a line of progress which will assure a place among the&#13;
foremost institutions of her class.&#13;
&#13;
Rev.&#13;
GR ACE Methodist&#13;
&#13;
Episcopal&#13;
&#13;
Herbert&#13;
&#13;
A. KECK&#13;
&#13;
Church&#13;
&#13;
Grace Methodist Episcopal Church of Morningside, situated at the south end of&#13;
the campus, may well be called the College Church. It is here that .the larger part of&#13;
the student body finds its church home. It is here that Morningside College has always&#13;
found a friend. Last spring when Main Hall was a mass of ruins and our class rooms&#13;
gone, the trustees of Grace Church tendered us the use of their building and we were&#13;
able to carry on class work without interruption. This plan continued until the completion of our New Main Hall late last fall. We cannot in words express our appreciation of the kindness of the church at every opportunity and especially in this particular&#13;
instance.&#13;
However, we are glad that when Grace Church was searching for a man to take&#13;
the pulpit about to be vacated by Dr. Wasser, Morningside College was able to step&#13;
forward and present one of its graduates for this all-important position. Rev. Herbert&#13;
A. Keck, of the class of 'O 1, although one of the young men of the Conference, was&#13;
chosen for this leading pulpit of Northwest Iowa. The same spirit which was manifest&#13;
in his work in oratory and debate while in College is making itself felt in Grace Church.&#13;
The large auditorium is crowded nearly every Sunday; and residents of Morningside&#13;
and students alike are being inspired and elevated by the earnestness and eloquence of&#13;
this man.&#13;
We are glad that the Church and the C olleg e are thus able to co-operate.&#13;
this spirit of mutuality continue in the days to come.&#13;
Interior&#13;
&#13;
View&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
BOOK I&#13;
MEDICINE MEN and PAPOOSES&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
&#13;
Board&#13;
&#13;
faculty&#13;
&#13;
of Trustees&#13;
&#13;
BOOK II&#13;
&#13;
E. C. HEILMAN , M. D.&#13;
&#13;
C. W. PAYNE&#13;
J. C . LocKIN&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
J. G. SHUMAKER&#13;
F. D. EMPEY&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
HASKINS&#13;
&#13;
students&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Auditor&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Field Secretary&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCAY&#13;
&#13;
Field Secretary&#13;
&#13;
WARS&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
athletics&#13;
&#13;
WARRIORS&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
&#13;
BOOK III&#13;
CHANTS andLEGENDS&#13;
( literary )&#13;
&#13;
BOOK IV&#13;
&#13;
TRIBES&#13;
&#13;
(Societies)&#13;
&#13;
. BOOK V&#13;
&#13;
COUNCILS&#13;
&#13;
BOOK VI&#13;
POW WOWS&#13;
calendar&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
jokes&#13;
&#13;
Foreword&#13;
Since the publication of the 191 3 Sioux, we have&#13;
witnessed many changes in Morningside College. We have&#13;
seen our Main Hall swept away in flames and a new fireproof building erected in its place. We have a new heating plant and every expectation of a complete new gymnasium within the coming year. Our record in inter-collegiate&#13;
activities during the past twelve months has never been surpassed.&#13;
&#13;
Surely this has been a year of achievement.&#13;
&#13;
During this period of advancement, the 1914 Sioux has&#13;
tried to keep pace.&#13;
&#13;
We have not tried to excel any prev-&#13;
&#13;
ious efforts, we have simply endeavored to embody some new&#13;
ideas and features in our work in order to make an annual&#13;
worthy of our institution. In so far as we have succeeded&#13;
we leave for you to judge.&#13;
&#13;
Throughout the construction of&#13;
&#13;
the book we have had but one aim in view, to help in the&#13;
realization of a Greater Morningside; and we feel that in this&#13;
great purpose every student of Morningside is with us.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
thank you for your co-operation and support and if in any&#13;
way we have erred we ask your charity.&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED EDWIN CRAIG, Ph.D .. D. D.&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, Ph. D.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Registrar&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biblical Literature&#13;
Professor of Economics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
SIDNEY LEVI CHANDLER. A M.&#13;
Dean of the&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND. A B.&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
AGNES B. FERGUSON, AM.&#13;
Acting Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
Principal of the Academy&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES. Ph. D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
......,,,,.,,,..................&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTHLEN ER, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL A. M.&#13;
&#13;
P rofessor of Greek&#13;
&#13;
Profesor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT N. VAN HORNE, Ph. B.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AUSTIN COSS, M . S.&#13;
&#13;
Professor. of M Mathemetics&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR A. BROWN, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREYNALD, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
P rofesso r of Education&#13;
&#13;
Professor of French&#13;
&#13;
,,•'&#13;
&#13;
twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES ALMER MARSH, B. S.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ESTELLE ROBERTS, A B.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS C. STEPHENS, M. D.&#13;
Secretary of the&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADLEY, A M.&#13;
Instructor in German&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN ALLISON MORSE&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA CLARK SANBORN&#13;
Librarian&#13;
&#13;
,,,,&#13;
&#13;
..,··'&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
MABEL ELIZABETH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SAUNDERSON, AB.&#13;
Director of Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Expression&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
HORACE L. HOUGHTON, Ph.B., B. D.&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE MACMURRAY, AM.&#13;
&#13;
Lecturer in Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD, Ph. B.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAC COLLIN, A B.&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
...,&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
,•'&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
CECIL BURLEIGH&#13;
&#13;
MAE EDITH WOOD, A B.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
Teach er in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD, A B.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A TEMPLEMAN&#13;
Teach er of Banjo, Mandolin and C uitar&#13;
&#13;
lnstructor in .Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
BERTHEMIA McCARTHY, AB.&#13;
JAMES REISTRUP&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Academy Latin&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte ' .&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET&#13;
&#13;
GAY DOLLIVER, A. B.&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN&#13;
&#13;
ENGLISH DIMMITT, A. M.&#13;
Professor of Latin&#13;
&#13;
Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
.........,,....................&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
......&#13;
&#13;
SARAH ANN BLEAKLY . . .... . ... .. Galva&#13;
&#13;
Au DREE IRENE DAVIE . . . .. . .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Stenographer&#13;
&#13;
Class Artist&#13;
&#13;
LORNA MARIE DISTAD&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN EDITH BOWER ... . . Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
·.· Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Latin Shark&#13;
&#13;
Class Bachelor M aid&#13;
&#13;
SILAS ALONZO BRALEY ... .. . .. . Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
SUSANA LOIS EADS . . .. . . . T yndall, S. D .&#13;
&#13;
Official Class Yellmaster&#13;
&#13;
Class Ford Automobilist&#13;
&#13;
JOHN ELY BRIGGS .. . .. . . . . . . Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
Genius&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH HENRY EDGE . . . .. . .. . Humboldt&#13;
&#13;
Class Brownstudy&#13;
&#13;
ELLA SEAVER CAMPBELL . .. . .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
 CATHERINE E. ELLIOTT .. . . . Ola the, K an.&#13;
&#13;
Class Conscience&#13;
&#13;
Class Booster&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE ELLEN CAIN .. .. .. . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM CLEVELANDE VANS . . . Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Class English Slave&#13;
&#13;
Class Silent T hinker&#13;
&#13;
JOCY IRENE CARTER ... . ... . . . .. Whiting&#13;
&#13;
ALELIAURSU LAFISH .. . .... . ... Quimby&#13;
&#13;
Class Jester&#13;
&#13;
Class Model Student&#13;
&#13;
................................&#13;
&#13;
.....&#13;
&#13;
,,.,,&#13;
&#13;
thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
.......,,,,,,,,......&#13;
&#13;
,,.,&#13;
&#13;
Th irty -th ree&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
RoY HITT GARLOCK .. . . . . .... Sioux, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
G RACE FLORENCE LOGAN . . . . . . . .. Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Class Grandfather&#13;
&#13;
Class Precise Girl&#13;
&#13;
HowARD GRAHAM . . . . . . . ... .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARYEMIRA McCuTCHEON ... Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Math Shark&#13;
&#13;
Class History Whale&#13;
&#13;
MARY ANNETTA HALL ... . .. . . .. ... Colo&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE MAVIS MONTGOMERY. S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Hard Worker&#13;
&#13;
FRANK PRESTON JOHNSON .. . .. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Oratorical Wonder&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE HERBERT KINGSBURY .. Ponca,&#13;
&#13;
"Class Queen"&#13;
EVERET MONTGOMERY . Sio ux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Crack Athlete&#13;
&#13;
HORACE GEORGE MERTEN ... . . .. G arner&#13;
&#13;
Class Prize Fusser&#13;
&#13;
Eva INEZ LEAZER .. .. . . . . . ... Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Modesty&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN CLARKE LEMON . . . .... . Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
MINN IE NELSON . .. .. .. . . W akefield, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
Class Insurgent Editor&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
ALICE MoWER . . . .. . . . . . . . . . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Juvenile Expert&#13;
&#13;
,,,,,&#13;
&#13;
Class Memory&#13;
&#13;
Class Minnehaha&#13;
&#13;
.. ,•·'&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL MAGDALENE SHUMAKER . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE WEBSTER PRICHARD . . ... Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Class Sympathetic Sociologist&#13;
&#13;
Class Infant Extraordinary&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ELIZABETH WEDGWOOD . . Sioux City&#13;
Eva WILSON RANDOLPH ..... . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Cheerful Helper&#13;
DAVID LAWRENCE WICKENS ... Avon, S. D.&#13;
]OHN&#13;
&#13;
Class Sturdy Hercules&#13;
&#13;
L. RALSTON . . . . . . . . . . . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
Class Loquacious Benedict&#13;
SARA RACHEL WHITEHOUSE . ... Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
Class Militant&#13;
&#13;
Suffragette&#13;
&#13;
ANNA RIEKE . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Class Substantial Smile&#13;
INEZ WHITNEY .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
Class Optimist&#13;
&#13;
(Spoken for)&#13;
&#13;
VERA ROWE . . . .. . . ..... . .... Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Quizzical Spectator&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
WEED WHITTEMORE&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Busy Member&#13;
LOTTIE Louise SANDE&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
. . . . . . . Sioux City&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class Leading&#13;
&#13;
Lady&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
JACOB HENRY WINTERRINGER . . . . . . . Oto&#13;
&#13;
Class Cardiac Specialist&#13;
EDNA SIMON ... . ... . .. ... .... Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Class C ermaniac&#13;
&#13;
LAVANCHA MARIE Wood . .... . Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Class Engaged Girl (not the only)&#13;
&#13;
,,,,,&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,, ..............&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,,,.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
LAURA L. BELT&#13;
Vi ce President&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE MORGAN&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
South Sioux City, Neb.&#13;
&#13;
"Beltie" could coax&#13;
the man out of the&#13;
moon . A c lever brain&#13;
and&#13;
dete rmin ed&#13;
will&#13;
hidden behind pleasing&#13;
&#13;
Lucile&#13;
is&#13;
another&#13;
very young lady who&#13;
has attended to busin ess and co ll ected the&#13;
necessary credits to be&#13;
a Junior at the age&#13;
when most of us are&#13;
ente ring college.&#13;
And&#13;
s h e graduated&#13;
from&#13;
Expression last year bes ides.&#13;
Just to show&#13;
&#13;
mann ers.,&#13;
&#13;
distracting&#13;
&#13;
eyes&#13;
a nd&#13;
dimples.&#13;
make a d a n gero us ly effective force. However,&#13;
Laura h as don e nothin g seri o us yet. except&#13;
graduate from Music,&#13;
Expression,&#13;
class h e rself a .J unior- and is&#13;
st ill in her teens. But&#13;
t h e r e is no limit to&#13;
what she may do- -&#13;
&#13;
how&#13;
&#13;
energeti c&#13;
&#13;
she&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
she&#13;
lives&#13;
in&#13;
South&#13;
Sioux and crosses the&#13;
Missouri on th e way to&#13;
classes eve ry morning.&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR W. HORNNEY, President&#13;
Le Mars&#13;
&#13;
L . ALICE KLIPPEL&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Alice&#13;
I&#13;
chosen&#13;
&#13;
I sobel is so me r ela tion of Old King Co le,&#13;
we judge. She Is cer tainly jolly- born and&#13;
been that way&#13;
ever&#13;
s in ce.&#13;
f ro m&#13;
appearances.&#13;
Her laugh is&#13;
frequent,&#13;
whol e-so ul ed&#13;
and infectiou s. It can&#13;
be quench ed only by&#13;
poetry, the Browning&#13;
variety especially. She&#13;
enjoys everything&#13;
else&#13;
in h e r bu sy sch oo l life&#13;
as only a worker can.&#13;
She is an authority&#13;
on&#13;
a ll society matters.&#13;
&#13;
is on e of t h e&#13;
few who&#13;
are&#13;
The&#13;
needs more&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
majoring in Latin&#13;
&#13;
class&#13;
these&#13;
&#13;
courageous&#13;
&#13;
soul s.&#13;
&#13;
Alice h as followed t h e&#13;
fortunes&#13;
of&#13;
"1914"&#13;
through a ll its trials&#13;
a n d stunts. Her friends&#13;
appreciate&#13;
&#13;
her&#13;
&#13;
stead-&#13;
&#13;
fast good nature and&#13;
h e r gentle di spos ition.&#13;
S he co mes to chape l&#13;
regularly and is an acti ve member of the Y.&#13;
W. A worker in anythi ng .&#13;
&#13;
MYRON 0. INSKO&#13;
Knierim&#13;
&#13;
Dear old chubby, pink-cheeked "F izz !" Always jolly, y et&#13;
ser iou s enough for study, society, journalism and about&#13;
·steen hours of fussing a week. A leader in Y. M. and&#13;
rough -houses. Hail s from Le Mars, the birthplace of other&#13;
Morningside notables. Not a n athl et e himse lf, but a peach&#13;
of a rooter. Had a steady girl once but she left schooljust writes lette rs now.&#13;
&#13;
"Yea Verily ," a fr iend to a ll. a printer by trade. a so ldier by occupati on , a preacher by callin g. a debater of no&#13;
littl e sk ill. a biological shark. and may even be found occas ion a ll y at hi s books. A love r of ' la n g uage-ca n utter&#13;
more words in a minute th an any man on the cam pu s . The&#13;
foreign fie ld s are hi s goal.&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
.....&#13;
&#13;
CAROLINE&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
F. EADS&#13;
&#13;
Edna&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Allen&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
Harold&#13;
&#13;
Engle&#13;
&#13;
A . Gorder&#13;
&#13;
Tyndall, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
Ainsworth. Neb.&#13;
&#13;
M oorh ead&#13;
&#13;
"Pug"&#13;
pouting,&#13;
or&#13;
"Pug" merry-and&#13;
her&#13;
smile is as quick and&#13;
flashing as her witis an inter esting person to talk to, full of&#13;
vivid life and d ecisive&#13;
of opin i on. Her moods&#13;
and her affections are&#13;
as changeful as March&#13;
&#13;
Take a qu ick brain,&#13;
a sassy t ongue. a mischievous humor, a large&#13;
&#13;
He hails&#13;
from t h e&#13;
sand hills o f Nebraska&#13;
whi ch accou n ts for his&#13;
grit.&#13;
A ha rd worker,&#13;
a steadfast fri end. optimistic. jovia l. serious&#13;
only&#13;
when&#13;
prea ching&#13;
a sermon or r eciting in&#13;
class.&#13;
A fa i thful adheren t of the&#13;
cinder&#13;
path. Chivalrous at all&#13;
times, East End is his&#13;
Mecca.&#13;
Considers duty&#13;
his master and is looking forward to ministry&#13;
in t h e foreign fi eld.&#13;
&#13;
"Gorder"&#13;
may&#13;
be&#13;
small&#13;
of stature, but&#13;
he h as a mighty supply of energy, and a&#13;
&#13;
weather,&#13;
&#13;
now&#13;
&#13;
heart, and much courage, and pack&#13;
th em&#13;
into a small body. and&#13;
you have Edna. But&#13;
don't forget l oyaltyto friends. school and&#13;
religion.&#13;
Optimistic.&#13;
&#13;
too. and such a worker !&#13;
A very Puritan&#13;
&#13;
warm.&#13;
&#13;
now cold. She is very&#13;
energetic. be it work or&#13;
play.&#13;
A&#13;
tennis and&#13;
basketballI enthusiast.&#13;
&#13;
fo r doing he r&#13;
dutywere t h ere more like&#13;
her. li fe would go more&#13;
smoothly.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD M.&#13;
&#13;
COBBS&#13;
&#13;
large capacity for work.&#13;
His&#13;
favori te&#13;
recreation i s dealing wi th&#13;
mathematical problems&#13;
and working&#13;
out new&#13;
chemical properties. A&#13;
firm&#13;
believer&#13;
in&#13;
coeducat ion.&#13;
A promising debater, having acquired skill i n that line&#13;
in hi s academic days.&#13;
His&#13;
aspirations&#13;
rest&#13;
upon the jusges bench.&#13;
&#13;
TRACIA Bregman&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Hull&#13;
&#13;
"Rusty"&#13;
is a good old scout, an athlete and debater, and&#13;
a modest man withal that dislikes to have his picture&#13;
taken. though not afraid to speak up in Psych. His bobby&#13;
is hunting and his favorite and oft repeated command is,&#13;
"Well, shut the door!" Hehas several "M's"&#13;
to his cr edit&#13;
and as many sweaters to his back.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Bregman takes life seriously-more&#13;
seriously than&#13;
n eed be. perhaps. She studi es hard. gets good grades and&#13;
works steadi ly towards her peupose.&#13;
Sb e is going to be a&#13;
missionary.&#13;
Sh e is a very active member&#13;
of Whitfield&#13;
Church and belongs to the Volunteer&#13;
Band.&#13;
We look to&#13;
her to help the class k eep up the Morningsiderecord in&#13;
the fo r eign fie ld .&#13;
&#13;
.............,,•&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
'••,,., ,.,,•'&#13;
&#13;
Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
Forty-three&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE A. LONG&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ARGIE DOOLITTLE&#13;
Sibley&#13;
&#13;
G. ALBERT VENNINK&#13;
&#13;
Florence is a Mathematics shark&#13;
- she&#13;
proves it by coming to&#13;
a 7 :40 cla ss four times&#13;
a week. And s till she&#13;
is consi stently ch eerfu l&#13;
and unhurried of aspect. Surely hers are&#13;
ways of peace and of&#13;
no trouble to the faculty.&#13;
Willing&#13;
and&#13;
h elpful at a ll ti mes. we&#13;
think Morningside&#13;
wou ld appl'eciate severa l more like her.&#13;
&#13;
Margie is a worker .&#13;
Sbe works&#13;
first of all&#13;
for Morningside&#13;
sh e&#13;
works for her class. she&#13;
worked on the Junior&#13;
Girls' basketha ll team.&#13;
and on all our&#13;
class&#13;
stun ts. she works, on h er&#13;
studies, sh e works and&#13;
boosts all along t h e&#13;
line!&#13;
She is full of&#13;
loya lty&#13;
and&#13;
school&#13;
s pirit . a ch eerful, pleasant&#13;
companion&#13;
and&#13;
classm ate.&#13;
&#13;
Vennink is a pra ctical sociologist. I n the&#13;
boy scout&#13;
movement&#13;
and other work a mong&#13;
t he boys he is accom plishing much.&#13;
He is&#13;
honest to h imself and&#13;
to his neighbor and absolutely fearless and&#13;
impartial in the discharge of his du ty. As&#13;
Humane Officer h e has&#13;
even been known to&#13;
arrest the Chief of&#13;
Police for driving&#13;
a&#13;
la me horse.&#13;
Received&#13;
a grade in Psych .&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM A. McCurdy&#13;
T wo Harbors, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUSTUS H.&#13;
BRUNELLE&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Gussie"-frank, s incere. caustically honest. The kind of student t h at revels in&#13;
and&#13;
Calculus.&#13;
Greek&#13;
but n ot a mere bookworm . for h e finds t ime&#13;
to run to the monument occasionally.&#13;
&#13;
sides&#13;
&#13;
Be-&#13;
&#13;
being a&#13;
hard&#13;
and loyal, be&#13;
possesses the rare vir1ne of punctuality. He&#13;
always boosts for Morningside and even champions the faculty.&#13;
worker&#13;
&#13;
ALMA H. WILHELM&#13;
Hartley&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" is by allI odds th e busiest m a n in the c lass. H e&#13;
has worn out four pair of s h oes s ince last fall just "getting&#13;
adds&#13;
yet h e h as found time to play football, debate and&#13;
meander about with the Glee Club besides. He is " 1914's"&#13;
most entertaining&#13;
member one of his favorite impersonat ions be ing that of '·Oswald .'' He is a leader in Y. M.,&#13;
absolutely d ep endabl e a n d a steadfast fr iend.&#13;
&#13;
Alma is brown-eyed. short and p lum p, and very wise.&#13;
Plump because s h e enjoys a joke and a good laugh . too.&#13;
And very wise because she s t udies h er lessons until s he&#13;
gets them and t h en she isn't afraid to let the professor's&#13;
know it. She is pe rsi stent in pursui t of any object. which&#13;
accounts for her good guarding on the basketball team this&#13;
winter.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE&#13;
&#13;
A. ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
L . BOWMAN&#13;
&#13;
LOLA G. BROWNELL&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Bernice has so me of&#13;
the peculiarities whi ch&#13;
bel ong to the a r t i sti c&#13;
temperament&#13;
be ing s ubj ect to every kn own&#13;
mood. But how she can&#13;
sing ! She has a voice&#13;
and musica l t alen t that&#13;
are recompense fo r any&#13;
care&#13;
She has enough&#13;
Fren ch b lood i n h er to&#13;
sh ow occasi onall y . and&#13;
enough Y ankee brains to&#13;
get her " A' ' grades. And&#13;
no one ca n have a bett er t ime.&#13;
&#13;
Th er e isn't a more&#13;
hospi tabl e person&#13;
in&#13;
Morningside Lola,&#13;
t han&#13;
n or a more hosp i tabl e&#13;
home t han Lola's h ome.&#13;
They are both famous&#13;
for good times and good&#13;
eats.&#13;
L o la can study&#13;
as well as cook. and&#13;
manage&#13;
a t y pewriter&#13;
skillfull y . She has class&#13;
spirit&#13;
enough for two&#13;
or&#13;
three peop le and&#13;
worked as m uch fo r&#13;
"1914." She has h elped&#13;
&#13;
Ruth i s fair. pretty&#13;
and sweet.&#13;
H er comp lexion and hair are&#13;
f ai r : her face and h er&#13;
ways are pret t y: and&#13;
her voice and h er smiles&#13;
are sweet.&#13;
She sings&#13;
beautifu lly.&#13;
And she&#13;
does very well in school.&#13;
on ly. she has been worried la t ely by- just imagine-jok es. Our only&#13;
co m p la i nt against her&#13;
is that she g i ves just&#13;
on e person m ost al I her&#13;
&#13;
Craig, Neb.&#13;
Miss Adams h as but&#13;
recently&#13;
joined&#13;
our&#13;
c l ass. h av ing com e to us&#13;
from Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan.&#13;
We have always&#13;
h ea r d t ha t it wa s a&#13;
good sch oo l. and sh e h as&#13;
provecl that it turn s out&#13;
good products at l east .&#13;
She&#13;
is quiet&#13;
modest,&#13;
studiou s and loya l- an&#13;
addition&#13;
to&#13;
Morningsi de.&#13;
Her purpose in&#13;
com in g to college is&#13;
unusually&#13;
s impl e&#13;
to&#13;
become cultured.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
time.&#13;
&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
P. MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
JOHN D. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Al gona&#13;
&#13;
,Jacksonville. Ill.&#13;
&#13;
"Morgan&#13;
i s a versatile chap who plays foo t ball. d ebates,&#13;
jokes and d r aws- m ostl y draws.&#13;
Hecan do anyth ing you&#13;
wish in t he way o f portrai ts. design · or cartoons.&#13;
When&#13;
it comes t o stun ts h e and McCurdy&#13;
are a pair hard to beat.&#13;
Horace h as had a worried&#13;
look t his spring, though,been&#13;
illustra t ing and ca rt oon ing for "1914."&#13;
&#13;
"Jawn"&#13;
is rela t ed to the faculty bu t i t hasn't hurt him&#13;
any.&#13;
He has. w on great populari t y by su ccessfully managing the Bobb's beaner y.&#13;
s&#13;
When h e laughs you cannot see&#13;
ey es. h en ce you never&#13;
see t h em.&#13;
He room ed with&#13;
Mahoney first year but has ou t lived i t. A good reliab le&#13;
the&#13;
plugger in football and always a true fr i end .&#13;
&#13;
Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
.......&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Lauren s&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
hard&#13;
&#13;
firm friend,&#13;
ciety&#13;
&#13;
"Bigg"-that&#13;
is, in&#13;
heart mind-other&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
wise slender.&#13;
&#13;
Helen has li tera r y&#13;
aspirations.&#13;
She reports for the "Report-&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
man. a t rue son&#13;
&#13;
He ha s&#13;
&#13;
ever&#13;
&#13;
been&#13;
&#13;
e r.' '&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
that accomplishes&#13;
He&#13;
is working especially&#13;
&#13;
show · upon&#13;
&#13;
works&#13;
&#13;
hair.&#13;
&#13;
yet&#13;
&#13;
overtime&#13;
&#13;
for the Annual. gets&#13;
her lessons and still&#13;
has t ime to play basketball and tennis. She&#13;
is quiet and non-excitab le, in spite of her red&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
humorous chap. but of&#13;
late t he seriousness of&#13;
his pos iti on has begun&#13;
him.&#13;
&#13;
"Full y"&#13;
has . disting uish ecl himself In t wo&#13;
&#13;
hard in Biology with&#13;
an eve to bei n g a surgeon&#13;
He debates&#13;
seldom misses an athletic&#13;
event. has an enviable&#13;
reputation as a baseball&#13;
&#13;
and- it&#13;
&#13;
worke r,&#13;
&#13;
a loyal so-&#13;
&#13;
of old M. C. is "Fully."&#13;
&#13;
He takes&#13;
&#13;
life- half humorously,&#13;
but on&#13;
occasions can&#13;
apply himself in a way&#13;
&#13;
umpire,&#13;
&#13;
HELEN&#13;
GIEHM&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EARL S. FULLBROOK&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HARRY C.&#13;
· BIGGLESTONE&#13;
&#13;
always&#13;
&#13;
jol ly&#13;
&#13;
and ready for a good&#13;
t ime :&#13;
s t udious&#13;
and&#13;
capable. yet wi t·hal modest, in fact. too modest&#13;
to even give herself a&#13;
&#13;
ways -a s&#13;
a&#13;
debater.&#13;
and as a fusse r. h avingearne d great honors in&#13;
&#13;
the latter capa city.&#13;
&#13;
fair&#13;
write-up.&#13;
scientious and&#13;
&#13;
looks&#13;
&#13;
as if he would live happily ever aft er.&#13;
&#13;
Consincere&#13;
&#13;
at all times. she is in-&#13;
&#13;
deed "true blue."&#13;
&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
ROY H. McVICKER&#13;
&#13;
W. WHITTEMORE&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"Mac" means energy and is a synonym&#13;
&#13;
esty&#13;
&#13;
.l rn n&#13;
was born&#13;
with th e energy and capacity of two&#13;
people.&#13;
She is finishing the college course in three years;&#13;
and has in that time graduated from Expression serve d on&#13;
innumerable com m it tees and taken part in every school&#13;
&#13;
mod-&#13;
&#13;
by his&#13;
&#13;
map. He missed a year but has re turned to study "that&#13;
blooming Deu tch ."' If i t doesn' t spoil his r eligion he will&#13;
preach eventually .&#13;
&#13;
affair. She is ever the same busy. fun -lo ving. un s poil ed&#13;
Jean, in great demand everywhere for her acting. her bright&#13;
ideas a nd capable hands.&#13;
An idea l college girl.&#13;
&#13;
......................&#13;
&#13;
'•,,&#13;
&#13;
,,,+&#13;
&#13;
,,.,•'&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
for unselfish&#13;
&#13;
Famous for hi s ability to deba te. recognized&#13;
&#13;
everlasting congeniali ty, and loved for h is curl y ha ir. this&#13;
man stands out among those who put Morningside&#13;
on the&#13;
&#13;
,..&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
BENH OLBERT, JR.&#13;
Greeley&#13;
C. LEE BARKS&#13;
&#13;
"Big&#13;
&#13;
Ben "-big&#13;
&#13;
ing won his "M"&#13;
&#13;
CLARAL. HAWCOTT&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
L. BELEW&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
stature, bigger in heart&#13;
An athlete, traveler a n d&#13;
scholar (&#13;
Won a reputation as a n orator&#13;
a nd debater before coming&#13;
to&#13;
Morningside&#13;
While here he h as d evoted&#13;
h is&#13;
atten t ion&#13;
ch ieflv to athlet ics. h av-&#13;
&#13;
ma n . While efficiently&#13;
carrying&#13;
on t be work&#13;
of Office Secretary of&#13;
the Co llege. h e h as won&#13;
honors in debate a n d&#13;
has had the responsiili ty&#13;
of&#13;
directing&#13;
"1914's" tracks on the&#13;
sands of t ime.&#13;
Occas iona ll y h e goes to&#13;
classes when not t oo&#13;
d eepl y en gaged in office&#13;
a ffairs or work on "The&#13;
Sioux.' '&#13;
B u t with a ll&#13;
his cares, be is a cheerful soul w ith a sm ile&#13;
a nd greeting ever ready.&#13;
&#13;
ADA&#13;
&#13;
in all&#13;
&#13;
four departmen ts. T he&#13;
greatest all around athlete among the I owa&#13;
Colleges&#13;
Pick ed&#13;
by&#13;
cri tics as A ll Missour i&#13;
Valley fullback. Not a&#13;
bit "chestie."&#13;
&#13;
girl&#13;
&#13;
was&#13;
&#13;
guard&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
casual&#13;
would never&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
st ar&#13;
&#13;
that&#13;
&#13;
observer&#13;
th ink she&#13;
&#13;
and mi nd&#13;
&#13;
the Junior basketball&#13;
team, an a ll around&#13;
shark, an artist-but&#13;
what isn 't she?&#13;
She&#13;
is in for everything except d elinquen ts. Especially is she fond of&#13;
"'A" grades. Also beans,&#13;
which were ever a fav-&#13;
&#13;
orite&#13;
&#13;
with the intellec-&#13;
&#13;
tual,&#13;
&#13;
w e understand.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
W. HENDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Plover&#13;
&#13;
" Ze" is famo us for her hospitality as well as her dei&#13;
licious cand y. She has read&#13;
a n y book you can mention,&#13;
a n d can talk on any subject you suggest. Naturally she&#13;
ma kes good grades in everything except but&#13;
who can get&#13;
a grade in Psych? She is as willing as the day is long,&#13;
a t i reless worker and a Jolly companion.&#13;
&#13;
"Hen" is the man · ho. tho' he has ·'never taken a lesw&#13;
son in his life.'' is a sort of a m usi cal prodigy.&#13;
He keeps&#13;
the piano in t he Ionian House going most of the time,&#13;
&#13;
composes parodies in his spare moments. sings in the Gl ee&#13;
Club, and h e even tun es pianos. It takes more than a street&#13;
car acciden t t o worry him, too.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
'•,&#13;
&#13;
their&#13;
&#13;
own&#13;
&#13;
bus iness.&#13;
One might&#13;
almost think she wasn·t&#13;
enjoy ing life sh e keeps&#13;
so still. only that the&#13;
most amazing rumors&#13;
about her pranks a nd&#13;
scrapes&#13;
keep&#13;
fl oating&#13;
ont from Loveland's.&#13;
She has traveled more&#13;
than Holbert and is famous besides for gett ing&#13;
ninety-some&#13;
in&#13;
Psych.&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
ZENANA OSBORNE&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
"Lu lu" is&#13;
anoth er&#13;
on e of these people that&#13;
prefer&#13;
to keep q u iet&#13;
&#13;
Ada is such a quiet ,&#13;
unobt rusive&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
LUCIAN L. WRIGHT&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
MABEL A · PECAUT&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Lucian wright&#13;
.&#13;
named than nght is more appropriately&#13;
named than any other man in school.&#13;
g&#13;
being as four-square and upright as they&#13;
·&#13;
make college students.&#13;
He has a characteristic way of throwing his head up&#13;
.&#13;
in the face. He is a proud leader to&#13;
Y.W.' work and .a football player of&#13;
e face&#13;
. . some reputation and experience.&#13;
.&#13;
told&#13;
Besides we are told she has a good position with the firm downtown.&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
society was evidently intended&#13;
sm il es and and was give&#13;
for a&#13;
smiles and talents accordingly&#13;
She is a very agreeable companion.&#13;
.&#13;
She manages to go a lot, and be a fair student&#13;
&#13;
,,,,,,,,,,,, ....................&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-two&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
'••,,,'&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
......,,,,,,,,,................&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Senior Expression&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
Senior Music&#13;
&#13;
CLASS ROLL&#13;
NATHALIE ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
ALVIN HENDRICKSON&#13;
&#13;
AMANDA RoosT&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS BEEBE&#13;
&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
MERLIN SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS BONDHUS&#13;
&#13;
IRENE ROBAR&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE BUTTERFIELD&#13;
&#13;
CHESTER ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET SMITH&#13;
&#13;
MABEL CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
IDA ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
DELANO STARR&#13;
&#13;
OSCARCARLSON&#13;
&#13;
MAY WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Sixty&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
NEW&#13;
&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE OFFICES&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
COACH J . M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Coach Saunderson while attending Albion College made a most remarkable record&#13;
in athletics. He represented his school four years in football, playing quarter-back, and&#13;
was chosen captain in 1907, while that same year was picked as "All-Michigan" quarterback. For three years he played third base on the baseball team and held down a&#13;
forward position on the basketball quint during four seasons. In track he made several&#13;
fast records, running the 100 yards in 10. 1, the 220 in 22. 1 and the 220 hurdles in&#13;
25.4. After graduating he was Athletic Director at South Dakota State College for&#13;
three years, 1908- 11, and at the University of the South for one year, 1911 - 12.&#13;
Mr. Saunderson took up the duties of Director of Athletics at Morningside during&#13;
the month of September, 1912, and already we have made great progress. Last fall,&#13;
with practically no games scheduled and when the outlook for a successful season&#13;
seemed most doubtful, our coach whipped into shape a combination which will not be&#13;
forgotten by Morningsiders for many years to come. Out of nine games we met&#13;
defeat but once, winning the State Collegiate Championship of Iowa and South&#13;
Dakota. Under such leadership we have every expectation of a successful season m&#13;
track and baseball.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.,,,,,,,,,.,,,,......&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. V. E. MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Committee&#13;
&#13;
R. N.&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
Van Horne&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
J. M.&#13;
&#13;
Saunderson&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
Kanthlener&#13;
F. E. Haynes&#13;
&#13;
The I 9 I 2 track season was one of the most successful and consistent seasons in the&#13;
history of track athletics at Morningside. The cinder path artists made a brilliant&#13;
start by winning the big Kansas City Invitation Indoor Meet. The next event was the&#13;
Drake Relay Carnival in which Morningside took one first and one second out of the&#13;
three relays entered. In the two mile event the maroon team established a new mark,&#13;
breaking the record held by South Dakota University by twelve seconds. The dual&#13;
meet with South Dakota State College at Brookings was close and not decided until&#13;
the last event, the mile relay. In the annual state meet at Grinnell, Morningside, tho'&#13;
unable to duplicate her feet of last year by winning first place, maintained her high&#13;
standard down state by finishing a strong second. In the Missouri Valley meet Holbert&#13;
and Montgomery were able to capture 5 1/2 points in competition with the larger universities. As a fitting climax to the season, Captain Montgomery was sent to the Oylmpic&#13;
tryouts in Chicago where he placed fourth in the 800 meter run in which event such men&#13;
as Davenport of Chicago and Bermond of Missouri were entered.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
KANSAS&#13;
&#13;
CITY SQUAD, 1912&#13;
&#13;
S U MMARY OF KANSAS CITY MEET&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
March 30, 1912&#13;
&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
LEUDER&#13;
&#13;
12 Pound Shot Put-Holbert, M.; Anderson, Mo.; Burnham, Kas . .... 54 ft. 1/4 in.&#13;
16 Pound Shot Put-Talbot, KC.AC.; Thatcher, Mo.; Barnes, K.C.AC.41 ft. 9 in.&#13;
Two Mile Relay-KC. AC.; Drake ... . .. . ........................ 8:27&#13;
50 Yard Dash-Walton, Missouri; Christian, KC.AC.; Stahl, Drake .. . .... 5 3-5&#13;
50 Yard Handicap-Parker, Baker; Schaulis, KC.AC.; Christian, KC.AC .. 5 1-5&#13;
50 Yard Hurdle-Parker, Baker; Hamilton; Martin ......... . .......... 5 4-5&#13;
880 Yard Run- Montgomery, M.; Patterson, Kansas; Kingsbury, M . ... . 2 :03 2-5&#13;
High Jump-Nicholson, Missouri; Hazen, Kansas; Cook, St. Louis ..... 6 ft. 2 1/2in.&#13;
440 Yard Run-Lemon, M.; Davis, Kansas; Martin ... . .... . ......... 53 1-5&#13;
One Mile Run-Murray, Kansas; Taylor, Westport; Redfern, Drake ........ 4:55&#13;
Pole Vault-Cramer, Kansas; Hearst; Sunderland, K.C.A.C ... . .... 10 ft. I 1/2 in.&#13;
Intercollegiate One Mile Relay-Morningside; Baker ............ . ..... 3 :49 1-5&#13;
One Mile Relay- William Jewell; KC.AC . . ..... . .. .. ... . .... . ... 3 :41&#13;
University One Mile Relay- Missouri; Kansas ....... . ....... . ...... 3 :32 2-5&#13;
Morningside, 21 ; Missouri, 20.&#13;
&#13;
"M"&#13;
&#13;
TRACK MEN&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
"VINCE"&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
WINNING&#13;
&#13;
220 YARD HURDLES&#13;
&#13;
SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
April 27, 1912&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF FRESHMAN-HIGH SCHOOL ME ET&#13;
&#13;
May I, 1912&#13;
&#13;
00 Yard Dash-Shelton,_ Fresh.; Lueder, Fresh ..... .. .. ... .... .... .. 10 2-5&#13;
High Hurdles-Vernon, Fresh.; Clarke, H. S .... .......... .. ... ... ... 17 2-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Holmes, H. S. ; Engle, Fresh.; Bridenbaugh, H . S . ....... 56 4-5&#13;
Low Hurdles- Vernon, Fresh.; Dubel, H. S.; Clarke, H. S ... ..... ... ... 28 4-5&#13;
Mile Run-Wedgwood, Fresh.; Bridenbaugh, Fresh.; Robinson, H. S ..... 5: 15 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Dash- Holmes, H. S.; Shelton, Fresh.; Lueder, Fresh .. . . .... .. 23 1-5&#13;
Mile Relay- Freshmen-Shelton, Bridenbaugh, Engle, Lueder ..... .. . .. . 3 :52 1-5&#13;
Shot Put-Holmes, H. S. ; Shelton, Fresh. ; Cochrane, H. S ........... 4 2 ft. 8 in.&#13;
880 Yard Run-Shelton, Fresh.; Engle, Fresh. ; Worth, H. S .. . .... . . .... . 2 :23&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Freshmen-Engle, McKinney, Lueder, Shelton ... . . . . ... .. 2:01&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder, Fresh.; Echert, H. S.; Brown, Fresh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 ft.&#13;
Discus-Vernon, Fresh.; Kuhns, Fresh.; Brown, Fresh ...... . .. . .... . ... 104 ft.&#13;
High Jump- McKoane, H. S.; Vernon, Fresh.; Brown, Fresh ... ...... 5 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Broad Jump---Vernon, Fresh; Miller, H. S.; Shelton, Fresh . . ........ .. 19 ft . 1 in.&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Jr. ; Shelton, Fresh.; Jory, Jr . . .. .. .. . ..... . 10:2&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Montgomery, Jr.; B. Brown, Acad.; Vernon, Fresh ..... 27:3&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Shelton, Fresh.; Lueder, Fresh.; Engle, Fresh . ...... .. . . . 24: 1&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Vernon, Fresh.; Montgomery, Jr.; B. Brown, Acad ..... 18:2&#13;
16 Pound Shot Put-Shelton, Fresh.; D. Brown, Fresh.; Wickens, Jr ... 31 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Payne, Fresh.; Winterringer, Jr.; Wickens, Jr.&#13;
440 Yard Dash- Montgomery, Jr.; Kingsbury, Jr.; Hess, Sr .... .... .. .. .. 57 :2&#13;
Two Mile Run- Bowker, Sr.; Brunelle, Soph.; Mahood, Acad . . . .... . .... 11 :00&#13;
Mile Run-Brunelle, Soph.; Wedgwood, Fresh. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5: 17&#13;
880 Yard Run-Montgomery, Jr. ; Bowker, Sr.; Kingsbury, Jr .. ....... .. 2 :08&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder, Fresh.; Lewis, Sr.; B. Brown, Acad . .... ........... 1O ft.&#13;
Discus Throw-Wickens, Jr.; Vernon, Fresh.; D. Brown, Fresh ...... 106 ft. 7 1/2 in.&#13;
High Jump- Vernon, Fresh., and D . Brown, Fresh., tied; Jory, Jr . . . . .... 5 ft. 3 in.&#13;
Broad Jump- Vernon, Fresh.; Shelton, Fresh.; McKinney, A cad .. . .... . 18 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Freshmen-Engle, G. McKinney, Lueder, Shelton ....... . . 1 :40&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen, 80; High School, 37.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen, 64; Juniors, 39; Seniors, 12 ; Sophomores, 8; Academy, 7.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
SUM MARY OF BROOKINGS MEET&#13;
&#13;
Brookings, May 6, 1912&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Knox, B.; Montgomery, M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 4-5&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles-Vernon, M.; Catlett, B ....... . . ................ 16 3-5&#13;
440 Yard D ash-Knox, B.; Lemon, M . .. .. . ........... .... ........... 55&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Montgomery, M.; Kellet, B .. ... ... . ............. 28 2-5&#13;
One Mlie Run-Montgomery, M.; Strachan, B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:01&#13;
Shot Put-Holbert, M.; Britzius, B .. ..... . . .. ...... . . ...... ... . 36 ft. 8 in.&#13;
High Jump-Bibby, B.; Jory, M . .. .. ................. . ... ... 5 ft. 7 1/2&#13;
in.&#13;
Hammer-Jensen, B.; Holbert, M . ..... . ........... . ..... ..... 111 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Half Mile-Kingsbury, M.; Montgomery, M . ... ..... ..... ... . ........ 2: 15&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Knox, B.; Lemon, M . ... . . . .... ... ..... .... . .... . 23 2-5&#13;
Discus-Wickens, M. ; Vernon, M ........ ........... .... ... 111 ft. 8 1/2 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Catlett, B.; Bibby, B . .. ... . . . ... .. ...... .... .. .. . 21 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run-Strachan, B. ; Bowker, M . .. ........ ...... .... ...... 11 :01&#13;
Pole Va ult-Catlett, B.; Lueder, M . . .. .... ........ . . . . .. . ..... 10 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Mile Relay- Brookings- Catlett, Caldwell, Stearns, Knox ..... . . . ...... .. . 3 :4 3&#13;
Brookings, 60; Morningside, 5 7.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The Inter-State High School Meet is held each year under the auspices of the&#13;
"M" C lub. Excellent trophies are awarded the winners of the individual events in&#13;
the way of gold, silver, and bronze medals. To the winning team in the half mile relay&#13;
individual cups are given and the Philomathean Literary Society gives a beautiful loving&#13;
cup to the team winning the mile relay, it to become their property if won for three consecutive years. Besides these, a large cup is given to the school winning the meet&#13;
and another to the man winning individual honors.&#13;
Last year, on a field already heavy with the mud of previous rains and with the&#13;
rain still pouring down at intervals, the athletes undaunted by the absence of Old Sol&#13;
and a dry field, made competition so keen, that the inclement weather was forgotten and all encouraged the boys by their hearty approval of their efforts. Had the&#13;
day been warm and the track fast there would have been undoubtedly some fast records&#13;
made in several of the events.&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF THE INTER-STATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
&#13;
May 10, 1912&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-Holmes, S. C.; Friedman, C. 8.; Shoemaker, Hawarden .... 11 :2&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Holmes, S. C . ; Friedman, C. 8.; Quigley, Hawarden .. . ... 24 :3&#13;
440 Yard Dasl:- Holmes, S. C.; W. Nigg, Le Mars; Hess, Charter Oak .. ... 60: 1&#13;
Half Mile Run- Lynott, Hawarden; Jacobson, Charter Oak; Scott, Hawarden . 2 :20: 1&#13;
Mile Run- Dean, Sloan; Lynott, Hawarden; Krebler, Le Mars .. ..... . .. . .. 5 : 1 7&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Hawarden (Shoemaker, Ball, Lynott, Quigley) . . .... . .. . . 1 :47&#13;
Mile Relay-Sioux City (Sedgwick, Iloff, Bridenbaugh, Holmes) .. . . . . ... . . . 4 :03&#13;
High Hurdles-Hardy, Fonda; 0. Hart, Le Mars; Dubel, S. C ... ..... ..... 19:4&#13;
Low Hurdles-Quigley, Hawarden; Hardy, Fonda; Dubel, S. C .. ... ..... .. 29: 1&#13;
High Jump-J. Hart, Le Mars; Eaton, Fonda; Lawton, Hawarden .. .. . . 5 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Rust, Elk Point; Campbell, Cherokee; Hilker, Paullina . . .. 18 ft. 6 in.&#13;
16 Pound Hammer Throw-Paulson, Vermillion; Knapp, Cherokee; Gailbraith,&#13;
Fonda ...... . ... . ... . .............. .. ......... . . . .. . . 95 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Holmes, S. C. ; Rust, Elk Point; Jacobson, Charter Oak . .. . 40 ft. 8 1/2 in.&#13;
Discus Throw-Knapp, Cherokee; Holmes, S. C. ; Paulson, Vermillion . 108 ft. 11 1/2 in.&#13;
Pole Vault-Eckert, S. C.; Gailbraith, Fonda; O'Neil, Cherokee . . . . . . . . 8 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Sioux City, 35; Hawarden, 22; Fonda, 15; Cherokee, 12; Le Mars, 12;&#13;
Elk Point, 8; Vermillion, 6; Council Bluffs, 6; Charter Oak, 5; Sloan, 5;&#13;
&#13;
DRAKE&#13;
&#13;
RELAY TEAMS&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF DRAKE INTER COLLEGIATE R E LAYS&#13;
&#13;
April 20, 1912&#13;
Four Mile Relay-Des M oines, Coe, Grinnell . . ... . . ....... . .. . .... 19 :4 7 3-5&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
Two Mile Relay-Morningside, Cornell, Grinnell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 :28 4-5&#13;
One Mile Relay-C oe, Morningside, Cornell. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 :29 4-5&#13;
One Hal f Mile Relay-Coe, Grinnell, Highland Park ...... ... . . .. . .. .... . 1 :36&#13;
&#13;
Paullina, 1.&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
STATE MEET&#13;
SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF STATE MEET&#13;
&#13;
Grinnell, May l 7, 1912&#13;
TWO MILE RELAY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
New Record-8 :28 4-5, lowered 11 4-5 seconds from the record of South Dakota&#13;
State University.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside feels proud to have&#13;
been represented at the Olympic tryouts in Chicago, 1912, by "Vince"&#13;
Montgomery, who was able to land&#13;
fourth place in the 800 meter run in&#13;
competition with the fastest middle distance runners of the west.&#13;
&#13;
"VINCE"&#13;
&#13;
AT OLYMPICS&#13;
&#13;
l 00&#13;
One&#13;
120&#13;
440&#13;
220&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Wilson, Simpson; Warren, H. P . . . . . ... . . . . l 0&#13;
Mile Run- Durey, Des Moines; Schluter, I.S.T.C.; Ewing, Parsons .... 4 :38&#13;
Yard Hurdles- Stunkard, Coe; Eagen, Grinnell, Drier, Des Moines . . . . 16: I&#13;
Yard Run-Wilson, Coe; Johnson H. P.; Lemon, Morningside .. . ..... 51 :3&#13;
Yard Hurdles-Stunkard, Coe; Lusted, Cornell; Montgomery, Morningside. (breaking state record of 25 :4) . . ... . .... .. ... ...... ... 25 :2&#13;
Hal f M ile Run-Montgomery, M.; Dawkins, Grinnell; Schultz, I.S.T.C .... 2 :05 :4&#13;
Pole Vault- Verink, Coe ; Fearing, Cornell; Ross, I.S.T.C., and Lueder, M.,&#13;
tied for first . . .. . ... .. .. . ... . . . . .. . ......... . . . . . ... . l O ft. 3 in.&#13;
Discus Throw- Wickens, M.; Rusk, Simpson; Holbert, M . . ........ l 14 ft. 6 in.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Wilson, Simpson; Colline, Parsons .. . .. .. ... 22 :2&#13;
One Mile Relay-Cornell, Morningside, Grinnell . ... . . .............. . 3 :35: l&#13;
High Jump- Jones, Grinr.ell; Verink, Coe, Miller, Simpson, tied for second.5 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Holbert, M orningside; Verink, Coe ; Rusk, Simpson ... . . . . .. 38 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run-Durey, Des Moines; Miller, Des Moines; Ewing, Parsons .. l O: 11 :4&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Coe, G rinnell, Cornell.&#13;
Summary: Coe, 38 1/4; Morningside, 23 1/4; Grinnell, 20; Simpson, 15;&#13;
Des Moines, 12 ; Cornell, 11 1/4; Iowa State Teachers, 6 1/4; Parsons, 4.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-ni n e&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
··&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
KANSAS&#13;
&#13;
MISSOURI VALLEY TEAM&#13;
Des Moines, May 25, 1912&#13;
&#13;
CITY SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
1,&#13;
&#13;
1913&#13;
&#13;
Montgomery wins second in the half mile.&#13;
Holbert ties for second in the shot put and makes new Morningside record.&#13;
&#13;
The Kansas City Indoor Meet&#13;
The Kansas City Indoor Invitation M eet, held under the auspices of the Kansas&#13;
City Athletic C lub, is considered the largest athletic event of its kind this side of&#13;
Chicago. Universities, Colleges, Athletic Associations and Y. M . C. A.'s from all&#13;
divisions of the West are here represented.&#13;
Last year with a four-man team, Morningside won first in the quarter mile, first and&#13;
third in the half mile, first in the shot put and the relay from Baker, thus annexing 21&#13;
points and winning first place over Missouri University, who made a total of 20. This&#13;
year the ranking of competitors was abandoned but we again made a fine showing,&#13;
taking two firsts and one second. Montgomery won the half mile in 2 :08 and Kingsbury and Braley took first and second respectively in the quarter mile in 48.&#13;
"MONTY"&#13;
&#13;
SECOND IN HALF&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Eighty&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
MILE&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MONUMENT UN&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
Winners,&#13;
&#13;
F ebrua ry 21, 1913:&#13;
&#13;
Montgomery,&#13;
&#13;
first: Armbuster,&#13;
&#13;
T i me, 20 min.&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
&#13;
second: Williams. t hird .&#13;
&#13;
sec.&#13;
&#13;
M OR NINGSIDE R ECORDS&#13;
&#13;
100 Yard Dash-C. Rogers, 1908 . ........ .. . . . .. ... . ...... . .. . . . 10 sec.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-F. F. Hall, 1903 . .. .... . .... . . ......... ... . . 22 1-5 sec.&#13;
440 Yard D ash-A P. Berkstresser, 1909 ......... . . .. . .. . ..... 52 2-5 sec.&#13;
880 Yard Run-A P. Berkstresser, 1909 . . . .. . .. . . .... . .. .. 2 min. 3 2-5 sec.&#13;
Mile Run- A. P. Berkstresser, 1908 .... . . . .. ... . ..... . ........ 4 min. 40 sec.&#13;
Two Mile Run- L. R. Chapman, 1908 .. .. ..... . . . . . ...... .. . 1 0 min. 5 sec.&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- £. G. Quarnstrom, 191 1 . .. .. . .... . ... . . .. . .. 15 4-5 sec.&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-£. G. Quarnstrom, 1910 .. ... .. . . .. . . . . ... .. 25 2-5 sec.&#13;
High Jump-£. M. Brown, 1906 ... .. . . . . . . . . . . . .... .. ... . . . . ... 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-G. E . W est, 1911 . . ... . . ... . . .. .. . .. . . .... ... .. . 21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Shot Put- B. Holbert, Jr. , 1912 .. . .. . ... . . . . .. .... . . . . . .. . . . . 39 ft.&#13;
&#13;
1/4 in.&#13;
&#13;
Hammer T hrow-E. G. Quarnstrom, 1911 ... ... . ........ ... .. 121 ft. 3 1/2 in.&#13;
Discus Throw- D. L. Wickens, 1911 . .... ..... .. .... . ...... . . .... . 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay-(V. E. Montgomery, A. P. Berkstresser, E. G. Quarnstrom,&#13;
F. E. Burns), 1909 . . .. .. . ... . . . ... . . ... .. . .... . . 3 min. 36 2-5 sec.&#13;
Two Mile Relay- (A C. Lemon, W . H. Bowker, L. H. Kingsbury,&#13;
V. E . Montgomery) , 19 12 .. . ... ....... . .. .... ..... 8 min. 28 4-5 sec.&#13;
Monument Run- V. E. Montgomery, 1911 . .. . . . ... ....... . 18 min. 46 3-5 sec.&#13;
*State Record.&#13;
&#13;
The baseball team of 19 12 was handicapped by the lack of indoor workouts and&#13;
inside baseball which are essentials in building up a winning combination. B ut for all&#13;
this they played winning ball throughout the season.&#13;
The team left on the down-state trip after an all night's excitement of watching our&#13;
College burn and played Highland P ark College of D es M oines the same afternoon in a&#13;
game which was not decided until the last man chalked up the final zero. A like experience was witnessed when the next day at Iowa C ity the crowd left the field in the&#13;
eighth believing their team defeated and outclassed, but they took the score 5-4 in the&#13;
ninth. O ut of the next three games played we won two and lost one.&#13;
The season came to a fitting close by the victory over Vermillion on. Bass field . The&#13;
team put up a fine exhibition of the fighting spirit of old M . C. and outplayed their old&#13;
rivals at all points of the game.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Eighty&#13;
-two&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. BEN&#13;
&#13;
HOLBERT&#13;
&#13;
GAMES OF 1912&#13;
April 22-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
1;&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University, 9&#13;
&#13;
April 30-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
7;&#13;
&#13;
Highland Park .. .. .. 8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
4;&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State University, .5&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
2-Morningside, 22;&#13;
&#13;
Central University .. . .. 2&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
3- Morningside, 11;&#13;
&#13;
Parsons .... . . . .. ... 6&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
4;&#13;
&#13;
Simpson ........ .. .. 8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
8-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
6;&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University, 5&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
"M" BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
MEN&#13;
&#13;
CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
V. K&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
No outside basketball games were played this winter. The heavy dust arising in&#13;
the field house during the track workouts made daily practice very unpleasant. Also&#13;
on account of our location it becomes necessary for the team to take a long trip&#13;
through the state and this year it was impossible to arrange satisfactory dates. It was&#13;
therefore thought best to abandon intercollegiate basketball for this year.&#13;
However, the boys ' annual class tournament was carried out with the Seniors&#13;
taking first honors in a very close series of games. There was also added a new feature&#13;
this year, that of a girls' basketball tournament, which was won by the Senior girls.&#13;
"OLD RELIABLE"&#13;
&#13;
"Consultation"&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR&#13;
SENIOR GIRLS&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
B O YS' BASKETBALL TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Winners Cl ass Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Winners Class Tourn ament&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
SUMMARY OF CLASS TOURNAMENT&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
to Seniors ... .. .. .... . 15&#13;
&#13;
Seniors. . . . . . . . . . 8&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
Seniors ... . ..... . . 3&#13;
Sophomores . .. ..... 3&#13;
&#13;
Seniors . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . 16&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Forfeited to Sophomores . ....... 12&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
Juniors. . . . . .. .. . 4&#13;
Freshmen . ... . .. . . 1&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen .. ..... . . 5&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
E ig h ty-eig h t&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
... . ..... .. .. . ... . .. . . . . . . . . ..... . ................. ... 1O&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-nine&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Ninety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
}&#13;
&#13;
The Football&#13;
&#13;
The football season of 191 2 from the standpoint of games won was the most&#13;
successful ever enjoyed by Morningside. Of the nine collegiate games played, seven&#13;
were victories, one was tied and one ended in defeat and that by the Iowa State College&#13;
at Ames. The "Maroons" recorded 268 points to 33 for their opponents in these&#13;
contests. The hard work of the men, both 'varsity and scrubs, coupled with the coaching of J. M. Saunderson, made the victories possible. Also too much cannot be said&#13;
concerning the work of Captain Ben Holbert, who directed the team play on the field&#13;
and whose all-around work made him the choice for All-Iowa fullback and he was&#13;
placed on the All-Western team by some critics.&#13;
At the opening of the season the prospects looked glum indeed. A new coach had&#13;
been placed in charge of affairs and, as far as was known, outside of Holbert there was&#13;
not an available backfield man in school. The usual pre-season practice camp at Blue&#13;
Lake was done away with, due to certain conditions at the College, and hence the&#13;
coach was given no chance to get a line upon his material before the season started. By&#13;
the time the season had opened, however, Coach Saunderson had whipped into shape a&#13;
strong combination.&#13;
The first collegiate game was won over Yankton on their home field. Next Buena&#13;
Vista and Nebraska Normal were handed the figure naught. Our first hard game&#13;
was with the fast team from Creighton University of Omaha. They had just defeated&#13;
Marquette University and came to Sioux City in force to see Morningside crushed. But&#13;
again the "Maroons" were on the long end of the score. The only defeat of the season&#13;
occurred on State Field at Ames when the cyclones were able to score two touchdowns&#13;
in the last period of play. But, Morningsiders, let us remember that for three quarters&#13;
our boys played the "Aggies" to a standstill, when the Ames rooters were thankful for&#13;
a score from placement, and not until they were reinforced with fresh men were they&#13;
able to gain any advantage. Though we lost the larger score, we compelled recognition&#13;
from the down state school. Then St. Joseph and Bellevue added two more scalps to&#13;
our belt. Next we tied Nebraska Wesleyan, collegiate champions of Nebraska, on&#13;
their home field. The last game of the season was on Thanksgiving day when we overwhelmed Dakota Wesleyan, the collegiate champions of South Dakota.&#13;
The place deserved by Morningside among the other schools of the state has been&#13;
disputed. But by our showing throughout the season and by comparative scores we&#13;
have won the right to claim the state collegiate championship, while at least two men&#13;
are eligible to positions on the All-State T earn.&#13;
The team at all times displayed the most unflinching loyalty to the Coach and to the&#13;
school. It was for M. C. and the good of the team and not for individual glory that&#13;
every member of the champion maroons struggled. It would be difficult to place one&#13;
man above another as they worked like a machine, each with his own part to perform.&#13;
The great player and captain, Ben Holbert, '14, was re-elected to lead the team&#13;
of 1913.&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. BEN HOLBERT&#13;
&#13;
THE SCHEDULE&#13;
Sept.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
28-Morningside,&#13;
5-Morningside,&#13;
12- Morningside,&#13;
19-Morningside,&#13;
26-Morningside,&#13;
2-Morningside,&#13;
9-Morningside,&#13;
16-Morningside,&#13;
22- Morningside,&#13;
28-Morningside,&#13;
&#13;
13;&#13;
16;&#13;
&#13;
51;&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee High School, 0&#13;
Yankton ............ 0&#13;
Buena Vista .. . ...... 0&#13;
Nebraska Normal .... 0&#13;
Creighton . . ... . .... . . 7&#13;
Ames ... .... ...... 16&#13;
Bellevue ........ . .... 0&#13;
St. Joseph ... . ...... 3&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan .... 0&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan . .. . . 7&#13;
&#13;
281&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
30;&#13;
65;&#13;
26;&#13;
&#13;
3;&#13;
&#13;
33;&#13;
44;&#13;
&#13;
O;&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
Season&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
,•'&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
BEN HOLBERT,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
Captain, Fullba ck&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT,&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
Left Half&#13;
&#13;
V.&#13;
&#13;
E. MONTGOMERY,&#13;
&#13;
'1 3&#13;
&#13;
Quarterback&#13;
&#13;
H. M.&#13;
&#13;
COBBS,&#13;
&#13;
' 14&#13;
&#13;
Right Half&#13;
&#13;
R. R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON ,&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
Left End&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
WINTERRINGER,&#13;
&#13;
'1 3&#13;
&#13;
PAYNE ,&#13;
&#13;
' 15&#13;
&#13;
WI C KENS,&#13;
&#13;
'1 3&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
McCuRDY,&#13;
&#13;
Right Guard&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
G. D.&#13;
&#13;
McKINNEY,&#13;
&#13;
'1 5&#13;
&#13;
HERMAN KocH ,&#13;
&#13;
' 16&#13;
&#13;
Sub Lineman&#13;
&#13;
Center&#13;
&#13;
W .&#13;
&#13;
'16&#13;
&#13;
R ight End&#13;
&#13;
Left Guard&#13;
&#13;
D. L.&#13;
&#13;
WEATHERBY,&#13;
&#13;
R ight T ackle&#13;
&#13;
L eft Tackle&#13;
&#13;
W. H.&#13;
&#13;
P. C.&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
J. D. KOLP , '14&#13;
&#13;
Sub Back&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR CHARLES A. MARSH&#13;
&#13;
FRANK P. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Professor Marsh, as teacher of Public Speaking and trainer of Intercollegiate orators&#13;
and debaters, has had a remarkably successful career. In the ten years he has been&#13;
teaching in Iowa, his students have won three first honors and five second honors in the&#13;
regular State Oratorical Contest, two first places in the State Peace Contest, and first&#13;
place in the State Prohibition Contest,-a total of six first and five second honors in ten&#13;
years. In debate the record is equally good. Since coming to Morningside three years&#13;
ago, the debating teams under his direction have won five out of eight intercollegiate&#13;
debates. These victories are all the more gratifying when it is remembered that the ideal&#13;
which he constantly holds before his students is not the winning of a contest but the&#13;
greatest good to the student. The favorable decision of the judges, he contends, is incidental, the highest possible development of individual is paramount. He will never&#13;
consent to the employment of means which might possibly win a victory, if they will not&#13;
at the same time result in permanent benefit to the student and prepare him for the&#13;
larger activities of life.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has held a place in the front rank in oratory for a number of years. For&#13;
five years she has not fallen below second place in the regular state oratorical contest.&#13;
No small part of the achievement has been due to the efforts of Frank Johnson, who has&#13;
represented our school with increasing merit for the last three years. Perhaps no college&#13;
orator can show a record equal to that of Morningside' s man. In the eleven contests in&#13;
which he has taken part, he has won four home contests, one divisional contest, two state&#13;
contests, second in three state contests, and third in the interstate prohibition contest.&#13;
With such a record behind him, Morningside may well be proud of Frank Johnson.&#13;
He has done much for us, and as he goes out from our halls this year to become an alumnus we must not forget that it is up to someone else to step in and take his place. The&#13;
record of the past must be maintained. However, under the leadership of Professor&#13;
Marsh we are all confident that the name of Morningside College will continue to be&#13;
ranked as a leader in state oratory and that the achievements of the past are simply stepping&#13;
stones to the greater future.&#13;
&#13;
. ......&#13;
&#13;
One hundred- two&#13;
&#13;
0ne hundred- three&#13;
&#13;
Home Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
November 8, 1912&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
J . L. Ralston&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
J. I. Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Law of the Sea, First&#13;
Julius Caesar, the Benefactor, Second&#13;
United States and Universal P eace, Third&#13;
The Heart of America, Fourth&#13;
&#13;
Divisional Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
Toledo, February 7, 191 3&#13;
The Law of the Sea, First&#13;
F. P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
The True Spirit of P eace, Second&#13;
E. R. Sifert, Des Moines&#13;
W. S. Dudley, Simpson&#13;
T he Social Emphasis, Third&#13;
The Problem of Democracy, Fourth&#13;
R. E. White, Buena Vista&#13;
Beecher and the Union Cause&#13;
H. Risse, Ellsworth&#13;
The Royalty of Knowledge vs. The Sovereignly of War&#13;
J. G. Watson, Ames&#13;
Mrs. Uhlenhopp, Leander Clark&#13;
A Voice from the Underworld&#13;
&#13;
J. L. RALSTON&#13;
&#13;
HOMEProhibition Oratorical&#13;
February 7, 19 13&#13;
Our&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
State Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
J. L. Ralston&#13;
I. Dolliver&#13;
R. L. Mitchell&#13;
C. W . Spry&#13;
&#13;
Present Pre-Eminent Need, First&#13;
Issue of Today, Second&#13;
Task of Duty, Third&#13;
Unheeded Vision, Fourth&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
D es Moines, March 7, 191 3&#13;
&#13;
State Prohibition Oratorical&#13;
Public Opinion, First&#13;
The Law of the Sea, Second&#13;
Democracy and World Peace, Third&#13;
The N ew D emocracy, Fourth&#13;
The True Spirit of Peace&#13;
The Slav&#13;
The Problem of Democracy&#13;
The Social Emphasis&#13;
&#13;
. D . B. Heller, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
F. P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
G. L. Potgetter, Cornell&#13;
A. F. Nickless, Lennox&#13;
E. R. Sifert, Des Moines&#13;
J . 0. Balcar, Coe&#13;
R. E. White, Buena Vista&#13;
W. S. Dudley, Simpson&#13;
&#13;
Contest&#13;
&#13;
Toledo, April 4, 1913&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
Our&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Legalized Outlaw, First&#13;
Crisis of R eform, Second&#13;
Present Pre-Eminent Need, Third&#13;
Economy of Temperance&#13;
Call of Today&#13;
Dreaded Foe&#13;
&#13;
F . lngvolstad, Simpson&#13;
A . H. Benner, Central Holiness&#13;
J. L. Ralston, Morningside&#13;
G. C. Miller, Leander Clark&#13;
C. F. Wiedenasam, Western Union&#13;
C. C. Ham, Cornell&#13;
&#13;
..,&#13;
One hundred four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred five&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Records&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1900-J. A Davies ....... ..... . Ninth&#13;
A Keck . ........ .. .. . Seventh&#13;
1901 -H.&#13;
1902-A. R. Toothaker .......... .Eliminated on thought&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall .............. Fourth&#13;
1904-R. E. Heilman ........... .&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer ........ .&#13;
1906-A. G. Cushman .. . .... .. . .&#13;
190 7-A. G. Cushman . ........... Fifth&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer .. ....... Second&#13;
1909-F. W. Backemeyer ......... First; Interstate, Eighth&#13;
191 0-H. S. Hamilton ........ .. . .Second&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson ............ .Second&#13;
1912--F. P. Johnson .............Second&#13;
1913-F. P. Johnson ............. Second&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1901 -G. W. Finch .............. . .First; Interstate, First; National, Third&#13;
1902- J. N. H. McCay .. ....... .. ..Second&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner ............... Third&#13;
1907-Ida Lewis . ...... . .... .. .... Fifth&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett. ... .. .. ...... Third&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill ................. Second&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson ... ............ .First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1911-W. A McCurdy ............. Sixth&#13;
191 2-C. E. Smith ......... ... .. . .. Fifth&#13;
19 13-J. L. Ralston .... ......... . . Third&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Academic&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, April 12, 1912&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
YANKTON ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Forest and Mineral Land,&#13;
now belonging to the United States, in the several&#13;
States, should be retained by the Federal Government.&#13;
&#13;
STATE PEACE ORATORICAL Association&#13;
&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson ................. First&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon ....... .. ......... Fifth&#13;
191 3-D. L. Wickens ................. First&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker University 2, Morningside I.&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside I .&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2.&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. I, Morningside 2. Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0.&#13;
1912-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2. Dakota Wesleyan 2, Morningside 1.&#13;
Iowa State Teachers 3, Morningside 0. Iowa S. Teachers 0, Morningside 3.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred six&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeMorningside Academy&#13;
NegativeYankton Academy&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
H. Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
n.&#13;
&#13;
C. McKinn ey&#13;
&#13;
B. W. Rin e ,·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
. . .......&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
November 22, 1912&#13;
&#13;
November 13, 1912&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That Federal&#13;
Legislation should be enacted,&#13;
embodying the Principles of&#13;
the German Industrial Accident Insurance Law, for the&#13;
compensation of industrial accid ents in the United States.&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Ques tion&#13;
Resolved, That the Federal Government should own&#13;
and operate the Express Companies of the United States.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeAdelphian&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye&#13;
&#13;
NegativePhilomathean&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Bark s&#13;
G. B . Crouch&#13;
B. H. Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
A. H. Hemmingsen&#13;
O. B. Ca rl son&#13;
L. C. Beebe&#13;
&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
W. A. McCurdy&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
L . H. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eight&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
PHILO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
H. G. Merten&#13;
J. E. Briggs&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
November 14, 1912&#13;
&#13;
November 15, 1912&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATH E AN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That&#13;
&#13;
Federal&#13;
Legislation should be enacted,&#13;
embodying the Principles of&#13;
the German Industrial Accident Insurance Law, for the&#13;
compensation of industrial accidents in the United States.&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Federal&#13;
Legislation should be enacted,&#13;
embodying the Principles of&#13;
the German Industrial Accident Insurance Law, for the&#13;
compensation of industrial accidents in the United States.&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
E. S. Fullbrook&#13;
T. B. Bassett&#13;
R. H. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
One hundred ten&#13;
&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
PHILO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
W. C. Evans&#13;
H. C. Bigglestone&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
G. W. Prichard&#13;
H. M. Cobbs&#13;
M. 0. Insko&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative I&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN TEAM&#13;
&#13;
.T. H. Edge&#13;
C. T. Craig&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular Debate&#13;
&#13;
April 26, 1912&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, NEBRASKA WESLEYAN, DAKOTA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Tariff of the United States should be determined by a nonpartisan board of tariff experts.&#13;
&#13;
Constitutionality granted.&#13;
&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
At Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
M. P. Briggs&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA WESLEYAN&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Morningside&#13;
Negative-Nebraska Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Triangular and Dual&#13;
Debaters&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Dakota Wesleyan&#13;
Negative-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
AFFIRMATIVE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative I&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative I&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
Dual Debate&#13;
&#13;
May 10, 1912&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Tariff Schedules of the United States should be determined by a&#13;
non-partisan board of tariff experts. Constitutionality granted.&#13;
At Morningside&#13;
&#13;
J. A. Lew is&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
G. Merten&#13;
&#13;
NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
At Cedar Falls&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-I. S . T . C.&#13;
Negative-Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-Morningside&#13;
Negative-I. S. T. C.&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twelve&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK III&#13;
Chants and Legends&#13;
&#13;
-Sioux 14One hundred fourteen&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK PRESTON JOHNSON,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
It was midnight on the North Atlantic and danger was on the deep. The Titanic,&#13;
greatest of ocean liners, had struck an iceberg off Cape Race and was sinking. The&#13;
great arch of sublimely silent stars looked down upon a vast sweep of lonely sea. No&#13;
sister ship was near in the hour of need. The life boats were far too few to carry the&#13;
great ship's human cargo. Precious lives were to be sacrificed. In that terrible crisis&#13;
manhood faced its supreme test, nor did it flinch. "Women and children first, the strong&#13;
must protect the weak,"-this is the unwritten law of the sea and it was not to be violated.&#13;
In the democracy of danger all men were equal. With heroic endurance, with noble&#13;
indifference to death a thousand of the world's heroes found an eternal grave in the&#13;
depths of a lonely sea. History records no nobler sacrifice, Posterity will forever sing&#13;
their praises. Monuments will be erected to their memories. But no word can be&#13;
written, no monument erected to express a nobler sentiment than they themselves have&#13;
carved on the great heart of the race, that "in order to conserve the strength of humanity&#13;
we must ever protect its weakness." Out of the blackness of that terrible night a great&#13;
light has arisen which shall grow brighter with the years. Legislation will make ocean&#13;
travel safer because of their death, but the awful sacrifice has served a higher purpose;&#13;
it has renewed the faith of the race in itself and made life so noble that "immortality&#13;
passes from a hope to a conviction." Our noisy, bustling, commercial age is suddenly&#13;
stilled in the sublime revelation of the "soul of humanity," and our hearts throb with the&#13;
spirit of brotherhood; that spirit which is today transforming political parties, changing&#13;
governments and fixing the meaning of life. That spirit which is destined to grow until&#13;
the law of the sea shall become the law of the land; when the strong shall cease to prey&#13;
upon the weak; when society shall be cleaned of its social and economic diseases.&#13;
A nation's strength should be measured by the degree in which it protects the weak&#13;
from the strong; by the freedom and equality of opportunity it has secured for all people.&#13;
"The realization of freedom is the ultimate destiny of the race." The desire for freedom&#13;
is inherent in the very nature of humanity. Without it history has no meaning; labor no&#13;
purpose; the race no hope. It is eloquent in the writings of the Hebrew prophets; it&#13;
throbs through the teaching of Socrates and Jesus; it wrenched the Magna Charta from&#13;
the hands of a tyrant king; it sent an army of psalm-singing patriots unto the fields of&#13;
Marston Moor and Nasbey; it gave life to the Declaration of Independence and established representative government on a virgin soil; it struck the shackles from an enslaved&#13;
race and wiped from the "Banner of the Stars" its foulest blot. Today that same desire&#13;
for freedom stands at the door of our social and industrial world and demands equality&#13;
of opportunity for all; demands that the law of the sea be made the law of the land.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred s ix teen&#13;
&#13;
The essentials of a national vigor are democracy and opportunity. And yet to&#13;
thousands of our people democracy has no meaning and opportunity they have never had.&#13;
Go into the slums of our cities if you would see the results of modern industry. Note&#13;
the swarming horde of ill-clad, underfed, tubercular beings. Born in the sub-cellar,&#13;
reared in the foul air and sickening steams of the slums. Victims of inequality. Products&#13;
of our laissez-faire policy. Note them well, for we will one day have to deal with&#13;
them. The slums are breeding places for crime. We allow them to exist and then&#13;
spend our substance to punish the criminal. If we sow slums we shall reap crime. If&#13;
we allow people to swarm in foul tenements, we shall reap national weakness. We&#13;
must remove the weight of greed from the backs of these people. We must give them&#13;
light and air and a chance to live. We must apply the law of the sea.&#13;
&#13;
I·&#13;
&#13;
Child labor is another phase of our industrial injustice. Thousands of children are&#13;
locked in mines, factories and mills when they should be at play. Robbed of their&#13;
childhood these little ones are brutalized in the glass works and textile mills. In the&#13;
tobacco factories they fall fainting from the sickening odors. The result of this slavery&#13;
is dwarfed minds, stunted bodies, bad morals; child labor's gift to the nation. Nothing&#13;
is so certain as the revenge of child labor upon the race that tolerates it. We cannot&#13;
afford to build an industry upon the tired little shoulders of the children. Every trade&#13;
involving child labor is a tragedy; a tragedy of children who have never had a play&#13;
time. Children who had the door of opportunity closed in their faces; children robbed&#13;
of the hopes, the desires, the ambitions which were theirs by right divine.&#13;
"Their blood splashes upward, oh, Gold heaper,&#13;
And your purple shows your path;&#13;
But the Child's sob in the silence curses deeper&#13;
Than the strong man in his wrath."&#13;
The object of the law is to make virtue easy and vice hard. Does our law fulfill&#13;
its sacred mission? Why do we legalize the saloon and imprison its products? Why&#13;
license the brothel, share in its profits and then cry, "unclean" at its victims? Why&#13;
scorn the scarlet woman and still permit industry to pay so small a w age to the working&#13;
girl that she cannot live a life of purity? Is three, four or five dollars a week a living&#13;
wage for a working girl? Her virtue becomes a luxury and society buys another slave.&#13;
From whom? From misery, hunger, cold and loneliness. An eternal soul for a crust&#13;
of bread. "Misery makes the offer, society accepts." Fifty thousand of these slaves&#13;
will die this year and fifty thousand more will take their places. The saddest, most&#13;
forlorn, the most hopeless of human creatures; scorned and reviled as the foulest of the&#13;
race. Must they alone bear the blame? Is there not a social responsibility somewhere&#13;
when a girl must sell her · soul for a chance to live ? We must have a minimum wage&#13;
law for women in industry. We must recognize the sisterhood of woman, a sisterhood&#13;
which shall extend to the very lowest member of society. That is the law of the sea.&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred seventeen&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
The spirit of social unrest is abroad. It is a universal sign of the times. The&#13;
claim of the people is up for adjustment. It is a claim of justice and mercy. A claim&#13;
of underpaid toilers. A claim of girls forced into lives of shame. It is a claim of&#13;
children who faint from hunger ; children who never had a childhood; whose tired eyes&#13;
have never rested on a field or meadow; whose misshapen little bodies know no rest.&#13;
It is a claim which must be settled. But how?&#13;
"Equality of condition. Make common property of the instruments of production,"&#13;
says the socialist. His remedy is unjust and impossible. The parable of the talents&#13;
teaches us that great capacity deserves more than the mediocre. Capital deserves a&#13;
just compensation. Individual prosperity is the fundamental basis of national prosperity.&#13;
Equalize conditions, make common property of the instruments of production and individual ambition will die. Socialism can never adjust the people's claim.&#13;
A new figure has recently appeared upon the industrial stage, the syndicalist.&#13;
Already industrial workers the world over are accepting the doctrine of this strangerand a dangerous doctrine it is. Syndicalism was begotten of dangerous parentage. It&#13;
had its birth when the anarchists gained control of the French trade unions. The&#13;
philosophy of the syndicalist is one of desperation; his weapon the general strike. He&#13;
proposes to go beyond political or constitutional action and by a general class war&#13;
abolish the wage system and the capitalistic class. Less than a year ago twenty thousand workmen walked out of the textile mills at Lawrence. It was not a carefully&#13;
planned union-ordered strike. They had no organization, no trained leaders, not even&#13;
a common tongue. A congress of nations thrown into a great American melting pot,&#13;
they withstood the fires of industrial persecution until the limit of human endurance was&#13;
reached; the sodden mass stirred, frothed, sputtered and with a hiss and scream boiled&#13;
over. Today fifteen thousand of these strikers are allied with the syndicalists, and who&#13;
can blame them? They did not want class war, but they did want a living wage. They&#13;
were not out against property, but against starvation. They struggled with rising food&#13;
and coal prices, with high rents paid for miserable shacks. Left alone in their hopeless&#13;
struggle they listened to the only voice within their hearing, the voice of the syndicalist.&#13;
He offered higher wages, shorter hours, and eventually ownership-they followed him.&#13;
The Lawrence situation is not unique. It is typical of what may one day be&#13;
produced in every industrial center. Oppressed by industrial conditions the syndicalist&#13;
may one day attempt to realize his dream. That day will mark the beginning of civil&#13;
war, for just beyond the proposed abolition of capital and the wage system we see the&#13;
red flag of the anarchist. There is but one remedy for this unrest, and that is democracy.&#13;
Not equality of condition, but equality of opportunity, is the doctrine of adjustment. The&#13;
law of the sea applied to industry will harmonize labor and capital. An awakened&#13;
public conscience demands the application of that law. We are in the midst of the&#13;
greatest political and social awakening the world has ever known. It marks the beginning of a new age; an age in which industrial problems are to be solved; an age in&#13;
which the reign of special privilege shall cease and the doctrine of equal rights shall&#13;
prevail.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighteen&#13;
&#13;
All over the world we see indications of this new age. Workingrnen are being&#13;
insured against accident, sickness and unemployment. The poorhouse is giving way to&#13;
old age pensions. Life is corning to have a new meaning. The church is turning away&#13;
from dogma to the social and ethical teaching of the Master and the real Christ is being&#13;
revealed. Out from the shadow of Golgatha the thorn-crowned Saviour is "walking&#13;
down the troubled ages" and we see the homeless man, less fortunate than the birds and&#13;
the foxes. We see the compassionate Christ too big in his humanity to judge the woman&#13;
at the well; tender in his love for children; withering in his contempt for a corrupt priesthood. This is the Christ of the twentieth century. He has the solution to our problem;&#13;
"Justice tempered by love"-the law of the sea.&#13;
It is midnight. Nearly a year has passed since the loss of the Titanic. A year&#13;
which marks an epoch in the age-long struggle for human liberty. Midnight, not the&#13;
midnight of despair, but rather that which precedes a glorious dawn. The black clouds&#13;
of hate and misunderstanding are breaking away before the dawn of industrial justice.&#13;
The law which prevailed on the midnight sea is corning to rule in the affairs of men,&#13;
and we who believe in the justice of that law must work for its application. It will&#13;
mean a struggle, but for a glorious cause. Democracy is leagued with the dawn and we&#13;
shall not fail. Our Captain has sounded the watchword, "Bear ye one another's&#13;
burdens."&#13;
"He hath sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;&#13;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment seat;&#13;
Oh, be swift my soul to answer him, be jubilant my feet,&#13;
Our God is marching on."&#13;
&#13;
College ties can ne'er be broken&#13;
Formed at old M. C.&#13;
Far surpassing wealth unspoken&#13;
They'll forever be.&#13;
&#13;
M . C. ! M. C. ! Hail to thee!&#13;
Thou hast been kind to us.&#13;
Ever shall we cherish for thee&#13;
Thoughts of love and trust.&#13;
When our college days are ended&#13;
And our ways shall part,&#13;
Still with thee we'll be united,&#13;
Still be one in heart.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
nineteen&#13;
&#13;
Picture Writing&#13;
&#13;
A merry lass once went to school&#13;
And afterward her love for votes&#13;
Did Lorna's blithesomeness o'errule.&#13;
&#13;
Prophetic Epitaphs&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
Mice live and constitute a lot&#13;
Of that eternal retinue&#13;
That is and-mystically is not.&#13;
There is no matter that is new,&#13;
And, man or mouse, the law's the sameThis life will perish as the dew.&#13;
The only stable thing is name.&#13;
Our records here are lastly weighed&#13;
In halls of perjury or fame.&#13;
So when beneath the sod we're laid,&#13;
A marble slab informs the world&#13;
The kind of game each one has played.&#13;
Now Jacob Henry Winterringer,&#13;
Dissected dogs and cats and folks&#13;
And mixed a dope that was a dinger.&#13;
&#13;
Of all wise men to live and die&#13;
The wisest one without a doubt&#13;
Is Merten, that you can't deny.&#13;
O f course we can't leave Mary out,&#13;
She got so wise in history&#13;
That ere she died she burst about.&#13;
She did the little things in life&#13;
And Eva Randolph's epithet,&#13;
Is simply this- a loving wife.&#13;
&#13;
If all the people lived as well,&#13;
O r were as good, or free from care&#13;
As Anna, there would be no hell.&#13;
Al Lemon started out to teach,&#13;
Then lectured some and ran a "Y",&#13;
But at the end was found to preach.&#13;
She lived right well and loved full hard,&#13;
She took her leap, she landed safe.&#13;
And Hazel bears our fond regard.&#13;
&#13;
Here lies a man of great renown&#13;
He won his "M" and studied law,&#13;
Then married Florence and settled down.&#13;
&#13;
Beware! Beware of too much thrift&#13;
Without alloy of fun or joy,&#13;
F or Ella's recompense was swift.&#13;
&#13;
They lived in bliss without a flaw.&#13;
He took a case for old Jawn D.&#13;
And made his mark as both foresaw.&#13;
&#13;
Now Vince replaced Coach Stagg at Chi,&#13;
And likewise trained the Vassar girls.&#13;
Just now he's singing bass on high.&#13;
&#13;
Ah, Susan Eads, so blithe and gay,&#13;
Could act so true that- sure she died&#13;
While Julius Caesar she did play.&#13;
&#13;
In vain, for man so true as she,&#13;
&#13;
The fourth dimension puzzled men&#13;
And turned their minds until a shark&#13;
Named Graham turned them back again.&#13;
&#13;
A silent girl, she seemed to know&#13;
What most folks don't. She listened, looked,&#13;
Then thought profound, did Vera Rowe.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty&#13;
&#13;
Now Minnie looked and yearned and prayed&#13;
For such a man was never made.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
Upon yon hill there is a shaft&#13;
In memory of Sarah Ann,&#13;
For stenographic handicraft.&#13;
&#13;
The lowly places of the earth&#13;
Extol her name, for Edith Bower&#13;
By deeds of kindness proved her worth.&#13;
&#13;
The life of Prit we hate to tell.&#13;
He practiced at the bar they say&#13;
And now he's gone below to dwell.&#13;
&#13;
Now Inez Whitney's claim to fame,&#13;
While it is altogether right,&#13;
Is all tied up in hubby's name.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Cain took English two and three,&#13;
Eleven, nine and eight and five,&#13;
Poor girl, she died for her A B .&#13;
&#13;
She lived, she died, let that suffice,&#13;
So full of mirth was Audree's smile&#13;
We'd all be glad if she lived twice.&#13;
&#13;
We pause a moment here before&#13;
The grave of one whose life was peace;&#13;
We all revered sweet Alice Mower.&#13;
&#13;
Here rests the bones of good old Wick,&#13;
He needs no other word of praise&#13;
Aside from this-he was a brick.&#13;
&#13;
It's said she ran the Ladies' Aid,&#13;
The Kensington and Sunday School,&#13;
She tried to run the Board of Trade.&#13;
&#13;
His Catherine set the world ablaze&#13;
She did so much and judged so well.&#13;
Her works are quite beyond a phrase.&#13;
&#13;
But Si rebelled, the ornery mule,&#13;
And now he spends his entire time&#13;
With needle, thread and reticule.&#13;
&#13;
Upon the far New Zealand shore,&#13;
Bill Evans' tomb bears these good words,&#13;
"To our beloved governor."&#13;
&#13;
Alas for Helen! Cupid's dart&#13;
Did never pierce the one she loved,&#13;
Poor thing, she died of broken heart.&#13;
&#13;
Of fair Marie there's this to say,&#13;
She jumped the gun and married Green,&#13;
To many another guy's dismay.&#13;
&#13;
In pearls and gold we measure worth,&#13;
But Grace demands a higher test The sweetest, nicest girl on earth.&#13;
&#13;
Stop here my friend and make a wish,&#13;
That you may place your aim as high&#13;
As did. this maid they called A Fish.&#13;
&#13;
A vegetarian was Jo.&#13;
She thrived on Herbs to beat the band,&#13;
But through French heels she came to woe.&#13;
&#13;
John Ralston married young, unwise!&#13;
He preached but dreamed a Bishop's dream.&#13;
These things account for his demise.&#13;
&#13;
She traveled here, she acted there,&#13;
Miss Lottie did most everything,&#13;
And on the side imported hair.&#13;
&#13;
There was a girl named Eva Leazer,&#13;
The only one of whom it's writ" And not a man did ever squeeze her."&#13;
&#13;
Beneath this verdant grass, alas,&#13;
The bones of Garlock lie in state,&#13;
The prolix agent of the class.&#13;
&#13;
Some men for great things, some for small&#13;
Were born. It's not been testified&#13;
Just why Joe Edge was born at all.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-t w o&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty- t h r ee&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Upon a foreign strand she strayed.&#13;
She studied Deutch, her native tongue;&#13;
It was too hard, she died a maid.&#13;
&#13;
Kwasind's Tale of Triumph&#13;
&#13;
Through school Miss Hall retained her name&#13;
'Tis true that late in life she died&#13;
But even then it was the same.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUSTUS&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
BRUNELLE,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
"Four-r-r-th down, three-e-e to go," came the stentorian tones of the referee.&#13;
Of diplomats the world has known,&#13;
Of orators since time began,&#13;
Frank Johnson stands out all alone.&#13;
Within Westminster's sepulcher&#13;
The vault of Jean is thus inscribed,&#13;
"Thus all the world doth honor her."&#13;
&#13;
snatch victory from defeat.&#13;
&#13;
Sharp and quick came the signals--"Thirteen, twenty-&#13;
&#13;
seven, seven, eleven, " -snap! the Windsor quarter passed the ball to Staufman, his&#13;
husky fullback, who never failed to gain.&#13;
&#13;
Despair came over the Grandon rooters, for&#13;
&#13;
they were only too well acquainted with Staufman' s prowess.&#13;
&#13;
But this was his first year&#13;
&#13;
of "Varsity," and the fiercely fought game had made unusual demands on his strength.&#13;
Small wonder that he hesitated for a moment.&#13;
&#13;
The annals here contain one blot,&#13;
One only of the class is lost,&#13;
His grave unknown, his face forgot.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
stands were hushed in eager expectancy-only a few seconds remained for Windsor to&#13;
&#13;
But only for a moment; an instant later&#13;
&#13;
his one-hundred-eighty pounds caused the Grandon line to fairly wince.&#13;
All was silent as the mass of arms and legs disentangled itself.&#13;
"They didn't make it, I know," said Dorothy Preston to her brother Jack.&#13;
&#13;
Despite&#13;
&#13;
her tender years, Dorothy was strong in her love for Grandon and good football.&#13;
"Now Dot," counselled Jack, "don't be too"-- But pandemonium had broken&#13;
loose-Staufman lacked a foot of having crossed the goal line.&#13;
&#13;
The Grandon rooters&#13;
&#13;
surged on the field, delirious w ith joy, "Alma Mater" could again proudly lift her head,&#13;
for last year's defeat had been venged.&#13;
"What's the trouble, Dot?" queried Jack as they were leaving the grounds.&#13;
Tell me not in joyful numbers&#13;
That a freshie's life is gay,&#13;
He has many trials and troubles,&#13;
And his sky is often gray.&#13;
&#13;
are you so glum?&#13;
&#13;
" Why&#13;
&#13;
Aren't you glad we won?"&#13;
&#13;
"We-I-I, I guess so.&#13;
&#13;
But, I'd feel lot's better if we'd won because we were stronger,&#13;
&#13;
not beause they had a quitter."&#13;
"Quitter!" Jack stared at his sister in amazement.&#13;
&#13;
"Who quit?"&#13;
&#13;
" Why, that big Dutchman, Staufman, when he had the ball that last time, he was&#13;
'Tis not nice to be so tiny,&#13;
And be told you're green as grass,&#13;
Or when you're lost and lonely wander,&#13;
To hear the scornful senior's laugh.&#13;
&#13;
so scared that he had to wait awhile before he started.&#13;
&#13;
And Dorothy sniffed contempt-&#13;
&#13;
uously.&#13;
"Well, well," laughed her brother.&#13;
&#13;
"Aren't you a little hard on him?&#13;
&#13;
He couldn't&#13;
&#13;
have waited very long, and think how tired he was."&#13;
Lives of freshies all remind us&#13;
We were once as green as they;&#13;
We should leave footprints behind us,&#13;
Their's to follow as we do today.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
"That didn't make any difference.&#13;
&#13;
I'd keep on fighting,&#13;
&#13;
no matter how bad I felt."&#13;
" Jingo," exclaimed Jack delightedly.&#13;
&#13;
"That's the way to talk.&#13;
&#13;
Grandon spirit."&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
One hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy stamped her foot.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twemty-five&#13;
&#13;
T hat's the true&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
For weeks this incident kept recurring to Jack Preston's mind. "Spunky little girl,"&#13;
he would soliloquize.&#13;
&#13;
"With a sister like that, it would be pretty cheap of me to fall&#13;
&#13;
down in that debate next month.&#13;
at work with redoubled vigor.&#13;
&#13;
Well, I won't."&#13;
&#13;
Whereupon he would set himself&#13;
&#13;
Nor did this escape the attention of his colleagues, Frank&#13;
&#13;
Ryder, and Walter Simmons.&#13;
&#13;
Jack sprang to the 'phone, but no Central answered his call and after repeated&#13;
efforts, he gave up the attempt.&#13;
&#13;
"Guess I'll try Smalley's 'phone," he thought.&#13;
&#13;
here again his efforts were unsuccessful.&#13;
telephone system.&#13;
&#13;
But&#13;
&#13;
Clearly some serious mishap had befallen the&#13;
&#13;
Nothing remained but to hasten to the Doctor's home, which was&#13;
&#13;
three-quarters of a mile distant.&#13;
&#13;
Jack was a good runner when in form; but he had done&#13;
&#13;
"Did you ever see Jack work so hard?" asked Ryder one evening.&#13;
&#13;
little training since the preceding Spring, and found it hard to continue the hot pace he&#13;
&#13;
"Never did," replied Simmons.&#13;
&#13;
set for himself.&#13;
&#13;
"He goes at it systematically, too!"&#13;
&#13;
"He always was a consistent worker, but"-"Hello, fellows!&#13;
&#13;
Speeches finished?"&#13;
&#13;
And the subject of their conversation burst&#13;
&#13;
irto the room.&#13;
a question like that.&#13;
&#13;
"Two weeks before the debate, and you ask&#13;
&#13;
Bet you've finished yours, though.&#13;
&#13;
Say, Jack you'll turn into a&#13;
&#13;
debater's handbook, first thing you know."&#13;
dozen rebuttal cards besides.&#13;
&#13;
" He's probably filled a few&#13;
&#13;
Come on, Jack read it off.&#13;
&#13;
I see it sticking out of your&#13;
&#13;
You can't escape, so ·speak up like a little man, "Ladies and Gentleman,&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Preston will conclude the argument for the Affirmative."&#13;
When the reading had ceased, Simmons drew a long breath.&#13;
Cicero, Adieu!&#13;
&#13;
But Jack was already on his way to D r. Brown, a young medical graduate who&#13;
had recently located in the suburb.&#13;
&#13;
H ere he was not disappointed.&#13;
&#13;
too late ! -pneumonia !-it must not be!&#13;
&#13;
Suppose he should be&#13;
&#13;
Doctor Brown, young man that he was, with&#13;
&#13;
difficulty kept up with Jack's rapid strides.&#13;
An hour later the battle had been won.&#13;
"although it was a close call.&#13;
&#13;
"Shades of Demos-&#13;
&#13;
But, an agony of&#13;
&#13;
"Your sister is safe," assured the doctor,&#13;
&#13;
But you appear pretty fagged yourself.&#13;
&#13;
Jump into bed&#13;
&#13;
right away, or I'll have two patients instead of one."&#13;
&#13;
That's the best speech- Ouch! Don't you think I can learn&#13;
&#13;
anything without having the books thrown at me? "&#13;
picked up the missile.&#13;
&#13;
Could I" - -&#13;
&#13;
suspense filled him as he waited for the Doctor to get his case.&#13;
&#13;
"Of course his speech is finished," agreed Ryder.&#13;
&#13;
thenes!&#13;
&#13;
'Im sorry, sir," said the maid who answered his nng, "but the Doctor left an&#13;
hour ago for a place several miles out in the country.&#13;
&#13;
"Speeches finished ! " gasped Simmons.&#13;
&#13;
coat pocket.&#13;
&#13;
The dampness of the air added to his difficulties, and he arrived at&#13;
&#13;
the Doctor's almost exhausted.&#13;
&#13;
And he sighed reproachfully as he&#13;
&#13;
"What would Bryce say if he saw you slamming his 'American&#13;
&#13;
Commonwealth' around?"&#13;
"He'd say, 'Hit 'im again,'" was the retort.&#13;
&#13;
"It's no use, Walter, you'll have to&#13;
&#13;
Don't worry about me," laughed Jack.&#13;
already begun to affect him.&#13;
&#13;
"Honest, Jack, " interposed Ryder, "That's a fine speech.&#13;
&#13;
If your rebuttal is as&#13;
&#13;
good as that, I don't see how we can lose."&#13;
The debate was to occur on Friday, the 25th.&#13;
&#13;
For several days the weather had&#13;
&#13;
been bright and clear, but early Thursday morning a drizzly, chilling rain set in.&#13;
&#13;
"Fine&#13;
&#13;
He simply must not let anyone think him ill; he could&#13;
&#13;
probably sleep off the unpleasant symptoms, anyway.&#13;
But it proved otherwise.&#13;
&#13;
stop that extravagant language."&#13;
&#13;
"But I'll take your advice, so good night."&#13;
&#13;
He neglected to say that the great exertion and the exposure in the damp night had&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Brown called again the next morning, and as he was&#13;
&#13;
about to leave, Jack took him aside.&#13;
&#13;
" Doc," he said, " I guess I underwent a little too&#13;
&#13;
much exertion last night, for I feel a little under the weather.&#13;
so I can go out tonight? "&#13;
&#13;
Can you fix me up a little&#13;
&#13;
The doctor became all attention; a quick examination revealed the senousness of&#13;
&#13;
chance to catch cold," muttered Jack, looking out of the window.&#13;
&#13;
"And then wouldn't&#13;
&#13;
Jack's condition.&#13;
&#13;
I be in great shape for tomorrow!&#13;
&#13;
And so well did he&#13;
&#13;
debate, you can't be allowed to go out tonight."&#13;
&#13;
I'll have to be pretty careful."&#13;
&#13;
live up to this determination that the usual maternal admonitions as to raincoat, rubbers&#13;
and umbrella were wholly unnecessary.&#13;
" Dorothy caught a bad cold today," she said&#13;
&#13;
anxiously, "and she has such severe pain in her lungs that I'm afraid she's threatened with&#13;
pneumoma.&#13;
&#13;
" Doctor," was the reply.&#13;
&#13;
I wish you would 'phone for Dr. Bartholdt to come at once."&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
me up a little, so to speak, I'll be very grateful.&#13;
one, even Mother.&#13;
&#13;
"Debate or no&#13;
&#13;
"You are a college man, and know how I feel.&#13;
&#13;
is no one who can go on in my place tonight, so I must be there.&#13;
&#13;
By evening the rain had almost ceased, and J ack was just rejoicing over the fact,&#13;
when his mother entered the room.&#13;
&#13;
"You'll be lucky to get out in a week," he declared.&#13;
&#13;
There&#13;
&#13;
But if you can bolster&#13;
&#13;
Remember, please, not a word to any&#13;
&#13;
With father away and Dorothy sick, she has enough to worry about."&#13;
&#13;
Doctor Brown perceived that further argument was useless, but he shook his head&#13;
gravely, as he wrote out a prescription.&#13;
&#13;
" It's a big risk you are taking, a big risk."&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
By a mighty concentration of will power, Jack kept up a cheerful appearance during&#13;
the day; except for a slight paleness, which was attributed to the hard work he had been&#13;
&#13;
Guy D.&#13;
&#13;
doing, even his close friends noticed nothing amiss.&#13;
The long-waited night had arrived at last.&#13;
&#13;
tion of government, with Grandon on the Affirmative. The Auditorium that had been the&#13;
scene of both defeat and victory in years past resounded to such rooting as it had never&#13;
But to Jack, all was as a dream.&#13;
&#13;
He was vaguely conscious that&#13;
&#13;
the noise had finally stopped, and Simmons had launched into his opening speech.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
listened mechanically to his opponents, whose fierce, destructive attack brought doubt&#13;
into the heart of many a loyal son of Grandon.&#13;
But the more knowing ones shook their heads.&#13;
'they counselled sagely.&#13;
&#13;
"Wait till old Jack goes after them,&#13;
&#13;
But in the Jack who spoke tonight; none recognized the Jack of&#13;
&#13;
former years, who could move the most apathetic and persuade the most obstinate.&#13;
"Quitter!" thought some.&#13;
&#13;
But they little knew the suffering that was being under-&#13;
&#13;
gone by the one they so rashly condemned.&#13;
The rebuttals were now almost over.&#13;
&#13;
The closing Windsor speaker in a magnificent&#13;
&#13;
finish, brought his supporters to their feet.&#13;
&#13;
The Jack of the old days could offset even&#13;
&#13;
that; but tonight-As Jack arose, a kaleidoscopic v1s1on passed before his eyes.&#13;
&#13;
He saw his sister&#13;
&#13;
stamping her foot and declaring, ''I'd keep on fighting no matter how bad I felt."&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
saw that same little sister, pale but trusting, bidding him good-bye with the words, "Jack,&#13;
I know you'll win."&#13;
&#13;
What would she say-what would she think if he proved a&#13;
&#13;
"quitter" now? All this took but a moment; but that moment sufficed.&#13;
addressed the chairman and stepped forward.&#13;
was with him.&#13;
&#13;
Confidently he&#13;
&#13;
A few terse sentences, and the audience&#13;
&#13;
Briefly, he disposed of the most important · charges of the Negative; con-&#13;
&#13;
vincingly summarized the argument of the Affirmative, and closed with a passionate appeal&#13;
for the abandonment of prejudice-the acceptance of reason and true progress.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
Grandon and Windsor, old rivals in&#13;
&#13;
forensics as well as in athletics, were to clash this evening on the question of centraliza-&#13;
&#13;
resounded to before.&#13;
&#13;
McKINNEY,&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
"Too bad you had to be carried home, old man," said Simmons, a few days later,&#13;
"it detracted somewhat from the joy of a three to nothing decision."&#13;
&#13;
Should you ask me why this story,&#13;
Why this tale of Sophomore people,&#13;
Why this thirsting after knowledge,&#13;
I should answer, I should tell you,&#13;
As the bow was to the ancient,&#13;
So is knowledge to the modern.&#13;
Should you ask me why these people&#13;
Whence they came and why they're chosen,&#13;
I should answer, I should tell you,&#13;
When the Indian picked his arrow&#13;
Then he chose the best and strongest;&#13;
Thus when picking out our heroes&#13;
Did we pick the best and wisest.&#13;
From the lands of the Dakotas,&#13;
From Nebraska 's plains and meadows,&#13;
From the towns and rising hamlets,&#13;
From the valleys of cloud,&#13;
Came this bunch of warrior people.&#13;
After they had pitched their wigwams,&#13;
After all of them were settled,&#13;
After they had passed the tortures&#13;
That the chiefs had thrust upon them;&#13;
Then within a mighty council&#13;
All the tribe of Freshmen gathered,&#13;
Here they gazed around about them,&#13;
Gazed around to note the warriors,&#13;
And the maidens of their people There was Vernon, the red-haired one,&#13;
Who was yet to be defeated&#13;
In the arts of running, jumping;&#13;
There was Leuder, learned in speaking,&#13;
Who before the council ended&#13;
Had been chosen as our chieftain ;&#13;
There was Shelton, skilled in boasting,&#13;
There was Shoe'y, skilled in fussing,&#13;
There was Bonnie, small but mighty, •&#13;
She, it was, who rising, toldus&#13;
&#13;
That a vote must now be taken&#13;
For as yet we had no chieftain&#13;
Who would lead us in our battle,&#13;
Who would talk for us in councils.&#13;
Then a warrior skilled in speaking,&#13;
Rose up from his place of resting,&#13;
And said: "People, I am Dawson,&#13;
I have looked around about me,&#13;
I have noted all the tribesmen&#13;
And, if we would win in combat&#13;
We must have a mighty chieftain;&#13;
We must have one skilled in speaking,&#13;
Skilled in fighting and in scheming&#13;
For that purpose, for that reason,&#13;
Leuder is the one I've chosen.&#13;
He would make a mighty leader,&#13;
He would bring us lots of honor,&#13;
He will lead us, if we ask him,&#13;
Will you have him for your chieftain?&#13;
Then the Freshmen as one person&#13;
Turned to look at Herman Leuder,&#13;
Saw that he was strong in body,&#13;
Saw that he was good to look at,&#13;
Saw he was a mighty warrior,&#13;
So they chose him for their chieftain.&#13;
After we had picked our ( Leuder)&#13;
Then we turned back to our wigwams,&#13;
There to study and grow wiser,&#13;
There to dwell in peace and quiet.&#13;
But one night the Sophomore people&#13;
Took upon themselves to show us&#13;
That they were the wiser warriors,&#13;
That we were the weaker people,&#13;
So they rounded up our chieftain&#13;
And three other Freshmen warriors,&#13;
Placed them in a mighty engine,&#13;
Fixed up by their men of magic,&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred twenty -eight&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Then they freed the mighty demon,&#13;
Freed the Demon Gasolinus,&#13;
The most powerful, the most speedy,&#13;
The most speedy of the racers.&#13;
Over hills and stones and valleys,&#13;
Over fields and rushing rivers&#13;
That were fraught with perils deadly,&#13;
Went this engine of the Sophies,&#13;
But they tho't not of the cunning&#13;
Of the wary Freshmen warriors;&#13;
And when they had stopped their engine,&#13;
When they tried to leave their captives,&#13;
Then they found our mighty chieftain&#13;
Had unloosened the bonds that bound him&#13;
And refused to leave the engine&#13;
Till back home it safely bore him.&#13;
Ere the sun had lit the campus&#13;
All the signals had been given,&#13;
And from every Freshman wigwam&#13;
Came a hunter dressed for battle.&#13;
There was Brokaw of the beef trust,&#13;
There was Dunham, once not sleepy,&#13;
Dressed was every loyal Freshie&#13;
For the Sophomores must be punished,&#13;
Must be shown their proper station ;&#13;
And no sooner did the Sophomore&#13;
Set his feet upon the campus&#13;
Than the Freshies jumped upon him,&#13;
Chased him, caught him, bound him tightly&#13;
Threw him helpless on the campus;&#13;
If he struggled then they kicked him,&#13;
Caring not for broken shoulders,&#13;
Caring not for weeping women,&#13;
Caring only just to punish,&#13;
Just to make them beg for mercy.&#13;
If I wished it, I could tell you,&#13;
I could tell you of more triumphs,&#13;
I could tell you of the boat rides,&#13;
Of the times we had together,&#13;
I could tell you of disaster,&#13;
I could tell you of the fever,&#13;
&#13;
How it grasped three of our strong men,&#13;
Burned them till their frames were wasted,&#13;
Till they looked to us like shadows.&#13;
I could tell you of more trouble,&#13;
How our college burned to ashes,&#13;
How we saw our .Alma Mater,&#13;
That we'd learned to love and honor,&#13;
Perish, like the hail in summer.&#13;
Should you ask me, I could tell you&#13;
How we pledged ten hundred eagles&#13;
Just to show we were in earnest,&#13;
Just to show we loved our college.&#13;
When at last the year was ended,&#13;
Then the time had come for hunting,&#13;
Hunting for the mighty dollar,&#13;
For the dollar that would feed us,&#13;
That would pay the great White Father&#13;
For the care that he would give us,&#13;
For the wisdom he imparted.&#13;
Long the hunt was, and the dollars,&#13;
Tho' we caught them, they were slippery,&#13;
And no sooner did we catch one&#13;
Than again it slipped far from us.&#13;
Thus it went the long, long season,&#13;
Till the days of Indian summer&#13;
Warned us we must leave our hunting.&#13;
Some, while searching for the dollar,&#13;
Had far from the college wandered,&#13;
Where their loved ones for them waited,&#13;
And the Juniors often sorrowed&#13;
For the pretty Freshmen maidens,&#13;
Who had failed to keep their promise,&#13;
Who would cheer some other wigwam.&#13;
When our hunting trip was over,&#13;
Then we held a new reunion&#13;
With the words of joy and greeting,&#13;
With the questions for the absent,&#13;
With all kinds of news and gossip.&#13;
After we had said our greetings,&#13;
Then we held another council&#13;
And elected for our cheftain&#13;
&#13;
One whose hair was like the sandstones,&#13;
One whose prowess on the gridiron&#13;
Made him feared by other na tions.&#13;
Now no longer were we Freshies,&#13;
After we had once gone hunting,&#13;
We were now the mighty Sophomores,&#13;
And the F reshies were the new ones,&#13;
Greener than the grass they trod on,&#13;
Yet their tongues were filled with boasting&#13;
And they called themselves red blooded.&#13;
Now, this bunch of Freshmen people&#13;
Trod the halls like earthly princes,&#13;
Trod them like they owned the college,&#13;
No respect had they for others,&#13;
And the Seniors warned us often,&#13;
Saying much and oft repeating,&#13;
"Oh! Beware of more delaying,&#13;
Strike them while they're green and swelling,&#13;
So one night while they were sleeping,&#13;
All the Sophomores came together,&#13;
Got a rack from old Pay-now-us,&#13;
Walked into the Freshmen's wigwams&#13;
And spoke thusly to the yearlings:&#13;
"Look at me, I am Brown Bassett,"&#13;
Spoke another, "I'm Turk Eiffert,"&#13;
And a third said, "I'm R ed Vernon,&#13;
And these are my trusty warriors,&#13;
Who will take you to the torture,&#13;
Who will try your strength and manhood.&#13;
Will you come in peace, or must I&#13;
Drag you like the sons of preachers&#13;
Dragged the skunk from out . the chapel?"&#13;
But the Freshmen's hearts beat quickly&#13;
And their blood it flowed like water,&#13;
And without a single struggle&#13;
They were packed upon the hayrack.&#13;
Here the cold, crisp winds of winter&#13;
Soon brought words of whimpering protest,&#13;
Soon brought cries and lamentations&#13;
Faster than the words of women&#13;
When they talk about the rights&#13;
&#13;
They ought to have, but have not.&#13;
But we heeded not their pleading,&#13;
Only looked at them with pity,&#13;
Only told them they were women.&#13;
So we journeyed westward, westward,&#13;
Left the college far behind us,&#13;
Left the beds of Freshmen empty,&#13;
Crossed the dangerous Milwaukee,&#13;
Crossing the fearful V iaductus,&#13;
Till at last we reached Sioux City.&#13;
Here we stopped our old Pay-now-us,&#13;
Here we bound again our captives,&#13;
Here we made them walk before us,&#13;
As the triumph of our prowess,&#13;
A s the Freshmen ought to journey.&#13;
A fter we had had our triumph,&#13;
Then we shoved our captives from us,&#13;
Made them walk back to the college,&#13;
While we rode back on the hayrack.&#13;
When the sun rose in the morning,&#13;
When the dew had left the shade trees,&#13;
A fter all of our P rofessors&#13;
H ad arisen from their couches,&#13;
Then, the Sophies dressed for fighting,&#13;
Waited for the raging F reshies,&#13;
Waited till the time for classes.&#13;
But the F reshies had no spirit,&#13;
O nly looked at us with sad eyes,&#13;
Like the doe when she is wounded.&#13;
Soon the F reshies had a Pow-wow,&#13;
And their speakers, skilled in boasting,&#13;
Sent a challenge forth to combat.&#13;
Then we had a Sophomore council&#13;
And decided it was fitting&#13;
That we have another battle.&#13;
Now the F reshies were red blooded,&#13;
They were strong in brain and sinew,&#13;
But when our men had suggested&#13;
That we take a rope and stretch it&#13;
Cross the wet and muddy river,&#13;
That ten men from each division&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirt y -one&#13;
&#13;
Try to pull the other ten men,&#13;
Pull them through the muddy water,&#13;
Then they stepped aside in terror,&#13;
Said the water was infected,&#13;
Said the germs would surely hurt them,&#13;
So we said to them, "Papooses,&#13;
You can choose your own diversion,&#13;
We will beat you, and we beat them.&#13;
After all the scraps were ended,&#13;
After all the Preps were silenced,&#13;
Then the strongest of the warriors&#13;
Gathered with the other strong men,&#13;
On the gridiron by the field house&#13;
There the wise one skilled in hunting&#13;
For the scalps ·of other nations,&#13;
Trained them in the art of running,&#13;
Tackling, diving on the pigskin,&#13;
Until forth from every battle&#13;
Came the warriors home triumphant.&#13;
Thus we lived, we Sophomore people,&#13;
Sometimes fighting, sometimes working,&#13;
Never resting, always busy, always looking&#13;
For some action that would make our&#13;
college better.&#13;
Then one night we held a council,&#13;
And a warrior rich in wisdom,&#13;
Rose up from his place of resting&#13;
And said: "People, I am McCurdy,&#13;
I'm a Junior, but I've watched you,&#13;
I have seen your deeds of prowess,&#13;
I have heard your tongues of silver,&#13;
I have watched you since you entered,&#13;
And this thought it has come to me,&#13;
You should leave behind a record&#13;
So that others who come after&#13;
May remember all your doings."&#13;
As we listened to the message,&#13;
As we heard his words of wisdom,&#13;
Then we saw his words were truthful,&#13;
Saw we ought to leave some record.&#13;
Then the question came before us,&#13;
&#13;
An Irish Tale to Kwasind&#13;
&#13;
Who should write this Indian story,&#13;
Who should be our story tellers,&#13;
When this bunch had to be chosen.&#13;
Then the ones best learned in writing,&#13;
Best in scheming, and in working,&#13;
Were the people that were chosen.&#13;
Burgess was the chief among them,&#13;
He, it was who'd plan the writing,&#13;
Plan the working and the legends,&#13;
But beneath him, only slightly,&#13;
Was Bill Payne, the mighty trader.&#13;
He, it is, who'll chase the dollars,&#13;
Trading for them, just the mention&#13;
We will give them in our record.&#13;
I could tell you, if I wished it,&#13;
Of the festivals and dances,&#13;
I could tell you of the rumpus,&#13;
When the words of our White Father&#13;
Went forth saying to the tribesmen:&#13;
"You must come to every council,&#13;
You must never miss a pow-wow,&#13;
Unless sickness or disaster&#13;
Can excuse your every absence,&#13;
Otherwise if you are absent&#13;
You must pay us two simoleons&#13;
And be tested by your wise meri&#13;
If you wish to stay among us."&#13;
I could tell you other stories,&#13;
But the time is swiftly coming&#13;
When once more will we go seeking&#13;
For the sleek and rolling dollar.&#13;
But before we start our hunting,&#13;
We will have a mighty pow-wow&#13;
And around it we will pledge that&#13;
When the Preps have lost their greenness,&#13;
When the Seniors start to working,&#13;
And the call of our White Father&#13;
Comes to bring us from our hunting,&#13;
We will come unless we're married,&#13;
Or some other great disaster&#13;
Has deprived us of our reason,&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL MARY COLLIER,&#13;
&#13;
"Sure Pat, did ye hear of the doin's,&#13;
That went on in New College Hall?&#13;
Ah, faith and it was a grand openin'&#13;
With everyone there, great and small.&#13;
Yourself should have been to the chapel,&#13;
And heard the foine spaches, and songs;&#13;
The wit of our countryman, Corbett,&#13;
Will remain in our memories long.&#13;
He told how the building committee&#13;
Had labored the long summer thro',&#13;
With many a trial and discussionBut at last they had come safely thro'.&#13;
The walls are of solid concrete,&#13;
Reinforced, absolutely fireproof,&#13;
And because of his friend, Misther Manley,&#13;
Sure and they have a tile roof.&#13;
The Reverend Claudius Spencer,&#13;
Then spoke to the people assembled&#13;
Of the splendid new hall, and the students,&#13;
And the marvellous growth of the college.&#13;
Thin followed the buildin' inspection.&#13;
Faith, we wint from the top to the bottom,&#13;
Yourself should have seen the foin class rooms,&#13;
They're the best that I've sot eyes on.&#13;
But the library's foinest of all.&#13;
With the lamps and its fixin's around,&#13;
And the books that they have there, sure, Pat,&#13;
They number into the thousands.&#13;
The last and the best of the doin's&#13;
Was in the society halls,&#13;
Where we had the frappe and wafers,&#13;
Such splendor ye never saw at all.&#13;
Sure, a splendid success and it was,&#13;
The opening of New College Hall."&#13;
&#13;
•,,,,&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
One hundred thirt y -tw o&#13;
&#13;
'15&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
A Tribe's Legend&#13;
Zet Nobelette&#13;
C HAPTER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
( Written by Lois Crouch)&#13;
"Dorothy said that last year when she was initiated she had to darn all the sorority&#13;
girl's stockings for two weeks," remarked Helen.&#13;
"Yes, and Catherine said she had to wear a gingham apron to school," added&#13;
Marian, "and Florence could not talk anything but French for two whole days."&#13;
"Our initiation could not be any worse than last year's, so let's not worry," remarked the ever-cheerful Helen.&#13;
"No, of course it couldn't," said Dorothy, entering the room of the Freshman&#13;
girls.&#13;
"What do you want Dorothy, did you come to tell us some more terrible things&#13;
they will do to us?"&#13;
"Oh no, I just called for you girls, aren't you nearly ready?"&#13;
"Don't forget your blind-fold, Marian," said Helen.&#13;
Dorothy had seemed so unconcerned when she called for the girls, that they thought&#13;
perhaps it wouldn't be so bad, but they were mistaken, when they got home, they concluded that there were worse things than talking French or darning stockings, because&#13;
they, as their special stunt had been forbidden to speak for three whole days. In a&#13;
silence that was dismal and unusual, they went to bed. The next morning, as Helen&#13;
opened her eyes she started to call to Marian, but remembered and sank back into bed&#13;
with a groan. As soon as they got up, Marian prepared a pad of paper and some&#13;
pencils because for three days this must be their means of communication.&#13;
"Let's not go down to breakfast," wrote Marian.&#13;
"But I'm hungry," replied Helen.&#13;
"I know but we can make some chocolate in the chafing dish and eat that box of&#13;
crackers, I would rather do that than go to breakfast, because· everybody will know&#13;
that we can't talk and will tease us."&#13;
"Yes, that is so, I'll make the chocolate, if you fix the table," wrote Helen.&#13;
After washing the dishes they took their books and hurried to school. Mathematics&#13;
was their first class and they were both called on to put problems on· the board. Then for&#13;
some unaccountable reason the professor lectured the rest of the hour. Feeling a little&#13;
encouraged they proceeded to their next classes. The poor unfortunate Marian flunked&#13;
in Latin because the teacher did not see the jesture she made toward her pledge ribbon.&#13;
Helen with her usual good luck was not called on in English, but offended one of her&#13;
best friends by not speaking to her. After other like experiences, they went back to&#13;
the dormitory, thoroughly discouraged and wondering if it was really worth while.&#13;
&#13;
The luncheon hour served only to deepen the gloom. The girls laughed at their&#13;
frantic jestures and motions with which they asked for the hash or the butter.&#13;
Again in their room, the unusual silence became so depressing that they began to&#13;
wonder how they could live until Sunday evening. Just then Dorothy came in. " Girls,"&#13;
she said, I'm going home this afternoon to stay over Sunday, I haven't been for six&#13;
weeks."&#13;
Dorothy lived in a great old-fashioned house, in a sleepy, little village not far from&#13;
Westcliffe College. Since Dorothy' s only brother was also away at college, her father&#13;
and mother were alone, so she frequently went home for the week-end.&#13;
"Oh, Dorothy," Marian quickly wrote on the tablet," please take us with you?"&#13;
Dorothy hesitated and said, ''I'd like to, but you know Cedar Crest is such a stupid,&#13;
little place and there will be nothing doing, not even any extra eats, as mother does not&#13;
know I am coming."&#13;
"That is just what we want," wrote Helen.&#13;
"Anything would be better than this place where everybody teases us and we can't&#13;
talk back," wrote Marian.&#13;
"All right," answered Dorothy, ''I'll ask the Dean, if you may go, while you pack&#13;
your suitcases, we'll leave on the three-twenty."&#13;
As she hastened off, the girls eagerly began to get ready. Each girl laid out her&#13;
street suit, ready to put on.&#13;
"Shall we take an evening dress?" wrote Helen.&#13;
"No, because we would have to take a light coat and there will be nothing to go to,&#13;
and we couldn't talk, if we went," answered Marian, with a jesture of despondency.&#13;
"What shall we take?" wrote Helen as suddenly she rushed to the closet and appeared with a yellow crepe and held it up with an inquiring look.&#13;
" It's very unbecoming," wrote Marian.&#13;
"I don't care," answered Helen, " I've got to wear it out and this is a good time&#13;
so I'm going to take it."&#13;
"If you take that I believe I'll take my pink messaline with the darned place in it,"&#13;
wrote Marian, and she laid it out.&#13;
They had packed their suitcases and had begun to dress when D orothy came in with&#13;
the permission from the Dean.&#13;
''I'll be ready in a few minutes and call for you," said Dorothy as she left.&#13;
Silently Helen and Marian waved farewells, while Dorothy called good-bye to the&#13;
girls. Dorothy had to take charge of the tickets, pay the hackman and attend to all of&#13;
the details of the trip, making the girls feel like a pair of irresponsible infants. The trip&#13;
was made without any special incidents and they arrived at 5 o'clock. Since Dorothy&#13;
was not expected there was no one to meet them, so they took the only conveyance that&#13;
the little village .afforded and soon arrived at Dorothy's home.&#13;
On being introduced to Mr. and Mrs. Browning, they could only shake hands and&#13;
bow while Dorothy explained the situation. Then she hastened them off to dress for&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundredthirty-five&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
-.:i·&#13;
&#13;
dinner as the Brownings dined at the unfashionably early hour of 6. When they&#13;
reached their room, Marian got out her pad and wrote, "Shall we dress for dinner, or&#13;
just put on fresh w aists, Helen?"&#13;
"Let's dress because if I don' t put on that yellow crepe, I won't look as gloomy as&#13;
I feel," wrote back Helen.&#13;
"All right, here goes the patched pink messaline. "&#13;
Dorothy in a white lingerie dress knocked at the door, calling, "Are you ready&#13;
girls?" They nodded, and with gloom written large on their faces started down stairs&#13;
with Dorothy leading. As they came to the turn of the stairs, they all looked down into&#13;
the laughing eyes of Harold, Dorothy's brother, and two of his college friends, also just&#13;
arrived for the week-end.&#13;
CHAPTE R&#13;
&#13;
II.&#13;
&#13;
(By Ada Belew)&#13;
Marian stifled a scream and sat limply down on the top step, but Helen pulled her&#13;
up by the arm, and with her handkerchief held firmly over the patch in the pink messaline,&#13;
bowed with the utmost ceremony to Bob, Jack and Harold, as Dorothy presented them.&#13;
In spite of the two speechless guests the meal was by no means a silent one or at all stiff.&#13;
The boys appreciated too well the possibilities a t hand for amusement.&#13;
When dinner was over the girls fled to their room and nothing could coax them down&#13;
again. Helen seized her pencil and pad and took six pages to write her opinion of&#13;
boys. Then, she tacked it up against the wall and every few moments during the process&#13;
of undressing, she stopped to hammer it with her shoe by way of expressing her feeling.&#13;
Dorothy wisely refrained from mentioning the dinner episode and only stuck her head in&#13;
the door to wish them "Good night and pleasant dreams."&#13;
"If you hear me talking in my sleep," wrote Helen, " for goodness sake, don't slap&#13;
me.&#13;
Saturday dawned a perfect autumn day. When the girls awoke they found on their&#13;
table a damp looking package wrapped in brown paper and tied up with twine. On&#13;
opening it they discovered a great cluster of wild asters laid on damp moss, and a note&#13;
which read:&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
"We say we' re twenty kinds of muts,&#13;
W e'll cut the kiddin' out,&#13;
W e feel that we have grown so good,&#13;
Our winglets soon will sprout.&#13;
&#13;
This is a little offering&#13;
In deep humility,&#13;
We pray that when you look at it&#13;
You then will think of me. "&#13;
&#13;
It was signed Bob, Jack and H arold, with evident signs of a struggle as to whose&#13;
name should stand nearest to the " me."&#13;
The day was to be spent at the home of Flora Martin, a friend of Dorothy's, who&#13;
lived at an old country place, called Woodburn. The white horse and carriage were&#13;
called into use and about 10 o'clock in the forenoon, they reached their destination.&#13;
The rest happened so suddenly that the girls never knew exactly how to explain it. They&#13;
&#13;
were left alone for a moment, while the boys took care of the old horse and Dorothy&#13;
had gone to look for Flo, when Flo herself, catching sight of them, came hurrying&#13;
across the lawn and seizing Helen's hand, shouted in her ear: "It was awfully good of&#13;
you to come so early? You are the girls from the Home aren't you? Nod your head&#13;
if you are." Helen was quick to see the joke and nodded her head violently. Dorothy&#13;
came running up and Marian motioned to her to be quiet, while Flo rambled on unconsciously. "Aren't they dear Dottie, they are going to help me serve this afternoon. I&#13;
sent for them up to the Deaf and Dumb Home. Did I tell you there are some people&#13;
coming, just a few from around here, you know." Dorothy saw that her part of the&#13;
program w as to get the boys and make them keep q uiet.&#13;
T he company a rrived early in the afternoon and the girls dressed in white caps and&#13;
aprons and carrying ear trumpets were set to work. Now was their chance to get even&#13;
with their tormentors of the night before. In spite of frantic shoutings in the ear trumpets, B ob found his coffee flavored with salt and Harold's creamed chicken had a&#13;
sickening sweetness.&#13;
"Serves you right, you dubs," said Jack, assuming an air of lofty virtue. Suddenly&#13;
the party were electrified to hear a familiar shout and see a great red automobile rolling&#13;
up the drive. It was packed fu ll of people from school.&#13;
" D otie," cried Flo, catching her arm, "it's a surprise for you, a surprise party,&#13;
d on't you understand ?"&#13;
When things had fina lly settled down to something like q uiet again, the waitresses&#13;
were missing.&#13;
Shout as they might, they were nowhere to be found . " The poor little&#13;
things,'_ said Flo, "they must have gotten frightened and gone home," and then to&#13;
'&#13;
Flora's consternation, D orothy explained the situation.&#13;
At this time the "poor little things" were sitting on a log in the woods, down by the&#13;
river. " I never could stand all that teasing," wrote Marian. ' 'I'd rather be eaten up&#13;
by the toads," replied Helen, drawing her skirt away from one that threatened to approach. So they sat on the log for it seemed to them, weeks. Finally it began to grow&#13;
dusk and creatures never before seen of man seemed to be creeping about in the underbrush. A long way off they heard shouts which were approaching. T he girls tried to&#13;
go toward them, but only went in a circle and came back again to their log. T he&#13;
shouts grew fa inter in the distance.&#13;
" Shall we answer?" wrote Marian in a shaky hand .&#13;
"Not if they never find anything but our bones!" H elen replied m a bold scrawl&#13;
so that M arian might read it in the fa ding light.&#13;
CHAPTER&#13;
&#13;
III.&#13;
&#13;
(By Catherine Elliott)&#13;
W hile the girls were having such a miserable time on the disconsolate log, the&#13;
group of gay young people at the house were enjoying themselves immensely, but D orothy&#13;
missed her fri ends and called her brother aside. "Say," she said to him, "those poor&#13;
&#13;
........................&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
One- hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
girls have gone off somewhere by themselves. I don't blame them a bit for not wanting&#13;
to meet the school crowd, so you and Jack go entertain them, won't you?" They&#13;
promised to do their best and hurried off. Just as the crowd was leaving, they returned.&#13;
"Why didn't you bring them back with you?" hailed Dorothy.&#13;
"Didn't find them."&#13;
"Where do you suppose they can have gone to?"&#13;
"Oh, I believe I know," interposed Flora, the maid said she thought she saw&#13;
them go towards the woods. Did you look there, boys?"&#13;
"No, never thought of it."&#13;
"Well, you go look there now. I must go home because mother will be worrymg.&#13;
And you bring the girls there as soon as you can."&#13;
Good-byes were said and the boys set out toward the woods, while Jack helped&#13;
Dorothy into the carriage for the homeward drive. This had been safely accomplished&#13;
and the staid white horse had been nodding in his stall almost an hour when the crunch&#13;
of wheels on the gravel driveway brought the anxious watchers down off the porch at a&#13;
run. Sure enough there they were all in a rather dilapidated looking spring wagon, the&#13;
two girls giggling on the back seat, while the two boys sat in the attitude of military&#13;
coachmen waiving a dilapidated whip over the flinching head of an awkward young&#13;
fellow who was crouched against the dashboard and the unheeding back of a stolid bay&#13;
horse.&#13;
"Well, we're awfully glad to see you back, but where did you get that wagon?"&#13;
asked Dorothy.&#13;
"That's the funny part of it," said Harold as he helped the two girls down from their&#13;
high seat. "You see their Highnesses were being kidnapped by this guy here and we&#13;
arrived just in time to rescue them. Here, you man, here's a dollar, you drive on home&#13;
now and keep mighty still or else you '11 get pinched. May I have the honor?" he asked,&#13;
bowing low before Helen, who took his proffered arm, and led the way to the house.&#13;
"What do you mean by this foolishness?" inquired Dorothy. "Stop laughing and&#13;
tell us."&#13;
"Well," began Bob, "we hurried to the woods and there by a log we found the&#13;
deserted ear-trumpets of our former maids. We heard some kind of a disturbance down&#13;
the road and a girl's distant giggle, so we beat it in that direction. We found that&#13;
fellow with his wagon, the girls in the back seat. We thought it was a clear case of&#13;
girl-napping, so we clipped after him. We made a wild running jump, let out a&#13;
mighty yell, and landing on the wagon steps, poked our flashlights in his eyes. He&#13;
crumpled up like a rag on the bottom of the wagon, then we turned the enterprise right&#13;
about face and here we are," ending with a flourish.&#13;
"Yes, but how did he get the girls?" queried Dorothy.&#13;
"That's easy enough," chimed in Harold. "You see he's the new hired hand at&#13;
the Deaf and Dumb Home and he was sent after those girls who didn't come. Well,&#13;
somehow he wandered around till he found these girls, saw the ear trumpets, didn't know&#13;
he had the wrong parties as they had nothing to say for themselves, , so he up and packs&#13;
them into his wagon. We didn't know this at first and were pretty hard on him, jumping&#13;
on him in good style."&#13;
&#13;
"He stammered and stuttered around awhile and we soon found he was not to&#13;
blame, but it was too good a chance to miss so we stuffed him properly, said these were&#13;
foreign princesses who didn't know our language and he would be in a deuce of a fix&#13;
for treating them so. Say, but I'm hungry. Get something to eat, and I'll answer any&#13;
question you care to ask."&#13;
This plea had been expected and prepared for and after a meal during which the&#13;
boys were too busy to tease the girls, the sufferers wrote out for Dorothy, a rather mixed&#13;
duet of their trials adding details entirely omitted by the boys.&#13;
"Well, you must certainly be tired out, so run on upstairs to your room, for it's&#13;
getting late." This they gladly did and found a note on the table. It was addressed&#13;
to both and read :&#13;
"STRICKEN FRIENDS :-We forgive the doctored eats; will you go for a walk tomorrow morning at seven. Jack is going to ask Dorothy. Answer by a note through&#13;
the window. (We shall act like cherubs). Please come.&#13;
"HAROLD and Bob."&#13;
"Shall we accept?" wrote Helen. "I think that throwing a note out of the window&#13;
IS silly."&#13;
"Of course we shall accept," answered Marian. "I think it is romantic," and she&#13;
suited the action to the word by taking a sheet of paper and promptly writing it. Just&#13;
then came the sound of soft singing from beneath the window. In an instant the light&#13;
was out and the two girls were looking from the window at the moonlight flooded yard&#13;
and the two serenaders. As they finished the concert and moved away singing, "Good&#13;
Night, Ladies," Helen dropped the note, which Harold caught as it fluttered and acknowledged by an upward wave of his hand.&#13;
The soothing quietness seemed to make their enforced silence more bearable and&#13;
they went to bed feeling more contented with their lot than they had for two days past.&#13;
The walk next morning was as great a success as three model young men on their&#13;
best behavior could make it. The girls scarcely missed the power of speech, so entertainingly did their companions carry on the one-sided conversation, seeming satisfied with&#13;
smiling attention and an occasional laugh from their otherwise silent companions. As&#13;
the girls dressed for church, Marian wrote: " I have decided that some boys are rather&#13;
nice to have around some times." Helen nodded her agreement.&#13;
The attitude of their companions of the morning was somewhat changed as they&#13;
walked to church for added to the jolly comradeship, was an air of extreme deference,&#13;
rather incongruous with the usual off-hand manner of the youth. This was soon accounted for by the whispering together of several small boys who passed them of something about princesses.&#13;
"It's that horrid story those foolish boys told that man last night," thought Dorothy.&#13;
As soon as the service was over, the boys whispered, "Let's hurry out or Dorothy will&#13;
proceed to introduce you under your own proper names and so spoil the illusion." Before they knew it they were once more on the way home, feeling like Chinese empresses&#13;
or some such dignitary as the boys strutted proudly beside them.&#13;
"Whatever did those boys tell everybody," wondered Marian. " I do hope noth-&#13;
&#13;
..,,,,,,,,................&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ouc hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
ing else happens to make us conspicuous for I know I should die if I could not say&#13;
something."&#13;
Her fears were groundless because nothing happened to destroy the quiet restfulness&#13;
of a Sunday afternoon, but the inquisitive gazing of a number of small boys through the&#13;
hedge and the 'phoning of gossiping neighbors. As the girls packed their suitcases that&#13;
evening, Helen wrote: "I am glad we are going to travel. I feel like a brute not to&#13;
be able to thank Dorothy's mother."&#13;
"Let's write notes," suggested Marian, and this was soon accomplished.&#13;
"Well," began Harold, as they stood waiting for the train on the station platform,&#13;
"we are extremely glad to have seen you girls, and we feel sure you have charming&#13;
voices. We hope we shall have an opportunity to hear them soon. Now, Dot, please be&#13;
careful with them and don't let the man from the Deaf and Dumb Home get a hold of&#13;
them again. Good-bye, here's the train."&#13;
A swift scramble for seats, a silent journey home, and at last they were back at&#13;
school. They felt as though they would simply burst forth into torrents of speech if they&#13;
stayed down stairs with the girls, so they crawled into bed at a preposterously early&#13;
hour and were soon asleep. The next morning, as soon as they awoke, both started at&#13;
once to shout aloud the beauties of being able to talk again and when Dorothy came in&#13;
they were at it like a pair of magpies.&#13;
"Girls, girls," she exclaimed, "you scold like a cage of monkeys. Do be quiet a&#13;
second and do it one at a time."&#13;
"Oh, say Dorothy," wailed Helen, "do tell us if your mother and brother thought&#13;
we were crazy. We just felt like perfect freaks the whole time, didn't we Marian?"&#13;
"I should say we did," Marian agreed. "I was never in such agony in all my&#13;
life."&#13;
"Well, you needn't to worry," consoled their friend, "because mother felt so sorry&#13;
for you and thought we girls were terrible to ask you to do such a thing and then well,&#13;
don't worry about what the boys think about you, for- well, I know something beautiful."&#13;
"What is it? Can't you tell?" This in ecstatic chorus.&#13;
"Well, if you will keep forever mum, I will tell you, because I think you really&#13;
deserve some reward. Last evening Harold came to me and said he and Bob were&#13;
wondering if you two girls would come up for their annual frat house party at Thanksgiving if they asked you. He said they both would like to have you. Of course I said&#13;
very calmly that I judged you would accept if you did not have any previous arrangements."&#13;
"Accept! Previous arrangements! Why I would keep still for a week for such a&#13;
chance," exclaimed Marian.&#13;
"You'll go with Jack won't you, Dorothy?" queried Helen. "Oh, goody, and do&#13;
you suppose they will really ask us?"&#13;
"Oh, I am sure of it," said Dorothy. "What dresses will you take?"&#13;
"Oh, there's the breakfast bell, let's go. I could endure things a thousand times&#13;
worse than we have had for such a glorious event as that house party," chattered Helen.&#13;
"Three college boys, three college girls, three silent days, three cheers for house&#13;
party," chimed Helen as the trio gayly hurried down stairs.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Alethia&#13;
Organized February 12, 1910&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
. · Champagne and Chocolate Brown&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Aristo Philain (Lovers of the best)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ....... . NELLIE FLETCHER&#13;
Vice President . . . . HULDA KREUTZ&#13;
Secretary . . . . . . . . . . JOCY&#13;
CARTER&#13;
Treasurer ......... SARA BLEAKLEY&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
ANNETTA HALL&#13;
ALMA WILHELM&#13;
RUTH FRENCH&#13;
GERTRUDE MOSIER&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
SARA BLEAKLEY&#13;
JOCY CARTER&#13;
GERTRUDE MOSIER&#13;
FLORENCE LONG&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Sara Bleakley&#13;
Annetta Hall&#13;
&#13;
Edith Bowers&#13;
Eva Leazer&#13;
&#13;
Joey Carter&#13;
Mary McCutcheon&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Myrtle Britton&#13;
&#13;
Lulu Hawcott&#13;
Alma Wilhelm&#13;
&#13;
Florence Long&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ruth French&#13;
&#13;
Kittie Nurse&#13;
&#13;
Fern Marquart&#13;
Olive Jones&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Ona Marsh&#13;
Gertrude Mosier&#13;
&#13;
Ellen Wan berg&#13;
Grace Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Alice Dewey&#13;
Flora Searls&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
On e hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-three&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Alethia Calendar&#13;
April 14, 1912-lmpromptu Program.&#13;
April 20, 1912-Spread.&#13;
April 2 7, 1912-0riginal Farce by New Girls.&#13;
May I I, 1912-Senior Aletheias entertain at H. Olmstead's.&#13;
May 17. 1912-Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
May 25, 1912-Senior Program at Ruth French's.&#13;
June I, 1912-Senior Aletheias entertained at F. Long's.&#13;
June 12, 191 2-Society Reunion.&#13;
September 28, 1912-Florence Long and Edith Bowers "At Home."&#13;
October 12, 1912-Spread at Alma Wilhelm's.&#13;
October 24, 191 2-Reception for Mrs. J. A Whitaker.&#13;
November 2, 1912-Hallowe'en Party at Kittie Nurse's.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Closed Door at Ruth French's.&#13;
November 22, 1912-Party for New Girls at Sara Bleakley' s.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Phoenix Society entertained at Long's.&#13;
November 30, 1912-Afternoon Party at Ruth French's.&#13;
December 7, 1912-Annual Banquet at Martin Hotel.&#13;
December 13, 1912-Reception for New Girls at Milligan's.&#13;
January 25, 1913-Spread with Gertrude Mosier.&#13;
February 1, 191 3-Celebration of Third Anniversary.&#13;
February 8, 191 3-Annual Baby Party with Misses Marquart, Marsh and Jones.&#13;
February I 7, 191 3-Mr. and Mrs. Whitaker entertain Phoenix and Aletheias at&#13;
Valentine Party.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Mr. and Mrs. Walter Breaw entertain Aletheias and Phoenix.&#13;
March 7, 191 3-Election of Officers for Spring Term.&#13;
March 15, 1913-St. Patrick Party.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-five&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Phoenix&#13;
Organized November 1, 1912&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Blue and Gray&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Deeds Not Words&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ..... . . .... . ... FRED HIME BAUCH&#13;
Vice President ... ... . . .. . JOHN RALSTON&#13;
Secretary .. . . . .... ... .. . HOWARD GRAHAM&#13;
Treasurer .... .. . . ....... JOHN ENGLE:&#13;
&#13;
W inter&#13;
JOHN RALSTON&#13;
HOWARD GRAHAM&#13;
WALTER BREAW&#13;
LESLIE LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS HIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Howard Graham&#13;
&#13;
John Ralston&#13;
J UNIORS&#13;
John Engle&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
W alter Breaw&#13;
&#13;
Fred Himebauch&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Leslie Logan&#13;
Clarence Harris&#13;
&#13;
S. Wesley Deakin&#13;
Richard Mitchell&#13;
The Phoenix Literary Society was organized November 1, 1912, because of the&#13;
urgent need that was felt by some for another literary society in which young men could&#13;
come together and secure the benefits of the most helpful intellectual, social and moral&#13;
training to fit them for their life work. They organized on the most democratic basis&#13;
possible because they believe that every student should have the training which literary&#13;
societies give, and that this should be a possible attainment for all, regardless of any&#13;
student's circumstances.&#13;
Although less than a year old, the Phoenix Society is already taking its place in the&#13;
This year orators captured second place in the&#13;
forensic activities of the school.&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest and first and third in the Home Prohibition Contest. This&#13;
is certainly a fine beginning and augurs well for the years to come.&#13;
&#13;
Phoenix Calendar&#13;
November 1, 1912-First Business Meeting.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Guest of Aletheias at M iss Long's.&#13;
January 9, 191 3-Closed D oor.&#13;
January 16, 1913-First Closed Door in N ew H all.&#13;
February 1 7, 191 3-Guests of Mr. and M rs. Whitaker.&#13;
February 24, 1913- Aletheia-Phoenix P arty at Breaw's.&#13;
March 1 3, 1913- First Preliminary D ebate.&#13;
March 20, 191 3-Second P reliminary Debate.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-seven&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Organized November 4, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Light Blue and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Utile Dulce (The useful with the pleasing)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ..... . . . .. RACHEL CooK&#13;
Vice President ..... HAZEL LANE&#13;
Secretary . ..... . .. .ANNA RIEKE&#13;
Treasurer .. . ...... ANNA BEARD&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
AUDREE DAVIE&#13;
INEZ WHITNEY&#13;
IsoBEL WEBB&#13;
SARA WHITEHOUSE&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
ANNA RIEKE&#13;
MINNIE NELSON&#13;
MARIE WOOD&#13;
BERTHA SATER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Audree Davie&#13;
Hazel Shumaker&#13;
Inez Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Minnie Nelson&#13;
Sara Whitehouse&#13;
&#13;
Anna Rieke&#13;
Marie Wood&#13;
Ruby Flinn&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Ruth Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Isobel&#13;
&#13;
Webb&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Anna Beard&#13;
Edith Lyles&#13;
Florence Shumaker&#13;
Beatrice Wright&#13;
&#13;
Linda Damerow&#13;
Bonnie Robinson&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Bertha Sater&#13;
Doris Wood&#13;
Ida Day&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Beulah Elder&#13;
Blanche Thompson&#13;
Elizabeth Shannon&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Johnson&#13;
Jean Thomson&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
Helen Roe&#13;
Florence Williams&#13;
Viola Feller&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum Calendar&#13;
April 20, 1912-Annual Violet Luncheon for Academy Girls.&#13;
May 28, 1912-Picnic at Riverside Boat Club.&#13;
June 11, 1912-Society Reunion Breakfast.&#13;
September 2 7, 1912-Philomathean Reception to Athenaeums.&#13;
September 28-30, 1912- Annual Rieke House Party.&#13;
October 3, 1912-Four O'clock Luncheon at Beatrice Wright's.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Six O'clock Dinner at Mrs. J. E. Ewer's.&#13;
October 7, 1912- Joint Business Meeting with Philos.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception to the Philos at Isobel Webb's.&#13;
November 2 3, 1912-Bonnie Robinson Entertained Athenaeums at 7 O'clock Dinner.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Presen tation of Athenaeum Queen at Webb's.&#13;
December 2, 1912-Progressive Breakfast at Raw's, Ewer's, Bridenbaugh's and Day's&#13;
December 6, 1912-Tenth Annual Banquet at the Martin Hotel.&#13;
December 13, 1912-Election of N ew Girls.&#13;
December 14, 1912-Reception for New Girls at Ethel Ewer's.&#13;
December 20, 1912-Christmas Party with Philos.&#13;
January 11, 1913-First Gathering of the New Year at Trenary's.&#13;
January 25, 1913-Mattie Bridenbaugh Entertained Athenaeums.&#13;
February 1, 191 3-Bess Shannon entertained Athenaeums.&#13;
February 3, 191 3-Mrs. Kanthlener entertained Athenaeums at Musical.&#13;
February 8, 1913-Philo-Athenaeum Party at Wright's.&#13;
February 15, 191 3-Informal Reception for the Misses McCandliss and Feller.&#13;
February 22, 191 3-Washington Party at Miss Flinn's.&#13;
March 1, 191 3-Mrs. Ed. Backemeyer entertained the Athenaeums.&#13;
March 8, 1913-Dedication of the New Hall with Philo-Athenaeum Alumni.&#13;
March 15, 191 3-N ew Girls entertained in New Hall.&#13;
March 17, 191 3-Formal Initiation.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
0 ne hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
Organized October 14, 1892&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and Maroon&#13;
&#13;
Motto, Vestigia Nulla Rectrorsum (No slipping backward)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ......... .RAY HESS&#13;
Vice President ..... .EARL BURGESS&#13;
Secretary .. ....... HERBERT FRENCH&#13;
Treasurer ......... HAROLD COBBS&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
JOHN BRIGGS&#13;
H. G. MERTEN&#13;
BEN HOLBERT&#13;
M. 0. INSKO&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
HORACE MERTON&#13;
J. H. WINTERRINGER&#13;
R. C. PRICHARD&#13;
EARL BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
J. E. Briggs&#13;
G. W. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
H. G. Merton&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
H. Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
H. M. Cobbs&#13;
Victor Hornney&#13;
&#13;
H erbert French&#13;
&#13;
M. 0. Insko&#13;
R. N. McVicker&#13;
&#13;
Ben Holbert&#13;
E. W. Johns&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
R. R. Knotts&#13;
&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Ralph Prichard&#13;
Cyril Upham&#13;
&#13;
Earl Hiett&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Frank Abel&#13;
J . V. Madison&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
D. C. Cooper •&#13;
Clifford Rieke&#13;
William Shriever&#13;
&#13;
One hundred 'fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
N. C. Gray&#13;
Earl Williams&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Organized October 4, 1908&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Canary and Black&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
F eliciter, F ortiter, Fideliter ( Happy, Brave, Faithful)&#13;
OFFIC ERS&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ...... MYRTLE SEIFERT&#13;
VERA ROWE&#13;
Vice President. . JEAN WHITTEMORE. HELEN GIEHM&#13;
Secretary ...... PEARL WILSON&#13;
ED NA ALLEN&#13;
reasurer ... . .. VERA ROWE&#13;
LOLA BROWNELL&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
JEAN WHITTEMORE.&#13;
EDNA ALLEN&#13;
MARGARET KIFER&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Vera Rowe&#13;
&#13;
Susan Eads&#13;
&#13;
Jean Whittemore&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
Caroline Eads&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Bernice Bowman&#13;
&#13;
Nellie U pham&#13;
Lola Brownell&#13;
Helen Giehm&#13;
Lucille Morgan&#13;
&#13;
Zenana Osborne&#13;
Edna Allen&#13;
Helen Gullickson&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Ethel Collier&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Kifer&#13;
Elsie Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Metcalf&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Clara Lewis&#13;
.Ruth Bailey&#13;
Florence Wilkinson&#13;
&#13;
Frances Craig&#13;
Ruth Fouke&#13;
Helen Laub&#13;
Margaret Lockin&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Ruth Fall&#13;
&#13;
'•,,........&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty -six&#13;
&#13;
One hu ndred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Marion Metcalf&#13;
Ethel Brown&#13;
Marion Simme&#13;
&#13;
-··.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
Pieria Calendar&#13;
May 27, 1912-Senior Pi's Entertain Society.&#13;
June 1, 1912-Hayrack Party to Melhurst Farm.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Joint Boat Ride up Sioux River.&#13;
June 9, 1912-Banquet to Graduates at Lucille Metcalf's.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Reunion.&#13;
September 2 7, 1912-Ionian-Pieria Party at Helen Gullickson' s.&#13;
October 2, 1912-"Grape Tea" at Lola Brownell's.&#13;
October 14, 1912-Luncheon at the West Hotel in Honor of Fifth Anniversary.&#13;
October 16, 1912-Ravine Party.&#13;
October 21, 1912-lonian-Pi Husking Bee at Ionian House.&#13;
October 31, 1912-Entertained by Mrs. Kanthlener at Hallowe'en Frolic.&#13;
November 2, 1912-Hallowe'en Party at Kifer's.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception for Ionians.&#13;
November 23, 1912-Informal Reception to New Girls.&#13;
December 3, 1912-Yellow Luncheon at Lucille Metcalf's.&#13;
December 5, 1912-Annual Banquet at Martin Hotel.&#13;
December 14, 1912-Reception to New Members.&#13;
December 18, 1912-Christmas Party at Frances Craig's.&#13;
January 28, 1913-New Officers Entertained at Kifer's.&#13;
February 1, 1913-Joint Closed Door at Gullickson's.&#13;
February 14, 191 3- Valentine Tea.&#13;
February 22, 191 3-Formal Initiation.&#13;
February 24, 191 3-"George Washington" Party with lonians.&#13;
March 8, 191 3-Closed Door at Home of Ethel Collier.&#13;
March 15, 1913-Closed Door Program in Hall.&#13;
March 19, 191 3-St. Patrick Tea in Hall.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
.. .&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Organized January 6, 1909&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Possunt quad Credere Possunt (They are able because they believe)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President ... . .. . . .A E . KENT&#13;
Vice President .... J. H. EDGE&#13;
Secretary .... .....CLARENCE CRAIG&#13;
Treasurer . ...... . HERMAN LUEDER&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
Fall&#13;
FRANK ]OHNSON&#13;
J. H. EDGE&#13;
R. W. HENDERSON&#13;
RoY GARLOCK&#13;
L. J. BRIDENBAUGH HARRY FOWLER&#13;
A H. BRUNELLE&#13;
]AMES D OLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Joseph H. Edge&#13;
&#13;
Roy&#13;
&#13;
H. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Frank P. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
A H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
Earl S. F ullbrook&#13;
&#13;
R. W. Henderson&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
T. 8. Bassett&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
Carl Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
James Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
L. Bridenbaugh&#13;
Herman Lueder&#13;
Everett Ostling&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Howard Allen&#13;
Harry Fowler&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty&#13;
&#13;
Charles Berkstresser&#13;
Walter Held&#13;
Frank Oliver&#13;
John Slater&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
Calvin Besore&#13;
Harrison Kilborne&#13;
Carl W. Sass&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Calendar&#13;
April 22, 1912--Grand Public.&#13;
May 7, 1912-Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 4, 1912-Final Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Farewell Reception to Graduates.&#13;
September 16, 1912-Watermelon Feed at the Ionian House.&#13;
September 2 I , 1912-Rush Stag at the Ionian House.&#13;
September 27, 1912-Ionian-Pi Party at Helen Gullickson's.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Joint Business Meeting with Pierias.&#13;
October 14, 1912-Second Degree Initiation.&#13;
October 21, 1912-Husking Bee.&#13;
October 28, 1912-Closed Door Program.&#13;
November 4, 1912-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
November I 4, 191 2-Won from Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 15, 1912-Won from Philos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception for Ionians by Pierias.&#13;
November 25, 1912-Preliminary Debate.&#13;
December 9, 1912-Stag Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
December 10, 1912-Closed Door Program.&#13;
January 13, 191 3-Stunt Night at the Ionian House.&#13;
January 27, 1913-Travel Program.&#13;
February 1, 191 3-Joint Closed Door.&#13;
February 10, 191 3-Extempore Program.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Washington's Birthday Party in the New Hall.&#13;
March 7, 1913- First Semi-final Debate.&#13;
March I 7, 191 3-0pen Door Play "Freezing a Mother-in-Law."&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
Organized November I I , I 89 7&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Scarlet and Black&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Esse Quam Videre (To be rather than to seem)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Spring&#13;
President .... FLORENCE ANTHONY&#13;
Vice PresidentMAUDE GILLIN&#13;
Secretary .... MADGE GILLIN&#13;
Treasurer .... RUTH PRENTICE&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
LOTTIE SANDERS&#13;
ELLA CAMPBELL&#13;
HELEN WEDGWOOD&#13;
LOIS CROUCH&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT&#13;
EvA RANDOLPH&#13;
GRACE LOGAN&#13;
FLORENCE MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
Ella Campbell&#13;
Catherine Elliott&#13;
Florence Montgomery&#13;
Lottie Sanders&#13;
&#13;
Florence Cain&#13;
Grace Logan&#13;
Eva Randolph&#13;
&#13;
Lorna Distad&#13;
Alice Mower&#13;
Edna Simon&#13;
Helen Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
] UNIORS&#13;
Ada Belew&#13;
&#13;
Lula Kindlespire&#13;
&#13;
Mabel Pecaut&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Olive Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth James&#13;
Marie Devitt&#13;
Mabel King&#13;
&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Mabel Irwin&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
Alice Thornburg&#13;
Lovice Strobel&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Eleanor Winkleman&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
Lura McLane&#13;
Mary Wedgwood&#13;
Anna Williams&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean Calendar&#13;
April 13, 1912-Zets entertain the Other Society Girls.&#13;
April 16, 1912-Zets Entertain the F acuity Ladies.&#13;
April 19, 1912-Luncheon for High School and Academy Girls.&#13;
April 20, 1912-Annual Hen Party at Hazel Siman's.&#13;
May 11, 1912-Zets entertain their Mothers at Luella Haskins'.&#13;
May 19, 1912-Annual Otho Breakfast for Zets.&#13;
May 30, 1912-Annual Picnic at Talbot's Farm.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Society Reunion.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Annual Tally-Ho Ride.&#13;
October 18, 1912-Joint Party with Othos at Montgomery's.&#13;
November 16, 1912-Reception for Othos at Luella Haskins'.&#13;
November 29, 1912-Barlow Hall Party.&#13;
December 2, 1912-Luncheon at Eva Randolph's.&#13;
December 9, 1912-Annual Banquet at Martin.&#13;
December 14, 1912-Dinner at Wilma Beam's.&#13;
January 27, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Othos at MacDonald's.&#13;
February 8, 1913-F reshmen Zets Entertain Society at Mary Wedgwood's.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Othos in New Hall.&#13;
February 2 7, 191 3-Reception for Mrs. Catherine 0. McCoy.&#13;
March 8, 191 3-Closed Door in Hall.&#13;
March 14, 1913-Installation of New Officers.&#13;
March 15, 1913-"Spread."&#13;
March 1 7, 191 3-St. Patrick's Day Luncheon.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
One hundred six ty-s ix&#13;
&#13;
sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Organized November 7, I 891&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Royal Purple and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Suaviter in M ado, F ortiter in Re (Gentle in Manner, Resolute in Deed)&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Fall&#13;
President ... . .... .L. H. KINGSBURY&#13;
Vice President .... V. E. MONTGOMERY&#13;
Secretary . . .......S. A. BRALEY&#13;
Treasurer ....... . J. D. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
Spring&#13;
V. E. MONTGOMERY F. B. ROGERS&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
w. B. BASS&#13;
H. P. MORGAN&#13;
w. H. BOWKER&#13;
]. D. KOLP&#13;
J. D. KOLP&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
S. A Braley&#13;
L. H. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
W. C. Evans&#13;
&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
]UNIORS&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
]. D. Kolp&#13;
&#13;
H. C. Bigglestone&#13;
W . A McCurdy&#13;
L. L. Wright .&#13;
&#13;
H. A. Gorder&#13;
H. P. Morgan&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
R. W. Austin&#13;
B . E. Evans&#13;
W. H. Payne&#13;
&#13;
W. B. Costar&#13;
G. D. McKinney&#13;
H. C. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
&#13;
H. V. Dunham&#13;
E. V. Kuhns&#13;
]. F . Pollock&#13;
W. A Wedgwood&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
C. A Ellis&#13;
G. B. Patrick&#13;
P. C. Weatherby&#13;
&#13;
L. 0. Gingerich&#13;
B. S. Reynolds&#13;
N. L. Williams&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Lawton&#13;
B. W. Riner&#13;
P. H. Woodke&#13;
&#13;
.....&#13;
&#13;
One hundre d sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
April 30, 1912-Reception to Zets.&#13;
May 19, 1912-0tho Breakfast to Zets.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Finals of First Gold Medal Debate Series.&#13;
June 10, 1912-Graduating Exercises; Finals of Second Gold. Medal Debate Series.&#13;
June 12, 1912-Annual Society Reunion.&#13;
September 30, 1912-Annual Otho Stag.&#13;
October 18, 1912- Joint Party with Zets at Montgomery Home.&#13;
October 25, 1912-0pen Door.&#13;
November 13, 1912-lnter-Society Debate with Philos.&#13;
November 14, 1912-lnter-Society Debate with lonians.&#13;
November 16, 1912- Zets entertain Othos at Haskins Home.&#13;
November 29, 1912-Zets entertain Othos at Barlow Hall Party.&#13;
January 20, 191 3-lnitiation.&#13;
January 27, 1913-Joint. Party with Zets at MacDonald's.&#13;
February 15, 191 3-Annual Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
February 17, 191 3-0pen Door Program.&#13;
February 24, 1913-Joint Closed Door in the New Hall.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
·One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seven ty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
severnty-three&#13;
&#13;
Organized February, 1902&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Olive Green and Wh ite&#13;
&#13;
Mott o&#13;
&#13;
To Possess the Aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED WooD&#13;
&#13;
IDA ROBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
ALICE THORNBURG&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Wood&#13;
&#13;
Elda Bridenbaugh&#13;
&#13;
DeVeda Mills&#13;
&#13;
Mary Harding&#13;
&#13;
Jessie Whittlesey&#13;
&#13;
Irene Robar&#13;
&#13;
Irene Chapin&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Byram&#13;
&#13;
Lulu Wiese&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Cummings&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Smith&#13;
&#13;
Olive Scott&#13;
&#13;
Maude Ewer&#13;
&#13;
Anna Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Elvira Widenfeller&#13;
&#13;
Martha Whitney&#13;
&#13;
Ida Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Harriet Mattson&#13;
&#13;
Caroline Ward&#13;
&#13;
Merlin Sawyer&#13;
&#13;
Florence Sloan&#13;
&#13;
Lyle Chandler&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
May 16, 1912-An nual Aesthesian-Adelphian Picnic.&#13;
May 24, 1912-Chafing Dish Party.&#13;
Septe:nber 20, 1912-Japanese Party at Marion Metcalf's.&#13;
September 28, 1912-Aesthesian-Adelphian Hayrack Ride.&#13;
September 30, 1912-Spread for New Academy Girls.&#13;
October 30, 1912- Aesthesian-Adelphian Hall owe' en Party.&#13;
November 28, 1912- Initiation.&#13;
December 11, 1912-Reception to Adelphian Debaters.&#13;
January 16, 191 3-Joint Closed Door with Adelphians.&#13;
February 17, 1913-Party at Lyle Chandler's Home.&#13;
February 24, 191 3- Closed Door in Society Hall.&#13;
March 15, 1913-St. Patrick Party .&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
Adelphian&#13;
Organized June 18, 1903&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Cerise and White&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Carpe Diem (Sieze the Opportunity)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
· Winter&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
BERNARD BROWN&#13;
&#13;
HARRISON KILBORNE&#13;
&#13;
WALTER BERKEY&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
April 15, 1912-Reception to Aesthesians.&#13;
May 6, 1912-Adelphian-Aesthesian Breakfast.&#13;
May 28, 1912- Gold Medal Debate.&#13;
June 3, 1912-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
September 20, 1912-Annual Adelphian Stag.&#13;
September 26, 1912-Annual Hayrack Ride.&#13;
Chester Robertson&#13;
&#13;
Merle Worden&#13;
&#13;
Reuben Walin&#13;
&#13;
October 30, 19 12- Hallowe' en Party.&#13;
&#13;
Earl Barks&#13;
&#13;
Edmund Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Harold Buehler&#13;
&#13;
November 22, 191 2-Won from Hawkeyes in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
&#13;
George Blodgett&#13;
&#13;
Glenn Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Louis Haitz&#13;
&#13;
George Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Walter Berkey&#13;
&#13;
Lyle Piper&#13;
&#13;
Milton Lory&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Rice&#13;
&#13;
Sherman Potter&#13;
&#13;
December 15, 1912-Adelphian-Aesthesian Vacation Party.&#13;
January 16, 1913-Joint Closed Door with Aesthesians.&#13;
&#13;
Carroll Northrup&#13;
&#13;
Leo Stevens&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
February 24, 19 13- Second Degree Initiation.&#13;
March&#13;
&#13;
1, 191 3- Annual Banquet at the Martin.&#13;
&#13;
March 10, 191 3-Closed Door Program.&#13;
&#13;
,..&#13;
&#13;
'."&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
Organized June 11, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Nile Green and White&#13;
W e Succeed by Doing&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall&#13;
&#13;
Spring&#13;
AMBER GARLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
ALICE HALLETT&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
LEONE LANGE&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May 12, 1912-Hawkeye-Crescent Picnic.&#13;
May 25, 1912-House Party at Hauswald's, Merrill, Iowa.&#13;
June 8, 1912-Crescent-Hawkeye Farewell Party at Watson's.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
June 10, 1912-Breakfast.&#13;
Septembe r 14, 1912-Tea for New Girls at Nellie Watson's.&#13;
September 16, 1912-Hawkeye-Crescent Reception for New Academy Girls.&#13;
September 19, 1912-Tea at Alice Hallett's.&#13;
September 28, 1912-Joint Closed Door with Hawkeyes.&#13;
October 5, 1912-Mrs. Pillsbury entertained Crescents.&#13;
October 12, 1912-Japanese Party at Himebaugh's.&#13;
October 19, 1912-Initiation at Watson's.&#13;
October 28, 1912-Hawkeye-Crescent Hall owe' en Party.&#13;
November 23, 1912-Crescent Reception for Hawkeye Debaters.&#13;
January 11 , 191 3-Luncheon in Honor of Miss Watson.&#13;
February 4, 191 3-Crescent Spread.&#13;
February 6, 19 13-Crescent Tea.&#13;
February 15, 191 3-Hawkeye-Crescent Valentine Party at Miss Graham's.&#13;
&#13;
.•.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
Organized September 27, I 899&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Cold and Silver&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Non Palma Sine Pulvere (No victory without Dust)&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring&#13;
BEN RINER&#13;
&#13;
Fall&#13;
ORIN BELL&#13;
&#13;
Winter&#13;
&#13;
0. 8.&#13;
&#13;
CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
May I 5, I 9 I 2-Annual Hawkeye-Crescent Picnic.&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
May 30, I 9 I 2-Final Gold Medal D ebate Series.&#13;
September I 6, I 9 I 2 -Hawkeye-Crescent Reception to New Academy Students.&#13;
&#13;
David Armburster&#13;
&#13;
George Dunn&#13;
&#13;
Garner Osborn&#13;
&#13;
Axel Beck&#13;
&#13;
Clark Harris&#13;
&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
&#13;
Orin Bell&#13;
&#13;
Wilber Hickman&#13;
&#13;
Lewis Beebe&#13;
&#13;
Francis Bondhus&#13;
&#13;
Fred Koch&#13;
&#13;
Axel Hemmingsen&#13;
&#13;
Oscar Carlson&#13;
&#13;
Herman Koch&#13;
&#13;
Zebbie Christensen&#13;
&#13;
October I 5, I 9 I 2- Initiation.&#13;
October 3 I, I 9 I 2-Hallowe'en Party.&#13;
November 23, I 9 I 2-Reception to Debaters by Crescents.&#13;
February I 5, I 9 I 3-Hawkeye-Crescent Valentine Party.&#13;
March 3, I 9 I 3-Annual Banquet at West Hotel.&#13;
March I 0, I 9 I 3-Gold Medal Debate Series.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
,,•'&#13;
&#13;
, ,,•'&#13;
&#13;
• One hundred eighty-one&#13;
One hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·.&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
..•&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian&#13;
ALLAN&#13;
V1cToR&#13;
&#13;
C&#13;
&#13;
Reporter Staff&#13;
&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
HoRNNEY&#13;
&#13;
HELEN GI EH M&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
VERNON&#13;
&#13;
LAURA B E LT&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT&#13;
JOSEPH EDGE&#13;
MYRON INSKO&#13;
FRANKIE KNIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Lectures&#13;
A thletics&#13;
Locals&#13;
Social&#13;
Associations&#13;
Forensics&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
This staff constitutes the brains and the brawn of one of the most enterprising college sheets in the Middle West. The Collegian R eporter is purely a student enterprise.&#13;
It was organized in the fall of 1896, though it received its present title some time later.&#13;
From that time it has been record ing the doings and the do' s of students, college and&#13;
vicinity with varying degrees of success. O ccasionally it comes to the rescue of the&#13;
faculty with very timely advice upon such matters as "Suppression of Promiscuous Fussing, " "Conservation of College Spirit," "Inflated Valuation of P edagogical Acumen,"&#13;
"Evils of F acuity Censorship," and many other eq ually important subjects. Altogether&#13;
its history has been one of phenominal progress and it has in these few short years become&#13;
one of the leaders of the state in college journalism.&#13;
&#13;
.....................,,,,,,,•'&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-flve&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
- -&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
JocY CARTER&#13;
Olive HARTZELL&#13;
FLOREN CE MONTGOMERY&#13;
NELLIE UPHAM&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
Catherine Elliott ... . .. .. ..... ... ....... . . .. ... .... .. .. .... ... . . Social&#13;
Mabel Irwin ... ... ... ...... ... .. ... .. .... .. ..... . ... . . . . ... Extension&#13;
Edna Allen ... ..... . ........ .... .... . ... .. .. .... ... . .... Intercollegiate&#13;
Bertha Sater ..... ... . .. . . . .. .. . . . ... ... . ..... .. .. . . .. . .. . .. Devotional&#13;
Anna Rieke .. . .. . ........ . . . ...... . . . .... . . . . . .......... . . . . . . Bible&#13;
&#13;
Young Men's Christian Association Cabinet&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
W. A&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
McCuRDY&#13;
&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
L. 0. GINGERICH&#13;
S. A BRAILEY&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES&#13;
F . E. Burgess . ... .. ... . .. . ... ... .. . . . .......... .. .. ... . . . Bible Study&#13;
D. L. Wickens ... . , ...... . . . .... . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. .... Devotional&#13;
C. T. Craig .. . .. .. .. .. . . . . ... .. . .. . . . .. . ... . .. . . . ... ... . . .... Social&#13;
J. E. Briggs . . . . .. .. . ... . .. . . .... .. .. . . . . .. ... ... . .... . . .. Membership&#13;
H. P. Morgan ... .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. . . . . .. . .... . ... ... .... .. . Finance&#13;
A. C. Lemon . .......... . .. . .... . ... . .. ... .. .. .. ..... . ·. .... Extension&#13;
R. R. Vernon ..... .. . ... .. .. . . .. . . . . ... . ... . .. ... ... .. .. New Students&#13;
H. G. Merten . ... . ... . . ... . . .. .. . ..... ... .. ... . . ... ... .... Missionary&#13;
&#13;
'•,,,&#13;
&#13;
,,,,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
O nc hundred&#13;
&#13;
ei g hty-seven&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
ALLAN LEMON&#13;
HAROLD POLLOCK&#13;
PAUL MacCOLLIN&#13;
HARRY CLARK&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
Student Manager&#13;
MEMBERSHIP&#13;
&#13;
FIRST TENOR&#13;
Aaron Ruth&#13;
Carl Nelson&#13;
Paul Eiffert&#13;
Robert Mitchell&#13;
Clare Lawton&#13;
&#13;
SECOND TENOR&#13;
Allan Lemon&#13;
Roy Garlock&#13;
Earl Burgess&#13;
Arthur Johnson&#13;
John Madison&#13;
&#13;
BARITONE&#13;
Harold Pollock&#13;
Fletcher Pollock&#13;
Wesley Henderson&#13;
Delano Starr&#13;
Lisle Hosford&#13;
&#13;
Harry Clark&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
William McCurdy&#13;
Arthur Lindsay&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
Herbert French&#13;
&#13;
Pianist&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club&#13;
The Morningside College Glee Club was organized during the fall of 191 0 by&#13;
Professor 0. A. Morse. The first two years little concert work was done except the&#13;
Annual Home Concert, there being only one or two concerts given outside the city.&#13;
Though the Club did good work considering its youthfulness, the present year is really&#13;
the first time the Club has taken a place in the state as a high class musical organization.&#13;
This success is due largely to the excellent instruction of Professor Paul MacCollin,&#13;
formerly of Oberlin College, and a thorough master of glee club work in all its phases.&#13;
The Club made its first extended tour last Christmas vacation giving twelve concerts.&#13;
During the Easter recess they made another shorter tour visiting a few of the towns in&#13;
the northern part of the state. Thus the Glee Club is taking its place among the other&#13;
student activities and is carrying the interests of old M. C. to the people whose support&#13;
and good will we most need. It is demonstrating to our constituency among other things&#13;
the true college spirit and enthusiasm as found in the modern small college of which&#13;
Morningside is the highest type.&#13;
&#13;
hundred eighty -eight&#13;
One hundred eighty-n i n e&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Agora Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
RUTH RIEKE&#13;
MABEL PECAUT&#13;
MABEL IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
For the past several years, a need has been felt among the girls of Morningside&#13;
College fo r a closer fellowship and co-operation as a student body, in order to gain for&#13;
the body of the girls as a whole all the advantages and opportunities for development&#13;
that should in the nature of things obtain in the pursuance of a college courses. To this&#13;
end, through the patient efforts of Miss Ferguson, the "Agora Club" was organized&#13;
shortly after Christmas vacation. The chief aim of the organization this year is to promote girls' athletics. Walking, tennis and basketball clubs have already been formed&#13;
in which every girl is expected to take part.&#13;
The first banquet of the club was held March 10, 191 3, which filled every girl&#13;
present with a genuine enthusiasm for its future. While the immediate aim of the club is&#13;
for greater fellowship and greater opportunity for every girl in school, deep underneath&#13;
it is another expression on the part of all for a greater and a better Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Mandolin Club&#13;
Manager-Director&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES A. TEMPLEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
INSTRUMENTATION&#13;
Guitar&#13;
Harp Guitar&#13;
Piano&#13;
Flute&#13;
Banjo&#13;
&#13;
First Mandolin&#13;
Second Mandolin&#13;
Mandala&#13;
Mando-Cello&#13;
Mando-Bass&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
MYRON INSKO&#13;
JOHN ENGLE&#13;
ALICE DEWEY&#13;
&#13;
OTHER MEMBERS&#13;
Ruth McCandliss&#13;
&#13;
Paul Boodagh&#13;
&#13;
Tracia Bregman&#13;
&#13;
Declaration: It is my purpose, if Cod permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
The Morningside Mandolin Club is the largest and best Concert Mandolin Orchestra&#13;
in the middle west. It was organized by Professor Charles A. Templeman, and is the&#13;
first organization of its kind in Sioux City to use modern correct mandolin orchestra instrumentation. Its growth has been nothing short of phenomenal and it has at present&#13;
thirty-six members, which is the largest mandolin orchestra that has ever been in Sioux&#13;
City. Professor Templeman has built up large classes m mandolin, guitar and banjo&#13;
since coming to Morningside, and the Mandolin Club is one of the results of his&#13;
enthusiastic work.&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of this band is to interest and enlist young men and women in foreign&#13;
missionary work. The organization started in Morningside in 1902, and is a branch of&#13;
a national movement that had its beginning in a Bible Study Conference held at Mt.&#13;
Hermon, Massachusetts, July, 1896. The foreign representatives of this band: Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Fred Trimble, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Carson, Estie Boddy, Ida Lewis,&#13;
Jennie Bridenbaugh, in China; C. F. Hartzell, in South America; C. Taylor, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. C. Taylor, in Korea.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Personnel of the "M" CLub&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs-Football, Baseball.&#13;
Paul Eiffert-Football, Baseball, Basketball.&#13;
Ben Holbert, J r.-F ootball, Baseball, Basketball, Track.&#13;
Leslie H. Kingsbury- Track.&#13;
Herman Koch-Football.&#13;
John D. Kolp-Football.&#13;
Allan C. Lemon-Track.&#13;
Herman H. Lueder-Track.&#13;
William A McCurdy-F ootball, Baseball.&#13;
Guy D. McKinney- Football.&#13;
Vincent E. Montgomery-Football, Basketball, Track.&#13;
Will H. Payne-Football.&#13;
George W . Prichard-Baseball.&#13;
The "M" Club is an honory organization.&#13;
&#13;
It is composed of those who have been&#13;
&#13;
found worthy to represent the school in intercollegiate athletics on the gridiron, the&#13;
diamond, the track or the basketball floor.&#13;
&#13;
The Club has for its purpose the promotion&#13;
&#13;
of clean athletics in Morningside College and works and boosts to that end.&#13;
we honor those who have honored their Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
Robert R. Vernon-Football, Track.&#13;
Paul C. Weatherby-Football.&#13;
&#13;
D. Lawrence Wickens-Football, Track.&#13;
&#13;
Thus do&#13;
J. Henry Winterringer- Football.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
REV.&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN M cCAY, '05&#13;
&#13;
P resident Alumni Association&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgome ry&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
A. McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
P. John son&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
G. Merten&#13;
&#13;
The Alumni&#13;
&#13;
Prof. C. A. Marsh&#13;
&#13;
M en of outstanding and commanding worth have builded Northwest Iowa.&#13;
of the leaders among these jointly sought the best means of self interpretation.&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta&#13;
&#13;
Some&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
composit result of their dedication to this supreme purpose is Morningside College.&#13;
Widely separated territorially and earnestly pursuing each his chosen vocation, the&#13;
&#13;
This organization is a purely honorary affair and is the first Fraternity at Morningside College. Only those who have represented Morningside in the past in oratory or&#13;
debate and Professor Marsh, the head of the D epartment of Public Speaking, are members; and only those who in the future represent the college in either of these departments&#13;
are eligible to membership.&#13;
&#13;
men constituting the Board of Trustees were each great enough to lend his whole self to&#13;
the laying of the founda tions of a real College.&#13;
&#13;
Just what this has cost in time, in&#13;
&#13;
money, in brain, in sweat, in consecrated devotion, in life, no pen can record.&#13;
Having thus been furnis hed the environment for the best self-development, and being&#13;
&#13;
The local chapter is a member of a national organization that has just been organized in many of the leading colleges of the west. Morningside and Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
are the only chapters in the state. The fraternity has for its name the initial letters of&#13;
the Greek phrase signifying: "The Art of Persuasion, Beautiful and Just." The&#13;
purpose is to promote greater interest in intercollegiate oratory, debate and public&#13;
speaking.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-four&#13;
&#13;
freely given opportunity to fashion the thinking, mold the purposes and d irect the motives&#13;
of a choice body of students, educators of the first rank have ever made this Faculty&#13;
While persistently sought for some of the most enticing, most desirable, most coveted&#13;
positions within the gift of the educational world, the leaders are yet with us.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
Among the more thoughtful of those seeking a higher education many finally&#13;
chose Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
The ideal :&#13;
&#13;
"The fitting of the individual to use to the full his&#13;
&#13;
powers" has been the magnet drawing here the choicest product of the homes, the&#13;
schools, the churches of our splendid territory.&#13;
&#13;
Because of Morningside' s ability to&#13;
&#13;
touch immediately the fountain of the individual's worth, wherever you find a person&#13;
who has ever been a student here there you find a life-lover of the Institution.&#13;
This Morningside spirit has given her most enviable standing, and bequeathed to&#13;
her graduates unusual equipment for life's work.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside is not only a miracle in&#13;
&#13;
the accumulation of her property and endowment, but also a miracle in the percentage of&#13;
her graduates who are filling responsible and prominent positions.&#13;
The Alumni thank God for their Alma Mater.&#13;
faced and overcame financial deficits.&#13;
&#13;
She kept faith with us.&#13;
&#13;
She&#13;
&#13;
She did not ask that we assume life-long, never-&#13;
&#13;
to-be-overcome educational deficits.&#13;
As for the returns upon your investment, Lovers of Morningside College, ask Montana, Kentucky, Connecticut, Florida, Colorado, Mississippi, Utah and Indiana in each&#13;
of which commonwealths one of our number labors.&#13;
and Washington where our number is paired.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Wisconsin, Maine, Maryland&#13;
&#13;
Ask New Yark, Missouri, Minnesota&#13;
&#13;
and Washington, D. C., where our number 1s in trios.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Alabama, California and&#13;
&#13;
Massachusetts where we are double paired.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Michigan, Kansas and North Dakota&#13;
&#13;
where we are double paired and a half.&#13;
&#13;
Ask Oregon where we are double double&#13;
&#13;
paired.&#13;
thirteen.&#13;
&#13;
Idaho where we are eleven strong.&#13;
South Dakota of her sixteen.&#13;
&#13;
forty-eight.&#13;
&#13;
Illinois of her twelve.&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska of her&#13;
&#13;
And dear old Iowa of her one hundred and&#13;
&#13;
Then drop in on India, Hawaii and South America and ask each of her&#13;
&#13;
one; Korea of her th_&#13;
ree; Canada of her four, and China of her twelve.&#13;
The Alumni, three hundred five strong, present their greetings to the Class of 1914.&#13;
June 7, 1900, was our Association's natal day.&#13;
by holding open house to you.&#13;
&#13;
June 17, 1914, we shall be honored&#13;
&#13;
All Hail!&#13;
THE PRESIDENT.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-six&#13;
&#13;
MR. McCARTHY&#13;
9 -Tuesday. The lucky star hung over the Morningside boys in&#13;
the Kansas City Meet. My observations were interrupted&#13;
by a kimona and nightshirt parade.&#13;
11-Thursday.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors stole Seniors' regalia.&#13;
&#13;
Seniors saw stars.&#13;
&#13;
12-F riday. Saw little Florence Montgomery and her satellite&#13;
under the stairs talking today. Constellations granted Morningside Academy a victory in debate over Yankton.&#13;
13-Saturday.&#13;
night.&#13;
&#13;
Saw Vince Montgomery showing falling stars to-&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR HAYNES&#13;
16-Tuesday. The cost of living is surely growing higha. Last&#13;
night Jory paid $5 for a fancy box containing a few dainty&#13;
mossels. In Morningside one could hardly say this was due&#13;
to unequal distribution of wealth.&#13;
18- Thursday. All of the Junias woa peculia felt hats this moning. A simple idear. Freshmen try to copy Junias in the&#13;
aftanoon.&#13;
19- F riday. Tonight I saw Mr. Bass and Mr. Knouse and Miss&#13;
Whittemore and Miss Shriner going out for a picnic. I feah&#13;
these young people ah often guilty of the evil of congestion&#13;
in small districts.&#13;
HARRY EWING-"Tubby"-"Hippo."&#13;
22- Monday. Coyotes trim us in baseball. They'll have to "cut&#13;
that out." Irma and I went to Ionian Public last night.&#13;
24-W ednesday.&#13;
&#13;
Canned a few cranberries this afternoon for Irma.&#13;
&#13;
26-F riday. Had some disturbances in my classes this morning.&#13;
Morningside won from Nebraska Wesleyan in debate.&#13;
27-Saturday. I ate 22 pancakes for breakfast this morning.&#13;
says I am getting fat. Freshmen win home meet.&#13;
&#13;
Irma&#13;
&#13;
MRS. IRMA EWING&#13;
29-Monday. The Main Hall burned last night. We saved nearly all the books. Harry helped quite a little.&#13;
30-Tuesday. No school today. Big mass meeting this morning.&#13;
True Morningside still lives .&#13;
&#13;
One hundred ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
MRS. IRMA EWING-Continued.&#13;
Classes were held in the church, conservatory&#13;
and chemistry building. Freshmen beat S. C. H. S. without Harry.&#13;
3-F riday. Seniors appear in caps and gowns. Harry's boys&#13;
beat Central yesterday 22-0 and Parsons today 11-3. Won&#13;
from Cedar Falls in debate.&#13;
&#13;
1-Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
BILL BASS&#13;
6-Monday. Senior reception at Craig's. Vince stars in Brookings Meet.&#13;
8-Wednesday. Jean went to the Pieria-Ionian picnic yesterday.&#13;
We beat old Vermillion today. Some mill.&#13;
9-Thursday. Students dug up $5,050 cold cash for new gym.&#13;
Jean and I and the rest of Morningside take a car ride.&#13;
ANDY LARSON&#13;
13-Monday. I saw Lucille Metcalf driving a new Winton Six.&#13;
1 7-F riday. The boys place second in the state meet.&#13;
18-Saturday. Busy day today. Hank and Bill came in early&#13;
this morning to buy eats for a picnic. They chaperoned a&#13;
bunch of girls out on the banks of the Mizz.&#13;
"DAD" EVANS&#13;
20-Monday. When I first got up this morning I saw the Zets and&#13;
Othos trooping off to the south ravine for their annual&#13;
breakfast. The Aesthesians and Adelphians also had a&#13;
picnic.&#13;
21-Tuesday. Printed programs for Ivy F ullbrook' s graduating&#13;
recital. Mrs. Kanthlener entertains German majors.&#13;
22-Saturday. Heard some boys dragging heavy ice cream freezer&#13;
past the store this evening. If they only knew how fat ice&#13;
cream makes one they would never have molested the Athenaeum eats.&#13;
BARNEY&#13;
27-Monday. Juniors and Seniors depart for their annual. picnic.&#13;
30-Thursday. Horace class had party at Renaissance yesterday,&#13;
but neglected to pay their bill or return the packer. Kingsbury came home singing "My wife's gone to Talbot's Farm."&#13;
Zets must be off on annual picnic.&#13;
31-F riday. Hicks Hackett came running in late this evening for&#13;
some blister remedy. He claimed to be champion rower on&#13;
Philo picnic.&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
Students and Friends&#13;
PATRONIZE THESE FIRMS.&#13;
&#13;
of Morningside ·&#13;
&#13;
THEY ARE MORNI NGSIDE BOOSTERS&#13;
&#13;
AND MADE THE PUBLICATIO N OF THIS BOOK POSSIBLE.&#13;
BARNEY-Continued.&#13;
&#13;
1-Saturday. Hear that Lemon was elected track captain for next&#13;
year and Florence Montgomery president of the girls' student body. If they do justice to their jobs they'll have to&#13;
cut out some of their fussing.&#13;
BILL BASS&#13;
4 -Tuesday. Jean went to the Pi picnic yesterday and the Ionian&#13;
picnic today. Haven't seen her since Sunday.&#13;
5-Wednesday. Exams begin today. It's a lucky thing I'm a&#13;
student and don't have to take any.&#13;
8- Saturday. Jean graduated in Expression tonight.&#13;
T omorrow' s Baccalaureate, will have to initiate my cap and gown.&#13;
Curses!&#13;
&#13;
I 0-Monday. Inauguration of President Craig ; Conservatory graduation; recital by Miss&#13;
&#13;
Plume;&#13;
&#13;
Morse entertains music&#13;
&#13;
graduates.&#13;
11 - T uesday. Academy graduation; trustee meeting; Alumni banquet; class play; college rally-three Bishops speak.&#13;
12-Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
College graduation; reunion of societies.&#13;
&#13;
hundr ed&#13;
&#13;
Abel-Pederson-Van Riper Co.&#13;
American Savings Bank.&#13;
Anthony's Trunk Factory.&#13;
Authier's Style Shop.&#13;
Will H. Beck Co.&#13;
August Bloom, Tailor.&#13;
Blue Valley Creamery Co.&#13;
Bureau of Engraving.&#13;
Clement &amp; Co.&#13;
Coomer &amp; Small.&#13;
Ray H. Darling.&#13;
Davidson Bros. Co.&#13;
Davie &amp; Patton.&#13;
M. K. Eliason.&#13;
E. &amp; W. Clothing House.&#13;
L. G . Everist.&#13;
Ferguson &amp; Abel Land Co.&#13;
Genelli Studio.&#13;
S. Green, Tailor.&#13;
H. E. Haakinson Coal Co.&#13;
H . &amp; H . Shoe Co.&#13;
Hanford Produce Co.&#13;
Oscar J. Hoberg.&#13;
Houston Pen Co.&#13;
Iowa State Savings Bank.&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson.&#13;
A. R. Johnson Bakery.&#13;
A. P. Larson.&#13;
Laurel Music House.&#13;
J. G . Legler Transfer Co.&#13;
The Martin Hotel.&#13;
T. S. Martin Co.&#13;
Monarch Printing C o.&#13;
&#13;
Moore Clothing Co.&#13;
Morningside Bank.&#13;
Morningside Barber Shop.&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy.&#13;
Morningside Printing Co.&#13;
Morningside Real Estate Co.&#13;
Morningside Tailor Shop.&#13;
National Bank of Commerce.&#13;
Nolen Laundry Co.&#13;
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance&#13;
Company.&#13;
Olympia Candy Kitchen.&#13;
The Orcutt Company.&#13;
Orr &amp; Graves Co.&#13;
Palmer &amp; Co.&#13;
Park Place Theatre.&#13;
Park Restaurant.&#13;
Pelletier Company.&#13;
Pete's Candy Palace.&#13;
Phillip's Sporting Goods.&#13;
Piper &amp; Larson.&#13;
J. C. Rennison Co.&#13;
Security National Bank.&#13;
Sioux City Optical Co.&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards.&#13;
The Stanley Co.&#13;
Wm. T ackaberry Co.&#13;
Todd-Becker Co.&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank.&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
Youngberg Studio.&#13;
Zimmerman Bros.&#13;
&#13;
T w o hundred&#13;
&#13;
one&#13;
&#13;
VERY "Co-Ed" Desires&#13;
to be Well Dressed&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
why&#13;
&#13;
That'sT'S&#13;
we extend this special invitation to&#13;
them to v1s1t out store where we always have a&#13;
complete and extensive display of the very latest dictates&#13;
of fashion, no matter what the time of year or season.&#13;
&#13;
W e make it our special effort to offer things which appeal to the tastes of the young&#13;
women.&#13;
&#13;
This is true in every department of our store, and we therefore appreciate it&#13;
&#13;
when the "co-eds" come to us for things which a re correct in fem inine wearing apparel.&#13;
&#13;
Our showing of Hats, Dresses,&#13;
Coats, Suits and Shoes is more&#13;
complete now than ever before.&#13;
&#13;
Whether it's to be a tramp through&#13;
the woods or a dance, we are ready to&#13;
supply the correct costume and the style&#13;
will be the latest and the quality the&#13;
best obtainable.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wo&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred three&#13;
&#13;
IF&#13;
&#13;
• • • •&#13;
You Want Anything in the Line of&#13;
&#13;
MR. McDowELL&#13;
&#13;
Text Books&#13;
&#13;
10-Tuesday. Registration of students began today.&#13;
new college building will soon be finished.&#13;
&#13;
School Supplies&#13;
&#13;
I hope the&#13;
&#13;
11-Wednesday. More registration, and more mud on the steps.&#13;
The boys began footba ll practice today.&#13;
13-Friday. Dr. Craig addressed the students this morning on the&#13;
subject of "Behavior." A word to the wise is sufficient but&#13;
to these Morningside students?&#13;
&#13;
Stationery&#13;
&#13;
14-Saturday. I saw some of the less studious boys wearing coats&#13;
made from horse blankets . They call them Mackinaws.&#13;
&#13;
Pennants&#13;
&#13;
"Fizz" HORNNEY&#13;
&#13;
College Pins, Belts, Fobs, Etc.&#13;
Kodak Supplies&#13;
Film Developing&#13;
Etc. Etc. Etc.&#13;
&#13;
16-Monday.&#13;
doing.&#13;
&#13;
Ben Holbert blows in, now there'll be something&#13;
&#13;
17-Tuesday. Hoorah for Woodrow He&#13;
gave us a speech this&#13;
morning. P rexy rode in the police wagon. Class scrapwhat next?&#13;
18-Wednesday-Collegian Reporter appeared this morning. By&#13;
thunder, but it takes time to fold papers, here's where I cast&#13;
my eyes for a congenial assistant.&#13;
&#13;
19-Thursday. Bill and Jean, Big and Ruth, Si and Sara, Barks&#13;
and Hazel, King and Florence attend the fa ir this afternoon&#13;
and had a whale of a time- and Emma at Coe-Curses!&#13;
23-Monday. The girls received little slips today which make them&#13;
some wrathy.&#13;
25-Wednesday. President Craig talked to the girls-told them&#13;
to make it easy for the young men to leave early in the&#13;
evening. Gee! I'm out of it this year. Glee Club organizes.&#13;
&#13;
See "DAD" at&#13;
&#13;
THE MORNINGSIDE PRINTING CO.&#13;
Auto Phone 6211&#13;
&#13;
North of Conservatory Building&#13;
&#13;
26-Thursday. Philo Stag at the Jackson. Afterwards called up&#13;
for not having chaperons. Dean Chandler and Professor&#13;
Van Horne were guests.&#13;
28- Saturday. Maroons beat up Cherokee. Y. M. C. A. stag.&#13;
Rieke's have annual house party at Kingsley, Cliff and I&#13;
carried grips and grips. I feel grippy.&#13;
30-Monday. Othos hold their stag at Bill Wedgwood's.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred four&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
five&#13;
&#13;
Where Youth and&#13;
Beauty Meet&#13;
ON THE CAMPUS-IN THE CLASS ROOM-UP THE STREETDOWN THE STREET-ALL ABOUT THE TOWN-NOTICE THE&#13;
CLASSY APPEARANCE OF THE CLOTHES FROM THE&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W. Clothing House&#13;
If this store doem't mean anything particular to you it is because you have not given&#13;
us an opportunity of proving the value of our services to you. To most young men and&#13;
any number of older men it is a popular shopping place; one of the most attractive stations&#13;
en route to perfect dress. It is the trysting place of style and quality, of individuality and&#13;
value, of tone and timeliness-of youth and beauty.&#13;
It is here that you will find clothes which embody the best style ideas of London,&#13;
New York and Chicago, skilfully adapted and finely developed. It is here you'll find&#13;
dependable quality walking hand in hand with the most highly perfected degree of selling&#13;
service.&#13;
We welcome you-try us.&#13;
&#13;
N. T. HANSON, Manager&#13;
Two hundred seve n&#13;
&#13;
HANFORD'S&#13;
ICE CREAM&#13;
THE CREAM of QUALITY&#13;
"Fizz" HoRNNEY-Continued.&#13;
1-Tuesday. Pinchot spoke today. Y. W. C. A tea for Miss&#13;
Morris.&#13;
2-Wednesday. McCurdy rides in singing "I've been working&#13;
on the railroad."&#13;
4- F riday. Hank and Turk skip football practice to attend races.&#13;
5-Saturday. Maroons put it over Yankton 16-0, without Hank&#13;
and Turk. Saw the Zets on their Tally-Ho party having&#13;
a whale of a time.&#13;
SAMUEL WESLEY D EAKIN&#13;
8-Tuesday. I have taken up my abode in Morningside.&#13;
I 0 -Thursday. Bought a chapel seat this morning.&#13;
I 1-Friday. Students elected Wilson president today.&#13;
12-Saturday. Saw my first football game. I didn't understand&#13;
it but they say we beat Buena Vista remarkably.&#13;
14-Monday. Juniors and Seniors had parties tonight. Saw Laura&#13;
Belt, the apple of my eye, going to Pieria .luncheon at the&#13;
West.&#13;
16- Wednesday. Walter Held came up to the drug store tonight&#13;
with a green necktie. He said he had an engagement.&#13;
MR. MACMURRAY.&#13;
21-Monday. The lonians and Pi' s had a husking bee here tonight. Blind Boone gave a recital at the church.&#13;
&#13;
Appreciation of the Unequalled High&#13;
Quality of Hanford's Ice Cream is&#13;
evidenced by it's Achievement of&#13;
Permanent Success and Popularity&#13;
Made in a Modern Sanitary Plant by&#13;
&#13;
The Hanford Produce Co.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3 70 7&#13;
&#13;
S. GREEN&#13;
&#13;
25- F riday. The students played hookey this morning after chapel&#13;
and walked to the monument.&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' and Gents'&#13;
&#13;
26- Saturday. We won from Creighton 26-7.&#13;
atrocious 'jollification.&#13;
&#13;
TAILORING&#13;
&#13;
The boys had an&#13;
&#13;
JOHN ENGLE&#13;
28- Monday. The Freshmen had a delightful picnic at the south&#13;
ra vme. Wesley Henderson, our devoted friend and classmate, was sadly injured in a street car accident.&#13;
29- Tuesday. Junior Annual Board had a party. Also Lola&#13;
Brownell entertained a few friends. We fear there were&#13;
some hen roosts robbed.&#13;
30-Wednesday.&#13;
a "Devil."&#13;
&#13;
I hear that Prof. Greynald called Frank Johnson&#13;
I hope and pray it is not true,&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
Suits of All Kinds Made to Order&#13;
Satisfaction Guaranteed&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
610 FIFTH STREET&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
nine&#13;
&#13;
Clements &amp; Co.&#13;
Who's&#13;
Who&#13;
&#13;
STAPLE AND FANCY&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
FRESH FRUITS&#13;
AND CONFECTIONS&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
Satisfaction&#13;
&#13;
Guaranteed.&#13;
&#13;
Students,&#13;
&#13;
It's&#13;
ELIASON&#13;
&#13;
let us furnish your picnic supplies.&#13;
&#13;
When it comes to Photography&#13;
&#13;
ST. AUBINS STATION&#13;
&#13;
4 14 Eleventh Street&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2 1 72&#13;
&#13;
THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL&#13;
LIFE INSURANCE CO.&#13;
OF MILWAUKEE, WIS.&#13;
WHAT IT DId IN IOWA IN 1912It wrote more insurance than any other company&#13;
It gained more insurance than any other company&#13;
WHAT IT HAS IN IOWAlt has in force a larger amount of insurance than any other company&#13;
It has $25,500,000 of its assets invested in the State of Iowa&#13;
&#13;
College Men Wanted for Agents&#13;
&#13;
H. E. ROSE, General District Agent.&#13;
&#13;
W. M. McKERCHER, General Agent&#13;
&#13;
Room 310-313 Davidson Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
T w o hundred&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR GREYNALD .&#13;
2-Saturday. Ah, Ames beat us 14-3. I hear ze Newland&#13;
girls are having a week end party at zeir home in Galva.&#13;
5-Tuesday. Saw Mees Ferguson talking to petite Lola Brownell&#13;
zis morning, perhaps she was telling her about ze faculty&#13;
party last night, perhaps not.&#13;
6-Wednesday. Ze big champion, Ben Holbert, goes wolf-hunting today.&#13;
7-Thursday. Johnson won in ze oratorical contest zis evening. I&#13;
will erase one of hees black marks.&#13;
9-Saturday. Professor Raymond lectured last night. Our football team beat ze college of Bellevue 33-0 today.&#13;
PROFESSOR HAYNES.&#13;
11-Monday. The campaign for Morningside money closed today&#13;
with $26,370. That sum should at least buy coal.&#13;
15-F riday. The Ge-man accident insurance system ·has been thooughly discussed these last three evenings. It has been&#13;
found to be altogether inadvisable, as a matter of fact, to&#13;
accept such a plan in the U. S. of Americer.&#13;
REV. MITCHELL.&#13;
19-Tuesday. The Sophomores had a party last night.&#13;
Dr.&#13;
Haynes was elected president of the Iowa State Charities&#13;
today. He is a worthy gentleman.&#13;
20-Wednesday. We announced the organization of our new&#13;
society, the Phoenix, this morning.&#13;
23-Saturday. The Adelphians defeated the Hawkeyes in debate&#13;
last night. Mcrningside tied Nebraska Wesleyan today.&#13;
MR. SKYGACK from Mars.&#13;
2 7-Wednesday. Descended to earth today in time to see Morningside preparing for war with Mitchell. Some yelling.&#13;
28-Thursday. Thanksgiving Day. Saw a big pow wow on&#13;
Mizzou Field and heard something about "There ain't no&#13;
Mitchell" and "57-7." I declined an invitation to faculty&#13;
reception.&#13;
29-Friday. Saw a happy crowd spinning out southeast tonight in&#13;
puffing machines. I heard it was the Zets entertaining the&#13;
Othos at Barlow Hall.&#13;
30-Saturday. Saw many earth beings parading over the city.&#13;
Never such confusion in Mars.&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
eleven&#13;
&#13;
SOME&#13;
&#13;
REASONS&#13;
&#13;
WHY&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE YOUR BANKING&#13;
Courteous and satisfactory treatment.&#13;
The business is directed by a local board of business men.&#13;
Incorporated under the State Banking Laws and complying with examination and&#13;
publications of statements.&#13;
We pay 4 per cent Compound Interest.&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK&#13;
W . S . SNYDER .&#13;
&#13;
P RESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
L. O'HARROW . VICE-PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
C .&#13;
&#13;
A . NORRBOM.&#13;
&#13;
Ross M. COOMER, Assoc. M. Am. Soc. C. E.&#13;
&#13;
CASHIER&#13;
&#13;
CHAS I. SMALL&#13;
&#13;
COOMER &amp; SMALL&#13;
Engineers and Contractors&#13;
212 United Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Ask Our Clients About Us-&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3 719&#13;
&#13;
W e R ebuilt Main Hall, M orningside College&#13;
&#13;
The Stanley Company&#13;
WOMEN'S, MISSES'&#13;
AND CHILDREN'S&#13;
OUTFIT'TERS&#13;
504 Fourth Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S MOST BEAUTIFUL AND FASH ~&#13;
IONABLE SHOP FOR WOMEN&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
twelve&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirteen&#13;
&#13;
How Often Have&#13;
You Heard it said--&#13;
&#13;
DEC.&#13;
FLETCHER POLLOCK.&#13;
&#13;
3 -Tuesday. Big Ben was chosen captain of the football team&#13;
for 1913. I saw Joe Edge with a cigar in his pocket today.&#13;
I wonder if they make him as sick as they do me.&#13;
&#13;
"When I Want Anything Good,&#13;
I go to&#13;
&#13;
5- Thursday. The Reporters came out in red ink yesterday, don't&#13;
we see enough of that without having the paper printed in&#13;
it? The Pieria banquet comes off tonight, I just finished&#13;
Miss Ferguson's gown this afternoon.&#13;
6-F riday. The Athenaeum banquet is held tonight and the&#13;
Aletheia' s tomorrow night. I wish I really was a girl so I&#13;
could go to these banquets and get pointers on styles.&#13;
9-Monday. The Zet banquet, the fourth and last, came off tonight. The lonians had a stag, too.&#13;
&#13;
MARTIN'S"&#13;
&#13;
10-Tuesday. The girls of the school were acquainted with Robert's Rules of Order. The Seniors in Expression gave a&#13;
recital this afternoon. We boys enjoyed it immensely from&#13;
the gallery. Special meetings begin tomorrow evening.&#13;
12- Thursday. Bunny Haynes was looking awful happy this&#13;
morning, wasn't sneezing or shivering at all. I found heat&#13;
had been turned into the Conservatory. A bunch of the&#13;
kids went skating this evening.&#13;
13-Friday.&#13;
&#13;
'Twas the night before elections.&#13;
&#13;
WE PAY TRANSPORTATION CHARGES&#13;
On all out-of-town purchases, no matter how large or small the&#13;
order may be, with the exception of goods sent on approval, when&#13;
&#13;
14-Saturday. Girls' rushing has ceased, everybody is happy.&#13;
Three niggers visited the different parties.&#13;
&#13;
we pay return express charges if any selections have been made.&#13;
Every order entrusted to our care will receive the careful attention&#13;
&#13;
MR. MACMURRAY.&#13;
&#13;
of persons trained in Mail Order Work.&#13;
&#13;
17-Tuesday. First day in the new building. It makes me grieved&#13;
to see Miss Sanborn work so hard in the library. The Zetalethean girls all wore white today. Arthur Lindsey told me&#13;
that Caroline Eads wore mistletoe this morning but for some&#13;
reason took it off this afternoon.&#13;
18- Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
The Same Day Mail Order House&#13;
&#13;
Bernice just called up for Howard.&#13;
&#13;
19-Thursday. 11 :45 P. M. Joe Edge isn't in yet.&#13;
speak to Mrs. Empey about this.&#13;
&#13;
I'll have to&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN CO.&#13;
&#13;
THE RELIABLE DRY GOODS HOUSE&#13;
20-Will be home in a few hours .&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred fourteen&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifteen&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
Everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles,&#13;
Rubber Goods, Trusses, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
Florists&#13;
&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
Cut Flowers&#13;
&#13;
Supplies and Finishing&#13;
High Grade Candies-All Popular&#13;
Brands&#13;
&#13;
]ANITOR OF THE COLLEGE.&#13;
&#13;
7-T uesday. School began today. These students make more&#13;
tracks and larger ones than any class of people I know.&#13;
9-Thursday. Vince Montgomery, Bill Wedgwood, et al., give&#13;
several people a good wetting this morning. Oh, I'd like to&#13;
tan their bloody hides!&#13;
10-Friday. Glee Club boys return from trip. Mr. Logan whispered that some of them were going to the bad.&#13;
11-Saturday. Heard Weatherby was elected president M Club.&#13;
&#13;
Visit Our&#13;
&#13;
TEA ROOM&#13;
The Most Popular Refreshment&#13;
Place in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Palms and Plants· for D ecorations.&#13;
Special attention to funeral orders.&#13;
Emblems made on short notice.&#13;
&#13;
TODD-BECKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR MARSH.&#13;
&#13;
You are invited to visit our store&#13;
&#13;
Two Stores&#13;
Pierce and Fourth Street&#13;
Nebraska and Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
13-Monday. I behold the stork circling over my chimney.&#13;
15 -Wednesday. Seniors wear caps and gowns. They looked fine.&#13;
Exams were posted today. Students look worried.&#13;
16-Thursday. New girls' club named "Agora."&#13;
1 7-Friday. D ean Burney and Dr. Thomson spoke in Chapel.&#13;
18-Saturday. Big chapel service this morning. The Glee Club&#13;
sang and sweaters were awarded to the athletes. Big Ben&#13;
Holbert got four. The Seniors had a big party at Whittemore' s in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
SIXTH AND PIERCE STREET&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3730&#13;
&#13;
606 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST BLOOM&#13;
&#13;
OLAF W1LLBURG-"Ole."&#13;
&#13;
TAILOR&#13;
&#13;
21-Tuesday. H eard a little disturbance on the avenue this evening and found Kuhns and Himebauch doing a heathenish&#13;
dance. They told me Professor Campbell had told them to&#13;
dance when they felt blue.&#13;
25-Saturday. Saw a crowd of tough looking individuals taking&#13;
the car tonight. They said they were going to a Freshman&#13;
party at Ruth Bailey's.&#13;
&#13;
ALSO CLEANING, PRESSING AND REPAIRING&#13;
Between Jackson and Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Miss SANBORN.&#13;
&#13;
THE LAUREL MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
&#13;
28-Tuesday. The Glee Club gave a very interesting program last&#13;
night. I heard that Shoemaker had left school to teach in&#13;
Merrill. He was such a troublesome boy.&#13;
29- W ednesday. The local chapter of Pi Kappa Delta was organized today. Saw a number of students enter the librarv&#13;
with tennis rackets, tennis season must have begun.&#13;
30-Thursday. Nobody but Dr. Haynes observed today as the&#13;
D ay of P rayer. He had not been informed of the changed&#13;
date.&#13;
&#13;
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF ALL KINDS&#13;
SHEET MUSIC AND MUSIC SUPPLIES&#13;
FREDERICK E. HESS, Prop.&#13;
508 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
six teen&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
Compare the HOUSTON PEN with&#13;
all others.&#13;
&#13;
MISS SANBORN-Continued,&#13;
3-F riday. Ludwig Becker recital tonight. I had to reprimand&#13;
Earl Hiett this morning for talking too loudly to Lola&#13;
Brownell.&#13;
Miss FERGUSON.&#13;
4 -Tuesday. I wonder why the girls don't hand in their little&#13;
slips. I'm really disappointed in Lottie Sanders and a few&#13;
others. The basketball girls are having their pictures taken&#13;
tonight.&#13;
5-Wednesday. I saw Earl F ullbrook eating a whole pumpkin&#13;
pie. This betting must be stopped.&#13;
7-Friday. Johnson won divisional contest at Toledo tonight and&#13;
Ralston won the D ewey Prize contest here. I called Sarah&#13;
Bleakley on the carpet for keeping her company out too&#13;
late last evening.&#13;
&#13;
Compare the quality and size of the&#13;
gold point.&#13;
Compare workmanship and quality&#13;
of rubber parts.&#13;
Compare the feed---which is really&#13;
the heart of a fountain pen.&#13;
&#13;
ANDY LARSON.&#13;
Saw by the paper there was a socialist club organized at the college. I wonder if they'll blow up my store&#13;
with bombs. Mr. and Mrs. Van Horne stopped in on their&#13;
way to the Junior party.&#13;
&#13;
Compare the chain, with a clip, for&#13;
which we make no charge.&#13;
&#13;
10-Monday.&#13;
&#13;
I I - Tuesday.&#13;
&#13;
2 I -Chapel seats were assigned today. I tried out for the monument run today. The boys said I had good form but my&#13;
legs weren't long enough.&#13;
PROFESSOR CAMPBELL.&#13;
25- T uesday. I have decided to work upon Frank Johnson by suggestion and instill in him the idea of selling tickets for Mrs.&#13;
McCoy's recital. Then other students will fo ll ow his example by imitation. Perhaps as an inducement I might excuse&#13;
them from Psych if they sell enough tickets.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
Compare shape and balance.&#13;
&#13;
Senior girls won basketball championship tonight.&#13;
&#13;
15-Saturday. Saw a bunch of Othos with their girls waiting for a&#13;
car. I suppose they're going to their banquet at the Martin&#13;
tonight.&#13;
GEORGE PRATT.&#13;
I 8 -Tuesday. My mamma sent me over to Larson's for some garbage for the chickens and when I went by the conservatory&#13;
I saw a light. I ambled up the steps to sec w ho was there&#13;
and fo und Kingsbury and his brother M ontgomery smoking.&#13;
They looked pale though and I think the wrath of the gods&#13;
was beginning to descend upon them.&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wenty&#13;
&#13;
RESUL T--NO Comparison--lt stands&#13;
alone.&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Not&#13;
&#13;
HOUSTON&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Pen&#13;
&#13;
HOUSTON&#13;
&#13;
MADE IN SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
HOUSTON PEN CO.&#13;
&#13;
BLUE&#13;
VALLEY&#13;
BUTTER&#13;
BUTTER WITH NATIONAL REPUTATION&#13;
USED IN NEARLY EVERY HOME&#13;
CHURNED FRESH EVERY DAY&#13;
&#13;
From Pure Pasteurized Cream shipped direct from the farm.&#13;
quality and flavor-Ask&#13;
&#13;
Talking&#13;
Pictures&#13;
Every photograph which we make 1s&#13;
a speaking likeness.&#13;
&#13;
Butter of the highest&#13;
&#13;
Your Grocer For It.&#13;
&#13;
Knowledge and&#13;
Industry Are&#13;
Good&#13;
But THRIFT is the balance wheel that&#13;
makes them WIN. A Bank Account&#13;
you must have.&#13;
We invite you to start with us.&#13;
&#13;
National Bank of&#13;
Commerce&#13;
ABOVE AUTHIER'S&#13;
&#13;
Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR CAMPBELL-Continued.&#13;
I-Saturday. Well, Mrs. Campbell is going to the Faculty&#13;
luncheon today. I wish she'd sew the&#13;
button on my&#13;
coat so I could go for a handout.&#13;
FARMER&#13;
CORN&#13;
TASSEL.&#13;
3- Monday. Willie said in his letter today as how the 1915&#13;
Annual Board was to be elected tonight.&#13;
7-Friday. Will came down with the Glee Club tonight. He&#13;
phoned out to say he'd stay at town till he heard how Johnson came out in the contest. He told us that the State Federation of Philos was organized.&#13;
8-Saturday. Willie had to hurry back for the Philo opening.&#13;
Miss FERGUSON.&#13;
10-Monday. Well, well, here it is 11 o'clock. I'm afraid I'll&#13;
not feel well tomorrow if I don't get to sleep soon, but that&#13;
girls' banquet was surely a success.&#13;
12-Wednesday. Miss Moxcey led another good meeting today.&#13;
Tonight my niece and I went to hear Schumann Heink. I&#13;
noticed that several students attended her concert. I'm&#13;
glad they have such elevated tastes.&#13;
13- Thursday. Surely this Day of Prayer was observed in a new&#13;
and original way. I saw Deakin, Mitchell, Logan and&#13;
Himebauch going to the Orpheum. I just wonder if they&#13;
hadn't better stayed home and played som'r'set.&#13;
Miss SANBORN.&#13;
17- Monday. St. Patrick's Day. The Freshmen looked greener&#13;
than ever today. I was shocked at the way Joey Carter and&#13;
Herbert French carried on this afternoon. They seemed to&#13;
be enjoying each other's company so much though that I&#13;
didn't disturb them.&#13;
18-Tuesday. The library closed at noon today and we girls&#13;
worked dreadfully hard to get it cleaned up for the opening&#13;
tonight.&#13;
20-Thursday. I noticed that Vince Montgomery brought Blanche&#13;
Thompson to the Chapin recital this evening. He is a fickle&#13;
youth, so unlike his sister.&#13;
21-Friday. Heard Joe Edge telling Edna today that he thought&#13;
he'd stay over vacation to see Maude Adams this week. That&#13;
boy has certainly changed this year.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred t wenty-three&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
A High Class Studio&#13;
producing the highest&#13;
standard in photography&#13;
at all times&#13;
&#13;
GEN ELLI&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
711 Pierce St.&#13;
&#13;
BOOK. VI&#13;
Pow Wows&#13;
-SIOUX&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
r•IF_.r&#13;
&#13;
14-&#13;
&#13;
Jolly Jokes Jerked by Joking Juniors&#13;
The world is old, yet likes to laugh.&#13;
New jokes are hard to find.&#13;
A whole new editorial staff&#13;
Can't tickle every mind.&#13;
So if you meet some ancient joke,&#13;
Decked out in modern guise,&#13;
Don't frown and call the thing a fake,&#13;
Just laugh-don't be too wise.-Ex.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
He&#13;
He&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
NowHe's got a grudge at Mr. Coss,&#13;
He's got a grudge at Campbell,&#13;
He's got a grudge at Hel---en I&#13;
Can't make this rhyme with Campbell.&#13;
&#13;
Leslie Kingsbury was detected riding home on the Peters Park car line one night.&#13;
When asked for an explanation for riding so far out of his way he said: "Why don't&#13;
you know I am staying at Darling's now?" ( Leslie says that was sure some bonehead.)&#13;
Lory looking at announcement of Volunteer Band meeting-"! wonder if they need&#13;
a cornet player. I used to play the cornet."&#13;
One day William McCurdy had four examinations. He came to school singing,&#13;
"I Don't Know Where I'm Going But I'm On My Way"; at chapel he sang, "Out On&#13;
the Stormy Deep"; at noon, "I Am Slowly Drifting Down"; at 3 :20, "There's One&#13;
More River to Cross"; and at 5 : 10, "Asleep in the Deep."&#13;
&#13;
In Physics class the other day after a long drawn out , proof, Professor Stiles remarked: "And now we get X equals O." A sleepy voice from the back of the room:&#13;
"Gee, all that work for nothing."&#13;
Lovice: "Oh, say but I like Bob parties."&#13;
Guess she's been having her share of them by the looks of things.&#13;
Professor Campbell remarked in his Psych. class that he wished his teachers had&#13;
flunked him more when he was in school. A voice in the back of the room was heard,&#13;
"I wish so too." They say it was John Engle.&#13;
&#13;
got a flunk in Chemistry,&#13;
got a flunk in Psych,&#13;
got a flunk in English III,&#13;
cussed with all his might.&#13;
&#13;
McKinney and Costar&#13;
AT SUNSHINE INN.&#13;
Ethel Brown-"Jimmie, will you give us a lecture on the 'Call to Arms?'"&#13;
Jimmie Dolliver-'TII have to collect my material together first."&#13;
Miss Dolliver-"Will that be an illustrated lecture, James?"&#13;
&#13;
He says:&#13;
captivating."&#13;
&#13;
WHY SAMMY DEACON GOES BARE-HEADED.&#13;
"When he wears a hat he is h-attractive, and when he wears a cap he is&#13;
&#13;
SUNDAY NIGHT AT EMPEY'S.&#13;
ParlorJoe Carter and Herbert French.&#13;
Dining Room-Joe Edge and Ethel Brown.&#13;
Living Room-Joe, the electrician and Ruth Besore.&#13;
Monsieur Greynald, calling the roll: "I notice Mr. Braley's absence because I&#13;
have not been interrupted during the recitation."&#13;
Barks in English II: "May we have our short stories typewritten?&#13;
Miss Loveland, after much thought: "Yes, Mr. Barks, after recalling your handwriting, I deem it advisable that you have your story typewritten."&#13;
Dean Chandler in History I:&#13;
the French Revolution?"&#13;
&#13;
4--&#13;
&#13;
Sophs carry off freezer of water at Freshman party at Hazel Day's.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson:&#13;
&#13;
"Miss Johnson, how did they execute people during&#13;
&#13;
"They killed them, didn't they?"&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
Miss Gravelle correcting a pupil in the Grammar class:&#13;
be Will."&#13;
&#13;
twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
"No, in the future it will&#13;
&#13;
Authier Style Shop&#13;
CORRECT DRESS FOR WOMEN&#13;
ExcLUSIVE LADIES' Suits, CoATS, FuRs, WAISTS&#13;
Muslin UNDERWEAR, CoRSETS, AND MILLINERY&#13;
&#13;
Siou x C ity's M ost Appre ciate d S tore&#13;
509-11-13 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
"O would some pow'r the giftie gie us&#13;
To see oursels as others see us!"&#13;
AS WE THINK&#13;
&#13;
AS THEY THINK&#13;
Guy McKinney-A wit.&#13;
Ada Belew-A great German teacher.&#13;
Gen. Balcom-Leader of Militant suffragettes.&#13;
Bernice Bowman-Grand opera singer.&#13;
Helen Giehm-F amed authoress.&#13;
D oris Wood-To graduate from Morningside College.&#13;
Gussie Brunelle-Man of intellect.&#13;
H . J. Winterringer-Famous doctor.&#13;
Inez Whitney-A coach's wife.&#13;
George Prichard-Brilliant for one so&#13;
young.&#13;
Henderson-Wait till I get that money&#13;
from the street car company.&#13;
Bob Vernon-A second Daniel Webster.&#13;
Ruth Besore-An electrical engineer.&#13;
Frank Johnson-Apollo.&#13;
J ocy Carter-To speak French fluently.&#13;
Bonnie Robinson-The ideal American&#13;
girl.&#13;
&#13;
We would rather go to the Orpheum and&#13;
get it fresh.&#13;
A second Miss Ferguson.&#13;
Does she know what a suffragette is?&#13;
She rolls her eyes beautifully.&#13;
Writes for Collegian Reporter.&#13;
Should think she'd get tired of having her&#13;
picture with the Sophs.&#13;
Teacher's pet.&#13;
Heap big medicine man.&#13;
Wonder when it will happen.&#13;
Ought to be with his mamma.&#13;
Better stick to piano tuning.&#13;
Makes a fine inn-keeper.&#13;
Where does she buy her face powder?&#13;
The ladies of St. Thomas Guild thought&#13;
so too.&#13;
She will laugh about this next week.&#13;
MacMurray thinks so too.&#13;
&#13;
The Hotel Martin&#13;
Pride of Sioux City&#13;
Absolutely Fireproof&#13;
&#13;
SYLLOGISMS&#13;
M. P.-All churches which demand married preachers obtain them.&#13;
Crescent Park demanded a married preacher and Kuhns was appointed.&#13;
Kuhns is married.&#13;
M. P.-All Freshmen are green.&#13;
&#13;
Therefore,&#13;
&#13;
BANQUET and DINNER PARTIES a SPECIALTY&#13;
Gray is a Freshman.&#13;
&#13;
Therefore, Gray is green.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
T w o hundred t wenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
t we nt y-nin e&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S FOREMOST CLOTHES STORE&#13;
&#13;
A PSYCHOLOGY PSALM&#13;
Professor Campbell is my teacher, I shall not pass.&#13;
He maketh me to answer in deep embarrassment;&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH AND NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
He leadeth me into traps of mine own setting,&#13;
He calleth my bluff,.&#13;
He leadeth me into dusty paths among orchards of dates for mine own nourishment, yea, though I walk with James and Angel,&#13;
I cannot recite for they will not help me; their dignity and their laws they crush me.&#13;
He prepareth me for a plucking in the presence of my classmates;&#13;
He raineth on my head his questions.&#13;
He showeth me up.&#13;
Verily, Psychology does haunt me every hour of my life, until I shall dwell in&#13;
the college no more forever.&#13;
FAVO RITE SONGS OF THE FACULTY&#13;
Miss Sanborn-"Put your foot on the soft, soft pedal-Sh! Don't talk so loud. "&#13;
Miss Ferguson- "Who were you with tonight?"&#13;
Miss Hadley-"Ach Du Liber, Augustine."&#13;
Miss Pearl Woodford-"Y ou keep your eyes on me, dear, I'll keep my eyes on you."&#13;
Professor Brown-"School Days."&#13;
Professor Stephens-"Each fish and worm, begins to twist and squirm. "&#13;
Professor Campbell- "Forgotten."&#13;
Miss Dimmitt- "Just a wearying for you."&#13;
&#13;
THE STORE OF&#13;
SATISFACTION&#13;
Men call this "The&#13;
Live Store"--that's&#13;
what they get here&#13;
and nothing less;&#13;
it is the business&#13;
policy of this store&#13;
to see that you get&#13;
it when you come&#13;
here to buy. The&#13;
newest goods,&#13;
better values, and&#13;
efficient service&#13;
are assured, backed by our famous&#13;
guarantee&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dolliver-"I love you truly."&#13;
Miss Roberts-"Whose little girlie are you?"&#13;
Professor Greynald-"T ake back your gold for gold can never buy me."&#13;
Miss Faith Woodford-"! have rings on my fingers and bells on my toes."&#13;
&#13;
Mr. MacMurray- "No wedding bells for me.''&#13;
Miss Brown- "Every little movement has a meaning all its own."&#13;
Bill Payne and Lovice go to Schumann Heink.&#13;
Bill asks Lovice what "lch Liebe Dich" means.&#13;
Lovice: "I love you. Didn't you know that.&#13;
&#13;
KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES&#13;
Why I' ve kn own it for a long&#13;
&#13;
time."&#13;
Professor Brown in Education V:&#13;
&#13;
"I have forgotten my roll book this morning.&#13;
&#13;
Will all those not present please answer?"&#13;
&#13;
A DOLLAR'S&#13;
WORTH FOR EVERY&#13;
DOLLAR OR EVERY&#13;
DOLLAR BACK&#13;
&#13;
Are featured because they measure up flush with our Ideals of&#13;
what good clothes ought to be---every accredited style, every fabric&#13;
and color are shown $15 to $35 with especially fine selections at $20&#13;
and $25. MOORE'S SPECIAL CLOTHES---all wool at $10, $12&#13;
and $15. Boys clothing of the best kind in Our Big Boys Store.&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING CO.&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hund r ed thirty&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty -one&#13;
&#13;
TESTIMONIALS&#13;
Otsego Love Co., New York.&#13;
Dear Sirs :-I bought a package of your I. K. Love Powders, placed them in a&#13;
May the Lord bless you and&#13;
young lady's pocket, and in four days she was mine&#13;
prosper you in your heart-uniting work.&#13;
Respectfully,&#13;
&#13;
Fancy GROCERIES, FRUITS&#13;
and VEGETABLES&#13;
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Dear Sirs :-I find your Hail Oil extremely beneficial. My hair is coming out in a&#13;
s&#13;
surprising manner. My friend, Woolson, has been using your oil also and his hair 1&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
now in full bloom.&#13;
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KUHNS.&#13;
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Dear Mr. Cerebellum: - Your remedy fo r softening of the brain surpassed all my&#13;
expectations. I have been using it regularly for a month and my brain is now so solid&#13;
Your well-wishing friend,&#13;
you couldn't force a spike into it with a pile driver.&#13;
CYRIL&#13;
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u PHAM .&#13;
&#13;
Messrs. Ried and Wright, Omaha, Manufacturers of High Grade L ectures,&#13;
Sermons and Essays.&#13;
Dear Sirs :-I used your anti-expansion lectu re at a political meeting one year ago&#13;
and I have used no other since. Please send a dozen more as per sample. I find&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
your "Addresses to Students" very useful also.&#13;
GUSSI E BRUNELLE .&#13;
&#13;
Nicotine Brothers, St. Louis .&#13;
Dear Sirs :-I have been using your Pick Axe Plug now for a year and find that it&#13;
beats anything.&#13;
Yours thankfully,&#13;
CHARLES SPRY.&#13;
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SHOES THAT SATISFY&#13;
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512 Fourth Street&#13;
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Leading Grocers&#13;
of Morningside&#13;
1951 S. ST. AUBIN AVENUE&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred t h irty-two&#13;
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PETERS PARK&#13;
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Kodak Developing and Printing&#13;
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Our department is complete and strictly mod ern in every&#13;
particular.&#13;
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Just moved into new quarters and have every-&#13;
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We are exclusive dealers in Kodaks and Kodak Supplies .&#13;
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ZIMMERMAN BROS.&#13;
New Davidson Building&#13;
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608 Pierce St.&#13;
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Will the Investment Pay?&#13;
The answer to this question. is all important to you young women and young men&#13;
of today, and be careful that the answer is not of more concern to the good parent at&#13;
home furnishing the timely remittances than to yourselves.&#13;
You are fitting yourselves for an age that requires not only a college training but it's&#13;
up to you to take on the many practical ideas and lessons that present themselves from&#13;
day to day to help you round out a successful future.&#13;
This bank recognizes its obligation&#13;
ingside and we desire to do our part&#13;
measure from year to year. F acuity&#13;
matters adding to their convenience or&#13;
&#13;
to Morningside College and the Suburb of Mornin the development and growth, coming in larger&#13;
and students are welcome to use this bank in all&#13;
advantage.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BANK&#13;
4 Per Cent Interest on Deposits -Responsibility $ 100,000&#13;
&#13;
E. C. PETERS, Pres.&#13;
]. G . Shumaker&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
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thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
JOHN S c oTT, JR. , Cash.&#13;
F. W. Lohr&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-five&#13;
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GEO. E. WARD, V. Pres.&#13;
C . J. Milligan&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
BOOK MAKING&#13;
&#13;
GIVEN CAREFUL ATTENTION&#13;
&#13;
The 1914 Sioux is the third consecutive volume that we have printed and bound. We wiil&#13;
be glad to assist in planning and compiling your&#13;
work. Special attention given to every detail.&#13;
&#13;
The Largest Engraving Establishment&#13;
in the United States specializing in&#13;
Quality&#13;
&#13;
Engravings&#13;
&#13;
Bureau&#13;
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for college&#13;
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ANNUALS&#13;
&#13;
Of E NG RAV I NG., I NC.&#13;
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DAY AND&#13;
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NIGHT SERVICE&#13;
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MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
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MlLWAUKE.E&#13;
&#13;
WITH WHOM DID THESE IDEAS ORIGINATE.&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
Glen Patrick owned the college.&#13;
"Bunny" would be an appropriate name for Professor Haynes.&#13;
the Glee Club were a tough bunch.&#13;
Turk Eiffert was a "Regular Guy."&#13;
Hank Winterringer was a permanent fixture at the college.&#13;
the Girl's Weekly Rooming Place Reports contained nothing but the truth.&#13;
Olive and Lula were rivals.&#13;
Guy McKinney likes to walk out from town.&#13;
the Girl Basketball Players could throw baskets.&#13;
"Baby," alias "Flunkey" looks good in a derby.&#13;
BOOKS THAT HAVE HELPED ME.&#13;
&#13;
Delineator . . . ... ..... . . . .. . .. . ...... . .... ... .... .. . ... Fletcher Pollock&#13;
Winning Hearts ....... .. . . .. .. .......... .. . . ...... . . .. Elihu Shoemaker&#13;
H ow to Appear Dignified . ....... . .... . .... . .. . . . .... . ... . . Dean Chandler&#13;
Wilhelm Tell (English Translation) .. .. .. . .. . ... . . . . .. . .. ... Herman Lueder&#13;
Self-Appreciation ... .......... . .. .. . . ... .. . . . ........ .. ... Neville Gray&#13;
How to Flunk Gracefully . . . . . ...... .... . . .. . ........ . .. .. Tommy James&#13;
Robert's Rules of Order .. ... .. ... ... . ... .. .. ... ..... . ... . .. J. L. Ralston&#13;
H ow to B ecome Beautiful ... . . . . ................. · · · · · · · · .... Helen Laub&#13;
How Not to Forget ........ . . . .. . ..... . ..... . ... .. . . . ..... Miss Ferguson&#13;
Hints to Housekeepers . ....... . . .. ..... . .. . ... . . . ......... . Sara and Jean&#13;
Encyclopedia . . .. .. . . . .. . ... .. ....... . ... . .. . ..... .. Vince Montgomery&#13;
Life . ... ....... . . ..... . .. .. . . .... . . . . ... . . . .. . .. . .. . .. . Fred Shriever&#13;
Professor Greynald: "A fool can ask more questions in a minute than a wise man&#13;
can answer in an hour."&#13;
Kingsbury : "No wonder so many of us flunked m exam.&#13;
J ocy goes down town to buy. an evening dress. The clerk using her m_ st. persuasive&#13;
o&#13;
smile, said: "This yellow one is stunnmg, you would look so F renchy in it.&#13;
J ocy&#13;
wonders how she knew.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
]. A.&#13;
&#13;
PATTEN&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
HOMES IN MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Residences and vacant lots in the beautiful college suburb of Sioux C ity at&#13;
reasonable prices and favorable terms.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6136&#13;
Bell Phone 953&#13;
Two hundred thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Where You Can Get the Best&#13;
&#13;
GROCERIES&#13;
FRESH FRUITS&#13;
CONFECTIONERY&#13;
Step in while you wait for the car&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE REAL ESTATE&#13;
Morningside Agency for&#13;
Hartford Insurance Co.&#13;
&#13;
A P. LARSON'S GROCERY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE GROCER&#13;
C orner of Morningside and Peters Streets&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE SA YING COUPONS TO BUYA date-Horace Merten.&#13;
A curl of my own-Minnie Nelson.&#13;
"M" sweater-Anna Held.&#13;
Subscription to "Elite Styles"-Fletcher Pollock.&#13;
An invitation to attend meeting of Athletic Committee-Ben Holbert (student&#13;
representative).&#13;
Pedometers--Girls the Walking Club.&#13;
of&#13;
A Gym-Morningside College.&#13;
Some new "Som'r'set" decks-Glee Club.&#13;
A fountain pen of my own-Margaret Kifer.&#13;
Clean collar- Sammy Deakin.&#13;
Dancing lessons-Herman&#13;
Lueder and Frank Johnson.&#13;
Ink eradicator, to take numbers of our infant class off the spoon holder-Studdent Body.&#13;
In Economics-Prof. Haynes : "Tell about the Black Belt of the South."&#13;
Bob Vernon: " I can't tell about the Black Belt, but I can tell an awful lot&#13;
about Laura Belt.&#13;
&#13;
STOP&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE OLYM PIA CANDY KITCHEN&#13;
BECAUSE you get the best service in the city.&#13;
Try Our Special College Sundaes, Candies,&#13;
Dainty Lunches, Ices, Fruits, for That Picnic&#13;
on the Sioux.&#13;
&#13;
'' Condrodendrom Tomentosum&#13;
Eriodictyon Glutinosum&#13;
Physostigma Venenosum&#13;
Bring 'em up and We 'll dose 'em&#13;
&#13;
PI LLS-- ''&#13;
&#13;
CORNER FIFTH AND PIERCE STREETS&#13;
&#13;
The Abel--Pedersen--Van Riper Co.&#13;
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Morningside&#13;
Pharmacy&#13;
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BEAUTIFIERS OF HOMES&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
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E. K. BARNEY, Prop.&#13;
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OBERG PEDERSEN&#13;
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ABEL&#13;
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A H.&#13;
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VAN R IPER&#13;
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P ICTURE F R AMI NG A SPECIA L TY&#13;
6 11 Fifth Street&#13;
Sioux City Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Iowa P hone 976&#13;
A uto Phone 25 70&#13;
T wo hundred forty&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty- one&#13;
&#13;
"Where Quality is as Represented"&#13;
EXCLUSIVE THINGS&#13;
&#13;
WONDERS OF THE COLLEGE.&#13;
&#13;
If D. L. Wickens goes over to Abernathy's to study music.&#13;
&#13;
If Professor Campbell would have the middle button sewed on his coat.&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
If&#13;
&#13;
Dunham sleeps because he likes it or can't help it.&#13;
Lee Barks will take a day off when he gets married.&#13;
the Student Council would become active.&#13;
Bunny Haynes would wear a quiet necktie.&#13;
the Dean wouldn't smile.&#13;
If Miss Hadley would let out a class on time.&#13;
&#13;
WHERE YOU WOULD FIND THEM IF A TELEGRAM SHOULD COME.&#13;
Lula Kindlespire ... .... . .. . .... . ........ .. . .. ..... . . .. .. . In the Library&#13;
Si Braley .. ..... ............. . ............ . . . ....... At the Whitehouse&#13;
Lemon ....... .. ..... . ............... . .... .. ....... . Before the Faculty&#13;
' Dunham . .... .. . . . . ....... . ...... .. .. . . ..... ....... In a chair sleeping&#13;
Tommy James .. ....... . . ...... ........... .... .... . . .... In the corridors&#13;
Morgan ....... .. ....... . ........................ .... ..... At Devitt's&#13;
McCurdy ... ................... . . ...... ..... ... ..... At the same place&#13;
Hank Winterringer ... . . ..... . . .. ... . ....... . .. . .. .. . Talking with the girls&#13;
Bernice Bowman .. ...... . .. . . . ........... .. . . .... At Howard Allen's heels&#13;
Lovice Strobel . .. ............. .. . . .. . In doubt whether to take Bob, Bill or Doc&#13;
Fully and Sally . ..... ....... . .. .......................... . Society Hall&#13;
John Kolp .... . .... .. ............. .. ............. Taking a Music Lesson&#13;
Woodke ... . ........... . . . .. .. .. ' ... . . ... .. .. .. . .. .. ... . .. . At Ewer's&#13;
President Craig . .. . ....... . .. ... . . . ..... . ........ . Planning new buildings&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR J. HOBERG&#13;
JEWELER&#13;
4 I O Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Haakinson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
L. D. Vigen&#13;
&#13;
Office, 3 12 Jackson Street&#13;
Office Phone, Auto 21 74&#13;
&#13;
Martin Hotel&#13;
&#13;
· R ichard Alsop&#13;
&#13;
J . J. Hansen&#13;
&#13;
Yards, First and Jackson Streets&#13;
Yard Phone, Auto 2923&#13;
Old Phone, 5 72&#13;
&#13;
H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
COAL, WOOD, COKE AND FEED,&#13;
SAND, GRAVEL, CEMENT AND ROCK&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
OMAHA&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
The class in astronomy seems to be doing very well, Miss Doolittle thought she had&#13;
found a new "Star" but upon further investigation found that it was only an old one&#13;
out of its orbit.&#13;
In English class, Miss Loveland, desiring to dismiss the class early, inquired the&#13;
time of Mr. Kingsbury. Leslie slowly takes out his watch, blushes and quickly closes&#13;
it. We can't possibly understand his action.&#13;
&#13;
THE GRADUATE&#13;
Has now reached the point where his business future looms large before&#13;
him and a selection of the life calling must be made. Whatever the&#13;
choice, if success is to crown the efforts, system and order must be&#13;
applied. As a developer of system in business, nothing equals a bank&#13;
account. Many have acquired the banking habit with us while in&#13;
school, and now in the larger field we invite you to continue this excellent habit.&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
VVOOD BROS. &amp; CO.&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION&#13;
.... MERCHANTS ....&#13;
TOM DEAL TRY,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred forty -two&#13;
&#13;
forty-three&#13;
&#13;
No More Cracked Collars&#13;
If Laundered by the Nolen Laundry Co., because we mould them in shape while wet,&#13;
leave an "easy slip" tie space, and finish the top without friction.&#13;
&#13;
Our collars are laundered by an entirely new method and will wear four times as&#13;
long as when done in the old way. Above cut illustrates our new method of finishing&#13;
collars.&#13;
SEND your collars to us.&#13;
SAVE greatly on your collar cost.&#13;
HAVE your tie slip easily.&#13;
Our modern equipment and facilities are the best, and our work is done in the most&#13;
advanced and approved manner.&#13;
Our employes are well trained in their work, which insures you perfect satisfaction&#13;
m all departments.&#13;
Let us have your suit or gown to press or clean.&#13;
Telephone us to call.&#13;
&#13;
We have seven wagons and automobiles in the service.&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN LAUNDRY CO.&#13;
Iowa Phone 3 3 3&#13;
&#13;
4 1 1 Jackson Street&#13;
D. T. STARR, College Agent&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 61 71&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1638&#13;
1320 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-five&#13;
&#13;
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENCE&#13;
HEART AND CAMPUS PROBLEMS&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Ella Campbell, Editor&#13;
&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
Would it B. Wright for a young lady and young gentleman&#13;
&#13;
to sit on the front porch after a Sophomore party when a light snow had fallen ?-Costar.&#13;
( 1)&#13;
&#13;
This would be perfectly proper if you would clean the whole porch instead&#13;
&#13;
of two spots, rather close together.&#13;
&#13;
Ask your Grocer for MOTHER'S BREAD.&#13;
Out of town orders given prompt attention.&#13;
Our customers are our best reference.&#13;
Auto Phone 119 7&#13;
Bell Phone 19 7&#13;
&#13;
408-410 Iowa Street&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
( 1 ) Is it proper to cut chapel and stroll on the campus&#13;
&#13;
with a young man who has been very devoted for three years?&#13;
&#13;
(2) Is it proper for&#13;
&#13;
this same young man to always accompany you to and from classes ?-Florence.&#13;
( 1 ) Perhaps it would be well for you to confer with the President or Dean of&#13;
Women on this subject.&#13;
&#13;
( 2) If the young man in question typewrites your outlines&#13;
&#13;
for you, it is well that you repay him for his kindness by allowing him to accompany you&#13;
to and from classes .&#13;
&#13;
VACATIONS&#13;
Sporting Goods that help make it&#13;
pleasant&#13;
&#13;
PARK PLACE&#13;
&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
&#13;
Of course, you should not detain him so as to make him very late&#13;
&#13;
to meals, as Mrs. Devitt likes to have her boarders there on time.&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
( l ) How can I keep company with a girl from town, a&#13;
&#13;
girl in college and a girl from Morningside?&#13;
&#13;
(2) Is it proper to wear a dress suit&#13;
&#13;
when calling ?-George Prichard.&#13;
( 1 ) If you would spend all your time with one girl, you could be more sure of&#13;
her. (2) If you have one, wear it when you feel like it.&#13;
&#13;
SPAULDING AND GOLDSMITH&#13;
Affords a pleasant evening's entertain-&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Goods&#13;
&#13;
ment.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Goods&#13;
&#13;
Our pictures are always the very&#13;
&#13;
cleanest and highest grade obtainable.&#13;
&#13;
Slotted Throat Tennis Rackets&#13;
Imported Golf Sticks&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
May I take a young lady boat riding ?-Frank Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
( 1 ) Certainly you may.&#13;
&#13;
But hug along the shore, Frank, hug along the shore.&#13;
&#13;
Pathe's Weekly shows the world's important events and pictures of great men.&#13;
&#13;
Dear Miss Campbell:&#13;
&#13;
Would you kindly tell me why Hank wore his Sunday suit&#13;
&#13;
several week days last fall ?-Inquisitive.&#13;
Fishing Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Golf Bags&#13;
&#13;
( 1 ) We cannot advise you in these columns as to the reason for Hank's wearing&#13;
his Sunday suit, but if you will send me a stamped self-addressed envelope I will give&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt' s Hardware&#13;
&#13;
you the desired information .&#13;
&#13;
3 12-1 4 Nebraska St.&#13;
&#13;
T wo hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-six&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
f or t y-seven&#13;
&#13;
MORGAN'S "A" GRADE PSYCH PAPER.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The Young Man&#13;
And His Clothes&#13;
Simply being covered up doesn't mean anything to&#13;
the young man of today.&#13;
erness.&#13;
&#13;
He wants style, polish, clev-&#13;
&#13;
He wants dash to pattern and design.&#13;
&#13;
about yourself?&#13;
some clothes.&#13;
&#13;
What&#13;
&#13;
You're interested in bright and blith-&#13;
&#13;
Aren't you?&#13;
&#13;
Sure you are.&#13;
&#13;
We put before you the products of the best manufacturers in the country.&#13;
&#13;
Not a suit or overcoat but&#13;
&#13;
what has been made right up to our rigid specification,&#13;
which means other good things, that every garment is&#13;
made closest possible to custom-made-only differing in&#13;
cost.&#13;
There's a lot of sentiment attached to tailor-made&#13;
clothes, and that's the only difference between exclusive&#13;
shop-made clothes and ours-with a third less price.&#13;
&#13;
It is for you to choose here from the best, which you&#13;
like the best.&#13;
Barks, McCurdy, Morgan and Kolp come to Junior Annual Board party at Helen&#13;
Giehm' s. D oris Giehm to Caroline Eads: "Who are they?" Caroline tells her.&#13;
D oris: "Why they look like men."&#13;
Caroline: "They are men."&#13;
D oris: "Yes, but I mean married men."&#13;
&#13;
that the whole integrity of this establishment is a warranty that you are dressed in accord w ith fashion.&#13;
We put before you the world's highest grade makes:&#13;
Stein-Bloch, Fit-form, the "L-System," Alfred Benja-&#13;
&#13;
Professor Greynald sees Ben talking to Jean in the hall.&#13;
H e says: "Mr. Holbert, you are interfering with Mr. Bass's Major Study.&#13;
J oey Carter at Lindholm's:&#13;
&#13;
min &amp; Co., and several others.&#13;
Suits $15 to $35-0vercoats, $ 15 to $45&#13;
&#13;
''I'd rather furnish a house than a Y. W. C. A. hall.&#13;
&#13;
Bill Wedgwood says Vince got fined in society for hanging his sign on the wrong&#13;
billboard.&#13;
&#13;
FITFORM&#13;
&#13;
Bros. Co.&#13;
&#13;
Catherine Elliott: "We don't have many chickens at our house.''&#13;
Harold Pollock: "No, they are all old hens."&#13;
J ohn Kolp:&#13;
&#13;
" H ello there.&#13;
&#13;
I see you."&#13;
&#13;
Two hubdred forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
You can make your choice in a few&#13;
&#13;
moments, and wear your suit the next day, and know&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred forty- nine&#13;
&#13;
OPEN ACCOUNTS INVITED&#13;
&#13;
THREE PER CENT PAID ON&#13;
CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT&#13;
&#13;
SECURITY.&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1884&#13;
&#13;
$450,000.00&#13;
&#13;
CAPITAL AND SUR PLUS&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S&#13;
CANDY PALACE&#13;
&#13;
H eadquarters for the Best of Candies,&#13;
Refreshments and Luncheonetts&#13;
&#13;
607 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Goods&#13;
&#13;
Safe and Lock&#13;
W ork&#13;
a Specialty&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PH ILLI PS, Pr0prie1or&#13;
SIOUX CIT Y. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
406 PEARL STREET&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred fifty .&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
You Believe in Money-Saving&#13;
if it isn't at the Expense&#13;
of Quality ..... .&#13;
&#13;
"Of all the beautiful pictures&#13;
That hang on memories wall,&#13;
That of my dear old sheepskin&#13;
It seemeth the best of all.&#13;
Not for the honor it brings me,&#13;
Though of that I am fully aware,&#13;
But the thought of the years of bluffing&#13;
Young Barks Sees Girls' Basketball Games It required to get the thing there."&#13;
Vince Montgomery, 20 years later.&#13;
&#13;
Our idea is to buy the best you can get and pay&#13;
just what you can afford, and that's what we&#13;
invite you to do here.&#13;
The saving is in the value we give you.&#13;
In quality of materials, in workmanship, and&#13;
styles, the Jewelry we sell is beyond a doubt the&#13;
best offered anywhere.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Greynald's opm1on of Arthur Johnson as expressed in French B . : "Mr.&#13;
Johnson, you are zie worst devil in zie class."&#13;
Joey says the blanks are a perfectly good sanitary plan.&#13;
Miss Whittemore did not answer roll call in History of Ed.&#13;
&#13;
WILL H. BECK CO.&#13;
Iowa's L eading Jewelry Store&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
THE PARK RESTAURANT&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Brown: "Did Miss Whittemore go with the baseball team, too? I know&#13;
she used to go last year, but I am not keeping up on social happenings this year."&#13;
Dean Chandler at bonfire after Creighton game: "The police judge promised to&#13;
be lenient with the boys. You know I am well acquainted down there."&#13;
Kingsbury in English 9: "The fun of hunting deer (dear) is just chasing it&#13;
around, whether you get it or not.&#13;
Miss Loveland laughs.&#13;
&#13;
King blushes.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Professor MacMurray: "Now I want you to understand how the drama was&#13;
made modern. They introduced the devil."&#13;
&#13;
MEALS AND LUNCHES AT ALL HOURS&#13;
HOME MADE PIES&#13;
&#13;
Grace Logan wishes that men of today would write love verses to their lady loves&#13;
as did the men of olden times.&#13;
&#13;
WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE&#13;
&#13;
Ben borrows Heavy Hiett's Experiments, and hands a copy of them in. Next day&#13;
Prof. Campbell calls Ben up and informs him that Mr. Hiett is the only one in the&#13;
class who is color blind.&#13;
Students in need of Glasses will find our OPTOMETRISTS&#13;
competent eye examiners and specialists in fitting nose glasses.&#13;
Ask any of the thousands we have fitted. All glasses made&#13;
in our own shop.&#13;
&#13;
Deakin's idea of an American: "An American is a white man; has strong patriotism, is filled with sublime self-conceit; but is always there with the goods.&#13;
&#13;
Corner 5th&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Catherine Elliott borrows Frankie Knight's dress to wear to a fashionable wedding.&#13;
Upon her return Frankie inspects her and says: "Oh! Kathie, you've been going the&#13;
wrong way all evening, you've got the back in the front."&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska&#13;
Streets&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fi ft y-two&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
The best informed Live Stock Growers and&#13;
Shippers have found that the MOST NET&#13;
MONEY is almost invariably secured by&#13;
shipping their stock to this market.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY STOCK YARDS&#13;
McCurdy and Jocy go to see Mr. Keck about special meetings. Mr. Keck, Jr.,&#13;
sees them coming and tells his mother that a couple are coming to get married. Mrs.&#13;
Keck rushes up stairs and helps Rev. Keck into his preacher's coat and white collar and&#13;
tie so that he will be presentable to marry Mac and Jocy.&#13;
&#13;
Ferguson, Abel Land Co., Inc.&#13;
PAID UP CAPITAL $100,000.00&#13;
WILLIGES BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
This winter Bill Evans fixed it up with his girl to take her to the 6:55 train. He&#13;
returned about 3 A. M. as usual Sunday night, or rather Monday morning, to rise at&#13;
5 : 30. But Bill's love of sleep got the best of his love for Miss Gravelle and he woke&#13;
up w. th a guilty conscience at 8 o'clock. Result-buys a Big Ben at Darlings.&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
Dealers in Farm Lands&#13;
&#13;
J. G. LEGLER&#13;
&#13;
Eastern South Dakota,&#13;
W estern Minnesota,&#13;
lowa---Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Dray and Van Line&#13;
Light and Heavy Draying&#13;
Special Attention Given to Packing&#13;
TERMS:&#13;
&#13;
Cash.&#13;
Office Phone 6240&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
Office, 1903 St. Aub.&#13;
Residence Phone 64 1 3&#13;
&#13;
hundred fifty-four&#13;
&#13;
CORN&#13;
&#13;
CLOVER&#13;
&#13;
ALFALFA&#13;
&#13;
Sales made on Easy Terms&#13;
EXCHANGES HANDLED ON EQUITABLE BASIS&#13;
Two hundred fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
.. .The ...&#13;
Reliable Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
ENGINEERS&#13;
CONTRACTORS&#13;
&#13;
We carry a complete line of up-to-date&#13;
Clothing and Furnishings, at very lowest&#13;
prices. Visit our store when in need of&#13;
clothing.&#13;
&#13;
PLUMBING&#13;
H EATING&#13;
&#13;
Orr &amp;&#13;
Graves&#13;
&#13;
KAUFMAN PRESHRUNK&#13;
CAMPUS TOGS&#13;
OUR SPECIALTY&#13;
IO PER CENT DISCOUNT TO&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
John son &amp;A ronson&#13;
7 l 0-7 l 2 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
United Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
1800&#13;
&#13;
1900&#13;
&#13;
TAILORING&#13;
French Dry Cleaning&#13;
Sanitary Pressing&#13;
Repairing neatly done&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
TAILOR SHOP&#13;
Sam Meyers, Prop.&#13;
Auto P hone 6240&#13;
Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE BARBER SHOP&#13;
C. D. KELLOGG, Prop.&#13;
Basement First Door South of Theatre&#13;
&#13;
L. J. EVERIST- CLEAN COAL&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred fifty-s ix&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PIPER &amp; LARSON&#13;
PLUMBING&#13;
STEAM AND HoT WATER HEATING&#13;
E STIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNISHED&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
2012 St. Aubin Ave.&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
The followi ng property will be sold at public auction from the Spoonholder, June&#13;
12th, 10 A. M.&#13;
Auctioneer, Frank Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE&#13;
&#13;
French sentences--F rench A. Class&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE OUTFITTERS&#13;
&#13;
Belt-]. D. Kolp&#13;
BI us hes-Woodke&#13;
Red Cordouroys-John Briggs&#13;
Chapel seats for next year-Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
"M" Sweaters-Ben Holbert&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING NEW INST ATIONERY, PENNANTS,&#13;
JEWELRY, POST CARDS, ETC.&#13;
&#13;
Extra credits-Frank Johnson-Hank Winterringer&#13;
Corsage • Bouquets-Lottie Sanders&#13;
Psych grades-Juniors&#13;
Caps, Gowns and Diplomas-Seniors&#13;
&#13;
RAY H. DARLING&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
Beans-Ada Belew&#13;
Dimples-Fully&#13;
Athletic record-Vince&#13;
Someone has said that life is just one blank thing after another.&#13;
Dunham says it's just one snooze after another.&#13;
Montgomery says it's just one bluff after another.&#13;
Barks states that it's just one day after another.&#13;
Susan Eads says it's just one stick of gum after another.&#13;
The Librarian declares it's just one Ruff house after another.&#13;
Miss D'Orsay says it's just one "M" sweater after another.&#13;
Bill Bass contends that it's the same sweater all the time.&#13;
To Kuhns it's one grind after another.&#13;
Kolp says it s one frost after another.&#13;
But all agree it's just one flunk after another.&#13;
We hope that these jokes will meet with the approbation of the ministerial association.&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nin e&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, Ph., D., D . D., President&#13;
&#13;
SOME REASONS FOR ATTENDING MORN I NGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
( 1) It is a standard College, whose graduates receive recognition&#13;
in the leading universities.&#13;
(2)&#13;
&#13;
It has an able Faculty who have been trained in the leading universities of America and Europe.&#13;
&#13;
(3) It has an endowment of over $400,000.&#13;
( 4) It is one of the few colleges of Iowa to pass the scrutiny and&#13;
receive the endowment of the General Education Board of&#13;
New York.&#13;
(5) The Scientific work is strong and well equipped. The laboratories are supplied with modern and up-to-date apparatus.&#13;
( 6) In all departments of intercollegiate interests such as athletics,&#13;
debates and oratory, Morningside holds an enviable record.&#13;
( 7) The location in a suburb of a prosperous city of fifty thousand affords many advantages found only m metropolitan&#13;
centers.&#13;
(8) The New Fire Proof Main Hall erected during the past year&#13;
is one of the best college buildings in the state. Steam heated,&#13;
from central heating plant, and electric lighted, the building&#13;
also contains fifteen modern-equipped recitation rooms, spacious library reading room, and four finely furnished Literary&#13;
Society Halls.&#13;
For Catalogue and Other Information, Address&#13;
&#13;
THE PRESIDENT&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred sixty&#13;
&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
Miss Brown&#13;
Chocolates&#13;
NOT IN A CLASS&#13;
THEY ST AND ALONE&#13;
MADE BY&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Morningside College Yearbook</text>
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                <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College Annual Yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The 1914 yearbook contains pictures, short articles, sporting results, and other college news and events related to this particular year</text>
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                    <text>THE&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
��PRESENTING-&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
CITY·&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�Richard McLaug&#13;
John Castle&#13;
&#13;
. . .&#13;
&#13;
��It is always a joy to pen a word of greeting to the Morningside Coll ege&#13;
Sioux readers. The Annual depicts in picture and report the story of the year.&#13;
The Annual is the most authentic report which is compiled of a year's activities.&#13;
&#13;
It reports concerning the faculty, the students, the achievements, the oddities,&#13;
the fun; about the only thing it leaves out is the regrets.&#13;
Because it is the year's report of the institution, it is the permanent word&#13;
of that year to all succeeding years. The. students and faculty are happy to&#13;
present the Annual for the year 1947 be.cause it is certain to give assurance of&#13;
a newer and a greater future for Morningside. Co ll ege. It is the year when&#13;
enrollments were doubled. It is the year when the A. W. Jones Hall of Science&#13;
is being erected . It is the year when the post war activities renew the hopes and&#13;
dreams of pre-war plans. We are now eagerly awaiting the construction of&#13;
the new Gymnasium anci Fieldhouse, the new Men's Dormitory and many other&#13;
promises of building and advancement.&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
RoADMAN,&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Prexy Lodge&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
�Myron&#13;
THOMAS ELMORE TwEITO&#13;
&#13;
EARLE GRABER&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Men&#13;
&#13;
Dean of the College&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
A. B., HEIDELBERG COLLEGE; A. M., ibid;&#13;
D. Sc., ibid; Ph.D., STATE UNIVERSITY OF&#13;
IOWA ; FELLOW IN PHYSICS, ibid; UNlVER·&#13;
SITY OF MICHIGAN; COLUMBIA UN IV ER·&#13;
SlTY; OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY; FELLOW&#13;
IN PHYSICS , UNIVERSITY OF CH ICAGO.&#13;
&#13;
A. D., ST, OLAF COLLEGE; UN IV ERS ITY OF&#13;
MINNESOTA; A. M., STATE UN IV ERSITY OF&#13;
JOWA; FELLOW IN HISTORY, ibid; GRADU·&#13;
ATE ASSISTANT, ibid; Ph.D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
ALVA Tolf&#13;
&#13;
NELSON ALLEN PRICE&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
Vice President of College&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Health and Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
A. B. , SYRACUSE UN IVER SITY; S. T. D.,&#13;
BOSTON SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY; B. D. , JlAR .&#13;
YARD ANDOVER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY.&#13;
&#13;
A. B. , COE COLLEGE ;&#13;
OF CH ICAGO.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
A. M.,&#13;
&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
��DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES&#13;
&#13;
PETER BANNON&#13;
&#13;
JOHN FRANCIS CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
A ssociate Professor of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa; A. M., ibid; Ph.D.,&#13;
ibid.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of&#13;
Illinois; A. M., Northwestern University.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK Guy BEAN&#13;
&#13;
MELBA MARIE CRIPE&#13;
&#13;
L ecturer in R eligion&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Speech&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Simpson College;&#13;
D. D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN E NGLlSH&#13;
DIMMlTT&#13;
MARJORIE ANDERSON&#13;
BOYD&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
low a; Graduate Assistantship Romance Lan11;uage,&#13;
ibid; A. M., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
LEF. CHARLES&#13;
BRADFORD&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Carleton College;&#13;
A.M., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
VESTA C . B URRIS&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Ohio University ; Otterbein&#13;
College; Bonebrake Seminary; University of&#13;
Chicago; Mornin gside&#13;
College, A. B.&#13;
&#13;
CLINTON EDo B uRRIS&#13;
&#13;
Lecturer in Library&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Otterbein College;&#13;
B. D., Bonebrake Theological Seminary; A. M&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women Emeritus,&#13;
Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages&#13;
A. B., Illinois Wesleyan&#13;
University: A. M., Columbia University ; L. H. D.,&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan University ; University of Chicago; American School of&#13;
Classical Studies, Rome.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
HARRIETTE LARSON&#13;
DOOLEY&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Mornin gside College; Graduate Work at&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
&#13;
LAURA CLARA FISCHER&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Carleton College;&#13;
A. M., ibid ; University of&#13;
Chicago; University of&#13;
Colorado; University of&#13;
Wisconsin; University of&#13;
Southern California.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD LUTHER&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Speech&#13;
&#13;
B. S., North Texas State&#13;
College; A. M., University&#13;
of Louisiana.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
�DIVISION OF NATURAL SCIENCE&#13;
ALFRED BRUCE&#13;
GAARDER&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Romance Languages&#13;
A. B., New Mexico Highlands University: M. deA.,&#13;
National University of&#13;
Mexico: Middlebury&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
NELONTINE M.&#13;
MAXWELL&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Mathem atics&#13;
A. B., Vassar College;&#13;
Iowa Stale College,&#13;
summer.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDERICK&#13;
KANTHLENER&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD ARTHUR&#13;
BEDIENT&#13;
&#13;
Professor of R omance&#13;
Languages&#13;
A. B., Cornell College;&#13;
A. M., Harvard University;&#13;
Institute Francois and&#13;
University of Madrid,&#13;
Spain; University of Chicago; University of Dijon;&#13;
National University of&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Albion College;&#13;
Teachin g Fellowship,&#13;
Cornell University;&#13;
Ph. D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN BENJAMI N MAGEE&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT WILLIAM&#13;
BUCKINGHAM&#13;
&#13;
Profes.,or of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
A. B., University of&#13;
Washington; A. M., Boston&#13;
University ; S. T. B., ibid:&#13;
A. M., Harvard University;&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
MmAH MILLS&#13;
&#13;
GLEN Roy BusHYAGER&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
A. B., Morningside College ; Stanford&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
B. S., Allegheny College;&#13;
A. lVL, Pennsylvania State&#13;
College: University of&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College: A. M., University of&#13;
Chicago; University of&#13;
Michigan; University of&#13;
Southern California.&#13;
&#13;
RoY Milton&#13;
&#13;
CHATTERS&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
Kalamazoo College; A. B.,&#13;
Hope College; M. S.&#13;
University of Michigan:&#13;
Teaching Assistant, ibid;&#13;
Ph.D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST WILLIAM&#13;
SAUNDERS&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Bible and&#13;
Religion&#13;
Northeastern University;&#13;
B. S. in R. E., Boston&#13;
University; S. T. B., ibid;&#13;
Ph.D., Duke University.&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BELINDA&#13;
COLE&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
A. B., Gri nnell College;&#13;
A. M., Columbia University; Ed. D., New York&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
�JAMES AusTIN Coss&#13;
&#13;
RoY ARCHER SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry,&#13;
Emeritus&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
B. S., Illinois Wesleyan&#13;
University; M. S., Univer·&#13;
sity of Illinois; Assistant&#13;
in Chemistry, ibid; University of Chicago; Fellow&#13;
in Chemistry, Clark&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Vanderbi lt University; A. M., ibid ; University of Chicago; Harvard&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
ARNOLD LESTER&#13;
STEINTJES&#13;
LESLIE H. DAVIS&#13;
&#13;
Director of Athletics&#13;
and Professor of Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Iowa State Teachers&#13;
College: A. M., South&#13;
Dakota University;&#13;
University of Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
&#13;
R egistrar&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Physics&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College ; M. S., State University of Iowa; Graduate&#13;
Assistant, ibid; NorthCentral Workshop in Higher Education, University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College; L. H. D., ibid; John&#13;
Hopkins University;&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD OGLESBY&#13;
MALCOLMSON&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES MILLER&#13;
WINSTON&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
Ins tructor in Biology&#13;
&#13;
Ed B., Western State&#13;
Teachers College; M. S.,&#13;
University of Illinois;&#13;
University of Pennsylvania.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of&#13;
Texas.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN STANTON&#13;
WINSTON&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Physics&#13;
NANCY ELIZABETH&#13;
BAXTER&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Vassar College.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES H. 0BYE&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
B. S., Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cornell College;&#13;
A. M., University of Chicago; Illinois Institute of&#13;
Technology ; University of&#13;
New Hampshire.&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE J URIST&#13;
WOLFSON&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Ph ysical&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of Michigan; A. M., New York&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
�DIVISION OF FINE ARTS&#13;
CHARLES RALEIGH&#13;
GARLAND&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Musical Theory&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT ETHAN LOWRY&#13;
&#13;
Carson-Newman College;&#13;
A. B., University of Kentucky; Eastman School of&#13;
Mu sic; A.M., State University of Iowa; Ph. D.,&#13;
ibid.&#13;
&#13;
In structo r in Wood-Wind&#13;
Instruments&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA ANN ODEGARD&#13;
HOMER EyGENE&#13;
GARRETSON&#13;
&#13;
Inst ructo r in Piano&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Mornin gs ide College; Eastman School of&#13;
Mu sic.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
B S. M., Morningside College; Juilliard School of&#13;
Music.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON&#13;
MAcCoLLIN&#13;
L01s JANE GRAMMER&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voic e&#13;
&#13;
/l ead of School Music&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B., Oberlin Co nservatory of Mu sic; A. B.,&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
B. F. A., University of&#13;
Nebraska; Mus. M.,&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAcCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
Director of th e Conserva·&#13;
Lory of Music and&#13;
Professor of Voice&#13;
&#13;
CLARA ASMUS GRAY&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin Conservatory of&#13;
Music; Chautauqua Summer School of Music;&#13;
A. B., Oberlin College;&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside Colle ge; teaching Fellowship, George P eabody&#13;
College for Teachers.&#13;
&#13;
Mu s. B., Morningside College; Chicago Mu sical&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
ETHEL THOMPSON&#13;
KUCINSKI&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
}AMES REISTR UP&#13;
&#13;
Mu s. B., Morningside College; Eastman School of&#13;
Mu sic ; Chicago Musical&#13;
College; The Cleveland&#13;
Institute of Music;&#13;
J uilliard School of Music.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Pianofort e&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Univers ity of Wi sco nsin;&#13;
Chicago musical College;&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
LEO KUCINSKI&#13;
&#13;
Head of Violin and&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside College: Cleveland Institute of&#13;
Mu sic; Conducting Fellowship in Juilliard Graduate&#13;
School of Music.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
GRACE PEARL SMITH&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa ; A. M., University of&#13;
South Dakota.&#13;
&#13;
In structo r in Art&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
�EMERY&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
}AMES EARL&#13;
KIRKPATRICK&#13;
&#13;
STEWART&#13;
&#13;
Chairman of the&#13;
Placement Committee&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
A. B., Cornell College;&#13;
A. M., State University of&#13;
Iowa; Graduate Assistant&#13;
in Education and&#13;
Research, Assistant in&#13;
Extension, ibid; Ph.D.,&#13;
ibid.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice&#13;
B. S. M., Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
FAI TH FOSTER&#13;
WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
and History of Music&#13;
A. B., Morn ingside College; American Conservatory of Music (Chicago) ;&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside College; University of&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH HERBERT&#13;
LEHMAN&#13;
&#13;
I nstruc/or in History&#13;
B S., Northwestern Un iversity; A. M., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
DIVISION OF&#13;
SOCIAL&#13;
SCIENCE&#13;
&#13;
MARCIA AGNES McNEE&#13;
&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Elementary Education&#13;
A. B., Upper Iowa University; A. M., University&#13;
of Ch icago; State University of Iowa: University of&#13;
Southern California.&#13;
&#13;
LELIA MAE BARBER&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Economics&#13;
B. S., Emporia Kan sas&#13;
State Teachers College ;&#13;
M. S., University of&#13;
Denver.&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND NORRIS&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
B. S., Illinois Wesleyan&#13;
University; A. M., University of Chicago; Teaching&#13;
Fellow, ibid ; S. T. B.,&#13;
Garrett Biblical Institute;&#13;
Austin Fellow, Harvard&#13;
University; Litt. D., Central College; George Peabody College for Teachers,&#13;
University of Tennessee;&#13;
New York University.&#13;
&#13;
BEATHICE BERGH&#13;
&#13;
Supervisor of Practice&#13;
Teaching. East Junior&#13;
High School&#13;
B. S., State University of&#13;
Iowa; A. M., Columbia&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD ERNEST&#13;
BOWMAN&#13;
RUTH MARIE MORRISON&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in History&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa; A. M., ibid; Graduate Assistant, ibid.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Augustana College;&#13;
A. M., University of&#13;
Nebraska; Johnson Fellow&#13;
in American History, ibid;&#13;
State University of Iowa;&#13;
Un iversity of Omaha.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL RuTH M u RRA Y&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
History&#13;
A. B., Morningside College; A. M., University of&#13;
Illinois, Columbia&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
HORACE Boies&#13;
HAWTHORN&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Sociology&#13;
B. S., Iowa State College;&#13;
M. S., ibid; Ph. D.,&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
�ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF&#13;
WILLIAM HENRY&#13;
ROBERTS&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Psycho!ogy&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Univers ity of&#13;
Rochester; A. M., Teachers&#13;
Colle ge; Ph. D., Northwestern Un iversity; Newton Theological Institution; Yale Un iversity.&#13;
&#13;
LEO D.&#13;
&#13;
GRAVES&#13;
&#13;
Vocational Appraiser&#13;
&#13;
Roy Eli STANTON&#13;
&#13;
Director of Downtown&#13;
Division&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Secretarial Science&#13;
A. B., Coll ege of Emporia;&#13;
M. S., Un iversi ty of Colorado; Emporia State&#13;
Teachers College.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MILO HALL, JR.&#13;
&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
MILDRED Wikert&#13;
WALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
In structor in Secretarial&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
w. ,HARTMAN&#13;
M.A.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Direc tor of&#13;
Admissions&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN Marie&#13;
MADSEN&#13;
&#13;
Secretary Lo President&#13;
I nsl rue/or in Secretarial&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside Co llegP- .&#13;
&#13;
HEALTH&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Alumni Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Loy LOTSPEI CH&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
Dietician&#13;
CHARLES F.&#13;
Berkstresser,&#13;
M.D.&#13;
&#13;
Col!ege Physician&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
HELEN&#13;
BRENNER, R.N.&#13;
&#13;
College Nurse&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Helen&#13;
&#13;
LYNCH&#13;
&#13;
H ousemother&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
�LOTTIE M AY&#13;
MA CARTH UR&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant R egistrar&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF 'TRUSTEES&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
D. W. Stewart, President... ........................................................................................................ Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. F. Roach, Vi ce-P res ident.. ................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Frank G. Bea n, Vice-President... .............................................................................................. Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
J. C. Buthman, Secretary........................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. J. Sweet, Treasurer..............................................................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
TR USTEES OF HONOR&#13;
Emlin Ber geson , Ma nager, Mid-West Li ve Stock Commission Co .................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A. W. Jon es, Ba nker .......... ·-···········-··················-································································· ...... Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. C. F. Lon g, House wife ........................... ....................................................................... Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
W. H. Lease, Mini ster......................................................................................................................... Webb, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1947&#13;
&#13;
LEroy&#13;
&#13;
Joshua Sweet&#13;
&#13;
Bu siness Manager&#13;
&#13;
HANS JA COB Raun&#13;
&#13;
S uperintendent of&#13;
Buildings and Grounds&#13;
&#13;
Leo n Hickm an, Attorney.............................................................................................. Pittsburgh, Penn sylvani a&#13;
Ar thur Schuldt, Superintendent Sheldon Di stri ct.. ............................................................ Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
H. I. Down, Physic ian and Surgeon .........................................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. N. Smith, Ma nager Wea th erw ax Clothin g Co .................................................................. Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
D. W. Stewart, Attorney............................................................................. ..............................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
P a rn ell Mahoney, Sioux City Brick &amp; Tile Co .....................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
W. C. Wolle, Real Estate .......................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
J. A. Farnham, Minister.. ........................ ·-·······················-····················· ........................... Webster City, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1948&#13;
Charles Buckwalter , Mini ster.. ................................................................................................... 1-lumboldt, Iowa&#13;
S. Will ard Cunnin gham, Minister ................ ....................................................... ....................... Row a n, Iowa&#13;
L. D. Havi ghurst, Superintendent F ort Dodge Distri ct ........... ····-··-··············-········--·······F on Dod ge, Iowa&#13;
Ernest N. Raun , Sioux City Gas &amp; Electr ic Co ..................................................................... Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
J. C. Buthma n, Minister.. ..............................&#13;
City, Iow a&#13;
F ra ncis Kin gsbury, Banker .............. ·-······································-·············································P onca, Nebraska&#13;
Miss Rae Wetmore, Play Publisher.. ......... ·-······················-······-···········--······························Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ray J. Harrin gton, Physic ian and Surgeon ..........................................................................S ioux City, Io wa&#13;
C. S. Van Eaton, Merchant ...................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1949&#13;
F ra nk G. Bea n, Superintendent Sioux City Distri ct... ......................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
L. D. Snyder, Contractor ........................................................... ................................................ Humboldt, Iowa&#13;
C. H. Brechlin , Manager Kresge Store.................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. W. Britton, Investment Banker...... ·-··························································-··-···-·············Siou x City, Iowa&#13;
F. E. Burgess, Superintendent Al gona Distric t. ......................................... ·--·-··························Algona, Iowa&#13;
G. W. Dunn , Mi nister. .................................. - ........................................................................ -.S ioux City, Iowa&#13;
I{. Cliffo rd Ha rper, Attorney....................................................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Charles F . Berkstresser, Physicia,1.. ..................................................................... - ............... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. F . Roach, Ma nager J. C. P enn ey Co mpa ny .................................................................... Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
Ha rold P. Win ter, Life Insura nce ........................................... _............................................... Cin cinnati , Ohio&#13;
&#13;
THO MAS CALDERWOO D STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
Professo r of Biology, Emeritus&#13;
&#13;
Adr ian College; Uni versity of Chi cago;&#13;
A. B., Ka nsas City Uni versity; M. D.,&#13;
Kansas Sta te Uni versity ( College of&#13;
Ph ys icians) : Mar ine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachu setts; State&#13;
Univers ity of Iowa; University of M ichiSc., Co rnell Coll ege.&#13;
ga n ; Hon.&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
Philip&#13;
&#13;
Wright&#13;
&#13;
Go vE DARE&#13;
&#13;
Terese&#13;
&#13;
G ERTRUDE M ALLOY&#13;
&#13;
Inst rue tor in English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Drafting&#13;
&#13;
A. B., No rth Central College; A. M.,&#13;
University of Jll inois; Uni versity of&#13;
Chi cago.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Teachers College; Imm ac ulate Conce ption Aca dem y ; Chicago&#13;
Aca demy of Fine Arts.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
��Class of 1947&#13;
&#13;
To you graduating seniors,&#13;
we'll miss you at Morningsidebut the best of luck always in&#13;
your future endeavors and ambitions. Remember to sing the,&#13;
praises of dear Alma Mater."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
McC RACKEN , MUTC HLER, CO NRAD&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
President ............................................................ .No rman Mut chler&#13;
.&#13;
Vi ce President. ...........................................Marjorie McCrack en&#13;
Sccrcla ry ............................ ............................. Mary Jan e Conrad&#13;
Treasurer ................................................................... .Darlene Held&#13;
Representative ....... ..................................................H arold M inor&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
�SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
EMILIO ARREDONDO&#13;
&#13;
GORDON FAIR CHILD&#13;
&#13;
DoN ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. !.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
La P az, Bolovia&#13;
&#13;
Sioux R apids&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan 1. 2. 3. 4. P res. 3;&#13;
\V.A.A. 3. 4; Yal e- Harvard 1.&#13;
&#13;
Ea rl y&#13;
&#13;
Student Council 2, 3; Junior Class Pres.;&#13;
YMCA J, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 2, Pres. 3;&#13;
Cosmopolitan C l ub 1, 2, 3, 4; Biology&#13;
Cl ub Treasure r 3, Vi ce Pres. 4; Beta&#13;
Beta Beta 4 ; Phi Sigma Iota 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Religious Life 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A gentleman and a scholar.''&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha I. 2. 3. 4. Warden 4;&#13;
Band ] , 2, 3, 4; Choir ], 2.&#13;
&#13;
" He's really a card."&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN WALKER FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
"A one-man woman."&#13;
&#13;
"An I pana smile that's genuine."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Elbert&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET BAKER&#13;
&#13;
N. BALES&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B.A.&#13;
&#13;
sioux&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bluff&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
YWCA l , 2; W.A.A . l , 2. 3, 4;&#13;
F.T.A. 3. 4; M.F.T.C. 3, 4;&#13;
IJask etball l , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Staff 2, 3: Band 3, 4: Choir&#13;
2, 3. 4 : Ph i Mu Alpha 3. 4: YM CA 2. 3;&#13;
Grace Col legians 4: Collegiate Pl ayers 2;&#13;
Pi Gam ma Mu Pres. 4 .&#13;
&#13;
" Listen lo the Ford go by!"&#13;
&#13;
" Intense and intelligent."&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4, Librarian&#13;
&#13;
4;&#13;
&#13;
Glenn&#13;
&#13;
GAFFEY&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
NORBERT GLODEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
YMCA , 1, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"The quiet kind whose&#13;
nature never varies.&#13;
&#13;
"An individualist&#13;
&#13;
CONNIE HAVIGHURST&#13;
ANTON BECKER&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM GORDON HANSEN&#13;
WILLIAM B URNS&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Marion, S. D.&#13;
Choir l. 2, 3: Band I; YMCA 2, 3;&#13;
Cosmopo litan l ; K appa Chi ] , 2, 3, 4,&#13;
Pres . 2.&#13;
&#13;
"The serious type."&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Cit y&#13;
Al pha Tau Delta 4.&#13;
&#13;
" That's a character /or ya!"&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
&#13;
S hel don&#13;
&#13;
Studen t Council ] . 2: Freshman Vice&#13;
Pres. : Co l legian Reporter Staff 4 :&#13;
W.S.G.A. l. 3: lshkoodah Pres.; YW CA&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Chi 1. 2, 4, S ec. 3;&#13;
Cosmopolitan 4; F.T.A. Sec. 1, P res. 3:&#13;
Grace Collegians 3: Religious Life 3:&#13;
H omecoming Attend ant 4 ; Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
Student Counci l 4 ; Biology Club 4;&#13;
Unil(... of Nebraska I, 2; Univ. of&#13;
Idaho 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A doctor in the making."&#13;
&#13;
"An eager-beaver."&#13;
&#13;
MARY J ANE CONRAD&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Ponca, Nebr.&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3. 4, Socia l Chairman 2. Pres. 4; Student Council 3. 4,&#13;
Vi ce Pres. 4; Collegian R eport er Staff 4;&#13;
&#13;
STEPHEN&#13;
&#13;
c. DEVRI ES&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
DARLENE HELD&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
K ATHERINE HELD&#13;
&#13;
Hin ton&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau De lta 2. 3. ti. ; Social Chairman 2. Pres. 3, 4: Student Coun ci l 3. 4;&#13;
Col legian R e porter 1, 2, Editor 4:&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu 4; Editor Scoop 4 :&#13;
Editor Student Direc tory 4; Collegiate&#13;
Players 1. 2, 3: Social Life 4:&#13;
R e ligious Life 4; Student Union Board&#13;
4; Cheerleader 1. 2; Who 's Wh o 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4, Direc tress 2,&#13;
Cones. Sec. 3, Vi ce Pres. 4: Student&#13;
Council 4; Junior Cl ass Vice Pres ..&#13;
Senior Class Treasurer; Sioux Staff 4;&#13;
W.A.A. I , 2, 3, 4, Vice Pres. 4.&#13;
Pres. 4, Corres. Sec. 3; Major Club&#13;
I. 2, 4; F.T.A. 3; Yale-Harvard l. 2;&#13;
May Fest iva l Qu een J: Beauty Queen&#13;
Attcn&lt;lant 3.&#13;
&#13;
Hin ton&#13;
&#13;
" It's not what a man stands for,&#13;
it's what he falls for."&#13;
&#13;
"Light or small, short or tall, she&#13;
sets her snare to catch them all."&#13;
&#13;
"Air bound."&#13;
&#13;
PHYLLIS DORAN&#13;
&#13;
J OHN D ULING&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET HEUMANN&#13;
&#13;
WILFRED KA UFMAN&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Agora Secretary 3. Senior Rep. 4:&#13;
Jntcrsororit y Council 3. 4 ; Symphon y&#13;
], 2. 3; Choir 2. 4; Swing Band 3:&#13;
Monohan Post Band l , 2. 3. 4: Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City Sym 1,honetta 2. 3: YWCA , I. 2, 3,&#13;
Secretary l. Vice Pres. 2; F'.T.A.&#13;
2. 3. 4, Secretary 3: Collegia te&#13;
P layers 3; Phi Sigma Iota 2, 3, 4; Pi&#13;
Gamma Mu 4: Social Life 4: Chapel&#13;
Commi ttee 4: Re li gious Life 4;&#13;
Who' s Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Can't help Lovin' dat&#13;
.&#13;
man o' mine "&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Kappa&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Council&#13;
Social&#13;
&#13;
Pi A I pha 2, 3, 4, Corres.&#13;
3, Sec. 4. Pres. 4 ; Stude nt&#13;
4; Inter-Sorority Counci l 4;&#13;
Life 4 ; R e ligious Life 4.&#13;
&#13;
"A Pi with lots of pep."&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Si oux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Al pha I. 2. 3 . 4. Sec. 3, 4,&#13;
Treas. 2; Choir 1. 4; Band 1, 3, 4 ;&#13;
YMCA 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
M.F.T.C. 4: F.T.A. 4 ; Univ. of&#13;
Ne braska .I , 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Whal love doesn't do to&#13;
some people!"&#13;
&#13;
"She's just 'human'."&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3. 4. Di rec tress 4;&#13;
Co ll egian 1: Col lege T rio 2. 3, 4 ;&#13;
F.T.A. 3: W.A.A. I. 2. Vice Pres. 3 .&#13;
Sec. 4: Major Cl ub 2, 4: YWCA I. 2. 3;&#13;
Collegiate P layers 2 : Intramural basketball 2, Volleyball 4 ; Yal e -H arva rd 4;&#13;
Agora Queen 4.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
H ave l ock&#13;
&#13;
Ph i Sigma; M C lu b 3. 4: Barn Board 4 ;&#13;
Football 1, 3; Hasketball 1.&#13;
&#13;
"There's an awful lot of&#13;
'Kauffie' at Schwarz."&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
�SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN MATHERS&#13;
&#13;
LOVICE K1 ' GSBURY&#13;
&#13;
MARY Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi I , 2, 3. 4, Corrcs.&#13;
Secre tary 3. Crit ic 4. Treasu rer 4:&#13;
Student Council 2. 4: Assistant Editor,&#13;
sioux 3. Editor Sioux 4; Col lcgian&#13;
R eporter Staff 2. 3; Ishkoodah Pres. I ;&#13;
Symphony l. 2 , 3: Marching Band 4:&#13;
Concert Band 4: YWCA l. 2. 3. 4. Vi ce&#13;
&#13;
President 2. 4: F.T.A. 2. 3. 4: MFTC&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3, 4 , vice&#13;
&#13;
Pres. 2: Phi sigma&#13;
&#13;
Iota&#13;
&#13;
Sergea nt Bluff&#13;
Kappa Zela C hi 3. 4: Student Council&#13;
3, 4; Sioux staff 3. 4; Manusc ript 4;&#13;
\V .S.G.A. Pres. Summer 1946 ; ln tcrSorority Council 4 ; M.r: r.c. 3, 4 ;&#13;
P res. 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Effervescent."&#13;
&#13;
2, 3. 4: Who' s Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"God b 1ess the man who&#13;
invented sleep."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Ponca , Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD MINOR&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Fo rt Do dge&#13;
&#13;
Student Council I, 4, Pres. 4; F reshman&#13;
Pres; M Club I , 2 , Pre s. 3, S ec. 4;&#13;
&#13;
F ootba ll I. Basketba ll I , 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Who does not love wine,&#13;
women, and song,&#13;
R emains a fool his whole&#13;
life long."&#13;
&#13;
Student Council l , 2. 3 . 4; Freshman&#13;
P res.; S iou x S tarr l; Band I; Choir 1 ;&#13;
S ymphony 1: Kap pa Chi 1, 2, 3, 4,&#13;
P res. 2 ; YMCA I , 2, 3, 4 ; Grace&#13;
Co l legians P res. I ; Alpha K appa&#13;
Del ta 4; Social Life 1 ; Chapel C omm .&#13;
l. 2: R e ligi ous Life I , 2. 3; Bask e tball&#13;
Man ager 2; Softba11 . Baseba ll I ntramurals 2, 3; Manager Book store I;&#13;
&#13;
Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"He ain't no 'minor'."&#13;
&#13;
CAROLYN M UTCHLER&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE LANE&#13;
&#13;
J. KRSKA&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
M UTCHLER&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
MELVI&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4 , "Reporter 3,&#13;
Usher 3, Cones. Sec. 4 , Chap lain 4 ;&#13;
Student Council 4 ; Agora F irst Vi ce&#13;
President 4 ; W.A.A. 1. 2 , 3, 4 , Repo rler&#13;
3, P res. ; Cheerleader 1. 2; J unior&#13;
Guard 3 ; Major Club 4; Modern Dance&#13;
Club; lnt rarnurals 1. 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
A lpha Tau Delta 3. 4; Stude nt C ouncil&#13;
4; Se ni o r Class President ; M Cl u b 3, 4;&#13;
F ootball I , 3: Baske tba ll 1; l ntramurals 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Student Counc il 3:&#13;
Prc·En gincers Club l , 2, 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
"He's the quiet type."&#13;
&#13;
A I pha Sigma 2, 3, 4, Chaplain 4;&#13;
YWCA I , 2. 4: F.T.A. I , 2, 4. Sec. 2 ;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu 4; Sigma Tau Delta&#13;
&#13;
4.&#13;
&#13;
" Mild manners and a gentle&#13;
heart are hers."&#13;
&#13;
"If you knew Susie like we know&#13;
-Susie-Ooohhh?"&#13;
&#13;
S parta , Mi chigan&#13;
&#13;
"A leader and all around&#13;
good fellow."&#13;
&#13;
MARCELLA POPPEN&#13;
JAMES LEACHMAN&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Center&#13;
&#13;
Sio ix C ity&#13;
&#13;
J OHN LARSON&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD PIPPETT&#13;
&#13;
Mn P hi Epsilon sec- teas&#13;
3, 4 ;&#13;
YWCA 1. 2. 3, 4; F .T.A. 2, 4; M.F.T.C.&#13;
2, 4 ; Cosmo1,olitan 4 ; Grace Coll egians&#13;
2 , 3, 4; Choir 2, 3; Madrigal 4.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Univ. of II linoi s I , 2~ 3; Baskctbal I 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Tremenjous."&#13;
&#13;
"Maybe he got lost&#13;
the stacks."&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
"He came to college for&#13;
an education."&#13;
&#13;
"A hard worker who should&#13;
go places."&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE RoADMAN&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
KATHLEEN LE CKBAND&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY LYLE&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Salina, Kan sas&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Symphony 4; Marymount&#13;
&#13;
College,&#13;
&#13;
Salina,. Kansas, 1, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A Southern lass with charm."&#13;
&#13;
YWCA I , 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. I . 2, 3. 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Silence is golden."&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi 2, 3, 4, So cial Chairma n&#13;
2, 3, Vice Pres. 3, P res. 4; Student&#13;
Cou ncil 2, 3, 4; Sophomore V ice Pres. ;&#13;
J unior Class Presiden t; Collegian&#13;
R eporter staff 3; Agora S ec. 3, Pres. 4 ;&#13;
l sh koodah Pres.; lntersorority Counci l&#13;
&#13;
Fred&#13;
&#13;
ROEHRS&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
3. 4; YWCA 2, 3, 4; W .A.A. I , 2, 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
Pre- Engineers 1, 3. Secretary 2, P resident&#13;
4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Pres. 3; Pi Gamm a Mu 4; Barn Board 4 ;&#13;
Attendan t to Ma y Queen I ; A ttendan t to&#13;
Sioux Queen 2; Homecoming Qu een 4;&#13;
Drake Relay Qu een Candidate 3;&#13;
&#13;
"/ like to play ghost because&#13;
I'm such a spook."&#13;
&#13;
Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Not a queen for a day but&#13;
a queen always."&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE McCRACKEN&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD McLAUGHLIN&#13;
&#13;
KEN ETH R UBY&#13;
&#13;
NADENE LAW&#13;
&#13;
Mani ll a&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Zeta Chi, Corres. Sec. 4 ; Se nior&#13;
Vi ce Pres.; Sioux Staff 4; W.S.C.A.&#13;
Representative 3, 4; Choir 3, 4: Vets&#13;
C lub 3; FTA 4; MFTC 4 ; YWCA 4.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Lawton&#13;
&#13;
Al pha T au De l ta 4: Bu siness Manager&#13;
Sioux 4 ; Pi Gamma Mu 4.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Al pha I , 2. 3. 4; Choir I. 2. 3:&#13;
Band I, 2, 3; Symphon y I , 2, Footba l l 4.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi 3. 4: Sioux Staff 4;&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon 3, 4: F.T.A . 3, 4;&#13;
&#13;
"A lawyer with definite ideas."&#13;
&#13;
" He's certainly a gem."&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Co ll ege 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Her smile belongs to every one,&#13;
her heart belongs to Clarence."&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
M.F.T .C. 3, 4 ; Chaplain 4.&#13;
&#13;
"She makes her own laws."&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
�Seniors at a Glance .&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
BARBARA SCHMIDT&#13;
&#13;
DONNA SEVERSON&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek&#13;
&#13;
Soldier&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha 2, 3, 4, Social Chairman 3. 4, Pres. 4; Mu Phi Epsilon&#13;
2, 3, 4, Social Chairman 3, Vice Pres. 4 ;&#13;
Student Council 3, 4; Junior Class Sec.;&#13;
Sioux Staff 4; Collegian R e port er&#13;
Staff 3; Agora Second Vic e Pres. 4 ;&#13;
W.S.G.A. 1, 3, 4, Vi ce Pres. 3, Pres. 4;&#13;
YWCA !, 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 2, 3, 4;&#13;
M.F.T.C. 2. 3, 4; At1 cndan t to&#13;
Homecomi ng Qu een 4; Wh o ' s Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kapp a Zeta Chi, 2, 3, 4, Treas. 3,&#13;
Report er 4; Student Council 2; Junior&#13;
Treas.; Choir l, 2, 3; College Trio&#13;
&#13;
2, 3, 4; Band I ; YWCA I , 2. 3;&#13;
W.A.A. ), 2. 3, Treas. 4; Cheerleader&#13;
2, 3, 4; Major Club 2; Collegiate&#13;
Play e rs 3; Intramural Basketball 2,&#13;
Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Marshall 4 ; Pi&#13;
Gamma Mu 4; Alpha Kappa De lta 4,&#13;
&#13;
"Quite seasonable!"&#13;
&#13;
"A gal with a classy chassis."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN SMITH&#13;
&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 4; Mu Phi Epsilon 4,&#13;
Alumni Secretary 4 ; Wa y ne State&#13;
Teachers College l , 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4, Treas. 3,&#13;
Social Chairman 4 ; Sigma Tau Delta 3,&#13;
Pres. 4; Pi Gamma Mu Vice Pres. 4;&#13;
Choir 2, 3; Madrigal 4; YWCA 2, 3;&#13;
W.S .G.A. 4; Sioux Staff 3; Collegian&#13;
&#13;
"A snappy number."&#13;
&#13;
Reporter 4; f.T.A. 4; Collegiate Players&#13;
3; Sheldon Junior College 1.&#13;
&#13;
" If you play gin rummy,&#13;
I'll play."&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT P. TRACY&#13;
LOUISE THOMS&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A woman's work is never&#13;
done."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Collegian Reporte r 2. 3. 4 ; Manu scri JJt&#13;
3, 4; Collegiate Players I. 2, 3. 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Morningside College Academy&#13;
Award Winner."&#13;
&#13;
CAROLYN WOLLE&#13;
LOIS WIESE&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3. 4. Librarian 2;&#13;
Critic 3. Vic e. Pres . 4; Student Council&#13;
2, 3, Sec.-Treas. 4; Collegian R epor ter&#13;
2: Scoop 3; Manuscript 1, 2, 3, Pre s. 4;&#13;
l shkoodah Sec.; Choir 1; Pi Gamma Mu&#13;
4; Kappa Chi 1, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Tau Delta&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha 3, 4, Vice Pres, 4 ;&#13;
lnt ersorori ty Council 4; Sioux City&#13;
Symphony 3. 4: Chapel Choir 3;&#13;
Symphonelta 3; Madrigal 4; College&#13;
String Quart e t 3, 4; F.T.A. 3, 4;&#13;
M.F.T.C. 3, 4; Sigma Alpha Iota.&#13;
&#13;
"Her violin speaks the tongue&#13;
of angels."&#13;
&#13;
3,4; YWCA 1,2.3; W.A.A. I; Chapel&#13;
Comm. 4; Religious Life l; Alumni&#13;
Scholarship 1; National Methodi st&#13;
Scholarship 2, 3. 4; Editor-"Tradition"&#13;
Book 3; Junior Marshall ; Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"The brain-trust."&#13;
&#13;
PAUL ZEMAN&#13;
DORIS YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Bradga te&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Collegian&#13;
Reporter l, 2; Sioux Staff 2;&#13;
YWCA 2; Col lcg iatc Players 2, 3;&#13;
Alpha Sigma 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Delta 4 ;&#13;
Cosmopolitan 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
"Let me analyze you."&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
Col I egia n Report er 3, Scoop 2, 3;&#13;
YMCA l , 2, 3, 4, Pres. l , Vi ce Pres. 4 ;&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi I. 2, 3, 4, Usher 2;&#13;
Life I ; Basketbal I l, 3; Tra ck&#13;
3; Footbal I 3; M Club 3, 4; Health&#13;
&#13;
Religious&#13;
&#13;
King 2; Collegiate Players 2.&#13;
&#13;
"/ went here to get the general&#13;
impression of things."&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
�Class of 1948&#13;
&#13;
The best of luck to you juniors&#13;
as you climax your college career&#13;
as the seniors of 1948. With your&#13;
able l e ad e rship, Mornin g side&#13;
shall continue to go ever forward.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SPEER. Lehmberg&#13;
&#13;
Macallum&#13;
&#13;
FAUL&#13;
&#13;
O FFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
P resident ..................................................................... . Duane Faul&#13;
.&#13;
Vice President......................................................Lois M cCallum&#13;
Secretary................................................. _ ........ Janyce Lehmberg&#13;
··&#13;
&#13;
1.reasurer ................................................... .. .................. .]ack Speer&#13;
.&#13;
........ Kathryn N elson&#13;
Representalive..................................,,.&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
�JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
RAMON BARBERO&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET BARKS&#13;
&#13;
Panama City, Panama&#13;
&#13;
Orange City&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD BEAN&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FRANKLIN RENE BROWN&#13;
&#13;
EUNICE BRUCE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
GORDON CHRISTENSEN&#13;
&#13;
MARY Lou CRASE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Redfield&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE D AVIS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DE BEER&#13;
&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT DES LAURIERS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
VESTA FELLER&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE GEAKE&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
NANCY GOODENOUGH&#13;
&#13;
IRENE HACKETT&#13;
&#13;
Morrison, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN HALL&#13;
&#13;
HELEN harding&#13;
&#13;
Everly&#13;
&#13;
Graettinger&#13;
&#13;
LOWELL HARTWICK&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HELD&#13;
&#13;
Wakonda, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Hinton&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY JoHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HELEN EHLERS&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST LARSON&#13;
&#13;
AUDREY LAUDE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Emmetsburg&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
�JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
J.U·N IO RS&#13;
JANY CE LEHMBERG&#13;
&#13;
MARY Lou&#13;
&#13;
LEMB CKE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES RI CHARDS&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE R UNION&#13;
&#13;
Soldier&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Whiting&#13;
&#13;
Lake Park&#13;
&#13;
AMY MATTSON&#13;
&#13;
Lois McCALLUM&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SARCHET&#13;
&#13;
L AVERNE SCHROEDER&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
Kensett&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
Lone Rock&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM SEIBERT&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SHREVE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT MELTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
Kin gsley&#13;
&#13;
ARLONE Rader&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Muriel&#13;
&#13;
Mu1LENBERG&#13;
&#13;
Orange Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
Kathryn&#13;
&#13;
ELSON&#13;
&#13;
Darwyn&#13;
&#13;
SNYDER&#13;
&#13;
LOIS SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn&#13;
&#13;
JEA N PI CKERTNG&#13;
&#13;
D ARLENE TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
LORRAINE THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bl uff&#13;
&#13;
VELMA R EDENBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
MARY JO TRAFTON&#13;
&#13;
GLENDENE TRI CKEY&#13;
&#13;
Vancouver, Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
�Juniors Off Guard&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
CLARE VANDEN BROCK&#13;
&#13;
]ACK BEDIENT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DARREL WARNER&#13;
&#13;
DONALD WEAVER&#13;
&#13;
}AUCILE LONG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Chattanooga, Tenn.&#13;
&#13;
Joyce&#13;
&#13;
TRONSRUE&#13;
&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
43&#13;
&#13;
�To you sophomores, the class&#13;
of '49, we are ever grateful for&#13;
your complete and 'traditional'&#13;
victory over the frosh on Freshman-Sophomore Day! May your&#13;
pep and enthusiasm continue to&#13;
uphold the true Morningside&#13;
spirit.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1949&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON, ANNAND, BARRETT , JOHNSTONE&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Presi dent ............................ ---····-································-Bill Annand&#13;
Vice Pres idenL ................ ....................................... .Ann Barrett&#13;
Secretary................................................. :········Margaret J ohnson&#13;
Treasurer...................................................................... Cleo Weins&#13;
Representative ...................................................... Ka ye Jol111stone&#13;
&#13;
45&#13;
&#13;
�SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMOR E S&#13;
&#13;
PATRICIA AHRENS&#13;
&#13;
GLENDA RAE BAERENWALD&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BOTTOLFSON&#13;
&#13;
}AMES CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
Matlock&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
&#13;
DALE BAKER&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY BARKS&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD CHADWICK&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES CROPLEY&#13;
&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
Belden, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Vancouver, Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE Barringer&#13;
&#13;
I RMA DENGLER&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE DOBBINS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ANN BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
Alvord&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
J ULIA BARTELS&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
BETTY EBERT&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ELVICK&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
PA UL BERTELOOT&#13;
&#13;
MARIE BETTS&#13;
&#13;
EDITH FIDERLICK&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT FRANKEN&#13;
&#13;
Rockford , 111.&#13;
&#13;
Gray&#13;
&#13;
Callender&#13;
&#13;
Schaller&#13;
&#13;
SmRLEY Booz&#13;
&#13;
Rr cHARD BoRNHOLT&#13;
&#13;
RALPH GRAHAM&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD GUSTAVSON&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
46&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
�SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
BERT KING&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY HAAS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DONALD KELSEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HUGH KNAPP&#13;
&#13;
JAY KNAPP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND GUSTAVSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Waukegan, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ToM HENRY&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HISEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Reno, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY HORTON&#13;
&#13;
DONALD HOSTETLER&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE HUXTABLE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT M. IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Merrill&#13;
&#13;
MAURICE I SAACSON&#13;
&#13;
ARDYTHE JACOBSON .&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
KAYE JOHNSTONE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DAVID KOELLING&#13;
&#13;
Lois Kuehn&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Marcus&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY LAMFEHS&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD LEWELLYN&#13;
&#13;
Ashton&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
HELEN LING&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR MENEFEE&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
RrcHARD YouNGSTROM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
&#13;
Joan&#13;
&#13;
Meyer&#13;
&#13;
Quimby&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
MILTON Meyer&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LOIS M1NNIG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Murray&#13;
&#13;
Elmwood Park, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY Nikolaison&#13;
&#13;
Blencoe&#13;
&#13;
JAMES Okey&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY OLSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
50&#13;
&#13;
DONALD Miller&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Clarice&#13;
&#13;
moone&#13;
&#13;
PHYLLIS OSBORN&#13;
&#13;
DONNA PAULIN&#13;
&#13;
Danbury&#13;
&#13;
Remse n&#13;
&#13;
JACK Paulin&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Virginia&#13;
&#13;
O'DELL&#13;
&#13;
Peterson&#13;
&#13;
Remsen&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD MUS Champ&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Dwayne&#13;
&#13;
PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Dike&#13;
&#13;
GERALDINE Prager&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
Ione&#13;
&#13;
PRESCOTT&#13;
&#13;
South Sioux City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
KENNETH OLESON&#13;
&#13;
LYLA REHNBLOM&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou REIMER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Stanhope&#13;
&#13;
Schleswig&#13;
&#13;
J oHN REIBHOFF&#13;
&#13;
PAUL RALSTON&#13;
&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
Somers&#13;
&#13;
William&#13;
&#13;
O'NEILL&#13;
&#13;
South Sioux City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
�SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES SAUTER&#13;
&#13;
JEANNE SAUTER&#13;
&#13;
MAX STERNE&#13;
&#13;
DONALD STONE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PHILIP SCALETTA&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE SCHULTZ&#13;
&#13;
RONALD STONE&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD T UTTLE&#13;
&#13;
South Sioux Ci ty, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Peterson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MADELYN SCHWEIZER&#13;
&#13;
DARLENE SCHWINDERMAN&#13;
&#13;
WILTON VAN MEEVEREN&#13;
&#13;
Winnebago, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Macedonia&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Hospers&#13;
&#13;
DONALD SHELTON&#13;
&#13;
CECILY SHERK&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE VANDER DAM&#13;
&#13;
LINDA Lou V ANOS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Lake Park&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FOREST WHITLOW&#13;
&#13;
BETTY WHITTINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Jackson, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
St. Lawrence, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
LEON SHORTENIIAUS&#13;
&#13;
Buffalo Center&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
SODERBERG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
Ruby&#13;
&#13;
SMALLEY&#13;
&#13;
New Rochelle, New York&#13;
&#13;
JAYNE Marie&#13;
&#13;
Soiseth&#13;
&#13;
Anna&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
52&#13;
&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
Edward&#13;
&#13;
VAN VELDH UIZEN&#13;
&#13;
LORNA WILLIAM S&#13;
&#13;
Elmwood P ark, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomore Snaps&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WITTER&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Marakyn&#13;
&#13;
WOOD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ANNALEE ZEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Bradgate&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
54&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
&#13;
�The "freshies" really looked&#13;
cute in their green caps and "lipsticked M' s"-but just remember&#13;
-there's another year coming,&#13;
and that means a whole new class&#13;
of freshmen eager for theit initiation by you as the more fortunate&#13;
sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1950&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MADISON, Preston&#13;
&#13;
WALTON, Friend&#13;
&#13;
PETTENGILL&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President-----·-·-········-·-·-·········---·································Don Preston&#13;
Vice P resident...........................·-·-························· Marge Walton&#13;
Secretary............................ ---···············-···········--P auline Pettengill&#13;
Treasurer....................-------·-·· -·-···········-··--···············_A mold Friend&#13;
Representative&#13;
.............. _.&#13;
Anne Madison&#13;
&#13;
57&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
EUGENE ALTON&#13;
&#13;
HOBERT BLEVINS&#13;
&#13;
WILMA BOZARTH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapid s&#13;
&#13;
Chi cago, Jll.&#13;
&#13;
JoE ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
EDWIN BRANCH&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA BREWER&#13;
&#13;
Blencoe&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
F.arly&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ANN BARTRAM&#13;
&#13;
MARY Jo BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Stuart, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BECKMAN&#13;
&#13;
KENNETH AALSETH&#13;
&#13;
JOAN BRODIE&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN BnowN&#13;
&#13;
Alhion, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Missouri Valley&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA Aagard&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Jane&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Homer, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY Barlett&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Belknap&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
BERGQUIST&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
58&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE BENHAM&#13;
&#13;
Red Oak&#13;
&#13;
BETTY BLACK&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
BRUCE&#13;
&#13;
Barbara&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE BRUMBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
Tll.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
belvidere,&#13;
&#13;
Roger&#13;
&#13;
JAMES Brodie&#13;
&#13;
BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY BURROUGHS&#13;
&#13;
Belvidere, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
59&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
Carl&#13;
&#13;
CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
Runy&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ann&#13;
&#13;
Cedar&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD DONKERSLOOT&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
LEE DOWNS&#13;
&#13;
Laurens&#13;
&#13;
Humboldt&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CHAMBERS&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN CLARK&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DRAKE&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
BETTY CHRISTENSEN&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE COCKS&#13;
&#13;
Lawton&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE CORNWELL&#13;
&#13;
CAROL CORRIE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM EIKLEBERRY&#13;
&#13;
ELAINE ENGELBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
Remsen&#13;
&#13;
Boyden&#13;
&#13;
Wheaton, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CORINNE Coyne&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bluff&#13;
&#13;
Vera&#13;
&#13;
Devaul&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DAWSON&#13;
&#13;
Joan&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DRURY&#13;
&#13;
FIDDICK&#13;
&#13;
Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
}AMES DOLPHIN&#13;
&#13;
Betty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FLETCHER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
60&#13;
&#13;
61&#13;
&#13;
Diane&#13;
&#13;
DRESSLER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
GARLAND D UN KELBERGER&#13;
&#13;
ARLENE FIDERLI CK&#13;
&#13;
Callender&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
Clinton&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Owie FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
JOAN FREDRICKSON&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE GO ULD&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND H ALL&#13;
&#13;
Chetek, Wie.&#13;
&#13;
Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
REGINALD HALL&#13;
&#13;
INA MAE H AM&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek&#13;
&#13;
Manilla&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Leo&#13;
&#13;
FRAMKE&#13;
&#13;
JOAN Friedlander '&#13;
&#13;
Blencoe&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD FORCE&#13;
&#13;
MARY GASSER&#13;
&#13;
Medway, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DALE GENTZLER&#13;
&#13;
JAMES GERKIN&#13;
&#13;
E UGENE HASSE&#13;
&#13;
LILLI AN HEDEEN&#13;
&#13;
Creighton, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapids&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILSON GINGLES&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM GIST&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH Heeb&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE HELLAND&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Belmond&#13;
&#13;
JAMES GLANN&#13;
&#13;
L01s GLAs co&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pocahontas&#13;
&#13;
62&#13;
&#13;
Marilyn&#13;
&#13;
Paul&#13;
&#13;
HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
HI CKMAN&#13;
&#13;
Ashton&#13;
&#13;
DALE HARRIS&#13;
&#13;
Mildred&#13;
&#13;
Hoar&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
63&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Jules&#13;
&#13;
HULTGREN&#13;
&#13;
Dan&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT D. Irwin&#13;
&#13;
KECIIEL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
&#13;
DARYL JAMES&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT JEN SEN&#13;
&#13;
Glen Ellyn, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton&#13;
&#13;
VICKY KECHEL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Neil&#13;
&#13;
Johns&#13;
&#13;
Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
Mona&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Auburndale, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Kail&#13;
&#13;
DARLENE Kimmel&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
ELAINE Johnson&#13;
&#13;
HowARD KoNRADY&#13;
&#13;
Ray&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, lJI.&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE Jones&#13;
&#13;
Lois KROGH&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bluff&#13;
&#13;
Rock Valley&#13;
&#13;
ALICE KARSTENS&#13;
&#13;
Jean&#13;
&#13;
Lafoy&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Paullina&#13;
&#13;
CLAYTON BRISTOW&#13;
&#13;
PATRICIA KEAGLE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE MAE LARSEN&#13;
&#13;
Akron&#13;
&#13;
64&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
Krieger&#13;
&#13;
Ireton&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt&#13;
&#13;
Paullina&#13;
&#13;
Kline&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEE Kutil&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Patricia&#13;
&#13;
LAMSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
LEAVITT&#13;
&#13;
Marcus&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
JOYCE LELAND&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
Lou Lind&#13;
&#13;
Shirley&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Swea City&#13;
&#13;
MENAGE&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE MENNING&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapid s&#13;
&#13;
Sanborn&#13;
&#13;
HELEN MEREDITH&#13;
&#13;
J OANNE MEREDITH&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Lora&#13;
&#13;
LoHR&#13;
&#13;
Lohrville&#13;
&#13;
THA I NE LYMAN&#13;
&#13;
DONNA LOWE&#13;
&#13;
Des P laines, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
Dee McEWEN&#13;
&#13;
NoRMA Jean&#13;
&#13;
McINTOSH&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn&#13;
&#13;
Wilbur&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe&#13;
&#13;
Huron, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Metz&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DoN McKEE&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Glen Ellyn, ll l.&#13;
&#13;
MEYER&#13;
&#13;
RALPH Meyer&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
M I LLER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Maquoketa&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD MINNICK&#13;
&#13;
J oy MoMSEN&#13;
&#13;
Pocahontas&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
Ann&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
GLENNA A . MARTZ&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
66&#13;
&#13;
Dean&#13;
&#13;
MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
]AMES Mathers&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EARL MONTAGNE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CAsHIE Morey&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
67&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
LEILA MUELLER&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE Mugge&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, ll1.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT PLENDL&#13;
&#13;
Hinton&#13;
&#13;
Calumet&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
LOLA PIRIE&#13;
&#13;
Mallard&#13;
&#13;
Cedar Rapids&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Joyce&#13;
&#13;
O'RouRKE&#13;
&#13;
Joan&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Gerald&#13;
&#13;
Little Rock&#13;
&#13;
Novak&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
PALMER&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST PARRY&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Mayfield, Pa.&#13;
&#13;
Donna&#13;
&#13;
Aberdeen, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
PETTENGILL&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapids&#13;
&#13;
RICE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Pauline&#13;
&#13;
PROTEXTER&#13;
&#13;
ROBAR&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE Roscoe&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY PIERCE&#13;
&#13;
}AMES Rissell&#13;
&#13;
Auburndale, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
68&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
69&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT PROTEXTER&#13;
&#13;
Little Rock&#13;
&#13;
RAMONA R OACH&#13;
&#13;
Kingston, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
R UBY ROBBINS&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
GAIL ROYER&#13;
&#13;
Woodbine&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD R UTH&#13;
&#13;
Paton&#13;
&#13;
�FR E SHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SANFORD&#13;
&#13;
J OSEPHI NE SANFORD&#13;
&#13;
V I CTOR TAMASH UNAS&#13;
&#13;
D U ANE TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
M ilford&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Milford,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
L01s&#13;
&#13;
ScHRAM&#13;
&#13;
MYRLE S c H U DER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES TEEMA&#13;
&#13;
MAX I NE THACK E R&#13;
&#13;
Titonka&#13;
&#13;
Newcastle, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
DONOVAN SCHU LER&#13;
&#13;
KATHY S CHWARZ&#13;
&#13;
METELLIUS THOMSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET T I LLOTSON&#13;
&#13;
Laurel, Ne hr.&#13;
&#13;
Lombard, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zell&#13;
&#13;
S c oTT&#13;
&#13;
M inneapoli s, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
Elien&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE S INGER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, TII.&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
SM I TH&#13;
&#13;
Paulli na&#13;
&#13;
S loan&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE SORENSEN&#13;
&#13;
Norma SwAN S01&#13;
&#13;
Luve rne&#13;
&#13;
Downe rs Grove, I ll.&#13;
&#13;
70&#13;
&#13;
Deestan&#13;
&#13;
T URN E R&#13;
&#13;
ST-I IRLEY T U RRENTI NE&#13;
&#13;
Bristol , Wi s.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE U RBAN&#13;
&#13;
WoRTHJE USHER&#13;
&#13;
Holstein&#13;
&#13;
Rowan&#13;
&#13;
CORNELI U S&#13;
&#13;
vANDE R B ROCK&#13;
&#13;
R ock Valley&#13;
&#13;
Glenice Vander&#13;
&#13;
Sa nborn&#13;
&#13;
Velde&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMEN&#13;
MARGARET Vik&#13;
&#13;
DONNA VOGT&#13;
&#13;
Draper, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen Frolic&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
RUTH WAGNER&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE WALTON&#13;
&#13;
Lake Delton, Wi s.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS WARD&#13;
&#13;
MARTLYN WEST&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
&#13;
Evanston, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
BETTY WHARTON&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA W rLLJAMS&#13;
&#13;
Woodbin e&#13;
&#13;
Elmwood Park, Il l.&#13;
&#13;
} AMES WlNTER&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET YOUNGSTROM&#13;
&#13;
S torm Lake&#13;
&#13;
72&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT Wooster&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton&#13;
&#13;
}ACQUELlNE Zeissler&#13;
&#13;
Chicago Tll .&#13;
&#13;
73&#13;
&#13;
��Freshman--Sophomore Day&#13;
We love the traditions a school&#13;
in time gathers . These traditions&#13;
mingled with today's Activities&#13;
make college life something we&#13;
won't soon forget.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
�Assembiy at Bass Field&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen Initiation&#13;
&#13;
Miss Gayle Jean Hofstad received a scholarship to Morningsidt&#13;
College and entered as a freshman the second semester. After her&#13;
thrilling adventure to Hollywood, Gayle, now as a dorm coed, anticipates her college career.&#13;
&#13;
78&#13;
&#13;
�Queen,&#13;
Escort,&#13;
&#13;
KATHEH!NE ROADMAN&#13;
Richard&#13;
&#13;
McLAUGllLLN&#13;
&#13;
Dance at the Tomba Ballroom&#13;
Attendant, C ONNIE Havighurst&#13;
Escort, Harold&#13;
Minor&#13;
&#13;
Attendant, Barbara&#13;
Escort, REGINALD&#13;
&#13;
Schmidt&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
The Coronation&#13;
&#13;
Regal Party at the Alumni Dinner&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
�Marching Band on Parade&#13;
&#13;
Barbecue on Bass Field&#13;
&#13;
/Pinning Tau Delt Float&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up, the Con Float&#13;
&#13;
83&#13;
&#13;
�A memorable occasion highlighted by Mrs. Charles B . Hoeven's address.&#13;
&#13;
84&#13;
&#13;
85&#13;
&#13;
�Students dance to the music of Joe Sanders and his Or chestra at the Christmas B all at the Tomba Ballroom.&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
�Th e R eigning M onarchs,&#13;
&#13;
. A Birdseye View of the Colorful Concessions&#13;
&#13;
VAN&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Katie&#13;
&#13;
�Miss Dorothy Floyd was&#13;
chosen as Daisy Mae at&#13;
the Sadie Hawkins Day&#13;
Dance. The dance was held&#13;
in the gym in typical rustic setting with corn and&#13;
other farm products as&#13;
decoration s. Other Dog·&#13;
patch roles chosen were:&#13;
Vic Menefee as th e official&#13;
Li'l Abner, Ray Meyer as&#13;
Pappy Yokum, and to&#13;
Drury as Mammy Yokum.&#13;
&#13;
Myrl Geake and Bill An·&#13;
nand were chosen the mo st&#13;
typical couple. Tom Ward&#13;
receiv e d recognition as&#13;
having the longest beard&#13;
( fu II y one· fourth inch)&#13;
and Carol Davis as having&#13;
the longest pigtail. Judges&#13;
for the event were Mr.&#13;
Bradford, Mrs. Winston,&#13;
and Miss Maxwell, all&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
&#13;
�Business Administration Students at W ork in Accounting Lab.&#13;
&#13;
Microscopic Study in Biology Lab.&#13;
&#13;
Study in th e Library on Second Floor&#13;
&#13;
92&#13;
&#13;
93&#13;
&#13;
�Students in Beginning T ypewriting Study the Proper Typing Technique s&#13;
&#13;
Study in the Library on First Floor&#13;
&#13;
94&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
�Freshman Initiation Days&#13;
&#13;
Fast game of Ping Pong in Student Union&#13;
&#13;
Across the campus to chapel at Grace Church&#13;
&#13;
Drive in Front of th e Gym&#13;
&#13;
Girls Dorm as viewed Jrom the air&#13;
&#13;
��Men's Athletics&#13;
The "Men of the M" truly&#13;
made an envious record this year.&#13;
It was "15 rahs for the team"&#13;
throughout the entire year.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The Men's Athletic Department is headed&#13;
by Leslie H. "Les" Davis, football and baseball coach, who is finishing his first year of&#13;
coaching at Morningside. Before coming to&#13;
Morningside, the Maroon mentor coached&#13;
football at Sioux City East for 19 years where&#13;
his teams averaged seven wins against two&#13;
losses each season. "Les" compiled a very&#13;
commendable record during his four years&#13;
at Morningside as a student. He earned four&#13;
letters in football and four in baseball; he&#13;
captained the diamond squad in 1923, the&#13;
last year the sport was played at Morningside&#13;
on an inter-collegiate basis before it was&#13;
revived by "Les" this year. A congenial person, Les is well liked at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside in 1939, when he was an all·&#13;
conference end, "Buck" coached two years&#13;
at Sergeant Bluff high school. To his credit&#13;
was a basketball squad going to the state&#13;
tournament and a second team winning the&#13;
county and runner-up in the sectional meet.&#13;
During the war he served as an air-sea rescue&#13;
operations officer in the Navy.&#13;
Charles "Chuck" Obye finished his first&#13;
year on the Maroon coaching staff as he.ad of&#13;
the football and basketball B squads, and&#13;
the college track team. "Chuck" graduated&#13;
from Morningside in 1946 after serving three&#13;
years in the Army Air Corps. While at&#13;
Morningside he earned two letters in football, three letters in basketball, and one letter&#13;
in track; in 1942 "Chuck" was all-conference&#13;
fullback.&#13;
&#13;
Albert W. "Buck" Buckingham is assistant&#13;
athletic director, football line coach and&#13;
head basketball coach. After graduating from&#13;
&#13;
101&#13;
&#13;
�FOOTBALL&#13;
HARRI NGTON&#13;
HALEY&#13;
HOEFER&#13;
&#13;
The Season's Record&#13;
In the season's opener against Nebraska Wesleyan, Coach Les Davis fielded an all-veteran&#13;
eleven that looked like they would be hard to&#13;
beat, but the Nebraskans were vastly underrated&#13;
and the first post-war football team at Morningside came out on the short end of a 13 to 6&#13;
score. The Maroons outdowned the visitors 12&#13;
to 5 and completed 11 of their 16 attempted&#13;
passes for a total of 115 yards ... not bad for&#13;
a losing team.&#13;
Morningside's second defeat of the season&#13;
came when the team traveled to Salina, Kansas,&#13;
only to be. edged by Kansas Wesleyan 9 to 7&#13;
in a close contest. A third quarter safety provided the winning margin, when Callahan fumbled a high pass from center and was tackled&#13;
&#13;
in the end zone. The Maroon running attack&#13;
was balked by the big Kansan line which held&#13;
the Sioux Cityans to 27 yards but Morningside&#13;
gained a total of 182 via the aerial route.&#13;
&#13;
In their first conference football game since&#13;
1942, the Maroons lost their third straight game,&#13;
bowing to the superior Bisons of North Dakota&#13;
State at Fargo, 42 to 7. The Maroon runnin g&#13;
attack again bogged down because of a rainsoaked field , but the whole story in a nutshell&#13;
is that North Dakota just ran and blocked harder&#13;
than Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
were really out to win this one. They put it to&#13;
the Vikings with Menefee, Peterson and HaenAer&#13;
blocking four of Augustana's punts. The passing&#13;
by Callahan and Newman was especially fine.&#13;
Both touchdowns were the results of passes when&#13;
Newman flipped Callahan a short button hook&#13;
pass that caught the hosts flat-footed and a&#13;
long pass from Callahan to Engle. Team defense&#13;
was superb, with outstanding performances&#13;
turned in b y tackles Peterson and Wynkoop.&#13;
The stage was set, the weather was perfect,&#13;
the fans were eager, the spirit was at its zenith.&#13;
In fact, everything was present that makes for&#13;
a good homecoming game, except the score&#13;
Morningside came out on the short end of a&#13;
6 to O score.. The Warriors of the Sioux outdowned and outplayed the Coyotes, except for&#13;
one sustained drive by South Dakota U. which&#13;
&#13;
cul minated in a touchdown . Call ahan pl ayed his&#13;
heart out and turned in a better than a verage&#13;
perfo rmance. HaenAer was in on al most ever y&#13;
tackle and Menefee played stellatel y at the end&#13;
p osition.&#13;
Morningside suffered its fifth defeat of the&#13;
season and third confe.rence setback to powerful&#13;
Iowa State Teachers here at the Public School&#13;
stadium. Maroon fans caught a glimpse of some&#13;
fancy running when Dave Williams, fo rmer&#13;
all-state halfback from Ottumwa, put on a dazz.&#13;
ling one-man show. Our forward line looked&#13;
exceptionally good during the first half. The.y&#13;
charged hard and completely stopped the Tutor's&#13;
running attack but the second half was al together&#13;
different with the T eachers running up a 38 to O&#13;
score.&#13;
&#13;
The Maroons looked like a rejuvenated team&#13;
in their second conference ti] t at Sioux Falls&#13;
when they spoiled Augustana's homecoming by&#13;
defeating the Vikings, 13 to 0. Les Davis' boys&#13;
&#13;
PETERSON&#13;
TIAENFLER&#13;
MENEFEE&#13;
&#13;
103&#13;
&#13;
�l{A S11U SS EN&#13;
STYCZYNS KI&#13;
&#13;
GENE ASPREY- Returning veteran who earned his second letter&#13;
in football. His be.autiful 60 yard run against N.D.U. will&#13;
long be remembered. A fine quarterback.&#13;
PAUL ENGLE-Freshman veteran who developed fast.&#13;
defensive quarterback on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
Best&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES CALLAHAN- Connie lived up to his reputation and&#13;
his all-around playing ability was rewarded by being selecteJ&#13;
as halfback on the North Central All-Conference team. His running, kicking, and passing were responsible for much of the&#13;
team's success. Returned veteran- first year in college competition.&#13;
PAT HALEY- A lot of real football ability in a small package.&#13;
His speed and determination inspired the team. Pat is a freshman and a Navy veteran.&#13;
STANLEY NEWMAN- Ran from the fullback position with&#13;
great speed and hard hitting ability. Stan's first year at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps one of the most exciting football games ever played&#13;
in Sioux City was the Morningside-North Dakota U. game. The&#13;
Maroons scored an upset by defeating the Nodaks 41 to 39. With&#13;
20 seconds left to go in the game, Callahan, ace Maroon halfback,&#13;
plunged over from the two yard line, giving Morningside the&#13;
needed points to win the game. From the opening minutes it&#13;
was a thrill-packed game, marked by sensational runs and beautiful passing. Morningside matched North Dakota touchdown for&#13;
touchdown throughout the game. During the game a total of&#13;
twelve touchdowns were scored by both teams and the lead&#13;
changed hands the same number of times. The best play of the&#13;
game took place in the fourth quarter when Callahan completed&#13;
a flat pass to Asprey on the Sioux 40, the quarterback twisted,&#13;
squirmed and reeled his way through three North Dakota tacklers&#13;
to go all the way for a touchdown.&#13;
&#13;
BILL COLLOPY- Bill was bothered a good share of the season&#13;
because of an ankle injury. One of the best broken field runners on the team. Freshman halfback and returned veteran.&#13;
BOB WOOSTER- Freshman fullback who proved time and agair,&#13;
that his straight ahead plunging was hard to stop .&#13;
ALEX PELELO- Returned G.I. who was really tough on defense&#13;
and discouraged plays over his guard position.&#13;
RALPH WIOKSTROM- "Wick" was the fastest man on the&#13;
squad. A Freshman center, who started in the majority of&#13;
games, he specialized in hard and clean tackles. Navy veteran.&#13;
end who got a late start but came along&#13;
VIC Menefee- big&#13;
fast. Pass catching was outstanding in the S.D.U. game. Good&#13;
all-around player. Navy veteran.&#13;
JULIUS SHKURENSKY- "Butch" captained the 1946 squad&#13;
and as a returning G.I. earned his second "M." A conscientious and fine defensive end. Specialized in kickoffs and point&#13;
after touchdown.&#13;
&#13;
In their last conference game of the season the Maroons played&#13;
a O to O deadlock with South Dakota State at Brookings. The&#13;
highly touted running attack of the Jackrabbits was completely&#13;
stopped by the. aggressive forward wall of the Maroons. Several&#13;
times during the game Morningside threatened to score, but the&#13;
South Dakota line held and the Maroons failed to hit pay dirt.&#13;
Haley turned in a nice running performance while. Gregorvich,&#13;
Wickstrom, Wynkoop, Peterson and Callahan played the entire&#13;
game which was played under snowy conditions.&#13;
&#13;
WICK STROM&#13;
ASPREY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside played host to a rangy Dakota Wesleyan team&#13;
in the final game of the season, defeating the Dakotans 32 to 23&#13;
in an afternoon game. The 1946 season was not too successful&#13;
as far as wins and losses are concerned, but after a slow start the&#13;
team improved and a lot of good material for next season was&#13;
uncovered. Morningside ended the season in fifth place in the&#13;
North Central conference.&#13;
&#13;
NEWMAN&#13;
PRESTON&#13;
BLAIR&#13;
&#13;
104&#13;
&#13;
105&#13;
&#13;
STOVER&#13;
CALLAHAN&#13;
G REGORVICH&#13;
&#13;
�HOWARD PETERSON- A 235 lb. tackle whose speed for such a big player was&#13;
outstanding. Was always one of the first men down the field on punts and enjoyed&#13;
blocking opponents' kicks. " Big Pete" was one of Morningsiae's three All-Conterence selections and earned his second letter after serving in the Marine Corps.&#13;
&#13;
ROY HAENFLER- All-Conference tackle whose outstanding ability&#13;
was backing up the line on defense. A former G.I. and two year&#13;
letterman, Ro y was a reason for the improvement of the team.&#13;
BOB GREGORVICH- Freshman guard who is an excellent blocker&#13;
and really tough on defense. Bob continually broke through the&#13;
opponent's line to break up plays. Veteran.&#13;
&#13;
FORREST WYNKOOP-A big, rugged tackle who could be depended upon in every&#13;
play. Never call ed time out and was never hurt.&#13;
&#13;
BOB HOEFER- Released from the Army in time to show his aggressiveness on the Maroon line. Rattled the opposition and got into&#13;
more scraps than any other man on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR BLAIR- Ever since his sophomore days in high school this little 150 lb.&#13;
reproduction of "Mighty Mouse" has been holding down a guard position. Clair&#13;
was always the hardest working man on the. field and is a fine addition to any&#13;
squad. A Navy veteran and a two year letter winner at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
BILL VERSCHOOR- Fast, aggressive lineman and one of the first&#13;
down the field on kicks. Bill's first season at Morningside.&#13;
DON PRESTON- Big, always smiling, liked to mix it in every play.&#13;
Marine returnee.&#13;
DEAN HARRINGTON-Best down the field blocker on the squad .&#13;
Was sidelined during latter part of season due to a broken arm.&#13;
Freshman G.I.&#13;
BILL KJOSE- Bill's first year at Morningside. Was a fine defensive end.&#13;
RAUN RASMUSSEN--Freshman end who turned in many notable&#13;
offensive performances. Especially outstanding in using his bas·&#13;
ketball ability to snag passes.&#13;
LEONARD STYCZYNSKI- Len hails from Schenectady, . Y. As a&#13;
Maroon fullback he developed fast and his playing ability was&#13;
notable. In the N.D.U. game he practically won the game by&#13;
kicking six points after touchdowns. Army veteran.&#13;
&#13;
S ii KUHENS KY&#13;
&#13;
KJOSE&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE STOVER- Re.turned to Morningside after seeing service&#13;
in the Arm y to win his second letter. Played a good steady game&#13;
at center.&#13;
&#13;
Verschoor&#13;
&#13;
WYNKOOP&#13;
ENGLE&#13;
COLLOPY&#13;
WOOSTEH&#13;
&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
107&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Maroons&#13;
&#13;
B Squad Football Season&#13;
The Maroon B squad under the capable direction of Chuck Obye, who assumed his coaching&#13;
duties for the first time at Morningside. last fall ,&#13;
opened their season against Sheldon J. C. in a&#13;
scoreless game played on Bass Field. Annand,&#13;
Wooster, and Fulton were the mainstays for the&#13;
Maroons.&#13;
Playing its second scoreless game of the season&#13;
against the Wayne State Teachers B squad, the&#13;
Morningside B squad outplayed the Nebraskans&#13;
but lacked the punch to score. Kowalki, Maroon&#13;
fullback, and Merriman, guard, looked good for&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
In their nextgame the B squad finally scored&#13;
but were nosed out 13 to 12 by the Wayne B team&#13;
in a return game at Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
1946&#13;
&#13;
Again the B squad lost by one point when we&#13;
traveled to Orange City and lost to Northwestern&#13;
J. C., 13 to 12. The. Maroons could have won&#13;
very easily in the last three minutes of play, had&#13;
it not been for a fumble which was recovered by&#13;
N.J.C. on the one yard line.&#13;
The Maroon B squad chalked up their first win&#13;
of the season in the. last game by defeating Sheldon&#13;
J. C. 30 to 6 in a return game at Sheldon.&#13;
Several players on the B team added materially&#13;
to the strength of the varsity squad during the season and many of the boys who saw action on Obye's&#13;
squad last fall will undoubtedly be first stringers&#13;
next fall.&#13;
&#13;
The Season's Record&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon J. C. ................ 0&#13;
Wayne 'B' .................... 0&#13;
Wayne 'B' .................... 13&#13;
Northwestern J. C....... 13&#13;
Sheldon J. C. ................ 6&#13;
&#13;
---------------- 0&#13;
---------------- 0&#13;
________________ 12&#13;
................ 12&#13;
................ 30&#13;
&#13;
LETTER WINNERS-Burt Merriman, Bob Lagle, John Sutton, Duane Taylor, Harlan Kerr, Burton Wertz,&#13;
Bob Fulton, Bill Benton, Ken Steffen, Vic Nielsen, Gene Benham, Leon Shortenhaus, Dale Harris, Bill&#13;
Annand, Roger Kowalki, James Rosauer, Jerry Stern, Cecil Rosauer, Gordon McKinstrey.&#13;
&#13;
1946 FOOTBALL SEASON&#13;
Morningside ·····----------- 6&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan ...... 13&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ------·········· 7&#13;
&#13;
Kansas Wesleyan ........ 9&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
North Dakota State ...... 32&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ................ 13&#13;
&#13;
Augustana (S. D.) ........ 0&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ---------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota U. ---------- 6&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ................ 0&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Teachers...... 38&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ................41&#13;
&#13;
North Dakota U . .......... 39&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ---------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota State ...... 0&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ________ _&#13;
_______ 32&#13;
&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan ........ 23&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
LETTERMEN&#13;
JULIUS SHKURENSKY&#13;
&#13;
DOB GREGORV ICH&#13;
&#13;
GENE ASPREY&#13;
&#13;
VIC MENEFEE&#13;
&#13;
DILL LINDGREN&#13;
&#13;
LEN STYCZYNSKI&#13;
&#13;
DOB WOOSTER&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
RALPH WICKSTROM&#13;
&#13;
STAN NEWMAN&#13;
&#13;
DILL KJOSE&#13;
RAUN RASMUSSEN&#13;
&#13;
PAUL ENGLE&#13;
&#13;
FORREST WYNKOOP&#13;
&#13;
GENE STOVER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES CALLAHAN&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR BLAIR&#13;
&#13;
DEAN HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
PAT HALEY&#13;
&#13;
DON PRESTON&#13;
&#13;
ROY HAENFLER&#13;
&#13;
BILL COLLOPY&#13;
&#13;
DILL VERSCHOOR&#13;
&#13;
ALEX PELELO&#13;
&#13;
BOB HOEFER&#13;
&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
109&#13;
&#13;
�millio11 , and sweet reven ge was ours in a hard-fou ght&#13;
&#13;
53 lo 48 victory, which put us in the No. 1 spot in&#13;
the conference. standings. \Ve lost our second conference game to the Jackrabbits in a rough 59 to 53&#13;
&#13;
The Season&#13;
&#13;
battle at Brookings.&#13;
Rebounding from the S.D.S. setback, the fightin g&#13;
&#13;
The Maroon cagers opened the 1946&#13;
47 season with four straight wins, displaying a fire-wagon brand of ball that&#13;
tabbed them as favorites to win the&#13;
North Central conference. Offensively&#13;
the team looked extremely good .&#13;
&#13;
Maroons came through to edge by Rube Hoy's kids&#13;
&#13;
In the next game Coach Buckingham's&#13;
boys ran up against the strong Creighton U. Bluejays and suffered their first&#13;
defeat of the season at Omaha, losing&#13;
by a scant three points. On New Year's&#13;
day the favore.d Maroons lost number&#13;
two to Montana State.&#13;
&#13;
trounced the leaders 63 to 4,l at Le Mars in a non-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside opened its conference&#13;
season with four straight wins over&#13;
N.D.U., N.D.S. (twice), and Augustana.&#13;
The trip to North Dakota was the first&#13;
time in the history of the coll ege that&#13;
both North Dakota schools were beaten&#13;
on their home floors. In these first four&#13;
conference games the Maroons scored&#13;
impressive victories and were picked by&#13;
other conference schoo ls to repeat as the conference champs. (Morningside won the unofficial North&#13;
Centra l conference basketball crown last season .) In between conference games the Maroons racked&#13;
up wins No. 8 and 9 over Buena Vista and a tall. rangy Dakota Wesleyan outfit.&#13;
Morningside lost its first conference game to an under-rated Iowa State. Teachers five at Cedar&#13;
Falls. The Maroons came back strong in their next two contests. knocking off Wartburg Co ll ege and&#13;
Tulsa University in an inter-sectional contest. Next came our arch rivals, the Coyotes from Ver-&#13;
&#13;
by a scant point in a thriller at Vermillion. The. next&#13;
game was a rather humiliating setback because the&#13;
Maroons were currently leading the N.C. conference&#13;
and the previously beaten Western Union quintet&#13;
conference tilt. The Maroons ran over Omaha U. for&#13;
their fifteenth win of the season.&#13;
The most important game of the season&#13;
took place in Sioux Falls. A win over&#13;
Augustana would give us the 1946-47 conference crown. The cagers played their&#13;
hearts out that night, displaying the type&#13;
of ball they are capable of playing and&#13;
their efforts were well rewarded when they&#13;
brought the first conference championship&#13;
back to Morningside since 1938.&#13;
&#13;
In the final game of the season we lost&#13;
to Dakota Wesleyan at Mitchell. Morningside chalked up 16 wins against 6 defeats&#13;
in the 1946-4,7 season , scoring a total of&#13;
&#13;
1259 points to their opponents 1112. The&#13;
scoring Maroons averaged 57.22&#13;
&#13;
high&#13;
&#13;
points per game.&#13;
&#13;
�BOB HELD- Although he still has a year left at&#13;
Morningside, Bob has completed his basketball&#13;
competition on the Maroon maples. Probably&#13;
no player in Morningside's basketball history&#13;
has established such a fine record. "Smorg" is&#13;
a three letter winner, was selected twice on AllConference teams, was leading scorer in the&#13;
North Central conference in 1942-43, was the&#13;
team's second high scorer and fourth in the&#13;
conference in 1946-47. He is an outstanding shot&#13;
and a fine defensive player.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GALE STEVENS- Gale is also a three letter man&#13;
and was selected as center on the current AllConference team. "Rookie" was the team's leading scorer and third highest in the conference.&#13;
Perhaps the best defensive man on the squad,&#13;
he is an uncanny basketmaker under pressure&#13;
and is an all-around position player.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
JACK LARSON-,The third member of the 1946-47&#13;
championship Maroon squad to make All-Conference selection is Morningside's rangy, aggressive guard, Jack Larson. This was Jack's first&#13;
and last year at Morningside but he proved his&#13;
ability in every game. The coolest headed player on the team, Jack continually broke up plays&#13;
and worried the opposing coach by holding down&#13;
his outstanding player.&#13;
&#13;
LANGSTRAAT&#13;
&#13;
BILL BRIGGS-This was Bill's second year in a&#13;
Maroon uniform. Known as the brain of the&#13;
squad, he is the team's most aggressive member and can always be counted on to come&#13;
through when needed. Received a broken ankle&#13;
in the important S.D.U. game and was sidelined&#13;
&#13;
for the remainder of the season. Always beat&#13;
opposing defensive man in more ways than one.&#13;
NORM MATHERS-A good rebound man, aggres-sive, and always a good competitor. This is&#13;
Norm's last year at Morningside. He is a two&#13;
letter winner. ·&#13;
DONALD RHODES-01' Pappy Rhodes, seems&#13;
like he's been playing basketball at Morningside for years. (He has too.) "Dusty" got off&#13;
to a slow start but found his place and came&#13;
through in good style. S.D.U. game was his&#13;
best- ask his friend, Rube Hoy. A two year&#13;
man.&#13;
CLAYTON BRISTOW - Freshman center who&#13;
really found a place in the heart of every loyal&#13;
Maroon fan. Turned the tide in the final minute&#13;
of play in the all important S.D.U game at Vermillion and came through in the pinches in&#13;
other games. An outstanding prospect who has&#13;
a bright future ahead of him.&#13;
HENRY LANGSTRAAT-First year on the Maroon&#13;
squad. Good shot from the floor and shows&#13;
much promise as a forward or center in '48.&#13;
BASIL BROCK- A freshman guard who failed to&#13;
earn a major letter. Came up from the B squad&#13;
mid-way in the season. Will undoubtedly be a&#13;
starter next season.&#13;
JOHN WILLIAMS-Was the first man moved up&#13;
from the B team. Johnnie didn't earn a letter&#13;
this season but keep your eye on him next season.&#13;
&#13;
DIIOCK&#13;
RHODES&#13;
BRISTOW&#13;
&#13;
�North Central Cha1npions&#13;
&#13;
B Squad Basketball Record&#13;
Morningside B ........ 49&#13;
&#13;
Burnett Motor Co ..... 32&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ........ 42&#13;
&#13;
ebraska B ............ 56&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 61&#13;
&#13;
Western Union B. ... 36&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 48&#13;
&#13;
Emmetsburg J. C..... 38&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........44&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista B........42&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ....... .40&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska B ............ 66&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 46&#13;
&#13;
Omaha B. ................. 31&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 31&#13;
&#13;
Sou th Dakota B...... 19&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 47&#13;
&#13;
. B. T ..................... 37&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gsid e B ........43&#13;
&#13;
Creighton B ............40&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 37&#13;
&#13;
Creighton B ............ 32&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ........ 35&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota B. ..... 52&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 68&#13;
&#13;
Sportsman's ...........48&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 37&#13;
&#13;
Western Union B. ... 39&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 47&#13;
&#13;
Augustana B. ........... 36&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ........ 52&#13;
&#13;
Omaha B ................ 51&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........46&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista B. ....... 29&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
LETTER WJN NERS&#13;
&#13;
RAUN Rasmussen&#13;
&#13;
JOII N WAN S INK&#13;
&#13;
WALTER JIILL&#13;
&#13;
FORREST Mcelmurray&#13;
&#13;
JERRY ST ERN&#13;
&#13;
BA S IL DROCK&#13;
&#13;
BILL CO LLOP Y&#13;
&#13;
8013 FULTON&#13;
&#13;
JOH N W ILLIAM S&#13;
&#13;
DON DUNN&#13;
&#13;
DON Preston&#13;
&#13;
Seated : H e ld, Williams Math e rs, Broc k , Saltwc l i.&#13;
Standing : Coach B uc kin g ham , Stevens, Larson, Briggs&#13;
&#13;
Bri stow, Lan gs tra a t, Coach Ob yc.&#13;
&#13;
THE SEASON RECORD&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
114&#13;
&#13;
............ 81&#13;
............ 60&#13;
............ 65&#13;
............54&#13;
............ 43&#13;
............ 54&#13;
............ 46&#13;
............ 66&#13;
............ 67&#13;
............ 57&#13;
............ 53&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Western Union ........ 65&#13;
Buena Vista ............41&#13;
Omaha .................... 31&#13;
St. Olaf .................... 32&#13;
Creighton ............... .4,6&#13;
Montana State ..........62&#13;
North Dakota .......... 42&#13;
No. Dak. State ..........48&#13;
Augustana ................ 60&#13;
Buena Vista .............. 47&#13;
Dak. Wesleyan ........ 42&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
............ 58&#13;
............42&#13;
............ 68&#13;
............ 53&#13;
............ 4,9&#13;
............ 53&#13;
............ 59&#13;
............ 4,1&#13;
............ 68&#13;
............ 59&#13;
............ 63&#13;
&#13;
o. Dak. State .......... 47&#13;
Ia. State Teachers... .4,6&#13;
Wartburg ................ 55&#13;
So. Dakota ............. 48&#13;
Tulsa ...................... 44&#13;
So. Dak. State .......... 59&#13;
So. Dakota .............. 58&#13;
Western Union ........ 63&#13;
Omaha ...................... 59&#13;
Augustana ................ 50&#13;
Dak. Wesleyan ........ 67&#13;
&#13;
�Spring Sports&#13;
Spring sports activities at Morningside in 194 7 consisted of baseball, golf, and tennis.&#13;
The Morningside athletic department went to great expense to revive baseball, which has not been&#13;
a major sport at Morningside since 1923. Athletic Director Les Davis took over coaching duties of&#13;
the newly formed Maroon baseball club.&#13;
Some forty aspirants reported for the initial workouts which were held daily in the gym, but with&#13;
the advent of warmer weather the squad moved out-of-doors where they practiced on a newly constructed diamond on Bass Field.&#13;
Members of the 1947 baseball team were Bob Held, catcher; Donald Protexter, catcher; Gale Stevens, first base; Spero Siganos, first base; Charles Johnson, second base; Connie Callahan, second&#13;
base; Laverne Luther, third base; Len Styczynski, third base; Bill Collopy, shortstop; Dick Bornholdt, fielder; Howard Harmon, fielder; Basil Brock, fielder; Bill Enockson, pitcher; Keith Erps,&#13;
pitcher; Ed Sokolowski, pitcher.&#13;
BASEBALL SCHEDULE 1947&#13;
Western Union&#13;
Here&#13;
Buena Vista&#13;
There&#13;
Creighton University&#13;
There&#13;
South Dakota State&#13;
There&#13;
South Dakota State&#13;
Here&#13;
Western Union -----·-···--·--·--There&#13;
Western Union&#13;
There&#13;
Omaha University&#13;
Here&#13;
Creighton University&#13;
Here&#13;
Buena Vista&#13;
Here&#13;
South Dakota U,&#13;
Here&#13;
South Dakota U.&#13;
There&#13;
Western Union&#13;
Here&#13;
Omaha University&#13;
There&#13;
&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
row&#13;
Ro w&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
A sprey, Newman, H oe fer, H e ld , Me ne fee .&#13;
Mut chl er, Pres to n, Woos ter, Styczynskic, Shkurcnsky, P e te rso n.&#13;
Hae nfl cr, Haley, Callahan, Kjo se, Collopy. Dlair.&#13;
Coach Dav is, Dri stow , Strait, Bri ggs , Coach Bu ckin gham,&#13;
&#13;
Six tennis and golf matches were scheduled with the Maroons meeting Creighton U. and Omaha&#13;
U. at Omaha and Augustana at Sioux Falls. The three schools traveled to Sioux City for return&#13;
matches.&#13;
The golf team was composed of Don Shelton, Don Molden , Don Fitzgerald, Frank Du ggan, Fred&#13;
Coury, and Bob Bergquist.&#13;
Members of the tennis team included Len Foster, Scotty Reynolds, Jack Larson , and Bill Lewis.&#13;
&#13;
M Club&#13;
&#13;
Due to a pri ntin g deadline resu lts of spring spo rts ac tiviti es can not be given.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President... .............................................---·······-···-····-Gene A sprey&#13;
Vi ce President.. .. ·-········································-··.] ulius Shkurensky&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer..... ----···················-·········-······· William Briggs&#13;
&#13;
The M Club is the organization of all major athletic award winners at Morningside College. The club annually take.s charge of Freshman-Sophomore ·Day, Sadie Hawkins Day, and concessions at basketball games. The club was revived last fall after three years of inactivity.&#13;
Former members returning last fall were Gene Asprey, Clair Blair,&#13;
William Briggs, Loren Clark, Joe De Maine, Thomas green, Robert&#13;
Held, Roy Haenfler, Wilfred Kaufman, Norman Mutchler, Norman&#13;
Mathers, Lawrence Freeman, Julius Shkurensky, Gale Stevens, Eugene&#13;
Stover, Howard Peterson, Donald Rhodes, John W ansink, Paul Zeman.&#13;
&#13;
116&#13;
&#13;
117&#13;
&#13;
�Women's Athletics&#13;
&#13;
Everything from modern dance&#13;
to soccer-that's what the W om en's Athletic department offered.&#13;
in all respects it was indeed a&#13;
success&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
W.A.A. Homecoming G FLOAT&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Physical Education department is under&#13;
the direction of Dr. Florence Cole and Miss Bernice&#13;
Wolfson. The department was improved this year by&#13;
the addiLion of an assistant to the department head. D r.&#13;
Cole, a graduate of Grinnell, Columbia, and&#13;
&#13;
ew York&#13;
&#13;
University, heads the departmen t and is assisted by Miss&#13;
Wolfson , a graduate of the University of Michigan and&#13;
ew York University.&#13;
&#13;
119&#13;
&#13;
�Physical Education Majors Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President.. ............................................................ M uriel Lambert&#13;
Secretary........................... ·······················-··-Charlotte Kingsbury&#13;
Treasurer.................. ·-···················-·······················Lyla R eh nblom&#13;
Adviser ....................... .....................................Dr. Florence Cole&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of the Physical Education Majors Club is threefold: first, to uphold&#13;
the standards of the National Physical Education Organization; second, to organize&#13;
and supervise recre.ational activities on the campus; and third, to be of service to&#13;
our own community.&#13;
Our main project throughout the past year has been a recreation program given&#13;
twice a month at the Good Shepherd's Home, where each physical education maj or&#13;
has had an opportunity to apply her skills and talents.&#13;
By sponsoring a very successful Sports Dance, the club was able to purchase&#13;
maroon and white jackets for all junior and senior majors.&#13;
&#13;
Row 1: Johnstone, Geake, Barrett, Schultz, Pappas, Lambert.&#13;
Row 2: C. Kingsbury, D. He ld, Mutchler, K. Held , S everson, Road man.&#13;
Row 3: Zeman , Rehnblom, Peterson, Irwin, L. Williams, H. Baker, Dengler, Smalley, Osborn, Vanos, Olson, Nelson.&#13;
&#13;
W omen,s Athletic Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President............................................................Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Vice President................................................·-··--·.Darlene Held&#13;
Secretary........................................................... ...Katherine Held&#13;
Treasurer..............·-·············································Donna Severson&#13;
SPORTS CHAIRMEN&#13;
&#13;
Volleyball.......................- .....................................Katherine Held&#13;
Basketball...........................................................- ---Ruby Smalley&#13;
Softball........................... - ..·-······························-···Bonnie Schultz&#13;
Ping Pong.......- --·······················································Irma Dengler&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Athletic Association, which is affiliated with the Athletic Federation of College&#13;
Women, is an organization including girls who have completed one season of ten hours in any of&#13;
the following sports: bowling, badminton, tennis , archery, hockey, basketball, volleyball, softball,&#13;
dance, and cheer-leading.&#13;
Dr. Cole is the adviser of the organization. Activities which the W.A.A. sponsored during the&#13;
year were tournaments in badminton, volleyball, basketball, ping-pong, softball; the spring festival,&#13;
the Yale-Harvard game, overnight hikes, and picnics. The Women's sports program is controlled by&#13;
the W.A.A. board which consists of the director of physical education for women and the officers of&#13;
W.A.A.&#13;
The highest award W.A.A. confers upon a girl is the presentation of a sweater. Many requirements are necessary for this award, and it is a symbol of good sportsmanship, scholarship, and leadership. The sweater winners this year are Carolyn Mutchler, Katie Roadman, Darlene Held, Katie&#13;
Held, and Donna Severson.&#13;
&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
Row 1 : I ohnstone, Geake, Barrett, Schultz, M. Wi ll iams.&#13;
Row 2: C. Kingsbury, D. Held, Mutchler, Lambert, K. Hel d, Pappas,&#13;
Row 3: Mul ford , Olson, Black, Rehnblom, Irwin , D. Baker, Nelson&#13;
&#13;
121&#13;
&#13;
�Yale--Harvard&#13;
Game&#13;
The annual Yale-Harvard&#13;
g i r I s basketball game was&#13;
played April 22 before a&#13;
group of interested spectators. The Harvard team was&#13;
the victor over Yale in a&#13;
close, well-fought game. The&#13;
final score was 34,-33. In&#13;
the event that it has been&#13;
customary to create interest&#13;
by having men coaches, Bill&#13;
Briggs and Jack Larson acted as coaches for Yale and&#13;
Harvard respectively.&#13;
&#13;
YALE&#13;
Seated: F'id erlick,&#13;
Wa lker.&#13;
Standing Larsen.&#13;
absent : Schu ltz.&#13;
&#13;
Anderson , \Vil Iiam s,&#13;
&#13;
e l son, Barre tt.&#13;
&#13;
Ro w 1: Lamson, Johnson, Walton, Barre tt.&#13;
row 2: H.iebhofT, Taylor, Johnstone, Severson.&#13;
&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
Our eight peppy cheerleaders were elected early in the fall&#13;
by the student body to lead the college yells throughout the&#13;
football and basketball season. This group which deserves so&#13;
much credit for its pep and enthusiasm is composed of the&#13;
foll owing Morningsiders:&#13;
&#13;
HARVARD&#13;
Seated: Corrie, Brand , P a ppas, K. H e ld.&#13;
Sta nding: Sherk, Brun son, Dawson, Smal-&#13;
&#13;
KAYE JOHNSTONE,&#13;
&#13;
ley.&#13;
Absent: Ceake.&#13;
&#13;
DoN A SEVERSON,&#13;
&#13;
senio,&#13;
&#13;
sophomore&#13;
&#13;
Soldier, Iowa&#13;
DARLENE TAYLOR,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
junior&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
N BARRETT,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
JonN Riebhoff,&#13;
&#13;
junior&#13;
&#13;
MARGE WA LTON,&#13;
&#13;
Burt, Iowa&#13;
Margaret&#13;
&#13;
freshman&#13;
&#13;
sioux City&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON,&#13;
&#13;
pat&#13;
&#13;
sophomore&#13;
&#13;
lamson,&#13;
&#13;
freshman&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
122&#13;
&#13;
sophomore&#13;
&#13;
Si oux City&#13;
&#13;
123 ·&#13;
&#13;
�May queen&#13;
&#13;
Spring Dance Festival&#13;
The Spring Dance Festival was presented May 9, 1947, by the&#13;
Women's Physical Education Department in collaboration with the&#13;
Conservatoryof Music.&#13;
The prologue a municipal airport scene, and the overture of&#13;
European folk tunes introduced the dances from Russia, Bohemia,&#13;
England, Sweden, Poland, and Palestine. The double string quartet&#13;
introduced the American dances by playing a medley of Stephen Foster's melodies.&#13;
The highlights of the American dances were the negro spirituals,&#13;
"little David," "It's Me," and "I Got Shoes," which were danced by&#13;
the modern dance club and accompanied by a chorus from the conservatory.&#13;
The modern dance class also demonstrated techniques of modern&#13;
dance and short studies created by the group representing "Greeting,''&#13;
"Worship," and "Conflict." Two members of the class developed a&#13;
study based on the movement of Al Jolson.&#13;
Perhaps the most delightful group of dances were the modern interpretations of two American folk songs, "I Know Where I'm Going,''&#13;
and "Tam Pierce," danced by Miss Wolfson and the modern dance&#13;
club. A fast and vigorous group of western square dances ended the&#13;
program.&#13;
At the municipal airport once more, the announcement was made&#13;
of the arrival of the Sioux City sue Special carrying the May Queen&#13;
and her attendants, Marjorie walton and Joby Tillotson. Amid the&#13;
applause of the audience and dancers, the flashin g of the photographers, Dean Tweito crowned Miss Dorothy Floyd, Queen of the may&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dorothy Floyd, of Clinton, Iowa, was chosen&#13;
by popular vote of the student body to reign as Queen&#13;
of the May at the annual Spring Festival presented&#13;
by the Women's Athletic department. She was attended by Miss Joby Tillotson and Miss Marjorie&#13;
Walton, both of Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
124&#13;
&#13;
125&#13;
&#13;
��We're always proud of our&#13;
"Con." And this year, as always,&#13;
it was a thrill to hear Bach and&#13;
''boogie" pouring out of the&#13;
practice room windows.&#13;
&#13;
Student Recital&#13;
No Conservatory wouid be complete without its student&#13;
recitals, and Morningside is no exception. Every We.dnesday afternoon a group of students perform for the Conservatory students and faculty. The main purpose is to&#13;
give the students experience in public performance and&#13;
to provide the opportunity for greater music appreciation. Attendance at these weekly recitals is required of&#13;
all registered Conservatory students.&#13;
&#13;
129&#13;
&#13;
�M orningside College Choir&#13;
The renown choir is back to the old standards. It cannot be said that the choir did not have the. neces-&#13;
&#13;
The M adrigal Club&#13;
&#13;
sary personnel, for it would be hard to find any that could surpass that of this year. Beside participation in&#13;
the regular Thursday chapels, the choir assisted in the presentation ot the "Me.ssiah," gave a beautiful rendition of "Elijah," and went on a ten-day tour through north-west Iowa, climaxed with a "Home Concert."&#13;
Thus it can truly be said that Mr. MacCollin has proven his ideals are possible to attain- a task well done.&#13;
SOPRA NOS-Ma rga re t Barks, Mary Lou Crase, Evelyn H a ll , H e len&#13;
Hun.l i ng. J a ni ce MacCo11in, Loi s M c Callum, J oan Meye r, Gloria P e ter son , J oan Ramsey, V e lma Rede nbaugh, Mary Jane Conrad, Ma rilyn&#13;
H ansen, Ruth Palmer , Joyce Leland, Lois Krogh , Donna Robar,&#13;
Patricia S choh eld, arlone Rader, Patricia F oulke.&#13;
&#13;
ALTOS-Beverl y Barks, elizabeth Beck man n , Mary Lou Brand, Ed il h&#13;
Fide rli ck , Lois Galsco, J a n yce Lehmbe rg, Cl arice Moo ne, Marjorie&#13;
McCrack en, Barbara S chmidt , L o rraine Thomas, Be tt y Wha rton , Darl yne S chwinde rman, Tone Prescott, Ma ry Dee M c Ewe n.&#13;
&#13;
BASSES- Bob Coleman, L yl e Cuture , Leslie Cornwe ll , J ohn Duling . Don&#13;
G oode now, R egina l d H all, Ha rold Ruth , Don Schu le r, Darwyn S n yder,&#13;
Eme ry S te wa rt , Bob Kail, Fred Ashl ey, J oh n P he lps, Ke ith Sloan,&#13;
&#13;
TENORS-Elbert bales&#13;
Bob Bower, Bruce Goodenow. l\1ilo H a ll , Raymond Wa ll ace, Don K e lsey, John Ri ehhofT, David Bye rs, Duane T ayl o r, Ra l ph Minni ch.&#13;
&#13;
This club was reorganized this year with the purpose of givin g gi rls who desired the opportunity to si ng. The Tuesday&#13;
ni ght rehearsals, with Emery Stewart at the baton, were an in spiration to all who attended. With such an organization on&#13;
the campus, one ca11not fail to find the musical enjoyment desired.&#13;
ME M B ERS&#13;
Ma rcell a P oppen , Marjorie Clapsaddle,&#13;
J a n e Anderson, Do ri s Chamber la in , Muri e l Mu il enburg, Lois S ch ra m, Glen na J ean Martz, Margo&#13;
Youngstrom, Mary Jo Driggs, Be tty Wh i tt ington, Lola Pirie, Barb ara&#13;
Bre we r, Doro thy P ie rce, Ma ry P ea rl Wil ey, Lyla Rehnblom&#13;
J oan&#13;
Bu ckwa lte r . K a thy Schwarz, Ma ry H e l en Gasser. K atie Smit h, J ayne&#13;
l\:larie Soiseth , Mrs. Dale White, Elai ne J ohnson, El eanor E vere tt , Dar·&#13;
&#13;
The Men's Glee Club&#13;
This club was reorganized this year to give the men a chance to sing. It rehearsed at the same time as did the Madrigal, and under Mr. MacCollin's direction, the glee club developed into a fine musical organization. This club was not 0 11&#13;
the roster for the year. However, the Madrigal and Men's Glee Club were often combined to form a second chorus fo r&#13;
antiphonal work with the college choir.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBER S&#13;
Fred Ashl ey&#13;
Don Ba ugous&#13;
Re ne Brown&#13;
George Brum baugh&#13;
Ca rl Carl sen&#13;
Jim Demctrolis&#13;
Ed Donkcr slout&#13;
J ac k Fowl er&#13;
Be rn a rd H e nsley&#13;
Dean K au ffman&#13;
H oward Lebowich&#13;
F rank Lieb&#13;
Marvin Lu dcns&#13;
Duane Mu ssel man&#13;
Robert Ne lson&#13;
J a mes Okey&#13;
George Pi than&#13;
W e nde ll R ensink&#13;
Wa ll ace Ro!!-C&lt;'C&#13;
Gail Royer&#13;
Jam es Sad ler&#13;
Le wis Sampson&#13;
\Vm . Sander&#13;
Harry Sm ith&#13;
Walte r S pade&#13;
Lee Strack bein&#13;
Ll oyd Chadwick&#13;
&#13;
130&#13;
&#13;
lync Schwinderma n , Vera Devaul, Margaret V ik , Jean LaFoy, Norma&#13;
Jean Mcintosh&#13;
R ub y Ceder. Elai ne E ngel b recht. Mary Fiddic k . J ean&#13;
Smith, Angel a Intravia&#13;
Karell Brodsk y, Mary Dec McEwen. El sie Mae&#13;
Larsen. Jo ne P rescott. Ina Mac I-l am . Da rl ene H urst, Au drey Laude,&#13;
Doro thy Olson M rs. \Verder. Evelyn F reeman, Dec Lillian Parke r, A my&#13;
Mattson . Ma xin e Thacker&#13;
Mae Ki essii, Doroth y \Va l tman .&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City Symphony&#13;
&#13;
Marching Band&#13;
&#13;
The symphony orchestra attained new heights thi s year ; Sioux City has awakened to, the fact th at thi s is an organization that&#13;
will be rated among the top symphonies in the nation within a few years. The concerts played 011 the concert course, and the series&#13;
of "Pop" concerts has proven that fact. Under Mr. Kucinski's capable leadership, the orchestra has demanded a nd acquired admira·&#13;
tion and respect for miles around. Morningside can be proud to be associated with such an organization.&#13;
&#13;
This year saw the return of the marching band on the campus.&#13;
nder the capable leadership of Bob Lowry, the band never failed&#13;
lo thrill the crowds at foo tball games, and added pep and enthusiasm lo the school sp irit. And who wasn't proud to see the&#13;
hand at the head of the Homecoming parade.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE MEMBERS IN THE SYMPHONY&#13;
first&#13;
VIOLINS- Hom e r Garretson. concert master&#13;
Marian Hu ghes. Lois wiese,&#13;
Fred e rick Naglestad,&#13;
Jim demetroulis,&#13;
Ja yne Mari e Soiseth.&#13;
&#13;
SECOND VIOL I S- Jack Fowl e r, Ja ck Wolf!, Mae&#13;
Kicssig. Ka thl een leckband.&#13;
V IOLAS- G l adys Logan Willi s Junker.&#13;
Cellos-Darwyn&#13;
Snyder. Barbara llre wcr.&#13;
Udega rd. John I-l ooker, Nan cy Pierson.&#13;
&#13;
FLUTES- Eunice Bru ce, Lillian Hedeen.&#13;
&#13;
Trumpet-Jack&#13;
&#13;
CLAR INET- Robert Lowr y.&#13;
&#13;
1 ROM BONE-Jay Wicke r.&#13;
&#13;
BASS CLARINET-Robert Kail.&#13;
&#13;
Kru scns lj c rna .&#13;
&#13;
LIBRARIAN'- Jim Demetroulis&#13;
&#13;
A marchin g band is only as good as its drum major and&#13;
majorettes. With Darwyn Snyder as drum major, and Geraldine&#13;
Prager, J a ucile Lon g, and Darlene Travis as majorettes, the&#13;
band upheld its fine reputa tion. And the row of buglers adde&lt;l&#13;
that fina l touch of finesse. One can truly say that Morningside&#13;
is proud of its marching band.&#13;
&#13;
llASSOON- Reginald Hall.&#13;
G loria&#13;
&#13;
French&#13;
HORNS- Loi s McCa llu m, Dal e Dunn, Elizabeth Beckmann&#13;
&#13;
OBOE- J can Smith.&#13;
&#13;
The marchin g band conta ined the same personnel as the concert band, except for the following who were in the marchinl!&#13;
band: John Duling, George P rager, Leslie Cornwell, Donovan&#13;
Schuler, Gerald P rotex ter, J ack Dyer, Karell Brodsky, Gloria&#13;
Peterson, Mary Lou Brand, Wayne W ise, Bert Kin g, Worthie&#13;
Usher, Tom Ward, Mari lyn Hansen, Robert Nelson, Jim Deme·&#13;
troulis, Maynard Minn ich, Beverly Barks, Ed Osborn, Robert&#13;
Forse, David Byers, Evelyn Hall, Hazel Dethmers.&#13;
&#13;
Travis Prager, Long Snyder&#13;
&#13;
132&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College Band&#13;
Morningside is proud of the band this year; even though the opportunity for performance came infrequently, the band , under the able direction of Dr. Garland , has shown what a true concert band is. The&#13;
band presented a formal concert in the spring, giving those who attended an ex amp le of true art.&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
FLUTE S -&#13;
&#13;
Lov ice Kin gsbury , Lillian Hedeen,&#13;
&#13;
Jany ce Lehmbe rg, Margo Youn gs trom.&#13;
&#13;
Pro tex te r.&#13;
&#13;
OBOE- J ea n Smi th.&#13;
CLARINETS- J ack Speer, Robert Kai l , Yo Shi ·&#13;
buya,&#13;
Dea n Marshal] , Way ne So renso n, Marga ret Vik, D o n Baugous, De tty Wharton, Dar-&#13;
&#13;
Pa tricia Scho-&#13;
&#13;
field , Marjori e H e ll and.&#13;
SA XOPllONES- Wil li am Sander. Jo hn Brod ee n ,&#13;
Oa rwyn Snyder, H arry Smith.&#13;
&#13;
HORN S-Lois McCa ll um,&#13;
&#13;
BA SSES-John&#13;
Bales.&#13;
&#13;
Sipma,&#13;
&#13;
Kei th&#13;
&#13;
S l oan,&#13;
&#13;
Elbert&#13;
Row 1 : Pop pe n. Mccallum&#13;
Schmidt, Soiseth.&#13;
How 2: Matt so n. J. S mith , Law , Peterso n, Sch wind e rm an.&#13;
&#13;
BA SS CLA R INET- Emery S tewa rt.&#13;
&#13;
TRUMPETS- Marvin Ludens, Jack Kru se ns tj e rna .&#13;
&#13;
BA SSOON-Reg in ald Hall.&#13;
&#13;
l ene Hurst, .Marj o rie Clapsaddle&#13;
&#13;
CO RN ETS-Frank Lieb, Roger Bu rgess, Don Al l en, Edith Fiderli ck , Ceorge Pithan, Gera ld&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth&#13;
&#13;
Bec km ann ,&#13;
&#13;
John Duling.&#13;
TROMBONES- Jay Wi cker, Don Cood e now, Aud .&#13;
rey Laud e, Shirley menage&#13;
Wa yne T ay l o r,&#13;
Ke nn e th R uby.&#13;
&#13;
STRING BASS- Les li e Cornwell.&#13;
PER CUSS ION-Da rl yne Schwi nd e rm an,&#13;
P e tt engi ll , E laine Jo hn son.&#13;
&#13;
Tympani-Lois&#13;
&#13;
Krogh&#13;
&#13;
Pau lin e&#13;
&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon&#13;
&#13;
BARITONES-Ca il Royer, D ea n Kau ffm an .&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
PresidenL. ............................................................. Lois M cCallum&#13;
Vice President .................................................... Barba ra Schmidt&#13;
J! eco rdin g secretary .................. ............................. Nadene Law&#13;
[ reasurer ............... ...................... .................... M arcella Poppen&#13;
Cor respo ndin g Secretary...................... Dar/yne Schwinderman&#13;
Hi storian ................................................................ Gloria P eterso11&#13;
Warden ................................................ ......................... J ean Smith&#13;
Chori ster....................................... ....................... Gloria P eterson&#13;
Publici ty Mana ge r... \ .................................. .Jayne Marie Soiseth&#13;
Advi se r ···-······- ···Miss Faith Woodford, Miss Lois Cramm er&#13;
&#13;
The Mornin gsid e Chapter, Phi Zeta, of Mu Phi Epsilon , national&#13;
music sorority in th e professional fi eld , recognizes in its members&#13;
scholarship , outstandin g musician ship, and friendly personalities. The&#13;
sorority became more active this year with the addition of several new&#13;
memhers.&#13;
&#13;
135&#13;
&#13;
�Con Capers&#13;
&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
1 As hl ey, Co l eman, Schule r, B augous.&#13;
2 S pade, Lieb , M innich , B a l es, K e l sey, Ludens, R oyer.&#13;
3 Speer, D uli ng, Sipma, Carey, S n yder, allen&#13;
4 wicker Bower. ruby&#13;
M. hall&#13;
D . goodenow,&#13;
kail&#13;
cornwell&#13;
5 S tewart, Lowry, Kucinski&#13;
MacCulli11 .&#13;
&#13;
B. Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Demetroulis&#13;
&#13;
Brumbaugh&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
President.. ................................................................ Patrick Carey&#13;
Vice President. .....................................................Darwyn Snyder&#13;
Secrelary.....................................................................John Duling&#13;
T reasurer........................................................................]ack S peer&#13;
Historian.....................................................................John Sipma&#13;
Warden&#13;
Don Allen&#13;
F aculty Members.............. Leo Kucinski R obert Lowry, Pau l&#13;
MacColli11, Jam es R eistrup, Hom er Garretson Charles&#13;
Garland Em ery Stewart&#13;
&#13;
Greetings from the members of Gamma Xi c hapter of Phi Mu Alpha, Sinfonia of America,&#13;
the onl y national professional fraternity on th e campus. This is our first full postwar year,&#13;
and we ha ve done well in our attempt to reestablish Sinfonia on a normal basis. Our fi rst activity of the year was the presentation of an All-Am erican Program on November 25, so de ignated&#13;
because all of the pieces presented were works of American compose.rs. In December, we and&#13;
our sister sorority, Mu Phi Epsilon, presented the Christmas assembl y, a musical paraphrase of&#13;
Dickens' "Christmas Carol." In Ma rch, eightee n pledges were initiated into our chapter.&#13;
Our big proj ect for this year has been the furnishing of our new home on the fo urth floo r&#13;
of the "Con." We are ver y proud of it, and we know that it will be long remembered by the&#13;
members who will graduate this year.&#13;
&#13;
)36&#13;
&#13;
]37&#13;
&#13;
��"To be or not to be" . . .&#13;
that's always the question. The&#13;
department carried on in its best&#13;
stage manner, considering the&#13;
iack of adequate facilities. The&#13;
production, "Murder in the Cathedral, " was truly an exceptional presentation!&#13;
&#13;
Ro w&#13;
R ow&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
]&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Lo ng, Scott, Il ooz, Burrou g hs,&#13;
S he rk , Ste rn e. Botto l fson, Jl am .&#13;
Uu ckw a lt c r, Zc iss l c r, Bruce, Schwarz&#13;
Tracy&#13;
R. Bollinger U. Bollinger&#13;
&#13;
Dawson&#13;
&#13;
barrett&#13;
&#13;
Roach&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Players&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
President. \&#13;
Max SLerne&#13;
Vice Pres ident... ............................................. Williarn B ottolfson&#13;
i&#13;
Secretary&#13;
---····-·····--Cecily Sherk&#13;
Treas urer&#13;
lna Mae Ham&#13;
&#13;
"Mornin gside Players" is a new organization on the campus under the capable&#13;
advisoryship of Professor Richard L. Flowers, head of the Department of Dramatics&#13;
and Speech. The purpose of the organization is to develop further understandin g&#13;
and skill in theatrical production and radio at Morningside.&#13;
The Players were very much handicapped throughout the entire yea r because of&#13;
the lack of a stage, but despite this difficulty the organization tackl ed a very stiff&#13;
production. This production was T. S. Eliot's poetic drama, Murder in the Cathedral.&#13;
The drama was a portrayal of the events about the death of St. Thomas A. Becket&#13;
of Canterbury.&#13;
It is the hop e of the Players to develop into an active and regular play producin g&#13;
organization next term.&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
�Murder&#13;
&#13;
T t-J&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
Cathedral&#13;
&#13;
Scenes from the production presented in Grace Church&#13;
&#13;
Th e En glish Drama, "Murder in the. Cathedral" by T. S. Eliot, was produced by Morningside Speech&#13;
students and the " Morningside Players" under the direction of Richard L. ,flowers on April 21 and 22.&#13;
The production was something new and different for a Sioux City audience, as the play is built around&#13;
the symbolic life of the 12th century. In the openin g scenes of the plaY,, a chorus of women of Canterbury&#13;
prophesy tragedy, and that prophecy is fulfilled with the murder of Archbishop Thomas A. Becket.&#13;
&#13;
cast&#13;
&#13;
OF CHARACTERS&#13;
&#13;
Archbishop Thom as A. Beck et... ... R obe rt Tracy&#13;
First T em ptor... ·-·················-···----Margaret Duttor,&#13;
Second Temptor .... ............... William Bottolfson&#13;
Third Temptor........................ ...Lloyd Schonrock&#13;
Fourth Temptor ·-··-····················--···Cecily Sherk&#13;
First Kni ght ....................... .. .. .Lloyd Schonrock&#13;
Second Kni ght... ..................... .... Rob ert Bollin ger&#13;
Third Kni ght... ................ ...............james Mo ody&#13;
fourth Kni ght...._ ............................... Roger davus&#13;
&#13;
Chorus................S hirley Booz, Barbara Henkel,&#13;
Gayle Jean Hofstad, Virginia Horst, Clarice&#13;
Lane, Jaucile Long, Beve rly Morgan, kathy&#13;
Schwarz, Madelyn Schweizer, Cecily Sherk,&#13;
Lorraine Thomas&#13;
First Priest...·-···-···-·······················Ralph Bollinger&#13;
Second Priest... ............. ----·········-···Ronald Miller&#13;
Third Priest... .....---·······························Max Sterne&#13;
Hcrald ............................................ Larry 1/7 ienstein&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
143&#13;
&#13;
�Radio&#13;
Mr. Richard L. Flowers, head of the&#13;
Speech Department, is very interested in&#13;
the radio field.&#13;
&#13;
However, owing to the&#13;
&#13;
limited facilities little. broadcasting was&#13;
done this year. The department did supervise the recording of thirteen five minute&#13;
broadcasts for the Sioux City Safety Council. Shown here are. speech students especially interested in radio work.&#13;
&#13;
S TERNE&#13;
NAGLESTAD, LEVILll&#13;
&#13;
Debate Team&#13;
The. Morningside College debate team, consisting of Marvin Levich and Frederick Naglestad,&#13;
participated in three inter-collegiate debates during the second semester of the academic ye.ar&#13;
1946-1947 The debate question was: Resolved, that labor should have a direct share in the&#13;
management of industry. On Fe.bruary 28 and March 1, they went to Lincoln, Nebraska, for&#13;
the debate and discussion conference held there. The team won decisions over the Unive.rsity of&#13;
Minnesota, Marquette University, and Nebraska Wesleyan, but they lost to Nebraska State&#13;
Teachers College and to the. University of Kansas. On March 10, 11, and 12, Morningside was&#13;
represented at the Inter-Collegiate Debate Conference at St. Paul, Minnesota. At this conference, the team won decisions over five co lieges and lost to three. The tournament winners&#13;
of Rock Island's Augustana College received their only defeat from the Morningside team.&#13;
Sixty-four colleges participate.cl, and the Morningside team netted 98 points, one of the third&#13;
highest in the tournament. At Cedar Rapids, on March 14 and 15, the team received one of&#13;
the three superior ratings awarded by the forensics association of Iowa.&#13;
Miss Cripe, instructor in the Speech department, accompanied the team on its trips and&#13;
acted as judge in the various events.&#13;
&#13;
CART ER ,&#13;
&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
nooz,&#13;
&#13;
BOTTOLFSON&#13;
&#13;
145&#13;
&#13;
��We pride ourselves in our&#13;
various clubs, sororities, fraternities, and fellowships. Each one,&#13;
in its own way, is carrying out a&#13;
fine program.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Row 1:&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
Wil liams, Nelson, Roadman, Schmidt.&#13;
&#13;
Row 2: Mutch l e r, H arding. Conrad&#13;
&#13;
Schultz. Schram.&#13;
&#13;
Agora&#13;
O FFICERS&#13;
&#13;
P resident.. ................................................. ...K atherine R oadman&#13;
F irst Vice President... ......... ---····················-----Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Second Vice President... ...................................Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Secretary.......................·-······································-K athryn Nelson&#13;
Treasurer..·-···-······- ···-·······························-···-······-Loma Williams&#13;
Senior Representative....................................M ary Jane Conrad&#13;
Junior Representati ve.................................._____ H elen Harding&#13;
___&#13;
Sophomore Representative ..................................B onnie Schultz&#13;
F resh man Representative .......... ·-···············-···········Lois Schram&#13;
&#13;
Agora had another busy season with Katie H.oadman at the helm. The first event&#13;
sponsored by the all-women's organization was the Big-Little Sister Te.a held in&#13;
the dorm; then the inspiring Leadership Banquet, with Mrs. Charles B. Hoeven,&#13;
wife of Congressman Hoeven, speaking to the guests a nd girls amid candle.light; also&#13;
the colorful carnival held in the gym with K . Held and "Van" as the reigning&#13;
monarchs. The organization presented the mirrors which were a beautiful addition&#13;
to the newly decorated Women's Lounge. Endin g the season was the successful _&#13;
traditional Mother-Daughter Banquet held at the Morningside Presbyterian Church.&#13;
&#13;
149&#13;
&#13;
�Coach Buckin gha m cha racterized the ' 46-'47 Student Coun cil well as '•not&#13;
a council, but a full hou se of re presenta tives." The 35 me mbe red Coun cil was&#13;
in kee pin g with th e 1200 membered Stude nt Body, th e la rges t of e ithe r in&#13;
Mornin gs ide's hi story. Althou gh thi s in c rease in population c rea ted ce rtain&#13;
in evitable problems for the governin g body, it also provided the opportunity&#13;
for large-scal e activiti es whi ch th e Council undertook for the yea r. The&#13;
expanded soc ial pro gram , the carryin g out of Mornin gside tradition s on a&#13;
ca mpu s predomin a ntly fre shm a n, a nd the meetin g of the uniqu e proble ms whi ch&#13;
a rose in ca mpu s life all required weekly mee tin gs of th e stude nts elected to&#13;
propa gate the democratic ve nture ol stude nt governme nt on the campu s.&#13;
Imm ediate impetu s was gi ven to a n optimisti c Council by the re port whi ch&#13;
the two Stude nt Body preside nts brought ba ck from a Midwest Stude nt&#13;
Governm ent Con vention early in the fall. The re port showed Morningside well&#13;
alon g the way to excell ent stude nt-fac ulty relation ship s, a nd e nj oy in g mu ch&#13;
grea te r freedom in student gove rnment th an most other mid-west school s.&#13;
Norm Ma thers presided ove r th e fir st se mester activiti es. Befor e th e e nd&#13;
of Se p:ember, freshman initiation was well under way, unde r the direction of&#13;
Norm Mutchle r a nd Duan e Faul. on October 11 the bi g Freshm a n-Sophomore&#13;
Day occurred, with Bill Annand and Vi c Me nefee as co-chairm e n. Alth ough&#13;
the lose rs still won' t admit it, th e sophomores were victors of th e day.&#13;
M ATII E HS&#13;
&#13;
Row l: Faul , Wic ke r, Pres to n, Min or, de Vri es, Chri stense n, Mulford&#13;
Ho w 2 : McCa llum , Sc hmi d t, Wolle&#13;
L. Jon es, Co nra d, L. W i lli ams, J ohn s tone.&#13;
Row 3: n. Willi ams, M. Kingsbury&#13;
Trosper&#13;
Madison&#13;
Hoa d ma n , Barrett&#13;
Mattson&#13;
&#13;
L. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Ann and ,&#13;
&#13;
Ne l so n.&#13;
&#13;
Student Council&#13;
REPRES EN TATIVES&#13;
&#13;
Alpha S igma&#13;
A m y M atrso n&#13;
A I pha T a u Del ta .................................... Dick Bea n&#13;
Alph a Tau Delta ................................ Don S helton&#13;
Biology Club .................................. Gordon hanson&#13;
Cheerlea ders......................................... Ann Barrel/&#13;
Cosrnopolitan ................................ H ar, iet T ros pe,&#13;
Ga mma Iota Alpha .................... .Harold Mulford&#13;
rsh kood a h ..................................Bar bara W illia111 s&#13;
Ishkoodah .................................... Mary L ou Brand&#13;
Ka pp a Chi ............................................. .] ack S pee r&#13;
Ka ppa Pi Alpha.............................. Ph yllis Doran&#13;
M Club ................................................ Cene A sprey&#13;
M .F.T.C. ............................ M ary Ellen K ingsbury&#13;
Mu Phi Epsil on ............................Lou Mccallum&#13;
Pre- En gi neers..........................H arold Muschamp&#13;
Ph ys ica l Educa tion Majors........Muriel Lambert&#13;
W.A. A.........................................Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Y.M. C. A ·-----------------· ............................ Bill Treloar&#13;
Y.M.C. A......................................... Dale Hiedeman&#13;
Y .W .C.A ................................. Velma R edenbaugh&#13;
&#13;
President .................................... Norman M at hers&#13;
Pres ide nt.. ............. ....... ..................... Lamar&#13;
Jones&#13;
Vice Pres ide nt... ..................... Ma. y Jane Con rad&#13;
Secretary-Treasuer ......................Carolyn W olle&#13;
Advise r.. ·-·······-············-----------Coach Buck ingham&#13;
A dvise r..............................................M rs. W allman&#13;
Adviser..............................................M rs. Win ton&#13;
Se ni or Class .............................. No rm an Mut chler&#13;
Senior Class .................................... Harold Min or&#13;
Juni or Class ........................................ Duane Faul&#13;
Juni or class ...................................... Katie Ne ls on&#13;
Sop homore Class ................................ Bill Annand&#13;
So phomore Class ..........................Kaye Johnston e&#13;
Freshm an Cla ss ..................................Don Preston&#13;
Freshm a n Class ............................. A nne M adis on&#13;
S ioux .......................................... Lovice Kings bury&#13;
Coll egia n Re porter ................... Ste ph en de Vries&#13;
Conse rvatory .......................... .............. J ay Wic!.er&#13;
A gora .............................................. Katic Roadman&#13;
W. S.G.A ....................................... B arbara Sc hmidt&#13;
&#13;
Hom ecomin g activiti es were like old tim es a ga in , comple te with a ba rbec ue&#13;
directed by Lamar Jones; th e bi g da nce a t the Tomba, of whi ch Gordon&#13;
Chri stense n was cha irm a n, with mu sic by M al Dunn ; th e corona ti on of Queen Kate head ed by Kati e Nelson; and a parad e&#13;
directed by Ste,·e de Vri es.&#13;
The Coun cil was give n full charge o[ Tuesday Student Chapels, and th e res pon sibiliti es of first semeste r chapels were&#13;
delegated to Ca rolyn Woll e and Mary Jan e Conrad. Until th e weather turned wintry, pro gram s were held on Bass Fi eld,&#13;
hi ghli ghted by th e appearance o[ Sioux City Sue. La ter, unde r limited fa cilities rn th e gym , the lea din g campu s or ganization s prese nted pro gram s, in cludin g the Pi South Ame rican R evue, th e Zet " Show Boat," the Si gs " Dream ," T a u Delt style&#13;
show, " Littl e Nell" of I shkoodah , and Kilroy a nd Smoe of Pre-En gineers Club.&#13;
A probl em of major interest and importan ce wa s ha ndled by the Coun cil in regard to the lack of dan ce-noor fa c iliti es&#13;
lar ge enou gh , a nd willin g to accommodate all stude nts, regardless of race. fortified with a non-compromisin g Counc il pe ti tion , th e Admini stration was abl e to sec ure th e use of the Tomha for the Chri stm as formal, a nd unde r the ch airm a nship&#13;
of Gordon Chri stense n, the e ntire stude nt body dan ced at th e Tomba to the mu s1 c of Joe Sa nd ers and hi s ba nd .&#13;
Anoth e r c riti cal proble m th e first semester Council faced wa s th a t o[ rai sin g mone y for the World Student Se rvi ce Fund&#13;
an d for a propose d Germ a n a nti-Nazi exchan ge stude nt. Des pite the sin cere efiort s of Harold Minor, chairm a n, a la rge&#13;
co mmittee of stude nts, a nd of th e Counc il , the project wa s t erminated un successfully.&#13;
In Nove mber the Council chartered a campu s Red Cross Un it under th e leadership of J ack La rson and Kati e Roadm an.&#13;
The seco nd semeste r prexy, Lam a r Jones, inhe rited a full l edge r of ca rryove r business and of un se ttled minor proble ms&#13;
rela tin g to pa rkin g areas, bulletin board, a nd ove r-drawn fi nunces. By di scontii,uin g weekly stude nt cha pels a nd con ce ntra tin g on full suppurt of the Mornin gside basketball tea m a nd on spon sorin g num e rou s inform al da nces, with Ka ti e Roadma n as soc ial chairm a n, th e lon g winte r month s pa ssed only too qui ckly. The end of Ma rch sa w all th e traditi onal Co unc il sponsored Sprin g eve nts underway, a nd th e a nnual Dogpatch celebration alrea dy&#13;
completed&#13;
Gene As prey was chairm a n of Sadie H a wkin s Da y, and althou gh&#13;
th e race " fi zzled out" under the March mi st a nd moi sture of th e day, th e&#13;
da nce th a t ni ght was a hil a ri ous success.&#13;
Al so be fore th e e nd of M a rch , Muri el La mbert a nd Ann e Madi son had&#13;
a tte nded th e organiza tion al meetin g of th e Nation al Student Organiza tion , a nd&#13;
th e Co unc il ha d voted a co ntinu ed inte rest in th e ac tiviti es a nd pro gram of&#13;
the na ti onal grou p.&#13;
April brou ght inte nse di sc ussion a nd pl a nnin g for th e group in sura nce&#13;
pl a n the Counc il wa s a nxiou s to instigate on the campu s. Spec ifi c criteri a&#13;
for Wh o's Wh o selection s a nd a con stitution al a me ndm e nt also we re compl eted.&#13;
T o co mplete a full se meste r's activities W alkout Day was held in May, with&#13;
Bill Bri ggs as chairm a n. Election s of Stude nt Body and class offi cers for&#13;
nex t yea r followed W alkout Day a nct clim axed a n extre mely s pirited ca mpai gn.&#13;
Clim axin g th e scc ial program th e Counc il a nd th e Juni or Class spon sored the&#13;
lovely Se nior Farewell Form al.&#13;
Jun e 2 a nd Comm e nce me nt clim axed a n eve ntful yea r of la rge-scal e stude nt&#13;
governm ent unde r th e direction of th e Stude nt Coun cil , and closed a noth er&#13;
yea r's demon st ra tion of a work a bl e Mornin gside ca mpu s de mocra cy-a gove rn me nt the wi se r for its defects a nd faiiin gs, and the prouder fo r its many accompli shed successes.&#13;
&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
151&#13;
&#13;
�The Sioux Staff&#13;
Editor.................................................................. Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Assista nt Editor...................................................Kathryn Nelson&#13;
Business Manager......................................R ichard M cLaughlin&#13;
Faculty Adviser································-······- ··················.John Castle&#13;
Faculty Editor......·-····································-·······Lucile Huxtable&#13;
Senior Edit-0r............................................. M arjorie McCracken&#13;
Organization Editor................................Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
Music Editor......·--···························-··-·················Lois M cCallum&#13;
(&#13;
Men's Sports Editor...................................... Gordon Christensen&#13;
Women's Sports Editor..........·-······-······:.............. Darlene Held&#13;
Feature Editor......................·-······-··········--·············-Vesta Feller&#13;
Make-up........... L ois K uehn, Betty R eimer, L yla R ehnblom,&#13;
Nadene Law, Helen Ling, Ann Barrett, Loma Williams&#13;
Snapshot Editor...- .............................................Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Photographers...........-·······--···Darrel Warner, Eldred Saltwell&#13;
Row 1 : Law. M. Kingsbu ry, Nelson, L. K ingsbury, Mc Laughlin , Xhristensen Warner.&#13;
Row 2: Rehn b lom, L. W11 li ams, Re imer, D. Held , Schmid t, McCracken, McCallu m, Darrc lt ,&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux&#13;
The Sioux, published annually, is the official yearbook of Morningside College. The editors and the business manager are appointed by&#13;
the faculty publications committee, upon considera tion of applications&#13;
submitted by interested students.&#13;
Miss Kaye Johnstone, Queen of the 1947 Sioux, and her attendants,&#13;
Miss Dorothy Floyd and Miss Gloria Aagard, were chosen by Ronald&#13;
Reagan, Warner motion picture star, from a group of thirty entries&#13;
submitted to him .&#13;
&#13;
NELSON, KINGSDURY, McLAUG!ILJN&#13;
&#13;
152&#13;
&#13;
153&#13;
&#13;
�The Collegian Reporter&#13;
Founded in 1895 the Collegian Reporter is a weekl y&#13;
publication of the students&#13;
&#13;
Editor............................................. Stephen C. deVries&#13;
Assistant Editor.. .................................. Hu gh N. Bale&#13;
&#13;
of Mornin gsid e Coll ege. The&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Sports Editor.. ...........................Gordon&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
editor of the Coll egian is&#13;
Christensen&#13;
&#13;
appointed - by the faculty&#13;
&#13;
Sports Features ....... John Soderberg, Victor Neil se11&#13;
&#13;
publi cations committee, and&#13;
&#13;
Columnists........ David Halvorsen , Edward Newman,&#13;
Max Sterne, Darrel Warner.&#13;
Reporters.................... Robert Tracy, Maral yn Wood,&#13;
Josephine Sanford, Connie Havi ghurst, Charlotte Kin gsbury, Earl Montagne, Richard Aton ,&#13;
Carol Davis.&#13;
Photographer ....................................Wendell Rensink&#13;
&#13;
the staff is appointed and&#13;
chosen by the editor. The&#13;
paper is one of the few college papers in the country&#13;
which is compl etely un censored as to news content.&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Business Managers.......... Allen Brown, Daryl James&#13;
Circulation ........ Mary Jane Conrad, Margaret Barks&#13;
Staff Accountants.. Arthur Leckband , Keith McKillip&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian's purpose is to keep students and faculty posted as to campus&#13;
activities and social fun ctions as well as&#13;
items of interest on national and international topics. The editors and staff of the&#13;
paper endeavor at all times to make the&#13;
Coll egian Reporter an instrument to make&#13;
the student opinion articulate.&#13;
Approximately 5/8of the paper's budget is paid by adverti sin g, the remaining&#13;
&#13;
3/8is contributed by the student activity&#13;
fund , of which the Coll egian is alloted 90&#13;
cents per student.&#13;
&#13;
Row 1: Lec kb an d , James, Ba l e, de V ri es. Ch ri s te nse n. A. B rown.&#13;
row 2: Mc Killip , K. S mith , J. Sa nford . Du vis, He hnbl o m. Conrad, M. Barks, C. Kingsbury.&#13;
Row 3: S tern e, Rhoa des, Warn er, Soderberg.&#13;
&#13;
154&#13;
&#13;
155&#13;
&#13;
�The women's Self&#13;
&#13;
Governing Association&#13;
&#13;
A warm cozy spot on a cold winter night&#13;
&#13;
Row l: Williams, Peterson, Jones, Schmidt, Ling, Madison.&#13;
Ro w 2 : Thacke r, Novak , Sanfo rd, Paulin , He ll and , S mi th, McC racke n.&#13;
Absent : L. McCall um , M. Hansen .&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President... ......................................................... Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Vice President.. ....................................................Lois McCallum&#13;
Secreta ry ( 1st Semester) ..........................................Lois Kuehn&#13;
Secretary (2nd Semester) ....................................... H elen Ling&#13;
Treasurer ............................................................... Gloria Peterson&#13;
&#13;
Always excitement to be found in the " dorm"- our home for the&#13;
year. We look forward to . the many traditions which belong to the&#13;
dormitory- the Hallowe'en masquerade, the birthday cakes, the Christmas formal dinner at which Mrs. Roadman reads the Christmas story;&#13;
and then our biggest spring event- the formal dinner-dance and open&#13;
house- the "Forest Frolic" ; the last event of the year is dorm " walkout"- a secret kept by all dorm girl s. Yes, we are indeed happy and&#13;
proud to be dormitory coeds !&#13;
A few of the 200 dorm gals gather in the lounge&#13;
&#13;
156&#13;
&#13;
157&#13;
&#13;
�1: Sc hwarz, Bla ck, A. Fiderlick. E. Larse n, Ham , Bozarth.&#13;
2: Karsten s, Coyne , Mulford . Tillotson, Dou ghe rt y. Corrie. Fiddick, Helland.&#13;
S: Pierce, Chambers, Wiley, 8. Wi lliam s . Brand. C. Davi s, Hol stad.&#13;
4: V. Daw so n. Drur y. Jo ne s, E . S mith , Lind,&#13;
Novak , Youngstorm, P a lm er ,&#13;
brecht&#13;
J. And e rso n, Floyd.&#13;
Row 5: Lohr. Hoar, E. John so n. J . Me redi th. H. Meredith .&#13;
M. William s, Vik, Schram.&#13;
Row 6: M. Mill er, Fortner , Brewer, Devaul,&#13;
row&#13;
row&#13;
Row&#13;
How&#13;
&#13;
LaFuy ,&#13;
&#13;
Clapsaddle,&#13;
&#13;
Krogh,&#13;
&#13;
R o w 1: (Lef t to ri ght) Caro l yn Woll&#13;
l e, Mary Jane Conrad, Barbara William s, Ma ry Williams&#13;
Charlotte Kin gs bury,&#13;
Vera De Vaul , Beve rly P e te rson.&#13;
Ro w 2: Darl e ne H e ld, Barh am Drewer, Anne Madiso n, Ann Barrett, Ma de l yn Schweizer, Ann e Fo rtn er, Mary&#13;
Ellen Kin gs bur y.&#13;
Row 3 : Lovice Kin gsbur y, Geo rge Berkstresser, Henr y Mull er, Wilson Gingles, Jac k Fowler, Rober t Held , Go rd on&#13;
Christensen.&#13;
Row 4: Margare t Barks, R oger Burgess, Eugene Ra smussen, R obert Irwin, Dea n H arr in g to n, Jim Ha rrin g ton .&#13;
&#13;
Ishkoodah&#13;
&#13;
Papoose Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President.. ........................................llarbara Williams&#13;
Vice President... ............................. Frances Chambers&#13;
Secretary..........................................Mary Pearl Wiley&#13;
Treas urer .............................................. Dorot/,y Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Mary Jo Briggs&#13;
Mar y Lou Brand&#13;
Gayle Jean Hofstad&#13;
Carol Davis&#13;
&#13;
l shkoodah is a very worthy organization for all Freshman girls. One of the main&#13;
purposes of the. organization is to promote new acquaintances and create friendship s.&#13;
All activities planned by the group are governed by the officers.&#13;
l shkoodah has had a very successful year including a chapel program, Christmas&#13;
party, several teas, Sweetheart dance, and the traditional Spring formal, plus semimonthl y meetings which included school talent as well as guest speakers. Miss Alva&#13;
Tolf, Dean of Women , acted as faculty adviser to the group.&#13;
&#13;
158&#13;
&#13;
engel&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President.. ................................................................ Darlene Held&#13;
Vice President... ......................................................... Rol.,ert Held&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer. ..................................... Cordon ch ristensen&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms.................................................... H enry Muller&#13;
&#13;
With an initial membership of 52, the Papoose Club is the most recent group&#13;
to be organized on the Morningside Co ll ege campus. Membership is restricted to&#13;
students who are sons or daughters of former Morningside College students. Purposes of the club are to bring second and third generation Morningside.rs into a&#13;
group for social functions and to foster increased harmony between students and&#13;
alumni. A reunion of all Papoose club members and their parents was held in late&#13;
May when · many parents were on the campus for graduation and school closing&#13;
activities.&#13;
&#13;
159&#13;
&#13;
�Y. M.C. A.&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... ......................................... William Treloar&#13;
Vice Presideut... .....................................James Lusher&#13;
Treasurer ............................................R obert B ollinger&#13;
Secretary..............................................Don.ald McKee&#13;
Religious Life....................................R alph Bollinger&#13;
Community Life...........................................Dale White&#13;
Publicity................................................R obert Nelson&#13;
Recreation ..................Kirby Gray and Harold Min or&#13;
Faculty Advisor........................................]ohn Magee&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Dale Hiedeman&#13;
Chester Gwinn and&#13;
Paul Zeman&#13;
K irby Gray&#13;
R obert L ane&#13;
John. Bedient&#13;
Dale 1/7 h ite&#13;
John. P helps&#13;
R ay Kline&#13;
John M agee&#13;
&#13;
This year the Y.M.C.A. had pins for the first time. Their float took third prize&#13;
in the homecoming parade. The major social events were the Y Hoe-Down with the&#13;
Y.W.C.A. and the New Student Party. Paul Zeman represented the orth Central&#13;
Area at the National Intercollegiate Christian Council and the United Student Christian Council. Chester Gwinn represented the campus YM at the National Student&#13;
Assembly at Urbana, Illinois. The YM-YW joine.d in Christmas caroling at the homes&#13;
of several shut-ins. Some members volunteered for service in social agencies of&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Row 1: Novak, Fiddick, Harding, Chambers, Long, Horton .&#13;
Row 2: Dougherty, H . Meredith, F loyd, Wil ey, Brand, Lohr, Engelbrecht, Mcintosh.&#13;
Row 3: L. Williams, J, Meredith , L. Kingsbury, Redenbaugh, Schwinderman, McCallum .&#13;
Row 4: Sarchet, K. Schwarz, M. Jones, Zeman , Lind , You ngstrom. Dengl er, Palm er, Schmidt, M. Darks, G. peter&#13;
son, McCracken, Hoar.&#13;
row 5: M. Mill e r, J. Anderson, B. B rewe r, Clapsaddle, Poppen, LaFoy, DeVaul, Nikoluison, Betts, Bru ce, Krogh.&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President... ..................................................... Velma R edenbaugh&#13;
Vice President..................................................Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Secretary..................................................Darlyne Schwinderman&#13;
Treasurcr..............................................................Joanne Meredith&#13;
Social Chairrnan ................................................... .Lois McCallum&#13;
&#13;
This was a busy year for the "Y" gals. Mrs. John Magee was our top-notch&#13;
adviser. Our activities included a YM-YW Mixer, a homecoming float, formal initiation of the new members, the " hoe-down," and scavenger hunt with the YM, selling&#13;
apples at the basketball games, learning how to make ourselves and our homes beautiful, movies about foreign students' conditions, Christmas caroling with the fellows,&#13;
the National Students Association Conference, a barn dance, heart sister week, election and install ation of new officers and re.treat.&#13;
&#13;
160&#13;
&#13;
Ro w 1: Kelsey, Rasmussen, B. Bo1linger.&#13;
Row 2: Hew lett , Lusher, Arredondo, Baugous.&#13;
Row 3: Speer, McKee, Dayton, R. Do ll inger, Faul.&#13;
&#13;
161&#13;
&#13;
�Row&#13;
Row&#13;
How&#13;
Row&#13;
How&#13;
&#13;
1 Davis . Spade, Bower, C. \Vein s, Seibert.&#13;
2 Jon es. Vand er Vc ldc, Kimm e l. Lind , D e Vaul , Me nning, Hcn and .&#13;
3 Kirkpatrick , K. Smith . M. Kin gsbury, Lem bcke , Be tts . Law,&#13;
4 Lohr, D ru ry, Paulin , S n yder, Sa nfo rd, Conrad , Schmid! , llae re nwald, Witter, Vanos.&#13;
L. K ingsbu ry, Urban&#13;
5 E. Joh nson, Leroy poppen&#13;
&#13;
R ow&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
]&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Roscoe, Larson, Baker.&#13;
Da yton, Carlsen, Usher. ll cw lett, Rasm ui;scn.&#13;
Hi cb hofT. Lush er, S peer. Horton.&#13;
Minor, Zeman , Redenbaugh&#13;
McCa ll um, Smalley, Youngstro111 , B ruce, Sarchet, Faul.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Future Teachers&#13;
&#13;
O FFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Preside nt.........................&#13;
. .. .. ......... Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
Vice President.. ............. .............................. M ary L ou Lembck e&#13;
Secre tary-Treasurer.. .......... ..... ..............................M arie Betts&#13;
adviser ......................................................}a mes E. Kirckpatrick&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
President....................................................................../ack Speer&#13;
Vice President. .......................................................M aralyn IV ood&#13;
Secre tary......................................................·-·······Beverly Horton&#13;
Treasurer....................... ........................................JohnR iebhoff&#13;
Marshall ........................................................................J im L usher&#13;
National Convention Chairman .................. Eugene Rasmussen&#13;
Faculty Advi rnr.................................................... E. W. Saunders&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
Dr. a nd l\!rs. E.W. Saunders, Dr. a nd Mrs. J. C. Buthman, Dr. and Mrs. F . G. Bean, Dr. a nd Mrs. E. A. Roadman, Dr.&#13;
and Mrs. 1. E. Graber, M r. and Mrs. J.B. Magee, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Burr is, Rev. and Mrs. V. V. Schuldt.&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Future Teachers Club, an active organization on the campus,&#13;
1s affiliated with the Iowa State Education Association and the National Education&#13;
Association. The purposes of the club are. to familiarize its members with the problems and responsibilities of the teaching profession, to better equip the members for&#13;
their work in education, to cooperate with state and national education, and to raise&#13;
the standards, influence, and prestige of the teaching profession.&#13;
Regular meetings are held semi-monthly in the dormitory drawing room, with&#13;
a program planned to provide speakers, debates, and round-table discussions abo ut&#13;
the present educational problems.&#13;
&#13;
162&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi is the ational Interdenominational Christian Service Fellowship for me.n and women who&#13;
plan to enter some type of vocational service throug h the church. This spring the. Delta Chapter of the&#13;
Kappa Chi Fellowship of Christian Service a t Morningside CoJlege was host to the national convention.&#13;
Kappa Chi uses the two initial letters of the Gree k words, " Karukos Christos," which mean " Preachers&#13;
of Christ." The key word is " Therapeia," the Gree k word for ser vice. The symbol s-Fellowship, the&#13;
frinity, and Service, are embodie.d in the Cross of Christ.&#13;
Monthl y meetings of Kappa Chi were held at th e homes of its members a nd provided opportunities&#13;
for Christian fellowship of a social nature as well as of a devotional nature. More than twenty-five new&#13;
members joined the group this year.&#13;
In keeping with its Christian purpose, Kappa Chi has sent out deputation teams to local and rural&#13;
churches this year to stimulate an interest in full ti me Christian service as a life career.&#13;
&#13;
163&#13;
&#13;
�Manuscript&#13;
Biology Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Pres id ent&#13;
Carolyn W olle&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident&#13;
Vesta Feller&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
PresidenL ......................................Robert Hill&#13;
Vice President...&#13;
&#13;
Em i 'io Arredondo&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Doris Raun&#13;
&#13;
Sec retary......................................Eunice Bruce&#13;
&#13;
Representative&#13;
Loma W illiam s&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. ... ·------- ---- --------~- --- ---------- Helen Lin g&#13;
&#13;
Busin ess Manager&#13;
Allen Brown&#13;
Advi ser&#13;
Miss Mirah Mills&#13;
&#13;
Sea te d : Fe ll er, W illiams, Kin gsbu ry, S he rk . Weave r, N. Hal vo rse n.&#13;
S tandin g: Bal e, Burgess, Wo ll e. Raun, Brown. D. Halvorsen,&#13;
·Sea ted : Ling, S mall ey, Bruce, Osborn.&#13;
Sta nding: Gea ke , D or moi, Ar redondo, Gund e rson, Koura ny, Hanson, Mr. Cha tt e rs.&#13;
&#13;
The Biology Club, whi ch draw s its membership from student s interested in the biolo gical sciences, was in full swin g thi s&#13;
year with pl ans for bi gger a nd better meetings. Movies, reports, a nd speakers have been enjoyed by the members.&#13;
Th e club enjoyed its inform al di scussions with its advi ser, Dr. Chatters, hea d of th e Biology Department.&#13;
Members of the club are Bob Hill, Emilio Arredondo, Euni ce Bruce, Jim Fribourgh, H elen Lin g, Myrtle Geake, Ruby Smalley,&#13;
Dale Dunn, Gabri el Kourany, Gordon Han sen, Robert Lapsley, W alte r G. Cassel, Frank H awthorne, Chuck Marriott, Harold Muschamp , Vern ell Gunderson, F elix Dormoi, and Ph ylli s Osborn.&#13;
&#13;
Founded in 1938, Manuscript Club is an organizatio b on the campus for student creative writers. Each year&#13;
the club publishes a Manuscript magazine featurin g stud ent short stories, poems, and vignettes. The highlight of&#13;
the year is the birthday banquet held each March for m embers and alumni.&#13;
&#13;
pre- Engineers Club&#13;
&#13;
Grace Collegians&#13;
&#13;
The Pre-E ngin eers Club of Mornin gside College is a n organization of youn g me n interested in th e study a nd current application of engineerin g and science. A business meetin g and suppe r group wa s held on ce a week for di scussion and parti cipation in&#13;
educa tion al proj ects of a scientifi c nature. Pre-En gineer hi ghli ght s in cluded th e Student Assembly, the Pre-Enginee rs Ni ght, and th e&#13;
Annu al Banquet. The P re-En gineers had an integral part in th e intellectu al and social acti viti es of Mornin gside.&#13;
&#13;
President.. ................................................................ W orth ie Us her&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CE RS&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident.. ............................................ Eugene Rasmussen&#13;
Secretary................................................................ B everly H orto11&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
T reasurer ................................................................... .Jack B edie11 t&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Rec rea tion Chairm en ................... _faucile Long, Paul Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Presi den t... .........................S tanley R oehrs&#13;
Vi ce President...&#13;
&#13;
Harold M uschamp&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ....................R obert Des Lauriers&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
The " Grace Collegian s" is the name given to the coll ege group in the regular Sunday evening youth program&#13;
of the Grace Methodist Church. During the year, they m et on Sunday evenings to discuss topics concernin g the&#13;
Christian: his attitudes toward society's problems, his attitudes toward the world's suffering.&#13;
&#13;
David Koelling&#13;
&#13;
Representati ve ..............H arold Muschamp&#13;
&#13;
Representatives attended the annual fall and spring conferences of the Iowa Methodist Student Movement&#13;
and brought back inspiration and ideas to the rest of the members. Regular recreation evenin gs plus two roller&#13;
skatin g parties and a spring picnic were. another part of this en ergetic group's activities.&#13;
&#13;
Seco nd Semester&#13;
P resident.. .......................... Francis Pipkin&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident... ..................... Willium Gist&#13;
&#13;
Members of Grace Collegians found it a group in which to air their grievances, to discuss personal problems,&#13;
to clarify ideas, and to come to understandin gs ; in it they found whole.some fun, lasting friend ships, and Christian fellowship.&#13;
&#13;
Secreta ry ..............................Robert Larso n&#13;
Treasurer ........................... David K oelling&#13;
Representa tive ..-.......... Harold Muschamp&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Row I : Koellin g, Des Laurie rs, Dr. Graber, Roehrs, Muscham p.&#13;
Row 2: Pi pkin , Larson, P e terson, K onrad y, Krska, Danes, Weis brod, Yates, Gis t, Tamashunas, Fau l.&#13;
&#13;
165&#13;
&#13;
�Row&#13;
How&#13;
Ho w&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Baugou s . M. Da vie s , Arre dondo , Carlsen, Barbero.&#13;
Mr. Bnrri s, Cabbell&#13;
Trosper Bruce Dormoi , Dougherty&#13;
William s. ll oar. Lo hr . For tn e r. Small e y, Youngstorm&#13;
Ramsey&#13;
Schwarz. B Johnson, Popp e n , Ohoin&#13;
&#13;
Wiley&#13;
&#13;
\Villiam i..&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
Doran&#13;
&#13;
Wiese&#13;
&#13;
Schmidt, Conrad&#13;
&#13;
Roadman&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Sorority Council&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Snyder Mattson&#13;
&#13;
The. inter-sorority council is composed of three representatives from each sorority&#13;
selected by their respective presidents. The responsibilities of the group include&#13;
rushing and pledging activities and other inter-sorority affairs.&#13;
&#13;
P resident. ................................................. ................ Eunice Bru ce&#13;
Vice Pres ide nt ................ ............ ................ lfarriet Trosper&#13;
&#13;
- MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ....................................... ........................Mar y Cabell&#13;
Editor........................................... .&#13;
&#13;
.. . ............. Gab riel Kouran y&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer _________ ..................................................... Felix Dormoi&#13;
&#13;
The Cosmopolitan Club is an international organization existing in all parts of&#13;
the world. Today more than ever before we can understand that being cosmopolitan&#13;
minded is th e only solution to remedy the world's crises.&#13;
The purpose of the Cosmopolitan Club of Morningside College is to further&#13;
friendship, harmony, and understanding among students of al l nations. This feeling&#13;
is achieved more. and more upon each monthly meeting, as it is the custom to have&#13;
a meal typical of the various nation s that are represented. The nations represented&#13;
are: China, Panama, Holl and, Japan , Ireland , Burma, United States. German y, and&#13;
Dolivia.&#13;
&#13;
· 166&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA ZETA&#13;
&#13;
Cm&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA&#13;
&#13;
Pr&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
Katherine Roadman&#13;
Mary Jan e Conrad&#13;
Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Phyllis Snyder&#13;
Mary Jan e Conrad&#13;
Mar y Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Phyllis Doran&#13;
Lois Wiese (Secretary)&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Phyllis Doran&#13;
Lois Wiese&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
Amy Mattson&#13;
Janyce Lehmb erg&#13;
Evelyn H all&#13;
&#13;
Am y Mattson&#13;
Clarice Lan e&#13;
Evelyn Hall&#13;
&#13;
ADVISEHS&#13;
M iss Toi/, Mrs. Winston Mrs. Wallman , Miss Grammer&#13;
&#13;
167&#13;
&#13;
�Row 1: Fide r1i ck, Leh mberg, Muller. Karstens, Drewer, Lind.&#13;
Row 2: Madison, Nikolnison, Ling-, Hall, Mattson&#13;
Miss Grammer Lane Betts. Hoar Smalley Martz&#13;
Row 3; Schweizer, Schwinderman , Zeman , Schultz, DeVaul , John so n, Leland , P eterson, Menage, Youngstrom , Sherk ,&#13;
&#13;
Osborn,&#13;
Absent: Crase. Anderson, Young, Be ckmann.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
For fifty-five years the Alpha Sigma star has been shining over Morningside's campus. The present members have been reliving the traditional experiences-initiation ceremonies&#13;
with red roses and candlelight, weeky teas with our guests, fun with our&#13;
alumni at the Homecoming luncheon&#13;
and later parties, our "super" intramural team, our five-pound parties,&#13;
our open house, and the swell times&#13;
with our freshmen guests durin g&#13;
"rush" season. Those who are leaving us for work or weddings will&#13;
want to remember most, however, the&#13;
close friends they have made. We&#13;
won't forget them, either.&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Amy Mattson&#13;
PresidenL·-··-···································Amy Mattson&#13;
Vice President.. ................................ Evelyn Hall&#13;
Darlyne Schwinderman&#13;
Recording Secretary........................Janyce Lehmberg&#13;
Georgia Anderson&#13;
Corresponding Secretary................ M uriel M uilenberg&#13;
Marie Betts&#13;
Treasurer........................................... Mary Lou Crase&#13;
Janyce Lehmberg&#13;
Usher...........................................·....... Madelyn Schweizer&#13;
Madelyn Schweizer&#13;
Critic.................................................. Marie Betts&#13;
Bonnie Schultz&#13;
Chaplain ............................................. Bonnie Schultz&#13;
Clarice Lane&#13;
Reporter. ............................................ Helen Ling&#13;
Helen Ling&#13;
Adviser.. ............................................. Miss Lois Gramer&#13;
Faculty Members .............................. Miss Mills, Miss Murray, Miss Woodford&#13;
Honorary Members........................... Miss Lillian E. Dimmitt, Mrs . Paul E . Johnson&#13;
Mrs. Earl A. &amp;adman, Mrs. Charles Smith,&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Stephens, Miss Ruth M cDonald&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Georgia Anderson, Marie Betts, Mary Lou Crase, Eveiyn Hall, Clarice Lane, Janyce Lehmberg,&#13;
Helen Ling, Amy Mattson, Dorothy ikolaison, Bonnie Schultz, Madelyn Schweizer, Darlyne&#13;
Schwinderman, Ruby Smalley, Doris Young.&#13;
Pledges-Betty Muller, Cecily Sherk, Beverly Johnson, Annalee Zeman, Phyllis Osborn, Margo&#13;
Youngstrom, Barbara Brewer, Vera DeVaul, Shirley Menage, Elizabeth Beckmann, Beverly&#13;
Peterson, Glenna Martz, Mildred Hoar, Alice Karste11 s, Mary Lou Lind, Anne Madison, Joyce&#13;
Leland, Arlene Fiderlick .&#13;
., Motto : Utile Dulce- The Useful and the Pleasing&#13;
Colors: Blue and White&#13;
Flower: Red Rose&#13;
&#13;
168&#13;
&#13;
169&#13;
&#13;
�How 1: Chambers. Lowe, Momsen, McEwen Glasco, Krogh, prescott&#13;
Wharton. Engelbrecht&#13;
How 2: Pickering, Hack ett. N ielse n, Shreve. Doran . Schmidt, Wiese. J o nes, Raun, Soise th,&#13;
How 3: Harter Witter Pe terson, Dressler, Harding, Swanson, Lamson&#13;
Lembecke Fortner, Drury, West Pen ce, Laude,&#13;
Robar&#13;
Absent Moone Everett Barre tt.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha interest ranged from talent to beauty.&#13;
There is always excitement to be found in the Pi halls. We&#13;
had fun working on our " Homecoming" float- and were&#13;
proud to have Barb as an attendant for the queen. Five.&#13;
pounds? Yes, in fac t, several! Those 1ucky girls were Lois&#13;
Swanson, Helen Witter, Jean Rae Pickering, Virginia O'Dell,&#13;
Clarice Moone., an d Betty Shreve. Picnics- with music,&#13;
frrep lace, dancing and moonlight-was a grand attraction&#13;
for the sorority sisters. Speaking of talent, our gay Spanish&#13;
program was "tops." Sweet violin from none other tha n&#13;
Lois- an honorary member of S.A.I. Then we have Gloria&#13;
and Marian with Lheir beautiful voices singing to us-and&#13;
they can. The "Pi's" are always "on the ball" working&#13;
Logether planning aclivities as recitals and spreads, rush&#13;
parties dinners, a nd formals. Our traditional "Trouser&#13;
Formal" held at the Martin Ballroom wa one of the hi ghlights and beautiful occasions of the en tire year.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... .........................................Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Vice PresidenL----························--Lois Wiese&#13;
Social-Chairman................................M arian Meier&#13;
Corresponding Secretary..................Gloria Peterson&#13;
Recording Secretary.......................- Phyllis Doran&#13;
Treasurer...·-··················-·················· / rene Hackett&#13;
Critic...................................................Helen Witter&#13;
Hall Chairman ................................Helen Harding&#13;
Librarian ................................ - ....... Audrey Laude&#13;
Reporter............................................. Doris Raun&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms.............................. Mary Lou Lembcke .&#13;
Chapla.in ...............- ............................Betty Shreve&#13;
Adviser............................................... Mrs. Winston&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Ph yllis Doran&#13;
Lois Wiese&#13;
Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Audrey Laude&#13;
Lois Swanson&#13;
Mary Lou Lembcke&#13;
Clarice Moon e&#13;
Gloria Peterson&#13;
Helen Witter&#13;
4nn Barrett&#13;
Doris Raun&#13;
Helen Harding&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors- Phyllis Doran, Lois Wiese, Barbara Schmidt.&#13;
Juniors- Audrey Laude, Helen Harding, J ean Rae Pickering, Irene Hackett, Betty Shreve Mary&#13;
Lou Lembcke, Elea nor Everett.&#13;
Sophomores-Marian Meier, Gloria Peterson, Helen Witter, Clarice Moone, Doris Raun, Lois&#13;
Swanson, Ann Barrett, Maureen Harter, Jayne Marie Soiseth, Karell Brodsky, Ione Prescott,&#13;
Ardythe J acobsen, Virginia O'Dell.&#13;
Pledges-Frances Chambers, Diane Dressler, Joan Drury, Elaine Engelbrecht, Ann Fortner, Lois&#13;
Glasco, Marjorie Jones, Lois Krogh, Patricia Lamson, Donna Lowe, Mary Dee McEwen, Joy&#13;
Momsen, Joyce Nielsen, Connie Pence, Donna June Robar, Marilyn West, Betty Wharton.&#13;
motto: Happily, Bravely, Faithfully.&#13;
Colors: Canary yellow and black.&#13;
Flower: Yellow rose.&#13;
&#13;
170&#13;
&#13;
171&#13;
&#13;
�Seated: L. Kingsbury , Law, M. Kingsbury, D . H e ld, Geake, Conrad. Woll e, K. N e l son ,&#13;
H.ow 2: Muell er, Rehnblom. B. Williams, Novak , L. Williams. McCracken, McCa llum,&#13;
Floyd , Mcintosh , Lambert.&#13;
Row 3: Corrie, Sanford, Bartram. Mut chl er. T aylor, Severson, K. held&#13;
Meyer, J ohnson .&#13;
Row 4: J. Smith. Zeissler, Briggs, G. N e l son, C. Kings bury, Walton&#13;
K. Smith, Baker,&#13;
Irwin, Gasser.&#13;
Ahsen t: K. Roadman D. Ol son, B. Whittington M. Hansen.&#13;
&#13;
Bozarth, Tronsrue, Tillotson.&#13;
Johnstone, M. Barks, Wright,&#13;
·&#13;
Snyder, Larson . Vik.&#13;
B. Barks, Rorapaugh Kriege&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Mary Jane Conrad&#13;
President. ............. ·-···························Katherine Roadman&#13;
Vice President... .................... .......... Darlene Held&#13;
Carolyn Wolle&#13;
Recording Secretary......................... Lois M cCallum&#13;
Myrtle Geake&#13;
Marjorie McCracken&#13;
Corresponding Secretary............... _.Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Treasurer........................................... Charlotte Kingsbury&#13;
Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Katherine Roadman&#13;
First Critic.................................. ----·· Carolyn Wolle&#13;
Lois McCallum&#13;
Second Critic ·-·······························-Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Kathryn Smith&#13;
Social Chairman ................................Kathryn Nelson&#13;
First Directress ............................... Mary Jane Conrad&#13;
Margaret Barks&#13;
Second Directress............................. Joyce Tronsrue&#13;
Katherine Held&#13;
First Usher......................................... Kathryn Smith&#13;
Phyllis Snyder&#13;
Second Usher.....................................Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
Joyce Tronsrue&#13;
Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Chaplain......·-····································Margaret Barks&#13;
Lorna Williams&#13;
Reporter.....----·--·-······-····················Donna Severson&#13;
Harriet Baker&#13;
Librarian............................ ............... Katherine Held&#13;
Adviser..................·-··········-··············Mrs. Mildred Wallman&#13;
Honorary Members........................... Mrs. M. E. Graber, Mrs. Ira Gwinn, Mrs. J. B. Magee&#13;
&#13;
Again this year, never a dull moment in Zet hall- the usual&#13;
music and chatter and 1elson's jokes-a record-breaking eleven&#13;
five-pound parties: Snyder, Conrad, Taylor, Roadman, Johnson,&#13;
Wolle, Johnstone., the two Rehnbloms, and McCracken- the ar·&#13;
rival of " Show Boat" at chapel in December- lots of spreads and&#13;
tea guests, including the Tau Delts- bananas and pills at the&#13;
Prexy Lodge party-all night sessions twirling rosettes for our&#13;
" littl e" float-singing for Queen Kate at the Tomba-fifteen&#13;
pounds and Mrs. Betty Roadman's readings all in one. Friday-a&#13;
Christmas party with the Tau Delts and gifts for a children's&#13;
home-that typically hilarious letter from Barbie from Mexicothe periodic invasions of "egg-juggling" Tau Delt pledges at&#13;
teas- new drapes- Kate's R. and N. wearing the Joy Smith pinthen Rushing and "halitosis'·' at the Floyd Park Club house- a&#13;
real Sultana Fruit Roll while "packed in" at Wolle's-climaxed&#13;
by eighteen lovel y pledges on March 18-then the fun that always&#13;
pre.cedes formal initiation of the pledges-an alum party and&#13;
tea-"Tedo," a pledge, as Daisie Mae, and Katie, a Held, as&#13;
Agora Queen- "Tedo" again as May Queen, with Joby and Walton as her attendants-the Tau Delt-Zet formal, and always the&#13;
thrill of singing to and answering each other's song-Kaye, our&#13;
beautiful Sioux Queen- the overnight "hen" party-and last, but&#13;
not least, on emorial Day, the Upriver Trip, with the usual&#13;
bathing beauties and sunburns-"You are first in cur heart,&#13;
Zetalethean ! !"&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors- Harriet Baker, Mary Jane Conrad, Darlene Held, Katie Held, Charlene Irwin, Lovice Kingsbury, Mary Ellen&#13;
Kingsbury, Nadene Law, Marjorie McCracken, Carolyn Mutchler, Katie Roadman, Donna Severson, Jean Smith, Katie&#13;
Smith, Carolyn Wolle.&#13;
Juniors- Margaret ,Barks, Myrtle Geake, Charlotte Kingsbury, Muriel Lambert, Lois McCallum, Katie Nelson, Phyllis&#13;
Snyder, Darlene faylor, Joyce Tronsrue.&#13;
Sophomores-Beverly Barks, Margaret Johnson, Kaye John stone, Sylvia Kriege, Joan Meyer, Dorothy Olson, Lyla Rehnblom, Jean Rorapaugh, Lorna Williams, Betty Whittington.&#13;
Pledges-Helen Ann Bartram, Wilma Bozarth, Mary Jo Briggs, Carol Corrie, Dorothy Floyd, Mary Gasser, Marilyn&#13;
Hansen, Elsie Larsen, Norma Mcintosh, Leila Mueller, Gloria Nelson, Joan Novak, Betty Sanford, Joby Tillotson,&#13;
Margaret Vik, Marjorie Walton, Barbara Williams, Jackie Zeissler.&#13;
&#13;
Motto : Esse Quam Videri- To be rather than to seem.&#13;
Colors: Scarlet and Black.&#13;
Flower : Red Rose.&#13;
172&#13;
&#13;
173&#13;
&#13;
�Alpha Tau Delta&#13;
Officers&#13;
Fi rst Semester&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Presid cnt.. ..........................................................Slcph en de Vries&#13;
Vi ce President ........................................... Douglas H em pstead&#13;
Sec retary .................................................................... Richard B ean&#13;
Treas11rer ................................................................... .Lamar Jones&#13;
Sergfant-at -Arm s&#13;
&#13;
:.................................... Don Shelton&#13;
&#13;
Cha plain ...................................................... Kenneth&#13;
&#13;
M cLaughlin&#13;
&#13;
Pl edge Maste r. ....................................................... C. W. Cropley&#13;
Social Chairman&#13;
&#13;
.................................................. Thomas Green&#13;
&#13;
Seniors- Lamar Jones, Ste ph en de Vri es, Darrel Warner, Douglas He mp stead, Norman Mutchler, Robert Hasek, Robert&#13;
Held, Ri c hard McLau ghlin.&#13;
Juniors-Richard Bean, Edward Ke rn, Gary Gall , Thoma s&#13;
Green.&#13;
Sophomores- Don Shelton, Ralph Graham , William Annand,&#13;
Kenneth McLaughlin, C. W. Cropley, William Mesmer, Victor Men efe e, Charles Burrow, Forrest Whitlow, Edward&#13;
Muma , Tom Henry, Roy Moore, Don Kelsey, William Burns,&#13;
Daryl James, Richard Fauchald.&#13;
&#13;
Fr es hm en- Kenn eth Ch111elk a, Robert Eldredge, Robert Irwin,&#13;
William Collopy, Dale H a rri s, Don Goode now, Bruce Good enow, Jam es Glann .&#13;
Pledges- John F esse nde n, Robe rt Jam es, Joseph Grimoskas&#13;
Wayn e Sorense n, Richard Sellon, Paul Berteloot, William&#13;
Metz, Gerald Schipull , Warre n P e terson, Gordon Christen sen ,&#13;
Charl es Irwin, Clayton Bri stow, Frank Lambert, Maynard&#13;
Minnic h, Gen e Markland, John Bolchunos, Richard Youngstrom, Ke nne th Steffan , William Gingles.&#13;
&#13;
Second Sc111cste r&#13;
Presidenl.. ...................................................... Douglas Hempstead&#13;
Vi ce Prcs ident.. ....................................................... richard&#13;
&#13;
Bean&#13;
&#13;
Scc re tary ....................................................................... Don S helton&#13;
Treasure r.................................................................... Lamar Jon es&#13;
Victor M enefe e&#13;
&#13;
Se rgeant-at-Arm s&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain ..................................................... .Kenn eth M cLaughlin&#13;
Pledge Mastcr ........................................................ C. W Cropley&#13;
Soc ial Chairman ......................................................... .Daie llarris&#13;
&#13;
FOUR CORNER STONES&#13;
Character, Culture, Broth erhood, Lo yalty&#13;
&#13;
Tau Dells prepare for&#13;
"chow" in the barn.&#13;
&#13;
174&#13;
&#13;
175&#13;
&#13;
�Gamma Iota A lpha&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President........... ---·········D onald Protexte r&#13;
&#13;
Vice President..... .Jackson Krusenstjema&#13;
Secretary.......................... Victor M cCaslen&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer....... .................. .Robert Stearns&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms....... ........ Hugh&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
Knapp&#13;
&#13;
Semester&#13;
&#13;
President............................. Milton M eyer&#13;
Vice President... __________ De Estan T urner&#13;
Secretary.......................... Cerald Protexter&#13;
Treasurer........................ Rob er t Protexter&#13;
Sergea nt-at-Arm s.............. Charles T eeman&#13;
&#13;
C. Protcx tcr, R. Protexter, Meyer, Turner.&#13;
&#13;
The Gamma Iota Alpha, after an inactive summer, reorganized agai n immediately with the opening of the fall term. The&#13;
majority of th e old active members had tran sferred to oth er campuses, but with the few that rema ined an active pledging drive&#13;
started, and the increased membership brought the Gamma Iota Alpha into the files as a recognized soc ial society.&#13;
The Gamma Iota Alpha is more familiarly known as the Vets fraternity. Membership is di stinctly compri sed of honorably&#13;
discharged veteran s whose interests are mutual ; therefore organization and soc ial activiti es are planned accordingly.&#13;
On Friday, December 13, all members enjoyed the main social event of the first term. With Chri stma s spirit in the air, and&#13;
that as the th eme, an appropriate dinner-dance was held in th e ballroom of the Warrior Hotel.&#13;
The first week of the second school term the newly elected officers stepped in to promote th e ac ti viti es for the forthcoming year.&#13;
Again a pledge drive was undertak en and 29 new members joined the active roster.&#13;
Picnics planned for the warm sp rin g and a dinner-dance, give n in honor of the new pledges, climaxed th e sprin g activiti es.&#13;
&#13;
EXECUT IVE COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
Milton Meyer, George DeBeer, Harold Muschamp,&#13;
Richard Loffswald, Donald&#13;
Protexter, Harold Mulford.&#13;
&#13;
176&#13;
&#13;
Vets take time out for a&#13;
game o/ bridge at their&#13;
social hour.&#13;
&#13;
��Beauty, popularity, personality-if this is what you're after&#13;
you ll find it in this section- a&#13;
cross section of the Morningside&#13;
College campus.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
KAYE&#13;
&#13;
John STONE&#13;
&#13;
Queen of the 1947 Sioux&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux Queen Judge&#13;
Sioux Queen Attendants&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Mrss&#13;
&#13;
Miss.&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA Aagard&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux Queen and her attendants were selected by Ronald Reagan, motion picture star of Warner&#13;
Brothers, from approximately thirty entries which were submitted to him. The following are excerpts from&#13;
his letter : " If the beauty contest candidates are representative, then apparently Morningside College is not&#13;
lacking in beautiful co-eds. . . . To the winners and the other candidates, my compliments and besl&#13;
wishes."&#13;
&#13;
182&#13;
&#13;
183&#13;
&#13;
�Homecoming Queen and Attendants&#13;
&#13;
Miss KATITEHINE RoADMAN as Miss Morningside reigned over Home.coming&#13;
festivities, attended by Miss BARBARA Schmidt and Miss CONNIE Havighurst&#13;
&#13;
184&#13;
&#13;
�Who's Who&#13;
KATHERINE ROADMAN, Senior of Sioux City, has been busy her entire four years&#13;
of college. She took an active part in the Agora Club, Ishkoodah, Inter-Sorority&#13;
Council, and Student Council. She is a member and president this year of Kappa&#13;
Zeta Chi, was candidate for the Drake Relay Queen in 1946, and reigned as Homecoming queen the fall of that year.&#13;
STEPHEN . DE VRIES, Senior of Sioux City, is serving this year as editor of the&#13;
Collegian Reporter, student directo,ry, and the summer newspaper, the Scoop. He&#13;
is a student representative on the Social Life Committee, a member of the Religious&#13;
Life Committee, a member of Student Council, and president of the Alpha Tau&#13;
Delta fraternity.&#13;
NORMAN MATHERS, Senior of Sioux City, was first semester president of the student body this school year. He is a member of the "M" Club, and is active in both&#13;
football and basketball. This year Norm is a member of F.T.A., and the Vets&#13;
I&#13;
organization.&#13;
I&#13;
I 1t&#13;
CAROLYN WOLLE, Senior of Sioux City, is Secretary-Treasurer of the Student&#13;
Council, president of Manuscript Club, co-chairman of student chapel committee,&#13;
and editor of the tradition book. She is a member of Kappa Zeta Chi, Sigma Tau&#13;
Delta, and W.A.A.&#13;
CONNIE HA VIGHURST, Senior, is from Fort Dodge, Iowa, and is an active participant in religious activities on the campus. She has served on the. Student&#13;
Council for three years. She is a member of Grace Collegians, Cosmopolitan Club,&#13;
and the Religious Life Committee.&#13;
HAROLD MINOR, Senior from Fort Dodge, Iowa, is a theological student. He is&#13;
senior representative of Student Council, member of Y.M.C.A., the little chapel&#13;
committee, and past president of Kappa Chi.&#13;
MARY JANE CONRAD, Senior, is from Ponca, Nebraska. She is a member of&#13;
the Student Council and vice president of the student body. She is secretary of&#13;
the Religious Life Committee, member of Kappa Zeta Chi and Phi Sigma Iota,&#13;
co-chairman of the student chapel committee, and is active in the chapel choir.&#13;
LAMAR JONES, Senior, is from Hinton, Iowa. He is a second semester president of&#13;
Student Council for this school year, and treasurer for the Tau Delts.&#13;
Seated: Nel son , Roadman , Conrad , Wolle , McCallum, Schmidt, Kingsbury&#13;
Standing: Jone s, deVries , Mathers, Easley, Minor.&#13;
&#13;
Havighursst&#13;
&#13;
Outstanding members of the junior and senior classes were nominated by the Student Council and passed on for faculty consideration&#13;
for Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges.&#13;
The choice was unanimous as 13 students were nominated and 13 received faculty approval. Selection was made. on the basis of scholastic&#13;
record, personality, leadership, achievement, and participation in 6&#13;
side activities.&#13;
&#13;
186&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM J. EASLEY, Senior, is from Sioux City. Bill acts as music critic on the.&#13;
campus. He is a member of the National Sinfonia Fraternity. He is student&#13;
organist for chapel and is on the staff of the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
LOVICE KINGSBURY, Senior, is from Ponca, Nebraska. During her four years at&#13;
Morningside she has participated in lshkoodah , the symphony orche tra, Y.W.C.A.,&#13;
and student body representative. She has worked on the Collegian Reporter and&#13;
is this year's editor of the Sioux. She is a member of Kappa Zeta Chi and a&#13;
member of Phi Sigma Iota and F.T.A.&#13;
BARBARA SCHMIDT, Senior, from Battle Creek, Iowa, is this year's president of&#13;
the Women's Residence Hall , a member of Mu Phi Epsilon, and F.T.A. She. is&#13;
also a member of chapel choir, president of Kappa Pi Alpha, and second vicepresident of Agora Club. In 1946 she served as Home.c oming attendant.&#13;
LOIS McCALLUM, Junior, is from Kensett, Iowa. Lou has held office in the&#13;
W.S.G.A., in Grace Collegians, and is a member of Kappa Zeta Chi. She is an&#13;
active member in Student Council and in choir. She is president of Mu Phi&#13;
Epsilon, and is in Kappa Chi, Y.W.C.A., orchestra, and acted as music editor for&#13;
the Sioux.&#13;
KATHRYN NELSON, Junior, is from Sioux City. She is a member of Student&#13;
Council, Secretary-Treasurer for W.A.A., member of Kappa Zeta Chi, and is on&#13;
the annual staff and Agora Club. Katie. was chosen as May Queen in 1945.&#13;
&#13;
187&#13;
&#13;
�Diary&#13;
Dear Diary:&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Well , another year of school is over, and oh the memories we look&#13;
back upon. It was really an eventful year, what with all of the queens,&#13;
the dreamy dances, and Morningside winning the Basketball Conference; first time since 1938, too.&#13;
&#13;
It all started out in September when the campus was just bubbling&#13;
over with new faces. The freshmen took their tests and we all registered for the year ahead. We thought we'd never begin to know&#13;
everybody but, in time, we managed to call quite a few of the kids by&#13;
their ,first, last, or nick names on passing them in the hall.&#13;
Then October came and along with bonfires and red and yellow&#13;
leaves the freshmen went through their paces for the upper classmen.&#13;
They really looked classy in their green caps and when their Day of&#13;
Reckoning came in the open air assembly at Bass Field, they looked so&#13;
sweet with their lipsticked "M's." Then came Homecoming, the crowning of Katie Roadman as queen with Connie Havighurst and Barb&#13;
Schmidt as attendants, the big parade on Saturday morning, and the&#13;
traditional football game with South Dakota U. in the evening. There&#13;
was an air of sentimentalism about it all for students and alums alike.&#13;
In November the W.A.A. put on a style show in the dorm. The Zets&#13;
gave a tea for one of their distinguished alums, Miss Lucy Wang .&#13;
Gerald Kennedy spoke in chapel, the Sinfonia recital as held at the&#13;
con, the student faculty reception was given in the dorm, and the traditional Agora Leadership' dinner was held at the Mayfair Ballroom.&#13;
Then it was Turkey Time again . .. and vacation.&#13;
December came, and with it Christmas and all of the activities&#13;
that precede that holiday. The annual Messiah was held at Grace&#13;
Church, the Y.W. and Y.M. had a caroling party, the annual Faculty&#13;
Women's formal Christmas party was held at the dorm, and a super&#13;
dance was put on by Student Council at the Tomba. The physical education department put on a modern dance recital at the gym'. The dorm&#13;
girls ate by cand lelight at their Lovely formal Christmas dinner, and&#13;
afterwards in the drawing room, Mrs. Roadman read a Christmas story.&#13;
And then it was "Merry Christmas" and off for home and a two weeks&#13;
holiday.&#13;
&#13;
188&#13;
&#13;
January came and every one was back ... "rested ." The big event&#13;
of the month was finals. I guess every one lived through them · all&#13;
right .. . at least there were no obituaries listed in the paper with&#13;
death attributed to that cause.&#13;
Then came February, and along with paper hearts lshkoodah put&#13;
on a sport dance after one of the basketball games. Mu Phi gave a&#13;
le.a at the dorm and on Wednesday, February 26, the student body met&#13;
in the gym to hear the announcement that the basketball team had&#13;
won the North Central Conference and the day was a holiday- NO&#13;
SCHOOL!&#13;
March brought sorority rushing with si lent day and the pledge&#13;
dinners. Student Council gave a dance at the gym. A few weeks later&#13;
the Y.W. gave one also. Agora sponsored the annual carnival and&#13;
" Van" Veldhuizen and Katie Held were crowned king and queen of&#13;
the event. Sadie Hawkin's Day was topped off by a super dance at&#13;
the gym.&#13;
In April the coll ege choir went on tour and when they returned&#13;
they gave a Home Concert in Grace Church. The annual spring dorm&#13;
formal was held. The Speech Department and the Morningside Players&#13;
did a grand job with T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral," which&#13;
was presented two nights at Grace Church. The Kappa Chi national&#13;
convention was held on our campus. And that was the end of April.&#13;
May not only brought May baskets, but the band put on a concert&#13;
at East Junior and then the dance festival was held in the gym with&#13;
Dorothy Floyd crowned Queen of the May, attended by Joby Tillotson&#13;
and Marge Walton. The seniors were entertained by Dr. and Mrs.&#13;
Roadman at a breakfast at Scribbin's Tea Room, and the Mother and&#13;
Daughter Banquet was held at the Morningside Presbyterian Church.&#13;
The month ended with the Senior Farewell Dance, climaxed by the&#13;
crowning of Kaye Johnstone as Sioux Queen, her attendants being Dorothy Floyd and Gloria Aagard.&#13;
June came along and the class of 1947 received their diplomas.&#13;
Both Baccalaureate and Graduation were held in Grace Church.&#13;
Well, Diary, that about sums up the year. We're looking forward&#13;
to another super time next fall .. . hut ... until then, I for one am&#13;
ready for three nice, long months of nothing but rest and relaxation.&#13;
How about you?&#13;
&#13;
189&#13;
&#13;
��These Ads Make This Book Possible&#13;
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193&#13;
&#13;
�·-----------···········-------------············-······-~&#13;
PAUL A. WARNER&#13;
President and General Manager&#13;
&#13;
CASTLE'S PHARMACY&#13;
&#13;
ADAIR-WARNER PRINTING CO.&#13;
&#13;
Hallmark Cards for All Occasions- Gifts&#13;
Drugs- Fountain Service- Prescriptions&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING WITH SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1918&#13;
&#13;
4666 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6506&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
516 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
~--------··················----·---··············-·······--···&#13;
·-···--------···············-1&#13;
&#13;
·--······················-····&#13;
&#13;
WILSON PRINTERY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
&#13;
··------------·--·-·-······----1&#13;
&#13;
Printing&#13;
&#13;
HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
Harold McDole, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Commercial Job&#13;
&#13;
MAC'S BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
GLASS &amp; PAINT CO.&#13;
&#13;
(The Old First Mortgage Bank )&#13;
SOFT WATER SHAMPOOS&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate Loans&#13;
Savings Department&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-5029&#13;
&#13;
4002 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
...........................&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-8863&#13;
&#13;
Hours 8 to 6&#13;
&#13;
504-10 Douglas Street&#13;
&#13;
3935 Transit Ave. Nasser Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
····-··············-·&#13;
&#13;
·-·----······----------------,&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSJDE'S&#13;
&#13;
STATIONERY COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
FRIENDLY STORE&#13;
&#13;
The Convenient Clothing Store&#13;
&#13;
The Glory Store&#13;
&#13;
Commercial Stationers&#13;
Party Favors&#13;
&#13;
l....... .&#13;
&#13;
413 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ELECTRIC&#13;
&#13;
PERLETH'S&#13;
&#13;
Clyde R. Phillips, Proprietor&#13;
in P eters Park&#13;
&#13;
Sales and Service&#13;
4114 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
4008 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-5975&#13;
&#13;
......&#13;
&#13;
···-----~&#13;
-------------------------------········· -----·· ····-~&#13;
DWIGHT HAUFF SPORTING GOODS CO.&#13;
Agent for&#13;
&#13;
.--···------·········-··-·······---------------····--····-··-···&#13;
&#13;
MOLSKOW PHARMACY&#13;
JOHN MOLSKOW, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
517 Pierce Street&#13;
Up-to-Date Athletic Equipment&#13;
Telephone 8-1877&#13;
&#13;
, .............................. .&#13;
&#13;
194&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6914&#13;
&#13;
FOR BETTER SERVICE STOP AT MOLSKOW'S&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
2004 So. St. Aubin Street&#13;
&#13;
..............................&#13;
&#13;
195&#13;
&#13;
�........................ ,&#13;
&#13;
.----·····-·············------··&#13;
A KEY TO A SAFE TOMORROW&#13;
&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS!&#13;
&#13;
CONSISTENT SAVING TODAY&#13;
Open a Savings Account at This Bank Today&#13;
&#13;
deserve&#13;
&#13;
congratulations&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
&#13;
your determination to get ai:i educa-&#13;
&#13;
IN SIOUX CITY&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
tion, and thus equipping yourself for&#13;
&#13;
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation&#13;
&#13;
- -- - - - - - --.......... - ... -&#13;
&#13;
the heavy responsibilities that lie&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - ....... - - - - - . - -- - --&#13;
&#13;
ahead. We confidently look to you to&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
Quality with Good Service&#13;
&#13;
do your part in keeping our country&#13;
free and strong .. . a country ... for&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
at the&#13;
&#13;
the people ... by the people.&#13;
&#13;
MOREY'S&#13;
&#13;
GREIGG'S HOUSE OF&#13;
. HAMBURGERS&#13;
&#13;
"We Won't Let You Wear&#13;
&#13;
P hone 6-924,9&#13;
&#13;
It Unless It Fits"&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
SIOUX CITY GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
1405 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
... ·..................... ...&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
••••••••••••••--•••••••••••••-••••••u----•••••••••••••••••---,&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
SELF-SERVE&#13;
&#13;
SPORTSMAN'S INC.&#13;
&#13;
BUSH CLEANERS&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
607 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
"Just. Off the Campus"&#13;
&#13;
SPORTING GOODS FOR EVERY SPORT&#13;
&#13;
1417 Morningside Ave.&#13;
"The Macgregor Coldsmith Store"&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-7355&#13;
&#13;
......... .&#13;
&#13;
FOUNTAIN SERVICE,&#13;
STATIONERY,&#13;
&#13;
SUNDRIES,&#13;
MAGAZINES;&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
TOILETRIES&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
&#13;
423 Pierce Street&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
The Campus Store&#13;
H. C. McCLI -TOCK, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
1423 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-9271&#13;
&#13;
196&#13;
&#13;
FERRIS FLORIST&#13;
Fresh Flowers Daily&#13;
from Our Own&#13;
Greenhouse&#13;
&#13;
GREETING CARDS : : GIFTS&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
Mottoes&#13;
&#13;
..........................&#13;
&#13;
CALL 8-7505&#13;
&#13;
Stationery&#13;
&#13;
197&#13;
&#13;
�COMPLETE BANKING&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
The Rexall&#13;
Drugstore&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GRAHAM'S&#13;
DRUG STORE&#13;
&#13;
Beauitful&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
4014 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY&#13;
SAVINGS BANK&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6244&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
····-·········-·········---&#13;
&#13;
-------------·········· --··1&#13;
EAT&#13;
with the College Crowd at&#13;
&#13;
LEE'S&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5814&#13;
&#13;
_J&#13;
&#13;
420 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
l---------------····· · ······&#13;
&#13;
Hutchins Studio&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
PARK MARKET&#13;
2016 S. St. Aubin Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
198&#13;
&#13;
199&#13;
&#13;
City Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�----------------1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
4006 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Complete Banking Service&#13;
&#13;
Pete.rs Park&#13;
&#13;
" The Dime Store at Peters Park"&#13;
Everything from Five Cents to One Dollar and Up&#13;
&#13;
4006 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
T. L. SCHA EF'ER, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
......•....................&#13;
&#13;
•••••• • .• • • • • . • • • • • • • . . • • • •&#13;
&#13;
Crary Beauty Shop&#13;
&#13;
ST ANDA RD OFFICE&#13;
EQUIPMENT CO.&#13;
&#13;
Park's Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
Office Supplies of Every Type&#13;
" we Make Our Own"&#13;
&#13;
Esquire Th eatre Building&#13;
&#13;
SUNDAES&#13;
&#13;
Portable Typewriters&#13;
Files&#13;
Mim eograph s&#13;
Shaw Walker Desks&#13;
Supplies&#13;
Paper&#13;
&#13;
MALTS&#13;
&#13;
Open Thursday and Friday Evenings ·&#13;
Take Some Home&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
to the&#13;
DAVENPORT CLEANING WORKS&#13;
618-620 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
for Summer Storage&#13;
&#13;
Allen Wales Adding Machines&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6147&#13;
4711 M'Side Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-9211&#13;
&#13;
Send Your Winter Garments&#13;
&#13;
410 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-0543&#13;
&#13;
1------·············--------&#13;
&#13;
.--·····-················----&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5008&#13;
&#13;
···-----------------·····--,&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
ROE'S HOMOGENIZED&#13;
VITAMIN " D' MILK&#13;
&#13;
SADOFF'S&#13;
&#13;
FINEST GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
Home of Men's Fine. Clothing&#13;
&#13;
MEATS -AND&#13;
&#13;
Assorted Ice Cream Flavors&#13;
Fountain Service&#13;
&#13;
and Furnishings&#13;
Roe Dairy Co.&#13;
Phone 6-5673&#13;
&#13;
- - -. .. . ..... - - -..... - - - - . _&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
402 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
FRESH FRUITS AND&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
VEGETABLES&#13;
&#13;
······--········- -·······----······ ~·-······· · ···----·······,&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Momingside's Own Photographers&#13;
&#13;
STILES IN PHOTOGRAPHY&#13;
C. V. STILES&#13;
&#13;
E. E. STILES&#13;
&#13;
BOTTLED BY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6797&#13;
&#13;
·-··------------- ----····----- ··-- ----··········· ···········--_J&#13;
&#13;
200&#13;
&#13;
VAN EATON'S&#13;
&#13;
CHESTERMAN CO.&#13;
&#13;
Weddings&#13;
Group Pictures&#13;
Portraits&#13;
Commercial Photography&#13;
Suite 3 Nasser Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
201&#13;
&#13;
O... P. SK"GGS&#13;
,OOD C.tJBtP- STO-;.&#13;
L-- · ····------------- ····· ·· -'&#13;
&#13;
�THE FAVORITE CANDY OF THE NORTHWEST ...&#13;
&#13;
The New&#13;
&#13;
LAFAMA Chocolates&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE CLEANERS&#13;
&#13;
One of a Family of Famous Chocolates&#13;
&#13;
DYERS AND TAILORS&#13;
Nothing Short of the Best&#13;
Phone 6-6336&#13;
&#13;
Made by&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON BISCUIT COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
••&#13;
•••• -&#13;
&#13;
•••••••••• -&#13;
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•••• -&#13;
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••••&#13;
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~---·--··----------------------------·-----·······------ ------,&#13;
.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
MOSIER SALES AND SERVICE&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
We Will Make You&#13;
Lovelier to Look at&#13;
Two Operators&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE LOCKERS&#13;
and MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6428&#13;
&#13;
VIOLET BEAUTY SALON&#13;
&#13;
WESTINGHOUSE APPLIANCES&#13;
&#13;
Complete Meat Processing&#13;
&#13;
3937 Transit Ave.&#13;
&#13;
4ll 8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6816&#13;
&#13;
One Block West of Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
r······ · ········------······1 .&#13;
&#13;
GRAYSON'S&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON'S BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
TEEMAN The Tailor&#13;
Morningside's High Class&#13;
&#13;
"SUITS ME"&#13;
1903 Morningside Ave&#13;
&#13;
•••&#13;
&#13;
BLUE BUNNY -&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
A Quality Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
•••••••••••••.•••••••••••••&#13;
&#13;
.----------------···········--·····-····--·····················,&#13;
&#13;
Pastry Shop&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
At Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-5966&#13;
&#13;
--···-··-----····-···········-······~·------------···········,&#13;
&#13;
LONE STAR TRADING CO.&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
COUNCIL OAK STORES&#13;
&#13;
Home Appliances&#13;
Sporting Goods&#13;
Hardware Sundries • Complete Kitchens&#13;
Home Workshop Tools&#13;
&#13;
BETTER FOODS FOR BETTER LIVING&#13;
Phone 5-7991&#13;
&#13;
313 Nebraska St.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
&#13;
·---··--------------------------------------------------------1&#13;
&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
203&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
�............ -.... ----- ---------- -.---.............. ---.-'&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
VERSTEGEN PRINTING CO.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL&#13;
&#13;
- - - · - - •••• --- - - -&#13;
&#13;
- - - -- - - - - ••••• ______&#13;
&#13;
·······1&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE PRINTERS&#13;
SCHRADER'S RESTAURANT&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
Your Host in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
BRADSHAW PHARMACY&#13;
Chicken-in-the-Basket&#13;
&#13;
Founta in Service&#13;
&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Phon e 6-7373&#13;
&#13;
Catalog Building • Ruling • Binding&#13;
Commercial Art • Layout and Copy&#13;
&#13;
STEAK DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
CREATIVE PRINTERS&#13;
&#13;
4619 Mo rningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Verstegen&#13;
&#13;
Hey, Gang!!&#13;
LET'S ALL EAT AT&#13;
&#13;
THE BARN&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
Across From the Court House&#13;
&#13;
615 Douglas Street + Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SNACK BAR A D CAFETERIA&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
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�...... ·--· ...................&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVING CO.&#13;
&#13;
S-D&#13;
&#13;
MAKER S O F FI N E PR I NT I N G&#13;
PLATES FOR BLACK &amp; COLOR&#13;
ARTISTS, PHOTO-ENGRAVERS,&#13;
OFFSET PLATES&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVERS&#13;
TO THE&#13;
&#13;
1 9 4 7&#13;
&#13;
S I O U X&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
320 1/2 Main Avenue&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX FALLS, SOUTH DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
·····························································-~&#13;
&#13;
206&#13;
&#13;
207&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux Staff wishes to express its gratitude and&#13;
appreciation to the following who have made the publication of this yearbook possible. To these people go our&#13;
sincere thanks.&#13;
Verstegen Printing Company-Sioux City&#13;
South Dakota En gravi ng Company-Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
Hu tchins Studio-Sioux City&#13;
Tiie S. K. Smith Cover Company-Chicago&#13;
Firms advertising in the Sioux&#13;
&#13;
208&#13;
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�</text>
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&#13;
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              <text>THE&#13;
&#13;
1947&#13;
&#13;
PRESENTING-&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
CITY·&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Richard McLaug&#13;
John Castle&#13;
&#13;
. . .&#13;
&#13;
It is always a joy to pen a word of greeting to the Morningside Coll ege&#13;
Sioux readers. The Annual depicts in picture and report the story of the year.&#13;
The Annual is the most authentic report which is compiled of a year's activities.&#13;
&#13;
It reports concerning the faculty, the students, the achievements, the oddities,&#13;
the fun; about the only thing it leaves out is the regrets.&#13;
Because it is the year's report of the institution, it is the permanent word&#13;
of that year to all succeeding years. The. students and faculty are happy to&#13;
present the Annual for the year 1947 be.cause it is certain to give assurance of&#13;
a newer and a greater future for Morningside. Co ll ege. It is the year when&#13;
enrollments were doubled. It is the year when the A. W. Jones Hall of Science&#13;
is being erected . It is the year when the post war activities renew the hopes and&#13;
dreams of pre-war plans. We are now eagerly awaiting the construction of&#13;
the new Gymnasium anci Fieldhouse, the new Men's Dormitory and many other&#13;
promises of building and advancement.&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
RoADMAN,&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Prexy Lodge&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Myron&#13;
THOMAS ELMORE TwEITO&#13;
&#13;
EARLE GRABER&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Men&#13;
&#13;
Dean of the College&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History&#13;
&#13;
A. B., HEIDELBERG COLLEGE; A. M., ibid;&#13;
D. Sc., ibid; Ph.D., STATE UNIVERSITY OF&#13;
IOWA ; FELLOW IN PHYSICS, ibid; UNlVER·&#13;
SITY OF MICHIGAN; COLUMBIA UN IV ER·&#13;
SlTY; OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY; FELLOW&#13;
IN PHYSICS , UNIVERSITY OF CH ICAGO.&#13;
&#13;
A. D., ST, OLAF COLLEGE; UN IV ERS ITY OF&#13;
MINNESOTA; A. M., STATE UN IV ERSITY OF&#13;
JOWA; FELLOW IN HISTORY, ibid; GRADU·&#13;
ATE ASSISTANT, ibid; Ph.D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
ALVA Tolf&#13;
&#13;
NELSON ALLEN PRICE&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
Vice President of College&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Health and Physical Education&#13;
&#13;
A. B. , SYRACUSE UN IVER SITY; S. T. D.,&#13;
BOSTON SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY; B. D. , JlAR .&#13;
YARD ANDOVER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY.&#13;
&#13;
A. B. , COE COLLEGE ;&#13;
OF CH ICAGO.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
A. M.,&#13;
&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
DIVISION OF THE HUMANITIES&#13;
&#13;
PETER BANNON&#13;
&#13;
JOHN FRANCIS CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
A ssociate Professor of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa; A. M., ibid; Ph.D.,&#13;
ibid.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of&#13;
Illinois; A. M., Northwestern University.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK Guy BEAN&#13;
&#13;
MELBA MARIE CRIPE&#13;
&#13;
L ecturer in R eligion&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Speech&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Simpson College;&#13;
D. D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN E NGLlSH&#13;
DIMMlTT&#13;
MARJORIE ANDERSON&#13;
BOYD&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
low a; Graduate Assistantship Romance Lan11;uage,&#13;
ibid; A. M., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
LEF. CHARLES&#13;
BRADFORD&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Carleton College;&#13;
A.M., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
VESTA C . B URRIS&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Ohio University ; Otterbein&#13;
College; Bonebrake Seminary; University of&#13;
Chicago; Mornin gside&#13;
College, A. B.&#13;
&#13;
CLINTON EDo B uRRIS&#13;
&#13;
Lecturer in Library&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Otterbein College;&#13;
B. D., Bonebrake Theological Seminary; A. M&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women Emeritus,&#13;
Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages&#13;
A. B., Illinois Wesleyan&#13;
University: A. M., Columbia University ; L. H. D.,&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan University ; University of Chicago; American School of&#13;
Classical Studies, Rome.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
HARRIETTE LARSON&#13;
DOOLEY&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Mornin gside College; Graduate Work at&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
&#13;
LAURA CLARA FISCHER&#13;
&#13;
Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Carleton College;&#13;
A. M., ibid ; University of&#13;
Chicago; University of&#13;
Colorado; University of&#13;
Wisconsin; University of&#13;
Southern California.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD LUTHER&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Speech&#13;
&#13;
B. S., North Texas State&#13;
College; A. M., University&#13;
of Louisiana.&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
DIVISION OF NATURAL SCIENCE&#13;
ALFRED BRUCE&#13;
GAARDER&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Romance Languages&#13;
A. B., New Mexico Highlands University: M. deA.,&#13;
National University of&#13;
Mexico: Middlebury&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
NELONTINE M.&#13;
MAXWELL&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Mathem atics&#13;
A. B., Vassar College;&#13;
Iowa Stale College,&#13;
summer.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDERICK&#13;
KANTHLENER&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD ARTHUR&#13;
BEDIENT&#13;
&#13;
Professor of R omance&#13;
Languages&#13;
A. B., Cornell College;&#13;
A. M., Harvard University;&#13;
Institute Francois and&#13;
University of Madrid,&#13;
Spain; University of Chicago; University of Dijon;&#13;
National University of&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Albion College;&#13;
Teachin g Fellowship,&#13;
Cornell University;&#13;
Ph. D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN BENJAMI N MAGEE&#13;
&#13;
ALBERT WILLIAM&#13;
BUCKINGHAM&#13;
&#13;
Profes.,or of Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Philosophy&#13;
A. B., University of&#13;
Washington; A. M., Boston&#13;
University ; S. T. B., ibid:&#13;
A. M., Harvard University;&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
MmAH MILLS&#13;
&#13;
GLEN Roy BusHYAGER&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Physical Education&#13;
A. B., Morningside College ; Stanford&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
B. S., Allegheny College;&#13;
A. lVL, Pennsylvania State&#13;
College: University of&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College: A. M., University of&#13;
Chicago; University of&#13;
Michigan; University of&#13;
Southern California.&#13;
&#13;
RoY Milton&#13;
&#13;
CHATTERS&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
Kalamazoo College; A. B.,&#13;
Hope College; M. S.&#13;
University of Michigan:&#13;
Teaching Assistant, ibid;&#13;
Ph.D., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST WILLIAM&#13;
SAUNDERS&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Bible and&#13;
Religion&#13;
Northeastern University;&#13;
B. S. in R. E., Boston&#13;
University; S. T. B., ibid;&#13;
Ph.D., Duke University.&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BELINDA&#13;
COLE&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
A. B., Gri nnell College;&#13;
A. M., Columbia University; Ed. D., New York&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AusTIN Coss&#13;
&#13;
RoY ARCHER SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Chemistry,&#13;
Emeritus&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
B. S., Illinois Wesleyan&#13;
University; M. S., Univer·&#13;
sity of Illinois; Assistant&#13;
in Chemistry, ibid; University of Chicago; Fellow&#13;
in Chemistry, Clark&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Vanderbi lt University; A. M., ibid ; University of Chicago; Harvard&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
ARNOLD LESTER&#13;
STEINTJES&#13;
LESLIE H. DAVIS&#13;
&#13;
Director of Athletics&#13;
and Professor of Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Iowa State Teachers&#13;
College: A. M., South&#13;
Dakota University;&#13;
University of Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
&#13;
R egistrar&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Physics&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College ; M. S., State University of Iowa; Graduate&#13;
Assistant, ibid; NorthCentral Workshop in Higher Education, University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B., Morningside College; L. H. D., ibid; John&#13;
Hopkins University;&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD OGLESBY&#13;
MALCOLMSON&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES MILLER&#13;
WINSTON&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
Ins tructor in Biology&#13;
&#13;
Ed B., Western State&#13;
Teachers College; M. S.,&#13;
University of Illinois;&#13;
University of Pennsylvania.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of&#13;
Texas.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN STANTON&#13;
WINSTON&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Physics&#13;
NANCY ELIZABETH&#13;
BAXTER&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Vassar College.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES H. 0BYE&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Physical&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
B. S., Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cornell College;&#13;
A. M., University of Chicago; Illinois Institute of&#13;
Technology ; University of&#13;
New Hampshire.&#13;
&#13;
BERNICE J URIST&#13;
WOLFSON&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Ph ysical&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
A. B., University of Michigan; A. M., New York&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
DIVISION OF FINE ARTS&#13;
CHARLES RALEIGH&#13;
GARLAND&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Musical Theory&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT ETHAN LOWRY&#13;
&#13;
Carson-Newman College;&#13;
A. B., University of Kentucky; Eastman School of&#13;
Mu sic; A.M., State University of Iowa; Ph. D.,&#13;
ibid.&#13;
&#13;
In structo r in Wood-Wind&#13;
Instruments&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA ANN ODEGARD&#13;
HOMER EyGENE&#13;
GARRETSON&#13;
&#13;
Inst ructo r in Piano&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Mornin gs ide College; Eastman School of&#13;
Mu sic.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violin&#13;
&#13;
B S. M., Morningside College; Juilliard School of&#13;
Music.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH NEWTON&#13;
MAcCoLLIN&#13;
L01s JANE GRAMMER&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voic e&#13;
&#13;
/l ead of School Music&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B., Oberlin Co nservatory of Mu sic; A. B.,&#13;
Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
B. F. A., University of&#13;
Nebraska; Mus. M.,&#13;
Northwestern University.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL MAcCoLLIN&#13;
&#13;
Director of th e Conserva·&#13;
Lory of Music and&#13;
Professor of Voice&#13;
&#13;
CLARA ASMUS GRAY&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Oberlin Conservatory of&#13;
Music; Chautauqua Summer School of Music;&#13;
A. B., Oberlin College;&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside Colle ge; teaching Fellowship, George P eabody&#13;
College for Teachers.&#13;
&#13;
Mu s. B., Morningside College; Chicago Mu sical&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
ETHEL THOMPSON&#13;
KUCINSKI&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
}AMES REISTR UP&#13;
&#13;
Mu s. B., Morningside College; Eastman School of&#13;
Mu sic ; Chicago Musical&#13;
College; The Cleveland&#13;
Institute of Music;&#13;
J uilliard School of Music.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Pianofort e&#13;
Department&#13;
&#13;
Univers ity of Wi sco nsin;&#13;
Chicago musical College;&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
LEO KUCINSKI&#13;
&#13;
Head of Violin and&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside College: Cleveland Institute of&#13;
Mu sic; Conducting Fellowship in Juilliard Graduate&#13;
School of Music.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
GRACE PEARL SMITH&#13;
&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa ; A. M., University of&#13;
South Dakota.&#13;
&#13;
In structo r in Art&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
EMERY&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
}AMES EARL&#13;
KIRKPATRICK&#13;
&#13;
STEWART&#13;
&#13;
Chairman of the&#13;
Placement Committee&#13;
Professor of Education&#13;
A. B., Cornell College;&#13;
A. M., State University of&#13;
Iowa; Graduate Assistant&#13;
in Education and&#13;
Research, Assistant in&#13;
Extension, ibid; Ph.D.,&#13;
ibid.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Voice&#13;
B. S. M., Morningside&#13;
College.&#13;
&#13;
FAI TH FOSTER&#13;
WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
and History of Music&#13;
A. B., Morn ingside College; American Conservatory of Music (Chicago) ;&#13;
Mus. B., Morningside College; University of&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH HERBERT&#13;
LEHMAN&#13;
&#13;
I nstruc/or in History&#13;
B S., Northwestern Un iversity; A. M., ibid.&#13;
&#13;
DIVISION OF&#13;
SOCIAL&#13;
SCIENCE&#13;
&#13;
MARCIA AGNES McNEE&#13;
&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
Elementary Education&#13;
A. B., Upper Iowa University; A. M., University&#13;
of Ch icago; State University of Iowa: University of&#13;
Southern California.&#13;
&#13;
LELIA MAE BARBER&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Economics&#13;
B. S., Emporia Kan sas&#13;
State Teachers College ;&#13;
M. S., University of&#13;
Denver.&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND NORRIS&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
B. S., Illinois Wesleyan&#13;
University; A. M., University of Chicago; Teaching&#13;
Fellow, ibid ; S. T. B.,&#13;
Garrett Biblical Institute;&#13;
Austin Fellow, Harvard&#13;
University; Litt. D., Central College; George Peabody College for Teachers,&#13;
University of Tennessee;&#13;
New York University.&#13;
&#13;
BEATHICE BERGH&#13;
&#13;
Supervisor of Practice&#13;
Teaching. East Junior&#13;
High School&#13;
B. S., State University of&#13;
Iowa; A. M., Columbia&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD ERNEST&#13;
BOWMAN&#13;
RUTH MARIE MORRISON&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in History&#13;
A. B., State University of&#13;
Iowa; A. M., ibid; Graduate Assistant, ibid.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Augustana College;&#13;
A. M., University of&#13;
Nebraska; Johnson Fellow&#13;
in American History, ibid;&#13;
State University of Iowa;&#13;
Un iversity of Omaha.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL RuTH M u RRA Y&#13;
&#13;
Associate Professor of&#13;
History&#13;
A. B., Morningside College; A. M., University of&#13;
Illinois, Columbia&#13;
University.&#13;
&#13;
HORACE Boies&#13;
HAWTHORN&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Sociology&#13;
B. S., Iowa State College;&#13;
M. S., ibid; Ph. D.,&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF&#13;
WILLIAM HENRY&#13;
ROBERTS&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Psycho!ogy&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Univers ity of&#13;
Rochester; A. M., Teachers&#13;
Colle ge; Ph. D., Northwestern Un iversity; Newton Theological Institution; Yale Un iversity.&#13;
&#13;
LEO D.&#13;
&#13;
GRAVES&#13;
&#13;
Vocational Appraiser&#13;
&#13;
Roy Eli STANTON&#13;
&#13;
Director of Downtown&#13;
Division&#13;
Assistant Professor of&#13;
Secretarial Science&#13;
A. B., Coll ege of Emporia;&#13;
M. S., Un iversi ty of Colorado; Emporia State&#13;
Teachers College.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MILO HALL, JR.&#13;
&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
HARRY&#13;
MILDRED Wikert&#13;
WALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
In structor in Secretarial&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
w. ,HARTMAN&#13;
M.A.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Direc tor of&#13;
Admissions&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN Marie&#13;
MADSEN&#13;
&#13;
Secretary Lo President&#13;
I nsl rue/or in Secretarial&#13;
Science&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Morningside Co llegP- .&#13;
&#13;
HEALTH&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Alumni Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Loy LOTSPEI CH&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
Dietician&#13;
CHARLES F.&#13;
Berkstresser,&#13;
M.D.&#13;
&#13;
Col!ege Physician&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
HELEN&#13;
BRENNER, R.N.&#13;
&#13;
College Nurse&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
Helen&#13;
&#13;
LYNCH&#13;
&#13;
H ousemother&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
LOTTIE M AY&#13;
MA CARTH UR&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
HELEN PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant R egistrar&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF 'TRUSTEES&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
D. W. Stewart, President... ........................................................................................................ Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. F. Roach, Vi ce-P res ident.. ................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Frank G. Bea n, Vice-President... .............................................................................................. Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
J. C. Buthman, Secretary........................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. J. Sweet, Treasurer..............................................................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
TR USTEES OF HONOR&#13;
Emlin Ber geson , Ma nager, Mid-West Li ve Stock Commission Co .................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A. W. Jon es, Ba nker .......... ·-···········-··················-································································· ...... Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. C. F. Lon g, House wife ........................... ....................................................................... Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
W. H. Lease, Mini ster......................................................................................................................... Webb, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1947&#13;
&#13;
LEroy&#13;
&#13;
Joshua Sweet&#13;
&#13;
Bu siness Manager&#13;
&#13;
HANS JA COB Raun&#13;
&#13;
S uperintendent of&#13;
Buildings and Grounds&#13;
&#13;
Leo n Hickm an, Attorney.............................................................................................. Pittsburgh, Penn sylvani a&#13;
Ar thur Schuldt, Superintendent Sheldon Di stri ct.. ............................................................ Storm Lake, Iowa&#13;
H. I. Down, Physic ian and Surgeon .........................................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. N. Smith, Ma nager Wea th erw ax Clothin g Co .................................................................. Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
D. W. Stewart, Attorney............................................................................. ..............................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
P a rn ell Mahoney, Sioux City Brick &amp; Tile Co .....................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
W. C. Wolle, Real Estate .......................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
J. A. Farnham, Minister.. ........................ ·-·······················-····················· ........................... Webster City, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1948&#13;
Charles Buckwalter , Mini ster.. ................................................................................................... 1-lumboldt, Iowa&#13;
S. Will ard Cunnin gham, Minister ................ ....................................................... ....................... Row a n, Iowa&#13;
L. D. Havi ghurst, Superintendent F ort Dodge Distri ct ........... ····-··-··············-········--·······F on Dod ge, Iowa&#13;
Ernest N. Raun , Sioux City Gas &amp; Electr ic Co ..................................................................... Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
J. C. Buthma n, Minister.. ..............................&#13;
City, Iow a&#13;
F ra ncis Kin gsbury, Banker .............. ·-······································-·············································P onca, Nebraska&#13;
Miss Rae Wetmore, Play Publisher.. ......... ·-······················-······-···········--······························Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Ray J. Harrin gton, Physic ian and Surgeon ..........................................................................S ioux City, Io wa&#13;
C. S. Van Eaton, Merchant ...................................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1949&#13;
F ra nk G. Bea n, Superintendent Sioux City Distri ct... ......................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
L. D. Snyder, Contractor ........................................................... ................................................ Humboldt, Iowa&#13;
C. H. Brechlin , Manager Kresge Store.................................................................................... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. W. Britton, Investment Banker...... ·-··························································-··-···-·············Siou x City, Iowa&#13;
F. E. Burgess, Superintendent Al gona Distric t. ......................................... ·--·-··························Algona, Iowa&#13;
G. W. Dunn , Mi nister. .................................. - ........................................................................ -.S ioux City, Iowa&#13;
I{. Cliffo rd Ha rper, Attorney....................................................................................................Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Charles F . Berkstresser, Physicia,1.. ..................................................................... - ............... Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. F . Roach, Ma nager J. C. P enn ey Co mpa ny .................................................................... Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
Ha rold P. Win ter, Life Insura nce ........................................... _............................................... Cin cinnati , Ohio&#13;
&#13;
THO MAS CALDERWOO D STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
Professo r of Biology, Emeritus&#13;
&#13;
Adr ian College; Uni versity of Chi cago;&#13;
A. B., Ka nsas City Uni versity; M. D.,&#13;
Kansas Sta te Uni versity ( College of&#13;
Ph ys icians) : Mar ine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachu setts; State&#13;
Univers ity of Iowa; University of M ichiSc., Co rnell Coll ege.&#13;
ga n ; Hon.&#13;
&#13;
D&#13;
&#13;
Philip&#13;
&#13;
Wright&#13;
&#13;
Go vE DARE&#13;
&#13;
Terese&#13;
&#13;
G ERTRUDE M ALLOY&#13;
&#13;
Inst rue tor in English&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Drafting&#13;
&#13;
A. B., No rth Central College; A. M.,&#13;
University of Jll inois; Uni versity of&#13;
Chi cago.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Teachers College; Imm ac ulate Conce ption Aca dem y ; Chicago&#13;
Aca demy of Fine Arts.&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1947&#13;
&#13;
To you graduating seniors,&#13;
we'll miss you at Morningsidebut the best of luck always in&#13;
your future endeavors and ambitions. Remember to sing the,&#13;
praises of dear Alma Mater."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
McC RACKEN , MUTC HLER, CO NRAD&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
President ............................................................ .No rman Mut chler&#13;
.&#13;
Vi ce President. ...........................................Marjorie McCrack en&#13;
Sccrcla ry ............................ ............................. Mary Jan e Conrad&#13;
Treasurer ................................................................... .Darlene Held&#13;
Representative ....... ..................................................H arold M inor&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
EMILIO ARREDONDO&#13;
&#13;
GORDON FAIR CHILD&#13;
&#13;
DoN ALLEN&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. !.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
La P az, Bolovia&#13;
&#13;
Sioux R apids&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan 1. 2. 3. 4. P res. 3;&#13;
\V.A.A. 3. 4; Yal e- Harvard 1.&#13;
&#13;
Ea rl y&#13;
&#13;
Student Council 2, 3; Junior Class Pres.;&#13;
YMCA J, 2, 3, 4, Secretary 2, Pres. 3;&#13;
Cosmopolitan C l ub 1, 2, 3, 4; Biology&#13;
Cl ub Treasure r 3, Vi ce Pres. 4; Beta&#13;
Beta Beta 4 ; Phi Sigma Iota 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Religious Life 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A gentleman and a scholar.''&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha I. 2. 3. 4. Warden 4;&#13;
Band ] , 2, 3, 4; Choir ], 2.&#13;
&#13;
" He's really a card."&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN WALKER FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
"A one-man woman."&#13;
&#13;
"An I pana smile that's genuine."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Elbert&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET BAKER&#13;
&#13;
N. BALES&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B.A.&#13;
&#13;
sioux&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bluff&#13;
&#13;
City&#13;
&#13;
YWCA l , 2; W.A.A . l , 2. 3, 4;&#13;
F.T.A. 3. 4; M.F.T.C. 3, 4;&#13;
IJask etball l , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Staff 2, 3: Band 3, 4: Choir&#13;
2, 3. 4 : Ph i Mu Alpha 3. 4: YM CA 2. 3;&#13;
Grace Col legians 4: Collegiate Pl ayers 2;&#13;
Pi Gam ma Mu Pres. 4 .&#13;
&#13;
" Listen lo the Ford go by!"&#13;
&#13;
" Intense and intelligent."&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4, Librarian&#13;
&#13;
4;&#13;
&#13;
Glenn&#13;
&#13;
GAFFEY&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
NORBERT GLODEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
YMCA , 1, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"The quiet kind whose&#13;
nature never varies.&#13;
&#13;
"An individualist&#13;
&#13;
CONNIE HAVIGHURST&#13;
ANTON BECKER&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM GORDON HANSEN&#13;
WILLIAM B URNS&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Marion, S. D.&#13;
Choir l. 2, 3: Band I; YMCA 2, 3;&#13;
Cosmopo litan l ; K appa Chi ] , 2, 3, 4,&#13;
Pres . 2.&#13;
&#13;
"The serious type."&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Cit y&#13;
Al pha Tau Delta 4.&#13;
&#13;
" That's a character /or ya!"&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge&#13;
&#13;
S hel don&#13;
&#13;
Studen t Council ] . 2: Freshman Vice&#13;
Pres. : Co l legian Reporter Staff 4 :&#13;
W.S.G.A. l. 3: lshkoodah Pres.; YW CA&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4; Kappa Chi 1. 2, 4, S ec. 3;&#13;
Cosmopolitan 4; F.T.A. Sec. 1, P res. 3:&#13;
Grace Collegians 3: Religious Life 3:&#13;
H omecoming Attend ant 4 ; Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
Student Counci l 4 ; Biology Club 4;&#13;
Unil(... of Nebraska I, 2; Univ. of&#13;
Idaho 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A doctor in the making."&#13;
&#13;
"An eager-beaver."&#13;
&#13;
MARY J ANE CONRAD&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Ponca, Nebr.&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3. 4, Socia l Chairman 2. Pres. 4; Student Council 3. 4,&#13;
Vi ce Pres. 4; Collegian R eport er Staff 4;&#13;
&#13;
STEPHEN&#13;
&#13;
c. DEVRI ES&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
DARLENE HELD&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
K ATHERINE HELD&#13;
&#13;
Hin ton&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau De lta 2. 3. ti. ; Social Chairman 2. Pres. 3, 4: Student Coun ci l 3. 4;&#13;
Col legian R e porter 1, 2, Editor 4:&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu 4; Editor Scoop 4 :&#13;
Editor Student Direc tory 4; Collegiate&#13;
Players 1. 2, 3: Social Life 4:&#13;
R e ligious Life 4; Student Union Board&#13;
4; Cheerleader 1. 2; Who 's Wh o 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4, Direc tress 2,&#13;
Cones. Sec. 3, Vi ce Pres. 4: Student&#13;
Council 4; Junior Cl ass Vice Pres ..&#13;
Senior Class Treasurer; Sioux Staff 4;&#13;
W.A.A. I , 2, 3, 4, Vice Pres. 4.&#13;
Pres. 4, Corres. Sec. 3; Major Club&#13;
I. 2, 4; F.T.A. 3; Yale-Harvard l. 2;&#13;
May Fest iva l Qu een J: Beauty Queen&#13;
Attcn&lt;lant 3.&#13;
&#13;
Hin ton&#13;
&#13;
" It's not what a man stands for,&#13;
it's what he falls for."&#13;
&#13;
"Light or small, short or tall, she&#13;
sets her snare to catch them all."&#13;
&#13;
"Air bound."&#13;
&#13;
PHYLLIS DORAN&#13;
&#13;
J OHN D ULING&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET HEUMANN&#13;
&#13;
WILFRED KA UFMAN&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Agora Secretary 3. Senior Rep. 4:&#13;
Jntcrsororit y Council 3. 4 ; Symphon y&#13;
], 2. 3; Choir 2. 4; Swing Band 3:&#13;
Monohan Post Band l , 2. 3. 4: Sioux&#13;
&#13;
City Sym 1,honetta 2. 3: YWCA , I. 2, 3,&#13;
Secretary l. Vice Pres. 2; F'.T.A.&#13;
2. 3. 4, Secretary 3: Collegia te&#13;
P layers 3; Phi Sigma Iota 2, 3, 4; Pi&#13;
Gamma Mu 4: Social Life 4: Chapel&#13;
Commi ttee 4: Re li gious Life 4;&#13;
Who' s Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Can't help Lovin' dat&#13;
.&#13;
man o' mine "&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Kappa&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Council&#13;
Social&#13;
&#13;
Pi A I pha 2, 3, 4, Corres.&#13;
3, Sec. 4. Pres. 4 ; Stude nt&#13;
4; Inter-Sorority Counci l 4;&#13;
Life 4 ; R e ligious Life 4.&#13;
&#13;
"A Pi with lots of pep."&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Si oux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Al pha I. 2. 3 . 4. Sec. 3, 4,&#13;
Treas. 2; Choir 1. 4; Band 1, 3, 4 ;&#13;
YMCA 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
M.F.T.C. 4: F.T.A. 4 ; Univ. of&#13;
Ne braska .I , 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Whal love doesn't do to&#13;
some people!"&#13;
&#13;
"She's just 'human'."&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3. 4. Di rec tress 4;&#13;
Co ll egian 1: Col lege T rio 2. 3, 4 ;&#13;
F.T.A. 3: W.A.A. I. 2. Vice Pres. 3 .&#13;
Sec. 4: Major Cl ub 2, 4: YWCA I. 2. 3;&#13;
Collegiate P layers 2 : Intramural basketball 2, Volleyball 4 ; Yal e -H arva rd 4;&#13;
Agora Queen 4.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
H ave l ock&#13;
&#13;
Ph i Sigma; M C lu b 3. 4: Barn Board 4 ;&#13;
Football 1, 3; Hasketball 1.&#13;
&#13;
"There's an awful lot of&#13;
'Kauffie' at Schwarz."&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN MATHERS&#13;
&#13;
LOVICE K1 ' GSBURY&#13;
&#13;
MARY Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi I , 2, 3. 4, Corrcs.&#13;
Secre tary 3. Crit ic 4. Treasu rer 4:&#13;
Student Council 2. 4: Assistant Editor,&#13;
sioux 3. Editor Sioux 4; Col lcgian&#13;
R eporter Staff 2. 3; Ishkoodah Pres. I ;&#13;
Symphony l. 2 , 3: Marching Band 4:&#13;
Concert Band 4: YWCA l. 2. 3. 4. Vi ce&#13;
&#13;
President 2. 4: F.T.A. 2. 3. 4: MFTC&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3, 4 , vice&#13;
&#13;
Pres. 2: Phi sigma&#13;
&#13;
Iota&#13;
&#13;
Sergea nt Bluff&#13;
Kappa Zela C hi 3. 4: Student Council&#13;
3, 4; Sioux staff 3. 4; Manusc ript 4;&#13;
\V .S.G.A. Pres. Summer 1946 ; ln tcrSorority Council 4 ; M.r: r.c. 3, 4 ;&#13;
P res. 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Effervescent."&#13;
&#13;
2, 3. 4: Who' s Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"God b 1ess the man who&#13;
invented sleep."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Ponca , Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD MINOR&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Fo rt Do dge&#13;
&#13;
Student Council I, 4, Pres. 4; F reshman&#13;
Pres; M Club I , 2 , Pre s. 3, S ec. 4;&#13;
&#13;
F ootba ll I. Basketba ll I , 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Who does not love wine,&#13;
women, and song,&#13;
R emains a fool his whole&#13;
life long."&#13;
&#13;
Student Council l , 2. 3 . 4; Freshman&#13;
P res.; S iou x S tarr l; Band I; Choir 1 ;&#13;
S ymphony 1: Kap pa Chi 1, 2, 3, 4,&#13;
P res. 2 ; YMCA I , 2, 3, 4 ; Grace&#13;
Co l legians P res. I ; Alpha K appa&#13;
Del ta 4; Social Life 1 ; Chapel C omm .&#13;
l. 2: R e ligi ous Life I , 2. 3; Bask e tball&#13;
Man ager 2; Softba11 . Baseba ll I ntramurals 2, 3; Manager Book store I;&#13;
&#13;
Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"He ain't no 'minor'."&#13;
&#13;
CAROLYN M UTCHLER&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE LANE&#13;
&#13;
J. KRSKA&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
M UTCHLER&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
MELVI&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4 , "Reporter 3,&#13;
Usher 3, Cones. Sec. 4 , Chap lain 4 ;&#13;
Student Council 4 ; Agora F irst Vi ce&#13;
President 4 ; W.A.A. 1. 2 , 3, 4 , Repo rler&#13;
3, P res. ; Cheerleader 1. 2; J unior&#13;
Guard 3 ; Major Club 4; Modern Dance&#13;
Club; lnt rarnurals 1. 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
A lpha Tau Delta 3. 4; Stude nt C ouncil&#13;
4; Se ni o r Class President ; M Cl u b 3, 4;&#13;
F ootball I , 3: Baske tba ll 1; l ntramurals 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Student Counc il 3:&#13;
Prc·En gincers Club l , 2, 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
"He's the quiet type."&#13;
&#13;
A I pha Sigma 2, 3, 4, Chaplain 4;&#13;
YWCA I , 2. 4: F.T.A. I , 2, 4. Sec. 2 ;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu 4; Sigma Tau Delta&#13;
&#13;
4.&#13;
&#13;
" Mild manners and a gentle&#13;
heart are hers."&#13;
&#13;
"If you knew Susie like we know&#13;
-Susie-Ooohhh?"&#13;
&#13;
S parta , Mi chigan&#13;
&#13;
"A leader and all around&#13;
good fellow."&#13;
&#13;
MARCELLA POPPEN&#13;
JAMES LEACHMAN&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Center&#13;
&#13;
Sio ix C ity&#13;
&#13;
J OHN LARSON&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD PIPPETT&#13;
&#13;
Mn P hi Epsilon sec- teas&#13;
3, 4 ;&#13;
YWCA 1. 2. 3, 4; F .T.A. 2, 4; M.F.T.C.&#13;
2, 4 ; Cosmo1,olitan 4 ; Grace Coll egians&#13;
2 , 3, 4; Choir 2, 3; Madrigal 4.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Univ. of II linoi s I , 2~ 3; Baskctbal I 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Tremenjous."&#13;
&#13;
"Maybe he got lost&#13;
the stacks."&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
"He came to college for&#13;
an education."&#13;
&#13;
"A hard worker who should&#13;
go places."&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE RoADMAN&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
KATHLEEN LE CKBAND&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY LYLE&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Salina, Kan sas&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Symphony 4; Marymount&#13;
&#13;
College,&#13;
&#13;
Salina,. Kansas, 1, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A Southern lass with charm."&#13;
&#13;
YWCA I , 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. I . 2, 3. 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Silence is golden."&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi 2, 3, 4, So cial Chairma n&#13;
2, 3, Vice Pres. 3, P res. 4; Student&#13;
Cou ncil 2, 3, 4; Sophomore V ice Pres. ;&#13;
J unior Class Presiden t; Collegian&#13;
R eporter staff 3; Agora S ec. 3, Pres. 4 ;&#13;
l sh koodah Pres.; lntersorority Counci l&#13;
&#13;
Fred&#13;
&#13;
ROEHRS&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
3. 4; YWCA 2, 3, 4; W .A.A. I , 2, 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
Pre- Engineers 1, 3. Secretary 2, P resident&#13;
4; Sigma Pi Sigma 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Pres. 3; Pi Gamm a Mu 4; Barn Board 4 ;&#13;
Attendan t to Ma y Queen I ; A ttendan t to&#13;
Sioux Queen 2; Homecoming Qu een 4;&#13;
Drake Relay Qu een Candidate 3;&#13;
&#13;
"/ like to play ghost because&#13;
I'm such a spook."&#13;
&#13;
Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Not a queen for a day but&#13;
a queen always."&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE McCRACKEN&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD McLAUGHLIN&#13;
&#13;
KEN ETH R UBY&#13;
&#13;
NADENE LAW&#13;
&#13;
Mani ll a&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Zeta Chi, Corres. Sec. 4 ; Se nior&#13;
Vi ce Pres.; Sioux Staff 4; W.S.C.A.&#13;
Representative 3, 4; Choir 3, 4: Vets&#13;
C lub 3; FTA 4; MFTC 4 ; YWCA 4.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Lawton&#13;
&#13;
Al pha T au De l ta 4: Bu siness Manager&#13;
Sioux 4 ; Pi Gamma Mu 4.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Al pha I , 2. 3. 4; Choir I. 2. 3:&#13;
Band I, 2, 3; Symphon y I , 2, Footba l l 4.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi 3. 4: Sioux Staff 4;&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon 3, 4: F.T.A . 3, 4;&#13;
&#13;
"A lawyer with definite ideas."&#13;
&#13;
" He's certainly a gem."&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Co ll ege 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Her smile belongs to every one,&#13;
her heart belongs to Clarence."&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
M.F.T .C. 3, 4 ; Chaplain 4.&#13;
&#13;
"She makes her own laws."&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
Seniors at a Glance .&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
BARBARA SCHMIDT&#13;
&#13;
DONNA SEVERSON&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek&#13;
&#13;
Soldier&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha 2, 3, 4, Social Chairman 3. 4, Pres. 4; Mu Phi Epsilon&#13;
2, 3, 4, Social Chairman 3, Vice Pres. 4 ;&#13;
Student Council 3, 4; Junior Class Sec.;&#13;
Sioux Staff 4; Collegian R e port er&#13;
Staff 3; Agora Second Vic e Pres. 4 ;&#13;
W.S.G.A. 1, 3, 4, Vi ce Pres. 3, Pres. 4;&#13;
YWCA !, 2, 3, 4; F.T.A. 2, 3, 4;&#13;
M.F.T.C. 2. 3, 4; At1 cndan t to&#13;
Homecomi ng Qu een 4; Wh o ' s Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kapp a Zeta Chi, 2, 3, 4, Treas. 3,&#13;
Report er 4; Student Council 2; Junior&#13;
Treas.; Choir l, 2, 3; College Trio&#13;
&#13;
2, 3, 4; Band I ; YWCA I , 2. 3;&#13;
W.A.A. ), 2. 3, Treas. 4; Cheerleader&#13;
2, 3, 4; Major Club 2; Collegiate&#13;
Play e rs 3; Intramural Basketball 2,&#13;
Volleyball 2, 3, 4; Marshall 4 ; Pi&#13;
Gamma Mu 4; Alpha Kappa De lta 4,&#13;
&#13;
"Quite seasonable!"&#13;
&#13;
"A gal with a classy chassis."&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN SMITH&#13;
&#13;
JEAN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 4; Mu Phi Epsilon 4,&#13;
Alumni Secretary 4 ; Wa y ne State&#13;
Teachers College l , 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3, 4, Treas. 3,&#13;
Social Chairman 4 ; Sigma Tau Delta 3,&#13;
Pres. 4; Pi Gamma Mu Vice Pres. 4;&#13;
Choir 2, 3; Madrigal 4; YWCA 2, 3;&#13;
W.S .G.A. 4; Sioux Staff 3; Collegian&#13;
&#13;
"A snappy number."&#13;
&#13;
Reporter 4; f.T.A. 4; Collegiate Players&#13;
3; Sheldon Junior College 1.&#13;
&#13;
" If you play gin rummy,&#13;
I'll play."&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT P. TRACY&#13;
LOUISE THOMS&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
"A woman's work is never&#13;
done."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Collegian Reporte r 2. 3. 4 ; Manu scri JJt&#13;
3, 4; Collegiate Players I. 2, 3. 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Morningside College Academy&#13;
Award Winner."&#13;
&#13;
CAROLYN WOLLE&#13;
LOIS WIESE&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi 2, 3. 4. Librarian 2;&#13;
Critic 3. Vic e. Pres . 4; Student Council&#13;
2, 3, Sec.-Treas. 4; Collegian R epor ter&#13;
2: Scoop 3; Manuscript 1, 2, 3, Pre s. 4;&#13;
l shkoodah Sec.; Choir 1; Pi Gamma Mu&#13;
4; Kappa Chi 1, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Tau Delta&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha 3, 4, Vice Pres, 4 ;&#13;
lnt ersorori ty Council 4; Sioux City&#13;
Symphony 3. 4: Chapel Choir 3;&#13;
Symphonelta 3; Madrigal 4; College&#13;
String Quart e t 3, 4; F.T.A. 3, 4;&#13;
M.F.T.C. 3, 4; Sigma Alpha Iota.&#13;
&#13;
"Her violin speaks the tongue&#13;
of angels."&#13;
&#13;
3,4; YWCA 1,2.3; W.A.A. I; Chapel&#13;
Comm. 4; Religious Life l; Alumni&#13;
Scholarship 1; National Methodi st&#13;
Scholarship 2, 3. 4; Editor-"Tradition"&#13;
Book 3; Junior Marshall ; Who's Who 4.&#13;
&#13;
"The brain-trust."&#13;
&#13;
PAUL ZEMAN&#13;
DORIS YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
B. A.&#13;
&#13;
Bradga te&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Collegian&#13;
Reporter l, 2; Sioux Staff 2;&#13;
YWCA 2; Col lcg iatc Players 2, 3;&#13;
Alpha Sigma 3, 4; Alpha Kappa Delta 4 ;&#13;
Cosmopolitan 3, 4,&#13;
&#13;
"Let me analyze you."&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
Col I egia n Report er 3, Scoop 2, 3;&#13;
YMCA l , 2, 3, 4, Pres. l , Vi ce Pres. 4 ;&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi I. 2, 3, 4, Usher 2;&#13;
Life I ; Basketbal I l, 3; Tra ck&#13;
3; Footbal I 3; M Club 3, 4; Health&#13;
&#13;
Religious&#13;
&#13;
King 2; Collegiate Players 2.&#13;
&#13;
"/ went here to get the general&#13;
impression of things."&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1948&#13;
&#13;
The best of luck to you juniors&#13;
as you climax your college career&#13;
as the seniors of 1948. With your&#13;
able l e ad e rship, Mornin g side&#13;
shall continue to go ever forward.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
SPEER. Lehmberg&#13;
&#13;
Macallum&#13;
&#13;
FAUL&#13;
&#13;
O FFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
P resident ..................................................................... . Duane Faul&#13;
.&#13;
Vice President......................................................Lois M cCallum&#13;
Secretary................................................. _ ........ Janyce Lehmberg&#13;
··&#13;
&#13;
1.reasurer ................................................... .. .................. .]ack Speer&#13;
.&#13;
........ Kathryn N elson&#13;
Representalive..................................,,.&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
RAMON BARBERO&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET BARKS&#13;
&#13;
Panama City, Panama&#13;
&#13;
Orange City&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD BEAN&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FRANKLIN RENE BROWN&#13;
&#13;
EUNICE BRUCE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
GORDON CHRISTENSEN&#13;
&#13;
MARY Lou CRASE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Redfield&#13;
&#13;
CLAUDE D AVIS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DE BEER&#13;
&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT DES LAURIERS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
VESTA FELLER&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE GEAKE&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
Wall Lake&#13;
&#13;
NANCY GOODENOUGH&#13;
&#13;
IRENE HACKETT&#13;
&#13;
Morrison, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN HALL&#13;
&#13;
HELEN harding&#13;
&#13;
Everly&#13;
&#13;
Graettinger&#13;
&#13;
LOWELL HARTWICK&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HELD&#13;
&#13;
Wakonda, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Hinton&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY JoHNSON&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HELEN EHLERS&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST LARSON&#13;
&#13;
AUDREY LAUDE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Emmetsburg&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
J.U·N IO RS&#13;
JANY CE LEHMBERG&#13;
&#13;
MARY Lou&#13;
&#13;
LEMB CKE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES RI CHARDS&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE R UNION&#13;
&#13;
Soldier&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Whiting&#13;
&#13;
Lake Park&#13;
&#13;
AMY MATTSON&#13;
&#13;
Lois McCALLUM&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SARCHET&#13;
&#13;
L AVERNE SCHROEDER&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
&#13;
Kensett&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
Lone Rock&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM SEIBERT&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SHREVE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT MELTON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
PHELPS&#13;
&#13;
Kin gsley&#13;
&#13;
ARLONE Rader&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Muriel&#13;
&#13;
Mu1LENBERG&#13;
&#13;
Orange Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
Kathryn&#13;
&#13;
ELSON&#13;
&#13;
Darwyn&#13;
&#13;
SNYDER&#13;
&#13;
LOIS SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn&#13;
&#13;
JEA N PI CKERTNG&#13;
&#13;
D ARLENE TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
LORRAINE THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bl uff&#13;
&#13;
VELMA R EDENBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
MARY JO TRAFTON&#13;
&#13;
GLENDENE TRI CKEY&#13;
&#13;
Vancouver, Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
Juniors Off Guard&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
&#13;
CLARE VANDEN BROCK&#13;
&#13;
]ACK BEDIENT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DARREL WARNER&#13;
&#13;
DONALD WEAVER&#13;
&#13;
}AUCILE LONG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Chattanooga, Tenn.&#13;
&#13;
Joyce&#13;
&#13;
TRONSRUE&#13;
&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
43&#13;
&#13;
To you sophomores, the class&#13;
of '49, we are ever grateful for&#13;
your complete and 'traditional'&#13;
victory over the frosh on Freshman-Sophomore Day! May your&#13;
pep and enthusiasm continue to&#13;
uphold the true Morningside&#13;
spirit.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1949&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON, ANNAND, BARRETT , JOHNSTONE&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Presi dent ............................ ---····-································-Bill Annand&#13;
Vice Pres idenL ................ ....................................... .Ann Barrett&#13;
Secretary................................................. :········Margaret J ohnson&#13;
Treasurer...................................................................... Cleo Weins&#13;
Representative ...................................................... Ka ye Jol111stone&#13;
&#13;
45&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMOR E S&#13;
&#13;
PATRICIA AHRENS&#13;
&#13;
GLENDA RAE BAERENWALD&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BOTTOLFSON&#13;
&#13;
}AMES CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
Matlock&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
&#13;
DALE BAKER&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY BARKS&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD CHADWICK&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES CROPLEY&#13;
&#13;
Britt&#13;
&#13;
Belden, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Vancouver, Wash.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE Barringer&#13;
&#13;
I RMA DENGLER&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE DOBBINS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ANN BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
Alvord&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
J ULIA BARTELS&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
BETTY EBERT&#13;
&#13;
RALPH ELVICK&#13;
&#13;
Dakota City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
PA UL BERTELOOT&#13;
&#13;
MARIE BETTS&#13;
&#13;
EDITH FIDERLICK&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT FRANKEN&#13;
&#13;
Rockford , 111.&#13;
&#13;
Gray&#13;
&#13;
Callender&#13;
&#13;
Schaller&#13;
&#13;
SmRLEY Booz&#13;
&#13;
Rr cHARD BoRNHOLT&#13;
&#13;
RALPH GRAHAM&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD GUSTAVSON&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
46&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
BERT KING&#13;
&#13;
Hornick&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY HAAS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DONALD KELSEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HUGH KNAPP&#13;
&#13;
JAY KNAPP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND GUSTAVSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Waukegan, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ToM HENRY&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HISEY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Reno, Kan.&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY HORTON&#13;
&#13;
DONALD HOSTETLER&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE HUXTABLE&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT M. IRWIN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Merrill&#13;
&#13;
MAURICE I SAACSON&#13;
&#13;
ARDYTHE JACOBSON .&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
KAYE JOHNSTONE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DAVID KOELLING&#13;
&#13;
Lois Kuehn&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Marcus&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY LAMFEHS&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD LEWELLYN&#13;
&#13;
Ashton&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
&#13;
HELEN LING&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR MENEFEE&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
RrcHARD YouNGSTROM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
&#13;
Joan&#13;
&#13;
Meyer&#13;
&#13;
Quimby&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
MILTON Meyer&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LOIS M1NNIG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Murray&#13;
&#13;
Elmwood Park, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY Nikolaison&#13;
&#13;
Blencoe&#13;
&#13;
JAMES Okey&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY OLSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
50&#13;
&#13;
DONALD Miller&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Clarice&#13;
&#13;
moone&#13;
&#13;
PHYLLIS OSBORN&#13;
&#13;
DONNA PAULIN&#13;
&#13;
Danbury&#13;
&#13;
Remse n&#13;
&#13;
JACK Paulin&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Virginia&#13;
&#13;
O'DELL&#13;
&#13;
Peterson&#13;
&#13;
Remsen&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD MUS Champ&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Dwayne&#13;
&#13;
PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Dike&#13;
&#13;
GERALDINE Prager&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
Ione&#13;
&#13;
PRESCOTT&#13;
&#13;
South Sioux City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
KENNETH OLESON&#13;
&#13;
LYLA REHNBLOM&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou REIMER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Stanhope&#13;
&#13;
Schleswig&#13;
&#13;
J oHN REIBHOFF&#13;
&#13;
PAUL RALSTON&#13;
&#13;
Burt&#13;
&#13;
Somers&#13;
&#13;
William&#13;
&#13;
O'NEILL&#13;
&#13;
South Sioux City, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES SAUTER&#13;
&#13;
JEANNE SAUTER&#13;
&#13;
MAX STERNE&#13;
&#13;
DONALD STONE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PHILIP SCALETTA&#13;
&#13;
BONNIE SCHULTZ&#13;
&#13;
RONALD STONE&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD T UTTLE&#13;
&#13;
South Sioux Ci ty, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Peterson&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MADELYN SCHWEIZER&#13;
&#13;
DARLENE SCHWINDERMAN&#13;
&#13;
WILTON VAN MEEVEREN&#13;
&#13;
Winnebago, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Macedonia&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Hospers&#13;
&#13;
DONALD SHELTON&#13;
&#13;
CECILY SHERK&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE VANDER DAM&#13;
&#13;
LINDA Lou V ANOS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Lake Park&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FOREST WHITLOW&#13;
&#13;
BETTY WHITTINGTON&#13;
&#13;
Jackson, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
St. Lawrence, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
LEON SHORTENIIAUS&#13;
&#13;
Buffalo Center&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
SODERBERG&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci ty&#13;
&#13;
Ruby&#13;
&#13;
SMALLEY&#13;
&#13;
New Rochelle, New York&#13;
&#13;
JAYNE Marie&#13;
&#13;
Soiseth&#13;
&#13;
Anna&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
52&#13;
&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
Edward&#13;
&#13;
VAN VELDH UIZEN&#13;
&#13;
LORNA WILLIAM S&#13;
&#13;
Elmwood P ark, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Snaps&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORES&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WITTER&#13;
&#13;
Storm Lake&#13;
&#13;
Marakyn&#13;
&#13;
WOOD&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ANNALEE ZEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Bradgate&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
&#13;
54&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
&#13;
The "freshies" really looked&#13;
cute in their green caps and "lipsticked M' s"-but just remember&#13;
-there's another year coming,&#13;
and that means a whole new class&#13;
of freshmen eager for theit initiation by you as the more fortunate&#13;
sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1950&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MADISON, Preston&#13;
&#13;
WALTON, Friend&#13;
&#13;
PETTENGILL&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President-----·-·-········-·-·-·········---·································Don Preston&#13;
Vice P resident...........................·-·-························· Marge Walton&#13;
Secretary............................ ---···············-···········--P auline Pettengill&#13;
Treasurer....................-------·-·· -·-···········-··--···············_A mold Friend&#13;
Representative&#13;
.............. _.&#13;
Anne Madison&#13;
&#13;
57&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
EUGENE ALTON&#13;
&#13;
HOBERT BLEVINS&#13;
&#13;
WILMA BOZARTH&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapid s&#13;
&#13;
Chi cago, Jll.&#13;
&#13;
JoE ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
EDWIN BRANCH&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA BREWER&#13;
&#13;
Blencoe&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
F.arly&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ANN BARTRAM&#13;
&#13;
MARY Jo BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Stuart, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH BECKMAN&#13;
&#13;
KENNETH AALSETH&#13;
&#13;
JOAN BRODIE&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN BnowN&#13;
&#13;
Alhion, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Missouri Valley&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA Aagard&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Jane&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
&#13;
Homer, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY Barlett&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Belknap&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
BERGQUIST&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
58&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE BENHAM&#13;
&#13;
Red Oak&#13;
&#13;
BETTY BLACK&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
BRUCE&#13;
&#13;
Barbara&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE BRUMBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
Tll.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
belvidere,&#13;
&#13;
Roger&#13;
&#13;
JAMES Brodie&#13;
&#13;
BURGESS&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY BURROUGHS&#13;
&#13;
Belvidere, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
59&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Carl&#13;
&#13;
CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
Runy&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Ann&#13;
&#13;
Cedar&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD DONKERSLOOT&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
LEE DOWNS&#13;
&#13;
Laurens&#13;
&#13;
Humboldt&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES CHAMBERS&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN CLARK&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE DRAKE&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
BETTY CHRISTENSEN&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE COCKS&#13;
&#13;
Lawton&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE CORNWELL&#13;
&#13;
CAROL CORRIE&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM EIKLEBERRY&#13;
&#13;
ELAINE ENGELBRECHT&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
Remsen&#13;
&#13;
Boyden&#13;
&#13;
Wheaton, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CORINNE Coyne&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bluff&#13;
&#13;
Vera&#13;
&#13;
Devaul&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe&#13;
&#13;
VIVIAN DAWSON&#13;
&#13;
Joan&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DRURY&#13;
&#13;
FIDDICK&#13;
&#13;
Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
}AMES DOLPHIN&#13;
&#13;
Betty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
FLETCHER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
60&#13;
&#13;
61&#13;
&#13;
Diane&#13;
&#13;
DRESSLER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
GARLAND D UN KELBERGER&#13;
&#13;
ARLENE FIDERLI CK&#13;
&#13;
Callender&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
Clinton&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Owie FLYNN&#13;
&#13;
JOAN FREDRICKSON&#13;
&#13;
BLANCHE GO ULD&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND H ALL&#13;
&#13;
Chetek, Wie.&#13;
&#13;
Rockford, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
REGINALD HALL&#13;
&#13;
INA MAE H AM&#13;
&#13;
Battle Creek&#13;
&#13;
Manilla&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Leo&#13;
&#13;
FRAMKE&#13;
&#13;
JOAN Friedlander '&#13;
&#13;
Blencoe&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD FORCE&#13;
&#13;
MARY GASSER&#13;
&#13;
Medway, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DALE GENTZLER&#13;
&#13;
JAMES GERKIN&#13;
&#13;
E UGENE HASSE&#13;
&#13;
LILLI AN HEDEEN&#13;
&#13;
Creighton, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapids&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILSON GINGLES&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM GIST&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPH Heeb&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE HELLAND&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Belmond&#13;
&#13;
JAMES GLANN&#13;
&#13;
L01s GLAs co&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Pocahontas&#13;
&#13;
62&#13;
&#13;
Marilyn&#13;
&#13;
Paul&#13;
&#13;
HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
HI CKMAN&#13;
&#13;
Ashton&#13;
&#13;
DALE HARRIS&#13;
&#13;
Mildred&#13;
&#13;
Hoar&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
63&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
Jules&#13;
&#13;
HULTGREN&#13;
&#13;
Dan&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT D. Irwin&#13;
&#13;
KECIIEL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sac City&#13;
&#13;
DARYL JAMES&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT JEN SEN&#13;
&#13;
Glen Ellyn, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton&#13;
&#13;
VICKY KECHEL&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Neil&#13;
&#13;
Johns&#13;
&#13;
Buckingham&#13;
&#13;
Mona&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Auburndale, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Kail&#13;
&#13;
DARLENE Kimmel&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
ELAINE Johnson&#13;
&#13;
HowARD KoNRADY&#13;
&#13;
Ray&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, lJI.&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE Jones&#13;
&#13;
Lois KROGH&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant Bluff&#13;
&#13;
Rock Valley&#13;
&#13;
ALICE KARSTENS&#13;
&#13;
Jean&#13;
&#13;
Lafoy&#13;
&#13;
Milford&#13;
&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Paullina&#13;
&#13;
CLAYTON BRISTOW&#13;
&#13;
PATRICIA KEAGLE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
ELSIE MAE LARSEN&#13;
&#13;
Akron&#13;
&#13;
64&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
Krieger&#13;
&#13;
Ireton&#13;
&#13;
Odebolt&#13;
&#13;
Paullina&#13;
&#13;
Kline&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEE Kutil&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Patricia&#13;
&#13;
LAMSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
John&#13;
&#13;
LEAVITT&#13;
&#13;
Marcus&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
JOYCE LELAND&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
Lou Lind&#13;
&#13;
Shirley&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Swea City&#13;
&#13;
MENAGE&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE MENNING&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapid s&#13;
&#13;
Sanborn&#13;
&#13;
HELEN MEREDITH&#13;
&#13;
J OANNE MEREDITH&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Lora&#13;
&#13;
LoHR&#13;
&#13;
Lohrville&#13;
&#13;
THA I NE LYMAN&#13;
&#13;
DONNA LOWE&#13;
&#13;
Des P laines, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
Dee McEWEN&#13;
&#13;
NoRMA Jean&#13;
&#13;
McINTOSH&#13;
&#13;
Cleghorn&#13;
&#13;
Wilbur&#13;
&#13;
Rolfe&#13;
&#13;
Huron, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Metz&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
DoN McKEE&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
Glen Ellyn, ll l.&#13;
&#13;
MEYER&#13;
&#13;
RALPH Meyer&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Mary&#13;
&#13;
M I LLER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Maquoketa&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD MINNICK&#13;
&#13;
J oy MoMSEN&#13;
&#13;
Pocahontas&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
Ann&#13;
&#13;
MADISON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
GLENNA A . MARTZ&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
66&#13;
&#13;
Dean&#13;
&#13;
MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
Spirit Lake&#13;
&#13;
]AMES Mathers&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EARL MONTAGNE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CAsHIE Morey&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
67&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
LEILA MUELLER&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE Mugge&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, ll1.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT PLENDL&#13;
&#13;
Hinton&#13;
&#13;
Calumet&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA MULFORD&#13;
&#13;
LOLA PIRIE&#13;
&#13;
Mallard&#13;
&#13;
Cedar Rapids&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Joyce&#13;
&#13;
O'RouRKE&#13;
&#13;
Joan&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Gerald&#13;
&#13;
Little Rock&#13;
&#13;
Novak&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
PALMER&#13;
&#13;
ERNEST PARRY&#13;
&#13;
BEVERLY PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
Mayfield, Pa.&#13;
&#13;
Donna&#13;
&#13;
Aberdeen, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
PETTENGILL&#13;
&#13;
Rock Rapids&#13;
&#13;
RICE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Pauline&#13;
&#13;
PROTEXTER&#13;
&#13;
ROBAR&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WALLACE Roscoe&#13;
&#13;
Algona&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY PIERCE&#13;
&#13;
}AMES Rissell&#13;
&#13;
Auburndale, Mass.&#13;
&#13;
68&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
69&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT PROTEXTER&#13;
&#13;
Little Rock&#13;
&#13;
RAMONA R OACH&#13;
&#13;
Kingston, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
R UBY ROBBINS&#13;
&#13;
Linn Grove&#13;
&#13;
GAIL ROYER&#13;
&#13;
Woodbine&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD R UTH&#13;
&#13;
Paton&#13;
&#13;
FR E SHMEN&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SANFORD&#13;
&#13;
J OSEPHI NE SANFORD&#13;
&#13;
V I CTOR TAMASH UNAS&#13;
&#13;
D U ANE TAYLOR&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
M ilford&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Milford,&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
L01s&#13;
&#13;
ScHRAM&#13;
&#13;
MYRLE S c H U DER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES TEEMA&#13;
&#13;
MAX I NE THACK E R&#13;
&#13;
Titonka&#13;
&#13;
Newcastle, Nebr.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Gilmore City&#13;
&#13;
DONOVAN SCHU LER&#13;
&#13;
KATHY S CHWARZ&#13;
&#13;
METELLIUS THOMSON&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET T I LLOTSON&#13;
&#13;
Laurel, Ne hr.&#13;
&#13;
Lombard, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Zell&#13;
&#13;
S c oTT&#13;
&#13;
M inneapoli s, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
Elien&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE S INGER&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, TII.&#13;
&#13;
Robert&#13;
&#13;
SM I TH&#13;
&#13;
Paulli na&#13;
&#13;
S loan&#13;
&#13;
WAYNE SORENSEN&#13;
&#13;
Norma SwAN S01&#13;
&#13;
Luve rne&#13;
&#13;
Downe rs Grove, I ll.&#13;
&#13;
70&#13;
&#13;
Deestan&#13;
&#13;
T URN E R&#13;
&#13;
ST-I IRLEY T U RRENTI NE&#13;
&#13;
Bristol , Wi s.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE U RBAN&#13;
&#13;
WoRTHJE USHER&#13;
&#13;
Holstein&#13;
&#13;
Rowan&#13;
&#13;
CORNELI U S&#13;
&#13;
vANDE R B ROCK&#13;
&#13;
R ock Valley&#13;
&#13;
Glenice Vander&#13;
&#13;
Sa nborn&#13;
&#13;
Velde&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
MARGARET Vik&#13;
&#13;
DONNA VOGT&#13;
&#13;
Draper, S. D.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen Frolic&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
RUTH WAGNER&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE WALTON&#13;
&#13;
Lake Delton, Wi s.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS WARD&#13;
&#13;
MARTLYN WEST&#13;
&#13;
Arnolds Park&#13;
&#13;
Evanston, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
BETTY WHARTON&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA W rLLJAMS&#13;
&#13;
Woodbin e&#13;
&#13;
Elmwood Park, Il l.&#13;
&#13;
} AMES WlNTER&#13;
&#13;
Alden&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET YOUNGSTROM&#13;
&#13;
S torm Lake&#13;
&#13;
72&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT Wooster&#13;
&#13;
Mapleton&#13;
&#13;
}ACQUELlNE Zeissler&#13;
&#13;
Chicago Tll .&#13;
&#13;
73&#13;
&#13;
Freshman--Sophomore Day&#13;
We love the traditions a school&#13;
in time gathers . These traditions&#13;
mingled with today's Activities&#13;
make college life something we&#13;
won't soon forget.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
Assembiy at Bass Field&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen Initiation&#13;
&#13;
Miss Gayle Jean Hofstad received a scholarship to Morningsidt&#13;
College and entered as a freshman the second semester. After her&#13;
thrilling adventure to Hollywood, Gayle, now as a dorm coed, anticipates her college career.&#13;
&#13;
78&#13;
&#13;
Queen,&#13;
Escort,&#13;
&#13;
KATHEH!NE ROADMAN&#13;
Richard&#13;
&#13;
McLAUGllLLN&#13;
&#13;
Dance at the Tomba Ballroom&#13;
Attendant, C ONNIE Havighurst&#13;
Escort, Harold&#13;
Minor&#13;
&#13;
Attendant, Barbara&#13;
Escort, REGINALD&#13;
&#13;
Schmidt&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
The Coronation&#13;
&#13;
Regal Party at the Alumni Dinner&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
Marching Band on Parade&#13;
&#13;
Barbecue on Bass Field&#13;
&#13;
/Pinning Tau Delt Float&#13;
&#13;
Runner-up, the Con Float&#13;
&#13;
83&#13;
&#13;
A memorable occasion highlighted by Mrs. Charles B . Hoeven's address.&#13;
&#13;
84&#13;
&#13;
85&#13;
&#13;
Students dance to the music of Joe Sanders and his Or chestra at the Christmas B all at the Tomba Ballroom.&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
Th e R eigning M onarchs,&#13;
&#13;
. A Birdseye View of the Colorful Concessions&#13;
&#13;
VAN&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Katie&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dorothy Floyd was&#13;
chosen as Daisy Mae at&#13;
the Sadie Hawkins Day&#13;
Dance. The dance was held&#13;
in the gym in typical rustic setting with corn and&#13;
other farm products as&#13;
decoration s. Other Dog·&#13;
patch roles chosen were:&#13;
Vic Menefee as th e official&#13;
Li'l Abner, Ray Meyer as&#13;
Pappy Yokum, and to&#13;
Drury as Mammy Yokum.&#13;
&#13;
Myrl Geake and Bill An·&#13;
nand were chosen the mo st&#13;
typical couple. Tom Ward&#13;
receiv e d recognition as&#13;
having the longest beard&#13;
( fu II y one· fourth inch)&#13;
and Carol Davis as having&#13;
the longest pigtail. Judges&#13;
for the event were Mr.&#13;
Bradford, Mrs. Winston,&#13;
and Miss Maxwell, all&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
&#13;
Business Administration Students at W ork in Accounting Lab.&#13;
&#13;
Microscopic Study in Biology Lab.&#13;
&#13;
Study in th e Library on Second Floor&#13;
&#13;
92&#13;
&#13;
93&#13;
&#13;
Students in Beginning T ypewriting Study the Proper Typing Technique s&#13;
&#13;
Study in the Library on First Floor&#13;
&#13;
94&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Initiation Days&#13;
&#13;
Fast game of Ping Pong in Student Union&#13;
&#13;
Across the campus to chapel at Grace Church&#13;
&#13;
Drive in Front of th e Gym&#13;
&#13;
Girls Dorm as viewed Jrom the air&#13;
&#13;
Men's Athletics&#13;
The "Men of the M" truly&#13;
made an envious record this year.&#13;
It was "15 rahs for the team"&#13;
throughout the entire year.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The Men's Athletic Department is headed&#13;
by Leslie H. "Les" Davis, football and baseball coach, who is finishing his first year of&#13;
coaching at Morningside. Before coming to&#13;
Morningside, the Maroon mentor coached&#13;
football at Sioux City East for 19 years where&#13;
his teams averaged seven wins against two&#13;
losses each season. "Les" compiled a very&#13;
commendable record during his four years&#13;
at Morningside as a student. He earned four&#13;
letters in football and four in baseball; he&#13;
captained the diamond squad in 1923, the&#13;
last year the sport was played at Morningside&#13;
on an inter-collegiate basis before it was&#13;
revived by "Les" this year. A congenial person, Les is well liked at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside in 1939, when he was an all·&#13;
conference end, "Buck" coached two years&#13;
at Sergeant Bluff high school. To his credit&#13;
was a basketball squad going to the state&#13;
tournament and a second team winning the&#13;
county and runner-up in the sectional meet.&#13;
During the war he served as an air-sea rescue&#13;
operations officer in the Navy.&#13;
Charles "Chuck" Obye finished his first&#13;
year on the Maroon coaching staff as he.ad of&#13;
the football and basketball B squads, and&#13;
the college track team. "Chuck" graduated&#13;
from Morningside in 1946 after serving three&#13;
years in the Army Air Corps. While at&#13;
Morningside he earned two letters in football, three letters in basketball, and one letter&#13;
in track; in 1942 "Chuck" was all-conference&#13;
fullback.&#13;
&#13;
Albert W. "Buck" Buckingham is assistant&#13;
athletic director, football line coach and&#13;
head basketball coach. After graduating from&#13;
&#13;
101&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
HARRI NGTON&#13;
HALEY&#13;
HOEFER&#13;
&#13;
The Season's Record&#13;
In the season's opener against Nebraska Wesleyan, Coach Les Davis fielded an all-veteran&#13;
eleven that looked like they would be hard to&#13;
beat, but the Nebraskans were vastly underrated&#13;
and the first post-war football team at Morningside came out on the short end of a 13 to 6&#13;
score. The Maroons outdowned the visitors 12&#13;
to 5 and completed 11 of their 16 attempted&#13;
passes for a total of 115 yards ... not bad for&#13;
a losing team.&#13;
Morningside's second defeat of the season&#13;
came when the team traveled to Salina, Kansas,&#13;
only to be. edged by Kansas Wesleyan 9 to 7&#13;
in a close contest. A third quarter safety provided the winning margin, when Callahan fumbled a high pass from center and was tackled&#13;
&#13;
in the end zone. The Maroon running attack&#13;
was balked by the big Kansan line which held&#13;
the Sioux Cityans to 27 yards but Morningside&#13;
gained a total of 182 via the aerial route.&#13;
&#13;
In their first conference football game since&#13;
1942, the Maroons lost their third straight game,&#13;
bowing to the superior Bisons of North Dakota&#13;
State at Fargo, 42 to 7. The Maroon runnin g&#13;
attack again bogged down because of a rainsoaked field , but the whole story in a nutshell&#13;
is that North Dakota just ran and blocked harder&#13;
than Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
were really out to win this one. They put it to&#13;
the Vikings with Menefee, Peterson and HaenAer&#13;
blocking four of Augustana's punts. The passing&#13;
by Callahan and Newman was especially fine.&#13;
Both touchdowns were the results of passes when&#13;
Newman flipped Callahan a short button hook&#13;
pass that caught the hosts flat-footed and a&#13;
long pass from Callahan to Engle. Team defense&#13;
was superb, with outstanding performances&#13;
turned in b y tackles Peterson and Wynkoop.&#13;
The stage was set, the weather was perfect,&#13;
the fans were eager, the spirit was at its zenith.&#13;
In fact, everything was present that makes for&#13;
a good homecoming game, except the score&#13;
Morningside came out on the short end of a&#13;
6 to O score.. The Warriors of the Sioux outdowned and outplayed the Coyotes, except for&#13;
one sustained drive by South Dakota U. which&#13;
&#13;
cul minated in a touchdown . Call ahan pl ayed his&#13;
heart out and turned in a better than a verage&#13;
perfo rmance. HaenAer was in on al most ever y&#13;
tackle and Menefee played stellatel y at the end&#13;
p osition.&#13;
Morningside suffered its fifth defeat of the&#13;
season and third confe.rence setback to powerful&#13;
Iowa State Teachers here at the Public School&#13;
stadium. Maroon fans caught a glimpse of some&#13;
fancy running when Dave Williams, fo rmer&#13;
all-state halfback from Ottumwa, put on a dazz.&#13;
ling one-man show. Our forward line looked&#13;
exceptionally good during the first half. The.y&#13;
charged hard and completely stopped the Tutor's&#13;
running attack but the second half was al together&#13;
different with the T eachers running up a 38 to O&#13;
score.&#13;
&#13;
The Maroons looked like a rejuvenated team&#13;
in their second conference ti] t at Sioux Falls&#13;
when they spoiled Augustana's homecoming by&#13;
defeating the Vikings, 13 to 0. Les Davis' boys&#13;
&#13;
PETERSON&#13;
TIAENFLER&#13;
MENEFEE&#13;
&#13;
103&#13;
&#13;
l{A S11U SS EN&#13;
STYCZYNS KI&#13;
&#13;
GENE ASPREY- Returning veteran who earned his second letter&#13;
in football. His be.autiful 60 yard run against N.D.U. will&#13;
long be remembered. A fine quarterback.&#13;
PAUL ENGLE-Freshman veteran who developed fast.&#13;
defensive quarterback on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
Best&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES CALLAHAN- Connie lived up to his reputation and&#13;
his all-around playing ability was rewarded by being selecteJ&#13;
as halfback on the North Central All-Conference team. His running, kicking, and passing were responsible for much of the&#13;
team's success. Returned veteran- first year in college competition.&#13;
PAT HALEY- A lot of real football ability in a small package.&#13;
His speed and determination inspired the team. Pat is a freshman and a Navy veteran.&#13;
STANLEY NEWMAN- Ran from the fullback position with&#13;
great speed and hard hitting ability. Stan's first year at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps one of the most exciting football games ever played&#13;
in Sioux City was the Morningside-North Dakota U. game. The&#13;
Maroons scored an upset by defeating the Nodaks 41 to 39. With&#13;
20 seconds left to go in the game, Callahan, ace Maroon halfback,&#13;
plunged over from the two yard line, giving Morningside the&#13;
needed points to win the game. From the opening minutes it&#13;
was a thrill-packed game, marked by sensational runs and beautiful passing. Morningside matched North Dakota touchdown for&#13;
touchdown throughout the game. During the game a total of&#13;
twelve touchdowns were scored by both teams and the lead&#13;
changed hands the same number of times. The best play of the&#13;
game took place in the fourth quarter when Callahan completed&#13;
a flat pass to Asprey on the Sioux 40, the quarterback twisted,&#13;
squirmed and reeled his way through three North Dakota tacklers&#13;
to go all the way for a touchdown.&#13;
&#13;
BILL COLLOPY- Bill was bothered a good share of the season&#13;
because of an ankle injury. One of the best broken field runners on the team. Freshman halfback and returned veteran.&#13;
BOB WOOSTER- Freshman fullback who proved time and agair,&#13;
that his straight ahead plunging was hard to stop .&#13;
ALEX PELELO- Returned G.I. who was really tough on defense&#13;
and discouraged plays over his guard position.&#13;
RALPH WIOKSTROM- "Wick" was the fastest man on the&#13;
squad. A Freshman center, who started in the majority of&#13;
games, he specialized in hard and clean tackles. Navy veteran.&#13;
end who got a late start but came along&#13;
VIC Menefee- big&#13;
fast. Pass catching was outstanding in the S.D.U. game. Good&#13;
all-around player. Navy veteran.&#13;
JULIUS SHKURENSKY- "Butch" captained the 1946 squad&#13;
and as a returning G.I. earned his second "M." A conscientious and fine defensive end. Specialized in kickoffs and point&#13;
after touchdown.&#13;
&#13;
In their last conference game of the season the Maroons played&#13;
a O to O deadlock with South Dakota State at Brookings. The&#13;
highly touted running attack of the Jackrabbits was completely&#13;
stopped by the. aggressive forward wall of the Maroons. Several&#13;
times during the game Morningside threatened to score, but the&#13;
South Dakota line held and the Maroons failed to hit pay dirt.&#13;
Haley turned in a nice running performance while. Gregorvich,&#13;
Wickstrom, Wynkoop, Peterson and Callahan played the entire&#13;
game which was played under snowy conditions.&#13;
&#13;
WICK STROM&#13;
ASPREY&#13;
&#13;
Morningside played host to a rangy Dakota Wesleyan team&#13;
in the final game of the season, defeating the Dakotans 32 to 23&#13;
in an afternoon game. The 1946 season was not too successful&#13;
as far as wins and losses are concerned, but after a slow start the&#13;
team improved and a lot of good material for next season was&#13;
uncovered. Morningside ended the season in fifth place in the&#13;
North Central conference.&#13;
&#13;
NEWMAN&#13;
PRESTON&#13;
BLAIR&#13;
&#13;
104&#13;
&#13;
105&#13;
&#13;
STOVER&#13;
CALLAHAN&#13;
G REGORVICH&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD PETERSON- A 235 lb. tackle whose speed for such a big player was&#13;
outstanding. Was always one of the first men down the field on punts and enjoyed&#13;
blocking opponents' kicks. " Big Pete" was one of Morningsiae's three All-Conterence selections and earned his second letter after serving in the Marine Corps.&#13;
&#13;
ROY HAENFLER- All-Conference tackle whose outstanding ability&#13;
was backing up the line on defense. A former G.I. and two year&#13;
letterman, Ro y was a reason for the improvement of the team.&#13;
BOB GREGORVICH- Freshman guard who is an excellent blocker&#13;
and really tough on defense. Bob continually broke through the&#13;
opponent's line to break up plays. Veteran.&#13;
&#13;
FORREST WYNKOOP-A big, rugged tackle who could be depended upon in every&#13;
play. Never call ed time out and was never hurt.&#13;
&#13;
BOB HOEFER- Released from the Army in time to show his aggressiveness on the Maroon line. Rattled the opposition and got into&#13;
more scraps than any other man on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR BLAIR- Ever since his sophomore days in high school this little 150 lb.&#13;
reproduction of "Mighty Mouse" has been holding down a guard position. Clair&#13;
was always the hardest working man on the. field and is a fine addition to any&#13;
squad. A Navy veteran and a two year letter winner at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
BILL VERSCHOOR- Fast, aggressive lineman and one of the first&#13;
down the field on kicks. Bill's first season at Morningside.&#13;
DON PRESTON- Big, always smiling, liked to mix it in every play.&#13;
Marine returnee.&#13;
DEAN HARRINGTON-Best down the field blocker on the squad .&#13;
Was sidelined during latter part of season due to a broken arm.&#13;
Freshman G.I.&#13;
BILL KJOSE- Bill's first year at Morningside. Was a fine defensive end.&#13;
RAUN RASMUSSEN--Freshman end who turned in many notable&#13;
offensive performances. Especially outstanding in using his bas·&#13;
ketball ability to snag passes.&#13;
LEONARD STYCZYNSKI- Len hails from Schenectady, . Y. As a&#13;
Maroon fullback he developed fast and his playing ability was&#13;
notable. In the N.D.U. game he practically won the game by&#13;
kicking six points after touchdowns. Army veteran.&#13;
&#13;
S ii KUHENS KY&#13;
&#13;
KJOSE&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE STOVER- Re.turned to Morningside after seeing service&#13;
in the Arm y to win his second letter. Played a good steady game&#13;
at center.&#13;
&#13;
Verschoor&#13;
&#13;
WYNKOOP&#13;
ENGLE&#13;
COLLOPY&#13;
WOOSTEH&#13;
&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
107&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Maroons&#13;
&#13;
B Squad Football Season&#13;
The Maroon B squad under the capable direction of Chuck Obye, who assumed his coaching&#13;
duties for the first time at Morningside. last fall ,&#13;
opened their season against Sheldon J. C. in a&#13;
scoreless game played on Bass Field. Annand,&#13;
Wooster, and Fulton were the mainstays for the&#13;
Maroons.&#13;
Playing its second scoreless game of the season&#13;
against the Wayne State Teachers B squad, the&#13;
Morningside B squad outplayed the Nebraskans&#13;
but lacked the punch to score. Kowalki, Maroon&#13;
fullback, and Merriman, guard, looked good for&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
In their nextgame the B squad finally scored&#13;
but were nosed out 13 to 12 by the Wayne B team&#13;
in a return game at Bass Field.&#13;
&#13;
1946&#13;
&#13;
Again the B squad lost by one point when we&#13;
traveled to Orange City and lost to Northwestern&#13;
J. C., 13 to 12. The. Maroons could have won&#13;
very easily in the last three minutes of play, had&#13;
it not been for a fumble which was recovered by&#13;
N.J.C. on the one yard line.&#13;
The Maroon B squad chalked up their first win&#13;
of the season in the. last game by defeating Sheldon&#13;
J. C. 30 to 6 in a return game at Sheldon.&#13;
Several players on the B team added materially&#13;
to the strength of the varsity squad during the season and many of the boys who saw action on Obye's&#13;
squad last fall will undoubtedly be first stringers&#13;
next fall.&#13;
&#13;
The Season's Record&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon J. C. ................ 0&#13;
Wayne 'B' .................... 0&#13;
Wayne 'B' .................... 13&#13;
Northwestern J. C....... 13&#13;
Sheldon J. C. ................ 6&#13;
&#13;
---------------- 0&#13;
---------------- 0&#13;
________________ 12&#13;
................ 12&#13;
................ 30&#13;
&#13;
LETTER WINNERS-Burt Merriman, Bob Lagle, John Sutton, Duane Taylor, Harlan Kerr, Burton Wertz,&#13;
Bob Fulton, Bill Benton, Ken Steffen, Vic Nielsen, Gene Benham, Leon Shortenhaus, Dale Harris, Bill&#13;
Annand, Roger Kowalki, James Rosauer, Jerry Stern, Cecil Rosauer, Gordon McKinstrey.&#13;
&#13;
1946 FOOTBALL SEASON&#13;
Morningside ·····----------- 6&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan ...... 13&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ------·········· 7&#13;
&#13;
Kansas Wesleyan ........ 9&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
North Dakota State ...... 32&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ................ 13&#13;
&#13;
Augustana (S. D.) ........ 0&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ---------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota U. ---------- 6&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ................ 0&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Teachers...... 38&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ................41&#13;
&#13;
North Dakota U . .......... 39&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ---------------- 0&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota State ...... 0&#13;
&#13;
Morningside ________ _&#13;
_______ 32&#13;
&#13;
Dakota Wesleyan ........ 23&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
LETTERMEN&#13;
JULIUS SHKURENSKY&#13;
&#13;
DOB GREGORV ICH&#13;
&#13;
GENE ASPREY&#13;
&#13;
VIC MENEFEE&#13;
&#13;
DILL LINDGREN&#13;
&#13;
LEN STYCZYNSKI&#13;
&#13;
DOB WOOSTER&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD PETERSON&#13;
&#13;
RALPH WICKSTROM&#13;
&#13;
STAN NEWMAN&#13;
&#13;
DILL KJOSE&#13;
RAUN RASMUSSEN&#13;
&#13;
PAUL ENGLE&#13;
&#13;
FORREST WYNKOOP&#13;
&#13;
GENE STOVER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES CALLAHAN&#13;
&#13;
CLAIR BLAIR&#13;
&#13;
DEAN HARRINGTON&#13;
&#13;
PAT HALEY&#13;
&#13;
DON PRESTON&#13;
&#13;
ROY HAENFLER&#13;
&#13;
BILL COLLOPY&#13;
&#13;
DILL VERSCHOOR&#13;
&#13;
ALEX PELELO&#13;
&#13;
BOB HOEFER&#13;
&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
109&#13;
&#13;
millio11 , and sweet reven ge was ours in a hard-fou ght&#13;
&#13;
53 lo 48 victory, which put us in the No. 1 spot in&#13;
the conference. standings. \Ve lost our second conference game to the Jackrabbits in a rough 59 to 53&#13;
&#13;
The Season&#13;
&#13;
battle at Brookings.&#13;
Rebounding from the S.D.S. setback, the fightin g&#13;
&#13;
The Maroon cagers opened the 1946&#13;
47 season with four straight wins, displaying a fire-wagon brand of ball that&#13;
tabbed them as favorites to win the&#13;
North Central conference. Offensively&#13;
the team looked extremely good .&#13;
&#13;
Maroons came through to edge by Rube Hoy's kids&#13;
&#13;
In the next game Coach Buckingham's&#13;
boys ran up against the strong Creighton U. Bluejays and suffered their first&#13;
defeat of the season at Omaha, losing&#13;
by a scant three points. On New Year's&#13;
day the favore.d Maroons lost number&#13;
two to Montana State.&#13;
&#13;
trounced the leaders 63 to 4,l at Le Mars in a non-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside opened its conference&#13;
season with four straight wins over&#13;
N.D.U., N.D.S. (twice), and Augustana.&#13;
The trip to North Dakota was the first&#13;
time in the history of the coll ege that&#13;
both North Dakota schools were beaten&#13;
on their home floors. In these first four&#13;
conference games the Maroons scored&#13;
impressive victories and were picked by&#13;
other conference schoo ls to repeat as the conference champs. (Morningside won the unofficial North&#13;
Centra l conference basketball crown last season .) In between conference games the Maroons racked&#13;
up wins No. 8 and 9 over Buena Vista and a tall. rangy Dakota Wesleyan outfit.&#13;
Morningside lost its first conference game to an under-rated Iowa State. Teachers five at Cedar&#13;
Falls. The Maroons came back strong in their next two contests. knocking off Wartburg Co ll ege and&#13;
Tulsa University in an inter-sectional contest. Next came our arch rivals, the Coyotes from Ver-&#13;
&#13;
by a scant point in a thriller at Vermillion. The. next&#13;
game was a rather humiliating setback because the&#13;
Maroons were currently leading the N.C. conference&#13;
and the previously beaten Western Union quintet&#13;
conference tilt. The Maroons ran over Omaha U. for&#13;
their fifteenth win of the season.&#13;
The most important game of the season&#13;
took place in Sioux Falls. A win over&#13;
Augustana would give us the 1946-47 conference crown. The cagers played their&#13;
hearts out that night, displaying the type&#13;
of ball they are capable of playing and&#13;
their efforts were well rewarded when they&#13;
brought the first conference championship&#13;
back to Morningside since 1938.&#13;
&#13;
In the final game of the season we lost&#13;
to Dakota Wesleyan at Mitchell. Morningside chalked up 16 wins against 6 defeats&#13;
in the 1946-4,7 season , scoring a total of&#13;
&#13;
1259 points to their opponents 1112. The&#13;
scoring Maroons averaged 57.22&#13;
&#13;
high&#13;
&#13;
points per game.&#13;
&#13;
BOB HELD- Although he still has a year left at&#13;
Morningside, Bob has completed his basketball&#13;
competition on the Maroon maples. Probably&#13;
no player in Morningside's basketball history&#13;
has established such a fine record. "Smorg" is&#13;
a three letter winner, was selected twice on AllConference teams, was leading scorer in the&#13;
North Central conference in 1942-43, was the&#13;
team's second high scorer and fourth in the&#13;
conference in 1946-47. He is an outstanding shot&#13;
and a fine defensive player.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GALE STEVENS- Gale is also a three letter man&#13;
and was selected as center on the current AllConference team. "Rookie" was the team's leading scorer and third highest in the conference.&#13;
Perhaps the best defensive man on the squad,&#13;
he is an uncanny basketmaker under pressure&#13;
and is an all-around position player.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
JACK LARSON-,The third member of the 1946-47&#13;
championship Maroon squad to make All-Conference selection is Morningside's rangy, aggressive guard, Jack Larson. This was Jack's first&#13;
and last year at Morningside but he proved his&#13;
ability in every game. The coolest headed player on the team, Jack continually broke up plays&#13;
and worried the opposing coach by holding down&#13;
his outstanding player.&#13;
&#13;
LANGSTRAAT&#13;
&#13;
BILL BRIGGS-This was Bill's second year in a&#13;
Maroon uniform. Known as the brain of the&#13;
squad, he is the team's most aggressive member and can always be counted on to come&#13;
through when needed. Received a broken ankle&#13;
in the important S.D.U. game and was sidelined&#13;
&#13;
for the remainder of the season. Always beat&#13;
opposing defensive man in more ways than one.&#13;
NORM MATHERS-A good rebound man, aggres-sive, and always a good competitor. This is&#13;
Norm's last year at Morningside. He is a two&#13;
letter winner. ·&#13;
DONALD RHODES-01' Pappy Rhodes, seems&#13;
like he's been playing basketball at Morningside for years. (He has too.) "Dusty" got off&#13;
to a slow start but found his place and came&#13;
through in good style. S.D.U. game was his&#13;
best- ask his friend, Rube Hoy. A two year&#13;
man.&#13;
CLAYTON BRISTOW - Freshman center who&#13;
really found a place in the heart of every loyal&#13;
Maroon fan. Turned the tide in the final minute&#13;
of play in the all important S.D.U game at Vermillion and came through in the pinches in&#13;
other games. An outstanding prospect who has&#13;
a bright future ahead of him.&#13;
HENRY LANGSTRAAT-First year on the Maroon&#13;
squad. Good shot from the floor and shows&#13;
much promise as a forward or center in '48.&#13;
BASIL BROCK- A freshman guard who failed to&#13;
earn a major letter. Came up from the B squad&#13;
mid-way in the season. Will undoubtedly be a&#13;
starter next season.&#13;
JOHN WILLIAMS-Was the first man moved up&#13;
from the B team. Johnnie didn't earn a letter&#13;
this season but keep your eye on him next season.&#13;
&#13;
DIIOCK&#13;
RHODES&#13;
BRISTOW&#13;
&#13;
North Central Cha1npions&#13;
&#13;
B Squad Basketball Record&#13;
Morningside B ........ 49&#13;
&#13;
Burnett Motor Co ..... 32&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ........ 42&#13;
&#13;
ebraska B ............ 56&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 61&#13;
&#13;
Western Union B. ... 36&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 48&#13;
&#13;
Emmetsburg J. C..... 38&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........44&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista B........42&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ....... .40&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska B ............ 66&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 46&#13;
&#13;
Omaha B. ................. 31&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 31&#13;
&#13;
Sou th Dakota B...... 19&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 47&#13;
&#13;
. B. T ..................... 37&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gsid e B ........43&#13;
&#13;
Creighton B ............40&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 37&#13;
&#13;
Creighton B ............ 32&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ........ 35&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota B. ..... 52&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 68&#13;
&#13;
Sportsman's ...........48&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 37&#13;
&#13;
Western Union B. ... 39&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........ 47&#13;
&#13;
Augustana B. ........... 36&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside B ........ 52&#13;
&#13;
Omaha B ................ 51&#13;
&#13;
Morningside B ........46&#13;
&#13;
Buena Vista B. ....... 29&#13;
&#13;
B&#13;
&#13;
LETTER WJN NERS&#13;
&#13;
RAUN Rasmussen&#13;
&#13;
JOII N WAN S INK&#13;
&#13;
WALTER JIILL&#13;
&#13;
FORREST Mcelmurray&#13;
&#13;
JERRY ST ERN&#13;
&#13;
BA S IL DROCK&#13;
&#13;
BILL CO LLOP Y&#13;
&#13;
8013 FULTON&#13;
&#13;
JOH N W ILLIAM S&#13;
&#13;
DON DUNN&#13;
&#13;
DON Preston&#13;
&#13;
Seated : H e ld, Williams Math e rs, Broc k , Saltwc l i.&#13;
Standing : Coach B uc kin g ham , Stevens, Larson, Briggs&#13;
&#13;
Bri stow, Lan gs tra a t, Coach Ob yc.&#13;
&#13;
THE SEASON RECORD&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
114&#13;
&#13;
............ 81&#13;
............ 60&#13;
............ 65&#13;
............54&#13;
............ 43&#13;
............ 54&#13;
............ 46&#13;
............ 66&#13;
............ 67&#13;
............ 57&#13;
............ 53&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Mornin gside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Western Union ........ 65&#13;
Buena Vista ............41&#13;
Omaha .................... 31&#13;
St. Olaf .................... 32&#13;
Creighton ............... .4,6&#13;
Montana State ..........62&#13;
North Dakota .......... 42&#13;
No. Dak. State ..........48&#13;
Augustana ................ 60&#13;
Buena Vista .............. 47&#13;
Dak. Wesleyan ........ 42&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
............ 58&#13;
............42&#13;
............ 68&#13;
............ 53&#13;
............ 4,9&#13;
............ 53&#13;
............ 59&#13;
............ 4,1&#13;
............ 68&#13;
............ 59&#13;
............ 63&#13;
&#13;
o. Dak. State .......... 47&#13;
Ia. State Teachers... .4,6&#13;
Wartburg ................ 55&#13;
So. Dakota ............. 48&#13;
Tulsa ...................... 44&#13;
So. Dak. State .......... 59&#13;
So. Dakota .............. 58&#13;
Western Union ........ 63&#13;
Omaha ...................... 59&#13;
Augustana ................ 50&#13;
Dak. Wesleyan ........ 67&#13;
&#13;
Spring Sports&#13;
Spring sports activities at Morningside in 194 7 consisted of baseball, golf, and tennis.&#13;
The Morningside athletic department went to great expense to revive baseball, which has not been&#13;
a major sport at Morningside since 1923. Athletic Director Les Davis took over coaching duties of&#13;
the newly formed Maroon baseball club.&#13;
Some forty aspirants reported for the initial workouts which were held daily in the gym, but with&#13;
the advent of warmer weather the squad moved out-of-doors where they practiced on a newly constructed diamond on Bass Field.&#13;
Members of the 1947 baseball team were Bob Held, catcher; Donald Protexter, catcher; Gale Stevens, first base; Spero Siganos, first base; Charles Johnson, second base; Connie Callahan, second&#13;
base; Laverne Luther, third base; Len Styczynski, third base; Bill Collopy, shortstop; Dick Bornholdt, fielder; Howard Harmon, fielder; Basil Brock, fielder; Bill Enockson, pitcher; Keith Erps,&#13;
pitcher; Ed Sokolowski, pitcher.&#13;
BASEBALL SCHEDULE 1947&#13;
Western Union&#13;
Here&#13;
Buena Vista&#13;
There&#13;
Creighton University&#13;
There&#13;
South Dakota State&#13;
There&#13;
South Dakota State&#13;
Here&#13;
Western Union -----·-···--·--·--There&#13;
Western Union&#13;
There&#13;
Omaha University&#13;
Here&#13;
Creighton University&#13;
Here&#13;
Buena Vista&#13;
Here&#13;
South Dakota U,&#13;
Here&#13;
South Dakota U.&#13;
There&#13;
Western Union&#13;
Here&#13;
Omaha University&#13;
There&#13;
&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
row&#13;
Ro w&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
A sprey, Newman, H oe fer, H e ld , Me ne fee .&#13;
Mut chl er, Pres to n, Woos ter, Styczynskic, Shkurcnsky, P e te rso n.&#13;
Hae nfl cr, Haley, Callahan, Kjo se, Collopy. Dlair.&#13;
Coach Dav is, Dri stow , Strait, Bri ggs , Coach Bu ckin gham,&#13;
&#13;
Six tennis and golf matches were scheduled with the Maroons meeting Creighton U. and Omaha&#13;
U. at Omaha and Augustana at Sioux Falls. The three schools traveled to Sioux City for return&#13;
matches.&#13;
The golf team was composed of Don Shelton, Don Molden , Don Fitzgerald, Frank Du ggan, Fred&#13;
Coury, and Bob Bergquist.&#13;
Members of the tennis team included Len Foster, Scotty Reynolds, Jack Larson , and Bill Lewis.&#13;
&#13;
M Club&#13;
&#13;
Due to a pri ntin g deadline resu lts of spring spo rts ac tiviti es can not be given.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President... .............................................---·······-···-····-Gene A sprey&#13;
Vi ce President.. .. ·-········································-··.] ulius Shkurensky&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer..... ----···················-·········-······· William Briggs&#13;
&#13;
The M Club is the organization of all major athletic award winners at Morningside College. The club annually take.s charge of Freshman-Sophomore ·Day, Sadie Hawkins Day, and concessions at basketball games. The club was revived last fall after three years of inactivity.&#13;
Former members returning last fall were Gene Asprey, Clair Blair,&#13;
William Briggs, Loren Clark, Joe De Maine, Thomas green, Robert&#13;
Held, Roy Haenfler, Wilfred Kaufman, Norman Mutchler, Norman&#13;
Mathers, Lawrence Freeman, Julius Shkurensky, Gale Stevens, Eugene&#13;
Stover, Howard Peterson, Donald Rhodes, John W ansink, Paul Zeman.&#13;
&#13;
116&#13;
&#13;
117&#13;
&#13;
Women's Athletics&#13;
&#13;
Everything from modern dance&#13;
to soccer-that's what the W om en's Athletic department offered.&#13;
in all respects it was indeed a&#13;
success&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
W.A.A. Homecoming G FLOAT&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Physical Education department is under&#13;
the direction of Dr. Florence Cole and Miss Bernice&#13;
Wolfson. The department was improved this year by&#13;
the addiLion of an assistant to the department head. D r.&#13;
Cole, a graduate of Grinnell, Columbia, and&#13;
&#13;
ew York&#13;
&#13;
University, heads the departmen t and is assisted by Miss&#13;
Wolfson , a graduate of the University of Michigan and&#13;
ew York University.&#13;
&#13;
119&#13;
&#13;
Physical Education Majors Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President.. ............................................................ M uriel Lambert&#13;
Secretary........................... ·······················-··-Charlotte Kingsbury&#13;
Treasurer.................. ·-···················-·······················Lyla R eh nblom&#13;
Adviser ....................... .....................................Dr. Florence Cole&#13;
&#13;
The purpose of the Physical Education Majors Club is threefold: first, to uphold&#13;
the standards of the National Physical Education Organization; second, to organize&#13;
and supervise recre.ational activities on the campus; and third, to be of service to&#13;
our own community.&#13;
Our main project throughout the past year has been a recreation program given&#13;
twice a month at the Good Shepherd's Home, where each physical education maj or&#13;
has had an opportunity to apply her skills and talents.&#13;
By sponsoring a very successful Sports Dance, the club was able to purchase&#13;
maroon and white jackets for all junior and senior majors.&#13;
&#13;
Row 1: Johnstone, Geake, Barrett, Schultz, Pappas, Lambert.&#13;
Row 2: C. Kingsbury, D. He ld, Mutchler, K. Held , S everson, Road man.&#13;
Row 3: Zeman , Rehnblom, Peterson, Irwin, L. Williams, H. Baker, Dengler, Smalley, Osborn, Vanos, Olson, Nelson.&#13;
&#13;
W omen,s Athletic Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President............................................................Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Vice President................................................·-··--·.Darlene Held&#13;
Secretary........................................................... ...Katherine Held&#13;
Treasurer..............·-·············································Donna Severson&#13;
SPORTS CHAIRMEN&#13;
&#13;
Volleyball.......................- .....................................Katherine Held&#13;
Basketball...........................................................- ---Ruby Smalley&#13;
Softball........................... - ..·-······························-···Bonnie Schultz&#13;
Ping Pong.......- --·······················································Irma Dengler&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Athletic Association, which is affiliated with the Athletic Federation of College&#13;
Women, is an organization including girls who have completed one season of ten hours in any of&#13;
the following sports: bowling, badminton, tennis , archery, hockey, basketball, volleyball, softball,&#13;
dance, and cheer-leading.&#13;
Dr. Cole is the adviser of the organization. Activities which the W.A.A. sponsored during the&#13;
year were tournaments in badminton, volleyball, basketball, ping-pong, softball; the spring festival,&#13;
the Yale-Harvard game, overnight hikes, and picnics. The Women's sports program is controlled by&#13;
the W.A.A. board which consists of the director of physical education for women and the officers of&#13;
W.A.A.&#13;
The highest award W.A.A. confers upon a girl is the presentation of a sweater. Many requirements are necessary for this award, and it is a symbol of good sportsmanship, scholarship, and leadership. The sweater winners this year are Carolyn Mutchler, Katie Roadman, Darlene Held, Katie&#13;
Held, and Donna Severson.&#13;
&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
Row 1 : I ohnstone, Geake, Barrett, Schultz, M. Wi ll iams.&#13;
Row 2: C. Kingsbury, D. Held, Mutchler, Lambert, K. Hel d, Pappas,&#13;
Row 3: Mul ford , Olson, Black, Rehnblom, Irwin , D. Baker, Nelson&#13;
&#13;
121&#13;
&#13;
Yale--Harvard&#13;
Game&#13;
The annual Yale-Harvard&#13;
g i r I s basketball game was&#13;
played April 22 before a&#13;
group of interested spectators. The Harvard team was&#13;
the victor over Yale in a&#13;
close, well-fought game. The&#13;
final score was 34,-33. In&#13;
the event that it has been&#13;
customary to create interest&#13;
by having men coaches, Bill&#13;
Briggs and Jack Larson acted as coaches for Yale and&#13;
Harvard respectively.&#13;
&#13;
YALE&#13;
Seated: F'id erlick,&#13;
Wa lker.&#13;
Standing Larsen.&#13;
absent : Schu ltz.&#13;
&#13;
Anderson , \Vil Iiam s,&#13;
&#13;
e l son, Barre tt.&#13;
&#13;
Ro w 1: Lamson, Johnson, Walton, Barre tt.&#13;
row 2: H.iebhofT, Taylor, Johnstone, Severson.&#13;
&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
Our eight peppy cheerleaders were elected early in the fall&#13;
by the student body to lead the college yells throughout the&#13;
football and basketball season. This group which deserves so&#13;
much credit for its pep and enthusiasm is composed of the&#13;
foll owing Morningsiders:&#13;
&#13;
HARVARD&#13;
Seated: Corrie, Brand , P a ppas, K. H e ld.&#13;
Sta nding: Sherk, Brun son, Dawson, Smal-&#13;
&#13;
KAYE JOHNSTONE,&#13;
&#13;
ley.&#13;
Absent: Ceake.&#13;
&#13;
DoN A SEVERSON,&#13;
&#13;
senio,&#13;
&#13;
sophomore&#13;
&#13;
Soldier, Iowa&#13;
DARLENE TAYLOR,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
junior&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
N BARRETT,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
JonN Riebhoff,&#13;
&#13;
junior&#13;
&#13;
MARGE WA LTON,&#13;
&#13;
Burt, Iowa&#13;
Margaret&#13;
&#13;
freshman&#13;
&#13;
sioux City&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON,&#13;
&#13;
pat&#13;
&#13;
sophomore&#13;
&#13;
lamson,&#13;
&#13;
freshman&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
122&#13;
&#13;
sophomore&#13;
&#13;
Si oux City&#13;
&#13;
123 ·&#13;
&#13;
May queen&#13;
&#13;
Spring Dance Festival&#13;
The Spring Dance Festival was presented May 9, 1947, by the&#13;
Women's Physical Education Department in collaboration with the&#13;
Conservatoryof Music.&#13;
The prologue a municipal airport scene, and the overture of&#13;
European folk tunes introduced the dances from Russia, Bohemia,&#13;
England, Sweden, Poland, and Palestine. The double string quartet&#13;
introduced the American dances by playing a medley of Stephen Foster's melodies.&#13;
The highlights of the American dances were the negro spirituals,&#13;
"little David," "It's Me," and "I Got Shoes," which were danced by&#13;
the modern dance club and accompanied by a chorus from the conservatory.&#13;
The modern dance class also demonstrated techniques of modern&#13;
dance and short studies created by the group representing "Greeting,''&#13;
"Worship," and "Conflict." Two members of the class developed a&#13;
study based on the movement of Al Jolson.&#13;
Perhaps the most delightful group of dances were the modern interpretations of two American folk songs, "I Know Where I'm Going,''&#13;
and "Tam Pierce," danced by Miss Wolfson and the modern dance&#13;
club. A fast and vigorous group of western square dances ended the&#13;
program.&#13;
At the municipal airport once more, the announcement was made&#13;
of the arrival of the Sioux City sue Special carrying the May Queen&#13;
and her attendants, Marjorie walton and Joby Tillotson. Amid the&#13;
applause of the audience and dancers, the flashin g of the photographers, Dean Tweito crowned Miss Dorothy Floyd, Queen of the may&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dorothy Floyd, of Clinton, Iowa, was chosen&#13;
by popular vote of the student body to reign as Queen&#13;
of the May at the annual Spring Festival presented&#13;
by the Women's Athletic department. She was attended by Miss Joby Tillotson and Miss Marjorie&#13;
Walton, both of Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
124&#13;
&#13;
125&#13;
&#13;
We're always proud of our&#13;
"Con." And this year, as always,&#13;
it was a thrill to hear Bach and&#13;
''boogie" pouring out of the&#13;
practice room windows.&#13;
&#13;
Student Recital&#13;
No Conservatory wouid be complete without its student&#13;
recitals, and Morningside is no exception. Every We.dnesday afternoon a group of students perform for the Conservatory students and faculty. The main purpose is to&#13;
give the students experience in public performance and&#13;
to provide the opportunity for greater music appreciation. Attendance at these weekly recitals is required of&#13;
all registered Conservatory students.&#13;
&#13;
129&#13;
&#13;
M orningside College Choir&#13;
The renown choir is back to the old standards. It cannot be said that the choir did not have the. neces-&#13;
&#13;
The M adrigal Club&#13;
&#13;
sary personnel, for it would be hard to find any that could surpass that of this year. Beside participation in&#13;
the regular Thursday chapels, the choir assisted in the presentation ot the "Me.ssiah," gave a beautiful rendition of "Elijah," and went on a ten-day tour through north-west Iowa, climaxed with a "Home Concert."&#13;
Thus it can truly be said that Mr. MacCollin has proven his ideals are possible to attain- a task well done.&#13;
SOPRA NOS-Ma rga re t Barks, Mary Lou Crase, Evelyn H a ll , H e len&#13;
Hun.l i ng. J a ni ce MacCo11in, Loi s M c Callum, J oan Meye r, Gloria P e ter son , J oan Ramsey, V e lma Rede nbaugh, Mary Jane Conrad, Ma rilyn&#13;
H ansen, Ruth Palmer , Joyce Leland, Lois Krogh , Donna Robar,&#13;
Patricia S choh eld, arlone Rader, Patricia F oulke.&#13;
&#13;
ALTOS-Beverl y Barks, elizabeth Beck man n , Mary Lou Brand, Ed il h&#13;
Fide rli ck , Lois Galsco, J a n yce Lehmbe rg, Cl arice Moo ne, Marjorie&#13;
McCrack en, Barbara S chmidt , L o rraine Thomas, Be tt y Wha rton , Darl yne S chwinde rman, Tone Prescott, Ma ry Dee M c Ewe n.&#13;
&#13;
BASSES- Bob Coleman, L yl e Cuture , Leslie Cornwe ll , J ohn Duling . Don&#13;
G oode now, R egina l d H all, Ha rold Ruth , Don Schu le r, Darwyn S n yder,&#13;
Eme ry S te wa rt , Bob Kail, Fred Ashl ey, J oh n P he lps, Ke ith Sloan,&#13;
&#13;
TENORS-Elbert bales&#13;
Bob Bower, Bruce Goodenow. l\1ilo H a ll , Raymond Wa ll ace, Don K e lsey, John Ri ehhofT, David Bye rs, Duane T ayl o r, Ra l ph Minni ch.&#13;
&#13;
This club was reorganized this year with the purpose of givin g gi rls who desired the opportunity to si ng. The Tuesday&#13;
ni ght rehearsals, with Emery Stewart at the baton, were an in spiration to all who attended. With such an organization on&#13;
the campus, one ca11not fail to find the musical enjoyment desired.&#13;
ME M B ERS&#13;
Ma rcell a P oppen , Marjorie Clapsaddle,&#13;
J a n e Anderson, Do ri s Chamber la in , Muri e l Mu il enburg, Lois S ch ra m, Glen na J ean Martz, Margo&#13;
Youngstrom, Mary Jo Driggs, Be tty Wh i tt ington, Lola Pirie, Barb ara&#13;
Bre we r, Doro thy P ie rce, Ma ry P ea rl Wil ey, Lyla Rehnblom&#13;
J oan&#13;
Bu ckwa lte r . K a thy Schwarz, Ma ry H e l en Gasser. K atie Smit h, J ayne&#13;
l\:larie Soiseth , Mrs. Dale White, Elai ne J ohnson, El eanor E vere tt , Dar·&#13;
&#13;
The Men's Glee Club&#13;
This club was reorganized this year to give the men a chance to sing. It rehearsed at the same time as did the Madrigal, and under Mr. MacCollin's direction, the glee club developed into a fine musical organization. This club was not 0 11&#13;
the roster for the year. However, the Madrigal and Men's Glee Club were often combined to form a second chorus fo r&#13;
antiphonal work with the college choir.&#13;
&#13;
MEMBER S&#13;
Fred Ashl ey&#13;
Don Ba ugous&#13;
Re ne Brown&#13;
George Brum baugh&#13;
Ca rl Carl sen&#13;
Jim Demctrolis&#13;
Ed Donkcr slout&#13;
J ac k Fowl er&#13;
Be rn a rd H e nsley&#13;
Dean K au ffman&#13;
H oward Lebowich&#13;
F rank Lieb&#13;
Marvin Lu dcns&#13;
Duane Mu ssel man&#13;
Robert Ne lson&#13;
J a mes Okey&#13;
George Pi than&#13;
W e nde ll R ensink&#13;
Wa ll ace Ro!!-C&lt;'C&#13;
Gail Royer&#13;
Jam es Sad ler&#13;
Le wis Sampson&#13;
\Vm . Sander&#13;
Harry Sm ith&#13;
Walte r S pade&#13;
Lee Strack bein&#13;
Ll oyd Chadwick&#13;
&#13;
130&#13;
&#13;
lync Schwinderma n , Vera Devaul, Margaret V ik , Jean LaFoy, Norma&#13;
Jean Mcintosh&#13;
R ub y Ceder. Elai ne E ngel b recht. Mary Fiddic k . J ean&#13;
Smith, Angel a Intravia&#13;
Karell Brodsk y, Mary Dec McEwen. El sie Mae&#13;
Larsen. Jo ne P rescott. Ina Mac I-l am . Da rl ene H urst, Au drey Laude,&#13;
Doro thy Olson M rs. \Verder. Evelyn F reeman, Dec Lillian Parke r, A my&#13;
Mattson . Ma xin e Thacker&#13;
Mae Ki essii, Doroth y \Va l tman .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Symphony&#13;
&#13;
Marching Band&#13;
&#13;
The symphony orchestra attained new heights thi s year ; Sioux City has awakened to, the fact th at thi s is an organization that&#13;
will be rated among the top symphonies in the nation within a few years. The concerts played 011 the concert course, and the series&#13;
of "Pop" concerts has proven that fact. Under Mr. Kucinski's capable leadership, the orchestra has demanded a nd acquired admira·&#13;
tion and respect for miles around. Morningside can be proud to be associated with such an organization.&#13;
&#13;
This year saw the return of the marching band on the campus.&#13;
nder the capable leadership of Bob Lowry, the band never failed&#13;
lo thrill the crowds at foo tball games, and added pep and enthusiasm lo the school sp irit. And who wasn't proud to see the&#13;
hand at the head of the Homecoming parade.&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE MEMBERS IN THE SYMPHONY&#13;
first&#13;
VIOLINS- Hom e r Garretson. concert master&#13;
Marian Hu ghes. Lois wiese,&#13;
Fred e rick Naglestad,&#13;
Jim demetroulis,&#13;
Ja yne Mari e Soiseth.&#13;
&#13;
SECOND VIOL I S- Jack Fowl e r, Ja ck Wolf!, Mae&#13;
Kicssig. Ka thl een leckband.&#13;
V IOLAS- G l adys Logan Willi s Junker.&#13;
Cellos-Darwyn&#13;
Snyder. Barbara llre wcr.&#13;
Udega rd. John I-l ooker, Nan cy Pierson.&#13;
&#13;
FLUTES- Eunice Bru ce, Lillian Hedeen.&#13;
&#13;
Trumpet-Jack&#13;
&#13;
CLAR INET- Robert Lowr y.&#13;
&#13;
1 ROM BONE-Jay Wicke r.&#13;
&#13;
BASS CLARINET-Robert Kail.&#13;
&#13;
Kru scns lj c rna .&#13;
&#13;
LIBRARIAN'- Jim Demetroulis&#13;
&#13;
A marchin g band is only as good as its drum major and&#13;
majorettes. With Darwyn Snyder as drum major, and Geraldine&#13;
Prager, J a ucile Lon g, and Darlene Travis as majorettes, the&#13;
band upheld its fine reputa tion. And the row of buglers adde&lt;l&#13;
that fina l touch of finesse. One can truly say that Morningside&#13;
is proud of its marching band.&#13;
&#13;
llASSOON- Reginald Hall.&#13;
G loria&#13;
&#13;
French&#13;
HORNS- Loi s McCa llu m, Dal e Dunn, Elizabeth Beckmann&#13;
&#13;
OBOE- J can Smith.&#13;
&#13;
The marchin g band conta ined the same personnel as the concert band, except for the following who were in the marchinl!&#13;
band: John Duling, George P rager, Leslie Cornwell, Donovan&#13;
Schuler, Gerald P rotex ter, J ack Dyer, Karell Brodsky, Gloria&#13;
Peterson, Mary Lou Brand, Wayne W ise, Bert Kin g, Worthie&#13;
Usher, Tom Ward, Mari lyn Hansen, Robert Nelson, Jim Deme·&#13;
troulis, Maynard Minn ich, Beverly Barks, Ed Osborn, Robert&#13;
Forse, David Byers, Evelyn Hall, Hazel Dethmers.&#13;
&#13;
Travis Prager, Long Snyder&#13;
&#13;
132&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Band&#13;
Morningside is proud of the band this year; even though the opportunity for performance came infrequently, the band , under the able direction of Dr. Garland , has shown what a true concert band is. The&#13;
band presented a formal concert in the spring, giving those who attended an ex amp le of true art.&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
FLUTE S -&#13;
&#13;
Lov ice Kin gsbury , Lillian Hedeen,&#13;
&#13;
Jany ce Lehmbe rg, Margo Youn gs trom.&#13;
&#13;
Pro tex te r.&#13;
&#13;
OBOE- J ea n Smi th.&#13;
CLARINETS- J ack Speer, Robert Kai l , Yo Shi ·&#13;
buya,&#13;
Dea n Marshal] , Way ne So renso n, Marga ret Vik, D o n Baugous, De tty Wharton, Dar-&#13;
&#13;
Pa tricia Scho-&#13;
&#13;
field , Marjori e H e ll and.&#13;
SA XOPllONES- Wil li am Sander. Jo hn Brod ee n ,&#13;
Oa rwyn Snyder, H arry Smith.&#13;
&#13;
HORN S-Lois McCa ll um,&#13;
&#13;
BA SSES-John&#13;
Bales.&#13;
&#13;
Sipma,&#13;
&#13;
Kei th&#13;
&#13;
S l oan,&#13;
&#13;
Elbert&#13;
Row 1 : Pop pe n. Mccallum&#13;
Schmidt, Soiseth.&#13;
How 2: Matt so n. J. S mith , Law , Peterso n, Sch wind e rm an.&#13;
&#13;
BA SS CLA R INET- Emery S tewa rt.&#13;
&#13;
TRUMPETS- Marvin Ludens, Jack Kru se ns tj e rna .&#13;
&#13;
BA SSOON-Reg in ald Hall.&#13;
&#13;
l ene Hurst, .Marj o rie Clapsaddle&#13;
&#13;
CO RN ETS-Frank Lieb, Roger Bu rgess, Don Al l en, Edith Fiderli ck , Ceorge Pithan, Gera ld&#13;
&#13;
Elizabeth&#13;
&#13;
Bec km ann ,&#13;
&#13;
John Duling.&#13;
TROMBONES- Jay Wi cker, Don Cood e now, Aud .&#13;
rey Laud e, Shirley menage&#13;
Wa yne T ay l o r,&#13;
Ke nn e th R uby.&#13;
&#13;
STRING BASS- Les li e Cornwell.&#13;
PER CUSS ION-Da rl yne Schwi nd e rm an,&#13;
P e tt engi ll , E laine Jo hn son.&#13;
&#13;
Tympani-Lois&#13;
&#13;
Krogh&#13;
&#13;
Pau lin e&#13;
&#13;
Mu Phi Epsilon&#13;
&#13;
BARITONES-Ca il Royer, D ea n Kau ffm an .&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
PresidenL. ............................................................. Lois M cCallum&#13;
Vice President .................................................... Barba ra Schmidt&#13;
J! eco rdin g secretary .................. ............................. Nadene Law&#13;
[ reasurer ............... ...................... .................... M arcella Poppen&#13;
Cor respo ndin g Secretary...................... Dar/yne Schwinderman&#13;
Hi storian ................................................................ Gloria P eterso11&#13;
Warden ................................................ ......................... J ean Smith&#13;
Chori ster....................................... ....................... Gloria P eterson&#13;
Publici ty Mana ge r... \ .................................. .Jayne Marie Soiseth&#13;
Advi se r ···-······- ···Miss Faith Woodford, Miss Lois Cramm er&#13;
&#13;
The Mornin gsid e Chapter, Phi Zeta, of Mu Phi Epsilon , national&#13;
music sorority in th e professional fi eld , recognizes in its members&#13;
scholarship , outstandin g musician ship, and friendly personalities. The&#13;
sorority became more active this year with the addition of several new&#13;
memhers.&#13;
&#13;
135&#13;
&#13;
Con Capers&#13;
&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
1 As hl ey, Co l eman, Schule r, B augous.&#13;
2 S pade, Lieb , M innich , B a l es, K e l sey, Ludens, R oyer.&#13;
3 Speer, D uli ng, Sipma, Carey, S n yder, allen&#13;
4 wicker Bower. ruby&#13;
M. hall&#13;
D . goodenow,&#13;
kail&#13;
cornwell&#13;
5 S tewart, Lowry, Kucinski&#13;
MacCulli11 .&#13;
&#13;
B. Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Demetroulis&#13;
&#13;
Brumbaugh&#13;
&#13;
Phi Mu Alpha&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
President.. ................................................................ Patrick Carey&#13;
Vice President. .....................................................Darwyn Snyder&#13;
Secrelary.....................................................................John Duling&#13;
T reasurer........................................................................]ack S peer&#13;
Historian.....................................................................John Sipma&#13;
Warden&#13;
Don Allen&#13;
F aculty Members.............. Leo Kucinski R obert Lowry, Pau l&#13;
MacColli11, Jam es R eistrup, Hom er Garretson Charles&#13;
Garland Em ery Stewart&#13;
&#13;
Greetings from the members of Gamma Xi c hapter of Phi Mu Alpha, Sinfonia of America,&#13;
the onl y national professional fraternity on th e campus. This is our first full postwar year,&#13;
and we ha ve done well in our attempt to reestablish Sinfonia on a normal basis. Our fi rst activity of the year was the presentation of an All-Am erican Program on November 25, so de ignated&#13;
because all of the pieces presented were works of American compose.rs. In December, we and&#13;
our sister sorority, Mu Phi Epsilon, presented the Christmas assembl y, a musical paraphrase of&#13;
Dickens' "Christmas Carol." In Ma rch, eightee n pledges were initiated into our chapter.&#13;
Our big proj ect for this year has been the furnishing of our new home on the fo urth floo r&#13;
of the "Con." We are ver y proud of it, and we know that it will be long remembered by the&#13;
members who will graduate this year.&#13;
&#13;
)36&#13;
&#13;
]37&#13;
&#13;
"To be or not to be" . . .&#13;
that's always the question. The&#13;
department carried on in its best&#13;
stage manner, considering the&#13;
iack of adequate facilities. The&#13;
production, "Murder in the Cathedral, " was truly an exceptional presentation!&#13;
&#13;
Ro w&#13;
R ow&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
]&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Lo ng, Scott, Il ooz, Burrou g hs,&#13;
S he rk , Ste rn e. Botto l fson, Jl am .&#13;
Uu ckw a lt c r, Zc iss l c r, Bruce, Schwarz&#13;
Tracy&#13;
R. Bollinger U. Bollinger&#13;
&#13;
Dawson&#13;
&#13;
barrett&#13;
&#13;
Roach&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Players&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
President. \&#13;
Max SLerne&#13;
Vice Pres ident... ............................................. Williarn B ottolfson&#13;
i&#13;
Secretary&#13;
---····-·····--Cecily Sherk&#13;
Treas urer&#13;
lna Mae Ham&#13;
&#13;
"Mornin gside Players" is a new organization on the campus under the capable&#13;
advisoryship of Professor Richard L. Flowers, head of the Department of Dramatics&#13;
and Speech. The purpose of the organization is to develop further understandin g&#13;
and skill in theatrical production and radio at Morningside.&#13;
The Players were very much handicapped throughout the entire yea r because of&#13;
the lack of a stage, but despite this difficulty the organization tackl ed a very stiff&#13;
production. This production was T. S. Eliot's poetic drama, Murder in the Cathedral.&#13;
The drama was a portrayal of the events about the death of St. Thomas A. Becket&#13;
of Canterbury.&#13;
It is the hop e of the Players to develop into an active and regular play producin g&#13;
organization next term.&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
Murder&#13;
&#13;
T t-J&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
Cathedral&#13;
&#13;
Scenes from the production presented in Grace Church&#13;
&#13;
Th e En glish Drama, "Murder in the. Cathedral" by T. S. Eliot, was produced by Morningside Speech&#13;
students and the " Morningside Players" under the direction of Richard L. ,flowers on April 21 and 22.&#13;
The production was something new and different for a Sioux City audience, as the play is built around&#13;
the symbolic life of the 12th century. In the openin g scenes of the plaY,, a chorus of women of Canterbury&#13;
prophesy tragedy, and that prophecy is fulfilled with the murder of Archbishop Thomas A. Becket.&#13;
&#13;
cast&#13;
&#13;
OF CHARACTERS&#13;
&#13;
Archbishop Thom as A. Beck et... ... R obe rt Tracy&#13;
First T em ptor... ·-·················-···----Margaret Duttor,&#13;
Second Temptor .... ............... William Bottolfson&#13;
Third Temptor........................ ...Lloyd Schonrock&#13;
Fourth Temptor ·-··-····················--···Cecily Sherk&#13;
First Kni ght ....................... .. .. .Lloyd Schonrock&#13;
Second Kni ght... ..................... .... Rob ert Bollin ger&#13;
Third Kni ght... ................ ...............james Mo ody&#13;
fourth Kni ght...._ ............................... Roger davus&#13;
&#13;
Chorus................S hirley Booz, Barbara Henkel,&#13;
Gayle Jean Hofstad, Virginia Horst, Clarice&#13;
Lane, Jaucile Long, Beve rly Morgan, kathy&#13;
Schwarz, Madelyn Schweizer, Cecily Sherk,&#13;
Lorraine Thomas&#13;
First Priest...·-···-···-·······················Ralph Bollinger&#13;
Second Priest... ............. ----·········-···Ronald Miller&#13;
Third Priest... .....---·······························Max Sterne&#13;
Hcrald ............................................ Larry 1/7 ienstein&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
143&#13;
&#13;
Radio&#13;
Mr. Richard L. Flowers, head of the&#13;
Speech Department, is very interested in&#13;
the radio field.&#13;
&#13;
However, owing to the&#13;
&#13;
limited facilities little. broadcasting was&#13;
done this year. The department did supervise the recording of thirteen five minute&#13;
broadcasts for the Sioux City Safety Council. Shown here are. speech students especially interested in radio work.&#13;
&#13;
S TERNE&#13;
NAGLESTAD, LEVILll&#13;
&#13;
Debate Team&#13;
The. Morningside College debate team, consisting of Marvin Levich and Frederick Naglestad,&#13;
participated in three inter-collegiate debates during the second semester of the academic ye.ar&#13;
1946-1947 The debate question was: Resolved, that labor should have a direct share in the&#13;
management of industry. On Fe.bruary 28 and March 1, they went to Lincoln, Nebraska, for&#13;
the debate and discussion conference held there. The team won decisions over the Unive.rsity of&#13;
Minnesota, Marquette University, and Nebraska Wesleyan, but they lost to Nebraska State&#13;
Teachers College and to the. University of Kansas. On March 10, 11, and 12, Morningside was&#13;
represented at the Inter-Collegiate Debate Conference at St. Paul, Minnesota. At this conference, the team won decisions over five co lieges and lost to three. The tournament winners&#13;
of Rock Island's Augustana College received their only defeat from the Morningside team.&#13;
Sixty-four colleges participate.cl, and the Morningside team netted 98 points, one of the third&#13;
highest in the tournament. At Cedar Rapids, on March 14 and 15, the team received one of&#13;
the three superior ratings awarded by the forensics association of Iowa.&#13;
Miss Cripe, instructor in the Speech department, accompanied the team on its trips and&#13;
acted as judge in the various events.&#13;
&#13;
CART ER ,&#13;
&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
nooz,&#13;
&#13;
BOTTOLFSON&#13;
&#13;
145&#13;
&#13;
We pride ourselves in our&#13;
various clubs, sororities, fraternities, and fellowships. Each one,&#13;
in its own way, is carrying out a&#13;
fine program.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Row 1:&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
Wil liams, Nelson, Roadman, Schmidt.&#13;
&#13;
Row 2: Mutch l e r, H arding. Conrad&#13;
&#13;
Schultz. Schram.&#13;
&#13;
Agora&#13;
O FFICERS&#13;
&#13;
P resident.. ................................................. ...K atherine R oadman&#13;
F irst Vice President... ......... ---····················-----Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Second Vice President... ...................................Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Secretary.......................·-······································-K athryn Nelson&#13;
Treasurer..·-···-······- ···-·······························-···-······-Loma Williams&#13;
Senior Representative....................................M ary Jane Conrad&#13;
Junior Representati ve.................................._____ H elen Harding&#13;
___&#13;
Sophomore Representative ..................................B onnie Schultz&#13;
F resh man Representative .......... ·-···············-···········Lois Schram&#13;
&#13;
Agora had another busy season with Katie H.oadman at the helm. The first event&#13;
sponsored by the all-women's organization was the Big-Little Sister Te.a held in&#13;
the dorm; then the inspiring Leadership Banquet, with Mrs. Charles B. Hoeven,&#13;
wife of Congressman Hoeven, speaking to the guests a nd girls amid candle.light; also&#13;
the colorful carnival held in the gym with K . Held and "Van" as the reigning&#13;
monarchs. The organization presented the mirrors which were a beautiful addition&#13;
to the newly decorated Women's Lounge. Endin g the season was the successful _&#13;
traditional Mother-Daughter Banquet held at the Morningside Presbyterian Church.&#13;
&#13;
149&#13;
&#13;
Coach Buckin gha m cha racterized the ' 46-'47 Student Coun cil well as '•not&#13;
a council, but a full hou se of re presenta tives." The 35 me mbe red Coun cil was&#13;
in kee pin g with th e 1200 membered Stude nt Body, th e la rges t of e ithe r in&#13;
Mornin gs ide's hi story. Althou gh thi s in c rease in population c rea ted ce rtain&#13;
in evitable problems for the governin g body, it also provided the opportunity&#13;
for large-scal e activiti es whi ch th e Council undertook for the yea r. The&#13;
expanded soc ial pro gram , the carryin g out of Mornin gside tradition s on a&#13;
ca mpu s predomin a ntly fre shm a n, a nd the meetin g of the uniqu e proble ms whi ch&#13;
a rose in ca mpu s life all required weekly mee tin gs of th e stude nts elected to&#13;
propa gate the democratic ve nture ol stude nt governme nt on the campu s.&#13;
Imm ediate impetu s was gi ven to a n optimisti c Council by the re port whi ch&#13;
the two Stude nt Body preside nts brought ba ck from a Midwest Stude nt&#13;
Governm ent Con vention early in the fall. The re port showed Morningside well&#13;
alon g the way to excell ent stude nt-fac ulty relation ship s, a nd e nj oy in g mu ch&#13;
grea te r freedom in student gove rnment th an most other mid-west school s.&#13;
Norm Ma thers presided ove r th e fir st se mester activiti es. Befor e th e e nd&#13;
of Se p:ember, freshman initiation was well under way, unde r the direction of&#13;
Norm Mutchle r a nd Duan e Faul. on October 11 the bi g Freshm a n-Sophomore&#13;
Day occurred, with Bill Annand and Vi c Me nefee as co-chairm e n. Alth ough&#13;
the lose rs still won' t admit it, th e sophomores were victors of th e day.&#13;
M ATII E HS&#13;
&#13;
Row l: Faul , Wic ke r, Pres to n, Min or, de Vri es, Chri stense n, Mulford&#13;
Ho w 2 : McCa llum , Sc hmi d t, Wolle&#13;
L. Jon es, Co nra d, L. W i lli ams, J ohn s tone.&#13;
Row 3: n. Willi ams, M. Kingsbury&#13;
Trosper&#13;
Madison&#13;
Hoa d ma n , Barrett&#13;
Mattson&#13;
&#13;
L. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Ann and ,&#13;
&#13;
Ne l so n.&#13;
&#13;
Student Council&#13;
REPRES EN TATIVES&#13;
&#13;
Alpha S igma&#13;
A m y M atrso n&#13;
A I pha T a u Del ta .................................... Dick Bea n&#13;
Alph a Tau Delta ................................ Don S helton&#13;
Biology Club .................................. Gordon hanson&#13;
Cheerlea ders......................................... Ann Barrel/&#13;
Cosrnopolitan ................................ H ar, iet T ros pe,&#13;
Ga mma Iota Alpha .................... .Harold Mulford&#13;
rsh kood a h ..................................Bar bara W illia111 s&#13;
Ishkoodah .................................... Mary L ou Brand&#13;
Ka pp a Chi ............................................. .] ack S pee r&#13;
Ka ppa Pi Alpha.............................. Ph yllis Doran&#13;
M Club ................................................ Cene A sprey&#13;
M .F.T.C. ............................ M ary Ellen K ingsbury&#13;
Mu Phi Epsil on ............................Lou Mccallum&#13;
Pre- En gi neers..........................H arold Muschamp&#13;
Ph ys ica l Educa tion Majors........Muriel Lambert&#13;
W.A. A.........................................Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Y.M. C. A ·-----------------· ............................ Bill Treloar&#13;
Y.M.C. A......................................... Dale Hiedeman&#13;
Y .W .C.A ................................. Velma R edenbaugh&#13;
&#13;
President .................................... Norman M at hers&#13;
Pres ide nt.. ............. ....... ..................... Lamar&#13;
Jones&#13;
Vice Pres ide nt... ..................... Ma. y Jane Con rad&#13;
Secretary-Treasuer ......................Carolyn W olle&#13;
Advise r.. ·-·······-············-----------Coach Buck ingham&#13;
A dvise r..............................................M rs. W allman&#13;
Adviser..............................................M rs. Win ton&#13;
Se ni or Class .............................. No rm an Mut chler&#13;
Senior Class .................................... Harold Min or&#13;
Juni or Class ........................................ Duane Faul&#13;
Juni or class ...................................... Katie Ne ls on&#13;
Sop homore Class ................................ Bill Annand&#13;
So phomore Class ..........................Kaye Johnston e&#13;
Freshm an Cla ss ..................................Don Preston&#13;
Freshm a n Class ............................. A nne M adis on&#13;
S ioux .......................................... Lovice Kings bury&#13;
Coll egia n Re porter ................... Ste ph en de Vries&#13;
Conse rvatory .......................... .............. J ay Wic!.er&#13;
A gora .............................................. Katic Roadman&#13;
W. S.G.A ....................................... B arbara Sc hmidt&#13;
&#13;
Hom ecomin g activiti es were like old tim es a ga in , comple te with a ba rbec ue&#13;
directed by Lamar Jones; th e bi g da nce a t the Tomba, of whi ch Gordon&#13;
Chri stense n was cha irm a n, with mu sic by M al Dunn ; th e corona ti on of Queen Kate head ed by Kati e Nelson; and a parad e&#13;
directed by Ste,·e de Vri es.&#13;
The Coun cil was give n full charge o[ Tuesday Student Chapels, and th e res pon sibiliti es of first semeste r chapels were&#13;
delegated to Ca rolyn Woll e and Mary Jan e Conrad. Until th e weather turned wintry, pro gram s were held on Bass Fi eld,&#13;
hi ghli ghted by th e appearance o[ Sioux City Sue. La ter, unde r limited fa cilities rn th e gym , the lea din g campu s or ganization s prese nted pro gram s, in cludin g the Pi South Ame rican R evue, th e Zet " Show Boat," the Si gs " Dream ," T a u Delt style&#13;
show, " Littl e Nell" of I shkoodah , and Kilroy a nd Smoe of Pre-En gineers Club.&#13;
A probl em of major interest and importan ce wa s ha ndled by the Coun cil in regard to the lack of dan ce-noor fa c iliti es&#13;
lar ge enou gh , a nd willin g to accommodate all stude nts, regardless of race. fortified with a non-compromisin g Counc il pe ti tion , th e Admini stration was abl e to sec ure th e use of the Tomha for the Chri stm as formal, a nd unde r the ch airm a nship&#13;
of Gordon Chri stense n, the e ntire stude nt body dan ced at th e Tomba to the mu s1 c of Joe Sa nd ers and hi s ba nd .&#13;
Anoth e r c riti cal proble m th e first semester Council faced wa s th a t o[ rai sin g mone y for the World Student Se rvi ce Fund&#13;
an d for a propose d Germ a n a nti-Nazi exchan ge stude nt. Des pite the sin cere efiort s of Harold Minor, chairm a n, a la rge&#13;
co mmittee of stude nts, a nd of th e Counc il , the project wa s t erminated un successfully.&#13;
In Nove mber the Council chartered a campu s Red Cross Un it under th e leadership of J ack La rson and Kati e Roadm an.&#13;
The seco nd semeste r prexy, Lam a r Jones, inhe rited a full l edge r of ca rryove r business and of un se ttled minor proble ms&#13;
rela tin g to pa rkin g areas, bulletin board, a nd ove r-drawn fi nunces. By di scontii,uin g weekly stude nt cha pels a nd con ce ntra tin g on full suppurt of the Mornin gside basketball tea m a nd on spon sorin g num e rou s inform al da nces, with Ka ti e Roadma n as soc ial chairm a n, th e lon g winte r month s pa ssed only too qui ckly. The end of Ma rch sa w all th e traditi onal Co unc il sponsored Sprin g eve nts underway, a nd th e a nnual Dogpatch celebration alrea dy&#13;
completed&#13;
Gene As prey was chairm a n of Sadie H a wkin s Da y, and althou gh&#13;
th e race " fi zzled out" under the March mi st a nd moi sture of th e day, th e&#13;
da nce th a t ni ght was a hil a ri ous success.&#13;
Al so be fore th e e nd of M a rch , Muri el La mbert a nd Ann e Madi son had&#13;
a tte nded th e organiza tion al meetin g of th e Nation al Student Organiza tion , a nd&#13;
th e Co unc il ha d voted a co ntinu ed inte rest in th e ac tiviti es a nd pro gram of&#13;
the na ti onal grou p.&#13;
April brou ght inte nse di sc ussion a nd pl a nnin g for th e group in sura nce&#13;
pl a n the Counc il wa s a nxiou s to instigate on the campu s. Spec ifi c criteri a&#13;
for Wh o's Wh o selection s a nd a con stitution al a me ndm e nt also we re compl eted.&#13;
T o co mplete a full se meste r's activities W alkout Day was held in May, with&#13;
Bill Bri ggs as chairm a n. Election s of Stude nt Body and class offi cers for&#13;
nex t yea r followed W alkout Day a nct clim axed a n extre mely s pirited ca mpai gn.&#13;
Clim axin g th e scc ial program th e Counc il a nd th e Juni or Class spon sored the&#13;
lovely Se nior Farewell Form al.&#13;
Jun e 2 a nd Comm e nce me nt clim axed a n eve ntful yea r of la rge-scal e stude nt&#13;
governm ent unde r th e direction of th e Stude nt Coun cil , and closed a noth er&#13;
yea r's demon st ra tion of a work a bl e Mornin gside ca mpu s de mocra cy-a gove rn me nt the wi se r for its defects a nd faiiin gs, and the prouder fo r its many accompli shed successes.&#13;
&#13;
JONES&#13;
&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
151&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux Staff&#13;
Editor.................................................................. Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Assista nt Editor...................................................Kathryn Nelson&#13;
Business Manager......................................R ichard M cLaughlin&#13;
Faculty Adviser································-······- ··················.John Castle&#13;
Faculty Editor......·-····································-·······Lucile Huxtable&#13;
Senior Edit-0r............................................. M arjorie McCracken&#13;
Organization Editor................................Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
Music Editor......·--···························-··-·················Lois M cCallum&#13;
(&#13;
Men's Sports Editor...................................... Gordon Christensen&#13;
Women's Sports Editor..........·-······-······:.............. Darlene Held&#13;
Feature Editor......................·-······-··········--·············-Vesta Feller&#13;
Make-up........... L ois K uehn, Betty R eimer, L yla R ehnblom,&#13;
Nadene Law, Helen Ling, Ann Barrett, Loma Williams&#13;
Snapshot Editor...- .............................................Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Photographers...........-·······--···Darrel Warner, Eldred Saltwell&#13;
Row 1 : Law. M. Kingsbu ry, Nelson, L. K ingsbury, Mc Laughlin , Xhristensen Warner.&#13;
Row 2: Rehn b lom, L. W11 li ams, Re imer, D. Held , Schmid t, McCracken, McCallu m, Darrc lt ,&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux&#13;
The Sioux, published annually, is the official yearbook of Morningside College. The editors and the business manager are appointed by&#13;
the faculty publications committee, upon considera tion of applications&#13;
submitted by interested students.&#13;
Miss Kaye Johnstone, Queen of the 1947 Sioux, and her attendants,&#13;
Miss Dorothy Floyd and Miss Gloria Aagard, were chosen by Ronald&#13;
Reagan, Warner motion picture star, from a group of thirty entries&#13;
submitted to him .&#13;
&#13;
NELSON, KINGSDURY, McLAUG!ILJN&#13;
&#13;
152&#13;
&#13;
153&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian Reporter&#13;
Founded in 1895 the Collegian Reporter is a weekl y&#13;
publication of the students&#13;
&#13;
Editor............................................. Stephen C. deVries&#13;
Assistant Editor.. .................................. Hu gh N. Bale&#13;
&#13;
of Mornin gsid e Coll ege. The&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Sports Editor.. ...........................Gordon&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
editor of the Coll egian is&#13;
Christensen&#13;
&#13;
appointed - by the faculty&#13;
&#13;
Sports Features ....... John Soderberg, Victor Neil se11&#13;
&#13;
publi cations committee, and&#13;
&#13;
Columnists........ David Halvorsen , Edward Newman,&#13;
Max Sterne, Darrel Warner.&#13;
Reporters.................... Robert Tracy, Maral yn Wood,&#13;
Josephine Sanford, Connie Havi ghurst, Charlotte Kin gsbury, Earl Montagne, Richard Aton ,&#13;
Carol Davis.&#13;
Photographer ....................................Wendell Rensink&#13;
&#13;
the staff is appointed and&#13;
chosen by the editor. The&#13;
paper is one of the few college papers in the country&#13;
which is compl etely un censored as to news content.&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
&#13;
Business Managers.......... Allen Brown, Daryl James&#13;
Circulation ........ Mary Jane Conrad, Margaret Barks&#13;
Staff Accountants.. Arthur Leckband , Keith McKillip&#13;
&#13;
The Collegian's purpose is to keep students and faculty posted as to campus&#13;
activities and social fun ctions as well as&#13;
items of interest on national and international topics. The editors and staff of the&#13;
paper endeavor at all times to make the&#13;
Coll egian Reporter an instrument to make&#13;
the student opinion articulate.&#13;
Approximately 5/8of the paper's budget is paid by adverti sin g, the remaining&#13;
&#13;
3/8is contributed by the student activity&#13;
fund , of which the Coll egian is alloted 90&#13;
cents per student.&#13;
&#13;
Row 1: Lec kb an d , James, Ba l e, de V ri es. Ch ri s te nse n. A. B rown.&#13;
row 2: Mc Killip , K. S mith , J. Sa nford . Du vis, He hnbl o m. Conrad, M. Barks, C. Kingsbury.&#13;
Row 3: S tern e, Rhoa des, Warn er, Soderberg.&#13;
&#13;
154&#13;
&#13;
155&#13;
&#13;
The women's Self&#13;
&#13;
Governing Association&#13;
&#13;
A warm cozy spot on a cold winter night&#13;
&#13;
Row l: Williams, Peterson, Jones, Schmidt, Ling, Madison.&#13;
Ro w 2 : Thacke r, Novak , Sanfo rd, Paulin , He ll and , S mi th, McC racke n.&#13;
Absent : L. McCall um , M. Hansen .&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President... ......................................................... Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Vice President.. ....................................................Lois McCallum&#13;
Secreta ry ( 1st Semester) ..........................................Lois Kuehn&#13;
Secretary (2nd Semester) ....................................... H elen Ling&#13;
Treasurer ............................................................... Gloria Peterson&#13;
&#13;
Always excitement to be found in the " dorm"- our home for the&#13;
year. We look forward to . the many traditions which belong to the&#13;
dormitory- the Hallowe'en masquerade, the birthday cakes, the Christmas formal dinner at which Mrs. Roadman reads the Christmas story;&#13;
and then our biggest spring event- the formal dinner-dance and open&#13;
house- the "Forest Frolic" ; the last event of the year is dorm " walkout"- a secret kept by all dorm girl s. Yes, we are indeed happy and&#13;
proud to be dormitory coeds !&#13;
A few of the 200 dorm gals gather in the lounge&#13;
&#13;
156&#13;
&#13;
157&#13;
&#13;
1: Sc hwarz, Bla ck, A. Fiderlick. E. Larse n, Ham , Bozarth.&#13;
2: Karsten s, Coyne , Mulford . Tillotson, Dou ghe rt y. Corrie. Fiddick, Helland.&#13;
S: Pierce, Chambers, Wiley, 8. Wi lliam s . Brand. C. Davi s, Hol stad.&#13;
4: V. Daw so n. Drur y. Jo ne s, E . S mith , Lind,&#13;
Novak , Youngstorm, P a lm er ,&#13;
brecht&#13;
J. And e rso n, Floyd.&#13;
Row 5: Lohr. Hoar, E. John so n. J . Me redi th. H. Meredith .&#13;
M. William s, Vik, Schram.&#13;
Row 6: M. Mill er, Fortner , Brewer, Devaul,&#13;
row&#13;
row&#13;
Row&#13;
How&#13;
&#13;
LaFuy ,&#13;
&#13;
Clapsaddle,&#13;
&#13;
Krogh,&#13;
&#13;
R o w 1: (Lef t to ri ght) Caro l yn Woll&#13;
l e, Mary Jane Conrad, Barbara William s, Ma ry Williams&#13;
Charlotte Kin gs bury,&#13;
Vera De Vaul , Beve rly P e te rson.&#13;
Ro w 2: Darl e ne H e ld, Barh am Drewer, Anne Madiso n, Ann Barrett, Ma de l yn Schweizer, Ann e Fo rtn er, Mary&#13;
Ellen Kin gs bur y.&#13;
Row 3 : Lovice Kin gsbur y, Geo rge Berkstresser, Henr y Mull er, Wilson Gingles, Jac k Fowler, Rober t Held , Go rd on&#13;
Christensen.&#13;
Row 4: Margare t Barks, R oger Burgess, Eugene Ra smussen, R obert Irwin, Dea n H arr in g to n, Jim Ha rrin g ton .&#13;
&#13;
Ishkoodah&#13;
&#13;
Papoose Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President.. ........................................llarbara Williams&#13;
Vice President... ............................. Frances Chambers&#13;
Secretary..........................................Mary Pearl Wiley&#13;
Treas urer .............................................. Dorot/,y Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Mary Jo Briggs&#13;
Mar y Lou Brand&#13;
Gayle Jean Hofstad&#13;
Carol Davis&#13;
&#13;
l shkoodah is a very worthy organization for all Freshman girls. One of the main&#13;
purposes of the. organization is to promote new acquaintances and create friendship s.&#13;
All activities planned by the group are governed by the officers.&#13;
l shkoodah has had a very successful year including a chapel program, Christmas&#13;
party, several teas, Sweetheart dance, and the traditional Spring formal, plus semimonthl y meetings which included school talent as well as guest speakers. Miss Alva&#13;
Tolf, Dean of Women , acted as faculty adviser to the group.&#13;
&#13;
158&#13;
&#13;
engel&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President.. ................................................................ Darlene Held&#13;
Vice President... ......................................................... Rol.,ert Held&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer. ..................................... Cordon ch ristensen&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms.................................................... H enry Muller&#13;
&#13;
With an initial membership of 52, the Papoose Club is the most recent group&#13;
to be organized on the Morningside Co ll ege campus. Membership is restricted to&#13;
students who are sons or daughters of former Morningside College students. Purposes of the club are to bring second and third generation Morningside.rs into a&#13;
group for social functions and to foster increased harmony between students and&#13;
alumni. A reunion of all Papoose club members and their parents was held in late&#13;
May when · many parents were on the campus for graduation and school closing&#13;
activities.&#13;
&#13;
159&#13;
&#13;
Y. M.C. A.&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... ......................................... William Treloar&#13;
Vice Presideut... .....................................James Lusher&#13;
Treasurer ............................................R obert B ollinger&#13;
Secretary..............................................Don.ald McKee&#13;
Religious Life....................................R alph Bollinger&#13;
Community Life...........................................Dale White&#13;
Publicity................................................R obert Nelson&#13;
Recreation ..................Kirby Gray and Harold Min or&#13;
Faculty Advisor........................................]ohn Magee&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Dale Hiedeman&#13;
Chester Gwinn and&#13;
Paul Zeman&#13;
K irby Gray&#13;
R obert L ane&#13;
John. Bedient&#13;
Dale 1/7 h ite&#13;
John. P helps&#13;
R ay Kline&#13;
John M agee&#13;
&#13;
This year the Y.M.C.A. had pins for the first time. Their float took third prize&#13;
in the homecoming parade. The major social events were the Y Hoe-Down with the&#13;
Y.W.C.A. and the New Student Party. Paul Zeman represented the orth Central&#13;
Area at the National Intercollegiate Christian Council and the United Student Christian Council. Chester Gwinn represented the campus YM at the National Student&#13;
Assembly at Urbana, Illinois. The YM-YW joine.d in Christmas caroling at the homes&#13;
of several shut-ins. Some members volunteered for service in social agencies of&#13;
Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Row 1: Novak, Fiddick, Harding, Chambers, Long, Horton .&#13;
Row 2: Dougherty, H . Meredith, F loyd, Wil ey, Brand, Lohr, Engelbrecht, Mcintosh.&#13;
Row 3: L. Williams, J, Meredith , L. Kingsbury, Redenbaugh, Schwinderman, McCallum .&#13;
Row 4: Sarchet, K. Schwarz, M. Jones, Zeman , Lind , You ngstrom. Dengl er, Palm er, Schmidt, M. Darks, G. peter&#13;
son, McCracken, Hoar.&#13;
row 5: M. Mill e r, J. Anderson, B. B rewe r, Clapsaddle, Poppen, LaFoy, DeVaul, Nikoluison, Betts, Bru ce, Krogh.&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. C. A.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
President... ..................................................... Velma R edenbaugh&#13;
Vice President..................................................Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Secretary..................................................Darlyne Schwinderman&#13;
Treasurcr..............................................................Joanne Meredith&#13;
Social Chairrnan ................................................... .Lois McCallum&#13;
&#13;
This was a busy year for the "Y" gals. Mrs. John Magee was our top-notch&#13;
adviser. Our activities included a YM-YW Mixer, a homecoming float, formal initiation of the new members, the " hoe-down," and scavenger hunt with the YM, selling&#13;
apples at the basketball games, learning how to make ourselves and our homes beautiful, movies about foreign students' conditions, Christmas caroling with the fellows,&#13;
the National Students Association Conference, a barn dance, heart sister week, election and install ation of new officers and re.treat.&#13;
&#13;
160&#13;
&#13;
Ro w 1: Kelsey, Rasmussen, B. Bo1linger.&#13;
Row 2: Hew lett , Lusher, Arredondo, Baugous.&#13;
Row 3: Speer, McKee, Dayton, R. Do ll inger, Faul.&#13;
&#13;
161&#13;
&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
How&#13;
Row&#13;
How&#13;
&#13;
1 Davis . Spade, Bower, C. \Vein s, Seibert.&#13;
2 Jon es. Vand er Vc ldc, Kimm e l. Lind , D e Vaul , Me nning, Hcn and .&#13;
3 Kirkpatrick , K. Smith . M. Kin gsbury, Lem bcke , Be tts . Law,&#13;
4 Lohr, D ru ry, Paulin , S n yder, Sa nfo rd, Conrad , Schmid! , llae re nwald, Witter, Vanos.&#13;
L. K ingsbu ry, Urban&#13;
5 E. Joh nson, Leroy poppen&#13;
&#13;
R ow&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
]&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Roscoe, Larson, Baker.&#13;
Da yton, Carlsen, Usher. ll cw lett, Rasm ui;scn.&#13;
Hi cb hofT. Lush er, S peer. Horton.&#13;
Minor, Zeman , Redenbaugh&#13;
McCa ll um, Smalley, Youngstro111 , B ruce, Sarchet, Faul.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Future Teachers&#13;
&#13;
O FFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Preside nt.........................&#13;
. .. .. ......... Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
Vice President.. ............. .............................. M ary L ou Lembck e&#13;
Secre tary-Treasurer.. .......... ..... ..............................M arie Betts&#13;
adviser ......................................................}a mes E. Kirckpatrick&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
President....................................................................../ack Speer&#13;
Vice President. .......................................................M aralyn IV ood&#13;
Secre tary......................................................·-·······Beverly Horton&#13;
Treasurer....................... ........................................JohnR iebhoff&#13;
Marshall ........................................................................J im L usher&#13;
National Convention Chairman .................. Eugene Rasmussen&#13;
Faculty Advi rnr.................................................... E. W. Saunders&#13;
HONORARY MEMBERS&#13;
Dr. a nd l\!rs. E.W. Saunders, Dr. a nd Mrs. J. C. Buthman, Dr. and Mrs. F . G. Bean, Dr. a nd Mrs. E. A. Roadman, Dr.&#13;
and Mrs. 1. E. Graber, M r. and Mrs. J.B. Magee, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Burr is, Rev. and Mrs. V. V. Schuldt.&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Future Teachers Club, an active organization on the campus,&#13;
1s affiliated with the Iowa State Education Association and the National Education&#13;
Association. The purposes of the club are. to familiarize its members with the problems and responsibilities of the teaching profession, to better equip the members for&#13;
their work in education, to cooperate with state and national education, and to raise&#13;
the standards, influence, and prestige of the teaching profession.&#13;
Regular meetings are held semi-monthly in the dormitory drawing room, with&#13;
a program planned to provide speakers, debates, and round-table discussions abo ut&#13;
the present educational problems.&#13;
&#13;
162&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi is the ational Interdenominational Christian Service Fellowship for me.n and women who&#13;
plan to enter some type of vocational service throug h the church. This spring the. Delta Chapter of the&#13;
Kappa Chi Fellowship of Christian Service a t Morningside CoJlege was host to the national convention.&#13;
Kappa Chi uses the two initial letters of the Gree k words, " Karukos Christos," which mean " Preachers&#13;
of Christ." The key word is " Therapeia," the Gree k word for ser vice. The symbol s-Fellowship, the&#13;
frinity, and Service, are embodie.d in the Cross of Christ.&#13;
Monthl y meetings of Kappa Chi were held at th e homes of its members a nd provided opportunities&#13;
for Christian fellowship of a social nature as well as of a devotional nature. More than twenty-five new&#13;
members joined the group this year.&#13;
In keeping with its Christian purpose, Kappa Chi has sent out deputation teams to local and rural&#13;
churches this year to stimulate an interest in full ti me Christian service as a life career.&#13;
&#13;
163&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript&#13;
Biology Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
Pres id ent&#13;
Carolyn W olle&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident&#13;
Vesta Feller&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
PresidenL ......................................Robert Hill&#13;
Vice President...&#13;
&#13;
Em i 'io Arredondo&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Doris Raun&#13;
&#13;
Sec retary......................................Eunice Bruce&#13;
&#13;
Representative&#13;
Loma W illiam s&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. ... ·------- ---- --------~- --- ---------- Helen Lin g&#13;
&#13;
Busin ess Manager&#13;
Allen Brown&#13;
Advi ser&#13;
Miss Mirah Mills&#13;
&#13;
Sea te d : Fe ll er, W illiams, Kin gsbu ry, S he rk . Weave r, N. Hal vo rse n.&#13;
S tandin g: Bal e, Burgess, Wo ll e. Raun, Brown. D. Halvorsen,&#13;
·Sea ted : Ling, S mall ey, Bruce, Osborn.&#13;
Sta nding: Gea ke , D or moi, Ar redondo, Gund e rson, Koura ny, Hanson, Mr. Cha tt e rs.&#13;
&#13;
The Biology Club, whi ch draw s its membership from student s interested in the biolo gical sciences, was in full swin g thi s&#13;
year with pl ans for bi gger a nd better meetings. Movies, reports, a nd speakers have been enjoyed by the members.&#13;
Th e club enjoyed its inform al di scussions with its advi ser, Dr. Chatters, hea d of th e Biology Department.&#13;
Members of the club are Bob Hill, Emilio Arredondo, Euni ce Bruce, Jim Fribourgh, H elen Lin g, Myrtle Geake, Ruby Smalley,&#13;
Dale Dunn, Gabri el Kourany, Gordon Han sen, Robert Lapsley, W alte r G. Cassel, Frank H awthorne, Chuck Marriott, Harold Muschamp , Vern ell Gunderson, F elix Dormoi, and Ph ylli s Osborn.&#13;
&#13;
Founded in 1938, Manuscript Club is an organizatio b on the campus for student creative writers. Each year&#13;
the club publishes a Manuscript magazine featurin g stud ent short stories, poems, and vignettes. The highlight of&#13;
the year is the birthday banquet held each March for m embers and alumni.&#13;
&#13;
pre- Engineers Club&#13;
&#13;
Grace Collegians&#13;
&#13;
The Pre-E ngin eers Club of Mornin gside College is a n organization of youn g me n interested in th e study a nd current application of engineerin g and science. A business meetin g and suppe r group wa s held on ce a week for di scussion and parti cipation in&#13;
educa tion al proj ects of a scientifi c nature. Pre-En gineer hi ghli ght s in cluded th e Student Assembly, the Pre-Enginee rs Ni ght, and th e&#13;
Annu al Banquet. The P re-En gineers had an integral part in th e intellectu al and social acti viti es of Mornin gside.&#13;
&#13;
President.. ................................................................ W orth ie Us her&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CE RS&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident.. ............................................ Eugene Rasmussen&#13;
Secretary................................................................ B everly H orto11&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
T reasurer ................................................................... .Jack B edie11 t&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Rec rea tion Chairm en ................... _faucile Long, Paul Ralston&#13;
&#13;
Presi den t... .........................S tanley R oehrs&#13;
Vi ce President...&#13;
&#13;
Harold M uschamp&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ....................R obert Des Lauriers&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
The " Grace Collegian s" is the name given to the coll ege group in the regular Sunday evening youth program&#13;
of the Grace Methodist Church. During the year, they m et on Sunday evenings to discuss topics concernin g the&#13;
Christian: his attitudes toward society's problems, his attitudes toward the world's suffering.&#13;
&#13;
David Koelling&#13;
&#13;
Representati ve ..............H arold Muschamp&#13;
&#13;
Representatives attended the annual fall and spring conferences of the Iowa Methodist Student Movement&#13;
and brought back inspiration and ideas to the rest of the members. Regular recreation evenin gs plus two roller&#13;
skatin g parties and a spring picnic were. another part of this en ergetic group's activities.&#13;
&#13;
Seco nd Semester&#13;
P resident.. .......................... Francis Pipkin&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident... ..................... Willium Gist&#13;
&#13;
Members of Grace Collegians found it a group in which to air their grievances, to discuss personal problems,&#13;
to clarify ideas, and to come to understandin gs ; in it they found whole.some fun, lasting friend ships, and Christian fellowship.&#13;
&#13;
Secreta ry ..............................Robert Larso n&#13;
Treasurer ........................... David K oelling&#13;
Representa tive ..-.......... Harold Muschamp&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Row I : Koellin g, Des Laurie rs, Dr. Graber, Roehrs, Muscham p.&#13;
Row 2: Pi pkin , Larson, P e terson, K onrad y, Krska, Danes, Weis brod, Yates, Gis t, Tamashunas, Fau l.&#13;
&#13;
165&#13;
&#13;
Row&#13;
How&#13;
Ho w&#13;
Row&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Baugou s . M. Da vie s , Arre dondo , Carlsen, Barbero.&#13;
Mr. Bnrri s, Cabbell&#13;
Trosper Bruce Dormoi , Dougherty&#13;
William s. ll oar. Lo hr . For tn e r. Small e y, Youngstorm&#13;
Ramsey&#13;
Schwarz. B Johnson, Popp e n , Ohoin&#13;
&#13;
Wiley&#13;
&#13;
\Villiam i..&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
Doran&#13;
&#13;
Wiese&#13;
&#13;
Schmidt, Conrad&#13;
&#13;
Roadman&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Sorority Council&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Snyder Mattson&#13;
&#13;
The. inter-sorority council is composed of three representatives from each sorority&#13;
selected by their respective presidents. The responsibilities of the group include&#13;
rushing and pledging activities and other inter-sorority affairs.&#13;
&#13;
P resident. ................................................. ................ Eunice Bru ce&#13;
Vice Pres ide nt ................ ............ ................ lfarriet Trosper&#13;
&#13;
- MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ....................................... ........................Mar y Cabell&#13;
Editor........................................... .&#13;
&#13;
.. . ............. Gab riel Kouran y&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer _________ ..................................................... Felix Dormoi&#13;
&#13;
The Cosmopolitan Club is an international organization existing in all parts of&#13;
the world. Today more than ever before we can understand that being cosmopolitan&#13;
minded is th e only solution to remedy the world's crises.&#13;
The purpose of the Cosmopolitan Club of Morningside College is to further&#13;
friendship, harmony, and understanding among students of al l nations. This feeling&#13;
is achieved more. and more upon each monthly meeting, as it is the custom to have&#13;
a meal typical of the various nation s that are represented. The nations represented&#13;
are: China, Panama, Holl and, Japan , Ireland , Burma, United States. German y, and&#13;
Dolivia.&#13;
&#13;
· 166&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA ZETA&#13;
&#13;
Cm&#13;
&#13;
KAPPA&#13;
&#13;
Pr&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
Katherine Roadman&#13;
Mary Jan e Conrad&#13;
Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Phyllis Snyder&#13;
Mary Jan e Conrad&#13;
Mar y Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Phyllis Doran&#13;
Lois Wiese (Secretary)&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Phyllis Doran&#13;
Lois Wiese&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
Amy Mattson&#13;
Janyce Lehmb erg&#13;
Evelyn H all&#13;
&#13;
Am y Mattson&#13;
Clarice Lan e&#13;
Evelyn Hall&#13;
&#13;
ADVISEHS&#13;
M iss Toi/, Mrs. Winston Mrs. Wallman , Miss Grammer&#13;
&#13;
167&#13;
&#13;
Row 1: Fide r1i ck, Leh mberg, Muller. Karstens, Drewer, Lind.&#13;
Row 2: Madison, Nikolnison, Ling-, Hall, Mattson&#13;
Miss Grammer Lane Betts. Hoar Smalley Martz&#13;
Row 3; Schweizer, Schwinderman , Zeman , Schultz, DeVaul , John so n, Leland , P eterson, Menage, Youngstrom , Sherk ,&#13;
&#13;
Osborn,&#13;
Absent: Crase. Anderson, Young, Be ckmann.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
For fifty-five years the Alpha Sigma star has been shining over Morningside's campus. The present members have been reliving the traditional experiences-initiation ceremonies&#13;
with red roses and candlelight, weeky teas with our guests, fun with our&#13;
alumni at the Homecoming luncheon&#13;
and later parties, our "super" intramural team, our five-pound parties,&#13;
our open house, and the swell times&#13;
with our freshmen guests durin g&#13;
"rush" season. Those who are leaving us for work or weddings will&#13;
want to remember most, however, the&#13;
close friends they have made. We&#13;
won't forget them, either.&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Amy Mattson&#13;
PresidenL·-··-···································Amy Mattson&#13;
Vice President.. ................................ Evelyn Hall&#13;
Darlyne Schwinderman&#13;
Recording Secretary........................Janyce Lehmberg&#13;
Georgia Anderson&#13;
Corresponding Secretary................ M uriel M uilenberg&#13;
Marie Betts&#13;
Treasurer........................................... Mary Lou Crase&#13;
Janyce Lehmberg&#13;
Usher...........................................·....... Madelyn Schweizer&#13;
Madelyn Schweizer&#13;
Critic.................................................. Marie Betts&#13;
Bonnie Schultz&#13;
Chaplain ............................................. Bonnie Schultz&#13;
Clarice Lane&#13;
Reporter. ............................................ Helen Ling&#13;
Helen Ling&#13;
Adviser.. ............................................. Miss Lois Gramer&#13;
Faculty Members .............................. Miss Mills, Miss Murray, Miss Woodford&#13;
Honorary Members........................... Miss Lillian E. Dimmitt, Mrs . Paul E . Johnson&#13;
Mrs. Earl A. &amp;adman, Mrs. Charles Smith,&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Stephens, Miss Ruth M cDonald&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Georgia Anderson, Marie Betts, Mary Lou Crase, Eveiyn Hall, Clarice Lane, Janyce Lehmberg,&#13;
Helen Ling, Amy Mattson, Dorothy ikolaison, Bonnie Schultz, Madelyn Schweizer, Darlyne&#13;
Schwinderman, Ruby Smalley, Doris Young.&#13;
Pledges-Betty Muller, Cecily Sherk, Beverly Johnson, Annalee Zeman, Phyllis Osborn, Margo&#13;
Youngstrom, Barbara Brewer, Vera DeVaul, Shirley Menage, Elizabeth Beckmann, Beverly&#13;
Peterson, Glenna Martz, Mildred Hoar, Alice Karste11 s, Mary Lou Lind, Anne Madison, Joyce&#13;
Leland, Arlene Fiderlick .&#13;
., Motto : Utile Dulce- The Useful and the Pleasing&#13;
Colors: Blue and White&#13;
Flower: Red Rose&#13;
&#13;
168&#13;
&#13;
169&#13;
&#13;
How 1: Chambers. Lowe, Momsen, McEwen Glasco, Krogh, prescott&#13;
Wharton. Engelbrecht&#13;
How 2: Pickering, Hack ett. N ielse n, Shreve. Doran . Schmidt, Wiese. J o nes, Raun, Soise th,&#13;
How 3: Harter Witter Pe terson, Dressler, Harding, Swanson, Lamson&#13;
Lembecke Fortner, Drury, West Pen ce, Laude,&#13;
Robar&#13;
Absent Moone Everett Barre tt.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha interest ranged from talent to beauty.&#13;
There is always excitement to be found in the Pi halls. We&#13;
had fun working on our " Homecoming" float- and were&#13;
proud to have Barb as an attendant for the queen. Five.&#13;
pounds? Yes, in fac t, several! Those 1ucky girls were Lois&#13;
Swanson, Helen Witter, Jean Rae Pickering, Virginia O'Dell,&#13;
Clarice Moone., an d Betty Shreve. Picnics- with music,&#13;
frrep lace, dancing and moonlight-was a grand attraction&#13;
for the sorority sisters. Speaking of talent, our gay Spanish&#13;
program was "tops." Sweet violin from none other tha n&#13;
Lois- an honorary member of S.A.I. Then we have Gloria&#13;
and Marian with Lheir beautiful voices singing to us-and&#13;
they can. The "Pi's" are always "on the ball" working&#13;
Logether planning aclivities as recitals and spreads, rush&#13;
parties dinners, a nd formals. Our traditional "Trouser&#13;
Formal" held at the Martin Ballroom wa one of the hi ghlights and beautiful occasions of the en tire year.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... .........................................Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Vice PresidenL----························--Lois Wiese&#13;
Social-Chairman................................M arian Meier&#13;
Corresponding Secretary..................Gloria Peterson&#13;
Recording Secretary.......................- Phyllis Doran&#13;
Treasurer...·-··················-·················· / rene Hackett&#13;
Critic...................................................Helen Witter&#13;
Hall Chairman ................................Helen Harding&#13;
Librarian ................................ - ....... Audrey Laude&#13;
Reporter............................................. Doris Raun&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms.............................. Mary Lou Lembcke .&#13;
Chapla.in ...............- ............................Betty Shreve&#13;
Adviser............................................... Mrs. Winston&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Ph yllis Doran&#13;
Lois Wiese&#13;
Barbara Schmidt&#13;
Audrey Laude&#13;
Lois Swanson&#13;
Mary Lou Lembcke&#13;
Clarice Moon e&#13;
Gloria Peterson&#13;
Helen Witter&#13;
4nn Barrett&#13;
Doris Raun&#13;
Helen Harding&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors- Phyllis Doran, Lois Wiese, Barbara Schmidt.&#13;
Juniors- Audrey Laude, Helen Harding, J ean Rae Pickering, Irene Hackett, Betty Shreve Mary&#13;
Lou Lembcke, Elea nor Everett.&#13;
Sophomores-Marian Meier, Gloria Peterson, Helen Witter, Clarice Moone, Doris Raun, Lois&#13;
Swanson, Ann Barrett, Maureen Harter, Jayne Marie Soiseth, Karell Brodsky, Ione Prescott,&#13;
Ardythe J acobsen, Virginia O'Dell.&#13;
Pledges-Frances Chambers, Diane Dressler, Joan Drury, Elaine Engelbrecht, Ann Fortner, Lois&#13;
Glasco, Marjorie Jones, Lois Krogh, Patricia Lamson, Donna Lowe, Mary Dee McEwen, Joy&#13;
Momsen, Joyce Nielsen, Connie Pence, Donna June Robar, Marilyn West, Betty Wharton.&#13;
motto: Happily, Bravely, Faithfully.&#13;
Colors: Canary yellow and black.&#13;
Flower: Yellow rose.&#13;
&#13;
170&#13;
&#13;
171&#13;
&#13;
Seated: L. Kingsbury , Law, M. Kingsbury, D . H e ld, Geake, Conrad. Woll e, K. N e l son ,&#13;
H.ow 2: Muell er, Rehnblom. B. Williams, Novak , L. Williams. McCracken, McCa llum,&#13;
Floyd , Mcintosh , Lambert.&#13;
Row 3: Corrie, Sanford, Bartram. Mut chl er. T aylor, Severson, K. held&#13;
Meyer, J ohnson .&#13;
Row 4: J. Smith. Zeissler, Briggs, G. N e l son, C. Kings bury, Walton&#13;
K. Smith, Baker,&#13;
Irwin, Gasser.&#13;
Ahsen t: K. Roadman D. Ol son, B. Whittington M. Hansen.&#13;
&#13;
Bozarth, Tronsrue, Tillotson.&#13;
Johnstone, M. Barks, Wright,&#13;
·&#13;
Snyder, Larson . Vik.&#13;
B. Barks, Rorapaugh Kriege&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Mary Jane Conrad&#13;
President. ............. ·-···························Katherine Roadman&#13;
Vice President... .................... .......... Darlene Held&#13;
Carolyn Wolle&#13;
Recording Secretary......................... Lois M cCallum&#13;
Myrtle Geake&#13;
Marjorie McCracken&#13;
Corresponding Secretary............... _.Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Treasurer........................................... Charlotte Kingsbury&#13;
Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Katherine Roadman&#13;
First Critic.................................. ----·· Carolyn Wolle&#13;
Lois McCallum&#13;
Second Critic ·-·······························-Lovice Kingsbury&#13;
Kathryn Smith&#13;
Social Chairman ................................Kathryn Nelson&#13;
First Directress ............................... Mary Jane Conrad&#13;
Margaret Barks&#13;
Second Directress............................. Joyce Tronsrue&#13;
Katherine Held&#13;
First Usher......................................... Kathryn Smith&#13;
Phyllis Snyder&#13;
Second Usher.....................................Mary Ellen Kingsbury&#13;
Joyce Tronsrue&#13;
Carolyn Mutchler&#13;
Chaplain......·-····································Margaret Barks&#13;
Lorna Williams&#13;
Reporter.....----·--·-······-····················Donna Severson&#13;
Harriet Baker&#13;
Librarian............................ ............... Katherine Held&#13;
Adviser..................·-··········-··············Mrs. Mildred Wallman&#13;
Honorary Members........................... Mrs. M. E. Graber, Mrs. Ira Gwinn, Mrs. J. B. Magee&#13;
&#13;
Again this year, never a dull moment in Zet hall- the usual&#13;
music and chatter and 1elson's jokes-a record-breaking eleven&#13;
five-pound parties: Snyder, Conrad, Taylor, Roadman, Johnson,&#13;
Wolle, Johnstone., the two Rehnbloms, and McCracken- the ar·&#13;
rival of " Show Boat" at chapel in December- lots of spreads and&#13;
tea guests, including the Tau Delts- bananas and pills at the&#13;
Prexy Lodge party-all night sessions twirling rosettes for our&#13;
" littl e" float-singing for Queen Kate at the Tomba-fifteen&#13;
pounds and Mrs. Betty Roadman's readings all in one. Friday-a&#13;
Christmas party with the Tau Delts and gifts for a children's&#13;
home-that typically hilarious letter from Barbie from Mexicothe periodic invasions of "egg-juggling" Tau Delt pledges at&#13;
teas- new drapes- Kate's R. and N. wearing the Joy Smith pinthen Rushing and "halitosis'·' at the Floyd Park Club house- a&#13;
real Sultana Fruit Roll while "packed in" at Wolle's-climaxed&#13;
by eighteen lovel y pledges on March 18-then the fun that always&#13;
pre.cedes formal initiation of the pledges-an alum party and&#13;
tea-"Tedo," a pledge, as Daisie Mae, and Katie, a Held, as&#13;
Agora Queen- "Tedo" again as May Queen, with Joby and Walton as her attendants-the Tau Delt-Zet formal, and always the&#13;
thrill of singing to and answering each other's song-Kaye, our&#13;
beautiful Sioux Queen- the overnight "hen" party-and last, but&#13;
not least, on emorial Day, the Upriver Trip, with the usual&#13;
bathing beauties and sunburns-"You are first in cur heart,&#13;
Zetalethean ! !"&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors- Harriet Baker, Mary Jane Conrad, Darlene Held, Katie Held, Charlene Irwin, Lovice Kingsbury, Mary Ellen&#13;
Kingsbury, Nadene Law, Marjorie McCracken, Carolyn Mutchler, Katie Roadman, Donna Severson, Jean Smith, Katie&#13;
Smith, Carolyn Wolle.&#13;
Juniors- Margaret ,Barks, Myrtle Geake, Charlotte Kingsbury, Muriel Lambert, Lois McCallum, Katie Nelson, Phyllis&#13;
Snyder, Darlene faylor, Joyce Tronsrue.&#13;
Sophomores-Beverly Barks, Margaret Johnson, Kaye John stone, Sylvia Kriege, Joan Meyer, Dorothy Olson, Lyla Rehnblom, Jean Rorapaugh, Lorna Williams, Betty Whittington.&#13;
Pledges-Helen Ann Bartram, Wilma Bozarth, Mary Jo Briggs, Carol Corrie, Dorothy Floyd, Mary Gasser, Marilyn&#13;
Hansen, Elsie Larsen, Norma Mcintosh, Leila Mueller, Gloria Nelson, Joan Novak, Betty Sanford, Joby Tillotson,&#13;
Margaret Vik, Marjorie Walton, Barbara Williams, Jackie Zeissler.&#13;
&#13;
Motto : Esse Quam Videri- To be rather than to seem.&#13;
Colors: Scarlet and Black.&#13;
Flower : Red Rose.&#13;
172&#13;
&#13;
173&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Tau Delta&#13;
Officers&#13;
Fi rst Semester&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Presid cnt.. ..........................................................Slcph en de Vries&#13;
Vi ce President ........................................... Douglas H em pstead&#13;
Sec retary .................................................................... Richard B ean&#13;
Treas11rer ................................................................... .Lamar Jones&#13;
Sergfant-at -Arm s&#13;
&#13;
:.................................... Don Shelton&#13;
&#13;
Cha plain ...................................................... Kenneth&#13;
&#13;
M cLaughlin&#13;
&#13;
Pl edge Maste r. ....................................................... C. W. Cropley&#13;
Social Chairman&#13;
&#13;
.................................................. Thomas Green&#13;
&#13;
Seniors- Lamar Jones, Ste ph en de Vri es, Darrel Warner, Douglas He mp stead, Norman Mutchler, Robert Hasek, Robert&#13;
Held, Ri c hard McLau ghlin.&#13;
Juniors-Richard Bean, Edward Ke rn, Gary Gall , Thoma s&#13;
Green.&#13;
Sophomores- Don Shelton, Ralph Graham , William Annand,&#13;
Kenneth McLaughlin, C. W. Cropley, William Mesmer, Victor Men efe e, Charles Burrow, Forrest Whitlow, Edward&#13;
Muma , Tom Henry, Roy Moore, Don Kelsey, William Burns,&#13;
Daryl James, Richard Fauchald.&#13;
&#13;
Fr es hm en- Kenn eth Ch111elk a, Robert Eldredge, Robert Irwin,&#13;
William Collopy, Dale H a rri s, Don Goode now, Bruce Good enow, Jam es Glann .&#13;
Pledges- John F esse nde n, Robe rt Jam es, Joseph Grimoskas&#13;
Wayn e Sorense n, Richard Sellon, Paul Berteloot, William&#13;
Metz, Gerald Schipull , Warre n P e terson, Gordon Christen sen ,&#13;
Charl es Irwin, Clayton Bri stow, Frank Lambert, Maynard&#13;
Minnic h, Gen e Markland, John Bolchunos, Richard Youngstrom, Ke nne th Steffan , William Gingles.&#13;
&#13;
Second Sc111cste r&#13;
Presidenl.. ...................................................... Douglas Hempstead&#13;
Vi ce Prcs ident.. ....................................................... richard&#13;
&#13;
Bean&#13;
&#13;
Scc re tary ....................................................................... Don S helton&#13;
Treasure r.................................................................... Lamar Jon es&#13;
Victor M enefe e&#13;
&#13;
Se rgeant-at-Arm s&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain ..................................................... .Kenn eth M cLaughlin&#13;
Pledge Mastcr ........................................................ C. W Cropley&#13;
Soc ial Chairman ......................................................... .Daie llarris&#13;
&#13;
FOUR CORNER STONES&#13;
Character, Culture, Broth erhood, Lo yalty&#13;
&#13;
Tau Dells prepare for&#13;
"chow" in the barn.&#13;
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174&#13;
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175&#13;
&#13;
Gamma Iota A lpha&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President........... ---·········D onald Protexte r&#13;
&#13;
Vice President..... .Jackson Krusenstjema&#13;
Secretary.......................... Victor M cCaslen&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer....... .................. .Robert Stearns&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms....... ........ Hugh&#13;
Second&#13;
&#13;
Knapp&#13;
&#13;
Semester&#13;
&#13;
President............................. Milton M eyer&#13;
Vice President... __________ De Estan T urner&#13;
Secretary.......................... Cerald Protexter&#13;
Treasurer........................ Rob er t Protexter&#13;
Sergea nt-at-Arm s.............. Charles T eeman&#13;
&#13;
C. Protcx tcr, R. Protexter, Meyer, Turner.&#13;
&#13;
The Gamma Iota Alpha, after an inactive summer, reorganized agai n immediately with the opening of the fall term. The&#13;
majority of th e old active members had tran sferred to oth er campuses, but with the few that rema ined an active pledging drive&#13;
started, and the increased membership brought the Gamma Iota Alpha into the files as a recognized soc ial society.&#13;
The Gamma Iota Alpha is more familiarly known as the Vets fraternity. Membership is di stinctly compri sed of honorably&#13;
discharged veteran s whose interests are mutual ; therefore organization and soc ial activiti es are planned accordingly.&#13;
On Friday, December 13, all members enjoyed the main social event of the first term. With Chri stma s spirit in the air, and&#13;
that as the th eme, an appropriate dinner-dance was held in th e ballroom of the Warrior Hotel.&#13;
The first week of the second school term the newly elected officers stepped in to promote th e ac ti viti es for the forthcoming year.&#13;
Again a pledge drive was undertak en and 29 new members joined the active roster.&#13;
Picnics planned for the warm sp rin g and a dinner-dance, give n in honor of the new pledges, climaxed th e sprin g activiti es.&#13;
&#13;
EXECUT IVE COMMITTEE&#13;
&#13;
Milton Meyer, George DeBeer, Harold Muschamp,&#13;
Richard Loffswald, Donald&#13;
Protexter, Harold Mulford.&#13;
&#13;
176&#13;
&#13;
Vets take time out for a&#13;
game o/ bridge at their&#13;
social hour.&#13;
&#13;
Beauty, popularity, personality-if this is what you're after&#13;
you ll find it in this section- a&#13;
cross section of the Morningside&#13;
College campus.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Miss&#13;
&#13;
KAYE&#13;
&#13;
John STONE&#13;
&#13;
Queen of the 1947 Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Queen Judge&#13;
Sioux Queen Attendants&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Mrss&#13;
&#13;
Miss.&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY FLOYD&#13;
&#13;
GLORIA Aagard&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux Queen and her attendants were selected by Ronald Reagan, motion picture star of Warner&#13;
Brothers, from approximately thirty entries which were submitted to him. The following are excerpts from&#13;
his letter : " If the beauty contest candidates are representative, then apparently Morningside College is not&#13;
lacking in beautiful co-eds. . . . To the winners and the other candidates, my compliments and besl&#13;
wishes."&#13;
&#13;
182&#13;
&#13;
183&#13;
&#13;
Homecoming Queen and Attendants&#13;
&#13;
Miss KATITEHINE RoADMAN as Miss Morningside reigned over Home.coming&#13;
festivities, attended by Miss BARBARA Schmidt and Miss CONNIE Havighurst&#13;
&#13;
184&#13;
&#13;
Who's Who&#13;
KATHERINE ROADMAN, Senior of Sioux City, has been busy her entire four years&#13;
of college. She took an active part in the Agora Club, Ishkoodah, Inter-Sorority&#13;
Council, and Student Council. She is a member and president this year of Kappa&#13;
Zeta Chi, was candidate for the Drake Relay Queen in 1946, and reigned as Homecoming queen the fall of that year.&#13;
STEPHEN . DE VRIES, Senior of Sioux City, is serving this year as editor of the&#13;
Collegian Reporter, student directo,ry, and the summer newspaper, the Scoop. He&#13;
is a student representative on the Social Life Committee, a member of the Religious&#13;
Life Committee, a member of Student Council, and president of the Alpha Tau&#13;
Delta fraternity.&#13;
NORMAN MATHERS, Senior of Sioux City, was first semester president of the student body this school year. He is a member of the "M" Club, and is active in both&#13;
football and basketball. This year Norm is a member of F.T.A., and the Vets&#13;
I&#13;
organization.&#13;
I&#13;
I 1t&#13;
CAROLYN WOLLE, Senior of Sioux City, is Secretary-Treasurer of the Student&#13;
Council, president of Manuscript Club, co-chairman of student chapel committee,&#13;
and editor of the tradition book. She is a member of Kappa Zeta Chi, Sigma Tau&#13;
Delta, and W.A.A.&#13;
CONNIE HA VIGHURST, Senior, is from Fort Dodge, Iowa, and is an active participant in religious activities on the campus. She has served on the. Student&#13;
Council for three years. She is a member of Grace Collegians, Cosmopolitan Club,&#13;
and the Religious Life Committee.&#13;
HAROLD MINOR, Senior from Fort Dodge, Iowa, is a theological student. He is&#13;
senior representative of Student Council, member of Y.M.C.A., the little chapel&#13;
committee, and past president of Kappa Chi.&#13;
MARY JANE CONRAD, Senior, is from Ponca, Nebraska. She is a member of&#13;
the Student Council and vice president of the student body. She is secretary of&#13;
the Religious Life Committee, member of Kappa Zeta Chi and Phi Sigma Iota,&#13;
co-chairman of the student chapel committee, and is active in the chapel choir.&#13;
LAMAR JONES, Senior, is from Hinton, Iowa. He is a second semester president of&#13;
Student Council for this school year, and treasurer for the Tau Delts.&#13;
Seated: Nel son , Roadman , Conrad , Wolle , McCallum, Schmidt, Kingsbury&#13;
Standing: Jone s, deVries , Mathers, Easley, Minor.&#13;
&#13;
Havighursst&#13;
&#13;
Outstanding members of the junior and senior classes were nominated by the Student Council and passed on for faculty consideration&#13;
for Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges.&#13;
The choice was unanimous as 13 students were nominated and 13 received faculty approval. Selection was made. on the basis of scholastic&#13;
record, personality, leadership, achievement, and participation in 6&#13;
side activities.&#13;
&#13;
186&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM J. EASLEY, Senior, is from Sioux City. Bill acts as music critic on the.&#13;
campus. He is a member of the National Sinfonia Fraternity. He is student&#13;
organist for chapel and is on the staff of the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
LOVICE KINGSBURY, Senior, is from Ponca, Nebraska. During her four years at&#13;
Morningside she has participated in lshkoodah , the symphony orche tra, Y.W.C.A.,&#13;
and student body representative. She has worked on the Collegian Reporter and&#13;
is this year's editor of the Sioux. She is a member of Kappa Zeta Chi and a&#13;
member of Phi Sigma Iota and F.T.A.&#13;
BARBARA SCHMIDT, Senior, from Battle Creek, Iowa, is this year's president of&#13;
the Women's Residence Hall , a member of Mu Phi Epsilon, and F.T.A. She. is&#13;
also a member of chapel choir, president of Kappa Pi Alpha, and second vicepresident of Agora Club. In 1946 she served as Home.c oming attendant.&#13;
LOIS McCALLUM, Junior, is from Kensett, Iowa. Lou has held office in the&#13;
W.S.G.A., in Grace Collegians, and is a member of Kappa Zeta Chi. She is an&#13;
active member in Student Council and in choir. She is president of Mu Phi&#13;
Epsilon, and is in Kappa Chi, Y.W.C.A., orchestra, and acted as music editor for&#13;
the Sioux.&#13;
KATHRYN NELSON, Junior, is from Sioux City. She is a member of Student&#13;
Council, Secretary-Treasurer for W.A.A., member of Kappa Zeta Chi, and is on&#13;
the annual staff and Agora Club. Katie. was chosen as May Queen in 1945.&#13;
&#13;
187&#13;
&#13;
Diary&#13;
Dear Diary:&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Well , another year of school is over, and oh the memories we look&#13;
back upon. It was really an eventful year, what with all of the queens,&#13;
the dreamy dances, and Morningside winning the Basketball Conference; first time since 1938, too.&#13;
&#13;
It all started out in September when the campus was just bubbling&#13;
over with new faces. The freshmen took their tests and we all registered for the year ahead. We thought we'd never begin to know&#13;
everybody but, in time, we managed to call quite a few of the kids by&#13;
their ,first, last, or nick names on passing them in the hall.&#13;
Then October came and along with bonfires and red and yellow&#13;
leaves the freshmen went through their paces for the upper classmen.&#13;
They really looked classy in their green caps and when their Day of&#13;
Reckoning came in the open air assembly at Bass Field, they looked so&#13;
sweet with their lipsticked "M's." Then came Homecoming, the crowning of Katie Roadman as queen with Connie Havighurst and Barb&#13;
Schmidt as attendants, the big parade on Saturday morning, and the&#13;
traditional football game with South Dakota U. in the evening. There&#13;
was an air of sentimentalism about it all for students and alums alike.&#13;
In November the W.A.A. put on a style show in the dorm. The Zets&#13;
gave a tea for one of their distinguished alums, Miss Lucy Wang .&#13;
Gerald Kennedy spoke in chapel, the Sinfonia recital as held at the&#13;
con, the student faculty reception was given in the dorm, and the traditional Agora Leadership' dinner was held at the Mayfair Ballroom.&#13;
Then it was Turkey Time again . .. and vacation.&#13;
December came, and with it Christmas and all of the activities&#13;
that precede that holiday. The annual Messiah was held at Grace&#13;
Church, the Y.W. and Y.M. had a caroling party, the annual Faculty&#13;
Women's formal Christmas party was held at the dorm, and a super&#13;
dance was put on by Student Council at the Tomba. The physical education department put on a modern dance recital at the gym'. The dorm&#13;
girls ate by cand lelight at their Lovely formal Christmas dinner, and&#13;
afterwards in the drawing room, Mrs. Roadman read a Christmas story.&#13;
And then it was "Merry Christmas" and off for home and a two weeks&#13;
holiday.&#13;
&#13;
188&#13;
&#13;
January came and every one was back ... "rested ." The big event&#13;
of the month was finals. I guess every one lived through them · all&#13;
right .. . at least there were no obituaries listed in the paper with&#13;
death attributed to that cause.&#13;
Then came February, and along with paper hearts lshkoodah put&#13;
on a sport dance after one of the basketball games. Mu Phi gave a&#13;
le.a at the dorm and on Wednesday, February 26, the student body met&#13;
in the gym to hear the announcement that the basketball team had&#13;
won the North Central Conference and the day was a holiday- NO&#13;
SCHOOL!&#13;
March brought sorority rushing with si lent day and the pledge&#13;
dinners. Student Council gave a dance at the gym. A few weeks later&#13;
the Y.W. gave one also. Agora sponsored the annual carnival and&#13;
" Van" Veldhuizen and Katie Held were crowned king and queen of&#13;
the event. Sadie Hawkin's Day was topped off by a super dance at&#13;
the gym.&#13;
In April the coll ege choir went on tour and when they returned&#13;
they gave a Home Concert in Grace Church. The annual spring dorm&#13;
formal was held. The Speech Department and the Morningside Players&#13;
did a grand job with T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathedral," which&#13;
was presented two nights at Grace Church. The Kappa Chi national&#13;
convention was held on our campus. And that was the end of April.&#13;
May not only brought May baskets, but the band put on a concert&#13;
at East Junior and then the dance festival was held in the gym with&#13;
Dorothy Floyd crowned Queen of the May, attended by Joby Tillotson&#13;
and Marge Walton. The seniors were entertained by Dr. and Mrs.&#13;
Roadman at a breakfast at Scribbin's Tea Room, and the Mother and&#13;
Daughter Banquet was held at the Morningside Presbyterian Church.&#13;
The month ended with the Senior Farewell Dance, climaxed by the&#13;
crowning of Kaye Johnstone as Sioux Queen, her attendants being Dorothy Floyd and Gloria Aagard.&#13;
June came along and the class of 1947 received their diplomas.&#13;
Both Baccalaureate and Graduation were held in Grace Church.&#13;
Well, Diary, that about sums up the year. We're looking forward&#13;
to another super time next fall .. . hut ... until then, I for one am&#13;
ready for three nice, long months of nothing but rest and relaxation.&#13;
How about you?&#13;
&#13;
189&#13;
&#13;
These Ads Make This Book Possible&#13;
STUDENTS: Remember these business firms&#13;
when you make your purchases&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
RECORDS!&#13;
&#13;
·'Populars -&#13;
&#13;
JIMMY CLARK'S&#13;
&#13;
Classics - Children's"&#13;
"Westerns"&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
"THE AERIAL"&#13;
&#13;
TEXACO STATION&#13;
&#13;
3929 3rd Ave.&#13;
4218 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
( In th e E squire Th eatre building&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-9163&#13;
&#13;
..... - .............. -·----&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
.... ----.... -------.......... -&#13;
&#13;
GLENN H. JONES&#13;
&#13;
FURS&#13;
WHERE VALUES ARE HARD TO BEAT&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY&#13;
&#13;
Glenn&#13;
MoadeFURS&#13;
&#13;
Furs that Are First in Quality, Style and Economy&#13;
&#13;
Dial 6-7286&#13;
4306 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
•·····························-------··········-·············--'&#13;
&#13;
l 192&#13;
&#13;
193&#13;
&#13;
·-----------···········-------------············-······-~&#13;
PAUL A. WARNER&#13;
President and General Manager&#13;
&#13;
CASTLE'S PHARMACY&#13;
&#13;
ADAIR-WARNER PRINTING CO.&#13;
&#13;
Hallmark Cards for All Occasions- Gifts&#13;
Drugs- Fountain Service- Prescriptions&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING WITH SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1918&#13;
&#13;
4666 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6506&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
516 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
~--------··················----·---··············-·······--···&#13;
·-···--------···············-1&#13;
&#13;
·--······················-····&#13;
&#13;
WILSON PRINTERY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
STATE BANK&#13;
&#13;
··------------·--·-·-······----1&#13;
&#13;
Printing&#13;
&#13;
HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
Harold McDole, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Commercial Job&#13;
&#13;
MAC'S BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
GLASS &amp; PAINT CO.&#13;
&#13;
(The Old First Mortgage Bank )&#13;
SOFT WATER SHAMPOOS&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate Loans&#13;
Savings Department&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-5029&#13;
&#13;
4002 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
...........................&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-8863&#13;
&#13;
Hours 8 to 6&#13;
&#13;
504-10 Douglas Street&#13;
&#13;
3935 Transit Ave. Nasser Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
····-··············-·&#13;
&#13;
·-·----······----------------,&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSJDE'S&#13;
&#13;
STATIONERY COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
FRIENDLY STORE&#13;
&#13;
The Convenient Clothing Store&#13;
&#13;
The Glory Store&#13;
&#13;
Commercial Stationers&#13;
Party Favors&#13;
&#13;
l....... .&#13;
&#13;
413 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE ELECTRIC&#13;
&#13;
PERLETH'S&#13;
&#13;
Clyde R. Phillips, Proprietor&#13;
in P eters Park&#13;
&#13;
Sales and Service&#13;
4114 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
4008 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-5975&#13;
&#13;
......&#13;
&#13;
···-----~&#13;
-------------------------------········· -----·· ····-~&#13;
DWIGHT HAUFF SPORTING GOODS CO.&#13;
Agent for&#13;
&#13;
.--···------·········-··-·······---------------····--····-··-···&#13;
&#13;
MOLSKOW PHARMACY&#13;
JOHN MOLSKOW, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
517 Pierce Street&#13;
Up-to-Date Athletic Equipment&#13;
Telephone 8-1877&#13;
&#13;
, .............................. .&#13;
&#13;
194&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6914&#13;
&#13;
FOR BETTER SERVICE STOP AT MOLSKOW'S&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
2004 So. St. Aubin Street&#13;
&#13;
..............................&#13;
&#13;
195&#13;
&#13;
........................ ,&#13;
&#13;
.----·····-·············------··&#13;
A KEY TO A SAFE TOMORROW&#13;
&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS!&#13;
&#13;
CONSISTENT SAVING TODAY&#13;
Open a Savings Account at This Bank Today&#13;
&#13;
deserve&#13;
&#13;
congratulations&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
&#13;
your determination to get ai:i educa-&#13;
&#13;
IN SIOUX CITY&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
tion, and thus equipping yourself for&#13;
&#13;
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation&#13;
&#13;
- -- - - - - - --.......... - ... -&#13;
&#13;
the heavy responsibilities that lie&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - ....... - - - - - . - -- - --&#13;
&#13;
ahead. We confidently look to you to&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
Quality with Good Service&#13;
&#13;
do your part in keeping our country&#13;
free and strong .. . a country ... for&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
at the&#13;
&#13;
the people ... by the people.&#13;
&#13;
MOREY'S&#13;
&#13;
GREIGG'S HOUSE OF&#13;
. HAMBURGERS&#13;
&#13;
"We Won't Let You Wear&#13;
&#13;
P hone 6-924,9&#13;
&#13;
It Unless It Fits"&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
SIOUX CITY GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
1405 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
... ·..................... ...&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
••••••••••••••--•••••••••••••-••••••u----•••••••••••••••••---,&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
SELF-SERVE&#13;
&#13;
SPORTSMAN'S INC.&#13;
&#13;
BUSH CLEANERS&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
607 Fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
"Just. Off the Campus"&#13;
&#13;
SPORTING GOODS FOR EVERY SPORT&#13;
&#13;
1417 Morningside Ave.&#13;
"The Macgregor Coldsmith Store"&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-7355&#13;
&#13;
......... .&#13;
&#13;
FOUNTAIN SERVICE,&#13;
STATIONERY,&#13;
&#13;
SUNDRIES,&#13;
MAGAZINES;&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
TOILETRIES&#13;
GIFTS&#13;
&#13;
423 Pierce Street&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
The Campus Store&#13;
H. C. McCLI -TOCK, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
1423 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-9271&#13;
&#13;
196&#13;
&#13;
FERRIS FLORIST&#13;
Fresh Flowers Daily&#13;
from Our Own&#13;
Greenhouse&#13;
&#13;
GREETING CARDS : : GIFTS&#13;
JEWELRY&#13;
Mottoes&#13;
&#13;
..........................&#13;
&#13;
CALL 8-7505&#13;
&#13;
Stationery&#13;
&#13;
197&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE BANKING&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
The Rexall&#13;
Drugstore&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GRAHAM'S&#13;
DRUG STORE&#13;
&#13;
Beauitful&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
4014 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY&#13;
SAVINGS BANK&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6244&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
····-·········-·········---&#13;
&#13;
-------------·········· --··1&#13;
EAT&#13;
with the College Crowd at&#13;
&#13;
LEE'S&#13;
&#13;
----&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5814&#13;
&#13;
_J&#13;
&#13;
420 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
l---------------····· · ······&#13;
&#13;
Hutchins Studio&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
PARK MARKET&#13;
2016 S. St. Aubin Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
198&#13;
&#13;
199&#13;
&#13;
City Iowa&#13;
&#13;
----------------1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
4006 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Complete Banking Service&#13;
&#13;
Pete.rs Park&#13;
&#13;
" The Dime Store at Peters Park"&#13;
Everything from Five Cents to One Dollar and Up&#13;
&#13;
4006 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
T. L. SCHA EF'ER, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
......•....................&#13;
&#13;
•••••• • .• • • • • . • • • • • • • . . • • • •&#13;
&#13;
Crary Beauty Shop&#13;
&#13;
ST ANDA RD OFFICE&#13;
EQUIPMENT CO.&#13;
&#13;
Park's Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
Office Supplies of Every Type&#13;
" we Make Our Own"&#13;
&#13;
Esquire Th eatre Building&#13;
&#13;
SUNDAES&#13;
&#13;
Portable Typewriters&#13;
Files&#13;
Mim eograph s&#13;
Shaw Walker Desks&#13;
Supplies&#13;
Paper&#13;
&#13;
MALTS&#13;
&#13;
Open Thursday and Friday Evenings ·&#13;
Take Some Home&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
to the&#13;
DAVENPORT CLEANING WORKS&#13;
618-620 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
for Summer Storage&#13;
&#13;
Allen Wales Adding Machines&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6147&#13;
4711 M'Side Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-9211&#13;
&#13;
Send Your Winter Garments&#13;
&#13;
410 Sixth Street&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-0543&#13;
&#13;
1------·············--------&#13;
&#13;
.--·····-················----&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5008&#13;
&#13;
···-----------------·····--,&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
ROE'S HOMOGENIZED&#13;
VITAMIN " D' MILK&#13;
&#13;
SADOFF'S&#13;
&#13;
FINEST GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
Home of Men's Fine. Clothing&#13;
&#13;
MEATS -AND&#13;
&#13;
Assorted Ice Cream Flavors&#13;
Fountain Service&#13;
&#13;
and Furnishings&#13;
Roe Dairy Co.&#13;
Phone 6-5673&#13;
&#13;
- - -. .. . ..... - - -..... - - - - . _&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
402 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
FRESH FRUITS AND&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
VEGETABLES&#13;
&#13;
······--········- -·······----······ ~·-······· · ···----·······,&#13;
&#13;
at&#13;
&#13;
Momingside's Own Photographers&#13;
&#13;
STILES IN PHOTOGRAPHY&#13;
C. V. STILES&#13;
&#13;
E. E. STILES&#13;
&#13;
BOTTLED BY&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6797&#13;
&#13;
·-··------------- ----····----- ··-- ----··········· ···········--_J&#13;
&#13;
200&#13;
&#13;
VAN EATON'S&#13;
&#13;
CHESTERMAN CO.&#13;
&#13;
Weddings&#13;
Group Pictures&#13;
Portraits&#13;
Commercial Photography&#13;
Suite 3 Nasser Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
*&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
201&#13;
&#13;
O... P. SK"GGS&#13;
,OOD C.tJBtP- STO-;.&#13;
L-- · ····------------- ····· ·· -'&#13;
&#13;
THE FAVORITE CANDY OF THE NORTHWEST ...&#13;
&#13;
The New&#13;
&#13;
LAFAMA Chocolates&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE CLEANERS&#13;
&#13;
One of a Family of Famous Chocolates&#13;
&#13;
DYERS AND TAILORS&#13;
Nothing Short of the Best&#13;
Phone 6-6336&#13;
&#13;
Made by&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON BISCUIT COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
••&#13;
•••• -&#13;
&#13;
•••••••••• -&#13;
&#13;
•••• -&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
•• -&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
••••••••••&#13;
&#13;
••• - - -&#13;
&#13;
•••• -&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
••••&#13;
&#13;
~---·--··----------------------------·-----·······------ ------,&#13;
.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
MOSIER SALES AND SERVICE&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
We Will Make You&#13;
Lovelier to Look at&#13;
Two Operators&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE LOCKERS&#13;
and MEAT MARKET&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6428&#13;
&#13;
VIOLET BEAUTY SALON&#13;
&#13;
WESTINGHOUSE APPLIANCES&#13;
&#13;
Complete Meat Processing&#13;
&#13;
3937 Transit Ave.&#13;
&#13;
4ll 8 Morningside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-6816&#13;
&#13;
One Block West of Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
r······ · ········------······1 .&#13;
&#13;
GRAYSON'S&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON'S BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
TEEMAN The Tailor&#13;
Morningside's High Class&#13;
&#13;
"SUITS ME"&#13;
1903 Morningside Ave&#13;
&#13;
•••&#13;
&#13;
BLUE BUNNY -&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
A Quality Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
•••••••••••••.•••••••••••••&#13;
&#13;
.----------------···········--·····-····--·····················,&#13;
&#13;
Pastry Shop&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
At Peters Park&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6-5966&#13;
&#13;
--···-··-----····-···········-······~·------------···········,&#13;
&#13;
LONE STAR TRADING CO.&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
COUNCIL OAK STORES&#13;
&#13;
Home Appliances&#13;
Sporting Goods&#13;
Hardware Sundries • Complete Kitchens&#13;
Home Workshop Tools&#13;
&#13;
BETTER FOODS FOR BETTER LIVING&#13;
Phone 5-7991&#13;
&#13;
313 Nebraska St.&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
&#13;
·---··--------------------------------------------------------1&#13;
&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
203&#13;
&#13;
DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
MINNESOTA&#13;
&#13;
............ -.... ----- ---------- -.---.............. ---.-'&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
VERSTEGEN PRINTING CO.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL&#13;
&#13;
- - - · - - •••• --- - - -&#13;
&#13;
- - - -- - - - - ••••• ______&#13;
&#13;
·······1&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE PRINTERS&#13;
SCHRADER'S RESTAURANT&#13;
&#13;
Compliments of&#13;
&#13;
Your Host in Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
BRADSHAW PHARMACY&#13;
Chicken-in-the-Basket&#13;
&#13;
Founta in Service&#13;
&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Phon e 6-7373&#13;
&#13;
Catalog Building • Ruling • Binding&#13;
Commercial Art • Layout and Copy&#13;
&#13;
STEAK DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
CREATIVE PRINTERS&#13;
&#13;
4619 Mo rningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Verstegen&#13;
&#13;
Hey, Gang!!&#13;
LET'S ALL EAT AT&#13;
&#13;
THE BARN&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
Across From the Court House&#13;
&#13;
615 Douglas Street + Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
SNACK BAR A D CAFETERIA&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
•••&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
••••••&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
••&#13;
&#13;
204&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
205&#13;
&#13;
...... ·--· ...................&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVING CO.&#13;
&#13;
S-D&#13;
&#13;
MAKER S O F FI N E PR I NT I N G&#13;
PLATES FOR BLACK &amp; COLOR&#13;
ARTISTS, PHOTO-ENGRAVERS,&#13;
OFFSET PLATES&#13;
&#13;
ENGRAVERS&#13;
TO THE&#13;
&#13;
1 9 4 7&#13;
&#13;
S I O U X&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
320 1/2 Main Avenue&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX FALLS, SOUTH DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
·····························································-~&#13;
&#13;
206&#13;
&#13;
207&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux Staff wishes to express its gratitude and&#13;
appreciation to the following who have made the publication of this yearbook possible. To these people go our&#13;
sincere thanks.&#13;
Verstegen Printing Company-Sioux City&#13;
South Dakota En gravi ng Company-Sioux Falls, S. D.&#13;
Hu tchins Studio-Sioux City&#13;
Tiie S. K. Smith Cover Company-Chicago&#13;
Firms advertising in the Sioux&#13;
&#13;
208&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Earl A. Roadman&#13;
Thomas Elmore Tweito&#13;
Myron Earle Graber&#13;
Alva Tolf&#13;
Nelson Allen Price&#13;
Peter Bannon&#13;
Frank Guy Bean &#13;
Marjorie Anderson Boyd&#13;
Lee Charles Bradford&#13;
Vesta C. Burris&#13;
Clinton Edo Burris&#13;
John Francis Castle&#13;
Melba Marie Cripe&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt&#13;
Harriette Larson Dooley&#13;
Laura Clara Fischer&#13;
Richard Luther Flowers&#13;
Alfred Bruce Gaarder&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener&#13;
John Benjamin Magee&#13;
Mirah Mills&#13;
Ernest William Saunders&#13;
Nelontine M. Maxwell&#13;
Harold Arthur Bedient&#13;
Albert William Buckingham&#13;
Glen Roy Bushyager&#13;
Roy Milton Chatters&#13;
Florence Belinda Cole&#13;
James Austin Coss&#13;
Leslie H. Davis&#13;
Ira James Gwinn&#13;
Richard Oglesby Malcolmson&#13;
Nancy Elizabeth Baxter&#13;
Charles H. Obye&#13;
Roy Archer Smith&#13;
Arnold Lester Steintjes&#13;
Robert Negley Van Horne&#13;
Frances Miller Winston&#13;
John Stanton Winston&#13;
Bernice Jurist Wolfson &#13;
Charles Raleigh Garland&#13;
Homer Eugene Garretson&#13;
Lois Jane Grammer&#13;
Clara Asmus Gray&#13;
Ethel Thompson Kucinski&#13;
Leo Kucinski&#13;
Robert Ethan Lowry&#13;
Gloria Ann Odegard&#13;
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                    <text>�College&#13;
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The 1940 Sioux&#13;
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Business Manager&#13;
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Miss Ethel Ruth Murray&#13;
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Th e 1940 Sioux is presented to the student body as a record of a&#13;
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in recognition of her fri endly guidance of stud ents&#13;
&#13;
memory-filled year. The year's progress and the spirit of Morning-&#13;
&#13;
and faithful lo yalty to Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
side College are refl ect ed in these pages in the theme of the Sioux&#13;
Indian. The staff hopes, by this book, to recall man y school&#13;
activities and pl easant memories.&#13;
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On Jun e 6, 1939, there pa ssed from our coll ege community one who had made a name for him-&#13;
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X lover of two countries, America, the land of his a dopti on, and hi s old Va terl and , Germany.&#13;
Professor Samu el C. Steinbrenner was born in Wuerttemberg, Germany, in 1877. He studi ed at&#13;
both German and Am erican Universities especially in the fields of language, philosophy and th eology.&#13;
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EARL ALAN ROADMAN&#13;
&#13;
Confe rence and later in the Northwest Iowa Con fe rence. His career as a teacher was long and successful. He tau ght a t Charl es City&#13;
SAMUEL C. STEINBRENNER&#13;
&#13;
Coll ege, Southern University of&#13;
Al abama, Western Union, and a t&#13;
Morningside. As an in structor he&#13;
was loved and honored for hi s&#13;
sterlin g character.&#13;
There was heroism and Christian fortitud e in the way in which&#13;
he bore whatever life brou ght to&#13;
him. Love of nature and of mu sic,&#13;
and quiet faith in God were outB.D., D.D., LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
standing traits of hi s personality.&#13;
He will long be missed and his&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Teachers Coll ege&#13;
&#13;
nam e held in honor at Mornin gside.&#13;
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Upper Iowa University&#13;
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�The 1940 Sioux&#13;
Ass1sTANT EoJTOR ............................................................ Betty Schunck&#13;
LITERARY EDITOR.......................................................... Winifred Cheely&#13;
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&#13;
LITERARY Ass1STANT.......................................... ......... Kathry n Madison&#13;
SENIOR Eo1TOR.............................................................. Verona DeMond&#13;
DRAMATICS EDITOR..........................................................Minetta Miller&#13;
&#13;
The work of the Sioux Staff consists of compiling material for a&#13;
&#13;
FORENSICS EoITOR ............................................ ______________________ Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
yearbook. This is accomplished by dividing the work into depart-&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHY Editor&#13;
&#13;
men ts with one person responsible for each, and the editor in charge&#13;
&#13;
-.....................Patricia Warner&#13;
&#13;
of revision and supervision.&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHER ············----············-···················-···············Robert Moore&#13;
SNAPSHOT EmTOR ...................................................... Geraldine Thomas&#13;
M u sic En1TOR................... ..........................&#13;
&#13;
The business manager handles the&#13;
&#13;
finances, and the adviser suggests and guides.&#13;
&#13;
Ge nevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S ATHLETICS....................................................Marjorie Nelson&#13;
MEN'S ATHLETTCS ....&#13;
&#13;
................................................. Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
ARTIST ······································-·····-·-················-··········Kenneth Johnson&#13;
TYP1STS ........................... ---··············Virginia Allen, Margaret Gusteson&#13;
GENERAL Ass1STANT............................ ............................... Helen Osbey&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHY ·······:········-·---·-·································Youngberg Studios&#13;
PRINTING.................................................... Verstegen Printing Company&#13;
ENGRA VING............................&#13;
&#13;
Menke&#13;
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K. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Bierman Engraving ·Company&#13;
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�OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
R. J. HARRINGTON, Sioux City, Iowa ............................................... ....... President&#13;
&#13;
C. L. BARKS, Orange City, lowa .................................................... Vice-President&#13;
For three years a college health office has been mainT. N. McCLURE, Sioux City, lowa................ :....................... Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
tained for students at Morningside. The office is located&#13;
on the second floor of the gym and is under the super-&#13;
&#13;
EMERITUS&#13;
&#13;
vision of Dr. C. F. Berkstresser and Nurse Inez Grove.&#13;
&#13;
J . G. Shumaker, Alamo, Texas&#13;
TRUSTEES OF HONOR&#13;
0. M. Bond, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. C. Harshbarger, Onawa, Iowa&#13;
J. N. Hu ghes, Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
A. M. Jack so n, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. C. F. Lon g, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Many privileges are offered through this office, among which are medical examinations of new students, small-pox vaccinations, Wasserman tests, and medical aid&#13;
&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1940&#13;
&#13;
for any student in need of it.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Britton, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
J. J. Davies, Fort Dod ge, Iowa&#13;
G. W. Dunn, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
L. W. F e ik, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Clifford Harper, Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
Gordon Metcalf, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. F. Roach, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A. L. Semans, Spencer, Iowa&#13;
J. R. Tumbleso n, Eagle Grove, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
The health office has been an invaluable asset to the college and many are benefited&#13;
through this service.&#13;
&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1941&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks, Oran ge City, Iowa&#13;
F. E. Burgess, Algona, Iowa ·&#13;
J . C. Buthm an, Algona, Iowa&#13;
H. I. Down, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
J. A. Farnham, Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
J. V. Madi son, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. N. Smith, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
D. W. Stewart, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
INEZ GROVE&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
College Nurse&#13;
&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1942&#13;
&#13;
DR. C. F. BERKSTRESSER&#13;
M.D.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Ray J . Harrin gton, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Leon Hi ckman, Pittsburg, P enn sylva nia&#13;
C. H. Kin gsbury, Ponca, Nebraska&#13;
John Kolp , Manson, Iowa&#13;
W. H. Lease, Akron, Iowa&#13;
F. W. Ortmeyer, Estherville, Iowa&#13;
C. S. VanEaton, Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
Miss Rae Wetmore, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
College Physician&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Eleve n&#13;
&#13;
Ten&#13;
&#13;
��MYRON EARLE GRABER&#13;
Dean of Men and Professor of Physics&#13;
Degree- B&#13;
A. at H eidelberg University, 1901.&#13;
M. A. ibid, 1904.&#13;
Ph. D. a t University of Iowa, 1924.&#13;
Graduate Student-University of M ichigan, summer 1907.&#13;
Columbia Un iversity, )908.&#13;
Ohio S tate University, 1913.&#13;
&#13;
Fellow in Ph ysics-University of Chicago, 1917-18.&#13;
University of Iowa, 1923-24.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT&#13;
Dean of Women and Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Dcgrcc- B. .\ . at I 11 inois Wesleyan Universi ty, 1888.&#13;
&#13;
M . A. at Co lum b ia University. 1913.&#13;
L. H . D. at Il lino is Wesleyan University, 1920.&#13;
Graduate Studen t-Universit y of Chicago. summer quarters&#13;
&#13;
1894 and 1897.&#13;
&#13;
S t udent in the Am erican S chool of Classical S tudies, Ro me, 1903-4.&#13;
Graduat e St11d c nt-Col umbia University , 1912-13.&#13;
Un iversi ty of Chicago, summer 1918.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EMAN UEL JOHNSON&#13;
Dean of the College and Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and R eligion&#13;
Dcgree-B. A. at Corne I I Col lcge, 1920.&#13;
M. A. at University of Chicago, 1921.&#13;
S . T. B. at Boston University, 1923.&#13;
Graduate F ellow in Philosoph y. Roston Uni versity. 1923-24.&#13;
Graduate Assistant&#13;
&#13;
Graduate&#13;
&#13;
Studies,&#13;
&#13;
in Philosophy . Brown&#13;
&#13;
University&#13;
&#13;
Harvard University. 1925. 1927-28.&#13;
Ph. D. at Boston University, 1928.&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
1924-25.&#13;
&#13;
�J AMES E . K IRKPATRI CK&#13;
&#13;
LAURA CLARA FISCHER&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
&#13;
G ORDON J. KI NNE Y&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
A .B. , M.S.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M. , Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violoncello and&#13;
Double Bass&#13;
&#13;
Professor of E ducation&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
M o rn in gside Col legc, university&#13;
&#13;
Ca rl e ton Coll ege. U ni ve rsity o f Chi cago ,&#13;
Un ive rsity of Co l orad o , U nive rs it y of&#13;
Wisconsin .&#13;
&#13;
of lowa,&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College, Un ive rsity of Io wa ,&#13;
&#13;
Maas School of Mu sic, Eastman Schoo l&#13;
of Music, Stude nt of Karl Agnesy,&#13;
Ne l son Watson.&#13;
&#13;
LEO K UCINS KI&#13;
&#13;
E THEL T HOMPSON K U CINSKI&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN HOWE&#13;
&#13;
M us. B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. 8.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
HAWTHORN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Piano fo rte&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Violin Department&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, E ast man S chool of&#13;
M usic, Chicago M usi ca l College, Cleve·&#13;
land I nstitute , J u illiard S chool of Music ,&#13;
S tudent of Rudol ph Ga nz, Raymond Wi l son, A rthur Loesser, J ames Frisk in.&#13;
&#13;
B.S ., M.S., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
M orningside Co l lege , Warsaw Conserva to r y of Music, Oberli n Conservatory of&#13;
M usic, Cleve l and I ns titute of M u sic ,&#13;
J uilliard Graduate School of M u sic,&#13;
P upil of Edwa rd l bzik owski , Charl o tte&#13;
Demuth Wi l liams. De R ibaupierre, Alber t&#13;
S toesse l , R u b in Goldmark, Noaum&#13;
B l inder.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of S ociology&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Stat e Co ll ege . Uni ve rsi t y o f&#13;
W isco nsin , Uni ve rsit y o f Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa S tate Coll ege. Am es Bus in ess&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTHLE ER&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE KAULL KINN EY&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH N EWTON&#13;
M AC C OLLIN&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
P rofessor Emeritus of E nglish&#13;
Language&#13;
&#13;
lnstmctor in Voice&#13;
&#13;
Coll ege, G regg Co ll ege, Chi cago.&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Romance Languages&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Corn e ll Co l lege, H arvard Uni versit y, ln·&#13;
s titut F ran ca is a nd Uni ve rsi t y o f Madrid ,&#13;
U ni ve rs i ty of Ch icago , Universit y of&#13;
Dijon , Na t io na l Unive rsit y of M exico .&#13;
&#13;
U ni versity of K a nsa s, E astm a n School of&#13;
Mu sic, Voice with Ri ch a rd H a ll iday,&#13;
Pia n o wit h La w re nce Sch au ffl e r.&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
L OVELAND&#13;
&#13;
S mith Co l l ege, Ox fo rd U niversity.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
M orningside Co ll ege, Oberlin Conserva·&#13;
t or y of Music , Lake Geneva, S tudent of&#13;
L. A. T orrens.&#13;
&#13;
PEARL AM UNDSEN&#13;
&#13;
CLARA LO UISE ASMUS&#13;
&#13;
P AUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Mu s. B.&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
B.A ., M.A., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant L ibrarian&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in P ianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Un ive rsit y o f South Dak o ta , Universit y o f&#13;
C hi cago, Uni ve rsi t y of Il li no is.&#13;
&#13;
M o rningsid e Co ll ege, Chi ca go M usica l&#13;
Co ll ege .&#13;
&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of&#13;
M usic and Professor of Voice&#13;
&#13;
Head of the Departm ent of&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Obe rl in College, Mornin gside CoJlege,&#13;
Obe rlin C onservatory of Mu sic, L ak e Ge n eva, P upil of Dr. Carl D u fft , E ll ison&#13;
Van Hoo se.&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside College, Un iversi ty o f Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL C ARTER&#13;
&#13;
}AMES A u sT1N C o s s&#13;
&#13;
R uTH McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
M AR CIA M c N EE&#13;
&#13;
B.S,.&#13;
&#13;
A.M .&#13;
&#13;
B.S., M.S.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of School M usic Depart-&#13;
&#13;
Professo r of Chem istry&#13;
&#13;
ment and Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Jl linois We s l eya n University, University&#13;
o f Il l in o is . U ni ve rsit y o f Ch icago,&#13;
C l a r k U niversit y.&#13;
&#13;
C E CIL E. MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , M.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in B iology&#13;
&#13;
I nstructor in Elementary&#13;
E ducation&#13;
&#13;
1\·1 orningsid e College, V irg inia P o l ytech·&#13;
n ic Institute, Iowa State Co ll ege.&#13;
&#13;
U1&#13;
,per Io wa Universit y, U niversity of&#13;
C hicago, University&#13;
of Iowa, Un iversity&#13;
of Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
Mi ssou ri Stat e T ea ch e rs Co ll ege,&#13;
Co lu mb ia Uni vers it y.&#13;
&#13;
E DWARDA M ETZ&#13;
&#13;
EARLE E. EMM E&#13;
&#13;
John GARRETT F ELTON&#13;
&#13;
A. D. , B.D. , A.M .. Ph .D.&#13;
&#13;
B.A .. M.A.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of P sychology&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Departm ent of Speech&#13;
and Dramatics&#13;
&#13;
No rt h wes te rn Unive rsity. G a rre tt Biblical&#13;
I ns ti tute , Co lu mbia Universit y, Bos to n&#13;
U niversi t y, U niversity o f Chi cago ,&#13;
U niversi ty of I owa .&#13;
&#13;
Un iversit y o f M iri neso ta, Universit y o f&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Four teen&#13;
&#13;
M ENDAL&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
MI LLER&#13;
&#13;
Mus. 8 .&#13;
&#13;
A.B .. A.m.&#13;
&#13;
Inst ructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics&#13;
and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Bogusl a wsk i College of Mu sic, Chi cago&#13;
M usical Co ll ege, Curti s Ins ti t ute, J uill ia rd Sc h oo l of Music, P upi l of Mo is·&#13;
sa ye Cogusl a ws ki , Loui s V. S aa r, T om ·&#13;
fo rd Harris, Louise Rob yn, Ern est H u t·&#13;
ch eso n , A us tin Conrad i. Haro ld Bauer.&#13;
A nge ll a Diller, Jam es F risk in .&#13;
&#13;
Greenv il le college, Universi ty of South·&#13;
e rn California, U n iversity o f Mi nnesota.&#13;
&#13;
F ifteen&#13;
&#13;
�THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
JEAN SCOTT&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
WIRICK&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F. WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., M.D.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M., B.S.&#13;
&#13;
B.A., B.Mus.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Physical Educatior:.&#13;
for Women&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
L ibrarian&#13;
&#13;
A&lt;lria n Coll ege, U nive rsity of Chicago,&#13;
K a nsas S ta t e U n ive rsity, K a nsas Cit y&#13;
Universit y, Marin e Bio logica l La bora to ry,&#13;
Uni versit y of Iowa, Unive rsity of&#13;
Mich igan.&#13;
&#13;
Uni versit y of Wiscon sin , Uni ve rsity of&#13;
Minn esota, U nive rsity of Illi nois.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in P iano forte, History&#13;
of Music, and English&#13;
&#13;
Uni ve rsit y of Illinoi s.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN WILSON STEWART&#13;
&#13;
LAURA T ASCHE&#13;
&#13;
B.A., M.A.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
&#13;
Ge neva Co l lege, Monta na S tat e U ni vc1 ·&#13;
sit y. Unive rsit y of Io wa, Uni ve rsit y o f&#13;
Il linoi s . Uni versity o f Washing ton.&#13;
&#13;
Uni ve rsit y o f Sou th Da kota, S pearfi sh&#13;
No rmal , Abe rde e n No rmal , F o r t Wayn e&#13;
Business Jn stitutc.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
v. SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
RoY J. SwEET&#13;
&#13;
B.D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT TIMM&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningsi de Coll ege , Be rlin Conservatory&#13;
of Music, Un iversit y of Michigan , P upil&#13;
of Emil Li eb ling, Al be rt o J o nes, C lar·&#13;
c nce Edd y, J oan Doane , Ol af A nd e rso n ,&#13;
H o ward Wells, P a lmer Christ ia n .&#13;
&#13;
Field R epresentative&#13;
&#13;
Director of Admissions&#13;
Mo rnin gside College, Ga rre tt Bibl ical In·&#13;
s titute, Boston Uni versit y, university of&#13;
Ch i cago.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
ELMA VOLLJNK&#13;
&#13;
McCLURE&#13;
&#13;
Ph.B.&#13;
&#13;
Bursar&#13;
&#13;
S ecretary lo the Bursar&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Vin ce nnes Un ive rsity, Uni versi ty o f&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
Na ti ona l B usi ness T raini ng Sc hool.&#13;
&#13;
R UTH HAYWARD&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MAE MACARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
B. Mus.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Wind Instruments&#13;
Department&#13;
Morningside Coll ege, Juilliard Schoo l of&#13;
Mu sic, E astma n S chool of Mu sic , Pu pil&#13;
of Donald L e ntz, George Carl son , G eorges&#13;
Barre, Arthu r Loda , Da nie l Groth , Do n ·&#13;
aid Schmid, Chaut a uqua Summe r S choo l.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Coll ege, John H o pkins Unive rsit y, University ol Chi cago.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
Manager of Bookstore&#13;
Ft. Dodge J un ior Coll ege, Mo rn ingside&#13;
&#13;
W este rn U n ion College, Na tio na l B usi·&#13;
ness T raining S chool.&#13;
&#13;
Co l lege.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL R UTH M URRAY&#13;
&#13;
MmAH MILLS&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English and S ecretary of th e Faculty&#13;
&#13;
R egistrar and Assistant Professor&#13;
of Ancient Languages and&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningside Coll ege . Universit y o f Chi·&#13;
cago, university&#13;
of Michigan&#13;
Uni ve r::.il y&#13;
o f Sou th e rn Cali fo rn ia.&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside Col ledge U ni versit y of&#13;
Il l inois, Co l umbia Unive rsit y.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES Reistrup&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT GLEN ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
B. Mus.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Pianoforte Department&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Ph ysical Educatio n&#13;
and A ssistant Athletic Director&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Co \ l ege. Pu pi l of E m ma&#13;
Sage. J. E ri ck Schma l I. Th eo. Ot te r·&#13;
strom , R udo l ph Ga nz. F ritz Voegc l ey ,&#13;
Ce ci l B u rl e igh .&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gsid e Co 11 ege . Uni versi t y of&#13;
lllino is.&#13;
&#13;
M INETTA MILLER&#13;
&#13;
ILA B UNCH&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
S ecretary to the P resident&#13;
Da ko ta&#13;
&#13;
Wes le ya n. Mo rnin gsi de&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningsid e Co ll ege .&#13;
&#13;
Co ll ege .&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
P ublicit y&#13;
&#13;
M anager of W om en's R esidence&#13;
Halls&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningside Col l egc .&#13;
&#13;
Iowa S ta te Coll ege.&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SA UNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
ELS YE TASH SATER&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN J ENSEN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Ph ysical Education&#13;
and Director of A thletics&#13;
&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
Augu stana Co ll ege , Uni versi t y o f&#13;
Vi rgin ia .&#13;
&#13;
Dormitory Nurse&#13;
&#13;
Dormitory Nurse&#13;
&#13;
A l b ion Co ll ege.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Va ll e y H o spita l , Siou x Fa ll s.&#13;
&#13;
Dakota W esl eyan , Me thodist Sta te&#13;
H ospita l , Mi tchell.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
S i xtee n&#13;
&#13;
MARJ BOCK&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�J&#13;
&#13;
Classof 1940&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
____ __ ________ _&#13;
_______ Arthur Lundblad&#13;
P resident --------- --- ------------------- __ _ _ _&#13;
Vice-President___ __ _ __&#13;
_ _ __&#13;
&#13;
_ B,&#13;
--· · ------ · · · ········ ----- --- _ ____ _&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ------------------------- --Student Council Representative&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
N ine teen&#13;
&#13;
Roy Brown&#13;
&#13;
_ ___ _ _&#13;
_ _ _ Janet Coe&#13;
Genevieve Whittin to n&#13;
&#13;
�DELORES EMILY COOK&#13;
&#13;
VERONA DEMOND&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
Kl emme, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"L et those who will be clever;&#13;
I'll win with a song."&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Primgha r, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi, Usher, 2, Treasurer, 4;&#13;
P i Ga mma Mu, P rogram C hairman, 3, 4;&#13;
W A. A. , l, 2, 3; Coll ege League, l, 2,&#13;
&#13;
I ndependent; Mu Phi E psilon, President, 4; Chapel Choir, 1, 2. 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Io wa State College&#13;
Kap1)a Pi A I pha, Corresponding Secret a r y, 3; Ph i Sigma Iota , Presid e nt , 4:&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta : Co ll egian R eport er. 2,&#13;
3, Edito rial Assistant, 3; .. Sioux," 4 .&#13;
&#13;
,(_,&#13;
CONSTANCE MA y G ALL&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Orange City, Iowa&#13;
Northwest ern Jr. Co ll ege , Oran ge City&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
"Still water runs deep."&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou GREENE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
I NEZ GROVE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
K appa Pi Alpha, Chaplain, 2, Treasurer,&#13;
3 , P resident, 4; Alpha Psi Omega. Sec·&#13;
retary -Treasurer, 3; S igma Tau De lta;&#13;
Phi Sigma Iota; Collegia te P layers,&#13;
Presid ent, 3; Manuscript Club, P resident ,&#13;
2 , 3, 4; Collegian R eporter, 2; "Siou x,"&#13;
2; "Manuscript" Edit or, 3, 4;&#13;
&#13;
"A Dutch treat."&#13;
&#13;
Independent; Psi Chi; Phi Sigma Iota,&#13;
Histo rian, 4; W. A . A., 2, 3; College&#13;
League, 2, 3; M. C . A., 2, 3; Cosmopolitan Club, Secretary, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Nothing is so contagious as&#13;
pep."&#13;
&#13;
"A friend!y persona'ity is the&#13;
&#13;
S iou x City&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Ch i, Li brarian. 2, Recording&#13;
S ecretary, 3, Critic, 4, Vice-P resi d ent ,&#13;
4; Vesper Choir, I; P ep Club ; Col legi ate Players, Secretary, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Vi ce· Presid ent , 4 , Corresponding Secretary, 4; Sig ma T a u Delta,&#13;
Vi ce. Presi d ent, 4; Phi S igma Iota: Ves·&#13;
pe r Ch o i r, 4; Band, 2; Ago ra Boa rd, 4.&#13;
&#13;
F u I ton, S ou th Dakota&#13;
D a k ota Wesleyan University&#13;
&#13;
GARY FISHER&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
HARLAN A. DEWELL&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES MARY Gasink&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Independent: P si Chi. 3. 4: Track, 1, 2 .&#13;
3, 4; Cosmopolitan, 1, 2, 3. 4. President,&#13;
4 ; Collegiate Pl aye rs. l , 2 : Sioux Scalpers. Chi ef, 4: Biology Club, 1, 2;&#13;
H ea lth Atte nd a nt , 4.&#13;
&#13;
first step to success.&#13;
&#13;
world is&#13;
&#13;
"My fella says . . ."&#13;
&#13;
NELLY&#13;
DEVRIES&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Rockford, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
3; W. S. G. A.; Pep C lub, 2, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Clever, capable, and&#13;
conservative."&#13;
&#13;
DAVJD Denny&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
L UCILLE FRITZSCHE&#13;
&#13;
Council Bluffs, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Alpha S igma . Dircctress, 3, Mu sic ian , 4;&#13;
Sigma Mu: Chapel Choir, l , 2, 3. 4;&#13;
College League, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JEAN FOWLER&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Inde pe ndent; Pre- Engineers.&#13;
&#13;
Independen t ; Collegian R e port e r , 2 . 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"To one girl constant never."&#13;
&#13;
" Girls are so unnecessary."&#13;
&#13;
"Who's Who."&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi Al pha, Sergea nt-at -A rms, 4;&#13;
Chap lain , 4: Psi Chi, Vice- P resident , 4;&#13;
M. C. A . • 4; Biology Cl ub , 4.&#13;
&#13;
"One reason it might be pleasant&#13;
to be sick."&#13;
&#13;
"Genius is often but perseverance&#13;
and hard work in disguise."&#13;
&#13;
VmGI IA ALLEN&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
JEANNE MARGARET&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, 111 inois&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi , Chapl ain, 3; Eta Sigma&#13;
Phi , 3, 4; W. A. A .. 1, 2. 3. 4. Secretary, 3, R e port e r. 2: Int ramural; "Sioux"&#13;
T ypist, 4.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GUSTESON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Si oux City&#13;
&#13;
" It's not the heat, it's the&#13;
Timm-idity."&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY D. BROOKE&#13;
&#13;
Sigma T heta Rho; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Brass Qua,tet, 2; T rumpet Trio, 3 ; Symphony, 3; Collegian R eport er, ] , 2.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
likes to blow-his horn."&#13;
&#13;
"Nearly all are born smart; the&#13;
good-looking don't have to&#13;
keep it up."&#13;
&#13;
B . RoY BROWN&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee, Io wa&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi A lpha, S ergean t-at-Arms, 2,&#13;
H a ll Chairman. 2, Recording S ec retary,&#13;
3, Vi ce- President, 3, Presi dent, 4; Sigma&#13;
Tau Delta, Vice-P resi dent. 4; Cha pel&#13;
Choir, ], 2, ~, _4 ; manuscriptCl11b;&#13;
Siou x, 4.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi A I pha , Sergeant-at-Arms, 2;&#13;
Sigma Mu; Vespe r Choir, l. 2, 3: Band,&#13;
] , 2, 3, 4; Fl ute Qu a rtet; F rench Qui n ·&#13;
tct ; Sympho n y, I , 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"She won't be teaching long."&#13;
&#13;
D EVON H. H AHN&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
RO BERT&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
H AKALA&#13;
&#13;
ADELATDE H . HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi Alpha, S ergeant-at- Arms, 3;&#13;
Mu Phi Ep si l on. Hi storia n , 4; Vesper&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4; Symphony, 3, 4 ;&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
I ndepend ent ; Pi Gamma Mu , Vice-President: Sigma Tau D e lta ; Eta Sigma Phi,&#13;
Vi ce- President ; I ntramura l ; Chapel Choi r ,&#13;
&#13;
Burt, Iowa&#13;
Cho fT y Jr. Coll ege, Ontario, Cali f.&#13;
&#13;
Virginia. Minnesota&#13;
Virginia Jr. Col lege&#13;
&#13;
Si ou x City&#13;
&#13;
Chi. 3. 4: Football. 3. 4: .. M" Club.&#13;
&#13;
isterial Assoc ia ti on, I , 2, 3; Collegian&#13;
R eporte r, Edito rial Assistant, 4 .&#13;
&#13;
W. S. G. A., 4.&#13;
&#13;
"A petite blonde with winning&#13;
ways."&#13;
&#13;
3. 4, Presid ent. 4; S tu d ent Council, 4;&#13;
P sycho l ogy Club, 3 ; Intramural, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
" Beware, Ladies Aid, here he&#13;
comes."&#13;
&#13;
GLEN R. B URROW&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Janet&#13;
CoE&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ph i Sigma. Preside n t, 3 : Footbal I, I , 2,&#13;
3, 4; Bask e tball , I ; Track, l ; "M ""&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Recording Secretary, 2,&#13;
Vice- P resident , 3; In t e r -Sorority Counci l ,&#13;
3, P resident, 4: Intramural, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
W. A. A.: St ud ent Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Club, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Silence is golden and I'm&#13;
bankrupt."&#13;
&#13;
" Happy are those who have the&#13;
gift of making friends."&#13;
Twe nt y&#13;
&#13;
In d ependent; Coll egiate Players. 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Ind epe ndent: Pi Gamma Mu. 3, 4; Psi&#13;
&#13;
I ; Band . 3; M. C. A., I. 2. 3, 4: Min·&#13;
&#13;
"She can go to town-on a&#13;
typewriter."&#13;
&#13;
"There's something about all redheads that T can't resist."&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ALICE VIRGINIA HANSON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
ALTA CLAIRE HARRISON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Od ebolt, lowa&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
\Vash ta, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
K ai pa Zeta Chi , President. 4; TnterSorority Council, 4: W. A. A., 4: Collegiate Players, 3. 4. Vice- P resident. 4;&#13;
Sioux Scalpers, 4: Collegian R eporter. 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kap pa Pi Alpha, Vi ce- P resident, 3;&#13;
&#13;
"W e are of the opinf_on that Don&#13;
is lucky.&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
Pep Club.&#13;
&#13;
" T here are no troubles that a&#13;
twinkle and a giggle&#13;
won't cure."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
�MILLICENT MARIE JENSEN&#13;
&#13;
]oHN JOSEPH KRZNARICH&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
I re ne, South Dako ta&#13;
Dakot a Wesl eya n University&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
K ap pa Pi Alpha, Librari a n , 3, Rcco,din g&#13;
Secretary, 4, Co rres pondin g Secretary , 3;&#13;
Sigma Tau Delt a; "S ioux ," 2, 3, Edit o r,&#13;
4 ; Manu scri pt Club. 2, 3, 4 , Secretary·&#13;
Treasurer, 3, Vi ce- Pres id ent , 4 ; Co l l e gia te Pla yers, 2; Associa te Edit o r o r&#13;
••Ma nu scrip t," 3; Coll eg ian R eporter,' 3;&#13;
" Wh o's Wh o."&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Pi Alph a, Critic, 3, Hall Chair·&#13;
man, 3, Vi ce -Pres id e nt , 4, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, 4; Sigma Mu: Vesper Ch o ir ,&#13;
2, 3, 4; Coll ege League, 2: M. C. A. , 2,&#13;
3, 4; Program Committee, 3 , 4.&#13;
&#13;
" Happin ess is a disease and&#13;
have a bad case of it."&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MARJE LARSON&#13;
&#13;
Ironwood, Mi chi ga n&#13;
I ronwood Jr. Coll ege&#13;
&#13;
IRENE M. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
In de pende nt ; Foot b a l I, 3 , 4: Bas k e 1ba l I,&#13;
3; "M " Club, 3 , 4 ; P syc hology Club;&#13;
Int ra mu ra l.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi Alpha , H a l I Chairman ,&#13;
c ia l Chairman , 3, Corr espond in g&#13;
tary. 4, Treasurer, 4: Sigma T au&#13;
May Qu ee n , 1 ; P e p Club , 2 , 3;&#13;
g iat e Pl aye rs, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, those dimples!"&#13;
&#13;
2, So·&#13;
Secre·&#13;
D e lta;&#13;
Coll e·&#13;
&#13;
"Who said beauty was only&#13;
skin dee p ?"&#13;
&#13;
"Diversity of interests with&#13;
constancy of ideals."&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE JoHNSON&#13;
A.B .&#13;
&#13;
ELLA&#13;
&#13;
LUCILLE BARBARA JoHNSO N&#13;
B.S .M.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
In d e pe nd e nt: Sigma Mu, Preside nt, 3 :&#13;
Mu Phi , Chap lai n, 4: Ves pe r Choir, 1.&#13;
2, 3, 4; Band , 4 .&#13;
&#13;
4; Symphony: M. C . A .. ] , 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Collegiate Pl ayers.&#13;
&#13;
RALPH KITTE RMAN&#13;
&#13;
"Proof that thorougl:ness pays&#13;
good returns."&#13;
&#13;
Ind epende nt ; Mu Phi Epsilon, 3. 4, R e·&#13;
cord in g Secretary, 4; V esper Choir, 2, 3 ,&#13;
4. Pres id e nt . 4: College Leag ue. 2, 3,&#13;
4: M. C. A., 3. 4: Cosmopo lit an Club,&#13;
2, 3, 4, Vi ce- P res id e nt , 4, Treasu rer, 4.&#13;
&#13;
" Honor lies in honest toil."&#13;
&#13;
NANCY ELLEN LOWRY&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET LONG&#13;
&#13;
KATHLYN MARIE KOLP&#13;
&#13;
.I .B.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.M .&#13;
Foochow,&#13;
China&#13;
Hwa Nan College&#13;
&#13;
Alpha S ig ma, Treas urer. 4: Phi S igma&#13;
Iota. Vice-President&#13;
3. Secre tary, 4;&#13;
Vcspe;· Ch oi r. 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Mu sic is well said to be the&#13;
speech of angels."&#13;
&#13;
" A man of many sides and all of&#13;
them excellent."&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SIMPSON LING&#13;
&#13;
LA URITSEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ch a pe l Choi r. 1. 2, 3, 4: Ba nd , 1. 2. 3.&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
A.B .&#13;
&#13;
P s i Chi , Vi ce- Pres id ent, 3, Pres id ent. 4:&#13;
Pi Cam ma Mu: Kappa Chi; Alpha P si:&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
M a nso n. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th e ta Rho , 1; Mini ste ri a l Asso·&#13;
c iation. 2, 3 . 4, Pres id e nt , 2: Chap e l&#13;
Choir , l , 2, J, 4 ; M. C. A . . 1. 2. 3 , 4.&#13;
&#13;
K a pp a Ze ta Chi, U sh e r. 2, 3. Lib rarian ,&#13;
3. Criti c, 4: Ch ape l Choir. 2 , 3. 4: Ves·&#13;
pe r Choir, 1; Coll ege Leag ue, 1, 2;&#13;
M. C. A. , 1. 2. 3, 4; Agora, Treasure r.&#13;
2; Junior C l ass S ecretary; Co ll egiate&#13;
Pl aye rs, 3, 4; Student Coun ci l. 4: \V. S.&#13;
C. A .. Pres id e nt , 4: "Who's Wh o."&#13;
&#13;
LETHA HOWES&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Ind epe nd e nt: Pi Gamma Mu , 3. 4; P si&#13;
Chi . 3, 4. Secretary. 3. 4: Coll eg ia n R e·&#13;
port e r, 4; P syc h o logy Club , Secretary, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A girl of influence in th e&#13;
history department."&#13;
&#13;
4; M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
" Black is my true love's hair,&#13;
but not her disposition."&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Kiro n , Io wa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Tnd epe nd e nt; Alpha P si Om ega, 3, 4,&#13;
Vi ce- Pr es id e nt , 3: P si Chi , 3, 4: Foot ·&#13;
b u ll, 1; Intramural : Student Bod y Pres i·&#13;
dent , 4; "Who' s Who."&#13;
&#13;
Kap p a Ze ta Chi, Chaplain. 4: Mu Phi&#13;
Ep sil o n, 4: Sigma Mu. 3 . 4: W. A. A. ,&#13;
3. 4: Vespe r Ch o ir , 1, 2. 3. 4; S trin g&#13;
Qu a rt e t , ] , 2, 3 , 4: Symphony. 1, 2. 3,&#13;
&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR L UN DBLAD&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
"The last of the eligible&#13;
bachelors."&#13;
&#13;
Ch erok ee, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"A rare Combination.... Beautyand&#13;
sweetness.&#13;
&#13;
"A good disposition promotes&#13;
popularity."&#13;
&#13;
MORGAN HARRISON&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sac City, Iowa&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi. Usher. 2. Inter-Sorority&#13;
Council . 3 . Critic. 4. Vi ce- Pres id e nt , 4 :&#13;
Alph a P si Omega. Vi ce- Pres id e nt , 4.&#13;
Secretary, 4: W. A. A. , 1, 2 ; Ves pe r&#13;
Ch o ir , 1, 2; Collegiate Pl aye rs. 1, 2, 3,&#13;
4. Secretary. 2 , Vi ce- Presi d e nt. 3, P resi·&#13;
dent, 4: "S ioux ," 3 : Student Council.&#13;
3; Ishkoodah , Presid e nt , 1.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Kin gs l ey, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"The gift of speech is a powerful&#13;
one."&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Calum e t, Io wa&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma, Pres id e nt , 4 ,&#13;
Arm s, 3. Vi ce- Pres id e nt , 3;&#13;
2, 3, 4; Vi ce- Pres id e nt or&#13;
Pres id e nt of Class .&#13;
&#13;
S ergea nt- a t·&#13;
Football , ] ,&#13;
Cla ss, 3;&#13;
4.&#13;
&#13;
" His futur e is Well taken&#13;
care of.&#13;
&#13;
Alph a Tau De lta , Sergeant-at-A rms , 2 ,&#13;
President, 4; Alpha Psi Om ega, Vi ce·&#13;
Pres idenr , 4 ; Ves pe r Ch o ir , 1 ; Co ll ege&#13;
League, 1. 2 ; M. C. A. , 4: Coll egia te&#13;
Pla ye rs,&#13;
2,&#13;
Secretary:&#13;
cosmopolitan&#13;
Club , Treas ure r, 3 : " S iou x" Bu sin ess&#13;
M a nage r. 3, 4: P resi d e nt o r Cia ss, 2;&#13;
H ea lth Kin g, 4: ' "Who' s Wh o."&#13;
&#13;
" Heil, the Kingfish!"&#13;
&#13;
ROGER H UGHES&#13;
&#13;
wALTER LEROY H URD&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Stanhope, Iowa&#13;
W ebs te r Cit y Jr. College&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
Uni ve rsity of Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Park er, South Dakota&#13;
D a k o ta Wes l eya n Uni ve rsit y&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th e ta Rho , Chap l ain, 3 , Pres i·&#13;
d en t, 4; P si Chi. 3: Int e r- Frat e rnit y&#13;
Co uncil , 3.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma , Pl ed gemas t er, 3, Tr easurer, 4,&#13;
Pres id e nt . 4; Foo tball , 4; B ask e tball ,&#13;
2. 3, 4; "M" Club , 2, 3, 4: All-Confer·&#13;
ence Bask e tb a ll T ea m. 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Ind e pe nd e nt: Pi Gamma l\1u , 3, 4, Pres i·&#13;
d e nt , 4: P si Chi, 4: Go a rd or Contro l ,&#13;
3, 4, Secretary . 4: "Sioux.'' 4; Co ll e·&#13;
g iat e Pla ye rs, 2, 3, 4&#13;
&#13;
"Walt and his ' Y' boys."&#13;
&#13;
"Why are all the nice men&#13;
married?" ·&#13;
&#13;
"P rexy' s personable pencilpusner.&#13;
&#13;
DEON MooR&#13;
&#13;
Alph a T au D e lt a; Int ra mu ra l.&#13;
&#13;
"Wake me when the bell rings."&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
MINETTA Miller&#13;
&#13;
DONALD H. MICHAELSON&#13;
&#13;
MILFORD EUGENE JACOBSEN&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS WILLIAM MooN&#13;
&#13;
B. S.M.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. Cit y&#13;
&#13;
S ioux. City&#13;
&#13;
St. An sgar, Tow a&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Ind epen d e nt ; Alph a P si Omega. 3 . 4.&#13;
P res id e nt , 4 ; Chap e l Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Ma l e Quart e t , 1, 2, 3 , 4 ; Mix ed Qu art e t ,&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4 ; Madri ga l Croup , 3, 4 ; Phi&#13;
: u. Treasu re r. 4.&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
I nd cpe nd cn t: P si Chi , 4; Pi Cam mu&#13;
Mu . 4.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
ISEMJNGER&#13;
&#13;
"Sorry, girls, I'm taken."&#13;
&#13;
" Be gone dull care; I have no&#13;
time for you."&#13;
&#13;
J nd e pe nd e nt ;&#13;
&#13;
Sinfonia, Secretary, 4 ;&#13;
Chapel Choi r, 1, 2, 3, 4; Madrigal , 2. 3 .&#13;
4: Collegiate Pl aye rs, 1, 2 ; Orch es tra ,&#13;
Messiah" alternate ,&#13;
I ; String Tri o, 1 ;&#13;
&#13;
2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kapp a Ze ta Chi: Eta S ig ma Phi. Tr eas·&#13;
urer. 3, Vi ce -Presi d e nt , 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Even the littlest candle casts&#13;
a far beam."&#13;
&#13;
I f man is what he thinks he is,&#13;
I'm great."&#13;
Tw e nty-three&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
�M. SMITH&#13;
&#13;
RAY PORT&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN MA RGUERITE P OSEY&#13;
&#13;
L EO SM ITH&#13;
&#13;
D.S .&#13;
&#13;
D.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Akron, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Map l eton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I ndependent; Footbal l , J, 2, 3, 4; I n·&#13;
tramural, ], 2, 3, 4; ''M" Club, 3, 4 .&#13;
&#13;
. In depende nt; Sigma Mu , 3, 4; Vesper&#13;
Choir, .I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Such eye-lashes are the envy of&#13;
many a girl."&#13;
&#13;
"Few have the courage to appear&#13;
as good as they really are."&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma, S ergea nt·at-Arms , l , Secretary, 2, P res ide nt , 3; Foo t ba ll , J , 2 , 3,&#13;
4;. I nt e r-frat e rnity Council, 3; Sophomore C l ass S ec re tary.&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon, Iowa&#13;
She ldon J r. Coll ege&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Assistant to Assistant Bursar&#13;
Bunch ."&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN PRESTON&#13;
&#13;
J OH N P ROSSER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha , Socia l Chairman , 2,&#13;
Recording Secretary, 3, Vice-President , 4;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu; Collegiate Players , 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Count the votes, boys, count&#13;
the votes."&#13;
&#13;
"Wo rry never made anyone great&#13;
-why should I worry?"&#13;
&#13;
A NNA S T E INBRENNER&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
A l pha Sigma, Chap l ain, 4; Chap e l Choir,&#13;
3, 4; Band. 3: Col lcge Leag ue , 3 , 4;&#13;
M. C. A .. 3, 4. Secretary; Sophomore&#13;
C lass Vic e- Pres id e nt.&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED P. STROZDAS&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
A l pha Tau De lta , Treas urer, 2; P si Chi,&#13;
4; Pi Gamma Mu , 4; Basketball , l , 2,&#13;
3, 4; "M" Club , 3, 4; I ntramura l , 2, 3,&#13;
4; Collegian R e port e r Sports Edit or, 4;&#13;
Stude nt Body Vic e- Pres id e nt , 4;&#13;
"Who's Who ."&#13;
&#13;
"Efficiency is the secret of&#13;
getting much done."&#13;
&#13;
"As impartial as a traffic light&#13;
except in matters of the heart."&#13;
A RNOLD&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
R UDD&#13;
&#13;
L E R OY B ASIL SHELEY&#13;
&#13;
I RVINE T HOE&#13;
&#13;
John SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
D.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
P au l lina, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
A l pha Tau De l ta; String Quartet, l. 2.&#13;
3, 4; Symphony, 1, 2 , 3. 4; Pres ident of&#13;
Con se rvatory Student Body, 4, VicePresident, 3.&#13;
&#13;
I ndepend e nt; Pi Cam ma Mu; P si Chi.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Lak e Mi l I s, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Ind e pendent: Sigma Pi Sigma ; Pre-En·&#13;
gineers, Trea s ure r, 3. Pres ident, 4;&#13;
H ealth Attendant , 3.&#13;
&#13;
"Milford's man Watson ."&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi: Sigma Tau De l ta , Secretary, 4: Pi Gamma Mu , Secretary; Ps i&#13;
Ch i: Co l lege Lea gue , l. 2: M. C. A. ,&#13;
l , 2 , 3, 4 , Pres id e nt. 3; Pr es id e nt of&#13;
Coop era tiv e Hou se . 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Why must some be born with&#13;
all the brains?"&#13;
&#13;
"A complexion like his name."&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
"Not too serious, not too gay-nice in a charming sort of way."&#13;
&#13;
H OWARD N IELSEN&#13;
&#13;
L YLE O BERLIN&#13;
&#13;
] AC K T HOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
D.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.D .&#13;
&#13;
Turi n, Iowa&#13;
Dana College, Blair, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Laurens, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mapl e ton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B e ta B e ta Beta.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma; Football , l; I ntramural.&#13;
&#13;
"He can because he thinks he&#13;
can."&#13;
&#13;
"When in doubt, 'tis safer to be&#13;
silent."&#13;
&#13;
A l pha Tau De lt a. Chaplain. 3; I ntramura l , l , 2; Co ll eg iat e Pl ayers,&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
L ESTER O LSON&#13;
&#13;
FRANK VAN D ER MATEN&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
L ORRA INE VE RSTEGEN&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Bradgat e, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Bo yd e n. Iowa&#13;
Northw es t e rn Jr. College, Orang e City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
stephens Col lege&#13;
&#13;
V es per Choir , 2, 3, 4: Band. 2: String&#13;
Quart e t , 4; Symphony, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi A l p h a. R ecordin g Secretary, 4 .&#13;
Social Chairman , 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Life is a serious business and&#13;
I'll treat· it as such."&#13;
&#13;
"Gracious is the wo rd for&#13;
L aurie."&#13;
&#13;
Jo YCE M . WEED&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Theta R ho , Chaplain, 2, 3; Col-&#13;
&#13;
l ege League , 2; M. C. A., 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"Why is that, Professo r?"&#13;
&#13;
D OROT HY ANN O LSON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi. Presid e nt. 4 : S igma Tau&#13;
De l ta , 3 , 4 : Alpha Psi Om eg a, 2 , 3. 4,&#13;
Pres ident, 3: \V. A. A., Vice-Pres ident,&#13;
4; I ntramural; Miss Morningsid e. 1939;&#13;
"Sioux'' Ed i tor, 3; Collegiate P l ayers,&#13;
1, 2. 3, 4; "Who' s Who."&#13;
4; Agora&#13;
Pres ident , 4; "Yumph Girl," 2; Beauty&#13;
Quee n, 3.&#13;
&#13;
S igma Th e ta Rho ,&#13;
Pledgemaster,&#13;
2.&#13;
Treasure r, 3 , Pres ident. 4 : l nter-Frat e rn·&#13;
ity Counc il , 2, 4; Bask e tbal l , 1: Co ll ege&#13;
Leag ue , 1 . 2 , 3; M . C. A . , 2, 3: Student&#13;
Council , 2: C lass Pres id e nt. 3; Bu sin ess&#13;
Manager of Collegian R ep ort e r, 3; Cos·&#13;
mopolitan Club, 3; "Who's Who."&#13;
&#13;
J OHN&#13;
&#13;
TH ROWER&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
"The harder I try the gooder to&#13;
be, the worser I am."&#13;
&#13;
"An all around girl liked by&#13;
everyone."&#13;
&#13;
" In this case, girls prefer&#13;
blonds too ."&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN O SBEY&#13;
&#13;
MARLYN P EDERSON&#13;
&#13;
P ATRI CIA D ORINE W ARNER&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux; City&#13;
&#13;
Lennox , South Dako ta&#13;
&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
&#13;
I ndepe ndent: P si Chi; Sigma Tau De l ta;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu; Eta Sigma Phi , Presid e nt. 4 , Nationa l Secretary, 4: "Sioux,"&#13;
4: Stude n t Counci l , Secretary; M iss&#13;
Morningside Att e n dant; "Who' s Who."&#13;
&#13;
I ndep e ndent: I ntramural. 1. 2, 3. 4: Economic s C l ub , }, 2: Avia ti o n Club , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Independent ;&#13;
Sigma Tau De lta , 3, 4.&#13;
Presid e nt, 4; \V . A. A . , 1, 2 , 3, 4 , Board.&#13;
3, 4: Manu sc ript Club. 3, 4; "Sioux,''&#13;
2, 3. 4; Collegian R epo rte r, l , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi. Re cording Secretary, 4;&#13;
W. A. A .. Treasu re r. 3 , Presid e nt , 4;&#13;
Hea lth Att e ndant , 2.&#13;
&#13;
"All this and heaven too?"&#13;
T wenty-four&#13;
&#13;
" Talking comes by nature,&#13;
silence by wisdom."&#13;
&#13;
"Quiet until you know her.''&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
" Joyce and John- proof to the&#13;
physicist that likes attract."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
GRACE BINGAMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARVIN FRUM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C it y&#13;
&#13;
Danbury, Jowa&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE CHAMPENY&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY SMITH&#13;
E agl e Grove, Io wa&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR Jones&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Carro l 1, Ne braska&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD SPA YDE&#13;
Sac C ity, I o wa&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT CRAVEN&#13;
&#13;
MARY JoRDAN&#13;
&#13;
S ioux C it y&#13;
&#13;
Sio ux City&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WEAVILL&#13;
S e rgeant Bl u ff, Jowa&#13;
&#13;
HILDA DETHLEFS&#13;
&#13;
CLARA L UTHER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Mil an. Illinois&#13;
&#13;
EDNA ELVING&#13;
&#13;
ELLEN PERRI N&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Ci t y&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET FERRIN&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT R ULEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CARETA Y OUNGLOVE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci t y&#13;
&#13;
Eag l e Grove, Io wa&#13;
&#13;
Siou x Citv&#13;
&#13;
HARRIETT WOODKE&#13;
Sio ux C it y&#13;
&#13;
GENE VIEVE WHITTINGTON&#13;
B.S. M.&#13;
Va yl and , South Da k o ta&#13;
A l p h a S ig ma, H is t o ri a n. 3 . Di rc ct ress, 3 ,&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce . Presiden t,&#13;
&#13;
4,&#13;
&#13;
Presid ent, 4;&#13;
&#13;
Inte r·&#13;
&#13;
So ro rit y Cou ncil , 4; S igma Mu: C h apel&#13;
Ch o ir. 4: Ves per Ch o ir, 1. 2. 3: Band,&#13;
l . 2, 3, 4. Bu siness Manager&#13;
4: madri&#13;
gal C ro u p. 4; S ym phony, 1. 3. 4: cos&#13;
mopo l i tan C l u b . 2. 3 . 4: W. S . G. A. ,&#13;
Vi ce- P resid e nt.&#13;
4:&#13;
S ec re ta ry.&#13;
Senior&#13;
C l a ss; " S io u x." 4: Is hk ood a h Presid e n t ,&#13;
1 : M iss Mo rnin gside Atte nda nt , 4.&#13;
&#13;
" In harmony with the world."&#13;
GORDON WHITVER&#13;
A. B.&#13;
Wa l nut. Ill in o is&#13;
&#13;
Methodist&#13;
&#13;
Sc hoo l o f Nurs ing&#13;
&#13;
I nd e pe nde nt : Be ta Be ta Be ta. Vi ceP resid ent , 4; Bi o logy C lub, 4 ,&#13;
S ec retary.&#13;
&#13;
" A t last, a doctor in the house."&#13;
&#13;
PA CK ARD WOLL E&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Ci t y&#13;
I nd e pe nd e n t : P si Chi: I ntra mu ra l: Siou x&#13;
Sca l p e rs, P reside n t, 4 ; Co ll egia n R e·&#13;
porte r, B usiness M anage r, 4: P e p C l ub .&#13;
l ; P s ycho l og y C l ub , 3; Eco nom ic s Cl u b ,&#13;
I : Cheerl eade r, l.&#13;
&#13;
"G rade A , we say, with plenty of&#13;
cream."&#13;
Twen ty-six&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
�J&#13;
EDYTHE M AE ALBERT&#13;
&#13;
DoNNIN AMES&#13;
&#13;
KEITH ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
MARY LOUISE BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
MILTON BINGER&#13;
&#13;
DORIS BROWN&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
..... Dean Forbes&#13;
&#13;
President -------------------- ------ ----------Vice-President -------------------- ------ --- -- --&#13;
&#13;
·--------- --· ....... Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ----- -------&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
Student Counc1 1 Representative.......................... .&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
RALPH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
ROLLIE BUCKHOLZ&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY CARRIGG&#13;
&#13;
Winifred&#13;
&#13;
MAURICE CLARE&#13;
&#13;
ARTH UR Clayton&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-nine&#13;
Twen ty-eight&#13;
&#13;
CHEELY&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
MAXINE Ericksen&#13;
&#13;
FRAN CES FORSBERG&#13;
&#13;
D UANE HALFORD&#13;
&#13;
DONALD FRITZSCHE&#13;
&#13;
D ALE HART ER&#13;
&#13;
joyce HELD&#13;
&#13;
CELIA FORDYCE&#13;
&#13;
D u RETH HELEN H1TcHco c K&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
ROLA ND GREFE&#13;
&#13;
B ETTY H UXTABL E&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN G UELFF&#13;
&#13;
LYLE JoH NSON&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPHINE Dixon&#13;
&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
&#13;
EUGENE EMM E&#13;
&#13;
Ila ELlERLY&#13;
&#13;
Thi rt y&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
CLIFFORD L AMKIN&#13;
&#13;
K ENNETH LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
FRAN K KAH OUN&#13;
&#13;
G EORGE K OCH&#13;
&#13;
GLENN YS CORDERMAN&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES Clayton&#13;
&#13;
BRUCE LI NDSAY&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
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Thirty -one&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth&#13;
&#13;
J O H NSON&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
MARTHA HELEN NELSON&#13;
&#13;
MAURICE SCHEIDER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE SCHILLER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
RUTH RANCE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
Irene&#13;
&#13;
BETTY ScHUNCK&#13;
&#13;
ALICE SCOTT&#13;
&#13;
SCHARMEL STURTEVANT&#13;
&#13;
L UCILLE PIPPETT&#13;
&#13;
MAX STERN&#13;
&#13;
Ix&#13;
.&#13;
SCHAAL&#13;
SHAVER&#13;
&#13;
MARY Mcbride&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
Oliver&#13;
&#13;
TAKEO NAGAMORJ&#13;
&#13;
Allice&#13;
&#13;
MELVIN McKNIGHT&#13;
&#13;
NORMA NEILSON&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY&#13;
&#13;
MoGCK&#13;
&#13;
GARRETT WALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED WIKERT&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD WISSINK&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Thirt y-two&#13;
&#13;
wALLEN&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WALKER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES WERT&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
LEONARD NELSON&#13;
&#13;
SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
AYAKO YAMASHIRO&#13;
&#13;
Thirt y-three&#13;
&#13;
�OFFI CERS&#13;
President ---------------&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------&#13;
&#13;
__________ _ John Kolp&#13;
_&#13;
Bernard Feikema&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President ·······----·······-----·········:·::·....... Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ······----···:······-··.&#13;
Geraldine Booth&#13;
Student Council Representative........... ---··--········&#13;
&#13;
T hi rt y- fi ve&#13;
&#13;
�ROBERT CAINE&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE CAIRY&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE D AHL&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT DANNENBERG&#13;
&#13;
BERNARD FEIKEMA&#13;
&#13;
MAXI NE F OST ER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
M ARGIE CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
VERNON CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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ALI CE C LAYTON&#13;
&#13;
GERALD COBBS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES GANDEK&#13;
&#13;
BRU CE C ONNOR&#13;
&#13;
D OROT H Y G ARTNER&#13;
&#13;
DARYLE C RABB&#13;
&#13;
EILEEN GILSON&#13;
&#13;
DONALD BALLANTINE&#13;
&#13;
E ARL G OODENOW&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA BARRY&#13;
&#13;
Ted GRIER&#13;
&#13;
M ARGARET BERG&#13;
&#13;
M ARIE BERGQUIST&#13;
&#13;
R AYMOND G u s TESON&#13;
&#13;
JAMES BOLTON&#13;
&#13;
BETTY BOOT JER&#13;
&#13;
Doris&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN BROWN&#13;
&#13;
HELEN BROYLES&#13;
&#13;
Thirty.six&#13;
&#13;
H ALL&#13;
&#13;
M ERRIE J UNE HEETLAND&#13;
&#13;
C HARLOTTE H ACKETT&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT H AMEL&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT H EMPSTEAD&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
BROWN GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
�H ELEN J OH NSON&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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&#13;
JoE L EASE&#13;
&#13;
D ONOVAN L EOPOLD&#13;
&#13;
L AURETTA KING&#13;
&#13;
R UTH KI NGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
B o B L o wRY&#13;
&#13;
D ARREL M c ENTAF FER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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LER OY K UH LMAN&#13;
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R OMA]&#13;
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Macur&#13;
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J OHN MAYNARD&#13;
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L AMKIN&#13;
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R oY M I CHAUD&#13;
&#13;
BETTE L ARSON&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD HENDRI CK S&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
E ARL HI CK S&#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS O AKLEAF&#13;
&#13;
M URIEL HILE R&#13;
&#13;
] ACK H OLDCROFT&#13;
&#13;
EDITH J ENS EN&#13;
&#13;
MAXI NE P OOLEY&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD P ORTER&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT J ACKSON&#13;
&#13;
E UNI CE J EEP&#13;
&#13;
M I LDRED P FEIFFER&#13;
&#13;
BETTY H OEFER&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT R EESE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES R IC HARDS&#13;
&#13;
ADELE R OBERTS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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v&#13;
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Thirty-eight&#13;
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Thi rty -ni ne&#13;
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K ATHRYN MADISON&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
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MARIAN STICKLES&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
I&#13;
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GERALDINE THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
GLEN THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
OPAL WALKER&#13;
&#13;
BYRON WALTER&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WEAVER&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou WELDING&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
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PHYLLTS THORNGREEN&#13;
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ELNA VAN CAMP&#13;
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H. FREDDIE WELLMERLTNG&#13;
&#13;
LA VoNNE WERTZ&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE VORIS&#13;
ELLA JEAN WADDELL&#13;
&#13;
DoNALD WrnLER&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD WINTER&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE ROHWEDER&#13;
FERNE ROLAND&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE SALSBURY&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
KATHLEEN SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
ALMA SHIPLEY&#13;
&#13;
LAUREE WooD&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD WooDs&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEYMAE ZECHMANN&#13;
WILLTAM&#13;
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c.&#13;
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DOROTHY JEAN SORENSON&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
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Forty&#13;
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Forty -o ne&#13;
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�j&#13;
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OFFI CERS&#13;
First S em ester&#13;
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Wil son Reynolds&#13;
President... ....................... ··-··· ·- ··-· · ·-········· Merl e Stone&#13;
Vi ce-President... .&#13;
An eline Thompson&#13;
-----·- Ruth Cow ling&#13;
g&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer..&#13;
Student Council Representative ______________ _&#13;
&#13;
Fo rt y- th ree&#13;
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S econd Sem ester&#13;
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Robert Hicks&#13;
Merl e Stone&#13;
Angeline Thompson&#13;
Ruth Cowlin g&#13;
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�Doris CoE&#13;
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RICHARD CORWIN&#13;
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HELEN FOSTER&#13;
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LUCILE GEHRT&#13;
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FLORENCE Coss&#13;
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RUTH COWLING&#13;
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JOEL GEISTER&#13;
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VIRGINIA DUNLAP&#13;
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Evelyn&#13;
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FRED DANIELS&#13;
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Cox&#13;
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RAY HUGHES&#13;
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ALICE JACOBS&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
BoB BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
HEWLETT&#13;
&#13;
· R UTH JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
METTA BREAW&#13;
&#13;
LESTER JONES&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
DOROTHY BROWN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS KENNY&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
PHYLLIS KNAPPE&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN CAPENER&#13;
&#13;
JAMES LEACHMAN&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
VIRGINIA CARR&#13;
&#13;
GLENN CLARK&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
ij&#13;
&#13;
Forty- four&#13;
&#13;
F orty- fi ve&#13;
&#13;
BoB HicKs&#13;
&#13;
�HARRIETT SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
GERALDINE SATRANG&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE ROBERTS&#13;
&#13;
VELMA SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE SW ISHER&#13;
&#13;
MARVIN SHULENBERGER&#13;
&#13;
MAR IETTA SEAMAN&#13;
&#13;
ANGELINE THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
lf&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD SKALBY&#13;
&#13;
VERA SM ITH&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR THORPE&#13;
&#13;
JAMES VANDER BERG&#13;
&#13;
GARNET WEDEKING&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE W ILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
MERLE STO:-.E&#13;
NORMAN SUSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY LONG&#13;
MAx McCoy&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Maclennon&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN MURPHY&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Zola&#13;
&#13;
MARCUSSEN&#13;
&#13;
LEONARD REHDER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
WILSON REYNOLDS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
i1Ja&#13;
&#13;
MARIELLEN R I FENBARK&#13;
&#13;
Forty- s ix&#13;
&#13;
For ty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Name&#13;
&#13;
Home&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM ROBERT ANDERSON.............................................. :................. Sioux City&#13;
WALTER LEE BRINK-------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
RICHARD JAMES BROOKS........................................................................ Sioux City&#13;
RoGER EuGENE DAUFFENBACH .............................................................. Sioux City&#13;
JIM EVERETT Du N--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JOSEPH HAROLD HAFFITS...................................................................... Sioux City&#13;
DoROTHE HELE&#13;
&#13;
HANTLA. ... ----------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN MAUDE HEWLTTT....................................................................Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
Roy B. HOLLAND-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JACK ALLAN HoLLOWAY........................................................................ Sioux City&#13;
ROBERT J. MAJOR ...................... -------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JOHN EDWARD MoNTAGNE ....................................................................Sioux City&#13;
MARY ADEL PATTERSON........................................................................Sioux City&#13;
MARJORIE EDITH Pu LLMAN.................................................................. Sioux City&#13;
JOSEPH ROSENBLUM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JAMES FRANCIS SEGER................... --------------------------------------------- ------------Sioux City&#13;
CHARLES DWIGHT SIMPSON _____ _ _ _ _____&#13;
_____ _ _ _________&#13;
_____________ ____ __ _&#13;
_ _ _ ______ ________ Sioux City&#13;
MARGARET ELAINE SLOWEY--------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
HELEN MAXINE SMITH----------------------------------------------------------Luverne, Minnesota&#13;
BILL ELLIOTT STODDARD------------------------------------------------------------------------ Sioux City&#13;
MARTHA RUTH WALKER ....... ------------------------------------------------·----------------Sioux City&#13;
THEODORE MORRIS WHICHER........ ---------·--------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
MARJ Bo cK --------------------------------------------------------------------.Loomis, South Dakota&#13;
ROBERT WILLIAM RAE&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CATHARINE RICH ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
How ARD BLAKE SHIPTON ----------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Forty-eigh t&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside is proud to have had the services of an Athletic&#13;
Director of Coach Saunderson's ability for the past twenty-nine&#13;
years. We know that we could not find a better coach, nor a finer&#13;
man to guide the young men of our student body through the developing period of their lives. We feel sure that "Saundy" will be&#13;
turning out the same fighting teams and develop the same type of&#13;
man far into the future . This high regard for " Saundy's" ability&#13;
as a coach and as a builder of men is evidenced by his selection to&#13;
the honorary position as referee of the Drake Relays for 1940.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�The traditional battle between the South Dakota University Coyotes and Morningside in Stock Yards Park almost _proved disastrous for the heavily favored Coyotes&#13;
as the Maroons went down by the slim margin of 7-6. The teams brought the large&#13;
crowd to their feet time after time as an inspired Morningside team battled the&#13;
Coyotes on even terms. The hard hitting of Jim Wernli brought the Coyotes six&#13;
points in the third quarter, and the educated toe of Ernie Gunderson bought the Coyotes their margin of victory. The Maroons roared back in fury with a drive from&#13;
their own 27 yard line that culminated with a touchdown pass from Burrow to Feikema. The all important placement kick was blocked. It would be doing both teams&#13;
injustice to say there were any definitely outstanding players.&#13;
-5. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
The Maroon gridders gave indications of having a winning season in pre-game&#13;
maneuvers, but a combination of bad breaks and injuries to key men in the Morningside roster resulted in a bad season in the won and lost column.&#13;
Wayne Teachers upset the favored Maroons in the opening grid encounter of the&#13;
season for Morningside. With Woody Hetland, Joe Lease, and George Schiller seeing&#13;
all their action from the sidelines due to injuries, the Maroons were dumped to the&#13;
tune of 13-7. Statistically the Maroons were the better team, but the Wildcats outfought and outscored them with an unorthodox brand of ball.&#13;
In the second game of the year, the Maroons dumped the pre-season favorites to&#13;
win the Conference title by a score of 15-0. It was the best game of the year for the&#13;
Maroons as they were led by all conference Pete Burrow, who swept the ends and&#13;
slashed off tackle for most of the yardage the Morningsiders mustered. Ray Port,&#13;
Morningside guard, was the outstanding defensive line-man for the Maroons, sharing&#13;
honors with Ned Adams at tackle. Jack Loff and Hap Haenfler played standout roles&#13;
with Burrow in the backfield.&#13;
The Mighty Maroons opened their home season as they romped to a one-sided&#13;
win over the Dakota Wesleyan Tigers of Mitchell, South Dakota, with a score of&#13;
28-0. Dewey Halford and Woody Hetland led the Maroon attack behind an efficiently&#13;
working line.&#13;
&#13;
The heretofore hapless Omaha Indians suddenly came to life and lambasted the&#13;
Maroons to the tune of 14-0, with a first half attack that netted both their touchdowns.&#13;
The Maroons' only threat came in the second quarter when they were stopped on the&#13;
Indian 25 yard marker by the failure of a lateral pass to click. The Morningsiders&#13;
were without a doubt a different ball club than that which played South Dakota&#13;
University the week before.&#13;
Morningside's homecoming was spoiled by one lone touchdown thrust in the first&#13;
half that gave Iowa State Teachers College a 7-0 win over Morningside. A high wind&#13;
hampered the play of both teams. The Maroons were playing without the services&#13;
of Ray Port and Jack Loff who were relegated to the sidelines because of injuries.&#13;
Again the Maroons dominated the statistics.&#13;
The following week-end, the luckless Maroons&#13;
were soundly trounced by the South Dakota State&#13;
College Jackrabbits at Brookings by a score of&#13;
34-13.&#13;
Morningside closed their heart-breaking season&#13;
with a stinging defeat from the Nodaks of North&#13;
Dakota University, 27-7. Morningside's only score&#13;
came in the second quarter as Art Lundblad caught&#13;
a deflected pass in the end zone. The statistics&#13;
were even, but the Maroon defense was caught&#13;
napping as the Nodaks pushed over four touchdowns.&#13;
&#13;
- S. C. Tribun e.&#13;
&#13;
BALLENTINE&#13;
&#13;
FEIKEMA&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-on e&#13;
&#13;
BURROWS&#13;
&#13;
HAENFLER&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
�PETE BURROW&#13;
"Pete" wound up a brilliant career of three years as a regular in the Maroon backfield by being selected as the team's most valuable player by his teammates. "Pete"&#13;
was also selected all conference quarterback this year. "Pete's" field generalship&#13;
will be greatly missed by Saundy next year.&#13;
&#13;
DUANE HALFORD&#13;
Dewey was again the speed merchant and spark plug of this year's aggregation.&#13;
He is a junior and this year as last, he alternated with Pete in the running back&#13;
position. Dewey is little and fast and packs the dynamite of a munitions dump.&#13;
GENE KENNEDY&#13;
&#13;
JACK LOFF&#13;
Jack Loff came to us as a Junior College transfer from Eveleth, Minnesota. He&#13;
came here as an end, but his speed prompted Saundy to transfer him to the wingback&#13;
post. Jack was one of the fastest men on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
Gene is a speedy back with the unusual ability of being able to play at any spot.&#13;
Gene made his first letter as a handyman, but should come into his own in his&#13;
remaining two years as a Maroon.&#13;
JOHN LITECKY&#13;
&#13;
RAY PORT&#13;
Ray Port, scrappy guard, made his second letter as he fought off the injury jinx&#13;
that has hampered him all through his collegiate career. Ray was one of the unsung&#13;
heroes of this year's front wall.&#13;
ART LUNDBLAD&#13;
Art Lundblad battled for three years to gain his position on the Maroon starting&#13;
line-up. He was converted from a tackle to center to plug up the gap in the center&#13;
of the line. Art carries on the tradition of small but rugged centers at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
A Junior college transfer student, John was hampered by injuries. He is a good&#13;
pass receiving end, and has another season to make his letter.&#13;
STEVE SMILONICH&#13;
Another Junior college transfer that made good his first year with Morningside.&#13;
Steve was playing his first year as a guard, having been transferred from tackle.&#13;
Steve should do big things next year.&#13;
GEORGE SCHILLER&#13;
&#13;
DON MICHAELSON&#13;
"Mike," better known for his basketball prowess, made his first football letter as&#13;
regular end on the eleven. "Mike," who winds up his athletic career at Morningside&#13;
this year, is big and rugged.&#13;
HAP HAENFLER&#13;
Hap was the regular blocking back on the eleven in his&#13;
sophomore year. He has the reputation of a brother to Jive&#13;
up to here, and if first year is any indication, he won't have&#13;
any trouble.&#13;
CHUCK SHERIDAN&#13;
&#13;
Schiller has the build of a guard and made his first letter at that position last&#13;
fall. George is in there fighting his heart out all the time, and should gain recognition next year.&#13;
DON WIDLER&#13;
Don, as a sophomore, was a dependable lineman. He&#13;
lettered at tackle. Don is hard as nails, and has two more&#13;
seasons to gain that regular starting position he seeks.&#13;
DON BALLANTINE&#13;
Don is a big boy who lettered at tackle as a sophomore.&#13;
He played some very outstanding games at his favorite&#13;
position. He is a hard worker who should be very valuable&#13;
in there the next two years.&#13;
&#13;
"Moose" is one of the brightest lights for next year. He&#13;
took over a tackle position this year as a sophomore, and&#13;
opposing tackles are still bemoaning the fact. Chuck is at&#13;
his best when the going gets rough.&#13;
NED ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE KOCH&#13;
&#13;
Ned is a junior, and served his second year as a letter&#13;
winner. Ned is a two hundred pounder and alternates between tackle and guard. He is a tough customer, especially&#13;
when he gets riled.&#13;
&#13;
George earned his second football letter by alternating&#13;
with Lundblad at the center post. He is very small for a&#13;
center, but he more than offset this with fight and speed.&#13;
&#13;
HAKALA&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HALFORD&#13;
&#13;
HETLAND&#13;
&#13;
WOODY HETLAND&#13;
&#13;
KOCH&#13;
&#13;
Woody is another three year regular who ended a brilliant career with the Maroons. Hard hitting Woody is one&#13;
of the best backs to attend Morningside in recent years.&#13;
His powerhouse drives through the center of the line will&#13;
be hard. to replace next season.&#13;
MICHAELSON&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KRZNARICI-1&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
LUNDBLAD&#13;
&#13;
Fift y- two&#13;
&#13;
SCHILLER&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
SHERIDAN&#13;
&#13;
SMILON!CH&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
PORT&#13;
&#13;
\VIDLER&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
�JOHN KRZNARICH&#13;
John was as tough as his name. John earned his second letter as a regular although hampered by an elbow injury. It was this injury that hit the Maroons the&#13;
hardest. It is players with John's love of the game and team spirit that makes for&#13;
winning teams.&#13;
BOB HAKALA&#13;
Bob was shifted from a guard spot to the fullback post to strengthen it because&#13;
of Hetland's injury. Bob came from Virginia, Minnesota, and earned two letters&#13;
here through his aggressive hard play.&#13;
LEO SMITH&#13;
Leo was the handyman of the squad. He played every position, and although he&#13;
failed to earn a letter, he was out there battling every inch of the way.&#13;
BERNIE FEIKEMA&#13;
"Feik" was a sophomore this year, but his greenness didn't show out on the gridiron. Feik gained the reputation of the best pass snatcher on the team, and one of&#13;
the hardest workers in earning his first letter.&#13;
DEA FORBES&#13;
Dean is small for an end, but did himself proud down at Omaha last fall. Dean&#13;
will have his chance at a regular berth next fall , and we are expecting great things&#13;
from him.&#13;
JOE LEASE&#13;
Joe was hampered by a pre-season injury that slowed him up considerably. Joe&#13;
is one of the hardest blockers on the squad, as well as a tough defensive man. He&#13;
should help us the next two seasons.&#13;
DON LEOPOLD&#13;
Don is a ruggedly built boy who was coming along fast at the end of the season.&#13;
Don could help the Maroons with his speed and size if he would supply the determination. He has two more years.&#13;
BOB REESE&#13;
Bob did not see any action, but was making it tough for the varsity. Bob has&#13;
two more seasons.&#13;
SWEDE REILLY&#13;
Swede, the fighting Irishman, likes it best when the going is rugged. He is a&#13;
footballer who really loves the game. He is not out there for glory, but to muss up&#13;
his man, which he usually does.&#13;
TOMMY THOMPSON&#13;
Tommy understudied two veteran centers this year. He should come into his own,&#13;
and be one of the Maroons' traditionally strong centers in the next two seasons.&#13;
EARL GOODENOW&#13;
Earl is a boy who did not play high school football. He looks like an end, and&#13;
has two more seasons to make a letter.&#13;
&#13;
McCoy, R . Logue, S teck, Ott , C. Logue, Rey nol ds, Robar, S tone .&#13;
&#13;
One of the smallest squads in the history of freshman football answered Coach&#13;
Honie Rogers' call. The season was not only unique for the size of the squad, but,&#13;
because of i obs and laboratory work, it was hard for the coach to get enough men&#13;
together to do the necessary practicing. The squad boasted of such stars as: Charles&#13;
Logue, Dale Robar, Chet Axthl em, Merle Stone, Orlan Ott, Melvin McNight, Gene&#13;
compton, Les Fones, Tom Kenn y, Bud Chambers, Lloyd Wiltsey, Russ Logue, Stanley&#13;
Simmons, Eugent Strover, Jack Steck, and Bob Bennett. Some of these boys sh owed&#13;
promise of becoming future Maroons of notabl e repute.&#13;
They played only one game, and that was against the Coyote Pups of South&#13;
Dakota Umversity. This game ended m a 0-0 deadlock with the future Maroons&#13;
dominating the statistics, in fact, they did not allow the Coyote P ups a first down .&#13;
&#13;
"M" club&#13;
The " M" Club, consisting of the major letter winners in school is one of the&#13;
oldest organizations on the Morningside campus. It has been an active organization&#13;
of the campus for thirty-two years. The "Men of the M" endeavor to maintain high&#13;
standards of sportsmanship,&#13;
develop strong physical specimens, and good moral&#13;
characters. In addition, the M Club has charge of Freshman orientation, Freshman·&#13;
Sophomore Day, and the Homecoming Parade. The alumni of the oroanization&#13;
sponsor an annual dinner and get-together of the old " M" men each year at Homecoming.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----------------------------------------------------·-·······---------Rober t Hakala&#13;
Vice-President ----------------------------------------------------------Elwood Hetland&#13;
Secretary --------------------------------------------------------------------------Glen Burrow&#13;
&#13;
H akal a, Sm ith, Leopold, K enne dy, H alford, Burrow, Loff, Goode no w.&#13;
T op: Adcock , Liteck y, \V idler, S trozdas, H aen Her, S heridan, Michaelson, Ballantine.&#13;
Middle : S au nderso n, Hetland, Denny, K ryznarich , B urrow, Langs ta ff, S milonich,&#13;
&#13;
Felkema.&#13;
F ront Row: Hakala, Adams, S chil ler, Koch, Port, Lundb lad, Kennedy. Halford .&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
F i ft y.four&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
�As assistant athletic director and head basketball coach, "Honie"&#13;
Rogers has established a fine reputation and position of respect.&#13;
"Honie" personifies the tradition established at Morningside, that of&#13;
providing fine coaches for the high schools of this territory.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Hopes were high as the basketball season approached, with four&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
of last year's regulars returning as well as the reserves, plus the&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
strong freshman squad of the 1938-39 season. While the team lacked&#13;
size and an undefinable something that prevented it from becoming&#13;
a consistent winner, Morningside has a spirited fighting team that&#13;
at times displayed the speed and ball handling ability for which&#13;
they are famous.&#13;
The season began as Morningside opened he r 1939-40 basketball&#13;
session on the home court against the Iowa State College Cyclones&#13;
of the Big Six Conference. The Maroons showed flashes of power,&#13;
although going down to defeat to the tune of 34-57. Morningside&#13;
was in the ball game matching the polished Cyclones basket for&#13;
basket the first half, but after intermission Iowa State gained control&#13;
and were never headed. Langstaff and Halford displayed outstanding basketball for the Maroons.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Michaelson, Hanson, Feikema, Goodenow, Sheridan, Lo ff.&#13;
Middle: Litecky, Strozdas, Cobbs, Langstaff, Jones.&#13;
Bottom: Graham, Sharp, Adcock, Brown, Halford.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
Fifty- seven&#13;
&#13;
-S. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
�The Maroons drubbed the Yankton College&#13;
&#13;
23-36, as the Tigers presented a strong double post&#13;
&#13;
Greyhounds the following week-end on the home&#13;
&#13;
offense. Langstaff again led the scorers as he&#13;
&#13;
court, 38-27. Honie substituted freely, as the en-&#13;
&#13;
racked up 15 points for Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
tire Morningside squad looked impressive as they&#13;
&#13;
Morningside spirit was still high and hopes were&#13;
undaunted as the Conference season approached.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
romped to victory over the upstate rivals.&#13;
Coach Honie Rogers' proteges then toured Kan-&#13;
&#13;
The first conference game was played against the&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
sas and Missouri, during the Christmas holidays,&#13;
&#13;
highly favored South Dakota State Jackrabbits at&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
and met three strong teams from the heart of the&#13;
&#13;
Brookings. The Maroons played outstanding bas-&#13;
&#13;
basketball country.&#13;
&#13;
The first game was played&#13;
&#13;
ketball, only to lose in the closing minutes, 39-45.&#13;
&#13;
against Washburn College at Topeka, Kansas.&#13;
&#13;
Langstaff led the attack as the entire Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, playing good basketball, lost a hard-&#13;
&#13;
team played well.&#13;
&#13;
fought game, 37-41, after they led throughout the&#13;
&#13;
The following week, Morningside entertained&#13;
&#13;
first three quarters of this close game. Strozdas&#13;
&#13;
the Bison of North Dakota State, and were again&#13;
&#13;
and Adcock looked best for the Maroons.&#13;
&#13;
defeated 36-51, as the eventual Conference Champs&#13;
&#13;
The following night, Morningside was enter-&#13;
&#13;
·State Teachers took the measure of the Maroons,&#13;
&#13;
Kansas City. The Maroons were handicapped by a&#13;
&#13;
33-40, as the Morningsiders again surrendered an&#13;
&#13;
tremendous height advantage, and lost a ragged&#13;
&#13;
early lead at Cedar Falls. Again the luckless Ma-&#13;
&#13;
game, 24-36. The weary Maroons met Wichita Uni-&#13;
&#13;
roons were defeated as Omaha University out-&#13;
&#13;
versity the third night and agam tasted defeat,&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
&#13;
hit the basket consistently from all angles. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
tained by the Union Wire and Rope Corporation in&#13;
&#13;
played us on Omaha court.&#13;
&#13;
Cobbs&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
\I •&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-eigh t&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside entertained her ancient rival, South&#13;
Dakota University, upon the home court, January&#13;
&#13;
versity by the score of 33-45, on South Dakota's&#13;
court, February 6.&#13;
&#13;
6, and could not withstand a second half rally by&#13;
&#13;
Morningside closed her season with two more&#13;
&#13;
the Coyotes that spelled defeat, 28-33. The Maroons surprised the Coyotes with 19-11 halftime&#13;
&#13;
and Iowa State Teachers' College, 39-40. Both of&#13;
&#13;
defeats upon the home court from Omaha, 33-37,&#13;
&#13;
lead, and went on to maintain a 24-21 margin at&#13;
&#13;
these contests were very well played, and they were&#13;
&#13;
the three-quarter mark, but faded in the waning&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
anybody's ball game up until the final gun.&#13;
&#13;
minutes. On the following Monday, the Maroons&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
The Maroons lose two outstanding basketball&#13;
&#13;
journeyed to Ames and were defeated by a score&#13;
&#13;
players from the varsity squad via graduation. Don&#13;
&#13;
of 36-58, which was nearly identical to the first&#13;
&#13;
Michaelson, twice chosen all-conference and one of&#13;
&#13;
game of the season when the Cyclones also took&#13;
&#13;
the finest basketball players Morningside has ever&#13;
&#13;
our measure.&#13;
&#13;
produced, will be greatly missed when Honie is-&#13;
&#13;
February 3 saw Morningside do something that&#13;
&#13;
sues his call for basketball aspirants next fall.&#13;
&#13;
no other team in the Conference has been able to&#13;
do, that was to beat North Dakota University three&#13;
&#13;
"Mike" has made three letters.&#13;
&#13;
times in a row, in a thrilling over-time game, 41-38.&#13;
&#13;
who was always a threat on offense, and a great&#13;
&#13;
Langstaff and Adcock played outstanding roles in&#13;
&#13;
team player, will leave a large hole for Coach&#13;
&#13;
this upset victory. The Maroons suffered their sec-&#13;
&#13;
Rogers to fill. Al has earned two monograms.&#13;
&#13;
Al Strozdas, a very outstanding defensive guard&#13;
&#13;
ond defeat from the Coyotes of South Dakota Uni-&#13;
&#13;
Langstaff&#13;
&#13;
Sh e ridan&#13;
Mi cha e l son&#13;
&#13;
Litecky&#13;
&#13;
Sixt y&#13;
&#13;
Sixty. one&#13;
&#13;
Strozdas&#13;
&#13;
�TOUCH BALL&#13;
&#13;
COMETS&#13;
&#13;
HORSESHOE CHA MPION&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Top : Robar, Nutt, DcMaine, R. Logue, C. Logue.&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
B ottom : Wa ll en, Wertz, Steck.&#13;
&#13;
The Freshmen this year enjo yed an undefeate d season under Coach Hugh Luby's&#13;
&#13;
A complete Intramural sports program of nine events was planned for this year.&#13;
&#13;
tutelage. They were the bright spot of this year's basketball campaign, and should&#13;
&#13;
There were two fall tournaments, which were horsesh oe and touchball , the former&#13;
&#13;
help tremen dously toward Morningside's titl e hopes in the future.&#13;
&#13;
being introduced this year. Al Strozdas won the horseshoe medal while the Comets&#13;
&#13;
About thirty-five candida tes reported in answer to the call for freshman talent&#13;
&#13;
were the winners of the touchba\l scramble.&#13;
&#13;
from which the following ten men were chosen: Deiters, VanderBerg, DeMaine, Steck.&#13;
C. Logue, R. Logue, Robar, Wallen, Wertz, and Nutt. These men bore the brunt of&#13;
&#13;
Spirited play marked the intramural basketball schedule in the firs t of the winter&#13;
&#13;
the season's play, and should suppl ement the returning varsity squad and bounce&#13;
&#13;
sports, as the Foo Goos and the Sigma Theta Rho fraternity tied a t the end of the&#13;
&#13;
Morningside back into the thick of the&#13;
&#13;
orth Central Conference titl e chase.&#13;
&#13;
regular play. The Foo Goos succeeded in downing the Fraternity men in the playoff.&#13;
Red Langstaff defeated Roy Brown for the ping pong championship .&#13;
&#13;
THE SEASON'S SUMMARY&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
&#13;
D enny&#13;
&#13;
Slvev&#13;
&#13;
Maroons..............................40&#13;
Maroons.............................. 28&#13;
Maroons..............................40&#13;
Maroons .............................. 32&#13;
Maroons.............................. 38&#13;
Maroons.............................. 38&#13;
Maroons..............................34&#13;
Maroons..............................51&#13;
Maroons.............................. 55&#13;
&#13;
The spring tournaments consisted of kittenball, golf, and tennis. Interest was&#13;
&#13;
Old Home Bread ............................ 11&#13;
All Stars ........................................ 28&#13;
All Stars ........................................ 26&#13;
South Dakota Frosh ...................... 19&#13;
South Dakota Frosh...................... 25&#13;
Omaha Frosh ................................18&#13;
Omaha Frosh ................................ 28&#13;
De Molay ...................................... 32&#13;
Bronson ....................................... 28&#13;
&#13;
Although track is listed as a major sport, and has brought&#13;
more la urels to Morningside than any other sport, interest&#13;
has been receding in the past few years until this season.&#13;
Earl y indications are that activity will increase with the&#13;
active lettermen being suppl emented by an inexperienced&#13;
squad that may help regain some of Morningside's track&#13;
prestige.&#13;
Dave Denn y is the ou tstanding hurdl er in the Conference,&#13;
and Vic Alvey should develop into an outstanding half.&#13;
mil er. These two men lettered last season in their favorite&#13;
events.&#13;
&#13;
high as there were six teams entered for the ki ttenball tournament. The In tramural&#13;
Board consists of Ralph Brown, Al Strozdas, George Schiller, and John Litecky.&#13;
&#13;
H arte r&#13;
Tennis Champ&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
S i xty-two&#13;
&#13;
S i x ty - th ree&#13;
&#13;
Top : Foo Coos&#13;
Basketba l l Champs&#13;
B ottom: Langstaff, Brown&#13;
Pi ng Pong&#13;
&#13;
Golf&#13;
&#13;
�Miss Jeanne Scott came to Morningside this year to replace Miss&#13;
Lois Brinkman as Head of the Women's Athletics Department. She&#13;
was graduated from the University of Illinois where she majored&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
in Physical Education. She has put forth a great deal of enthusiasm&#13;
and an interest in all sports and proved herself to be a capable&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
instructor and leader. Under her supervision, the women's athletic&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
department completed four seasonal sports, presented two dance&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
festivals, and conducted a dancing class. Her favorite sports are&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
golf, swimming and horseback riding. Miss Scott organized on the&#13;
coll ege campus, "Orchesis"- an organization of the study of modern,&#13;
interpretative, and original dances. Only the upper classmen were&#13;
members of this group and they presented a modern dance in the&#13;
Spring Festival.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Sixty -four&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
Sixt y- five&#13;
&#13;
�W.A.A.Board&#13;
&#13;
R. K ingsbury, weed,&#13;
&#13;
Wike rt , Mi ller, Forsberg , Collier, Smi th .&#13;
&#13;
K. B rown, Saunde rson, N. K ingsbury, Lowry, Marcussen, Cairy,&#13;
&#13;
D. Brown, Waddell.&#13;
&#13;
-S. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Warner, Forsberg, Lowry, Nelson, Wallen.&#13;
&#13;
Bottom : Weed, Cheely, Collier.&#13;
&#13;
On March _ the annual Yale-Harvard game was played. The two teams were&#13;
15,&#13;
selected' for their playing ability, sportsmanship, and the completion of practice&#13;
hours. The members were chosen by Miss Scott, class captains, basketball captain,&#13;
and the president of W. A. A.&#13;
The game was the best of the season, as the two teams were very evenly matched.&#13;
The Harvard team nosed out a victory by only one score-20-19. The honorary&#13;
basketball players were decided upon after the Yale-Harvard game, and they are&#13;
as follows:&#13;
&#13;
The W. A. A. board for this year was composed of Joyce Weed,&#13;
president ; Dorothy Ann Olson, vice-president; Shirley Wallen, secretary ; Marjorie Nelson, treasurer; Nancy Lowry, badminton chairman; Nancy Kingsbury, basketball chairman; Frances Forsberg,&#13;
social chairman; Patricia Warner, awards chairman; Winifred&#13;
Cheeley, publicity chairman; Janice Collier, archery; Virginia Al-&#13;
&#13;
Guards&#13;
Nancy Lowry&#13;
Shirley Wall en&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
&#13;
Forwards&#13;
Joyce Weed&#13;
Marian Mill er&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
len, tennis; and Charlotte Robinson, volleyball chairman. This&#13;
board controlled the wome n's sports program. Their activities include such sports as tennis, badminton, archery, over-night hikes,&#13;
golf and other individual sports. They also sponsored the annual&#13;
&#13;
The Members of the Yale and Harvard Teams&#13;
&#13;
" Play Day," attended by Senior girls from surrounding high schools.&#13;
&#13;
Harvard Team&#13;
Nancy Lowry, Captain&#13;
Zola Marcussen&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Louice Cairy&#13;
Ella Jean Waddell&#13;
Dorothy Brown&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Katherine Brown&#13;
&#13;
Yale Team&#13;
Joyce Weed, Captain&#13;
Shirley Wallen&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
Janice Collier&#13;
Ruth Kin gsbury&#13;
Maxine Smith&#13;
Marian Miller&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The annual swimming meet was held at the Y. W. C. A. on March 8. Spectators&#13;
were entertained with individual and team events of speed and skill. The Sioux&#13;
City Mariners gave demonstrations as a special feature . The individual awards were&#13;
won by Geraldine Satrang and Bob Mohr. The team trophy was won by the Kappa&#13;
Zeta Chi Sorority.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
D. Brown, Cairy, Scott, Forsberg, Coe, Nelson, Waddell , Kingsbu ry , Col lier,&#13;
Weed, Cheely, Hanson.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�The Winter Festival , sponsored annuall y by W. A. A., had as its theme selections&#13;
from the "Nutcracker Suite." The story was woven around the nutcracker which was&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
given as a Christmas present to a little child. As he fall s asleep beneath the Christ-&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
mas tree, he dreams about to y soldiers, sugar sticks, etc. The dances, participated in&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
by the women students of the ph ysical educati on department, represented th e dreams&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
of the child . There were man y very modern and routin e dan ces that were ori ginal&#13;
and worked out by the dancers. The climax of the story was the throne room of&#13;
the queen and the visit of the child led b y the nutcracker who had come to life.&#13;
&#13;
BAS KET BALL Champs&#13;
To p : Sophomore T eam&#13;
Bottom: Zet T eam&#13;
&#13;
intramural and cl ass tournaments were held this year as usual and th e four annual&#13;
sports brou ght out the interes t of all th e girl s.&#13;
Basketball produ ced keen competition and proved to be a ver y successful season.&#13;
This year, the Zets won the. round-robin sorority tournament, while the enthusiasti c&#13;
Sophomores captured the class tourney. Members of the Zet team were Nancy Kingsbury, Louise Cairy, Katherine Brown, Marian Mill er, Betty Lou Saunderson, Nancy&#13;
Lowry, Mildred Wikert, Winifred Cheeley, Ella Jean Waddell, Alice Hanson, Joyce&#13;
Weed, Janice Collier, Dorothy Ann Ol son, and Ruth Kin gsbury.&#13;
The Sophomore team was composed of Katherine Brown, Betty Lou Saunderson,&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury, Marian Miller, Ella Jean Waddell , and Louise Cairy.&#13;
The tournament captains this year were :&#13;
Freshman ....................................................Zola Marcussen&#13;
Sophomore........................................ Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
In the sprin g the women's athl etic department presents a dance f estival similar to&#13;
the winter festival. It is at this festival that the May Queen is crowned. The queen&#13;
is a Freshman girl , and is voted upon by the entire student body. There is much&#13;
pomp and ceremony at this coronation, and it is a very impressive occasion. In 1939&#13;
th e May Queen was Ruth Kingsbury and attendants were Marian Miller, Katherine&#13;
Brown, Virginia Boline, and Lauretta Kin g. Miss Kin gsbu ry was crowned by Mildred&#13;
Wikert, the queen of 1938 . This year, the spring festival was based upon the progression of the dance, beginnin g with Indian dances and comin g up to the very modern interpretative dances of the present.&#13;
&#13;
Aths ...................................................... Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
l\li l ler, B row n , Miss Ki ngsbu ry, King. Boline .&#13;
&#13;
The voll eyball season was under way and had not been compl eted when the yea r&#13;
book went to press. The tennis and badminton tournaments were pl ayed in the la te&#13;
spring and the participation of all individual sports was started.&#13;
&#13;
Soccer&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Six ty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Arch e ry&#13;
&#13;
Hockey&#13;
&#13;
�The importance of good health was stressed during the annual health week, February 27 to March 2. Twenty-four good posture tags were awarded in Monday chapel&#13;
to Glennys Corderman, Ruth Kingsbury, Ruth Olsen, Alice Hanson, Betty Lou Saunderson, Ralph Brown, Velma Swanson, Garry Wallman, La Vonne Wertz, Dewey Halford, Earl Hicks, Lawrence Johnson, Betty Lou Welding, Connie Gall, Helen Osbey,&#13;
Lester Olson, Harriet Swanson, Gary Fischer, Orlan Ott, Morgan Harrison, Dorothy&#13;
Carrigg.&#13;
Dr. Elizabeth Mochrie gave a very interesting talk on " Health" on the Tuesday of&#13;
health week at the Morningside Christian Association.&#13;
The King and Queen of Health were presented to the students at the all-college&#13;
dance held on the Saturday of Health Week. The 4-H requirements were the basis&#13;
upon which the health winners were chosen. The King and Queen were Lester Menke&#13;
and Ruth Olsen; the attendants were Nancy Lowry, David Denny, Ella Jean Waddell ,&#13;
and John Kolp.&#13;
On Friday night there was held a volley ball game between the "Brains" and the&#13;
" Brawn," a wrestling match with Albert Haenfler and Forrest Simons as contestants,&#13;
and a basketball game between the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority and Ishkoodah. The&#13;
volleyball game was won by the " Brawn," and the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority won the&#13;
basketball game.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Weed&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
The highest award that W. A. A. confers upon a girl is the presentation of a&#13;
sweater award. Many requirements are necessary fo r this award, and it is a symbol&#13;
of good sportsmanship, "scholarship and leadership. The sweaters were given to Joyce&#13;
Weed, Mary Stankiewicz and Alberta Seavey.&#13;
&#13;
Yeah Morningside-M-0-R-N-I-N-G-S-I-D-E- ! Costumed in the traditional Maroon&#13;
and White, Maynard P orter, Kathryn Brown, Ted Walensky, and Winifred Cheely&#13;
led the Pep Club for the past year. To these four should go the appreciation of the&#13;
entire student body, for the faithful service and energetic efforts to increase the&#13;
&#13;
Lowry, Waddell , Olsen&#13;
&#13;
spirit of Morningside's teams.&#13;
&#13;
Me nke, Kolp, Denny&#13;
&#13;
Top: P orter, Walensk y.&#13;
B otto m : Chee ly, B row n.&#13;
&#13;
Seve nt y&#13;
&#13;
S event y-one&#13;
&#13;
�5&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Chief .................................... Packard Woll e&#13;
Medicine Man ...................... Garry Wallman&#13;
Wampum Taker.. .............. Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Executive Council.. ............Ruth Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
'"Kid Party"&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux Scalpers was organized as one of the first acts of the new student&#13;
council. Its purpose was to create and maintain a higher standard of school spirit.&#13;
Charter members were chosen from the peppiest of the four classes, and the club&#13;
began activities.&#13;
Stringent rules were enforced about absences, and the executive committee replaced new members from a long waiting list. In the Friday chapel before the&#13;
Wayne game, some more energetic scalpers journeyed to Wayne and captured the&#13;
season's first scalp. After a mournful fun eral for the deceased was held, the scalp&#13;
and contents-four healthy cockroaches-were placed in the trophy case. Scalpers,&#13;
under the direction of Winifred Cheely, proved themselves capable dramatists when&#13;
they presented stunts before the football and basketball games. The Homecoming&#13;
snake dance was led by scalpers, and Garry Wallman and Packard Wolle explained&#13;
the significance of the club to the radio audience on two different occasions. Once,&#13;
during the first semester, the organization held its skuffle. This was a "Kid Party"&#13;
under the chairmanship of Garry Wallman and Millie Wikert, and here Scalpers&#13;
played hop-scotch, drop-the-handkerchief, and ate hot dogs to their heart's content.&#13;
Sioux Scalpers is a permanent organization, and under the guidance of Professor&#13;
Marshall. They look forward to many more successful fun-filled years in the future.&#13;
&#13;
Sadie Hawkins Day was re-enacted by a worthy cast of Scalpers again under the&#13;
guidance of Winifred Cheely, and some of the day's success can be attributed to the&#13;
good work of the Sioux Scalpers. Winning costumes were worn by Glennys Corderman, Dorothy Gartner, Marlyn P ederson, and Edgar Graham.&#13;
Sadie Hawkins Day&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College is fortunate in having at the head of its&#13;
Forensic department a man as capable as Mendal B. Miller. Not&#13;
only does Mr. Miller have the ability to produce fine debaters, but&#13;
he is himself a fluent speaker displaying a keen sense of humor.&#13;
Mr. Miller is past president of the Iowa Forensic Association.&#13;
and now holds the office of secretary.&#13;
&#13;
S eventy -three&#13;
&#13;
�Fred Davenport, Robert Hamel, Ted Whicher, and Robert Rae&#13;
represented the college at the St. Thomas tournament in St. Paul.&#13;
The State Forensics meeting was held in Cedar Rapids the second&#13;
week in March. The boys' team consisting of Fred Davenport and&#13;
Robert Hamel received a superior rating.&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Booth and&#13;
&#13;
Shirley Smith were awarded an excellent rating. Miss Booth received the distinction of superior rating on her individual debating&#13;
ability. The same two teams again represented Morningside at the&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta national convention in Knoxville, Tennessee, the&#13;
third week in March. Mr. Davenport and Mr. Hamel were awarded&#13;
the rating of excellent.&#13;
&#13;
Intercollegiate debate was unusually stimulating this year because&#13;
of the timely question being discussed-"Resolved: That the United&#13;
States should adopt a policy of strict economic and military isolation&#13;
from all nations outside of the western hemisphere involved in&#13;
international or civil conflict."&#13;
The annual pre-season non-decision debate tournament was held&#13;
at Omaha University in November. During the following month&#13;
debates were carried on with colleges and universities in the surrounding territory.&#13;
&#13;
Booth&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Wa lt e r&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
Ham e l&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
S eventy-four&#13;
&#13;
S eve nty - five&#13;
&#13;
�5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HAMEL&#13;
&#13;
GERALDINE BOOTH&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Students achieving certain honors in debate, oratory, or extemporaneous speaking and maintaining a high scholastic standing are&#13;
eligible for membership in Morningside's Iowa Delta chapter of&#13;
P i Kappa Delta. This is a national honorary fo rensic fra terni ty.&#13;
During the year the group has both study and social meetings.&#13;
Geraldine Booth, Shirley Smith, Fred Davenport, and Robert&#13;
Hamel, accompanied by Mendal B. Miller, were the Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
representatives at the national Pi K appa Delta meeting in Knoxville,&#13;
SHIRLEY SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FRED DAVENPORT&#13;
&#13;
Tennessee, during March. At this tournament the boys' team was&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
awarded an excellent rating.&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT RAE&#13;
TED WHICHER&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
BYRON WALTER&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS FOR DELTA CHAPTER&#13;
President ................................................................................ Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President ......................................................................Dale Harter&#13;
Secretary-Treas urer .................................................... Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
r&#13;
f&#13;
Seven ty-six&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
�Throu gh the efforts of professor.·Paul MacCo llin , the Con servator y of Mu sic has com e to be known as one of the finest in the&#13;
Middl e West. The success of the Morningside Coll ege Methodist&#13;
Choir is due to his ceaseless activity and perseve rance. " Mr. Mac"&#13;
has been named by leading music critics of the United States a&#13;
genius of conductin g and a marvel in his ability to train a group of&#13;
singers in so acc urate and precise a musical manner.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
�5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Fritzsche, Albert. Woodford, santee, Ling.&#13;
Nelson, Barre tt , Lowry, Brooke, Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President -------------------------------------------------··········--·-···Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
Vice-President.. ..................................................Martha Helen elson&#13;
Recording Secretary............................................................Betty Ling&#13;
Corresponding Secretary......................................Edythe Mae Albert&#13;
Alumnae Secretary......................................................Lucille Johnson&#13;
Treasurer.............................................................. Esther Mary Santee&#13;
Historian ---------------·-··················----------·-·····----------------Dorothy Brooke&#13;
W arden ................................................................Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Chaplain --··········-----···········-----···-----------·····----------------Faith Woodford&#13;
On the ninth day of November, 1939, Phi Zeta Chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, the&#13;
National Music Honor Sorority, celebrated its tenth year as a stimulating influence&#13;
for musical excellence.&#13;
This society is composed of junior and senior girls and faculty women of the&#13;
Conservatory who have achieved superior scholastic and music attainments.&#13;
A business delegate will represent Phi Zeta Chapter at the National Convention&#13;
which will be held in Cincinnati, Ohio, during the summer of 1940.&#13;
&#13;
Sloan, Emme, Rozeboom , Iseminger.&#13;
&#13;
The male quartet is composed of Grayson Sloan, Gene Emme, Bill Rozeboom,&#13;
and George l seminger. The quartet is often in demand for programs in the city, and&#13;
was a fea ture number for informal concerts on the chapel choir tour.&#13;
&#13;
The Madrigal Singers is an organization active du ring the holiday season. The&#13;
group has provided music for chapel programs and various organizations in the city.&#13;
Included in the membership are: Alice Scott, Lucille Fritzsche, Ruth Harris, Genevieve Whittington, Edith Jensen, Gene Emme, Thomas Moon, George l seminger,&#13;
and Bill Roseboom.&#13;
&#13;
m. E. A. Trio&#13;
This string ensemble takes part in the M. C. A. broadcast every Sunday morning,&#13;
besides furnishing music for other numerous occasions. The M. C. A. trio is composed&#13;
of Edith Jensen, piano; Homer Garretson, violin; and Robe rt Feick, cello.&#13;
Jensen, Fe ick , Garretson.&#13;
&#13;
One of the small ensembles in the Conservatory is the Brass Quartet, composed&#13;
of Oliver Mogck, Jack Suffiel d, Grayson Sloan, and Bob Brooks. It was featured on&#13;
the band trip, and has appeared in Conservatory recitals.&#13;
&#13;
Brooks, S loan, Suffield, Mogck.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty&#13;
Eight y-one&#13;
&#13;
�The sen es of six brilliant concerts offered to the patrons of the 1939-40 Sioux&#13;
The Student String Quartet is composed of&#13;
Martha H elen Nelson, Na ncy Lowry, Marian&#13;
Stickles, and Charlotte Williams. The quartet&#13;
is in co nstant demand for performances in&#13;
Sioux City and the surroundin g territory. It is&#13;
noted for superb rendition of classical composi tion s, both old a nd new.&#13;
&#13;
City Concert Course is undoubtedly one of the most outstanding groups of entertainment and cultural attractions Sioux City has ever had in one season.&#13;
&#13;
Nel so n, Lowry , William s, Stick l es.&#13;
&#13;
" THREE HITS AND A MISS"&#13;
Lily Pons&#13;
Marcel Huber t&#13;
&#13;
Gene Emme, Merri e Jun e Heet land, Bill Rozeboom , George Isemin gcr.&#13;
&#13;
Coolid ge Q ua rtet&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
Ku cinski , Mossma n, Kinney , Rudd .&#13;
&#13;
The F aculty String Quartet is composed of Leo Ku cinski , violin; Bennta&#13;
Mossman, violin; Arnold Rudd, viola;&#13;
a nd Gordon Kinn ey, cello. Under the&#13;
direction of Mr. Kuci nski, the quartet&#13;
has been hi ghl y praised and recognized&#13;
in mu sic gro ups of Sioux City an d surroundin g territory.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Simon Barer&#13;
Vron sky a nd Babin&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Robert Nicholson&#13;
&#13;
Eighty . three&#13;
&#13;
�5&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
The Mornin gside Coll ege Band is under the direction of Everett Timm , one of&#13;
the finest fluti sts in the United States. Besides bein g a concert organization, it is a&#13;
medium for promotion of pep at football and basketball games of which Morningside can be justl y proud.&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
Bob Lowry&#13;
Edith Jensen&#13;
Lawrence J ohn son&#13;
Brown Garlock&#13;
Marion Benton&#13;
Gene Dauffe nb ach&#13;
Bob Hicks&#13;
Eln a Van Camp&#13;
Evelyn Capener&#13;
J ea n White&#13;
Lucille John son&#13;
Leonard Leeds&#13;
Norm an Uehle&#13;
Thom as Thompson&#13;
J ea nn e Anderson&#13;
Leona Witze nburg&#13;
Jea n Jon es, Drum Maior&#13;
&#13;
Ardi s Hall&#13;
Eu ge ne Orner&#13;
Oscar Towler&#13;
Charles Meachem,&#13;
Equipment Manager&#13;
Francis Kin gsbury&#13;
Kenneth Klass&#13;
Clari ce Rohweder&#13;
Vera Smith, Drum Major&#13;
Grayson Sloan,&#13;
A ssistant Conducto r&#13;
Louise Madi son&#13;
Philip Baker&#13;
Harry Werder&#13;
Jimm y Adams&#13;
Mildred P fe iffer&#13;
Devon Hahn , Librarian&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Smyphony is sponsored by the Sioux City Civic Music Association, under the direction of Leo Kucinski, head of the violin department in the Con-&#13;
&#13;
Oliver Mo gck&#13;
Jack Suffield, Hall Manager&#13;
Dean Brox,&#13;
P ersonnel Manager&#13;
Genevieve Whittin gton,&#13;
Executive Secretary&#13;
Wall ace P eterson&#13;
Bill Powers&#13;
Bob Brooks&#13;
Donald Olson&#13;
Ross Harri s&#13;
Odell Woods, Drum Major&#13;
Lauretta Kin g&#13;
John Sipma&#13;
Walter Brink&#13;
Bob Green&#13;
Albert HaenAer&#13;
&#13;
servatory. It is through his constant efforts and sparkling brilliancy of conductin g&#13;
that the Symphony has come to be well-recognized throughout the Northwest.&#13;
&#13;
Four of Morningside's students had the honor of being chosen as soloists&#13;
&#13;
Jones, \Vood s, Smith&#13;
Dav idso n&#13;
&#13;
in the 1939 presentation of Handel 's Messiah. Miss Alice Scott was chosen&#13;
soprano soloist with Miss Lucille Fritzsche alternate. Mr. Thomas Moon&#13;
was cho sen alternate for the tenor soloist, and Oliver Mogck was chosen&#13;
bass soloist.&#13;
&#13;
A li ce S cott&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gs ide's four drum majors, Odell Woods,&#13;
Jean Jones, Vera Smith , a nd J ani ce David son, led&#13;
the band in all parades a nd fi eld maneuvers.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
Oli ve r Mogck&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
Ei ghty-fou r&#13;
&#13;
Eight y. fi ve&#13;
&#13;
�Altos&#13;
&#13;
Sopranos&#13;
&#13;
Glennys Corderman&#13;
&#13;
Clarice Rohweder&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Cox&#13;
&#13;
Maxine Ericksen&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Long&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
Harriette Swanson&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn Capener&#13;
&#13;
Opal Walker&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Swisher&#13;
&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
&#13;
Ardis Hall&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Edythe Albert&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
&#13;
J ea n Jones&#13;
&#13;
Irene Schaal&#13;
&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Harris&#13;
&#13;
Edith J ensen&#13;
Betty Bootjer&#13;
Marjorie&#13;
&#13;
elson&#13;
&#13;
T enors&#13;
&#13;
Basses&#13;
&#13;
Bill Power&#13;
&#13;
Donald Fritzsche&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Moon&#13;
&#13;
George Iseminger&#13;
&#13;
J ames Bolton&#13;
&#13;
Oliver Mogck&#13;
&#13;
George Greene&#13;
&#13;
Keith Arnold&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence John so n&#13;
&#13;
Bill Rozeboom&#13;
&#13;
Odell Woods&#13;
&#13;
Ted Coomer&#13;
&#13;
Le Moine Van Houte n&#13;
&#13;
John Sipma&#13;
&#13;
J ack Suffield&#13;
&#13;
Richard Brenneman&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Emme&#13;
&#13;
Ross Harris&#13;
&#13;
Le Roy Kuhlman&#13;
&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Robert Caine&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Coll ege Methodist Choir has built up a high type of sacred&#13;
a capella singing, and has been recognized by well-known critics and musicians to&#13;
be one of the finest organizations of its type.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty.six&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-seve n&#13;
&#13;
�j&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
The Speech De partment of Morningside College was most for-&#13;
&#13;
Stage Manager........................Lawrence J ohnson&#13;
Dr. Gibbs&#13;
Dale Harter&#13;
&#13;
Woman in the Balcony....................lrene Schaal&#13;
Man in the Auditat·ium&#13;
Maurice Scheider&#13;
Lady in the Box................................ Betty Hoefer&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
tunate in securing Mr. John Felton, Jr., as the head this year. Mr.&#13;
&#13;
Joe CrowelL....................................... Jim Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Felton came to Morningside from the University of Iowa where he&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Howie Newsome.............................. Robert Moore&#13;
&#13;
Si mon Sti mson ............................ Bartlett Lubbers&#13;
&#13;
was an assistant in the Department of Dramatic Art. He received&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Gibbs............................Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Soames.................................. Mary McBride&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Webb&#13;
&#13;
·--········-····Donald Wertz&#13;
Constable Warren&#13;
Si CrowelL.&#13;
Edgar Graham&#13;
Baseball P layer.............................. Robert Craven&#13;
&#13;
his B. A. degree from the University of Iowa_&#13;
His able direction of all of the plays and programs of the year&#13;
&#13;
_Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
George Gibbs........................ Richard Brenneman&#13;
Rebecca Gibbs..............................Maxine Pooley&#13;
&#13;
has been well acknowledged. Mr. Felton has been assisted in the&#13;
&#13;
Wally Webb .................................... Robert F rakes&#13;
&#13;
Sam Craig.................................... Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
presentation of the plays of the year by Mrs. Felton who is also a&#13;
&#13;
Emily Webb..................................Margaret Long&#13;
&#13;
Joe Stoddard .................................. Gerald McCoy&#13;
&#13;
Professor Williard..........................Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Assistan t Stage Managers-Edward Hendricks,&#13;
&#13;
major in dramatics.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Webb ........................................ Robert Cai ne&#13;
&#13;
Edgar Graham.&#13;
&#13;
People of the Town-Dorothy Long, George Green, Scharmel Sturtevant, Irvine Thoe, Irene Johnson, Robert Craven, Betty Hoefer, Betty Lou Saunderson, Maurice Scheider, Irene Schaal,&#13;
Betty Bootjer, Philip Sandberg, Nancy Kingsbury, Kathlyn Kolp, Edward Hendricks.&#13;
&#13;
" Our Town," by Thornton Wilder, gave a picture of what transpired in a small&#13;
New England town between the years 1901 to 1914. It was a simple story, beautifull y told of the growing up, marrying, living, and dying of the people in that community. The play itself was a theatrical experiment in which a stage manager as an&#13;
actor, philosopher, and commentator, set the scenes so that the bare stage became&#13;
the proper background for the action of the play.&#13;
This 1938 Pulitzer P rize winning play was presented on November 10, in the&#13;
East High Auditorium, to a very appreciative audience.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Eighty -nine&#13;
&#13;
�CAST&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
Sil via .............................................. Maxine Pooley&#13;
&#13;
Mario ........................................ Ma urice Scheider ·&#13;
&#13;
Nora .................................................. Lu cille Gehrt&#13;
&#13;
Ma urya ..........................................Ma ry McBride&#13;
&#13;
Lisette .............................................. Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Dorante ........................................ Cliffor d Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Kathleen .................................. Mary Cruik shank&#13;
&#13;
Bartley ·······························-···Lawre nce John son&#13;
&#13;
M. Orgon .......................................... Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Pasquin .......................................... Gene Kennedy&#13;
&#13;
Valet ........................................ Lawrence J ohn son&#13;
&#13;
" Riders to the Sea," a hauntin g Irish tragedy, is a one-act play written by John&#13;
Millington Synge. The scene is in the kitchen of a fisherman's cottage on an island&#13;
&#13;
The second play of the season, " Love in Liver y," was presented in the Mornin g-&#13;
&#13;
off of th e west coast of Ireland. Maurya, who has already given a husband and five&#13;
&#13;
side Coll ege Auditorium on February 21 and 22 at 8 :00 P. M.&#13;
&#13;
sons to the sea, now lo ses Bartley and " is left with no son livin g." Th e utter dejec-&#13;
&#13;
"Love in Livery" by Pierre Marivaux is a Franch comedy, ori ginall y produced in&#13;
&#13;
tion and relief of the mother are shown by-"They're all gone now, and th ere isn't&#13;
&#13;
Paris in 1736. It is a drawin g room comedy, set in the home of M. Orgon in Paris&#13;
&#13;
anythin g more the sea can do to me-." No more does she have to wonder what way&#13;
&#13;
durin g the summ er of 1730. Orgon has promised his dau ghter, Silvia, to be married&#13;
&#13;
the wind is blowing or what " way the sea is-"&#13;
&#13;
to Dorante, th e son of an old friend of his. Neither Silvia nor Dorante are ac-&#13;
&#13;
This play was presented in a student chap el program on Wednesday, May 1, and&#13;
&#13;
quainted, so both di sguise themselves as their servants in order to observe each&#13;
&#13;
was under the direction of Dorothy Ann Ol son .&#13;
&#13;
other before their engagement. The play concerns itself with th e meetin g of Silvia&#13;
and Dorante and their fallin g in love. Th e real maid and valet al so fall in love and&#13;
the play ends happily with Silvia's advice to the lovelorn.&#13;
The play is fill ed with amu sing situations. The 18th century costumes and furniture were very different and furni shed an unusual settin g for the play.&#13;
&#13;
At the tim e of goin g to press, th e play in rehearsal to be given at Comm encement was "Th e Ro yal Famil y," by Edna Ferber and George Kaufman.&#13;
Thi s 1927 " Best Pla y" was supposedl y a caricature of th e dramaticall y great&#13;
Barrymore and Drew famil ies. The authors cl aim, however, tha t this simil arity was&#13;
onl y coin cidental. The play con cerns a famil y of three generation s of actors who&#13;
eventuall y learn that famil y ties are more important th an the glamour of the stage.&#13;
Thi s play was to be given on May 31 in th e Mornin gside Coll ege Auditorium .&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
N in ety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-o ne&#13;
&#13;
�J&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ...................................................... George lseminger&#13;
Vice-President ························-······--···----------------Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ----···········-·······-----------------Margaret Long&#13;
lsem inge r&#13;
&#13;
The Speech Department in cooperation with the Conservatory of Music, has presented a monthly program over radio station WNAX from their Sioux City studio.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Gamma Cast of Alpha P si Omega, National Honorary Dramatics fraternit y,&#13;
&#13;
This presentation has been a part of the College Hour which five colleges in this&#13;
&#13;
is an active participant in the dramatic and speech activities on the campus. Entrance&#13;
&#13;
territory have brought to the radio audience. The programs consisted of both origi-&#13;
&#13;
into the organization may be obtained by presenting fifty points earned in acting and&#13;
&#13;
nal plays and cuttings of popular plays.&#13;
&#13;
production work, with a minimum of fifteen points and a maximum of thirty-five&#13;
points in either phase of the work. Monthly meetings are held under the direction of&#13;
&#13;
The students who have participated in these presentations are: Alice Scott, Mary&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Felton, faculty sponsor for the fraternity.&#13;
&#13;
Louise Barrett, Betty Bootjer, Lawrence Johnson, Dale Harter, Lester Menke, Margaret Long, Alice Hanson, Irene Schaal, Richard Brenneman, and Kathlyn Kolp.&#13;
All of the continuity and script-writing has been done by Irvine Thoe under the&#13;
supervision of Mr. Felton.&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Collegiate Players Club has completed another successful year&#13;
on the campus. The purpose of the club is to stimulate interest in drama through&#13;
study, laboratory experience, and actual production. The organization meets every&#13;
two weeks to discuss some phase of the theatre, to present some dramatic hit, or to&#13;
have a social period and discussion.&#13;
Members of the group took an active part in cas ting and producing the year's&#13;
productions, and sponsored a one-act play. Under the able guidance of the new&#13;
director, Mr. Felton, it has presented an unusual and widely varied program.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President ..................................Margaret Lon g&#13;
Vice-President... ................. Dorothy Ann Ol son&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer .............. Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
President... ..................... Mary Eileen McBride&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President ------ --- ---------------- ---Alice Hanson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer .................. Constance Gall&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
R eese, Harter, Moore , Menke , Johnson&#13;
Waddell&#13;
D. Long, Thorpe , Hill , Miller, Ga ll&#13;
P oo l e y, H an son, Bootjer, B oot h, H oefer, Fowler, McBride&#13;
D. Brown, Cheely , M. Lon g, Wikert , Kingsbury , Ko lp , K. Brown&#13;
&#13;
�OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First S emester&#13;
Second Sem ester&#13;
President.. ______&#13;
_______ _ _&#13;
_____ ___________&#13;
_____________ _________ _ _ Lawrence Johnson Lawrence Johnson&#13;
___&#13;
_ ___&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.. ......................................................Inez Grove&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
Celia Fordyce&#13;
Secretary............................................................... .Letha Howes&#13;
Treasurer.. ..............................................................Helen Broyles&#13;
Careta Younglove&#13;
Corresponding Secretary...................................... Letha Howes&#13;
Letha Howes&#13;
PublicitY--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- .................Frances Gasink&#13;
The Morningside College Chapter of P si Chi, the National Honor Fraternity in&#13;
Psychol ogy, was chartered on June 5, 1939. Twelve hours of work in P sychology&#13;
with an average grade of B are required for membership. The organization has fo r&#13;
its purpose the stimulation of interest and research in P sych ology. The outstanding&#13;
event of the year is the presenta tion of P sych ological Demonstration Night.&#13;
Alumni Members Are:&#13;
&#13;
Members not in the picture are&#13;
Stanley Anderson&#13;
ancy Arthur&#13;
F erdinand Bah r&#13;
&#13;
Fred Davenport&#13;
Edna El ving&#13;
Catherine Rich&#13;
&#13;
George Hawn&#13;
Euba Huntsley&#13;
Dick Pawson&#13;
Dr. Edward Sibley&#13;
&#13;
Top: P . Joh nson. All e n. Booth , Il roy lcs, E. Em me.&#13;
C . Emm e, Fo rd yce, Gasi nk. Grove, ll a ka la .&#13;
L. Joh nson.&#13;
Harri son. Harte r. Ho wes. Jacobson&#13;
Bo tt om : Miller, Ho ll an d. S he ley, T hoe. Th o rng rcc n, Zechmann.&#13;
&#13;
Nine ty-fou r&#13;
&#13;
�The Student Coun cil is composed of the followin g : the president, vice-president,&#13;
and secretary-treasurer of th e student bod y; th e president of each class- Arthur&#13;
Lundbl ad, Dean Forbes, John Kolp, and Bob Hicks ; on e representative from each&#13;
class- Jan et Coe, Ruth Olsen, Geraldine Booth, Ruth Cowlin g; one representative&#13;
from the Women's Self-Go verning Association- Kathl yn Kolp; one representative&#13;
from the Conservatory- Arnold Rudd; on e representative from Pi Kappa DeltaRobert Hamel ; the editor of th e Coll egian Reporter- Fred Davenport; the presidents of M. C. A.- Dal e Harter, " M" Club- Robert Hakala, and W. A. A.--Doroth y&#13;
Ann Ol son.&#13;
Th e Student Coun cil has successfull y spon sored the followin g events : FreshmanSophomore Day, Homecomin g activities Including the barbecue, crownin g of Miss&#13;
Morningside, parade, football gam e and dance, a series of dances after basketbaJI&#13;
games, Sadie Hawkins Day dance, Hi-Ya Day and dance, Walk-out Day and dan ce,&#13;
and an all colle ge formal each semester.&#13;
They have al so spon sored a campai gn on political education which in cluded outside speak ers for the major political parties and culminated in party convention s&#13;
and a mock election.&#13;
A Campaign&#13;
&#13;
for beautifyin g th e campu s was al so successfull y carried out. Many&#13;
&#13;
beautiful trees have been planted which will lon g be a source of beauty. As a part·&#13;
in g gift, th e Coun cil has given th e school a bull etin board to be used for announcements of interest to th e student body.&#13;
Under these capabl e studen t Executives, anoth er successful year of activities of&#13;
gen eral student interest has been compl eted.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ···-----·····----·--······----·------------- -·····Morgan Harri son&#13;
Vice-President ································---- --· -····Alfred Strozdas&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ........................................Helen Osbey&#13;
&#13;
Nin ety-five&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
H appily, Bravely,&#13;
Faithfully&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President. ........................................................Betty Greene&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President... ..............................................Millicent Jensen&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Marian Preston&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary...................................... Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary............................... Verona De Mond&#13;
&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. ...................................................... Anna Marie Larson&#13;
&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain ......................................................... Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
&#13;
Critic............................................................... Helen Jen sen&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
&#13;
Alice Swanson&#13;
&#13;
lI?ez Grove&#13;
&#13;
Librarian ......................................................... Marian Preston&#13;
&#13;
Shirl eymae Zechman&#13;
&#13;
Hall Chairman ............................................... Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
&#13;
Social Chairman ............................................. Nancy Arthur&#13;
Reporter.......................................................... Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Marcia McNee&#13;
&#13;
Alice Clayton&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Jeanne Anderson&#13;
Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Verona De Mond&#13;
Betty Greene&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Alta Claire Harrison&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Top: Anderson , Be rgquist, Booth , Bootj er, B 1ooke.&#13;
Brown , Carrigg, Clayton, D cMond, Greene.&#13;
Middl e: Grove, Custeson . Ha rrison, Je nsen, H . Johnson .&#13;
I. Johnson. king larson&#13;
Preston. Rance. Rohweder.&#13;
B ottom: Schunck , Sorenson, Swanson, Thomas, verstegen,&#13;
Zechmann.&#13;
&#13;
Ninet y-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
Ann Marie Larson&#13;
Marian Preston&#13;
Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Doris Brown&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Alice Swanson&#13;
&#13;
Sophom ores&#13;
Marie Bergquist&#13;
Geraldi ne Booth&#13;
Betty Bootjer&#13;
Alice Clayton&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
Lauretta King&#13;
Clarice Rohweder&#13;
Dorothy Jean Sorenoon&#13;
Geraldine Thomas&#13;
Shirleymae Zechmann&#13;
&#13;
�To Be, R ather than&#13;
to Seem&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... ...................................................... Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Vice-President... ______________________________ ..........Margaret Long&#13;
____&#13;
_____ __ __&#13;
Recording Secretary_________________________ _ _ __ joyce Weed&#13;
&#13;
S econd Semester&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Constance Gall&#13;
Mildred Wiker t&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretar y.............................. .Lucille Pippett&#13;
Treasurer _________________&#13;
________________________&#13;
________ _&#13;
_____ jean F ow !er&#13;
First Critic_________________ _&#13;
_______&#13;
________________ :__ K athlyn Kolp&#13;
____ _____&#13;
Second Critic ___&#13;
__________________&#13;
________&#13;
________________ Constance Gall&#13;
_____&#13;
Chaplain......................................................... Irvine Thoe&#13;
Directresses _ ____________________________________ _&#13;
__&#13;
_____________Mildred Wiker t&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
___ _ _______ ______________ _______Winifred Cheely&#13;
Librarian _________________ ___ _____&#13;
Ushers_____&#13;
___________ ______ _ ______ ___________ _ _ _&#13;
___&#13;
_&#13;
_____ ___ ______ ancy Kingsbury&#13;
Norma Neilson&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Miss Jeanne Scott&#13;
&#13;
Marj orie Nelson&#13;
Jean F ow !er&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Nancy Lowr y&#13;
Louise Cairy&#13;
Barbara Barry&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Marian Miller&#13;
Ruth Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Jean Fowler&#13;
Constance Gall&#13;
Alice H anson&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Nancy Lowry&#13;
Deon Moor&#13;
Dorothy An n Olson&#13;
Irvine Thoe&#13;
Joyce Weed&#13;
&#13;
Top: Alb ert. Barrett, Barry, Brown, Cai ry, Cheely&#13;
Corderman, Dall am, Ericksen, Foster, Fowl er. Gall&#13;
Hanson , Heet land , He ld, Hitchcock, Hoefer, Kingsbury&#13;
Kol p, Lo ng, Lowry, Mill er, Moor, Ne lson&#13;
Niel son. Olson, Pippctt , Pool ey, Saunderson, St ick les, Thoe&#13;
Bottom: \Vadd ell , \Va l l en, \Veave r, We rtz. \Veed, \Vikert, Wood&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Edythe Albert&#13;
Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Winifred Cheely&#13;
Glen nys Corderm an&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
Maxine Er ickson&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
Dureth Helen Hi tchcock&#13;
Marjorie Nelson&#13;
Norma Neilson&#13;
Lucille Pippett&#13;
Shirley W allen&#13;
Mildred W ikert&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Barbara Barry&#13;
Kathryn Brown&#13;
Louise Cairy&#13;
J anice Collier&#13;
Maxine Foster&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
Betty Hoefer&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Ruth Kin gsbury&#13;
Marian Miller&#13;
Maxine P ooley&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Marian Stickels&#13;
Ellajean Waddell&#13;
Helen Weaver&#13;
Va Vonne Wertz&#13;
Lauree Wood&#13;
&#13;
�T he Useful and&#13;
the Pleasing&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
First Sem ester&#13;
&#13;
Second Sem ester&#13;
&#13;
President.__ ____ ___ _&#13;
___ -------------------------------------- Genevieve Whittington Janet Coe&#13;
_ _ _______ _ _ _&#13;
_ __ ____________ _ _ ell y De Vries&#13;
___&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Vice-President__ ____ _____ _&#13;
_ __ ___ _ _ _ _______ _&#13;
Recording Secretary_ _ _ _ ___ ___ ___ _ _ _ Charl otte Robinson&#13;
Frances F orsberg&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
__ _ ___ _ _ _ J&#13;
Corresponding Secretary____ _ __ _ _ ___ ___ __ anet Coe&#13;
Treasurer___________ _ _ _ __________ ________ ___ _ _ Ella Lauritson&#13;
_ ___ _____&#13;
_&#13;
__ _ __&#13;
&#13;
Ella Lauritson&#13;
&#13;
Directress _ ___ _ _ ____ _&#13;
_ __ ___ _ _ _______ ____ _&#13;
_ _________ _ _Frances Forsberg&#13;
_____ ___&#13;
&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
____ ____&#13;
______&#13;
Reporter _ __ _ __ _ __ ________ _ _____ _ ___F ranees Forsberg&#13;
_ _ _ __ ___ ____&#13;
&#13;
Helen Broyles&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain _&#13;
________ _____ _____ ___ _ __ ______ _ __ ___ __&#13;
_ _ _ __ _ _ ___ ___ _ruth Smith&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
&#13;
pianist _______ ___ _ _&#13;
_ _ ______ ________ _&#13;
_______ ___ __ _____ _D olorys Cook&#13;
_ __ __ _ _&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
&#13;
Usher__ ______ _ _ __ _ ____&#13;
____ _ _ ________________________&#13;
___________ Nell y De Vries&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Ferne Rolla nd&#13;
&#13;
Nelly De Vries&#13;
&#13;
__&#13;
_ _ ____ ____ _ __ ____ _ _J&#13;
Historian _______ _ ___ ____ _ __ _ __ ___ _ _ _ _ _ __ a net Coe&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Miss Ethel Murray&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
J anet Coe&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Nelly De Vries&#13;
Ella Lauritson&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Genevieve Whittin gton&#13;
&#13;
Top: B roy les , Carl son , Coe, Cook.&#13;
DeVri es. Fo rsbe rg-. Jones&#13;
Lau ritson.&#13;
Mc Bri de, Madi son , Robe rts, Robinson, Ro l land.&#13;
Bottom: Salsbu ry, Schatz, Smi th , Wel ding, Whittington.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred One&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
F rances F orsberg&#13;
Mary Eileen McBride&#13;
Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Helen Broyles&#13;
Marjorie Carlson&#13;
J ean Jones&#13;
Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
Kath ryn Madison&#13;
Adele Roberts&#13;
Ferne Rolland&#13;
Marjorie Salsb ury&#13;
Kathleen Schatz&#13;
Betty Lou Weldi ng&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
Wee R etrace No&#13;
Foo tsteps&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... ................................ Don Widler&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
Third Semester&#13;
&#13;
Bernard Feikema Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President..&#13;
&#13;
Charles Clayton&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Bob Dann enberg Gl enn Thompson Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
Glenn Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Pledge Master..&#13;
&#13;
Gl en Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Gl en Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Gl en Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
&#13;
.Arthur Lundblad Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
So phom ores&#13;
&#13;
Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
Fres hm en&#13;
&#13;
Glen Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Robert Dann enberg&#13;
&#13;
Ri chard Brenn eman&#13;
&#13;
Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Bernar d F eikema&#13;
&#13;
J oe DeMaine&#13;
John J ensen&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
Albert HaenA er&#13;
&#13;
Don Mi chaelso n&#13;
&#13;
Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
Ru ssell Lo gue&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Ted Macur&#13;
&#13;
Robert Mohr&#13;
&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Mi chael Reilly&#13;
&#13;
Merle Ston e&#13;
&#13;
Charles Sherid an&#13;
&#13;
Jam es Va nder Berg&#13;
&#13;
Glen Thom pson&#13;
Don Widler&#13;
Robert Wor rell&#13;
&#13;
'fop: B u rrow. Dann enberg. F ei kema, Lease.&#13;
&#13;
Midd l e: Lundb l ad. Mac ur. Michae l so n, Sm i th .&#13;
Bott om: Sto ne. Th ompson , Vander Berg, Wi d le r.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
One H und reJ. Two&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Three&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Charl es Sh eridan Charl es Sheridan&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Se niors&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
�II&#13;
&#13;
Smoothness in Manner,&#13;
S trength in A ll T hings.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
PresidenL. ............................................................... .Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Garret Wallman&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President. .................................... ....................Garrett Wal Iman&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
Secretary...................................................................Ray Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Ray Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. .... ___ ............................................. ___ ........ John Ko 1p&#13;
&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms.............. _ ____ ......... _ __ .......... _____ ... John Maynard&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Kennedy&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Pledgemaster............................ ---·--·--·---------------------·Eugene Kennedy&#13;
Social Chairman ......................................... -------------Ra! ph Brown&#13;
_....&#13;
_&#13;
...&#13;
Chap 1ain.. __________ _____ ........... _........ ___ __ ................Richard Woods&#13;
&#13;
Don Leopold&#13;
Richard Woods&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Cecil E. Marshall&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
John Thrower&#13;
Bruce Van De Mark&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
Garrett Wall man&#13;
&#13;
Top: Bennett, Bolton, Brown, Cobbs, Corwin.&#13;
Goodenow. Custeso n, Hempstead . E. Hi cks, R. H icks.&#13;
Hu ghes, Kingsbury. Kolp. Leopold , Mahood .&#13;
Maynard , Menke, Rehder, Thrower. Van De Mark&#13;
Wallman, Wellmerling&#13;
Woods.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Five&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
J ames Bolton&#13;
Gerald Cobbs&#13;
Earl Goodenow&#13;
Raymond Gusteson&#13;
Robert Hempstead&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Eugene Kennedy&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
John Maynard&#13;
Harold Wellmerling&#13;
Richard Woods&#13;
&#13;
James Adams&#13;
Samuel Back&#13;
Robert Bennett&#13;
Richard Corwin&#13;
Robert Hicks&#13;
Raymond Hughes&#13;
Robert Jarvise&#13;
Francis Kingsbury&#13;
Guy Nettleto n&#13;
Leonard Rehder&#13;
Pledges&#13;
James Dunn&#13;
Francis Jones&#13;
Warren Jurgensen&#13;
&#13;
�Members of the inte r-sorority council consist of the president and two appointed&#13;
by her to represent each sorority. A secretary is chosen to serve for the year, each&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
First S em ester&#13;
President.. .............................. --------------------------- --Walter Hurd&#13;
&#13;
sorority havin g one of its representatives act in this position every third year. The&#13;
&#13;
S econd S emester&#13;
&#13;
council functions, with the advice and guidance of Miss Lillian Dimmitt, dean of&#13;
&#13;
Lester Ol son&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President. .................................................... Dayrle Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Dean Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Secretary............... ..............................................Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
Melvin McKnight&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer ............................................................. Francis Ames&#13;
&#13;
Francis Ames&#13;
&#13;
Pl edgemaster ....................................................... Dean Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms................................................ Jack Holdcroft&#13;
Chaplain _______ _&#13;
_____________________ _&#13;
___________ _ _&#13;
_ ____________ _ ___ _Howard Nielsen&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
Takeo Nagamori&#13;
&#13;
Boarding Club Manager.. .................................. Dayrle Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Dayrle Crabb&#13;
&#13;
House Manager ................................................... Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
women, onl y wh en cooperative measures arc necessary.&#13;
&#13;
Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
K APPA ZETA&#13;
&#13;
Second Sem ester&#13;
&#13;
Chi&#13;
&#13;
K APPA ZETA&#13;
&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Glennys Corderman&#13;
Dorothy Ann Ol son&#13;
&#13;
Philip Sandberg&#13;
&#13;
K APPA&#13;
&#13;
Pr&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
Chi&#13;
&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Glenn ys Corderman&#13;
Dorothy Ann Ol son&#13;
KAPPA&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Betty Greene&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Pr&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Betty Greene&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Top : Ames , Crabb, Gibson, Hahn.&#13;
Midd le: Ho ldcroft, Hurd, K enn y, Mc Kni ght.&#13;
Bot tom: Nagamori, Nie lsen, Ol son.&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA STGMA&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Nelly De Vries&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Devon Hahn&#13;
Walter Hurd&#13;
Howard Nielsen&#13;
Lester Olson&#13;
Robert Ruleman&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Arnold Anderson&#13;
Donnin Ames&#13;
F ra ncis Am es&#13;
Dean F orbes&#13;
Myles Gates&#13;
Melvin McKnight&#13;
Takeo Na ga mori&#13;
&#13;
council has charge of pl edging activities and solving probl ems of the fraternities.&#13;
In the past years, it has served chiefly in an advisory capacity. Members include two&#13;
from each fraternity, with a president and secretary elected within the group by&#13;
the members.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ------------------ ------- -------- ------ -- ---- -----------------------Robert Rul eman&#13;
Secretary --------------- ------------- --------------------------------------Garrett Wal Iman&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
A L PHA T AU DELTA&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
SIGMA THETA RHO&#13;
&#13;
Garrett Wall man&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Robert Rul eman&#13;
Howard Niel sen&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
One Hundred S ix&#13;
&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
With Dr. M. E. Graber, Dean of Men, as faculty adviser, the inter-fraternity&#13;
&#13;
So phomores&#13;
Marion Benton&#13;
Dayrle Cra bb&#13;
Odell Woo ds&#13;
J ack Holdcrof t&#13;
J ohn Ba ne&#13;
Fres hmen&#13;
David Gibson&#13;
Th omas Kenny&#13;
Charles Meac ham&#13;
Lowell Ralston&#13;
Phili p Sandberg&#13;
Willi a m Stodda rd&#13;
Willi am Anderson&#13;
Willi am Murray&#13;
Robert Moore&#13;
Edwin Osbo rn&#13;
Robert Th ompso n&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seven&#13;
&#13;
Phi&#13;
&#13;
SI GMA&#13;
&#13;
Bernard Feikm a&#13;
Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
�Ishkoodah is an organization t o which all freshman girl s may&#13;
belong. The name, which means shooting star, signifies that the&#13;
Mc Claran&#13;
&#13;
memb ership of Ishkoodah changes every year.&#13;
Ishkoodah participates in such school activities as furnishin g a&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
President... ........................................................... Mrs. L. C. McClaran&#13;
Vice-President.. ..........................................................Mr. Odes Hilton&#13;
Secretary..........................................................Miss Ruth Wedgewood&#13;
Treasurer .............................................................. Mr. Homer Schaper&#13;
&#13;
float for the homecoming parade, takin g part in the annual Agora&#13;
carnival, and havin g charge of a chapel program. Ishkoodah sponsors two formal dances durin g the year which are the main social&#13;
functions of the society.&#13;
The bi-monthly meetings held in the Student Union Room are for&#13;
&#13;
Zeta Sigma is a local honor society primarily for the purpose of promotin g&#13;
scholarship and leadership on the campus. Students mu st have an average of at&#13;
least three and one-third honor points, and are elected into the society in the sprin g&#13;
of their graduation.&#13;
The Frederick W. Schneider Loan Fund has been established by Zeta Sigma to&#13;
be awarded to students of hi gh scholarship, good character, and leadership, who are&#13;
interested in preparin g for some form of humanitarian service.&#13;
&#13;
the purpose of developing friendship amon g the freshman girl s.&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President ----·------------ -------------- ----------- ---··········--·Lucile Roberts&#13;
Vice-President .................... ....................................Doris Coe&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ...................................... Dorothy Brown&#13;
Program Chairman ........................................ Zola Marcussen&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arm s --------······················------··--·-----Dorothy Long&#13;
S econd Semester&#13;
President ---·--··················-------····--·····················Florence Coss&#13;
Vice-President ............................................... Jane Garretson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ........................................ Dorothy Long&#13;
Program Chairman..................................Gwendol yn Downey&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms ................................................. Jean White&#13;
&#13;
Luci l e Roberts&#13;
&#13;
The function of the alumni association is to initiate the graduates into their ranks&#13;
each spring after graduation.&#13;
Alumni are encouraged to keep in contact with the organization, and many states&#13;
are represented in its membership. The annual dinner of the group is held during&#13;
Homecoming, and the new officers are th en elected.&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
President .................................................. Richard Burrows&#13;
Vice-President .................................................. Don Paul ey&#13;
Secretary ..................................................... William Woll e&#13;
Treasurer.. .......... ............................................. .Ira J. Gwinn&#13;
&#13;
Fl orence Coss&#13;
&#13;
Burrows&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
One H undred Eight&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred Nine&#13;
&#13;
�5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
top:&#13;
&#13;
T op: Stevens, Crabb, Arnold , Lafoon, McDonald , Whit ver, D aufTenbach,&#13;
Bottom : Salsbury, Gartner, F o rsberg, Grove.&#13;
&#13;
Th oe, Olson, D ave nport , Kitt e rm an , G refe , H ar ter.&#13;
&#13;
Middl e: Mur ray , H owes, Youn glove, Ford yce, McNee, Wiri ck, Jacobson , Johnson,&#13;
Sheley , Cl ayto n H akala .&#13;
Bo ttom : Osb ey , Pres to n , Miller&#13;
Fo wl er, B rown.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ------------------------------------------- ____ __ _____ __ _ _______ Min etta Mill er&#13;
_____&#13;
Vi ce-President_ _______ _&#13;
________________________ _&#13;
_______ _ ____________________ _ Ro y Brown&#13;
_&#13;
B,&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----------------------------- -------- -·-·····-·-·-··-··-···---·---Frances Forsberg&#13;
Vice-President --------------------- -------- ---------- ---------------·-----·---Keith Arnold&#13;
Steward _______________________________________________________ _ _________ _Dorothy Gartner&#13;
___&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ------ ---------------- --···--------·-· ··------- ------------ --- -------------- Irvine Thoe&#13;
Treasure r ----- ------------ -- ---- ----------------------------- ------------------Marcia McNee&#13;
Faculty Spon sor__ ______ _&#13;
___________ _&#13;
___________ _ _&#13;
__ _________ _______ ______ Dr. Earl Emme&#13;
This club is maintained in the Biolo gy Department for the purpose of stimulatin g&#13;
interest in biological fi elds and to provide an opportunity for those interested in this&#13;
department for social gatherings. The ultimate aim of the club is to promote Beta&#13;
Beta Beta, honorar y biological fraternity. The regular events of the club include&#13;
periodical bird or field trips and bi-weekl y lun cheon s followed by reports of biological interest.&#13;
&#13;
National honorary social science fraternity. The requirement for eligibility is a&#13;
grade average of B for thirty semester hours in a field , with fifteen hours from one&#13;
department. The purpose of the fraternity is to encourage and reward the study of&#13;
society and of social questions in the light of truth and b y th e scientific method.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Kappa Delta, H onorary Sociological Fraternity, was brought to Mornin gside College with nine charter members to promote scholarship, creative writing, and&#13;
community service in the social field. Students who have a major interest in Sociology and whose collegiate work is of a high order are eligible to come into the fellowship of this society.&#13;
The fraternity is of national scope, havin g chapters in man y of the large universities of America. Throu gh Alpha Kappa Delta, welfare workers, researchers, and&#13;
special students are brought into more sympathetic contact to discuss th e manifold&#13;
probl ems which our modern civilization has brought forth.&#13;
The Alpha chapter in Iowa b elongs to Morningside College.&#13;
Faculty Sponsor: Horace Hawthorne.&#13;
H awthorne&#13;
&#13;
Beta Beta Beta is a national honorary society for students of the biological&#13;
sciences, es tablished for the purpose of encouraging scholarly attainment in biolo gy.&#13;
It thus reserves its membership to those who achieve high academic records and&#13;
who have a special interest in the subj ect. Its purpose is three fold: the stimulation&#13;
of sound scholarship, the dissemination of scientific knowle dge, and the promotion&#13;
of biological research.&#13;
OFFICERS OF TAU CHAPTER&#13;
President _________________ __ _____ _&#13;
___________________ ___ _ _ ___ Keith Arnold&#13;
__ __&#13;
Vice-President ____________________________________________ Gordon Whitver&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ----------·-·----··----···--------------------------Gordon Whitver&#13;
Faculty Adviser__ ______________________ ______ _ ____ Dr. T. C. Stephens&#13;
___&#13;
Arn old&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Ten&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eleven&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Top: Brown, Caine, Grefe, Smith.&#13;
Middle: Dal lam, Wikert, Van Camp, Bcgqui st, Hitchcock.&#13;
Bottom: Osbey, Moor.&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President --------------------------------------- -------- ---------------------------Helen Osbey&#13;
Vice-President ---------------------·------------ ·------- --------------------------Deon Moor&#13;
Secretary ------------------------------------------------------------------------Shirley Smith&#13;
Treasurer ----------------------------------------------------------------------------Bob Caine&#13;
&#13;
Top: Warn er, Mill s, Johnson , Thoe, DeVries , Olson, Osbey.&#13;
Bottom: Gusteson, Huxtable , DeMond, Greene.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----- ------------------------------------------------ ----- ----------Patricia Warner&#13;
Vicr-President.. ____________________________________________ _ ______ __ __ _Nelly De Vries&#13;
__&#13;
__&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ---------------------------------------------------------.Irvine Thoe&#13;
Adviser ·------------------------------- ------------------------------------Miss Mirah Mills&#13;
&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi is a national honorary Latin and Greek fraternity which has for its&#13;
purpose the promotion of scholarship in the classical languages. Require ments for&#13;
acceptance into the group are registration in twelve or more hours of Latin or Greek&#13;
with an avera ge of 3.2 honor points per semester hour or above. Monthly meetings&#13;
are h eld.&#13;
Hel en Osbey, president of the local chapter, has been national secretary during&#13;
the past year. Mildred Wikert, Dureth Helen Hitchcock, Elna Van Camp, and Helen&#13;
Osbey attended the national convention at Tulane University in New Orleans, from&#13;
April 9-16.&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta, National Honorary English fraternity, is composed of English&#13;
majors pledged " to endeavor to advance the study of the chief literary masterpieces,&#13;
to encourage worthwhile reading, and to promote the mastery of written expression."&#13;
The requirements for eligibility are a major in English and a grade of B in all&#13;
courses in this field.&#13;
This past year, the organization was composed of twelve m embers. The programs were varied, being presented both by members and by outside speakers. A&#13;
social hour usually follow ed the regular meeting. One of the traditions of the club&#13;
is the annual May breakfast which concluded the activities of the year.&#13;
This year, Sigma Tau Delta was privileged to be in charge of the annual Honor&#13;
Society banquet held during the last part of the second semester.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma Iota, national honorary romance languages fraternity, is primarily for&#13;
students of junior standing or above in the romance languages. Meetings are held&#13;
each month at which individual research papers are read by the members. The purpose is to stimulate research and promote interest between nations.&#13;
This year, the club elected Mr. Cecil Marshall an honorary member.&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club meets once a month for a dinner and a program. The dinners&#13;
are prepared by the club members, and are in the form that the particular nationality&#13;
would serve. During the past year Chinese, Danish, Dutch, Indian, Canadian, and&#13;
English dinners were planned. The programs are built around the nationality or&#13;
the nation from which the dinner is supposed to originate.&#13;
The primary aim of the club is to create friendship among foreign students who&#13;
have little immediate connection with other lands and who are interested in learning&#13;
more about the customs and habits elsewhere. The club had a membership of thirty&#13;
this year, including the followin g forei gn students: Takeo Nagamori, Ayako Yamashiro, Betty Ling, Anne Holiday, Frances Walker, Dave Denny, and Toni Crow.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Marsha l I, Lauritsen , De Vri es, Schun ck, Kan thl ener.&#13;
Bottom: Casink, DeMo nd, Saun derson.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Denny&#13;
&#13;
President... ................... Verona De Mond&#13;
Vice-President .... ............ Frances Gasink&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer.. ........ Ella Lauritsen&#13;
Faculty Adviser.. .. Mr. Henry Kanthlener&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
President ----------------------------------------------------------------------------David Denny&#13;
Vice-President ------------------- -------------------------------------------Eric Liljestrand&#13;
Secretar y --------------------------·-··------------------------------------------Frances Gasink&#13;
Treasurer ------ --------- ------- ----- ---- --- ----- -------------------- ------- --------------Betty Ling&#13;
Advi ser ________________________________________________________________________ Dr. Paul Johnson&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
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&#13;
One Hundred Twelve&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
H arter&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
Harter&#13;
Dallam&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Adviser ............................................Dr. Paul E. Johnson&#13;
The Morningside Christian Association is an organization composed of three&#13;
former groups- the Christian Service Club, Y. W. C. A., and the Y. M. C. A. They&#13;
aim to further fellowship among students, and to help students formulate a philosophy&#13;
of life and to strengthen their ideals.&#13;
among the events which they sponsor are Freshman Week, the Gospel Team,&#13;
Religious Emphasis&#13;
Week, all-college parties, and the securing of outside speakers&#13;
for chapel programs.&#13;
Their meetings are held once a week in the Student Union Room and are usually&#13;
followed b y a luncheon. During the past year, they have been a very active group&#13;
on the campus and have a large number of members enrolled.&#13;
&#13;
M. C A Radio. groups&#13;
Every Sunday morning at 9 :45 over station KTRI, this group of young musical&#13;
artists presented fifteen minutes of sacred and secular music under the sponsorship&#13;
of the Christian Association of Morningside College. They presented thirty programs&#13;
during the year. The strin g trio is composed of Edith J_ensen, piano; Robert Feick,&#13;
cello· Homer Garretson, violin. The mixed quartet consists of Ahce Scott, soprano;&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp, contralto; Gene Emme, tenor ; and William Rozeboom, baritone. The&#13;
prog ram announcers were Bill Rozeboom and Dale Harter. The program was directed&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----------------------------------------------------------------------Doreen Dallam&#13;
Vice-President ........................................................ Kathryn Madison&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ................................................Wilson Reynolds&#13;
Social Chairman ........................................................Philip Sandberg&#13;
Song Leader..................................................................... .Irene Schaal&#13;
Pianist ------------------------------------------------------------------Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
Adviser..................................................................Dr. Paul E. Johnson&#13;
College League meets every Sunday evening at Grace M. E. Church. The purpose&#13;
of the group is to offer to every coll ege student an opportunity for religious self·&#13;
expression.&#13;
The lesson is conducted by students belonging to the League, and the varied program included outside speakers, student discussions, and special music. Social meetings wer e hel d frequentl y throughout the past year to encourage friendship among&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi is a new organization on the campus this year. They strive to develop&#13;
a spirit of comradeship among students preparing fo r Christian work, and to spread&#13;
the Christian spirit over the campus by a united effort. Meetings were held every&#13;
two months in addition to weekly seminars held weekl y under the leadership of&#13;
P resident Roadman.&#13;
The charter members include : B. Ro y Brown, Robert Caine, Willard Cunningham, Wilbur Fosnot, Lawrence Johnson, Ralph Kitterman, Howard Nielsen, Robert&#13;
Rul eman, William C. Smith, and Josephine Smith. Initiates include: Stanley Ander·&#13;
son, Arthur Beckman, Harold Bockart, Horace Graubner, Louise Madison, Robert&#13;
Rae, and Philip Sandberg.&#13;
&#13;
b y Gene Emme.&#13;
Garretso n, Jensen, Fe ick&#13;
&#13;
T op : B o ckart, Caine, Fosnot. Rae.&#13;
Mid dle: Neil son. Sl oan. Sm ith, Craubncr.&#13;
Bottom: Brown , R oadman , Madison .&#13;
&#13;
Rozeboom, Kolp , Scott, Emme&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
�j&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
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x&#13;
&#13;
Koch&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President -------·······················----------------------------------------------George Koch&#13;
Vice-President ------------------------------------------------------------------Bruce Lindsay&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ----------------------------------------------------------Charles Wert&#13;
Omicron chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma, national honorary physics fraternity, 1s&#13;
open to students having completed at least ten hours of advanced physics with an&#13;
average of B grades or above. Bi-monthly meetings are held, with Dr. M. E. Graber&#13;
and Prof. Ira J. Gwinn of the physics department, as sponsors of the group. The&#13;
meetings include discussions of physics and related sciences, and the modern experimentation and advancement made by discoveries of men in the scientific world.&#13;
&#13;
The Pre-Engineers Club is an organization on the campus devoted to scientific&#13;
pursuits and the spirit of good fellowship. It not only includes future engineers,&#13;
but also all those who are primarily interested in chemical and physical sciences.&#13;
&#13;
Something distinctly new and different was incorporated within the Aeronautics&#13;
Department this year when the Civil Aeronautics Authority approved Morningside as&#13;
one of a select group of colleges in the country to give actual pilot-training under&#13;
government supervision. A nominal fee of only fo rty dollars was charged each student. The federal government bore the remainder of the costs.&#13;
Twenty students, nineteen men and one girl, selected on the basis of rigorous&#13;
physical examinations embarked on the flight training course at the beginning of the&#13;
school year. Ground school work was undertaken immediately under the able supervision of Dr. Graber.&#13;
Late in ovember, the students took their places behind the instructors in the&#13;
dual control training ships. Before January had passed, every student had made his&#13;
solo flights, which marked the eight hours of dual instruction. This f ea t accomplished&#13;
by twenty students in seven weeks speaks especially well for the instructors and the&#13;
formulated p lan of instruction.&#13;
Following this first flight, the students flew solo about three-fourths of the time&#13;
until a total of thirty-five hours was completed. At this stage, the students were given&#13;
examinations for a Private Pilot's License by a regular Civil Aeronautics Authority&#13;
Inspector.&#13;
The fl ying training was under the proficient supervision of Mr. E. L. Graham,&#13;
who had two efficient and very capable young instructors, Mr. Tom Lynch and Mr.&#13;
Art. Myers.&#13;
The planes used were fifty horsepower, four-cylinder Piper Cubs with the tandem&#13;
seating arrangement.&#13;
The first class of student aviators to become private pilots at Morningside College&#13;
are: Rollie Buckholtz, Charles Clayton, Marvin Frum, Ted Grier, Edgar Graham, J r.,&#13;
&#13;
Thus the club is separated into affilia ted departments; these are the chemistry, radio,&#13;
photography, and aeronautics divisions.&#13;
The first semester of the year the principal function of the Pre-Engineers Club is&#13;
to prepare scientific experiments for the annual Pre-Engineers' Night. In addition to&#13;
this, the club has weekly luncheons in conjunction with its business meetings.&#13;
Top: H e mpstead , Lindsay, Smi th , S te rn , Adams, Oakl eaf.&#13;
Upper Middl e: Winter, Church, McDonald , Shaffer, Koch.&#13;
Lowe r Middle: \Vagstaff, Haskins, Swa nson , Leachman.&#13;
Bottom: \Ve rt , Hicks, Scheider, McKnight, Coomer.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President ______ _ __ _ _&#13;
__ ____ ________&#13;
John Swanson&#13;
Vice-President __ ____ __ ____ _ _&#13;
_ _ _ ___ George Koch&#13;
Secretary __ ______________&#13;
_&#13;
_______________ Max Stern&#13;
Treasurer ______ _&#13;
_________________ Fuller Haskins&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
President ----------------------------George Koch&#13;
Vice-President .......................... Vic Alvey&#13;
Secretary ----------------------------Charles Wert&#13;
Treasurer _____ _ _____ _____________ Glenn Smith&#13;
____&#13;
Historian _ _______&#13;
_&#13;
___________ Melvin McKnight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred S eventeen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
�George Green, Robert Hempstead, Walter Hurd, Lester Jones, Richard Kaup, Margaret Long, Max McCoy, Melvin McKnight, John Pojunos, Charles Richards, Clifford&#13;
Skalby, Glenn Smith, George Tripp, Bruce Van de Mark, and Roger Younglove.&#13;
The transition of these fledglings into private pilots marks a great milestone in&#13;
the history of the Aeronautics Department. Dr. Graber is deserving of much credit&#13;
for the success of this new experiment as it was through his tireless efforts and interest in aviation that secured for Morningside College the right as a participant in&#13;
this national program.&#13;
The present plan of the government is to continue the pilot training program fo r&#13;
five years. Advanced training, including night flight in a larger plane will be given&#13;
next Fall. Many members of the class plan to pursue their flying careers as cadets&#13;
in the Army and Navy Air Corps.&#13;
This year's class of pilots extends their heartiest wishes and a warm handclasp to&#13;
Dr. Graber and to the students who will launch their training next Fall.&#13;
&#13;
Greene&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript is the literary magazine sponsored and&#13;
edited by the Manuscript Club to which all students are&#13;
encouraged to contribute original writings. All material&#13;
submitted is considered and selected fo r publication by&#13;
a committee composed of three members of the club in&#13;
cooperation with the staffs of other college p ublications.&#13;
Two issues appeared during the year 1938-39, one in December, and the other in&#13;
May. During the year 1940, one appP-ared on April 15, in conjunction with the short&#13;
story contest. The magazine greatly encouraged creative writing by students.&#13;
This yea r's editorial staff, selected b y the Board of Control , consisted of : editorBetty Greene, associate editors-Pa tricia Warner and Bartlett Lubbers. They have&#13;
an exchange list with other colleges and universities, and copies are sent to all Sioux&#13;
City libraries. The magazine is fi nanced by fu nds from the activity tickets. Miss&#13;
Mirah Mills and Mr. Carroll Norling acted as consultants this year. The contents of&#13;
the 1940 issue of Manuscript included the foll owing :&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
PROSE&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
1. The Son- P a tricia Warner .&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Club was organized on March 18, 1938, under the guidance of Professor Lynn Beyer for the purpose of encouraging creative writing among the students. Membership is based on the approval of an original manuscript.&#13;
The club holds mi-monthl y meetings at which original manuscripts are read by&#13;
members, followed by an open forum discussion. One of the traditions of the club&#13;
is the birthday dinner held in March.&#13;
This year the associate adviser has been Mr. Carroll orling. The club sponsors&#13;
and edits Manuscript, and has, this year, sponsored a short story contest with competitive prizes. It is the truly literary organization on the campus.&#13;
&#13;
2. The Champ- Kenneth Johnson.&#13;
3. Lif t Thine Eyes-Bartlett Lubbers.&#13;
4,. Gift of the Innocent- Betty Greene.&#13;
5. A Trip to Aunt Jenny's-Irene Johnson.&#13;
6. Blue Books-Irvine Thoe.&#13;
7. Creation in Chaos- Kathryn Madison.&#13;
POETRY&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
1. Ode to a Moonflower-l rene Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
President --------------------------------------------------------------------------Betty Greene&#13;
Vice-President ........... .................................................... .Irene Johnson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ..............................................Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Faculty Adviser .................................................................... Miss Mills&#13;
Associate Adviser.. ..............................................Mr. Carroll Norli ng&#13;
&#13;
2. Personification- Eric Lil jestrand.&#13;
3. Fog-Betty H uxtabl e.&#13;
4. Love's Confusion- Miriam Hawthorne.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Custeso n, T hoe, Lubbe rs, Mad ison, Johnson.&#13;
Bo ttom: Mc Bride, Warne r, Hux tabl e.&#13;
&#13;
The various styles of writing in the magazine permit a wide range of appeal to the reade rs of it.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
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5&#13;
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I&#13;
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v&#13;
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One Hun d red Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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v&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Nine teen&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
�STAFF&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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&#13;
Fred Davenport -------····-····----····----------------------------------Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Robert Hamel ............................................................Managing Editor&#13;
Edward Hendricks.................................................. Business Manager&#13;
B. Roy Brown ........................................................Editorial Assistant&#13;
Patricia Warner.......................................................... Dramatic Editor&#13;
Winifred Cheely..........................................~-------------Exchange Editor&#13;
Ray Hughes.................................................................... Sports Editor&#13;
Special Writers- Mary McBride, Josephine Dixon, Francis Kingsbury.&#13;
Reporters- Ruth Kingsbury, Alice Hanson, Alice Clayton, Garry Wallman, Gerry Fischer, Kenneth Johnson, Morgan Harrison, Irvine Thoe.&#13;
The all-college newspaper is written, edited, and managed by students whose d_uty&#13;
it is to publish an edition each week. Exchanges with colleges and high schools&#13;
throughout the United States result in a mailing list of approximately five hundred&#13;
issues each week.&#13;
The various departments adequately cover the social, athletic, and political phases&#13;
of Morningside campus life. Gossip and joke columns furnish humor, and the exchange column acquaints Morningside students with thoughts from other campuses.&#13;
&#13;
Hendricks&#13;
Hanson&#13;
Harrison&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Wallman&#13;
Thoe&#13;
&#13;
Cheely&#13;
Warner&#13;
&#13;
Fisher&#13;
&#13;
Clayton&#13;
Hughes&#13;
Dixon&#13;
&#13;
Hamel&#13;
Mcbride&#13;
F. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
The Board of Control of student publications consists of five facul ty members&#13;
and five students, It elects the editor and business manager of both the Collegian&#13;
&#13;
Reporter and the Sioux. Its main purpose is for guidance and advice in matters of&#13;
publication, and censors publications only at the request of the student council.&#13;
Professor H. F. Kanthlener is chairman of the board whose facul ty members include Miss Mirah Mills, Professor Ira J. Gwinn, Mrs. Elsye Sater, and Dr. T. C.&#13;
Stephens. The student members are Minetta Miller, senior, and secretary of the&#13;
board; Garry Wallman, junior; Geraldine Booth, sophomore; Gwendolyn Downey,&#13;
freshman; and Ray Gusteson, representative at large. Ex-officio members are Editor&#13;
Fred Davenport and Business Manager Ed Hendricks of the Collegian R eporter.&#13;
Members fo r the coming year will be elected by the present board.&#13;
&#13;
Woll e&#13;
Brown&#13;
R. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
T op: Mill er, Wallman&#13;
Booth , Gusteson,&#13;
Bottom: Kanthl c ne r, Mil l s, Gwin n , S uter, Stevens.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty.one&#13;
&#13;
�W.&#13;
&#13;
S q. A&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
President ........................................................................Kathl yn Kolp&#13;
Vice-President ................................................ Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Secreta ry ........................................................................Betty Bootj er&#13;
Social Chairman..................................................................Alice Scott&#13;
Senior Hall Chairman .................................... Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Junior Hall Chairman................................................ Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Sophomore Hall Chairman...................................... Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
Freshman Hall Chairman ............................................... J ean Fowler&#13;
The Women's Self Governing Association is the board elected by the residents&#13;
of the women's dormitory to act as the governing body. Disciplinary measures are&#13;
settl ed through the Honor Court, composed of the board members and Mrs. Winifred&#13;
.&#13;
Cross Felton, social director of the dormitory.&#13;
W. S. G. A. annually sponsors two formal dinner-dances, one just preceding the&#13;
Thanksgiving vacation and the other in the Spring. A Christmas dinner for nonresidents, teas for Sioux City and out-of-town women, Sunday afternoon musicales,&#13;
paj ama parties, spreads, and holiday parties are traditional fea tures for the entertainment of the dormitory residents.&#13;
The re-dedication of the dormitory, with members of W. S. G. A. as characters&#13;
in the " Lighting of the Hearth," a skit written by one of the first residents, is an&#13;
annual Fall feature, which includes a formal dinner and talks by Miss Lillian E.&#13;
Dimmitt and by Mrs. Earl A. Roadman.&#13;
&#13;
F e lton&#13;
Scott&#13;
&#13;
K ol p&#13;
Fowl e r&#13;
&#13;
Whitting ton&#13;
Brooke&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President. .............................................................Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Vice-Presiden t ..............................................................Betty Schunck&#13;
Secretary ........................................................................Alice Cl ayton&#13;
Treasurer ...................................................................... Lucile Pippett&#13;
Senior Representative.................................................. elly De Vries&#13;
Junior Representative....................................................... Joyce Held&#13;
Soph omore Representative............................................ Betty Bootjer&#13;
Freshman Representative....................................Mariellen Rifenbark&#13;
Agora is the truly democratic organization on the campus since it includes in&#13;
membership ever y girl on the campus. Miss Agnes Ferguson was the fo under of the&#13;
group, and it was her aim to promote fell owship among the young women in college.&#13;
The activities sponsored by Agora include the Campus Sister movement in the&#13;
Fall of the year, a carnival hel d this year at the Dormitory, a tea for all the girls in&#13;
school, the Agora edition of the Collegian Reporter, and the annual Mother and&#13;
Daugh ter Banquet in the Spring.&#13;
&#13;
Bootjer&#13;
Fritzsche&#13;
&#13;
Ol son&#13;
DeVries&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Twenty- two&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Twenty-th ree&#13;
&#13;
Schunck&#13;
Held&#13;
&#13;
Clayton&#13;
Bootjer&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Pi ppett&#13;
Rifenbark&#13;
&#13;
�The Student Union Room on the third floor of Main Hall has been one of the&#13;
most enjoyable features of the school since it was incorporated during the year&#13;
&#13;
1938-39.&#13;
Comfortably furnished and provided with a radio and magazines, the Union has&#13;
been a great asset to student life.&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Lounge is a comfortable retreat for th e women students of Morningside. Girls may retire here for studying, chatting, or relaxation. The room has&#13;
been especiall y valuable to freshman women.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
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On e Hundred Tw e nt y. four&#13;
&#13;
�Presenting&#13;
&#13;
Including&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE SENIORS . ..&#13;
Selected by a faculty committee as representative of character, scholarship,&#13;
leadership, service, and future possibilities.&#13;
&#13;
BRAVEST OF THE BRAVE ...&#13;
WHO'S WHO ...&#13;
HOMECOMING ...&#13;
MISS MORNINGSIDE OF 1939 ...&#13;
THE 1940 SIOUX KING AND QUEEN ...&#13;
Selected by Claudette Colbert and Tyrone Power as signifying beauty, grace,&#13;
poise, personality, and character.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�MISS DOROTHY AN&#13;
&#13;
MISS BETTY LOU GREENE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
OLSON&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Ann has been one of Morningside's&#13;
most active students. Among her many honors&#13;
were "Miss Morningside of 1939," president of&#13;
Agora, president of Alpha Psi Omega, and president of Kappa Zeta Chi Sorority. Her ability in&#13;
drama tics has been shown both by her acting and&#13;
by her backstage work . She has been selected as a&#13;
beauty queen several times, and has been an interested and willing worker in several fields of&#13;
activity.&#13;
&#13;
Betty is known a t Morningside as a schola r in&#13;
the true sense of the word. Her execulive ability&#13;
was brought out by her presidencies of Kappa Pi&#13;
Alpha Sorority, Collegiate Players, and Manuscript&#13;
O ub. She was one of the organizers of Manuscript&#13;
Club and worked on the Manuscript Magazine, and&#13;
on the collegian Reporter. Her futu re possibilities&#13;
a re great as based upon her college work.&#13;
&#13;
MR. ALFRED P. STROZDAS&#13;
" Al" has gained many friends a t Morn ingside,&#13;
thro ugh a friendl y personality and a cooperative&#13;
spirit. He has been active in a thl etics, both in&#13;
intramurals and in varsity basketball , and has held&#13;
membership in the "M" Club. Vice-presidency of&#13;
the Student Body as an ln d- pendent is evidence of&#13;
e&#13;
his popularity with the students. His has been a&#13;
worthwhile college career.&#13;
&#13;
MR. B. ROY BROWN&#13;
Ro y has demonstrated his abilities by his work&#13;
a t Morningside. He has been a dependable and&#13;
reliable worker here at school. His primary interest is in the ministry, and he is a member of the&#13;
Ministerial Association. Three honorary fraternities&#13;
cl aim his membership, and music has also been an&#13;
interest as shown by his participation in choir and&#13;
band. Much may be expected of Roy in the future.&#13;
&#13;
One Hu ndred Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�MISS MI ETTA MILLER&#13;
Minetta is one of the busiest persons on the campus. Her activities include presidency of Pi Gamma&#13;
Mu, membership in Psi Chi, Board of Control, and&#13;
Collegiate Players. Her position as Dr. Roadman's&#13;
secretary is demonstrative of her ability to get&#13;
along with people and with life. She will be missed&#13;
from student life on the campus after her gradua·&#13;
tion.&#13;
&#13;
P rio r to the last football game, the Sioux Scalpers&#13;
p resented the first non-partisan election, when the&#13;
student body was asked to select their favorite on&#13;
the foo tball squad. Absolute secrecy prevailed,&#13;
and on the foll owing Friday, Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
presented the Bravest Brave, Dewey Halford, a&#13;
beautifull y engraved tomahawk, emblematic of his&#13;
selection.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
- S. C. Journal.&#13;
Olson, Hal ford&#13;
&#13;
WHO'S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES&#13;
AND COLLEGES&#13;
To be included in Who's Who, a student must have a combination of qualities&#13;
listed below to indicate that he is outstanding and an asset to his school : character,&#13;
leadership in extra curricular activities, scholarship, and potential ities of future&#13;
usefulness to business and society. The foll owing students were selected fo r this&#13;
honor by a faculty committee : Morgan Harrison, Alfred Strozdas, Lester Menke,&#13;
Lawrence Johnson, Lester Olson, Betty Green, I rene Johnson, Dorothy Ann Olson,&#13;
Helen Osbey, Kathlyn Kolp .&#13;
MR. JOHN SWANSON&#13;
John has been one of the unsung heroes on the&#13;
campus. He accomplished a great deal in a quiet&#13;
fashion, and has been a valuable asset to the school&#13;
--especially in the depa rtment of science. He has&#13;
been Dr. Graber's right-hand man, and his activities include offices in P re-Engineers' Club and in&#13;
Sigma Pi Sigma. It will be hard to find as an efficient and thorough worker as John has been.&#13;
&#13;
Harrison, S trozdas, Menke, L. Johnson.&#13;
Crccne. 1. Johnson, D. Olson, Osbey, Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
On e Hund red T wenty.eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
-S. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
�Miss Dorothy Ann Ol son, in bein g crowned "Miss Mornin gside of 1939," received&#13;
the highest honor which can be bestowed upon an y girl in Morningside. El ected by a&#13;
popular student vote, Miss Morningside is th e president of the Kappa Zeta Chi&#13;
Sorority and of Agora. Al so reignin g over the homecomin g festiviti es were two girl s&#13;
elected by th e student body as attendants-Miss Helen Osbey and Miss Genevieve&#13;
Whittington. The Queen and her attendants were reveal ed at the P ep Chapel on&#13;
November 3, and presided over all the events of Homecomin g on Novemb er 4. The&#13;
barbecue, snake dance, parade, football gam e, and dance rounded out a memorable&#13;
Homecomin g for 1939.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Miss Doro th y Ann O l son&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
OUT STATE&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Miss Helen&#13;
&#13;
Osbey&#13;
&#13;
Miss Genevieve Whitti ngton&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
One hundred Th i1ty&#13;
&#13;
One Hu ndred T h ir ty-one&#13;
&#13;
�1940 Sioux King&#13;
&#13;
I 940&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
Queen&#13;
&#13;
Six of Morningside's men were selected by Roy Justus and George Vanden Brink,&#13;
&#13;
Six of Morningside's women were selected by Roy Justus and George Vanden&#13;
&#13;
local artists, as candidates for the 1940 Sioux King. The following were selected:&#13;
&#13;
Brink, local artists, as candidates for the 1940 Sioux Queen. The following were&#13;
&#13;
Don Ballentine, Robert Craven, Robert Dannenberg, Ted Macur, Clifford Skalby, and&#13;
&#13;
selected: Helen Johnson, Anna Marie Larson, Zola Marcussen, Dorothy Ann Olson,&#13;
&#13;
Harold Wissink. The pictures of the six were forwarded to Hollywood to Claudette&#13;
&#13;
Helen Osbey, and Betty Lou Welding. The pictures of the six were forwarded to&#13;
&#13;
Colbert, who did the final judging.&#13;
&#13;
Hollywood to Tyrone Power, who did the final judging.&#13;
&#13;
"I think all of the six are as handsome as can&#13;
&#13;
"I have chosen this student because of her beau-&#13;
&#13;
be, and each one at one time or other during the&#13;
&#13;
tifully expressive eyes combined with the sweetness&#13;
&#13;
the number one&#13;
&#13;
and charm of her character which is very evident&#13;
&#13;
momentous selecting was in&#13;
&#13;
to anyone looking at her portrait."&#13;
&#13;
position."&#13;
- CLAUDETTE COLBERT.&#13;
&#13;
-TYRONE POWER.&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
�·····&#13;
&#13;
... -------&#13;
&#13;
WAGER'S&#13;
SERVICE STATION&#13;
&#13;
House of Hamburgers&#13;
&#13;
White Rose Gasoline&#13;
&#13;
"From Morningside- For Morningside'·&#13;
&#13;
En-Ar-Co Oil&#13;
Earl FitzPatrick&#13;
&#13;
Goodyear Tires and Batteries&#13;
National Specialized Lubrication&#13;
&#13;
1405 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MEALS&#13;
&#13;
ALL NIGHT SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
SHORT ORDERS&#13;
&#13;
... --&#13;
&#13;
1412 Morningside Avenue&#13;
______________&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
CHOCOLATES&#13;
One of a Fam ily of Famous Chocolates&#13;
Made by&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Company&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Keep Youthful&#13;
with Dairy&#13;
Products&#13;
&#13;
PA U L&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
WARNE R&#13;
&#13;
President and General Manager&#13;
&#13;
Adair -Warner&#13;
Printing&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
Printing with Service&#13;
&#13;
MILK DEALERS&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
&#13;
516 Sixth St.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred Thi rty- four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
BREAKFASTS : LUNCHES&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Swift and Courteous Service&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUS PHARMACY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
REAL MALTED MILKS&#13;
Thick and Creamy- toe&#13;
Hot Chocola te&#13;
Special Milk Shakes-Sc&#13;
All Kinds Fountain Drinks&#13;
PRESCRIPT IONS&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES&#13;
SCHOOL SU PPLIES&#13;
Get It H ere&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Dusty's&#13;
PARK LUNCH&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
1419 Morningside Avenue&#13;
W. J. Shane, Proprietor Phone 6-6957&#13;
&#13;
Everything for Programs&#13;
PLAYS&#13;
PAGEANTS&#13;
READINGS&#13;
OPERETTAS&#13;
STUNTS&#13;
&#13;
WETMORE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
______&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
SEPTEMBER&#13;
&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
&#13;
11- Nice-looking bunch of freshmen invade&#13;
campus. Registration.&#13;
20- Dr. Roadman gives Matriculation Address.&#13;
Faculty on parade.&#13;
25- Sorority rushing begins, which means one&#13;
week of headaches for everyone concerned.&#13;
29-The boys take the first conference game&#13;
at North Dakota U., 15-0.&#13;
30- Congratulations to all the new pledges.&#13;
&#13;
3-Scoop ! Dorothy Ann Olson beautiful as&#13;
Mi ss Mornin gside. Moat puts over one&#13;
grand Homecomi ng.&#13;
4-Sig Rho and Pi fl oats agai n carry off&#13;
cups. 7-0 for Iowa State.&#13;
9-P sychology Night.&#13;
10-"0ur Town" brin gs the dramatic department to the front aga in. Orchids to the&#13;
whole cast, especially P eg Long for a&#13;
splendid job.&#13;
11- Mid-semes:er ! Headaches or smiles?&#13;
17-Dewey Halford named Bravest Brave.&#13;
Lily Pons opens Concert Course with a&#13;
thrillin g concert.&#13;
25-Kitty Kolp stars at Dorm Formal.&#13;
&#13;
OCTOBER&#13;
3- Freshman-Sophomore Day. Spook Austin&#13;
ri ght out in the middle of everything.&#13;
Outcome? Freshies wear green caps till&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
6- Faculty Reception. The girls turned out&#13;
well, but7- The boys come through with another win&#13;
over Dakota Wesleyan, 27-0.&#13;
16- Surprise ! A really good Monday Chapel.&#13;
Dr. Kin g speaks on the Psychology of&#13;
Drunkenness.&#13;
20-Professor Van Horne again inspires the&#13;
squad to brin g back that Coyote pelt.&#13;
Frat, bid day.&#13;
21- P arents' Day innovated. It's a success&#13;
even if the U. beats us 7-6. A big bouquet to the band for their performance&#13;
of "Stardust."&#13;
&#13;
29-Whoops ! Vacation ! Too bad that with&#13;
two Tha nksgivin gs we only get one vacation.&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
4-Back again. The B. B. team looks like a&#13;
winner, even if Iowa State was too tough&#13;
for them.&#13;
5-Vacation brought a diamond ring to&#13;
Nancy and a big grin to Red. Nicky and&#13;
Jack join the Morningsiders-in-Chicago&#13;
Club as Mr. a nd Mrs.&#13;
8- I shkoodah F ormal. Even the date bureau&#13;
didn' t bring a crowd.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
�Compliments&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
In Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Rediscover America&#13;
BY AIR-CONDITIONED SUPER-COACH&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
See America at its best-and see it best by highway&#13;
- by air-conditioned Union Pacific Super-Coach!&#13;
This modern, "American-style" travel is the one way&#13;
to go places and really SEE thin gs . . . intima te&#13;
"close-ups'' of romance and beauty you'd miss, travelin g any other way! The cost ? Amazin gly little ! You&#13;
go farther ... see more ... yet spend less! It's the&#13;
ideal way to make short trips, too. See your local&#13;
Union Pacific bus agent for complete . travel in formation.&#13;
&#13;
DEPOT&#13;
Fift h&#13;
&#13;
Doug las&#13;
Phon e 5-7678&#13;
&#13;
- - --.......... -.... ---THANK YOU ...&#13;
&#13;
Grayson's&#13;
&#13;
for the privilege of&#13;
knowing you.&#13;
&#13;
SUITS ME&#13;
&#13;
"It's Been Great"&#13;
&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Gunny's Cafe&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�'&#13;
&#13;
MAKE&#13;
&#13;
Member F. D. I. C.&#13;
&#13;
THE TOY NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
YOUR BANK&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
''&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Intelligent and Conservative Banking Since 1873&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
--------------------&#13;
&#13;
----------&#13;
&#13;
-----····1&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
Beuttler &amp; Arnold&#13;
&#13;
Developing and Printing&#13;
&#13;
Architects and Engineers&#13;
&#13;
HOME MOVIES&#13;
Specializing in the Design of&#13;
Public Buildings&#13;
&#13;
Eastman's&#13;
Kodak Stores, Inc.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5374&#13;
450 Insurance Exch ange Building&#13;
&#13;
608 Pierce Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR- Continued&#13;
18- Scotty and Oliver score one for Mornin gside by the ir parts in the Messiah.&#13;
&#13;
22- Semester exams begin. Who stays and&#13;
who goes home?&#13;
&#13;
19- That event of the year! The Winter F estival! And no one was di sappointed.&#13;
&#13;
26-Registration.&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
Welcome to eighteen new&#13;
&#13;
29- So lon g. See you next year.&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
JANUARY&#13;
8-Now we can get rid of Christmas neckties and get rested up from vacation.&#13;
15- Woman chases man-News nash ! Glennys&#13;
Corderman and Eddie Graham win Sadie&#13;
Hawkins costume event. Millie J ensen&#13;
shows what comes after she catches him,&#13;
by exhibiting a ring on that finger placed&#13;
there by J ason Saunderson, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
J. C. RENNISON&#13;
FLORAL CO.&#13;
&#13;
9- Professor Van Horne presents eighteen M&#13;
sweaters to football Maroons.&#13;
17- P ledge formals climax a hectic week.&#13;
New sorority members eagerly welcomed.&#13;
21-"Love in Livery" nothing short of colossal. Gene Kennedy si mpe rin gly beautiful&#13;
in satin and lace, and Moat and Pooley&#13;
perfect examples of young love.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK'S CAFE&#13;
Lady cooks h ave a style of cookin g&#13;
which appeals to our restaurant-going&#13;
public. The food tas:es like a home&#13;
cooked meal and that mea ns a lot.&#13;
&#13;
516 Nebraska Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, lOW A&#13;
&#13;
WIRE FLOWERS A YWHERE&#13;
&#13;
"Say It with Flowers"&#13;
&#13;
GLASS FRONT&#13;
607 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
~--------------------&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
�A,&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Spalding&#13;
&#13;
Bros.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Equipment&#13;
&#13;
HAUFF SPORTING&#13;
&#13;
511&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
81877&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
...... 4&#13;
Meet Your Friends at&#13;
&#13;
Barney's College Service Store&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
Van Schreeven &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Where yo u can buy everything&#13;
in college needs.&#13;
&#13;
J eweler s a n d Optome trist s&#13;
&#13;
CARA NOME TOILETRIES&#13;
and all other brands.&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
508 Fifth Street, Nea r Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
OUR FOUNTAIN SERVICE IS THE&#13;
VERY BEST&#13;
&#13;
Telephone 8-1213&#13;
&#13;
Barney's Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
The Rexall Store&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
···········-········-------1&#13;
&#13;
Member F. D . I. C.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
One Hundred Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
Ben Franklin Stores&#13;
4006 Mornin gside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--··-----··------···---···1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
P eters P ark&#13;
&#13;
" Your Dime S tore at Peters Park"&#13;
Everythin g fro m F ive Cents to&#13;
One Dollar and Up&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY&#13;
SAVINGS BANK&#13;
&#13;
T. L. SCHAEFER, P ro prietor&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR-Continued&#13;
25- Wh o didn' t get a posture tag?&#13;
&#13;
9- P rim a nd Isemin ge r ann oun ce hon orable&#13;
intentions at the Zet fo rm al. P rof. Stewart&#13;
wi eld a wicked ankle.&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
&#13;
10- Buck Ballentin e ri des again!&#13;
bi g success.&#13;
&#13;
1- Zets vs. Ishkoodah, Simon s vs. Haenfl er,&#13;
and Bra in s vs. Brawn s- new innovati on&#13;
in athleti cs. Dr. Marshall vigorously applaude d, but Brawn fi nally triumph s.&#13;
&#13;
18- Mid-semesters- so soon ?&#13;
11- 0rla n Ott return s fro m Chi cago Gold en&#13;
Gloves battles. Hand some in a robe which&#13;
is visible token of Mo rnin gside affection&#13;
for him. (Si gh, hea rt throb , sigh- wotta&#13;
man!)&#13;
&#13;
2- Ruth Ol sen and Les Menke re ign as&#13;
Ellajea n Wadd ell,&#13;
Health Monarchs.&#13;
Na ncy Lowry, Dave Denn y, and J oh n&#13;
Kolp would di scourage a ny doc tor.&#13;
&#13;
the low handicap man gets his&#13;
birdie, the chances are that there was&#13;
averages. There was, we duffers can be sure, the&#13;
&#13;
Council Oak Stores&#13;
&#13;
sweet combination of physical coordination, brain·&#13;
work and nervel ess concentration. VERSTEGEN,&#13;
in quality year book printin g that is as welcome as a&#13;
Sub-par round in golf, and fashioned from the same&#13;
compound of manual adroitness and heady play.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
more to it than just luck or the law of&#13;
&#13;
in typical style, leads the fi eld with new treatments&#13;
&#13;
Pi form al&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Your Friend at Mealtime&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
SO UTH DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
MINN ESOTA&#13;
&#13;
L-----------------------········------------~---------_,&#13;
·--------1 ~--···---·····--···---------1 ·&#13;
&#13;
VERSTEGEN&#13;
PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
615 Douglas Street&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
CITY&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
One H un dred Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Ferris Florists&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON'S&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
Flowers for All Occasions&#13;
Morningside's High Class&#13;
Pastry Shop&#13;
At P eters P ark&#13;
&#13;
Telephon e 8-7505&#13;
&#13;
Ph one 6-5966&#13;
&#13;
Warrior Hotel&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
On e Hun dre d Fo rt y- fi ve&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�... ----............ ----... --..&#13;
&#13;
······1&#13;
&#13;
Between Classes . . .&#13;
&#13;
DRINK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
In Bottles&#13;
It's the Refreshing Thi ng to Do&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman Co.&#13;
&#13;
1----··-- --- -----~--------------------···&#13;
CALE NDA R-Continued&#13;
&#13;
STUDIOS&#13;
&#13;
24-Mi ke a nd Strcz play their last game for&#13;
the Maroons-lose in the last q uarter to&#13;
&#13;
I. S. T. C.&#13;
21- Home to greet the Easter bunny.&#13;
&#13;
615 Pierce&#13;
&#13;
25- Choir tours fo ur states in super-coach&#13;
b uses. Would we were mice or cockroaches. We've heard about those choir&#13;
trips.&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
23-Comm encement formal. 1940 Sioux King&#13;
a nd Queen revealed amidst pomp and&#13;
splendor.&#13;
30----No classes-Memorial day.&#13;
&#13;
APRIL&#13;
&#13;
Knowing that you have obtained the best is significant&#13;
&#13;
1- We knew they were fooling- or were&#13;
they? Classes really did start again.&#13;
15-Edi tor and assistant tear their hair ! Annual to press.&#13;
20- Ath for mal- pulenty swi sh!&#13;
&#13;
when you purchase photographs. All Youngberg photographs&#13;
&#13;
- .. -&#13;
&#13;
have our imprint . .. such work carries a value far beyond&#13;
&#13;
JUNE&#13;
I-Fi nals are all over-two sighs of relief.&#13;
2-Baccalau reate - seniors dignified in cap&#13;
a nd gown.&#13;
3-Com mencement ! Congratulations and good&#13;
luck to a bunch of swell people we have&#13;
been glad to know.&#13;
So long !&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - - ..............&#13;
&#13;
the price paid.&#13;
&#13;
BETTER LIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Modern equipment .. . Large groups such as weddings and&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
family group!' . . . also photographs of children and copies&#13;
&#13;
BETTER GRADES&#13;
&#13;
of old photographs.&#13;
&#13;
Does studying tire yo u easily? Do your eyes trouble you? Do you&#13;
get nervous and fidge ty whil e using you r eyes fo r close work ? Do&#13;
yo u squint ? Poor lighting may be the cause of any one or all of&#13;
these discomfo r ts. S: icnce has discovered that the remedy often is&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-five Y ears of Leadership&#13;
&#13;
better lighting. Read and study at home with I. E. S. Study or Floor&#13;
Lamps. They are made for safe seeing. They conserve sight and&#13;
make work easier- often make for better grades.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Gas &amp;Electric Company&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
One H un dred Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�One Hundred Forrty-Eight&#13;
&#13;
���</text>
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                    <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College Annual Yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The 1940 yearbook contains pictures, short articles, sporting results, and other college news and events related to this particular year. This PDF file is a digital copy of the original physical yearbook.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Sioux City Public Museum</text>
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&#13;
A number of yearbooks do not have people's names index in this database. Those yearbooks will have a PDF index of the people's names in that particular year with a reference to the page(s) that they appear on.</text>
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              <text>College&#13;
Sioux&#13;
DESK&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Col&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Co&#13;
&#13;
Presents&#13;
&#13;
The 1940 Sioux&#13;
V•&#13;
&#13;
Editor&#13;
Irene ]ohnson&#13;
&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Adviser&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
M. SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The 1940 Sioux is affectionately dedi cated to&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ethel Ruth Murray&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Th e 1940 Sioux is presented to the student body as a record of a&#13;
&#13;
in recognition of her fri endly guidance of stud ents&#13;
&#13;
memory-filled year. The year's progress and the spirit of Morning-&#13;
&#13;
and faithful lo yalty to Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
side College are refl ect ed in these pages in the theme of the Sioux&#13;
Indian. The staff hopes, by this book, to recall man y school&#13;
activities and pl easant memories.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
Fivo&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Our President&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
On Jun e 6, 1939, there pa ssed from our coll ege community one who had made a name for him-&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
V self as a master of languages, a minister of the Gospel, a tireless worker, a loyal friend and a true-&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
X lover of two countries, America, the land of his a dopti on, and hi s old Va terl and , Germany.&#13;
Professor Samu el C. Steinbrenner was born in Wuerttemberg, Germany, in 1877. He studi ed at&#13;
both German and Am erican Universities especially in the fields of language, philosophy and th eology.&#13;
As a minister of the Methodist Church he served a n umber of pastorates, first in the North west German&#13;
&#13;
EARL ALAN ROADMAN&#13;
&#13;
Confe rence and later in the Northwest Iowa Con fe rence. His career as a teacher was long and successful. He tau ght a t Charl es City&#13;
SAMUEL C. STEINBRENNER&#13;
&#13;
Coll ege, Southern University of&#13;
Al abama, Western Union, and a t&#13;
Morningside. As an in structor he&#13;
was loved and honored for hi s&#13;
sterlin g character.&#13;
There was heroism and Christian fortitud e in the way in which&#13;
he bore whatever life brou ght to&#13;
him. Love of nature and of mu sic,&#13;
and quiet faith in God were outB.D., D.D., LL.D.&#13;
&#13;
standing traits of hi s personality.&#13;
He will long be missed and his&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Teachers Coll ege&#13;
&#13;
nam e held in honor at Mornin gside.&#13;
&#13;
Upper Iowa University&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
Boston University Graduate&#13;
School&#13;
&#13;
L. C. F .&#13;
&#13;
University of Halle, German y&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Six&#13;
&#13;
S e ve n&#13;
&#13;
The 1940 Sioux&#13;
Ass1sTANT EoJTOR ............................................................ Betty Schunck&#13;
LITERARY EDITOR.......................................................... Winifred Cheely&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY Ass1STANT.......................................... ......... Kathry n Madison&#13;
SENIOR Eo1TOR.............................................................. Verona DeMond&#13;
DRAMATICS EDITOR..........................................................Minetta Miller&#13;
&#13;
The work of the Sioux Staff consists of compiling material for a&#13;
&#13;
FORENSICS EoITOR ............................................ ______________________ Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
yearbook. This is accomplished by dividing the work into depart-&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHY Editor&#13;
&#13;
men ts with one person responsible for each, and the editor in charge&#13;
&#13;
-.....................Patricia Warner&#13;
&#13;
of revision and supervision.&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHER ············----············-···················-···············Robert Moore&#13;
SNAPSHOT EmTOR ...................................................... Geraldine Thomas&#13;
M u sic En1TOR................... ..........................&#13;
&#13;
The business manager handles the&#13;
&#13;
finances, and the adviser suggests and guides.&#13;
&#13;
Ge nevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
WOMEN'S ATHLETICS....................................................Marjorie Nelson&#13;
MEN'S ATHLETTCS ....&#13;
&#13;
................................................. Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
ARTIST ······································-·····-·-················-··········Kenneth Johnson&#13;
TYP1STS ........................... ---··············Virginia Allen, Margaret Gusteson&#13;
GENERAL Ass1STANT............................ ............................... Helen Osbey&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHY ·······:········-·---·-·································Youngberg Studios&#13;
PRINTING.................................................... Verstegen Printing Company&#13;
ENGRA VING............................&#13;
&#13;
Menke&#13;
Madison&#13;
K. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Bierman Engraving ·Company&#13;
&#13;
-S. C. Journal.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
1&#13;
E;gbt&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
!\inc&#13;
&#13;
Schunck&#13;
DeMond&#13;
Nelson&#13;
&#13;
J. Johnson&#13;
Miller&#13;
Whitti ngton&#13;
&#13;
Osbey&#13;
Olsen&#13;
Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Cheely&#13;
Warner&#13;
Allen&#13;
&#13;
Saunderson&#13;
Thomas&#13;
Brown&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
R. J. HARRINGTON, Sioux City, Iowa ............................................... ....... President&#13;
&#13;
C. L. BARKS, Orange City, lowa .................................................... Vice-President&#13;
For three years a college health office has been mainT. N. McCLURE, Sioux City, lowa................ :....................... Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
tained for students at Morningside. The office is located&#13;
on the second floor of the gym and is under the super-&#13;
&#13;
EMERITUS&#13;
&#13;
vision of Dr. C. F. Berkstresser and Nurse Inez Grove.&#13;
&#13;
J . G. Shumaker, Alamo, Texas&#13;
TRUSTEES OF HONOR&#13;
0. M. Bond, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. C. Harshbarger, Onawa, Iowa&#13;
J. N. Hu ghes, Des Moines, Iowa&#13;
A. M. Jack so n, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Mrs. C. F. Lon g, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Many privileges are offered through this office, among which are medical examinations of new students, small-pox vaccinations, Wasserman tests, and medical aid&#13;
&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1940&#13;
&#13;
for any student in need of it.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Britton, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
J. J. Davies, Fort Dod ge, Iowa&#13;
G. W. Dunn, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
L. W. F e ik, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Clifford Harper, Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
Gordon Metcalf, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
R. F. Roach, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A. L. Semans, Spencer, Iowa&#13;
J. R. Tumbleso n, Eagle Grove, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
The health office has been an invaluable asset to the college and many are benefited&#13;
through this service.&#13;
&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1941&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks, Oran ge City, Iowa&#13;
F. E. Burgess, Algona, Iowa ·&#13;
J . C. Buthm an, Algona, Iowa&#13;
H. I. Down, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
J. A. Farnham, Cherokee, Iowa&#13;
J. V. Madi son, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
C. N. Smith, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
D. W. Stewart, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
INEZ GROVE&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
College Nurse&#13;
&#13;
TERMS EXPIRE 1942&#13;
&#13;
DR. C. F. BERKSTRESSER&#13;
M.D.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Ray J . Harrin gton, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
Leon Hi ckman, Pittsburg, P enn sylva nia&#13;
C. H. Kin gsbury, Ponca, Nebraska&#13;
John Kolp , Manson, Iowa&#13;
W. H. Lease, Akron, Iowa&#13;
F. W. Ortmeyer, Estherville, Iowa&#13;
C. S. VanEaton, Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
Miss Rae Wetmore, Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
College Physician&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Eleve n&#13;
&#13;
Ten&#13;
&#13;
MYRON EARLE GRABER&#13;
Dean of Men and Professor of Physics&#13;
Degree- B&#13;
A. at H eidelberg University, 1901.&#13;
M. A. ibid, 1904.&#13;
Ph. D. a t University of Iowa, 1924.&#13;
Graduate Student-University of M ichigan, summer 1907.&#13;
Columbia Un iversity, )908.&#13;
Ohio S tate University, 1913.&#13;
&#13;
Fellow in Ph ysics-University of Chicago, 1917-18.&#13;
University of Iowa, 1923-24.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT&#13;
Dean of Women and Professor of Ancient&#13;
Languages&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Dcgrcc- B. .\ . at I 11 inois Wesleyan Universi ty, 1888.&#13;
&#13;
M . A. at Co lum b ia University. 1913.&#13;
L. H . D. at Il lino is Wesleyan University, 1920.&#13;
Graduate Studen t-Universit y of Chicago. summer quarters&#13;
&#13;
1894 and 1897.&#13;
&#13;
S t udent in the Am erican S chool of Classical S tudies, Ro me, 1903-4.&#13;
Graduat e St11d c nt-Col umbia University , 1912-13.&#13;
Un iversi ty of Chicago, summer 1918.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EMAN UEL JOHNSON&#13;
Dean of the College and Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and R eligion&#13;
Dcgree-B. A. at Corne I I Col lcge, 1920.&#13;
M. A. at University of Chicago, 1921.&#13;
S . T. B. at Boston University, 1923.&#13;
Graduate F ellow in Philosoph y. Roston Uni versity. 1923-24.&#13;
Graduate Assistant&#13;
&#13;
Graduate&#13;
&#13;
Studies,&#13;
&#13;
in Philosophy . Brown&#13;
&#13;
University&#13;
&#13;
Harvard University. 1925. 1927-28.&#13;
Ph. D. at Boston University, 1928.&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
1924-25.&#13;
&#13;
J AMES E . K IRKPATRI CK&#13;
&#13;
LAURA CLARA FISCHER&#13;
&#13;
IRA JAMES GWINN&#13;
&#13;
G ORDON J. KI NNE Y&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
A .B. , M.S.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M. , Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant Professor of Physics&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Violoncello and&#13;
Double Bass&#13;
&#13;
Professor of E ducation&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant Professor of German&#13;
&#13;
M o rn in gside Col legc, university&#13;
&#13;
Ca rl e ton Coll ege. U ni ve rsity o f Chi cago ,&#13;
Un ive rsity of Co l orad o , U nive rs it y of&#13;
Wisconsin .&#13;
&#13;
of lowa,&#13;
&#13;
Cornell College, Un ive rsity of Io wa ,&#13;
&#13;
Maas School of Mu sic, Eastman Schoo l&#13;
of Music, Stude nt of Karl Agnesy,&#13;
Ne l son Watson.&#13;
&#13;
LEO K UCINS KI&#13;
&#13;
E THEL T HOMPSON K U CINSKI&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN HOWE&#13;
&#13;
M us. B.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. 8.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
HAWTHORN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Piano fo rte&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Violin Department&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College, E ast man S chool of&#13;
M usic, Chicago M usi ca l College, Cleve·&#13;
land I nstitute , J u illiard S chool of Music ,&#13;
S tudent of Rudol ph Ga nz, Raymond Wi l son, A rthur Loesser, J ames Frisk in.&#13;
&#13;
B.S ., M.S., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
M orningside Co l lege , Warsaw Conserva to r y of Music, Oberli n Conservatory of&#13;
M usic, Cleve l and I ns titute of M u sic ,&#13;
J uilliard Graduate School of M u sic,&#13;
P upil of Edwa rd l bzik owski , Charl o tte&#13;
Demuth Wi l liams. De R ibaupierre, Alber t&#13;
S toesse l , R u b in Goldmark, Noaum&#13;
B l inder.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of S ociology&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Stat e Co ll ege . Uni ve rsi t y o f&#13;
W isco nsin , Uni ve rsit y o f Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Iowa S tate Coll ege. Am es Bus in ess&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTHLE ER&#13;
&#13;
KATHERINE KAULL KINN EY&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
ELIZABETH N EWTON&#13;
M AC C OLLIN&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A. M.&#13;
&#13;
Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
P rofessor Emeritus of E nglish&#13;
Language&#13;
&#13;
lnstmctor in Voice&#13;
&#13;
Coll ege, G regg Co ll ege, Chi cago.&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Romance Languages&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Corn e ll Co l lege, H arvard Uni versit y, ln·&#13;
s titut F ran ca is a nd Uni ve rsi t y o f Madrid ,&#13;
U ni ve rs i ty of Ch icago , Universit y of&#13;
Dijon , Na t io na l Unive rsit y of M exico .&#13;
&#13;
U ni versity of K a nsa s, E astm a n School of&#13;
Mu sic, Voice with Ri ch a rd H a ll iday,&#13;
Pia n o wit h La w re nce Sch au ffl e r.&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
L OVELAND&#13;
&#13;
S mith Co l l ege, Ox fo rd U niversity.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
M orningside Co ll ege, Oberlin Conserva·&#13;
t or y of Music , Lake Geneva, S tudent of&#13;
L. A. T orrens.&#13;
&#13;
PEARL AM UNDSEN&#13;
&#13;
CLARA LO UISE ASMUS&#13;
&#13;
P AUL MACCOLLIN&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Mu s. B.&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , Mus. B.&#13;
&#13;
B.A ., M.A., Ph.D.&#13;
&#13;
A ssistant L ibrarian&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in P ianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Un ive rsit y o f South Dak o ta , Universit y o f&#13;
C hi cago, Uni ve rsi t y of Il li no is.&#13;
&#13;
M o rningsid e Co ll ege, Chi ca go M usica l&#13;
Co ll ege .&#13;
&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of&#13;
M usic and Professor of Voice&#13;
&#13;
Head of the Departm ent of&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Obe rl in College, Mornin gside CoJlege,&#13;
Obe rlin C onservatory of Mu sic, L ak e Ge n eva, P upil of Dr. Carl D u fft , E ll ison&#13;
Van Hoo se.&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside College, Un iversi ty o f Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL C ARTER&#13;
&#13;
}AMES A u sT1N C o s s&#13;
&#13;
R uTH McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
M AR CIA M c N EE&#13;
&#13;
B.S,.&#13;
&#13;
A.M .&#13;
&#13;
B.S., M.S.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of School M usic Depart-&#13;
&#13;
Professo r of Chem istry&#13;
&#13;
ment and Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Jl linois We s l eya n University, University&#13;
o f Il l in o is . U ni ve rsit y o f Ch icago,&#13;
C l a r k U niversit y.&#13;
&#13;
C E CIL E. MARSHALL&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , M.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in B iology&#13;
&#13;
I nstructor in Elementary&#13;
E ducation&#13;
&#13;
1\·1 orningsid e College, V irg inia P o l ytech·&#13;
n ic Institute, Iowa State Co ll ege.&#13;
&#13;
U1&#13;
,per Io wa Universit y, U niversity of&#13;
C hicago, University&#13;
of Iowa, Un iversity&#13;
of Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
Mi ssou ri Stat e T ea ch e rs Co ll ege,&#13;
Co lu mb ia Uni vers it y.&#13;
&#13;
E DWARDA M ETZ&#13;
&#13;
EARLE E. EMM E&#13;
&#13;
John GARRETT F ELTON&#13;
&#13;
A. D. , B.D. , A.M .. Ph .D.&#13;
&#13;
B.A .. M.A.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of P sychology&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Departm ent of Speech&#13;
and Dramatics&#13;
&#13;
No rt h wes te rn Unive rsity. G a rre tt Biblical&#13;
I ns ti tute , Co lu mbia Universit y, Bos to n&#13;
U niversi t y, U niversity o f Chi cago ,&#13;
U niversi ty of I owa .&#13;
&#13;
Un iversit y o f M iri neso ta, Universit y o f&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Four teen&#13;
&#13;
M ENDAL&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
MI LLER&#13;
&#13;
Mus. 8 .&#13;
&#13;
A.B .. A.m.&#13;
&#13;
Inst ructor in Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics&#13;
and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
Bogusl a wsk i College of Mu sic, Chi cago&#13;
M usical Co ll ege, Curti s Ins ti t ute, J uill ia rd Sc h oo l of Music, P upi l of Mo is·&#13;
sa ye Cogusl a ws ki , Loui s V. S aa r, T om ·&#13;
fo rd Harris, Louise Rob yn, Ern est H u t·&#13;
ch eso n , A us tin Conrad i. Haro ld Bauer.&#13;
A nge ll a Diller, Jam es F risk in .&#13;
&#13;
Greenv il le college, Universi ty of South·&#13;
e rn California, U n iversity o f Mi nnesota.&#13;
&#13;
F ifteen&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
JEAN SCOTT&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
WIRICK&#13;
&#13;
FAITH F. WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., M.D.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M., B.S.&#13;
&#13;
B.A., B.Mus.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Physical Educatior:.&#13;
for Women&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology&#13;
&#13;
L ibrarian&#13;
&#13;
A&lt;lria n Coll ege, U nive rsity of Chicago,&#13;
K a nsas S ta t e U n ive rsity, K a nsas Cit y&#13;
Universit y, Marin e Bio logica l La bora to ry,&#13;
Uni versit y of Iowa, Unive rsity of&#13;
Mich igan.&#13;
&#13;
Uni versit y of Wiscon sin , Uni ve rsity of&#13;
Minn esota, U nive rsity of Illi nois.&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in P iano forte, History&#13;
of Music, and English&#13;
&#13;
Uni ve rsit y of Illinoi s.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN WILSON STEWART&#13;
&#13;
LAURA T ASCHE&#13;
&#13;
B.A., M.A.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
VICTOR&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Commercial&#13;
&#13;
Ge neva Co l lege, Monta na S tat e U ni vc1 ·&#13;
sit y. Unive rsit y of Io wa, Uni ve rsit y o f&#13;
Il linoi s . Uni versity o f Washing ton.&#13;
&#13;
Uni ve rsit y o f Sou th Da kota, S pearfi sh&#13;
No rmal , Abe rde e n No rmal , F o r t Wayn e&#13;
Business Jn stitutc.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
v. SCHULDT&#13;
&#13;
RoY J. SwEET&#13;
&#13;
B.D.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Economics&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT TIMM&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningsi de Coll ege , Be rlin Conservatory&#13;
of Music, Un iversit y of Michigan , P upil&#13;
of Emil Li eb ling, Al be rt o J o nes, C lar·&#13;
c nce Edd y, J oan Doane , Ol af A nd e rso n ,&#13;
H o ward Wells, P a lmer Christ ia n .&#13;
&#13;
Field R epresentative&#13;
&#13;
Director of Admissions&#13;
Mo rnin gside College, Ga rre tt Bibl ical In·&#13;
s titute, Boston Uni versit y, university of&#13;
Ch i cago.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
N.&#13;
&#13;
ELMA VOLLJNK&#13;
&#13;
McCLURE&#13;
&#13;
Ph.B.&#13;
&#13;
Bursar&#13;
&#13;
S ecretary lo the Bursar&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Vin ce nnes Un ive rsity, Uni versi ty o f&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
Na ti ona l B usi ness T raini ng Sc hool.&#13;
&#13;
R UTH HAYWARD&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MAE MACARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
B. Mus.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Wind Instruments&#13;
Department&#13;
Morningside Coll ege, Juilliard Schoo l of&#13;
Mu sic, E astma n S chool of Mu sic , Pu pil&#13;
of Donald L e ntz, George Carl son , G eorges&#13;
Barre, Arthu r Loda , Da nie l Groth , Do n ·&#13;
aid Schmid, Chaut a uqua Summe r S choo l.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Coll ege, John H o pkins Unive rsit y, University ol Chi cago.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeper&#13;
&#13;
Manager of Bookstore&#13;
Ft. Dodge J un ior Coll ege, Mo rn ingside&#13;
&#13;
W este rn U n ion College, Na tio na l B usi·&#13;
ness T raining S chool.&#13;
&#13;
Co l lege.&#13;
&#13;
ETHEL R UTH M URRAY&#13;
&#13;
MmAH MILLS&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B. , A.M.&#13;
&#13;
Professor of English and S ecretary of th e Faculty&#13;
&#13;
R egistrar and Assistant Professor&#13;
of Ancient Languages and&#13;
History&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningside Coll ege . Universit y o f Chi·&#13;
cago, university&#13;
of Michigan&#13;
Uni ve r::.il y&#13;
o f Sou th e rn Cali fo rn ia.&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gside Col ledge U ni versit y of&#13;
Il l inois, Co l umbia Unive rsit y.&#13;
&#13;
JAMES Reistrup&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT GLEN ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
B. Mus.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
H ead of Pianoforte Department&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Ph ysical Educatio n&#13;
and A ssistant Athletic Director&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Co \ l ege. Pu pi l of E m ma&#13;
Sage. J. E ri ck Schma l I. Th eo. Ot te r·&#13;
strom , R udo l ph Ga nz. F ritz Voegc l ey ,&#13;
Ce ci l B u rl e igh .&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gsid e Co 11 ege . Uni versi t y of&#13;
lllino is.&#13;
&#13;
M INETTA MILLER&#13;
&#13;
ILA B UNCH&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Cashier&#13;
&#13;
S ecretary to the P resident&#13;
Da ko ta&#13;
&#13;
Wes le ya n. Mo rnin gsi de&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningsid e Co ll ege .&#13;
&#13;
Co ll ege .&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN MORGAN&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
P ublicit y&#13;
&#13;
M anager of W om en's R esidence&#13;
Halls&#13;
&#13;
Mo rningside Col l egc .&#13;
&#13;
Iowa S ta te Coll ege.&#13;
&#13;
JASON M. SA UNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
ELS YE TASH SATER&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN J ENSEN&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Ph ysical Education&#13;
and Director of A thletics&#13;
&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
R.N.&#13;
&#13;
Augu stana Co ll ege , Uni versi t y o f&#13;
Vi rgin ia .&#13;
&#13;
Dormitory Nurse&#13;
&#13;
Dormitory Nurse&#13;
&#13;
A l b ion Co ll ege.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Va ll e y H o spita l , Siou x Fa ll s.&#13;
&#13;
Dakota W esl eyan , Me thodist Sta te&#13;
H ospita l , Mi tchell.&#13;
&#13;
A.B., A.M.&#13;
&#13;
S i xtee n&#13;
&#13;
MARJ BOCK&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
Classof 1940&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
____ __ ________ _&#13;
_______ Arthur Lundblad&#13;
P resident --------- --- ------------------- __ _ _ _&#13;
Vice-President___ __ _ __&#13;
_ _ __&#13;
&#13;
_ B,&#13;
--· · ------ · · · ········ ----- --- _ ____ _&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ------------------------- --Student Council Representative&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
N ine teen&#13;
&#13;
Roy Brown&#13;
&#13;
_ ___ _ _&#13;
_ _ _ Janet Coe&#13;
Genevieve Whittin to n&#13;
&#13;
DELORES EMILY COOK&#13;
&#13;
VERONA DEMOND&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
Kl emme, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"L et those who will be clever;&#13;
I'll win with a song."&#13;
&#13;
Fort Dodge, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Primgha r, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi, Usher, 2, Treasurer, 4;&#13;
P i Ga mma Mu, P rogram C hairman, 3, 4;&#13;
W A. A. , l, 2, 3; Coll ege League, l, 2,&#13;
&#13;
I ndependent; Mu Phi E psilon, President, 4; Chapel Choir, 1, 2. 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Io wa State College&#13;
Kap1)a Pi A I pha, Corresponding Secret a r y, 3; Ph i Sigma Iota , Presid e nt , 4:&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta : Co ll egian R eport er. 2,&#13;
3, Edito rial Assistant, 3; .. Sioux," 4 .&#13;
&#13;
,(_,&#13;
CONSTANCE MA y G ALL&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Orange City, Iowa&#13;
Northwest ern Jr. Co ll ege , Oran ge City&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
"Still water runs deep."&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou GREENE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
I NEZ GROVE&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
K appa Pi Alpha, Chaplain, 2, Treasurer,&#13;
3 , P resident, 4; Alpha Psi Omega. Sec·&#13;
retary -Treasurer, 3; S igma Tau De lta;&#13;
Phi Sigma Iota; Collegia te P layers,&#13;
Presid ent, 3; Manuscript Club, P resident ,&#13;
2 , 3, 4; Collegian R eporter, 2; "Siou x,"&#13;
2; "Manuscript" Edit or, 3, 4;&#13;
&#13;
"A Dutch treat."&#13;
&#13;
Independent; Psi Chi; Phi Sigma Iota,&#13;
Histo rian, 4; W. A . A., 2, 3; College&#13;
League, 2, 3; M. C . A., 2, 3; Cosmopolitan Club, Secretary, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Nothing is so contagious as&#13;
pep."&#13;
&#13;
"A friend!y persona'ity is the&#13;
&#13;
S iou x City&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Ch i, Li brarian. 2, Recording&#13;
S ecretary, 3, Critic, 4, Vice-P resi d ent ,&#13;
4; Vesper Choir, I; P ep Club ; Col legi ate Players, Secretary, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Vi ce· Presid ent , 4 , Corresponding Secretary, 4; Sig ma T a u Delta,&#13;
Vi ce. Presi d ent, 4; Phi S igma Iota: Ves·&#13;
pe r Ch o i r, 4; Band, 2; Ago ra Boa rd, 4.&#13;
&#13;
F u I ton, S ou th Dakota&#13;
D a k ota Wesleyan University&#13;
&#13;
GARY FISHER&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
HARLAN A. DEWELL&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES MARY Gasink&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C ity&#13;
&#13;
Independent: P si Chi. 3. 4: Track, 1, 2 .&#13;
3, 4; Cosmopolitan, 1, 2, 3. 4. President,&#13;
4 ; Collegiate Pl aye rs. l , 2 : Sioux Scalpers. Chi ef, 4: Biology Club, 1, 2;&#13;
H ea lth Atte nd a nt , 4.&#13;
&#13;
first step to success.&#13;
&#13;
world is&#13;
&#13;
"My fella says . . ."&#13;
&#13;
NELLY&#13;
DEVRIES&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Rockford, Illinois&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
3; W. S. G. A.; Pep C lub, 2, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Clever, capable, and&#13;
conservative."&#13;
&#13;
DAVJD Denny&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
L UCILLE FRITZSCHE&#13;
&#13;
Council Bluffs, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Alpha S igma . Dircctress, 3, Mu sic ian , 4;&#13;
Sigma Mu: Chapel Choir, l , 2, 3. 4;&#13;
College League, 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
JEAN FOWLER&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Inde pe ndent; Pre- Engineers.&#13;
&#13;
Independen t ; Collegian R e port e r , 2 . 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"To one girl constant never."&#13;
&#13;
" Girls are so unnecessary."&#13;
&#13;
"Who's Who."&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi Al pha, Sergea nt-at -A rms, 4;&#13;
Chap lain , 4: Psi Chi, Vice- P resident , 4;&#13;
M. C. A . • 4; Biology Cl ub , 4.&#13;
&#13;
"One reason it might be pleasant&#13;
to be sick."&#13;
&#13;
"Genius is often but perseverance&#13;
and hard work in disguise."&#13;
&#13;
VmGI IA ALLEN&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
JEANNE MARGARET&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, 111 inois&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Zeta Chi , Chapl ain, 3; Eta Sigma&#13;
Phi , 3, 4; W. A. A .. 1, 2. 3. 4. Secretary, 3, R e port e r. 2: Int ramural; "Sioux"&#13;
T ypist, 4.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GUSTESON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Si oux City&#13;
&#13;
" It's not the heat, it's the&#13;
Timm-idity."&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY D. BROOKE&#13;
&#13;
Sigma T heta Rho; Band, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Brass Qua,tet, 2; T rumpet Trio, 3 ; Symphony, 3; Collegian R eport er, ] , 2.&#13;
&#13;
He&#13;
&#13;
likes to blow-his horn."&#13;
&#13;
"Nearly all are born smart; the&#13;
good-looking don't have to&#13;
keep it up."&#13;
&#13;
B . RoY BROWN&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee, Io wa&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi A lpha, S ergean t-at-Arms, 2,&#13;
H a ll Chairman. 2, Recording S ec retary,&#13;
3, Vi ce- President, 3, Presi dent, 4; Sigma&#13;
Tau Delta, Vice-P resi dent. 4; Cha pel&#13;
Choir, ], 2, ~, _4 ; manuscriptCl11b;&#13;
Siou x, 4.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi A I pha , Sergeant-at-Arms, 2;&#13;
Sigma Mu; Vespe r Choir, l. 2, 3: Band,&#13;
] , 2, 3, 4; Fl ute Qu a rtet; F rench Qui n ·&#13;
tct ; Sympho n y, I , 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"She won't be teaching long."&#13;
&#13;
D EVON H. H AHN&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
RO BERT&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
H AKALA&#13;
&#13;
ADELATDE H . HANSEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi Alpha, S ergeant-at- Arms, 3;&#13;
Mu Phi Ep si l on. Hi storia n , 4; Vesper&#13;
Choir, I , 2, 3, 4; Symphony, 3, 4 ;&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
I ndepend ent ; Pi Gamma Mu , Vice-President: Sigma Tau D e lta ; Eta Sigma Phi,&#13;
Vi ce- President ; I ntramura l ; Chapel Choi r ,&#13;
&#13;
Burt, Iowa&#13;
Cho fT y Jr. Coll ege, Ontario, Cali f.&#13;
&#13;
Virginia. Minnesota&#13;
Virginia Jr. Col lege&#13;
&#13;
Si ou x City&#13;
&#13;
Chi. 3. 4: Football. 3. 4: .. M" Club.&#13;
&#13;
isterial Assoc ia ti on, I , 2, 3; Collegian&#13;
R eporte r, Edito rial Assistant, 4 .&#13;
&#13;
W. S. G. A., 4.&#13;
&#13;
"A petite blonde with winning&#13;
ways."&#13;
&#13;
3. 4, Presid ent. 4; S tu d ent Council, 4;&#13;
P sycho l ogy Club, 3 ; Intramural, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
" Beware, Ladies Aid, here he&#13;
comes."&#13;
&#13;
GLEN R. B URROW&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Janet&#13;
CoE&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ph i Sigma. Preside n t, 3 : Footbal I, I , 2,&#13;
3, 4; Bask e tball , I ; Track, l ; "M ""&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Sigma, Recording Secretary, 2,&#13;
Vice- P resident , 3; In t e r -Sorority Counci l ,&#13;
3, P resident, 4: Intramural, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
W. A. A.: St ud ent Council, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Club, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Silence is golden and I'm&#13;
bankrupt."&#13;
&#13;
" Happy are those who have the&#13;
gift of making friends."&#13;
Twe nt y&#13;
&#13;
In d ependent; Coll egiate Players. 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Ind epe ndent: Pi Gamma Mu. 3, 4; Psi&#13;
&#13;
I ; Band . 3; M. C. A., I. 2. 3, 4: Min·&#13;
&#13;
"She can go to town-on a&#13;
typewriter."&#13;
&#13;
"There's something about all redheads that T can't resist."&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ALICE VIRGINIA HANSON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
ALTA CLAIRE HARRISON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Od ebolt, lowa&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
\Vash ta, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
K ai pa Zeta Chi , President. 4; TnterSorority Council, 4: W. A. A., 4: Collegiate Players, 3. 4. Vice- P resident. 4;&#13;
Sioux Scalpers, 4: Collegian R eporter. 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kap pa Pi Alpha, Vi ce- P resident, 3;&#13;
&#13;
"W e are of the opinf_on that Don&#13;
is lucky.&#13;
Twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
Pep Club.&#13;
&#13;
" T here are no troubles that a&#13;
twinkle and a giggle&#13;
won't cure."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
MILLICENT MARIE JENSEN&#13;
&#13;
]oHN JOSEPH KRZNARICH&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
I re ne, South Dako ta&#13;
Dakot a Wesl eya n University&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
K ap pa Pi Alpha, Librari a n , 3, Rcco,din g&#13;
Secretary, 4, Co rres pondin g Secretary , 3;&#13;
Sigma Tau Delt a; "S ioux ," 2, 3, Edit o r,&#13;
4 ; Manu scri pt Club. 2, 3, 4 , Secretary·&#13;
Treasurer, 3, Vi ce- Pres id ent , 4 ; Co l l e gia te Pla yers, 2; Associa te Edit o r o r&#13;
••Ma nu scrip t," 3; Coll eg ian R eporter,' 3;&#13;
" Wh o's Wh o."&#13;
&#13;
Ka ppa Pi Alph a, Critic, 3, Hall Chair·&#13;
man, 3, Vi ce -Pres id e nt , 4, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, 4; Sigma Mu: Vesper Ch o ir ,&#13;
2, 3, 4; Coll ege League, 2: M. C. A. , 2,&#13;
3, 4; Program Committee, 3 , 4.&#13;
&#13;
" Happin ess is a disease and&#13;
have a bad case of it."&#13;
&#13;
ANNA MARJE LARSON&#13;
&#13;
Ironwood, Mi chi ga n&#13;
I ronwood Jr. Coll ege&#13;
&#13;
IRENE M. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
In de pende nt ; Foot b a l I, 3 , 4: Bas k e 1ba l I,&#13;
3; "M " Club, 3 , 4 ; P syc hology Club;&#13;
Int ra mu ra l.&#13;
&#13;
K appa Pi Alpha , H a l I Chairman ,&#13;
c ia l Chairman , 3, Corr espond in g&#13;
tary. 4, Treasurer, 4: Sigma T au&#13;
May Qu ee n , 1 ; P e p Club , 2 , 3;&#13;
g iat e Pl aye rs, 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, those dimples!"&#13;
&#13;
2, So·&#13;
Secre·&#13;
D e lta;&#13;
Coll e·&#13;
&#13;
"Who said beauty was only&#13;
skin dee p ?"&#13;
&#13;
"Diversity of interests with&#13;
constancy of ideals."&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE JoHNSON&#13;
A.B .&#13;
&#13;
ELLA&#13;
&#13;
LUCILLE BARBARA JoHNSO N&#13;
B.S .M.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
In d e pe nd e nt: Sigma Mu, Preside nt, 3 :&#13;
Mu Phi , Chap lai n, 4: Ves pe r Choir, 1.&#13;
2, 3, 4; Band , 4 .&#13;
&#13;
4; Symphony: M. C . A .. ] , 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Collegiate Pl ayers.&#13;
&#13;
RALPH KITTE RMAN&#13;
&#13;
"Proof that thorougl:ness pays&#13;
good returns."&#13;
&#13;
Ind epende nt ; Mu Phi Epsilon, 3. 4, R e·&#13;
cord in g Secretary, 4; V esper Choir, 2, 3 ,&#13;
4. Pres id e nt . 4: College Leag ue. 2, 3,&#13;
4: M. C. A., 3. 4: Cosmopo lit an Club,&#13;
2, 3, 4, Vi ce- P res id e nt , 4, Treasu rer, 4.&#13;
&#13;
" Honor lies in honest toil."&#13;
&#13;
NANCY ELLEN LOWRY&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET LONG&#13;
&#13;
KATHLYN MARIE KOLP&#13;
&#13;
.I .B.&#13;
&#13;
B. S.M .&#13;
Foochow,&#13;
China&#13;
Hwa Nan College&#13;
&#13;
Alpha S ig ma, Treas urer. 4: Phi S igma&#13;
Iota. Vice-President&#13;
3. Secre tary, 4;&#13;
Vcspe;· Ch oi r. 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Mu sic is well said to be the&#13;
speech of angels."&#13;
&#13;
" A man of many sides and all of&#13;
them excellent."&#13;
&#13;
BETTY SIMPSON LING&#13;
&#13;
LA URITSEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Ch a pe l Choi r. 1. 2, 3, 4: Ba nd , 1. 2. 3.&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
A.B .&#13;
&#13;
P s i Chi , Vi ce- Pres id ent, 3, Pres id ent. 4:&#13;
Pi Cam ma Mu: Kappa Chi; Alpha P si:&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
M a nso n. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th e ta Rho , 1; Mini ste ri a l Asso·&#13;
c iation. 2, 3 . 4, Pres id e nt , 2: Chap e l&#13;
Choir , l , 2, J, 4 ; M. C. A . . 1. 2. 3 , 4.&#13;
&#13;
K a pp a Ze ta Chi, U sh e r. 2, 3. Lib rarian ,&#13;
3. Criti c, 4: Ch ape l Choir. 2 , 3. 4: Ves·&#13;
pe r Choir, 1; Coll ege Leag ue, 1, 2;&#13;
M. C. A. , 1. 2. 3, 4; Agora, Treasure r.&#13;
2; Junior C l ass S ecretary; Co ll egiate&#13;
Pl aye rs, 3, 4; Student Coun ci l. 4: \V. S.&#13;
C. A .. Pres id e nt , 4: "Who's Wh o."&#13;
&#13;
LETHA HOWES&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Ind epe nd e nt: Pi Gamma Mu , 3. 4; P si&#13;
Chi . 3, 4. Secretary. 3. 4: Coll eg ia n R e·&#13;
port e r, 4; P syc h o logy Club , Secretary, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"A girl of influence in th e&#13;
history department."&#13;
&#13;
4; M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
" Black is my true love's hair,&#13;
but not her disposition."&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Kiro n , Io wa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Tnd epe nd e nt; Alpha P si Om ega, 3, 4,&#13;
Vi ce- Pr es id e nt , 3: P si Chi , 3, 4: Foot ·&#13;
b u ll, 1; Intramural : Student Bod y Pres i·&#13;
dent , 4; "Who' s Who."&#13;
&#13;
Kap p a Ze ta Chi, Chaplain. 4: Mu Phi&#13;
Ep sil o n, 4: Sigma Mu. 3 . 4: W. A. A. ,&#13;
3. 4: Vespe r Ch o ir , 1, 2. 3. 4; S trin g&#13;
Qu a rt e t , ] , 2, 3 , 4: Symphony. 1, 2. 3,&#13;
&#13;
LESTER MENKE&#13;
&#13;
ARTHUR L UN DBLAD&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
"The last of the eligible&#13;
bachelors."&#13;
&#13;
Ch erok ee, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"A rare Combination.... Beautyand&#13;
sweetness.&#13;
&#13;
"A good disposition promotes&#13;
popularity."&#13;
&#13;
MORGAN HARRISON&#13;
&#13;
B. S. M.&#13;
&#13;
Sac City, Iowa&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi. Usher. 2. Inter-Sorority&#13;
Council . 3 . Critic. 4. Vi ce- Pres id e nt , 4 :&#13;
Alph a P si Omega. Vi ce- Pres id e nt , 4.&#13;
Secretary, 4: W. A. A. , 1, 2 ; Ves pe r&#13;
Ch o ir , 1, 2; Collegiate Pl aye rs. 1, 2, 3,&#13;
4. Secretary. 2 , Vi ce- Presi d e nt. 3, P resi·&#13;
dent, 4: "S ioux ," 3 : Student Council.&#13;
3; Ishkoodah , Presid e nt , 1.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Kin gs l ey, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
"The gift of speech is a powerful&#13;
one."&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Calum e t, Io wa&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma, Pres id e nt , 4 ,&#13;
Arm s, 3. Vi ce- Pres id e nt , 3;&#13;
2, 3, 4; Vi ce- Pres id e nt or&#13;
Pres id e nt of Class .&#13;
&#13;
S ergea nt- a t·&#13;
Football , ] ,&#13;
Cla ss, 3;&#13;
4.&#13;
&#13;
" His futur e is Well taken&#13;
care of.&#13;
&#13;
Alph a Tau De lta , Sergeant-at-A rms , 2 ,&#13;
President, 4; Alpha Psi Om ega, Vi ce·&#13;
Pres idenr , 4 ; Ves pe r Ch o ir , 1 ; Co ll ege&#13;
League, 1. 2 ; M. C. A. , 4: Coll egia te&#13;
Pla ye rs,&#13;
2,&#13;
Secretary:&#13;
cosmopolitan&#13;
Club , Treas ure r, 3 : " S iou x" Bu sin ess&#13;
M a nage r. 3, 4: P resi d e nt o r Cia ss, 2;&#13;
H ea lth Kin g, 4: ' "Who' s Wh o."&#13;
&#13;
" Heil, the Kingfish!"&#13;
&#13;
ROGER H UGHES&#13;
&#13;
wALTER LEROY H URD&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Stanhope, Iowa&#13;
W ebs te r Cit y Jr. College&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
Uni ve rsity of Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Park er, South Dakota&#13;
D a k o ta Wes l eya n Uni ve rsit y&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Th e ta Rho , Chap l ain, 3 , Pres i·&#13;
d en t, 4; P si Chi. 3: Int e r- Frat e rnit y&#13;
Co uncil , 3.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma , Pl ed gemas t er, 3, Tr easurer, 4,&#13;
Pres id e nt . 4; Foo tball , 4; B ask e tball ,&#13;
2. 3, 4; "M" Club , 2, 3, 4: All-Confer·&#13;
ence Bask e tb a ll T ea m. 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Ind e pe nd e nt: Pi Gamma l\1u , 3, 4, Pres i·&#13;
d e nt , 4: P si Chi, 4: Go a rd or Contro l ,&#13;
3, 4, Secretary . 4: "Sioux.'' 4; Co ll e·&#13;
g iat e Pla ye rs, 2, 3, 4&#13;
&#13;
"Walt and his ' Y' boys."&#13;
&#13;
"Why are all the nice men&#13;
married?" ·&#13;
&#13;
"P rexy' s personable pencilpusner.&#13;
&#13;
DEON MooR&#13;
&#13;
Alph a T au D e lt a; Int ra mu ra l.&#13;
&#13;
"Wake me when the bell rings."&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
MINETTA Miller&#13;
&#13;
DONALD H. MICHAELSON&#13;
&#13;
MILFORD EUGENE JACOBSEN&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS WILLIAM MooN&#13;
&#13;
B. S.M.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux. Cit y&#13;
&#13;
S ioux. City&#13;
&#13;
St. An sgar, Tow a&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Ind epen d e nt ; Alph a P si Omega. 3 . 4.&#13;
P res id e nt , 4 ; Chap e l Choir, 1, 2, 3, 4;&#13;
Ma l e Quart e t , 1, 2, 3 , 4 ; Mix ed Qu art e t ,&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4 ; Madri ga l Croup , 3, 4 ; Phi&#13;
: u. Treasu re r. 4.&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
I nd cpe nd cn t: P si Chi , 4; Pi Cam mu&#13;
Mu . 4.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
ISEMJNGER&#13;
&#13;
"Sorry, girls, I'm taken."&#13;
&#13;
" Be gone dull care; I have no&#13;
time for you."&#13;
&#13;
J nd e pe nd e nt ;&#13;
&#13;
Sinfonia, Secretary, 4 ;&#13;
Chapel Choi r, 1, 2, 3, 4; Madrigal , 2. 3 .&#13;
4: Collegiate Pl aye rs, 1, 2 ; Orch es tra ,&#13;
Messiah" alternate ,&#13;
I ; String Tri o, 1 ;&#13;
&#13;
2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kapp a Ze ta Chi: Eta S ig ma Phi. Tr eas·&#13;
urer. 3, Vi ce -Presi d e nt , 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Even the littlest candle casts&#13;
a far beam."&#13;
&#13;
I f man is what he thinks he is,&#13;
I'm great."&#13;
Tw e nty-three&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
M. SMITH&#13;
&#13;
RAY PORT&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN MA RGUERITE P OSEY&#13;
&#13;
L EO SM ITH&#13;
&#13;
D.S .&#13;
&#13;
D.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Akron, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Map l eton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I ndependent; Footbal l , J, 2, 3, 4; I n·&#13;
tramural, ], 2, 3, 4; ''M" Club, 3, 4 .&#13;
&#13;
. In depende nt; Sigma Mu , 3, 4; Vesper&#13;
Choir, .I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Such eye-lashes are the envy of&#13;
many a girl."&#13;
&#13;
"Few have the courage to appear&#13;
as good as they really are."&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma, S ergea nt·at-Arms , l , Secretary, 2, P res ide nt , 3; Foo t ba ll , J , 2 , 3,&#13;
4;. I nt e r-frat e rnity Council, 3; Sophomore C l ass S ec re tary.&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon, Iowa&#13;
She ldon J r. Coll ege&#13;
&#13;
Ruth&#13;
&#13;
Assistant to Assistant Bursar&#13;
Bunch ."&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN PRESTON&#13;
&#13;
J OH N P ROSSER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi Alpha , Socia l Chairman , 2,&#13;
Recording Secretary, 3, Vice-President , 4;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu; Collegiate Players , 1, 2.&#13;
&#13;
"Count the votes, boys, count&#13;
the votes."&#13;
&#13;
"Wo rry never made anyone great&#13;
-why should I worry?"&#13;
&#13;
A NNA S T E INBRENNER&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
A l pha Sigma, Chap l ain, 4; Chap e l Choir,&#13;
3, 4; Band. 3: Col lcge Leag ue , 3 , 4;&#13;
M. C. A .. 3, 4. Secretary; Sophomore&#13;
C lass Vic e- Pres id e nt.&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED P. STROZDAS&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
A l pha Tau De lta , Treas urer, 2; P si Chi,&#13;
4; Pi Gamma Mu , 4; Basketball , l , 2,&#13;
3, 4; "M" Club , 3, 4; I ntramura l , 2, 3,&#13;
4; Collegian R e port e r Sports Edit or, 4;&#13;
Stude nt Body Vic e- Pres id e nt , 4;&#13;
"Who's Who ."&#13;
&#13;
"Efficiency is the secret of&#13;
getting much done."&#13;
&#13;
"As impartial as a traffic light&#13;
except in matters of the heart."&#13;
A RNOLD&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
R UDD&#13;
&#13;
L E R OY B ASIL SHELEY&#13;
&#13;
I RVINE T HOE&#13;
&#13;
John SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
D.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
P au l lina, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
A l pha Tau De l ta; String Quartet, l. 2.&#13;
3, 4; Symphony, 1, 2 , 3. 4; Pres ident of&#13;
Con se rvatory Student Body, 4, VicePresident, 3.&#13;
&#13;
I ndepend e nt; Pi Cam ma Mu; P si Chi.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Lak e Mi l I s, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Ind e pendent: Sigma Pi Sigma ; Pre-En·&#13;
gineers, Trea s ure r, 3. Pres ident, 4;&#13;
H ealth Attendant , 3.&#13;
&#13;
"Milford's man Watson ."&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Ze ta Chi: Sigma Tau De l ta , Secretary, 4: Pi Gamma Mu , Secretary; Ps i&#13;
Ch i: Co l lege Lea gue , l. 2: M. C. A. ,&#13;
l , 2 , 3, 4 , Pres id e nt. 3; Pr es id e nt of&#13;
Coop era tiv e Hou se . 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Why must some be born with&#13;
all the brains?"&#13;
&#13;
"A complexion like his name."&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
"Not too serious, not too gay-nice in a charming sort of way."&#13;
&#13;
H OWARD N IELSEN&#13;
&#13;
L YLE O BERLIN&#13;
&#13;
] AC K T HOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
D.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.D .&#13;
&#13;
Turi n, Iowa&#13;
Dana College, Blair, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Laurens, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Mapl e ton , Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
B e ta B e ta Beta.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma; Football , l; I ntramural.&#13;
&#13;
"He can because he thinks he&#13;
can."&#13;
&#13;
"When in doubt, 'tis safer to be&#13;
silent."&#13;
&#13;
A l pha Tau De lt a. Chaplain. 3; I ntramura l , l , 2; Co ll eg iat e Pl ayers,&#13;
I , 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
L ESTER O LSON&#13;
&#13;
FRANK VAN D ER MATEN&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.M.&#13;
&#13;
L ORRA INE VE RSTEGEN&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
Bradgat e, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Bo yd e n. Iowa&#13;
Northw es t e rn Jr. College, Orang e City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
stephens Col lege&#13;
&#13;
V es per Choir , 2, 3, 4: Band. 2: String&#13;
Quart e t , 4; Symphony, 2, 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Pi A l p h a. R ecordin g Secretary, 4 .&#13;
Social Chairman , 4.&#13;
&#13;
"Life is a serious business and&#13;
I'll treat· it as such."&#13;
&#13;
"Gracious is the wo rd for&#13;
L aurie."&#13;
&#13;
Jo YCE M . WEED&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Theta R ho , Chaplain, 2, 3; Col-&#13;
&#13;
l ege League , 2; M. C. A., 2, 3.&#13;
&#13;
"Why is that, Professo r?"&#13;
&#13;
D OROT HY ANN O LSON&#13;
A.B.&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi. Presid e nt. 4 : S igma Tau&#13;
De l ta , 3 , 4 : Alpha Psi Om eg a, 2 , 3. 4,&#13;
Pres ident, 3: \V. A. A., Vice-Pres ident,&#13;
4; I ntramural; Miss Morningsid e. 1939;&#13;
"Sioux'' Ed i tor, 3; Collegiate P l ayers,&#13;
1, 2. 3, 4; "Who' s Who."&#13;
4; Agora&#13;
Pres ident , 4; "Yumph Girl," 2; Beauty&#13;
Quee n, 3.&#13;
&#13;
S igma Th e ta Rho ,&#13;
Pledgemaster,&#13;
2.&#13;
Treasure r, 3 , Pres ident. 4 : l nter-Frat e rn·&#13;
ity Counc il , 2, 4; Bask e tbal l , 1: Co ll ege&#13;
Leag ue , 1 . 2 , 3; M . C. A . , 2, 3: Student&#13;
Council , 2: C lass Pres id e nt. 3; Bu sin ess&#13;
Manager of Collegian R ep ort e r, 3; Cos·&#13;
mopolitan Club, 3; "Who's Who."&#13;
&#13;
J OHN&#13;
&#13;
TH ROWER&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
"The harder I try the gooder to&#13;
be, the worser I am."&#13;
&#13;
"An all around girl liked by&#13;
everyone."&#13;
&#13;
" In this case, girls prefer&#13;
blonds too ."&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN O SBEY&#13;
&#13;
MARLYN P EDERSON&#13;
&#13;
P ATRI CIA D ORINE W ARNER&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
B.S.&#13;
&#13;
A.D.&#13;
&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
S ioux; City&#13;
&#13;
Lennox , South Dako ta&#13;
&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
&#13;
Sioux; City&#13;
&#13;
I ndepe ndent: P si Chi; Sigma Tau De l ta;&#13;
Pi Gamma Mu; Eta Sigma Phi , Presid e nt. 4 , Nationa l Secretary, 4: "Sioux,"&#13;
4: Stude n t Counci l , Secretary; M iss&#13;
Morningside Att e n dant; "Who' s Who."&#13;
&#13;
I ndep e ndent: I ntramural. 1. 2, 3. 4: Economic s C l ub , }, 2: Avia ti o n Club , 2.&#13;
&#13;
Independent ;&#13;
Sigma Tau De lta , 3, 4.&#13;
Presid e nt, 4; \V . A. A . , 1, 2 , 3, 4 , Board.&#13;
3, 4: Manu sc ript Club. 3, 4; "Sioux,''&#13;
2, 3. 4; Collegian R epo rte r, l , 3, 4.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Zeta Chi. Re cording Secretary, 4;&#13;
W. A. A .. Treasu re r. 3 , Presid e nt , 4;&#13;
Hea lth Att e ndant , 2.&#13;
&#13;
"All this and heaven too?"&#13;
T wenty-four&#13;
&#13;
" Talking comes by nature,&#13;
silence by wisdom."&#13;
&#13;
"Quiet until you know her.''&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
" Joyce and John- proof to the&#13;
physicist that likes attract."&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GRACE BINGAMAN&#13;
&#13;
MARVIN FRUM&#13;
&#13;
Sioux C it y&#13;
&#13;
Danbury, Jowa&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE CHAMPENY&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY SMITH&#13;
E agl e Grove, Io wa&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR Jones&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Carro l 1, Ne braska&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD SPA YDE&#13;
Sac C ity, I o wa&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT CRAVEN&#13;
&#13;
MARY JoRDAN&#13;
&#13;
S ioux C it y&#13;
&#13;
Sio ux City&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WEAVILL&#13;
S e rgeant Bl u ff, Jowa&#13;
&#13;
HILDA DETHLEFS&#13;
&#13;
CLARA L UTHER&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
Mil an. Illinois&#13;
&#13;
EDNA ELVING&#13;
&#13;
ELLEN PERRI N&#13;
&#13;
S ioux Ci t y&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Cit y&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET FERRIN&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT R ULEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CARETA Y OUNGLOVE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux Ci t y&#13;
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Eag l e Grove, Io wa&#13;
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Siou x Citv&#13;
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HARRIETT WOODKE&#13;
Sio ux C it y&#13;
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GENE VIEVE WHITTINGTON&#13;
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Va yl and , South Da k o ta&#13;
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So ro rit y Cou ncil , 4; S igma Mu: C h apel&#13;
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4: madri&#13;
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4:&#13;
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C l a ss; " S io u x." 4: Is hk ood a h Presid e n t ,&#13;
1 : M iss Mo rnin gside Atte nda nt , 4.&#13;
&#13;
" In harmony with the world."&#13;
GORDON WHITVER&#13;
A. B.&#13;
Wa l nut. Ill in o is&#13;
&#13;
Methodist&#13;
&#13;
Sc hoo l o f Nurs ing&#13;
&#13;
I nd e pe nde nt : Be ta Be ta Be ta. Vi ceP resid ent , 4; Bi o logy C lub, 4 ,&#13;
S ec retary.&#13;
&#13;
" A t last, a doctor in the house."&#13;
&#13;
PA CK ARD WOLL E&#13;
A.B.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
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S ioux Ci t y&#13;
I nd e pe nd e n t : P si Chi: I ntra mu ra l: Siou x&#13;
Sca l p e rs, P reside n t, 4 ; Co ll egia n R e·&#13;
porte r, B usiness M anage r, 4: P e p C l ub .&#13;
l ; P s ycho l og y C l ub , 3; Eco nom ic s Cl u b ,&#13;
I : Cheerl eade r, l.&#13;
&#13;
"G rade A , we say, with plenty of&#13;
cream."&#13;
Twen ty-six&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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x&#13;
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J&#13;
EDYTHE M AE ALBERT&#13;
&#13;
DoNNIN AMES&#13;
&#13;
KEITH ARNOLD&#13;
&#13;
MARY LOUISE BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
MILTON BINGER&#13;
&#13;
DORIS BROWN&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
..... Dean Forbes&#13;
&#13;
President -------------------- ------ ----------Vice-President -------------------- ------ --- -- --&#13;
&#13;
·--------- --· ....... Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ----- -------&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
Student Counc1 1 Representative.......................... .&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
RALPH BROWN&#13;
&#13;
ROLLIE BUCKHOLZ&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY CARRIGG&#13;
&#13;
Winifred&#13;
&#13;
MAURICE CLARE&#13;
&#13;
ARTH UR Clayton&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
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Twenty-nine&#13;
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CHEELY&#13;
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MAXINE Ericksen&#13;
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FRAN CES FORSBERG&#13;
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D UANE HALFORD&#13;
&#13;
DONALD FRITZSCHE&#13;
&#13;
D ALE HART ER&#13;
&#13;
joyce HELD&#13;
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CELIA FORDYCE&#13;
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D u RETH HELEN H1TcHco c K&#13;
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B ETTY H UXTABL E&#13;
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EVELYN G UELFF&#13;
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LYLE JoH NSON&#13;
&#13;
JOSEPHINE Dixon&#13;
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Doreen Dallam&#13;
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EUGENE EMM E&#13;
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Thi rt y&#13;
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CLIFFORD L AMKIN&#13;
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K ENNETH LAWRENCE&#13;
&#13;
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FRAN K KAH OUN&#13;
&#13;
G EORGE K OCH&#13;
&#13;
GLENN YS CORDERMAN&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES Clayton&#13;
&#13;
BRUCE LI NDSAY&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
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Thirty -one&#13;
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Kenneth&#13;
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J O H NSON&#13;
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&#13;
I&#13;
MARTHA HELEN NELSON&#13;
&#13;
MAURICE SCHEIDER&#13;
&#13;
RUTH OLSEN&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE SCHILLER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
5&#13;
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RUTH RANCE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
Irene&#13;
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BETTY ScHUNCK&#13;
&#13;
ALICE SCOTT&#13;
&#13;
SCHARMEL STURTEVANT&#13;
&#13;
L UCILLE PIPPETT&#13;
&#13;
MAX STERN&#13;
&#13;
Ix&#13;
.&#13;
SCHAAL&#13;
SHAVER&#13;
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MARY Mcbride&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS MAHOOD&#13;
&#13;
Oliver&#13;
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TAKEO NAGAMORJ&#13;
&#13;
Allice&#13;
&#13;
MELVIN McKNIGHT&#13;
&#13;
NORMA NEILSON&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEY&#13;
&#13;
MoGCK&#13;
&#13;
GARRETT WALLMAN&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED WIKERT&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD WISSINK&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Thirt y-two&#13;
&#13;
wALLEN&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES WALKER&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES WERT&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
LEONARD NELSON&#13;
&#13;
SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
AYAKO YAMASHIRO&#13;
&#13;
Thirt y-three&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
President ---------------&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------&#13;
&#13;
__________ _ John Kolp&#13;
_&#13;
Bernard Feikema&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President ·······----·······-----·········:·::·....... Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ······----···:······-··.&#13;
Geraldine Booth&#13;
Student Council Representative........... ---··--········&#13;
&#13;
T hi rt y- fi ve&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT CAINE&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE CAIRY&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE D AHL&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT DANNENBERG&#13;
&#13;
BERNARD FEIKEMA&#13;
&#13;
MAXI NE F OST ER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
M ARGIE CARLSON&#13;
&#13;
VERNON CASTLE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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ALI CE C LAYTON&#13;
&#13;
GERALD COBBS&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES GANDEK&#13;
&#13;
BRU CE C ONNOR&#13;
&#13;
D OROT H Y G ARTNER&#13;
&#13;
DARYLE C RABB&#13;
&#13;
EILEEN GILSON&#13;
&#13;
DONALD BALLANTINE&#13;
&#13;
E ARL G OODENOW&#13;
&#13;
BARBARA BARRY&#13;
&#13;
Ted GRIER&#13;
&#13;
M ARGARET BERG&#13;
&#13;
M ARIE BERGQUIST&#13;
&#13;
R AYMOND G u s TESON&#13;
&#13;
JAMES BOLTON&#13;
&#13;
BETTY BOOT JER&#13;
&#13;
Doris&#13;
&#13;
KATHRYN BROWN&#13;
&#13;
HELEN BROYLES&#13;
&#13;
Thirty.six&#13;
&#13;
H ALL&#13;
&#13;
M ERRIE J UNE HEETLAND&#13;
&#13;
C HARLOTTE H ACKETT&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT H AMEL&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT H EMPSTEAD&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-seven&#13;
&#13;
BROWN GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
H ELEN J OH NSON&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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} EAN JoNES&#13;
&#13;
JoE L EASE&#13;
&#13;
D ONOVAN L EOPOLD&#13;
&#13;
L AURETTA KING&#13;
&#13;
R UTH KI NGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
B o B L o wRY&#13;
&#13;
D ARREL M c ENTAF FER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
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v&#13;
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J OHN K OLP&#13;
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TED&#13;
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LER OY K UH LMAN&#13;
&#13;
R OMA]&#13;
&#13;
Macur&#13;
&#13;
J OHN MAYNARD&#13;
&#13;
L AMKIN&#13;
&#13;
R oY M I CHAUD&#13;
&#13;
BETTE L ARSON&#13;
&#13;
EDWARD HENDRI CK S&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN MILLER&#13;
&#13;
E ARL HI CK S&#13;
&#13;
DOUGLAS O AKLEAF&#13;
&#13;
M URIEL HILE R&#13;
&#13;
] ACK H OLDCROFT&#13;
&#13;
EDITH J ENS EN&#13;
&#13;
MAXI NE P OOLEY&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD P ORTER&#13;
&#13;
R OBERT J ACKSON&#13;
&#13;
E UNI CE J EEP&#13;
&#13;
M I LDRED P FEIFFER&#13;
&#13;
BETTY H OEFER&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT R EESE&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES R IC HARDS&#13;
&#13;
ADELE R OBERTS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
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Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Thi rty -ni ne&#13;
&#13;
K ATHRYN MADISON&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MARIAN STICKLES&#13;
&#13;
loNE SWANLUND&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GERALDINE THOMAS&#13;
&#13;
GLEN THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
OPAL WALKER&#13;
&#13;
BYRON WALTER&#13;
&#13;
HELEN WEAVER&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou WELDING&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
f&#13;
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PHYLLTS THORNGREEN&#13;
&#13;
ELNA VAN CAMP&#13;
&#13;
H. FREDDIE WELLMERLTNG&#13;
&#13;
LA VoNNE WERTZ&#13;
&#13;
CLARENCE VORIS&#13;
ELLA JEAN WADDELL&#13;
&#13;
DoNALD WrnLER&#13;
&#13;
HOWARD WINTER&#13;
&#13;
CLARICE ROHWEDER&#13;
FERNE ROLAND&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE SALSBURY&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Lou SAUNDERSON&#13;
&#13;
KATHLEEN SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
ALMA SHIPLEY&#13;
&#13;
LAUREE WooD&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD WooDs&#13;
&#13;
SHIRLEYMAE ZECHMANN&#13;
WILLTAM&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY JEAN SORENSON&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
Forty -o ne&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
First S em ester&#13;
&#13;
Wil son Reynolds&#13;
President... ....................... ··-··· ·- ··-· · ·-········· Merl e Stone&#13;
Vi ce-President... .&#13;
An eline Thompson&#13;
-----·- Ruth Cow ling&#13;
g&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer..&#13;
Student Council Representative ______________ _&#13;
&#13;
Fo rt y- th ree&#13;
&#13;
S econd Sem ester&#13;
&#13;
Robert Hicks&#13;
Merl e Stone&#13;
Angeline Thompson&#13;
Ruth Cowlin g&#13;
&#13;
Doris CoE&#13;
&#13;
RICHARD CORWIN&#13;
&#13;
HELEN FOSTER&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE GEHRT&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE Coss&#13;
&#13;
RUTH COWLING&#13;
&#13;
JOEL GEISTER&#13;
&#13;
DAVID GIBSON&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
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TONI CROW&#13;
&#13;
LA VERGNE HILL&#13;
&#13;
VIRGINIA DUNLAP&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn&#13;
&#13;
evelyn&#13;
&#13;
FRED DANIELS&#13;
&#13;
Cox&#13;
&#13;
RAY HUGHES&#13;
&#13;
ALICE JACOBS&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
MILDRED JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
BoB BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
HEWLETT&#13;
&#13;
· R UTH JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
METTA BREAW&#13;
&#13;
LESTER JONES&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
DOROTHY BROWN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS KENNY&#13;
&#13;
FRANCIS KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
PHYLLIS KNAPPE&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN CAPENER&#13;
&#13;
JAMES LEACHMAN&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
VIRGINIA CARR&#13;
&#13;
GLENN CLARK&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
ij&#13;
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Forty- four&#13;
&#13;
F orty- fi ve&#13;
&#13;
BoB HicKs&#13;
&#13;
HARRIETT SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
GERALDINE SATRANG&#13;
&#13;
LUCILE ROBERTS&#13;
&#13;
VELMA SWANSON&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MARJORIE SW ISHER&#13;
&#13;
MARVIN SHULENBERGER&#13;
&#13;
MAR IETTA SEAMAN&#13;
&#13;
ANGELINE THOMPSON&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
lf&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD SKALBY&#13;
&#13;
VERA SM ITH&#13;
&#13;
ELEANOR THORPE&#13;
&#13;
JAMES VANDER BERG&#13;
&#13;
GARNET WEDEKING&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE W ILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
MERLE STO:-.E&#13;
NORMAN SUSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
DOROTHY LONG&#13;
MAx McCoy&#13;
&#13;
BETTY Maclennon&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN MURPHY&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
Zola&#13;
&#13;
MARCUSSEN&#13;
&#13;
LEONARD REHDER&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
WILSON REYNOLDS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
i1Ja&#13;
&#13;
MARIELLEN R I FENBARK&#13;
&#13;
Forty- s ix&#13;
&#13;
For ty-seven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMEN&#13;
&#13;
Name&#13;
&#13;
Home&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM ROBERT ANDERSON.............................................. :................. Sioux City&#13;
WALTER LEE BRINK-------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
RICHARD JAMES BROOKS........................................................................ Sioux City&#13;
RoGER EuGENE DAUFFENBACH .............................................................. Sioux City&#13;
JIM EVERETT Du N--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JOSEPH HAROLD HAFFITS...................................................................... Sioux City&#13;
DoROTHE HELE&#13;
&#13;
HANTLA. ... ----------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
EVELYN MAUDE HEWLTTT....................................................................Rolfe, Iowa&#13;
Roy B. HOLLAND-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JACK ALLAN HoLLOWAY........................................................................ Sioux City&#13;
ROBERT J. MAJOR ...................... -------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JOHN EDWARD MoNTAGNE ....................................................................Sioux City&#13;
MARY ADEL PATTERSON........................................................................Sioux City&#13;
MARJORIE EDITH Pu LLMAN.................................................................. Sioux City&#13;
JOSEPH ROSENBLUM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
JAMES FRANCIS SEGER................... --------------------------------------------- ------------Sioux City&#13;
CHARLES DWIGHT SIMPSON _____ _ _ _ _____&#13;
_____ _ _ _________&#13;
_____________ ____ __ _&#13;
_ _ _ ______ ________ Sioux City&#13;
MARGARET ELAINE SLOWEY--------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
HELEN MAXINE SMITH----------------------------------------------------------Luverne, Minnesota&#13;
BILL ELLIOTT STODDARD------------------------------------------------------------------------ Sioux City&#13;
MARTHA RUTH WALKER ....... ------------------------------------------------·----------------Sioux City&#13;
THEODORE MORRIS WHICHER........ ---------·--------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
JUNIORS&#13;
MARJ Bo cK --------------------------------------------------------------------.Loomis, South Dakota&#13;
ROBERT WILLIAM RAE&#13;
&#13;
-----------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
CATHARINE RICH ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
How ARD BLAKE SHIPTON ----------------------------------------------------------------------Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Forty-eigh t&#13;
&#13;
Morningside is proud to have had the services of an Athletic&#13;
Director of Coach Saunderson's ability for the past twenty-nine&#13;
years. We know that we could not find a better coach, nor a finer&#13;
man to guide the young men of our student body through the developing period of their lives. We feel sure that "Saundy" will be&#13;
turning out the same fighting teams and develop the same type of&#13;
man far into the future . This high regard for " Saundy's" ability&#13;
as a coach and as a builder of men is evidenced by his selection to&#13;
the honorary position as referee of the Drake Relays for 1940.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-nine&#13;
&#13;
The traditional battle between the South Dakota University Coyotes and Morningside in Stock Yards Park almost _proved disastrous for the heavily favored Coyotes&#13;
as the Maroons went down by the slim margin of 7-6. The teams brought the large&#13;
crowd to their feet time after time as an inspired Morningside team battled the&#13;
Coyotes on even terms. The hard hitting of Jim Wernli brought the Coyotes six&#13;
points in the third quarter, and the educated toe of Ernie Gunderson bought the Coyotes their margin of victory. The Maroons roared back in fury with a drive from&#13;
their own 27 yard line that culminated with a touchdown pass from Burrow to Feikema. The all important placement kick was blocked. It would be doing both teams&#13;
injustice to say there were any definitely outstanding players.&#13;
-5. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
The Maroon gridders gave indications of having a winning season in pre-game&#13;
maneuvers, but a combination of bad breaks and injuries to key men in the Morningside roster resulted in a bad season in the won and lost column.&#13;
Wayne Teachers upset the favored Maroons in the opening grid encounter of the&#13;
season for Morningside. With Woody Hetland, Joe Lease, and George Schiller seeing&#13;
all their action from the sidelines due to injuries, the Maroons were dumped to the&#13;
tune of 13-7. Statistically the Maroons were the better team, but the Wildcats outfought and outscored them with an unorthodox brand of ball.&#13;
In the second game of the year, the Maroons dumped the pre-season favorites to&#13;
win the Conference title by a score of 15-0. It was the best game of the year for the&#13;
Maroons as they were led by all conference Pete Burrow, who swept the ends and&#13;
slashed off tackle for most of the yardage the Morningsiders mustered. Ray Port,&#13;
Morningside guard, was the outstanding defensive line-man for the Maroons, sharing&#13;
honors with Ned Adams at tackle. Jack Loff and Hap Haenfler played standout roles&#13;
with Burrow in the backfield.&#13;
The Mighty Maroons opened their home season as they romped to a one-sided&#13;
win over the Dakota Wesleyan Tigers of Mitchell, South Dakota, with a score of&#13;
28-0. Dewey Halford and Woody Hetland led the Maroon attack behind an efficiently&#13;
working line.&#13;
&#13;
The heretofore hapless Omaha Indians suddenly came to life and lambasted the&#13;
Maroons to the tune of 14-0, with a first half attack that netted both their touchdowns.&#13;
The Maroons' only threat came in the second quarter when they were stopped on the&#13;
Indian 25 yard marker by the failure of a lateral pass to click. The Morningsiders&#13;
were without a doubt a different ball club than that which played South Dakota&#13;
University the week before.&#13;
Morningside's homecoming was spoiled by one lone touchdown thrust in the first&#13;
half that gave Iowa State Teachers College a 7-0 win over Morningside. A high wind&#13;
hampered the play of both teams. The Maroons were playing without the services&#13;
of Ray Port and Jack Loff who were relegated to the sidelines because of injuries.&#13;
Again the Maroons dominated the statistics.&#13;
The following week-end, the luckless Maroons&#13;
were soundly trounced by the South Dakota State&#13;
College Jackrabbits at Brookings by a score of&#13;
34-13.&#13;
Morningside closed their heart-breaking season&#13;
with a stinging defeat from the Nodaks of North&#13;
Dakota University, 27-7. Morningside's only score&#13;
came in the second quarter as Art Lundblad caught&#13;
a deflected pass in the end zone. The statistics&#13;
were even, but the Maroon defense was caught&#13;
napping as the Nodaks pushed over four touchdowns.&#13;
&#13;
- S. C. Tribun e.&#13;
&#13;
BALLENTINE&#13;
&#13;
FEIKEMA&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-on e&#13;
&#13;
BURROWS&#13;
&#13;
HAENFLER&#13;
&#13;
ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
PETE BURROW&#13;
"Pete" wound up a brilliant career of three years as a regular in the Maroon backfield by being selected as the team's most valuable player by his teammates. "Pete"&#13;
was also selected all conference quarterback this year. "Pete's" field generalship&#13;
will be greatly missed by Saundy next year.&#13;
&#13;
DUANE HALFORD&#13;
Dewey was again the speed merchant and spark plug of this year's aggregation.&#13;
He is a junior and this year as last, he alternated with Pete in the running back&#13;
position. Dewey is little and fast and packs the dynamite of a munitions dump.&#13;
GENE KENNEDY&#13;
&#13;
JACK LOFF&#13;
Jack Loff came to us as a Junior College transfer from Eveleth, Minnesota. He&#13;
came here as an end, but his speed prompted Saundy to transfer him to the wingback&#13;
post. Jack was one of the fastest men on the squad.&#13;
&#13;
Gene is a speedy back with the unusual ability of being able to play at any spot.&#13;
Gene made his first letter as a handyman, but should come into his own in his&#13;
remaining two years as a Maroon.&#13;
JOHN LITECKY&#13;
&#13;
RAY PORT&#13;
Ray Port, scrappy guard, made his second letter as he fought off the injury jinx&#13;
that has hampered him all through his collegiate career. Ray was one of the unsung&#13;
heroes of this year's front wall.&#13;
ART LUNDBLAD&#13;
Art Lundblad battled for three years to gain his position on the Maroon starting&#13;
line-up. He was converted from a tackle to center to plug up the gap in the center&#13;
of the line. Art carries on the tradition of small but rugged centers at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
A Junior college transfer student, John was hampered by injuries. He is a good&#13;
pass receiving end, and has another season to make his letter.&#13;
STEVE SMILONICH&#13;
Another Junior college transfer that made good his first year with Morningside.&#13;
Steve was playing his first year as a guard, having been transferred from tackle.&#13;
Steve should do big things next year.&#13;
GEORGE SCHILLER&#13;
&#13;
DON MICHAELSON&#13;
"Mike," better known for his basketball prowess, made his first football letter as&#13;
regular end on the eleven. "Mike," who winds up his athletic career at Morningside&#13;
this year, is big and rugged.&#13;
HAP HAENFLER&#13;
Hap was the regular blocking back on the eleven in his&#13;
sophomore year. He has the reputation of a brother to Jive&#13;
up to here, and if first year is any indication, he won't have&#13;
any trouble.&#13;
CHUCK SHERIDAN&#13;
&#13;
Schiller has the build of a guard and made his first letter at that position last&#13;
fall. George is in there fighting his heart out all the time, and should gain recognition next year.&#13;
DON WIDLER&#13;
Don, as a sophomore, was a dependable lineman. He&#13;
lettered at tackle. Don is hard as nails, and has two more&#13;
seasons to gain that regular starting position he seeks.&#13;
DON BALLANTINE&#13;
Don is a big boy who lettered at tackle as a sophomore.&#13;
He played some very outstanding games at his favorite&#13;
position. He is a hard worker who should be very valuable&#13;
in there the next two years.&#13;
&#13;
"Moose" is one of the brightest lights for next year. He&#13;
took over a tackle position this year as a sophomore, and&#13;
opposing tackles are still bemoaning the fact. Chuck is at&#13;
his best when the going gets rough.&#13;
NED ADAMS&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE KOCH&#13;
&#13;
Ned is a junior, and served his second year as a letter&#13;
winner. Ned is a two hundred pounder and alternates between tackle and guard. He is a tough customer, especially&#13;
when he gets riled.&#13;
&#13;
George earned his second football letter by alternating&#13;
with Lundblad at the center post. He is very small for a&#13;
center, but he more than offset this with fight and speed.&#13;
&#13;
HAKALA&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
HALFORD&#13;
&#13;
HETLAND&#13;
&#13;
WOODY HETLAND&#13;
&#13;
KOCH&#13;
&#13;
Woody is another three year regular who ended a brilliant career with the Maroons. Hard hitting Woody is one&#13;
of the best backs to attend Morningside in recent years.&#13;
His powerhouse drives through the center of the line will&#13;
be hard. to replace next season.&#13;
MICHAELSON&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
KRZNARICI-1&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
LUNDBLAD&#13;
&#13;
Fift y- two&#13;
&#13;
SCHILLER&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
SHERIDAN&#13;
&#13;
SMILON!CH&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
PORT&#13;
&#13;
\VIDLER&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
JOHN KRZNARICH&#13;
John was as tough as his name. John earned his second letter as a regular although hampered by an elbow injury. It was this injury that hit the Maroons the&#13;
hardest. It is players with John's love of the game and team spirit that makes for&#13;
winning teams.&#13;
BOB HAKALA&#13;
Bob was shifted from a guard spot to the fullback post to strengthen it because&#13;
of Hetland's injury. Bob came from Virginia, Minnesota, and earned two letters&#13;
here through his aggressive hard play.&#13;
LEO SMITH&#13;
Leo was the handyman of the squad. He played every position, and although he&#13;
failed to earn a letter, he was out there battling every inch of the way.&#13;
BERNIE FEIKEMA&#13;
"Feik" was a sophomore this year, but his greenness didn't show out on the gridiron. Feik gained the reputation of the best pass snatcher on the team, and one of&#13;
the hardest workers in earning his first letter.&#13;
DEA FORBES&#13;
Dean is small for an end, but did himself proud down at Omaha last fall. Dean&#13;
will have his chance at a regular berth next fall , and we are expecting great things&#13;
from him.&#13;
JOE LEASE&#13;
Joe was hampered by a pre-season injury that slowed him up considerably. Joe&#13;
is one of the hardest blockers on the squad, as well as a tough defensive man. He&#13;
should help us the next two seasons.&#13;
DON LEOPOLD&#13;
Don is a ruggedly built boy who was coming along fast at the end of the season.&#13;
Don could help the Maroons with his speed and size if he would supply the determination. He has two more years.&#13;
BOB REESE&#13;
Bob did not see any action, but was making it tough for the varsity. Bob has&#13;
two more seasons.&#13;
SWEDE REILLY&#13;
Swede, the fighting Irishman, likes it best when the going is rugged. He is a&#13;
footballer who really loves the game. He is not out there for glory, but to muss up&#13;
his man, which he usually does.&#13;
TOMMY THOMPSON&#13;
Tommy understudied two veteran centers this year. He should come into his own,&#13;
and be one of the Maroons' traditionally strong centers in the next two seasons.&#13;
EARL GOODENOW&#13;
Earl is a boy who did not play high school football. He looks like an end, and&#13;
has two more seasons to make a letter.&#13;
&#13;
McCoy, R . Logue, S teck, Ott , C. Logue, Rey nol ds, Robar, S tone .&#13;
&#13;
One of the smallest squads in the history of freshman football answered Coach&#13;
Honie Rogers' call. The season was not only unique for the size of the squad, but,&#13;
because of i obs and laboratory work, it was hard for the coach to get enough men&#13;
together to do the necessary practicing. The squad boasted of such stars as: Charles&#13;
Logue, Dale Robar, Chet Axthl em, Merle Stone, Orlan Ott, Melvin McNight, Gene&#13;
compton, Les Fones, Tom Kenn y, Bud Chambers, Lloyd Wiltsey, Russ Logue, Stanley&#13;
Simmons, Eugent Strover, Jack Steck, and Bob Bennett. Some of these boys sh owed&#13;
promise of becoming future Maroons of notabl e repute.&#13;
They played only one game, and that was against the Coyote Pups of South&#13;
Dakota Umversity. This game ended m a 0-0 deadlock with the future Maroons&#13;
dominating the statistics, in fact, they did not allow the Coyote P ups a first down .&#13;
&#13;
"M" club&#13;
The " M" Club, consisting of the major letter winners in school is one of the&#13;
oldest organizations on the Morningside campus. It has been an active organization&#13;
of the campus for thirty-two years. The "Men of the M" endeavor to maintain high&#13;
standards of sportsmanship,&#13;
develop strong physical specimens, and good moral&#13;
characters. In addition, the M Club has charge of Freshman orientation, Freshman·&#13;
Sophomore Day, and the Homecoming Parade. The alumni of the oroanization&#13;
sponsor an annual dinner and get-together of the old " M" men each year at Homecoming.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----------------------------------------------------·-·······---------Rober t Hakala&#13;
Vice-President ----------------------------------------------------------Elwood Hetland&#13;
Secretary --------------------------------------------------------------------------Glen Burrow&#13;
&#13;
H akal a, Sm ith, Leopold, K enne dy, H alford, Burrow, Loff, Goode no w.&#13;
T op: Adcock , Liteck y, \V idler, S trozdas, H aen Her, S heridan, Michaelson, Ballantine.&#13;
Middle : S au nderso n, Hetland, Denny, K ryznarich , B urrow, Langs ta ff, S milonich,&#13;
&#13;
Felkema.&#13;
F ront Row: Hakala, Adams, S chil ler, Koch, Port, Lundb lad, Kennedy. Halford .&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
F i ft y.four&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
As assistant athletic director and head basketball coach, "Honie"&#13;
Rogers has established a fine reputation and position of respect.&#13;
"Honie" personifies the tradition established at Morningside, that of&#13;
providing fine coaches for the high schools of this territory.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
Hopes were high as the basketball season approached, with four&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
of last year's regulars returning as well as the reserves, plus the&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
strong freshman squad of the 1938-39 season. While the team lacked&#13;
size and an undefinable something that prevented it from becoming&#13;
a consistent winner, Morningside has a spirited fighting team that&#13;
at times displayed the speed and ball handling ability for which&#13;
they are famous.&#13;
The season began as Morningside opened he r 1939-40 basketball&#13;
session on the home court against the Iowa State College Cyclones&#13;
of the Big Six Conference. The Maroons showed flashes of power,&#13;
although going down to defeat to the tune of 34-57. Morningside&#13;
was in the ball game matching the polished Cyclones basket for&#13;
basket the first half, but after intermission Iowa State gained control&#13;
and were never headed. Langstaff and Halford displayed outstanding basketball for the Maroons.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Michaelson, Hanson, Feikema, Goodenow, Sheridan, Lo ff.&#13;
Middle: Litecky, Strozdas, Cobbs, Langstaff, Jones.&#13;
Bottom: Graham, Sharp, Adcock, Brown, Halford.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
Fifty- seven&#13;
&#13;
-S. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
The Maroons drubbed the Yankton College&#13;
&#13;
23-36, as the Tigers presented a strong double post&#13;
&#13;
Greyhounds the following week-end on the home&#13;
&#13;
offense. Langstaff again led the scorers as he&#13;
&#13;
court, 38-27. Honie substituted freely, as the en-&#13;
&#13;
racked up 15 points for Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
tire Morningside squad looked impressive as they&#13;
&#13;
Morningside spirit was still high and hopes were&#13;
undaunted as the Conference season approached.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
romped to victory over the upstate rivals.&#13;
Coach Honie Rogers' proteges then toured Kan-&#13;
&#13;
The first conference game was played against the&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
sas and Missouri, during the Christmas holidays,&#13;
&#13;
highly favored South Dakota State Jackrabbits at&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
and met three strong teams from the heart of the&#13;
&#13;
Brookings. The Maroons played outstanding bas-&#13;
&#13;
basketball country.&#13;
&#13;
The first game was played&#13;
&#13;
ketball, only to lose in the closing minutes, 39-45.&#13;
&#13;
against Washburn College at Topeka, Kansas.&#13;
&#13;
Langstaff led the attack as the entire Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, playing good basketball, lost a hard-&#13;
&#13;
team played well.&#13;
&#13;
fought game, 37-41, after they led throughout the&#13;
&#13;
The following week, Morningside entertained&#13;
&#13;
first three quarters of this close game. Strozdas&#13;
&#13;
the Bison of North Dakota State, and were again&#13;
&#13;
and Adcock looked best for the Maroons.&#13;
&#13;
defeated 36-51, as the eventual Conference Champs&#13;
&#13;
The following night, Morningside was enter-&#13;
&#13;
·State Teachers took the measure of the Maroons,&#13;
&#13;
Kansas City. The Maroons were handicapped by a&#13;
&#13;
33-40, as the Morningsiders again surrendered an&#13;
&#13;
tremendous height advantage, and lost a ragged&#13;
&#13;
early lead at Cedar Falls. Again the luckless Ma-&#13;
&#13;
game, 24-36. The weary Maroons met Wichita Uni-&#13;
&#13;
roons were defeated as Omaha University out-&#13;
&#13;
versity the third night and agam tasted defeat,&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
&#13;
hit the basket consistently from all angles. Iowa&#13;
&#13;
tained by the Union Wire and Rope Corporation in&#13;
&#13;
played us on Omaha court.&#13;
&#13;
Cobbs&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
\I •&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-eigh t&#13;
&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Morningside entertained her ancient rival, South&#13;
Dakota University, upon the home court, January&#13;
&#13;
versity by the score of 33-45, on South Dakota's&#13;
court, February 6.&#13;
&#13;
6, and could not withstand a second half rally by&#13;
&#13;
Morningside closed her season with two more&#13;
&#13;
the Coyotes that spelled defeat, 28-33. The Maroons surprised the Coyotes with 19-11 halftime&#13;
&#13;
and Iowa State Teachers' College, 39-40. Both of&#13;
&#13;
defeats upon the home court from Omaha, 33-37,&#13;
&#13;
lead, and went on to maintain a 24-21 margin at&#13;
&#13;
these contests were very well played, and they were&#13;
&#13;
the three-quarter mark, but faded in the waning&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
anybody's ball game up until the final gun.&#13;
&#13;
minutes. On the following Monday, the Maroons&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
The Maroons lose two outstanding basketball&#13;
&#13;
journeyed to Ames and were defeated by a score&#13;
&#13;
players from the varsity squad via graduation. Don&#13;
&#13;
of 36-58, which was nearly identical to the first&#13;
&#13;
Michaelson, twice chosen all-conference and one of&#13;
&#13;
game of the season when the Cyclones also took&#13;
&#13;
the finest basketball players Morningside has ever&#13;
&#13;
our measure.&#13;
&#13;
produced, will be greatly missed when Honie is-&#13;
&#13;
February 3 saw Morningside do something that&#13;
&#13;
sues his call for basketball aspirants next fall.&#13;
&#13;
no other team in the Conference has been able to&#13;
do, that was to beat North Dakota University three&#13;
&#13;
"Mike" has made three letters.&#13;
&#13;
times in a row, in a thrilling over-time game, 41-38.&#13;
&#13;
who was always a threat on offense, and a great&#13;
&#13;
Langstaff and Adcock played outstanding roles in&#13;
&#13;
team player, will leave a large hole for Coach&#13;
&#13;
this upset victory. The Maroons suffered their sec-&#13;
&#13;
Rogers to fill. Al has earned two monograms.&#13;
&#13;
Al Strozdas, a very outstanding defensive guard&#13;
&#13;
ond defeat from the Coyotes of South Dakota Uni-&#13;
&#13;
Langstaff&#13;
&#13;
Sh e ridan&#13;
Mi cha e l son&#13;
&#13;
Litecky&#13;
&#13;
Sixt y&#13;
&#13;
Sixty. one&#13;
&#13;
Strozdas&#13;
&#13;
TOUCH BALL&#13;
&#13;
COMETS&#13;
&#13;
HORSESHOE CHA MPION&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Top : Robar, Nutt, DcMaine, R. Logue, C. Logue.&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
B ottom : Wa ll en, Wertz, Steck.&#13;
&#13;
The Freshmen this year enjo yed an undefeate d season under Coach Hugh Luby's&#13;
&#13;
A complete Intramural sports program of nine events was planned for this year.&#13;
&#13;
tutelage. They were the bright spot of this year's basketball campaign, and should&#13;
&#13;
There were two fall tournaments, which were horsesh oe and touchball , the former&#13;
&#13;
help tremen dously toward Morningside's titl e hopes in the future.&#13;
&#13;
being introduced this year. Al Strozdas won the horseshoe medal while the Comets&#13;
&#13;
About thirty-five candida tes reported in answer to the call for freshman talent&#13;
&#13;
were the winners of the touchba\l scramble.&#13;
&#13;
from which the following ten men were chosen: Deiters, VanderBerg, DeMaine, Steck.&#13;
C. Logue, R. Logue, Robar, Wallen, Wertz, and Nutt. These men bore the brunt of&#13;
&#13;
Spirited play marked the intramural basketball schedule in the firs t of the winter&#13;
&#13;
the season's play, and should suppl ement the returning varsity squad and bounce&#13;
&#13;
sports, as the Foo Goos and the Sigma Theta Rho fraternity tied a t the end of the&#13;
&#13;
Morningside back into the thick of the&#13;
&#13;
orth Central Conference titl e chase.&#13;
&#13;
regular play. The Foo Goos succeeded in downing the Fraternity men in the playoff.&#13;
Red Langstaff defeated Roy Brown for the ping pong championship .&#13;
&#13;
THE SEASON'S SUMMARY&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
Future&#13;
&#13;
D enny&#13;
&#13;
Slvev&#13;
&#13;
Maroons..............................40&#13;
Maroons.............................. 28&#13;
Maroons..............................40&#13;
Maroons .............................. 32&#13;
Maroons.............................. 38&#13;
Maroons.............................. 38&#13;
Maroons..............................34&#13;
Maroons..............................51&#13;
Maroons.............................. 55&#13;
&#13;
The spring tournaments consisted of kittenball, golf, and tennis. Interest was&#13;
&#13;
Old Home Bread ............................ 11&#13;
All Stars ........................................ 28&#13;
All Stars ........................................ 26&#13;
South Dakota Frosh ...................... 19&#13;
South Dakota Frosh...................... 25&#13;
Omaha Frosh ................................18&#13;
Omaha Frosh ................................ 28&#13;
De Molay ...................................... 32&#13;
Bronson ....................................... 28&#13;
&#13;
Although track is listed as a major sport, and has brought&#13;
more la urels to Morningside than any other sport, interest&#13;
has been receding in the past few years until this season.&#13;
Earl y indications are that activity will increase with the&#13;
active lettermen being suppl emented by an inexperienced&#13;
squad that may help regain some of Morningside's track&#13;
prestige.&#13;
Dave Denn y is the ou tstanding hurdl er in the Conference,&#13;
and Vic Alvey should develop into an outstanding half.&#13;
mil er. These two men lettered last season in their favorite&#13;
events.&#13;
&#13;
high as there were six teams entered for the ki ttenball tournament. The In tramural&#13;
Board consists of Ralph Brown, Al Strozdas, George Schiller, and John Litecky.&#13;
&#13;
H arte r&#13;
Tennis Champ&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
S i xty-two&#13;
&#13;
S i x ty - th ree&#13;
&#13;
Top : Foo Coos&#13;
Basketba l l Champs&#13;
B ottom: Langstaff, Brown&#13;
Pi ng Pong&#13;
&#13;
Golf&#13;
&#13;
Miss Jeanne Scott came to Morningside this year to replace Miss&#13;
Lois Brinkman as Head of the Women's Athletics Department. She&#13;
was graduated from the University of Illinois where she majored&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
in Physical Education. She has put forth a great deal of enthusiasm&#13;
and an interest in all sports and proved herself to be a capable&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
instructor and leader. Under her supervision, the women's athletic&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
department completed four seasonal sports, presented two dance&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
festivals, and conducted a dancing class. Her favorite sports are&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
golf, swimming and horseback riding. Miss Scott organized on the&#13;
coll ege campus, "Orchesis"- an organization of the study of modern,&#13;
interpretative, and original dances. Only the upper classmen were&#13;
members of this group and they presented a modern dance in the&#13;
Spring Festival.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Sixty -four&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
Sixt y- five&#13;
&#13;
W.A.A.Board&#13;
&#13;
R. K ingsbury, weed,&#13;
&#13;
Wike rt , Mi ller, Forsberg , Collier, Smi th .&#13;
&#13;
K. B rown, Saunde rson, N. K ingsbury, Lowry, Marcussen, Cairy,&#13;
&#13;
D. Brown, Waddell.&#13;
&#13;
-S. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Warner, Forsberg, Lowry, Nelson, Wallen.&#13;
&#13;
Bottom : Weed, Cheely, Collier.&#13;
&#13;
On March _ the annual Yale-Harvard game was played. The two teams were&#13;
15,&#13;
selected' for their playing ability, sportsmanship, and the completion of practice&#13;
hours. The members were chosen by Miss Scott, class captains, basketball captain,&#13;
and the president of W. A. A.&#13;
The game was the best of the season, as the two teams were very evenly matched.&#13;
The Harvard team nosed out a victory by only one score-20-19. The honorary&#13;
basketball players were decided upon after the Yale-Harvard game, and they are&#13;
as follows:&#13;
&#13;
The W. A. A. board for this year was composed of Joyce Weed,&#13;
president ; Dorothy Ann Olson, vice-president; Shirley Wallen, secretary ; Marjorie Nelson, treasurer; Nancy Lowry, badminton chairman; Nancy Kingsbury, basketball chairman; Frances Forsberg,&#13;
social chairman; Patricia Warner, awards chairman; Winifred&#13;
Cheeley, publicity chairman; Janice Collier, archery; Virginia Al-&#13;
&#13;
Guards&#13;
Nancy Lowry&#13;
Shirley Wall en&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
&#13;
Forwards&#13;
Joyce Weed&#13;
Marian Mill er&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
len, tennis; and Charlotte Robinson, volleyball chairman. This&#13;
board controlled the wome n's sports program. Their activities include such sports as tennis, badminton, archery, over-night hikes,&#13;
golf and other individual sports. They also sponsored the annual&#13;
&#13;
The Members of the Yale and Harvard Teams&#13;
&#13;
" Play Day," attended by Senior girls from surrounding high schools.&#13;
&#13;
Harvard Team&#13;
Nancy Lowry, Captain&#13;
Zola Marcussen&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Louice Cairy&#13;
Ella Jean Waddell&#13;
Dorothy Brown&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Katherine Brown&#13;
&#13;
Yale Team&#13;
Joyce Weed, Captain&#13;
Shirley Wallen&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
Janice Collier&#13;
Ruth Kin gsbury&#13;
Maxine Smith&#13;
Marian Miller&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The annual swimming meet was held at the Y. W. C. A. on March 8. Spectators&#13;
were entertained with individual and team events of speed and skill. The Sioux&#13;
City Mariners gave demonstrations as a special feature . The individual awards were&#13;
won by Geraldine Satrang and Bob Mohr. The team trophy was won by the Kappa&#13;
Zeta Chi Sorority.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
D. Brown, Cairy, Scott, Forsberg, Coe, Nelson, Waddell , Kingsbu ry , Col lier,&#13;
Weed, Cheely, Hanson.&#13;
&#13;
sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-seven&#13;
&#13;
The Winter Festival , sponsored annuall y by W. A. A., had as its theme selections&#13;
from the "Nutcracker Suite." The story was woven around the nutcracker which was&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
given as a Christmas present to a little child. As he fall s asleep beneath the Christ-&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
mas tree, he dreams about to y soldiers, sugar sticks, etc. The dances, participated in&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
by the women students of the ph ysical educati on department, represented th e dreams&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
of the child . There were man y very modern and routin e dan ces that were ori ginal&#13;
and worked out by the dancers. The climax of the story was the throne room of&#13;
the queen and the visit of the child led b y the nutcracker who had come to life.&#13;
&#13;
BAS KET BALL Champs&#13;
To p : Sophomore T eam&#13;
Bottom: Zet T eam&#13;
&#13;
intramural and cl ass tournaments were held this year as usual and th e four annual&#13;
sports brou ght out the interes t of all th e girl s.&#13;
Basketball produ ced keen competition and proved to be a ver y successful season.&#13;
This year, the Zets won the. round-robin sorority tournament, while the enthusiasti c&#13;
Sophomores captured the class tourney. Members of the Zet team were Nancy Kingsbury, Louise Cairy, Katherine Brown, Marian Mill er, Betty Lou Saunderson, Nancy&#13;
Lowry, Mildred Wikert, Winifred Cheeley, Ella Jean Waddell, Alice Hanson, Joyce&#13;
Weed, Janice Collier, Dorothy Ann Ol son, and Ruth Kin gsbury.&#13;
The Sophomore team was composed of Katherine Brown, Betty Lou Saunderson,&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury, Marian Miller, Ella Jean Waddell , and Louise Cairy.&#13;
The tournament captains this year were :&#13;
Freshman ....................................................Zola Marcussen&#13;
Sophomore........................................ Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
In the sprin g the women's athl etic department presents a dance f estival similar to&#13;
the winter festival. It is at this festival that the May Queen is crowned. The queen&#13;
is a Freshman girl , and is voted upon by the entire student body. There is much&#13;
pomp and ceremony at this coronation, and it is a very impressive occasion. In 1939&#13;
th e May Queen was Ruth Kingsbury and attendants were Marian Miller, Katherine&#13;
Brown, Virginia Boline, and Lauretta Kin g. Miss Kin gsbu ry was crowned by Mildred&#13;
Wikert, the queen of 1938 . This year, the spring festival was based upon the progression of the dance, beginnin g with Indian dances and comin g up to the very modern interpretative dances of the present.&#13;
&#13;
Aths ...................................................... Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
l\li l ler, B row n , Miss Ki ngsbu ry, King. Boline .&#13;
&#13;
The voll eyball season was under way and had not been compl eted when the yea r&#13;
book went to press. The tennis and badminton tournaments were pl ayed in the la te&#13;
spring and the participation of all individual sports was started.&#13;
&#13;
Soccer&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Six ty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Arch e ry&#13;
&#13;
Hockey&#13;
&#13;
The importance of good health was stressed during the annual health week, February 27 to March 2. Twenty-four good posture tags were awarded in Monday chapel&#13;
to Glennys Corderman, Ruth Kingsbury, Ruth Olsen, Alice Hanson, Betty Lou Saunderson, Ralph Brown, Velma Swanson, Garry Wallman, La Vonne Wertz, Dewey Halford, Earl Hicks, Lawrence Johnson, Betty Lou Welding, Connie Gall, Helen Osbey,&#13;
Lester Olson, Harriet Swanson, Gary Fischer, Orlan Ott, Morgan Harrison, Dorothy&#13;
Carrigg.&#13;
Dr. Elizabeth Mochrie gave a very interesting talk on " Health" on the Tuesday of&#13;
health week at the Morningside Christian Association.&#13;
The King and Queen of Health were presented to the students at the all-college&#13;
dance held on the Saturday of Health Week. The 4-H requirements were the basis&#13;
upon which the health winners were chosen. The King and Queen were Lester Menke&#13;
and Ruth Olsen; the attendants were Nancy Lowry, David Denny, Ella Jean Waddell ,&#13;
and John Kolp.&#13;
On Friday night there was held a volley ball game between the "Brains" and the&#13;
" Brawn," a wrestling match with Albert Haenfler and Forrest Simons as contestants,&#13;
and a basketball game between the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority and Ishkoodah. The&#13;
volleyball game was won by the " Brawn," and the Kappa Zeta Chi sorority won the&#13;
basketball game.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Weed&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
The highest award that W. A. A. confers upon a girl is the presentation of a&#13;
sweater award. Many requirements are necessary fo r this award, and it is a symbol&#13;
of good sportsmanship, "scholarship and leadership. The sweaters were given to Joyce&#13;
Weed, Mary Stankiewicz and Alberta Seavey.&#13;
&#13;
Yeah Morningside-M-0-R-N-I-N-G-S-I-D-E- ! Costumed in the traditional Maroon&#13;
and White, Maynard P orter, Kathryn Brown, Ted Walensky, and Winifred Cheely&#13;
led the Pep Club for the past year. To these four should go the appreciation of the&#13;
entire student body, for the faithful service and energetic efforts to increase the&#13;
&#13;
Lowry, Waddell , Olsen&#13;
&#13;
spirit of Morningside's teams.&#13;
&#13;
Me nke, Kolp, Denny&#13;
&#13;
Top: P orter, Walensk y.&#13;
B otto m : Chee ly, B row n.&#13;
&#13;
Seve nt y&#13;
&#13;
S event y-one&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Chief .................................... Packard Woll e&#13;
Medicine Man ...................... Garry Wallman&#13;
Wampum Taker.. .............. Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Executive Council.. ............Ruth Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
'"Kid Party"&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux Scalpers was organized as one of the first acts of the new student&#13;
council. Its purpose was to create and maintain a higher standard of school spirit.&#13;
Charter members were chosen from the peppiest of the four classes, and the club&#13;
began activities.&#13;
Stringent rules were enforced about absences, and the executive committee replaced new members from a long waiting list. In the Friday chapel before the&#13;
Wayne game, some more energetic scalpers journeyed to Wayne and captured the&#13;
season's first scalp. After a mournful fun eral for the deceased was held, the scalp&#13;
and contents-four healthy cockroaches-were placed in the trophy case. Scalpers,&#13;
under the direction of Winifred Cheely, proved themselves capable dramatists when&#13;
they presented stunts before the football and basketball games. The Homecoming&#13;
snake dance was led by scalpers, and Garry Wallman and Packard Wolle explained&#13;
the significance of the club to the radio audience on two different occasions. Once,&#13;
during the first semester, the organization held its skuffle. This was a "Kid Party"&#13;
under the chairmanship of Garry Wallman and Millie Wikert, and here Scalpers&#13;
played hop-scotch, drop-the-handkerchief, and ate hot dogs to their heart's content.&#13;
Sioux Scalpers is a permanent organization, and under the guidance of Professor&#13;
Marshall. They look forward to many more successful fun-filled years in the future.&#13;
&#13;
Sadie Hawkins Day was re-enacted by a worthy cast of Scalpers again under the&#13;
guidance of Winifred Cheely, and some of the day's success can be attributed to the&#13;
good work of the Sioux Scalpers. Winning costumes were worn by Glennys Corderman, Dorothy Gartner, Marlyn P ederson, and Edgar Graham.&#13;
Sadie Hawkins Day&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College is fortunate in having at the head of its&#13;
Forensic department a man as capable as Mendal B. Miller. Not&#13;
only does Mr. Miller have the ability to produce fine debaters, but&#13;
he is himself a fluent speaker displaying a keen sense of humor.&#13;
Mr. Miller is past president of the Iowa Forensic Association.&#13;
and now holds the office of secretary.&#13;
&#13;
S eventy -three&#13;
&#13;
Fred Davenport, Robert Hamel, Ted Whicher, and Robert Rae&#13;
represented the college at the St. Thomas tournament in St. Paul.&#13;
The State Forensics meeting was held in Cedar Rapids the second&#13;
week in March. The boys' team consisting of Fred Davenport and&#13;
Robert Hamel received a superior rating.&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Booth and&#13;
&#13;
Shirley Smith were awarded an excellent rating. Miss Booth received the distinction of superior rating on her individual debating&#13;
ability. The same two teams again represented Morningside at the&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta national convention in Knoxville, Tennessee, the&#13;
third week in March. Mr. Davenport and Mr. Hamel were awarded&#13;
the rating of excellent.&#13;
&#13;
Intercollegiate debate was unusually stimulating this year because&#13;
of the timely question being discussed-"Resolved: That the United&#13;
States should adopt a policy of strict economic and military isolation&#13;
from all nations outside of the western hemisphere involved in&#13;
international or civil conflict."&#13;
The annual pre-season non-decision debate tournament was held&#13;
at Omaha University in November. During the following month&#13;
debates were carried on with colleges and universities in the surrounding territory.&#13;
&#13;
Booth&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Wa lt e r&#13;
&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
Ham e l&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
S eventy-four&#13;
&#13;
S eve nty - five&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT HAMEL&#13;
&#13;
GERALDINE BOOTH&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Students achieving certain honors in debate, oratory, or extemporaneous speaking and maintaining a high scholastic standing are&#13;
eligible for membership in Morningside's Iowa Delta chapter of&#13;
P i Kappa Delta. This is a national honorary fo rensic fra terni ty.&#13;
During the year the group has both study and social meetings.&#13;
Geraldine Booth, Shirley Smith, Fred Davenport, and Robert&#13;
Hamel, accompanied by Mendal B. Miller, were the Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
representatives at the national Pi K appa Delta meeting in Knoxville,&#13;
SHIRLEY SMITH&#13;
&#13;
FRED DAVENPORT&#13;
&#13;
Tennessee, during March. At this tournament the boys' team was&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
awarded an excellent rating.&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Iowa State Forensics Meet&#13;
Pi Kappa Delta Tournament&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT RAE&#13;
TED WHICHER&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
&#13;
St. Thomas Tournament&#13;
BYRON WALTER&#13;
&#13;
South Dakota University&#13;
Orange City Junior College&#13;
&#13;
Omaha Tournament&#13;
&#13;
Wayne Teachers College&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS FOR DELTA CHAPTER&#13;
President ................................................................................ Ruth Olsen&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President ......................................................................Dale Harter&#13;
Secretary-Treas urer .................................................... Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
r&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
r&#13;
f&#13;
Seven ty-six&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Throu gh the efforts of professor.·Paul MacCo llin , the Con servator y of Mu sic has com e to be known as one of the finest in the&#13;
Middl e West. The success of the Morningside Coll ege Methodist&#13;
Choir is due to his ceaseless activity and perseve rance. " Mr. Mac"&#13;
has been named by leading music critics of the United States a&#13;
genius of conductin g and a marvel in his ability to train a group of&#13;
singers in so acc urate and precise a musical manner.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Fritzsche, Albert. Woodford, santee, Ling.&#13;
Nelson, Barre tt , Lowry, Brooke, Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President -------------------------------------------------··········--·-···Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
Vice-President.. ..................................................Martha Helen elson&#13;
Recording Secretary............................................................Betty Ling&#13;
Corresponding Secretary......................................Edythe Mae Albert&#13;
Alumnae Secretary......................................................Lucille Johnson&#13;
Treasurer.............................................................. Esther Mary Santee&#13;
Historian ---------------·-··················----------·-·····----------------Dorothy Brooke&#13;
W arden ................................................................Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Chaplain --··········-----···········-----···-----------·····----------------Faith Woodford&#13;
On the ninth day of November, 1939, Phi Zeta Chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, the&#13;
National Music Honor Sorority, celebrated its tenth year as a stimulating influence&#13;
for musical excellence.&#13;
This society is composed of junior and senior girls and faculty women of the&#13;
Conservatory who have achieved superior scholastic and music attainments.&#13;
A business delegate will represent Phi Zeta Chapter at the National Convention&#13;
which will be held in Cincinnati, Ohio, during the summer of 1940.&#13;
&#13;
Sloan, Emme, Rozeboom , Iseminger.&#13;
&#13;
The male quartet is composed of Grayson Sloan, Gene Emme, Bill Rozeboom,&#13;
and George l seminger. The quartet is often in demand for programs in the city, and&#13;
was a fea ture number for informal concerts on the chapel choir tour.&#13;
&#13;
The Madrigal Singers is an organization active du ring the holiday season. The&#13;
group has provided music for chapel programs and various organizations in the city.&#13;
Included in the membership are: Alice Scott, Lucille Fritzsche, Ruth Harris, Genevieve Whittington, Edith Jensen, Gene Emme, Thomas Moon, George l seminger,&#13;
and Bill Roseboom.&#13;
&#13;
m. E. A. Trio&#13;
This string ensemble takes part in the M. C. A. broadcast every Sunday morning,&#13;
besides furnishing music for other numerous occasions. The M. C. A. trio is composed&#13;
of Edith Jensen, piano; Homer Garretson, violin; and Robe rt Feick, cello.&#13;
Jensen, Fe ick , Garretson.&#13;
&#13;
One of the small ensembles in the Conservatory is the Brass Quartet, composed&#13;
of Oliver Mogck, Jack Suffiel d, Grayson Sloan, and Bob Brooks. It was featured on&#13;
the band trip, and has appeared in Conservatory recitals.&#13;
&#13;
Brooks, S loan, Suffield, Mogck.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty&#13;
Eight y-one&#13;
&#13;
The sen es of six brilliant concerts offered to the patrons of the 1939-40 Sioux&#13;
The Student String Quartet is composed of&#13;
Martha H elen Nelson, Na ncy Lowry, Marian&#13;
Stickles, and Charlotte Williams. The quartet&#13;
is in co nstant demand for performances in&#13;
Sioux City and the surroundin g territory. It is&#13;
noted for superb rendition of classical composi tion s, both old a nd new.&#13;
&#13;
City Concert Course is undoubtedly one of the most outstanding groups of entertainment and cultural attractions Sioux City has ever had in one season.&#13;
&#13;
Nel so n, Lowry , William s, Stick l es.&#13;
&#13;
" THREE HITS AND A MISS"&#13;
Lily Pons&#13;
Marcel Huber t&#13;
&#13;
Gene Emme, Merri e Jun e Heet land, Bill Rozeboom , George Isemin gcr.&#13;
&#13;
Coolid ge Q ua rtet&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
Ku cinski , Mossma n, Kinney , Rudd .&#13;
&#13;
The F aculty String Quartet is composed of Leo Ku cinski , violin; Bennta&#13;
Mossman, violin; Arnold Rudd, viola;&#13;
a nd Gordon Kinn ey, cello. Under the&#13;
direction of Mr. Kuci nski, the quartet&#13;
has been hi ghl y praised and recognized&#13;
in mu sic gro ups of Sioux City an d surroundin g territory.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Simon Barer&#13;
Vron sky a nd Babin&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Robert Nicholson&#13;
&#13;
Eighty . three&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
The Mornin gside Coll ege Band is under the direction of Everett Timm , one of&#13;
the finest fluti sts in the United States. Besides bein g a concert organization, it is a&#13;
medium for promotion of pep at football and basketball games of which Morningside can be justl y proud.&#13;
PERSONNEL&#13;
Bob Lowry&#13;
Edith Jensen&#13;
Lawrence J ohn son&#13;
Brown Garlock&#13;
Marion Benton&#13;
Gene Dauffe nb ach&#13;
Bob Hicks&#13;
Eln a Van Camp&#13;
Evelyn Capener&#13;
J ea n White&#13;
Lucille John son&#13;
Leonard Leeds&#13;
Norm an Uehle&#13;
Thom as Thompson&#13;
J ea nn e Anderson&#13;
Leona Witze nburg&#13;
Jea n Jon es, Drum Maior&#13;
&#13;
Ardi s Hall&#13;
Eu ge ne Orner&#13;
Oscar Towler&#13;
Charles Meachem,&#13;
Equipment Manager&#13;
Francis Kin gsbury&#13;
Kenneth Klass&#13;
Clari ce Rohweder&#13;
Vera Smith, Drum Major&#13;
Grayson Sloan,&#13;
A ssistant Conducto r&#13;
Louise Madi son&#13;
Philip Baker&#13;
Harry Werder&#13;
Jimm y Adams&#13;
Mildred P fe iffer&#13;
Devon Hahn , Librarian&#13;
&#13;
The Sioux City Smyphony is sponsored by the Sioux City Civic Music Association, under the direction of Leo Kucinski, head of the violin department in the Con-&#13;
&#13;
Oliver Mo gck&#13;
Jack Suffield, Hall Manager&#13;
Dean Brox,&#13;
P ersonnel Manager&#13;
Genevieve Whittin gton,&#13;
Executive Secretary&#13;
Wall ace P eterson&#13;
Bill Powers&#13;
Bob Brooks&#13;
Donald Olson&#13;
Ross Harri s&#13;
Odell Woods, Drum Major&#13;
Lauretta Kin g&#13;
John Sipma&#13;
Walter Brink&#13;
Bob Green&#13;
Albert HaenAer&#13;
&#13;
servatory. It is through his constant efforts and sparkling brilliancy of conductin g&#13;
that the Symphony has come to be well-recognized throughout the Northwest.&#13;
&#13;
Four of Morningside's students had the honor of being chosen as soloists&#13;
&#13;
Jones, \Vood s, Smith&#13;
Dav idso n&#13;
&#13;
in the 1939 presentation of Handel 's Messiah. Miss Alice Scott was chosen&#13;
soprano soloist with Miss Lucille Fritzsche alternate. Mr. Thomas Moon&#13;
was cho sen alternate for the tenor soloist, and Oliver Mogck was chosen&#13;
bass soloist.&#13;
&#13;
A li ce S cott&#13;
&#13;
Mornin gs ide's four drum majors, Odell Woods,&#13;
Jean Jones, Vera Smith , a nd J ani ce David son, led&#13;
the band in all parades a nd fi eld maneuvers.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
Oli ve r Mogck&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
Ei ghty-fou r&#13;
&#13;
Eight y. fi ve&#13;
&#13;
Altos&#13;
&#13;
Sopranos&#13;
&#13;
Glennys Corderman&#13;
&#13;
Clarice Rohweder&#13;
&#13;
Miriam Cox&#13;
&#13;
Maxine Ericksen&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Long&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
Harriette Swanson&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn Capener&#13;
&#13;
Opal Walker&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Swisher&#13;
&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
&#13;
Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
&#13;
Ardis Hall&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Edythe Albert&#13;
&#13;
Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
&#13;
J ea n Jones&#13;
&#13;
Irene Schaal&#13;
&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Harris&#13;
&#13;
Edith J ensen&#13;
Betty Bootjer&#13;
Marjorie&#13;
&#13;
elson&#13;
&#13;
T enors&#13;
&#13;
Basses&#13;
&#13;
Bill Power&#13;
&#13;
Donald Fritzsche&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Moon&#13;
&#13;
George Iseminger&#13;
&#13;
J ames Bolton&#13;
&#13;
Oliver Mogck&#13;
&#13;
George Greene&#13;
&#13;
Keith Arnold&#13;
&#13;
Lawrence John so n&#13;
&#13;
Bill Rozeboom&#13;
&#13;
Odell Woods&#13;
&#13;
Ted Coomer&#13;
&#13;
Le Moine Van Houte n&#13;
&#13;
John Sipma&#13;
&#13;
J ack Suffield&#13;
&#13;
Richard Brenneman&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Emme&#13;
&#13;
Ross Harris&#13;
&#13;
Le Roy Kuhlman&#13;
&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Robert Caine&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Coll ege Methodist Choir has built up a high type of sacred&#13;
a capella singing, and has been recognized by well-known critics and musicians to&#13;
be one of the finest organizations of its type.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty.six&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-seve n&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
The Speech De partment of Morningside College was most for-&#13;
&#13;
Stage Manager........................Lawrence J ohnson&#13;
Dr. Gibbs&#13;
Dale Harter&#13;
&#13;
Woman in the Balcony....................lrene Schaal&#13;
Man in the Auditat·ium&#13;
Maurice Scheider&#13;
Lady in the Box................................ Betty Hoefer&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
tunate in securing Mr. John Felton, Jr., as the head this year. Mr.&#13;
&#13;
Joe CrowelL....................................... Jim Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Felton came to Morningside from the University of Iowa where he&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Howie Newsome.............................. Robert Moore&#13;
&#13;
Si mon Sti mson ............................ Bartlett Lubbers&#13;
&#13;
was an assistant in the Department of Dramatic Art. He received&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Gibbs............................Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Soames.................................. Mary McBride&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Webb&#13;
&#13;
·--········-····Donald Wertz&#13;
Constable Warren&#13;
Si CrowelL.&#13;
Edgar Graham&#13;
Baseball P layer.............................. Robert Craven&#13;
&#13;
his B. A. degree from the University of Iowa_&#13;
His able direction of all of the plays and programs of the year&#13;
&#13;
_Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
George Gibbs........................ Richard Brenneman&#13;
Rebecca Gibbs..............................Maxine Pooley&#13;
&#13;
has been well acknowledged. Mr. Felton has been assisted in the&#13;
&#13;
Wally Webb .................................... Robert F rakes&#13;
&#13;
Sam Craig.................................... Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
presentation of the plays of the year by Mrs. Felton who is also a&#13;
&#13;
Emily Webb..................................Margaret Long&#13;
&#13;
Joe Stoddard .................................. Gerald McCoy&#13;
&#13;
Professor Williard..........................Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Assistan t Stage Managers-Edward Hendricks,&#13;
&#13;
major in dramatics.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Webb ........................................ Robert Cai ne&#13;
&#13;
Edgar Graham.&#13;
&#13;
People of the Town-Dorothy Long, George Green, Scharmel Sturtevant, Irvine Thoe, Irene Johnson, Robert Craven, Betty Hoefer, Betty Lou Saunderson, Maurice Scheider, Irene Schaal,&#13;
Betty Bootjer, Philip Sandberg, Nancy Kingsbury, Kathlyn Kolp, Edward Hendricks.&#13;
&#13;
" Our Town," by Thornton Wilder, gave a picture of what transpired in a small&#13;
New England town between the years 1901 to 1914. It was a simple story, beautifull y told of the growing up, marrying, living, and dying of the people in that community. The play itself was a theatrical experiment in which a stage manager as an&#13;
actor, philosopher, and commentator, set the scenes so that the bare stage became&#13;
the proper background for the action of the play.&#13;
This 1938 Pulitzer P rize winning play was presented on November 10, in the&#13;
East High Auditorium, to a very appreciative audience.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Eighty -nine&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
&#13;
CAST&#13;
Sil via .............................................. Maxine Pooley&#13;
&#13;
Mario ........................................ Ma urice Scheider ·&#13;
&#13;
Nora .................................................. Lu cille Gehrt&#13;
&#13;
Ma urya ..........................................Ma ry McBride&#13;
&#13;
Lisette .............................................. Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
&#13;
Dorante ........................................ Cliffor d Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Kathleen .................................. Mary Cruik shank&#13;
&#13;
Bartley ·······························-···Lawre nce John son&#13;
&#13;
M. Orgon .......................................... Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Pasquin .......................................... Gene Kennedy&#13;
&#13;
Valet ........................................ Lawrence J ohn son&#13;
&#13;
" Riders to the Sea," a hauntin g Irish tragedy, is a one-act play written by John&#13;
Millington Synge. The scene is in the kitchen of a fisherman's cottage on an island&#13;
&#13;
The second play of the season, " Love in Liver y," was presented in the Mornin g-&#13;
&#13;
off of th e west coast of Ireland. Maurya, who has already given a husband and five&#13;
&#13;
side Coll ege Auditorium on February 21 and 22 at 8 :00 P. M.&#13;
&#13;
sons to the sea, now lo ses Bartley and " is left with no son livin g." Th e utter dejec-&#13;
&#13;
"Love in Livery" by Pierre Marivaux is a Franch comedy, ori ginall y produced in&#13;
&#13;
tion and relief of the mother are shown by-"They're all gone now, and th ere isn't&#13;
&#13;
Paris in 1736. It is a drawin g room comedy, set in the home of M. Orgon in Paris&#13;
&#13;
anythin g more the sea can do to me-." No more does she have to wonder what way&#13;
&#13;
durin g the summ er of 1730. Orgon has promised his dau ghter, Silvia, to be married&#13;
&#13;
the wind is blowing or what " way the sea is-"&#13;
&#13;
to Dorante, th e son of an old friend of his. Neither Silvia nor Dorante are ac-&#13;
&#13;
This play was presented in a student chap el program on Wednesday, May 1, and&#13;
&#13;
quainted, so both di sguise themselves as their servants in order to observe each&#13;
&#13;
was under the direction of Dorothy Ann Ol son .&#13;
&#13;
other before their engagement. The play concerns itself with th e meetin g of Silvia&#13;
and Dorante and their fallin g in love. Th e real maid and valet al so fall in love and&#13;
the play ends happily with Silvia's advice to the lovelorn.&#13;
The play is fill ed with amu sing situations. The 18th century costumes and furniture were very different and furni shed an unusual settin g for the play.&#13;
&#13;
At the tim e of goin g to press, th e play in rehearsal to be given at Comm encement was "Th e Ro yal Famil y," by Edna Ferber and George Kaufman.&#13;
Thi s 1927 " Best Pla y" was supposedl y a caricature of th e dramaticall y great&#13;
Barrymore and Drew famil ies. The authors cl aim, however, tha t this simil arity was&#13;
onl y coin cidental. The play con cerns a famil y of three generation s of actors who&#13;
eventuall y learn that famil y ties are more important th an the glamour of the stage.&#13;
Thi s play was to be given on May 31 in th e Mornin gside Coll ege Auditorium .&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
N in ety&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-o ne&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ...................................................... George lseminger&#13;
Vice-President ························-······--···----------------Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ----···········-·······-----------------Margaret Long&#13;
lsem inge r&#13;
&#13;
The Speech Department in cooperation with the Conservatory of Music, has presented a monthly program over radio station WNAX from their Sioux City studio.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Gamma Cast of Alpha P si Omega, National Honorary Dramatics fraternit y,&#13;
&#13;
This presentation has been a part of the College Hour which five colleges in this&#13;
&#13;
is an active participant in the dramatic and speech activities on the campus. Entrance&#13;
&#13;
territory have brought to the radio audience. The programs consisted of both origi-&#13;
&#13;
into the organization may be obtained by presenting fifty points earned in acting and&#13;
&#13;
nal plays and cuttings of popular plays.&#13;
&#13;
production work, with a minimum of fifteen points and a maximum of thirty-five&#13;
points in either phase of the work. Monthly meetings are held under the direction of&#13;
&#13;
The students who have participated in these presentations are: Alice Scott, Mary&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Felton, faculty sponsor for the fraternity.&#13;
&#13;
Louise Barrett, Betty Bootjer, Lawrence Johnson, Dale Harter, Lester Menke, Margaret Long, Alice Hanson, Irene Schaal, Richard Brenneman, and Kathlyn Kolp.&#13;
All of the continuity and script-writing has been done by Irvine Thoe under the&#13;
supervision of Mr. Felton.&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Collegiate Players Club has completed another successful year&#13;
on the campus. The purpose of the club is to stimulate interest in drama through&#13;
study, laboratory experience, and actual production. The organization meets every&#13;
two weeks to discuss some phase of the theatre, to present some dramatic hit, or to&#13;
have a social period and discussion.&#13;
Members of the group took an active part in cas ting and producing the year's&#13;
productions, and sponsored a one-act play. Under the able guidance of the new&#13;
director, Mr. Felton, it has presented an unusual and widely varied program.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President ..................................Margaret Lon g&#13;
Vice-President... ................. Dorothy Ann Ol son&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer .............. Geraldine Booth&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
President... ..................... Mary Eileen McBride&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President ------ --- ---------------- ---Alice Hanson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer .................. Constance Gall&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
R eese, Harter, Moore , Menke , Johnson&#13;
Waddell&#13;
D. Long, Thorpe , Hill , Miller, Ga ll&#13;
P oo l e y, H an son, Bootjer, B oot h, H oefer, Fowler, McBride&#13;
D. Brown, Cheely , M. Lon g, Wikert , Kingsbury , Ko lp , K. Brown&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First S emester&#13;
Second Sem ester&#13;
President.. ______&#13;
_______ _ _&#13;
_____ ___________&#13;
_____________ _________ _ _ Lawrence Johnson Lawrence Johnson&#13;
___&#13;
_ ___&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.. ......................................................Inez Grove&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
Celia Fordyce&#13;
Secretary............................................................... .Letha Howes&#13;
Treasurer.. ..............................................................Helen Broyles&#13;
Careta Younglove&#13;
Corresponding Secretary...................................... Letha Howes&#13;
Letha Howes&#13;
PublicitY--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- .................Frances Gasink&#13;
The Morningside College Chapter of P si Chi, the National Honor Fraternity in&#13;
Psychol ogy, was chartered on June 5, 1939. Twelve hours of work in P sychology&#13;
with an average grade of B are required for membership. The organization has fo r&#13;
its purpose the stimulation of interest and research in P sych ology. The outstanding&#13;
event of the year is the presenta tion of P sych ological Demonstration Night.&#13;
Alumni Members Are:&#13;
&#13;
Members not in the picture are&#13;
Stanley Anderson&#13;
ancy Arthur&#13;
F erdinand Bah r&#13;
&#13;
Fred Davenport&#13;
Edna El ving&#13;
Catherine Rich&#13;
&#13;
George Hawn&#13;
Euba Huntsley&#13;
Dick Pawson&#13;
Dr. Edward Sibley&#13;
&#13;
Top: P . Joh nson. All e n. Booth , Il roy lcs, E. Em me.&#13;
C . Emm e, Fo rd yce, Gasi nk. Grove, ll a ka la .&#13;
L. Joh nson.&#13;
Harri son. Harte r. Ho wes. Jacobson&#13;
Bo tt om : Miller, Ho ll an d. S he ley, T hoe. Th o rng rcc n, Zechmann.&#13;
&#13;
Nine ty-fou r&#13;
&#13;
The Student Coun cil is composed of the followin g : the president, vice-president,&#13;
and secretary-treasurer of th e student bod y; th e president of each class- Arthur&#13;
Lundbl ad, Dean Forbes, John Kolp, and Bob Hicks ; on e representative from each&#13;
class- Jan et Coe, Ruth Olsen, Geraldine Booth, Ruth Cowlin g; one representative&#13;
from the Women's Self-Go verning Association- Kathl yn Kolp; one representative&#13;
from the Conservatory- Arnold Rudd; on e representative from Pi Kappa DeltaRobert Hamel ; the editor of th e Coll egian Reporter- Fred Davenport; the presidents of M. C. A.- Dal e Harter, " M" Club- Robert Hakala, and W. A. A.--Doroth y&#13;
Ann Ol son.&#13;
Th e Student Coun cil has successfull y spon sored the followin g events : FreshmanSophomore Day, Homecomin g activities Including the barbecue, crownin g of Miss&#13;
Morningside, parade, football gam e and dance, a series of dances after basketbaJI&#13;
games, Sadie Hawkins Day dance, Hi-Ya Day and dance, Walk-out Day and dan ce,&#13;
and an all colle ge formal each semester.&#13;
They have al so spon sored a campai gn on political education which in cluded outside speak ers for the major political parties and culminated in party convention s&#13;
and a mock election.&#13;
A Campaign&#13;
&#13;
for beautifyin g th e campu s was al so successfull y carried out. Many&#13;
&#13;
beautiful trees have been planted which will lon g be a source of beauty. As a part·&#13;
in g gift, th e Coun cil has given th e school a bull etin board to be used for announcements of interest to th e student body.&#13;
Under these capabl e studen t Executives, anoth er successful year of activities of&#13;
gen eral student interest has been compl eted.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ···-----·····----·--······----·------------- -·····Morgan Harri son&#13;
Vice-President ································---- --· -····Alfred Strozdas&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ........................................Helen Osbey&#13;
&#13;
Nin ety-five&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
H appily, Bravely,&#13;
Faithfully&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President. ........................................................Betty Greene&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President... ..............................................Millicent Jensen&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Marian Preston&#13;
&#13;
Recording Secretary...................................... Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary............................... Verona De Mond&#13;
&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. ...................................................... Anna Marie Larson&#13;
&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain ......................................................... Ruth Rance&#13;
&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
&#13;
Critic............................................................... Helen Jen sen&#13;
&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms&#13;
&#13;
Alice Swanson&#13;
&#13;
lI?ez Grove&#13;
&#13;
Librarian ......................................................... Marian Preston&#13;
&#13;
Shirl eymae Zechman&#13;
&#13;
Hall Chairman ............................................... Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
&#13;
Social Chairman ............................................. Nancy Arthur&#13;
Reporter.......................................................... Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Marcia McNee&#13;
&#13;
Alice Clayton&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Jeanne Anderson&#13;
Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Verona De Mond&#13;
Betty Greene&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Alta Claire Harrison&#13;
Millicent Jensen&#13;
Irene Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Top: Anderson , Be rgquist, Booth , Bootj er, B 1ooke.&#13;
Brown , Carrigg, Clayton, D cMond, Greene.&#13;
Middl e: Grove, Custeson . Ha rrison, Je nsen, H . Johnson .&#13;
I. Johnson. king larson&#13;
Preston. Rance. Rohweder.&#13;
B ottom: Schunck , Sorenson, Swanson, Thomas, verstegen,&#13;
Zechmann.&#13;
&#13;
Ninet y-six&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-seven&#13;
&#13;
Ann Marie Larson&#13;
Marian Preston&#13;
Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Doris Brown&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Alice Swanson&#13;
&#13;
Sophom ores&#13;
Marie Bergquist&#13;
Geraldi ne Booth&#13;
Betty Bootjer&#13;
Alice Clayton&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
Lauretta King&#13;
Clarice Rohweder&#13;
Dorothy Jean Sorenoon&#13;
Geraldine Thomas&#13;
Shirleymae Zechmann&#13;
&#13;
To Be, R ather than&#13;
to Seem&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... ...................................................... Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Vice-President... ______________________________ ..........Margaret Long&#13;
____&#13;
_____ __ __&#13;
Recording Secretary_________________________ _ _ __ joyce Weed&#13;
&#13;
S econd Semester&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Constance Gall&#13;
Mildred Wiker t&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretar y.............................. .Lucille Pippett&#13;
Treasurer _________________&#13;
________________________&#13;
________ _&#13;
_____ jean F ow !er&#13;
First Critic_________________ _&#13;
_______&#13;
________________ :__ K athlyn Kolp&#13;
____ _____&#13;
Second Critic ___&#13;
__________________&#13;
________&#13;
________________ Constance Gall&#13;
_____&#13;
Chaplain......................................................... Irvine Thoe&#13;
Directresses _ ____________________________________ _&#13;
__&#13;
_____________Mildred Wiker t&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
___ _ _______ ______________ _______Winifred Cheely&#13;
Librarian _________________ ___ _____&#13;
Ushers_____&#13;
___________ ______ _ ______ ___________ _ _ _&#13;
___&#13;
_&#13;
_____ ___ ______ ancy Kingsbury&#13;
Norma Neilson&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Miss Jeanne Scott&#13;
&#13;
Marj orie Nelson&#13;
Jean F ow !er&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Nancy Lowr y&#13;
Louise Cairy&#13;
Barbara Barry&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Marian Miller&#13;
Ruth Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Jean Fowler&#13;
Constance Gall&#13;
Alice H anson&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Nancy Lowry&#13;
Deon Moor&#13;
Dorothy An n Olson&#13;
Irvine Thoe&#13;
Joyce Weed&#13;
&#13;
Top: Alb ert. Barrett, Barry, Brown, Cai ry, Cheely&#13;
Corderman, Dall am, Ericksen, Foster, Fowl er. Gall&#13;
Hanson , Heet land , He ld, Hitchcock, Hoefer, Kingsbury&#13;
Kol p, Lo ng, Lowry, Mill er, Moor, Ne lson&#13;
Niel son. Olson, Pippctt , Pool ey, Saunderson, St ick les, Thoe&#13;
Bottom: \Vadd ell , \Va l l en, \Veave r, We rtz. \Veed, \Vikert, Wood&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Edythe Albert&#13;
Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Winifred Cheely&#13;
Glen nys Corderm an&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
Maxine Er ickson&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
Dureth Helen Hi tchcock&#13;
Marjorie Nelson&#13;
Norma Neilson&#13;
Lucille Pippett&#13;
Shirley W allen&#13;
Mildred W ikert&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
Barbara Barry&#13;
Kathryn Brown&#13;
Louise Cairy&#13;
J anice Collier&#13;
Maxine Foster&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
Betty Hoefer&#13;
Nancy Kingsbury&#13;
Ruth Kin gsbury&#13;
Marian Miller&#13;
Maxine P ooley&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Marian Stickels&#13;
Ellajean Waddell&#13;
Helen Weaver&#13;
Va Vonne Wertz&#13;
Lauree Wood&#13;
&#13;
T he Useful and&#13;
the Pleasing&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
First Sem ester&#13;
&#13;
Second Sem ester&#13;
&#13;
President.__ ____ ___ _&#13;
___ -------------------------------------- Genevieve Whittington Janet Coe&#13;
_ _ _______ _ _ _&#13;
_ __ ____________ _ _ ell y De Vries&#13;
___&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Vice-President__ ____ _____ _&#13;
_ __ ___ _ _ _ _______ _&#13;
Recording Secretary_ _ _ _ ___ ___ ___ _ _ _ Charl otte Robinson&#13;
Frances F orsberg&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
__ _ ___ _ _ _ J&#13;
Corresponding Secretary____ _ __ _ _ ___ ___ __ anet Coe&#13;
Treasurer___________ _ _ _ __________ ________ ___ _ _ Ella Lauritson&#13;
_ ___ _____&#13;
_&#13;
__ _ __&#13;
&#13;
Ella Lauritson&#13;
&#13;
Directress _ ___ _ _ ____ _&#13;
_ __ ___ _ _ _______ ____ _&#13;
_ _________ _ _Frances Forsberg&#13;
_____ ___&#13;
&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
&#13;
____ ____&#13;
______&#13;
Reporter _ __ _ __ _ __ ________ _ _____ _ ___F ranees Forsberg&#13;
_ _ _ __ ___ ____&#13;
&#13;
Helen Broyles&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain _&#13;
________ _____ _____ ___ _ __ ______ _ __ ___ __&#13;
_ _ _ __ _ _ ___ ___ _ruth Smith&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
&#13;
pianist _______ ___ _ _&#13;
_ _ ______ ________ _&#13;
_______ ___ __ _____ _D olorys Cook&#13;
_ __ __ _ _&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
&#13;
Usher__ ______ _ _ __ _ ____&#13;
____ _ _ ________________________&#13;
___________ Nell y De Vries&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Ferne Rolla nd&#13;
&#13;
Nelly De Vries&#13;
&#13;
__&#13;
_ _ ____ ____ _ __ ____ _ _J&#13;
Historian _______ _ ___ ____ _ __ _ __ ___ _ _ _ _ _ __ a net Coe&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Miss Ethel Murray&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
J anet Coe&#13;
Dolorys Cook&#13;
Nelly De Vries&#13;
Ella Lauritson&#13;
Ruth Smith&#13;
Genevieve Whittin gton&#13;
&#13;
Top: B roy les , Carl son , Coe, Cook.&#13;
DeVri es. Fo rsbe rg-. Jones&#13;
Lau ritson.&#13;
Mc Bri de, Madi son , Robe rts, Robinson, Ro l land.&#13;
Bottom: Salsbu ry, Schatz, Smi th , Wel ding, Whittington.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred One&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
F rances F orsberg&#13;
Mary Eileen McBride&#13;
Charlotte Robinson&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Helen Broyles&#13;
Marjorie Carlson&#13;
J ean Jones&#13;
Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
Kath ryn Madison&#13;
Adele Roberts&#13;
Ferne Rolland&#13;
Marjorie Salsb ury&#13;
Kathleen Schatz&#13;
Betty Lou Weldi ng&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
Wee R etrace No&#13;
Foo tsteps&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President... ................................ Don Widler&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
Third Semester&#13;
&#13;
Bernard Feikema Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President..&#13;
&#13;
Charles Clayton&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Bob Dann enberg Gl enn Thompson Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
Don Michaelson&#13;
&#13;
Glenn Thompson&#13;
&#13;
Pledge Master..&#13;
&#13;
Gl en Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Gl en Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Gl en Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Chaplain&#13;
&#13;
.Arthur Lundblad Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
So phom ores&#13;
&#13;
Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
Fres hm en&#13;
&#13;
Glen Burrow&#13;
&#13;
Robert Dann enberg&#13;
&#13;
Ri chard Brenn eman&#13;
&#13;
Elwood Hetland&#13;
&#13;
Bernar d F eikema&#13;
&#13;
J oe DeMaine&#13;
John J ensen&#13;
&#13;
Arthur Lundblad&#13;
&#13;
Albert HaenA er&#13;
&#13;
Don Mi chaelso n&#13;
&#13;
Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
Ru ssell Lo gue&#13;
&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
&#13;
Ted Macur&#13;
&#13;
Robert Mohr&#13;
&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
&#13;
Mi chael Reilly&#13;
&#13;
Merle Ston e&#13;
&#13;
Charles Sherid an&#13;
&#13;
Jam es Va nder Berg&#13;
&#13;
Glen Thom pson&#13;
Don Widler&#13;
Robert Wor rell&#13;
&#13;
'fop: B u rrow. Dann enberg. F ei kema, Lease.&#13;
&#13;
Midd l e: Lundb l ad. Mac ur. Michae l so n, Sm i th .&#13;
Bott om: Sto ne. Th ompson , Vander Berg, Wi d le r.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
One H und reJ. Two&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Three&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Charl es Sh eridan Charl es Sheridan&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Se niors&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
Smoothness in Manner,&#13;
S trength in A ll T hings.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
&#13;
PresidenL. ............................................................... .Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Garret Wallman&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President. .................................... ....................Garrett Wal Iman&#13;
&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
&#13;
Secretary...................................................................Ray Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Ray Gusteson&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.. .... ___ ............................................. ___ ........ John Ko 1p&#13;
&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms.............. _ ____ ......... _ __ .......... _____ ... John Maynard&#13;
&#13;
Eugene Kennedy&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
&#13;
Pledgemaster............................ ---·--·--·---------------------·Eugene Kennedy&#13;
Social Chairman ......................................... -------------Ra! ph Brown&#13;
_....&#13;
_&#13;
...&#13;
Chap 1ain.. __________ _____ ........... _........ ___ __ ................Richard Woods&#13;
&#13;
Don Leopold&#13;
Richard Woods&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Adviser: Cecil E. Marshall&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
John Thrower&#13;
Bruce Van De Mark&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
Garrett Wall man&#13;
&#13;
Top: Bennett, Bolton, Brown, Cobbs, Corwin.&#13;
Goodenow. Custeso n, Hempstead . E. Hi cks, R. H icks.&#13;
Hu ghes, Kingsbury. Kolp. Leopold , Mahood .&#13;
Maynard , Menke, Rehder, Thrower. Van De Mark&#13;
Wallman, Wellmerling&#13;
Woods.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Four&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Five&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
&#13;
J ames Bolton&#13;
Gerald Cobbs&#13;
Earl Goodenow&#13;
Raymond Gusteson&#13;
Robert Hempstead&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Eugene Kennedy&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
John Maynard&#13;
Harold Wellmerling&#13;
Richard Woods&#13;
&#13;
James Adams&#13;
Samuel Back&#13;
Robert Bennett&#13;
Richard Corwin&#13;
Robert Hicks&#13;
Raymond Hughes&#13;
Robert Jarvise&#13;
Francis Kingsbury&#13;
Guy Nettleto n&#13;
Leonard Rehder&#13;
Pledges&#13;
James Dunn&#13;
Francis Jones&#13;
Warren Jurgensen&#13;
&#13;
Members of the inte r-sorority council consist of the president and two appointed&#13;
by her to represent each sorority. A secretary is chosen to serve for the year, each&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
&#13;
First S em ester&#13;
President.. .............................. --------------------------- --Walter Hurd&#13;
&#13;
sorority havin g one of its representatives act in this position every third year. The&#13;
&#13;
S econd S emester&#13;
&#13;
council functions, with the advice and guidance of Miss Lillian Dimmitt, dean of&#13;
&#13;
Lester Ol son&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President. .................................................... Dayrle Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Dean Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Secretary............... ..............................................Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
Melvin McKnight&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer ............................................................. Francis Ames&#13;
&#13;
Francis Ames&#13;
&#13;
Pl edgemaster ....................................................... Dean Forbes&#13;
&#13;
Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms................................................ Jack Holdcroft&#13;
Chaplain _______ _&#13;
_____________________ _&#13;
___________ _ _&#13;
_ ____________ _ ___ _Howard Nielsen&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
Takeo Nagamori&#13;
&#13;
Boarding Club Manager.. .................................. Dayrle Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Dayrle Crabb&#13;
&#13;
House Manager ................................................... Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
women, onl y wh en cooperative measures arc necessary.&#13;
&#13;
Donnin Ames&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
K APPA ZETA&#13;
&#13;
Second Sem ester&#13;
&#13;
Chi&#13;
&#13;
K APPA ZETA&#13;
&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Glennys Corderman&#13;
Dorothy Ann Ol son&#13;
&#13;
Philip Sandberg&#13;
&#13;
K APPA&#13;
&#13;
Pr&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
Chi&#13;
&#13;
Alice Hanson&#13;
Glenn ys Corderman&#13;
Dorothy Ann Ol son&#13;
KAPPA&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Betty Greene&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Pr&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Betty Greene&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
&#13;
Top : Ames , Crabb, Gibson, Hahn.&#13;
Midd le: Ho ldcroft, Hurd, K enn y, Mc Kni ght.&#13;
Bot tom: Nagamori, Nie lsen, Ol son.&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA STGMA&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
&#13;
Nelly De Vries&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
Devon Hahn&#13;
Walter Hurd&#13;
Howard Nielsen&#13;
Lester Olson&#13;
Robert Ruleman&#13;
Juniors&#13;
Arnold Anderson&#13;
Donnin Ames&#13;
F ra ncis Am es&#13;
Dean F orbes&#13;
Myles Gates&#13;
Melvin McKnight&#13;
Takeo Na ga mori&#13;
&#13;
council has charge of pl edging activities and solving probl ems of the fraternities.&#13;
In the past years, it has served chiefly in an advisory capacity. Members include two&#13;
from each fraternity, with a president and secretary elected within the group by&#13;
the members.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ------------------ ------- -------- ------ -- ---- -----------------------Robert Rul eman&#13;
Secretary --------------- ------------- --------------------------------------Garrett Wal Iman&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES&#13;
A L PHA T AU DELTA&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
SIGMA THETA RHO&#13;
&#13;
Garrett Wall man&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
&#13;
Robert Rul eman&#13;
Howard Niel sen&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
One Hundred S ix&#13;
&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
&#13;
With Dr. M. E. Graber, Dean of Men, as faculty adviser, the inter-fraternity&#13;
&#13;
So phomores&#13;
Marion Benton&#13;
Dayrle Cra bb&#13;
Odell Woo ds&#13;
J ack Holdcrof t&#13;
J ohn Ba ne&#13;
Fres hmen&#13;
David Gibson&#13;
Th omas Kenny&#13;
Charles Meac ham&#13;
Lowell Ralston&#13;
Phili p Sandberg&#13;
Willi a m Stodda rd&#13;
Willi am Anderson&#13;
Willi am Murray&#13;
Robert Moore&#13;
Edwin Osbo rn&#13;
Robert Th ompso n&#13;
&#13;
ALPHA SIGMA&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Seven&#13;
&#13;
Phi&#13;
&#13;
SI GMA&#13;
&#13;
Bernard Feikm a&#13;
Joe Lease&#13;
&#13;
Ishkoodah is an organization t o which all freshman girl s may&#13;
belong. The name, which means shooting star, signifies that the&#13;
Mc Claran&#13;
&#13;
memb ership of Ishkoodah changes every year.&#13;
Ishkoodah participates in such school activities as furnishin g a&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
President... ........................................................... Mrs. L. C. McClaran&#13;
Vice-President.. ..........................................................Mr. Odes Hilton&#13;
Secretary..........................................................Miss Ruth Wedgewood&#13;
Treasurer .............................................................. Mr. Homer Schaper&#13;
&#13;
float for the homecoming parade, takin g part in the annual Agora&#13;
carnival, and havin g charge of a chapel program. Ishkoodah sponsors two formal dances durin g the year which are the main social&#13;
functions of the society.&#13;
The bi-monthly meetings held in the Student Union Room are for&#13;
&#13;
Zeta Sigma is a local honor society primarily for the purpose of promotin g&#13;
scholarship and leadership on the campus. Students mu st have an average of at&#13;
least three and one-third honor points, and are elected into the society in the sprin g&#13;
of their graduation.&#13;
The Frederick W. Schneider Loan Fund has been established by Zeta Sigma to&#13;
be awarded to students of hi gh scholarship, good character, and leadership, who are&#13;
interested in preparin g for some form of humanitarian service.&#13;
&#13;
the purpose of developing friendship amon g the freshman girl s.&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President ----·------------ -------------- ----------- ---··········--·Lucile Roberts&#13;
Vice-President .................... ....................................Doris Coe&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ...................................... Dorothy Brown&#13;
Program Chairman ........................................ Zola Marcussen&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arm s --------······················------··--·-----Dorothy Long&#13;
S econd Semester&#13;
President ---·--··················-------····--·····················Florence Coss&#13;
Vice-President ............................................... Jane Garretson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ........................................ Dorothy Long&#13;
Program Chairman..................................Gwendol yn Downey&#13;
Sergeant-at-Arms ................................................. Jean White&#13;
&#13;
Luci l e Roberts&#13;
&#13;
The function of the alumni association is to initiate the graduates into their ranks&#13;
each spring after graduation.&#13;
Alumni are encouraged to keep in contact with the organization, and many states&#13;
are represented in its membership. The annual dinner of the group is held during&#13;
Homecoming, and the new officers are th en elected.&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
President .................................................. Richard Burrows&#13;
Vice-President .................................................. Don Paul ey&#13;
Secretary ..................................................... William Woll e&#13;
Treasurer.. .......... ............................................. .Ira J. Gwinn&#13;
&#13;
Fl orence Coss&#13;
&#13;
Burrows&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
One H undred Eight&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred Nine&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
top:&#13;
&#13;
T op: Stevens, Crabb, Arnold , Lafoon, McDonald , Whit ver, D aufTenbach,&#13;
Bottom : Salsbury, Gartner, F o rsberg, Grove.&#13;
&#13;
Th oe, Olson, D ave nport , Kitt e rm an , G refe , H ar ter.&#13;
&#13;
Middl e: Mur ray , H owes, Youn glove, Ford yce, McNee, Wiri ck, Jacobson , Johnson,&#13;
Sheley , Cl ayto n H akala .&#13;
Bo ttom : Osb ey , Pres to n , Miller&#13;
Fo wl er, B rown.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ------------------------------------------- ____ __ _____ __ _ _______ Min etta Mill er&#13;
_____&#13;
Vi ce-President_ _______ _&#13;
________________________ _&#13;
_______ _ ____________________ _ Ro y Brown&#13;
_&#13;
B,&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----------------------------- -------- -·-·····-·-·-··-··-···---·---Frances Forsberg&#13;
Vice-President --------------------- -------- ---------- ---------------·-----·---Keith Arnold&#13;
Steward _______________________________________________________ _ _________ _Dorothy Gartner&#13;
___&#13;
_&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ------ ---------------- --···--------·-· ··------- ------------ --- -------------- Irvine Thoe&#13;
Treasure r ----- ------------ -- ---- ----------------------------- ------------------Marcia McNee&#13;
Faculty Spon sor__ ______ _&#13;
___________ _&#13;
___________ _ _&#13;
__ _________ _______ ______ Dr. Earl Emme&#13;
This club is maintained in the Biolo gy Department for the purpose of stimulatin g&#13;
interest in biological fi elds and to provide an opportunity for those interested in this&#13;
department for social gatherings. The ultimate aim of the club is to promote Beta&#13;
Beta Beta, honorar y biological fraternity. The regular events of the club include&#13;
periodical bird or field trips and bi-weekl y lun cheon s followed by reports of biological interest.&#13;
&#13;
National honorary social science fraternity. The requirement for eligibility is a&#13;
grade average of B for thirty semester hours in a field , with fifteen hours from one&#13;
department. The purpose of the fraternity is to encourage and reward the study of&#13;
society and of social questions in the light of truth and b y th e scientific method.&#13;
&#13;
Alpha Kappa Delta, H onorary Sociological Fraternity, was brought to Mornin gside College with nine charter members to promote scholarship, creative writing, and&#13;
community service in the social field. Students who have a major interest in Sociology and whose collegiate work is of a high order are eligible to come into the fellowship of this society.&#13;
The fraternity is of national scope, havin g chapters in man y of the large universities of America. Throu gh Alpha Kappa Delta, welfare workers, researchers, and&#13;
special students are brought into more sympathetic contact to discuss th e manifold&#13;
probl ems which our modern civilization has brought forth.&#13;
The Alpha chapter in Iowa b elongs to Morningside College.&#13;
Faculty Sponsor: Horace Hawthorne.&#13;
H awthorne&#13;
&#13;
Beta Beta Beta is a national honorary society for students of the biological&#13;
sciences, es tablished for the purpose of encouraging scholarly attainment in biolo gy.&#13;
It thus reserves its membership to those who achieve high academic records and&#13;
who have a special interest in the subj ect. Its purpose is three fold: the stimulation&#13;
of sound scholarship, the dissemination of scientific knowle dge, and the promotion&#13;
of biological research.&#13;
OFFICERS OF TAU CHAPTER&#13;
President _________________ __ _____ _&#13;
___________________ ___ _ _ ___ Keith Arnold&#13;
__ __&#13;
Vice-President ____________________________________________ Gordon Whitver&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Secretary ----------·-·----··----···--------------------------Gordon Whitver&#13;
Faculty Adviser__ ______________________ ______ _ ____ Dr. T. C. Stephens&#13;
___&#13;
Arn old&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Ten&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Eleven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Top: Brown, Caine, Grefe, Smith.&#13;
Middle: Dal lam, Wikert, Van Camp, Bcgqui st, Hitchcock.&#13;
Bottom: Osbey, Moor.&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President --------------------------------------- -------- ---------------------------Helen Osbey&#13;
Vice-President ---------------------·------------ ·------- --------------------------Deon Moor&#13;
Secretary ------------------------------------------------------------------------Shirley Smith&#13;
Treasurer ----------------------------------------------------------------------------Bob Caine&#13;
&#13;
Top: Warn er, Mill s, Johnson , Thoe, DeVries , Olson, Osbey.&#13;
Bottom: Gusteson, Huxtable , DeMond, Greene.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----- ------------------------------------------------ ----- ----------Patricia Warner&#13;
Vicr-President.. ____________________________________________ _ ______ __ __ _Nelly De Vries&#13;
__&#13;
__&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ---------------------------------------------------------.Irvine Thoe&#13;
Adviser ·------------------------------- ------------------------------------Miss Mirah Mills&#13;
&#13;
Eta Sigma Phi is a national honorary Latin and Greek fraternity which has for its&#13;
purpose the promotion of scholarship in the classical languages. Require ments for&#13;
acceptance into the group are registration in twelve or more hours of Latin or Greek&#13;
with an avera ge of 3.2 honor points per semester hour or above. Monthly meetings&#13;
are h eld.&#13;
Hel en Osbey, president of the local chapter, has been national secretary during&#13;
the past year. Mildred Wikert, Dureth Helen Hitchcock, Elna Van Camp, and Helen&#13;
Osbey attended the national convention at Tulane University in New Orleans, from&#13;
April 9-16.&#13;
&#13;
Sigma Tau Delta, National Honorary English fraternity, is composed of English&#13;
majors pledged " to endeavor to advance the study of the chief literary masterpieces,&#13;
to encourage worthwhile reading, and to promote the mastery of written expression."&#13;
The requirements for eligibility are a major in English and a grade of B in all&#13;
courses in this field.&#13;
This past year, the organization was composed of twelve m embers. The programs were varied, being presented both by members and by outside speakers. A&#13;
social hour usually follow ed the regular meeting. One of the traditions of the club&#13;
is the annual May breakfast which concluded the activities of the year.&#13;
This year, Sigma Tau Delta was privileged to be in charge of the annual Honor&#13;
Society banquet held during the last part of the second semester.&#13;
&#13;
Phi Sigma Iota, national honorary romance languages fraternity, is primarily for&#13;
students of junior standing or above in the romance languages. Meetings are held&#13;
each month at which individual research papers are read by the members. The purpose is to stimulate research and promote interest between nations.&#13;
This year, the club elected Mr. Cecil Marshall an honorary member.&#13;
&#13;
Cosmopolitan Club meets once a month for a dinner and a program. The dinners&#13;
are prepared by the club members, and are in the form that the particular nationality&#13;
would serve. During the past year Chinese, Danish, Dutch, Indian, Canadian, and&#13;
English dinners were planned. The programs are built around the nationality or&#13;
the nation from which the dinner is supposed to originate.&#13;
The primary aim of the club is to create friendship among foreign students who&#13;
have little immediate connection with other lands and who are interested in learning&#13;
more about the customs and habits elsewhere. The club had a membership of thirty&#13;
this year, including the followin g forei gn students: Takeo Nagamori, Ayako Yamashiro, Betty Ling, Anne Holiday, Frances Walker, Dave Denny, and Toni Crow.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Marsha l I, Lauritsen , De Vri es, Schun ck, Kan thl ener.&#13;
Bottom: Casink, DeMo nd, Saun derson.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Denny&#13;
&#13;
President... ................... Verona De Mond&#13;
Vice-President .... ............ Frances Gasink&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer.. ........ Ella Lauritsen&#13;
Faculty Adviser.. .. Mr. Henry Kanthlener&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
President ----------------------------------------------------------------------------David Denny&#13;
Vice-President ------------------- -------------------------------------------Eric Liljestrand&#13;
Secretar y --------------------------·-··------------------------------------------Frances Gasink&#13;
Treasurer ------ --------- ------- ----- ---- --- ----- -------------------- ------- --------------Betty Ling&#13;
Advi ser ________________________________________________________________________ Dr. Paul Johnson&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twelve&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
H arter&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice-President&#13;
&#13;
Harter&#13;
Dallam&#13;
&#13;
Faculty Adviser ............................................Dr. Paul E. Johnson&#13;
The Morningside Christian Association is an organization composed of three&#13;
former groups- the Christian Service Club, Y. W. C. A., and the Y. M. C. A. They&#13;
aim to further fellowship among students, and to help students formulate a philosophy&#13;
of life and to strengthen their ideals.&#13;
among the events which they sponsor are Freshman Week, the Gospel Team,&#13;
Religious Emphasis&#13;
Week, all-college parties, and the securing of outside speakers&#13;
for chapel programs.&#13;
Their meetings are held once a week in the Student Union Room and are usually&#13;
followed b y a luncheon. During the past year, they have been a very active group&#13;
on the campus and have a large number of members enrolled.&#13;
&#13;
M. C A Radio. groups&#13;
Every Sunday morning at 9 :45 over station KTRI, this group of young musical&#13;
artists presented fifteen minutes of sacred and secular music under the sponsorship&#13;
of the Christian Association of Morningside College. They presented thirty programs&#13;
during the year. The strin g trio is composed of Edith J_ensen, piano; Robert Feick,&#13;
cello· Homer Garretson, violin. The mixed quartet consists of Ahce Scott, soprano;&#13;
Kathlyn Kolp, contralto; Gene Emme, tenor ; and William Rozeboom, baritone. The&#13;
prog ram announcers were Bill Rozeboom and Dale Harter. The program was directed&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President ----------------------------------------------------------------------Doreen Dallam&#13;
Vice-President ........................................................ Kathryn Madison&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ................................................Wilson Reynolds&#13;
Social Chairman ........................................................Philip Sandberg&#13;
Song Leader..................................................................... .Irene Schaal&#13;
Pianist ------------------------------------------------------------------Dorothy Luchsinger&#13;
Adviser..................................................................Dr. Paul E. Johnson&#13;
College League meets every Sunday evening at Grace M. E. Church. The purpose&#13;
of the group is to offer to every coll ege student an opportunity for religious self·&#13;
expression.&#13;
The lesson is conducted by students belonging to the League, and the varied program included outside speakers, student discussions, and special music. Social meetings wer e hel d frequentl y throughout the past year to encourage friendship among&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
Kappa Chi is a new organization on the campus this year. They strive to develop&#13;
a spirit of comradeship among students preparing fo r Christian work, and to spread&#13;
the Christian spirit over the campus by a united effort. Meetings were held every&#13;
two months in addition to weekly seminars held weekl y under the leadership of&#13;
P resident Roadman.&#13;
The charter members include : B. Ro y Brown, Robert Caine, Willard Cunningham, Wilbur Fosnot, Lawrence Johnson, Ralph Kitterman, Howard Nielsen, Robert&#13;
Rul eman, William C. Smith, and Josephine Smith. Initiates include: Stanley Ander·&#13;
son, Arthur Beckman, Harold Bockart, Horace Graubner, Louise Madison, Robert&#13;
Rae, and Philip Sandberg.&#13;
&#13;
b y Gene Emme.&#13;
Garretso n, Jensen, Fe ick&#13;
&#13;
T op : B o ckart, Caine, Fosnot. Rae.&#13;
Mid dle: Neil son. Sl oan. Sm ith, Craubncr.&#13;
Bottom: Brown , R oadman , Madison .&#13;
&#13;
Rozeboom, Kolp , Scott, Emme&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Fifteen&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Koch&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President -------·······················----------------------------------------------George Koch&#13;
Vice-President ------------------------------------------------------------------Bruce Lindsay&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ----------------------------------------------------------Charles Wert&#13;
Omicron chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma, national honorary physics fraternity, 1s&#13;
open to students having completed at least ten hours of advanced physics with an&#13;
average of B grades or above. Bi-monthly meetings are held, with Dr. M. E. Graber&#13;
and Prof. Ira J. Gwinn of the physics department, as sponsors of the group. The&#13;
meetings include discussions of physics and related sciences, and the modern experimentation and advancement made by discoveries of men in the scientific world.&#13;
&#13;
The Pre-Engineers Club is an organization on the campus devoted to scientific&#13;
pursuits and the spirit of good fellowship. It not only includes future engineers,&#13;
but also all those who are primarily interested in chemical and physical sciences.&#13;
&#13;
Something distinctly new and different was incorporated within the Aeronautics&#13;
Department this year when the Civil Aeronautics Authority approved Morningside as&#13;
one of a select group of colleges in the country to give actual pilot-training under&#13;
government supervision. A nominal fee of only fo rty dollars was charged each student. The federal government bore the remainder of the costs.&#13;
Twenty students, nineteen men and one girl, selected on the basis of rigorous&#13;
physical examinations embarked on the flight training course at the beginning of the&#13;
school year. Ground school work was undertaken immediately under the able supervision of Dr. Graber.&#13;
Late in ovember, the students took their places behind the instructors in the&#13;
dual control training ships. Before January had passed, every student had made his&#13;
solo flights, which marked the eight hours of dual instruction. This f ea t accomplished&#13;
by twenty students in seven weeks speaks especially well for the instructors and the&#13;
formulated p lan of instruction.&#13;
Following this first flight, the students flew solo about three-fourths of the time&#13;
until a total of thirty-five hours was completed. At this stage, the students were given&#13;
examinations for a Private Pilot's License by a regular Civil Aeronautics Authority&#13;
Inspector.&#13;
The fl ying training was under the proficient supervision of Mr. E. L. Graham,&#13;
who had two efficient and very capable young instructors, Mr. Tom Lynch and Mr.&#13;
Art. Myers.&#13;
The planes used were fifty horsepower, four-cylinder Piper Cubs with the tandem&#13;
seating arrangement.&#13;
The first class of student aviators to become private pilots at Morningside College&#13;
are: Rollie Buckholtz, Charles Clayton, Marvin Frum, Ted Grier, Edgar Graham, J r.,&#13;
&#13;
Thus the club is separated into affilia ted departments; these are the chemistry, radio,&#13;
photography, and aeronautics divisions.&#13;
The first semester of the year the principal function of the Pre-Engineers Club is&#13;
to prepare scientific experiments for the annual Pre-Engineers' Night. In addition to&#13;
this, the club has weekly luncheons in conjunction with its business meetings.&#13;
Top: H e mpstead , Lindsay, Smi th , S te rn , Adams, Oakl eaf.&#13;
Upper Middl e: Winter, Church, McDonald , Shaffer, Koch.&#13;
Lowe r Middle: \Vagstaff, Haskins, Swa nson , Leachman.&#13;
Bottom: \Ve rt , Hicks, Scheider, McKnight, Coomer.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
First Semester&#13;
President ______ _ __ _ _&#13;
__ ____ ________&#13;
John Swanson&#13;
Vice-President __ ____ __ ____ _ _&#13;
_ _ _ ___ George Koch&#13;
Secretary __ ______________&#13;
_&#13;
_______________ Max Stern&#13;
Treasurer ______ _&#13;
_________________ Fuller Haskins&#13;
Second Semester&#13;
President ----------------------------George Koch&#13;
Vice-President .......................... Vic Alvey&#13;
Secretary ----------------------------Charles Wert&#13;
Treasurer _____ _ _____ _____________ Glenn Smith&#13;
____&#13;
Historian _ _______&#13;
_&#13;
___________ Melvin McKnight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred S eventeen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
George Green, Robert Hempstead, Walter Hurd, Lester Jones, Richard Kaup, Margaret Long, Max McCoy, Melvin McKnight, John Pojunos, Charles Richards, Clifford&#13;
Skalby, Glenn Smith, George Tripp, Bruce Van de Mark, and Roger Younglove.&#13;
The transition of these fledglings into private pilots marks a great milestone in&#13;
the history of the Aeronautics Department. Dr. Graber is deserving of much credit&#13;
for the success of this new experiment as it was through his tireless efforts and interest in aviation that secured for Morningside College the right as a participant in&#13;
this national program.&#13;
The present plan of the government is to continue the pilot training program fo r&#13;
five years. Advanced training, including night flight in a larger plane will be given&#13;
next Fall. Many members of the class plan to pursue their flying careers as cadets&#13;
in the Army and Navy Air Corps.&#13;
This year's class of pilots extends their heartiest wishes and a warm handclasp to&#13;
Dr. Graber and to the students who will launch their training next Fall.&#13;
&#13;
Greene&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript is the literary magazine sponsored and&#13;
edited by the Manuscript Club to which all students are&#13;
encouraged to contribute original writings. All material&#13;
submitted is considered and selected fo r publication by&#13;
a committee composed of three members of the club in&#13;
cooperation with the staffs of other college p ublications.&#13;
Two issues appeared during the year 1938-39, one in December, and the other in&#13;
May. During the year 1940, one appP-ared on April 15, in conjunction with the short&#13;
story contest. The magazine greatly encouraged creative writing by students.&#13;
This yea r's editorial staff, selected b y the Board of Control , consisted of : editorBetty Greene, associate editors-Pa tricia Warner and Bartlett Lubbers. They have&#13;
an exchange list with other colleges and universities, and copies are sent to all Sioux&#13;
City libraries. The magazine is fi nanced by fu nds from the activity tickets. Miss&#13;
Mirah Mills and Mr. Carroll Norling acted as consultants this year. The contents of&#13;
the 1940 issue of Manuscript included the foll owing :&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
PROSE&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
1. The Son- P a tricia Warner .&#13;
&#13;
Manuscript Club was organized on March 18, 1938, under the guidance of Professor Lynn Beyer for the purpose of encouraging creative writing among the students. Membership is based on the approval of an original manuscript.&#13;
The club holds mi-monthl y meetings at which original manuscripts are read by&#13;
members, followed by an open forum discussion. One of the traditions of the club&#13;
is the birthday dinner held in March.&#13;
This year the associate adviser has been Mr. Carroll orling. The club sponsors&#13;
and edits Manuscript, and has, this year, sponsored a short story contest with competitive prizes. It is the truly literary organization on the campus.&#13;
&#13;
2. The Champ- Kenneth Johnson.&#13;
3. Lif t Thine Eyes-Bartlett Lubbers.&#13;
4,. Gift of the Innocent- Betty Greene.&#13;
5. A Trip to Aunt Jenny's-Irene Johnson.&#13;
6. Blue Books-Irvine Thoe.&#13;
7. Creation in Chaos- Kathryn Madison.&#13;
POETRY&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
1. Ode to a Moonflower-l rene Johnson.&#13;
&#13;
President --------------------------------------------------------------------------Betty Greene&#13;
Vice-President ........... .................................................... .Irene Johnson&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer ..............................................Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Faculty Adviser .................................................................... Miss Mills&#13;
Associate Adviser.. ..............................................Mr. Carroll Norli ng&#13;
&#13;
2. Personification- Eric Lil jestrand.&#13;
3. Fog-Betty H uxtabl e.&#13;
4. Love's Confusion- Miriam Hawthorne.&#13;
&#13;
Top: Custeso n, T hoe, Lubbe rs, Mad ison, Johnson.&#13;
Bo ttom: Mc Bride, Warne r, Hux tabl e.&#13;
&#13;
The various styles of writing in the magazine permit a wide range of appeal to the reade rs of it.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
One Hun d red Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Nine teen&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
STAFF&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Fred Davenport -------····-····----····----------------------------------Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Robert Hamel ............................................................Managing Editor&#13;
Edward Hendricks.................................................. Business Manager&#13;
B. Roy Brown ........................................................Editorial Assistant&#13;
Patricia Warner.......................................................... Dramatic Editor&#13;
Winifred Cheely..........................................~-------------Exchange Editor&#13;
Ray Hughes.................................................................... Sports Editor&#13;
Special Writers- Mary McBride, Josephine Dixon, Francis Kingsbury.&#13;
Reporters- Ruth Kingsbury, Alice Hanson, Alice Clayton, Garry Wallman, Gerry Fischer, Kenneth Johnson, Morgan Harrison, Irvine Thoe.&#13;
The all-college newspaper is written, edited, and managed by students whose d_uty&#13;
it is to publish an edition each week. Exchanges with colleges and high schools&#13;
throughout the United States result in a mailing list of approximately five hundred&#13;
issues each week.&#13;
The various departments adequately cover the social, athletic, and political phases&#13;
of Morningside campus life. Gossip and joke columns furnish humor, and the exchange column acquaints Morningside students with thoughts from other campuses.&#13;
&#13;
Hendricks&#13;
Hanson&#13;
Harrison&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Wallman&#13;
Thoe&#13;
&#13;
Cheely&#13;
Warner&#13;
&#13;
Fisher&#13;
&#13;
Clayton&#13;
Hughes&#13;
Dixon&#13;
&#13;
Hamel&#13;
Mcbride&#13;
F. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
The Board of Control of student publications consists of five facul ty members&#13;
and five students, It elects the editor and business manager of both the Collegian&#13;
&#13;
Reporter and the Sioux. Its main purpose is for guidance and advice in matters of&#13;
publication, and censors publications only at the request of the student council.&#13;
Professor H. F. Kanthlener is chairman of the board whose facul ty members include Miss Mirah Mills, Professor Ira J. Gwinn, Mrs. Elsye Sater, and Dr. T. C.&#13;
Stephens. The student members are Minetta Miller, senior, and secretary of the&#13;
board; Garry Wallman, junior; Geraldine Booth, sophomore; Gwendolyn Downey,&#13;
freshman; and Ray Gusteson, representative at large. Ex-officio members are Editor&#13;
Fred Davenport and Business Manager Ed Hendricks of the Collegian R eporter.&#13;
Members fo r the coming year will be elected by the present board.&#13;
&#13;
Woll e&#13;
Brown&#13;
R. Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
T op: Mill er, Wallman&#13;
Booth , Gusteson,&#13;
Bottom: Kanthl c ne r, Mil l s, Gwin n , S uter, Stevens.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty.one&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
S q. A&#13;
&#13;
OFFI CERS&#13;
President ........................................................................Kathl yn Kolp&#13;
Vice-President ................................................ Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Secreta ry ........................................................................Betty Bootj er&#13;
Social Chairman..................................................................Alice Scott&#13;
Senior Hall Chairman .................................... Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Junior Hall Chairman................................................ Dorothy Brooke&#13;
Sophomore Hall Chairman...................................... Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
Freshman Hall Chairman ............................................... J ean Fowler&#13;
The Women's Self Governing Association is the board elected by the residents&#13;
of the women's dormitory to act as the governing body. Disciplinary measures are&#13;
settl ed through the Honor Court, composed of the board members and Mrs. Winifred&#13;
.&#13;
Cross Felton, social director of the dormitory.&#13;
W. S. G. A. annually sponsors two formal dinner-dances, one just preceding the&#13;
Thanksgiving vacation and the other in the Spring. A Christmas dinner for nonresidents, teas for Sioux City and out-of-town women, Sunday afternoon musicales,&#13;
paj ama parties, spreads, and holiday parties are traditional fea tures for the entertainment of the dormitory residents.&#13;
The re-dedication of the dormitory, with members of W. S. G. A. as characters&#13;
in the " Lighting of the Hearth," a skit written by one of the first residents, is an&#13;
annual Fall feature, which includes a formal dinner and talks by Miss Lillian E.&#13;
Dimmitt and by Mrs. Earl A. Roadman.&#13;
&#13;
F e lton&#13;
Scott&#13;
&#13;
K ol p&#13;
Fowl e r&#13;
&#13;
Whitting ton&#13;
Brooke&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President. .............................................................Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Vice-Presiden t ..............................................................Betty Schunck&#13;
Secretary ........................................................................Alice Cl ayton&#13;
Treasurer ...................................................................... Lucile Pippett&#13;
Senior Representative.................................................. elly De Vries&#13;
Junior Representative....................................................... Joyce Held&#13;
Soph omore Representative............................................ Betty Bootjer&#13;
Freshman Representative....................................Mariellen Rifenbark&#13;
Agora is the truly democratic organization on the campus since it includes in&#13;
membership ever y girl on the campus. Miss Agnes Ferguson was the fo under of the&#13;
group, and it was her aim to promote fell owship among the young women in college.&#13;
The activities sponsored by Agora include the Campus Sister movement in the&#13;
Fall of the year, a carnival hel d this year at the Dormitory, a tea for all the girls in&#13;
school, the Agora edition of the Collegian Reporter, and the annual Mother and&#13;
Daugh ter Banquet in the Spring.&#13;
&#13;
Bootjer&#13;
Fritzsche&#13;
&#13;
Ol son&#13;
DeVries&#13;
&#13;
One H undred Twenty- two&#13;
&#13;
On e Hundred Twenty-th ree&#13;
&#13;
Schunck&#13;
Held&#13;
&#13;
Clayton&#13;
Bootjer&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
Pi ppett&#13;
Rifenbark&#13;
&#13;
The Student Union Room on the third floor of Main Hall has been one of the&#13;
most enjoyable features of the school since it was incorporated during the year&#13;
&#13;
1938-39.&#13;
Comfortably furnished and provided with a radio and magazines, the Union has&#13;
been a great asset to student life.&#13;
&#13;
The Women's Lounge is a comfortable retreat for th e women students of Morningside. Girls may retire here for studying, chatting, or relaxation. The room has&#13;
been especiall y valuable to freshman women.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
On e Hundred Tw e nt y. four&#13;
&#13;
Presenting&#13;
&#13;
Including&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTATIVE SENIORS . ..&#13;
Selected by a faculty committee as representative of character, scholarship,&#13;
leadership, service, and future possibilities.&#13;
&#13;
BRAVEST OF THE BRAVE ...&#13;
WHO'S WHO ...&#13;
HOMECOMING ...&#13;
MISS MORNINGSIDE OF 1939 ...&#13;
THE 1940 SIOUX KING AND QUEEN ...&#13;
Selected by Claudette Colbert and Tyrone Power as signifying beauty, grace,&#13;
poise, personality, and character.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
MISS DOROTHY AN&#13;
&#13;
MISS BETTY LOU GREENE&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
OLSON&#13;
&#13;
Dorothy Ann has been one of Morningside's&#13;
most active students. Among her many honors&#13;
were "Miss Morningside of 1939," president of&#13;
Agora, president of Alpha Psi Omega, and president of Kappa Zeta Chi Sorority. Her ability in&#13;
drama tics has been shown both by her acting and&#13;
by her backstage work . She has been selected as a&#13;
beauty queen several times, and has been an interested and willing worker in several fields of&#13;
activity.&#13;
&#13;
Betty is known a t Morningside as a schola r in&#13;
the true sense of the word. Her execulive ability&#13;
was brought out by her presidencies of Kappa Pi&#13;
Alpha Sorority, Collegiate Players, and Manuscript&#13;
O ub. She was one of the organizers of Manuscript&#13;
Club and worked on the Manuscript Magazine, and&#13;
on the collegian Reporter. Her futu re possibilities&#13;
a re great as based upon her college work.&#13;
&#13;
MR. ALFRED P. STROZDAS&#13;
" Al" has gained many friends a t Morn ingside,&#13;
thro ugh a friendl y personality and a cooperative&#13;
spirit. He has been active in a thl etics, both in&#13;
intramurals and in varsity basketball , and has held&#13;
membership in the "M" Club. Vice-presidency of&#13;
the Student Body as an ln d- pendent is evidence of&#13;
e&#13;
his popularity with the students. His has been a&#13;
worthwhile college career.&#13;
&#13;
MR. B. ROY BROWN&#13;
Ro y has demonstrated his abilities by his work&#13;
a t Morningside. He has been a dependable and&#13;
reliable worker here at school. His primary interest is in the ministry, and he is a member of the&#13;
Ministerial Association. Three honorary fraternities&#13;
cl aim his membership, and music has also been an&#13;
interest as shown by his participation in choir and&#13;
band. Much may be expected of Roy in the future.&#13;
&#13;
One Hu ndred Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
MISS MI ETTA MILLER&#13;
Minetta is one of the busiest persons on the campus. Her activities include presidency of Pi Gamma&#13;
Mu, membership in Psi Chi, Board of Control, and&#13;
Collegiate Players. Her position as Dr. Roadman's&#13;
secretary is demonstrative of her ability to get&#13;
along with people and with life. She will be missed&#13;
from student life on the campus after her gradua·&#13;
tion.&#13;
&#13;
P rio r to the last football game, the Sioux Scalpers&#13;
p resented the first non-partisan election, when the&#13;
student body was asked to select their favorite on&#13;
the foo tball squad. Absolute secrecy prevailed,&#13;
and on the foll owing Friday, Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
presented the Bravest Brave, Dewey Halford, a&#13;
beautifull y engraved tomahawk, emblematic of his&#13;
selection.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
- S. C. Journal.&#13;
Olson, Hal ford&#13;
&#13;
WHO'S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES&#13;
AND COLLEGES&#13;
To be included in Who's Who, a student must have a combination of qualities&#13;
listed below to indicate that he is outstanding and an asset to his school : character,&#13;
leadership in extra curricular activities, scholarship, and potential ities of future&#13;
usefulness to business and society. The foll owing students were selected fo r this&#13;
honor by a faculty committee : Morgan Harrison, Alfred Strozdas, Lester Menke,&#13;
Lawrence Johnson, Lester Olson, Betty Green, I rene Johnson, Dorothy Ann Olson,&#13;
Helen Osbey, Kathlyn Kolp .&#13;
MR. JOHN SWANSON&#13;
John has been one of the unsung heroes on the&#13;
campus. He accomplished a great deal in a quiet&#13;
fashion, and has been a valuable asset to the school&#13;
--especially in the depa rtment of science. He has&#13;
been Dr. Graber's right-hand man, and his activities include offices in P re-Engineers' Club and in&#13;
Sigma Pi Sigma. It will be hard to find as an efficient and thorough worker as John has been.&#13;
&#13;
Harrison, S trozdas, Menke, L. Johnson.&#13;
Crccne. 1. Johnson, D. Olson, Osbey, Kolp.&#13;
&#13;
On e Hund red T wenty.eight&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
-S. C. Tribune.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dorothy Ann Ol son, in bein g crowned "Miss Mornin gside of 1939," received&#13;
the highest honor which can be bestowed upon an y girl in Morningside. El ected by a&#13;
popular student vote, Miss Morningside is th e president of the Kappa Zeta Chi&#13;
Sorority and of Agora. Al so reignin g over the homecomin g festiviti es were two girl s&#13;
elected by th e student body as attendants-Miss Helen Osbey and Miss Genevieve&#13;
Whittington. The Queen and her attendants were reveal ed at the P ep Chapel on&#13;
November 3, and presided over all the events of Homecomin g on Novemb er 4. The&#13;
barbecue, snake dance, parade, football gam e, and dance rounded out a memorable&#13;
Homecomin g for 1939.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
Miss Doro th y Ann O l son&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
OUT STATE&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
v&#13;
&#13;
Miss Helen&#13;
&#13;
Osbey&#13;
&#13;
Miss Genevieve Whitti ngton&#13;
&#13;
x&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
One hundred Th i1ty&#13;
&#13;
One Hu ndred T h ir ty-one&#13;
&#13;
1940 Sioux King&#13;
&#13;
I 940&#13;
&#13;
Sioux&#13;
Queen&#13;
&#13;
Six of Morningside's men were selected by Roy Justus and George Vanden Brink,&#13;
&#13;
Six of Morningside's women were selected by Roy Justus and George Vanden&#13;
&#13;
local artists, as candidates for the 1940 Sioux King. The following were selected:&#13;
&#13;
Brink, local artists, as candidates for the 1940 Sioux Queen. The following were&#13;
&#13;
Don Ballentine, Robert Craven, Robert Dannenberg, Ted Macur, Clifford Skalby, and&#13;
&#13;
selected: Helen Johnson, Anna Marie Larson, Zola Marcussen, Dorothy Ann Olson,&#13;
&#13;
Harold Wissink. The pictures of the six were forwarded to Hollywood to Claudette&#13;
&#13;
Helen Osbey, and Betty Lou Welding. The pictures of the six were forwarded to&#13;
&#13;
Colbert, who did the final judging.&#13;
&#13;
Hollywood to Tyrone Power, who did the final judging.&#13;
&#13;
"I think all of the six are as handsome as can&#13;
&#13;
"I have chosen this student because of her beau-&#13;
&#13;
be, and each one at one time or other during the&#13;
&#13;
tifully expressive eyes combined with the sweetness&#13;
&#13;
the number one&#13;
&#13;
and charm of her character which is very evident&#13;
&#13;
momentous selecting was in&#13;
&#13;
to anyone looking at her portrait."&#13;
&#13;
position."&#13;
- CLAUDETTE COLBERT.&#13;
&#13;
-TYRONE POWER.&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
f&#13;
&#13;
·····&#13;
&#13;
... -------&#13;
&#13;
WAGER'S&#13;
SERVICE STATION&#13;
&#13;
House of Hamburgers&#13;
&#13;
White Rose Gasoline&#13;
&#13;
"From Morningside- For Morningside'·&#13;
&#13;
En-Ar-Co Oil&#13;
Earl FitzPatrick&#13;
&#13;
Goodyear Tires and Batteries&#13;
National Specialized Lubrication&#13;
&#13;
1405 Morningside Avenue&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
MEALS&#13;
&#13;
ALL NIGHT SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
SHORT ORDERS&#13;
&#13;
... --&#13;
&#13;
1412 Morningside Avenue&#13;
______________&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
CHOCOLATES&#13;
One of a Fam ily of Famous Chocolates&#13;
Made by&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Company&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Keep Youthful&#13;
with Dairy&#13;
Products&#13;
&#13;
PA U L&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
WARNE R&#13;
&#13;
President and General Manager&#13;
&#13;
Adair -Warner&#13;
Printing&#13;
&#13;
Co.&#13;
Printing with Service&#13;
&#13;
MILK DEALERS&#13;
OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8-7831&#13;
&#13;
516 Sixth St.&#13;
&#13;
On e H undred Thi rty- four&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
BREAKFASTS : LUNCHES&#13;
DINNERS&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Swift and Courteous Service&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
CAMPUS PHARMACY&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
REAL MALTED MILKS&#13;
Thick and Creamy- toe&#13;
Hot Chocola te&#13;
Special Milk Shakes-Sc&#13;
All Kinds Fountain Drinks&#13;
PRESCRIPT IONS&#13;
TOILET ARTICLES&#13;
SCHOOL SU PPLIES&#13;
Get It H ere&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Dusty's&#13;
PARK LUNCH&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
1419 Morningside Avenue&#13;
W. J. Shane, Proprietor Phone 6-6957&#13;
&#13;
Everything for Programs&#13;
PLAYS&#13;
PAGEANTS&#13;
READINGS&#13;
OPERETTAS&#13;
STUNTS&#13;
&#13;
WETMORE&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
______&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
SEPTEMBER&#13;
&#13;
NOVEMBER&#13;
&#13;
11- Nice-looking bunch of freshmen invade&#13;
campus. Registration.&#13;
20- Dr. Roadman gives Matriculation Address.&#13;
Faculty on parade.&#13;
25- Sorority rushing begins, which means one&#13;
week of headaches for everyone concerned.&#13;
29-The boys take the first conference game&#13;
at North Dakota U., 15-0.&#13;
30- Congratulations to all the new pledges.&#13;
&#13;
3-Scoop ! Dorothy Ann Olson beautiful as&#13;
Mi ss Mornin gside. Moat puts over one&#13;
grand Homecomi ng.&#13;
4-Sig Rho and Pi fl oats agai n carry off&#13;
cups. 7-0 for Iowa State.&#13;
9-P sychology Night.&#13;
10-"0ur Town" brin gs the dramatic department to the front aga in. Orchids to the&#13;
whole cast, especially P eg Long for a&#13;
splendid job.&#13;
11- Mid-semes:er ! Headaches or smiles?&#13;
17-Dewey Halford named Bravest Brave.&#13;
Lily Pons opens Concert Course with a&#13;
thrillin g concert.&#13;
25-Kitty Kolp stars at Dorm Formal.&#13;
&#13;
OCTOBER&#13;
3- Freshman-Sophomore Day. Spook Austin&#13;
ri ght out in the middle of everything.&#13;
Outcome? Freshies wear green caps till&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
6- Faculty Reception. The girls turned out&#13;
well, but7- The boys come through with another win&#13;
over Dakota Wesleyan, 27-0.&#13;
16- Surprise ! A really good Monday Chapel.&#13;
Dr. Kin g speaks on the Psychology of&#13;
Drunkenness.&#13;
20-Professor Van Horne again inspires the&#13;
squad to brin g back that Coyote pelt.&#13;
Frat, bid day.&#13;
21- P arents' Day innovated. It's a success&#13;
even if the U. beats us 7-6. A big bouquet to the band for their performance&#13;
of "Stardust."&#13;
&#13;
29-Whoops ! Vacation ! Too bad that with&#13;
two Tha nksgivin gs we only get one vacation.&#13;
DECEMBER&#13;
4-Back again. The B. B. team looks like a&#13;
winner, even if Iowa State was too tough&#13;
for them.&#13;
5-Vacation brought a diamond ring to&#13;
Nancy and a big grin to Red. Nicky and&#13;
Jack join the Morningsiders-in-Chicago&#13;
Club as Mr. a nd Mrs.&#13;
8- I shkoodah F ormal. Even the date bureau&#13;
didn' t bring a crowd.&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Compliments&#13;
&#13;
First National Bank&#13;
In Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Rediscover America&#13;
BY AIR-CONDITIONED SUPER-COACH&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
See America at its best-and see it best by highway&#13;
- by air-conditioned Union Pacific Super-Coach!&#13;
This modern, "American-style" travel is the one way&#13;
to go places and really SEE thin gs . . . intima te&#13;
"close-ups'' of romance and beauty you'd miss, travelin g any other way! The cost ? Amazin gly little ! You&#13;
go farther ... see more ... yet spend less! It's the&#13;
ideal way to make short trips, too. See your local&#13;
Union Pacific bus agent for complete . travel in formation.&#13;
&#13;
DEPOT&#13;
Fift h&#13;
&#13;
Doug las&#13;
Phon e 5-7678&#13;
&#13;
- - --.......... -.... ---THANK YOU ...&#13;
&#13;
Grayson's&#13;
&#13;
for the privilege of&#13;
knowing you.&#13;
&#13;
SUITS ME&#13;
&#13;
"It's Been Great"&#13;
&#13;
415 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Gunny's Cafe&#13;
&#13;
One Hund red Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
MAKE&#13;
&#13;
Member F. D. I. C.&#13;
&#13;
THE TOY NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
YOUR BANK&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
''&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Intelligent and Conservative Banking Since 1873&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
--------------------&#13;
&#13;
----------&#13;
&#13;
-----····1&#13;
KODAKS&#13;
&#13;
Beuttler &amp; Arnold&#13;
&#13;
Developing and Printing&#13;
&#13;
Architects and Engineers&#13;
&#13;
HOME MOVIES&#13;
Specializing in the Design of&#13;
Public Buildings&#13;
&#13;
Eastman's&#13;
Kodak Stores, Inc.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 5-5374&#13;
450 Insurance Exch ange Building&#13;
&#13;
608 Pierce Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR- Continued&#13;
18- Scotty and Oliver score one for Mornin gside by the ir parts in the Messiah.&#13;
&#13;
22- Semester exams begin. Who stays and&#13;
who goes home?&#13;
&#13;
19- That event of the year! The Winter F estival! And no one was di sappointed.&#13;
&#13;
26-Registration.&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
Welcome to eighteen new&#13;
&#13;
29- So lon g. See you next year.&#13;
FEBRUARY&#13;
JANUARY&#13;
8-Now we can get rid of Christmas neckties and get rested up from vacation.&#13;
15- Woman chases man-News nash ! Glennys&#13;
Corderman and Eddie Graham win Sadie&#13;
Hawkins costume event. Millie J ensen&#13;
shows what comes after she catches him,&#13;
by exhibiting a ring on that finger placed&#13;
there by J ason Saunderson, Jr.&#13;
&#13;
J. C. RENNISON&#13;
FLORAL CO.&#13;
&#13;
9- Professor Van Horne presents eighteen M&#13;
sweaters to football Maroons.&#13;
17- P ledge formals climax a hectic week.&#13;
New sorority members eagerly welcomed.&#13;
21-"Love in Livery" nothing short of colossal. Gene Kennedy si mpe rin gly beautiful&#13;
in satin and lace, and Moat and Pooley&#13;
perfect examples of young love.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK'S CAFE&#13;
Lady cooks h ave a style of cookin g&#13;
which appeals to our restaurant-going&#13;
public. The food tas:es like a home&#13;
cooked meal and that mea ns a lot.&#13;
&#13;
516 Nebraska Street&#13;
SIOUX CITY, lOW A&#13;
&#13;
WIRE FLOWERS A YWHERE&#13;
&#13;
"Say It with Flowers"&#13;
&#13;
GLASS FRONT&#13;
607 Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
~--------------------&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A,&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
Spalding&#13;
&#13;
Bros.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Equipment&#13;
&#13;
HAUFF SPORTING&#13;
&#13;
511&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
81877&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
...... 4&#13;
Meet Your Friends at&#13;
&#13;
Barney's College Service Store&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
Van Schreeven &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Where yo u can buy everything&#13;
in college needs.&#13;
&#13;
J eweler s a n d Optome trist s&#13;
&#13;
CARA NOME TOILETRIES&#13;
and all other brands.&#13;
i&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
508 Fifth Street, Nea r Pierce Street&#13;
&#13;
OUR FOUNTAIN SERVICE IS THE&#13;
VERY BEST&#13;
&#13;
Telephone 8-1213&#13;
&#13;
Barney's Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
The Rexall Store&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
···········-········-------1&#13;
&#13;
Member F. D . I. C.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
One Hundred Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Ben Franklin Stores&#13;
4006 Mornin gside Ave.&#13;
&#13;
--··-----··------···---···1&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
P eters P ark&#13;
&#13;
" Your Dime S tore at Peters Park"&#13;
Everythin g fro m F ive Cents to&#13;
One Dollar and Up&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY&#13;
SAVINGS BANK&#13;
&#13;
T. L. SCHAEFER, P ro prietor&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR-Continued&#13;
25- Wh o didn' t get a posture tag?&#13;
&#13;
9- P rim a nd Isemin ge r ann oun ce hon orable&#13;
intentions at the Zet fo rm al. P rof. Stewart&#13;
wi eld a wicked ankle.&#13;
&#13;
MARCH&#13;
&#13;
10- Buck Ballentin e ri des again!&#13;
bi g success.&#13;
&#13;
1- Zets vs. Ishkoodah, Simon s vs. Haenfl er,&#13;
and Bra in s vs. Brawn s- new innovati on&#13;
in athleti cs. Dr. Marshall vigorously applaude d, but Brawn fi nally triumph s.&#13;
&#13;
18- Mid-semesters- so soon ?&#13;
11- 0rla n Ott return s fro m Chi cago Gold en&#13;
Gloves battles. Hand some in a robe which&#13;
is visible token of Mo rnin gside affection&#13;
for him. (Si gh, hea rt throb , sigh- wotta&#13;
man!)&#13;
&#13;
2- Ruth Ol sen and Les Menke re ign as&#13;
Ellajea n Wadd ell,&#13;
Health Monarchs.&#13;
Na ncy Lowry, Dave Denn y, and J oh n&#13;
Kolp would di scourage a ny doc tor.&#13;
&#13;
the low handicap man gets his&#13;
birdie, the chances are that there was&#13;
averages. There was, we duffers can be sure, the&#13;
&#13;
Council Oak Stores&#13;
&#13;
sweet combination of physical coordination, brain·&#13;
work and nervel ess concentration. VERSTEGEN,&#13;
in quality year book printin g that is as welcome as a&#13;
Sub-par round in golf, and fashioned from the same&#13;
compound of manual adroitness and heady play.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
more to it than just luck or the law of&#13;
&#13;
in typical style, leads the fi eld with new treatments&#13;
&#13;
Pi form al&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Your Friend at Mealtime&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
NEBRASKA&#13;
&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
SO UTH DAKOTA&#13;
&#13;
::&#13;
&#13;
MINN ESOTA&#13;
&#13;
L-----------------------········------------~---------_,&#13;
·--------1 ~--···---·····--···---------1 ·&#13;
&#13;
VERSTEGEN&#13;
PRINTING COMPANY&#13;
615 Douglas Street&#13;
SIOUX&#13;
CITY&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
One H un dred Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Ferris Florists&#13;
&#13;
ANDERSON'S&#13;
BAKERY&#13;
&#13;
Flowers for All Occasions&#13;
Morningside's High Class&#13;
Pastry Shop&#13;
At P eters P ark&#13;
&#13;
Telephon e 8-7505&#13;
&#13;
Ph one 6-5966&#13;
&#13;
Warrior Hotel&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
On e Hun dre d Fo rt y- fi ve&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
... ----............ ----... --..&#13;
&#13;
······1&#13;
&#13;
Between Classes . . .&#13;
&#13;
DRINK&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
In Bottles&#13;
It's the Refreshing Thi ng to Do&#13;
&#13;
Chesterman Co.&#13;
&#13;
1----··-- --- -----~--------------------···&#13;
CALE NDA R-Continued&#13;
&#13;
STUDIOS&#13;
&#13;
24-Mi ke a nd Strcz play their last game for&#13;
the Maroons-lose in the last q uarter to&#13;
&#13;
I. S. T. C.&#13;
21- Home to greet the Easter bunny.&#13;
&#13;
615 Pierce&#13;
&#13;
25- Choir tours fo ur states in super-coach&#13;
b uses. Would we were mice or cockroaches. We've heard about those choir&#13;
trips.&#13;
&#13;
MAY&#13;
23-Comm encement formal. 1940 Sioux King&#13;
a nd Queen revealed amidst pomp and&#13;
splendor.&#13;
30----No classes-Memorial day.&#13;
&#13;
APRIL&#13;
&#13;
Knowing that you have obtained the best is significant&#13;
&#13;
1- We knew they were fooling- or were&#13;
they? Classes really did start again.&#13;
15-Edi tor and assistant tear their hair ! Annual to press.&#13;
20- Ath for mal- pulenty swi sh!&#13;
&#13;
when you purchase photographs. All Youngberg photographs&#13;
&#13;
- .. -&#13;
&#13;
have our imprint . .. such work carries a value far beyond&#13;
&#13;
JUNE&#13;
I-Fi nals are all over-two sighs of relief.&#13;
2-Baccalau reate - seniors dignified in cap&#13;
a nd gown.&#13;
3-Com mencement ! Congratulations and good&#13;
luck to a bunch of swell people we have&#13;
been glad to know.&#13;
So long !&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - - ..............&#13;
&#13;
the price paid.&#13;
&#13;
BETTER LIGHT&#13;
&#13;
Modern equipment .. . Large groups such as weddings and&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
family group!' . . . also photographs of children and copies&#13;
&#13;
BETTER GRADES&#13;
&#13;
of old photographs.&#13;
&#13;
Does studying tire yo u easily? Do your eyes trouble you? Do you&#13;
get nervous and fidge ty whil e using you r eyes fo r close work ? Do&#13;
yo u squint ? Poor lighting may be the cause of any one or all of&#13;
these discomfo r ts. S: icnce has discovered that the remedy often is&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-five Y ears of Leadership&#13;
&#13;
better lighting. Read and study at home with I. E. S. Study or Floor&#13;
Lamps. They are made for safe seeing. They conserve sight and&#13;
make work easier- often make for better grades.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Gas &amp;Electric Company&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
One Hundred Forty-Eight&#13;
Myron Earle Graber&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt&#13;
Paul Emanuel Johnson&#13;
Laura Clara Fischer&#13;
Ira James Gwinn&#13;
Horace B. Hawthorn &#13;
Marian Howe&#13;
Henry F. Kanthlener&#13;
Katherine Kaull Kinney&#13;
Pearl Amundsen&#13;
Clara Louise Asmus&#13;
Hazel Carter&#13;
James Austin Coss&#13;
Earle E. Emme&#13;
John Garrett Felton&#13;
Gordon J. Kinney&#13;
James E. Kirkpatrick&#13;
Ethel Thompson Kucinski&#13;
Leo Kucinski&#13;
Helen I. Loveland&#13;
Elizabeth Newton MacCollin&#13;
Paul MacCollin&#13;
Cecil E. Marshall&#13;
Ruth MacDonald&#13;
Marcia McNee&#13;
Edward Metz&#13;
Mendel B. Miller&#13;
Jean Scott&#13;
Thomas C. Stephens&#13;
John Wilson Stewart&#13;
Laura Tascha&#13;
Everett Timm&#13;
Robert N. Van Horne&#13;
Mirah Mills&#13;
Ethel Ruth Murray&#13;
James Reistrup&#13;
Robert Glen Rogers&#13;
Harriet P. Wirick&#13;
Faith F. Woodford&#13;
Victor V. Schuldt&#13;
Roy J. Sweet&#13;
T. N. McClure&#13;
Elma Vollink&#13;
Ruth Hayward&#13;
Mae MacArthur&#13;
Minetta Miller&#13;
Ila Bunch&#13;
Virginia Thomas&#13;
Lillian Morgan&#13;
Helen Jensen&#13;
Marj Bock&#13;
Elyse Tash Sater&#13;
Jason M. Saunderson&#13;
Delores Emily Cook&#13;
Verona DeMond&#13;
David Denny&#13;
Nelly DeVries&#13;
Harlan A. Dewell&#13;
Gary Fisher&#13;
Virginia Allen&#13;
Jeanne Margaret Anderson&#13;
Dorothy D. Brooke&#13;
B. Roy Brown&#13;
Jean Fowler&#13;
Lucille Fritzsche&#13;
Constance May Gall&#13;
Frances Mary Gasink&#13;
Betty Lou Greene&#13;
Inez Grove&#13;
Margaret Gusteson&#13;
Devon H. Hahn&#13;
Robert W. Hakala&#13;
Adelaide H. Hansen&#13;
Glen R. Burrow&#13;
Janet Coe&#13;
Alice Virginia Hanson&#13;
Alta Claire Harrison&#13;
Millicent Marie Jensen&#13;
Irene M. Johnson&#13;
Lawrence Johnson&#13;
Lucille Barbara Johnson&#13;
Ralph Kitterman&#13;
Kathlyn Marie Kolp&#13;
John Joseph Krznarich&#13;
Anna Marie Larson&#13;
Ella L. Lauritsen&#13;
Betty Simpson Ling&#13;
Margaret Long&#13;
Nancy Ellen Lowry&#13;
Morgan Harrison&#13;
Letha Howes&#13;
Roger Hughes&#13;
Walter LeRoy Hurd&#13;
George W. Iseminger&#13;
Milford Eugene Jacobsen&#13;
Ray Port&#13;
Helen Marguerite Posey&#13;
Marian Preston&#13;
John Prosser&#13;
Arthur Lundblad&#13;
Lester Menke&#13;
Donald H. Michaelson&#13;
Minetta Miller&#13;
Thomas William Moon&#13;
Deon Moor&#13;
Leo Smith&#13;
Ruth M. Smith&#13;
Anna Steinbrenner&#13;
Alfred P. Strozdas&#13;
Arnold B. Rudd&#13;
LeRoy Basil Sheley&#13;
Howard Nielsen&#13;
Lyle Oberlin&#13;
Dorothy Ann Olson&#13;
Lester Olson&#13;
Helen Osbey&#13;
Marlyn Pederson&#13;
John Swanson&#13;
Irvine Thoe&#13;
Jack Thompson&#13;
John B. Thrower&#13;
Frank Van Der Maten&#13;
Lorraine Verstegen&#13;
Patricia Dorine Warner&#13;
Joyce M. Weed&#13;
Grace Bingaman&#13;
Charlotte Champeny&#13;
Robert Craven&#13;
Hilda Dethlefs&#13;
Edna Elving&#13;
Margaret Ferrin&#13;
Marvin Frum&#13;
Eleanor Jones&#13;
Mary Jordan&#13;
Clara Luther&#13;
Ellen Perrin&#13;
Robert Ruleman&#13;
Shirley Smith&#13;
Clifford Spayde&#13;
Helen Weavill&#13;
Harriett Woodke&#13;
Careta Younglove&#13;
Genevieve Whittington&#13;
Donnin Ames&#13;
Edythe Mae Albert&#13;
Keith Arnold&#13;
Mary Louise Barrett&#13;
Milton Binger&#13;
Doris Brown&#13;
Ralph Brown&#13;
Rollie Buckholz&#13;
Dorothy Carrigg&#13;
Winifred Cheely&#13;
Maurice Clare&#13;
Arthur Clayton&#13;
Maxine Ericksen&#13;
Celia Fordyce&#13;
Duane Halford&#13;
Dale Harter&#13;
Frances Forsberg&#13;
Donald Fritzsche&#13;
Roland Grefe&#13;
Evelyn Guelff&#13;
Charles Clayton&#13;
Glennys Corderman&#13;
Doreen Dallam&#13;
Josephine Dixon&#13;
Joyce Held&#13;
Dureth Helen Hitchcock&#13;
Betty Huxtable&#13;
Kenneth Johnson&#13;
Lyle Johnson&#13;
Frank Kahoun&#13;
George Koch &#13;
Clifford Lamkin&#13;
Ila Eberly&#13;
Eugene Emme&#13;
Martha Helen Nelson&#13;
Ruth Olsen&#13;
Lucille Pippett&#13;
Ruth Rance&#13;
Charlotte Robinson&#13;
Irene Schaal&#13;
Mary McBride&#13;
Melvin McKnight&#13;
Maurice Scheider&#13;
George Schiller&#13;
Betty Schunck&#13;
Alice Scott&#13;
Scharmel Sturtevant Shaver&#13;
Max Stern&#13;
Alice Swanson&#13;
Frances Walker&#13;
Lewis Mahood&#13;
Oliver Mogck&#13;
Takeo Nagamori&#13;
Norma Neilson&#13;
Leonard Nelson&#13;
Marjorie Nelson&#13;
Shirley Wallen&#13;
Garrett Wallman&#13;
Charles Wert&#13;
Mildred Wikert&#13;
Harold Wissink&#13;
Ayako Yamashiro&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
Bernard Feikema&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Geraldine Booth&#13;
Robert Caine&#13;
Louise Cairy&#13;
Margie Carlson&#13;
Vernon Castle&#13;
Alice Clayton&#13;
Gerald Cobbs&#13;
Bruce Connor&#13;
Daryle Crabb&#13;
Donald Ballantine&#13;
Barbara Barry&#13;
Margaret Berg&#13;
Marie Bergquist&#13;
James Bolton&#13;
Betty Bootjer&#13;
Florence Dahl&#13;
Robert Dannenberg&#13;
Maxine Foster&#13;
Charles Gandek&#13;
Brown Garlock&#13;
Dorothy Gartner&#13;
Eileen Gilson&#13;
Earl Goodenow&#13;
Ted Grier&#13;
Raymond Gusteson&#13;
Charlotte Hackett&#13;
Doris Hall&#13;
Robert Hamel&#13;
Kathryn Brown&#13;
Helen Broyles&#13;
Helen Johnson&#13;
Jean Jones&#13;
Lauretta King&#13;
Ruth Kingsbury&#13;
John Kolp&#13;
LeRoy Kuhlman&#13;
Romain Lamkin&#13;
Bette Larson&#13;
Edward Hendricks&#13;
Earl Hicks&#13;
Merrie June Heetland&#13;
Robert Hempstead&#13;
Joe Lease&#13;
Donovan Leopold&#13;
Bob Lowry&#13;
Darrel McEntaffer&#13;
Ted Macur&#13;
Kathryn Madison&#13;
John Maynard&#13;
Roy Michaud&#13;
Marian Miller&#13;
Douglas Oakleaf&#13;
Muriel Hiler&#13;
Betty Hoefer&#13;
Jack Holdcroft&#13;
Robert Jackson&#13;
Eunice Jeep&#13;
Edith Jensen&#13;
Marian Stickles&#13;
Ione Swanlund&#13;
Geraldine Thomas&#13;
Glen Thompson&#13;
Mildred Pfeiffer&#13;
Maxine Pooley&#13;
Maynard Porter&#13;
Robert Reese&#13;
Charles Richards&#13;
Adele Roberts&#13;
Opal Walker&#13;
Byron Walter&#13;
Helen Weaver&#13;
Betty Lou Welding&#13;
Phyllis Thorngreen&#13;
Elna Van Camp&#13;
Clarence Voris&#13;
Ella Jean Waddell&#13;
Clarice Rohweder&#13;
Ferne Roland&#13;
Marjorie Salsbury&#13;
Betty Lou Saunderson&#13;
Kathleen Schatz&#13;
Alma Shipley&#13;
William C. Smith&#13;
Dorothy Jean Sorenson&#13;
H. Freddie Wellmerling&#13;
La Vonne Wertz&#13;
Donald Widler&#13;
Howard Winter&#13;
Lauree Wood&#13;
Richard Woods&#13;
Shirleymae Zechmann&#13;
Doris Coe&#13;
Richard Corwin&#13;
Florence Coss&#13;
Ruth Cowling&#13;
Miriam Cox&#13;
Toni Crow&#13;
Fred Daniels&#13;
Virginia Dunlap&#13;
Evelyn Anderson&#13;
Helen Anderson&#13;
Bob Bennett&#13;
Metta Breaw&#13;
Helen Foster&#13;
Lucile Gehrt&#13;
Joel Geister&#13;
David Gibson&#13;
Evelyn Hewlett&#13;
Bob Hicks&#13;
La Vergne Hill&#13;
Ray Hughes&#13;
Alice Jacobs&#13;
Mildred Johnson&#13;
Ruth Johnson&#13;
Lester Jones&#13;
Dorothy Brown&#13;
Evelyn Capener&#13;
Virginia Carr&#13;
Glenn Clark&#13;
Lucile Roberts&#13;
Geraldine Satrang&#13;
Marietta Seaman&#13;
Marvin Shulenberger&#13;
Clifford Skalby&#13;
Vera Smith&#13;
Thomas Kenny&#13;
Francis Kingsbury&#13;
Phyllis Knappe&#13;
James Leachman&#13;
Harriett Swanson&#13;
Velma Swanson&#13;
Marjorie Swisher&#13;
Angeline Thompson&#13;
Eleanor Thorpe&#13;
James Vander Berg&#13;
Merle Stone&#13;
Norman Sussman&#13;
Dorothy Long&#13;
Max McCoy&#13;
Betty MacLennon&#13;
Evelyn Murphy&#13;
Zola Marcussen&#13;
Leonard Rehder&#13;
Wilson Reynolds&#13;
Mariellen Rifenbark&#13;
Garnet Wedeking&#13;
Charlotte Williams&#13;
William Robert Anderson&#13;
Walter Lee Brink&#13;
Richard James Brooks&#13;
Roger Eugene Dauffenbach&#13;
Jim Everett Dunn&#13;
Joseph Harold Haffits&#13;
Dorothe Helen Hantla&#13;
Evelyn Maude Hewlitt&#13;
Roy B. Holland&#13;
Jack Allan Holloway&#13;
Robert J. Major&#13;
John Edward Montagne&#13;
Mary Adel Patterson&#13;
Marjorie Edith Pullman&#13;
Joseph Rosenblum&#13;
James Francis Seger&#13;
Charles Dwight Simpson&#13;
Margaret Elaine Slowey&#13;
Helen Maxine Smith&#13;
Bill Elliott Stoddard&#13;
Martha Ruth Walker&#13;
Theodore Morris Whicher&#13;
Howard Blake Shipton&#13;
Robert William Rae&#13;
Marj Bock&#13;
Catharine Rich&#13;
Gordon Whitver&#13;
Packard Wolle&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
            </elementText>
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                <text>Sioux (1940), The</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Morningside College Yearbook</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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                <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College Annual Yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The 1940 yearbook contains pictures, short articles, sporting results, and other college news and events related to this particular year.</text>
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                    <text>��The Sioux 1913&#13;
&#13;
�Publishers&#13;
J. E. BRIGGS, Editor in Chief&#13;
D. L. WICKENS, Business M-anager&#13;
ANNA RIEKE, Assistant Editor&#13;
AuDREE DAVIE, Artist&#13;
&#13;
L. H. KINGSBURY, Photographer&#13;
&#13;
V. E. MONTGOMERY, Athletics&#13;
M. P. BRIGGS, Forensics&#13;
A. C. LEMON, Classes&#13;
SARAH BLEAKLY, Organizations&#13;
SUSAN EADS, Societies&#13;
&#13;
R. H. GARLOCK, Alumni&#13;
LOTTIE SANDERS, Literary&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT, Calendar&#13;
JoCY CARTER, Jokes&#13;
&#13;
�Foreword&#13;
o those unsophisticated ones&#13;
who have been prevailed upon&#13;
to part with the price of this&#13;
book greetings.&#13;
Another cycle of pleasure&#13;
and nf sorrow, of joy and woe.&#13;
has quickly gone, or much too&#13;
slow and passing left behind&#13;
but memories of days well spent or bad, of deeds&#13;
both mad and wise. With or without offense to&#13;
friend or foe it fell to us to sketch the year exactly as it went.&#13;
Wherein&#13;
we have failed, we&#13;
beseech&#13;
your charity wherein succeeded&#13;
your&#13;
support.&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
o those whose presence makes&#13;
this college fart; to that student body with a faith ever&#13;
steadfast, with a zeal unparalleled, and with a spirit unconquerable; to those whose&#13;
words and deeds have been&#13;
herein recorded; to the Student Body of Morningside College this book is&#13;
faithfully dedicated.&#13;
&#13;
�Welcome to Dr.Craig&#13;
ere is&#13;
&#13;
a college,rich in&#13;
the buoyant spirit of&#13;
youth rich in the purity of its associations,&#13;
and rich in its possibilities for the future.&#13;
We welcome you, Dr.&#13;
Craig, as the man best&#13;
fitted to carry on the work so well conceived and&#13;
begun by your predecessors.&#13;
We pledge you our&#13;
support, promising to strive, under your leadership, toward a greater. better. and more influential Morningside. .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Even if the cover isn't artistic, it's expensive.&#13;
Why didn't we put the faculty pedigrees in?&#13;
suppose the college gets out a catalogue for?&#13;
&#13;
What do you&#13;
&#13;
No, faculty and athletics don't harmonize well, yet variety is the&#13;
spice of life.&#13;
That joke we put in on you made you mad?&#13;
those on Sara and Si.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
But you laughed at&#13;
&#13;
Oh, ought not the classes to be so far back? Well, you see,&#13;
we Juniors aren't so important as you thought we were.&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
The stories in the literary department aren't very appropriate?&#13;
Then why didn't you write one that would be?&#13;
The etching on the Junior pictures isn't natural? We thought&#13;
you were tired of those duds we've been wearing for the last two years.&#13;
Where are the jokes? This book is a history.&#13;
what it used to be; Irma is librarian now.&#13;
So you think these criticisms are pretty apt?&#13;
So this annual is "different."&#13;
if we had tried.&#13;
&#13;
College isn't&#13;
&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
&#13;
Just think what it could have been&#13;
&#13;
Well, anyhow, we did our best and you ought not to kick.&#13;
The annual cost us $1,600 and you got it for $2.25, a clear gain&#13;
of $1,597.75.&#13;
&#13;
Culture and Character&#13;
&#13;
�The History of Morningside&#13;
SIDNEY&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
CHANDLER&#13;
&#13;
0 WRITE of one's alma mater is like writing of one's own mother.&#13;
No medium could express the high esteem and yet the sweep of&#13;
feeling is such that even ordinary expression is beyond reach.&#13;
Urbs divina condita est A. D. 1894. However, this republic&#13;
of learning had its colonial period during which its fore-runner&#13;
was known as the University of the Northwest. This institution&#13;
had been established at Morningside in 1890, mainly through&#13;
the efforts of its first chancellor, the Rev. Wilmot Whitfield, D .&#13;
D., and his brother-in-law, its first dean, the Rev. R. C. Glass,&#13;
D. D. At this time Sioux City was growing in population, and financially, the most&#13;
rapidly of any city in the United States. Her leading men undertook to support the&#13;
new University. When the financial panic of the early nineties broke upon the world,&#13;
the catastrophe was felt most where the development had been most rapid. In the general&#13;
collapse of city values the property of the institution and the fortunes of its founders&#13;
passed into the hands of its creditors. Upon the resignation of Chancellor Whitfield,&#13;
in 1892, he was succeeded by Chancellor William Brush, D. D., who, in turn,&#13;
resigned in 1894. The Conservatory building, known as North Hall, had been&#13;
erected in 1890, and the foundation for the present Main Hall had been laid, but,&#13;
of course, no further progress could be made. The campus grew up to weeds; an order&#13;
for a single pane of glass was refused, so low had the credit fallen. Salaries of pro. fessors could not be paid. Conditions were not only bad, they were intolerable, not even&#13;
sanitary, and the students rose in revolt. In response to a threatened protest delivered&#13;
to the board of trustees in its session, one of the trustees (a leading minister of the Conference of whom it is said the angels' books will show credit as being its chief founder)&#13;
wrote a hasty note with a pencil upon a ·scrap of wrapping paper to the student leading&#13;
the demonstration (now the most influential alumnus of the College), saying, "For&#13;
God's sake,&#13;
stay by us and we will see that you get things better some how!"&#13;
The officers and faculty left the Institution, with the exception of two professors and a&#13;
few instructors. It was then that the young Latin professor received an offer of a liberal&#13;
salary and a desirable position elsewhere. The dean said that it would be hopeless to&#13;
try to go further if she accepted this position and announced his intention of leaving, too.&#13;
The students gathered and said, "We may as well go." That hour was a combination&#13;
of Valley Forge distress and a defeat like that of Bull Run. In that supreme crisis this&#13;
woman quieted the alarm, telling the students that she had no intention of going and that&#13;
none of them must consider it either. The institution was saved and it is one of the chief&#13;
glories of Morningside College that that noble young professor who held the bridge in&#13;
that hour is still in the prime of a great educational career, a chief factor in the destiny&#13;
of the Institution.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Main&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
Twelve&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
�The nucleus of the student body being thu.s conserved, a commission appointed by&#13;
the Northwest Iowa Conference purchased at auction the north end of the present&#13;
campus with its one building and the debris of the old foundation for $25,550, the&#13;
splendid statesman of the Kingdom, Rev. J. B. Trimble, D. D., mortgaging a small&#13;
farm in Calhoun County to raise the money to make the necessary cash payment of $2,500.&#13;
December 5, 1894, is the charter day of Morningside College, the date on which the&#13;
articles of incorporation were filed. The name was regarded as temporary when first&#13;
assumed. There were keen debates in the Conference as to the wisdom of trying to build&#13;
the college. Presidents of other institutions, and even the able Secretary of the Board&#13;
of Education at that time, opposed it with great skill. The debate in its behalf was&#13;
led by the trustee first mentioned above, who showed with great strength the strategy of&#13;
the location and opportunity connected with these ruins. These arguments prevailed.&#13;
The Rev. G. W. Carr was elected president and held the ground with a few students&#13;
and the remnant of the faculty for the next three years. He was a practical business&#13;
man and his talents were of great service. Like Israel in Egypt, the board of trustees&#13;
sought a leader equal to the emergency, a Moses to conduct them into the new era.&#13;
Having canvassed such educators as were available, they fixed upon Principal Wilson&#13;
Seeley Lewis, of Epworth Seminary. Professor Lewis (known and loved through the&#13;
years as "Doctor," now "Bishop," Lewis) was then in his fortieth year, with fourteen&#13;
years' experience in educational work. He was sought for other positions camparatively&#13;
without burden but came here because of the "sea room," the unequaled opportunity. His&#13;
greatness was entirely unassuming. His inaugural sermon was preached one evening in&#13;
June, 1897, in the little old church at the corner of St. Mary's and Orleans Avenues&#13;
to a few dozen persons. He was handed a few rusty keys on an old steel ring and not&#13;
one person in a thousand in Northwest Iowa knew that anything had happened. He&#13;
sounded the note: "God calls us to care for the tens of thousands of children in this&#13;
territory. Have faith and. go forward." Three months from that time he took a collection at Ida Grove Conference amounting to $17,500, and for the next eleven years was&#13;
never able to escape the people who desired to press money upon him in the "crises"&#13;
attendant upon the development of the Institution. The Institution was utterly without&#13;
educational recognition. Simultaneously, with each financial campaign, the standards&#13;
were raised. The faculty was enlarged. The curriculum was so extended that no&#13;
classes were allowed to graduate for two years. In 1899 the first class whose work was&#13;
approved by the University Senate was graduated and these six persons organized the&#13;
Alumni Association. The campus was cleared and Main Hall erected in 1900.&#13;
Peters Tract, the south end of the campus, the portion crowning the hill, was purchased.&#13;
Students began to assemble in larger numbers and Morningside College as known today&#13;
closely co-ordinates with the twentieth century.&#13;
CONSE RVATORY OF M U SIC&#13;
&#13;
Higher educational demands were met as necessary to development and deficits&#13;
accompanying were included with the several campaigns for building and endowment.&#13;
President Lewis secured a conditional offer from Mr. Andrew Carnegie and a success-&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
F i fteen&#13;
&#13;
�ful campaign for a quarter of a million dollars endowment and $50,000 of debt was&#13;
triumphantly concluded. The faculty was increased, the standards were raised, the major&#13;
system adopted and the school recognized by the world as having arrived. After a&#13;
thorough examination by the expert investigator of the General Educational Board of&#13;
New York City, this Board surprised the College with a premature announcement that it&#13;
was one of the three colleges in Iowa to be put on the first approved list and offers of&#13;
endowment were publicly made.&#13;
So many campaigns had been made that it seemed impossible to make another but&#13;
after deep consideration of the situation with great anxiety and much prayer, it was&#13;
interpreted as the call to go forward and the undertaking was begun with new zeal. Two&#13;
hundred thousand dollars for the endowment and the one hundred ten thousand dollars&#13;
for debt and enlargement funds made a large total to reach under the circumstances.&#13;
During the Conference session in September of 1907, a mammoth tent which would seat&#13;
fifteen hundred people at a banquet was pitched on the south end of the campus and a&#13;
public collection of $65,000 was taken. With this unparalleled enthusiasm, progress was&#13;
rapid until interrupted by the panic in November of that year. Before winter had passed,&#13;
business having resumed a normal condition, the campaign was again pressed with such&#13;
vigor that during the year 1908 the victory was achieved, the endowment being thus raised&#13;
to $400,000 and the Institution cleared from debt in every form. Another classification&#13;
appeared, namely, that of the State of Iowa, which ranked its colleges in three groups, in&#13;
which Morningside also entered Class A.&#13;
President Lewis was elected Bishop in the Baltimore Conference in May, 1908.&#13;
The telegram which expressed the feelings of the school was sent, saying, "Tearful congratulations of the faculty, sorrowful rahs of students." Never had man performed for&#13;
an institution eleven years of more heroic and successful achievement. He was a leader&#13;
who led. The sacrificing spirit shown by his labors was also indicated by the giving of&#13;
his own splendid home in Morningside in the last great crisis. Others saw the same&#13;
vision and felt the same burden. Every member of the Board of Trustees, every member&#13;
of the Northwest Iowa Conference, every member of the faculty, every alumnus and&#13;
every student of the college, and every patron and friend of the Institution felt some how&#13;
that his own work was of great value and all working in this splendid spirit, carried the&#13;
enterprise forward. Prominent among his co-workers were the following : Mr. C. W.&#13;
Payne of Westside, Iowa, whose magnificent gifts, amounting to $75,000, saved the day&#13;
at its most critical hour (The Institution was glad to vote him her chief patron) ; Dr. E.&#13;
C. Heilman of Ida Grove, whose gifts were heroic; the late Senator J. P. Dolliver;&#13;
the late John Metcalf of Paullina, Iowa; the late Isaac Garmoe of Ft. Dodge, Iowa ;&#13;
Mrs. Cynthia Jones of Denison, Iowa; Mr. J. J. Hill of Minneapolis; Mr. Robert Leeds&#13;
of Cherokee, and a splendid list of others. The late Hon. Victor B. Dolliver's intended&#13;
liberal donation on the purchase price of the Renaissance Hall property was confirmed&#13;
and established by Dean Margaret G. Dolliver and its acquisition thus made possible.&#13;
In all the years no worker has more constantly borne heavy burdens and accomplished&#13;
&#13;
Sixt een&#13;
&#13;
CH EM I STR Y H ALL&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�difficult tasks with greater efficiency than Secretary J. C. Lockin. "But time would fa il&#13;
to tell" of the splendid hosts of whom these are chiefly representative. Morningside ·&#13;
College is the result of their labors.&#13;
From the weed-covered hole in the ground with a debt on it, the campus passed&#13;
in eleven years to thirty acres and several buildings, the value of which, added to her&#13;
other resources, amounted to $750,000. The few teachers had become a proper faculty.&#13;
The motto, Kala Kagatha (the Good and the Beautiful), had been adopted to express&#13;
the ideal. A sabbatic year with leave of absence for travel and study and the principle of&#13;
third election constituting a permanent one gave to the faculty confidence and inspiration for&#13;
labor. The major system which prepared with unusual efficiency for graduate study or&#13;
professional work showed its splendid results in the achievement of the younger alumni.&#13;
Ninety-seven per cent of the graduates of the Institution were Christians and the students&#13;
at all times showed themselves worthy of high trust and splendid responsibility. The government was on the principle that self control constitutes the central power in human character. Morningside College became a synonym for boundless faith and courage and&#13;
was known as the "Young Giant" among the colleges. The work was of an abiding&#13;
character. Senator Dolliver, who was always ready to lend his marvelous eloquence or&#13;
statesmanlike counsel to the service of the Institution, said, "Morningside College has&#13;
grown faster on lines of permanent strength than any college in history." During 1908&#13;
and 1909 the marvelous growth of the college continued. The school spirit was regarded&#13;
as wonderful by all who knew the Institution. Victories of every kind-great victoriesfirst victories in athletics, oratory, debate, Y. M. C. A. work and all lines of healthful&#13;
activity were achieved by the student body. The total attendance mounted to over six&#13;
hundred. The number of Collegiate students increased sixty per cent in two years and&#13;
Morningside College was recognized far and near. The name was so representative of&#13;
bringing things to pass and so meaningful and of so much value that there was no longer&#13;
thought of changing it and it probably will be permanent.&#13;
In June, 1909, from among many eminent men who were considered, there was&#13;
chosen as president, the Rev. Luther Freeman, D. D., Pastor of the Independence&#13;
Avenue Church in Kansas City, Missouri. He was an able, scholarly and eloquent man,&#13;
of splendid personality and high ideals. As an advanced thinker, as an efficient and&#13;
popular speaker, he made a great impression upon the territory. His admirable qualities&#13;
and unusual abilities were such that every cause he pleaded was presented with the most&#13;
consummate skill and incomparable effect. The old Park Place at this time was made&#13;
over into the present suitable Chemistry Building. The Field House was erected, the&#13;
grounds improved, adorned and beautified. Higher cultural levels were attained. Dr.&#13;
Freeman resigned, leaving hosts of friends and followed by the good will of all, in&#13;
June, 1911 .&#13;
On the eighth of August, the Rev. Alfred E . C raig, D. D ., Ph. D ., was unanimously elected president. Commanding in presence, strong in scholarship, administrative&#13;
talent, pulpit ability, and in everything, his administration has opened with every promise&#13;
&#13;
Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
RENAISSANCE&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
�of great success. Few men are so well balanced, so unusually able in all of the many&#13;
lines of activity belonging to such an office. The school and all her constituency possess&#13;
the greatest confidence in his leadership and it is fully believed that a great era of development lies ahead.&#13;
The ultimate future of Morningside is great and sure. A study of the map shows&#13;
that in the splendid northwest half of Iowa she is practically alone and that the richest and&#13;
best portions of three other states are included within her territory. The character of&#13;
the people is such as to assure high educational demands and ideals, having few extremely&#13;
rich and comparatively few poor. There is a prosperous and well-to-do class of the best&#13;
sort of America's population, a situation without prospect of change. From such homes&#13;
young people of the highest possibilities will come seeking adequate life preparation. The&#13;
highest educational authorities after thorough expert investigation have declared this to be&#13;
the best opportunity for the building of a college in this great West. What the fathers&#13;
have begun, those who remain must continue. Many more buildings, multiplied endowment, increased numbers, exalted fame await her. The school spirit, prestige and influence&#13;
will be increased beyond present comprehension. Meanwhile the good wrought in the lives&#13;
of the multitude of students constantly passing through the college will be immeasurable.&#13;
It ought to be an important station of the Kingdom of Heaven and the brotherhood of&#13;
learning in the earth. This sane vision can only be realized through the same spirit of&#13;
heroic sacrifice that has marked the development of the Institution thus far. A college&#13;
is a spiritual reality, a living being which gets its life from the hearts of those who love it.&#13;
The rapidity with which the educational demand is overtaken and this matchless opportunity improved must depend upon the faith, wisdom, courage and love of the patriots&#13;
of this cause. It is easy for this generation to miss seeing its share of the work done by&#13;
either wild enthusiasm, attempting the impossible without proper recognition of the time&#13;
element, or by hesitating till the messenger with the winged foot has passed. The&#13;
Quarter Centennial Anniversary in 1919 will afford a splendid opportunity for the celebration of achievements which will set the College further on its way as seen in our time.&#13;
The memories of days gone by&#13;
Will blend her name with longing tears,&#13;
And glad we'll watch it mounting high,&#13;
Swift toward the zenith, just begun.&#13;
GRACE CH URCH&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
�Officers of the Board of Trustees&#13;
&#13;
Emma L. DAHL Ass't Secretary&#13;
.J. G. SHUMAKER, Auditor&#13;
O. W. TOWNER&#13;
L. J . HASKINS Treasurer&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
F . D. EMPEY Field Secretary&#13;
Pres ident&#13;
C. W. PAYNE, Vice-President&#13;
.T. C. LOCKIN Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Faculty&#13;
&#13;
of the College of&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Administration&#13;
&#13;
Professors Emeriti&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED EDWIN CRAIG&#13;
Doctor of Divinity&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern U.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
AGNES BEVERIDGE FERGUSON&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
SIDNEY LEVI CHANDLER&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
D ean of the Faculty&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREYNALD&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
University of Paris&#13;
&#13;
French and Spanish&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GAY DOLLIVER&#13;
Bachelor of Arts, Cincinnati Wesleyan College&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, R EGISTRAR&#13;
HAROLD STILES, PRINCIPAL&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
THE ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CALDERWOOD STEPHENS, SECRETARY&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan U.&#13;
&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
THE FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�HENRY FREDERICK KANTHLENER&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Harvard U niversity&#13;
&#13;
Greek&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES&#13;
Harvard University&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Northwestern U.&#13;
Doctor of Philosophy&#13;
Physics&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES ALMER MARSH&#13;
Bachelor of Science&#13;
New Lyme Institute&#13;
Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY VAN HORNE&#13;
Bachelor of Philosophy&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Ma thematics&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CALDERWOOD STEPHENS&#13;
Doctor of Medicine&#13;
Kansas University&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Harvard University&#13;
Doctor of Philosophy&#13;
Harvard University&#13;
E conomics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AUSTIN COSS&#13;
Master of Science&#13;
Illinois University&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Instructors&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
Associate&#13;
&#13;
ALLETTA M. GILLETTE&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
University of Washington&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADLEY&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
University of Michigan&#13;
&#13;
Professors&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ESTELLE ROBERTS&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
Grinnell&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD&#13;
Bachelor of Philosophy&#13;
Morningside&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
BEULAH WARREN GREENE&#13;
Graduate&#13;
Columbia College of Expression&#13;
Elocution&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED ALICE GARNICH&#13;
Graduate&#13;
Columbia College of Expression&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Women&#13;
Elocution&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Faculty&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
Conservatory of Music&#13;
HARRY WALTER EWING&#13;
Master of Law (pending)&#13;
Nebraska U.&#13;
Director of Physical Education&#13;
History and Politics&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN ALLISON MORSE&#13;
Associate of American Guild of Organists&#13;
Member of R oyal College of Organists (Eng.)&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
IDA NOLAN REYNOLDS&#13;
Graduate&#13;
Drake University Training School&#13;
Primary Methods and Drawing&#13;
&#13;
JAMES REISTRU P&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER VERA SEAMAN&#13;
Bachelor of Philosophy&#13;
Grinnell&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
CECIL BURLEIGH&#13;
Violin&#13;
&#13;
IRMA FRANKLIN EWING&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
University of Nebraska&#13;
Acting Librarian&#13;
Preparatory&#13;
&#13;
MAYBEL ROMA SMYLIE&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Athletics&#13;
&#13;
CLOVIS B. JOHNSON&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
Band Leader&#13;
&#13;
HENRIETTA M. REES&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
University of Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte and Organ&#13;
&#13;
MAE EDITH WOOD&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
*FAITH&#13;
&#13;
FOSTER WOODFORD&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
. *Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
�H. W. EWING&#13;
H. F . KANTHLENER&#13;
&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
R. N. VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
AthleticCommittee&#13;
&#13;
F . E. HAYNES&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The athletic management for the past year has been under the direction of a&#13;
committee composed of three members from the fa culty, the physical director, ex-officio,&#13;
and a student representative. Almost every kind of athletic control has been tried at&#13;
Morningside with variable success. The present system has perhaps met the most&#13;
general approval.&#13;
&#13;
COACH HARRY W. EWING&#13;
&#13;
Coach Ewing began his athletic career in Lincoln High School in the fall of 1904.&#13;
That year the team upon which he played won the championship of Iowa, Nebraska&#13;
and Kansas. The next fall they won the championship of the United States. Entering&#13;
Nebraska University in 1906, he played on the 'varsity for three years, '07, '08, '09.&#13;
Each year he was picked on the "All Missouri Valley Eleven," and the last year by&#13;
some critics for the "All Wes tern." During 191 0, he acted as assistant coach at&#13;
the University.&#13;
Upon the resignation of "Jack" Hollister, who has done so much to put Morningside on the map, Mr. Ewing was secured to superintend the athletics of the school.&#13;
Though sadly handicapped by having to teach several classes in History and Politics,&#13;
our athletic prowess has shown no depression. Despite perverse circumstances, the football&#13;
season was a success. The basketball team was the best in years. In track, we have&#13;
already won the Kansas City Indoor Meet in competition with the biggest schools in&#13;
the central states, and taken second in the Drake Relay Meet. Baseball prospects&#13;
are bright.&#13;
Field&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
H OU SE&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
100 Yard Dash&#13;
. . C.&#13;
220 Yard Dash&#13;
. . F.&#13;
440 Yard Dash&#13;
. . A.&#13;
880 Yard Run .. . . . ... .. A.&#13;
Mile Run . . . . . .&#13;
. . A.&#13;
2 Mile Run . . . . .&#13;
. . L.&#13;
120. Yard Hurdles&#13;
.. E.&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles&#13;
. . E.&#13;
High Jump . . . .&#13;
. . E.&#13;
Broad Jump ... . . . ... .. . G .&#13;
Shot Put . .. . . . .. . .. .. . F.&#13;
Hammer Throw&#13;
. . E.&#13;
Discus Throw ..&#13;
. . D.&#13;
Mile Relay&#13;
&#13;
........ .&#13;
&#13;
Rogers&#13;
F. Hall . . . . . .&#13;
P. Berkstresser .&#13;
P. Berkstresser .&#13;
P. Berkstresser.&#13;
R. Chapman. . .&#13;
G. Quarnstrom.&#13;
G. Quarnstrom .&#13;
M. Brown. . . .&#13;
E. West. .. . .&#13;
F. Hall. . . . . .&#13;
G. Quarnstrom .&#13;
L. Wickens .. .&#13;
&#13;
. 1908 . . . 10 sec.&#13;
. 1903 .&#13;
22 1-5 sec.&#13;
. 1909.&#13;
. 52 2-5 sec.&#13;
. 1909 . . 2 min. 3 2-5 sec.&#13;
. 1908.&#13;
. 4 min. 40 sec.&#13;
. 1908 . . l O min. 5 sec.&#13;
. 1911 . . . 15 4-5 sec.&#13;
. 1910 . . 25 1-5 sec.&#13;
. 1906.&#13;
. 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
. 1911 . . 21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
. 1903. . . 38 ft. 7 in.&#13;
. 191 l&#13;
121 ft. 3,% m&#13;
. 1911&#13;
120 ft.&#13;
&#13;
E. Montgomery .&#13;
A. P. Berkstresser . . . 1909&#13;
E G Quarnstrom&#13;
. .. . 3 min 36 2-5 sec.&#13;
. .&#13;
.. .&#13;
F. E. Burns . .. . .. .&#13;
&#13;
Cross Country to Floyd&#13;
Monument and Return .. . V. E. Montgomery .. . . 1911 . ... 18 min. 4.6 3-5 sec.&#13;
*State record.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Thirty- seven&#13;
&#13;
�CAPT. E. G. QUARNSTROM&#13;
Winner of sixth place at Amateur Athletic Union Meet, Chicago, 1911&#13;
&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
'12&#13;
'11&#13;
'10&#13;
'09&#13;
Record .... . .&#13;
Third&#13;
St. Paul Indoor Meet. ................ First&#13;
Kansas City Indoor Meet. . . . ..... . .... Second&#13;
No Team&#13;
Fifth&#13;
First&#13;
Omaha Indoor Meet, April I , 1911 ..... . ... .. ............ Fifth with I 7 points&#13;
Sioux Gity Tri-State Indoor Meet, 1910: M. C. 50, S. D. U. 21, Neb. U. 8, Drake 5&#13;
Last year Morningside made a strong showing in the Kansas City Indoor Meet.&#13;
The mile run, the relay, and the 440, the events in which Morningside had based her&#13;
hope of points, were consecutive, which proved a great hindrance. Even so, Montgomery won the mile, and the team took second in the relay.&#13;
At the Omaha Meet one week later, Morningside again showed up strong. The&#13;
mile relay was splendidly won from Drake in fast time. Lemon's victory of second in&#13;
the 440 was a feature of the meet. The winning of first and third by Hudson and&#13;
Bowker in the mile showed class, and Holbert took second in the shot against the best&#13;
weight heavers in the west, making a total of seventeen points.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�lNDOOR SQUAD, 1912&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME INDOOR MEET&#13;
&#13;
March 15, 191 2&#13;
&#13;
RELAY TEAM, 1911&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME INDOOR MEET, FEBRUARY&#13;
&#13;
14, 1911&#13;
&#13;
35 Yard Dash-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Lemon; Soph.; Montgomery, Soph.&#13;
35 Yard Low Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Montgomery, Soph.; Prichard, Soph ... 5&#13;
35 Yard High Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Montgomery, Soph.; Braley, Soph... 5 3-5&#13;
Mile Run-Bass, Soph.; Phenis, Academy; Braley, Soph ............... 5: 18 3-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Lemon, Soph.; Engle, Academy.&#13;
High Jump-McIntosh, Academy; Wickens, Soph.; Holbert, Fresh.,&#13;
and Mahood, Academy ..... .. .. . . ... ........... . ... . 5 ft.&#13;
Half Mile Run-Montgomery, Soph.; Quarnstrom, Soph.; Parrish, Academy. 2 :21 3-5&#13;
2 Mile Run-Bass, Soph.; Bowker, Junior; Dolliver, Junior .............. I I :41&#13;
Broad Jump-McKinney, Academy; McIntosh, Academy; Wickens, Soph.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Soph.; Braley, Soph.; McIntosh, Academy.&#13;
Pole Vault-Dolliver, Junior·; D. Brown,Academy; McKinney and Mahood, Academy.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Sophs.; Wickens, Hess, Braley, Montgomery.&#13;
Totals-Sophomores, 71 ; Academy, 2 3 1/2; Juniors, 9 ; Freshmen, 1/2&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
25 Yard Dash-Lemon, Junior; Montgomery, Junior; Kingsbury, Junior .. .... 3 2-5&#13;
Mile Run-Montgomery, Junior; Bowker, Senior; Cushing, Freshman . ... 5:38 4-5&#13;
High Jump-Vernon, Freshman; Vennick, Sophomore; Shelton, Freshman .. 5 ft. 1 in.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Juniors; Montgomery, Kingsbury, Braley, Lemon ........ 2 :4 3-5&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder, Freshman; Lewis, Senior; D. Brown, Freshman ..... . 9 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Mile Relay-Juniors; Kingsbury, Braley, Montgomery, Lemon .............. 4 :38&#13;
Shot Put-Eilfert, Freshman; D. Brown, Freshman; Brokaw, Freshman ... 31 ft. IO in.&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Lemon, Junior; Bowker, Senior; Kingsbury, Junior ...... I :4 4-5&#13;
Half Mile Run-Montgomery, Junior; Bass, Senior; Bowker, Senior. ... .... 2:37&#13;
Totals- Juniors, 4 3 ; Freshmen, 22 ; Seniors, 1 3 ; Sophomores, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�__&#13;
SOPHOMORE&#13;
TEAM-WINNER&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SQUAD, '11&#13;
&#13;
OF HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
May 5, 1911&#13;
100 Yard Dash . . . . Lemon, Sophomore; Chandler, Freshman; Montgomery, Sophomore&#13;
Mile Run . .. .. ..... Hudson, Senior; Williams, Academy; C . Berkstresser, Academy&#13;
220 Yard Dash ...... Lemon, Sophomore; Mahoney, Junior; Chandler, Freshman&#13;
Half Mile Run . ... Phenis, Academy; Braley, Sophomore; C. Berkstresser, Academy&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles ... . .. . .. .. .. . ..... Chandler, Freshman; B. Brown, Academy&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles . . Montgomery, Sophomore ; Chandler, Freshman; Peden, Sophomore&#13;
Two Mile Run .. .. ......... Bowker, Junior; Hudson, Senior ; Garlock, Sophomore&#13;
440 Yard Dash .. . Lemon, Sophomore; Montgomery, Sophomore; Chandler, Freshman&#13;
Broad Jump .. . . . ... . . .... Jory, Sophomore; Wickens, Sophomore; Frear, Junior&#13;
Discus ...... . .. Wickens, Sophomore; D. Brown, Freshman; A . Johnson, Freshman&#13;
Hammer ...... . . .. .. V ennick, Sophomore; Wickens, Sophomore; Dolliver, Junior&#13;
Pole Vault. ..... J. A. Lewis, Sophomore ; Chandler, Freshman; D. Brown, Freshman&#13;
High Jump - ....... . . Jory, Sophomore ; D. Brown, Freshman ; Wickens, Sophomore&#13;
.&#13;
Shot Put. .. . .. .. L. Brown, Freshman; Wickens, Sophomore ; A. Johnson, Freshman&#13;
Half Mile Relay ... . . . ... . ... . .. Sophomores; Peden, Braley, Montgomery, Lemon&#13;
Totals -Sophomores, 62 ; Freshmen, 3 5 ; Seniors, 13 ; Academy, 8 ; Juniors, 5.&#13;
SOPHOMORE RELAY&#13;
&#13;
Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
TEAM IN THE&#13;
&#13;
HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
'11&#13;
&#13;
�The Interstate High School Meet is held annually under the auspices of the "M"&#13;
Club. It is open to about three hundred high schools of Iowa, South Dakota, Nebraska&#13;
and Minnesota. The object of the meet is to further an interest in college student life and&#13;
to give those who attend an impression of the "way things are done at Morningside."&#13;
Gold, silver and bronze medals are awarded to the winners of each event, and also&#13;
individual cups to the winning team in the relays. Besides the medals and small cups,&#13;
a large cup is given to the school winning the meet and another to the man who wins the&#13;
most points. A large loving cup is given to the team winning the mile relay by the&#13;
Philomathean Literary Society.&#13;
Hearty co-operation is given by the students and faculty. Last year the meet was&#13;
held on Friday, the preliminaries in the morning and the meet proper in the afternoon.&#13;
In the evening the debate with Upper Iowa occurred. On Saturday morning an opportunity was given the delegations to attend the classes. In the afternoon was staged a dual&#13;
meet between Vermillion and Morningside, champions of their respective states, and also&#13;
a ball game-one of the fastest in the west last year. Thus an opportunity is given to&#13;
witness college life in action.&#13;
SUMMARY OF INTERSTATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
&#13;
May 6, 1911&#13;
100&#13;
220&#13;
440&#13;
880&#13;
Mile&#13;
120&#13;
220&#13;
Pole&#13;
&#13;
SQU AD A'l' DRAKE RELAY MEET , '11&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY AT THE DRAKE RELAY MEET&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines, April 22, 1911&#13;
4 Mile Relay .. . .... . . . .... Des Moines, first; Cornell, second; Morningside, third&#13;
2 Mile Relay .. . .. ... . ......... . South Dakota, first; Coe, second; Cornell, third&#13;
Mile Relay .. ..... ... .. ......... Coe, first; Morningside, second; Cornell, third&#13;
Half Mile Relay . . . . . . .. . .... South Dakota, first; Coe, second; Morningside, third&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash- Osborne, LeMars; Shulkin, Sioux City; Kurtz, Odebolt .... . . 10&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee; Osborne, LeMars; Shulkin, Sioux City ... . 23&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee; Holmes, Sioux City; Cranny, Centerville .. . . 56&#13;
Yard Run-Ferrin, Cherokee ; Mullen, Fonda; Scott, Hawarden ...... .. . 2: 15&#13;
Run-Sumner, Hawarden; Fox, Sioux Falls ; Ferrin, Cherokee .. . . .. 4 :56 3-5&#13;
Yard Hurdles-Vernon, Hawarden; Hanford, Sioux City; Hardy, Fonda . . 1 7&#13;
Yard Hurdles-Quigley, Hawarden; Hardy, Fonda; Shelton, Sloan . ... 27 4-5&#13;
Vault-Lueder, Cherokee; Peterson, Centerville; Wilkins, Correctionville, tied for first place ....................... .. . 10 ft. 9 in.&#13;
High J ump--Aldrich, Sioux City; Franklin, Sioux Falls; Peterson, Centerville . 5 ft. 9 in.&#13;
Broad Jump--Vernon, Hawarden; Rieke, Kingsley; Elfrink, Cherokee .. 19 ft. 9 1/2in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Gilliland, Storm Lake; Moulton, Fonda; Barron, Correctionville ....... . . . ... . .......... ........ . . 146 ft. 3 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Aldrich, Sioux City ; Holmes, Sioux City; Vernon, Hawarden .. 40 ft. 11 in.&#13;
Discus-Knapp, Cherokee; Vernon, Hawarden; Aldrich, Sioux City .. . .. ... 11 0 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay-Cherokee, first; Hawarden, second .. . ... . .............. .. . 4 :07&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Sioux City, first; Cherokee, second .. . ......... . . .. .. ... 1 :40&#13;
Totals-Cherokee, 33; Sioux Ciy, 29; Hawarden, 28; Fonda, 10 ; LeMars, 9;&#13;
Kingsley, 3; Odebolt, 1 ; Sloan, 1.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
�QUARNSTROM WINNING 120 YARD HURDLES MAY 13, 1911&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF SOUTH DAKOTA UNIVE RSITY-M ORNINGSIDE M EET&#13;
&#13;
May 13, 1911&#13;
&#13;
I 00&#13;
220&#13;
440&#13;
880&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash-Aspinwall, S. D. ; Thackaberry, S. D ......... .. .. . ...... . 10&#13;
Yard Dash-Aspinwall, S. D.; Thackaberry, S. D ....... ... ... . ... 22 2-5&#13;
Yard Dash-Quarnstrom, M.; Gay, S . D ...... ....... .. . . ... . . . 5 3 1-5&#13;
Yard Run- Gay, S. D.; Montgomery, M. . .... . .. . ... . .. ..... 2 :05 2-5&#13;
Mile Run- Montgomery, M. ; Gay, S. D ........... . ....... ... .. ..... 4 :48&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- Quarnstrom, M. ( others disqualified ) ...... . . . .... . .. 15 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles- Quarnstrom, M .; Sheeks, S. D .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 25 2-5&#13;
Pole Vault-Norgren, S. D.; Lewis and Chandler, M.. .......... .. . . . IO ft. 6 in.&#13;
High Jump- Norgren, S. D.; Jory, M. . ........... .. .... ... ....... 5 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Sheeks, S. D.; West, M.. .. .... . . .. . . ....... . . ...... 21 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Goddard, S. D . ; Quarnstrom, M. . ...... . .... ... .. 139 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Shot Put- Holbert, M.; Downing, S. D . .. .. ........ .. . . .......... 36 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus Throw- Wickens, M .; Barrett, S. D ... ... .... .. ... . .. .. . . 115 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run- Bowker, M. ; Lambert, S. D .. .. . . . . . ..... .. .. ... ..... IO :59&#13;
Totals-South Dakota, 59; Morningside, 50.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
STATE CHAMPIONS&#13;
&#13;
1911&#13;
&#13;
Morningside in the State Meet&#13;
Morningside's career in the state meet has been indeed unique. S ince entering&#13;
the State Association five years ago, Morningside has made a record seldom, if ever,&#13;
equaled in the history of Iowa athletics. In 190 7, our first year in state competition,&#13;
we won fifth place. In 1908, we won fo urth place, Iowa University ranking fifth. In&#13;
1909, our third year in the state meet, we came away with third honors. Before&#13;
another year rolled around, Ames, Iowa and D rake had withdrawn from the State&#13;
Association in order to join the Missouri Valley Conference. T he place of holding&#13;
the state meet was changed from D es Moines to G rinnell. P ractically every college&#13;
is represented in this annual meet at Grinnell. In 191 0, Morningside won second in the&#13;
state meet and last year she went to the state meet w ith a well balanced sq uad of ten&#13;
men and for the first time brought home first honors. H aving progressed steadily in five&#13;
years from fifth to first place, it being impossible to advance further, we propose to&#13;
maintain our present position at the top.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�SUMMARY OF STATE MEET, GRINNELL, IOWA, MAY&#13;
&#13;
19, 1911&#13;
&#13;
100&#13;
220&#13;
440&#13;
880&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Hoovey, Cornell; Sherman, Grinnell .. ... . .. 10 2-5&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Quarnstrom, Morningside; Hoovey, Cornell .. .. . . 24&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Lemon, Morningside; Collins, Parsons . . . . . . 5 1 1-4&#13;
Yard Run- Osborn, Simpson; Montgomery, Morningside; Tucker, Cornell 2:05 1/2&#13;
Mile Run-Durey, Des Moines; Boyack, Grinnell; Berwind, Corneli. ..... . . .. 4 :40&#13;
12 0 Yard Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Morningside; Dreier, Des Moines;&#13;
Rusk, Simpson . .... .. .. ... ........ . .... . . .. . .. . . 16 1-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Lusted, Cornell; Quarnstrom, Morningside;&#13;
Dreier, Des Moines ..... . . . ........ .. . ...... .. ...... 28&#13;
Pole Vault-Verink, Coe; Chandler, Morningside; Bair, Grinnell . . . .. . .. 10 ft. 3 in.&#13;
High Jump--Jones, Grinnell; Rusk, Simpson, Dreier, Des Moines, and&#13;
Green, Coe, tied for second . . .... .. ..... . .. .. . . 5 ft. 7 1/4&#13;
in.&#13;
Broad Jump--Beggaman, Teachers' College; Cross, Grinnell; West,&#13;
Morningside .. .. .. . . . .. . .. . . . .. . ... . . . .... 19 ft. 11 1/4 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Holbert, Morningside; Verink, Coe; Hunter, Grinnell .. ... . . . 36 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus-Wickens, Morningside; Rusk, Simpson; Holbert, Morningside . ... . . . 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay- Cornell, first; Grinnell, second ; Coe, third . . .. . .... . . . .. .. . 3 : 4 2 1/2&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Grinnell, first ; Morningside, second ; Coe, third . .... . . . . . 1 : 3 5 3/4&#13;
Two Mile Run- Rurey, Des Moines; Cross, Grinnell; Bowker, Morningside .. 11 :14 1/2&#13;
Totals-Morningside, 36; Coe, 25 1-3; Grinnell, 25; Cornell, 16; Des Moines,&#13;
14 1-3; Simpson, 9 1-3; Teachers' College, 5; Parsons, I.&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY STEALING THE&#13;
&#13;
IJ AL F MILE&#13;
&#13;
AT GRINNELL&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
�VIEWS OF THE MONUMENT RUN, FEBRUARY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
22, 1912&#13;
&#13;
Monument Run&#13;
&#13;
The annual cross country run to Floyd Monument and return on Washington's&#13;
birthday has come to be a tradition at Morningside. Over a course involving a number&#13;
of steep hills and measuring approximately three and one-half miles, it provides a strenuous run and an interesting race. Besides its traditional value, it has the further intrinsic&#13;
worth of developing material for the later winter and spring track work.&#13;
The Monument Run was introduced in the early days of the college and its&#13;
history is marked by many hard races in snow and rain when the time was not the best.&#13;
When A. P. Berkstresser, for several years holder of the record, cut the time down to&#13;
twenty minutes and twenty seconds, even then running in deep snow, it was thought the&#13;
record would hold for some time. However, in 19 11, V. E. Montgomery, with excellent weather conditions and a fast course, covered the distance in 18 :46 3-5, thereby&#13;
establishing a record of exceptional time.&#13;
Last year, F. H. Trimble, '11, made provision for two medals, gold and silver, to&#13;
be awarded to the two men finishing first and second. The Doctors Mahood also put&#13;
up a gold medal for the first Academy man to finish. This was given for one year only&#13;
and was won by C. F. Berkstresser. The Trimble medals are offered for five years&#13;
and next year a bronze one will be awarded for third place. During the first two years,&#13;
Montgomery has won the gold medal and J. H. Berkstresser and W. H. Bowker each&#13;
a silver medal.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
�Fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�Base ball&#13;
&#13;
COACH JOH N W . H OLL ISTE R&#13;
&#13;
The Season of 1911&#13;
The success of a college baseball season is not always determined by the percentage&#13;
column. The development shown should enter as a prominent factor in the decision.&#13;
Taking this, then, as our criterion, the season of 1911 was one of the best in the history&#13;
of Morningside. With only three men of the 191 0 'varsity in school, Coach Hollister,&#13;
with his usual system, overcame this difficulty and early in March played five practice&#13;
games with the Sioux City Western Leaguers, two of which were won from the professionals. Then came the regular college games. A trip in Nebraska was not a success&#13;
from the standpoint of games won. In. three games with South Dakota, Vermillion was&#13;
all but defeated twice. On a trip down state, Iowa, who had just won from Wisconsin,&#13;
was defeated. In a series of return games played at home, the hard work of the men&#13;
and the coaching of "Jack" showed their value and not one was lost. Thus, a team,&#13;
green almost in its entirety, was molded into one of the best Morningside ever turned out.&#13;
A s a fittin g tribute to a worthy player, Ben Holbert was elected captain of the team&#13;
for 1912.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
�CAPT. H. C. HARPER&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
Schedule for 1911&#13;
&#13;
Morningside .... 6 .... . ......... Sioux City Wes tern League . . . . 3&#13;
Morningside .... 7 ..... .. . . .. . . .. Sioux City Western League. . . . 3&#13;
(Ten innings)&#13;
18-Morningside .... 8 . .. .. . ..... .. .. Bellevue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6&#13;
19-Morningside . . .. 0 . . ............. Creighton . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. I0&#13;
20-Morningside .... 2 . ........ . ..... Nebraska Wesleyan . .&#13;
. . 10&#13;
2 I- Morningside .... 9 .. . ..... ...... . Cotner ............... . . . . 10&#13;
24- Morningside ... . 0 . .. . . .. ........ South Dakota University. . . .&#13;
9&#13;
25-Morningside .... 1 .. . .. .......... South Dakota University. . . . . . . 1&#13;
(Four innings.)&#13;
2-Morningside ... . 8 .. .. . .... .. .... Iowa University . . . . . . . . . . . . 7&#13;
3- Morningside .... 2 ........... ... . St. Joseph . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7&#13;
4- Morningside .... 5 .. ... .. ... ..... St. Thomas .... . . . .... ..... 10&#13;
12- Morningside .... 5 . . ........... . . Nebraska Wesleyan . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
13- Morningside . . .. 5 ...... ........ . South Dakota University . . . . . . 4&#13;
15-Morningside . ... 8 ........... . . . . St. Thomas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5&#13;
I -Morningside .... 8 .... . ... .... . .. Cotner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
&#13;
Harper&#13;
&#13;
.z,..&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-six:&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�CAPT . J.&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
Sept.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
H. WINTERRINGER&#13;
&#13;
Schedule for 1911&#13;
&#13;
30-Morningside. . . . 5 . . . .. . ... . .. . .. . Cherokee High School. . . . . . . 3&#13;
7-Morningside ... . 15 . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . Bellevue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
14-Morningside . . . . 5 .... . . ...... . ... Iowa University .. . .. . . .. . . 11&#13;
21-Morningside .. .. I 7 .... ....... . .. . . Rapid City School of Mines. . 3&#13;
28-Morningside. . . . 6 .. . . ............ Creighton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8&#13;
4-Morningside .... 30 ........ . ....... Des Moines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
18-Morningside ... . 5 . . .. ............ St. Joseph ... ... .. . ... . . . 0&#13;
30-Morningside . . . . 0 .. . ............. South Dakota University . ... 24&#13;
R ESE RVES&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 3-Morningside Reserves . . . . 0 .... . . . . . ..... Onawa High School . . . . 5&#13;
Nov. 25-Morningside Reserves .... 22 .. .... . .. . .. . . Onawa High School .... 0&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�The Season of 1911&#13;
The football season of 1911 opened with the customary camp at Blue Lake near&#13;
Onawa.&#13;
&#13;
Ten men reported and two weeks were spent on the rudiments of the game.&#13;
&#13;
Early in the season a game was played at Iowa City with the encouraging result of all but&#13;
a victory for the Maroons.&#13;
of Mines.&#13;
&#13;
For the first time a game was played with Rapid City School&#13;
&#13;
It was easily won. Out of eight games played, the long end of the score was&#13;
&#13;
with Morningside in five.&#13;
&#13;
The team would probably have been more successful had not&#13;
&#13;
an epidemic of typhoid fever broken out in the squad taking four of the 'varsity.&#13;
hole was never able to be filled.&#13;
&#13;
This&#13;
&#13;
In the Thanksgiving game only five men were in their&#13;
&#13;
regul.a r positions which accounts in a measure for the lop-sided score.&#13;
&#13;
In consideration of&#13;
&#13;
the conditions the season as a whole may be recorded as a success.&#13;
&#13;
With most of the&#13;
&#13;
'varsity still in school, with this year's experience, and with "Big Ben" Holbert to lead&#13;
them, we may confidently look for a still better record next fall.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Varsity&#13;
&#13;
SQ U AD 1911&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
S ixty&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
�J.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY WINTERRINGER ("Hank")&#13;
&#13;
Left Tackle&#13;
Weight, 198. Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.&#13;
Captain for two years which did not spoil his&#13;
playing. Picked by most critics for an "All&#13;
Iowa" position. Good leader and hard scraper.&#13;
Has a special hatred for negroes. Has played&#13;
four years and is still good for another.&#13;
&#13;
EARL KNOUSE ("Yaller")&#13;
&#13;
Right Half back&#13;
Weight, 175. Height, 5 feet 10 inches.&#13;
Played a star game at half. Was strong at&#13;
running interference. One of the typhoid patients. Played his prep ball at Beatrice, Nebraska High. Also a year with the Nebraska&#13;
Freshmen. His first year at Morningside.&#13;
ROBERT E. SMYLIE ("Bob")&#13;
&#13;
Left Halfback&#13;
Weight, 160. Height, 5 feet 8 inches.&#13;
"Bob" played his first football in the Academy&#13;
and has been a 'varsity star ever since his size&#13;
would permit. Rated by all judges as one of&#13;
the best open field runners in the state. Never&#13;
failed to make a gain when given the ball.&#13;
EARL C. WARBURTON ("Buttons")&#13;
&#13;
Substitute End&#13;
Weight, 170. Height, 5 feet 10 inches.&#13;
Played his first football in Cherokee High and&#13;
later on the Beloit Freshman team. Held down&#13;
the end position early in the season. A hard&#13;
and willing worker but baffled by the forward&#13;
pass.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�WILLIAM A. McCuRDY ("Mac")&#13;
&#13;
D. LAWRENCE WICKENS ("Wick")&#13;
&#13;
Right Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Center&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 165. Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.&#13;
Learned his football in the Academy. Small&#13;
for a tackle but a mighty man to oppose. Never&#13;
been licked on the gridiron and he will take on&#13;
any of them. An aggressive player. Third year&#13;
on the Morningside 'varsity.&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 185. Height, 6 feet&#13;
inch.&#13;
Played at center till he contracted the typhoid.&#13;
A hard, consistent, aggressive player. Especially strong on the defense.&#13;
Had a knack of&#13;
breaking up center smashes and falling on the&#13;
ball. His first year.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT ("Turk")&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT R. VERNON ("Pinkey")&#13;
&#13;
Left Guard&#13;
&#13;
Left End&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 190. Height, 5 feet 11 inches.&#13;
Played his first year of football last fall. Fast&#13;
and aggressive, he made an ideal guard. Had&#13;
a hobby for breaking up end runs before they&#13;
started. Blocked more kicks than all the men&#13;
on the team. Another victim of typhoid.&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 180. Height, 6 feet. Good all&#13;
around athlete. Showed lots of class but played&#13;
in hard luck. Laid up early in the season with&#13;
a bad knee and later with typhoid. Fast on his&#13;
feet and an adept at handling the forward pass . .&#13;
Came to us last fall from Hawarden.&#13;
&#13;
BEN HOLBERT, JR. ("Ben")&#13;
&#13;
Fullback&#13;
Weight, 19 5. Height, 6 feet 11/2 inches.&#13;
As good an athletic as ever wore a Morningside&#13;
uniform. Was the mainstay of the back field.&#13;
His long spiral punts fooled them all and saved&#13;
many a game for the Maroons. When called&#13;
upon to hit the line he rarely failed to gain.&#13;
The unanimous choice for captain in 1912.&#13;
Played first at Culver Military Academy.&#13;
&#13;
Guy D. McKINNEY ("Mac")&#13;
&#13;
Center and Guard&#13;
Weight, 158. Height, 5 feet 10 1/2 inches.&#13;
Played at guard the first part of the season but&#13;
shifted to center when Wickens was taken sick.&#13;
Small but a fierce player. As game a man as&#13;
ever stopped a smash. Hails from Ft. Dodge.&#13;
&#13;
]AMES H. LEWIS ("Jimmy")&#13;
&#13;
BARRETT P. DOLLIVER ("Dolly")&#13;
&#13;
Right End&#13;
&#13;
Substitute&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 146. Height, 5 feet 8 3/4 inches.&#13;
Though diminutive in size, is there and over on&#13;
the football field. Has played football in Morningside since his early infancy. His long familiarity with the game makes him an expert at&#13;
sizing up a play. When he tackles the ball is&#13;
down. Second year of 'varsity.&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 17 5. Height, 5 feet 1 1 inches.&#13;
The hardest worker on the squad although he&#13;
never succeeded in winning a permanent berth&#13;
on the 'varsity. His work was always consistent and his faithfulness inspiring. Captain&#13;
of the reserves last fall.&#13;
&#13;
Six ty-four&#13;
&#13;
Six ty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�THE&#13;
&#13;
" R" MEN, 1911&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. CLIFFORD&#13;
&#13;
Many fitting and sincere comments have been made concerning the value of that&#13;
part of the football squad that does not make the 'varsity. No praise, however, can be&#13;
too high or extravagant for those men who have fought night after night without hope of&#13;
personal advancement. Each night they appeared, generally before the varsity, amid rain&#13;
and snow, during warm September and cold November. Those who have so done know&#13;
best the unconquerable energy required to steadfastly bear the disheartening gruelling&#13;
smashes of the heavier 'varsity, the neglect of coaching, a losing fight carried on in the&#13;
face of criticism and blame from those who have not the nerve to get out and help,-all&#13;
that their chosen school may win more laurels.&#13;
This year reserve jerseys have been awarded to the men who stayed out through the&#13;
season as a token of the school's appreciation of the time, effort, and courage of these&#13;
men. 'The men who have had the honor of representing their school on the gridiron cannot adequately express their gratitude to the scrubs for their struggles. They can only say&#13;
in thanks, that it is the spirit which these men have shown that has earned the varsity victoriously through inter-collegiate conflicts toward a greater Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
JORY&#13;
&#13;
The Season of 1912&#13;
The past season in basketball was the most successful in years in spite of a very&#13;
light schedule. Three college games were played of which two were victories. Nebraska, who holds the championship of Missouri Valley, met us when we were in the&#13;
worst shape of the season. In the next game with Huron, champions of North and South&#13;
Dakota, Morningside retrieved herself by winning 24 to 31. South Dakota came next on&#13;
the schedule and although the team was not in the best of shape, we got the long end of&#13;
the 41 to 45 score after a hard fight. Three of the team were new at basketball in&#13;
Morningside. Joryat center, was the pivot of the Maroon team-work. Montgomery,&#13;
forward, figuratively was probably the strongest man on the team. Bass developed into ·&#13;
a consistent twin. Holbert and Eiffert as guards were fast, heavy, accurate, aggressive,&#13;
unsurpassed. All but Bass will be in school next year.&#13;
&#13;
Six ty -seven&#13;
&#13;
�THE TEAM THAT&#13;
&#13;
BEAT VERMILLION&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE 1912&#13;
for&#13;
Jan. 27-Morningside .... 10 .... ...... ...... Nebraska University&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
-Morningside .... 3 1 . . . . ........... Huron&#13;
&#13;
Feb. 14- Morningside .... 45 .&#13;
&#13;
. . .......... South Dakota University.&#13;
&#13;
.62&#13;
.24&#13;
.41&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
VARSITY SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
�FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM, 1912&#13;
&#13;
Summary of Class&#13;
Seniors&#13;
vs.&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
. .. . ... . . .&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
. .....&#13;
&#13;
Tournament&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
....... . 8&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ... . ...&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Middle A cademy&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen .......... 46&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen .&#13;
&#13;
........ . 28&#13;
&#13;
. 26&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Middle Academy .. . . ..... . ............... 16&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�Dual&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Dual&#13;
Inter -Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, Iowa, April 21 ' 1911&#13;
Fayette, Iowa, April 2 I, 1911&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Parliamentary form of&#13;
governmen t is better adapted to the needs ofa&#13;
.&#13;
progressive an d democratic nation than the&#13;
Presidential form.&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Parliamentary form of government is better adapted to the needs of a progressive and democratic nation than the Presidential form.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeAffirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
NegativeUpper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
NegativeMorningside&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative, 2&#13;
Negative, I&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
�Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter- Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
November 16, 1911&#13;
November 9, 1911&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That a system of compulsory industrial insurance, covering sickness, accident, and old age,&#13;
would be desirable in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Initiative and&#13;
Referendum should be adopted by&#13;
the several states.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
D ECISION&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
PHILO TEAM&#13;
H. G. Merten&#13;
R. W. H ess&#13;
M. P . Briggs&#13;
&#13;
IO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
IO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
E. S. Fullbrool,&#13;
R. H. Carter&#13;
R. H. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
H. H. Lueder&#13;
J. H. L ewis&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
W. A. Mccurdy&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
&#13;
L. H . Kin gsbury&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Academic&#13;
Debate&#13;
Yankton, South Dakota, May 5, 1911&#13;
&#13;
November 23, 1911&#13;
&#13;
YANKTON ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That the States and the Nation&#13;
should pass laws guaranteeing bank deposits.&#13;
&#13;
R esolved,&#13;
&#13;
That the Panama&#13;
Canal should be neutralized.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Yankton Academy&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
PHILO&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
J . E. Briggs&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
R. H. McVicke r&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
F. B. Rogers&#13;
G. E. Wick en s&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
-·&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
Seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter- Soceity&#13;
Debate&#13;
December 8, 1911&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
FRANK P. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
HOME RATORICAL&#13;
O&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
November 27, 19 11&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That all moneys and&#13;
credits in the state of Iowa should&#13;
be exempt from taxation.&#13;
&#13;
State Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeHawkeye&#13;
&#13;
Ames, Iowa, March 1, 191 2&#13;
&#13;
NegativeAdelphian&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
HAWKEYE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
C. M. Phenis&#13;
D. C. McKinney&#13;
H. A . Gorde r&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
Frank P. Johnson&#13;
Elihu C. Mead&#13;
Barrett P. Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Majesty of Peace, First&#13;
The Book of Books, Second&#13;
The Problem, Third&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
H . L. Fowler&#13;
R. E. Mahood&#13;
T. B. Bassett&#13;
&#13;
S eventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
Hugh Webster, Ames&#13;
Commerce and World Peace, F irst&#13;
F. P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
The Realized Vision, Second&#13;
Clarendon Havighorst, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
The Crucial Problem of Democracy, Third&#13;
G. L. Young, Leander Clark&#13;
Peace, the Mission of America&#13;
George L. Potgeter, Cornell&#13;
Savonarola&#13;
G len Jackson, Coe&#13;
Dynamic Peace&#13;
Miss G race Bowen, Parsons&#13;
The College Woman's Opportunity and Responsibility&#13;
Beldon Dennison, Lenox&#13;
The Crowd and Social Progress&#13;
Schools not on the contest:&#13;
Ellsworth, Simpson.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines, Penn, Upper Iowa, Tabor, Buena Vista,&#13;
&#13;
�C. E. SMITH&#13;
ROBERT R. VERNON&#13;
&#13;
FRANK P. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Home Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
February 23, 1912&#13;
&#13;
State Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
Pella, Iowa, May 12, 1911&#13;
The Majesty of Peace, First&#13;
America and Peace in the Orient, Second&#13;
The Master Force of Progress, Third&#13;
Dynamic Peace&#13;
The Passing of War&#13;
The Approach of Peace&#13;
The Curse of Armaments&#13;
The Evolution of Government&#13;
The Next Step in the Peace Propaganda&#13;
&#13;
Frank P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
J. G. Emerson, Ames&#13;
H. F. Dickensheets, Leander Clark&#13;
Glen Jackson, Coe&#13;
Rudolph Peterson, Luther&#13;
Roy Lewis, Central University&#13;
Hubert Peckham, Penn&#13;
Roy Currier, Parsons&#13;
H. G. Craymer, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
Home Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
March 22, 1912&#13;
United States and Universal Peace, First&#13;
The New Patriotism&#13;
&#13;
Robert R. Vernon&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
The Anarchism of the Liquor Traffic, First&#13;
The Problem, Second&#13;
Our Twentieth Century Problem&#13;
The Call to Arms&#13;
The Enemy Within&#13;
Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness&#13;
Christian Responsibility&#13;
&#13;
C. E. Smith&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
Charles Spry&#13;
Harry Fowler&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
Clark Hickman&#13;
&#13;
State Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
March 22, 1912&#13;
A Second Slavery, First&#13;
The Legalized Outlaw, Second&#13;
The Sacred Heritage in Peril, Third&#13;
The Nullification of Law&#13;
The Anarchism of the Liquor Traffic&#13;
The Call to Arms&#13;
The Ultimate Solution&#13;
The Broken Tread of Onward Progress&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
Miss Laura M. Chasse!, Cornell&#13;
Fred W. lngvoldstad, Central Holiness U.&#13;
G. T. Becktolt, Leander Clark&#13;
R. E. Mendenhall, Penn&#13;
C. E. Smith, Morningside&#13;
W. L. Canady, Highland Park&#13;
H. E. Norton, Central University&#13;
0. P. Manker, Simpson&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Records&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL AssoCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1900-J. A. Davies. . . .&#13;
. Ninth&#13;
1901-H. A. Keck. . . . .&#13;
. Seventh&#13;
1902-A. R. Toothaker .&#13;
. Eliminated on thought&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall . . . . . .&#13;
. Fourth&#13;
1904-R. E. Heilman ............. .&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer .. .&#13;
1906-A. G. Cushman ... .&#13;
. . Fifth&#13;
1907-A. G. Cushman ... .&#13;
. . Second&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer.&#13;
. . First; Interstate, Eighth&#13;
1909-F.&#13;
w. Backemeyer.&#13;
. Second&#13;
1910-H. S. Hamilton .&#13;
. Second&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson.&#13;
. Second&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson.&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL AssocIATION&#13;
&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch ...... ... . .... First; Interstate, First; National, Third&#13;
. Second&#13;
1903-J. N. H. McCay.&#13;
. Third&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner ..&#13;
. Fifth&#13;
1907-Ida Lewis ....&#13;
. Third&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett.&#13;
. Second&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill . ... .&#13;
. First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson .. .&#13;
. Sixth&#13;
1911-W. A. McCurdy ..&#13;
. . Fifth&#13;
1912-C. E. Smith . . .. . .&#13;
STATE. PEACE ORATORICAL AssocIATION&#13;
&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson .... ......... First&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon ........ .. ... Fifth&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-N ebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Morningside 2&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker University 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Upper Iowa 1, Morningside 2&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2. · Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
Eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
�FLORENCE E. · ANTHONY&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
Excellent&#13;
Amiable&#13;
&#13;
P.R. CORNER&#13;
&#13;
Pleasant&#13;
Reasonable&#13;
Congenial&#13;
&#13;
W. H . BOWKER&#13;
&#13;
Wistful&#13;
Honorabl e&#13;
Bashful&#13;
&#13;
R. H. CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Reliable&#13;
H efty&#13;
Cute&#13;
&#13;
w. ·w.&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
Waggish&#13;
Winning&#13;
Boyish&#13;
&#13;
A. BLAN CHE CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Accurate&#13;
Benevolent&#13;
Con s tant&#13;
&#13;
L. L. CULBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
Lusty&#13;
Lucky&#13;
Courageous&#13;
&#13;
CLARA E. CRUMMER&#13;
&#13;
Considerate&#13;
Earnes t&#13;
Compet en l&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
£&#13;
&#13;
B. P. DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Bustling&#13;
P eaceable&#13;
Dauntless&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE C. FLETCHER&#13;
&#13;
Nice&#13;
Coefficient&#13;
Facetious&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
Eighty -four&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
E. ELLISON&#13;
&#13;
Worthy&#13;
Efficient&#13;
Enduring&#13;
&#13;
I. N. GABRIELSON&#13;
&#13;
Independent&#13;
Noble&#13;
Genuin e&#13;
&#13;
S. E. ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
W . D. FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
Silent&#13;
Exact&#13;
Erudite&#13;
&#13;
Willing&#13;
Diligent&#13;
Fainthearted&#13;
&#13;
MAUDE L. GILLIN&#13;
&#13;
Modest&#13;
Loving&#13;
Graciou s&#13;
&#13;
MADGE L. GILLIN&#13;
&#13;
Merry&#13;
Little&#13;
Gifte d&#13;
&#13;
�R. W . HESS&#13;
&#13;
Runty&#13;
Wise&#13;
Handy&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL M.&#13;
&#13;
COOK&#13;
&#13;
Righteous&#13;
Mild&#13;
Charming&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
D. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sesq uipedalianic&#13;
Dignified&#13;
Judicious&#13;
&#13;
J . A. LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Journalistic&#13;
Agreeable&#13;
Luminous&#13;
&#13;
A.E.KENT&#13;
&#13;
Aberrant&#13;
Eccentric&#13;
Kind&#13;
&#13;
J. H. LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Jocular&#13;
Hilarious&#13;
Lithesome&#13;
&#13;
HULDA A. KREUTZ&#13;
&#13;
Hasty&#13;
Angelic&#13;
Keen&#13;
&#13;
E. LOUISE 1lcDONALD HELEN A. McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
Estimable&#13;
Loyal&#13;
teditative&#13;
&#13;
D. P. MAHONEY&#13;
&#13;
LOLA I. RAW&#13;
&#13;
Dashing&#13;
Pugilistic&#13;
Musical&#13;
&#13;
Laudable&#13;
Imperturbable&#13;
Resourceful&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
Humble&#13;
Attentive&#13;
Modest&#13;
&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Energetic&#13;
R efulgent&#13;
&#13;
HELEN K. OLMSTEAD&#13;
&#13;
Honest&#13;
Kind&#13;
Obliging&#13;
&#13;
F. B. ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
Frisky&#13;
Brainy&#13;
Rare&#13;
&#13;
E. C. PALMER&#13;
&#13;
Effeminate&#13;
Cheerful&#13;
Pious&#13;
&#13;
A. H. SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
Antiquated&#13;
Helpful&#13;
Shark&#13;
&#13;
�C. E.&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
H AZEL E.&#13;
&#13;
Courteous&#13;
Eloquent&#13;
Square&#13;
&#13;
R. E.&#13;
&#13;
SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
Rougish&#13;
Elegant&#13;
Sportive&#13;
&#13;
SIMAN&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE L. SEIFERT&#13;
&#13;
Happy&#13;
Effulgent&#13;
Skillful&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
TUTTLE&#13;
&#13;
Gentle&#13;
Optimistic&#13;
True&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE E. SHREINER ETHEL&#13;
&#13;
Mirthful&#13;
Lively&#13;
Sincer e&#13;
&#13;
G. E.&#13;
&#13;
WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Galla nt&#13;
E goistic&#13;
Wil y&#13;
&#13;
Merry&#13;
Effervescent&#13;
Studious&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
W ISEMAN • E.&#13;
&#13;
Good&#13;
Faithful&#13;
·winsome&#13;
&#13;
A. SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Eager&#13;
Affable&#13;
Sagacious&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
WARBURTON&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
Cautious&#13;
Wayward&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
E i ghty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�LILLIAN E. BOWER&#13;
&#13;
MITCH E LL&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
&#13;
Edith is one of that&#13;
"Loveland Bunch." She&#13;
has the rare qualities of wit&#13;
and humor. By some she&#13;
has been dubbed an old&#13;
maid, but this is leap year&#13;
and Edith is making herself heard. Poetical, musical, true and steadfast. A&#13;
firm friend and a wise&#13;
counselor. A hard worker, with a liberal supply of&#13;
"A" grades as a reward.&#13;
&#13;
SARAH ANN BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
Society's best man.&#13;
Would play football if a&#13;
dress suit could be worn&#13;
for the moleskins.&#13;
"Mike's" time is too full&#13;
of numerous official duties&#13;
for study.&#13;
Verbosity is&#13;
his hobby; formality, his&#13;
delight; singing and debating, his recreation; reporting, his vocation; and the&#13;
ministry his aspiration.&#13;
&#13;
SILAS A. BRALEY&#13;
&#13;
JOHN E. BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
ELLA&#13;
&#13;
s. CAMPBELL&#13;
&#13;
Galva&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
You are greeted with a&#13;
smile and a cheery, "Good&#13;
morning," when you approach the office if "Sarah&#13;
Ann" is there. She even&#13;
thinks she can influence&#13;
the Dean. How absurd!&#13;
Is never backward about&#13;
giving advice, to all those&#13;
who need it. Enthusiastic&#13;
over every undertaking,&#13;
stick-to-it-iveness is&#13;
her&#13;
prominent characteristic.&#13;
&#13;
We call him "Si," but&#13;
there are very few sighs in&#13;
his nature. He believes in&#13;
finishing what he starts, as&#13;
shown by his consistent&#13;
work in Chemistry, and in&#13;
maintaining his high school&#13;
affections. A believer in&#13;
the productions of his home&#13;
town.&#13;
Consistent in his&#13;
visits to the kitchen of&#13;
Marion Hall. A jolly,&#13;
jovial friend. Has ambitions on the cinder path.&#13;
&#13;
First of all a college&#13;
booster, then a loyal society member, and a firm&#13;
friend.&#13;
"Ephriam"&#13;
is&#13;
skillful, poetic and artistic.&#13;
Originality is his hobby,&#13;
journalism his chosen vocation, debating his pastime.&#13;
Is strictly in a class by&#13;
himself.&#13;
Chronically he&#13;
keeps a diary, spasmodically he has a date. Verbally, formality is his bore,&#13;
yet personally none is more&#13;
exacting and orderly.&#13;
&#13;
An "A" grade student,&#13;
hence, a man hater. Possesses constancy and kindliness of disposition, the&#13;
marks of a pure character.&#13;
She couldn't even quarrel with herself. Gentle,&#13;
perhaps shy, but a true&#13;
friend to those who know&#13;
her well. Has sometimes&#13;
been termed a favorite of&#13;
the faculty, but that is because she doesn't know&#13;
how to get into mischief.&#13;
&#13;
Nine t y&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�I. DAVIE&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM C. EVANS&#13;
&#13;
AUDREE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Last year, "Bill" had&#13;
Lofty aims.&#13;
She is not&#13;
here this year, so he has&#13;
become diligent in his studies. If it were not for&#13;
Biology, German, French&#13;
and several other things he&#13;
would enjoy life immensely. Is a coming debater.&#13;
Has never entered the athletic arena. In class room&#13;
and on the campus, a serious, steadfast and friendly&#13;
character.&#13;
&#13;
A jolly fine girl, who&#13;
is a supreme favorite with&#13;
her society members, and&#13;
admired or loved by everyone in school. Ever welcome in any social gathering, where she soon stirs&#13;
up a good time. Never&#13;
more in her place than at&#13;
a party.&#13;
Delightfully&#13;
straightforward and frank&#13;
in her manner. Studious,&#13;
yet if she doesn't get an&#13;
"A" a "B" will do.&#13;
&#13;
JOCY&#13;
&#13;
I. CARTER&#13;
Whiting&#13;
&#13;
Between her hair and&#13;
her eyes, there is a rivalry&#13;
for depth of color. Jocy&#13;
is our official "jokist."&#13;
Invariably she sees the&#13;
point to a joke-within&#13;
two weeks. Though at&#13;
times serious, at others&#13;
blithesome, she is never&#13;
trivial. Wherever she is&#13;
there is something doing.&#13;
Her only complaint is that&#13;
the days are seven hours&#13;
too short.&#13;
&#13;
SUSAN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
EADS&#13;
&#13;
CATHERINE E. ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
Roy H.&#13;
&#13;
GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Olathe, Kansas&#13;
&#13;
Sioux, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Primarily and pre-eminently a Junior, next a Pi,&#13;
and at the end of the list&#13;
a French student and a&#13;
believer in leap year. A&#13;
jolly friend, a royal entertainer, and an accomplished reader.&#13;
Has never&#13;
been seriously attached until recently, and now it is&#13;
to a mighty nice lad who&#13;
will some day grow up.&#13;
There is none other like&#13;
Susan.&#13;
&#13;
She does more things&#13;
and does them well than&#13;
any other girl in school.&#13;
She is president of the&#13;
girls' student body, which&#13;
speaks of her popularity&#13;
among the girls. A brilliant student, an earnest Y .&#13;
W. worker, and a friend&#13;
to all. Always busy, yet&#13;
ever anxious to render&#13;
assistance or give counsel.&#13;
She really accomplishes&#13;
things.&#13;
&#13;
Has been in Morningside since the flood. Talks&#13;
· with anybody, at any time,&#13;
at any place, on any sub,&#13;
ject, at any length. Has&#13;
. sold many books in his&#13;
day, and could sell patent&#13;
medicine.&#13;
Exceedingly&#13;
ambitious in debate, and&#13;
has thus far achieved no&#13;
little success.&#13;
A singer&#13;
of ability, and a strenuous&#13;
worker. The ministry is&#13;
his chosen profession.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
�I.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR HALL&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Whiting&#13;
Contrary to the implication of his name, he is seldom seen in the corridors.&#13;
A man with a big voice&#13;
and heart as large. Never&#13;
known to praise himself,&#13;
but ever with a good word&#13;
for others. A hard worker in Y. M. His aspirations are in the ministerial&#13;
line, where he cannot help&#13;
but succeed. A deep student, a steadfast friend,&#13;
and at all times a man.&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
Colo&#13;
No one has been able&#13;
to tell exactly whether her&#13;
eyes are blue or brown.&#13;
Annetta, though quiet and&#13;
unassuming, has won her&#13;
way into the hearts of her&#13;
classmates by her earnest&#13;
loyalty and sweet tempered&#13;
disposition. A true friend&#13;
to whom her chums love&#13;
to go for consolation and&#13;
advice.&#13;
She knows the&#13;
truth and dares to stand&#13;
by it.&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
Our platinum tongued&#13;
orator, the best in the state.&#13;
Hails f r o m Cherokee,&#13;
where they say there are&#13;
a few more noisy people.&#13;
Hopeful, versatile, humorous, interesting, and a practical politician. His home&#13;
is on the platform. "Bugger's" fame as a singer and&#13;
a reader is state wide.&#13;
The most popular man in&#13;
school. Too busy for athletics.&#13;
&#13;
R. HOSFORD&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LISLE&#13;
&#13;
He came this year from&#13;
Fremont Normal school&#13;
because he wanted to finish&#13;
with a good class. Although a new man, he does&#13;
not display his talents but&#13;
leaves them to be discovered-no Herculean task .&#13;
He is silent, retiring, and&#13;
attends to his own affairs,&#13;
characteristics we all might&#13;
covet. An interesting conversationalist and a good&#13;
musician.&#13;
&#13;
Nine t y-four&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
HESS&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD ]ORY&#13;
&#13;
Plover&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Ray is the nifty kid. A&#13;
whale of a student, a&#13;
shark at Chemistry. Studies for the good derived,&#13;
accepts the grades as incidental. Has a knack of&#13;
getting interested in everything he thinks abouteven German.&#13;
Thought&#13;
about a nice girl once and&#13;
now receives a daily letter. No wonder he decided to finish this year. A&#13;
good debater, almost a&#13;
philosopher, and a right&#13;
good fellow . .&#13;
&#13;
Clif-a different man&#13;
since Hazel came to Morningside. Particularly devoted in his attendance to&#13;
and from school and most&#13;
of the rest of the day.&#13;
Even eats at the same&#13;
table. What little time is&#13;
left he devotes to athletics&#13;
and journalism.&#13;
With&#13;
him a recitation and a&#13;
bluff are synonomous. A&#13;
chronic joker, witty, carefree and happy.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
�C. LEMON&#13;
LeMars&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN&#13;
LULA&#13;
&#13;
M. KINDLESPIRE&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
As an orator, debater,&#13;
athlete and student, Al has&#13;
brought honor to himself&#13;
and his school. A hard&#13;
and consistent worker, no&#13;
one more readily appreciates a joke than he. He&#13;
is loved by his friends, respected by his opponents,&#13;
and honored by all who&#13;
! know him: No one who&#13;
takes him into his confidence will ever want for a&#13;
courageous ally and a&#13;
steadfast fri end.&#13;
&#13;
One of the "Spencer&#13;
Twins. " Sunny hair, sunny smile, sunny disposition.&#13;
A lover of history (Montgomery's) and for some&#13;
reason she tries to keep it&#13;
on the reserve shelf. "O&#13;
heaven! were man constant he were perfect."&#13;
We know her best as an&#13;
accommodating librarian,&#13;
and to our loss if not socially. A real, jolly college girl.&#13;
&#13;
L. KIFER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET&#13;
&#13;
We may say she is silent and gentle, yet with a&#13;
happy stnile for all. No&#13;
one is more optimistic than&#13;
she.&#13;
A lover of that&#13;
which is pure and good.&#13;
Always strives for the best.&#13;
Scrupulous about pleasing&#13;
the faculty, for which she&#13;
is rewarded.&#13;
Afraid of&#13;
ghosts!&#13;
Only those that&#13;
really know her can fully&#13;
realize her merit.&#13;
&#13;
Ponca, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Ev A I. LEAZER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A coming man.&#13;
His&#13;
first hit looks like a home&#13;
run.&#13;
His promise as a&#13;
track man is probably due&#13;
to his affiliations with the&#13;
Montgomery family. He&#13;
is a good student but this&#13;
never interferes with the&#13;
possibility to play a good&#13;
joke.&#13;
A ready wit, a&#13;
keen mind, and a promising debater. "Poncaberry" is a product of the&#13;
sand hills of Nebraska.&#13;
&#13;
"Ebenezer" is more of a&#13;
politician than a rhetorician. She is an accomplished cornetist, a singer,&#13;
an earnest church worker,&#13;
and makes a few grades.&#13;
Isn't that enough for one&#13;
girl?&#13;
Benevolent, constant, and of a jolly temperament. Gentleness and&#13;
optimism are her dominant&#13;
characteristics. W h e r e&#13;
she is, there you will find&#13;
a good time.&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE H. KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
GRACE&#13;
&#13;
N in ety-s even&#13;
&#13;
LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
The other "Spencer&#13;
Twin."&#13;
A Junior by&#13;
choice, drawn there, it&#13;
seems by presidential attraction. A good student,&#13;
but not over studious. A&#13;
sympathetic listener and a&#13;
good companion, as evidenced by her seldom lack&#13;
of an attendant. Is jolly,&#13;
yet serious; fun-loving, yet&#13;
sincere. Has a quick and&#13;
open sympathy for all who&#13;
need it. An inspiration to&#13;
all who seek the good of&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
,-t., '&#13;
&#13;
N i nety-six&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
Spen cer&#13;
&#13;
�G. MERTEN&#13;
Carner&#13;
&#13;
A. MOWER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA&#13;
&#13;
A genius in disguise. A&#13;
hard worker, a debater of&#13;
ability, an embryonic philosopher, an earnest student with "A" grades as&#13;
a by-product. H e quotes&#13;
Horace and reads Faust&#13;
as a pastime. He regards&#13;
time as knowledge and&#13;
girls as a necessary evil.&#13;
Morningside h a s done&#13;
much for him, but not&#13;
more than he has done fo r&#13;
her.&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
A. M cCuTCHEN&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
The old adage that, "a&#13;
friend is one who knows&#13;
all about you and still&#13;
loves you," might have&#13;
been taken from her example. She can tell the&#13;
history of the world from&#13;
the creation through the&#13;
nineteen twelve presidential&#13;
election. Of a cheerful&#13;
and winning disposition.&#13;
Just one look from her&#13;
great laughing blue eyes&#13;
is ample inspiration to conquer worlds.&#13;
&#13;
Has anyone forgotten&#13;
the annual board election&#13;
at Alice's last spring?&#13;
Hardly! Sooner would&#13;
he forget his society banquet or spring outing.&#13;
Quiet, reserved, studious.&#13;
Always wears blue-the&#13;
class color. One of Sioux&#13;
C ity's most splendid gifts&#13;
to Morningside. We can&#13;
but say, with Burns,&#13;
"Sweet Alice."&#13;
&#13;
V INCENTE.&#13;
FLORENCE M.&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Small-but oh my! A&#13;
man among men. A star&#13;
debater, a prince of a fusser, and a crack athlete.&#13;
If you are in the habit of&#13;
taking a back seat, don't&#13;
attempt to follow "Vince."&#13;
Gives his class distinction&#13;
through his track captaincy. Is full of fun, energetic, game. His favorite&#13;
pastime is breaking the&#13;
Monument Run record.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
A co-ed blithe and gay.&#13;
Has decided to finish college in three years&#13;
we&#13;
wonder why. Has been&#13;
known to talk an hour or&#13;
so each day in the halls&#13;
with a certain lad from&#13;
Ponca, in spite of which&#13;
she always seems to have&#13;
her lessons. Few indeed&#13;
are there in school more&#13;
cheerful than Florence.&#13;
Her smile is the kind that&#13;
won't wash off. No girl&#13;
is better liked.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
A. NELSON&#13;
Wakefield, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE&#13;
&#13;
One whose studies do&#13;
not hinder her college education. Is shy and rather&#13;
quiet, but a&#13;
splendid&#13;
friend, when once that&#13;
friendship has been established. Was never supposed to think of boys but&#13;
leap year brings its revelations. Obliging yet firm.&#13;
A worker; earnest in Y.&#13;
W., diligent in society, enthusiastic in everything.&#13;
Precise, dignified, nice. A&#13;
Junior true blue.&#13;
&#13;
�EVA&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
RANDOLPH&#13;
LOTTIE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
Man or boy? Graduates from college at an&#13;
age when most of us do&#13;
from high school. Concomitant with the lengthening of his knee breeches,&#13;
his mind has broadened&#13;
since coming to Morningside. "Prit" has won his&#13;
honor "M" in baseball&#13;
and tackled the sturdiest&#13;
on the gridiron. To become an accomplished fusser and a legal light is his&#13;
ambition.&#13;
&#13;
SANDERS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Another of that jolly&#13;
crowd who come each&#13;
morning from the city. In&#13;
society, a tireless worker.&#13;
Eva does those little unseen things, and perhaps&#13;
the great ones, too, that&#13;
make the world go on.&#13;
Cheerful, optimistic, studious. An inspiration to&#13;
those who are honored&#13;
with her friendship, an aspiration to those who are&#13;
not.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
A Sioux City girl, classy, talented and winning.&#13;
One of those who make us&#13;
sit up and take notice,&#13;
whether before an audience, in the class room, or&#13;
in the parlor. She is a&#13;
royal hostess, and she has&#13;
often thrown open wid e the&#13;
doors of hospitality to the&#13;
young people of the school.&#13;
A n exceedingly clever&#13;
reader, a jolly friend, and&#13;
a brilliant student.&#13;
&#13;
ANNA RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
To speak of her uncomplimentarily would be falsehood. In Morningside is&#13;
not her equal. She studies&#13;
enough, enjoys life all day,&#13;
and never worries nor gets&#13;
peeved. Couldn't be snobbish if she tried, which she&#13;
never did. Anna is modest, unassummg, wholesome. Whoever meets her&#13;
is her ally thereafter, and&#13;
the richer for the possession of her friendship.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
RoREM&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
Home's in St. P aul,&#13;
1 i v e s in Morningside,&#13;
heart's in Florida. Prim&#13;
little Mabel. Was ever&#13;
one more exacting? "To&#13;
hear her sing, to hear her&#13;
sing, it is to hear the birds&#13;
in sprmg.&#13;
To see her&#13;
smile, to see her smile, it's&#13;
worth your while to go a&#13;
mile." Studious, serious,&#13;
fun-loving, religious. What&#13;
need of more to tell of any&#13;
one?&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
O ne hundred one&#13;
&#13;
M. SHUMAKER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL&#13;
&#13;
We are all aware that&#13;
Hazel lives in Morningside, for her home has ever&#13;
been open to us in our&#13;
frolics. A charming girl&#13;
with a smile for all. Last&#13;
year she acq uired a love&#13;
for history, and is now interested in the Hudson settlement. It does not take&#13;
much to keep some people&#13;
happy and Hazel is one&#13;
of these.&#13;
If optimism&#13;
were riches, she'd be a&#13;
millionaire.&#13;
&#13;
�D.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN E . WEDGEWOOD&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Quiet and seemingly reserved to those who do not&#13;
know her. Rather bashful, modest, conscientious&#13;
beyond reason. Takes her&#13;
time and does everything&#13;
well. Never forgets what&#13;
she learns. Always ready&#13;
to help one out of a difficulty and is full of really&#13;
helpful suggestions. She&#13;
likes to stand up and&#13;
thinks she has red hair.&#13;
&#13;
EDNA SIMON&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
A booster from the&#13;
word go.&#13;
Trustworthy,&#13;
energetic, capable, spirited&#13;
and to spare. She never&#13;
wastes time. Enthusiastic&#13;
in all her work. German&#13;
is her hobby. Has even&#13;
traveled and studied in&#13;
Germany. Edna is a girl&#13;
whose dignified bearing&#13;
commands respect and acquaintance means admiration. True clear through,&#13;
of marked personality, with&#13;
a strong will and determination.&#13;
&#13;
Avon, South Dakota&#13;
In stature, he reminds us&#13;
of some great men. Being&#13;
surpassingly tall, we call&#13;
him "Wick" for short.&#13;
There is no certainty as to&#13;
when he came to Morningside, but it is safe to&#13;
say he is an "old timer."&#13;
A business-like, earnest,&#13;
aggressive worker, a winner in athletics and ambitious in debate and oratory. Thinks twice before&#13;
he spea ks.&#13;
&#13;
SARA&#13;
&#13;
R. WHITEHOUSE&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
Sara is one of those&#13;
happy girls who is the life&#13;
of any company with&#13;
whom she happens to find&#13;
herself. With her ready&#13;
wit and contagious laughter, in school or out, she&#13;
keeps those near her in a&#13;
pleasant mood. Just now&#13;
a member of the Jolly&#13;
Bachelor Girls, although&#13;
it appears that her sojourn&#13;
there will not endure and&#13;
soon she will join the&#13;
ranks of the home-makers.&#13;
&#13;
INEZ&#13;
&#13;
L. WHITN EY&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
A quiet girl whose smile&#13;
is wonderously sweet and&#13;
whose speech is gentle,&#13;
pleasing. Her kindly nature has won her many&#13;
true and lasting friends,&#13;
which makes her one of&#13;
the jewels of old M. C.&#13;
She wears a far-away look&#13;
in her eyes and we Juniors&#13;
know her thoughts are&#13;
with her heart at Parsons&#13;
College. She simply must&#13;
finish this year.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred three&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY&#13;
&#13;
WINTERRINGER&#13;
&#13;
Oto&#13;
A football veteran, the&#13;
only Morningside captain&#13;
to serve for two years.&#13;
Has fussed more girls&#13;
than all the rest of the&#13;
boys collectively, and this&#13;
not from necessity but&#13;
from choice. "Hank" is&#13;
always jolly, yet ever serious; a firm friend, hates&#13;
deceit. A Biological major, with a surgical reputation. His athletic propensities are but a mask to&#13;
his wisdom.&#13;
&#13;
�LA&#13;
&#13;
V ANCHE M. Wooo&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
The jolliest, most carefree girl in school, yet sincere and constant. Has&#13;
adopted for her slogan,&#13;
"More men for Morningside," and lives it out to&#13;
the letter. Is blessed with&#13;
that library spirit so prevalent in a co-educational&#13;
institution. Likes to talk&#13;
to the football men. We&#13;
must say she is studious&#13;
for she is finishing in three&#13;
years.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
five&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
�.1..-·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
�Compared to the Morningside Class War the Turko-Italian War Sinks Into Insignificance&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
�The Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
T. C. STEPHENS&#13;
H . G. CAMPBELL&#13;
H. W. EWING&#13;
H. STILES&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
On the evening of February 3, 1912, there was a quiet gathering in the Biology&#13;
room and the organization of a Men's FacultyClub was perfected. M eetings are held&#13;
monthly and at each one some topic is presented by one of the members. These topics&#13;
pertain chiefly to observations and personal experiences in travel or to recent advances and&#13;
discoveries in the various departmental fields represented.&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
February 3, 1912- "German Universities" .. . .. . . . .. .. . .. .. . .. H. G. Campbell&#13;
March 2, 1912- "Egypt, the Land of Mystery" .. . . .. ...... . ... . .. A E. Craig&#13;
April 6, 1912- "Some Modern Educational Problems" .......... . .. E. A. Brown&#13;
May 4, 1912-"Racial Elements in the Population of the United States" S. L. Chandler&#13;
October 5, 191 2-"F&#13;
F orward Movements Since the Civil War" ..... . . F. E. Haynes&#13;
November 2, 1912-"The Parthenon" ... .. . . . .. ............ H. F. Kanthlener&#13;
November 30, 1912-"The&#13;
Electron Theory" ... . . ........ . . ... .. . . . H. Stiles&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
W. A&#13;
&#13;
J. H.&#13;
&#13;
M c CuRDY&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
H. G.&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
I. 0. H all&#13;
&#13;
Academy Reading Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
FRANCIS CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
The Young Women's Christian Association has long felt the need of some sort of&#13;
organization through which it could reach the Academy girls. In view of this fact a&#13;
Missionary Reading Circle has been organized. Already more than half of the Academy&#13;
girls are enrolled, nearly all of whom are also members of the Association. The work has&#13;
been put under the supervision of Miss Sarah Crowther, assisted by Miss Emma Klippel.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred t welve&#13;
&#13;
M ERTEN&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
A H. Brunelle&#13;
I. N. G abrielson&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
J. A Lewis&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
and Treasurer&#13;
E . C . M ead&#13;
C. W. Spry&#13;
· R. R. Vernon&#13;
C. E . Smith&#13;
&#13;
According to the constitution adopted last spring, the Oratorical Association is&#13;
composed of those persons of collegiate standing who have participated in a home&#13;
contest. The object of the Association is to further the oratorical interests of Morningside. It is a member of the State Oratorical Association.&#13;
Last year Morningside entered the Intercollegiate Peace Contest, and, represented&#13;
by Frank P. Johnson, took firs t place. J. G. Emerson, of Ames, who had previously&#13;
won over Mr. Johnson in the regular State Oratorical Contest, and who later won&#13;
the Inter-State Oratorical Contest which was held at Morningside, May 19, 1911,&#13;
was ranked second.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
�Prohibition Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
A. C. LEMON&#13;
M. 0. INSKO&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
"Moderation in all things," may be said to be the motto of the College Prohibition Association. Since its establishment in 1890, it has been one of Morningside's&#13;
important organizations, having survived the German Club and several locker clubs.&#13;
The primary purpose· of the Association is the study of the liquor problem from all&#13;
standpoints.&#13;
One of the chief functions of the Association is the conducting of the annual&#13;
Dewey Prize Oratorical Contest, so called in honor of Mr. Erwin Dewey of Sargeant&#13;
Bluffs, Iowa, the donor of the prizes of twenty-five dollars and fifteen dollars for first&#13;
and second places. This contest has always been one of Morningside's leading&#13;
forensic events, invariably comprising a number of strong orations arguing the urgency&#13;
of prohibiting the liquor traffic. The winners of the local contest representing Morningside in the state contest have twice won first place, twice second, and once third, having&#13;
also won once the inter-state and third place in the national contest. The work of&#13;
Morningside's orators in this department has been a strong factor in forming her&#13;
enviable reputation in forensics.&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
R. H. McVicKER&#13;
Secretary&#13;
J. A. LEWIS&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
D. L. WICK ENS&#13;
PROF. C. A. MARSH, Permanent Corresponding Secretary&#13;
The Debate League of Morningside College has entire charge of all the intersociety and inter-collegiate debates. It is composed of twelve members, chosen, three&#13;
from each of the men's collegiate literary societies and three from the faculty, making&#13;
a full representation of the interests of the school.&#13;
The League was organized in the fall of 1909, under the leadership of Professor&#13;
Eno, and it has proven to be the most satisfactory method of supervising the debating&#13;
affairs of the college. The officers are elected annually.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fourteen&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Glee Club was organized in 191 0 by Director 0 . A. Morse&#13;
of the Conservatory of Music, with a membership of sixteen. Activities of the first&#13;
season were confined to hard work in getting the raw voices into shape and giving&#13;
the home concert.&#13;
In the fall of 19 11, the membership was increased to twenty. The Club was&#13;
somewhat handicapped by a change in personnel, all but one of the first tenors being&#13;
new members. Concerts have been given at Alta; Rosalie, Nebraska; and Hinton.&#13;
Since the home concert the Club has been overwhelmed with requests for dates, and&#13;
have sung at numerous affairs in the city and at the college. Musical critics have&#13;
expressed the opinion that the Morningside Club will compare favorably with any in&#13;
the state, not excepting the one known as "The Best in the West."&#13;
&#13;
�Collegian Reporter Staff&#13;
Away back in those days when Morningside College was an experiment, still&#13;
a thing of the future, T . F. Warner, now of Twin Falls, Idaho, published a monthly&#13;
college paper. The first issue contained eighteen pages and many pictures of the&#13;
buildings of the Morningside to be. Its life was brief, however, and it expired in the&#13;
first gloomy days of the University of the Northwest. During the fall of 1896, the&#13;
Philomatheans instigated the publication of a college paper on the basis of a student&#13;
enterprise. Accordingly, Charles McCaffree was chosen editor of L' Echo, with P rofessor Stokes at the head of the management. Following Mr. McCaffree, W . L.&#13;
Harding edited the paper for three years with much success, changing the name to&#13;
Collegian Reporter and making it a weekly. T hen D. L. Young held the position&#13;
for a year. In 1902, C. L. Gilbert was elected editor, but having resigned on account&#13;
of illness, Miss Pearl Woodford filled the vacancy. The next year Mr. Gilbert was&#13;
again elected but served only two terms. R. G. Young did much towards giving the&#13;
paper vivacity and popularity during 1904. In 1905, J. W. Wunn wielded the editorial pen and D . F . Robbins was leader in college journalism during the winter and&#13;
spring of 1906. The next year the Reporter was improved under the superintendenc&#13;
of J. C. Bass. During 1907 and 1908, S. 0. Rorem brought the paper to an&#13;
unparalleled state of excellent. C. F. Cushman took his turn in the spring of 1909. In&#13;
1909 and 1910, G. W. Barrett edited a very creditable sheet. L. S. Anderson,&#13;
who served in this capacity in the fall of 191 0, resigned at the end of the second&#13;
semester, and since that time E. C. Warburton has held down the editorial chair.&#13;
&#13;
Band&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
CLOVIS&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Glen Garrett&#13;
Herman Lueder&#13;
Claude Cushing&#13;
Reuben Wallin&#13;
Donald Willhoit&#13;
Herbert Dunham&#13;
Lowell Brokaw&#13;
Harold Gorder&#13;
Jesse Dawson&#13;
Silas Braley&#13;
Carl Nelson&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
&#13;
Cornet&#13;
Cornet&#13;
Manager, Cornet&#13;
Alto&#13;
Alto&#13;
. Tenor&#13;
Trombone&#13;
Baritone&#13;
Snare Drum&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer, Bass Drum&#13;
Clarinet&#13;
Piccolo&#13;
&#13;
.A&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
�A Resume of MorningsideAnnuals&#13;
To the class of '02 belongs the honor of publishing the first Morningside Junior&#13;
Annual. The "Blue and White," which were then the College colors, made its appearance in the spring of '01, was edited by Miss Florence Cate, and was appropriately dedicated to President Wilson S. Lewis. It contained many ideas which have been faithfully&#13;
followed ever since and some that have never been surpassed. The class of '03, not to be&#13;
outdone, published the "Bumble Bee," dedicated to YOU and edited by D. M. Simpson. In 1903, the idea was abandoned as being too big an undertaking for the size of the&#13;
class. The following year the "Maroon" came out dedicated to Rev. Bennett Mitchell&#13;
and edited by G. J. Poppenheimer of '05. "Whoops of the Sioux" was next in line. It&#13;
was dedicated to the Alumni and edited by J. W. Kindig. Since that time the Morningside Year Book has appeared regularly each spring, always springing some new ideas&#13;
which have made it the "best ever." The "Sioux" '07 was dedicated to Miss Dimmitt&#13;
and edited by D. F. Robbins; the "Sioux" '08 was dedicated to Rev. J. B. Trimble&#13;
and edited by C. D. Horner; the "Sioux" '09, dedicated to Our Sioux City Friends,&#13;
was edited by A. G. Cushman. The class of '10 chose L. R. Chapman as their editor&#13;
and Professor F. H. Garver as the one most worthy of the dedication. The "Sioux"&#13;
'11 was dedicated to the new president, Luther Freeman, and L. S. Anderson wielded&#13;
the editorial pen. Last year F. G. Elwick superintended the work on the book which&#13;
was dedicated to our dean, Sidney L. Chandler.&#13;
Let this year's production speak for itself.&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
A. E.&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
eighteen&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
ERICKSON&#13;
&#13;
P resident&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Declaration: It is my purpose, if God permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
At a Bible Study Conference held at Mt. Hermon, Massachusetts, in July, 1886,&#13;
a movement was started to enlist men and women for C hristian work in foreign fields.&#13;
Out of eight thousand men and women who have gone as foreign missionaries for North&#13;
America, five thousand have been secured through the Student Volunteer Movement.&#13;
The Band at Morningside was started in 1902. At present the volunteers in foreign countries are: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trimble, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Carson, Estie&#13;
Boddy, Ida Lewis, Jennie Bridenbaugh, in China; C. F. Hartzell in South America;&#13;
C. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Taylor in Korea.&#13;
&#13;
"The world for Christ in this generation."&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
KENT&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninet een&#13;
&#13;
�Young Women's&#13;
&#13;
Christian&#13;
&#13;
Young Men's Christian Association Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
Association Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
W. A. M cCuRDY&#13;
I. 0. HALL&#13;
V. W. HoRNNEY&#13;
M . P. BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
PEARL WILSON&#13;
Joey CARTER&#13;
GRACE LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE NELSON&#13;
NELLIE UPHAM&#13;
RACH EL HOLM&#13;
SARAH CROWTHER&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
H. C. Pollock&#13;
H. G. Merten&#13;
I. 0. Hall&#13;
F. E. Burgess&#13;
&#13;
Social&#13;
Extension&#13;
Intercollegiate&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Mission&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
twen ty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
Bible Study&#13;
Extension&#13;
Social&#13;
Membership&#13;
Mission&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Personal Work&#13;
&#13;
�Personnel of the"M" Club&#13;
George B. Barrett-Baseball, '11&#13;
William W. Bass-Football, '09; Basketball, '12&#13;
Willard H. Bowker-Track, '11&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs-Baseball, '11&#13;
Barrett P. Dolliver-Football, '11&#13;
Paul Eiffert-Football, ' 11 ; Basketball, '12&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.-Football, '10, '11; Baseball, '11; Track, '11; Basketball, '12&#13;
Clifford Jory-Football, '1 0; Basketball, '11 , '12&#13;
Earl Knouse-Football, '11&#13;
Allan C. Lemon-Track, '1 0, '11&#13;
James H. Lewis-Football, '09, '11&#13;
William A. McCurdy-F ootball, '08, ' 10, '11 ; Baseball, '08, '09, '11&#13;
Guy D. McKinney-Football, '11&#13;
Vincent E. Montgomery-Track, '11 ; Basketball, '12&#13;
George W. Prichard-Baseball, '11&#13;
Robert E. Smylie-Football, '08, '09, '10, '11 ; Basketball, ' 10; Baseball, ' 10&#13;
Robert R. Vernon-Football, '11 .&#13;
Earl C. Warburton-Football, '11&#13;
D. Lawrence Wickens-Track, '10, '11&#13;
Henry Winterringer-Football, '08, '09, '10, '1 1&#13;
&#13;
One hun dred twenty-t w o&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wenty -t hr ee&#13;
&#13;
�MOVILLE GOSPEL TEAM&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
�Athenaeum&#13;
Organized November 14, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Light Blue and White&#13;
Motto-Utile dulce (The useful with the pleasing)&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE NELSON&#13;
&#13;
LOLA RAW&#13;
&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 2 7, 1911-Picnic at Floyd Monument.&#13;
May 22, 1911-Picnic at Riverside.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September 21, 1911-Presentation of Athenaeum Queen.&#13;
September 23, 1911-Wienie roast at North Ravine.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Taffy pull at Audree Davie's home.&#13;
September 26, 1911-Kid party at Doris Wood's home.&#13;
September 30, 1911-Track&#13;
meet; Ames, Drake, Iowa, Morningside.&#13;
October 7, 1911 -Progressive dinner ; Shumaker's, F rary's, Raw's, Webb's.&#13;
October 2 I , 1911 -Attic party, mock wedding.&#13;
October 30, 1911 -Annual banquet at the West.&#13;
November 13, 1911-Formal initiation.&#13;
November 25, 1911 -Reception for Philo debaters.&#13;
December 13, 1911-Tea&#13;
&#13;
for the ladies of the faculty.&#13;
&#13;
January 20, 1912- 0pen door by new girls.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�Organized October 14, 1892&#13;
Colors-Olive and Maroon&#13;
Motto-Vestigia nulla retrorsum (No stepping backward)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
HUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
M. P. BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
AC.&#13;
&#13;
CALEN DAR&#13;
April 29, 1911-Joint closed door with Athenaeums.&#13;
May 8, 191 1-Final of gold medal debates.&#13;
May 31, 1911-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September 16, 1911-"Get Acquainted" Stag for new men.&#13;
October 2, 1911-Joint closed door with Athenaeums.&#13;
November 9, 1911-Lost to lonians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 23, 1911-Won from Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
January 22, 1912-Debaters' open door.&#13;
January 29, 1912-Joint closed door with Athenaeums.&#13;
February 19, 1912-Eighth annual mock trial.&#13;
February 26, 1912-Second and third degrees administered.&#13;
March 11 , 1912-Bingville Bugle program.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
�Pieria&#13;
Organized October 4, 1908&#13;
Colors-Canary and Black&#13;
Motto-Feliciter, fortiter, fideliter (Happy, brave, faithful)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Vivian&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS TUTTLE&#13;
&#13;
McFARLAND&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE SEIFERT&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 29, 1911-Picnic at Talbot's Farm.&#13;
June 7, 1911 -Tea at Riverside.&#13;
June 12, 1911-Dinner to graduates at Riverside.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September, 23, 1911-Joint entertainment for new prospectives.&#13;
October 9, 1911&#13;
&#13;
Tramp party to South Ravine.&#13;
&#13;
October 26, 1911-Dinner at Josephine Herbst's home.&#13;
October 30, 1911-Banquet at the West.&#13;
November 4, 1911-lnitiation.&#13;
November 16, 1911-Reception to Ionian debaters.&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
1 1911 -Alumni party at Gladys Tuttle's home.&#13;
&#13;
December 14, 1911 -Annual Christmas party at Marguerite Shreiner' s.&#13;
February 14, 1912-Valentine tea to ladies of the faculty.&#13;
February 21, 1912- Washington's birthday party for lonians.&#13;
March 18, 1912-Joint party at Helen Giehm's home.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thir ty -one&#13;
&#13;
�Ionian&#13;
Organized January 6, 1909&#13;
Colors-Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
Motto- P ossunt quad credere possunt (They are able through faith)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
ROSCOE&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 30, 1911-Picnic at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 30, 1911-Reception for new fellows.&#13;
October 19, 1911 - Party for Pierias and new girls.&#13;
November 9, 1911-Won from Philos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 16, 1911 - Lost to Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
January 15, 1912-Bob ride for Pierias.&#13;
March 18, 1912- Joint party at Helen Giehm's home.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
One hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
KENT&#13;
&#13;
�Zetalethean&#13;
Organized November 11, 1897&#13;
Colors-Scarlet and Black&#13;
M otlo-Esse, quam videri&#13;
&#13;
(To be rather than to seem)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
EDNA RANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL ESTELLE SIMAN&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
GEORGIA WISEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 15 , 1911 - Zet annual "Hen P arty" at Cushman's.&#13;
May 15, 1911 - 0thos entertain Zets at breakfast.&#13;
May 2 7, 1911-Z&#13;
&#13;
et German program.&#13;
&#13;
May 30, 1911 - Picnic at Talbot Farm.&#13;
June 14, 1911 - Reunion.&#13;
September 19, 1911 - Reception for new girls.&#13;
October 9, 1911 -Tally-ho party.&#13;
October 14, 1911 - Pullman party.&#13;
October 23, 1911 - Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
October 28, 1911-Annual&#13;
January 12, 1912-Leap&#13;
&#13;
banquet at the W est.&#13;
year party at Lois Crouch's home.&#13;
&#13;
J anuary 29, 1912- Joint closed door with Othos.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thi rty -fi ve&#13;
&#13;
�Othonian&#13;
Organized November 7, 1891&#13;
Color-Royal Purple&#13;
M otto-Suaviter in modo, fortit er in re (Gentle in manner, resolute m deed)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
w. T ACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
D. P.&#13;
&#13;
MAHON EY&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
E. ELLISON&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 28, 1911 - Reception for Zets at Smylie's home.&#13;
May 24, 1911-Zet-Otho picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 14, 1911 - Reunion.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Annual Otho Stag.&#13;
October 23, 1911-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 16, 1911-W&#13;
November 2 3, 1911-Lost&#13;
&#13;
on from Ionians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
to Philos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
&#13;
January 29, 1912- Joint closed door with Zets.&#13;
February 16, 191 2- Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
�Organized February 12, 191 0&#13;
Colors-Champagne and Cho colate Brown&#13;
M Otto-Lovers of the B est&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
MARIE WEISE&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
CLARA CRUMMER&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
H E L EN OLMSTEAD&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 26, 1911-Arbor Day program on the campus.&#13;
May 1, 1911-May party for Senior Academy.&#13;
June 5, 1911-Senior picnic at Riverside.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Luncheon for new girls at Florence Long's home.&#13;
September 30, 1911 - Wienie roast in the gym.&#13;
October 13, 1911-Gypsy party.&#13;
October 20, 1911 - Progressive game party at Ruth French's home.&#13;
October 28, 1911 - Banquet at the West.&#13;
November 1, 1911 - Luncheon at Mary McCutchen' s home.&#13;
December 1, 1911-Chafing dish party at Nellie Fletcher's home.&#13;
December 9, 1911-Christmas tree.&#13;
February 1 7, 1912- Valentine party.&#13;
February 22, 1912- Dinner at Florence Long's home.&#13;
March 28, 1912- Dinner for Senior girls at Nellie Fletcher's home.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thrity-eight&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�Summary&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-one&#13;
&#13;
�ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-three&#13;
&#13;
�One hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred fo r ty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
�Organized February, . 1902&#13;
Colors- Olive Green and Whit e&#13;
Motto-To possess the aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
EDITH ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
VERA M c CRAC K E N&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
ALI C E THORNBERG&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1, 191 1-Aesthesian-Adelphian breakfast at South Ravine.&#13;
&#13;
May 27, 1911 -Roller skating party at Riverside.&#13;
September 12, 1911-Jap party at Lois Crouch's home.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Aesthesian-Adelphian hay rack ride.&#13;
September 30, 1911-Chafing dish party.&#13;
October 30, 1911-Aesthesian-Adelphian Hallowe' en Party at Renaissance Barn.&#13;
October 11 1911-lnitiation.&#13;
December 9, 1911-Reception to Adelphian debaters.&#13;
January 13, 1912-Leap year party.&#13;
&#13;
One hu ndred forty-s ix&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�. .,&#13;
&#13;
Organized November 4, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Cerise and Whit e&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Carpe&#13;
diem ( Sieze the opportunity)&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
GLEN WELLS&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
BERNARD BROWN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 19, 1911-Annual Adelphian-Aesthesian picnic.&#13;
June 3, 1911-- Annual Adelphian boat ride,&#13;
September 25, 1911-Annual Adelphian-Aesthesian hay rack ride.&#13;
December 8, 1911-Lost to Hawkeyes in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
January 19, 1912-Annual Adelphian banquet at the West.&#13;
January 29, 191 2-Adelphian bob ride.&#13;
February 2 7, 1912-lnitiation.&#13;
February 29, 1912-Skating 'party at the Half Moon.&#13;
March 11, 1912-Biennial open door.&#13;
&#13;
··&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty -e ight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
�Crescent&#13;
Organized November 2, 1900&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Nile Green and White&#13;
Motto-We succeed by doing&#13;
PRESID ENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
GRACE WALKES&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
EDNA HIMEBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
CORA DIETERICK&#13;
&#13;
CALEN DAR&#13;
March 13, 1911-Mock trial and spread.&#13;
April 1 7, 1911 - Joint closed door.&#13;
May 13, 1911 - Joint picnic at Riverside.&#13;
May 26, 1911-Picnic to North R avine.&#13;
&#13;
June 3, 1911 - Farewell party at Alice Klock's home.&#13;
September 18, 1911-Picnic at South R avine.&#13;
September 23, 19 11-Spread for new girls.&#13;
September 30, 1911 - A nnual reception to new Academy students.&#13;
November 11 , 1911 -Spread and taffy pull by new girls at Kitty Nurse's home.&#13;
January 20, 191 2-Bob ride and luncheon at Josephine W eisz's home.&#13;
&#13;
"&gt;'!).&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-on e&#13;
&#13;
�Organized September 2 7, I 899&#13;
Colors-Old Gold and Silver&#13;
Motto-Non palma sine pulvere (No victory without dust)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
HAROLD GORDER&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
E. L.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
B EN RIN ER&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
June 6, 1911-Final gold medal debates.&#13;
September I 8, 19 11 - Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
September 30, 191 I-Annual reception to new Academy students.&#13;
O ctober 28, 1911-Hallowe'en party at Haunted House.&#13;
December 8, 19 11-Won from Adelphians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
December 9, 1911 - Reception by Crescents.&#13;
J anuary 20, 1912- Bob party for Crescents.&#13;
February 19, 191 2-Annual banquet at the W est.&#13;
March 18, 1912-St. Patrick's Party.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty -t w o&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
�One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty -four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty -five&#13;
&#13;
�One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�1,&#13;
&#13;
G RAD UATES OF THE&#13;
&#13;
PRIMARY TRAINING COURSE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
six ty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
�College Traditions&#13;
&#13;
remember this and cleave to their traditions with&#13;
all the strength of their beings.&#13;
&#13;
FTER a college man is out in the world there is nothing concerning&#13;
which he is more sensitive than the matter of college traditions.&#13;
The increasing years from his alma mater increase their importance&#13;
to him and if he tells the truth about it he will say that no other&#13;
element in his college life, not excepting his studies, afforded him&#13;
so much lasting benefit as did the traditional atmosphere of his&#13;
college.&#13;
What are college traditions? They can not be defined. An&#13;
annual cane rush, the shape of a monogram, or the style of a junior's hat may give&#13;
expression to college tradition but they do not define it. To say that college tradition&#13;
is that body of customs, ideals and standards which is recognized in an institution from&#13;
year to year, is but a cold-blooded expression of it.&#13;
College tradition is much more than can be .put into words. It is the very heart&#13;
and life blood of the institution. College faculties may come and go, courses of study&#13;
may be modified with the progress of years, presidents may follow each other in succeeding administrations, the very buildings may be torn away to give place to more&#13;
modern structures, and the campus changed by the gardener, but the college itself, the&#13;
real alma mater of its graduates, lives as long as its traditions live.&#13;
Why do we think of Yale and Harvard in the same thought with the term "college"&#13;
and why do these institutions maintain their lead in the presence of many institutions of&#13;
vastly greater wealth and much more modern equipment? Tradition- simply tradition&#13;
- but a deep-seated, virile tradition that has made real men through centuries of American history. What keeps old William and Mary College alive in a region long since&#13;
deserted by American progress? Tradition-simply tradition-but a type of tradition&#13;
which lives deep rooted in the hearts of their sons and daughters and makes them equal&#13;
to the battle of life.&#13;
Morningside College is still in the golden age of tradition building-an age of&#13;
tremendous responsibility. Let her build wisely and well. Let her traditions represent&#13;
the best standards, the noblest ideals and the truest impulses of the human heart. Let&#13;
them partake of the exuberance and joy of youth, let them ring with the spirit of happiness, let them permeate the fun, the sport, the class room, and the social life of the college,&#13;
but above all let them make for the building of manhood and womanhood.&#13;
Traditions once formed are not to be lightly put aside. Their very endurance is&#13;
what makes them valuable, and the older they are the more revered they shall be, for it&#13;
is the traditions that live through the years that bind the alumni together in a common&#13;
bond and make them part of the college. Let the sons and daughters of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Some day, as old, gray-haired graduates,&#13;
we'll come back. Some day we'll revisit the&#13;
scenes of our youthful happiness. The buildings will be changed, the campus will be&#13;
changed, the faculty and students will be of&#13;
another generation and perhaps no face will&#13;
be known to us. But the traditions that we&#13;
helped to make, the traditions in which we&#13;
had a part, will be here and we'll know by&#13;
them that we are still a part of Morningside and&#13;
that the marks of the years can not entirely&#13;
sever our affiliation with the old college "in&#13;
the city on the Sioux.''&#13;
THE OLD GRADS&#13;
Once we felt that the very existence of&#13;
Morningside College depended chiefly on us,&#13;
and it was with a feeling of pity that we&#13;
thought of those who should come to her campus&#13;
after our departure and try to get along without our advice and supervision. Alas! are&#13;
we truly "atoms lost in the wide, wide world?"&#13;
Well, we may be atoms, but at least we&#13;
are not entirely lost to each other. A glance&#13;
through the list of alumni shows that from&#13;
Maine to California, from Canada to Florida,&#13;
in China, India, Korea and Hawaii, we are&#13;
represented. Our occupation may vary also.&#13;
Business men, teachers, lawyers, preachers, physicians, farmers, home-keepers, missionaries, librarians-we have them all among our number.&#13;
But regardless of occupation and location&#13;
one thing is certain,wherever an "Old Grad"&#13;
from Morningside resides. there is heard a good&#13;
word for the old school. Many a student of&#13;
today would not be at Morningside had not&#13;
some alumnus sung the praises of his alma&#13;
mater, inspiring his younger associates with a&#13;
desire for a Morningside College education.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
�HERE WE ARE BRIEFLY&#13;
BY CLASSES&#13;
&#13;
I 891 - The first class.&#13;
1893-Two is company, three is a&#13;
crowd.&#13;
1894-Noted for its harmony and unanimity of opinion. It now practices law-E. M. Corbett.&#13;
1895-A doctor and a preacher.&#13;
I 896-Contained the first girl graduate,&#13;
Dora Eisentraut.&#13;
1899-F our out of six are preachers.&#13;
1900- A double quartet.&#13;
190 ]- Noteworthy for the first class romance- Marsh-Reinhart.&#13;
1902-Published the first annual.&#13;
1903-The author of the spoonholder.&#13;
1904-The class that was too busy&#13;
spooning to publish an annual.&#13;
1905-Noted for "digging."&#13;
1906--"Doctor' s Chicks,"&#13;
otherwise&#13;
known as "the Sioux."&#13;
1907-Seven of its members have left&#13;
the United States.&#13;
1908-Few in numbers, but1909-Contained Morningside' s fi rs t winner of the State Oratorical&#13;
Contest.&#13;
1910Several renowned athletes.&#13;
1911-The largest yet.&#13;
&#13;
In Memory of the Departed&#13;
&#13;
To the students of today we send&#13;
greetings and hope you will stay by the&#13;
college till you join our ranks. Then,&#13;
old M. C.&#13;
"Hail to thee!&#13;
Thou hast been kind to us,&#13;
Ever shall we cherish for thee,&#13;
Thoughts of love and trus t."&#13;
&#13;
O n e hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
�when-" and Henry found himself whistling his own improvised tune again a rather&#13;
forlorn little tune, with a wavering trill at the end.&#13;
&#13;
"There was a Time"&#13;
JOSEPHINE H ERBST,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
H EN Henry Hogan heard of the G eneral's arrival, he wiped&#13;
his brushes on the edge of the tablecloth and packed his&#13;
sketches into a bundle. His wife, who was coming in from&#13;
the kitchen with the dinner, gave a faint cry of despair as&#13;
she saw the painted blur on the linen, but she tried to smile&#13;
as she rubbed the spot with her apron and listened to the&#13;
news her husband had received.&#13;
"The General's here," he said in his rough way and&#13;
went on packing up the sketches.&#13;
"Oh," said his wife.&#13;
"Oh!" echoed the husband. "Is that all you can think of to say? Oh! Well,&#13;
I suppose it would be too much to ask you to think of anything but tablecloths and potatoes and carpets."&#13;
Elsa said nothing, but she followed him to the door as he bolted out and stood&#13;
watching him as he puffed up the road, the sketches in his bulging pockets, making&#13;
his round and shapeless figure appear more round and shapeless than ever. She stood&#13;
there a long time. As Henry took the bend in the road he glanced back; probably the&#13;
consciousness of her eyes upon him made him turn, and he saw the blue of her dress&#13;
gleaming against the white door frame.&#13;
"Ugh," he grunted, "it's a wonder she'd waste so much time looking after me.&#13;
But perhaps it isn't me she's looking at. The chickens may be about to scratch up her&#13;
radishes or maybe she's watching for the grocer. But it isn't me, oh mercy no, not .me,"&#13;
and he shook his head gloomily. "Well, there was a time-," he began, then stopped&#13;
abruptly and patted the sketches in his pocket. But somehow that thought of the time&#13;
that had been kept repeating itself in his mind, even while he made his calculations as to&#13;
the General's probable purchase. The G eneral was a friend of a friend. " He will&#13;
buy your sketches," wrote Henry's friend. "He'll buy them, for he is made of money&#13;
and crazy about art." So Henry, as he plodded through the dust, found himself building airy castles on the foundation of this hope. It had been so long since his sketches&#13;
had found a sale. Why, it had been years! "Years and years and years," said Henry&#13;
soberly. A wagon came rumbling along the road, and Henry stepped out of the way&#13;
mechanically. "If I sell the sketches we will move nearer civilization," he thought, and&#13;
with that recurred to the old strain again, "There was a time. " He found himself&#13;
putting it to a tune, he found himself whistling the tune, he found himself&#13;
thinking thoughts that he was often too busy to remember, but that were always there.&#13;
He had planned big things once, why, Elsa had helped in the planning --but that was&#13;
before chickens and household tasks had usurped his claim. "Well, there was a time&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
O n e hundred sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
H e was in town now and he hurried as he saw the red brick of the hotel. His&#13;
shoulders straightened and his ·hand went down to his pocket where his sketches were&#13;
as he entered the hotel doors. He refused to admit to himself that he was nervous but&#13;
he fervently hoped that the General was not a big man, nor an imposing one. The&#13;
General was not a big man; he was little and shriveled and he wore a pair of black&#13;
rimmed eye glasses astride his narrow old nose. H e had snappy black eyes and his&#13;
mou th shut with a click after he had said, "Good morning," to H enry, who stood smiling&#13;
and trying to show how much at ease he was. It was the matter of a moment for the&#13;
General to turn rapidly from one sketch to another as Henry handed them to him. But&#13;
it seemed a long time to Henry, for it meant much to him whether the G eneral thought&#13;
these pictures good. It meant more than much- why, it meant everything. H enry had&#13;
felt of late that he was losing his grip, his confidence, and this success would mean&#13;
a return of the old hopes, such as he had had "that once upon a time" when Elsa had&#13;
planned with him for the future. He saw the General lay the sketches aside, one by one.&#13;
He felt cold, his hands were clammy, his lips twitched. Then suddenly the G eneral&#13;
picked up the last sketch, a little thing of a misty landscape and one swaying tree. ''I'll&#13;
take this," said he with a click of his teeth.&#13;
H enry hardly heard him. H e stared at the picture as if it were a new and&#13;
strange thing. Somehow the transaction was over and he got into the street. The&#13;
cool air striking his face and the jangling of the street cars aroused him. " I must think&#13;
this out, " he thought. "That picture was not mine-not mine. But if not mine, then&#13;
whose?" He tried to collect his thoughts and to recall how he had wrapped the&#13;
sketches together, but at first he could only remember that somehow a picture not created&#13;
by him had slipped in among the others- and had sold! Then at last, he recalled how&#13;
the news of the General's arrival had come to him; he remembered how he had stopped&#13;
his work, wiped his brushes, and pulling the sketches from the table drawer, had tied them&#13;
together. Among these had been the sketch that had sold. So much was clear. But&#13;
how did that sketch come to be among the others. · " I must think this out," said H enry,&#13;
but the suddenness of it had left him d azed and slow of thought. As he walked along&#13;
he once more reviewed the whole transaction but soon found himsel f back at the same old&#13;
place in his reasoning, and as much in the dark as ever. " I won't think of a thing until&#13;
I come to the next block, and then I'll reason it out. " The next block came and with&#13;
the crossing of the street car track, Henry took up his old line of thought. It seemed&#13;
clearer now. The whole affair seemed less like a d ream. "Let's look at this thing in&#13;
a common sense way," he argued to himsel f. "Now, that sketch wasn' t mine. So it&#13;
must have been somebody else's. But it was in my drawer. Well, I must have put it&#13;
there, along with my own. Of course-I see it now!" H e stopped and chuckled over&#13;
the simpleness of it all. "Why, I see it now-when I was at D ick's the other day,&#13;
looking over his sketches and showing him mine, I must have picked up one of his by&#13;
&#13;
�mistake when I went away. Why didn't I think of that before?"&#13;
the country now, the damp weeds swished about his ankles.&#13;
&#13;
He was out in&#13;
&#13;
But now that the mystery part had been figured out, he felt tired and old. After&#13;
all, the trip had meant nothing. His own sketches were still unsold. His pocket sagged&#13;
with them, he almost hated them as he glanced down at their bulk. Other people were&#13;
always lucky, why, Dick sold pictures all the time. He tried to whistle, but no sound&#13;
came at first, and when it did, it was the old, forlorn little tune with a wavering trill&#13;
at the end.&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL&#13;
&#13;
Estelle&#13;
&#13;
SIMAN,&#13;
&#13;
'12&#13;
&#13;
Fair Betsey Bell, from Camden town&#13;
Once to school went she.&#13;
It was not many a mile, I guess&#13;
A mile, but barely three.&#13;
&#13;
"Well," said Henry quietly, and looking up, saw that he was almost home; The&#13;
white house looked cool and peaceful among the trees. Behind, the hills rose quietly,&#13;
like prayers.&#13;
&#13;
She oh-ed and ah-ed in vocal strains,&#13;
She practiced many scales;&#13;
She counted ein, zwei, drei und vier,&#13;
And read old English tales.&#13;
&#13;
It was very still as he softly entered the house. The tablecloth that Henry had so&#13;
ruthlessly spoiled hung over a chair. There was dust on the nearby bookcase and the&#13;
scattered blossoms of some faded lilacs lay strewn upon the floor. Elsa was sitting at&#13;
the table, with her back to the door, but she rose hurriedly as she heard footsteps. There&#13;
was upon the table-Elsa threw her apron over it as she saw her husband.&#13;
&#13;
She learned of Alfred's Chronicle,&#13;
Of Saxon battles won,&#13;
How Beowulf the dragon killed&#13;
Without a sword or gun.&#13;
&#13;
But she was not quick enough. For in that instant Henry saw what lay upon the&#13;
table-brushes and paints-and a half finished sketch.&#13;
Then he knew.&#13;
As they stood there, facing each other, it all came fl.ashing to him, like a memory of&#13;
something long since past that had meanwhile been forgotten. All the years that they&#13;
had been misunderstanding each other seemed crowded into one brief, vivid moment. He&#13;
knew now. Oh, he saw it all. Long ago Elsa had loved to paint-but he had&#13;
thought she no longer cared .&#13;
&#13;
She spoke in French tres, tres bien,&#13;
And Latin, too, you see,&#13;
And in the Greek a line she knew,&#13;
A line, but barely three.&#13;
But then, alas! her wisdom ceased,&#13;
She did a foolish deed ;&#13;
Of all the lectures she had heard,&#13;
Not one did Betsy heed.&#13;
&#13;
"Elsa," he said quietly, and went over and lifted the apron from the sketch upon&#13;
the table. "I know, Elsa. I see it, all now. I've been so busy wishing for just your&#13;
sympathy that-well, I guess I had forgotten that time when we first began things&#13;
together. It's so long ago. Your sketch sold today and-and-I'm so glad, Elsa."&#13;
&#13;
She took a dish from out her desk,&#13;
Her bottle H N 03.&#13;
It was all concentrated strong,&#13;
Dilute it ought to be.&#13;
&#13;
He hung the apron he had taken from the table over a nearby chair. He handled&#13;
it very tenderly, for through his mind ran a tune, an old tune-"There Was a Time."&#13;
Elsa stood watching him. She tried to answer him but she could not. Her eyes&#13;
were too full of happiness for that. She went into the kitchen to put the kettle on for tea.&#13;
&#13;
Some H2 0 from tap she drew,&#13;
And straightway 'gan to pour&#13;
The water in the acid dish,&#13;
And she was seen no morel&#13;
Now maidens all, both large and small,&#13;
A moral here you read;&#13;
And if experiments you would do,&#13;
Please all directions heed.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
�quarterwe've had things coming our way this fall.&#13;
&#13;
Of course Wilson occasionally does&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
something for the Betas and Martin of the Deltas is a fair end but we've got three-&#13;
&#13;
D. L.&#13;
&#13;
WICKENS,&#13;
&#13;
'I 3&#13;
&#13;
fourths of the back field besides Doland in the line and that's enough to do as we please,&#13;
I guess.&#13;
&#13;
Just watch Sigma Xi win the game tomorrow."&#13;
&#13;
"We're getting sweet revenge for the lead they got on us in the rushing season,&#13;
A NOVEMBER afternoon two men were seated on a settee on&#13;
the campus of Marmouth college, discussing the final football game&#13;
of the season, to be played the following day with their old&#13;
rival, Brown.&#13;
&#13;
After a few minutes Coach Hardy, the older man,&#13;
&#13;
suddenly said, "The only thing I fear is the lack of team work.&#13;
We should never have lost so many of our games this season&#13;
had it not been · for the want of unity among the members of&#13;
the team."&#13;
The other man was Mason, the quarterback, who fairly&#13;
&#13;
aren't we, Earl?" put in Charlie Rollins.&#13;
When thus suddenly appealed to, Mason nodded, but, contrary to his custom in&#13;
football discussions, remained silent.&#13;
&#13;
was the general impression held by the student body, for during the whole season the&#13;
quarterback had not called their signals when they could appear to advantage.&#13;
was that not in accord with the time honored athletic doctrine of Sigma Xi?&#13;
&#13;
They agreed that a victory over Brown would turn the season into a&#13;
&#13;
success, as the other losses could be explained.&#13;
&#13;
house, a smile of approval and admiration ran over the face of the trainer as he again&#13;
noted the youth's perfection of form and litheness of figure.&#13;
&#13;
But within&#13;
&#13;
plunges off tackle as well as Martin's speed in going around end.&#13;
Just then a number of the alumni of the fraternity entered, announcing that they&#13;
had come down early to see the game.&#13;
&#13;
In a moment the members had arisen and were&#13;
&#13;
vigorously shaking hands as they greeted these old makers of tradition.&#13;
&#13;
As the two men separated and the qua·rterback walked away toward his fraternity&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
himself his keen football eye had not failed to recognize the terriffic force of Wilson's&#13;
&#13;
radiated enthusiasm over the prospects of the game but remained silent on the question&#13;
of team work.&#13;
&#13;
What the outspoken Sanford had .said in belittling&#13;
&#13;
the ability of Wilson and Martin might well be the judgment of a spectator, and in fact&#13;
&#13;
the new men followed.&#13;
&#13;
Introductions to&#13;
&#13;
When the group finally became reseated the conversation again&#13;
&#13;
turned to the dominant theme and eager question and answer passed back and forth.&#13;
&#13;
Often had he seen him&#13;
&#13;
The younger men related all the details of the season's games and the prospects for the&#13;
&#13;
dodge around end and outwit his opponents for a good gain or on the defense launch&#13;
&#13;
final contest, emphasizing the prominent part which Sigma Xi men were taking and&#13;
&#13;
himself through air to a runner's knees.&#13;
&#13;
He had ever had a genuine pride in coaching&#13;
&#13;
this man of great capacity although he had also been a kind of problem.&#13;
&#13;
As Mason&#13;
&#13;
referring with animation to the work of their quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
The old graduates frequently&#13;
&#13;
interrupted with the relation of some incident in games of years past.&#13;
&#13;
The younger men&#13;
&#13;
approached the entrance of the vine-clad chapter house, upon meeting Larry Sanford&#13;
&#13;
listened eagerly and even Mason ceased for a while to be the center of interest as Carl&#13;
&#13;
and several other fellow members, a number of joyous greetings came from the group on&#13;
&#13;
Ostrand, an old gridiron star and popular alumnus of the fraternity, told of the old times.&#13;
&#13;
recognizing their fraternity leader.&#13;
&#13;
As he noted the emphasis placed on fraternity interest, he remarked, "I used to talk&#13;
&#13;
At this, Coach Hardy's smile faded to a look of&#13;
&#13;
puzzlement as he turned and walked away, more conscious than ever that Marmouth's&#13;
&#13;
just as you boys' do now.&#13;
&#13;
greatest need was not to be supplied by good coaching.&#13;
&#13;
important thing in school, and although we considered ourselves loyal to Marmouth,&#13;
&#13;
The jolly bunch of fraternity men entered the parlor and while awaiting the call&#13;
&#13;
that part was secondary.&#13;
&#13;
In those days it seemed to me that old Sigma Xi was the most&#13;
There was a bunch of us who always chummed together and&#13;
&#13;
to dinner seated themselves on sofas and easy chairs and discussed the football game,&#13;
&#13;
worked together and we were the same on the athletic field.&#13;
&#13;
which was uppermost in all minds.&#13;
&#13;
whole left side of the line were Sigmas and we used to meet in this same room and&#13;
&#13;
Some tried to predict results by comparative scores&#13;
&#13;
but this resulted invariably in Brown's favor.&#13;
&#13;
The others were gathered around Mason,&#13;
&#13;
as usual, and talking of the personnel of the team.&#13;
&#13;
After a few slighting remarks about&#13;
&#13;
scheme out plays for our side.&#13;
of old Marmouth.&#13;
&#13;
In the fall of 1901 the&#13;
&#13;
Though I still love Sigma Xi, I have come to think more&#13;
&#13;
Of the men I meet only a few are of my fraternity but many are&#13;
&#13;
various players belonging to other fraternities, Larry Sanford, the self-appointed spokes-&#13;
&#13;
from the same old school and so I have grown to think of the old frat rather as only a part&#13;
&#13;
man, voiced the sentiments of the group by saying, "Best of all, though, Sigma Xi has&#13;
&#13;
of Marmouth."&#13;
&#13;
the most men on the team.&#13;
&#13;
idea.&#13;
&#13;
With Johnson at left half, Breen at full, and Earl here at&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seven ty&#13;
&#13;
The other fellows took this as a well meant but of course misconceived&#13;
&#13;
Who had ever heard of such a policy being practicable, especially during school&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
�life.&#13;
&#13;
So they indulged in a quiet smile and remained silent out of respect.&#13;
&#13;
But Mason&#13;
&#13;
had followed closely the old alumnus's line of thought and for some time remained sitting&#13;
with an unusually serious expression lighting up his keen eyes.&#13;
Dinner over, the men separated.&#13;
&#13;
That isn't the way you used to talk.&#13;
&#13;
through the game of the afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
He continued, passing group after group; the town&#13;
&#13;
seemed full of alumni and visitors, all bent on a good time and determined to win.&#13;
&#13;
At length Mason abruptly remarked, "I was surprised at what you said tonight&#13;
about disregarding frat interest.&#13;
&#13;
As&#13;
&#13;
the venerable man greeted him and hoped that he would have old Marmouth in his heart&#13;
&#13;
Although most of them went out to parties and&#13;
&#13;
balls, the quarterback and Ostrand chose to take a stroll on the campus.&#13;
&#13;
you might have more consistency.&#13;
&#13;
back he again thought of O strand, whose changed opinion he could not understand.&#13;
&#13;
he passed the Hall of Art he met the old white-haired college president and paused as&#13;
&#13;
It seems to me&#13;
&#13;
When he neared the chapter house a special train pulled up at the station and a senes&#13;
of yells announced the arrival of Brown's rooters.&#13;
Mason entered and had lain down to rest when a messenger boy hurried in and&#13;
&#13;
You know that for years the object of our frat&#13;
&#13;
members has been to work Sigma Xi and that the Betas and other frats have done the&#13;
&#13;
handed him a pink note which bore the seal of a friendly sorority.&#13;
&#13;
The missive closed&#13;
&#13;
That's what you taught us was proper when I was a Freshman and we've&#13;
&#13;
thus, "They say Brown is very strong, but you will win, of course.&#13;
&#13;
Remember that we&#13;
&#13;
as well as Sigma Xi shall be watching and thinking about you."&#13;
&#13;
On recognizing the&#13;
&#13;
same thing.&#13;
&#13;
practiced it and passed it on ever since."&#13;
&#13;
"I'll admit all that," replied Ostrand, "but since getting away from both fraternity&#13;
&#13;
familiar signature the quarterback breathed shortly and folded the note in some confusion&#13;
&#13;
and school and viewing them from a distance, things appear in a different light, and&#13;
&#13;
as Larry Sanford burst into the room announcing that another group of Sigma Xi alumni&#13;
&#13;
now I consider the fraternity differences of less account."&#13;
&#13;
had motored down to see the game and attend the annual fraternity dinner in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
"It may appear that way to you now, but I don't see it," returned Mason.&#13;
&#13;
"There&#13;
&#13;
As the hour for the game approached the crowd streamed down to the bleachers&#13;
&#13;
are a hundred old scores yet to be settled which we can never forget, and after nearly&#13;
&#13;
and when the teams ran out on the gridiron the vast amphitheater presented one solid&#13;
&#13;
four years at it I intend to play the game out.&#13;
&#13;
Why, I couldn't even respect myself, to&#13;
&#13;
say nothing of what the other fellows would think of a change of my colors."&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
front of the impatient throng rising tier above tier, while the roar of the cheering enthusiasts&#13;
became a succession of mighty surges, swelled by the blare of several bands.&#13;
&#13;
conversation continued in the same pointed and earnest manner, each arguing from a&#13;
&#13;
The two teams lined up opposite each other and from the first scrimmage it was&#13;
evident that each would go the limit.&#13;
&#13;
firm conviction.&#13;
When at last they returned to the chapter house the two parted, Ostrand going to&#13;
visit other friends and Mason to his room.&#13;
&#13;
The last sound he heard before falling&#13;
&#13;
The two elevens surged up and down the field,&#13;
&#13;
fighting for every inch of ground gained; but most of the play was in Marmouth' s territory, and at the last minute of the first half the Brown halfback secured a drop kick.&#13;
&#13;
asleep that night was the shouting of the Betas• as from the veranda of their house they&#13;
&#13;
The Brown division of the grand stand fairly rent the air with deafening shouts and the&#13;
&#13;
cheered the Beta members of the team, and as the voices of that detested group rang out&#13;
&#13;
cheering continued even after the half had closed.&#13;
&#13;
through the night, Mason settled the question in his mind by deciding that tomorrow's&#13;
game should count for old Sigma Xi.&#13;
&#13;
The team, too, had taken a brace.&#13;
&#13;
The next morning most people were stirring when the quarterback came down to&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
The second half opened with the Marmouth rooters cheering their team strongly.&#13;
&#13;
He scowled as he read the account in the morning paper which picked&#13;
&#13;
Brown to win again, both by reason of comparative scores and greater weight.&#13;
&#13;
Then he&#13;
&#13;
Breen was playing his old game at fullback and&#13;
&#13;
had repeatedly gone through the line; Johnson at left half was making consistent gains;&#13;
Mason himself had gained many yards and as usual was putting all his strength into the&#13;
game.&#13;
&#13;
But as the minutes of the last quarter were passing and the score stood 3 to O in&#13;
&#13;
recalled his conversation with Carl Ostrand the previous evening, and with a disturbed&#13;
&#13;
Brown's favor, Mason found his team on Brown's thirty yard line with the third down&#13;
&#13;
mind sauntered down toward the football field.&#13;
&#13;
left.&#13;
&#13;
Standing on the topmost row of seats in&#13;
&#13;
the stadium, he gazed contemplatively upon the white lined field below.&#13;
&#13;
He had played&#13;
&#13;
The superior weight of the opposing team was telling at last.&#13;
&#13;
T he forward pass&#13;
&#13;
had failed; Breen's assaults on the line were becoming ineffective; Johnson had already&#13;
&#13;
many a gruelling game there but through them all had never felt uneasy except from the&#13;
&#13;
been overworked with end runs, and Mason had wrenched his ankle.&#13;
&#13;
excitement of the play.&#13;
&#13;
quarterback heard the rooters on the tiers of seats cheering to a man in desperation for old&#13;
&#13;
But now he realized that he was about to play his last game&#13;
&#13;
and call those familiar signals for the last time.&#13;
&#13;
A feeling · of responsibility for his own&#13;
&#13;
conduct and for that of the team as a whole gradually came over him, and as he walked&#13;
&#13;
Marmouth. A moment of confusion swept his mind, then the truth of Ostrand's statement&#13;
suddenly flashed clear upon him.&#13;
&#13;
Quickly he turned and called the signal for Martin, the&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
In the pause the&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
sevent y -t h ree&#13;
&#13;
�Delta left end.&#13;
&#13;
Like a released animal, the unused man snapped the ball and skirted right&#13;
&#13;
end for a gain of fifteen yards. The fatigued team seemed fired with new spirit as they&#13;
sprang into position. Their quivering muscles flexed taut as steel.&#13;
&#13;
"N 56," shouted the&#13;
&#13;
EDNA SIMON,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
quarter, and Wilson, the Beta right half, plunged over left tackle for five yards more.&#13;
He had been used the least of the back field and was comparatively fresh.&#13;
players were alarmed.&#13;
&#13;
Again Martin swept around the end for a gain.&#13;
&#13;
cheers rang from the frenzied rooters.&#13;
&#13;
The goal was only four yards off.&#13;
&#13;
The Brown&#13;
Jetzt ist der Schnee schon fort,&#13;
Und alles wird nun gruen,&#13;
1hr fragt, wer kommt nun dort?&#13;
Ach ja, es ist der Fruehling.&#13;
&#13;
Deafening&#13;
Amidst a&#13;
&#13;
pandemonium of yells, Mason gave the ball to his old rival and Wilson went over for&#13;
the winning touchdown.&#13;
The crowd broke loose in thunderous tumult, and the wildest enthusiasm seized them&#13;
as they rushed en masse upon the field and carried the heroes off on their shoulders.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
"dope" had been upset, Brown had been defeated and Old Marmouth had won.&#13;
&#13;
Die Voegel im Baume singen,&#13;
Und bauen ihre Nester.&#13;
Vor F reude muss man springen,&#13;
Und wandern durch die Waelder.&#13;
&#13;
As&#13;
&#13;
Mason was carried through the crowd, congratulated on all sides, he saw Larry Sanford&#13;
Jetzt bluehen schoene Blumen,&#13;
Und herrlich glaenzt die Sonne,&#13;
Denn Sommer ist gekommen,&#13;
Und bringt uns viele Wonne.&#13;
&#13;
leading a group of Betas, Sigmas and Deltas in cheers for the various members of the&#13;
team, and no names were omitted.&#13;
him with a radiant face.&#13;
&#13;
Then he sighted big Carl Ostrand pressing toward&#13;
&#13;
With a quiet smile the quarter reached down to receive his&#13;
&#13;
friend's hand, gripped it hard and said nothing.&#13;
&#13;
So froehlich is die Welt.&#13;
Die Herrlichkeit zu sehen,&#13;
Es duftet das frische Feld,&#13;
Doch Sommer muss bald gehen.&#13;
&#13;
A Sonnet&#13;
H. G.&#13;
&#13;
MERTEN,&#13;
&#13;
Nun kuerzer wird der Tag,&#13;
Die Blaetter fallen herunter,&#13;
Einen T eppich von Gold wird gemacht,&#13;
Auf der Erde, gefaerbt und bunter.&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
The day is dark, chill blows the blast&#13;
Upon my poor, defenseless head,&#13;
Above the sky is overcast,&#13;
And at my feet the leaves lie dead .&#13;
The bare twigs whistle in the wind;&#13;
I hear no more the robin's trill.&#13;
The willow with the grapevine twined&#13;
Looms up before me black and still.&#13;
Yet what care I for cold and wind,&#13;
For darkened sky and prospect drear,&#13;
A joy wells up within my mind,&#13;
A gleam of hope, a flood of cheer.&#13;
I laugh to scorn the tempest's roar.&#13;
I rest in peace-exams are o' er.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
Wie schoen ist doch das Wetter,&#13;
Doch manchmal ist es kuehl,&#13;
N ach Schule muessen die Kinder.&#13;
Ein augenehmes Gefuehl&#13;
Die Wolken ziehen zusammen,&#13;
Der Schnee ueber alles liegt,&#13;
Nun kann man schlitten fahren,&#13;
Der Winter hat doch gesiegt.&#13;
Wie prachtvoll ist die Natur,&#13;
So wunderschoen und klar,&#13;
Wir freuen uns fortan,&#13;
Auch durch das ganze Jahr.&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
�RUTH&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
FRE N C H,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
TS AWFULLY good of you, Mae, to come and practice at my hour&#13;
today. It's pretty late to go down town at five-thirty in the winter.&#13;
If it gets too dark, I always turn on the gas. It does get a little&#13;
spooky here in the chapel after dark ."&#13;
The speaker, Elsie Benson, was a tall, dark-haired girl, whose&#13;
voice and manner betokened energy and spirit.&#13;
"Oh, I'll be all right," answered Mae, a girl so tiny that one wondered how she ever manipulated the big organ.&#13;
"Well, I'll work on these studies first," she said when she was alone. "I don't like&#13;
them, but maybe I'll get something I do like if I work on these."&#13;
She played along, quite lost in the piece. At last she looked up, "Oh, this isn't&#13;
bad, maybe it won't be so dark after all. I'll try that study over again . Professor&#13;
Lane said it could go better, and I suppose it could, so here goes."&#13;
Mae Ingoldsby had come to Breyton College, four months before, for the purpose&#13;
of studying music. Her organ work was a source of never-failing pleasure to her. It&#13;
was so fascinating to work out different combinations of stops, and to study the&#13;
qualities of the tones. Very often she was so rapt in her study that she forgot time&#13;
and everything.&#13;
At length she stopped and with a start she peered out into the chapel. "Goodness,&#13;
it's darker than Egypt here. I can't even see the balcony. Is someone standing in the&#13;
aisle? I-I'll-light the--gas." Casting a timid glance around her, a chill went&#13;
through her frame and she stopped. What if the chain on the fixture should turn into&#13;
an icy hand that would clasp hers and draw her up- and up? She sat there wide-eyed&#13;
and white. Some awful crouching monster was surely creeping around the organ desk.&#13;
Terrified and trembling, she gazed out into the darkness . Then her eyes fell on the&#13;
music. It diverted her thoughts, and noiselessly she turned the pages and began to play&#13;
very softly. The creatures of the dark slowly retreated, and she could look out into&#13;
the chapel without fear.&#13;
Her hands jerked · from the&#13;
Suddenly she heard, all around her, a moan.&#13;
keyboard, and she sat bolt upright, every nerve quivering. This was real. Great beads&#13;
of perspiration burst out on her forehead and were followed instantly by icy, creepy&#13;
sensations. Thoughts chased wildly through her brain. If someone would only come.&#13;
But she had not heard a footstep since her friend had left. There was only the awful&#13;
monster back of the organ, separated only by a frail partition of wood. She sat waiting&#13;
-waiting, but all was silent. Then suddenly she thought, "Maybe someone is trying&#13;
to scare me, well-" and with that, she began to play a piece which in the&#13;
farthest corner of the chapel was deafening, but back of the organ was positively ear-&#13;
&#13;
Recollections of an Ancient Freshman&#13;
"Rags"&#13;
&#13;
A youth once dreamed a stately dream&#13;
Of colleges, and books, and fame;&#13;
Of mighty undertakings, his to be,&#13;
When from the halls in full efficiency,&#13;
He'd tread a path of roses to the living world.&#13;
To be a builder of some mighty thing,&#13;
Perhaps of business 'mong the useful arts,&#13;
Perhaps through genius that he might possess&#13;
To win a name immortal in the hearts of men,&#13;
And make them servants at his very feet.&#13;
But, ah, the interim!&#13;
Dark is the night in which we dream&#13;
To wake and find ourselves again!&#13;
Dark is the night which breaks away&#13;
And leaves earth's objects as they are!&#13;
-At last he wakes and looks around.&#13;
Despair comes o'er him like the chill of death&#13;
And down he sinks with face upturned to Heaven,&#13;
"O God, have mercy," plead the fainting lips&#13;
And silence reigns ; the bold extreme is riven.&#13;
Now soon the light comes back and tho'ts arise&#13;
And truth bids him to realize,&#13;
He IS a builder of a mighty thing.&#13;
He is a servant to the needs of men&#13;
And wins a soul immortal in the eyes of God.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Onw hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
�splitting. "They won't try that on me again," she thought, and a little smile played&#13;
about her lips. It soon died and gave place to a look of terro r, for over the right side of&#13;
the organ desk two round white faces appeared . Too frightened to look either way, she&#13;
rivited her gaze on the music, her hands remaining on the keys, makin g one long, dea fening discord. She vaguely remembered tha t the piano had been pushed against the&#13;
left side of the organ. H er left hand shot up to the solitary electric light, and "snap,"&#13;
the room was in darkness. She dodged to escape an impact with the piano, darted under&#13;
it and leaped from the platform. A light flashed on, and she heard someone calling.&#13;
"Why, Miss Ingoldsby ! " Then she turned and looked into the startled fa ces of P rofessor Lane and Professor Ellsworth.&#13;
"We didn't mean to frighten you , Miss lngoldsby," said M r. L ane.&#13;
"Well-well-but-" and she stopped , bewildered, then suddenly added , " Who&#13;
was groaning back there?"&#13;
"Groaning! Where? " they exclaimed. " W e didn't hear a nything. W e just&#13;
came up to practice a piano and organ number for Mr. Ellsworth's recital tomorrow&#13;
night," explained Mr. Lane.&#13;
"Well, someone or something was there," stoutly affirmed M ae.&#13;
The professors looked mystified. "Did anybody come in while you were practicing?" asked Mr. Ellsworth.&#13;
"I didn't see anyone."&#13;
"Well, there was no one on the back stairway just now, and no one could possibly&#13;
get in any other way without your seeing them," reasoned Professor L ane.&#13;
"Well, that may be," answered Mae, "but nevertheless something or somebody was&#13;
groaning back there when I was practicing."&#13;
The professor started to reply, when a wail, like the agony of a lost soul, broke&#13;
upon their ears, so close that even the men started. Crossing the platform, Professor&#13;
Ellsworth opened the door of the organ. Like a fla sh, a huge gray cat raced out, cleared&#13;
the rostrum with a bound, and tore out of the room.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
J. E.&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS,&#13;
&#13;
Tale&#13;
'I 3&#13;
&#13;
Whylom, as olde stories tellen us,&#13;
Ther was a sete of wit, a scole of scoles.&#13;
The name of it y-highte Morningside,&#13;
And many oon dide com fro fer and wyd&#13;
Oon in a student bodi ones to be&#13;
That hadde swich spirit and swich loyaltee&#13;
That gretter was ther noon under the sonne.&#13;
Full many a noble victorie hadde she wonne.&#13;
And legende telleth in a neih contree&#13;
Was South Dacota Universitee,&#13;
A scole whos fame hadde goon thurh ute the lond,&#13;
Whos trecherie dide everich wight astond.&#13;
A pac of wolues they noi:i fayn wolde mokken&#13;
For which dide Morningside hem euer token.&#13;
And certes, if it nere to long to here&#13;
I wolde han told yow fully the manere,&#13;
How wonnen was the game of basket balle&#13;
By South Dacota, but thurh foules alle,&#13;
And of the grete bataille uppon the setes&#13;
Betwixen Holbert-and that hautein Sheeks,&#13;
And to, for feer and reyn, a base balle game&#13;
Was forfetede in South Oacota's name,&#13;
How oonli foot balle faire coud they winne,&#13;
But wher I lefte, I wol ageyn biginne.&#13;
The rivalrie was ful right merye kene&#13;
Bitwixen hem, as it is clere sene,&#13;
.&#13;
And so it cam to been, oon bright warm day&#13;
Whan halfe cours ye sonne y-ronne in May&#13;
This base balle teem of whom I make mencion&#13;
Fro S. D . U ., cam to Soo Citee toun.&#13;
For want of sturdi men folk it wolde seme&#13;
Thise same nine weren eek hir runninge teem.&#13;
And hennes, felinge naught but thair defait,&#13;
Thise hirelinges sekeden slie Ladye Fate.&#13;
And thus, by runninge swift, as was thair wone,&#13;
And chaunce of trecherie, as was thair bone,&#13;
They wonneden that ese cauardlik game,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
�A cut hadde made bifore his verray eyes.&#13;
But nou oon, "Rusty" Cobbs, cam up to batte,&#13;
Than turnede round and casteth of his hatte;&#13;
He strak at oon ful hard ; he strak at tweye;&#13;
The thride he hitte and stertede on his weye.&#13;
Than Ben they chere and nolde nevere stenten&#13;
Till he the battle dide chuse and ferme henten.&#13;
H e strak the balle and ran as if for lyf,&#13;
F orgetinge scole and game and hoom and wyf,&#13;
And everich persone fro his sete than sterte;&#13;
A home rinne made l The wolues lesede herte,&#13;
For after that they strak ute everichon,&#13;
With eche the same foreuer and anon,&#13;
And michenlik thos wolues goon bak to dwelle&#13;
Fro whennes they cam; ther is namore to telle.&#13;
&#13;
And bostede stroutingly his empti fame.&#13;
But whan at base balle than thair Fortune stake,&#13;
Lo, swich a cry and swich a wo they make,&#13;
That in this world nis creature livinge&#13;
That herde swich another waymentinge,&#13;
And glorie wonders heigh, in M orningside&#13;
Than sorede, and in South Dacota diede.&#13;
But this balle game of which I make mencious,&#13;
That makede al this lamentacioun&#13;
Dide Morningside biginne in sore tene,&#13;
And ladyes' corteisyes were al unsene.&#13;
Amonge Dacota hiles sank the sonne&#13;
Bifore the sturdi game scars hadde bigonne.&#13;
Tho wolues grennen, for in derk of night&#13;
Muche better is thair chaunce thanne in day light.&#13;
And so whan South Dacota cam to batte&#13;
The first time up, tweye scores quike they gatte;&#13;
The oon they gatte by hittinge hard the balle,&#13;
The other oon thurh W est, who lat it falle.&#13;
Than in the second inning oon cut mo&#13;
They makeden, nou thre mo thanne thair fo.&#13;
Big Ben than steppinge up dide rubbe erthe,&#13;
He grennede, and alle others stoppede mirthe;&#13;
Than saisede batte and strak right merye wee!,&#13;
Atrenne the balle, and lo, a score did stele.&#13;
But nou bothe teemes stoppede taillyinge&#13;
And ti! thre inninges nis a hoom-cominge.&#13;
Yet South Dacota doutelees this hem leste,&#13;
For it wolde seme they alle bigan to reste,&#13;
And verrailly al so the wonders Mee&#13;
Threw wyd the balle; it went fer to the lee,&#13;
And Culbertson a walk to first did tak.&#13;
The next strak Prit, and eche went on a sak.&#13;
Than Barrett swang his batte with swich a vese&#13;
That it made al the people for to rese.&#13;
The balle flew heigh and on the grund dide lihte&#13;
That ferrer wolde been ute of sight.&#13;
And than by runninge swift the score y-teyd&#13;
With ringinge cheres cler for Morningside.&#13;
And theruppon Prit swalen so with pryde&#13;
That for a wink he caste his glans asyde.&#13;
Alias, thos wolues, muche to his surpryse,&#13;
&#13;
The Journey&#13;
EDITH Bower,&#13;
&#13;
' 13&#13;
&#13;
D arkness drops over the river,&#13;
Velvety breezes blow,&#13;
The leaves of the maple trees quiver&#13;
As dreamily on we go.&#13;
&#13;
In and out among shadows,&#13;
M errily moonbeams play;&#13;
The darkness is brightened by star-eyes,&#13;
And gaily we go on our way.&#13;
Black clouds the heavens darken,&#13;
Star-eyes no more we see ;&#13;
With tongues stilled in terror we hearken,&#13;
F earfully hushed is our glee.&#13;
We hear the thunder's loud groaning,&#13;
No longer the soft winds blow;&#13;
The boughs of the forest are moaning,&#13;
As sadly onward we go.&#13;
But onward , still onward we' re gomg,&#13;
Even though shadows fal l.&#13;
Onward, still onward we're rowmg&#13;
In answer to Duty's call.&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
&#13;
Every Student&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
SCENE I&#13;
&#13;
Campus of any College at Sundown. Every Student, his room-mate, Contentment, meet Reason and Desire strolling. Contentment draws away from Every Student's&#13;
side.&#13;
Reason: What have you done?&#13;
Every Student: I have dismissed my old master, Ideals!&#13;
are you going?&#13;
Contentment:&#13;
&#13;
can remain no longer.&#13;
&#13;
Contentment!&#13;
&#13;
You must get a new room-mate.&#13;
&#13;
Where&#13;
&#13;
Enter Reproach&#13;
Every Student: Why are you here?&#13;
Reproach: You brought me here.&#13;
Reason: You know why he's coming. You should not have ceased to follow Ideals.&#13;
Desire: You were perfectly right in wanting to keep on the good side of Jollity.&#13;
He is a merry fellow.&#13;
Reason: He is not half as worthy as Ideals.&#13;
Every Student: I know, but I want to be friendly with both.&#13;
Desire: Sure, you would rather have a good time.&#13;
Reason: It's the wiser part to be true to Ideals, and it's impossible to follow both&#13;
of them. Go and tell Jollity that you utterly discard him.&#13;
Every Student: Yes, that would be best. I think I will.&#13;
&#13;
(Half Starts to follow Reason off the stage.&#13;
Enter Trivolity, with dancing curls and too red lips. )&#13;
T rivolity: Where are you going with such a serious face and why are you deserting our good friend Desire? Come, let's go walking, I have something so lovely to tell&#13;
you!&#13;
Yes, have one more good time, then you can go to Ideals.&#13;
&#13;
( Vice brings in tray with glasses)&#13;
&#13;
See&#13;
&#13;
he is commg.&#13;
&#13;
Desire:&#13;
&#13;
Jollity: This coy young Every Student,&#13;
Two years I've tried from him;&#13;
But he has been on goodness bent,&#13;
Considered me a whim.&#13;
Mirth: May fair Trivolity win him o'er&#13;
And bring him here tonight.&#13;
Jollity: Of old Ideals he'll think no more,&#13;
And we'll have won the fight.&#13;
Mirth (at right): I hear Trivolity coming now.&#13;
Jollity (at left)&#13;
Here, Vice, bring in the tray,&#13;
We'll have a downright jolly row&#13;
And drive all care away.&#13;
&#13;
He'll keep.&#13;
&#13;
Place it on the table here&#13;
And now bring forth the wine,&#13;
The wine of Joy to me most dear,&#13;
And champagnes dry and fine.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter D esire at right with Every Student and&#13;
&#13;
Trivolity)&#13;
&#13;
Welcome to ye, student friend,&#13;
Good old Desire and maiden fair.&#13;
Here's Mirth, who'll to your pleasure bend.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Frolic at right)&#13;
And here comes Frolic, who'll not spare&#13;
To give ye merriment the while.&#13;
&#13;
( Vice has arranged tables and goes out)&#13;
Frolic:&#13;
&#13;
Bright greetings to ye, people all.&#13;
(To Every Student) : Take care that ye do naught but smile&#13;
Or into dire disgrace ye'll fall.&#13;
Come, gay T rivolity, we must show&#13;
This student here a merry rout.&#13;
So all join hands and round we'll go,&#13;
With many a laugh and boisterous shout.&#13;
&#13;
(They dance around the table, Every Student between Trivolity&#13;
and Frolic. They stop and girls lead him to the front of the stage&#13;
and sing)&#13;
&#13;
(Exeunt).&#13;
SCENE II&#13;
&#13;
Room in the House of Jollity Door at right to outside, at left to inner apartment.&#13;
Table in center, sideboard with bottles at back.&#13;
Jollity and Mirth&#13;
Mirth: 'Tis queer to me, Sir Jollity,&#13;
How good to men appeals,&#13;
When they a friend with me may be&#13;
They'll cling to old Ideals.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Trivolity and Frolic : Oh, think you not we're maidens fair,&#13;
Maidens fair, maidens fair,&#13;
We've laughing eyes and golden hair, golden hair, golden hair,&#13;
Our love is sweet,&#13;
Oh, very sweet,&#13;
So come and drink with us, sir.&#13;
( They lead him to the table, give him a glass. All toast)&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-three&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Reason:&#13;
&#13;
Mirth: Oh, here's a toast to pleasure,&#13;
Whose we cannot measure !&#13;
&#13;
( Enter Ideals )&#13;
True Friendship: Yonder comes your master now. Come, let me lead you to him.&#13;
Every Student: I will go with you, then he will welcome me, for you are a&#13;
favorite of his. (To Ideals) : Can you forgive me for leaving you?&#13;
Ideals: Yes, but by your own efforts you must regain your lost ground. But&#13;
this will not be difficult, for see, when Shame and Reproach are leaving you, Contentment&#13;
&#13;
(As they drink R eason enters, standing behind Every Student)&#13;
T rivolity: And here's a draught to our gay old host,&#13;
And ne'er from him we'll' sever,&#13;
We'll serve him aye, whate'er the cost,&#13;
And be his own forever.&#13;
&#13;
is returning.&#13;
&#13;
(Reason whispers in ear of Every Student)&#13;
Frolic:&#13;
&#13;
It's the courageous thing to try to right the wrong you have done.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Contentment)&#13;
&#13;
Come, youth, drink.&#13;
&#13;
Every Student: Welcome, comrade. With you my friend, True Friendship my&#13;
adviser, Reason my tutor, and Ideals my master, my college life is almost ideal.&#13;
&#13;
(Every Student stands with glass untouched )&#13;
Mirth: Ha! ha! aren't afraid of a little glass, are you?&#13;
Every Student: No, it's the pledge- shall I give it?&#13;
Reason: No. You know it will but lead to your ruin.&#13;
Mirth: Nonsense, enjoy yourself. You live but once.&#13;
Frolic and T rivolity: Drink with us. Come-&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Reproach with True Friendship)&#13;
Reproach: Why did you come here? You are in a pleasant mix-up.&#13;
Every Student: W ell, don't remind me of it. It's too late to help matters now.&#13;
True Friendship (a beautiful girl with the freshness of morning): No, it isn't too&#13;
late. You have done wrong, but you can make a fresh start.&#13;
Reason: That is true. Leave this place at once.&#13;
True Friendship: Yes, come with me.&#13;
T rivolity: No, stay with us and have some fun.&#13;
Desire: Yes, this one time will do no harm.&#13;
Reason: No, you must not stay to drink the toast.&#13;
True Friendship: Come with me.&#13;
&#13;
a Lament&#13;
EDITH&#13;
&#13;
A feeling of sadness comes o'er me&#13;
As I enter the chapel door,&#13;
A feeling of sadness comes o'er me&#13;
I have never felt before.&#13;
&#13;
(He straightens up and goes out with her)&#13;
&#13;
I gaze at the empty platform,&#13;
And eyes are filled with tears,&#13;
I gaze at the empty platform,&#13;
And my heart is filled with fears.&#13;
&#13;
SCENE III&#13;
&#13;
Same as Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
Every Student, True Friendship, Reproach and Reason.&#13;
&#13;
True Friendship: Come, go back to Ideals, he will welcome you.&#13;
Reason: Yes, go, you know he is the only one who can fitly direct your life.&#13;
Reproach: Why did you leave your good old master in the first place?&#13;
&#13;
No more I see those faces&#13;
That I have loved so long,&#13;
No more I see those faces,&#13;
As I raise my voice in song.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Shame)&#13;
Shame:&#13;
&#13;
Yes, that was the meanest thing that you could have done.&#13;
&#13;
You dare&#13;
&#13;
not go back to Ideals.&#13;
Reason: You must go. He is generous, he will forgive you.&#13;
Shame: But you have acted so disgracefully, how can you face him.&#13;
Every Student: .I will not. I'll just go to the dogs. I'm a mere good-for-nothing.&#13;
&#13;
Where are the honored pedagogues ?&#13;
Will some one make reply?&#13;
They've turned their backs upon us&#13;
And descended from on high.&#13;
&#13;
(He starts off)&#13;
True Friendship (starting after him):&#13;
&#13;
You are not.&#13;
&#13;
You know very well that&#13;
&#13;
Ideals will welcome you.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
Bower, '1 3&#13;
&#13;
011 e hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
�CHAPTER I.&#13;
ELIZABETH ]AM ES,&#13;
&#13;
'I 5&#13;
&#13;
ICHARD CAMPBELL paced back and forth across the floor&#13;
of his room. Richard was furious.&#13;
" I tell you fellows, it's no use. I'll not stay here another&#13;
minute. I've been cooped up and treated like a two-year-old&#13;
baby just about long enough. I don't give a hang if I am the&#13;
Sophomore president whom those blasted Freshmen are trying to&#13;
kidnap. I don't give a hang about the class nor you nor- nor&#13;
anything-I'm going."&#13;
A hand was laid on his shoulder-the hand of his chum&#13;
Jack Arnold. "Oh come now, Dickie, don't get peevish. I realize that it's beastly luck&#13;
to have to stay in one room for three days and not be able to see Marjorie even once. But&#13;
think of your class, boy. Those beastly Freshmen out number us three to one and we&#13;
can't let you, our president, and the most glowing specimen of American manhood among&#13;
us, we cannot let you out for them to swoop down upon and batter up for life. It's the&#13;
class honor that's at stake, old fellow. It's beastly luck that Marjorie has a Freshman&#13;
brother, but since she has, Bright-eyes, you must be contented to stay at home."&#13;
"Oh dash Marjorie. It isn't her I want. It's air, freedom. 'Give me liberty or&#13;
give me death!' Never before did I appreciate the full meaning of that phrase."&#13;
But the six sturdy collegians who were barricading the door only grinned and&#13;
yawned spasmodically.&#13;
"Sorry, Sweet-heart, but it's no use," piped "Fatty."&#13;
"Yes, it is hard luck," cooed "Tubby" to his beloved meerschaum, " to get a brand&#13;
new case on a perfectly good looking young lady and then have it blotted out in the flower&#13;
of its youth simply because one happens to be president of the Sophomore class and one's&#13;
classmates won't let him be devoured by those relentless Freshmen. It is hard luck,&#13;
Dickie."&#13;
"Well, it isn't our fault that he's so popular," remarked another, "and he's got us&#13;
to comfort him in his misery."&#13;
"Yes, you're a heap of comfort, you are," growled Richard.&#13;
Richard was young, Richard was good looking, Richard was witty, and well, Richard was a college chap. H e was just the kind of a man to be popular, and he was popular, but this time his popularity had gotten him into a " dickens of a mess," as he styled it.&#13;
Yes, it was all very nice to be president of the class when all it meant was to preside at&#13;
the meetings, to be toastmaster at the banquet, to lead the grand march a t the "Prom,"&#13;
and such things.&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Oh yes, all that was very nice. But when it meant to be shut up in one room for&#13;
three days, to be pressed under the bed or behind the piano, or smothered with ·sofa pillows to represent a stationary couch whenever the least noise was heard; when it meant&#13;
to be kept away from one's best girl for three whole consecutive days-when it meant&#13;
these things, it was terrible. No, life as a Sophomore president certainly was no "bed of&#13;
roses.&#13;
And Richard vowed and declared that he would endure this isolation no longer.&#13;
What if the Freshmen did capture him for a while-it could be no worse than this, and&#13;
at least he would have a change of scenery. O f course there were but three days left until&#13;
the time agreed upon by the two classes would be up, but gee whiz, three days more in&#13;
one room, three days more without Marjorie ! N ever!&#13;
In the midst of his meditations the dinner bell rang and the fellows jumped up&#13;
joyously.&#13;
" Well, good-bye, old man, keep up your spirits. We' ll be back in half an hour&#13;
and bring you a peach of a dinner. Honest. Lock the door, fellows, bar it up so that&#13;
our worthy president won't be tempted. Well, happy dreams, old man-so-long."&#13;
And Richard H enry Campbell once more paced back and forth across the floor of&#13;
his room.&#13;
C HAPTER II.&#13;
FLORENCE MONTGOMERY,&#13;
&#13;
'I 4&#13;
&#13;
"Confound 'em! They did lock that door. Take that from me," and a six-inch&#13;
space of varnishless wood gave silent testimony to the wrathful venting of much pent-up&#13;
energy.&#13;
Then crossing to the window, he flung it wide open and leaned out. "What a night&#13;
this is going to be," he prophetically mused, as he aimlessly fired a perfectly straight ruler&#13;
down among the fast lengthening .shadows.&#13;
"Ou-ouch! I ain't done nothin' to you, Mars Dick, have I? "&#13;
"Why, 'Shifty,' you old black rascal, what are you skulking around down there for?&#13;
It's rather dangerous, don't you know it?"&#13;
Yessah, believes yuh, but I come to see yuh. Come down heah."&#13;
I&#13;
"Why, you see, 'Shifty,' the door's locked."&#13;
" T he door's locked? Why don' t yuh unlock it?"&#13;
"You are the biggest blockhead. I suppose I'll have to explain it all to you. You' re&#13;
an awful nuisance, don't you know it? "&#13;
During this tirade 'Shifty' had shinned up to the top of the silver maple and having wound his agile frame around the tip of the longest limb until he formed a veritable&#13;
human knot, was now cheerfully ensconced on what appeared to D ick to be nothing more&#13;
nor less than a gentle swaying breeze.&#13;
'Ts ready now for da 'splanation, M ars Dick," for thus did "Shifty," having enthroned Dick in his heart as an all-conquering hero to be humbly worshiped, constantly&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
�persist in addressing him. "I didn't heah what yuh was sayin' 'cept 'bout a blockhead.&#13;
My head do feel like a ruler yet, sah."&#13;
"Say, that'll do for you. If you utter another word, I'll laugh and f don't want&#13;
to. You understand, don't you? Keep still."&#13;
"Y assah, Mars Dick," floated meekly across the ten feet intervening between the&#13;
dark rocking mass and the stone window ledge of the dormitory, the latter now adorned by&#13;
a pair of dangling tan shoes.&#13;
"You see, it's like this. The F reshies are after me"-"Y assah, I " - "Shut up, I say. Don't interrupt me. I say the Freshies are after my scalp and my&#13;
affectionate friends want to save my hide by locking me up in my room. See?"&#13;
"Y assah, I knows it. I heared 'em talkin' and they said they was gwine to git yuh,&#13;
Mars Dick, and one of 'em had a awful long rope, 'cause I seen one end of it-they ain't&#13;
gwine to hang yuh, are they, Mars Dick?&#13;
I come to tell yuh 'bout 'em.&#13;
Don't let 'em&#13;
git yuh, Mars Dick, please."&#13;
"Well 'Shifty,' I'll have to give you credit for having some sense after all, but why&#13;
in thunder didn't you tell me that years ago?"&#13;
"Why, Mars Dick, how could I? Yuh kep' sayin' 'shut up, shut up.' "&#13;
"Sorry, 'Shifty,' but now, see here; all the Sophs in Kentucky couldn't save me&#13;
from those F reshies if I stay here, so I've got to migrate."&#13;
A few seconds thoughtful silence ensued, then Dick's voice, strangely calm, continued: "Say, 'Shifty,' did you ever have a girl?"&#13;
"Wha-at? Why, once, when yuh stopped that runaway, I stayed with Marjorie&#13;
but yuh was only gone 'bout ten minutes."&#13;
"Scoundrel! But, by George, I have it!"&#13;
"Suttenly, suh. I'll do it."&#13;
"Do what? I haven't told you anything to do yet."&#13;
"There's a ladder over behin' Mars Cratton' s barn."&#13;
"Say, you get out of that tree as fast as you can,-well-wait a minute until I tell&#13;
you what I want. Run your black legs off over to old T riedel' s style shop and give him a&#13;
note for me."&#13;
"Shuah, I will suh," eagerly.&#13;
"Well, you young idiot, come back here until I give you the note. If the old man&#13;
can't read it, you tell him I want a white coat, a hat with a willow plume, a pink silk&#13;
dress, long white gloves-big ones, tell him-I forgot to mention the size-tell him twelves&#13;
- a black wig, a pompadore one, you understand-come back here, I'm not through-a&#13;
black veil, one that drapes. Now shoot."&#13;
"Is that all, suh"-"Shoot, I say. Oh-come back here. Get a pair of pink silk hose and slippers, and&#13;
if you let anyone see you I'll ring your worthless neck. Go," and 'Shifty,' to put it&#13;
mildly, went.&#13;
Dick searched madly through his dresser drawers. "Blast it. What did Jack do&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
with that box of whitewash? Whew! It's hot. I've got to get that note to Marjorie&#13;
written by the time my clothes get here. Let me see. How shall I say it?"-DEAR MARJORIE:&#13;
&#13;
I'm in an awful scrape and I want you to help me out.&#13;
I've got forty-five minutes in which to make my escape from&#13;
this dormitory, and then I am coming to call on you. I'm a&#13;
friend from New York, Gwendolyn Halycott, a schoolmate&#13;
of yours at Vassar, you understand. Probably you will not&#13;
recognize me, that is, me, but if you will only welcome&#13;
Gwendolyn with open arms, that is, I mean, heartily, I shall&#13;
be indebted to you forever. I'll explain more later. In haste,&#13;
RICHARD.&#13;
&#13;
"There! I f " - "Mars Dick, Mars Dick, I' se heah."&#13;
CHAPTER III.&#13;
ALICE MowER, '1 3&#13;
&#13;
When Richard looked out in answer to the summons, he rubbed his eyes in bewilderment. Surely he was seeing a vision, and not an extremely ethical one at that, for&#13;
there was 'Shifty' torn, tattered, and soaked with mud and water.&#13;
"Oh, Mars Dick, Mars Dick, they did duck me in mos' powerful col' water, sah."&#13;
"Who, where, what have you been up to you hoodoo?"&#13;
"It's like this, Mars Dick, I saw that bunch of your awful bad enemies, with that&#13;
rope an' I just hung 'round 'till I grabbed it and run, but they catched me an' put me in&#13;
the lake all over, Mars Dick. I j.ust begged them not to hurt yuh, sah, but they said&#13;
they would do yuh up if they ever caught sight of yuh, Mars Dick."&#13;
"Never mind, 'Shifty,' perhaps they won't have the chance. Now, where's · the&#13;
clothes?"&#13;
"Heah, sah, I got 'em. All but the pink slippers, sah, number twelve. They is out&#13;
of style Mars T riedel said."&#13;
"Deuce take Triedel, but see here, 'Shifty,' you take this note around to Miss Vancott, and don't give it to anyone else. Understand?"&#13;
"Yas, sah; yas, sah, I's understan'. This little nigger ain't gwine to git yuh hung,&#13;
Mars Dick."&#13;
"And say, 'Shifty,' if you let Leonard see you, you needn't come back here," but&#13;
'Shifty' was too far away to hear.&#13;
Richard turned back into his room in high spirits which were only to be darkened.&#13;
What a blockhead he was! There he had sent 'Shifty' off and the bundle containing the&#13;
paraphernalia for his masquerade was lying below on the ground .&#13;
&#13;
On e h undred eig ht y -nine&#13;
&#13;
�"Now what shall I do. If that 'Shifty· · don't beat all I ever saw."&#13;
"Extra! Extra! All about the class scrap!" came floating in at the window.&#13;
Richard looked down upon his only chance of escape.&#13;
"Say Newsy, want to earn a nickle?"&#13;
"Sure. Want a paper?"&#13;
"No, but I'm locked up in this hole and if you will help me out you won't be sorry.&#13;
I'll-I'll buy a hundred papers!"&#13;
"Oh gee, I say now, do you mean all that talk?"&#13;
"Sure I do, if you will get that ladder-now here, where did 'Shifty' say that ladder&#13;
was?" and Richard ran his lingers swiftly through his hair.&#13;
While he was thus employed the thump of the ladder against the wall was heard.&#13;
He wasted no time in scrambling down it.&#13;
"There's your money, and keep this mum or you'll hear from me, see."&#13;
Seizing the precious bundle he mounted the ladder and at once began rapidly&#13;
dressing. As he· wrestled with the hooks up and down the back of the gown he surveyed himself in the mirror.&#13;
"Well, of all things. How will Marjorie take me-she probably won't take me at&#13;
all after this mix-up and it'll serve me right, too. That pompadour is on crooked, but&#13;
I can't find a hairpin."&#13;
At last removing all traces of his make-up from the room, he took one last look and&#13;
descended the ladder. But oh, alas, when half way down his feet got tangled some way&#13;
in his gown and his descent was sudden and anything but comfortable. Picking himself&#13;
up he straightened his hat and wig, and searched for his elaborate hand-bag. "There,&#13;
Dick Campbell, this is the last such escapade you're going to indulge in for one while."&#13;
Turning the corner, he beheld a group of fellows gesticulating and talking excitedly.&#13;
As he neared them he could faintly feel the excitement and beardLeonard Vancott say,&#13;
"The others won't be here for fifteen minutes and I'll run home and get Marj so fussed&#13;
that she'll tell all she knows. Say-I don't like to change the subject-but did any of&#13;
you fellows ever see a street gown like the one passing?"&#13;
Thankful that his dress reached the ground thus concealing his sturdy number nines,&#13;
but nevertheless fearful of recognition, Richard walked quickly · past the group.&#13;
''I'll wager you aren't polite enough to ask her if she would like a 'taxi,' said one.&#13;
"Just watch," and Leonard Vancott hastened after the disappearing figure. Hearing the approaching footsteps, Richard felt sure his identity had been discovered; even&#13;
when Vancott politely asked if he should call a taxi he wondered if he was being caught.&#13;
He was game, though, and with what he thought was a charming smile, assented and was&#13;
soon speeding down the avenue.&#13;
Returning to his convulsed comrades, Vancott described her as "not half bad," and&#13;
was on the point of starting for home when 'Shifty' put in an appearance.&#13;
"Now 'Shifty,' if you don't tell us where Dick Campbell is"-"Oh, but I mus' tell yuh that Miss Marjorie said that she be habin' a friend from&#13;
&#13;
Vas-sah to see hah and that yuh would like hah, sah," and 'Shifty' made his escap.e.&#13;
"Say, boys, we'll find that Soph and then have a celebration at Marjorie's and meet&#13;
the 'Vah-sah' girl. · What do you say?"&#13;
C HAPTER IV.&#13;
HAZEL ESTELLE SIMAN,&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Vancott was thinking. Marjorie had grown up in a college town and&#13;
as a consequence had helped many a student out of various escapades. Gypsy like little&#13;
Marjorie always had some bright plan stowed away, something that was sure to fit. But&#13;
here was an occasion that needed her greatest originality. Difficulties stood in the way of&#13;
every solution she could make as to how to dispose of Dick Campbell. Now he couldn't&#13;
be kept in the house for there was Leonard. Leonard was a Freshman and the only&#13;
youth that Marjorie had found whom she could not manage. But help Dick she must.&#13;
There were numberless young men from awestruck Freshmen to confident Seniors&#13;
as suitors at Marjorie's court. However, for the past few weeks the handsome young&#13;
Sophomore president had loomed large on the horizon and the others had become largely&#13;
background.&#13;
That was the reason Marjorie with her big dark eyes all perplexed and her little hands&#13;
tightly clasped was thinking. Suddenly with a little delighted cry she ran from the room.&#13;
She ordered the car, packed her bag, and had just hung up the 'phone receiver when the&#13;
"taxi" with its highly decorated occupant drew up before the door.&#13;
"Oh, Marjorie," began the vision in pink.&#13;
"Now, Dick, don't stop to say one word.&#13;
when I have time, now you do just as I say."&#13;
&#13;
Of course I'm glad to see you or will be&#13;
&#13;
"Always," from the gallant Dick.&#13;
"Run up in Len's room, take off those ridiculous things, find Len's brown suit and&#13;
auto coat. And Dick, hurry, because Len will be here any moment."&#13;
"Oh, I say, Marj," as Richard once more appeared at the foot of the stairs m&#13;
Leonard's somewhat snug fitting garments.&#13;
"You mustn't say anything, Dick," retorted Marjorie as she hastened out to the&#13;
machine, followed by the bewildered Dick. "Drive to Tallawunda, Wilson. Never mind&#13;
the speed limit-and Wilson, if you see Leonard turn around. It won't matter in which&#13;
direction, just turn."&#13;
And as Wilson needed no encouragement concerning . the disregard for the speed&#13;
laws, threw the machine into high and rolled down the drive. Marjorie leaned back in the&#13;
tonneau with a little sigh of satisfaction and relief.&#13;
"Might I venture to speak?" inquired Richard meekly. Of course where ignorance&#13;
is bliss-and it sure is in this case. Dick was master of the art.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred n in ety&#13;
&#13;
'12&#13;
&#13;
On e h und red&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
�"Now don't be silly or perhaps I won't carry out my plan. Dick Campbell, I have&#13;
kidnapped you!"&#13;
"Hooray!"&#13;
"Well, somebody had to do it. The question was whether it should be the Sophs,&#13;
F reshies, or myself. I decided."&#13;
"And blessings on you. I haven't the slightest idea what I'm in for, but I'm inclined to think I shall like it jolly well." Dick took a quick glance at the girl. "I repeat,&#13;
jolly well, and now if it is according to etiquette of kidnappers, might one inquire our destination? As I recall Tallawunda, it wouldn't make a very good stopping place. Does&#13;
not the population consist of the stationmaster and the blacksmith?"&#13;
"Oh, but we are going to the surrounding country. I have an uncle who lives on a&#13;
farm near there."&#13;
"Hurrah, I'm for the farm," rejoiced Dick, "but say, Marj, I'm afraid you are&#13;
bothering yourself too much with my predicament."&#13;
"I guess I'll be able to stand the strain," Marjorie answered lightly, but Richard&#13;
Henry, who was a wise youth, and who observed a bright red color flood the cheek near&#13;
him, made a resolution.&#13;
Meantime consternation reigned on the campus. The Freshmen were wild because&#13;
they couldn't locate Campbell. They had broken into his room but found no trace of him.&#13;
The Sophs were wilder when they found Dick gone and traces of a Freshman attack on&#13;
the room. Their natural conclusion was that the F reshies had him. For three days the&#13;
Freshmen and Sophomores, each darkly suspicioning the other, went gloomily about the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Even the anticipated pleasure of the Vassar girl had left them. Leonard informed&#13;
them that the girl had just stopped between trains and taken Marjorie on with her.&#13;
At the expiration of the three days, a group of agitated Sophs and F reshies were&#13;
standing near the campus gates, heatedly arguing. The Sophomores were demanding&#13;
Campbell, and the Freshmen were disclaiming any knowledge of his whereabouts.&#13;
"Well, by Jove,,,. exclaimed Jack Arnold, pointing to a boy and girl leisurely strolling up the street from the direction of the station. Everyone stared.&#13;
"Fine day, fellows," called Richard cooly as he passed.&#13;
"You can duck me for a duffer," growled Leonard in self-derision. "I might have&#13;
known Marj would have a hand in this."&#13;
"Cool!" puffed Fatty, "jumping gophers!"&#13;
And Richard Henry Campbell blessed the day he was elected Sophomore president, as the sparkle of the frat pin on Marjorie's blouse caught his eye.&#13;
&#13;
On e h u ndred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
�7-Friday. George Barrett appears on the scene of action. Everyone goes home for spring vacation.&#13;
&#13;
1-Monday.&#13;
&#13;
Snowed on Renaissance lilacs.&#13;
&#13;
2-T uesday. Iowa 7, Morningside 8. The "Ein, zwei"&#13;
story captivates the hearts and feet of boys.&#13;
&#13;
18-Tuesday. Everyone back with new Easter bonnet.&#13;
Bellevue 6, Morningside 8 .&#13;
&#13;
3-Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
19-Wednesday. Creighton 10, Morningside 0. Mass&#13;
meeting for debaters. Barrett calls at Cushman's.&#13;
&#13;
4-Thursday. Girls' mass meeting. Lulu Weary has a&#13;
picnic spraining her ankle and being carried home.&#13;
&#13;
20-Thursday. Barrett wakes roommate singing, "Oh,&#13;
Be Ye Reconciled."&#13;
Baby grand arrives at&#13;
Renaissance. Nebraska Wesleyan 10, Morningside 2.&#13;
21-Friday. Cotner 10, Morningside 9. Win debate&#13;
, from Upper Iowa here, they at Fayette.&#13;
&#13;
5-Friday. Song service at chapel. Robin Adair is a new&#13;
one at Morningside. Home meet-Sophs win.&#13;
6-Saturday. Inter-Scholastic meet in a storm of dust.&#13;
Cherokee High School wins.&#13;
&#13;
22-Saturday. Holiday under false pretenses.&#13;
23-Sunday. Weather pleasant. Many strollers.&#13;
24-Monday. Same old story, Vermillion 9, Morningside U.&#13;
2 5 -Tuesday. Spring in full sway. Many chapel seats&#13;
vacant on account of the fever.&#13;
26-Wednesday. Y. M. and Y. W. meetings-joint&#13;
stroll afterward.&#13;
27-Thursday. Faculty late to chapel. Students have one&#13;
of their own on the campus.&#13;
28-Friday. Girls' society day. Marguerite and Jean&#13;
hold weekly court under linden tree.&#13;
29-Saturday. Beat Vermillion in the rain, but they&#13;
wouldn't admit it.&#13;
30-Sunday. Riverside roller rink opens. W arby rejoices.&#13;
&#13;
7-Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
Chapel visitor calls at Conservatory.&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club sings at Sargeant Bluffs.&#13;
&#13;
8-Monday. Ravine breakfasts and early morning strolls&#13;
to the monument.&#13;
9-Tuesday. Mass meeting to boost for the Inter-State&#13;
Oratorical Contest. W aymack urges girls to speak&#13;
up and 'spress themselves with no avail.&#13;
10-Wednesday.&#13;
Widow.&#13;
&#13;
Kanthlener and Doxee go to Merry&#13;
&#13;
11Thursday. Peifer and Vennick stage a little pugilistic&#13;
combat in German class.&#13;
12-Friday. Johnson wins state Peace Contest at Pella.&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan 2, Morningside 5.&#13;
13-Saturday. Meet Vermillion in track with variations.&#13;
Also baseball, Vermillion 4, Morningside 5.&#13;
14-Sunday. More strollers.&#13;
15-Monday. St. Thomas 5, Morningside 8.&#13;
risk double cuts and go on a picnic.&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
�16 -Tuesday. Boost for Inter-State Contest again . Junior&#13;
class in elocution speak pieces.&#13;
17-Wednesday. Still boosting the Inter-State Contest.&#13;
Happen to think we beat Ames at the Peace Contest and yell for it.&#13;
18-Thursday. Women's Clubs inspect the College with&#13;
the assistance of the dignified Seniors.&#13;
19- F riday. Give luncheon to hungry Inter-State delegates. Iowa wins the contest. Morningside wins the&#13;
state meet at Grinnell. Midnight parade in full&#13;
evening dress.&#13;
20-Saturday. Half holiday. Rains on the bonfire. Celebrate in chapel with candy and tin. pans.&#13;
21-Sunday. Rain! Sure, we all had dates for a stroll.&#13;
22-Monday. White rats entertain in Biology Lab.&#13;
23-T uesday. "Sioux" out. Annual board missing.&#13;
24-Wednesday. Otho breakfast in South Ravine at 4: 1S.&#13;
Who stayed till 2 o'clock?&#13;
25-Thursday. Girls' banquet. Rev. Wasser caught&#13;
peeking in the window with the· rest of the boys.&#13;
26-F riday. "Pat" gets the measles-Bill F. fumigates.&#13;
2 7-Saturday. Missouri Valley meet at Des Moines.&#13;
Morningside 1 point.&#13;
28-Sunday. Barrett Delliver takes a girl to the monument.&#13;
29-Monday. Lots of picnics. Prof. Rigby and Miss&#13;
Anderson get reputation as chaperones.&#13;
30-Tuesday. More picnics. Bill Farnham and Evangeline Stone hold revival meeting at Crystal Lake.&#13;
31 - Wednesday. Philo Up-River Trip. · Miss Hinde&#13;
falls in--!&#13;
&#13;
1- Thursday. Convalescence from picnics. Sunburns and&#13;
blisters much in evidence. Cub calls at Renaissance.&#13;
2-Friday. Seniors gone but not forgotten by Juniors.&#13;
Cub wishes he were a Senior.&#13;
3-Saturday. Zets and Othos display new furniture at a&#13;
reception. Pearl Wilson and Gladys Fitch get lost&#13;
on way to a house party.&#13;
4-Sunday. Rachel Holm goes home to Norfolk by mistake. Cub calls again.&#13;
S-Monday. Ionian open door. Dolly took another girl.&#13;
Cub, etc., go to Crystal Lake.&#13;
6-T uesday. Parties at Riverside. Cub plays tennis at&#13;
Renaissance.&#13;
7-Wednesday. Girls' mass meeting. Alice Anderson&#13;
springs a diamond.&#13;
8 -Thursday. Exams begin. Miss Loveland serves hers&#13;
with lemonade accompaniment in the basement.&#13;
9- F riday. Normal graduation. Francis Horn comes to&#13;
school with a diamond and Frosty.&#13;
10-Saturday. Juniors decorate. Laura Cushman has a&#13;
new ring.&#13;
11-Sunday. Bacculaureate Sermon. Dolly takes two girls&#13;
to the monument.&#13;
12-Monday. Mahoney president of student body. Lesson in parliamentary law. Academy graduation.&#13;
13-Tuesday. Senior class play. Seniors beat F acuity at&#13;
baseball.&#13;
14-Wednesday. Farewell mass meeting. Bean shower repeated by Freshmen. Society reunions.&#13;
1S- Thursday. College graduation. Bishop McIntyre&#13;
speaks. Everybody makes mad rush for trains.&#13;
&#13;
�The Designing, Grouping, Lettering&#13;
Etchingsand all Photographic Work&#13;
of the Classes and Societies&#13;
found in this Annual, originated at and came&#13;
from the&#13;
&#13;
We have the skill and experiencewith every working facility&#13;
necessary to give the collegeprompt serviceand&#13;
refinedwork at moderate prices&#13;
&#13;
�Our New Daylight Factory&#13;
The Largest Factory, employing the Largest number&#13;
of people in the city&#13;
&#13;
Home of&#13;
&#13;
Home of&#13;
&#13;
Johnson's&#13;
Biscuits&#13;
&#13;
Johnson's&#13;
Candies&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Company&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
PHONES: Auto 1196, Bell 24 1.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago Dye and Cleaning Works&#13;
French Dry Cleaning a Specialty. Repairing,&#13;
Pressing and Tailoring Neatly Done. Goods&#13;
Called for and Delivered to any part of City.&#13;
Main O ffice, Swasey Block&#13;
823 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
311 Virginia S t .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A u to P h o n e 28 15&#13;
Bell P ho ne 433&#13;
&#13;
IOWA CEMENT BRICK CO.&#13;
C ONT RACTORS FOR&#13;
&#13;
ALL KINDS OF CEMENT WORK&#13;
J.M. Smith, Manager&#13;
&#13;
M A NUFACTUR E R S O F&#13;
&#13;
HOLLOW CEMENT BUILDING BLOCKS&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�The Morningside&#13;
Printing Co.&#13;
12-Tuesday.&#13;
&#13;
Publishers of "The Leader"&#13;
&#13;
THE POPULAR COLLEGE BOOK STORE&#13;
Headquarters for Students' Supplies&#13;
Try our high grade printing when you want&#13;
anything in the line of Programs, Menus&#13;
or Calling Cards.&#13;
Let us furnish your wants in Books and&#13;
School Supplies.&#13;
We cater to the student trade.&#13;
Honesty is our policy.&#13;
&#13;
Don't forget the place&#13;
&#13;
Just north of the Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
L. F. &amp; C. E. EVANS, Proprietors&#13;
3631 Peters Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Pb.one 6211&#13;
&#13;
coach.&#13;
&#13;
Registration.&#13;
&#13;
Girls all look&#13;
&#13;
for new&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Wednesday trouble with the registrar.Girls&#13;
, More&#13;
.&#13;
discover coach is married and stare at his wife.&#13;
14-Thursday. College breaks out on some Freshmen.&#13;
Bill wholesales chapel seats.&#13;
Epworth League&#13;
social. Jory sees Hazel.&#13;
Jory calls assisted by Warburton.&#13;
15 Friday&#13;
·&#13;
l 6-Saturday. Y. W. C. A. receives new girls at Renaissance.&#13;
.&#13;
1 7-Sunday. M atriculation sermon. Freshmen use their&#13;
dictionaries.&#13;
18-Monday. Lafe Young speaks in chapel. T . 0. T.&#13;
S. parade. Quarny leaves school and girls wear an&#13;
extra handkerchief.&#13;
19 -Tuesday. Some misdirected Freshmen go to chapel.&#13;
20-Wednesday. Conference in G race Church. K ent begins to behave.&#13;
2 1-Thursday. Big day at the fair. Kent ordamed elder.&#13;
22-Friday.&#13;
Freshmen attend conference and write&#13;
strange, wierd themes.&#13;
23-Saturday.&#13;
Football with Cherokee High School.&#13;
Knockers get out their hammers.&#13;
24-Sunday. Conference in full sway. Students entertain the home preacher and go to church four times.&#13;
25- Monday. Boys' societies show girls how to rope in&#13;
new members.&#13;
26- T uesday. Football mass meeting. John Briggs makes&#13;
a spiel and appears at practice.&#13;
27-Wednesday. Girls watch football practice. John&#13;
Briggs does not appear.&#13;
28-Thursday. Champ Clark lectures in G race C hurch.&#13;
29-Friday. M ass meeting for the band. Prof. Morse&#13;
praises "Every Little Movement."&#13;
30-Saturday. Chapel seats assigned.&#13;
Freshmen find&#13;
they have been sold-the wrong seat.&#13;
13 -&#13;
&#13;
�How often have&#13;
you heard it said....&#13;
&#13;
1-Sunday. Cora McKellip back on a visit· -Cub rejoices.&#13;
2-Monday. Girls rush new ones hard. Last chance.&#13;
3-Tuesday. .New rushing compact in force . No pri·&#13;
vate rushmg.&#13;
4-Wednesday. Junior class meets. Mitchell Briggs&#13;
elected president. Freshmen meet.&#13;
5-Tuesday.Girls' mass meeting. Sophomores meet.&#13;
6-F nday. Senior meeting. Freshmen meet again. F aculty tea for Mrs. Craig.&#13;
7-Saturday. Bellevue 0, Morningside 15. Lueder and&#13;
Johnson entertain their Cherokee girls.&#13;
8-Sunday. Lueder and Johnson entertain their Morningside girls.&#13;
9-Monday. Freshmen and Sophs sharpen weapons.&#13;
I 0- T uesday. Freshman meeting. Sophomore meeting.&#13;
Sophs give Freshman boys free auto ride.&#13;
I I - Wednesday.&#13;
Class scrap.&#13;
Sophomore girls distinguish themselves.&#13;
12 - Thursday. Mass meeting. Dolly tells a story. Si&#13;
leads the yells.&#13;
I 3- F riday.&#13;
F acuity reception at Renaissance. Who&#13;
stole the cakes-?&#13;
14- Saturday. Iowa 11, Morningside 5. Freshmen have&#13;
picnic and boys get lost.&#13;
15-Sunday. Missing boys turn up. They had wandered into a moving picture show by mistake.&#13;
&#13;
"When I Want Anything Good,&#13;
I Go To&#13;
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After the · Programs, Entertainments and Athletic Games, the&#13;
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16-Monday. Prom invitations out.&#13;
·&#13;
1 7-Tuesday. Big excitement! Some girls get dates for&#13;
the prom.&#13;
18-Wednesday. Mass meeting. Freewill offering for&#13;
football equipment.&#13;
19-Thursday. More dates made for the prom.&#13;
20-Friday. Jean and Bill go walking.&#13;
21-Saturday. Rapid City School of Mines 3, Morningside 17.&#13;
22-Sunday. Ead's "At home" it would seem.&#13;
23-Monday. Zet-Otho Prom-wailing and gnashing of&#13;
teeth. Chocolate Soldier. Orpheum party.&#13;
24-Tuesday. One of the Orpheum acts suppressed.&#13;
Who looked "dashed?"&#13;
25-Wednesday. Gadski concert at Auditorium.&#13;
26-Thursday. Mahoney visits brewery and buys hops.&#13;
What for, we ask. We don't know, we answer.&#13;
27-Friday.&#13;
Ruth Rieke and Harry Bigglestone find each&#13;
other.&#13;
28-Saturday. Creighton 8, Morningside 6. Girls go&#13;
from banquets at the West to meet boys and are&#13;
not recognized.&#13;
29-Sunday. Johnnie Fair entertains at a sacred concert.&#13;
30-Monday.&#13;
Academy parties.&#13;
Hallowe' en stunts.&#13;
Everybody in by ten.&#13;
31-Tuesday. Girls spring Hall owe' en parties.&#13;
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1-Wednesday. Everyo_e recovers from Hallowe' en&#13;
n&#13;
dangers.&#13;
2-Thursday. Tommy James watches football practice,&#13;
yells for scrubs-and Paul Corner.&#13;
3-F riday. Election returns of girls' societies. Scrubs&#13;
play Onawa. F acuity reception. Dolly cusses.&#13;
4-Saturday. Des Moines 0, Morningside 30. Sweet&#13;
revenge.&#13;
5-Sunday. Warby calls up the third girl before he can&#13;
get a date.&#13;
6-Monday. Ionian Open Door. Many surprising couples happen.&#13;
7-Tuesday. Parnell manicures his nails in philosophy&#13;
class.&#13;
8-Wednesday. Boys and girls disentangle themselves&#13;
and have separate mass meetings. Boys late to&#13;
classes.&#13;
9-Thursday. Ionian-Philo Debate. Some plaster falls.&#13;
I 0-Friday. Prof. MacBride of Iowa City says night&#13;
air won't hurt any girl (male applause)-provided&#13;
she's asleep. Mid-semester exams.&#13;
11-Saturday. Blizzard. Party at Marguerite Shreiner's.&#13;
College floors are oiled. Prof. Stiles found asleep&#13;
in the library.&#13;
12-Sunday. Football boys show symptoms of typhoid.&#13;
Oil soaks into floors.&#13;
13-Monday. Boys, etc., go skating in the halls.&#13;
14-Tuesday. Floors are very slick. Susan Eads and&#13;
Rev. Sjoding fall down stairs.&#13;
15-Wednesday. Mrs. Carroll talks to girls in chapel.&#13;
Where was Holbert?&#13;
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IT HAS NEARLY $24,000,000 LOANED ON&#13;
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College Men Wanted for Agents&#13;
W. M . MCKERCHER, General Agent&#13;
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IF You WANT To D EAL WITH A&#13;
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There's a Reason&#13;
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16-Thursday. Otho-Ionian Debate. Much more plaster&#13;
falls.&#13;
17-Friday. Dr. Shaw speaks in chapel.&#13;
18-Saturday.&#13;
Dr. Headland speaks in chapel. Boys&#13;
imitate his linger movement. St. Joseph 0, Morningside 5.&#13;
19-Sunday. Warby calls up the fourth girl before he&#13;
gets a date.&#13;
20-Monday. Mike and Grace begin to take their evening constitutional.&#13;
21-Tuesday. Mahoney, Hall and Bowker caught manicuring their nails in philosophy class.&#13;
22-Wednesday. Susan and Killy cut chapel and go&#13;
walking.&#13;
23-Thursday. Psychology lecture on love ; Sara and Si,&#13;
Florence and "King" take notes.&#13;
24-F riday. Philo-Otho Debate. Rest of the plaster&#13;
falls.&#13;
25-Saturday. Cross country try-outs. Onawa 0, Reserves 21.&#13;
26-Sunday. Bishop Lewis speaks in Grace Church.&#13;
Jimmie and John sit near the front.&#13;
27-Monday. Home oratorical contest. Johnson wins.&#13;
28-Tuesday.&#13;
Mass meeting to beat Vermillion on&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
29-Wednesday. Another mass meeting. Pow-wow with&#13;
pulverizer discs as accompaniment.&#13;
30-Thursday. Alumni back. Vermillion here. Well,&#13;
we'll get them next year.&#13;
&#13;
�A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.,&#13;
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL&#13;
&#13;
Ask your Grocer for MOTHER'S Bread&#13;
O ut of town orders given prompt attention.&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
1-Friday. Senior party, girls hand mittens&#13;
P rattler Club holds annual " Doo."&#13;
2-Saturday. Holiday gloom prevails.&#13;
all gone home.&#13;
3-Sunday. Another gloomy day.&#13;
wise eat chicken.&#13;
&#13;
freely.&#13;
&#13;
Dutiful students&#13;
&#13;
D utiful and other-&#13;
&#13;
4-M onday. Girls console themselves with Christmas&#13;
shopping.&#13;
5-Tuesday. School again . That " lost" feeling.&#13;
cital of M iss R ees of the Conservatory.&#13;
&#13;
Re-&#13;
&#13;
6--Wednesday. Expression recital. Beginning of special&#13;
religious meetings. Otho debaters entertained at&#13;
Frank's Cafe.&#13;
&#13;
customers&#13;
&#13;
are&#13;
&#13;
our&#13;
&#13;
best&#13;
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reference.&#13;
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Auto Phone 1197&#13;
408-410 IOWA STREET&#13;
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When In Town Visit O ur&#13;
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7-Thursday.&#13;
Herman Lueder walks back and forth&#13;
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Try Our&#13;
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We carry the best Groceries, also a complete line&#13;
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8-Friday-Adelphian-Hawkeye Debate.&#13;
Adelphian colors.&#13;
&#13;
Susan wears&#13;
&#13;
9-Saturday. Prof. Campbell talks on German universities in History of Education. Rogers wishes they&#13;
would inaugurate a German system of cuts here.&#13;
10-Sunday. Bowker makes a call down town in the&#13;
evenmg.&#13;
1 1-Monday. Wickens back from the hospital.&#13;
by faculty against over-work.&#13;
&#13;
Warned&#13;
&#13;
12-Tuesday. Y. W. C. A. hold up.&#13;
sneaking in.&#13;
&#13;
WE WILL PLEASE YOU - STOP IN WHILE YOU WAIT FOR THE CAR&#13;
&#13;
Merten got caught&#13;
&#13;
13-Wednesday. Exams announced.&#13;
note books.&#13;
&#13;
Bunny cafls for&#13;
&#13;
14-Thursday.&#13;
Economic students burn midnight oil.&#13;
Everyone crams and packs trunk.&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON&#13;
THE COLLEGE GROCER&#13;
Cor. Morningside and Peters Sts.&#13;
&#13;
15- F riday. Exams! Glee Club goes to Alta.&#13;
Ewing comes to chapel!&#13;
&#13;
Coach&#13;
&#13;
�T . F. H arrington, V. Pres.&#13;
&#13;
G . R. Whitmer, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
While You Are LearningLearn to Save.&#13;
G.&#13;
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J. B. Alexander, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
R. Whitmer&#13;
&#13;
T. F. Harrington&#13;
Keep Your Banking A ccount&#13;
With Us.&#13;
&#13;
3-Wednesday. All return from vacation in the snow.&#13;
4-Thursday. Boys realize that this is leap year.&#13;
5-Friday. Girls' societies meet in frigid halls.&#13;
6-Saturday. Bids for first leap year party out. Boys&#13;
keep out of sight.&#13;
7-Sunday. Very cold. Vespers postponed.&#13;
8-Monday. Colder and snow. Frank Johnson wears&#13;
·ear muffs.&#13;
9-Tuesday. Still colder. Dr. Leete of Detroit begins&#13;
revival meetings.&#13;
10-Wednesday. Bridenbaugh freezes his nose.&#13;
11-Thursday. Miss Ferguson so busy reading she forgets&#13;
to go to dinner.&#13;
12- F riday. Zet. leap year party. Kingsbury is "afraid&#13;
to go home in the dark."&#13;
13-Saturday. Miss Morris, Y. W. C. A. secretary, here.&#13;
Girls' mass meeting. Dr. Leete holds meeting for&#13;
boys.&#13;
14-Sunday. Vespers in chapel.&#13;
15- Monday. Barrett Dolliver steals some sleds and Renaissance girls go coasting.&#13;
16-Tuesday. Day of prayer for colleges. Rachel Holm,&#13;
Al Lemon and Ada Belew go to moving picture&#13;
shows instead.&#13;
&#13;
J. B. Alexander&#13;
C. B. Toy&#13;
D. E. Kerby&#13;
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Carries a Full Line of&#13;
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All goods sold at prices guaranteed&#13;
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to&#13;
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meet city competition&#13;
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Free Delivery Over A ll Morningside&#13;
1902-4-6-8 MORNINGSIDE AVENUE&#13;
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- Sioux City's best&#13;
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1 7-Wednesd ay.&#13;
&#13;
Snow.&#13;
&#13;
18-Thursday. R eviews!&#13;
&#13;
Snow.&#13;
&#13;
M ore snow!&#13;
&#13;
The day of doom is not far off.&#13;
&#13;
19-Friday. A delphian banquet.&#13;
receives some roses.&#13;
&#13;
All in by ten. Susan&#13;
&#13;
20--Saturday. E xams postponed .&#13;
the arrangement.&#13;
&#13;
F reshmen puzzled by&#13;
&#13;
21-Sunday. Mike B riggs, Lee B arks, B igg., V ince,&#13;
Morgan, Kolp and Slippery R ogers throw snow&#13;
balls and O le takes a hand.&#13;
22-Monday. H inted that req uired work is to be lessened. Freshmen look encouraged . Seniors chagrined .&#13;
23-Tuesday. Hint becomes a certainty.&#13;
solve to cut Trig. next semester.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen re-&#13;
&#13;
24-Wednesd ay. Freshmen and Sophs look worried and&#13;
cram. Seniors and Juniors look serene-but cram.&#13;
25-Thursday. EXAMS!&#13;
cram some more.&#13;
&#13;
Faculty relentless.&#13;
&#13;
26-F rid ay. E verybody gloomy.&#13;
day of Judgment is here.&#13;
27-Saturday.&#13;
&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
More cramming.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska 62, M orningside 10.&#13;
&#13;
28-Sunday.&#13;
Everyone recuperates after exams and&#13;
dreams of A grades.&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING THAT'S GOOD&#13;
IN APPAREL FOR MAN OR&#13;
WOMAN, YOUTH OR GIRL&#13;
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Pelletier's&#13;
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29-Monday. R egistration.&#13;
new ones in the halls.&#13;
&#13;
Some old faces and some&#13;
&#13;
30-Tuesd ay. New resolutions to study every week.&#13;
31-Wednesday. M ondamin Hotel burns.&#13;
&#13;
�By Frost&#13;
Nor Fire&#13;
Nor Floods&#13;
Nor Even Time Are Clays Destroyed&#13;
A BUCKET OF WATER WITH BRICK&#13;
IS EQUAL TO A WHOLE F IRE DEPARTMENT WITH WOOD&#13;
&#13;
WHEN YOU BUILD, BUILD WITH&#13;
&#13;
I-Thursday. Huron 3 1, Morningside 26.&#13;
party at Hazel Siman' s for Dr. Haskell.&#13;
2-F riday. Groundhog sees his shadow.&#13;
Goethe and Schiller by Dr. Haskell.&#13;
3--Saturday.&#13;
4- Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
BRICK&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
ALL COLORS, SHADES AND TEXTURES&#13;
&#13;
Lecture on&#13;
&#13;
Exhibit of German dolls by Dr. Haskell.&#13;
Vespers.&#13;
&#13;
5-Monday. Otho Open D oor. LaF ollette will be&#13;
next president. M cKinney a suffragette.&#13;
6-Tuesday. D r. Riggs lectures on Cordova. Who rattled the note paper?&#13;
'&#13;
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Sioux City Brick and Tile Works&#13;
Room 9, Iowa Building&#13;
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7-W ednesday. Dr. Riggs speaks in chapel and on&#13;
Toledo in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
All Know the&#13;
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8--Thursday. Si Braley injured in basketball game. Dr.&#13;
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SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
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9-Friday. Glee Club Home Concert. Nelson draws&#13;
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10-Saturday.&#13;
&#13;
Frenchman pleased.&#13;
&#13;
Nelson gets grade.&#13;
&#13;
11-Sunday. Fred R ogers and Paul Corner have to cancel&#13;
dates because mother goes out of town.&#13;
12- Monday. Glee Club dinner and concert at Presbyterian Church.&#13;
13-Tuesday.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Marion Greene gives recital.&#13;
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Buy Your Groceries of Us&#13;
and Get the Best and the&#13;
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�14-Wednesday. St. Valentine's Day.&#13;
G irls wear&#13;
flowers to school. Vermillion 41 , M orningside 46.&#13;
15-Thursday. Senior expression class speak pieces.&#13;
16-Friday. Otho banquet. Profs. gets checks from Miss&#13;
Dahl.&#13;
17-Saturday. Girls go shopping. O verflow at Orpheum&#13;
goes to moving picture shows.&#13;
18-Sunday. Prospects of spring. Few daring ones, like&#13;
Susan and Killy, go strolling.&#13;
19-Monday. Florence Anthony takes auto ride. Philos&#13;
hold Minnehaha Court.&#13;
20-Tuesday. Susan sits in boys' section at chapel. Laura&#13;
Belt comes to chapel!&#13;
21-Wednesday. Mr. Allee orates in chapel. Bill Bass&#13;
and Mike Briggs try to be patriotic.&#13;
22-Thursday. Holiday. Vince wins the monument run.&#13;
Party at Renaissance. Men's banquet.&#13;
23-Friday. Dewey Prize contest. C. E. Smith gets&#13;
first; Dolliver second.&#13;
24-Saturday. Sophs have party and elect annual board.&#13;
25-Sunday. Cold. Ardor of last week strollers chilled.&#13;
26-Monday. Zet-OthoClosed Door. Bill Bass presides&#13;
at cake eating contest.&#13;
2 7-Tuesday. Clifford and Hazel change boarding places&#13;
for the third time.&#13;
28-Wednesday. Sheldon wins at basketball. Our boys&#13;
not used to wax floors.&#13;
29-Thursday. One of Prof. Stiles' twins walks. Will&#13;
the girl talk first?&#13;
&#13;
�Not like the proverbial Good Indian-.&#13;
&#13;
--We are always Alive&#13;
&#13;
Are Constantly G etting in New Novelties and Designs in&#13;
&#13;
Stationery, Pennants, Jewelry,&#13;
1-F riday. Miss Smylie in vocal recital. Johnson gets&#13;
second in state oratorical contest. John Briggs&#13;
president of State Oratorical Association.&#13;
2-Saturday. Joint jollification of girls' societies. Who&#13;
swiped the ice cream?&#13;
3-Sunday. Vespers.&#13;
4-Monday. Freshman party at Lois Crouch's. Girls&#13;
give ill ustrated treatise on basketball.&#13;
5 -Tuesday. Leap year party. M ac and Mike make&#13;
themselves famous.&#13;
6-Wednesday. D olly gathers stray sheep into Y. M.&#13;
fold.&#13;
7-Thursday&#13;
Junior party at Hazel Shumaker's. Girls&#13;
demonstrate athletic ability. Vince is familiar with&#13;
hair curlers.&#13;
8-F riday.&#13;
Faculty send mandate regarding reinforcement of the social rule.&#13;
9-Saturday. Freshmen win basketball championship.&#13;
10-Sunday. Hank Winterringer teaches D olly's bible&#13;
study class.&#13;
11 -Monday. Senior party at Bill Bass's. Enjoy a miserable evening. D olly and C lara Crummer eat ice&#13;
cream. P hilos give Bingville Bugle program.&#13;
12-Tuesday. Nelson discovers what a real Renaissance&#13;
spread is like.&#13;
1 3-Wednesday. M r. Schwartz, student volunteer secretary, speaks in chapel. Girls rave about his hair.&#13;
14-Thursday. Mass meeting for girls' banquet. Y. W.&#13;
C. A. concert.&#13;
15-F riday. Mass meeting. H ome indoor field meet.&#13;
Juniors win. Lecture by D r. Fairchild on "College&#13;
Sports."&#13;
&#13;
.Post Cards, etc.&#13;
Y our Patronage is Appreciated by&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
H. DARLING&#13;
&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
�EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
THE BEST AND PUREST CREAM IN THE CITY&#13;
Wholesalers and Retailers of&#13;
SWEET CREAM. MILK AND FROZEN SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
41 7 JACKSON STREET&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
ABEL&#13;
&#13;
OBERG&#13;
&#13;
PEDERSEN&#13;
&#13;
A H.&#13;
&#13;
VAN&#13;
&#13;
RIPER&#13;
&#13;
The Abel-Pedersen-Van Riper Co.&#13;
&#13;
18-Monday.&#13;
suit.&#13;
&#13;
BEAUTIFIERS OF HOMES&#13;
PICTURE FRAMING A SPECIALTY&#13;
Iowa Phone 9 76&#13;
Auto Phone 25 70&#13;
&#13;
16-Saturday. Miss Donaldson resigns.&#13;
17-Sunday. St. Patrick's Day. Bill Bass wears shamrock.&#13;
&#13;
619 Fifth Street&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Warm day.&#13;
&#13;
Mike Briggs springs spring&#13;
&#13;
19-Tuesday. Cold day. Mike springs dark suit.&#13;
20-Wednesday. Blizzard. Students fail to meet their&#13;
classes.&#13;
21-Thursday. Senior expression recital.&#13;
more roses.&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON&#13;
LUMBER&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
N ew Location:&#13;
Four th and&#13;
&#13;
LafayetteSts.&#13;
&#13;
Hardware and&#13;
Sporting Goods&#13;
Nationally Advertised Lines&#13;
That Qualify&#13;
FISHING TACKLE&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
LAWN TENNIS&#13;
GOLF&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete&#13;
stock of building material m&#13;
the city.&#13;
&#13;
WE WILL PLEASE YOU&#13;
&#13;
Do not fail to let us figure&#13;
your lumber bill.&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt's Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Phones : Auto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
3 12- 14 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
Susan gets&#13;
&#13;
22-Friday. Jean and Hank, Lola and Holbert, Marguerite and Knouse take stroll through the snow.&#13;
23-Saturday. Peace contest in chapel. Vernon wins.&#13;
Girls' banquet. Boys wait.&#13;
24-Sunday. Ernest Wickens waits at the choir door after&#13;
church.&#13;
25-Monday. Billy Beam muffles the 'phone and resolves&#13;
to stay up stairs. Man from Ames calls. Billy&#13;
comes down.&#13;
26--T uesday. Most solemn chapel of the year. Somebody must have made a mistake.&#13;
27-Wednesday. Grand indignation meeting.&#13;
Dolly&#13;
gives the altar call. Senior party at Gillin's.&#13;
28-Thursday. Junior expression recital. Mass meeting&#13;
for annual subscriptions.&#13;
29-F riday. Exams. Trunks. Floods. Home?&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
TERRIBLE LOSS!&#13;
to you if you don't start in to&#13;
&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS!&#13;
Their goods are right and they will treat you on the square.&#13;
Our advertisers have made the publication of this book possible, showing that they&#13;
are boosters for our college. Let's demonstrate our appreciation.&#13;
&#13;
�Well, get sore&#13;
Because&#13;
&#13;
Did not care&#13;
&#13;
We put a&#13;
&#13;
To write&#13;
&#13;
Joke in&#13;
&#13;
As bad things&#13;
&#13;
Here on you&#13;
&#13;
As we knew&#13;
&#13;
And said&#13;
&#13;
About.&#13;
&#13;
Some things&#13;
&#13;
So if you really&#13;
&#13;
You thought&#13;
&#13;
Must get mad&#13;
&#13;
That no&#13;
&#13;
We don't ca.re.&#13;
&#13;
One knew.&#13;
&#13;
Your shoes&#13;
&#13;
But don't forget&#13;
&#13;
========for========&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE MAN&#13;
The Most&#13;
Clever Ideas&#13;
that Master&#13;
&#13;
Don't fit in&#13;
&#13;
We know&#13;
&#13;
Our trunk&#13;
&#13;
Lots of things&#13;
&#13;
No more.&#13;
&#13;
We've left out&#13;
&#13;
So there!&#13;
&#13;
Professor Campbell : "You have a habit of buttoning your coat.&#13;
come to a button that is off, what happens?"&#13;
Jory: ''Curses.''&#13;
Ewing:&#13;
&#13;
Society Brand Clothes&#13;
&#13;
Because we&#13;
&#13;
When you&#13;
&#13;
can Produce&#13;
are Here and&#13;
Ready for Your&#13;
Inspection&#13;
&#13;
"Now, Vince, cut out the slang so we can get what you are driving at."&#13;
&#13;
Bess Barnes, calling Sara Whitehouse out of class:&#13;
the parlor."&#13;
&#13;
"This is your night for&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Lane, writing home: "Mother, Wesleyput his arm around me last night.&#13;
Do you care?"&#13;
,&#13;
Letter from mamma: "No, Hazel, if you like it." ( Hazel says this is not so.)&#13;
Agnes Ewer, returning from the Philo up-river trip:&#13;
rheumatic!''&#13;
Sara Whitehouse, in Chemistry Lab. :&#13;
&#13;
"Isn't boat riding awfully&#13;
&#13;
"Si, darling, how do you do this?"&#13;
&#13;
Professor MacFarren, to Miss Price: "Couldn't you come to class earlier?"&#13;
Miss Price: "I couldn't today. M r. D oxsee held me."&#13;
&#13;
W. A. GILL CO.&#13;
&#13;
D r. Craig: "Rev. Ellison, will you repeat the ten commandments?"&#13;
Ellison, much embarrassed : "I am afraid I have forgotten them."&#13;
&#13;
419 4th Street&#13;
Conyright 1912,&#13;
&#13;
�SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�Hughes, Lola. Member of Red Cross Society.&#13;
erences-McCurdy.)&#13;
&#13;
Third aid to the injured.&#13;
&#13;
(Ref-&#13;
&#13;
James, Elizabeth. "Tommy." Former rag time vocalist at the Mizzou, but at&#13;
present out of a job and attending school. "I love my German, but O you Greek"&#13;
(boot-black).&#13;
Kifer, Margaret. Writes French novels.&#13;
Je vous adore. Que voulez vous encore?"&#13;
Knouse, Earl.&#13;
girls' banquet.&#13;
&#13;
Best known quotation, "Je vous aime&#13;
&#13;
Made the 'varsity team, the hospital squad, and waiters' corps at the&#13;
&#13;
Lueder, Herman. A born leader and politician. Class president. Can vault&#13;
any fence between here and Newton Avenue. Contemplates turning his attention to&#13;
archery but failing would probably accept the presidency of Cherokee's great hospital.&#13;
Metcalf, Lucile. Musician. Studied under Blind Boone. Can play "Alexander's Ragtime Band'' more times in an hour than any other electric piano in the city.&#13;
Neslon Carl. Jack of all trades. The drawing attraction of the Freshman class,&#13;
who is just beginning to make his mark in the world.&#13;
Ostling, Carl.&#13;
&#13;
The true friend of the hospital squad.&#13;
&#13;
Pollock, Fletcher. Our local color expert.&#13;
Butterick Fashions Company.&#13;
&#13;
Traveling representative for the&#13;
&#13;
Robinson, Bonnie. Likes "A" grades but 0, you Phi Kappa Sigma (frat in Wisa&#13;
consin). Speaks entertainingly in public as well as in priv_ te.&#13;
Sater, Emma.&#13;
&#13;
The girl whose pretty smile helped win the cane rush.&#13;
&#13;
Shelton, Robert. Advertising manager.&#13;
any man in the Freshman class.&#13;
&#13;
A fine runner.&#13;
&#13;
Has more wind than&#13;
&#13;
Shoemaker, Elihu. "Hazel." Grafter and author as a side issue. Best known&#13;
volume is entitled, "How to Fuss a Different Girl Each Night," or "A Change of&#13;
Feminine Atmosphere is Conducive to Study."&#13;
Smith, Bethel. Teacher. The pride of Correctionville. Famous trick violinist&#13;
who is now starring at Moville. Can draw more beaux on her string than any other&#13;
player in captivity and still not spoil the harmony.&#13;
Spry, Catherine.&#13;
&#13;
A regular shark.&#13;
&#13;
Will eat anything that looks like an ''A" grade.&#13;
&#13;
Time Reveals&#13;
All Things&#13;
ONE THING REVEALED IS THAT&#13;
&#13;
C. EMENTS GROCERY&#13;
L&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
May be relied upon for quality of&#13;
goods and efficiency of service . ..&#13;
After years of experience we are&#13;
better than ever prepared to give satisfaction to our customers and friends.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in the line of fine Groceries&#13;
and Vegetables, first quality&#13;
Fruits and Confections&#13;
Our delight is to please our customers&#13;
&#13;
Upham, Cyril. Beauty doctor. Has bought out Fizz Hornney's interest in&#13;
Sater &amp; Co., face powder manufacturers. "Uppie" is now the company and chief&#13;
demonstrator.&#13;
&#13;
STUDENTS, LET US FURNISH YOUR PICNIC SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
Vernon, Robert. "Pinkey." Athlete, teetotaler and peace advocate. Our redheaded Demosthenes. Born, 1892; died, October 14, 1911, at Iowa City. Rose&#13;
again half a day later minus most of his gray matter.&#13;
&#13;
Grocers&#13;
&#13;
Wedgewood, William. "Bill." Lost both arms at the Freshman girls' party.&#13;
Finder please return to 1625 Ridge Avenue and receive thanks.&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; Co.&#13;
ST.&#13;
&#13;
AUBINS&#13;
&#13;
STATION&#13;
&#13;
�A Digest of College Idioms&#13;
An exhausting work of reference to · uncertain United States words pertinent and&#13;
impertinent to college affairs; their origin, meaning, legitimate and illegitimate use&#13;
, confused by no pictures :&#13;
&#13;
PHILLIPS&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
Forsberg&#13;
Hardware&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Why Not Come In and Take a Look at&#13;
&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
CUTLERY&#13;
AND STO V ES&#13;
&#13;
"A"-Registrar's regard for night invasion and day theft.&#13;
Athlete-Dignified bunch of muscles that majors in Politics and French A.&#13;
&#13;
The Largest and&#13;
Baseball-A game in which a young man who bravely strikes out for himself receives no credit for it.&#13;
Bawl-out-The lowest form of revenge.&#13;
Billy- The butter.&#13;
Bluffer-A stupid person who doesn't get found out.&#13;
Board- An implement used for corporal punishment by landladies. Daily hash.&#13;
Bone-One dollar. The original price of a wife. N . B.: Adam gave one&#13;
bone before he got Eve.&#13;
Bone-head-A stupid person who does get found out.&#13;
Brick-An admirable person made of the right kind of clay and plenty of sand.&#13;
Chump-Anyone who would go to English VI. twice a week.&#13;
Coach- Irma's hubby.&#13;
Co-ed-The most virile factor in the materialization of our slogan, "More Men&#13;
for Morningside."&#13;
College ( from Fr. colle, stuck; and elude, study ) - A place where everybody is&#13;
stuck on study ( ? ) .•&#13;
Collegian Reporter- A juvenile attempt at a semi-periodical. Syn. Moral Uplift.&#13;
Coyote-A canine animal that hangs ·around Vermillion.&#13;
Cram (v. i., act) - To study on high gear.&#13;
D ate-Fruit resulting from the graft of a lemon to a peach.&#13;
Delinquent card-Invitation to a class officer.&#13;
Diploma-Five bones.&#13;
Doo- One-third faculty reception, two-thirds Fourth of July celebration, and&#13;
four-thirds joy.&#13;
&#13;
Most Up-to-Da te&#13;
Stock of&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Furnace and Tin Work&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC GOODS&#13;
Give Us a Trial for&#13;
&#13;
in the city ?&#13;
Everything for the&#13;
&#13;
Anything in Hardware&#13;
&#13;
athlete or sportsman.&#13;
406 PEARL ST.&#13;
&#13;
WE G UARANTEE SATISFACTION&#13;
&#13;
Sioux CITY, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
N. Tiedeman&#13;
&#13;
I OI 0- I OI 2 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
L. D. Vigen&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Haakinson&#13;
&#13;
Yards, First and Jackson Sts.&#13;
Office, 312 Jackson St.&#13;
Office Phone, Auto 2 I 74; Yard Phone, Auto 2923; Old P hone, 572&#13;
&#13;
H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL&#13;
&#13;
COAL, WOOD, COKE AND FEED, SAND&#13;
GRAVEL, CEMENT AND ROCK.&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 532&#13;
Encore-Greedy audience's desire to get more than their money's worth. (Fr. en,&#13;
among; and cochon, pig.) Common among pigs.&#13;
Etiquette-A difficult symphony in B. natural.&#13;
Exams- Imperative of the verb, to cram.&#13;
Exercise-Bodily exertion requiring a $ 100,000 gym, ten acres and impossible&#13;
raiment.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3267&#13;
&#13;
GOODS BOUGHT, SOLD AND EXCHANGED&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable, New and Second-Hand&#13;
Furniture Store&#13;
M . LEVICH, Prop.&#13;
SEE US WHEN YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL STOVES&#13;
FURNITURE OR ANYTHING OF VALUE&#13;
&#13;
I 004- I 006 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�Faculty-One the hardships of student life.&#13;
of&#13;
Flunk-Required of one who majors in one study. Syn. (in Some 'r' Set) to pass.&#13;
Football-Clever subterfuge for carrying on prize fights under the guise of a&#13;
reputable game.&#13;
Fun-Joy.&#13;
Function-Devoid of Joy.&#13;
Fuss-Common contents of the minds of those who maJor m Campustry. References- Lueder, Bigglestone and Shoemaker.&#13;
Gag-Corpse of a witticism.&#13;
&#13;
Cink-A long, lean, lank, lost, lazy, limber, listless, love-lorn, luckless, lop-eared,&#13;
left-handed, long-legged, loose-jointed lolligager.&#13;
Grind-One who never reads Life. References- Hank and Ethel Shannon.&#13;
Gump--One who, after the Dean has excused him from the final exam, confesses&#13;
that he had dropped the course after the second recitation.&#13;
Hammock (Lat. hamus, hook and Grk. makar, happy)-Happiness on hooks.&#13;
Hash-A mystery. Syn. medley.&#13;
Hug-To entwine. n. Roundabout way of expressing affection.&#13;
Idiot (·Eng. idea and out)-One who is just out of ideas. Example-Editor of&#13;
the Sioux.&#13;
Inn-Institution for the spread of dyspepsia. Now obsolete.&#13;
Jitney-Coin of low denomination most common when finance becomes frenzied.&#13;
Joke-Form of humor found only in "Sioux" '13. In Morningside requiring a&#13;
diagram, raised letters and a club.&#13;
&#13;
EXTRAORDINARY VALUES IN WATCHES ·&#13;
16 size 21 jewel railroad&#13;
Gents' 7 jewel Elgin watch&#13;
movem e nt, to pass inspecfo r , onl y .. ... . .. .... . $5. 00&#13;
tion only ....... .... $20.00&#13;
Gents' 15 jewe l H a m pden&#13;
G e nts' 21 jewel movement,&#13;
watch for, only . .. .... $6. 00&#13;
regular price $19.00-0ur&#13;
Ladies' hunting gold-filled&#13;
price . .. . .... . .... . . $1 5.00&#13;
c ase, American mov em ent,&#13;
Gents' 17 jewel E lgin in&#13;
o nl y ....... . . ... . . . . . $6.50&#13;
gold filled 20-yea r case,&#13;
Ladies' Hunting gold-filled ,&#13;
only ... . . ... .. .... . . $11.00&#13;
20-year case, with American&#13;
Gents' 17 j ewel in nickel&#13;
movement, only .. . . .. $8.00&#13;
case only . ...... ... . . $7.00&#13;
L adies' gold-filled, 20- year&#13;
Gen t s' 15 jewel Elgin watch&#13;
hunting case, Elgi n m ovefor only .... .. ....... $6.50&#13;
m e nt, only .. ........ $10.0 0&#13;
'&#13;
Watches for students from $1.0 0 and&#13;
&#13;
J. Fleckenstein&#13;
1167&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&#13;
G e n t s ' 1 6 size, gol d-filled,&#13;
hunting c ase, with Ame rican m ovement, only . . $6.00&#13;
G e n t s ' 12 s i ze open f ace, 20y ear g o ld-filled case, w ith&#13;
Ame rican movemen t,&#13;
onl y . .. ... . . .... .. .. $10. 00&#13;
G e n ts' 12 size, 1 7 j ewel&#13;
hun t ing. 20- year gold- fi lled&#13;
case, with Americ an movemen t, onl y .. . .... .. . $15. 00&#13;
Eight-D ay Mantel Clo c ks,&#13;
onl y ... ... . ... . ..... . $5.00&#13;
up.&#13;
&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
THE WORD&#13;
&#13;
Kiss-An indescribable something that is of no value to any one but much pnzed by&#13;
the right two.&#13;
Knock- Commonly to gain entrance.&#13;
&#13;
At Morningside a sure means of exit.&#13;
&#13;
Laundry-A place where clothes are mangled.&#13;
Lecture-Faculty's&#13;
favorite form of punishment, at which it pays to look intelligent.&#13;
Lie-Poor substitute for the truth but the only one discovered up to date.&#13;
Life-Weekly obituary notice from New York chronicling the death of humor.&#13;
Love -Terrible disease contracted just before one commits matrimony. (Allan&#13;
Lemon says there isn' t any such thing.)&#13;
Lover-Si Braley.&#13;
M-Trade mark borne by the best brand of manhood in the country.&#13;
Money- Meaning unknown.&#13;
Morningside-Greatest seat of wisdom since Solomon died. Syn. Millennium of&#13;
perfection, for lack of better term.&#13;
Mutt- One who knows all about you and loves you just the same.&#13;
&#13;
MEANS GOOD&#13;
&#13;
CREAMERY BUTTER&#13;
and ICE CREAM&#13;
HANFORD'S ICE CREAM and CREAMERY BUTTER are&#13;
manufactured of good wholesome pasteurized cream m the&#13;
LARGEST and most sanitary plant in the world.&#13;
&#13;
Sold By ALL R ETAILERS WHO CARRY THE BEST&#13;
&#13;
co. SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�Nifty-Epithet applied to him who can fuss eight girls a week, go to the Orpheum,&#13;
attend Y. M., win M's in athletics and oratory, throw chalk, and make A grades.&#13;
Nifty Kid-B. P. Dolliver.&#13;
Nobby-Junior class hats.&#13;
Ode-Students' board bills.&#13;
Oratory-Dissemination of pastuerized packages of philosophy.&#13;
Pastry-Deadly weapon carried by most landladies.&#13;
Peach-Synonym for fair woman because she is largely skin and stony at heart.&#13;
Pikers-Those who did not buy Junior class hats. Example-the Seniors.&#13;
Question-How much Coach Ewing learns in his classes.&#13;
Quiz-Cross-examination when the prof. is not prepared.&#13;
Rah, rah, rah-A civilized war whoop.&#13;
Regrets- Occasionally an expression of sorrow, usually a paean of praise for&#13;
deliverance from evil.&#13;
Rhetoric-Language in a dress suit.&#13;
Room-Diminutive of ice box, used for storage of clothes and books.&#13;
Rough-neck-Member of Vermillion football team.&#13;
Sioux-Morningside publication of literary merit used as a text book in S. D. U.&#13;
Sioux Board- A dignified committee of aristocrats, Juniors and fanatics.&#13;
Spirit- Explanation of Morningside's continual victories.&#13;
Stag-A party to which the dears are not admitted.&#13;
Stung-What one is at Marion Hall. Antonym, date.&#13;
Tobacco-A nauseating plant consumed&#13;
worm doesn't know any better.&#13;
T radition- "Beat Vermillion."&#13;
Two-bits- Technical term of finance, worth five jitneys.&#13;
Umpire-No jeweler yet high authority on diamonds.&#13;
Usher-One who takes the leading part at a recital.&#13;
Vermillion-An intellectual desert in South Dakota, inhabited by coyotes who are&#13;
doomed to everlasting chagrin in "the hole in the bottom of the Sioux."&#13;
Victory- The password at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
No Athletic Victo,&#13;
ry, class day, grad,&#13;
uation or other&#13;
high school or college celebration can be a&#13;
complete success unless you wear&#13;
SON'S clothes.&#13;
&#13;
These are the only real&#13;
&#13;
"college men's clothes," the only clothes&#13;
with the swmg and dash and individuality&#13;
required by the "undergrad" who is a genume " mixer."&#13;
&#13;
They win you admiration,&#13;
&#13;
approval-pave the way for populari!y.&#13;
The young chap here illustrated wears a&#13;
two-button, English&#13;
lapel.&#13;
&#13;
style&#13;
&#13;
with&#13;
&#13;
roll&#13;
&#13;
a high waist line that gives it a long, slim&#13;
effect.&#13;
&#13;
Vest is six button.&#13;
&#13;
in the chest.&#13;
&#13;
It is medium full&#13;
&#13;
Trousers fit tightly in the waist&#13;
&#13;
and set firmly over the hips, no peg.&#13;
want swagger college suits try&#13;
&#13;
X-Put in the form of a quadratic equation and by the use of the binomial theory&#13;
solve for the definition.&#13;
&#13;
Zero- Originally, nothing; but last January discovered to mean a good deal on&#13;
the thermometer. Comp.rises two-thirds of a speech in mass meeting.&#13;
&#13;
soft&#13;
&#13;
The coat has center vent, plain seams,&#13;
&#13;
Work- To read the Dean's writing.&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. (masculine) - Those who worship.&#13;
Y. W. (feminine)-Those to be worshipped.&#13;
&#13;
DAVID-&#13;
&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
"The Big Store"&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
If you&#13;
&#13;
�Iowa P hone I 30&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
J. C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
Mike Briggs, starting for a drink in debate : "Now let us go to Oregon."&#13;
&#13;
Cut Flowers&#13;
&#13;
Bass: "What are these papers to be on?"&#13;
Ewing: "On some subject."&#13;
&#13;
PALMS AND PLA NTS FOR DECORATIONS&#13;
&#13;
This joke is for the boys only.&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL A TTENTION TO FUNERAL ORDERS&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig attended a party one night with Lucile Metcalf and got in at an&#13;
early hour. The next day Mrs. Metcalf apologized to Mrs. Craig.&#13;
&#13;
EMBLEMS MADE ON SHORT NOTICE&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Campbell, 'phoning to the dean: "Herbert has a bad headache today.&#13;
Do you know where we can get a vacuum cleaner?"&#13;
Vince, in mass meeting:&#13;
be there."&#13;
&#13;
"This vote means that three-fourths of every student will&#13;
&#13;
Grace and Mike made candy one Sunday afternoon.&#13;
her garbage can, only to find it covered with syrup.&#13;
&#13;
Later, Mrs. Johnson hunted&#13;
&#13;
Ella Rossberg, hearing someone say that they were going to hibernate:&#13;
that town?"&#13;
&#13;
"Where is&#13;
&#13;
Dean Burney, speaking in chapel, makes a sweeping gesture, pointing to Rev.&#13;
Wasser: "Satan is leaving his indelible mark on all men."&#13;
&#13;
YOU ARE INVITED TO V ISIT OUR STORE&#13;
&#13;
Sixth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
�VIOLET BOX&#13;
&#13;
ONCE EATEN&#13;
NEVER FORGOTTEN&#13;
&#13;
ROMAN CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
ALPEAN CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
MAXIMA CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
BITTER SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
ALL MAPLE&#13;
CHOCOLATES&#13;
PALMER'S CHOCOLATE&#13;
&#13;
MARASCHINO CHERRIES&#13;
MADE IN SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Dolliver: "Now we ought to give those who poured down the beans a chance to&#13;
come forward and confess."&#13;
Vince, chairman, rising and looking over the student body: "I don' t see many&#13;
standing."&#13;
REASONS WHY SOME MAY HOLD THEIR OWN&#13;
Sara and Si-For exceeding great love.&#13;
Jean and Bill-Just for fun.&#13;
Susan and Killy-Because she is so much older than he.&#13;
Bernice and H erman- Exceedingly aboundant great. love. (This made Lueder&#13;
sore, but how did we know they were going to quit?)&#13;
Hulda and Kent- Because they are both Seniors.&#13;
Grace and Mike-For mutual heartrending affection.&#13;
Leila and Vince-Somebody has to start something.&#13;
Emma and Fizz- They just simply can't help it.&#13;
Ruth and Bigg- Because he beat all the rest of the boys in school.&#13;
Leona and Bowker-It's his last year in school.&#13;
Hazel and Clif-Terrible, everlasting, consuming, slavishly great love.&#13;
Van Horne: "Unless ye become as little children ye cannot enter the kingdom of&#13;
C alculus.' '&#13;
Dolly : "United we stand, divided we flunk."&#13;
Miss Loveland: "Except ye study ye shall all likewise receive delinquents."&#13;
Prof. Campbell: "Be ye therefore ready for ye know not when the quiz cometh."&#13;
&#13;
In the Cleanest and Most Up-to-Date Candy Factory in the West&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Baker Co.&#13;
THE REXALL STORE&#13;
For li fe's work may be ever so perfect,&#13;
yet, if you neglect to pay heed to the&#13;
practical things, and fail to profit by the&#13;
experiences of those who have been suc&#13;
cessful in your chosen calling, the chances&#13;
are against your reaching a very high&#13;
mark.&#13;
A savings account following graduation&#13;
is almost as necessary to success as hard&#13;
study preceeding, it provides money to&#13;
take advantage of any opportunities&#13;
offered.&#13;
We invite your account, on which interest will be added twice a year.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
405-407 NEBRASKA STREET&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
EVERYTHING IN DRUGS&#13;
SURGICAL APPLIANCES&#13;
R UBBER GOODS, ETC.&#13;
F I NE CANDI ES&#13;
A SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
VISIT OUR SODA FOUNTAIN&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Baker Co.&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
STORES&#13;
&#13;
4 2 1 Fourth Street and Security Building&#13;
&#13;
�This Cut Shows Our&#13;
&#13;
How WouldThey Look ?&#13;
&#13;
Office and Cattle&#13;
&#13;
A Student Recital ..................... .. . .. .. . .. .. ....... With a Crowd&#13;
Dolly .... ............... . .......................... Without a Red Tie&#13;
DeVada Mills . . . . .. .. . ............ . .. .. ....... . . .. ... Without a "Case"&#13;
Jimmie Lewis ....... ... .. .......... . ... . ........... .. .. Without a Smile .&#13;
Mrs. Reynolds ... . ..... . .... . .... .. ... . . .... . ......... Without Her Hair&#13;
Faculty&#13;
......... . ............... . .. .. . ........... Back on the Rostrum&#13;
Annual . ........ . .............. . ........ ·.......... .. . With a Joke in It&#13;
Chapel ............. ... .... . . .. ..... . ................. Without a Stunt&#13;
Librarian .......... ..... . .... . .... .... . ..... . . .. . . ..... .. With Smiles&#13;
Phychology ...... .. ....... . .. . ... .. . . .. . .......... .. . .. Without a Quiz&#13;
Clifford Jory ........... .. ... . ......... . . ..... .. . .. . . .. .. Without Hazel&#13;
Prof. Campbell . . .... ............. . . .. .............. Without His Muffler&#13;
Bill Bass .... . .. ................. .. ........ . .. . . ...... . .. With a Shirt&#13;
Si ............ . .... .. ............ . . ... . . . ...... . ..... .. Without Sara&#13;
Hulda .... .. . .... . ... . .. . .. . .. .. . . ... ....... .. .. . Without Her Wisdom&#13;
Prit . .. . . ..... ..... .. . . .. ..... . . .. ..... .... ... With His Shoes Buttoned&#13;
Dr. Craig ....... . .... .. .. .. .. . .... . ...... ... . ...... Without His Glasses&#13;
Morningside . ... . .... . .. . . .... .. . . .. ... With Three New Buildings Next fall&#13;
George Pratt ............... . ... ....... .... . ...... . ...... . In Mole-Skins&#13;
Leo Stevens ... ..... . ...... ............. . .. . ... . .. . With His Hair Mussed&#13;
Elsie Johnson .. .... .. . .. .... .. . ... . . . ....... . . ... With a Melancholy Look&#13;
Collegian Reporter .. . . ...... .. . ...... . .. . . . .. . .. . .. .. . .. With Some News&#13;
Hank ... . .... .... . .... . . ........ ...... ...... ... . .. With Ethel Shannon&#13;
Coach .. . .... ... . .. .. ... . . ..... . . ... .. . . .. .. .. ... .... With His Lesson&#13;
Ole . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . With a Prisoner&#13;
Dean .. .. ....... .. ...... . .... . ... . . ... ... . . .. . .. . ... . . ... . .. . Sober&#13;
Lula .................. . . .... ..... ..... .. . .. . ... . .. . With Vince Again&#13;
&#13;
Location in&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
H . H. Holmes&#13;
&#13;
E. M. Hatch&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
H. U . Carpenter&#13;
J. S. H oard&#13;
&#13;
E. Walsh&#13;
&#13;
LONG &amp; HANSEN CO.&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS&#13;
SIOUX C ITY, IA&#13;
&#13;
CH ICAGO, ILL.&#13;
&#13;
SO. ST. PAUL, MINN.&#13;
&#13;
WE DO A STRICTLY COMMISSION&#13;
BUSINESS IN B UYING AND SELLING&#13;
&#13;
"OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
Cattle, Hogs and Sheep&#13;
&#13;
G. D. Hanson &amp; Company&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCE :&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
&#13;
Our many well satisfied customers and nineteen years of successful business, having&#13;
led all of our competitors on the Sioux City market for&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHERS&#13;
Examine Our Stock Before Buying&#13;
&#13;
82 7 Fourth Street; Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
1909==1910==1911&#13;
&#13;
�Dean Chandler:&#13;
&#13;
reasons why Moore's&#13;
FOUR great your clothes store&#13;
should be&#13;
&#13;
"A flat is so small a dog must wag his tail up and down."&#13;
&#13;
Frenchman, during zie call of zie roll: " D olliver."&#13;
Dolly, just entering: "Here."&#13;
Frenchman: "Zer is an English proverb I zink, saying :&#13;
and he will appear.'&#13;
&#13;
OUR VALUE V ING POWER&#13;
GI&#13;
EXTENSI VE VAR IETY&#13;
&#13;
'Speak of zie&#13;
&#13;
THE BEST STYLES AND&#13;
Prof. Campbell:&#13;
Rachel Holm:&#13;
Kent:&#13;
&#13;
"You can't have color without substance."&#13;
&#13;
OUR STORE SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
"One can have the blues."&#13;
&#13;
"There is only one volunteer missionary in school and that is myself.&#13;
&#13;
biggest problem is organization."&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING&#13;
F O U R TH AN D NEB R ASKA&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Stephens: "How does the euglena move about?"&#13;
Ruth Rieke: " I don't know whether it pushes or pulls."&#13;
Miss Hadley: "I wish we might spend two years on the grammar.''&#13;
Harry Wiley: "No doubt most of us will have to."&#13;
Prof. Brown:&#13;
&#13;
"Everything has a will except a mule and he has a won't."&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia Park Grocery&#13;
AN DREW JO HNSO N, P ROP.&#13;
Call Upon Us for Best Q ualities and Service in Groceries&#13;
&#13;
WE ALSO DO ALL KINDS OF PLUM BING AND T INNING&#13;
CECELIA P A R K&#13;
&#13;
THE STO RE T H AT ALWAYS H AS THE M OST&#13;
&#13;
EXCLUSI VE STYLES OBTAINABLE&#13;
&#13;
H. &amp; H. Shoe Company&#13;
5 12 FOUR T H STR EET&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City, Ia., Jan. 7, 1912. (Special to Journal) . The three months' bride&#13;
of John Kolp yesterday tried to kill her husband by filling a pie with chipped glass.&#13;
Mary Lund, in English VI:&#13;
Hazel Simon:&#13;
&#13;
Ship Your Live Stock&#13;
. TO . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
"John Bunyan fed a family of twelve with his pen."&#13;
&#13;
"Is there a copy of Bunyan's Vanity Fair in the Library?"&#13;
A TRAGEDY&#13;
ACT I.&#13;
&#13;
· ··-&#13;
&#13;
Scene 1. Bethel arrives on 1 : 30&#13;
train.&#13;
Scene 2. Shoemaker borrows money&#13;
from Henderson to go to the train to&#13;
meet Bethel.&#13;
Scene 3. Shoey goes to the depot&#13;
at 5: 15.&#13;
Scene 4. Train late! Shoey raves.&#13;
Scene 5. Train arrives at 7:45.&#13;
No Bethel!!&#13;
Scene 6. 9 :00--Shoey keeps one&#13;
of his other dates and arrives with&#13;
Ethel Ewer at a party.&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, KITSELMAN&#13;
&amp; TIMMEL&#13;
Three live wires who have shown a steady&#13;
increase in business by satisfying customers&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Auto Phone 1443&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 397&#13;
&#13;
THREE PER CENT PAID ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT&#13;
OPEN ACCOUNTS INVITED&#13;
&#13;
FOR YOUR&#13;
&#13;
MADE&#13;
&#13;
WHILE&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
WAIT&#13;
&#13;
Best Equipped Studio in the City&#13;
&#13;
PECKHAM &amp;, BROWN&#13;
&#13;
309 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
J. M. Pinckney Co.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
WALL PAPER, PAINTS, BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY,SCHOOL BOOKS&#13;
New Phone 1348 L&#13;
&#13;
610 4th Street&#13;
&#13;
SECURITY&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S CANDY PALACE&#13;
Home of&#13;
PETE'S HAND ROLLED BITTER SWEETS&#13;
Choicest Qualities in Confections&#13;
&#13;
60 7 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHE D 1884&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS&#13;
&#13;
$450,000.00&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Mike Briggs, in Epworth League:&#13;
&#13;
"I am so glad to say I have been saved by&#13;
&#13;
grace.''&#13;
Nick Carter: "Prof Greynald, I don't deserve an E grade."&#13;
Prof. Greynald: "To be sure, to be sure, but it is zie lowest grade zat I can give&#13;
you.''&#13;
G. E. Wickens, in mass meeting:&#13;
Higday."&#13;
&#13;
" I would like to give my support to Miss&#13;
&#13;
Onawa, la., Nov. 24-(Special to Journal) :&#13;
day for boot-legging.&#13;
&#13;
Nick Carter was arrested here to-&#13;
&#13;
Lemon, the morning after taking Emma to the Prattler Doo:&#13;
two-bits rent I owe you."&#13;
&#13;
"Here Fizz is that&#13;
&#13;
Pro f. Brown: " Miss Whitehouse, is what Mr. Braley says true?"&#13;
Sara: " It surely must be if he says so."&#13;
J ocy, in Psychology: "Then you mean to say that this wall is not green unless&#13;
someone is here to see it?"&#13;
Prof. Campbell: "Exactly so. The green is in you."&#13;
D r. Craig, in Biblical Literature:&#13;
&#13;
"Mr. Johnson will you dispose of the devil for&#13;
&#13;
us.) "&#13;
&#13;
Personality Wins&#13;
I&#13;
T'S the man with personality,&#13;
who commands respect and&#13;
gains success.&#13;
&#13;
And it's the clothes with "personality" that reinforce the man---that&#13;
urge him on---that keep him going.&#13;
"E. &amp; W. Fashion Clothes" have a personality. They' re decisively styled and expertly tailored. They look elegant and will&#13;
wear everlastingly.&#13;
Distributed throughout these clothes are a number of&#13;
features which are certain to strike your fancy.&#13;
&#13;
This is a National Bank. You know the U. S.&#13;
Government safeguards it. We do a general banking&#13;
business-handle checking accounts and buy and sell&#13;
foreign exchange.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
National Bank&#13;
CAPITAL AN D PROFITS, $150,000.00&#13;
Savings D epartment open Saturday Evenings. Foreign&#13;
Drafts and Steamship Tickets.&#13;
J. A. MAGOUN, JR., P res.&#13;
&#13;
B. H. KINGSBURY, V. Pres.&#13;
&#13;
I. M. LYON, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Breast of&#13;
&#13;
coats hand quilted with pure-dye silk.&#13;
&#13;
Fancy hand-made&#13;
buttonhole in coat-lapel. Razor edge on all coats. Bouquet&#13;
holder under left lapel. Extra watch pocket within outside&#13;
breast pocket. Patent tuck in all pockets prevents sagging.&#13;
Extra cut-in "V" in coat facing to reinforce the fro nt.&#13;
"THE CLOTHES UNUSUAL" AT THE USUAL PRICES:&#13;
$15, $ 18, $20, $22.50, $25, $27.50, $30&#13;
&#13;
OUR HAT AND FURNISHING SECTIONS ARE COMPLETE&#13;
WITH NEWEST STYLES, BEST QUALITIES&#13;
AT MODERATE PRICES&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W. Clothing House&#13;
N. T. HANSON, Manager&#13;
4th &amp; Jackson Streets,&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
�AT THE M EN'S BANQUET&#13;
&#13;
F lowers of Quality&#13;
&#13;
Junior Table-Briggs occupied either end and a man of war the middle.&#13;
&#13;
for all Occasions&#13;
&#13;
If a Senior is foolish, is a Soph more?&#13;
I f Bernice should go blind would Herman Lueder?&#13;
If Nick Carter should marry, would Rachel Cook?&#13;
&#13;
FINE SELECTION OF&#13;
&#13;
If the Dean would teach Van Horne to flirt with the waiters who would coach&#13;
&#13;
PALMS AND FERNS&#13;
&#13;
Ewing?&#13;
&#13;
If a Junior died would Kingsbury? No but Wedgewood.&#13;
If the coal gave out would they burn Cobbs? No, they would burn Koch.&#13;
Found in Frank Johnson's room.&#13;
Dear Frank&#13;
&#13;
This is not much to send I know , but I&#13;
&#13;
wanted you to know that at&#13;
&#13;
Christmas time, as well as all other times, Edna Genevieve doesn't forget you.&#13;
wishing you a very Merry Xmas and the Happiest New Year. Yours,&#13;
&#13;
Here's&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&#13;
"THE LOVELY GIRL."&#13;
&#13;
Manley Peifer, responding to roll call in English with a quotation:&#13;
has come to judgment."&#13;
Miss Hadley:&#13;
Miss Watson:&#13;
&#13;
"Yea, Daniel&#13;
&#13;
"Translate, 'Denn er ging in hinaus.'&#13;
"Then he went in the hen house.''&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Allmon and Frank Johnson have lunch at Todd-Bakers.&#13;
Clerk: "Mr. Johnson, vour wife&#13;
left the baby carriage here for you to&#13;
take home with you."&#13;
&#13;
512 FIFTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
OPPOSITE GRAIN EXCHANGE&#13;
&#13;
WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
C. S. VON HATTEN&#13;
&#13;
Reliable Clothers&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer and Remodeler of&#13;
&#13;
FIN E FlJRS&#13;
OUR SPECIAL TY IS TO SATISFY&#13;
&#13;
We carry a complete line of&#13;
&#13;
5 I 2 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Up-to-Date Clothing and Furnishing Goods at very lowest&#13;
prices. Visit our store when&#13;
in need of clothing.&#13;
&#13;
Over H. &amp; H. Shoe Store&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Olson's Grocery&#13;
&#13;
Ten per cent discount to&#13;
F acuity and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE PREPARED TO GIVE YOU PROMPT AND RELIABLE&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&amp;, A&#13;
ronson&#13;
710-712 FOURTH ST.&#13;
MASS MEETING&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE IN ALL KINDS OF GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
GIVE US A TRIAL AND BE CONVINCED&#13;
&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
�Seldom Inn&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
Knights&#13;
&#13;
Motto-Ad hades cum sapientia&#13;
Colors-Blonde and brunette&#13;
Flower- Bachelor's Button&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Allan Lemon, 'I 3 .... .. ...... . ............ .. ... .. . Grand High Chief Fusser&#13;
Stuart Noble, ' 00 (deceased) ........... . ....... Vice Grand High Chief Fusser&#13;
Horace Merten, 'I 3 ... ......................... Great Big Exalted Promulgator&#13;
Fizz Hornney, '15 ......... . ...... .. ... . .... ... .. .. .......... . . Steward&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker, '23 ..... .. .... . . ... .......... Vice Crafty Back Door Keeper&#13;
Clifford Jory, '15 .... . ........................ Right Masterful Band Leader&#13;
Bernard Brown, ' ? ....... . ........... .... .............. .. ..... Chaplain&#13;
Si Braley, '13 ................... .. . Mighty Glorified Janitor of the Whitehouse&#13;
Herman Lueder, 'I 5 ...... . . .. .. . . . ... .. .. .. . .. . Worthy Royal Master Archer&#13;
Mitchell Briggs, 'I 3 ..................... Chief Trusty Guardian of the Password&#13;
George Pratt, '21 .......................... Great Royal Imperial Head Mogul&#13;
Harry Bigglestone, '14 ....... . ..... . .. . .. . ..... ... Marvelous Chief Exemplar&#13;
Earl Knouse, 'I 6 .... .. ... . . . .... .. .. . ... . .... . ... Most Holy D evout Shriner&#13;
Ray Hess, '12 ..... ... . . ...... .... ............. Right Honorable Chancellor&#13;
MEMBER&#13;
Jacob Henry Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, Ph. D., D. D., President&#13;
&#13;
Some Reasons for Attending Morningside College&#13;
(I)&#13;
&#13;
It is a standard College, whose graduates receive&#13;
recognition in the leading universities.&#13;
&#13;
(2)&#13;
&#13;
It has an able Faculty, who have been trained in the&#13;
leading universities of America and Europe.&#13;
&#13;
(3)&#13;
&#13;
It has an endowment of over $400,000.&#13;
&#13;
( 4)&#13;
&#13;
It is one of the few colleges of Iowa to pass the&#13;
scrutiny and receive the endorsement of the General Education Board of New York.&#13;
&#13;
(5)&#13;
&#13;
J. G. LEGLER&#13;
Morningside Dray&#13;
and Baggage Line&#13;
LIGHT AND HEAVY&#13;
&#13;
It has a vigorous student body, composed of young&#13;
men and young women from the best homes of the&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
&#13;
( 6)&#13;
&#13;
In all departments of intercollegiate interests such as&#13;
athletics, debates and oratory, Morningside holds&#13;
an enviable record.&#13;
&#13;
( 7)&#13;
&#13;
The location in a suburb of a prosperous city of fifty&#13;
thousand affords many advantages found only in&#13;
metropolitan centers.&#13;
&#13;
( 8)&#13;
&#13;
Expenses are as low as is consistent with the best work.&#13;
&#13;
DRAYING&#13;
&#13;
FURNITURE MOVED AND STORED&#13;
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO PACKING&#13;
PIANOS MOVED TO ANY PART OF THE CITY&#13;
&#13;
For catalogue and other information, address,&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
THE PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
Deliveries Prompt&#13;
Office Phone 6240&#13;
&#13;
Res. Phone 64 I 3&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�PIPER &amp; LARSON&#13;
&#13;
An Ode to Hippo&#13;
&#13;
ing an&#13;
Wh o liked to coax t he star at h lete&#13;
T o get out in a s ui t?&#13;
\Yh o likecl to holler , "Sh a ke it up!&#13;
You ' r e n o t wor t h a galoot!"&#13;
who liked to cuss the foo tba ll team&#13;
and fi ll t h em up wi t h fi gh t?&#13;
Who was it th at delayed&#13;
t b e ga me?&#13;
'Twas E wing-that's righ t.&#13;
Who was it with the cinders made&#13;
Our brand n ew indoor track ?&#13;
Who was i t made the b' ba ll fl oo r&#13;
T o fill a lon g f el t lack ?&#13;
Who was it wi t h a s h ovel, scooped&#13;
The s now fr om off our gy m ?&#13;
Who was t h e guy that did a ll t hi s:&#13;
'Twa s Ewing-th at's him.&#13;
&#13;
SCENE IN POLITICS II&#13;
&#13;
Who likes t o t ea ch us politics&#13;
Till each n ew m a n' s a mbi t ion&#13;
I s firs t to be a n athl ete stron g,&#13;
And t hen a politi cian ?&#13;
Who was it with his base ba ll t eam&#13;
Did old Vermilli on trim ?&#13;
Who is it that will get t h e ir goat?&#13;
Coach Ewin g- tha t' s him.&#13;
&#13;
eating&#13;
&#13;
FIRST C LASS WORK AT&#13;
&#13;
REASONA BLE PRICES&#13;
&#13;
ESTIMATES CHEER FULLY FURNISHED&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
191 7 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 122 7&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
The best informed Live Stock Growers and Shippers&#13;
have found that the MOST NET MONEY 1 almost&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
NON-LEAKABLE&#13;
They never leak. They are filled and teated at the factory and&#13;
that same ink is in them when you buy them at the store. What&#13;
better proof could there be that Moore'• Fountain Pena never leak?&#13;
The traveler appreciates the fact that it is not necessary to carry&#13;
Moore's in an upright position. When the cap is screwed on the pen, it&#13;
is as tight as a bottle. Either end up or lying flat it cannot leak. There's&#13;
no joint to leak ink just where the fingers hold the pen.&#13;
As easy&#13;
to fill as a bottle, unscrew the cap and put in the ink. The ink flows evenly and freely. No shaking&#13;
needed. $2.50 and up, fine, medium and stub nibs. Write for circular.&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN FOUNTAIN PEN COMPANY&#13;
ADAMS, CUSHING&amp; FOSTER, Selling Agents, 168 DEVONSHIRE STREET. BOSTON, MASS.&#13;
&#13;
invariably secured by shipping their stock to this market&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
�Rachel Holm :&#13;
&#13;
"Those Nebraska debaters were too darned mild."&#13;
&#13;
Clay Products Company&#13;
Incorporated $1,000,000&#13;
MANUFACTURERS COMMON BUILDING BRIC K&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Campbell : " What is the best cure fo r a melancholy temperament?"&#13;
Lemon: "I should suggest the Orpheum."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux CITY, IOWA&#13;
7,500 Cars Annually&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Garver, answering a knock at the door:&#13;
Quarny, suddenly awaking: "Topic VI."&#13;
&#13;
Peifer, in Trig : "Then the formulae for x plus y and x minus y are the key notes&#13;
of the whole thing."&#13;
Prof. V an Horne: " Keynotes ! Why they are the whole tune."&#13;
Enter Miss Dahl.&#13;
&#13;
FOur&#13;
&#13;
"Mr. Quarnstrom. "&#13;
&#13;
"Dad" E vans sings, "Oh, You Great Big Beautiful Doll!"&#13;
&#13;
Miss Hadley : " Translate, 'I have never learned that.'&#13;
Mr. Hess : " Ich habe nie lerne das. "&#13;
Miss Hadley: " Mr. Hess, your nie (knee) is in the wrong place. "&#13;
Stranger.: "Peters Park, Peters Park- do they have animals out there? "&#13;
Resident : "None except students.''&#13;
&#13;
• SIOUX CITYBLUFFS&#13;
SARGJiJNTS&#13;
FactoriesCORRECTIONVILLE&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WE MAKE&#13;
Vitrified&#13;
Glazed Drain&#13;
Tile&#13;
4 to 30 Inches&#13;
Glazed Wall&#13;
Coping&#13;
Glazed Face&#13;
Brick&#13;
Glazed&#13;
&#13;
Tile&#13;
&#13;
Well Curbing&#13;
Flue Linings&#13;
&#13;
P. T. Barnum, the Circus King&#13;
once said a fool was born&#13;
every second and none dieGeorge M. Cohan, the actor, sings a song called, "Barnum Had the Right Idea.'&#13;
&#13;
Partition Tile&#13;
Hollow Blocks&#13;
Fire Proofing&#13;
Impervious&#13;
Face Brick&#13;
&#13;
Some merchants think Barnum was a greater man than Abraham Lincoln.&#13;
Red Pressed&#13;
Face Brick&#13;
&#13;
Some merchants think they are running a circus.&#13;
&#13;
WE SOLICIT THE PATRONAGE OF WOMEN AND MISSES&#13;
THAT APPRECIATE STYLE AND KNOW VALUES&#13;
&#13;
Fire Brick&#13;
Fire Clay&#13;
Hollow Brick&#13;
&#13;
W. A. GILL CO.&#13;
.Miss&#13;
&#13;
LEILA DAWSON IN CHARG E&#13;
&#13;
Women's Ready-to-Wear&#13;
Section&#13;
THIRD FLOOR&#13;
&#13;
T he ','SOO'' SILO BLOX are absolutel y impervious to all weather conditions and no acid&#13;
I&#13;
known w ill affect them .&#13;
The "SOO" SILO BLOX are THOROUGHLY VITRIFIED, made to a circle, and have the&#13;
appearance of sewer p i pe. A s il o built from "SOO" SILO BLOX will l ast forever and is the&#13;
cheapest silo known, as it never has to be repl aced.&#13;
Note the A I R SPACES RUNNING VERTICALLY which assures PERFECT INSULATION against FROST, NOT FOUND I N ANY OTHER SILO.&#13;
WRITE US FOR PRICES&#13;
&#13;
�\&#13;
Special Attention Given to Fine&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE AND SCHOOL PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
The Monarch Printing Co.&#13;
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�Hess: " I have all but the last&#13;
verse of my debate learned."&#13;
&#13;
Warburton,&#13;
in Psych :&#13;
"When&#13;
scared, standing on the end of the&#13;
hair follows."&#13;
&#13;
Student :&#13;
"Professor, how can&#13;
you te ll the age of a pullet?"&#13;
Prof. Greynald : "By zie teeth."&#13;
Student: "But a pull et has no&#13;
teeth ."&#13;
Prof. Greynald:&#13;
"No, but I have."&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson : "If I should say,&#13;
'Has he a book,' what would you&#13;
say?"'&#13;
Bill Bass: "IIat er." (hot air).&#13;
&#13;
Dean Chandler, reading chapel announcements: "Miss E rickson will&#13;
lead Y. M. C. A. ton ight."&#13;
&#13;
THE WEST HOTEL&#13;
FRANK J. DONOHUE, PROPRIETOR&#13;
&#13;
JAY MACLARTY, MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
Corner Third and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
WITHIN TWO BLOCKS OF ALL RAILROAD STA TIO NS&#13;
&#13;
ROGERS AND PROF'. BROWN HA VE LITTLE BOUT&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury : "Engla nd and France&#13;
sent out compan ies to discover the&#13;
United States."&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred forty-four rooms, one hundred forty with private bath.&#13;
&#13;
Authier&#13;
&#13;
LADIES' SUITS, CLOAKS, FURS,&#13;
MILLINERY&#13;
&#13;
"The Style Shop''&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Thirty large, well-lighted Sample Rooms with private bath.&#13;
Located in heart of wholesale and retail district, public buildings and theaters.&#13;
&#13;
FREEMAN AuTHIER, Proprietor&#13;
Convenient to all street cars.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S POPULAR STORE&#13;
5 13 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
European Plan.&#13;
Rates:&#13;
&#13;
Cadillac&#13;
Cars&#13;
Lights, Starts&#13;
and Ignites&#13;
Itself.&#13;
Manufactures&#13;
Its Own&#13;
Electricity.&#13;
&#13;
WYCOFF-CORD AUTOMOBILE CO., 409-411 4th St., Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
$1.00, without bath; $1.50 to $3.00 per day,&#13;
&#13;
private bath.&#13;
Three fine Cafes.&#13;
Twelveprivate Dining Rooms.&#13;
Cuisine unexcelled.&#13;
&#13;
�THIRTEEN&#13;
You've often heard your grandma say&#13;
That thirteen is unlucky,&#13;
That woe and ruin shall mark the day&#13;
Despite the fact you're plucky.&#13;
&#13;
"Rickety, Rickety,&#13;
Rahl Rah! Rahl&#13;
Rackety, Rackety,&#13;
&#13;
It sure will bring calamity,&#13;
Misfortune, misery.&#13;
There's sure to be catastrophe&#13;
Wherever it may be.&#13;
&#13;
Wah Whoo Wah,&#13;
Boom-a-lacker Boom-a-lacker,&#13;
Ray! Ray! Ray!&#13;
DRINK SUPERB COFFEE&#13;
&#13;
If thirteen at one table eat,&#13;
&#13;
EVERY DAY."&#13;
&#13;
Of them one sure will die.&#13;
That Thirteen Club its fate will meet,&#13;
On that you can rely.&#13;
Yes, thirteen means mishap, distress,&#13;
Disaster dire, alas!&#13;
For us naught but unhappiness-The nineteen thirteen class.&#13;
But what care we for superstition,&#13;
We'll break this foolish hoodoo.&#13;
The thirteen states are demonstration&#13;
That that's no cause to boohoo.&#13;
For proof there's Mrs. Washington,&#13;
Who showed the thing would fail.&#13;
She raised a mottled cat for fun&#13;
With a thirteen ringed tail.&#13;
&#13;
STEEL CUT or&#13;
&#13;
So we'll go on and print our Sioux,&#13;
And risk adversity;&#13;
We've done our level best for you,&#13;
And sure tired women we.&#13;
&#13;
Whole Bean&#13;
&#13;
In 1 Pound Air&#13;
Tight Tins only,&#13;
AT YOUR GROCER'S&#13;
"AROUND THE CORNER."&#13;
&#13;
Fresh Cut Flowers on Hand Daily&#13;
ALL KINDS OF FLORAL EMBLEMS ON SHORT NOTICE&#13;
OuR PRICES ARE RIGHT&#13;
&#13;
ROCKLIN &amp; LEHMAN&#13;
Sioux City's Leading Florists&#13;
405 DOUGLAS STREET&#13;
&#13;
T olerton &amp; Warfield ·Co.&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
CORNER 4TH&#13;
&#13;
City, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�The Adventuresof Alfred Kent in Wonderland&#13;
&#13;
We Invite&#13;
CHECKING ACCOUNTS&#13;
&#13;
(By 0. Gurez.)&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS&#13;
Alfred Kent, who was French, but yet a very Wiseman, rode forth on a Campbell&#13;
to Britton in Search of a Cook. As he turned the first Corner and came near the Edge&#13;
of the so-called King-land he met a Shoemaker. This Shoemaker had a good wife and&#13;
was trying to Carter. He came to a Stone in the road and Alfred had to help get her&#13;
over that. Soon she began to sing, "O Ma honey, 0 Ma honey."&#13;
Alfred was deeply wrought and pursued his journey. The next Day he came to&#13;
a Whitehouse where he left his Campbell for he was a swift Walker. The people who&#13;
lived in the house had seven dogs and their Barks were fierce. At the opening of a narrow Lane he stumbled over some Cobbs and fell. Alfred thought he would Crouch in&#13;
the Wood nearby and if a Cook happened by he would Hall her in. But since he could&#13;
Doolittle here he traveled farther.&#13;
Presently he .met John's son and decided to give him a trial at cooking. For the&#13;
first meal she prepared Bass suspended from a Beam and made Graham bread. The&#13;
bread was Raw and Alfred became very ill. A Nurse was called who gave him Lemon&#13;
juice and took from her Belt a Bell for him to ring when he needed anything. He was&#13;
Noble through his Payne and would often Wright Holm.&#13;
None of the people with whom he stayed could speak English. He sent for a&#13;
Bowman who came in covered with Blood and carrying three Brown Kuhns. He told&#13;
Howe he had found them in some Wells at the foot of a rocky Craig. Soon Alfred&#13;
received word that his Nease, whom he had thought he would never see any Mower, was&#13;
looking for him. Straightway Alfred fell to worrying for fear she would not recognize&#13;
him with his Long Beard and Hornney hands. The next day a Shreiner passing by&#13;
stopped and convinced Alfred by means of a mystic Webb that he was not sick. Accordingly that night he tied the sheet on his bed in several Knotts, slid to the ground, and, following a Rowe of elm trees, found his way back to Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
TIME DEPOSITS&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
STATE SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
SOUTHEAST CORNER FOURTH AND JAC KSON STREETS&#13;
&#13;
Drafts and Money Orders Sold&#13;
Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent&#13;
Checks and Drafts Cashed on&#13;
Satisfactory Identification.&#13;
THE USE OF OUR WAITING&#13;
ROOM IS FREE TO ALL&#13;
&#13;
OPEN SATURDAY EVENNGS&#13;
FROM&#13;
7 T O 9 O' CL OCK&#13;
&#13;
Good Country Butter and&#13;
Nice Fresh Eggs&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
HESE two very desirable table necessities c_n always be secured&#13;
a&#13;
in any quantity without a tiresome trip into the country.&#13;
Mr. A . J . Porter of Morningside recently purchased the store&#13;
owned by Schlosser' s.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Porter in the capacity of a wholesale grocery salesman had&#13;
been selling goods to this store for nearly twenty-five years. He was no&#13;
stranger to the store's business but the very first day that Mr. Porter was&#13;
in the store he was pleased beyond his highest hopes at the amount of&#13;
eggs and Fresh D airy Butter that came from the country.&#13;
The store maintains a very adequate delivery system.&#13;
If you do not live in the vicinity of the store, just step to the nearest&#13;
'phone.&#13;
&#13;
PORTER'S&#13;
SUCCESSOR TO ScHLOSSER's&#13;
&#13;
The Last of the Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Phones:&#13;
&#13;
Auto 6 127; Iowa 519.&#13;
&#13;
2001 Lakeport Ave., MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
�Alumni&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
...... . ........ .. .. . ... 161&#13;
&#13;
Ath letics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Baseball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Basketball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Football . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Track . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Indoor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Outdoor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
67&#13;
59&#13;
37&#13;
38&#13;
42&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
Calendar . . ..... .. . . . . ......... 19 3&#13;
April ..... . . ... . . ... . ....... 194&#13;
December ............ . ... 212-215&#13;
F ebruary ................ 220-223&#13;
Interim .................... . 198&#13;
January ... ..... . . . .. . .... 216- 219&#13;
June .. . ..... ... . . ... .... . . .. 197&#13;
Mar ch . . ...... . . ..... . .. . 224-227&#13;
May ...... . .... . ..... . . . 195-196&#13;
November ....... . . . ... . .. 208-211&#13;
October ..... . . .. ..... . .. 204-207&#13;
September ..... . .. .... . . ..... 203&#13;
Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Freshmen ... ....... ..&#13;
Juniors . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Seniors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Sophomores ..... . .....&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
. . . . . 83&#13;
. .... 107&#13;
. . . . . 89&#13;
. . . . . 83&#13;
... .. 10 5&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Departme nts .... .. ............. 141&#13;
Academy .. ...... .. . .... .. ... 143&#13;
Expression ......... . ......... 1 5 9&#13;
Music ...... . ...... ... ....... 155&#13;
Teachers' Training Course ..... . 1 5 7&#13;
Expected Criticisms&#13;
&#13;
.........&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Foreword .... . . . .. ...... .&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Frontispiece . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Greeting to Dr. Craig. . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
History of Morningside College. . . . . 12&#13;
Jok es ... . ........... . ......... 229&#13;
Literary . . . .&#13;
. ....... .. .. . 16 5&#13;
A Chapel Incide nt ....... .. .... 177&#13;
A Chemical Catastrophe .... .. . . 169&#13;
A Lament .. . .. .. ...... ...... 185&#13;
A Sonnet .... ..... ·...... ..... 174&#13;
Die Jahreszeiten ..... . .. . .... . 17 5&#13;
Earl Mason's Choice ............ l 7 0&#13;
Every Stud ent . .. ... .. .... . ... l 82&#13;
R ecollections of An An cient Freshman .. ... . . ........... . ... 176&#13;
The Jo u rney .................. 181&#13;
There Was a Time ... .. .. ...... 166&#13;
The Stud ent's Tale . ..... .. .. .. . 179&#13;
Zet. Novelette ... .. .. .. ....... 186&#13;
Organizations ... ... ... ......... 111&#13;
Academ y R eading Clu b ......... 112&#13;
Annual Board . . .......... .... 118&#13;
Band .. . ....... . ... . ........ 116&#13;
Collegian R eporter ... . . ... .. . . 11 7&#13;
Debate League .. .. ........ ... 114&#13;
Faculty Club . . . . .. .. . ...... . . 112&#13;
Glee Club .... .. ...... . ....... 11 5&#13;
M. Club ........ ... . . . ....... 1 22&#13;
Oratorical Association ......... 113&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Association 11&#13;
Volunteer Band ... ....... . ... 119&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet ....... . .... 121&#13;
Y. W. C. A. Cabin et . . .... . ... . l 20&#13;
&#13;
Faculty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23&#13;
&#13;
Publishers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
Fore nsics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Academy Inter-society Debate . . .&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest . . . . . . .&#13;
Home P eace Oratorical Con test. . .&#13;
Home Prohibition Oratorical Contest ..... . ..... . . .. . . ... . . .&#13;
In ter-Academic Debate . . . . . . . .&#13;
In ter-Collegiate Debates . . .&#13;
Inter-Society Debates . . . .&#13;
R ecords .. . .. . ... . ... .. ......&#13;
State Oratorical Contest . . . . . . . .&#13;
State P eace Oratorical Contest. . .&#13;
State Prohi bition Oratorical Contest .............. . ........&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
78&#13;
72&#13;
74&#13;
82&#13;
79&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
Societies ....... .... . ...... ..... 1 2 5&#13;
Adelphian .. .... . . .. ..... . ... 148&#13;
Aesthesia n .. . ...... . ......... 146&#13;
Aletheia ..... ... .... ..... .... 13 8&#13;
Athenaeum .. . ... . .. .. ..... .. 126&#13;
Crescent ...... . ... ........... 1 50&#13;
Hawkeye . .... . .... . ... . ..... 152&#13;
Ionian ... ... . . .. ... . . ... .. .. 1 32&#13;
Oth'Onian . ...... .... . ........ 1 36&#13;
Philomathean ...... . . .. .... . . 12 8&#13;
Pieria ...... . ................ 1 30&#13;
Zetaleth ean .. . .... . .... . .. . . . 13 4&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
Trustees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22&#13;
&#13;
71&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
79&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
����</text>
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                    <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College Annual yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The 1913 yearbook contains pictures, short articles, sporting results, and other college news and events related to this particular year. The PDF file is a digital copy of the original physical yearbook</text>
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                    <text>Hernandez, Evelyn:Cataloger</text>
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                  <text>The Sioux (Yearbooks)</text>
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                  <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College annual yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The yearbooks contain pictures, short articles, sporting event results, and other college news and events related to that particular year.&#13;
&#13;
A number of yearbooks do not have people's names index in this database. Those yearbooks will have a PDF index of the people's names in that particular year with a reference to the page(s) that they appear on.</text>
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                  <text>Morningside College</text>
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                  <text>Fullerton, Adam: Cataloger</text>
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                  <text>All rights belong to Morningside College</text>
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              <text>Text&#13;
The Sioux 1913&#13;
&#13;
Publishers&#13;
J. E. BRIGGS, Editor in Chief&#13;
D. L. WICKENS, Business M-anager&#13;
ANNA RIEKE, Assistant Editor&#13;
AuDREE DAVIE, Artist&#13;
&#13;
L. H. KINGSBURY, Photographer&#13;
&#13;
V. E. MONTGOMERY, Athletics&#13;
M. P. BRIGGS, Forensics&#13;
A. C. LEMON, Classes&#13;
SARAH BLEAKLY, Organizations&#13;
SUSAN EADS, Societies&#13;
&#13;
R. H. GARLOCK, Alumni&#13;
LOTTIE SANDERS, Literary&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT, Calendar&#13;
JoCY CARTER, Jokes&#13;
&#13;
Foreword&#13;
o those unsophisticated ones&#13;
who have been prevailed upon&#13;
to part with the price of this&#13;
book greetings.&#13;
Another cycle of pleasure&#13;
and nf sorrow, of joy and woe.&#13;
has quickly gone, or much too&#13;
slow and passing left behind&#13;
but memories of days well spent or bad, of deeds&#13;
both mad and wise. With or without offense to&#13;
friend or foe it fell to us to sketch the year exactly as it went.&#13;
Wherein&#13;
we have failed, we&#13;
beseech&#13;
your charity wherein succeeded&#13;
your&#13;
support.&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
o those whose presence makes&#13;
this college fart; to that student body with a faith ever&#13;
steadfast, with a zeal unparalleled, and with a spirit unconquerable; to those whose&#13;
words and deeds have been&#13;
herein recorded; to the Student Body of Morningside College this book is&#13;
faithfully dedicated.&#13;
&#13;
Welcome to Dr.Craig&#13;
ere is&#13;
&#13;
a college,rich in&#13;
the buoyant spirit of&#13;
youth rich in the purity of its associations,&#13;
and rich in its possibilities for the future.&#13;
We welcome you, Dr.&#13;
Craig, as the man best&#13;
fitted to carry on the work so well conceived and&#13;
begun by your predecessors.&#13;
We pledge you our&#13;
support, promising to strive, under your leadership, toward a greater. better. and more influential Morningside. .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Even if the cover isn't artistic, it's expensive.&#13;
Why didn't we put the faculty pedigrees in?&#13;
suppose the college gets out a catalogue for?&#13;
&#13;
What do you&#13;
&#13;
No, faculty and athletics don't harmonize well, yet variety is the&#13;
spice of life.&#13;
That joke we put in on you made you mad?&#13;
those on Sara and Si.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
But you laughed at&#13;
&#13;
Oh, ought not the classes to be so far back? Well, you see,&#13;
we Juniors aren't so important as you thought we were.&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
The stories in the literary department aren't very appropriate?&#13;
Then why didn't you write one that would be?&#13;
The etching on the Junior pictures isn't natural? We thought&#13;
you were tired of those duds we've been wearing for the last two years.&#13;
Where are the jokes? This book is a history.&#13;
what it used to be; Irma is librarian now.&#13;
So you think these criticisms are pretty apt?&#13;
So this annual is "different."&#13;
if we had tried.&#13;
&#13;
College isn't&#13;
&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
&#13;
Just think what it could have been&#13;
&#13;
Well, anyhow, we did our best and you ought not to kick.&#13;
The annual cost us $1,600 and you got it for $2.25, a clear gain&#13;
of $1,597.75.&#13;
&#13;
Culture and Character&#13;
&#13;
The History of Morningside&#13;
SIDNEY&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
&#13;
CHANDLER&#13;
&#13;
0 WRITE of one's alma mater is like writing of one's own mother.&#13;
No medium could express the high esteem and yet the sweep of&#13;
feeling is such that even ordinary expression is beyond reach.&#13;
Urbs divina condita est A. D. 1894. However, this republic&#13;
of learning had its colonial period during which its fore-runner&#13;
was known as the University of the Northwest. This institution&#13;
had been established at Morningside in 1890, mainly through&#13;
the efforts of its first chancellor, the Rev. Wilmot Whitfield, D .&#13;
D., and his brother-in-law, its first dean, the Rev. R. C. Glass,&#13;
D. D. At this time Sioux City was growing in population, and financially, the most&#13;
rapidly of any city in the United States. Her leading men undertook to support the&#13;
new University. When the financial panic of the early nineties broke upon the world,&#13;
the catastrophe was felt most where the development had been most rapid. In the general&#13;
collapse of city values the property of the institution and the fortunes of its founders&#13;
passed into the hands of its creditors. Upon the resignation of Chancellor Whitfield,&#13;
in 1892, he was succeeded by Chancellor William Brush, D. D., who, in turn,&#13;
resigned in 1894. The Conservatory building, known as North Hall, had been&#13;
erected in 1890, and the foundation for the present Main Hall had been laid, but,&#13;
of course, no further progress could be made. The campus grew up to weeds; an order&#13;
for a single pane of glass was refused, so low had the credit fallen. Salaries of pro. fessors could not be paid. Conditions were not only bad, they were intolerable, not even&#13;
sanitary, and the students rose in revolt. In response to a threatened protest delivered&#13;
to the board of trustees in its session, one of the trustees (a leading minister of the Conference of whom it is said the angels' books will show credit as being its chief founder)&#13;
wrote a hasty note with a pencil upon a ·scrap of wrapping paper to the student leading&#13;
the demonstration (now the most influential alumnus of the College), saying, "For&#13;
God's sake,&#13;
stay by us and we will see that you get things better some how!"&#13;
The officers and faculty left the Institution, with the exception of two professors and a&#13;
few instructors. It was then that the young Latin professor received an offer of a liberal&#13;
salary and a desirable position elsewhere. The dean said that it would be hopeless to&#13;
try to go further if she accepted this position and announced his intention of leaving, too.&#13;
The students gathered and said, "We may as well go." That hour was a combination&#13;
of Valley Forge distress and a defeat like that of Bull Run. In that supreme crisis this&#13;
woman quieted the alarm, telling the students that she had no intention of going and that&#13;
none of them must consider it either. The institution was saved and it is one of the chief&#13;
glories of Morningside College that that noble young professor who held the bridge in&#13;
that hour is still in the prime of a great educational career, a chief factor in the destiny&#13;
of the Institution.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Main&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
Twelve&#13;
&#13;
Thirteen&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
The nucleus of the student body being thu.s conserved, a commission appointed by&#13;
the Northwest Iowa Conference purchased at auction the north end of the present&#13;
campus with its one building and the debris of the old foundation for $25,550, the&#13;
splendid statesman of the Kingdom, Rev. J. B. Trimble, D. D., mortgaging a small&#13;
farm in Calhoun County to raise the money to make the necessary cash payment of $2,500.&#13;
December 5, 1894, is the charter day of Morningside College, the date on which the&#13;
articles of incorporation were filed. The name was regarded as temporary when first&#13;
assumed. There were keen debates in the Conference as to the wisdom of trying to build&#13;
the college. Presidents of other institutions, and even the able Secretary of the Board&#13;
of Education at that time, opposed it with great skill. The debate in its behalf was&#13;
led by the trustee first mentioned above, who showed with great strength the strategy of&#13;
the location and opportunity connected with these ruins. These arguments prevailed.&#13;
The Rev. G. W. Carr was elected president and held the ground with a few students&#13;
and the remnant of the faculty for the next three years. He was a practical business&#13;
man and his talents were of great service. Like Israel in Egypt, the board of trustees&#13;
sought a leader equal to the emergency, a Moses to conduct them into the new era.&#13;
Having canvassed such educators as were available, they fixed upon Principal Wilson&#13;
Seeley Lewis, of Epworth Seminary. Professor Lewis (known and loved through the&#13;
years as "Doctor," now "Bishop," Lewis) was then in his fortieth year, with fourteen&#13;
years' experience in educational work. He was sought for other positions camparatively&#13;
without burden but came here because of the "sea room," the unequaled opportunity. His&#13;
greatness was entirely unassuming. His inaugural sermon was preached one evening in&#13;
June, 1897, in the little old church at the corner of St. Mary's and Orleans Avenues&#13;
to a few dozen persons. He was handed a few rusty keys on an old steel ring and not&#13;
one person in a thousand in Northwest Iowa knew that anything had happened. He&#13;
sounded the note: "God calls us to care for the tens of thousands of children in this&#13;
territory. Have faith and. go forward." Three months from that time he took a collection at Ida Grove Conference amounting to $17,500, and for the next eleven years was&#13;
never able to escape the people who desired to press money upon him in the "crises"&#13;
attendant upon the development of the Institution. The Institution was utterly without&#13;
educational recognition. Simultaneously, with each financial campaign, the standards&#13;
were raised. The faculty was enlarged. The curriculum was so extended that no&#13;
classes were allowed to graduate for two years. In 1899 the first class whose work was&#13;
approved by the University Senate was graduated and these six persons organized the&#13;
Alumni Association. The campus was cleared and Main Hall erected in 1900.&#13;
Peters Tract, the south end of the campus, the portion crowning the hill, was purchased.&#13;
Students began to assemble in larger numbers and Morningside College as known today&#13;
closely co-ordinates with the twentieth century.&#13;
CONSE RVATORY OF M U SIC&#13;
&#13;
Higher educational demands were met as necessary to development and deficits&#13;
accompanying were included with the several campaigns for building and endowment.&#13;
President Lewis secured a conditional offer from Mr. Andrew Carnegie and a success-&#13;
&#13;
Fourteen&#13;
&#13;
F i fteen&#13;
&#13;
ful campaign for a quarter of a million dollars endowment and $50,000 of debt was&#13;
triumphantly concluded. The faculty was increased, the standards were raised, the major&#13;
system adopted and the school recognized by the world as having arrived. After a&#13;
thorough examination by the expert investigator of the General Educational Board of&#13;
New York City, this Board surprised the College with a premature announcement that it&#13;
was one of the three colleges in Iowa to be put on the first approved list and offers of&#13;
endowment were publicly made.&#13;
So many campaigns had been made that it seemed impossible to make another but&#13;
after deep consideration of the situation with great anxiety and much prayer, it was&#13;
interpreted as the call to go forward and the undertaking was begun with new zeal. Two&#13;
hundred thousand dollars for the endowment and the one hundred ten thousand dollars&#13;
for debt and enlargement funds made a large total to reach under the circumstances.&#13;
During the Conference session in September of 1907, a mammoth tent which would seat&#13;
fifteen hundred people at a banquet was pitched on the south end of the campus and a&#13;
public collection of $65,000 was taken. With this unparalleled enthusiasm, progress was&#13;
rapid until interrupted by the panic in November of that year. Before winter had passed,&#13;
business having resumed a normal condition, the campaign was again pressed with such&#13;
vigor that during the year 1908 the victory was achieved, the endowment being thus raised&#13;
to $400,000 and the Institution cleared from debt in every form. Another classification&#13;
appeared, namely, that of the State of Iowa, which ranked its colleges in three groups, in&#13;
which Morningside also entered Class A.&#13;
President Lewis was elected Bishop in the Baltimore Conference in May, 1908.&#13;
The telegram which expressed the feelings of the school was sent, saying, "Tearful congratulations of the faculty, sorrowful rahs of students." Never had man performed for&#13;
an institution eleven years of more heroic and successful achievement. He was a leader&#13;
who led. The sacrificing spirit shown by his labors was also indicated by the giving of&#13;
his own splendid home in Morningside in the last great crisis. Others saw the same&#13;
vision and felt the same burden. Every member of the Board of Trustees, every member&#13;
of the Northwest Iowa Conference, every member of the faculty, every alumnus and&#13;
every student of the college, and every patron and friend of the Institution felt some how&#13;
that his own work was of great value and all working in this splendid spirit, carried the&#13;
enterprise forward. Prominent among his co-workers were the following : Mr. C. W.&#13;
Payne of Westside, Iowa, whose magnificent gifts, amounting to $75,000, saved the day&#13;
at its most critical hour (The Institution was glad to vote him her chief patron) ; Dr. E.&#13;
C. Heilman of Ida Grove, whose gifts were heroic; the late Senator J. P. Dolliver;&#13;
the late John Metcalf of Paullina, Iowa; the late Isaac Garmoe of Ft. Dodge, Iowa ;&#13;
Mrs. Cynthia Jones of Denison, Iowa; Mr. J. J. Hill of Minneapolis; Mr. Robert Leeds&#13;
of Cherokee, and a splendid list of others. The late Hon. Victor B. Dolliver's intended&#13;
liberal donation on the purchase price of the Renaissance Hall property was confirmed&#13;
and established by Dean Margaret G. Dolliver and its acquisition thus made possible.&#13;
In all the years no worker has more constantly borne heavy burdens and accomplished&#13;
&#13;
Sixt een&#13;
&#13;
CH EM I STR Y H ALL&#13;
&#13;
Seventeen&#13;
&#13;
difficult tasks with greater efficiency than Secretary J. C. Lockin. "But time would fa il&#13;
to tell" of the splendid hosts of whom these are chiefly representative. Morningside ·&#13;
College is the result of their labors.&#13;
From the weed-covered hole in the ground with a debt on it, the campus passed&#13;
in eleven years to thirty acres and several buildings, the value of which, added to her&#13;
other resources, amounted to $750,000. The few teachers had become a proper faculty.&#13;
The motto, Kala Kagatha (the Good and the Beautiful), had been adopted to express&#13;
the ideal. A sabbatic year with leave of absence for travel and study and the principle of&#13;
third election constituting a permanent one gave to the faculty confidence and inspiration for&#13;
labor. The major system which prepared with unusual efficiency for graduate study or&#13;
professional work showed its splendid results in the achievement of the younger alumni.&#13;
Ninety-seven per cent of the graduates of the Institution were Christians and the students&#13;
at all times showed themselves worthy of high trust and splendid responsibility. The government was on the principle that self control constitutes the central power in human character. Morningside College became a synonym for boundless faith and courage and&#13;
was known as the "Young Giant" among the colleges. The work was of an abiding&#13;
character. Senator Dolliver, who was always ready to lend his marvelous eloquence or&#13;
statesmanlike counsel to the service of the Institution, said, "Morningside College has&#13;
grown faster on lines of permanent strength than any college in history." During 1908&#13;
and 1909 the marvelous growth of the college continued. The school spirit was regarded&#13;
as wonderful by all who knew the Institution. Victories of every kind-great victoriesfirst victories in athletics, oratory, debate, Y. M. C. A. work and all lines of healthful&#13;
activity were achieved by the student body. The total attendance mounted to over six&#13;
hundred. The number of Collegiate students increased sixty per cent in two years and&#13;
Morningside College was recognized far and near. The name was so representative of&#13;
bringing things to pass and so meaningful and of so much value that there was no longer&#13;
thought of changing it and it probably will be permanent.&#13;
In June, 1909, from among many eminent men who were considered, there was&#13;
chosen as president, the Rev. Luther Freeman, D. D., Pastor of the Independence&#13;
Avenue Church in Kansas City, Missouri. He was an able, scholarly and eloquent man,&#13;
of splendid personality and high ideals. As an advanced thinker, as an efficient and&#13;
popular speaker, he made a great impression upon the territory. His admirable qualities&#13;
and unusual abilities were such that every cause he pleaded was presented with the most&#13;
consummate skill and incomparable effect. The old Park Place at this time was made&#13;
over into the present suitable Chemistry Building. The Field House was erected, the&#13;
grounds improved, adorned and beautified. Higher cultural levels were attained. Dr.&#13;
Freeman resigned, leaving hosts of friends and followed by the good will of all, in&#13;
June, 1911 .&#13;
On the eighth of August, the Rev. Alfred E . C raig, D. D ., Ph. D ., was unanimously elected president. Commanding in presence, strong in scholarship, administrative&#13;
talent, pulpit ability, and in everything, his administration has opened with every promise&#13;
&#13;
Eighteen&#13;
&#13;
RENAISSANCE&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
of great success. Few men are so well balanced, so unusually able in all of the many&#13;
lines of activity belonging to such an office. The school and all her constituency possess&#13;
the greatest confidence in his leadership and it is fully believed that a great era of development lies ahead.&#13;
The ultimate future of Morningside is great and sure. A study of the map shows&#13;
that in the splendid northwest half of Iowa she is practically alone and that the richest and&#13;
best portions of three other states are included within her territory. The character of&#13;
the people is such as to assure high educational demands and ideals, having few extremely&#13;
rich and comparatively few poor. There is a prosperous and well-to-do class of the best&#13;
sort of America's population, a situation without prospect of change. From such homes&#13;
young people of the highest possibilities will come seeking adequate life preparation. The&#13;
highest educational authorities after thorough expert investigation have declared this to be&#13;
the best opportunity for the building of a college in this great West. What the fathers&#13;
have begun, those who remain must continue. Many more buildings, multiplied endowment, increased numbers, exalted fame await her. The school spirit, prestige and influence&#13;
will be increased beyond present comprehension. Meanwhile the good wrought in the lives&#13;
of the multitude of students constantly passing through the college will be immeasurable.&#13;
It ought to be an important station of the Kingdom of Heaven and the brotherhood of&#13;
learning in the earth. This sane vision can only be realized through the same spirit of&#13;
heroic sacrifice that has marked the development of the Institution thus far. A college&#13;
is a spiritual reality, a living being which gets its life from the hearts of those who love it.&#13;
The rapidity with which the educational demand is overtaken and this matchless opportunity improved must depend upon the faith, wisdom, courage and love of the patriots&#13;
of this cause. It is easy for this generation to miss seeing its share of the work done by&#13;
either wild enthusiasm, attempting the impossible without proper recognition of the time&#13;
element, or by hesitating till the messenger with the winged foot has passed. The&#13;
Quarter Centennial Anniversary in 1919 will afford a splendid opportunity for the celebration of achievements which will set the College further on its way as seen in our time.&#13;
The memories of days gone by&#13;
Will blend her name with longing tears,&#13;
And glad we'll watch it mounting high,&#13;
Swift toward the zenith, just begun.&#13;
GRACE CH URCH&#13;
&#13;
Twenty&#13;
&#13;
Officers of the Board of Trustees&#13;
&#13;
Emma L. DAHL Ass't Secretary&#13;
.J. G. SHUMAKER, Auditor&#13;
O. W. TOWNER&#13;
L. J . HASKINS Treasurer&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
F . D. EMPEY Field Secretary&#13;
Pres ident&#13;
C. W. PAYNE, Vice-President&#13;
.T. C. LOCKIN Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-two&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-three&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
of the College of&#13;
&#13;
Liberal Arts&#13;
&#13;
Administration&#13;
&#13;
Professors Emeriti&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND&#13;
Smith&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED EDWIN CRAIG&#13;
Doctor of Divinity&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern U.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
AGNES BEVERIDGE FERGUSON&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
SIDNEY LEVI CHANDLER&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
D ean of the Faculty&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREYNALD&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
University of Paris&#13;
&#13;
French and Spanish&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GAY DOLLIVER&#13;
Bachelor of Arts, Cincinnati Wesleyan College&#13;
&#13;
Dean of Women&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, R EGISTRAR&#13;
HAROLD STILES, PRINCIPAL&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
THE ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CALDERWOOD STEPHENS, SECRETARY&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Illinois Wesleyan U.&#13;
&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
THE FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDERICK KANTHLENER&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Harvard U niversity&#13;
&#13;
Greek&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES&#13;
Harvard University&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Northwestern U.&#13;
Doctor of Philosophy&#13;
Physics&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES ALMER MARSH&#13;
Bachelor of Science&#13;
New Lyme Institute&#13;
Public Speaking&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY VAN HORNE&#13;
Bachelor of Philosophy&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Ma thematics&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CALDERWOOD STEPHENS&#13;
Doctor of Medicine&#13;
Kansas University&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Harvard University&#13;
Doctor of Philosophy&#13;
Harvard University&#13;
E conomics and Sociology&#13;
&#13;
JAMES AUSTIN COSS&#13;
Master of Science&#13;
Illinois University&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Instructors&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
Columbia University&#13;
Education&#13;
&#13;
Associate&#13;
&#13;
ALLETTA M. GILLETTE&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
University of Washington&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
EDITH HADLEY&#13;
Master of Arts&#13;
University of Michigan&#13;
&#13;
Professors&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ESTELLE ROBERTS&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
Grinnell&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD&#13;
Bachelor of Philosophy&#13;
Morningside&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
BEULAH WARREN GREENE&#13;
Graduate&#13;
Columbia College of Expression&#13;
Elocution&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED ALICE GARNICH&#13;
Graduate&#13;
Columbia College of Expression&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Women&#13;
Elocution&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
of the&#13;
Conservatory of Music&#13;
HARRY WALTER EWING&#13;
Master of Law (pending)&#13;
Nebraska U.&#13;
Director of Physical Education&#13;
History and Politics&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN ALLISON MORSE&#13;
Associate of American Guild of Organists&#13;
Member of R oyal College of Organists (Eng.)&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
IDA NOLAN REYNOLDS&#13;
Graduate&#13;
Drake University Training School&#13;
Primary Methods and Drawing&#13;
&#13;
JAMES REISTRU P&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER VERA SEAMAN&#13;
Bachelor of Philosophy&#13;
Grinnell&#13;
Latin&#13;
&#13;
CECIL BURLEIGH&#13;
Violin&#13;
&#13;
IRMA FRANKLIN EWING&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
University of Nebraska&#13;
Acting Librarian&#13;
Preparatory&#13;
&#13;
MAYBEL ROMA SMYLIE&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
&#13;
Thirty&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-one&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
&#13;
CLOVIS B. JOHNSON&#13;
Voice Culture&#13;
Band Leader&#13;
&#13;
HENRIETTA M. REES&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
University of Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte and Organ&#13;
&#13;
MAE EDITH WOOD&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
*FAITH&#13;
&#13;
FOSTER WOODFORD&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor of Arts&#13;
&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
. *Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
H. W. EWING&#13;
H. F . KANTHLENER&#13;
&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
R. N. VAN HORNE&#13;
&#13;
AthleticCommittee&#13;
&#13;
F . E. HAYNES&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
The athletic management for the past year has been under the direction of a&#13;
committee composed of three members from the fa culty, the physical director, ex-officio,&#13;
and a student representative. Almost every kind of athletic control has been tried at&#13;
Morningside with variable success. The present system has perhaps met the most&#13;
general approval.&#13;
&#13;
COACH HARRY W. EWING&#13;
&#13;
Coach Ewing began his athletic career in Lincoln High School in the fall of 1904.&#13;
That year the team upon which he played won the championship of Iowa, Nebraska&#13;
and Kansas. The next fall they won the championship of the United States. Entering&#13;
Nebraska University in 1906, he played on the 'varsity for three years, '07, '08, '09.&#13;
Each year he was picked on the "All Missouri Valley Eleven," and the last year by&#13;
some critics for the "All Wes tern." During 191 0, he acted as assistant coach at&#13;
the University.&#13;
Upon the resignation of "Jack" Hollister, who has done so much to put Morningside on the map, Mr. Ewing was secured to superintend the athletics of the school.&#13;
Though sadly handicapped by having to teach several classes in History and Politics,&#13;
our athletic prowess has shown no depression. Despite perverse circumstances, the football&#13;
season was a success. The basketball team was the best in years. In track, we have&#13;
already won the Kansas City Indoor Meet in competition with the biggest schools in&#13;
the central states, and taken second in the Drake Relay Meet. Baseball prospects&#13;
are bright.&#13;
Field&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-five&#13;
&#13;
H OU SE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
100 Yard Dash&#13;
. . C.&#13;
220 Yard Dash&#13;
. . F.&#13;
440 Yard Dash&#13;
. . A.&#13;
880 Yard Run .. . . . ... .. A.&#13;
Mile Run . . . . . .&#13;
. . A.&#13;
2 Mile Run . . . . .&#13;
. . L.&#13;
120. Yard Hurdles&#13;
.. E.&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles&#13;
. . E.&#13;
High Jump . . . .&#13;
. . E.&#13;
Broad Jump ... . . . ... .. . G .&#13;
Shot Put . .. . . . .. . .. .. . F.&#13;
Hammer Throw&#13;
. . E.&#13;
Discus Throw ..&#13;
. . D.&#13;
Mile Relay&#13;
&#13;
........ .&#13;
&#13;
Rogers&#13;
F. Hall . . . . . .&#13;
P. Berkstresser .&#13;
P. Berkstresser .&#13;
P. Berkstresser.&#13;
R. Chapman. . .&#13;
G. Quarnstrom.&#13;
G. Quarnstrom .&#13;
M. Brown. . . .&#13;
E. West. .. . .&#13;
F. Hall. . . . . .&#13;
G. Quarnstrom .&#13;
L. Wickens .. .&#13;
&#13;
. 1908 . . . 10 sec.&#13;
. 1903 .&#13;
22 1-5 sec.&#13;
. 1909.&#13;
. 52 2-5 sec.&#13;
. 1909 . . 2 min. 3 2-5 sec.&#13;
. 1908.&#13;
. 4 min. 40 sec.&#13;
. 1908 . . l O min. 5 sec.&#13;
. 1911 . . . 15 4-5 sec.&#13;
. 1910 . . 25 1-5 sec.&#13;
. 1906.&#13;
. 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
. 1911 . . 21 ft. 2 in.&#13;
. 1903. . . 38 ft. 7 in.&#13;
. 191 l&#13;
121 ft. 3,% m&#13;
. 1911&#13;
120 ft.&#13;
&#13;
E. Montgomery .&#13;
A. P. Berkstresser . . . 1909&#13;
E G Quarnstrom&#13;
. .. . 3 min 36 2-5 sec.&#13;
. .&#13;
.. .&#13;
F. E. Burns . .. . .. .&#13;
&#13;
Cross Country to Floyd&#13;
Monument and Return .. . V. E. Montgomery .. . . 1911 . ... 18 min. 4.6 3-5 sec.&#13;
*State record.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Thirty- seven&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. E. G. QUARNSTROM&#13;
Winner of sixth place at Amateur Athletic Union Meet, Chicago, 1911&#13;
&#13;
Indoor Track&#13;
'12&#13;
'11&#13;
'10&#13;
'09&#13;
Record .... . .&#13;
Third&#13;
St. Paul Indoor Meet. ................ First&#13;
Kansas City Indoor Meet. . . . ..... . .... Second&#13;
No Team&#13;
Fifth&#13;
First&#13;
Omaha Indoor Meet, April I , 1911 ..... . ... .. ............ Fifth with I 7 points&#13;
Sioux Gity Tri-State Indoor Meet, 1910: M. C. 50, S. D. U. 21, Neb. U. 8, Drake 5&#13;
Last year Morningside made a strong showing in the Kansas City Indoor Meet.&#13;
The mile run, the relay, and the 440, the events in which Morningside had based her&#13;
hope of points, were consecutive, which proved a great hindrance. Even so, Montgomery won the mile, and the team took second in the relay.&#13;
At the Omaha Meet one week later, Morningside again showed up strong. The&#13;
mile relay was splendidly won from Drake in fast time. Lemon's victory of second in&#13;
the 440 was a feature of the meet. The winning of first and third by Hudson and&#13;
Bowker in the mile showed class, and Holbert took second in the shot against the best&#13;
weight heavers in the west, making a total of seventeen points.&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-eight&#13;
&#13;
Thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
lNDOOR SQUAD, 1912&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME INDOOR MEET&#13;
&#13;
March 15, 191 2&#13;
&#13;
RELAY TEAM, 1911&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME INDOOR MEET, FEBRUARY&#13;
&#13;
14, 1911&#13;
&#13;
35 Yard Dash-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Lemon; Soph.; Montgomery, Soph.&#13;
35 Yard Low Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Montgomery, Soph.; Prichard, Soph ... 5&#13;
35 Yard High Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Montgomery, Soph.; Braley, Soph... 5 3-5&#13;
Mile Run-Bass, Soph.; Phenis, Academy; Braley, Soph ............... 5: 18 3-5&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Quarnstrom, Soph.; Lemon, Soph.; Engle, Academy.&#13;
High Jump-McIntosh, Academy; Wickens, Soph.; Holbert, Fresh.,&#13;
and Mahood, Academy ..... .. .. . . ... ........... . ... . 5 ft.&#13;
Half Mile Run-Montgomery, Soph.; Quarnstrom, Soph.; Parrish, Academy. 2 :21 3-5&#13;
2 Mile Run-Bass, Soph.; Bowker, Junior; Dolliver, Junior .............. I I :41&#13;
Broad Jump-McKinney, Academy; McIntosh, Academy; Wickens, Soph.&#13;
220 Yard Dash-Montgomery, Soph.; Braley, Soph.; McIntosh, Academy.&#13;
Pole Vault-Dolliver, Junior·; D. Brown,Academy; McKinney and Mahood, Academy.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Sophs.; Wickens, Hess, Braley, Montgomery.&#13;
Totals-Sophomores, 71 ; Academy, 2 3 1/2; Juniors, 9 ; Freshmen, 1/2&#13;
&#13;
Forty&#13;
&#13;
25 Yard Dash-Lemon, Junior; Montgomery, Junior; Kingsbury, Junior .. .... 3 2-5&#13;
Mile Run-Montgomery, Junior; Bowker, Senior; Cushing, Freshman . ... 5:38 4-5&#13;
High Jump-Vernon, Freshman; Vennick, Sophomore; Shelton, Freshman .. 5 ft. 1 in.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Juniors; Montgomery, Kingsbury, Braley, Lemon ........ 2 :4 3-5&#13;
Pole Vault-Lueder, Freshman; Lewis, Senior; D. Brown, Freshman ..... . 9 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Mile Relay-Juniors; Kingsbury, Braley, Montgomery, Lemon .............. 4 :38&#13;
Shot Put-Eilfert, Freshman; D. Brown, Freshman; Brokaw, Freshman ... 31 ft. IO in.&#13;
440 Yard Dash-Lemon, Junior; Bowker, Senior; Kingsbury, Junior ...... I :4 4-5&#13;
Half Mile Run-Montgomery, Junior; Bass, Senior; Bowker, Senior. ... .... 2:37&#13;
Totals- Juniors, 4 3 ; Freshmen, 22 ; Seniors, 1 3 ; Sophomores, 3.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-one&#13;
&#13;
__&#13;
SOPHOMORE&#13;
TEAM-WINNER&#13;
&#13;
TRACK SQUAD, '11&#13;
&#13;
OF HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
May 5, 1911&#13;
100 Yard Dash . . . . Lemon, Sophomore; Chandler, Freshman; Montgomery, Sophomore&#13;
Mile Run . .. .. ..... Hudson, Senior; Williams, Academy; C . Berkstresser, Academy&#13;
220 Yard Dash ...... Lemon, Sophomore; Mahoney, Junior; Chandler, Freshman&#13;
Half Mile Run . ... Phenis, Academy; Braley, Sophomore; C. Berkstresser, Academy&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles ... . .. . .. .. .. . ..... Chandler, Freshman; B. Brown, Academy&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles . . Montgomery, Sophomore ; Chandler, Freshman; Peden, Sophomore&#13;
Two Mile Run .. .. ......... Bowker, Junior; Hudson, Senior ; Garlock, Sophomore&#13;
440 Yard Dash .. . Lemon, Sophomore; Montgomery, Sophomore; Chandler, Freshman&#13;
Broad Jump .. . . . ... . . .... Jory, Sophomore; Wickens, Sophomore; Frear, Junior&#13;
Discus ...... . .. Wickens, Sophomore; D. Brown, Freshman; A . Johnson, Freshman&#13;
Hammer ...... . . .. .. V ennick, Sophomore; Wickens, Sophomore; Dolliver, Junior&#13;
Pole Vault. ..... J. A. Lewis, Sophomore ; Chandler, Freshman; D. Brown, Freshman&#13;
High Jump - ....... . . Jory, Sophomore ; D. Brown, Freshman ; Wickens, Sophomore&#13;
.&#13;
Shot Put. .. . .. .. L. Brown, Freshman; Wickens, Sophomore ; A. Johnson, Freshman&#13;
Half Mile Relay ... . . . ... . ... . .. Sophomores; Peden, Braley, Montgomery, Lemon&#13;
Totals -Sophomores, 62 ; Freshmen, 3 5 ; Seniors, 13 ; Academy, 8 ; Juniors, 5.&#13;
SOPHOMORE RELAY&#13;
&#13;
Forty-two&#13;
&#13;
TEAM IN THE&#13;
&#13;
HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
'11&#13;
&#13;
The Interstate High School Meet is held annually under the auspices of the "M"&#13;
Club. It is open to about three hundred high schools of Iowa, South Dakota, Nebraska&#13;
and Minnesota. The object of the meet is to further an interest in college student life and&#13;
to give those who attend an impression of the "way things are done at Morningside."&#13;
Gold, silver and bronze medals are awarded to the winners of each event, and also&#13;
individual cups to the winning team in the relays. Besides the medals and small cups,&#13;
a large cup is given to the school winning the meet and another to the man who wins the&#13;
most points. A large loving cup is given to the team winning the mile relay by the&#13;
Philomathean Literary Society.&#13;
Hearty co-operation is given by the students and faculty. Last year the meet was&#13;
held on Friday, the preliminaries in the morning and the meet proper in the afternoon.&#13;
In the evening the debate with Upper Iowa occurred. On Saturday morning an opportunity was given the delegations to attend the classes. In the afternoon was staged a dual&#13;
meet between Vermillion and Morningside, champions of their respective states, and also&#13;
a ball game-one of the fastest in the west last year. Thus an opportunity is given to&#13;
witness college life in action.&#13;
SUMMARY OF INTERSTATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
&#13;
May 6, 1911&#13;
100&#13;
220&#13;
440&#13;
880&#13;
Mile&#13;
120&#13;
220&#13;
Pole&#13;
&#13;
SQU AD A'l' DRAKE RELAY MEET , '11&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY AT THE DRAKE RELAY MEET&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines, April 22, 1911&#13;
4 Mile Relay .. . .... . . . .... Des Moines, first; Cornell, second; Morningside, third&#13;
2 Mile Relay .. . .. ... . ......... . South Dakota, first; Coe, second; Cornell, third&#13;
Mile Relay .. ..... ... .. ......... Coe, first; Morningside, second; Cornell, third&#13;
Half Mile Relay . . . . . . .. . .... South Dakota, first; Coe, second; Morningside, third&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash- Osborne, LeMars; Shulkin, Sioux City; Kurtz, Odebolt .... . . 10&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee; Osborne, LeMars; Shulkin, Sioux City ... . 23&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee; Holmes, Sioux City; Cranny, Centerville .. . . 56&#13;
Yard Run-Ferrin, Cherokee ; Mullen, Fonda; Scott, Hawarden ...... .. . 2: 15&#13;
Run-Sumner, Hawarden; Fox, Sioux Falls ; Ferrin, Cherokee .. . . .. 4 :56 3-5&#13;
Yard Hurdles-Vernon, Hawarden; Hanford, Sioux City; Hardy, Fonda . . 1 7&#13;
Yard Hurdles-Quigley, Hawarden; Hardy, Fonda; Shelton, Sloan . ... 27 4-5&#13;
Vault-Lueder, Cherokee; Peterson, Centerville; Wilkins, Correctionville, tied for first place ....................... .. . 10 ft. 9 in.&#13;
High J ump--Aldrich, Sioux City; Franklin, Sioux Falls; Peterson, Centerville . 5 ft. 9 in.&#13;
Broad Jump--Vernon, Hawarden; Rieke, Kingsley; Elfrink, Cherokee .. 19 ft. 9 1/2in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Gilliland, Storm Lake; Moulton, Fonda; Barron, Correctionville ....... . . . ... . .......... ........ . . 146 ft. 3 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Aldrich, Sioux City ; Holmes, Sioux City; Vernon, Hawarden .. 40 ft. 11 in.&#13;
Discus-Knapp, Cherokee; Vernon, Hawarden; Aldrich, Sioux City .. . .. ... 11 0 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay-Cherokee, first; Hawarden, second .. . ... . .............. .. . 4 :07&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Sioux City, first; Cherokee, second .. . ......... . . .. .. ... 1 :40&#13;
Totals-Cherokee, 33; Sioux Ciy, 29; Hawarden, 28; Fonda, 10 ; LeMars, 9;&#13;
Kingsley, 3; Odebolt, 1 ; Sloan, 1.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Forty-four&#13;
&#13;
Forty-five&#13;
&#13;
QUARNSTROM WINNING 120 YARD HURDLES MAY 13, 1911&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF SOUTH DAKOTA UNIVE RSITY-M ORNINGSIDE M EET&#13;
&#13;
May 13, 1911&#13;
&#13;
I 00&#13;
220&#13;
440&#13;
880&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash-Aspinwall, S. D. ; Thackaberry, S. D ......... .. .. . ...... . 10&#13;
Yard Dash-Aspinwall, S. D.; Thackaberry, S. D ....... ... ... . ... 22 2-5&#13;
Yard Dash-Quarnstrom, M.; Gay, S . D ...... ....... .. . . ... . . . 5 3 1-5&#13;
Yard Run- Gay, S. D.; Montgomery, M. . .... . .. . ... . .. ..... 2 :05 2-5&#13;
Mile Run- Montgomery, M. ; Gay, S. D ........... . ....... ... .. ..... 4 :48&#13;
120 Yard Hurdles- Quarnstrom, M. ( others disqualified ) ...... . . . .... . .. 15 4-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles- Quarnstrom, M .; Sheeks, S. D .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 25 2-5&#13;
Pole Vault-Norgren, S. D.; Lewis and Chandler, M.. .......... .. . . . IO ft. 6 in.&#13;
High Jump- Norgren, S. D.; Jory, M. . ........... .. .... ... ....... 5 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Sheeks, S. D.; West, M.. .. .... . . .. . . ....... . . ...... 21 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Goddard, S. D . ; Quarnstrom, M. . ...... . .... ... .. 139 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Shot Put- Holbert, M.; Downing, S. D . .. .. ........ .. . . .......... 36 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus Throw- Wickens, M .; Barrett, S. D ... ... .... .. ... . .. .. . . 115 ft. 5 in.&#13;
Two Mile Run- Bowker, M. ; Lambert, S. D .. .. . . . . . ..... .. .. ... ..... IO :59&#13;
Totals-South Dakota, 59; Morningside, 50.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-six&#13;
&#13;
STATE CHAMPIONS&#13;
&#13;
1911&#13;
&#13;
Morningside in the State Meet&#13;
Morningside's career in the state meet has been indeed unique. S ince entering&#13;
the State Association five years ago, Morningside has made a record seldom, if ever,&#13;
equaled in the history of Iowa athletics. In 190 7, our first year in state competition,&#13;
we won fifth place. In 1908, we won fo urth place, Iowa University ranking fifth. In&#13;
1909, our third year in the state meet, we came away with third honors. Before&#13;
another year rolled around, Ames, Iowa and D rake had withdrawn from the State&#13;
Association in order to join the Missouri Valley Conference. T he place of holding&#13;
the state meet was changed from D es Moines to G rinnell. P ractically every college&#13;
is represented in this annual meet at Grinnell. In 191 0, Morningside won second in the&#13;
state meet and last year she went to the state meet w ith a well balanced sq uad of ten&#13;
men and for the first time brought home first honors. H aving progressed steadily in five&#13;
years from fifth to first place, it being impossible to advance further, we propose to&#13;
maintain our present position at the top.&#13;
&#13;
Forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF STATE MEET, GRINNELL, IOWA, MAY&#13;
&#13;
19, 1911&#13;
&#13;
100&#13;
220&#13;
440&#13;
880&#13;
&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Hoovey, Cornell; Sherman, Grinnell .. ... . .. 10 2-5&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Quarnstrom, Morningside; Hoovey, Cornell .. .. . . 24&#13;
Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Lemon, Morningside; Collins, Parsons . . . . . . 5 1 1-4&#13;
Yard Run- Osborn, Simpson; Montgomery, Morningside; Tucker, Cornell 2:05 1/2&#13;
Mile Run-Durey, Des Moines; Boyack, Grinnell; Berwind, Corneli. ..... . . .. 4 :40&#13;
12 0 Yard Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Morningside; Dreier, Des Moines;&#13;
Rusk, Simpson . .... .. .. ... ........ . .... . . .. . .. . . 16 1-5&#13;
220 Yard Hurdles-Lusted, Cornell; Quarnstrom, Morningside;&#13;
Dreier, Des Moines ..... . . . ........ .. . ...... .. ...... 28&#13;
Pole Vault-Verink, Coe; Chandler, Morningside; Bair, Grinnell . . . .. . .. 10 ft. 3 in.&#13;
High Jump--Jones, Grinnell; Rusk, Simpson, Dreier, Des Moines, and&#13;
Green, Coe, tied for second . . .... .. ..... . .. .. . . 5 ft. 7 1/4&#13;
in.&#13;
Broad Jump--Beggaman, Teachers' College; Cross, Grinnell; West,&#13;
Morningside .. .. .. . . . .. . .. . . . .. . ... . . . .... 19 ft. 11 1/4 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Holbert, Morningside; Verink, Coe; Hunter, Grinnell .. ... . . . 36 ft. 4 in.&#13;
Discus-Wickens, Morningside; Rusk, Simpson; Holbert, Morningside . ... . . . 120 ft.&#13;
Mile Relay- Cornell, first; Grinnell, second ; Coe, third . . .. . .... . . . .. .. . 3 : 4 2 1/2&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Grinnell, first ; Morningside, second ; Coe, third . .... . . . . . 1 : 3 5 3/4&#13;
Two Mile Run- Rurey, Des Moines; Cross, Grinnell; Bowker, Morningside .. 11 :14 1/2&#13;
Totals-Morningside, 36; Coe, 25 1-3; Grinnell, 25; Cornell, 16; Des Moines,&#13;
14 1-3; Simpson, 9 1-3; Teachers' College, 5; Parsons, I.&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY STEALING THE&#13;
&#13;
IJ AL F MILE&#13;
&#13;
AT GRINNELL&#13;
&#13;
Forty-eight&#13;
&#13;
VIEWS OF THE MONUMENT RUN, FEBRUARY&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
22, 1912&#13;
&#13;
Monument Run&#13;
&#13;
The annual cross country run to Floyd Monument and return on Washington's&#13;
birthday has come to be a tradition at Morningside. Over a course involving a number&#13;
of steep hills and measuring approximately three and one-half miles, it provides a strenuous run and an interesting race. Besides its traditional value, it has the further intrinsic&#13;
worth of developing material for the later winter and spring track work.&#13;
The Monument Run was introduced in the early days of the college and its&#13;
history is marked by many hard races in snow and rain when the time was not the best.&#13;
When A. P. Berkstresser, for several years holder of the record, cut the time down to&#13;
twenty minutes and twenty seconds, even then running in deep snow, it was thought the&#13;
record would hold for some time. However, in 19 11, V. E. Montgomery, with excellent weather conditions and a fast course, covered the distance in 18 :46 3-5, thereby&#13;
establishing a record of exceptional time.&#13;
Last year, F. H. Trimble, '11, made provision for two medals, gold and silver, to&#13;
be awarded to the two men finishing first and second. The Doctors Mahood also put&#13;
up a gold medal for the first Academy man to finish. This was given for one year only&#13;
and was won by C. F. Berkstresser. The Trimble medals are offered for five years&#13;
and next year a bronze one will be awarded for third place. During the first two years,&#13;
Montgomery has won the gold medal and J. H. Berkstresser and W. H. Bowker each&#13;
a silver medal.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-one&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-two&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
Base ball&#13;
&#13;
COACH JOH N W . H OLL ISTE R&#13;
&#13;
The Season of 1911&#13;
The success of a college baseball season is not always determined by the percentage&#13;
column. The development shown should enter as a prominent factor in the decision.&#13;
Taking this, then, as our criterion, the season of 1911 was one of the best in the history&#13;
of Morningside. With only three men of the 191 0 'varsity in school, Coach Hollister,&#13;
with his usual system, overcame this difficulty and early in March played five practice&#13;
games with the Sioux City Western Leaguers, two of which were won from the professionals. Then came the regular college games. A trip in Nebraska was not a success&#13;
from the standpoint of games won. In. three games with South Dakota, Vermillion was&#13;
all but defeated twice. On a trip down state, Iowa, who had just won from Wisconsin,&#13;
was defeated. In a series of return games played at home, the hard work of the men&#13;
and the coaching of "Jack" showed their value and not one was lost. Thus, a team,&#13;
green almost in its entirety, was molded into one of the best Morningside ever turned out.&#13;
A s a fittin g tribute to a worthy player, Ben Holbert was elected captain of the team&#13;
for 1912.&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-five&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. H. C. HARPER&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
May&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
Schedule for 1911&#13;
&#13;
Morningside .... 6 .... . ......... Sioux City Wes tern League . . . . 3&#13;
Morningside .... 7 ..... .. . . .. . . .. Sioux City Western League. . . . 3&#13;
(Ten innings)&#13;
18-Morningside .... 8 . .. .. . ..... .. .. Bellevue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6&#13;
19-Morningside . . .. 0 . . ............. Creighton . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. I0&#13;
20-Morningside .... 2 . ........ . ..... Nebraska Wesleyan . .&#13;
. . 10&#13;
2 I- Morningside .... 9 .. . ..... ...... . Cotner ............... . . . . 10&#13;
24- Morningside ... . 0 . .. . . .. ........ South Dakota University. . . .&#13;
9&#13;
25-Morningside .... 1 .. . .. .......... South Dakota University. . . . . . . 1&#13;
(Four innings.)&#13;
2-Morningside ... . 8 .. .. . .... .. .... Iowa University . . . . . . . . . . . . 7&#13;
3- Morningside .... 2 ........... ... . St. Joseph . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7&#13;
4- Morningside .... 5 .. ... .. ... ..... St. Thomas .... . . . .... ..... 10&#13;
12- Morningside .... 5 . . ........... . . Nebraska Wesleyan . . . . . . . . . 2&#13;
13- Morningside . . .. 5 ...... ........ . South Dakota University . . . . . . 4&#13;
15-Morningside . ... 8 ........... . . . . St. Thomas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5&#13;
I -Morningside .... 8 .... . ... .... . .. Cotner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
&#13;
Harper&#13;
&#13;
.z,..&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-six:&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
CAPT . J.&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
Sept.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
H. WINTERRINGER&#13;
&#13;
Schedule for 1911&#13;
&#13;
30-Morningside. . . . 5 . . . .. . ... . .. . .. . Cherokee High School. . . . . . . 3&#13;
7-Morningside ... . 15 . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . Bellevue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
14-Morningside . . . . 5 .... . . ...... . ... Iowa University .. . .. . . .. . . 11&#13;
21-Morningside .. .. I 7 .... ....... . .. . . Rapid City School of Mines. . 3&#13;
28-Morningside. . . . 6 .. . . ............ Creighton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8&#13;
4-Morningside .... 30 ........ . ....... Des Moines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
18-Morningside ... . 5 . . .. ............ St. Joseph ... ... .. . ... . . . 0&#13;
30-Morningside . . . . 0 .. . ............. South Dakota University . ... 24&#13;
R ESE RVES&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 3-Morningside Reserves . . . . 0 .... . . . . . ..... Onawa High School . . . . 5&#13;
Nov. 25-Morningside Reserves .... 22 .. .... . .. . .. . . Onawa High School .... 0&#13;
&#13;
Fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
The Season of 1911&#13;
The football season of 1911 opened with the customary camp at Blue Lake near&#13;
Onawa.&#13;
&#13;
Ten men reported and two weeks were spent on the rudiments of the game.&#13;
&#13;
Early in the season a game was played at Iowa City with the encouraging result of all but&#13;
a victory for the Maroons.&#13;
of Mines.&#13;
&#13;
For the first time a game was played with Rapid City School&#13;
&#13;
It was easily won. Out of eight games played, the long end of the score was&#13;
&#13;
with Morningside in five.&#13;
&#13;
The team would probably have been more successful had not&#13;
&#13;
an epidemic of typhoid fever broken out in the squad taking four of the 'varsity.&#13;
hole was never able to be filled.&#13;
&#13;
This&#13;
&#13;
In the Thanksgiving game only five men were in their&#13;
&#13;
regul.a r positions which accounts in a measure for the lop-sided score.&#13;
&#13;
In consideration of&#13;
&#13;
the conditions the season as a whole may be recorded as a success.&#13;
&#13;
With most of the&#13;
&#13;
'varsity still in school, with this year's experience, and with "Big Ben" Holbert to lead&#13;
them, we may confidently look for a still better record next fall.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Varsity&#13;
&#13;
SQ U AD 1911&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
S ixty&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
J&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY WINTERRINGER ("Hank")&#13;
&#13;
Left Tackle&#13;
Weight, 198. Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.&#13;
Captain for two years which did not spoil his&#13;
playing. Picked by most critics for an "All&#13;
Iowa" position. Good leader and hard scraper.&#13;
Has a special hatred for negroes. Has played&#13;
four years and is still good for another.&#13;
&#13;
EARL KNOUSE ("Yaller")&#13;
&#13;
Right Half back&#13;
Weight, 175. Height, 5 feet 10 inches.&#13;
Played a star game at half. Was strong at&#13;
running interference. One of the typhoid patients. Played his prep ball at Beatrice, Nebraska High. Also a year with the Nebraska&#13;
Freshmen. His first year at Morningside.&#13;
ROBERT E. SMYLIE ("Bob")&#13;
&#13;
Left Halfback&#13;
Weight, 160. Height, 5 feet 8 inches.&#13;
"Bob" played his first football in the Academy&#13;
and has been a 'varsity star ever since his size&#13;
would permit. Rated by all judges as one of&#13;
the best open field runners in the state. Never&#13;
failed to make a gain when given the ball.&#13;
EARL C. WARBURTON ("Buttons")&#13;
&#13;
Substitute End&#13;
Weight, 170. Height, 5 feet 10 inches.&#13;
Played his first football in Cherokee High and&#13;
later on the Beloit Freshman team. Held down&#13;
the end position early in the season. A hard&#13;
and willing worker but baffled by the forward&#13;
pass.&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM A. McCuRDY ("Mac")&#13;
&#13;
D. LAWRENCE WICKENS ("Wick")&#13;
&#13;
Right Tackle&#13;
&#13;
Center&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 165. Height, 5 feet 8 1/2 inches.&#13;
Learned his football in the Academy. Small&#13;
for a tackle but a mighty man to oppose. Never&#13;
been licked on the gridiron and he will take on&#13;
any of them. An aggressive player. Third year&#13;
on the Morningside 'varsity.&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 185. Height, 6 feet&#13;
inch.&#13;
Played at center till he contracted the typhoid.&#13;
A hard, consistent, aggressive player. Especially strong on the defense.&#13;
Had a knack of&#13;
breaking up center smashes and falling on the&#13;
ball. His first year.&#13;
&#13;
PAUL EIFFERT ("Turk")&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT R. VERNON ("Pinkey")&#13;
&#13;
Left Guard&#13;
&#13;
Left End&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 190. Height, 5 feet 11 inches.&#13;
Played his first year of football last fall. Fast&#13;
and aggressive, he made an ideal guard. Had&#13;
a hobby for breaking up end runs before they&#13;
started. Blocked more kicks than all the men&#13;
on the team. Another victim of typhoid.&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 180. Height, 6 feet. Good all&#13;
around athlete. Showed lots of class but played&#13;
in hard luck. Laid up early in the season with&#13;
a bad knee and later with typhoid. Fast on his&#13;
feet and an adept at handling the forward pass . .&#13;
Came to us last fall from Hawarden.&#13;
&#13;
BEN HOLBERT, JR. ("Ben")&#13;
&#13;
Fullback&#13;
Weight, 19 5. Height, 6 feet 11/2 inches.&#13;
As good an athletic as ever wore a Morningside&#13;
uniform. Was the mainstay of the back field.&#13;
His long spiral punts fooled them all and saved&#13;
many a game for the Maroons. When called&#13;
upon to hit the line he rarely failed to gain.&#13;
The unanimous choice for captain in 1912.&#13;
Played first at Culver Military Academy.&#13;
&#13;
Guy D. McKINNEY ("Mac")&#13;
&#13;
Center and Guard&#13;
Weight, 158. Height, 5 feet 10 1/2 inches.&#13;
Played at guard the first part of the season but&#13;
shifted to center when Wickens was taken sick.&#13;
Small but a fierce player. As game a man as&#13;
ever stopped a smash. Hails from Ft. Dodge.&#13;
&#13;
]AMES H. LEWIS ("Jimmy")&#13;
&#13;
BARRETT P. DOLLIVER ("Dolly")&#13;
&#13;
Right End&#13;
&#13;
Substitute&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 146. Height, 5 feet 8 3/4 inches.&#13;
Though diminutive in size, is there and over on&#13;
the football field. Has played football in Morningside since his early infancy. His long familiarity with the game makes him an expert at&#13;
sizing up a play. When he tackles the ball is&#13;
down. Second year of 'varsity.&#13;
&#13;
Weight, 17 5. Height, 5 feet 1 1 inches.&#13;
The hardest worker on the squad although he&#13;
never succeeded in winning a permanent berth&#13;
on the 'varsity. His work was always consistent and his faithfulness inspiring. Captain&#13;
of the reserves last fall.&#13;
&#13;
Six ty-four&#13;
&#13;
Six ty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
" R" MEN, 1911&#13;
&#13;
CAPT. CLIFFORD&#13;
&#13;
Many fitting and sincere comments have been made concerning the value of that&#13;
part of the football squad that does not make the 'varsity. No praise, however, can be&#13;
too high or extravagant for those men who have fought night after night without hope of&#13;
personal advancement. Each night they appeared, generally before the varsity, amid rain&#13;
and snow, during warm September and cold November. Those who have so done know&#13;
best the unconquerable energy required to steadfastly bear the disheartening gruelling&#13;
smashes of the heavier 'varsity, the neglect of coaching, a losing fight carried on in the&#13;
face of criticism and blame from those who have not the nerve to get out and help,-all&#13;
that their chosen school may win more laurels.&#13;
This year reserve jerseys have been awarded to the men who stayed out through the&#13;
season as a token of the school's appreciation of the time, effort, and courage of these&#13;
men. 'The men who have had the honor of representing their school on the gridiron cannot adequately express their gratitude to the scrubs for their struggles. They can only say&#13;
in thanks, that it is the spirit which these men have shown that has earned the varsity victoriously through inter-collegiate conflicts toward a greater Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
JORY&#13;
&#13;
The Season of 1912&#13;
The past season in basketball was the most successful in years in spite of a very&#13;
light schedule. Three college games were played of which two were victories. Nebraska, who holds the championship of Missouri Valley, met us when we were in the&#13;
worst shape of the season. In the next game with Huron, champions of North and South&#13;
Dakota, Morningside retrieved herself by winning 24 to 31. South Dakota came next on&#13;
the schedule and although the team was not in the best of shape, we got the long end of&#13;
the 41 to 45 score after a hard fight. Three of the team were new at basketball in&#13;
Morningside. Joryat center, was the pivot of the Maroon team-work. Montgomery,&#13;
forward, figuratively was probably the strongest man on the team. Bass developed into ·&#13;
a consistent twin. Holbert and Eiffert as guards were fast, heavy, accurate, aggressive,&#13;
unsurpassed. All but Bass will be in school next year.&#13;
&#13;
Six ty -seven&#13;
&#13;
THE TEAM THAT&#13;
&#13;
BEAT VERMILLION&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE 1912&#13;
for&#13;
Jan. 27-Morningside .... 10 .... ...... ...... Nebraska University&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
-Morningside .... 3 1 . . . . ........... Huron&#13;
&#13;
Feb. 14- Morningside .... 45 .&#13;
&#13;
. . .......... South Dakota University.&#13;
&#13;
.62&#13;
.24&#13;
.41&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
VARSITY SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM, 1912&#13;
&#13;
Summary of Class&#13;
Seniors&#13;
vs.&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
. .. . ... . . .&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
Seniors&#13;
&#13;
. .....&#13;
&#13;
Tournament&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
&#13;
....... . 8&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores ... . ...&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
vs.&#13;
Middle A cademy&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen .......... 46&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
Freshmen .&#13;
&#13;
........ . 28&#13;
&#13;
. 26&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Middle Academy .. . . ..... . ............... 16&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Seventy&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
Dual&#13;
Inter-Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Dual&#13;
Inter -Collegiate&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, Iowa, April 21 ' 1911&#13;
Fayette, Iowa, April 2 I, 1911&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
UPPER IOWA UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Parliamentary form of&#13;
governmen t is better adapted to the needs ofa&#13;
.&#13;
progressive an d democratic nation than the&#13;
Presidential form.&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Parliamentary form of government is better adapted to the needs of a progressive and democratic nation than the Presidential form.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeAffirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Upper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
NegativeUpper Iowa&#13;
&#13;
NegativeMorningside&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative, 2&#13;
Negative, I&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-three&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter- Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
November 16, 1911&#13;
November 9, 1911&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That a system of compulsory industrial insurance, covering sickness, accident, and old age,&#13;
would be desirable in the United&#13;
States.&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That the Initiative and&#13;
Referendum should be adopted by&#13;
the several states.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
D ECISION&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
PHILO TEAM&#13;
H. G. Merten&#13;
R. W. H ess&#13;
M. P . Briggs&#13;
&#13;
IO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
IO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
E. S. Fullbrool,&#13;
R. H. Carter&#13;
R. H. Garlock&#13;
&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
H. H. Lueder&#13;
J. H. L ewis&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1&#13;
Negative 2&#13;
&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
W. A. Mccurdy&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
&#13;
L. H . Kin gsbury&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Triangular&#13;
Inter-Society&#13;
Debate&#13;
&#13;
Inter- Academic&#13;
Debate&#13;
Yankton, South Dakota, May 5, 1911&#13;
&#13;
November 23, 1911&#13;
&#13;
YANKTON ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
0THONIAN&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That the States and the Nation&#13;
should pass laws guaranteeing bank deposits.&#13;
&#13;
R esolved,&#13;
&#13;
That the Panama&#13;
Canal should be neutralized.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
Yankton Academy&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Negative-&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Academy&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION&#13;
&#13;
DECISION&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
PHILO&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
J . E. Briggs&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
R. H. McVicke r&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3&#13;
OTHO TEAM&#13;
&#13;
F. B. Rogers&#13;
G. E. Wick en s&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
-·&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-six&#13;
Seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Academy&#13;
Inter- Soceity&#13;
Debate&#13;
December 8, 1911&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
&#13;
vs.&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
FRANK P. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
HOME RATORICAL&#13;
O&#13;
CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
&#13;
November 27, 19 11&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That all moneys and&#13;
credits in the state of Iowa should&#13;
be exempt from taxation.&#13;
&#13;
State Oratorical Contest&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeHawkeye&#13;
&#13;
Ames, Iowa, March 1, 191 2&#13;
&#13;
NegativeAdelphian&#13;
&#13;
Decision&#13;
HAWKEYE TEAM&#13;
&#13;
C. M. Phenis&#13;
D. C. McKinney&#13;
H. A . Gorde r&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 2&#13;
Negative 1&#13;
&#13;
Frank P. Johnson&#13;
Elihu C. Mead&#13;
Barrett P. Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Majesty of Peace, First&#13;
The Book of Books, Second&#13;
The Problem, Third&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHIAN&#13;
&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
H . L. Fowler&#13;
R. E. Mahood&#13;
T. B. Bassett&#13;
&#13;
S eventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
Hugh Webster, Ames&#13;
Commerce and World Peace, F irst&#13;
F. P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
The Realized Vision, Second&#13;
Clarendon Havighorst, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
The Crucial Problem of Democracy, Third&#13;
G. L. Young, Leander Clark&#13;
Peace, the Mission of America&#13;
George L. Potgeter, Cornell&#13;
Savonarola&#13;
G len Jackson, Coe&#13;
Dynamic Peace&#13;
Miss G race Bowen, Parsons&#13;
The College Woman's Opportunity and Responsibility&#13;
Beldon Dennison, Lenox&#13;
The Crowd and Social Progress&#13;
Schools not on the contest:&#13;
Ellsworth, Simpson.&#13;
&#13;
Seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines, Penn, Upper Iowa, Tabor, Buena Vista,&#13;
&#13;
C. E. SMITH&#13;
ROBERT R. VERNON&#13;
&#13;
FRANK P. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Home Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
February 23, 1912&#13;
&#13;
State Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
Pella, Iowa, May 12, 1911&#13;
The Majesty of Peace, First&#13;
America and Peace in the Orient, Second&#13;
The Master Force of Progress, Third&#13;
Dynamic Peace&#13;
The Passing of War&#13;
The Approach of Peace&#13;
The Curse of Armaments&#13;
The Evolution of Government&#13;
The Next Step in the Peace Propaganda&#13;
&#13;
Frank P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
J. G. Emerson, Ames&#13;
H. F. Dickensheets, Leander Clark&#13;
Glen Jackson, Coe&#13;
Rudolph Peterson, Luther&#13;
Roy Lewis, Central University&#13;
Hubert Peckham, Penn&#13;
Roy Currier, Parsons&#13;
H. G. Craymer, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
Home Peace Oratorical Contest&#13;
March 22, 1912&#13;
United States and Universal Peace, First&#13;
The New Patriotism&#13;
&#13;
Robert R. Vernon&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
The Anarchism of the Liquor Traffic, First&#13;
The Problem, Second&#13;
Our Twentieth Century Problem&#13;
The Call to Arms&#13;
The Enemy Within&#13;
Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness&#13;
Christian Responsibility&#13;
&#13;
C. E. Smith&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
R. R. Vernon&#13;
Charles Spry&#13;
Harry Fowler&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
Clark Hickman&#13;
&#13;
State Prohibition Oratorical Contest&#13;
March 22, 1912&#13;
A Second Slavery, First&#13;
The Legalized Outlaw, Second&#13;
The Sacred Heritage in Peril, Third&#13;
The Nullification of Law&#13;
The Anarchism of the Liquor Traffic&#13;
The Call to Arms&#13;
The Ultimate Solution&#13;
The Broken Tread of Onward Progress&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
Miss Laura M. Chasse!, Cornell&#13;
Fred W. lngvoldstad, Central Holiness U.&#13;
G. T. Becktolt, Leander Clark&#13;
R. E. Mendenhall, Penn&#13;
C. E. Smith, Morningside&#13;
W. L. Canady, Highland Park&#13;
H. E. Norton, Central University&#13;
0. P. Manker, Simpson&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Records&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL AssoCIATION&#13;
&#13;
1900-J. A. Davies. . . .&#13;
. Ninth&#13;
1901-H. A. Keck. . . . .&#13;
. Seventh&#13;
1902-A. R. Toothaker .&#13;
. Eliminated on thought&#13;
1903-D. C. Hall . . . . . .&#13;
. Fourth&#13;
1904-R. E. Heilman ............. .&#13;
1905-G. J. Poppenheimer .. .&#13;
1906-A. G. Cushman ... .&#13;
. . Fifth&#13;
1907-A. G. Cushman ... .&#13;
. . Second&#13;
1908-F. W. Backemeyer.&#13;
. . First; Interstate, Eighth&#13;
1909-F.&#13;
w. Backemeyer.&#13;
. Second&#13;
1910-H. S. Hamilton .&#13;
. Second&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson.&#13;
. Second&#13;
1912-F. P. Johnson.&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL AssocIATION&#13;
&#13;
1901-G. W. Finch ...... ... . .... First; Interstate, First; National, Third&#13;
. Second&#13;
1903-J. N. H. McCay.&#13;
. Third&#13;
1906-C. D. Horner ..&#13;
. Fifth&#13;
1907-Ida Lewis ....&#13;
. Third&#13;
1908-G. W. Barrett.&#13;
. Second&#13;
1909-H. H. Gill . ... .&#13;
. First; Interstate, Third&#13;
1910-F. P. Johnson .. .&#13;
. Sixth&#13;
1911-W. A. McCurdy ..&#13;
. . Fifth&#13;
1912-C. E. Smith . . .. . .&#13;
STATE. PEACE ORATORICAL AssocIATION&#13;
&#13;
1911-F. P. Johnson .... ......... First&#13;
1912-R. R. Vernon ........ .. ... Fifth&#13;
DEBATE&#13;
1902-N ebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3&#13;
1903-Baker University 1, Morningside 2&#13;
1904-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Baker University 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1905-Upper Iowa U. 2, Morningside 1. Baker U. 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1906-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1907-Upper Iowa University 2, Morningside 1&#13;
1908-Upper Iowa U. 0, Morningside 3. Nebraska Wesleyan 0, Morningside 3&#13;
1909-Nebraska Wesleyan 1, Morningside 2&#13;
1910-Simpson 0, Morningside 3. Upper Iowa 1, Morningside 2&#13;
1911-Upper Iowa U. 1, Morningside 2. · Upper Iowa U. 3, Morningside 0&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
Eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-three&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE E. · ANTHONY&#13;
&#13;
Fair&#13;
Excellent&#13;
Amiable&#13;
&#13;
P.R. CORNER&#13;
&#13;
Pleasant&#13;
Reasonable&#13;
Congenial&#13;
&#13;
W. H . BOWKER&#13;
&#13;
Wistful&#13;
Honorabl e&#13;
Bashful&#13;
&#13;
R. H. CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Reliable&#13;
H efty&#13;
Cute&#13;
&#13;
w. ·w.&#13;
&#13;
BASS&#13;
&#13;
Waggish&#13;
Winning&#13;
Boyish&#13;
&#13;
A. BLAN CHE CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Accurate&#13;
Benevolent&#13;
Con s tant&#13;
&#13;
L. L. CULBERTSON&#13;
&#13;
Lusty&#13;
Lucky&#13;
Courageous&#13;
&#13;
CLARA E. CRUMMER&#13;
&#13;
Considerate&#13;
Earnes t&#13;
Compet en l&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
£&#13;
&#13;
B. P. DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Bustling&#13;
P eaceable&#13;
Dauntless&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE C. FLETCHER&#13;
&#13;
Nice&#13;
Coefficient&#13;
Facetious&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
Eighty -four&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
E. ELLISON&#13;
&#13;
Worthy&#13;
Efficient&#13;
Enduring&#13;
&#13;
I. N. GABRIELSON&#13;
&#13;
Independent&#13;
Noble&#13;
Genuin e&#13;
&#13;
S. E. ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
W . D. FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
Silent&#13;
Exact&#13;
Erudite&#13;
&#13;
Willing&#13;
Diligent&#13;
Fainthearted&#13;
&#13;
MAUDE L. GILLIN&#13;
&#13;
Modest&#13;
Loving&#13;
Graciou s&#13;
&#13;
MADGE L. GILLIN&#13;
&#13;
Merry&#13;
Little&#13;
Gifte d&#13;
&#13;
R. W . HESS&#13;
&#13;
Runty&#13;
Wise&#13;
Handy&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL M.&#13;
&#13;
COOK&#13;
&#13;
Righteous&#13;
Mild&#13;
Charming&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
D. JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Sesq uipedalianic&#13;
Dignified&#13;
Judicious&#13;
&#13;
J . A. LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Journalistic&#13;
Agreeable&#13;
Luminous&#13;
&#13;
A.E.KENT&#13;
&#13;
Aberrant&#13;
Eccentric&#13;
Kind&#13;
&#13;
J. H. LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Jocular&#13;
Hilarious&#13;
Lithesome&#13;
&#13;
HULDA A. KREUTZ&#13;
&#13;
Hasty&#13;
Angelic&#13;
Keen&#13;
&#13;
E. LOUISE 1lcDONALD HELEN A. McDONALD&#13;
&#13;
Estimable&#13;
Loyal&#13;
teditative&#13;
&#13;
D. P. MAHONEY&#13;
&#13;
LOLA I. RAW&#13;
&#13;
Dashing&#13;
Pugilistic&#13;
Musical&#13;
&#13;
Laudable&#13;
Imperturbable&#13;
Resourceful&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-sev en&#13;
&#13;
Humble&#13;
Attentive&#13;
Modest&#13;
&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Energetic&#13;
R efulgent&#13;
&#13;
HELEN K. OLMSTEAD&#13;
&#13;
Honest&#13;
Kind&#13;
Obliging&#13;
&#13;
F. B. ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
Frisky&#13;
Brainy&#13;
Rare&#13;
&#13;
E. C. PALMER&#13;
&#13;
Effeminate&#13;
Cheerful&#13;
Pious&#13;
&#13;
A. H. SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
Antiquated&#13;
Helpful&#13;
Shark&#13;
&#13;
C. E.&#13;
&#13;
SMITH&#13;
&#13;
H AZEL E.&#13;
&#13;
Courteous&#13;
Eloquent&#13;
Square&#13;
&#13;
R. E.&#13;
&#13;
SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
Rougish&#13;
Elegant&#13;
Sportive&#13;
&#13;
SIMAN&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE L. SEIFERT&#13;
&#13;
Happy&#13;
Effulgent&#13;
Skillful&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS&#13;
&#13;
0.&#13;
&#13;
TUTTLE&#13;
&#13;
Gentle&#13;
Optimistic&#13;
True&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE E. SHREINER ETHEL&#13;
&#13;
Mirthful&#13;
Lively&#13;
Sincer e&#13;
&#13;
G. E.&#13;
&#13;
WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Galla nt&#13;
E goistic&#13;
Wil y&#13;
&#13;
Merry&#13;
Effervescent&#13;
Studious&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
W ISEMAN • E.&#13;
&#13;
Good&#13;
Faithful&#13;
·winsome&#13;
&#13;
A. SHANNON&#13;
&#13;
Eager&#13;
Affable&#13;
Sagacious&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
&#13;
WARBURTON&#13;
&#13;
Easy&#13;
Cautious&#13;
Wayward&#13;
&#13;
Eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
E i ghty-nine&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN E. BOWER&#13;
&#13;
MITCH E LL&#13;
&#13;
Correctionville&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
LeMars&#13;
&#13;
Edith is one of that&#13;
"Loveland Bunch." She&#13;
has the rare qualities of wit&#13;
and humor. By some she&#13;
has been dubbed an old&#13;
maid, but this is leap year&#13;
and Edith is making herself heard. Poetical, musical, true and steadfast. A&#13;
firm friend and a wise&#13;
counselor. A hard worker, with a liberal supply of&#13;
"A" grades as a reward.&#13;
&#13;
SARAH ANN BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
Society's best man.&#13;
Would play football if a&#13;
dress suit could be worn&#13;
for the moleskins.&#13;
"Mike's" time is too full&#13;
of numerous official duties&#13;
for study.&#13;
Verbosity is&#13;
his hobby; formality, his&#13;
delight; singing and debating, his recreation; reporting, his vocation; and the&#13;
ministry his aspiration.&#13;
&#13;
SILAS A. BRALEY&#13;
&#13;
JOHN E. BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
ELLA&#13;
&#13;
s. CAMPBELL&#13;
&#13;
Galva&#13;
&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
Eagle Grove&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
You are greeted with a&#13;
smile and a cheery, "Good&#13;
morning," when you approach the office if "Sarah&#13;
Ann" is there. She even&#13;
thinks she can influence&#13;
the Dean. How absurd!&#13;
Is never backward about&#13;
giving advice, to all those&#13;
who need it. Enthusiastic&#13;
over every undertaking,&#13;
stick-to-it-iveness is&#13;
her&#13;
prominent characteristic.&#13;
&#13;
We call him "Si," but&#13;
there are very few sighs in&#13;
his nature. He believes in&#13;
finishing what he starts, as&#13;
shown by his consistent&#13;
work in Chemistry, and in&#13;
maintaining his high school&#13;
affections. A believer in&#13;
the productions of his home&#13;
town.&#13;
Consistent in his&#13;
visits to the kitchen of&#13;
Marion Hall. A jolly,&#13;
jovial friend. Has ambitions on the cinder path.&#13;
&#13;
First of all a college&#13;
booster, then a loyal society member, and a firm&#13;
friend.&#13;
"Ephriam"&#13;
is&#13;
skillful, poetic and artistic.&#13;
Originality is his hobby,&#13;
journalism his chosen vocation, debating his pastime.&#13;
Is strictly in a class by&#13;
himself.&#13;
Chronically he&#13;
keeps a diary, spasmodically he has a date. Verbally, formality is his bore,&#13;
yet personally none is more&#13;
exacting and orderly.&#13;
&#13;
An "A" grade student,&#13;
hence, a man hater. Possesses constancy and kindliness of disposition, the&#13;
marks of a pure character.&#13;
She couldn't even quarrel with herself. Gentle,&#13;
perhaps shy, but a true&#13;
friend to those who know&#13;
her well. Has sometimes&#13;
been termed a favorite of&#13;
the faculty, but that is because she doesn't know&#13;
how to get into mischief.&#13;
&#13;
Nine t y&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
I. DAVIE&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM C. EVANS&#13;
&#13;
AUDREE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Last year, "Bill" had&#13;
Lofty aims.&#13;
She is not&#13;
here this year, so he has&#13;
become diligent in his studies. If it were not for&#13;
Biology, German, French&#13;
and several other things he&#13;
would enjoy life immensely. Is a coming debater.&#13;
Has never entered the athletic arena. In class room&#13;
and on the campus, a serious, steadfast and friendly&#13;
character.&#13;
&#13;
A jolly fine girl, who&#13;
is a supreme favorite with&#13;
her society members, and&#13;
admired or loved by everyone in school. Ever welcome in any social gathering, where she soon stirs&#13;
up a good time. Never&#13;
more in her place than at&#13;
a party.&#13;
Delightfully&#13;
straightforward and frank&#13;
in her manner. Studious,&#13;
yet if she doesn't get an&#13;
"A" a "B" will do.&#13;
&#13;
JOCY&#13;
&#13;
I. CARTER&#13;
Whiting&#13;
&#13;
Between her hair and&#13;
her eyes, there is a rivalry&#13;
for depth of color. Jocy&#13;
is our official "jokist."&#13;
Invariably she sees the&#13;
point to a joke-within&#13;
two weeks. Though at&#13;
times serious, at others&#13;
blithesome, she is never&#13;
trivial. Wherever she is&#13;
there is something doing.&#13;
Her only complaint is that&#13;
the days are seven hours&#13;
too short.&#13;
&#13;
SUSAN&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
EADS&#13;
&#13;
CATHERINE E. ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
Roy H.&#13;
&#13;
GARLOCK&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Olathe, Kansas&#13;
&#13;
Sioux, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Primarily and pre-eminently a Junior, next a Pi,&#13;
and at the end of the list&#13;
a French student and a&#13;
believer in leap year. A&#13;
jolly friend, a royal entertainer, and an accomplished reader.&#13;
Has never&#13;
been seriously attached until recently, and now it is&#13;
to a mighty nice lad who&#13;
will some day grow up.&#13;
There is none other like&#13;
Susan.&#13;
&#13;
She does more things&#13;
and does them well than&#13;
any other girl in school.&#13;
She is president of the&#13;
girls' student body, which&#13;
speaks of her popularity&#13;
among the girls. A brilliant student, an earnest Y .&#13;
W. worker, and a friend&#13;
to all. Always busy, yet&#13;
ever anxious to render&#13;
assistance or give counsel.&#13;
She really accomplishes&#13;
things.&#13;
&#13;
Has been in Morningside since the flood. Talks&#13;
· with anybody, at any time,&#13;
at any place, on any sub,&#13;
ject, at any length. Has&#13;
. sold many books in his&#13;
day, and could sell patent&#13;
medicine.&#13;
Exceedingly&#13;
ambitious in debate, and&#13;
has thus far achieved no&#13;
little success.&#13;
A singer&#13;
of ability, and a strenuous&#13;
worker. The ministry is&#13;
his chosen profession.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-three&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK&#13;
&#13;
OSCAR HALL&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Whiting&#13;
Contrary to the implication of his name, he is seldom seen in the corridors.&#13;
A man with a big voice&#13;
and heart as large. Never&#13;
known to praise himself,&#13;
but ever with a good word&#13;
for others. A hard worker in Y. M. His aspirations are in the ministerial&#13;
line, where he cannot help&#13;
but succeed. A deep student, a steadfast friend,&#13;
and at all times a man.&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
Colo&#13;
No one has been able&#13;
to tell exactly whether her&#13;
eyes are blue or brown.&#13;
Annetta, though quiet and&#13;
unassuming, has won her&#13;
way into the hearts of her&#13;
classmates by her earnest&#13;
loyalty and sweet tempered&#13;
disposition. A true friend&#13;
to whom her chums love&#13;
to go for consolation and&#13;
advice.&#13;
She knows the&#13;
truth and dares to stand&#13;
by it.&#13;
&#13;
Alta&#13;
Our platinum tongued&#13;
orator, the best in the state.&#13;
Hails f r o m Cherokee,&#13;
where they say there are&#13;
a few more noisy people.&#13;
Hopeful, versatile, humorous, interesting, and a practical politician. His home&#13;
is on the platform. "Bugger's" fame as a singer and&#13;
a reader is state wide.&#13;
The most popular man in&#13;
school. Too busy for athletics.&#13;
&#13;
R. HOSFORD&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
LISLE&#13;
&#13;
He came this year from&#13;
Fremont Normal school&#13;
because he wanted to finish&#13;
with a good class. Although a new man, he does&#13;
not display his talents but&#13;
leaves them to be discovered-no Herculean task .&#13;
He is silent, retiring, and&#13;
attends to his own affairs,&#13;
characteristics we all might&#13;
covet. An interesting conversationalist and a good&#13;
musician.&#13;
&#13;
Nine t y-four&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
HESS&#13;
&#13;
CLIFFORD ]ORY&#13;
&#13;
Plover&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon&#13;
&#13;
Ray is the nifty kid. A&#13;
whale of a student, a&#13;
shark at Chemistry. Studies for the good derived,&#13;
accepts the grades as incidental. Has a knack of&#13;
getting interested in everything he thinks abouteven German.&#13;
Thought&#13;
about a nice girl once and&#13;
now receives a daily letter. No wonder he decided to finish this year. A&#13;
good debater, almost a&#13;
philosopher, and a right&#13;
good fellow . .&#13;
&#13;
Clif-a different man&#13;
since Hazel came to Morningside. Particularly devoted in his attendance to&#13;
and from school and most&#13;
of the rest of the day.&#13;
Even eats at the same&#13;
table. What little time is&#13;
left he devotes to athletics&#13;
and journalism.&#13;
With&#13;
him a recitation and a&#13;
bluff are synonomous. A&#13;
chronic joker, witty, carefree and happy.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-five&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
C. LEMON&#13;
LeMars&#13;
&#13;
ALLAN&#13;
LULA&#13;
&#13;
M. KINDLESPIRE&#13;
Spencer&#13;
&#13;
As an orator, debater,&#13;
athlete and student, Al has&#13;
brought honor to himself&#13;
and his school. A hard&#13;
and consistent worker, no&#13;
one more readily appreciates a joke than he. He&#13;
is loved by his friends, respected by his opponents,&#13;
and honored by all who&#13;
! know him: No one who&#13;
takes him into his confidence will ever want for a&#13;
courageous ally and a&#13;
steadfast fri end.&#13;
&#13;
One of the "Spencer&#13;
Twins. " Sunny hair, sunny smile, sunny disposition.&#13;
A lover of history (Montgomery's) and for some&#13;
reason she tries to keep it&#13;
on the reserve shelf. "O&#13;
heaven! were man constant he were perfect."&#13;
We know her best as an&#13;
accommodating librarian,&#13;
and to our loss if not socially. A real, jolly college girl.&#13;
&#13;
L. KIFER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HARRIET&#13;
&#13;
We may say she is silent and gentle, yet with a&#13;
happy stnile for all. No&#13;
one is more optimistic than&#13;
she.&#13;
A lover of that&#13;
which is pure and good.&#13;
Always strives for the best.&#13;
Scrupulous about pleasing&#13;
the faculty, for which she&#13;
is rewarded.&#13;
Afraid of&#13;
ghosts!&#13;
Only those that&#13;
really know her can fully&#13;
realize her merit.&#13;
&#13;
Ponca, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
Ev A I. LEAZER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
A coming man.&#13;
His&#13;
first hit looks like a home&#13;
run.&#13;
His promise as a&#13;
track man is probably due&#13;
to his affiliations with the&#13;
Montgomery family. He&#13;
is a good student but this&#13;
never interferes with the&#13;
possibility to play a good&#13;
joke.&#13;
A ready wit, a&#13;
keen mind, and a promising debater. "Poncaberry" is a product of the&#13;
sand hills of Nebraska.&#13;
&#13;
"Ebenezer" is more of a&#13;
politician than a rhetorician. She is an accomplished cornetist, a singer,&#13;
an earnest church worker,&#13;
and makes a few grades.&#13;
Isn't that enough for one&#13;
girl?&#13;
Benevolent, constant, and of a jolly temperament. Gentleness and&#13;
optimism are her dominant&#13;
characteristics. W h e r e&#13;
she is, there you will find&#13;
a good time.&#13;
&#13;
LESLIE H. KINGSBURY&#13;
&#13;
GRACE&#13;
&#13;
N in ety-s even&#13;
&#13;
LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
The other "Spencer&#13;
Twin."&#13;
A Junior by&#13;
choice, drawn there, it&#13;
seems by presidential attraction. A good student,&#13;
but not over studious. A&#13;
sympathetic listener and a&#13;
good companion, as evidenced by her seldom lack&#13;
of an attendant. Is jolly,&#13;
yet serious; fun-loving, yet&#13;
sincere. Has a quick and&#13;
open sympathy for all who&#13;
need it. An inspiration to&#13;
all who seek the good of&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
,-t., '&#13;
&#13;
N i nety-six&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
Spen cer&#13;
&#13;
G. MERTEN&#13;
Carner&#13;
&#13;
A. MOWER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HORACE&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA&#13;
&#13;
A genius in disguise. A&#13;
hard worker, a debater of&#13;
ability, an embryonic philosopher, an earnest student with "A" grades as&#13;
a by-product. H e quotes&#13;
Horace and reads Faust&#13;
as a pastime. He regards&#13;
time as knowledge and&#13;
girls as a necessary evil.&#13;
Morningside h a s done&#13;
much for him, but not&#13;
more than he has done fo r&#13;
her.&#13;
&#13;
MARY&#13;
&#13;
A. M cCuTCHEN&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
The old adage that, "a&#13;
friend is one who knows&#13;
all about you and still&#13;
loves you," might have&#13;
been taken from her example. She can tell the&#13;
history of the world from&#13;
the creation through the&#13;
nineteen twelve presidential&#13;
election. Of a cheerful&#13;
and winning disposition.&#13;
Just one look from her&#13;
great laughing blue eyes&#13;
is ample inspiration to conquer worlds.&#13;
&#13;
Has anyone forgotten&#13;
the annual board election&#13;
at Alice's last spring?&#13;
Hardly! Sooner would&#13;
he forget his society banquet or spring outing.&#13;
Quiet, reserved, studious.&#13;
Always wears blue-the&#13;
class color. One of Sioux&#13;
C ity's most splendid gifts&#13;
to Morningside. We can&#13;
but say, with Burns,&#13;
"Sweet Alice."&#13;
&#13;
V INCENTE.&#13;
FLORENCE M.&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
MONTGOMERY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Small-but oh my! A&#13;
man among men. A star&#13;
debater, a prince of a fusser, and a crack athlete.&#13;
If you are in the habit of&#13;
taking a back seat, don't&#13;
attempt to follow "Vince."&#13;
Gives his class distinction&#13;
through his track captaincy. Is full of fun, energetic, game. His favorite&#13;
pastime is breaking the&#13;
Monument Run record.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
A co-ed blithe and gay.&#13;
Has decided to finish college in three years&#13;
we&#13;
wonder why. Has been&#13;
known to talk an hour or&#13;
so each day in the halls&#13;
with a certain lad from&#13;
Ponca, in spite of which&#13;
she always seems to have&#13;
her lessons. Few indeed&#13;
are there in school more&#13;
cheerful than Florence.&#13;
Her smile is the kind that&#13;
won't wash off. No girl&#13;
is better liked.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-eight&#13;
&#13;
Ninety-nine&#13;
&#13;
A. NELSON&#13;
Wakefield, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE&#13;
&#13;
One whose studies do&#13;
not hinder her college education. Is shy and rather&#13;
quiet, but a&#13;
splendid&#13;
friend, when once that&#13;
friendship has been established. Was never supposed to think of boys but&#13;
leap year brings its revelations. Obliging yet firm.&#13;
A worker; earnest in Y.&#13;
W., diligent in society, enthusiastic in everything.&#13;
Precise, dignified, nice. A&#13;
Junior true blue.&#13;
&#13;
EVA&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
RANDOLPH&#13;
LOTTIE&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Onawa&#13;
Man or boy? Graduates from college at an&#13;
age when most of us do&#13;
from high school. Concomitant with the lengthening of his knee breeches,&#13;
his mind has broadened&#13;
since coming to Morningside. "Prit" has won his&#13;
honor "M" in baseball&#13;
and tackled the sturdiest&#13;
on the gridiron. To become an accomplished fusser and a legal light is his&#13;
ambition.&#13;
&#13;
SANDERS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Another of that jolly&#13;
crowd who come each&#13;
morning from the city. In&#13;
society, a tireless worker.&#13;
Eva does those little unseen things, and perhaps&#13;
the great ones, too, that&#13;
make the world go on.&#13;
Cheerful, optimistic, studious. An inspiration to&#13;
those who are honored&#13;
with her friendship, an aspiration to those who are&#13;
not.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
A Sioux City girl, classy, talented and winning.&#13;
One of those who make us&#13;
sit up and take notice,&#13;
whether before an audience, in the class room, or&#13;
in the parlor. She is a&#13;
royal hostess, and she has&#13;
often thrown open wid e the&#13;
doors of hospitality to the&#13;
young people of the school.&#13;
A n exceedingly clever&#13;
reader, a jolly friend, and&#13;
a brilliant student.&#13;
&#13;
ANNA RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
Kingsley&#13;
To speak of her uncomplimentarily would be falsehood. In Morningside is&#13;
not her equal. She studies&#13;
enough, enjoys life all day,&#13;
and never worries nor gets&#13;
peeved. Couldn't be snobbish if she tried, which she&#13;
never did. Anna is modest, unassummg, wholesome. Whoever meets her&#13;
is her ally thereafter, and&#13;
the richer for the possession of her friendship.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
RoREM&#13;
&#13;
St. Paul, Minn.&#13;
Home's in St. P aul,&#13;
1 i v e s in Morningside,&#13;
heart's in Florida. Prim&#13;
little Mabel. Was ever&#13;
one more exacting? "To&#13;
hear her sing, to hear her&#13;
sing, it is to hear the birds&#13;
in sprmg.&#13;
To see her&#13;
smile, to see her smile, it's&#13;
worth your while to go a&#13;
mile." Studious, serious,&#13;
fun-loving, religious. What&#13;
need of more to tell of any&#13;
one?&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
O ne hundred one&#13;
&#13;
M. SHUMAKER&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL&#13;
&#13;
We are all aware that&#13;
Hazel lives in Morningside, for her home has ever&#13;
been open to us in our&#13;
frolics. A charming girl&#13;
with a smile for all. Last&#13;
year she acq uired a love&#13;
for history, and is now interested in the Hudson settlement. It does not take&#13;
much to keep some people&#13;
happy and Hazel is one&#13;
of these.&#13;
If optimism&#13;
were riches, she'd be a&#13;
millionaire.&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN E . WEDGEWOOD&#13;
&#13;
LAWRENCE WICKENS&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
Quiet and seemingly reserved to those who do not&#13;
know her. Rather bashful, modest, conscientious&#13;
beyond reason. Takes her&#13;
time and does everything&#13;
well. Never forgets what&#13;
she learns. Always ready&#13;
to help one out of a difficulty and is full of really&#13;
helpful suggestions. She&#13;
likes to stand up and&#13;
thinks she has red hair.&#13;
&#13;
EDNA SIMON&#13;
&#13;
Ida Grove&#13;
A booster from the&#13;
word go.&#13;
Trustworthy,&#13;
energetic, capable, spirited&#13;
and to spare. She never&#13;
wastes time. Enthusiastic&#13;
in all her work. German&#13;
is her hobby. Has even&#13;
traveled and studied in&#13;
Germany. Edna is a girl&#13;
whose dignified bearing&#13;
commands respect and acquaintance means admiration. True clear through,&#13;
of marked personality, with&#13;
a strong will and determination.&#13;
&#13;
Avon, South Dakota&#13;
In stature, he reminds us&#13;
of some great men. Being&#13;
surpassingly tall, we call&#13;
him "Wick" for short.&#13;
There is no certainty as to&#13;
when he came to Morningside, but it is safe to&#13;
say he is an "old timer."&#13;
A business-like, earnest,&#13;
aggressive worker, a winner in athletics and ambitious in debate and oratory. Thinks twice before&#13;
he spea ks.&#13;
&#13;
SARA&#13;
&#13;
R. WHITEHOUSE&#13;
Cherokee&#13;
&#13;
Sara is one of those&#13;
happy girls who is the life&#13;
of any company with&#13;
whom she happens to find&#13;
herself. With her ready&#13;
wit and contagious laughter, in school or out, she&#13;
keeps those near her in a&#13;
pleasant mood. Just now&#13;
a member of the Jolly&#13;
Bachelor Girls, although&#13;
it appears that her sojourn&#13;
there will not endure and&#13;
soon she will join the&#13;
ranks of the home-makers.&#13;
&#13;
INEZ&#13;
&#13;
L. WHITN EY&#13;
Aurelia&#13;
&#13;
A quiet girl whose smile&#13;
is wonderously sweet and&#13;
whose speech is gentle,&#13;
pleasing. Her kindly nature has won her many&#13;
true and lasting friends,&#13;
which makes her one of&#13;
the jewels of old M. C.&#13;
She wears a far-away look&#13;
in her eyes and we Juniors&#13;
know her thoughts are&#13;
with her heart at Parsons&#13;
College. She simply must&#13;
finish this year.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred three&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY&#13;
&#13;
WINTERRINGER&#13;
&#13;
Oto&#13;
A football veteran, the&#13;
only Morningside captain&#13;
to serve for two years.&#13;
Has fussed more girls&#13;
than all the rest of the&#13;
boys collectively, and this&#13;
not from necessity but&#13;
from choice. "Hank" is&#13;
always jolly, yet ever serious; a firm friend, hates&#13;
deceit. A Biological major, with a surgical reputation. His athletic propensities are but a mask to&#13;
his wisdom.&#13;
&#13;
LA&#13;
&#13;
V ANCHE M. Wooo&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
The jolliest, most carefree girl in school, yet sincere and constant. Has&#13;
adopted for her slogan,&#13;
"More men for Morningside," and lives it out to&#13;
the letter. Is blessed with&#13;
that library spirit so prevalent in a co-educational&#13;
institution. Likes to talk&#13;
to the football men. We&#13;
must say she is studious&#13;
for she is finishing in three&#13;
years.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
five&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred seven&#13;
&#13;
.1..-·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred nine&#13;
&#13;
Compared to the Morningside Class War the Turko-Italian War Sinks Into Insignificance&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ten&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eleven&#13;
&#13;
The Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Club&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
T. C. STEPHENS&#13;
H . G. CAMPBELL&#13;
H. W. EWING&#13;
H. STILES&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
Historian&#13;
&#13;
On the evening of February 3, 1912, there was a quiet gathering in the Biology&#13;
room and the organization of a Men's FacultyClub was perfected. M eetings are held&#13;
monthly and at each one some topic is presented by one of the members. These topics&#13;
pertain chiefly to observations and personal experiences in travel or to recent advances and&#13;
discoveries in the various departmental fields represented.&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
February 3, 1912- "German Universities" .. . .. . . . .. .. . .. .. . .. H. G. Campbell&#13;
March 2, 1912- "Egypt, the Land of Mystery" .. . . .. ...... . ... . .. A E. Craig&#13;
April 6, 1912- "Some Modern Educational Problems" .......... . .. E. A. Brown&#13;
May 4, 1912-"Racial Elements in the Population of the United States" S. L. Chandler&#13;
October 5, 191 2-"F&#13;
F orward Movements Since the Civil War" ..... . . F. E. Haynes&#13;
November 2, 1912-"The Parthenon" ... .. . . . .. ............ H. F. Kanthlener&#13;
November 30, 1912-"The&#13;
Electron Theory" ... . . ........ . . ... .. . . . H. Stiles&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
W. A&#13;
&#13;
J. H.&#13;
&#13;
M c CuRDY&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
H. G.&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
I. 0. H all&#13;
&#13;
Academy Reading Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
CLARA LEWIS&#13;
FRANCIS CRAIG&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
The Young Women's Christian Association has long felt the need of some sort of&#13;
organization through which it could reach the Academy girls. In view of this fact a&#13;
Missionary Reading Circle has been organized. Already more than half of the Academy&#13;
girls are enrolled, nearly all of whom are also members of the Association. The work has&#13;
been put under the supervision of Miss Sarah Crowther, assisted by Miss Emma Klippel.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred t welve&#13;
&#13;
M ERTEN&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
A H. Brunelle&#13;
I. N. G abrielson&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
J. A Lewis&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
and Treasurer&#13;
E . C . M ead&#13;
C. W. Spry&#13;
· R. R. Vernon&#13;
C. E . Smith&#13;
&#13;
According to the constitution adopted last spring, the Oratorical Association is&#13;
composed of those persons of collegiate standing who have participated in a home&#13;
contest. The object of the Association is to further the oratorical interests of Morningside. It is a member of the State Oratorical Association.&#13;
Last year Morningside entered the Intercollegiate Peace Contest, and, represented&#13;
by Frank P. Johnson, took firs t place. J. G. Emerson, of Ames, who had previously&#13;
won over Mr. Johnson in the regular State Oratorical Contest, and who later won&#13;
the Inter-State Oratorical Contest which was held at Morningside, May 19, 1911,&#13;
was ranked second.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirteen&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Association&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
D. L. WICKENS&#13;
A. C. LEMON&#13;
M. 0. INSKO&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
"Moderation in all things," may be said to be the motto of the College Prohibition Association. Since its establishment in 1890, it has been one of Morningside's&#13;
important organizations, having survived the German Club and several locker clubs.&#13;
The primary purpose· of the Association is the study of the liquor problem from all&#13;
standpoints.&#13;
One of the chief functions of the Association is the conducting of the annual&#13;
Dewey Prize Oratorical Contest, so called in honor of Mr. Erwin Dewey of Sargeant&#13;
Bluffs, Iowa, the donor of the prizes of twenty-five dollars and fifteen dollars for first&#13;
and second places. This contest has always been one of Morningside's leading&#13;
forensic events, invariably comprising a number of strong orations arguing the urgency&#13;
of prohibiting the liquor traffic. The winners of the local contest representing Morningside in the state contest have twice won first place, twice second, and once third, having&#13;
also won once the inter-state and third place in the national contest. The work of&#13;
Morningside's orators in this department has been a strong factor in forming her&#13;
enviable reputation in forensics.&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
R. H. McVicKER&#13;
Secretary&#13;
J. A. LEWIS&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
D. L. WICK ENS&#13;
PROF. C. A. MARSH, Permanent Corresponding Secretary&#13;
The Debate League of Morningside College has entire charge of all the intersociety and inter-collegiate debates. It is composed of twelve members, chosen, three&#13;
from each of the men's collegiate literary societies and three from the faculty, making&#13;
a full representation of the interests of the school.&#13;
The League was organized in the fall of 1909, under the leadership of Professor&#13;
Eno, and it has proven to be the most satisfactory method of supervising the debating&#13;
affairs of the college. The officers are elected annually.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fourteen&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Glee Club was organized in 191 0 by Director 0 . A. Morse&#13;
of the Conservatory of Music, with a membership of sixteen. Activities of the first&#13;
season were confined to hard work in getting the raw voices into shape and giving&#13;
the home concert.&#13;
In the fall of 19 11, the membership was increased to twenty. The Club was&#13;
somewhat handicapped by a change in personnel, all but one of the first tenors being&#13;
new members. Concerts have been given at Alta; Rosalie, Nebraska; and Hinton.&#13;
Since the home concert the Club has been overwhelmed with requests for dates, and&#13;
have sung at numerous affairs in the city and at the college. Musical critics have&#13;
expressed the opinion that the Morningside Club will compare favorably with any in&#13;
the state, not excepting the one known as "The Best in the West."&#13;
&#13;
Collegian Reporter Staff&#13;
Away back in those days when Morningside College was an experiment, still&#13;
a thing of the future, T . F. Warner, now of Twin Falls, Idaho, published a monthly&#13;
college paper. The first issue contained eighteen pages and many pictures of the&#13;
buildings of the Morningside to be. Its life was brief, however, and it expired in the&#13;
first gloomy days of the University of the Northwest. During the fall of 1896, the&#13;
Philomatheans instigated the publication of a college paper on the basis of a student&#13;
enterprise. Accordingly, Charles McCaffree was chosen editor of L' Echo, with P rofessor Stokes at the head of the management. Following Mr. McCaffree, W . L.&#13;
Harding edited the paper for three years with much success, changing the name to&#13;
Collegian Reporter and making it a weekly. T hen D. L. Young held the position&#13;
for a year. In 1902, C. L. Gilbert was elected editor, but having resigned on account&#13;
of illness, Miss Pearl Woodford filled the vacancy. The next year Mr. Gilbert was&#13;
again elected but served only two terms. R. G. Young did much towards giving the&#13;
paper vivacity and popularity during 1904. In 1905, J. W. Wunn wielded the editorial pen and D . F . Robbins was leader in college journalism during the winter and&#13;
spring of 1906. The next year the Reporter was improved under the superintendenc&#13;
of J. C. Bass. During 1907 and 1908, S. 0. Rorem brought the paper to an&#13;
unparalleled state of excellent. C. F. Cushman took his turn in the spring of 1909. In&#13;
1909 and 1910, G. W. Barrett edited a very creditable sheet. L. S. Anderson,&#13;
who served in this capacity in the fall of 191 0, resigned at the end of the second&#13;
semester, and since that time E. C. Warburton has held down the editorial chair.&#13;
&#13;
Band&#13;
PROF.&#13;
&#13;
CLOVIS&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
&#13;
Director&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS&#13;
Glen Garrett&#13;
Herman Lueder&#13;
Claude Cushing&#13;
Reuben Wallin&#13;
Donald Willhoit&#13;
Herbert Dunham&#13;
Lowell Brokaw&#13;
Harold Gorder&#13;
Jesse Dawson&#13;
Silas Braley&#13;
Carl Nelson&#13;
Clarence Craig&#13;
&#13;
Cornet&#13;
Cornet&#13;
Manager, Cornet&#13;
Alto&#13;
Alto&#13;
. Tenor&#13;
Trombone&#13;
Baritone&#13;
Snare Drum&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer, Bass Drum&#13;
Clarinet&#13;
Piccolo&#13;
&#13;
.A&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixteen&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventeen&#13;
&#13;
A Resume of MorningsideAnnuals&#13;
To the class of '02 belongs the honor of publishing the first Morningside Junior&#13;
Annual. The "Blue and White," which were then the College colors, made its appearance in the spring of '01, was edited by Miss Florence Cate, and was appropriately dedicated to President Wilson S. Lewis. It contained many ideas which have been faithfully&#13;
followed ever since and some that have never been surpassed. The class of '03, not to be&#13;
outdone, published the "Bumble Bee," dedicated to YOU and edited by D. M. Simpson. In 1903, the idea was abandoned as being too big an undertaking for the size of the&#13;
class. The following year the "Maroon" came out dedicated to Rev. Bennett Mitchell&#13;
and edited by G. J. Poppenheimer of '05. "Whoops of the Sioux" was next in line. It&#13;
was dedicated to the Alumni and edited by J. W. Kindig. Since that time the Morningside Year Book has appeared regularly each spring, always springing some new ideas&#13;
which have made it the "best ever." The "Sioux" '07 was dedicated to Miss Dimmitt&#13;
and edited by D. F. Robbins; the "Sioux" '08 was dedicated to Rev. J. B. Trimble&#13;
and edited by C. D. Horner; the "Sioux" '09, dedicated to Our Sioux City Friends,&#13;
was edited by A. G. Cushman. The class of '10 chose L. R. Chapman as their editor&#13;
and Professor F. H. Garver as the one most worthy of the dedication. The "Sioux"&#13;
'11 was dedicated to the new president, Luther Freeman, and L. S. Anderson wielded&#13;
the editorial pen. Last year F. G. Elwick superintended the work on the book which&#13;
was dedicated to our dean, Sidney L. Chandler.&#13;
Let this year's production speak for itself.&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
A. E.&#13;
CLARA&#13;
&#13;
eighteen&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
ERICKSON&#13;
&#13;
P resident&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Declaration: It is my purpose, if God permits, to become a foreign missionary.&#13;
At a Bible Study Conference held at Mt. Hermon, Massachusetts, in July, 1886,&#13;
a movement was started to enlist men and women for C hristian work in foreign fields.&#13;
Out of eight thousand men and women who have gone as foreign missionaries for North&#13;
America, five thousand have been secured through the Student Volunteer Movement.&#13;
The Band at Morningside was started in 1902. At present the volunteers in foreign countries are: Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trimble, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Carson, Estie&#13;
Boddy, Ida Lewis, Jennie Bridenbaugh, in China; C. F. Hartzell in South America;&#13;
C. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Taylor in Korea.&#13;
&#13;
"The world for Christ in this generation."&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
KENT&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
ninet een&#13;
&#13;
Young Women's&#13;
&#13;
Christian&#13;
&#13;
Young Men's Christian Association Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
Association Cabinet&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
W. A. M cCuRDY&#13;
I. 0. HALL&#13;
V. W. HoRNNEY&#13;
M . P. BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
PEARL WILSON&#13;
Joey CARTER&#13;
GRACE LOGAN&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
MINNIE NELSON&#13;
NELLIE UPHAM&#13;
RACH EL HOLM&#13;
SARAH CROWTHER&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
F. P. Johnson&#13;
H. C. Pollock&#13;
H. G. Merten&#13;
I. 0. Hall&#13;
F. E. Burgess&#13;
&#13;
Social&#13;
Extension&#13;
Intercollegiate&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Mission&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
twen ty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-one&#13;
&#13;
Bible Study&#13;
Extension&#13;
Social&#13;
Membership&#13;
Mission&#13;
Devotional&#13;
Personal Work&#13;
&#13;
Personnel of the"M" Club&#13;
George B. Barrett-Baseball, '11&#13;
William W. Bass-Football, '09; Basketball, '12&#13;
Willard H. Bowker-Track, '11&#13;
Harold M. Cobbs-Baseball, '11&#13;
Barrett P. Dolliver-Football, '11&#13;
Paul Eiffert-Football, ' 11 ; Basketball, '12&#13;
Ben Holbert, Jr.-Football, '10, '11; Baseball, '11; Track, '11; Basketball, '12&#13;
Clifford Jory-Football, '1 0; Basketball, '11 , '12&#13;
Earl Knouse-Football, '11&#13;
Allan C. Lemon-Track, '1 0, '11&#13;
James H. Lewis-Football, '09, '11&#13;
William A. McCurdy-F ootball, '08, ' 10, '11 ; Baseball, '08, '09, '11&#13;
Guy D. McKinney-Football, '11&#13;
Vincent E. Montgomery-Track, '11 ; Basketball, '12&#13;
George W. Prichard-Baseball, '11&#13;
Robert E. Smylie-Football, '08, '09, '10, '11 ; Basketball, ' 10; Baseball, ' 10&#13;
Robert R. Vernon-Football, '11 .&#13;
Earl C. Warburton-Football, '11&#13;
D. Lawrence Wickens-Track, '10, '11&#13;
Henry Winterringer-Football, '08, '09, '10, '1 1&#13;
&#13;
One hun dred twenty-t w o&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wenty -t hr ee&#13;
&#13;
MOVILLE GOSPEL TEAM&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-five&#13;
&#13;
Athenaeum&#13;
Organized November 14, 1891&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Light Blue and White&#13;
Motto-Utile dulce (The useful with the pleasing)&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE NELSON&#13;
&#13;
LOLA RAW&#13;
&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 2 7, 1911-Picnic at Floyd Monument.&#13;
May 22, 1911-Picnic at Riverside.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September 21, 1911-Presentation of Athenaeum Queen.&#13;
September 23, 1911-Wienie roast at North Ravine.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Taffy pull at Audree Davie's home.&#13;
September 26, 1911-Kid party at Doris Wood's home.&#13;
September 30, 1911-Track&#13;
meet; Ames, Drake, Iowa, Morningside.&#13;
October 7, 1911 -Progressive dinner ; Shumaker's, F rary's, Raw's, Webb's.&#13;
October 2 I , 1911 -Attic party, mock wedding.&#13;
October 30, 1911 -Annual banquet at the West.&#13;
November 13, 1911-Formal initiation.&#13;
November 25, 1911 -Reception for Philo debaters.&#13;
December 13, 1911-Tea&#13;
&#13;
for the ladies of the faculty.&#13;
&#13;
January 20, 1912- 0pen door by new girls.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred twenty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-seven&#13;
&#13;
Organized October 14, 1892&#13;
Colors-Olive and Maroon&#13;
Motto-Vestigia nulla retrorsum (No stepping backward)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
HUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
M. P. BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
AC.&#13;
&#13;
CALEN DAR&#13;
April 29, 1911-Joint closed door with Athenaeums.&#13;
May 8, 191 1-Final of gold medal debates.&#13;
May 31, 1911-Annual Up-River Trip.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September 16, 1911-"Get Acquainted" Stag for new men.&#13;
October 2, 1911-Joint closed door with Athenaeums.&#13;
November 9, 1911-Lost to lonians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 23, 1911-Won from Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
January 22, 1912-Debaters' open door.&#13;
January 29, 1912-Joint closed door with Athenaeums.&#13;
February 19, 1912-Eighth annual mock trial.&#13;
February 26, 1912-Second and third degrees administered.&#13;
March 11 , 1912-Bingville Bugle program.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
twenty-eight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
t wenty-nine&#13;
&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
Organized October 4, 1908&#13;
Colors-Canary and Black&#13;
Motto-Feliciter, fortiter, fideliter (Happy, brave, faithful)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Vivian&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS TUTTLE&#13;
&#13;
McFARLAND&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE SEIFERT&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 29, 1911-Picnic at Talbot's Farm.&#13;
June 7, 1911 -Tea at Riverside.&#13;
June 12, 1911-Dinner to graduates at Riverside.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September, 23, 1911-Joint entertainment for new prospectives.&#13;
October 9, 1911&#13;
&#13;
Tramp party to South Ravine.&#13;
&#13;
October 26, 1911-Dinner at Josephine Herbst's home.&#13;
October 30, 1911-Banquet at the West.&#13;
November 4, 1911-lnitiation.&#13;
November 16, 1911-Reception to Ionian debaters.&#13;
December&#13;
&#13;
1 1911 -Alumni party at Gladys Tuttle's home.&#13;
&#13;
December 14, 1911 -Annual Christmas party at Marguerite Shreiner' s.&#13;
February 14, 1912-Valentine tea to ladies of the faculty.&#13;
February 21, 1912- Washington's birthday party for lonians.&#13;
March 18, 1912-Joint party at Helen Giehm's home.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thirty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thir ty -one&#13;
&#13;
Ionian&#13;
Organized January 6, 1909&#13;
Colors-Royal Purple and Old Gold&#13;
Motto- P ossunt quad credere possunt (They are able through faith)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
ROSCOE&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CARTER&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
BARRETT&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
ALFRED&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 30, 1911-Picnic at Crystal Lake.&#13;
September 30, 1911-Reception for new fellows.&#13;
October 19, 1911 - Party for Pierias and new girls.&#13;
November 9, 1911-Won from Philos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
November 16, 1911 - Lost to Othos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
January 15, 1912-Bob ride for Pierias.&#13;
March 18, 1912- Joint party at Helen Giehm's home.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
One hundred thirty-two&#13;
&#13;
thirty-three&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
KENT&#13;
&#13;
Zetalethean&#13;
Organized November 11, 1897&#13;
Colors-Scarlet and Black&#13;
M otlo-Esse, quam videri&#13;
&#13;
(To be rather than to seem)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
EDNA RANDOLPH&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL ESTELLE SIMAN&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
GEORGIA WISEMAN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 15 , 1911 - Zet annual "Hen P arty" at Cushman's.&#13;
May 15, 1911 - 0thos entertain Zets at breakfast.&#13;
May 2 7, 1911-Z&#13;
&#13;
et German program.&#13;
&#13;
May 30, 1911 - Picnic at Talbot Farm.&#13;
June 14, 1911 - Reunion.&#13;
September 19, 1911 - Reception for new girls.&#13;
October 9, 1911 -Tally-ho party.&#13;
October 14, 1911 - Pullman party.&#13;
October 23, 1911 - Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
October 28, 1911-Annual&#13;
January 12, 1912-Leap&#13;
&#13;
banquet at the W est.&#13;
year party at Lois Crouch's home.&#13;
&#13;
J anuary 29, 1912- Joint closed door with Othos.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thi rty -fi ve&#13;
&#13;
Othonian&#13;
Organized November 7, 1891&#13;
Color-Royal Purple&#13;
M otto-Suaviter in modo, fortit er in re (Gentle in manner, resolute m deed)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
&#13;
w. T ACKABERRY&#13;
&#13;
D. P.&#13;
&#13;
MAHON EY&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
E. ELLISON&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 28, 1911 - Reception for Zets at Smylie's home.&#13;
May 24, 1911-Zet-Otho picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
June 14, 1911 - Reunion.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Annual Otho Stag.&#13;
October 23, 1911-Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
November 16, 1911-W&#13;
November 2 3, 1911-Lost&#13;
&#13;
on from Ionians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
to Philos in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
&#13;
January 29, 1912- Joint closed door with Zets.&#13;
February 16, 191 2- Annual Banquet at the West.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-six&#13;
&#13;
Organized February 12, 191 0&#13;
Colors-Champagne and Cho colate Brown&#13;
M Otto-Lovers of the B est&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
MARIE WEISE&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
CLARA CRUMMER&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
H E L EN OLMSTEAD&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
April 26, 1911-Arbor Day program on the campus.&#13;
May 1, 1911-May party for Senior Academy.&#13;
June 5, 1911-Senior picnic at Riverside.&#13;
June 14, 1911-Reunion.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Luncheon for new girls at Florence Long's home.&#13;
September 30, 1911 - Wienie roast in the gym.&#13;
October 13, 1911-Gypsy party.&#13;
October 20, 1911 - Progressive game party at Ruth French's home.&#13;
October 28, 1911 - Banquet at the West.&#13;
November 1, 1911 - Luncheon at Mary McCutchen' s home.&#13;
December 1, 1911-Chafing dish party at Nellie Fletcher's home.&#13;
December 9, 1911-Christmas tree.&#13;
February 1 7, 1912- Valentine party.&#13;
February 22, 1912- Dinner at Florence Long's home.&#13;
March 28, 1912- Dinner for Senior girls at Nellie Fletcher's home.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred thrity-eight&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
thirty-nine&#13;
&#13;
Summary&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty-one&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-two&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-three&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-four&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred fo r ty-fiv e&#13;
&#13;
Organized February, . 1902&#13;
Colors- Olive Green and Whit e&#13;
Motto-To possess the aesthetic&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
EDITH ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
VERA M c CRAC K E N&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
ALI C E THORNBERG&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
1, 191 1-Aesthesian-Adelphian breakfast at South Ravine.&#13;
&#13;
May 27, 1911 -Roller skating party at Riverside.&#13;
September 12, 1911-Jap party at Lois Crouch's home.&#13;
September 25, 1911-Aesthesian-Adelphian hay rack ride.&#13;
September 30, 1911-Chafing dish party.&#13;
October 30, 1911-Aesthesian-Adelphian Hallowe' en Party at Renaissance Barn.&#13;
October 11 1911-lnitiation.&#13;
December 9, 1911-Reception to Adelphian debaters.&#13;
January 13, 1912-Leap year party.&#13;
&#13;
One hu ndred forty-s ix&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty-seven&#13;
&#13;
. .,&#13;
&#13;
Organized November 4, 1901&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Cerise and Whit e&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Carpe&#13;
diem ( Sieze the opportunity)&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
GLEN WELLS&#13;
&#13;
HARRY FOWLER&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
BERNARD BROWN&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
May 19, 1911-Annual Adelphian-Aesthesian picnic.&#13;
June 3, 1911-- Annual Adelphian boat ride,&#13;
September 25, 1911-Annual Adelphian-Aesthesian hay rack ride.&#13;
December 8, 1911-Lost to Hawkeyes in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
January 19, 1912-Annual Adelphian banquet at the West.&#13;
January 29, 191 2-Adelphian bob ride.&#13;
February 2 7, 1912-lnitiation.&#13;
February 29, 1912-Skating 'party at the Half Moon.&#13;
March 11, 1912-Biennial open door.&#13;
&#13;
··&#13;
&#13;
One hundred forty -e ight&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
forty -nine&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
Organized November 2, 1900&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Nile Green and White&#13;
Motto-We succeed by doing&#13;
PRESID ENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
GRACE WALKES&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
&#13;
EDNA HIMEBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
CORA DIETERICK&#13;
&#13;
CALEN DAR&#13;
March 13, 1911-Mock trial and spread.&#13;
April 1 7, 1911 - Joint closed door.&#13;
May 13, 1911 - Joint picnic at Riverside.&#13;
May 26, 1911-Picnic to North R avine.&#13;
&#13;
June 3, 1911 - Farewell party at Alice Klock's home.&#13;
September 18, 1911-Picnic at South R avine.&#13;
September 23, 19 11-Spread for new girls.&#13;
September 30, 1911 - A nnual reception to new Academy students.&#13;
November 11 , 1911 -Spread and taffy pull by new girls at Kitty Nurse's home.&#13;
January 20, 191 2-Bob ride and luncheon at Josephine W eisz's home.&#13;
&#13;
"&gt;'!).&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-on e&#13;
&#13;
Organized September 2 7, I 899&#13;
Colors-Old Gold and Silver&#13;
Motto-Non palma sine pulvere (No victory without dust)&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENTS&#13;
Spring Term&#13;
HAROLD GORDER&#13;
&#13;
Fall Term&#13;
&#13;
E. L.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMS&#13;
&#13;
Winter Term&#13;
B EN RIN ER&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
June 6, 1911-Final gold medal debates.&#13;
September I 8, 19 11 - Picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
September 30, 191 I-Annual reception to new Academy students.&#13;
O ctober 28, 1911-Hallowe'en party at Haunted House.&#13;
December 8, 19 11-Won from Adelphians in Inter-Society Debate.&#13;
December 9, 1911 - Reception by Crescents.&#13;
J anuary 20, 1912- Bob party for Crescents.&#13;
February 19, 191 2-Annual banquet at the W est.&#13;
March 18, 1912-St. Patrick's Party.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty -t w o&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred fifty-three&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty -four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty -five&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-six&#13;
&#13;
One hundred fifty-seven&#13;
&#13;
1,&#13;
&#13;
G RAD UATES OF THE&#13;
&#13;
PRIMARY TRAINING COURSE&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-eight&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
fifty-nine&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
six ty&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-one&#13;
&#13;
College Traditions&#13;
&#13;
remember this and cleave to their traditions with&#13;
all the strength of their beings.&#13;
&#13;
FTER a college man is out in the world there is nothing concerning&#13;
which he is more sensitive than the matter of college traditions.&#13;
The increasing years from his alma mater increase their importance&#13;
to him and if he tells the truth about it he will say that no other&#13;
element in his college life, not excepting his studies, afforded him&#13;
so much lasting benefit as did the traditional atmosphere of his&#13;
college.&#13;
What are college traditions? They can not be defined. An&#13;
annual cane rush, the shape of a monogram, or the style of a junior's hat may give&#13;
expression to college tradition but they do not define it. To say that college tradition&#13;
is that body of customs, ideals and standards which is recognized in an institution from&#13;
year to year, is but a cold-blooded expression of it.&#13;
College tradition is much more than can be .put into words. It is the very heart&#13;
and life blood of the institution. College faculties may come and go, courses of study&#13;
may be modified with the progress of years, presidents may follow each other in succeeding administrations, the very buildings may be torn away to give place to more&#13;
modern structures, and the campus changed by the gardener, but the college itself, the&#13;
real alma mater of its graduates, lives as long as its traditions live.&#13;
Why do we think of Yale and Harvard in the same thought with the term "college"&#13;
and why do these institutions maintain their lead in the presence of many institutions of&#13;
vastly greater wealth and much more modern equipment? Tradition- simply tradition&#13;
- but a deep-seated, virile tradition that has made real men through centuries of American history. What keeps old William and Mary College alive in a region long since&#13;
deserted by American progress? Tradition-simply tradition-but a type of tradition&#13;
which lives deep rooted in the hearts of their sons and daughters and makes them equal&#13;
to the battle of life.&#13;
Morningside College is still in the golden age of tradition building-an age of&#13;
tremendous responsibility. Let her build wisely and well. Let her traditions represent&#13;
the best standards, the noblest ideals and the truest impulses of the human heart. Let&#13;
them partake of the exuberance and joy of youth, let them ring with the spirit of happiness, let them permeate the fun, the sport, the class room, and the social life of the college,&#13;
but above all let them make for the building of manhood and womanhood.&#13;
Traditions once formed are not to be lightly put aside. Their very endurance is&#13;
what makes them valuable, and the older they are the more revered they shall be, for it&#13;
is the traditions that live through the years that bind the alumni together in a common&#13;
bond and make them part of the college. Let the sons and daughters of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-two&#13;
&#13;
Some day, as old, gray-haired graduates,&#13;
we'll come back. Some day we'll revisit the&#13;
scenes of our youthful happiness. The buildings will be changed, the campus will be&#13;
changed, the faculty and students will be of&#13;
another generation and perhaps no face will&#13;
be known to us. But the traditions that we&#13;
helped to make, the traditions in which we&#13;
had a part, will be here and we'll know by&#13;
them that we are still a part of Morningside and&#13;
that the marks of the years can not entirely&#13;
sever our affiliation with the old college "in&#13;
the city on the Sioux.''&#13;
THE OLD GRADS&#13;
Once we felt that the very existence of&#13;
Morningside College depended chiefly on us,&#13;
and it was with a feeling of pity that we&#13;
thought of those who should come to her campus&#13;
after our departure and try to get along without our advice and supervision. Alas! are&#13;
we truly "atoms lost in the wide, wide world?"&#13;
Well, we may be atoms, but at least we&#13;
are not entirely lost to each other. A glance&#13;
through the list of alumni shows that from&#13;
Maine to California, from Canada to Florida,&#13;
in China, India, Korea and Hawaii, we are&#13;
represented. Our occupation may vary also.&#13;
Business men, teachers, lawyers, preachers, physicians, farmers, home-keepers, missionaries, librarians-we have them all among our number.&#13;
But regardless of occupation and location&#13;
one thing is certain,wherever an "Old Grad"&#13;
from Morningside resides. there is heard a good&#13;
word for the old school. Many a student of&#13;
today would not be at Morningside had not&#13;
some alumnus sung the praises of his alma&#13;
mater, inspiring his younger associates with a&#13;
desire for a Morningside College education.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred sixty-three&#13;
&#13;
HERE WE ARE BRIEFLY&#13;
BY CLASSES&#13;
&#13;
I 891 - The first class.&#13;
1893-Two is company, three is a&#13;
crowd.&#13;
1894-Noted for its harmony and unanimity of opinion. It now practices law-E. M. Corbett.&#13;
1895-A doctor and a preacher.&#13;
I 896-Contained the first girl graduate,&#13;
Dora Eisentraut.&#13;
1899-F our out of six are preachers.&#13;
1900- A double quartet.&#13;
190 ]- Noteworthy for the first class romance- Marsh-Reinhart.&#13;
1902-Published the first annual.&#13;
1903-The author of the spoonholder.&#13;
1904-The class that was too busy&#13;
spooning to publish an annual.&#13;
1905-Noted for "digging."&#13;
1906--"Doctor' s Chicks,"&#13;
otherwise&#13;
known as "the Sioux."&#13;
1907-Seven of its members have left&#13;
the United States.&#13;
1908-Few in numbers, but1909-Contained Morningside' s fi rs t winner of the State Oratorical&#13;
Contest.&#13;
1910Several renowned athletes.&#13;
1911-The largest yet.&#13;
&#13;
In Memory of the Departed&#13;
&#13;
To the students of today we send&#13;
greetings and hope you will stay by the&#13;
college till you join our ranks. Then,&#13;
old M. C.&#13;
"Hail to thee!&#13;
Thou hast been kind to us,&#13;
Ever shall we cherish for thee,&#13;
Thoughts of love and trus t."&#13;
&#13;
O n e hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-four&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-five&#13;
&#13;
when-" and Henry found himself whistling his own improvised tune again a rather&#13;
forlorn little tune, with a wavering trill at the end.&#13;
&#13;
"There was a Time"&#13;
JOSEPHINE H ERBST,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
H EN Henry Hogan heard of the G eneral's arrival, he wiped&#13;
his brushes on the edge of the tablecloth and packed his&#13;
sketches into a bundle. His wife, who was coming in from&#13;
the kitchen with the dinner, gave a faint cry of despair as&#13;
she saw the painted blur on the linen, but she tried to smile&#13;
as she rubbed the spot with her apron and listened to the&#13;
news her husband had received.&#13;
"The General's here," he said in his rough way and&#13;
went on packing up the sketches.&#13;
"Oh," said his wife.&#13;
"Oh!" echoed the husband. "Is that all you can think of to say? Oh! Well,&#13;
I suppose it would be too much to ask you to think of anything but tablecloths and potatoes and carpets."&#13;
Elsa said nothing, but she followed him to the door as he bolted out and stood&#13;
watching him as he puffed up the road, the sketches in his bulging pockets, making&#13;
his round and shapeless figure appear more round and shapeless than ever. She stood&#13;
there a long time. As Henry took the bend in the road he glanced back; probably the&#13;
consciousness of her eyes upon him made him turn, and he saw the blue of her dress&#13;
gleaming against the white door frame.&#13;
"Ugh," he grunted, "it's a wonder she'd waste so much time looking after me.&#13;
But perhaps it isn't me she's looking at. The chickens may be about to scratch up her&#13;
radishes or maybe she's watching for the grocer. But it isn't me, oh mercy no, not .me,"&#13;
and he shook his head gloomily. "Well, there was a time-," he began, then stopped&#13;
abruptly and patted the sketches in his pocket. But somehow that thought of the time&#13;
that had been kept repeating itself in his mind, even while he made his calculations as to&#13;
the General's probable purchase. The G eneral was a friend of a friend. " He will&#13;
buy your sketches," wrote Henry's friend. "He'll buy them, for he is made of money&#13;
and crazy about art." So Henry, as he plodded through the dust, found himself building airy castles on the foundation of this hope. It had been so long since his sketches&#13;
had found a sale. Why, it had been years! "Years and years and years," said Henry&#13;
soberly. A wagon came rumbling along the road, and Henry stepped out of the way&#13;
mechanically. "If I sell the sketches we will move nearer civilization," he thought, and&#13;
with that recurred to the old strain again, "There was a time. " He found himself&#13;
putting it to a tune, he found himself whistling the tune, he found himself&#13;
thinking thoughts that he was often too busy to remember, but that were always there.&#13;
He had planned big things once, why, Elsa had helped in the planning --but that was&#13;
before chickens and household tasks had usurped his claim. "Well, there was a time&#13;
&#13;
!&#13;
&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
O n e hundred sixty-six&#13;
&#13;
H e was in town now and he hurried as he saw the red brick of the hotel. His&#13;
shoulders straightened and his ·hand went down to his pocket where his sketches were&#13;
as he entered the hotel doors. He refused to admit to himself that he was nervous but&#13;
he fervently hoped that the General was not a big man, nor an imposing one. The&#13;
General was not a big man; he was little and shriveled and he wore a pair of black&#13;
rimmed eye glasses astride his narrow old nose. H e had snappy black eyes and his&#13;
mou th shut with a click after he had said, "Good morning," to H enry, who stood smiling&#13;
and trying to show how much at ease he was. It was the matter of a moment for the&#13;
General to turn rapidly from one sketch to another as Henry handed them to him. But&#13;
it seemed a long time to Henry, for it meant much to him whether the G eneral thought&#13;
these pictures good. It meant more than much- why, it meant everything. H enry had&#13;
felt of late that he was losing his grip, his confidence, and this success would mean&#13;
a return of the old hopes, such as he had had "that once upon a time" when Elsa had&#13;
planned with him for the future. He saw the General lay the sketches aside, one by one.&#13;
He felt cold, his hands were clammy, his lips twitched. Then suddenly the G eneral&#13;
picked up the last sketch, a little thing of a misty landscape and one swaying tree. ''I'll&#13;
take this," said he with a click of his teeth.&#13;
H enry hardly heard him. H e stared at the picture as if it were a new and&#13;
strange thing. Somehow the transaction was over and he got into the street. The&#13;
cool air striking his face and the jangling of the street cars aroused him. " I must think&#13;
this out, " he thought. "That picture was not mine-not mine. But if not mine, then&#13;
whose?" He tried to collect his thoughts and to recall how he had wrapped the&#13;
sketches together, but at first he could only remember that somehow a picture not created&#13;
by him had slipped in among the others- and had sold! Then at last, he recalled how&#13;
the news of the General's arrival had come to him; he remembered how he had stopped&#13;
his work, wiped his brushes, and pulling the sketches from the table drawer, had tied them&#13;
together. Among these had been the sketch that had sold. So much was clear. But&#13;
how did that sketch come to be among the others. · " I must think this out," said H enry,&#13;
but the suddenness of it had left him d azed and slow of thought. As he walked along&#13;
he once more reviewed the whole transaction but soon found himsel f back at the same old&#13;
place in his reasoning, and as much in the dark as ever. " I won't think of a thing until&#13;
I come to the next block, and then I'll reason it out. " The next block came and with&#13;
the crossing of the street car track, Henry took up his old line of thought. It seemed&#13;
clearer now. The whole affair seemed less like a d ream. "Let's look at this thing in&#13;
a common sense way," he argued to himsel f. "Now, that sketch wasn' t mine. So it&#13;
must have been somebody else's. But it was in my drawer. Well, I must have put it&#13;
there, along with my own. Of course-I see it now!" H e stopped and chuckled over&#13;
the simpleness of it all. "Why, I see it now-when I was at D ick's the other day,&#13;
looking over his sketches and showing him mine, I must have picked up one of his by&#13;
&#13;
mistake when I went away. Why didn't I think of that before?"&#13;
the country now, the damp weeds swished about his ankles.&#13;
&#13;
He was out in&#13;
&#13;
But now that the mystery part had been figured out, he felt tired and old. After&#13;
all, the trip had meant nothing. His own sketches were still unsold. His pocket sagged&#13;
with them, he almost hated them as he glanced down at their bulk. Other people were&#13;
always lucky, why, Dick sold pictures all the time. He tried to whistle, but no sound&#13;
came at first, and when it did, it was the old, forlorn little tune with a wavering trill&#13;
at the end.&#13;
&#13;
HAZEL&#13;
&#13;
Estelle&#13;
&#13;
SIMAN,&#13;
&#13;
'12&#13;
&#13;
Fair Betsey Bell, from Camden town&#13;
Once to school went she.&#13;
It was not many a mile, I guess&#13;
A mile, but barely three.&#13;
&#13;
"Well," said Henry quietly, and looking up, saw that he was almost home; The&#13;
white house looked cool and peaceful among the trees. Behind, the hills rose quietly,&#13;
like prayers.&#13;
&#13;
She oh-ed and ah-ed in vocal strains,&#13;
She practiced many scales;&#13;
She counted ein, zwei, drei und vier,&#13;
And read old English tales.&#13;
&#13;
It was very still as he softly entered the house. The tablecloth that Henry had so&#13;
ruthlessly spoiled hung over a chair. There was dust on the nearby bookcase and the&#13;
scattered blossoms of some faded lilacs lay strewn upon the floor. Elsa was sitting at&#13;
the table, with her back to the door, but she rose hurriedly as she heard footsteps. There&#13;
was upon the table-Elsa threw her apron over it as she saw her husband.&#13;
&#13;
She learned of Alfred's Chronicle,&#13;
Of Saxon battles won,&#13;
How Beowulf the dragon killed&#13;
Without a sword or gun.&#13;
&#13;
But she was not quick enough. For in that instant Henry saw what lay upon the&#13;
table-brushes and paints-and a half finished sketch.&#13;
Then he knew.&#13;
As they stood there, facing each other, it all came fl.ashing to him, like a memory of&#13;
something long since past that had meanwhile been forgotten. All the years that they&#13;
had been misunderstanding each other seemed crowded into one brief, vivid moment. He&#13;
knew now. Oh, he saw it all. Long ago Elsa had loved to paint-but he had&#13;
thought she no longer cared .&#13;
&#13;
She spoke in French tres, tres bien,&#13;
And Latin, too, you see,&#13;
And in the Greek a line she knew,&#13;
A line, but barely three.&#13;
But then, alas! her wisdom ceased,&#13;
She did a foolish deed ;&#13;
Of all the lectures she had heard,&#13;
Not one did Betsy heed.&#13;
&#13;
"Elsa," he said quietly, and went over and lifted the apron from the sketch upon&#13;
the table. "I know, Elsa. I see it, all now. I've been so busy wishing for just your&#13;
sympathy that-well, I guess I had forgotten that time when we first began things&#13;
together. It's so long ago. Your sketch sold today and-and-I'm so glad, Elsa."&#13;
&#13;
She took a dish from out her desk,&#13;
Her bottle H N 03.&#13;
It was all concentrated strong,&#13;
Dilute it ought to be.&#13;
&#13;
He hung the apron he had taken from the table over a nearby chair. He handled&#13;
it very tenderly, for through his mind ran a tune, an old tune-"There Was a Time."&#13;
Elsa stood watching him. She tried to answer him but she could not. Her eyes&#13;
were too full of happiness for that. She went into the kitchen to put the kettle on for tea.&#13;
&#13;
Some H2 0 from tap she drew,&#13;
And straightway 'gan to pour&#13;
The water in the acid dish,&#13;
And she was seen no morel&#13;
Now maidens all, both large and small,&#13;
A moral here you read;&#13;
And if experiments you would do,&#13;
Please all directions heed.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
sixty-eight&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred sixty-nine&#13;
&#13;
quarterwe've had things coming our way this fall.&#13;
&#13;
Of course Wilson occasionally does&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
something for the Betas and Martin of the Deltas is a fair end but we've got three-&#13;
&#13;
D. L.&#13;
&#13;
WICKENS,&#13;
&#13;
'I 3&#13;
&#13;
fourths of the back field besides Doland in the line and that's enough to do as we please,&#13;
I guess.&#13;
&#13;
Just watch Sigma Xi win the game tomorrow."&#13;
&#13;
"We're getting sweet revenge for the lead they got on us in the rushing season,&#13;
A NOVEMBER afternoon two men were seated on a settee on&#13;
the campus of Marmouth college, discussing the final football game&#13;
of the season, to be played the following day with their old&#13;
rival, Brown.&#13;
&#13;
After a few minutes Coach Hardy, the older man,&#13;
&#13;
suddenly said, "The only thing I fear is the lack of team work.&#13;
We should never have lost so many of our games this season&#13;
had it not been · for the want of unity among the members of&#13;
the team."&#13;
The other man was Mason, the quarterback, who fairly&#13;
&#13;
aren't we, Earl?" put in Charlie Rollins.&#13;
When thus suddenly appealed to, Mason nodded, but, contrary to his custom in&#13;
football discussions, remained silent.&#13;
&#13;
was the general impression held by the student body, for during the whole season the&#13;
quarterback had not called their signals when they could appear to advantage.&#13;
was that not in accord with the time honored athletic doctrine of Sigma Xi?&#13;
&#13;
They agreed that a victory over Brown would turn the season into a&#13;
&#13;
success, as the other losses could be explained.&#13;
&#13;
house, a smile of approval and admiration ran over the face of the trainer as he again&#13;
noted the youth's perfection of form and litheness of figure.&#13;
&#13;
But within&#13;
&#13;
plunges off tackle as well as Martin's speed in going around end.&#13;
Just then a number of the alumni of the fraternity entered, announcing that they&#13;
had come down early to see the game.&#13;
&#13;
In a moment the members had arisen and were&#13;
&#13;
vigorously shaking hands as they greeted these old makers of tradition.&#13;
&#13;
As the two men separated and the qua·rterback walked away toward his fraternity&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
himself his keen football eye had not failed to recognize the terriffic force of Wilson's&#13;
&#13;
radiated enthusiasm over the prospects of the game but remained silent on the question&#13;
of team work.&#13;
&#13;
What the outspoken Sanford had .said in belittling&#13;
&#13;
the ability of Wilson and Martin might well be the judgment of a spectator, and in fact&#13;
&#13;
the new men followed.&#13;
&#13;
Introductions to&#13;
&#13;
When the group finally became reseated the conversation again&#13;
&#13;
turned to the dominant theme and eager question and answer passed back and forth.&#13;
&#13;
Often had he seen him&#13;
&#13;
The younger men related all the details of the season's games and the prospects for the&#13;
&#13;
dodge around end and outwit his opponents for a good gain or on the defense launch&#13;
&#13;
final contest, emphasizing the prominent part which Sigma Xi men were taking and&#13;
&#13;
himself through air to a runner's knees.&#13;
&#13;
He had ever had a genuine pride in coaching&#13;
&#13;
this man of great capacity although he had also been a kind of problem.&#13;
&#13;
As Mason&#13;
&#13;
referring with animation to the work of their quarterback.&#13;
&#13;
The old graduates frequently&#13;
&#13;
interrupted with the relation of some incident in games of years past.&#13;
&#13;
The younger men&#13;
&#13;
approached the entrance of the vine-clad chapter house, upon meeting Larry Sanford&#13;
&#13;
listened eagerly and even Mason ceased for a while to be the center of interest as Carl&#13;
&#13;
and several other fellow members, a number of joyous greetings came from the group on&#13;
&#13;
Ostrand, an old gridiron star and popular alumnus of the fraternity, told of the old times.&#13;
&#13;
recognizing their fraternity leader.&#13;
&#13;
As he noted the emphasis placed on fraternity interest, he remarked, "I used to talk&#13;
&#13;
At this, Coach Hardy's smile faded to a look of&#13;
&#13;
puzzlement as he turned and walked away, more conscious than ever that Marmouth's&#13;
&#13;
just as you boys' do now.&#13;
&#13;
greatest need was not to be supplied by good coaching.&#13;
&#13;
important thing in school, and although we considered ourselves loyal to Marmouth,&#13;
&#13;
The jolly bunch of fraternity men entered the parlor and while awaiting the call&#13;
&#13;
that part was secondary.&#13;
&#13;
In those days it seemed to me that old Sigma Xi was the most&#13;
There was a bunch of us who always chummed together and&#13;
&#13;
to dinner seated themselves on sofas and easy chairs and discussed the football game,&#13;
&#13;
worked together and we were the same on the athletic field.&#13;
&#13;
which was uppermost in all minds.&#13;
&#13;
whole left side of the line were Sigmas and we used to meet in this same room and&#13;
&#13;
Some tried to predict results by comparative scores&#13;
&#13;
but this resulted invariably in Brown's favor.&#13;
&#13;
The others were gathered around Mason,&#13;
&#13;
as usual, and talking of the personnel of the team.&#13;
&#13;
After a few slighting remarks about&#13;
&#13;
scheme out plays for our side.&#13;
of old Marmouth.&#13;
&#13;
In the fall of 1901 the&#13;
&#13;
Though I still love Sigma Xi, I have come to think more&#13;
&#13;
Of the men I meet only a few are of my fraternity but many are&#13;
&#13;
various players belonging to other fraternities, Larry Sanford, the self-appointed spokes-&#13;
&#13;
from the same old school and so I have grown to think of the old frat rather as only a part&#13;
&#13;
man, voiced the sentiments of the group by saying, "Best of all, though, Sigma Xi has&#13;
&#13;
of Marmouth."&#13;
&#13;
the most men on the team.&#13;
&#13;
idea.&#13;
&#13;
With Johnson at left half, Breen at full, and Earl here at&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seven ty&#13;
&#13;
The other fellows took this as a well meant but of course misconceived&#13;
&#13;
Who had ever heard of such a policy being practicable, especially during school&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-one&#13;
&#13;
life.&#13;
&#13;
So they indulged in a quiet smile and remained silent out of respect.&#13;
&#13;
But Mason&#13;
&#13;
had followed closely the old alumnus's line of thought and for some time remained sitting&#13;
with an unusually serious expression lighting up his keen eyes.&#13;
Dinner over, the men separated.&#13;
&#13;
That isn't the way you used to talk.&#13;
&#13;
through the game of the afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
He continued, passing group after group; the town&#13;
&#13;
seemed full of alumni and visitors, all bent on a good time and determined to win.&#13;
&#13;
At length Mason abruptly remarked, "I was surprised at what you said tonight&#13;
about disregarding frat interest.&#13;
&#13;
As&#13;
&#13;
the venerable man greeted him and hoped that he would have old Marmouth in his heart&#13;
&#13;
Although most of them went out to parties and&#13;
&#13;
balls, the quarterback and Ostrand chose to take a stroll on the campus.&#13;
&#13;
you might have more consistency.&#13;
&#13;
back he again thought of O strand, whose changed opinion he could not understand.&#13;
&#13;
he passed the Hall of Art he met the old white-haired college president and paused as&#13;
&#13;
It seems to me&#13;
&#13;
When he neared the chapter house a special train pulled up at the station and a senes&#13;
of yells announced the arrival of Brown's rooters.&#13;
Mason entered and had lain down to rest when a messenger boy hurried in and&#13;
&#13;
You know that for years the object of our frat&#13;
&#13;
members has been to work Sigma Xi and that the Betas and other frats have done the&#13;
&#13;
handed him a pink note which bore the seal of a friendly sorority.&#13;
&#13;
The missive closed&#13;
&#13;
That's what you taught us was proper when I was a Freshman and we've&#13;
&#13;
thus, "They say Brown is very strong, but you will win, of course.&#13;
&#13;
Remember that we&#13;
&#13;
as well as Sigma Xi shall be watching and thinking about you."&#13;
&#13;
On recognizing the&#13;
&#13;
same thing.&#13;
&#13;
practiced it and passed it on ever since."&#13;
&#13;
"I'll admit all that," replied Ostrand, "but since getting away from both fraternity&#13;
&#13;
familiar signature the quarterback breathed shortly and folded the note in some confusion&#13;
&#13;
and school and viewing them from a distance, things appear in a different light, and&#13;
&#13;
as Larry Sanford burst into the room announcing that another group of Sigma Xi alumni&#13;
&#13;
now I consider the fraternity differences of less account."&#13;
&#13;
had motored down to see the game and attend the annual fraternity dinner in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
"It may appear that way to you now, but I don't see it," returned Mason.&#13;
&#13;
"There&#13;
&#13;
As the hour for the game approached the crowd streamed down to the bleachers&#13;
&#13;
are a hundred old scores yet to be settled which we can never forget, and after nearly&#13;
&#13;
and when the teams ran out on the gridiron the vast amphitheater presented one solid&#13;
&#13;
four years at it I intend to play the game out.&#13;
&#13;
Why, I couldn't even respect myself, to&#13;
&#13;
say nothing of what the other fellows would think of a change of my colors."&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
front of the impatient throng rising tier above tier, while the roar of the cheering enthusiasts&#13;
became a succession of mighty surges, swelled by the blare of several bands.&#13;
&#13;
conversation continued in the same pointed and earnest manner, each arguing from a&#13;
&#13;
The two teams lined up opposite each other and from the first scrimmage it was&#13;
evident that each would go the limit.&#13;
&#13;
firm conviction.&#13;
When at last they returned to the chapter house the two parted, Ostrand going to&#13;
visit other friends and Mason to his room.&#13;
&#13;
The last sound he heard before falling&#13;
&#13;
The two elevens surged up and down the field,&#13;
&#13;
fighting for every inch of ground gained; but most of the play was in Marmouth' s territory, and at the last minute of the first half the Brown halfback secured a drop kick.&#13;
&#13;
asleep that night was the shouting of the Betas• as from the veranda of their house they&#13;
&#13;
The Brown division of the grand stand fairly rent the air with deafening shouts and the&#13;
&#13;
cheered the Beta members of the team, and as the voices of that detested group rang out&#13;
&#13;
cheering continued even after the half had closed.&#13;
&#13;
through the night, Mason settled the question in his mind by deciding that tomorrow's&#13;
game should count for old Sigma Xi.&#13;
&#13;
The team, too, had taken a brace.&#13;
&#13;
The next morning most people were stirring when the quarterback came down to&#13;
breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
The second half opened with the Marmouth rooters cheering their team strongly.&#13;
&#13;
He scowled as he read the account in the morning paper which picked&#13;
&#13;
Brown to win again, both by reason of comparative scores and greater weight.&#13;
&#13;
Then he&#13;
&#13;
Breen was playing his old game at fullback and&#13;
&#13;
had repeatedly gone through the line; Johnson at left half was making consistent gains;&#13;
Mason himself had gained many yards and as usual was putting all his strength into the&#13;
game.&#13;
&#13;
But as the minutes of the last quarter were passing and the score stood 3 to O in&#13;
&#13;
recalled his conversation with Carl Ostrand the previous evening, and with a disturbed&#13;
&#13;
Brown's favor, Mason found his team on Brown's thirty yard line with the third down&#13;
&#13;
mind sauntered down toward the football field.&#13;
&#13;
left.&#13;
&#13;
Standing on the topmost row of seats in&#13;
&#13;
the stadium, he gazed contemplatively upon the white lined field below.&#13;
&#13;
He had played&#13;
&#13;
The superior weight of the opposing team was telling at last.&#13;
&#13;
T he forward pass&#13;
&#13;
had failed; Breen's assaults on the line were becoming ineffective; Johnson had already&#13;
&#13;
many a gruelling game there but through them all had never felt uneasy except from the&#13;
&#13;
been overworked with end runs, and Mason had wrenched his ankle.&#13;
&#13;
excitement of the play.&#13;
&#13;
quarterback heard the rooters on the tiers of seats cheering to a man in desperation for old&#13;
&#13;
But now he realized that he was about to play his last game&#13;
&#13;
and call those familiar signals for the last time.&#13;
&#13;
A feeling · of responsibility for his own&#13;
&#13;
conduct and for that of the team as a whole gradually came over him, and as he walked&#13;
&#13;
Marmouth. A moment of confusion swept his mind, then the truth of Ostrand's statement&#13;
suddenly flashed clear upon him.&#13;
&#13;
Quickly he turned and called the signal for Martin, the&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-two&#13;
&#13;
In the pause the&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
sevent y -t h ree&#13;
&#13;
Delta left end.&#13;
&#13;
Like a released animal, the unused man snapped the ball and skirted right&#13;
&#13;
end for a gain of fifteen yards. The fatigued team seemed fired with new spirit as they&#13;
sprang into position. Their quivering muscles flexed taut as steel.&#13;
&#13;
"N 56," shouted the&#13;
&#13;
EDNA SIMON,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
quarter, and Wilson, the Beta right half, plunged over left tackle for five yards more.&#13;
He had been used the least of the back field and was comparatively fresh.&#13;
players were alarmed.&#13;
&#13;
Again Martin swept around the end for a gain.&#13;
&#13;
cheers rang from the frenzied rooters.&#13;
&#13;
The goal was only four yards off.&#13;
&#13;
The Brown&#13;
Jetzt ist der Schnee schon fort,&#13;
Und alles wird nun gruen,&#13;
1hr fragt, wer kommt nun dort?&#13;
Ach ja, es ist der Fruehling.&#13;
&#13;
Deafening&#13;
Amidst a&#13;
&#13;
pandemonium of yells, Mason gave the ball to his old rival and Wilson went over for&#13;
the winning touchdown.&#13;
The crowd broke loose in thunderous tumult, and the wildest enthusiasm seized them&#13;
as they rushed en masse upon the field and carried the heroes off on their shoulders.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
"dope" had been upset, Brown had been defeated and Old Marmouth had won.&#13;
&#13;
Die Voegel im Baume singen,&#13;
Und bauen ihre Nester.&#13;
Vor F reude muss man springen,&#13;
Und wandern durch die Waelder.&#13;
&#13;
As&#13;
&#13;
Mason was carried through the crowd, congratulated on all sides, he saw Larry Sanford&#13;
Jetzt bluehen schoene Blumen,&#13;
Und herrlich glaenzt die Sonne,&#13;
Denn Sommer ist gekommen,&#13;
Und bringt uns viele Wonne.&#13;
&#13;
leading a group of Betas, Sigmas and Deltas in cheers for the various members of the&#13;
team, and no names were omitted.&#13;
him with a radiant face.&#13;
&#13;
Then he sighted big Carl Ostrand pressing toward&#13;
&#13;
With a quiet smile the quarter reached down to receive his&#13;
&#13;
friend's hand, gripped it hard and said nothing.&#13;
&#13;
So froehlich is die Welt.&#13;
Die Herrlichkeit zu sehen,&#13;
Es duftet das frische Feld,&#13;
Doch Sommer muss bald gehen.&#13;
&#13;
A Sonnet&#13;
H. G.&#13;
&#13;
MERTEN,&#13;
&#13;
Nun kuerzer wird der Tag,&#13;
Die Blaetter fallen herunter,&#13;
Einen T eppich von Gold wird gemacht,&#13;
Auf der Erde, gefaerbt und bunter.&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
The day is dark, chill blows the blast&#13;
Upon my poor, defenseless head,&#13;
Above the sky is overcast,&#13;
And at my feet the leaves lie dead .&#13;
The bare twigs whistle in the wind;&#13;
I hear no more the robin's trill.&#13;
The willow with the grapevine twined&#13;
Looms up before me black and still.&#13;
Yet what care I for cold and wind,&#13;
For darkened sky and prospect drear,&#13;
A joy wells up within my mind,&#13;
A gleam of hope, a flood of cheer.&#13;
I laugh to scorn the tempest's roar.&#13;
I rest in peace-exams are o' er.&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
Wie schoen ist doch das Wetter,&#13;
Doch manchmal ist es kuehl,&#13;
N ach Schule muessen die Kinder.&#13;
Ein augenehmes Gefuehl&#13;
Die Wolken ziehen zusammen,&#13;
Der Schnee ueber alles liegt,&#13;
Nun kann man schlitten fahren,&#13;
Der Winter hat doch gesiegt.&#13;
Wie prachtvoll ist die Natur,&#13;
So wunderschoen und klar,&#13;
Wir freuen uns fortan,&#13;
Auch durch das ganze Jahr.&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-four&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-five&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
FRE N C H,&#13;
&#13;
'14&#13;
&#13;
TS AWFULLY good of you, Mae, to come and practice at my hour&#13;
today. It's pretty late to go down town at five-thirty in the winter.&#13;
If it gets too dark, I always turn on the gas. It does get a little&#13;
spooky here in the chapel after dark ."&#13;
The speaker, Elsie Benson, was a tall, dark-haired girl, whose&#13;
voice and manner betokened energy and spirit.&#13;
"Oh, I'll be all right," answered Mae, a girl so tiny that one wondered how she ever manipulated the big organ.&#13;
"Well, I'll work on these studies first," she said when she was alone. "I don't like&#13;
them, but maybe I'll get something I do like if I work on these."&#13;
She played along, quite lost in the piece. At last she looked up, "Oh, this isn't&#13;
bad, maybe it won't be so dark after all. I'll try that study over again . Professor&#13;
Lane said it could go better, and I suppose it could, so here goes."&#13;
Mae Ingoldsby had come to Breyton College, four months before, for the purpose&#13;
of studying music. Her organ work was a source of never-failing pleasure to her. It&#13;
was so fascinating to work out different combinations of stops, and to study the&#13;
qualities of the tones. Very often she was so rapt in her study that she forgot time&#13;
and everything.&#13;
At length she stopped and with a start she peered out into the chapel. "Goodness,&#13;
it's darker than Egypt here. I can't even see the balcony. Is someone standing in the&#13;
aisle? I-I'll-light the--gas." Casting a timid glance around her, a chill went&#13;
through her frame and she stopped. What if the chain on the fixture should turn into&#13;
an icy hand that would clasp hers and draw her up- and up? She sat there wide-eyed&#13;
and white. Some awful crouching monster was surely creeping around the organ desk.&#13;
Terrified and trembling, she gazed out into the darkness . Then her eyes fell on the&#13;
music. It diverted her thoughts, and noiselessly she turned the pages and began to play&#13;
very softly. The creatures of the dark slowly retreated, and she could look out into&#13;
the chapel without fear.&#13;
Her hands jerked · from the&#13;
Suddenly she heard, all around her, a moan.&#13;
keyboard, and she sat bolt upright, every nerve quivering. This was real. Great beads&#13;
of perspiration burst out on her forehead and were followed instantly by icy, creepy&#13;
sensations. Thoughts chased wildly through her brain. If someone would only come.&#13;
But she had not heard a footstep since her friend had left. There was only the awful&#13;
monster back of the organ, separated only by a frail partition of wood. She sat waiting&#13;
-waiting, but all was silent. Then suddenly she thought, "Maybe someone is trying&#13;
to scare me, well-" and with that, she began to play a piece which in the&#13;
farthest corner of the chapel was deafening, but back of the organ was positively ear-&#13;
&#13;
Recollections of an Ancient Freshman&#13;
"Rags"&#13;
&#13;
A youth once dreamed a stately dream&#13;
Of colleges, and books, and fame;&#13;
Of mighty undertakings, his to be,&#13;
When from the halls in full efficiency,&#13;
He'd tread a path of roses to the living world.&#13;
To be a builder of some mighty thing,&#13;
Perhaps of business 'mong the useful arts,&#13;
Perhaps through genius that he might possess&#13;
To win a name immortal in the hearts of men,&#13;
And make them servants at his very feet.&#13;
But, ah, the interim!&#13;
Dark is the night in which we dream&#13;
To wake and find ourselves again!&#13;
Dark is the night which breaks away&#13;
And leaves earth's objects as they are!&#13;
-At last he wakes and looks around.&#13;
Despair comes o'er him like the chill of death&#13;
And down he sinks with face upturned to Heaven,&#13;
"O God, have mercy," plead the fainting lips&#13;
And silence reigns ; the bold extreme is riven.&#13;
Now soon the light comes back and tho'ts arise&#13;
And truth bids him to realize,&#13;
He IS a builder of a mighty thing.&#13;
He is a servant to the needs of men&#13;
And wins a soul immortal in the eyes of God.&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Onw hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-six&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-seven&#13;
&#13;
splitting. "They won't try that on me again," she thought, and a little smile played&#13;
about her lips. It soon died and gave place to a look of terro r, for over the right side of&#13;
the organ desk two round white faces appeared . Too frightened to look either way, she&#13;
rivited her gaze on the music, her hands remaining on the keys, makin g one long, dea fening discord. She vaguely remembered tha t the piano had been pushed against the&#13;
left side of the organ. H er left hand shot up to the solitary electric light, and "snap,"&#13;
the room was in darkness. She dodged to escape an impact with the piano, darted under&#13;
it and leaped from the platform. A light flashed on, and she heard someone calling.&#13;
"Why, Miss Ingoldsby ! " Then she turned and looked into the startled fa ces of P rofessor Lane and Professor Ellsworth.&#13;
"We didn't mean to frighten you , Miss lngoldsby," said M r. L ane.&#13;
"Well-well-but-" and she stopped , bewildered, then suddenly added , " Who&#13;
was groaning back there?"&#13;
"Groaning! Where? " they exclaimed. " W e didn't hear a nything. W e just&#13;
came up to practice a piano and organ number for Mr. Ellsworth's recital tomorrow&#13;
night," explained Mr. Lane.&#13;
"Well, someone or something was there," stoutly affirmed M ae.&#13;
The professors looked mystified. "Did anybody come in while you were practicing?" asked Mr. Ellsworth.&#13;
"I didn't see anyone."&#13;
"Well, there was no one on the back stairway just now, and no one could possibly&#13;
get in any other way without your seeing them," reasoned Professor L ane.&#13;
"Well, that may be," answered Mae, "but nevertheless something or somebody was&#13;
groaning back there when I was practicing."&#13;
The professor started to reply, when a wail, like the agony of a lost soul, broke&#13;
upon their ears, so close that even the men started. Crossing the platform, Professor&#13;
Ellsworth opened the door of the organ. Like a fla sh, a huge gray cat raced out, cleared&#13;
the rostrum with a bound, and tore out of the room.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-eight&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
J. E.&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS,&#13;
&#13;
Tale&#13;
'I 3&#13;
&#13;
Whylom, as olde stories tellen us,&#13;
Ther was a sete of wit, a scole of scoles.&#13;
The name of it y-highte Morningside,&#13;
And many oon dide com fro fer and wyd&#13;
Oon in a student bodi ones to be&#13;
That hadde swich spirit and swich loyaltee&#13;
That gretter was ther noon under the sonne.&#13;
Full many a noble victorie hadde she wonne.&#13;
And legende telleth in a neih contree&#13;
Was South Dacota Universitee,&#13;
A scole whos fame hadde goon thurh ute the lond,&#13;
Whos trecherie dide everich wight astond.&#13;
A pac of wolues they noi:i fayn wolde mokken&#13;
For which dide Morningside hem euer token.&#13;
And certes, if it nere to long to here&#13;
I wolde han told yow fully the manere,&#13;
How wonnen was the game of basket balle&#13;
By South Dacota, but thurh foules alle,&#13;
And of the grete bataille uppon the setes&#13;
Betwixen Holbert-and that hautein Sheeks,&#13;
And to, for feer and reyn, a base balle game&#13;
Was forfetede in South Oacota's name,&#13;
How oonli foot balle faire coud they winne,&#13;
But wher I lefte, I wol ageyn biginne.&#13;
The rivalrie was ful right merye kene&#13;
Bitwixen hem, as it is clere sene,&#13;
.&#13;
And so it cam to been, oon bright warm day&#13;
Whan halfe cours ye sonne y-ronne in May&#13;
This base balle teem of whom I make mencion&#13;
Fro S. D . U ., cam to Soo Citee toun.&#13;
For want of sturdi men folk it wolde seme&#13;
Thise same nine weren eek hir runninge teem.&#13;
And hennes, felinge naught but thair defait,&#13;
Thise hirelinges sekeden slie Ladye Fate.&#13;
And thus, by runninge swift, as was thair wone,&#13;
And chaunce of trecherie, as was thair bone,&#13;
They wonneden that ese cauardlik game,&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
seventy-nine&#13;
&#13;
A cut hadde made bifore his verray eyes.&#13;
But nou oon, "Rusty" Cobbs, cam up to batte,&#13;
Than turnede round and casteth of his hatte;&#13;
He strak at oon ful hard ; he strak at tweye;&#13;
The thride he hitte and stertede on his weye.&#13;
Than Ben they chere and nolde nevere stenten&#13;
Till he the battle dide chuse and ferme henten.&#13;
H e strak the balle and ran as if for lyf,&#13;
F orgetinge scole and game and hoom and wyf,&#13;
And everich persone fro his sete than sterte;&#13;
A home rinne made l The wolues lesede herte,&#13;
For after that they strak ute everichon,&#13;
With eche the same foreuer and anon,&#13;
And michenlik thos wolues goon bak to dwelle&#13;
Fro whennes they cam; ther is namore to telle.&#13;
&#13;
And bostede stroutingly his empti fame.&#13;
But whan at base balle than thair Fortune stake,&#13;
Lo, swich a cry and swich a wo they make,&#13;
That in this world nis creature livinge&#13;
That herde swich another waymentinge,&#13;
And glorie wonders heigh, in M orningside&#13;
Than sorede, and in South Dacota diede.&#13;
But this balle game of which I make mencious,&#13;
That makede al this lamentacioun&#13;
Dide Morningside biginne in sore tene,&#13;
And ladyes' corteisyes were al unsene.&#13;
Amonge Dacota hiles sank the sonne&#13;
Bifore the sturdi game scars hadde bigonne.&#13;
Tho wolues grennen, for in derk of night&#13;
Muche better is thair chaunce thanne in day light.&#13;
And so whan South Dacota cam to batte&#13;
The first time up, tweye scores quike they gatte;&#13;
The oon they gatte by hittinge hard the balle,&#13;
The other oon thurh W est, who lat it falle.&#13;
Than in the second inning oon cut mo&#13;
They makeden, nou thre mo thanne thair fo.&#13;
Big Ben than steppinge up dide rubbe erthe,&#13;
He grennede, and alle others stoppede mirthe;&#13;
Than saisede batte and strak right merye wee!,&#13;
Atrenne the balle, and lo, a score did stele.&#13;
But nou bothe teemes stoppede taillyinge&#13;
And ti! thre inninges nis a hoom-cominge.&#13;
Yet South Dacota doutelees this hem leste,&#13;
For it wolde seme they alle bigan to reste,&#13;
And verrailly al so the wonders Mee&#13;
Threw wyd the balle; it went fer to the lee,&#13;
And Culbertson a walk to first did tak.&#13;
The next strak Prit, and eche went on a sak.&#13;
Than Barrett swang his batte with swich a vese&#13;
That it made al the people for to rese.&#13;
The balle flew heigh and on the grund dide lihte&#13;
That ferrer wolde been ute of sight.&#13;
And than by runninge swift the score y-teyd&#13;
With ringinge cheres cler for Morningside.&#13;
And theruppon Prit swalen so with pryde&#13;
That for a wink he caste his glans asyde.&#13;
Alias, thos wolues, muche to his surpryse,&#13;
&#13;
The Journey&#13;
EDITH Bower,&#13;
&#13;
' 13&#13;
&#13;
D arkness drops over the river,&#13;
Velvety breezes blow,&#13;
The leaves of the maple trees quiver&#13;
As dreamily on we go.&#13;
&#13;
In and out among shadows,&#13;
M errily moonbeams play;&#13;
The darkness is brightened by star-eyes,&#13;
And gaily we go on our way.&#13;
Black clouds the heavens darken,&#13;
Star-eyes no more we see ;&#13;
With tongues stilled in terror we hearken,&#13;
F earfully hushed is our glee.&#13;
We hear the thunder's loud groaning,&#13;
No longer the soft winds blow;&#13;
The boughs of the forest are moaning,&#13;
As sadly onward we go.&#13;
But onward , still onward we' re gomg,&#13;
Even though shadows fal l.&#13;
Onward, still onward we're rowmg&#13;
In answer to Duty's call.&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty&#13;
&#13;
eighty-one&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
Every Student&#13;
CATHERINE ELLIOTT,&#13;
&#13;
'13&#13;
&#13;
SCENE I&#13;
&#13;
Campus of any College at Sundown. Every Student, his room-mate, Contentment, meet Reason and Desire strolling. Contentment draws away from Every Student's&#13;
side.&#13;
Reason: What have you done?&#13;
Every Student: I have dismissed my old master, Ideals!&#13;
are you going?&#13;
Contentment:&#13;
&#13;
can remain no longer.&#13;
&#13;
Contentment!&#13;
&#13;
You must get a new room-mate.&#13;
&#13;
Where&#13;
&#13;
Enter Reproach&#13;
Every Student: Why are you here?&#13;
Reproach: You brought me here.&#13;
Reason: You know why he's coming. You should not have ceased to follow Ideals.&#13;
Desire: You were perfectly right in wanting to keep on the good side of Jollity.&#13;
He is a merry fellow.&#13;
Reason: He is not half as worthy as Ideals.&#13;
Every Student: I know, but I want to be friendly with both.&#13;
Desire: Sure, you would rather have a good time.&#13;
Reason: It's the wiser part to be true to Ideals, and it's impossible to follow both&#13;
of them. Go and tell Jollity that you utterly discard him.&#13;
Every Student: Yes, that would be best. I think I will.&#13;
&#13;
(Half Starts to follow Reason off the stage.&#13;
Enter Trivolity, with dancing curls and too red lips. )&#13;
T rivolity: Where are you going with such a serious face and why are you deserting our good friend Desire? Come, let's go walking, I have something so lovely to tell&#13;
you!&#13;
Yes, have one more good time, then you can go to Ideals.&#13;
&#13;
( Vice brings in tray with glasses)&#13;
&#13;
See&#13;
&#13;
he is commg.&#13;
&#13;
Desire:&#13;
&#13;
Jollity: This coy young Every Student,&#13;
Two years I've tried from him;&#13;
But he has been on goodness bent,&#13;
Considered me a whim.&#13;
Mirth: May fair Trivolity win him o'er&#13;
And bring him here tonight.&#13;
Jollity: Of old Ideals he'll think no more,&#13;
And we'll have won the fight.&#13;
Mirth (at right): I hear Trivolity coming now.&#13;
Jollity (at left)&#13;
Here, Vice, bring in the tray,&#13;
We'll have a downright jolly row&#13;
And drive all care away.&#13;
&#13;
He'll keep.&#13;
&#13;
Place it on the table here&#13;
And now bring forth the wine,&#13;
The wine of Joy to me most dear,&#13;
And champagnes dry and fine.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter D esire at right with Every Student and&#13;
&#13;
Trivolity)&#13;
&#13;
Welcome to ye, student friend,&#13;
Good old Desire and maiden fair.&#13;
Here's Mirth, who'll to your pleasure bend.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Frolic at right)&#13;
And here comes Frolic, who'll not spare&#13;
To give ye merriment the while.&#13;
&#13;
( Vice has arranged tables and goes out)&#13;
Frolic:&#13;
&#13;
Bright greetings to ye, people all.&#13;
(To Every Student) : Take care that ye do naught but smile&#13;
Or into dire disgrace ye'll fall.&#13;
Come, gay T rivolity, we must show&#13;
This student here a merry rout.&#13;
So all join hands and round we'll go,&#13;
With many a laugh and boisterous shout.&#13;
&#13;
(They dance around the table, Every Student between Trivolity&#13;
and Frolic. They stop and girls lead him to the front of the stage&#13;
and sing)&#13;
&#13;
(Exeunt).&#13;
SCENE II&#13;
&#13;
Room in the House of Jollity Door at right to outside, at left to inner apartment.&#13;
Table in center, sideboard with bottles at back.&#13;
Jollity and Mirth&#13;
Mirth: 'Tis queer to me, Sir Jollity,&#13;
How good to men appeals,&#13;
When they a friend with me may be&#13;
They'll cling to old Ideals.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-two&#13;
&#13;
Trivolity and Frolic : Oh, think you not we're maidens fair,&#13;
Maidens fair, maidens fair,&#13;
We've laughing eyes and golden hair, golden hair, golden hair,&#13;
Our love is sweet,&#13;
Oh, very sweet,&#13;
So come and drink with us, sir.&#13;
( They lead him to the table, give him a glass. All toast)&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-three&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Reason:&#13;
&#13;
Mirth: Oh, here's a toast to pleasure,&#13;
Whose we cannot measure !&#13;
&#13;
( Enter Ideals )&#13;
True Friendship: Yonder comes your master now. Come, let me lead you to him.&#13;
Every Student: I will go with you, then he will welcome me, for you are a&#13;
favorite of his. (To Ideals) : Can you forgive me for leaving you?&#13;
Ideals: Yes, but by your own efforts you must regain your lost ground. But&#13;
this will not be difficult, for see, when Shame and Reproach are leaving you, Contentment&#13;
&#13;
(As they drink R eason enters, standing behind Every Student)&#13;
T rivolity: And here's a draught to our gay old host,&#13;
And ne'er from him we'll' sever,&#13;
We'll serve him aye, whate'er the cost,&#13;
And be his own forever.&#13;
&#13;
is returning.&#13;
&#13;
(Reason whispers in ear of Every Student)&#13;
Frolic:&#13;
&#13;
It's the courageous thing to try to right the wrong you have done.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Contentment)&#13;
&#13;
Come, youth, drink.&#13;
&#13;
Every Student: Welcome, comrade. With you my friend, True Friendship my&#13;
adviser, Reason my tutor, and Ideals my master, my college life is almost ideal.&#13;
&#13;
(Every Student stands with glass untouched )&#13;
Mirth: Ha! ha! aren't afraid of a little glass, are you?&#13;
Every Student: No, it's the pledge- shall I give it?&#13;
Reason: No. You know it will but lead to your ruin.&#13;
Mirth: Nonsense, enjoy yourself. You live but once.&#13;
Frolic and T rivolity: Drink with us. Come-&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Reproach with True Friendship)&#13;
Reproach: Why did you come here? You are in a pleasant mix-up.&#13;
Every Student: W ell, don't remind me of it. It's too late to help matters now.&#13;
True Friendship (a beautiful girl with the freshness of morning): No, it isn't too&#13;
late. You have done wrong, but you can make a fresh start.&#13;
Reason: That is true. Leave this place at once.&#13;
True Friendship: Yes, come with me.&#13;
T rivolity: No, stay with us and have some fun.&#13;
Desire: Yes, this one time will do no harm.&#13;
Reason: No, you must not stay to drink the toast.&#13;
True Friendship: Come with me.&#13;
&#13;
a Lament&#13;
EDITH&#13;
&#13;
A feeling of sadness comes o'er me&#13;
As I enter the chapel door,&#13;
A feeling of sadness comes o'er me&#13;
I have never felt before.&#13;
&#13;
(He straightens up and goes out with her)&#13;
&#13;
I gaze at the empty platform,&#13;
And eyes are filled with tears,&#13;
I gaze at the empty platform,&#13;
And my heart is filled with fears.&#13;
&#13;
SCENE III&#13;
&#13;
Same as Scene I.&#13;
&#13;
Every Student, True Friendship, Reproach and Reason.&#13;
&#13;
True Friendship: Come, go back to Ideals, he will welcome you.&#13;
Reason: Yes, go, you know he is the only one who can fitly direct your life.&#13;
Reproach: Why did you leave your good old master in the first place?&#13;
&#13;
No more I see those faces&#13;
That I have loved so long,&#13;
No more I see those faces,&#13;
As I raise my voice in song.&#13;
&#13;
(Enter Shame)&#13;
Shame:&#13;
&#13;
Yes, that was the meanest thing that you could have done.&#13;
&#13;
You dare&#13;
&#13;
not go back to Ideals.&#13;
Reason: You must go. He is generous, he will forgive you.&#13;
Shame: But you have acted so disgracefully, how can you face him.&#13;
Every Student: .I will not. I'll just go to the dogs. I'm a mere good-for-nothing.&#13;
&#13;
Where are the honored pedagogues ?&#13;
Will some one make reply?&#13;
They've turned their backs upon us&#13;
And descended from on high.&#13;
&#13;
(He starts off)&#13;
True Friendship (starting after him):&#13;
&#13;
You are not.&#13;
&#13;
You know very well that&#13;
&#13;
Ideals will welcome you.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-four&#13;
&#13;
Bower, '1 3&#13;
&#13;
011 e hundred eighty-five&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
ELIZABETH ]AM ES,&#13;
&#13;
'I 5&#13;
&#13;
ICHARD CAMPBELL paced back and forth across the floor&#13;
of his room. Richard was furious.&#13;
" I tell you fellows, it's no use. I'll not stay here another&#13;
minute. I've been cooped up and treated like a two-year-old&#13;
baby just about long enough. I don't give a hang if I am the&#13;
Sophomore president whom those blasted Freshmen are trying to&#13;
kidnap. I don't give a hang about the class nor you nor- nor&#13;
anything-I'm going."&#13;
A hand was laid on his shoulder-the hand of his chum&#13;
Jack Arnold. "Oh come now, Dickie, don't get peevish. I realize that it's beastly luck&#13;
to have to stay in one room for three days and not be able to see Marjorie even once. But&#13;
think of your class, boy. Those beastly Freshmen out number us three to one and we&#13;
can't let you, our president, and the most glowing specimen of American manhood among&#13;
us, we cannot let you out for them to swoop down upon and batter up for life. It's the&#13;
class honor that's at stake, old fellow. It's beastly luck that Marjorie has a Freshman&#13;
brother, but since she has, Bright-eyes, you must be contented to stay at home."&#13;
"Oh dash Marjorie. It isn't her I want. It's air, freedom. 'Give me liberty or&#13;
give me death!' Never before did I appreciate the full meaning of that phrase."&#13;
But the six sturdy collegians who were barricading the door only grinned and&#13;
yawned spasmodically.&#13;
"Sorry, Sweet-heart, but it's no use," piped "Fatty."&#13;
"Yes, it is hard luck," cooed "Tubby" to his beloved meerschaum, " to get a brand&#13;
new case on a perfectly good looking young lady and then have it blotted out in the flower&#13;
of its youth simply because one happens to be president of the Sophomore class and one's&#13;
classmates won't let him be devoured by those relentless Freshmen. It is hard luck,&#13;
Dickie."&#13;
"Well, it isn't our fault that he's so popular," remarked another, "and he's got us&#13;
to comfort him in his misery."&#13;
"Yes, you're a heap of comfort, you are," growled Richard.&#13;
Richard was young, Richard was good looking, Richard was witty, and well, Richard was a college chap. H e was just the kind of a man to be popular, and he was popular, but this time his popularity had gotten him into a " dickens of a mess," as he styled it.&#13;
Yes, it was all very nice to be president of the class when all it meant was to preside at&#13;
the meetings, to be toastmaster at the banquet, to lead the grand march a t the "Prom,"&#13;
and such things.&#13;
&#13;
On e hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-six&#13;
&#13;
Oh yes, all that was very nice. But when it meant to be shut up in one room for&#13;
three days, to be pressed under the bed or behind the piano, or smothered with ·sofa pillows to represent a stationary couch whenever the least noise was heard; when it meant&#13;
to be kept away from one's best girl for three whole consecutive days-when it meant&#13;
these things, it was terrible. No, life as a Sophomore president certainly was no "bed of&#13;
roses.&#13;
And Richard vowed and declared that he would endure this isolation no longer.&#13;
What if the Freshmen did capture him for a while-it could be no worse than this, and&#13;
at least he would have a change of scenery. O f course there were but three days left until&#13;
the time agreed upon by the two classes would be up, but gee whiz, three days more in&#13;
one room, three days more without Marjorie ! N ever!&#13;
In the midst of his meditations the dinner bell rang and the fellows jumped up&#13;
joyously.&#13;
" Well, good-bye, old man, keep up your spirits. We' ll be back in half an hour&#13;
and bring you a peach of a dinner. Honest. Lock the door, fellows, bar it up so that&#13;
our worthy president won't be tempted. Well, happy dreams, old man-so-long."&#13;
And Richard H enry Campbell once more paced back and forth across the floor of&#13;
his room.&#13;
C HAPTER II.&#13;
FLORENCE MONTGOMERY,&#13;
&#13;
'I 4&#13;
&#13;
"Confound 'em! They did lock that door. Take that from me," and a six-inch&#13;
space of varnishless wood gave silent testimony to the wrathful venting of much pent-up&#13;
energy.&#13;
Then crossing to the window, he flung it wide open and leaned out. "What a night&#13;
this is going to be," he prophetically mused, as he aimlessly fired a perfectly straight ruler&#13;
down among the fast lengthening .shadows.&#13;
"Ou-ouch! I ain't done nothin' to you, Mars Dick, have I? "&#13;
"Why, 'Shifty,' you old black rascal, what are you skulking around down there for?&#13;
It's rather dangerous, don't you know it?"&#13;
Yessah, believes yuh, but I come to see yuh. Come down heah."&#13;
I&#13;
"Why, you see, 'Shifty,' the door's locked."&#13;
" T he door's locked? Why don' t yuh unlock it?"&#13;
"You are the biggest blockhead. I suppose I'll have to explain it all to you. You' re&#13;
an awful nuisance, don't you know it? "&#13;
During this tirade 'Shifty' had shinned up to the top of the silver maple and having wound his agile frame around the tip of the longest limb until he formed a veritable&#13;
human knot, was now cheerfully ensconced on what appeared to D ick to be nothing more&#13;
nor less than a gentle swaying breeze.&#13;
'Ts ready now for da 'splanation, M ars Dick," for thus did "Shifty," having enthroned Dick in his heart as an all-conquering hero to be humbly worshiped, constantly&#13;
&#13;
One hundred&#13;
&#13;
eighty-seven&#13;
&#13;
persist in addressing him. "I didn't heah what yuh was sayin' 'cept 'bout a blockhead.&#13;
My head do feel like a ruler yet, sah."&#13;
"Say, that'll do for you. If you utter another word, I'll laugh and f don't want&#13;
to. You understand, don't you? Keep still."&#13;
"Y assah, Mars Dick," floated meekly across the ten feet intervening between the&#13;
dark rocking mass and the stone window ledge of the dormitory, the latter now adorned by&#13;
a pair of dangling tan shoes.&#13;
"You see, it's like this. The F reshies are after me"-"Y assah, I " - "Shut up, I say. Don't interrupt me. I say the Freshies are after my scalp and my&#13;
affectionate friends want to save my hide by locking me up in my room. See?"&#13;
"Y assah, I knows it. I heared 'em talkin' and they said they was gwine to git yuh,&#13;
Mars Dick, and one of 'em had a awful long rope, 'cause I seen one end of it-they ain't&#13;
gwine to hang yuh, are they, Mars Dick?&#13;
I come to tell yuh 'bout 'em.&#13;
Don't let 'em&#13;
git yuh, Mars Dick, please."&#13;
"Well 'Shifty,' I'll have to give you credit for having some sense after all, but why&#13;
in thunder didn't you tell me that years ago?"&#13;
"Why, Mars Dick, how could I? Yuh kep' sayin' 'shut up, shut up.' "&#13;
"Sorry, 'Shifty,' but now, see here; all the Sophs in Kentucky couldn't save me&#13;
from those F reshies if I stay here, so I've got to migrate."&#13;
A few seconds thoughtful silence ensued, then Dick's voice, strangely calm, continued: "Say, 'Shifty,' did you ever have a girl?"&#13;
"Wha-at? Why, once, when yuh stopped that runaway, I stayed with Marjorie&#13;
but yuh was only gone 'bout ten minutes."&#13;
"Scoundrel! But, by George, I have it!"&#13;
"Suttenly, suh. I'll do it."&#13;
"Do what? I haven't told you anything to do yet."&#13;
"There's a ladder over behin' Mars Cratton' s barn."&#13;
"Say, you get out of that tree as fast as you can,-well-wait a minute until I tell&#13;
you what I want. Run your black legs off over to old T riedel' s style shop and give him a&#13;
note for me."&#13;
"Shuah, I will suh," eagerly.&#13;
"Well, you young idiot, come back here until I give you the note. If the old man&#13;
can't read it, you tell him I want a white coat, a hat with a willow plume, a pink silk&#13;
dress, long white gloves-big ones, tell him-I forgot to mention the size-tell him twelves&#13;
- a black wig, a pompadore one, you understand-come back here, I'm not through-a&#13;
black veil, one that drapes. Now shoot."&#13;
"Is that all, suh"-"Shoot, I say. Oh-come back here. Get a pair of pink silk hose and slippers, and&#13;
if you let anyone see you I'll ring your worthless neck. Go," and 'Shifty,' to put it&#13;
mildly, went.&#13;
Dick searched madly through his dresser drawers. "Blast it. What did Jack do&#13;
&#13;
One hundred eighty-eight&#13;
&#13;
with that box of whitewash? Whew! It's hot. I've got to get that note to Marjorie&#13;
written by the time my clothes get here. Let me see. How shall I say it?"-DEAR MARJORIE:&#13;
&#13;
I'm in an awful scrape and I want you to help me out.&#13;
I've got forty-five minutes in which to make my escape from&#13;
this dormitory, and then I am coming to call on you. I'm a&#13;
friend from New York, Gwendolyn Halycott, a schoolmate&#13;
of yours at Vassar, you understand. Probably you will not&#13;
recognize me, that is, me, but if you will only welcome&#13;
Gwendolyn with open arms, that is, I mean, heartily, I shall&#13;
be indebted to you forever. I'll explain more later. In haste,&#13;
RICHARD.&#13;
&#13;
"There! I f " - "Mars Dick, Mars Dick, I' se heah."&#13;
CHAPTER III.&#13;
ALICE MowER, '1 3&#13;
&#13;
When Richard looked out in answer to the summons, he rubbed his eyes in bewilderment. Surely he was seeing a vision, and not an extremely ethical one at that, for&#13;
there was 'Shifty' torn, tattered, and soaked with mud and water.&#13;
"Oh, Mars Dick, Mars Dick, they did duck me in mos' powerful col' water, sah."&#13;
"Who, where, what have you been up to you hoodoo?"&#13;
"It's like this, Mars Dick, I saw that bunch of your awful bad enemies, with that&#13;
rope an' I just hung 'round 'till I grabbed it and run, but they catched me an' put me in&#13;
the lake all over, Mars Dick. I j.ust begged them not to hurt yuh, sah, but they said&#13;
they would do yuh up if they ever caught sight of yuh, Mars Dick."&#13;
"Never mind, 'Shifty,' perhaps they won't have the chance. Now, where's · the&#13;
clothes?"&#13;
"Heah, sah, I got 'em. All but the pink slippers, sah, number twelve. They is out&#13;
of style Mars T riedel said."&#13;
"Deuce take Triedel, but see here, 'Shifty,' you take this note around to Miss Vancott, and don't give it to anyone else. Understand?"&#13;
"Yas, sah; yas, sah, I's understan'. This little nigger ain't gwine to git yuh hung,&#13;
Mars Dick."&#13;
"And say, 'Shifty,' if you let Leonard see you, you needn't come back here," but&#13;
'Shifty' was too far away to hear.&#13;
Richard turned back into his room in high spirits which were only to be darkened.&#13;
What a blockhead he was! There he had sent 'Shifty' off and the bundle containing the&#13;
paraphernalia for his masquerade was lying below on the ground .&#13;
&#13;
On e h undred eig ht y -nine&#13;
&#13;
"Now what shall I do. If that 'Shifty· · don't beat all I ever saw."&#13;
"Extra! Extra! All about the class scrap!" came floating in at the window.&#13;
Richard looked down upon his only chance of escape.&#13;
"Say Newsy, want to earn a nickle?"&#13;
"Sure. Want a paper?"&#13;
"No, but I'm locked up in this hole and if you will help me out you won't be sorry.&#13;
I'll-I'll buy a hundred papers!"&#13;
"Oh gee, I say now, do you mean all that talk?"&#13;
"Sure I do, if you will get that ladder-now here, where did 'Shifty' say that ladder&#13;
was?" and Richard ran his lingers swiftly through his hair.&#13;
While he was thus employed the thump of the ladder against the wall was heard.&#13;
He wasted no time in scrambling down it.&#13;
"There's your money, and keep this mum or you'll hear from me, see."&#13;
Seizing the precious bundle he mounted the ladder and at once began rapidly&#13;
dressing. As he· wrestled with the hooks up and down the back of the gown he surveyed himself in the mirror.&#13;
"Well, of all things. How will Marjorie take me-she probably won't take me at&#13;
all after this mix-up and it'll serve me right, too. That pompadour is on crooked, but&#13;
I can't find a hairpin."&#13;
At last removing all traces of his make-up from the room, he took one last look and&#13;
descended the ladder. But oh, alas, when half way down his feet got tangled some way&#13;
in his gown and his descent was sudden and anything but comfortable. Picking himself&#13;
up he straightened his hat and wig, and searched for his elaborate hand-bag. "There,&#13;
Dick Campbell, this is the last such escapade you're going to indulge in for one while."&#13;
Turning the corner, he beheld a group of fellows gesticulating and talking excitedly.&#13;
As he neared them he could faintly feel the excitement and beardLeonard Vancott say,&#13;
"The others won't be here for fifteen minutes and I'll run home and get Marj so fussed&#13;
that she'll tell all she knows. Say-I don't like to change the subject-but did any of&#13;
you fellows ever see a street gown like the one passing?"&#13;
Thankful that his dress reached the ground thus concealing his sturdy number nines,&#13;
but nevertheless fearful of recognition, Richard walked quickly · past the group.&#13;
''I'll wager you aren't polite enough to ask her if she would like a 'taxi,' said one.&#13;
"Just watch," and Leonard Vancott hastened after the disappearing figure. Hearing the approaching footsteps, Richard felt sure his identity had been discovered; even&#13;
when Vancott politely asked if he should call a taxi he wondered if he was being caught.&#13;
He was game, though, and with what he thought was a charming smile, assented and was&#13;
soon speeding down the avenue.&#13;
Returning to his convulsed comrades, Vancott described her as "not half bad," and&#13;
was on the point of starting for home when 'Shifty' put in an appearance.&#13;
"Now 'Shifty,' if you don't tell us where Dick Campbell is"-"Oh, but I mus' tell yuh that Miss Marjorie said that she be habin' a friend from&#13;
&#13;
Vas-sah to see hah and that yuh would like hah, sah," and 'Shifty' made his escap.e.&#13;
"Say, boys, we'll find that Soph and then have a celebration at Marjorie's and meet&#13;
the 'Vah-sah' girl. · What do you say?"&#13;
C HAPTER IV.&#13;
HAZEL ESTELLE SIMAN,&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Vancott was thinking. Marjorie had grown up in a college town and&#13;
as a consequence had helped many a student out of various escapades. Gypsy like little&#13;
Marjorie always had some bright plan stowed away, something that was sure to fit. But&#13;
here was an occasion that needed her greatest originality. Difficulties stood in the way of&#13;
every solution she could make as to how to dispose of Dick Campbell. Now he couldn't&#13;
be kept in the house for there was Leonard. Leonard was a Freshman and the only&#13;
youth that Marjorie had found whom she could not manage. But help Dick she must.&#13;
There were numberless young men from awestruck Freshmen to confident Seniors&#13;
as suitors at Marjorie's court. However, for the past few weeks the handsome young&#13;
Sophomore president had loomed large on the horizon and the others had become largely&#13;
background.&#13;
That was the reason Marjorie with her big dark eyes all perplexed and her little hands&#13;
tightly clasped was thinking. Suddenly with a little delighted cry she ran from the room.&#13;
She ordered the car, packed her bag, and had just hung up the 'phone receiver when the&#13;
"taxi" with its highly decorated occupant drew up before the door.&#13;
"Oh, Marjorie," began the vision in pink.&#13;
"Now, Dick, don't stop to say one word.&#13;
when I have time, now you do just as I say."&#13;
&#13;
Of course I'm glad to see you or will be&#13;
&#13;
"Always," from the gallant Dick.&#13;
"Run up in Len's room, take off those ridiculous things, find Len's brown suit and&#13;
auto coat. And Dick, hurry, because Len will be here any moment."&#13;
"Oh, I say, Marj," as Richard once more appeared at the foot of the stairs m&#13;
Leonard's somewhat snug fitting garments.&#13;
"You mustn't say anything, Dick," retorted Marjorie as she hastened out to the&#13;
machine, followed by the bewildered Dick. "Drive to Tallawunda, Wilson. Never mind&#13;
the speed limit-and Wilson, if you see Leonard turn around. It won't matter in which&#13;
direction, just turn."&#13;
And as Wilson needed no encouragement concerning . the disregard for the speed&#13;
laws, threw the machine into high and rolled down the drive. Marjorie leaned back in the&#13;
tonneau with a little sigh of satisfaction and relief.&#13;
"Might I venture to speak?" inquired Richard meekly. Of course where ignorance&#13;
is bliss-and it sure is in this case. Dick was master of the art.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
One hundred n in ety&#13;
&#13;
'12&#13;
&#13;
On e h und red&#13;
&#13;
ninety-one&#13;
&#13;
"Now don't be silly or perhaps I won't carry out my plan. Dick Campbell, I have&#13;
kidnapped you!"&#13;
"Hooray!"&#13;
"Well, somebody had to do it. The question was whether it should be the Sophs,&#13;
F reshies, or myself. I decided."&#13;
"And blessings on you. I haven't the slightest idea what I'm in for, but I'm inclined to think I shall like it jolly well." Dick took a quick glance at the girl. "I repeat,&#13;
jolly well, and now if it is according to etiquette of kidnappers, might one inquire our destination? As I recall Tallawunda, it wouldn't make a very good stopping place. Does&#13;
not the population consist of the stationmaster and the blacksmith?"&#13;
"Oh, but we are going to the surrounding country. I have an uncle who lives on a&#13;
farm near there."&#13;
"Hurrah, I'm for the farm," rejoiced Dick, "but say, Marj, I'm afraid you are&#13;
bothering yourself too much with my predicament."&#13;
"I guess I'll be able to stand the strain," Marjorie answered lightly, but Richard&#13;
Henry, who was a wise youth, and who observed a bright red color flood the cheek near&#13;
him, made a resolution.&#13;
Meantime consternation reigned on the campus. The Freshmen were wild because&#13;
they couldn't locate Campbell. They had broken into his room but found no trace of him.&#13;
The Sophs were wilder when they found Dick gone and traces of a Freshman attack on&#13;
the room. Their natural conclusion was that the F reshies had him. For three days the&#13;
Freshmen and Sophomores, each darkly suspicioning the other, went gloomily about the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Even the anticipated pleasure of the Vassar girl had left them. Leonard informed&#13;
them that the girl had just stopped between trains and taken Marjorie on with her.&#13;
At the expiration of the three days, a group of agitated Sophs and F reshies were&#13;
standing near the campus gates, heatedly arguing. The Sophomores were demanding&#13;
Campbell, and the Freshmen were disclaiming any knowledge of his whereabouts.&#13;
"Well, by Jove,,,. exclaimed Jack Arnold, pointing to a boy and girl leisurely strolling up the street from the direction of the station. Everyone stared.&#13;
"Fine day, fellows," called Richard cooly as he passed.&#13;
"You can duck me for a duffer," growled Leonard in self-derision. "I might have&#13;
known Marj would have a hand in this."&#13;
"Cool!" puffed Fatty, "jumping gophers!"&#13;
And Richard Henry Campbell blessed the day he was elected Sophomore president, as the sparkle of the frat pin on Marjorie's blouse caught his eye.&#13;
&#13;
On e h u ndred ninety-two&#13;
&#13;
7-Friday. George Barrett appears on the scene of action. Everyone goes home for spring vacation.&#13;
&#13;
1-Monday.&#13;
&#13;
Snowed on Renaissance lilacs.&#13;
&#13;
2-T uesday. Iowa 7, Morningside 8. The "Ein, zwei"&#13;
story captivates the hearts and feet of boys.&#13;
&#13;
18-Tuesday. Everyone back with new Easter bonnet.&#13;
Bellevue 6, Morningside 8 .&#13;
&#13;
3-Wednesday.&#13;
&#13;
19-Wednesday. Creighton 10, Morningside 0. Mass&#13;
meeting for debaters. Barrett calls at Cushman's.&#13;
&#13;
4-Thursday. Girls' mass meeting. Lulu Weary has a&#13;
picnic spraining her ankle and being carried home.&#13;
&#13;
20-Thursday. Barrett wakes roommate singing, "Oh,&#13;
Be Ye Reconciled."&#13;
Baby grand arrives at&#13;
Renaissance. Nebraska Wesleyan 10, Morningside 2.&#13;
21-Friday. Cotner 10, Morningside 9. Win debate&#13;
, from Upper Iowa here, they at Fayette.&#13;
&#13;
5-Friday. Song service at chapel. Robin Adair is a new&#13;
one at Morningside. Home meet-Sophs win.&#13;
6-Saturday. Inter-Scholastic meet in a storm of dust.&#13;
Cherokee High School wins.&#13;
&#13;
22-Saturday. Holiday under false pretenses.&#13;
23-Sunday. Weather pleasant. Many strollers.&#13;
24-Monday. Same old story, Vermillion 9, Morningside U.&#13;
2 5 -Tuesday. Spring in full sway. Many chapel seats&#13;
vacant on account of the fever.&#13;
26-Wednesday. Y. M. and Y. W. meetings-joint&#13;
stroll afterward.&#13;
27-Thursday. Faculty late to chapel. Students have one&#13;
of their own on the campus.&#13;
28-Friday. Girls' society day. Marguerite and Jean&#13;
hold weekly court under linden tree.&#13;
29-Saturday. Beat Vermillion in the rain, but they&#13;
wouldn't admit it.&#13;
30-Sunday. Riverside roller rink opens. W arby rejoices.&#13;
&#13;
7-Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
Chapel visitor calls at Conservatory.&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club sings at Sargeant Bluffs.&#13;
&#13;
8-Monday. Ravine breakfasts and early morning strolls&#13;
to the monument.&#13;
9-Tuesday. Mass meeting to boost for the Inter-State&#13;
Oratorical Contest. W aymack urges girls to speak&#13;
up and 'spress themselves with no avail.&#13;
10-Wednesday.&#13;
Widow.&#13;
&#13;
Kanthlener and Doxee go to Merry&#13;
&#13;
11Thursday. Peifer and Vennick stage a little pugilistic&#13;
combat in German class.&#13;
12-Friday. Johnson wins state Peace Contest at Pella.&#13;
Nebraska Wesleyan 2, Morningside 5.&#13;
13-Saturday. Meet Vermillion in track with variations.&#13;
Also baseball, Vermillion 4, Morningside 5.&#13;
14-Sunday. More strollers.&#13;
15-Monday. St. Thomas 5, Morningside 8.&#13;
risk double cuts and go on a picnic.&#13;
&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
16 -Tuesday. Boost for Inter-State Contest again . Junior&#13;
class in elocution speak pieces.&#13;
17-Wednesday. Still boosting the Inter-State Contest.&#13;
Happen to think we beat Ames at the Peace Contest and yell for it.&#13;
18-Thursday. Women's Clubs inspect the College with&#13;
the assistance of the dignified Seniors.&#13;
19- F riday. Give luncheon to hungry Inter-State delegates. Iowa wins the contest. Morningside wins the&#13;
state meet at Grinnell. Midnight parade in full&#13;
evening dress.&#13;
20-Saturday. Half holiday. Rains on the bonfire. Celebrate in chapel with candy and tin. pans.&#13;
21-Sunday. Rain! Sure, we all had dates for a stroll.&#13;
22-Monday. White rats entertain in Biology Lab.&#13;
23-T uesday. "Sioux" out. Annual board missing.&#13;
24-Wednesday. Otho breakfast in South Ravine at 4: 1S.&#13;
Who stayed till 2 o'clock?&#13;
25-Thursday. Girls' banquet. Rev. Wasser caught&#13;
peeking in the window with the· rest of the boys.&#13;
26-F riday. "Pat" gets the measles-Bill F. fumigates.&#13;
2 7-Saturday. Missouri Valley meet at Des Moines.&#13;
Morningside 1 point.&#13;
28-Sunday. Barrett Delliver takes a girl to the monument.&#13;
29-Monday. Lots of picnics. Prof. Rigby and Miss&#13;
Anderson get reputation as chaperones.&#13;
30-Tuesday. More picnics. Bill Farnham and Evangeline Stone hold revival meeting at Crystal Lake.&#13;
31 - Wednesday. Philo Up-River Trip. · Miss Hinde&#13;
falls in--!&#13;
&#13;
1- Thursday. Convalescence from picnics. Sunburns and&#13;
blisters much in evidence. Cub calls at Renaissance.&#13;
2-Friday. Seniors gone but not forgotten by Juniors.&#13;
Cub wishes he were a Senior.&#13;
3-Saturday. Zets and Othos display new furniture at a&#13;
reception. Pearl Wilson and Gladys Fitch get lost&#13;
on way to a house party.&#13;
4-Sunday. Rachel Holm goes home to Norfolk by mistake. Cub calls again.&#13;
S-Monday. Ionian open door. Dolly took another girl.&#13;
Cub, etc., go to Crystal Lake.&#13;
6-T uesday. Parties at Riverside. Cub plays tennis at&#13;
Renaissance.&#13;
7-Wednesday. Girls' mass meeting. Alice Anderson&#13;
springs a diamond.&#13;
8 -Thursday. Exams begin. Miss Loveland serves hers&#13;
with lemonade accompaniment in the basement.&#13;
9- F riday. Normal graduation. Francis Horn comes to&#13;
school with a diamond and Frosty.&#13;
10-Saturday. Juniors decorate. Laura Cushman has a&#13;
new ring.&#13;
11-Sunday. Bacculaureate Sermon. Dolly takes two girls&#13;
to the monument.&#13;
12-Monday. Mahoney president of student body. Lesson in parliamentary law. Academy graduation.&#13;
13-Tuesday. Senior class play. Seniors beat F acuity at&#13;
baseball.&#13;
14-Wednesday. Farewell mass meeting. Bean shower repeated by Freshmen. Society reunions.&#13;
1S- Thursday. College graduation. Bishop McIntyre&#13;
speaks. Everybody makes mad rush for trains.&#13;
&#13;
The Designing, Grouping, Lettering&#13;
Etchingsand all Photographic Work&#13;
of the Classes and Societies&#13;
found in this Annual, originated at and came&#13;
from the&#13;
&#13;
We have the skill and experiencewith every working facility&#13;
necessary to give the collegeprompt serviceand&#13;
refinedwork at moderate prices&#13;
&#13;
Our New Daylight Factory&#13;
The Largest Factory, employing the Largest number&#13;
of people in the city&#13;
&#13;
Home of&#13;
&#13;
Home of&#13;
&#13;
Johnson's&#13;
Biscuits&#13;
&#13;
Johnson's&#13;
Candies&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Company&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
PHONES: Auto 1196, Bell 24 1.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago Dye and Cleaning Works&#13;
French Dry Cleaning a Specialty. Repairing,&#13;
Pressing and Tailoring Neatly Done. Goods&#13;
Called for and Delivered to any part of City.&#13;
Main O ffice, Swasey Block&#13;
823 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE&#13;
311 Virginia S t .&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
A u to P h o n e 28 15&#13;
Bell P ho ne 433&#13;
&#13;
IOWA CEMENT BRICK CO.&#13;
C ONT RACTORS FOR&#13;
&#13;
ALL KINDS OF CEMENT WORK&#13;
J.M. Smith, Manager&#13;
&#13;
M A NUFACTUR E R S O F&#13;
&#13;
HOLLOW CEMENT BUILDING BLOCKS&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside&#13;
Printing Co.&#13;
12-Tuesday.&#13;
&#13;
Publishers of "The Leader"&#13;
&#13;
THE POPULAR COLLEGE BOOK STORE&#13;
Headquarters for Students' Supplies&#13;
Try our high grade printing when you want&#13;
anything in the line of Programs, Menus&#13;
or Calling Cards.&#13;
Let us furnish your wants in Books and&#13;
School Supplies.&#13;
We cater to the student trade.&#13;
Honesty is our policy.&#13;
&#13;
Don't forget the place&#13;
&#13;
Just north of the Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
L. F. &amp; C. E. EVANS, Proprietors&#13;
3631 Peters Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Pb.one 6211&#13;
&#13;
coach.&#13;
&#13;
Registration.&#13;
&#13;
Girls all look&#13;
&#13;
for new&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Wednesday trouble with the registrar.Girls&#13;
, More&#13;
.&#13;
discover coach is married and stare at his wife.&#13;
14-Thursday. College breaks out on some Freshmen.&#13;
Bill wholesales chapel seats.&#13;
Epworth League&#13;
social. Jory sees Hazel.&#13;
Jory calls assisted by Warburton.&#13;
15 Friday&#13;
·&#13;
l 6-Saturday. Y. W. C. A. receives new girls at Renaissance.&#13;
.&#13;
1 7-Sunday. M atriculation sermon. Freshmen use their&#13;
dictionaries.&#13;
18-Monday. Lafe Young speaks in chapel. T . 0. T.&#13;
S. parade. Quarny leaves school and girls wear an&#13;
extra handkerchief.&#13;
19 -Tuesday. Some misdirected Freshmen go to chapel.&#13;
20-Wednesday. Conference in G race Church. K ent begins to behave.&#13;
2 1-Thursday. Big day at the fair. Kent ordamed elder.&#13;
22-Friday.&#13;
Freshmen attend conference and write&#13;
strange, wierd themes.&#13;
23-Saturday.&#13;
Football with Cherokee High School.&#13;
Knockers get out their hammers.&#13;
24-Sunday. Conference in full sway. Students entertain the home preacher and go to church four times.&#13;
25- Monday. Boys' societies show girls how to rope in&#13;
new members.&#13;
26- T uesday. Football mass meeting. John Briggs makes&#13;
a spiel and appears at practice.&#13;
27-Wednesday. Girls watch football practice. John&#13;
Briggs does not appear.&#13;
28-Thursday. Champ Clark lectures in G race C hurch.&#13;
29-Friday. M ass meeting for the band. Prof. Morse&#13;
praises "Every Little Movement."&#13;
30-Saturday. Chapel seats assigned.&#13;
Freshmen find&#13;
they have been sold-the wrong seat.&#13;
13 -&#13;
&#13;
How often have&#13;
you heard it said....&#13;
&#13;
1-Sunday. Cora McKellip back on a visit· -Cub rejoices.&#13;
2-Monday. Girls rush new ones hard. Last chance.&#13;
3-Tuesday. .New rushing compact in force . No pri·&#13;
vate rushmg.&#13;
4-Wednesday. Junior class meets. Mitchell Briggs&#13;
elected president. Freshmen meet.&#13;
5-Tuesday.Girls' mass meeting. Sophomores meet.&#13;
6-F nday. Senior meeting. Freshmen meet again. F aculty tea for Mrs. Craig.&#13;
7-Saturday. Bellevue 0, Morningside 15. Lueder and&#13;
Johnson entertain their Cherokee girls.&#13;
8-Sunday. Lueder and Johnson entertain their Morningside girls.&#13;
9-Monday. Freshmen and Sophs sharpen weapons.&#13;
I 0- T uesday. Freshman meeting. Sophomore meeting.&#13;
Sophs give Freshman boys free auto ride.&#13;
I I - Wednesday.&#13;
Class scrap.&#13;
Sophomore girls distinguish themselves.&#13;
12 - Thursday. Mass meeting. Dolly tells a story. Si&#13;
leads the yells.&#13;
I 3- F riday.&#13;
F acuity reception at Renaissance. Who&#13;
stole the cakes-?&#13;
14- Saturday. Iowa 11, Morningside 5. Freshmen have&#13;
picnic and boys get lost.&#13;
15-Sunday. Missing boys turn up. They had wandered into a moving picture show by mistake.&#13;
&#13;
"When I Want Anything Good,&#13;
I Go To&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN CO.&#13;
The Reliable Dry Goods House&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
GRADUATION JEWELRY&#13;
Jewelry For All Times&#13;
The Will H. Beck Co ...&#13;
&#13;
(&#13;
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Carries without doubt the&#13;
choicest line of Diamonds, Watches,&#13;
Jewelry and Silverware and&#13;
&#13;
... Solicits Your Patronage&#13;
Corner 4th and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
After the · Programs, Entertainments and Athletic Games, the&#13;
College Drug Store is the place.&#13;
Our fountain is the best and our&#13;
promptest service is at your disposal.&#13;
Guaranteed Fresh.&#13;
&#13;
Lowney's, Palmer's, Johnson's and Morse's Chocolates.&#13;
&#13;
Your Prescriptions left with us will be compounded&#13;
by registered pharmacists only.&#13;
&#13;
E. K. BARNEY, Prop.&#13;
&#13;
PETERS PARK&#13;
&#13;
16-Monday. Prom invitations out.&#13;
·&#13;
1 7-Tuesday. Big excitement! Some girls get dates for&#13;
the prom.&#13;
18-Wednesday. Mass meeting. Freewill offering for&#13;
football equipment.&#13;
19-Thursday. More dates made for the prom.&#13;
20-Friday. Jean and Bill go walking.&#13;
21-Saturday. Rapid City School of Mines 3, Morningside 17.&#13;
22-Sunday. Ead's "At home" it would seem.&#13;
23-Monday. Zet-Otho Prom-wailing and gnashing of&#13;
teeth. Chocolate Soldier. Orpheum party.&#13;
24-Tuesday. One of the Orpheum acts suppressed.&#13;
Who looked "dashed?"&#13;
25-Wednesday. Gadski concert at Auditorium.&#13;
26-Thursday. Mahoney visits brewery and buys hops.&#13;
What for, we ask. We don't know, we answer.&#13;
27-Friday.&#13;
Ruth Rieke and Harry Bigglestone find each&#13;
other.&#13;
28-Saturday. Creighton 8, Morningside 6. Girls go&#13;
from banquets at the West to meet boys and are&#13;
not recognized.&#13;
29-Sunday. Johnnie Fair entertains at a sacred concert.&#13;
30-Monday.&#13;
Academy parties.&#13;
Hallowe' en stunts.&#13;
Everybody in by ten.&#13;
31-Tuesday. Girls spring Hall owe' en parties.&#13;
&#13;
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LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY&#13;
OF MILWAUKEE, WIS.&#13;
WHAT IT DID IN IOWA IN 1911IT WROTE MORE INSURANCE THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY&#13;
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,,&#13;
&#13;
1-Wednesday. Everyo_e recovers from Hallowe' en&#13;
n&#13;
dangers.&#13;
2-Thursday. Tommy James watches football practice,&#13;
yells for scrubs-and Paul Corner.&#13;
3-F riday. Election returns of girls' societies. Scrubs&#13;
play Onawa. F acuity reception. Dolly cusses.&#13;
4-Saturday. Des Moines 0, Morningside 30. Sweet&#13;
revenge.&#13;
5-Sunday. Warby calls up the third girl before he can&#13;
get a date.&#13;
6-Monday. Ionian Open Door. Many surprising couples happen.&#13;
7-Tuesday. Parnell manicures his nails in philosophy&#13;
class.&#13;
8-Wednesday. Boys and girls disentangle themselves&#13;
and have separate mass meetings. Boys late to&#13;
classes.&#13;
9-Thursday. Ionian-Philo Debate. Some plaster falls.&#13;
I 0-Friday. Prof. MacBride of Iowa City says night&#13;
air won't hurt any girl (male applause)-provided&#13;
she's asleep. Mid-semester exams.&#13;
11-Saturday. Blizzard. Party at Marguerite Shreiner's.&#13;
College floors are oiled. Prof. Stiles found asleep&#13;
in the library.&#13;
12-Sunday. Football boys show symptoms of typhoid.&#13;
Oil soaks into floors.&#13;
13-Monday. Boys, etc., go skating in the halls.&#13;
14-Tuesday. Floors are very slick. Susan Eads and&#13;
Rev. Sjoding fall down stairs.&#13;
15-Wednesday. Mrs. Carroll talks to girls in chapel.&#13;
Where was Holbert?&#13;
&#13;
WHAT IT HAS IN row AIT HAS IN FORCE A LARGER AMOUNT OF INSURANCE THAN&#13;
ANY OTHER COMPANY&#13;
IT HAS NEARLY $24,000,000 LOANED ON&#13;
JOWA REAL ESTATE AND IOWA POLICIES&#13;
College Men Wanted for Agents&#13;
W. M . MCKERCHER, General Agent&#13;
&#13;
H . E. RosE, Special Agent&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
IF You WANT To D EAL WITH A&#13;
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Hardware Company&#13;
That Knows How to Treat You Right&#13;
TRY US OUT&#13;
&#13;
See Our Gas Ranges and&#13;
McCray Refrigerators.&#13;
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AUGUST&#13;
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CORNER FOURTH AND PEARL&#13;
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SIOUX CITY,&#13;
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rowA&#13;
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Iowa Phone&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone&#13;
&#13;
761&#13;
&#13;
6143&#13;
&#13;
There's a Reason&#13;
FOR&#13;
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AMONG THE PATRONS OF&#13;
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Patton's Grocery&#13;
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QUALITY GOODS AT RIGHT PRICES&#13;
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PETERS PARK&#13;
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MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
16-Thursday. Otho-Ionian Debate. Much more plaster&#13;
falls.&#13;
17-Friday. Dr. Shaw speaks in chapel.&#13;
18-Saturday.&#13;
Dr. Headland speaks in chapel. Boys&#13;
imitate his linger movement. St. Joseph 0, Morningside 5.&#13;
19-Sunday. Warby calls up the fourth girl before he&#13;
gets a date.&#13;
20-Monday. Mike and Grace begin to take their evening constitutional.&#13;
21-Tuesday. Mahoney, Hall and Bowker caught manicuring their nails in philosophy class.&#13;
22-Wednesday. Susan and Killy cut chapel and go&#13;
walking.&#13;
23-Thursday. Psychology lecture on love ; Sara and Si,&#13;
Florence and "King" take notes.&#13;
24-F riday. Philo-Otho Debate. Rest of the plaster&#13;
falls.&#13;
25-Saturday. Cross country try-outs. Onawa 0, Reserves 21.&#13;
26-Sunday. Bishop Lewis speaks in Grace Church.&#13;
Jimmie and John sit near the front.&#13;
27-Monday. Home oratorical contest. Johnson wins.&#13;
28-Tuesday.&#13;
Mass meeting to beat Vermillion on&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
29-Wednesday. Another mass meeting. Pow-wow with&#13;
pulverizer discs as accompaniment.&#13;
30-Thursday. Alumni back. Vermillion here. Well,&#13;
we'll get them next year.&#13;
&#13;
A. R. JOHNSON &amp; CO.,&#13;
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL&#13;
&#13;
Ask your Grocer for MOTHER'S Bread&#13;
O ut of town orders given prompt attention.&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
1-Friday. Senior party, girls hand mittens&#13;
P rattler Club holds annual " Doo."&#13;
2-Saturday. Holiday gloom prevails.&#13;
all gone home.&#13;
3-Sunday. Another gloomy day.&#13;
wise eat chicken.&#13;
&#13;
freely.&#13;
&#13;
Dutiful students&#13;
&#13;
D utiful and other-&#13;
&#13;
4-M onday. Girls console themselves with Christmas&#13;
shopping.&#13;
5-Tuesday. School again . That " lost" feeling.&#13;
cital of M iss R ees of the Conservatory.&#13;
&#13;
Re-&#13;
&#13;
6--Wednesday. Expression recital. Beginning of special&#13;
religious meetings. Otho debaters entertained at&#13;
Frank's Cafe.&#13;
&#13;
customers&#13;
&#13;
are&#13;
&#13;
our&#13;
&#13;
best&#13;
&#13;
reference.&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1197&#13;
408-410 IOWA STREET&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 19 7&#13;
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Olympia&#13;
Candy Company&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Furniture&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
When In Town Visit O ur&#13;
Up-to-D ate Confectionery and&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE HOME&#13;
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Ice Cream P arlor&#13;
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OUTFITTERS&#13;
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7-Thursday.&#13;
Herman Lueder walks back and forth&#13;
from Newton Avenue six times.&#13;
&#13;
High Grade Furniture&#13;
Rugs, Lace Curtains and&#13;
Shades&#13;
&#13;
Try Our&#13;
"College Sundaes," special&#13;
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people. One class has found it --- the&#13;
customers of&#13;
&#13;
cer&#13;
Convenient Location&#13;
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Reliable Qualities&#13;
&#13;
Prompt Service&#13;
&#13;
We carry the best Groceries, also a complete line&#13;
of fresh Fruits and Confectionery ,&#13;
&#13;
8-Friday-Adelphian-Hawkeye Debate.&#13;
Adelphian colors.&#13;
&#13;
Susan wears&#13;
&#13;
9-Saturday. Prof. Campbell talks on German universities in History of Education. Rogers wishes they&#13;
would inaugurate a German system of cuts here.&#13;
10-Sunday. Bowker makes a call down town in the&#13;
evenmg.&#13;
1 1-Monday. Wickens back from the hospital.&#13;
by faculty against over-work.&#13;
&#13;
Warned&#13;
&#13;
12-Tuesday. Y. W. C. A. hold up.&#13;
sneaking in.&#13;
&#13;
WE WILL PLEASE YOU - STOP IN WHILE YOU WAIT FOR THE CAR&#13;
&#13;
Merten got caught&#13;
&#13;
13-Wednesday. Exams announced.&#13;
note books.&#13;
&#13;
Bunny cafls for&#13;
&#13;
14-Thursday.&#13;
Economic students burn midnight oil.&#13;
Everyone crams and packs trunk.&#13;
&#13;
A. P. LARSON&#13;
THE COLLEGE GROCER&#13;
Cor. Morningside and Peters Sts.&#13;
&#13;
15- F riday. Exams! Glee Club goes to Alta.&#13;
Ewing comes to chapel!&#13;
&#13;
Coach&#13;
&#13;
T . F. H arrington, V. Pres.&#13;
&#13;
G . R. Whitmer, Pres.&#13;
&#13;
While You Are LearningLearn to Save.&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
J. B. Alexander, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
R. Whitmer&#13;
&#13;
T. F. Harrington&#13;
Keep Your Banking A ccount&#13;
With Us.&#13;
&#13;
3-Wednesday. All return from vacation in the snow.&#13;
4-Thursday. Boys realize that this is leap year.&#13;
5-Friday. Girls' societies meet in frigid halls.&#13;
6-Saturday. Bids for first leap year party out. Boys&#13;
keep out of sight.&#13;
7-Sunday. Very cold. Vespers postponed.&#13;
8-Monday. Colder and snow. Frank Johnson wears&#13;
·ear muffs.&#13;
9-Tuesday. Still colder. Dr. Leete of Detroit begins&#13;
revival meetings.&#13;
10-Wednesday. Bridenbaugh freezes his nose.&#13;
11-Thursday. Miss Ferguson so busy reading she forgets&#13;
to go to dinner.&#13;
12- F riday. Zet. leap year party. Kingsbury is "afraid&#13;
to go home in the dark."&#13;
13-Saturday. Miss Morris, Y. W. C. A. secretary, here.&#13;
Girls' mass meeting. Dr. Leete holds meeting for&#13;
boys.&#13;
14-Sunday. Vespers in chapel.&#13;
15- Monday. Barrett Dolliver steals some sleds and Renaissance girls go coasting.&#13;
16-Tuesday. Day of prayer for colleges. Rachel Holm,&#13;
Al Lemon and Ada Belew go to moving picture&#13;
shows instead.&#13;
&#13;
J. B. Alexander&#13;
C. B. Toy&#13;
D. E. Kerby&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. VanDyke&#13;
D. C. Shull&#13;
J. N . Warren&#13;
John Lang&#13;
&#13;
NATIONAL BANK OF&#13;
COMMERCE&#13;
CORNER FOURTH AND NEBRASKA ST R E ETS&#13;
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Larson=Swan Dry Goods&#13;
Company&#13;
Dry Goods, Carpets, Curtains and Draperies, L adies' Suits, Cloaks, Skirts and W aists&#13;
Mens' Furnishings and Notions&#13;
STUDENTS, for goods that please, stop off at&#13;
905-907 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
B. H. Silver&#13;
Carries a Full Line of&#13;
GROCERIES, M E A T S, NOTIONS&#13;
HARDWARE, PAINT S &amp; GLASS&#13;
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All goods sold at prices guaranteed&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
meet city competition&#13;
&#13;
Free Delivery Over A ll Morningside&#13;
1902-4-6-8 MORNINGSIDE AVENUE&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
MAID&#13;
OR&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
MAN&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
should&#13;
acquaint&#13;
yourselves,by&#13;
personal&#13;
inspection, with the careful&#13;
attention w e h a v e&#13;
given your every&#13;
wish. Y o u should&#13;
know that this store&#13;
- Sioux City's best&#13;
&#13;
1 7-Wednesd ay.&#13;
&#13;
Snow.&#13;
&#13;
18-Thursday. R eviews!&#13;
&#13;
Snow.&#13;
&#13;
M ore snow!&#13;
&#13;
The day of doom is not far off.&#13;
&#13;
19-Friday. A delphian banquet.&#13;
receives some roses.&#13;
&#13;
All in by ten. Susan&#13;
&#13;
20--Saturday. E xams postponed .&#13;
the arrangement.&#13;
&#13;
F reshmen puzzled by&#13;
&#13;
21-Sunday. Mike B riggs, Lee B arks, B igg., V ince,&#13;
Morgan, Kolp and Slippery R ogers throw snow&#13;
balls and O le takes a hand.&#13;
22-Monday. H inted that req uired work is to be lessened. Freshmen look encouraged . Seniors chagrined .&#13;
23-Tuesday. Hint becomes a certainty.&#13;
solve to cut Trig. next semester.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen re-&#13;
&#13;
24-Wednesd ay. Freshmen and Sophs look worried and&#13;
cram. Seniors and Juniors look serene-but cram.&#13;
25-Thursday. EXAMS!&#13;
cram some more.&#13;
&#13;
Faculty relentless.&#13;
&#13;
26-F rid ay. E verybody gloomy.&#13;
day of Judgment is here.&#13;
27-Saturday.&#13;
&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
More cramming.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Nebraska 62, M orningside 10.&#13;
&#13;
28-Sunday.&#13;
Everyone recuperates after exams and&#13;
dreams of A grades.&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING THAT'S GOOD&#13;
IN APPAREL FOR MAN OR&#13;
WOMAN, YOUTH OR GIRL&#13;
&#13;
Pelletier's&#13;
&#13;
29-Monday. R egistration.&#13;
new ones in the halls.&#13;
&#13;
Some old faces and some&#13;
&#13;
30-Tuesd ay. New resolutions to study every week.&#13;
31-Wednesday. M ondamin Hotel burns.&#13;
&#13;
By Frost&#13;
Nor Fire&#13;
Nor Floods&#13;
Nor Even Time Are Clays Destroyed&#13;
A BUCKET OF WATER WITH BRICK&#13;
IS EQUAL TO A WHOLE F IRE DEPARTMENT WITH WOOD&#13;
&#13;
WHEN YOU BUILD, BUILD WITH&#13;
&#13;
I-Thursday. Huron 3 1, Morningside 26.&#13;
party at Hazel Siman' s for Dr. Haskell.&#13;
2-F riday. Groundhog sees his shadow.&#13;
Goethe and Schiller by Dr. Haskell.&#13;
3--Saturday.&#13;
4- Sunday.&#13;
&#13;
BRICK&#13;
&#13;
German&#13;
&#13;
ALL COLORS, SHADES AND TEXTURES&#13;
&#13;
Lecture on&#13;
&#13;
Exhibit of German dolls by Dr. Haskell.&#13;
Vespers.&#13;
&#13;
5-Monday. Otho Open D oor. LaF ollette will be&#13;
next president. M cKinney a suffragette.&#13;
6-Tuesday. D r. Riggs lectures on Cordova. Who rattled the note paper?&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
SOLD BY&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Brick and Tile Works&#13;
Room 9, Iowa Building&#13;
&#13;
In City or Country&#13;
&#13;
7-W ednesday. Dr. Riggs speaks in chapel and on&#13;
Toledo in the evening.&#13;
&#13;
All Know the&#13;
&#13;
8--Thursday. Si Braley injured in basketball game. Dr.&#13;
Riggs lectures on Florence.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
FRENCH DRY CLEANING&#13;
&#13;
K &amp; K Grocery&#13;
&#13;
9-Friday. Glee Club Home Concert. Nelson draws&#13;
cartoon of Frenchman because he receives no grade.&#13;
10-Saturday.&#13;
&#13;
Frenchman pleased.&#13;
&#13;
Nelson gets grade.&#13;
&#13;
11-Sunday. Fred R ogers and Paul Corner have to cancel&#13;
dates because mother goes out of town.&#13;
12- Monday. Glee Club dinner and concert at Presbyterian Church.&#13;
13-Tuesday.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Marion Greene gives recital.&#13;
&#13;
Buy Your Groceries of Us&#13;
and Get the Best and the&#13;
Most for Your Money.&#13;
SANITARY STEAM&#13;
Sell Your Produce to Us&#13;
and Get All That Is Coming&#13;
to You.&#13;
&#13;
K. &amp; K. GROCERY&#13;
522-524 Fifth St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PRESSING&#13;
&#13;
R epairing N eatly Done&#13;
Suits Made to Order&#13;
&#13;
S. Harrison&#13;
Peters P ark,&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6240&#13;
&#13;
14-Wednesday. St. Valentine's Day.&#13;
G irls wear&#13;
flowers to school. Vermillion 41 , M orningside 46.&#13;
15-Thursday. Senior expression class speak pieces.&#13;
16-Friday. Otho banquet. Profs. gets checks from Miss&#13;
Dahl.&#13;
17-Saturday. Girls go shopping. O verflow at Orpheum&#13;
goes to moving picture shows.&#13;
18-Sunday. Prospects of spring. Few daring ones, like&#13;
Susan and Killy, go strolling.&#13;
19-Monday. Florence Anthony takes auto ride. Philos&#13;
hold Minnehaha Court.&#13;
20-Tuesday. Susan sits in boys' section at chapel. Laura&#13;
Belt comes to chapel!&#13;
21-Wednesday. Mr. Allee orates in chapel. Bill Bass&#13;
and Mike Briggs try to be patriotic.&#13;
22-Thursday. Holiday. Vince wins the monument run.&#13;
Party at Renaissance. Men's banquet.&#13;
23-Friday. Dewey Prize contest. C. E. Smith gets&#13;
first; Dolliver second.&#13;
24-Saturday. Sophs have party and elect annual board.&#13;
25-Sunday. Cold. Ardor of last week strollers chilled.&#13;
26-Monday. Zet-OthoClosed Door. Bill Bass presides&#13;
at cake eating contest.&#13;
2 7-Tuesday. Clifford and Hazel change boarding places&#13;
for the third time.&#13;
28-Wednesday. Sheldon wins at basketball. Our boys&#13;
not used to wax floors.&#13;
29-Thursday. One of Prof. Stiles' twins walks. Will&#13;
the girl talk first?&#13;
&#13;
Not like the proverbial Good Indian-.&#13;
&#13;
--We are always Alive&#13;
&#13;
Are Constantly G etting in New Novelties and Designs in&#13;
&#13;
Stationery, Pennants, Jewelry,&#13;
1-F riday. Miss Smylie in vocal recital. Johnson gets&#13;
second in state oratorical contest. John Briggs&#13;
president of State Oratorical Association.&#13;
2-Saturday. Joint jollification of girls' societies. Who&#13;
swiped the ice cream?&#13;
3-Sunday. Vespers.&#13;
4-Monday. Freshman party at Lois Crouch's. Girls&#13;
give ill ustrated treatise on basketball.&#13;
5 -Tuesday. Leap year party. M ac and Mike make&#13;
themselves famous.&#13;
6-Wednesday. D olly gathers stray sheep into Y. M.&#13;
fold.&#13;
7-Thursday&#13;
Junior party at Hazel Shumaker's. Girls&#13;
demonstrate athletic ability. Vince is familiar with&#13;
hair curlers.&#13;
8-F riday.&#13;
Faculty send mandate regarding reinforcement of the social rule.&#13;
9-Saturday. Freshmen win basketball championship.&#13;
10-Sunday. Hank Winterringer teaches D olly's bible&#13;
study class.&#13;
11 -Monday. Senior party at Bill Bass's. Enjoy a miserable evening. D olly and C lara Crummer eat ice&#13;
cream. P hilos give Bingville Bugle program.&#13;
12-Tuesday. Nelson discovers what a real Renaissance&#13;
spread is like.&#13;
1 3-Wednesday. M r. Schwartz, student volunteer secretary, speaks in chapel. Girls rave about his hair.&#13;
14-Thursday. Mass meeting for girls' banquet. Y. W.&#13;
C. A. concert.&#13;
15-F riday. Mass meeting. H ome indoor field meet.&#13;
Juniors win. Lecture by D r. Fairchild on "College&#13;
Sports."&#13;
&#13;
.Post Cards, etc.&#13;
Y our Patronage is Appreciated by&#13;
&#13;
RAY&#13;
&#13;
H. DARLING&#13;
&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
EAT PILE'S ICE CREAM&#13;
THE BEST AND PUREST CREAM IN THE CITY&#13;
Wholesalers and Retailers of&#13;
SWEET CREAM. MILK AND FROZEN SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
PILE ICE CREAM CO.&#13;
41 7 JACKSON STREET&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
ABEL&#13;
&#13;
OBERG&#13;
&#13;
PEDERSEN&#13;
&#13;
A H.&#13;
&#13;
VAN&#13;
&#13;
RIPER&#13;
&#13;
The Abel-Pedersen-Van Riper Co.&#13;
&#13;
18-Monday.&#13;
suit.&#13;
&#13;
BEAUTIFIERS OF HOMES&#13;
PICTURE FRAMING A SPECIALTY&#13;
Iowa Phone 9 76&#13;
Auto Phone 25 70&#13;
&#13;
16-Saturday. Miss Donaldson resigns.&#13;
17-Sunday. St. Patrick's Day. Bill Bass wears shamrock.&#13;
&#13;
619 Fifth Street&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Warm day.&#13;
&#13;
Mike Briggs springs spring&#13;
&#13;
19-Tuesday. Cold day. Mike springs dark suit.&#13;
20-Wednesday. Blizzard. Students fail to meet their&#13;
classes.&#13;
21-Thursday. Senior expression recital.&#13;
more roses.&#13;
&#13;
FULLERTON&#13;
LUMBER&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
N ew Location:&#13;
Four th and&#13;
&#13;
LafayetteSts.&#13;
&#13;
Hardware and&#13;
Sporting Goods&#13;
Nationally Advertised Lines&#13;
That Qualify&#13;
FISHING TACKLE&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
LAWN TENNIS&#13;
GOLF&#13;
&#13;
Largest and most complete&#13;
stock of building material m&#13;
the city.&#13;
&#13;
WE WILL PLEASE YOU&#13;
&#13;
Do not fail to let us figure&#13;
your lumber bill.&#13;
&#13;
Orcutt's Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Phones : Auto 1065, Bell 65&#13;
&#13;
3 12- 14 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
Susan gets&#13;
&#13;
22-Friday. Jean and Hank, Lola and Holbert, Marguerite and Knouse take stroll through the snow.&#13;
23-Saturday. Peace contest in chapel. Vernon wins.&#13;
Girls' banquet. Boys wait.&#13;
24-Sunday. Ernest Wickens waits at the choir door after&#13;
church.&#13;
25-Monday. Billy Beam muffles the 'phone and resolves&#13;
to stay up stairs. Man from Ames calls. Billy&#13;
comes down.&#13;
26--T uesday. Most solemn chapel of the year. Somebody must have made a mistake.&#13;
27-Wednesday. Grand indignation meeting.&#13;
Dolly&#13;
gives the altar call. Senior party at Gillin's.&#13;
28-Thursday. Junior expression recital. Mass meeting&#13;
for annual subscriptions.&#13;
29-F riday. Exams. Trunks. Floods. Home?&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
TERRIBLE LOSS!&#13;
to you if you don't start in to&#13;
&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS!&#13;
Their goods are right and they will treat you on the square.&#13;
Our advertisers have made the publication of this book possible, showing that they&#13;
are boosters for our college. Let's demonstrate our appreciation.&#13;
&#13;
Well, get sore&#13;
Because&#13;
&#13;
Did not care&#13;
&#13;
We put a&#13;
&#13;
To write&#13;
&#13;
Joke in&#13;
&#13;
As bad things&#13;
&#13;
Here on you&#13;
&#13;
As we knew&#13;
&#13;
And said&#13;
&#13;
About.&#13;
&#13;
Some things&#13;
&#13;
So if you really&#13;
&#13;
You thought&#13;
&#13;
Must get mad&#13;
&#13;
That no&#13;
&#13;
We don't ca.re.&#13;
&#13;
One knew.&#13;
&#13;
Your shoes&#13;
&#13;
But don't forget&#13;
&#13;
========for========&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE MAN&#13;
The Most&#13;
Clever Ideas&#13;
that Master&#13;
&#13;
Don't fit in&#13;
&#13;
We know&#13;
&#13;
Our trunk&#13;
&#13;
Lots of things&#13;
&#13;
No more.&#13;
&#13;
We've left out&#13;
&#13;
So there!&#13;
&#13;
Professor Campbell : "You have a habit of buttoning your coat.&#13;
come to a button that is off, what happens?"&#13;
Jory: ''Curses.''&#13;
Ewing:&#13;
&#13;
Society Brand Clothes&#13;
&#13;
Because we&#13;
&#13;
When you&#13;
&#13;
can Produce&#13;
are Here and&#13;
Ready for Your&#13;
Inspection&#13;
&#13;
"Now, Vince, cut out the slang so we can get what you are driving at."&#13;
&#13;
Bess Barnes, calling Sara Whitehouse out of class:&#13;
the parlor."&#13;
&#13;
"This is your night for&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Lane, writing home: "Mother, Wesleyput his arm around me last night.&#13;
Do you care?"&#13;
,&#13;
Letter from mamma: "No, Hazel, if you like it." ( Hazel says this is not so.)&#13;
Agnes Ewer, returning from the Philo up-river trip:&#13;
rheumatic!''&#13;
Sara Whitehouse, in Chemistry Lab. :&#13;
&#13;
"Isn't boat riding awfully&#13;
&#13;
"Si, darling, how do you do this?"&#13;
&#13;
Professor MacFarren, to Miss Price: "Couldn't you come to class earlier?"&#13;
Miss Price: "I couldn't today. M r. D oxsee held me."&#13;
&#13;
W. A. GILL CO.&#13;
&#13;
D r. Craig: "Rev. Ellison, will you repeat the ten commandments?"&#13;
Ellison, much embarrassed : "I am afraid I have forgotten them."&#13;
&#13;
419 4th Street&#13;
Conyright 1912,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Hughes, Lola. Member of Red Cross Society.&#13;
erences-McCurdy.)&#13;
&#13;
Third aid to the injured.&#13;
&#13;
(Ref-&#13;
&#13;
James, Elizabeth. "Tommy." Former rag time vocalist at the Mizzou, but at&#13;
present out of a job and attending school. "I love my German, but O you Greek"&#13;
(boot-black).&#13;
Kifer, Margaret. Writes French novels.&#13;
Je vous adore. Que voulez vous encore?"&#13;
Knouse, Earl.&#13;
girls' banquet.&#13;
&#13;
Best known quotation, "Je vous aime&#13;
&#13;
Made the 'varsity team, the hospital squad, and waiters' corps at the&#13;
&#13;
Lueder, Herman. A born leader and politician. Class president. Can vault&#13;
any fence between here and Newton Avenue. Contemplates turning his attention to&#13;
archery but failing would probably accept the presidency of Cherokee's great hospital.&#13;
Metcalf, Lucile. Musician. Studied under Blind Boone. Can play "Alexander's Ragtime Band'' more times in an hour than any other electric piano in the city.&#13;
Neslon Carl. Jack of all trades. The drawing attraction of the Freshman class,&#13;
who is just beginning to make his mark in the world.&#13;
Ostling, Carl.&#13;
&#13;
The true friend of the hospital squad.&#13;
&#13;
Pollock, Fletcher. Our local color expert.&#13;
Butterick Fashions Company.&#13;
&#13;
Traveling representative for the&#13;
&#13;
Robinson, Bonnie. Likes "A" grades but 0, you Phi Kappa Sigma (frat in Wisa&#13;
consin). Speaks entertainingly in public as well as in priv_ te.&#13;
Sater, Emma.&#13;
&#13;
The girl whose pretty smile helped win the cane rush.&#13;
&#13;
Shelton, Robert. Advertising manager.&#13;
any man in the Freshman class.&#13;
&#13;
A fine runner.&#13;
&#13;
Has more wind than&#13;
&#13;
Shoemaker, Elihu. "Hazel." Grafter and author as a side issue. Best known&#13;
volume is entitled, "How to Fuss a Different Girl Each Night," or "A Change of&#13;
Feminine Atmosphere is Conducive to Study."&#13;
Smith, Bethel. Teacher. The pride of Correctionville. Famous trick violinist&#13;
who is now starring at Moville. Can draw more beaux on her string than any other&#13;
player in captivity and still not spoil the harmony.&#13;
Spry, Catherine.&#13;
&#13;
A regular shark.&#13;
&#13;
Will eat anything that looks like an ''A" grade.&#13;
&#13;
Time Reveals&#13;
All Things&#13;
ONE THING REVEALED IS THAT&#13;
&#13;
C. EMENTS GROCERY&#13;
L&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
May be relied upon for quality of&#13;
goods and efficiency of service . ..&#13;
After years of experience we are&#13;
better than ever prepared to give satisfaction to our customers and friends.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in the line of fine Groceries&#13;
and Vegetables, first quality&#13;
Fruits and Confections&#13;
Our delight is to please our customers&#13;
&#13;
Upham, Cyril. Beauty doctor. Has bought out Fizz Hornney's interest in&#13;
Sater &amp; Co., face powder manufacturers. "Uppie" is now the company and chief&#13;
demonstrator.&#13;
&#13;
STUDENTS, LET US FURNISH YOUR PICNIC SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
Vernon, Robert. "Pinkey." Athlete, teetotaler and peace advocate. Our redheaded Demosthenes. Born, 1892; died, October 14, 1911, at Iowa City. Rose&#13;
again half a day later minus most of his gray matter.&#13;
&#13;
Grocers&#13;
&#13;
Wedgewood, William. "Bill." Lost both arms at the Freshman girls' party.&#13;
Finder please return to 1625 Ridge Avenue and receive thanks.&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; Co.&#13;
ST.&#13;
&#13;
AUBINS&#13;
&#13;
STATION&#13;
&#13;
A Digest of College Idioms&#13;
An exhausting work of reference to · uncertain United States words pertinent and&#13;
impertinent to college affairs; their origin, meaning, legitimate and illegitimate use&#13;
, confused by no pictures :&#13;
&#13;
PHILLIPS&#13;
SPORTING GOODS&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
Forsberg&#13;
Hardware&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
Why Not Come In and Take a Look at&#13;
&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
CUTLERY&#13;
AND STO V ES&#13;
&#13;
"A"-Registrar's regard for night invasion and day theft.&#13;
Athlete-Dignified bunch of muscles that majors in Politics and French A.&#13;
&#13;
The Largest and&#13;
Baseball-A game in which a young man who bravely strikes out for himself receives no credit for it.&#13;
Bawl-out-The lowest form of revenge.&#13;
Billy- The butter.&#13;
Bluffer-A stupid person who doesn't get found out.&#13;
Board- An implement used for corporal punishment by landladies. Daily hash.&#13;
Bone-One dollar. The original price of a wife. N . B.: Adam gave one&#13;
bone before he got Eve.&#13;
Bone-head-A stupid person who does get found out.&#13;
Brick-An admirable person made of the right kind of clay and plenty of sand.&#13;
Chump-Anyone who would go to English VI. twice a week.&#13;
Coach- Irma's hubby.&#13;
Co-ed-The most virile factor in the materialization of our slogan, "More Men&#13;
for Morningside."&#13;
College ( from Fr. colle, stuck; and elude, study ) - A place where everybody is&#13;
stuck on study ( ? ) .•&#13;
Collegian Reporter- A juvenile attempt at a semi-periodical. Syn. Moral Uplift.&#13;
Coyote-A canine animal that hangs ·around Vermillion.&#13;
Cram (v. i., act) - To study on high gear.&#13;
D ate-Fruit resulting from the graft of a lemon to a peach.&#13;
Delinquent card-Invitation to a class officer.&#13;
Diploma-Five bones.&#13;
Doo- One-third faculty reception, two-thirds Fourth of July celebration, and&#13;
four-thirds joy.&#13;
&#13;
Most Up-to-Da te&#13;
Stock of&#13;
&#13;
All Kinds of Furnace and Tin Work&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC GOODS&#13;
Give Us a Trial for&#13;
&#13;
in the city ?&#13;
Everything for the&#13;
&#13;
Anything in Hardware&#13;
&#13;
athlete or sportsman.&#13;
406 PEARL ST.&#13;
&#13;
WE G UARANTEE SATISFACTION&#13;
&#13;
Sioux CITY, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
N. Tiedeman&#13;
&#13;
I OI 0- I OI 2 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
L. D. Vigen&#13;
&#13;
H. E. Haakinson&#13;
&#13;
Yards, First and Jackson Sts.&#13;
Office, 312 Jackson St.&#13;
Office Phone, Auto 2 I 74; Yard Phone, Auto 2923; Old P hone, 572&#13;
&#13;
H. E. HAAKINSON COAL CO.&#13;
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL&#13;
&#13;
COAL, WOOD, COKE AND FEED, SAND&#13;
GRAVEL, CEMENT AND ROCK.&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 532&#13;
Encore-Greedy audience's desire to get more than their money's worth. (Fr. en,&#13;
among; and cochon, pig.) Common among pigs.&#13;
Etiquette-A difficult symphony in B. natural.&#13;
Exams- Imperative of the verb, to cram.&#13;
Exercise-Bodily exertion requiring a $ 100,000 gym, ten acres and impossible&#13;
raiment.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY,&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 3267&#13;
&#13;
GOODS BOUGHT, SOLD AND EXCHANGED&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable, New and Second-Hand&#13;
Furniture Store&#13;
M . LEVICH, Prop.&#13;
SEE US WHEN YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL STOVES&#13;
FURNITURE OR ANYTHING OF VALUE&#13;
&#13;
I 004- I 006 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Faculty-One the hardships of student life.&#13;
of&#13;
Flunk-Required of one who majors in one study. Syn. (in Some 'r' Set) to pass.&#13;
Football-Clever subterfuge for carrying on prize fights under the guise of a&#13;
reputable game.&#13;
Fun-Joy.&#13;
Function-Devoid of Joy.&#13;
Fuss-Common contents of the minds of those who maJor m Campustry. References- Lueder, Bigglestone and Shoemaker.&#13;
Gag-Corpse of a witticism.&#13;
&#13;
Cink-A long, lean, lank, lost, lazy, limber, listless, love-lorn, luckless, lop-eared,&#13;
left-handed, long-legged, loose-jointed lolligager.&#13;
Grind-One who never reads Life. References- Hank and Ethel Shannon.&#13;
Gump--One who, after the Dean has excused him from the final exam, confesses&#13;
that he had dropped the course after the second recitation.&#13;
Hammock (Lat. hamus, hook and Grk. makar, happy)-Happiness on hooks.&#13;
Hash-A mystery. Syn. medley.&#13;
Hug-To entwine. n. Roundabout way of expressing affection.&#13;
Idiot (·Eng. idea and out)-One who is just out of ideas. Example-Editor of&#13;
the Sioux.&#13;
Inn-Institution for the spread of dyspepsia. Now obsolete.&#13;
Jitney-Coin of low denomination most common when finance becomes frenzied.&#13;
Joke-Form of humor found only in "Sioux" '13. In Morningside requiring a&#13;
diagram, raised letters and a club.&#13;
&#13;
EXTRAORDINARY VALUES IN WATCHES ·&#13;
16 size 21 jewel railroad&#13;
Gents' 7 jewel Elgin watch&#13;
movem e nt, to pass inspecfo r , onl y .. ... . .. .... . $5. 00&#13;
tion only ....... .... $20.00&#13;
Gents' 15 jewe l H a m pden&#13;
G e nts' 21 jewel movement,&#13;
watch for, only . .. .... $6. 00&#13;
regular price $19.00-0ur&#13;
Ladies' hunting gold-filled&#13;
price . .. . .... . .... . . $1 5.00&#13;
c ase, American mov em ent,&#13;
Gents' 17 jewel E lgin in&#13;
o nl y ....... . . ... . . . . . $6.50&#13;
gold filled 20-yea r case,&#13;
Ladies' Hunting gold-filled ,&#13;
only ... . . ... .. .... . . $11.00&#13;
20-year case, with American&#13;
Gents' 17 j ewel in nickel&#13;
movement, only .. . . .. $8.00&#13;
case only . ...... ... . . $7.00&#13;
L adies' gold-filled, 20- year&#13;
Gen t s' 15 jewel Elgin watch&#13;
hunting case, Elgi n m ovefor only .... .. ....... $6.50&#13;
m e nt, only .. ........ $10.0 0&#13;
'&#13;
Watches for students from $1.0 0 and&#13;
&#13;
J. Fleckenstein&#13;
1167&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&#13;
G e n t s ' 1 6 size, gol d-filled,&#13;
hunting c ase, with Ame rican m ovement, only . . $6.00&#13;
G e n t s ' 12 s i ze open f ace, 20y ear g o ld-filled case, w ith&#13;
Ame rican movemen t,&#13;
onl y . .. ... . . .... .. .. $10. 00&#13;
G e n ts' 12 size, 1 7 j ewel&#13;
hun t ing. 20- year gold- fi lled&#13;
case, with Americ an movemen t, onl y .. . .... .. . $15. 00&#13;
Eight-D ay Mantel Clo c ks,&#13;
onl y ... ... . ... . ..... . $5.00&#13;
up.&#13;
&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
St.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
Iowa&#13;
&#13;
THE WORD&#13;
&#13;
Kiss-An indescribable something that is of no value to any one but much pnzed by&#13;
the right two.&#13;
Knock- Commonly to gain entrance.&#13;
&#13;
At Morningside a sure means of exit.&#13;
&#13;
Laundry-A place where clothes are mangled.&#13;
Lecture-Faculty's&#13;
favorite form of punishment, at which it pays to look intelligent.&#13;
Lie-Poor substitute for the truth but the only one discovered up to date.&#13;
Life-Weekly obituary notice from New York chronicling the death of humor.&#13;
Love -Terrible disease contracted just before one commits matrimony. (Allan&#13;
Lemon says there isn' t any such thing.)&#13;
Lover-Si Braley.&#13;
M-Trade mark borne by the best brand of manhood in the country.&#13;
Money- Meaning unknown.&#13;
Morningside-Greatest seat of wisdom since Solomon died. Syn. Millennium of&#13;
perfection, for lack of better term.&#13;
Mutt- One who knows all about you and loves you just the same.&#13;
&#13;
MEANS GOOD&#13;
&#13;
CREAMERY BUTTER&#13;
and ICE CREAM&#13;
HANFORD'S ICE CREAM and CREAMERY BUTTER are&#13;
manufactured of good wholesome pasteurized cream m the&#13;
LARGEST and most sanitary plant in the world.&#13;
&#13;
Sold By ALL R ETAILERS WHO CARRY THE BEST&#13;
&#13;
co. SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Nifty-Epithet applied to him who can fuss eight girls a week, go to the Orpheum,&#13;
attend Y. M., win M's in athletics and oratory, throw chalk, and make A grades.&#13;
Nifty Kid-B. P. Dolliver.&#13;
Nobby-Junior class hats.&#13;
Ode-Students' board bills.&#13;
Oratory-Dissemination of pastuerized packages of philosophy.&#13;
Pastry-Deadly weapon carried by most landladies.&#13;
Peach-Synonym for fair woman because she is largely skin and stony at heart.&#13;
Pikers-Those who did not buy Junior class hats. Example-the Seniors.&#13;
Question-How much Coach Ewing learns in his classes.&#13;
Quiz-Cross-examination when the prof. is not prepared.&#13;
Rah, rah, rah-A civilized war whoop.&#13;
Regrets- Occasionally an expression of sorrow, usually a paean of praise for&#13;
deliverance from evil.&#13;
Rhetoric-Language in a dress suit.&#13;
Room-Diminutive of ice box, used for storage of clothes and books.&#13;
Rough-neck-Member of Vermillion football team.&#13;
Sioux-Morningside publication of literary merit used as a text book in S. D. U.&#13;
Sioux Board- A dignified committee of aristocrats, Juniors and fanatics.&#13;
Spirit- Explanation of Morningside's continual victories.&#13;
Stag-A party to which the dears are not admitted.&#13;
Stung-What one is at Marion Hall. Antonym, date.&#13;
Tobacco-A nauseating plant consumed&#13;
worm doesn't know any better.&#13;
T radition- "Beat Vermillion."&#13;
Two-bits- Technical term of finance, worth five jitneys.&#13;
Umpire-No jeweler yet high authority on diamonds.&#13;
Usher-One who takes the leading part at a recital.&#13;
Vermillion-An intellectual desert in South Dakota, inhabited by coyotes who are&#13;
doomed to everlasting chagrin in "the hole in the bottom of the Sioux."&#13;
Victory- The password at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
No Athletic Victo,&#13;
ry, class day, grad,&#13;
uation or other&#13;
high school or college celebration can be a&#13;
complete success unless you wear&#13;
SON'S clothes.&#13;
&#13;
These are the only real&#13;
&#13;
"college men's clothes," the only clothes&#13;
with the swmg and dash and individuality&#13;
required by the "undergrad" who is a genume " mixer."&#13;
&#13;
They win you admiration,&#13;
&#13;
approval-pave the way for populari!y.&#13;
The young chap here illustrated wears a&#13;
two-button, English&#13;
lapel.&#13;
&#13;
style&#13;
&#13;
with&#13;
&#13;
roll&#13;
&#13;
a high waist line that gives it a long, slim&#13;
effect.&#13;
&#13;
Vest is six button.&#13;
&#13;
in the chest.&#13;
&#13;
It is medium full&#13;
&#13;
Trousers fit tightly in the waist&#13;
&#13;
and set firmly over the hips, no peg.&#13;
want swagger college suits try&#13;
&#13;
X-Put in the form of a quadratic equation and by the use of the binomial theory&#13;
solve for the definition.&#13;
&#13;
Zero- Originally, nothing; but last January discovered to mean a good deal on&#13;
the thermometer. Comp.rises two-thirds of a speech in mass meeting.&#13;
&#13;
soft&#13;
&#13;
The coat has center vent, plain seams,&#13;
&#13;
Work- To read the Dean's writing.&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. (masculine) - Those who worship.&#13;
Y. W. (feminine)-Those to be worshipped.&#13;
&#13;
DAVID-&#13;
&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
"The Big Store"&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
If you&#13;
&#13;
Iowa P hone I 30&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2863&#13;
&#13;
J. C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
FLORISTS&#13;
&#13;
Mike Briggs, starting for a drink in debate : "Now let us go to Oregon."&#13;
&#13;
Cut Flowers&#13;
&#13;
Bass: "What are these papers to be on?"&#13;
Ewing: "On some subject."&#13;
&#13;
PALMS AND PLA NTS FOR DECORATIONS&#13;
&#13;
This joke is for the boys only.&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL A TTENTION TO FUNERAL ORDERS&#13;
&#13;
Clarence Craig attended a party one night with Lucile Metcalf and got in at an&#13;
early hour. The next day Mrs. Metcalf apologized to Mrs. Craig.&#13;
&#13;
EMBLEMS MADE ON SHORT NOTICE&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Campbell, 'phoning to the dean: "Herbert has a bad headache today.&#13;
Do you know where we can get a vacuum cleaner?"&#13;
Vince, in mass meeting:&#13;
be there."&#13;
&#13;
"This vote means that three-fourths of every student will&#13;
&#13;
Grace and Mike made candy one Sunday afternoon.&#13;
her garbage can, only to find it covered with syrup.&#13;
&#13;
Later, Mrs. Johnson hunted&#13;
&#13;
Ella Rossberg, hearing someone say that they were going to hibernate:&#13;
that town?"&#13;
&#13;
"Where is&#13;
&#13;
Dean Burney, speaking in chapel, makes a sweeping gesture, pointing to Rev.&#13;
Wasser: "Satan is leaving his indelible mark on all men."&#13;
&#13;
YOU ARE INVITED TO V ISIT OUR STORE&#13;
&#13;
Sixth and Pierce Streets&#13;
&#13;
VIOLET BOX&#13;
&#13;
ONCE EATEN&#13;
NEVER FORGOTTEN&#13;
&#13;
ROMAN CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
ALPEAN CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
MAXIMA CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
BITTER SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
ALL MAPLE&#13;
CHOCOLATES&#13;
PALMER'S CHOCOLATE&#13;
&#13;
MARASCHINO CHERRIES&#13;
MADE IN SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Dolliver: "Now we ought to give those who poured down the beans a chance to&#13;
come forward and confess."&#13;
Vince, chairman, rising and looking over the student body: "I don' t see many&#13;
standing."&#13;
REASONS WHY SOME MAY HOLD THEIR OWN&#13;
Sara and Si-For exceeding great love.&#13;
Jean and Bill-Just for fun.&#13;
Susan and Killy-Because she is so much older than he.&#13;
Bernice and H erman- Exceedingly aboundant great. love. (This made Lueder&#13;
sore, but how did we know they were going to quit?)&#13;
Hulda and Kent- Because they are both Seniors.&#13;
Grace and Mike-For mutual heartrending affection.&#13;
Leila and Vince-Somebody has to start something.&#13;
Emma and Fizz- They just simply can't help it.&#13;
Ruth and Bigg- Because he beat all the rest of the boys in school.&#13;
Leona and Bowker-It's his last year in school.&#13;
Hazel and Clif-Terrible, everlasting, consuming, slavishly great love.&#13;
Van Horne: "Unless ye become as little children ye cannot enter the kingdom of&#13;
C alculus.' '&#13;
Dolly : "United we stand, divided we flunk."&#13;
Miss Loveland: "Except ye study ye shall all likewise receive delinquents."&#13;
Prof. Campbell: "Be ye therefore ready for ye know not when the quiz cometh."&#13;
&#13;
In the Cleanest and Most Up-to-Date Candy Factory in the West&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Baker Co.&#13;
THE REXALL STORE&#13;
For li fe's work may be ever so perfect,&#13;
yet, if you neglect to pay heed to the&#13;
practical things, and fail to profit by the&#13;
experiences of those who have been suc&#13;
cessful in your chosen calling, the chances&#13;
are against your reaching a very high&#13;
mark.&#13;
A savings account following graduation&#13;
is almost as necessary to success as hard&#13;
study preceeding, it provides money to&#13;
take advantage of any opportunities&#13;
offered.&#13;
We invite your account, on which interest will be added twice a year.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
405-407 NEBRASKA STREET&#13;
&#13;
LEADING DRUGGISTS&#13;
EVERYTHING IN DRUGS&#13;
SURGICAL APPLIANCES&#13;
R UBBER GOODS, ETC.&#13;
F I NE CANDI ES&#13;
A SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
VISIT OUR SODA FOUNTAIN&#13;
&#13;
Todd-Baker Co.&#13;
Two&#13;
&#13;
STORES&#13;
&#13;
4 2 1 Fourth Street and Security Building&#13;
&#13;
This Cut Shows Our&#13;
&#13;
How WouldThey Look ?&#13;
&#13;
Office and Cattle&#13;
&#13;
A Student Recital ..................... .. . .. .. . .. .. ....... With a Crowd&#13;
Dolly .... ............... . .......................... Without a Red Tie&#13;
DeVada Mills . . . . .. .. . ............ . .. .. ....... . . .. ... Without a "Case"&#13;
Jimmie Lewis ....... ... .. .......... . ... . ........... .. .. Without a Smile .&#13;
Mrs. Reynolds ... . ..... . .... . .... .. ... . . .... . ......... Without Her Hair&#13;
Faculty&#13;
......... . ............... . .. .. . ........... Back on the Rostrum&#13;
Annual . ........ . .............. . ........ ·.......... .. . With a Joke in It&#13;
Chapel ............. ... .... . . .. ..... . ................. Without a Stunt&#13;
Librarian .......... ..... . .... . .... .... . ..... . . .. . . ..... .. With Smiles&#13;
Phychology ...... .. ....... . .. . ... .. . . .. . .......... .. . .. Without a Quiz&#13;
Clifford Jory ........... .. ... . ......... . . ..... .. . .. . . .. .. Without Hazel&#13;
Prof. Campbell . . .... ............. . . .. .............. Without His Muffler&#13;
Bill Bass .... . .. ................. .. ........ . .. . . ...... . .. With a Shirt&#13;
Si ............ . .... .. ............ . . ... . . . ...... . ..... .. Without Sara&#13;
Hulda .... .. . .... . ... . .. . .. . .. .. . . ... ....... .. .. . Without Her Wisdom&#13;
Prit . .. . . ..... ..... .. . . .. ..... . . .. ..... .... ... With His Shoes Buttoned&#13;
Dr. Craig ....... . .... .. .. .. .. . .... . ...... ... . ...... Without His Glasses&#13;
Morningside . ... . .... . .. . . .... .. . . .. ... With Three New Buildings Next fall&#13;
George Pratt ............... . ... ....... .... . ...... . ...... . In Mole-Skins&#13;
Leo Stevens ... ..... . ...... ............. . .. . ... . .. . With His Hair Mussed&#13;
Elsie Johnson .. .... .. . .. .... .. . ... . . . ....... . . ... With a Melancholy Look&#13;
Collegian Reporter .. . . ...... .. . ...... . .. . . . .. . .. . .. .. . .. With Some News&#13;
Hank ... . .... .... . .... . . ........ ...... ...... ... . .. With Ethel Shannon&#13;
Coach .. . .... ... . .. .. ... . . ..... . . ... .. . . .. .. .. ... .... With His Lesson&#13;
Ole . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . With a Prisoner&#13;
Dean .. .. ....... .. ...... . .... . ... . . ... ... . . .. . .. . ... . . ... . .. . Sober&#13;
Lula .................. . . .... ..... ..... .. . .. . ... . .. . With Vince Again&#13;
&#13;
Location in&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
H . H. Holmes&#13;
&#13;
E. M. Hatch&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
H. U . Carpenter&#13;
J. S. H oard&#13;
&#13;
E. Walsh&#13;
&#13;
LONG &amp; HANSEN CO.&#13;
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION MERCHANTS&#13;
SIOUX C ITY, IA&#13;
&#13;
CH ICAGO, ILL.&#13;
&#13;
SO. ST. PAUL, MINN.&#13;
&#13;
WE DO A STRICTLY COMMISSION&#13;
BUSINESS IN B UYING AND SELLING&#13;
&#13;
"OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
Cattle, Hogs and Sheep&#13;
&#13;
G. D. Hanson &amp; Company&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCE :&#13;
&#13;
TAILORS, CLOTHIERS, HATTERS AND&#13;
&#13;
Our many well satisfied customers and nineteen years of successful business, having&#13;
led all of our competitors on the Sioux City market for&#13;
&#13;
MEN'S FURNISHERS&#13;
Examine Our Stock Before Buying&#13;
&#13;
82 7 Fourth Street; Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
1909==1910==1911&#13;
&#13;
Dean Chandler:&#13;
&#13;
reasons why Moore's&#13;
FOUR great your clothes store&#13;
should be&#13;
&#13;
"A flat is so small a dog must wag his tail up and down."&#13;
&#13;
Frenchman, during zie call of zie roll: " D olliver."&#13;
Dolly, just entering: "Here."&#13;
Frenchman: "Zer is an English proverb I zink, saying :&#13;
and he will appear.'&#13;
&#13;
OUR VALUE V ING POWER&#13;
GI&#13;
EXTENSI VE VAR IETY&#13;
&#13;
'Speak of zie&#13;
&#13;
THE BEST STYLES AND&#13;
Prof. Campbell:&#13;
Rachel Holm:&#13;
Kent:&#13;
&#13;
"You can't have color without substance."&#13;
&#13;
OUR STORE SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
"One can have the blues."&#13;
&#13;
"There is only one volunteer missionary in school and that is myself.&#13;
&#13;
biggest problem is organization."&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
THE MOORE CLOTHING&#13;
F O U R TH AN D NEB R ASKA&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Stephens: "How does the euglena move about?"&#13;
Ruth Rieke: " I don't know whether it pushes or pulls."&#13;
Miss Hadley: "I wish we might spend two years on the grammar.''&#13;
Harry Wiley: "No doubt most of us will have to."&#13;
Prof. Brown:&#13;
&#13;
"Everything has a will except a mule and he has a won't."&#13;
&#13;
Cecelia Park Grocery&#13;
AN DREW JO HNSO N, P ROP.&#13;
Call Upon Us for Best Q ualities and Service in Groceries&#13;
&#13;
WE ALSO DO ALL KINDS OF PLUM BING AND T INNING&#13;
CECELIA P A R K&#13;
&#13;
THE STO RE T H AT ALWAYS H AS THE M OST&#13;
&#13;
EXCLUSI VE STYLES OBTAINABLE&#13;
&#13;
H. &amp; H. Shoe Company&#13;
5 12 FOUR T H STR EET&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX C ITY&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Ia., Jan. 7, 1912. (Special to Journal) . The three months' bride&#13;
of John Kolp yesterday tried to kill her husband by filling a pie with chipped glass.&#13;
Mary Lund, in English VI:&#13;
Hazel Simon:&#13;
&#13;
Ship Your Live Stock&#13;
. TO . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
"John Bunyan fed a family of twelve with his pen."&#13;
&#13;
"Is there a copy of Bunyan's Vanity Fair in the Library?"&#13;
A TRAGEDY&#13;
ACT I.&#13;
&#13;
· ··-&#13;
&#13;
Scene 1. Bethel arrives on 1 : 30&#13;
train.&#13;
Scene 2. Shoemaker borrows money&#13;
from Henderson to go to the train to&#13;
meet Bethel.&#13;
Scene 3. Shoey goes to the depot&#13;
at 5: 15.&#13;
Scene 4. Train late! Shoey raves.&#13;
Scene 5. Train arrives at 7:45.&#13;
No Bethel!!&#13;
Scene 6. 9 :00--Shoey keeps one&#13;
of his other dates and arrives with&#13;
Ethel Ewer at a party.&#13;
&#13;
BALDWIN, KITSELMAN&#13;
&amp; TIMMEL&#13;
Three live wires who have shown a steady&#13;
increase in business by satisfying customers&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission Merchants&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
Auto Phone 1443&#13;
&#13;
Bell Phone 397&#13;
&#13;
THREE PER CENT PAID ON CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT&#13;
OPEN ACCOUNTS INVITED&#13;
&#13;
FOR YOUR&#13;
&#13;
MADE&#13;
&#13;
WHILE&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
WAIT&#13;
&#13;
Best Equipped Studio in the City&#13;
&#13;
PECKHAM &amp;, BROWN&#13;
&#13;
309 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
&#13;
J. M. Pinckney Co.&#13;
Wholesale and Retail&#13;
&#13;
WALL PAPER, PAINTS, BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY,SCHOOL BOOKS&#13;
New Phone 1348 L&#13;
&#13;
610 4th Street&#13;
&#13;
SECURITY&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
PETE'S CANDY PALACE&#13;
Home of&#13;
PETE'S HAND ROLLED BITTER SWEETS&#13;
Choicest Qualities in Confections&#13;
&#13;
60 7 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHE D 1884&#13;
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS&#13;
&#13;
$450,000.00&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Mike Briggs, in Epworth League:&#13;
&#13;
"I am so glad to say I have been saved by&#13;
&#13;
grace.''&#13;
Nick Carter: "Prof Greynald, I don't deserve an E grade."&#13;
Prof. Greynald: "To be sure, to be sure, but it is zie lowest grade zat I can give&#13;
you.''&#13;
G. E. Wickens, in mass meeting:&#13;
Higday."&#13;
&#13;
" I would like to give my support to Miss&#13;
&#13;
Onawa, la., Nov. 24-(Special to Journal) :&#13;
day for boot-legging.&#13;
&#13;
Nick Carter was arrested here to-&#13;
&#13;
Lemon, the morning after taking Emma to the Prattler Doo:&#13;
two-bits rent I owe you."&#13;
&#13;
"Here Fizz is that&#13;
&#13;
Pro f. Brown: " Miss Whitehouse, is what Mr. Braley says true?"&#13;
Sara: " It surely must be if he says so."&#13;
J ocy, in Psychology: "Then you mean to say that this wall is not green unless&#13;
someone is here to see it?"&#13;
Prof. Campbell: "Exactly so. The green is in you."&#13;
D r. Craig, in Biblical Literature:&#13;
&#13;
"Mr. Johnson will you dispose of the devil for&#13;
&#13;
us.) "&#13;
&#13;
Personality Wins&#13;
I&#13;
T'S the man with personality,&#13;
who commands respect and&#13;
gains success.&#13;
&#13;
And it's the clothes with "personality" that reinforce the man---that&#13;
urge him on---that keep him going.&#13;
"E. &amp; W. Fashion Clothes" have a personality. They' re decisively styled and expertly tailored. They look elegant and will&#13;
wear everlastingly.&#13;
Distributed throughout these clothes are a number of&#13;
features which are certain to strike your fancy.&#13;
&#13;
This is a National Bank. You know the U. S.&#13;
Government safeguards it. We do a general banking&#13;
business-handle checking accounts and buy and sell&#13;
foreign exchange.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern&#13;
National Bank&#13;
CAPITAL AN D PROFITS, $150,000.00&#13;
Savings D epartment open Saturday Evenings. Foreign&#13;
Drafts and Steamship Tickets.&#13;
J. A. MAGOUN, JR., P res.&#13;
&#13;
B. H. KINGSBURY, V. Pres.&#13;
&#13;
I. M. LYON, Cashier&#13;
&#13;
Breast of&#13;
&#13;
coats hand quilted with pure-dye silk.&#13;
&#13;
Fancy hand-made&#13;
buttonhole in coat-lapel. Razor edge on all coats. Bouquet&#13;
holder under left lapel. Extra watch pocket within outside&#13;
breast pocket. Patent tuck in all pockets prevents sagging.&#13;
Extra cut-in "V" in coat facing to reinforce the fro nt.&#13;
"THE CLOTHES UNUSUAL" AT THE USUAL PRICES:&#13;
$15, $ 18, $20, $22.50, $25, $27.50, $30&#13;
&#13;
OUR HAT AND FURNISHING SECTIONS ARE COMPLETE&#13;
WITH NEWEST STYLES, BEST QUALITIES&#13;
AT MODERATE PRICES&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W. Clothing House&#13;
N. T. HANSON, Manager&#13;
4th &amp; Jackson Streets,&#13;
&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
AT THE M EN'S BANQUET&#13;
&#13;
F lowers of Quality&#13;
&#13;
Junior Table-Briggs occupied either end and a man of war the middle.&#13;
&#13;
for all Occasions&#13;
&#13;
If a Senior is foolish, is a Soph more?&#13;
I f Bernice should go blind would Herman Lueder?&#13;
If Nick Carter should marry, would Rachel Cook?&#13;
&#13;
FINE SELECTION OF&#13;
&#13;
If the Dean would teach Van Horne to flirt with the waiters who would coach&#13;
&#13;
PALMS AND FERNS&#13;
&#13;
Ewing?&#13;
&#13;
If a Junior died would Kingsbury? No but Wedgewood.&#13;
If the coal gave out would they burn Cobbs? No, they would burn Koch.&#13;
Found in Frank Johnson's room.&#13;
Dear Frank&#13;
&#13;
This is not much to send I know , but I&#13;
&#13;
wanted you to know that at&#13;
&#13;
Christmas time, as well as all other times, Edna Genevieve doesn't forget you.&#13;
wishing you a very Merry Xmas and the Happiest New Year. Yours,&#13;
&#13;
Here's&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&#13;
"THE LOVELY GIRL."&#13;
&#13;
Manley Peifer, responding to roll call in English with a quotation:&#13;
has come to judgment."&#13;
Miss Hadley:&#13;
Miss Watson:&#13;
&#13;
"Yea, Daniel&#13;
&#13;
"Translate, 'Denn er ging in hinaus.'&#13;
"Then he went in the hen house.''&#13;
&#13;
Winifred Allmon and Frank Johnson have lunch at Todd-Bakers.&#13;
Clerk: "Mr. Johnson, vour wife&#13;
left the baby carriage here for you to&#13;
take home with you."&#13;
&#13;
512 FIFTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
OPPOSITE GRAIN EXCHANGE&#13;
&#13;
WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
C. S. VON HATTEN&#13;
&#13;
Reliable Clothers&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer and Remodeler of&#13;
&#13;
FIN E FlJRS&#13;
OUR SPECIAL TY IS TO SATISFY&#13;
&#13;
We carry a complete line of&#13;
&#13;
5 I 2 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
Up-to-Date Clothing and Furnishing Goods at very lowest&#13;
prices. Visit our store when&#13;
in need of clothing.&#13;
&#13;
Over H. &amp; H. Shoe Store&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Olson's Grocery&#13;
&#13;
Ten per cent discount to&#13;
F acuity and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE PREPARED TO GIVE YOU PROMPT AND RELIABLE&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&amp;, A&#13;
ronson&#13;
710-712 FOURTH ST.&#13;
MASS MEETING&#13;
&#13;
SERVICE IN ALL KINDS OF GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
GIVE US A TRIAL AND BE CONVINCED&#13;
&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
Seldom Inn&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
Knights&#13;
&#13;
Motto-Ad hades cum sapientia&#13;
Colors-Blonde and brunette&#13;
Flower- Bachelor's Button&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
Allan Lemon, 'I 3 .... .. ...... . ............ .. ... .. . Grand High Chief Fusser&#13;
Stuart Noble, ' 00 (deceased) ........... . ....... Vice Grand High Chief Fusser&#13;
Horace Merten, 'I 3 ... ......................... Great Big Exalted Promulgator&#13;
Fizz Hornney, '15 ......... . ...... .. ... . .... ... .. .. .......... . . Steward&#13;
Elihu Shoemaker, '23 ..... .. .... . . ... .......... Vice Crafty Back Door Keeper&#13;
Clifford Jory, '15 .... . ........................ Right Masterful Band Leader&#13;
Bernard Brown, ' ? ....... . ........... .... .............. .. ..... Chaplain&#13;
Si Braley, '13 ................... .. . Mighty Glorified Janitor of the Whitehouse&#13;
Herman Lueder, 'I 5 ...... . . .. .. . . . ... .. .. .. . .. . Worthy Royal Master Archer&#13;
Mitchell Briggs, 'I 3 ..................... Chief Trusty Guardian of the Password&#13;
George Pratt, '21 .......................... Great Royal Imperial Head Mogul&#13;
Harry Bigglestone, '14 ....... . ..... . .. . .. . ..... ... Marvelous Chief Exemplar&#13;
Earl Knouse, 'I 6 .... .. ... . . . .... .. .. . ... . .... . ... Most Holy D evout Shriner&#13;
Ray Hess, '12 ..... ... . . ...... .... ............. Right Honorable Chancellor&#13;
MEMBER&#13;
Jacob Henry Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
ALFRED E. CRAIG, Ph. D., D. D., President&#13;
&#13;
Some Reasons for Attending Morningside College&#13;
(I)&#13;
&#13;
It is a standard College, whose graduates receive&#13;
recognition in the leading universities.&#13;
&#13;
(2)&#13;
&#13;
It has an able Faculty, who have been trained in the&#13;
leading universities of America and Europe.&#13;
&#13;
(3)&#13;
&#13;
It has an endowment of over $400,000.&#13;
&#13;
( 4)&#13;
&#13;
It is one of the few colleges of Iowa to pass the&#13;
scrutiny and receive the endorsement of the General Education Board of New York.&#13;
&#13;
(5)&#13;
&#13;
J. G. LEGLER&#13;
Morningside Dray&#13;
and Baggage Line&#13;
LIGHT AND HEAVY&#13;
&#13;
It has a vigorous student body, composed of young&#13;
men and young women from the best homes of the&#13;
Northwest.&#13;
&#13;
( 6)&#13;
&#13;
In all departments of intercollegiate interests such as&#13;
athletics, debates and oratory, Morningside holds&#13;
an enviable record.&#13;
&#13;
( 7)&#13;
&#13;
The location in a suburb of a prosperous city of fifty&#13;
thousand affords many advantages found only in&#13;
metropolitan centers.&#13;
&#13;
( 8)&#13;
&#13;
Expenses are as low as is consistent with the best work.&#13;
&#13;
DRAYING&#13;
&#13;
FURNITURE MOVED AND STORED&#13;
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO PACKING&#13;
PIANOS MOVED TO ANY PART OF THE CITY&#13;
&#13;
For catalogue and other information, address,&#13;
&#13;
SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS&#13;
&#13;
THE PRESIDENT&#13;
&#13;
Deliveries Prompt&#13;
Office Phone 6240&#13;
&#13;
Res. Phone 64 I 3&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
PIPER &amp; LARSON&#13;
&#13;
An Ode to Hippo&#13;
&#13;
ing an&#13;
Wh o liked to coax t he star at h lete&#13;
T o get out in a s ui t?&#13;
\Yh o likecl to holler , "Sh a ke it up!&#13;
You ' r e n o t wor t h a galoot!"&#13;
who liked to cuss the foo tba ll team&#13;
and fi ll t h em up wi t h fi gh t?&#13;
Who was it th at delayed&#13;
t b e ga me?&#13;
'Twas E wing-that's righ t.&#13;
Who was it with the cinders made&#13;
Our brand n ew indoor track ?&#13;
Who was i t made the b' ba ll fl oo r&#13;
T o fill a lon g f el t lack ?&#13;
Who was it wi t h a s h ovel, scooped&#13;
The s now fr om off our gy m ?&#13;
Who was t h e guy that did a ll t hi s:&#13;
'Twa s Ewing-th at's him.&#13;
&#13;
SCENE IN POLITICS II&#13;
&#13;
Who likes t o t ea ch us politics&#13;
Till each n ew m a n' s a mbi t ion&#13;
I s firs t to be a n athl ete stron g,&#13;
And t hen a politi cian ?&#13;
Who was it with his base ba ll t eam&#13;
Did old Vermilli on trim ?&#13;
Who is it that will get t h e ir goat?&#13;
Coach Ewin g- tha t' s him.&#13;
&#13;
eating&#13;
&#13;
FIRST C LASS WORK AT&#13;
&#13;
REASONA BLE PRICES&#13;
&#13;
ESTIMATES CHEER FULLY FURNISHED&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 6306&#13;
&#13;
191 7 St. Aubin Avenue&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 122 7&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
)&#13;
The best informed Live Stock Growers and Shippers&#13;
have found that the MOST NET MONEY 1 almost&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
NON-LEAKABLE&#13;
They never leak. They are filled and teated at the factory and&#13;
that same ink is in them when you buy them at the store. What&#13;
better proof could there be that Moore'• Fountain Pena never leak?&#13;
The traveler appreciates the fact that it is not necessary to carry&#13;
Moore's in an upright position. When the cap is screwed on the pen, it&#13;
is as tight as a bottle. Either end up or lying flat it cannot leak. There's&#13;
no joint to leak ink just where the fingers hold the pen.&#13;
As easy&#13;
to fill as a bottle, unscrew the cap and put in the ink. The ink flows evenly and freely. No shaking&#13;
needed. $2.50 and up, fine, medium and stub nibs. Write for circular.&#13;
&#13;
AMERICAN FOUNTAIN PEN COMPANY&#13;
ADAMS, CUSHING&amp; FOSTER, Selling Agents, 168 DEVONSHIRE STREET. BOSTON, MASS.&#13;
&#13;
invariably secured by shipping their stock to this market&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City Stock Yards&#13;
&#13;
Rachel Holm :&#13;
&#13;
"Those Nebraska debaters were too darned mild."&#13;
&#13;
Clay Products Company&#13;
Incorporated $1,000,000&#13;
MANUFACTURERS COMMON BUILDING BRIC K&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Campbell : " What is the best cure fo r a melancholy temperament?"&#13;
Lemon: "I should suggest the Orpheum."&#13;
&#13;
Sioux CITY, IOWA&#13;
7,500 Cars Annually&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Garver, answering a knock at the door:&#13;
Quarny, suddenly awaking: "Topic VI."&#13;
&#13;
Peifer, in Trig : "Then the formulae for x plus y and x minus y are the key notes&#13;
of the whole thing."&#13;
Prof. V an Horne: " Keynotes ! Why they are the whole tune."&#13;
Enter Miss Dahl.&#13;
&#13;
FOur&#13;
&#13;
"Mr. Quarnstrom. "&#13;
&#13;
"Dad" E vans sings, "Oh, You Great Big Beautiful Doll!"&#13;
&#13;
Miss Hadley : " Translate, 'I have never learned that.'&#13;
Mr. Hess : " Ich habe nie lerne das. "&#13;
Miss Hadley: " Mr. Hess, your nie (knee) is in the wrong place. "&#13;
Stranger.: "Peters Park, Peters Park- do they have animals out there? "&#13;
Resident : "None except students.''&#13;
&#13;
• SIOUX CITYBLUFFS&#13;
SARGJiJNTS&#13;
FactoriesCORRECTIONVILLE&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
WE MAKE&#13;
Vitrified&#13;
Glazed Drain&#13;
Tile&#13;
4 to 30 Inches&#13;
Glazed Wall&#13;
Coping&#13;
Glazed Face&#13;
Brick&#13;
Glazed&#13;
&#13;
Tile&#13;
&#13;
Well Curbing&#13;
Flue Linings&#13;
&#13;
P. T. Barnum, the Circus King&#13;
once said a fool was born&#13;
every second and none dieGeorge M. Cohan, the actor, sings a song called, "Barnum Had the Right Idea.'&#13;
&#13;
Partition Tile&#13;
Hollow Blocks&#13;
Fire Proofing&#13;
Impervious&#13;
Face Brick&#13;
&#13;
Some merchants think Barnum was a greater man than Abraham Lincoln.&#13;
Red Pressed&#13;
Face Brick&#13;
&#13;
Some merchants think they are running a circus.&#13;
&#13;
WE SOLICIT THE PATRONAGE OF WOMEN AND MISSES&#13;
THAT APPRECIATE STYLE AND KNOW VALUES&#13;
&#13;
Fire Brick&#13;
Fire Clay&#13;
Hollow Brick&#13;
&#13;
W. A. GILL CO.&#13;
.Miss&#13;
&#13;
LEILA DAWSON IN CHARG E&#13;
&#13;
Women's Ready-to-Wear&#13;
Section&#13;
THIRD FLOOR&#13;
&#13;
T he ','SOO'' SILO BLOX are absolutel y impervious to all weather conditions and no acid&#13;
I&#13;
known w ill affect them .&#13;
The "SOO" SILO BLOX are THOROUGHLY VITRIFIED, made to a circle, and have the&#13;
appearance of sewer p i pe. A s il o built from "SOO" SILO BLOX will l ast forever and is the&#13;
cheapest silo known, as it never has to be repl aced.&#13;
Note the A I R SPACES RUNNING VERTICALLY which assures PERFECT INSULATION against FROST, NOT FOUND I N ANY OTHER SILO.&#13;
WRITE US FOR PRICES&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
Special Attention Given to Fine&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE AND SCHOOL PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
The Monarch Printing Co.&#13;
COUNCIL BLUFFS, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Hess: " I have all but the last&#13;
verse of my debate learned."&#13;
&#13;
Warburton,&#13;
in Psych :&#13;
"When&#13;
scared, standing on the end of the&#13;
hair follows."&#13;
&#13;
Student :&#13;
"Professor, how can&#13;
you te ll the age of a pullet?"&#13;
Prof. Greynald : "By zie teeth."&#13;
Student: "But a pull et has no&#13;
teeth ."&#13;
Prof. Greynald:&#13;
"No, but I have."&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson : "If I should say,&#13;
'Has he a book,' what would you&#13;
say?"'&#13;
Bill Bass: "IIat er." (hot air).&#13;
&#13;
Dean Chandler, reading chapel announcements: "Miss E rickson will&#13;
lead Y. M. C. A. ton ight."&#13;
&#13;
THE WEST HOTEL&#13;
FRANK J. DONOHUE, PROPRIETOR&#13;
&#13;
JAY MACLARTY, MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
Corner Third and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
WITHIN TWO BLOCKS OF ALL RAILROAD STA TIO NS&#13;
&#13;
ROGERS AND PROF'. BROWN HA VE LITTLE BOUT&#13;
&#13;
Kingsbury : "Engla nd and France&#13;
sent out compan ies to discover the&#13;
United States."&#13;
&#13;
Two hundred forty-four rooms, one hundred forty with private bath.&#13;
&#13;
Authier&#13;
&#13;
LADIES' SUITS, CLOAKS, FURS,&#13;
MILLINERY&#13;
&#13;
"The Style Shop''&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Thirty large, well-lighted Sample Rooms with private bath.&#13;
Located in heart of wholesale and retail district, public buildings and theaters.&#13;
&#13;
FREEMAN AuTHIER, Proprietor&#13;
Convenient to all street cars.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY'S POPULAR STORE&#13;
5 13 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
European Plan.&#13;
Rates:&#13;
&#13;
Cadillac&#13;
Cars&#13;
Lights, Starts&#13;
and Ignites&#13;
Itself.&#13;
Manufactures&#13;
Its Own&#13;
Electricity.&#13;
&#13;
WYCOFF-CORD AUTOMOBILE CO., 409-411 4th St., Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
$1.00, without bath; $1.50 to $3.00 per day,&#13;
&#13;
private bath.&#13;
Three fine Cafes.&#13;
Twelveprivate Dining Rooms.&#13;
Cuisine unexcelled.&#13;
&#13;
THIRTEEN&#13;
You've often heard your grandma say&#13;
That thirteen is unlucky,&#13;
That woe and ruin shall mark the day&#13;
Despite the fact you're plucky.&#13;
&#13;
"Rickety, Rickety,&#13;
Rahl Rah! Rahl&#13;
Rackety, Rackety,&#13;
&#13;
It sure will bring calamity,&#13;
Misfortune, misery.&#13;
There's sure to be catastrophe&#13;
Wherever it may be.&#13;
&#13;
Wah Whoo Wah,&#13;
Boom-a-lacker Boom-a-lacker,&#13;
Ray! Ray! Ray!&#13;
DRINK SUPERB COFFEE&#13;
&#13;
If thirteen at one table eat,&#13;
&#13;
EVERY DAY."&#13;
&#13;
Of them one sure will die.&#13;
That Thirteen Club its fate will meet,&#13;
On that you can rely.&#13;
Yes, thirteen means mishap, distress,&#13;
Disaster dire, alas!&#13;
For us naught but unhappiness-The nineteen thirteen class.&#13;
But what care we for superstition,&#13;
We'll break this foolish hoodoo.&#13;
The thirteen states are demonstration&#13;
That that's no cause to boohoo.&#13;
For proof there's Mrs. Washington,&#13;
Who showed the thing would fail.&#13;
She raised a mottled cat for fun&#13;
With a thirteen ringed tail.&#13;
&#13;
STEEL CUT or&#13;
&#13;
So we'll go on and print our Sioux,&#13;
And risk adversity;&#13;
We've done our level best for you,&#13;
And sure tired women we.&#13;
&#13;
Whole Bean&#13;
&#13;
In 1 Pound Air&#13;
Tight Tins only,&#13;
AT YOUR GROCER'S&#13;
"AROUND THE CORNER."&#13;
&#13;
Fresh Cut Flowers on Hand Daily&#13;
ALL KINDS OF FLORAL EMBLEMS ON SHORT NOTICE&#13;
OuR PRICES ARE RIGHT&#13;
&#13;
ROCKLIN &amp; LEHMAN&#13;
Sioux City's Leading Florists&#13;
405 DOUGLAS STREET&#13;
&#13;
T olerton &amp; Warfield ·Co.&#13;
Sioux&#13;
&#13;
CORNER 4TH&#13;
&#13;
City, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The Adventuresof Alfred Kent in Wonderland&#13;
&#13;
We Invite&#13;
CHECKING ACCOUNTS&#13;
&#13;
(By 0. Gurez.)&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS ACCOUNTS&#13;
Alfred Kent, who was French, but yet a very Wiseman, rode forth on a Campbell&#13;
to Britton in Search of a Cook. As he turned the first Corner and came near the Edge&#13;
of the so-called King-land he met a Shoemaker. This Shoemaker had a good wife and&#13;
was trying to Carter. He came to a Stone in the road and Alfred had to help get her&#13;
over that. Soon she began to sing, "O Ma honey, 0 Ma honey."&#13;
Alfred was deeply wrought and pursued his journey. The next Day he came to&#13;
a Whitehouse where he left his Campbell for he was a swift Walker. The people who&#13;
lived in the house had seven dogs and their Barks were fierce. At the opening of a narrow Lane he stumbled over some Cobbs and fell. Alfred thought he would Crouch in&#13;
the Wood nearby and if a Cook happened by he would Hall her in. But since he could&#13;
Doolittle here he traveled farther.&#13;
Presently he .met John's son and decided to give him a trial at cooking. For the&#13;
first meal she prepared Bass suspended from a Beam and made Graham bread. The&#13;
bread was Raw and Alfred became very ill. A Nurse was called who gave him Lemon&#13;
juice and took from her Belt a Bell for him to ring when he needed anything. He was&#13;
Noble through his Payne and would often Wright Holm.&#13;
None of the people with whom he stayed could speak English. He sent for a&#13;
Bowman who came in covered with Blood and carrying three Brown Kuhns. He told&#13;
Howe he had found them in some Wells at the foot of a rocky Craig. Soon Alfred&#13;
received word that his Nease, whom he had thought he would never see any Mower, was&#13;
looking for him. Straightway Alfred fell to worrying for fear she would not recognize&#13;
him with his Long Beard and Hornney hands. The next day a Shreiner passing by&#13;
stopped and convinced Alfred by means of a mystic Webb that he was not sick. Accordingly that night he tied the sheet on his bed in several Knotts, slid to the ground, and, following a Rowe of elm trees, found his way back to Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
TIME DEPOSITS&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
STATE SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
SOUTHEAST CORNER FOURTH AND JAC KSON STREETS&#13;
&#13;
Drafts and Money Orders Sold&#13;
Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent&#13;
Checks and Drafts Cashed on&#13;
Satisfactory Identification.&#13;
THE USE OF OUR WAITING&#13;
ROOM IS FREE TO ALL&#13;
&#13;
OPEN SATURDAY EVENNGS&#13;
FROM&#13;
7 T O 9 O' CL OCK&#13;
&#13;
Good Country Butter and&#13;
Nice Fresh Eggs&#13;
&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
HESE two very desirable table necessities c_n always be secured&#13;
a&#13;
in any quantity without a tiresome trip into the country.&#13;
Mr. A . J . Porter of Morningside recently purchased the store&#13;
owned by Schlosser' s.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Porter in the capacity of a wholesale grocery salesman had&#13;
been selling goods to this store for nearly twenty-five years. He was no&#13;
stranger to the store's business but the very first day that Mr. Porter was&#13;
in the store he was pleased beyond his highest hopes at the amount of&#13;
eggs and Fresh D airy Butter that came from the country.&#13;
The store maintains a very adequate delivery system.&#13;
If you do not live in the vicinity of the store, just step to the nearest&#13;
'phone.&#13;
&#13;
PORTER'S&#13;
SUCCESSOR TO ScHLOSSER's&#13;
&#13;
The Last of the Sioux&#13;
&#13;
Phones:&#13;
&#13;
Auto 6 127; Iowa 519.&#13;
&#13;
2001 Lakeport Ave., MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Alumni&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
...... . ........ .. .. . ... 161&#13;
&#13;
Ath letics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Baseball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Basketball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Football . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Track . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Indoor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Outdoor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
67&#13;
59&#13;
37&#13;
38&#13;
42&#13;
37&#13;
&#13;
Calendar . . ..... .. . . . . ......... 19 3&#13;
April ..... . . ... . . ... . ....... 194&#13;
December ............ . ... 212-215&#13;
F ebruary ................ 220-223&#13;
Interim .................... . 198&#13;
January ... ..... . . . .. . .... 216- 219&#13;
June .. . ..... ... . . ... .... . . .. 197&#13;
Mar ch . . ...... . . ..... . .. . 224-227&#13;
May ...... . .... . ..... . . . 195-196&#13;
November ....... . . . ... . .. 208-211&#13;
October ..... . . .. ..... . .. 204-207&#13;
September ..... . .. .... . . ..... 203&#13;
Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Freshmen ... ....... ..&#13;
Juniors . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Seniors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Sophomores ..... . .....&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
. . . . . 83&#13;
. .... 107&#13;
. . . . . 89&#13;
. . . . . 83&#13;
... .. 10 5&#13;
&#13;
Dedication&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
Departme nts .... .. ............. 141&#13;
Academy .. ...... .. . .... .. ... 143&#13;
Expression ......... . ......... 1 5 9&#13;
Music ...... . ...... ... ....... 155&#13;
Teachers' Training Course ..... . 1 5 7&#13;
Expected Criticisms&#13;
&#13;
.........&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Foreword .... . . . .. ...... .&#13;
&#13;
Page&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Frontispiece . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
Greeting to Dr. Craig. . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
History of Morningside College. . . . . 12&#13;
Jok es ... . ........... . ......... 229&#13;
Literary . . . .&#13;
. ....... .. .. . 16 5&#13;
A Chapel Incide nt ....... .. .... 177&#13;
A Chemical Catastrophe .... .. . . 169&#13;
A Lament .. . .. .. ...... ...... 185&#13;
A Sonnet .... ..... ·...... ..... 174&#13;
Die Jahreszeiten ..... . .. . .... . 17 5&#13;
Earl Mason's Choice ............ l 7 0&#13;
Every Stud ent . .. ... .. .... . ... l 82&#13;
R ecollections of An An cient Freshman .. ... . . ........... . ... 176&#13;
The Jo u rney .................. 181&#13;
There Was a Time ... .. .. ...... 166&#13;
The Stud ent's Tale . ..... .. .. .. . 179&#13;
Zet. Novelette ... .. .. .. ....... 186&#13;
Organizations ... ... ... ......... 111&#13;
Academ y R eading Clu b ......... 112&#13;
Annual Board . . .......... .... 118&#13;
Band .. . ....... . ... . ........ 116&#13;
Collegian R eporter ... . . ... .. . . 11 7&#13;
Debate League .. .. ........ ... 114&#13;
Faculty Club . . . . .. .. . ...... . . 112&#13;
Glee Club .... .. ...... . ....... 11 5&#13;
M. Club ........ ... . . . ....... 1 22&#13;
Oratorical Association ......... 113&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Association 11&#13;
Volunteer Band ... ....... . ... 119&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet ....... . .... 121&#13;
Y. W. C. A. Cabin et . . .... . ... . l 20&#13;
&#13;
Faculty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23&#13;
&#13;
Publishers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
Fore nsics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Academy Inter-society Debate . . .&#13;
Home Oratorical Contest . . . . . . .&#13;
Home P eace Oratorical Con test. . .&#13;
Home Prohibition Oratorical Contest ..... . ..... . . .. . . ... . . .&#13;
In ter-Academic Debate . . . . . . . .&#13;
In ter-Collegiate Debates . . .&#13;
Inter-Society Debates . . . .&#13;
R ecords .. . .. . ... . ... .. ......&#13;
State Oratorical Contest . . . . . . . .&#13;
State P eace Oratorical Contest. . .&#13;
State Prohi bition Oratorical Contest .............. . ........&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
78&#13;
72&#13;
74&#13;
82&#13;
79&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
Societies ....... .... . ...... ..... 1 2 5&#13;
Adelphian .. .... . . .. ..... . ... 148&#13;
Aesthesia n .. . ...... . ......... 146&#13;
Aletheia ..... ... .... ..... .... 13 8&#13;
Athenaeum .. . ... . .. .. ..... .. 126&#13;
Crescent ...... . ... ........... 1 50&#13;
Hawkeye . .... . .... . ... . ..... 152&#13;
Ionian ... ... . . .. ... . . ... .. .. 1 32&#13;
Oth'Onian . ...... .... . ........ 1 36&#13;
Philomathean ...... . . .. .... . . 12 8&#13;
Pieria ...... . ................ 1 30&#13;
Zetaleth ean .. . .... . .... . .. . . . 13 4&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
Trustees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22&#13;
&#13;
71&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
79&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Edit&#13;
View Public Page&#13;
Item&#13;
Sioux (1913), The&#13;
&#13;
Direct Links&#13;
Original&#13;
Fullsize&#13;
Thumbnail&#13;
Square Thumbnail&#13;
Format Metadata&#13;
Filename:&#13;
6f86c2983258dd25dded37ecbca5a755.pdf&#13;
Original Filename:&#13;
Sioux_SYB_1913_01-01_02.pdf&#13;
File Size:&#13;
54318594 bytes&#13;
File History&#13;
Date Added&#13;
Nov 30, 2016&#13;
Date Modified&#13;
Nov 30, 2016&#13;
Authentication&#13;
ae7319dff20c367e4eccdf88264220f6&#13;
Type Metadata&#13;
Mime Type:&#13;
application/pdf&#13;
File Type / OS:&#13;
PDF document, version 1.6&#13;
Embedded Metadata&#13;
mime_type: application/pdf&#13;
Output Formats&#13;
omeka-json&#13;
omeka-xml&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
J. Henry Winterringer &#13;
Earl Knouse &#13;
Robert E. Smylie&#13;
 Earl C. Warburton &#13;
William A. McCurdy&#13;
 Paul Eifert &#13;
Ben Holbert Jr.&#13;
 James H. Lewis &#13;
D. Lawrence Wickens Robert R. Vernon Guy D. McKinney Barrett P. Dolliver pg. &#13;
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                <text>Morningside College Yearbook</text>
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                <text>The Sioux is the official Morningside College Annual yearbook. Publication began in 1901, and continued intermittently until 2004. The 1913 yearbook contains pictures, short articles, sporting results, and other college news and events related to this particular year</text>
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                    <text>���YEAR BOOK OF MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF 1912&#13;
&#13;
MAY, 1911&#13;
&#13;
�-·-·-·-·-·-&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
dedicate&#13;
to our dean,&#13;
Levi Chandler A.M.,&#13;
&#13;
this volume&#13;
Sidney&#13;
&#13;
in tokenof&#13;
of him.s&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
our&#13;
&#13;
appreciation&#13;
&#13;
Christian&#13;
&#13;
a noble&#13;
&#13;
man of unusual magnanimity&#13;
&#13;
and poise a just administrator, n inspiring&#13;
a&#13;
and a sympathetic&#13;
&#13;
friend.&#13;
&#13;
::;;;DEAN SIDNEY L. CHANDLER, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
teacher&#13;
&#13;
�OFFICERS OF THE&#13;
BOARD OF TRUSTEES&#13;
&#13;
0. W.&#13;
C. W.&#13;
Literary&#13;
Lola Raw&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
Rob't Smyli e&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Florence Anthony&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Wi cke n s&#13;
&#13;
Edna Reik e&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
J. H . Lewis&#13;
&#13;
TOWNER,&#13;
PAYN E,&#13;
&#13;
]. C.&#13;
&#13;
LOCKIN,&#13;
&#13;
EMMA&#13;
&#13;
L. ] .&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
. F.&#13;
&#13;
F. G&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
.J. A. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Louise McDonald&#13;
&#13;
DAHL,&#13;
&#13;
HASKINS,&#13;
&#13;
D . EMPEY,&#13;
&#13;
]. G.&#13;
&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SHOEMAKER,&#13;
&#13;
Pres.&#13;
V . Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Sect'y&#13;
Ass 't Sect' y&#13;
Treas.&#13;
&#13;
Field Sect'y&#13;
Auditor&#13;
&#13;
Busin ess Manager&#13;
D P. Mahoney&#13;
&#13;
in Chief&#13;
Elwick&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
G ladys Tuttl e&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Cartoon&#13;
Myrtle Seifert&#13;
&#13;
Photographel'&#13;
John Fair&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
�8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
�PROGRAM&#13;
Rev. Charles Macauley Stuart, D. D., Litt. D ., LL. D., Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
LUTHER FREEMAN, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Sonata- C Minor .......... . ....... . . . ... . ... . . . .... . . . Felix M endelssohn&#13;
Organ Prelude.&#13;
Choral Song and Fugue .... ..... ......... .. . .. . ... .. ...... .. S. S. Wesley&#13;
Mr. Herbert Macfarren, A. R. A . M:&#13;
Processional Hymn-"Holy, Holy, Holy."&#13;
Invocation . ... .... .. . .. .. . . .. . . ... ... . .... . . R ev. Bennett Mitchell, D . D.&#13;
Address of Welcome ... . . .. . .. . ....... ... ... Dean Sidney L. Chandler, A M .&#13;
Roll Call of Delegates ... .. ... . ....... . . . Professor H enry F. Kanthlener, A M .&#13;
Response in Behalf of the D elegates .. .. ............ Rev. Edwin A Schell, D . D .&#13;
Chorus- " O Clap Your H ands" .. .... ............ . . .. .. .... ... . ... Turner&#13;
The College Choir&#13;
Prayer . . ...... . .. . . ......... .... . ...... .. Rev. James Lewis Gillies, A B.&#13;
Induction . .. . . .. ....... . Hon. 0. W . Towner, President of the Board of Trustees&#13;
Acceptance ... . . . ....... . ....... .. . . .... .. . President Luther Freeman, D. D.&#13;
Hymn- "Faith of Our Fathers."&#13;
Inaugural Address .. .. . . ..... ... . . . .. . .. . ... President Luther Freeman, D. D.&#13;
Address .. . .. .. . . ..... . . . . . .. . . . ... . .. ...... .. .... ... Bishop M cDowell&#13;
Benediction . ... . . ........ ..... . .. ...... R ev. Wm. Campbell Wasser, Ph. D.&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
�INAUGURAL ADDRESS&#13;
INSTITUTIONS REPRESENTED AT DR. FREEMAN'S&#13;
INAUGURATION&#13;
State of Iowa, Department of Public Instruction, State of Iowa, The City of&#13;
Sioux City, H arva rd University, Yale University, Columbia University, Willia ms College, Princeton University, Allegheny College, Colga te University, McGill University,&#13;
Mt. Holyoke College, Wesleyan University, Union Theological Seminary, D epauw&#13;
University, Iowa Wesleyan University, Ohio Wesleyan University, University of Iowa,&#13;
Grinnell College, University of Wisconsin, Wes tern College for Women, B eaver College,&#13;
Hamlin University, Northwestern University, Cornell College, Upper Iowa University,&#13;
Vassar College, Carlton College, Simpson College, Tabor College, University of West&#13;
Virginia, Wellesley College, German Wallace College, Boston University, Coe College,&#13;
Yankton College, University of South D akota, Bellevue College, University of North&#13;
Dakota, Goucher College, Dakota Wesleyan University, University of C hicago.&#13;
&#13;
THE PRESIDENT'S&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
HOME&#13;
&#13;
DR . LUTHER FREEMAN&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Stuart, President of the Board of Trustees, Delegates, Trustees, Alumni, Ladies&#13;
and Gentlemen:&#13;
It is und erstoo d by a ll , of co ur se,. t ha t th e pagea nt a nd welco m e and di stin cti o n of&#13;
thi s day a r e g ive n no t to any pa rt icul a r pe rso n , bu t as a tribut e to th at whi ch h as b ee n&#13;
feli cito usly den o min ated, o u r na ti o nal id ol," ed ucati o n .&#13;
Alth o ug h p erso nality is di st in ctl y in th e bac kgro und . we m u st recog ni ze th at th e&#13;
type and qu ality of th e edu cat io n characte ri sti c of a n in stit ut io n is la r ge ly depend ent upon&#13;
th e perso na lity wh ic h shap es its po li cy. It is, th e r efo re. quite fittin g, a nd certainly a&#13;
di stinct p erso nal pl eas ure, to r ecogni ze th e ve ry g r eat se r vice r end e r ed to the educati o nal&#13;
inter ests of thi s sectio n by m y ho no r ed predecesso r who, throu g h practi call y all -th e year s&#13;
o f Mo rnin gs id e Co llege, ha s bee n its in s pirat io n and leade r. W e all reg r et m ost sin ce r ely&#13;
th e prov id en ce th at m a kes it n ecessa ry fo r us thi s day to do with o ut th e presen ce o f th e&#13;
eloqu ent and states m a nlik e edu ca to r, Bi sh op Wilson Seeley L ewi s. P erhap s, howe ver,&#13;
th e spirit o f M ornings id e is pictur ed all th e m o r e vividly by hi s a b se nc e; for M o rnings ide, whil e very di stin ctly , and to a remar ka bl e exte nt, th e child o f a special locality, has&#13;
always r ecogni zed a wo rld -w ide mi ssio n . Th er e is hardl y a land a nyw here beyo nd th e&#13;
r each of its imm ediat e influ enc e ; fo r Mo rnin gs id e bo ys and g irl s ha ve go ne to th e end s.&#13;
of th e ea rth to tell m e n of " th e li fe th at is life indeed. "&#13;
Whil e th e fr eq uency of such occas io n s rend ers uniqu e or ori g in al ut terance o n edu ca ti o nal pro bl em s impossibl e, it see m s fittin g that, wi t h th e beginnin g o f a coll ege admin istrati o n, th ose to who m th e sha pin g o f its p olicy is co mmitted sho uld be ex pected to&#13;
indicate, in o utlin e, th e id eal s th at sho uld in th eir jud g m ent, do min ate th e wo rk o f th e&#13;
in stitution.&#13;
It is a ll th e m o re fittin g at thi s tim e th at a wo rd o f de fen se sho uld be spo ken becau se o f th e fa ct th at th e coll eges of th e U nit ed States have bee n und er fir e of late.&#13;
Whil e we ha ve wo rshipp ed edu cati o n in th e ab stract with blind devo tio n, declaring th at&#13;
it is th e sove r eig n panac ea fo r all o ur nati o nal ill s, fo r th e bani shm ent o f po ve rty, th e&#13;
ass imilati o n o f th e fo r eig n er, th e e radicati o n o f th e liqu o r evil , th e solution of th e rac e&#13;
pro bl em, a nd th e final cr ea t o r of do m es tic t ranquili ty, we find o ur colleges bitterl y&#13;
criticised.&#13;
Pres id ent Butl er ·say s: " Th e A meri ca n coll ege hardl y exi st s nowad ays a nd , unless&#13;
a ll sign s ·mi slead , th ose wh o want it back in all its u seful excell encies will ha ve to fi g ht&#13;
fo r it vigo rou sly. Th e milk and wa ter sub stitut e and th e fi at uni ve rsity th at have take n&#13;
th e pl ace of th e coll ege a r e pretty poo r r et urn s fo r what we have lost."&#13;
Th e ch a r ges a r e many and o fte n co ntradict o ry . S o m eon e has di sco ver ed th at&#13;
th e colleges ar e hotb eds o f eve ry kind o f h er esy, th at th e faith o f o ur fath ers is bein g&#13;
so r ely impe ril ed by th e frankn ess of th e teachin g , es pec iall y th e scientific teachin g, now&#13;
being g ive n in our class roo m s. On th e o th er hand we ar e told th a t we ar e so bo und&#13;
by th e old faith s and creeds as to be un a bl e t o g ive th at breadth and catholi city of&#13;
thought necessary t o develo p th e po ise and judg m ent essential t o th e largest p er so nality.&#13;
One day we a re char ged with dr ea my ideali sm , th e nex t we ar e said to lay o ur empha sis&#13;
upon foo tball , we ig ht thr o win g and ge neral ath leti cs, until th e aim see m s to be a sch ola r ship of mu scl e and a vo irdupo is. Promin ent r eprese ntati ves o f th e bu siness wo rld a r e&#13;
tellin g us th at our g raduat es are ineffic ient, that mu ch whi ch has bee n lea rned in co ll ege&#13;
has to be unl earn ed befo r e a boy is of pa rti cul a r value as an empl oye in on e of o ur&#13;
m ercantil e ho u ses. Sch ola rs declar e th at th e pass io n fo r sc holarship is a thin g of th e&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
�past; that o ur g rad uat es lack the stamp of real culture; that th e bookkeepe r is more&#13;
ho n o r ed th an Browning, a nd Ben Pitman o utrank s Plato-and so meo ne ha s suggested&#13;
the raising of a comm iss io n to asce r tain the actual percentage of illite rate s among college matriculants. If we a re no t co nd em ned becau se of th e things we teach, we are&#13;
co n sign ed by some special ist to eve rl asting co nd emnati o n for the things we d o not teach .&#13;
At the sa m e time money has been poured o ut of public a nd private purse for th e building&#13;
a nd end owi ng of institutions of learni n g in a manner ec lipsin g anything known in the&#13;
hi sto ry of mankind. And in t hi s m unifi ce nce the coll ege has enj oy ed m ost generous&#13;
recognition.&#13;
We may appropr iate ly in quire: What do we mean by education? What end is it&#13;
intended to serve? Do we propose to eq uip its beneficiaries to win the world's financial&#13;
prizes, o r do we propose to create an inte ll ectual aristocracy? I s o ur aim culture for&#13;
culture's sake, o r are we seek in g technical sc h o larship ? What shall be o ur answer?&#13;
W e sha ll not be sat isfied with a ny a n swe r that is not stated in term s of life. How&#13;
to li ve is th e question. The pragmatist is a bso lu te ly correct at thi s point. I cannot do&#13;
better than quote this m emorable pa ssage from H e rb ert Spencer: " How to live?-that&#13;
is th e esse ntial question fo r us. No t how to liv e in th e m e re material sense only, but in&#13;
the widest se nse . Th e ge ne ra l problem which comprehends all spec ial probl em s is-the&#13;
right rulin g of conduct in a ll directions under all c ircum stan ces. In what way to tr eat&#13;
the body; in what way to treat th e mind: in what way to manage our affairs; in what&#13;
way t o brin g up a family: in what way t o behave as a citizen; in what way to utilize all&#13;
th ose so urces of happin ess which natur e suppli es-how to u se all o ur facultie s to the&#13;
great est advantage to o ur se lves a nd ot he r s ?-how to live completely? And thi s being&#13;
the g r eat thin g nee dful for us to learn is by consequence th e great thing which education&#13;
ha s to teac h . To prepare us for co m plete li ving is th e function which education ha s t o&#13;
discharge; and the o nly ration a l mod e of judging of any e ducational course is to judge&#13;
in wha t d eg r ee it discharges s uch a function."&#13;
Has the co ll ege an esse ntial pl ace in th e work of giving our young peo ple such&#13;
ed ucation? W e do not hes it a t e t o answer with an e mph a tic affirmative. It is not&#13;
possible for th e hi g h sc hoo l by multiplyin g its co ur ses to give anything like an equivalent&#13;
for th e work of the fir st years of the college. Th e atmosphere of the high sc hool due to&#13;
the immaturity of the st ud ent body is quite di stinct from that of th e college. So diffe re nt mu s t high sc hoo l m et hods be that the bett er co ll eges cannot give credit for&#13;
co ur ses parallel to their ow n. which ha ve been pursued in the secondary institutio n. W e&#13;
are in sy mpath y with the broader co nc ep ti o n o f th e high sc hool. It mu st no t be look ed&#13;
upo n as exc lu sively a fitting sc hool fo r the college. Doubtless th e stat e sh o uld rec ognize&#13;
an o bli gat io n to give in creasin g consideration t o that large percentage of high scho o l&#13;
stud ent s who have no expec tat ion of goi n g furth e r. It may o ff er ' so me elementary&#13;
technical co ur ses , but it ca n g ive no acceptabl e sub st itute fo r the cultural courses and&#13;
atmosphere of the r ea l college.&#13;
On the oth e r hand. th e sp irit of th e uni ve r s ity is not th e spirit of the college. The&#13;
univ er sity e mph as izes tec hni ca l sc ho larship: th e co ll ege. broad and catholic culture. The&#13;
university adapts its work a nd di sc iplin e to th e mature student to whom th e la rges t lib er ty sho uld a lways be g iv en. Int en sive work. na rr owed to th e chosen spec ialty, is it s aim .&#13;
Th e college take s st ud ent s in th e lat er ado lesce nt period a nd is charged with the re sponsibility of sha ping the int ell ect ual and m o ral natur e, into harm o ny with the true st ideal s&#13;
of life. It must a im continually to pr od uc e th e we ll-round ed personality. Sch o larship in&#13;
the technical se n se is a s ub o r d inat e consideration. Th e n o n se n se of the irrespon si ble&#13;
boy must be tra n sformed into genuine serio u sness. His work mu st in s pire him with&#13;
hea rty interest. a nd life must be fill ed with a worthy purpose. Whil e th e fr ee liberty of&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
univer sity life mu st be de ni ed him at this period, he mu st recog ni ze th e necess ity of&#13;
facing for him self great moral problems a nd accepting the consequences. The rea l college will not seek to go beyond its legitim ate sphere in eit he r direction&#13;
It will ask th e&#13;
seco ndary school to give thorough grounding in the fundamentals a nd in that painstaking&#13;
drill without which th e stude nt must always walk with uncertain steps. It will aim to&#13;
help youth to se lf- conscio usness through in te ll ect ua l training; to teach th e m to think for&#13;
th em se lv es; to acquaint t hem wit h the great curre nt s of hi st o ry and th e m o r e importa nt&#13;
fact s of th e world in which we now liv e; to adjust them t o the wo rld of activity so that&#13;
th ey shall co m e to la r gest se lf-hoo d and the maximum of u sefuln ess, and then se nd th e m&#13;
on to th e univ ersity to purs ue their ch osen profession. Th e college is still a n ecess ity.&#13;
Until within a few years the courses of st udy in o ur co ll eges we r e so uniform that&#13;
the bac helor's d egree s ignifie d a ce rtain very definite amount of particular wo rk. A&#13;
few years ago a brilliant ed ucato r sta rtl ed the o ld time co ll eges o ut of the routine by&#13;
proclaiming th e woodenness of the syste m of prescribed co ur ses. So e loquently did h e&#13;
preach a nd so lo gica ll y did h e maintain the exce ll encies of an electi ve syste m , th a t the old&#13;
landmarks were oblit er ate d. Th e stud ent was given th e widest po ss ibl e la titu de in&#13;
choosing the co ur ses which he particularly fa nc ied, or, if he was of a n indol e nt di spos ition, th e courses in which h e might mo st eas il y sec ure c redit s. Now, we see a di stinct&#13;
s winging of the pendulum in the o th er direction. It ha s co m e to be recog ni zed that a&#13;
course which costs th e stude nt littl e is worth littl e to the student. Th e s tudent from&#13;
the high sc hoo l is ve ry inadequately suppli ed with that vision an d per spectiv e necessary&#13;
to make wi se choice of offered courses. From all s id es we are hea ring an outcry because o f th e lac k of e nthu s iasm for r ea l sc h o larship , a nd those who beli eve that th e&#13;
electiv e syste m ha s been car ri ed to a n unwi se ex tre m e do no t hes itate to ascribe much&#13;
of o ur mental s loth t o the habi t of d o in g o nly the thin gs that are congenial.&#13;
The old sys t em with its pr esc rib ed co ur ses was und o ubt edly open to grave o bjection.&#13;
No tw o mind s are precisely alik e, and you ca n no m ore get sc holar ship of the bes t type&#13;
out of a cast-iron r eg im e than yo u ca n get th e best speed from fifty colts by driving&#13;
them in a drove around the race track. Th e co ur se wa s t oo narrow ; it confined itself&#13;
almost exclusively to the a nci ent lan g uages, m a th ematic s, phil oso phy and a typ e of hi story that wa s hardly more th an a set of ch ronicl es. But we mu st say in d efe nse of&#13;
this regime that th e curri culum cove r ed pretty well th e knowl edge then c urr ent among&#13;
men. The world of sc ien ce a nd the m ode rn m ethod s of sc ientific investigati o n were as&#13;
yet unknown. We mu st remember that Har va rd began its work one hundred fifty years&#13;
before Priest ly a nd Lav o isier had r evea led th e my st e rie s of chemistry and Hutton and&#13;
Cuvier had aroused th e world t o a n inte r est in paleontology and geology, o r A dam Smith&#13;
in hi s " W ea lth of Nations" had sh ow n men that th er e were law s underlyin g th e soc ial&#13;
movements of humanity . This was o ne hundred years before Linnaeus had awakened&#13;
men to the study of botany a nd zoo lo gy, and fifty years befor e L ock e had written hi s&#13;
·' Human Understanding" and made possible modern philosophy a nd m o d ern hi story.&#13;
But, crude as it was, this m eth o d acco mpli sh ed marvels fo r tho se who s ubmitted themse lv es to it. W e are not in a mood for despising the atta inm ent s o f the lawyers, state sm en, preach e r s and poets who were the product of the sc hoo ls o f those o lden tim es.&#13;
Those m e n studi ed logic and mathematics, a nd as a r es ult th ey could think. Th ey could&#13;
think cl ea rly and persistently, an d they co uld draw co nclu sio n s and defe nd th e m . They&#13;
had power not o nly t o think, but they had power to give ex press io n t o their thought s;&#13;
and we should be quite gratified if we co uld produce in o ur in st ituti o n a few men with&#13;
th e ability t o write as clearly, think as closely, o r speak with th e force a nd eloq uenc e&#13;
of the m en who lifted th e last century to hi g h leve ls.&#13;
In th ese day s we are callin g fo r co ur ses that shall permit the stud ent to work a lo n g&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
�the line of least resi stance. We talk a bo ut adaptation, th e awakening of interest, and&#13;
considerin g the bent o f th e indi vidual mi nd. W e eliminate t he spur of discipline a nd&#13;
sharp competitio n and g ive the sugar pl um of a pleasant diversion. In sho rt, we ar e&#13;
askin g that the m ethods which m ay be tole rabl e in t he k indergarten be ca rried through&#13;
the secondary course and finally into the college. As a r esult we ha ve inaccurate scholarship, loose thinking, a smattering of superficial information, d ilettante culture, and positive paralysis in th e presence of problems that require r eal o riginality. A real coll ege&#13;
course wi ll awaken do rmant capacities, develop th e sense of responsibility, teach accuracy&#13;
and create sturdy self-co nfid ence. It can not do thi s by making the college like Tenn yso n's valley o f Avili on ··Wher e fall s not ra in no r hail no r any snow;" _&#13;
but it m ust have&#13;
its rules and r egulatio n s, it must di scipline, a nd it must compel the proper perform ance&#13;
of r easonabl e tasks. T her e is n o royal road to mental po we r and mastery. T he r e is no&#13;
way but the hard way leading to the end. The do ing of t he positi vely distasteful is&#13;
necessary. Holding o ne's self without com promise to the undes irable task is impe rat ive.&#13;
The unpromisin g student cri es for sympathetic patience when he needs th e discipline of&#13;
hardness. It is o ur business to prepa re the student to live in the actual wo rld an d th ere&#13;
he will n ot find con cessio n a nd compromise the prevailing spi rit. H e must meet thin gs&#13;
as th ey are, he must t ranslate hi s ideals into life without a ''pony" and solve t he difficul t&#13;
problems without a "key." The world will not always excuse and tol erate his inefficiency&#13;
because h e is "so fasc inating." Unl ess he lea rn s h ow to lift the heavy burdens a nd&#13;
st rike the ha rd blow and defend him self, th e chariots of civilization will r oll ove r him&#13;
and h e will be cru sh ed. If he does not li ke math ematics it is because it is not ea sy for&#13;
him to think accurately and continuo usly. That is just the r easo n why mathem at ics&#13;
sho uld be taken. Metaphysics is see mingly impossible at fir st because we have not&#13;
learned to think outside o f se nse pheno mena. Abstr act think in g is not so simple as&#13;
handling the co ncrete, but no man gets far until h e has acquired thi s power. Therefore&#13;
ph ilosophy and metaphysics have th eir place and no student sho uld b e allowed to shirk&#13;
t hi s kind of work. Has a student no fac ulty for seei ng t hings? Has his po wer of&#13;
obse rvation never bee n culti vated ? W ould he rather r ead poet ry than strain hi s eyes by&#13;
car efu l attenti o n to t he microscope? That is the reaso n why he sho uld have courses in&#13;
t he labo rato ry and t rain him self to observe accurately and patiently. How few o f us&#13;
a re a ble to see eve n th oug h we a ppear to have eyes! For how many years m en have&#13;
looked upo n th e mosquito as simply a disagreeable nocturnal visitor. H e has bee n tol erated and we ha ve looked upo n hi s torments as havi ng no more significance t ha n a&#13;
tempo rary irritation of the e pidermi s. T hen some o ne. had wi t eno ug h to n ote the co nn ectio n between the mosquito and a dread di sease, and suddenly the m osquito is seen to&#13;
be more dangero us to humanity than all th e veno mo us snakes ever di scovered. The&#13;
educated m a n is t he man who can hold hismelf to th e unpleasant, unattract'ive task. Cont ro l of o ne's facul ties-that is the goal ! It is said that S enato r Edmond s could loo k at a&#13;
fly o n a barn doo r fo r thirty minutes and nev er see th e barn door ! I t is no wo nder&#13;
that he made hi s way to a place of almost unmatch ed in fl uence in th e hi gh est legislati ve&#13;
body in the la nd and that his advice had much to do with shaping o ur more significant&#13;
national m ovement s fo r a third of a century.&#13;
The degree of a man' s real educatio n is determ ined by hi s p ower of vo lunta ry&#13;
rather than spontaneuos attentio n. I t h in k we can see t he tendency of the loose, easy&#13;
go in g methods of th e m odern sch ool amo ng th e masses of th e people. The real lecture&#13;
platform was o nce popular. The people flocked to hear such m en as W endell Ph illips,&#13;
Henry Ward Beecher and Ralph W aldo E m erson di scuss great question s in a great way.&#13;
T o day the buffoon has th e crowd. The Ch auta uqua of old, with its courses of ge nuin e&#13;
study, attractin g th e multiude, ha s degene r ated into a pious vaudeville. Men do no t&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
want to think. Th ey cannot th ink. They ha ve not been taugh t to hold their m inds to&#13;
anything tha t d id not con t in ue to inte r est t hem . Volunta ry, continuous think ing is a&#13;
burden to th em. B ut t here is no other way to work out q uali ty in thought or character, but by th e ha rd way.&#13;
We have new proble ms in church and state and school and domestic life t o solve.&#13;
We need some me n to do it. We need m en who do not stagger along on crutches,&#13;
lean on auth o ri ties, foll o w m ajo r ities; n ot th e lazy and the thrift less, but men who know&#13;
h ow to wo rk, and work hard, and never qui t . It is the bus iness of the college to demand courses st rict en o ugh. and va r ied en o ugh, to g ive this trai nin g . By our m odified&#13;
elective course, with its system of maj ors and mino rs, we ai m to give the st udent a&#13;
symmetrical develo pment. He must ta ke en o ugh of the cla ssics, ancient and m odern,&#13;
to give that indefinable someth ing so characteristic of the E nglish universities which we&#13;
call culture. H e m ust gi ve enou g h time to t he study of th e scie nces to produce something of th at wh ich is cha r acteristic of the Ger man system o f ed ucation, which we call&#13;
scholarship. A nd y et his m ajo r mu st be carried far enough t o make him, in so m e measure, at hom e in so me wo rt hy fi eld of sch ola rly investi gation.&#13;
When a student has taken a pa rticula r cou rse there a re two tests that can be&#13;
applied to it, t he t echnical an d the ph ilosoph ica l. As an ill ust ration: A student has&#13;
been studying a m o de rn languag e. Afte r a reaso nable length of tim e it is fair to ask for&#13;
results. We have a right to expect that the student shall be abl e to interpret th e m eaning of symbo ls which hereto fore were no mo re t han hie r ogly phics. N ot only m ust he be&#13;
able to read t he lan guage with a certain degree of accu racy, but he should be able to put&#13;
simple th o ughts of his own in to the fore ign tong ue. Woul d it not be reasonable to expect him to un derstand what is said to hi m by one speakin g t hat language a nd make&#13;
suitable reply in t he la ngua g e of the interrogato r? This is th e tech nical r esult. F ailure&#13;
to meet this test wo uld just ify a condemnati o n of the meth od of t he teache r o r the&#13;
ability of the student.&#13;
But there is also a philoso p hical test. Th is is not qui te so easy of applicatio n, but&#13;
it is quite as real and searching. S uppo se that t he course has been one in history. W hat&#13;
is the test?&#13;
Not&#13;
whether the studen t remem bers certain da tes and can recite unrelated&#13;
facts, but, has he so mastered th e life and spirit of the people and age which he ha s&#13;
been studying as to have for med a r easo nably accur ate pictu r e o f t he civilization o f t hat&#13;
time? Has he g one beneath th e surface of su perfi cial fact s and fou nd there the t h robbing life? Can he interpret the age in intelligible term s ? This r eq ui r es tho ught and&#13;
insigh t. This is t he philosophical te st. I n so m e measu r e th ese tests are appli ca ble to&#13;
every course; an d the teacher who do es not bring satisfactory r esults should co unt&#13;
himself incompeten t .&#13;
It is in te resting and suggest ive to note th at th e great m oveme nts which have lifted a&#13;
people into larger life, when wider chann els have been made fo r t he flood of h umani ty,&#13;
have been led by some great native soul. The fo r eign missio nary may be the init iating&#13;
force, but he can ne ver be t h e ultimate leader. T he emancipato r from the power of&#13;
Egypt was learned in all the arts and wisdo m of the Egyptian schools. The J ew who&#13;
became the m o st fea rless and succes sful mission ary of the new fa ith, at the begin n ing of&#13;
t he Christian era, was hims elf a product of th e best culture of th e J ewish schools. It&#13;
was out of the best schools a nd with the best tra ining that the histo r ic church could gi ve.&#13;
t hat Martin Luther cam e to leade rship. I t was fr om the halls of Oxford, where he had&#13;
won sch o la rly r eco g nition, that John Wesl ey came forth to be the teache r of a&#13;
m ore vital and effective type of Ch r istia ni ty. T he man who shall pioneer our American&#13;
life into broad er ho rizons is today being t rained for his task in o ne of our colleges. The&#13;
cultured child of t oday will be our leader of tomo rrow.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
�The Chri st ian ministry was t h e goal of th e m ajo rity of t he students in o ur&#13;
early Amer ican colleges. Thi s is n ot rema rka ble wh en we r eme mber that o ur oldest inst itutio n Harvard bea rs th e nam e of a cler gy m an , pasto r of Ch a rl estow n, who, a t hi s&#13;
death, left hi s library a nd o n e- half of his estate t o t h e in stituti o n . Yale had similar&#13;
o rigin. F o r fi ftee n year s th e in structio n was perfo rm ed by clergy m en in th e various&#13;
C o nn ecti cut settl em ents and their class room s were th ei r own studi es. D a rtm o ut h was&#13;
fo unded fo r a mi ssio nary purpose, t o ca re fo r th e spiri tual welfare o f th e Indians. A ll&#13;
the pre- revolutio nary colleges o we t h eir fo undin g t o th e relig io u s impul se. I n. fac t, n o&#13;
other impulse is basal en oug h to in spire t h e h eroi c self-sacrifi ce necessa ry t o bring such&#13;
far-sighted r es ults fro m pio nee rs so poo r a nd h edged a bout wi t h such t remendo u s&#13;
diffi culti es.&#13;
T o th em th e ma intena nce o f the institutio n s of r eli g io n was o f pa r am o un t impo rtance. They dem a nded a cultivated mini stry. Th er efo re th ey cr eated th e p rogenito rs of&#13;
o ur present day hi g he r in stitutio ns o f learnin g .&#13;
Is n o t th e sam e esse ntial need, o ur need ? R eli g io us problem s still h old the place&#13;
of first impo rtan ce. These subj ects a r e not academi c. Th ey are not age worn. W e&#13;
discuss them b ecause t h ey are the m ost vital questio ns be fo r e thinking m en t oday. S o m e&#13;
conce ptio n of the trend o f nin eteenth century r eli g io us th o ug ht is essentia l to a liberal&#13;
education. Our philosophy o f th e univer se lead s u s back throu g h all the pheno m ena&#13;
abo ut us t o a personal wo rld -gr o und , th e E tern al God. I t is im possible t o di scuss vitally&#13;
th e deepest problem s o f everyday life-th e social a nd do m estic and civic conditions th at&#13;
surround us-witho ut takin g into a ccount thi s funda m ental basis of a ll o u r thinking. And&#13;
·even a part fro m all t hi s, I think it wo uld be easy t o mai ntai n t hat fo r cultural value and&#13;
awakenin g o f th e log ical po wer s, stirrin g th e imaginati o n a nd testin g th e la r gest capacity&#13;
fo r self expressio n , no subj ects a r e sup erio r to th ose whi ch deal with t h e p roblems of th e&#13;
r eligio us life. S o we justify on purely pedagogical principles, _ th e courses o ffer ed in&#13;
Christian ideal s, th e development of r eli g io us th o ught, t h e tr acin g o f the "Acts o f th e&#13;
Apostl es" in th ese present day s. Whil e o ur co nceptio n has ve ry g reatly broadened a nd&#13;
we are maintainin g t hat th e college course ha s a value as well fo r t he m erchant, th e&#13;
lawyer, th e phys icia n, the edito r , as fo r th e cler gy man, we mu st no t fo r get_ that th at&#13;
spirit o f th e olden day s is as n ecessary as ever. The trul y tr ained m an of thi s day will&#13;
recognize hi s o bligati o n t o be a Christi an mini ster, in t he broader se nse. _ He m ay&#13;
carry o n hi s ministry either in th e pulpit o r o ut of it. H e may mingle in polit ical battles,&#13;
lead in th e wo rld of literature, g ive hi s m essage throug h musical m easures, find th e&#13;
expressio n o f hi s life th rou g h bru sh o r pencil, but th e true college m an will feel t hat life&#13;
is aft er all, at its best. an essentially Chri stian mini stry. The old line of demarcati o n&#13;
between th e secul a r a nd sacr ed has la r gely di sappea r ed. F o r t hat we may well be grateful. It was at best a fi ctiti o us di stincti o n cr eated by a misco ncep t io n of the place o f&#13;
r elig io n in th e daily life; and we question wh ether any institu ti o n can produce t he b est&#13;
in its stud ent body witho ut thi s do minati ng r eli g io us idea l. The chapel service is no t&#13;
an unimp orta nt addendum, a vest ige of a rchaic days, indicati ng t hat we have not qui te&#13;
o utg rown th e prejudice of a cruder age. It is a r ecognitio n t hat that whi ch is truest a nd&#13;
no blest in human life will never be brou ght fo rth except by m en wh o have been stirred&#13;
by g reat r eli g io u s ideals and purposes. The hardest fi g hter is the Chri sti a n, for he never&#13;
fi g hts until th e se n se of holy duty is u po n him and therefore it is impossible to surrender. The hard est wo rke r is th e C hri stian, fo r h e is an idealist, a nd, making his wo r k&#13;
a sacram ent, he never wea ri es. T he fi nest scholar is t he Chri stia n ; fo r , to all pri zes&#13;
which allure o th er s h e adds a bigger o ne t ha n t hey all- pleasi ng Hi m wh o has called him .&#13;
W e have r estated o ur cr eeds, m o difi ed our m eth ods of worship, shi fted the place of&#13;
emphasis in life, but we have not o utgro wn Christia n ideal s nor fo und a mi g h tier in spirer&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
of m an's noblest t h an th e Manof Galilee. It is reasonable tha t we should recogn ize th e&#13;
claims o f th e Christian mini st ry, and that from t ime to time t hey should be presented&#13;
to o ur stud ent body. W hy not? From a t housand sources pr essure is coming upo n&#13;
t hese youn g people to t urn t heir lives into other professions. The cry of the wo rld&#13;
is eve r upon them, an d it is vigorously enfo rced by bread and butter consideration s. I s&#13;
ther e any valid reason why the highest a nd m ost unselfish of all vocations should no t&#13;
cha llenge all their latent nobility? We have a r ight to expect o ur colleges, established&#13;
under C hris t ian auspices, to do their best to an swer the cry of the chu rches for leader ship. Men with trained min ds as well as co n secrated hearts mu st be persuaded to r espo nd t o t h is supreme opportu nity for se r vice.&#13;
F ar mo r e effective than any systematic teach ing of Christian ethics is the exemplifi cati o n o f t he true eth ical spir it in t he cha racter of t he teachers. Ma rk Hopkins o n o ne&#13;
end of t he log and Jam es Ga r field on the oth er, may not perfectly descr ibe the modern&#13;
college, but it certainly puts in graphic fo rm one of the essentials of t he modern college,&#13;
a nd pe rhaps I may say the essential. Yo u have here an earnest student, anxious ly desi rin g to k now how to r ealize h is best in life, and you have a great-hea rted, broad- minded,&#13;
sy mpathetic gentleman t ryi ng to solve the p roblem a.nd trying to place his larger exper ience and r ipe r wisdo m at th e service of t he student. Without t hese, in essence, yo u&#13;
cann ot have a college.&#13;
Pres iden t Dwigh t, of Yale, in his last repo rt laid emphasis upo n th e obligatio n of&#13;
the teacher to make t he acqua intance of hi s students individually, saying : " T he teach er&#13;
who sees hi s student o nly dur ing the class exercises is failing t o do the most esse ntial&#13;
wo rk. Ou r pride in numb ers makes this all th e mo r e serious. The fact that the pro fesso r can be see n at ce r tain tim es is not eno ug h, fo r t h e men who need t his most a r e th e&#13;
ve ry o nes who wi ll not co me when they are in vited." I nforma ti o n m ay be gotten fro m a&#13;
text book, sk ill acqui red in th e laboratory, m o r e learning co me fro m t he lectu re r, fact s&#13;
secured in a hu ndred different ways, but t hat wh ich peculiarly d isting uish es the coll egeinspirat io n, life, enthusias m, ideals-comes o nl y by contact, by fe llowsh ip, sympathy a nd&#13;
pe rsonal to uch . Was it not th is which made t he g reat co lleges o f th e days gone by ? O r&#13;
ra ther was it not this eleme nt, splendidly realized, t hat produ ced fr om those colleges&#13;
t he m en wh ose names stand as beacon lights? Are we not all conscious that t he rich est&#13;
and best th ings that ever come to us in ou r college career we re no t the products o f th e&#13;
schola rshi p of those who taught us, but t he personal touch and inspi r ation that ca m e to&#13;
o ur lives fr om their fe ll owsh ip ? The value of t he college co urse is m uch more la r gely&#13;
determin ed by th e amo un t of t he teacher t han t he amount of the book t hat gets in to o n e's&#13;
life. The plastic yea rs o f coll ege life are peculiarly susceptible to thi s kind of influence.&#13;
T here m ay be some mor e alluring work fo r a m an wh o aspires to project his perso nality&#13;
into th e generations to come th an con tact with t he growing yo ut h in o ur colleges, but I&#13;
have neve r heard about it. We do not rem ember so well the subj ect s we were taught as&#13;
we r em e mber what t hose men were who taug ht us. It woul d no t be possible fo r us&#13;
today to solve th e problems in mathemat ics, or translate the passages from the class ics,&#13;
o r clea rly sta te the logical processes by whi ch we came to ce rtain m etaphysical concl usion s, but we shall neve r fo r get what o ur teachers were and h ow t heir g reat wa rm&#13;
souls fo und o u rs and wa rm ed them into life and made us think and love and aspire after&#13;
t he best.&#13;
D r. T hwi ng sets us t hink ing when he te lls us that "From th e d iscipline of a sin g le&#13;
college and from the tui tion of a certain teach er of English in thi s college were r eared&#13;
Ralph Waldo Emerso n, And rew P . Peabody, Ol iver ·wendell Holmes, Charles S umner,&#13;
John Loth rop Motley, Richard Henry Dana, J ames Russell Lowell, Henry D. Thor eau,&#13;
E d wa rd Eve rett Hale, Thomas Wentworth H igginson and C ha rles Elliott Norton . A t&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
�the present tim e in this coll ege, havin g many teachers of E ngli sh. no such persons are&#13;
appearing. What is the r eason that under th e great Channing so many great writers and&#13;
at the present tim e so few great writers a r e appearing."&#13;
May the answer not be found in la rge part in the di stance betwee n th e teacher and&#13;
the stud ent? The size of the college is not the main determining factor, but the question&#13;
as to how ea rnestly th e teaching force seek s to face and solve th e difficulty.&#13;
In the o ld fa shi o ned college the chi ef executive found tim e t o work in the class&#13;
room. You r emember that the fondly anticipated climax of th e who le course, to which&#13;
the student looked forward from th e beginning, was the day when h e should sit in th e&#13;
class room unde r the president. I fear that, from the higher standpoint, these days in&#13;
which th e president is altogether absorbed in the problems of financ e are days decadent.&#13;
If he is really worth&#13;
whil e, he o ught to ha ve the o pportunity to touch in a personal and&#13;
vital way the&#13;
souls those who are temporarily committed to hi s g uidance. Here is our&#13;
of&#13;
legitimate field of competition; no t to vie with one another in extent of acreage, o r&#13;
magnificence of structure, or even magnitud e o f library or completeness of laboratory&#13;
equipment. It is not even a question of the schola sti c attainments of t h e faculty. We a r e&#13;
rather t o compete in those hi g h er r ealm s. ' Th e problem is to bring such quality o f&#13;
heart and soul into the class room as shall develo p in th e stud ent the deepest and truest&#13;
character.&#13;
Our Christianity mu st have an intellectual basis and be r eady to defend itself in&#13;
the court of reaso n . We are no lon ger able to appeal with confidence to established&#13;
authority, however hoary it may be with age and h owever venerabl e in t he eyes of devotees. The man who will m eet the stress and stra in o f th e comin g generatio n mu st&#13;
have not only good purpose, but so und r eason as foundation and buttress. Mere enthu siasm makes the fanatic, mere logical process makes cold and un sympathetic intellectual ity.&#13;
but intellectual and moral purpose blended produces the man o f courage, conviction and&#13;
leadership.&#13;
When the m o ral atmosphe re of th e modern college is criticised, certain extenuating&#13;
co n siderations are not given th eir just we ight. W e mu st reme mber that th e college atmospher e is created by individual elements. These elem ents have come fr o m t he hom es&#13;
of th e people. In so me cases th ese homes have do ne littl e or n othing to deve lo p noble&#13;
ideals. Parents who have neve r co ntrolled th eir children at ho m e se nd th em t o college.&#13;
hoping that th e authorities will be able to do what the home o ug ht to hav e done. The&#13;
college auth orities are then most ungra cio usly criticised for not doing in a m o nth what&#13;
the home ha s fail ed to do in eighteen years. These heterogeneous elements do not see m&#13;
to coalesce. They are insolubles. Th ey mov e arou nd in the atmosphere o f the institution&#13;
unaffected, so far as we can see, by th e conditio ns. In spite o f a ll thi s it is only fair to&#13;
say that th e students in our colleges a r e in a better moral atmo sphe re than they wi ll ever&#13;
be again in all their li ves. It cannot be maintained for a m o ment that the spirit of the&#13;
business or professional or social world into whi ch they a r e go in g beg ins t o have th e&#13;
moral inspiratio n and th e purity of ideal found in th e m odern coll ege, even with all its&#13;
limitations.&#13;
The place of athl etics in th e life of th e m o dern college is, I think, coming to be&#13;
more ratio nally interpreted. That m en have bodies as well as mind s we mu st understand,&#13;
and th e problem of th e college is to develop to its ve ry best th e wh ole p er son. In thi s&#13;
general developm ent, of course, th e body must be re cognized. Ther e has undoubtedly&#13;
been tendency t o place undue empha sis upo n th e ph ysical side and a man o f unu sual&#13;
physical ab ili ty has been g iven con sideration that would not have been a llowed a classmate of inferior proportions. In so far as athl etics contribute to th e deeper and larger&#13;
&#13;
mental and moral li fe, in as much as they ma ke a basis for big , strong, manly work in&#13;
th e years to come. they sho uld have recogn iti on and cultivati o n .. In so far as they administer to professionalism and succum b to the mercantile spirit of the age, they ar e&#13;
utterly abhorrent to the best collegiate ideals. In working out the athletic side o f an institution the bearing upo n intellectual a nd m o ral develop ment must be the uppe rmost&#13;
consideratio n. The coarse, di ssolute rowdy has no place in the college and the hoodlum&#13;
making night hideou s, frequenting the , saloons and dives of th e city, devoid of any m erit&#13;
o ther th an his un earn ed physique, should be eli minated.&#13;
No insti t ution in America has larger o pportunity to vitally affect the civilization of&#13;
the coming decades than o ur ow n M o rnin gside, located in the no rth ern portion of this&#13;
great central valley, the most productive o n th e American continent, at the ve ry point&#13;
where the noble M issouri, hith er to a comparati vely insignificant stream, broade ns into&#13;
great dimensions an d becomes a mi ghty fac tor in the develo pment of the land. Hither&#13;
comes th e earnest and ardent pioneer fro m the better co untries of the old worl d. They&#13;
are not th e retrogress ive and t he vice-poiso ned from the grea t cities , seeking other great&#13;
cities with their atte ndant vice and conseq11ent cor ruption. They are liberty-lovi ng, landloving, fresh-air-loving, God-fearing people, who are here to make for themse lves a nd&#13;
for their children per m anent homes. To our student body they are coming. I do n ot&#13;
know how many races a nd nationalities are re prese nted with us here today. I do know&#13;
that we ha ve t h e Scandinavian with the hot Norse blood flowi ng with und iminished vigor.&#13;
panting fo r n ew worlds to conquer and new pro bl em s to solve. We have the sturdy German, with his genius fo r accumulatio n and per sistent toil, hesitating at n o amount of&#13;
drudgery in order that he m ay attain t he worthy end. We have the Russian, b r eathin g&#13;
the larger liberty of the new land. We ha ve r epresentatives o f practically all t he great&#13;
races and types of civi li za tion. Children from th e Orient a nd fr o m the Occident sit in&#13;
. class here side by side, each a stimulus to the o ther and all plannin g and wo rking to&#13;
make fo r them selves lives of servi ceable respectability, and at th e same time contributin g&#13;
to th e development of a no ble a nd permanent civilization. This accum ulatio n o f strong,&#13;
vigorous, vi r ile ma nhood and womanhood means a center o f influence second to none in&#13;
shaping th e ideals of thi s st r ategic locality for th e next gene rati on. These yo ung man&#13;
will go on to these plains a nd prairies and into these deve lo ping cities to make clean&#13;
social and civic life. These young wo man will go out to ho nor themselves a nd th eir&#13;
A lma Mater as teachers in our schools and mothers in our ho m es and queens in the&#13;
best social life of the new republi c.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Iowa is the Pu ritan state of these modern days. Out o f th e old Puritan ism came&#13;
our best literature, th e largest contributions to philosophica l and r el igious th ought, an d&#13;
the most progressive states manshi p of the past generation. New E ngland gave to America its poets, its histo rian s, its philosophers, its orators, its great national leaders, but&#13;
the po wer t o render this hi g h ser vice has been transferred. in th e movement of the g r eat&#13;
populatio ns . from t he east t o t he west, and this Missouri valley is the logical successor&#13;
of the Puritan ism of the past. No one will question the em ine nt quality of the products&#13;
we have been pouring forth into the world of finan ce and utilitarian educatio n and cer tainly no secti o n has been eve n a serious co mpetito r in the variety and viri li ty of political&#13;
output. We have the physical basis to enable thi s valley to become the dom inat in g intell ectual force of al l thi s western empire. These consecrated m en and wo m en are asking that th ey be given the privilege of helping to shape th is civi lizati o n in accordance&#13;
with Christian ideals. Th ey are asking that libraries, labo ra tories and equipme nt in&#13;
buildings, adeq uate to t he need, shall be placed at their disposal. They are glad ly and&#13;
&#13;
�loyally giving their liv es, enam o ured as they a re of the possibility&#13;
of proj ecti n g th em selves through tho se whom th ey teac h into th e generations t o come.&#13;
·&#13;
We gratefully acknowledge th e signifi ca nt courtesy of th e presence of th ese cultured repre se ntativ es from the o ld er colleges and uni ve rsiti es. Your sympa thy is an&#13;
inspiration . Your nobl e achievements goad u s night an d day. What you are to your&#13;
constituency we pray we may increasingly become to those who look to us fo r leader ship. W e salute you in the name of o ur com m o n purpose, o ur co mm o n co untry, o ur&#13;
common Master.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
�LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT, A M.,&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GAY DOLLIVER, A B.,&#13;
DEAN OF WOMEN.&#13;
&#13;
Profess or of L atin.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cin cinnati Wesleyan&#13;
Coll ege, 1886; Graduate Student Northwestern Un ive rsi ty, 1905-06; Teacher in Fort Dodge Public Schools. 18861890; Dean of Women, Morningside Col lege, 1906.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., I llinois Wesleyan University, 1888: A. M., ibid., 1890; Graduate&#13;
Student&#13;
University of Chi cago, Summer Qua r ters, 1894 and 189 7: Student&#13;
in the American School&#13;
of Classical S tudies, rome, 1903-04; Instructor in&#13;
Eng lish. I llinois Wesleyan Unive rsi ty, 1888-89; I nstructor in Greek and&#13;
La t in, Morningside Co llege, 1893-97;&#13;
Professor of Latin, ibid., 189 7.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ESTELLE ROBERTS, A B. ,&#13;
HENRY FREDERICK KANTHLENER, AM.,&#13;
Professor of&#13;
&#13;
A ssociate P rofessor of Latin.&#13;
&#13;
Greek.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Iowa College, 1895; Graduate Student, Wellesley Col lege, 18951896; Graduate S tudent, Univ ersity of Chicago, 1900-01, and Summer Quarte r, 1904; Hearing&#13;
lectures a nd studying monumen ts in Italy and Greece,&#13;
Su mmer, 1902 ; Acting Professor of Greek, Morningside College. 1902-03;&#13;
Acting Professor&#13;
of L atin, Morningside&#13;
College, 1903-04; lnstructor in&#13;
lnstructor&#13;
in L atin , Girls' Latin School of&#13;
G reek, I owa College, 1904-06;&#13;
Bal t imore, 1906-08: Associate Professor L atin, MorningsideCollege, 1908 .&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cornell College, 1896; A. M., H arvard University,&#13;
1899; G raduate Student, Harvard Un i ver s ity, 1897-99 and 1902-03: Instructor in Latin&#13;
and Greek, Epworth Seminary, 1896-97 ; Instructor in L atin , Wesleyan&#13;
Acade my. Wilbraham, Mass., 1899-1900 : Professor of Greek,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, 1900.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, PH. D ..&#13;
REGISTRAR.&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER VERA SEAMAN, PH. B. ,&#13;
&#13;
Profess or of Economics and Sociology.&#13;
A. B .. Harvard University&#13;
1889; A. M., ibid. 1890; Ph. D. ibid, 1891;&#13;
..&#13;
Student, University of Re ,·lin and Cambridge U ni vers i ty, 1891-92;&#13;
Instuct or in History. Uni vers ity of Cali forni a. 1892-95;&#13;
Head of South Park Settleme n t, San Francisco, 1894-95;&#13;
Ass istan t in Un ited Sta tes History, Harvard University,&#13;
1896-97;&#13;
Resident of South End H o use, Boston, 1895-1900;&#13;
Professo r of E con omi cs and Sociology, Morningside ege. 1900.&#13;
Coll&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Latin.&#13;
Ph. B ., I owa College, 1905; Instructor in L a t in, MorningsideCollege,&#13;
1910.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
�AGNES BEVERIDGE FERGUSON, A M.,&#13;
Professor of German.&#13;
Sc. B .. Cornell Col lege, 1894&#13;
A. M., Columbia University,&#13;
1909; Using&#13;
libraries&#13;
and hearing lectu res, D resden and Berlin, Summer. 1902; Graduate&#13;
Student, U niversity of Ch icago, Summe r, 1904; Graduate S t uden t, Columbia&#13;
Un i versi ty, Summer. 1907, and 1908-09: Student, University of Heidelberg,&#13;
Summer Semester , 1910; Professor&#13;
of Modern Languages, Fort Worth Uniersity. 1896-97; Professor of German, Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, 1901.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND. A B.,&#13;
P rofessor of E nglish.&#13;
A . B., Smi th Co ll ege, 1889:&#13;
&#13;
S tuden t, Oxford Unive rsi ty, England . 19021903; Instructor&#13;
in History and English, Epworth&#13;
Seminary, 1892-95; Prossor of Modern L a nguages, Upper Iowa U niversity, 1896-97; Professor&#13;
of&#13;
English Language an d Literature, Morningside College, 1897-190 2; Professor&#13;
of English Literature,&#13;
ibid., 1902.&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD, PH. B.,&#13;
Assistant Professor of E nglish.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREY NALD. A M .,&#13;
Professor of French.&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B ., Morningside&#13;
College. 1903: G radua te S tud en t in English, Universi t y of Chicago, Summer, 1906, and 1908-09; Instructor in English and&#13;
Lat in , L ake Mlills High&#13;
School , 1903-05; Instructor in English and Mathematics, Hartley High School. 1905-06; Instructor in Engl ish, Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, 1906-10: Assistant Professor&#13;
of E ng lish, ibid., 1910.&#13;
&#13;
A . B .. University&#13;
of Paris,&#13;
1874; A. M., ibid., 1880 ; Professorof&#13;
L ati n, Chatenu Gontre, F r ance, 1876-78; Professor of French,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 1896.&#13;
&#13;
EST HER CA T HERIN E WHEELER. A B..&#13;
&#13;
CARLL WHITMAN Doxsee A M..&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in German.&#13;
A. B. , Northwestern&#13;
s ide College, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
Univer sity, 1910 ; Instructor&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in E nglish.&#13;
in German, Morning-&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Wesleyan&#13;
English, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
U ni ver s ity, 1909;&#13;
College, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
A. M., ibid ., 1910 ; Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
�FRANK HARMON GARVER. A M.,&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES ALMER MARSH, B. S.,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History and Politics.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of P ublic Speaking.&#13;
&#13;
.A. B... Upper Iowa University,&#13;
1898 : A. M. State University of Iowa,&#13;
..&#13;
F ebruary. 1908; Graduate Student, State Un ive r s ity of I owa. 1901-02, 19071908; F e llow in History, ibid .. 1901-02 ; Research Assistant in the State Histo ri cal Society of Iowa, 1907-08; Professor f History and Economics&#13;
o&#13;
Mornings ide College, 1898-1900: Professor of History and P olitics, ibid., 1900.&#13;
&#13;
B . S. New&#13;
Lyme Insti t ute. 1894;&#13;
Graduate, Colu m bia Colleg e of Expression,&#13;
1898; Professor Oratory. Iowa Wesleyan University, 1898-1900;&#13;
of&#13;
Instructo r. Columbia College of Expression , 1900-01 ; Studen t, Oberlin College, 1901-02 : Professor Public Speaking, S impson College, 1902-06 ; Inof&#13;
structor, Jon es Sch ool of Orato ry . 1906-10; A ct ing Professor Public&#13;
of&#13;
Speaking, Morningside&#13;
College, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CALDERWOOD STEPHENS, A B., M.D.,&#13;
SECRETARY OF TH E F A CU L TY.&#13;
&#13;
ARCH EDWARD RIGBY, A B.,&#13;
Acting Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
P rofessor of Biology.&#13;
Student, Adrian Coll ege, 1894-96: University of Chicago. 1900-01;&#13;
A. B. ,&#13;
Kansas Ci ty University, 1901: M. D .. Ka n sas S tate University (College of&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons ), 1904;&#13;
S tuden t MarineB iological Laboratory&#13;
Woods Holl, Mass., Summer, 1901: lnstructor in K ansas City University,&#13;
1901-02;&#13;
Student&#13;
in Neu rology, Ill inois Medical College, S um me r , 1902:&#13;
F e llow in Zoology, U niversity of Chicago, 1904-06; Ass istant in Embryology,&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Corn ell Co llege, 1898: Graduate Student. University of Chica go,&#13;
1907-09; Summe r Quarte r. 1910; Missionary and Professor of Engl ish and&#13;
German, Chin zei College, Nagasaki, Japan , 1900-1907;&#13;
&#13;
A cting Professor of&#13;
&#13;
History and Social Sciences. Dakota Wesleyan University. 1909-10;&#13;
Professor of Philosophy, Morningside College, 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
Acting&#13;
&#13;
ibid., Summer Quar ter, 1905 and 1906;&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology,&#13;
&#13;
College, 1906.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES, PH. D.,&#13;
Acting Professor of Physics.&#13;
&#13;
*ALLETTA M. GILLETTE, A B.,&#13;
Instructor in English.&#13;
A. B .,&#13;
&#13;
lege,&#13;
&#13;
1908.&#13;
&#13;
Smi t h Col lege,&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
1907;&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Col-&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B. Kenyon Colleg e, 1896: A. B., Harvard U niversi ty. 1903; Schola r&#13;
in P hysics, ibid., 1903-04, a nd A. M., 1904; Columbia Un i versity, Summer,&#13;
1904; University&#13;
of Ch icago, Summer Quarter, 1905: Public&#13;
School Work in&#13;
Oh io. 1896-1902; ; Instructor in Physics, Academy of Northwestern&#13;
Univers ity. 1904-07; Fellow&#13;
in Physics, Northwestern&#13;
University, 1907-09; Ph. D.&#13;
..&#13;
ibid .. 1909; Acting Professor of Physics,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College. 1909.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
�EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, AM.,&#13;
Professor of Education.&#13;
B., De Pauw University, 1884: A. M., ibid .. 1887: A. M., Co lumbi a&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
Un ivers ity, 1910; Graduate Student, University of Ch icago. Summer. 1909;&#13;
Columbia University. 1909-10; Superintendent of Schools, Woodbury County,&#13;
1894-1900, 1902-06: Professor of Mathematics, Morn in gside College, 1890-94;&#13;
Professor of Mathematics and Pedagogy, Mornings id e College, 1900-02; Professor of Education. Morningside ll ege, 1904.&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BREESE JONES, PH. D.,&#13;
Acting Professor of Chemistry&#13;
A. B., Ripon Col lege, 1904; Ph. D ., Yal e Unive r s ity, 1910 ; In structor&#13;
in Chemistry.&#13;
Princeton. Minnesota, 1904-06; Assistant in Chemistry, Yale&#13;
University, 1906-08; Research Chemi st on Proteins, Connecticut Agricultural&#13;
Experiment Stat ion, unde r the auspices of the Carnegie In st itute of Washington, D. C., 1908-09; Acting Professor of Chemistry,&#13;
Morningside ll ege,&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
1910.&#13;
&#13;
IDA NOLAN REYNOLDS,&#13;
Instructor in Primary Methods and Drawing.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY VAN HORNE, PH. B.,&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Graduate, Drake U niversity Training Schoo l, 1903; Student, School of&#13;
Education, Un iversity of Chicago, Summer Quarte r, 1905; Pr incipal West&#13;
Ward School and Teacher in Primary Grade, Rockwell City , Iowa , 1903-04:&#13;
Principal High School, Victor, Iowa , 1904-05; Director, Summe r Schoo l of&#13;
Manual Tra in ing, Rockwell City, Iowa, 1904 ; In st ru c tor in Primary&#13;
Methods and Draw in g, Morningside&#13;
College. 1905.&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B .. Morningside Co ll ege, 1900; Graduate Student . Johns Hopkins&#13;
Un iversity. 1900-01; Graduate Student, University&#13;
of Chi cago. Summer,&#13;
1906 ; Instructor in Mathematics Morningside Co ll ege. 1901-02 : Professor&#13;
of Mathematics, orningside Co ll ege, 1902.&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
MARIE VOY HOARD,&#13;
Instructor in Normal Branches.&#13;
Graduate, State Norma l -School. Springfield, S. D .. 1900; Student, Columbia School of Exp ress ion and Un iversity of Chi cago. Summer. 1904 a nd&#13;
1905; In structor In Normal Department. 1907.&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE BAIRD BRIDENBAUGH, A B ..&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics&#13;
A. B., Morningside College,&#13;
s ide College, 1909.&#13;
&#13;
1909;&#13;
&#13;
Instructor&#13;
&#13;
in Mathematics Morning-&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
�ORWIN ALLISON MORSE, A A G. 0.,&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music and Acting P ro fessor of&#13;
Music in the College&#13;
Associate of the American Guild of Organists;&#13;
Member of t h e Royal&#13;
Coll ege of Organists&#13;
(Eng land) ; Musical Director, Avondale College, N. S.&#13;
W.,&#13;
Australia, 1898-99; Organist,&#13;
Flemington&#13;
Presbyterian Chu r ch , Melbourne. 1899-1900;&#13;
Musical Di rector, Emmanue l Co ll ege, 1901-04 ; Director,&#13;
School of Music, John B. Stetson University,&#13;
Organist and Choirmaster,&#13;
First Baptist Church, and Conductor De Land Choral Society. De Land, Fla.,&#13;
1905-09: Director, Conservatory&#13;
of Musi c, a nd Organist and Choirmaster,&#13;
First Baptist Chu r ch, Greenvi ll e, S. C., 1909-10; Director. Morningside College, Conservatory&#13;
of Mus ic and Acting Professor f Music in .the Colo&#13;
lege, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
*FREDERIC CURTIS BUTTERFIELD, A B.,&#13;
Instructor in P ianoforte and Counterpoint.&#13;
College, 1905 ( Honorable&#13;
mention in Music, t wice :&#13;
Teachers; Harmony, Coun terpoint and Musical&#13;
Form, Professor W. R. Spalding : Orchestration and Musical History, Professor J. K. Paine; Canon.&#13;
Fugue and Free Composition, Mr. Frederick Converse ) : Pupi l in Pianoforte.&#13;
of Miss Adela ide Proctor, Boston, 1899-1907; Pupil in Organ of J ohn Hermann Loud. Boston, 1903-04; Organist, First Parish Church, Malden, Mass...&#13;
1905-07; Instructor in Pianoforte, Morningside College, 1907.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.. Harvard&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MACFARREN, AR. AM.,&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte and Theory of Music.&#13;
&#13;
LOIS EDNA FREAR.&#13;
&#13;
Associate, Royal Acad emy of Mus ic; Student, Royal Academy of Music,&#13;
Londo n, 1897-1903 ; Appointed Sub-Professor, Royal Academy of Music, 19001903; Ass istan t Organist and Choirmaster,&#13;
St. Martins-in-th-Fields, London.&#13;
1900-02; Organist and Ch o irmaster, Beechen Grove Church, Wa tfo rd. 19021903; Organist a n d Choirmaster,&#13;
Seaford Parish Church, 1903-05; Engaged&#13;
in Private Teaching. 1902-05; Director of Music Department and O rgan ist&#13;
and Choirmaster,&#13;
St . John's&#13;
Coll ege, Newfoundland,&#13;
1905-09;&#13;
Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
1910.&#13;
&#13;
Student in Morningside College, 1903-04; S tudent in Morningside Conservatory of Music, 1904-06; Student in Chicago Musical College, 1906-09;&#13;
Student of Piano under Ernest Consolo: Harmony. Dr. Loui s Falk: Composition . F elix Borowski : Graduate of Chicago Musical College. 1909; Teacher&#13;
of Pianoforte,&#13;
Morningside College. 1909.&#13;
&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD, A B.,&#13;
&#13;
T eacher of P ianoforte.&#13;
&#13;
LUELLA ANDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte.&#13;
&#13;
T eacher of Violin.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College, 1907; Graduate of Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
Conservatory,&#13;
1902 ; Pupil of Emi l Liebl ing. Chicago, 1903-04. and Summer.&#13;
1908; Pupil of Fannie Church Parsons in Illustrated Music908 and 1909:&#13;
1&#13;
Teacher of Pianoforte, Morningside Col lege, 1905-09;&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte, ibid ., 1909.&#13;
&#13;
Student in Violin at the American&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Chicago,&#13;
1904-05; R eceived Teachers' Certificate fro m American&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
of&#13;
Music, 1905; Pupil of H erbert Butler and Adolf We idig. Chicago, 1905-06:&#13;
Soloist and Director of Orchestra. First M. E. Church, Sioux City. 1908-09;&#13;
Private Teaching Sioux City. 1906-09; Teacher of Violin, Morningside&#13;
College, 1909.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.,&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
�MA YBEL ROMA SMYLIE.&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture.&#13;
Voice Graduate,&#13;
class of 1904, Morningside Conservatory&#13;
Studen t of&#13;
vo ice culture&#13;
under Lester&#13;
Ba rtl ett J ones of Chicago University,&#13;
1906&#13;
St ud en t of p ia no under Mrs. Eva Bordwell Gardner, of Mary Wood Chase&#13;
School o f Pi a no. in Chi ca go. 1906-07;&#13;
Pupil of: Mr. a nd Mrs. Th oma s B .&#13;
in&#13;
Garst, teachers of vo ice. Chi cago, 19 07-08. a nd Summ e r, 1909: Instructor&#13;
Voice, Morningsidell ege. 19 08.&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
JOHN W. HOLLISTER, A. B., LL. B.,&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Men.&#13;
A. B.. Williams Coll ege, 1893;&#13;
.&#13;
LL. B.. University&#13;
of Mi chi ga n. 1896;&#13;
Physical Instructor,&#13;
Be loit Co ll ege. 1894-95, and 1897-1902;&#13;
Football Coach .&#13;
University&#13;
of Mississippi 1896; Phys ica l Director, Hamline U nive r s ity, 19031905; Director of Phys ica l Training a nd Athl eti cs for Men,Morningside&#13;
Co ll ege. 1908.&#13;
&#13;
INGA NELSON BROWN.&#13;
Teacher of Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED ALICE GARNICH,&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Women.&#13;
&#13;
Graduate&#13;
of t he L ondon Coll ege of Mu s ic . June,&#13;
1896;&#13;
Pupil Ernst&#13;
Jedliezka,&#13;
Berlin. 1897-98; Pupil of Xaver Scharwenka,&#13;
Imperial Cour t&#13;
Piani s t . 1900-02, 1905-06, 1908-10; Harmony&#13;
a nd Co mpos ition. Arthur&#13;
Ol af Anderson. 1908-09; Voice, Hermann Durra, 1908-09;&#13;
Teacher of Pianoforte, Mornin gs id e Co ll ege. 1910.&#13;
&#13;
S tudi ed with Ma be l E. Brown , Northland&#13;
College. As hl a nd , Wisconsin .&#13;
1907-08; Graduate Columbi a Coll ege of Expression, Chi cago, Ill., 1910;&#13;
Private&#13;
T ea chin g As hl a nd . Wi scon s in , 1910-11;&#13;
Ph ys ica l Director of Women.&#13;
Morningside Coll ege, 1911.&#13;
&#13;
BEULAH WARREN GREENE,&#13;
Instructor in Public Speaking.&#13;
Gr a du ate, Department&#13;
of E xpress ion , Otta wa University,&#13;
Graduate,&#13;
Columbia Co ll ege of Expression,&#13;
Chi cago. 1910;&#13;
Public Spea king. MorningsideCo ll ege. 1910.&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
Kan sas, 1908:&#13;
Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
EMMA L. DAHL,&#13;
Assistant Secretary of the College.&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
�*HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL, A M.,&#13;
Profess.or of Philosophy.&#13;
Ph. B .. Cornell Co ll ege. 1896; A. M. .. Columbia University, 1902: Graduate Student. Co lumbia Univers ity .&#13;
1901-04; Schola r in Philosophy. ibid., 1901-02: Un ion&#13;
Theological&#13;
Seminary. 1902-03; Assista n t Principal of&#13;
Epworth Seminary, 1896-97: Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and Vice-President,&#13;
Morningside College, 1904-07; Professor of Philosophy&#13;
i&#13;
1907.&#13;
&#13;
In Memoriam&#13;
*BLANCHE VIOLA WATTS, A B..&#13;
Librarian.&#13;
A. B. , Morningside Co ll ege. 1908: Librarian, )Iomingside College, 1907.&#13;
&#13;
JESSIE PHEBE SWEM,&#13;
Acting Librarian.&#13;
Graduate. Epworth Seminary;&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa , 1901-10.&#13;
&#13;
Student. Morningside Co ll ege, 1904-05; Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Public Library&#13;
&#13;
BERTHEMIA McCARTHY, A B.,&#13;
ASSISTANT R EGISTRAR.&#13;
A. B., Morningside Co llege. 1906.&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
36&#13;
&#13;
�Margaret Henrietta Wright&#13;
&#13;
HON. J. P . DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Alber t Henry Digern ess&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
�SONNET&#13;
What is this death?&#13;
Into eternity.&#13;
&#13;
The passing of a soul&#13;
&#13;
Where it doth dwell&#13;
&#13;
As spirit is not known.&#13;
&#13;
Nor can we tell&#13;
&#13;
Ought of its shape while on the ages roll.&#13;
But when at last some friend for us shall toll&#13;
The stately, solemn, muffled old church bell,&#13;
The pain which loved ones feel they seek to quell,&#13;
Believing we have safely reached the goal.&#13;
When we lie sleeping in our earthly bed&#13;
Kathryn Kuhl&#13;
&#13;
Returned, as wisdom saith "Dust unto dust,"&#13;
We'll realize the hope which all men trust,&#13;
Will learn the secret known but to the dead .&#13;
Will understand that cry above earth's strife,&#13;
"I am the resurrection and the life."&#13;
&#13;
-F.&#13;
&#13;
David Edward L a r son&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
GRANTHAM.&#13;
&#13;
�43&#13;
&#13;
�u&#13;
N&#13;
l&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
44&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
-·-:::=;....--&#13;
&#13;
45&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE SCHREINER&#13;
&#13;
JOHN LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Pieri a. President Pieria Society. Vice P resident of Y. W. C. A.&#13;
of&#13;
President of Girls' Studen t Body, ' 11. Editor-in-Chief&#13;
of Girls&#13;
Collegian Reporter. '09. Member of Girls· Staff. ·10. Pieria G rand&#13;
Publi c, '10.&#13;
"True as the needle to the pole&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Second in Prohibition con test, ' 09. President of Ionian&#13;
society '10. President of Oratorical Association , '11. In ter-Society Debate, '10. Annual Board. Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
or&#13;
&#13;
"An orator of promise-conceals&#13;
&#13;
a d eal of deviltry underneath&#13;
&#13;
a calm exterior."&#13;
&#13;
as the dial to th e sun."&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM FARNUM&#13;
Ion ian.&#13;
In ter-Society Debate, '10.&#13;
partment.&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL COOK&#13;
Atheneum.&#13;
&#13;
Grand&#13;
&#13;
Public, 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
Di r·ectress J ester Club.&#13;
&#13;
"Thus she stood amid&#13;
the stooks&#13;
praising od with sweetest looks."&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in Chemistry De-&#13;
&#13;
"From distant Idaho h e comes,&#13;
A studious&#13;
lad, yet fun he loves,&#13;
And through the midnight hours he toils&#13;
Consuming 'Rockies precious oils."&#13;
&#13;
W. E. ELLISON&#13;
FLORENCE ANTHONY&#13;
Zetalethean,&#13;
&#13;
Critic,&#13;
&#13;
D irectr ess.&#13;
&#13;
Ann ual Boar d , ' 11. Jeste r Cl ub.&#13;
ease, and sweetness vivid by pride,&#13;
&#13;
"Her&#13;
graceful&#13;
hide her faults&#13;
Might&#13;
&#13;
i f faul t s she had to hide."&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer of t h e Y. M. C ..A., ·10.&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Public, ·10.&#13;
&#13;
A man through and through.&#13;
Has tendencies&#13;
along financial&#13;
lines and y et is studying for the ministry . . however a good combination&#13;
His wagon is hitched to a star a nd we doubt 110/ that&#13;
ll is ambitions will be realized.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE E. WICKENS&#13;
ETHEL SHANNON&#13;
Aletheia.&#13;
&#13;
Honorable mention , 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
"Knowledge, in&#13;
&#13;
46&#13;
&#13;
truth,&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
the great sun&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer of Aletheia.&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
the firmament."&#13;
&#13;
Oth on ian Society. Otho Grand Publi c, '09. Zet-Otho Grand P ublic, '10. In ter-Societ y Debate, ·10. Busin ess Manager of Collegian&#13;
Reporte r, 1910-11. Annual Board. ·11. Inter-Collegiate Deba te, '11.&#13;
"Yet while the serious thought his soul approves,&#13;
Cheerful he seemsand gentleness&#13;
he loves."&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
�D. PARNELL MAHONEY&#13;
Othonian&#13;
President&#13;
of Freshman Class, 1908-09. Otho Grand&#13;
Publi c. '09. Y. M. C. A. Ca binet, 1909-10. Inter-Society Debate,&#13;
·10. President of th e Prohibition Association. 1910-11. Member&#13;
of Glee Club . Field Boos ter for th e College. 1909-10. Zet-Otho&#13;
Grand Publi c, ' 10. Business Ma nage r of t h e Junior Annua l, ' 11.&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debate, ' 11 .&#13;
"A mixture&#13;
of music, eloqu en ce, lrish wit,&#13;
enthusiasm,&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
MADGE GILLIN&#13;
Zetal eth ean.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
of Zetal e tb eau Society.&#13;
&#13;
Who looks very much like her sister,&#13;
"And mistress of h erself tho' China fall.'"&#13;
&#13;
indominitable energy.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BASS&#13;
MAUDE GILLIN&#13;
Ze tal e thean.&#13;
"Her&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
heart&#13;
&#13;
is not&#13;
&#13;
of Zetalethean&#13;
in her&#13;
&#13;
work,&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
' tis elsewhere."&#13;
&#13;
tho se fri ends of&#13;
&#13;
whom&#13;
&#13;
you're&#13;
&#13;
Secr etary of&#13;
&#13;
always sure.&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
Fred hails from the town formerly occupied by th e Cherokee&#13;
Indians.&#13;
He makes "A" grades&#13;
but s till remains human. A hard&#13;
worker and a staunch friend. What bett er virtues&#13;
could we spell!"&#13;
&#13;
FREDRICK G.&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIE DAY&#13;
If one-half of twins can be so staunch and yet&#13;
So en erg etic and so strong, what can th e whole&#13;
&#13;
so fr ee,&#13;
twins be?"&#13;
&#13;
ELWICK&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
President Debating League, 1910-11. Third place in&#13;
Home Oratorical contes ts, 1008-09. Pres ident of t he State Prohibiti on Association,&#13;
1909-10. P r esident of Loca l Oratori ca l Association. ·10. Inte r-Socie ty Debates, 1909-10. Otho Grand Pub li c.&#13;
'09. Ze t-Otho Grand Publi c, '10. Class Pres ident, 1909-11. Editor-in -Chief of the .Junior Annual, ' 11.&#13;
ling&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
Baseball , 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
FRED ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
CLARA CRUMMER&#13;
&#13;
On e of&#13;
&#13;
Varsity&#13;
&#13;
I love the farm , but oh I you college life,&#13;
With books (&#13;
and girl s and soc ial w hir l s&#13;
that&#13;
blot out every strife.&#13;
&#13;
Soci e ty.&#13;
&#13;
Alethi a . Vice President of Alethia's.&#13;
Corresponding&#13;
Alethia 's. First Directress of Alethia's.&#13;
Sob er , quiet., pensive and demure,&#13;
&#13;
Vars ity Football. '09.&#13;
&#13;
"Endowed&#13;
with many tal ents, ser ene i n disposition,&#13;
with humor, an example of a r eal man."&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
&#13;
y et bub-&#13;
&#13;
�HULDA KREUTZ&#13;
Alethia. First Critic of Alethia Society.&#13;
Alethia's.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. BOWKER&#13;
&#13;
Second Directress of&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
"A girl with a ' nack' to do everything&#13;
well,&#13;
How great sh e will be no one can t ell ."&#13;
&#13;
Otho Grand Public, ' 09.&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
"And e'en h is failings l ean to virtues&#13;
&#13;
side."&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS TUTTLE&#13;
Pieria Society. Pieria Gra n d Public. "10.&#13;
Pres ident of the Pieria.&#13;
&#13;
Annual Board.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FREAR&#13;
&#13;
Vice&#13;
&#13;
" He cam e back to graduate with a class he knew he'd&#13;
be&#13;
proud of. A coming athlete and already a. good student&#13;
and accomplishes it with th e strength of his own mind.&#13;
&#13;
" l lo ve tranquil solitudes&#13;
And such society&#13;
As is quiet , wise., and good,."&#13;
&#13;
JAMES LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE SEIFERT&#13;
Pieri a. Secretary of the Junior&#13;
Grand Public, ' 10.&#13;
&#13;
Class.&#13;
&#13;
Annua l Board.&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
&#13;
"Born for success sh e seemed&#13;
With grace to win, with h eart to hold,&#13;
With shining gifts that took all eyes."&#13;
&#13;
Ionian . Varsity Football, ' 08. Inter-Soci e ty Debate, '10. Assis t ant Editor of Collegian Repo rte r, '10. Member of "M" Club.&#13;
Member of Glee Club. Pres id ent of Ionian Society. '09. In ter-Co llegiate Debate, '11. Junior Annua l Board.&#13;
"A merry heart go es all the day.&#13;
A sad one tires in a mile."&#13;
&#13;
HELEN OMSTEAD&#13;
Alethia.&#13;
Co rresponding Secretary of Al ethia&#13;
Critic of Alethia Society.&#13;
"Her aim is high, her aim is sure,&#13;
For Ames, you, see, ' il-aim, at her.&#13;
&#13;
50&#13;
&#13;
Society.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST H. SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
Otho Grand Public, '10.&#13;
&#13;
"Biology&#13;
shark.&#13;
A consistent and faithful&#13;
worker who g ets&#13;
results. His manners mild and pleasant, y et his wills&#13;
his own."&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
�MARIE WIESE&#13;
Alethi a.&#13;
&#13;
President of the Alethia, '11.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
BARRETT DOLLIVER&#13;
of the Alethia.&#13;
&#13;
1910.&#13;
"So noble, good and&#13;
gentle,&#13;
A maiden of pure metal."&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Inter-Society Debate. '10. Presiclent of Y. M. C. A., '10.&#13;
Secretary of the Oratorical Association . 1909-10.&#13;
Goes into everything and has com e to believe that " Woman is&#13;
and t error of man."&#13;
&#13;
at once the delight&#13;
&#13;
ROSCOE CARTER&#13;
W. ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Soc iety.&#13;
Society, '11.&#13;
&#13;
"'A girl who goes to the d epth s of things,&#13;
Who ever wishes&#13;
the reason why."&#13;
&#13;
SETH EARL ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE FLETCHER&#13;
a virtue&#13;
&#13;
par&#13;
&#13;
excellence,&#13;
&#13;
when you don't&#13;
&#13;
someone&#13;
&#13;
say s."&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
"Bunny."&#13;
&#13;
man teachers.&#13;
&#13;
A star in Math.&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident of Zets, '11.&#13;
&#13;
"And still her&#13;
Xongul ran on."&#13;
A cou sin of the famous&#13;
cartoonist,&#13;
degree of his tal ents.&#13;
&#13;
52&#13;
&#13;
lover&#13;
&#13;
and beloved&#13;
&#13;
of his Ger-&#13;
&#13;
a friend true blue and a loyal&#13;
&#13;
patriot.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN FAIR&#13;
&#13;
Annual Board, ' 11.&#13;
&#13;
J es-&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. ,Junio r Annua l Board&#13;
ment, 1908-09.&#13;
Heloves the&#13;
&#13;
·· Ding"&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Wh en once you l ear·n to know him, then you know&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE McDONALD&#13;
Zeta lethean .&#13;
ter Club.&#13;
&#13;
President of I onian&#13;
&#13;
"Nick." Short in statue but big in brain and heart,&#13;
Possessed of wit and many talents&#13;
tho' hidden. play their part.&#13;
&#13;
Al e thia. Honorable me ntion. ·10 . Directress of Alethia Soc iety.&#13;
"Tis a pleasant reward when you dig to get A'sBut&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate, ·10.&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
inherits&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Exploding&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in Physics&#13;
&#13;
smell of gasoline&#13;
&#13;
his Ford machine,&#13;
And likes lo hear the ladies shout&#13;
As forward l eaps his run-about.&#13;
from&#13;
&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
depart-&#13;
&#13;
�ROBERT SMY LIE&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
At hene um . Honorabl e men t ion , '10. Sec ret a ry and Trea surer Athe neum. Atheneum Publi c, 1910-11. Annu a l Board.&#13;
"Humility&#13;
that l ow, sweet root&#13;
From w hich all heave nly v irtues sho ot.''&#13;
&#13;
Oth onian. Va rs ity Football. 1907-08-09-10. Vice Pres iden t of th e&#13;
"M" Club, 1908-09-10.&#13;
Va rs ity Baseball , 1908-09-10. Basketball ,&#13;
1908-09. Winner Cross Country Run , '09 . Junior Annua l Board.&#13;
For four y ears "Bob" has been one of th e pillars i n athletics.&#13;
In football he has played every position i n the back fi eld and at&#13;
end in the lin e. H e i s fond of the girls, ·i n fact likes th em all.&#13;
Occasionally&#13;
makes "A" grades j ust to sh ow h e can .&#13;
&#13;
E. CECIL PALMER&#13;
HAZEL SIMAN&#13;
Zetalethean.&#13;
"Sweets t o the sweet-farewell&#13;
Where&#13;
virtue with tru e beauty dwe lls."&#13;
&#13;
LOLA RAW&#13;
Ath eneum Socie ty. Grand Pub li c, ' 10. Recording Secretary Athene um . Soc ia l Cha i r rn a n Y. W. C. A. Ann ua l Board. J est e r Club.&#13;
"When once the young heart of a maiden ·is stol en,&#13;
The maiden&#13;
her self will st eal after it soon."&#13;
&#13;
BLANCH CARTER&#13;
Al ethia .&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce President of th e Alethia's.&#13;
&#13;
She k nows sh e knows, sh e's glad she kno ws.&#13;
W e're glad she' s glad she knows sh e kn ows.&#13;
&#13;
54&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
Membe r of Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
A typical Twentieth&#13;
Ce ntury Knight. Preci se in manners,&#13;
gallant ·in form and sp eec h ; h e lo ves to bask i n th e r adiance of&#13;
admiring&#13;
eyes .&#13;
&#13;
PAUL CORNER&#13;
Oth onian.&#13;
H e hath a m erry twinkle i n his ey e,&#13;
They're ting ed th e hue of bluish sky.&#13;
Many talents h e possesses,&#13;
Not all of which he e'er confesses.&#13;
&#13;
EARL WARBURTON&#13;
I onian . I nter-Co ll eg iate Debate, ·10.&#13;
of Coll egian Reporter, ·1 1.&#13;
" Rare compound&#13;
and (loves to study&#13;
&#13;
Footba ll Tea m, "09.&#13;
&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
of oddity, fr ol ic and f u n, w ho re lishes a jok e&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
&#13;
�57&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
58&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
59&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
.;&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
~ ~ (~~&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
"!(,'!I\,.&#13;
&#13;
ti,~~&#13;
&#13;
�\&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
--.-------&#13;
&#13;
62&#13;
&#13;
63&#13;
&#13;
�academy&#13;
ACADEMY&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
DEPARTMENT OF EXPRESSION&#13;
NORMAL DEPARTMENT&#13;
&#13;
64&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
�6G&#13;
&#13;
67&#13;
&#13;
�69&#13;
&#13;
�( ( 1&#13;
&#13;
70&#13;
&#13;
71&#13;
&#13;
��THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION&#13;
What person is there who has not spent many hours, in his earlier life, dreaming of&#13;
the wonderful things he was going to accomplish when he arrived at the proper age or&#13;
when opportunity presented itself. It may have been on the public platform that he&#13;
would sway the multitudes with his forensic oratory and logic, or it may have been in&#13;
the bustle of the commercial world, as banker, manufacturer or tradesman, that he would&#13;
achieve success, or perchance some foreign country had looked inviting. How many&#13;
prima donnas would we have today if dreams could only be realized?&#13;
F:ow much we may accomplish along any given line depends on our ability, our How&#13;
portumty and our power of application. The first of these is a fixed quantity, our natural&#13;
ability was determined before we could exercise any agency or choice. Over what is&#13;
now our acquired ability we once had a large determining power, but for our present&#13;
use that, too, is fixed, and however we may modify it hereafter we cannot change it at&#13;
this moment. The past was the time to prepare for the present. The present is the&#13;
time to prepare for the future. But the past is gone and no man has the power to recall&#13;
it.&#13;
&#13;
and die out altogether, those of us who have passed the age when it were fitting to&#13;
longer remain within the college halls and have entered upon the broader field of life,&#13;
have banded ourselves together into an organization, "The Alumni Association," the&#13;
object of which is to perpetuate the spirit of good-fellowship which college students enjoy.&#13;
There is no enterprise of the college which is not of vital interest to us. We&#13;
rejoice in her victories and achievements. Her defeats are our defeats. As an association we have but one purpose and a common interest, that of the growth and success of&#13;
our Alma Mater.&#13;
AN ALUMNUS.&#13;
&#13;
"Where, 0 where are the grand old Seniors?&#13;
Gone out in the cold, cold world."&#13;
&#13;
We once had a large determining power over what is now our opportunity. In&#13;
that sense it may be said that we make our opportunities. But that power has been exhausted and at each occasion we must accept our opportunities, if we accept them at all,&#13;
just as they are. We never realize our lack of preparation until the opportunity presents&#13;
itself and we find ourselves unfitted to grasp it.&#13;
There are no days which afford us the opportunity for development like our college days, animated by college spirit, enthused by class and society competition, surrounded by congenial companions we rise by leaps and bounds. If we are called upon&#13;
to make a recitation or to write an examination, we congratulate ourselves upon the&#13;
ability to recite well or to write pages with very little, if any, real knowledge of the&#13;
subject at hand.&#13;
But alas commencement day is over and we find ourselves amid a new and vastly&#13;
different environment. No longer have we class or society enthusiasm or college spirit to&#13;
buoy us up. We are not called upon to write examinations or to make recitations but to&#13;
do things, and we begin to apply ourselves to the problems at hand and take stock of our&#13;
ability. Too often we find that we have mistaken college spirit and enthusiasm for&#13;
development. However, college associations have had a beneficial effect. There remains with each one a consciousness of the advantages gained in yonder halls, and in the&#13;
heart is felt a yearning to once more feel the influence and the inspiration of good-fellowship which exists nowhere, to so marked a degree, outside the college walls. Truly,&#13;
"College ties can ne'er be broken." There our aims and purposes were one; outside&#13;
they are as diversified as the many activies of life with which we find ourselves occupied and we are ever wont to cast aside our burdens and our cares to mingle once more&#13;
amid the old environments and to feel the inspiration which comes from true college&#13;
spirit. Lest the fire there kindled should be smothered by the considerations of life,&#13;
&#13;
What Alumnus does not remember that commencement address which warned&#13;
him that the world's buffetings were not cushioned for college men and women; or that&#13;
chapel speaker who stated that the first five or six years out of college would prove most&#13;
unsatisfactory and unsettled in the aspiring graduate's career?&#13;
The first year of energetic effort awakens numerous thoughts of what he might have&#13;
done to prepare to live and that old college phrase, "Never let your studies interfere&#13;
with your college education," which once seemed a worthy motto, has become a&#13;
hollow mockery. It was once a perfect reason for chatting endlessly in the corridors and&#13;
strolling on the campus, bending every effort in society rush and serving on innumerable&#13;
committees, but now he thinks of neglected notebooks, scoffs at his clever bluffing and&#13;
yearns for scholarship.&#13;
Has college taught him to be practical, or does he measure his new surroundings&#13;
by narrow standards and finding himself among uneducated people become discontented and complain? Perhaps he has studied books a little but people not at all.&#13;
Perhaps he has some hard lessons in tact and diplomacy to learn. His schooling is not&#13;
completed with his college course.&#13;
For four happy years he has received instruction, as thorough as he would permit, has attended educating lectures and concerts and imbibed good from the atBut with his time of&#13;
mosphere. In short all people and things have served him.&#13;
test comes his time of service. Can he give out as generously as he has received?&#13;
He misses the opportunities to advise with interested friends and finds himself dependent&#13;
upon his own meagre resources. He has much to learn and for a time must be his&#13;
own professor.&#13;
The days are not less full than they were in college but there is less spice to&#13;
season them. A college girl asked an alumna friend, "Do you get as tired working&#13;
now as you used to in college?" The alumna had quite forgotten that college people&#13;
were ever tired and was at least certain the word had acquired a new meaning in&#13;
her experience.&#13;
&#13;
74&#13;
&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
AN ALUMNUS.&#13;
&#13;
�society&#13;
&#13;
76&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
�ATHENE UM&#13;
&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Light Blue and W hite.&#13;
Motto-Utile Dulce.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
President .... . ... . . . . . .. . . .. .Mable McCreery ......... . ... Bess Barnes&#13;
Vice President ... . ... . .. . ... . Anna Goodchild .... .. . . . . . .. .Alice Anderson&#13;
Recording Secretary .......... . Sadie Cunningham . ..... . .. ... Minnie Nelson&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ...... .. Edith Eicher . . .. . ... . . .. ... . H allie Fry&#13;
Treasurer .... . ... .. .... . .. . . Ethel Higday .. .. . .. . ....... .Audree Davie&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1911&#13;
Alice Anderson&#13;
Anna Goodchild&#13;
Jennie Nelson&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
Bess Barnes&#13;
Mable McCreey&#13;
Mary Thoburn&#13;
&#13;
Harriet Bass&#13;
Edith Eicher&#13;
Laura Shumway&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Rachel Cook&#13;
&#13;
Edna Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Lola Raw&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19 I 3.&#13;
Sadie Cunningham&#13;
Ethel Higday&#13;
Minnie N elson&#13;
&#13;
Audree Davie&#13;
Marguerite Kemper&#13;
Hazel Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
Agnes Ewer&#13;
Lela McClary&#13;
Anna Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914 .&#13;
Lois Gillam&#13;
Hallie Fry&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
Hazle Lane&#13;
June Price&#13;
Mattie Bridenbaugh&#13;
Isabel Webb&#13;
M aese! Wall&#13;
Sara Whitehouse&#13;
&#13;
78&#13;
&#13;
79&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Heastand&#13;
Mae P ennington&#13;
Gabriella Srstka&#13;
Marie Wood&#13;
Ida Day&#13;
&#13;
�PHILOMATH EAN&#13;
Colors-Maroon and Olive.&#13;
Motto- Vestigianulla retrorsum.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President. .. ..... . .... .... .. .L. Anderson . .. . .... . . . . . .. . .W . W. W aymack&#13;
Vice President . . .... .. .. .. . . . J. E. Briggs . . ... ...... . .. . . M. P. Briggs&#13;
Recording Secretary . . .. .... . . . Hickman .... . . ... ... . . . ... . .H. L. Johns&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . . .. .. .. H. L. Johns ... . .... . . . . . . . . .J. E. Briggs&#13;
Treasurer . .. ... .. ... . . ... . .. V. E. Prichard . .. . . . . .. . . . .. Hudson&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19 ! I&#13;
Hudson&#13;
Loepp&#13;
&#13;
Hackett&#13;
Waymack&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
H. L. Johns&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19/2 .&#13;
V . E . Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Gabrielson&#13;
&#13;
Frear&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9/3 .&#13;
M. P . Briggs&#13;
Geo. Prichard&#13;
Postin&#13;
&#13;
Hess&#13;
&#13;
]. E. Briggs&#13;
Lemon&#13;
Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
H. Merten&#13;
Mc Vicker&#13;
Scott&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9/4.&#13;
Chapler&#13;
Fuller&#13;
A . Johnson&#13;
Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
French&#13;
Horney&#13;
Phelps&#13;
&#13;
Barrick&#13;
Chase&#13;
Holbert&#13;
E. Merten&#13;
&#13;
Voy&#13;
&#13;
Vennick&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
�PIERIA&#13;
Colors-Canary and Black.&#13;
Motto Feliciter, f ortiter, fideliter .&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term .&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Second Term .&#13;
&#13;
President. . ....... .... .. ... F ranees Horn ....... . . . . ... .Vivian McFarland&#13;
Vice President .. . . ... ..... . .. Vivian McFarland ........... Gladys Tuttle&#13;
Recording Secretary . ....... . .. Myrtle Seifert ......... .. . ...Mary Kifer&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ... . .... Marguerite Shreiner ..... ..... Susan Eads&#13;
Treasurer .... ............... Gladys Tuttle ... . ... ....... .Pearl Wilson&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1911&#13;
T alma Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
Cora McKellip&#13;
Vivian McFarland&#13;
&#13;
F ranees Horn&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Myrtle Seifert&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Tuttle&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
Bertha Eads&#13;
&#13;
Hattie Kifer&#13;
Mary Kifer&#13;
&#13;
Susan Eads&#13;
Vera Rowe&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914.&#13;
Edna Allen&#13;
Lola Brownelle&#13;
Helen Gheim&#13;
Evangeline Stone&#13;
&#13;
82&#13;
&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Gladys Dean&#13;
Josephine Herbst&#13;
Nellie Upham&#13;
Pearl Wilson&#13;
&#13;
83&#13;
&#13;
Berneice Bowman&#13;
Caroline Eads&#13;
Rachel Holm&#13;
Jean Whittemore&#13;
&#13;
�IONIAN&#13;
Colors- Royal Purple and Old Cold.&#13;
Motto- Poss unt quod credere possunt.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ......... .. ..... ... .Farnham . .. . ........ . . . . . ...Carter&#13;
Vice President ............... Quarnstrom ..... .. .... .. .....Johnson&#13;
Recording Secretary ... .. ...... Carter ...... . ............. . Hukle&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . ....... Quarnstrom .... .... ... .... ... Chandler&#13;
Treasurer. ... .. . .. .. .. ...... F ullbrook ................... Peden&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Farnham&#13;
John Lewis&#13;
&#13;
James Lewis&#13;
Carter&#13;
&#13;
Dolliver&#13;
Warburton&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
Quarnstrom&#13;
&#13;
Kent&#13;
&#13;
Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
Noble&#13;
&#13;
Peden&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914.&#13;
Edge&#13;
Garlock&#13;
Brunelle&#13;
Hutchinson&#13;
&#13;
84&#13;
&#13;
Henderson&#13;
Hukle&#13;
Little&#13;
Chandler&#13;
&#13;
85&#13;
&#13;
F ullbrook&#13;
F. Johnson&#13;
Welsh&#13;
&#13;
�ZETALETHEAN&#13;
Colors-Scarlet and Black.&#13;
Motto-Esse, quam videri.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President . .. . ........... .. .. .Etta Mahood .. .... ... . . ... . . Edna Randolph&#13;
Vice President .. . ...... . ... . . Edna Randolph ... ..... :· . .... Elsie Rodine&#13;
Recording Secretary . . . ........ Edna Simon . ... . ........... .Alice Mower&#13;
Corresponding Secretary .. . . .... Ethel Lynch . . ....... . ... . . . .Ruth Prentice&#13;
Treasurer . ............ . . . . . . Lorene Jackson ... .. . . .. .... . .Maude Gillin&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
'·&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 I&#13;
Laura Cushman&#13;
Nina Farnham&#13;
&#13;
Etta Mahood&#13;
Edna Randolph&#13;
Pearl Synder&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Lynch&#13;
Iola Westcott&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 2.&#13;
Florence Anthony&#13;
Louise M cDonald&#13;
Hazel Simon&#13;
Madge Gillin&#13;
Maude Gillin&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
D ora Carlson&#13;
Catherine Elliott&#13;
Janet Little&#13;
Eva Randolph&#13;
Mabel Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Ella Campbell&#13;
Gladys Evans&#13;
H elen McDonald&#13;
Elsie Rodine&#13;
Martha Siever&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
&#13;
Lorna Distad&#13;
Lorene Jackson&#13;
Alice Mower&#13;
Helen Roddy&#13;
Lottie Sande, s&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19 I 4.&#13;
Wilna Beam&#13;
Lucy Cushman&#13;
Grace Logan&#13;
Hazel Simon&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Bond&#13;
Neva Beimer&#13;
Lula Kindlespire&#13;
Vernice Chamberlain&#13;
Alice McCurry&#13;
Mary Lund&#13;
Mabel Pecaut&#13;
Florence Montgomery&#13;
Jaunita Walker&#13;
Lulu Weary&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
�..&#13;
OTHON IA N&#13;
Color-Royal P urple.&#13;
Motto-Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second T erm.&#13;
&#13;
President . . . . . .. ... .. . .... . . F. Chandler .. ... .. . .. . .. . . .. Cushman&#13;
Vice President . . . ...... . .. . . . Bachmeyer .. . . ..... . .. .. . . .. T ackaberry&#13;
Secretary . . .. . ... . . . .. . . . . .. .Kingsbury ... . . . .. . . . . . . ... .. Montgomery&#13;
Treasurer . . . . . .. .. .. . .. .. . . . Ellison . . ..... .. . .. .. ... . . . . E llison&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1911&#13;
Bachemeyer&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Culbertson&#13;
Tackaberry&#13;
&#13;
F. Chandler&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Hays&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Elliott&#13;
H arper&#13;
Palmer&#13;
Smylie&#13;
&#13;
Bowker&#13;
Elwick&#13;
Mahoney&#13;
Schatz&#13;
G. E . Wickens&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
Ellison&#13;
D. Johnson&#13;
Rogers&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
Jory&#13;
M ontgomery&#13;
&#13;
Corner&#13;
Maynard&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
Braeley&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914.&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Wright&#13;
&#13;
West&#13;
88&#13;
&#13;
Bigglestone&#13;
H all&#13;
M cClure&#13;
Morgan&#13;
R einke&#13;
&#13;
Barks&#13;
Evans&#13;
Linder&#13;
McFarland&#13;
Patteshall&#13;
&#13;
Austin&#13;
Crane&#13;
Kolp&#13;
M cCurdy&#13;
Muckey .&#13;
&#13;
89&#13;
&#13;
�ALETHEIA&#13;
Colors-Champagne and Brown.&#13;
Motto-Lovers of the best.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
Second T erm.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ..... . .... . .... ... . .Ida Brown .. .. .... . .. .. .. ... Maria Wiese&#13;
Vice President . ... ...... . ... . Blanch Carter .... . . .. . ..... ..Clara C rummer&#13;
Recording Secretary . .. . . . . ... . Mary M cCutchei::m ...... . .. .. . Sarah Bleakley&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . ...... . Helen Olmstead . .. . . . . ·. . . .. .. Annetta H all&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. . .. .. ... . . . . . . M aria Wiese . ...... . .. ...... Ethel Shannon&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9//&#13;
M aria Wiese&#13;
&#13;
Ida Brown&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9/2.&#13;
Hulda K reutz&#13;
Myrtle Britton&#13;
Blanch Carter&#13;
&#13;
Clara C rummer&#13;
H elen Olmstead&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Shannon&#13;
Nellie Fletcher&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
&#13;
"'&#13;
M ary McCutcheon&#13;
Sarah Bleakley&#13;
Eva Leazer&#13;
&#13;
Josie Carter&#13;
Edith Bower&#13;
Hazel Hermann&#13;
&#13;
Annetta Hall&#13;
Kate Leazer&#13;
Mae Engle&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914&#13;
Alma Wilhelm&#13;
Ruth French&#13;
&#13;
90&#13;
&#13;
Iva Hinkley&#13;
Julia Morsch&#13;
Cora Cornelinsen&#13;
&#13;
Florence Long&#13;
H azel Brake&#13;
Arena Loft&#13;
&#13;
�CRESCENT&#13;
Colors-Nile Green and White.&#13;
Motto&#13;
We&#13;
succeed by doing.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
First Term.&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
President. . ... . .. ..... .. .... .Ruth Bleakly ..... ...... ... .. Grace Walkes&#13;
Vice President ........ . .. .. . . May Wickens . . .. . .... ..... .. Flossie Hall&#13;
Recording Secretary ......... ... Flossie Hall ... .. .. . ......... E thel Mitchell&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ... . .. .. Amber Garlock . . ....... . .. . . .Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. . .... . . . .. . ... Grace Walkes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ruby Rhodes&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
Fourth Year.&#13;
Ruth Bleakly&#13;
Gladys Fitch&#13;
Mabel Henderson&#13;
Ona Marsh&#13;
Marjorie Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Sarah Crowther&#13;
Grace Walkes&#13;
•&#13;
Dorothy Koons&#13;
Kathryn Nurse&#13;
Emma Zimmerman&#13;
&#13;
Val Ecker&#13;
Elsie Hallett&#13;
Ethel Mitchell&#13;
Esther Ross&#13;
Bess Trenary&#13;
&#13;
Third Year.&#13;
&#13;
Amber Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Jessie Shultz&#13;
&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
&#13;
Alyce Hallett&#13;
&#13;
Edna Thorndyke&#13;
&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
&#13;
Addie Onstot&#13;
&#13;
Zettie Onstot&#13;
Ada Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Grace McDugal&#13;
&#13;
Music.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Carter&#13;
Ruby Rhodes&#13;
Laura Postin&#13;
Josephine W eiz&#13;
92&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dieterick&#13;
Genevieve Hinde&#13;
Josephine D e Roas&#13;
Mable Maynard&#13;
Helen Humphreys&#13;
93&#13;
&#13;
Flossie Hall&#13;
Alice Kleah&#13;
Winnie Walker&#13;
Floy Gifford&#13;
&#13;
�HAWKEYE&#13;
Colors-Old Gold and Silver.&#13;
Motto-Non palma sine pulvere&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ................... .McKinney .................. .Gorder&#13;
Vice President ............... N. J. Williams ..... .. ....... .Himebauch&#13;
Secretary .... . ... . ... ... .. .. .Crummer ....................Lovitt&#13;
Treasurer ... . ............... J. L. Williams ...... .. . . ... . .Crummer&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Y ear.&#13;
&#13;
Gorder&#13;
Yackey&#13;
J. L. Williams&#13;
&#13;
Engle&#13;
Henderson&#13;
Kuhns&#13;
&#13;
Barrett&#13;
Himebauch&#13;
P. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Third Year.&#13;
Stonebraker&#13;
&#13;
Breaw&#13;
N. ]. Williams&#13;
&#13;
Beebe&#13;
&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
Leazer&#13;
Rickard&#13;
&#13;
Jenson&#13;
Phenis&#13;
&#13;
Crummer&#13;
McKinney&#13;
&#13;
Wiltze&#13;
&#13;
Riner&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
Batchelor&#13;
Bell&#13;
&#13;
94&#13;
&#13;
Butler&#13;
Lovitt&#13;
&#13;
Boas&#13;
Hoyt&#13;
Spicker&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
�AESTHES IAN&#13;
Colors-Olive Green and White.&#13;
M otto-To possess the aesthetic.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
First Term .&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
President ... . . .. . ......... . . .Grace Ryan ... ..... ...... .. . Edith Rogers&#13;
Vice President .... . .. .. .. . . . . Vera McCracken .... . . .. .. . . . Marie D evitt&#13;
Secretary .. . ... . . .. . .... . .. . .Ethel McCracken .. . . ... . .. .. . Lucille Metcalf&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. .............. Lois Crouch ...... .. . . . . ..... Vera McCracken&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
Fourth Y ear.&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Bilsborough&#13;
Edith Craven&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
Marie D evitt&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Theresa Freeman&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Ina Heeren&#13;
Nancy Kallemeyn&#13;
Ethel Kellogg&#13;
Lucille Metcalf&#13;
Laura Pease&#13;
H arriet Patterson&#13;
Edith Parrot&#13;
Florence Rodine&#13;
E dith Rogers&#13;
Florence Shumaker&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
Ethel W eisensee&#13;
Third Year.&#13;
&#13;
Grace Chamberlain&#13;
Marion Metcalf&#13;
Vera McCracken&#13;
Ethel McCracken&#13;
Ruth Whitlock&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
&#13;
Madeline Ford&#13;
&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Jean Thomson&#13;
&#13;
J estina Schindel&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
&#13;
Irene Robar&#13;
Special.&#13;
&#13;
Mary Secord&#13;
&#13;
Pearl Siglen&#13;
&#13;
Alice Thornburg&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHI AN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Cerise and White.&#13;
M otto--C arpe diem.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ......... . . . .... .. . Larson ....... .. ..... . .... . Wells&#13;
Vice President .... ..... .... . . Bassett .... .. . . . ......... . .. Freeman&#13;
Recording Secretary ...... . .. .. Kilbourne . . ... .. ..... . . . . . . . Peat&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . . .. . . .. Brown . . ·.. . .. .. ... . .. . . ... Mahood&#13;
Treasurer ......... . .... . .. . . Gratz . .... .. .. . ............ Pritchard&#13;
MEMBERS .&#13;
&#13;
Four th Year.&#13;
Bassett&#13;
Peat&#13;
Hiett&#13;
&#13;
Freeman&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
H. Pollock&#13;
Parrick&#13;
&#13;
Fowler&#13;
Wells&#13;
F. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
Third .Year.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Gratz&#13;
&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
Brown&#13;
Vosburg&#13;
&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
Maho'od&#13;
H endrickson&#13;
&#13;
Upham&#13;
Garretson&#13;
Sass&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
Henderson&#13;
Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Piper&#13;
Friend&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
Izakoff&#13;
&#13;
H aitz&#13;
&#13;
T orbet&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
98&#13;
&#13;
99&#13;
&#13;
��THE MAJESTY OF PEACE&#13;
By Frank P. Johnson&#13;
The biggest thing under God's stars is an idea. "The world is governed not&#13;
by men, not by parties, but by ideas." The idea of one God made Judaism immortal; the idea of beauty raised Greece from mediocrity to eternal leadership; the idea&#13;
of law and order gave to Rome a majesty which the centuries cannot efface. The&#13;
temple of Jerusalem has fallen; the Acropolis is in ruins; the Forum is deserted and the&#13;
Appian way untraveled; but the ideals which created them are eternal. The day that&#13;
sees no great idea struggling for recognition will be a day of stagnation and decay.&#13;
The greatest idea at work in the world today is that of Universal Peace. Founded&#13;
upon deliberate judgment, backed by enlightened public opinion and dealing with the&#13;
greatest moral issue that has ever affected the welfare of man, this idea is destined to&#13;
pervade the hearts and minds of the masses until it is a realized fact. Two thousand&#13;
years ago the air above Judea's plains throbbed with the waves of the angelic song,&#13;
"Peace on Earth, Good Will to Men." Sad and weary centuries have passed since&#13;
But the&#13;
then; centuries in which man has written his history in letters of blood.&#13;
"cradle song of Christ was not sung in vain." The echo of that heavenly song is&#13;
filling the hearts of men; the message which came from the Gallilean Hills proclaiming&#13;
Universal Peace is the hope and inspiration of humanity.&#13;
The heart aches as we recall man's awful sacrifice to the God of War. What&#13;
tongue can describe, what mind can picture the horrors of a single battle? If you&#13;
would see war in its true character; go not in the thick of the conflict spurred on by&#13;
strains of martial music; go not under the proud banner of the victorious warrior; go&#13;
when night has failen on the field of misery; when the rival forces have withdrawn;&#13;
when the glory of the charge is forgotten; when the cold rain is falling on the dead&#13;
and wounded and the forest, field and hill resound with the groans of the dying- men&#13;
and boys connected, as all of us, by ties of home, love, and friendship, dying under&#13;
a foreign sky to be buried in an unknown grave; dying that a tyrant's dream of a&#13;
world empire might be realized; dying to open a new field to British products; dying that&#13;
Russia might retain stolen lands in the Orient;&#13;
"Dying to build false greatness,&#13;
Victims of greed and vice,&#13;
Where is the structure builded&#13;
That was ever worth the price?"&#13;
And this is the established method of determining justice among Christian nations! Is there not · a better way? Must might forever be accepted as right? If it&#13;
is wrong for an individual to shed blood in an effort to establish justice, it is wrong for&#13;
a collection of individuals to do likewise. As the wearing of .a rms in private life has been&#13;
restricted to the policeman, so also the armaments of the nations should be limited to&#13;
an international police force. As peace is best maintained in communities whose citizens are unarmed, so international peace will be established when the nations reduce&#13;
102&#13;
&#13;
their armaments and submit their controversies to an international court. We do not&#13;
say "do away with force." Without force there can be no universal respect for law.&#13;
In an ideal world there is no force; an ideal world is governed by brotherly love.&#13;
The world is not yet ideal. The law of love must be supplemented by physical force.&#13;
Take armed policemen from our cities and anarchy will reign. Take armored cruisers&#13;
from the seas and every ocean would become a scene of bloodshed, piracy, and lawlessness.&#13;
Modern navies, however, have not been built as a protection against pirates; they&#13;
owe their existence to the spirit of jealousy among Christian nations. The major portion of the world's labor and capital is taken from productive enterprises and un-productively consumed, while the problem of daily bread is becoming more and more&#13;
serious. England and Germany spend three hundred million dollars a year on their&#13;
navies, while thousands of children wander homeless in the streets of London and Berlin. Russia cannot even pay the interest on her war debt; and yet she has outlined&#13;
a billion dollar naval program. Our own rich Republic has recently departed from&#13;
the policy which has made her loved and respected in all corners of the earth. In&#13;
twenty years we have increased our military expenditures seven hundred per cent. The&#13;
cost of one battleship would buy every college and university in the state of Iowa; it&#13;
would pay for the college education of ten thousand young men and women; or would&#13;
build an improved highway from Chicago to San Francisco. Without an enemy in&#13;
the world, we are planning to spend three hundred and fifty million dollars on our&#13;
navy the coming year, and yet we have two million people who can neither read nor&#13;
write. Our rivers should be opened for commerce; our national resources conserved;&#13;
our foreign population should be trained for citizenship. Men of America, is it not&#13;
time for a halt to be called in the construction of armaments?&#13;
Military men tell us, however, that if " we wish peace we must prepare for war."&#13;
This is true up to a certain maxim; beyond that it is false. If we wish peace. we must&#13;
prepare for peace. This is what our forefathers did on the Canadian border and for&#13;
a century the longest boundary line between two civilized nations in the world, has&#13;
been protected only by police. Moreover, as Victor Hugo said, "The chief cause for&#13;
war is to be found in the armaments of the nations." The Napoleonic wars, the&#13;
most indefensible wars of history, were brought on because one man had a passion&#13;
for dominion and as he himself said "because he had a great army ready to act."&#13;
All history is a vain word if instruments of war are promoters of peace. They&#13;
quench the faith in the power of justice; they blind the eyes to the highest ideals; they&#13;
strain international relations and arouse jealousies; they excite the very evils against which&#13;
they are to guard. We settle our individual disputes by reason and the civil law; can&#13;
we not as a collection of individuals settle our international difficulties by arbitration and&#13;
international law? Must the nations of Christendom cling forever to the barbarous&#13;
agencies which mark the failures of the past? Shall we pin our faith to the symbols of&#13;
Barbarism or devote our energies to the problems of an enlightened civilization? Shall&#13;
we take for our ideal, Christ's Law of Love or man's rule of honor? We do not&#13;
103&#13;
&#13;
�advocate a complete disarmament; we would not say with the late Count T olstoi "do&#13;
away with force." But we do plead for a halt to be called in this mad race for&#13;
military supremacy. We do plead for the establishment of an International High Court&#13;
of Justice. Christianity, Commerce, Industry, and Education are opposed to this system of competitive arming. It is the inevitable conflict between a lower and a higher&#13;
civilization, with the inevitable result. The trend of events, the march of progress, the&#13;
signs of the times point the downfall of Militarism and to the triumph of Reason.&#13;
Twice in ten years has a Parliament of twenty-six nations met at The Hague to discuss questions formerly settled by war; over eighty treaties of arbitration have gone&#13;
into effect in the past five years. Norway and Sweden have separated peacefully; Bulgaria has secured her independence without resorting to force; Chile and Argentine have&#13;
settled the long disputed questions of boundary line without bloodshed. In commemoration of this they have erected in the heart of the lordly Andes, a colossal statue of "The&#13;
Prince of Peace," on the base of which is engraved these words-"Sooner shall these&#13;
mountains crumble into dust, than the Chileans and Argentines shall break this treaty&#13;
which here at the feet of Christ The Redeemer they have sworn to maintain."&#13;
The dream of the poet is becoming a reality. The vision of the ages is within&#13;
our grasp. The weary nations long for permanent peace. Not a peace purchased by the&#13;
sacrifice of principles; but a peace based upon justice and love. Not a peace which&#13;
will mean an end to struggling and striving and will allow us to wander peacefully in&#13;
the Utopian fields of contentment; but a peace which will mean the beginning of a higher,&#13;
nobler struggle; a struggle permeated by a desire for social service, scientific knowledge&#13;
and spiritual progression.&#13;
A leader is needed to guide the nations from military bondage; what nation is&#13;
best fitted to lead? The nations of Europe are bound down by age old hatreds. Germany will not follow the leadership of England and England will not be lead by&#13;
France or Russia. But there is a nation far away from the debasing influences of&#13;
the Old World; a nation built upon a virgin continent, rich in the gifts of nature and&#13;
washed by two broad oceans; a nation of Saxon and Teuton of Celt and Slav who&#13;
combine their love for the Fatherland with their love for the land of their adoption,&#13;
thus forming a bond of unity which is a more potent factor in the cause of Peace than&#13;
the proudest navy afloat; a nation which has become a world power without the use&#13;
of a great armament; a nation which since the adoption of its constitution has never been&#13;
attacked; a nation which citizen-soldiers in the time of need have proven themselves&#13;
the peers of the trained legions of Europe. The United States of America is well fitted&#13;
to lead in the cause of Peace. The downtrodden people of Europe are looking our&#13;
way for light; they know that across the great Atlantic is a nation conceived in Liberty,&#13;
whose watchwords are Freedom, Progress, and Equality. This is America's opportunity-her's is a Divine mission. There is but one emblem above the Stars and&#13;
Stripes and that is the Cross of Christ. Let us fold our banner around that Cross&#13;
and point the nations to the true majesty which is to be found in a Peace based upon&#13;
a common brotherhood. Then shall dawn that great day"When the war drums throb no longer,&#13;
And the battle flags are furled&#13;
In the Parliament of Man,&#13;
The Federation of the World."&#13;
&#13;
THE LAST MAN&#13;
By W. W. Waymack&#13;
The last man's grimly failing eye&#13;
Essayed the sea, the earth, the sky&#13;
In solemn revery.&#13;
He raised his hand-the frenzied pack&#13;
Of venomed huntresses drew back&#13;
In awe-they knew not why.&#13;
Frail was his poise, his gesture cold,&#13;
His figure feebly knit and old,&#13;
His face a haggard thing;&#13;
'Twas strange what wierd, etherial force&#13;
Of realms unseen could thrill a corse&#13;
And make it seem a king!&#13;
He raised his hand; a silence deep&#13;
As desert sands all hushed in sleep,&#13;
Throttled their snarls unheard.&#13;
He spoke; and some superior Will&#13;
On tones but sharp and words but shrill&#13;
A majesty conferred.&#13;
"Ten hundred years have sought decay&#13;
Since Male dominion passed away&#13;
In Surrey as in Kent;&#13;
Ten hundred years since first to feel&#13;
The suffragette's imperious heel&#13;
The neck of man was bent;&#13;
Ten hundred years, and in that space&#13;
How juxtaposed the human race,&#13;
How autocratic woman's place,&#13;
How subjugate the man's!&#13;
Who dreamed ten hundred years would show&#13;
Such cataclysmic overthrow&#13;
Of what were just and what were trueMan's schemes, and Nature's plans?&#13;
'Tis true thy splenative intent&#13;
Hath wronged the ribs whence thou wert rent&#13;
And men debased to dogs;&#13;
Too true, once franchised and once free,&#13;
Enkitchened man rolls pies for thee&#13;
While thou dost roll the logs;&#13;
10 5&#13;
&#13;
�'Tis true, too true, our lineal pride&#13;
By servile centuries denied&#13;
Hath paled and wasted, near hath died&#13;
Beneath our cruel estate,&#13;
Till now male valor is a dream&#13;
Too ancient for historic theme,&#13;
And masculine endowments seem&#13;
Much more emasculate.&#13;
That, chilled by foul oppression's blast,&#13;
Malekinds first member is its last&#13;
Thou knowst, nor I deny;&#13;
That I alone of all my sex&#13;
Thy still insatiate souls perplex&#13;
Is my calamity.&#13;
I know thy unencompassed power;&#13;
I apprehend my final hour;&#13;
'Tis not unknown thy features dour&#13;
Foretell my day has comeThink not I look for mercy's face&#13;
Where meager justice lacks a place,&#13;
Nor dream repentancy' s disgrace&#13;
Can halt my martyrdom.&#13;
No, no! Regard it no surprise&#13;
Decadent man should once arise&#13;
In dignity of yore;&#13;
The marvel is he staid so long&#13;
Prostrate to thine oppressive thong&#13;
And raised him not before&#13;
Oh, woman; woman !-and didst dare&#13;
Fore' er unbearded think to wear ·&#13;
Thy maladorning despot air&#13;
To gloat on cringing man?&#13;
Oh, wisdom, stranger that thou art&#13;
To Amazonic-tinctured heart!&#13;
Why, why didst not a love impart&#13;
For better cautioned plan?&#13;
Alone, alone, long have I borne&#13;
The impact of thy common scorn&#13;
In deep humility,&#13;
And truly never aught was given&#13;
More generously under Heaven&#13;
Than thy indignity;&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
But shall a man, howe' er debased,&#13;
However far his grandeur passed,&#13;
However hushed his song,&#13;
At female lords' tyrannic whim&#13;
Betray what hath supported him&#13;
Through bitter years and long?&#13;
Shall those two pillars of his house,&#13;
His nether limbs, henceforth carouse,&#13;
Thy jibing humor to arouse,&#13;
Appareled but in dirt?&#13;
Shall-worst iniquity of allThe climax of his woeful thrallThose stumps their trousered youth recall&#13;
Now compassed in a skirt?&#13;
Oh, cruelest creatures Time hath sent&#13;
To vex a globe for humans meant,&#13;
This shalt thou never see!&#13;
Puissant despots of my line,&#13;
The Richard spirit now in mineNo more man bows to thee!&#13;
Go, legislate till thou art mad&#13;
With making laws 'twere best unhad,&#13;
Decree bad good, or make good bad,&#13;
Coerce what can't retort.&#13;
Go, deal with planets or with gods,&#13;
Transmute the stars to ray less clouds,&#13;
But spare to man thy Jovian nods,&#13;
Abjure thy customed sport.&#13;
Go, while the spark that fires my brain&#13;
Still sputters in its wonted train&#13;
And leave me, dying, peace!&#13;
Go, in remembrance of a breast&#13;
That quavers not at thy behest,&#13;
Nor grieves at its surcease!&#13;
Go, tell thy tyrant populace&#13;
Thou sawst the last of Arthur's race&#13;
On Albion's sea-skirt crags&#13;
Ten million suffragettes defy&#13;
To squelch his masculinity&#13;
Or misadorn his legs!"&#13;
&#13;
10 7&#13;
&#13;
�"Oh, how I wish mother and father were here," exclaimed Gretchen, as the girls&#13;
&#13;
THE ZET. NOVELETTE&#13;
&#13;
shook the snow from each other.&#13;
"Yes, and just to think that they are away off in Sunny Italy and here we are&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
Written December by Etta Mahood.&#13;
"Please, mum-they's a big red-faced woman at the back door as 'ud like toe see&#13;
yez-looks mighty like a cook mum. "&#13;
"How I wish it were, Sally Ann. Did you ask her in?"&#13;
"Indade I did mum, but she wouldn't stir inside, mum."&#13;
"Well I'll be down directly. Tell her to step at least inside the door."&#13;
"Very well, mum," and Sally Ann vanished.&#13;
The fact was that the cook had left Hartford College as soon as the Xmas&#13;
holidays began, and Miss Dean, the little English teacher, had been at wits end · to&#13;
provide meals for herself, two Junior girls who had no home in the United States and&#13;
Sally Ann, the maid. It only lacked two days until Xmas and at the expectation of·&#13;
having a real cook for the Xmas dinner Miss Dean hurried down to the kitchen. When&#13;
she reached the lower room the person in question still stood outside.&#13;
"She won't come in, mum," ventured Sally Ann. "Well, we'll soon see, Sally&#13;
Ann." And to Sally Ann's amazement the big Irishwoman did come in at Miss Dean's&#13;
request.&#13;
"May I inquire your business with me?" asked the little teacher with palpitating&#13;
heart.&#13;
"Shure yez may- it's what I do be comin' after Miss. Heerd yer do be afther&#13;
wantin' a cook Miss. Them's me raisons fer comin'."&#13;
"We surely do," exclaimed the relieved head.&#13;
"Don't we tho', mum!" echoed Sally Ann.&#13;
A business consultation followe.d, after which Molly was legally installed as mistress of the utensil domain. With a happy step Miss Dean hurried up to her room. "I&#13;
must write a note to Gretchen and Kathleen and have them dress up for dinner tonight&#13;
for Molly, the dear, has promised us all sorts of good things. Imagine having a meal&#13;
we haven't ploughed thru ! We must celebrate, I do believe, just for fun. I'll put on&#13;
my pink chiffon.''&#13;
In the meantime Gretchen and Kathleen were having a glorious tramp on their&#13;
snow-shoes over the hills around the college. Nature held a charm for both girls and in&#13;
the coldest weather they were out of doors at every opportunity. The afternoon was&#13;
fast waning and the clouds to the west were growing heavier.&#13;
"We'd better go in Kathleen, it is beginning to snow!"&#13;
"I don't want to, Gretchen. This is so grand!&#13;
If only a good supper was&#13;
waiting for us!"&#13;
"Let's go and see if one isn't. I feel something hopeful in my bones Kathleen.&#13;
Come, I'll race you in."&#13;
With a bound they were both off and in a very short time they dashed into the&#13;
entrance together.&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
planked in a snow-covered world."&#13;
"We'll have to make the best of it, little sister," as they climbed the broad stairway.&#13;
"Why, here's a note Kathleen and it's from Miss Dean."&#13;
"What can it be, Gret ?- Hurry and open it!"&#13;
With hasty fingers the girls unsealed the note, and read:&#13;
' 'Dear Gretchen and Kathleen:"I know you will be delighted to know that we have at last secured"-"A cook," shouted Kathleen- "Well, bully for her!"&#13;
"Kathleen, such language!"&#13;
" A cook, and to celebrate, let's dress up and go to dinner in style. Dinner will be&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
served at 6 : 30.&#13;
"ELIZ. DEAN.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, how perfectly glorious! Will we dress up? Well, I rather guess! Where&#13;
did we put our evening gowns, Gretchen?"&#13;
"We're not going to get into those things, kiddie."&#13;
"Why not? Didn't Miss Dean say to dress up? Come, sis, let's put on our best.&#13;
You put on your white satin and I'll get into my blue silk."&#13;
No one could resist the appeal and the dresses and accessories were brought to&#13;
light. It still lacked an hour and a half till dinner time, and the girls went about their&#13;
toilets carefully, and painstakingly.&#13;
When the gong sounded the girls were ready and issued forth in resplendent glory.&#13;
Miss Dean, brilliant in her evening attire, met them in the lower corridor. They all&#13;
reached the dining room, which Miss Dean simply decorated for the occasion, when the&#13;
door bell rang. With a look of dismay Miss Dean called Sally Ann and asked her to&#13;
answer the call.&#13;
"Who can be coming here this time of the night? and look at me in this ridiculous&#13;
garb!"&#13;
All three waited expectantly, for visitors were uncommon.&#13;
"Please, mum, two gentlemans 'ud like ter see yer."&#13;
"I can't see them tonight, Sally Ann. Tell them to call tomorrow."&#13;
"I tried puttin' thim off, mum, but they wouldn't put.&#13;
and they say, mum, as you knowed 'em."&#13;
&#13;
They's handsome, mum,&#13;
&#13;
"I wonder." And Miss Dean hurried from the room. Gretchen and Kathleen&#13;
entered into a stormy session-maybe I should say Kathleen did.&#13;
''I'll just bet they're those nephews of hers," she stormed, "and I know they're&#13;
come to stay-horrid things! What have we always got to have men come in for anyway? What do we want of stiff-necked, handsome fellows, dudes, sports, dandies&#13;
hanging around here?"&#13;
1 09&#13;
&#13;
�"Hush, Kathleen, wait until you see them," cautioned Gretchen. "They may ·&#13;
make lots of fun for us."&#13;
"Well, I just won't! I"&#13;
Thedoor opened and Miss Dean, flushed, entered.&#13;
"Girls, my two nephews from Harvard have come to spend their vacation with me.&#13;
I'm so glad that you are here. Come and meet them before we sit down to dinner."&#13;
There was nothing to do but to obey, so Kathleen, with certain mysterious grimaces,&#13;
followed Miss Dean and Gretchen into the library.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
&#13;
Written&#13;
&#13;
January Dora Carlson.&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
It was a commonplace meeting which occurred in the other room, and as they&#13;
were indulging in quiet conversation, the doors suddenly opened and the red face of&#13;
the cook shone forth radiant with anger, as with arms akimbo she surveyed the group.&#13;
"I am for to be tellin' yez, mum, that I am not for to be workin' vituals for no&#13;
one to eat. They be now very nigh cold, lady, and the supper all gone to ruin."&#13;
Both young men rose involuntarily at the sight of the cook and remained staring at&#13;
her astonished.&#13;
"Great Guns, Molly, how did you ever get to this part of the world?"&#13;
"If that don't be Sid Brownwell. The world's comin' to an end. It be mighty&#13;
queer if I can't be holdin' a respectable position without the likeness of some prancin'&#13;
young men a followin' me. And there's Ned Brownwell, too; the very same min I do&#13;
be wantin' to get away from."&#13;
The cook was obliged to stop for breath.&#13;
"But Molly, Boys, what is the matter?"&#13;
"A school-boy prank, I warrant. How disgusting. I should think that men out&#13;
of their 'teens would have some comprehension of what is right," frowned Kathleen.&#13;
"How jolly, now you are in for it my good fellows!" laughed Gretchen.&#13;
Clearly, the cook was angry. She stood in the door for a few minutes glaring at&#13;
the young men and then turned on her heel and marched away.&#13;
The boys looked at each other and laughed; Gretchen giggled; Kathleen was&#13;
sarcastically scornful while Miss Dean was perfectly bewildered. Finally, gathering&#13;
her wits, she suggested that they go to dinner. The well cooked and tasty dinner was&#13;
served by Sally Ann. All was proceeding very nicely when the cook again entered&#13;
upon the scene.&#13;
&#13;
"If it do please yez or not, lady, I'm fer lavin' this place immediately."&#13;
&#13;
Gretchen rose hastily and waylaid the cook at the backdoor. Here she begged&#13;
and offered all manner of bribes, but she could not persuade the cook to remain.&#13;
"All the Spirits there's ever been will be dwellin' in this house before those 'gimmen' have 'been here twenty-four hours," was her fina l blessing for the Dormitory.&#13;
That evening the boys, pleading an engagement, ravaged the country far and near&#13;
for a cook. Finally, running out of gasoline, they stopped at a small country store, and&#13;
while waiting they told their story to the clerk, who said he could easily help them out&#13;
of their difficulty. When they had gone out to start the car the proprietor came out with&#13;
a stout Irish woman whom he introduced to the boys as the new cook. They promised&#13;
her a good salary and radiant they started for the Dormitory. Arriving at 10 :00 they&#13;
were about to leave their burden at the rear door, but the cook would not leave the&#13;
machine. Then the boys realized that, after all, they had carried home the same rebellious cook. Seemingly frantic and wringing her hands, she shouted : " I do fear all&#13;
the sperits that ever were chasin' me. They foller me where all I go. You min be the&#13;
cause of it all."&#13;
Certainly the cook was frightened. Cautiously the boys approached her and finally&#13;
promising that they would leave the Hall that evening and trouble her no more, with&#13;
bribes of money and pleading for the girls' Xmas dinner, the cook promised to remain.&#13;
During a jolly hour spent in the library Sid Brownwell confided to Gretchen the&#13;
story of the cook. "So now you see, Gretchen, we must not be visible to the mistress of&#13;
the utensil domain."&#13;
"But what makes her so angry with you? Where have you seen her before? Do&#13;
tell. ..&#13;
"Just a foolish prank played upon her."&#13;
"Miss Dean," said Gretchen, "do make your nephews tell us the cause of the cook&#13;
having to leave."&#13;
"Yes, boys, I wish you would explain. I thought to let you off without an account&#13;
of yourselves, but you seem to have been up to mischief. Where have you seen her&#13;
before?"&#13;
"Oh," said Ned, "perhaps she has gotten us mixed up with some boy friends of&#13;
her's. I'm sure I can hardly account for it otherwise. Can you Sid?"&#13;
Their attention was now called to the snow and plans were made for a sleigh ride&#13;
the next morning. "It will be jollier I am sure than auto riding, hunting for a cook,"&#13;
laughed Gretchen.&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
&#13;
Dismayed and protesting Miss Dean urged Molly to remain, but all in vain.&#13;
&#13;
Written February by Florence Montgom ery.&#13;
&#13;
"I do not be for stayin' in a place where those "gimmen," as they be called, visit.&#13;
They will not be fer livin' in this house long if they kape their former conduct." She&#13;
soared grandly and turned and left the group.&#13;
&#13;
Having reached the sleeping apartment assigned to them by Miss Dean, the boys&#13;
entered into a heated, tho' rather subdued discussion, not knowing in how close proximity&#13;
the sharp ears of the cook might be, and rememb,ering that they were to be minus&#13;
&#13;
110&#13;
&#13;
111&#13;
&#13;
�quantities to the ears as well as to the eyes of the cook if they were to be saved from&#13;
starvation.&#13;
"Well of all things, to get into this mess, just when we thought we had reached a&#13;
place where we could rest our shattered nerves for a week or two. How in the&#13;
dickens, Ted, do you suppose that critter got into this part of the country? I never&#13;
expected to lay eyes on her again after that night she left the Frat house."&#13;
"Maybe she heard we were coming and thought she'd like to see us again, you&#13;
especially, for I think she loves you more than she does me. I don't know how else to&#13;
explain it," and Ted, recalling the event that had sent away the raging cook, was unable&#13;
to hold in any longer and rolled on the bed in hysterics, which not even Ned's broad&#13;
hands clapped down rather violently over his mouth, could entirely suppress.&#13;
"Man, are you crazy?" exclaimed Ned wrathfully. ''I'll bet that cook is packing&#13;
her things now, preparatory to leaving. If we get turned out of here, we've no place to&#13;
go. I wish that they had left the remodeling of the Frat house until next month and&#13;
then it would not matter so much. But, as it is, we can't go home. We wouldn't any&#13;
more than get there before we'd have to start back, so, as I see it, we've got to make the&#13;
best of it and stick it out here."&#13;
"Well, I'll tell you." Ted spoke up after a brief silence of thoughtful considering. "We can't expect to keep out of the way of that cook all the time we're here.&#13;
That would be impossible and if we don't keep out of her way, we won't be here, that's&#13;
all. Then there won't be any Xmas dinner here, or any other for that matter, for it&#13;
seems that the art of Domestic Science has not yet made its debut into this boarding&#13;
school. Would that it had. It could save the situation and us, too, alright. Well, as&#13;
I was saying, about the only thing left for us to do is to win her good graces again, ·&#13;
and mighty sudden, too. But, by George, how are we going to do it? That gets me."&#13;
"That's the question, how can we do it? We got out of her graces so far the other&#13;
time that it will be pretty hard sledding to get into the right traces again. Whatever you&#13;
do, don't you dare let it out why she is angry at us, or our beloved Frat will be disgraced&#13;
forever.&#13;
"Oh, don't worry, kid. Let's retire and dream about it," yawned Fred. "I'm&#13;
sleepy. Whew! Look out here, it's a regular blizzard. Why you can't see a foot away&#13;
for the snow and the wind's blowing forty miles an hour. Hear the windows rattle, will&#13;
you? No sleigh ride for tomorrow."&#13;
A groan from Ned interrupted him. "Well, I see my finish if we have to stay&#13;
cooped up here all day tomorrow. I'll die off. It's bad enough to be "Butt-in-Skies"&#13;
as they very plainly made us understand"-"Aw, g'wan, that pretty one is a p--."&#13;
&#13;
creased very many degrees during the short time of our unfortunate association."&#13;
with a disgusted shrug, Ned lapsed into silence.&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, never mind, we'll have time to begin our maneuvering right away anyhow.&#13;
Good night, old man, and think hard."&#13;
But a grunt from Ned very plainly showed that he was already past the stage of&#13;
hard thinking.&#13;
For Ted, however, sleep was not forthcoming. For the idea had suddenly flashed&#13;
upon him that getting into the cook's good graces might mean favorable approval from&#13;
two blue eyes, mischievious, dancing ones, that sparkled when the owner smiled at you,&#13;
and when the owner smiled there were two dimples that simply had to show themselves,&#13;
yes, and her name was Gretchen, too. Why was it he had always liked that name so&#13;
well. Oh, yes, he remembered now-he had read about her in a fairy tale and she was&#13;
a beautiful princess and Ted's thoughts wandered on and on until he was dreaming he&#13;
was a noble prince when a shout, very much like the voice of Molly, the cook, came to&#13;
his ears. However, with a sigh of relief he noted the alarm rather than anger prevalent&#13;
in the tone. He sat up and listened. He heard someone hurry downstairs and then&#13;
the anxious voice of Miss Dean and the louder, alarmed tones of Molly. Then a call&#13;
to the girls and a hasty scurrying past the door and down the stairs to the kitchen where&#13;
the anxious conference continued and rather violent knocks and rushing about were taking&#13;
place. He jumped out of bed and into his clothes, but he dared not go down. So he&#13;
opened the door a little and listened.&#13;
floor.&#13;
&#13;
"Well, girls, we've got to get help quickly. The water is simply flooding the&#13;
Whatever do you suppose made the pipe burst?"&#13;
&#13;
"Well, we all do be going to be drowned in a minute. As fer meself, I don't&#13;
see where help do be comin' from on sech a night like this. Thim young 'gimmens' has&#13;
went an' I do be doubtin' if they could do nothin' to help us, anyway. Th're that&#13;
empty headed they don't know nothin'. Yet I'd be willin' to let thim stare and give them&#13;
a big Xmas dinner if they could help." said Molly between violent swishes and wringing&#13;
out of the mop.&#13;
"Oh, Molly, if we could find the boys, couldn't we bring them to help us? I&#13;
know they could," and without waiting for an answer Gretchen bounded up the stairs.&#13;
Ned quietly closed the door and hastily retreated backwards. In answer to the&#13;
tap on the door Ted responded, "Yes, is there anything the matter?"&#13;
"Oh yes, we are in a terrible fix. One of the water pipes in the kitchen broke and&#13;
is just simply flooding everything and Miss Dean wants to know if you and T - . I mean&#13;
you bo- or young gentlemen would help us out. Oh"- "W e certainly will.&#13;
&#13;
We'll be right down in just a minute."&#13;
&#13;
"Well, anyway, that younger one did. Did you notice the way she scowled?&#13;
She's a regular clam, she won't even open her mouth and now we've got them into a&#13;
fix, destroyed all their blissful happiness, got their cook ready to leave them, disgraced&#13;
ourselves, and muddled things up generally. I'll bet their good opinion of us has in-&#13;
&#13;
"Wake up there, old fellow, our chance has come. We'll show them what we're&#13;
made of," called Ted as he jerked the expostulating sleeper out onto the floor and pro-&#13;
&#13;
112&#13;
&#13;
11 3&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, please, and do hurry," and she was gone.&#13;
&#13;
�ceeded to explain the situation. "Now's our chance and we've got to make good." But&#13;
he muttered to himself, "I'll be jiggered if either of us know anything about stopping up&#13;
a hole in a pipe that doesn't belong there."&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER IV.&#13;
&#13;
Written by Laura Cushman-March.&#13;
Molly was too excited in moping up the water to be surprised when the boys came&#13;
into the kitchen, but promptly bade them to "Stop the water, will yez?" Ted immediately walked gingerly through the water to where Gretchen stood in high rubbers and&#13;
a pink kimona, holding her small hand over the crack in the pipe. "I guess that I am not&#13;
doing any good," she said as she looked up, but Ted only thought how bewitching she&#13;
was with her hair tied back that way. Just then Ned said, "Here's a wrench Sally Ann .&#13;
found ."&#13;
Between them they managed to loosen the pipe at the joint and after inserting a&#13;
plug they stood back triumphantly.&#13;
"I don't see how yez can be gettin' any water from there," said Molly, stooping&#13;
down to look at the pipe. Just then the power of the water loosened the plug. It flew&#13;
out in Molly's face and deluged her with water. "Begorra, and yez done thet on&#13;
poipose. It was shust what Oi might have 'spected from the loikes in yez," and she&#13;
made a wild rush after the boys with the wet mop, while they dashed into the first open&#13;
door, and nearly fell down the basement stairs. They could hear the shrieks and laughter of the girls and could make out that Miss Dean was expostulating with Molly. Ned ·&#13;
was furious and raging at the utter hopelessness of fate, when Ted whispered: "Gee! Of&#13;
all the luck. Here's the gas meter. Why didn't we think of it before? We're a&#13;
couple of blockheads!" He jerked the crank around.&#13;
"I don't see where that's going to help any," grumbled Ned.&#13;
"Wait and see," suggested Ted.&#13;
They were silent a moment then New exclaimed: "Don't you remember how she&#13;
likes to hear Irish songs?" and without further ceremonies the strains of "Oh, Paddy&#13;
Dear, and Did You Hear the News That's Going Round" floated into the kitchen, interrupting Molly's tirade against "Raison-Boardin' School-Busted water pipes and&#13;
"haythen" college boys."&#13;
&#13;
"You bet we will!" and two rather anxious faces appeared at the door. "We've&#13;
turned the water off in the basement and"-"Shure now, ay me bones, the water is stopped," exclaimed Molly.&#13;
"Yes, and you remember, Molly, you said if the boys were only here and could&#13;
stop the water and fix the pipe you would be awillin' to give them a big Xmas dinner,"&#13;
said Kathleen; and Miss Dean added, "I think we'll let the boys clean up the water&#13;
and we will retire."&#13;
Molly at last reluctantly gave in, giving as a parting warning: "Faith and I do be&#13;
still belavin' they'll be bringin' yez more throuble."&#13;
The next day dawned clear and cold. A plumber fixed matters in the kitchen and&#13;
preparations were begun in earnest for a good Xmas feast. Songs and gay laughter&#13;
made the day a happy one and the week that followed was one long to be remembered.&#13;
Even Molly caught the spirit of Xmas and said: "Faith and I belave as me ould&#13;
mistress used to say, 'There's so mich good in the bist iv us and so mich bad in the woist&#13;
iv us thet the bist in us have no business talkin' about the woist in us'."&#13;
(End.)&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dean looked at the girls and smiled and they all looked at Molly, who stood&#13;
listening in amazement; then dropped into a chair and began to weep.&#13;
"Oh, me! Moi dear ould wearin' of the Green.&#13;
was sung at me Pat's funeral."&#13;
&#13;
Faith 'twas that very song as&#13;
&#13;
MAC &amp; CUSH&#13;
&#13;
Impulsive Kathleen put her arms around the Irish cook's bent shoulders and said:&#13;
''They are singing it for you, Molly. Now you will let them stay, won't you? They'll&#13;
be very good I know,"&#13;
"Yes, do," added Gretchen.&#13;
&#13;
They'll help you lots."&#13;
114&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
�TO THE CLASS OF 1911&#13;
The D ean walked slowly down the aisle,&#13;
He did not crack a smile;&#13;
His coat was buttoned up and down&#13;
In good old college style.&#13;
And when the platform he had reached&#13;
He met a goodly show;&#13;
The I 9 I I graduates&#13;
All sitting in a row.&#13;
With faltering step and mournful eye&#13;
He each hand sadly pressed ;&#13;
The scalding tears ran down his cheek,&#13;
As them he thus addressed :&#13;
" In retrospect but sorrow is,&#13;
But sorrow now I see,&#13;
And to your futures' black abyss&#13;
But sorrow beckons me.&#13;
"No joy I know, but in despair&#13;
I hope but that I may&#13;
In what of life remains to bear&#13;
Endure no darker day."&#13;
"Oh, had gaunt D eath the mortal line,&#13;
For my poor corps transcended;&#13;
I'd gladly clasp his hand in mine,&#13;
Had he me so befriended."&#13;
&#13;
116&#13;
&#13;
117&#13;
&#13;
�CLASS PROPHECY&#13;
GRATITUDE&#13;
By Edna L. Harris.&#13;
One day, among the shadows and the gloom,&#13;
Strong Help and sorrowing Need, met, face to face;&#13;
Then bending there with kingly mein and look,&#13;
Strong Help glanced down and said with proffered hand:&#13;
"What service may I render you today?"&#13;
Sad Need, to whom the days and nights had been&#13;
One long, unending time of deep despair,&#13;
Once more took hope and with an upward glance,&#13;
Poured out her soul, her dire distress and fear,&#13;
Thus weeping, sought for sympathy and aid.&#13;
Strong Help, whose soul was wont in pain to turn,&#13;
When e'er in sorrow human-kind be found,&#13;
Spoke kindly words of hope, of faith and cheer,&#13;
And bade her trust in Him who rules above,&#13;
Whose ear to needy man doth 'er incline:&#13;
&#13;
LONDON, ENG., May 22, 1922.&#13;
&#13;
My Dear Alice:Evening in London and I am alone with my thoughts. Such a foggy old day as&#13;
this has been. I have been homesick all day, but tomorrow our aeroplane leaves for&#13;
America-maybe you think that little old New York town won't look good to me. Two&#13;
years abroad among strange peoples, hearing new tongues and seeing foreign sights makes&#13;
the thoughts of home doubly precious. Such a trip as we have had! New York to&#13;
'Frisco by train, then Japan, China and the Philippines by water, the Continent by rail,&#13;
auto and aeroplane. I tell you it has been a splendid trip and Jess has made such a&#13;
success, I am so proud of him. He sang before the Emperor of Japan, the Czar of&#13;
Russia and the Royal Houses of Germany and England.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
But after all, there are no fri ends like our old friends and no homage like their&#13;
praise and we are coming home to Iowa-to Sioux City and to Morningside. Jess has&#13;
a position in the Scenic theater. Your letter has made us homesick for Morningside and&#13;
we are both of us longing to get back to the old school, though I suppose that we would&#13;
hardly recognize it now with a new gymnasium, Science hall, library, and the dormitories.&#13;
Morningside University ! And Fred Elwick, dear old "Judge" is president. What&#13;
a change ten years does make. And so Johnny Fair bought out the Morningside barber&#13;
shop and got married, good for John !&#13;
&#13;
Sad Need, once more felt hope renewed within,&#13;
Felt life take on, again, a rosy hueThe clouds dispelled, the sun shone full and clear,&#13;
And thus revived, with glad and lightened heart,&#13;
Need longed to show the gratitude she felt.&#13;
&#13;
You would certainly be surprised at the number of nineteen-twelve people we have&#13;
come across in these past few years. The Gillins, Maude and Madge, you know- have&#13;
a fashionable hair-dressing establishment in New York City and are doing fine. Nellie&#13;
Fletcher is at the head of a girls' school in Philadelphia-yes, still Miss Fletcher. She is&#13;
certainly a credit to the old class and is recognized as one of the most prominent German&#13;
educators in the country. Wilhelmina Anderson is still on the platform talking Women's&#13;
Suffrage. I have not seen her for years, but I have kept track of her through the papers.&#13;
&#13;
Her thought with that one passion seemed to burn,&#13;
Sweet gratitude, her hungry soul possessed;&#13;
She longed some kindly office to perform&#13;
For Him, who thought of her extremity,&#13;
And, gracious, bent to listen to her words.&#13;
&#13;
On our way to 'Frisco we changed cars at Chicago and when a few miles out of&#13;
the city, the news agent came through the train selling postcards. His voice sounded&#13;
familiar and as he came nearer I recognized Bob Smylie. Can you imagine Bob as a&#13;
news agent? He was always so quiet and studious we thought sure he would be a Latin&#13;
professor or a minister. Bob is married now and lives in Kankakee.&#13;
&#13;
But naught appeared to her that she might doBut bow to her Eternal Lord, low at his feet,&#13;
In earnest words, breathe for that righteous one,&#13;
A prayer, that should remain, if God so willed,&#13;
Throughout the length of Everlasting-Day.&#13;
&#13;
118&#13;
&#13;
In San Francisco we called upon Rev. Paul Corner, D. D. Paul has a large&#13;
church in the heart of the business district and is very successful in his chosen field. He&#13;
has a dandy little wife-an Iowa girl. As our boat did not leave for a few days we&#13;
spent the time in looking over the city. It was while we were making a visit to the&#13;
Catalina Islands that we came across a couple of old friends-Florence Anthony and&#13;
Louise McDonald. Florence has been divorced f rom her Count and has taken her&#13;
maiden name. The Count made away with her entire fortune, leaving her upon her&#13;
own resources. They. own a little curio shop. Louise paints on sea-shells which th.e y&#13;
11 9&#13;
&#13;
�sell as souvenirs. They seemed mighty glad to see us and told us that some day they&#13;
are coming back to Sioux City and make their home there.&#13;
Yokohama was the first point on our tour. We stayed but a short time in Japan&#13;
as the Japs are not very friendly since the spanking we gave them back in 1914. Jess&#13;
was received at the Royal Palace, however, and sang before the Emperor, who was&#13;
much pleased. On our way to China we came across another old friend. We were&#13;
lounging on deck one afternoon when we were accosted by a sanctimonious looking&#13;
individual in a long black coat-he called us by name and you can imagine our surprise when we recognized William Wing Bass. He told us that the Marcus Epworth&#13;
League was sending him to China as a missionary. He left the boat at the first port and&#13;
our visit was very brief. We did not stop in China as the plague was infesting the&#13;
country.&#13;
Manila was our next point and it was on our way there that an event of interest&#13;
happened. A number of men were engaged in a game of cards, when an officer broke&#13;
up the game and arrested one of the players. He said the man was "Slippery Rogers,"&#13;
the professional card shark, wanted by the police of half a dozen countries. Jess joined&#13;
in the crowd which surrounded the men and recognized Fredrick Benton Rogers. Poor&#13;
Fred, he was a victim of his college environments. His beginning was at Somerset over at&#13;
Cobbs! Never would study, you know, always flunked in everything. He was given&#13;
five years in the Federal prison at Manila.&#13;
In Manila we visited the Department of Education and there learned that Hazel&#13;
Siman, John Lewis and Ethel Shannon were teaching school in the interior. Seth Elliot,&#13;
that veteran of many a football season, has followed up his favorite sport and is now&#13;
football coach in the Manila High School.&#13;
Our voyage to Europe was a long one and one long to be remembered. Beautiful&#13;
nights under the tropic stars, and days when we lounged on deck, reading and sleeping,&#13;
made the voyage a pleasant one. It was one of these days when we were looking&#13;
through the ship's library that I found Clara Crummer' s latest book, "A Broken Heart,&#13;
or She Loved Another." It is a splendid book-she certainly has a future before her in&#13;
the field of letters if she only stays single.&#13;
In Rome we met Blanche Carter, August Shatz, Ernest Wickens, Waiter Ellison,&#13;
Charles Frear and Gladys Tuttle. They, with many other American educators, had&#13;
taken advantage of the offer made by the Ladies' Home Journal for good work in canvassing and were now doing research work in Italy. We had a Morningside reunion and&#13;
I am sure you would have been glad to see us do the barn-dance to the tune of "Morningside" on the top of Mar's Hill.&#13;
In Paris there was a bunch of letters awaiting me and among others there was one&#13;
from Myrtle Siefert. She is living on a farm now near Eagle Grove; she says that it is&#13;
the only life. In the Latin quarters we found Rachel Cook and Cecil Palmer. Rachel&#13;
is gathering material for her book "Social Conditions of the American Art Student in&#13;
Paris." Cecil · is studying art and is quite successful, he paints signs on barber shops, restaurants, etc. In the evening Cecil took us to a variety show and you can imagine our sur-&#13;
&#13;
prise when we found that the "headliners" that evening were furnished by American artists&#13;
-and these were Bowker and Dolliver! They were together in Gospel team work you&#13;
know at Morningside and their successes led them into the larger field of Christian Activity. Bowker was the comedian and entertained the people with songs, monologues, etc.,&#13;
while Barrett, in pink tights and bangles, did stunts on the tight wire. They seemed&#13;
real glad to see us and we had a jolly supper and talk after the program.&#13;
In St. Petersburg Jess sang before the Czar and a few invited guests- mostly foreign&#13;
ambassadors and their families. Jess always ends his program by singing that song so&#13;
dear to the hearts of all Morningsiders-"Every Little Movement." While he was&#13;
singing this I noticed a lady in the audience who seemed strangely moved. At the close&#13;
of the program she rushed up front and to our surprise and delight we recognized Marguerite Shreiner, now the Countess Zoakmeintheneckski, and a leader of Royal Society.&#13;
To outsiders she was a grand lady, but to us she was the dear little Marguerite of old&#13;
whom we supposed was tending the ducks and chickens in Nebraska. What changes a&#13;
few years will make. You may be sure that our stay in St. Petersburg was a pleasant&#13;
one.&#13;
Berlin was the next city we visited and here we found our friend Jimmie Lewis.&#13;
The Rt. Hon. James Lewis, you know, is our present ambassador to Germany, and I dare&#13;
say he could tell us more about the Houses of Hapsburg and Hohenzollern than F. Harmon Garver ever knew. Of course the music quarter of Berlin was what interested us&#13;
most. Here we found Marie Weise, Helen Olmstead and Roscoe Carter. Marie . is&#13;
studying the violin, together with her fiance, a young nobleman of Italy. Helen is still&#13;
unattached and she is studying voice with a view of taking up the moving picture business.&#13;
Roscoe has developed a deep bass voice and, in his debut as the "Bandit Chief," in&#13;
a German Opera, he was the sensation of musical Europe. He has signed with Hammerstein for the coming season.&#13;
In Edinburgh we called to see Edna Reike, who now holds the chair in Semitic&#13;
languages, but she was not in at the time and as our stay was short we had to leave without seeing her. We have been in London now for nearly a month and I am sure tired&#13;
of the place. We have visited all of the places of interest and have been treated splendidly while here. Prof. MacF arren, now head of the Royal Academy, has shown us&#13;
every courtesy and as his word is law in musical London you may be sure that we have&#13;
profited by our visit.&#13;
Oh, yes! I almost forgol to tell you one of the biggest surprises of the trip. Only&#13;
last week we attended the great revival meetings which were being held by the "Great&#13;
American Trio," Mahoney, Luge and Hackett. Pam and Noel were always so chummy&#13;
in college, you know, and now are joined together in their life work. Bessie Luge has&#13;
been with them for some time and she is now a full fledged singing evangelist. They&#13;
are doing a great work in the Vineyard.&#13;
Well, Dearie, it is 10 o'clock and Jess will soon be home from his last concert and&#13;
I must close. Tomorrow morning we leave for New York and tomorrow night will find&#13;
us safe in the Waldorf. Good by Dearie.&#13;
Love to you all,&#13;
&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
121&#13;
&#13;
LOLA.&#13;
&#13;
�REBUFF&#13;
With trim toilette and crushing smile,&#13;
He went to make a date;&#13;
His mind was musing all the while&#13;
On his prospective mate.&#13;
He climbed the steps and rang the bell ;&#13;
She met him at the doorThe rest I hesitate to tell,&#13;
For her action I deplore.&#13;
He hastily retraced his tracks;&#13;
His gayety was marred,&#13;
For "where the chicken got the ax,"&#13;
He got it good and hard.&#13;
He went to her to get a date;&#13;
He got it without check;&#13;
From her, his sweet prospective mate,&#13;
He "got it in the neck!"&#13;
&#13;
12 2&#13;
&#13;
123&#13;
&#13;
�YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
CABINET&#13;
CABINET&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
]ENNIE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE SHREINER&#13;
Alice&#13;
&#13;
T ALMA&#13;
&#13;
McCuRRY&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees.&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
]AMES LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WALT ER ELLISON&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
FRED HEIMBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees.&#13;
&#13;
Laura Cushman, Membership&#13;
&#13;
Edith Eicher, Bible Study&#13;
&#13;
Ed Bachemeyer, New Student Work&#13;
&#13;
Wm. McCurdy, Bible Study&#13;
&#13;
Francis Horne, Social&#13;
&#13;
Ida Brown, Mission Study&#13;
&#13;
Oscar Hall, Personal Work&#13;
&#13;
Roy Garlock, Membership&#13;
&#13;
Catherine Elliott, Intercollegiate&#13;
&#13;
Mabel McCreery, Devotional&#13;
&#13;
Willard Bowker, Extension&#13;
Allen Lemon, Mission Study&#13;
Howard Berkstresser, Social&#13;
&#13;
T alma Kitchen, Finance&#13;
&#13;
124&#13;
&#13;
125&#13;
&#13;
�VOLUNTEER BAND&#13;
MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ETTA MAHOOD .&#13;
NINA&#13;
&#13;
FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OSCAR&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
E. F. LOVETT&#13;
&#13;
At a summer conference, held at Mt. Hermon, Mass., in 1878, a movement was&#13;
started to enlist college men and women for Christian work in foreign countries. This&#13;
movement has spread until today its members are to be found in almost every part of the&#13;
world. To awaken a greater interest and more fully prepare themselves for their life&#13;
work the members in each college are organized into a Student Volunteer Band.&#13;
The Band at Morningside was started in 1902, with Fred Trimble, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Carson of China, and Mr. and Mrs. Taylor of Korea as charter members.&#13;
The other members of the band who are now engaged in active service are Frank&#13;
Hartzell in South America, and Estie Boddy, Ida Lewis and Stanley Collins in China.&#13;
&#13;
"The world for Christ in this generation."&#13;
&#13;
12 6&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
BREAW .&#13;
&#13;
The Ministerial Association is an organization which calls together all men who&#13;
are in definite Christian work, or those who have a desire to go into definite Christian&#13;
work as ministers. The object and aim of the organization is to bring the men into&#13;
closer touch, one with another, and to bring mutual help and encouragement to all.&#13;
The importance of such an organization cannot be overestimated. The world of&#13;
today demands the best that is in the strongest and broadest men to be a leader as a&#13;
minister, and in the weekly meetings of the local organization, the difficulties and problems&#13;
in the work are brought out.&#13;
A definite program is followed, very often having such men as Dr. Chipperfield,&#13;
Dean Chandler, and Dr. Wasser to give practical talks along practical lines, which&#13;
prove very interesting as well as instructive.&#13;
127&#13;
&#13;
�Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
......&#13;
&#13;
..,.,....&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
BAND&#13;
The College Band is one of the important organizations of the college.&#13;
it is well balanced and contains about fifteen pieces.&#13;
&#13;
At present&#13;
&#13;
Although they have made no public&#13;
&#13;
appearances this year they are making remarkable progress under the able leadership of&#13;
Prof. McF arren and the management of A. B. Peden, and will count materially in the&#13;
winning of the spring track meets.&#13;
&#13;
The fact that much new and inexperienced material&#13;
&#13;
enters the band every fall makes it somewhat hard to get organized until late, but the&#13;
loyalty and interest of the younger members of the college and academy give to the&#13;
management good prospects of a bright future.&#13;
&#13;
S. AB.&#13;
&#13;
128&#13;
&#13;
1 29&#13;
&#13;
�PROHIBITION ASSOCIATION&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
D. P.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
MAHONEY&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
JOHN LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN L E MON&#13;
&#13;
The Prohibition Association is a non-partisan organization which has for its object&#13;
the study of the prohibition question from a socialogical standpoint.&#13;
college pertaining to the liquor problem is under this organization.&#13;
&#13;
A ll work of the&#13;
T he officers of the&#13;
&#13;
association are elected annually from the membership, and consist of a president, vice&#13;
president and secretary-treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
The association is also a member of the State Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Association, and each year sends a representative to compete in the State Prohibition Oratorical contest.&#13;
&#13;
GLEE CLUB&#13;
&#13;
for second.&#13;
&#13;
Attempts have been made several times in years past to organize a Glee Club, but&#13;
interest seemed to be lacking.&#13;
&#13;
Never, since the club under Professor Barbour, has&#13;
&#13;
Morningside had a club that has hung together long enough to give a concert.&#13;
&#13;
This year&#13;
&#13;
Professor 0. A. Morse came to head the conservatory and seeing the need, undertook the&#13;
&#13;
The prizes given in this state contest are $ 7 5 for first place and $5 5&#13;
&#13;
In preparation for this event a local contest is held in F ebruary, open to all&#13;
&#13;
members of the college.&#13;
state contest.&#13;
&#13;
The winner of the local contest represents Morningside in this&#13;
&#13;
Two prizes of $25 .00 and $15.00 are offered each year by Mr. Erwin&#13;
&#13;
Dewey of Sergeant Bluffs as first and second prizes in the local contest.&#13;
Morningside joined the State Oratorical Association in 1890.&#13;
&#13;
In 1897 G. W.&#13;
&#13;
He succeeded in gathering together sixteen men, and by&#13;
&#13;
Finch took first place in the state contest, first in the interstate and third in the national.&#13;
&#13;
constant drill a nd his untiring energy, has made an organization that can do credit to&#13;
&#13;
In 1908 Morningside took second in the state contest and duplicated the trick again in&#13;
1909. In 19 10 we took first place, our orator being Frank Johnson. Thus, in the last&#13;
&#13;
task of organizing a Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
It is to be hoped that next year will see a stronger club under the same leadership,&#13;
&#13;
three years, we have taken two seconds and one first.&#13;
&#13;
as there will be fourteen old men still in school.&#13;
&#13;
any other college in the state and one of which the students of Morningside can well&#13;
be proud.&#13;
&#13;
PRES.&#13;
&#13;
130&#13;
&#13;
131&#13;
&#13;
This is a record not equaled by&#13;
&#13;
�-&#13;
&#13;
ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
THE DEBATING LEAGUE&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
L EWIS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICER S&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
BARRETT DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Oratorical Association, with a membership of fifty-two, is one of&#13;
the strongest student organizations of the school.&#13;
&#13;
There is no branch of Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
F. G. ELWIC K .&#13;
H. H. HUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
activity, with the exception of athletics, which is given the support accorded to oratory.&#13;
The greatest of interest is manifested in the home contest, so much in fact that all of&#13;
those desiring to enter cannot deliver their speeches.&#13;
&#13;
The coming year a new plan will be&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside College Debating League is an organization with complete&#13;
charge of all inter-society and inter-collegiate debates.&#13;
&#13;
D espite its short period of opera-&#13;
&#13;
tried ; each society will hold a home contest in their halls and select two men to repre-&#13;
&#13;
tion the league has in every way fulfilled the purpose of its creation.&#13;
&#13;
sent them in the final Alumni prize contest, the winner of this to represent the college in&#13;
&#13;
precision which have characterized its work since its formation a year ago have shown it&#13;
&#13;
the state contest.&#13;
&#13;
An entering freshman cannot long remain ignorant of the fact that&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has a record in oratory which is unsurpassed by any college in the state.&#13;
There are seventeen colleges in the state association, each college submits an oration:&#13;
From this number the eight best orations are chosen for delivery.&#13;
failed to place among the eight.&#13;
and second place three times.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has never&#13;
&#13;
In the past four years we have won first place once&#13;
&#13;
A repeated reference to this splendid standing is justified in&#13;
&#13;
that it is an effective stimulus toward bringing each new effort up to standard.&#13;
&#13;
This year&#13;
&#13;
marks an epoch in the history of the local association in that we will enter, aside from&#13;
&#13;
The despatch and&#13;
&#13;
a most efficient method of supervising the debating affairs of the college, and hence a&#13;
welcome change from the unsatisfactory system of inter-society committees.&#13;
The composition of the league is an important element in its success.&#13;
&#13;
The fact that&#13;
&#13;
the twelve members are chosen three from each of the men's collegiate societies and three&#13;
from the faculty assures full representation of all the interests of the school while society&#13;
spirit is reduced to a minimum.&#13;
&#13;
Officers are elected annually and its deliberations are&#13;
&#13;
governed by a constitution and by-laws.&#13;
The unusually active interest in debate at Morningside as evidenced by the debate&#13;
&#13;
the regular contest, the Inter-Collegiate Peace contest and also that we entertain the&#13;
&#13;
series within the societies, the triangular inter-society contests, and her high record in inter-&#13;
&#13;
annual Inter-State contest, an organization made up of all the leading colleges of twelve&#13;
&#13;
collegiate debate, have unquestionably found a valuable aid in the D ebating League as&#13;
&#13;
states of the great middle-west.&#13;
&#13;
a central organization in control of this important college activity.&#13;
&#13;
This contest is by far the biggest oratorical event of the&#13;
&#13;
United States. Such men as Bryan, Beveridge and La Follette are numbered among those&#13;
who have spoken on this contest in years past.&#13;
&#13;
l 32&#13;
&#13;
133&#13;
&#13;
�FAIRVIEW CLUB&#13;
Stag Meeting, Friday, J anuary 2 3, 19 11.&#13;
Called to Order by Hon. J. Andrew Fair.&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Hon. J. Andrew F air -H ere- all but six.&#13;
Geo. E. W est- Just a minute, until I get this key in the door&#13;
Arthur H. P eden- Gee / I'm tired of the walk!&#13;
Quarny Quarnstrom-Say! She's a dream.&#13;
Wm. D. Farnham- What's the lesson ?&#13;
Stub "Si" Braley-Some class to her, I say.&#13;
Billard Bowker- Name her. I'll take it if I lose my job.&#13;
F red H. Trimble- D id you get home before IO p. m.&#13;
a fine of two dollars fo r you&#13;
&#13;
KAR KATCHERS&#13;
12: 30 P . M. Division&#13;
{ Isabell W ebb&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner&#13;
Juha Marsch&#13;
Eva Randolph&#13;
Alice Moore&#13;
Mary Kifer&#13;
Louise McDonald&#13;
Gladys Tuttle&#13;
F lorence A nthony&#13;
Ethel Lynch&#13;
Marie Wood&#13;
A lice Anderson&#13;
11 : 30 P. M. Division&#13;
Louis Chandler&#13;
J ames Lewis&#13;
Howard P eden&#13;
W ill Voy&#13;
Charles Cushman&#13;
Lorne Wickens&#13;
Mitchell Briggs&#13;
Earl Warburton&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Trimble-It's your deal, pass the mush.&#13;
Miss Gladys T rimble-"D o it som mo."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1 34&#13;
&#13;
135&#13;
&#13;
�j\&#13;
RESIDENCE M. C . PETERS CAMPUS&#13;
&#13;
136&#13;
&#13;
1 37&#13;
&#13;
�TRIANGULAR&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANGULAR&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE VS. SIMPSON&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE VS. UPPER IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, Ia, May 6, 191 0.&#13;
&#13;
Fayette, Iowa, May 6, 191 0.&#13;
&#13;
W. W. Waymack&#13;
&#13;
E. C. Warburton&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION.&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION.&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That Congress should&#13;
establish a central bank.&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That Congress should&#13;
establish a central bank.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeMorningside.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeUpper Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
NegativeSimpson.&#13;
&#13;
NegativeMorningside.&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
K. Carson&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION-&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1 Negative 2.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3.&#13;
]UDGES-&#13;
&#13;
]UDGES -&#13;
&#13;
J. S. Montgomery, Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
Hon. 0. F. Holmes, Algona, Iowa.&#13;
Supt. Maus, Cherokee, Iowa.&#13;
Rev. Hamilton, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Supt., F. T. Oldt, Dubuque, Iowa.&#13;
Dr. Buchanan, Independence, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
138&#13;
&#13;
139&#13;
G. W. Barrett&#13;
&#13;
0. G. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
�G. E. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
C. F. Cushman&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
E. Briggs&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
H. H. Hudson&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANGULAR INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANG ULAR INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
November 4, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
November 11 , 191 0.&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That the P arliamentary form of government is better&#13;
&#13;
adapted to the need s of a progressive and democratic nation than the Presidential form.&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
&#13;
Othonian 3.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. Farnham&#13;
&#13;
Q UEST ION:&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
A. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
140&#13;
&#13;
H. A . Shoemake r&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, T hat the establishment of a non-partisan tariff commission&#13;
&#13;
empowered to regulate the tariff schedules of the federal government would be desirable.&#13;
Philomathean 2, Ionian 1.&#13;
&#13;
R. C. Carter&#13;
&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
IONIAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
�F. G. Elwick&#13;
&#13;
D. P. Mahoney&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
&#13;
F. H. Chandler&#13;
&#13;
TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANGULAR INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
Frank P. J ohn son&#13;
&#13;
November 18, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
QUESTION: Resolved, That a constitutional convention should be called for the&#13;
&#13;
December 3, 191 0.&#13;
Frank P. Johnson&#13;
Charles F. Cushman&#13;
David Loepp&#13;
Melvin J. Muckey&#13;
G lenn A Phelps&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
The Majesty of Peace, First&#13;
The Lethargy of the Cities, Second&#13;
Liberty ; Its Three D imensions, Third&#13;
The Eloquence of Patrick H enry&#13;
America's Mission&#13;
The Prevention of Crime&#13;
&#13;
purpose of revising the federal constitution.&#13;
D ECISION: Othonian 2, Philomathean 1.&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Toledo, Iowa, M arch 3, 1911.&#13;
&#13;
N. L. Hacke tt&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
D . F. Loepp&#13;
&#13;
]. G. Emerson, Ames&#13;
America and Peace in the O rient, First&#13;
Frank P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
The Majesty of P eace, . Second&#13;
H. F. Dickensheets, Leander C lark&#13;
The Master Force of Progress, Third&#13;
H. F. Champlin, Simpson&#13;
The Aristocracy of Achievement&#13;
L. M . Stunkard, Coe&#13;
John Hay, P eacemaker&#13;
H. P eckham, Penn.&#13;
Curse of Armament&#13;
Wishard, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
Garibaldi&#13;
Roy E. Curray, P arsons&#13;
Future of Government&#13;
Schools not on contest: Cornell, Upper Iowa, Central Holiness, Buena Vista,&#13;
Tabor, Des Moines, Lenox.&#13;
143&#13;
&#13;
�Frank P&#13;
&#13;
Wm. A. McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Morningside, Iowa, April 8, 1910.&#13;
Young Men of Today-Their Mission, First&#13;
The Ultimate Triumph of a Principle&#13;
The Bar of Justice&#13;
Life by Death&#13;
Am I My Borthers' Keeper?&#13;
The Liquor Fight&#13;
Education-The Solving Principle&#13;
Twentieth Century Conflict&#13;
&#13;
Frank P . Johnson, Morningside&#13;
Geo. F. Tripp, Central Holiness&#13;
M. E . Ausman, Highland Park&#13;
C. T. Gough, Upper Iowa&#13;
Emma Kissick, Penn.&#13;
N. W. Afflerbaugh, Western Union&#13;
C. G. Dudley, Simpson&#13;
H. J . Clark, Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
INTERSTATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Oskaloosa, Iowa, May 18, 191 0.&#13;
Clyde Cordner, Lincoln, Neb.&#13;
Passing of Alcoholism, First&#13;
John Shields, Ottawa, Kas.&#13;
A Plea for United Action, Second&#13;
Frank P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
Young Men of Today- Their Mission, Third&#13;
A. A. Oldum, U. of Colorado&#13;
March of Prohibition&#13;
C. C. Bredeson, Gustavius Adolphus, Minn.&#13;
Unfinished Task&#13;
]. A. Johnson, Augustana College, S. D.&#13;
*Do&#13;
or Die&#13;
J . M . Price, U. of Texas&#13;
Price of Victory&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
HOME PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
DEWEY PRIZE CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
February 10, 1911.&#13;
Wm. A. McGurdy&#13;
Allan C. Lemon&#13;
John Lewis&#13;
D . L. Wickens&#13;
M ary Kifer&#13;
A 0 . Hukle&#13;
Harry Fowler&#13;
H. L. Johns&#13;
B. P . Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Solving Principle, First&#13;
The Macedonian Call, Second&#13;
The Progress of Public Opinion&#13;
Prohibition and Popular Government&#13;
The Yitai Protection&#13;
The Price of Victory&#13;
Virtue&#13;
The National Peril&#13;
The Problem&#13;
JUDGES:&#13;
&#13;
Rev. R. C. Cully&#13;
A. Anderson&#13;
Prin. E . E. Stacey&#13;
R ev. A. H. Meyers&#13;
Justice H. W. Pitkin&#13;
&#13;
145&#13;
&#13;
�INTER-ACADEMIC DEBATE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE VS. YANKTON&#13;
Morningside, Iowa, April 30, 191 0 .&#13;
&#13;
Oscar&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
M. 0.&#13;
&#13;
Insko&#13;
&#13;
W . C.&#13;
&#13;
Evans&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION.&#13;
&#13;
R eso lved, That Congress should&#13;
enact a graduated income tax law&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
with a provision exempting the first&#13;
A. 0. Hukle&#13;
&#13;
December 9, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
$5,000; constitutionality waived.&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION: Resolved, That the states and nation should pass laws guaranteeing&#13;
bank deposits, constitutionality waived.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION: Hawkeye 2, Adelphian l .&#13;
&#13;
Y ankton.&#13;
&#13;
NegativeMorningside.&#13;
&#13;
H. P. Morgan&#13;
&#13;
DECISIONAffirmative 3.&#13;
]UDGES-&#13;
&#13;
I. S. Struble, Le Mars, Iowa.&#13;
· M. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
ADELPHlAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
14G&#13;
&#13;
A. C. L oepp&#13;
&#13;
Prof. T reentien, Vermillion, S. D .&#13;
Prof. A . L. Bronson, Hawarden, Ia.&#13;
147&#13;
W. C. Evan s&#13;
&#13;
�ZET ALET H EANOTHONIAN&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
ATHENEUMPHILOMA T HEAN&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
CLAIRE .JUDE WESTCOTT&#13;
&#13;
PIERIAIONIAN&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
THE FIELD HOUSE&#13;
By John W. H ollister.&#13;
This is an age of limited time and specialization. C ollege athletics in the last twenty&#13;
years in the East and more particularly in the West, have, through inter-collegiate contests and professional coaching, assumed a very high standa rd, while intensified undergraduate activities and the demands on time for study to attain the higher scholarship of the&#13;
&#13;
148&#13;
&#13;
]49&#13;
&#13;
�present time, have brought about the use of the field house in co-operation with the gymnasium. The thoughtful administrators of the older colleges have approved of the new&#13;
idea. For example, Northwestern University has incorporated the idea in a new and&#13;
costly structure, the Alumni of Williams College in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts&#13;
have recently built a field house on Western Field, one-quarter of a mile from the&#13;
campus, on which stands the expensive Lusell Gymnasium. Most of the other colleges&#13;
of the conservative East have adopted the same idea.&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
The field house recently built on Bass Field at Morningside has been the scene of&#13;
more athletic activity during the hours for exercise, from 4 to 6 p, m., than is recorded&#13;
of any University or College on its list of exchanges. The field house does not interfere&#13;
in the realm of the gymnasium nor does it take the place of one. The uses of the gymnasium are so well understood that little mention is necessary on that score, but perhaps&#13;
a few words on the work in a field house will explain the difference.&#13;
The dirt floor gives the trackmen the natural resistance and so-called spring of the&#13;
out-door track. The air is always still and enables the runner to strengthen his lungs with&#13;
less labor than is employed in the raw and often windy atmosphere of the athletic field.&#13;
It developes a quality of sprinting ofa higher grade in less time than can possibly be&#13;
attained out of doors. It is attractive and secures more physical exercise in a larger&#13;
number of students than does the outdoor running later in the spring. The wind never&#13;
blows over the hurdles nor disarranges the jumping and vaulting standards.&#13;
The different athletic teams work in squads. The baseball men use the interior&#13;
oval for grounders and battery work, becoming accustomed to regular distances and approaching out-door conditions. Space is sufficient for secret football maneuvers and&#13;
signal practice. It affords a retreat in all branches of out-door sport in case of unfavorable weather. The whole athletic program is more easily handled by the director and&#13;
captains. Approximately 50 per cent of the male students of Morningside have made&#13;
more or less use of the field house since it has been in operation.&#13;
&#13;
ALLE N DELMAGE&#13;
&#13;
BA SS&#13;
&#13;
RECORD: SPRING, '10&#13;
Morningside . ... 3 .... . . . .... .. .. ... .. . . .. Omaha (Western League) . .. . 4&#13;
Morningside . . . . 8 . .. . .. . .. ... . .. .. .. ... .. Amity College . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Morningside . . .. 13 . . .. .. . . .. . .. .. ....... . Tabor College .. . ....... . .. I 0&#13;
.&#13;
Morningside. . . . 4 . ... . . .... . ... .. .... . . . . Ames ( 11 innings) . . . . . . . . . 5&#13;
Morningside. . . . 4 .. .. ... . . . . ....... .. .... Simpson&#13;
&#13;
.... ... .......... 2&#13;
&#13;
Morningside . . . . 1 . .. . .. . .. . . . . . .... .. . .. . Highland Park . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9&#13;
Morningside. . . . 6 .. . ... ... ... . .... .... ... Leander Clark . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Morningside . . . . 0 . . . . ... .. . ...... ... . . . . . Iowa State Uni. . . . . . . . . . . . . 6&#13;
Morningside . . . . 5 ... . .. ... . ... .. . . ... .... Uni. of South Dakota. . . . . . . 2&#13;
MORNINGSIDE'S NEW FIELD HO USE&#13;
&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
151&#13;
&#13;
�TRACK&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS EMMELINETRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
100-Y ard Dash .......... .C. Rogers . . .... . ... .. . .. 10 seconds&#13;
220-Y ard D ash ... .. ...... Hall ... .. . .. . ..... . . . .. 22 1-5 seconds&#13;
440-Y ard D ash ....... . ... Winn .. ................. 5 2 seconds&#13;
880-Y ard Dash .. ... . . . . .. A. P. Berkstresser. .. . . .. . . 2 minutes 3 seconds&#13;
Mile Run ........ ... .... .A. P. Berkstresser ... ... ... 4 minutes 40 seconds&#13;
2-Mile Run . ............ .L. R. Chapman .. ..... . . .. 10 minutes 10 seconds&#13;
220-Y ard Hurdles ........ .E. G. Quarnstrom ..... . ... 25 2-5 seconds&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles ......... E. M. Brown . ... ........ 16 seconds&#13;
High Jump ....... ....... E. M . Brown ...... . ..... 5 feet 7 inches&#13;
Broad Jump . ... . ... .. .... W. 0. Dowdy ... ....... . 2 1 feet&#13;
Shot Put .. ..... ... . . .... Hall .. . ................ 38 feet 7 inches&#13;
Hammer Throw . . . . . . . . . . E. G. Quarnstrom . . . . . . . . . 1 1 7 feet&#13;
Discus Throw .... . .... . .. Weatherby ....... ... ..... 11 0 feet 8 inches&#13;
Mile Relay .... .... ... ... ............. ... . .. .... 3 minutes 36 2-5 seconds&#13;
Cross Country to Floyd&#13;
Monument and Return .... V. E. Montgomery ...... .. 18 minutes 38 seconds&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
TEAM,&#13;
&#13;
152&#13;
&#13;
SPRING ' 10&#13;
&#13;
153&#13;
&#13;
�INTER-STATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
This meet is held annually under the auspices of the M. club.&#13;
&#13;
The meet is open&#13;
&#13;
to about 300 of the high schools of Northwest Iowa, South Dakota and Nebraska and&#13;
Southern Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
The object of the meet is to further an interest in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
student life and to give those who attend an impression of the "way things are done&#13;
at Morningside."&#13;
Valuable prizes are given to the winners of the different places and also individual&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
WINNIN G AT HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
cups to the winners in the two relays and a larger cup for the winner of the meet.&#13;
Hearty co-operation is given in all of the activities connected with the meet by the&#13;
students and faculty and we hope in the near future to have at least 500 instead of&#13;
300 institutions on the invited list.&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME MEET&#13;
1OO-Yard Dash ....... Mahoney, Sophomore; Berkstresser, Senior; Lemon, Freshman&#13;
220-Y ard Dash .... Lemon, Freshman; Mahoney, Sophomore; Montgomery, Freshman&#13;
440-Yard Dash . ... Berkstresser, Senior; Montgomery, Freshman; Lemon, Freshman&#13;
Ralf Mile .. .. ... .. Montgomery, Freshman; Lemon, Freshman; Berkstresser, Senior&#13;
Mile Run .............. Berkstresser, Senior; Hickman, Freshman; Chapman, Senior&#13;
Two-Mile .. ..... ... Chapman, Senior; Hickman, Freshman; Cushing, Mid-Academy&#13;
Shot Put .... .. . ... .. .. Berkstresser, Senior ; Wickens, Freshman; Shaver, Freshman&#13;
Hammer Throw . . Quarnstrom, Freshman; Vennick, Freshman; Winterringer, Freshman&#13;
120 Hurdles ...... Belt, Senior; James Lewis, Sophomore; Chandler, Senior Academy&#13;
220 Hurdles . . Montgomery, Freshman; Chandler, Senior Academy; Lemon, Freshman&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
D ISCUS . . , , , , , , , , W 1ckens , Freshman·, Pyncheon, Freshman; Winterringer, Freshman&#13;
Broad Jump. Fearing, Senior Academy; Chandler, Senior Academy; Wickens, Freshman&#13;
High Jump ..... . ..... Belt, Senior; Fearing, Senior Academy; Wickens, Freshman&#13;
Pole Vault ... Fearing, Senior Academy; John Lewis, Sophomore; Greynald, Academy&#13;
Mile Relay ... . . ....... . ............... . .. . . . .. ... ... Won by Freshmen&#13;
Half Mile Relay . ... ... .............&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF INTER-SCHOLASTIC MEET&#13;
I 00-Yard Dash--Osborn, LeMars; Burroughs, Centerville; Shulkin, S. C ... . .. 11 :2&#13;
220- ard Dash- Osborn, LeMars; Burroughs, Centerville; Wilson, Cherokee .. 25: 3&#13;
440-Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee; Brown, Storm Lake; Philip, Sioux Falls ... 56:2&#13;
Half Mile-Harrison, Storm Lake; Ferren, Cherokee; Philip, S. F ............ 2 :25&#13;
Mile Run-Connely, S. C.; Ferren, Cherokee ; Schaser, S. F .......... ... · .. . 5 :4 3&#13;
Broad Jump-Burroughs, Cherokee; Knapp, Cherokee; Boyd, LeMars .. 18 ft. 6 in.&#13;
High Jump-Peterson, Centerville; Knapp, Cherokee; no third . . .... . .. .. 4 ft. 9 in.&#13;
Pole Vault-Peterson, Cherokee; Aldrich, S. C. ; Leuder, Cherokee .... .. ... . 8 ft.&#13;
Shot Put-Aldrich, S. C. ; Harney, S. C. ; Jett, Salix ................ 38 ft. I I in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Gillilland, Storm Lake; Borman, S. C. ; Kiefilbauch, Tyndall .. ... .&#13;
120 Hurdles-Hanford, S. C. ; Borman, S. C.; Pausen, Centerville ........... :21&#13;
220 Hurdles-Hutchins, S. C.; Hanford, S. C.; Pausen, Centerville ...... no time&#13;
Mile Relay-Cherokee first; S. C. second.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Sioux City first; Cherokee second.&#13;
&#13;
...... . ... . . Won by Senior Academy&#13;
Records poor because of deep mud.&#13;
&#13;
154&#13;
&#13;
15 5&#13;
&#13;
�QUARNSTROM WINNING H URDLES AT GRINNELL&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF THE S. DAK.-NEB. UNIVERSITYMORNINGSIDE MEET&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Thackaberry, S. D.; Reed, Neb.; Quarnstrom, M . ..... .... 10&#13;
220-Yard Dash- Reed, Neb.; Thackaberry, S. D.; Mahoney, M . .......... 22 :2&#13;
440-Yard Dash- Burke, Neb.; Reed, Neb.; Lemon, M . ....... . .. ....... . :52&#13;
Half Mile-Brookman, S. D.; Montgomery, M.; Lemon, M . . . .. . . ..... ... . 2 :5&#13;
Mile-A. Berkstresser, M.; Clark, N.; H. Berkstresser, M .. . . . .. .. ...... 4 :44&#13;
Two Mile-Hickman, M. ; Chapman, M. ; Shultz, S. D ....... . . .. . ..... 10: 30&#13;
Hammer Throw-Goddard, S. D.; Potts, S. D.; Quarnstrom, M . ..... 129 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Discus Throw-Quarnstrom, M.; Roberts, S. D.; Moreysen, S. D .. .. . 106 ft. 9 in.&#13;
120 Hurdles- Roberts, S. D.; Fleming, Neb.; Grigsby, S. D . ..... . . ... ... : 17&#13;
220 Hurdles- Quarnstrom, M.; Powers, Neb.; Floid, Neb .. . ..... .. ..... 25 : 1&#13;
Shot Put- Shanks, Neb.; Downing, S. D.; Roberts, S. D ................ 38 ft.&#13;
Pole Vault-Graham, Neb. ; Fearing, M. ; N orgren, S. D ... . . . . . . 1 1 ft. 2 m.&#13;
High Jump-Royal, S. D . ; Moreysen, S. D. ; Graham, Neb . . ....... 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Munsing, Neb.; Brookman, S. D . ; Fearing, M . . .. . . . . 20 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Mile Relay-Neb. first; Morningside second ..... .. .... . ........ . ... . .. 3 :20&#13;
T otals-S. D., 48; Neb., 4 7; Morningside, 39.&#13;
&#13;
156&#13;
&#13;
STATE MEET&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF GRINNELL MEET&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Gill, Grinnell; Beers, Grinnell . . .... . . : 10 flat&#13;
220-Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Turner, Grinnell; Gill, Grinnell. ... .. .... :22 flat&#13;
440-Yard Dash- Wilson, Coe; Lemon, Morningside; Shinstron, Grinnell .... 51 :4&#13;
Half Mile-Dawkins, Grinnell; Hutchins, Grinnell, Stevenson, Cor .. .... . .... 2 :3&#13;
Mile Run-Merwin, Cornell; Hickman, Morningside; Wilcox, Coe . . . .. .. 4 :41 1-5&#13;
Two Mile-Chapman, Morningside; Heide, Grinnell; Hickman, Morningside .. 10 :2 7&#13;
Broad Jump-Knowles, Grinnell; Fearing, Morningside; Cross, Grinnell. . 22 ft. 2 in.&#13;
High Jump-Cross, Grinnell ; Bagby, Grinnell ; Wells, Grinnell ... . .. 5 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Ziegler, Grinnell; Turner, Grinnell; Sharks, Grinnell .. . ..... 38 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Discus-Ziegler, Grinnell; Wickens, Morningside; Quarnstrom, M . .. 11 3 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Hammer-Ziegler, Grinnell; Quarnstrom, Morningside; Kramm, Cornell ...... 125 ft.&#13;
120 Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Morningside; Kinzer, Grinnell; Clark, G rinnell . ... 16 :4&#13;
220 Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Morningside; Beers, Grinnell; Kinzer, Grinnell .. 25 :4&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Morningside, first; Cornell; Coe .......... . ... . .... 1 :26 1-5&#13;
Mile Relay- Grinnell, first; Morningside; Cornell .. . .. . ... . .... .. . . .. 3: 35 1-5&#13;
1 57&#13;
&#13;
�FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
SEASON'S RECORD&#13;
Morningside . .... . .. 39 .. .... . .... .. ...... . .... Cherokee High . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
M . S. Seconds . . . . . 5 ....... . . .. .. . ...... ... . Correctionville . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 0 .................. ·...... Uni. of Iowa . ... . .. .... 12&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 6 ... .. ............. . . .... Creighton . . . . . . . . . . . . 5&#13;
Morningside ........ 15 ........................ St. Joseph . . . . .&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 5 ............... . ..... . .. Ames . . . . . . . .&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 0 ..... . .......... . ....... Des Moines . . . .&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 6 .................. .. . . .. South Dakota . . .&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
....&#13;
....&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
... 0&#13;
... 0&#13;
... 8&#13;
.. 19&#13;
CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
]58&#13;
&#13;
WINTERINGER&#13;
&#13;
159&#13;
&#13;
�FLAG "M"&#13;
VIEW Of&#13;
&#13;
VERMILLION GAME&#13;
&#13;
VARSI TY SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
READY MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL CAMP-BLUE LAKE&#13;
&#13;
160&#13;
&#13;
161&#13;
&#13;
�BASKETBALL&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR ACADEMY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Winners of the Class Tournament&#13;
MEN WINNING "M'S" IN FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
162&#13;
&#13;
l 63&#13;
&#13;
�PUSHBALL&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY&#13;
&#13;
WATCHING&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
MONUMENT&#13;
&#13;
RUN&#13;
&#13;
On Washington's Birthday the customary cross-country run was made to Floyd&#13;
.&#13;
Monument and return. The record for time was lowered b y V. E. Montgomery,&#13;
Sophomore, to 18 minutes 38 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
VIEWS&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
1 64&#13;
&#13;
THE FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE PUS H BALL CONTEST&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
16 5&#13;
&#13;
�GIRL'S ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' GYM CLASS&#13;
&#13;
GIRL'S ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
By Helena Hawley.&#13;
Much has been said in these recent times about the physical development ·aiding&#13;
the intellectual.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College realizes this, and in lieu of a gymnasium a field&#13;
&#13;
house has been built for the physical development of the male student body.&#13;
about the girls of our institution?&#13;
&#13;
But how&#13;
&#13;
They have no proper gymnasium.&#13;
&#13;
Recently, college authority has succeeded in securing an efficient physical director&#13;
for girls in Miss Winnifred Garnish.&#13;
&#13;
Three series of classes meet twice a week.&#13;
&#13;
Club drills, dumb bells, wands, etc., are put into use.&#13;
&#13;
The proper position in sitting,&#13;
&#13;
walking, and standing is emphasized, and to give to each girl a graceful poise and a&#13;
strong roundness drills and steps of various kinds are practiced.&#13;
But this is practically all that can be· done with the quarters now available.&#13;
&#13;
How-&#13;
&#13;
ever, in the near future we are hoping to have a fine $100,000 gymnasium on our&#13;
campus.&#13;
&#13;
Our girls will then have more impetus toward intellectual studies because of&#13;
&#13;
taking more regular physical training.&#13;
&#13;
Studying will then not be such a hardship.&#13;
" M" CL UB&#13;
&#13;
166&#13;
&#13;
167&#13;
&#13;
�TENNIS&#13;
The tennis association is growing year by year in favor with the majority of the&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
The game is one that a student can play and get the necessary exercise and&#13;
&#13;
recreation without going out and spending the entire afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Larned Brown&#13;
&#13;
is President of the local organization.&#13;
Morningside has never yet broken into the ranks of the Inter-collegiate association,&#13;
but it hopes that this end may be accomplished next year.&#13;
&#13;
The courts which have&#13;
&#13;
heretofore been used were discarded this spring, 1911 , and we now have some excellent courts just west of the Conservatory.&#13;
&#13;
The sport is excellent, the accommodations&#13;
&#13;
are good and we hope that in the near future Morningside may have a representative go down state and win the Inter-collegiate contest.&#13;
&#13;
BASS FIELD&#13;
&#13;
168&#13;
&#13;
169&#13;
&#13;
�COLLEGE MEN ALWAYS WANT&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Vesper Service.&#13;
&#13;
Girls think "Palmer's Best" serves purpose of May baskets very&#13;
&#13;
well.&#13;
2- Pluvius interferes with Zet. Otho breakfast party.&#13;
3-Freshmen win meet. Atheneums to Riverside ( Fig. 8). First annual girls' banquet.&#13;
6- Baseball team leaves for Fayette.&#13;
8-0tho's really breakfast Zets. Pearl Snyder narrowly escapes drowning, as did also&#13;
the pickles. Chapman looses Otho pin, but not his heart.&#13;
9-Aesthesians have hen party.&#13;
12-Lieutenant Shackleton lectures. Some people insist on yelling the way they have&#13;
been taught.&#13;
13- Junior Normals entertain Seniors at Hazel Herman's home.&#13;
14- Johnson off for Oskaloosa. N ew Atheneums entertain&#13;
16-F&#13;
rank Johnson wins third for Iowa in Interstate Prohibition Contest.&#13;
1 ?-Morningside postoffice opens.&#13;
18-Comet day. Everyone looks to higher things.&#13;
19-20-Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra appears at May festival.&#13;
20-Tabor plays ball at M. S. Tabor 5, Morningside 6.&#13;
21 - Pieria Grand Public.&#13;
23-Pierias and Ionians have launch party up the Sioux.&#13;
24-Juniors and Seniors digress from daily routine-picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
27-H. G. Bennett of Sioux City speaks to Sociology class.&#13;
28-Misses Dott and Gilman entertain Aletheias at Sioux City Boat Club. Prof. Campbell sails. Philo's annual trip up Big Sioux. Was Lorenne a "Pretty Fair&#13;
rower?"&#13;
30- Decoration day.&#13;
&#13;
M. C. loses to Vermillion.&#13;
&#13;
tHE BEST IN CLOTHING&#13;
And they always get it if th ey wear the Pelletier kind. There's a Suit for every man, a fit&#13;
for every Suit, in this great new Clothing storea store whose management k nows what the particular dresser wants and knows just the way to fill&#13;
that want.&#13;
&#13;
There's&#13;
double action in a Pelletier Suit-best&#13;
quality and fit, combined with style and economy.&#13;
&#13;
Get Your New Apparel Here&#13;
IHirsh-Wickwire, Sincerity, Harvard , the L Systern and other good Clothes make up our stock.&#13;
&#13;
Zet's annual picnic at Talbot's&#13;
&#13;
Farm.&#13;
31-Seniors entertained at President Freeman's home.&#13;
Mrs. Devitt takes boarders to Riverside Park.&#13;
SPRING FEVER&#13;
MICROBE&#13;
&#13;
Pelletier' s Clothing Store&#13;
MEN'S AND BOYS' OUTFITTERS FROM HEAD TO FOOT&#13;
&#13;
Stetson and Columbus Hats,&#13;
Manhattan and Pelletier Shirts&#13;
and other Apparel just like that&#13;
&#13;
170&#13;
&#13;
171&#13;
&#13;
�Auto Phone 2865&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
1-Y. M . and Y. W. Associations have joint meeting, then adjourn to Renaissance&#13;
Hall for Geneva Rally.&#13;
Sophs win baseball game from Freshmen.&#13;
3-Beloit plays ball at Morningside.&#13;
4-Morningside goes to Vermillion for second ball game.&#13;
5-Jesters have meeting at Riverside Boat Club.&#13;
Atheneums entertain honorary members at breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
J.C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
&#13;
I 0- Graduating exercises of the Department of Expression.&#13;
I I- Banquet given at Whitakers' for graduating Aletheias.&#13;
12- Baccalaureate address and Commencement Vespers.&#13;
I 3-Academy graduation.&#13;
I 4-Class Day exercises.&#13;
Conservatory graduation.&#13;
Alumni meeting.&#13;
&#13;
Florists&#13;
&#13;
Reunion of Societies.&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
I 5-Student farewell chapel service.&#13;
&#13;
Many clever stunts pulled off by classmen.&#13;
&#13;
"There was weeping and wailing"-where?&#13;
I 6-Commencement.&#13;
&#13;
All students off for home.&#13;
&#13;
"All's well that ends well."&#13;
&#13;
Palms and Plants for Decorations Special attention to&#13;
Funeral Orders. Emblems made on short notice.&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
ARE&#13;
&#13;
INVITED&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
VISIT&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
SIXTH AND PIERCE STREETS&#13;
&#13;
172&#13;
&#13;
173&#13;
&#13;
�CALLING CARDS&#13;
&#13;
12-School year begins.&#13;
&#13;
Town students register.&#13;
&#13;
POST CARDS&#13;
&#13;
SAVE MONEY&#13;
&#13;
13- Registration continues.&#13;
14- And still new students come-among which is a "Perfectly&#13;
man."&#13;
15-Work begins in earnest. Y. M. stag party in Main Hall.&#13;
16-Societies have first _&#13;
meeting. Pierias and Ionians entertain some new students in&#13;
their hall.&#13;
17-President Freeman speaks in Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. has social afternoon at Renaissance.&#13;
&#13;
18-Matriculation sermon preached at Grace Church by Rev. Keck.&#13;
19- "0tho stag" at Tacks'.&#13;
21-Rousing Mass Meeting held in chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Shall Collegian Reporter continue?&#13;
&#13;
Buy always from&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside&#13;
&#13;
22-Rev. Dr. Smylie speaks in Chapel. Bobbie occupies front Chapel seat.&#13;
Y . M. and Y. W. joint party. Mr. Muckey ·ditches Miss Belt in a really truly&#13;
ditch.&#13;
&#13;
2 3-Day for Green-capped Freshmen postponed.&#13;
Pi's have slumber party at Frances Horn's.&#13;
24-First football game of the season.&#13;
26-Brainless Bone-Headed Bulletin issued by the F rousley Fool-Headed Freshmen.&#13;
&#13;
Greatest College&#13;
&#13;
2 7- F reshmen primary election begins.&#13;
&#13;
Supply Store&#13;
&#13;
AUTO TELEPHONE NO.· 6211&#13;
STUDENTS' SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
174&#13;
&#13;
STATIONARY TYPEWRITERS (Oliver)&#13;
]75&#13;
&#13;
�BEAUTIFUL&#13;
&#13;
FOR GRADUATES AND ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
1-Aletheia picnic at Riverside.&#13;
2-Zet. annual Ravine party to Freshman girls.&#13;
M ad ame Langendorf recital.&#13;
3 -0 tho's win debate from Ionians.&#13;
4 -In formal party given by the Pierias.&#13;
6 -D ramatization of "Polly of the Circus" by Miss Greene.&#13;
8-Aletheia Ravine party.&#13;
I 0-Zet.-O tho P rom.&#13;
Are You Happy?''&#13;
12-The P ierias have chafing dish luncheon in hall.&#13;
16 -Z ets. entertain "new girls" at Tally-ho party. Luncheon at Todd-Bakers.&#13;
Etta and Ethel don't always mean all they say, boys.&#13;
18-Aletheias entertain Freshman girls at an elaborate spread.&#13;
19-Formal inauguration of Pres. L uther Freeman, D . D. Pi. tea party.&#13;
20-Aletheias give first Open D oor.&#13;
22-Z et. H allowe'en party, Commercial M en's Boat C lub.&#13;
2 8- P ierias " B arn D ance" in Renaissance barn.&#13;
29-Aletheia H allowe'en party. H ouse party at R eike home, Kingsley.&#13;
Slumber party at Frary' s.&#13;
30- Philos a nd A theneums have masq uerade party.&#13;
3 1- P ierias have H all owe' en breakfast. A delphian-Aesthesian H allowe' en party.&#13;
&#13;
STORE 512 FIFTH STREET&#13;
PHONES 466 AND 1734&#13;
&#13;
OPPOSITE GRAIN EXCHANGE BLD 'G&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
A Glance in the Looking Glass&#13;
May reveal to you the cause of your&#13;
failure to get that position&#13;
&#13;
Clothes Do Count&#13;
Neatness of Dress is a Valuable Asset&#13;
It can be yours by having your work done at&#13;
&#13;
Harrison, The Tailor&#13;
S. Harrison , 1905 St. Aubin Ave., Peter's Park. , M. S.&#13;
17 6&#13;
&#13;
177&#13;
&#13;
�It's just as&#13;
important&#13;
to get&#13;
Clothes&#13;
that befit&#13;
your per-son al i ty,&#13;
as 1t to get&#13;
Clothes&#13;
to fit your&#13;
figure.&#13;
&#13;
2-Atheneum progressive dinner party.&#13;
3-Pierias banquet "new girls" at the West.&#13;
Pushball game goes to the Freshmen, 1 3-6.&#13;
Ames victory celebrated; holiday declared by the Faculty&#13;
Zets. have buffet luncheon for "new girls."&#13;
4-Zets. entertain "new girls" at dinner party at home of .Hazel Simon.&#13;
Atheneum annual banquet at the West.&#13;
Ask Bess Barnes if she knows the price of cut-glass baskets.&#13;
5-Pierias entertain lonians informally.&#13;
12- Miss Rorem and Miss Weary have house party;_ some people still sleep on.&#13;
&#13;
The broad range of our fabrics, patterns and models spans the whole domain of fashion.&#13;
&#13;
13-0tho's initiate "new fellows."&#13;
14-F reshmen celebrate pushball victory at Wilna Beams.&#13;
&#13;
In expressing your personality there&#13;
are no garments so intensly individual&#13;
as "E. &amp; W. Fashion Clothes" for&#13;
young men from 15 to 50. Scan the&#13;
flesh-and-blood figure reproduced here&#13;
and observe the lines of life in the garments, which make the wearer seem a&#13;
breathing, pulsing personality.&#13;
&#13;
"Things look different the morning after."&#13;
16-&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Ionian debate.&#13;
&#13;
1 7- 0tho-Philo debate. · College praises sung in chapel.&#13;
23-Crescent new members entertain the "old girls."&#13;
26-Vermillion gets the turkey again.&#13;
&#13;
The all-wool fabrics are the soft,&#13;
"clingish" kind, that fall easily and&#13;
naturally into the curves of the figure.&#13;
The tailoring- all hand- is as painstaking below as on top.&#13;
The patterns are out of the rut-distinctly young-mannish.&#13;
Every part&#13;
and process is first perfected and, then,&#13;
inspected to "render assurance doubly&#13;
sure.''&#13;
&#13;
Newest and classiest Hats and Furnishings can be seen&#13;
here as quickly as the express companies can get them here from&#13;
the leading fashion centers.&#13;
&#13;
Usual .&#13;
&#13;
178&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W. CLOTHING HOUSE&#13;
17 9&#13;
&#13;
�YOUR&#13;
&#13;
August Williges&#13;
&#13;
PREPARATION&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
1-Home oratorical-Frank Johnson wins first place.&#13;
&#13;
For life's work may be ever so&#13;
perfect, yet, if you neglect to pay&#13;
heed to the practical things, and&#13;
fail to profit from t he experiences&#13;
of those who have been successful&#13;
in your chosen calling the chances&#13;
are against your reaching a very&#13;
high mark.&#13;
A savings account following&#13;
graduation is almost as necessary&#13;
to success as hard .study preceding,&#13;
it provides money to take advantage&#13;
of any opportunities offered.&#13;
We invite your accoun t on&#13;
which interest will be added twice&#13;
a year.&#13;
&#13;
Fine Furs&#13;
&#13;
5-Junior class have party at Miss Marguerite Shreiners'.&#13;
8-Miss Lila Ormond gives recital-Hawkeye-Adelphian debate.&#13;
9-Prof. Garver comes to History III class late.&#13;
&#13;
I 0-Miss Helen Gullickson entertains Pierias at her place.&#13;
11 -Philos entertain Atheneums in hall.&#13;
Orvill Maynard puts his gum under his plate then gives his plate to Mrs. McDonald.&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
Orvill insists that he would rather eat in the kitchen.&#13;
12- Y. W. girls have Doll show-34 a favorite number.&#13;
15- School closes for Christmas vacation.&#13;
Annual Christmas party given at Jean Whittemore's.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
405-407 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1088&#13;
&#13;
Young Man&#13;
&#13;
Old Phone 605&#13;
&#13;
Bryon E. Brown&#13;
&#13;
In addition to brains and an&#13;
education, you will some day&#13;
need capital. Why not start&#13;
now on a ten, fifteen or twenty&#13;
year policy, that will mature&#13;
while you are yet a young man?&#13;
Send date of birth and get&#13;
literature.&#13;
&#13;
DEALER IN&#13;
&#13;
High Grade Pianos&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Life Insurance Co.&#13;
&#13;
Piano Tuning&#13;
and Repairing&#13;
&#13;
WATERLOO, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
P. H. PILCHARD, District Manager&#13;
409 Farmers Loan and Trust Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Off FOR HOME AND FUN&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
406 Fourth St.&#13;
Splendid money making agency propositions open for young men willing to hustle&#13;
180&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
181&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�Now,&#13;
&#13;
you'll find us better able&#13;
than ever before, and better&#13;
than anybody else, to supply&#13;
your shoe needs. We've&#13;
brought together a great line&#13;
of fine shoes, the pick of the&#13;
line of the greatest maker of&#13;
good shoes in the world.&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
-Resolutions.&#13;
3--"F rarys" christened "Marion Hall."&#13;
4- Field House completed.&#13;
5 -Jessie Ewer gives recital in Adelphian hall.&#13;
6-Herr Paulo Gruppe, Cellist in recital.&#13;
9-New Atheneums entertain "old girls" at Isabel Webb's home.&#13;
decided (who?) is the bigger flirt?&#13;
11 - No Chapel-"There's a reason."&#13;
14-Adelphians enjoy annual banquet.&#13;
15-Theresa Freeman entertains at "Consolation Party."&#13;
18- Y. M. C. A stag party.&#13;
20-Professor Macfarren gives recital in College Auditorium.&#13;
&#13;
come in for&#13;
a pair of our&#13;
new shoes.&#13;
&#13;
Has anybody de-&#13;
&#13;
Everything you can desire&#13;
- men's, women's and children's-is here, in new late&#13;
models, smart styles, best&#13;
leathers. They're the famous&#13;
&#13;
25- Exams.Of all sad words of pen or tongue,&#13;
The saddest are these-"Exams. B egun."&#13;
&#13;
SELZ ROY AL BLUE&#13;
AND OTHER SELZ SHOES&#13;
&#13;
all good, all guaranteed to be wholly satisfactory,&#13;
all perfect fitting.&#13;
There is no way in which you can so well provide&#13;
for your shoe needs as to decide to wear Selz shoes•&#13;
They're the only shoes that are unreservedly guaranteed to you.&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
We want you to see these shoes before&#13;
you buy any shoes, anywhere; we know&#13;
you'll be grateful to us for urging it. Selz&#13;
shoes ready for men, women and children.&#13;
&#13;
MAKING&#13;
&#13;
DYSON'S&#13;
&#13;
THOSE NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS GOOD&#13;
&#13;
SELZ ROYAL BLUE STORE&#13;
Cor. Fourth and Court Sts., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
183&#13;
182&#13;
&#13;
�CERTIFICATES&#13;
&#13;
DRAFTS&#13;
&#13;
Where Your Business is Appreciated&#13;
2-Delicatessen closes its doo rs.&#13;
4-A new "Frosty and Frances" in History V class.&#13;
3-10-Dr.&#13;
Stansfield conducts meetings.&#13;
9-Day of Prayer for Colleges.&#13;
10-Warburton and Smylie insist on talking in class.&#13;
12-Silas 0. Rorem visits old scenes and faces.&#13;
1 3-0tho banquet at the West.&#13;
Rev. Tumbleson doesn't want "Frosty and Frances" to forg et his number.&#13;
14-Charley Cushman tells "Tack" to simply "shut up."&#13;
Miss McKellip receives a large bunch of violets.&#13;
Mr. Culbertson and W aymack serve Lunch in Shakespeare Class.&#13;
17-Mr. Briggs pulls Mary Thoburn's -hair as a matter of satisfaction.&#13;
20-Miss McKellip receives more violets.&#13;
21-Dr. E. S. Johnson of First M. E. Church speaks on George Washington .&#13;
Vince wins Monument run-Men's Banquet.&#13;
Girls at Renaissance entertain at Colonial party.&#13;
23-Bess and Back are surprised by shower of rice and old shoes.&#13;
24-Mr. Kent insists he knows Miss Laud and pays her car fare.&#13;
2 7-F rosty leaves for Blencoe-tears.&#13;
&#13;
We Invite Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
American Savings Bank&#13;
Fourth and Court&#13;
W . S. SNYDER. PRESIDENT&#13;
ALBERT WEDGWOOD . CASHIER .&#13;
LEN . O ' HARROW , VICE-PRESIDENT.&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
CASH&#13;
&#13;
===GLASSES MADE BY US===&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fifth and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
Fresh Cut Flowers on Hand Daily&#13;
All Kinds of Floral Emblems on Short Notice.&#13;
Our Prices are Right.&#13;
WATCHING THE MONUMENT RUN .&#13;
&#13;
Rocklin &amp; Lehman, Florists&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
405 Douglas, St. cor. 4th&#13;
184&#13;
&#13;
18 5&#13;
&#13;
111111&#13;
&#13;
�1-Fairview Club entertained at Chinese dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trimble.&#13;
Pierias entertain Zets. at tea.&#13;
3-Frank Johnson wins second at Toledo.&#13;
Frenchman locked in his room--Who did it?&#13;
4-Miss Georgia Fletcher visits school.&#13;
5-Monthly Vesper service.&#13;
7-Faculty entertained at Dr. Freeman's.&#13;
Senior girls spring caps and gowns-Wickens springs "specs."&#13;
8- Evan Pattishall gives organ recital.&#13;
9- 0rvill leaves for Colorado- Edna looks dejected.&#13;
I 1-Atheneum Grand Public.&#13;
I 3-Ionian Banquet.&#13;
14-Sophomores entertained at Miss Gladys Evans', Sargent Bluffs.&#13;
I 6-Miss McKellip receives more violets.&#13;
I 7-Miss McDonald calls Mr. Kent "darling"-at least he thinks so.&#13;
Zets. have St. Patrick's luncheon at home of Miss Randolph.&#13;
Atheneums have theater party.&#13;
Pierias have party at Keifer's.&#13;
20- Hawkeye Banquet.&#13;
24- BEANS ! BEANS! ! BEANS! ! !&#13;
25-Kansas City Meet.&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; CO.&#13;
Staple and Fancy&#13;
Groceries&#13;
&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
BOTH PHONES&#13;
&#13;
Students. buy your eatings for your picnics here&#13;
ST. AUBINS STATION&#13;
&#13;
186&#13;
&#13;
187&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
THE GROCER&#13;
Whose store is clean, sanitary,&#13;
neat and tidy, who supplies orders&#13;
quickly.&#13;
&#13;
PETER'S PARK&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Real&#13;
Estate Off ice&#13;
CUSHMAN , PATTON &amp; STRAND&#13;
Insurance written in the best Mutual and&#13;
&#13;
B E L L PHONE 953&#13;
&#13;
AU T O PHONE 61 3 6&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Lumber&#13;
&#13;
P&#13;
&#13;
LACE&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
BUY&#13;
&#13;
TRLJNKS&#13;
TRUNKS&#13;
&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
= = = IS WHERE = = =&#13;
&#13;
Dealer s in&#13;
&#13;
MATERIAL&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
&#13;
A R&#13;
&#13;
L et us Figure Yo ur Bill. We&#13;
Want Your Business. We&#13;
also handle&#13;
&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
MADE&#13;
&#13;
SAMPLE CASES TO ORDER&#13;
REPA IR ING DONE&#13;
&#13;
Coal and Wood&#13;
&#13;
D.S. ANTHONY&#13;
MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO: "Our Prices are Right.&#13;
Square Dealing that is Square."&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 2108&#13;
&#13;
Telephones&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 1995&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
Lakeport Ave.&#13;
&#13;
4 13 fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
188&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
189&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
QUOVADIS CLUB.&#13;
Motto~Honesty is the best policy? ? ? ?&#13;
Pass Word-Jiggers the Shack.&#13;
Grand Exalted Hobo-Vince Montgomery.&#13;
Chief Consul-0. L. Wickens.&#13;
Common Bums-Charles Berkstresser&#13;
Heavy T orbet&#13;
Ivan Fuller&#13;
Melvin Hatch&#13;
Fourth annual convention held at the East End Station, May 21 , 191 0.&#13;
Frank Johnson, after the Prohibition Contest, tells of how parched his throat became during his oration.&#13;
"Why, it is just like when you blow the f---"--&#13;
&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
IT IS SO CONVENIENT! WE ARE ALWAYS&#13;
READY TO SERVE YOU WITH THE BEST&#13;
LINE OF GROCERIES IN MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
THERE IS NO SECOND OR THIRD WITH&#13;
US, EVERYTHING IS FIRST CLASS AND&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Trimble (from kitchen)-Oh, Fred.&#13;
Fred (saying his evening prayers)-"Excuse me Lord, while I talk to wife."&#13;
At Men's BanquetW. W.-Introduces A. Lemon to toast oratory.&#13;
A. Lemon-Well, I will leave it to you gentlemen whether you would rather&#13;
have A. Lemon or A. Bill and a Gas Bill at ·that.&#13;
At the Paxton, 3 a. m.- J ack-W ell, we have a game here two weeks from today.&#13;
Bill Bass-Will we be here over Sunday?&#13;
Jack-No, I will take you out where there is some chance of you fellows going&#13;
to bed at night.&#13;
Tabor, IowaGreat excitement&#13;
four of the M. C. ball&#13;
day afternoon meeting&#13;
Prichard, Weise,&#13;
&#13;
was noticed in the vicinity of the College this afternoon when&#13;
players and their coach deliberately walked into the regular Sunof the Y . M. C. A.&#13;
Lindsey, Parrish and Coach Hollister.&#13;
&#13;
RELIABLE.&#13;
&#13;
THAT'S WHY&#13;
LARSON'S GROCERIES ARE IN CONSTANT DEMAND.&#13;
LARSON'S GROCERIES A REAL NECESSITY IN EVERY HOME.&#13;
&#13;
A. P.&#13;
&#13;
LARSON&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE GROCER&#13;
&#13;
1 90&#13;
&#13;
1 91&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
WHO'S WHO IN MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Flirting Princess&#13;
Miss Innocence&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Higday&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Billie Beam&#13;
Marguerite Kemper&#13;
&#13;
The Blue Mouse&#13;
Slim Princess&#13;
Midnight Sons&#13;
&#13;
( See Organizations)&#13;
&#13;
The Merry Widow&#13;
Miss Nobody&#13;
&#13;
Fairview Club&#13;
Helen Roddy&#13;
&#13;
Lola Raw&#13;
Hayes, Gabrielson, Harper, Schatz&#13;
&#13;
Jolly Bachelors&#13;
Such a Little Queen&#13;
The Violator&#13;
Three Twins&#13;
The Fair Co-ed&#13;
&#13;
Florence Montgomery&#13;
Vince Montgomery&#13;
Winterringer, Holbert, W aymack&#13;
Vivian McFarland&#13;
Florence Anthony&#13;
&#13;
The Other Woman&#13;
Samson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Fred Trimble&#13;
&#13;
The Matinee Idol&#13;
Anti-Matrimony&#13;
The College Widow&#13;
&#13;
Arthah Ellerd&#13;
&#13;
The Jester&#13;
Stubborn Cinderella&#13;
Nobody's Widow&#13;
&#13;
Willie McCurdy&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner&#13;
&#13;
Etta Mahdod .&#13;
Mary Kifer&#13;
&#13;
Louise McDonald&#13;
Bertha Eads&#13;
&#13;
The Pink Lady&#13;
The Winning Miss&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Metcalf&#13;
Nick Carter '&#13;
&#13;
The Chocolate Soldier&#13;
Bright Eyes&#13;
&#13;
Hallie Frye&#13;
Charley Cushman&#13;
&#13;
The Country Boy&#13;
Prince of Tonight&#13;
&#13;
Dan Brown&#13;
Cliff Jory&#13;
&#13;
Jumping Jupiter&#13;
Baby Mine&#13;
The Man of the Hour&#13;
Bachelor Belles&#13;
&#13;
Jean Whittemore&#13;
Earl Warburton&#13;
Lola Westcott, Nina Farnam, Edith Eicher, Mabel McCreery&#13;
&#13;
The Chorus Lady&#13;
&#13;
Copyright 1911&#13;
&#13;
The House of Kuppenheimer&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
do better&#13;
You'll the college in clothes buying at Moore's,&#13;
men's clothes store. Always&#13;
the newest of the new clothes, and the most of the&#13;
newest. Your satisfaction our aim.&#13;
&#13;
Edna Randolph&#13;
&#13;
The Moore Clothing Co.&#13;
Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
19 2&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Cowa&#13;
&#13;
1 93&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
THE WOOINGS OF A&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMAN GIRL&#13;
&#13;
3% paid on Certificates of Deposit&#13;
&#13;
By Collin Clouts.&#13;
Come list to me and you shall know&#13;
Of all the little doings,&#13;
A Freshman girl at Morningside&#13;
Experienced in her wooings.&#13;
Her dark brown hair, her browner eyes,&#13;
Her winning smiles-a cheat,&#13;
And hobble skirts took all by storm,&#13;
The boys swept off their feet.&#13;
The fist to fall beneath her charms&#13;
And count himself most lucky,&#13;
A Freshman was, like grass as green,&#13;
You know him-Melvin Muckey.&#13;
But when he called some later date;&#13;
Perspired and said, The Dickens,"&#13;
Turned pale as death and from her fled,&#13;
For on the couch sat Wickens.&#13;
Poor Muckey, he just tore his hair,&#13;
H e saw he was a victim,&#13;
With clenched fists he muttered low&#13;
"That cuss, I should have licked him."&#13;
T his did seem inconsistent and&#13;
Will so appear to you,&#13;
On learning she stands four feet six&#13;
And Wickens six feet, two.&#13;
But Wickens quickly met his fate,&#13;
With Muckey was a mourner,&#13;
Of love and time and cash mis-spentShe now made eyes at Corner.&#13;
Corner declared himself in love&#13;
And wooed her with great zest,&#13;
Could even lose his grades for herJust then she sighted West.&#13;
&#13;
Security&#13;
National Bank&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1884&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $450,000&#13;
We Want You to Know&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
OUR SHOES&#13;
As We Know Them&#13;
&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
WANT THE&#13;
BEST&#13;
That's Why We Make all&#13;
Our Goods Perfect&#13;
&#13;
Comfortable Shoes&#13;
&#13;
We stand behind every package of&#13;
&#13;
Honestly Made&#13;
Reasonably Priced&#13;
&#13;
CRACKERS, CAKES&#13;
or CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
Our salesmen know how to fit you corr ectly, consult them.&#13;
&#13;
L. O'HARROW&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Company&#13;
&#13;
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY&#13;
&#13;
902 Fourth St.&#13;
Auto Phone 1715&#13;
Iowa Phone 1358&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
19 4&#13;
&#13;
19 5&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
College Seal Stationery&#13;
Fancy Emblem Stationery&#13;
&#13;
College Spoons&#13;
College Seal Jewelry&#13;
"Beware, beware," three lone hearts cried,&#13;
"She's just a cruel flirt. "&#13;
But love is blind; West heeded not.&#13;
She said, "They're mean as dirt."&#13;
But West soon found their words were true,&#13;
She changed as with the wind,&#13;
And cast around those glances keen,&#13;
Some other dupe to find .&#13;
She found him- Ellerd is his name.&#13;
(Poor West he mourned his fate)&#13;
When Ellerd in the parlor sat,&#13;
And stayed there until late.&#13;
Ellerd thought her heart his own,&#13;
He loved with might and main,&#13;
He dreamed of her by day and nightAnd then she dreamed of Crane.&#13;
But, in the steps Crane followed quick,&#13;
Of all his fallen brothers,&#13;
As Cushman did and Maynard, too,&#13;
And Fuller and some others.&#13;
Last- Pattishall had found a "peach,"&#13;
She found a "pumpkin," too.&#13;
For her he changed his boarding placeAnd then-she changed her beau.&#13;
As each one told his tale of woe,&#13;
And chewed and bit his tongue,&#13;
The sentiment of all he said&#13;
Was, "Gee, but I was stung."&#13;
&#13;
In fact the time's too short to tell&#13;
Of lives made sad and dreary,&#13;
Of Seniors, Juniors, Freshy's, Soph's&#13;
Who loved and lost Miss Weary.&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE ALL PATRONS OF THE&#13;
&#13;
"The Sioux"&#13;
TO VISIT OUR STORE&#13;
&#13;
Books&#13;
&#13;
Pennants&#13;
&#13;
Pillow Tops&#13;
&#13;
Ray G. Darling&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
197&#13;
196&#13;
&#13;
�"OUT&#13;
&#13;
OF T H E H IGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
TODD BAKER CO.&#13;
THE REXALL STORE&#13;
&#13;
TRAGEDY&#13;
SCENE-Third floor, Renaissance Hall.&#13;
TIME-Eleven o'clock, Saturday night, after a spread on first floor.&#13;
COSTUMES-Bathrobes and curl-papers.&#13;
PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS- Miss Genevieve Bond, heroine; Mr. Barrett Dolliver,&#13;
&#13;
Leading&#13;
&#13;
G. D.HANSON&#13;
&amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Druggists&#13;
&#13;
would-be hero; Mrs. Heath, the housekeeper; Misses Alice McCurry and Rachel Holm.&#13;
&#13;
AcT&#13;
Cries and screams from third floor.&#13;
ing down stairs.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Drugs. Surgical Appliances,&#13;
Rubber Goods, Etc.&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
Tailors, Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
Rapid succession of bumps like someone fall-&#13;
&#13;
heard calling from second floor, "Barrett! Barrett! Come quick!&#13;
&#13;
FINE C AN DIES&#13;
&#13;
Hatters and Men's&#13;
Furnishers&#13;
&#13;
Immediately, Rachel, with blanched cheeks and frightened voice, is&#13;
There is a man in&#13;
&#13;
A SPEC IAL TY&#13;
&#13;
Alice's room."&#13;
&#13;
Visit Our Soda Fountain&#13;
&#13;
ACT II.&#13;
In three strides Barrett reaches second floor.&#13;
&#13;
The hall is filled with wide-eyed girls&#13;
8 2 7 Fourth Street&#13;
Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
and a babble of discordant voices.&#13;
&#13;
TODD BAKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, !OW A&#13;
&#13;
Barrett ( at bottom of second flight of stairs), "What's the ma-tter?"&#13;
Genevieve [who had investigated] (smiling serenely from above): "It's just Mrs.&#13;
Heath."&#13;
&#13;
THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.&#13;
&#13;
In meeting on the Day of Prayer- Hix sits by Theresa Freeman.&#13;
&#13;
Wants&#13;
&#13;
Miss Day- Theresa, was that your brother sitting by you at the meeting yesterday?&#13;
&#13;
Active College Men for Agents&#13;
Apply Suite 600-601 Security Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Morse rails over the lack of sense a certain dog has one day, while he was&#13;
walking over to chapel.&#13;
Prof. Macfarren-If you knew half as much as that dog, you'd be smart.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Crane, on the way to the Orpheum one afternoon, stopped to ask for a sign in the&#13;
&#13;
TWIN CITY DENTAL COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
window- "GIRLS WANTED."&#13;
&#13;
M .&#13;
&#13;
Mc KERCHER,&#13;
&#13;
General&#13;
&#13;
Agent&#13;
&#13;
CHERRIES AND PEARLS- Red lips, pearly teeth. Those&#13;
who have them do not fear to show them. They make a&#13;
smile doubly pleasant, doubly attractive.&#13;
&#13;
I PRACTICE MODERN PAIN LESS DENTISTRY&#13;
DR.C.A.TAYLOR&#13;
1 98&#13;
&#13;
302 Metropolitan Building&#13;
1 99&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
�NIGHT SHIRT PARADE.&#13;
T'was one night after ten, and all through the house&#13;
Not a creature was stirring-not even a mouse.&#13;
We girls all were sleeping so snug in our beds&#13;
While visions of summer time danced through our heads.&#13;
When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,&#13;
We ran to the window to see what was the matter.&#13;
And there on the south front was a sight to behold,&#13;
The partic'lars of which can scarcely be told.&#13;
The Morningside boys, in white clothes arrayed,&#13;
Were giving to Renaissance a night shirt parade.&#13;
Each one of them carried a great big tin can&#13;
And made more racket than a drunken Scotch Clan.&#13;
And while we all hung there, more outside than in,&#13;
Miss Dolliver, our Dean, thro' the door did come in.&#13;
She raised the old "Dickens" and gave it to us,&#13;
For acting like heathen and hanging out thus.&#13;
Though she fussed and she fumed, it was all done in vain,&#13;
As we only hung further the more view to gain.&#13;
Then Miss Dolliver grew angry and grabbed the first shin&#13;
Of the girl nighest to her and yanked her within.&#13;
"Why, girls, this is awful," she cried in great horror,&#13;
"You'll answer for it when the 'Fae' meets tomorrow."&#13;
Well, she talked and she talked and angrier grew,&#13;
Till she strongly resembled an "Untamed Shrew."&#13;
&#13;
THE WEST HOTEL&#13;
&#13;
JAY MACLARTY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
FRANK J. DONOHOE, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Corner Third and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
Within two blocks from all Railroad Stations&#13;
&#13;
244 Rooms.&#13;
&#13;
140 with private bath.&#13;
&#13;
30 large, well-lighted Sample Rooms with&#13;
&#13;
private bath.&#13;
Located in heart of wholesale and retail&#13;
district, public buildings and theatres&#13;
Convenient to all street cars.&#13;
European Plan.&#13;
Rates: $1.00 without bath, $1.50 to $3.00&#13;
&#13;
Then bidding us all get right into bed,&#13;
She went out, still fussing and shaking her head .&#13;
No sooner had she slamed the door to behind her,&#13;
Then we climbed out and locked it-lots sadder, but wiser!&#13;
Our former positions real quickly we took,&#13;
Low we hung out the window the further to look.&#13;
The creatures were dancing and beating on tin,&#13;
Loud screaming and yelling and raising a din.&#13;
&#13;
,;I OQ&#13;
&#13;
per day, private bath.&#13;
Three fine Cafes.&#13;
Twelve private Dining R ooms.&#13;
Cuisine unexcelled.&#13;
&#13;
201&#13;
&#13;
�The notes were a'fluttering and cards were outflung,&#13;
Some yells were then given and College songs sung,&#13;
Till the boys thinking that they'd raised enough muss,&#13;
Then piled out the West gate with a terrible fuss.&#13;
&#13;
ATTEN.TION!&#13;
We have fixed both of these&#13;
stores for your use&#13;
&#13;
When they all had gotten the avenue down,&#13;
We eased in the window and bedward were bound.&#13;
Again all was silent and throughout the house&#13;
Not a creature was stirring-not even a mouse?&#13;
&#13;
With the largest assortment of&#13;
Bowker (at First Congregational Church):&#13;
the aisle."&#13;
Patteshall:&#13;
&#13;
"Say, 'Pat,' there's Dr. Haynes across&#13;
&#13;
"Aw I know that fellah; he sings in the Foist Presbyterian choir every&#13;
&#13;
Sunday morning."&#13;
Bowker:&#13;
Patteshall:&#13;
Bowker:&#13;
&#13;
"I think you' re slightly mistaken."&#13;
"Don't he work at S henkberg's?"&#13;
&#13;
Imported Perfumes&#13;
Toilet Articles and&#13;
Fancy Sundries&#13;
&#13;
"That is the college R egistrar."&#13;
&#13;
OF ALL KINDS&#13;
&#13;
D ean Chandler was not always so averse to fur-bearing animals.&#13;
&#13;
As a boy on his&#13;
&#13;
Our Assortment is the Best in the City&#13;
&#13;
father's farm, in a locality notorious for its odious infestants, young Sidney was an industrious and successful trapper.&#13;
&#13;
His talent in this line was recognized by his father who,&#13;
&#13;
in order to encourage industry, paid the boy 10 cents for each varmint he killed on the&#13;
farm.&#13;
&#13;
The Best Candies&#13;
&#13;
Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
One day he was observed by a neighbor carrying a live captive from an adjoining&#13;
&#13;
farm to his own territory.&#13;
&#13;
A few questions revealed the fact that the home supply was&#13;
&#13;
exhausted, and that as long as the killing was done on home soil he cared not from whose&#13;
farm the supply of bounty-earning a nimals were obtained.&#13;
&#13;
Prescriptions filled exactly as ordered&#13;
No substitutions. Personal attention&#13;
&#13;
Needless to say, foreign depre-&#13;
&#13;
dators did not interest the senior Chandler and bounty payments ceased.&#13;
&#13;
I. P. Cummings&#13;
Proprietor&#13;
Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
PETER'S PARK&#13;
&#13;
20 3&#13;
&#13;
�MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM (Class Play, 1910).&#13;
Prof. MarshA pessimist is one who chooses both of two evils.&#13;
An optimist makes lemonade of the lemons handed him.&#13;
Ellerd-(To the librarian- forgets himself and says): "I want a package of&#13;
Ivanhoe."&#13;
In Eng. VI. a debate was held in regard to CharlesJosie Carter-Tells of what a noble, good, domestic man he was.&#13;
Ben Holbert-Yes, Charley would have been an angel if he had had a pair of&#13;
wings.&#13;
Bess Barnes in giving a definition for EducationEd is the superior adjustment of a human being to his environment.&#13;
Miss Stone is asked what she is going to give up for Lent? Is it Trig?&#13;
am going to make some sacrifice.&#13;
Grantham-I should think you would be giving up Mr. Quarnstrom, then.&#13;
&#13;
No, I&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Garver, in Faculty meeting, complains of the excess of noise in the hall of late.&#13;
Why, the other day I went out in the hall and there was W aymack kicking the&#13;
bucket.&#13;
Marguerite Kemper--I'll bet you haven't found anyone you would live with yet,&#13;
have you?&#13;
B. S.-N o, but I'll bet you have.&#13;
M. K.-Yes, I have.&#13;
204&#13;
&#13;
Ederheimer-Stein Young Men's Clothes&#13;
&#13;
VVhen Spring Freshens&#13;
The desire for new Clothes gets in to the blood like the&#13;
wish to go fishing.&#13;
And here they are-the kind of clothes that make&#13;
you g1ad Spring has come.&#13;
Eiderstein Stein and Stein-Bloch Clothes made of pure&#13;
wool, perfect fitting.&#13;
Suits $10 to $25.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS.&#13;
10\NA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
205&#13;
&#13;
�TO YOU WHO HAVE DRAYING TO BE DONE&#13;
&#13;
I AM IN A&#13;
&#13;
POSITION&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
IT&#13;
&#13;
DO&#13;
&#13;
TO DO YOUR DRAYING&#13;
RIGHT&#13;
&#13;
RIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
PRICES&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
RIGHT SERVICES.&#13;
&#13;
BRYAN CLUB.&#13;
HON.&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
PARNELL&#13;
&#13;
HON. JUDGE&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
MAHONEY&#13;
&#13;
ELWICK&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary and Treas.&#13;
Wardheeler&#13;
&#13;
HoN. ]ACK HoLLISTER&#13;
&#13;
Motto-Vote for Bryan in I 912.&#13;
Emblem-Long Ears.&#13;
Platform-"Free Drinks."&#13;
&#13;
LEGLER, THE&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6124&#13;
&#13;
DRAYMAN&#13;
&#13;
1903 ST. AUBIN AVE., MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
PARTY ADHERENTS.&#13;
&#13;
Dr: Freeman&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Macfarren&#13;
Miss D ahl&#13;
Miss Ferguson&#13;
Prof Garver&#13;
&#13;
Dean Chandler&#13;
Marguerite Gay D olliver&#13;
Bolby Van Horn&#13;
Miss Loveland&#13;
Prof. Morse&#13;
&#13;
Prof H aynes&#13;
Miss Swem&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber Shop&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
A Morningside Shop for Morningside people&#13;
&#13;
Olympia Candy&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
A Clean, Sanitary, Up-todate Shop.&#13;
Fine Service.&#13;
Convenient.&#13;
&#13;
Service the Best in the City&#13;
Famous for its&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
Candies, Dainty&#13;
Lunches, Ices,&#13;
Fruits&#13;
&#13;
Shave Before you go Downtown&#13;
&#13;
--T. Valentine, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
206&#13;
&#13;
2 07&#13;
&#13;
�FROSTY BACK&#13;
FROM FRONT&#13;
Grants Interview.&#13;
&#13;
We Lead&#13;
&#13;
We note that "Frosty" is back at the&#13;
old stand, and is handing out the hot air&#13;
on Glass Avenue every evening with all&#13;
the graciousness that years of gentle service teaches a fellow. In a short interview&#13;
with him last night, he said that crops&#13;
were good out at Blencoe, that he didn't&#13;
like the way Bryan was cavortin' around&#13;
in Nebraska, and that as far as he himself was concerned, he didn't care what&#13;
happened, nothing was going to prevent&#13;
him from having a home near the College next year. We are glad to see the&#13;
old students return for it shows the proper spirit.&#13;
&#13;
With the best assortment of&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries of&#13;
all kinds.&#13;
&#13;
in Morningside.&#13;
We al ways obtain everything&#13;
new that comes out.&#13;
&#13;
Vine-Attempted to sell a horse to some horse traders while he should have been&#13;
leading his Epworth League.&#13;
&#13;
and let us show you our line.&#13;
&#13;
Talma Kitchen-Speaking of the May Music Festival, declared she would go if she&#13;
got an invitation.&#13;
I wonder if T alma attended the concerts?&#13;
&#13;
Davie &amp; Patton&#13;
Peter's Park Grocery&#13;
&#13;
Bill W aymack-My father thinks my conscience as good as new.&#13;
Hank-Why?&#13;
Bill-He says I never use it.&#13;
&#13;
208&#13;
&#13;
We cordially invite the patrons of this publication to call&#13;
&#13;
Harper-Bought one whole package of Nutty Corn one evening.&#13;
Marguerite Kemper happened along when he was going home.&#13;
Harper-I am treating my girl tonight.&#13;
Who could it be?&#13;
&#13;
Muckey-Hello, is this the Eads residence?&#13;
Susan-Yes.&#13;
Muckey-Would you like to attend the entertainment this evening?&#13;
was talking to Caroline.&#13;
&#13;
Our line is the best&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
Thinking he&#13;
&#13;
209&#13;
&#13;
�THE SKUNK IN CHAPEL.&#13;
&#13;
HOW OFTEN HAVE YOU HEARD IT SAID-&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? You can't prove that by me;&#13;
I was not there when it was done, nor could I wish to be.&#13;
I have got some affection, and maybe lots of spunk,&#13;
And yet I never dreamed to pet a measly little skunk.&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? When it was dark at night,&#13;
Went stumbling up the fire-escape, nor dared to use a light.&#13;
Pushed up the window stealthily and uttered one loud wail,&#13;
When he, the skunk, alighted and gently swished his tail.&#13;
&#13;
"When I want anything&#13;
good I go to Martin's?"&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel, chargined our janitor,&#13;
And had the old man search the place from top to bottom floor.&#13;
Who made him work excessively; who put him in a rage?&#13;
This surely is a novel way to show respect for age.&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel, the students to annoy?&#13;
The lengthening of our periods did not increase our joy.&#13;
We hoped to visit in the halls instead of going to ChapelThe Faculty thought otherwise; with lessons made us grapple.&#13;
&#13;
T.· S. Martin&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel, to tease the Faculty?&#13;
To hear them say, "Such beastly trick this school did never see."&#13;
To have them sit in session the culprits for to know,&#13;
To say the joke had angered them-it's grieved them more I trow.&#13;
&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? when our good-natured Dean&#13;
Was left responsible for all; to act that way was mean.&#13;
The situation was "intense" and most embarrassing,&#13;
Unusual skill was needed to sift out such a thing.&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Dry Goods House&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? The President's away,&#13;
Gone to the East on pocketbooks of millionaires to play.&#13;
Who made him pound the desk (as we have seen him oft before),&#13;
And say of "stink" and "stinker," "Such conduct I deplore."&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel our worship did disturb,&#13;
Desires for the highest things t'was wicked thus to curb.&#13;
Besides, we could not give "Nine Rahs" nor sing "Pride of the Sioux"·&#13;
O'er hero's at mass meetings as we are wont to do.&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel pulled off a dirty stunt,&#13;
And no doubt in the future for a cleaner joke will hunt.&#13;
Few know yet who the parties were, and even if all did,&#13;
There's not a man among us who would "snitch upon a kid."&#13;
&#13;
211&#13;
&#13;
210&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Reciprocity Stimulates&#13;
Cordiality&#13;
We are in the LAUNDRY business&#13;
and cater to our friends. We believe&#13;
you to be in this class. Our methods&#13;
are the very latest.&#13;
Experienced&#13;
help.&#13;
We are purveyors to the students of this college. Try us.&#13;
&#13;
THE OLD RELIABLE&#13;
SWEET DREAMS.&#13;
One evening during the spring vacation when things were quiet and time hung heavily upon his hands, Silas Braily, moved by those resistless impulses which surge through&#13;
the breast of a young man in the springtime, went to call upon Miss Whitehouse.&#13;
When he arrived at her home she asked him in and together they sat down for a&#13;
"teet-a-teet" in the silent recesses of the parlor. It being early evening and quite light, the&#13;
gas was lighted and turned to a small flame-a very small flame-and as the evening&#13;
advanced and they were not engaged in reading or looking at pictures, nor in any other&#13;
eye-straining occupation, there seemed to be no good reason for turning it higher. All&#13;
was quiet about the house, outside the Sable Goddess gently drew her curtain down and&#13;
was busily engaged in pinning it with a star. The feeble light flickered low and shadows&#13;
danced upon the wall. What use to speak? For thoughts came, and 0, what thoughts!&#13;
-came and went and came again, and returning were even sweeter than before.&#13;
The clock on the mantle ticked low, the good old "Ingersol" within his vest chimed&#13;
in rythmic cadence and, the while, two hearts in separate breasts throbbed in unison.&#13;
These all wove themselves into one harmonious lullaby past all resisting. The fringed&#13;
curtains drooped then closed and slumber soft and sweet stole over both their spirits.&#13;
Cruel Time passed on. The gong upon the mantel struck out the hours. The resounding vibrations fell upon their enraptured ears like silver chimes ringing out over&#13;
gardens of roses and each succeeding hour as it pealed out seemed softer and sweeter&#13;
and more distant. ONE seemed very faint-TWO they scarcely heard, . and THREE&#13;
they heard not at allBut the Senior Whitehouse heard it- heard it and wondered,&#13;
Arose from his cot, seized a bed slat and thundered:&#13;
"AWAKE thou, Oh, Brailey! ARISE and BEGONE!&#13;
Why sleep in my parlor till the break of the dawn?"&#13;
Young Silas awoke, grabbed his hat and departed,&#13;
Sorely regretting the "biff" that her father imparted.&#13;
212&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN LAUNDRY&#13;
&#13;
JACKSON STREET&#13;
&#13;
BOTH PHONES&#13;
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Style&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
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THE&#13;
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We carry a complete line&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
We obtain everything new&#13;
both Imported and American. Our Guarantee of&#13;
Reliability is our Past Reputation.&#13;
&#13;
of up-to-date Clothing and Fur-&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson&#13;
&#13;
Orkin Bros.&#13;
&#13;
710-712 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
nishing Goods at very lowest&#13;
prices. Ten per cent discount to&#13;
Professors and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
�.,&#13;
&#13;
WATCHES,&#13;
WOULD TO GOODNESS THAT&#13;
&#13;
All sorts and conditions of men and women will find our&#13;
immense watch stock complete with everything new in the&#13;
watch world. Lots of new designs in cases and every&#13;
movement made by the Elgin, Waltham, Hampden, Hamilton and Howard companies.&#13;
We are the agents for the celebrat ed Patek Philippe watch&#13;
-the finest of all imported watches.&#13;
&#13;
Melvin could have a few flashes of brilliant silence,&#13;
Bernice Bowman a steady man,&#13;
Ernest Wickens a new handkerchief;&#13;
Bill W aymack a white shirt,&#13;
Bill Bass a fresh change of "M" sweaters,&#13;
"Yea Verily" a new phrase,&#13;
Mrs. Reynolds a new switch,&#13;
&#13;
WATCHES FOR FATHER , MOTHER. SON OR DAUGHTER&#13;
&#13;
Dean Chandler a stand upon a question,&#13;
Professor Morse less diplomacy,&#13;
&#13;
WILL&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Macfarren sense enough to sit still during grace,&#13;
Professor Rigby a shave,&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
BECK&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
JEWELERS, FOURTH AND PIERCE STS.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Van Horne would clean his finger nails,&#13;
Prof. Doxee would quit drinking tea,&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1877&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dahl would cheer up,&#13;
John Engle would take a bath,&#13;
Hatch would get clipped,&#13;
Bob would put no more skunks in the Chapel,&#13;
Backameyer wouldn't leave any more letters around,&#13;
Marguerite Kemper would quit mourning for Pritt,&#13;
&#13;
For the best in Photography&#13;
&#13;
Cecil Palmer would get a new smile,&#13;
Miss Garnish would quit taking walks,&#13;
&#13;
Miss Anderson and Doxee would make up,&#13;
Spiker and Breaw would quit smoking,&#13;
Ellison and Hall cut out their cards.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
407 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
214&#13;
&#13;
21 5&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College&#13;
1894-1910&#13;
&#13;
LUTHER FREEMAN, President&#13;
&#13;
WHY ATTEND MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE?&#13;
It is a hi g h g rad e college wh ose g raduates tak e hi g h est&#13;
standin g in post gradu ate wo rk in th e leading uni ve rsiti es .&#13;
An abl e faculty of thirty- six m emb ers tr a in ed in the&#13;
lea din g sch ools in Am erica and Europe.&#13;
A spl endid stud ent body, six hundr ed str o n g, from th e&#13;
bes t hom es in the North west, in cr ea sin g steadil y in th e&#13;
stro ngest departments.&#13;
An endowm ent of $400,000.00&#13;
On e o f th e few coll eges in Iow a to r eceive th e endor sem ent and offer of endowm ent after t ho r o ugh person al examination by th e General Educati o n B oa rd of Ne w Yo rk.&#13;
E x p en ses ar e as lo w a s is co nsist ent w ith th e bes t&#13;
wo rk.&#13;
L oca tion in an unu sually aggr essive city of 50,000&#13;
a ffo rd s spl endid oppo rtuniti es for stud ent s of ent erpri se&#13;
t o o btain profi ta bl e e mpl oy m ent and t o fo rm valuable&#13;
a cq uainta nces.&#13;
Mo rnin gs id e lead s th e state in oratory, as is sho wn&#13;
by th e record s o f th e last fo ur yea rs, a nd is fo rgin g&#13;
steadil y t o th e front in many lin es.&#13;
An athl etic pa rk with a quart er mil e course and a&#13;
fi eld h o u se with an indoo r track g ive full opportunities&#13;
of&#13;
athl eti c develo pm ent.&#13;
s&#13;
F o r catalog and ge ne ral info rmati o n adclres_&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE OF THE DEAN&#13;
Views in the New Chemistry Building&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
21 6&#13;
&#13;
217&#13;
&#13;
�Palmer'sONCE EATEN&#13;
&#13;
MU CKEY'S WATERLOO&#13;
&#13;
Scene-Dark.&#13;
Place-Park.&#13;
One night when homeward strolling,&#13;
As the midnight bell was tolling,&#13;
I heard afar a most tremendous roar.&#13;
Then the roaring grew to rumbling,&#13;
And I saw two forms come tumbling,&#13;
Headlong, pitching, falling, stumbling,&#13;
On to ditches, dirty floor.&#13;
Then a silence most relieving,&#13;
And I turned away believing,&#13;
For my eyes are past deceiving,&#13;
'Twas Laura and Melvin-nothing more.&#13;
&#13;
VIOLET BOX&#13;
&#13;
NEVER FORGOTTEN&#13;
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Palmers&#13;
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ROMAN CUOCOLATES&#13;
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Palmers&#13;
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BITTER SWEETS&#13;
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ALL MAPLE&#13;
CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
PALMER'S CHOCOLATE&#13;
MARASCHINO CHERRIES&#13;
&#13;
Look! Listen! one of our promising young students at last tenders his Economics&#13;
&#13;
MADE IN SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Outline, due some twenty-four months ago.&#13;
Outline,&#13;
&#13;
Economics I.&#13;
&#13;
In the Cleanest and Most Up-to-Date Candy Factory in the West&#13;
&#13;
W.W. WAYMACK.&#13;
Brief of the same extracted by W. W. Waymack,&#13;
who is a student of Morningside College-to his great&#13;
gratification had the discredit of the school, for the purpose&#13;
of removing a moss-grown condition in Econ. I.&#13;
&#13;
DAVEN&#13;
PORT &amp; JORDAN&#13;
&#13;
A PARTING WORD.&#13;
&#13;
Latest Methods for&#13;
&#13;
He has vanished-he has left us,&#13;
Oh, what cruel fate bereft us,&#13;
Oh, how many a gentle maiden&#13;
Girds her eyelids tear-drop laden&#13;
At but mention of-&#13;
&#13;
PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Garver-Appearing at class with a muffler on his neck, remarks about the cold room.&#13;
At Chapel time he goes home after his collar.&#13;
Bunny Elliott, standing in the hall. Dr. Haynes happens along as Cushman speaks.&#13;
Cushman-Hello, Bunny, old sport.&#13;
&#13;
French Dry Cleaning&#13;
and Dyeing&#13;
&#13;
Your Tie&#13;
i s the key-note&#13;
to you ,· attire.&#13;
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been&#13;
redeemed&#13;
by a&#13;
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get a strictly firs t -class job done. W e dye&#13;
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P lumes. Our machiner y is new. and our&#13;
process of thoroughly clea nsing all kind s&#13;
of g a rmenls for ladies and gen tlemen is&#13;
e n tirely the most modern. Remember t h e&#13;
name-&#13;
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sma r t, well-made&#13;
cravat. Washington Cr avats com e&#13;
in m an y shades&#13;
and m any patterns, each the&#13;
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==== BOTH PHONES 2677 ====&#13;
417 Douglas Street&#13;
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21 8&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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WASHINGTON SHIRT CO.&#13;
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Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
61 7 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
219&#13;
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Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
INSIST ON THE BEST&#13;
AT YOUR&#13;
&#13;
GROCER'S&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST PRIZE&#13;
Frosty sitting on the rear seat in History V classMary Thoburn-What are you sitting on the back seat for?&#13;
Frosty- So that I can't see your face.&#13;
Bachemeyer (at the table)-1&#13;
&#13;
just simply cannot hear a girl talk- that is in public.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Brown in Psychology class:&#13;
&#13;
You can all be rich if you really wish it.&#13;
&#13;
WILL BE THE&#13;
&#13;
BRAND&#13;
&#13;
Trimble: I want to be rich.&#13;
Brown: You cannot be a missionary to China and wish to be rich at the same time.&#13;
Miss Bond and Miss Dean should have a chaperon when going down town, for&#13;
they took the wrong train when going home Easter vacation.&#13;
Miss Shannon has a report in Polioics.&#13;
Prof. Garver- It is needless to write down the whole book.&#13;
Mrs. Coleman, in her report to the Faculty&#13;
Well, there are three fellows w ho&#13;
are all that can be expected of college men and the other one is a gentleman.&#13;
&#13;
TOLERTON &amp; WARFIELD CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Bachemeyer and Mahoney are met coming out of the Mondamin pool hall by Dr.&#13;
Freeman.&#13;
Needless to say profuse excuses are hurriedly offered.&#13;
220&#13;
&#13;
22 1&#13;
&#13;
�Garver, in History Class: Woman is the head of the household.&#13;
If you don't believe it get married.&#13;
Professor P endell, in Chem. C lass:&#13;
&#13;
Well, Jory, what does your book say?&#13;
&#13;
Palmer calls uo A u to 11 75 by mistake and asks for D ora. Mrs. Distad of&#13;
course sends Lorna to the 'phone and Palmer tenders an invitation to the Otho Banquet.&#13;
M oral-Make :your dates with someone you know.&#13;
D avey Loepp-When coming to S. C. on the Illinois Central, says, "This train is&#13;
an instrument of God."&#13;
Bill Bass-Why?&#13;
pavey- God created all creeping things.&#13;
Mahoney-(When offering prayers shortly before the Otho-Philo debate):&#13;
&#13;
Mr.&#13;
&#13;
EVERY&#13;
&#13;
CO-ED KNOWS&#13;
CLOTHES&#13;
&#13;
C hairma n - Miss Fletcher d eclines to come to the front of the room when about to read a&#13;
paper, presumably because Bowker is on the front seat.&#13;
Prof. Brown: N ever mind, Miss F., I'll protect you.&#13;
"A gentleman is one who breaks all the ten commandments genteelly and wears spotless linen."&#13;
Prof. Macfarren-&#13;
&#13;
{In a hea ted argument with M ahoney) : I would rather die in&#13;
&#13;
Ireland than any other place, I think.&#13;
Mahoney: Of course, I knew you would admit it.&#13;
M acfarren : Well, it would be because I could leave Ireland with less regret than&#13;
any spot on earth.&#13;
Miss Eicher calmly working in the libraryFreshman Girl- Are you Mrs. Trimble ?&#13;
&#13;
and knowing what's what in clothes she&#13;
brings her wants to this store where every&#13;
woman can get just the apparel fashion&#13;
decrees she shall wear. There is nothing&#13;
that is good in women's apparel that cannot be found here and at prices most&#13;
reasonable.&#13;
It has become a habit with all women&#13;
who are particular about their dress to do&#13;
all their trading at Pelletier's. Any one&#13;
who has worn Pelletier' s apparel knows&#13;
why it becomes a custom.&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING FOR EVERYONE&#13;
ALWAYS HERE&#13;
The Suits, Dresses, and Coats were never as beautiful as they are this season.&#13;
&#13;
223&#13;
222&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
NOT HOW CHEAP- BUT HOW GOOD&#13;
&#13;
LET LINDHOLM FURNISH&#13;
YOUR HOME COMPLETE&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; HOBERG&#13;
JEWELERS OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
511 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner in Psychology :&#13;
&#13;
Tells of a class for the benefit of dull children&#13;
&#13;
in the University of Minnesota.&#13;
Prof. Brown:&#13;
&#13;
What do you think of it?&#13;
&#13;
If you were a little girl would you like&#13;
&#13;
to be in the class?&#13;
&#13;
Lindholm Furniture Company&#13;
Fifth and Douglas Streets&#13;
&#13;
Ethel L ynch-Coming from the M ain H all and seeing the car has just gone is&#13;
asked to walk up to the park by one of the fellows.&#13;
E thel-W ell, I might as well, it isn't any worse than standing here.&#13;
&#13;
ESCORTING AN UNINVITED&#13;
GUEST FROM CHAPEL&#13;
&#13;
224&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, U. S. A&#13;
&#13;
22 5&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Valuable&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Determined effort to save develops or strengthens a valuable faculty,&#13;
namely: The faculty of drawing the line between necessary and useless expenditure.&#13;
Think of it: Isn't it usually the thing one is better off without that takes&#13;
the money he should save?&#13;
Hence the double benefit of the saving habit: First, learning to deny&#13;
one's self harmful indulgences; and second, acquiring a property through little&#13;
triumphs over self.&#13;
Ask yourself now if there is any reason why you should not become a&#13;
money saver at the&#13;
&#13;
GENELLI STUDIO&#13;
513&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH STREET&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Safe Deposit Boxes&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHEAST&#13;
&#13;
For Rent in Our Steel Lined Burglar and Fire Proof Vaults&#13;
&#13;
CORNER&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
&#13;
STREETS&#13;
&#13;
A H.&#13;
&#13;
OBERG PEDERSEN&#13;
&#13;
VAN RIPER&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
THE PEDERSEN-VAN RIPER CO.&#13;
Interior&#13;
&#13;
Decorators&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
619 FIFTH STREET&#13;
Lewis Block&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4214&#13;
&#13;
Corner-In debate-We&#13;
Judges.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Negative-Maintain-Mr.&#13;
&#13;
Chairman-Hon.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Clyde Devitt-(Shortly after Ellerd's flame becomes bright with Lulu) : "Lulu&#13;
has a date every night next week with the toughest boy in school."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ethan Smith and Genevieve Bond-Late to supper after a skating partyEthan: "My hands didn't get a bit cold while I was skating."&#13;
Genevieve-( From across the table) : "Neither did mine."&#13;
&#13;
IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL PHOTOGRAPHS AND&#13;
DESIGNS APPEARING IN THIS ANNUAL.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Prichard, Anderson and Warburton receive a bid to spend the evening at&#13;
the home of Miss Frances Horn.&#13;
Upon arriving they fail to find anyone but Frosty and Frances there.&#13;
Warburton-Coming into Politics Class late, as usual.&#13;
Prof. Garver: "Well, let's don't pay too much attention to visitors."&#13;
Mary Kifer:&#13;
something.&#13;
&#13;
WE MAKE A FEATURE OF COL·&#13;
LEGE PHOTOGRAPHS AND HAVE&#13;
UNSURPASSED&#13;
FACILITIES&#13;
FOR THE PROMPT DELIVERY OF&#13;
SUCH WORK.&#13;
&#13;
"Say, Louise, if someone asks you a question, let on you know&#13;
&#13;
Kent and Miss Green approach a muddy crossing on their way to dinnerKent: "Well, there is only one of two things to do. Leave my coat down or carry&#13;
you across.&#13;
226&#13;
&#13;
227&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
GOOD PRINTING&#13;
We do no other kind. We&#13;
printed this book, and submit it to the public as an&#13;
evidence of the quality of&#13;
our work. We can turn out&#13;
just as good a job for you.&#13;
Give us a trial. Catalogues&#13;
and booklets a specialty.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
THE MONARCH PRINTING CO.&#13;
Printers of The Sioux=&#13;
&#13;
COU N CIL&#13;
&#13;
BLUF F S ,&#13;
&#13;
228&#13;
&#13;
===&#13;
&#13;
IOW A&#13;
&#13;
229&#13;
&#13;
�GO BACK&#13;
And read carefully the advertisements.&#13;
&#13;
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
We have selected them with care;&#13;
&#13;
advertisers are the kind that stand back of their goods.&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
They are the folks in&#13;
&#13;
C. S. VON HATTEN&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City that help to boost our college enterprises and it is only right that they should&#13;
have our co-operation in their business.&#13;
&#13;
Prefer our advertisers to all others.&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
REMODELER&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
FINE FURS&#13;
OVER H . &amp; H . S HO E STORE&#13;
&#13;
512 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
A few weeks ago this bird left upon the steps of Morningside a new Annual board.&#13;
They are young and know not the magnitude of the task that lies before them.&#13;
give them .greeting and bespeak for them the co-operation of every student.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Walk&#13;
&#13;
Nights&#13;
To Buy&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
Upon them&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
&#13;
we cast our mantel and wish them success.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF EDITORS, SIOUX '12.&#13;
&#13;
Mahoney &amp;&#13;
&#13;
Elwick&#13;
&#13;
THE EN D .&#13;
&#13;
Choice Residence&#13;
Properties in&#13;
&#13;
Morningside and&#13;
Crescent Park&#13;
Write and Tell Us Your Wants&#13;
MAIN OFFICE- 1300 MORNINGSIDE A VE.&#13;
23 0&#13;
&#13;
23 1&#13;
&#13;
Wild Lands&#13;
Houses and Lots&#13;
&#13;
����</text>
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              <text>YEAR BOOK OF MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF 1912&#13;
&#13;
MAY, 1911&#13;
&#13;
-·-·-·-·-·-&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
dedicate&#13;
to our dean,&#13;
Levi Chandler A.M.,&#13;
&#13;
this volume&#13;
Sidney&#13;
&#13;
in tokenof&#13;
of him.s&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
our&#13;
&#13;
appreciation&#13;
&#13;
Christian&#13;
&#13;
a noble&#13;
&#13;
man of unusual magnanimity&#13;
&#13;
and poise a just administrator, n inspiring&#13;
a&#13;
and a sympathetic&#13;
&#13;
friend.&#13;
&#13;
::;;;DEAN SIDNEY L. CHANDLER, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
teacher&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS OF THE&#13;
BOARD OF TRUSTEES&#13;
&#13;
0. W.&#13;
C. W.&#13;
Literary&#13;
Lola Raw&#13;
&#13;
Jokes&#13;
Rob't Smyli e&#13;
&#13;
Calendar&#13;
Florence Anthony&#13;
&#13;
Organizations&#13;
&#13;
Forensics&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
E.&#13;
&#13;
Wi cke n s&#13;
&#13;
Edna Reik e&#13;
&#13;
Classes&#13;
J. H . Lewis&#13;
&#13;
TOWNER,&#13;
PAYN E,&#13;
&#13;
]. C.&#13;
&#13;
LOCKIN,&#13;
&#13;
EMMA&#13;
&#13;
L. ] .&#13;
&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
. F.&#13;
&#13;
F. G&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
.J. A. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Alumni&#13;
Louise McDonald&#13;
&#13;
DAHL,&#13;
&#13;
HASKINS,&#13;
&#13;
D . EMPEY,&#13;
&#13;
]. G.&#13;
&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
SHOEMAKER,&#13;
&#13;
Pres.&#13;
V . Pres.&#13;
&#13;
Sect'y&#13;
Ass 't Sect' y&#13;
Treas.&#13;
&#13;
Field Sect'y&#13;
Auditor&#13;
&#13;
Busin ess Manager&#13;
D P. Mahoney&#13;
&#13;
in Chief&#13;
Elwick&#13;
&#13;
Societies&#13;
G ladys Tuttl e&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Cartoon&#13;
Myrtle Seifert&#13;
&#13;
Photographel'&#13;
John Fair&#13;
&#13;
7&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
Rev. Charles Macauley Stuart, D. D., Litt. D ., LL. D., Presiding.&#13;
&#13;
LUTHER FREEMAN, D. D.&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Sonata- C Minor .......... . ....... . . . ... . ... . . . .... . . . Felix M endelssohn&#13;
Organ Prelude.&#13;
Choral Song and Fugue .... ..... ......... .. . .. . ... .. ...... .. S. S. Wesley&#13;
Mr. Herbert Macfarren, A. R. A . M:&#13;
Processional Hymn-"Holy, Holy, Holy."&#13;
Invocation . ... .... .. . .. .. . . .. . . ... ... . .... . . R ev. Bennett Mitchell, D . D.&#13;
Address of Welcome ... . . .. . .. . ....... ... ... Dean Sidney L. Chandler, A M .&#13;
Roll Call of Delegates ... .. ... . ....... . . . Professor H enry F. Kanthlener, A M .&#13;
Response in Behalf of the D elegates .. .. ............ Rev. Edwin A Schell, D . D .&#13;
Chorus- " O Clap Your H ands" .. .... ............ . . .. .. .... ... . ... Turner&#13;
The College Choir&#13;
Prayer . . ...... . .. . . ......... .... . ...... .. Rev. James Lewis Gillies, A B.&#13;
Induction . .. . . .. ....... . Hon. 0. W . Towner, President of the Board of Trustees&#13;
Acceptance ... . . . ....... . ....... .. . . .... .. . President Luther Freeman, D. D.&#13;
Hymn- "Faith of Our Fathers."&#13;
Inaugural Address .. .. . . ..... ... . . . .. . .. . ... President Luther Freeman, D. D.&#13;
Address .. . .. .. . . ..... . . . . . .. . . . ... . .. ...... .. .... ... Bishop M cDowell&#13;
Benediction . ... . . ........ ..... . .. ...... R ev. Wm. Campbell Wasser, Ph. D.&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
INAUGURAL ADDRESS&#13;
INSTITUTIONS REPRESENTED AT DR. FREEMAN'S&#13;
INAUGURATION&#13;
State of Iowa, Department of Public Instruction, State of Iowa, The City of&#13;
Sioux City, H arva rd University, Yale University, Columbia University, Willia ms College, Princeton University, Allegheny College, Colga te University, McGill University,&#13;
Mt. Holyoke College, Wesleyan University, Union Theological Seminary, D epauw&#13;
University, Iowa Wesleyan University, Ohio Wesleyan University, University of Iowa,&#13;
Grinnell College, University of Wisconsin, Wes tern College for Women, B eaver College,&#13;
Hamlin University, Northwestern University, Cornell College, Upper Iowa University,&#13;
Vassar College, Carlton College, Simpson College, Tabor College, University of West&#13;
Virginia, Wellesley College, German Wallace College, Boston University, Coe College,&#13;
Yankton College, University of South D akota, Bellevue College, University of North&#13;
Dakota, Goucher College, Dakota Wesleyan University, University of C hicago.&#13;
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THE PRESIDENT'S&#13;
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12&#13;
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HOME&#13;
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DR . LUTHER FREEMAN&#13;
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Dr. Stuart, President of the Board of Trustees, Delegates, Trustees, Alumni, Ladies&#13;
and Gentlemen:&#13;
It is und erstoo d by a ll , of co ur se,. t ha t th e pagea nt a nd welco m e and di stin cti o n of&#13;
thi s day a r e g ive n no t to any pa rt icul a r pe rso n , bu t as a tribut e to th at whi ch h as b ee n&#13;
feli cito usly den o min ated, o u r na ti o nal id ol," ed ucati o n .&#13;
Alth o ug h p erso nality is di st in ctl y in th e bac kgro und . we m u st recog ni ze th at th e&#13;
type and qu ality of th e edu cat io n characte ri sti c of a n in stit ut io n is la r ge ly depend ent upon&#13;
th e perso na lity wh ic h shap es its po li cy. It is, th e r efo re. quite fittin g, a nd certainly a&#13;
di stinct p erso nal pl eas ure, to r ecogni ze th e ve ry g r eat se r vice r end e r ed to the educati o nal&#13;
inter ests of thi s sectio n by m y ho no r ed predecesso r who, throu g h practi call y all -th e year s&#13;
o f Mo rnin gs id e Co llege, ha s bee n its in s pirat io n and leade r. W e all reg r et m ost sin ce r ely&#13;
th e prov id en ce th at m a kes it n ecessa ry fo r us thi s day to do with o ut th e presen ce o f th e&#13;
eloqu ent and states m a nlik e edu ca to r, Bi sh op Wilson Seeley L ewi s. P erhap s, howe ver,&#13;
th e spirit o f M ornings id e is pictur ed all th e m o r e vividly by hi s a b se nc e; for M o rnings ide, whil e very di stin ctly , and to a remar ka bl e exte nt, th e child o f a special locality, has&#13;
always r ecogni zed a wo rld -w ide mi ssio n . Th er e is hardl y a land a nyw here beyo nd th e&#13;
r each of its imm ediat e influ enc e ; fo r Mo rnin gs id e bo ys and g irl s ha ve go ne to th e end s.&#13;
of th e ea rth to tell m e n of " th e li fe th at is life indeed. "&#13;
Whil e th e fr eq uency of such occas io n s rend ers uniqu e or ori g in al ut terance o n edu ca ti o nal pro bl em s impossibl e, it see m s fittin g that, wi t h th e beginnin g o f a coll ege admin istrati o n, th ose to who m th e sha pin g o f its p olicy is co mmitted sho uld be ex pected to&#13;
indicate, in o utlin e, th e id eal s th at sho uld in th eir jud g m ent, do min ate th e wo rk o f th e&#13;
in stitution.&#13;
It is a ll th e m o re fittin g at thi s tim e th at a wo rd o f de fen se sho uld be spo ken becau se o f th e fa ct th at th e coll eges of th e U nit ed States have bee n und er fir e of late.&#13;
Whil e we ha ve wo rshipp ed edu cati o n in th e ab stract with blind devo tio n, declaring th at&#13;
it is th e sove r eig n panac ea fo r all o ur nati o nal ill s, fo r th e bani shm ent o f po ve rty, th e&#13;
ass imilati o n o f th e fo r eig n er, th e e radicati o n o f th e liqu o r evil , th e solution of th e rac e&#13;
pro bl em, a nd th e final cr ea t o r of do m es tic t ranquili ty, we find o ur colleges bitterl y&#13;
criticised.&#13;
Pres id ent Butl er ·say s: " Th e A meri ca n coll ege hardl y exi st s nowad ays a nd , unless&#13;
a ll sign s ·mi slead , th ose wh o want it back in all its u seful excell encies will ha ve to fi g ht&#13;
fo r it vigo rou sly. Th e milk and wa ter sub stitut e and th e fi at uni ve rsity th at have take n&#13;
th e pl ace of th e coll ege a r e pretty poo r r et urn s fo r what we have lost."&#13;
Th e ch a r ges a r e many and o fte n co ntradict o ry . S o m eon e has di sco ver ed th at&#13;
th e colleges ar e hotb eds o f eve ry kind o f h er esy, th at th e faith o f o ur fath ers is bein g&#13;
so r ely impe ril ed by th e frankn ess of th e teachin g , es pec iall y th e scientific teachin g, now&#13;
being g ive n in our class roo m s. On th e o th er hand we ar e told th a t we ar e so bo und&#13;
by th e old faith s and creeds as to be un a bl e t o g ive th at breadth and catholi city of&#13;
thought necessary t o develo p th e po ise and judg m ent essential t o th e largest p er so nality.&#13;
One day we a re char ged with dr ea my ideali sm , th e nex t we ar e said to lay o ur empha sis&#13;
upon foo tball , we ig ht thr o win g and ge neral ath leti cs, until th e aim see m s to be a sch ola r ship of mu scl e and a vo irdupo is. Promin ent r eprese ntati ves o f th e bu siness wo rld a r e&#13;
tellin g us th at our g raduat es are ineffic ient, that mu ch whi ch has bee n lea rned in co ll ege&#13;
has to be unl earn ed befo r e a boy is of pa rti cul a r value as an empl oye in on e of o ur&#13;
m ercantil e ho u ses. Sch ola rs declar e th at th e pass io n fo r sc holarship is a thin g of th e&#13;
13&#13;
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past; that o ur g rad uat es lack the stamp of real culture; that th e bookkeepe r is more&#13;
ho n o r ed th an Browning, a nd Ben Pitman o utrank s Plato-and so meo ne ha s suggested&#13;
the raising of a comm iss io n to asce r tain the actual percentage of illite rate s among college matriculants. If we a re no t co nd em ned becau se of th e things we teach, we are&#13;
co n sign ed by some special ist to eve rl asting co nd emnati o n for the things we d o not teach .&#13;
At the sa m e time money has been poured o ut of public a nd private purse for th e building&#13;
a nd end owi ng of institutions of learni n g in a manner ec lipsin g anything known in the&#13;
hi sto ry of mankind. And in t hi s m unifi ce nce the coll ege has enj oy ed m ost generous&#13;
recognition.&#13;
We may appropr iate ly in quire: What do we mean by education? What end is it&#13;
intended to serve? Do we propose to eq uip its beneficiaries to win the world's financial&#13;
prizes, o r do we propose to create an inte ll ectual aristocracy? I s o ur aim culture for&#13;
culture's sake, o r are we seek in g technical sc h o larship ? What shall be o ur answer?&#13;
W e sha ll not be sat isfied with a ny a n swe r that is not stated in term s of life. How&#13;
to li ve is th e question. The pragmatist is a bso lu te ly correct at thi s point. I cannot do&#13;
better than quote this m emorable pa ssage from H e rb ert Spencer: " How to live?-that&#13;
is th e esse ntial question fo r us. No t how to liv e in th e m e re material sense only, but in&#13;
the widest se nse . Th e ge ne ra l problem which comprehends all spec ial probl em s is-the&#13;
right rulin g of conduct in a ll directions under all c ircum stan ces. In what way to tr eat&#13;
the body; in what way to treat th e mind: in what way to manage our affairs; in what&#13;
way t o brin g up a family: in what way t o behave as a citizen; in what way to utilize all&#13;
th ose so urces of happin ess which natur e suppli es-how to u se all o ur facultie s to the&#13;
great est advantage to o ur se lves a nd ot he r s ?-how to live completely? And thi s being&#13;
the g r eat thin g nee dful for us to learn is by consequence th e great thing which education&#13;
ha s to teac h . To prepare us for co m plete li ving is th e function which education ha s t o&#13;
discharge; and the o nly ration a l mod e of judging of any e ducational course is to judge&#13;
in wha t d eg r ee it discharges s uch a function."&#13;
Has the co ll ege an esse ntial pl ace in th e work of giving our young peo ple such&#13;
ed ucation? W e do not hes it a t e t o answer with an e mph a tic affirmative. It is not&#13;
possible for th e hi g h sc hoo l by multiplyin g its co ur ses to give anything like an equivalent&#13;
for th e work of the fir st years of the college. Th e atmosphere of the high sc hool due to&#13;
the immaturity of the st ud ent body is quite di stinct from that of th e college. So diffe re nt mu s t high sc hoo l m et hods be that the bett er co ll eges cannot give credit for&#13;
co ur ses parallel to their ow n. which ha ve been pursued in the secondary institutio n. W e&#13;
are in sy mpath y with the broader co nc ep ti o n o f th e high sc hool. It mu st no t be look ed&#13;
upo n as exc lu sively a fitting sc hool fo r the college. Doubtless th e stat e sh o uld rec ognize&#13;
an o bli gat io n to give in creasin g consideration t o that large percentage of high scho o l&#13;
stud ent s who have no expec tat ion of goi n g furth e r. It may o ff er ' so me elementary&#13;
technical co ur ses , but it ca n g ive no acceptabl e sub st itute fo r the cultural courses and&#13;
atmosphere of the r ea l college.&#13;
On the oth e r hand. th e sp irit of th e uni ve r s ity is not th e spirit of the college. The&#13;
univ er sity e mph as izes tec hni ca l sc ho larship: th e co ll ege. broad and catholic culture. The&#13;
university adapts its work a nd di sc iplin e to th e mature student to whom th e la rges t lib er ty sho uld a lways be g iv en. Int en sive work. na rr owed to th e chosen spec ialty, is it s aim .&#13;
Th e college take s st ud ent s in th e lat er ado lesce nt period a nd is charged with the re sponsibility of sha ping the int ell ect ual and m o ral natur e, into harm o ny with the true st ideal s&#13;
of life. It must a im continually to pr od uc e th e we ll-round ed personality. Sch o larship in&#13;
the technical se n se is a s ub o r d inat e consideration. Th e n o n se n se of the irrespon si ble&#13;
boy must be tra n sformed into genuine serio u sness. His work mu st in s pire him with&#13;
hea rty interest. a nd life must be fill ed with a worthy purpose. Whil e th e fr ee liberty of&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
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univer sity life mu st be de ni ed him at this period, he mu st recog ni ze th e necess ity of&#13;
facing for him self great moral problems a nd accepting the consequences. The rea l college will not seek to go beyond its legitim ate sphere in eit he r direction&#13;
It will ask th e&#13;
seco ndary school to give thorough grounding in the fundamentals a nd in that painstaking&#13;
drill without which th e stude nt must always walk with uncertain steps. It will aim to&#13;
help youth to se lf- conscio usness through in te ll ect ua l training; to teach th e m to think for&#13;
th em se lv es; to acquaint t hem wit h the great curre nt s of hi st o ry and th e m o r e importa nt&#13;
fact s of th e world in which we now liv e; to adjust them t o the wo rld of activity so that&#13;
th ey shall co m e to la r gest se lf-hoo d and the maximum of u sefuln ess, and then se nd th e m&#13;
on to th e univ ersity to purs ue their ch osen profession. Th e college is still a n ecess ity.&#13;
Until within a few years the courses of st udy in o ur co ll eges we r e so uniform that&#13;
the bac helor's d egree s ignifie d a ce rtain very definite amount of particular wo rk. A&#13;
few years ago a brilliant ed ucato r sta rtl ed the o ld time co ll eges o ut of the routine by&#13;
proclaiming th e woodenness of the syste m of prescribed co ur ses. So e loquently did h e&#13;
preach a nd so lo gica ll y did h e maintain the exce ll encies of an electi ve syste m , th a t the old&#13;
landmarks were oblit er ate d. Th e stud ent was given th e widest po ss ibl e la titu de in&#13;
choosing the co ur ses which he particularly fa nc ied, or, if he was of a n indol e nt di spos ition, th e courses in which h e might mo st eas il y sec ure c redit s. Now, we see a di stinct&#13;
s winging of the pendulum in the o th er direction. It ha s co m e to be recog ni zed that a&#13;
course which costs th e stude nt littl e is worth littl e to the student. Th e s tudent from&#13;
the high sc hoo l is ve ry inadequately suppli ed with that vision an d per spectiv e necessary&#13;
to make wi se choice of offered courses. From all s id es we are hea ring an outcry because o f th e lac k of e nthu s iasm for r ea l sc h o larship , a nd those who beli eve that th e&#13;
electiv e syste m ha s been car ri ed to a n unwi se ex tre m e do no t hes itate to ascribe much&#13;
of o ur mental s loth t o the habi t of d o in g o nly the thin gs that are congenial.&#13;
The old sys t em with its pr esc rib ed co ur ses was und o ubt edly open to grave o bjection.&#13;
No tw o mind s are precisely alik e, and you ca n no m ore get sc holar ship of the bes t type&#13;
out of a cast-iron r eg im e than yo u ca n get th e best speed from fifty colts by driving&#13;
them in a drove around the race track. Th e co ur se wa s t oo narrow ; it confined itself&#13;
almost exclusively to the a nci ent lan g uages, m a th ematic s, phil oso phy and a typ e of hi story that wa s hardly more th an a set of ch ronicl es. But we mu st say in d efe nse of&#13;
this regime that th e curri culum cove r ed pretty well th e knowl edge then c urr ent among&#13;
men. The world of sc ien ce a nd the m ode rn m ethod s of sc ientific investigati o n were as&#13;
yet unknown. We mu st remember that Har va rd began its work one hundred fifty years&#13;
before Priest ly a nd Lav o isier had r evea led th e my st e rie s of chemistry and Hutton and&#13;
Cuvier had aroused th e world t o a n inte r est in paleontology and geology, o r A dam Smith&#13;
in hi s " W ea lth of Nations" had sh ow n men that th er e were law s underlyin g th e soc ial&#13;
movements of humanity . This was o ne hundred years before Linnaeus had awakened&#13;
men to the study of botany a nd zoo lo gy, and fifty years befor e L ock e had written hi s&#13;
·' Human Understanding" and made possible modern philosophy a nd m o d ern hi story.&#13;
But, crude as it was, this m eth o d acco mpli sh ed marvels fo r tho se who s ubmitted themse lv es to it. W e are not in a mood for despising the atta inm ent s o f the lawyers, state sm en, preach e r s and poets who were the product of the sc hoo ls o f those o lden tim es.&#13;
Those m e n studi ed logic and mathematics, a nd as a r es ult th ey could think. Th ey could&#13;
think cl ea rly and persistently, an d they co uld draw co nclu sio n s and defe nd th e m . They&#13;
had power not o nly t o think, but they had power to give ex press io n t o their thought s;&#13;
and we should be quite gratified if we co uld produce in o ur in st ituti o n a few men with&#13;
th e ability t o write as clearly, think as closely, o r speak with th e force a nd eloq uenc e&#13;
of the m en who lifted th e last century to hi g h leve ls.&#13;
In th ese day s we are callin g fo r co ur ses that shall permit the stud ent to work a lo n g&#13;
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the line of least resi stance. We talk a bo ut adaptation, th e awakening of interest, and&#13;
considerin g the bent o f th e indi vidual mi nd. W e eliminate t he spur of discipline a nd&#13;
sharp competitio n and g ive the sugar pl um of a pleasant diversion. In sho rt, we ar e&#13;
askin g that the m ethods which m ay be tole rabl e in t he k indergarten be ca rried through&#13;
the secondary course and finally into the college. As a r esult we ha ve inaccurate scholarship, loose thinking, a smattering of superficial information, d ilettante culture, and positive paralysis in th e presence of problems that require r eal o riginality. A real coll ege&#13;
course wi ll awaken do rmant capacities, develop th e sense of responsibility, teach accuracy&#13;
and create sturdy self-co nfid ence. It can not do thi s by making the college like Tenn yso n's valley o f Avili on ··Wher e fall s not ra in no r hail no r any snow;" _&#13;
but it m ust have&#13;
its rules and r egulatio n s, it must di scipline, a nd it must compel the proper perform ance&#13;
of r easonabl e tasks. T her e is n o royal road to mental po we r and mastery. T he r e is no&#13;
way but the hard way leading to the end. The do ing of t he positi vely distasteful is&#13;
necessary. Holding o ne's self without com promise to the undes irable task is impe rat ive.&#13;
The unpromisin g student cri es for sympathetic patience when he needs th e discipline of&#13;
hardness. It is o ur business to prepa re the student to live in the actual wo rld an d th ere&#13;
he will n ot find con cessio n a nd compromise the prevailing spi rit. H e must meet thin gs&#13;
as th ey are, he must t ranslate hi s ideals into life without a ''pony" and solve t he difficul t&#13;
problems without a "key." The world will not always excuse and tol erate his inefficiency&#13;
because h e is "so fasc inating." Unl ess he lea rn s h ow to lift the heavy burdens a nd&#13;
st rike the ha rd blow and defend him self, th e chariots of civilization will r oll ove r him&#13;
and h e will be cru sh ed. If he does not li ke math ematics it is because it is not ea sy for&#13;
him to think accurately and continuo usly. That is just the r easo n why mathem at ics&#13;
sho uld be taken. Metaphysics is see mingly impossible at fir st because we have not&#13;
learned to think outside o f se nse pheno mena. Abstr act think in g is not so simple as&#13;
handling the co ncrete, but no man gets far until h e has acquired thi s power. Therefore&#13;
ph ilosophy and metaphysics have th eir place and no student sho uld b e allowed to shirk&#13;
t hi s kind of work. Has a student no fac ulty for seei ng t hings? Has his po wer of&#13;
obse rvation never bee n culti vated ? W ould he rather r ead poet ry than strain hi s eyes by&#13;
car efu l attenti o n to t he microscope? That is the reaso n why he sho uld have courses in&#13;
t he labo rato ry and t rain him self to observe accurately and patiently. How few o f us&#13;
a re a ble to see eve n th oug h we a ppear to have eyes! For how many years m en have&#13;
looked upo n th e mosquito as simply a disagreeable nocturnal visitor. H e has bee n tol erated and we ha ve looked upo n hi s torments as havi ng no more significance t ha n a&#13;
tempo rary irritation of the e pidermi s. T hen some o ne. had wi t eno ug h to n ote the co nn ectio n between the mosquito and a dread di sease, and suddenly the m osquito is seen to&#13;
be more dangero us to humanity than all th e veno mo us snakes ever di scovered. The&#13;
educated m a n is t he man who can hold hismelf to th e unpleasant, unattract'ive task. Cont ro l of o ne's facul ties-that is the goal ! It is said that S enato r Edmond s could loo k at a&#13;
fly o n a barn doo r fo r thirty minutes and nev er see th e barn door ! I t is no wo nder&#13;
that he made hi s way to a place of almost unmatch ed in fl uence in th e hi gh est legislati ve&#13;
body in the la nd and that his advice had much to do with shaping o ur more significant&#13;
national m ovement s fo r a third of a century.&#13;
The degree of a man' s real educatio n is determ ined by hi s p ower of vo lunta ry&#13;
rather than spontaneuos attentio n. I t h in k we can see t he tendency of the loose, easy&#13;
go in g methods of th e m odern sch ool amo ng th e masses of th e people. The real lecture&#13;
platform was o nce popular. The people flocked to hear such m en as W endell Ph illips,&#13;
Henry Ward Beecher and Ralph W aldo E m erson di scuss great question s in a great way.&#13;
T o day the buffoon has th e crowd. The Ch auta uqua of old, with its courses of ge nuin e&#13;
study, attractin g th e multiude, ha s degene r ated into a pious vaudeville. Men do no t&#13;
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•&#13;
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want to think. Th ey cannot th ink. They ha ve not been taugh t to hold their m inds to&#13;
anything tha t d id not con t in ue to inte r est t hem . Volunta ry, continuous think ing is a&#13;
burden to th em. B ut t here is no other way to work out q uali ty in thought or character, but by th e ha rd way.&#13;
We have new proble ms in church and state and school and domestic life t o solve.&#13;
We need some me n to do it. We need m en who do not stagger along on crutches,&#13;
lean on auth o ri ties, foll o w m ajo r ities; n ot th e lazy and the thrift less, but men who know&#13;
h ow to wo rk, and work hard, and never qui t . It is the bus iness of the college to demand courses st rict en o ugh. and va r ied en o ugh, to g ive this trai nin g . By our m odified&#13;
elective course, with its system of maj ors and mino rs, we ai m to give the st udent a&#13;
symmetrical develo pment. He must ta ke en o ugh of the cla ssics, ancient and m odern,&#13;
to give that indefinable someth ing so characteristic of the E nglish universities which we&#13;
call culture. H e m ust gi ve enou g h time to t he study of th e scie nces to produce something of th at wh ich is cha r acteristic of the Ger man system o f ed ucation, which we call&#13;
scholarship. A nd y et his m ajo r mu st be carried far enough t o make him, in so m e measure, at hom e in so me wo rt hy fi eld of sch ola rly investi gation.&#13;
When a student has taken a pa rticula r cou rse there a re two tests that can be&#13;
applied to it, t he t echnical an d the ph ilosoph ica l. As an ill ust ration: A student has&#13;
been studying a m o de rn languag e. Afte r a reaso nable length of tim e it is fair to ask for&#13;
results. We have a right to expect that the student shall be abl e to interpret th e m eaning of symbo ls which hereto fore were no mo re t han hie r ogly phics. N ot only m ust he be&#13;
able to read t he lan guage with a certain degree of accu racy, but he should be able to put&#13;
simple th o ughts of his own in to the fore ign tong ue. Woul d it not be reasonable to expect him to un derstand what is said to hi m by one speakin g t hat language a nd make&#13;
suitable reply in t he la ngua g e of the interrogato r? This is th e tech nical r esult. F ailure&#13;
to meet this test wo uld just ify a condemnati o n of the meth od of t he teache r o r the&#13;
ability of the student.&#13;
But there is also a philoso p hical test. Th is is not qui te so easy of applicatio n, but&#13;
it is quite as real and searching. S uppo se that t he course has been one in history. W hat&#13;
is the test?&#13;
Not&#13;
whether the studen t remem bers certain da tes and can recite unrelated&#13;
facts, but, has he so mastered th e life and spirit of the people and age which he ha s&#13;
been studying as to have for med a r easo nably accur ate pictu r e o f t he civilization o f t hat&#13;
time? Has he g one beneath th e surface of su perfi cial fact s and fou nd there the t h robbing life? Can he interpret the age in intelligible term s ? This r eq ui r es tho ught and&#13;
insigh t. This is t he philosophical te st. I n so m e measu r e th ese tests are appli ca ble to&#13;
every course; an d the teacher who do es not bring satisfactory r esults should co unt&#13;
himself incompeten t .&#13;
It is in te resting and suggest ive to note th at th e great m oveme nts which have lifted a&#13;
people into larger life, when wider chann els have been made fo r t he flood of h umani ty,&#13;
have been led by some great native soul. The fo r eign missio nary may be the init iating&#13;
force, but he can ne ver be t h e ultimate leader. T he emancipato r from the power of&#13;
Egypt was learned in all the arts and wisdo m of the Egyptian schools. The J ew who&#13;
became the m o st fea rless and succes sful mission ary of the new fa ith, at the begin n ing of&#13;
t he Christian era, was hims elf a product of th e best culture of th e J ewish schools. It&#13;
was out of the best schools a nd with the best tra ining that the histo r ic church could gi ve.&#13;
t hat Martin Luther cam e to leade rship. I t was fr om the halls of Oxford, where he had&#13;
won sch o la rly r eco g nition, that John Wesl ey came forth to be the teache r of a&#13;
m ore vital and effective type of Ch r istia ni ty. T he man who shall pioneer our American&#13;
life into broad er ho rizons is today being t rained for his task in o ne of our colleges. The&#13;
cultured child of t oday will be our leader of tomo rrow.&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
The Chri st ian ministry was t h e goal of th e m ajo rity of t he students in o ur&#13;
early Amer ican colleges. Thi s is n ot rema rka ble wh en we r eme mber that o ur oldest inst itutio n Harvard bea rs th e nam e of a cler gy m an , pasto r of Ch a rl estow n, who, a t hi s&#13;
death, left hi s library a nd o n e- half of his estate t o t h e in stituti o n . Yale had similar&#13;
o rigin. F o r fi ftee n year s th e in structio n was perfo rm ed by clergy m en in th e various&#13;
C o nn ecti cut settl em ents and their class room s were th ei r own studi es. D a rtm o ut h was&#13;
fo unded fo r a mi ssio nary purpose, t o ca re fo r th e spiri tual welfare o f th e Indians. A ll&#13;
the pre- revolutio nary colleges o we t h eir fo undin g t o th e relig io u s impul se. I n. fac t, n o&#13;
other impulse is basal en oug h to in spire t h e h eroi c self-sacrifi ce necessa ry t o bring such&#13;
far-sighted r es ults fro m pio nee rs so poo r a nd h edged a bout wi t h such t remendo u s&#13;
diffi culti es.&#13;
T o th em th e ma intena nce o f the institutio n s of r eli g io n was o f pa r am o un t impo rtance. They dem a nded a cultivated mini stry. Th er efo re th ey cr eated th e p rogenito rs of&#13;
o ur present day hi g he r in stitutio ns o f learnin g .&#13;
Is n o t th e sam e esse ntial need, o ur need ? R eli g io us problem s still h old the place&#13;
of first impo rtan ce. These subj ects a r e not academi c. Th ey are not age worn. W e&#13;
discuss them b ecause t h ey are the m ost vital questio ns be fo r e thinking m en t oday. S o m e&#13;
conce ptio n of the trend o f nin eteenth century r eli g io us th o ug ht is essentia l to a liberal&#13;
education. Our philosophy o f th e univer se lead s u s back throu g h all the pheno m ena&#13;
abo ut us t o a personal wo rld -gr o und , th e E tern al God. I t is im possible t o di scuss vitally&#13;
th e deepest problem s o f everyday life-th e social a nd do m estic and civic conditions th at&#13;
surround us-witho ut takin g into a ccount thi s funda m ental basis of a ll o u r thinking. And&#13;
·even a part fro m all t hi s, I think it wo uld be easy t o mai ntai n t hat fo r cultural value and&#13;
awakenin g o f th e log ical po wer s, stirrin g th e imaginati o n a nd testin g th e la r gest capacity&#13;
fo r self expressio n , no subj ects a r e sup erio r to th ose whi ch deal with t h e p roblems of th e&#13;
r eligio us life. S o we justify on purely pedagogical principles, _ th e courses o ffer ed in&#13;
Christian ideal s, th e development of r eli g io us th o ught, t h e tr acin g o f the "Acts o f th e&#13;
Apostl es" in th ese present day s. Whil e o ur co nceptio n has ve ry g reatly broadened a nd&#13;
we are maintainin g t hat th e college course ha s a value as well fo r t he m erchant, th e&#13;
lawyer, th e phys icia n, the edito r , as fo r th e cler gy man, we mu st no t fo r get_ that th at&#13;
spirit o f th e olden day s is as n ecessary as ever. The trul y tr ained m an of thi s day will&#13;
recognize hi s o bligati o n t o be a Christi an mini ster, in t he broader se nse. _ He m ay&#13;
carry o n hi s ministry either in th e pulpit o r o ut of it. H e may mingle in polit ical battles,&#13;
lead in th e wo rld of literature, g ive hi s m essage throug h musical m easures, find th e&#13;
expressio n o f hi s life th rou g h bru sh o r pencil, but th e true college m an will feel t hat life&#13;
is aft er all, at its best. an essentially Chri stian mini stry. The old line of demarcati o n&#13;
between th e secul a r a nd sacr ed has la r gely di sappea r ed. F o r t hat we may well be grateful. It was at best a fi ctiti o us di stincti o n cr eated by a misco ncep t io n of the place o f&#13;
r elig io n in th e daily life; and we question wh ether any institu ti o n can produce t he b est&#13;
in its stud ent body witho ut thi s do minati ng r eli g io us idea l. The chapel service is no t&#13;
an unimp orta nt addendum, a vest ige of a rchaic days, indicati ng t hat we have not qui te&#13;
o utg rown th e prejudice of a cruder age. It is a r ecognitio n t hat that whi ch is truest a nd&#13;
no blest in human life will never be brou ght fo rth except by m en wh o have been stirred&#13;
by g reat r eli g io u s ideals and purposes. The hardest fi g hter is the Chri sti a n, for he never&#13;
fi g hts until th e se n se of holy duty is u po n him and therefore it is impossible to surrender. The hard est wo rke r is th e C hri stian, fo r h e is an idealist, a nd, making his wo r k&#13;
a sacram ent, he never wea ri es. T he fi nest scholar is t he Chri stia n ; fo r , to all pri zes&#13;
which allure o th er s h e adds a bigger o ne t ha n t hey all- pleasi ng Hi m wh o has called him .&#13;
W e have r estated o ur cr eeds, m o difi ed our m eth ods of worship, shi fted the place of&#13;
emphasis in life, but we have not o utgro wn Christia n ideal s nor fo und a mi g h tier in spirer&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
of m an's noblest t h an th e Manof Galilee. It is reasonable tha t we should recogn ize th e&#13;
claims o f th e Christian mini st ry, and that from t ime to time t hey should be presented&#13;
to o ur stud ent body. W hy not? From a t housand sources pr essure is coming upo n&#13;
t hese youn g people to t urn t heir lives into other professions. The cry of the wo rld&#13;
is eve r upon them, an d it is vigorously enfo rced by bread and butter consideration s. I s&#13;
ther e any valid reason why the highest a nd m ost unselfish of all vocations should no t&#13;
cha llenge all their latent nobility? We have a r ight to expect o ur colleges, established&#13;
under C hris t ian auspices, to do their best to an swer the cry of the chu rches for leader ship. Men with trained min ds as well as co n secrated hearts mu st be persuaded to r espo nd t o t h is supreme opportu nity for se r vice.&#13;
F ar mo r e effective than any systematic teach ing of Christian ethics is the exemplifi cati o n o f t he true eth ical spir it in t he cha racter of t he teachers. Ma rk Hopkins o n o ne&#13;
end of t he log and Jam es Ga r field on the oth er, may not perfectly descr ibe the modern&#13;
college, but it certainly puts in graphic fo rm one of the essentials of t he modern college,&#13;
a nd pe rhaps I may say the essential. Yo u have here an earnest student, anxious ly desi rin g to k now how to r ealize h is best in life, and you have a great-hea rted, broad- minded,&#13;
sy mpathetic gentleman t ryi ng to solve the p roblem a.nd trying to place his larger exper ience and r ipe r wisdo m at th e service of t he student. Without t hese, in essence, yo u&#13;
cann ot have a college.&#13;
Pres iden t Dwigh t, of Yale, in his last repo rt laid emphasis upo n th e obligatio n of&#13;
the teacher to make t he acqua intance of hi s students individually, saying : " T he teach er&#13;
who sees hi s student o nly dur ing the class exercises is failing t o do the most esse ntial&#13;
wo rk. Ou r pride in numb ers makes this all th e mo r e serious. The fact that the pro fesso r can be see n at ce r tain tim es is not eno ug h, fo r t h e men who need t his most a r e th e&#13;
ve ry o nes who wi ll not co me when they are in vited." I nforma ti o n m ay be gotten fro m a&#13;
text book, sk ill acqui red in th e laboratory, m o r e learning co me fro m t he lectu re r, fact s&#13;
secured in a hu ndred different ways, but t hat wh ich peculiarly d isting uish es the coll egeinspirat io n, life, enthusias m, ideals-comes o nl y by contact, by fe llowsh ip, sympathy a nd&#13;
pe rsonal to uch . Was it not th is which made t he g reat co lleges o f th e days gone by ? O r&#13;
ra ther was it not this eleme nt, splendidly realized, t hat produ ced fr om those colleges&#13;
t he m en wh ose names stand as beacon lights? Are we not all conscious that t he rich est&#13;
and best th ings that ever come to us in ou r college career we re no t the products o f th e&#13;
schola rshi p of those who taught us, but t he personal touch and inspi r ation that ca m e to&#13;
o ur lives fr om their fe ll owsh ip ? The value of t he college co urse is m uch more la r gely&#13;
determin ed by th e amo un t of t he teacher t han t he amount of the book t hat gets in to o n e's&#13;
life. The plastic yea rs o f coll ege life are peculiarly susceptible to thi s kind of influence.&#13;
T here m ay be some mor e alluring work fo r a m an wh o aspires to project his perso nality&#13;
into th e generations to come th an con tact with t he growing yo ut h in o ur colleges, but I&#13;
have neve r heard about it. We do not rem ember so well the subj ect s we were taught as&#13;
we r em e mber what t hose men were who taug ht us. It woul d no t be possible fo r us&#13;
today to solve th e problems in mathemat ics, or translate the passages from the class ics,&#13;
o r clea rly sta te the logical processes by whi ch we came to ce rtain m etaphysical concl usion s, but we shall neve r fo r get what o ur teachers were and h ow t heir g reat wa rm&#13;
souls fo und o u rs and wa rm ed them into life and made us think and love and aspire after&#13;
t he best.&#13;
D r. T hwi ng sets us t hink ing when he te lls us that "From th e d iscipline of a sin g le&#13;
college and from the tui tion of a certain teach er of English in thi s college were r eared&#13;
Ralph Waldo Emerso n, And rew P . Peabody, Ol iver ·wendell Holmes, Charles S umner,&#13;
John Loth rop Motley, Richard Henry Dana, J ames Russell Lowell, Henry D. Thor eau,&#13;
E d wa rd Eve rett Hale, Thomas Wentworth H igginson and C ha rles Elliott Norton . A t&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
the present tim e in this coll ege, havin g many teachers of E ngli sh. no such persons are&#13;
appearing. What is the r eason that under th e great Channing so many great writers and&#13;
at the present tim e so few great writers a r e appearing."&#13;
May the answer not be found in la rge part in the di stance betwee n th e teacher and&#13;
the stud ent? The size of the college is not the main determining factor, but the question&#13;
as to how ea rnestly th e teaching force seek s to face and solve th e difficulty.&#13;
In the o ld fa shi o ned college the chi ef executive found tim e t o work in the class&#13;
room. You r emember that the fondly anticipated climax of th e who le course, to which&#13;
the student looked forward from th e beginning, was the day when h e should sit in th e&#13;
class room unde r the president. I fear that, from the higher standpoint, these days in&#13;
which th e president is altogether absorbed in the problems of financ e are days decadent.&#13;
If he is really worth&#13;
whil e, he o ught to ha ve the o pportunity to touch in a personal and&#13;
vital way the&#13;
souls those who are temporarily committed to hi s g uidance. Here is our&#13;
of&#13;
legitimate field of competition; no t to vie with one another in extent of acreage, o r&#13;
magnificence of structure, or even magnitud e o f library or completeness of laboratory&#13;
equipment. It is not even a question of the schola sti c attainments of t h e faculty. We a r e&#13;
rather t o compete in those hi g h er r ealm s. ' Th e problem is to bring such quality o f&#13;
heart and soul into the class room as shall develo p in th e stud ent the deepest and truest&#13;
character.&#13;
Our Christianity mu st have an intellectual basis and be r eady to defend itself in&#13;
the court of reaso n . We are no lon ger able to appeal with confidence to established&#13;
authority, however hoary it may be with age and h owever venerabl e in t he eyes of devotees. The man who will m eet the stress and stra in o f th e comin g generatio n mu st&#13;
have not only good purpose, but so und r eason as foundation and buttress. Mere enthu siasm makes the fanatic, mere logical process makes cold and un sympathetic intellectual ity.&#13;
but intellectual and moral purpose blended produces the man o f courage, conviction and&#13;
leadership.&#13;
When the m o ral atmosphe re of th e modern college is criticised, certain extenuating&#13;
co n siderations are not given th eir just we ight. W e mu st reme mber that th e college atmospher e is created by individual elements. These elem ents have come fr o m t he hom es&#13;
of th e people. In so me cases th ese homes have do ne littl e or n othing to deve lo p noble&#13;
ideals. Parents who have neve r co ntrolled th eir children at ho m e se nd th em t o college.&#13;
hoping that th e authorities will be able to do what the home o ug ht to hav e done. The&#13;
college auth orities are then most ungra cio usly criticised for not doing in a m o nth what&#13;
the home ha s fail ed to do in eighteen years. These heterogeneous elements do not see m&#13;
to coalesce. They are insolubles. Th ey mov e arou nd in the atmosphere o f the institution&#13;
unaffected, so far as we can see, by th e conditio ns. In spite o f a ll thi s it is only fair to&#13;
say that th e students in our colleges a r e in a better moral atmo sphe re than they wi ll ever&#13;
be again in all their li ves. It cannot be maintained for a m o ment that the spirit of the&#13;
business or professional or social world into whi ch they a r e go in g beg ins t o have th e&#13;
moral inspiratio n and th e purity of ideal found in th e m odern coll ege, even with all its&#13;
limitations.&#13;
The place of athl etics in th e life of th e m o dern college is, I think, coming to be&#13;
more ratio nally interpreted. That m en have bodies as well as mind s we mu st understand,&#13;
and th e problem of th e college is to develop to its ve ry best th e wh ole p er son. In thi s&#13;
general developm ent, of course, th e body must be re cognized. Ther e has undoubtedly&#13;
been tendency t o place undue empha sis upo n th e ph ysical side and a man o f unu sual&#13;
physical ab ili ty has been g iven con sideration that would not have been a llowed a classmate of inferior proportions. In so far as athl etics contribute to th e deeper and larger&#13;
&#13;
mental and moral li fe, in as much as they ma ke a basis for big , strong, manly work in&#13;
th e years to come. they sho uld have recogn iti on and cultivati o n .. In so far as they administer to professionalism and succum b to the mercantile spirit of the age, they ar e&#13;
utterly abhorrent to the best collegiate ideals. In working out the athletic side o f an institution the bearing upo n intellectual a nd m o ral develop ment must be the uppe rmost&#13;
consideratio n. The coarse, di ssolute rowdy has no place in the college and the hoodlum&#13;
making night hideou s, frequenting the , saloons and dives of th e city, devoid of any m erit&#13;
o ther th an his un earn ed physique, should be eli minated.&#13;
No insti t ution in America has larger o pportunity to vitally affect the civilization of&#13;
the coming decades than o ur ow n M o rnin gside, located in the no rth ern portion of this&#13;
great central valley, the most productive o n th e American continent, at the ve ry point&#13;
where the noble M issouri, hith er to a comparati vely insignificant stream, broade ns into&#13;
great dimensions an d becomes a mi ghty fac tor in the develo pment of the land. Hither&#13;
comes th e earnest and ardent pioneer fro m the better co untries of the old worl d. They&#13;
are not th e retrogress ive and t he vice-poiso ned from the grea t cities , seeking other great&#13;
cities with their atte ndant vice and conseq11ent cor ruption. They are liberty-lovi ng, landloving, fresh-air-loving, God-fearing people, who are here to make for themse lves a nd&#13;
for their children per m anent homes. To our student body they are coming. I do n ot&#13;
know how many races a nd nationalities are re prese nted with us here today. I do know&#13;
that we ha ve t h e Scandinavian with the hot Norse blood flowi ng with und iminished vigor.&#13;
panting fo r n ew worlds to conquer and new pro bl em s to solve. We have the sturdy German, with his genius fo r accumulatio n and per sistent toil, hesitating at n o amount of&#13;
drudgery in order that he m ay attain t he worthy end. We have the Russian, b r eathin g&#13;
the larger liberty of the new land. We ha ve r epresentatives o f practically all t he great&#13;
races and types of civi li za tion. Children from th e Orient a nd fr o m the Occident sit in&#13;
. class here side by side, each a stimulus to the o ther and all plannin g and wo rking to&#13;
make fo r them selves lives of servi ceable respectability, and at th e same time contributin g&#13;
to th e development of a no ble a nd permanent civilization. This accum ulatio n o f strong,&#13;
vigorous, vi r ile ma nhood and womanhood means a center o f influence second to none in&#13;
shaping th e ideals of thi s st r ategic locality for th e next gene rati on. These yo ung man&#13;
will go on to these plains a nd prairies and into these deve lo ping cities to make clean&#13;
social and civic life. These young wo man will go out to ho nor themselves a nd th eir&#13;
A lma Mater as teachers in our schools and mothers in our ho m es and queens in the&#13;
best social life of the new republi c.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Iowa is the Pu ritan state of these modern days. Out o f th e old Puritan ism came&#13;
our best literature, th e largest contributions to philosophica l and r el igious th ought, an d&#13;
the most progressive states manshi p of the past generation. New E ngland gave to America its poets, its histo rian s, its philosophers, its orators, its great national leaders, but&#13;
the po wer t o render this hi g h ser vice has been transferred. in th e movement of the g r eat&#13;
populatio ns . from t he east t o t he west, and this Missouri valley is the logical successor&#13;
of the Puritan ism of the past. No one will question the em ine nt quality of the products&#13;
we have been pouring forth into the world of finan ce and utilitarian educatio n and cer tainly no secti o n has been eve n a serious co mpetito r in the variety and viri li ty of political&#13;
output. We have the physical basis to enable thi s valley to become the dom inat in g intell ectual force of al l thi s western empire. These consecrated m en and wo m en are asking that th ey be given the privilege of helping to shape th is civi lizati o n in accordance&#13;
with Christian ideals. Th ey are asking that libraries, labo ra tories and equipme nt in&#13;
buildings, adeq uate to t he need, shall be placed at their disposal. They are glad ly and&#13;
&#13;
loyally giving their liv es, enam o ured as they a re of the possibility&#13;
of proj ecti n g th em selves through tho se whom th ey teac h into th e generations t o come.&#13;
·&#13;
We gratefully acknowledge th e signifi ca nt courtesy of th e presence of th ese cultured repre se ntativ es from the o ld er colleges and uni ve rsiti es. Your sympa thy is an&#13;
inspiration . Your nobl e achievements goad u s night an d day. What you are to your&#13;
constituency we pray we may increasingly become to those who look to us fo r leader ship. W e salute you in the name of o ur com m o n purpose, o ur co mm o n co untry, o ur&#13;
common Master.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT, A M.,&#13;
&#13;
MARGARET GAY DOLLIVER, A B.,&#13;
DEAN OF WOMEN.&#13;
&#13;
Profess or of L atin.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cin cinnati Wesleyan&#13;
Coll ege, 1886; Graduate Student Northwestern Un ive rsi ty, 1905-06; Teacher in Fort Dodge Public Schools. 18861890; Dean of Women, Morningside Col lege, 1906.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., I llinois Wesleyan University, 1888: A. M., ibid., 1890; Graduate&#13;
Student&#13;
University of Chi cago, Summer Qua r ters, 1894 and 189 7: Student&#13;
in the American School&#13;
of Classical S tudies, rome, 1903-04; Instructor in&#13;
Eng lish. I llinois Wesleyan Unive rsi ty, 1888-89; I nstructor in Greek and&#13;
La t in, Morningside Co llege, 1893-97;&#13;
Professor of Latin, ibid., 189 7.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ESTELLE ROBERTS, A B. ,&#13;
HENRY FREDERICK KANTHLENER, AM.,&#13;
Professor of&#13;
&#13;
A ssociate P rofessor of Latin.&#13;
&#13;
Greek.&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Iowa College, 1895; Graduate Student, Wellesley Col lege, 18951896; Graduate S tudent, Univ ersity of Chicago, 1900-01, and Summer Quarte r, 1904; Hearing&#13;
lectures a nd studying monumen ts in Italy and Greece,&#13;
Su mmer, 1902 ; Acting Professor of Greek, Morningside College. 1902-03;&#13;
Acting Professor&#13;
of L atin, Morningside&#13;
College, 1903-04; lnstructor in&#13;
lnstructor&#13;
in L atin , Girls' Latin School of&#13;
G reek, I owa College, 1904-06;&#13;
Bal t imore, 1906-08: Associate Professor L atin, MorningsideCollege, 1908 .&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Cornell College, 1896; A. M., H arvard University,&#13;
1899; G raduate Student, Harvard Un i ver s ity, 1897-99 and 1902-03: Instructor in Latin&#13;
and Greek, Epworth Seminary, 1896-97 ; Instructor in L atin , Wesleyan&#13;
Acade my. Wilbraham, Mass., 1899-1900 : Professor of Greek,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, 1900.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES, PH. D ..&#13;
REGISTRAR.&#13;
&#13;
ESTHER VERA SEAMAN, PH. B. ,&#13;
&#13;
Profess or of Economics and Sociology.&#13;
A. B .. Harvard University&#13;
1889; A. M., ibid. 1890; Ph. D. ibid, 1891;&#13;
..&#13;
Student, University of Re ,·lin and Cambridge U ni vers i ty, 1891-92;&#13;
Instuct or in History. Uni vers ity of Cali forni a. 1892-95;&#13;
Head of South Park Settleme n t, San Francisco, 1894-95;&#13;
Ass istan t in Un ited Sta tes History, Harvard University,&#13;
1896-97;&#13;
Resident of South End H o use, Boston, 1895-1900;&#13;
Professo r of E con omi cs and Sociology, Morningside ege. 1900.&#13;
Coll&#13;
&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Latin.&#13;
Ph. B ., I owa College, 1905; Instructor in L a t in, MorningsideCollege,&#13;
1910.&#13;
&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
AGNES BEVERIDGE FERGUSON, A M.,&#13;
Professor of German.&#13;
Sc. B .. Cornell Col lege, 1894&#13;
A. M., Columbia University,&#13;
1909; Using&#13;
libraries&#13;
and hearing lectu res, D resden and Berlin, Summer. 1902; Graduate&#13;
Student, U niversity of Ch icago, Summe r, 1904; Graduate S t uden t, Columbia&#13;
Un i versi ty, Summer. 1907, and 1908-09: Student, University of Heidelberg,&#13;
Summer Semester , 1910; Professor&#13;
of Modern Languages, Fort Worth Uniersity. 1896-97; Professor of German, Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, 1901.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND. A B.,&#13;
P rofessor of E nglish.&#13;
A . B., Smi th Co ll ege, 1889:&#13;
&#13;
S tuden t, Oxford Unive rsi ty, England . 19021903; Instructor&#13;
in History and English, Epworth&#13;
Seminary, 1892-95; Prossor of Modern L a nguages, Upper Iowa U niversity, 1896-97; Professor&#13;
of&#13;
English Language an d Literature, Morningside College, 1897-190 2; Professor&#13;
of English Literature,&#13;
ibid., 1902.&#13;
&#13;
PEARL ALICE WOODFORD, PH. B.,&#13;
Assistant Professor of E nglish.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD GREY NALD. A M .,&#13;
Professor of French.&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B ., Morningside&#13;
College. 1903: G radua te S tud en t in English, Universi t y of Chicago, Summer, 1906, and 1908-09; Instructor in English and&#13;
Lat in , L ake Mlills High&#13;
School , 1903-05; Instructor in English and Mathematics, Hartley High School. 1905-06; Instructor in Engl ish, Morningside&#13;
Coll ege, 1906-10: Assistant Professor&#13;
of E ng lish, ibid., 1910.&#13;
&#13;
A . B .. University&#13;
of Paris,&#13;
1874; A. M., ibid., 1880 ; Professorof&#13;
L ati n, Chatenu Gontre, F r ance, 1876-78; Professor of French,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
College, 1896.&#13;
&#13;
EST HER CA T HERIN E WHEELER. A B..&#13;
&#13;
CARLL WHITMAN Doxsee A M..&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in German.&#13;
A. B. , Northwestern&#13;
s ide College, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
Univer sity, 1910 ; Instructor&#13;
&#13;
26&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in E nglish.&#13;
in German, Morning-&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Wesleyan&#13;
English, Morningside&#13;
&#13;
U ni ver s ity, 1909;&#13;
College, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
A. M., ibid ., 1910 ; Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
FRANK HARMON GARVER. A M.,&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES ALMER MARSH, B. S.,&#13;
&#13;
Professor of History and Politics.&#13;
&#13;
Acting Professor of P ublic Speaking.&#13;
&#13;
.A. B... Upper Iowa University,&#13;
1898 : A. M. State University of Iowa,&#13;
..&#13;
F ebruary. 1908; Graduate Student, State Un ive r s ity of I owa. 1901-02, 19071908; F e llow in History, ibid .. 1901-02 ; Research Assistant in the State Histo ri cal Society of Iowa, 1907-08; Professor f History and Economics&#13;
o&#13;
Mornings ide College, 1898-1900: Professor of History and P olitics, ibid., 1900.&#13;
&#13;
B . S. New&#13;
Lyme Insti t ute. 1894;&#13;
Graduate, Colu m bia Colleg e of Expression,&#13;
1898; Professor Oratory. Iowa Wesleyan University, 1898-1900;&#13;
of&#13;
Instructo r. Columbia College of Expression , 1900-01 ; Studen t, Oberlin College, 1901-02 : Professor Public Speaking, S impson College, 1902-06 ; Inof&#13;
structor, Jon es Sch ool of Orato ry . 1906-10; A ct ing Professor Public&#13;
of&#13;
Speaking, Morningside&#13;
College, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
THOMAS CALDERWOOD STEPHENS, A B., M.D.,&#13;
SECRETARY OF TH E F A CU L TY.&#13;
&#13;
ARCH EDWARD RIGBY, A B.,&#13;
Acting Professor of Philosophy&#13;
&#13;
P rofessor of Biology.&#13;
Student, Adrian Coll ege, 1894-96: University of Chicago. 1900-01;&#13;
A. B. ,&#13;
Kansas Ci ty University, 1901: M. D .. Ka n sas S tate University (College of&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons ), 1904;&#13;
S tuden t MarineB iological Laboratory&#13;
Woods Holl, Mass., Summer, 1901: lnstructor in K ansas City University,&#13;
1901-02;&#13;
Student&#13;
in Neu rology, Ill inois Medical College, S um me r , 1902:&#13;
F e llow in Zoology, U niversity of Chicago, 1904-06; Ass istant in Embryology,&#13;
&#13;
A. B., Corn ell Co llege, 1898: Graduate Student. University of Chica go,&#13;
1907-09; Summe r Quarte r. 1910; Missionary and Professor of Engl ish and&#13;
German, Chin zei College, Nagasaki, Japan , 1900-1907;&#13;
&#13;
A cting Professor of&#13;
&#13;
History and Social Sciences. Dakota Wesleyan University. 1909-10;&#13;
Professor of Philosophy, Morningside College, 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
Acting&#13;
&#13;
ibid., Summer Quar ter, 1905 and 1906;&#13;
&#13;
Professor of Biology,&#13;
&#13;
College, 1906.&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD STILES, PH. D.,&#13;
Acting Professor of Physics.&#13;
&#13;
*ALLETTA M. GILLETTE, A B.,&#13;
Instructor in English.&#13;
A. B .,&#13;
&#13;
lege,&#13;
&#13;
1908.&#13;
&#13;
Smi t h Col lege,&#13;
&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
1907;&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in English,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
Col-&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B. Kenyon Colleg e, 1896: A. B., Harvard U niversi ty. 1903; Schola r&#13;
in P hysics, ibid., 1903-04, a nd A. M., 1904; Columbia Un i versity, Summer,&#13;
1904; University&#13;
of Ch icago, Summer Quarter, 1905: Public&#13;
School Work in&#13;
Oh io. 1896-1902; ; Instructor in Physics, Academy of Northwestern&#13;
Univers ity. 1904-07; Fellow&#13;
in Physics, Northwestern&#13;
University, 1907-09; Ph. D.&#13;
..&#13;
ibid .. 1909; Acting Professor of Physics,&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College. 1909.&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
EPHENOR ADRASTUS BROWN, AM.,&#13;
Professor of Education.&#13;
B., De Pauw University, 1884: A. M., ibid .. 1887: A. M., Co lumbi a&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
Un ivers ity, 1910; Graduate Student, University of Ch icago. Summer. 1909;&#13;
Columbia University. 1909-10; Superintendent of Schools, Woodbury County,&#13;
1894-1900, 1902-06: Professor of Mathematics, Morn in gside College, 1890-94;&#13;
Professor of Mathematics and Pedagogy, Mornings id e College, 1900-02; Professor of Education. Morningside ll ege, 1904.&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
DAVID BREESE JONES, PH. D.,&#13;
Acting Professor of Chemistry&#13;
A. B., Ripon Col lege, 1904; Ph. D ., Yal e Unive r s ity, 1910 ; In structor&#13;
in Chemistry.&#13;
Princeton. Minnesota, 1904-06; Assistant in Chemistry, Yale&#13;
University, 1906-08; Research Chemi st on Proteins, Connecticut Agricultural&#13;
Experiment Stat ion, unde r the auspices of the Carnegie In st itute of Washington, D. C., 1908-09; Acting Professor of Chemistry,&#13;
Morningside ll ege,&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
o.&#13;
&#13;
1910.&#13;
&#13;
IDA NOLAN REYNOLDS,&#13;
Instructor in Primary Methods and Drawing.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT NEGLEY VAN HORNE, PH. B.,&#13;
Professor of Mathematics&#13;
&#13;
Graduate, Drake U niversity Training Schoo l, 1903; Student, School of&#13;
Education, Un iversity of Chicago, Summer Quarte r, 1905; Pr incipal West&#13;
Ward School and Teacher in Primary Grade, Rockwell City , Iowa , 1903-04:&#13;
Principal High School, Victor, Iowa , 1904-05; Director, Summe r Schoo l of&#13;
Manual Tra in ing, Rockwell City, Iowa, 1904 ; In st ru c tor in Primary&#13;
Methods and Draw in g, Morningside&#13;
College. 1905.&#13;
&#13;
Ph. B .. Morningside Co ll ege, 1900; Graduate Student . Johns Hopkins&#13;
Un iversity. 1900-01; Graduate Student, University&#13;
of Chi cago. Summer,&#13;
1906 ; Instructor in Mathematics Morningside Co ll ege. 1901-02 : Professor&#13;
of Mathematics, orningside Co ll ege, 1902.&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
MARIE VOY HOARD,&#13;
Instructor in Normal Branches.&#13;
Graduate, State Norma l -School. Springfield, S. D .. 1900; Student, Columbia School of Exp ress ion and Un iversity of Chi cago. Summer. 1904 a nd&#13;
1905; In structor In Normal Department. 1907.&#13;
&#13;
30&#13;
&#13;
JENNIE BAIRD BRIDENBAUGH, A B ..&#13;
Instructor in Mathematics&#13;
A. B., Morningside College,&#13;
s ide College, 1909.&#13;
&#13;
1909;&#13;
&#13;
Instructor&#13;
&#13;
in Mathematics Morning-&#13;
&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
ORWIN ALLISON MORSE, A A G. 0.,&#13;
Director of the Conservatory of Music and Acting P ro fessor of&#13;
Music in the College&#13;
Associate of the American Guild of Organists;&#13;
Member of t h e Royal&#13;
Coll ege of Organists&#13;
(Eng land) ; Musical Director, Avondale College, N. S.&#13;
W.,&#13;
Australia, 1898-99; Organist,&#13;
Flemington&#13;
Presbyterian Chu r ch , Melbourne. 1899-1900;&#13;
Musical Di rector, Emmanue l Co ll ege, 1901-04 ; Director,&#13;
School of Music, John B. Stetson University,&#13;
Organist and Choirmaster,&#13;
First Baptist Church, and Conductor De Land Choral Society. De Land, Fla.,&#13;
1905-09: Director, Conservatory&#13;
of Musi c, a nd Organist and Choirmaster,&#13;
First Baptist Chu r ch, Greenvi ll e, S. C., 1909-10; Director. Morningside College, Conservatory&#13;
of Mus ic and Acting Professor f Music in .the Colo&#13;
lege, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
*FREDERIC CURTIS BUTTERFIELD, A B.,&#13;
Instructor in P ianoforte and Counterpoint.&#13;
College, 1905 ( Honorable&#13;
mention in Music, t wice :&#13;
Teachers; Harmony, Coun terpoint and Musical&#13;
Form, Professor W. R. Spalding : Orchestration and Musical History, Professor J. K. Paine; Canon.&#13;
Fugue and Free Composition, Mr. Frederick Converse ) : Pupi l in Pianoforte.&#13;
of Miss Adela ide Proctor, Boston, 1899-1907; Pupil in Organ of J ohn Hermann Loud. Boston, 1903-04; Organist, First Parish Church, Malden, Mass...&#13;
1905-07; Instructor in Pianoforte, Morningside College, 1907.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.. Harvard&#13;
&#13;
HERBERT MACFARREN, AR. AM.,&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte and Theory of Music.&#13;
&#13;
LOIS EDNA FREAR.&#13;
&#13;
Associate, Royal Acad emy of Mus ic; Student, Royal Academy of Music,&#13;
Londo n, 1897-1903 ; Appointed Sub-Professor, Royal Academy of Music, 19001903; Ass istan t Organist and Choirmaster,&#13;
St. Martins-in-th-Fields, London.&#13;
1900-02; Organist and Ch o irmaster, Beechen Grove Church, Wa tfo rd. 19021903; Organist a n d Choirmaster,&#13;
Seaford Parish Church, 1903-05; Engaged&#13;
in Private Teaching. 1902-05; Director of Music Department and O rgan ist&#13;
and Choirmaster,&#13;
St . John's&#13;
Coll ege, Newfoundland,&#13;
1905-09;&#13;
Instructor in&#13;
Pianoforte&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
1910.&#13;
&#13;
Student in Morningside College, 1903-04; S tudent in Morningside Conservatory of Music, 1904-06; Student in Chicago Musical College, 1906-09;&#13;
Student of Piano under Ernest Consolo: Harmony. Dr. Loui s Falk: Composition . F elix Borowski : Graduate of Chicago Musical College. 1909; Teacher&#13;
of Pianoforte,&#13;
Morningside College. 1909.&#13;
&#13;
FAITH FOSTER WOODFORD, A B.,&#13;
&#13;
T eacher of P ianoforte.&#13;
&#13;
LUELLA ANDERSON,&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte.&#13;
&#13;
T eacher of Violin.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
College, 1907; Graduate of Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
Conservatory,&#13;
1902 ; Pupil of Emi l Liebl ing. Chicago, 1903-04. and Summer.&#13;
1908; Pupil of Fannie Church Parsons in Illustrated Music908 and 1909:&#13;
1&#13;
Teacher of Pianoforte, Morningside Col lege, 1905-09;&#13;
Instructor in Pianoforte, ibid ., 1909.&#13;
&#13;
Student in Violin at the American&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Chicago,&#13;
1904-05; R eceived Teachers' Certificate fro m American&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
of&#13;
Music, 1905; Pupil of H erbert Butler and Adolf We idig. Chicago, 1905-06:&#13;
Soloist and Director of Orchestra. First M. E. Church, Sioux City. 1908-09;&#13;
Private Teaching Sioux City. 1906-09; Teacher of Violin, Morningside&#13;
College, 1909.&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
B.,&#13;
&#13;
32&#13;
&#13;
33&#13;
&#13;
MA YBEL ROMA SMYLIE.&#13;
Instructor in Voice Culture.&#13;
Voice Graduate,&#13;
class of 1904, Morningside Conservatory&#13;
Studen t of&#13;
vo ice culture&#13;
under Lester&#13;
Ba rtl ett J ones of Chicago University,&#13;
1906&#13;
St ud en t of p ia no under Mrs. Eva Bordwell Gardner, of Mary Wood Chase&#13;
School o f Pi a no. in Chi ca go. 1906-07;&#13;
Pupil of: Mr. a nd Mrs. Th oma s B .&#13;
in&#13;
Garst, teachers of vo ice. Chi cago, 19 07-08. a nd Summ e r, 1909: Instructor&#13;
Voice, Morningsidell ege. 19 08.&#13;
Co&#13;
&#13;
JOHN W. HOLLISTER, A. B., LL. B.,&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Men.&#13;
A. B.. Williams Coll ege, 1893;&#13;
.&#13;
LL. B.. University&#13;
of Mi chi ga n. 1896;&#13;
Physical Instructor,&#13;
Be loit Co ll ege. 1894-95, and 1897-1902;&#13;
Football Coach .&#13;
University&#13;
of Mississippi 1896; Phys ica l Director, Hamline U nive r s ity, 19031905; Director of Phys ica l Training a nd Athl eti cs for Men,Morningside&#13;
Co ll ege. 1908.&#13;
&#13;
INGA NELSON BROWN.&#13;
Teacher of Pianoforte&#13;
&#13;
WINIFRED ALICE GARNICH,&#13;
Director of Physical Training for Women.&#13;
&#13;
Graduate&#13;
of t he L ondon Coll ege of Mu s ic . June,&#13;
1896;&#13;
Pupil Ernst&#13;
Jedliezka,&#13;
Berlin. 1897-98; Pupil of Xaver Scharwenka,&#13;
Imperial Cour t&#13;
Piani s t . 1900-02, 1905-06, 1908-10; Harmony&#13;
a nd Co mpos ition. Arthur&#13;
Ol af Anderson. 1908-09; Voice, Hermann Durra, 1908-09;&#13;
Teacher of Pianoforte, Mornin gs id e Co ll ege. 1910.&#13;
&#13;
S tudi ed with Ma be l E. Brown , Northland&#13;
College. As hl a nd , Wisconsin .&#13;
1907-08; Graduate Columbi a Coll ege of Expression, Chi cago, Ill., 1910;&#13;
Private&#13;
T ea chin g As hl a nd . Wi scon s in , 1910-11;&#13;
Ph ys ica l Director of Women.&#13;
Morningside Coll ege, 1911.&#13;
&#13;
BEULAH WARREN GREENE,&#13;
Instructor in Public Speaking.&#13;
Gr a du ate, Department&#13;
of E xpress ion , Otta wa University,&#13;
Graduate,&#13;
Columbia Co ll ege of Expression,&#13;
Chi cago. 1910;&#13;
Public Spea king. MorningsideCo ll ege. 1910.&#13;
&#13;
34&#13;
&#13;
Kan sas, 1908:&#13;
Instructor in&#13;
&#13;
EMMA L. DAHL,&#13;
Assistant Secretary of the College.&#13;
&#13;
35&#13;
&#13;
*HERBERT GRANT CAMPBELL, A M.,&#13;
Profess.or of Philosophy.&#13;
Ph. B .. Cornell Co ll ege. 1896; A. M. .. Columbia University, 1902: Graduate Student. Co lumbia Univers ity .&#13;
1901-04; Schola r in Philosophy. ibid., 1901-02: Un ion&#13;
Theological&#13;
Seminary. 1902-03; Assista n t Principal of&#13;
Epworth Seminary, 1896-97: Professor of Philosophy&#13;
and Vice-President,&#13;
Morningside College, 1904-07; Professor of Philosophy&#13;
i&#13;
1907.&#13;
&#13;
In Memoriam&#13;
*BLANCHE VIOLA WATTS, A B..&#13;
Librarian.&#13;
A. B. , Morningside Co ll ege. 1908: Librarian, )Iomingside College, 1907.&#13;
&#13;
JESSIE PHEBE SWEM,&#13;
Acting Librarian.&#13;
Graduate. Epworth Seminary;&#13;
Cherokee, Iowa , 1901-10.&#13;
&#13;
Student. Morningside Co ll ege, 1904-05; Librarian&#13;
&#13;
Public Library&#13;
&#13;
BERTHEMIA McCARTHY, A B.,&#13;
ASSISTANT R EGISTRAR.&#13;
A. B., Morningside Co llege. 1906.&#13;
&#13;
*Absent on leave.&#13;
&#13;
37&#13;
36&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Henrietta Wright&#13;
&#13;
HON. J. P . DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Alber t Henry Digern ess&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
SONNET&#13;
What is this death?&#13;
Into eternity.&#13;
&#13;
The passing of a soul&#13;
&#13;
Where it doth dwell&#13;
&#13;
As spirit is not known.&#13;
&#13;
Nor can we tell&#13;
&#13;
Ought of its shape while on the ages roll.&#13;
But when at last some friend for us shall toll&#13;
The stately, solemn, muffled old church bell,&#13;
The pain which loved ones feel they seek to quell,&#13;
Believing we have safely reached the goal.&#13;
When we lie sleeping in our earthly bed&#13;
Kathryn Kuhl&#13;
&#13;
Returned, as wisdom saith "Dust unto dust,"&#13;
We'll realize the hope which all men trust,&#13;
Will learn the secret known but to the dead .&#13;
Will understand that cry above earth's strife,&#13;
"I am the resurrection and the life."&#13;
&#13;
-F.&#13;
&#13;
David Edward L a r son&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
GRANTHAM.&#13;
&#13;
43&#13;
&#13;
u&#13;
N&#13;
l&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
44&#13;
&#13;
R&#13;
s&#13;
&#13;
-·-:::=;....--&#13;
&#13;
45&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE SCHREINER&#13;
&#13;
JOHN LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Pieri a. President Pieria Society. Vice P resident of Y. W. C. A.&#13;
of&#13;
President of Girls' Studen t Body, ' 11. Editor-in-Chief&#13;
of Girls&#13;
Collegian Reporter. '09. Member of Girls· Staff. ·10. Pieria G rand&#13;
Publi c, '10.&#13;
"True as the needle to the pole&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Second in Prohibition con test, ' 09. President of Ionian&#13;
society '10. President of Oratorical Association , '11. In ter-Society Debate, '10. Annual Board. Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
or&#13;
&#13;
"An orator of promise-conceals&#13;
&#13;
a d eal of deviltry underneath&#13;
&#13;
a calm exterior."&#13;
&#13;
as the dial to th e sun."&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM FARNUM&#13;
Ion ian.&#13;
In ter-Society Debate, '10.&#13;
partment.&#13;
&#13;
RACHEL COOK&#13;
Atheneum.&#13;
&#13;
Grand&#13;
&#13;
Public, 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
Di r·ectress J ester Club.&#13;
&#13;
"Thus she stood amid&#13;
the stooks&#13;
praising od with sweetest looks."&#13;
G&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in Chemistry De-&#13;
&#13;
"From distant Idaho h e comes,&#13;
A studious&#13;
lad, yet fun he loves,&#13;
And through the midnight hours he toils&#13;
Consuming 'Rockies precious oils."&#13;
&#13;
W. E. ELLISON&#13;
FLORENCE ANTHONY&#13;
Zetalethean,&#13;
&#13;
Critic,&#13;
&#13;
D irectr ess.&#13;
&#13;
Ann ual Boar d , ' 11. Jeste r Cl ub.&#13;
ease, and sweetness vivid by pride,&#13;
&#13;
"Her&#13;
graceful&#13;
hide her faults&#13;
Might&#13;
&#13;
i f faul t s she had to hide."&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer of t h e Y. M. C ..A., ·10.&#13;
&#13;
Othonian Public, ·10.&#13;
&#13;
A man through and through.&#13;
Has tendencies&#13;
along financial&#13;
lines and y et is studying for the ministry . . however a good combination&#13;
His wagon is hitched to a star a nd we doubt 110/ that&#13;
ll is ambitions will be realized.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE E. WICKENS&#13;
ETHEL SHANNON&#13;
Aletheia.&#13;
&#13;
Honorable mention , 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
"Knowledge, in&#13;
&#13;
46&#13;
&#13;
truth,&#13;
&#13;
is&#13;
&#13;
the great sun&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer of Aletheia.&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
the firmament."&#13;
&#13;
Oth on ian Society. Otho Grand Publi c, '09. Zet-Otho Grand P ublic, '10. In ter-Societ y Debate, ·10. Busin ess Manager of Collegian&#13;
Reporte r, 1910-11. Annual Board. ·11. Inter-Collegiate Deba te, '11.&#13;
"Yet while the serious thought his soul approves,&#13;
Cheerful he seemsand gentleness&#13;
he loves."&#13;
...&#13;
&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
D. PARNELL MAHONEY&#13;
Othonian&#13;
President&#13;
of Freshman Class, 1908-09. Otho Grand&#13;
Publi c. '09. Y. M. C. A. Ca binet, 1909-10. Inter-Society Debate,&#13;
·10. President of th e Prohibition Association. 1910-11. Member&#13;
of Glee Club . Field Boos ter for th e College. 1909-10. Zet-Otho&#13;
Grand Publi c, ' 10. Business Ma nage r of t h e Junior Annua l, ' 11.&#13;
Inter-Collegiate Debate, ' 11 .&#13;
"A mixture&#13;
of music, eloqu en ce, lrish wit,&#13;
enthusiasm,&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
MADGE GILLIN&#13;
Zetal eth ean.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
of Zetal e tb eau Society.&#13;
&#13;
Who looks very much like her sister,&#13;
"And mistress of h erself tho' China fall.'"&#13;
&#13;
indominitable energy.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM BASS&#13;
MAUDE GILLIN&#13;
Ze tal e thean.&#13;
"Her&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
heart&#13;
&#13;
is not&#13;
&#13;
of Zetalethean&#13;
in her&#13;
&#13;
work,&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
' tis elsewhere."&#13;
&#13;
tho se fri ends of&#13;
&#13;
whom&#13;
&#13;
you're&#13;
&#13;
Secr etary of&#13;
&#13;
always sure.&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
Fred hails from the town formerly occupied by th e Cherokee&#13;
Indians.&#13;
He makes "A" grades&#13;
but s till remains human. A hard&#13;
worker and a staunch friend. What bett er virtues&#13;
could we spell!"&#13;
&#13;
FREDRICK G.&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIE DAY&#13;
If one-half of twins can be so staunch and yet&#13;
So en erg etic and so strong, what can th e whole&#13;
&#13;
so fr ee,&#13;
twins be?"&#13;
&#13;
ELWICK&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
President Debating League, 1910-11. Third place in&#13;
Home Oratorical contes ts, 1008-09. Pres ident of t he State Prohibiti on Association,&#13;
1909-10. P r esident of Loca l Oratori ca l Association. ·10. Inte r-Socie ty Debates, 1909-10. Otho Grand Pub li c.&#13;
'09. Ze t-Otho Grand Publi c, '10. Class Pres ident, 1909-11. Editor-in -Chief of the .Junior Annual, ' 11.&#13;
ling&#13;
&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
Baseball , 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
FRED ROGERS&#13;
&#13;
CLARA CRUMMER&#13;
&#13;
On e of&#13;
&#13;
Varsity&#13;
&#13;
I love the farm , but oh I you college life,&#13;
With books (&#13;
and girl s and soc ial w hir l s&#13;
that&#13;
blot out every strife.&#13;
&#13;
Soci e ty.&#13;
&#13;
Alethi a . Vice President of Alethia's.&#13;
Corresponding&#13;
Alethia 's. First Directress of Alethia's.&#13;
Sob er , quiet., pensive and demure,&#13;
&#13;
Vars ity Football. '09.&#13;
&#13;
"Endowed&#13;
with many tal ents, ser ene i n disposition,&#13;
with humor, an example of a r eal man."&#13;
&#13;
49&#13;
&#13;
y et bub-&#13;
&#13;
HULDA KREUTZ&#13;
Alethia. First Critic of Alethia Society.&#13;
Alethia's.&#13;
&#13;
W. H. BOWKER&#13;
&#13;
Second Directress of&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
"A girl with a ' nack' to do everything&#13;
well,&#13;
How great sh e will be no one can t ell ."&#13;
&#13;
Otho Grand Public, ' 09.&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1910-11.&#13;
&#13;
"And e'en h is failings l ean to virtues&#13;
&#13;
side."&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS TUTTLE&#13;
Pieria Society. Pieria Gra n d Public. "10.&#13;
Pres ident of the Pieria.&#13;
&#13;
Annual Board.&#13;
&#13;
CHARLES FREAR&#13;
&#13;
Vice&#13;
&#13;
" He cam e back to graduate with a class he knew he'd&#13;
be&#13;
proud of. A coming athlete and already a. good student&#13;
and accomplishes it with th e strength of his own mind.&#13;
&#13;
" l lo ve tranquil solitudes&#13;
And such society&#13;
As is quiet , wise., and good,."&#13;
&#13;
JAMES LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE SEIFERT&#13;
Pieri a. Secretary of the Junior&#13;
Grand Public, ' 10.&#13;
&#13;
Class.&#13;
&#13;
Annua l Board.&#13;
&#13;
Pieria&#13;
&#13;
"Born for success sh e seemed&#13;
With grace to win, with h eart to hold,&#13;
With shining gifts that took all eyes."&#13;
&#13;
Ionian . Varsity Football, ' 08. Inter-Soci e ty Debate, '10. Assis t ant Editor of Collegian Repo rte r, '10. Member of "M" Club.&#13;
Member of Glee Club. Pres id ent of Ionian Society. '09. In ter-Co llegiate Debate, '11. Junior Annua l Board.&#13;
"A merry heart go es all the day.&#13;
A sad one tires in a mile."&#13;
&#13;
HELEN OMSTEAD&#13;
Alethia.&#13;
Co rresponding Secretary of Al ethia&#13;
Critic of Alethia Society.&#13;
"Her aim is high, her aim is sure,&#13;
For Ames, you, see, ' il-aim, at her.&#13;
&#13;
50&#13;
&#13;
Society.&#13;
&#13;
AUGUST H. SCHATZ&#13;
&#13;
Second&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
Otho Grand Public, '10.&#13;
&#13;
"Biology&#13;
shark.&#13;
A consistent and faithful&#13;
worker who g ets&#13;
results. His manners mild and pleasant, y et his wills&#13;
his own."&#13;
&#13;
51&#13;
&#13;
MARIE WIESE&#13;
Alethi a.&#13;
&#13;
President of the Alethia, '11.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
BARRETT DOLLIVER&#13;
of the Alethia.&#13;
&#13;
1910.&#13;
"So noble, good and&#13;
gentle,&#13;
A maiden of pure metal."&#13;
&#13;
Ionian. Inter-Society Debate. '10. Presiclent of Y. M. C. A., '10.&#13;
Secretary of the Oratorical Association . 1909-10.&#13;
Goes into everything and has com e to believe that " Woman is&#13;
and t error of man."&#13;
&#13;
at once the delight&#13;
&#13;
ROSCOE CARTER&#13;
W. ANDERSON&#13;
&#13;
Ionian Soc iety.&#13;
Society, '11.&#13;
&#13;
"'A girl who goes to the d epth s of things,&#13;
Who ever wishes&#13;
the reason why."&#13;
&#13;
SETH EARL ELLIOTT&#13;
&#13;
NELLIE FLETCHER&#13;
a virtue&#13;
&#13;
par&#13;
&#13;
excellence,&#13;
&#13;
when you don't&#13;
&#13;
someone&#13;
&#13;
say s."&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
"Bunny."&#13;
&#13;
man teachers.&#13;
&#13;
A star in Math.&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce Pres ident of Zets, '11.&#13;
&#13;
"And still her&#13;
Xongul ran on."&#13;
A cou sin of the famous&#13;
cartoonist,&#13;
degree of his tal ents.&#13;
&#13;
52&#13;
&#13;
lover&#13;
&#13;
and beloved&#13;
&#13;
of his Ger-&#13;
&#13;
a friend true blue and a loyal&#13;
&#13;
patriot.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN FAIR&#13;
&#13;
Annual Board, ' 11.&#13;
&#13;
J es-&#13;
&#13;
Othonian. ,Junio r Annua l Board&#13;
ment, 1908-09.&#13;
Heloves the&#13;
&#13;
·· Ding"&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Wh en once you l ear·n to know him, then you know&#13;
&#13;
LOUISE McDONALD&#13;
Zeta lethean .&#13;
ter Club.&#13;
&#13;
President of I onian&#13;
&#13;
"Nick." Short in statue but big in brain and heart,&#13;
Possessed of wit and many talents&#13;
tho' hidden. play their part.&#13;
&#13;
Al e thia. Honorable me ntion. ·10 . Directress of Alethia Soc iety.&#13;
"Tis a pleasant reward when you dig to get A'sBut&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate, ·10.&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
inherits&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Exploding&#13;
&#13;
Assistant in Physics&#13;
&#13;
smell of gasoline&#13;
&#13;
his Ford machine,&#13;
And likes lo hear the ladies shout&#13;
As forward l eaps his run-about.&#13;
from&#13;
&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
depart-&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT SMY LIE&#13;
EDNA RIEKE&#13;
At hene um . Honorabl e men t ion , '10. Sec ret a ry and Trea surer Athe neum. Atheneum Publi c, 1910-11. Annu a l Board.&#13;
"Humility&#13;
that l ow, sweet root&#13;
From w hich all heave nly v irtues sho ot.''&#13;
&#13;
Oth onian. Va rs ity Football. 1907-08-09-10. Vice Pres iden t of th e&#13;
"M" Club, 1908-09-10.&#13;
Va rs ity Baseball , 1908-09-10. Basketball ,&#13;
1908-09. Winner Cross Country Run , '09 . Junior Annua l Board.&#13;
For four y ears "Bob" has been one of th e pillars i n athletics.&#13;
In football he has played every position i n the back fi eld and at&#13;
end in the lin e. H e i s fond of the girls, ·i n fact likes th em all.&#13;
Occasionally&#13;
makes "A" grades j ust to sh ow h e can .&#13;
&#13;
E. CECIL PALMER&#13;
HAZEL SIMAN&#13;
Zetalethean.&#13;
"Sweets t o the sweet-farewell&#13;
Where&#13;
virtue with tru e beauty dwe lls."&#13;
&#13;
LOLA RAW&#13;
Ath eneum Socie ty. Grand Pub li c, ' 10. Recording Secretary Athene um . Soc ia l Cha i r rn a n Y. W. C. A. Ann ua l Board. J est e r Club.&#13;
"When once the young heart of a maiden ·is stol en,&#13;
The maiden&#13;
her self will st eal after it soon."&#13;
&#13;
BLANCH CARTER&#13;
Al ethia .&#13;
&#13;
Vi ce President of th e Alethia's.&#13;
&#13;
She k nows sh e knows, sh e's glad she kno ws.&#13;
W e're glad she' s glad she knows sh e kn ows.&#13;
&#13;
54&#13;
&#13;
Othonian.&#13;
&#13;
Membe r of Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
A typical Twentieth&#13;
Ce ntury Knight. Preci se in manners,&#13;
gallant ·in form and sp eec h ; h e lo ves to bask i n th e r adiance of&#13;
admiring&#13;
eyes .&#13;
&#13;
PAUL CORNER&#13;
Oth onian.&#13;
H e hath a m erry twinkle i n his ey e,&#13;
They're ting ed th e hue of bluish sky.&#13;
Many talents h e possesses,&#13;
Not all of which he e'er confesses.&#13;
&#13;
EARL WARBURTON&#13;
I onian . I nter-Co ll eg iate Debate, ·10.&#13;
of Coll egian Reporter, ·1 1.&#13;
" Rare compound&#13;
and (loves to study&#13;
&#13;
Footba ll Tea m, "09.&#13;
&#13;
Editor&#13;
&#13;
of oddity, fr ol ic and f u n, w ho re lishes a jok e&#13;
&#13;
55&#13;
&#13;
57&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
58&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
59&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
.;&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
~ ~ (~~&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
(&#13;
&#13;
"!(,'!I\,.&#13;
&#13;
ti,~~&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
--.-------&#13;
&#13;
62&#13;
&#13;
63&#13;
&#13;
academy&#13;
ACADEMY&#13;
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC&#13;
DEPARTMENT OF EXPRESSION&#13;
NORMAL DEPARTMENT&#13;
&#13;
64&#13;
&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
6G&#13;
&#13;
67&#13;
&#13;
69&#13;
&#13;
( ( 1&#13;
&#13;
70&#13;
&#13;
71&#13;
&#13;
THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION&#13;
What person is there who has not spent many hours, in his earlier life, dreaming of&#13;
the wonderful things he was going to accomplish when he arrived at the proper age or&#13;
when opportunity presented itself. It may have been on the public platform that he&#13;
would sway the multitudes with his forensic oratory and logic, or it may have been in&#13;
the bustle of the commercial world, as banker, manufacturer or tradesman, that he would&#13;
achieve success, or perchance some foreign country had looked inviting. How many&#13;
prima donnas would we have today if dreams could only be realized?&#13;
F:ow much we may accomplish along any given line depends on our ability, our How&#13;
portumty and our power of application. The first of these is a fixed quantity, our natural&#13;
ability was determined before we could exercise any agency or choice. Over what is&#13;
now our acquired ability we once had a large determining power, but for our present&#13;
use that, too, is fixed, and however we may modify it hereafter we cannot change it at&#13;
this moment. The past was the time to prepare for the present. The present is the&#13;
time to prepare for the future. But the past is gone and no man has the power to recall&#13;
it.&#13;
&#13;
and die out altogether, those of us who have passed the age when it were fitting to&#13;
longer remain within the college halls and have entered upon the broader field of life,&#13;
have banded ourselves together into an organization, "The Alumni Association," the&#13;
object of which is to perpetuate the spirit of good-fellowship which college students enjoy.&#13;
There is no enterprise of the college which is not of vital interest to us. We&#13;
rejoice in her victories and achievements. Her defeats are our defeats. As an association we have but one purpose and a common interest, that of the growth and success of&#13;
our Alma Mater.&#13;
AN ALUMNUS.&#13;
&#13;
"Where, 0 where are the grand old Seniors?&#13;
Gone out in the cold, cold world."&#13;
&#13;
We once had a large determining power over what is now our opportunity. In&#13;
that sense it may be said that we make our opportunities. But that power has been exhausted and at each occasion we must accept our opportunities, if we accept them at all,&#13;
just as they are. We never realize our lack of preparation until the opportunity presents&#13;
itself and we find ourselves unfitted to grasp it.&#13;
There are no days which afford us the opportunity for development like our college days, animated by college spirit, enthused by class and society competition, surrounded by congenial companions we rise by leaps and bounds. If we are called upon&#13;
to make a recitation or to write an examination, we congratulate ourselves upon the&#13;
ability to recite well or to write pages with very little, if any, real knowledge of the&#13;
subject at hand.&#13;
But alas commencement day is over and we find ourselves amid a new and vastly&#13;
different environment. No longer have we class or society enthusiasm or college spirit to&#13;
buoy us up. We are not called upon to write examinations or to make recitations but to&#13;
do things, and we begin to apply ourselves to the problems at hand and take stock of our&#13;
ability. Too often we find that we have mistaken college spirit and enthusiasm for&#13;
development. However, college associations have had a beneficial effect. There remains with each one a consciousness of the advantages gained in yonder halls, and in the&#13;
heart is felt a yearning to once more feel the influence and the inspiration of good-fellowship which exists nowhere, to so marked a degree, outside the college walls. Truly,&#13;
"College ties can ne'er be broken." There our aims and purposes were one; outside&#13;
they are as diversified as the many activies of life with which we find ourselves occupied and we are ever wont to cast aside our burdens and our cares to mingle once more&#13;
amid the old environments and to feel the inspiration which comes from true college&#13;
spirit. Lest the fire there kindled should be smothered by the considerations of life,&#13;
&#13;
What Alumnus does not remember that commencement address which warned&#13;
him that the world's buffetings were not cushioned for college men and women; or that&#13;
chapel speaker who stated that the first five or six years out of college would prove most&#13;
unsatisfactory and unsettled in the aspiring graduate's career?&#13;
The first year of energetic effort awakens numerous thoughts of what he might have&#13;
done to prepare to live and that old college phrase, "Never let your studies interfere&#13;
with your college education," which once seemed a worthy motto, has become a&#13;
hollow mockery. It was once a perfect reason for chatting endlessly in the corridors and&#13;
strolling on the campus, bending every effort in society rush and serving on innumerable&#13;
committees, but now he thinks of neglected notebooks, scoffs at his clever bluffing and&#13;
yearns for scholarship.&#13;
Has college taught him to be practical, or does he measure his new surroundings&#13;
by narrow standards and finding himself among uneducated people become discontented and complain? Perhaps he has studied books a little but people not at all.&#13;
Perhaps he has some hard lessons in tact and diplomacy to learn. His schooling is not&#13;
completed with his college course.&#13;
For four happy years he has received instruction, as thorough as he would permit, has attended educating lectures and concerts and imbibed good from the atBut with his time of&#13;
mosphere. In short all people and things have served him.&#13;
test comes his time of service. Can he give out as generously as he has received?&#13;
He misses the opportunities to advise with interested friends and finds himself dependent&#13;
upon his own meagre resources. He has much to learn and for a time must be his&#13;
own professor.&#13;
The days are not less full than they were in college but there is less spice to&#13;
season them. A college girl asked an alumna friend, "Do you get as tired working&#13;
now as you used to in college?" The alumna had quite forgotten that college people&#13;
were ever tired and was at least certain the word had acquired a new meaning in&#13;
her experience.&#13;
&#13;
74&#13;
&#13;
75&#13;
&#13;
AN ALUMNUS.&#13;
&#13;
society&#13;
&#13;
76&#13;
&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
ATHENE UM&#13;
&#13;
;&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Light Blue and W hite.&#13;
Motto-Utile Dulce.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
President .... . ... . . . . . .. . . .. .Mable McCreery ......... . ... Bess Barnes&#13;
Vice President ... . ... . .. . ... . Anna Goodchild .... .. . . . . . .. .Alice Anderson&#13;
Recording Secretary .......... . Sadie Cunningham . ..... . .. ... Minnie Nelson&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ...... .. Edith Eicher . . .. . ... . . .. ... . H allie Fry&#13;
Treasurer .... . ... .. .... . .. . . Ethel Higday .. .. . .. . ....... .Audree Davie&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1911&#13;
Alice Anderson&#13;
Anna Goodchild&#13;
Jennie Nelson&#13;
~&#13;
&#13;
Bess Barnes&#13;
Mable McCreey&#13;
Mary Thoburn&#13;
&#13;
Harriet Bass&#13;
Edith Eicher&#13;
Laura Shumway&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Rachel Cook&#13;
&#13;
Edna Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Lola Raw&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19 I 3.&#13;
Sadie Cunningham&#13;
Ethel Higday&#13;
Minnie N elson&#13;
&#13;
Audree Davie&#13;
Marguerite Kemper&#13;
Hazel Shumaker&#13;
&#13;
Agnes Ewer&#13;
Lela McClary&#13;
Anna Rieke&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914 .&#13;
Lois Gillam&#13;
Hallie Fry&#13;
Ethel Olsen&#13;
Hazle Lane&#13;
June Price&#13;
Mattie Bridenbaugh&#13;
Isabel Webb&#13;
M aese! Wall&#13;
Sara Whitehouse&#13;
&#13;
78&#13;
&#13;
79&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Heastand&#13;
Mae P ennington&#13;
Gabriella Srstka&#13;
Marie Wood&#13;
Ida Day&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATH EAN&#13;
Colors-Maroon and Olive.&#13;
Motto- Vestigianulla retrorsum.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President. .. ..... . .... .... .. .L. Anderson . .. . .... . . . . . .. . .W . W. W aymack&#13;
Vice President . . .... .. .. .. . . . J. E. Briggs . . ... ...... . .. . . M. P. Briggs&#13;
Recording Secretary . . .. .... . . . Hickman .... . . ... ... . . . ... . .H. L. Johns&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . . .. .. .. H. L. Johns ... . .... . . . . . . . . .J. E. Briggs&#13;
Treasurer . .. ... .. ... . . ... . .. V. E. Prichard . .. . . . . .. . . . .. Hudson&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19 ! I&#13;
Hudson&#13;
Loepp&#13;
&#13;
Hackett&#13;
Waymack&#13;
&#13;
Anderson&#13;
H. L. Johns&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19/2 .&#13;
V . E . Prichard&#13;
&#13;
Gabrielson&#13;
&#13;
Frear&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9/3 .&#13;
M. P . Briggs&#13;
Geo. Prichard&#13;
Postin&#13;
&#13;
Hess&#13;
&#13;
]. E. Briggs&#13;
Lemon&#13;
Winterringer&#13;
&#13;
H. Merten&#13;
Mc Vicker&#13;
Scott&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9/4.&#13;
Chapler&#13;
Fuller&#13;
A . Johnson&#13;
Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Brown&#13;
French&#13;
Horney&#13;
Phelps&#13;
&#13;
Barrick&#13;
Chase&#13;
Holbert&#13;
E. Merten&#13;
&#13;
Voy&#13;
&#13;
Vennick&#13;
&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
PIERIA&#13;
Colors-Canary and Black.&#13;
Motto Feliciter, f ortiter, fideliter .&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term .&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
Second Term .&#13;
&#13;
President. . ....... .... .. ... F ranees Horn ....... . . . . ... .Vivian McFarland&#13;
Vice President .. . . ... ..... . .. Vivian McFarland ........... Gladys Tuttle&#13;
Recording Secretary . ....... . .. Myrtle Seifert ......... .. . ...Mary Kifer&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ... . .... Marguerite Shreiner ..... ..... Susan Eads&#13;
Treasurer .... ............... Gladys Tuttle ... . ... ....... .Pearl Wilson&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1911&#13;
T alma Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
Cora McKellip&#13;
Vivian McFarland&#13;
&#13;
F ranees Horn&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Myrtle Seifert&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Tuttle&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
Bertha Eads&#13;
&#13;
Hattie Kifer&#13;
Mary Kifer&#13;
&#13;
Susan Eads&#13;
Vera Rowe&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914.&#13;
Edna Allen&#13;
Lola Brownelle&#13;
Helen Gheim&#13;
Evangeline Stone&#13;
&#13;
82&#13;
&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Gladys Dean&#13;
Josephine Herbst&#13;
Nellie Upham&#13;
Pearl Wilson&#13;
&#13;
83&#13;
&#13;
Berneice Bowman&#13;
Caroline Eads&#13;
Rachel Holm&#13;
Jean Whittemore&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN&#13;
Colors- Royal Purple and Old Cold.&#13;
Motto- Poss unt quod credere possunt.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ......... .. ..... ... .Farnham . .. . ........ . . . . . ...Carter&#13;
Vice President ............... Quarnstrom ..... .. .... .. .....Johnson&#13;
Recording Secretary ... .. ...... Carter ...... . ............. . Hukle&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . ....... Quarnstrom .... .... ... .... ... Chandler&#13;
Treasurer. ... .. . .. .. .. ...... F ullbrook ................... Peden&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Farnham&#13;
John Lewis&#13;
&#13;
James Lewis&#13;
Carter&#13;
&#13;
Dolliver&#13;
Warburton&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
Quarnstrom&#13;
&#13;
Kent&#13;
&#13;
Shoemaker&#13;
&#13;
Noble&#13;
&#13;
Peden&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914.&#13;
Edge&#13;
Garlock&#13;
Brunelle&#13;
Hutchinson&#13;
&#13;
84&#13;
&#13;
Henderson&#13;
Hukle&#13;
Little&#13;
Chandler&#13;
&#13;
85&#13;
&#13;
F ullbrook&#13;
F. Johnson&#13;
Welsh&#13;
&#13;
ZETALETHEAN&#13;
Colors-Scarlet and Black.&#13;
Motto-Esse, quam videri.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President . .. . ........... .. .. .Etta Mahood .. .... ... . . ... . . Edna Randolph&#13;
Vice President .. . ...... . ... . . Edna Randolph ... ..... :· . .... Elsie Rodine&#13;
Recording Secretary . . . ........ Edna Simon . ... . ........... .Alice Mower&#13;
Corresponding Secretary .. . . .... Ethel Lynch . . ....... . ... . . . .Ruth Prentice&#13;
Treasurer . ............ . . . . . . Lorene Jackson ... .. . . .. .... . .Maude Gillin&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
'·&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 I&#13;
Laura Cushman&#13;
Nina Farnham&#13;
&#13;
Etta Mahood&#13;
Edna Randolph&#13;
Pearl Synder&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Lynch&#13;
Iola Westcott&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 2.&#13;
Florence Anthony&#13;
Louise M cDonald&#13;
Hazel Simon&#13;
Madge Gillin&#13;
Maude Gillin&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
D ora Carlson&#13;
Catherine Elliott&#13;
Janet Little&#13;
Eva Randolph&#13;
Mabel Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Ella Campbell&#13;
Gladys Evans&#13;
H elen McDonald&#13;
Elsie Rodine&#13;
Martha Siever&#13;
Ruth Prentice&#13;
&#13;
Lorna Distad&#13;
Lorene Jackson&#13;
Alice Mower&#13;
Helen Roddy&#13;
Lottie Sande, s&#13;
&#13;
Class of 19 I 4.&#13;
Wilna Beam&#13;
Lucy Cushman&#13;
Grace Logan&#13;
Hazel Simon&#13;
&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
Genevieve Bond&#13;
Neva Beimer&#13;
Lula Kindlespire&#13;
Vernice Chamberlain&#13;
Alice McCurry&#13;
Mary Lund&#13;
Mabel Pecaut&#13;
Florence Montgomery&#13;
Jaunita Walker&#13;
Lulu Weary&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
OTHON IA N&#13;
Color-Royal P urple.&#13;
Motto-Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second T erm.&#13;
&#13;
President . . . . . .. ... .. . .... . . F. Chandler .. ... .. . .. . .. . . .. Cushman&#13;
Vice President . . . ...... . .. . . . Bachmeyer .. . . ..... . .. .. . . .. T ackaberry&#13;
Secretary . . .. . ... . . . .. . . . . .. .Kingsbury ... . . . .. . . . . . . ... .. Montgomery&#13;
Treasurer . . . . . .. .. .. . .. .. . . . Ellison . . ..... .. . .. .. ... . . . . E llison&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1911&#13;
Bachemeyer&#13;
Cushman&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Culbertson&#13;
Tackaberry&#13;
&#13;
F. Chandler&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Hays&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1912.&#13;
Elliott&#13;
H arper&#13;
Palmer&#13;
Smylie&#13;
&#13;
Bowker&#13;
Elwick&#13;
Mahoney&#13;
Schatz&#13;
G. E . Wickens&#13;
&#13;
Bass&#13;
Ellison&#13;
D. Johnson&#13;
Rogers&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
Jory&#13;
M ontgomery&#13;
&#13;
Corner&#13;
Maynard&#13;
D. L. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
Braeley&#13;
Kingsbury&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914.&#13;
:&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Wright&#13;
&#13;
West&#13;
88&#13;
&#13;
Bigglestone&#13;
H all&#13;
M cClure&#13;
Morgan&#13;
R einke&#13;
&#13;
Barks&#13;
Evans&#13;
Linder&#13;
McFarland&#13;
Patteshall&#13;
&#13;
Austin&#13;
Crane&#13;
Kolp&#13;
M cCurdy&#13;
Muckey .&#13;
&#13;
89&#13;
&#13;
ALETHEIA&#13;
Colors-Champagne and Brown.&#13;
Motto-Lovers of the best.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
Second T erm.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ..... . .... . .... ... . .Ida Brown .. .. .... . .. .. .. ... Maria Wiese&#13;
Vice President . ... ...... . ... . Blanch Carter .... . . .. . ..... ..Clara C rummer&#13;
Recording Secretary . .. . . . . ... . Mary M cCutchei::m ...... . .. .. . Sarah Bleakley&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . ...... . Helen Olmstead . .. . . . . ·. . . .. .. Annetta H all&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. . .. .. ... . . . . . . M aria Wiese . ...... . .. ...... Ethel Shannon&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9//&#13;
M aria Wiese&#13;
&#13;
Ida Brown&#13;
&#13;
Class of /9/2.&#13;
Hulda K reutz&#13;
Myrtle Britton&#13;
Blanch Carter&#13;
&#13;
Clara C rummer&#13;
H elen Olmstead&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Shannon&#13;
Nellie Fletcher&#13;
&#13;
Class of 191 3.&#13;
&#13;
"'&#13;
M ary McCutcheon&#13;
Sarah Bleakley&#13;
Eva Leazer&#13;
&#13;
Josie Carter&#13;
Edith Bower&#13;
Hazel Hermann&#13;
&#13;
Annetta Hall&#13;
Kate Leazer&#13;
Mae Engle&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1914&#13;
Alma Wilhelm&#13;
Ruth French&#13;
&#13;
90&#13;
&#13;
Iva Hinkley&#13;
Julia Morsch&#13;
Cora Cornelinsen&#13;
&#13;
Florence Long&#13;
H azel Brake&#13;
Arena Loft&#13;
&#13;
CRESCENT&#13;
Colors-Nile Green and White.&#13;
Motto&#13;
We&#13;
succeed by doing.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
First Term.&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
President. . ... . .. ..... .. .... .Ruth Bleakly ..... ...... ... .. Grace Walkes&#13;
Vice President ........ . .. .. . . May Wickens . . .. . .... ..... .. Flossie Hall&#13;
Recording Secretary ......... ... Flossie Hall ... .. .. . ......... E thel Mitchell&#13;
Corresponding Secretary ... . .. .. Amber Garlock . . ....... . .. . . .Ruth Hartzell&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. . .... . . . .. . ... Grace Walkes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ruby Rhodes&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
Fourth Year.&#13;
Ruth Bleakly&#13;
Gladys Fitch&#13;
Mabel Henderson&#13;
Ona Marsh&#13;
Marjorie Spencer&#13;
&#13;
Sarah Crowther&#13;
Grace Walkes&#13;
•&#13;
Dorothy Koons&#13;
Kathryn Nurse&#13;
Emma Zimmerman&#13;
&#13;
Val Ecker&#13;
Elsie Hallett&#13;
Ethel Mitchell&#13;
Esther Ross&#13;
Bess Trenary&#13;
&#13;
Third Year.&#13;
&#13;
Amber Garlock&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Jessie Shultz&#13;
&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
&#13;
Alyce Hallett&#13;
&#13;
Edna Thorndyke&#13;
&#13;
May Wickens&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
&#13;
Addie Onstot&#13;
&#13;
Zettie Onstot&#13;
Ada Wallen&#13;
&#13;
Grace McDugal&#13;
&#13;
Music.&#13;
&#13;
Ruth Carter&#13;
Ruby Rhodes&#13;
Laura Postin&#13;
Josephine W eiz&#13;
92&#13;
&#13;
Cora Dieterick&#13;
Genevieve Hinde&#13;
Josephine D e Roas&#13;
Mable Maynard&#13;
Helen Humphreys&#13;
93&#13;
&#13;
Flossie Hall&#13;
Alice Kleah&#13;
Winnie Walker&#13;
Floy Gifford&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE&#13;
Colors-Old Gold and Silver.&#13;
Motto-Non palma sine pulvere&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ................... .McKinney .................. .Gorder&#13;
Vice President ............... N. J. Williams ..... .. ....... .Himebauch&#13;
Secretary .... . ... . ... ... .. .. .Crummer ....................Lovitt&#13;
Treasurer ... . ............... J. L. Williams ...... .. . . ... . .Crummer&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Y ear.&#13;
&#13;
Gorder&#13;
Yackey&#13;
J. L. Williams&#13;
&#13;
Engle&#13;
Henderson&#13;
Kuhns&#13;
&#13;
Barrett&#13;
Himebauch&#13;
P. Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Third Year.&#13;
Stonebraker&#13;
&#13;
Breaw&#13;
N. ]. Williams&#13;
&#13;
Beebe&#13;
&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
Leazer&#13;
Rickard&#13;
&#13;
Jenson&#13;
Phenis&#13;
&#13;
Crummer&#13;
McKinney&#13;
&#13;
Wiltze&#13;
&#13;
Riner&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
Batchelor&#13;
Bell&#13;
&#13;
94&#13;
&#13;
Butler&#13;
Lovitt&#13;
&#13;
Boas&#13;
Hoyt&#13;
Spicker&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
AESTHES IAN&#13;
Colors-Olive Green and White.&#13;
M otto-To possess the aesthetic.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
First Term .&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
President ... . . .. . ......... . . .Grace Ryan ... ..... ...... .. . Edith Rogers&#13;
Vice President .... . .. .. .. . . . . Vera McCracken .... . . .. .. . . . Marie D evitt&#13;
Secretary .. . ... . . .. . .... . .. . .Ethel McCracken .. . . ... . .. .. . Lucille Metcalf&#13;
Treasurer .. . .. .............. Lois Crouch ...... .. . . . . ..... Vera McCracken&#13;
&#13;
MEMBERS.&#13;
Fourth Y ear.&#13;
&#13;
Hazel Bilsborough&#13;
Edith Craven&#13;
Lois Crouch&#13;
Hazel Day&#13;
Marie D evitt&#13;
Ethel Ewer&#13;
Theresa Freeman&#13;
Luella Haskins&#13;
Ina Heeren&#13;
Nancy Kallemeyn&#13;
Ethel Kellogg&#13;
Lucille Metcalf&#13;
Laura Pease&#13;
H arriet Patterson&#13;
Edith Parrot&#13;
Florence Rodine&#13;
E dith Rogers&#13;
Florence Shumaker&#13;
Mabel Trenary&#13;
Ethel W eisensee&#13;
Third Year.&#13;
&#13;
Grace Chamberlain&#13;
Marion Metcalf&#13;
Vera McCracken&#13;
Ethel McCracken&#13;
Ruth Whitlock&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
&#13;
Madeline Ford&#13;
&#13;
Amanda Roost&#13;
Jean Thomson&#13;
&#13;
J estina Schindel&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
&#13;
Irene Robar&#13;
Special.&#13;
&#13;
Mary Secord&#13;
&#13;
Pearl Siglen&#13;
&#13;
Alice Thornburg&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
ADELPHI AN&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Cerise and White.&#13;
M otto--C arpe diem.&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
&#13;
First Term.&#13;
&#13;
Second Term.&#13;
&#13;
President ......... . . . .... .. . Larson ....... .. ..... . .... . Wells&#13;
Vice President .... ..... .... . . Bassett .... .. . . . ......... . .. Freeman&#13;
Recording Secretary ...... . .. .. Kilbourne . . ... .. ..... . . . . . . . Peat&#13;
Corresponding Secretary . . .. . . .. Brown . . ·.. . .. .. ... . .. . . ... Mahood&#13;
Treasurer ......... . .... . .. . . Gratz . .... .. .. . ............ Pritchard&#13;
MEMBERS .&#13;
&#13;
Four th Year.&#13;
Bassett&#13;
Peat&#13;
Hiett&#13;
&#13;
Freeman&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
H. Pollock&#13;
Parrick&#13;
&#13;
Fowler&#13;
Wells&#13;
F. Pollock&#13;
&#13;
Third .Year.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Gratz&#13;
&#13;
Second Year.&#13;
Brown&#13;
Vosburg&#13;
&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
Maho'od&#13;
H endrickson&#13;
&#13;
Upham&#13;
Garretson&#13;
Sass&#13;
&#13;
First Year.&#13;
Henderson&#13;
Crouch&#13;
&#13;
Piper&#13;
Friend&#13;
&#13;
Smith&#13;
Izakoff&#13;
&#13;
H aitz&#13;
&#13;
T orbet&#13;
&#13;
L&#13;
&#13;
98&#13;
&#13;
99&#13;
&#13;
THE MAJESTY OF PEACE&#13;
By Frank P. Johnson&#13;
The biggest thing under God's stars is an idea. "The world is governed not&#13;
by men, not by parties, but by ideas." The idea of one God made Judaism immortal; the idea of beauty raised Greece from mediocrity to eternal leadership; the idea&#13;
of law and order gave to Rome a majesty which the centuries cannot efface. The&#13;
temple of Jerusalem has fallen; the Acropolis is in ruins; the Forum is deserted and the&#13;
Appian way untraveled; but the ideals which created them are eternal. The day that&#13;
sees no great idea struggling for recognition will be a day of stagnation and decay.&#13;
The greatest idea at work in the world today is that of Universal Peace. Founded&#13;
upon deliberate judgment, backed by enlightened public opinion and dealing with the&#13;
greatest moral issue that has ever affected the welfare of man, this idea is destined to&#13;
pervade the hearts and minds of the masses until it is a realized fact. Two thousand&#13;
years ago the air above Judea's plains throbbed with the waves of the angelic song,&#13;
"Peace on Earth, Good Will to Men." Sad and weary centuries have passed since&#13;
But the&#13;
then; centuries in which man has written his history in letters of blood.&#13;
"cradle song of Christ was not sung in vain." The echo of that heavenly song is&#13;
filling the hearts of men; the message which came from the Gallilean Hills proclaiming&#13;
Universal Peace is the hope and inspiration of humanity.&#13;
The heart aches as we recall man's awful sacrifice to the God of War. What&#13;
tongue can describe, what mind can picture the horrors of a single battle? If you&#13;
would see war in its true character; go not in the thick of the conflict spurred on by&#13;
strains of martial music; go not under the proud banner of the victorious warrior; go&#13;
when night has failen on the field of misery; when the rival forces have withdrawn;&#13;
when the glory of the charge is forgotten; when the cold rain is falling on the dead&#13;
and wounded and the forest, field and hill resound with the groans of the dying- men&#13;
and boys connected, as all of us, by ties of home, love, and friendship, dying under&#13;
a foreign sky to be buried in an unknown grave; dying that a tyrant's dream of a&#13;
world empire might be realized; dying to open a new field to British products; dying that&#13;
Russia might retain stolen lands in the Orient;&#13;
"Dying to build false greatness,&#13;
Victims of greed and vice,&#13;
Where is the structure builded&#13;
That was ever worth the price?"&#13;
And this is the established method of determining justice among Christian nations! Is there not · a better way? Must might forever be accepted as right? If it&#13;
is wrong for an individual to shed blood in an effort to establish justice, it is wrong for&#13;
a collection of individuals to do likewise. As the wearing of .a rms in private life has been&#13;
restricted to the policeman, so also the armaments of the nations should be limited to&#13;
an international police force. As peace is best maintained in communities whose citizens are unarmed, so international peace will be established when the nations reduce&#13;
102&#13;
&#13;
their armaments and submit their controversies to an international court. We do not&#13;
say "do away with force." Without force there can be no universal respect for law.&#13;
In an ideal world there is no force; an ideal world is governed by brotherly love.&#13;
The world is not yet ideal. The law of love must be supplemented by physical force.&#13;
Take armed policemen from our cities and anarchy will reign. Take armored cruisers&#13;
from the seas and every ocean would become a scene of bloodshed, piracy, and lawlessness.&#13;
Modern navies, however, have not been built as a protection against pirates; they&#13;
owe their existence to the spirit of jealousy among Christian nations. The major portion of the world's labor and capital is taken from productive enterprises and un-productively consumed, while the problem of daily bread is becoming more and more&#13;
serious. England and Germany spend three hundred million dollars a year on their&#13;
navies, while thousands of children wander homeless in the streets of London and Berlin. Russia cannot even pay the interest on her war debt; and yet she has outlined&#13;
a billion dollar naval program. Our own rich Republic has recently departed from&#13;
the policy which has made her loved and respected in all corners of the earth. In&#13;
twenty years we have increased our military expenditures seven hundred per cent. The&#13;
cost of one battleship would buy every college and university in the state of Iowa; it&#13;
would pay for the college education of ten thousand young men and women; or would&#13;
build an improved highway from Chicago to San Francisco. Without an enemy in&#13;
the world, we are planning to spend three hundred and fifty million dollars on our&#13;
navy the coming year, and yet we have two million people who can neither read nor&#13;
write. Our rivers should be opened for commerce; our national resources conserved;&#13;
our foreign population should be trained for citizenship. Men of America, is it not&#13;
time for a halt to be called in the construction of armaments?&#13;
Military men tell us, however, that if " we wish peace we must prepare for war."&#13;
This is true up to a certain maxim; beyond that it is false. If we wish peace. we must&#13;
prepare for peace. This is what our forefathers did on the Canadian border and for&#13;
a century the longest boundary line between two civilized nations in the world, has&#13;
been protected only by police. Moreover, as Victor Hugo said, "The chief cause for&#13;
war is to be found in the armaments of the nations." The Napoleonic wars, the&#13;
most indefensible wars of history, were brought on because one man had a passion&#13;
for dominion and as he himself said "because he had a great army ready to act."&#13;
All history is a vain word if instruments of war are promoters of peace. They&#13;
quench the faith in the power of justice; they blind the eyes to the highest ideals; they&#13;
strain international relations and arouse jealousies; they excite the very evils against which&#13;
they are to guard. We settle our individual disputes by reason and the civil law; can&#13;
we not as a collection of individuals settle our international difficulties by arbitration and&#13;
international law? Must the nations of Christendom cling forever to the barbarous&#13;
agencies which mark the failures of the past? Shall we pin our faith to the symbols of&#13;
Barbarism or devote our energies to the problems of an enlightened civilization? Shall&#13;
we take for our ideal, Christ's Law of Love or man's rule of honor? We do not&#13;
103&#13;
&#13;
advocate a complete disarmament; we would not say with the late Count T olstoi "do&#13;
away with force." But we do plead for a halt to be called in this mad race for&#13;
military supremacy. We do plead for the establishment of an International High Court&#13;
of Justice. Christianity, Commerce, Industry, and Education are opposed to this system of competitive arming. It is the inevitable conflict between a lower and a higher&#13;
civilization, with the inevitable result. The trend of events, the march of progress, the&#13;
signs of the times point the downfall of Militarism and to the triumph of Reason.&#13;
Twice in ten years has a Parliament of twenty-six nations met at The Hague to discuss questions formerly settled by war; over eighty treaties of arbitration have gone&#13;
into effect in the past five years. Norway and Sweden have separated peacefully; Bulgaria has secured her independence without resorting to force; Chile and Argentine have&#13;
settled the long disputed questions of boundary line without bloodshed. In commemoration of this they have erected in the heart of the lordly Andes, a colossal statue of "The&#13;
Prince of Peace," on the base of which is engraved these words-"Sooner shall these&#13;
mountains crumble into dust, than the Chileans and Argentines shall break this treaty&#13;
which here at the feet of Christ The Redeemer they have sworn to maintain."&#13;
The dream of the poet is becoming a reality. The vision of the ages is within&#13;
our grasp. The weary nations long for permanent peace. Not a peace purchased by the&#13;
sacrifice of principles; but a peace based upon justice and love. Not a peace which&#13;
will mean an end to struggling and striving and will allow us to wander peacefully in&#13;
the Utopian fields of contentment; but a peace which will mean the beginning of a higher,&#13;
nobler struggle; a struggle permeated by a desire for social service, scientific knowledge&#13;
and spiritual progression.&#13;
A leader is needed to guide the nations from military bondage; what nation is&#13;
best fitted to lead? The nations of Europe are bound down by age old hatreds. Germany will not follow the leadership of England and England will not be lead by&#13;
France or Russia. But there is a nation far away from the debasing influences of&#13;
the Old World; a nation built upon a virgin continent, rich in the gifts of nature and&#13;
washed by two broad oceans; a nation of Saxon and Teuton of Celt and Slav who&#13;
combine their love for the Fatherland with their love for the land of their adoption,&#13;
thus forming a bond of unity which is a more potent factor in the cause of Peace than&#13;
the proudest navy afloat; a nation which has become a world power without the use&#13;
of a great armament; a nation which since the adoption of its constitution has never been&#13;
attacked; a nation which citizen-soldiers in the time of need have proven themselves&#13;
the peers of the trained legions of Europe. The United States of America is well fitted&#13;
to lead in the cause of Peace. The downtrodden people of Europe are looking our&#13;
way for light; they know that across the great Atlantic is a nation conceived in Liberty,&#13;
whose watchwords are Freedom, Progress, and Equality. This is America's opportunity-her's is a Divine mission. There is but one emblem above the Stars and&#13;
Stripes and that is the Cross of Christ. Let us fold our banner around that Cross&#13;
and point the nations to the true majesty which is to be found in a Peace based upon&#13;
a common brotherhood. Then shall dawn that great day"When the war drums throb no longer,&#13;
And the battle flags are furled&#13;
In the Parliament of Man,&#13;
The Federation of the World."&#13;
&#13;
THE LAST MAN&#13;
By W. W. Waymack&#13;
The last man's grimly failing eye&#13;
Essayed the sea, the earth, the sky&#13;
In solemn revery.&#13;
He raised his hand-the frenzied pack&#13;
Of venomed huntresses drew back&#13;
In awe-they knew not why.&#13;
Frail was his poise, his gesture cold,&#13;
His figure feebly knit and old,&#13;
His face a haggard thing;&#13;
'Twas strange what wierd, etherial force&#13;
Of realms unseen could thrill a corse&#13;
And make it seem a king!&#13;
He raised his hand; a silence deep&#13;
As desert sands all hushed in sleep,&#13;
Throttled their snarls unheard.&#13;
He spoke; and some superior Will&#13;
On tones but sharp and words but shrill&#13;
A majesty conferred.&#13;
"Ten hundred years have sought decay&#13;
Since Male dominion passed away&#13;
In Surrey as in Kent;&#13;
Ten hundred years since first to feel&#13;
The suffragette's imperious heel&#13;
The neck of man was bent;&#13;
Ten hundred years, and in that space&#13;
How juxtaposed the human race,&#13;
How autocratic woman's place,&#13;
How subjugate the man's!&#13;
Who dreamed ten hundred years would show&#13;
Such cataclysmic overthrow&#13;
Of what were just and what were trueMan's schemes, and Nature's plans?&#13;
'Tis true thy splenative intent&#13;
Hath wronged the ribs whence thou wert rent&#13;
And men debased to dogs;&#13;
Too true, once franchised and once free,&#13;
Enkitchened man rolls pies for thee&#13;
While thou dost roll the logs;&#13;
10 5&#13;
&#13;
'Tis true, too true, our lineal pride&#13;
By servile centuries denied&#13;
Hath paled and wasted, near hath died&#13;
Beneath our cruel estate,&#13;
Till now male valor is a dream&#13;
Too ancient for historic theme,&#13;
And masculine endowments seem&#13;
Much more emasculate.&#13;
That, chilled by foul oppression's blast,&#13;
Malekinds first member is its last&#13;
Thou knowst, nor I deny;&#13;
That I alone of all my sex&#13;
Thy still insatiate souls perplex&#13;
Is my calamity.&#13;
I know thy unencompassed power;&#13;
I apprehend my final hour;&#13;
'Tis not unknown thy features dour&#13;
Foretell my day has comeThink not I look for mercy's face&#13;
Where meager justice lacks a place,&#13;
Nor dream repentancy' s disgrace&#13;
Can halt my martyrdom.&#13;
No, no! Regard it no surprise&#13;
Decadent man should once arise&#13;
In dignity of yore;&#13;
The marvel is he staid so long&#13;
Prostrate to thine oppressive thong&#13;
And raised him not before&#13;
Oh, woman; woman !-and didst dare&#13;
Fore' er unbearded think to wear ·&#13;
Thy maladorning despot air&#13;
To gloat on cringing man?&#13;
Oh, wisdom, stranger that thou art&#13;
To Amazonic-tinctured heart!&#13;
Why, why didst not a love impart&#13;
For better cautioned plan?&#13;
Alone, alone, long have I borne&#13;
The impact of thy common scorn&#13;
In deep humility,&#13;
And truly never aught was given&#13;
More generously under Heaven&#13;
Than thy indignity;&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
But shall a man, howe' er debased,&#13;
However far his grandeur passed,&#13;
However hushed his song,&#13;
At female lords' tyrannic whim&#13;
Betray what hath supported him&#13;
Through bitter years and long?&#13;
Shall those two pillars of his house,&#13;
His nether limbs, henceforth carouse,&#13;
Thy jibing humor to arouse,&#13;
Appareled but in dirt?&#13;
Shall-worst iniquity of allThe climax of his woeful thrallThose stumps their trousered youth recall&#13;
Now compassed in a skirt?&#13;
Oh, cruelest creatures Time hath sent&#13;
To vex a globe for humans meant,&#13;
This shalt thou never see!&#13;
Puissant despots of my line,&#13;
The Richard spirit now in mineNo more man bows to thee!&#13;
Go, legislate till thou art mad&#13;
With making laws 'twere best unhad,&#13;
Decree bad good, or make good bad,&#13;
Coerce what can't retort.&#13;
Go, deal with planets or with gods,&#13;
Transmute the stars to ray less clouds,&#13;
But spare to man thy Jovian nods,&#13;
Abjure thy customed sport.&#13;
Go, while the spark that fires my brain&#13;
Still sputters in its wonted train&#13;
And leave me, dying, peace!&#13;
Go, in remembrance of a breast&#13;
That quavers not at thy behest,&#13;
Nor grieves at its surcease!&#13;
Go, tell thy tyrant populace&#13;
Thou sawst the last of Arthur's race&#13;
On Albion's sea-skirt crags&#13;
Ten million suffragettes defy&#13;
To squelch his masculinity&#13;
Or misadorn his legs!"&#13;
&#13;
10 7&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, how I wish mother and father were here," exclaimed Gretchen, as the girls&#13;
&#13;
THE ZET. NOVELETTE&#13;
&#13;
shook the snow from each other.&#13;
"Yes, and just to think that they are away off in Sunny Italy and here we are&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
Written December by Etta Mahood.&#13;
"Please, mum-they's a big red-faced woman at the back door as 'ud like toe see&#13;
yez-looks mighty like a cook mum. "&#13;
"How I wish it were, Sally Ann. Did you ask her in?"&#13;
"Indade I did mum, but she wouldn't stir inside, mum."&#13;
"Well I'll be down directly. Tell her to step at least inside the door."&#13;
"Very well, mum," and Sally Ann vanished.&#13;
The fact was that the cook had left Hartford College as soon as the Xmas&#13;
holidays began, and Miss Dean, the little English teacher, had been at wits end · to&#13;
provide meals for herself, two Junior girls who had no home in the United States and&#13;
Sally Ann, the maid. It only lacked two days until Xmas and at the expectation of·&#13;
having a real cook for the Xmas dinner Miss Dean hurried down to the kitchen. When&#13;
she reached the lower room the person in question still stood outside.&#13;
"She won't come in, mum," ventured Sally Ann. "Well, we'll soon see, Sally&#13;
Ann." And to Sally Ann's amazement the big Irishwoman did come in at Miss Dean's&#13;
request.&#13;
"May I inquire your business with me?" asked the little teacher with palpitating&#13;
heart.&#13;
"Shure yez may- it's what I do be comin' after Miss. Heerd yer do be afther&#13;
wantin' a cook Miss. Them's me raisons fer comin'."&#13;
"We surely do," exclaimed the relieved head.&#13;
"Don't we tho', mum!" echoed Sally Ann.&#13;
A business consultation followe.d, after which Molly was legally installed as mistress of the utensil domain. With a happy step Miss Dean hurried up to her room. "I&#13;
must write a note to Gretchen and Kathleen and have them dress up for dinner tonight&#13;
for Molly, the dear, has promised us all sorts of good things. Imagine having a meal&#13;
we haven't ploughed thru ! We must celebrate, I do believe, just for fun. I'll put on&#13;
my pink chiffon.''&#13;
In the meantime Gretchen and Kathleen were having a glorious tramp on their&#13;
snow-shoes over the hills around the college. Nature held a charm for both girls and in&#13;
the coldest weather they were out of doors at every opportunity. The afternoon was&#13;
fast waning and the clouds to the west were growing heavier.&#13;
"We'd better go in Kathleen, it is beginning to snow!"&#13;
"I don't want to, Gretchen. This is so grand!&#13;
If only a good supper was&#13;
waiting for us!"&#13;
"Let's go and see if one isn't. I feel something hopeful in my bones Kathleen.&#13;
Come, I'll race you in."&#13;
With a bound they were both off and in a very short time they dashed into the&#13;
entrance together.&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
planked in a snow-covered world."&#13;
"We'll have to make the best of it, little sister," as they climbed the broad stairway.&#13;
"Why, here's a note Kathleen and it's from Miss Dean."&#13;
"What can it be, Gret ?- Hurry and open it!"&#13;
With hasty fingers the girls unsealed the note, and read:&#13;
' 'Dear Gretchen and Kathleen:"I know you will be delighted to know that we have at last secured"-"A cook," shouted Kathleen- "Well, bully for her!"&#13;
"Kathleen, such language!"&#13;
" A cook, and to celebrate, let's dress up and go to dinner in style. Dinner will be&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
served at 6 : 30.&#13;
"ELIZ. DEAN.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, how perfectly glorious! Will we dress up? Well, I rather guess! Where&#13;
did we put our evening gowns, Gretchen?"&#13;
"We're not going to get into those things, kiddie."&#13;
"Why not? Didn't Miss Dean say to dress up? Come, sis, let's put on our best.&#13;
You put on your white satin and I'll get into my blue silk."&#13;
No one could resist the appeal and the dresses and accessories were brought to&#13;
light. It still lacked an hour and a half till dinner time, and the girls went about their&#13;
toilets carefully, and painstakingly.&#13;
When the gong sounded the girls were ready and issued forth in resplendent glory.&#13;
Miss Dean, brilliant in her evening attire, met them in the lower corridor. They all&#13;
reached the dining room, which Miss Dean simply decorated for the occasion, when the&#13;
door bell rang. With a look of dismay Miss Dean called Sally Ann and asked her to&#13;
answer the call.&#13;
"Who can be coming here this time of the night? and look at me in this ridiculous&#13;
garb!"&#13;
All three waited expectantly, for visitors were uncommon.&#13;
"Please, mum, two gentlemans 'ud like ter see yer."&#13;
"I can't see them tonight, Sally Ann. Tell them to call tomorrow."&#13;
"I tried puttin' thim off, mum, but they wouldn't put.&#13;
and they say, mum, as you knowed 'em."&#13;
&#13;
They's handsome, mum,&#13;
&#13;
"I wonder." And Miss Dean hurried from the room. Gretchen and Kathleen&#13;
entered into a stormy session-maybe I should say Kathleen did.&#13;
''I'll just bet they're those nephews of hers," she stormed, "and I know they're&#13;
come to stay-horrid things! What have we always got to have men come in for anyway? What do we want of stiff-necked, handsome fellows, dudes, sports, dandies&#13;
hanging around here?"&#13;
1 09&#13;
&#13;
"Hush, Kathleen, wait until you see them," cautioned Gretchen. "They may ·&#13;
make lots of fun for us."&#13;
"Well, I just won't! I"&#13;
Thedoor opened and Miss Dean, flushed, entered.&#13;
"Girls, my two nephews from Harvard have come to spend their vacation with me.&#13;
I'm so glad that you are here. Come and meet them before we sit down to dinner."&#13;
There was nothing to do but to obey, so Kathleen, with certain mysterious grimaces,&#13;
followed Miss Dean and Gretchen into the library.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
&#13;
Written&#13;
&#13;
January Dora Carlson.&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
It was a commonplace meeting which occurred in the other room, and as they&#13;
were indulging in quiet conversation, the doors suddenly opened and the red face of&#13;
the cook shone forth radiant with anger, as with arms akimbo she surveyed the group.&#13;
"I am for to be tellin' yez, mum, that I am not for to be workin' vituals for no&#13;
one to eat. They be now very nigh cold, lady, and the supper all gone to ruin."&#13;
Both young men rose involuntarily at the sight of the cook and remained staring at&#13;
her astonished.&#13;
"Great Guns, Molly, how did you ever get to this part of the world?"&#13;
"If that don't be Sid Brownwell. The world's comin' to an end. It be mighty&#13;
queer if I can't be holdin' a respectable position without the likeness of some prancin'&#13;
young men a followin' me. And there's Ned Brownwell, too; the very same min I do&#13;
be wantin' to get away from."&#13;
The cook was obliged to stop for breath.&#13;
"But Molly, Boys, what is the matter?"&#13;
"A school-boy prank, I warrant. How disgusting. I should think that men out&#13;
of their 'teens would have some comprehension of what is right," frowned Kathleen.&#13;
"How jolly, now you are in for it my good fellows!" laughed Gretchen.&#13;
Clearly, the cook was angry. She stood in the door for a few minutes glaring at&#13;
the young men and then turned on her heel and marched away.&#13;
The boys looked at each other and laughed; Gretchen giggled; Kathleen was&#13;
sarcastically scornful while Miss Dean was perfectly bewildered. Finally, gathering&#13;
her wits, she suggested that they go to dinner. The well cooked and tasty dinner was&#13;
served by Sally Ann. All was proceeding very nicely when the cook again entered&#13;
upon the scene.&#13;
&#13;
"If it do please yez or not, lady, I'm fer lavin' this place immediately."&#13;
&#13;
Gretchen rose hastily and waylaid the cook at the backdoor. Here she begged&#13;
and offered all manner of bribes, but she could not persuade the cook to remain.&#13;
"All the Spirits there's ever been will be dwellin' in this house before those 'gimmen' have 'been here twenty-four hours," was her fina l blessing for the Dormitory.&#13;
That evening the boys, pleading an engagement, ravaged the country far and near&#13;
for a cook. Finally, running out of gasoline, they stopped at a small country store, and&#13;
while waiting they told their story to the clerk, who said he could easily help them out&#13;
of their difficulty. When they had gone out to start the car the proprietor came out with&#13;
a stout Irish woman whom he introduced to the boys as the new cook. They promised&#13;
her a good salary and radiant they started for the Dormitory. Arriving at 10 :00 they&#13;
were about to leave their burden at the rear door, but the cook would not leave the&#13;
machine. Then the boys realized that, after all, they had carried home the same rebellious cook. Seemingly frantic and wringing her hands, she shouted : " I do fear all&#13;
the sperits that ever were chasin' me. They foller me where all I go. You min be the&#13;
cause of it all."&#13;
Certainly the cook was frightened. Cautiously the boys approached her and finally&#13;
promising that they would leave the Hall that evening and trouble her no more, with&#13;
bribes of money and pleading for the girls' Xmas dinner, the cook promised to remain.&#13;
During a jolly hour spent in the library Sid Brownwell confided to Gretchen the&#13;
story of the cook. "So now you see, Gretchen, we must not be visible to the mistress of&#13;
the utensil domain."&#13;
"But what makes her so angry with you? Where have you seen her before? Do&#13;
tell. ..&#13;
"Just a foolish prank played upon her."&#13;
"Miss Dean," said Gretchen, "do make your nephews tell us the cause of the cook&#13;
having to leave."&#13;
"Yes, boys, I wish you would explain. I thought to let you off without an account&#13;
of yourselves, but you seem to have been up to mischief. Where have you seen her&#13;
before?"&#13;
"Oh," said Ned, "perhaps she has gotten us mixed up with some boy friends of&#13;
her's. I'm sure I can hardly account for it otherwise. Can you Sid?"&#13;
Their attention was now called to the snow and plans were made for a sleigh ride&#13;
the next morning. "It will be jollier I am sure than auto riding, hunting for a cook,"&#13;
laughed Gretchen.&#13;
CHAPTER III&#13;
&#13;
Dismayed and protesting Miss Dean urged Molly to remain, but all in vain.&#13;
&#13;
Written February by Florence Montgom ery.&#13;
&#13;
"I do not be for stayin' in a place where those "gimmen," as they be called, visit.&#13;
They will not be fer livin' in this house long if they kape their former conduct." She&#13;
soared grandly and turned and left the group.&#13;
&#13;
Having reached the sleeping apartment assigned to them by Miss Dean, the boys&#13;
entered into a heated, tho' rather subdued discussion, not knowing in how close proximity&#13;
the sharp ears of the cook might be, and rememb,ering that they were to be minus&#13;
&#13;
110&#13;
&#13;
111&#13;
&#13;
quantities to the ears as well as to the eyes of the cook if they were to be saved from&#13;
starvation.&#13;
"Well of all things, to get into this mess, just when we thought we had reached a&#13;
place where we could rest our shattered nerves for a week or two. How in the&#13;
dickens, Ted, do you suppose that critter got into this part of the country? I never&#13;
expected to lay eyes on her again after that night she left the Frat house."&#13;
"Maybe she heard we were coming and thought she'd like to see us again, you&#13;
especially, for I think she loves you more than she does me. I don't know how else to&#13;
explain it," and Ted, recalling the event that had sent away the raging cook, was unable&#13;
to hold in any longer and rolled on the bed in hysterics, which not even Ned's broad&#13;
hands clapped down rather violently over his mouth, could entirely suppress.&#13;
"Man, are you crazy?" exclaimed Ned wrathfully. ''I'll bet that cook is packing&#13;
her things now, preparatory to leaving. If we get turned out of here, we've no place to&#13;
go. I wish that they had left the remodeling of the Frat house until next month and&#13;
then it would not matter so much. But, as it is, we can't go home. We wouldn't any&#13;
more than get there before we'd have to start back, so, as I see it, we've got to make the&#13;
best of it and stick it out here."&#13;
"Well, I'll tell you." Ted spoke up after a brief silence of thoughtful considering. "We can't expect to keep out of the way of that cook all the time we're here.&#13;
That would be impossible and if we don't keep out of her way, we won't be here, that's&#13;
all. Then there won't be any Xmas dinner here, or any other for that matter, for it&#13;
seems that the art of Domestic Science has not yet made its debut into this boarding&#13;
school. Would that it had. It could save the situation and us, too, alright. Well, as&#13;
I was saying, about the only thing left for us to do is to win her good graces again, ·&#13;
and mighty sudden, too. But, by George, how are we going to do it? That gets me."&#13;
"That's the question, how can we do it? We got out of her graces so far the other&#13;
time that it will be pretty hard sledding to get into the right traces again. Whatever you&#13;
do, don't you dare let it out why she is angry at us, or our beloved Frat will be disgraced&#13;
forever.&#13;
"Oh, don't worry, kid. Let's retire and dream about it," yawned Fred. "I'm&#13;
sleepy. Whew! Look out here, it's a regular blizzard. Why you can't see a foot away&#13;
for the snow and the wind's blowing forty miles an hour. Hear the windows rattle, will&#13;
you? No sleigh ride for tomorrow."&#13;
A groan from Ned interrupted him. "Well, I see my finish if we have to stay&#13;
cooped up here all day tomorrow. I'll die off. It's bad enough to be "Butt-in-Skies"&#13;
as they very plainly made us understand"-"Aw, g'wan, that pretty one is a p--."&#13;
&#13;
creased very many degrees during the short time of our unfortunate association."&#13;
with a disgusted shrug, Ned lapsed into silence.&#13;
&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, never mind, we'll have time to begin our maneuvering right away anyhow.&#13;
Good night, old man, and think hard."&#13;
But a grunt from Ned very plainly showed that he was already past the stage of&#13;
hard thinking.&#13;
For Ted, however, sleep was not forthcoming. For the idea had suddenly flashed&#13;
upon him that getting into the cook's good graces might mean favorable approval from&#13;
two blue eyes, mischievious, dancing ones, that sparkled when the owner smiled at you,&#13;
and when the owner smiled there were two dimples that simply had to show themselves,&#13;
yes, and her name was Gretchen, too. Why was it he had always liked that name so&#13;
well. Oh, yes, he remembered now-he had read about her in a fairy tale and she was&#13;
a beautiful princess and Ted's thoughts wandered on and on until he was dreaming he&#13;
was a noble prince when a shout, very much like the voice of Molly, the cook, came to&#13;
his ears. However, with a sigh of relief he noted the alarm rather than anger prevalent&#13;
in the tone. He sat up and listened. He heard someone hurry downstairs and then&#13;
the anxious voice of Miss Dean and the louder, alarmed tones of Molly. Then a call&#13;
to the girls and a hasty scurrying past the door and down the stairs to the kitchen where&#13;
the anxious conference continued and rather violent knocks and rushing about were taking&#13;
place. He jumped out of bed and into his clothes, but he dared not go down. So he&#13;
opened the door a little and listened.&#13;
floor.&#13;
&#13;
"Well, girls, we've got to get help quickly. The water is simply flooding the&#13;
Whatever do you suppose made the pipe burst?"&#13;
&#13;
"Well, we all do be going to be drowned in a minute. As fer meself, I don't&#13;
see where help do be comin' from on sech a night like this. Thim young 'gimmens' has&#13;
went an' I do be doubtin' if they could do nothin' to help us, anyway. Th're that&#13;
empty headed they don't know nothin'. Yet I'd be willin' to let thim stare and give them&#13;
a big Xmas dinner if they could help." said Molly between violent swishes and wringing&#13;
out of the mop.&#13;
"Oh, Molly, if we could find the boys, couldn't we bring them to help us? I&#13;
know they could," and without waiting for an answer Gretchen bounded up the stairs.&#13;
Ned quietly closed the door and hastily retreated backwards. In answer to the&#13;
tap on the door Ted responded, "Yes, is there anything the matter?"&#13;
"Oh yes, we are in a terrible fix. One of the water pipes in the kitchen broke and&#13;
is just simply flooding everything and Miss Dean wants to know if you and T - . I mean&#13;
you bo- or young gentlemen would help us out. Oh"- "W e certainly will.&#13;
&#13;
We'll be right down in just a minute."&#13;
&#13;
"Well, anyway, that younger one did. Did you notice the way she scowled?&#13;
She's a regular clam, she won't even open her mouth and now we've got them into a&#13;
fix, destroyed all their blissful happiness, got their cook ready to leave them, disgraced&#13;
ourselves, and muddled things up generally. I'll bet their good opinion of us has in-&#13;
&#13;
"Wake up there, old fellow, our chance has come. We'll show them what we're&#13;
made of," called Ted as he jerked the expostulating sleeper out onto the floor and pro-&#13;
&#13;
112&#13;
&#13;
11 3&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, please, and do hurry," and she was gone.&#13;
&#13;
ceeded to explain the situation. "Now's our chance and we've got to make good." But&#13;
he muttered to himself, "I'll be jiggered if either of us know anything about stopping up&#13;
a hole in a pipe that doesn't belong there."&#13;
&#13;
CHAPTER IV.&#13;
&#13;
Written by Laura Cushman-March.&#13;
Molly was too excited in moping up the water to be surprised when the boys came&#13;
into the kitchen, but promptly bade them to "Stop the water, will yez?" Ted immediately walked gingerly through the water to where Gretchen stood in high rubbers and&#13;
a pink kimona, holding her small hand over the crack in the pipe. "I guess that I am not&#13;
doing any good," she said as she looked up, but Ted only thought how bewitching she&#13;
was with her hair tied back that way. Just then Ned said, "Here's a wrench Sally Ann .&#13;
found ."&#13;
Between them they managed to loosen the pipe at the joint and after inserting a&#13;
plug they stood back triumphantly.&#13;
"I don't see how yez can be gettin' any water from there," said Molly, stooping&#13;
down to look at the pipe. Just then the power of the water loosened the plug. It flew&#13;
out in Molly's face and deluged her with water. "Begorra, and yez done thet on&#13;
poipose. It was shust what Oi might have 'spected from the loikes in yez," and she&#13;
made a wild rush after the boys with the wet mop, while they dashed into the first open&#13;
door, and nearly fell down the basement stairs. They could hear the shrieks and laughter of the girls and could make out that Miss Dean was expostulating with Molly. Ned ·&#13;
was furious and raging at the utter hopelessness of fate, when Ted whispered: "Gee! Of&#13;
all the luck. Here's the gas meter. Why didn't we think of it before? We're a&#13;
couple of blockheads!" He jerked the crank around.&#13;
"I don't see where that's going to help any," grumbled Ned.&#13;
"Wait and see," suggested Ted.&#13;
They were silent a moment then New exclaimed: "Don't you remember how she&#13;
likes to hear Irish songs?" and without further ceremonies the strains of "Oh, Paddy&#13;
Dear, and Did You Hear the News That's Going Round" floated into the kitchen, interrupting Molly's tirade against "Raison-Boardin' School-Busted water pipes and&#13;
"haythen" college boys."&#13;
&#13;
"You bet we will!" and two rather anxious faces appeared at the door. "We've&#13;
turned the water off in the basement and"-"Shure now, ay me bones, the water is stopped," exclaimed Molly.&#13;
"Yes, and you remember, Molly, you said if the boys were only here and could&#13;
stop the water and fix the pipe you would be awillin' to give them a big Xmas dinner,"&#13;
said Kathleen; and Miss Dean added, "I think we'll let the boys clean up the water&#13;
and we will retire."&#13;
Molly at last reluctantly gave in, giving as a parting warning: "Faith and I do be&#13;
still belavin' they'll be bringin' yez more throuble."&#13;
The next day dawned clear and cold. A plumber fixed matters in the kitchen and&#13;
preparations were begun in earnest for a good Xmas feast. Songs and gay laughter&#13;
made the day a happy one and the week that followed was one long to be remembered.&#13;
Even Molly caught the spirit of Xmas and said: "Faith and I belave as me ould&#13;
mistress used to say, 'There's so mich good in the bist iv us and so mich bad in the woist&#13;
iv us thet the bist in us have no business talkin' about the woist in us'."&#13;
(End.)&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dean looked at the girls and smiled and they all looked at Molly, who stood&#13;
listening in amazement; then dropped into a chair and began to weep.&#13;
"Oh, me! Moi dear ould wearin' of the Green.&#13;
was sung at me Pat's funeral."&#13;
&#13;
Faith 'twas that very song as&#13;
&#13;
MAC &amp; CUSH&#13;
&#13;
Impulsive Kathleen put her arms around the Irish cook's bent shoulders and said:&#13;
''They are singing it for you, Molly. Now you will let them stay, won't you? They'll&#13;
be very good I know,"&#13;
"Yes, do," added Gretchen.&#13;
&#13;
They'll help you lots."&#13;
114&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
TO THE CLASS OF 1911&#13;
The D ean walked slowly down the aisle,&#13;
He did not crack a smile;&#13;
His coat was buttoned up and down&#13;
In good old college style.&#13;
And when the platform he had reached&#13;
He met a goodly show;&#13;
The I 9 I I graduates&#13;
All sitting in a row.&#13;
With faltering step and mournful eye&#13;
He each hand sadly pressed ;&#13;
The scalding tears ran down his cheek,&#13;
As them he thus addressed :&#13;
" In retrospect but sorrow is,&#13;
But sorrow now I see,&#13;
And to your futures' black abyss&#13;
But sorrow beckons me.&#13;
"No joy I know, but in despair&#13;
I hope but that I may&#13;
In what of life remains to bear&#13;
Endure no darker day."&#13;
"Oh, had gaunt D eath the mortal line,&#13;
For my poor corps transcended;&#13;
I'd gladly clasp his hand in mine,&#13;
Had he me so befriended."&#13;
&#13;
116&#13;
&#13;
117&#13;
&#13;
CLASS PROPHECY&#13;
GRATITUDE&#13;
By Edna L. Harris.&#13;
One day, among the shadows and the gloom,&#13;
Strong Help and sorrowing Need, met, face to face;&#13;
Then bending there with kingly mein and look,&#13;
Strong Help glanced down and said with proffered hand:&#13;
"What service may I render you today?"&#13;
Sad Need, to whom the days and nights had been&#13;
One long, unending time of deep despair,&#13;
Once more took hope and with an upward glance,&#13;
Poured out her soul, her dire distress and fear,&#13;
Thus weeping, sought for sympathy and aid.&#13;
Strong Help, whose soul was wont in pain to turn,&#13;
When e'er in sorrow human-kind be found,&#13;
Spoke kindly words of hope, of faith and cheer,&#13;
And bade her trust in Him who rules above,&#13;
Whose ear to needy man doth 'er incline:&#13;
&#13;
LONDON, ENG., May 22, 1922.&#13;
&#13;
My Dear Alice:Evening in London and I am alone with my thoughts. Such a foggy old day as&#13;
this has been. I have been homesick all day, but tomorrow our aeroplane leaves for&#13;
America-maybe you think that little old New York town won't look good to me. Two&#13;
years abroad among strange peoples, hearing new tongues and seeing foreign sights makes&#13;
the thoughts of home doubly precious. Such a trip as we have had! New York to&#13;
'Frisco by train, then Japan, China and the Philippines by water, the Continent by rail,&#13;
auto and aeroplane. I tell you it has been a splendid trip and Jess has made such a&#13;
success, I am so proud of him. He sang before the Emperor of Japan, the Czar of&#13;
Russia and the Royal Houses of Germany and England.&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
But after all, there are no fri ends like our old friends and no homage like their&#13;
praise and we are coming home to Iowa-to Sioux City and to Morningside. Jess has&#13;
a position in the Scenic theater. Your letter has made us homesick for Morningside and&#13;
we are both of us longing to get back to the old school, though I suppose that we would&#13;
hardly recognize it now with a new gymnasium, Science hall, library, and the dormitories.&#13;
Morningside University ! And Fred Elwick, dear old "Judge" is president. What&#13;
a change ten years does make. And so Johnny Fair bought out the Morningside barber&#13;
shop and got married, good for John !&#13;
&#13;
Sad Need, once more felt hope renewed within,&#13;
Felt life take on, again, a rosy hueThe clouds dispelled, the sun shone full and clear,&#13;
And thus revived, with glad and lightened heart,&#13;
Need longed to show the gratitude she felt.&#13;
&#13;
You would certainly be surprised at the number of nineteen-twelve people we have&#13;
come across in these past few years. The Gillins, Maude and Madge, you know- have&#13;
a fashionable hair-dressing establishment in New York City and are doing fine. Nellie&#13;
Fletcher is at the head of a girls' school in Philadelphia-yes, still Miss Fletcher. She is&#13;
certainly a credit to the old class and is recognized as one of the most prominent German&#13;
educators in the country. Wilhelmina Anderson is still on the platform talking Women's&#13;
Suffrage. I have not seen her for years, but I have kept track of her through the papers.&#13;
&#13;
Her thought with that one passion seemed to burn,&#13;
Sweet gratitude, her hungry soul possessed;&#13;
She longed some kindly office to perform&#13;
For Him, who thought of her extremity,&#13;
And, gracious, bent to listen to her words.&#13;
&#13;
On our way to 'Frisco we changed cars at Chicago and when a few miles out of&#13;
the city, the news agent came through the train selling postcards. His voice sounded&#13;
familiar and as he came nearer I recognized Bob Smylie. Can you imagine Bob as a&#13;
news agent? He was always so quiet and studious we thought sure he would be a Latin&#13;
professor or a minister. Bob is married now and lives in Kankakee.&#13;
&#13;
But naught appeared to her that she might doBut bow to her Eternal Lord, low at his feet,&#13;
In earnest words, breathe for that righteous one,&#13;
A prayer, that should remain, if God so willed,&#13;
Throughout the length of Everlasting-Day.&#13;
&#13;
118&#13;
&#13;
In San Francisco we called upon Rev. Paul Corner, D. D. Paul has a large&#13;
church in the heart of the business district and is very successful in his chosen field. He&#13;
has a dandy little wife-an Iowa girl. As our boat did not leave for a few days we&#13;
spent the time in looking over the city. It was while we were making a visit to the&#13;
Catalina Islands that we came across a couple of old friends-Florence Anthony and&#13;
Louise McDonald. Florence has been divorced f rom her Count and has taken her&#13;
maiden name. The Count made away with her entire fortune, leaving her upon her&#13;
own resources. They. own a little curio shop. Louise paints on sea-shells which th.e y&#13;
11 9&#13;
&#13;
sell as souvenirs. They seemed mighty glad to see us and told us that some day they&#13;
are coming back to Sioux City and make their home there.&#13;
Yokohama was the first point on our tour. We stayed but a short time in Japan&#13;
as the Japs are not very friendly since the spanking we gave them back in 1914. Jess&#13;
was received at the Royal Palace, however, and sang before the Emperor, who was&#13;
much pleased. On our way to China we came across another old friend. We were&#13;
lounging on deck one afternoon when we were accosted by a sanctimonious looking&#13;
individual in a long black coat-he called us by name and you can imagine our surprise when we recognized William Wing Bass. He told us that the Marcus Epworth&#13;
League was sending him to China as a missionary. He left the boat at the first port and&#13;
our visit was very brief. We did not stop in China as the plague was infesting the&#13;
country.&#13;
Manila was our next point and it was on our way there that an event of interest&#13;
happened. A number of men were engaged in a game of cards, when an officer broke&#13;
up the game and arrested one of the players. He said the man was "Slippery Rogers,"&#13;
the professional card shark, wanted by the police of half a dozen countries. Jess joined&#13;
in the crowd which surrounded the men and recognized Fredrick Benton Rogers. Poor&#13;
Fred, he was a victim of his college environments. His beginning was at Somerset over at&#13;
Cobbs! Never would study, you know, always flunked in everything. He was given&#13;
five years in the Federal prison at Manila.&#13;
In Manila we visited the Department of Education and there learned that Hazel&#13;
Siman, John Lewis and Ethel Shannon were teaching school in the interior. Seth Elliot,&#13;
that veteran of many a football season, has followed up his favorite sport and is now&#13;
football coach in the Manila High School.&#13;
Our voyage to Europe was a long one and one long to be remembered. Beautiful&#13;
nights under the tropic stars, and days when we lounged on deck, reading and sleeping,&#13;
made the voyage a pleasant one. It was one of these days when we were looking&#13;
through the ship's library that I found Clara Crummer' s latest book, "A Broken Heart,&#13;
or She Loved Another." It is a splendid book-she certainly has a future before her in&#13;
the field of letters if she only stays single.&#13;
In Rome we met Blanche Carter, August Shatz, Ernest Wickens, Waiter Ellison,&#13;
Charles Frear and Gladys Tuttle. They, with many other American educators, had&#13;
taken advantage of the offer made by the Ladies' Home Journal for good work in canvassing and were now doing research work in Italy. We had a Morningside reunion and&#13;
I am sure you would have been glad to see us do the barn-dance to the tune of "Morningside" on the top of Mar's Hill.&#13;
In Paris there was a bunch of letters awaiting me and among others there was one&#13;
from Myrtle Siefert. She is living on a farm now near Eagle Grove; she says that it is&#13;
the only life. In the Latin quarters we found Rachel Cook and Cecil Palmer. Rachel&#13;
is gathering material for her book "Social Conditions of the American Art Student in&#13;
Paris." Cecil · is studying art and is quite successful, he paints signs on barber shops, restaurants, etc. In the evening Cecil took us to a variety show and you can imagine our sur-&#13;
&#13;
prise when we found that the "headliners" that evening were furnished by American artists&#13;
-and these were Bowker and Dolliver! They were together in Gospel team work you&#13;
know at Morningside and their successes led them into the larger field of Christian Activity. Bowker was the comedian and entertained the people with songs, monologues, etc.,&#13;
while Barrett, in pink tights and bangles, did stunts on the tight wire. They seemed&#13;
real glad to see us and we had a jolly supper and talk after the program.&#13;
In St. Petersburg Jess sang before the Czar and a few invited guests- mostly foreign&#13;
ambassadors and their families. Jess always ends his program by singing that song so&#13;
dear to the hearts of all Morningsiders-"Every Little Movement." While he was&#13;
singing this I noticed a lady in the audience who seemed strangely moved. At the close&#13;
of the program she rushed up front and to our surprise and delight we recognized Marguerite Shreiner, now the Countess Zoakmeintheneckski, and a leader of Royal Society.&#13;
To outsiders she was a grand lady, but to us she was the dear little Marguerite of old&#13;
whom we supposed was tending the ducks and chickens in Nebraska. What changes a&#13;
few years will make. You may be sure that our stay in St. Petersburg was a pleasant&#13;
one.&#13;
Berlin was the next city we visited and here we found our friend Jimmie Lewis.&#13;
The Rt. Hon. James Lewis, you know, is our present ambassador to Germany, and I dare&#13;
say he could tell us more about the Houses of Hapsburg and Hohenzollern than F. Harmon Garver ever knew. Of course the music quarter of Berlin was what interested us&#13;
most. Here we found Marie Weise, Helen Olmstead and Roscoe Carter. Marie . is&#13;
studying the violin, together with her fiance, a young nobleman of Italy. Helen is still&#13;
unattached and she is studying voice with a view of taking up the moving picture business.&#13;
Roscoe has developed a deep bass voice and, in his debut as the "Bandit Chief," in&#13;
a German Opera, he was the sensation of musical Europe. He has signed with Hammerstein for the coming season.&#13;
In Edinburgh we called to see Edna Reike, who now holds the chair in Semitic&#13;
languages, but she was not in at the time and as our stay was short we had to leave without seeing her. We have been in London now for nearly a month and I am sure tired&#13;
of the place. We have visited all of the places of interest and have been treated splendidly while here. Prof. MacF arren, now head of the Royal Academy, has shown us&#13;
every courtesy and as his word is law in musical London you may be sure that we have&#13;
profited by our visit.&#13;
Oh, yes! I almost forgol to tell you one of the biggest surprises of the trip. Only&#13;
last week we attended the great revival meetings which were being held by the "Great&#13;
American Trio," Mahoney, Luge and Hackett. Pam and Noel were always so chummy&#13;
in college, you know, and now are joined together in their life work. Bessie Luge has&#13;
been with them for some time and she is now a full fledged singing evangelist. They&#13;
are doing a great work in the Vineyard.&#13;
Well, Dearie, it is 10 o'clock and Jess will soon be home from his last concert and&#13;
I must close. Tomorrow morning we leave for New York and tomorrow night will find&#13;
us safe in the Waldorf. Good by Dearie.&#13;
Love to you all,&#13;
&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
121&#13;
&#13;
LOLA.&#13;
&#13;
REBUFF&#13;
With trim toilette and crushing smile,&#13;
He went to make a date;&#13;
His mind was musing all the while&#13;
On his prospective mate.&#13;
He climbed the steps and rang the bell ;&#13;
She met him at the doorThe rest I hesitate to tell,&#13;
For her action I deplore.&#13;
He hastily retraced his tracks;&#13;
His gayety was marred,&#13;
For "where the chicken got the ax,"&#13;
He got it good and hard.&#13;
He went to her to get a date;&#13;
He got it without check;&#13;
From her, his sweet prospective mate,&#13;
He "got it in the neck!"&#13;
&#13;
12 2&#13;
&#13;
123&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
CABINET&#13;
CABINET&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
]ENNIE&#13;
&#13;
B.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
NELSON&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
MARGUERITE SHREINER&#13;
Alice&#13;
&#13;
T ALMA&#13;
&#13;
McCuRRY&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees.&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
]AMES LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
WALT ER ELLISON&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
BRIGGS&#13;
&#13;
FRED HEIMBAUGH&#13;
&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees.&#13;
&#13;
Laura Cushman, Membership&#13;
&#13;
Edith Eicher, Bible Study&#13;
&#13;
Ed Bachemeyer, New Student Work&#13;
&#13;
Wm. McCurdy, Bible Study&#13;
&#13;
Francis Horne, Social&#13;
&#13;
Ida Brown, Mission Study&#13;
&#13;
Oscar Hall, Personal Work&#13;
&#13;
Roy Garlock, Membership&#13;
&#13;
Catherine Elliott, Intercollegiate&#13;
&#13;
Mabel McCreery, Devotional&#13;
&#13;
Willard Bowker, Extension&#13;
Allen Lemon, Mission Study&#13;
Howard Berkstresser, Social&#13;
&#13;
T alma Kitchen, Finance&#13;
&#13;
124&#13;
&#13;
125&#13;
&#13;
VOLUNTEER BAND&#13;
MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ETTA MAHOOD .&#13;
NINA&#13;
&#13;
FARNHAM&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
OSCAR&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
E. F. LOVETT&#13;
&#13;
At a summer conference, held at Mt. Hermon, Mass., in 1878, a movement was&#13;
started to enlist college men and women for Christian work in foreign countries. This&#13;
movement has spread until today its members are to be found in almost every part of the&#13;
world. To awaken a greater interest and more fully prepare themselves for their life&#13;
work the members in each college are organized into a Student Volunteer Band.&#13;
The Band at Morningside was started in 1902, with Fred Trimble, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Carson of China, and Mr. and Mrs. Taylor of Korea as charter members.&#13;
The other members of the band who are now engaged in active service are Frank&#13;
Hartzell in South America, and Estie Boddy, Ida Lewis and Stanley Collins in China.&#13;
&#13;
"The world for Christ in this generation."&#13;
&#13;
12 6&#13;
&#13;
w.&#13;
&#13;
BREAW .&#13;
&#13;
The Ministerial Association is an organization which calls together all men who&#13;
are in definite Christian work, or those who have a desire to go into definite Christian&#13;
work as ministers. The object and aim of the organization is to bring the men into&#13;
closer touch, one with another, and to bring mutual help and encouragement to all.&#13;
The importance of such an organization cannot be overestimated. The world of&#13;
today demands the best that is in the strongest and broadest men to be a leader as a&#13;
minister, and in the weekly meetings of the local organization, the difficulties and problems&#13;
in the work are brought out.&#13;
A definite program is followed, very often having such men as Dr. Chipperfield,&#13;
Dean Chandler, and Dr. Wasser to give practical talks along practical lines, which&#13;
prove very interesting as well as instructive.&#13;
127&#13;
&#13;
Collegian Reporter&#13;
&#13;
......&#13;
&#13;
..,.,....&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
BAND&#13;
The College Band is one of the important organizations of the college.&#13;
it is well balanced and contains about fifteen pieces.&#13;
&#13;
At present&#13;
&#13;
Although they have made no public&#13;
&#13;
appearances this year they are making remarkable progress under the able leadership of&#13;
Prof. McF arren and the management of A. B. Peden, and will count materially in the&#13;
winning of the spring track meets.&#13;
&#13;
The fact that much new and inexperienced material&#13;
&#13;
enters the band every fall makes it somewhat hard to get organized until late, but the&#13;
loyalty and interest of the younger members of the college and academy give to the&#13;
management good prospects of a bright future.&#13;
&#13;
S. AB.&#13;
&#13;
128&#13;
&#13;
1 29&#13;
&#13;
PROHIBITION ASSOCIATION&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
D. P.&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
MAHONEY&#13;
&#13;
Vice President&#13;
&#13;
JOHN LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
ALLEN L E MON&#13;
&#13;
The Prohibition Association is a non-partisan organization which has for its object&#13;
the study of the prohibition question from a socialogical standpoint.&#13;
college pertaining to the liquor problem is under this organization.&#13;
&#13;
A ll work of the&#13;
T he officers of the&#13;
&#13;
association are elected annually from the membership, and consist of a president, vice&#13;
president and secretary-treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
The association is also a member of the State Oratorical&#13;
&#13;
Association, and each year sends a representative to compete in the State Prohibition Oratorical contest.&#13;
&#13;
GLEE CLUB&#13;
&#13;
for second.&#13;
&#13;
Attempts have been made several times in years past to organize a Glee Club, but&#13;
interest seemed to be lacking.&#13;
&#13;
Never, since the club under Professor Barbour, has&#13;
&#13;
Morningside had a club that has hung together long enough to give a concert.&#13;
&#13;
This year&#13;
&#13;
Professor 0. A. Morse came to head the conservatory and seeing the need, undertook the&#13;
&#13;
The prizes given in this state contest are $ 7 5 for first place and $5 5&#13;
&#13;
In preparation for this event a local contest is held in F ebruary, open to all&#13;
&#13;
members of the college.&#13;
state contest.&#13;
&#13;
The winner of the local contest represents Morningside in this&#13;
&#13;
Two prizes of $25 .00 and $15.00 are offered each year by Mr. Erwin&#13;
&#13;
Dewey of Sergeant Bluffs as first and second prizes in the local contest.&#13;
Morningside joined the State Oratorical Association in 1890.&#13;
&#13;
In 1897 G. W.&#13;
&#13;
He succeeded in gathering together sixteen men, and by&#13;
&#13;
Finch took first place in the state contest, first in the interstate and third in the national.&#13;
&#13;
constant drill a nd his untiring energy, has made an organization that can do credit to&#13;
&#13;
In 1908 Morningside took second in the state contest and duplicated the trick again in&#13;
1909. In 19 10 we took first place, our orator being Frank Johnson. Thus, in the last&#13;
&#13;
task of organizing a Glee Club.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside.&#13;
It is to be hoped that next year will see a stronger club under the same leadership,&#13;
&#13;
three years, we have taken two seconds and one first.&#13;
&#13;
as there will be fourteen old men still in school.&#13;
&#13;
any other college in the state and one of which the students of Morningside can well&#13;
be proud.&#13;
&#13;
PRES.&#13;
&#13;
130&#13;
&#13;
131&#13;
&#13;
This is a record not equaled by&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION&#13;
THE DEBATING LEAGUE&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
L EWIS&#13;
&#13;
OFFICER S&#13;
&#13;
Secretary-Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
BARRETT DOLLIVER&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside Oratorical Association, with a membership of fifty-two, is one of&#13;
the strongest student organizations of the school.&#13;
&#13;
There is no branch of Inter-Collegiate&#13;
&#13;
F. G. ELWIC K .&#13;
H. H. HUDSON&#13;
&#13;
Secretary&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
activity, with the exception of athletics, which is given the support accorded to oratory.&#13;
The greatest of interest is manifested in the home contest, so much in fact that all of&#13;
those desiring to enter cannot deliver their speeches.&#13;
&#13;
The coming year a new plan will be&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside College Debating League is an organization with complete&#13;
charge of all inter-society and inter-collegiate debates.&#13;
&#13;
D espite its short period of opera-&#13;
&#13;
tried ; each society will hold a home contest in their halls and select two men to repre-&#13;
&#13;
tion the league has in every way fulfilled the purpose of its creation.&#13;
&#13;
sent them in the final Alumni prize contest, the winner of this to represent the college in&#13;
&#13;
precision which have characterized its work since its formation a year ago have shown it&#13;
&#13;
the state contest.&#13;
&#13;
An entering freshman cannot long remain ignorant of the fact that&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has a record in oratory which is unsurpassed by any college in the state.&#13;
There are seventeen colleges in the state association, each college submits an oration:&#13;
From this number the eight best orations are chosen for delivery.&#13;
failed to place among the eight.&#13;
and second place three times.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside has never&#13;
&#13;
In the past four years we have won first place once&#13;
&#13;
A repeated reference to this splendid standing is justified in&#13;
&#13;
that it is an effective stimulus toward bringing each new effort up to standard.&#13;
&#13;
This year&#13;
&#13;
marks an epoch in the history of the local association in that we will enter, aside from&#13;
&#13;
The despatch and&#13;
&#13;
a most efficient method of supervising the debating affairs of the college, and hence a&#13;
welcome change from the unsatisfactory system of inter-society committees.&#13;
The composition of the league is an important element in its success.&#13;
&#13;
The fact that&#13;
&#13;
the twelve members are chosen three from each of the men's collegiate societies and three&#13;
from the faculty assures full representation of all the interests of the school while society&#13;
spirit is reduced to a minimum.&#13;
&#13;
Officers are elected annually and its deliberations are&#13;
&#13;
governed by a constitution and by-laws.&#13;
The unusually active interest in debate at Morningside as evidenced by the debate&#13;
&#13;
the regular contest, the Inter-Collegiate Peace contest and also that we entertain the&#13;
&#13;
series within the societies, the triangular inter-society contests, and her high record in inter-&#13;
&#13;
annual Inter-State contest, an organization made up of all the leading colleges of twelve&#13;
&#13;
collegiate debate, have unquestionably found a valuable aid in the D ebating League as&#13;
&#13;
states of the great middle-west.&#13;
&#13;
a central organization in control of this important college activity.&#13;
&#13;
This contest is by far the biggest oratorical event of the&#13;
&#13;
United States. Such men as Bryan, Beveridge and La Follette are numbered among those&#13;
who have spoken on this contest in years past.&#13;
&#13;
l 32&#13;
&#13;
133&#13;
&#13;
FAIRVIEW CLUB&#13;
Stag Meeting, Friday, J anuary 2 3, 19 11.&#13;
Called to Order by Hon. J. Andrew Fair.&#13;
ROLL CALL&#13;
Hon. J. Andrew F air -H ere- all but six.&#13;
Geo. E. W est- Just a minute, until I get this key in the door&#13;
Arthur H. P eden- Gee / I'm tired of the walk!&#13;
Quarny Quarnstrom-Say! She's a dream.&#13;
Wm. D. Farnham- What's the lesson ?&#13;
Stub "Si" Braley-Some class to her, I say.&#13;
Billard Bowker- Name her. I'll take it if I lose my job.&#13;
F red H. Trimble- D id you get home before IO p. m.&#13;
a fine of two dollars fo r you&#13;
&#13;
KAR KATCHERS&#13;
12: 30 P . M. Division&#13;
{ Isabell W ebb&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner&#13;
Juha Marsch&#13;
Eva Randolph&#13;
Alice Moore&#13;
Mary Kifer&#13;
Louise McDonald&#13;
Gladys Tuttle&#13;
F lorence A nthony&#13;
Ethel Lynch&#13;
Marie Wood&#13;
A lice Anderson&#13;
11 : 30 P. M. Division&#13;
Louis Chandler&#13;
J ames Lewis&#13;
Howard P eden&#13;
W ill Voy&#13;
Charles Cushman&#13;
Lorne Wickens&#13;
Mitchell Briggs&#13;
Earl Warburton&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Trimble-It's your deal, pass the mush.&#13;
Miss Gladys T rimble-"D o it som mo."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
1 34&#13;
&#13;
135&#13;
&#13;
j\&#13;
RESIDENCE M. C . PETERS CAMPUS&#13;
&#13;
136&#13;
&#13;
1 37&#13;
&#13;
TRIANGULAR&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANGULAR&#13;
INTER-COLLEGIATE DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE VS. SIMPSON&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE VS. UPPER IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, Ia, May 6, 191 0.&#13;
&#13;
Fayette, Iowa, May 6, 191 0.&#13;
&#13;
W. W. Waymack&#13;
&#13;
E. C. Warburton&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION.&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION.&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That Congress should&#13;
establish a central bank.&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That Congress should&#13;
establish a central bank.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeMorningside.&#13;
&#13;
AffirmativeUpper Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
NegativeSimpson.&#13;
&#13;
NegativeMorningside.&#13;
&#13;
P.&#13;
&#13;
K. Carson&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION-&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION-&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 1 Negative 2.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative 3.&#13;
]UDGES-&#13;
&#13;
]UDGES -&#13;
&#13;
J. S. Montgomery, Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
&#13;
Hon. 0. F. Holmes, Algona, Iowa.&#13;
Supt. Maus, Cherokee, Iowa.&#13;
Rev. Hamilton, Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Supt., F. T. Oldt, Dubuque, Iowa.&#13;
Dr. Buchanan, Independence, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
138&#13;
&#13;
139&#13;
G. W. Barrett&#13;
&#13;
0. G. Prichard&#13;
&#13;
G. E. Wickens&#13;
&#13;
C. F. Cushman&#13;
&#13;
V. E. Montgomery&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
E. Briggs&#13;
&#13;
OTHONIAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
H. H. Hudson&#13;
&#13;
A. C. Lemon&#13;
&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANGULAR INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANG ULAR INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
November 4, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
November 11 , 191 0.&#13;
&#13;
Q UESTION:&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That the P arliamentary form of government is better&#13;
&#13;
adapted to the need s of a progressive and democratic nation than the Presidential form.&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
&#13;
Othonian 3.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. Farnham&#13;
&#13;
Q UEST ION:&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION:&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
A. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
IONIAN TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
140&#13;
&#13;
H. A . Shoemake r&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, T hat the establishment of a non-partisan tariff commission&#13;
&#13;
empowered to regulate the tariff schedules of the federal government would be desirable.&#13;
Philomathean 2, Ionian 1.&#13;
&#13;
R. C. Carter&#13;
&#13;
B. P. Dolliver&#13;
IONIAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
J. H. Lewis&#13;
&#13;
F. G. Elwick&#13;
&#13;
D. P. Mahoney&#13;
OTHONIAN&#13;
&#13;
F. H. Chandler&#13;
&#13;
TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
TRIANGULAR INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
Frank P. J ohn son&#13;
&#13;
November 18, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
HOME ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
QUESTION: Resolved, That a constitutional convention should be called for the&#13;
&#13;
December 3, 191 0.&#13;
Frank P. Johnson&#13;
Charles F. Cushman&#13;
David Loepp&#13;
Melvin J. Muckey&#13;
G lenn A Phelps&#13;
A. H. Brunelle&#13;
&#13;
The Majesty of Peace, First&#13;
The Lethargy of the Cities, Second&#13;
Liberty ; Its Three D imensions, Third&#13;
The Eloquence of Patrick H enry&#13;
America's Mission&#13;
The Prevention of Crime&#13;
&#13;
purpose of revising the federal constitution.&#13;
D ECISION: Othonian 2, Philomathean 1.&#13;
&#13;
STATE ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Toledo, Iowa, M arch 3, 1911.&#13;
&#13;
N. L. Hacke tt&#13;
&#13;
R. H. McVicker&#13;
PHILOMATHEAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
D . F. Loepp&#13;
&#13;
]. G. Emerson, Ames&#13;
America and Peace in the O rient, First&#13;
Frank P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
The Majesty of P eace, . Second&#13;
H. F. Dickensheets, Leander C lark&#13;
The Master Force of Progress, Third&#13;
H. F. Champlin, Simpson&#13;
The Aristocracy of Achievement&#13;
L. M . Stunkard, Coe&#13;
John Hay, P eacemaker&#13;
H. P eckham, Penn.&#13;
Curse of Armament&#13;
Wishard, Iowa Wesleyan&#13;
Garibaldi&#13;
Roy E. Curray, P arsons&#13;
Future of Government&#13;
Schools not on contest: Cornell, Upper Iowa, Central Holiness, Buena Vista,&#13;
Tabor, Des Moines, Lenox.&#13;
143&#13;
&#13;
Frank P&#13;
&#13;
Wm. A. McCurdy&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
STATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Morningside, Iowa, April 8, 1910.&#13;
Young Men of Today-Their Mission, First&#13;
The Ultimate Triumph of a Principle&#13;
The Bar of Justice&#13;
Life by Death&#13;
Am I My Borthers' Keeper?&#13;
The Liquor Fight&#13;
Education-The Solving Principle&#13;
Twentieth Century Conflict&#13;
&#13;
Frank P . Johnson, Morningside&#13;
Geo. F. Tripp, Central Holiness&#13;
M. E . Ausman, Highland Park&#13;
C. T. Gough, Upper Iowa&#13;
Emma Kissick, Penn.&#13;
N. W. Afflerbaugh, Western Union&#13;
C. G. Dudley, Simpson&#13;
H. J . Clark, Des Moines&#13;
&#13;
INTERSTATE PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
Oskaloosa, Iowa, May 18, 191 0.&#13;
Clyde Cordner, Lincoln, Neb.&#13;
Passing of Alcoholism, First&#13;
John Shields, Ottawa, Kas.&#13;
A Plea for United Action, Second&#13;
Frank P. Johnson, Morningside&#13;
Young Men of Today- Their Mission, Third&#13;
A. A. Oldum, U. of Colorado&#13;
March of Prohibition&#13;
C. C. Bredeson, Gustavius Adolphus, Minn.&#13;
Unfinished Task&#13;
]. A. Johnson, Augustana College, S. D.&#13;
*Do&#13;
or Die&#13;
J . M . Price, U. of Texas&#13;
Price of Victory&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
HOME PROHIBITION ORATORICAL CONTEST&#13;
DEWEY PRIZE CONTEST&#13;
&#13;
February 10, 1911.&#13;
Wm. A. McGurdy&#13;
Allan C. Lemon&#13;
John Lewis&#13;
D . L. Wickens&#13;
M ary Kifer&#13;
A 0 . Hukle&#13;
Harry Fowler&#13;
H. L. Johns&#13;
B. P . Dolliver&#13;
&#13;
The Solving Principle, First&#13;
The Macedonian Call, Second&#13;
The Progress of Public Opinion&#13;
Prohibition and Popular Government&#13;
The Yitai Protection&#13;
The Price of Victory&#13;
Virtue&#13;
The National Peril&#13;
The Problem&#13;
JUDGES:&#13;
&#13;
Rev. R. C. Cully&#13;
A. Anderson&#13;
Prin. E . E. Stacey&#13;
R ev. A. H. Meyers&#13;
Justice H. W. Pitkin&#13;
&#13;
145&#13;
&#13;
INTER-ACADEMIC DEBATE&#13;
MORNINGSIDE VS. YANKTON&#13;
Morningside, Iowa, April 30, 191 0 .&#13;
&#13;
Oscar&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
&#13;
M. 0.&#13;
&#13;
Insko&#13;
&#13;
W . C.&#13;
&#13;
Evans&#13;
&#13;
HAWKEYE TEAM-AFFIRMATIVE&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION.&#13;
&#13;
R eso lved, That Congress should&#13;
enact a graduated income tax law&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE&#13;
&#13;
with a provision exempting the first&#13;
A. 0. Hukle&#13;
&#13;
December 9, 1910.&#13;
&#13;
$5,000; constitutionality waived.&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION: Resolved, That the states and nation should pass laws guaranteeing&#13;
bank deposits, constitutionality waived.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative-&#13;
&#13;
D ECISION: Hawkeye 2, Adelphian l .&#13;
&#13;
Y ankton.&#13;
&#13;
NegativeMorningside.&#13;
&#13;
H. P. Morgan&#13;
&#13;
DECISIONAffirmative 3.&#13;
]UDGES-&#13;
&#13;
I. S. Struble, Le Mars, Iowa.&#13;
· M. Freeman&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Barks&#13;
ADELPHlAN TEAM-NEGATIVE&#13;
&#13;
14G&#13;
&#13;
A. C. L oepp&#13;
&#13;
Prof. T reentien, Vermillion, S. D .&#13;
Prof. A . L. Bronson, Hawarden, Ia.&#13;
147&#13;
W. C. Evan s&#13;
&#13;
ZET ALET H EANOTHONIAN&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
ATHENEUMPHILOMA T HEAN&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
CLAIRE .JUDE WESTCOTT&#13;
&#13;
PIERIAIONIAN&#13;
HALL&#13;
&#13;
THE FIELD HOUSE&#13;
By John W. H ollister.&#13;
This is an age of limited time and specialization. C ollege athletics in the last twenty&#13;
years in the East and more particularly in the West, have, through inter-collegiate contests and professional coaching, assumed a very high standa rd, while intensified undergraduate activities and the demands on time for study to attain the higher scholarship of the&#13;
&#13;
148&#13;
&#13;
]49&#13;
&#13;
present time, have brought about the use of the field house in co-operation with the gymnasium. The thoughtful administrators of the older colleges have approved of the new&#13;
idea. For example, Northwestern University has incorporated the idea in a new and&#13;
costly structure, the Alumni of Williams College in the Berkshire Hills of Massachusetts&#13;
have recently built a field house on Western Field, one-quarter of a mile from the&#13;
campus, on which stands the expensive Lusell Gymnasium. Most of the other colleges&#13;
of the conservative East have adopted the same idea.&#13;
&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
The field house recently built on Bass Field at Morningside has been the scene of&#13;
more athletic activity during the hours for exercise, from 4 to 6 p, m., than is recorded&#13;
of any University or College on its list of exchanges. The field house does not interfere&#13;
in the realm of the gymnasium nor does it take the place of one. The uses of the gymnasium are so well understood that little mention is necessary on that score, but perhaps&#13;
a few words on the work in a field house will explain the difference.&#13;
The dirt floor gives the trackmen the natural resistance and so-called spring of the&#13;
out-door track. The air is always still and enables the runner to strengthen his lungs with&#13;
less labor than is employed in the raw and often windy atmosphere of the athletic field.&#13;
It developes a quality of sprinting ofa higher grade in less time than can possibly be&#13;
attained out of doors. It is attractive and secures more physical exercise in a larger&#13;
number of students than does the outdoor running later in the spring. The wind never&#13;
blows over the hurdles nor disarranges the jumping and vaulting standards.&#13;
The different athletic teams work in squads. The baseball men use the interior&#13;
oval for grounders and battery work, becoming accustomed to regular distances and approaching out-door conditions. Space is sufficient for secret football maneuvers and&#13;
signal practice. It affords a retreat in all branches of out-door sport in case of unfavorable weather. The whole athletic program is more easily handled by the director and&#13;
captains. Approximately 50 per cent of the male students of Morningside have made&#13;
more or less use of the field house since it has been in operation.&#13;
&#13;
ALLE N DELMAGE&#13;
&#13;
BA SS&#13;
&#13;
RECORD: SPRING, '10&#13;
Morningside . ... 3 .... . . . .... .. .. ... .. . . .. Omaha (Western League) . .. . 4&#13;
Morningside . . . . 8 . .. . .. . .. ... . .. .. .. ... .. Amity College . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Morningside . . .. 13 . . .. .. . . .. . .. .. ....... . Tabor College .. . ....... . .. I 0&#13;
.&#13;
Morningside. . . . 4 . ... . . .... . ... .. .... . . . . Ames ( 11 innings) . . . . . . . . . 5&#13;
Morningside. . . . 4 .. .. ... . . . . ....... .. .... Simpson&#13;
&#13;
.... ... .......... 2&#13;
&#13;
Morningside . . . . 1 . .. . .. . .. . . . . . .... .. . .. . Highland Park . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9&#13;
Morningside. . . . 6 .. . ... ... ... . .... .... ... Leander Clark . . . . . . . . . . . . 4&#13;
Morningside . . . . 0 . . . . ... .. . ...... ... . . . . . Iowa State Uni. . . . . . . . . . . . . 6&#13;
Morningside . . . . 5 ... . .. ... . ... .. . . ... .... Uni. of South Dakota. . . . . . . 2&#13;
MORNINGSIDE'S NEW FIELD HO USE&#13;
&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
151&#13;
&#13;
TRACK&#13;
&#13;
GLADYS EMMELINETRIMBLE&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE RECORDS&#13;
100-Y ard Dash .......... .C. Rogers . . .... . ... .. . .. 10 seconds&#13;
220-Y ard D ash ... .. ...... Hall ... .. . .. . ..... . . . .. 22 1-5 seconds&#13;
440-Y ard D ash ....... . ... Winn .. ................. 5 2 seconds&#13;
880-Y ard Dash .. ... . . . . .. A. P. Berkstresser. .. . . .. . . 2 minutes 3 seconds&#13;
Mile Run ........ ... .... .A. P. Berkstresser ... ... ... 4 minutes 40 seconds&#13;
2-Mile Run . ............ .L. R. Chapman .. ..... . . .. 10 minutes 10 seconds&#13;
220-Y ard Hurdles ........ .E. G. Quarnstrom ..... . ... 25 2-5 seconds&#13;
120-Yard Hurdles ......... E. M. Brown . ... ........ 16 seconds&#13;
High Jump ....... ....... E. M . Brown ...... . ..... 5 feet 7 inches&#13;
Broad Jump . ... . ... .. .... W. 0. Dowdy ... ....... . 2 1 feet&#13;
Shot Put .. ..... ... . . .... Hall .. . ................ 38 feet 7 inches&#13;
Hammer Throw . . . . . . . . . . E. G. Quarnstrom . . . . . . . . . 1 1 7 feet&#13;
Discus Throw .... . .... . .. Weatherby ....... ... ..... 11 0 feet 8 inches&#13;
Mile Relay .... .... ... ... ............. ... . .. .... 3 minutes 36 2-5 seconds&#13;
Cross Country to Floyd&#13;
Monument and Return .... V. E. Montgomery ...... .. 18 minutes 38 seconds&#13;
BASEBALL&#13;
&#13;
TEAM,&#13;
&#13;
152&#13;
&#13;
SPRING ' 10&#13;
&#13;
153&#13;
&#13;
INTER-STATE HIGH SCHOOL MEET&#13;
This meet is held annually under the auspices of the M. club.&#13;
&#13;
The meet is open&#13;
&#13;
to about 300 of the high schools of Northwest Iowa, South Dakota and Nebraska and&#13;
Southern Minnesota.&#13;
&#13;
The object of the meet is to further an interest in Morningside&#13;
&#13;
student life and to give those who attend an impression of the "way things are done&#13;
at Morningside."&#13;
Valuable prizes are given to the winners of the different places and also individual&#13;
LEMON&#13;
&#13;
WINNIN G AT HOME MEET&#13;
&#13;
cups to the winners in the two relays and a larger cup for the winner of the meet.&#13;
Hearty co-operation is given in all of the activities connected with the meet by the&#13;
students and faculty and we hope in the near future to have at least 500 instead of&#13;
300 institutions on the invited list.&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF HOME MEET&#13;
1OO-Yard Dash ....... Mahoney, Sophomore; Berkstresser, Senior; Lemon, Freshman&#13;
220-Y ard Dash .... Lemon, Freshman; Mahoney, Sophomore; Montgomery, Freshman&#13;
440-Yard Dash . ... Berkstresser, Senior; Montgomery, Freshman; Lemon, Freshman&#13;
Ralf Mile .. .. ... .. Montgomery, Freshman; Lemon, Freshman; Berkstresser, Senior&#13;
Mile Run .............. Berkstresser, Senior; Hickman, Freshman; Chapman, Senior&#13;
Two-Mile .. ..... ... Chapman, Senior; Hickman, Freshman; Cushing, Mid-Academy&#13;
Shot Put .... .. . ... .. .. Berkstresser, Senior ; Wickens, Freshman; Shaver, Freshman&#13;
Hammer Throw . . Quarnstrom, Freshman; Vennick, Freshman; Winterringer, Freshman&#13;
120 Hurdles ...... Belt, Senior; James Lewis, Sophomore; Chandler, Senior Academy&#13;
220 Hurdles . . Montgomery, Freshman; Chandler, Senior Academy; Lemon, Freshman&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
D ISCUS . . , , , , , , , , W 1ckens , Freshman·, Pyncheon, Freshman; Winterringer, Freshman&#13;
Broad Jump. Fearing, Senior Academy; Chandler, Senior Academy; Wickens, Freshman&#13;
High Jump ..... . ..... Belt, Senior; Fearing, Senior Academy; Wickens, Freshman&#13;
Pole Vault ... Fearing, Senior Academy; John Lewis, Sophomore; Greynald, Academy&#13;
Mile Relay ... . . ....... . ............... . .. . . . .. ... ... Won by Freshmen&#13;
Half Mile Relay . ... ... .............&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF INTER-SCHOLASTIC MEET&#13;
I 00-Yard Dash--Osborn, LeMars; Burroughs, Centerville; Shulkin, S. C ... . .. 11 :2&#13;
220- ard Dash- Osborn, LeMars; Burroughs, Centerville; Wilson, Cherokee .. 25: 3&#13;
440-Yard Dash-Wilson, Cherokee; Brown, Storm Lake; Philip, Sioux Falls ... 56:2&#13;
Half Mile-Harrison, Storm Lake; Ferren, Cherokee; Philip, S. F ............ 2 :25&#13;
Mile Run-Connely, S. C.; Ferren, Cherokee ; Schaser, S. F .......... ... · .. . 5 :4 3&#13;
Broad Jump-Burroughs, Cherokee; Knapp, Cherokee; Boyd, LeMars .. 18 ft. 6 in.&#13;
High Jump-Peterson, Centerville; Knapp, Cherokee; no third . . .... . .. .. 4 ft. 9 in.&#13;
Pole Vault-Peterson, Cherokee; Aldrich, S. C. ; Leuder, Cherokee .... .. ... . 8 ft.&#13;
Shot Put-Aldrich, S. C. ; Harney, S. C. ; Jett, Salix ................ 38 ft. I I in.&#13;
Hammer Throw-Gillilland, Storm Lake; Borman, S. C. ; Kiefilbauch, Tyndall .. ... .&#13;
120 Hurdles-Hanford, S. C. ; Borman, S. C.; Pausen, Centerville ........... :21&#13;
220 Hurdles-Hutchins, S. C.; Hanford, S. C.; Pausen, Centerville ...... no time&#13;
Mile Relay-Cherokee first; S. C. second.&#13;
Half Mile Relay-Sioux City first; Cherokee second.&#13;
&#13;
...... . ... . . Won by Senior Academy&#13;
Records poor because of deep mud.&#13;
&#13;
154&#13;
&#13;
15 5&#13;
&#13;
QUARNSTROM WINNING H URDLES AT GRINNELL&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF THE S. DAK.-NEB. UNIVERSITYMORNINGSIDE MEET&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Thackaberry, S. D.; Reed, Neb.; Quarnstrom, M . ..... .... 10&#13;
220-Yard Dash- Reed, Neb.; Thackaberry, S. D.; Mahoney, M . .......... 22 :2&#13;
440-Yard Dash- Burke, Neb.; Reed, Neb.; Lemon, M . ....... . .. ....... . :52&#13;
Half Mile-Brookman, S. D.; Montgomery, M.; Lemon, M . . . .. . . ..... ... . 2 :5&#13;
Mile-A. Berkstresser, M.; Clark, N.; H. Berkstresser, M .. . . . .. .. ...... 4 :44&#13;
Two Mile-Hickman, M. ; Chapman, M. ; Shultz, S. D ....... . . .. . ..... 10: 30&#13;
Hammer Throw-Goddard, S. D.; Potts, S. D.; Quarnstrom, M . ..... 129 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Discus Throw-Quarnstrom, M.; Roberts, S. D.; Moreysen, S. D .. .. . 106 ft. 9 in.&#13;
120 Hurdles- Roberts, S. D.; Fleming, Neb.; Grigsby, S. D . ..... . . ... ... : 17&#13;
220 Hurdles- Quarnstrom, M.; Powers, Neb.; Floid, Neb .. . ..... .. ..... 25 : 1&#13;
Shot Put- Shanks, Neb.; Downing, S. D.; Roberts, S. D ................ 38 ft.&#13;
Pole Vault-Graham, Neb. ; Fearing, M. ; N orgren, S. D ... . . . . . . 1 1 ft. 2 m.&#13;
High Jump-Royal, S. D . ; Moreysen, S. D. ; Graham, Neb . . ....... 5 ft. 7 in.&#13;
Broad Jump-Munsing, Neb.; Brookman, S. D . ; Fearing, M . . .. . . . . 20 ft. 2 in.&#13;
Mile Relay-Neb. first; Morningside second ..... .. .... . ........ . ... . .. 3 :20&#13;
T otals-S. D., 48; Neb., 4 7; Morningside, 39.&#13;
&#13;
156&#13;
&#13;
STATE MEET&#13;
&#13;
SUMMARY OF GRINNELL MEET&#13;
100-Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Gill, Grinnell; Beers, Grinnell . . .... . . : 10 flat&#13;
220-Yard Dash-Wilson, Coe; Turner, Grinnell; Gill, Grinnell. ... .. .... :22 flat&#13;
440-Yard Dash- Wilson, Coe; Lemon, Morningside; Shinstron, Grinnell .... 51 :4&#13;
Half Mile-Dawkins, Grinnell; Hutchins, Grinnell, Stevenson, Cor .. .... . .... 2 :3&#13;
Mile Run-Merwin, Cornell; Hickman, Morningside; Wilcox, Coe . . . .. .. 4 :41 1-5&#13;
Two Mile-Chapman, Morningside; Heide, Grinnell; Hickman, Morningside .. 10 :2 7&#13;
Broad Jump-Knowles, Grinnell; Fearing, Morningside; Cross, Grinnell. . 22 ft. 2 in.&#13;
High Jump-Cross, Grinnell ; Bagby, Grinnell ; Wells, Grinnell ... . .. 5 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Shot Put-Ziegler, Grinnell; Turner, Grinnell; Sharks, Grinnell .. . ..... 38 ft. 10 in.&#13;
Discus-Ziegler, Grinnell; Wickens, Morningside; Quarnstrom, M . .. 11 3 ft. 6 in.&#13;
Hammer-Ziegler, Grinnell; Quarnstrom, Morningside; Kramm, Cornell ...... 125 ft.&#13;
120 Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Morningside; Kinzer, Grinnell; Clark, G rinnell . ... 16 :4&#13;
220 Hurdles-Quarnstrom, Morningside; Beers, Grinnell; Kinzer, Grinnell .. 25 :4&#13;
Half Mile Relay- Morningside, first; Cornell; Coe .......... . ... . .... 1 :26 1-5&#13;
Mile Relay- Grinnell, first; Morningside; Cornell .. . .. . ... . .... .. . . .. 3: 35 1-5&#13;
1 57&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
FRANCES&#13;
&#13;
RUTH&#13;
&#13;
SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
SEASON'S RECORD&#13;
Morningside . .... . .. 39 .. .... . .... .. ...... . .... Cherokee High . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
M . S. Seconds . . . . . 5 ....... . . .. .. . ...... ... . Correctionville . . . . . . . . . 0&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 0 .................. ·...... Uni. of Iowa . ... . .. .... 12&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 6 ... .. ............. . . .... Creighton . . . . . . . . . . . . 5&#13;
Morningside ........ 15 ........................ St. Joseph . . . . .&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 5 ............... . ..... . .. Ames . . . . . . . .&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 0 ..... . .......... . ....... Des Moines . . . .&#13;
Morningside . . . . . . . . 6 .................. .. . . .. South Dakota . . .&#13;
&#13;
....&#13;
....&#13;
....&#13;
....&#13;
&#13;
... 0&#13;
... 0&#13;
... 8&#13;
.. 19&#13;
CAPT.&#13;
&#13;
]58&#13;
&#13;
WINTERINGER&#13;
&#13;
159&#13;
&#13;
FLAG "M"&#13;
VIEW Of&#13;
&#13;
VERMILLION GAME&#13;
&#13;
VARSI TY SQUAD&#13;
&#13;
READY MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
FOOTBALL CAMP-BLUE LAKE&#13;
&#13;
160&#13;
&#13;
161&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR ACADEMY TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Winners of the Class Tournament&#13;
MEN WINNING "M'S" IN FOOTBALL&#13;
&#13;
162&#13;
&#13;
l 63&#13;
&#13;
PUSHBALL&#13;
CROSS-COUNTRY&#13;
&#13;
WATCHING&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
MONUMENT&#13;
&#13;
RUN&#13;
&#13;
On Washington's Birthday the customary cross-country run was made to Floyd&#13;
.&#13;
Monument and return. The record for time was lowered b y V. E. Montgomery,&#13;
Sophomore, to 18 minutes 38 seconds.&#13;
&#13;
VIEWS&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
1 64&#13;
&#13;
THE FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE PUS H BALL CONTEST&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
16 5&#13;
&#13;
GIRL'S ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
GIRLS' GYM CLASS&#13;
&#13;
GIRL'S ATHLETICS&#13;
&#13;
By Helena Hawley.&#13;
Much has been said in these recent times about the physical development ·aiding&#13;
the intellectual.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College realizes this, and in lieu of a gymnasium a field&#13;
&#13;
house has been built for the physical development of the male student body.&#13;
about the girls of our institution?&#13;
&#13;
But how&#13;
&#13;
They have no proper gymnasium.&#13;
&#13;
Recently, college authority has succeeded in securing an efficient physical director&#13;
for girls in Miss Winnifred Garnish.&#13;
&#13;
Three series of classes meet twice a week.&#13;
&#13;
Club drills, dumb bells, wands, etc., are put into use.&#13;
&#13;
The proper position in sitting,&#13;
&#13;
walking, and standing is emphasized, and to give to each girl a graceful poise and a&#13;
strong roundness drills and steps of various kinds are practiced.&#13;
But this is practically all that can be· done with the quarters now available.&#13;
&#13;
How-&#13;
&#13;
ever, in the near future we are hoping to have a fine $100,000 gymnasium on our&#13;
campus.&#13;
&#13;
Our girls will then have more impetus toward intellectual studies because of&#13;
&#13;
taking more regular physical training.&#13;
&#13;
Studying will then not be such a hardship.&#13;
" M" CL UB&#13;
&#13;
166&#13;
&#13;
167&#13;
&#13;
TENNIS&#13;
The tennis association is growing year by year in favor with the majority of the&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
The game is one that a student can play and get the necessary exercise and&#13;
&#13;
recreation without going out and spending the entire afternoon.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Larned Brown&#13;
&#13;
is President of the local organization.&#13;
Morningside has never yet broken into the ranks of the Inter-collegiate association,&#13;
but it hopes that this end may be accomplished next year.&#13;
&#13;
The courts which have&#13;
&#13;
heretofore been used were discarded this spring, 1911 , and we now have some excellent courts just west of the Conservatory.&#13;
&#13;
The sport is excellent, the accommodations&#13;
&#13;
are good and we hope that in the near future Morningside may have a representative go down state and win the Inter-collegiate contest.&#13;
&#13;
BASS FIELD&#13;
&#13;
168&#13;
&#13;
169&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE MEN ALWAYS WANT&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
Vesper Service.&#13;
&#13;
Girls think "Palmer's Best" serves purpose of May baskets very&#13;
&#13;
well.&#13;
2- Pluvius interferes with Zet. Otho breakfast party.&#13;
3-Freshmen win meet. Atheneums to Riverside ( Fig. 8). First annual girls' banquet.&#13;
6- Baseball team leaves for Fayette.&#13;
8-0tho's really breakfast Zets. Pearl Snyder narrowly escapes drowning, as did also&#13;
the pickles. Chapman looses Otho pin, but not his heart.&#13;
9-Aesthesians have hen party.&#13;
12-Lieutenant Shackleton lectures. Some people insist on yelling the way they have&#13;
been taught.&#13;
13- Junior Normals entertain Seniors at Hazel Herman's home.&#13;
14- Johnson off for Oskaloosa. N ew Atheneums entertain&#13;
16-F&#13;
rank Johnson wins third for Iowa in Interstate Prohibition Contest.&#13;
1 ?-Morningside postoffice opens.&#13;
18-Comet day. Everyone looks to higher things.&#13;
19-20-Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra appears at May festival.&#13;
20-Tabor plays ball at M. S. Tabor 5, Morningside 6.&#13;
21 - Pieria Grand Public.&#13;
23-Pierias and Ionians have launch party up the Sioux.&#13;
24-Juniors and Seniors digress from daily routine-picnic at South Ravine.&#13;
27-H. G. Bennett of Sioux City speaks to Sociology class.&#13;
28-Misses Dott and Gilman entertain Aletheias at Sioux City Boat Club. Prof. Campbell sails. Philo's annual trip up Big Sioux. Was Lorenne a "Pretty Fair&#13;
rower?"&#13;
30- Decoration day.&#13;
&#13;
M. C. loses to Vermillion.&#13;
&#13;
tHE BEST IN CLOTHING&#13;
And they always get it if th ey wear the Pelletier kind. There's a Suit for every man, a fit&#13;
for every Suit, in this great new Clothing storea store whose management k nows what the particular dresser wants and knows just the way to fill&#13;
that want.&#13;
&#13;
There's&#13;
double action in a Pelletier Suit-best&#13;
quality and fit, combined with style and economy.&#13;
&#13;
Get Your New Apparel Here&#13;
IHirsh-Wickwire, Sincerity, Harvard , the L Systern and other good Clothes make up our stock.&#13;
&#13;
Zet's annual picnic at Talbot's&#13;
&#13;
Farm.&#13;
31-Seniors entertained at President Freeman's home.&#13;
Mrs. Devitt takes boarders to Riverside Park.&#13;
SPRING FEVER&#13;
MICROBE&#13;
&#13;
Pelletier' s Clothing Store&#13;
MEN'S AND BOYS' OUTFITTERS FROM HEAD TO FOOT&#13;
&#13;
Stetson and Columbus Hats,&#13;
Manhattan and Pelletier Shirts&#13;
and other Apparel just like that&#13;
&#13;
170&#13;
&#13;
171&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 2865&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Phone 130&#13;
&#13;
1-Y. M . and Y. W. Associations have joint meeting, then adjourn to Renaissance&#13;
Hall for Geneva Rally.&#13;
Sophs win baseball game from Freshmen.&#13;
3-Beloit plays ball at Morningside.&#13;
4-Morningside goes to Vermillion for second ball game.&#13;
5-Jesters have meeting at Riverside Boat Club.&#13;
Atheneums entertain honorary members at breakfast.&#13;
&#13;
J.C. RENNISON CO.&#13;
&#13;
I 0- Graduating exercises of the Department of Expression.&#13;
I I- Banquet given at Whitakers' for graduating Aletheias.&#13;
12- Baccalaureate address and Commencement Vespers.&#13;
I 3-Academy graduation.&#13;
I 4-Class Day exercises.&#13;
Conservatory graduation.&#13;
Alumni meeting.&#13;
&#13;
Florists&#13;
&#13;
Reunion of Societies.&#13;
&#13;
CUT FLOWERS&#13;
&#13;
I 5-Student farewell chapel service.&#13;
&#13;
Many clever stunts pulled off by classmen.&#13;
&#13;
"There was weeping and wailing"-where?&#13;
I 6-Commencement.&#13;
&#13;
All students off for home.&#13;
&#13;
"All's well that ends well."&#13;
&#13;
Palms and Plants for Decorations Special attention to&#13;
Funeral Orders. Emblems made on short notice.&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
ARE&#13;
&#13;
INVITED&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
VISIT&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
STORE&#13;
&#13;
SIXTH AND PIERCE STREETS&#13;
&#13;
172&#13;
&#13;
173&#13;
&#13;
CALLING CARDS&#13;
&#13;
12-School year begins.&#13;
&#13;
Town students register.&#13;
&#13;
POST CARDS&#13;
&#13;
SAVE MONEY&#13;
&#13;
13- Registration continues.&#13;
14- And still new students come-among which is a "Perfectly&#13;
man."&#13;
15-Work begins in earnest. Y. M. stag party in Main Hall.&#13;
16-Societies have first _&#13;
meeting. Pierias and Ionians entertain some new students in&#13;
their hall.&#13;
17-President Freeman speaks in Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Y. W. has social afternoon at Renaissance.&#13;
&#13;
18-Matriculation sermon preached at Grace Church by Rev. Keck.&#13;
19- "0tho stag" at Tacks'.&#13;
21-Rousing Mass Meeting held in chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Shall Collegian Reporter continue?&#13;
&#13;
Buy always from&#13;
&#13;
The Morningside&#13;
&#13;
22-Rev. Dr. Smylie speaks in Chapel. Bobbie occupies front Chapel seat.&#13;
Y . M. and Y. W. joint party. Mr. Muckey ·ditches Miss Belt in a really truly&#13;
ditch.&#13;
&#13;
2 3-Day for Green-capped Freshmen postponed.&#13;
Pi's have slumber party at Frances Horn's.&#13;
24-First football game of the season.&#13;
26-Brainless Bone-Headed Bulletin issued by the F rousley Fool-Headed Freshmen.&#13;
&#13;
Greatest College&#13;
&#13;
2 7- F reshmen primary election begins.&#13;
&#13;
Supply Store&#13;
&#13;
AUTO TELEPHONE NO.· 6211&#13;
STUDENTS' SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
174&#13;
&#13;
STATIONARY TYPEWRITERS (Oliver)&#13;
]75&#13;
&#13;
BEAUTIFUL&#13;
&#13;
FOR GRADUATES AND ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
1-Aletheia picnic at Riverside.&#13;
2-Zet. annual Ravine party to Freshman girls.&#13;
M ad ame Langendorf recital.&#13;
3 -0 tho's win debate from Ionians.&#13;
4 -In formal party given by the Pierias.&#13;
6 -D ramatization of "Polly of the Circus" by Miss Greene.&#13;
8-Aletheia Ravine party.&#13;
I 0-Zet.-O tho P rom.&#13;
Are You Happy?''&#13;
12-The P ierias have chafing dish luncheon in hall.&#13;
16 -Z ets. entertain "new girls" at Tally-ho party. Luncheon at Todd-Bakers.&#13;
Etta and Ethel don't always mean all they say, boys.&#13;
18-Aletheias entertain Freshman girls at an elaborate spread.&#13;
19-Formal inauguration of Pres. L uther Freeman, D . D. Pi. tea party.&#13;
20-Aletheias give first Open D oor.&#13;
22-Z et. H allowe'en party, Commercial M en's Boat C lub.&#13;
2 8- P ierias " B arn D ance" in Renaissance barn.&#13;
29-Aletheia H allowe'en party. H ouse party at R eike home, Kingsley.&#13;
Slumber party at Frary' s.&#13;
30- Philos a nd A theneums have masq uerade party.&#13;
3 1- P ierias have H all owe' en breakfast. A delphian-Aesthesian H allowe' en party.&#13;
&#13;
STORE 512 FIFTH STREET&#13;
PHONES 466 AND 1734&#13;
&#13;
OPPOSITE GRAIN EXCHANGE BLD 'G&#13;
&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
A Glance in the Looking Glass&#13;
May reveal to you the cause of your&#13;
failure to get that position&#13;
&#13;
Clothes Do Count&#13;
Neatness of Dress is a Valuable Asset&#13;
It can be yours by having your work done at&#13;
&#13;
Harrison, The Tailor&#13;
S. Harrison , 1905 St. Aubin Ave., Peter's Park. , M. S.&#13;
17 6&#13;
&#13;
177&#13;
&#13;
It's just as&#13;
important&#13;
to get&#13;
Clothes&#13;
that befit&#13;
your per-son al i ty,&#13;
as 1t to get&#13;
Clothes&#13;
to fit your&#13;
figure.&#13;
&#13;
2-Atheneum progressive dinner party.&#13;
3-Pierias banquet "new girls" at the West.&#13;
Pushball game goes to the Freshmen, 1 3-6.&#13;
Ames victory celebrated; holiday declared by the Faculty&#13;
Zets. have buffet luncheon for "new girls."&#13;
4-Zets. entertain "new girls" at dinner party at home of .Hazel Simon.&#13;
Atheneum annual banquet at the West.&#13;
Ask Bess Barnes if she knows the price of cut-glass baskets.&#13;
5-Pierias entertain lonians informally.&#13;
12- Miss Rorem and Miss Weary have house party;_ some people still sleep on.&#13;
&#13;
The broad range of our fabrics, patterns and models spans the whole domain of fashion.&#13;
&#13;
13-0tho's initiate "new fellows."&#13;
14-F reshmen celebrate pushball victory at Wilna Beams.&#13;
&#13;
In expressing your personality there&#13;
are no garments so intensly individual&#13;
as "E. &amp; W. Fashion Clothes" for&#13;
young men from 15 to 50. Scan the&#13;
flesh-and-blood figure reproduced here&#13;
and observe the lines of life in the garments, which make the wearer seem a&#13;
breathing, pulsing personality.&#13;
&#13;
"Things look different the morning after."&#13;
16-&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Ionian debate.&#13;
&#13;
1 7- 0tho-Philo debate. · College praises sung in chapel.&#13;
23-Crescent new members entertain the "old girls."&#13;
26-Vermillion gets the turkey again.&#13;
&#13;
The all-wool fabrics are the soft,&#13;
"clingish" kind, that fall easily and&#13;
naturally into the curves of the figure.&#13;
The tailoring- all hand- is as painstaking below as on top.&#13;
The patterns are out of the rut-distinctly young-mannish.&#13;
Every part&#13;
and process is first perfected and, then,&#13;
inspected to "render assurance doubly&#13;
sure.''&#13;
&#13;
Newest and classiest Hats and Furnishings can be seen&#13;
here as quickly as the express companies can get them here from&#13;
the leading fashion centers.&#13;
&#13;
Usual .&#13;
&#13;
178&#13;
&#13;
E. &amp; W. CLOTHING HOUSE&#13;
17 9&#13;
&#13;
YOUR&#13;
&#13;
August Williges&#13;
&#13;
PREPARATION&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
1-Home oratorical-Frank Johnson wins first place.&#13;
&#13;
For life's work may be ever so&#13;
perfect, yet, if you neglect to pay&#13;
heed to the practical things, and&#13;
fail to profit from t he experiences&#13;
of those who have been successful&#13;
in your chosen calling the chances&#13;
are against your reaching a very&#13;
high mark.&#13;
A savings account following&#13;
graduation is almost as necessary&#13;
to success as hard .study preceding,&#13;
it provides money to take advantage&#13;
of any opportunities offered.&#13;
We invite your accoun t on&#13;
which interest will be added twice&#13;
a year.&#13;
&#13;
Fine Furs&#13;
&#13;
5-Junior class have party at Miss Marguerite Shreiners'.&#13;
8-Miss Lila Ormond gives recital-Hawkeye-Adelphian debate.&#13;
9-Prof. Garver comes to History III class late.&#13;
&#13;
I 0-Miss Helen Gullickson entertains Pierias at her place.&#13;
11 -Philos entertain Atheneums in hall.&#13;
Orvill Maynard puts his gum under his plate then gives his plate to Mrs. McDonald.&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
Orvill insists that he would rather eat in the kitchen.&#13;
12- Y. W. girls have Doll show-34 a favorite number.&#13;
15- School closes for Christmas vacation.&#13;
Annual Christmas party given at Jean Whittemore's.&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
405-407 Nebraska Street&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 1088&#13;
&#13;
Young Man&#13;
&#13;
Old Phone 605&#13;
&#13;
Bryon E. Brown&#13;
&#13;
In addition to brains and an&#13;
education, you will some day&#13;
need capital. Why not start&#13;
now on a ten, fifteen or twenty&#13;
year policy, that will mature&#13;
while you are yet a young man?&#13;
Send date of birth and get&#13;
literature.&#13;
&#13;
DEALER IN&#13;
&#13;
High Grade Pianos&#13;
&#13;
Iowa Life Insurance Co.&#13;
&#13;
Piano Tuning&#13;
and Repairing&#13;
&#13;
WATERLOO, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
P. H. PILCHARD, District Manager&#13;
409 Farmers Loan and Trust Bldg.&#13;
&#13;
Off FOR HOME AND FUN&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
406 Fourth St.&#13;
Splendid money making agency propositions open for young men willing to hustle&#13;
180&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
181&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Now,&#13;
&#13;
you'll find us better able&#13;
than ever before, and better&#13;
than anybody else, to supply&#13;
your shoe needs. We've&#13;
brought together a great line&#13;
of fine shoes, the pick of the&#13;
line of the greatest maker of&#13;
good shoes in the world.&#13;
&#13;
1.&#13;
-Resolutions.&#13;
3--"F rarys" christened "Marion Hall."&#13;
4- Field House completed.&#13;
5 -Jessie Ewer gives recital in Adelphian hall.&#13;
6-Herr Paulo Gruppe, Cellist in recital.&#13;
9-New Atheneums entertain "old girls" at Isabel Webb's home.&#13;
decided (who?) is the bigger flirt?&#13;
11 - No Chapel-"There's a reason."&#13;
14-Adelphians enjoy annual banquet.&#13;
15-Theresa Freeman entertains at "Consolation Party."&#13;
18- Y. M. C. A stag party.&#13;
20-Professor Macfarren gives recital in College Auditorium.&#13;
&#13;
come in for&#13;
a pair of our&#13;
new shoes.&#13;
&#13;
Has anybody de-&#13;
&#13;
Everything you can desire&#13;
- men's, women's and children's-is here, in new late&#13;
models, smart styles, best&#13;
leathers. They're the famous&#13;
&#13;
25- Exams.Of all sad words of pen or tongue,&#13;
The saddest are these-"Exams. B egun."&#13;
&#13;
SELZ ROY AL BLUE&#13;
AND OTHER SELZ SHOES&#13;
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all good, all guaranteed to be wholly satisfactory,&#13;
all perfect fitting.&#13;
There is no way in which you can so well provide&#13;
for your shoe needs as to decide to wear Selz shoes•&#13;
They're the only shoes that are unreservedly guaranteed to you.&#13;
/&#13;
&#13;
We want you to see these shoes before&#13;
you buy any shoes, anywhere; we know&#13;
you'll be grateful to us for urging it. Selz&#13;
shoes ready for men, women and children.&#13;
&#13;
MAKING&#13;
&#13;
DYSON'S&#13;
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THOSE NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS GOOD&#13;
&#13;
SELZ ROYAL BLUE STORE&#13;
Cor. Fourth and Court Sts., Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
183&#13;
182&#13;
&#13;
CERTIFICATES&#13;
&#13;
DRAFTS&#13;
&#13;
Where Your Business is Appreciated&#13;
2-Delicatessen closes its doo rs.&#13;
4-A new "Frosty and Frances" in History V class.&#13;
3-10-Dr.&#13;
Stansfield conducts meetings.&#13;
9-Day of Prayer for Colleges.&#13;
10-Warburton and Smylie insist on talking in class.&#13;
12-Silas 0. Rorem visits old scenes and faces.&#13;
1 3-0tho banquet at the West.&#13;
Rev. Tumbleson doesn't want "Frosty and Frances" to forg et his number.&#13;
14-Charley Cushman tells "Tack" to simply "shut up."&#13;
Miss McKellip receives a large bunch of violets.&#13;
Mr. Culbertson and W aymack serve Lunch in Shakespeare Class.&#13;
17-Mr. Briggs pulls Mary Thoburn's -hair as a matter of satisfaction.&#13;
20-Miss McKellip receives more violets.&#13;
21-Dr. E. S. Johnson of First M. E. Church speaks on George Washington .&#13;
Vince wins Monument run-Men's Banquet.&#13;
Girls at Renaissance entertain at Colonial party.&#13;
23-Bess and Back are surprised by shower of rice and old shoes.&#13;
24-Mr. Kent insists he knows Miss Laud and pays her car fare.&#13;
2 7-F rosty leaves for Blencoe-tears.&#13;
&#13;
We Invite Your Patronage&#13;
&#13;
American Savings Bank&#13;
Fourth and Court&#13;
W . S. SNYDER. PRESIDENT&#13;
ALBERT WEDGWOOD . CASHIER .&#13;
LEN . O ' HARROW , VICE-PRESIDENT.&#13;
&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
&#13;
CASH&#13;
&#13;
===GLASSES MADE BY US===&#13;
&#13;
Corner Fifth and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
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Fresh Cut Flowers on Hand Daily&#13;
All Kinds of Floral Emblems on Short Notice.&#13;
Our Prices are Right.&#13;
WATCHING THE MONUMENT RUN .&#13;
&#13;
Rocklin &amp; Lehman, Florists&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
405 Douglas, St. cor. 4th&#13;
184&#13;
&#13;
18 5&#13;
&#13;
111111&#13;
&#13;
1-Fairview Club entertained at Chinese dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Trimble.&#13;
Pierias entertain Zets. at tea.&#13;
3-Frank Johnson wins second at Toledo.&#13;
Frenchman locked in his room--Who did it?&#13;
4-Miss Georgia Fletcher visits school.&#13;
5-Monthly Vesper service.&#13;
7-Faculty entertained at Dr. Freeman's.&#13;
Senior girls spring caps and gowns-Wickens springs "specs."&#13;
8- Evan Pattishall gives organ recital.&#13;
9- 0rvill leaves for Colorado- Edna looks dejected.&#13;
I 1-Atheneum Grand Public.&#13;
I 3-Ionian Banquet.&#13;
14-Sophomores entertained at Miss Gladys Evans', Sargent Bluffs.&#13;
I 6-Miss McKellip receives more violets.&#13;
I 7-Miss McDonald calls Mr. Kent "darling"-at least he thinks so.&#13;
Zets. have St. Patrick's luncheon at home of Miss Randolph.&#13;
Atheneums have theater party.&#13;
Pierias have party at Keifer's.&#13;
20- Hawkeye Banquet.&#13;
24- BEANS ! BEANS! ! BEANS! ! !&#13;
25-Kansas City Meet.&#13;
&#13;
CLEMENTS &amp; CO.&#13;
Staple and Fancy&#13;
Groceries&#13;
&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
BOTH PHONES&#13;
&#13;
Students. buy your eatings for your picnics here&#13;
ST. AUBINS STATION&#13;
&#13;
186&#13;
&#13;
187&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
B. H. SILVER&#13;
THE GROCER&#13;
Whose store is clean, sanitary,&#13;
neat and tidy, who supplies orders&#13;
quickly.&#13;
&#13;
PETER'S PARK&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Real&#13;
Estate Off ice&#13;
CUSHMAN , PATTON &amp; STRAND&#13;
Insurance written in the best Mutual and&#13;
&#13;
B E L L PHONE 953&#13;
&#13;
AU T O PHONE 61 3 6&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Lumber&#13;
&#13;
P&#13;
&#13;
LACE&#13;
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TO&#13;
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BUY&#13;
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TRLJNKS&#13;
TRUNKS&#13;
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Company&#13;
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= = = IS WHERE = = =&#13;
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Dealer s in&#13;
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MATERIAL&#13;
BUILDING&#13;
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A R&#13;
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L et us Figure Yo ur Bill. We&#13;
Want Your Business. We&#13;
also handle&#13;
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E&#13;
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MADE&#13;
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SAMPLE CASES TO ORDER&#13;
REPA IR ING DONE&#13;
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Coal and Wood&#13;
&#13;
D.S. ANTHONY&#13;
MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO: "Our Prices are Right.&#13;
Square Dealing that is Square."&#13;
&#13;
AUTO PHONE 2108&#13;
&#13;
Telephones&#13;
&#13;
Iowa 1995&#13;
Auto 6122&#13;
&#13;
Lakeport Ave.&#13;
&#13;
4 13 fifth Street&#13;
&#13;
188&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
189&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
QUOVADIS CLUB.&#13;
Motto~Honesty is the best policy? ? ? ?&#13;
Pass Word-Jiggers the Shack.&#13;
Grand Exalted Hobo-Vince Montgomery.&#13;
Chief Consul-0. L. Wickens.&#13;
Common Bums-Charles Berkstresser&#13;
Heavy T orbet&#13;
Ivan Fuller&#13;
Melvin Hatch&#13;
Fourth annual convention held at the East End Station, May 21 , 191 0.&#13;
Frank Johnson, after the Prohibition Contest, tells of how parched his throat became during his oration.&#13;
"Why, it is just like when you blow the f---"--&#13;
&#13;
BECAUSE&#13;
IT IS SO CONVENIENT! WE ARE ALWAYS&#13;
READY TO SERVE YOU WITH THE BEST&#13;
LINE OF GROCERIES IN MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
THERE IS NO SECOND OR THIRD WITH&#13;
US, EVERYTHING IS FIRST CLASS AND&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Trimble (from kitchen)-Oh, Fred.&#13;
Fred (saying his evening prayers)-"Excuse me Lord, while I talk to wife."&#13;
At Men's BanquetW. W.-Introduces A. Lemon to toast oratory.&#13;
A. Lemon-Well, I will leave it to you gentlemen whether you would rather&#13;
have A. Lemon or A. Bill and a Gas Bill at ·that.&#13;
At the Paxton, 3 a. m.- J ack-W ell, we have a game here two weeks from today.&#13;
Bill Bass-Will we be here over Sunday?&#13;
Jack-No, I will take you out where there is some chance of you fellows going&#13;
to bed at night.&#13;
Tabor, IowaGreat excitement&#13;
four of the M. C. ball&#13;
day afternoon meeting&#13;
Prichard, Weise,&#13;
&#13;
was noticed in the vicinity of the College this afternoon when&#13;
players and their coach deliberately walked into the regular Sunof the Y . M. C. A.&#13;
Lindsey, Parrish and Coach Hollister.&#13;
&#13;
RELIABLE.&#13;
&#13;
THAT'S WHY&#13;
LARSON'S GROCERIES ARE IN CONSTANT DEMAND.&#13;
LARSON'S GROCERIES A REAL NECESSITY IN EVERY HOME.&#13;
&#13;
A. P.&#13;
&#13;
LARSON&#13;
&#13;
THE COLLEGE GROCER&#13;
&#13;
1 90&#13;
&#13;
1 91&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
WHO'S WHO IN MORNINGSIDE&#13;
Flirting Princess&#13;
Miss Innocence&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Higday&#13;
Laura Belt&#13;
Billie Beam&#13;
Marguerite Kemper&#13;
&#13;
The Blue Mouse&#13;
Slim Princess&#13;
Midnight Sons&#13;
&#13;
( See Organizations)&#13;
&#13;
The Merry Widow&#13;
Miss Nobody&#13;
&#13;
Fairview Club&#13;
Helen Roddy&#13;
&#13;
Lola Raw&#13;
Hayes, Gabrielson, Harper, Schatz&#13;
&#13;
Jolly Bachelors&#13;
Such a Little Queen&#13;
The Violator&#13;
Three Twins&#13;
The Fair Co-ed&#13;
&#13;
Florence Montgomery&#13;
Vince Montgomery&#13;
Winterringer, Holbert, W aymack&#13;
Vivian McFarland&#13;
Florence Anthony&#13;
&#13;
The Other Woman&#13;
Samson&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Fred Trimble&#13;
&#13;
The Matinee Idol&#13;
Anti-Matrimony&#13;
The College Widow&#13;
&#13;
Arthah Ellerd&#13;
&#13;
The Jester&#13;
Stubborn Cinderella&#13;
Nobody's Widow&#13;
&#13;
Willie McCurdy&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner&#13;
&#13;
Etta Mahdod .&#13;
Mary Kifer&#13;
&#13;
Louise McDonald&#13;
Bertha Eads&#13;
&#13;
The Pink Lady&#13;
The Winning Miss&#13;
&#13;
Lucile Metcalf&#13;
Nick Carter '&#13;
&#13;
The Chocolate Soldier&#13;
Bright Eyes&#13;
&#13;
Hallie Frye&#13;
Charley Cushman&#13;
&#13;
The Country Boy&#13;
Prince of Tonight&#13;
&#13;
Dan Brown&#13;
Cliff Jory&#13;
&#13;
Jumping Jupiter&#13;
Baby Mine&#13;
The Man of the Hour&#13;
Bachelor Belles&#13;
&#13;
Jean Whittemore&#13;
Earl Warburton&#13;
Lola Westcott, Nina Farnam, Edith Eicher, Mabel McCreery&#13;
&#13;
The Chorus Lady&#13;
&#13;
Copyright 1911&#13;
&#13;
The House of Kuppenheimer&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
do better&#13;
You'll the college in clothes buying at Moore's,&#13;
men's clothes store. Always&#13;
the newest of the new clothes, and the most of the&#13;
newest. Your satisfaction our aim.&#13;
&#13;
Edna Randolph&#13;
&#13;
The Moore Clothing Co.&#13;
Fourth and Nebraska Streets&#13;
&#13;
19 2&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Cowa&#13;
&#13;
1 93&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
THE WOOINGS OF A&#13;
&#13;
FRESHMAN GIRL&#13;
&#13;
3% paid on Certificates of Deposit&#13;
&#13;
By Collin Clouts.&#13;
Come list to me and you shall know&#13;
Of all the little doings,&#13;
A Freshman girl at Morningside&#13;
Experienced in her wooings.&#13;
Her dark brown hair, her browner eyes,&#13;
Her winning smiles-a cheat,&#13;
And hobble skirts took all by storm,&#13;
The boys swept off their feet.&#13;
The fist to fall beneath her charms&#13;
And count himself most lucky,&#13;
A Freshman was, like grass as green,&#13;
You know him-Melvin Muckey.&#13;
But when he called some later date;&#13;
Perspired and said, The Dickens,"&#13;
Turned pale as death and from her fled,&#13;
For on the couch sat Wickens.&#13;
Poor Muckey, he just tore his hair,&#13;
H e saw he was a victim,&#13;
With clenched fists he muttered low&#13;
"That cuss, I should have licked him."&#13;
T his did seem inconsistent and&#13;
Will so appear to you,&#13;
On learning she stands four feet six&#13;
And Wickens six feet, two.&#13;
But Wickens quickly met his fate,&#13;
With Muckey was a mourner,&#13;
Of love and time and cash mis-spentShe now made eyes at Corner.&#13;
Corner declared himself in love&#13;
And wooed her with great zest,&#13;
Could even lose his grades for herJust then she sighted West.&#13;
&#13;
Security&#13;
National Bank&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1884&#13;
&#13;
Capital and Surplus $450,000&#13;
We Want You to Know&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
Students&#13;
&#13;
OUR SHOES&#13;
As We Know Them&#13;
&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
WANT THE&#13;
BEST&#13;
That's Why We Make all&#13;
Our Goods Perfect&#13;
&#13;
Comfortable Shoes&#13;
&#13;
We stand behind every package of&#13;
&#13;
Honestly Made&#13;
Reasonably Priced&#13;
&#13;
CRACKERS, CAKES&#13;
or CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
Our salesmen know how to fit you corr ectly, consult them.&#13;
&#13;
L. O'HARROW&#13;
&#13;
Johnson Biscuit Company&#13;
&#13;
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY&#13;
&#13;
902 Fourth St.&#13;
Auto Phone 1715&#13;
Iowa Phone 1358&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
19 4&#13;
&#13;
19 5&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
College Seal Stationery&#13;
Fancy Emblem Stationery&#13;
&#13;
College Spoons&#13;
College Seal Jewelry&#13;
"Beware, beware," three lone hearts cried,&#13;
"She's just a cruel flirt. "&#13;
But love is blind; West heeded not.&#13;
She said, "They're mean as dirt."&#13;
But West soon found their words were true,&#13;
She changed as with the wind,&#13;
And cast around those glances keen,&#13;
Some other dupe to find .&#13;
She found him- Ellerd is his name.&#13;
(Poor West he mourned his fate)&#13;
When Ellerd in the parlor sat,&#13;
And stayed there until late.&#13;
Ellerd thought her heart his own,&#13;
He loved with might and main,&#13;
He dreamed of her by day and nightAnd then she dreamed of Crane.&#13;
But, in the steps Crane followed quick,&#13;
Of all his fallen brothers,&#13;
As Cushman did and Maynard, too,&#13;
And Fuller and some others.&#13;
Last- Pattishall had found a "peach,"&#13;
She found a "pumpkin," too.&#13;
For her he changed his boarding placeAnd then-she changed her beau.&#13;
As each one told his tale of woe,&#13;
And chewed and bit his tongue,&#13;
The sentiment of all he said&#13;
Was, "Gee, but I was stung."&#13;
&#13;
In fact the time's too short to tell&#13;
Of lives made sad and dreary,&#13;
Of Seniors, Juniors, Freshy's, Soph's&#13;
Who loved and lost Miss Weary.&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE ALL PATRONS OF THE&#13;
&#13;
"The Sioux"&#13;
TO VISIT OUR STORE&#13;
&#13;
Books&#13;
&#13;
Pennants&#13;
&#13;
Pillow Tops&#13;
&#13;
Ray G. Darling&#13;
The College Bookman&#13;
&#13;
197&#13;
196&#13;
&#13;
"OUT&#13;
&#13;
OF T H E H IGH RENT DISTRICT"&#13;
&#13;
TODD BAKER CO.&#13;
THE REXALL STORE&#13;
&#13;
TRAGEDY&#13;
SCENE-Third floor, Renaissance Hall.&#13;
TIME-Eleven o'clock, Saturday night, after a spread on first floor.&#13;
COSTUMES-Bathrobes and curl-papers.&#13;
PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS- Miss Genevieve Bond, heroine; Mr. Barrett Dolliver,&#13;
&#13;
Leading&#13;
&#13;
G. D.HANSON&#13;
&amp; CO.&#13;
&#13;
Druggists&#13;
&#13;
would-be hero; Mrs. Heath, the housekeeper; Misses Alice McCurry and Rachel Holm.&#13;
&#13;
AcT&#13;
Cries and screams from third floor.&#13;
ing down stairs.&#13;
&#13;
Everything in Drugs. Surgical Appliances,&#13;
Rubber Goods, Etc.&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
Tailors, Clothiers&#13;
&#13;
Rapid succession of bumps like someone fall-&#13;
&#13;
heard calling from second floor, "Barrett! Barrett! Come quick!&#13;
&#13;
FINE C AN DIES&#13;
&#13;
Hatters and Men's&#13;
Furnishers&#13;
&#13;
Immediately, Rachel, with blanched cheeks and frightened voice, is&#13;
There is a man in&#13;
&#13;
A SPEC IAL TY&#13;
&#13;
Alice's room."&#13;
&#13;
Visit Our Soda Fountain&#13;
&#13;
ACT II.&#13;
In three strides Barrett reaches second floor.&#13;
&#13;
The hall is filled with wide-eyed girls&#13;
8 2 7 Fourth Street&#13;
Corner of Jennings&#13;
&#13;
and a babble of discordant voices.&#13;
&#13;
TODD BAKER CO.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, !OW A&#13;
&#13;
Barrett ( at bottom of second flight of stairs), "What's the ma-tter?"&#13;
Genevieve [who had investigated] (smiling serenely from above): "It's just Mrs.&#13;
Heath."&#13;
&#13;
THE NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.&#13;
&#13;
In meeting on the Day of Prayer- Hix sits by Theresa Freeman.&#13;
&#13;
Wants&#13;
&#13;
Miss Day- Theresa, was that your brother sitting by you at the meeting yesterday?&#13;
&#13;
Active College Men for Agents&#13;
Apply Suite 600-601 Security Bank Building&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Morse rails over the lack of sense a certain dog has one day, while he was&#13;
walking over to chapel.&#13;
Prof. Macfarren-If you knew half as much as that dog, you'd be smart.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
Crane, on the way to the Orpheum one afternoon, stopped to ask for a sign in the&#13;
&#13;
TWIN CITY DENTAL COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
window- "GIRLS WANTED."&#13;
&#13;
M .&#13;
&#13;
Mc KERCHER,&#13;
&#13;
General&#13;
&#13;
Agent&#13;
&#13;
CHERRIES AND PEARLS- Red lips, pearly teeth. Those&#13;
who have them do not fear to show them. They make a&#13;
smile doubly pleasant, doubly attractive.&#13;
&#13;
I PRACTICE MODERN PAIN LESS DENTISTRY&#13;
DR.C.A.TAYLOR&#13;
1 98&#13;
&#13;
302 Metropolitan Building&#13;
1 99&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
NIGHT SHIRT PARADE.&#13;
T'was one night after ten, and all through the house&#13;
Not a creature was stirring-not even a mouse.&#13;
We girls all were sleeping so snug in our beds&#13;
While visions of summer time danced through our heads.&#13;
When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter,&#13;
We ran to the window to see what was the matter.&#13;
And there on the south front was a sight to behold,&#13;
The partic'lars of which can scarcely be told.&#13;
The Morningside boys, in white clothes arrayed,&#13;
Were giving to Renaissance a night shirt parade.&#13;
Each one of them carried a great big tin can&#13;
And made more racket than a drunken Scotch Clan.&#13;
And while we all hung there, more outside than in,&#13;
Miss Dolliver, our Dean, thro' the door did come in.&#13;
She raised the old "Dickens" and gave it to us,&#13;
For acting like heathen and hanging out thus.&#13;
Though she fussed and she fumed, it was all done in vain,&#13;
As we only hung further the more view to gain.&#13;
Then Miss Dolliver grew angry and grabbed the first shin&#13;
Of the girl nighest to her and yanked her within.&#13;
"Why, girls, this is awful," she cried in great horror,&#13;
"You'll answer for it when the 'Fae' meets tomorrow."&#13;
Well, she talked and she talked and angrier grew,&#13;
Till she strongly resembled an "Untamed Shrew."&#13;
&#13;
THE WEST HOTEL&#13;
&#13;
JAY MACLARTY, Manager&#13;
&#13;
FRANK J. DONOHOE, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Corner Third and Nebraska Sts.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA.&#13;
Within two blocks from all Railroad Stations&#13;
&#13;
244 Rooms.&#13;
&#13;
140 with private bath.&#13;
&#13;
30 large, well-lighted Sample Rooms with&#13;
&#13;
private bath.&#13;
Located in heart of wholesale and retail&#13;
district, public buildings and theatres&#13;
Convenient to all street cars.&#13;
European Plan.&#13;
Rates: $1.00 without bath, $1.50 to $3.00&#13;
&#13;
Then bidding us all get right into bed,&#13;
She went out, still fussing and shaking her head .&#13;
No sooner had she slamed the door to behind her,&#13;
Then we climbed out and locked it-lots sadder, but wiser!&#13;
Our former positions real quickly we took,&#13;
Low we hung out the window the further to look.&#13;
The creatures were dancing and beating on tin,&#13;
Loud screaming and yelling and raising a din.&#13;
&#13;
,;I OQ&#13;
&#13;
per day, private bath.&#13;
Three fine Cafes.&#13;
Twelve private Dining R ooms.&#13;
Cuisine unexcelled.&#13;
&#13;
201&#13;
&#13;
The notes were a'fluttering and cards were outflung,&#13;
Some yells were then given and College songs sung,&#13;
Till the boys thinking that they'd raised enough muss,&#13;
Then piled out the West gate with a terrible fuss.&#13;
&#13;
ATTEN.TION!&#13;
We have fixed both of these&#13;
stores for your use&#13;
&#13;
When they all had gotten the avenue down,&#13;
We eased in the window and bedward were bound.&#13;
Again all was silent and throughout the house&#13;
Not a creature was stirring-not even a mouse?&#13;
&#13;
With the largest assortment of&#13;
Bowker (at First Congregational Church):&#13;
the aisle."&#13;
Patteshall:&#13;
&#13;
"Say, 'Pat,' there's Dr. Haynes across&#13;
&#13;
"Aw I know that fellah; he sings in the Foist Presbyterian choir every&#13;
&#13;
Sunday morning."&#13;
Bowker:&#13;
Patteshall:&#13;
Bowker:&#13;
&#13;
"I think you' re slightly mistaken."&#13;
"Don't he work at S henkberg's?"&#13;
&#13;
Imported Perfumes&#13;
Toilet Articles and&#13;
Fancy Sundries&#13;
&#13;
"That is the college R egistrar."&#13;
&#13;
OF ALL KINDS&#13;
&#13;
D ean Chandler was not always so averse to fur-bearing animals.&#13;
&#13;
As a boy on his&#13;
&#13;
Our Assortment is the Best in the City&#13;
&#13;
father's farm, in a locality notorious for its odious infestants, young Sidney was an industrious and successful trapper.&#13;
&#13;
His talent in this line was recognized by his father who,&#13;
&#13;
in order to encourage industry, paid the boy 10 cents for each varmint he killed on the&#13;
farm.&#13;
&#13;
The Best Candies&#13;
&#13;
Ice Cream&#13;
&#13;
One day he was observed by a neighbor carrying a live captive from an adjoining&#13;
&#13;
farm to his own territory.&#13;
&#13;
A few questions revealed the fact that the home supply was&#13;
&#13;
exhausted, and that as long as the killing was done on home soil he cared not from whose&#13;
farm the supply of bounty-earning a nimals were obtained.&#13;
&#13;
Prescriptions filled exactly as ordered&#13;
No substitutions. Personal attention&#13;
&#13;
Needless to say, foreign depre-&#13;
&#13;
dators did not interest the senior Chandler and bounty payments ceased.&#13;
&#13;
I. P. Cummings&#13;
Proprietor&#13;
Cecelia Park Drug Store&#13;
CECELIA PARK&#13;
&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Pharmacy&#13;
PETER'S PARK&#13;
&#13;
20 3&#13;
&#13;
MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM (Class Play, 1910).&#13;
Prof. MarshA pessimist is one who chooses both of two evils.&#13;
An optimist makes lemonade of the lemons handed him.&#13;
Ellerd-(To the librarian- forgets himself and says): "I want a package of&#13;
Ivanhoe."&#13;
In Eng. VI. a debate was held in regard to CharlesJosie Carter-Tells of what a noble, good, domestic man he was.&#13;
Ben Holbert-Yes, Charley would have been an angel if he had had a pair of&#13;
wings.&#13;
Bess Barnes in giving a definition for EducationEd is the superior adjustment of a human being to his environment.&#13;
Miss Stone is asked what she is going to give up for Lent? Is it Trig?&#13;
am going to make some sacrifice.&#13;
Grantham-I should think you would be giving up Mr. Quarnstrom, then.&#13;
&#13;
No, I&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Garver, in Faculty meeting, complains of the excess of noise in the hall of late.&#13;
Why, the other day I went out in the hall and there was W aymack kicking the&#13;
bucket.&#13;
Marguerite Kemper--I'll bet you haven't found anyone you would live with yet,&#13;
have you?&#13;
B. S.-N o, but I'll bet you have.&#13;
M. K.-Yes, I have.&#13;
204&#13;
&#13;
Ederheimer-Stein Young Men's Clothes&#13;
&#13;
VVhen Spring Freshens&#13;
The desire for new Clothes gets in to the blood like the&#13;
wish to go fishing.&#13;
And here they are-the kind of clothes that make&#13;
you g1ad Spring has come.&#13;
Eiderstein Stein and Stein-Bloch Clothes made of pure&#13;
wool, perfect fitting.&#13;
Suits $10 to $25.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIDSON BROS.&#13;
10\NA&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
205&#13;
&#13;
TO YOU WHO HAVE DRAYING TO BE DONE&#13;
&#13;
I AM IN A&#13;
&#13;
POSITION&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
IT&#13;
&#13;
DO&#13;
&#13;
TO DO YOUR DRAYING&#13;
RIGHT&#13;
&#13;
RIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
PRICES&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
RIGHT SERVICES.&#13;
&#13;
BRYAN CLUB.&#13;
HON.&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
PARNELL&#13;
&#13;
HON. JUDGE&#13;
&#13;
F.&#13;
&#13;
MAHONEY&#13;
&#13;
ELWICK&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
Secretary and Treas.&#13;
Wardheeler&#13;
&#13;
HoN. ]ACK HoLLISTER&#13;
&#13;
Motto-Vote for Bryan in I 912.&#13;
Emblem-Long Ears.&#13;
Platform-"Free Drinks."&#13;
&#13;
LEGLER, THE&#13;
AUTO PHONE 6124&#13;
&#13;
DRAYMAN&#13;
&#13;
1903 ST. AUBIN AVE., MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
PARTY ADHERENTS.&#13;
&#13;
Dr: Freeman&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Macfarren&#13;
Miss D ahl&#13;
Miss Ferguson&#13;
Prof Garver&#13;
&#13;
Dean Chandler&#13;
Marguerite Gay D olliver&#13;
Bolby Van Horn&#13;
Miss Loveland&#13;
Prof. Morse&#13;
&#13;
Prof H aynes&#13;
Miss Swem&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Barber Shop&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
A Morningside Shop for Morningside people&#13;
&#13;
Olympia Candy&#13;
&#13;
--&#13;
&#13;
Kitchen&#13;
&#13;
A Clean, Sanitary, Up-todate Shop.&#13;
Fine Service.&#13;
Convenient.&#13;
&#13;
Service the Best in the City&#13;
Famous for its&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
Candies, Dainty&#13;
Lunches, Ices,&#13;
Fruits&#13;
&#13;
Shave Before you go Downtown&#13;
&#13;
--T. Valentine, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
206&#13;
&#13;
2 07&#13;
&#13;
FROSTY BACK&#13;
FROM FRONT&#13;
Grants Interview.&#13;
&#13;
We Lead&#13;
&#13;
We note that "Frosty" is back at the&#13;
old stand, and is handing out the hot air&#13;
on Glass Avenue every evening with all&#13;
the graciousness that years of gentle service teaches a fellow. In a short interview&#13;
with him last night, he said that crops&#13;
were good out at Blencoe, that he didn't&#13;
like the way Bryan was cavortin' around&#13;
in Nebraska, and that as far as he himself was concerned, he didn't care what&#13;
happened, nothing was going to prevent&#13;
him from having a home near the College next year. We are glad to see the&#13;
old students return for it shows the proper spirit.&#13;
&#13;
With the best assortment of&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries of&#13;
all kinds.&#13;
&#13;
in Morningside.&#13;
We al ways obtain everything&#13;
new that comes out.&#13;
&#13;
Vine-Attempted to sell a horse to some horse traders while he should have been&#13;
leading his Epworth League.&#13;
&#13;
and let us show you our line.&#13;
&#13;
Talma Kitchen-Speaking of the May Music Festival, declared she would go if she&#13;
got an invitation.&#13;
I wonder if T alma attended the concerts?&#13;
&#13;
Davie &amp; Patton&#13;
Peter's Park Grocery&#13;
&#13;
Bill W aymack-My father thinks my conscience as good as new.&#13;
Hank-Why?&#13;
Bill-He says I never use it.&#13;
&#13;
208&#13;
&#13;
We cordially invite the patrons of this publication to call&#13;
&#13;
Harper-Bought one whole package of Nutty Corn one evening.&#13;
Marguerite Kemper happened along when he was going home.&#13;
Harper-I am treating my girl tonight.&#13;
Who could it be?&#13;
&#13;
Muckey-Hello, is this the Eads residence?&#13;
Susan-Yes.&#13;
Muckey-Would you like to attend the entertainment this evening?&#13;
was talking to Caroline.&#13;
&#13;
Our line is the best&#13;
&#13;
Both Phones&#13;
&#13;
Thinking he&#13;
&#13;
209&#13;
&#13;
THE SKUNK IN CHAPEL.&#13;
&#13;
HOW OFTEN HAVE YOU HEARD IT SAID-&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? You can't prove that by me;&#13;
I was not there when it was done, nor could I wish to be.&#13;
I have got some affection, and maybe lots of spunk,&#13;
And yet I never dreamed to pet a measly little skunk.&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? When it was dark at night,&#13;
Went stumbling up the fire-escape, nor dared to use a light.&#13;
Pushed up the window stealthily and uttered one loud wail,&#13;
When he, the skunk, alighted and gently swished his tail.&#13;
&#13;
"When I want anything&#13;
good I go to Martin's?"&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel, chargined our janitor,&#13;
And had the old man search the place from top to bottom floor.&#13;
Who made him work excessively; who put him in a rage?&#13;
This surely is a novel way to show respect for age.&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel, the students to annoy?&#13;
The lengthening of our periods did not increase our joy.&#13;
We hoped to visit in the halls instead of going to ChapelThe Faculty thought otherwise; with lessons made us grapple.&#13;
&#13;
T.· S. Martin&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel, to tease the Faculty?&#13;
To hear them say, "Such beastly trick this school did never see."&#13;
To have them sit in session the culprits for to know,&#13;
To say the joke had angered them-it's grieved them more I trow.&#13;
&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? when our good-natured Dean&#13;
Was left responsible for all; to act that way was mean.&#13;
The situation was "intense" and most embarrassing,&#13;
Unusual skill was needed to sift out such a thing.&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Dry Goods House&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel? The President's away,&#13;
Gone to the East on pocketbooks of millionaires to play.&#13;
Who made him pound the desk (as we have seen him oft before),&#13;
And say of "stink" and "stinker," "Such conduct I deplore."&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel our worship did disturb,&#13;
Desires for the highest things t'was wicked thus to curb.&#13;
Besides, we could not give "Nine Rahs" nor sing "Pride of the Sioux"·&#13;
O'er hero's at mass meetings as we are wont to do.&#13;
Who put the skunk in Chapel pulled off a dirty stunt,&#13;
And no doubt in the future for a cleaner joke will hunt.&#13;
Few know yet who the parties were, and even if all did,&#13;
There's not a man among us who would "snitch upon a kid."&#13;
&#13;
211&#13;
&#13;
210&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Reciprocity Stimulates&#13;
Cordiality&#13;
We are in the LAUNDRY business&#13;
and cater to our friends. We believe&#13;
you to be in this class. Our methods&#13;
are the very latest.&#13;
Experienced&#13;
help.&#13;
We are purveyors to the students of this college. Try us.&#13;
&#13;
THE OLD RELIABLE&#13;
SWEET DREAMS.&#13;
One evening during the spring vacation when things were quiet and time hung heavily upon his hands, Silas Braily, moved by those resistless impulses which surge through&#13;
the breast of a young man in the springtime, went to call upon Miss Whitehouse.&#13;
When he arrived at her home she asked him in and together they sat down for a&#13;
"teet-a-teet" in the silent recesses of the parlor. It being early evening and quite light, the&#13;
gas was lighted and turned to a small flame-a very small flame-and as the evening&#13;
advanced and they were not engaged in reading or looking at pictures, nor in any other&#13;
eye-straining occupation, there seemed to be no good reason for turning it higher. All&#13;
was quiet about the house, outside the Sable Goddess gently drew her curtain down and&#13;
was busily engaged in pinning it with a star. The feeble light flickered low and shadows&#13;
danced upon the wall. What use to speak? For thoughts came, and 0, what thoughts!&#13;
-came and went and came again, and returning were even sweeter than before.&#13;
The clock on the mantle ticked low, the good old "Ingersol" within his vest chimed&#13;
in rythmic cadence and, the while, two hearts in separate breasts throbbed in unison.&#13;
These all wove themselves into one harmonious lullaby past all resisting. The fringed&#13;
curtains drooped then closed and slumber soft and sweet stole over both their spirits.&#13;
Cruel Time passed on. The gong upon the mantel struck out the hours. The resounding vibrations fell upon their enraptured ears like silver chimes ringing out over&#13;
gardens of roses and each succeeding hour as it pealed out seemed softer and sweeter&#13;
and more distant. ONE seemed very faint-TWO they scarcely heard, . and THREE&#13;
they heard not at allBut the Senior Whitehouse heard it- heard it and wondered,&#13;
Arose from his cot, seized a bed slat and thundered:&#13;
"AWAKE thou, Oh, Brailey! ARISE and BEGONE!&#13;
Why sleep in my parlor till the break of the dawn?"&#13;
Young Silas awoke, grabbed his hat and departed,&#13;
Sorely regretting the "biff" that her father imparted.&#13;
212&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN LAUNDRY&#13;
&#13;
JACKSON STREET&#13;
&#13;
BOTH PHONES&#13;
&#13;
Style&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Reliable Clothiers&#13;
We carry a complete line&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
We obtain everything new&#13;
both Imported and American. Our Guarantee of&#13;
Reliability is our Past Reputation.&#13;
&#13;
of up-to-date Clothing and Fur-&#13;
&#13;
---&#13;
&#13;
Johnson &amp; Aronson&#13;
&#13;
Orkin Bros.&#13;
&#13;
710-712 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
nishing Goods at very lowest&#13;
prices. Ten per cent discount to&#13;
Professors and Students of College.&#13;
&#13;
.,&#13;
&#13;
WATCHES,&#13;
WOULD TO GOODNESS THAT&#13;
&#13;
All sorts and conditions of men and women will find our&#13;
immense watch stock complete with everything new in the&#13;
watch world. Lots of new designs in cases and every&#13;
movement made by the Elgin, Waltham, Hampden, Hamilton and Howard companies.&#13;
We are the agents for the celebrat ed Patek Philippe watch&#13;
-the finest of all imported watches.&#13;
&#13;
Melvin could have a few flashes of brilliant silence,&#13;
Bernice Bowman a steady man,&#13;
Ernest Wickens a new handkerchief;&#13;
Bill W aymack a white shirt,&#13;
Bill Bass a fresh change of "M" sweaters,&#13;
"Yea Verily" a new phrase,&#13;
Mrs. Reynolds a new switch,&#13;
&#13;
WATCHES FOR FATHER , MOTHER. SON OR DAUGHTER&#13;
&#13;
Dean Chandler a stand upon a question,&#13;
Professor Morse less diplomacy,&#13;
&#13;
WILL&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Macfarren sense enough to sit still during grace,&#13;
Professor Rigby a shave,&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
BECK&#13;
&#13;
co.&#13;
&#13;
JEWELERS, FOURTH AND PIERCE STS.&#13;
&#13;
Professor Van Horne would clean his finger nails,&#13;
Prof. Doxee would quit drinking tea,&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHED 1877&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Miss Dahl would cheer up,&#13;
John Engle would take a bath,&#13;
Hatch would get clipped,&#13;
Bob would put no more skunks in the Chapel,&#13;
Backameyer wouldn't leave any more letters around,&#13;
Marguerite Kemper would quit mourning for Pritt,&#13;
&#13;
For the best in Photography&#13;
&#13;
Cecil Palmer would get a new smile,&#13;
Miss Garnish would quit taking walks,&#13;
&#13;
Miss Anderson and Doxee would make up,&#13;
Spiker and Breaw would quit smoking,&#13;
Ellison and Hall cut out their cards.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
407 Fourth St.&#13;
&#13;
214&#13;
&#13;
21 5&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
1894-1910&#13;
&#13;
LUTHER FREEMAN, President&#13;
&#13;
WHY ATTEND MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE?&#13;
It is a hi g h g rad e college wh ose g raduates tak e hi g h est&#13;
standin g in post gradu ate wo rk in th e leading uni ve rsiti es .&#13;
An abl e faculty of thirty- six m emb ers tr a in ed in the&#13;
lea din g sch ools in Am erica and Europe.&#13;
A spl endid stud ent body, six hundr ed str o n g, from th e&#13;
bes t hom es in the North west, in cr ea sin g steadil y in th e&#13;
stro ngest departments.&#13;
An endowm ent of $400,000.00&#13;
On e o f th e few coll eges in Iow a to r eceive th e endor sem ent and offer of endowm ent after t ho r o ugh person al examination by th e General Educati o n B oa rd of Ne w Yo rk.&#13;
E x p en ses ar e as lo w a s is co nsist ent w ith th e bes t&#13;
wo rk.&#13;
L oca tion in an unu sually aggr essive city of 50,000&#13;
a ffo rd s spl endid oppo rtuniti es for stud ent s of ent erpri se&#13;
t o o btain profi ta bl e e mpl oy m ent and t o fo rm valuable&#13;
a cq uainta nces.&#13;
Mo rnin gs id e lead s th e state in oratory, as is sho wn&#13;
by th e record s o f th e last fo ur yea rs, a nd is fo rgin g&#13;
steadil y t o th e front in many lin es.&#13;
An athl etic pa rk with a quart er mil e course and a&#13;
fi eld h o u se with an indoo r track g ive full opportunities&#13;
of&#13;
athl eti c develo pm ent.&#13;
s&#13;
F o r catalog and ge ne ral info rmati o n adclres_&#13;
&#13;
OFFICE OF THE DEAN&#13;
Views in the New Chemistry Building&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
21 6&#13;
&#13;
217&#13;
&#13;
Palmer'sONCE EATEN&#13;
&#13;
MU CKEY'S WATERLOO&#13;
&#13;
Scene-Dark.&#13;
Place-Park.&#13;
One night when homeward strolling,&#13;
As the midnight bell was tolling,&#13;
I heard afar a most tremendous roar.&#13;
Then the roaring grew to rumbling,&#13;
And I saw two forms come tumbling,&#13;
Headlong, pitching, falling, stumbling,&#13;
On to ditches, dirty floor.&#13;
Then a silence most relieving,&#13;
And I turned away believing,&#13;
For my eyes are past deceiving,&#13;
'Twas Laura and Melvin-nothing more.&#13;
&#13;
VIOLET BOX&#13;
&#13;
NEVER FORGOTTEN&#13;
&#13;
Palmers&#13;
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ROMAN CUOCOLATES&#13;
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Palmers&#13;
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Palm&#13;
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MAXIMA CUOCO-&#13;
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ALPEAN CUOCOLATES&#13;
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Palmers&#13;
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Delicious&#13;
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Chocolates&#13;
&#13;
BITTER SWEETS&#13;
&#13;
ALL MAPLE&#13;
CHOCOLATES&#13;
&#13;
PALMER'S CHOCOLATE&#13;
MARASCHINO CHERRIES&#13;
&#13;
Look! Listen! one of our promising young students at last tenders his Economics&#13;
&#13;
MADE IN SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Outline, due some twenty-four months ago.&#13;
Outline,&#13;
&#13;
Economics I.&#13;
&#13;
In the Cleanest and Most Up-to-Date Candy Factory in the West&#13;
&#13;
W.W. WAYMACK.&#13;
Brief of the same extracted by W. W. Waymack,&#13;
who is a student of Morningside College-to his great&#13;
gratification had the discredit of the school, for the purpose&#13;
of removing a moss-grown condition in Econ. I.&#13;
&#13;
DAVEN&#13;
PORT &amp; JORDAN&#13;
&#13;
A PARTING WORD.&#13;
&#13;
Latest Methods for&#13;
&#13;
He has vanished-he has left us,&#13;
Oh, what cruel fate bereft us,&#13;
Oh, how many a gentle maiden&#13;
Girds her eyelids tear-drop laden&#13;
At but mention of-&#13;
&#13;
PRICHARD&#13;
&#13;
Garver-Appearing at class with a muffler on his neck, remarks about the cold room.&#13;
At Chapel time he goes home after his collar.&#13;
Bunny Elliott, standing in the hall. Dr. Haynes happens along as Cushman speaks.&#13;
Cushman-Hello, Bunny, old sport.&#13;
&#13;
French Dry Cleaning&#13;
and Dyeing&#13;
&#13;
Your Tie&#13;
i s the key-note&#13;
to you ,· attire.&#13;
Many a shabby&#13;
sui t&#13;
h as&#13;
been&#13;
redeemed&#13;
by a&#13;
&#13;
Br ing your Suits and Overcoats t o u s and&#13;
get a strictly firs t -class job done. W e dye&#13;
a nd clean Gloves. a nd clean. dye a nd curl&#13;
P lumes. Our machiner y is new. and our&#13;
process of thoroughly clea nsing all kind s&#13;
of g a rmenls for ladies and gen tlemen is&#13;
e n tirely the most modern. Remember t h e&#13;
name-&#13;
&#13;
sma r t, well-made&#13;
cravat. Washington Cr avats com e&#13;
in m an y shades&#13;
and m any patterns, each the&#13;
best&#13;
and most&#13;
d esi rabl e of its&#13;
kind. 50c and $1.&#13;
&#13;
DAVENPORT &amp;JORDAN&#13;
&#13;
==== BOTH PHONES 2677 ====&#13;
417 Douglas Street&#13;
&#13;
21 8&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
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WASHINGTON SHIRT CO.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
61 7 Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
219&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
INSIST ON THE BEST&#13;
AT YOUR&#13;
&#13;
GROCER'S&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST PRIZE&#13;
Frosty sitting on the rear seat in History V classMary Thoburn-What are you sitting on the back seat for?&#13;
Frosty- So that I can't see your face.&#13;
Bachemeyer (at the table)-1&#13;
&#13;
just simply cannot hear a girl talk- that is in public.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Brown in Psychology class:&#13;
&#13;
You can all be rich if you really wish it.&#13;
&#13;
WILL BE THE&#13;
&#13;
BRAND&#13;
&#13;
Trimble: I want to be rich.&#13;
Brown: You cannot be a missionary to China and wish to be rich at the same time.&#13;
Miss Bond and Miss Dean should have a chaperon when going down town, for&#13;
they took the wrong train when going home Easter vacation.&#13;
Miss Shannon has a report in Polioics.&#13;
Prof. Garver- It is needless to write down the whole book.&#13;
Mrs. Coleman, in her report to the Faculty&#13;
Well, there are three fellows w ho&#13;
are all that can be expected of college men and the other one is a gentleman.&#13;
&#13;
TOLERTON &amp; WARFIELD CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Bachemeyer and Mahoney are met coming out of the Mondamin pool hall by Dr.&#13;
Freeman.&#13;
Needless to say profuse excuses are hurriedly offered.&#13;
220&#13;
&#13;
22 1&#13;
&#13;
Garver, in History Class: Woman is the head of the household.&#13;
If you don't believe it get married.&#13;
Professor P endell, in Chem. C lass:&#13;
&#13;
Well, Jory, what does your book say?&#13;
&#13;
Palmer calls uo A u to 11 75 by mistake and asks for D ora. Mrs. Distad of&#13;
course sends Lorna to the 'phone and Palmer tenders an invitation to the Otho Banquet.&#13;
M oral-Make :your dates with someone you know.&#13;
D avey Loepp-When coming to S. C. on the Illinois Central, says, "This train is&#13;
an instrument of God."&#13;
Bill Bass-Why?&#13;
pavey- God created all creeping things.&#13;
Mahoney-(When offering prayers shortly before the Otho-Philo debate):&#13;
&#13;
Mr.&#13;
&#13;
EVERY&#13;
&#13;
CO-ED KNOWS&#13;
CLOTHES&#13;
&#13;
C hairma n - Miss Fletcher d eclines to come to the front of the room when about to read a&#13;
paper, presumably because Bowker is on the front seat.&#13;
Prof. Brown: N ever mind, Miss F., I'll protect you.&#13;
"A gentleman is one who breaks all the ten commandments genteelly and wears spotless linen."&#13;
Prof. Macfarren-&#13;
&#13;
{In a hea ted argument with M ahoney) : I would rather die in&#13;
&#13;
Ireland than any other place, I think.&#13;
Mahoney: Of course, I knew you would admit it.&#13;
M acfarren : Well, it would be because I could leave Ireland with less regret than&#13;
any spot on earth.&#13;
Miss Eicher calmly working in the libraryFreshman Girl- Are you Mrs. Trimble ?&#13;
&#13;
and knowing what's what in clothes she&#13;
brings her wants to this store where every&#13;
woman can get just the apparel fashion&#13;
decrees she shall wear. There is nothing&#13;
that is good in women's apparel that cannot be found here and at prices most&#13;
reasonable.&#13;
It has become a habit with all women&#13;
who are particular about their dress to do&#13;
all their trading at Pelletier's. Any one&#13;
who has worn Pelletier' s apparel knows&#13;
why it becomes a custom.&#13;
&#13;
EVERYTHING FOR EVERYONE&#13;
ALWAYS HERE&#13;
The Suits, Dresses, and Coats were never as beautiful as they are this season.&#13;
&#13;
223&#13;
222&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
OUR MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
NOT HOW CHEAP- BUT HOW GOOD&#13;
&#13;
LET LINDHOLM FURNISH&#13;
YOUR HOME COMPLETE&#13;
&#13;
THORPE &amp; HOBERG&#13;
JEWELERS OF SIOUX CITY&#13;
511 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
Marguerite Shreiner in Psychology :&#13;
&#13;
Tells of a class for the benefit of dull children&#13;
&#13;
in the University of Minnesota.&#13;
Prof. Brown:&#13;
&#13;
What do you think of it?&#13;
&#13;
If you were a little girl would you like&#13;
&#13;
to be in the class?&#13;
&#13;
Lindholm Furniture Company&#13;
Fifth and Douglas Streets&#13;
&#13;
Ethel L ynch-Coming from the M ain H all and seeing the car has just gone is&#13;
asked to walk up to the park by one of the fellows.&#13;
E thel-W ell, I might as well, it isn't any worse than standing here.&#13;
&#13;
ESCORTING AN UNINVITED&#13;
GUEST FROM CHAPEL&#13;
&#13;
224&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, U. S. A&#13;
&#13;
22 5&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Valuable&#13;
Faculty&#13;
&#13;
Determined effort to save develops or strengthens a valuable faculty,&#13;
namely: The faculty of drawing the line between necessary and useless expenditure.&#13;
Think of it: Isn't it usually the thing one is better off without that takes&#13;
the money he should save?&#13;
Hence the double benefit of the saving habit: First, learning to deny&#13;
one's self harmful indulgences; and second, acquiring a property through little&#13;
triumphs over self.&#13;
Ask yourself now if there is any reason why you should not become a&#13;
money saver at the&#13;
&#13;
GENELLI STUDIO&#13;
513&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH STREET&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
IOWA STATE SAVINGS BANK&#13;
Safe Deposit Boxes&#13;
&#13;
SOUTHEAST&#13;
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For Rent in Our Steel Lined Burglar and Fire Proof Vaults&#13;
&#13;
CORNER&#13;
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OF&#13;
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FOURTH&#13;
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AND&#13;
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JACKSON&#13;
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STREETS&#13;
&#13;
A H.&#13;
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OBERG PEDERSEN&#13;
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VAN RIPER&#13;
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THE&#13;
&#13;
THE PEDERSEN-VAN RIPER CO.&#13;
Interior&#13;
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Decorators&#13;
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.&#13;
&#13;
619 FIFTH STREET&#13;
Lewis Block&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Auto Phone 4214&#13;
&#13;
Corner-In debate-We&#13;
Judges.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Negative-Maintain-Mr.&#13;
&#13;
Chairman-Hon.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Clyde Devitt-(Shortly after Ellerd's flame becomes bright with Lulu) : "Lulu&#13;
has a date every night next week with the toughest boy in school."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ethan Smith and Genevieve Bond-Late to supper after a skating partyEthan: "My hands didn't get a bit cold while I was skating."&#13;
Genevieve-( From across the table) : "Neither did mine."&#13;
&#13;
IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL PHOTOGRAPHS AND&#13;
DESIGNS APPEARING IN THIS ANNUAL.&#13;
&#13;
Johnson, Prichard, Anderson and Warburton receive a bid to spend the evening at&#13;
the home of Miss Frances Horn.&#13;
Upon arriving they fail to find anyone but Frosty and Frances there.&#13;
Warburton-Coming into Politics Class late, as usual.&#13;
Prof. Garver: "Well, let's don't pay too much attention to visitors."&#13;
Mary Kifer:&#13;
something.&#13;
&#13;
WE MAKE A FEATURE OF COL·&#13;
LEGE PHOTOGRAPHS AND HAVE&#13;
UNSURPASSED&#13;
FACILITIES&#13;
FOR THE PROMPT DELIVERY OF&#13;
SUCH WORK.&#13;
&#13;
"Say, Louise, if someone asks you a question, let on you know&#13;
&#13;
Kent and Miss Green approach a muddy crossing on their way to dinnerKent: "Well, there is only one of two things to do. Leave my coat down or carry&#13;
you across.&#13;
226&#13;
&#13;
227&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
GOOD PRINTING&#13;
We do no other kind. We&#13;
printed this book, and submit it to the public as an&#13;
evidence of the quality of&#13;
our work. We can turn out&#13;
just as good a job for you.&#13;
Give us a trial. Catalogues&#13;
and booklets a specialty.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
THE MONARCH PRINTING CO.&#13;
Printers of The Sioux=&#13;
&#13;
COU N CIL&#13;
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BLUF F S ,&#13;
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===&#13;
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IOW A&#13;
&#13;
229&#13;
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GO BACK&#13;
And read carefully the advertisements.&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
We have selected them with care;&#13;
&#13;
advertisers are the kind that stand back of their goods.&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
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They are the folks in&#13;
&#13;
C. S. VON HATTEN&#13;
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Sioux City that help to boost our college enterprises and it is only right that they should&#13;
have our co-operation in their business.&#13;
&#13;
Prefer our advertisers to all others.&#13;
/&#13;
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MANUFACTURER&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
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&#13;
OF&#13;
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&#13;
512 FOURTH STREET&#13;
&#13;
A few weeks ago this bird left upon the steps of Morningside a new Annual board.&#13;
They are young and know not the magnitude of the task that lies before them.&#13;
give them .greeting and bespeak for them the co-operation of every student.&#13;
&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA&#13;
&#13;
Walk&#13;
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Nights&#13;
To Buy&#13;
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We&#13;
&#13;
Upon them&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
&#13;
we cast our mantel and wish them success.&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
BOARD OF EDITORS, SIOUX '12.&#13;
&#13;
Mahoney &amp;&#13;
&#13;
Elwick&#13;
&#13;
THE EN D .&#13;
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Properties in&#13;
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&#13;
Dean Sidney L. Chandler&#13;
Lola Raw &#13;
Rob't Smylie&#13;
Florence Anthony&#13;
G. E. Wickens&#13;
Edna Reike&#13;
J.H. Lewis&#13;
Luther Freeman&#13;
Felix Mendelssohn&#13;
S.S Wesley&#13;
Margaret Gay Dolliver&#13;
Rev. Bennett Mitchell&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener&#13;
Fred Emory Hanes&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt&#13;
Lillian Estelle Roberts&#13;
Esther Vera Seaman&#13;
Agnes beveridge Ferguson&#13;
Reynard Greynald&#13;
Esther Catherine Wheeler&#13;
Helen Isabella Loveland &#13;
Pearl Alice Woodford&#13;
Carll Whitman Doxsee&#13;
Frank harmon Garver&#13;
Arch Edward Rigby &#13;
Alletta M. Gillette&#13;
Charles Almer Marsh&#13;
Thomas calderwood Stephens &#13;
Harold Stiles&#13;
Ephenor Adradtus Brown&#13;
Ida Nolan Reynolds&#13;
Marie Voy Hoard&#13;
David Breese jones&#13;
Robert Negley Van Horne&#13;
Jennie Baird Bridenbaugh &#13;
Orwin Allison Morse&#13;
Herbert MacFarren&#13;
Faith Foster Woodforn&#13;
Frederic Curtis Butterfield&#13;
lois Ena Frear&#13;
Leulla Anderson&#13;
Maybel Roma Smylie&#13;
Inga Nelson Brown&#13;
Beulah Warren Greene&#13;
John W. Hollister&#13;
Winifred Alice Garnich&#13;
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&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
VOL. III.&#13;
EDITED AND PUBLISH ED BY THE CLASS OF 1905.&#13;
&#13;
�This Book&#13;
IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Mitchell,&#13;
&#13;
D. D.&#13;
&#13;
PRINT Of"&#13;
&#13;
UNION&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
CO.,&#13;
&#13;
158-164&#13;
&#13;
FIFTH&#13;
&#13;
STREET ,&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
�Bennett Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
IF&#13;
&#13;
THERE is anyone who could be taken as an ideal Christian,&#13;
&#13;
it is Rev. Bennett Mitchell, D. D. His consistent life has&#13;
been an inspiration to all. His unassuming manner may well be&#13;
coveted, and his sound judgment sought by young people at the&#13;
crises in their lives.&#13;
His life has been one crowded with labors for the Methodist&#13;
Episcopal Church. He entered the ministry in 1854, joining the&#13;
Iowa Conference the following year. His influence in his ministry&#13;
has been felt through four different Conferences of Iowa. He has&#13;
been a member of Northwest Iowa Conference for nearly thirtythree years, has served four terms as Presiding Elder and been&#13;
elected five times to General Conference. He was a member of&#13;
the Commission that organized Morningside College, and has&#13;
continually been president of the Board of Trustees since that&#13;
time. The labors of this man for the college have been untiring,&#13;
and the students and friends recognize in him one of her truest&#13;
friends.&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT MITCHELL, D . D .&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Mitchell is the senior active member of the Northwest&#13;
Iowa Conference. He was born in Indiana, February 18th, 1832,&#13;
being therefore seventy-two years of age. He has served over&#13;
fifty-one years in active ministry.&#13;
&#13;
�MAIN HALL.&#13;
&#13;
NORTH&#13;
&#13;
HALL.&#13;
&#13;
�Introduction&#13;
We, THE JUNIOR CLASS OF MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE,&#13;
have labored long and earnestly to prepare an Annual that would be an honor to the Class&#13;
and a credit to the institution we represent While we realize that the production&#13;
is not as good as we might wish it to be, we also feel that we do not owe an apology&#13;
because it is not better.&#13;
&#13;
But we sincerely ask that our fellow students, our&#13;
&#13;
Faculty and the friends of the college rejoice with us that it is as good as it is.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
believe that there has been an honest effort in our part, and that we&#13;
have been just in revealing the life of the school.&#13;
&#13;
Your appreciation of our effort&#13;
&#13;
and work will be shown by the reception you give this volume.&#13;
We believe that we have tried to deal fairly with all and hope that we have&#13;
added strength to our already warm friendship.&#13;
&#13;
�College History&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
College first received&#13;
&#13;
its name in&#13;
September, 1895. The institution, however,&#13;
came into existence as the University of the Northwest&#13;
in 1890. The great Northwest had been developing&#13;
very rapidly for the preceding fifteen years. The population of Sioux City had increased from 10,000 in 1880&#13;
to nearly 40,000 in 1890. Progress had been so rapid&#13;
that to the people of Sioux City all things seemed possible. The city was filled with active and aggressive&#13;
business men, and 'doing things in the Sioux City way,'&#13;
and 'getting a Sioux City move on you,' were synonyms&#13;
that traveled beyond the borders of the state. So it&#13;
came that the idea of a great university that would add&#13;
to the renown of the city was conceived.&#13;
The prospectus was a modest bit of advertising,&#13;
although it called attention to the fact that the university&#13;
consisted of a College of Liberal Arts, a College of&#13;
Didactics, a College of Medicine, a College of Law, a&#13;
College of Commerce, a Conservatory of Music a Department of Painting and a Preparatory Department.&#13;
The University was not strictly a Methodist school,&#13;
although it was under the patronage of that church.&#13;
Most of the departments had quarters down in the&#13;
city. The first-class sessions of the College of Liberal&#13;
Arts were held in Grace Church, then . recently com*Taken from the "Blueand White."&#13;
&#13;
pleted. But the dark days of the institution came when&#13;
its fate hung in the balance.&#13;
These are sometimes&#13;
referred to as the ' heroic days'. The students, worked&#13;
on the Campus, made roads, and planted trees. The&#13;
faculty was burdened with paying heavy bills from light&#13;
receipts, and trying to live on the remainder. A spirit&#13;
of uncertainty pervaded the school. As one of the students expressed it, 'We didn't know when we left school&#13;
one day, whether there would be any school to go to the&#13;
next.' The different colleges separated, some to cease&#13;
work, some to become separate institutions. The Sioux&#13;
City Medical College is one of the departments that&#13;
continued its work.&#13;
At this juncture the grounds and building at Morningside were purchased by the Northwest Iowa Conference of the M. E. Church, the name changed to Morningside College and Rev. G. W. Carr was made the&#13;
president. He was appointed some time during the fall&#13;
of 1894 and served until June 1897. We do not know&#13;
just how many students were enrolled during the.first&#13;
year of the College, as the number was not given in the&#13;
catalogue at the close of that year. One hundred and&#13;
eighty-seven were enrolled in the second year. On Commencement Day of this year, Dr. W. S. Lewis was installed as president. During the seven years since that&#13;
time the school has grown rapidly, so that the enrollment&#13;
for the present year will exceed six hundred. Aside&#13;
from the increase in numbers of students, it has increased&#13;
its buildings, its equipment and its faculty, and is eagerly&#13;
looking forward to the day when it will be the leading&#13;
educational institution of the Northwest."&#13;
&#13;
�VIEW&#13;
&#13;
OF CAMPUS.&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Maroon Staff&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, - Geo. Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY, - - Cora Lockin, Chairman&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER, - Ralph E. Root&#13;
&#13;
PRODUCTIONS&#13;
Estella Harding&#13;
Mary Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Poppenheimer&#13;
CENSOR BOARD, - Ralph E. Root&#13;
( Estella Harding&#13;
ASST. BUSINESS&#13;
MANAGERS&#13;
&#13;
ASST. EDITORS&#13;
&#13;
C. E. Harding&#13;
Carl W . .Maynard&#13;
Rena Bowker&#13;
Estella Harding&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
Carrie Brown&#13;
Myrtle Cook&#13;
&#13;
JOKES&#13;
Norman McCay&#13;
Vincent DuBois&#13;
&#13;
HISTORICAL, - Davis C. Hall, Chairman&#13;
SOCIETIES&#13;
CLASSES, Clara Killam&#13;
ASSOCIATIONS Maude Cling. FACULTY, Anna Goodell&#13;
ALUMNI, S. D. Stulkin&#13;
CLUBS&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC,&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETICS, - -&#13;
&#13;
Rena Bowker&#13;
Anna Hollingsworth&#13;
Florence Davidson&#13;
D. L. Young&#13;
Alice Marsh&#13;
&#13;
�RENA N. BOWKER.&#13;
Birth unimportant. Death not yet evident. Modesty and innocent love of pleasure&#13;
temper a serious vein which is never entirely&#13;
underneath the surface. Could you in her&#13;
photograph get a glimpse of her noble ideals&#13;
you might then picture to yourself more accurately this piece of fun-loving seriousness.&#13;
It is inconceivable to imagine her ever&#13;
becoming such a thing as a "New Woman"&#13;
or even an old one. In regard to the former&#13;
she's not enough of a scientific old maid to&#13;
wield a Womans' Club; although in an emergency case she might a stove poker.&#13;
As for the latter, old age, she's far from&#13;
that. How far, I can't say. Too cheerful&#13;
and active to become a drone, and leads&#13;
easier than she will be lead.&#13;
&#13;
Entered Morningside College in the fall&#13;
of 1901. Has been faithful; never meddles&#13;
with the affairs of others; has a strong personality; is a lover of the fairer sex and there&#13;
are some indications that h e will be captured.&#13;
He is now assistant in the Chemistry department.&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCAY.&#13;
&#13;
MYRTILLA MAE COOK.&#13;
&#13;
Our beloved president. A .Canadian by&#13;
birth; an American by adoption; a minister&#13;
by profession. Came to Morningside in '96,&#13;
a sub-prep. Returned to Canada once, bringng back with him a bonnie Canadian lassie;&#13;
hence the only Junior who has tasted the&#13;
joys of matrimony.&#13;
Working his way by&#13;
means of his mouth. Accomplished in oratory and debate. Of lovable disposition,&#13;
a&#13;
natural peacemaker. Of strong character, a&#13;
natural leader. Of amiable nature, as proven&#13;
by his refusal to publish jokes on the faculty.&#13;
Believes in : ethodism and Othonianism. Is&#13;
M&#13;
bound to make his presence felt in the world.&#13;
&#13;
Born and raised at Medicine Lodge, Kansas, but denounces the faith of both Jerry&#13;
Simpson and Carrie Nation. Believes the&#13;
world was made for girls. Is a popular&#13;
writer, musician and social leader. Member&#13;
of the Zetalethean Society. Assistant in the&#13;
Biological Laboratory. So far in life she has&#13;
accomplished every undertaking and "the&#13;
maid her charms with inward greatness&#13;
unaffected mind." Is too valuable a g irl to&#13;
remain long a Cook.&#13;
Will always bring&#13;
honor to the class of 1905. For her future&#13;
watch the stars of the coming century.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. McCARTHY.&#13;
&#13;
�ESTELLA HARDING.&#13;
Born on the southeast corner of section&#13;
one, Goewey' Township, Osceola County,&#13;
Iowa, U. S. A. When? 0, she's not so antedeluvia n as she might be. A special elocutor.&#13;
Not a member of the cloak room class,-but&#13;
what about the Hall?&#13;
CHARACTER1STICS-Jolly, good natured,&#13;
fond of dish washing, good fudge maker,&#13;
fancy cooker, in general is a teetotaler, hates&#13;
cats and dogs and lacks all those qualities&#13;
which go to make up a single spinster.&#13;
APPEARANCE - Tall, slender, graceful,&#13;
and as handsome as a picture hat.&#13;
Hestella Arding his not Henglish, but er&#13;
prospects hare Hall good.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIS C. HALL.&#13;
Calm and graceful as the lean elm, jolly&#13;
as a ' lark, yet serious as a November sky.&#13;
Tall, slim, Jong features and arms, dark hair,&#13;
well- combed back (and head ); a hazel grey&#13;
eye on either side (in fact on both) of a Roman nose, a chin clear cut and medium strong.&#13;
A gentleman, is composed of honesty, energy,&#13;
backbone and propriety, finished with a&#13;
touch of sympathy and courtesy. He has&#13;
won distinction as an orator and is a leader&#13;
in social circles. Such is the Hall of fame.&#13;
&#13;
MR. E. H. HULSER.&#13;
&#13;
MAUDE KLING.&#13;
&#13;
A man of marked ability; born of noble&#13;
ancestry during the prosperous times of the&#13;
seventies. His chief ambition is to make&#13;
himself felt in the world. Has won some&#13;
distinction as a debater and an orator. Believes in woman and expects to be an ideal&#13;
husband. As a business man he is second to&#13;
none. Is a hard worker and believes in&#13;
Othonianism. His college life has been one&#13;
full of to il and battles, but he has crowned&#13;
himself with his success.&#13;
&#13;
Mason City-place of birth.&#13;
Age-same as usual for one of her years.&#13;
U will know her hy her audible smiles.&#13;
Dwells by the Big Muddy at the present date.&#13;
Early always at her classes.&#13;
&#13;
Kind to creatures great and small.&#13;
Little in stature, mighty on her understanding&#13;
Industrious, faithful, good and true .&#13;
No one knows all her virtues.&#13;
Gain her acquaintance, all.&#13;
&#13;
�ALICE MARSH.&#13;
&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
DAVID WESLEY&#13;
HANNA.&#13;
&#13;
Born on a night when one of the greatest&#13;
blizzards that has visited northern Iowa during the past forty years, swept over the&#13;
prairies of Osceola County.&#13;
Her disposition, true to the lone birth-star&#13;
of that stormy night, has ever sought the&#13;
tempestuous, in love. In childhood given to&#13;
tears, races with boys of her block, and&#13;
strenuous hater of the camera. As a college&#13;
Junior, she affects a high pompadour, is fond&#13;
of" a good time" and believes in the Zets."&#13;
&#13;
Native of the state of Iowa, whether a&#13;
relative of Marcus Hanna is not known. Began to preach the gospel in Nebraska. Attended Cornell in 1900; in 1901 came to Morningside; helped to organize the Adelphian&#13;
Literary Society; was a member of the first&#13;
Academy Inter-Society Debate Team. Since&#13;
entering the college, his life has been that&#13;
of the average student.&#13;
&#13;
SIMON D. STULKEN.&#13;
&#13;
MARY GILBERT.&#13;
&#13;
He came to Northwest Iowa from the Sun&#13;
Flower state during the trying times of&#13;
Grover Cleveland's Administration. As an&#13;
ambitious youth he struggled some years&#13;
with varying fortunes, finally entering the&#13;
Academy of Morningside College during the&#13;
struggling days of North Hall. He is a. hero&#13;
of the old days, and delights in relating their&#13;
experiences. He has won distinction as an&#13;
original thinker, and has contributed to&#13;
philosophy a unique definition of the soul,&#13;
''A % vacuum with an echo in it."&#13;
&#13;
Product of Iowa soil.&#13;
Descendant of John Bull, also a connection of all the Gilberts of bygone days and&#13;
sister of Cyrus L. of the present day.&#13;
Not matrimonially inclined because of&#13;
her dislike of housework but will accept (the&#13;
inevitable when Fate shall decree.&#13;
Particular and persevering, a hard working student, never does anything by halves.&#13;
If you ever come within four miles of&#13;
Larrabee,-stop-at Mary Giibert's. She is&#13;
worthy of your further acquaintance.&#13;
&#13;
�"&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BOOTH&#13;
DAVIDSON.&#13;
No relation to Davidson Bros. Some h ave&#13;
said she was born to rule. Those who h ave&#13;
met her charm s believe it, for "Her&#13;
love was&#13;
sought I do aver by twenty beaux or more."&#13;
Popular reader and leader in college affairs.&#13;
1&#13;
Member o f the Zetale thean Society. I n struct·&#13;
or in Ladies' Gymnasium. Elocution graduate in 1902. Vocal s tude nt in Con servato ry.&#13;
Member of the First Presbyterian c h oir,&#13;
Sioux City. Uses o nly o n e bad word, " Jinks"&#13;
Knows many m ore. She was happy when&#13;
she becam e a Junior and we are proud of&#13;
her.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE J. POPPENHEIMER.&#13;
"Lest we forget, lest we forget. 11&#13;
Of -German ancestry, born n ear Manis tee,&#13;
Michigan. When two years old moved to&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Life near the Indians created&#13;
within him an overpowering ambitio n to become a grea t c hief. Admires women. Sym pathetic and stron g in c h a racter. Won d is·&#13;
tinctions in athletics a nd o rato ry. Hasn't an&#13;
e nemy in the world. Is a staunch Oth o nian.&#13;
In '96&#13;
entered Morningside, a Junior Prep. t o&#13;
study for the ministry. Worked his way&#13;
through college. In 1903 his early ambitions&#13;
were realized and he became a great chief of&#13;
a great cause- the h o n o r ed Editor in Chief o f&#13;
the "Maroon" f 1905&#13;
o&#13;
&#13;
CORALlNN LOCKIN.&#13;
R. E. ROOT.&#13;
Naturally inquis itive- in fact born in the&#13;
s tate "show m e. ·' kissed in earliest youth&#13;
by the sun s rays, his lock s are of the auburn&#13;
hue. Fair of face an d com e ly of form 1 richly e n dowed with talents that m a k e for greatuess. Inspired by a love of truth, he has been&#13;
engaged several yea rs in the acquisition of an&#13;
education (a nd within one year's time will&#13;
take unto himself his Bachelor degree.) In&#13;
youth he dreamed of perpetual motion now&#13;
I&#13;
he is perpetualily on the move. A man,&#13;
thoughtful, scholastic, ready with penand&#13;
has recognized business ability.&#13;
&#13;
In Cherokee County she was born and reared.&#13;
Not without sound brains as might have bee n&#13;
feared,&#13;
But nature did "Lockin " her make up, good&#13;
sense&#13;
And she keeps&#13;
within bounds without any&#13;
&#13;
In stature Miss Cora's of medium size&#13;
With abundant brown h air and lightish blue&#13;
eyes.&#13;
She knows good from eviland sure shuns the&#13;
latter&#13;
And when s h e must needs decide o n a matter&#13;
She knows when to say yea and when to say&#13;
nay&#13;
And opes not her mouth till she knows what&#13;
to say.&#13;
&#13;
�Class of 1905.&#13;
Officers:&#13;
G. J . :POPPENHEIMER, Vice-Pres.&#13;
C. E. HARDING, Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCAY, President.&#13;
ANNA L. HOLLINGSWORTH, Secy.&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Colorrs&#13;
&#13;
OLD GOLD and MAROON .&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Emblem&#13;
&#13;
" DIG."&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
S-s-s Boom!&#13;
MR. W.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
sure of success.&#13;
&#13;
19 !&#13;
&#13;
19 !&#13;
&#13;
1905 !&#13;
&#13;
Class Roll&#13;
&#13;
MORGAN.&#13;
&#13;
Bor n so m e wh e re in England;&#13;
h o m e n o w in I owa; lives n ear a&#13;
Ma r s h , b ut is al ways o n h igh&#13;
g ro und. His lo ve fo r learn in g&#13;
induce d him to com e to Mornin gside a nd p ursue th e study o f&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
His desire is to become a profession a l c h e mist . Mr.&#13;
Morgan h as la b o red h a rd a n d is&#13;
&#13;
Rive !&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCA Y&#13;
ANNA L. HOLLINGSWORTH .&#13;
G. J. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
C. E. HARDING&#13;
RENA BOWKER&#13;
MYRTLE COOK&#13;
MARY GILBERT&#13;
CARL W. MAYNARD&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
J . W . MORGAN&#13;
ANNA GOODALL&#13;
D. L. YOUNG&#13;
E. H . HULSER&#13;
CARRIE BROWN&#13;
DAVIS C. HALL&#13;
EARL HANNA&#13;
S. D. STULKIN&#13;
MAUDE KLING&#13;
&#13;
R. E. ROOT&#13;
CORA LOCKIN&#13;
FLORENCE DAVIDSON&#13;
CLARA KILLAM&#13;
VINCENT DU BOIS&#13;
ESTELLA HARDING&#13;
WALDO McCARTHY&#13;
ALICE MARSH&#13;
&#13;
�In&#13;
&#13;
Memoriam&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
ABEL SIA was born in Foo Chow, China, November, 1874, and&#13;
&#13;
died in the same city November, 1903. She publicly confessed&#13;
Christ when thirteen years old, and continued in that faith, being perfectly ready to go when God called her to her home.&#13;
At seventeen she graduated from the Methodist Girls' Boarding&#13;
School at Foo Chow. When feeling the need of a better intellectual&#13;
equipment, she spent one year in school in Japan, coming to America&#13;
in 1897, and entered Morningside College. She was a member of the&#13;
class of 1905, an excellent student, and soon won the love and friendship&#13;
of faculty and students. In the three and one half years that she was&#13;
with us, she proved the possibilities of the Chinese people.&#13;
When the news came that she was not, "for God took her," all&#13;
who knew her were stricken with grief. We felt that a most· precious&#13;
jewel had been taken from us. We do ·not understand the mysterious&#13;
hand of God, but we know the influence of her life has given us a better&#13;
opinion and truer idea of the Chinese people.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL SIA.&#13;
&#13;
It is not too much to say, "China, thou mayest well mourn, thou&#13;
hast buried beneath thy sod the noblest woman. Let those who draw&#13;
near to her final resting place tread softly, for the memories of her&#13;
whose body lies crumbling into dust have made sacred the spot where&#13;
thou hast laid her. "&#13;
&#13;
�,&#13;
&#13;
�BARSALOU&#13;
&#13;
TOOTHAKER&#13;
SIMPSON&#13;
&#13;
HIEBY&#13;
&#13;
GILBERT&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
NISSEN&#13;
&#13;
SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
RUTHVEN&#13;
&#13;
McDOWELL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
McISAAC&#13;
&#13;
�Class History&#13;
'03&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
HISTORY of the Class of '03 properly begins with the fall&#13;
term of 1901, with D. M. Simpson, president, Sophia Hieby,&#13;
secretary, and M. F. McDowell, treasurer.&#13;
The Class was dubbed by the faculty and school authorities the&#13;
"Impetuous Thirteen". No precedents had been formed by preceding classes, and the coast was clear. The originality of the class was&#13;
exercised and they proceeded to blaze the way for Juniors to follow&#13;
in the generations to come.&#13;
It was decided to publish an annual, and the following officers&#13;
were elected: Editor-in-chief, D. M. Simpson; Assistant editors, Ray&#13;
Toothaker and F. E. Mossman. The annual was duly published,&#13;
making its appearance in the month of June. "The Bumble Bee"&#13;
was the literary hit of the season.&#13;
The Class has made good their title and played with the Seniors,&#13;
indulged in contests vs. the entire school, and even dared defend&#13;
Junior dignity on "Campus Day" piling up a score of Preps. as the&#13;
result of a cane rush.&#13;
The "Impetuous" Juniors organized as dignified Seniors in&#13;
September of 1902, with F . E. Mossman, president; Pearl Woodford,&#13;
secretary; and A. G. Ruthven, treasurer.&#13;
The only time the Seniors lost their dignity was on Halloween,&#13;
for when the "Authorities" opened the door to the Senior quarters,&#13;
they saw only the form of the last Senior retreating through the basement window. Chase was made, but no avail.&#13;
The class took an active part in all college interests: the Reporter,&#13;
foot ball, basket ball, debates, and all social events.&#13;
Early in the spring, they donned their caps and gowns, and mingled hard work with many pleasant social events, among which were&#13;
the picnic at Riverside; the Tally-ho ride to the Woodford Farm; the&#13;
&#13;
Junior banquet at Dr. Straubs; and, as a last farewell, the class breakfast on the Campus, Commencement morning, at six o'clock.&#13;
Of all the treat at commencement time, the richest was the Commencement Address "Ulyses," given by Dr. William A. Quayle of&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
It was with mingled joy and sadness that the class bade farewell&#13;
to their much loved college, and went to take their places in life's&#13;
work.&#13;
F. E. Mossman spent the summer as pastor of the M. E. Church&#13;
at Sergeant Bluff, and at last conference was appointed Financial&#13;
Agent _ Morningside College.&#13;
of&#13;
D. M. Simpson is pursuing his theological course at Evanston.&#13;
Three of the class are still at Morningside:- Sophia Hieby, doing'&#13;
graduate work in German; Mr. Barsalou, instructor in the Normal&#13;
Department at the College; and Lorne Smylie, whose home is at&#13;
Morningside, has been employing his art in the insurance business:&#13;
A. G. Ruthven has an assistantship in the Biological department&#13;
in the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor.&#13;
The class has made a record in different ways. Commencement&#13;
Day M. F. McDowell was married to Loraine Dwight of Sioux City.&#13;
(He is now doing graduate work in the University of Nebraska).&#13;
That suprise was hardly over when we received the announcement&#13;
of the marriage of R. J. McIsaac and Gertrude Gregory. At last report they were enjoying life at Portland, Oregon. At Conference&#13;
time, Rev. Geo. Gilhert took his bride, Lillian Parker Gilbert, to their&#13;
new home, the M. E. Parsonage, at Meriden.&#13;
A. B. Gilbert ably fills the pastorate at Hawarden.&#13;
A. R. Toothaker accepted the position of instructor in Mathematics in the High School of Atlantic, Iowa, where he has also taken part&#13;
in the school athletics.&#13;
Mr. Nissen, the class prodigy, is "growing handsome," as he says,&#13;
in his work as pastor at Barnum.&#13;
Pearl Woodford is Principal in the Lake Mills High School.&#13;
From all reports the class are doing well their different work, and&#13;
though scattered, there still remains that bond of friendship which&#13;
joins the members to each other and to their Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
�Lines to the Class of '03&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
A. R.&#13;
&#13;
TOOTHAKER, CLASS DAY POET&#13;
&#13;
These parting paths, which us now separate,&#13;
Have been well worn by foot prints of the great.&#13;
And while a feeling like of sadness, seems&#13;
To steal upon our _&#13;
soul, yet still there beams&#13;
&#13;
Dear Classmates, truest friends, we stand today,&#13;
At the many forked branching of a way,&#13;
Which o'er the foot hills of the lower land&#13;
We've traveled side by side and hand in hand.&#13;
&#13;
Within our hearts a greater joy, to see&#13;
The paths lead on to larger victory&#13;
Yet far beyond the farthest driven stake,&#13;
Are regions unexplored, and paths to make,&#13;
&#13;
A pleasant pathway it has been, and sweet&#13;
The memories, that fill with finest wheat&#13;
The storehouse of the mind. 'Tis joy today&#13;
To glance back o'er the ever-upward way.&#13;
&#13;
The avenues by which lost men shall find&#13;
Their true relations to the Master Mind.&#13;
The grandest theme of all philosophy,&#13;
Is to become more like the Diety;&#13;
&#13;
. Indeed this college life's a wondrous world,&#13;
A fairer, brighter ne'er from suns was hurled;&#13;
A grander ne'er was trod by human race,&#13;
Nor courses the deep unfathomed realms of space.&#13;
&#13;
Yet all our gain would be of small account,&#13;
If all remained on learning's pleasant mount,&#13;
Where waters from Pyrean springs e'er flow,&#13;
And Zephyrs from Ambrosial seas e'er blow.&#13;
&#13;
Transcendant with its own inherent light,&#13;
It pierces far the outer world of night;&#13;
A pure Elysian paradise on earth,&#13;
So full of life, of truth, of love, and worth.&#13;
&#13;
From basking in the beams that ever play&#13;
Upon the mount from an eternal day,&#13;
We must return where hang the shades of night,&#13;
To where benighted thousands cry for light.&#13;
&#13;
Altho the way was rough and steep, 'tis true,&#13;
And oft' the summit faded from our view,&#13;
Yet roses by our pathway ever bloomed,&#13;
Whose rich aroma sweet the air perfumed.&#13;
&#13;
To those still in the slough of blind despair,&#13;
And footsore from the rocks of worldly care,&#13;
And turn their eyes unto the higher hills,&#13;
Above those earthly cares and earthly ills.&#13;
&#13;
�O Mighty is the work on every hand;&#13;
World wide is now the Macedonian land;&#13;
"Come o'er and help us," ringing still,&#13;
From every living valley, plane and hill.&#13;
&#13;
Such thots, which from a heart of love o'erflow,&#13;
In other lives spring up, and bnd and blow,&#13;
And e'er bring forth a hundred fold, the seed&#13;
That shall the worlds increasing famine feed.&#13;
&#13;
If this broad land we would make great,&#13;
Then larger, greater souls we must create;&#13;
True progress follows not of earthly things,&#13;
But from the very heart of man it springs.&#13;
&#13;
The lives thus lived and truly spent,&#13;
Are to the world a living testament,&#13;
That Justice, Truth and Christ do reign&#13;
Triumphant o'er this wild storm-beaten main.&#13;
&#13;
This Matter's but a plastic element,&#13;
But Mind's dynamic and omnipotent,&#13;
That ever moulds and fashions in this clay,&#13;
True forms of life, of an eternal clay.&#13;
&#13;
Tho in the conflict, oft' we meet defeat,&#13;
Yet Truth and Right know not retreat;&#13;
From this, new strength for every strife we borrow,&#13;
And where the van now camps, we'll camp tomorrow.&#13;
&#13;
And yet the mind is servant of the soul,&#13;
That will on thru the ceaseless ages roll;&#13;
And too, it is the heart and not the brain&#13;
That to the grand and lofty cloth attain.&#13;
&#13;
Altho our college days are now to sever,&#13;
May Friendship's ties remain forever.&#13;
May rnem'ry hang within her treasured hall&#13;
An ever cherished portrait of us all.&#13;
&#13;
All is soul that lives 'neath earth or heaven,&#13;
Essence Divine! Soul cannot be riven;&#13;
It lives in stone, on page, in art and song,&#13;
It lives in hearts, with God, in unison.&#13;
&#13;
And now before we step into the world,&#13;
Before we are in Life's swift maelstrom hurled,&#13;
Let us back o'er the closing pathway glance,&#13;
And catch a smile trom each glad countenance.&#13;
&#13;
For Truth itself must reign within the heart,&#13;
&#13;
Let us aside thots of the climbing fling,&#13;
And in a joyous chorus, join and sing&#13;
Of all the glories and the victories won,&#13;
At this the setting of our college sun.&#13;
&#13;
If unto others truth we would impart.&#13;
&#13;
For lofty thots and aims when truly sought,&#13;
In living deeds shall be divinely wrought.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�NORTH&#13;
&#13;
HALL,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�FACULTY.&#13;
&#13;
�The 19th Century is cal led great not onl y beca use of its many marv elous&#13;
inventions and discoveri es but also because of the great men whi ch that&#13;
century called forth . N ew York state was especially favored in b eing able&#13;
to call many of these men h er own. On one of her farms Dr. Wilson Seely&#13;
Lewis, the honored President of Morni ngside College was born and reared.&#13;
H e was one of a large family of children and it was ma inl y th rough his&#13;
own struggles th at h e was enabled to obtain his higher education. He,&#13;
however, had in him the making of a great man and was not afraid to come&#13;
up against discouraging circumstances and early learned the art of surmounting them. By his ow n struggles, Dr. Lewis has bee n brought to a&#13;
position where he can sympathize with the ambitious youths of northw est&#13;
Iowa in their struggles and has already proved to be a great h elp to many.&#13;
H e was ed ucated at St. Lawrence University and experie nce and private study have added very g reatly to his Collegiate Course.&#13;
Dr. Lewis became President of Morningside College in 1897, having&#13;
served nine years pre vious to that time as Principal of Epworth Seminary.&#13;
That school gave him up very reluctant ly and Morningside was the fortunate competitor among several schools for his services.&#13;
Since he has been in Mo rningside, his chief a mb ition has been that the&#13;
College should b e a success in eve ry respect, and to thi s end h e has g iven&#13;
his untiring efforts.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
S. LEWIS, A.M., D.D.&#13;
&#13;
Aside from his official capacity Dr. Lewis is a frien d of every studen t&#13;
that enters the College and has a personal interest in each one of them.&#13;
He lea ves the impress of his strong pe rsonality on every one with whom he&#13;
comes in contact.&#13;
&#13;
�ENGLISH LITERATURE.&#13;
The year 1902-1903 Miss Helen I. Loveland spent at Oxford&#13;
University in the study of English Literature. Upon her return&#13;
the department was divided, she taking charge of the English&#13;
Literature and Dr. Blue, who had had control of the department during her absence was given charge of the work in&#13;
Eng lish and Bihlical Literature. This division makes possible&#13;
a more extended arrangement of courses in both departments.&#13;
In English Literature four years work are offered, consisting of&#13;
a study of the literary movement in England, of the English&#13;
novel, of Shakespeare and the English drama, the Elizabethean&#13;
Age, Tennyson's works and the Eighteenth Century Literature.&#13;
&#13;
H. I. LOVELAND, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
ENGLISH and BIBLICAL LITERATURE.&#13;
Dr. Leonard A. Blue, Professor of English and Biblical&#13;
Literature, is a graduate (1892) of Cornell College. One year&#13;
was spent in graduate work at the University of Chicago. Later he pursued graduate study as a fellow at the University of&#13;
Pennsylvania, receiving the Ph.D. degree in the spring of 1902.&#13;
He came to Morningside the following fall. Six courses are&#13;
offered in English, including a course in forensics and oral debate and the required oration work in the Junior and Senior&#13;
years. Two courses are offered in Biblical Literature.&#13;
L.A. BLUE, PH,D.&#13;
&#13;
�BOTANY.&#13;
For the past two years Robert B. Wylie, Professer of Botany at Morningside, has been pursuing graduate work in botany in Chicago University. During his absence the work has&#13;
been in charge of Professors T. C. Frye and LeRoy H. Harvey.&#13;
The laboratories are well equipped with all necessary apparatus and there is an excellent department library. Fifteen&#13;
courses are offered in the college and seven major students are&#13;
doing more or less original work. About twelve papers have&#13;
been prepared by the department or by the professors and&#13;
have been published in the leading scientific journals. Much&#13;
is due Prof. Wylie and the Department of Botany for our recognition among Eastern Universities.&#13;
&#13;
R. B . WYLIE,&#13;
&#13;
Sc.B.&#13;
&#13;
CHEM ISTRY.&#13;
In the fall of 1900 Prof. Alfred N. Cook took charge of the&#13;
department of chemistry. Under his direction it was organized&#13;
and has been developed to its present high standard. During&#13;
the past year there have been fifteen major students in chemistry with five doing original and advanced work. A number of&#13;
original papers prepared by Dr. Cook and advanced students,&#13;
have been published in state and national journals. Ten courses are offered including original work. The work done is on a&#13;
par with that of any college in the state and the high standard&#13;
of the department as well as its rapid growth si.nce its organization is largely due to the ability and energy of Dr. Cook.&#13;
A. N . COOK, .A.M., PH .D,&#13;
&#13;
�PHYSICS.&#13;
The work in physics is under the direction of Prof. J. W.&#13;
Green. Four courses are offered in the College, including a&#13;
year of thesis work open to major students iri the department&#13;
doing original research work. The laboratory occupies the entire basement floor of the chapel wing. Much apparatus has&#13;
been purchased-during the past two years and some has also&#13;
been made by Prof. Green. At present the equiptment is&#13;
practically complete for all quantitative work and the grade of&#13;
work d one compares favorably with that of many universities.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. GREEN, So.B.&#13;
&#13;
MATHEMATICS&#13;
The word "Growth" probably best characterizes the department of mathematics at Morningside College. After graduating from Morningside and spending a year in graduate work at&#13;
Johns Hopkins University, Prof. Robert Van Horn took charge&#13;
of the department which up to that time had been practically&#13;
unorganized. Since then the department has been thoroughl y&#13;
systematized and a years work has been added to the course&#13;
each year to the present time. Twelve courses are offered&#13;
with as much advanced work as may be called for. The department will be further strengthened by the addition of several new courses for next year.&#13;
R. VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
&#13;
�PROF. GEORGE BARSALOU.&#13;
Geo. Barsalou, professor of Geology and instructor in the&#13;
Normal Sciences and Pedagogy, is a graduate of Morningside,&#13;
class of 1903. Prior to his coming to Mo rningside, Prof. Barsalou had spent several years as a Methodist minister and also as&#13;
a teacher in the public schools. During this time he was a&#13;
geology enthusiast and made several tours in the pursuance of&#13;
his favorite study. This year the College offers its first course&#13;
in Geology with Prof. Barsalou as instructor. The course consists of dynamic geology in the fall, paleontology in the winter,&#13;
and in the spring, mineralogy and blow-pipe analysis. About&#13;
twelve thousand specimens, property of the Sioux City Academy of Sciences, are available for use in the department. The&#13;
department also has a library of about five-hundred volumes.&#13;
&#13;
G. F. BARSALOU, Sc. B.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. LEROY H. HARVEY.&#13;
Prof. LeRoy H. Harvey, instructor in Botany, took his&#13;
preparatory work in a High School in Maine. He took his&#13;
B. S. degree at the University of Maine in 1901. While at the&#13;
University he received special honors twice in Biology and&#13;
also received a prize for writing the best scientific essay during&#13;
his Junior aud Senior years. Prof. Harvey has spent some&#13;
time in special work at Mt. Katahdin and also in the Marine&#13;
Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass. Besides this he&#13;
has gone on several scientific expeditions.&#13;
Morningside College congratulates itself on having a man&#13;
of Prof. Harvey's ability and enthusiasm at the head of the&#13;
Department of Biology in the absence of Prof. Wylie.&#13;
L. H. HARVEY.&#13;
&#13;
�HISTORY and POLITICS.&#13;
Few colleges offer better facilities or more complete courses in the department of history and economies than Morningside. In 1898 the department was organized under the direction of Prof. F. H. Garver. In 1902 the department was divided, Prof. Garver being made Professor of History and Politics.&#13;
In History five years work are offered, two in European History, one in English History, one in American History and seminary work in American History open to advance students&#13;
majoring in the department. In politics courses are offered in&#13;
Political Science, American Constitutional Law, International&#13;
Law and American Political Parties.&#13;
&#13;
F. H. GARVER, A.B.&#13;
&#13;
ECONOMICS and SOCIOLOGY.&#13;
In 1899 the growth of the department was such that Prof.&#13;
Fred. E. Haynes, Ph. D., of Harvard, '91, was called to take&#13;
charge of part of the work. In 1902 when the division of the&#13;
department was made Dr. Haynes received the title of Professor of Economics and Sociology. Four courses are offered in&#13;
economics, two in economic theory and two in economic history.&#13;
In sociology three courses are offered, one in practical sociology, one in the principles of sociology and an advanced course&#13;
of selected topics in economics and sociology. A growing&#13;
library for the two departments makes possible a large amount&#13;
of research work and this combined with lectures and text&#13;
book work is the method pursued.&#13;
F. E. HAYNES, PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
�LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT.&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt, professor of Latin in Morningside&#13;
College, has been identified with the Institution since its organization. By her own persistent efforts, the Department of Latin&#13;
has reached its present status.&#13;
During the year 1903 and 1904 she has been enjoying a well&#13;
earned leave of absence, and has been engaged in research&#13;
work among the catacombs of Rome.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt is a woman of strong personality, sterling&#13;
character and of eminent scholarship.&#13;
&#13;
* L.&#13;
&#13;
E. DIMMITT, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDERIC KANTHLENER.&#13;
&#13;
* On leave of absence to attend&#13;
the American at Rome.&#13;
&#13;
Henry Frederic Kanthlener, A. M., Professor of Greek in&#13;
Morningside College, came here from Wilberham, Mass., where&#13;
he taught Latin for two years. He completed his classical&#13;
cou rse at Cornell College in 1896, and the following year taught&#13;
Latin and Greek in Epworth Seminary. From 1897 to 1899 he&#13;
studied at Harvard University, ob taining his ·Master's degree.&#13;
Since 1900 he has had charge of the Greek department at Morningside, and has built it up very materially. He has won the&#13;
friendship and esteem of all our students and teachers.&#13;
&#13;
H.F. KANTHLENER, A. M .&#13;
&#13;
�MISS BESSIE CARR.&#13;
A graduate of Morningside, '02. The following year she&#13;
took post-graduate work and is now an efficient instructor in&#13;
the Latin Department.&#13;
&#13;
B, M. CARR, PH. B,&#13;
&#13;
MISS ESTELLA ROBERTS.&#13;
Came to our institution as Greek professor in the fall of&#13;
In 1903 she took&#13;
charge of the Latin Department in the absence of Miss Dimmitt. She has shown her efficiency as a teacher in the masterly&#13;
way she handled these departments. We can congratulate&#13;
ourselves in having her on our corps of professors.&#13;
1902, in the absence of Prof. Kanthlener.&#13;
&#13;
L. E , ROBERTS, A, B.&#13;
&#13;
�PROFESSOR of FRENCH.&#13;
Prof. Reynard B. Greynald, A. M. is a native of France.&#13;
He came to Morningside in 1896. His first class contained only&#13;
seven students, while this year there are over 100 students en rolled under him. In his department, five courses are offered,&#13;
one being Scientific French. Quite often he is obliged to send&#13;
to France for books for scientific reading. After reading Victor Hu go's "Les Miserables" some students have desired to&#13;
read ''Notre Dame de Paris," and the professor complied with&#13;
the request. It is expected that the enrollment next year will&#13;
reach 125 in this department.&#13;
&#13;
R.B.GREYNALD,A.M.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR of GERMAN.&#13;
Agnes B. Ferguson, M.Sc. Professor of German, came to&#13;
Morningside in the fall of 1902. Previous to this time the work&#13;
was in charge of Miss Loveland and Prof. Kanthlener, who&#13;
could give only a part of their time to the department. Miss&#13;
Ferguson has given her entire time and energy to the work until it now offers a six year's course, and one year in scientific&#13;
German. The enrollment in her department this year is over&#13;
125. Three stud ents are making German their major.&#13;
A. B . FERGUSON,&#13;
&#13;
M.Sc.&#13;
&#13;
�PROF. W. A. BLACKWELL.&#13;
The Commercia l Department of the College for the past&#13;
eigh t years has been in charge of Prof. W. A. Blackwell. Mr.&#13;
Blackwell received his degree of "Master of Accounts·· from&#13;
th e Gem City Business College of Quincy, Ill. He a lso completed a two-years course in the W este rn Normal School of&#13;
Bushnell, Ill. in 1896. He is a successful teacher and a n influentia l member of the Faculty of which he has been Secreta ry&#13;
for the past five years.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. BLACKWELL.&#13;
&#13;
MISS CHARLOTTE M. HICKMAN.&#13;
A graduate from Ohio Wesleyan, ca me to Morningside in&#13;
the Fall of 1898 as an instructor in Physics and Mathematics.&#13;
She is now instructor in English and has a leave of absence.&#13;
This spring term she will travel in California.&#13;
&#13;
C. E. HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
B. L.&#13;
&#13;
�CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON.&#13;
After a year's absence, Mrs. Clara Booth Davidson is again&#13;
at her former post as Professor of Elocution and Physical&#13;
Training in the College. The greatly increased enrollment. in&#13;
the department is sufficient evidence of the high esteem in&#13;
which she is held as an instructor, and also is an expression of&#13;
her influence in the school.&#13;
Mrs. Davidson studied for her work, first in the Philadelphia School of Oratory and later with some of the best known&#13;
teachers of Oratory in the United States. Both as a teacher&#13;
and as a reader, Mrs. Davidson has attained a large degree of&#13;
success and since her election as instructor at Morningside, she&#13;
has built up the Department of Elocution to its present degree&#13;
of excellence.&#13;
&#13;
EDITH A. LARSON.&#13;
C. B. DAVIDSON.&#13;
&#13;
Edith A. Larson came to Morningside in the fa ll of 1902,&#13;
as an instructor in vocal music. Miss Larson was born at&#13;
Stoughton, Wis., but came with her parents to Iowa at an early&#13;
age. After her graduation from the Forest City High School&#13;
she attended the Chicago Musical College for two years. Later&#13;
she studied under Alfred Williams and William Nelson Burritt&#13;
of Chicago. Her wide experience as a private teacher of both&#13;
piano and voice, supplement this excellent preparation, and especially fit her for the work of the department here. Since&#13;
Prof. Barbour's resignation, Miss Larson has carried on the entire work of the Vocal Music department, with a success which&#13;
is best shown by the high esteem in which she is held by her&#13;
every student.&#13;
E. A. LARSON.&#13;
&#13;
�MISS FLORENCE G. LEWIS.&#13;
Miss Florence G. Lewis has been connected with Morningside Conservatory since 1900, and has gained during that time&#13;
a reputation which reaches far beyond the limits of the College,&#13;
as a musician of high grade and as a thorough and conscientious instructor.&#13;
Her musical education was begun in Dubuque, her birthplace; was continued in Minneapolis, and in 1888 she graduated&#13;
from the New England Conservatory in Boston. She studied under masters of world-wide reputation among whom were&#13;
J.C. D. Parker, piano, Geo. E. Whiting, pipe organ, Carl Zerrahn, harmony, and Louis C. Elson, theory.&#13;
She has had fifteen yea rs experience as an instructor and&#13;
has during that time given 15 ,000 music lessons. F or fift ee n&#13;
yea rs she has been a member of the Executive Board of the&#13;
Beethoven Club.&#13;
&#13;
F. G. LEWIS.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MARSHALL.&#13;
Mrs. Marshall has been a member of the music faculty of&#13;
Morningsid e College since the fall of 1902. Her reputation as a&#13;
private teacher is of the very best as is justified by the excellent preparation which she has had. Her own studies have&#13;
been pursued under such. teachers as A. K. Virgil, Carl Retter&#13;
and William H. Sherwood. As a teacher she is beloved by&#13;
every pupil, and her presence is a valuable addition to the faculty of our college.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
A. B. MARSHALL .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
�MISS MYRTLE LOTHIAN.&#13;
Miss Myrtle Lothian, who has for the past two years been&#13;
an instructor in the Morningside College Conservatory of&#13;
Music, began her study of the piano at Cornell College, Mt.&#13;
Vernon, Iowa. After spending two years there she pursued a&#13;
course at the Conservatory of Music of Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. Since coming to Morningside she has&#13;
proven herself to be a very competent instructor.&#13;
&#13;
M. M. LOTHIAN&#13;
&#13;
MR. STANISLAUS SCHERZEL.&#13;
In the fall of 1901 the Department of Music in this College&#13;
took a very decided step forward, for it was then that Mr. Stanislaus Scherzel became one of its instructors. Mr. Scherzel&#13;
was born in Revel, Russia, in 1871. He came with his mother&#13;
to America in 1880. His love for the violin resulted in his&#13;
pursuing a study of music for eight years, first in the Chicago&#13;
Musical College, and later in the College of Music at Cincinnati. Mr. Scherzel possesses rare ability as a violinist.&#13;
&#13;
S. SCHERZEL.&#13;
&#13;
�The&#13;
&#13;
Art Department&#13;
&#13;
The Art Department of the College is in full charge of Kitty Anna Patterson. Miss Patterson completed her High School course at Schaler, Iowa.&#13;
She then pursued a four years course in Art at Des Moines and from there&#13;
went to Chicago to continue her study. During the summer of 1900 she&#13;
made a sketching tour through Michigan. In the Fall of 1901 she began&#13;
her work at this College.&#13;
&#13;
K. A . PATTERSON&#13;
&#13;
�REV. FRANK&#13;
&#13;
E. MOSSMANN.&#13;
&#13;
For the past five years th e finan cial burden of the school has&#13;
rested upon our President. At the meeting of the Board of Trustees in the Fall of 1903, it was thought wise to organize the College&#13;
Guild to aid in support of the College and to bring Morningside&#13;
in closer touch with North West Iowa. It was also decided at this&#13;
meeting of the Trustees to elect Rev. F. E. Mossman as financial&#13;
secretary of the College. The large degree of success he has attained has justified the action.&#13;
Mr. Mossman was a member of the Class of 1903 of the College. While in school he twice represented his society, the Philomathians, in inte r-society debate and three time represented th e&#13;
College in inter-col legiate debate.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE L. SEARCH.&#13;
&#13;
In September, 1901, George L. Search was elected assistant&#13;
Secretary of the College. Prior to his coming to Morningside,&#13;
Mr. Search had taken a complete course in stenography in the&#13;
Unive rsity of the Northwest and later engaged in the real estate&#13;
and loan business in Sioux City.&#13;
His first work after enterin g upon his new duties was to systematize the acco·u nts of the insti tution since its organization in&#13;
1895. So well was the work done that he was elected Secretary&#13;
at the meeting of the Trustees in the fall of 1903. Mr. Search's&#13;
business training excellently qualifes him for the position of Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
��MAGEE&#13;
&#13;
FINCH&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
KILLAM&#13;
&#13;
CARSON&#13;
DARLING&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH&#13;
&#13;
�History of Senior Class&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SCHOOL is a great wagon that travels over a rough road, the&#13;
students are potatoes in the wagon box. In jolting over the&#13;
road, the small ones go to the bottom, the big ones come to the top.&#13;
This is especially true of Morningside College in 1904.&#13;
As a result of the roughness of the road many who thought themselves of sufficient greatness to come to the top because of a few&#13;
knowledge bumps they possessed, have in the process, been reduced&#13;
to their proper size and place by having these supposed knowledge&#13;
bumps broken off or dented by contact with the full, round, symmetrically developed mentality of those whose such characteristics made&#13;
thei1 evolution as sure as the loss of said bumps made the devolution&#13;
of the others inevitable. Another confirmation of the law of the survival of the fittest.&#13;
The asking that the history of the class of 1904 be written is a&#13;
very natural thing. The possession of such history, revealing the secret of success, would be a priceless treasure to those who aspire to&#13;
the privilege of at least sitting in the seats to be left vacant by the&#13;
Seniors. But the revealing of this secret cannot be. It is enough for&#13;
us to have attained our lofty position, and enough for others to guess&#13;
how we did it.&#13;
Besides, school life is in a peculiar sense a p rehistoric period and&#13;
its events have but little interest and are of but little importance except they are made famous by achievements of the historic age which&#13;
begins where the other leaves off. A Cyrus the Great, helping the&#13;
soldiers pull a wagon out of the mud, a Napoleon pacing the beat of&#13;
the guardsman he found asleep are not events worthy of note except&#13;
&#13;
as they are connected with great men. Whoever heard even the name&#13;
of the hundred common soldiers who all day worked in the mud and&#13;
water up to their waists and at night slept on the bare ground in their&#13;
wet clothes, caught rheumatism and died, while old Cy, dry shod&#13;
walked out on a plank, leaned over the hind end gate, yelled, ·'Heave&#13;
ho!" and with his feet dangling in the air rode out to dry land while&#13;
the other fellows did the pushing? Or, who knows anything about&#13;
the French soldiers who did the fighting, bleeding, and dying, while&#13;
Napoleon one night didn't kill one of them whom he had marched so&#13;
hard all that day that he could not have kept awake if he had been in&#13;
bed with a Spaniard?&#13;
Yet because the greatness of these men the stories are cherished&#13;
and because of the ability of the class of 1904 and because of the certainty of their becoming great in the historic period of their life, even&#13;
now incidents of the preparatory stage are sought for, lest the world&#13;
be the poorer from them in the time when they will become valuable.&#13;
But modesty, ever inseparable from incipient greatness, causes us to&#13;
forbear. Cyrus never told that mud hole story nor did Napoleon tell&#13;
the little joke he played on the sentry that night. There were plenty&#13;
of followers to keep the stories going.&#13;
There are some things, however, that we have learned that ought&#13;
to be told. Namely; that the only kind of government we can have&#13;
is an Aristocracy, there being no common people in the class; how&#13;
little real knowledge it takes to make a Freshman feel like a sage;&#13;
how vanity produces the same effects on a Sophomore; how gas may&#13;
puff up a Junior until he feels as big as a Senior; that there are some&#13;
things that we cannot do, but that which we cannot do, we can Hoo-do.&#13;
As to the future of the class, neither now nor in time to come do&#13;
ever expect to have time to write its h istory. There are plenty&#13;
who wi ll want no better occupation than writing such works, to them&#13;
should be left the task , whi le the Seniors' more valuable time wi ll be&#13;
occupied in making history.&#13;
we&#13;
&#13;
�KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
BROWER&#13;
&#13;
FAIR&#13;
WUNN&#13;
&#13;
NICHOLS&#13;
GILBERT&#13;
&#13;
CALKINS&#13;
&#13;
SHOEMAKER&#13;
&#13;
FAIR&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
DEBBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
ELLERBROCK&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL&#13;
&#13;
CROSSAN&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
PATTERSON&#13;
&#13;
FLINN&#13;
&#13;
�SOPHOMORE&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
CLASS of 1906 rea ll y needs no written hi sto ry . Its&#13;
deeds and adventures are known by everyone and&#13;
will ever be remembered. But for the benefit of those&#13;
with shorter memories and of those who are behind the&#13;
times and do not know us, we will try to give a brief review.&#13;
This wonderful class entered Morningside College as&#13;
Freshmen in September, 1902. There was a very noticeable difference between thi s class and all its predecesso rs.&#13;
No member of the class was troubled with the terrible malady "Greenness." Of course, some lik e Miss. Grossan were&#13;
more quiet than others but it was not from fear. For was&#13;
not the redoubtable football player, Saylor, the distinguished&#13;
"judge" Kindig, the great d.ebater, Hartzell, and learned scientists, Hawkins and Brower and the minister Calbins&#13;
amo ng them? If we did get into trouble there were plenty&#13;
who could help us out.&#13;
But in this historical sketc h we must not forget our&#13;
girls . A paragraph devoted to them will be fitting for the&#13;
story of this class. An exa min ation of tile registrar's books&#13;
reveals the fact that the Sophomore coeds have a peerless&#13;
record in the class room, thu s furnishing the school's&#13;
ideal for sc h olarship. Not on ly as students do our girls exce l, but also do they stand as the pride of the college in that&#13;
other realm, Society. That ba nquet would not have been&#13;
quite so swell, that reception would not have been quite so&#13;
entertaining, that party would not have been quite so novel&#13;
and cosy without the presence and ingenuity of the Sophomore girls.&#13;
&#13;
These characteristics, plus that of class patriotism, made&#13;
poss ibl e the many Soph banquets and picnics. For never&#13;
once s'i nce our organization have we had an occasion to&#13;
doubt the courage of our heroines; never have we distrusted&#13;
their devotion and loyalty.&#13;
It is the extension and development of these noble qualities that will produce the pride of the Twenti eth Centurythe American Woman. To know such characters is a rare&#13;
privilege, to be class-mates with them is an honor.&#13;
But everything must end, and so did those happy&#13;
Freshmen days. However, it was only that better days,&#13;
greater deed s, and happier times might come; for the class&#13;
who were noble and strong as Freshmen were the very personification of greatness as Sophomores.&#13;
"How fresh in ou r minds are the d eeds o f the Sophomores&#13;
When oft reco ll ec tion prese nts th em to view;&#13;
Th e rooster, the banquet, th e Freshi es part in it&#13;
And th e apple s the Freshmen paid for after all.&#13;
The speech of the Doctor, heart throbs of th e Sophomores;&#13;
&#13;
The apologies Cain gave the Doctor next day;&#13;
Fear caused by th e visit of Officer Vreeland;&#13;
The calm after battle, all friends o nce again ."&#13;
&#13;
Yes, we even found poet in this group of genii. And&#13;
well do their adventures deserve t o be sung in verse and&#13;
recounted in poetry. As Sophomores they remained quiet,&#13;
on the whole, for a time, but only that they might burst&#13;
forth more brightly in the winter.&#13;
There is no need to write more. Everyone will agree&#13;
that this class is most remarkable in every way. There is&#13;
more strength, more wi sdom, more beauty, and more spirit&#13;
in this class a lready than in any other class in the schoo l,&#13;
a nd it is stead ily improving. It is impossible even to imagine to what glory and renown it will rise in the future; we&#13;
can only wait and lea rn by experience.&#13;
&#13;
�Spratt&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
Robbins Mekkleson Sparks&#13;
Pierce&#13;
Garver Van Marter Mellen&#13;
Mason&#13;
Richards&#13;
Squires&#13;
Whittaker&#13;
Gantt&#13;
Chambers&#13;
Barringer&#13;
Bartlett Adams&#13;
Hymer&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Toothaker Bass&#13;
Eredendoll Manning Patterson&#13;
Grubb&#13;
Swem&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Cable&#13;
Clark&#13;
Frear&#13;
Tracey&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Hawcott&#13;
Collins&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Cain&#13;
Howard&#13;
Heilman&#13;
Cole&#13;
Towner&#13;
McCay&#13;
Frear&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
&#13;
�Out Class Bouquet&#13;
countless ages poets have paid tribute to flowers. They have personified them, addressed them in&#13;
their most render and eloquent language, and sung their&#13;
praises with love and ardor. These floral favorites have always stood for the good and beautiful in life. The care of&#13;
them is a joy, their association is enabling, and their presence has brightened and made happy many a weary existence. With these thoughts before you we introduce to you&#13;
the Freshman Bouquet. In a brief history we shall tell you&#13;
something concerning this collection of flowers.&#13;
This bouquet is a group of some fifty specimens of the&#13;
choicest varities, combining modesty, beauty, grace, wit,&#13;
wisdom, and mischief. Each one has its own individuality.&#13;
This makes the bouquet most attractive.&#13;
There are modest violets, exerting much influence in&#13;
their own quiet way. There are roses, full blown American&#13;
beauties, lovely half blown buds, and buds which as yet re·&#13;
main so firmly closed that no color shows forth through the&#13;
calyx hinting at what the flower may be like. A few of&#13;
these lovely ros.es and buds have cruel little thorns which&#13;
prick and stick unmercifully. Couquettish, bright-eyed&#13;
daisies laugh and make merry with fun and mischief. There&#13;
is one stately lilly, pure and white, that lifts its head above&#13;
its neighbors, occasionally.condescending to their level to receive the homage due it. Sweet-Williams are found side by&#13;
side with graceful columbines. Forget-me-nots nod and&#13;
smile and become your dearest friends. The wit of some&#13;
THROUGH&#13;
&#13;
departed jester lives again in a Shamrock. In this bouquet&#13;
there are also sleepy four-o'clocks; century plants (slow but&#13;
sure); cacti which bloom one season, rest one, and bloom&#13;
again; johnny-jump-ups, ready and willing, and bachelors&#13;
buttons. Besides, we have some sturdy, well-developed&#13;
plants which at present defy classification but perhaps later&#13;
a few may be specified as Jacks-in-the-pulpits.&#13;
These flowers have been gathered in from far and near.&#13;
Many of them were transplanted from home gardens where&#13;
they had grown strong and beautiful surrounded by an atmosphere of high ideals and noble ambitions. Some had&#13;
been more tenderly cared for than others. The winds were&#13;
gentle with them- never once whispering of trouble or&#13;
grief; the rains were only refreshing showers. Some, unlike&#13;
those, were at different times nearly overcome by storms&#13;
but they lifted up their heads, fought bravely the winds of&#13;
adversity, and overcame the frosts which might have been&#13;
their ruin.&#13;
It seems rather strange that these flowers should have&#13;
all been sent to Morningside. But wonderful stories were&#13;
told of the place-how no plant could fail to thrive and grow&#13;
in strength and beauty in the vigorous atmosphere, and under the care of a loving President and diligent Faculty.&#13;
And as healthy minded plants they possessed the desire to&#13;
develop physically, spiritually, and morally, and so it happens that they are now blossoming within the halls of Morn·&#13;
ingside College.&#13;
How long these flowers will be together it is not within&#13;
our power to foretell. Some will fade or wither and all the tender care bestowed upon them by the President or Faculty&#13;
will not revive them. Others will continue developing and&#13;
growing until, in 1907, they will blossom out into the world.&#13;
They will be addressed in tender and eloquent language;&#13;
their praises will be sung with love and ardor; association&#13;
with them will be ennobling; and their presence will brighten and make happy the lives of many people.&#13;
&#13;
�Our Custodian&#13;
McCARTHY&#13;
and&#13;
M R. has shown ahas been faithful in performing his duty had&#13;
Christian character ever since he has&#13;
charge of the college buildings. In the five years that he has&#13;
served the institution he has been an indispensable factor. He has&#13;
been needed and called upon from all sides. One minute the students call upon him to open the society halls or association room,&#13;
the next some one is pulling at his coat wanting him to open some&#13;
door of the laboratory, yet he always has a kind word and a smile&#13;
for everyone. The students and faculty have found in him an&#13;
honorable man. Mr. McCarthy has done a great deal to improve&#13;
and beautify the campus and lawn. He has added a great many&#13;
trees and flowers that, after a few years of growth, will make an&#13;
ideal park.&#13;
&#13;
�CLUBS&#13;
Associations&#13;
&#13;
�N. McCAY&#13;
&#13;
J. R. M A GEE&#13;
&#13;
G. W. FINCH&#13;
&#13;
Debate between Simpson College and Morningside&#13;
,JANUARY 25, 1904.&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That for the future the restriction of foreign immigration by means of an educational and property qualification be the policy for the United States.&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
SIMPSON&#13;
&#13;
Howard Applegate.&#13;
Verne Dusenberry.&#13;
Bruce Bartholomew.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Norman McCay.&#13;
G. W. Finch.&#13;
J. R. Magee.&#13;
&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
Judge Gaynor, Lemars, Iowa.&#13;
Prof. M. Young, Vermilion, S. D.&#13;
I. N.. McCash, Des Moines, Iowa.&#13;
Decision-Three for the negative.&#13;
&#13;
�C . F. HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
F. E . MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
D. L.YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
31. N. LeagueDebate&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That a Board of Compulsory Arbitration between Labor and Capital shoul&lt;l be established by law.&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
J. S. Struble, Le Mars.&#13;
Lieut. Gov. Milliman, Logan.&#13;
Judge J. G. Wakefield, Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
Affirmative.&#13;
BAKER UNIVERSITY.&#13;
&#13;
F. L. Geyer.&#13;
0. C. Heatwood.&#13;
J. P. Ault.&#13;
&#13;
Negative.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE.&#13;
&#13;
C. F. Hartzell.&#13;
F. E. Mossman.&#13;
D. L. Young.&#13;
&#13;
Decision-One&#13;
&#13;
for the affirmative, two for the negative.&#13;
&#13;
�R . E.ROOT&#13;
&#13;
D. C. HALL&#13;
&#13;
E. H. HULSER&#13;
&#13;
N. McCAY&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That for the future the restriction of foreign immigration by means of education and property qualification&#13;
is a desirable policy for the United States.&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
Affirmati ve-PHILOMATHEAN.&#13;
Negative- OTHONIAN.&#13;
D. C. Hall.&#13;
E. H. Hulser.&#13;
R. E. Root.&#13;
J. W. Kindig.&#13;
Norman McCay.&#13;
J. R. Magee.&#13;
Decision-One for the affirmative, two for the negative.&#13;
J. R. MAGEE&#13;
&#13;
J . W . KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
�c . E.&#13;
&#13;
WILCOX,&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
P. M. BODDY,&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
Young Woman's Christian&#13;
Association&#13;
During the six years since its organization the Association has&#13;
l&#13;
made a creditable record. It now has a membership of about&#13;
one hundred girls and is a power in the school.&#13;
The Association receives fresh impetus each year from the Summer Conference at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, and from the state convention, through the delegates who are sent to these places. The&#13;
blessings received by the girls at these gatherings are very many.&#13;
The work of the Y. W. C. A. is broad and covers many fields.&#13;
The Devotional Committee arranges a meeting for every Sunday&#13;
morning and these meetings are a source of inspiration to the girls&#13;
who attend. During last spring term a series of life work meetings&#13;
were addressed by women of practical experience and some perplexing questions were answered.&#13;
&#13;
J. E.&#13;
&#13;
LOCKIN,&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
G. DARLlNG,&#13;
&#13;
vice-president&#13;
&#13;
During .the year a number of interesting and instructive missionary meetings have been held with the Y. M. C. A. The Y. M. C. A.&#13;
and Y. W. C. A. Mission study classes have been carried on throughout the year. The Association has for three years supported two&#13;
boys in the Hig h School of Moradahad. India, and is planning to help&#13;
our State worker in India next year. Three girls have been in the&#13;
Volunteer Band the past year.&#13;
The new girls feel the influence of the Association from the first&#13;
day of College life. Many a girl will always cherish loving memories&#13;
of the Y. W. C. A. girls who met her at the train, helped her to find&#13;
her boarding place, and thoughtfully helped her to get acquainted and&#13;
feel at home. In the informal receptions and luncheons the girls are&#13;
brought close together and close to the Master. The social work of&#13;
the Association is broad in its plans and its results.&#13;
But while the Association has been interested in spiritual and social development it has not forgotten to provide entertainment and&#13;
profit for the mind. Besides an alcove in the Library, filled with&#13;
books of special helpfulness, through the joint effort of the Y. M. and&#13;
Y. 'vV. C. A., an excellent lecture course is provided for the&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
�E. H.&#13;
&#13;
HULSER .&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
F. H .&#13;
&#13;
TRIMBLE,&#13;
&#13;
vice-president&#13;
&#13;
YoungMen's Christian&#13;
Association&#13;
E ARLY in th e history of our college a band of ea rnest you ng men&#13;
organized a society known as th e Christian League. In May&#13;
of 1899 the Leag ue was reorganized a nd took on the plan and a im of&#13;
a generally condu cted Young Men's Christian Association. From&#13;
this beginning th e Association h as steadily grown and ex pa nded in&#13;
its usefuln ess until it now holds an importa nt place among the depa1 tm ents of the college.&#13;
Its aim is to be beneficial in the deve lo pment of th e whole man,&#13;
physically, m entally a nd spiritually. It is the one organization of the&#13;
school that aims to reach every man, the one organization whose sole&#13;
purpose and reason for existence is th e development in eve ry stude nt&#13;
of that o ne thing without which no one can claim to have a liberal ed ucatio n, a persona l, expe rimental kn owledge of Jesus Christ, toge ther&#13;
with a training that will eq uip one for his service.&#13;
&#13;
W. H.&#13;
&#13;
Debenham&#13;
&#13;
A. B. Cook&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
The Association holds a meeting every Sunday mornin g at 9:15&#13;
o'clock. These m eetings are ve ry helpful. Thei r strong spirituality&#13;
enables o ne to find out where he reall y is, and points out the way that&#13;
will bring him whe re h e ought to be. Besid es being used for devotional and evangelistic purposes, the m eeti ngs are often used as a&#13;
m eans of presenting some line of Christian work planned for the Association. For brevit y the regular featur es of the Association m ay be&#13;
summed up as follows:&#13;
Regular Sunday devotional m eetings, monthly missiona ry meetin gs, week ly m eetings of missionary a nd Bible study c lasses, annual&#13;
representatio n at Lak e Geneva and Iowa conferences, maint enan ce of&#13;
in fo rmation, board and room and emplopment burea u, publisher of&#13;
ha nd book for benefit of new students, also the work accomplished by&#13;
the train a nd social committees.&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES.&#13;
Devotional .. ........... Fred Trimb le. Bible Study&#13;
....... C. L. Gilbert.&#13;
.. Ray Tumbleson.&#13;
Membership ......... A. A. Maynard. Train ..&#13;
Missionary..&#13;
. H. H. Sawver. In formation Bureau .... J.W.Wunn.&#13;
Intercollegiate ....... F. V. Duboios Empl'ym't Bureau .. C. F. Hartzell.&#13;
Social..&#13;
........... Ira Aldrich . Finance Bureau .. ..... A. B. Cook.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�Volunteer Band&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE opening of the spring term of the year 1901, after six months of&#13;
careful consideration, a student Volunteer Band of seven members&#13;
was formed, affiliated with the International Student Volunteer Movement,&#13;
under the Declaration, "It is my purpose, if God permit, to become a foreign&#13;
missionary."&#13;
In November of that year two of our students, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.&#13;
Empey, sailed for India, where they remained until Mr. Empey's health&#13;
failed.&#13;
The opportunities offered by the foreign field for a larger life work&#13;
were presented to the stude·nts and the following year onr number increased&#13;
to twelve.&#13;
Two of our members have graduated, others· have been obliged to&#13;
leave school for a time, new recruits have taken their places and onr present&#13;
member hip is eleven.&#13;
In a few years we hope to see each one of our number actively&#13;
engaged in the work of the Church on the foreign field.&#13;
&#13;
�Knockers' Club&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
" Kick today, tomorrow may be too late."&#13;
&#13;
Object&#13;
&#13;
Green and Black.&#13;
&#13;
To promote and perpetuate scientific&#13;
and indiscriminate antagonism.&#13;
&#13;
Time and Place of Meeting&#13;
From the rising of each individual member to the going down of the same. Wherever two or three shall be gathered&#13;
together, there shall the Knock be also.&#13;
POST PRANDIAL KNOCKING A SPECIALTY.&#13;
&#13;
CLUB ROSTER.&#13;
Grand Chief Knocker ........... .. ... Asa Lee Brower&#13;
Vice Grand Knocker . . . ............ Helen I. Loveland&#13;
Vice Chief Boodler .. . .. . ............. George Millner&#13;
Recorder of Knocks and Sarcasms .................. .&#13;
. . . . . . . ................. . Gertrude Emma Crossan&#13;
BOARD OF SATIRISTS AND WITTICISTS.&#13;
Frank Harmon Garver ............ . .... Life Director&#13;
A. Howard Maynard&#13;
Narcissa Miller&#13;
D. Ford Robbins&#13;
H. Judson Calkins&#13;
BLACKBALLED.&#13;
Wilson Seely Lewis&#13;
Herbert Saylor&#13;
Evva Erskine&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes&#13;
&#13;
COMMON KICKS.&#13;
The Janitor .................. IO o'clock Lights Out!&#13;
I. R. Aldrich ..... ......... ........ "Why a Mason"?&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Gilbert . ..................... No College Spirit&#13;
Hazel Gantt ......................... 0, that Dutch!&#13;
Prof. Garver ...... ... ....... Those Tuesday Lessons!!!&#13;
C. J. Mekkelson .... . ................ Gee! No Soup?&#13;
Narcissa Miller . ........ That write up in the Tribune!&#13;
Dr. Blue .............. ..... . . Those Junior Orations!&#13;
Gertrude Crossan .............. On general principles&#13;
W. B. B. Shoemaker ................. That fool girl!!&#13;
&#13;
�Leap YearClub&#13;
Motto&#13;
"It is not good for man to live alone."&#13;
&#13;
Aim&#13;
To prevent lonesomeness, and to impress upon the wayward mind of inan the intrinsic truth of the above motto.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
Chief Proposer .......... . .. . .. . .. . Mabel Ellerbrock&#13;
Recorder of Proposals . ............. Katheryne Gibson&#13;
Mabel Killam&#13;
Board of Matchmakers.. . . . . . . . . . . . { E ll a Wendel&#13;
Mabel Smylie&#13;
&#13;
CLUB ROLL AND RESPONSE&#13;
Ruby Flinn ...... .. ....... .- . . . . . . No Not Wunn&#13;
Grace Darling . . ....... "Blest Be The Tie That Binds"&#13;
Xenia Ellis . . . . . . . ............... . ..... . (P ) Shaw&#13;
Edith Larson. . . . . . . . . .. .. . "No One To L ove Me"&#13;
Genevieve Howard ...... "If at first you don't succeed?"&#13;
Elsie Kilborne . . ................. "Try, Try Again"&#13;
Ella Wendel ..... . . . . . ....... . "Girls Never say No"&#13;
Jessie Swem .... . ... . ... Anything but a forgetful in an&#13;
Effie Tennis.. . . . . .. . . ............. "Better ask me"&#13;
Myrtle Lothian . ... . .. . "A Man's a Man for a' o' that"&#13;
Emma Fair . ... ... . I may be Young but never Green&#13;
Gertrude Crossan .... .- ... .. ...... A m an that Kin dig&#13;
&#13;
��G. J. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
Home Contest&#13;
&#13;
R. E. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
R. E. HEILMAN, First Place.&#13;
&#13;
J. WHITTAKER&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
J. PoPPENHEIMER, Second Place.&#13;
&#13;
D . C . HALL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
WHITTAKER, Third Place.&#13;
&#13;
Though we are young in oratorical work we have won some distinction at the state contests. In 1903 D. C. Hall&#13;
won first place in delivery at Oskaloosa, and was fourth in final rank. The same year Norman McCay took second&#13;
place in final rank at Cedar Rapids in the Prohibition Oratorical Contest. We believe that in another year we will&#13;
have an orator who will be a hard rival in the State Contest for first place.&#13;
&#13;
�Collegian&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
is an eight page publication edited weekly by the students and devoted&#13;
to the interests of the students of the college.&#13;
The paper is at present in its eighth year. Charles McCaffree, now editor of the Canova Herald&#13;
of Canova, South Dakota, was the first editor. He was succeeded by W. L. Harding, who edited the&#13;
paper for three years. Then for a year the work was carried on by D. L. Young.&#13;
In the Fall of '02, C. L. Gilbert .was elected Editor-in-chief, but ill-health made it necessary that&#13;
he resign. The work was then taken up by Miss Pearl Woodford who held the position the remainder of the year. At the beginning of the college year C. L. Gilbert was again made editor and served&#13;
for two terms. At the close of the Winter term on account of his election on the Baker-Morningside&#13;
debate, he found it impossible to do the work required of the Editor-in-chief.&#13;
Mr. R. G. Young is now at the head of the Reporter Staff.&#13;
HE COLLEGIAN REPORTER&#13;
&#13;
STAFF OF 1904.&#13;
Editor-in-chief ......... .... ........... R. G. Young&#13;
Reporters ............ Carl W. Maynard, H. B. Saylor&#13;
Athletic Editor ..................... C. G. Manning&#13;
Society Editor ................... Ralph E. Heilman&#13;
Y. M. and Y. W. C. A ............... Stanley Carson&#13;
Alumni and Correspondence ............ F. V. DuBois&#13;
Local Editors ........... J. W . Wunn, Grace Darling&#13;
Business Managers........ . .. ... Mossman and Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
��Trimble&#13;
Toothaker&#13;
Brown&#13;
Killam&#13;
Harding&#13;
Cook&#13;
Larson&#13;
Mason&#13;
Smith&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Palmer&#13;
Ellerbrock&#13;
Si man&#13;
Fair&#13;
Seaver&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Delay&#13;
Towner&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Garver&#13;
Crossan&#13;
Olson&#13;
Swem&#13;
Hay&#13;
Brown&#13;
Howard&#13;
Davidson&#13;
Miller&#13;
Killam&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
Fair&#13;
Cable&#13;
Siman&#13;
&#13;
�MABEL&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
KILLAM&#13;
&#13;
years ago much interest was aroused in Morningside by the appearance of a publisher whose volumes were issued under the pseudonym of Zetalethean.&#13;
The first edition was a set of eight volumes, one of which&#13;
still remains in one library, while the rest have been removed surreptitiously and otherwise. The remaining&#13;
volume of this edition is known as our "Encyclopedia of&#13;
Useful Information."&#13;
Besides this volume there are at present in the library thirty others, any one of which will afford a half&#13;
hour of quiet enjoyment.&#13;
The orderliness which pervades the college library&#13;
is explained in part by the presence of two books, donated by Zetalethean, upon whose leaves may be found information pertaining to the management of a library.&#13;
They will be found giving directions in so concise a&#13;
manner that Poole's index will be found unnecessary.&#13;
Our most popular volume is our little brown "Rules&#13;
of Order." Every one consults this book when difficulties arise, and our friend is so accomodating that we canalways prove our point.&#13;
Should you wish to consult two of our volumes you&#13;
must call before 4:15 or you will find them "just out" on&#13;
their way to the city. At the noon hour a visit to the&#13;
EVEN&#13;
&#13;
biological laboratory will reward one with a glimpse of&#13;
this set. We may add that these two attractive volumes&#13;
are often returned for something special in the evening.&#13;
On our shelves we have a small volume dressed in a&#13;
pretty binding yet servicable in appearance. This bears&#13;
a close relation to our historical department and students&#13;
desiring to excel in history would do well to consult&#13;
this little volume.&#13;
In wandering about the library one will not fail to&#13;
notice a small volume. The binding is attractive and&#13;
withal so winsome that as the reader unconsciously takes&#13;
the book in his hands and turns its pages he is intensely&#13;
interested in this favorite work of a scientist.&#13;
Lovers of fiction will be interested in a volume&#13;
which has been in the library for several months. It is&#13;
a "forest scented, fresh aired, bracing and wholly Canadian story" a kind of life never found in books before.&#13;
In the athletic alcove of the library you will find&#13;
but a single volume; a treatise on basket ball which was&#13;
transferred from Buena Vista College last fall.&#13;
One Friday afternoon some years ago Zetalethean&#13;
added two volumes to the library which, since their first&#13;
appearance, have been much in demand. These volumes are usually found together as they are sister volumes and so close is the companionship that they are regarded as inseparable. From present indications, however the set will be broken before long and one of the volumes republished with an addendum on constitutional law.&#13;
In the early autumn of '03 a large consignment of&#13;
manuscript was received from various parts of the state.&#13;
Its arrival was celebrated by Zetalethean with unusual&#13;
demonstrations and she at once proceeded to issue the&#13;
&#13;
�same in book form. From Alta, Hubbard, Rock Rapids&#13;
and Correctionville the material came by every mail until the publisher was taxed to her utmost capacity working these into service. The result of her strenuous efforts was three volumes whose principle trend is instrumental music and one on general literary criticism with&#13;
an introduction in German.&#13;
One of the most practical additions during the last&#13;
year has been a book which formerly belonged to the&#13;
Iowa Agricultural College. Its pages are full of the latest recipes for dainty dishes. Can we long hope to retain&#13;
so priceless a volume?&#13;
Upon a shelf at the farther side of the library will&#13;
be noticed a vacant place just wide enough for two volumes of ordinary size. The absence of one of these may&#13;
be explained by its special popularity. A careful search&#13;
at the close of chapel will find this volume undergoing a&#13;
careful perusal. The other will be returned in time to&#13;
avoid fines and if in search of plans for social evenings&#13;
or opinions as to whom should be awarded places on the&#13;
"All American Eleven," consult its pages.&#13;
Several of the volumes contain much information&#13;
concerning biological science. One volume is particularly valuable for its frequent foot notes referring to authorities of the University of Chicago. It will suggest many&#13;
plans for obtaining material for dissection.&#13;
"The Music of the Spheres is not in the Spheres but&#13;
in the heart of man, not above us and without us but&#13;
near us and about us." If you believe th is you will sure1y be interested in our latest musical publication, a collection of vocal selections in four volumes. The failure&#13;
of this edition to appear at the time announced was a&#13;
source of much dissapointment to the musical public but&#13;
&#13;
' since their appearance they have been constantly in demand.&#13;
If you are looking for an all around book handy to&#13;
carry and full of general information just inquire for&#13;
"The Little Giant of Peterson." It will tell you anything you wish to know from biology to music.&#13;
In a secluded corner two interesting volumes may&#13;
be found which are characterised by domestic traits and&#13;
musical tastes. The former characteristic is sufficiently&#13;
strong to prevent these volumes being found at boarding&#13;
clubs.&#13;
A volume which is held in much esteem is one from&#13;
the Elizabethean age which furnishes a recipe fur fudge&#13;
which would make glad the heart of the most confirmed&#13;
dyspeptic.&#13;
The latest addition to the library is a set of three&#13;
volumes of varied style and content. One was transferred from Cornell and since being reissued by Zetalethean has become a favorite with cultured readers. . Another has a charm of style peculiarly its own, a deservedly&#13;
popular book whose place if . left vacant would destroy&#13;
the harmony of the collection. The other is a book&#13;
which requires accquaintance if we would appreciate it,&#13;
but when once well known will afford a varied fund of&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
The commencement season will witness the withdrawal from circulation of two of our oldest volumes.&#13;
One is a most attractive book and for years its pages&#13;
have furnished so much information upon all phases of&#13;
college life that its place will not be easily filled. You&#13;
will find the other over in the corner. It is a dust covered&#13;
book with broken binding and tattered leaves, but why&#13;
describe so uninteresting a volume?&#13;
&#13;
�Philomathean Society&#13;
C. L.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Bilbert&#13;
&#13;
fall of I 892 the Philomathean Literary Society&#13;
came into being. During its early history both&#13;
women and men were admitted to membership, but by&#13;
mutual agreement, toward the close of the first year&#13;
after organization this po1icy was changed and men&#13;
only were admitted.&#13;
For many years all male students of the school&#13;
were eligible to membership, but in June, 1901, the&#13;
society was chartered as a Collegiate Society at the same&#13;
time with the other three Collegiate Societies of the&#13;
school and since that time only Collegiate students have&#13;
been eligible to election. In the same spring the new&#13;
halls on the third floor of Main hall were assigned to&#13;
the Collegiate Literary Societies, and after a debate before Judge Scott M. Ladd, in which he concurred with&#13;
every point made by the Philomathean representative,&#13;
the Philos and Atheneums were permitted to draw lots&#13;
with the other two Societies for choice of halls. In the&#13;
drawing of lots fortune favored the victors in the debate&#13;
and the Philos and Atheneums chose the southeast&#13;
corner room.&#13;
Most favorable for situation, the hall occupied by&#13;
the Philomathean Society. is also recognized to be the&#13;
best furnished of all the society halls in the college. The&#13;
N THE&#13;
&#13;
money for the purchasing of the furnishings has all&#13;
been subscribed by members of the societies occupying&#13;
the hall and their alumni, and the equipment has been&#13;
put in without incurring any debt. It is the policy of&#13;
the Philos to keep free from debt.&#13;
Through the kindness of Mr. C. P. Kilbourne, a&#13;
handsome life-sized portrait of President W. S. Lewis, has&#13;
been added to the wall decorations this year.&#13;
The Philomathean Literary Society long ago abolished the oath of secrecy in regard to business sessions.&#13;
The society maintains an open policy and stands for .&#13;
open and fair dea1ing in all matters.&#13;
The society has given mure public programs this&#13;
year than any other society in school. At some of these&#13;
programs the hall has been crowded far beyond the&#13;
doors into the Association Hall at the back and into the&#13;
Adelphian-Aesthesian Hall at the side. The society&#13;
stands for individual work, believing it to be productive&#13;
of the highest intellectual and moral development.&#13;
In the field of debate the Philos have always taken&#13;
the leading part. The present inter-society debate compact was first proposed in the Philomathean business&#13;
session and a challenge to debate was sent to the rival&#13;
society.&#13;
Not content with merely inter-society debating , the&#13;
Philos also took the initiative in making inter-collegiate&#13;
debate work a feature of our college work. After successfully encountering strenuous opposition the society&#13;
&#13;
�Hanna&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Chambers&#13;
Mekkleson&#13;
Stulkin&#13;
Whittaker&#13;
HaJJ&#13;
Brower&#13;
Shoemaker&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Wunn&#13;
Harding&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Du Bois&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Root&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
Magee&#13;
Carroll&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Debenham&#13;
Grubb&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
�succeeded in bringing about the formation of the K. I. N.&#13;
debate league in which Morningside has thus far been&#13;
so successful.&#13;
Not only in establishing debate has the Philomathean Society been the predominant factor but in the&#13;
debate contests themselves the Philos have. enjoyed&#13;
especial distinction. In three out of four inter-collegi·ate&#13;
debates, in which ·Morningside has won each time, the&#13;
Philos have been represented by two speakers.&#13;
In the oratorical field, too, the society has not been&#13;
idle. The highest ranking yet gained by Morningside&#13;
in the State Oratorical Contest was made last year by a&#13;
Philo, who won first place in delivery.&#13;
&#13;
The college paper is also the product of Philo enterprise. The first editor and business manager were&#13;
Philos, and during the eight years of its existence only&#13;
one year and a portion of another has the editorship&#13;
&#13;
passed out of the hands of members of the Philomathean&#13;
Literary Society.&#13;
Of its alumni the society is justly proud, for they&#13;
hold positions of honor and trnst wherever they are&#13;
found . An alumnus of the society has become a leader&#13;
in Sioux City's politics. Another is Superintendent of&#13;
City Missions in Sioux City and is one of the most energetic and capable men in the church. One of them is&#13;
at the head of a department in Morningside College. A&#13;
Philo holds the important position of financial agent of&#13;
the college.&#13;
Always and everywhere the Philomathean Literary&#13;
Society, in the persons and character of its members,&#13;
whether students or alumni, endeavors to honor by life&#13;
and actions the name, Philo, which means lover. And&#13;
the Philos will ever be lovers of learning, justice, truth,&#13;
keeping always in mind the society's motto, Nulla&#13;
vestigia retrorsum, which being interpreted means, No&#13;
Steps Backward.&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Cole&#13;
Davenport&#13;
Haafke&#13;
Patterson&#13;
Whitney&#13;
Wendell&#13;
Williams&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Frear&#13;
Lockin&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Frear&#13;
Flinn&#13;
Heiby&#13;
Gantt&#13;
Whitney&#13;
Cain&#13;
Erskine&#13;
Barringer&#13;
Bryan&#13;
Kling&#13;
Butler&#13;
Wilcox&#13;
Shumaker&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Wyatt&#13;
Manus&#13;
Matthews&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
Lockin&#13;
Darling&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
Henry&#13;
Corell&#13;
Bowker&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Ho! Hu ! Ho! Hu ! H·o! Ho! Ath-e-neum Ho' Hurrah for the, star that shines so bright on&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! Ath-e-neum Ho' Hurrah for the star that shines so bright on the Ath-e-neums, Ho 1.&#13;
&#13;
Atheneum Society&#13;
BY ATHENEUMS&#13;
&#13;
stars were we at first.&#13;
At that time we&#13;
shed our golden beams of light upon twelve&#13;
happy girls who composed the first literary society for&#13;
young women in the University of the Northwest.&#13;
Those whom we guided were called Atheneums, the&#13;
name being derived from ancient Athens. In the fall of&#13;
Eighteen hundred and ninety-one they made their first&#13;
public appearance with Miss Lola Clark as president.&#13;
Although in those days they assembled in no beautiful hall, yet many merry hearts swelled with pride after&#13;
the defects of the old chapel were hidden behind Nature's&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
WELVE&#13;
&#13;
contribution of flowers and foliage gathered by untiring&#13;
hands. The effect was artistic; varied was the appearance of the chapel on different occasions. Then, on&#13;
Friday afternoons after recitation hours, members of the&#13;
society might be seen seeking a place in which to hold&#13;
their business sessions. Weighty questions were discussed in those early days for well they realized the&#13;
responsibility of future years resting upon their young&#13;
shoulders, the responsibility of founding a society that&#13;
should endure; one upon whom we could benignly smile.&#13;
Many social delights were shared with the two gentlemen societies existing at that time. The programs&#13;
given by these Atheneums entertained interested audiences and at the same time served as a means of developing the intellectual life of the girls.&#13;
&#13;
�As time passed, we stars noted with pleasure that&#13;
the membership of the society was increasing and in proportion as it grew, new stars were added to our number.&#13;
Not only did the society grow in numbers, but it developed greater interest along literary and social lines and&#13;
as the University of the Northwest became Morningside&#13;
College, the same spirit that had previously dominated&#13;
the Atheneums was still manifest working in them a&#13;
deeper intellectual growth.&#13;
&#13;
In the year Eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, on&#13;
the old foundation, so long like an ancient ruin, began&#13;
to rest the walls of a beautiful new structure. Great was&#13;
the delight of the Atheneums to realize that at last in&#13;
one corner of this building they were to have a hall, and&#13;
after that memorable debate, the Fates being kind, we&#13;
saw the Atheneums the proud possessors of the south&#13;
east hall. With interest intent we watched the young&#13;
women as they planned with the Philomatheans to make&#13;
this sunny corner cheerful and home-like.&#13;
Until the fall of ·Nineteen hundred they welcomed&#13;
into their society as members the academic as well as collegiate students. At that time, however, they received&#13;
a charter properly signed entitling them to collegiate&#13;
rank.&#13;
&#13;
Eleven years have passed since first we appeared.&#13;
During this time we have rejoiced with the Atheneums&#13;
when victory was theirs and we have noted with pride&#13;
that defeats have made them only more persevering and&#13;
determined to succeed. No wonder such efforts have&#13;
won laurels for them!&#13;
Every year our Atheneums are leaving the college&#13;
world to take upon themselves the greater responsibilities of life. Some of them today are helping to uplift&#13;
those who are oppressed. Some are moulding the characters of young lives and fitting them for noble citizenship. Still others are the jewels of happy homes. A few&#13;
no longer need our guidance, for they are now in the&#13;
brighter world above.&#13;
Praise to the Atheneums upon whom first we shone,&#13;
success to those still in the college halls upon whom we&#13;
smile propitiously, joy to those whose paths in the future&#13;
we are yet to brighten. May prosperity and happiness&#13;
attend those over whom fl.oats the banner, Blue and&#13;
White, upon whose folds are inscribed "Utile Dulci"The Stars.&#13;
Rippi Zippi, Rippi Zippi, Rippi Zippi Zee!&#13;
Boomaraka, Boomaraka, Boomaraka, Ree!&#13;
Who are! Who are! Who are we?&#13;
We're the Atheneums of M. S. C.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Color&#13;
Royal Purple.&#13;
&#13;
Zip, ki, yah !&#13;
Zip, ki, yah !&#13;
Otho! Otho!&#13;
Otho-ni-ah !&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in Re."&#13;
&#13;
One-a-zip-a&#13;
Two-a-zip-a&#13;
Three-a-zi p-a-zo !&#13;
Ripple, tipple, Roly, poly, ki-o-to !&#13;
Whang-a-doodle !&#13;
Hity-tity !&#13;
Whang-a-doodle-whang !&#13;
Otho ! Otho ! Boomerang ! Bang !&#13;
&#13;
�Saylor&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
Harvey&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Green&#13;
Finch&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
Hulser&#13;
&#13;
Maynard&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Calkins&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
Kindig&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Aldrich&#13;
&#13;
Cain&#13;
Howe&#13;
Squires&#13;
Patterson&#13;
Maynard&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
McCay&#13;
Millner&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Hawkins&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
skein has slipped thru the fingers of the&#13;
Fates and we pause again to look over the list of&#13;
deeds which the gods have seen fit to record for the&#13;
Othonian Literary Society.&#13;
&#13;
at the school, four times have her orators carried away&#13;
the wreath, winning both first and second places. Three&#13;
times have her orators taken the platform to test their&#13;
forensic powers on the prohibition question, winning the&#13;
home contest twice and the state contest once. Seven&#13;
times have her men been pitted against strong opponents&#13;
in annual inter-society debate, and five times have the&#13;
gods placed the crown of victory upon their brows.&#13;
&#13;
Her old charter roll, hanging upon her wall, bears&#13;
the names of the fourteen men who met one autumn&#13;
evening in 1891 and ushered into the quiet surroundings&#13;
of the University of the Northwest, the Othonian Literary Society and her Boomerang.&#13;
&#13;
Not satisfied with literary attainments alone, her&#13;
members have reached out into other fields, and have&#13;
been the leaders in social and athletic life. Last fall the&#13;
name of her president was the first to be engraved upon&#13;
the foot ball trophy.&#13;
&#13;
History&#13;
IRA&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. Richards&#13;
&#13;
NOTHER&#13;
&#13;
The Boomerang was the first paper published in&#13;
Morningside and as its name signifies it gives and takes.&#13;
&#13;
In 1900 thesociety became collegiate and todayonly&#13;
collegiates are found on its membership roll.&#13;
The records show that in '94 and '95 she brought&#13;
the first lecture course of the college to the city. It was&#13;
composed of eight numbers, some of which were Bishop&#13;
Fowler, Robt. McIntyre, and Frank Crans.&#13;
Her past achievements along literary lines have been&#13;
very satisfactory. In the five oratorical contests, given&#13;
&#13;
Her alumni is the largest of any society's in school.&#13;
Its members are holding important positions over the&#13;
land.&#13;
The future is indeed bright. Her present members&#13;
are strong men who are not afraid of work. She is building broad plans for the future and expects these men,&#13;
when their struggles of preparation is ended, to be able&#13;
to look back and thank her for her contribution to their&#13;
strength of heart, steadiness of purpose, and the larger&#13;
outlook towards life's nobler fields.&#13;
&#13;
�Correll&#13;
&#13;
Wendel&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
&#13;
Lockin&#13;
Harding&#13;
&#13;
Lockin&#13;
&#13;
Platts&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY.&#13;
&#13;
�Pende ll&#13;
Foster&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Good lander&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Tracey&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
Batcheller&#13;
Weary&#13;
Stukenburg&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Sharr&#13;
Beach&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Briggle&#13;
Good lander&#13;
&#13;
Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Barkley&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Harman&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Kahley&#13;
&#13;
�SeniorAcademy&#13;
&#13;
T HE SENIOR ACADEMY Class of 1904&#13;
began its career in Morningside by&#13;
winningthe·beautiful pennant, in 1902,&#13;
offered to any class of the entire school&#13;
scoring the most points in an athletic&#13;
field meet at Riverside Park. We have&#13;
had in our class until the last two&#13;
terms the champion and also the second best all around athlete of the&#13;
school.&#13;
But it was not until we became middles and inherited from our predecessors the insatiable desire for blood,&#13;
that we began to make ourselves felt and that the rest&#13;
of the school began to pay us due respect and to hold us&#13;
in awe. At the opening of the winter term we were insulted, by the uncultured Seniors of 1903, one morning&#13;
after Chapel and we immediately proceeded to carry them&#13;
out of doors and throw them headfirst into a snow bank.&#13;
A few nights after this the Seniors finding they were no&#13;
match for us either in brains or brawn endeavored to outwit us by climbing to the Cupalo of North Hall and&#13;
float the besmeared and conquered colors from the eminence, but our scouts were too wary and the "War Whoop"&#13;
was resounded through onr tribe at three o'clock in the&#13;
morning. All of our braves assembled to find four of the&#13;
&#13;
Seniors in the "Superior Heights." The tribe was&#13;
quickly drawn up and messengers sent to inform those&#13;
legions which were left behind to guard camp. After&#13;
four hours of continual fighting the enemy being exhausted by wounds, were completely "pacified" and their&#13;
standard was burned.&#13;
Soon after this victory a reception was tendered the&#13;
conquered Seniors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P.&#13;
Negus and our right to rule was acknowledged by all.&#13;
During this same year we furnished two of the debaters for the Inter Society debate between the Hawkeye and Adelphian Literary Societies, an orator for the&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest, more foot ball players&#13;
than any class in school and still held the Championship&#13;
thletics.&#13;
During our Senior year we have still the distinction&#13;
of never having been defeated in a class scrap, of having&#13;
the Champion Athlete of the school and of furnishing&#13;
five out of six of the Academy Inter Society debaters and&#13;
one of the Inter Academic debaters with Grinell Academy. We also hold the distinction of having three married persons and only one Batcheller in our class.&#13;
While we are perhaps the smallest class in point of&#13;
numbers that has graduated from the Academy for several years, yet it is acknowledged by all that we are one of&#13;
the best and wisest classes that ever received their sheepskins from the rostrum of Morningside Academy.&#13;
Our Motto is: Scandite, scopulis confragosis.&#13;
Colors: Old Rose and Steel Gray.&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Pendell&#13;
Foster&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Good lander&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Tracey&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
Batcheller&#13;
Weary&#13;
Stulkenburg&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Sharr&#13;
Beach&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Briggle&#13;
Goodlander&#13;
&#13;
Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Barkley&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Harman&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Kahley&#13;
&#13;
�Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
The ACADEMY Class of 1904&#13;
SENIOR&#13;
began its career in Morningside by&#13;
winning the beautiful pennant, in 1902,&#13;
offered to any class of the entire school&#13;
scoring the most points in an athletic&#13;
field meet at Riverside Park. We have&#13;
had in our class until the last two&#13;
terms the champion and also the second best all around athlete of the&#13;
school.&#13;
But it was not until we became middles and inherited from our predecessors the insatiable desire for blood,&#13;
that we began to make ourselves felt and that the rest&#13;
of the school began to pay us due respect and to hold us&#13;
in awe. At the opening of the winter term we were insulted, by the uncultured Seniors of 1903, one morning&#13;
after Chapel and we immediately proceeded to carry them&#13;
out of doors and throw them headfirst into a snow bank.&#13;
A few nights after this the Seniors finding they were no&#13;
match for us either in brains or brawn endeavored to outwit us by climbing to the Cupalo of North Hall and&#13;
float the besmeared and conquered colors from the eminence, but our scouts were too wary and the "War Whoop"&#13;
was resounded through our tribe at three o'clock in the&#13;
morning. All of our braves assembled tofind four of the&#13;
&#13;
Seniors in the "Superior Heights." The tribe was&#13;
quickly drawn up and messengers sent to inform those&#13;
legions which were left behind to guard camp. After&#13;
four hours of continual fighting the enemy being exhausted by wounds, were completely "pacified" and their&#13;
standard was burned.&#13;
Soon after this victory a reception was tendered the&#13;
conquered Seniors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P.&#13;
Negus and our right to rule was acknowledged by all.&#13;
During this same year we furnished two of the debaters for the Inter Society debate between the Hawkeye and Adelphian Literary Societies, an orator for the&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest, more foot ball players&#13;
than any class in school and still held the Championship&#13;
in Athletics.&#13;
During our Senior year we have still the distinction&#13;
of never having been defeated in a class scrap, of having&#13;
the Champion Athlete of the school and of furnishing&#13;
five out of six of the Academy Inter Society debaters and&#13;
one of the Inter Academic debaters with Grinell Academy. We also hold the distinction of having three married persons and only one Batcheller in our class.&#13;
While we are perhaps the smallest class in point of&#13;
numbers that has graduated from the Academy for several years, yet it is acknowledged by all that we are one of&#13;
the best and wisest classes that ever received their sheepskins from the rostrum of Morningside Academy.&#13;
Our Motto is: Scandite, scopulis confragosis.&#13;
Colors: Old Rose and Steel Gray.&#13;
&#13;
�J. G. WATERMAN&#13;
&#13;
W. H. SHAW&#13;
&#13;
H. H . SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Academic Debate&#13;
MARCH 21, 1904.&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That the railroads of the United States should be owned and operated by the Federal government.&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
Affirmative-GR INNELL.&#13;
C. McGill.&#13;
A. K. Beik.&#13;
E . P. Erwine.&#13;
&#13;
Negative-MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
W . H. Shaw.&#13;
H. H. Sawyer.&#13;
J. G. Waterman.&#13;
&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
Mayor Caldwell, Sioux City.&#13;
Dr. F. Newhall White, Sioux City.&#13;
Judge Hutchinson, Sioux City.&#13;
Deczsion-Affirmative,&#13;
one; Negative, two.&#13;
&#13;
�.&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY&#13;
SOCIETIES&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
Willis&#13;
Currier&#13;
Tonies&#13;
&#13;
Budlong&#13;
Beach&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Herrick&#13;
Rorem&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Howarth&#13;
Fair&#13;
Barkley&#13;
Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Legate&#13;
Day&#13;
Conway&#13;
Parker&#13;
&#13;
Gauch&#13;
&#13;
Berkhead&#13;
Mahood&#13;
Goodlander&#13;
&#13;
Brenner&#13;
Hartzel&#13;
Hart&#13;
Dunn&#13;
Tonies&#13;
Stu ken burg&#13;
Gibson&#13;
Zimmerman&#13;
Ellis&#13;
Batcheller&#13;
Hoffman&#13;
&#13;
�Aesthesian Literary Society&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. N.&#13;
&#13;
Goodlander&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
NELLIE GOODLANDER, President.&#13;
GERTRUDE PARKER, S ecretary.&#13;
Color-White.&#13;
&#13;
Emblem-Olive&#13;
&#13;
Hippa-ka-boom ,&#13;
Hippa-ka-bide,&#13;
Aesthesian Girls of Morningside!&#13;
E Pluribus Unum!&#13;
Well I Guess!&#13;
We're the Aesthesians,&#13;
Yes ! Yes ! Yes !&#13;
&#13;
Leaf.&#13;
&#13;
I N FEBRUARY, 1902, nineteen academ y girls obtained&#13;
permission to form a new literary society. They&#13;
saw the need of not only more literary activity, but of&#13;
Morningside's growing academy, and thinking not so&#13;
much of th e present as the future, by their united efforts&#13;
and sacrifices, fou nded that most aesth etic of all literary&#13;
societies, the Aesthesian.&#13;
The num ber of members was increased to t hirtysix last year, and thi s year th e same number is still entitled to wear the oli ve leaf-the symbol of peace which&#13;
has been chosen by the Aesthesians as their emblem.&#13;
We skipped that childhood period of society life.&#13;
From infancy to womanhood at a single bound has b een&#13;
our record. Even our charter members are amazed at&#13;
our growth. We do not exult in our strength, but rather in humbleness endeavoring to promote the best interest of our Academy.&#13;
To live up to our nam e and motto we must cultivate the aesthetic, promote peace and purity and point&#13;
out th e beauties that are around us everywhere. We&#13;
always endeavor to please our visitors at our programs&#13;
and our members invite you to attend.&#13;
The effort of every Aesthesian is to labor and sacrifice for her society that it may keep on growing as the&#13;
college grows, furnishing material that will lead in the&#13;
upper societies, a nd finally go out into the world to take&#13;
their part in the practical life, bearing the stamp of beautiful and pure womanhood.&#13;
&#13;
�Waterman&#13;
Brower&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Sharr&#13;
Styles&#13;
Manley&#13;
Metcalf&#13;
Pruden&#13;
Shaw&#13;
Blood&#13;
Smock&#13;
Bruce&#13;
Brandow&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
Barrick&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
Eaton&#13;
Hobbs&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Baslough&#13;
Prichard&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Carkuff&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
Bryant&#13;
Miller&#13;
Harrison&#13;
Bass&#13;
Beach&#13;
Yuel&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
�Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah!&#13;
Through thick, through thin&#13;
Adelphians, Adelphians are sure to win.&#13;
BY BRUCE&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
the rapid growth of the school it seemed&#13;
necessary, in the fall of 1901, to organize another&#13;
society for gentlemen in .the Academy. Recognizing&#13;
this need, a band of young men gathered on Nov. 4th&#13;
for the purpose of considering the organization of a new&#13;
literary society. On that day the Adelphians were introduced into Morningside College. The number of&#13;
charter members was twenty-five, and their officers for&#13;
the Fall term were:&#13;
WING TO&#13;
&#13;
H. L. Mossman, President.&#13;
Earl Hanna, Vice President.&#13;
J. E. Pritchard, Secretary.&#13;
C. 0. Rex, Treasurer.&#13;
P. E. Fredendoll, Cor. Secretary.&#13;
R. S. Day, First Censor.&#13;
C. C. Crosten, Second Censor.&#13;
The Adelphian society began at once to flourish,&#13;
and for a time the future seemed bright, but perplexing&#13;
problems soon arose, and a hard struggle was at hand.&#13;
&#13;
With these cheering words as a yell the spirit soon&#13;
took possession of the members to win.&#13;
The Adelphians at first chose as their colors royal&#13;
blue and cerise but soon they decided that cerise only&#13;
should be the color of the society.&#13;
On Dec. 5th, 1902, the Adelphians entered the intersociety debate, with the Hawkeye Literary Society, and&#13;
were defeated but not discouraged. Again in 1903 these&#13;
two societies, met in debate and this time the victory was&#13;
the Adelphians. The debaters, Mossman, Johnson, and&#13;
Shaw, will ever be remembered as the heroes of the 1903&#13;
Academic inter-society debate.&#13;
The Adelphians are sure that success is in store for&#13;
them and that a bright future is assured.&#13;
With what enthusiam is given the yell:&#13;
Wah hoo wah&#13;
Ta Rah Boom&#13;
Re Rah Zip Boom&#13;
Rickety Boom&#13;
Ripety Ripety&#13;
Ripety Ride&#13;
We are the Adelphians of Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
�Newcom&#13;
Bender&#13;
Hummel&#13;
&#13;
Bowers&#13;
Noble&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Beacham&#13;
&#13;
Foster&#13;
&#13;
Weary&#13;
&#13;
Graybill&#13;
&#13;
Gibson&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Oslin&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Beacham&#13;
&#13;
Simmons&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Lukes&#13;
Mitchell&#13;
Fields&#13;
&#13;
Crummer&#13;
Moberly&#13;
Hummel&#13;
&#13;
Trenary&#13;
&#13;
Welch&#13;
Myers&#13;
&#13;
�Crescent&#13;
CLARA CRUMMER, President.&#13;
BLANCHE JOHNSON, Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
We succeed by doing.&#13;
&#13;
White and Light Green.&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Boom a linger bow,&#13;
Ching a linger chee,&#13;
Ta la kn wah,&#13;
Ta la ku wee,&#13;
Crescents, Crescents, ,whee.&#13;
In the fall of 1900, both young ladies societies of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College having become collegiate, all noncollegiate girls were debarred from the privilege of literary work. Hence the organization of a new literary society was necessary. A petition was drawn up and sent&#13;
&#13;
to the faculty, asking them to grant to the Academy&#13;
girls the right to form the Crescent Society. This petition was readily granted, and November 2nd, 1900, the&#13;
first girls society of the Academy was organized, having&#13;
fifteen charter members. Few of them are now in school,&#13;
still all hold dear the memory of the Crescent Literary&#13;
Society.&#13;
The motto is "We succeed by Doing" and it may&#13;
well be said of the Crescents, that they do succeed by doing, for they always have done excellent work ever since&#13;
the society was organized. The Society is proud of its&#13;
name, which has been handed down through the ages,&#13;
and also of its Crescent shaped pin, which is one of the&#13;
prettiest in school. In the winter of 1902-03, the society&#13;
together with the Hawkeyes purchased a fine piano,&#13;
which is of great service to them, as well as making a&#13;
beautiful furnishing for the hall.&#13;
The Crescents endeavor to set up a high Christian&#13;
standard: first in spiritual work, then in social pleasure&#13;
and intellectual development. As the whole is made up&#13;
of its parts, so is Morningside College made up of its different departments and societies and this society by daily&#13;
striving is forming a very essential part. It is believed&#13;
that the Crescents by thus fitting themselves will aspire&#13;
to lofty heights.&#13;
&#13;
�Shaffer&#13;
&#13;
Morrel&#13;
Clipple&#13;
Murray&#13;
Hinde&#13;
Hayes&#13;
Hamilton&#13;
Fair&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Crabb&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Mould&#13;
De Grisselles&#13;
Vermilea&#13;
Williams&#13;
Harman&#13;
Cook&#13;
Mason&#13;
Staples&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Peterson&#13;
Robins&#13;
Hamren&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
Lukens&#13;
Howlett&#13;
&#13;
�NewStudent's Letter&#13;
to his Sweetheart&#13;
My Dearest Katherine :- I had a pecular experience&#13;
when I joined th e Haw keye Society. I was never worse&#13;
scared in my life than I was then. I can't tell you much&#13;
about it, for I was blindfolded, but I know that I was raised&#13;
high up in the air and then it seemed like I was falling from&#13;
a high cliff. I was sure that I would be dashed into a&#13;
thousand pieces when I lit, and had a vision of a lot of&#13;
fellows picking up my remains with large blotters. When&#13;
I did light it sti ll seemed that I was dreaming, but I was&#13;
unhurt and soon found myself standing erect supported by&#13;
some of the boys who put me to several tests which I&#13;
promised to keep secret. 0 ! I am so glad it is over, a nd&#13;
that I did not have to be served like one poor fellow, who&#13;
got mad when the boys tried to initiate him. He had to be&#13;
cripp led before they cou ld handle him, and though that was&#13;
over two years ago he is still unable to walk without a Cain.&#13;
Well when I was getting about tired ou t th ey took the cloth&#13;
from off my eyes, a nd made me give th e society ye ll.&#13;
It runs lik e this.&#13;
Ki Ki Hawkeye my&#13;
Whee zip boom ba soo&#13;
Ra Ra 1- o-w-a&#13;
Wahoo hi&#13;
And a ba zoo boom&#13;
Animus animus&#13;
Die tu sum&#13;
Haw Haw Haw Ki Ki Ki&#13;
Hawkeye Hawkeye&#13;
Ra! ra!! ra!!!&#13;
&#13;
Next they made me translate their motto.&#13;
It is a Latin&#13;
motto containing but four words (Non palma sine pulvera)&#13;
which in our language is "Not the palms without the dust."&#13;
I told the boys that I thought there was more dust than&#13;
palms, but they assured me that I was mistaken. They&#13;
said the dust first the palms later.&#13;
The Hawkeye Literary Society was organized in the&#13;
Fall of 1899, in the old building now known as North Ha ll.&#13;
Fifteen boys of the academy met there to discuss the matter,&#13;
and decided to organize a society whose purpose should be,&#13;
The literary moral and socia l advancement, and the develop ment of everything which pertains to high and noble manhood. For the society they choose the name Hawkeye, the&#13;
name of our State. Because the soil of our state is pure,&#13;
and its product stands first both in quality and quantity.&#13;
This was thought to be an appropriate standard for an&#13;
oraanization: First purity: Then seek to rank first in quality&#13;
a nd quantity of the work accomplished. Following this a&#13;
sho rt history of the struggles, defeats, and victories of the&#13;
societ y were mentioned. The Hawkeye and Adelphian&#13;
societies have a debating compact which provides for an&#13;
inter-society debate each year. The first one was held in&#13;
December, 1902 and was unanimously won by the Hawkeyes&#13;
The second was held in December, 1903, and lost by a vote&#13;
of two to one in favor of th e Adelphians.&#13;
The society now occupies a well furni s hed room on the&#13;
third floor ot Main Hall, and with a membership of thirtyfive is doing a great work.&#13;
I am so g lad I joined a society for I am sure th at I never&#13;
cou ld have been the well rounded man which I now expect&#13;
to be when I leave schoo l had I not done so, and I am sure&#13;
that I made no mistake in jo ining the Hawkeyes.&#13;
Faithfully yours,&#13;
HERBY.&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
PARK PLACE HALL.&#13;
&#13;
��Alumni Association&#13;
THE Alumni Association of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College was preceded by an Alumni Association of the old University&#13;
of the Northwest. This association was formed during Commencement of 1894 and held its first and only dinner in the&#13;
lecture room of Grace Church during the Commencement&#13;
of 189S. E. M. Corbett was president, and Judge Lawrence&#13;
was the speaker of the evening. With the breaking up of&#13;
the old University and the organization of Morningside College, the Alumni Association went out of existence with a&#13;
balance of 74 cents in the treasury.&#13;
But the idea of an alumni association had been started&#13;
and it lived. Through the persistent efforts of E. M. Corbett and others it was again brought to the front. The various graduates of the University of the Northwest and of&#13;
Morningside College were interested, and all who could be&#13;
reached in any way were informed that a meeting would be&#13;
held during Commencement of 1900 for the purpose of organizing an alumni association of Morningside College.&#13;
Those considered eligible were the members of the class of&#13;
'99, the outgoing class of 1900 and the graduates of the old&#13;
University of the Northwest.&#13;
Accordingly at five o'clock on commencement day of&#13;
1900, five of the above named met in the old chapel and organized the present alumni association. The following officers were elected: Pres., Ernest Richards, '99; Vice-Pres.,&#13;
E. M. Corbett, '94; Sec'y., S. L. Chandler, '99; Treas., Dora&#13;
Eisentraut, '96; Members Executive Committee, J.B. Trimble, '91, and Clara Yetter, '00. This was all that was accomplished at this Commencement but during the year the members endeavored to inspire interest in the movement and&#13;
during Commencement of 1901 the association gave its first&#13;
dinner and lecture. The dinner was given in Park Place&#13;
Hall. The lecture was given by Dr. C . J. Little of Evans-&#13;
&#13;
ton. Lectures were new in Morningside. The faculty,&#13;
headed by Dr. Lewis, cheerfully joined the alumni in backing the enterprise and by dint of hard canvassing, the expenses were nearly met by the receipts.&#13;
During the business meeting of this year the old officers&#13;
were re-elected to suffer hardships for another year. ln 1902&#13;
the dinner was given on the third floor of the new college&#13;
building and Dr. Frank W. Gunsaulus gave a brilliant lecture to an enthusiastic audience in the chapel. This year&#13;
the association found itself with a balance in the treasury .&#13;
This year, 1902, S. L. Chandler was elected President,&#13;
E. M. Corbett, Vice-Pres., A. J. Quirin Cor. Sec., Miss Jennie&#13;
Skewis, Rec. Sec., Dora Eisentraut, Treas., J. 8. Trimble and&#13;
Anna Marsh Reinhart members of the executive committee.&#13;
During the following Commencement a large audience&#13;
greeted Dr. W. F. McDowell who gave the lecture, and a&#13;
very enthusiastic company gathered at the dinner given in&#13;
the basement of the Main Hall. The association was by this&#13;
time an established fact and showed what it might do in the&#13;
future by subscribing at its business meeting several hundred dollars toward the Guild fund. The president, vicepresident, treasurer and executive committee were re-elected. Miss Bessie Carr was elected corresponding secretary&#13;
and Miss Pearl Woodford recording secretary.&#13;
Such are the beginnings of an association which some&#13;
day will be a powerful factor in the life of the College. Like&#13;
the Alma Mater, it has "come up through great tribulations."&#13;
Nearly all of its members graduated with great honors but&#13;
little cash. They have gone out to battle with the world.&#13;
With few exceptions they are sacrificing loyally for the&#13;
school. Engrossed with the cares of life, visions often pass&#13;
before their eyes, shutting out all else. When they know&#13;
that their hearts are still "On the hills of Morningside."&#13;
With the success of the school upon our hearts we can all&#13;
sing "Blest be the tie that binds our hearts in Christian&#13;
love," for we have all felt the influence of God in Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
�Our Alumni&#13;
Alumni Officers&#13;
S. L. CHANDLER, President.&#13;
E. M. CORBETT, Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
J. B. Trimble, A.&#13;
B., '91, Pastor at Odebolt, '92. Presiding Elder Sheldon District&#13;
'93, Sioux City District,&#13;
98. In '03 appointed&#13;
one of the Missionary&#13;
Field Secretaries of the&#13;
Methodist Episcopal&#13;
Church .&#13;
&#13;
MISS PEARL WOODFORD, Recording Secretary&#13;
MISS BESSIE CARR, Corresponding Secretary.&#13;
MISS DORA EISENTRAUT, Treasurer.&#13;
J. B. TRIMBLE,&#13;
&#13;
Members of&#13;
Executive&#13;
ANNA MARSH REINHART&#13;
Committee.&#13;
&#13;
Th. Warner, A.B.,&#13;
Teaching at Postville, Ia., '92. Farming&#13;
'94.&#13;
'9r.&#13;
&#13;
Ed. Mahood, Ph.B., '93. State University '94,&#13;
Teaching '95, Chicago university '96. A. M. and chair&#13;
of Mathematics, State Agricultural College, St. Paul,&#13;
Minn., '97; Chair Mathematics, St. Louis High Schools,&#13;
'03.&#13;
James H. O'Donohue, A.B.,'93. Eighteen months in&#13;
England and Scotland, being special student in Chemistry, Edinburgh University, and life member of Chemical&#13;
&#13;
�Society of Edinburgh. Superintendent Schools of Correctionville, '95. State University of Iowa M.Sc., '97.&#13;
Superintendent of Schools Correctionville, '98. Superintendent Schools Storm Lake since '98 and a member of&#13;
Iowa Academy of Science.&#13;
Edward M. Corbett, B.A., '94. Studied law in the&#13;
office of P.A. Sawyer of Sioux City, '95, State University, 96, admitted to the bar '96, practiced with P.A. Sawyer in '97. Entered a law partnership under firm name&#13;
of Brown &amp; Corbett '98 in the Security Bank Building&#13;
where the present offices are located.&#13;
Fred J. Plondke, M.D., Ph.B., '95. Began medical&#13;
profession at Everly, '95. Located in St. Paul, Minn.,&#13;
1900.&#13;
E. Lawrence Benedict, A.B., '95. Pastor at Larabee, '95. Garrett Biblical Institute, '98. Boston University School of Theology, '98. Degree S. T. B. 'oo.&#13;
Traveled in Europe summer 1900. Pastor at Hawarden,&#13;
'01. Transferred to Pe Ell, Washington, '03.&#13;
James Hudson Benedict, Ph.B., '96. Chicago College Dental Surgery, '97, Degree D. D. S. 'oo. Practicing dentistry at Pender, Neb., since 1900.&#13;
&#13;
Dora Alice Eisentraut, A.B., '96. Teaching at&#13;
Anthon, Iowa, '97. Since then a successful teacher m&#13;
the public schools of Sioux City.&#13;
Frank D. Empy, A.B., '96. Garret Biblical Institute, '98, pastor at Hinton, 'or, at Castana, '02. Chicago&#13;
University, '03. Pastor at Whiting, '04.&#13;
Frank Mitchell, Ph.B., '97. Studied law in office&#13;
of Danson &amp; Butler, Algona, '97, U.S. Army, '98. Studied law in office of S. H. CarrIreton, '99. Entered partnership with his brother in launching "The Butler County&#13;
Tribune" of Allison,· Iowa, 'oo. Admitted to the bar&#13;
and opened a law office at Early, 'oo.&#13;
Sidney L. Chandler, A.B., '99. Pastor at Hull 1900,&#13;
received his Master's degree, 'oo. Financial agent of M.&#13;
C., 'or. Pastor of Haddock Church and Superintendent&#13;
Methodist Missions of Sioux City at present. A. M. Degree, 'or.&#13;
Asbury Dean, Ph.B., '99. Pastor at Willow Creek,&#13;
'oo. Harris, 'or, Garret Biblical Institute, '03. Curlew, '04.&#13;
Jabob Eisentraut, Ph.B., '99. Chicago University&#13;
'99, studying law and writing insurance in Washington,&#13;
D. C., 'oo. Traveled in British Isles, '03.&#13;
&#13;
�Walter Bruce Empey, A.B., '99. Pastor of Seney,&#13;
'oo. Missionary to Morada bad, India, 'or. Returned on&#13;
sick leave '02. Pastor at Merril '02.&#13;
Adams R. Hastings, A.B., '99. In employ of Knapp&#13;
&amp; Spencer Hardware Co., Sioux City, 'oo. Northwestern Railway, Sioux City, 'or. North Western Railway,&#13;
Minneapolis and Chicago, '02.&#13;
Ernest C. Richards, Ph.B., '99. Pastor at Lester&#13;
'oo, graduate student at M. C. 'or. Boston University&#13;
School of Theology, '02., A. M. degree, '02. Pastor at&#13;
Lester, '03, at Pocahontas, '04.&#13;
Carrie M. Bartlett, Ph.B., 'oo. Teaching '01, deaconess training school, Chicago, '03, and in June expects to&#13;
sail for China as a missionary.&#13;
James A. Davies, Ph.B., 'oo. Pastor at Germania,&#13;
1900 to present time. A. M. degree '03.&#13;
Hattie Bartlett Empey, Ph.B., 'oo. Missionary at&#13;
Moradabad India, 'or. Merril, '02.&#13;
Edna Hathaway, B.Sc., 'oo.&#13;
S. D. 'or.&#13;
&#13;
Teaching at Mitchell,&#13;
&#13;
Albert H. Jastrum, Ph.B., 'oo. Practicing medicine&#13;
at Remsen and teaching in Sioux City College of Medicine, 'or.&#13;
Clarence E. Van Horne, Ph.B., 'oo.&#13;
stein 'or. Sanborn '02, Pocahontas '03.&#13;
teaching at Sykestown, N. D., '04.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor of Hol Preaching and&#13;
&#13;
Robert N. Van. Horne, Ph.B., 'oo. John Hopkins&#13;
University, '01, traveled in Europe summer '01, Chair of&#13;
of Mathematics in M. C. '02.&#13;
Clara Yetter Flint, A.B., 'oo.&#13;
rathon, 'or.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor's wife, Ma-&#13;
&#13;
Harry H. Adair, A.B., '01. Principal schools Dakota City, Neb., '02.&#13;
Arthur J. Folson, A. B., '01. Pastor at Whiting&#13;
'02, transferred to Chicago conference '03.&#13;
Herbert A. Keck, Ph.B., '01.&#13;
Danbury '03.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor at Ute '02,&#13;
&#13;
Augustus J. Quirin, A.B., '01.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor Cylinder '02.&#13;
&#13;
Anna Marsh Reinhart, Ph.B., '01. Wife of Oscar&#13;
Reinhart, Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
�Oscar Reinhart, B.Sc., '01.&#13;
ional Bank, Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Position in First Nat-&#13;
&#13;
Jennie R. Skewis, B.Sc., '01. Editor "The Inwood&#13;
Herald," '02. Traveled abroad '03, continued the publishing of the Herald, '03.&#13;
Charles F. Eberly, B.Sc., '02. Taught Chemistry&#13;
at M. C. summer session '02. Teaching near Denhoff,&#13;
N. D. '03.&#13;
&#13;
c.,&#13;
&#13;
Bessie M. Carr, Ph. B., '02.&#13;
'03.&#13;
&#13;
George A. Platts, Ph.B., '02.&#13;
'03, pastor at Sergeant's Bluff '04.&#13;
Fred J. Seaver, B.Sc., 02.&#13;
versity, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago University,&#13;
&#13;
Fellowship State Uni-&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Walker Trimble, A.B., '02..&#13;
Sioux Rapids, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor's wife;&#13;
&#13;
Emma A. Flathers, Ph.B., '02. Teaching&#13;
quoketa schools '03, in Sioux City schools '04.&#13;
&#13;
111&#13;
&#13;
Ma-&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Latin, M.&#13;
Samuel Knoer, Ph.B., 02.&#13;
at Nemoha, '04.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor at Moorhead '03,&#13;
&#13;
Ross P. Brown, A.B., '02. Studied law in office of&#13;
J. D. Brown, Guthrie Center, 03. In employ of Interstate Electric Supply Co., Sioux City, '04.&#13;
&#13;
Guy G. Frary, B.Sc. '02. Assistant in Chemistry&#13;
M. C. '03. Fellowship State University '04.&#13;
&#13;
Ethel M. Gantt, Ph.B., '02.&#13;
Sioux City, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Florence M. Cate, Ph.B., '02.&#13;
schools of Hubbard, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Teaching School,&#13;
&#13;
Teaching&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
public&#13;
&#13;
�Reminiscences&#13;
BY JACOB EISENTRAUT&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
fireside of his heart sat Memory dreaming a&#13;
dream. Into the wildwood of bygones wandered&#13;
the dreamer happy with the thoughts of youth. Sweet&#13;
for-get-me-nots were nodding by the strange and winding pathway and the birds were singing the song of yore.&#13;
The western sky was radiant with the glow of a Hawkeye sunset and from the distance came the sound of an&#13;
old familiar bell. In a stretch of beautiful landscape by&#13;
the banks of a winding river, there still stood the famous&#13;
North Hall. The church, the hillside, the trees, the&#13;
campus, the old stone steps and narrow hallway, yes&#13;
they were just the same as in years gone by. But what&#13;
of the Ananias Club, Companies A and B, the Feminine&#13;
Wand Brigade and the old foundation stones? Where&#13;
are all the girls with whom we studied Virgil and the&#13;
boys who made life's sunshine bright and fair? Why&#13;
does the old fam iliar path, though filled with strange&#13;
and earnest faces, seem so lonely now? Where are all&#13;
the chums we knew whose kind and loyal friendships&#13;
made so happy those endearing days? Must we pass as&#13;
strangers now and never know those joys again? Alas,&#13;
alas, how changed is all since time has hastened on, and&#13;
yet how unchanged, for do we not feel the thrill of those&#13;
same old friendships still? Yes, we cherish all that was&#13;
T THE&#13;
&#13;
beautiful in the lives of those we knew, for the flight of&#13;
time has mellowed and hallowed the memory of those&#13;
happy associations.&#13;
Indeed that mysterious bond of friendly feeling is&#13;
made securer at every mile post of the passing years.&#13;
For we love the old true friendships, the chums we used&#13;
to know, in the dim sweet distant yesterday, the dear&#13;
old long ago.&#13;
It may be true that most of our young dreams of&#13;
life's greatness and glamour came to us in the old college&#13;
halls, but after all it is not to them our hearts return;&#13;
rather do we see again the happy faces of old friends,&#13;
the sunshine in their eye and their smile, oh we see it&#13;
yet, as pure and sweet as a drop of dew in the heart of a&#13;
prairie rose.&#13;
The very simplicity of lives swept clean with the&#13;
purity of moral winds from chapel and pulpit is a picture&#13;
that will fade nevermore. The ideals which came to us&#13;
in the class room, at study or while walking in the star&#13;
sown nights, these are the beckoning hands that still&#13;
invite us on.&#13;
Nowhere in life do we cease longing for the companionship and the company of our kind; it is this that&#13;
makes college life most dear. True friendships are&#13;
formed there, friendship at its best.&#13;
There is something ever novel and inspiring about&#13;
college life that exerts a silent influence over us during&#13;
all the succeeding years. Especially was this true in the&#13;
&#13;
�early days of our Institution when the scenes shifted&#13;
from sunshine to gloom so often. Wild and fanciful&#13;
were the scenes about the campus when the thirty&#13;
students enrolled in the autumn of 1890. We met as&#13;
strangers and in that spirit took up our duties only to&#13;
miss the enthusiasm of rivalry and comradeship. How&#13;
changed is the scene . today, with the enrollment running on toward the thousand mark. College and society&#13;
yells, football heroes, class spirit and debating trophies&#13;
have fired the hearts of the students with a new flame.&#13;
While the title "University of the Northwest" remained, the dark days ever shadowed the brighter ones&#13;
in making the future uncertain. Censure was heaped&#13;
upon the men who managed its affairs, and yet without&#13;
their earnest attempt, the beautiful buildings of today&#13;
might have remained only in the fancy of some dreamer.&#13;
The story of the early years of our College borders&#13;
on the pathetic. How like a great ship at sea, driven&#13;
by the winds and tempest-tossed, but at last steaming&#13;
into the harbor proud of her achievement. By that very&#13;
struggle and later success the love of the student for his&#13;
college is made securer and more loyal. Today many&#13;
hands are stretched across the hills from out the hamlets&#13;
and cities in kindly friendship for those who are making&#13;
the life and success of the college.&#13;
&#13;
Before the trenches at Richmond the two armies&#13;
lay close to each other. The bands of Northern army&#13;
struck up "The Star Spangled Banner." The musician&#13;
of the Southland returned with "Dixie." After the lull&#13;
the bands of both armies played "Home, Sweet Home."&#13;
That is the fairest picture of the war, the union of hearts.&#13;
Perhaps we were members of different societies and on&#13;
opposing teams on the field and in the forum. Let us&#13;
be brothers now in reviewing the old scenes. Let us&#13;
not forget the lessons taught us in the old college halls,&#13;
and may we live to see the realization of those early&#13;
ideals.&#13;
There is a picture painted by a master hand, it is&#13;
called the "Feast of the Gods." That is the gleam of a&#13;
lofty imagination; yet far more sublime even than that&#13;
is the faith of the college student looking ahead on life's&#13;
pathway with a steady purpose and an iron ·will to&#13;
achieve. Success to the boys and girls of M. S. C.&#13;
Here's a hand of kindly greeting to the old students,&#13;
and to those yet to come. I believe in our college. I&#13;
believe in her noble President. I believe in the old&#13;
friends of other days.&#13;
May our journey back across the years give us&#13;
courage and inspiration for the strenuous times before us.&#13;
Farewell,&#13;
J. EISENTRAUT.&#13;
&#13;
�ATHLETICS.&#13;
&#13;
�H . B. SAYLOR,&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
Estella&#13;
&#13;
HARDING,&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
Emma&#13;
&#13;
FAIR,&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
AthleticOfficers&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
L . YOUNG,&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
'03&#13;
&#13;
DEBBENHAM.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Officers&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
w . B.&#13;
&#13;
'04&#13;
&#13;
G. E.&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER.&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
�Athletics&#13;
that wholesome exercise together with the&#13;
fostering of the spirit of contest aids in making the&#13;
"well rounded" practical collegiate product, the facultyand&#13;
students of Morningside College have recognized athletics&#13;
as one of the essentials in college life.&#13;
The general&#13;
association, with the Fa.c ulty Committee on athletics&#13;
have supervision of regulations concerning meets and&#13;
contests. Subordinate to the general association are the&#13;
auxiliary associations, viz., Baseball, Track Team, Men's&#13;
Basket Ball, Ladies' Basket Ball, Tennis and Football.&#13;
During the past year the results have been highly satisfactory&#13;
BELIEVING&#13;
&#13;
The base ball work of 1903 was under the management of E. H. Hulser. The team was coached by&#13;
Wilson of Sioux City, and at the close of the season was&#13;
in excellent condition. Games were played with Yankton College, University of South Dakota and other&#13;
colleges in the surrounding territory.&#13;
The men's basket ball team, managed by D. C. Hall,&#13;
. was fast and furious, and demonstrated in the games&#13;
with such teams as the City Y. M. C. A., the High&#13;
&#13;
School, and other teams in the local tournament that&#13;
Morningside's Basket Ball team need not take a back&#13;
seat on any gymnasium floor.&#13;
The ladies' basket ball team, while yet comparatively&#13;
a new organization, proved beyond a doubt that M. C.&#13;
girls were as active physically as mentally. A number&#13;
of teams were played with visiting teams. A blushing&#13;
maiden full of life to her very finger tips is one of God's&#13;
greatest gifts to humanity.&#13;
Basket ball insures health&#13;
and longevity.&#13;
Football is the real American college sport. By&#13;
some who are not acquainted with the game it is though&#13;
to be rough. We admit that it does require the very&#13;
best physical condition to withstand this vigorous&#13;
exercise. Herein lies its great value, for only when the&#13;
body is in good condition does the mind show its greatest efficiency. The season of 1903 was the fifth year for&#13;
football in Morningside. The Association is to be complimented for having obtained the services as coach of&#13;
one who has a football record such as Everett Sweeley&#13;
of Sioux City. Mr. Sweeley was a full-back and star&#13;
kicker on Michigan's invincibles of 1902. Nothwithstanding that most of the material which the coach&#13;
found on Morningside's gridiron was raw, yet he turned&#13;
out a creditable team.&#13;
The season was successful.&#13;
Nine games, of which five were won, were played.&#13;
&#13;
�*Sweeley&#13;
Hymer&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
*Coach&#13;
&#13;
tManager&#13;
&#13;
Heilman&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
Squires&#13;
Howe&#13;
Saylor&#13;
Cain&#13;
Tracy&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
&#13;
Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
Stiles&#13;
&#13;
Millner&#13;
Debenhatn&#13;
&#13;
tYoung&#13;
Nichols&#13;
&#13;
�IN&#13;
&#13;
preceding the opening of College last Fall, Everett M. Sweeley&#13;
was elected to coach the Morningside College team. His record on the&#13;
Michigan University team for the years 1901 and 1902 when they held the&#13;
undisputed championship of the west is evidence of his ability as a player.&#13;
As a coach Mr. Sweeley met the full expectation of the management.&#13;
He held the confidence of his men throughout the season. Every night of&#13;
practice saw the Coach with his suit on, upon the gridiron training his men.&#13;
It is evident that Sweeley as a coach used his material to the very best advantage, and taught not only eleven men, but the entire squad the game of&#13;
foot ball.&#13;
AUGUST,&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT M. SWEELEY,&#13;
COACH.&#13;
&#13;
�GEORGE. MILLNER,&#13;
&#13;
L, G.&#13;
&#13;
GLENN SQUIRES,&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
NICHOLS,&#13;
&#13;
R. G.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
B . COLLINS.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
E. M .&#13;
&#13;
TRACEY&#13;
&#13;
Q. B.&#13;
&#13;
Winners of Football Ms of the&#13;
&#13;
R . E. HEILMAN, E.&#13;
&#13;
P. E .&#13;
&#13;
FREDENDOLL&#13;
&#13;
ROY&#13;
&#13;
WINN,&#13;
&#13;
L. H.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
BASS,&#13;
&#13;
R . H.&#13;
&#13;
w .H&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
DEBENHA&lt;&#13;
&#13;
L. E.&#13;
&#13;
�The Football&#13;
Trophy Cup&#13;
This&#13;
lS&#13;
&#13;
L. R. HOWE. F. B.&#13;
&#13;
H.B .&#13;
&#13;
SAYLOR. CAPT.,&#13;
&#13;
L. T.&#13;
&#13;
Winner of Trophy&#13;
&#13;
Season 1903&#13;
&#13;
cup&#13;
was presented to&#13;
the foot ball association by&#13;
Mr. A. R. Toothaker, a former foot&#13;
ball player and alumnus of the&#13;
college. The t rophy was given as&#13;
an annual prize to the best footba 11&#13;
player making the best grades in&#13;
his .classes. The cup is a beautiful&#13;
silver piece, and stands thirte en&#13;
inches high, mounted upon an ebony base.&#13;
The prize is awa rd ed as follows:&#13;
At the close of the football&#13;
season, the men on the team winning M's shall meet and select by&#13;
ballot the five best players. The&#13;
one of these five thus selected having the highest average grade in&#13;
his studies, of at least fifteen hours.&#13;
shall be declared the winner of the&#13;
cup and shall ho ld the same for&#13;
one year.&#13;
&#13;
D. L. YOUNG, H . B.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
H . K. CAIN, R. E.&#13;
&#13;
�THE SQUAD.&#13;
&#13;
��Wescott&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Bryant&#13;
&#13;
Millner&#13;
Eveleth&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
&#13;
�Wilcox&#13;
&#13;
Delay&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Siman&#13;
Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Toothaker&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Hieby&#13;
&#13;
Garretson&#13;
&#13;
�*Hulser&#13;
Barnes&#13;
&#13;
Faey&#13;
&#13;
*Manager&#13;
&#13;
Allen&#13;
Wescott&#13;
&#13;
Van Dyke&#13;
Day&#13;
Debbenham&#13;
&#13;
Olds&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Rissler&#13;
Clarey&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
�Baseball&#13;
Although playing a losing game by a small margin as to the actual score, the team of 1903 may be&#13;
justly proud of its record. The men not only won the&#13;
support of our own students by playing fast and hard,&#13;
and in every case clean ball, but also won the admiration and respect of their opponents. The team in its&#13;
final development was greatly indebted to Mr. Wilson&#13;
for his faithful work as coach.&#13;
VIRGIL FAEV, Pitcher.&#13;
H. OLDS, Pitcher.&#13;
ROY BARNES, Catcher.&#13;
C. DEBBENHAM, First Base.&#13;
E. E. DAY, Second Base.&#13;
CLAIR WESCOTT, Third Base.&#13;
H. VAN DYKE, Left Field.&#13;
WM. CLAREY, Center Field.&#13;
A. TUMBLESON, Capt. Right Field.&#13;
C. RISSLER, Short Stop.&#13;
GEORGE MILLNER, Substitute.&#13;
E. H . HULSER, Manager.&#13;
CLARK. WILSON, Coach.&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Team 1903&#13;
Schedule&#13;
MORNINGSIDE vs:&#13;
&#13;
Score.&#13;
&#13;
Yankton at Yankton . ........ ........... I 2-5&#13;
Sioux City League at Sioux City ...... . .. 13-3&#13;
University of South Dakota at Vermillion. 6-7&#13;
Yankton at Morningside.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
1-0&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion at Sioux City ........ .. ...... 11-4&#13;
Sioux City at Morningside . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-14&#13;
Collegiates and Preps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2&#13;
&#13;
�Track Team Coach&#13;
WARREN PANTON comes to us from Cedar&#13;
Falls State Normal, where he has been attending&#13;
school for the past two years. His efficient work&#13;
done there on the track warranted the team in electing him as their Captain. He has been in ten different meets in which he has won 119 points. The&#13;
events in his field are 100, 220, 440 yards, dashes&#13;
and half mile run.&#13;
&#13;
�Hall&#13;
McKee&#13;
&#13;
McIsaac&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
Brokaw&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Null&#13;
&#13;
*McIsaac&#13;
Price&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Wescott&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Debbenham Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Debbenham, Captain&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Our Star Athlete&#13;
MR. F. F . HALL though young in his athletic career has&#13;
made a record that has never been equaled by any one of his age&#13;
in any Western College. With the proper training he will be&#13;
able in a few years to break the world's records. Mr. Hall was&#13;
awarded a gold medal two years in succession for winning the&#13;
greatest number of points in the home meet.&#13;
RECORDS.&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash-10 2-5 seconds.&#13;
220 yard dash-22 1/2 seconds.&#13;
Discus throw- 107 feet.&#13;
Hammer throw-104-5 feet.&#13;
Shot put-38-7 feet .&#13;
&#13;
F. F. HALL.&#13;
&#13;
��An Important Meeting&#13;
BY ASAL. BROWER.&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
at a meeting of the Y. M. C. A. Devotional Committee at Wilistone College. Since the end of the fall&#13;
term was drawing near a schedule of the leaders for the&#13;
following term had been arranged. The schedule having&#13;
completed and some minor details attended to the chairman,&#13;
George Dalton, _&#13;
asked if there was any further business&#13;
that should come before the Committee.&#13;
At this juncture Basil Arlington, a tall, awkward,&#13;
homely young fellow stirred uneasily in his seat, grasped&#13;
the back of the seat in front of him, shuffled his feet&#13;
nervously and finally arose, blushing like a girl.&#13;
"M-M-Mr. Chairman" he stammered, I think we ought&#13;
to do something to save some of the reckless, wayward&#13;
boys about us. Becoming more composed and forgetting&#13;
his embarrassment he went on to tell how Creighton Dollinger, who roomed in the same house as he, was being led&#13;
away by some of the wild rougher young fellows.&#13;
When he first began to speak the other committeemen&#13;
were astonished at the unexpected behavior of Arlington,&#13;
for ever since he had been assigned to their committee,&#13;
through the influence of President Wistle, they had considered him as a timid retiring fellow who would never be&#13;
much help in their department. They soon became much&#13;
interested in his earnest words and when he sat down concluded they were honored with the presence of a "diamond&#13;
in the rough.''&#13;
"Well Arlington," said Dalton, "what course do you&#13;
think best for us to take towards this young man?"&#13;
"I don't believe, from his nature, that it would be best&#13;
for any of you to speak to him on the subject, but just&#13;
pray for him and speak to him pleasantly whenever you&#13;
WAS&#13;
&#13;
*Prize Winner for Long Story.&#13;
&#13;
chance to meet him. He needs a few real true friends who&#13;
will not try to lead him off."&#13;
At the same time five other boys of this same school&#13;
were holding another meeting of an entirely different&#13;
character and purpose in the room of their leader, Don&#13;
Brathton. There were four other boys present, viz: John&#13;
Driscoll, familiarly known as "Drizzle", Harold Van Bild,&#13;
answering to the name of "Van", Daniel Clegg, nicknamed&#13;
"Keg" because of his resemblance to that piece of furniture,&#13;
and lastly Creighton Dollinger, more often spoken of as&#13;
"Crait" or "Dolly". All of the boys were chronic loafers&#13;
and often came together thus to pass away the time smoking and playing poker. Dolly, however being the only son&#13;
of a hard working father who sent him to school to make a&#13;
man of him, was not as hardened as the others but was fast&#13;
being led astray.&#13;
"Say Drizzle," exclaimed Don, "do you know old Wistle&#13;
called me up today and told me he hoped I would be careful&#13;
how I spent my time and caused others to squander theirs.&#13;
The old fool seems to think all there is in life is to be&#13;
goody-goody and get your lessons every day."&#13;
"Yes" returned Drizzle who was busily engaged in a&#13;
game of poker with Keg and Van, "a fellow like Dalton is&#13;
about his calibre, one who digs all the time and says his&#13;
prayers at night."&#13;
"Well Driz' you might profitably occupy some of your&#13;
time in praying", put in Dolly.&#13;
"Oh I say Crait, let up on that, no preaching here, 1&#13;
thought we had you pretty well broke in," said Don as he&#13;
added a cloud of blue smoke to the already supercharged&#13;
air of the room.&#13;
He chuckled softly and then continued, "can't you re·&#13;
member boys when we first found the "Dolly" he would&#13;
hardly look at a pack of cards and wouldn't even touch a&#13;
cigarette, said his mother wouldn't like it. Oh I telly' old&#13;
boy we'll make a man of you yet."&#13;
Basil Arlington's opportunity came sooner than he had&#13;
dared hope. The second morning of the winter term he&#13;
&#13;
�met Creighton Dollinger in the corridor of the Science&#13;
Building.&#13;
"Hello Crait," he said as he advanced and shook hands&#13;
with him. "You back for another term, how did you enjoy&#13;
yourself, got a room yet?" he asked all in one breath.&#13;
"No I haven't. I've been looking for a room mate; you&#13;
know Jim Waite went to Quincy, Ill., to a business school&#13;
so that leaves me without a partner. How are you fixed?"&#13;
"I'm about the same way. Andy Saunders' brother&#13;
came back to school and is going to room with him, so I am&#13;
out too. Say, how would it do for you and I to go in&#13;
cahoots? We could get our College Algebra and Chem.&#13;
together, as well as read Virgil. What do you say?"&#13;
"Why yes I guess that'll be all right, but I may come in&#13;
a little late some nights," said Creighton casting his eyes&#13;
to the floor. "You'll have to put up with a little extra that&#13;
way. You know I'm not such an angel as Andy was."&#13;
"Oh ho, I guess we'll get along alright. Say by the&#13;
way, you play the flute pretty well, don't you? Since Andy&#13;
left we are minus a good flute soloist in the orchestra and&#13;
Prof. wanted me to find one if I could. Can 't you come&#13;
and help us out?"&#13;
"Oh yes I play the flute a little to amuse myself now&#13;
and then. Maybe I can help 'Old Nerves' out a little if I&#13;
have time. I suppose you still saw on the first fiddle?"&#13;
"Yes. Well come up to practice in the conservatory&#13;
today at 3:30. I'll go to the house now and move my books&#13;
and truck out of the old room into yours. Has Jim pulled&#13;
up his stakes yet?"&#13;
"Yes, came and got his traps yesterday morning. Well&#13;
I must be going, got to go down and see Don and the boys.&#13;
So long."&#13;
Turning away, Basil sent up a prayer for his friend and&#13;
thought how fortunate he had been in getting Creighton to&#13;
room with him.&#13;
For about two months things went on in the usual way.&#13;
Creighton had joined the orchestra upon Basil's earnest&#13;
solicitation and being a good player he had managed to&#13;
&#13;
keep on the roll, although he was at Don's room more often&#13;
than at practice.&#13;
Basil had had several heart to heart talks with him&#13;
about the time when they would be out of school and what&#13;
manly strength they would need to win out in the battle of&#13;
life. But yet it seemed that Don's power over him amounted&#13;
almost to a hypnotic spell, for as soon as he was with the&#13;
"Four Toughs," as they were called, he threw off all&#13;
restraint and plunged headlong into vice.&#13;
One morning just before chapel, Basil met him. in front&#13;
of the Bulletin Board in the Science Hall, reading the notice&#13;
of the chemistry lesson for the next day.&#13;
"Say Crait, old boy," exclaimed Basil, "I've just been&#13;
hunting for you. You know the Orchestra is to play at the&#13;
Mozart Club up town Friday night. I ran across Prof. just&#13;
now and he told me that Tommy Olson is sick abed with&#13;
pneumonia and can't possibly be there and he wanted me&#13;
to see you, if you wouldn't make arrangements and be sure&#13;
to be there?"&#13;
"Hello Dolly, say step out here a minute, I want to see&#13;
you," cried Brathon coming up in a rush.&#13;
"Excuse me a minute will you Basil?" said Crait, steping over to where Don was standing, where they held a hasty,&#13;
low toned conversation for a few minutes, then as they&#13;
turned about Don said, "Now be sure to be there tonight,&#13;
will you Dolly?"&#13;
"Yes," replied Crait.&#13;
"Now you won't go back on us?"&#13;
"No sir, when I make a promise I always keep it.&#13;
never break my word."&#13;
Basil looked at him quickly and quietly said, "Do you&#13;
always live up to that?"&#13;
"Yes always."&#13;
"Well I hope you always will and still not get into any&#13;
trouble over it. But how about playing down the Mozart&#13;
Club Friday evening, will you be there?"&#13;
"Let's see, this is Tuesday isn't it? Tomorrow is Wednesday the night of the Oligonian Banquet. Thursday&#13;
&#13;
�nothing," he said half aloud." "Yes I guess I can be there for&#13;
all I know now."&#13;
"Well we want to depend on you. We must have a&#13;
good flute soloist for the Priests' March you know," Basil&#13;
shrewdly urged, for he knew Crait was very fond of the&#13;
&#13;
Priests' March.&#13;
"Yes I'll be there", said Crait decidedly, vaguely feeling as if fate depended upon this decision.&#13;
That night there was a consultation held in Don's room&#13;
in which he revealed to his henchmen a plan for a more&#13;
bold and reckless piece of vandalism than they had ever&#13;
attempted before.&#13;
All seemed to fall in with the plan immediately, except&#13;
Keg, who was afraid of being caught, and Crait whose&#13;
consience was not entirely scared by his wrong doings.&#13;
But the others soon persuaded them, and it was decided to&#13;
make the raid Friday night.&#13;
"Say boys" exclaimed Dolly suddenly" I can't be there&#13;
Friday night."&#13;
"0 yes you can, cut everything else," said Don, as&#13;
they parted.&#13;
But for all the boys coaxed him all the next day and&#13;
the next they couldn't persuade Crait to give up his engage·&#13;
rnent nor even to divulge the nature of it.&#13;
Friday night came and with it the concert. Craig went&#13;
along with Basil but was preoccupied, nervous and silent.&#13;
The orchestra played twice and after the last encore&#13;
Crait asked Basil if he wasn't about ready to go home.&#13;
"Why yes, I guess so but what's your hurry, aren't you&#13;
well?"&#13;
"Not very. I wish I were in bed now."&#13;
"All right we'll go right away."&#13;
Crait was as glum on the way home as he was going&#13;
up town. As soon as he reached home he rolled into bed&#13;
without an unnecessary word.&#13;
The next morning Crait didn't get up for breakfast nor&#13;
even to go to chapel. He made the plea of "a headache."&#13;
Right after chapel Basil came bounding into the room&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
where Crait was vainly trying to study his College Algebra.&#13;
"Say Crait," he exclaimed breathlessly, "have you heard&#13;
the news?" "Something doing at chapel this morning I tell&#13;
&#13;
y'."&#13;
"No. What was it," asked Crait turning white.&#13;
"Doc expelled Drizzle, Van Bild, Cleggy and Brathton.&#13;
My wasn't I surprised, and the whole school, too. Why,&#13;
what is the matter?" he asked quickly . noticing Crait rise&#13;
hurriedly, change color and fall over on the bed. Basil&#13;
quickly turned, snatched a glass of water from the stand&#13;
and threw it into his face. He then hastily loosened his&#13;
collar and opened a window. In a few minutes Crait&#13;
opened his eyes and glared about him wildly.&#13;
After he became calm Basil gently drew from him how&#13;
his promise to play at the concert had saved him from disgrace of his comrades. How chance had kept him from&#13;
thoughtlessly breaking his hard working mother's heart&#13;
and had kept him from disgracing his father's untarnished&#13;
name.&#13;
"Why yes, now I see what Doctor meant when he said,&#13;
'there are others that have been connected with these&#13;
young men, but whose names will be withheld upon good&#13;
behavior," said Basil thoughtfully.&#13;
"Basil" said Crait with shaking voice as he took his&#13;
hand in a firm grasp, "it is you I have to thank for this.&#13;
Had you not put yourself out to keep me from mischief I&#13;
should have suffered the same fate as the boys. You think&#13;
I didn't know, but I did. Only you have kept me from&#13;
being as bad as they, yes even worse."&#13;
"Now Crait," softly replied Basil, "it wasn't me but&#13;
Christ working through me. Wont you take him as your&#13;
personal guide and Savior, Crait you need him?"&#13;
Before they left the room that morning Crait had ac·&#13;
cepted a new Companion and had written a tear stained&#13;
letter home to his mother, telling of his deliverance and&#13;
new found Friend.&#13;
And this was the outcome of Important Meetings and&#13;
and the result of a consistent Christian life.&#13;
&#13;
�BY POTTER CLAY&#13;
&#13;
Autumn's wind is sadly sighing&#13;
'Mong the leaves and pining flowers&#13;
In the glens and glades of Lehigh,&#13;
Casting gloom on sunlit bowers;&#13;
For the Lehigh's laughing water&#13;
Little heeds the wind's weird wooing,&#13;
Deaf to all his love-lorn whispers,&#13;
Still her lightsome way pursuing.&#13;
Longing, lingering, loth to leave her,&#13;
Sometimes tender, sometimes grieving,&#13;
Now in fondness, now in anger,&#13;
Zealous wind his highway leaving,&#13;
From her moist lips filches kisses,&#13;
Breathes his warm breath on her dimples;&#13;
But she coldly spurns his yearning,&#13;
And in vexed aversion, wimples.&#13;
&#13;
Nature was the only mother&#13;
In whose nuture Laughing Water&#13;
Had been blessed, corrected, cultured;&#13;
Yet full graceful of demeanor&#13;
Was she, fair and sweet as heaven,&#13;
Cheeks the love blood ill concealing,&#13;
Mirth oft bubbling pure as ether,&#13;
Breast oft heaved with tender feeling,&#13;
Eyes so dark and deep with meaning&#13;
That to once behold their burning&#13;
Was to be forever dreaming,&#13;
Was to ne'er be free from yearning.&#13;
Lovers had she, brave and many;&#13;
But, like Lehigh's restless water,&#13;
She had yielded not to wooing,&#13;
Nor to trophies they had brought her.&#13;
&#13;
'Neath the shadow of the hemlocks,&#13;
In a fastness of the mountains,&#13;
Where the spry squirrel, unmolested,&#13;
Crams his cellar walls and nut-bins,&#13;
Sat the lodge of Chief Towanda&#13;
And his daughter, Laughing Water,&#13;
In the days ere land was captive,&#13;
When each swarthy son and daughter,&#13;
Nature's free, obedient off-spring,&#13;
Drinking deep her healthful potions,&#13;
By inheritence owned the forests&#13;
And the valleys 'twixt the oceans Chief Towanda, man of valor,&#13;
Keen of sense, with iron sinews;&#13;
Laughing Water, lithe and blithsome,&#13;
Eyes that gleamed like flashing minnows.&#13;
&#13;
They remembered not brave Deerwing,&#13;
Who, in former days among them,&#13;
Ran beside their swiftest horses,&#13;
And in Skillful war excelled them,&#13;
Who now lay in silent slumber&#13;
'Neath an elm tree in the hollow,&#13;
'Neath the nest of jay and king-bird,&#13;
'Neath the flight of hawk and swallow;&#13;
But still true to first devotion&#13;
Was the heart of Lehigh's daughter,&#13;
Though she seemed all joy and frolic,&#13;
Like its own rock-broken water;&#13;
For her life, once like the current&#13;
Of a deep, slow-moving river,&#13;
Was now broken into impulse&#13;
By the crushed hopes deep within her.&#13;
&#13;
*Prize Winner&#13;
&#13;
of Long Poenl.&#13;
&#13;
She stands often in the moonlight&#13;
By the grave of her lost lover,&#13;
Listening to the rushing water,&#13;
Praying to the stars above her,&#13;
While her eyes grow large and misty,&#13;
And her heart grows sick with beating;&#13;
But she looks beyond the gateway&#13;
Of the daily sun's retreating,&#13;
And she wonders, should she wander&#13;
Whither light and life have faded,&#13;
If perchance she still might find them&#13;
By the power of love, unaided.&#13;
Then she hears unspoken voices&#13;
From the playmates of her childhood,&#13;
Rustling elm, and birch, and cedar,&#13;
Vine, and blossom of the wildwood.&#13;
Then her eyes begin to brighten&#13;
And her heart takes back its singing,&#13;
For the hope springs fresh within her&#13;
From the message they are bringing&#13;
That beyond the sunset curtain,&#13;
And beyond her sight and hearing,&#13;
Song, and love, and joy are living&#13;
In the blue sky's boundless clearing.&#13;
Musing, dreaming, hoping, longing,&#13;
Conscious of communion sweet,&#13;
A petition, all unspoken,&#13;
Finds expression far more meet That the Keeper of the sunset,&#13;
And the chief of night and day,&#13;
To the land of happy wigwams,&#13;
Will soon bear her heart away.&#13;
So our Laughing Water lingers&#13;
'Mid the leaves and pining flowers,&#13;
In the glens and glades of Lehigh,&#13;
In its shady nooks and bowers,&#13;
Heeding not the wooing warriors,&#13;
They her motive misconstruing,&#13;
Deaf to all their ardent pleading&#13;
Still her lightsome way pursuing.&#13;
&#13;
�A Greek Story&#13;
Written for the Zetalethean Annual Public&#13;
BY Myrtilla&#13;
&#13;
a parasol over her head, while a younger one, who seemed&#13;
to be regarded more as a companion than a slave, knelt on&#13;
the ground and joked confidently with her mistress. A little&#13;
way off was a carriage drawn by mules, and two male slaves&#13;
were seated beside it conversing.&#13;
&#13;
COOK&#13;
&#13;
THROUGH the Parnes Mountains is seen a narrow defile,&#13;
&#13;
winding southward between great walls of rock. This&#13;
confined way was formerly the road from Thebes to Athens.&#13;
Nearing the city, the rocky cliffs gradually give way to vegetation, and just outside the gate of Athens the road runs by&#13;
the side of a brook, overgrown with thickets of under-brush&#13;
and trees.&#13;
It was in the 111 th Olympiad that a youth, whose years&#13;
could scarcely have reached a quarter of a century, was proceeding along this road, mounted on a dark colored steed,&#13;
The rider was broad of chest and shoulders, but his form&#13;
was rather slender and supp le than thickset and muscular.&#13;
His slight ly tanned neck rose proudly, his whole bearing indicated a youth of nobility and strength, but in the sparkle&#13;
of his blue eye was blended a tender expression which bespoke his affectionate nature.&#13;
The wayfarer had reached a spot where the blooming&#13;
myrtles and oleanders were thickest, when suddenly he&#13;
heard female voices close at hand, coming from the direction&#13;
of the brook, accompanied by much merriment and laughter. Approaching the spot, he beheld through a break in the&#13;
bushes a most fascinating spectacle. At the edge of the&#13;
brook sat a maiden, wondrous fair, dabbling with her feet in&#13;
the clear stream. Behind her a female slave stood holding&#13;
&#13;
The youth remained enchanted, his eyes feasting on the&#13;
sporting maidens, who, casting aside all stiffness and formality, were giving vent to their overflowing spirits. The&#13;
younger female attendant now brought a handful of flowers&#13;
which she had just plucked and showered them over her&#13;
mistress. In mock wrath, the lady seized her gold em broid·&#13;
ered shoe and threw it at the servant, but missing the mark,&#13;
it fell into the brook. The maidens set up a scream and the&#13;
rash youth, forgetting all questions of propriety, dashed&#13;
down and rescued the floating shoe. At his appearance, the&#13;
women screamed louder than ever and were about to run to&#13;
the carriage, but in an instant the young man gallantly&#13;
handed the slipper to the damsel, who rose, blushing and&#13;
confused, and looked about for her veil, which she had re·&#13;
moved.&#13;
The youth felt no little ,emotion. In the brilliancy of&#13;
the gir l's great dark eyes was mingled an expression of soft&#13;
rapture. A profusion of dark ringlets descended on her&#13;
white neck. The finely penciled arch of the eyebrows was&#13;
of jetty black; in the delicate whiteness of her cheeks arose&#13;
a tinge of scarlet; her whole person possessed an irresistible&#13;
charm of youthful loveliness. For a few moments only was&#13;
the man permitted to revel in these beauties, for the cries of&#13;
the females had summoned the men, the lady was hastened&#13;
into the carriage, and the party rapid ly disappeared. Hav·&#13;
&#13;
�ing watched the carriage out of sight, the youth turned and&#13;
noticed for the first time that in her haste and confusion, the&#13;
girl had left lying on the grass, the mate to the gold embroidered shoe which he had rescued. With trembling eagerness he put the dainty slipper in his chiton, mounted his&#13;
horse and continued his jorney to Athens.&#13;
After the midday meal the youth, with preoccupied&#13;
mind, directed his steps toward the gymnasium. Hastening&#13;
by the groups of people in the arcades surrounding the peristyle, the youth sought out a group of young men who&#13;
were seated in the great court waiting for the exercises to&#13;
begin.&#13;
"By Hercules," exclaimed one, "it's Nausicrates."&#13;
"Nausicrates! You here!" exclaimed another in astonishment: "When did you come?''&#13;
"I returned this morning from Thebes," was the reply.&#13;
"Hail to thee, friend, "said the first, "we'll celebrate your&#13;
return by a carouse. Today you are my guest Tomorrow&#13;
we will attend the Dionysia together."&#13;
Then jest and laughter ran high, Nausicrates alone.&#13;
seeming preoccupied, until finally one cried, "Why so silent&#13;
and thoughtful, Nausicrates? You are in love." To be sure&#13;
I am, had formerly been his laughing retort to such accusations, but now he did not relish the sally, and his mounting&#13;
color proclaimed the truth of the joke.&#13;
Soon the two friends left the gymnasium and proceeded&#13;
to Callipides' home, where the evening was spent in reminiscenses, and Nausicrates had much to tell of the events of&#13;
his three years absence in Thebes. Finally Callipides said,&#13;
"We must make the most of the festival tomorrow. Doubt-&#13;
&#13;
less the enchanting Chloris will be there. The gods be&#13;
praised that there is sometimes a day when the women can&#13;
be out."&#13;
"Who is this Chloris," began Nausicrates in a bantering&#13;
tone. "Are you in love, Callipides? Come, tell me all&#13;
about it."&#13;
"Is it possible you have not heard? You remember&#13;
Manes, the wealthy merchant who lives in the mansion&#13;
near the Lyceum? His daughter was but a girl when you&#13;
left, but she has grown into womanhood and is the most&#13;
beautiful maiden in Athens. But old Manes, jealous of her&#13;
beauty, and fearful lest her suitors are more interested in her&#13;
dower than in the girl, has imposed a condition which no lover can meet. He has made an oath that Chloris shall wed&#13;
the man who will, with his own hand, cut exactly one inch&#13;
off from the end of her nose. The old rascal knows that no&#13;
one will do such a thing and thus he will keep Chloris with&#13;
him always."&#13;
"By the gods! He must be beside himself! But, my&#13;
Callipides, can you not do something to persuade him?"&#13;
"Oh, as for myself, I do not wish to undertake the cares&#13;
of a husband and father and embitter my days with a thousand anxieties. A free life for me, with the gymnasium, the&#13;
theatre, my friends and an occasional feasting on such beauty as that of Chloris. Let us retire, Nausicrates, and tomorrow you shall see the enchantress for yourself."&#13;
The Dionysia had begun early the following day and&#13;
pleasure was the pursuit of all. Strangers and citizens paraded the streets in holiday attire. Altars were wreathed&#13;
with chaplets and in every thoroughfare stood huge bowls&#13;
&#13;
�filled with the gift of the god, inviting all that liked to drink&#13;
freely. Since early dawn the seats of the great Dionysiac&#13;
theatre had been crammed with spectators who attentively&#13;
followed the tragedies, sometimes responding with cheering&#13;
and applause, sometimes with shrill whistling directed at the&#13;
bad performance of some player. Into this scene Callipedes&#13;
and Nausicrates crowded their way about the middle of the&#13;
forenoon. They were watching the performance rather indifferently when suddenly, as if impelled by the intensity of&#13;
their gaze, Nausicrates' attention was drawn to two dark&#13;
eyes looking intently into his own. He started. It was her&#13;
whom he had encountered at the brook. For an instant the&#13;
two looked at each orher as if charmed. Then a soft flush&#13;
spread over the girl's cheeks and hastily she turned her&#13;
head and seemed to be engrossed in the tragedy being enacted. Just then Callipides saw her and said lazily, "Look&#13;
Nausicrates, there is Chloris. Is she not a Venus? And by&#13;
her side is old Manes."&#13;
From that moment the performance lost its charm for&#13;
Nausicrates. Frequently his eager eyes sought the graceful&#13;
figure on the other side of the theatre, but she kept her face&#13;
averted and he was not permitted another glance.&#13;
At last the tragedies were ended, and the people awaited the decision of the judges as to which poet had produced&#13;
the best play. After the prizes were awarded, the day was&#13;
given to the merrymakers for revelry and mirth.&#13;
It was then that Manes ascended a small platform which&#13;
was used in the festival. All eyes were turned toward the&#13;
eccentric old man, who was of no little influence in Athens&#13;
because of his great wealth. Tall, but with bent shoulders,&#13;
piercing black eyes peering forth from grizzled hair and&#13;
wrinkled features, the old man cried; "Ye men of Athens,&#13;
are ye not willing to pay the price? Is it only the beauty of&#13;
&#13;
Chloris that ye desire and not her real worth, that makes&#13;
ye refuse to meet the condition? Do ye hesitate to take a&#13;
wife who is disfigured? Aha! Aha! ye cannot meet the condition, and the daughter of Manes remains free with her&#13;
father."&#13;
For an instance there was silence, as the old man looked&#13;
about exultingly. Then Nausicrates sprang to his feet and&#13;
said in a low, ringing tone, "What is the condition?"&#13;
"The man _who will, with his own hand, cut exactly one&#13;
inch off from the nose of Chloris shall wed her. Manes has&#13;
made oath to give her to such a one. Are ye ready for the&#13;
trial?"&#13;
"I am. Bring Chloris forth."&#13;
"Are you mad?" said Callipides, pulling his friend's&#13;
sleeve. But Nausicrates was already by the side of Manes,&#13;
whose exulting expression had changed to one of anger and&#13;
fear.&#13;
"What do ye mean? Would ye be such a fool as to&#13;
take a disfigured damsel for thy bride?"&#13;
"Let a knife and a rule be brought," was the calm reply.&#13;
"The daughter of Manes shall not be insulted. Stand&#13;
aside, insolent youth," and Manes took the arm of Chloris,&#13;
as if to lead her away.&#13;
Turning suddenly Nausicrates cried, "Was it not an&#13;
oath, men of Athens? I call you to witness."&#13;
"Yes, yes," cried several; "but you would not be so&#13;
mad as to hold him to it. Think of the maiden."&#13;
"An oath is an oath," was the reply. "Let the rule and&#13;
knife be brought."&#13;
Meanwhile Chloris had stood with pallid, frightened&#13;
face, and as Nausicrates turned toward her, she looked at&#13;
him pleadingly. As a slave came running up with the rule&#13;
and the knife, Nausicrates leaned over Chloris and whispered tenderly, "Do not be frightened, Chloris. I shall not&#13;
hurt you and you will yet be my bride."&#13;
Manes stood by muttering curses as Nausicrates took&#13;
&#13;
�the knife and the rule, carefully measured the designated&#13;
distance, and drew the knife through the air at a distance of&#13;
one inch off from the girl's nose. Then he turned to Manes.&#13;
"l have fulfilled the condition. I have cut one inch off from&#13;
Chloris's nose. Let the betrothal take place at once, for tomorrow we must celebrate the wedding." The assembly&#13;
broke into applause.&#13;
"Ha! You have not met the condition, you shall not&#13;
wed Chloris. Stand aside, impostor."&#13;
"It's an oath and Nausicrates has met the condition,"&#13;
cried several from the crowd. Let the betrothal take place&#13;
at once." ''Hail to Nausicrates and Chloris."&#13;
Manes saw that he had been fairly outwitted and that&#13;
he had better yield as gracefully as possible, so he extended&#13;
his hand to Nausicrates and said with a forced smile, "An&#13;
oath is an oath. Let us proceed to the house."&#13;
Some friends had been hastily summoned and after the&#13;
formalities of the betrothal, all seated themselves at Manes&#13;
well-filled table. In the midst of the feast some cried, ''Let&#13;
us have a song; or guess riddles; which shall it be?"&#13;
"Riddles forever!" replied Callipides; and Nausicrates&#13;
must propound the first one." After reflecting a few moments Nausicrates said, "Beauty played with her possessions.&#13;
Frolic seized one and started to run away with it. Strength&#13;
rescued it and restored it to Beauty, and Beauty became the&#13;
possession of Strengt·h."&#13;
None could suggest the answer to the riddle, so Nausicrates explained; "Chloris is Beauty; the brook by which&#13;
she played is Frolic; I am Strength. Beauty's possession is&#13;
Chloris' shoe which fell into the brook. I rescued it, and&#13;
now Chloris has come, is in my possession; and here is the&#13;
mate to the rescued slipper." So saying, he knelt before the&#13;
blushing Chloris and handed her the dainty slipper. The&#13;
guests applauded and shouted, "Long live Beauty and&#13;
Strength! May the gods richly bless their home! Long live&#13;
Chloris and Nausicrates."&#13;
&#13;
BY A.R.TOOTHAKER&#13;
&#13;
Once more, a day of rest&#13;
Now hovers o'er the world, and blest&#13;
Are they, who keep it best&#13;
Hallowed as a day of rest.&#13;
The gentle rain, all day&#13;
Has sifted down its gentle spray;&#13;
And bowed, as if to pray,&#13;
The leaves and flowers nod and sway.&#13;
The bowed -leaves, the rain&#13;
With its mystic chanting strain,&#13;
Attunes my soul to its refrain,&#13;
And sweeter harmonies attain.&#13;
&#13;
*Prize Winner of Short Poem.&#13;
&#13;
�Written for Atheneum Annual Public&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
RENA BOWKER&#13;
&#13;
Angels and ministers of grace defend us!&#13;
What means this shadow on our Eastern wall?&#13;
Be thou a spirit of health or goblin dammed?&#13;
Dost bring with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell?&#13;
Be thy intents wicked or charitable?&#13;
Thou comest in such a wonderful shape that I will speak to thee,&#13;
Answer, tell me! who art thou?&#13;
Let me not burst in ignorance but tell what mean th ese ominous&#13;
Sounds? The thought is beyond the reach of my soul.&#13;
Say, why is this, wherefore, what does this mean?&#13;
Ah, I see thou art indeed a phantom,&#13;
Thou canst come and go at thine own pleasure&#13;
And dost trouble whom thou wilt.&#13;
Thou hast appeared in midnight darkness&#13;
And fought a duel with slumber. Weary lids at last would conquerthou wouldst vanish for a time,&#13;
But return again all sudden with the waking of the morn.&#13;
Thou possessest comely features nought that any one should fear&#13;
Yet methinks I heard it rumored thou hadst sprinkled heads with&#13;
gray,&#13;
And it set my mind a wondering what the reason thereof might be.&#13;
Ah, come just a little nearer, let me whisper in thy ear,&#13;
Just now a thought came to my mind&#13;
And I will tell it now to thee. Perhaps thou wilt not understand it&#13;
from thy present point of view&#13;
Who always hast lived within thy realm&#13;
Where time nor space hath power to trouble thee&#13;
But we whose spirits are surrounded by frame of flesh and blood.&#13;
&#13;
Unlike to thee, time limits us and when we move we must have space&#13;
Perhaps thou wonderest what it is that I am about to say,&#13;
And good for evil I will render- will not keep thee in suspense.Listen.&#13;
Since thou hast power not given to man but only to those of thy kind&#13;
Just lend thy hand in the perfection of God's marvelous handiwork.&#13;
Thou canst if only thou wilt consent to conform to requirements made.&#13;
And l'm sure thou never canst refuse, no matter how immense the cost.&#13;
If only thou canst be of use both unto God and man.&#13;
Ah yes, I see Dame Willingness reflected in thy hollow eye,&#13;
And thy aerial form seems all a quiver with impatience to know how.&#13;
Well, I'll tell you and that right quickly,&#13;
Under heaven there's but one way,&#13;
Tho canst not remain a spirit and be help to any man.&#13;
Thou must change thy spirit body into one of stone and brick,&#13;
Rear thy walls from earth toward heaven,&#13;
Till thy crown shall pierce the clouds,&#13;
Which will rain down blessings on thee like the April showers in&#13;
Spring.&#13;
Thou must add both length and wideness&#13;
Thickness to thy stately sides,&#13;
And as this massive structure with its spacious rooms and halls,&#13;
Thou canst as can no other be of service to mankind.&#13;
Ah, I see the shudder like as if thou'd shrink away,&#13;
But I pray thee wait a moment though there is no other way&#13;
Yet methinks thou art too serious&#13;
Dost thou think thou'd lose thy power?&#13;
Nay, a hundred times more over added power to thee'd be given,&#13;
Power o'er lives of human beings,&#13;
Thou couldst mould them as thou wouldst.&#13;
Would there anything better than to have within thy shade,&#13;
This world 's men of the tomorrow there to learn of wisdom 's ways.&#13;
Power I say to wield an influence strong and mighty in the land,&#13;
Such an influence as ne'er is given to the care of any man.&#13;
Could st thou covet work more powerful than the orie now offered thee?&#13;
Thou couldst yield for this world's warfare mighty men and valiant, too&#13;
&#13;
�Men who would encourage progress and make it real b y their&#13;
invention.&#13;
There, that throws new light upon the matter&#13;
And I see thee slowly change&#13;
From that worse than useless shape into form majestic, g rand.&#13;
How my eyes do feast upon thee as upon the h ill thou standest,&#13;
I am held in rapturous wonder at the transformation wrought,&#13;
All the love within my bosom cometh forth you now to g reet&#13;
And my heart is filled with reverence for thy most majestic self.&#13;
0 let this not be delusion, turn thou never ·back agai n,&#13;
I would pray th ee and en treat you in this form fo r a ye remain .&#13;
Where cou ld life be more p leasaut than upon this sunkissed hill,&#13;
Here it seems old Sol beams brightest of any place in his long ride;&#13;
To me it seems no wonder that men have called it Morningside.&#13;
And 'tis here and no place other that we bid. thee now abide.&#13;
What thy special mission? Oh, I a lmost had forgot,&#13;
'Tis just this and nothing other,&#13;
Stay thou here as our "Science Hall!"&#13;
&#13;
BY ESTE&#13;
&#13;
BODDY&#13;
&#13;
To My Friend, Maude:&#13;
Let us w a nder in th e twilight&#13;
As we oft have done before,&#13;
T o the placid si le nt rive r,&#13;
To the paths of days of yore.&#13;
Let us watch th e dainty ripples&#13;
Of th e waters at our feet,&#13;
While the moon sheds forth her radiance,&#13;
Makes the beauty more complete.&#13;
As we stand and watch the distant&#13;
Shores so indistin ct to vie w,&#13;
Let us trust through s hade or su nshine,&#13;
G od will help us to be true.&#13;
Though the shore-lines seem to vanish&#13;
As the night h a ngs over there,&#13;
Morning will reveal them better,&#13;
So His light will ease our care.&#13;
We will dwell upon the beauty&#13;
Of the sce ne before us spread,&#13;
W e will w atch and lea rn some lesso n&#13;
That will take away life's dread.&#13;
For this life is like the river&#13;
W ith its never ceasing flow;&#13;
And the way will all be clearer&#13;
As we ever onward go.&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside College&#13;
BY STANLEY B, COLLINS&#13;
&#13;
So nature round this new born star,&#13;
With growing grandeur unsurpassed,&#13;
With golden arrows piercing far,&#13;
Erected walls in glory cast.&#13;
&#13;
An eagle on the mountain crest,&#13;
With golden sunbeams glowing bright,&#13;
Unwound a banner from his nest,&#13;
And launched upon his westward flight.&#13;
&#13;
The sunrise watched the eastern marge&#13;
The sunset held the distant west.&#13;
Aurora did her bounds enlarge&#13;
To guard the north with firey crest.&#13;
&#13;
He scaled the raging war bent clouds,&#13;
That changed the time-told day to night;&#13;
He rose above earth's vapory shrouds&#13;
And journeyed with the broad daylight.&#13;
&#13;
The polar star in blue draped throne&#13;
Was on the southern border placed,&#13;
The azure sky's encircling zone&#13;
Hath roofed the night, the day hath graced.&#13;
&#13;
And as the day's enthroned king&#13;
Doth leave his eastern highland reign&#13;
And toward the west, his kingdom bring,&#13;
And set in glory on the plain,&#13;
&#13;
A west bound traveler, lone and poor,&#13;
Was slowly plodding o'er the sands,&#13;
Was crossing hillock, creek or moor,&#13;
And risking life in Indian lands;&#13;
&#13;
The nation's light the eagle bore,&#13;
Bore from its nest 'mid eastern rills&#13;
And spread renown beneath its soar&#13;
And dropped the flag 'mid western hills.&#13;
&#13;
Was leaving home as in a dream,&#13;
To seek the veins of glittering gold;&#13;
But as he neared the flowing stream,&#13;
The muddy river, ages old,&#13;
&#13;
As sons of war with Roman veins,&#13;
Descendants from the great god Mars,&#13;
Erected walls around their shrines,&#13;
To check the thrust of foe-sent bars.&#13;
&#13;
Whose current flows through land and sea,&#13;
And waves of warmth about them throw&#13;
To keep the frost from Frankins tree&#13;
And warm the blood of English doe,&#13;
&#13;
�His eye was dimmed by sudden glimmer.&#13;
He strained his nerves and saw a glow,&#13;
A spot from which the beamy shimmer&#13;
Shot out like arrows from a bow.&#13;
&#13;
He saw his kin in mental dark,&#13;
His kin, the nation's future king,&#13;
Must see her ever glowing spark&#13;
And to her fame more honor bring.&#13;
&#13;
Forgetting love for wealth and fame,&#13;
He hastened to the magic beam.&#13;
To him the world was not the same,&#13;
The kingly light, the nation's gleam,&#13;
&#13;
With David's faith, with Caesar's will,&#13;
He grasped a bundle of the rays.&#13;
With lightning speed o'er dale and hill,&#13;
He bore the torch from lakes to bays.&#13;
&#13;
Had burned the scales from off his eyes.&#13;
The shades that dimmed his mental sight&#13;
Had vanished like the darkened skies&#13;
Before the dawn of morning light.&#13;
&#13;
To high-born youth and growing lad&#13;
&#13;
A new born vision round him fell.&#13;
True beauty clothed the golden rod.&#13;
The glow worn in his grassy dell&#13;
Became a model work of God.&#13;
&#13;
From palace gate and rural door,&#13;
From meadows broad and forests tall,&#13;
The sons and daughters rich and poor&#13;
Made pilgrimages, one and all,&#13;
&#13;
He saw the nation of the world&#13;
Build up by wonder-working man.&#13;
The ages of the past unfurled&#13;
The races ancient kingdoms ran.&#13;
&#13;
To view the place where morn had broke&#13;
&#13;
Whose cheeks were browned by nature's bright&#13;
He told with joy that made them glad&#13;
How he had found the nation's light.&#13;
&#13;
Upon the man in darkness tied.&#13;
'Twas chistened rightly when he spoke,&#13;
"This is the College Morningside."&#13;
&#13;
�Duella Nortis&#13;
BY Potter&#13;
&#13;
Clay&#13;
&#13;
I come from the gloom&#13;
Of the shadows of doom,&#13;
And traverse the world with delight.&#13;
From all light must I hide,&#13;
So I ne'er may abide,&#13;
For I m the Maid of the Night.&#13;
&#13;
I could secrets reveal&#13;
Which I nightly conceal&#13;
That would startle the world with affright:&#13;
All the pads and shams fail,&#13;
For I'm inside the veil,&#13;
And to me densest darkness is light.&#13;
&#13;
I powder the grape&#13;
And the plum; none escape,&#13;
Paint the delicate hues of the rose,&#13;
And the buds I imbue&#13;
With a life fresh and new;&#13;
For I know where each tender thing grows.&#13;
&#13;
Yet, forlorn my distress!&#13;
I'm in love, I confess,&#13;
With the glorious Man of the Day,&#13;
And I follow afar&#13;
With my good evening star&#13;
For a guide lest I o'erstep the way;&#13;
&#13;
I muffle the race&#13;
And their homes in embrace,&#13;
And hypnotize folks at my will.&#13;
Every locked door and gate&#13;
I with ease penetrate;&#13;
My invasions are subtle and still.&#13;
&#13;
For my form should he spy,&#13;
By the turn of his eye,&#13;
Undone I forever would be;&#13;
So I mock him good-bye&#13;
As he fades from the sky;&#13;
But behold, at his coming I flee!&#13;
&#13;
�Reflections&#13;
&#13;
But when we had thought more about it&#13;
We knew though the perfume was spent&#13;
That each flower-how could we doubt it?&#13;
Some good to this sad world had lent.&#13;
&#13;
I walked through the garden this morning&#13;
With flowers to left and to right.&#13;
The dew is fast leaving the blossoms&#13;
But a few drops reflect back the light.&#13;
&#13;
And here, too, we strung lilac blossoms&#13;
Into necklaces, dainty to see,&#13;
And of maple-leaves woven together,&#13;
Quaint hats made for you and for me.&#13;
&#13;
The dew is still cooling the flowers&#13;
Though the sun shines down in his might,&#13;
As we sit 'neath the same leafy bowers&#13;
Where we once played from morning till night.&#13;
&#13;
How pure were the fresh water-cresses&#13;
Which filled our pails up to the brim.&#13;
How rich were the bright yellow dresses&#13;
Of dandelions, dainty and trim.&#13;
&#13;
How well I remember the Mayflowers&#13;
As we made here a feast for the bees.&#13;
This very same bench was the table,&#13;
And the messenger, fleet, was the breeze.&#13;
&#13;
Those days at this moment still linger&#13;
Though the years with such swiftness have sped;&#13;
And, sitting beneath the same bower&#13;
How our minds through old paths have been led.&#13;
&#13;
With innocence we oft transplanted&#13;
The blossoms of violets-so,&#13;
And, watching them long were impatient&#13;
For more of the flowers to grow.&#13;
&#13;
What is that which disturbs my reflections&#13;
As it moves in and out of my view?&#13;
Just a spider industriously weaving&#13;
But see, something struggles there too.&#13;
&#13;
And this was a great childish sorrow&#13;
That the sweetness had left them so soon;&#13;
For when we came back on the morrow,&#13;
Each flower, its petals had strewn.&#13;
&#13;
'Tis a fly, which in some way or other&#13;
Has ventured to close to the lair.&#13;
Shall I free it or just watch it struggle&#13;
And leave it to die in the snare?&#13;
&#13;
�Now I ask myself what does it matter&#13;
If one of the many should die?&#13;
This is truly but one little creature&#13;
Just a poor little innocent fly.&#13;
&#13;
Then we'll brush off the cobwebs of danger&#13;
From some brother's path, if we may.&#13;
What matter to us if a stranger,&#13;
Sufficient to know it will pay.&#13;
&#13;
But the thought to me comes with such meaning&#13;
I am brought face to face with the fact&#13;
'Tis my privilege just at this moment&#13;
To help or refuse thus to act.&#13;
&#13;
And, looking back to our childhood,&#13;
We wish for those days to return;&#13;
And are glad that the present is with us,&#13;
But our hearts for the erring ones yearn.&#13;
&#13;
I free the poor little pris'ner&#13;
But think as I turn back again,&#13;
That the cobwebs of sin on the highways&#13;
Are ensnaring weak women and men.&#13;
&#13;
And enough at the last in the knowing&#13;
We have helped; we have done what we could.&#13;
And then we may feel we've been growing&#13;
To know men and God as we should.&#13;
&#13;
Not enough that one person escape them&#13;
If the cause still remains just the same&#13;
With all of the tinsel allurements&#13;
Will be lives full of sorrow and shame.&#13;
&#13;
That German Exam&#13;
( MARCH 24th&#13;
&#13;
1904)&#13;
&#13;
Oh, the snares which with vices are reeking&#13;
Where people are leading to sin!&#13;
But, thank God, there are those who are seeking&#13;
Many souls for the right way to win.&#13;
&#13;
The grades were posted in the hall,&#13;
Preps, Freshies, Seniors gathered all&#13;
To see the wonderful display&#13;
And learn which ones had made an A.&#13;
&#13;
And some Christian people are striving&#13;
To cast out the evils with speed;&#13;
And more who seem now to be shirking&#13;
Would help if they knew of the need.&#13;
&#13;
The German class of second year&#13;
Scanned the board with faces drear.&#13;
Of all the class there were but three&#13;
Who escaped that untold misery.&#13;
&#13;
�The rest of the class walked to the room;&#13;
Full well they knew they walked to their doom.&#13;
They did not know what that doom would be,&#13;
But they felt it was either a flunk or a C.&#13;
Miss F. siezed the crayon with all her might,&#13;
With arm raised high, she began to write;&#13;
The questions appeared-the students did stare&#13;
The heart of each one sank in dnmb despair.&#13;
"Der Tannenbaum", "Die Wacht am Rhein",&#13;
"Erlkonig" too must be told in rhyme;&#13;
Translations from "Tell", constructions galore,&#13;
And things which they never had heard of before.&#13;
The crayon flew fast-the board was filled soon;&#13;
And then for a moment she stepped from the room.&#13;
"Is that all the questions?" asked two in accord .&#13;
"Oh no," said a third one, "she's gone for more board."&#13;
The students wrote fast, their faces grew pale,&#13;
Anon from a weak one was heard a slight wail.&#13;
Their arms were purple, their hands quite sore,&#13;
Their hair stood on end-yet they worked the more.&#13;
&#13;
* * * * * *&#13;
The chapel bell rang; the cheif raised her head,&#13;
Then over her face came a look of great dread.&#13;
The seats were all empty-no students we there,&#13;
For every last one had gone up in thin air.&#13;
&#13;
What's a Name&#13;
In&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
R. G.&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
The Day was Fair. The Robbins were singing&#13;
sweetly; a little Finch was Warbling a Carroll contentedly; the foliage was a beautiful Green. A Boddy of&#13;
Young Squires Weary of their Tennis, decided to go on a&#13;
fishing excursion. Among them were several noted&#13;
personages, such as Root, Hanna, Bryan, Bryant, Harrison,&#13;
and Johnson; and others, lesser lights, such as the Miller,&#13;
the Millner, the Mason, the Cook And'er son, and the&#13;
Waterman with the Boals. Going down to the Beach,&#13;
they found a large Saylor, and a short distance away a&#13;
little Bark-lay secured by a Cable which was fastened by&#13;
means of Staples to a strong Cain on the Beach. Preferring the Saylor, they entered taking with them their&#13;
Grubb which they had procured with their Nichols and&#13;
which consisted principally of a Mellon which was later&#13;
found to be Sauer as Hul, sir. (With apologies, to Ed.)&#13;
But they were not yet Reddy to go, for all the&#13;
Squires were not there "Oh", said Wunn, "Why does&#13;
Leona De Lay us? Wont Bart Jett her go?" "Shaw'', said&#13;
another, "Why Kant Lener come? Has he an Achen'bach?"&#13;
"No", was the reply, "but he got Luse Wunn Day, and&#13;
the Drugg has a bad effect on him." "I wish Darling&#13;
were here", exclaimed a disappointed youth. "I fear it&#13;
will break my Hart if she doesn't come."&#13;
&#13;
�Is Professor Black-well?" asked a pretty maid. "Oh&#13;
no", was the response, "don't you know that he's a&#13;
chronic Toothaker?" At length all these little troubles&#13;
were forgotten and they were on their way.&#13;
Having reached the Marsh they began to fish.&#13;
Several whispered cautiously, ·"What will Miss Love&#13;
land?" "I don't know what she'll land", said one, "but&#13;
I'm going to land a Bass, at least, I Wish 'ard that I&#13;
might". "You'll play Hobb", said his neighbor, see&#13;
Howe you Trimble." "Yes", was the reply, "but I'm&#13;
sure to Winn." Soon he had a bite which required&#13;
careful handling.&#13;
"Good land 'er", said Wunn. "Now be Pruden'",&#13;
said another. "Look out, Yule Tumble son", joined in&#13;
a third. "Look out for the pole" came the cry, "Yule&#13;
Bender." At length he began to pull in his prize, a&#13;
&#13;
measly Crabb; but in Crossan the boat to take it from a&#13;
Root to which it was attached, he fell into the water.&#13;
The people began to scream, "Oh, can he Swem?"&#13;
"Will it Kill 'am?" Some one Chase him quick." "Oh&#13;
I Sawyer, I knew you'd do it." Just hear him Howl itt."&#13;
"Du Bois pull him ont." "He's in the Myer, but Jim&#13;
Kin dig him out." They then began to Search, and&#13;
soon drew him out, White but Smylie as ever and with&#13;
no loss of Blood.&#13;
The excitement over, we turned to our Grubb, feeling very Gantt. In a few moments all the Grub er provender, so to speak, was Eaton.&#13;
At last the Stellar lights began to appear near old&#13;
Hall in the distant Town er on the Brow er the Hill&#13;
near the Peter's Place, and so we returned home still&#13;
very Weary and Gantt.&#13;
&#13;
�PrizeProductions of S. B. Collins&#13;
&#13;
��Greeting&#13;
" A little nonsense, now and then,&#13;
Is relished by the wisest men."&#13;
Stick a pin in that superlative. Only those of this class have received the attention of the joke&#13;
committee. It has not been our policy to " hurt "--so look out for " sore heads ".&#13;
&#13;
�MathematicalProblems&#13;
(These original problems are given with the request&#13;
that any students specializing in mathematics will assist&#13;
in solving them and send the solution to the editors of&#13;
the Maroon.)&#13;
Let F = Number of flunks; x = No.of perfect recitations; C = Credit. S = Stand-in with Professer.&#13;
To prove F -1 x = C.&#13;
Suggestion: First find S then solve for C.&#13;
Let B = board bill; L = laundry bill; 3R = room&#13;
rent; D = draft from father; X = subscription to missionary fund; Y = incidentals (tickets, candy, flowers,&#13;
etc.)&#13;
To make D - Y = B -1 L -1 3R -1 X. (Assume&#13;
- that X = o. )&#13;
Let A. H. M. = the fellow; M. K. = his girl;&#13;
L. C.= lower corridor; S . F. = second floor; T. F .= third&#13;
floor; L = Laboratory; L' = Library.&#13;
Given L. C., S. F., T. F., Land L' to find A.H. M.&#13;
and M. K.&#13;
Suggestion: Eliminate all the unknown quantities&#13;
but one; the one remaining is the location of A. H. M.&#13;
and M. K.&#13;
·&#13;
Let C. C. = College Boarding Club; 64x = Boarders. Y = a pie; r-6 Y = One piece of pie.&#13;
To prove 5Y -1- 64x = r-6 Y. Or that there will&#13;
be a piece of pie for each boarder.&#13;
&#13;
Dear Hattie: * * * * Mrs. Trimble as you&#13;
would expect, is very careful to observe all the rules issued by the faculty.&#13;
It taxes our ingenuity to avoid being caught in disobedience. The other night, the girls had a party at&#13;
Park Place. Emma and I were present and just a few&#13;
minutes before ten we slipped back to our rooms. When&#13;
Mrs. Trimble made her usual round at ten o'clock the&#13;
light was out and we were safely in bed. After a few&#13;
minutes we slipped down the back stairs and returned to&#13;
the merriment at Park Place. About one A. M., we retired again for good, Mrs. Trimble none the wiser.&#13;
* * * * Nettie.&#13;
THE CLOAK ROOM CLASS.&#13;
&#13;
This class occupies the cloak room in the winter&#13;
when it is cold. Its laboratory work consists in giving&#13;
the mind full relapse into nothingness, pepsin guni (sometimes black jack) and a competive exercise of their gossiping powers. For this latter, they have a low power&#13;
apparatus consisting of the widow pane, through which&#13;
they observe passers by, after which they make idle remarks highly detrimental mainly to themselves. Expectorations and lead pencil marking obtains special attention.&#13;
In summer they occupy the front steps of main hall.&#13;
These are much better accomodations since they are not&#13;
obliged to stand. This requires too much energy. No&#13;
regular diploma is given with this work. For any desiring to take up special retrograde work, this course is&#13;
extremely useful. This requires a great deal of time and&#13;
students taking this cannot be expected to do much of&#13;
anything else in particular excepting to eat and sleep&#13;
and carry their clothes around.&#13;
&#13;
�Aldrich, introduces Mr. A. to Mr. B.&#13;
Mr. B.: "Yes, Aldrich is a friend of mine."&#13;
Aldrich: "Yes, Mr. B. always wants you to know that he&#13;
is in with the best people in the college."&#13;
&#13;
"Ye great old ox, what brought you here,&#13;
Ye have drawn saw-logs for many a year.&#13;
With kicks and cuffs and sad abuse,&#13;
And now you're here for boarder's use!"&#13;
&#13;
Platts-"Say, Gilbert, have you heard about the&#13;
sick woman in in the eastern part of the State?&#13;
Gilbert- "What woman?"&#13;
Platts-"The woman who wrote Dr. Lewis inquiring&#13;
if the young man who wrote for the Journal, reporting&#13;
college affairs, is a Christian."&#13;
Gilbert-"No, what about her?"&#13;
Platts-"Dr. Lewis answered in the affirmative.&#13;
The woman turned with her face to the wall and died."&#13;
&#13;
It may be interesting to the new students for me&#13;
to state that we have no fixed and binding rules for governing the conduct of students, while in attendance&#13;
at Morningside. We regard you as American citizens.&#13;
We trust you. During the last twenty years I have&#13;
never lost a single night's sleep watching students or&#13;
peering around to see whether they were doing anything&#13;
wrong or not. We have left that to them.&#13;
&#13;
A SAMPLE GREETING.&#13;
&#13;
�Sophomore Girl (meeting Senior man in the doorway of Main Hall)-"If I am not careful, I will be&#13;
mashed right here in the door."&#13;
Prof. Green (in Physics Class) "Mr. Brower, why&#13;
do you give the small horse the long end of the double&#13;
tree?"&#13;
Asa: "Oh, I just do that by common horse sense."&#13;
Recently, after correcting some work handed in by&#13;
one of his classes, Dr. Blue found, to his embarrassment,&#13;
that the work was some quotations from Shakespeare&#13;
which he had asked the class to write out.&#13;
Prof. Green: "Mr. Trimble, you were absent the&#13;
other day, have you an excuse?"&#13;
Fred: "I had an engagement with a young lady on&#13;
which depended my future happiness."&#13;
During vacation George Finch attended Dr. Martin's evangelistic meeting the evening the Doctor spoke&#13;
on "Home."&#13;
Dr. Martin: "Will all the gentlemen present who&#13;
are married please hold up their right hands."&#13;
George responded manfully, much to the embarrassment of his fair companion.&#13;
Mabel Killam (to Mr. Finch in History Class) "Prof.&#13;
Garver always picks on me, he doesn't like me at all."&#13;
Finch: "It's because you're so little."&#13;
(Garver is about fifteen minutes late to history class.)&#13;
McCay: ''Let's climb out the window."&#13;
Miss Killam: "Yes, let's do, I'd like to."&#13;
It is said that the boy's glee club has ordered hot&#13;
water bags to carry their tunes in.&#13;
The faculty has forbidden students to sit on the iron&#13;
stairs at the back of the buildings. They say it is dangerous, since that is where the fire-escapes.&#13;
&#13;
A paradox--true as steal.&#13;
Ira Aldrich, Student. (?)&#13;
.&#13;
Kindig, (in logic class). Foot originally meant the&#13;
foundation of man.&#13;
ONE OF DOCTOR'S ST AND ARD JOKES.&#13;
&#13;
I have been very solicitous concerning the occurrence&#13;
of recent date. I have investigated the matter thoroughly. The parties are known with the part played by each.&#13;
Each will save himself great embarrassment and me&#13;
much annoyance by calling at my office and making matters right.&#13;
BARE STATEMENTS.&#13;
&#13;
"I would rather have a man than a name." Grace&#13;
Darling.&#13;
"Next term I expect to devote more time to children." Dr. Haynes.&#13;
"We have a little savage at our house." Prof. Garver.&#13;
"Give me your hand." J. G. Waterman.&#13;
"It took man a long time to brush his hair back&#13;
from his forehead." Dr. Lewis.&#13;
"One chair will do for tonight." Prof. Green.&#13;
Ask Waterman how he happened to ask two girls for&#13;
their hands in one evening.&#13;
Sophomore, (standing on his head-to Junior) "See,&#13;
when I stand with my feet in the air the blood all runs&#13;
to my head." (Junior says nothing. ) "And when I&#13;
stand on my feet, it doesn't."&#13;
Junior: "Your feet are not hollow."&#13;
Mrss LARSON'S CHAPEL SPEECH.&#13;
The Ladies' Glee Club will meet in my studio at&#13;
4: 15 to-day.&#13;
&#13;
�RECORD OF CUTE SAYINGS AND SENSIBLE REMARKS&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 30th, 1901, 7 to 12 P. M., La-la-la-la.&#13;
Dec. 10th, 1901, Goo-goo.&#13;
Feb. 6th, 1902, Andle-andle-andle.&#13;
March 19th, 1902, Bab-bab-bab-bab.&#13;
April 1st, 1902, Dad-dad-dad-dad.&#13;
May 6th, 1902, Maam-maam-maam.&#13;
June, 1902, Bla'll-adle-a'lbe-a'lle-a'lle,&#13;
RECORD OF EXTRAORD!NAR Y EVENTS.&#13;
&#13;
March I st, 1902, Rode on "Choo-choo" cars for first time.&#13;
April 1st, 1902, Slept all night.&#13;
May 20th, 1902, Succeeded in getting big toe in mouth for first time.&#13;
Sept. 22nd, 1902, Commenced to shake hands with papa.&#13;
Nov. 15th, 1902, "Hello papa.''&#13;
CHARACTERISTIC EXPRESSIONS.&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND JOSEPH GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
May you become as wise as your father and as good as your mother.&#13;
Weight, Oct. 31, 1901, 61 Ibs. and 8 oz.&#13;
First outing, March 23rd, 1902. In his go-cart, eight blocks. "Was&#13;
very good and did't cry, nor ask the reason why."&#13;
First laugh, Jan 20th, 1902.&#13;
First picture, taken Feb. 20th, 1902.&#13;
First hair clipped, Jan. 12th 1902.&#13;
First toy, a rattle costing 15 cents.&#13;
First word, Sept. 4th, 1902, "Mamma."&#13;
First Short Clothes, March 28th, 1902.&#13;
First tooth, July 30th, 1902.&#13;
First crept, Nov. 8th, 1902.&#13;
First step, Jan. 1st, 1902.&#13;
First Student-"Wescott, what are you going to be when you get&#13;
. through school?"&#13;
Wescott- " Broke".&#13;
&#13;
Miss Loveland-"I think so".&#13;
Carson- "Gracious me".&#13;
Dr, Haynes- "Well, of course the idear".&#13;
Van Horn-"Git it?"&#13;
Dr. Lewis- "Just call at the office".&#13;
Richards- " M y G-a- u-s-h !".&#13;
Magee - "Hu".&#13;
Poppenheimer-"I don't believe it".&#13;
Hall- "Well what?"&#13;
Dr. Lewis-"It has been in the minds of the faculty".&#13;
Barsalou-"Oh, it's marvelous."&#13;
Debenham- "By hec."&#13;
Garver- "W-e-e-1, y-e-s- and - a no".&#13;
Mabel Killam-"Say-y-y!"&#13;
Rissler - "The old wart".&#13;
Saylor-"Well, Well."&#13;
Ora Barringer- "H -o-n-est?"&#13;
Miss Cook- "Now".&#13;
Miss Ferguson- "Natiirlich".&#13;
C. E. Harding- "By Hookev".&#13;
Garver- "I suppose you all--know that-"&#13;
Prof. Green- "lch glaube nicht".&#13;
&#13;
�PROTO·&#13;
PLASMIC&#13;
&#13;
CELL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
October:&#13;
&#13;
"There is always a man for the crisis."&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Mother Trimble: "Fred, my boy, how came this rent&#13;
in the Doctor's trousers? "&#13;
Fred: "That gets me."&#13;
&#13;
�SENIORS "MAKING HISTORY "&#13;
&#13;
�Lines written by a Freshman and appropriated hy the Committee.&#13;
I sat in chapel nothing fearing,&#13;
Because of colors white and blue,&#13;
But a rooster from the Sophies&#13;
Into mid-air quickly flew&#13;
"Be that bird our sign of parting."&#13;
With such insult deeply smarting,&#13;
Went the Freshies forth to battle,&#13;
Ah! That noise is but the rattle&#13;
Of their heads upon the floor,&#13;
And they'll love us, nevermore.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
R. T.&#13;
&#13;
It has been in the minds of the students (and facu lty) to add the&#13;
letter F, to the scale of scholarship for Miss Ferguson's benefit, to accomodate flunks.&#13;
Joke Committee (to Robbins): ·'What's your favorite expression?"&#13;
Robbins: "Gol ! I Dunn-no."&#13;
Q.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
At DIAMOND CENTRE.&#13;
&#13;
What is one .of the land marks in Morningside College history?&#13;
The time Jim Kindig landed on the Y. W. C. A. pop-corn.&#13;
&#13;
Saylor (entering Physics Laboratory) "ls the Herr Professor&#13;
here?"&#13;
Pendell: "No, but the hairless professor is over there."&#13;
&#13;
First School Marm: "Hello Gertie, have you read this morning's&#13;
Journal?"&#13;
Second School Marm; "No, why?"&#13;
F. S. M: "Our pastor, Brother Waterman, has been in a class&#13;
scrap."&#13;
S. S. M: "Oh, horrors, what happened?"&#13;
F. S. M: "Well, he Jost his collar, tie and part of his s-h-i-r-t."&#13;
S.S. M: "My, but he must have looked cute."&#13;
&#13;
Barber at Peter's Park: "Who is this Dr. Lewis I hear so much&#13;
about?"&#13;
Student: "Why, he's the President of Morningside College."&#13;
Barber: "Oh, I got the idea from what Search said one day when&#13;
he was in, that he was a man who was working for Search."&#13;
&#13;
Mr. C. J. Mekkelson enjoys out door sports and often goes hunting. Duck hunting is his favorite sport. He once even got a "duck"&#13;
at a fawcet.&#13;
"GEO. L. SEARCH, Secretary,&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.'&#13;
&#13;
Resolved: That students should not be allowed to attend class&#13;
when tardy.&#13;
Affirmative, Prof. Harvey.&#13;
Negative, Prof. Green.&#13;
Time keeper, Mrs. Clark.&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY DEBATE.&#13;
&#13;
�New student [rubbing his hands before one of the pillars in th e&#13;
college dining hall and mistaking it for a steam pipe) "My, but this is&#13;
a cold day."&#13;
The trustees are thinking of cutting out our art department since&#13;
all our girls are skilled painters.&#13;
Hartzell says this ten o'clock belle business is a nuisance.&#13;
&#13;
A Joke- Dr. Lewis' "A" grades.&#13;
No Joke- Those Rules.&#13;
To be taken as a Joke-- Miss Ferguson 's Flunks&#13;
&#13;
THE WOMAN BEHIND&#13;
&#13;
THE GUN.&#13;
&#13;
"Wailing, wailing, wailing, wailing,&#13;
Over land and sea,&#13;
And the maidens'. voices in the wind crying,&#13;
Boys, come out to we."&#13;
&#13;
�Dr. Lewis (in chapel "The Y. W. C. A. will hold&#13;
their regular meeting tomorrow morning at 9:15. All&#13;
women in the school are invited. We will of course&#13;
all be there."&#13;
Baggage Master (to Misses Stella Raw and Faith&#13;
Woodford, at the station about to leave for Chicago.)&#13;
"Ladies, is there a corpse in this box that you wish&#13;
checked?"&#13;
Stella (in horror) "Heavens, no! That's only the&#13;
box we wanted for a window seat."&#13;
Dr. Lewis (in chapel, giving a five minute lecture,&#13;
reaching his climax thus) "Of course it is understood&#13;
that the students are not expected to leave the city&#13;
except to fill appoinments."&#13;
A flunk is that fellow that lets his college education interfere with his studies.&#13;
FAVORITE NICKNAMES.&#13;
&#13;
Hall- Brintley.&#13;
Cain- Boley.&#13;
C. E. Harding--Kid.&#13;
Shoemaker-Buffalo Bill.&#13;
Gilbert- Cy Plunk .&#13;
Root- Stump.&#13;
Miss Ferguson- Fergy.&#13;
Rissler- Chet.&#13;
D. F. Robbins- Bobbs.&#13;
Shaw- Jock o.&#13;
Staples- Nails.&#13;
Tracey- Mike.&#13;
Saylor- Capt.&#13;
Kindig- Judge.&#13;
Schar-Cherry picker.&#13;
Carroll- Cataline.&#13;
Mekkleson- Ole.&#13;
Mason-Shep.&#13;
Hymer- Stuffy.&#13;
Maynard- Fatty.&#13;
Harvey - His Botanic Majesty.&#13;
Greynald- The Frenchman.&#13;
Prof. Green- The Green Professor.&#13;
Poppenheimer- Poppendale from Swaleheimer.&#13;
HOW THEY LOOK ?&#13;
&#13;
Harry Cain&#13;
........ Without his smile.&#13;
Dr. Lewis .......... At a social gathering of the ·students.&#13;
Herbert Saylor......................... .. ... Without his slang.&#13;
Base-ball team ............................ ........... With a victorv.&#13;
The Seniors ....................&#13;
.. . ........... At chapel.&#13;
The Sophs .&#13;
.. .. With an intelligent expression.&#13;
The Freshmen ......In a brown (instead of green) study.&#13;
0. R. Mason..&#13;
.. .... Without his conceit.&#13;
The campus ..&#13;
.. ...... With cement walks.&#13;
Geo. L. Search, Secy.&#13;
. ........ Without his title.&#13;
&#13;
��April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
7 Spring term opens.&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. and Y. W . C. A. Reception.&#13;
&#13;
April 18&#13;
&#13;
Base Ball season opens, Morningside vs. Vermillion.&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye goat gets rambunctious.&#13;
Carrie Nation tried by Philo court.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
April 24&#13;
April 25&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
MAROON&#13;
&#13;
Base Ball. Yankton 15, Morningside 5.&#13;
Collegiate girl athletes entertain Prep ditto.&#13;
&#13;
April 30&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
Home Field Meet. Girls distinguish themselves on the race track.&#13;
Brawn wins over brain; that is, Preps over Collegiates.&#13;
Zets entertain Atheneums.&#13;
&#13;
April 27&#13;
&#13;
DRAWN&#13;
&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Empey address Christian Associations.&#13;
&#13;
Kangaroo Court.&#13;
&#13;
Book agents fined.&#13;
&#13;
�May&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Morningside debaters meet Sioux City&#13;
business men. Elements disturbed by&#13;
their logic. Calamity I.&#13;
&#13;
Mav&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
One Sioux City business man confined to&#13;
his bed as a result of debaters ' logic.&#13;
Calamity II. College Boo k Store sold.&#13;
&#13;
May 23&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
Mass meeting. Speech by Prof. Garver.&#13;
Calamity III. Debate yells practiced.&#13;
Faculty refuses to yell.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4 Field Meet; Morningside 65,&#13;
Yankton 63.&#13;
&#13;
May 25&#13;
&#13;
Morningside defeats Baker in&#13;
debate. Calamity IV.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5 "At Last" Smylie and friends&#13;
&#13;
May 26&#13;
&#13;
Faculty invites students to arrange ratification. Students&#13;
in secret session arrange half&#13;
holiday at Riverside, and invite Faculty to go. Faculty&#13;
recieves residents of Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
May 27&#13;
&#13;
Piano Gold Medal Contest.&#13;
&#13;
brought before the public.&#13;
Seniors rescue classmate&#13;
from Normals.&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Seniors appear in caps and&#13;
gowns. The dignity. is oppressive. National Prohibition Contest.&#13;
&#13;
Class 1905 meets in solemn conclave. Message received&#13;
from Fates over wireless telegraph stating that the class&#13;
is chosen to publish the&#13;
greatest Junior Annual of the&#13;
age.&#13;
May 13 First Graduating Recital, Music Department.&#13;
May 15 Second Graduating Recital Music Department. Base&#13;
Ball, Yankton 1, Morningside o.&#13;
May 19 Editor and Business Manager of Junior Annual&#13;
elected.&#13;
May 20 Mass meeting. Speeches in behalf of debate. Garver rendered speechless by hearty applause.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen appear with caps and&#13;
canes.&#13;
Class 1905 announce Junior AnMay&#13;
30&#13;
nual prizes. Class of 1904&#13;
eulogized. Elocution recital.&#13;
&#13;
�June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
June 6&#13;
June 7&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
June 11&#13;
June 12&#13;
June 13&#13;
June 14&#13;
June 15&#13;
June 16&#13;
June 17&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
Juniors banquet Seniors. Prof. Brown entertains Normals. Freshie dragged&#13;
into Sophomore class meeting. Miss Mason stands off whole Freshmen&#13;
class and secures one scalp.&#13;
Class 1905 give Junior Annual yell in chapel.&#13;
Seniors and Freshmen picnic at Riverside. "Birds of a feather flock together." Queen Alexandra" and "Prince of Wales" go boating. After picnic Hawkins and Miss Crossan ascend Prospect Hill to look at Missiouri.&#13;
Dr. Blue makes his first chapel speech. Contrary to his instructions to English&#13;
class, he uses table for a "prop." Junior Senior Contest.&#13;
Field meet with Vermillion.&#13;
Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. meeting on campus. Green and Blackwell get to breakfast on time.&#13;
Philomathean Annnual Excursion. Dr. Haynes receives faculty.&#13;
Choral Union Cantanta. "Journal" announces that Miss Marsh will leave the&#13;
"state" permanently.&#13;
Normal Graduation.&#13;
Seniors go to Sergeant Bluff. On return trip, ladies sit on gentlemen's laps.&#13;
Sophs gain another Freshie cap. Consternation among Freshies.&#13;
Inter-society program. Faculty see themselves as others see them. Y. W . C.&#13;
A. Supper on Campus.&#13;
Baccalaureate Sermon. Address before Christian Associations. Dr. Frye and&#13;
Miss Ellerbroek go boating. Annual Sermon.&#13;
Academy Graduation. More examinations.&#13;
Music Graduation. Class Day Exercises.&#13;
Alumni Day. Farewell Chapel Service. Society Reunions. Miss Marsh&#13;
leaves the "state."&#13;
18 Commencement. McDowell hastens to fulfi 11&#13;
Dr .&#13;
Quayle's&#13;
prophecy.&#13;
Mc Isaac&#13;
waits a&#13;
week.&#13;
&#13;
�September&#13;
&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 14-15 "Have you registered?''&#13;
Sept. 16&#13;
Faculty gets rattled at chapel.&#13;
"Are there any present who have not registered?" Freshmen&#13;
Sept. 17&#13;
send out dove in chapel to see if the floods are coming.&#13;
Freshie dove returns with remnant of Soph cap. First chapel&#13;
Sept. 18&#13;
speech, Fred B. Smith of New York.&#13;
Juniors appear in colors.&#13;
Sept. 19&#13;
Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
Sept. 21&#13;
Juniors hold a protracted session. All serene.&#13;
Sept. 22&#13;
Atheneum hay rack party. Chapel seats assigned.&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
"Are there any present who have not registered?" Coach SweeSept. 24&#13;
ley makes his debut in chapel. Faculty reception.&#13;
Foot ball season opens. Sac City o, Morningside 29.&#13;
Sept. 26&#13;
Zetalethean Ravine Party.&#13;
Sept. 28&#13;
Dr. Lewis establishes advertising bureau; Silk waists, knives,&#13;
Sept. 29&#13;
books, etc. recovered free of charge.&#13;
Oratorical Association meets. 25c admission.&#13;
Sept. 30&#13;
&#13;
�RAZZLEDAZZLE RAZZLE DAZZLE&#13;
S1S BOOM BAH. ! !!!! ! !&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, MORNINGSIDE, RAH RAH,!&#13;
RAH,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Aldrich leads ·yells.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
3 Dr. Lewis announces library hours, 8 to 12 :30 A . M.&#13;
neum Carnival of th e Season.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
5 Football; Morningside 45, Yankton o.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Athe-&#13;
&#13;
Orchestra appears at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 7 "Will th ose who have not registered please stand."&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewi; at conference.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Cook leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 9&#13;
&#13;
Football boys depart for Simpson.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
Football, Simpson vs. Morningside;&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Fowler preaches a t opera house.&#13;
&#13;
Don't mention it.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 13&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Reception to football boys.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 14&#13;
&#13;
"Will all who have not registered please do so."&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 17&#13;
&#13;
Football; Western Union o, Morningside 71.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 19&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Harvey dislocates his arm.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 20&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis back at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 23&#13;
&#13;
Football; Morningside 6, Mitchell 5.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 2.i&#13;
&#13;
"Chew not gum." Zetaletheans ente rtain Othonians.&#13;
entertain Philomatheans.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 27&#13;
&#13;
McCarthy gives chemical lecture in Dr. Cook's absence.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 29&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis gives Hallowe'en address "For men on ly."&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 31&#13;
&#13;
Football; Cedar Falls 33, Morningside o. Hare and H ou nd Chase.&#13;
Where were the hares? Where were the hounds?&#13;
&#13;
Full attendance of Faculty.&#13;
Intersociety debate.&#13;
Atheneums&#13;
&#13;
�November&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Bass makes a call.&#13;
2 Dr. Lewis entertains Faculty.&#13;
3 Prof. Garver tests his lungs.&#13;
4 "Will those present who have not registered please stand?"&#13;
5 Dr. Lewis interviews members of Junior class.&#13;
7 Collegian Reporter ellucidates on lack of college spirit. Dr. Cook al lows meeting&#13;
following chapel, "since Dr. Lewis is away."&#13;
Editor Collegian Reporter shown some college spirit- kidnapped and left on back&#13;
II&#13;
step of the "Carr."&#13;
12 Miss Gibson's Vermillion penant disappears. Jennie Osborn Concert Co. Mr. Minkler attends. Also Miss Hie by.&#13;
13 Dr. Lewis announces that all who class Junior at begining of winter term can ha,·e&#13;
pictures in · Annual.&#13;
14 Football, Mitchell 6, Morningside 5.&#13;
16 "Rooters" departed for Yankton, Morningside 11, Yankton 5.&#13;
17 Dr. Cook grows eloquent on "The Academy of Science and Letters." "Rooters" and&#13;
football team return jubilant. President Class 19o6 goes to sleep in library.&#13;
19 Chemistry class makes excursion in search of a man imported from South Carolina.&#13;
20 First Senior Middle Scrap. Bishop Hamilton speaks in Auditorium. Mr. Gilbert&#13;
appears with the Germaine troup. Also Cain shuffles the cards "very rapidly and&#13;
thoroughly."&#13;
21 Garver makes a speech without funny remarks. Atheneum Annual Pubiic.&#13;
23 Mass meeting. Attendance less than 1000.&#13;
24 Dr. Cook announces that Senior Preps are not at the stage of "foolhood." Demonstrated after chapel by said class.&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 26 Thanksgiving game. A traitor supplies Vermillion with our songs.&#13;
Vermillion yell master tried hy&#13;
snow bank ordeal. Found guilty.&#13;
Nov. 27 A limited number have their lessons.&#13;
Nov. 28 Coach Sweeley entertains football&#13;
squad. Garver speaks on the Debate; announces his birthday to be&#13;
March 9th. Please have presents&#13;
ready.&#13;
&#13;
�December&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Football trophy awarded to Saylor General surprise that Cain did not receive it. "M's"&#13;
awarded.&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Fowler lectures.&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Blue occupies south east corner of Dr. Lewis'&#13;
chair at the chapel. Oratorical Asscociation&#13;
meets. Constitution mutilated.&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
5 Othonians banquet Zetaletheans.&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 7 Hawkeye-Adelphian debate.&#13;
Dec. 8 Dr. Cook threatens to take an "i" out of Friedendoll. Dr. Lewis multiplies mercies to Juniors&#13;
and Seniors. Crescents and Aesthesians entertain Hawkeyes and Adelphians respectively.&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
I I&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical contest.&#13;
Mr. Cain nominated as member of missionary&#13;
hoard. Narrowly escapes election. Term recital of music.&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 16 Term tortures begin.&#13;
Dec. 18&#13;
&#13;
Fall term closes.&#13;
&#13;
�January&#13;
Jan . 5 Winter term opens.&#13;
Jan. 7 First Chapel Service. Dr. Lewis reads new rules; no exams for .&#13;
those making A grades.&#13;
Jan. 8 Miss Ferguson dismisses second year German class before bell&#13;
rings. Dr. Lewis makes his regular term speech on the "Best&#13;
Literary Society."&#13;
Jan. 9 Dr. Lewis announces that there is plenty of room UP. (After&#13;
chapel several go up to see .)&#13;
Jan. 12 "Climb-acts" in second year German. Miss Ferguson misses chapel.&#13;
Jan. 13 Green-Harvey debate. Sophomore meeting. A "fool" attendance&#13;
reported.&#13;
Jan. 14 · Prof.Harvey late to class. (See Jan. 13).&#13;
Jan. I 5 Miss F. finds it necessary to lock Scientific German class in.&#13;
Jan. 16 Kanthlener studies Greek in chapel. Harvey mentions a "flock"&#13;
of cattle in Biology class.&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 19&#13;
&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
&#13;
Jan.&#13;
&#13;
Soph-Freshman rooster fight. Some&#13;
hens implicated . Carson occupies&#13;
chair of Philosophy. Darling occupies chair of Psychologv. Garver jumps history class. (Note:&#13;
See new rules.) Soph Banquet.&#13;
(- - - ----- - - ! ! ! ! )&#13;
20&#13;
Dr. Lewis and Prof. Garver offend&#13;
Preps. Preps rebellious.&#13;
21 Dr. Lewis apologizes to Preps.&#13;
Preps&#13;
resolve to boycott debate.&#13;
22&#13;
Dr. Lewis tearfully pleads with Preps&#13;
in secret session. Preps relent.&#13;
Simpson-Morningside cl e bate.&#13;
Preps in full attendance, but&#13;
where's the cartoon.&#13;
23 Basket Ball Game. Morningside 50,&#13;
Western Union 18. Trial for theft&#13;
of missing cartoon.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Paddock, State Sec'y. Y. W . C.&#13;
A. speaks.&#13;
Jan. 28 Day of Prayer for colleges,&#13;
Jan. 29 Revival meetings begin. McCay sent&#13;
as spy to land of Kansas.&#13;
Jan. 30 Spy reports that there are giants in&#13;
the land.&#13;
Jan. 26&#13;
&#13;
�February ·&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
Feb. II&#13;
Feb. 12&#13;
Feb. 13&#13;
Feb. I 5&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feh.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feh.&#13;
Feh.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
26&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Blue makes a speech in Junior Class meeting. Theme,&#13;
"()rations." Dr. Lewis announces that a Philo ·'star" has&#13;
been found.&#13;
Feb. 3 Dr. Blue's announcement read in chapel. Theme, "Orations."&#13;
Feb. 4 Dr. Cook skips Chemistry class.&#13;
Feb. 5 Y. W. C. A. has winter picnic. Boys disconsolate.&#13;
Feb. 6 Dr. Lewis announces the approach of cold wave and cautions the&#13;
children to wear wraps.&#13;
Feb. 7 Biology Professor makes a call; gets sent home at 2 a. m.&#13;
Feb. 9 Rev. Millard speaks at chapel on Egypt.&#13;
1 Faculty shows they have not lost their youthful desire to&#13;
" look at pictures."&#13;
2 Miss Lothian remains faithful at her post.&#13;
3 Saylor tries to buy a wife for $1.35.&#13;
4 Kindig declines to leave for Egypt post haste.&#13;
5 Dr. Lewis alone is conscious of flight of time. (He could&#13;
not see the pictures.)&#13;
6 Recitation period reduced one-half.&#13;
Feb. 10 Sophs noticeable in groups talking about mince pie, etc.&#13;
8 p. m. Sophs give Farmer's party.•&#13;
Feb.11 Dr. Lewis absent. Dr. Blue improves his opportunity to make a&#13;
speech. Theme, "Orations." Quotation from speech, "A word&#13;
to the wise is sufficient." Third and fourth verses of Hymn&#13;
No. 6 sung.&#13;
Basket ball game with Medics. Morningside victorious.&#13;
Every one required to take mid-term tests. See Jan. 7.&#13;
Seniors ? conduct themselves disgracefully in chapel. Zctalethean Annual Public. After entertainment Scharr and his girl take a stroll to enjoy the "gentle breeze"&#13;
Cy Guilbert spends whole day making a valentine.&#13;
Basket Ball. University of Nebraska&#13;
wins over Morningside. Morningside girls win over Sargeant&#13;
Bluff girls.&#13;
Dr. Blue reluctantly vacates Dr. Lewis' chair upon the discovery of the latter's appearance at chapel.&#13;
Herbert Butler Concert Co. appear in striking costumes. Sophs "bob" ride fails to materialize.&#13;
Dr:Julius Smith of Burma speaks at chapel.&#13;
Monday: Scherzel waits for pupils thinking it Tuesday. Query- How did he spend Sundav?&#13;
Entertainment by Elocution Department.&#13;
Dr. Lewis absent. Six members of Faculty present at chapel.&#13;
Dr. Lewis returns. Twenty members of Faculty present at chapel.&#13;
Five seniors at chapel.&#13;
Freshman Leap Year Party. Sophs detain two gallant girls; rescued by two blushing Freshman boys.&#13;
&#13;
��Class of 1903&#13;
&#13;
E. L. Empy&#13;
&#13;
V. M. Vigars&#13;
&#13;
S.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Raw&#13;
&#13;
E. M. Durst&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
E. Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
F. K. Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1904&#13;
&#13;
Miss Wadham&#13;
&#13;
S.&#13;
&#13;
J. Lacy&#13;
&#13;
G. Wyatt&#13;
&#13;
E. Cain&#13;
&#13;
K . J. Manus&#13;
&#13;
M. R. Smylie&#13;
&#13;
K . M . Gibson&#13;
&#13;
�Glee Club&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
Spratt&#13;
Hart&#13;
Barringer&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Smylie&#13;
Howard&#13;
&#13;
Gibson&#13;
Erskin&#13;
Mellin&#13;
&#13;
Weary&#13;
&#13;
Lothian&#13;
&#13;
Ellis&#13;
Larson&#13;
&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
Rorem&#13;
Newcom&#13;
Wyatt&#13;
Cain&#13;
&#13;
�Mossman&#13;
Manning&#13;
Calkins&#13;
&#13;
Tun1bleson&#13;
Lukins&#13;
Shaw&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
Everhart&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Van Marter&#13;
&#13;
Grubb&#13;
&#13;
Mlossman&#13;
&#13;
�Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
C. C. Tonjes&#13;
S. Scherzel&#13;
&#13;
String Quartet&#13;
&#13;
C. W. Maynard&#13;
E. A. Tonjes&#13;
&#13;
���Music by&#13;
&#13;
Words by&#13;
R. ALDRICH&#13;
&#13;
Hail! Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
V. MAE VIGARS.&#13;
&#13;
we raise to thee A&#13;
with&#13;
in thy walls Our&#13;
fair Morn-ing-side; Thy&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
Ma&#13;
Morn&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
song,&#13;
stay&#13;
rise&#13;
&#13;
thou - sand pul - es beat for thee In&#13;
Thy class-rooms and thy spa-cious halls The&#13;
To bring thee glo - ry. hon - or, fame; Thy&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
With Joy - al hearts and&#13;
will-ing hands and voi-ces loud and clear&#13;
We hon -or thee and&#13;
Thy cam-pus green and cher-ished scene con-strain us to&#13;
a - bide&#13;
Up-on thine am - ple&#13;
Till death, thy name we will pro- claim, for thou hast made us free T h y h work reand&#13;
&#13;
meas-ure firm and strong&#13;
woes of life al - lay&#13;
name im - mor- tal - ize&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
own&#13;
&#13;
joy - ous glad-some&#13;
heart-strings bid us&#13;
no - ble sons shall&#13;
&#13;
IRA&#13;
&#13;
ter&#13;
ing&#13;
&#13;
dear;&#13;
side;&#13;
&#13;
Ma&#13;
ter,&#13;
Morn - ing&#13;
ter&#13;
ni&#13;
&#13;
dear&#13;
side.&#13;
ty&#13;
&#13;
�Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
T HE&#13;
&#13;
of Morningside College had its&#13;
beginning in 1894. Prof. T. G. Hadley was the&#13;
first director, his work continuing until 1897 when Prof.&#13;
0. P. Barbour succeeded him. Prof. Barbour was director until 1903 when he accepted a position as director of&#13;
the Conservatory of Cornell College, Iowa. Since that&#13;
time the Conservatory has been without a recognized&#13;
head. However, the work has been carried on with remarkable success and next year Prof. J. W. Mather will&#13;
begin his work as Director of the Conservatory.&#13;
Prof. Mather is a man of considerable reputation&#13;
and experience and the College considers itself fortunate&#13;
in being able to secure his service. He is a graduate of&#13;
Oberlin and has studied for some time in Germany, and&#13;
is accomplished both in piano and pipe organ music.&#13;
He has taught for three years in Mt. Vernon, Iowa, and&#13;
for four years has been a director of the Conservatory at&#13;
Yankton College.&#13;
The work of the Conservator y is very satisfactory&#13;
and has proven itself a very important part of Morningside College.&#13;
Both public and private recitals are given during&#13;
the year in which the pupils are required to take part.&#13;
At these recitals which occur every two or three weeks&#13;
the works of the masters are studied and whenever it is&#13;
CONSERVATORY&#13;
&#13;
possible the best lecturers and performers that the surrounding country affords are secured.&#13;
The Spirit of the Conservatory is very well expressed in the following anecdote of J. A. Ward the sculptor. Some one asked him which of his works he considered the best, to which he replied, "The Next."&#13;
There are various organizations connected with the&#13;
Conservatory. The Band which is under the direction&#13;
of Prof. Everhart has made itself famous upon a number&#13;
of occasions. It has represented the Music Department&#13;
at a number of out of town contests and can always cope&#13;
with the very best College bands.&#13;
The Choral Union, directed by C. P. Kilborne, is&#13;
worthy of the very highest commendation. It meets&#13;
each week and much hard work is done during the year.&#13;
It gives an annual entertainment in the Spring which is&#13;
always a credit to it.&#13;
The Ladies' Glee Club which has been organized&#13;
during the past year by Miss Larson is composed of&#13;
Morningside's very best talent. It has made few public&#13;
appearances as yet but will be heard from more frequently in the not distant future.&#13;
The Orchestra of Morningside College has had a&#13;
rather desultory existen ce during this year but whenever&#13;
they do appear it is to the satisfaction of all who hear&#13;
them. A ll ·those who play stringed instruments are&#13;
urged to belong and are given training and practice.&#13;
&#13;
�TH - END.&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
�( OVER.)&#13;
&#13;
�HELLO !&#13;
&#13;
Now we have come to the most important&#13;
&#13;
and most entertaining part of The Maroon, and we will&#13;
now go on and see funny&#13;
&#13;
CARTOONS and&#13;
&#13;
while we are having a good laugh we will keep our eyes&#13;
open and learn where to do business, for we know they are&#13;
the best business men who gave The Maroon these&#13;
&#13;
ADS.&#13;
&#13;
�ARTISTIC POSING, COURTEOUS TREATMENT&#13;
PERFECT APPOINTMENTS&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
HONEST PRICES&#13;
ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD HAVE YOUR&#13;
&#13;
Photographs&#13;
-TAKEN&#13;
&#13;
AT-&#13;
&#13;
Studio,&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
�DON'T IMAGINE THAT&#13;
BECAUSE THIS IS A BIG&#13;
BANK IT DOES NOT WANT&#13;
SMALL ACCOUNTS.&#13;
Deposits in any amount from&#13;
&#13;
$1 Up&#13;
&#13;
4%&#13;
&#13;
are accepted and interest&#13;
paid at the rate of&#13;
Compounded Semi-Annually&#13;
&#13;
Banking Hours:&#13;
8 to 5 p. m . except Saturdays until 9 p. m .&#13;
Your car s tops at.our corner.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
( SAVINGS DEPT .)&#13;
To y BLOC K, S . E . CoR . 4TH AND JACKSON STS .&#13;
&#13;
ALL WE ASK&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON&#13;
&#13;
C. E. FOGELQUIST&#13;
&#13;
G.D. Hanson CO.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
and consider quality and price, all we ask is an&#13;
inspection and pricing of our stock.&#13;
SEE US FOR&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds, Watches, .Jewelry and Optical Goods&#13;
&#13;
J. FLECKENSTEIN &amp; CO.&#13;
PHONE 956.&#13;
&#13;
Let Us Do Your&#13;
Watch Repairing · 406 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
Tailors,&#13;
&#13;
Clothiers,&#13;
&#13;
hatters&#13;
&#13;
, and&#13;
&#13;
Men's furnishers&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCHOOL&#13;
( CHICAGO MEDICAL COLLEGE )&#13;
&#13;
N. S. DAVIS, JR., A.M., M.D., DEAN.&#13;
&#13;
Buildings and Equipment New.&#13;
Clinical Opportunities Unequalled.&#13;
Four hospitals in affiliation, with 800 beds.&#13;
Dispensary treats 50,000 patients annually.&#13;
&#13;
Ward walks daily for seniors.&#13;
Clinical teaching in every year.&#13;
The recognized leader in medical education.&#13;
For circulars and information, address&#13;
&#13;
DR. ARTHUR R. EDWARDS,&#13;
2431&#13;
&#13;
DEARBORN&#13;
&#13;
SECRETARY,&#13;
&#13;
STREET, CHICAGO.&#13;
&#13;
�The People's Savings Bank&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
F. W . KEMP&#13;
DR. WM. JEPSON&#13;
GEORGE JEPSON&#13;
F. L. WIRICK&#13;
JOHN G. SHUMAKER&#13;
HOMER A. MILLER&#13;
A. T. BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
4%&#13;
&#13;
Interest on Deposits&#13;
SMALL BANKS FREE.&#13;
&#13;
DON'T F'AIL TO&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
SHUMAKER BROS.&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
Telephon e 820-LI.&#13;
&#13;
Dentist&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
A Dean Co&#13;
&#13;
Have been selling&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Pianos, Organs&#13;
and all kinds of Musical Goods to the people of&#13;
Sioux City and vicinity for more than 20 years. We&#13;
have the most complete Music House in the middle&#13;
West, with Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota as a&#13;
field. We sell only such instruments as we can conscientiously recommend and guarantee. All goods&#13;
marked in plain figures. We make a specialty of&#13;
selling direct to the person who uses the instrument,&#13;
naming lowest prices-cutting off expenses of agents&#13;
and canvassers-Correspondence solicited&#13;
&#13;
Rederich &amp; De Walt,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Property and&#13;
Fire Insurance&#13;
410 Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
BUYING A PIANO&#13;
&#13;
609 Fourth Street,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
on Morningside see&#13;
&#13;
Office with Dr. H anchette,&#13;
3o6 a nd 306 1/2&#13;
Toy Building.&#13;
&#13;
Buy from first hands&#13;
and save Commission.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. STEWART, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
A. M. Jackson &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 503.&#13;
&#13;
LITTLE GEM&#13;
BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PETERS' PARK,&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
�THE SUN CROWNED HILLS OF MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
WORDS BY A. R . TOOTHAKER.&#13;
&#13;
Where&#13;
Where&#13;
When&#13;
&#13;
•oa.&#13;
&#13;
Morn's&#13;
first&#13;
early&#13;
moonlight&#13;
silv'ry&#13;
drifting down Life's&#13;
&#13;
Chorus-&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC BY ESSIE CREWDSON&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
bill&#13;
tops&#13;
deck&#13;
in&#13;
radiant&#13;
sheen,&#13;
o·er&#13;
shady&#13;
slopes,&#13;
In&#13;
deep&#13;
ravines'&#13;
comes to&#13;
leave&#13;
these&#13;
sun-crowned hills,&#13;
&#13;
golden&#13;
gently&#13;
changing&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
College,&#13;
&#13;
mother&#13;
&#13;
fair,&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
always&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
blessings&#13;
&#13;
-:___,&#13;
1 it&#13;
last fading&#13;
&#13;
light,&#13;
Riverside,&#13;
fostering&#13;
&#13;
their&#13;
waft&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
care,&#13;
&#13;
where · Aurora's&#13;
And&#13;
Floyd's&#13;
Where brave&#13;
&#13;
full&#13;
&#13;
shaft&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
undergrads&#13;
the&#13;
undergrads&#13;
returning&#13;
will&#13;
&#13;
temples&#13;
crown&#13;
with&#13;
halos&#13;
bright,&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
ebbing&#13;
tide.&#13;
gently&#13;
the&#13;
world&#13;
burdens&#13;
o!&#13;
to&#13;
share,&#13;
&#13;
their&#13;
&#13;
orbed&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
bill&#13;
&#13;
crowned&#13;
&#13;
hills&#13;
&#13;
willin&amp;&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
share,&#13;
&#13;
College,&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
teachings&#13;
&#13;
mother&#13;
&#13;
so&#13;
&#13;
we'll&#13;
&#13;
cherish,&#13;
&#13;
dear.&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
halls&#13;
&#13;
name&#13;
&#13;
and'&#13;
&#13;
we'll&#13;
&#13;
revere&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
courts&#13;
&#13;
�WHO?&#13;
&#13;
WM. H. BECK&#13;
The SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Clay, Robinson &amp; Co.&#13;
My Specialty is the Sale of&#13;
FINE DIAMONDS,&#13;
GOOD WATCHES,&#13;
SILVERWARE and CUT GLASS.&#13;
&#13;
WHAT?&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
School, College and Class Pins and Emblems.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
&#13;
LAVELLE &amp; HOGAN&#13;
PLUMBING&#13;
&#13;
WHERE?&#13;
&#13;
GAS FITTING&#13;
STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING&#13;
&#13;
Estimates Cheerfully Given. Gas Fixtures a Specialty.&#13;
Phone 822-L.&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH OMAHA&#13;
513&#13;
&#13;
KANSAS CITY&#13;
&#13;
SO. ST. JOSEPH&#13;
&#13;
DENVER&#13;
&#13;
FIFTH&#13;
&#13;
STREET&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�A New Stock of&#13;
&#13;
SHOES&#13;
&#13;
at Very Low Prices&#13;
&#13;
OR&#13;
&#13;
FREE SHOES&#13;
IF&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
BUY&#13;
&#13;
Clothing, Hats, Shirts&#13;
and Furnishings&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
BIG STORE----BIG NEW STOCK&#13;
&#13;
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
G ETTI NG RICH&#13;
Some folks are getting rich, and, apparently, with great ease.&#13;
Do you know their plan ? In many instances here it is: They&#13;
commenced by laying aside a fixed portion of their income, this&#13;
they deposited regularly in our savings baok, where it was allowed&#13;
to accumulate. Are you working along this line ?&#13;
No deposit .too small and none too large to make a beginning with.&#13;
We accept deposits by mail on the same terms as if made&#13;
in person.&#13;
&#13;
4%&#13;
&#13;
A LL&#13;
KINDS&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
COAL&#13;
ST EAM&#13;
COAL&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Specialty.&#13;
&#13;
Allow ed on any amount.&#13;
Compounded Half Yearly .&#13;
WHOLESALE&#13;
&#13;
Your Account Invited.&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK,&#13;
S IOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
ONLY.&#13;
&#13;
WR I T E&#13;
&#13;
U S FOR PRICES,&#13;
&#13;
THE BROWN COAL Co. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
PRINTERY&#13;
MOSSMAN &amp; GILBERT, Proprietors&#13;
&#13;
Seymour Studio&#13;
ALWAYS THE LATEST&#13;
&#13;
CHI LDREN A S PECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
407 Fourth&#13;
&#13;
Street&#13;
&#13;
NEAT BOOKLETS&#13;
LEAFLETS&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
WEDDING STATIONERY&#13;
OFFICE STATIONERY&#13;
FANCY STATIONERY&#13;
POSTERS BLANKS ETC.&#13;
&#13;
LET US FIGURE ON YOUR WORK,&#13;
WE WILL PLEASE YOU&#13;
&#13;
�To those who know TYPEWRITERS and the value of a dollar&#13;
&#13;
The Chicago&#13;
&#13;
It has established a higher "standard" at a lower price.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Writing&#13;
&#13;
94-96 WENDELL STREET&#13;
&#13;
Our printed matter tells how.&#13;
&#13;
MACHINE CO.&#13;
CHICAGO, U. S. A&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
�Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
C. L. CRAIGHEAD, CATTLE&#13;
T. DEALTRY,&#13;
&#13;
SALESMAN&#13;
&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
STRAUB BROTHERS,&#13;
&#13;
Dentists&#13;
WOOD BROS.&#13;
&#13;
WOOD BROS.&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
PHONE NO. 704-J.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH OMAHA&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHED&#13;
&#13;
JAMES R . WOOD&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
E . WOOD,&#13;
&#13;
1867&#13;
&#13;
R . NASH&#13;
&#13;
CATTLE SALESMAN&#13;
&#13;
WALTER WOOD,&#13;
CATTLE. SALE SMAN AND MANAG ER&#13;
&#13;
202 and 203 BROWN BLOCK,&#13;
CORNER FOURTH and NEBRASKA STREETS&#13;
&#13;
�FRANK C. WAPLES&#13;
Stenographer and Bookkeeper&#13;
Castana Savings Bank&#13;
Castana, I o wa&#13;
&#13;
MISS PHOEBE MULLEN&#13;
Stenographer County Attorney&#13;
O' Neill, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
STENOGRAPHER AND BOOKKEEPER&#13;
THE COMMERCIAL MUTUAL FIRE ASSOCIATION&#13;
MITCHELL, S. 0.&#13;
&#13;
I cannot say t oo tnuch for Brown's Business College, as I received m y business education in this&#13;
school, and Mr. Brown secured tny prese nt position for me.&#13;
MISS ETHEL SMITH.&#13;
&#13;
MISS LUCILE BATES&#13;
Aberdeen, South Dakota, May 27, 1903.&#13;
Pres. G. W. Brown, Jr., Sioux City, Iowa:&#13;
Dear Sir-I h ave never t o regret the time I spent in&#13;
your college last year. As a r esult I have a perman ent and&#13;
good-payin g position with the MEYER L AND COMPANY, of&#13;
Aberdeen, S. D. This is owing t o the tho rough instruction&#13;
I r eceived at your school in the Business Course.&#13;
Wis hing you continued success, I am,&#13;
Your former student,&#13;
LUCILE BATES.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN'S BUSINESS COLLEGE,&#13;
SIOUX CIT Y, IOWA.&#13;
THE OLDEST, LARGEST AND MOST SUCCESSFUL PRIVA TE COMMERCIAL SCHOOL IN&#13;
THE NORTHWEST. = = = = = = = = = = = = = == =&#13;
&#13;
�Security National Bank,&#13;
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY.&#13;
&#13;
Capital&#13;
Profits&#13;
Deposits&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
1904&#13;
&#13;
1883&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM GORDON,&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
$250,000&#13;
110,000&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
&#13;
$2,200,000&#13;
&#13;
Man&#13;
&#13;
SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS AND PROM ISE SATISFACTORY TREATMENT.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUILDING&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
C. W. BRITTON , Asst. Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
T. A. BLACK , Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
L. WR IGHT , Vice President.&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCE:&#13;
&#13;
ANY BANK IN SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
�LOST&#13;
&#13;
Somewhere between sunrise and&#13;
sunset two golden hours, each set&#13;
with sixty diamond minutes; no reward is offered for they are lost&#13;
forever.&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS.&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
&#13;
WE CARRY ONE OF THE MOST COMPLETE LINES OF&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds, Watches, /jewelry and Silverware&#13;
IN THE CITY.&#13;
&#13;
BASE BALL&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Jeweler.&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
ALF • WISSING&#13;
&#13;
624 FOURTH STREET,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
The Dependable&#13;
Dry Goods House&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC&#13;
&#13;
GOODS&#13;
BICYCLES&#13;
&#13;
GUNS&#13;
&#13;
AMMUNITION&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN &amp; CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
MAIL&#13;
&#13;
ORDERS&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SPECIALTY .&#13;
&#13;
DOG FURNISHINGS&#13;
&#13;
408 Pearl Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�THE MERCHANTS&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
A GENERAL&#13;
&#13;
BANKING BUSINESS&#13;
TRANSACTED.&#13;
&#13;
Individual, Firm and Bank Accounts Solicited.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
GEO. P. DAY, Cashier.&#13;
E.W. RICE, President.&#13;
G. N. SW AN, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
E. B. SPALDING, Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Mystic Milling Company&#13;
MERCHANT&#13;
&#13;
MILLERS&#13;
MANUFACTURERS&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
EXPORTERS&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Flour ·and Feed&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTED:&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
LONDON&#13;
&#13;
�YOUR EDUCATION&#13;
IS NOT COMPLETE UNTIL YOU HAVE TAKEN A&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS . COURSE&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
BEST&#13;
&#13;
PLACE&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
DO&#13;
&#13;
THIS&#13;
&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
National Business Training School,&#13;
PENMANSHIP, BOOKKEEPING, MOSHER SHORTHAND,&#13;
TYPEWRITING, TELEGRAPHY, ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING,&#13;
PREPARATORY and NORMAL COURSES.&#13;
INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION. Enter any day. No theory work, but all practical business. More than&#13;
students placed in good situations last year. We do not guarantee situations, but we guarantee satisfaction when the student does his part. Tuition reasonable. Text books free. Write for information.&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
ADDRESS :&#13;
&#13;
W . A. BARRETT, President.&#13;
H. E. REISTER, Secy. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
N. B. T. SCHOOL,&#13;
THIRD FLOOR UNION DEPOT,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
�If it is a Typewriter you are Looking for, do not fail to examine the&#13;
&#13;
Blickensderfer&#13;
- - - Before Making a Decision. - - FOR&#13;
&#13;
AN&#13;
&#13;
ALL&#13;
&#13;
AROUND MACHINE,&#13;
&#13;
IT&#13;
&#13;
HAS&#13;
&#13;
NOT&#13;
&#13;
AN EQUAL.&#13;
&#13;
NOTE THE FEATURES:&#13;
&#13;
Visible writing, interchangeable type, perfect alignment at all times, direct inking from rolls, rather than&#13;
ribbons, being better and cheaper, simplicity of construction and ease of operation, portability,&#13;
and low price, while the quality of work cannot be surpassed by any $100 machine on the market.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
POSTAL&#13;
&#13;
WILL BRING&#13;
&#13;
ALL NEEDED&#13;
&#13;
HARGER &amp;&#13;
GENERAL AGENTS,&#13;
&#13;
INFORMATION .&#13;
&#13;
BLISH,&#13;
DUBUQUE, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
�Morningside Real Estate Office&#13;
Have FOR SALE a Good List of CHOICE RESIDENCES&#13;
Sizes, Prices and Locations to Suit You,&#13;
We deal In FARM LANDS in Iowa, Nebraska and the Dakotas.&#13;
&#13;
No trouble to show property.&#13;
&#13;
Correspondence solicited.&#13;
&#13;
CUSHMAN &amp; MILLER, Peters&#13;
&#13;
Park, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
AN ACCURATE KNOWLEDGE&#13;
of words(including those of most&#13;
&#13;
recent origin), noted people,&#13;
geographical terms, persons and&#13;
&#13;
WEBSTER'S&#13;
INTERNATIONAL&#13;
DICTIONARY&#13;
T h e One Grea t A u t h ority&#13;
of the Government, the Courts,&#13;
the Schools,· and the Englishspeaking World. Get t h e Best&#13;
&#13;
Let Us Send You Free&#13;
A Test In Pronunciation "&#13;
Also an Illustrated Pamphlet.&#13;
&#13;
G &amp; C MERRIAM CO., Publishers,&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Springfield, Mass., U.S. A&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
�R. H. Darling&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
Bookman&#13;
OUR SPECIALTIES ARE:&#13;
College Text Books at publishers wholesale&#13;
list price.&#13;
Moore's Non-Leakable Fountain Pen.&#13;
Spalding's Athletic Goods.&#13;
The best ten cent Ice Cream Soda in the city.&#13;
&#13;
IT IS OUR POLICY TO SUPPLY&#13;
ALL THE NEEDS OF A STUDENT&#13;
AT THE LOWEST PRICES COMPATIBLE WITH A HIGH STANDARD OF GOODS•&#13;
&#13;
�GO&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Studio Grand&#13;
513 FOURTH STREET&#13;
FOR YOUR LATEST AND UP- TO-DATE&#13;
&#13;
Photos&#13;
NEWLY REMODELED AND FITTED&#13;
THROUGHOUT, AND WE ARE READY TO&#13;
TURN OUT PHOTOS CHEAPER AND&#13;
BETTER THAN EVE R BEFORE.&#13;
ALL&#13;
WORK GUARANTEED.&#13;
WE HAVE ALL NEGATIVES FOR TEN&#13;
BACK, RETAINED FOR FUTURE ORDERS.&#13;
&#13;
YEARS&#13;
&#13;
Respectfully yours,&#13;
&#13;
Coates &amp; Hollenbeck.&#13;
&#13;
�co.,&#13;
&#13;
UNION PRINTING&#13;
158 - 164 FIFTH STREET,&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
"IF IT CAN BE DONE&#13;
&#13;
DROP US A LINE.&#13;
&#13;
IN A PRINT - SHOP,&#13;
WE CAN DO IT."&#13;
&#13;
We Answer All Communications&#13;
Promptly.&#13;
We have the&#13;
&#13;
Best of Machinery,&#13;
&#13;
WE HAVE SPECIAL FACILITIES FOR TURNING OUT&#13;
&#13;
''We Print''&#13;
&#13;
College Annuals&#13;
ON&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
SHORT&#13;
WORK&#13;
&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
&#13;
CANNOT BE&#13;
&#13;
EXCELLED.&#13;
&#13;
�������</text>
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              <text>JUNIOR ANNUAL,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
VOL. III.&#13;
EDITED AND PUBLISH ED BY THE CLASS OF 1905.&#13;
&#13;
This Book&#13;
IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Mitchell,&#13;
&#13;
D. D.&#13;
&#13;
PRINT Of"&#13;
&#13;
UNION&#13;
&#13;
PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
CO.,&#13;
&#13;
158-164&#13;
&#13;
FIFTH&#13;
&#13;
STREET ,&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Bennett Mitchell&#13;
&#13;
IF&#13;
&#13;
THERE is anyone who could be taken as an ideal Christian,&#13;
&#13;
it is Rev. Bennett Mitchell, D. D. His consistent life has&#13;
been an inspiration to all. His unassuming manner may well be&#13;
coveted, and his sound judgment sought by young people at the&#13;
crises in their lives.&#13;
His life has been one crowded with labors for the Methodist&#13;
Episcopal Church. He entered the ministry in 1854, joining the&#13;
Iowa Conference the following year. His influence in his ministry&#13;
has been felt through four different Conferences of Iowa. He has&#13;
been a member of Northwest Iowa Conference for nearly thirtythree years, has served four terms as Presiding Elder and been&#13;
elected five times to General Conference. He was a member of&#13;
the Commission that organized Morningside College, and has&#13;
continually been president of the Board of Trustees since that&#13;
time. The labors of this man for the college have been untiring,&#13;
and the students and friends recognize in him one of her truest&#13;
friends.&#13;
&#13;
BENNETT MITCHELL, D . D .&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Mitchell is the senior active member of the Northwest&#13;
Iowa Conference. He was born in Indiana, February 18th, 1832,&#13;
being therefore seventy-two years of age. He has served over&#13;
fifty-one years in active ministry.&#13;
&#13;
MAIN HALL.&#13;
&#13;
NORTH&#13;
&#13;
HALL.&#13;
&#13;
Introduction&#13;
We, THE JUNIOR CLASS OF MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE,&#13;
have labored long and earnestly to prepare an Annual that would be an honor to the Class&#13;
and a credit to the institution we represent While we realize that the production&#13;
is not as good as we might wish it to be, we also feel that we do not owe an apology&#13;
because it is not better.&#13;
&#13;
But we sincerely ask that our fellow students, our&#13;
&#13;
Faculty and the friends of the college rejoice with us that it is as good as it is.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
believe that there has been an honest effort in our part, and that we&#13;
have been just in revealing the life of the school.&#13;
&#13;
Your appreciation of our effort&#13;
&#13;
and work will be shown by the reception you give this volume.&#13;
We believe that we have tried to deal fairly with all and hope that we have&#13;
added strength to our already warm friendship.&#13;
&#13;
College History&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
College first received&#13;
&#13;
its name in&#13;
September, 1895. The institution, however,&#13;
came into existence as the University of the Northwest&#13;
in 1890. The great Northwest had been developing&#13;
very rapidly for the preceding fifteen years. The population of Sioux City had increased from 10,000 in 1880&#13;
to nearly 40,000 in 1890. Progress had been so rapid&#13;
that to the people of Sioux City all things seemed possible. The city was filled with active and aggressive&#13;
business men, and 'doing things in the Sioux City way,'&#13;
and 'getting a Sioux City move on you,' were synonyms&#13;
that traveled beyond the borders of the state. So it&#13;
came that the idea of a great university that would add&#13;
to the renown of the city was conceived.&#13;
The prospectus was a modest bit of advertising,&#13;
although it called attention to the fact that the university&#13;
consisted of a College of Liberal Arts, a College of&#13;
Didactics, a College of Medicine, a College of Law, a&#13;
College of Commerce, a Conservatory of Music a Department of Painting and a Preparatory Department.&#13;
The University was not strictly a Methodist school,&#13;
although it was under the patronage of that church.&#13;
Most of the departments had quarters down in the&#13;
city. The first-class sessions of the College of Liberal&#13;
Arts were held in Grace Church, then . recently com*Taken from the "Blueand White."&#13;
&#13;
pleted. But the dark days of the institution came when&#13;
its fate hung in the balance.&#13;
These are sometimes&#13;
referred to as the ' heroic days'. The students, worked&#13;
on the Campus, made roads, and planted trees. The&#13;
faculty was burdened with paying heavy bills from light&#13;
receipts, and trying to live on the remainder. A spirit&#13;
of uncertainty pervaded the school. As one of the students expressed it, 'We didn't know when we left school&#13;
one day, whether there would be any school to go to the&#13;
next.' The different colleges separated, some to cease&#13;
work, some to become separate institutions. The Sioux&#13;
City Medical College is one of the departments that&#13;
continued its work.&#13;
At this juncture the grounds and building at Morningside were purchased by the Northwest Iowa Conference of the M. E. Church, the name changed to Morningside College and Rev. G. W. Carr was made the&#13;
president. He was appointed some time during the fall&#13;
of 1894 and served until June 1897. We do not know&#13;
just how many students were enrolled during the.first&#13;
year of the College, as the number was not given in the&#13;
catalogue at the close of that year. One hundred and&#13;
eighty-seven were enrolled in the second year. On Commencement Day of this year, Dr. W. S. Lewis was installed as president. During the seven years since that&#13;
time the school has grown rapidly, so that the enrollment&#13;
for the present year will exceed six hundred. Aside&#13;
from the increase in numbers of students, it has increased&#13;
its buildings, its equipment and its faculty, and is eagerly&#13;
looking forward to the day when it will be the leading&#13;
educational institution of the Northwest."&#13;
&#13;
VIEW&#13;
&#13;
OF CAMPUS.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Maroon Staff&#13;
&#13;
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, - Geo. Poppenheimer&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY, - - Cora Lockin, Chairman&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS MANAGER, - Ralph E. Root&#13;
&#13;
PRODUCTIONS&#13;
Estella Harding&#13;
Mary Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Poppenheimer&#13;
CENSOR BOARD, - Ralph E. Root&#13;
( Estella Harding&#13;
ASST. BUSINESS&#13;
MANAGERS&#13;
&#13;
ASST. EDITORS&#13;
&#13;
C. E. Harding&#13;
Carl W . .Maynard&#13;
Rena Bowker&#13;
Estella Harding&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
Carrie Brown&#13;
Myrtle Cook&#13;
&#13;
JOKES&#13;
Norman McCay&#13;
Vincent DuBois&#13;
&#13;
HISTORICAL, - Davis C. Hall, Chairman&#13;
SOCIETIES&#13;
CLASSES, Clara Killam&#13;
ASSOCIATIONS Maude Cling. FACULTY, Anna Goodell&#13;
ALUMNI, S. D. Stulkin&#13;
CLUBS&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC,&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETICS, - -&#13;
&#13;
Rena Bowker&#13;
Anna Hollingsworth&#13;
Florence Davidson&#13;
D. L. Young&#13;
Alice Marsh&#13;
&#13;
RENA N. BOWKER.&#13;
Birth unimportant. Death not yet evident. Modesty and innocent love of pleasure&#13;
temper a serious vein which is never entirely&#13;
underneath the surface. Could you in her&#13;
photograph get a glimpse of her noble ideals&#13;
you might then picture to yourself more accurately this piece of fun-loving seriousness.&#13;
It is inconceivable to imagine her ever&#13;
becoming such a thing as a "New Woman"&#13;
or even an old one. In regard to the former&#13;
she's not enough of a scientific old maid to&#13;
wield a Womans' Club; although in an emergency case she might a stove poker.&#13;
As for the latter, old age, she's far from&#13;
that. How far, I can't say. Too cheerful&#13;
and active to become a drone, and leads&#13;
easier than she will be lead.&#13;
&#13;
Entered Morningside College in the fall&#13;
of 1901. Has been faithful; never meddles&#13;
with the affairs of others; has a strong personality; is a lover of the fairer sex and there&#13;
are some indications that h e will be captured.&#13;
He is now assistant in the Chemistry department.&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCAY.&#13;
&#13;
MYRTILLA MAE COOK.&#13;
&#13;
Our beloved president. A .Canadian by&#13;
birth; an American by adoption; a minister&#13;
by profession. Came to Morningside in '96,&#13;
a sub-prep. Returned to Canada once, bringng back with him a bonnie Canadian lassie;&#13;
hence the only Junior who has tasted the&#13;
joys of matrimony.&#13;
Working his way by&#13;
means of his mouth. Accomplished in oratory and debate. Of lovable disposition,&#13;
a&#13;
natural peacemaker. Of strong character, a&#13;
natural leader. Of amiable nature, as proven&#13;
by his refusal to publish jokes on the faculty.&#13;
Believes in : ethodism and Othonianism. Is&#13;
M&#13;
bound to make his presence felt in the world.&#13;
&#13;
Born and raised at Medicine Lodge, Kansas, but denounces the faith of both Jerry&#13;
Simpson and Carrie Nation. Believes the&#13;
world was made for girls. Is a popular&#13;
writer, musician and social leader. Member&#13;
of the Zetalethean Society. Assistant in the&#13;
Biological Laboratory. So far in life she has&#13;
accomplished every undertaking and "the&#13;
maid her charms with inward greatness&#13;
unaffected mind." Is too valuable a g irl to&#13;
remain long a Cook.&#13;
Will always bring&#13;
honor to the class of 1905. For her future&#13;
watch the stars of the coming century.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. McCARTHY.&#13;
&#13;
ESTELLA HARDING.&#13;
Born on the southeast corner of section&#13;
one, Goewey' Township, Osceola County,&#13;
Iowa, U. S. A. When? 0, she's not so antedeluvia n as she might be. A special elocutor.&#13;
Not a member of the cloak room class,-but&#13;
what about the Hall?&#13;
CHARACTER1STICS-Jolly, good natured,&#13;
fond of dish washing, good fudge maker,&#13;
fancy cooker, in general is a teetotaler, hates&#13;
cats and dogs and lacks all those qualities&#13;
which go to make up a single spinster.&#13;
APPEARANCE - Tall, slender, graceful,&#13;
and as handsome as a picture hat.&#13;
Hestella Arding his not Henglish, but er&#13;
prospects hare Hall good.&#13;
&#13;
DAVIS C. HALL.&#13;
Calm and graceful as the lean elm, jolly&#13;
as a ' lark, yet serious as a November sky.&#13;
Tall, slim, Jong features and arms, dark hair,&#13;
well- combed back (and head ); a hazel grey&#13;
eye on either side (in fact on both) of a Roman nose, a chin clear cut and medium strong.&#13;
A gentleman, is composed of honesty, energy,&#13;
backbone and propriety, finished with a&#13;
touch of sympathy and courtesy. He has&#13;
won distinction as an orator and is a leader&#13;
in social circles. Such is the Hall of fame.&#13;
&#13;
MR. E. H. HULSER.&#13;
&#13;
MAUDE KLING.&#13;
&#13;
A man of marked ability; born of noble&#13;
ancestry during the prosperous times of the&#13;
seventies. His chief ambition is to make&#13;
himself felt in the world. Has won some&#13;
distinction as a debater and an orator. Believes in woman and expects to be an ideal&#13;
husband. As a business man he is second to&#13;
none. Is a hard worker and believes in&#13;
Othonianism. His college life has been one&#13;
full of to il and battles, but he has crowned&#13;
himself with his success.&#13;
&#13;
Mason City-place of birth.&#13;
Age-same as usual for one of her years.&#13;
U will know her hy her audible smiles.&#13;
Dwells by the Big Muddy at the present date.&#13;
Early always at her classes.&#13;
&#13;
Kind to creatures great and small.&#13;
Little in stature, mighty on her understanding&#13;
Industrious, faithful, good and true .&#13;
No one knows all her virtues.&#13;
Gain her acquaintance, all.&#13;
&#13;
ALICE MARSH.&#13;
&#13;
EARL&#13;
&#13;
DAVID WESLEY&#13;
HANNA.&#13;
&#13;
Born on a night when one of the greatest&#13;
blizzards that has visited northern Iowa during the past forty years, swept over the&#13;
prairies of Osceola County.&#13;
Her disposition, true to the lone birth-star&#13;
of that stormy night, has ever sought the&#13;
tempestuous, in love. In childhood given to&#13;
tears, races with boys of her block, and&#13;
strenuous hater of the camera. As a college&#13;
Junior, she affects a high pompadour, is fond&#13;
of" a good time" and believes in the Zets."&#13;
&#13;
Native of the state of Iowa, whether a&#13;
relative of Marcus Hanna is not known. Began to preach the gospel in Nebraska. Attended Cornell in 1900; in 1901 came to Morningside; helped to organize the Adelphian&#13;
Literary Society; was a member of the first&#13;
Academy Inter-Society Debate Team. Since&#13;
entering the college, his life has been that&#13;
of the average student.&#13;
&#13;
SIMON D. STULKEN.&#13;
&#13;
MARY GILBERT.&#13;
&#13;
He came to Northwest Iowa from the Sun&#13;
Flower state during the trying times of&#13;
Grover Cleveland's Administration. As an&#13;
ambitious youth he struggled some years&#13;
with varying fortunes, finally entering the&#13;
Academy of Morningside College during the&#13;
struggling days of North Hall. He is a. hero&#13;
of the old days, and delights in relating their&#13;
experiences. He has won distinction as an&#13;
original thinker, and has contributed to&#13;
philosophy a unique definition of the soul,&#13;
''A % vacuum with an echo in it."&#13;
&#13;
Product of Iowa soil.&#13;
Descendant of John Bull, also a connection of all the Gilberts of bygone days and&#13;
sister of Cyrus L. of the present day.&#13;
Not matrimonially inclined because of&#13;
her dislike of housework but will accept (the&#13;
inevitable when Fate shall decree.&#13;
Particular and persevering, a hard working student, never does anything by halves.&#13;
If you ever come within four miles of&#13;
Larrabee,-stop-at Mary Giibert's. She is&#13;
worthy of your further acquaintance.&#13;
&#13;
"&#13;
&#13;
FLORENCE BOOTH&#13;
DAVIDSON.&#13;
No relation to Davidson Bros. Some h ave&#13;
said she was born to rule. Those who h ave&#13;
met her charm s believe it, for "Her&#13;
love was&#13;
sought I do aver by twenty beaux or more."&#13;
Popular reader and leader in college affairs.&#13;
1&#13;
Member o f the Zetale thean Society. I n struct·&#13;
or in Ladies' Gymnasium. Elocution graduate in 1902. Vocal s tude nt in Con servato ry.&#13;
Member of the First Presbyterian c h oir,&#13;
Sioux City. Uses o nly o n e bad word, " Jinks"&#13;
Knows many m ore. She was happy when&#13;
she becam e a Junior and we are proud of&#13;
her.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE J. POPPENHEIMER.&#13;
"Lest we forget, lest we forget. 11&#13;
Of -German ancestry, born n ear Manis tee,&#13;
Michigan. When two years old moved to&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Life near the Indians created&#13;
within him an overpowering ambitio n to become a grea t c hief. Admires women. Sym pathetic and stron g in c h a racter. Won d is·&#13;
tinctions in athletics a nd o rato ry. Hasn't an&#13;
e nemy in the world. Is a staunch Oth o nian.&#13;
In '96&#13;
entered Morningside, a Junior Prep. t o&#13;
study for the ministry. Worked his way&#13;
through college. In 1903 his early ambitions&#13;
were realized and he became a great chief of&#13;
a great cause- the h o n o r ed Editor in Chief o f&#13;
the "Maroon" f 1905&#13;
o&#13;
&#13;
CORALlNN LOCKIN.&#13;
R. E. ROOT.&#13;
Naturally inquis itive- in fact born in the&#13;
s tate "show m e. ·' kissed in earliest youth&#13;
by the sun s rays, his lock s are of the auburn&#13;
hue. Fair of face an d com e ly of form 1 richly e n dowed with talents that m a k e for greatuess. Inspired by a love of truth, he has been&#13;
engaged several yea rs in the acquisition of an&#13;
education (a nd within one year's time will&#13;
take unto himself his Bachelor degree.) In&#13;
youth he dreamed of perpetual motion now&#13;
I&#13;
he is perpetualily on the move. A man,&#13;
thoughtful, scholastic, ready with penand&#13;
has recognized business ability.&#13;
&#13;
In Cherokee County she was born and reared.&#13;
Not without sound brains as might have bee n&#13;
feared,&#13;
But nature did "Lockin " her make up, good&#13;
sense&#13;
And she keeps&#13;
within bounds without any&#13;
&#13;
In stature Miss Cora's of medium size&#13;
With abundant brown h air and lightish blue&#13;
eyes.&#13;
She knows good from eviland sure shuns the&#13;
latter&#13;
And when s h e must needs decide o n a matter&#13;
She knows when to say yea and when to say&#13;
nay&#13;
And opes not her mouth till she knows what&#13;
to say.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1905.&#13;
Officers:&#13;
G. J . :POPPENHEIMER, Vice-Pres.&#13;
C. E. HARDING, Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCAY, President.&#13;
ANNA L. HOLLINGSWORTH, Secy.&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Colorrs&#13;
&#13;
OLD GOLD and MAROON .&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
Emblem&#13;
&#13;
" DIG."&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
S-s-s Boom!&#13;
MR. W.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
sure of success.&#13;
&#13;
19 !&#13;
&#13;
19 !&#13;
&#13;
1905 !&#13;
&#13;
Class Roll&#13;
&#13;
MORGAN.&#13;
&#13;
Bor n so m e wh e re in England;&#13;
h o m e n o w in I owa; lives n ear a&#13;
Ma r s h , b ut is al ways o n h igh&#13;
g ro und. His lo ve fo r learn in g&#13;
induce d him to com e to Mornin gside a nd p ursue th e study o f&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
His desire is to become a profession a l c h e mist . Mr.&#13;
Morgan h as la b o red h a rd a n d is&#13;
&#13;
Rive !&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN McCA Y&#13;
ANNA L. HOLLINGSWORTH .&#13;
G. J. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
C. E. HARDING&#13;
RENA BOWKER&#13;
MYRTLE COOK&#13;
MARY GILBERT&#13;
CARL W. MAYNARD&#13;
&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
J . W . MORGAN&#13;
ANNA GOODALL&#13;
D. L. YOUNG&#13;
E. H . HULSER&#13;
CARRIE BROWN&#13;
DAVIS C. HALL&#13;
EARL HANNA&#13;
S. D. STULKIN&#13;
MAUDE KLING&#13;
&#13;
R. E. ROOT&#13;
CORA LOCKIN&#13;
FLORENCE DAVIDSON&#13;
CLARA KILLAM&#13;
VINCENT DU BOIS&#13;
ESTELLA HARDING&#13;
WALDO McCARTHY&#13;
ALICE MARSH&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
Memoriam&#13;
&#13;
M&#13;
&#13;
ABEL SIA was born in Foo Chow, China, November, 1874, and&#13;
&#13;
died in the same city November, 1903. She publicly confessed&#13;
Christ when thirteen years old, and continued in that faith, being perfectly ready to go when God called her to her home.&#13;
At seventeen she graduated from the Methodist Girls' Boarding&#13;
School at Foo Chow. When feeling the need of a better intellectual&#13;
equipment, she spent one year in school in Japan, coming to America&#13;
in 1897, and entered Morningside College. She was a member of the&#13;
class of 1905, an excellent student, and soon won the love and friendship&#13;
of faculty and students. In the three and one half years that she was&#13;
with us, she proved the possibilities of the Chinese people.&#13;
When the news came that she was not, "for God took her," all&#13;
who knew her were stricken with grief. We felt that a most· precious&#13;
jewel had been taken from us. We do ·not understand the mysterious&#13;
hand of God, but we know the influence of her life has given us a better&#13;
opinion and truer idea of the Chinese people.&#13;
&#13;
MABEL SIA.&#13;
&#13;
It is not too much to say, "China, thou mayest well mourn, thou&#13;
hast buried beneath thy sod the noblest woman. Let those who draw&#13;
near to her final resting place tread softly, for the memories of her&#13;
whose body lies crumbling into dust have made sacred the spot where&#13;
thou hast laid her. "&#13;
&#13;
,&#13;
&#13;
BARSALOU&#13;
&#13;
TOOTHAKER&#13;
SIMPSON&#13;
&#13;
HIEBY&#13;
&#13;
GILBERT&#13;
MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
NISSEN&#13;
&#13;
SMYLIE&#13;
&#13;
RUTHVEN&#13;
&#13;
McDOWELL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
WOODFORD&#13;
&#13;
McISAAC&#13;
&#13;
Class History&#13;
'03&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
HISTORY of the Class of '03 properly begins with the fall&#13;
term of 1901, with D. M. Simpson, president, Sophia Hieby,&#13;
secretary, and M. F. McDowell, treasurer.&#13;
The Class was dubbed by the faculty and school authorities the&#13;
"Impetuous Thirteen". No precedents had been formed by preceding classes, and the coast was clear. The originality of the class was&#13;
exercised and they proceeded to blaze the way for Juniors to follow&#13;
in the generations to come.&#13;
It was decided to publish an annual, and the following officers&#13;
were elected: Editor-in-chief, D. M. Simpson; Assistant editors, Ray&#13;
Toothaker and F. E. Mossman. The annual was duly published,&#13;
making its appearance in the month of June. "The Bumble Bee"&#13;
was the literary hit of the season.&#13;
The Class has made good their title and played with the Seniors,&#13;
indulged in contests vs. the entire school, and even dared defend&#13;
Junior dignity on "Campus Day" piling up a score of Preps. as the&#13;
result of a cane rush.&#13;
The "Impetuous" Juniors organized as dignified Seniors in&#13;
September of 1902, with F . E. Mossman, president; Pearl Woodford,&#13;
secretary; and A. G. Ruthven, treasurer.&#13;
The only time the Seniors lost their dignity was on Halloween,&#13;
for when the "Authorities" opened the door to the Senior quarters,&#13;
they saw only the form of the last Senior retreating through the basement window. Chase was made, but no avail.&#13;
The class took an active part in all college interests: the Reporter,&#13;
foot ball, basket ball, debates, and all social events.&#13;
Early in the spring, they donned their caps and gowns, and mingled hard work with many pleasant social events, among which were&#13;
the picnic at Riverside; the Tally-ho ride to the Woodford Farm; the&#13;
&#13;
Junior banquet at Dr. Straubs; and, as a last farewell, the class breakfast on the Campus, Commencement morning, at six o'clock.&#13;
Of all the treat at commencement time, the richest was the Commencement Address "Ulyses," given by Dr. William A. Quayle of&#13;
Kansas City.&#13;
It was with mingled joy and sadness that the class bade farewell&#13;
to their much loved college, and went to take their places in life's&#13;
work.&#13;
F. E. Mossman spent the summer as pastor of the M. E. Church&#13;
at Sergeant Bluff, and at last conference was appointed Financial&#13;
Agent _ Morningside College.&#13;
of&#13;
D. M. Simpson is pursuing his theological course at Evanston.&#13;
Three of the class are still at Morningside:- Sophia Hieby, doing'&#13;
graduate work in German; Mr. Barsalou, instructor in the Normal&#13;
Department at the College; and Lorne Smylie, whose home is at&#13;
Morningside, has been employing his art in the insurance business:&#13;
A. G. Ruthven has an assistantship in the Biological department&#13;
in the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor.&#13;
The class has made a record in different ways. Commencement&#13;
Day M. F. McDowell was married to Loraine Dwight of Sioux City.&#13;
(He is now doing graduate work in the University of Nebraska).&#13;
That suprise was hardly over when we received the announcement&#13;
of the marriage of R. J. McIsaac and Gertrude Gregory. At last report they were enjoying life at Portland, Oregon. At Conference&#13;
time, Rev. Geo. Gilhert took his bride, Lillian Parker Gilbert, to their&#13;
new home, the M. E. Parsonage, at Meriden.&#13;
A. B. Gilbert ably fills the pastorate at Hawarden.&#13;
A. R. Toothaker accepted the position of instructor in Mathematics in the High School of Atlantic, Iowa, where he has also taken part&#13;
in the school athletics.&#13;
Mr. Nissen, the class prodigy, is "growing handsome," as he says,&#13;
in his work as pastor at Barnum.&#13;
Pearl Woodford is Principal in the Lake Mills High School.&#13;
From all reports the class are doing well their different work, and&#13;
though scattered, there still remains that bond of friendship which&#13;
joins the members to each other and to their Alma Mater.&#13;
&#13;
Lines to the Class of '03&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
A. R.&#13;
&#13;
TOOTHAKER, CLASS DAY POET&#13;
&#13;
These parting paths, which us now separate,&#13;
Have been well worn by foot prints of the great.&#13;
And while a feeling like of sadness, seems&#13;
To steal upon our _&#13;
soul, yet still there beams&#13;
&#13;
Dear Classmates, truest friends, we stand today,&#13;
At the many forked branching of a way,&#13;
Which o'er the foot hills of the lower land&#13;
We've traveled side by side and hand in hand.&#13;
&#13;
Within our hearts a greater joy, to see&#13;
The paths lead on to larger victory&#13;
Yet far beyond the farthest driven stake,&#13;
Are regions unexplored, and paths to make,&#13;
&#13;
A pleasant pathway it has been, and sweet&#13;
The memories, that fill with finest wheat&#13;
The storehouse of the mind. 'Tis joy today&#13;
To glance back o'er the ever-upward way.&#13;
&#13;
The avenues by which lost men shall find&#13;
Their true relations to the Master Mind.&#13;
The grandest theme of all philosophy,&#13;
Is to become more like the Diety;&#13;
&#13;
. Indeed this college life's a wondrous world,&#13;
A fairer, brighter ne'er from suns was hurled;&#13;
A grander ne'er was trod by human race,&#13;
Nor courses the deep unfathomed realms of space.&#13;
&#13;
Yet all our gain would be of small account,&#13;
If all remained on learning's pleasant mount,&#13;
Where waters from Pyrean springs e'er flow,&#13;
And Zephyrs from Ambrosial seas e'er blow.&#13;
&#13;
Transcendant with its own inherent light,&#13;
It pierces far the outer world of night;&#13;
A pure Elysian paradise on earth,&#13;
So full of life, of truth, of love, and worth.&#13;
&#13;
From basking in the beams that ever play&#13;
Upon the mount from an eternal day,&#13;
We must return where hang the shades of night,&#13;
To where benighted thousands cry for light.&#13;
&#13;
Altho the way was rough and steep, 'tis true,&#13;
And oft' the summit faded from our view,&#13;
Yet roses by our pathway ever bloomed,&#13;
Whose rich aroma sweet the air perfumed.&#13;
&#13;
To those still in the slough of blind despair,&#13;
And footsore from the rocks of worldly care,&#13;
And turn their eyes unto the higher hills,&#13;
Above those earthly cares and earthly ills.&#13;
&#13;
O Mighty is the work on every hand;&#13;
World wide is now the Macedonian land;&#13;
"Come o'er and help us," ringing still,&#13;
From every living valley, plane and hill.&#13;
&#13;
Such thots, which from a heart of love o'erflow,&#13;
In other lives spring up, and bnd and blow,&#13;
And e'er bring forth a hundred fold, the seed&#13;
That shall the worlds increasing famine feed.&#13;
&#13;
If this broad land we would make great,&#13;
Then larger, greater souls we must create;&#13;
True progress follows not of earthly things,&#13;
But from the very heart of man it springs.&#13;
&#13;
The lives thus lived and truly spent,&#13;
Are to the world a living testament,&#13;
That Justice, Truth and Christ do reign&#13;
Triumphant o'er this wild storm-beaten main.&#13;
&#13;
This Matter's but a plastic element,&#13;
But Mind's dynamic and omnipotent,&#13;
That ever moulds and fashions in this clay,&#13;
True forms of life, of an eternal clay.&#13;
&#13;
Tho in the conflict, oft' we meet defeat,&#13;
Yet Truth and Right know not retreat;&#13;
From this, new strength for every strife we borrow,&#13;
And where the van now camps, we'll camp tomorrow.&#13;
&#13;
And yet the mind is servant of the soul,&#13;
That will on thru the ceaseless ages roll;&#13;
And too, it is the heart and not the brain&#13;
That to the grand and lofty cloth attain.&#13;
&#13;
Altho our college days are now to sever,&#13;
May Friendship's ties remain forever.&#13;
May rnem'ry hang within her treasured hall&#13;
An ever cherished portrait of us all.&#13;
&#13;
All is soul that lives 'neath earth or heaven,&#13;
Essence Divine! Soul cannot be riven;&#13;
It lives in stone, on page, in art and song,&#13;
It lives in hearts, with God, in unison.&#13;
&#13;
And now before we step into the world,&#13;
Before we are in Life's swift maelstrom hurled,&#13;
Let us back o'er the closing pathway glance,&#13;
And catch a smile trom each glad countenance.&#13;
&#13;
For Truth itself must reign within the heart,&#13;
&#13;
Let us aside thots of the climbing fling,&#13;
And in a joyous chorus, join and sing&#13;
Of all the glories and the victories won,&#13;
At this the setting of our college sun.&#13;
&#13;
If unto others truth we would impart.&#13;
&#13;
For lofty thots and aims when truly sought,&#13;
In living deeds shall be divinely wrought.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
NORTH&#13;
&#13;
HALL,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY.&#13;
&#13;
The 19th Century is cal led great not onl y beca use of its many marv elous&#13;
inventions and discoveri es but also because of the great men whi ch that&#13;
century called forth . N ew York state was especially favored in b eing able&#13;
to call many of these men h er own. On one of her farms Dr. Wilson Seely&#13;
Lewis, the honored President of Morni ngside College was born and reared.&#13;
H e was one of a large family of children and it was ma inl y th rough his&#13;
own struggles th at h e was enabled to obtain his higher education. He,&#13;
however, had in him the making of a great man and was not afraid to come&#13;
up against discouraging circumstances and early learned the art of surmounting them. By his ow n struggles, Dr. Lewis has bee n brought to a&#13;
position where he can sympathize with the ambitious youths of northw est&#13;
Iowa in their struggles and has already proved to be a great h elp to many.&#13;
H e was ed ucated at St. Lawrence University and experie nce and private study have added very g reatly to his Collegiate Course.&#13;
Dr. Lewis became President of Morningside College in 1897, having&#13;
served nine years pre vious to that time as Principal of Epworth Seminary.&#13;
That school gave him up very reluctant ly and Morningside was the fortunate competitor among several schools for his services.&#13;
Since he has been in Mo rningside, his chief a mb ition has been that the&#13;
College should b e a success in eve ry respect, and to thi s end h e has g iven&#13;
his untiring efforts.&#13;
&#13;
W.&#13;
&#13;
S. LEWIS, A.M., D.D.&#13;
&#13;
Aside from his official capacity Dr. Lewis is a frien d of every studen t&#13;
that enters the College and has a personal interest in each one of them.&#13;
He lea ves the impress of his strong pe rsonality on every one with whom he&#13;
comes in contact.&#13;
&#13;
ENGLISH LITERATURE.&#13;
The year 1902-1903 Miss Helen I. Loveland spent at Oxford&#13;
University in the study of English Literature. Upon her return&#13;
the department was divided, she taking charge of the English&#13;
Literature and Dr. Blue, who had had control of the department during her absence was given charge of the work in&#13;
Eng lish and Bihlical Literature. This division makes possible&#13;
a more extended arrangement of courses in both departments.&#13;
In English Literature four years work are offered, consisting of&#13;
a study of the literary movement in England, of the English&#13;
novel, of Shakespeare and the English drama, the Elizabethean&#13;
Age, Tennyson's works and the Eighteenth Century Literature.&#13;
&#13;
H. I. LOVELAND, A.M.&#13;
&#13;
ENGLISH and BIBLICAL LITERATURE.&#13;
Dr. Leonard A. Blue, Professor of English and Biblical&#13;
Literature, is a graduate (1892) of Cornell College. One year&#13;
was spent in graduate work at the University of Chicago. Later he pursued graduate study as a fellow at the University of&#13;
Pennsylvania, receiving the Ph.D. degree in the spring of 1902.&#13;
He came to Morningside the following fall. Six courses are&#13;
offered in English, including a course in forensics and oral debate and the required oration work in the Junior and Senior&#13;
years. Two courses are offered in Biblical Literature.&#13;
L.A. BLUE, PH,D.&#13;
&#13;
BOTANY.&#13;
For the past two years Robert B. Wylie, Professer of Botany at Morningside, has been pursuing graduate work in botany in Chicago University. During his absence the work has&#13;
been in charge of Professors T. C. Frye and LeRoy H. Harvey.&#13;
The laboratories are well equipped with all necessary apparatus and there is an excellent department library. Fifteen&#13;
courses are offered in the college and seven major students are&#13;
doing more or less original work. About twelve papers have&#13;
been prepared by the department or by the professors and&#13;
have been published in the leading scientific journals. Much&#13;
is due Prof. Wylie and the Department of Botany for our recognition among Eastern Universities.&#13;
&#13;
R. B . WYLIE,&#13;
&#13;
Sc.B.&#13;
&#13;
CHEM ISTRY.&#13;
In the fall of 1900 Prof. Alfred N. Cook took charge of the&#13;
department of chemistry. Under his direction it was organized&#13;
and has been developed to its present high standard. During&#13;
the past year there have been fifteen major students in chemistry with five doing original and advanced work. A number of&#13;
original papers prepared by Dr. Cook and advanced students,&#13;
have been published in state and national journals. Ten courses are offered including original work. The work done is on a&#13;
par with that of any college in the state and the high standard&#13;
of the department as well as its rapid growth si.nce its organization is largely due to the ability and energy of Dr. Cook.&#13;
A. N . COOK, .A.M., PH .D,&#13;
&#13;
PHYSICS.&#13;
The work in physics is under the direction of Prof. J. W.&#13;
Green. Four courses are offered in the College, including a&#13;
year of thesis work open to major students iri the department&#13;
doing original research work. The laboratory occupies the entire basement floor of the chapel wing. Much apparatus has&#13;
been purchased-during the past two years and some has also&#13;
been made by Prof. Green. At present the equiptment is&#13;
practically complete for all quantitative work and the grade of&#13;
work d one compares favorably with that of many universities.&#13;
&#13;
J. W. GREEN, So.B.&#13;
&#13;
MATHEMATICS&#13;
The word "Growth" probably best characterizes the department of mathematics at Morningside College. After graduating from Morningside and spending a year in graduate work at&#13;
Johns Hopkins University, Prof. Robert Van Horn took charge&#13;
of the department which up to that time had been practically&#13;
unorganized. Since then the department has been thoroughl y&#13;
systematized and a years work has been added to the course&#13;
each year to the present time. Twelve courses are offered&#13;
with as much advanced work as may be called for. The department will be further strengthened by the addition of several new courses for next year.&#13;
R. VAN HORNE, PH. B.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. GEORGE BARSALOU.&#13;
Geo. Barsalou, professor of Geology and instructor in the&#13;
Normal Sciences and Pedagogy, is a graduate of Morningside,&#13;
class of 1903. Prior to his coming to Mo rningside, Prof. Barsalou had spent several years as a Methodist minister and also as&#13;
a teacher in the public schools. During this time he was a&#13;
geology enthusiast and made several tours in the pursuance of&#13;
his favorite study. This year the College offers its first course&#13;
in Geology with Prof. Barsalou as instructor. The course consists of dynamic geology in the fall, paleontology in the winter,&#13;
and in the spring, mineralogy and blow-pipe analysis. About&#13;
twelve thousand specimens, property of the Sioux City Academy of Sciences, are available for use in the department. The&#13;
department also has a library of about five-hundred volumes.&#13;
&#13;
G. F. BARSALOU, Sc. B.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. LEROY H. HARVEY.&#13;
Prof. LeRoy H. Harvey, instructor in Botany, took his&#13;
preparatory work in a High School in Maine. He took his&#13;
B. S. degree at the University of Maine in 1901. While at the&#13;
University he received special honors twice in Biology and&#13;
also received a prize for writing the best scientific essay during&#13;
his Junior aud Senior years. Prof. Harvey has spent some&#13;
time in special work at Mt. Katahdin and also in the Marine&#13;
Biological Laboratory at Woods Hole, Mass. Besides this he&#13;
has gone on several scientific expeditions.&#13;
Morningside College congratulates itself on having a man&#13;
of Prof. Harvey's ability and enthusiasm at the head of the&#13;
Department of Biology in the absence of Prof. Wylie.&#13;
L. H. HARVEY.&#13;
&#13;
HISTORY and POLITICS.&#13;
Few colleges offer better facilities or more complete courses in the department of history and economies than Morningside. In 1898 the department was organized under the direction of Prof. F. H. Garver. In 1902 the department was divided, Prof. Garver being made Professor of History and Politics.&#13;
In History five years work are offered, two in European History, one in English History, one in American History and seminary work in American History open to advance students&#13;
majoring in the department. In politics courses are offered in&#13;
Political Science, American Constitutional Law, International&#13;
Law and American Political Parties.&#13;
&#13;
F. H. GARVER, A.B.&#13;
&#13;
ECONOMICS and SOCIOLOGY.&#13;
In 1899 the growth of the department was such that Prof.&#13;
Fred. E. Haynes, Ph. D., of Harvard, '91, was called to take&#13;
charge of part of the work. In 1902 when the division of the&#13;
department was made Dr. Haynes received the title of Professor of Economics and Sociology. Four courses are offered in&#13;
economics, two in economic theory and two in economic history.&#13;
In sociology three courses are offered, one in practical sociology, one in the principles of sociology and an advanced course&#13;
of selected topics in economics and sociology. A growing&#13;
library for the two departments makes possible a large amount&#13;
of research work and this combined with lectures and text&#13;
book work is the method pursued.&#13;
F. E. HAYNES, PH. D.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT.&#13;
Lillian English Dimmitt, professor of Latin in Morningside&#13;
College, has been identified with the Institution since its organization. By her own persistent efforts, the Department of Latin&#13;
has reached its present status.&#13;
During the year 1903 and 1904 she has been enjoying a well&#13;
earned leave of absence, and has been engaged in research&#13;
work among the catacombs of Rome.&#13;
Miss Dimmitt is a woman of strong personality, sterling&#13;
character and of eminent scholarship.&#13;
&#13;
* L.&#13;
&#13;
E. DIMMITT, A. M.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY FREDERIC KANTHLENER.&#13;
&#13;
* On leave of absence to attend&#13;
the American at Rome.&#13;
&#13;
Henry Frederic Kanthlener, A. M., Professor of Greek in&#13;
Morningside College, came here from Wilberham, Mass., where&#13;
he taught Latin for two years. He completed his classical&#13;
cou rse at Cornell College in 1896, and the following year taught&#13;
Latin and Greek in Epworth Seminary. From 1897 to 1899 he&#13;
studied at Harvard University, ob taining his ·Master's degree.&#13;
Since 1900 he has had charge of the Greek department at Morningside, and has built it up very materially. He has won the&#13;
friendship and esteem of all our students and teachers.&#13;
&#13;
H.F. KANTHLENER, A. M .&#13;
&#13;
MISS BESSIE CARR.&#13;
A graduate of Morningside, '02. The following year she&#13;
took post-graduate work and is now an efficient instructor in&#13;
the Latin Department.&#13;
&#13;
B, M. CARR, PH. B,&#13;
&#13;
MISS ESTELLA ROBERTS.&#13;
Came to our institution as Greek professor in the fall of&#13;
In 1903 she took&#13;
charge of the Latin Department in the absence of Miss Dimmitt. She has shown her efficiency as a teacher in the masterly&#13;
way she handled these departments. We can congratulate&#13;
ourselves in having her on our corps of professors.&#13;
1902, in the absence of Prof. Kanthlener.&#13;
&#13;
L. E , ROBERTS, A, B.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR of FRENCH.&#13;
Prof. Reynard B. Greynald, A. M. is a native of France.&#13;
He came to Morningside in 1896. His first class contained only&#13;
seven students, while this year there are over 100 students en rolled under him. In his department, five courses are offered,&#13;
one being Scientific French. Quite often he is obliged to send&#13;
to France for books for scientific reading. After reading Victor Hu go's "Les Miserables" some students have desired to&#13;
read ''Notre Dame de Paris," and the professor complied with&#13;
the request. It is expected that the enrollment next year will&#13;
reach 125 in this department.&#13;
&#13;
R.B.GREYNALD,A.M.&#13;
&#13;
PROFESSOR of GERMAN.&#13;
Agnes B. Ferguson, M.Sc. Professor of German, came to&#13;
Morningside in the fall of 1902. Previous to this time the work&#13;
was in charge of Miss Loveland and Prof. Kanthlener, who&#13;
could give only a part of their time to the department. Miss&#13;
Ferguson has given her entire time and energy to the work until it now offers a six year's course, and one year in scientific&#13;
German. The enrollment in her department this year is over&#13;
125. Three stud ents are making German their major.&#13;
A. B . FERGUSON,&#13;
&#13;
M.Sc.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. W. A. BLACKWELL.&#13;
The Commercia l Department of the College for the past&#13;
eigh t years has been in charge of Prof. W. A. Blackwell. Mr.&#13;
Blackwell received his degree of "Master of Accounts·· from&#13;
th e Gem City Business College of Quincy, Ill. He a lso completed a two-years course in the W este rn Normal School of&#13;
Bushnell, Ill. in 1896. He is a successful teacher and a n influentia l member of the Faculty of which he has been Secreta ry&#13;
for the past five years.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. BLACKWELL.&#13;
&#13;
MISS CHARLOTTE M. HICKMAN.&#13;
A graduate from Ohio Wesleyan, ca me to Morningside in&#13;
the Fall of 1898 as an instructor in Physics and Mathematics.&#13;
She is now instructor in English and has a leave of absence.&#13;
This spring term she will travel in California.&#13;
&#13;
C. E. HICKMAN&#13;
&#13;
B. L.&#13;
&#13;
CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON.&#13;
After a year's absence, Mrs. Clara Booth Davidson is again&#13;
at her former post as Professor of Elocution and Physical&#13;
Training in the College. The greatly increased enrollment. in&#13;
the department is sufficient evidence of the high esteem in&#13;
which she is held as an instructor, and also is an expression of&#13;
her influence in the school.&#13;
Mrs. Davidson studied for her work, first in the Philadelphia School of Oratory and later with some of the best known&#13;
teachers of Oratory in the United States. Both as a teacher&#13;
and as a reader, Mrs. Davidson has attained a large degree of&#13;
success and since her election as instructor at Morningside, she&#13;
has built up the Department of Elocution to its present degree&#13;
of excellence.&#13;
&#13;
EDITH A. LARSON.&#13;
C. B. DAVIDSON.&#13;
&#13;
Edith A. Larson came to Morningside in the fa ll of 1902,&#13;
as an instructor in vocal music. Miss Larson was born at&#13;
Stoughton, Wis., but came with her parents to Iowa at an early&#13;
age. After her graduation from the Forest City High School&#13;
she attended the Chicago Musical College for two years. Later&#13;
she studied under Alfred Williams and William Nelson Burritt&#13;
of Chicago. Her wide experience as a private teacher of both&#13;
piano and voice, supplement this excellent preparation, and especially fit her for the work of the department here. Since&#13;
Prof. Barbour's resignation, Miss Larson has carried on the entire work of the Vocal Music department, with a success which&#13;
is best shown by the high esteem in which she is held by her&#13;
every student.&#13;
E. A. LARSON.&#13;
&#13;
MISS FLORENCE G. LEWIS.&#13;
Miss Florence G. Lewis has been connected with Morningside Conservatory since 1900, and has gained during that time&#13;
a reputation which reaches far beyond the limits of the College,&#13;
as a musician of high grade and as a thorough and conscientious instructor.&#13;
Her musical education was begun in Dubuque, her birthplace; was continued in Minneapolis, and in 1888 she graduated&#13;
from the New England Conservatory in Boston. She studied under masters of world-wide reputation among whom were&#13;
J.C. D. Parker, piano, Geo. E. Whiting, pipe organ, Carl Zerrahn, harmony, and Louis C. Elson, theory.&#13;
She has had fifteen yea rs experience as an instructor and&#13;
has during that time given 15 ,000 music lessons. F or fift ee n&#13;
yea rs she has been a member of the Executive Board of the&#13;
Beethoven Club.&#13;
&#13;
F. G. LEWIS.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. MARSHALL.&#13;
Mrs. Marshall has been a member of the music faculty of&#13;
Morningsid e College since the fall of 1902. Her reputation as a&#13;
private teacher is of the very best as is justified by the excellent preparation which she has had. Her own studies have&#13;
been pursued under such. teachers as A. K. Virgil, Carl Retter&#13;
and William H. Sherwood. As a teacher she is beloved by&#13;
every pupil, and her presence is a valuable addition to the faculty of our college.&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
A. B. MARSHALL .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MISS MYRTLE LOTHIAN.&#13;
Miss Myrtle Lothian, who has for the past two years been&#13;
an instructor in the Morningside College Conservatory of&#13;
Music, began her study of the piano at Cornell College, Mt.&#13;
Vernon, Iowa. After spending two years there she pursued a&#13;
course at the Conservatory of Music of Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois. Since coming to Morningside she has&#13;
proven herself to be a very competent instructor.&#13;
&#13;
M. M. LOTHIAN&#13;
&#13;
MR. STANISLAUS SCHERZEL.&#13;
In the fall of 1901 the Department of Music in this College&#13;
took a very decided step forward, for it was then that Mr. Stanislaus Scherzel became one of its instructors. Mr. Scherzel&#13;
was born in Revel, Russia, in 1871. He came with his mother&#13;
to America in 1880. His love for the violin resulted in his&#13;
pursuing a study of music for eight years, first in the Chicago&#13;
Musical College, and later in the College of Music at Cincinnati. Mr. Scherzel possesses rare ability as a violinist.&#13;
&#13;
S. SCHERZEL.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Art Department&#13;
&#13;
The Art Department of the College is in full charge of Kitty Anna Patterson. Miss Patterson completed her High School course at Schaler, Iowa.&#13;
She then pursued a four years course in Art at Des Moines and from there&#13;
went to Chicago to continue her study. During the summer of 1900 she&#13;
made a sketching tour through Michigan. In the Fall of 1901 she began&#13;
her work at this College.&#13;
&#13;
K. A . PATTERSON&#13;
&#13;
REV. FRANK&#13;
&#13;
E. MOSSMANN.&#13;
&#13;
For the past five years th e finan cial burden of the school has&#13;
rested upon our President. At the meeting of the Board of Trustees in the Fall of 1903, it was thought wise to organize the College&#13;
Guild to aid in support of the College and to bring Morningside&#13;
in closer touch with North West Iowa. It was also decided at this&#13;
meeting of the Trustees to elect Rev. F. E. Mossman as financial&#13;
secretary of the College. The large degree of success he has attained has justified the action.&#13;
Mr. Mossman was a member of the Class of 1903 of the College. While in school he twice represented his society, the Philomathians, in inte r-society debate and three time represented th e&#13;
College in inter-col legiate debate.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE L. SEARCH.&#13;
&#13;
In September, 1901, George L. Search was elected assistant&#13;
Secretary of the College. Prior to his coming to Morningside,&#13;
Mr. Search had taken a complete course in stenography in the&#13;
Unive rsity of the Northwest and later engaged in the real estate&#13;
and loan business in Sioux City.&#13;
His first work after enterin g upon his new duties was to systematize the acco·u nts of the insti tution since its organization in&#13;
1895. So well was the work done that he was elected Secretary&#13;
at the meeting of the Trustees in the fall of 1903. Mr. Search's&#13;
business training excellently qualifes him for the position of Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
MAGEE&#13;
&#13;
FINCH&#13;
&#13;
MAYNARD&#13;
&#13;
MILLER&#13;
&#13;
KILLAM&#13;
&#13;
CARSON&#13;
DARLING&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH&#13;
&#13;
History of Senior Class&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SCHOOL is a great wagon that travels over a rough road, the&#13;
students are potatoes in the wagon box. In jolting over the&#13;
road, the small ones go to the bottom, the big ones come to the top.&#13;
This is especially true of Morningside College in 1904.&#13;
As a result of the roughness of the road many who thought themselves of sufficient greatness to come to the top because of a few&#13;
knowledge bumps they possessed, have in the process, been reduced&#13;
to their proper size and place by having these supposed knowledge&#13;
bumps broken off or dented by contact with the full, round, symmetrically developed mentality of those whose such characteristics made&#13;
thei1 evolution as sure as the loss of said bumps made the devolution&#13;
of the others inevitable. Another confirmation of the law of the survival of the fittest.&#13;
The asking that the history of the class of 1904 be written is a&#13;
very natural thing. The possession of such history, revealing the secret of success, would be a priceless treasure to those who aspire to&#13;
the privilege of at least sitting in the seats to be left vacant by the&#13;
Seniors. But the revealing of this secret cannot be. It is enough for&#13;
us to have attained our lofty position, and enough for others to guess&#13;
how we did it.&#13;
Besides, school life is in a peculiar sense a p rehistoric period and&#13;
its events have but little interest and are of but little importance except they are made famous by achievements of the historic age which&#13;
begins where the other leaves off. A Cyrus the Great, helping the&#13;
soldiers pull a wagon out of the mud, a Napoleon pacing the beat of&#13;
the guardsman he found asleep are not events worthy of note except&#13;
&#13;
as they are connected with great men. Whoever heard even the name&#13;
of the hundred common soldiers who all day worked in the mud and&#13;
water up to their waists and at night slept on the bare ground in their&#13;
wet clothes, caught rheumatism and died, while old Cy, dry shod&#13;
walked out on a plank, leaned over the hind end gate, yelled, ·'Heave&#13;
ho!" and with his feet dangling in the air rode out to dry land while&#13;
the other fellows did the pushing? Or, who knows anything about&#13;
the French soldiers who did the fighting, bleeding, and dying, while&#13;
Napoleon one night didn't kill one of them whom he had marched so&#13;
hard all that day that he could not have kept awake if he had been in&#13;
bed with a Spaniard?&#13;
Yet because the greatness of these men the stories are cherished&#13;
and because of the ability of the class of 1904 and because of the certainty of their becoming great in the historic period of their life, even&#13;
now incidents of the preparatory stage are sought for, lest the world&#13;
be the poorer from them in the time when they will become valuable.&#13;
But modesty, ever inseparable from incipient greatness, causes us to&#13;
forbear. Cyrus never told that mud hole story nor did Napoleon tell&#13;
the little joke he played on the sentry that night. There were plenty&#13;
of followers to keep the stories going.&#13;
There are some things, however, that we have learned that ought&#13;
to be told. Namely; that the only kind of government we can have&#13;
is an Aristocracy, there being no common people in the class; how&#13;
little real knowledge it takes to make a Freshman feel like a sage;&#13;
how vanity produces the same effects on a Sophomore; how gas may&#13;
puff up a Junior until he feels as big as a Senior; that there are some&#13;
things that we cannot do, but that which we cannot do, we can Hoo-do.&#13;
As to the future of the class, neither now nor in time to come do&#13;
ever expect to have time to write its h istory. There are plenty&#13;
who wi ll want no better occupation than writing such works, to them&#13;
should be left the task , whi le the Seniors' more valuable time wi ll be&#13;
occupied in making history.&#13;
we&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
BROWER&#13;
&#13;
FAIR&#13;
WUNN&#13;
&#13;
NICHOLS&#13;
GILBERT&#13;
&#13;
CALKINS&#13;
&#13;
SHOEMAKER&#13;
&#13;
FAIR&#13;
&#13;
ERSKINE&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER&#13;
&#13;
DEBBENHAM&#13;
&#13;
TUMBLESON&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON&#13;
ELLERBROCK&#13;
&#13;
CARROLL&#13;
&#13;
CROSSAN&#13;
&#13;
HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
PATTERSON&#13;
&#13;
FLINN&#13;
&#13;
SOPHOMORE&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
CLASS of 1906 rea ll y needs no written hi sto ry . Its&#13;
deeds and adventures are known by everyone and&#13;
will ever be remembered. But for the benefit of those&#13;
with shorter memories and of those who are behind the&#13;
times and do not know us, we will try to give a brief review.&#13;
This wonderful class entered Morningside College as&#13;
Freshmen in September, 1902. There was a very noticeable difference between thi s class and all its predecesso rs.&#13;
No member of the class was troubled with the terrible malady "Greenness." Of course, some lik e Miss. Grossan were&#13;
more quiet than others but it was not from fear. For was&#13;
not the redoubtable football player, Saylor, the distinguished&#13;
"judge" Kindig, the great d.ebater, Hartzell, and learned scientists, Hawkins and Brower and the minister Calbins&#13;
amo ng them? If we did get into trouble there were plenty&#13;
who could help us out.&#13;
But in this historical sketc h we must not forget our&#13;
girls . A paragraph devoted to them will be fitting for the&#13;
story of this class. An exa min ation of tile registrar's books&#13;
reveals the fact that the Sophomore coeds have a peerless&#13;
record in the class room, thu s furnishing the school's&#13;
ideal for sc h olarship. Not on ly as students do our girls exce l, but also do they stand as the pride of the college in that&#13;
other realm, Society. That ba nquet would not have been&#13;
quite so swell, that reception would not have been quite so&#13;
entertaining, that party would not have been quite so novel&#13;
and cosy without the presence and ingenuity of the Sophomore girls.&#13;
&#13;
These characteristics, plus that of class patriotism, made&#13;
poss ibl e the many Soph banquets and picnics. For never&#13;
once s'i nce our organization have we had an occasion to&#13;
doubt the courage of our heroines; never have we distrusted&#13;
their devotion and loyalty.&#13;
It is the extension and development of these noble qualities that will produce the pride of the Twenti eth Centurythe American Woman. To know such characters is a rare&#13;
privilege, to be class-mates with them is an honor.&#13;
But everything must end, and so did those happy&#13;
Freshmen days. However, it was only that better days,&#13;
greater deed s, and happier times might come; for the class&#13;
who were noble and strong as Freshmen were the very personification of greatness as Sophomores.&#13;
"How fresh in ou r minds are the d eeds o f the Sophomores&#13;
When oft reco ll ec tion prese nts th em to view;&#13;
Th e rooster, the banquet, th e Freshi es part in it&#13;
And th e apple s the Freshmen paid for after all.&#13;
The speech of the Doctor, heart throbs of th e Sophomores;&#13;
&#13;
The apologies Cain gave the Doctor next day;&#13;
Fear caused by th e visit of Officer Vreeland;&#13;
The calm after battle, all friends o nce again ."&#13;
&#13;
Yes, we even found poet in this group of genii. And&#13;
well do their adventures deserve t o be sung in verse and&#13;
recounted in poetry. As Sophomores they remained quiet,&#13;
on the whole, for a time, but only that they might burst&#13;
forth more brightly in the winter.&#13;
There is no need to write more. Everyone will agree&#13;
that this class is most remarkable in every way. There is&#13;
more strength, more wi sdom, more beauty, and more spirit&#13;
in this class a lready than in any other class in the schoo l,&#13;
a nd it is stead ily improving. It is impossible even to imagine to what glory and renown it will rise in the future; we&#13;
can only wait and lea rn by experience.&#13;
&#13;
Spratt&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
Robbins Mekkleson Sparks&#13;
Pierce&#13;
Garver Van Marter Mellen&#13;
Mason&#13;
Richards&#13;
Squires&#13;
Whittaker&#13;
Gantt&#13;
Chambers&#13;
Barringer&#13;
Bartlett Adams&#13;
Hymer&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Toothaker Bass&#13;
Eredendoll Manning Patterson&#13;
Grubb&#13;
Swem&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Cable&#13;
Clark&#13;
Frear&#13;
Tracey&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Hawcott&#13;
Collins&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Cain&#13;
Howard&#13;
Heilman&#13;
Cole&#13;
Towner&#13;
McCay&#13;
Frear&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
&#13;
Out Class Bouquet&#13;
countless ages poets have paid tribute to flowers. They have personified them, addressed them in&#13;
their most render and eloquent language, and sung their&#13;
praises with love and ardor. These floral favorites have always stood for the good and beautiful in life. The care of&#13;
them is a joy, their association is enabling, and their presence has brightened and made happy many a weary existence. With these thoughts before you we introduce to you&#13;
the Freshman Bouquet. In a brief history we shall tell you&#13;
something concerning this collection of flowers.&#13;
This bouquet is a group of some fifty specimens of the&#13;
choicest varities, combining modesty, beauty, grace, wit,&#13;
wisdom, and mischief. Each one has its own individuality.&#13;
This makes the bouquet most attractive.&#13;
There are modest violets, exerting much influence in&#13;
their own quiet way. There are roses, full blown American&#13;
beauties, lovely half blown buds, and buds which as yet re·&#13;
main so firmly closed that no color shows forth through the&#13;
calyx hinting at what the flower may be like. A few of&#13;
these lovely ros.es and buds have cruel little thorns which&#13;
prick and stick unmercifully. Couquettish, bright-eyed&#13;
daisies laugh and make merry with fun and mischief. There&#13;
is one stately lilly, pure and white, that lifts its head above&#13;
its neighbors, occasionally.condescending to their level to receive the homage due it. Sweet-Williams are found side by&#13;
side with graceful columbines. Forget-me-nots nod and&#13;
smile and become your dearest friends. The wit of some&#13;
THROUGH&#13;
&#13;
departed jester lives again in a Shamrock. In this bouquet&#13;
there are also sleepy four-o'clocks; century plants (slow but&#13;
sure); cacti which bloom one season, rest one, and bloom&#13;
again; johnny-jump-ups, ready and willing, and bachelors&#13;
buttons. Besides, we have some sturdy, well-developed&#13;
plants which at present defy classification but perhaps later&#13;
a few may be specified as Jacks-in-the-pulpits.&#13;
These flowers have been gathered in from far and near.&#13;
Many of them were transplanted from home gardens where&#13;
they had grown strong and beautiful surrounded by an atmosphere of high ideals and noble ambitions. Some had&#13;
been more tenderly cared for than others. The winds were&#13;
gentle with them- never once whispering of trouble or&#13;
grief; the rains were only refreshing showers. Some, unlike&#13;
those, were at different times nearly overcome by storms&#13;
but they lifted up their heads, fought bravely the winds of&#13;
adversity, and overcame the frosts which might have been&#13;
their ruin.&#13;
It seems rather strange that these flowers should have&#13;
all been sent to Morningside. But wonderful stories were&#13;
told of the place-how no plant could fail to thrive and grow&#13;
in strength and beauty in the vigorous atmosphere, and under the care of a loving President and diligent Faculty.&#13;
And as healthy minded plants they possessed the desire to&#13;
develop physically, spiritually, and morally, and so it happens that they are now blossoming within the halls of Morn·&#13;
ingside College.&#13;
How long these flowers will be together it is not within&#13;
our power to foretell. Some will fade or wither and all the tender care bestowed upon them by the President or Faculty&#13;
will not revive them. Others will continue developing and&#13;
growing until, in 1907, they will blossom out into the world.&#13;
They will be addressed in tender and eloquent language;&#13;
their praises will be sung with love and ardor; association&#13;
with them will be ennobling; and their presence will brighten and make happy the lives of many people.&#13;
&#13;
Our Custodian&#13;
McCARTHY&#13;
and&#13;
M R. has shown ahas been faithful in performing his duty had&#13;
Christian character ever since he has&#13;
charge of the college buildings. In the five years that he has&#13;
served the institution he has been an indispensable factor. He has&#13;
been needed and called upon from all sides. One minute the students call upon him to open the society halls or association room,&#13;
the next some one is pulling at his coat wanting him to open some&#13;
door of the laboratory, yet he always has a kind word and a smile&#13;
for everyone. The students and faculty have found in him an&#13;
honorable man. Mr. McCarthy has done a great deal to improve&#13;
and beautify the campus and lawn. He has added a great many&#13;
trees and flowers that, after a few years of growth, will make an&#13;
ideal park.&#13;
&#13;
CLUBS&#13;
Associations&#13;
&#13;
N. McCAY&#13;
&#13;
J. R. M A GEE&#13;
&#13;
G. W. FINCH&#13;
&#13;
Debate between Simpson College and Morningside&#13;
,JANUARY 25, 1904.&#13;
&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That for the future the restriction of foreign immigration by means of an educational and property qualification be the policy for the United States.&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
SIMPSON&#13;
&#13;
Howard Applegate.&#13;
Verne Dusenberry.&#13;
Bruce Bartholomew.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
Norman McCay.&#13;
G. W. Finch.&#13;
J. R. Magee.&#13;
&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
Judge Gaynor, Lemars, Iowa.&#13;
Prof. M. Young, Vermilion, S. D.&#13;
I. N.. McCash, Des Moines, Iowa.&#13;
Decision-Three for the negative.&#13;
&#13;
C . F. HARTZELL&#13;
&#13;
F. E . MOSSMAN&#13;
&#13;
D. L.YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
K.&#13;
&#13;
31. N. LeagueDebate&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That a Board of Compulsory Arbitration between Labor and Capital shoul&lt;l be established by law.&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
J. S. Struble, Le Mars.&#13;
Lieut. Gov. Milliman, Logan.&#13;
Judge J. G. Wakefield, Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
Affirmative.&#13;
BAKER UNIVERSITY.&#13;
&#13;
F. L. Geyer.&#13;
0. C. Heatwood.&#13;
J. P. Ault.&#13;
&#13;
Negative.&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE.&#13;
&#13;
C. F. Hartzell.&#13;
F. E. Mossman.&#13;
D. L. Young.&#13;
&#13;
Decision-One&#13;
&#13;
for the affirmative, two for the negative.&#13;
&#13;
R . E.ROOT&#13;
&#13;
D. C. HALL&#13;
&#13;
E. H. HULSER&#13;
&#13;
N. McCAY&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Society Debate&#13;
Question&#13;
Resolved, That for the future the restriction of foreign immigration by means of education and property qualification&#13;
is a desirable policy for the United States.&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
Affirmati ve-PHILOMATHEAN.&#13;
Negative- OTHONIAN.&#13;
D. C. Hall.&#13;
E. H. Hulser.&#13;
R. E. Root.&#13;
J. W. Kindig.&#13;
Norman McCay.&#13;
J. R. Magee.&#13;
Decision-One for the affirmative, two for the negative.&#13;
J. R. MAGEE&#13;
&#13;
J . W . KINDIG&#13;
&#13;
c . E.&#13;
&#13;
WILCOX,&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
P. M. BODDY,&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
Young Woman's Christian&#13;
Association&#13;
During the six years since its organization the Association has&#13;
l&#13;
made a creditable record. It now has a membership of about&#13;
one hundred girls and is a power in the school.&#13;
The Association receives fresh impetus each year from the Summer Conference at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, and from the state convention, through the delegates who are sent to these places. The&#13;
blessings received by the girls at these gatherings are very many.&#13;
The work of the Y. W. C. A. is broad and covers many fields.&#13;
The Devotional Committee arranges a meeting for every Sunday&#13;
morning and these meetings are a source of inspiration to the girls&#13;
who attend. During last spring term a series of life work meetings&#13;
were addressed by women of practical experience and some perplexing questions were answered.&#13;
&#13;
J. E.&#13;
&#13;
LOCKIN,&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
G. DARLlNG,&#13;
&#13;
vice-president&#13;
&#13;
During .the year a number of interesting and instructive missionary meetings have been held with the Y. M. C. A. The Y. M. C. A.&#13;
and Y. W. C. A. Mission study classes have been carried on throughout the year. The Association has for three years supported two&#13;
boys in the Hig h School of Moradahad. India, and is planning to help&#13;
our State worker in India next year. Three girls have been in the&#13;
Volunteer Band the past year.&#13;
The new girls feel the influence of the Association from the first&#13;
day of College life. Many a girl will always cherish loving memories&#13;
of the Y. W. C. A. girls who met her at the train, helped her to find&#13;
her boarding place, and thoughtfully helped her to get acquainted and&#13;
feel at home. In the informal receptions and luncheons the girls are&#13;
brought close together and close to the Master. The social work of&#13;
the Association is broad in its plans and its results.&#13;
But while the Association has been interested in spiritual and social development it has not forgotten to provide entertainment and&#13;
profit for the mind. Besides an alcove in the Library, filled with&#13;
books of special helpfulness, through the joint effort of the Y. M. and&#13;
Y. 'vV. C. A., an excellent lecture course is provided for the&#13;
students.&#13;
&#13;
E. H.&#13;
&#13;
HULSER .&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
F. H .&#13;
&#13;
TRIMBLE,&#13;
&#13;
vice-president&#13;
&#13;
YoungMen's Christian&#13;
Association&#13;
E ARLY in th e history of our college a band of ea rnest you ng men&#13;
organized a society known as th e Christian League. In May&#13;
of 1899 the Leag ue was reorganized a nd took on the plan and a im of&#13;
a generally condu cted Young Men's Christian Association. From&#13;
this beginning th e Association h as steadily grown and ex pa nded in&#13;
its usefuln ess until it now holds an importa nt place among the depa1 tm ents of the college.&#13;
Its aim is to be beneficial in the deve lo pment of th e whole man,&#13;
physically, m entally a nd spiritually. It is the one organization of the&#13;
school that aims to reach every man, the one organization whose sole&#13;
purpose and reason for existence is th e development in eve ry stude nt&#13;
of that o ne thing without which no one can claim to have a liberal ed ucatio n, a persona l, expe rimental kn owledge of Jesus Christ, toge ther&#13;
with a training that will eq uip one for his service.&#13;
&#13;
W. H.&#13;
&#13;
Debenham&#13;
&#13;
A. B. Cook&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
The Association holds a meeting every Sunday mornin g at 9:15&#13;
o'clock. These m eetings are ve ry helpful. Thei r strong spirituality&#13;
enables o ne to find out where he reall y is, and points out the way that&#13;
will bring him whe re h e ought to be. Besid es being used for devotional and evangelistic purposes, the m eeti ngs are often used as a&#13;
m eans of presenting some line of Christian work planned for the Association. For brevit y the regular featur es of the Association m ay be&#13;
summed up as follows:&#13;
Regular Sunday devotional m eetings, monthly missiona ry meetin gs, week ly m eetings of missionary a nd Bible study c lasses, annual&#13;
representatio n at Lak e Geneva and Iowa conferences, maint enan ce of&#13;
in fo rmation, board and room and emplopment burea u, publisher of&#13;
ha nd book for benefit of new students, also the work accomplished by&#13;
the train a nd social committees.&#13;
CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES.&#13;
Devotional .. ........... Fred Trimb le. Bible Study&#13;
....... C. L. Gilbert.&#13;
.. Ray Tumbleson.&#13;
Membership ......... A. A. Maynard. Train ..&#13;
Missionary..&#13;
. H. H. Sawver. In formation Bureau .... J.W.Wunn.&#13;
Intercollegiate ....... F. V. Duboios Empl'ym't Bureau .. C. F. Hartzell.&#13;
Social..&#13;
........... Ira Aldrich . Finance Bureau .. ..... A. B. Cook.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Volunteer Band&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE opening of the spring term of the year 1901, after six months of&#13;
careful consideration, a student Volunteer Band of seven members&#13;
was formed, affiliated with the International Student Volunteer Movement,&#13;
under the Declaration, "It is my purpose, if God permit, to become a foreign&#13;
missionary."&#13;
In November of that year two of our students, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.&#13;
Empey, sailed for India, where they remained until Mr. Empey's health&#13;
failed.&#13;
The opportunities offered by the foreign field for a larger life work&#13;
were presented to the stude·nts and the following year onr number increased&#13;
to twelve.&#13;
Two of our members have graduated, others· have been obliged to&#13;
leave school for a time, new recruits have taken their places and onr present&#13;
member hip is eleven.&#13;
In a few years we hope to see each one of our number actively&#13;
engaged in the work of the Church on the foreign field.&#13;
&#13;
Knockers' Club&#13;
Motto&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
" Kick today, tomorrow may be too late."&#13;
&#13;
Object&#13;
&#13;
Green and Black.&#13;
&#13;
To promote and perpetuate scientific&#13;
and indiscriminate antagonism.&#13;
&#13;
Time and Place of Meeting&#13;
From the rising of each individual member to the going down of the same. Wherever two or three shall be gathered&#13;
together, there shall the Knock be also.&#13;
POST PRANDIAL KNOCKING A SPECIALTY.&#13;
&#13;
CLUB ROSTER.&#13;
Grand Chief Knocker ........... .. ... Asa Lee Brower&#13;
Vice Grand Knocker . . . ............ Helen I. Loveland&#13;
Vice Chief Boodler .. . .. . ............. George Millner&#13;
Recorder of Knocks and Sarcasms .................. .&#13;
. . . . . . . ................. . Gertrude Emma Crossan&#13;
BOARD OF SATIRISTS AND WITTICISTS.&#13;
Frank Harmon Garver ............ . .... Life Director&#13;
A. Howard Maynard&#13;
Narcissa Miller&#13;
D. Ford Robbins&#13;
H. Judson Calkins&#13;
BLACKBALLED.&#13;
Wilson Seely Lewis&#13;
Herbert Saylor&#13;
Evva Erskine&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes&#13;
&#13;
COMMON KICKS.&#13;
The Janitor .................. IO o'clock Lights Out!&#13;
I. R. Aldrich ..... ......... ........ "Why a Mason"?&#13;
&#13;
C. L. Gilbert . ..................... No College Spirit&#13;
Hazel Gantt ......................... 0, that Dutch!&#13;
Prof. Garver ...... ... ....... Those Tuesday Lessons!!!&#13;
C. J. Mekkelson .... . ................ Gee! No Soup?&#13;
Narcissa Miller . ........ That write up in the Tribune!&#13;
Dr. Blue .............. ..... . . Those Junior Orations!&#13;
Gertrude Crossan .............. On general principles&#13;
W. B. B. Shoemaker ................. That fool girl!!&#13;
&#13;
Leap YearClub&#13;
Motto&#13;
"It is not good for man to live alone."&#13;
&#13;
Aim&#13;
To prevent lonesomeness, and to impress upon the wayward mind of inan the intrinsic truth of the above motto.&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS.&#13;
Chief Proposer .......... . .. . .. . .. . Mabel Ellerbrock&#13;
Recorder of Proposals . ............. Katheryne Gibson&#13;
Mabel Killam&#13;
Board of Matchmakers.. . . . . . . . . . . . { E ll a Wendel&#13;
Mabel Smylie&#13;
&#13;
CLUB ROLL AND RESPONSE&#13;
Ruby Flinn ...... .. ....... .- . . . . . . No Not Wunn&#13;
Grace Darling . . ....... "Blest Be The Tie That Binds"&#13;
Xenia Ellis . . . . . . . ............... . ..... . (P ) Shaw&#13;
Edith Larson. . . . . . . . . .. .. . "No One To L ove Me"&#13;
Genevieve Howard ...... "If at first you don't succeed?"&#13;
Elsie Kilborne . . ................. "Try, Try Again"&#13;
Ella Wendel ..... . . . . . ....... . "Girls Never say No"&#13;
Jessie Swem .... . ... . ... Anything but a forgetful in an&#13;
Effie Tennis.. . . . . .. . . ............. "Better ask me"&#13;
Myrtle Lothian . ... . .. . "A Man's a Man for a' o' that"&#13;
Emma Fair . ... ... . I may be Young but never Green&#13;
Gertrude Crossan .... .- ... .. ...... A m an that Kin dig&#13;
&#13;
G. J. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
Home Contest&#13;
&#13;
R. E. HEILMAN&#13;
&#13;
R. E. HEILMAN, First Place.&#13;
&#13;
J. WHITTAKER&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
J. PoPPENHEIMER, Second Place.&#13;
&#13;
D . C . HALL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
WHITTAKER, Third Place.&#13;
&#13;
Though we are young in oratorical work we have won some distinction at the state contests. In 1903 D. C. Hall&#13;
won first place in delivery at Oskaloosa, and was fourth in final rank. The same year Norman McCay took second&#13;
place in final rank at Cedar Rapids in the Prohibition Oratorical Contest. We believe that in another year we will&#13;
have an orator who will be a hard rival in the State Contest for first place.&#13;
&#13;
Collegian&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
Reporter&#13;
&#13;
is an eight page publication edited weekly by the students and devoted&#13;
to the interests of the students of the college.&#13;
The paper is at present in its eighth year. Charles McCaffree, now editor of the Canova Herald&#13;
of Canova, South Dakota, was the first editor. He was succeeded by W. L. Harding, who edited the&#13;
paper for three years. Then for a year the work was carried on by D. L. Young.&#13;
In the Fall of '02, C. L. Gilbert .was elected Editor-in-chief, but ill-health made it necessary that&#13;
he resign. The work was then taken up by Miss Pearl Woodford who held the position the remainder of the year. At the beginning of the college year C. L. Gilbert was again made editor and served&#13;
for two terms. At the close of the Winter term on account of his election on the Baker-Morningside&#13;
debate, he found it impossible to do the work required of the Editor-in-chief.&#13;
Mr. R. G. Young is now at the head of the Reporter Staff.&#13;
HE COLLEGIAN REPORTER&#13;
&#13;
STAFF OF 1904.&#13;
Editor-in-chief ......... .... ........... R. G. Young&#13;
Reporters ............ Carl W. Maynard, H. B. Saylor&#13;
Athletic Editor ..................... C. G. Manning&#13;
Society Editor ................... Ralph E. Heilman&#13;
Y. M. and Y. W. C. A ............... Stanley Carson&#13;
Alumni and Correspondence ............ F. V. DuBois&#13;
Local Editors ........... J. W . Wunn, Grace Darling&#13;
Business Managers........ . .. ... Mossman and Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Toothaker&#13;
Brown&#13;
Killam&#13;
Harding&#13;
Cook&#13;
Larson&#13;
Mason&#13;
Smith&#13;
Thompson&#13;
Palmer&#13;
Ellerbrock&#13;
Si man&#13;
Fair&#13;
Seaver&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Delay&#13;
Towner&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Garver&#13;
Crossan&#13;
Olson&#13;
Swem&#13;
Hay&#13;
Brown&#13;
Howard&#13;
Davidson&#13;
Miller&#13;
Killam&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
Fair&#13;
Cable&#13;
Siman&#13;
&#13;
MABEL&#13;
&#13;
S&#13;
&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
KILLAM&#13;
&#13;
years ago much interest was aroused in Morningside by the appearance of a publisher whose volumes were issued under the pseudonym of Zetalethean.&#13;
The first edition was a set of eight volumes, one of which&#13;
still remains in one library, while the rest have been removed surreptitiously and otherwise. The remaining&#13;
volume of this edition is known as our "Encyclopedia of&#13;
Useful Information."&#13;
Besides this volume there are at present in the library thirty others, any one of which will afford a half&#13;
hour of quiet enjoyment.&#13;
The orderliness which pervades the college library&#13;
is explained in part by the presence of two books, donated by Zetalethean, upon whose leaves may be found information pertaining to the management of a library.&#13;
They will be found giving directions in so concise a&#13;
manner that Poole's index will be found unnecessary.&#13;
Our most popular volume is our little brown "Rules&#13;
of Order." Every one consults this book when difficulties arise, and our friend is so accomodating that we canalways prove our point.&#13;
Should you wish to consult two of our volumes you&#13;
must call before 4:15 or you will find them "just out" on&#13;
their way to the city. At the noon hour a visit to the&#13;
EVEN&#13;
&#13;
biological laboratory will reward one with a glimpse of&#13;
this set. We may add that these two attractive volumes&#13;
are often returned for something special in the evening.&#13;
On our shelves we have a small volume dressed in a&#13;
pretty binding yet servicable in appearance. This bears&#13;
a close relation to our historical department and students&#13;
desiring to excel in history would do well to consult&#13;
this little volume.&#13;
In wandering about the library one will not fail to&#13;
notice a small volume. The binding is attractive and&#13;
withal so winsome that as the reader unconsciously takes&#13;
the book in his hands and turns its pages he is intensely&#13;
interested in this favorite work of a scientist.&#13;
Lovers of fiction will be interested in a volume&#13;
which has been in the library for several months. It is&#13;
a "forest scented, fresh aired, bracing and wholly Canadian story" a kind of life never found in books before.&#13;
In the athletic alcove of the library you will find&#13;
but a single volume; a treatise on basket ball which was&#13;
transferred from Buena Vista College last fall.&#13;
One Friday afternoon some years ago Zetalethean&#13;
added two volumes to the library which, since their first&#13;
appearance, have been much in demand. These volumes are usually found together as they are sister volumes and so close is the companionship that they are regarded as inseparable. From present indications, however the set will be broken before long and one of the volumes republished with an addendum on constitutional law.&#13;
In the early autumn of '03 a large consignment of&#13;
manuscript was received from various parts of the state.&#13;
Its arrival was celebrated by Zetalethean with unusual&#13;
demonstrations and she at once proceeded to issue the&#13;
&#13;
same in book form. From Alta, Hubbard, Rock Rapids&#13;
and Correctionville the material came by every mail until the publisher was taxed to her utmost capacity working these into service. The result of her strenuous efforts was three volumes whose principle trend is instrumental music and one on general literary criticism with&#13;
an introduction in German.&#13;
One of the most practical additions during the last&#13;
year has been a book which formerly belonged to the&#13;
Iowa Agricultural College. Its pages are full of the latest recipes for dainty dishes. Can we long hope to retain&#13;
so priceless a volume?&#13;
Upon a shelf at the farther side of the library will&#13;
be noticed a vacant place just wide enough for two volumes of ordinary size. The absence of one of these may&#13;
be explained by its special popularity. A careful search&#13;
at the close of chapel will find this volume undergoing a&#13;
careful perusal. The other will be returned in time to&#13;
avoid fines and if in search of plans for social evenings&#13;
or opinions as to whom should be awarded places on the&#13;
"All American Eleven," consult its pages.&#13;
Several of the volumes contain much information&#13;
concerning biological science. One volume is particularly valuable for its frequent foot notes referring to authorities of the University of Chicago. It will suggest many&#13;
plans for obtaining material for dissection.&#13;
"The Music of the Spheres is not in the Spheres but&#13;
in the heart of man, not above us and without us but&#13;
near us and about us." If you believe th is you will sure1y be interested in our latest musical publication, a collection of vocal selections in four volumes. The failure&#13;
of this edition to appear at the time announced was a&#13;
source of much dissapointment to the musical public but&#13;
&#13;
' since their appearance they have been constantly in demand.&#13;
If you are looking for an all around book handy to&#13;
carry and full of general information just inquire for&#13;
"The Little Giant of Peterson." It will tell you anything you wish to know from biology to music.&#13;
In a secluded corner two interesting volumes may&#13;
be found which are characterised by domestic traits and&#13;
musical tastes. The former characteristic is sufficiently&#13;
strong to prevent these volumes being found at boarding&#13;
clubs.&#13;
A volume which is held in much esteem is one from&#13;
the Elizabethean age which furnishes a recipe fur fudge&#13;
which would make glad the heart of the most confirmed&#13;
dyspeptic.&#13;
The latest addition to the library is a set of three&#13;
volumes of varied style and content. One was transferred from Cornell and since being reissued by Zetalethean has become a favorite with cultured readers. . Another has a charm of style peculiarly its own, a deservedly&#13;
popular book whose place if . left vacant would destroy&#13;
the harmony of the collection. The other is a book&#13;
which requires accquaintance if we would appreciate it,&#13;
but when once well known will afford a varied fund of&#13;
entertainment.&#13;
The commencement season will witness the withdrawal from circulation of two of our oldest volumes.&#13;
One is a most attractive book and for years its pages&#13;
have furnished so much information upon all phases of&#13;
college life that its place will not be easily filled. You&#13;
will find the other over in the corner. It is a dust covered&#13;
book with broken binding and tattered leaves, but why&#13;
describe so uninteresting a volume?&#13;
&#13;
Philomathean Society&#13;
C. L.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Bilbert&#13;
&#13;
fall of I 892 the Philomathean Literary Society&#13;
came into being. During its early history both&#13;
women and men were admitted to membership, but by&#13;
mutual agreement, toward the close of the first year&#13;
after organization this po1icy was changed and men&#13;
only were admitted.&#13;
For many years all male students of the school&#13;
were eligible to membership, but in June, 1901, the&#13;
society was chartered as a Collegiate Society at the same&#13;
time with the other three Collegiate Societies of the&#13;
school and since that time only Collegiate students have&#13;
been eligible to election. In the same spring the new&#13;
halls on the third floor of Main hall were assigned to&#13;
the Collegiate Literary Societies, and after a debate before Judge Scott M. Ladd, in which he concurred with&#13;
every point made by the Philomathean representative,&#13;
the Philos and Atheneums were permitted to draw lots&#13;
with the other two Societies for choice of halls. In the&#13;
drawing of lots fortune favored the victors in the debate&#13;
and the Philos and Atheneums chose the southeast&#13;
corner room.&#13;
Most favorable for situation, the hall occupied by&#13;
the Philomathean Society. is also recognized to be the&#13;
best furnished of all the society halls in the college. The&#13;
N THE&#13;
&#13;
money for the purchasing of the furnishings has all&#13;
been subscribed by members of the societies occupying&#13;
the hall and their alumni, and the equipment has been&#13;
put in without incurring any debt. It is the policy of&#13;
the Philos to keep free from debt.&#13;
Through the kindness of Mr. C. P. Kilbourne, a&#13;
handsome life-sized portrait of President W. S. Lewis, has&#13;
been added to the wall decorations this year.&#13;
The Philomathean Literary Society long ago abolished the oath of secrecy in regard to business sessions.&#13;
The society maintains an open policy and stands for .&#13;
open and fair dea1ing in all matters.&#13;
The society has given mure public programs this&#13;
year than any other society in school. At some of these&#13;
programs the hall has been crowded far beyond the&#13;
doors into the Association Hall at the back and into the&#13;
Adelphian-Aesthesian Hall at the side. The society&#13;
stands for individual work, believing it to be productive&#13;
of the highest intellectual and moral development.&#13;
In the field of debate the Philos have always taken&#13;
the leading part. The present inter-society debate compact was first proposed in the Philomathean business&#13;
session and a challenge to debate was sent to the rival&#13;
society.&#13;
Not content with merely inter-society debating , the&#13;
Philos also took the initiative in making inter-collegiate&#13;
debate work a feature of our college work. After successfully encountering strenuous opposition the society&#13;
&#13;
Hanna&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Chambers&#13;
Mekkleson&#13;
Stulkin&#13;
Whittaker&#13;
HaJJ&#13;
Brower&#13;
Shoemaker&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Wunn&#13;
Harding&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Du Bois&#13;
Robbins&#13;
Root&#13;
Young&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
Magee&#13;
Carroll&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Debenham&#13;
Grubb&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
succeeded in bringing about the formation of the K. I. N.&#13;
debate league in which Morningside has thus far been&#13;
so successful.&#13;
Not only in establishing debate has the Philomathean Society been the predominant factor but in the&#13;
debate contests themselves the Philos have. enjoyed&#13;
especial distinction. In three out of four inter-collegi·ate&#13;
debates, in which ·Morningside has won each time, the&#13;
Philos have been represented by two speakers.&#13;
In the oratorical field, too, the society has not been&#13;
idle. The highest ranking yet gained by Morningside&#13;
in the State Oratorical Contest was made last year by a&#13;
Philo, who won first place in delivery.&#13;
&#13;
The college paper is also the product of Philo enterprise. The first editor and business manager were&#13;
Philos, and during the eight years of its existence only&#13;
one year and a portion of another has the editorship&#13;
&#13;
passed out of the hands of members of the Philomathean&#13;
Literary Society.&#13;
Of its alumni the society is justly proud, for they&#13;
hold positions of honor and trnst wherever they are&#13;
found . An alumnus of the society has become a leader&#13;
in Sioux City's politics. Another is Superintendent of&#13;
City Missions in Sioux City and is one of the most energetic and capable men in the church. One of them is&#13;
at the head of a department in Morningside College. A&#13;
Philo holds the important position of financial agent of&#13;
the college.&#13;
Always and everywhere the Philomathean Literary&#13;
Society, in the persons and character of its members,&#13;
whether students or alumni, endeavors to honor by life&#13;
and actions the name, Philo, which means lover. And&#13;
the Philos will ever be lovers of learning, justice, truth,&#13;
keeping always in mind the society's motto, Nulla&#13;
vestigia retrorsum, which being interpreted means, No&#13;
Steps Backward.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Cole&#13;
Davenport&#13;
Haafke&#13;
Patterson&#13;
Whitney&#13;
Wendell&#13;
Williams&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Frear&#13;
Lockin&#13;
&#13;
Carson&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Frear&#13;
Flinn&#13;
Heiby&#13;
Gantt&#13;
Whitney&#13;
Cain&#13;
Erskine&#13;
Barringer&#13;
Bryan&#13;
Kling&#13;
Butler&#13;
Wilcox&#13;
Shumaker&#13;
Tennis&#13;
Wyatt&#13;
Manus&#13;
Matthews&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
Lockin&#13;
Darling&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
Henry&#13;
Corell&#13;
Bowker&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ho! Hu ! Ho! Hu ! H·o! Ho! Ath-e-neum Ho' Hurrah for the, star that shines so bright on&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! Ho! Ath-e-neum Ho' Hurrah for the star that shines so bright on the Ath-e-neums, Ho 1.&#13;
&#13;
Atheneum Society&#13;
BY ATHENEUMS&#13;
&#13;
stars were we at first.&#13;
At that time we&#13;
shed our golden beams of light upon twelve&#13;
happy girls who composed the first literary society for&#13;
young women in the University of the Northwest.&#13;
Those whom we guided were called Atheneums, the&#13;
name being derived from ancient Athens. In the fall of&#13;
Eighteen hundred and ninety-one they made their first&#13;
public appearance with Miss Lola Clark as president.&#13;
Although in those days they assembled in no beautiful hall, yet many merry hearts swelled with pride after&#13;
the defects of the old chapel were hidden behind Nature's&#13;
T&#13;
&#13;
WELVE&#13;
&#13;
contribution of flowers and foliage gathered by untiring&#13;
hands. The effect was artistic; varied was the appearance of the chapel on different occasions. Then, on&#13;
Friday afternoons after recitation hours, members of the&#13;
society might be seen seeking a place in which to hold&#13;
their business sessions. Weighty questions were discussed in those early days for well they realized the&#13;
responsibility of future years resting upon their young&#13;
shoulders, the responsibility of founding a society that&#13;
should endure; one upon whom we could benignly smile.&#13;
Many social delights were shared with the two gentlemen societies existing at that time. The programs&#13;
given by these Atheneums entertained interested audiences and at the same time served as a means of developing the intellectual life of the girls.&#13;
&#13;
As time passed, we stars noted with pleasure that&#13;
the membership of the society was increasing and in proportion as it grew, new stars were added to our number.&#13;
Not only did the society grow in numbers, but it developed greater interest along literary and social lines and&#13;
as the University of the Northwest became Morningside&#13;
College, the same spirit that had previously dominated&#13;
the Atheneums was still manifest working in them a&#13;
deeper intellectual growth.&#13;
&#13;
In the year Eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, on&#13;
the old foundation, so long like an ancient ruin, began&#13;
to rest the walls of a beautiful new structure. Great was&#13;
the delight of the Atheneums to realize that at last in&#13;
one corner of this building they were to have a hall, and&#13;
after that memorable debate, the Fates being kind, we&#13;
saw the Atheneums the proud possessors of the south&#13;
east hall. With interest intent we watched the young&#13;
women as they planned with the Philomatheans to make&#13;
this sunny corner cheerful and home-like.&#13;
Until the fall of ·Nineteen hundred they welcomed&#13;
into their society as members the academic as well as collegiate students. At that time, however, they received&#13;
a charter properly signed entitling them to collegiate&#13;
rank.&#13;
&#13;
Eleven years have passed since first we appeared.&#13;
During this time we have rejoiced with the Atheneums&#13;
when victory was theirs and we have noted with pride&#13;
that defeats have made them only more persevering and&#13;
determined to succeed. No wonder such efforts have&#13;
won laurels for them!&#13;
Every year our Atheneums are leaving the college&#13;
world to take upon themselves the greater responsibilities of life. Some of them today are helping to uplift&#13;
those who are oppressed. Some are moulding the characters of young lives and fitting them for noble citizenship. Still others are the jewels of happy homes. A few&#13;
no longer need our guidance, for they are now in the&#13;
brighter world above.&#13;
Praise to the Atheneums upon whom first we shone,&#13;
success to those still in the college halls upon whom we&#13;
smile propitiously, joy to those whose paths in the future&#13;
we are yet to brighten. May prosperity and happiness&#13;
attend those over whom fl.oats the banner, Blue and&#13;
White, upon whose folds are inscribed "Utile Dulci"The Stars.&#13;
Rippi Zippi, Rippi Zippi, Rippi Zippi Zee!&#13;
Boomaraka, Boomaraka, Boomaraka, Ree!&#13;
Who are! Who are! Who are we?&#13;
We're the Atheneums of M. S. C.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Color&#13;
Royal Purple.&#13;
&#13;
Zip, ki, yah !&#13;
Zip, ki, yah !&#13;
Otho! Otho!&#13;
Otho-ni-ah !&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
"Suaviter in Modo, Fortiter in Re."&#13;
&#13;
One-a-zip-a&#13;
Two-a-zip-a&#13;
Three-a-zi p-a-zo !&#13;
Ripple, tipple, Roly, poly, ki-o-to !&#13;
Whang-a-doodle !&#13;
Hity-tity !&#13;
Whang-a-doodle-whang !&#13;
Otho ! Otho ! Boomerang ! Bang !&#13;
&#13;
Saylor&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Manning&#13;
&#13;
McCay&#13;
Harvey&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
Green&#13;
Finch&#13;
Poppenheimer&#13;
Hulser&#13;
&#13;
Maynard&#13;
&#13;
Pierce&#13;
&#13;
Calkins&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
Blackwell&#13;
Kindig&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Aldrich&#13;
&#13;
Cain&#13;
Howe&#13;
Squires&#13;
Patterson&#13;
Maynard&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
McCay&#13;
Millner&#13;
Collins&#13;
&#13;
Hawkins&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
skein has slipped thru the fingers of the&#13;
Fates and we pause again to look over the list of&#13;
deeds which the gods have seen fit to record for the&#13;
Othonian Literary Society.&#13;
&#13;
at the school, four times have her orators carried away&#13;
the wreath, winning both first and second places. Three&#13;
times have her orators taken the platform to test their&#13;
forensic powers on the prohibition question, winning the&#13;
home contest twice and the state contest once. Seven&#13;
times have her men been pitted against strong opponents&#13;
in annual inter-society debate, and five times have the&#13;
gods placed the crown of victory upon their brows.&#13;
&#13;
Her old charter roll, hanging upon her wall, bears&#13;
the names of the fourteen men who met one autumn&#13;
evening in 1891 and ushered into the quiet surroundings&#13;
of the University of the Northwest, the Othonian Literary Society and her Boomerang.&#13;
&#13;
Not satisfied with literary attainments alone, her&#13;
members have reached out into other fields, and have&#13;
been the leaders in social and athletic life. Last fall the&#13;
name of her president was the first to be engraved upon&#13;
the foot ball trophy.&#13;
&#13;
History&#13;
IRA&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH&#13;
&#13;
CHAS. Richards&#13;
&#13;
NOTHER&#13;
&#13;
The Boomerang was the first paper published in&#13;
Morningside and as its name signifies it gives and takes.&#13;
&#13;
In 1900 thesociety became collegiate and todayonly&#13;
collegiates are found on its membership roll.&#13;
The records show that in '94 and '95 she brought&#13;
the first lecture course of the college to the city. It was&#13;
composed of eight numbers, some of which were Bishop&#13;
Fowler, Robt. McIntyre, and Frank Crans.&#13;
Her past achievements along literary lines have been&#13;
very satisfactory. In the five oratorical contests, given&#13;
&#13;
Her alumni is the largest of any society's in school.&#13;
Its members are holding important positions over the&#13;
land.&#13;
The future is indeed bright. Her present members&#13;
are strong men who are not afraid of work. She is building broad plans for the future and expects these men,&#13;
when their struggles of preparation is ended, to be able&#13;
to look back and thank her for her contribution to their&#13;
strength of heart, steadiness of purpose, and the larger&#13;
outlook towards life's nobler fields.&#13;
&#13;
Correll&#13;
&#13;
Wendel&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
&#13;
Lockin&#13;
Harding&#13;
&#13;
Lockin&#13;
&#13;
Platts&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY.&#13;
&#13;
Pende ll&#13;
Foster&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Good lander&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Tracey&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
Batcheller&#13;
Weary&#13;
Stukenburg&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Sharr&#13;
Beach&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Briggle&#13;
Good lander&#13;
&#13;
Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Barkley&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Harman&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Kahley&#13;
&#13;
SeniorAcademy&#13;
&#13;
T HE SENIOR ACADEMY Class of 1904&#13;
began its career in Morningside by&#13;
winningthe·beautiful pennant, in 1902,&#13;
offered to any class of the entire school&#13;
scoring the most points in an athletic&#13;
field meet at Riverside Park. We have&#13;
had in our class until the last two&#13;
terms the champion and also the second best all around athlete of the&#13;
school.&#13;
But it was not until we became middles and inherited from our predecessors the insatiable desire for blood,&#13;
that we began to make ourselves felt and that the rest&#13;
of the school began to pay us due respect and to hold us&#13;
in awe. At the opening of the winter term we were insulted, by the uncultured Seniors of 1903, one morning&#13;
after Chapel and we immediately proceeded to carry them&#13;
out of doors and throw them headfirst into a snow bank.&#13;
A few nights after this the Seniors finding they were no&#13;
match for us either in brains or brawn endeavored to outwit us by climbing to the Cupalo of North Hall and&#13;
float the besmeared and conquered colors from the eminence, but our scouts were too wary and the "War Whoop"&#13;
was resounded through onr tribe at three o'clock in the&#13;
morning. All of our braves assembled to find four of the&#13;
&#13;
Seniors in the "Superior Heights." The tribe was&#13;
quickly drawn up and messengers sent to inform those&#13;
legions which were left behind to guard camp. After&#13;
four hours of continual fighting the enemy being exhausted by wounds, were completely "pacified" and their&#13;
standard was burned.&#13;
Soon after this victory a reception was tendered the&#13;
conquered Seniors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P.&#13;
Negus and our right to rule was acknowledged by all.&#13;
During this same year we furnished two of the debaters for the Inter Society debate between the Hawkeye and Adelphian Literary Societies, an orator for the&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest, more foot ball players&#13;
than any class in school and still held the Championship&#13;
thletics.&#13;
During our Senior year we have still the distinction&#13;
of never having been defeated in a class scrap, of having&#13;
the Champion Athlete of the school and of furnishing&#13;
five out of six of the Academy Inter Society debaters and&#13;
one of the Inter Academic debaters with Grinell Academy. We also hold the distinction of having three married persons and only one Batcheller in our class.&#13;
While we are perhaps the smallest class in point of&#13;
numbers that has graduated from the Academy for several years, yet it is acknowledged by all that we are one of&#13;
the best and wisest classes that ever received their sheepskins from the rostrum of Morningside Academy.&#13;
Our Motto is: Scandite, scopulis confragosis.&#13;
Colors: Old Rose and Steel Gray.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Pendell&#13;
Foster&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Good lander&#13;
Boddy&#13;
Tracey&#13;
Staples&#13;
&#13;
Pritchard&#13;
Batcheller&#13;
Weary&#13;
Stulkenburg&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Sharr&#13;
Beach&#13;
Trimble&#13;
&#13;
Johnson&#13;
&#13;
Briggle&#13;
Goodlander&#13;
&#13;
Rorem&#13;
&#13;
Barkley&#13;
&#13;
Boals&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Harman&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Kahley&#13;
&#13;
Senior Academy&#13;
&#13;
The ACADEMY Class of 1904&#13;
SENIOR&#13;
began its career in Morningside by&#13;
winning the beautiful pennant, in 1902,&#13;
offered to any class of the entire school&#13;
scoring the most points in an athletic&#13;
field meet at Riverside Park. We have&#13;
had in our class until the last two&#13;
terms the champion and also the second best all around athlete of the&#13;
school.&#13;
But it was not until we became middles and inherited from our predecessors the insatiable desire for blood,&#13;
that we began to make ourselves felt and that the rest&#13;
of the school began to pay us due respect and to hold us&#13;
in awe. At the opening of the winter term we were insulted, by the uncultured Seniors of 1903, one morning&#13;
after Chapel and we immediately proceeded to carry them&#13;
out of doors and throw them headfirst into a snow bank.&#13;
A few nights after this the Seniors finding they were no&#13;
match for us either in brains or brawn endeavored to outwit us by climbing to the Cupalo of North Hall and&#13;
float the besmeared and conquered colors from the eminence, but our scouts were too wary and the "War Whoop"&#13;
was resounded through our tribe at three o'clock in the&#13;
morning. All of our braves assembled tofind four of the&#13;
&#13;
Seniors in the "Superior Heights." The tribe was&#13;
quickly drawn up and messengers sent to inform those&#13;
legions which were left behind to guard camp. After&#13;
four hours of continual fighting the enemy being exhausted by wounds, were completely "pacified" and their&#13;
standard was burned.&#13;
Soon after this victory a reception was tendered the&#13;
conquered Seniors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P.&#13;
Negus and our right to rule was acknowledged by all.&#13;
During this same year we furnished two of the debaters for the Inter Society debate between the Hawkeye and Adelphian Literary Societies, an orator for the&#13;
Prohibition Oratorical Contest, more foot ball players&#13;
than any class in school and still held the Championship&#13;
in Athletics.&#13;
During our Senior year we have still the distinction&#13;
of never having been defeated in a class scrap, of having&#13;
the Champion Athlete of the school and of furnishing&#13;
five out of six of the Academy Inter Society debaters and&#13;
one of the Inter Academic debaters with Grinell Academy. We also hold the distinction of having three married persons and only one Batcheller in our class.&#13;
While we are perhaps the smallest class in point of&#13;
numbers that has graduated from the Academy for several years, yet it is acknowledged by all that we are one of&#13;
the best and wisest classes that ever received their sheepskins from the rostrum of Morningside Academy.&#13;
Our Motto is: Scandite, scopulis confragosis.&#13;
Colors: Old Rose and Steel Gray.&#13;
&#13;
J. G. WATERMAN&#13;
&#13;
W. H. SHAW&#13;
&#13;
H. H . SAWYER&#13;
&#13;
Inter-Academic Debate&#13;
MARCH 21, 1904.&#13;
&#13;
Resolved, That the railroads of the United States should be owned and operated by the Federal government.&#13;
DEBATERS&#13;
Affirmative-GR INNELL.&#13;
C. McGill.&#13;
A. K. Beik.&#13;
E . P. Erwine.&#13;
&#13;
Negative-MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
W . H. Shaw.&#13;
H. H. Sawyer.&#13;
J. G. Waterman.&#13;
&#13;
JUDGES&#13;
Mayor Caldwell, Sioux City.&#13;
Dr. F. Newhall White, Sioux City.&#13;
Judge Hutchinson, Sioux City.&#13;
Deczsion-Affirmative,&#13;
one; Negative, two.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
ACADEMY&#13;
SOCIETIES&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Willis&#13;
Currier&#13;
Tonies&#13;
&#13;
Budlong&#13;
Beach&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Herrick&#13;
Rorem&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Howarth&#13;
Fair&#13;
Barkley&#13;
Lewis&#13;
&#13;
Legate&#13;
Day&#13;
Conway&#13;
Parker&#13;
&#13;
Gauch&#13;
&#13;
Berkhead&#13;
Mahood&#13;
Goodlander&#13;
&#13;
Brenner&#13;
Hartzel&#13;
Hart&#13;
Dunn&#13;
Tonies&#13;
Stu ken burg&#13;
Gibson&#13;
Zimmerman&#13;
Ellis&#13;
Batcheller&#13;
Hoffman&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian Literary Society&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. N.&#13;
&#13;
Goodlander&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
NELLIE GOODLANDER, President.&#13;
GERTRUDE PARKER, S ecretary.&#13;
Color-White.&#13;
&#13;
Emblem-Olive&#13;
&#13;
Hippa-ka-boom ,&#13;
Hippa-ka-bide,&#13;
Aesthesian Girls of Morningside!&#13;
E Pluribus Unum!&#13;
Well I Guess!&#13;
We're the Aesthesians,&#13;
Yes ! Yes ! Yes !&#13;
&#13;
Leaf.&#13;
&#13;
I N FEBRUARY, 1902, nineteen academ y girls obtained&#13;
permission to form a new literary society. They&#13;
saw the need of not only more literary activity, but of&#13;
Morningside's growing academy, and thinking not so&#13;
much of th e present as the future, by their united efforts&#13;
and sacrifices, fou nded that most aesth etic of all literary&#13;
societies, the Aesthesian.&#13;
The num ber of members was increased to t hirtysix last year, and thi s year th e same number is still entitled to wear the oli ve leaf-the symbol of peace which&#13;
has been chosen by the Aesthesians as their emblem.&#13;
We skipped that childhood period of society life.&#13;
From infancy to womanhood at a single bound has b een&#13;
our record. Even our charter members are amazed at&#13;
our growth. We do not exult in our strength, but rather in humbleness endeavoring to promote the best interest of our Academy.&#13;
To live up to our nam e and motto we must cultivate the aesthetic, promote peace and purity and point&#13;
out th e beauties that are around us everywhere. We&#13;
always endeavor to please our visitors at our programs&#13;
and our members invite you to attend.&#13;
The effort of every Aesthesian is to labor and sacrifice for her society that it may keep on growing as the&#13;
college grows, furnishing material that will lead in the&#13;
upper societies, a nd finally go out into the world to take&#13;
their part in the practical life, bearing the stamp of beautiful and pure womanhood.&#13;
&#13;
Waterman&#13;
Brower&#13;
&#13;
Cushman&#13;
Fair&#13;
&#13;
Sharr&#13;
Styles&#13;
Manley&#13;
Metcalf&#13;
Pruden&#13;
Shaw&#13;
Blood&#13;
Smock&#13;
Bruce&#13;
Brandow&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
Barrick&#13;
Boddy&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
Eaton&#13;
Hobbs&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Baslough&#13;
Prichard&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Carkuff&#13;
McCarthy&#13;
Bryant&#13;
Miller&#13;
Harrison&#13;
Bass&#13;
Beach&#13;
Yuel&#13;
&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah!&#13;
Through thick, through thin&#13;
Adelphians, Adelphians are sure to win.&#13;
BY BRUCE&#13;
&#13;
O&#13;
&#13;
the rapid growth of the school it seemed&#13;
necessary, in the fall of 1901, to organize another&#13;
society for gentlemen in .the Academy. Recognizing&#13;
this need, a band of young men gathered on Nov. 4th&#13;
for the purpose of considering the organization of a new&#13;
literary society. On that day the Adelphians were introduced into Morningside College. The number of&#13;
charter members was twenty-five, and their officers for&#13;
the Fall term were:&#13;
WING TO&#13;
&#13;
H. L. Mossman, President.&#13;
Earl Hanna, Vice President.&#13;
J. E. Pritchard, Secretary.&#13;
C. 0. Rex, Treasurer.&#13;
P. E. Fredendoll, Cor. Secretary.&#13;
R. S. Day, First Censor.&#13;
C. C. Crosten, Second Censor.&#13;
The Adelphian society began at once to flourish,&#13;
and for a time the future seemed bright, but perplexing&#13;
problems soon arose, and a hard struggle was at hand.&#13;
&#13;
With these cheering words as a yell the spirit soon&#13;
took possession of the members to win.&#13;
The Adelphians at first chose as their colors royal&#13;
blue and cerise but soon they decided that cerise only&#13;
should be the color of the society.&#13;
On Dec. 5th, 1902, the Adelphians entered the intersociety debate, with the Hawkeye Literary Society, and&#13;
were defeated but not discouraged. Again in 1903 these&#13;
two societies, met in debate and this time the victory was&#13;
the Adelphians. The debaters, Mossman, Johnson, and&#13;
Shaw, will ever be remembered as the heroes of the 1903&#13;
Academic inter-society debate.&#13;
The Adelphians are sure that success is in store for&#13;
them and that a bright future is assured.&#13;
With what enthusiam is given the yell:&#13;
Wah hoo wah&#13;
Ta Rah Boom&#13;
Re Rah Zip Boom&#13;
Rickety Boom&#13;
Ripety Ripety&#13;
Ripety Ride&#13;
We are the Adelphians of Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
Newcom&#13;
Bender&#13;
Hummel&#13;
&#13;
Bowers&#13;
Noble&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Beacham&#13;
&#13;
Foster&#13;
&#13;
Weary&#13;
&#13;
Graybill&#13;
&#13;
Gibson&#13;
Johnson&#13;
Oslin&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Beacham&#13;
&#13;
Simmons&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
Deno&#13;
&#13;
Lukes&#13;
Mitchell&#13;
Fields&#13;
&#13;
Crummer&#13;
Moberly&#13;
Hummel&#13;
&#13;
Trenary&#13;
&#13;
Welch&#13;
Myers&#13;
&#13;
Crescent&#13;
CLARA CRUMMER, President.&#13;
BLANCHE JOHNSON, Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Colors&#13;
&#13;
Motto&#13;
We succeed by doing.&#13;
&#13;
White and Light Green.&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Boom a linger bow,&#13;
Ching a linger chee,&#13;
Ta la kn wah,&#13;
Ta la ku wee,&#13;
Crescents, Crescents, ,whee.&#13;
In the fall of 1900, both young ladies societies of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College having become collegiate, all noncollegiate girls were debarred from the privilege of literary work. Hence the organization of a new literary society was necessary. A petition was drawn up and sent&#13;
&#13;
to the faculty, asking them to grant to the Academy&#13;
girls the right to form the Crescent Society. This petition was readily granted, and November 2nd, 1900, the&#13;
first girls society of the Academy was organized, having&#13;
fifteen charter members. Few of them are now in school,&#13;
still all hold dear the memory of the Crescent Literary&#13;
Society.&#13;
The motto is "We succeed by Doing" and it may&#13;
well be said of the Crescents, that they do succeed by doing, for they always have done excellent work ever since&#13;
the society was organized. The Society is proud of its&#13;
name, which has been handed down through the ages,&#13;
and also of its Crescent shaped pin, which is one of the&#13;
prettiest in school. In the winter of 1902-03, the society&#13;
together with the Hawkeyes purchased a fine piano,&#13;
which is of great service to them, as well as making a&#13;
beautiful furnishing for the hall.&#13;
The Crescents endeavor to set up a high Christian&#13;
standard: first in spiritual work, then in social pleasure&#13;
and intellectual development. As the whole is made up&#13;
of its parts, so is Morningside College made up of its different departments and societies and this society by daily&#13;
striving is forming a very essential part. It is believed&#13;
that the Crescents by thus fitting themselves will aspire&#13;
to lofty heights.&#13;
&#13;
Shaffer&#13;
&#13;
Morrel&#13;
Clipple&#13;
Murray&#13;
Hinde&#13;
Hayes&#13;
Hamilton&#13;
Fair&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Crabb&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Mould&#13;
De Grisselles&#13;
Vermilea&#13;
Williams&#13;
Harman&#13;
Cook&#13;
Mason&#13;
Staples&#13;
Hartzell&#13;
Peterson&#13;
Robins&#13;
Hamren&#13;
Hollingsworth&#13;
Lukens&#13;
Howlett&#13;
&#13;
NewStudent's Letter&#13;
to his Sweetheart&#13;
My Dearest Katherine :- I had a pecular experience&#13;
when I joined th e Haw keye Society. I was never worse&#13;
scared in my life than I was then. I can't tell you much&#13;
about it, for I was blindfolded, but I know that I was raised&#13;
high up in the air and then it seemed like I was falling from&#13;
a high cliff. I was sure that I would be dashed into a&#13;
thousand pieces when I lit, and had a vision of a lot of&#13;
fellows picking up my remains with large blotters. When&#13;
I did light it sti ll seemed that I was dreaming, but I was&#13;
unhurt and soon found myself standing erect supported by&#13;
some of the boys who put me to several tests which I&#13;
promised to keep secret. 0 ! I am so glad it is over, a nd&#13;
that I did not have to be served like one poor fellow, who&#13;
got mad when the boys tried to initiate him. He had to be&#13;
cripp led before they cou ld handle him, and though that was&#13;
over two years ago he is still unable to walk without a Cain.&#13;
Well when I was getting about tired ou t th ey took the cloth&#13;
from off my eyes, a nd made me give th e society ye ll.&#13;
It runs lik e this.&#13;
Ki Ki Hawkeye my&#13;
Whee zip boom ba soo&#13;
Ra Ra 1- o-w-a&#13;
Wahoo hi&#13;
And a ba zoo boom&#13;
Animus animus&#13;
Die tu sum&#13;
Haw Haw Haw Ki Ki Ki&#13;
Hawkeye Hawkeye&#13;
Ra! ra!! ra!!!&#13;
&#13;
Next they made me translate their motto.&#13;
It is a Latin&#13;
motto containing but four words (Non palma sine pulvera)&#13;
which in our language is "Not the palms without the dust."&#13;
I told the boys that I thought there was more dust than&#13;
palms, but they assured me that I was mistaken. They&#13;
said the dust first the palms later.&#13;
The Hawkeye Literary Society was organized in the&#13;
Fall of 1899, in the old building now known as North Ha ll.&#13;
Fifteen boys of the academy met there to discuss the matter,&#13;
and decided to organize a society whose purpose should be,&#13;
The literary moral and socia l advancement, and the develop ment of everything which pertains to high and noble manhood. For the society they choose the name Hawkeye, the&#13;
name of our State. Because the soil of our state is pure,&#13;
and its product stands first both in quality and quantity.&#13;
This was thought to be an appropriate standard for an&#13;
oraanization: First purity: Then seek to rank first in quality&#13;
a nd quantity of the work accomplished. Following this a&#13;
sho rt history of the struggles, defeats, and victories of the&#13;
societ y were mentioned. The Hawkeye and Adelphian&#13;
societies have a debating compact which provides for an&#13;
inter-society debate each year. The first one was held in&#13;
December, 1902 and was unanimously won by the Hawkeyes&#13;
The second was held in December, 1903, and lost by a vote&#13;
of two to one in favor of th e Adelphians.&#13;
The society now occupies a well furni s hed room on the&#13;
third floor ot Main Hall, and with a membership of thirtyfive is doing a great work.&#13;
I am so g lad I joined a society for I am sure th at I never&#13;
cou ld have been the well rounded man which I now expect&#13;
to be when I leave schoo l had I not done so, and I am sure&#13;
that I made no mistake in jo ining the Hawkeyes.&#13;
Faithfully yours,&#13;
HERBY.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
PARK PLACE HALL.&#13;
&#13;
Alumni Association&#13;
THE Alumni Association of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College was preceded by an Alumni Association of the old University&#13;
of the Northwest. This association was formed during Commencement of 1894 and held its first and only dinner in the&#13;
lecture room of Grace Church during the Commencement&#13;
of 189S. E. M. Corbett was president, and Judge Lawrence&#13;
was the speaker of the evening. With the breaking up of&#13;
the old University and the organization of Morningside College, the Alumni Association went out of existence with a&#13;
balance of 74 cents in the treasury.&#13;
But the idea of an alumni association had been started&#13;
and it lived. Through the persistent efforts of E. M. Corbett and others it was again brought to the front. The various graduates of the University of the Northwest and of&#13;
Morningside College were interested, and all who could be&#13;
reached in any way were informed that a meeting would be&#13;
held during Commencement of 1900 for the purpose of organizing an alumni association of Morningside College.&#13;
Those considered eligible were the members of the class of&#13;
'99, the outgoing class of 1900 and the graduates of the old&#13;
University of the Northwest.&#13;
Accordingly at five o'clock on commencement day of&#13;
1900, five of the above named met in the old chapel and organized the present alumni association. The following officers were elected: Pres., Ernest Richards, '99; Vice-Pres.,&#13;
E. M. Corbett, '94; Sec'y., S. L. Chandler, '99; Treas., Dora&#13;
Eisentraut, '96; Members Executive Committee, J.B. Trimble, '91, and Clara Yetter, '00. This was all that was accomplished at this Commencement but during the year the members endeavored to inspire interest in the movement and&#13;
during Commencement of 1901 the association gave its first&#13;
dinner and lecture. The dinner was given in Park Place&#13;
Hall. The lecture was given by Dr. C . J. Little of Evans-&#13;
&#13;
ton. Lectures were new in Morningside. The faculty,&#13;
headed by Dr. Lewis, cheerfully joined the alumni in backing the enterprise and by dint of hard canvassing, the expenses were nearly met by the receipts.&#13;
During the business meeting of this year the old officers&#13;
were re-elected to suffer hardships for another year. ln 1902&#13;
the dinner was given on the third floor of the new college&#13;
building and Dr. Frank W. Gunsaulus gave a brilliant lecture to an enthusiastic audience in the chapel. This year&#13;
the association found itself with a balance in the treasury .&#13;
This year, 1902, S. L. Chandler was elected President,&#13;
E. M. Corbett, Vice-Pres., A. J. Quirin Cor. Sec., Miss Jennie&#13;
Skewis, Rec. Sec., Dora Eisentraut, Treas., J. 8. Trimble and&#13;
Anna Marsh Reinhart members of the executive committee.&#13;
During the following Commencement a large audience&#13;
greeted Dr. W. F. McDowell who gave the lecture, and a&#13;
very enthusiastic company gathered at the dinner given in&#13;
the basement of the Main Hall. The association was by this&#13;
time an established fact and showed what it might do in the&#13;
future by subscribing at its business meeting several hundred dollars toward the Guild fund. The president, vicepresident, treasurer and executive committee were re-elected. Miss Bessie Carr was elected corresponding secretary&#13;
and Miss Pearl Woodford recording secretary.&#13;
Such are the beginnings of an association which some&#13;
day will be a powerful factor in the life of the College. Like&#13;
the Alma Mater, it has "come up through great tribulations."&#13;
Nearly all of its members graduated with great honors but&#13;
little cash. They have gone out to battle with the world.&#13;
With few exceptions they are sacrificing loyally for the&#13;
school. Engrossed with the cares of life, visions often pass&#13;
before their eyes, shutting out all else. When they know&#13;
that their hearts are still "On the hills of Morningside."&#13;
With the success of the school upon our hearts we can all&#13;
sing "Blest be the tie that binds our hearts in Christian&#13;
love," for we have all felt the influence of God in Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
Our Alumni&#13;
Alumni Officers&#13;
S. L. CHANDLER, President.&#13;
E. M. CORBETT, Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
J. B. Trimble, A.&#13;
B., '91, Pastor at Odebolt, '92. Presiding Elder Sheldon District&#13;
'93, Sioux City District,&#13;
98. In '03 appointed&#13;
one of the Missionary&#13;
Field Secretaries of the&#13;
Methodist Episcopal&#13;
Church .&#13;
&#13;
MISS PEARL WOODFORD, Recording Secretary&#13;
MISS BESSIE CARR, Corresponding Secretary.&#13;
MISS DORA EISENTRAUT, Treasurer.&#13;
J. B. TRIMBLE,&#13;
&#13;
Members of&#13;
Executive&#13;
ANNA MARSH REINHART&#13;
Committee.&#13;
&#13;
Th. Warner, A.B.,&#13;
Teaching at Postville, Ia., '92. Farming&#13;
'94.&#13;
'9r.&#13;
&#13;
Ed. Mahood, Ph.B., '93. State University '94,&#13;
Teaching '95, Chicago university '96. A. M. and chair&#13;
of Mathematics, State Agricultural College, St. Paul,&#13;
Minn., '97; Chair Mathematics, St. Louis High Schools,&#13;
'03.&#13;
James H. O'Donohue, A.B.,'93. Eighteen months in&#13;
England and Scotland, being special student in Chemistry, Edinburgh University, and life member of Chemical&#13;
&#13;
Society of Edinburgh. Superintendent Schools of Correctionville, '95. State University of Iowa M.Sc., '97.&#13;
Superintendent of Schools Correctionville, '98. Superintendent Schools Storm Lake since '98 and a member of&#13;
Iowa Academy of Science.&#13;
Edward M. Corbett, B.A., '94. Studied law in the&#13;
office of P.A. Sawyer of Sioux City, '95, State University, 96, admitted to the bar '96, practiced with P.A. Sawyer in '97. Entered a law partnership under firm name&#13;
of Brown &amp; Corbett '98 in the Security Bank Building&#13;
where the present offices are located.&#13;
Fred J. Plondke, M.D., Ph.B., '95. Began medical&#13;
profession at Everly, '95. Located in St. Paul, Minn.,&#13;
1900.&#13;
E. Lawrence Benedict, A.B., '95. Pastor at Larabee, '95. Garrett Biblical Institute, '98. Boston University School of Theology, '98. Degree S. T. B. 'oo.&#13;
Traveled in Europe summer 1900. Pastor at Hawarden,&#13;
'01. Transferred to Pe Ell, Washington, '03.&#13;
James Hudson Benedict, Ph.B., '96. Chicago College Dental Surgery, '97, Degree D. D. S. 'oo. Practicing dentistry at Pender, Neb., since 1900.&#13;
&#13;
Dora Alice Eisentraut, A.B., '96. Teaching at&#13;
Anthon, Iowa, '97. Since then a successful teacher m&#13;
the public schools of Sioux City.&#13;
Frank D. Empy, A.B., '96. Garret Biblical Institute, '98, pastor at Hinton, 'or, at Castana, '02. Chicago&#13;
University, '03. Pastor at Whiting, '04.&#13;
Frank Mitchell, Ph.B., '97. Studied law in office&#13;
of Danson &amp; Butler, Algona, '97, U.S. Army, '98. Studied law in office of S. H. CarrIreton, '99. Entered partnership with his brother in launching "The Butler County&#13;
Tribune" of Allison,· Iowa, 'oo. Admitted to the bar&#13;
and opened a law office at Early, 'oo.&#13;
Sidney L. Chandler, A.B., '99. Pastor at Hull 1900,&#13;
received his Master's degree, 'oo. Financial agent of M.&#13;
C., 'or. Pastor of Haddock Church and Superintendent&#13;
Methodist Missions of Sioux City at present. A. M. Degree, 'or.&#13;
Asbury Dean, Ph.B., '99. Pastor at Willow Creek,&#13;
'oo. Harris, 'or, Garret Biblical Institute, '03. Curlew, '04.&#13;
Jabob Eisentraut, Ph.B., '99. Chicago University&#13;
'99, studying law and writing insurance in Washington,&#13;
D. C., 'oo. Traveled in British Isles, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Walter Bruce Empey, A.B., '99. Pastor of Seney,&#13;
'oo. Missionary to Morada bad, India, 'or. Returned on&#13;
sick leave '02. Pastor at Merril '02.&#13;
Adams R. Hastings, A.B., '99. In employ of Knapp&#13;
&amp; Spencer Hardware Co., Sioux City, 'oo. Northwestern Railway, Sioux City, 'or. North Western Railway,&#13;
Minneapolis and Chicago, '02.&#13;
Ernest C. Richards, Ph.B., '99. Pastor at Lester&#13;
'oo, graduate student at M. C. 'or. Boston University&#13;
School of Theology, '02., A. M. degree, '02. Pastor at&#13;
Lester, '03, at Pocahontas, '04.&#13;
Carrie M. Bartlett, Ph.B., 'oo. Teaching '01, deaconess training school, Chicago, '03, and in June expects to&#13;
sail for China as a missionary.&#13;
James A. Davies, Ph.B., 'oo. Pastor at Germania,&#13;
1900 to present time. A. M. degree '03.&#13;
Hattie Bartlett Empey, Ph.B., 'oo. Missionary at&#13;
Moradabad India, 'or. Merril, '02.&#13;
Edna Hathaway, B.Sc., 'oo.&#13;
S. D. 'or.&#13;
&#13;
Teaching at Mitchell,&#13;
&#13;
Albert H. Jastrum, Ph.B., 'oo. Practicing medicine&#13;
at Remsen and teaching in Sioux City College of Medicine, 'or.&#13;
Clarence E. Van Horne, Ph.B., 'oo.&#13;
stein 'or. Sanborn '02, Pocahontas '03.&#13;
teaching at Sykestown, N. D., '04.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor of Hol Preaching and&#13;
&#13;
Robert N. Van. Horne, Ph.B., 'oo. John Hopkins&#13;
University, '01, traveled in Europe summer '01, Chair of&#13;
of Mathematics in M. C. '02.&#13;
Clara Yetter Flint, A.B., 'oo.&#13;
rathon, 'or.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor's wife, Ma-&#13;
&#13;
Harry H. Adair, A.B., '01. Principal schools Dakota City, Neb., '02.&#13;
Arthur J. Folson, A. B., '01. Pastor at Whiting&#13;
'02, transferred to Chicago conference '03.&#13;
Herbert A. Keck, Ph.B., '01.&#13;
Danbury '03.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor at Ute '02,&#13;
&#13;
Augustus J. Quirin, A.B., '01.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor Cylinder '02.&#13;
&#13;
Anna Marsh Reinhart, Ph.B., '01. Wife of Oscar&#13;
Reinhart, Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Oscar Reinhart, B.Sc., '01.&#13;
ional Bank, Sioux City.&#13;
&#13;
Position in First Nat-&#13;
&#13;
Jennie R. Skewis, B.Sc., '01. Editor "The Inwood&#13;
Herald," '02. Traveled abroad '03, continued the publishing of the Herald, '03.&#13;
Charles F. Eberly, B.Sc., '02. Taught Chemistry&#13;
at M. C. summer session '02. Teaching near Denhoff,&#13;
N. D. '03.&#13;
&#13;
c.,&#13;
&#13;
Bessie M. Carr, Ph. B., '02.&#13;
'03.&#13;
&#13;
George A. Platts, Ph.B., '02.&#13;
'03, pastor at Sergeant's Bluff '04.&#13;
Fred J. Seaver, B.Sc., 02.&#13;
versity, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago University,&#13;
&#13;
Fellowship State Uni-&#13;
&#13;
Ethel Walker Trimble, A.B., '02..&#13;
Sioux Rapids, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor's wife;&#13;
&#13;
Emma A. Flathers, Ph.B., '02. Teaching&#13;
quoketa schools '03, in Sioux City schools '04.&#13;
&#13;
111&#13;
&#13;
Ma-&#13;
&#13;
Instructor in Latin, M.&#13;
Samuel Knoer, Ph.B., 02.&#13;
at Nemoha, '04.&#13;
&#13;
Pastor at Moorhead '03,&#13;
&#13;
Ross P. Brown, A.B., '02. Studied law in office of&#13;
J. D. Brown, Guthrie Center, 03. In employ of Interstate Electric Supply Co., Sioux City, '04.&#13;
&#13;
Guy G. Frary, B.Sc. '02. Assistant in Chemistry&#13;
M. C. '03. Fellowship State University '04.&#13;
&#13;
Ethel M. Gantt, Ph.B., '02.&#13;
Sioux City, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Florence M. Cate, Ph.B., '02.&#13;
schools of Hubbard, '03.&#13;
&#13;
Teaching School,&#13;
&#13;
Teaching&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
public&#13;
&#13;
Reminiscences&#13;
BY JACOB EISENTRAUT&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
fireside of his heart sat Memory dreaming a&#13;
dream. Into the wildwood of bygones wandered&#13;
the dreamer happy with the thoughts of youth. Sweet&#13;
for-get-me-nots were nodding by the strange and winding pathway and the birds were singing the song of yore.&#13;
The western sky was radiant with the glow of a Hawkeye sunset and from the distance came the sound of an&#13;
old familiar bell. In a stretch of beautiful landscape by&#13;
the banks of a winding river, there still stood the famous&#13;
North Hall. The church, the hillside, the trees, the&#13;
campus, the old stone steps and narrow hallway, yes&#13;
they were just the same as in years gone by. But what&#13;
of the Ananias Club, Companies A and B, the Feminine&#13;
Wand Brigade and the old foundation stones? Where&#13;
are all the girls with whom we studied Virgil and the&#13;
boys who made life's sunshine bright and fair? Why&#13;
does the old fam iliar path, though filled with strange&#13;
and earnest faces, seem so lonely now? Where are all&#13;
the chums we knew whose kind and loyal friendships&#13;
made so happy those endearing days? Must we pass as&#13;
strangers now and never know those joys again? Alas,&#13;
alas, how changed is all since time has hastened on, and&#13;
yet how unchanged, for do we not feel the thrill of those&#13;
same old friendships still? Yes, we cherish all that was&#13;
T THE&#13;
&#13;
beautiful in the lives of those we knew, for the flight of&#13;
time has mellowed and hallowed the memory of those&#13;
happy associations.&#13;
Indeed that mysterious bond of friendly feeling is&#13;
made securer at every mile post of the passing years.&#13;
For we love the old true friendships, the chums we used&#13;
to know, in the dim sweet distant yesterday, the dear&#13;
old long ago.&#13;
It may be true that most of our young dreams of&#13;
life's greatness and glamour came to us in the old college&#13;
halls, but after all it is not to them our hearts return;&#13;
rather do we see again the happy faces of old friends,&#13;
the sunshine in their eye and their smile, oh we see it&#13;
yet, as pure and sweet as a drop of dew in the heart of a&#13;
prairie rose.&#13;
The very simplicity of lives swept clean with the&#13;
purity of moral winds from chapel and pulpit is a picture&#13;
that will fade nevermore. The ideals which came to us&#13;
in the class room, at study or while walking in the star&#13;
sown nights, these are the beckoning hands that still&#13;
invite us on.&#13;
Nowhere in life do we cease longing for the companionship and the company of our kind; it is this that&#13;
makes college life most dear. True friendships are&#13;
formed there, friendship at its best.&#13;
There is something ever novel and inspiring about&#13;
college life that exerts a silent influence over us during&#13;
all the succeeding years. Especially was this true in the&#13;
&#13;
early days of our Institution when the scenes shifted&#13;
from sunshine to gloom so often. Wild and fanciful&#13;
were the scenes about the campus when the thirty&#13;
students enrolled in the autumn of 1890. We met as&#13;
strangers and in that spirit took up our duties only to&#13;
miss the enthusiasm of rivalry and comradeship. How&#13;
changed is the scene . today, with the enrollment running on toward the thousand mark. College and society&#13;
yells, football heroes, class spirit and debating trophies&#13;
have fired the hearts of the students with a new flame.&#13;
While the title "University of the Northwest" remained, the dark days ever shadowed the brighter ones&#13;
in making the future uncertain. Censure was heaped&#13;
upon the men who managed its affairs, and yet without&#13;
their earnest attempt, the beautiful buildings of today&#13;
might have remained only in the fancy of some dreamer.&#13;
The story of the early years of our College borders&#13;
on the pathetic. How like a great ship at sea, driven&#13;
by the winds and tempest-tossed, but at last steaming&#13;
into the harbor proud of her achievement. By that very&#13;
struggle and later success the love of the student for his&#13;
college is made securer and more loyal. Today many&#13;
hands are stretched across the hills from out the hamlets&#13;
and cities in kindly friendship for those who are making&#13;
the life and success of the college.&#13;
&#13;
Before the trenches at Richmond the two armies&#13;
lay close to each other. The bands of Northern army&#13;
struck up "The Star Spangled Banner." The musician&#13;
of the Southland returned with "Dixie." After the lull&#13;
the bands of both armies played "Home, Sweet Home."&#13;
That is the fairest picture of the war, the union of hearts.&#13;
Perhaps we were members of different societies and on&#13;
opposing teams on the field and in the forum. Let us&#13;
be brothers now in reviewing the old scenes. Let us&#13;
not forget the lessons taught us in the old college halls,&#13;
and may we live to see the realization of those early&#13;
ideals.&#13;
There is a picture painted by a master hand, it is&#13;
called the "Feast of the Gods." That is the gleam of a&#13;
lofty imagination; yet far more sublime even than that&#13;
is the faith of the college student looking ahead on life's&#13;
pathway with a steady purpose and an iron ·will to&#13;
achieve. Success to the boys and girls of M. S. C.&#13;
Here's a hand of kindly greeting to the old students,&#13;
and to those yet to come. I believe in our college. I&#13;
believe in her noble President. I believe in the old&#13;
friends of other days.&#13;
May our journey back across the years give us&#13;
courage and inspiration for the strenuous times before us.&#13;
Farewell,&#13;
J. EISENTRAUT.&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETICS.&#13;
&#13;
H . B. SAYLOR,&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
Estella&#13;
&#13;
HARDING,&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
Emma&#13;
&#13;
FAIR,&#13;
&#13;
secretary&#13;
&#13;
AthleticOfficers&#13;
&#13;
D.&#13;
&#13;
L . YOUNG,&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
president&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
'03&#13;
&#13;
DEBBENHAM.&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Officers&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
w . B.&#13;
&#13;
'04&#13;
&#13;
G. E.&#13;
&#13;
MILLNER.&#13;
&#13;
treasurer&#13;
&#13;
Athletics&#13;
that wholesome exercise together with the&#13;
fostering of the spirit of contest aids in making the&#13;
"well rounded" practical collegiate product, the facultyand&#13;
students of Morningside College have recognized athletics&#13;
as one of the essentials in college life.&#13;
The general&#13;
association, with the Fa.c ulty Committee on athletics&#13;
have supervision of regulations concerning meets and&#13;
contests. Subordinate to the general association are the&#13;
auxiliary associations, viz., Baseball, Track Team, Men's&#13;
Basket Ball, Ladies' Basket Ball, Tennis and Football.&#13;
During the past year the results have been highly satisfactory&#13;
BELIEVING&#13;
&#13;
The base ball work of 1903 was under the management of E. H. Hulser. The team was coached by&#13;
Wilson of Sioux City, and at the close of the season was&#13;
in excellent condition. Games were played with Yankton College, University of South Dakota and other&#13;
colleges in the surrounding territory.&#13;
The men's basket ball team, managed by D. C. Hall,&#13;
. was fast and furious, and demonstrated in the games&#13;
with such teams as the City Y. M. C. A., the High&#13;
&#13;
School, and other teams in the local tournament that&#13;
Morningside's Basket Ball team need not take a back&#13;
seat on any gymnasium floor.&#13;
The ladies' basket ball team, while yet comparatively&#13;
a new organization, proved beyond a doubt that M. C.&#13;
girls were as active physically as mentally. A number&#13;
of teams were played with visiting teams. A blushing&#13;
maiden full of life to her very finger tips is one of God's&#13;
greatest gifts to humanity.&#13;
Basket ball insures health&#13;
and longevity.&#13;
Football is the real American college sport. By&#13;
some who are not acquainted with the game it is though&#13;
to be rough. We admit that it does require the very&#13;
best physical condition to withstand this vigorous&#13;
exercise. Herein lies its great value, for only when the&#13;
body is in good condition does the mind show its greatest efficiency. The season of 1903 was the fifth year for&#13;
football in Morningside. The Association is to be complimented for having obtained the services as coach of&#13;
one who has a football record such as Everett Sweeley&#13;
of Sioux City. Mr. Sweeley was a full-back and star&#13;
kicker on Michigan's invincibles of 1902. Nothwithstanding that most of the material which the coach&#13;
found on Morningside's gridiron was raw, yet he turned&#13;
out a creditable team.&#13;
The season was successful.&#13;
Nine games, of which five were won, were played.&#13;
&#13;
*Sweeley&#13;
Hymer&#13;
Bass&#13;
&#13;
*Coach&#13;
&#13;
tManager&#13;
&#13;
Heilman&#13;
&#13;
Adams&#13;
Fredendoll&#13;
Squires&#13;
Howe&#13;
Saylor&#13;
Cain&#13;
Tracy&#13;
&#13;
Winn&#13;
&#13;
Crabb&#13;
&#13;
Collins&#13;
Stiles&#13;
&#13;
Millner&#13;
Debenhatn&#13;
&#13;
tYoung&#13;
Nichols&#13;
&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
preceding the opening of College last Fall, Everett M. Sweeley&#13;
was elected to coach the Morningside College team. His record on the&#13;
Michigan University team for the years 1901 and 1902 when they held the&#13;
undisputed championship of the west is evidence of his ability as a player.&#13;
As a coach Mr. Sweeley met the full expectation of the management.&#13;
He held the confidence of his men throughout the season. Every night of&#13;
practice saw the Coach with his suit on, upon the gridiron training his men.&#13;
It is evident that Sweeley as a coach used his material to the very best advantage, and taught not only eleven men, but the entire squad the game of&#13;
foot ball.&#13;
AUGUST,&#13;
&#13;
EVERETT M. SWEELEY,&#13;
COACH.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE. MILLNER,&#13;
&#13;
L, G.&#13;
&#13;
GLENN SQUIRES,&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
T.&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
NICHOLS,&#13;
&#13;
R. G.&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
B . COLLINS.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
E. M .&#13;
&#13;
TRACEY&#13;
&#13;
Q. B.&#13;
&#13;
Winners of Football Ms of the&#13;
&#13;
R . E. HEILMAN, E.&#13;
&#13;
P. E .&#13;
&#13;
FREDENDOLL&#13;
&#13;
ROY&#13;
&#13;
WINN,&#13;
&#13;
L. H.&#13;
&#13;
JOHN&#13;
&#13;
BASS,&#13;
&#13;
R . H.&#13;
&#13;
w .H&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
DEBENHA&lt;&#13;
&#13;
L. E.&#13;
&#13;
The Football&#13;
Trophy Cup&#13;
This&#13;
lS&#13;
&#13;
L. R. HOWE. F. B.&#13;
&#13;
H.B .&#13;
&#13;
SAYLOR. CAPT.,&#13;
&#13;
L. T.&#13;
&#13;
Winner of Trophy&#13;
&#13;
Season 1903&#13;
&#13;
cup&#13;
was presented to&#13;
the foot ball association by&#13;
Mr. A. R. Toothaker, a former foot&#13;
ball player and alumnus of the&#13;
college. The t rophy was given as&#13;
an annual prize to the best footba 11&#13;
player making the best grades in&#13;
his .classes. The cup is a beautiful&#13;
silver piece, and stands thirte en&#13;
inches high, mounted upon an ebony base.&#13;
The prize is awa rd ed as follows:&#13;
At the close of the football&#13;
season, the men on the team winning M's shall meet and select by&#13;
ballot the five best players. The&#13;
one of these five thus selected having the highest average grade in&#13;
his studies, of at least fifteen hours.&#13;
shall be declared the winner of the&#13;
cup and shall ho ld the same for&#13;
one year.&#13;
&#13;
D. L. YOUNG, H . B.&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
H . K. CAIN, R. E.&#13;
&#13;
THE SQUAD.&#13;
&#13;
Wescott&#13;
Day&#13;
&#13;
Bryant&#13;
&#13;
Millner&#13;
Eveleth&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
&#13;
Wilcox&#13;
&#13;
Delay&#13;
Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
Siman&#13;
Gantt&#13;
&#13;
Toothaker&#13;
Marsh&#13;
Hieby&#13;
&#13;
Garretson&#13;
&#13;
*Hulser&#13;
Barnes&#13;
&#13;
Faey&#13;
&#13;
*Manager&#13;
&#13;
Allen&#13;
Wescott&#13;
&#13;
Van Dyke&#13;
Day&#13;
Debbenham&#13;
&#13;
Olds&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Rissler&#13;
Clarey&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
Although playing a losing game by a small margin as to the actual score, the team of 1903 may be&#13;
justly proud of its record. The men not only won the&#13;
support of our own students by playing fast and hard,&#13;
and in every case clean ball, but also won the admiration and respect of their opponents. The team in its&#13;
final development was greatly indebted to Mr. Wilson&#13;
for his faithful work as coach.&#13;
VIRGIL FAEV, Pitcher.&#13;
H. OLDS, Pitcher.&#13;
ROY BARNES, Catcher.&#13;
C. DEBBENHAM, First Base.&#13;
E. E. DAY, Second Base.&#13;
CLAIR WESCOTT, Third Base.&#13;
H. VAN DYKE, Left Field.&#13;
WM. CLAREY, Center Field.&#13;
A. TUMBLESON, Capt. Right Field.&#13;
C. RISSLER, Short Stop.&#13;
GEORGE MILLNER, Substitute.&#13;
E. H . HULSER, Manager.&#13;
CLARK. WILSON, Coach.&#13;
&#13;
Baseball Team 1903&#13;
Schedule&#13;
MORNINGSIDE vs:&#13;
&#13;
Score.&#13;
&#13;
Yankton at Yankton . ........ ........... I 2-5&#13;
Sioux City League at Sioux City ...... . .. 13-3&#13;
University of South Dakota at Vermillion. 6-7&#13;
Yankton at Morningside.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
1-0&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion at Sioux City ........ .. ...... 11-4&#13;
Sioux City at Morningside . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2-14&#13;
Collegiates and Preps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-2&#13;
&#13;
Track Team Coach&#13;
WARREN PANTON comes to us from Cedar&#13;
Falls State Normal, where he has been attending&#13;
school for the past two years. His efficient work&#13;
done there on the track warranted the team in electing him as their Captain. He has been in ten different meets in which he has won 119 points. The&#13;
events in his field are 100, 220, 440 yards, dashes&#13;
and half mile run.&#13;
&#13;
Hall&#13;
McKee&#13;
&#13;
McIsaac&#13;
&#13;
Manager&#13;
&#13;
Brokaw&#13;
Millner&#13;
&#13;
Null&#13;
&#13;
*McIsaac&#13;
Price&#13;
Trimble&#13;
Wescott&#13;
Sawyer&#13;
Debbenham Hartzell&#13;
&#13;
Debbenham, Captain&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Our Star Athlete&#13;
MR. F. F . HALL though young in his athletic career has&#13;
made a record that has never been equaled by any one of his age&#13;
in any Western College. With the proper training he will be&#13;
able in a few years to break the world's records. Mr. Hall was&#13;
awarded a gold medal two years in succession for winning the&#13;
greatest number of points in the home meet.&#13;
RECORDS.&#13;
&#13;
100 yard dash-10 2-5 seconds.&#13;
220 yard dash-22 1/2 seconds.&#13;
Discus throw- 107 feet.&#13;
Hammer throw-104-5 feet.&#13;
Shot put-38-7 feet .&#13;
&#13;
F. F. HALL.&#13;
&#13;
An Important Meeting&#13;
BY ASAL. BROWER.&#13;
&#13;
It&#13;
&#13;
at a meeting of the Y. M. C. A. Devotional Committee at Wilistone College. Since the end of the fall&#13;
term was drawing near a schedule of the leaders for the&#13;
following term had been arranged. The schedule having&#13;
completed and some minor details attended to the chairman,&#13;
George Dalton, _&#13;
asked if there was any further business&#13;
that should come before the Committee.&#13;
At this juncture Basil Arlington, a tall, awkward,&#13;
homely young fellow stirred uneasily in his seat, grasped&#13;
the back of the seat in front of him, shuffled his feet&#13;
nervously and finally arose, blushing like a girl.&#13;
"M-M-Mr. Chairman" he stammered, I think we ought&#13;
to do something to save some of the reckless, wayward&#13;
boys about us. Becoming more composed and forgetting&#13;
his embarrassment he went on to tell how Creighton Dollinger, who roomed in the same house as he, was being led&#13;
away by some of the wild rougher young fellows.&#13;
When he first began to speak the other committeemen&#13;
were astonished at the unexpected behavior of Arlington,&#13;
for ever since he had been assigned to their committee,&#13;
through the influence of President Wistle, they had considered him as a timid retiring fellow who would never be&#13;
much help in their department. They soon became much&#13;
interested in his earnest words and when he sat down concluded they were honored with the presence of a "diamond&#13;
in the rough.''&#13;
"Well Arlington," said Dalton, "what course do you&#13;
think best for us to take towards this young man?"&#13;
"I don't believe, from his nature, that it would be best&#13;
for any of you to speak to him on the subject, but just&#13;
pray for him and speak to him pleasantly whenever you&#13;
WAS&#13;
&#13;
*Prize Winner for Long Story.&#13;
&#13;
chance to meet him. He needs a few real true friends who&#13;
will not try to lead him off."&#13;
At the same time five other boys of this same school&#13;
were holding another meeting of an entirely different&#13;
character and purpose in the room of their leader, Don&#13;
Brathton. There were four other boys present, viz: John&#13;
Driscoll, familiarly known as "Drizzle", Harold Van Bild,&#13;
answering to the name of "Van", Daniel Clegg, nicknamed&#13;
"Keg" because of his resemblance to that piece of furniture,&#13;
and lastly Creighton Dollinger, more often spoken of as&#13;
"Crait" or "Dolly". All of the boys were chronic loafers&#13;
and often came together thus to pass away the time smoking and playing poker. Dolly, however being the only son&#13;
of a hard working father who sent him to school to make a&#13;
man of him, was not as hardened as the others but was fast&#13;
being led astray.&#13;
"Say Drizzle," exclaimed Don, "do you know old Wistle&#13;
called me up today and told me he hoped I would be careful&#13;
how I spent my time and caused others to squander theirs.&#13;
The old fool seems to think all there is in life is to be&#13;
goody-goody and get your lessons every day."&#13;
"Yes" returned Drizzle who was busily engaged in a&#13;
game of poker with Keg and Van, "a fellow like Dalton is&#13;
about his calibre, one who digs all the time and says his&#13;
prayers at night."&#13;
"Well Driz' you might profitably occupy some of your&#13;
time in praying", put in Dolly.&#13;
"Oh I say Crait, let up on that, no preaching here, 1&#13;
thought we had you pretty well broke in," said Don as he&#13;
added a cloud of blue smoke to the already supercharged&#13;
air of the room.&#13;
He chuckled softly and then continued, "can't you re·&#13;
member boys when we first found the "Dolly" he would&#13;
hardly look at a pack of cards and wouldn't even touch a&#13;
cigarette, said his mother wouldn't like it. Oh I telly' old&#13;
boy we'll make a man of you yet."&#13;
Basil Arlington's opportunity came sooner than he had&#13;
dared hope. The second morning of the winter term he&#13;
&#13;
met Creighton Dollinger in the corridor of the Science&#13;
Building.&#13;
"Hello Crait," he said as he advanced and shook hands&#13;
with him. "You back for another term, how did you enjoy&#13;
yourself, got a room yet?" he asked all in one breath.&#13;
"No I haven't. I've been looking for a room mate; you&#13;
know Jim Waite went to Quincy, Ill., to a business school&#13;
so that leaves me without a partner. How are you fixed?"&#13;
"I'm about the same way. Andy Saunders' brother&#13;
came back to school and is going to room with him, so I am&#13;
out too. Say, how would it do for you and I to go in&#13;
cahoots? We could get our College Algebra and Chem.&#13;
together, as well as read Virgil. What do you say?"&#13;
"Why yes I guess that'll be all right, but I may come in&#13;
a little late some nights," said Creighton casting his eyes&#13;
to the floor. "You'll have to put up with a little extra that&#13;
way. You know I'm not such an angel as Andy was."&#13;
"Oh ho, I guess we'll get along alright. Say by the&#13;
way, you play the flute pretty well, don't you? Since Andy&#13;
left we are minus a good flute soloist in the orchestra and&#13;
Prof. wanted me to find one if I could. Can 't you come&#13;
and help us out?"&#13;
"Oh yes I play the flute a little to amuse myself now&#13;
and then. Maybe I can help 'Old Nerves' out a little if I&#13;
have time. I suppose you still saw on the first fiddle?"&#13;
"Yes. Well come up to practice in the conservatory&#13;
today at 3:30. I'll go to the house now and move my books&#13;
and truck out of the old room into yours. Has Jim pulled&#13;
up his stakes yet?"&#13;
"Yes, came and got his traps yesterday morning. Well&#13;
I must be going, got to go down and see Don and the boys.&#13;
So long."&#13;
Turning away, Basil sent up a prayer for his friend and&#13;
thought how fortunate he had been in getting Creighton to&#13;
room with him.&#13;
For about two months things went on in the usual way.&#13;
Creighton had joined the orchestra upon Basil's earnest&#13;
solicitation and being a good player he had managed to&#13;
&#13;
keep on the roll, although he was at Don's room more often&#13;
than at practice.&#13;
Basil had had several heart to heart talks with him&#13;
about the time when they would be out of school and what&#13;
manly strength they would need to win out in the battle of&#13;
life. But yet it seemed that Don's power over him amounted&#13;
almost to a hypnotic spell, for as soon as he was with the&#13;
"Four Toughs," as they were called, he threw off all&#13;
restraint and plunged headlong into vice.&#13;
One morning just before chapel, Basil met him. in front&#13;
of the Bulletin Board in the Science Hall, reading the notice&#13;
of the chemistry lesson for the next day.&#13;
"Say Crait, old boy," exclaimed Basil, "I've just been&#13;
hunting for you. You know the Orchestra is to play at the&#13;
Mozart Club up town Friday night. I ran across Prof. just&#13;
now and he told me that Tommy Olson is sick abed with&#13;
pneumonia and can't possibly be there and he wanted me&#13;
to see you, if you wouldn't make arrangements and be sure&#13;
to be there?"&#13;
"Hello Dolly, say step out here a minute, I want to see&#13;
you," cried Brathon coming up in a rush.&#13;
"Excuse me a minute will you Basil?" said Crait, steping over to where Don was standing, where they held a hasty,&#13;
low toned conversation for a few minutes, then as they&#13;
turned about Don said, "Now be sure to be there tonight,&#13;
will you Dolly?"&#13;
"Yes," replied Crait.&#13;
"Now you won't go back on us?"&#13;
"No sir, when I make a promise I always keep it.&#13;
never break my word."&#13;
Basil looked at him quickly and quietly said, "Do you&#13;
always live up to that?"&#13;
"Yes always."&#13;
"Well I hope you always will and still not get into any&#13;
trouble over it. But how about playing down the Mozart&#13;
Club Friday evening, will you be there?"&#13;
"Let's see, this is Tuesday isn't it? Tomorrow is Wednesday the night of the Oligonian Banquet. Thursday&#13;
&#13;
nothing," he said half aloud." "Yes I guess I can be there for&#13;
all I know now."&#13;
"Well we want to depend on you. We must have a&#13;
good flute soloist for the Priests' March you know," Basil&#13;
shrewdly urged, for he knew Crait was very fond of the&#13;
&#13;
Priests' March.&#13;
"Yes I'll be there", said Crait decidedly, vaguely feeling as if fate depended upon this decision.&#13;
That night there was a consultation held in Don's room&#13;
in which he revealed to his henchmen a plan for a more&#13;
bold and reckless piece of vandalism than they had ever&#13;
attempted before.&#13;
All seemed to fall in with the plan immediately, except&#13;
Keg, who was afraid of being caught, and Crait whose&#13;
consience was not entirely scared by his wrong doings.&#13;
But the others soon persuaded them, and it was decided to&#13;
make the raid Friday night.&#13;
"Say boys" exclaimed Dolly suddenly" I can't be there&#13;
Friday night."&#13;
"0 yes you can, cut everything else," said Don, as&#13;
they parted.&#13;
But for all the boys coaxed him all the next day and&#13;
the next they couldn't persuade Crait to give up his engage·&#13;
rnent nor even to divulge the nature of it.&#13;
Friday night came and with it the concert. Craig went&#13;
along with Basil but was preoccupied, nervous and silent.&#13;
The orchestra played twice and after the last encore&#13;
Crait asked Basil if he wasn't about ready to go home.&#13;
"Why yes, I guess so but what's your hurry, aren't you&#13;
well?"&#13;
"Not very. I wish I were in bed now."&#13;
"All right we'll go right away."&#13;
Crait was as glum on the way home as he was going&#13;
up town. As soon as he reached home he rolled into bed&#13;
without an unnecessary word.&#13;
The next morning Crait didn't get up for breakfast nor&#13;
even to go to chapel. He made the plea of "a headache."&#13;
Right after chapel Basil came bounding into the room&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
where Crait was vainly trying to study his College Algebra.&#13;
"Say Crait," he exclaimed breathlessly, "have you heard&#13;
the news?" "Something doing at chapel this morning I tell&#13;
&#13;
y'."&#13;
"No. What was it," asked Crait turning white.&#13;
"Doc expelled Drizzle, Van Bild, Cleggy and Brathton.&#13;
My wasn't I surprised, and the whole school, too. Why,&#13;
what is the matter?" he asked quickly . noticing Crait rise&#13;
hurriedly, change color and fall over on the bed. Basil&#13;
quickly turned, snatched a glass of water from the stand&#13;
and threw it into his face. He then hastily loosened his&#13;
collar and opened a window. In a few minutes Crait&#13;
opened his eyes and glared about him wildly.&#13;
After he became calm Basil gently drew from him how&#13;
his promise to play at the concert had saved him from disgrace of his comrades. How chance had kept him from&#13;
thoughtlessly breaking his hard working mother's heart&#13;
and had kept him from disgracing his father's untarnished&#13;
name.&#13;
"Why yes, now I see what Doctor meant when he said,&#13;
'there are others that have been connected with these&#13;
young men, but whose names will be withheld upon good&#13;
behavior," said Basil thoughtfully.&#13;
"Basil" said Crait with shaking voice as he took his&#13;
hand in a firm grasp, "it is you I have to thank for this.&#13;
Had you not put yourself out to keep me from mischief I&#13;
should have suffered the same fate as the boys. You think&#13;
I didn't know, but I did. Only you have kept me from&#13;
being as bad as they, yes even worse."&#13;
"Now Crait," softly replied Basil, "it wasn't me but&#13;
Christ working through me. Wont you take him as your&#13;
personal guide and Savior, Crait you need him?"&#13;
Before they left the room that morning Crait had ac·&#13;
cepted a new Companion and had written a tear stained&#13;
letter home to his mother, telling of his deliverance and&#13;
new found Friend.&#13;
And this was the outcome of Important Meetings and&#13;
and the result of a consistent Christian life.&#13;
&#13;
BY POTTER CLAY&#13;
&#13;
Autumn's wind is sadly sighing&#13;
'Mong the leaves and pining flowers&#13;
In the glens and glades of Lehigh,&#13;
Casting gloom on sunlit bowers;&#13;
For the Lehigh's laughing water&#13;
Little heeds the wind's weird wooing,&#13;
Deaf to all his love-lorn whispers,&#13;
Still her lightsome way pursuing.&#13;
Longing, lingering, loth to leave her,&#13;
Sometimes tender, sometimes grieving,&#13;
Now in fondness, now in anger,&#13;
Zealous wind his highway leaving,&#13;
From her moist lips filches kisses,&#13;
Breathes his warm breath on her dimples;&#13;
But she coldly spurns his yearning,&#13;
And in vexed aversion, wimples.&#13;
&#13;
Nature was the only mother&#13;
In whose nuture Laughing Water&#13;
Had been blessed, corrected, cultured;&#13;
Yet full graceful of demeanor&#13;
Was she, fair and sweet as heaven,&#13;
Cheeks the love blood ill concealing,&#13;
Mirth oft bubbling pure as ether,&#13;
Breast oft heaved with tender feeling,&#13;
Eyes so dark and deep with meaning&#13;
That to once behold their burning&#13;
Was to be forever dreaming,&#13;
Was to ne'er be free from yearning.&#13;
Lovers had she, brave and many;&#13;
But, like Lehigh's restless water,&#13;
She had yielded not to wooing,&#13;
Nor to trophies they had brought her.&#13;
&#13;
'Neath the shadow of the hemlocks,&#13;
In a fastness of the mountains,&#13;
Where the spry squirrel, unmolested,&#13;
Crams his cellar walls and nut-bins,&#13;
Sat the lodge of Chief Towanda&#13;
And his daughter, Laughing Water,&#13;
In the days ere land was captive,&#13;
When each swarthy son and daughter,&#13;
Nature's free, obedient off-spring,&#13;
Drinking deep her healthful potions,&#13;
By inheritence owned the forests&#13;
And the valleys 'twixt the oceans Chief Towanda, man of valor,&#13;
Keen of sense, with iron sinews;&#13;
Laughing Water, lithe and blithsome,&#13;
Eyes that gleamed like flashing minnows.&#13;
&#13;
They remembered not brave Deerwing,&#13;
Who, in former days among them,&#13;
Ran beside their swiftest horses,&#13;
And in Skillful war excelled them,&#13;
Who now lay in silent slumber&#13;
'Neath an elm tree in the hollow,&#13;
'Neath the nest of jay and king-bird,&#13;
'Neath the flight of hawk and swallow;&#13;
But still true to first devotion&#13;
Was the heart of Lehigh's daughter,&#13;
Though she seemed all joy and frolic,&#13;
Like its own rock-broken water;&#13;
For her life, once like the current&#13;
Of a deep, slow-moving river,&#13;
Was now broken into impulse&#13;
By the crushed hopes deep within her.&#13;
&#13;
*Prize Winner&#13;
&#13;
of Long Poenl.&#13;
&#13;
She stands often in the moonlight&#13;
By the grave of her lost lover,&#13;
Listening to the rushing water,&#13;
Praying to the stars above her,&#13;
While her eyes grow large and misty,&#13;
And her heart grows sick with beating;&#13;
But she looks beyond the gateway&#13;
Of the daily sun's retreating,&#13;
And she wonders, should she wander&#13;
Whither light and life have faded,&#13;
If perchance she still might find them&#13;
By the power of love, unaided.&#13;
Then she hears unspoken voices&#13;
From the playmates of her childhood,&#13;
Rustling elm, and birch, and cedar,&#13;
Vine, and blossom of the wildwood.&#13;
Then her eyes begin to brighten&#13;
And her heart takes back its singing,&#13;
For the hope springs fresh within her&#13;
From the message they are bringing&#13;
That beyond the sunset curtain,&#13;
And beyond her sight and hearing,&#13;
Song, and love, and joy are living&#13;
In the blue sky's boundless clearing.&#13;
Musing, dreaming, hoping, longing,&#13;
Conscious of communion sweet,&#13;
A petition, all unspoken,&#13;
Finds expression far more meet That the Keeper of the sunset,&#13;
And the chief of night and day,&#13;
To the land of happy wigwams,&#13;
Will soon bear her heart away.&#13;
So our Laughing Water lingers&#13;
'Mid the leaves and pining flowers,&#13;
In the glens and glades of Lehigh,&#13;
In its shady nooks and bowers,&#13;
Heeding not the wooing warriors,&#13;
They her motive misconstruing,&#13;
Deaf to all their ardent pleading&#13;
Still her lightsome way pursuing.&#13;
&#13;
A Greek Story&#13;
Written for the Zetalethean Annual Public&#13;
BY Myrtilla&#13;
&#13;
a parasol over her head, while a younger one, who seemed&#13;
to be regarded more as a companion than a slave, knelt on&#13;
the ground and joked confidently with her mistress. A little&#13;
way off was a carriage drawn by mules, and two male slaves&#13;
were seated beside it conversing.&#13;
&#13;
COOK&#13;
&#13;
THROUGH the Parnes Mountains is seen a narrow defile,&#13;
&#13;
winding southward between great walls of rock. This&#13;
confined way was formerly the road from Thebes to Athens.&#13;
Nearing the city, the rocky cliffs gradually give way to vegetation, and just outside the gate of Athens the road runs by&#13;
the side of a brook, overgrown with thickets of under-brush&#13;
and trees.&#13;
It was in the 111 th Olympiad that a youth, whose years&#13;
could scarcely have reached a quarter of a century, was proceeding along this road, mounted on a dark colored steed,&#13;
The rider was broad of chest and shoulders, but his form&#13;
was rather slender and supp le than thickset and muscular.&#13;
His slight ly tanned neck rose proudly, his whole bearing indicated a youth of nobility and strength, but in the sparkle&#13;
of his blue eye was blended a tender expression which bespoke his affectionate nature.&#13;
The wayfarer had reached a spot where the blooming&#13;
myrtles and oleanders were thickest, when suddenly he&#13;
heard female voices close at hand, coming from the direction&#13;
of the brook, accompanied by much merriment and laughter. Approaching the spot, he beheld through a break in the&#13;
bushes a most fascinating spectacle. At the edge of the&#13;
brook sat a maiden, wondrous fair, dabbling with her feet in&#13;
the clear stream. Behind her a female slave stood holding&#13;
&#13;
The youth remained enchanted, his eyes feasting on the&#13;
sporting maidens, who, casting aside all stiffness and formality, were giving vent to their overflowing spirits. The&#13;
younger female attendant now brought a handful of flowers&#13;
which she had just plucked and showered them over her&#13;
mistress. In mock wrath, the lady seized her gold em broid·&#13;
ered shoe and threw it at the servant, but missing the mark,&#13;
it fell into the brook. The maidens set up a scream and the&#13;
rash youth, forgetting all questions of propriety, dashed&#13;
down and rescued the floating shoe. At his appearance, the&#13;
women screamed louder than ever and were about to run to&#13;
the carriage, but in an instant the young man gallantly&#13;
handed the slipper to the damsel, who rose, blushing and&#13;
confused, and looked about for her veil, which she had re·&#13;
moved.&#13;
The youth felt no little ,emotion. In the brilliancy of&#13;
the gir l's great dark eyes was mingled an expression of soft&#13;
rapture. A profusion of dark ringlets descended on her&#13;
white neck. The finely penciled arch of the eyebrows was&#13;
of jetty black; in the delicate whiteness of her cheeks arose&#13;
a tinge of scarlet; her whole person possessed an irresistible&#13;
charm of youthful loveliness. For a few moments only was&#13;
the man permitted to revel in these beauties, for the cries of&#13;
the females had summoned the men, the lady was hastened&#13;
into the carriage, and the party rapid ly disappeared. Hav·&#13;
&#13;
ing watched the carriage out of sight, the youth turned and&#13;
noticed for the first time that in her haste and confusion, the&#13;
girl had left lying on the grass, the mate to the gold embroidered shoe which he had rescued. With trembling eagerness he put the dainty slipper in his chiton, mounted his&#13;
horse and continued his jorney to Athens.&#13;
After the midday meal the youth, with preoccupied&#13;
mind, directed his steps toward the gymnasium. Hastening&#13;
by the groups of people in the arcades surrounding the peristyle, the youth sought out a group of young men who&#13;
were seated in the great court waiting for the exercises to&#13;
begin.&#13;
"By Hercules," exclaimed one, "it's Nausicrates."&#13;
"Nausicrates! You here!" exclaimed another in astonishment: "When did you come?''&#13;
"I returned this morning from Thebes," was the reply.&#13;
"Hail to thee, friend, "said the first, "we'll celebrate your&#13;
return by a carouse. Today you are my guest Tomorrow&#13;
we will attend the Dionysia together."&#13;
Then jest and laughter ran high, Nausicrates alone.&#13;
seeming preoccupied, until finally one cried, "Why so silent&#13;
and thoughtful, Nausicrates? You are in love." To be sure&#13;
I am, had formerly been his laughing retort to such accusations, but now he did not relish the sally, and his mounting&#13;
color proclaimed the truth of the joke.&#13;
Soon the two friends left the gymnasium and proceeded&#13;
to Callipides' home, where the evening was spent in reminiscenses, and Nausicrates had much to tell of the events of&#13;
his three years absence in Thebes. Finally Callipides said,&#13;
"We must make the most of the festival tomorrow. Doubt-&#13;
&#13;
less the enchanting Chloris will be there. The gods be&#13;
praised that there is sometimes a day when the women can&#13;
be out."&#13;
"Who is this Chloris," began Nausicrates in a bantering&#13;
tone. "Are you in love, Callipides? Come, tell me all&#13;
about it."&#13;
"Is it possible you have not heard? You remember&#13;
Manes, the wealthy merchant who lives in the mansion&#13;
near the Lyceum? His daughter was but a girl when you&#13;
left, but she has grown into womanhood and is the most&#13;
beautiful maiden in Athens. But old Manes, jealous of her&#13;
beauty, and fearful lest her suitors are more interested in her&#13;
dower than in the girl, has imposed a condition which no lover can meet. He has made an oath that Chloris shall wed&#13;
the man who will, with his own hand, cut exactly one inch&#13;
off from the end of her nose. The old rascal knows that no&#13;
one will do such a thing and thus he will keep Chloris with&#13;
him always."&#13;
"By the gods! He must be beside himself! But, my&#13;
Callipides, can you not do something to persuade him?"&#13;
"Oh, as for myself, I do not wish to undertake the cares&#13;
of a husband and father and embitter my days with a thousand anxieties. A free life for me, with the gymnasium, the&#13;
theatre, my friends and an occasional feasting on such beauty as that of Chloris. Let us retire, Nausicrates, and tomorrow you shall see the enchantress for yourself."&#13;
The Dionysia had begun early the following day and&#13;
pleasure was the pursuit of all. Strangers and citizens paraded the streets in holiday attire. Altars were wreathed&#13;
with chaplets and in every thoroughfare stood huge bowls&#13;
&#13;
filled with the gift of the god, inviting all that liked to drink&#13;
freely. Since early dawn the seats of the great Dionysiac&#13;
theatre had been crammed with spectators who attentively&#13;
followed the tragedies, sometimes responding with cheering&#13;
and applause, sometimes with shrill whistling directed at the&#13;
bad performance of some player. Into this scene Callipedes&#13;
and Nausicrates crowded their way about the middle of the&#13;
forenoon. They were watching the performance rather indifferently when suddenly, as if impelled by the intensity of&#13;
their gaze, Nausicrates' attention was drawn to two dark&#13;
eyes looking intently into his own. He started. It was her&#13;
whom he had encountered at the brook. For an instant the&#13;
two looked at each orher as if charmed. Then a soft flush&#13;
spread over the girl's cheeks and hastily she turned her&#13;
head and seemed to be engrossed in the tragedy being enacted. Just then Callipides saw her and said lazily, "Look&#13;
Nausicrates, there is Chloris. Is she not a Venus? And by&#13;
her side is old Manes."&#13;
From that moment the performance lost its charm for&#13;
Nausicrates. Frequently his eager eyes sought the graceful&#13;
figure on the other side of the theatre, but she kept her face&#13;
averted and he was not permitted another glance.&#13;
At last the tragedies were ended, and the people awaited the decision of the judges as to which poet had produced&#13;
the best play. After the prizes were awarded, the day was&#13;
given to the merrymakers for revelry and mirth.&#13;
It was then that Manes ascended a small platform which&#13;
was used in the festival. All eyes were turned toward the&#13;
eccentric old man, who was of no little influence in Athens&#13;
because of his great wealth. Tall, but with bent shoulders,&#13;
piercing black eyes peering forth from grizzled hair and&#13;
wrinkled features, the old man cried; "Ye men of Athens,&#13;
are ye not willing to pay the price? Is it only the beauty of&#13;
&#13;
Chloris that ye desire and not her real worth, that makes&#13;
ye refuse to meet the condition? Do ye hesitate to take a&#13;
wife who is disfigured? Aha! Aha! ye cannot meet the condition, and the daughter of Manes remains free with her&#13;
father."&#13;
For an instance there was silence, as the old man looked&#13;
about exultingly. Then Nausicrates sprang to his feet and&#13;
said in a low, ringing tone, "What is the condition?"&#13;
"The man _who will, with his own hand, cut exactly one&#13;
inch off from the nose of Chloris shall wed her. Manes has&#13;
made oath to give her to such a one. Are ye ready for the&#13;
trial?"&#13;
"I am. Bring Chloris forth."&#13;
"Are you mad?" said Callipides, pulling his friend's&#13;
sleeve. But Nausicrates was already by the side of Manes,&#13;
whose exulting expression had changed to one of anger and&#13;
fear.&#13;
"What do ye mean? Would ye be such a fool as to&#13;
take a disfigured damsel for thy bride?"&#13;
"Let a knife and a rule be brought," was the calm reply.&#13;
"The daughter of Manes shall not be insulted. Stand&#13;
aside, insolent youth," and Manes took the arm of Chloris,&#13;
as if to lead her away.&#13;
Turning suddenly Nausicrates cried, "Was it not an&#13;
oath, men of Athens? I call you to witness."&#13;
"Yes, yes," cried several; "but you would not be so&#13;
mad as to hold him to it. Think of the maiden."&#13;
"An oath is an oath," was the reply. "Let the rule and&#13;
knife be brought."&#13;
Meanwhile Chloris had stood with pallid, frightened&#13;
face, and as Nausicrates turned toward her, she looked at&#13;
him pleadingly. As a slave came running up with the rule&#13;
and the knife, Nausicrates leaned over Chloris and whispered tenderly, "Do not be frightened, Chloris. I shall not&#13;
hurt you and you will yet be my bride."&#13;
Manes stood by muttering curses as Nausicrates took&#13;
&#13;
the knife and the rule, carefully measured the designated&#13;
distance, and drew the knife through the air at a distance of&#13;
one inch off from the girl's nose. Then he turned to Manes.&#13;
"l have fulfilled the condition. I have cut one inch off from&#13;
Chloris's nose. Let the betrothal take place at once, for tomorrow we must celebrate the wedding." The assembly&#13;
broke into applause.&#13;
"Ha! You have not met the condition, you shall not&#13;
wed Chloris. Stand aside, impostor."&#13;
"It's an oath and Nausicrates has met the condition,"&#13;
cried several from the crowd. Let the betrothal take place&#13;
at once." ''Hail to Nausicrates and Chloris."&#13;
Manes saw that he had been fairly outwitted and that&#13;
he had better yield as gracefully as possible, so he extended&#13;
his hand to Nausicrates and said with a forced smile, "An&#13;
oath is an oath. Let us proceed to the house."&#13;
Some friends had been hastily summoned and after the&#13;
formalities of the betrothal, all seated themselves at Manes&#13;
well-filled table. In the midst of the feast some cried, ''Let&#13;
us have a song; or guess riddles; which shall it be?"&#13;
"Riddles forever!" replied Callipides; and Nausicrates&#13;
must propound the first one." After reflecting a few moments Nausicrates said, "Beauty played with her possessions.&#13;
Frolic seized one and started to run away with it. Strength&#13;
rescued it and restored it to Beauty, and Beauty became the&#13;
possession of Strengt·h."&#13;
None could suggest the answer to the riddle, so Nausicrates explained; "Chloris is Beauty; the brook by which&#13;
she played is Frolic; I am Strength. Beauty's possession is&#13;
Chloris' shoe which fell into the brook. I rescued it, and&#13;
now Chloris has come, is in my possession; and here is the&#13;
mate to the rescued slipper." So saying, he knelt before the&#13;
blushing Chloris and handed her the dainty slipper. The&#13;
guests applauded and shouted, "Long live Beauty and&#13;
Strength! May the gods richly bless their home! Long live&#13;
Chloris and Nausicrates."&#13;
&#13;
BY A.R.TOOTHAKER&#13;
&#13;
Once more, a day of rest&#13;
Now hovers o'er the world, and blest&#13;
Are they, who keep it best&#13;
Hallowed as a day of rest.&#13;
The gentle rain, all day&#13;
Has sifted down its gentle spray;&#13;
And bowed, as if to pray,&#13;
The leaves and flowers nod and sway.&#13;
The bowed -leaves, the rain&#13;
With its mystic chanting strain,&#13;
Attunes my soul to its refrain,&#13;
And sweeter harmonies attain.&#13;
&#13;
*Prize Winner of Short Poem.&#13;
&#13;
Written for Atheneum Annual Public&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
RENA BOWKER&#13;
&#13;
Angels and ministers of grace defend us!&#13;
What means this shadow on our Eastern wall?&#13;
Be thou a spirit of health or goblin dammed?&#13;
Dost bring with thee airs from heaven or blasts from hell?&#13;
Be thy intents wicked or charitable?&#13;
Thou comest in such a wonderful shape that I will speak to thee,&#13;
Answer, tell me! who art thou?&#13;
Let me not burst in ignorance but tell what mean th ese ominous&#13;
Sounds? The thought is beyond the reach of my soul.&#13;
Say, why is this, wherefore, what does this mean?&#13;
Ah, I see thou art indeed a phantom,&#13;
Thou canst come and go at thine own pleasure&#13;
And dost trouble whom thou wilt.&#13;
Thou hast appeared in midnight darkness&#13;
And fought a duel with slumber. Weary lids at last would conquerthou wouldst vanish for a time,&#13;
But return again all sudden with the waking of the morn.&#13;
Thou possessest comely features nought that any one should fear&#13;
Yet methinks I heard it rumored thou hadst sprinkled heads with&#13;
gray,&#13;
And it set my mind a wondering what the reason thereof might be.&#13;
Ah, come just a little nearer, let me whisper in thy ear,&#13;
Just now a thought came to my mind&#13;
And I will tell it now to thee. Perhaps thou wilt not understand it&#13;
from thy present point of view&#13;
Who always hast lived within thy realm&#13;
Where time nor space hath power to trouble thee&#13;
But we whose spirits are surrounded by frame of flesh and blood.&#13;
&#13;
Unlike to thee, time limits us and when we move we must have space&#13;
Perhaps thou wonderest what it is that I am about to say,&#13;
And good for evil I will render- will not keep thee in suspense.Listen.&#13;
Since thou hast power not given to man but only to those of thy kind&#13;
Just lend thy hand in the perfection of God's marvelous handiwork.&#13;
Thou canst if only thou wilt consent to conform to requirements made.&#13;
And l'm sure thou never canst refuse, no matter how immense the cost.&#13;
If only thou canst be of use both unto God and man.&#13;
Ah yes, I see Dame Willingness reflected in thy hollow eye,&#13;
And thy aerial form seems all a quiver with impatience to know how.&#13;
Well, I'll tell you and that right quickly,&#13;
Under heaven there's but one way,&#13;
Tho canst not remain a spirit and be help to any man.&#13;
Thou must change thy spirit body into one of stone and brick,&#13;
Rear thy walls from earth toward heaven,&#13;
Till thy crown shall pierce the clouds,&#13;
Which will rain down blessings on thee like the April showers in&#13;
Spring.&#13;
Thou must add both length and wideness&#13;
Thickness to thy stately sides,&#13;
And as this massive structure with its spacious rooms and halls,&#13;
Thou canst as can no other be of service to mankind.&#13;
Ah, I see the shudder like as if thou'd shrink away,&#13;
But I pray thee wait a moment though there is no other way&#13;
Yet methinks thou art too serious&#13;
Dost thou think thou'd lose thy power?&#13;
Nay, a hundred times more over added power to thee'd be given,&#13;
Power o'er lives of human beings,&#13;
Thou couldst mould them as thou wouldst.&#13;
Would there anything better than to have within thy shade,&#13;
This world 's men of the tomorrow there to learn of wisdom 's ways.&#13;
Power I say to wield an influence strong and mighty in the land,&#13;
Such an influence as ne'er is given to the care of any man.&#13;
Could st thou covet work more powerful than the orie now offered thee?&#13;
Thou couldst yield for this world's warfare mighty men and valiant, too&#13;
&#13;
Men who would encourage progress and make it real b y their&#13;
invention.&#13;
There, that throws new light upon the matter&#13;
And I see thee slowly change&#13;
From that worse than useless shape into form majestic, g rand.&#13;
How my eyes do feast upon thee as upon the h ill thou standest,&#13;
I am held in rapturous wonder at the transformation wrought,&#13;
All the love within my bosom cometh forth you now to g reet&#13;
And my heart is filled with reverence for thy most majestic self.&#13;
0 let this not be delusion, turn thou never ·back agai n,&#13;
I would pray th ee and en treat you in this form fo r a ye remain .&#13;
Where cou ld life be more p leasaut than upon this sunkissed hill,&#13;
Here it seems old Sol beams brightest of any place in his long ride;&#13;
To me it seems no wonder that men have called it Morningside.&#13;
And 'tis here and no place other that we bid. thee now abide.&#13;
What thy special mission? Oh, I a lmost had forgot,&#13;
'Tis just this and nothing other,&#13;
Stay thou here as our "Science Hall!"&#13;
&#13;
BY ESTE&#13;
&#13;
BODDY&#13;
&#13;
To My Friend, Maude:&#13;
Let us w a nder in th e twilight&#13;
As we oft have done before,&#13;
T o the placid si le nt rive r,&#13;
To the paths of days of yore.&#13;
Let us watch th e dainty ripples&#13;
Of th e waters at our feet,&#13;
While the moon sheds forth her radiance,&#13;
Makes the beauty more complete.&#13;
As we stand and watch the distant&#13;
Shores so indistin ct to vie w,&#13;
Let us trust through s hade or su nshine,&#13;
G od will help us to be true.&#13;
Though the shore-lines seem to vanish&#13;
As the night h a ngs over there,&#13;
Morning will reveal them better,&#13;
So His light will ease our care.&#13;
We will dwell upon the beauty&#13;
Of the sce ne before us spread,&#13;
W e will w atch and lea rn some lesso n&#13;
That will take away life's dread.&#13;
For this life is like the river&#13;
W ith its never ceasing flow;&#13;
And the way will all be clearer&#13;
As we ever onward go.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
BY STANLEY B, COLLINS&#13;
&#13;
So nature round this new born star,&#13;
With growing grandeur unsurpassed,&#13;
With golden arrows piercing far,&#13;
Erected walls in glory cast.&#13;
&#13;
An eagle on the mountain crest,&#13;
With golden sunbeams glowing bright,&#13;
Unwound a banner from his nest,&#13;
And launched upon his westward flight.&#13;
&#13;
The sunrise watched the eastern marge&#13;
The sunset held the distant west.&#13;
Aurora did her bounds enlarge&#13;
To guard the north with firey crest.&#13;
&#13;
He scaled the raging war bent clouds,&#13;
That changed the time-told day to night;&#13;
He rose above earth's vapory shrouds&#13;
And journeyed with the broad daylight.&#13;
&#13;
The polar star in blue draped throne&#13;
Was on the southern border placed,&#13;
The azure sky's encircling zone&#13;
Hath roofed the night, the day hath graced.&#13;
&#13;
And as the day's enthroned king&#13;
Doth leave his eastern highland reign&#13;
And toward the west, his kingdom bring,&#13;
And set in glory on the plain,&#13;
&#13;
A west bound traveler, lone and poor,&#13;
Was slowly plodding o'er the sands,&#13;
Was crossing hillock, creek or moor,&#13;
And risking life in Indian lands;&#13;
&#13;
The nation's light the eagle bore,&#13;
Bore from its nest 'mid eastern rills&#13;
And spread renown beneath its soar&#13;
And dropped the flag 'mid western hills.&#13;
&#13;
Was leaving home as in a dream,&#13;
To seek the veins of glittering gold;&#13;
But as he neared the flowing stream,&#13;
The muddy river, ages old,&#13;
&#13;
As sons of war with Roman veins,&#13;
Descendants from the great god Mars,&#13;
Erected walls around their shrines,&#13;
To check the thrust of foe-sent bars.&#13;
&#13;
Whose current flows through land and sea,&#13;
And waves of warmth about them throw&#13;
To keep the frost from Frankins tree&#13;
And warm the blood of English doe,&#13;
&#13;
His eye was dimmed by sudden glimmer.&#13;
He strained his nerves and saw a glow,&#13;
A spot from which the beamy shimmer&#13;
Shot out like arrows from a bow.&#13;
&#13;
He saw his kin in mental dark,&#13;
His kin, the nation's future king,&#13;
Must see her ever glowing spark&#13;
And to her fame more honor bring.&#13;
&#13;
Forgetting love for wealth and fame,&#13;
He hastened to the magic beam.&#13;
To him the world was not the same,&#13;
The kingly light, the nation's gleam,&#13;
&#13;
With David's faith, with Caesar's will,&#13;
He grasped a bundle of the rays.&#13;
With lightning speed o'er dale and hill,&#13;
He bore the torch from lakes to bays.&#13;
&#13;
Had burned the scales from off his eyes.&#13;
The shades that dimmed his mental sight&#13;
Had vanished like the darkened skies&#13;
Before the dawn of morning light.&#13;
&#13;
To high-born youth and growing lad&#13;
&#13;
A new born vision round him fell.&#13;
True beauty clothed the golden rod.&#13;
The glow worn in his grassy dell&#13;
Became a model work of God.&#13;
&#13;
From palace gate and rural door,&#13;
From meadows broad and forests tall,&#13;
The sons and daughters rich and poor&#13;
Made pilgrimages, one and all,&#13;
&#13;
He saw the nation of the world&#13;
Build up by wonder-working man.&#13;
The ages of the past unfurled&#13;
The races ancient kingdoms ran.&#13;
&#13;
To view the place where morn had broke&#13;
&#13;
Whose cheeks were browned by nature's bright&#13;
He told with joy that made them glad&#13;
How he had found the nation's light.&#13;
&#13;
Upon the man in darkness tied.&#13;
'Twas chistened rightly when he spoke,&#13;
"This is the College Morningside."&#13;
&#13;
Duella Nortis&#13;
BY Potter&#13;
&#13;
Clay&#13;
&#13;
I come from the gloom&#13;
Of the shadows of doom,&#13;
And traverse the world with delight.&#13;
From all light must I hide,&#13;
So I ne'er may abide,&#13;
For I m the Maid of the Night.&#13;
&#13;
I could secrets reveal&#13;
Which I nightly conceal&#13;
That would startle the world with affright:&#13;
All the pads and shams fail,&#13;
For I'm inside the veil,&#13;
And to me densest darkness is light.&#13;
&#13;
I powder the grape&#13;
And the plum; none escape,&#13;
Paint the delicate hues of the rose,&#13;
And the buds I imbue&#13;
With a life fresh and new;&#13;
For I know where each tender thing grows.&#13;
&#13;
Yet, forlorn my distress!&#13;
I'm in love, I confess,&#13;
With the glorious Man of the Day,&#13;
And I follow afar&#13;
With my good evening star&#13;
For a guide lest I o'erstep the way;&#13;
&#13;
I muffle the race&#13;
And their homes in embrace,&#13;
And hypnotize folks at my will.&#13;
Every locked door and gate&#13;
I with ease penetrate;&#13;
My invasions are subtle and still.&#13;
&#13;
For my form should he spy,&#13;
By the turn of his eye,&#13;
Undone I forever would be;&#13;
So I mock him good-bye&#13;
As he fades from the sky;&#13;
But behold, at his coming I flee!&#13;
&#13;
Reflections&#13;
&#13;
But when we had thought more about it&#13;
We knew though the perfume was spent&#13;
That each flower-how could we doubt it?&#13;
Some good to this sad world had lent.&#13;
&#13;
I walked through the garden this morning&#13;
With flowers to left and to right.&#13;
The dew is fast leaving the blossoms&#13;
But a few drops reflect back the light.&#13;
&#13;
And here, too, we strung lilac blossoms&#13;
Into necklaces, dainty to see,&#13;
And of maple-leaves woven together,&#13;
Quaint hats made for you and for me.&#13;
&#13;
The dew is still cooling the flowers&#13;
Though the sun shines down in his might,&#13;
As we sit 'neath the same leafy bowers&#13;
Where we once played from morning till night.&#13;
&#13;
How pure were the fresh water-cresses&#13;
Which filled our pails up to the brim.&#13;
How rich were the bright yellow dresses&#13;
Of dandelions, dainty and trim.&#13;
&#13;
How well I remember the Mayflowers&#13;
As we made here a feast for the bees.&#13;
This very same bench was the table,&#13;
And the messenger, fleet, was the breeze.&#13;
&#13;
Those days at this moment still linger&#13;
Though the years with such swiftness have sped;&#13;
And, sitting beneath the same bower&#13;
How our minds through old paths have been led.&#13;
&#13;
With innocence we oft transplanted&#13;
The blossoms of violets-so,&#13;
And, watching them long were impatient&#13;
For more of the flowers to grow.&#13;
&#13;
What is that which disturbs my reflections&#13;
As it moves in and out of my view?&#13;
Just a spider industriously weaving&#13;
But see, something struggles there too.&#13;
&#13;
And this was a great childish sorrow&#13;
That the sweetness had left them so soon;&#13;
For when we came back on the morrow,&#13;
Each flower, its petals had strewn.&#13;
&#13;
'Tis a fly, which in some way or other&#13;
Has ventured to close to the lair.&#13;
Shall I free it or just watch it struggle&#13;
And leave it to die in the snare?&#13;
&#13;
Now I ask myself what does it matter&#13;
If one of the many should die?&#13;
This is truly but one little creature&#13;
Just a poor little innocent fly.&#13;
&#13;
Then we'll brush off the cobwebs of danger&#13;
From some brother's path, if we may.&#13;
What matter to us if a stranger,&#13;
Sufficient to know it will pay.&#13;
&#13;
But the thought to me comes with such meaning&#13;
I am brought face to face with the fact&#13;
'Tis my privilege just at this moment&#13;
To help or refuse thus to act.&#13;
&#13;
And, looking back to our childhood,&#13;
We wish for those days to return;&#13;
And are glad that the present is with us,&#13;
But our hearts for the erring ones yearn.&#13;
&#13;
I free the poor little pris'ner&#13;
But think as I turn back again,&#13;
That the cobwebs of sin on the highways&#13;
Are ensnaring weak women and men.&#13;
&#13;
And enough at the last in the knowing&#13;
We have helped; we have done what we could.&#13;
And then we may feel we've been growing&#13;
To know men and God as we should.&#13;
&#13;
Not enough that one person escape them&#13;
If the cause still remains just the same&#13;
With all of the tinsel allurements&#13;
Will be lives full of sorrow and shame.&#13;
&#13;
That German Exam&#13;
( MARCH 24th&#13;
&#13;
1904)&#13;
&#13;
Oh, the snares which with vices are reeking&#13;
Where people are leading to sin!&#13;
But, thank God, there are those who are seeking&#13;
Many souls for the right way to win.&#13;
&#13;
The grades were posted in the hall,&#13;
Preps, Freshies, Seniors gathered all&#13;
To see the wonderful display&#13;
And learn which ones had made an A.&#13;
&#13;
And some Christian people are striving&#13;
To cast out the evils with speed;&#13;
And more who seem now to be shirking&#13;
Would help if they knew of the need.&#13;
&#13;
The German class of second year&#13;
Scanned the board with faces drear.&#13;
Of all the class there were but three&#13;
Who escaped that untold misery.&#13;
&#13;
The rest of the class walked to the room;&#13;
Full well they knew they walked to their doom.&#13;
They did not know what that doom would be,&#13;
But they felt it was either a flunk or a C.&#13;
Miss F. siezed the crayon with all her might,&#13;
With arm raised high, she began to write;&#13;
The questions appeared-the students did stare&#13;
The heart of each one sank in dnmb despair.&#13;
"Der Tannenbaum", "Die Wacht am Rhein",&#13;
"Erlkonig" too must be told in rhyme;&#13;
Translations from "Tell", constructions galore,&#13;
And things which they never had heard of before.&#13;
The crayon flew fast-the board was filled soon;&#13;
And then for a moment she stepped from the room.&#13;
"Is that all the questions?" asked two in accord .&#13;
"Oh no," said a third one, "she's gone for more board."&#13;
The students wrote fast, their faces grew pale,&#13;
Anon from a weak one was heard a slight wail.&#13;
Their arms were purple, their hands quite sore,&#13;
Their hair stood on end-yet they worked the more.&#13;
&#13;
* * * * * *&#13;
The chapel bell rang; the cheif raised her head,&#13;
Then over her face came a look of great dread.&#13;
The seats were all empty-no students we there,&#13;
For every last one had gone up in thin air.&#13;
&#13;
What's a Name&#13;
In&#13;
BY&#13;
&#13;
R. G.&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG&#13;
&#13;
The Day was Fair. The Robbins were singing&#13;
sweetly; a little Finch was Warbling a Carroll contentedly; the foliage was a beautiful Green. A Boddy of&#13;
Young Squires Weary of their Tennis, decided to go on a&#13;
fishing excursion. Among them were several noted&#13;
personages, such as Root, Hanna, Bryan, Bryant, Harrison,&#13;
and Johnson; and others, lesser lights, such as the Miller,&#13;
the Millner, the Mason, the Cook And'er son, and the&#13;
Waterman with the Boals. Going down to the Beach,&#13;
they found a large Saylor, and a short distance away a&#13;
little Bark-lay secured by a Cable which was fastened by&#13;
means of Staples to a strong Cain on the Beach. Preferring the Saylor, they entered taking with them their&#13;
Grubb which they had procured with their Nichols and&#13;
which consisted principally of a Mellon which was later&#13;
found to be Sauer as Hul, sir. (With apologies, to Ed.)&#13;
But they were not yet Reddy to go, for all the&#13;
Squires were not there "Oh", said Wunn, "Why does&#13;
Leona De Lay us? Wont Bart Jett her go?" "Shaw'', said&#13;
another, "Why Kant Lener come? Has he an Achen'bach?"&#13;
"No", was the reply, "but he got Luse Wunn Day, and&#13;
the Drugg has a bad effect on him." "I wish Darling&#13;
were here", exclaimed a disappointed youth. "I fear it&#13;
will break my Hart if she doesn't come."&#13;
&#13;
Is Professor Black-well?" asked a pretty maid. "Oh&#13;
no", was the response, "don't you know that he's a&#13;
chronic Toothaker?" At length all these little troubles&#13;
were forgotten and they were on their way.&#13;
Having reached the Marsh they began to fish.&#13;
Several whispered cautiously, ·"What will Miss Love&#13;
land?" "I don't know what she'll land", said one, "but&#13;
I'm going to land a Bass, at least, I Wish 'ard that I&#13;
might". "You'll play Hobb", said his neighbor, see&#13;
Howe you Trimble." "Yes", was the reply, "but I'm&#13;
sure to Winn." Soon he had a bite which required&#13;
careful handling.&#13;
"Good land 'er", said Wunn. "Now be Pruden'",&#13;
said another. "Look out, Yule Tumble son", joined in&#13;
a third. "Look out for the pole" came the cry, "Yule&#13;
Bender." At length he began to pull in his prize, a&#13;
&#13;
measly Crabb; but in Crossan the boat to take it from a&#13;
Root to which it was attached, he fell into the water.&#13;
The people began to scream, "Oh, can he Swem?"&#13;
"Will it Kill 'am?" Some one Chase him quick." "Oh&#13;
I Sawyer, I knew you'd do it." Just hear him Howl itt."&#13;
"Du Bois pull him ont." "He's in the Myer, but Jim&#13;
Kin dig him out." They then began to Search, and&#13;
soon drew him out, White but Smylie as ever and with&#13;
no loss of Blood.&#13;
The excitement over, we turned to our Grubb, feeling very Gantt. In a few moments all the Grub er provender, so to speak, was Eaton.&#13;
At last the Stellar lights began to appear near old&#13;
Hall in the distant Town er on the Brow er the Hill&#13;
near the Peter's Place, and so we returned home still&#13;
very Weary and Gantt.&#13;
&#13;
PrizeProductions of S. B. Collins&#13;
&#13;
Greeting&#13;
" A little nonsense, now and then,&#13;
Is relished by the wisest men."&#13;
Stick a pin in that superlative. Only those of this class have received the attention of the joke&#13;
committee. It has not been our policy to " hurt "--so look out for " sore heads ".&#13;
&#13;
MathematicalProblems&#13;
(These original problems are given with the request&#13;
that any students specializing in mathematics will assist&#13;
in solving them and send the solution to the editors of&#13;
the Maroon.)&#13;
Let F = Number of flunks; x = No.of perfect recitations; C = Credit. S = Stand-in with Professer.&#13;
To prove F -1 x = C.&#13;
Suggestion: First find S then solve for C.&#13;
Let B = board bill; L = laundry bill; 3R = room&#13;
rent; D = draft from father; X = subscription to missionary fund; Y = incidentals (tickets, candy, flowers,&#13;
etc.)&#13;
To make D - Y = B -1 L -1 3R -1 X. (Assume&#13;
- that X = o. )&#13;
Let A. H. M. = the fellow; M. K. = his girl;&#13;
L. C.= lower corridor; S . F. = second floor; T. F .= third&#13;
floor; L = Laboratory; L' = Library.&#13;
Given L. C., S. F., T. F., Land L' to find A.H. M.&#13;
and M. K.&#13;
Suggestion: Eliminate all the unknown quantities&#13;
but one; the one remaining is the location of A. H. M.&#13;
and M. K.&#13;
·&#13;
Let C. C. = College Boarding Club; 64x = Boarders. Y = a pie; r-6 Y = One piece of pie.&#13;
To prove 5Y -1- 64x = r-6 Y. Or that there will&#13;
be a piece of pie for each boarder.&#13;
&#13;
Dear Hattie: * * * * Mrs. Trimble as you&#13;
would expect, is very careful to observe all the rules issued by the faculty.&#13;
It taxes our ingenuity to avoid being caught in disobedience. The other night, the girls had a party at&#13;
Park Place. Emma and I were present and just a few&#13;
minutes before ten we slipped back to our rooms. When&#13;
Mrs. Trimble made her usual round at ten o'clock the&#13;
light was out and we were safely in bed. After a few&#13;
minutes we slipped down the back stairs and returned to&#13;
the merriment at Park Place. About one A. M., we retired again for good, Mrs. Trimble none the wiser.&#13;
* * * * Nettie.&#13;
THE CLOAK ROOM CLASS.&#13;
&#13;
This class occupies the cloak room in the winter&#13;
when it is cold. Its laboratory work consists in giving&#13;
the mind full relapse into nothingness, pepsin guni (sometimes black jack) and a competive exercise of their gossiping powers. For this latter, they have a low power&#13;
apparatus consisting of the widow pane, through which&#13;
they observe passers by, after which they make idle remarks highly detrimental mainly to themselves. Expectorations and lead pencil marking obtains special attention.&#13;
In summer they occupy the front steps of main hall.&#13;
These are much better accomodations since they are not&#13;
obliged to stand. This requires too much energy. No&#13;
regular diploma is given with this work. For any desiring to take up special retrograde work, this course is&#13;
extremely useful. This requires a great deal of time and&#13;
students taking this cannot be expected to do much of&#13;
anything else in particular excepting to eat and sleep&#13;
and carry their clothes around.&#13;
&#13;
Aldrich, introduces Mr. A. to Mr. B.&#13;
Mr. B.: "Yes, Aldrich is a friend of mine."&#13;
Aldrich: "Yes, Mr. B. always wants you to know that he&#13;
is in with the best people in the college."&#13;
&#13;
"Ye great old ox, what brought you here,&#13;
Ye have drawn saw-logs for many a year.&#13;
With kicks and cuffs and sad abuse,&#13;
And now you're here for boarder's use!"&#13;
&#13;
Platts-"Say, Gilbert, have you heard about the&#13;
sick woman in in the eastern part of the State?&#13;
Gilbert- "What woman?"&#13;
Platts-"The woman who wrote Dr. Lewis inquiring&#13;
if the young man who wrote for the Journal, reporting&#13;
college affairs, is a Christian."&#13;
Gilbert-"No, what about her?"&#13;
Platts-"Dr. Lewis answered in the affirmative.&#13;
The woman turned with her face to the wall and died."&#13;
&#13;
It may be interesting to the new students for me&#13;
to state that we have no fixed and binding rules for governing the conduct of students, while in attendance&#13;
at Morningside. We regard you as American citizens.&#13;
We trust you. During the last twenty years I have&#13;
never lost a single night's sleep watching students or&#13;
peering around to see whether they were doing anything&#13;
wrong or not. We have left that to them.&#13;
&#13;
A SAMPLE GREETING.&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Girl (meeting Senior man in the doorway of Main Hall)-"If I am not careful, I will be&#13;
mashed right here in the door."&#13;
Prof. Green (in Physics Class) "Mr. Brower, why&#13;
do you give the small horse the long end of the double&#13;
tree?"&#13;
Asa: "Oh, I just do that by common horse sense."&#13;
Recently, after correcting some work handed in by&#13;
one of his classes, Dr. Blue found, to his embarrassment,&#13;
that the work was some quotations from Shakespeare&#13;
which he had asked the class to write out.&#13;
Prof. Green: "Mr. Trimble, you were absent the&#13;
other day, have you an excuse?"&#13;
Fred: "I had an engagement with a young lady on&#13;
which depended my future happiness."&#13;
During vacation George Finch attended Dr. Martin's evangelistic meeting the evening the Doctor spoke&#13;
on "Home."&#13;
Dr. Martin: "Will all the gentlemen present who&#13;
are married please hold up their right hands."&#13;
George responded manfully, much to the embarrassment of his fair companion.&#13;
Mabel Killam (to Mr. Finch in History Class) "Prof.&#13;
Garver always picks on me, he doesn't like me at all."&#13;
Finch: "It's because you're so little."&#13;
(Garver is about fifteen minutes late to history class.)&#13;
McCay: ''Let's climb out the window."&#13;
Miss Killam: "Yes, let's do, I'd like to."&#13;
It is said that the boy's glee club has ordered hot&#13;
water bags to carry their tunes in.&#13;
The faculty has forbidden students to sit on the iron&#13;
stairs at the back of the buildings. They say it is dangerous, since that is where the fire-escapes.&#13;
&#13;
A paradox--true as steal.&#13;
Ira Aldrich, Student. (?)&#13;
.&#13;
Kindig, (in logic class). Foot originally meant the&#13;
foundation of man.&#13;
ONE OF DOCTOR'S ST AND ARD JOKES.&#13;
&#13;
I have been very solicitous concerning the occurrence&#13;
of recent date. I have investigated the matter thoroughly. The parties are known with the part played by each.&#13;
Each will save himself great embarrassment and me&#13;
much annoyance by calling at my office and making matters right.&#13;
BARE STATEMENTS.&#13;
&#13;
"I would rather have a man than a name." Grace&#13;
Darling.&#13;
"Next term I expect to devote more time to children." Dr. Haynes.&#13;
"We have a little savage at our house." Prof. Garver.&#13;
"Give me your hand." J. G. Waterman.&#13;
"It took man a long time to brush his hair back&#13;
from his forehead." Dr. Lewis.&#13;
"One chair will do for tonight." Prof. Green.&#13;
Ask Waterman how he happened to ask two girls for&#13;
their hands in one evening.&#13;
Sophomore, (standing on his head-to Junior) "See,&#13;
when I stand with my feet in the air the blood all runs&#13;
to my head." (Junior says nothing. ) "And when I&#13;
stand on my feet, it doesn't."&#13;
Junior: "Your feet are not hollow."&#13;
Mrss LARSON'S CHAPEL SPEECH.&#13;
The Ladies' Glee Club will meet in my studio at&#13;
4: 15 to-day.&#13;
&#13;
RECORD OF CUTE SAYINGS AND SENSIBLE REMARKS&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 30th, 1901, 7 to 12 P. M., La-la-la-la.&#13;
Dec. 10th, 1901, Goo-goo.&#13;
Feb. 6th, 1902, Andle-andle-andle.&#13;
March 19th, 1902, Bab-bab-bab-bab.&#13;
April 1st, 1902, Dad-dad-dad-dad.&#13;
May 6th, 1902, Maam-maam-maam.&#13;
June, 1902, Bla'll-adle-a'lbe-a'lle-a'lle,&#13;
RECORD OF EXTRAORD!NAR Y EVENTS.&#13;
&#13;
March I st, 1902, Rode on "Choo-choo" cars for first time.&#13;
April 1st, 1902, Slept all night.&#13;
May 20th, 1902, Succeeded in getting big toe in mouth for first time.&#13;
Sept. 22nd, 1902, Commenced to shake hands with papa.&#13;
Nov. 15th, 1902, "Hello papa.''&#13;
CHARACTERISTIC EXPRESSIONS.&#13;
&#13;
RAYMOND JOSEPH GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
May you become as wise as your father and as good as your mother.&#13;
Weight, Oct. 31, 1901, 61 Ibs. and 8 oz.&#13;
First outing, March 23rd, 1902. In his go-cart, eight blocks. "Was&#13;
very good and did't cry, nor ask the reason why."&#13;
First laugh, Jan 20th, 1902.&#13;
First picture, taken Feb. 20th, 1902.&#13;
First hair clipped, Jan. 12th 1902.&#13;
First toy, a rattle costing 15 cents.&#13;
First word, Sept. 4th, 1902, "Mamma."&#13;
First Short Clothes, March 28th, 1902.&#13;
First tooth, July 30th, 1902.&#13;
First crept, Nov. 8th, 1902.&#13;
First step, Jan. 1st, 1902.&#13;
First Student-"Wescott, what are you going to be when you get&#13;
. through school?"&#13;
Wescott- " Broke".&#13;
&#13;
Miss Loveland-"I think so".&#13;
Carson- "Gracious me".&#13;
Dr, Haynes- "Well, of course the idear".&#13;
Van Horn-"Git it?"&#13;
Dr. Lewis- "Just call at the office".&#13;
Richards- " M y G-a- u-s-h !".&#13;
Magee - "Hu".&#13;
Poppenheimer-"I don't believe it".&#13;
Hall- "Well what?"&#13;
Dr. Lewis-"It has been in the minds of the faculty".&#13;
Barsalou-"Oh, it's marvelous."&#13;
Debenham- "By hec."&#13;
Garver- "W-e-e-1, y-e-s- and - a no".&#13;
Mabel Killam-"Say-y-y!"&#13;
Rissler - "The old wart".&#13;
Saylor-"Well, Well."&#13;
Ora Barringer- "H -o-n-est?"&#13;
Miss Cook- "Now".&#13;
Miss Ferguson- "Natiirlich".&#13;
C. E. Harding- "By Hookev".&#13;
Garver- "I suppose you all--know that-"&#13;
Prof. Green- "lch glaube nicht".&#13;
&#13;
PROTO·&#13;
PLASMIC&#13;
&#13;
CELL&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
October:&#13;
&#13;
"There is always a man for the crisis."&#13;
&#13;
l&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Mother Trimble: "Fred, my boy, how came this rent&#13;
in the Doctor's trousers? "&#13;
Fred: "That gets me."&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS "MAKING HISTORY "&#13;
&#13;
Lines written by a Freshman and appropriated hy the Committee.&#13;
I sat in chapel nothing fearing,&#13;
Because of colors white and blue,&#13;
But a rooster from the Sophies&#13;
Into mid-air quickly flew&#13;
"Be that bird our sign of parting."&#13;
With such insult deeply smarting,&#13;
Went the Freshies forth to battle,&#13;
Ah! That noise is but the rattle&#13;
Of their heads upon the floor,&#13;
And they'll love us, nevermore.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
R. T.&#13;
&#13;
It has been in the minds of the students (and facu lty) to add the&#13;
letter F, to the scale of scholarship for Miss Ferguson's benefit, to accomodate flunks.&#13;
Joke Committee (to Robbins): ·'What's your favorite expression?"&#13;
Robbins: "Gol ! I Dunn-no."&#13;
Q.&#13;
A.&#13;
&#13;
At DIAMOND CENTRE.&#13;
&#13;
What is one .of the land marks in Morningside College history?&#13;
The time Jim Kindig landed on the Y. W. C. A. pop-corn.&#13;
&#13;
Saylor (entering Physics Laboratory) "ls the Herr Professor&#13;
here?"&#13;
Pendell: "No, but the hairless professor is over there."&#13;
&#13;
First School Marm: "Hello Gertie, have you read this morning's&#13;
Journal?"&#13;
Second School Marm; "No, why?"&#13;
F. S. M: "Our pastor, Brother Waterman, has been in a class&#13;
scrap."&#13;
S. S. M: "Oh, horrors, what happened?"&#13;
F. S. M: "Well, he Jost his collar, tie and part of his s-h-i-r-t."&#13;
S.S. M: "My, but he must have looked cute."&#13;
&#13;
Barber at Peter's Park: "Who is this Dr. Lewis I hear so much&#13;
about?"&#13;
Student: "Why, he's the President of Morningside College."&#13;
Barber: "Oh, I got the idea from what Search said one day when&#13;
he was in, that he was a man who was working for Search."&#13;
&#13;
Mr. C. J. Mekkelson enjoys out door sports and often goes hunting. Duck hunting is his favorite sport. He once even got a "duck"&#13;
at a fawcet.&#13;
"GEO. L. SEARCH, Secretary,&#13;
Morningside College,&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.'&#13;
&#13;
Resolved: That students should not be allowed to attend class&#13;
when tardy.&#13;
Affirmative, Prof. Harvey.&#13;
Negative, Prof. Green.&#13;
Time keeper, Mrs. Clark.&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY DEBATE.&#13;
&#13;
New student [rubbing his hands before one of the pillars in th e&#13;
college dining hall and mistaking it for a steam pipe) "My, but this is&#13;
a cold day."&#13;
The trustees are thinking of cutting out our art department since&#13;
all our girls are skilled painters.&#13;
Hartzell says this ten o'clock belle business is a nuisance.&#13;
&#13;
A Joke- Dr. Lewis' "A" grades.&#13;
No Joke- Those Rules.&#13;
To be taken as a Joke-- Miss Ferguson 's Flunks&#13;
&#13;
THE WOMAN BEHIND&#13;
&#13;
THE GUN.&#13;
&#13;
"Wailing, wailing, wailing, wailing,&#13;
Over land and sea,&#13;
And the maidens'. voices in the wind crying,&#13;
Boys, come out to we."&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis (in chapel "The Y. W. C. A. will hold&#13;
their regular meeting tomorrow morning at 9:15. All&#13;
women in the school are invited. We will of course&#13;
all be there."&#13;
Baggage Master (to Misses Stella Raw and Faith&#13;
Woodford, at the station about to leave for Chicago.)&#13;
"Ladies, is there a corpse in this box that you wish&#13;
checked?"&#13;
Stella (in horror) "Heavens, no! That's only the&#13;
box we wanted for a window seat."&#13;
Dr. Lewis (in chapel, giving a five minute lecture,&#13;
reaching his climax thus) "Of course it is understood&#13;
that the students are not expected to leave the city&#13;
except to fill appoinments."&#13;
A flunk is that fellow that lets his college education interfere with his studies.&#13;
FAVORITE NICKNAMES.&#13;
&#13;
Hall- Brintley.&#13;
Cain- Boley.&#13;
C. E. Harding--Kid.&#13;
Shoemaker-Buffalo Bill.&#13;
Gilbert- Cy Plunk .&#13;
Root- Stump.&#13;
Miss Ferguson- Fergy.&#13;
Rissler- Chet.&#13;
D. F. Robbins- Bobbs.&#13;
Shaw- Jock o.&#13;
Staples- Nails.&#13;
Tracey- Mike.&#13;
Saylor- Capt.&#13;
Kindig- Judge.&#13;
Schar-Cherry picker.&#13;
Carroll- Cataline.&#13;
Mekkleson- Ole.&#13;
Mason-Shep.&#13;
Hymer- Stuffy.&#13;
Maynard- Fatty.&#13;
Harvey - His Botanic Majesty.&#13;
Greynald- The Frenchman.&#13;
Prof. Green- The Green Professor.&#13;
Poppenheimer- Poppendale from Swaleheimer.&#13;
HOW THEY LOOK ?&#13;
&#13;
Harry Cain&#13;
........ Without his smile.&#13;
Dr. Lewis .......... At a social gathering of the ·students.&#13;
Herbert Saylor......................... .. ... Without his slang.&#13;
Base-ball team ............................ ........... With a victorv.&#13;
The Seniors ....................&#13;
.. . ........... At chapel.&#13;
The Sophs .&#13;
.. .. With an intelligent expression.&#13;
The Freshmen ......In a brown (instead of green) study.&#13;
0. R. Mason..&#13;
.. .... Without his conceit.&#13;
The campus ..&#13;
.. ...... With cement walks.&#13;
Geo. L. Search, Secy.&#13;
. ........ Without his title.&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
7 Spring term opens.&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. and Y. W . C. A. Reception.&#13;
&#13;
April 18&#13;
&#13;
Base Ball season opens, Morningside vs. Vermillion.&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
&#13;
Hawkeye goat gets rambunctious.&#13;
Carrie Nation tried by Philo court.&#13;
&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
April 24&#13;
April 25&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
MAROON&#13;
&#13;
Base Ball. Yankton 15, Morningside 5.&#13;
Collegiate girl athletes entertain Prep ditto.&#13;
&#13;
April 30&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
Home Field Meet. Girls distinguish themselves on the race track.&#13;
Brawn wins over brain; that is, Preps over Collegiates.&#13;
Zets entertain Atheneums.&#13;
&#13;
April 27&#13;
&#13;
DRAWN&#13;
&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Empey address Christian Associations.&#13;
&#13;
Kangaroo Court.&#13;
&#13;
Book agents fined.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Morningside debaters meet Sioux City&#13;
business men. Elements disturbed by&#13;
their logic. Calamity I.&#13;
&#13;
Mav&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
One Sioux City business man confined to&#13;
his bed as a result of debaters ' logic.&#13;
Calamity II. College Boo k Store sold.&#13;
&#13;
May 23&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
Mass meeting. Speech by Prof. Garver.&#13;
Calamity III. Debate yells practiced.&#13;
Faculty refuses to yell.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
4 Field Meet; Morningside 65,&#13;
Yankton 63.&#13;
&#13;
May 25&#13;
&#13;
Morningside defeats Baker in&#13;
debate. Calamity IV.&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
5 "At Last" Smylie and friends&#13;
&#13;
May 26&#13;
&#13;
Faculty invites students to arrange ratification. Students&#13;
in secret session arrange half&#13;
holiday at Riverside, and invite Faculty to go. Faculty&#13;
recieves residents of Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
May 27&#13;
&#13;
Piano Gold Medal Contest.&#13;
&#13;
brought before the public.&#13;
Seniors rescue classmate&#13;
from Normals.&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
May&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
Seniors appear in caps and&#13;
gowns. The dignity. is oppressive. National Prohibition Contest.&#13;
&#13;
Class 1905 meets in solemn conclave. Message received&#13;
from Fates over wireless telegraph stating that the class&#13;
is chosen to publish the&#13;
greatest Junior Annual of the&#13;
age.&#13;
May 13 First Graduating Recital, Music Department.&#13;
May 15 Second Graduating Recital Music Department. Base&#13;
Ball, Yankton 1, Morningside o.&#13;
May 19 Editor and Business Manager of Junior Annual&#13;
elected.&#13;
May 20 Mass meeting. Speeches in behalf of debate. Garver rendered speechless by hearty applause.&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen appear with caps and&#13;
canes.&#13;
Class 1905 announce Junior AnMay&#13;
30&#13;
nual prizes. Class of 1904&#13;
eulogized. Elocution recital.&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
June 6&#13;
June 7&#13;
June&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
June 11&#13;
June 12&#13;
June 13&#13;
June 14&#13;
June 15&#13;
June 16&#13;
June 17&#13;
June&#13;
&#13;
Juniors banquet Seniors. Prof. Brown entertains Normals. Freshie dragged&#13;
into Sophomore class meeting. Miss Mason stands off whole Freshmen&#13;
class and secures one scalp.&#13;
Class 1905 give Junior Annual yell in chapel.&#13;
Seniors and Freshmen picnic at Riverside. "Birds of a feather flock together." Queen Alexandra" and "Prince of Wales" go boating. After picnic Hawkins and Miss Crossan ascend Prospect Hill to look at Missiouri.&#13;
Dr. Blue makes his first chapel speech. Contrary to his instructions to English&#13;
class, he uses table for a "prop." Junior Senior Contest.&#13;
Field meet with Vermillion.&#13;
Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. meeting on campus. Green and Blackwell get to breakfast on time.&#13;
Philomathean Annnual Excursion. Dr. Haynes receives faculty.&#13;
Choral Union Cantanta. "Journal" announces that Miss Marsh will leave the&#13;
"state" permanently.&#13;
Normal Graduation.&#13;
Seniors go to Sergeant Bluff. On return trip, ladies sit on gentlemen's laps.&#13;
Sophs gain another Freshie cap. Consternation among Freshies.&#13;
Inter-society program. Faculty see themselves as others see them. Y. W . C.&#13;
A. Supper on Campus.&#13;
Baccalaureate Sermon. Address before Christian Associations. Dr. Frye and&#13;
Miss Ellerbroek go boating. Annual Sermon.&#13;
Academy Graduation. More examinations.&#13;
Music Graduation. Class Day Exercises.&#13;
Alumni Day. Farewell Chapel Service. Society Reunions. Miss Marsh&#13;
leaves the "state."&#13;
18 Commencement. McDowell hastens to fulfi 11&#13;
Dr .&#13;
Quayle's&#13;
prophecy.&#13;
Mc Isaac&#13;
waits a&#13;
week.&#13;
&#13;
September&#13;
&#13;
ADVERTISING&#13;
&#13;
BUREAU&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 14-15 "Have you registered?''&#13;
Sept. 16&#13;
Faculty gets rattled at chapel.&#13;
"Are there any present who have not registered?" Freshmen&#13;
Sept. 17&#13;
send out dove in chapel to see if the floods are coming.&#13;
Freshie dove returns with remnant of Soph cap. First chapel&#13;
Sept. 18&#13;
speech, Fred B. Smith of New York.&#13;
Juniors appear in colors.&#13;
Sept. 19&#13;
Zet-Otho Prom.&#13;
Sept. 21&#13;
Juniors hold a protracted session. All serene.&#13;
Sept. 22&#13;
Atheneum hay rack party. Chapel seats assigned.&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
"Are there any present who have not registered?" Coach SweeSept. 24&#13;
ley makes his debut in chapel. Faculty reception.&#13;
Foot ball season opens. Sac City o, Morningside 29.&#13;
Sept. 26&#13;
Zetalethean Ravine Party.&#13;
Sept. 28&#13;
Dr. Lewis establishes advertising bureau; Silk waists, knives,&#13;
Sept. 29&#13;
books, etc. recovered free of charge.&#13;
Oratorical Association meets. 25c admission.&#13;
Sept. 30&#13;
&#13;
RAZZLEDAZZLE RAZZLE DAZZLE&#13;
S1S BOOM BAH. ! !!!! ! !&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE, MORNINGSIDE, RAH RAH,!&#13;
RAH,&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Aldrich leads ·yells.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
3 Dr. Lewis announces library hours, 8 to 12 :30 A . M.&#13;
neum Carnival of th e Season.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
5 Football; Morningside 45, Yankton o.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
6&#13;
&#13;
Philo-Athe-&#13;
&#13;
Orchestra appears at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 7 "Will th ose who have not registered please stand."&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewi; at conference.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Cook leads chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 9&#13;
&#13;
Football boys depart for Simpson.&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
Football, Simpson vs. Morningside;&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Fowler preaches a t opera house.&#13;
&#13;
Don't mention it.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 13&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A. Reception to football boys.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 14&#13;
&#13;
"Will all who have not registered please do so."&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 17&#13;
&#13;
Football; Western Union o, Morningside 71.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 19&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Harvey dislocates his arm.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 20&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis back at chapel.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 23&#13;
&#13;
Football; Morningside 6, Mitchell 5.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 2.i&#13;
&#13;
"Chew not gum." Zetaletheans ente rtain Othonians.&#13;
entertain Philomatheans.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 27&#13;
&#13;
McCarthy gives chemical lecture in Dr. Cook's absence.&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 29&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Lewis gives Hallowe'en address "For men on ly."&#13;
&#13;
Oct. 31&#13;
&#13;
Football; Cedar Falls 33, Morningside o. Hare and H ou nd Chase.&#13;
Where were the hares? Where were the hounds?&#13;
&#13;
Full attendance of Faculty.&#13;
Intersociety debate.&#13;
Atheneums&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Bass makes a call.&#13;
2 Dr. Lewis entertains Faculty.&#13;
3 Prof. Garver tests his lungs.&#13;
4 "Will those present who have not registered please stand?"&#13;
5 Dr. Lewis interviews members of Junior class.&#13;
7 Collegian Reporter ellucidates on lack of college spirit. Dr. Cook al lows meeting&#13;
following chapel, "since Dr. Lewis is away."&#13;
Editor Collegian Reporter shown some college spirit- kidnapped and left on back&#13;
II&#13;
step of the "Carr."&#13;
12 Miss Gibson's Vermillion penant disappears. Jennie Osborn Concert Co. Mr. Minkler attends. Also Miss Hie by.&#13;
13 Dr. Lewis announces that all who class Junior at begining of winter term can ha,·e&#13;
pictures in · Annual.&#13;
14 Football, Mitchell 6, Morningside 5.&#13;
16 "Rooters" departed for Yankton, Morningside 11, Yankton 5.&#13;
17 Dr. Cook grows eloquent on "The Academy of Science and Letters." "Rooters" and&#13;
football team return jubilant. President Class 19o6 goes to sleep in library.&#13;
19 Chemistry class makes excursion in search of a man imported from South Carolina.&#13;
20 First Senior Middle Scrap. Bishop Hamilton speaks in Auditorium. Mr. Gilbert&#13;
appears with the Germaine troup. Also Cain shuffles the cards "very rapidly and&#13;
thoroughly."&#13;
21 Garver makes a speech without funny remarks. Atheneum Annual Pubiic.&#13;
23 Mass meeting. Attendance less than 1000.&#13;
24 Dr. Cook announces that Senior Preps are not at the stage of "foolhood." Demonstrated after chapel by said class.&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 26 Thanksgiving game. A traitor supplies Vermillion with our songs.&#13;
Vermillion yell master tried hy&#13;
snow bank ordeal. Found guilty.&#13;
Nov. 27 A limited number have their lessons.&#13;
Nov. 28 Coach Sweeley entertains football&#13;
squad. Garver speaks on the Debate; announces his birthday to be&#13;
March 9th. Please have presents&#13;
ready.&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Football trophy awarded to Saylor General surprise that Cain did not receive it. "M's"&#13;
awarded.&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
Bishop Fowler lectures.&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Blue occupies south east corner of Dr. Lewis'&#13;
chair at the chapel. Oratorical Asscociation&#13;
meets. Constitution mutilated.&#13;
&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
5 Othonians banquet Zetaletheans.&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 7 Hawkeye-Adelphian debate.&#13;
Dec. 8 Dr. Cook threatens to take an "i" out of Friedendoll. Dr. Lewis multiplies mercies to Juniors&#13;
and Seniors. Crescents and Aesthesians entertain Hawkeyes and Adelphians respectively.&#13;
Dec.&#13;
&#13;
I I&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 15&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical contest.&#13;
Mr. Cain nominated as member of missionary&#13;
hoard. Narrowly escapes election. Term recital of music.&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 16 Term tortures begin.&#13;
Dec. 18&#13;
&#13;
Fall term closes.&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
Jan . 5 Winter term opens.&#13;
Jan. 7 First Chapel Service. Dr. Lewis reads new rules; no exams for .&#13;
those making A grades.&#13;
Jan. 8 Miss Ferguson dismisses second year German class before bell&#13;
rings. Dr. Lewis makes his regular term speech on the "Best&#13;
Literary Society."&#13;
Jan. 9 Dr. Lewis announces that there is plenty of room UP. (After&#13;
chapel several go up to see .)&#13;
Jan. 12 "Climb-acts" in second year German. Miss Ferguson misses chapel.&#13;
Jan. 13 Green-Harvey debate. Sophomore meeting. A "fool" attendance&#13;
reported.&#13;
Jan. 14 · Prof.Harvey late to class. (See Jan. 13).&#13;
Jan. I 5 Miss F. finds it necessary to lock Scientific German class in.&#13;
Jan. 16 Kanthlener studies Greek in chapel. Harvey mentions a "flock"&#13;
of cattle in Biology class.&#13;
&#13;
Jan. 19&#13;
&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
Jan.&#13;
&#13;
Jan.&#13;
&#13;
Soph-Freshman rooster fight. Some&#13;
hens implicated . Carson occupies&#13;
chair of Philosophy. Darling occupies chair of Psychologv. Garver jumps history class. (Note:&#13;
See new rules.) Soph Banquet.&#13;
(- - - ----- - - ! ! ! ! )&#13;
20&#13;
Dr. Lewis and Prof. Garver offend&#13;
Preps. Preps rebellious.&#13;
21 Dr. Lewis apologizes to Preps.&#13;
Preps&#13;
resolve to boycott debate.&#13;
22&#13;
Dr. Lewis tearfully pleads with Preps&#13;
in secret session. Preps relent.&#13;
Simpson-Morningside cl e bate.&#13;
Preps in full attendance, but&#13;
where's the cartoon.&#13;
23 Basket Ball Game. Morningside 50,&#13;
Western Union 18. Trial for theft&#13;
of missing cartoon.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Paddock, State Sec'y. Y. W . C.&#13;
A. speaks.&#13;
Jan. 28 Day of Prayer for colleges,&#13;
Jan. 29 Revival meetings begin. McCay sent&#13;
as spy to land of Kansas.&#13;
Jan. 30 Spy reports that there are giants in&#13;
the land.&#13;
Jan. 26&#13;
&#13;
February ·&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
Feb. II&#13;
Feb. 12&#13;
Feb. 13&#13;
Feb. I 5&#13;
Feb. 17&#13;
Feh.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feh.&#13;
Feh.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
Feb.&#13;
&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
26&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Blue makes a speech in Junior Class meeting. Theme,&#13;
"()rations." Dr. Lewis announces that a Philo ·'star" has&#13;
been found.&#13;
Feb. 3 Dr. Blue's announcement read in chapel. Theme, "Orations."&#13;
Feb. 4 Dr. Cook skips Chemistry class.&#13;
Feb. 5 Y. W. C. A. has winter picnic. Boys disconsolate.&#13;
Feb. 6 Dr. Lewis announces the approach of cold wave and cautions the&#13;
children to wear wraps.&#13;
Feb. 7 Biology Professor makes a call; gets sent home at 2 a. m.&#13;
Feb. 9 Rev. Millard speaks at chapel on Egypt.&#13;
1 Faculty shows they have not lost their youthful desire to&#13;
" look at pictures."&#13;
2 Miss Lothian remains faithful at her post.&#13;
3 Saylor tries to buy a wife for $1.35.&#13;
4 Kindig declines to leave for Egypt post haste.&#13;
5 Dr. Lewis alone is conscious of flight of time. (He could&#13;
not see the pictures.)&#13;
6 Recitation period reduced one-half.&#13;
Feb. 10 Sophs noticeable in groups talking about mince pie, etc.&#13;
8 p. m. Sophs give Farmer's party.•&#13;
Feb.11 Dr. Lewis absent. Dr. Blue improves his opportunity to make a&#13;
speech. Theme, "Orations." Quotation from speech, "A word&#13;
to the wise is sufficient." Third and fourth verses of Hymn&#13;
No. 6 sung.&#13;
Basket ball game with Medics. Morningside victorious.&#13;
Every one required to take mid-term tests. See Jan. 7.&#13;
Seniors ? conduct themselves disgracefully in chapel. Zctalethean Annual Public. After entertainment Scharr and his girl take a stroll to enjoy the "gentle breeze"&#13;
Cy Guilbert spends whole day making a valentine.&#13;
Basket Ball. University of Nebraska&#13;
wins over Morningside. Morningside girls win over Sargeant&#13;
Bluff girls.&#13;
Dr. Blue reluctantly vacates Dr. Lewis' chair upon the discovery of the latter's appearance at chapel.&#13;
Herbert Butler Concert Co. appear in striking costumes. Sophs "bob" ride fails to materialize.&#13;
Dr:Julius Smith of Burma speaks at chapel.&#13;
Monday: Scherzel waits for pupils thinking it Tuesday. Query- How did he spend Sundav?&#13;
Entertainment by Elocution Department.&#13;
Dr. Lewis absent. Six members of Faculty present at chapel.&#13;
Dr. Lewis returns. Twenty members of Faculty present at chapel.&#13;
Five seniors at chapel.&#13;
Freshman Leap Year Party. Sophs detain two gallant girls; rescued by two blushing Freshman boys.&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1903&#13;
&#13;
E. L. Empy&#13;
&#13;
V. M. Vigars&#13;
&#13;
S.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
Raw&#13;
&#13;
E. M. Durst&#13;
&#13;
I.&#13;
&#13;
E. Kilborne&#13;
&#13;
F. K. Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Class of 1904&#13;
&#13;
Miss Wadham&#13;
&#13;
S.&#13;
&#13;
J. Lacy&#13;
&#13;
G. Wyatt&#13;
&#13;
E. Cain&#13;
&#13;
K . J. Manus&#13;
&#13;
M. R. Smylie&#13;
&#13;
K . M . Gibson&#13;
&#13;
Glee Club&#13;
&#13;
Mason&#13;
Spratt&#13;
Hart&#13;
Barringer&#13;
Clark&#13;
&#13;
Smylie&#13;
Howard&#13;
&#13;
Gibson&#13;
Erskin&#13;
Mellin&#13;
&#13;
Weary&#13;
&#13;
Lothian&#13;
&#13;
Ellis&#13;
Larson&#13;
&#13;
Chrysler&#13;
Rorem&#13;
Newcom&#13;
Wyatt&#13;
Cain&#13;
&#13;
Mossman&#13;
Manning&#13;
Calkins&#13;
&#13;
Tun1bleson&#13;
Lukins&#13;
Shaw&#13;
&#13;
Tumbleson&#13;
&#13;
Everhart&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Richards&#13;
&#13;
Williams&#13;
Bennett&#13;
&#13;
Bartlett&#13;
Van Marter&#13;
&#13;
Grubb&#13;
&#13;
Mlossman&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory&#13;
&#13;
C. C. Tonjes&#13;
S. Scherzel&#13;
&#13;
String Quartet&#13;
&#13;
C. W. Maynard&#13;
E. A. Tonjes&#13;
&#13;
Music by&#13;
&#13;
Words by&#13;
R. ALDRICH&#13;
&#13;
Hail! Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
V. MAE VIGARS.&#13;
&#13;
we raise to thee A&#13;
with&#13;
in thy walls Our&#13;
fair Morn-ing-side; Thy&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
V&#13;
&#13;
Ma&#13;
Morn&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
song,&#13;
stay&#13;
rise&#13;
&#13;
thou - sand pul - es beat for thee In&#13;
Thy class-rooms and thy spa-cious halls The&#13;
To bring thee glo - ry. hon - or, fame; Thy&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
With Joy - al hearts and&#13;
will-ing hands and voi-ces loud and clear&#13;
We hon -or thee and&#13;
Thy cam-pus green and cher-ished scene con-strain us to&#13;
a - bide&#13;
Up-on thine am - ple&#13;
Till death, thy name we will pro- claim, for thou hast made us free T h y h work reand&#13;
&#13;
meas-ure firm and strong&#13;
woes of life al - lay&#13;
name im - mor- tal - ize&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
own&#13;
&#13;
joy - ous glad-some&#13;
heart-strings bid us&#13;
no - ble sons shall&#13;
&#13;
IRA&#13;
&#13;
ter&#13;
ing&#13;
&#13;
dear;&#13;
side;&#13;
&#13;
Ma&#13;
ter,&#13;
Morn - ing&#13;
ter&#13;
ni&#13;
&#13;
dear&#13;
side.&#13;
ty&#13;
&#13;
Conservatory of Music&#13;
&#13;
T HE&#13;
&#13;
of Morningside College had its&#13;
beginning in 1894. Prof. T. G. Hadley was the&#13;
first director, his work continuing until 1897 when Prof.&#13;
0. P. Barbour succeeded him. Prof. Barbour was director until 1903 when he accepted a position as director of&#13;
the Conservatory of Cornell College, Iowa. Since that&#13;
time the Conservatory has been without a recognized&#13;
head. However, the work has been carried on with remarkable success and next year Prof. J. W. Mather will&#13;
begin his work as Director of the Conservatory.&#13;
Prof. Mather is a man of considerable reputation&#13;
and experience and the College considers itself fortunate&#13;
in being able to secure his service. He is a graduate of&#13;
Oberlin and has studied for some time in Germany, and&#13;
is accomplished both in piano and pipe organ music.&#13;
He has taught for three years in Mt. Vernon, Iowa, and&#13;
for four years has been a director of the Conservatory at&#13;
Yankton College.&#13;
The work of the Conservator y is very satisfactory&#13;
and has proven itself a very important part of Morningside College.&#13;
Both public and private recitals are given during&#13;
the year in which the pupils are required to take part.&#13;
At these recitals which occur every two or three weeks&#13;
the works of the masters are studied and whenever it is&#13;
CONSERVATORY&#13;
&#13;
possible the best lecturers and performers that the surrounding country affords are secured.&#13;
The Spirit of the Conservatory is very well expressed in the following anecdote of J. A. Ward the sculptor. Some one asked him which of his works he considered the best, to which he replied, "The Next."&#13;
There are various organizations connected with the&#13;
Conservatory. The Band which is under the direction&#13;
of Prof. Everhart has made itself famous upon a number&#13;
of occasions. It has represented the Music Department&#13;
at a number of out of town contests and can always cope&#13;
with the very best College bands.&#13;
The Choral Union, directed by C. P. Kilborne, is&#13;
worthy of the very highest commendation. It meets&#13;
each week and much hard work is done during the year.&#13;
It gives an annual entertainment in the Spring which is&#13;
always a credit to it.&#13;
The Ladies' Glee Club which has been organized&#13;
during the past year by Miss Larson is composed of&#13;
Morningside's very best talent. It has made few public&#13;
appearances as yet but will be heard from more frequently in the not distant future.&#13;
The Orchestra of Morningside College has had a&#13;
rather desultory existen ce during this year but whenever&#13;
they do appear it is to the satisfaction of all who hear&#13;
them. A ll ·those who play stringed instruments are&#13;
urged to belong and are given training and practice.&#13;
&#13;
TH - END.&#13;
E&#13;
&#13;
( OVER.)&#13;
&#13;
HELLO !&#13;
&#13;
Now we have come to the most important&#13;
&#13;
and most entertaining part of The Maroon, and we will&#13;
now go on and see funny&#13;
&#13;
CARTOONS and&#13;
&#13;
while we are having a good laugh we will keep our eyes&#13;
open and learn where to do business, for we know they are&#13;
the best business men who gave The Maroon these&#13;
&#13;
ADS.&#13;
&#13;
ARTISTIC POSING, COURTEOUS TREATMENT&#13;
PERFECT APPOINTMENTS&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
HONEST PRICES&#13;
ARE REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD HAVE YOUR&#13;
&#13;
Photographs&#13;
-TAKEN&#13;
&#13;
AT-&#13;
&#13;
Studio,&#13;
&#13;
607 Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
DON'T IMAGINE THAT&#13;
BECAUSE THIS IS A BIG&#13;
BANK IT DOES NOT WANT&#13;
SMALL ACCOUNTS.&#13;
Deposits in any amount from&#13;
&#13;
$1 Up&#13;
&#13;
4%&#13;
&#13;
are accepted and interest&#13;
paid at the rate of&#13;
Compounded Semi-Annually&#13;
&#13;
Banking Hours:&#13;
8 to 5 p. m . except Saturdays until 9 p. m .&#13;
Your car s tops at.our corner.&#13;
&#13;
FIRST NATIONAL BANK&#13;
( SAVINGS DEPT .)&#13;
To y BLOC K, S . E . CoR . 4TH AND JACKSON STS .&#13;
&#13;
ALL WE ASK&#13;
&#13;
G. D. HANSON&#13;
&#13;
C. E. FOGELQUIST&#13;
&#13;
G.D. Hanson CO.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
and consider quality and price, all we ask is an&#13;
inspection and pricing of our stock.&#13;
SEE US FOR&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds, Watches, .Jewelry and Optical Goods&#13;
&#13;
J. FLECKENSTEIN &amp; CO.&#13;
PHONE 956.&#13;
&#13;
Let Us Do Your&#13;
Watch Repairing · 406 FOURTH ST.&#13;
&#13;
Tailors,&#13;
&#13;
Clothiers,&#13;
&#13;
hatters&#13;
&#13;
, and&#13;
&#13;
Men's furnishers&#13;
827 Fourth Street, Corner Jennings&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCHOOL&#13;
( CHICAGO MEDICAL COLLEGE )&#13;
&#13;
N. S. DAVIS, JR., A.M., M.D., DEAN.&#13;
&#13;
Buildings and Equipment New.&#13;
Clinical Opportunities Unequalled.&#13;
Four hospitals in affiliation, with 800 beds.&#13;
Dispensary treats 50,000 patients annually.&#13;
&#13;
Ward walks daily for seniors.&#13;
Clinical teaching in every year.&#13;
The recognized leader in medical education.&#13;
For circulars and information, address&#13;
&#13;
DR. ARTHUR R. EDWARDS,&#13;
2431&#13;
&#13;
DEARBORN&#13;
&#13;
SECRETARY,&#13;
&#13;
STREET, CHICAGO.&#13;
&#13;
The People's Savings Bank&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS&#13;
&#13;
F. W . KEMP&#13;
DR. WM. JEPSON&#13;
GEORGE JEPSON&#13;
F. L. WIRICK&#13;
JOHN G. SHUMAKER&#13;
HOMER A. MILLER&#13;
A. T. BENNETT&#13;
&#13;
4%&#13;
&#13;
Interest on Deposits&#13;
SMALL BANKS FREE.&#13;
&#13;
DON'T F'AIL TO&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
&#13;
SHUMAKER BROS.&#13;
FOR&#13;
&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
Telephon e 820-LI.&#13;
&#13;
Dentist&#13;
&#13;
w&#13;
&#13;
A Dean Co&#13;
&#13;
Have been selling&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Pianos, Organs&#13;
and all kinds of Musical Goods to the people of&#13;
Sioux City and vicinity for more than 20 years. We&#13;
have the most complete Music House in the middle&#13;
West, with Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota as a&#13;
field. We sell only such instruments as we can conscientiously recommend and guarantee. All goods&#13;
marked in plain figures. We make a specialty of&#13;
selling direct to the person who uses the instrument,&#13;
naming lowest prices-cutting off expenses of agents&#13;
and canvassers-Correspondence solicited&#13;
&#13;
Rederich &amp; De Walt,&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Property and&#13;
Fire Insurance&#13;
410 Security Bank Building&#13;
&#13;
BUYING A PIANO&#13;
&#13;
609 Fourth Street,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
on Morningside see&#13;
&#13;
Office with Dr. H anchette,&#13;
3o6 a nd 306 1/2&#13;
Toy Building.&#13;
&#13;
Buy from first hands&#13;
and save Commission.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. STEWART, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
A. M. Jackson &amp; Co.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 503.&#13;
&#13;
LITTLE GEM&#13;
BARBER SHOP&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
PETERS' PARK,&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE&#13;
&#13;
THE SUN CROWNED HILLS OF MORNINGSIDE.&#13;
WORDS BY A. R . TOOTHAKER.&#13;
&#13;
Where&#13;
Where&#13;
When&#13;
&#13;
•oa.&#13;
&#13;
Morn's&#13;
first&#13;
early&#13;
moonlight&#13;
silv'ry&#13;
drifting down Life's&#13;
&#13;
Chorus-&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC BY ESSIE CREWDSON&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
bill&#13;
tops&#13;
deck&#13;
in&#13;
radiant&#13;
sheen,&#13;
o·er&#13;
shady&#13;
slopes,&#13;
In&#13;
deep&#13;
ravines'&#13;
comes to&#13;
leave&#13;
these&#13;
sun-crowned hills,&#13;
&#13;
golden&#13;
gently&#13;
changing&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
College,&#13;
&#13;
mother&#13;
&#13;
fair,&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
always&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
blessings&#13;
&#13;
-:___,&#13;
1 it&#13;
last fading&#13;
&#13;
light,&#13;
Riverside,&#13;
fostering&#13;
&#13;
their&#13;
waft&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
care,&#13;
&#13;
where · Aurora's&#13;
And&#13;
Floyd's&#13;
Where brave&#13;
&#13;
full&#13;
&#13;
shaft&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
undergrads&#13;
the&#13;
undergrads&#13;
returning&#13;
will&#13;
&#13;
temples&#13;
crown&#13;
with&#13;
halos&#13;
bright,&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
ebbing&#13;
tide.&#13;
gently&#13;
the&#13;
world&#13;
burdens&#13;
o!&#13;
to&#13;
share,&#13;
&#13;
their&#13;
&#13;
orbed&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
on&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
bill&#13;
&#13;
crowned&#13;
&#13;
hills&#13;
&#13;
willin&amp;&#13;
&#13;
to&#13;
&#13;
share,&#13;
&#13;
College,&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Morningside&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
teachings&#13;
&#13;
mother&#13;
&#13;
so&#13;
&#13;
we'll&#13;
&#13;
cherish,&#13;
&#13;
dear.&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
halls&#13;
&#13;
name&#13;
&#13;
and'&#13;
&#13;
we'll&#13;
&#13;
revere&#13;
&#13;
thy&#13;
&#13;
courts&#13;
&#13;
WHO?&#13;
&#13;
WM. H. BECK&#13;
The SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
Clay, Robinson &amp; Co.&#13;
My Specialty is the Sale of&#13;
FINE DIAMONDS,&#13;
GOOD WATCHES,&#13;
SILVERWARE and CUT GLASS.&#13;
&#13;
WHAT?&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturer of&#13;
&#13;
School, College and Class Pins and Emblems.&#13;
&#13;
Live Stock Commission&#13;
&#13;
LAVELLE &amp; HOGAN&#13;
PLUMBING&#13;
&#13;
WHERE?&#13;
&#13;
GAS FITTING&#13;
STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING&#13;
&#13;
Estimates Cheerfully Given. Gas Fixtures a Specialty.&#13;
Phone 822-L.&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH OMAHA&#13;
513&#13;
&#13;
KANSAS CITY&#13;
&#13;
SO. ST. JOSEPH&#13;
&#13;
DENVER&#13;
&#13;
FIFTH&#13;
&#13;
STREET&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
A New Stock of&#13;
&#13;
SHOES&#13;
&#13;
at Very Low Prices&#13;
&#13;
OR&#13;
&#13;
FREE SHOES&#13;
IF&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
BUY&#13;
&#13;
Clothing, Hats, Shirts&#13;
and Furnishings&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
BIG STORE----BIG NEW STOCK&#13;
&#13;
WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS&#13;
&#13;
G ETTI NG RICH&#13;
Some folks are getting rich, and, apparently, with great ease.&#13;
Do you know their plan ? In many instances here it is: They&#13;
commenced by laying aside a fixed portion of their income, this&#13;
they deposited regularly in our savings baok, where it was allowed&#13;
to accumulate. Are you working along this line ?&#13;
No deposit .too small and none too large to make a beginning with.&#13;
We accept deposits by mail on the same terms as if made&#13;
in person.&#13;
&#13;
4%&#13;
&#13;
A LL&#13;
KINDS&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
COAL&#13;
ST EAM&#13;
COAL&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
Specialty.&#13;
&#13;
Allow ed on any amount.&#13;
Compounded Half Yearly .&#13;
WHOLESALE&#13;
&#13;
Your Account Invited.&#13;
&#13;
WOODBURY COUNTY SAVINGS BANK,&#13;
S IOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
ONLY.&#13;
&#13;
WR I T E&#13;
&#13;
U S FOR PRICES,&#13;
&#13;
THE BROWN COAL Co. Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
PRINTERY&#13;
MOSSMAN &amp; GILBERT, Proprietors&#13;
&#13;
Seymour Studio&#13;
ALWAYS THE LATEST&#13;
&#13;
CHI LDREN A S PECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
407 Fourth&#13;
&#13;
Street&#13;
&#13;
NEAT BOOKLETS&#13;
LEAFLETS&#13;
PROGRAMS&#13;
WEDDING STATIONERY&#13;
OFFICE STATIONERY&#13;
FANCY STATIONERY&#13;
POSTERS BLANKS ETC.&#13;
&#13;
LET US FIGURE ON YOUR WORK,&#13;
WE WILL PLEASE YOU&#13;
&#13;
To those who know TYPEWRITERS and the value of a dollar&#13;
&#13;
The Chicago&#13;
&#13;
It has established a higher "standard" at a lower price.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago&#13;
&#13;
Writing&#13;
&#13;
94-96 WENDELL STREET&#13;
&#13;
Our printed matter tells how.&#13;
&#13;
MACHINE CO.&#13;
CHICAGO, U. S. A&#13;
&#13;
j&#13;
&#13;
Wood Bros. &amp; Co.&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
C. L. CRAIGHEAD, CATTLE&#13;
T. DEALTRY,&#13;
&#13;
SALESMAN&#13;
&#13;
MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
STRAUB BROTHERS,&#13;
&#13;
Dentists&#13;
WOOD BROS.&#13;
&#13;
WOOD BROS.&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
PHONE NO. 704-J.&#13;
&#13;
SOUTH OMAHA&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLISHED&#13;
&#13;
JAMES R . WOOD&#13;
&#13;
s.&#13;
&#13;
E . WOOD,&#13;
&#13;
1867&#13;
&#13;
R . NASH&#13;
&#13;
CATTLE SALESMAN&#13;
&#13;
WALTER WOOD,&#13;
CATTLE. SALE SMAN AND MANAG ER&#13;
&#13;
202 and 203 BROWN BLOCK,&#13;
CORNER FOURTH and NEBRASKA STREETS&#13;
&#13;
FRANK C. WAPLES&#13;
Stenographer and Bookkeeper&#13;
Castana Savings Bank&#13;
Castana, I o wa&#13;
&#13;
MISS PHOEBE MULLEN&#13;
Stenographer County Attorney&#13;
O' Neill, Nebraska&#13;
&#13;
STENOGRAPHER AND BOOKKEEPER&#13;
THE COMMERCIAL MUTUAL FIRE ASSOCIATION&#13;
MITCHELL, S. 0.&#13;
&#13;
I cannot say t oo tnuch for Brown's Business College, as I received m y business education in this&#13;
school, and Mr. Brown secured tny prese nt position for me.&#13;
MISS ETHEL SMITH.&#13;
&#13;
MISS LUCILE BATES&#13;
Aberdeen, South Dakota, May 27, 1903.&#13;
Pres. G. W. Brown, Jr., Sioux City, Iowa:&#13;
Dear Sir-I h ave never t o regret the time I spent in&#13;
your college last year. As a r esult I have a perman ent and&#13;
good-payin g position with the MEYER L AND COMPANY, of&#13;
Aberdeen, S. D. This is owing t o the tho rough instruction&#13;
I r eceived at your school in the Business Course.&#13;
Wis hing you continued success, I am,&#13;
Your former student,&#13;
LUCILE BATES.&#13;
&#13;
BROWN'S BUSINESS COLLEGE,&#13;
SIOUX CIT Y, IOWA.&#13;
THE OLDEST, LARGEST AND MOST SUCCESSFUL PRIVA TE COMMERCIAL SCHOOL IN&#13;
THE NORTHWEST. = = = = = = = = = = = = = == =&#13;
&#13;
Security National Bank,&#13;
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY.&#13;
&#13;
Capital&#13;
Profits&#13;
Deposits&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
1904&#13;
&#13;
1883&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM GORDON,&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
$250,000&#13;
110,000&#13;
&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
&#13;
$2,200,000&#13;
&#13;
Man&#13;
&#13;
SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS AND PROM ISE SATISFACTORY TREATMENT.&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUILDING&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President.&#13;
&#13;
c.&#13;
&#13;
C. W. BRITTON , Asst. Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
T. A. BLACK , Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
L. WR IGHT , Vice President.&#13;
&#13;
REFERENCE:&#13;
&#13;
ANY BANK IN SIOUX CITY&#13;
&#13;
LOST&#13;
&#13;
Somewhere between sunrise and&#13;
sunset two golden hours, each set&#13;
with sixty diamond minutes; no reward is offered for they are lost&#13;
forever.&#13;
&#13;
R. S. PHILLIPS.&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
&#13;
WE CARRY ONE OF THE MOST COMPLETE LINES OF&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds, Watches, /jewelry and Silverware&#13;
IN THE CITY.&#13;
&#13;
BASE BALL&#13;
&#13;
The Reliable Jeweler.&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
ALF • WISSING&#13;
&#13;
624 FOURTH STREET,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
The Dependable&#13;
Dry Goods House&#13;
&#13;
ATHLETIC&#13;
&#13;
GOODS&#13;
BICYCLES&#13;
&#13;
GUNS&#13;
&#13;
AMMUNITION&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
T. S. MARTIN &amp; CO.&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
MAIL&#13;
&#13;
ORDERS&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SPECIALTY .&#13;
&#13;
DOG FURNISHINGS&#13;
&#13;
408 Pearl Street&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
THE MERCHANTS&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
A GENERAL&#13;
&#13;
BANKING BUSINESS&#13;
TRANSACTED.&#13;
&#13;
Individual, Firm and Bank Accounts Solicited.&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
GEO. P. DAY, Cashier.&#13;
E.W. RICE, President.&#13;
G. N. SW AN, Asst. Cashier.&#13;
E. B. SPALDING, Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Mystic Milling Company&#13;
MERCHANT&#13;
&#13;
MILLERS&#13;
MANUFACTURERS&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
EXPORTERS&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
Flour ·and Feed&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS&#13;
&#13;
REPRESENTED:&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
LONDON&#13;
&#13;
YOUR EDUCATION&#13;
IS NOT COMPLETE UNTIL YOU HAVE TAKEN A&#13;
&#13;
BUSINESS . COURSE&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
BEST&#13;
&#13;
PLACE&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
DO&#13;
&#13;
THIS&#13;
&#13;
IS&#13;
&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
National Business Training School,&#13;
PENMANSHIP, BOOKKEEPING, MOSHER SHORTHAND,&#13;
TYPEWRITING, TELEGRAPHY, ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING,&#13;
PREPARATORY and NORMAL COURSES.&#13;
INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION. Enter any day. No theory work, but all practical business. More than&#13;
students placed in good situations last year. We do not guarantee situations, but we guarantee satisfaction when the student does his part. Tuition reasonable. Text books free. Write for information.&#13;
150&#13;
&#13;
ADDRESS :&#13;
&#13;
W . A. BARRETT, President.&#13;
H. E. REISTER, Secy. and Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
N. B. T. SCHOOL,&#13;
THIRD FLOOR UNION DEPOT,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
If it is a Typewriter you are Looking for, do not fail to examine the&#13;
&#13;
Blickensderfer&#13;
- - - Before Making a Decision. - - FOR&#13;
&#13;
AN&#13;
&#13;
ALL&#13;
&#13;
AROUND MACHINE,&#13;
&#13;
IT&#13;
&#13;
HAS&#13;
&#13;
NOT&#13;
&#13;
AN EQUAL.&#13;
&#13;
NOTE THE FEATURES:&#13;
&#13;
Visible writing, interchangeable type, perfect alignment at all times, direct inking from rolls, rather than&#13;
ribbons, being better and cheaper, simplicity of construction and ease of operation, portability,&#13;
and low price, while the quality of work cannot be surpassed by any $100 machine on the market.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
POSTAL&#13;
&#13;
WILL BRING&#13;
&#13;
ALL NEEDED&#13;
&#13;
HARGER &amp;&#13;
GENERAL AGENTS,&#13;
&#13;
INFORMATION .&#13;
&#13;
BLISH,&#13;
DUBUQUE, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Morningside Real Estate Office&#13;
Have FOR SALE a Good List of CHOICE RESIDENCES&#13;
Sizes, Prices and Locations to Suit You,&#13;
We deal In FARM LANDS in Iowa, Nebraska and the Dakotas.&#13;
&#13;
No trouble to show property.&#13;
&#13;
Correspondence solicited.&#13;
&#13;
CUSHMAN &amp; MILLER, Peters&#13;
&#13;
Park, Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
AN ACCURATE KNOWLEDGE&#13;
of words(including those of most&#13;
&#13;
recent origin), noted people,&#13;
geographical terms, persons and&#13;
&#13;
WEBSTER'S&#13;
INTERNATIONAL&#13;
DICTIONARY&#13;
T h e One Grea t A u t h ority&#13;
of the Government, the Courts,&#13;
the Schools,· and the Englishspeaking World. Get t h e Best&#13;
&#13;
Let Us Send You Free&#13;
A Test In Pronunciation "&#13;
Also an Illustrated Pamphlet.&#13;
&#13;
G &amp; C MERRIAM CO., Publishers,&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
Springfield, Mass., U.S. A&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
..&#13;
&#13;
R. H. Darling&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
College&#13;
Bookman&#13;
OUR SPECIALTIES ARE:&#13;
College Text Books at publishers wholesale&#13;
list price.&#13;
Moore's Non-Leakable Fountain Pen.&#13;
Spalding's Athletic Goods.&#13;
The best ten cent Ice Cream Soda in the city.&#13;
&#13;
IT IS OUR POLICY TO SUPPLY&#13;
ALL THE NEEDS OF A STUDENT&#13;
AT THE LOWEST PRICES COMPATIBLE WITH A HIGH STANDARD OF GOODS•&#13;
&#13;
GO&#13;
&#13;
TO&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
&#13;
Studio Grand&#13;
513 FOURTH STREET&#13;
FOR YOUR LATEST AND UP- TO-DATE&#13;
&#13;
Photos&#13;
NEWLY REMODELED AND FITTED&#13;
THROUGHOUT, AND WE ARE READY TO&#13;
TURN OUT PHOTOS CHEAPER AND&#13;
BETTER THAN EVE R BEFORE.&#13;
ALL&#13;
WORK GUARANTEED.&#13;
WE HAVE ALL NEGATIVES FOR TEN&#13;
BACK, RETAINED FOR FUTURE ORDERS.&#13;
&#13;
YEARS&#13;
&#13;
Respectfully yours,&#13;
&#13;
Coates &amp; Hollenbeck.&#13;
&#13;
co.,&#13;
&#13;
UNION PRINTING&#13;
158 - 164 FIFTH STREET,&#13;
&#13;
DUBUQUE, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
"IF IT CAN BE DONE&#13;
&#13;
DROP US A LINE.&#13;
&#13;
IN A PRINT - SHOP,&#13;
WE CAN DO IT."&#13;
&#13;
We Answer All Communications&#13;
Promptly.&#13;
We have the&#13;
&#13;
Best of Machinery,&#13;
&#13;
WE HAVE SPECIAL FACILITIES FOR TURNING OUT&#13;
&#13;
''We Print''&#13;
&#13;
College Annuals&#13;
ON&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
OUR&#13;
&#13;
SHORT&#13;
WORK&#13;
&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
&#13;
CANNOT BE&#13;
&#13;
EXCELLED.&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Portrait of Professor Herbert G. Cambell, former Vice President and Philosophy Professor at Morningside College. Professor Cambell and his wife made many trips to Europe and other parts of the world. During World War One they went to Europe to help with relief work in France. After the war, Professor Cambell traveled Europe promoting the League of Nations.</text>
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                    <text>���Published by&#13;
&#13;
D. L.&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
UNION PRINTIN G COMPANY&#13;
DUBUQUE , IOWA&#13;
&#13;
�VOL. II.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
- - - E D I T E D BY·&#13;
- - -&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 1903&#13;
&#13;
�This Book is&#13;
Dedicated to&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
�·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Secretary Miss Sophia Herby&#13;
.&#13;
Treasurer, M. F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief D.M. Simpson&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
N&#13;
. Assistant Editors Ray Toothaker&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
F. E. Mossman Athletics&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
MC ISAAC.&#13;
&#13;
Illustrations.&#13;
&#13;
the northwest&#13;
&#13;
Historical.&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Calendar.&#13;
L. F.&#13;
&#13;
Smylie&#13;
&#13;
Jokes.&#13;
Miss Pearl Woodford&#13;
J.R. Ackenback&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Hans Nissen&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
our friends&#13;
fellow Students&#13;
alumni&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
Alex Ruthven , M.F. McDowell&#13;
George Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
To....&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
present the Sophomore Class consists of nine of the best students in&#13;
college. There really should be more members in the class, but several,&#13;
having become so learned, the Faculty promoted them to be Juniors. This&#13;
may have been because the Faculty foresaw that the "Bumble BEE OF&#13;
1903," would prove a failure if some brainy Sophomores were not added to&#13;
th e c lass of 1903.&#13;
Being interes ted in their future, th e members of our class paid Miss Anna Eva&#13;
Fay a visit durin g h er recen t sojourn in this city in order that th eir hop es might be&#13;
fully es tablish ed. One Monday afternoon th e class ca ll ed at th e apartments of the&#13;
fair Mabatma and we re very co rdi a lly rece ived. After a few minut es spent in conversation, th e students were asked to write any question whi ch th ey d es ired answ ered&#13;
o n a slip of paper. Miss Faythen seated h erself on a low stool and completely&#13;
enveloped herse lf in a la rge India shawl.&#13;
"The nam e of Ira Aldrich comes to m e. Mr. Aldrich, you want to know&#13;
wh et her you will ever be pastor of th e Metropolitan T emp le, New York. That cong rega tion is anxiously awai tin g a silver tongued o rator.-M r. Jones has a qu es tion.&#13;
Will he win first place in the Prohibition Oratorical Contest next year? The res ult,&#13;
Mr. Jon es, will astonish you.--Now Miss Miller's question. "Am I really handsome?"&#13;
Narcissa, you have furnished inspiration for man y a poem.- Ralph Milliken wants to&#13;
know who stole his overcoat. I think A. P . Urloiner did.- A. H . Maynard's question&#13;
is, "How may I a lways keep in good company?'' Live in a subjective state of mind .&#13;
- C. L. Gilbert wants to know whether h e will be on the next Intercollegiate Debate.&#13;
Yes, if the Faculty make th e appointments.- Grace Darling wond ers whether she&#13;
will always be a Darlin g. Yes.-Carl McKaig, you want to kn ow whether you will&#13;
make $10,000 a year in your future profession. Yes, if you radi ca ll y a lt er your prese nt&#13;
habits.- Mr. Carson wou ld lik e to be a soldier. The Salvation Army needs rec ruits,&#13;
li eu tenant."&#13;
Miss Fay then threw off her mantle and bade the illu strious c lass adieu.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
�Seniors.R?&#13;
OME weeks ago when requested&#13;
to write the history of t he class&#13;
of 1902, the task seemed comparatively easy, but each day&#13;
made it more difficu lt until at&#13;
last it seemed an impossibil it y, fo r our&#13;
history is wri tten upon the lives of our&#13;
classmates and recorded in the registrar's&#13;
book. The question, what will you write,&#13;
has unconsciously asked itself. Over this&#13;
question the author has hesitated, but all&#13;
attempts at solution have bee n in vain.&#13;
The task seems as ponderable as ever,&#13;
not because th ere may be a lack of material from which to draw; not because&#13;
the class may not have accomplished&#13;
anything of note, but because of the magn itude of the resources and the inabilit y&#13;
of words to portray the true worth of the&#13;
Seniors. But more than all the write r is&#13;
restrained by modest y, for bei ng a membe r of Class 190 2 , he mi ght seem to be&#13;
egotistical, which is ever the farthest&#13;
from the mind of a Senior.&#13;
What shall we write ? W e might tell you of our organi zation, which prog ressed so rapidly and in the fall term of 1900 attracted the attention of a few&#13;
ambitious Sophomores so that when the winter term op ened our class numbered n ine.&#13;
Amid warnings and fea rs we undertook an ente r prise which was a new feature&#13;
in our college. Remembering that withou t risk the re could be no gain, we successfully edi ted the "Blue and Wh ite," th e gentle forerunner of the "Bumble Bee."&#13;
In the followin g spring the Seniors of '01, unw illing to graduate without leaving the J uni ors some token of g rat it ude and example of their rare ability, unse lfish ly&#13;
appointed Fred J. Seaver to join our class, which resulted in his total seve rance from&#13;
Class of '01. W e could give you a glimpse of the social part of our class li fe, but these&#13;
mem ories are too precious for the pen and better untold. Or we might tell of the cha racteristics of its various memb e rs; of the debating ability of a Cate or a Knoe r, but&#13;
lest othe rs suffer in the comparison, we forbear; or of the scient ific knowledge of a&#13;
Seaver a nd Eberly, the learned in Biology and Chemistry; or of the eloquence of a&#13;
Platts, that unexcelled divine; or of th e success of a Gantt who wields the rod and&#13;
pursues h er college course as rec reation; or of the ambition of a Frary who has his&#13;
gaze fixed u pon the goal, M. D ., or a Fla the rs, who lin gers long and la te over the&#13;
charms of the German tongue ; or of a Brown who successfully concea ls a world of&#13;
fun beneath his sober countenance; or of a Carr, whose dreams wave r between&#13;
Roman philosophy and life in the far, far West.&#13;
Ti me fails and modesty prevents from speaking longer of the countless grades&#13;
we ran down upon our bridleless steeds, when Juniors. Now our sins (if indeed they&#13;
were such ) are all concealed be neath the folds of ou r flowing gowns and caps, fo r at&#13;
last we a re Seniors. Once th is was our goal, but now success has moved from the&#13;
college hall out in to the wide, wide world and beckons us thither.&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
�=&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Premature hatch of a few of Doctor's chi cks, full y fled ged.&#13;
Dr. Cook and the janitor expel them. See April 9th.&#13;
Number of students go home to vote.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mysterious disappearance of Carmichael. Some think he&#13;
was kidnapped.&#13;
Senior Class meeting.&#13;
Frary in an enthusiastic speech d ecla res the incapability of the Juniors to edit an Annual.&#13;
Great applause. Dad Eberly says, "What's that noise?"&#13;
Miss Cate forebodingly says, "That sounds to m e like a&#13;
Bumble Bee."&#13;
The blind musician, Perry, g ives a piano lecture conce rt in&#13;
College Auditorium.&#13;
W . L. Harding appointed by Athletic Association to visit&#13;
th e eastern coll eges in search of a coach.&#13;
Students all heard William Hawley Smith on "We th e&#13;
People." Asa Brower was so firmly impressed that he&#13;
continues to use the lecturer's sig n of the people in asking a qu estion.&#13;
The question for Intersociety Debate chosen.&#13;
Atheneum Grand Public, "Council of the Gods." Morningside-Vermillion football, 5 to 11. Bovaird laid out for&#13;
wind.&#13;
Bovaird resuscitated.&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Harding goes "coach'' hunting. Zets and Othos&#13;
instigate a party.&#13;
Time for entry to Oratorical Contest exposes three in the&#13;
race. Asa Brower and Miss Lucy Brainard attend a&#13;
wedding at Moville.&#13;
Full attendance of Faculty at Chapel. Cause, false rumor&#13;
of the Doctor's return.&#13;
22 Friday.&#13;
25 Woman's Symphony Orchestra apea r at the College.&#13;
Smith and Sanders make app lication to some of&#13;
the lady players for positions as second fiddlers.&#13;
Two young men havin g escorted a couple of Park&#13;
Place g irls to the lecture, get stranded in the&#13;
crowd at the college hall door and the g irls go&#13;
hom e alone.&#13;
26 Mossman sings a Chapel solo.&#13;
27 Faculty receive. Janitor from force of habit turns&#13;
off the gas at ten.&#13;
28 Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
30 Othos accept negative side of debate quest ion. Zets&#13;
g ive a humorous program, Shorthand students&#13;
g ive a rag time party to their friend s.&#13;
&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
ro&#13;
&#13;
Rumors from way down in Missouri reach our ea rs conce rning Carmichael.&#13;
Introd uction of the " Marvel," Inlay's Odoriferae.&#13;
Athletic Association elects officers. Smylie elected&#13;
president. Prof. a nd instructors of North H a ll go on&#13;
a strike. By th e union of capita l and labor work was&#13;
resumed the following d ay.&#13;
Abduction of P latts and Mossman from school.&#13;
Third Annual Oratorical Contest. Toothaker wins first.&#13;
Prof. Brown is recei ved by th e Norm a ls, at his own expense. It was reported th at he was surprised. Fred&#13;
Null reads a Chatterbox at Hawkeye program.&#13;
John Smith threatened to pulverize editor of Chatterbox.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Exams begin.&#13;
Lyric Ladies appear on the "Sta r Lecture Course" at&#13;
the Grand.&#13;
13 Day and Franklin agree to work at Pellitiers for any&#13;
price.&#13;
14 Students throng the d epots. Partings.&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
15 We all rested.&#13;
25 Santa Claus visits Morningside.&#13;
30 A. H . Maynard tries coasting by fastening his coattail&#13;
to th e rear of a street car.&#13;
&#13;
12 1&#13;
&#13;
�CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
�Athletic Association&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
&#13;
THLETICS, as one of the departments of college life, has in&#13;
th e past year received much careful attention from the&#13;
student body. One year ago a new organization was&#13;
perfected, known as the "General Athletic Association of&#13;
Morningside College."&#13;
In this association much care was given, to so arrange the&#13;
. management of athletics in the college, that every student would&#13;
have an equal chance to be represented and make his influence felt.&#13;
Membership in this general association is open to any regularly&#13;
enrolled student of the college.&#13;
Under the General Association are sub-organizations comprising&#13;
tennis, base ball, basket ball, foot ball and track team. Any student&#13;
who is a member of the general association may, if he wishes to take&#13;
part in the events of any or all of the sub-organizations, become&#13;
a member of the same without further expense.&#13;
The managers of the various suborganizations are elected by the&#13;
members of th ese organizations, and comprise, with the president,&#13;
secretary and treasurer of the general association, the Executive&#13;
Board. The work of the Executive Board is to approve of the plans&#13;
of the managers and have supervision of the finances of the association. The membership fee, which covers all expenses, is one dollar&#13;
per year.&#13;
Coach and Physical Director&#13;
&#13;
Realizing our inability to compete with other schools on a fair&#13;
basis as matters then stood the Athletic Association last fall took the&#13;
initiative and opened negotiations with several good men with a view&#13;
to hiring a coach in all athletics for the coming year. These negotiations have resulted in a contract being signed with Mr. A. G.&#13;
Flanagan of Chicago University to fill this position.&#13;
He has an enviable record upon Chicago's Athletic field and&#13;
comes to us with all the experience and qualities of leadership&#13;
necessary to the coaching of a winning team. We may consider&#13;
ourselves fortunate in securing Mr. Flanagan and it is with pleasure&#13;
we await the opening of the new year.&#13;
&#13;
��Juniors&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
is said that there is no more interesting&#13;
reading than that which is to be found in&#13;
biographies, and no ne mo re profi table. As&#13;
"Plutarch's Li ves" have bee n happily&#13;
described as the pasture of g rea t minds,&#13;
so real life is quite as fascinating and far mo re&#13;
educational. Truth and virtue in action is more&#13;
effective and stimulating than the clea rest exposition of them in text hooks. Let this b e a fitting&#13;
introduction to the history which this and every&#13;
subsequent Juni or Class shall make in the future&#13;
years of th is school. Lest there shoul d be failure&#13;
in the task , Clio, t he Muse of History, is entreated&#13;
to assist this chronicl e r to reco rd a modest account&#13;
of th e Class of 1903.&#13;
Time and space does not pe rmit of an individu al narra t ive of its thirteen members. Space&#13;
limi ts to a few words, and time brushes from&#13;
memory many worthy deeds done and harmless&#13;
jokes played du ring th e two previous college&#13;
years. Hence ou r readers must be con te nt with a&#13;
general consideration of the class, upon which environm ental influences have worked&#13;
a common spirit.&#13;
By untiring effort this pe rsisten t and faculty-styled "impetuous class" of 1903&#13;
has reached al l but the last mi le sto ne in the college course.&#13;
After them, upon the al most precipitous incline of a Mount O lympus, follow the&#13;
struggling and straggling Sophomores and Freshmen. In vain d o they attempt to&#13;
scale the heigh ts by Junio rs ga ined, but slip and fl un k into remorse and pain.&#13;
W ith a n abho rrence for backwa rd steps, and with all urin g pros pects before&#13;
them, they anx iously await their turn to amp ly fi ll each and all the chapel seats assigned to the Seniors.&#13;
The class is composed of clergymen, school teach ers, book salesmen and&#13;
business m en. Among th e number arc two he roines, the pride of the class. In&#13;
spo rts and athletics the class is well represented. T he Junio rs are also fou nd in intersociety a nd inter-collegiate debating contests. T hey are known as t he lite ra ry class&#13;
of th e school. The Juniors have held their own numbers, some refusing advancement beca use of a desire to gradu ate together. T hey have incited double diligence o n&#13;
the part of some Sophomores to be advanced to the year 1903.&#13;
In order that the re might be an indelible im pression made of their school existence and that their m emories and faces might be recal led at pleasure, they undertook the h e rculean task of publishing to t he world the Second Junior An nual of&#13;
Morningside College. No pains have been s pared to make this Annu al a t hing&#13;
of literary me rit equal to any publi shed in th e state.&#13;
The supreme object of the class in putting ou t this Annual is that our friends&#13;
may kno w something of the inwa rd and outward workings of th e institution and&#13;
admire it.&#13;
The Annual may become mispla ced and dust covered, but t he class purposes&#13;
to keep themselves ever before the world as men and women of purpose, who are&#13;
moved by th at impetuosity wh ich never shrinks in the presence of d iffic ulties, but&#13;
always does things with a vengeance.&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
�Is Your Future&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Doubt?&#13;
&#13;
IF SO, WE BEG TO SUGGEST THAT&#13;
&#13;
We buy&#13;
&#13;
school-books&#13;
&#13;
And we lend free to any applicant our&#13;
' 'Books Wanted" Catalogueotover2,000&#13;
school-books, with the prices at which&#13;
we accept second-hand as well asnew&#13;
books.&#13;
&#13;
...Dentistry&#13;
&#13;
Offers Exceptional Opportunities&#13;
to the Intelligent Young Man or&#13;
Woman, Mechanically Inclined.&#13;
&#13;
For all marketable school-books, or if&#13;
desired, we credit consignmentson a ccount, to be paid by us in other schoolbooks from time to time as needed.&#13;
Hinds &amp;; NOBLE&#13;
&#13;
4 Cooper Instltute&#13;
&#13;
New York City&#13;
&#13;
Mention this ad.&#13;
&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
There is no&#13;
profession in&#13;
which the returns are&#13;
more certain&#13;
and profitable, considering the education,money and time&#13;
expended in&#13;
acquiring it.&#13;
&#13;
The next&#13;
school session is the&#13;
last opportunity to take a&#13;
three years•&#13;
course of&#13;
7 months&#13;
each. School&#13;
session commencing&#13;
1903 will require four&#13;
years of seven months&#13;
each.&#13;
Write for&#13;
cata log and&#13;
book of halfto nes illustrating o u r&#13;
equipment.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern Unive rsity Dental&#13;
School offers&#13;
unequaled&#13;
facilities and&#13;
advantages&#13;
to those who&#13;
want a strictly high grade&#13;
course.&#13;
&#13;
NEW SCHOOL BUILDING .&#13;
&#13;
The Iowa State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts,&#13;
&#13;
Ames, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
offers free tuition and most thorough courses to students of Iowa, in Mechanical, Civil.&#13;
Electrical and Mining Engineering; in Agriculture, long and short courses; in the Sciences,&#13;
Veterinary Medicine and Dairying. Both sexes admitted. Next college year begins September 1st, 1902. For particulars address&#13;
&#13;
W, M, BEARDSHEAR, President, Ames, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern University Dental School&#13;
DR. W.E. HARPER, Secretary.&#13;
Cor, Lake and Dearborn Streets&#13;
&#13;
...CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
�Straub Brothers,&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Phone 645,&#13;
&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
203&#13;
&#13;
Brown Block.&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Fourth and Neb. Streets&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
MEN&#13;
ONLY!&#13;
&#13;
0. W. BROWN, Jr.,&#13;
Proprietor and Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Security&#13;
National&#13;
&#13;
Bank.&#13;
&#13;
UNITED&#13;
STATES&#13;
DEPOSITARY&#13;
&#13;
Capital · $250,000.00&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
BARBERSHOP&#13;
&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President.&#13;
C. L. WRIGHT, Vice-President,&#13;
T. A. BLACK, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. O. W. BROWN, Jr.,&#13;
Superintendent Stenography.&#13;
&#13;
ADD TO YOUR GENERAL EDUCATION A&#13;
THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF&#13;
&#13;
BOOKKEEPING,&#13;
SHORTHAND,&#13;
TYPEWRITING AND&#13;
PENMANSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Brown's ·Business College&#13;
employs only the best teachers and offers to its patrons&#13;
thorough courses of study. 400 Students registered&#13;
during the year. Over 100 Students placed in paying&#13;
positions last term. Illustrated Catalogue Free. Address&#13;
&#13;
G. W. BROWN, Jr.,&#13;
&#13;
409-4 11 Jackson St., Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
�NORMAN M'CAY TRIES TO PLOW HIS GARDEN.&#13;
THE FIRST ROUND HE THROWS A DEAD&#13;
FURROW AND THEN WONDERS&#13;
HOW HE CAN PLOW THE&#13;
NEXT FURROW.&#13;
&#13;
An Ordinary&#13;
&#13;
A Class Scene&#13;
&#13;
Guy&#13;
&#13;
Several German students were discussing Immensee.&#13;
Some thought that&#13;
Reinhart did wrong in not letting Elizabeth know his feelings regarding her.&#13;
"Well, what sort of a fell ow was this&#13;
Reinhart? I never read the story all&#13;
through," said a Senior girl.&#13;
"Oh," replied Mr. N.; "he was only an&#13;
ordinary guy."&#13;
And they all burst out laughing- all&#13;
but the Senior. She blushed.&#13;
STELLA: "I believe that all the nice&#13;
boys in college are married."&#13;
SADIE: "I don't think so (later adding) Rob, my brother, isn't married."&#13;
PROF, WYLIE: "Mr. Young, you may&#13;
give the life history of the sporophyte."&#13;
MR. YOUNG: "Don't know that, but I&#13;
can tell about the gametophyte."&#13;
PROF. WYLIE: "You remind me of&#13;
the man who called on his neighbor to&#13;
borrow a plow and was told that it was&#13;
out of order, but that he was perfectly&#13;
welcome to his wheelbarrow."&#13;
&#13;
Place- German Room.&#13;
Time- Five minutes after class time.&#13;
Persons - Miss Ferguson and three&#13;
students.&#13;
Mrss F: "Miss Goodal, you may begin the lesson."&#13;
Mrss G: "In deinem Alter, mein liebes&#13;
Kind, hat noch fast jedes Jahr sein (noise&#13;
outside; door opens and ten or twelve belated students enter laughing and take&#13;
their seats) eigenes Gesicht; denn die&#13;
Jugend last sich nicht armer machen."&#13;
(Effie D, one of the tardy students, turns&#13;
around, motions frantically to the one reciting and calls, "Sh-0-0-0, sh-0-0-0.")&#13;
Class laughs; instructor frowns.&#13;
Mrss F: "Miss Lockin, you may proceed with the lesson."&#13;
Charley was a Freshman,&#13;
Brindle a hungry cow;&#13;
Brindle met him in the alley,&#13;
Charley is in heaven now.&#13;
Tearfully,&#13;
SADIE VAN HORNE.&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
AN&#13;
&#13;
OCCASIONAL SCENE ON THE CAMPUS.&#13;
129&#13;
&#13;
�CLUBS:&#13;
&#13;
The Student's Best Friend.&#13;
&#13;
�The Philomatheans&#13;
&#13;
To&#13;
&#13;
meet the increasing demand of Morningside College in its&#13;
early existence for original literary work among the students,&#13;
there was organized in October of the year 1892, the Philomathean Literary Society. It began its activities at once.&#13;
Two weeks after its organization it appeared before the public with&#13;
its first literary entertainment. This was characterized by that predominant characteristic that ever since has marked the society, viz.,&#13;
individual originality. Far from trying to tickle the ears or cater to&#13;
the notions of a popular audience, it has ever been the object of this&#13;
society to set forth the individual and let him stand for what he is&#13;
worth. During the earlier stages of its history its weekly programs&#13;
alternated between public and close-door meetings. But since it has&#13;
become more thoroughly organized it has dispensed with the closedoor work and now gives weekly public entertainments. Aside from&#13;
the literary entertainment it was the custom of the society to have an&#13;
annual banquet for the members of the society and their friends.&#13;
This also has been changed and now the annual "Outing" which&#13;
consists of a steamboat ride np the Big Sioux River, has become the&#13;
climatic amusement of the college year.&#13;
The society began its career with a charter membership of&#13;
seven. But as the school grew in numbers the society increased i.ts&#13;
membership proportionately and now has a large alumni and a membership greater than any society in the school.&#13;
It has not been the desire of the society to boast of its members&#13;
or of its great men, but it has held out an equal chance to every one&#13;
who has desired to rise by individual effort. It has welcomed every&#13;
society that has had its beginning in the school since its own&#13;
existence, and bids them God-speed in every noble aim.&#13;
From their earliest existence as a society, the Philo's have shown&#13;
great activity in competitive contests, and although sometimes suffering defeat they have had their quota of victories. But alike in&#13;
victory or defeat they have always conducted themselves wisely and&#13;
discreetly. In this they not only have won the respect and good will&#13;
of the school, but also have won many friends outside of the school.&#13;
The Philo's are justly proud of their past achievements, and&#13;
with a spirit of loyalty among themselves and for the college, they&#13;
look ahead and with one voice say" Vestiganulla Retrorsum."&#13;
57&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
�Elocution Class&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
this is but the second class to graduate from the Departmen t of E locution , and th e first to be dignified with a&#13;
history considered of enough importance to have its place&#13;
among the a nnals of our College, we find our task somewhat difficult.&#13;
The class is com-posed of three members and although small in&#13;
numbers, they compensate in quality. T wo of th e members when&#13;
very young were noted for t hei r marked ability in the art of elocution, a nd have since developed both mentall y and physically. They&#13;
began their education a t that time in this art under the same&#13;
instruct or who still directs them.&#13;
They recited on ma ny public platforms during the earlier period&#13;
of their careers, winning the hearty applause and appreciat ion of&#13;
many large audiences. One of them , at the tender age of twelve ,&#13;
made her appearance on a Chautauqua platform where sh e was very&#13;
favorably received. The ot her has always been distinguished for&#13;
her pleasing delivery, and is in great demand at many of the social&#13;
functions of t he city. Since then they have recited more or less at&#13;
public a nd private entertainments, ta king prominent parts in High&#13;
S chool affairs .&#13;
The t hird came to Morningside two years ago to en ter t he&#13;
Department of E locution , and since, by faithful and efficient work,&#13;
has well merited the black mortor-board wit h its salmon tassel.&#13;
Their closing program is entirely from t he book of " Ben-Hu r ,"&#13;
the recitations having been arranged by the instructor.&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
��lntersociety Debate&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Winning Team&#13;
&#13;
Philomatheans vs. Othonians&#13;
Friday Even i n g , Feb r uary 21 , 1902.&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That in the formation of society, heredity exercises a&#13;
greater influence than environment.&#13;
N ega tive- Othonians.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative- Philomatheans.&#13;
&#13;
Ray Toothaker,&#13;
Ira Aldrich,&#13;
Stanley Carson.&#13;
&#13;
Samuel Knoer,&#13;
F. E. Mossman,&#13;
George A. Platts,&#13;
&#13;
Decision of Judges two to one in favor of Negative'.&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
�Gossip of the Library Owl&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
the southeast corner of the library since the beginning of time&#13;
has sat the wise old college owl. No one thougt him worthy&#13;
of notice till one day the Bumble Bee of 1903 stung him.&#13;
With a start he turned his head, blinked his eyes, opened his&#13;
mouth and spoke as follows:&#13;
"Though unnoticed, yet I have watched with open eye the&#13;
actions of you all, sometimes wishing to clap my wings in joy at&#13;
some of your pranks, then again to hide my head for shame at the&#13;
pain you have caused the Madam.&#13;
"One afternoon peace had been reigning supreme when in came&#13;
a student who with start, jerk and slam seated himself at the table&#13;
where were two young ladies. In the quiet I heard, 'How are you&#13;
Miss Good-? 0, you are in trouble again, but never mind, just&#13;
persevere, you know after you finish here it's a law school. Yes, by&#13;
all means I'd rather my wife knew law than how to cook.' No telling what I might have heard if a voice had not called, 'There is&#13;
another table here.'&#13;
"Later two girls came near my corner to consult the mysteries&#13;
of the Gods and shock old Vergil with their translations. 'Say Elsie,&#13;
how do you translate this passage?' '0 yes, that is where they greased&#13;
their heads.' 'I wonder if Mr. Brown still thinks Vergil is not&#13;
finished.' 'Look May, how those brilliants lighten up the night.'&#13;
This continued till the familiar voice called, 'Too much noise in the&#13;
room.' They left with the parting shot, 'Dont see what she wanted&#13;
to make so much fuss when we were only studying our lesson.'&#13;
"One afternoon I was ruthlessly snatched branch and all from&#13;
my corner and seated in middle of table surrounded by four most formidable young men who treated me shamefully and made slurring&#13;
remarks that I dare not repeat. But while there I saw a young man&#13;
standing by the English alcove nervously turning the leaves of a&#13;
grammar. The agitation of this Prep. increased at the approach of a&#13;
dignified collegiate girl, a moment of hesitation then I heard Miss&#13;
B-'Would you like my company to the lecture next Wednesday&#13;
night?' I did not hear the answer.&#13;
"One morning when the students were nicely settled at their&#13;
work, some one appeared at the door saying, 'Dr. Lewis' house is on&#13;
fire.' Such a scattering as there was for Prof's, students and even&#13;
Madam rushed the stairs and ran madly up the street. For half an&#13;
114&#13;
&#13;
hour I listened anxiously for return that I might know the result.&#13;
Some said, 'meat boiled over,' others, 'chimney caught fire.' What&#13;
it really was I do not know.&#13;
"It seems there are no privileged characters, for one day the German teacher chanced to be standing in my room, the History Professor seeing her decided to pass the time of day, this lead to other&#13;
topics and quite a breezy conversation followed 'till Madam rapped&#13;
.energetically and called, 'Too much noise in the room.'&#13;
"On that long to be remembered day when the wind blew in&#13;
gale, and sheets of rain passed by my window, I saw many an umbrella sail away with hats, hair-pins and even coats. Inside it grew&#13;
so dark that Madam asked a certain tall young man to light the gas.&#13;
'No doubt you can borrow a match from some young man who&#13;
smokes,' she said. But not a match could be found in the library.&#13;
"I have learned to love the students but there are some faces I&#13;
seldom see; I've heard it said, they do their studying in the halls.&#13;
"Many other secrets I might tell you but must forbear, yet I&#13;
hope in the future you will have more respect for your Library Owl."&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
�Officers&#13;
CLARK FOSTER- Captain,&#13;
C. G. FLANAGAN- Coach,&#13;
w. L. HARDING- Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines at Yankton,&#13;
&#13;
for 1901&#13;
M.C.&#13;
&#13;
28-&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion,&#13;
Yankton,&#13;
Mitchell,&#13;
Yankton,&#13;
Vermillion,&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0- 5&#13;
56- 0&#13;
5-17&#13;
I I- 5&#13;
&#13;
Schedule for 1902&#13;
Cornell at Sioux City,&#13;
Yankton at Yankton,&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
Oct. 4&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Hamlin at St. Paul,&#13;
Carlton at Northfield,&#13;
Yankton at Sioux City, Nov.&#13;
DesMoines at Des Moines,&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Simpson at Indianola,&#13;
Hamlin at Sioux City,&#13;
Vermillion at Sioux City,&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
18&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
is a new feature in the life of Morningside College. Last year&#13;
was the first time in the history of the college that a definite schedule was&#13;
arranged and carried out. In the fall of 1900, late in the season, Alph&#13;
Lockwood was elected manager for the team of that year, and games were&#13;
arranged with Yankton College and South Dakota University. In these&#13;
games, the men, under the captaincy of Oscar Reinhart, did good work,&#13;
but because they had no one of experience to coach them, much of their playing was&#13;
individual work. The good work done by these men furnished the inspiration for&#13;
last season's efforts, when a definite schedule was arranged for and carried out.&#13;
The list of colleges played was small because of the difficulty of securing the necessary financial support.&#13;
.&#13;
Last year was the critical year in the history of football in Morningside College.&#13;
Two things were demonstrated beyond the reason of a doubt: first, that the men of&#13;
the college can play football, and second, that the college and the city will support&#13;
the game financially.&#13;
The days of doubt are past, and football has carved for itself a legitimate&#13;
place among the sports of the college. Each fall the eyes of the city will be turned&#13;
toward the college on the hill with expectancy. They will give financial aid and&#13;
loyal and enthusiastic support at the games. No longer will our padded giants be&#13;
compelled to play to a crowd of 200 or 300, but thousands will wear the maroon and&#13;
press the side lines to urge the men as they carry the pigskin in triumph for a&#13;
"touchdown." Each man on the 1901 team is worthy of especial mention, but it is&#13;
sufficient to say that individual playing was always subordinated to team work.&#13;
Nearly all of the men who played football last year will be on the team this fall, and&#13;
with the new men who are coming, the team can justly merit the support of every&#13;
student of the college and every resident of Sioux City. The securing of Flanagan&#13;
for coach has added an impetus to the game among the men and will bring many&#13;
more who will strive for a place on the team. His place on the Chicago team and&#13;
his work for the past three years under Stagg will insure for us a style of playing that&#13;
can meet any college in the state.&#13;
Clark Foster has been chosen captain of the team. H e was the unanimous&#13;
choice of the men who composed the last fall team. In the last game with Vermillion&#13;
he showed his ability as a field captain and the close score was due to his work in&#13;
generating his team.&#13;
Arrangements have been made to run a big excursion into Sioux City to witness the first game next fall. This game will be played on September 23, and will&#13;
be the date of the dedication of the new athletic park.&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
�WATCH THIS SPACE NEXT YEAR&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Glee Club&#13;
&#13;
Our College Paper&#13;
Collegian&#13;
Reporter&#13;
of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
A twenty-four page&#13;
weekly Journal with&#13;
a circulation of&#13;
&#13;
500&#13;
&#13;
copies every issue.&#13;
&#13;
D. LAWRENCE YOUNG,&#13;
Editor and Publisher.&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLIS H ED 1890&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' Basket Ball Team&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
�The Hawkeyes&#13;
F. MISSMAN President.&#13;
M otto- No n palma sine pulvere.&#13;
&#13;
G. GOODLANDER- Secretary.&#13;
Colors-Silver a nd Gold .&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Animus, An im us, Dictus Sum !&#13;
Haw, Ha w, H aw, Ki, Ki, Ki!&#13;
Hawkeye, H awkeye!&#13;
Kah! R ah !! R ah !!!&#13;
&#13;
Ki , K i, Hawki My!&#13;
Wh ee Zip, Boom Ba Zoo !&#13;
R ah R ah, l owah !&#13;
Wha-ho-hi a nd a Bazoo Boom,&#13;
&#13;
HE Hawkeye Literary Society was organized in the fall of&#13;
1899. Since the organization the Society has made rapid&#13;
progress in the literary field. As it has been thought that&#13;
thorough preparation is necessary for public programs, strict&#13;
attention has been given to closed door work. The membership is&#13;
increasing rapidly, but care will be taken that all have an opportunity for development. Many new members have been taken in during&#13;
the last year. In the stillness of the program night is heard a dreadful sound coming from the northwest hall. Shouts of laughter are&#13;
m ingled with the groans of victims and the hurried steps of an angry&#13;
goat. A moment more and an awful sound fills the corridors. The&#13;
new student, trembling with fear, asks the reason for the disturbance&#13;
and shudders when he is informed that it is only the regular initiatory&#13;
ceremonies of the Hawkeyes.&#13;
Debating and Oratory are becoming a prominent feature in the&#13;
Society. We have resolved to .raise the roof, as the boys are greatly&#13;
hampered in their Rights of oratory. This we think is a wise action,&#13;
although a special apparatus will be necessary for the rescue of the&#13;
soaring orator. With the present ceiling a step-ladder is sufficient.&#13;
The writer considers it worth the while to mention some of the&#13;
typical members. The fattest member of the Society is Melson. He&#13;
is noted for conversational ability and laziness. It can be proven&#13;
that during the hot weather he carries a cat under his arm to breathe&#13;
for him, and he has been known to hold long conversations with the&#13;
bed post during the night. But of his football record the Hawkeyes&#13;
are justly proud. He is Morningside's star center. Hartzell and&#13;
Sawyer are men of great literary ability; this has been demonstrated&#13;
by the forceful and logical oratory displayed before their victims in&#13;
the barber's chair. William Richards deserves a place in our literary&#13;
circle. H e follows in the footsteps of Demosthenes. Although he&#13;
has not yet shaved his head, he has entirely deserted society, that is the&#13;
feminine portion. As minister he fills a weekly appointment. Space&#13;
prevents further mention of the individual members of our Society.&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
�The Zetaletheans&#13;
&#13;
Dates&#13;
&#13;
reeking with the damp and mold of the past are the&#13;
bug-bear of the burdened history student. They transfix&#13;
him to the martyr stake of definiteness and hold him with&#13;
bands of iron to the post of certainty. But to the student&#13;
who loves his Society, dates-some dates-are very dear. A mystic&#13;
charm surrounds these-a charm which increases and deepens with&#13;
the passing of time. To those upon whom kind Fate has bestowed&#13;
the right to wear the scarlet and black, October 11, 1897, is such a&#13;
date. Around this the memory plays with delight, for it was then&#13;
that the Zetalethean Society was born.&#13;
The first clays of life are always days of anxiety and care. Many&#13;
were the meetings which were held before existence was actually&#13;
assured. Gradually a constitution grew into definite form; officers&#13;
were elected and the first programme was arranged. Then nine halffrightened, yet wholly elated girls stopped to contemplate their work.&#13;
They gazed at the creation of their labor with hopeful eyes for they&#13;
had lavished upon it the thought of their souls. They had set before&#13;
it the ideal of truth and the heights of human attainment. Then&#13;
they turned to the future. Out of the struggle and labor of the early&#13;
days they saw a noble form issue and they were content.&#13;
Almost five years have passed since the organization of the Zetalethean Society was effected. During this time the members have&#13;
faithfully endeavored to attain their ideal of social, literary and moral&#13;
excellence. They have sought those things which best fit for true&#13;
womanly success in twentieth century life. Successful and indifferent programs-even total failures-have been their lot, yet, back of&#13;
all there has ever reposed the consciousness of the good attempted.&#13;
"Esse quam videre" has been their constant cry. In moments of&#13;
trial, in moments of joy, this thought of truth rather than the&#13;
thought of appearances, has been the motive underlying the act.&#13;
Today the Zetalethean is striving to develop a rounded, womanly&#13;
character. Today she believes in the development of every faculty,&#13;
the social as well as the intellectual, but ever and always the moral&#13;
and religious. Tomorrow the Zetalethean steps out into the world&#13;
better fitted to do her part in its heated strife because of her society&#13;
training. Others take her place in the active work of the society, yet&#13;
in spite of change and varying fortune, the magic name of Zetalethean binds heart to heart, as all those who belong to its ranks strive to&#13;
be rather than to seem to be.&#13;
61&#13;
&#13;
�The&#13;
&#13;
Atheneums&#13;
&#13;
Dark&#13;
&#13;
indeed is the night that has no stars. Only the artist&#13;
can portray by brush or pen the wonderful beauty of a&#13;
scene, where the clouds slashed and tossed by the tempest&#13;
are suddenly broken and through the rift the stars appear&#13;
as promises of peace and security to tempest-tossed voyagers.&#13;
Thus amid the strife of opposing elements, and the troubles of a&#13;
new school, the dark clouds suddenly parted, and one by one bright&#13;
stars appeared until twelve had been discerned. In November, 1891,&#13;
this group of stars was discovered to be the constellation, Atheneum.&#13;
This new discovery became a mystery to many interested and often&#13;
was heard the exclamation"Twinkle, twinkl e, little sta r,&#13;
H ow I wonder what you are,&#13;
U p above th e world so high&#13;
Lik e a diam ond in th e sky."&#13;
&#13;
Some studied our constellation, because they were attracted by&#13;
its beauty, some because of the wonder we instilled into their hearts,&#13;
but some studied us or rather noticed us because they were obliged to&#13;
do so. For some people never stop to notice the little things of life,&#13;
but have their gaze upon objects far in the distance, forgetting that&#13;
were it not for the little stars that light the way and measure the distance, their great aims would be beyond reach. So like the stars of&#13;
Heaven we seem to be breathing forth the motto-"Utile Dulci"(the useful as well as pleasant.)&#13;
New stars have constantly been discovered until now the constellation is greatly enlarged so that not only does America feel our&#13;
influence, but even as far east as India may our light be seen. From&#13;
term to term and year to year the individual mem hers of this constellation change their relative positions, those which occupy the&#13;
prominent places one year pass into the background and yield theirs&#13;
to another.&#13;
No, we would not say that a few of our stars have&#13;
gone out. Although they have ceased to brighten our sky and to&#13;
guide the way of mortals, still we believe they have gone to another&#13;
world where they will shine more brightly than here.&#13;
Constantly during the ten and one-half years the Atheneum has&#13;
continued to grow in wonder and brilliancy. We can only hope that&#13;
someone will say of us as Longfellow said of his stars"Sil ently one by one, in the infinite meadows of heav en,&#13;
Bl osso med th e love ly sta rs, the forge t-me- nots of the an ge ls."&#13;
&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
�Tennis Club&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
Teatn.= ======&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Offi cers:&#13;
A. RUTHVEN- President.&#13;
&#13;
M. F. McDOWELL- Vice President.&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
One of the most important branches of&#13;
athletics in Morningside College is that&#13;
of tennis. The club was organized in the&#13;
fall of 1900 and has shown wonderful progress since&#13;
its organization. In regard to the work done by the&#13;
team, it sufficeth to say, "there record is clean." In the&#13;
two years which have passed not a single game has been&#13;
lost. They have scooped everything they have run up&#13;
against. We are sure, with such a start, to accomplish&#13;
great things in the future . .&#13;
&#13;
Anyone expecting to enter Morningside College and&#13;
wishing to join the Club must be in good practice, as only the "select"&#13;
are elected.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
. .&#13;
C&#13;
H. Olds,hpitcher; C. Debenham, pitcher; C. Foster, catcher; .L.&#13;
Smylie, first base; J. Nissen, second .base; H. Debenham, third base;&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
·.&#13;
.&#13;
H. Van Dyke, right .field; J. Bleakly, center field; H. Briggs, left&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
field; E. Fry, shortstop; R. Toothaker, substitute; C. McKaig, captain; W . B. Fry, manager.&#13;
List of Games&#13;
Morningside College vs.&#13;
&#13;
.. . .. .. ..&#13;
&#13;
Score&#13;
6-1 I&#13;
&#13;
LeMar's High School.·.·· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · . . . . . . . . . . 5-12&#13;
Washburn at Sioux City· · · ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·&#13;
. . . . ...&#13;
3-16&#13;
Sioux City League at Sioux City .... ... . ... . . ... . .. ...... 3-10&#13;
Yankton at Sioux City· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · . . . . . . . . . . 4- 7&#13;
Morningside at Yankton ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .. . ... . .. ... . . 13- 2&#13;
Morningside at Morningside . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. . . . . . . 5-10&#13;
Collegiates and Preps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . .... . . . .. .. .&#13;
U. S. D. at Vermillion. · · · · · · · · · · . · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·&#13;
Vermillion at Sioux City·· · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·&#13;
· ·· ·· ····&#13;
97&#13;
&#13;
�BYE BYE, GEORGIE; WH EN WE WANT ANOTHER&#13;
DEBATE WE WILL SEND FOR YOU.&#13;
&#13;
FRESHIE (To Ne w Student in Spring Term):&#13;
last winter ."&#13;
NEW STUDENT:&#13;
&#13;
OUR COLLEGE BOOK STORE&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
A Fresh Arrival&#13;
&#13;
beautiful day in the early fall a tall, lank, would-be sporty&#13;
looking young man arrived in the city and as he had no&#13;
baggage except a small satchel h e did not expect to secure&#13;
the services of a hackman, but h e gazed at them in openmouthed wonder as their various cries greeted his ears: "Vendome&#13;
Hotel, Sir! Going right away! First-class hotel ! Vendome, Sir!"&#13;
He seemed to wonder at one hackman more than the rest, as he cried&#13;
in stentorian tones: "Mondamin, Garretson, Omnibus! This way&#13;
for th e Mondamin and Garretson !" But no response came from the&#13;
traveler. "Kerridge, Sir? Kerridge ! Oxford H otel , Sir! Take&#13;
a kerridge for the Oxford." "Pullman Hotel, Sir? Best hotel in&#13;
town! Take you to the Pullman!" The hack drivers were inclined&#13;
to be amused at the green countryman; finally one of them ran up&#13;
to him and said: "Morningside College, Sir? Going ri ght away;&#13;
take you out to Morningside." This struck the "Fresh Arrival" in&#13;
just the right spot, and the man who had been bright enough to see&#13;
that the young man was from a farm had the honor and profit of&#13;
carrying Mr. Augustus Greenstalk who had "finished the school down&#13;
to hum," and was advanced enough to go away to school, out to th e&#13;
"Pride of Sioux City," Morningside College ("The Farmer's Home.")&#13;
&#13;
I s that so; what was it ?&#13;
&#13;
FRESHIE: "You know those odorifero us wa lk s along the east si d e of Park&#13;
Pl ace campus; well, when the first few loads of ca rbo naceous ci nd e r s were dumped&#13;
o n th e ground th e gaseous odor soo n permeated th e a tm osph e re fo r a co ns id e rabl e&#13;
distance around. A yo uth , sk ill ed in fanciful conclusions, who liv ed some tw o blocks&#13;
away, upon sniffing the morning air and scenting th e gaseo us atmosphere imm ed iately conclud ed upon what h e thought the cause. Rushing to th e nearest 'ph one h e&#13;
comma ndin g ly sa id in a somewhat sarcast ic voice: 'ls thi s the ci ty gas plant? Yes?&#13;
Well you better send a man out here to Morningside right away; the main gas p ip es&#13;
hav e hursted, th e gas is escap in g and making everybody sick.' Rang off. A man&#13;
from the Gas Works came ou t on&#13;
th e next car a nd immediately obse rvin g th e cause, ca ll ed upon th e&#13;
you th and gently told him th e&#13;
cause. My, you ought to have seen&#13;
how cheap h e looked."&#13;
NEW STUDENT: "Indeed, h ow&#13;
c h eap did he look?"&#13;
FRESHIE: "We ll, to use Melson' s figu re, 'Like thirt y cents with&#13;
the three rubbed ou t.' "&#13;
NE W STUDENT (inqu is itiv e ly):&#13;
"Who was th e guy?"&#13;
FRESHIE:&#13;
pharmacist."&#13;
&#13;
TIME GOES TOO FAST FOR THE STUDENTS WHEN&#13;
THE HOUR COMES TO SAY GOOD NIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
JONATHAN SNODGRASS.&#13;
&#13;
134&#13;
&#13;
"Say, we had the b es t joke h e re&#13;
&#13;
135&#13;
&#13;
"They say he is a&#13;
&#13;
�May and June&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
1S&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
26&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Junior Class holds all clay session. Dr. Cook dismisses&#13;
Chemistry Class, doubtless in recognition of Juni ors'&#13;
value.&#13;
Senior Academy Declamatory prize awarded.&#13;
(a) Seniors a ppear in "Mortar Boards" and mourning&#13;
weeds, presumably in sympathy with their beloved&#13;
brothe r Samuel. (b) A swarm of Bumble Bees breaks&#13;
the solemnity of the occasion however.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Baseball - Morningside 12, Yankton 11.&#13;
D ean think s th ere is altogether too much stealing going&#13;
on in halls.&#13;
Zets initiate new membe rs.&#13;
First Senior Piano Recital of Departmen t of Music.&#13;
Campus Day. Usua l events at Rive rsid e in afternoon,&#13;
Preps carry everything. Baseball- Pre ps 7, College 5.&#13;
Baseball-Yank ton 7, Morningside 3. Coach Flanagan&#13;
arrives in the city.&#13;
Baseb a ll- Morningside 10, Yankton H igh School 2.&#13;
Prof. Flanagan captures th e h earts of all th e m ale&#13;
students in first Chapel address.&#13;
Graduating R eci tal.&#13;
Prof. Flanagan captures th e hea rts of all the femal e&#13;
students.&#13;
Graduating Recital.&#13;
Prof. Barbour roasts ne ws pa per reporte rs.&#13;
Miss Ferguson's square letter didn 't come. Much&#13;
wee ping .&#13;
Junior-Senior Oratorical Contest.&#13;
Baseball- Vermillion-Morningsicle.&#13;
Gold Medal Contest.&#13;
&#13;
JUNE&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
1S&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Track Meet- Vermillion-Morningside&#13;
Medal Contest.&#13;
Inter-Collegiate D ebate. Baseball- Vermilli on-Morningside.&#13;
Philo Annual Picnic.&#13;
Diamond Medal Contest.&#13;
Normal Graduation.&#13;
Elocution Graduation.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Baccalaureate Address.&#13;
Address before&#13;
Christian Association.&#13;
Acad emy Graduation.&#13;
Class Day. Alumni Lecture.&#13;
Wednesd ay morning Alumni Business Meeting. Wednesday afternoon Inte r-society Program. Wednesday&#13;
evening Oratorio.&#13;
Thursday morning Commencement Exercises. Thursday afternoon Annual College Lectu re followed by&#13;
Conferring of Degrees. Thursday evening Presiden t's&#13;
Receptwn.&#13;
&#13;
The Bee, you know, is a contrary thing,&#13;
It gives us nectar and also a sting;&#13;
&#13;
This sting, my boy, is a mine of wealth,&#13;
It is good for the blood, not bad for the health.&#13;
127&#13;
&#13;
�"I&#13;
&#13;
have that honor," said Bill assumingly: "What may I do for you?"&#13;
Why, I- I wanted to see you about coming to school here."&#13;
"Won't you step in?" said the new president.&#13;
"Let me see, what is your name?" asked Bill.&#13;
"Henry Phillips."&#13;
"What course do you think of taking?"&#13;
"l think I prefer the Philosophical."&#13;
"That's right. You couldn't choose a better one"&#13;
"Thetrouble is I shall have to earn part of myway as I go along said the&#13;
prospective student, blushing at his confession. "I know how to run a typewriter&#13;
and thought that might help me some."&#13;
"Certainly. There is good demand for such work here at present." A scheme&#13;
dawned upon Bill. "I have been typewriting some myself," he continued. "My&#13;
regular stenographer has moved to Texas. I want to get another one before school&#13;
begins.&#13;
If you care to write some for me this afternoon l will be glad to have you.&#13;
Then if the work ts satisfactory we can make some arrangement for next term. Here&#13;
are some outlines for the History Department."&#13;
The stranger was all eagerness for such' a chance. Soon the typewriter was&#13;
clicking like hail on a tin roof.&#13;
After some time Bill began to wonder how he could rid himself of this new&#13;
fellow withoutspoiling the joke. He was not long in thinking of a way.&#13;
Mr. Philips, have you secured your room yet?"&#13;
"No, I haven't," replied the stenographer perplexed.&#13;
"Well, that's one of the things you ought to see about today."&#13;
"Maybe they wouldn't trust ME. If you would go with me- "&#13;
Bill tried to imagine himself doing such a thing.&#13;
Some one was coming down the hall. The door opened and in stepped Dean&#13;
Lymer and with him- Dr. Lewis .&#13;
That's from the frying pan into the fire sure, thought Bill. His face, however,&#13;
wore its usual bland expression.&#13;
·&#13;
"Why, how do you do!&#13;
I'm glad to see you!" he said, shakin'g hands with&#13;
them but not mentioning their names so that Phillips should know who they were:&#13;
Ive been typewriting some this afternoon," the would-be-President explained, "and&#13;
haven t. kept things very tidy. I will just clear out some of these papers."&#13;
"Many new students in yet?" said Dr. Lewis, seating himself before his desk&#13;
and feeling for his keys.&#13;
"Yes, we are going to have more than ever this term. I see the janitor has&#13;
taken the waste paper basket away. Excuse me just a minute until I throw these in&#13;
the box in the hall." So saying he hastened out the door with his outlines under his&#13;
arm. "A miss is as good as a mile, any day," thought he as he hastened out of the&#13;
duilding.&#13;
Phillips has never told how he excused himself.&#13;
&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
~~&#13;
&#13;
Uncle Zebulem's Tour&#13;
of the Colleges&#13;
&#13;
On&#13;
&#13;
January 14, 1902, Dr. Lymer received the following letter&#13;
from Mr. Ezekiel Zebulem, a well-to-do farmer who lives&#13;
near Fayette, Iowa:&#13;
&#13;
DEEN OF MORNENSIDE KOLLEGE:-&#13;
&#13;
I heer yuve got a fin Kolledge out thar at swoixe sitee an as Ive got a boy&#13;
Billy whitch is rite smaat brite I loud Ide put him too sum skule an I wunt send billy&#13;
too nuthin but the best soo ive been vysiten sum of the Kolledges in iowa weve got a&#13;
guden ny by hare but i want Billy to see sum of the warlde and gess ile send him&#13;
away to skule - Sum how ar nuther I kouldent fel just rite over thar at Kornyell the&#13;
gals suted me prettie fare but them uther fellers made me fel like icle bin harroin al&#13;
day-i wus wel ny suted out thar at seeder Fals- them fellers hav got sum gitinem&#13;
(git in them) but i know Bill wasent kut out for a skule mam I loud Ide not send him&#13;
thar now myster deen ime wanten to pae yure skule a vyset Bills cut out fur debaten&#13;
an one of mi nabors wus tellen me you got in sum fine fellers this yare fur debaten&#13;
if your ha vem a debaten sune let me no and lie be cu men over about then - thar&#13;
koms Billy with a Ioele of fodder an i muse helpem unlode as hes driven a fule of a&#13;
kolt.&#13;
So longe to yue&#13;
EZEKIEL ZEBULEM.&#13;
&#13;
The Dean who has the interest of the school at heart sent Mr.&#13;
Zebulem a timely letter informing him of the date of our intersociety&#13;
debate. On the afternoon of Feb. 17, Mr. Zebulem arrived via I. C. Ry.&#13;
He espied a young man, getting off the same coach, with a serious,&#13;
studious expression on his face (the young man proved to be Loyd&#13;
Harding who was returning from his charge) and accosted him thus:&#13;
"Say young feller do you know whare that debaten match comes off&#13;
tonight?&#13;
Mr. Harding, with his keen perception, surmised at once&#13;
that the old gentleman was corning out to the debate. "Yes sir,"&#13;
said Mr. Harding, I am going out to the college now and will be&#13;
pleased to go with you.&#13;
Mr. Zebulem was more than delighted. As the "college" car&#13;
galloped along over the viaduct, Mr. Zebulem turned pale and bracing his feet against the floor said: "I've rid buckin bronkos but&#13;
never on a high bridge like this har.,, Mr. Harding conducted Mr.&#13;
Z. to the Dean's office, and according to his custom the Dean showed&#13;
Mr. Zebulern through the intricacies of Main Hall. When they reached&#13;
the auditorium Mr. Z. could contain himself no longer and dropping&#13;
his hat, with hands uplifted, and open mouth he exclaimed: "Ge-e-e&#13;
mymie! Say Mr. Dean, this hare beats 'em all. What a bunch of&#13;
hay this ud hold. If your debaten looms up you can just put Billy's&#13;
name on your list."&#13;
109&#13;
&#13;
�NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
MEDICAL&#13;
&#13;
ScHOOL&#13;
&#13;
(CHICAGO MEDICAL COLLEGE.)&#13;
DR. N. S. DAVIS, JR. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
DR. W. S. HALL, JR. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
Four Hospitals with 800 beds.&#13;
Ward Walks Daily for Every Senior.&#13;
A Dispensary Treating 25,000&#13;
Patients a year.&#13;
&#13;
New Buildings and Equipment.&#13;
A Superior Faculty.&#13;
A Reputation as a Leader in&#13;
Medical Education.&#13;
&#13;
FOR ANNOUNCEMENTS AND PARTICULARS , ADDRESS ______.&#13;
&#13;
DR. ARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
EDWARDS, SECRETARY,&#13;
----2431&#13;
&#13;
DEARBORN STREET , CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
The Organ Grinder&#13;
may be doing a charitable work. But we are strictly out for business.&#13;
We grind out constantly, year after year,&#13;
&#13;
HALF TONE AND PHOTO ZINC ENGRAVINGS&#13;
have been doing it for twenty years. The illustrations in this Book, "The&#13;
Bumble Bee of '03," are a part of our grind. Should you be interesteddrop us a line, tell us what you want, and we shall quote you rates&#13;
and send catalogue.&#13;
&#13;
The Levytype Co.,&#13;
171-3 Washington St. Cor. 5th Ave.,&#13;
CLASS DIVISION IN HISTOLOGY.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
�The Adelphians&#13;
Founded November 4, 1901.&#13;
&#13;
H. L. MOSS MAN, President.&#13;
Motto- "Cape Diem.&#13;
&#13;
IRA E. PRICHARD, Secretary.&#13;
Colors- R o yal Purple a nd Cerise.&#13;
&#13;
YE LL&#13;
&#13;
We're&#13;
&#13;
Wah- Hoo-Wah!&#13;
Ta-Rah- Boom!&#13;
Re- Rah- Zipp!&#13;
Rickety! Boom!&#13;
Ripety! Ripety!&#13;
Ripety ! Rid e!&#13;
&#13;
the Adelphians of Morningside! Owing to the rapid&#13;
growth of the school it was deemed necessary to organize&#13;
a new society for men in the Academy, there being about&#13;
seventy-five Academic Students out of society work. At&#13;
the request of some of the faculty, Harland L. Mossman consented to&#13;
circulate a petition and do his utmost to meet this need. Friday&#13;
morning, November 1st, Perry E. Fredendoll and Earl D. W. Hanna&#13;
rallied to his assistance. The three went to work in earnest, and by&#13;
the following Monday had more than enough to complete the organization. Monday evening, November 4, 1901, sixteen men met in the&#13;
South-east Hall on the the third floor of Main College Building and&#13;
organized the Adelphian Literary Society with the following officers:&#13;
President, H. L. Mossman; Vi ce-President, E. D. W. Hanna; First Censor, S. H·&#13;
Day; Second Censor, C. C. Croston; Critic, Lloyd Crosb y; Recording Secretary, I.E.&#13;
Prichard; Corresponding Secretary, P. E. Fredendoll;Treasu re r, C. 0. Rex.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five men allied themselves with the new movement as&#13;
charter members. Thirteen others joined during the winter term.&#13;
They have held a program and a business meeting each week laying&#13;
much_stress on debating and parliamentary drill. Their constitution&#13;
provides for a series of championship debates. Realizing the benefits&#13;
derived from intersociety debating, a committee was sent to the&#13;
Hawkeye Society asking them to appoint a committee to confer with&#13;
them to draft a debating compact. This request was complied with&#13;
and a compact was soon drawn up and adopted by both societies.&#13;
Their society membership is made up of men of various occupations,&#13;
the majority of them earning their own way through school, but&#13;
made of the kind of stuff that makes good society men, as they are in&#13;
school to fit themselves for some definite work, thus they are sure to&#13;
make things go. Four are preachers, while several others are fitting&#13;
themselves for that vocation; four have taught school, and five or six&#13;
have been in successful business of one kind or another.&#13;
73&#13;
&#13;
��Colors-Olive Green and Old Rose.&#13;
Emblem-Spade.&#13;
Motto-Dig.&#13;
The Freshman Class came, was matriculated, and is&#13;
now conquering t he obstacles in its way. When we came&#13;
the weather was dreary, the rain was falling and the drooping leaves seemed to be emblematic to us of the reception&#13;
we were to receive at the hands of the often talked of&#13;
Sophomores. Those first nights were awful nights. H ow&#13;
we hied ourselves to our rooms ere Old Sol had hid his face&#13;
behi nd the western horizon, and there alone with the curtains drawn low, the doors locked and barred, crouched in&#13;
an obscure corner, we sat not daring to remove ou r clothes and reti re, waiting and&#13;
listening for the approach of Sophomore feet. What awfu l moments and what&#13;
harrowing thoughts. Visions of ourselves being dragged through the streets, ducked&#13;
in the Half Moon P ond, or left in some lonely barn , tied hand and foot and gagged,&#13;
played before our tear bedimmed lanterns, like mice about a cheese box.&#13;
In th e early mornin g we awoke, gazed out of the window and longed to be home&#13;
again with the dear folks and the familiar scenes. On the third morn ing with&#13;
trembling and fear we attended the chapel exercises. As we entered the large room&#13;
we found the seats assigned to the Freshmen Class and for the first t ime got a&#13;
glimpse of that Sophomore crowd tha t had been harrowing our minds for the past&#13;
few days. What a sight; what a revelation ! T he on ly redeeming fea ture was the&#13;
Darling. The re she sat among four of the homeliest, roughest, awkwa rdest looking&#13;
fell ows that it has ever been the misfortune of a Freshman to gaze upon. Stanley&#13;
Carson, Robbie Mcisaac, Harry Jones and Alex Ruthven, composed the dust-.&#13;
begrimed, weather-beaten quartette. Surely mutual sympath y must have drawn&#13;
them together.&#13;
As we saw th em there and noted the sadness of their countenances ou r fear&#13;
turned to sympathy and charity and we were in the act of taking up a collection to&#13;
get a doctor for them, when Ira Aldrich came in and took h is seat by th eir side a nd&#13;
to the right. This seemed to cheer them and we learned later the reason he had&#13;
such an influence over them was, because he had been there before.&#13;
But, to write of the Freshmen was the assigned task. This is the largest F reshman class in the history of the college, numbering some 45 members. They are the&#13;
best from th e Academ y and the High Schools of northwest Iowa, southern Minnesota,&#13;
southeastern South Dakota, and northeastern Nebraska.&#13;
It wou ld be interesting to give a short sketch of the life of each member of this&#13;
class, then fair reader, you wou ld be better able to appreciate the emblem and motto&#13;
of the class. In the life story of each there are inte resting facts and incidents, that if&#13;
written, would call to your m ind the early lives of the great men and women of the&#13;
world. In the Academy and in th e High Schools, records were made and reputations&#13;
won that might well be the pride of any one. All this may sound like boasting, but&#13;
you wi ll see it is not when we sight a few of the things Freshmen have done and are&#13;
doing this year. T o the class belongs the honor of second place in the Oratorical&#13;
contest and a place on the program for a toast at the State Oratorica l Contest. One&#13;
of our number is president of the Prohibition Club of the school, a college organization, and another will represent the college in the State Oratorical Contest. Our&#13;
members hold prominent offices in th e Athletic Association and are we ll represented&#13;
on the foot ball, base ball and track team.&#13;
The ca reer of the Freshman Class has only begun, d uring the next three yea rs&#13;
they will carve a place for Morningside Col lege, among the colleges of Iowa, that&#13;
will be the pride of her constituency. Trophies will be hung upon he r walls, and&#13;
records placed in h er archives that will cause those who follow to rustle.&#13;
The Freshman Class looks out upon the tomorrow with the assurance of success.&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
�MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
�President&#13;
&#13;
Wilson S. Lewis====&#13;
&#13;
Dr.&#13;
&#13;
R. WILSON SEELY LEWIS is known to every Methodist Congregation in&#13;
Northwest Iowa. He believes in and lives the strenuous life. For five&#13;
years as President of Morningside College, he has employed his splendid&#13;
ability to open doors of educational"opportunity to the youth of Northwest&#13;
Iowa. Born in New York, of sturdy Holland stock, he learned in youth&#13;
and young manhood, during his academic and collegiate days at St.&#13;
Lawrence University, the value of patient, persistent endeavor.&#13;
In addition to his collegiate and private study in America, Dr. Lewis has had&#13;
the advantage of travel abroad, and attendance upon courses of study at Oxford,&#13;
England. After graduation from college his time was devoted for two years to the&#13;
work of the pastorate. Providentially called to the principality of Epworth Seminary, for nine years he stood as the inspiration of the young people who came to&#13;
Epworth. By his efforts the halls of that institution were filled with students, many&#13;
of whom are now filling responsible positions in business and professional life.&#13;
Upon his acceptance of the presidency of Morningside College, he at once took&#13;
upon his heart all the interests of this institution. The splendid new building, Main&#13;
Hall, stands as a national monument of his labors, while the nearly five hundred students gathered largely through his efforts, bear witness to his zeal in the course of&#13;
Higher Education.&#13;
Doctor Lewis believes in winning and holding his students for the spiritual&#13;
life. During his entire presidency he has personally directed the College prayermeeting and has each year led many to Christ.&#13;
He has been himself an inspiration to the large number of students who hear&#13;
him gladly every Thursday evening, and the influence of his life will abide for decades to come in the lives of young men and women, who have felt the power of his&#13;
consecrated life.&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
�T. C. FRYE.&#13;
Robert Bradford Wylie, Sc. B., Professor of Biology, graduated from Upper Iowa University in 1897. In&#13;
the year 1898-1899 h e taught Science in Morningside College, the summer of 1898 being spent in advance study in&#13;
the University of Minnesota. In 1900 h e was elected to&#13;
a Fellowship. in Botany in the University&#13;
of Chicago.&#13;
To Prof. Wylie is due th e credit of rapidly ra is ing the&#13;
Scien ce Work of o ur school to the level of that in the&#13;
best coJJeges. The fact tha t he has he en recently elected&#13;
to Fellow 111 Botany in University o f Chicago is evidence&#13;
o f his scholarship. We regret his separation from us,&#13;
but nevertheless it reflects hono r upon o ur college.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK H. GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
. Prof. T . C. Frye who will have charge o f the Biological Work h ere for the coming year, will take his&#13;
Doctor's Degree from the University of Chicago this&#13;
summer.&#13;
Prof. Frye 1s a n A lumnus of the University of&#13;
Illinois,&#13;
amd has spent. several years in public school&#13;
work as Principal and City Superintendent. He resigned&#13;
the City Superintendency a t Batavia, Ill., to enter the&#13;
Department of Botany at the University of Chicago&#13;
where he has spent three years. During one year he&#13;
held a Fellowship and for a nother was Assistant in Histology and Cytology. Prof. Frye comes recommended as&#13;
a man of high character, liberal and thorough culture.&#13;
&#13;
Frank H. Garver, A .B 1 has the distinction of being&#13;
Iowa born , his birth place being Albion , Marsha ll&#13;
County. Afte r attending the schools at A lbion, h e went&#13;
to Epworth Seminary, where he graduated. H e afterward w ent to Upper I o wa University, where he r eceived&#13;
his A . B. degree. m 1898. In the fall of tha t year he&#13;
accepted the Chair of Histo ry in Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
During the school year of 1901-02, Pro fessor Garver took&#13;
a leave of absence to pursue_ a course of s tudy at the&#13;
State University, having r eceived a F e llowship to t hat&#13;
institution&#13;
His work he re has been such as to make&#13;
his return to Morningside greatly appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES.&#13;
&#13;
E . A. BROWN.&#13;
&#13;
Fre d Emory Haynes, Ph. D ., was born in MAssachusetts,&#13;
in which State&#13;
he received his pre parato ry education. H e e ntered Harvard College in 1885,&#13;
graduating in 1889, afterward r eceiving the degree of Ph. D. in the graduate&#13;
school. The n e xt year (1892) was s pent in study a nd travel in Europe. H e&#13;
s tudied Economics in the University of Berlin under Gustav Schmoller, a lso in&#13;
the University o f Cam bridge under Sir John Seely and others. In August, 1892,&#13;
h e r e turned to the U nited States as teach e r o f His to ry and Economics in the&#13;
Un iversity o f California. In 1896 and '97 h e was assistant in historical work in&#13;
Harvard College. Since September 1900, he h as occupied the Ch air o f Political&#13;
Science a n d Sociology in M o rnings ide College.&#13;
&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown , A . M ., graduated fro m DePauw U niversity in&#13;
1884 an d durin g the past e ighteen years has been con t inuously engaged in educational work, e ither as high school prin cipal, professor in college or as county&#13;
superinte n dent of schools. H e h as ta ught in or conducted county institutes&#13;
every year fo r the past twe l ve years, a nd h as been four times e lected County&#13;
Superintendent&#13;
of Schools o f Woodbury County. His ability as in s tructor a nd&#13;
educator is recognized througho ut the State. The student body r egret that h e&#13;
is no lo nge r a member of the faculty since he has again been elected Superinendent of Schools .&#13;
&#13;
�ROBERT B. WYLIE.&#13;
&#13;
T. C. FRYE.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK H. GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
Robert Bradford Wylie, Sc. B., Professor of Biology, graduated from Upper Iowa University in 1897. In&#13;
the year 1898-1899 he taught Science in Morningside College, the summer of 1898 being spent in advance study in&#13;
the University of : innesota. In 1900 he was elected to&#13;
M&#13;
a Fellowship in Botany in the University of Chicago.&#13;
To Prof. Wylie is due the credit of rapidly raising the&#13;
Science Work of our school to the level of that in the&#13;
best colleges. The fact that he has heen recently elected&#13;
to Fellow in Botany in University of Chicago is evidence&#13;
of his scholarship. We regret his separation from us,&#13;
but nevertheless it reflects honor upon our college.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. T. C. Frye who will have charge of the Biological Work here for the coming year, will take his&#13;
Doctor 1 s Degree from the University of Chicago this&#13;
summer. Prof. Frye is an Alumnus of the University of&#13;
Illinois. and has spent several years in public school&#13;
work as Principal and City Superintendent. He resigned&#13;
the City Superintendency at Batavia, Ill., to enter the&#13;
Department of Botany at the University of Chicago,&#13;
where he has spent three years. During one year he&#13;
held a Fellowship and for another was Assistant in Histology and Cytology. Prat. Frye comes recommended as&#13;
a man of high character, liberal and thorough culture.&#13;
&#13;
Frank H. Garver, A.B , has the distinction of being&#13;
Iowa born, his birth place being Albion, Marshall&#13;
County. After attending the schools at Albion, he went&#13;
to Epworth Seminary, where he graduated. He afterward went to Upper Iowa University, where he received&#13;
his A. B. degree in 1898. In the fall of that year he&#13;
accepted the Chair of History in Morningside College.&#13;
During the school year of 1901-02, Professor Garver took&#13;
a leave of absence to pursue a course of study at the&#13;
State Unh·ersity, having received a Fellowship to that&#13;
institution. His work here has been such as to make&#13;
his return to Morningside greatly appreciated,&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES.&#13;
&#13;
E. A. BROWN.&#13;
&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes, Ph. D., was born in Massachusetts, in which State&#13;
he received his preparatory education. He entered Harvard _College in 1885,&#13;
graduating in 1889, afterward receiving the degree of Ph. D. in the graduate&#13;
school. The next year ( 1892) was spent in study and travel. in Europe. He&#13;
studied Economics in the University of Berlin under Gustav Schmoller, also 1n&#13;
the University of Cambridge under Sir John Seely and others. In August, 1892,&#13;
he returned to the United States as teacher of History and Economics in the&#13;
University of California. In 1896 and 197 he was assistant in historical work in&#13;
Harvard College. Since September, 1900, he has occupied the Chair of Political&#13;
Science and Sociology in Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown, A. M., graduated fro!" DePauw University in&#13;
1884 and during the past eighteen years has been continuously engaged in educational work, either as high school principal, professor 1n college or as county&#13;
superintendent of schools. He has taught in or conducted county institutes&#13;
every year for the past twelve years, and has been four times elected County&#13;
Superintendent of Schools of Woodbury County. His ability as instructor and&#13;
educator is recognized throughout the.State. The stu.dent body regret that he&#13;
is no longer a member of the faculty since he has again been elected Supertendent of Schools.&#13;
&#13;
�W. A. BLACKWELL.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT N. VAN HORNE.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. W. A. Blackwell came to Morningside College in September, 1896.&#13;
He received his education in different schools, having taken a course in&#13;
the Gem City Business College of Quincy, Ill., and received the degree&#13;
of "Master&#13;
of Accounts." He also completed a two years' course in the&#13;
Western Normal School of Bushnell, Ill., 1896. His success as a teacher is&#13;
shown in the increased number of students in that department, and in the consequent growing out of old accommodations to take up the work in newer and&#13;
larger. For three years he has also been Secretary of the Faculty, and has&#13;
discharged the duties of that office in his usual business-like manner.&#13;
&#13;
Robert Negley Van Horne was born in 1875 on a farm near Mason, Iowa.&#13;
In 1894 he graduated from the high school at that place , and in the winter of&#13;
1896&#13;
entered Cornell College. Five terms later he transferred his allegiance to&#13;
Morningside College, where he graduated as a Ph. B. in 1900. The next year&#13;
was spent at Johns Hopkins University where he pursued a special course in&#13;
mathematics. In the spring of 1901 he was elected Instructor of Mathematics&#13;
in Morningside College, and in the fall of that year took his place among the&#13;
Faculty. Prof. Van Horne holds a high place in the hearts of his students, and&#13;
his energetic spirit, sturdy, progressive manhood, and clean, wholesome influence, certainly augurs well for the future of his department.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. GREENE&#13;
&#13;
Prof. J. w. Greene is a native of Illinois, but has spent most of his life in&#13;
Iowa. After completing the course of the high school in the town near his&#13;
home, he went to the Upper Iowa University at Fayette, where he graduated&#13;
from the scientific course in 1899. He came to Morningside&#13;
College to take&#13;
charge of the Department of Physics in 1900. He obtained leave of absence in&#13;
the spring of 1901 and went to the University of Wisconsin. The past year has&#13;
been one of hard work on his part and the result is that his laboratory is offering as complete a course as may be found in any college of Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD B. GREYNALD.&#13;
Prof. Reynard B. Greynald, A. M .. was born in France in 1854. He attended&#13;
the public schools of Normandy for five yea.rs, after which he entered college&#13;
in Paris. His college course was completed in the College of Chateau Goutier.&#13;
While there he won the first prize in Greek and Latin and also in Geometry.&#13;
In 1874 he received the A. B. degree in the University of France.&#13;
He studied&#13;
Law and Letters in the Academy for a year and a half receiving the A .. M . degree He has occupied, with. great success, the Chair of French in Morningside&#13;
College for six years. He will always be remembered by his characteristicnod&#13;
and his gentle hand fall upon the shoulders of the boys who approach him.&#13;
He is indeed a valuable man to our college.&#13;
&#13;
�HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
On&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE ELLA HICKMAN.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT.&#13;
&#13;
FAIRY STORY&#13;
&#13;
one twenty-ninth of February, in a lonely sequestered nook far from the&#13;
bustle of city, a nd the gossip of town, there was born a child, the heroine of&#13;
this ta le.&#13;
Four fairies, whose mission is to shape the d estinies of m ortals, gathered&#13;
around the cradl e of our h eroine. Each stood at the corner of the cradle and&#13;
gazed intentl y at the child .&#13;
Then, for e ven fairi es disagree, two insisted that her eyes were brown, her ha ir&#13;
d a rk, while the othe rs firml y d eclared he r eyes to be blue and her h air to be light. All&#13;
agreed, however, that she must co ve r her eyes after the fashi on of morta ls with those&#13;
strange thing s called spectacles.&#13;
Then their disc ussi on wax ed wa rm. "She will be tall and thin," said one. "Ah,&#13;
no. She will be plump a nd of medium heigh th," said another. "You a re both wrong,"&#13;
said the other two, "she will be sma ll an d slight." Aft er a moment of reflection one&#13;
said, "she will be dig nifi ed a nd slow in her movements ; he r speech will be d e liberate,&#13;
her m anne r imp ressive." One agreed , but the othe r two sa id, "Sisters, you a re mistaken,&#13;
she will be quick in movement a nd in word." " Hark," sa id one, "it is tim e for us to&#13;
return to our queen. L et us leave our g ifts a nd d epa rt."&#13;
As they were about to spread their wings, one cried, "Siste rs, we ha ve not na med&#13;
he r.'' All stood in d eep thought. They with one voice said , " H er name sha ll be&#13;
L ilcharaghe l,"- a nam e which in fa iry language means di ve rsity of characteristics.&#13;
Thus blessed b y the fairi es, Lilch a raghe l grew into happy childhood.&#13;
H er first words were " Cara Mutter und et lieb Pater." She amazed her rela ti ves&#13;
MISS AGNES FERGUSON,&#13;
b y correct E ng lish sentences. Never did she talk bab y talk after the ma nner of&#13;
ordinary children.&#13;
Her school life b egan early and was a series of strange contradictions. H er intellectua l superiority was a lways apparent, yet some&#13;
days she was the despair of her tea chers,- lessons were unlearned, while notes and paper wads, flew in all directions from he r d esk.&#13;
Perchance the next day h er eyes would be g lued to her book, and upon he r fa ce there would rest the pious and sa intl y expression of one wh o&#13;
is d eepl y shocked at such enormities of condu ct. At last she came to the day when her mission in life must be chosen. Again th e four fairi es&#13;
sought her side. Again they each whispered one word in her ear. Together they sa id, "Teach." As the fairi es gazed ea ch rejoiced to see&#13;
her prophecy fulfill ed and again they spoke, with one voice saying, "Lilcha raghel, you are well named, for you a re not one, but four."&#13;
&#13;
�MYRTLE M. LOTHIAN.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE L. SEARCH.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON.&#13;
&#13;
Myrtle M. Lothian was born in Spencer, Iowa.&#13;
Her early life was uneventful only as she moved from&#13;
place to place-being the daughter of a Methodist minister. In 1895 she finished the high school course, and&#13;
after a year's rest the higher education was begun, At&#13;
Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa, she started her college course, taking music as a mere side study. Two&#13;
years were spent there, then came the decision to&#13;
study music as a profession. The first year of professional study was pursued at the Conservatory of Music&#13;
of Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., after which&#13;
she came to Morningside as an assistant teacher.&#13;
&#13;
George L. Search came to Sioux City August 1890,&#13;
30,&#13;
and took a complete course in Stenography in the&#13;
Business Department of the University of the Northwest.&#13;
He was engaged in business until September 1, 1901,&#13;
when he accepted a position as Assistant Secretary of&#13;
the Board of Trustees of the college and Instructor in&#13;
Shorthand and Typewriting. Mr. Search is also an experienced accountant and has thoroughly checked over&#13;
the accounts of the college since its incorporation in 1895&#13;
and has written a new set of double entry books, showing a complete financial history of the institution. This&#13;
service has filled satisfactorily a long-felt need.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Clara Booth Davidson attended the Philadelphia&#13;
School of Oratory and has since studied under many of&#13;
the prominent teachers of oratory in the United States.&#13;
She has attained great success both as a reader and as&#13;
teacher of elocution. For five years she has had charge&#13;
of the work during the summer at Chautauquas in different states. She was elected Instructor in Elocution and&#13;
Physical Training in Morningside College in 1899. For&#13;
the past three years by her energy and efficiency she has&#13;
made her department an indispensable addition to the&#13;
school. Her work is greatly appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
0 . P. BARBOUR.&#13;
&#13;
Prof Barbour is a native of Ohio. Early in life he exhibited a marked&#13;
talent for music. At the age of ten he was the best reader i n a large choir of&#13;
matured singers. After availing himself of the best advantages at home he&#13;
entered Grinnell College where he studied Piano under the direction of L. A.&#13;
Phelps now of Chicago. From Grinnell he went to Oberlin where he remained for five years studying piano, violin and chorus work. Later he spent&#13;
two years in Germany with instructors of world renown. He studied harmony&#13;
andcomposition under the personal direction of the noted Dr. Goteschius, who&#13;
chose Prof. Barbour to conduct the English speaking classes in harmony. Upon returning from Germany Prof. Barbour taught eight years 1n Cornell College with marked success.&#13;
From Cornell he went to Epworth where&#13;
he&#13;
remainedfour years. Since 1897 he has been Director of the Musical Conservatory of Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. BLANCHE P. BARBOUR.&#13;
Mrs. Barbour was a pupil of Balisaus, who classed her among the most&#13;
apt of his students. After graduating in Music from Morningside College Conservatory, Mrs. Barbour spent a year in Germany. Prior to her work abroad&#13;
she spent two summers with Liebling in Chicago. Walter Bachmann was her&#13;
instructor in piano and Faehrman in pipe organ while in Germany. Mrs.&#13;
Barbour has decided ability in composition, having written a number of choice&#13;
quartettes for male voices. Mrs. Barbour is a strong addition to our musical&#13;
faculty.&#13;
&#13;
�STANISLAUS SCHERZEL.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTHLENER.&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener, A. M., Professor of&#13;
Greek in Morningside College comes of a sturdy Teutonic ancestry, and was born in the State he is now serving&#13;
as a citizen. In 1896 completed the classical course at&#13;
he&#13;
Cornell College and spent the following year as Instructor in Latin and Greek at Epworth Seminary The&#13;
years from 1897 to 1899 were spent at Harvard Utuversity&#13;
where he received the Master's Degree.&#13;
Professor&#13;
Kanthlener began his work here in the autumn of 1900.&#13;
In the two years he has been here he has greatly built&#13;
up his department and has won the friendship and&#13;
esteem of both students and teachers.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Stanislaus Scherzel was born in Revel, Russia,&#13;
in 1871. After his father's death, he and his mother&#13;
sailed for America, landing at New York in 1880. Leaving New York they came to Chicago where they lived&#13;
until 1885, when they made their home at Davenport, Ia.&#13;
It was here Mr. Scherzel took his first violin lesson.&#13;
His aunt, Mrs. Leopold Markbreit, of Cincinnati, Ohio,&#13;
perceiving his great love for the violin and his display of&#13;
musical talent, gave him the advantage of eight years'&#13;
study in the Chicago Musical College and in the College&#13;
of Music in Cincinnati under the instructions of Jacobsohn, Campanari and Marieu. In the year 1898 he&#13;
located at Sioux City, Ia., where he has since made his&#13;
home. In the fall of 1901 be was appointed as Violin Instructor in the Department of Music in Morningside&#13;
College. He holds the position of leading violinist in&#13;
the city. As an instructor Mr. Scherzel excels.&#13;
&#13;
KITTIE ANNA PATTERSON.&#13;
Kittie Anna Patterson was born in Sac County, Iowa,&#13;
near Schaeler, where her early life was spent. She completed the high school course at Schaeler and later pursued a four years' course in Des Moines, and immediately&#13;
thereafter went to Chicago where she continued to study&#13;
her chosen line of work. In the summer of 1900 she&#13;
made a sketching tour through Michigan. Thus prepared, she came to our college in the winter of 1901&#13;
where she took full charge of the Art Department. Miss&#13;
&#13;
Patterson' s accomplishments in her chosen work are&#13;
worthy of note, while her sterling womanhood and her&#13;
executive ability are of the greatest value in the development of her department.&#13;
&#13;
�The Academy.&#13;
&#13;
Where we all got our start.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
�The Senior Academy Class&#13;
Yell.&#13;
&#13;
OCCi c e r s.&#13;
&#13;
Rickety, Rickety, Rickety Rix!&#13;
J. W. WUNN-President.&#13;
We are, We are Doctor's Chicks.&#13;
ELLA WENDEL-Secretary.&#13;
We'll hatch out in 1906.&#13;
Rickety, Rickety, Rickety Rix!&#13;
JOHN PRICE- Treasurer.&#13;
Colors-Gold and Dark Blue.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
truly believe the Juniors did not realize what they were requesting when&#13;
they asked for a history of the Senior Academy Class of 1901-02. Volumes might be written of the struggles undergone and of the progress&#13;
made by the class in its desire to succeed and in the accomplishment of&#13;
this desire. But our space will not permit us to go into detail here and&#13;
relate all the battles fought and victories won with Germany, Greece and Rome. It&#13;
will not permit us to tell of the tragedies witnessed through the vivid portrayal of&#13;
heroes and heroines by the "to be" Shakespeareans. However, we will try to bring&#13;
before you a few incidents from the history of the class.&#13;
It was with somewhat of a fearful feeling that we entered our school year.&#13;
Why should it not be? Before us stood the "Freshies" loudly lauding themselves to&#13;
the skies, and at our feet lay the worn-out ponies and rusty spades of their former&#13;
pretentious life. Anxiously we worked until all their rubbish was cleared away and&#13;
all was ready for the laying of our strong, firm foundation. Then we looked up expecting to see the "Freshies" far out of our reach, but to our surprise we saw them&#13;
still in the same place. Why this? At first we could not answer. But since, in their&#13;
trying to bring back some of their old worn-out "ponies," we believe a reason to be&#13;
given. Their situation opened our eyes and we have cautiously watched that such&#13;
shall not be the condition of the Freshman Class of 1902-03.&#13;
The Sleighri de, Janu ary 3 0.&#13;
The snow of night was falling fast,&#13;
In happy homes we saw the light&#13;
As through a suburban village passed&#13;
Of household fires gleam warm and bright&#13;
A bob which bore 'mid snow and ice&#13;
About, the evening lights shone bright,&#13;
A class shouting in one voice,&#13;
And from our lips escaped that night,&#13;
Aei Pro-eontes.&#13;
Aei Pro-eontes.&#13;
At twelve o'clock with cheerful sound,&#13;
The Senior Class was homeward bound,&#13;
Uttering the oft-repeated cry&#13;
With voices clear that knew no sigh,&#13;
Aei Pro-eontes.&#13;
&#13;
Where Some of the Cla ss Were.&#13;
&#13;
Wun(o)n(e) (McK)night Hanna(h) McCay and Henry Hartzell were left at Patterson's to Cook. Miss-mann and Byrkit Woodford met at the B(r)ower and went to&#13;
the Mill(i)ner to get the Price of hats. Wendel McCarthy and Lewis Yeager Durst&#13;
follow. Debenham, Hulser and Beinhauer overtook them and had them go to Patterson's where they were met by Melson and Flinn, and all went in and ate Fr(y)ied ·&#13;
Hawk-in(s) great delight. While here they were Lock(ed)-in by their Fair host, who&#13;
said "you Kin-dig to get out. On the following Day Bart-let(t) them out.&#13;
Genera l Information&#13;
&#13;
Concerning the Class .&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion's star athlete laid out by the fall&#13;
of Price. November 16.&#13;
Myrtle Cook, president; Emma Fair, vicepresident, and Sadie Van Horne, secretary of&#13;
Y.W.C.A.&#13;
A "fair" girl of the Class was heard to remark,&#13;
I'm always going to be young."&#13;
W. W. Harris, secretary of Y. M. C. A.&#13;
Sadie Van Horne on January II delivered&#13;
Freshman ma(i)le at second house east of P e ters&#13;
Park.&#13;
Foster, captain of football team.&#13;
&#13;
Van Dyke, captain of basketball team.&#13;
WHAT TWOGIRLS SAID&#13;
&#13;
First: "Oh, Green is my favorite color."&#13;
Second: " Oh, I think Black (does very)&#13;
well. "&#13;
Estella Harding, president of a College Society in Fall term, and took part in Zet. Grand&#13;
Public, February 15.&#13;
Faith Woodford, Senior in Music.&#13;
Charles Richards took part in the Otho&#13;
Grand Public on Marc 17; and is a member of&#13;
the College Quartet.&#13;
&#13;
"Oh,&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
�The Normal&#13;
&#13;
Shorthand&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
the fall of nineteen hundred and one five maidens in search of wisdom turned&#13;
.&#13;
their footsteps toward the path which led to the Tower of Knowledge&#13;
To them It seemed as a strange mysterious. building, the apartments&#13;
. .&#13;
of which were illuminated according to the studies pursued therein. But it&#13;
was attractive to them and they decided to visit the place and imbibe some&#13;
of the wisdom found there; although one knew it could not equal the&#13;
.&#13;
charms(?) of her former home, i.e. Chicago. Hence the others heard much concerning this place even to the quality of paper on which the daily news was printed.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Mr.&#13;
&#13;
GEO. L. SEARCH, Ass,t. Sec'y. of the Board of Trustees, has charge of this department. Graham's system of&#13;
Standard Phonography is taught. Eleven students registered during the year, six of whom h ave completed the&#13;
course.&#13;
Mr. Ed. V. Youngquist has a position with the Bank of Ocheyedan, Ocheyedan, Iowa, and is fast becoming an expert stenographer.&#13;
Ed. always was exceptionally bright, and we predict for him a very&#13;
successful career in his chosen profession.&#13;
Miss Ada M. Grier has been taking some special advanced work&#13;
during the Spring Term, and assisting in the business office of the&#13;
College. Miss Ada has been a faithful student, and is not afraid of&#13;
hard work. She has already been offered a good position.&#13;
Mr. Chas. L. Debenham will no doubt become one of the leading&#13;
writers of the. Winged Art. He is the class phenomenon, being able&#13;
to write with either hand. With a little practice he expects to write&#13;
with both hands at once and take dictation from two different persons at the same time.&#13;
Miss Ethel M. Epperson is prepared to do general work for any&#13;
who are in need of the services of a proficient stenographer. She is&#13;
accurate and careful, and with practice will become an expert&#13;
Amanuensis. She is doing special job work. We understand, however, that she recently refused a very flattering offer.&#13;
Miss Cora G. Grier is successfully filling a position in one of the&#13;
leading Real Estate and Insurance offices in the city. Cora likes&#13;
Sioux City very well, but expects to remain here for a short time only.&#13;
Miss Pearl Phillips is employed as stenographer and bookkeeper&#13;
in her father's office in Ft. Dodge, Iowa. In connection with her&#13;
regular duties she is also prepared to take dictation or do general&#13;
copy work, for those needing the services of an experienced stenographer.&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
and Typewriti ng&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
�Ross Brown&#13;
President&#13;
Ralph Milliken&#13;
Sec'y&#13;
Color&#13;
&#13;
Purple&#13;
&#13;
=The=&#13;
Othonians&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
Suaviter in modo,&#13;
fortiter in re.&#13;
&#13;
YELL:&#13;
&#13;
Zip! ki! ah! Zip! ki! ah!&#13;
Otho! Otho! Othon-i-ah !&#13;
&#13;
A Freshman's Letter&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE, April 19, 1902.&#13;
DEAR PA:&#13;
I thought I heard my grandmother say&#13;
The Othos gave their yell to-day,&#13;
With a Re-vo! With a Ri-vo!&#13;
With a Re-vo! Ri-vo! Vum!&#13;
For it's just so plain that we can show&#13;
The ones that get there are Othos&#13;
With a Ring-tail! With a Rat-tail!&#13;
With a Ring-tail! Rat-tail! Bang!&#13;
&#13;
Excuse me, Pa, but that's a new yell I've been learning. You&#13;
see I've joined the Othonian Literary Society and I'm so glad that&#13;
I'll have to tell you all about it.&#13;
I'm glad for several reasons:-In the first place I'm in about the&#13;
best crowd of fellows in school, and they know how to receive a&#13;
fellow, too. I declare, I'm lame enough already and I've taken only&#13;
three degrees. Then, too, the Othos are the oldest society in the&#13;
school, having been formed in the fall term of 1891 soon after the&#13;
opening of the old University of the Northwest .&#13;
Our badge and the preamble of our constitution will show you&#13;
the object of our formation. The badge is a shield signifying the&#13;
defense of Truth and Morality. At the top of the shield is inscribed&#13;
the word Otho, and below that are two crossed pens signifying composition.&#13;
In the lowest point of the shield is the beak of a Carthaginian war vessel-rostrum-representing oratory. The preamble of&#13;
our constitution reads: "Desiring for ourselves the highest intellectual moral, and social culture and improvement in composition,&#13;
oratory, debate, and parliamentary usage: and realizing that development comes only from proper exercise,-we, students of Morningside College, do organize a literary society and adopt for our government the following Constitution and By-laws."&#13;
The boys say that our motto which, construed, means, "The&#13;
gloved hand of iron," has been lived up to ever since the organization&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
�of the society, and has done much toward the formation of sturdy,&#13;
cultured manhood.&#13;
The name of our society was taken from that of old Otho or&#13;
Otto, the Great, King of Germany, and restorer of the Holy Roman&#13;
Empire. When it comes to conquests we have tried to keep up with&#13;
the old fellow's record, for we have won every oratorical contest in&#13;
the college, and three of the four debates that have been held with&#13;
the Philos. The last debate was held February 21st, and the victory&#13;
gave us the right to two of the three debaters to represent the college&#13;
in the intercollegiate debate, but we declined taking part in another&#13;
debate this year, as we thought the time left wasn't long enough for&#13;
us to get up a creditable debate according to our methods, even if we&#13;
should defeat the college's opponents.&#13;
One-a-zippa ! Two-a-z ippa ! Three-a-zippa! Zo!&#13;
Rippl e tipple! Roly poly! Ki-o-to!&#13;
Wh ang-a-dood le! Hity-tity! Whand-a-doodle! Whang!&#13;
Otho! Otho! Boomerang!! Bang!!!&#13;
&#13;
That's another of our yells. The Boomerang is our paper and it&#13;
still blazes away. Like the society it is willing to give and take.&#13;
I said we had a lot of nice fellows and we have, but there are a&#13;
couple that the boys are talking of expelling, I think; at any rate I&#13;
heard Aldrich tell Charlie Richards that we wouldn't be bothered&#13;
with them next year. Come to think of it, Pa, they're serious. One&#13;
of 'em is Dad Eberly. He was president in the winter term and you&#13;
can't rattle him a little bit, but he gets so awfully red-headed sometimes that the boys can't do anything with him. Brown is the other&#13;
fellow. The only trouble with Brown is that you can't keep him&#13;
from getting the floor and talking all the time when anything comes&#13;
up about the Zets. They are our sister society. We occupy the ZetOtho hall on the third floor. The Zets are true blue every time and&#13;
I tell you we're proud of 'em, that is, all of us but A. H. Maynard.&#13;
When they're mentioned his only thought seems to be "Kill'm !&#13;
Kill'm !"&#13;
Simpson is the smartest looking man in the society, but he's&#13;
from Oklahoma, and tells such lies about the country that nobody&#13;
trusts him. He has charge of the city missions.&#13;
We boast of thirteen alumni out of nineteen men who have&#13;
graduated from the school, and _&#13;
President Ross Brown and Dad&#13;
Eberly will make fifteen. Besides these there are dozens of others&#13;
who never graduated, but who are an honor to the society in active&#13;
business life. Don't you think, Pa, that I'm in a pretty good crowd&#13;
of fellows.&#13;
Your true son,&#13;
ROBERT.&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
�•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
��•&#13;
&#13;
�I&#13;
&#13;
�The Crescents&#13;
&#13;
Ever&#13;
&#13;
YT HING must have a beginning-even the great oak&#13;
begins from a very small acorn-but from this beginning it&#13;
attains great height. The laying of the Atlantic cable was&#13;
a great work, but its beginning was the thoughts of a man&#13;
and his diligent application to the task. Our school life may begin&#13;
with many difficulties, but with perseverance on our part we may&#13;
attain the very highest mark of prominence.&#13;
Literary work also has its beginning. What would the world do&#13;
or be without literature? It would be dry enough to burn up. The&#13;
many evenings spent listening to the great speakers or reading good&#13;
books are never wasted, for we are brought to see matters in a new&#13;
light.&#13;
The Crescent Literary Society began to grow in the fall of the&#13;
year 1900. The first program given by this society was held in the&#13;
basement chapel on the twenty-sixth of January, 1901, the very&#13;
night the Freshmen kidnapped their little brother, a Sophomore.&#13;
The program was not affected by this, however. One week last fall&#13;
some thought the Society was dead-even a kind friend wanted to&#13;
take the order for a tombstone, and still another wished to preach the&#13;
funeral sermon-but these movements were not thought advisable&#13;
and the members concluded to wait and see if it would come to life&#13;
again.&#13;
It surely did, for in a week they presented a program fit for a&#13;
king to listen to.&#13;
You ask, who are the Crescents? Space will not permit a&#13;
minute description of every one, but you may know who some of&#13;
them are before this is finished.&#13;
The first president of the Society may be seen "Fostering" on&#13;
pleasant evenings.&#13;
Another may be seen breaking prohibition laws by being with&#13;
"Ale," and another can be seen walking after school through "Hins&#13;
Dale."&#13;
The Society boasts the honor of having a Fitzsimmons; perhaps&#13;
she may be some relative of the fighter, but we cannot vouch as to&#13;
her abilities in that line of athletics.&#13;
The' motto is a good one : "We succeed by doing," and by&#13;
doing the Crescents intend to grow until some day they may hold&#13;
a high position of prominence in the state or nation.&#13;
69&#13;
&#13;
���The Aesthesians&#13;
&#13;
Motto-To possess the Aesthetic.&#13;
&#13;
Emblem-The Olive Leaf.&#13;
Colors-Fawn&#13;
&#13;
and Pink.&#13;
&#13;
YELL&#13;
Pink a nd fawn.Brighte r th an th e dawn, Way above par,G uess who we are!&#13;
F a wn a nd pink.Who do you think ?&#13;
Who a re we th en ?&#13;
Why!&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian!&#13;
&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
"Necessity is the mother of invention" is acknowledged&#13;
by all. In the fall of 1901, there being but one literary&#13;
society for young ladies in the Academy of Morningside&#13;
College, it became evident that in order to promote literary&#13;
activity, another society was necessary to accommodate the large&#13;
number of academic students. The plan of a new organization had&#13;
been suggested by different ones during the fall, but no permanent&#13;
steps were taken toward organization. At length in February, 190 2,&#13;
having obtained permission, nineteen energetic young ladies organized the Aesthesian Literary Society.&#13;
As yet, the society is in its infancy. It has no past history, no&#13;
memorable deeds, no great victories to record. We can only speak&#13;
of its present and future.&#13;
It is starting with a few members who are determined to make&#13;
it a success. Its business and literary meetings are full of energy&#13;
and delight. With the present conditions in view, it is safe to say&#13;
that as the years come and go, the Aesthesian Literary Society will&#13;
stand the test, and will become one of the most important organizat ions in the Academy of Morningside College.&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
�Prohibition Club of&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Purpose-The study of the liquor problem from every angle.&#13;
OFFICERS, 1901-02.&#13;
President,&#13;
C. L. GILBERT&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
W. W. HARRIS&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
F. E . HERRINGTON&#13;
Winner of Oratorical Contest,&#13;
D. C. HALL&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
With an open mind&#13;
And gentle word&#13;
We recei ve the Truth&#13;
When she is heard.&#13;
&#13;
YELLS&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition&#13;
For our State&#13;
The Saloon&#13;
Annihilate&#13;
For the G. 0. P.&#13;
We'll never wait&#13;
See us, See us&#13;
Vote 'er straight.&#13;
&#13;
The Donk may bray&#13;
Gesticulate&#13;
He's full of whiskey&#13;
Up to date&#13;
W e'll not bite&#13;
His Anti-Bait&#13;
S e e us, See us&#13;
Vote 'er straight.&#13;
&#13;
Charter Members.&#13;
R. B. WYLIE, (Biology.)&#13;
C. F. EBERLY, (Chemistry.)&#13;
A. N. COOK, (Chemistry.)&#13;
GEO. W. BARSELOU, (Geology.)&#13;
GUY G. FRARY, (Chemistry.)&#13;
ALEX . G. RUTHVEN, (Biology.)&#13;
M. F. McDOWELL, (Ph ysics.)&#13;
W. J. MORGAN, (C hemistry.)&#13;
FRED J. SEAVER, (Biology.)&#13;
E. J. FRY, (Chemistry.)&#13;
JOHN W. GREENE, (Physics.)&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Science Club of Morningside College was organized in&#13;
September, 1901. Active membership in the organization&#13;
is limited to instructors and major students of the various&#13;
Departments of Natural Science, but all who are interested&#13;
along these lines are welcome, and are invited to take part in the&#13;
discussions, etc.&#13;
The objects of the club are to promote original investigation; to&#13;
cultivate a taste for scientific literature, and to be mutually helpful to&#13;
teachers and students of science.&#13;
Monthly meetings have been held during the year. The work&#13;
has consisted of reports of research work conducted in the college&#13;
laboratories; reviews of important articles from scientific journals, and&#13;
lectures on the general status of different branches of scientific work.&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
G. W. SHIDELER,&#13;
Chief Bald&#13;
C. F. EBERLY,&#13;
Vice Bald&#13;
CHAS. YEAGER,&#13;
Wig Fancier&#13;
STANLEY CARSON, "Ayers' Vigor" Dispensor&#13;
Charter Members&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Members&#13;
&#13;
F. H. GARVER, (Founder)&#13;
A. S. DEAN, (First Chief.)&#13;
&#13;
DR. LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Black Balled&#13;
LON HAWKINS&#13;
SAM KNOER&#13;
D. C. HALL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
DEAN LYMER&#13;
&#13;
W. GREEN&#13;
&#13;
Expelled&#13;
GEO. WINTER,&#13;
For fraudulent shaving of head.&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
�Sooner Clubs&#13;
&#13;
THE SOONER NOTS&#13;
&#13;
THE SOONERS&#13;
or&#13;
&#13;
or&#13;
&#13;
Married Students&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor Students&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
The Soonerest Sooner, -&#13;
&#13;
GEO. HANNAH&#13;
&#13;
The Sooner Sooner,&#13;
&#13;
FRED RAY&#13;
&#13;
The Nottest Sooner, F. E. HARRINGTON&#13;
Chief Batch,&#13;
GEO. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
Active Members&#13;
&#13;
Active Members&#13;
&#13;
C. F. EBERLY&#13;
&#13;
MERRITT METCALF&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK EDWARDS&#13;
NORMAN MCCAY&#13;
GEO.GOODLANDER&#13;
&#13;
W. GREENE&#13;
CHAS. RICHARDS&#13;
FRANK lNLEY&#13;
JAM ES BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
GEO. A. PLATTS&#13;
A. S. HOWARTH&#13;
&#13;
Expelled&#13;
Prospective Members&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
*NORMAN MCCAY&#13;
+ SAMUELKNOER&#13;
§FRED HALL&#13;
&#13;
W. MORGAN&#13;
FRED SEAVER&#13;
lRA ADDRICH&#13;
&#13;
Back Sliders&#13;
&#13;
*A. H. MAYNARD&#13;
*F RED NULL&#13;
&#13;
WILL FRY&#13;
&#13;
GEO. STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
*For secretly stealing away to Canada a nd&#13;
&#13;
*Elections withheld on accoun t of age.&#13;
&#13;
marrying one of the daughters of that land .&#13;
&#13;
tTaken back o n probation since the marriage of M iss Hobbs.&#13;
s For being so atte ntive in waiting upon the&#13;
young ladies at Darling's store.&#13;
&#13;
Buz-z-z !&#13;
Buz-z-z !&#13;
Ge-e-e Whiz-z-z !&#13;
Bumble Bee,&#13;
1903.&#13;
&#13;
82&#13;
&#13;
�Instrutnental Music&#13;
THE CLASS OF 1902&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
With pleasure we give you a sketch of our class,&#13;
How quickly but surely we managed to pass.&#13;
We maids worked together a B. M. to gain,&#13;
And this we accomplished mid sunshine and rain.&#13;
Many desparate battles with the keyboard we fought,&#13;
And had many trials which amounted to naught.&#13;
Of the rules of "suspension" we were never afraid,&#13;
And through "anticipation" we worked for a grade.&#13;
The Faculty all have acknowledged our skill,&#13;
And they must admit we have been through the mill.&#13;
And now it is whispered around the whole town,&#13;
The rest must all go "way back and sit down."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
With our B. M. to back us, the whole world around,&#13;
We're equipped to sell music by the chord or the pound.&#13;
With all of our talent and musical skill,&#13;
We should find a buyer and certainly will.&#13;
We have conquered at last; we nine jolly cronies,&#13;
Without seeking help from the Main Hall ponies.&#13;
And now we must leave this dear old "North Hall,"&#13;
By bidding farewell to our friends one and all.&#13;
&#13;
.. .&#13;
&#13;
�Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Young Women's Christian Association&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Recordin g Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
Devotional, W . M. Richards; Missionary, E. H. Hulser; Bible Study, Fred&#13;
Erskine; Finance, R. E. Root; Inte r-Collegiate Rel ations, R. J. McIsaac; Employment Bureau, F. H. Trimble ; Membership, F. E. Mossman; Train, C. E. Harding;&#13;
Social, Ray Toothaker.&#13;
&#13;
Devotional, Nel lie Blood; Missionary, Grace Darling; Membership, Emma&#13;
Fair; Bible Study, Nettie Fry; Social, Mabel Kill am; Intercollegiate Relations,&#13;
Clara Kill am ; Finance, Estie Boddy.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
A Y back in the history of the college a band of earnest young men organized a society known as the Christian League. The earliest recorded&#13;
business meeting was held May 25, 1898, in which Fred Erskine and Buckwalter were elected president and secretary. On May 3, 1899, after an&#13;
address by R ev. Marsh, the League was disbanded and the members proceed ed to the organi zation of a Y. M. C. A., of which Prof. Frank Garver was chosen&#13;
first president. At the same meeting Garver and C. Van Horne we re elected to represe nt the Y. M. C. A. at the Lake Geneva Conference.&#13;
From a small beginning the Association work has steadily grown and expanded&#13;
until at present it is an absolutely indispensable auxiliary to the college. Below are&#13;
given some of the regular features of the Assoc iation.&#13;
I. Regular Sunday mornin g d evotional meetings.&#13;
2. R egular monthly missionary meetings.&#13;
3. R egular weekly meetings of Missionary Study Class.&#13;
4. Reg ular weekl y Bible study classes.&#13;
5. R egular weekly Volunteer Band meetings.&#13;
6. R egular annual re presentation at Lake Geneva Conference.&#13;
7. R epresentation at International Convention of Student Volunteers.&#13;
8. Regular receptions for new students at the beginning of each term.&#13;
9.&#13;
Maintenance of Information Bureau. (a) Board and Room. (b) Employment Burea u.&#13;
10.&#13;
Publishing of Handbook of valuable information particularly for the benefit of new students.&#13;
11.&#13;
Issue of ce rtificates to students for reduced rates on the railroads.&#13;
Among the important branches of the Association are: The Students Volunteer&#13;
Band; the Information Bureau. The departments are: De votional, Financial, Social,&#13;
Missionary, Inter-Collegiate, Census, Bible Study.&#13;
88&#13;
&#13;
During&#13;
&#13;
June, 1898, amid the hurry and confu sion incide nt to e xaminations&#13;
and commencement, about twenty young women assembled in the commercia l room and transformed the local Christian League into a branch of&#13;
the "National Young Women's Christian Association," and appointed a&#13;
del egate to be sent to the summe r conference at Lake Geneva. Thus was&#13;
ushered in a mighty factor in,spiritual work of our school.&#13;
Afte r Main H all was completed, they together with the Young Men's Christian&#13;
Association, became the proud possessors of the most pleasant room on the third&#13;
floor, which is set apart solely for religious meetings.&#13;
Each year shows a marked growth. The second year they sent one delegate&#13;
to Geneva and then to the State Convention at D es Moines. The third yea r five&#13;
were sent to Geneva and five to the State Convention at Cedar Falls.&#13;
The Bible Circles, Mission Study Class, and weekly devotional meetings have&#13;
been the chi ef factors in carrying out the purposes of the Association:&#13;
"For a warmer earthly friendl y fri endship,&#13;
For a pure r, holier life,&#13;
For a whole-souled consecation,&#13;
Free from taint of earthly strife;&#13;
For the highest aspiration&#13;
Of a heart filled with God's love&#13;
That when life's work is completed&#13;
Each shall rest at home- above."&#13;
&#13;
�VOLUNTEER BAND&#13;
&#13;
Organized June&#13;
&#13;
Charter Membetship, 7.&#13;
&#13;
1, 1901.&#13;
&#13;
Present Membership, .13.&#13;
Delegates to Toronto Convention, 5.&#13;
Volunteer Hall Assigned, April 9, 1902.&#13;
&#13;
On Field (India)&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Leader,&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer,&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY CARSON&#13;
NELLIE BLOOD&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
�!=======Basket Ball. = = = = = =&#13;
=&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
year '01 and '02 the basket ball enthusiasts met and organized two teams&#13;
&#13;
under the head of the Athletic Association. A constitution was adopted and&#13;
the following officers chosen: President, H. Van Dyke; Captain of Gentlemen's Team, Chas. Yaeger; Captain of Ladies' Team, Miss Fae Simans;&#13;
Secretary, Miss Florence Davidson; Custodian, W. H. Debenham.&#13;
Although the Ladies' Team has not played any match games, we yet have good&#13;
reasons for believing that it is one of the best teams in the Northwest.&#13;
As there were others who wished to play at basket ball, a second team was&#13;
organized with John Price as Captain. After several weeks of hard work the two&#13;
teams began a series of games in which they won five out of eight. As the game was&#13;
new to them and as they had no coach, we have reason to feel proud of this record.&#13;
&#13;
List of&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
M. C.&#13;
&#13;
1st&#13;
2d .............. ..... .&#13;
1st&#13;
1st&#13;
2d&#13;
1st&#13;
1st&#13;
2d&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
Games&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Columbias .&#13;
Sioux City High School..&#13;
Columbias&#13;
Y. M. C. A&#13;
Sioux City High School ...&#13;
Columbias&#13;
Yankton College&#13;
Columbias ........ ...... ..... .. .&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
17&#13;
19&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
30&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
�====Third&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical Contest.= = = =&#13;
&#13;
RAY TOOTHAKER&#13;
&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN WENDEL&#13;
&#13;
The New Aris tocracy&#13;
RAY TOOTHAKER,*&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College vs. Neb. Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon. Iowa&#13;
At Morningside College , June 6 , 1902.&#13;
&#13;
Columbi a&#13;
Morningside, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN WENDEL, +&#13;
&#13;
SECOND CONTEST, '01&#13;
&#13;
QUE STION:&#13;
&#13;
National Progress&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That our laws should provide for Boards of Arbitration, with powers to compel parties in labor disputes to submit their&#13;
disputes to arbitration and to abide by the Board's decision.&#13;
&#13;
H. A. KECK,*&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
'00&#13;
&#13;
F IRST CONTEST,&#13;
&#13;
The Triumph of Miss ions&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
A. DAVIES,*&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
*First Place. tSecond Place.&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical&#13;
Association&#13;
&#13;
President,&#13;
Vice-President,&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
100&#13;
&#13;
Negative.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative.&#13;
&#13;
G. G. Frary&#13;
Anna Marsh&#13;
Florence Cate&#13;
W. L. Harding&#13;
&#13;
Geo. A. Platts,&#13;
Miss Florence Cate,&#13;
F. E. Mossman.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Harry England,&#13;
Mrs. Harry England,&#13;
Mr. John Burk.&#13;
&#13;
This is the first Intercollegiate Debate for Morningside College,&#13;
and all are looking forward to a victory for Morningside College.&#13;
IOI&#13;
&#13;
�Some&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
Trust ees&#13;
&#13;
�The Avils of an Idjication&#13;
BY MICHAEL O'BRIEN.&#13;
&#13;
Best 1000 Word Story, $5.00, .&#13;
H . A. SAWYER&#13;
Best Short Story, $5.00,&#13;
RALPH MILLIKEN&#13;
Second Best Short Story, S2.oo,&#13;
CHARLES E. SHIDLER&#13;
Best Fable, $2.00,&#13;
RALPH MILLIKEN&#13;
*Best Parable, $2.00,&#13;
JUNIOR CLASS&#13;
Best Poem, $5.00,&#13;
ESTIE BODDY&#13;
*Best Collection of Yellow Back Titles, $2.00,&#13;
JUNIOR CLASS&#13;
*Best Collection of Twelve Jokes,&#13;
$4.00, . . . . JUNIOR CLASS&#13;
Sweepstakes, $2.00.&#13;
*No competition,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
104&#13;
&#13;
To yez bois that are makin' that Junior Bumble Bee: Whin me bye Eddie&#13;
came home the ither day frim college he tould me that yez were offerin' tin&#13;
dollars fir the besht pace that anny wan would write fir yer book. Now Oi&#13;
don't sit mesilf up ash a book maker or a nusepaper correspondint, but&#13;
Oi've heard a good rlal e of late about idjication and ivery wan . that says&#13;
annything about it ish wan of yer idjicated fellies wat wants to git ivery wan ilse&#13;
idjicated. So Oi that it would be a foine thing fir me to ixpriss me views on this&#13;
question, and bein' ash Oi am an onidjicated man and livin' away frim the city on a&#13;
farm siventane moiles narth of Scraggsville, Oi think Oi kin spake with othority on&#13;
the subjick ash Oi know by ixparience what Oi am tellin ' yez.&#13;
Now take an idjicated man and he wants farty or fifty dollars fir a month's&#13;
yez&#13;
wark, and sum of thim want more than that, and yez kin hire ash good a man ash&#13;
iver shouldered a pick fir aiteen or twinty if he aint idjicated. Wy Oi know wan of&#13;
me naybor's bois that wasn't wurth the oice crame he'd ate in Janywary and he wint&#13;
off to college a few years and got a posishun with goovermint fir too thousand dollars&#13;
fir wan year. Thin yez take the g irls : Yez can't git wan of yer idjicated girls to&#13;
wark fir too dollars a wake, fir jist as sune ash th ey git idjicated thin they want to&#13;
tache skule or be a clark in a sthore or office or write books or do sumthin' ilse that&#13;
pays thim better, and so now it's gettin' so we can't hardly git a girl to wark in the&#13;
kitchen at all. Oi waz radin' in the nusepaper only a few days ago of a man&#13;
who had foive girls and ivery wan of thim wint off to college and gradjiated. Well,&#13;
wan of thim married a pracher and anither a lawyir and an ither a docther and the&#13;
ither too wint out fir thimsilves, wan to write books and the ither to tache in a college&#13;
sum where.&#13;
Thin thare's an ither thing too-thase idjicated chaps won't marry our common&#13;
girls; they want sum of thare high sthrung idjicated girls or they will niver marry at&#13;
all. Wy right here in Scraggsville we had a young spalpeen of a docthe r and a&#13;
young pracher that Oi thot ware purty foine min fir bein' idjicated, till Oi tried to git&#13;
thim to marry me dauthers and they up a nd wint down thare to Soo City and came&#13;
back married to a couple of yer college girls and that fixed me.&#13;
And thase idjicated girls are entoirely too sthuck up altogither. They won't&#13;
think of marryin' a good onisht farmer or warkingman. Jist lasht wake the girl me&#13;
ouldest son, Michael, used to kape company wid before she wint off to college, waz&#13;
married to a young saplyn in Scraggsville, the banker's son, and he ish idjiated too.&#13;
Thin thase idjicated fellies want to be ilicted fir prisidint and too go to congriss and the ligislathure and all thase political jobs, and it has got so now that a&#13;
man can't hardly git ilicted to anny office- even a skule director-without an idjication, and an onisht hard warkingman if he ish ilicted fir an office, sum raskal of an&#13;
idjicated fellie will aitlter bate him out of it or wark him to vote ash he wants him to&#13;
annyhow. Thin thare ish all this hulabaloo that thase idjicated fellies ish makin'&#13;
about idjicatin' ivery wan to make the warld better and wizer, and all that kind of&#13;
flummerydiddle. Who iver knew anny wan better and wizer than Abraham Link un,&#13;
or Sam Knoer, or Ray Tooth ak er? And none of thim fellies is idjicated. And&#13;
ferninst all that, our worst min and biggest fools have all bin idjicated. Thare's&#13;
Dooey, ash soon ash he could git to Amerika after the battle of Manillie he wint and&#13;
got fooled by that ould widdie. And Hobson lit foive hundred girls all shlobbe r&#13;
over him in wan day. Thin Sampson and Shley both run a race and had to have a&#13;
special court and trial to see which waz the biggest fool. Aven the Good Book itsilf&#13;
&#13;
105&#13;
&#13;
�sez sumthin' about it tak es an idjicated fellie to make a go -d raskaL (Oi am not so&#13;
well posted on Skriptur as Oi m oight be, so Oi can't te ll yez ixactly where that ish&#13;
found, but yez fellies wil I kno w,) And thase idjicated rasbkals will wark wan of us&#13;
common sthicks ivery toime he gits a chance; and do yez think wan of us could wark&#13;
thim? Not by the half o' pint of buttermilk! And whin it comes into polyticks this&#13;
wan same idjica ted fe llie will wark a whoul e million of us chaps to vote fir him, and&#13;
a whoule regiment of us fellies wid a petishun ash long ash d oomsday could not influ ence th e little finge r of wan of thim after h e ish ilicted,&#13;
Thin whin a fellie g its idjicated he allus wants ive ry wa n ilse to git idjicated&#13;
too, and yez fellies kno w ash well ash Oi d o that whinive r a man goes into wick edness he wants ive ry wan ilse to go in too, That's wan of the warst thing about idjication, and fir that rason Oi don't kn ow whithe r Oi'll lit m e boi Eddie go back to&#13;
college an ny mo re or not, fir he's allus a talkin ' about college, and lan g uage, and&#13;
reto rick, and g ramm e r, and feet ball and sich foo lishness, and now h e's got the ithe r&#13;
b ois all a wantin' to go to college too,&#13;
Thin they te ll us th at if the farm ers waz all idjicated so they cou ld all farm&#13;
sientifickally th e land would produce twice as much, Now if that ish so, thin it&#13;
wouldent take ounly half ash many min to wark th e land and thin yez see wan half&#13;
of the min would be out of a job and wan half of the land would have to lay oidle, or&#13;
ilse we would l1ave to se ll it to sum wan ilse,&#13;
Thin if ive ry wan waz idjicated they would know how to be th eir ow n lawyir&#13;
and docther and pracher and skule tach er, so yez see it would lave out of imploimint&#13;
sich a lot of min and wimmin that the country would be flood ed with tramps- both&#13;
mail and faymail - look in' fir an idjicated job whin thare wouldent be no idjicated job&#13;
a look in' fir thim,&#13;
Thin thare ish a lot more that moig ht be said against idjication, but Eddie&#13;
tould me yez ounly wanted a thousand wards, and so Oi must draw me conclusions&#13;
and conclude,&#13;
Thin look in' the quistion square betwane the oyes a nd the mouth, Oi would say&#13;
that firsht thare probabl y allus will be idjicated min, fir avils allus did ixisht and&#13;
they probably all us will, fir a few of ihim mixed in are all roight and necesshary fir&#13;
the country, fir th e Boible sez, yez know, that it takes all kinds of payple to make a&#13;
warld, Thin the thing to do ish to conthrol the a vii ash besht we ca n, jist loike we&#13;
would control the lick er aviL And m e way of control Jin' the c ritter ish thi s- to idjica te ounly a shmall numbe r of our bois and g irls- jist enough to make our lawyirs&#13;
and docthe rs and prachers and skule tach e rs and the loikes, and th e rist kape at&#13;
hom e on the farm and larn thim to be onisht hard-wo rking min loike thare fathers&#13;
and mithers.&#13;
Oi hav e siventane chilclern m esilf- Mary, Michael, Willie, Lizzie, Barney,&#13;
Patrick, Josie, Eddie, Maggie, Johnny, J emmi e, Kati e, D e nnis, Tim, Joseph, Moike&#13;
and the baby. Thin th are's too of thase bois th at ain 't rale sharp, Barney and Eddie,&#13;
and Oi do n't think th ey will iver b e much on th e farm, so Oi'll sine! thim to college&#13;
and icljicate wan fir a prache r and the ither fir a docther. Eddie has already bin&#13;
goin' toyer college thare at Mornin side, but Oi g uess all he's learned the first year&#13;
waz th e college yells and feet ball. Thin Kate she ish a kind of a wak e, frail, sickly&#13;
c ritte r. She never waz anny good around the house and waz not sthrong enoug h to&#13;
do the chores around the barn, so Oi'll idjicate h er fir a skule m a rm. And thin Oi&#13;
think Oi've clone m e duty fir me country, and if a ny of yez icljicated fellies ca n do&#13;
better tha n that Oi'cl loike to h ave him try.&#13;
&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
How the World Became Round&#13;
&#13;
Professor&#13;
&#13;
KANOVER, a philospher wise, was discoursing&#13;
-upon the rotundity of the earth, The class was sleeping by&#13;
turns that relaxing May afternoon, A fly buzzed in through&#13;
the open window, but upon finding what class it was getting&#13;
into, quickly sped out into the world of ig norance,&#13;
"That the world wa·s flat," continued the professor, "up to the&#13;
time of the Romans at least, there is no doubt. We read of the imperial legions marching to the faur corners of the earth there were&#13;
roads leading diagonally across from the one to the other. At the&#13;
cross-roads stood Rome.&#13;
"During the Dark Ages, however, great changes took place.&#13;
Everything became so corrupt and warped that even the earth itself&#13;
became deflected. In the course of those hundreds of years the outer&#13;
edges of the earth met and gradually united. A process of rolling&#13;
set in, working the mass into the ball or globe which we now have.&#13;
"Proof of this rounding process is given by the Leaning T ower&#13;
of Pisa which was originally perpendicular, but which now leans&#13;
very perceptibly to one side. This is the only building in the world&#13;
that has tilted correspondingl y with the land upon which it stands.&#13;
By measuring the angle formed by this tower and the true perpendicular, men of science have estimated the curvature of the earth's&#13;
surface, and from this the diameter and circumference."&#13;
The bell rang.&#13;
"Wake up," shouted the professor, "you're dismissed."&#13;
&#13;
Impersonating the President&#13;
E day during the Christmas vacation a Sophomore wen t ove r to Main Hall&#13;
to do some typewriting, Upon arriving t he re he found th at the typewriter&#13;
he wanted was in the President's offi ce. Will H atch knew that h e had no&#13;
business in there but then, the Doctor was ou t of tow n and p robably the&#13;
Dean was, too, If the re is anything a second year stude nt won't do it must&#13;
b e something that he neve r thought of, fo r with them, to think is to act. Bill H atch&#13;
was no exception. A skeleton key opened the door. Page afte r page of history&#13;
notes were copied, But what a heap of them there were! Eve r since October.&#13;
The typewriter stopped suddenly.&#13;
Foot steps were approaching th e door. Presen t ly&#13;
someone k nocked,&#13;
If it is some new stude nt I'll h ave to p lay t he role of President,&#13;
tod ay, thought Bill. Stepping softly but fi rml y ove r to the door, h e opened it.&#13;
" Are you the P resident of this institution?" asked the young man who appeared&#13;
at the d oor, h is voice a lmost failing him.&#13;
107&#13;
&#13;
�Mr. Zebulem was entertai_ ed at Park Place Hall and 7 :30 o'clock&#13;
n&#13;
found him advantageously seated in central row at the auditorium .&#13;
When the debators hung their charts Mr. Zebulem beckoned to&#13;
him, with his finger, one of the ushers and asked him in whispered&#13;
tones which could be heard all over the hall, "Say, sonnie, (as he&#13;
pointed to the charts) is this hare to be a missionary meeten?" At&#13;
last the glad hour had arrived Mr. Zebulem was consumed in attention. When one of the speakers asked one of his opponents, "Where&#13;
did you get your black hair?" Mr. Zebulem 's eyes fairly danced and&#13;
with a significant smile, he so vigorously rubbed his bald head with&#13;
his hard hand that it seemed the sparks would fly. During the demonstration which followed the announcement of the judge's decision&#13;
Mr. Zebulem almost shouted to Dr. Lewis. "Say Mr. Doctor, I call&#13;
that thar fine debaten. Youve got six mightee fine chaps thar. Them&#13;
fellers what lost have got some mightee good debaters but they didnt&#13;
pull together like unto them other fellers. Gee-e they made me think&#13;
of my old Jim and Fan and Tom, as fine pullers as was ever hitched&#13;
to an eavenor.&#13;
After talking to Mr. Zebulem concerning his boy, Dr. Lewis&#13;
excused himself very gracefully and bade Mr. Z. good-night. On the&#13;
following day Mr. Zebulem returned home, and in about a week the&#13;
Dean received the following letter:DEER MISTER DEEN:&#13;
I got home all rite Billy wus watin fur me and as soone as we dun sum tradin&#13;
an loded a grindestone in the waggun we set out fur home i tolde Bill what I sene out&#13;
thar at sue sitee an I tell you he was mity tichekled then I sayd Bill if you wurk hard&#13;
tel le next falle ile send you out thar to skule. You just orter see Bi ll , he flize arond&#13;
and wunt let me doo hardley nuthen. Mistre deen i wishe youde git Bill a gud plac&#13;
to borde fur I didn't hav time too luch arounde when I wus thar.&#13;
Yors etch,&#13;
EZEKIEL ZEBULEM.&#13;
&#13;
Deck Them With Flowers&#13;
Then scatter bright flowers for the gray&#13;
and the blue,&#13;
To show they were brothers and they&#13;
have been true.&#13;
From East or from West, from the South&#13;
or the North&#13;
What matter? They're brothers. The&#13;
flag! Bring it forth.&#13;
&#13;
We come with our garland of lilies replete&#13;
With the dew of the morn; and we cast&#13;
at the feet&#13;
Of warriors whose bravery well may we&#13;
praise, •&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
And with adoration our voices we raise.&#13;
We deck them with earth's fairest blossoms today,&#13;
With violets, lilies and roses so gay;&#13;
With myrtle and peonies and smilax entwine&#13;
The tombs of those dear ones- your fathers and mine.&#13;
&#13;
Then wrap 'round their tomb-stones Old&#13;
Glory, our boastAnd echo their praise from the Lakes to&#13;
the Coast,&#13;
And tell how they fought to retain for the&#13;
youth&#13;
The Union, its purity, valor and truth.&#13;
&#13;
Then echo their praise from the Lakes to&#13;
the Coast,&#13;
And wrap 'round their tomb-stones Old&#13;
Glory, our boastAnd tell how they fought to preserve to&#13;
the youth&#13;
The Union, its purity, valor and truth.&#13;
&#13;
Nor fail to recall how in battle some fell,&#13;
While others have lived these old tales&#13;
to re-tell&#13;
Of battle and prison, of hunger and cold,&#13;
Of fever and wounds and of mis'ry untold.&#13;
Remember to say how in camp many died,&#13;
With dying companions in cots at each&#13;
side;&#13;
Who, trying but vainly to stem fever's&#13;
tide,&#13;
Were dreaming of home over lands far&#13;
and wide.&#13;
Then bring forth your wreaths and the&#13;
sprays of pure white,&#13;
To cover the mounds that enfold from&#13;
our sight&#13;
The dear ones whose bravery fills many&#13;
a page,&#13;
Whose names will not tarnish nor rust&#13;
o'er with age.&#13;
&#13;
Then speak of the boys who went down&#13;
with the Maine,&#13;
Of ships bringing home those dead heroes&#13;
again;&#13;
.&#13;
To those weeping sore this one hope with&#13;
the pain&#13;
.&#13;
That now what to friends 'is but loss 1s&#13;
their gain.&#13;
And do not forget when Columbia's host&#13;
Of brave ones you mention to name with&#13;
your boast,&#13;
..&#13;
The heroes in Cuba, in Phillipines too;&#13;
Behold how they fought 'neath the red,&#13;
white and blue.&#13;
&#13;
Then leave them with well-deserved&#13;
peace so serene,&#13;
Well covered with flags in a mantle of&#13;
green;&#13;
And under the starry folds well may they&#13;
rest,&#13;
At peace with their God in the home of&#13;
the blest.&#13;
BIRD EASTON.&#13;
&#13;
We saw, with the blue coats, the soldiers&#13;
in gray,&#13;
And flying the same starry emblem that&#13;
day;&#13;
United they stood to make Cuba as free&#13;
As brave young America ever shall be.&#13;
&#13;
Lines Upon Discovering a Violet&#13;
May 4, 1902&#13;
&#13;
Off for Morningside.&#13;
I IO&#13;
&#13;
Thy life; 'tis in my hand, I see;&#13;
But shall it ravished be&#13;
For a moment of intensity&#13;
Of pleasure, fancy free?&#13;
&#13;
Nay, I touch thee not. I fain&#13;
Would by thee please my sense;&#13;
But hands more innocent than mine&#13;
Thy life shall recompense.&#13;
&#13;
.. ....&#13;
&#13;
And shall I pluck thee, purple beauty,&#13;
From thy native bed,&#13;
And establish thy mortality&#13;
By thy drooping head.&#13;
&#13;
Expression of the Infinite,&#13;
Who made us both,&#13;
I dare not, ruthless. bid thee plight&#13;
To me thy troth.&#13;
&#13;
Woundless on thy mossy bed remain.&#13;
Thou hast not murmured:&#13;
Yet, unworthy hand refrain.&#13;
IRA ALDRICH.&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
�A Dream Lesson&#13;
&#13;
Oh his head it was crammed&#13;
It was crowded, it was jammed,&#13;
With the convolusions of his massive&#13;
intellect,&#13;
And the jokes that he cracked,&#13;
Were funny, that's a fact,&#13;
For he alone a point could e'er detect.&#13;
&#13;
Through veilings darkly seen.&#13;
Confusion. reigned supreme&#13;
And chaos its domain.&#13;
&#13;
I sank to rest and sleep;&#13;
And as I slept I dreamed&#13;
A dream most wondrous, for&#13;
In foreign land I was&#13;
And unfamiliar sights&#13;
My startled eyes beheld.&#13;
&#13;
Sharp beams of visional light&#13;
Then burst the murky screen&#13;
And clear as midday sun&#13;
Another cross stood by&#13;
Upon its front outstretched&#13;
A form familiar, I,&#13;
With tremulous eyes beheld;&#13;
For my blood stained the beams.&#13;
&#13;
Sudden the sky was dark&#13;
The earth beneath my feet&#13;
Trembled, and, sore afraid,&#13;
I looked above and saw&#13;
Upon the mountains brow&#13;
The ancient crucifix,&#13;
My Lord upon it nailed;&#13;
And round about a glow&#13;
Of heavenly light was shed.&#13;
&#13;
Instantly wide awake&#13;
I pondered on the sight&#13;
And home this lesson came,If men through me may find&#13;
Him, whom to find is life,&#13;
His suffering must in me&#13;
Find fitting counterpartAnd yet I nothing lose&#13;
But infinitely gain;&#13;
For, the Glory that shall be,&#13;
As noontide glare the night&#13;
Shall grief and pain outshine.&#13;
&#13;
Rapt on Him I gazed&#13;
And longed to ga in from him&#13;
A recognizing glance&#13;
But as I nearer drew&#13;
The vision vanished quite.&#13;
Half dreaming still I lay&#13;
And pondered what it meant;&#13;
When, from the darkened room,&#13;
New forms and shadows came&#13;
Like changeable eidolons&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
IRA&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH.&#13;
&#13;
Once he tried reporting,&#13;
Public favor courting,&#13;
And he covered printer's paper by the&#13;
ream,&#13;
Once he thought to war he'd go&#13;
Be a hero, don't you knowBut he gave that all up, later, as an empty,&#13;
foolish dream,&#13;
Now in chemistry he delves&#13;
Among the bottles on his shelves,&#13;
With bulbs, and tubes, and much such&#13;
curious apparatusAnd with H 2 0&#13;
And stuff like that, you know,&#13;
He's everlastingly attempting to inflate us.&#13;
&#13;
0, there once was a youth&#13;
A living, breathing proof&#13;
That Mother Nature sometimes cuts an&#13;
anticFor he was, so to speak&#13;
A natural freak&#13;
On a scale that was perfectly gigantic.&#13;
&#13;
But the evening hours are spent&#13;
In giving temporary vent&#13;
To the love that fills his heart with suffocation:&#13;
When his evening clothes are&#13;
donned,&#13;
He goes calling on his blond,&#13;
Tender object of his manly adoration.&#13;
&#13;
(All rights reserved)&#13;
&#13;
Bound&#13;
An artist before an easel stood&#13;
With feature of thotful care,&#13;
An image in the eye of his soul,&#13;
He wished with the world to share.&#13;
&#13;
Yet the world sang his praises,&#13;
In his art they saw heaven's chi Id.&#13;
To them it was a masterpiece,&#13;
To him, a dream by flesh defiled.&#13;
&#13;
But words cannot utter,&#13;
What the heart can feel;&#13;
Bard sing the song he hears;&#13;
Colors express an ideal.&#13;
&#13;
Thus perish angel whispers,&#13;
Man's toil and skill and art,&#13;
Fail to reveal the yearning,&#13;
Of Word Divin e and human heart.&#13;
&#13;
He worked by day, by night he toiled,&#13;
With pencil and brush and pen,&#13;
Heartbroken- every effort foiled&#13;
A rapturous vision tarnished and soiled&#13;
In passing from mind to men.&#13;
&#13;
The stately lily transplanted,&#13;
Crumbles in the desert drought&#13;
Tones and thot ethereal&#13;
Fade from hand to mouth.&#13;
&#13;
Six feet three&#13;
In his stockings measured he A good six feet, if an inch,&#13;
And the number seventeens&#13;
At the bottom of his jeans&#13;
Fitted him exactly- at a pinch.&#13;
&#13;
And he notes her shy affection,&#13;
Smiling at the recollection,&#13;
That a rival once his peace of mind&#13;
molested:&#13;
And he thinks with quiet glee"Tis very far across the sea&#13;
And they say that land with natives is&#13;
infested!"&#13;
&#13;
He was famous far and wide&#13;
Throughout the country side&#13;
For the size of his mighty understanding.&#13;
And he held himself as straight&#13;
As an ancient potentate&#13;
With a manner quite as haughty and&#13;
commanding.&#13;
&#13;
The First Snow, December 4, 1901&#13;
&#13;
The Spirit longs to break the bonds,&#13;
Fettering, stifling its symphony,&#13;
Take its flight forever free&#13;
In winged immortality.&#13;
HANS NISSEN.&#13;
&#13;
112&#13;
&#13;
Farewell to the rose,&#13;
And the woodland repose,&#13;
And the circus and medicine show;&#13;
And the midsummer swim;&#13;
And the frogs vesper hymn&#13;
Let us welcome the magic white show.&#13;
How it sifts! How it slides!&#13;
How it drifts! How it glides!&#13;
And the pink to the cheek quickly brings.&#13;
E'en the sluggard steps quick,&#13;
To the coop hies the chick,&#13;
And the wind a weird melody sings.&#13;
&#13;
See! The dust in the road,&#13;
Stirred as load after load&#13;
The vehicles pass on their way,&#13;
It is mixed with the snow,&#13;
Where the grinding wheels go,&#13;
Into uncommon chocolate-gray.&#13;
The shimmering sheen&#13;
Of the great milky scene,&#13;
As the restless flakes glint in the sun.&#13;
How it dazzles the eyes!&#13;
Fills with gladsome surprise!&#13;
And makes the wide universe one.&#13;
IRA R. ALDRICH.&#13;
113&#13;
&#13;
�October&#13;
September&#13;
Senior Prognosticator denies the possibility of the '03 Annual.&#13;
4&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Football squad assembles.&#13;
New student attended a spiritualist show, thinking it was to be&#13;
a religious service.&#13;
Enrollment begins.&#13;
First appearance of Collegian Reporter under new management. Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. reception for new students.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Geo . Stephens returns with his Degree M. D.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
McKinley Memorial.&#13;
Oratorical Association election. Zet-Otho promenade.&#13;
Football game at Vermillion. Captain Finch seriously injured.&#13;
Dr. Lewis labels a new batch (See Nov. 1 .)&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
"Rickety, Rickety, Rickety Rix!&#13;
We are, We are, Doctor's Chicks!&#13;
We'll hatch out in 19o6."&#13;
28 Junior Class incorporate. D. M. Simpson elected president of the class. Miss Hieby&#13;
secretary. Geo. W. Finch elected as editor.in-chief of Junior Annual.&#13;
30 Subs vs. City High School. Subs win 5- 0. Cain rush on side line. It was reported there&#13;
was a little watermelon meeting after ten o'clock without the consent of the Dean.&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Blackwell returns accompanying his Burnsides.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Brown sports a spud (potato) for a watch charm.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
22&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
28&#13;
29&#13;
30&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Music and art students take to the woods. Sam Knoer,&#13;
assisted by six freshmen, rescue Miss Hobbs from a&#13;
watery grave.&#13;
Dr. Henson lectures on "Fools." Many were present.&#13;
Morningside defeats Yankton at football; score, 5-0. Faculty shows signs of life.&#13;
"Gigger" receives football trophy.&#13;
Death of Mrs. Kanthlener.&#13;
Senior Prognosticator launches new argument against appearance of the '03 Annual.&#13;
Harding visits his charge at Meriden.&#13;
Philo Grand Public. Mitchell-Morningside football game.&#13;
Keep quiet.&#13;
First appearance of Prof. Wylie's "French Point."&#13;
Organization of a Basket Ball Team.&#13;
Othos receive a challenge from Philos to debate.&#13;
Basket Ball Association organized.&#13;
Aldrich "goes back" to his old charge at Rock Rapids.&#13;
Enthusiastically received.&#13;
Platts tries to steal a ride on the train leading out of "Main&#13;
Hall." Morningside, 17; Yankton, 5.&#13;
Atheneums revel in the ravine. Thev prefer to walk&#13;
home.&#13;
Dr. Lewis holds a joint meeting of the two literary societies&#13;
and encourages Intersociety Debate.&#13;
Melson complains of the length of the twilight at Claverac.&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The day immediately following Monday.&#13;
Wednesday. Semester exams.&#13;
Halloween- Annual Collegiate Entertainment.&#13;
Judges&#13;
award palm to Juniors.&#13;
&#13;
119&#13;
&#13;
118&#13;
&#13;
�January&#13;
4 Cards appear in all the Sioux City street cars, "Beware of&#13;
Accident."&#13;
5 Sunday. Large number of new students at church.&#13;
6 Trunks and two loads of band boxes hauled up.&#13;
7 Enrollment begins.&#13;
8 Working powers of enrolling officers taxed by the heavy&#13;
arrival of all students at 4 p. m.&#13;
9 Frary confidentially advises the Illustrating Committee&#13;
that an Annual will be an impossibility.&#13;
10 Nuthin duin.&#13;
11 Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. reception. Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus&#13;
re-visit Morningside. Peters makes the "waist" places&#13;
glad.&#13;
12 Preaching.&#13;
13 Dean recommends Omaha confidence man, who takes&#13;
photographs and takes in many men. Prof. Van Horne&#13;
has the list of fleeced.&#13;
14 Dr. Buckley's lecture on "The Hall of Fame." Many&#13;
famous men mentioned.&#13;
15 Fifteen "Preps" covenant together to write their name in&#13;
the "Hall of Fame."&#13;
16 C. F. Eberly receives distinction at chapel. Wickersham&#13;
pays glowing tribute to him.&#13;
17 "Please arise."&#13;
18 "You are at liberty."&#13;
19 Sunday.&#13;
20 Hawkeye goat gets fierce.&#13;
21 Indoor track meet. Morningside wins. Basket ball.&#13;
22 Eberly lectures at science club. Astounding facts brought&#13;
to light concerning Sioux City water.&#13;
23 Somebody's birthday.&#13;
24 Miss Marsh entertains visitor. Morgan attempts suicide.&#13;
Is rususcitated by Dad Eberly.&#13;
25 Faculty all present at chapel except fifteen members.&#13;
26 Sunday. Miss Lydia Trimble speaks.&#13;
27 Dean forgets to order coal.&#13;
28 Fire all out. Jacob Riis lectures on Slum Problem.&#13;
29 Dr. Haynes tries four chairs, and finally finds one that&#13;
suits him.&#13;
30 Day of Prayer for colleges. Prexie and Yeager take a nap&#13;
in chapel, while Dr. Day preaches.&#13;
122&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
26&#13;
27&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Annual christened the "Bumble Bee of 1903." Elixir&#13;
of youth works wonders at Zet. program. Calvin Hall&#13;
goes home with a girl on one arm and a highchair on&#13;
the other.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Underhill recites Rip Van Winkle.&#13;
Frary nearly stung by a Bumble Bee.&#13;
Miss Armstrong and Nash forgot to draw the blinds.&#13;
Ask Miss Armstrong if the candy was good.&#13;
Faculty submitted list of judges for Inter-Society debate.&#13;
Privilege of studying on the stairs is again withdrawn.&#13;
Prof. A. 0. Sifert of Blue and White Came visited the&#13;
college.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Young and Platts hold preliminary debate.&#13;
Revival meetings in progress.&#13;
70th anniversary of Lincoln's birthday. Rousing business meetings in societies.&#13;
Dean late to chapel. Harding and Platts visit Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan University.&#13;
Zet Grand Public.&#13;
Sunday. Great meetings at Grace Church.&#13;
John B. Gordon lectures on "The Last Days of the Confederacy."&#13;
Enthusiasm grows warm over the debate.&#13;
Enthusiasm grows hot over debate.&#13;
Societies hold all day sessions.&#13;
Inter-Society debate. Othonians win. Donor of prize&#13;
not to be made known for a few days.&#13;
Zets banquet the Othos. Delegates leave for Toronto.&#13;
Sunday. Harding and Platts, after woeful deliberation,&#13;
cancel order for Otho Tombstone.&#13;
The Misses Flathers and Harding enter pugilistic arena.&#13;
Pictures are requested by the Chicago American and&#13;
Police Gazette. No issue of the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
Cut out.&#13;
Prof. C. E. B. Sawbuck's lecture recital.&#13;
Delegation left for Oratorical Contest.&#13;
Weather Bureau makes a mistake and March wind&#13;
arrives fifteen hours early.&#13;
&#13;
123&#13;
&#13;
�March&#13;
Intercollegiate Debaters named by the Faculty. Wilder&#13;
decides to give up entering the Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
until next fall.&#13;
2&#13;
Sunday&#13;
3 The making known of the donor of the Intersociety&#13;
Prize still deferred.&#13;
4 Debut of College Orchestra. Faculty takes corner seats&#13;
in chapel.&#13;
5 Harding gives war-whoop in chapel.&#13;
6&#13;
Lecture by the Dean, "Curiosity vs. Knowledge." Orchestra forgets to play march.&#13;
7 Great tragedy in "Prepdom:" John Price gets his hair&#13;
cut.&#13;
8 Miss Hazel Oak entertains company. Pa and Ma forget to go to bed .&#13;
9 Sunday. Preaching services.&#13;
10 All events blew away.&#13;
I I&#13;
Coach Flanagan hired as Dean of Athletics. Morningside wins two basket ball games.&#13;
12 Piled up what we did yesterday.&#13;
13 Photographer&#13;
comes to college and takes pictures.&#13;
14 Social rennaisance in Prepdom . Middles banquet Seniors.&#13;
15 Knoer and Mossman come to blows in recitation room&#13;
just as Dr. Haynes appears.&#13;
16 The Sabbath.&#13;
17 Othonian Grand Public.&#13;
18 Prof. Wylie reveals botanical facts to Sioux City Science&#13;
Club.&#13;
19 Social·time at Park Place.&#13;
20 Athletic Park launched. Color Committee appointed.&#13;
21&#13;
Wmdy day.&#13;
22 Logic class play "hookey."&#13;
23 Sunday.&#13;
·&#13;
24 John G. Wooley lectures.&#13;
25 Term Concert of Conservatory of Music.&#13;
26 Examinations begin. Morningside wins in basket ball&#13;
carnival.&#13;
27 Senior Preparatory Declamatory Contest. Miss Harding wins first place.&#13;
28 Ross Brown entertains Seniors. Frary moves "That a&#13;
fine of fifty cents be imposed on those mentioning the&#13;
nam e of the abominable Bumble Bee during the evening."&#13;
29 School out. Knoer accompanies Miss Hobbs to train.&#13;
31 Annual Board sits in session.&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
Platts eats a bar of Sapolio without wavering. Verily the&#13;
inner man should rejoice.&#13;
Miss Cook makes cake for a friend. Lecture- Acres of&#13;
7&#13;
Diamonds.&#13;
8 School opens. Forty-seven at chapel.&#13;
9 As to who the donor of the Inter-Society debate prize is,&#13;
deferred till the decision of the Inter-collegiate is given.&#13;
IO Five Juniors and twelve Seniors are hung up till they find&#13;
it convenient to orate.&#13;
Senior President advertises for orations offering good price.&#13;
II&#13;
Ad answered by a Junior.&#13;
12 Doctor tests his eggs, to see about how many are going to&#13;
hatch.- A little more heat.&#13;
13 Sunday.&#13;
14 Ade lphian Society pins appear.&#13;
15 (a) College colors changed. (b) Othos submit question for&#13;
next year's Inter-Society debate.&#13;
16 Frary dreams of hunting Bumble Bees.&#13;
17 A new assistant in the department of Min eralogy appears.&#13;
Prof. Barsalou looks with displeasure upon too many&#13;
lady assistants.&#13;
18 Mosquitos arrive at Young's office. They take the editor&#13;
first.&#13;
19 Baseball-Le Mars High School 14, Morningside 6.&#13;
20 Sunday.&#13;
22 A new sprinter develops. Dr. Cook makes a sensational&#13;
run of half mile to fire in Dr. Lewis' cook stove.&#13;
23 Philo Debaters named for Inter-Society Debate next year.&#13;
Wilder postpones his plans for another season.&#13;
24 Baseball - Washburn 11, Morningside 4.&#13;
25 Heavi est straight winds this country has ever known·&#13;
$25,000 damage. All pictures repainted in water colors·&#13;
Miss Dimmitt loses umbrella. Prof. Wylie takes balloon&#13;
ride. Miss Lothian embraces a post. Street cars stop&#13;
in deference to the wind.&#13;
26 Dr. Cook acts as judge for Anna Eva Fayke.&#13;
27 Frary and Seaver write their orations using sacred subjects&#13;
"For Conscience Sake."&#13;
28 First Adelphian Public ("Howling Success").&#13;
29 Recital of Students of Elocution .&#13;
30 Wickersham Lecture "Chickens Come home to Roost."&#13;
&#13;
124&#13;
125&#13;
&#13;
�Buzzing's&#13;
&#13;
of the Bumble Bee&#13;
&#13;
Mod est little Minkler&#13;
Cail ed at Hiawatha.&#13;
Who for? What fo r? Why for?&#13;
Hiawathaens do not know.&#13;
Which: -Is most irritating to the Dean, the janito r's watch or th e whoo ping&#13;
co ugh?&#13;
Park Platz ist ein schone r Plat z,&#13;
Ein scho ner Plat z zu gehen,&#13;
Wir gingen bin zu singen&#13;
Und die Madchen zu sehen.&#13;
&#13;
From the Archives&#13;
&#13;
A ll students shall be expected to receive the company of students of the opposite sex in the parlo rs of th eir b oarding place. The lad ies and gentlemen of th e&#13;
University a re expected to treat each other with the courtesy and civility which prevail in re fined society, and th e limitations in th e conduct of the sexes recognized by a&#13;
Christian family, will be th e limitations for the University.&#13;
&#13;
An&#13;
&#13;
every day event in&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Suggestions by the Bumble Bee&#13;
&#13;
That Millner fall in love with somebody else's girl.&#13;
chronic apa thy.&#13;
&#13;
That the Faculty have a chapel card.&#13;
&#13;
The Bumble Bee Can Recommend&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Wylie to bra ve sparks in his Tab.&#13;
Shideler to part his hair in the middle.&#13;
Simon Stulken to eat with the cook.&#13;
Miss Harding on Hall Committee.&#13;
&#13;
room&#13;
&#13;
It is the best tonic for&#13;
&#13;
That someone make the Dean a present of a memorandum book.&#13;
That Minkler grease the hinges on his gai t.&#13;
That Dr. Cook b e provided with a small express cart in whi ch to transport his&#13;
hand grenade to and from fires.&#13;
That Park-Place Nunnery adv ertise for a few more resident Nuns.&#13;
&#13;
Will Fry to catch an 8:40 train.&#13;
The Basket Ball Team to win games.&#13;
Guy Frary to mak e fouls- "arm around."&#13;
Bessie Carl to substitute Bible for Latin Dictionary.&#13;
Hulser to kill a chicken, if you give him time enough.&#13;
&#13;
cloak&#13;
&#13;
To the Terrestrial Globe&#13;
&#13;
for eve ry seven years the reafter he shortens one inch in hei g ht.&#13;
How long will Asa Brower have to live&#13;
for his corns to give him the headache?&#13;
&#13;
Roll on, thou ball, roll on!&#13;
Through pathless realms of space&#13;
Rol l on!&#13;
What tho I 'm in a sorry ca se?&#13;
What tho I cannot m eet my bills?&#13;
What tho I suffer toothache il ls?&#13;
What tho I swallow countl ess pills?&#13;
Never you mind .&#13;
Roll on.&#13;
&#13;
The Evils of the Times&#13;
&#13;
Roll on, thou ball, ro ll on!&#13;
Thru seas of inky a ir&#13;
R oll o n!&#13;
Its tru e I've got no shirts to wear,&#13;
Its tru e my board b ill still is due,&#13;
Its tru e m y prospects all look blue,&#13;
But don't let this unsett le you!&#13;
N e ver you mind !&#13;
R oll on.&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Novembe r 26,&#13;
&#13;
Mathematical Problem&#13;
&#13;
It is scientifically d emonstrated that&#13;
when a man reaches the age of fifty years&#13;
&#13;
November 27.&#13;
131&#13;
&#13;
�Facultian Privileges&#13;
&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
Black Board&#13;
&#13;
The Dean- To crack jokes and laugh at&#13;
them.&#13;
Kanthlener-To train for contortionist.&#13;
Loveland- To unmercifully slash orations&#13;
Greene- To flirt.&#13;
Greynald- To hoe potatoes on Sunday.&#13;
Dimmitt- None whatever allowed for&#13;
fear of trouble.&#13;
Hickman- To excuse herself from chapel.&#13;
Blackwell - The faculty's scapegoat (Secretary.)&#13;
Brown- To jump his job.&#13;
Patterson - To draw everything but her&#13;
salary.&#13;
Barbour-To storm when the sun shines.&#13;
Ferguson- To edit Red Deutsch books.&#13;
Wylie-To ask misleading questions.&#13;
Van Horne-- To get rattled.&#13;
Cook-To build new Science Hall.&#13;
Lothian-- To keep Emory's memory green&#13;
THERE ARE TOO MANY LOBSTERS HANGING&#13;
AROUND THE CLOAK ROOMS.&#13;
&#13;
Letter Ho:rne&#13;
&#13;
CRESCENT GIRL- (In accents of surprise)- Whv, did you hear that they had&#13;
the smallpox at Flather's?&#13;
AESTHESIAN GIRL- Who, vou don't&#13;
say, have the girls there got it?&#13;
CRESCENT-No; they happened to be&#13;
out when the yellow sign was tacked up.&#13;
AESTHESIAN- (Perplexed)- Why, people will be afraid to take them in; where&#13;
are they going to stay?&#13;
CRESCENT-I understand Mamie is going to room at Mrs.- -and Emma has&#13;
gone to Frary's.&#13;
AESTHESIAN- Aw ! fudge!&#13;
The Mystery of the West Lobby; or&#13;
How did Eberly's Cap and Gown get out&#13;
of His Locker?&#13;
&#13;
Problem&#13;
&#13;
HYPOTHESISSuppose one Dean Lymer held a Logic&#13;
Class;&#13;
Suppose there were nine present as&#13;
usual;&#13;
Suppose the Doctor is detained outside;&#13;
QUESTIONHow many persons can leave the room,&#13;
thru the window, one at a time, allowing&#13;
five minutes for penny matching, before&#13;
the Doctor puts in his appearance?&#13;
ANSWER- Nine.&#13;
This has been experimentally demonstrated.&#13;
&#13;
DEAR FOLKS:"Tempus fugit'' and with difficulty I find time to write this short letter. I take&#13;
bioligy now, keeps me hustling. Yesterday we had to count the leaves on a maple&#13;
tree, twenty feet high. Today we will have a centipede to examine. Prof. wants&#13;
me to count his legs and see if he has the right number.&#13;
Excuse brevity, for I must determine how old a water plant is before it can&#13;
swim.&#13;
Hastily your son,&#13;
JOHN.&#13;
P. S. - The price of board has advanced.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson's Memorandum Leaf&#13;
Found on the Campus&#13;
&#13;
PROF. CooK--(In chemistry class) "The young ladies may answer,&#13;
None respond.&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMAN OF PICTURE COMMITTEE&#13;
(said of several)- I'm sure, it wasn't the&#13;
photographer's fault that her picture was&#13;
poor.&#13;
&#13;
"If a Senior meets a Freshie,&#13;
Comin' tnro' the hall,&#13;
If a Senior kicks a Freshie,&#13;
Need a Freshie bawl?&#13;
Every Freshie has his troubles,&#13;
None, they say, ha' I;&#13;
Yet when a brutal Senior kicks me,&#13;
I canna help but cry."&#13;
&#13;
Hark! hark! the dogs do bark,&#13;
The Seniors are coming to town,&#13;
None in rags, none in tags,&#13;
But all in Monkish gowns.&#13;
132&#13;
&#13;
DO THE OTHER FELLOW OR&#13;
HE'LL DO YOU.&#13;
&#13;
Gotz Lesson for Wednesday.&#13;
(Tuesday off day.)&#13;
Study introduction carefully.&#13;
Look up Goethe in Koenig's D eutsche&#13;
Litterateur Geschicte and read the whole of&#13;
Lewes Goethe. Translate fifty pages. Give&#13;
synopsis in blank verse (German.)&#13;
Spend all extra time in reviewing Joynes&#13;
Meissner.&#13;
See Will F. and Frank W. about back&#13;
work.&#13;
&#13;
133&#13;
&#13;
�SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY ,&#13;
SYRACUSE , N . Y .&#13;
&#13;
Morn ing Side College,&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
I owa&#13;
MISS DIMMITT PROVES HER RELATION TO HORACE GREELEY.&#13;
SYRACUSE, N. Y., 3-24-'02&#13;
MY DEAR Miss D - - . I would address you by name if I were able to&#13;
make your name from the signature. * * * I close, recommending the use of a&#13;
Remington.&#13;
Very truly, - - The boy with the wild west name was observed standing before the store waiting for a car. He stood with hands in his pockets, and eyes cast to the ground, his&#13;
broad mind perplexed. Suddenly he turned and peered curiously into the window of&#13;
the store near the corner. His face lighted up with a smile and as he boarded the&#13;
car, he cast one more glance at the window. Moved by curiosity, we walked over and&#13;
saw in a prominent place a neat gilt cardbook, with this inscription, "My Grace is&#13;
Sufficient for Thee." The mystery was solved a few hours later when we met this&#13;
same young man in company with a fair young maiden whom he expectantly addressed as "Grace."&#13;
Prof. in Physics explaining the production of a charge of electricity on a hard&#13;
rubber bar.&#13;
"By rubber I mean the rubber that is rubbed by the and not the rubber&#13;
rubber rub&#13;
who rubs the rubber, there seems to be a confusion of terms, but you will understand&#13;
if you think of the rubber, the rubbing and the rubbed."&#13;
PROF. IN PSYCHOLOGY-T here is nothing of so much importance as the development of the Soul.&#13;
KNOER- (shaking his head)- For me I will pay my first attention to my Body.&#13;
PROF. VAN HORNE - (cal lin g roll)- Root,&#13;
Miller, Marsh, Maynard, Magirl.&#13;
&#13;
PROF.- What is hvdrobromic acid like?&#13;
Mrss K.- (who is somewhat "at outs" with the&#13;
boys)-Like an unrighteous man, unstable in all its&#13;
ways.&#13;
&#13;
USING INLAY'S ODORIFERAE&#13;
&#13;
THE SENIOR PROGNOSTICATOR WHO PROPHESIED THERE WOULD&#13;
BE NO BUMBLE BEES THIS YEAR.&#13;
&#13;
Corrections of the Spheri cal&#13;
Aberration&#13;
&#13;
G. A. PLATTS - "Fanaticism, whether&#13;
political or religious, has no stopping&#13;
place short of heaven or hell."&#13;
SAM KNOER- "He draweth out the&#13;
thread of his verbosity finer than the&#13;
staple of his argument."&#13;
W. L. HARDING - "I have seen the politician in great power, and spreading&#13;
himself like a green bay tree&#13;
But I sought him in the Latin and German classes and he was not to be found,&#13;
and in the Science and English classes,&#13;
but lo- hewas not."&#13;
Even though humanity appreciates&#13;
noise, it may be well to remember that&#13;
some people can distinguish between a&#13;
tin hors and a silver clarion et.&#13;
FREDDIE LEANER:&#13;
lf this boy were older,&#13;
If this boy were bolder,&#13;
He might pass for a man.&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG- " He is something like&#13;
wheel whose spokes tend to tire."&#13;
&#13;
MARY GILBERT- "If sandwiches are&#13;
not plenty where she came from, it is not&#13;
for the want of tongue."&#13;
STULKEN- "He skims his milk on the&#13;
top, then turns it over and skims it on&#13;
the bottom."&#13;
INLAY- "He looks as if he had been&#13;
rubbed down with sand paper."&#13;
BERT FERGUSON- "He could boast of&#13;
royal blood if the ass were king of brutes.''&#13;
WILDER- "Egotists cannot conve rse;&#13;
they talk to themselves.''&#13;
OLDS-"He&#13;
is a sort of a mental reservoir that may burst upon you and overwhelm you in a moment."&#13;
HINSDALE- "Like a disabled ship in a&#13;
fog, drifting among the shoals and breakers of a dangerous coast."&#13;
&#13;
PROF.-Philosophers taught that everything&#13;
came from fire, water and air.&#13;
WISE FRESHIE-lf that's so, Professor, chickens must have been made from "foul" air.&#13;
&#13;
136&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
137&#13;
&#13;
�Yellow&#13;
&#13;
Back Titles&#13;
&#13;
"A Treatise on Botany," or "My Experiments with Roots."&#13;
-Rena Bowker.&#13;
"My Cook Book," or "The Delights of a Fry."-Prof. Blackwell.&#13;
"The First Battle," or "How We Lost the Debate."-Philos.&#13;
"The Mystery of a Lone Dive," or "What Became of Carmichael."&#13;
-Ex-Chief of Police George Stephens.&#13;
"True Culture," or "The A dvantages of a High Ideal."&#13;
-Emma Flathers.&#13;
"A Botanist's Retreat," or "Research in Art."--Fred Seaver.&#13;
"How Cyrus Gilbert Caught the Carr."- By Faith Woodford.&#13;
"The Prep of Great Price."-Florence Cate.&#13;
"A Romance of a Fair Young Couple."-Edith Empey.&#13;
"The Fauna, of Northwest Iowa and How to Trap or Killam."&#13;
-A. H. Maynard.&#13;
"The Mystery of North Hall," or "Who Stole Mrs. Barbour's Bottle."&#13;
-Janitor McCarth y.&#13;
"Prehistoric Relics," or "Age of Eberly."-J. W. Mo(r)gan.&#13;
"The Darkest Days of My Life," or "Randall's Illness. "-Effie Durst.&#13;
&#13;
Sayings Which Have Become Proverbial&#13;
and Their Authors&#13;
"This is very interesting."-Prof Wylie.&#13;
"Uhm, say agin. "-Prof. Greynald.&#13;
"Not because it's me. "-Stella Harding.&#13;
"By Dads. "-Will Frv.&#13;
"Some things. "-Dean L ymer.&#13;
"In view of the fact."-D. C. Hall.&#13;
"Guy says so."-Emma Flathers.&#13;
"Cut it out."-D. L. Young.&#13;
"Not to brag at all."-Nettie Fry.&#13;
"Those dinky outs. "-Harry Olds.&#13;
"Heck. "-Geo. Poppenheimer&#13;
"0 my! 0 my! 0 my !"-Clara Killam.&#13;
"This is the best thing, to my mind, that Shakespear has written."&#13;
-Geo. Platts.&#13;
"It was in the minds of the committee."-Dr. Lewis.&#13;
"Is dat so?"-Hiaman Van Dyke.&#13;
"No more'n a rabbit."-Geo. Stephens.&#13;
138&#13;
&#13;
A TIMELY SUGGESTION.&#13;
IF YOU KNOW A HUMAN NEED, SUPPLY IT- RUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CONWELL.&#13;
&#13;
Ev i dence s of New Philo s ophy.&#13;
&#13;
One of our bright ci ty gi rl s was hea rd to remark: "0, I just love to work in&#13;
th e labora tory up-stairs. Prof. Wylie's assistants are alw ay s ready to h elp and th ey&#13;
are just perfect little dears."&#13;
Madame de Loveland, Lord High Preceptress of Park Place, hands us the&#13;
following edict fo r publication. "Any agreement entered into by th e you ng lad ies of&#13;
this h a ll after 10 p. m. will not be binding."&#13;
VISITOR- What are you st ud ying in geometry at present, Professor?&#13;
VAN H ORNE- H ast ily- We're cussing truncated p ri sms.&#13;
A Lock In.&#13;
&#13;
Acertain you ng m an ca ll ed to accompany his lady to a lecture. After waiting&#13;
in th e parlor th e usual length of tim e, h e became anxious a nd began pacing th e floor.&#13;
Happily some one entered just then.&#13;
"Why John, what is the trouble? Were you wating for some one? 0, Florence!&#13;
Well, I'll ca ll her."&#13;
Upon entering F's room no one could be seen, but from th e closet came a&#13;
muffled voice," Let me out, please." After diligent search the c loset key was found&#13;
and the lady joined her awai tin g escort.&#13;
A coll ege boy rushes up Frary's front steps. Door bell rin gs and it is ope ned.&#13;
He beholds his specia l lady happily talki ng with another you ng man.&#13;
What happens?&#13;
Well, John sim p ly sta res, stamme rs and excla1m s:- "I JUSt came ove r to tell&#13;
you you r door-bell rang."&#13;
Sam says- I 've heard it said that i[ a man tries to preserve his ow n life he is&#13;
su re t o loose it, but I neve r dreamed that when a ma n saved the life of a m aiden&#13;
(from drowning) he would loose her too.&#13;
139&#13;
&#13;
�What Happened on the Porch of the Hiawatha Club&#13;
at the Close of Spring Term 1901.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
windstorm&#13;
of April 25.&#13;
&#13;
A number of Hiawathians, who fancied th e balmy days of springtime, had&#13;
gently turned to thoughts of love- and that to quite a degree. They returned in the&#13;
solemn hours of the night to the spot where farewells and good-nights had often&#13;
been spoken before, but this time it seemed almost impossible to say good-bye. It&#13;
meant a long vacation's separation--something seemed to bind them all togetherone to each. Time passed silently by without a word being spoken. It seemed as&#13;
'tho their hearts would break. Heads were bosomed on their breasts; mumbling&#13;
words were uttered by the boys; the girls began to sob; the strain and the pressure of&#13;
the hour became too great for some of the company, and one young man gave ve nt&#13;
to his feelings by saying, "Let us pray ." And then broke forth upon the midnight&#13;
stillness, such an appeal of earnestness and pathos, as would pierce a heart of stone.&#13;
With the closing of the prayer, their spirits seemed borne aloft to realms of soothing&#13;
ecstacy, and with little longer lingerings, and a few fond fondlings, and such farewells as only Erebus can reveal- they parted.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA., JAN.&#13;
Miss--&#13;
&#13;
18, 1900.&#13;
&#13;
--AKRON, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
MY ONCE DEAR LovE:-I am sorry to have to write you this note. I trust it&#13;
will not hurt .your feelings. I will be frank with you. I think our relations must&#13;
cease. A girl in Morningside has won my heart. Do not feel bad overt his.&#13;
Frankly Your Friend,&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
Professors Struck Dumb&#13;
&#13;
Visions before them rose&#13;
Of students and their woes,&#13;
And they grew very sad in their silent&#13;
way.&#13;
ln all the college range,&#13;
Was ever anything so strange&#13;
That three Profs should lose their voice&#13;
that day.&#13;
&#13;
Upon the platform stand&#13;
There stood a stately band,&#13;
Watching the faces before them so plain&#13;
While chapel passed away,&#13;
Even to the Dean's last say,&#13;
And the throng moved out to a lively&#13;
strain.&#13;
Yet three of that number grand&#13;
This day were not on hand.&#13;
If these Professors you should have found&#13;
Ferguson, Loveland or Cook&#13;
To question with word or look,&#13;
They could not have given an intelligible&#13;
sound.&#13;
One thought of a German song&#13;
And those fifteen pages long&#13;
That she meant that day to give the Class,&#13;
While another in greater pain&#13;
From class lecture must refrain,&#13;
While of Milton's Satan the other sighed,&#13;
alas.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. IN PHYSICS-Mr. Eberly, you&#13;
may give a definition of Dew Point.&#13;
EBERLY- Three days after the room&#13;
rent expires.&#13;
PROF. IN PHYSICS-Mr. McCarty, give&#13;
me a good synonym for focus.&#13;
McCARTY- The farm, because that is&#13;
where sons raise meet.&#13;
"I haven't the face to wear it," said&#13;
Jones, as he gave up trying to raise Burnsides.&#13;
140&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SUCCESSFUL ROOTER&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
�It Is Not Generally Known&#13;
What takes place in the faculty room.&#13;
To Null and Maynard who gets in last on Saturday nights.&#13;
How often Harding goes to Meriden.&#13;
How Peters lost his Junior cane.&#13;
Where Will Fry went Saturday evening after the picnic.&#13;
How the Preps beat the College in baseball Campus Day.&#13;
How Miss McKnight does so well in Biology Lab.&#13;
That the Seniors are contemplating putting a "nigger head'' on&#13;
the campus.&#13;
How so many young men "accidentally" find their lady friends&#13;
after church Sunday evening.&#13;
How four college girls got out of the gym one Saturday forenoon.&#13;
That married students who endure rules and regulations at&#13;
home, and rules and regulations at school get a bit nervous.&#13;
That the Alumni have been spared for next year's Annual.&#13;
That the English Department reports more class absences than&#13;
any other department in school.&#13;
That Stephens does not know what kind of a plant "Antonius" is&#13;
or was.&#13;
How two young ladies who returned to Park Place after "hours"&#13;
fooled the preceptress of the hall.&#13;
How "flush" the College treasury is.&#13;
That extensive plans are already made by the Sophs for an&#13;
Annual next year.&#13;
That Pathology is a study of Boston streets.&#13;
On what basis the Senior Prep orations were judged.&#13;
What became of Carmichael.&#13;
What answer Smith and Sanders received after they offered&#13;
their services to the Slayton Woman's Orchestra.&#13;
What some of the "history work" looked like which came to&#13;
the Bumble Bee.&#13;
That the Bumble Bee is different from a honey bee in that the&#13;
former always retains his stinger after using it, while the latter generally leaves his in his victim.&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
�College Barber Shop.&#13;
&#13;
�GOOD&#13;
&#13;
RESOLUTIONS&#13;
&#13;
WILL NOT MAKE YOU HAPPY. BUT YOU&#13;
WILL BE PLEASED WHEN YOU BUY YOUR&#13;
&#13;
Cont ections,&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Sta.ionery&#13;
f&#13;
AT&#13;
&#13;
Darling's Store.&#13;
ICE CREAM AND SODAS&#13;
STUDENTS '&#13;
&#13;
SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
&#13;
ALL&#13;
&#13;
KINDS .&#13;
&#13;
St. Aubin Station.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 635 L 1 .&#13;
&#13;
Kind Readers of the Bumble Bee&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Y&#13;
&#13;
OU will now be pleased to know how to $ave dollar$&#13;
and live $ucce$$fully.&#13;
&#13;
quainted with the firm$ herein repre$ented.&#13;
&#13;
They will add&#13;
&#13;
dollar$ to your profit and in$ure your $ucce$$ if you deal with&#13;
them.&#13;
&#13;
They are college men, progre$$ive and intere$ted in our&#13;
&#13;
$ucce$$.&#13;
&#13;
They will treat you with courte$y and make your&#13;
&#13;
bu$ine$$ life a plea$ure.&#13;
&#13;
$ $&#13;
&#13;
SPICES AND EXTRACTS&#13;
&#13;
We want you to become ac-&#13;
&#13;
$&#13;
&#13;
$ $&#13;
&#13;
$ $&#13;
&#13;
$ $&#13;
&#13;
$&#13;
&#13;
$&#13;
&#13;
Miller &amp; Newland,&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
GROCERS&#13;
THAT KEEP A FRESH STOCK AND SUPPLY ALL ORDERS&#13;
PROMPTLY&#13;
STUDENTS GET GOOD SERVICE AND SPECIAL RATES.&#13;
&#13;
�The Durston Crockery Co.&#13;
&#13;
Music-Making&#13;
&#13;
IMPORTERS ANO&#13;
&#13;
D EALERS&#13;
&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
is impossible on some instruments.&#13;
It is easy to make music on the&#13;
Hazelton, Crown, Poole, Doll,&#13;
Cable and other pianos that we&#13;
handle. The best that the manufacturers can do has been done&#13;
to make these of the standard&#13;
quality. We want you to call and&#13;
see how fine they are or write for&#13;
particulars. We make a specialty&#13;
of Church organs, both pipe and&#13;
semi-pipe and reed, from $35 to&#13;
$10,000 to suit any size church.&#13;
Special Agents for C. G. Conn's&#13;
Band Instruments, Talking Machines and Records.&#13;
Musical&#13;
Merchandise, Sheet Music, Etc.&#13;
&#13;
CHINA,&#13;
&#13;
W. A. DEAN CO.&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
604-606 FOURTH ST .&#13;
&#13;
OUR ANCESTORS&#13;
&#13;
POTTERY&#13;
&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
GLASSWARE,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY. IOWA .&#13;
&#13;
SCENES at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
321&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH STREET .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
FOUNDED IN 1865&#13;
&#13;
INCORPORATED&#13;
&#13;
IOWA Business College&#13;
COMPRISES THE FOLLOWING COURSES :&#13;
&#13;
You will Always be Happy&#13;
When you can have&#13;
All your wants&#13;
Supplied as well&#13;
As we supply&#13;
Your student wants.&#13;
&#13;
BEAR THIS IN MIND&#13;
WHEN&#13;
&#13;
You&#13;
&#13;
NEED STUDENT SUPPLIES .&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH &amp; SIMPSON,&#13;
The College Bookmen&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeping&#13;
Civil Service&#13;
&#13;
Shorthand&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Telegraphy&#13;
Penmanship&#13;
&#13;
If you are contemplating taking a course it will pay you to visit our school&#13;
before entering elsewhere.&#13;
The business men of Des Moines and adjacent towns have come to depend upon&#13;
this college for their office help. The railroad companies are taking care of every&#13;
operator we can prepare.&#13;
No institution has better facilities or more extensive equipments. We employ&#13;
the best teachers money can provide. More graduates placed in good positions than&#13;
any other school in Iowa.&#13;
School in session the entire year-enter now.&#13;
Catalogue free. Call or address ...&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUSINESS COLLEGE&#13;
Corner Fourth and Locust Sts., DES MOINES, IOWA,&#13;
&#13;
J. R. HUTCHISON, President&#13;
&#13;
L. E. STAMM, Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
�NEW EDITION&#13;
&#13;
Webster's&#13;
International&#13;
Dictionary&#13;
New Plates Throug hout&#13;
&#13;
25,000 Additional Words&#13;
PHRASES AND DE.FINITIONS&#13;
Prepared u nder the direct supervision of&#13;
W. T. HARRIS, Ph .D., LL.D., United States&#13;
Commissioner of Education, assisted by a&#13;
large corps of competent specialists.&#13;
Rich Binding s.&#13;
2364 Pages.&#13;
5000 Illustrations.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
International was first issued in 1890,&#13;
succeeding the " Unabridged." The N ew Edit ion of the International was issued in October,&#13;
1900. Get the latest and the best.&#13;
Also Webster's Coll egiate D i ctionary&#13;
with Scottish Glossary, etc.&#13;
&#13;
MYSTIC MILLING&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
The Name&#13;
&#13;
MERCHANT&#13;
MILLERS&#13;
&#13;
Clothing&#13;
Co.&#13;
&#13;
DOW&#13;
&#13;
Manufacturers and Exporters of&#13;
&#13;
Is a Guaranty of Quality.&#13;
&#13;
FLOUR and FEED&#13;
&#13;
Clothing most&#13;
reasonably priced&#13;
&#13;
First class in quality, second class&#13;
in xize."&#13;
&#13;
Nicholas Murray Butler&#13;
&#13;
eent on application.&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
&#13;
&amp;&#13;
&#13;
C. MERRIAM CO.,&#13;
Springfield , Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
R epresented:&#13;
Minneapolis, Chicago, London.&#13;
&#13;
Scenes at Morningside&#13;
&#13;
When You Have Reached&#13;
the Point where You can&#13;
go no Farther&#13;
&#13;
RIDER&#13;
&#13;
AGENTS WANTED&#13;
&#13;
one in each town to ride and exhibit a sample 1901 model&#13;
bicycle of our manufacture. YOU CAN MAKE $10 TO&#13;
$50 A WEEK besides havm g a wheel t o ride for yourself.&#13;
&#13;
1901 Models&#13;
$10 to $18&#13;
'00 &amp;'99 Models $7 to $12&#13;
to $8&#13;
&#13;
and Pa's Checks appear to be&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
only a Sacred Memory, spend&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
. ....... .. . . .... . ... ..... . .&#13;
&#13;
We ship any bicycle ON APPROVAL to&#13;
anyone without a cent deposit in advance and allow&#13;
&#13;
that last little bunch of change&#13;
&#13;
10 DAYS FREE TRIAL.&#13;
&#13;
no risk in orderi ng from us, as you do not need t o pay&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PHARMACY.&#13;
WHERE IT WILL LAST THE LONGEST,&#13;
&#13;
no NOT BUY&#13;
&#13;
a cent if the bicycle does not. suit you.&#13;
&#13;
AT THE&#13;
&#13;
a wheel unt,1 you have w ritten for our&#13;
.&#13;
FACTORY PRICES and FREE TRIAL OFFER&#13;
this ltberal offer h as never been equaled and is a guarantee of&#13;
·&#13;
the&#13;
quality of our wheels.&#13;
to distribute catalogues for us in&#13;
e o ay for ree catalogue and ou r special offer.&#13;
&#13;
J. L. MEAD CYCLE&#13;
CO.,&#13;
&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
�Sioux City College of Medicine,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
Th e Thirteenth Annua l Session Opens September 9th, I 902 an d Continues for Eight Months.&#13;
&#13;
The course of Study is carefully graded and extends through four years. This&#13;
co1lege, maintaining membership in the Association of American Medical College,&#13;
exacts of students such requirements as to Matriculation, Attendance on Didactics,&#13;
Laboratory and Clinic Instruction, and Graduation as conform with requirements of&#13;
the said Association.&#13;
&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
PICTURES&#13;
FOR THE STUDENTS ARE MADE AT THE&#13;
&#13;
STUDIO GRAND&#13;
ALL WORK IS GUARANTEED&#13;
OR MONEY REFUNDED . STUDENTS ALWAYS GET SPECIAL&#13;
RATES&#13;
&#13;
GRADUATI NG C LASS O F 1902.&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOS&#13;
&#13;
Instruction is imparted by lectures, recitations, Clinic and Practical Laboratory&#13;
Work in Anatomy and Bacteriology with bedside instruction in Surgery, Medicine,&#13;
Obstetrics and Gynaecology. Weekly Clinics at St. Joseph's and Samaritan hospitals.&#13;
FEES, Matriculation paid at once $5.00; Fees for Regular Session, $48.00;&#13;
Hospital Fee $5.00.&#13;
&#13;
ARE A THING OF BEAUTY WHEN TAKEN&#13;
AT THE&#13;
&#13;
STUDIO GRAND&#13;
&#13;
Women adm itted on same conditions as men, for furthe r information and catalogue ci rcular, apply to&#13;
&#13;
DR. W. JEPSON, Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
&#13;
�KIMBALL PIANOS&#13;
&#13;
Union Printing Co.&#13;
&#13;
AND ORGANS.&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - DUBUQUE, I O W A . - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
Appeal to Artists.&#13;
&#13;
49 Years in Public View.&#13;
MAKE A SPECIALTY OF&#13;
Pre-eminent Now&#13;
Builded on Honor&#13;
Sold on Merit&#13;
&#13;
Fine Printing&#13;
&#13;
A. B. WHITE,&#13;
1105 Fourth Street,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Down on the Farm.&#13;
&#13;
Haskin's Grocery&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
HASKINS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Right Goods&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
Right Treatment&#13;
&#13;
The Bumble Bee of l 903 was printed by us.&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
158-164 Fifth St.&#13;
Phone 491 L-3.&#13;
&#13;
Lakeport Ave. .&#13;
&#13;
ANNUALS&#13;
&#13;
A SPECIALTY.&#13;
&#13;
Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
�S IO U X&#13;
&#13;
C I TY I O WA&#13;
&#13;
=======HOTELS=======&#13;
W. A. KENT, Proprietor.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE PRINTERY&#13;
R. D. ACHESON, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
The Printer that Prints&#13;
THE ATTRACTIVE KIND OF PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
The GARRETSON&#13;
&#13;
The MONDAMIN&#13;
&#13;
Rates $2.50 and Upward&#13;
&#13;
Rates $2.00 and Upward&#13;
&#13;
STREET OARS PASS BOTH HOTELS FOR ALL PARTS OF CITY&#13;
&#13;
First-class in Every Respect.&#13;
Electric Lights and Elevators.&#13;
Turkish Baths.&#13;
&#13;
The Favorite Commercial House in&#13;
the Center of the Business District.&#13;
Electric Lights and Elevator.&#13;
R. B. KENT, Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Neat Booklets, Leaflets, Programs,&#13;
Wedding Stationery Office Stationery&#13;
Fancy Stationery, Calling Cards&#13;
Posters Blanks Etc.&#13;
&#13;
�WHEN JEWELRY COMES FROM&#13;
&#13;
ALF. WISSING'S&#13;
YOU KNOW THE QUALITY&#13;
AND PRICE IS RIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
Go to&#13;
&#13;
Sellon&#13;
The Boston Candy&#13;
and Ice Cream Store&#13;
(E s tablish ed 189 1)&#13;
&#13;
That's our strongest argument. Next time you need&#13;
a wedding present, come to&#13;
us first, then look around.&#13;
We know you'll come back.&#13;
&#13;
625&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
For Your Ice Cream.&#13;
(All Flavors )&#13;
&#13;
FRUIT SHERBETS, FROZEN&#13;
PUDDINGS AND ICES OF ALL&#13;
KINDS&#13;
&#13;
cover by Frederic Remington, mailed for 3 stamps.&#13;
&#13;
MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Ct.&#13;
&#13;
Fancy Paper Cups and Mats of All Kinds.&#13;
&#13;
Perfect&#13;
Pictures&#13;
&#13;
JAS. F. TOY, President.&#13;
A . GRONINGER, V ice President.&#13;
A. S. GARRETSON, Vice President.&#13;
C. N . LUKES, Cashier.&#13;
J. FRED TOY, Assistant Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
ARE MADE&#13;
AT THE&#13;
&#13;
The FirstNational Bank,&#13;
&#13;
Genelli· Studio&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
CAPITAL PAID-UP&#13;
SURPLUS FUND&#13;
DEPOSITS&#13;
&#13;
Students are always&#13;
pleased and satisfied&#13;
with their pictures.&#13;
&#13;
670 Fourth Street,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
GeneralBanking Business Done.&#13;
&#13;
$ 200,000&#13;
35,000&#13;
l,800,000&#13;
&#13;
Interest Paid on time Deposits.&#13;
&#13;
�Epworth Seminary,&#13;
==============EPWORTH, IOWA==============&#13;
Sixteen Miles West of Dubuque on the Illinois Central and Chicago Great Western.&#13;
&#13;
Waltermire's Studio&#13;
PHONE l 12 L-4 .&#13;
&#13;
Field&#13;
Work&#13;
Interior&#13;
Views&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS HALL.&#13;
Epworth Seminary furnishes a thorough preparation for entering college as a Sophomore; or a splendid equipment&#13;
for active and useful life for those who cannot go to college. The moral and Christian influences are very strong; yet&#13;
persons of various religious faiths are free from proselyting efforts. The Seminary stands for the best manhood and&#13;
womanhood among its pupils. Twelve departments of Work in the following five courses: Academic, Nor-&#13;
&#13;
A SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
mal, Commercial, Music, Art,&#13;
Address&#13;
&#13;
H. R, De Bra, A, M., B, D., Principal , Epworth, Iowa, for Catalogue or Information.&#13;
&#13;
703 DOUGLAS STREET&#13;
&#13;
Waltermire's Studio&#13;
Park Place Hall- Sce nes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
�THE DES MOINES&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Fire&#13;
&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
OF DES MOINES, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
DO YOU KNOW that this Company has the distinction of having paid a&#13;
larger sum of money than any other Insurance Company of this state in&#13;
one Tornado, viz the Pomeroy Storm,&#13;
&#13;
Amount Paid $42,000.00&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN &amp; FRASER&#13;
&#13;
LAUNDRY&#13;
411 Jackson St.&#13;
Phone 333.&#13;
&#13;
THE OLDFST LAUNDRY&#13;
DOING WORK FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS.&#13;
GIVE&#13;
THEM A TRIAL AND YOU&#13;
WILL BE PLEASED.&#13;
&#13;
ESTA BLIS H E D 189 3 .&#13;
&#13;
T o lerton , Wm . Mikhrist, C. C.&#13;
thelander, W. P. Manley, Chas. E. Faeth,&#13;
T. A . Thompson, T. A. Black.&#13;
GEO. SINCLAIR, Cash ie r.&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS-0. 0 .&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County&#13;
Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
DO YOU KNOW that this Company paid out more money for losses in Iowa&#13;
during&#13;
&#13;
1901&#13;
&#13;
than any other Fire and Tornado Insurance Company doing&#13;
&#13;
business in the state of Iowa,&#13;
&#13;
Amount Paid $178,246.12&#13;
&#13;
405-407 Nebraska St.&#13;
&#13;
A Bank of Deposits for Savings.&#13;
&#13;
HARDING &amp; HAWKINS,&#13;
&#13;
We issue Savings Pass Books to depositors&#13;
of $1.00 and upwards, and pay 4% interest&#13;
the reon which is add ed twice a year. We accept accounts subject to check and do a general&#13;
banking business. Attention is called to our&#13;
Board of Directors, whose names are a guarantee of safe and conservative management. A&#13;
private box in our la rge Safe Deposit Vau lt&#13;
affords a secure place in which to place your&#13;
valuable papers, je welry, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Agents at College.&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE INSPECTION.&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE WRITING BUSI NESS TODAY, IF YOU NEED INSURANCE&#13;
SEE ONE OF OUR REPRESENTATIVES, THEY&#13;
ARE IN EVERY TOWN.&#13;
&#13;
C. H. AINLEY, President&#13;
&#13;
�TO SAVE TIME,&#13;
IS TO LENGTHEN LIFE .&#13;
&#13;
. . the ..&#13;
&#13;
NEW BLIGKENSDERFER TYPEWRITER&#13;
NO. 7&#13;
&#13;
Will H. Beck,&#13;
The Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
The Newest you can find at Beck 's.&#13;
The Best you can find at Beck's.&#13;
Twenty-five years of active business&#13;
experience enables me to know the&#13;
requirements of the people.&#13;
For&#13;
whatever you need see me and I will&#13;
please you,&#13;
&#13;
WILL H. BECK,&#13;
For Twenty five Years&#13;
Iowa's Leading Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
Mondamin Hotel Corner,&#13;
&#13;
DOES BOTH&#13;
&#13;
JOHN F . CRAMER , PRESIDENT .&#13;
F. K. TRACY , MANAGER .&#13;
GEO . A . STRONG , SEC ' Y AND TREAS .&#13;
&#13;
CHICA60 NEWSPAPER&#13;
...UNION...&#13;
Sioux City Newspaper Union Branch.&#13;
&#13;
Ready Print Publishers&#13;
&#13;
With it, as much work can be accomplished in a day, as can be done on&#13;
any typewriter on the market, costing double the money .&#13;
The machine is durable, efficient and portable, and so simple in construction and action , that a child can work it, and yet equal to the demands of the&#13;
large business establishment.&#13;
Clergymen, professional men, operators, and newspaper men use them&#13;
largely, while a contract just made with one of the largest lumber concerns in&#13;
the north west for 15 machines shows how they strike th e business world.&#13;
&#13;
And Dealers in&#13;
&#13;
Printer's Supplies,&#13;
Electrotyping,&#13;
Stereotyping,&#13;
and Paper.&#13;
W, H. ROGERS, Resident Manager.&#13;
411 Douglas St., Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Two Styles No. 5, $35.00. No. 7, $50.00&#13;
&#13;
Harger &amp; Blish,&#13;
6eneral Agents for Iowa and Nebraska.&#13;
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Dubuque,&#13;
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Baking Powder&#13;
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BLINDS, MOULDINGS&#13;
MANTELS, GRATES, SHOW CASES,&#13;
OFFICE, STORE and BANK FIXTURES,&#13;
PARQUETRY FLOORI NG, WOOD GRILLS,&#13;
MIRRORS AND FANCY GLASS.&#13;
&#13;
Factory and Warehouse,&#13;
West Fourth and Perry Sts .•&#13;
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is Guaranteed to Give&#13;
Satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 106.&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The Truth, The Whole Truth and Nothing But the Truth&#13;
UNCONDITIONALLY THE BEST TYPEWRITER IS&#13;
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THE CHICAGO&#13;
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No typewriter is worth $100. We have made a&#13;
mechanically excelling machine and sell it for $35.00.&#13;
We claim that it is the Superior of any typewriter&#13;
made. This is a broad but carefully weighed statement and is the Truth.&#13;
Awarded gold medal at the Paris Exposition,&#13;
1900, in open competition with all other makes of&#13;
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Our descriptive matter tells an interesting story,&#13;
Send for it and learn something about a high-grade&#13;
typewriter sold at an honest price.&#13;
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CHICAGO WRITING MACHINE COMPANY&#13;
94-96 Wendell Street, Chicago, U.S. A.&#13;
176&#13;
&#13;
���</text>
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              <text>Published by&#13;
&#13;
D. L.&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG,&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
UNION PRINTIN G COMPANY&#13;
DUBUQUE , IOWA&#13;
&#13;
VOL. II.&#13;
&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
- - - E D I T E D BY·&#13;
- - -&#13;
&#13;
CLASS OF 1903&#13;
&#13;
This Book is&#13;
Dedicated to&#13;
&#13;
YOU&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
Secretary Miss Sophia Herby&#13;
.&#13;
Treasurer, M. F. McDowell&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-Chief D.M. Simpson&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
N&#13;
. Assistant Editors Ray Toothaker&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
F. E. Mossman Athletics&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
MC ISAAC.&#13;
&#13;
Illustrations.&#13;
&#13;
the northwest&#13;
&#13;
Historical.&#13;
Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
Calendar.&#13;
L. F.&#13;
&#13;
Smylie&#13;
&#13;
Jokes.&#13;
Miss Pearl Woodford&#13;
J.R. Ackenback&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Hans Nissen&#13;
&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
our friends&#13;
fellow Students&#13;
alumni&#13;
And&#13;
&#13;
Alex Ruthven , M.F. McDowell&#13;
George Gilbert&#13;
&#13;
A. B.&#13;
&#13;
To....&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
t&#13;
&#13;
present the Sophomore Class consists of nine of the best students in&#13;
college. There really should be more members in the class, but several,&#13;
having become so learned, the Faculty promoted them to be Juniors. This&#13;
may have been because the Faculty foresaw that the "Bumble BEE OF&#13;
1903," would prove a failure if some brainy Sophomores were not added to&#13;
th e c lass of 1903.&#13;
Being interes ted in their future, th e members of our class paid Miss Anna Eva&#13;
Fay a visit durin g h er recen t sojourn in this city in order that th eir hop es might be&#13;
fully es tablish ed. One Monday afternoon th e class ca ll ed at th e apartments of the&#13;
fair Mabatma and we re very co rdi a lly rece ived. After a few minut es spent in conversation, th e students were asked to write any question whi ch th ey d es ired answ ered&#13;
o n a slip of paper. Miss Faythen seated h erself on a low stool and completely&#13;
enveloped herse lf in a la rge India shawl.&#13;
"The nam e of Ira Aldrich comes to m e. Mr. Aldrich, you want to know&#13;
wh et her you will ever be pastor of th e Metropolitan T emp le, New York. That cong rega tion is anxiously awai tin g a silver tongued o rator.-M r. Jones has a qu es tion.&#13;
Will he win first place in the Prohibition Oratorical Contest next year? The res ult,&#13;
Mr. Jon es, will astonish you.--Now Miss Miller's question. "Am I really handsome?"&#13;
Narcissa, you have furnished inspiration for man y a poem.- Ralph Milliken wants to&#13;
know who stole his overcoat. I think A. P . Urloiner did.- A. H . Maynard's question&#13;
is, "How may I a lways keep in good company?'' Live in a subjective state of mind .&#13;
- C. L. Gilbert wants to know whether h e will be on the next Intercollegiate Debate.&#13;
Yes, if the Faculty make th e appointments.- Grace Darling wond ers whether she&#13;
will always be a Darlin g. Yes.-Carl McKaig, you want to kn ow whether you will&#13;
make $10,000 a year in your future profession. Yes, if you radi ca ll y a lt er your prese nt&#13;
habits.- Mr. Carson wou ld lik e to be a soldier. The Salvation Army needs rec ruits,&#13;
li eu tenant."&#13;
Miss Fay then threw off her mantle and bade the illu strious c lass adieu.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Seniors.R?&#13;
OME weeks ago when requested&#13;
to write the history of t he class&#13;
of 1902, the task seemed comparatively easy, but each day&#13;
made it more difficu lt until at&#13;
last it seemed an impossibil it y, fo r our&#13;
history is wri tten upon the lives of our&#13;
classmates and recorded in the registrar's&#13;
book. The question, what will you write,&#13;
has unconsciously asked itself. Over this&#13;
question the author has hesitated, but all&#13;
attempts at solution have bee n in vain.&#13;
The task seems as ponderable as ever,&#13;
not because th ere may be a lack of material from which to draw; not because&#13;
the class may not have accomplished&#13;
anything of note, but because of the magn itude of the resources and the inabilit y&#13;
of words to portray the true worth of the&#13;
Seniors. But more than all the write r is&#13;
restrained by modest y, for bei ng a membe r of Class 190 2 , he mi ght seem to be&#13;
egotistical, which is ever the farthest&#13;
from the mind of a Senior.&#13;
What shall we write ? W e might tell you of our organi zation, which prog ressed so rapidly and in the fall term of 1900 attracted the attention of a few&#13;
ambitious Sophomores so that when the winter term op ened our class numbered n ine.&#13;
Amid warnings and fea rs we undertook an ente r prise which was a new feature&#13;
in our college. Remembering that withou t risk the re could be no gain, we successfully edi ted the "Blue and Wh ite," th e gentle forerunner of the "Bumble Bee."&#13;
In the followin g spring the Seniors of '01, unw illing to graduate without leaving the J uni ors some token of g rat it ude and example of their rare ability, unse lfish ly&#13;
appointed Fred J. Seaver to join our class, which resulted in his total seve rance from&#13;
Class of '01. W e could give you a glimpse of the social part of our class li fe, but these&#13;
mem ories are too precious for the pen and better untold. Or we might tell of the cha racteristics of its various memb e rs; of the debating ability of a Cate or a Knoe r, but&#13;
lest othe rs suffer in the comparison, we forbear; or of the scient ific knowledge of a&#13;
Seaver a nd Eberly, the learned in Biology and Chemistry; or of the eloquence of a&#13;
Platts, that unexcelled divine; or of th e success of a Gantt who wields the rod and&#13;
pursues h er college course as rec reation; or of the ambition of a Frary who has his&#13;
gaze fixed u pon the goal, M. D ., or a Fla the rs, who lin gers long and la te over the&#13;
charms of the German tongue ; or of a Brown who successfully concea ls a world of&#13;
fun beneath his sober countenance; or of a Carr, whose dreams wave r between&#13;
Roman philosophy and life in the far, far West.&#13;
Ti me fails and modesty prevents from speaking longer of the countless grades&#13;
we ran down upon our bridleless steeds, when Juniors. Now our sins (if indeed they&#13;
were such ) are all concealed be neath the folds of ou r flowing gowns and caps, fo r at&#13;
last we a re Seniors. Once th is was our goal, but now success has moved from the&#13;
college hall out in to the wide, wide world and beckons us thither.&#13;
13&#13;
&#13;
=&#13;
&#13;
November&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
&#13;
5&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
&#13;
9&#13;
II&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
Premature hatch of a few of Doctor's chi cks, full y fled ged.&#13;
Dr. Cook and the janitor expel them. See April 9th.&#13;
Number of students go home to vote.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mysterious disappearance of Carmichael. Some think he&#13;
was kidnapped.&#13;
Senior Class meeting.&#13;
Frary in an enthusiastic speech d ecla res the incapability of the Juniors to edit an Annual.&#13;
Great applause. Dad Eberly says, "What's that noise?"&#13;
Miss Cate forebodingly says, "That sounds to m e like a&#13;
Bumble Bee."&#13;
The blind musician, Perry, g ives a piano lecture conce rt in&#13;
College Auditorium.&#13;
W . L. Harding appointed by Athletic Association to visit&#13;
th e eastern coll eges in search of a coach.&#13;
Students all heard William Hawley Smith on "We th e&#13;
People." Asa Brower was so firmly impressed that he&#13;
continues to use the lecturer's sig n of the people in asking a qu estion.&#13;
The question for Intersociety Debate chosen.&#13;
Atheneum Grand Public, "Council of the Gods." Morningside-Vermillion football, 5 to 11. Bovaird laid out for&#13;
wind.&#13;
Bovaird resuscitated.&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Harding goes "coach'' hunting. Zets and Othos&#13;
instigate a party.&#13;
Time for entry to Oratorical Contest exposes three in the&#13;
race. Asa Brower and Miss Lucy Brainard attend a&#13;
wedding at Moville.&#13;
Full attendance of Faculty at Chapel. Cause, false rumor&#13;
of the Doctor's return.&#13;
22 Friday.&#13;
25 Woman's Symphony Orchestra apea r at the College.&#13;
Smith and Sanders make app lication to some of&#13;
the lady players for positions as second fiddlers.&#13;
Two young men havin g escorted a couple of Park&#13;
Place g irls to the lecture, get stranded in the&#13;
crowd at the college hall door and the g irls go&#13;
hom e alone.&#13;
26 Mossman sings a Chapel solo.&#13;
27 Faculty receive. Janitor from force of habit turns&#13;
off the gas at ten.&#13;
28 Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
30 Othos accept negative side of debate quest ion. Zets&#13;
g ive a humorous program, Shorthand students&#13;
g ive a rag time party to their friend s.&#13;
&#13;
120&#13;
&#13;
December&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
ro&#13;
&#13;
Rumors from way down in Missouri reach our ea rs conce rning Carmichael.&#13;
Introd uction of the " Marvel," Inlay's Odoriferae.&#13;
Athletic Association elects officers. Smylie elected&#13;
president. Prof. a nd instructors of North H a ll go on&#13;
a strike. By th e union of capita l and labor work was&#13;
resumed the following d ay.&#13;
Abduction of P latts and Mossman from school.&#13;
Third Annual Oratorical Contest. Toothaker wins first.&#13;
Prof. Brown is recei ved by th e Norm a ls, at his own expense. It was reported th at he was surprised. Fred&#13;
Null reads a Chatterbox at Hawkeye program.&#13;
John Smith threatened to pulverize editor of Chatterbox.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
&#13;
Exams begin.&#13;
Lyric Ladies appear on the "Sta r Lecture Course" at&#13;
the Grand.&#13;
13 Day and Franklin agree to work at Pellitiers for any&#13;
price.&#13;
14 Students throng the d epots. Partings.&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
15 We all rested.&#13;
25 Santa Claus visits Morningside.&#13;
30 A. H . Maynard tries coasting by fastening his coattail&#13;
to th e rear of a street car.&#13;
&#13;
12 1&#13;
&#13;
CALENDAR&#13;
&#13;
Athletic Association&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
&#13;
THLETICS, as one of the departments of college life, has in&#13;
th e past year received much careful attention from the&#13;
student body. One year ago a new organization was&#13;
perfected, known as the "General Athletic Association of&#13;
Morningside College."&#13;
In this association much care was given, to so arrange the&#13;
. management of athletics in the college, that every student would&#13;
have an equal chance to be represented and make his influence felt.&#13;
Membership in this general association is open to any regularly&#13;
enrolled student of the college.&#13;
Under the General Association are sub-organizations comprising&#13;
tennis, base ball, basket ball, foot ball and track team. Any student&#13;
who is a member of the general association may, if he wishes to take&#13;
part in the events of any or all of the sub-organizations, become&#13;
a member of the same without further expense.&#13;
The managers of the various suborganizations are elected by the&#13;
members of th ese organizations, and comprise, with the president,&#13;
secretary and treasurer of the general association, the Executive&#13;
Board. The work of the Executive Board is to approve of the plans&#13;
of the managers and have supervision of the finances of the association. The membership fee, which covers all expenses, is one dollar&#13;
per year.&#13;
Coach and Physical Director&#13;
&#13;
Realizing our inability to compete with other schools on a fair&#13;
basis as matters then stood the Athletic Association last fall took the&#13;
initiative and opened negotiations with several good men with a view&#13;
to hiring a coach in all athletics for the coming year. These negotiations have resulted in a contract being signed with Mr. A. G.&#13;
Flanagan of Chicago University to fill this position.&#13;
He has an enviable record upon Chicago's Athletic field and&#13;
comes to us with all the experience and qualities of leadership&#13;
necessary to the coaching of a winning team. We may consider&#13;
ourselves fortunate in securing Mr. Flanagan and it is with pleasure&#13;
we await the opening of the new year.&#13;
&#13;
Juniors&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
is said that there is no more interesting&#13;
reading than that which is to be found in&#13;
biographies, and no ne mo re profi table. As&#13;
"Plutarch's Li ves" have bee n happily&#13;
described as the pasture of g rea t minds,&#13;
so real life is quite as fascinating and far mo re&#13;
educational. Truth and virtue in action is more&#13;
effective and stimulating than the clea rest exposition of them in text hooks. Let this b e a fitting&#13;
introduction to the history which this and every&#13;
subsequent Juni or Class shall make in the future&#13;
years of th is school. Lest there shoul d be failure&#13;
in the task , Clio, t he Muse of History, is entreated&#13;
to assist this chronicl e r to reco rd a modest account&#13;
of th e Class of 1903.&#13;
Time and space does not pe rmit of an individu al narra t ive of its thirteen members. Space&#13;
limi ts to a few words, and time brushes from&#13;
memory many worthy deeds done and harmless&#13;
jokes played du ring th e two previous college&#13;
years. Hence ou r readers must be con te nt with a&#13;
general consideration of the class, upon which environm ental influences have worked&#13;
a common spirit.&#13;
By untiring effort this pe rsisten t and faculty-styled "impetuous class" of 1903&#13;
has reached al l but the last mi le sto ne in the college course.&#13;
After them, upon the al most precipitous incline of a Mount O lympus, follow the&#13;
struggling and straggling Sophomores and Freshmen. In vain d o they attempt to&#13;
scale the heigh ts by Junio rs ga ined, but slip and fl un k into remorse and pain.&#13;
W ith a n abho rrence for backwa rd steps, and with all urin g pros pects before&#13;
them, they anx iously await their turn to amp ly fi ll each and all the chapel seats assigned to the Seniors.&#13;
The class is composed of clergymen, school teach ers, book salesmen and&#13;
business m en. Among th e number arc two he roines, the pride of the class. In&#13;
spo rts and athletics the class is well represented. T he Junio rs are also fou nd in intersociety a nd inter-collegiate debating contests. T hey are known as t he lite ra ry class&#13;
of th e school. The Juniors have held their own numbers, some refusing advancement beca use of a desire to gradu ate together. T hey have incited double diligence o n&#13;
the part of some Sophomores to be advanced to the year 1903.&#13;
In order that the re might be an indelible im pression made of their school existence and that their m emories and faces might be recal led at pleasure, they undertook the h e rculean task of publishing to t he world the Second Junior An nual of&#13;
Morningside College. No pains have been s pared to make this Annu al a t hing&#13;
of literary me rit equal to any publi shed in th e state.&#13;
The supreme object of the class in putting ou t this Annual is that our friends&#13;
may kno w something of the inwa rd and outward workings of th e institution and&#13;
admire it.&#13;
The Annual may become mispla ced and dust covered, but t he class purposes&#13;
to keep themselves ever before the world as men and women of purpose, who are&#13;
moved by th at impetuosity wh ich never shrinks in the presence of d iffic ulties, but&#13;
always does things with a vengeance.&#13;
9&#13;
&#13;
Is Your Future&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
in&#13;
&#13;
Doubt?&#13;
&#13;
IF SO, WE BEG TO SUGGEST THAT&#13;
&#13;
We buy&#13;
&#13;
school-books&#13;
&#13;
And we lend free to any applicant our&#13;
' 'Books Wanted" Catalogueotover2,000&#13;
school-books, with the prices at which&#13;
we accept second-hand as well asnew&#13;
books.&#13;
&#13;
...Dentistry&#13;
&#13;
Offers Exceptional Opportunities&#13;
to the Intelligent Young Man or&#13;
Woman, Mechanically Inclined.&#13;
&#13;
For all marketable school-books, or if&#13;
desired, we credit consignmentson a ccount, to be paid by us in other schoolbooks from time to time as needed.&#13;
Hinds &amp;; NOBLE&#13;
&#13;
4 Cooper Instltute&#13;
&#13;
New York City&#13;
&#13;
Mention this ad.&#13;
&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
There is no&#13;
profession in&#13;
which the returns are&#13;
more certain&#13;
and profitable, considering the education,money and time&#13;
expended in&#13;
acquiring it.&#13;
&#13;
The next&#13;
school session is the&#13;
last opportunity to take a&#13;
three years•&#13;
course of&#13;
7 months&#13;
each. School&#13;
session commencing&#13;
1903 will require four&#13;
years of seven months&#13;
each.&#13;
Write for&#13;
cata log and&#13;
book of halfto nes illustrating o u r&#13;
equipment.&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern Unive rsity Dental&#13;
School offers&#13;
unequaled&#13;
facilities and&#13;
advantages&#13;
to those who&#13;
want a strictly high grade&#13;
course.&#13;
&#13;
NEW SCHOOL BUILDING .&#13;
&#13;
The Iowa State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts,&#13;
&#13;
Ames, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
offers free tuition and most thorough courses to students of Iowa, in Mechanical, Civil.&#13;
Electrical and Mining Engineering; in Agriculture, long and short courses; in the Sciences,&#13;
Veterinary Medicine and Dairying. Both sexes admitted. Next college year begins September 1st, 1902. For particulars address&#13;
&#13;
W, M, BEARDSHEAR, President, Ames, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
Northwestern University Dental School&#13;
DR. W.E. HARPER, Secretary.&#13;
Cor, Lake and Dearborn Streets&#13;
&#13;
...CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
Straub Brothers,&#13;
DENTISTS&#13;
&#13;
Phone 645,&#13;
&#13;
202&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
203&#13;
&#13;
Brown Block.&#13;
&#13;
Cor. Fourth and Neb. Streets&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
FOR&#13;
MEN&#13;
ONLY!&#13;
&#13;
0. W. BROWN, Jr.,&#13;
Proprietor and Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Security&#13;
National&#13;
&#13;
Bank.&#13;
&#13;
UNITED&#13;
STATES&#13;
DEPOSITARY&#13;
&#13;
Capital · $250,000.00&#13;
&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
BARBERSHOP&#13;
&#13;
W. P. MANLEY, President.&#13;
C. L. WRIGHT, Vice-President,&#13;
T. A. BLACK, Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. O. W. BROWN, Jr.,&#13;
Superintendent Stenography.&#13;
&#13;
ADD TO YOUR GENERAL EDUCATION A&#13;
THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF&#13;
&#13;
BOOKKEEPING,&#13;
SHORTHAND,&#13;
TYPEWRITING AND&#13;
PENMANSHIP&#13;
&#13;
Brown's ·Business College&#13;
employs only the best teachers and offers to its patrons&#13;
thorough courses of study. 400 Students registered&#13;
during the year. Over 100 Students placed in paying&#13;
positions last term. Illustrated Catalogue Free. Address&#13;
&#13;
G. W. BROWN, Jr.,&#13;
&#13;
409-4 11 Jackson St., Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
NORMAN M'CAY TRIES TO PLOW HIS GARDEN.&#13;
THE FIRST ROUND HE THROWS A DEAD&#13;
FURROW AND THEN WONDERS&#13;
HOW HE CAN PLOW THE&#13;
NEXT FURROW.&#13;
&#13;
An Ordinary&#13;
&#13;
A Class Scene&#13;
&#13;
Guy&#13;
&#13;
Several German students were discussing Immensee.&#13;
Some thought that&#13;
Reinhart did wrong in not letting Elizabeth know his feelings regarding her.&#13;
"Well, what sort of a fell ow was this&#13;
Reinhart? I never read the story all&#13;
through," said a Senior girl.&#13;
"Oh," replied Mr. N.; "he was only an&#13;
ordinary guy."&#13;
And they all burst out laughing- all&#13;
but the Senior. She blushed.&#13;
STELLA: "I believe that all the nice&#13;
boys in college are married."&#13;
SADIE: "I don't think so (later adding) Rob, my brother, isn't married."&#13;
PROF, WYLIE: "Mr. Young, you may&#13;
give the life history of the sporophyte."&#13;
MR. YOUNG: "Don't know that, but I&#13;
can tell about the gametophyte."&#13;
PROF. WYLIE: "You remind me of&#13;
the man who called on his neighbor to&#13;
borrow a plow and was told that it was&#13;
out of order, but that he was perfectly&#13;
welcome to his wheelbarrow."&#13;
&#13;
Place- German Room.&#13;
Time- Five minutes after class time.&#13;
Persons - Miss Ferguson and three&#13;
students.&#13;
Mrss F: "Miss Goodal, you may begin the lesson."&#13;
Mrss G: "In deinem Alter, mein liebes&#13;
Kind, hat noch fast jedes Jahr sein (noise&#13;
outside; door opens and ten or twelve belated students enter laughing and take&#13;
their seats) eigenes Gesicht; denn die&#13;
Jugend last sich nicht armer machen."&#13;
(Effie D, one of the tardy students, turns&#13;
around, motions frantically to the one reciting and calls, "Sh-0-0-0, sh-0-0-0.")&#13;
Class laughs; instructor frowns.&#13;
Mrss F: "Miss Lockin, you may proceed with the lesson."&#13;
Charley was a Freshman,&#13;
Brindle a hungry cow;&#13;
Brindle met him in the alley,&#13;
Charley is in heaven now.&#13;
Tearfully,&#13;
SADIE VAN HORNE.&#13;
&#13;
,,&#13;
AN&#13;
&#13;
OCCASIONAL SCENE ON THE CAMPUS.&#13;
129&#13;
&#13;
CLUBS:&#13;
&#13;
The Student's Best Friend.&#13;
&#13;
The Philomatheans&#13;
&#13;
To&#13;
&#13;
meet the increasing demand of Morningside College in its&#13;
early existence for original literary work among the students,&#13;
there was organized in October of the year 1892, the Philomathean Literary Society. It began its activities at once.&#13;
Two weeks after its organization it appeared before the public with&#13;
its first literary entertainment. This was characterized by that predominant characteristic that ever since has marked the society, viz.,&#13;
individual originality. Far from trying to tickle the ears or cater to&#13;
the notions of a popular audience, it has ever been the object of this&#13;
society to set forth the individual and let him stand for what he is&#13;
worth. During the earlier stages of its history its weekly programs&#13;
alternated between public and close-door meetings. But since it has&#13;
become more thoroughly organized it has dispensed with the closedoor work and now gives weekly public entertainments. Aside from&#13;
the literary entertainment it was the custom of the society to have an&#13;
annual banquet for the members of the society and their friends.&#13;
This also has been changed and now the annual "Outing" which&#13;
consists of a steamboat ride np the Big Sioux River, has become the&#13;
climatic amusement of the college year.&#13;
The society began its career with a charter membership of&#13;
seven. But as the school grew in numbers the society increased i.ts&#13;
membership proportionately and now has a large alumni and a membership greater than any society in the school.&#13;
It has not been the desire of the society to boast of its members&#13;
or of its great men, but it has held out an equal chance to every one&#13;
who has desired to rise by individual effort. It has welcomed every&#13;
society that has had its beginning in the school since its own&#13;
existence, and bids them God-speed in every noble aim.&#13;
From their earliest existence as a society, the Philo's have shown&#13;
great activity in competitive contests, and although sometimes suffering defeat they have had their quota of victories. But alike in&#13;
victory or defeat they have always conducted themselves wisely and&#13;
discreetly. In this they not only have won the respect and good will&#13;
of the school, but also have won many friends outside of the school.&#13;
The Philo's are justly proud of their past achievements, and&#13;
with a spirit of loyalty among themselves and for the college, they&#13;
look ahead and with one voice say" Vestiganulla Retrorsum."&#13;
57&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
Elocution Class&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
this is but the second class to graduate from the Departmen t of E locution , and th e first to be dignified with a&#13;
history considered of enough importance to have its place&#13;
among the a nnals of our College, we find our task somewhat difficult.&#13;
The class is com-posed of three members and although small in&#13;
numbers, they compensate in quality. T wo of th e members when&#13;
very young were noted for t hei r marked ability in the art of elocution, a nd have since developed both mentall y and physically. They&#13;
began their education a t that time in this art under the same&#13;
instruct or who still directs them.&#13;
They recited on ma ny public platforms during the earlier period&#13;
of their careers, winning the hearty applause and appreciat ion of&#13;
many large audiences. One of them , at the tender age of twelve ,&#13;
made her appearance on a Chautauqua platform where sh e was very&#13;
favorably received. The ot her has always been distinguished for&#13;
her pleasing delivery, and is in great demand at many of the social&#13;
functions of t he city. Since then they have recited more or less at&#13;
public a nd private entertainments, ta king prominent parts in High&#13;
S chool affairs .&#13;
The t hird came to Morningside two years ago to en ter t he&#13;
Department of E locution , and since, by faithful and efficient work,&#13;
has well merited the black mortor-board wit h its salmon tassel.&#13;
Their closing program is entirely from t he book of " Ben-Hu r ,"&#13;
the recitations having been arranged by the instructor.&#13;
42&#13;
&#13;
lntersociety Debate&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Winning Team&#13;
&#13;
Philomatheans vs. Othonians&#13;
Friday Even i n g , Feb r uary 21 , 1902.&#13;
&#13;
QUESTION:&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That in the formation of society, heredity exercises a&#13;
greater influence than environment.&#13;
N ega tive- Othonians.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative- Philomatheans.&#13;
&#13;
Ray Toothaker,&#13;
Ira Aldrich,&#13;
Stanley Carson.&#13;
&#13;
Samuel Knoer,&#13;
F. E. Mossman,&#13;
George A. Platts,&#13;
&#13;
Decision of Judges two to one in favor of Negative'.&#13;
144&#13;
&#13;
Gossip of the Library Owl&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
the southeast corner of the library since the beginning of time&#13;
has sat the wise old college owl. No one thougt him worthy&#13;
of notice till one day the Bumble Bee of 1903 stung him.&#13;
With a start he turned his head, blinked his eyes, opened his&#13;
mouth and spoke as follows:&#13;
"Though unnoticed, yet I have watched with open eye the&#13;
actions of you all, sometimes wishing to clap my wings in joy at&#13;
some of your pranks, then again to hide my head for shame at the&#13;
pain you have caused the Madam.&#13;
"One afternoon peace had been reigning supreme when in came&#13;
a student who with start, jerk and slam seated himself at the table&#13;
where were two young ladies. In the quiet I heard, 'How are you&#13;
Miss Good-? 0, you are in trouble again, but never mind, just&#13;
persevere, you know after you finish here it's a law school. Yes, by&#13;
all means I'd rather my wife knew law than how to cook.' No telling what I might have heard if a voice had not called, 'There is&#13;
another table here.'&#13;
"Later two girls came near my corner to consult the mysteries&#13;
of the Gods and shock old Vergil with their translations. 'Say Elsie,&#13;
how do you translate this passage?' '0 yes, that is where they greased&#13;
their heads.' 'I wonder if Mr. Brown still thinks Vergil is not&#13;
finished.' 'Look May, how those brilliants lighten up the night.'&#13;
This continued till the familiar voice called, 'Too much noise in the&#13;
room.' They left with the parting shot, 'Dont see what she wanted&#13;
to make so much fuss when we were only studying our lesson.'&#13;
"One afternoon I was ruthlessly snatched branch and all from&#13;
my corner and seated in middle of table surrounded by four most formidable young men who treated me shamefully and made slurring&#13;
remarks that I dare not repeat. But while there I saw a young man&#13;
standing by the English alcove nervously turning the leaves of a&#13;
grammar. The agitation of this Prep. increased at the approach of a&#13;
dignified collegiate girl, a moment of hesitation then I heard Miss&#13;
B-'Would you like my company to the lecture next Wednesday&#13;
night?' I did not hear the answer.&#13;
"One morning when the students were nicely settled at their&#13;
work, some one appeared at the door saying, 'Dr. Lewis' house is on&#13;
fire.' Such a scattering as there was for Prof's, students and even&#13;
Madam rushed the stairs and ran madly up the street. For half an&#13;
114&#13;
&#13;
hour I listened anxiously for return that I might know the result.&#13;
Some said, 'meat boiled over,' others, 'chimney caught fire.' What&#13;
it really was I do not know.&#13;
"It seems there are no privileged characters, for one day the German teacher chanced to be standing in my room, the History Professor seeing her decided to pass the time of day, this lead to other&#13;
topics and quite a breezy conversation followed 'till Madam rapped&#13;
.energetically and called, 'Too much noise in the room.'&#13;
"On that long to be remembered day when the wind blew in&#13;
gale, and sheets of rain passed by my window, I saw many an umbrella sail away with hats, hair-pins and even coats. Inside it grew&#13;
so dark that Madam asked a certain tall young man to light the gas.&#13;
'No doubt you can borrow a match from some young man who&#13;
smokes,' she said. But not a match could be found in the library.&#13;
"I have learned to love the students but there are some faces I&#13;
seldom see; I've heard it said, they do their studying in the halls.&#13;
"Many other secrets I might tell you but must forbear, yet I&#13;
hope in the future you will have more respect for your Library Owl."&#13;
&#13;
115&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
CLARK FOSTER- Captain,&#13;
C. G. FLANAGAN- Coach,&#13;
w. L. HARDING- Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Des Moines at Yankton,&#13;
&#13;
for 1901&#13;
M.C.&#13;
&#13;
28-&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion,&#13;
Yankton,&#13;
Mitchell,&#13;
Yankton,&#13;
Vermillion,&#13;
&#13;
0&#13;
&#13;
0- 5&#13;
56- 0&#13;
5-17&#13;
I I- 5&#13;
&#13;
Schedule for 1902&#13;
Cornell at Sioux City,&#13;
Yankton at Yankton,&#13;
&#13;
Sept. 23&#13;
Oct. 4&#13;
&#13;
Football&#13;
&#13;
Oct.&#13;
Hamlin at St. Paul,&#13;
Carlton at Northfield,&#13;
Yankton at Sioux City, Nov.&#13;
DesMoines at Des Moines,&#13;
Nov.&#13;
Simpson at Indianola,&#13;
Hamlin at Sioux City,&#13;
Vermillion at Sioux City,&#13;
Nov.&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
18&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
25&#13;
&#13;
is a new feature in the life of Morningside College. Last year&#13;
was the first time in the history of the college that a definite schedule was&#13;
arranged and carried out. In the fall of 1900, late in the season, Alph&#13;
Lockwood was elected manager for the team of that year, and games were&#13;
arranged with Yankton College and South Dakota University. In these&#13;
games, the men, under the captaincy of Oscar Reinhart, did good work,&#13;
but because they had no one of experience to coach them, much of their playing was&#13;
individual work. The good work done by these men furnished the inspiration for&#13;
last season's efforts, when a definite schedule was arranged for and carried out.&#13;
The list of colleges played was small because of the difficulty of securing the necessary financial support.&#13;
.&#13;
Last year was the critical year in the history of football in Morningside College.&#13;
Two things were demonstrated beyond the reason of a doubt: first, that the men of&#13;
the college can play football, and second, that the college and the city will support&#13;
the game financially.&#13;
The days of doubt are past, and football has carved for itself a legitimate&#13;
place among the sports of the college. Each fall the eyes of the city will be turned&#13;
toward the college on the hill with expectancy. They will give financial aid and&#13;
loyal and enthusiastic support at the games. No longer will our padded giants be&#13;
compelled to play to a crowd of 200 or 300, but thousands will wear the maroon and&#13;
press the side lines to urge the men as they carry the pigskin in triumph for a&#13;
"touchdown." Each man on the 1901 team is worthy of especial mention, but it is&#13;
sufficient to say that individual playing was always subordinated to team work.&#13;
Nearly all of the men who played football last year will be on the team this fall, and&#13;
with the new men who are coming, the team can justly merit the support of every&#13;
student of the college and every resident of Sioux City. The securing of Flanagan&#13;
for coach has added an impetus to the game among the men and will bring many&#13;
more who will strive for a place on the team. His place on the Chicago team and&#13;
his work for the past three years under Stagg will insure for us a style of playing that&#13;
can meet any college in the state.&#13;
Clark Foster has been chosen captain of the team. H e was the unanimous&#13;
choice of the men who composed the last fall team. In the last game with Vermillion&#13;
he showed his ability as a field captain and the close score was due to his work in&#13;
generating his team.&#13;
Arrangements have been made to run a big excursion into Sioux City to witness the first game next fall. This game will be played on September 23, and will&#13;
be the date of the dedication of the new athletic park.&#13;
&#13;
95&#13;
&#13;
WATCH THIS SPACE NEXT YEAR&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College Glee Club&#13;
&#13;
Our College Paper&#13;
Collegian&#13;
Reporter&#13;
of Morningside&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
A twenty-four page&#13;
weekly Journal with&#13;
a circulation of&#13;
&#13;
500&#13;
&#13;
copies every issue.&#13;
&#13;
D. LAWRENCE YOUNG,&#13;
Editor and Publisher.&#13;
&#13;
ESTABLIS H ED 1890&#13;
&#13;
Ladies' Basket Ball Team&#13;
86&#13;
&#13;
87&#13;
&#13;
The Hawkeyes&#13;
F. MISSMAN President.&#13;
M otto- No n palma sine pulvere.&#13;
&#13;
G. GOODLANDER- Secretary.&#13;
Colors-Silver a nd Gold .&#13;
&#13;
Yell&#13;
Animus, An im us, Dictus Sum !&#13;
Haw, Ha w, H aw, Ki, Ki, Ki!&#13;
Hawkeye, H awkeye!&#13;
Kah! R ah !! R ah !!!&#13;
&#13;
Ki , K i, Hawki My!&#13;
Wh ee Zip, Boom Ba Zoo !&#13;
R ah R ah, l owah !&#13;
Wha-ho-hi a nd a Bazoo Boom,&#13;
&#13;
HE Hawkeye Literary Society was organized in the fall of&#13;
1899. Since the organization the Society has made rapid&#13;
progress in the literary field. As it has been thought that&#13;
thorough preparation is necessary for public programs, strict&#13;
attention has been given to closed door work. The membership is&#13;
increasing rapidly, but care will be taken that all have an opportunity for development. Many new members have been taken in during&#13;
the last year. In the stillness of the program night is heard a dreadful sound coming from the northwest hall. Shouts of laughter are&#13;
m ingled with the groans of victims and the hurried steps of an angry&#13;
goat. A moment more and an awful sound fills the corridors. The&#13;
new student, trembling with fear, asks the reason for the disturbance&#13;
and shudders when he is informed that it is only the regular initiatory&#13;
ceremonies of the Hawkeyes.&#13;
Debating and Oratory are becoming a prominent feature in the&#13;
Society. We have resolved to .raise the roof, as the boys are greatly&#13;
hampered in their Rights of oratory. This we think is a wise action,&#13;
although a special apparatus will be necessary for the rescue of the&#13;
soaring orator. With the present ceiling a step-ladder is sufficient.&#13;
The writer considers it worth the while to mention some of the&#13;
typical members. The fattest member of the Society is Melson. He&#13;
is noted for conversational ability and laziness. It can be proven&#13;
that during the hot weather he carries a cat under his arm to breathe&#13;
for him, and he has been known to hold long conversations with the&#13;
bed post during the night. But of his football record the Hawkeyes&#13;
are justly proud. He is Morningside's star center. Hartzell and&#13;
Sawyer are men of great literary ability; this has been demonstrated&#13;
by the forceful and logical oratory displayed before their victims in&#13;
the barber's chair. William Richards deserves a place in our literary&#13;
circle. H e follows in the footsteps of Demosthenes. Although he&#13;
has not yet shaved his head, he has entirely deserted society, that is the&#13;
feminine portion. As minister he fills a weekly appointment. Space&#13;
prevents further mention of the individual members of our Society.&#13;
65&#13;
&#13;
The Zetaletheans&#13;
&#13;
Dates&#13;
&#13;
reeking with the damp and mold of the past are the&#13;
bug-bear of the burdened history student. They transfix&#13;
him to the martyr stake of definiteness and hold him with&#13;
bands of iron to the post of certainty. But to the student&#13;
who loves his Society, dates-some dates-are very dear. A mystic&#13;
charm surrounds these-a charm which increases and deepens with&#13;
the passing of time. To those upon whom kind Fate has bestowed&#13;
the right to wear the scarlet and black, October 11, 1897, is such a&#13;
date. Around this the memory plays with delight, for it was then&#13;
that the Zetalethean Society was born.&#13;
The first clays of life are always days of anxiety and care. Many&#13;
were the meetings which were held before existence was actually&#13;
assured. Gradually a constitution grew into definite form; officers&#13;
were elected and the first programme was arranged. Then nine halffrightened, yet wholly elated girls stopped to contemplate their work.&#13;
They gazed at the creation of their labor with hopeful eyes for they&#13;
had lavished upon it the thought of their souls. They had set before&#13;
it the ideal of truth and the heights of human attainment. Then&#13;
they turned to the future. Out of the struggle and labor of the early&#13;
days they saw a noble form issue and they were content.&#13;
Almost five years have passed since the organization of the Zetalethean Society was effected. During this time the members have&#13;
faithfully endeavored to attain their ideal of social, literary and moral&#13;
excellence. They have sought those things which best fit for true&#13;
womanly success in twentieth century life. Successful and indifferent programs-even total failures-have been their lot, yet, back of&#13;
all there has ever reposed the consciousness of the good attempted.&#13;
"Esse quam videre" has been their constant cry. In moments of&#13;
trial, in moments of joy, this thought of truth rather than the&#13;
thought of appearances, has been the motive underlying the act.&#13;
Today the Zetalethean is striving to develop a rounded, womanly&#13;
character. Today she believes in the development of every faculty,&#13;
the social as well as the intellectual, but ever and always the moral&#13;
and religious. Tomorrow the Zetalethean steps out into the world&#13;
better fitted to do her part in its heated strife because of her society&#13;
training. Others take her place in the active work of the society, yet&#13;
in spite of change and varying fortune, the magic name of Zetalethean binds heart to heart, as all those who belong to its ranks strive to&#13;
be rather than to seem to be.&#13;
61&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Atheneums&#13;
&#13;
Dark&#13;
&#13;
indeed is the night that has no stars. Only the artist&#13;
can portray by brush or pen the wonderful beauty of a&#13;
scene, where the clouds slashed and tossed by the tempest&#13;
are suddenly broken and through the rift the stars appear&#13;
as promises of peace and security to tempest-tossed voyagers.&#13;
Thus amid the strife of opposing elements, and the troubles of a&#13;
new school, the dark clouds suddenly parted, and one by one bright&#13;
stars appeared until twelve had been discerned. In November, 1891,&#13;
this group of stars was discovered to be the constellation, Atheneum.&#13;
This new discovery became a mystery to many interested and often&#13;
was heard the exclamation"Twinkle, twinkl e, little sta r,&#13;
H ow I wonder what you are,&#13;
U p above th e world so high&#13;
Lik e a diam ond in th e sky."&#13;
&#13;
Some studied our constellation, because they were attracted by&#13;
its beauty, some because of the wonder we instilled into their hearts,&#13;
but some studied us or rather noticed us because they were obliged to&#13;
do so. For some people never stop to notice the little things of life,&#13;
but have their gaze upon objects far in the distance, forgetting that&#13;
were it not for the little stars that light the way and measure the distance, their great aims would be beyond reach. So like the stars of&#13;
Heaven we seem to be breathing forth the motto-"Utile Dulci"(the useful as well as pleasant.)&#13;
New stars have constantly been discovered until now the constellation is greatly enlarged so that not only does America feel our&#13;
influence, but even as far east as India may our light be seen. From&#13;
term to term and year to year the individual mem hers of this constellation change their relative positions, those which occupy the&#13;
prominent places one year pass into the background and yield theirs&#13;
to another.&#13;
No, we would not say that a few of our stars have&#13;
gone out. Although they have ceased to brighten our sky and to&#13;
guide the way of mortals, still we believe they have gone to another&#13;
world where they will shine more brightly than here.&#13;
Constantly during the ten and one-half years the Atheneum has&#13;
continued to grow in wonder and brilliancy. We can only hope that&#13;
someone will say of us as Longfellow said of his stars"Sil ently one by one, in the infinite meadows of heav en,&#13;
Bl osso med th e love ly sta rs, the forge t-me- nots of the an ge ls."&#13;
&#13;
53&#13;
&#13;
Tennis Club&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
Teatn.= ======&#13;
&#13;
'&#13;
&#13;
Offi cers:&#13;
A. RUTHVEN- President.&#13;
&#13;
M. F. McDOWELL- Vice President.&#13;
&#13;
Tennis&#13;
&#13;
One of the most important branches of&#13;
athletics in Morningside College is that&#13;
of tennis. The club was organized in the&#13;
fall of 1900 and has shown wonderful progress since&#13;
its organization. In regard to the work done by the&#13;
team, it sufficeth to say, "there record is clean." In the&#13;
two years which have passed not a single game has been&#13;
lost. They have scooped everything they have run up&#13;
against. We are sure, with such a start, to accomplish&#13;
great things in the future . .&#13;
&#13;
Anyone expecting to enter Morningside College and&#13;
wishing to join the Club must be in good practice, as only the "select"&#13;
are elected.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
. .&#13;
C&#13;
H. Olds,hpitcher; C. Debenham, pitcher; C. Foster, catcher; .L.&#13;
Smylie, first base; J. Nissen, second .base; H. Debenham, third base;&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
·.&#13;
.&#13;
H. Van Dyke, right .field; J. Bleakly, center field; H. Briggs, left&#13;
·&#13;
'&#13;
field; E. Fry, shortstop; R. Toothaker, substitute; C. McKaig, captain; W . B. Fry, manager.&#13;
List of Games&#13;
Morningside College vs.&#13;
&#13;
.. . .. .. ..&#13;
&#13;
Score&#13;
6-1 I&#13;
&#13;
LeMar's High School.·.·· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · . . . . . . . . . . 5-12&#13;
Washburn at Sioux City· · · ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·&#13;
. . . . ...&#13;
3-16&#13;
Sioux City League at Sioux City .... ... . ... . . ... . .. ...... 3-10&#13;
Yankton at Sioux City· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · . . . . . . . . . . 4- 7&#13;
Morningside at Yankton ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .. . ... . .. ... . . 13- 2&#13;
Morningside at Morningside . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
. . . . . . . 5-10&#13;
Collegiates and Preps. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . .... . . . .. .. .&#13;
U. S. D. at Vermillion. · · · · · · · · · · . · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·&#13;
Vermillion at Sioux City·· · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·&#13;
· ·· ·· ····&#13;
97&#13;
&#13;
BYE BYE, GEORGIE; WH EN WE WANT ANOTHER&#13;
DEBATE WE WILL SEND FOR YOU.&#13;
&#13;
FRESHIE (To Ne w Student in Spring Term):&#13;
last winter ."&#13;
NEW STUDENT:&#13;
&#13;
OUR COLLEGE BOOK STORE&#13;
&#13;
One&#13;
&#13;
A Fresh Arrival&#13;
&#13;
beautiful day in the early fall a tall, lank, would-be sporty&#13;
looking young man arrived in the city and as he had no&#13;
baggage except a small satchel h e did not expect to secure&#13;
the services of a hackman, but h e gazed at them in openmouthed wonder as their various cries greeted his ears: "Vendome&#13;
Hotel, Sir! Going right away! First-class hotel ! Vendome, Sir!"&#13;
He seemed to wonder at one hackman more than the rest, as he cried&#13;
in stentorian tones: "Mondamin, Garretson, Omnibus! This way&#13;
for th e Mondamin and Garretson !" But no response came from the&#13;
traveler. "Kerridge, Sir? Kerridge ! Oxford H otel , Sir! Take&#13;
a kerridge for the Oxford." "Pullman Hotel, Sir? Best hotel in&#13;
town! Take you to the Pullman!" The hack drivers were inclined&#13;
to be amused at the green countryman; finally one of them ran up&#13;
to him and said: "Morningside College, Sir? Going ri ght away;&#13;
take you out to Morningside." This struck the "Fresh Arrival" in&#13;
just the right spot, and the man who had been bright enough to see&#13;
that the young man was from a farm had the honor and profit of&#13;
carrying Mr. Augustus Greenstalk who had "finished the school down&#13;
to hum," and was advanced enough to go away to school, out to th e&#13;
"Pride of Sioux City," Morningside College ("The Farmer's Home.")&#13;
&#13;
I s that so; what was it ?&#13;
&#13;
FRESHIE: "You know those odorifero us wa lk s along the east si d e of Park&#13;
Pl ace campus; well, when the first few loads of ca rbo naceous ci nd e r s were dumped&#13;
o n th e ground th e gaseous odor soo n permeated th e a tm osph e re fo r a co ns id e rabl e&#13;
distance around. A yo uth , sk ill ed in fanciful conclusions, who liv ed some tw o blocks&#13;
away, upon sniffing the morning air and scenting th e gaseo us atmosphere imm ed iately conclud ed upon what h e thought the cause. Rushing to th e nearest 'ph one h e&#13;
comma ndin g ly sa id in a somewhat sarcast ic voice: 'ls thi s the ci ty gas plant? Yes?&#13;
Well you better send a man out here to Morningside right away; the main gas p ip es&#13;
hav e hursted, th e gas is escap in g and making everybody sick.' Rang off. A man&#13;
from the Gas Works came ou t on&#13;
th e next car a nd immediately obse rvin g th e cause, ca ll ed upon th e&#13;
you th and gently told him th e&#13;
cause. My, you ought to have seen&#13;
how cheap h e looked."&#13;
NEW STUDENT: "Indeed, h ow&#13;
c h eap did he look?"&#13;
FRESHIE: "We ll, to use Melson' s figu re, 'Like thirt y cents with&#13;
the three rubbed ou t.' "&#13;
NE W STUDENT (inqu is itiv e ly):&#13;
"Who was th e guy?"&#13;
FRESHIE:&#13;
pharmacist."&#13;
&#13;
TIME GOES TOO FAST FOR THE STUDENTS WHEN&#13;
THE HOUR COMES TO SAY GOOD NIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
JONATHAN SNODGRASS.&#13;
&#13;
134&#13;
&#13;
"Say, we had the b es t joke h e re&#13;
&#13;
135&#13;
&#13;
"They say he is a&#13;
&#13;
May and June&#13;
1&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
3&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
1S&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
26&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Junior Class holds all clay session. Dr. Cook dismisses&#13;
Chemistry Class, doubtless in recognition of Juni ors'&#13;
value.&#13;
Senior Academy Declamatory prize awarded.&#13;
(a) Seniors a ppear in "Mortar Boards" and mourning&#13;
weeds, presumably in sympathy with their beloved&#13;
brothe r Samuel. (b) A swarm of Bumble Bees breaks&#13;
the solemnity of the occasion however.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Baseball - Morningside 12, Yankton 11.&#13;
D ean think s th ere is altogether too much stealing going&#13;
on in halls.&#13;
Zets initiate new membe rs.&#13;
First Senior Piano Recital of Departmen t of Music.&#13;
Campus Day. Usua l events at Rive rsid e in afternoon,&#13;
Preps carry everything. Baseball- Pre ps 7, College 5.&#13;
Baseball-Yank ton 7, Morningside 3. Coach Flanagan&#13;
arrives in the city.&#13;
Baseb a ll- Morningside 10, Yankton H igh School 2.&#13;
Prof. Flanagan captures th e h earts of all th e m ale&#13;
students in first Chapel address.&#13;
Graduating R eci tal.&#13;
Prof. Flanagan captures th e hea rts of all the femal e&#13;
students.&#13;
Graduating Recital.&#13;
Prof. Barbour roasts ne ws pa per reporte rs.&#13;
Miss Ferguson's square letter didn 't come. Much&#13;
wee ping .&#13;
Junior-Senior Oratorical Contest.&#13;
Baseball- Vermillion-Morningsicle.&#13;
Gold Medal Contest.&#13;
&#13;
JUNE&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
1S&#13;
&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
Track Meet- Vermillion-Morningside&#13;
Medal Contest.&#13;
Inter-Collegiate D ebate. Baseball- Vermilli on-Morningside.&#13;
Philo Annual Picnic.&#13;
Diamond Medal Contest.&#13;
Normal Graduation.&#13;
Elocution Graduation.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Baccalaureate Address.&#13;
Address before&#13;
Christian Association.&#13;
Acad emy Graduation.&#13;
Class Day. Alumni Lecture.&#13;
Wednesd ay morning Alumni Business Meeting. Wednesday afternoon Inte r-society Program. Wednesday&#13;
evening Oratorio.&#13;
Thursday morning Commencement Exercises. Thursday afternoon Annual College Lectu re followed by&#13;
Conferring of Degrees. Thursday evening Presiden t's&#13;
Receptwn.&#13;
&#13;
The Bee, you know, is a contrary thing,&#13;
It gives us nectar and also a sting;&#13;
&#13;
This sting, my boy, is a mine of wealth,&#13;
It is good for the blood, not bad for the health.&#13;
127&#13;
&#13;
"I&#13;
&#13;
have that honor," said Bill assumingly: "What may I do for you?"&#13;
Why, I- I wanted to see you about coming to school here."&#13;
"Won't you step in?" said the new president.&#13;
"Let me see, what is your name?" asked Bill.&#13;
"Henry Phillips."&#13;
"What course do you think of taking?"&#13;
"l think I prefer the Philosophical."&#13;
"That's right. You couldn't choose a better one"&#13;
"Thetrouble is I shall have to earn part of myway as I go along said the&#13;
prospective student, blushing at his confession. "I know how to run a typewriter&#13;
and thought that might help me some."&#13;
"Certainly. There is good demand for such work here at present." A scheme&#13;
dawned upon Bill. "I have been typewriting some myself," he continued. "My&#13;
regular stenographer has moved to Texas. I want to get another one before school&#13;
begins.&#13;
If you care to write some for me this afternoon l will be glad to have you.&#13;
Then if the work ts satisfactory we can make some arrangement for next term. Here&#13;
are some outlines for the History Department."&#13;
The stranger was all eagerness for such' a chance. Soon the typewriter was&#13;
clicking like hail on a tin roof.&#13;
After some time Bill began to wonder how he could rid himself of this new&#13;
fellow withoutspoiling the joke. He was not long in thinking of a way.&#13;
Mr. Philips, have you secured your room yet?"&#13;
"No, I haven't," replied the stenographer perplexed.&#13;
"Well, that's one of the things you ought to see about today."&#13;
"Maybe they wouldn't trust ME. If you would go with me- "&#13;
Bill tried to imagine himself doing such a thing.&#13;
Some one was coming down the hall. The door opened and in stepped Dean&#13;
Lymer and with him- Dr. Lewis .&#13;
That's from the frying pan into the fire sure, thought Bill. His face, however,&#13;
wore its usual bland expression.&#13;
·&#13;
"Why, how do you do!&#13;
I'm glad to see you!" he said, shakin'g hands with&#13;
them but not mentioning their names so that Phillips should know who they were:&#13;
Ive been typewriting some this afternoon," the would-be-President explained, "and&#13;
haven t. kept things very tidy. I will just clear out some of these papers."&#13;
"Many new students in yet?" said Dr. Lewis, seating himself before his desk&#13;
and feeling for his keys.&#13;
"Yes, we are going to have more than ever this term. I see the janitor has&#13;
taken the waste paper basket away. Excuse me just a minute until I throw these in&#13;
the box in the hall." So saying he hastened out the door with his outlines under his&#13;
arm. "A miss is as good as a mile, any day," thought he as he hastened out of the&#13;
duilding.&#13;
Phillips has never told how he excused himself.&#13;
&#13;
108&#13;
&#13;
~~&#13;
&#13;
Uncle Zebulem's Tour&#13;
of the Colleges&#13;
&#13;
On&#13;
&#13;
January 14, 1902, Dr. Lymer received the following letter&#13;
from Mr. Ezekiel Zebulem, a well-to-do farmer who lives&#13;
near Fayette, Iowa:&#13;
&#13;
DEEN OF MORNENSIDE KOLLEGE:-&#13;
&#13;
I heer yuve got a fin Kolledge out thar at swoixe sitee an as Ive got a boy&#13;
Billy whitch is rite smaat brite I loud Ide put him too sum skule an I wunt send billy&#13;
too nuthin but the best soo ive been vysiten sum of the Kolledges in iowa weve got a&#13;
guden ny by hare but i want Billy to see sum of the warlde and gess ile send him&#13;
away to skule - Sum how ar nuther I kouldent fel just rite over thar at Kornyell the&#13;
gals suted me prettie fare but them uther fellers made me fel like icle bin harroin al&#13;
day-i wus wel ny suted out thar at seeder Fals- them fellers hav got sum gitinem&#13;
(git in them) but i know Bill wasent kut out for a skule mam I loud Ide not send him&#13;
thar now myster deen ime wanten to pae yure skule a vyset Bills cut out fur debaten&#13;
an one of mi nabors wus tellen me you got in sum fine fellers this yare fur debaten&#13;
if your ha vem a debaten sune let me no and lie be cu men over about then - thar&#13;
koms Billy with a Ioele of fodder an i muse helpem unlode as hes driven a fule of a&#13;
kolt.&#13;
So longe to yue&#13;
EZEKIEL ZEBULEM.&#13;
&#13;
The Dean who has the interest of the school at heart sent Mr.&#13;
Zebulem a timely letter informing him of the date of our intersociety&#13;
debate. On the afternoon of Feb. 17, Mr. Zebulem arrived via I. C. Ry.&#13;
He espied a young man, getting off the same coach, with a serious,&#13;
studious expression on his face (the young man proved to be Loyd&#13;
Harding who was returning from his charge) and accosted him thus:&#13;
"Say young feller do you know whare that debaten match comes off&#13;
tonight?&#13;
Mr. Harding, with his keen perception, surmised at once&#13;
that the old gentleman was corning out to the debate. "Yes sir,"&#13;
said Mr. Harding, I am going out to the college now and will be&#13;
pleased to go with you.&#13;
Mr. Zebulem was more than delighted. As the "college" car&#13;
galloped along over the viaduct, Mr. Zebulem turned pale and bracing his feet against the floor said: "I've rid buckin bronkos but&#13;
never on a high bridge like this har.,, Mr. Harding conducted Mr.&#13;
Z. to the Dean's office, and according to his custom the Dean showed&#13;
Mr. Zebulern through the intricacies of Main Hall. When they reached&#13;
the auditorium Mr. Z. could contain himself no longer and dropping&#13;
his hat, with hands uplifted, and open mouth he exclaimed: "Ge-e-e&#13;
mymie! Say Mr. Dean, this hare beats 'em all. What a bunch of&#13;
hay this ud hold. If your debaten looms up you can just put Billy's&#13;
name on your list."&#13;
109&#13;
&#13;
NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY&#13;
&#13;
MEDICAL&#13;
&#13;
ScHOOL&#13;
&#13;
(CHICAGO MEDICAL COLLEGE.)&#13;
DR. N. S. DAVIS, JR. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
DR. W. S. HALL, JR. DEAN&#13;
&#13;
Four Hospitals with 800 beds.&#13;
Ward Walks Daily for Every Senior.&#13;
A Dispensary Treating 25,000&#13;
Patients a year.&#13;
&#13;
New Buildings and Equipment.&#13;
A Superior Faculty.&#13;
A Reputation as a Leader in&#13;
Medical Education.&#13;
&#13;
FOR ANNOUNCEMENTS AND PARTICULARS , ADDRESS ______.&#13;
&#13;
DR. ARTHUR&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
EDWARDS, SECRETARY,&#13;
----2431&#13;
&#13;
DEARBORN STREET , CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
The Organ Grinder&#13;
may be doing a charitable work. But we are strictly out for business.&#13;
We grind out constantly, year after year,&#13;
&#13;
HALF TONE AND PHOTO ZINC ENGRAVINGS&#13;
have been doing it for twenty years. The illustrations in this Book, "The&#13;
Bumble Bee of '03," are a part of our grind. Should you be interesteddrop us a line, tell us what you want, and we shall quote you rates&#13;
and send catalogue.&#13;
&#13;
The Levytype Co.,&#13;
171-3 Washington St. Cor. 5th Ave.,&#13;
CLASS DIVISION IN HISTOLOGY.&#13;
&#13;
Chicago, Ill.&#13;
&#13;
The Adelphians&#13;
Founded November 4, 1901.&#13;
&#13;
H. L. MOSS MAN, President.&#13;
Motto- "Cape Diem.&#13;
&#13;
IRA E. PRICHARD, Secretary.&#13;
Colors- R o yal Purple a nd Cerise.&#13;
&#13;
YE LL&#13;
&#13;
We're&#13;
&#13;
Wah- Hoo-Wah!&#13;
Ta-Rah- Boom!&#13;
Re- Rah- Zipp!&#13;
Rickety! Boom!&#13;
Ripety! Ripety!&#13;
Ripety ! Rid e!&#13;
&#13;
the Adelphians of Morningside! Owing to the rapid&#13;
growth of the school it was deemed necessary to organize&#13;
a new society for men in the Academy, there being about&#13;
seventy-five Academic Students out of society work. At&#13;
the request of some of the faculty, Harland L. Mossman consented to&#13;
circulate a petition and do his utmost to meet this need. Friday&#13;
morning, November 1st, Perry E. Fredendoll and Earl D. W. Hanna&#13;
rallied to his assistance. The three went to work in earnest, and by&#13;
the following Monday had more than enough to complete the organization. Monday evening, November 4, 1901, sixteen men met in the&#13;
South-east Hall on the the third floor of Main College Building and&#13;
organized the Adelphian Literary Society with the following officers:&#13;
President, H. L. Mossman; Vi ce-President, E. D. W. Hanna; First Censor, S. H·&#13;
Day; Second Censor, C. C. Croston; Critic, Lloyd Crosb y; Recording Secretary, I.E.&#13;
Prichard; Corresponding Secretary, P. E. Fredendoll;Treasu re r, C. 0. Rex.&#13;
&#13;
Twenty-five men allied themselves with the new movement as&#13;
charter members. Thirteen others joined during the winter term.&#13;
They have held a program and a business meeting each week laying&#13;
much_stress on debating and parliamentary drill. Their constitution&#13;
provides for a series of championship debates. Realizing the benefits&#13;
derived from intersociety debating, a committee was sent to the&#13;
Hawkeye Society asking them to appoint a committee to confer with&#13;
them to draft a debating compact. This request was complied with&#13;
and a compact was soon drawn up and adopted by both societies.&#13;
Their society membership is made up of men of various occupations,&#13;
the majority of them earning their own way through school, but&#13;
made of the kind of stuff that makes good society men, as they are in&#13;
school to fit themselves for some definite work, thus they are sure to&#13;
make things go. Four are preachers, while several others are fitting&#13;
themselves for that vocation; four have taught school, and five or six&#13;
have been in successful business of one kind or another.&#13;
73&#13;
&#13;
Colors-Olive Green and Old Rose.&#13;
Emblem-Spade.&#13;
Motto-Dig.&#13;
The Freshman Class came, was matriculated, and is&#13;
now conquering t he obstacles in its way. When we came&#13;
the weather was dreary, the rain was falling and the drooping leaves seemed to be emblematic to us of the reception&#13;
we were to receive at the hands of the often talked of&#13;
Sophomores. Those first nights were awful nights. H ow&#13;
we hied ourselves to our rooms ere Old Sol had hid his face&#13;
behi nd the western horizon, and there alone with the curtains drawn low, the doors locked and barred, crouched in&#13;
an obscure corner, we sat not daring to remove ou r clothes and reti re, waiting and&#13;
listening for the approach of Sophomore feet. What awfu l moments and what&#13;
harrowing thoughts. Visions of ourselves being dragged through the streets, ducked&#13;
in the Half Moon P ond, or left in some lonely barn , tied hand and foot and gagged,&#13;
played before our tear bedimmed lanterns, like mice about a cheese box.&#13;
In th e early mornin g we awoke, gazed out of the window and longed to be home&#13;
again with the dear folks and the familiar scenes. On the third morn ing with&#13;
trembling and fear we attended the chapel exercises. As we entered the large room&#13;
we found the seats assigned to the Freshmen Class and for the first t ime got a&#13;
glimpse of that Sophomore crowd tha t had been harrowing our minds for the past&#13;
few days. What a sight; what a revelation ! T he on ly redeeming fea ture was the&#13;
Darling. The re she sat among four of the homeliest, roughest, awkwa rdest looking&#13;
fell ows that it has ever been the misfortune of a Freshman to gaze upon. Stanley&#13;
Carson, Robbie Mcisaac, Harry Jones and Alex Ruthven, composed the dust-.&#13;
begrimed, weather-beaten quartette. Surely mutual sympath y must have drawn&#13;
them together.&#13;
As we saw th em there and noted the sadness of their countenances ou r fear&#13;
turned to sympathy and charity and we were in the act of taking up a collection to&#13;
get a doctor for them, when Ira Aldrich came in and took h is seat by th eir side a nd&#13;
to the right. This seemed to cheer them and we learned later the reason he had&#13;
such an influence over them was, because he had been there before.&#13;
But, to write of the Freshmen was the assigned task. This is the largest F reshman class in the history of the college, numbering some 45 members. They are the&#13;
best from th e Academ y and the High Schools of northwest Iowa, southern Minnesota,&#13;
southeastern South Dakota, and northeastern Nebraska.&#13;
It wou ld be interesting to give a short sketch of the life of each member of this&#13;
class, then fair reader, you wou ld be better able to appreciate the emblem and motto&#13;
of the class. In the life story of each there are inte resting facts and incidents, that if&#13;
written, would call to your m ind the early lives of the great men and women of the&#13;
world. In the Academy and in th e High Schools, records were made and reputations&#13;
won that might well be the pride of any one. All this may sound like boasting, but&#13;
you wi ll see it is not when we sight a few of the things Freshmen have done and are&#13;
doing this year. T o the class belongs the honor of second place in the Oratorical&#13;
contest and a place on the program for a toast at the State Oratorica l Contest. One&#13;
of our number is president of the Prohibition Club of the school, a college organization, and another will represent the college in the State Oratorical Contest. Our&#13;
members hold prominent offices in th e Athletic Association and are we ll represented&#13;
on the foot ball, base ball and track team.&#13;
The ca reer of the Freshman Class has only begun, d uring the next three yea rs&#13;
they will carve a place for Morningside Col lege, among the colleges of Iowa, that&#13;
will be the pride of her constituency. Trophies will be hung upon he r walls, and&#13;
records placed in h er archives that will cause those who follow to rustle.&#13;
The Freshman Class looks out upon the tomorrow with the assurance of success.&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
President&#13;
&#13;
Wilson S. Lewis====&#13;
&#13;
Dr.&#13;
&#13;
R. WILSON SEELY LEWIS is known to every Methodist Congregation in&#13;
Northwest Iowa. He believes in and lives the strenuous life. For five&#13;
years as President of Morningside College, he has employed his splendid&#13;
ability to open doors of educational"opportunity to the youth of Northwest&#13;
Iowa. Born in New York, of sturdy Holland stock, he learned in youth&#13;
and young manhood, during his academic and collegiate days at St.&#13;
Lawrence University, the value of patient, persistent endeavor.&#13;
In addition to his collegiate and private study in America, Dr. Lewis has had&#13;
the advantage of travel abroad, and attendance upon courses of study at Oxford,&#13;
England. After graduation from college his time was devoted for two years to the&#13;
work of the pastorate. Providentially called to the principality of Epworth Seminary, for nine years he stood as the inspiration of the young people who came to&#13;
Epworth. By his efforts the halls of that institution were filled with students, many&#13;
of whom are now filling responsible positions in business and professional life.&#13;
Upon his acceptance of the presidency of Morningside College, he at once took&#13;
upon his heart all the interests of this institution. The splendid new building, Main&#13;
Hall, stands as a national monument of his labors, while the nearly five hundred students gathered largely through his efforts, bear witness to his zeal in the course of&#13;
Higher Education.&#13;
Doctor Lewis believes in winning and holding his students for the spiritual&#13;
life. During his entire presidency he has personally directed the College prayermeeting and has each year led many to Christ.&#13;
He has been himself an inspiration to the large number of students who hear&#13;
him gladly every Thursday evening, and the influence of his life will abide for decades to come in the lives of young men and women, who have felt the power of his&#13;
consecrated life.&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
T. C. FRYE.&#13;
Robert Bradford Wylie, Sc. B., Professor of Biology, graduated from Upper Iowa University in 1897. In&#13;
the year 1898-1899 h e taught Science in Morningside College, the summer of 1898 being spent in advance study in&#13;
the University of Minnesota. In 1900 h e was elected to&#13;
a Fellowship. in Botany in the University&#13;
of Chicago.&#13;
To Prof. Wylie is due th e credit of rapidly ra is ing the&#13;
Scien ce Work of o ur school to the level of that in the&#13;
best coJJeges. The fact tha t he has he en recently elected&#13;
to Fellow 111 Botany in University o f Chicago is evidence&#13;
o f his scholarship. We regret his separation from us,&#13;
but nevertheless it reflects hono r upon o ur college.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK H. GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
. Prof. T . C. Frye who will have charge o f the Biological Work h ere for the coming year, will take his&#13;
Doctor's Degree from the University of Chicago this&#13;
summer.&#13;
Prof. Frye 1s a n A lumnus of the University of&#13;
Illinois,&#13;
amd has spent. several years in public school&#13;
work as Principal and City Superintendent. He resigned&#13;
the City Superintendency a t Batavia, Ill., to enter the&#13;
Department of Botany at the University of Chicago&#13;
where he has spent three years. During one year he&#13;
held a Fellowship and for a nother was Assistant in Histology and Cytology. Prof. Frye comes recommended as&#13;
a man of high character, liberal and thorough culture.&#13;
&#13;
Frank H. Garver, A .B 1 has the distinction of being&#13;
Iowa born , his birth place being Albion , Marsha ll&#13;
County. Afte r attending the schools at A lbion, h e went&#13;
to Epworth Seminary, where he graduated. H e afterward w ent to Upper I o wa University, where he r eceived&#13;
his A . B. degree. m 1898. In the fall of tha t year he&#13;
accepted the Chair of Histo ry in Morningside&#13;
College&#13;
During the school year of 1901-02, Pro fessor Garver took&#13;
a leave of absence to pursue_ a course of s tudy at the&#13;
State University, having r eceived a F e llowship to t hat&#13;
institution&#13;
His work he re has been such as to make&#13;
his return to Morningside greatly appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES.&#13;
&#13;
E . A. BROWN.&#13;
&#13;
Fre d Emory Haynes, Ph. D ., was born in MAssachusetts,&#13;
in which State&#13;
he received his pre parato ry education. H e e ntered Harvard College in 1885,&#13;
graduating in 1889, afterward r eceiving the degree of Ph. D. in the graduate&#13;
school. The n e xt year (1892) was s pent in study a nd travel in Europe. H e&#13;
s tudied Economics in the University of Berlin under Gustav Schmoller, a lso in&#13;
the University o f Cam bridge under Sir John Seely and others. In August, 1892,&#13;
h e r e turned to the U nited States as teach e r o f His to ry and Economics in the&#13;
Un iversity o f California. In 1896 and '97 h e was assistant in historical work in&#13;
Harvard College. Since September 1900, he h as occupied the Ch air o f Political&#13;
Science a n d Sociology in M o rnings ide College.&#13;
&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown , A . M ., graduated fro m DePauw U niversity in&#13;
1884 an d durin g the past e ighteen years has been con t inuously engaged in educational work, e ither as high school prin cipal, professor in college or as county&#13;
superinte n dent of schools. H e h as ta ught in or conducted county institutes&#13;
every year fo r the past twe l ve years, a nd h as been four times e lected County&#13;
Superintendent&#13;
of Schools o f Woodbury County. His ability as in s tructor a nd&#13;
educator is recognized througho ut the State. The student body r egret that h e&#13;
is no lo nge r a member of the faculty since he has again been elected Superinendent of Schools .&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT B. WYLIE.&#13;
&#13;
T. C. FRYE.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK H. GARVER.&#13;
&#13;
Robert Bradford Wylie, Sc. B., Professor of Biology, graduated from Upper Iowa University in 1897. In&#13;
the year 1898-1899 he taught Science in Morningside College, the summer of 1898 being spent in advance study in&#13;
the University of : innesota. In 1900 he was elected to&#13;
M&#13;
a Fellowship in Botany in the University of Chicago.&#13;
To Prof. Wylie is due the credit of rapidly raising the&#13;
Science Work of our school to the level of that in the&#13;
best colleges. The fact that he has heen recently elected&#13;
to Fellow in Botany in University of Chicago is evidence&#13;
of his scholarship. We regret his separation from us,&#13;
but nevertheless it reflects honor upon our college.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. T. C. Frye who will have charge of the Biological Work here for the coming year, will take his&#13;
Doctor 1 s Degree from the University of Chicago this&#13;
summer. Prof. Frye is an Alumnus of the University of&#13;
Illinois. and has spent several years in public school&#13;
work as Principal and City Superintendent. He resigned&#13;
the City Superintendency at Batavia, Ill., to enter the&#13;
Department of Botany at the University of Chicago,&#13;
where he has spent three years. During one year he&#13;
held a Fellowship and for another was Assistant in Histology and Cytology. Prat. Frye comes recommended as&#13;
a man of high character, liberal and thorough culture.&#13;
&#13;
Frank H. Garver, A.B , has the distinction of being&#13;
Iowa born, his birth place being Albion, Marshall&#13;
County. After attending the schools at Albion, he went&#13;
to Epworth Seminary, where he graduated. He afterward went to Upper Iowa University, where he received&#13;
his A. B. degree in 1898. In the fall of that year he&#13;
accepted the Chair of History in Morningside College.&#13;
During the school year of 1901-02, Professor Garver took&#13;
a leave of absence to pursue a course of study at the&#13;
State Unh·ersity, having received a Fellowship to that&#13;
institution. His work here has been such as to make&#13;
his return to Morningside greatly appreciated,&#13;
&#13;
FRED EMORY HAYNES.&#13;
&#13;
E. A. BROWN.&#13;
&#13;
Fred Emory Haynes, Ph. D., was born in Massachusetts, in which State&#13;
he received his preparatory education. He entered Harvard _College in 1885,&#13;
graduating in 1889, afterward receiving the degree of Ph. D. in the graduate&#13;
school. The next year ( 1892) was spent in study and travel. in Europe. He&#13;
studied Economics in the University of Berlin under Gustav Schmoller, also 1n&#13;
the University of Cambridge under Sir John Seely and others. In August, 1892,&#13;
he returned to the United States as teacher of History and Economics in the&#13;
University of California. In 1896 and 197 he was assistant in historical work in&#13;
Harvard College. Since September, 1900, he has occupied the Chair of Political&#13;
Science and Sociology in Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
Ephenor Adrastus Brown, A. M., graduated fro!" DePauw University in&#13;
1884 and during the past eighteen years has been continuously engaged in educational work, either as high school principal, professor 1n college or as county&#13;
superintendent of schools. He has taught in or conducted county institutes&#13;
every year for the past twelve years, and has been four times elected County&#13;
Superintendent of Schools of Woodbury County. His ability as instructor and&#13;
educator is recognized throughout the.State. The stu.dent body regret that he&#13;
is no longer a member of the faculty since he has again been elected Supertendent of Schools.&#13;
&#13;
W. A. BLACKWELL.&#13;
&#13;
ROBERT N. VAN HORNE.&#13;
&#13;
Prof. W. A. Blackwell came to Morningside College in September, 1896.&#13;
He received his education in different schools, having taken a course in&#13;
the Gem City Business College of Quincy, Ill., and received the degree&#13;
of "Master&#13;
of Accounts." He also completed a two years' course in the&#13;
Western Normal School of Bushnell, Ill., 1896. His success as a teacher is&#13;
shown in the increased number of students in that department, and in the consequent growing out of old accommodations to take up the work in newer and&#13;
larger. For three years he has also been Secretary of the Faculty, and has&#13;
discharged the duties of that office in his usual business-like manner.&#13;
&#13;
Robert Negley Van Horne was born in 1875 on a farm near Mason, Iowa.&#13;
In 1894 he graduated from the high school at that place , and in the winter of&#13;
1896&#13;
entered Cornell College. Five terms later he transferred his allegiance to&#13;
Morningside College, where he graduated as a Ph. B. in 1900. The next year&#13;
was spent at Johns Hopkins University where he pursued a special course in&#13;
mathematics. In the spring of 1901 he was elected Instructor of Mathematics&#13;
in Morningside College, and in the fall of that year took his place among the&#13;
Faculty. Prof. Van Horne holds a high place in the hearts of his students, and&#13;
his energetic spirit, sturdy, progressive manhood, and clean, wholesome influence, certainly augurs well for the future of his department.&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
W. GREENE&#13;
&#13;
Prof. J. w. Greene is a native of Illinois, but has spent most of his life in&#13;
Iowa. After completing the course of the high school in the town near his&#13;
home, he went to the Upper Iowa University at Fayette, where he graduated&#13;
from the scientific course in 1899. He came to Morningside&#13;
College to take&#13;
charge of the Department of Physics in 1900. He obtained leave of absence in&#13;
the spring of 1901 and went to the University of Wisconsin. The past year has&#13;
been one of hard work on his part and the result is that his laboratory is offering as complete a course as may be found in any college of Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
REYNARD B. GREYNALD.&#13;
Prof. Reynard B. Greynald, A. M .. was born in France in 1854. He attended&#13;
the public schools of Normandy for five yea.rs, after which he entered college&#13;
in Paris. His college course was completed in the College of Chateau Goutier.&#13;
While there he won the first prize in Greek and Latin and also in Geometry.&#13;
In 1874 he received the A. B. degree in the University of France.&#13;
He studied&#13;
Law and Letters in the Academy for a year and a half receiving the A .. M . degree He has occupied, with. great success, the Chair of French in Morningside&#13;
College for six years. He will always be remembered by his characteristicnod&#13;
and his gentle hand fall upon the shoulders of the boys who approach him.&#13;
He is indeed a valuable man to our college.&#13;
&#13;
HELEN ISABELLA LOVELAND.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
On&#13;
&#13;
CHARLOTTE ELLA HICKMAN.&#13;
&#13;
LILLIAN ENGLISH DIMMITT.&#13;
&#13;
FAIRY STORY&#13;
&#13;
one twenty-ninth of February, in a lonely sequestered nook far from the&#13;
bustle of city, a nd the gossip of town, there was born a child, the heroine of&#13;
this ta le.&#13;
Four fairies, whose mission is to shape the d estinies of m ortals, gathered&#13;
around the cradl e of our h eroine. Each stood at the corner of the cradle and&#13;
gazed intentl y at the child .&#13;
Then, for e ven fairi es disagree, two insisted that her eyes were brown, her ha ir&#13;
d a rk, while the othe rs firml y d eclared he r eyes to be blue and her h air to be light. All&#13;
agreed, however, that she must co ve r her eyes after the fashi on of morta ls with those&#13;
strange thing s called spectacles.&#13;
Then their disc ussi on wax ed wa rm. "She will be tall and thin," said one. "Ah,&#13;
no. She will be plump a nd of medium heigh th," said another. "You a re both wrong,"&#13;
said the other two, "she will be sma ll an d slight." Aft er a moment of reflection one&#13;
said, "she will be dig nifi ed a nd slow in her movements ; he r speech will be d e liberate,&#13;
her m anne r imp ressive." One agreed , but the othe r two sa id, "Sisters, you a re mistaken,&#13;
she will be quick in movement a nd in word." " Hark," sa id one, "it is tim e for us to&#13;
return to our queen. L et us leave our g ifts a nd d epa rt."&#13;
As they were about to spread their wings, one cried, "Siste rs, we ha ve not na med&#13;
he r.'' All stood in d eep thought. They with one voice said , " H er name sha ll be&#13;
L ilcharaghe l,"- a nam e which in fa iry language means di ve rsity of characteristics.&#13;
Thus blessed b y the fairi es, Lilch a raghe l grew into happy childhood.&#13;
H er first words were " Cara Mutter und et lieb Pater." She amazed her rela ti ves&#13;
MISS AGNES FERGUSON,&#13;
b y correct E ng lish sentences. Never did she talk bab y talk after the ma nner of&#13;
ordinary children.&#13;
Her school life b egan early and was a series of strange contradictions. H er intellectua l superiority was a lways apparent, yet some&#13;
days she was the despair of her tea chers,- lessons were unlearned, while notes and paper wads, flew in all directions from he r d esk.&#13;
Perchance the next day h er eyes would be g lued to her book, and upon he r fa ce there would rest the pious and sa intl y expression of one wh o&#13;
is d eepl y shocked at such enormities of condu ct. At last she came to the day when her mission in life must be chosen. Again th e four fairi es&#13;
sought her side. Again they each whispered one word in her ear. Together they sa id, "Teach." As the fairi es gazed ea ch rejoiced to see&#13;
her prophecy fulfill ed and again they spoke, with one voice saying, "Lilcha raghel, you are well named, for you a re not one, but four."&#13;
&#13;
MYRTLE M. LOTHIAN.&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE L. SEARCH.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. CLARA BOOTH DAVIDSON.&#13;
&#13;
Myrtle M. Lothian was born in Spencer, Iowa.&#13;
Her early life was uneventful only as she moved from&#13;
place to place-being the daughter of a Methodist minister. In 1895 she finished the high school course, and&#13;
after a year's rest the higher education was begun, At&#13;
Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, Iowa, she started her college course, taking music as a mere side study. Two&#13;
years were spent there, then came the decision to&#13;
study music as a profession. The first year of professional study was pursued at the Conservatory of Music&#13;
of Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill., after which&#13;
she came to Morningside as an assistant teacher.&#13;
&#13;
George L. Search came to Sioux City August 1890,&#13;
30,&#13;
and took a complete course in Stenography in the&#13;
Business Department of the University of the Northwest.&#13;
He was engaged in business until September 1, 1901,&#13;
when he accepted a position as Assistant Secretary of&#13;
the Board of Trustees of the college and Instructor in&#13;
Shorthand and Typewriting. Mr. Search is also an experienced accountant and has thoroughly checked over&#13;
the accounts of the college since its incorporation in 1895&#13;
and has written a new set of double entry books, showing a complete financial history of the institution. This&#13;
service has filled satisfactorily a long-felt need.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Clara Booth Davidson attended the Philadelphia&#13;
School of Oratory and has since studied under many of&#13;
the prominent teachers of oratory in the United States.&#13;
She has attained great success both as a reader and as&#13;
teacher of elocution. For five years she has had charge&#13;
of the work during the summer at Chautauquas in different states. She was elected Instructor in Elocution and&#13;
Physical Training in Morningside College in 1899. For&#13;
the past three years by her energy and efficiency she has&#13;
made her department an indispensable addition to the&#13;
school. Her work is greatly appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
0 . P. BARBOUR.&#13;
&#13;
Prof Barbour is a native of Ohio. Early in life he exhibited a marked&#13;
talent for music. At the age of ten he was the best reader i n a large choir of&#13;
matured singers. After availing himself of the best advantages at home he&#13;
entered Grinnell College where he studied Piano under the direction of L. A.&#13;
Phelps now of Chicago. From Grinnell he went to Oberlin where he remained for five years studying piano, violin and chorus work. Later he spent&#13;
two years in Germany with instructors of world renown. He studied harmony&#13;
andcomposition under the personal direction of the noted Dr. Goteschius, who&#13;
chose Prof. Barbour to conduct the English speaking classes in harmony. Upon returning from Germany Prof. Barbour taught eight years 1n Cornell College with marked success.&#13;
From Cornell he went to Epworth where&#13;
he&#13;
remainedfour years. Since 1897 he has been Director of the Musical Conservatory of Morningside College.&#13;
&#13;
MRS. BLANCHE P. BARBOUR.&#13;
Mrs. Barbour was a pupil of Balisaus, who classed her among the most&#13;
apt of his students. After graduating in Music from Morningside College Conservatory, Mrs. Barbour spent a year in Germany. Prior to her work abroad&#13;
she spent two summers with Liebling in Chicago. Walter Bachmann was her&#13;
instructor in piano and Faehrman in pipe organ while in Germany. Mrs.&#13;
Barbour has decided ability in composition, having written a number of choice&#13;
quartettes for male voices. Mrs. Barbour is a strong addition to our musical&#13;
faculty.&#13;
&#13;
STANISLAUS SCHERZEL.&#13;
&#13;
HENRY F. KANTHLENER.&#13;
Henry Frederick Kanthlener, A. M., Professor of&#13;
Greek in Morningside College comes of a sturdy Teutonic ancestry, and was born in the State he is now serving&#13;
as a citizen. In 1896 completed the classical course at&#13;
he&#13;
Cornell College and spent the following year as Instructor in Latin and Greek at Epworth Seminary The&#13;
years from 1897 to 1899 were spent at Harvard Utuversity&#13;
where he received the Master's Degree.&#13;
Professor&#13;
Kanthlener began his work here in the autumn of 1900.&#13;
In the two years he has been here he has greatly built&#13;
up his department and has won the friendship and&#13;
esteem of both students and teachers.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Stanislaus Scherzel was born in Revel, Russia,&#13;
in 1871. After his father's death, he and his mother&#13;
sailed for America, landing at New York in 1880. Leaving New York they came to Chicago where they lived&#13;
until 1885, when they made their home at Davenport, Ia.&#13;
It was here Mr. Scherzel took his first violin lesson.&#13;
His aunt, Mrs. Leopold Markbreit, of Cincinnati, Ohio,&#13;
perceiving his great love for the violin and his display of&#13;
musical talent, gave him the advantage of eight years'&#13;
study in the Chicago Musical College and in the College&#13;
of Music in Cincinnati under the instructions of Jacobsohn, Campanari and Marieu. In the year 1898 he&#13;
located at Sioux City, Ia., where he has since made his&#13;
home. In the fall of 1901 be was appointed as Violin Instructor in the Department of Music in Morningside&#13;
College. He holds the position of leading violinist in&#13;
the city. As an instructor Mr. Scherzel excels.&#13;
&#13;
KITTIE ANNA PATTERSON.&#13;
Kittie Anna Patterson was born in Sac County, Iowa,&#13;
near Schaeler, where her early life was spent. She completed the high school course at Schaeler and later pursued a four years' course in Des Moines, and immediately&#13;
thereafter went to Chicago where she continued to study&#13;
her chosen line of work. In the summer of 1900 she&#13;
made a sketching tour through Michigan. Thus prepared, she came to our college in the winter of 1901&#13;
where she took full charge of the Art Department. Miss&#13;
&#13;
Patterson' s accomplishments in her chosen work are&#13;
worthy of note, while her sterling womanhood and her&#13;
executive ability are of the greatest value in the development of her department.&#13;
&#13;
The Academy.&#13;
&#13;
Where we all got our start.&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
The Senior Academy Class&#13;
Yell.&#13;
&#13;
OCCi c e r s.&#13;
&#13;
Rickety, Rickety, Rickety Rix!&#13;
J. W. WUNN-President.&#13;
We are, We are Doctor's Chicks.&#13;
ELLA WENDEL-Secretary.&#13;
We'll hatch out in 1906.&#13;
Rickety, Rickety, Rickety Rix!&#13;
JOHN PRICE- Treasurer.&#13;
Colors-Gold and Dark Blue.&#13;
&#13;
We&#13;
&#13;
truly believe the Juniors did not realize what they were requesting when&#13;
they asked for a history of the Senior Academy Class of 1901-02. Volumes might be written of the struggles undergone and of the progress&#13;
made by the class in its desire to succeed and in the accomplishment of&#13;
this desire. But our space will not permit us to go into detail here and&#13;
relate all the battles fought and victories won with Germany, Greece and Rome. It&#13;
will not permit us to tell of the tragedies witnessed through the vivid portrayal of&#13;
heroes and heroines by the "to be" Shakespeareans. However, we will try to bring&#13;
before you a few incidents from the history of the class.&#13;
It was with somewhat of a fearful feeling that we entered our school year.&#13;
Why should it not be? Before us stood the "Freshies" loudly lauding themselves to&#13;
the skies, and at our feet lay the worn-out ponies and rusty spades of their former&#13;
pretentious life. Anxiously we worked until all their rubbish was cleared away and&#13;
all was ready for the laying of our strong, firm foundation. Then we looked up expecting to see the "Freshies" far out of our reach, but to our surprise we saw them&#13;
still in the same place. Why this? At first we could not answer. But since, in their&#13;
trying to bring back some of their old worn-out "ponies," we believe a reason to be&#13;
given. Their situation opened our eyes and we have cautiously watched that such&#13;
shall not be the condition of the Freshman Class of 1902-03.&#13;
The Sleighri de, Janu ary 3 0.&#13;
The snow of night was falling fast,&#13;
In happy homes we saw the light&#13;
As through a suburban village passed&#13;
Of household fires gleam warm and bright&#13;
A bob which bore 'mid snow and ice&#13;
About, the evening lights shone bright,&#13;
A class shouting in one voice,&#13;
And from our lips escaped that night,&#13;
Aei Pro-eontes.&#13;
Aei Pro-eontes.&#13;
At twelve o'clock with cheerful sound,&#13;
The Senior Class was homeward bound,&#13;
Uttering the oft-repeated cry&#13;
With voices clear that knew no sigh,&#13;
Aei Pro-eontes.&#13;
&#13;
Where Some of the Cla ss Were.&#13;
&#13;
Wun(o)n(e) (McK)night Hanna(h) McCay and Henry Hartzell were left at Patterson's to Cook. Miss-mann and Byrkit Woodford met at the B(r)ower and went to&#13;
the Mill(i)ner to get the Price of hats. Wendel McCarthy and Lewis Yeager Durst&#13;
follow. Debenham, Hulser and Beinhauer overtook them and had them go to Patterson's where they were met by Melson and Flinn, and all went in and ate Fr(y)ied ·&#13;
Hawk-in(s) great delight. While here they were Lock(ed)-in by their Fair host, who&#13;
said "you Kin-dig to get out. On the following Day Bart-let(t) them out.&#13;
Genera l Information&#13;
&#13;
Concerning the Class .&#13;
&#13;
Vermillion's star athlete laid out by the fall&#13;
of Price. November 16.&#13;
Myrtle Cook, president; Emma Fair, vicepresident, and Sadie Van Horne, secretary of&#13;
Y.W.C.A.&#13;
A "fair" girl of the Class was heard to remark,&#13;
I'm always going to be young."&#13;
W. W. Harris, secretary of Y. M. C. A.&#13;
Sadie Van Horne on January II delivered&#13;
Freshman ma(i)le at second house east of P e ters&#13;
Park.&#13;
Foster, captain of football team.&#13;
&#13;
Van Dyke, captain of basketball team.&#13;
WHAT TWOGIRLS SAID&#13;
&#13;
First: "Oh, Green is my favorite color."&#13;
Second: " Oh, I think Black (does very)&#13;
well. "&#13;
Estella Harding, president of a College Society in Fall term, and took part in Zet. Grand&#13;
Public, February 15.&#13;
Faith Woodford, Senior in Music.&#13;
Charles Richards took part in the Otho&#13;
Grand Public on Marc 17; and is a member of&#13;
the College Quartet.&#13;
&#13;
"Oh,&#13;
&#13;
39&#13;
&#13;
The Normal&#13;
&#13;
Shorthand&#13;
&#13;
Class&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
the fall of nineteen hundred and one five maidens in search of wisdom turned&#13;
.&#13;
their footsteps toward the path which led to the Tower of Knowledge&#13;
To them It seemed as a strange mysterious. building, the apartments&#13;
. .&#13;
of which were illuminated according to the studies pursued therein. But it&#13;
was attractive to them and they decided to visit the place and imbibe some&#13;
of the wisdom found there; although one knew it could not equal the&#13;
.&#13;
charms(?) of her former home, i.e. Chicago. Hence the others heard much concerning this place even to the quality of paper on which the daily news was printed.&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
Mr.&#13;
&#13;
GEO. L. SEARCH, Ass,t. Sec'y. of the Board of Trustees, has charge of this department. Graham's system of&#13;
Standard Phonography is taught. Eleven students registered during the year, six of whom h ave completed the&#13;
course.&#13;
Mr. Ed. V. Youngquist has a position with the Bank of Ocheyedan, Ocheyedan, Iowa, and is fast becoming an expert stenographer.&#13;
Ed. always was exceptionally bright, and we predict for him a very&#13;
successful career in his chosen profession.&#13;
Miss Ada M. Grier has been taking some special advanced work&#13;
during the Spring Term, and assisting in the business office of the&#13;
College. Miss Ada has been a faithful student, and is not afraid of&#13;
hard work. She has already been offered a good position.&#13;
Mr. Chas. L. Debenham will no doubt become one of the leading&#13;
writers of the. Winged Art. He is the class phenomenon, being able&#13;
to write with either hand. With a little practice he expects to write&#13;
with both hands at once and take dictation from two different persons at the same time.&#13;
Miss Ethel M. Epperson is prepared to do general work for any&#13;
who are in need of the services of a proficient stenographer. She is&#13;
accurate and careful, and with practice will become an expert&#13;
Amanuensis. She is doing special job work. We understand, however, that she recently refused a very flattering offer.&#13;
Miss Cora G. Grier is successfully filling a position in one of the&#13;
leading Real Estate and Insurance offices in the city. Cora likes&#13;
Sioux City very well, but expects to remain here for a short time only.&#13;
Miss Pearl Phillips is employed as stenographer and bookkeeper&#13;
in her father's office in Ft. Dodge, Iowa. In connection with her&#13;
regular duties she is also prepared to take dictation or do general&#13;
copy work, for those needing the services of an experienced stenographer.&#13;
&#13;
40&#13;
&#13;
and Typewriti ng&#13;
&#13;
41&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Ross Brown&#13;
President&#13;
Ralph Milliken&#13;
Sec'y&#13;
Color&#13;
&#13;
Purple&#13;
&#13;
=The=&#13;
Othonians&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
Suaviter in modo,&#13;
fortiter in re.&#13;
&#13;
YELL:&#13;
&#13;
Zip! ki! ah! Zip! ki! ah!&#13;
Otho! Otho! Othon-i-ah !&#13;
&#13;
A Freshman's Letter&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE, April 19, 1902.&#13;
DEAR PA:&#13;
I thought I heard my grandmother say&#13;
The Othos gave their yell to-day,&#13;
With a Re-vo! With a Ri-vo!&#13;
With a Re-vo! Ri-vo! Vum!&#13;
For it's just so plain that we can show&#13;
The ones that get there are Othos&#13;
With a Ring-tail! With a Rat-tail!&#13;
With a Ring-tail! Rat-tail! Bang!&#13;
&#13;
Excuse me, Pa, but that's a new yell I've been learning. You&#13;
see I've joined the Othonian Literary Society and I'm so glad that&#13;
I'll have to tell you all about it.&#13;
I'm glad for several reasons:-In the first place I'm in about the&#13;
best crowd of fellows in school, and they know how to receive a&#13;
fellow, too. I declare, I'm lame enough already and I've taken only&#13;
three degrees. Then, too, the Othos are the oldest society in the&#13;
school, having been formed in the fall term of 1891 soon after the&#13;
opening of the old University of the Northwest .&#13;
Our badge and the preamble of our constitution will show you&#13;
the object of our formation. The badge is a shield signifying the&#13;
defense of Truth and Morality. At the top of the shield is inscribed&#13;
the word Otho, and below that are two crossed pens signifying composition.&#13;
In the lowest point of the shield is the beak of a Carthaginian war vessel-rostrum-representing oratory. The preamble of&#13;
our constitution reads: "Desiring for ourselves the highest intellectual moral, and social culture and improvement in composition,&#13;
oratory, debate, and parliamentary usage: and realizing that development comes only from proper exercise,-we, students of Morningside College, do organize a literary society and adopt for our government the following Constitution and By-laws."&#13;
The boys say that our motto which, construed, means, "The&#13;
gloved hand of iron," has been lived up to ever since the organization&#13;
47&#13;
&#13;
of the society, and has done much toward the formation of sturdy,&#13;
cultured manhood.&#13;
The name of our society was taken from that of old Otho or&#13;
Otto, the Great, King of Germany, and restorer of the Holy Roman&#13;
Empire. When it comes to conquests we have tried to keep up with&#13;
the old fellow's record, for we have won every oratorical contest in&#13;
the college, and three of the four debates that have been held with&#13;
the Philos. The last debate was held February 21st, and the victory&#13;
gave us the right to two of the three debaters to represent the college&#13;
in the intercollegiate debate, but we declined taking part in another&#13;
debate this year, as we thought the time left wasn't long enough for&#13;
us to get up a creditable debate according to our methods, even if we&#13;
should defeat the college's opponents.&#13;
One-a-zippa ! Two-a-z ippa ! Three-a-zippa! Zo!&#13;
Rippl e tipple! Roly poly! Ki-o-to!&#13;
Wh ang-a-dood le! Hity-tity! Whand-a-doodle! Whang!&#13;
Otho! Otho! Boomerang!! Bang!!!&#13;
&#13;
That's another of our yells. The Boomerang is our paper and it&#13;
still blazes away. Like the society it is willing to give and take.&#13;
I said we had a lot of nice fellows and we have, but there are a&#13;
couple that the boys are talking of expelling, I think; at any rate I&#13;
heard Aldrich tell Charlie Richards that we wouldn't be bothered&#13;
with them next year. Come to think of it, Pa, they're serious. One&#13;
of 'em is Dad Eberly. He was president in the winter term and you&#13;
can't rattle him a little bit, but he gets so awfully red-headed sometimes that the boys can't do anything with him. Brown is the other&#13;
fellow. The only trouble with Brown is that you can't keep him&#13;
from getting the floor and talking all the time when anything comes&#13;
up about the Zets. They are our sister society. We occupy the ZetOtho hall on the third floor. The Zets are true blue every time and&#13;
I tell you we're proud of 'em, that is, all of us but A. H. Maynard.&#13;
When they're mentioned his only thought seems to be "Kill'm !&#13;
Kill'm !"&#13;
Simpson is the smartest looking man in the society, but he's&#13;
from Oklahoma, and tells such lies about the country that nobody&#13;
trusts him. He has charge of the city missions.&#13;
We boast of thirteen alumni out of nineteen men who have&#13;
graduated from the school, and _&#13;
President Ross Brown and Dad&#13;
Eberly will make fifteen. Besides these there are dozens of others&#13;
who never graduated, but who are an honor to the society in active&#13;
business life. Don't you think, Pa, that I'm in a pretty good crowd&#13;
of fellows.&#13;
Your true son,&#13;
ROBERT.&#13;
48&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
The Crescents&#13;
&#13;
Ever&#13;
&#13;
YT HING must have a beginning-even the great oak&#13;
begins from a very small acorn-but from this beginning it&#13;
attains great height. The laying of the Atlantic cable was&#13;
a great work, but its beginning was the thoughts of a man&#13;
and his diligent application to the task. Our school life may begin&#13;
with many difficulties, but with perseverance on our part we may&#13;
attain the very highest mark of prominence.&#13;
Literary work also has its beginning. What would the world do&#13;
or be without literature? It would be dry enough to burn up. The&#13;
many evenings spent listening to the great speakers or reading good&#13;
books are never wasted, for we are brought to see matters in a new&#13;
light.&#13;
The Crescent Literary Society began to grow in the fall of the&#13;
year 1900. The first program given by this society was held in the&#13;
basement chapel on the twenty-sixth of January, 1901, the very&#13;
night the Freshmen kidnapped their little brother, a Sophomore.&#13;
The program was not affected by this, however. One week last fall&#13;
some thought the Society was dead-even a kind friend wanted to&#13;
take the order for a tombstone, and still another wished to preach the&#13;
funeral sermon-but these movements were not thought advisable&#13;
and the members concluded to wait and see if it would come to life&#13;
again.&#13;
It surely did, for in a week they presented a program fit for a&#13;
king to listen to.&#13;
You ask, who are the Crescents? Space will not permit a&#13;
minute description of every one, but you may know who some of&#13;
them are before this is finished.&#13;
The first president of the Society may be seen "Fostering" on&#13;
pleasant evenings.&#13;
Another may be seen breaking prohibition laws by being with&#13;
"Ale," and another can be seen walking after school through "Hins&#13;
Dale."&#13;
The Society boasts the honor of having a Fitzsimmons; perhaps&#13;
she may be some relative of the fighter, but we cannot vouch as to&#13;
her abilities in that line of athletics.&#13;
The' motto is a good one : "We succeed by doing," and by&#13;
doing the Crescents intend to grow until some day they may hold&#13;
a high position of prominence in the state or nation.&#13;
69&#13;
&#13;
The Aesthesians&#13;
&#13;
Motto-To possess the Aesthetic.&#13;
&#13;
Emblem-The Olive Leaf.&#13;
Colors-Fawn&#13;
&#13;
and Pink.&#13;
&#13;
YELL&#13;
Pink a nd fawn.Brighte r th an th e dawn, Way above par,G uess who we are!&#13;
F a wn a nd pink.Who do you think ?&#13;
Who a re we th en ?&#13;
Why!&#13;
&#13;
Aesthesian!&#13;
&#13;
That&#13;
&#13;
"Necessity is the mother of invention" is acknowledged&#13;
by all. In the fall of 1901, there being but one literary&#13;
society for young ladies in the Academy of Morningside&#13;
College, it became evident that in order to promote literary&#13;
activity, another society was necessary to accommodate the large&#13;
number of academic students. The plan of a new organization had&#13;
been suggested by different ones during the fall, but no permanent&#13;
steps were taken toward organization. At length in February, 190 2,&#13;
having obtained permission, nineteen energetic young ladies organized the Aesthesian Literary Society.&#13;
As yet, the society is in its infancy. It has no past history, no&#13;
memorable deeds, no great victories to record. We can only speak&#13;
of its present and future.&#13;
It is starting with a few members who are determined to make&#13;
it a success. Its business and literary meetings are full of energy&#13;
and delight. With the present conditions in view, it is safe to say&#13;
that as the years come and go, the Aesthesian Literary Society will&#13;
stand the test, and will become one of the most important organizat ions in the Academy of Morningside College.&#13;
77&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition Club of&#13;
Morningside College&#13;
Purpose-The study of the liquor problem from every angle.&#13;
OFFICERS, 1901-02.&#13;
President,&#13;
C. L. GILBERT&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
W. W. HARRIS&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
F. E . HERRINGTON&#13;
Winner of Oratorical Contest,&#13;
D. C. HALL&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO:&#13;
&#13;
With an open mind&#13;
And gentle word&#13;
We recei ve the Truth&#13;
When she is heard.&#13;
&#13;
YELLS&#13;
&#13;
Prohibition&#13;
For our State&#13;
The Saloon&#13;
Annihilate&#13;
For the G. 0. P.&#13;
We'll never wait&#13;
See us, See us&#13;
Vote 'er straight.&#13;
&#13;
The Donk may bray&#13;
Gesticulate&#13;
He's full of whiskey&#13;
Up to date&#13;
W e'll not bite&#13;
His Anti-Bait&#13;
S e e us, See us&#13;
Vote 'er straight.&#13;
&#13;
Charter Members.&#13;
R. B. WYLIE, (Biology.)&#13;
C. F. EBERLY, (Chemistry.)&#13;
A. N. COOK, (Chemistry.)&#13;
GEO. W. BARSELOU, (Geology.)&#13;
GUY G. FRARY, (Chemistry.)&#13;
ALEX . G. RUTHVEN, (Biology.)&#13;
M. F. McDOWELL, (Ph ysics.)&#13;
W. J. MORGAN, (C hemistry.)&#13;
FRED J. SEAVER, (Biology.)&#13;
E. J. FRY, (Chemistry.)&#13;
JOHN W. GREENE, (Physics.)&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
&#13;
Science Club of Morningside College was organized in&#13;
September, 1901. Active membership in the organization&#13;
is limited to instructors and major students of the various&#13;
Departments of Natural Science, but all who are interested&#13;
along these lines are welcome, and are invited to take part in the&#13;
discussions, etc.&#13;
The objects of the club are to promote original investigation; to&#13;
cultivate a taste for scientific literature, and to be mutually helpful to&#13;
teachers and students of science.&#13;
Monthly meetings have been held during the year. The work&#13;
has consisted of reports of research work conducted in the college&#13;
laboratories; reviews of important articles from scientific journals, and&#13;
lectures on the general status of different branches of scientific work.&#13;
80&#13;
&#13;
OFFICERS&#13;
G. W. SHIDELER,&#13;
Chief Bald&#13;
C. F. EBERLY,&#13;
Vice Bald&#13;
CHAS. YEAGER,&#13;
Wig Fancier&#13;
STANLEY CARSON, "Ayers' Vigor" Dispensor&#13;
Charter Members&#13;
&#13;
Honorary Members&#13;
&#13;
F. H. GARVER, (Founder)&#13;
A. S. DEAN, (First Chief.)&#13;
&#13;
DR. LEWIS&#13;
&#13;
Black Balled&#13;
LON HAWKINS&#13;
SAM KNOER&#13;
D. C. HALL&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
DEAN LYMER&#13;
&#13;
W. GREEN&#13;
&#13;
Expelled&#13;
GEO. WINTER,&#13;
For fraudulent shaving of head.&#13;
&#13;
81&#13;
&#13;
Sooner Clubs&#13;
&#13;
THE SOONER NOTS&#13;
&#13;
THE SOONERS&#13;
or&#13;
&#13;
or&#13;
&#13;
Married Students&#13;
&#13;
Bachelor Students&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
The Soonerest Sooner, -&#13;
&#13;
GEO. HANNAH&#13;
&#13;
The Sooner Sooner,&#13;
&#13;
FRED RAY&#13;
&#13;
The Nottest Sooner, F. E. HARRINGTON&#13;
Chief Batch,&#13;
GEO. POPPENHEIMER&#13;
&#13;
Active Members&#13;
&#13;
Active Members&#13;
&#13;
C. F. EBERLY&#13;
&#13;
MERRITT METCALF&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
FRANK EDWARDS&#13;
NORMAN MCCAY&#13;
GEO.GOODLANDER&#13;
&#13;
W. GREENE&#13;
CHAS. RICHARDS&#13;
FRANK lNLEY&#13;
JAM ES BLEAKLY&#13;
&#13;
GEO. A. PLATTS&#13;
A. S. HOWARTH&#13;
&#13;
Expelled&#13;
Prospective Members&#13;
&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
*NORMAN MCCAY&#13;
+ SAMUELKNOER&#13;
§FRED HALL&#13;
&#13;
W. MORGAN&#13;
FRED SEAVER&#13;
lRA ADDRICH&#13;
&#13;
Back Sliders&#13;
&#13;
*A. H. MAYNARD&#13;
*F RED NULL&#13;
&#13;
WILL FRY&#13;
&#13;
GEO. STEPHENS&#13;
&#13;
*For secretly stealing away to Canada a nd&#13;
&#13;
*Elections withheld on accoun t of age.&#13;
&#13;
marrying one of the daughters of that land .&#13;
&#13;
tTaken back o n probation since the marriage of M iss Hobbs.&#13;
s For being so atte ntive in waiting upon the&#13;
young ladies at Darling's store.&#13;
&#13;
Buz-z-z !&#13;
Buz-z-z !&#13;
Ge-e-e Whiz-z-z !&#13;
Bumble Bee,&#13;
1903.&#13;
&#13;
82&#13;
&#13;
Instrutnental Music&#13;
THE CLASS OF 1902&#13;
I&#13;
&#13;
With pleasure we give you a sketch of our class,&#13;
How quickly but surely we managed to pass.&#13;
We maids worked together a B. M. to gain,&#13;
And this we accomplished mid sunshine and rain.&#13;
Many desparate battles with the keyboard we fought,&#13;
And had many trials which amounted to naught.&#13;
Of the rules of "suspension" we were never afraid,&#13;
And through "anticipation" we worked for a grade.&#13;
The Faculty all have acknowledged our skill,&#13;
And they must admit we have been through the mill.&#13;
And now it is whispered around the whole town,&#13;
The rest must all go "way back and sit down."&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
With our B. M. to back us, the whole world around,&#13;
We're equipped to sell music by the chord or the pound.&#13;
With all of our talent and musical skill,&#13;
We should find a buyer and certainly will.&#13;
We have conquered at last; we nine jolly cronies,&#13;
Without seeking help from the Main Hall ponies.&#13;
And now we must leave this dear old "North Hall,"&#13;
By bidding farewell to our friends one and all.&#13;
&#13;
.. .&#13;
&#13;
Y. M. C. A.&#13;
&#13;
Young Women's Christian Association&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
President.&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Vice-President.&#13;
&#13;
Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
Recordin g Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
Chairmen of Committees&#13;
&#13;
Devotional, W . M. Richards; Missionary, E. H. Hulser; Bible Study, Fred&#13;
Erskine; Finance, R. E. Root; Inte r-Collegiate Rel ations, R. J. McIsaac; Employment Bureau, F. H. Trimble ; Membership, F. E. Mossman; Train, C. E. Harding;&#13;
Social, Ray Toothaker.&#13;
&#13;
Devotional, Nel lie Blood; Missionary, Grace Darling; Membership, Emma&#13;
Fair; Bible Study, Nettie Fry; Social, Mabel Kill am; Intercollegiate Relations,&#13;
Clara Kill am ; Finance, Estie Boddy.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
A Y back in the history of the college a band of earnest young men organized a society known as the Christian League. The earliest recorded&#13;
business meeting was held May 25, 1898, in which Fred Erskine and Buckwalter were elected president and secretary. On May 3, 1899, after an&#13;
address by R ev. Marsh, the League was disbanded and the members proceed ed to the organi zation of a Y. M. C. A., of which Prof. Frank Garver was chosen&#13;
first president. At the same meeting Garver and C. Van Horne we re elected to represe nt the Y. M. C. A. at the Lake Geneva Conference.&#13;
From a small beginning the Association work has steadily grown and expanded&#13;
until at present it is an absolutely indispensable auxiliary to the college. Below are&#13;
given some of the regular features of the Assoc iation.&#13;
I. Regular Sunday mornin g d evotional meetings.&#13;
2. R egular monthly missionary meetings.&#13;
3. R egular weekly meetings of Missionary Study Class.&#13;
4. Reg ular weekl y Bible study classes.&#13;
5. R egular weekly Volunteer Band meetings.&#13;
6. R egular annual re presentation at Lake Geneva Conference.&#13;
7. R epresentation at International Convention of Student Volunteers.&#13;
8. Regular receptions for new students at the beginning of each term.&#13;
9.&#13;
Maintenance of Information Bureau. (a) Board and Room. (b) Employment Burea u.&#13;
10.&#13;
Publishing of Handbook of valuable information particularly for the benefit of new students.&#13;
11.&#13;
Issue of ce rtificates to students for reduced rates on the railroads.&#13;
Among the important branches of the Association are: The Students Volunteer&#13;
Band; the Information Bureau. The departments are: De votional, Financial, Social,&#13;
Missionary, Inter-Collegiate, Census, Bible Study.&#13;
88&#13;
&#13;
During&#13;
&#13;
June, 1898, amid the hurry and confu sion incide nt to e xaminations&#13;
and commencement, about twenty young women assembled in the commercia l room and transformed the local Christian League into a branch of&#13;
the "National Young Women's Christian Association," and appointed a&#13;
del egate to be sent to the summe r conference at Lake Geneva. Thus was&#13;
ushered in a mighty factor in,spiritual work of our school.&#13;
Afte r Main H all was completed, they together with the Young Men's Christian&#13;
Association, became the proud possessors of the most pleasant room on the third&#13;
floor, which is set apart solely for religious meetings.&#13;
Each year shows a marked growth. The second year they sent one delegate&#13;
to Geneva and then to the State Convention at D es Moines. The third yea r five&#13;
were sent to Geneva and five to the State Convention at Cedar Falls.&#13;
The Bible Circles, Mission Study Class, and weekly devotional meetings have&#13;
been the chi ef factors in carrying out the purposes of the Association:&#13;
"For a warmer earthly friendl y fri endship,&#13;
For a pure r, holier life,&#13;
For a whole-souled consecation,&#13;
Free from taint of earthly strife;&#13;
For the highest aspiration&#13;
Of a heart filled with God's love&#13;
That when life's work is completed&#13;
Each shall rest at home- above."&#13;
&#13;
VOLUNTEER BAND&#13;
&#13;
Organized June&#13;
&#13;
Charter Membetship, 7.&#13;
&#13;
1, 1901.&#13;
&#13;
Present Membership, .13.&#13;
Delegates to Toronto Convention, 5.&#13;
Volunteer Hall Assigned, April 9, 1902.&#13;
&#13;
On Field (India)&#13;
&#13;
Officers&#13;
&#13;
Leader,&#13;
Secretary and Treasurer,&#13;
&#13;
STANLEY CARSON&#13;
NELLIE BLOOD&#13;
&#13;
2.&#13;
&#13;
!=======Basket Ball. = = = = = =&#13;
=&#13;
&#13;
In&#13;
&#13;
year '01 and '02 the basket ball enthusiasts met and organized two teams&#13;
&#13;
under the head of the Athletic Association. A constitution was adopted and&#13;
the following officers chosen: President, H. Van Dyke; Captain of Gentlemen's Team, Chas. Yaeger; Captain of Ladies' Team, Miss Fae Simans;&#13;
Secretary, Miss Florence Davidson; Custodian, W. H. Debenham.&#13;
Although the Ladies' Team has not played any match games, we yet have good&#13;
reasons for believing that it is one of the best teams in the Northwest.&#13;
As there were others who wished to play at basket ball, a second team was&#13;
organized with John Price as Captain. After several weeks of hard work the two&#13;
teams began a series of games in which they won five out of eight. As the game was&#13;
new to them and as they had no coach, we have reason to feel proud of this record.&#13;
&#13;
List of&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
M.&#13;
&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
C.&#13;
M. C.&#13;
&#13;
1st&#13;
2d .............. ..... .&#13;
1st&#13;
1st&#13;
2d&#13;
1st&#13;
1st&#13;
2d&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
22&#13;
&#13;
29&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
38&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
Games&#13;
TEAM&#13;
&#13;
Columbias .&#13;
Sioux City High School..&#13;
Columbias&#13;
Y. M. C. A&#13;
Sioux City High School ...&#13;
Columbias&#13;
Yankton College&#13;
Columbias ........ ...... ..... .. .&#13;
&#13;
SCORE&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
17&#13;
19&#13;
27&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
8&#13;
30&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
\&#13;
&#13;
====Third&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical Contest.= = = =&#13;
&#13;
RAY TOOTHAKER&#13;
&#13;
Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN WENDEL&#13;
&#13;
The New Aris tocracy&#13;
RAY TOOTHAKER,*&#13;
&#13;
Morningside College vs. Neb. Wesleyan&#13;
&#13;
Sheldon. Iowa&#13;
At Morningside College , June 6 , 1902.&#13;
&#13;
Columbi a&#13;
Morningside, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
BENJAMIN WENDEL, +&#13;
&#13;
SECOND CONTEST, '01&#13;
&#13;
QUE STION:&#13;
&#13;
National Progress&#13;
&#13;
R esolved, That our laws should provide for Boards of Arbitration, with powers to compel parties in labor disputes to submit their&#13;
disputes to arbitration and to abide by the Board's decision.&#13;
&#13;
H. A. KECK,*&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
'00&#13;
&#13;
F IRST CONTEST,&#13;
&#13;
The Triumph of Miss ions&#13;
JAMES&#13;
&#13;
A. DAVIES,*&#13;
&#13;
Morningside, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
*First Place. tSecond Place.&#13;
&#13;
Oratorical&#13;
Association&#13;
&#13;
President,&#13;
Vice-President,&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
100&#13;
&#13;
Negative.&#13;
&#13;
Affirmative.&#13;
&#13;
G. G. Frary&#13;
Anna Marsh&#13;
Florence Cate&#13;
W. L. Harding&#13;
&#13;
Geo. A. Platts,&#13;
Miss Florence Cate,&#13;
F. E. Mossman.&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Harry England,&#13;
Mrs. Harry England,&#13;
Mr. John Burk.&#13;
&#13;
This is the first Intercollegiate Debate for Morningside College,&#13;
and all are looking forward to a victory for Morningside College.&#13;
IOI&#13;
&#13;
Some&#13;
&#13;
of&#13;
&#13;
Our&#13;
&#13;
Trust ees&#13;
&#13;
The Avils of an Idjication&#13;
BY MICHAEL O'BRIEN.&#13;
&#13;
Best 1000 Word Story, $5.00, .&#13;
H . A. SAWYER&#13;
Best Short Story, $5.00,&#13;
RALPH MILLIKEN&#13;
Second Best Short Story, S2.oo,&#13;
CHARLES E. SHIDLER&#13;
Best Fable, $2.00,&#13;
RALPH MILLIKEN&#13;
*Best Parable, $2.00,&#13;
JUNIOR CLASS&#13;
Best Poem, $5.00,&#13;
ESTIE BODDY&#13;
*Best Collection of Yellow Back Titles, $2.00,&#13;
JUNIOR CLASS&#13;
*Best Collection of Twelve Jokes,&#13;
$4.00, . . . . JUNIOR CLASS&#13;
Sweepstakes, $2.00.&#13;
*No competition,&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
&#13;
104&#13;
&#13;
To yez bois that are makin' that Junior Bumble Bee: Whin me bye Eddie&#13;
came home the ither day frim college he tould me that yez were offerin' tin&#13;
dollars fir the besht pace that anny wan would write fir yer book. Now Oi&#13;
don't sit mesilf up ash a book maker or a nusepaper correspondint, but&#13;
Oi've heard a good rlal e of late about idjication and ivery wan . that says&#13;
annything about it ish wan of yer idjicated fellies wat wants to git ivery wan ilse&#13;
idjicated. So Oi that it would be a foine thing fir me to ixpriss me views on this&#13;
question, and bein' ash Oi am an onidjicated man and livin' away frim the city on a&#13;
farm siventane moiles narth of Scraggsville, Oi think Oi kin spake with othority on&#13;
the subjick ash Oi know by ixparience what Oi am tellin ' yez.&#13;
Now take an idjicated man and he wants farty or fifty dollars fir a month's&#13;
yez&#13;
wark, and sum of thim want more than that, and yez kin hire ash good a man ash&#13;
iver shouldered a pick fir aiteen or twinty if he aint idjicated. Wy Oi know wan of&#13;
me naybor's bois that wasn't wurth the oice crame he'd ate in Janywary and he wint&#13;
off to college a few years and got a posishun with goovermint fir too thousand dollars&#13;
fir wan year. Thin yez take the g irls : Yez can't git wan of yer idjicated girls to&#13;
wark fir too dollars a wake, fir jist as sune ash th ey git idjicated thin they want to&#13;
tache skule or be a clark in a sthore or office or write books or do sumthin' ilse that&#13;
pays thim better, and so now it's gettin' so we can't hardly git a girl to wark in the&#13;
kitchen at all. Oi waz radin' in the nusepaper only a few days ago of a man&#13;
who had foive girls and ivery wan of thim wint off to college and gradjiated. Well,&#13;
wan of thim married a pracher and anither a lawyir and an ither a docther and the&#13;
ither too wint out fir thimsilves, wan to write books and the ither to tache in a college&#13;
sum where.&#13;
Thin thare's an ither thing too-thase idjicated chaps won't marry our common&#13;
girls; they want sum of thare high sthrung idjicated girls or they will niver marry at&#13;
all. Wy right here in Scraggsville we had a young spalpeen of a docthe r and a&#13;
young pracher that Oi thot ware purty foine min fir bein' idjicated, till Oi tried to git&#13;
thim to marry me dauthers and they up a nd wint down thare to Soo City and came&#13;
back married to a couple of yer college girls and that fixed me.&#13;
And thase idjicated girls are entoirely too sthuck up altogither. They won't&#13;
think of marryin' a good onisht farmer or warkingman. Jist lasht wake the girl me&#13;
ouldest son, Michael, used to kape company wid before she wint off to college, waz&#13;
married to a young saplyn in Scraggsville, the banker's son, and he ish idjiated too.&#13;
Thin thase idjicated fellies want to be ilicted fir prisidint and too go to congriss and the ligislathure and all thase political jobs, and it has got so now that a&#13;
man can't hardly git ilicted to anny office- even a skule director-without an idjication, and an onisht hard warkingman if he ish ilicted fir an office, sum raskal of an&#13;
idjicated fellie will aitlter bate him out of it or wark him to vote ash he wants him to&#13;
annyhow. Thin thare ish all this hulabaloo that thase idjicated fellies ish makin'&#13;
about idjicatin' ivery wan to make the warld better and wizer, and all that kind of&#13;
flummerydiddle. Who iver knew anny wan better and wizer than Abraham Link un,&#13;
or Sam Knoer, or Ray Tooth ak er? And none of thim fellies is idjicated. And&#13;
ferninst all that, our worst min and biggest fools have all bin idjicated. Thare's&#13;
Dooey, ash soon ash he could git to Amerika after the battle of Manillie he wint and&#13;
got fooled by that ould widdie. And Hobson lit foive hundred girls all shlobbe r&#13;
over him in wan day. Thin Sampson and Shley both run a race and had to have a&#13;
special court and trial to see which waz the biggest fool. Aven the Good Book itsilf&#13;
&#13;
105&#13;
&#13;
sez sumthin' about it tak es an idjicated fellie to make a go -d raskaL (Oi am not so&#13;
well posted on Skriptur as Oi m oight be, so Oi can't te ll yez ixactly where that ish&#13;
found, but yez fellies wil I kno w,) And thase idjicated rasbkals will wark wan of us&#13;
common sthicks ivery toime he gits a chance; and do yez think wan of us could wark&#13;
thim? Not by the half o' pint of buttermilk! And whin it comes into polyticks this&#13;
wan same idjica ted fe llie will wark a whoul e million of us chaps to vote fir him, and&#13;
a whoule regiment of us fellies wid a petishun ash long ash d oomsday could not influ ence th e little finge r of wan of thim after h e ish ilicted,&#13;
Thin whin a fellie g its idjicated he allus wants ive ry wa n ilse to git idjicated&#13;
too, and yez fellies kno w ash well ash Oi d o that whinive r a man goes into wick edness he wants ive ry wan ilse to go in too, That's wan of the warst thing about idjication, and fir that rason Oi don't kn ow whithe r Oi'll lit m e boi Eddie go back to&#13;
college an ny mo re or not, fir he's allus a talkin ' about college, and lan g uage, and&#13;
reto rick, and g ramm e r, and feet ball and sich foo lishness, and now h e's got the ithe r&#13;
b ois all a wantin' to go to college too,&#13;
Thin they te ll us th at if the farm ers waz all idjicated so they cou ld all farm&#13;
sientifickally th e land would produce twice as much, Now if that ish so, thin it&#13;
wouldent take ounly half ash many min to wark th e land and thin yez see wan half&#13;
of the min would be out of a job and wan half of the land would have to lay oidle, or&#13;
ilse we would l1ave to se ll it to sum wan ilse,&#13;
Thin if ive ry wan waz idjicated they would know how to be th eir ow n lawyir&#13;
and docther and pracher and skule tach er, so yez see it would lave out of imploimint&#13;
sich a lot of min and wimmin that the country would be flood ed with tramps- both&#13;
mail and faymail - look in' fir an idjicated job whin thare wouldent be no idjicated job&#13;
a look in' fir thim,&#13;
Thin thare ish a lot more that moig ht be said against idjication, but Eddie&#13;
tould me yez ounly wanted a thousand wards, and so Oi must draw me conclusions&#13;
and conclude,&#13;
Thin look in' the quistion square betwane the oyes a nd the mouth, Oi would say&#13;
that firsht thare probabl y allus will be idjicated min, fir avils allus did ixisht and&#13;
they probably all us will, fir a few of ihim mixed in are all roight and necesshary fir&#13;
the country, fir th e Boible sez, yez know, that it takes all kinds of payple to make a&#13;
warld, Thin the thing to do ish to conthrol the a vii ash besht we ca n, jist loike we&#13;
would control the lick er aviL And m e way of control Jin' the c ritter ish thi s- to idjica te ounly a shmall numbe r of our bois and g irls- jist enough to make our lawyirs&#13;
and docthe rs and prachers and skule tach e rs and the loikes, and th e rist kape at&#13;
hom e on the farm and larn thim to be onisht hard-wo rking min loike thare fathers&#13;
and mithers.&#13;
Oi hav e siventane chilclern m esilf- Mary, Michael, Willie, Lizzie, Barney,&#13;
Patrick, Josie, Eddie, Maggie, Johnny, J emmi e, Kati e, D e nnis, Tim, Joseph, Moike&#13;
and the baby. Thin th are's too of thase bois th at ain 't rale sharp, Barney and Eddie,&#13;
and Oi do n't think th ey will iver b e much on th e farm, so Oi'll sine! thim to college&#13;
and icljicate wan fir a prache r and the ither fir a docther. Eddie has already bin&#13;
goin' toyer college thare at Mornin side, but Oi g uess all he's learned the first year&#13;
waz th e college yells and feet ball. Thin Kate she ish a kind of a wak e, frail, sickly&#13;
c ritte r. She never waz anny good around the house and waz not sthrong enoug h to&#13;
do the chores around the barn, so Oi'll idjicate h er fir a skule m a rm. And thin Oi&#13;
think Oi've clone m e duty fir me country, and if a ny of yez icljicated fellies ca n do&#13;
better tha n that Oi'cl loike to h ave him try.&#13;
&#13;
106&#13;
&#13;
How the World Became Round&#13;
&#13;
Professor&#13;
&#13;
KANOVER, a philospher wise, was discoursing&#13;
-upon the rotundity of the earth, The class was sleeping by&#13;
turns that relaxing May afternoon, A fly buzzed in through&#13;
the open window, but upon finding what class it was getting&#13;
into, quickly sped out into the world of ig norance,&#13;
"That the world wa·s flat," continued the professor, "up to the&#13;
time of the Romans at least, there is no doubt. We read of the imperial legions marching to the faur corners of the earth there were&#13;
roads leading diagonally across from the one to the other. At the&#13;
cross-roads stood Rome.&#13;
"During the Dark Ages, however, great changes took place.&#13;
Everything became so corrupt and warped that even the earth itself&#13;
became deflected. In the course of those hundreds of years the outer&#13;
edges of the earth met and gradually united. A process of rolling&#13;
set in, working the mass into the ball or globe which we now have.&#13;
"Proof of this rounding process is given by the Leaning T ower&#13;
of Pisa which was originally perpendicular, but which now leans&#13;
very perceptibly to one side. This is the only building in the world&#13;
that has tilted correspondingl y with the land upon which it stands.&#13;
By measuring the angle formed by this tower and the true perpendicular, men of science have estimated the curvature of the earth's&#13;
surface, and from this the diameter and circumference."&#13;
The bell rang.&#13;
"Wake up," shouted the professor, "you're dismissed."&#13;
&#13;
Impersonating the President&#13;
E day during the Christmas vacation a Sophomore wen t ove r to Main Hall&#13;
to do some typewriting, Upon arriving t he re he found th at the typewriter&#13;
he wanted was in the President's offi ce. Will H atch knew that h e had no&#13;
business in there but then, the Doctor was ou t of tow n and p robably the&#13;
Dean was, too, If the re is anything a second year stude nt won't do it must&#13;
b e something that he neve r thought of, fo r with them, to think is to act. Bill H atch&#13;
was no exception. A skeleton key opened the door. Page afte r page of history&#13;
notes were copied, But what a heap of them there were! Eve r since October.&#13;
The typewriter stopped suddenly.&#13;
Foot steps were approaching th e door. Presen t ly&#13;
someone k nocked,&#13;
If it is some new stude nt I'll h ave to p lay t he role of President,&#13;
tod ay, thought Bill. Stepping softly but fi rml y ove r to the door, h e opened it.&#13;
" Are you the P resident of this institution?" asked the young man who appeared&#13;
at the d oor, h is voice a lmost failing him.&#13;
107&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Zebulem was entertai_ ed at Park Place Hall and 7 :30 o'clock&#13;
n&#13;
found him advantageously seated in central row at the auditorium .&#13;
When the debators hung their charts Mr. Zebulem beckoned to&#13;
him, with his finger, one of the ushers and asked him in whispered&#13;
tones which could be heard all over the hall, "Say, sonnie, (as he&#13;
pointed to the charts) is this hare to be a missionary meeten?" At&#13;
last the glad hour had arrived Mr. Zebulem was consumed in attention. When one of the speakers asked one of his opponents, "Where&#13;
did you get your black hair?" Mr. Zebulem 's eyes fairly danced and&#13;
with a significant smile, he so vigorously rubbed his bald head with&#13;
his hard hand that it seemed the sparks would fly. During the demonstration which followed the announcement of the judge's decision&#13;
Mr. Zebulem almost shouted to Dr. Lewis. "Say Mr. Doctor, I call&#13;
that thar fine debaten. Youve got six mightee fine chaps thar. Them&#13;
fellers what lost have got some mightee good debaters but they didnt&#13;
pull together like unto them other fellers. Gee-e they made me think&#13;
of my old Jim and Fan and Tom, as fine pullers as was ever hitched&#13;
to an eavenor.&#13;
After talking to Mr. Zebulem concerning his boy, Dr. Lewis&#13;
excused himself very gracefully and bade Mr. Z. good-night. On the&#13;
following day Mr. Zebulem returned home, and in about a week the&#13;
Dean received the following letter:DEER MISTER DEEN:&#13;
I got home all rite Billy wus watin fur me and as soone as we dun sum tradin&#13;
an loded a grindestone in the waggun we set out fur home i tolde Bill what I sene out&#13;
thar at sue sitee an I tell you he was mity tichekled then I sayd Bill if you wurk hard&#13;
tel le next falle ile send you out thar to skule. You just orter see Bi ll , he flize arond&#13;
and wunt let me doo hardley nuthen. Mistre deen i wishe youde git Bill a gud plac&#13;
to borde fur I didn't hav time too luch arounde when I wus thar.&#13;
Yors etch,&#13;
EZEKIEL ZEBULEM.&#13;
&#13;
Deck Them With Flowers&#13;
Then scatter bright flowers for the gray&#13;
and the blue,&#13;
To show they were brothers and they&#13;
have been true.&#13;
From East or from West, from the South&#13;
or the North&#13;
What matter? They're brothers. The&#13;
flag! Bring it forth.&#13;
&#13;
We come with our garland of lilies replete&#13;
With the dew of the morn; and we cast&#13;
at the feet&#13;
Of warriors whose bravery well may we&#13;
praise, •&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
And with adoration our voices we raise.&#13;
We deck them with earth's fairest blossoms today,&#13;
With violets, lilies and roses so gay;&#13;
With myrtle and peonies and smilax entwine&#13;
The tombs of those dear ones- your fathers and mine.&#13;
&#13;
Then wrap 'round their tomb-stones Old&#13;
Glory, our boastAnd echo their praise from the Lakes to&#13;
the Coast,&#13;
And tell how they fought to retain for the&#13;
youth&#13;
The Union, its purity, valor and truth.&#13;
&#13;
Then echo their praise from the Lakes to&#13;
the Coast,&#13;
And wrap 'round their tomb-stones Old&#13;
Glory, our boastAnd tell how they fought to preserve to&#13;
the youth&#13;
The Union, its purity, valor and truth.&#13;
&#13;
Nor fail to recall how in battle some fell,&#13;
While others have lived these old tales&#13;
to re-tell&#13;
Of battle and prison, of hunger and cold,&#13;
Of fever and wounds and of mis'ry untold.&#13;
Remember to say how in camp many died,&#13;
With dying companions in cots at each&#13;
side;&#13;
Who, trying but vainly to stem fever's&#13;
tide,&#13;
Were dreaming of home over lands far&#13;
and wide.&#13;
Then bring forth your wreaths and the&#13;
sprays of pure white,&#13;
To cover the mounds that enfold from&#13;
our sight&#13;
The dear ones whose bravery fills many&#13;
a page,&#13;
Whose names will not tarnish nor rust&#13;
o'er with age.&#13;
&#13;
Then speak of the boys who went down&#13;
with the Maine,&#13;
Of ships bringing home those dead heroes&#13;
again;&#13;
.&#13;
To those weeping sore this one hope with&#13;
the pain&#13;
.&#13;
That now what to friends 'is but loss 1s&#13;
their gain.&#13;
And do not forget when Columbia's host&#13;
Of brave ones you mention to name with&#13;
your boast,&#13;
..&#13;
The heroes in Cuba, in Phillipines too;&#13;
Behold how they fought 'neath the red,&#13;
white and blue.&#13;
&#13;
Then leave them with well-deserved&#13;
peace so serene,&#13;
Well covered with flags in a mantle of&#13;
green;&#13;
And under the starry folds well may they&#13;
rest,&#13;
At peace with their God in the home of&#13;
the blest.&#13;
BIRD EASTON.&#13;
&#13;
We saw, with the blue coats, the soldiers&#13;
in gray,&#13;
And flying the same starry emblem that&#13;
day;&#13;
United they stood to make Cuba as free&#13;
As brave young America ever shall be.&#13;
&#13;
Lines Upon Discovering a Violet&#13;
May 4, 1902&#13;
&#13;
Off for Morningside.&#13;
I IO&#13;
&#13;
Thy life; 'tis in my hand, I see;&#13;
But shall it ravished be&#13;
For a moment of intensity&#13;
Of pleasure, fancy free?&#13;
&#13;
Nay, I touch thee not. I fain&#13;
Would by thee please my sense;&#13;
But hands more innocent than mine&#13;
Thy life shall recompense.&#13;
&#13;
.. ....&#13;
&#13;
And shall I pluck thee, purple beauty,&#13;
From thy native bed,&#13;
And establish thy mortality&#13;
By thy drooping head.&#13;
&#13;
Expression of the Infinite,&#13;
Who made us both,&#13;
I dare not, ruthless. bid thee plight&#13;
To me thy troth.&#13;
&#13;
Woundless on thy mossy bed remain.&#13;
Thou hast not murmured:&#13;
Yet, unworthy hand refrain.&#13;
IRA ALDRICH.&#13;
III&#13;
&#13;
A Dream Lesson&#13;
&#13;
Oh his head it was crammed&#13;
It was crowded, it was jammed,&#13;
With the convolusions of his massive&#13;
intellect,&#13;
And the jokes that he cracked,&#13;
Were funny, that's a fact,&#13;
For he alone a point could e'er detect.&#13;
&#13;
Through veilings darkly seen.&#13;
Confusion. reigned supreme&#13;
And chaos its domain.&#13;
&#13;
I sank to rest and sleep;&#13;
And as I slept I dreamed&#13;
A dream most wondrous, for&#13;
In foreign land I was&#13;
And unfamiliar sights&#13;
My startled eyes beheld.&#13;
&#13;
Sharp beams of visional light&#13;
Then burst the murky screen&#13;
And clear as midday sun&#13;
Another cross stood by&#13;
Upon its front outstretched&#13;
A form familiar, I,&#13;
With tremulous eyes beheld;&#13;
For my blood stained the beams.&#13;
&#13;
Sudden the sky was dark&#13;
The earth beneath my feet&#13;
Trembled, and, sore afraid,&#13;
I looked above and saw&#13;
Upon the mountains brow&#13;
The ancient crucifix,&#13;
My Lord upon it nailed;&#13;
And round about a glow&#13;
Of heavenly light was shed.&#13;
&#13;
Instantly wide awake&#13;
I pondered on the sight&#13;
And home this lesson came,If men through me may find&#13;
Him, whom to find is life,&#13;
His suffering must in me&#13;
Find fitting counterpartAnd yet I nothing lose&#13;
But infinitely gain;&#13;
For, the Glory that shall be,&#13;
As noontide glare the night&#13;
Shall grief and pain outshine.&#13;
&#13;
Rapt on Him I gazed&#13;
And longed to ga in from him&#13;
A recognizing glance&#13;
But as I nearer drew&#13;
The vision vanished quite.&#13;
Half dreaming still I lay&#13;
And pondered what it meant;&#13;
When, from the darkened room,&#13;
New forms and shadows came&#13;
Like changeable eidolons&#13;
&#13;
-&#13;
&#13;
IRA&#13;
&#13;
R.&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH.&#13;
&#13;
Once he tried reporting,&#13;
Public favor courting,&#13;
And he covered printer's paper by the&#13;
ream,&#13;
Once he thought to war he'd go&#13;
Be a hero, don't you knowBut he gave that all up, later, as an empty,&#13;
foolish dream,&#13;
Now in chemistry he delves&#13;
Among the bottles on his shelves,&#13;
With bulbs, and tubes, and much such&#13;
curious apparatusAnd with H 2 0&#13;
And stuff like that, you know,&#13;
He's everlastingly attempting to inflate us.&#13;
&#13;
0, there once was a youth&#13;
A living, breathing proof&#13;
That Mother Nature sometimes cuts an&#13;
anticFor he was, so to speak&#13;
A natural freak&#13;
On a scale that was perfectly gigantic.&#13;
&#13;
But the evening hours are spent&#13;
In giving temporary vent&#13;
To the love that fills his heart with suffocation:&#13;
When his evening clothes are&#13;
donned,&#13;
He goes calling on his blond,&#13;
Tender object of his manly adoration.&#13;
&#13;
(All rights reserved)&#13;
&#13;
Bound&#13;
An artist before an easel stood&#13;
With feature of thotful care,&#13;
An image in the eye of his soul,&#13;
He wished with the world to share.&#13;
&#13;
Yet the world sang his praises,&#13;
In his art they saw heaven's chi Id.&#13;
To them it was a masterpiece,&#13;
To him, a dream by flesh defiled.&#13;
&#13;
But words cannot utter,&#13;
What the heart can feel;&#13;
Bard sing the song he hears;&#13;
Colors express an ideal.&#13;
&#13;
Thus perish angel whispers,&#13;
Man's toil and skill and art,&#13;
Fail to reveal the yearning,&#13;
Of Word Divin e and human heart.&#13;
&#13;
He worked by day, by night he toiled,&#13;
With pencil and brush and pen,&#13;
Heartbroken- every effort foiled&#13;
A rapturous vision tarnished and soiled&#13;
In passing from mind to men.&#13;
&#13;
The stately lily transplanted,&#13;
Crumbles in the desert drought&#13;
Tones and thot ethereal&#13;
Fade from hand to mouth.&#13;
&#13;
Six feet three&#13;
In his stockings measured he A good six feet, if an inch,&#13;
And the number seventeens&#13;
At the bottom of his jeans&#13;
Fitted him exactly- at a pinch.&#13;
&#13;
And he notes her shy affection,&#13;
Smiling at the recollection,&#13;
That a rival once his peace of mind&#13;
molested:&#13;
And he thinks with quiet glee"Tis very far across the sea&#13;
And they say that land with natives is&#13;
infested!"&#13;
&#13;
He was famous far and wide&#13;
Throughout the country side&#13;
For the size of his mighty understanding.&#13;
And he held himself as straight&#13;
As an ancient potentate&#13;
With a manner quite as haughty and&#13;
commanding.&#13;
&#13;
The First Snow, December 4, 1901&#13;
&#13;
The Spirit longs to break the bonds,&#13;
Fettering, stifling its symphony,&#13;
Take its flight forever free&#13;
In winged immortality.&#13;
HANS NISSEN.&#13;
&#13;
112&#13;
&#13;
Farewell to the rose,&#13;
And the woodland repose,&#13;
And the circus and medicine show;&#13;
And the midsummer swim;&#13;
And the frogs vesper hymn&#13;
Let us welcome the magic white show.&#13;
How it sifts! How it slides!&#13;
How it drifts! How it glides!&#13;
And the pink to the cheek quickly brings.&#13;
E'en the sluggard steps quick,&#13;
To the coop hies the chick,&#13;
And the wind a weird melody sings.&#13;
&#13;
See! The dust in the road,&#13;
Stirred as load after load&#13;
The vehicles pass on their way,&#13;
It is mixed with the snow,&#13;
Where the grinding wheels go,&#13;
Into uncommon chocolate-gray.&#13;
The shimmering sheen&#13;
Of the great milky scene,&#13;
As the restless flakes glint in the sun.&#13;
How it dazzles the eyes!&#13;
Fills with gladsome surprise!&#13;
And makes the wide universe one.&#13;
IRA R. ALDRICH.&#13;
113&#13;
&#13;
October&#13;
September&#13;
Senior Prognosticator denies the possibility of the '03 Annual.&#13;
4&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Football squad assembles.&#13;
New student attended a spiritualist show, thinking it was to be&#13;
a religious service.&#13;
Enrollment begins.&#13;
First appearance of Collegian Reporter under new management. Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. reception for new students.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
&#13;
Geo . Stephens returns with his Degree M. D.&#13;
&#13;
19&#13;
&#13;
McKinley Memorial.&#13;
Oratorical Association election. Zet-Otho promenade.&#13;
Football game at Vermillion. Captain Finch seriously injured.&#13;
Dr. Lewis labels a new batch (See Nov. 1 .)&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
"Rickety, Rickety, Rickety Rix!&#13;
We are, We are, Doctor's Chicks!&#13;
We'll hatch out in 19o6."&#13;
28 Junior Class incorporate. D. M. Simpson elected president of the class. Miss Hieby&#13;
secretary. Geo. W. Finch elected as editor.in-chief of Junior Annual.&#13;
30 Subs vs. City High School. Subs win 5- 0. Cain rush on side line. It was reported there&#13;
was a little watermelon meeting after ten o'clock without the consent of the Dean.&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
4&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
IO&#13;
&#13;
12&#13;
&#13;
13&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Blackwell returns accompanying his Burnsides.&#13;
&#13;
17&#13;
&#13;
2&#13;
&#13;
Brown sports a spud (potato) for a watch charm.&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
22&#13;
24&#13;
&#13;
27&#13;
28&#13;
29&#13;
30&#13;
31&#13;
&#13;
Music and art students take to the woods. Sam Knoer,&#13;
assisted by six freshmen, rescue Miss Hobbs from a&#13;
watery grave.&#13;
Dr. Henson lectures on "Fools." Many were present.&#13;
Morningside defeats Yankton at football; score, 5-0. Faculty shows signs of life.&#13;
"Gigger" receives football trophy.&#13;
Death of Mrs. Kanthlener.&#13;
Senior Prognosticator launches new argument against appearance of the '03 Annual.&#13;
Harding visits his charge at Meriden.&#13;
Philo Grand Public. Mitchell-Morningside football game.&#13;
Keep quiet.&#13;
First appearance of Prof. Wylie's "French Point."&#13;
Organization of a Basket Ball Team.&#13;
Othos receive a challenge from Philos to debate.&#13;
Basket Ball Association organized.&#13;
Aldrich "goes back" to his old charge at Rock Rapids.&#13;
Enthusiastically received.&#13;
Platts tries to steal a ride on the train leading out of "Main&#13;
Hall." Morningside, 17; Yankton, 5.&#13;
Atheneums revel in the ravine. Thev prefer to walk&#13;
home.&#13;
Dr. Lewis holds a joint meeting of the two literary societies&#13;
and encourages Intersociety Debate.&#13;
Melson complains of the length of the twilight at Claverac.&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The day immediately following Monday.&#13;
Wednesday. Semester exams.&#13;
Halloween- Annual Collegiate Entertainment.&#13;
Judges&#13;
award palm to Juniors.&#13;
&#13;
119&#13;
&#13;
118&#13;
&#13;
January&#13;
4 Cards appear in all the Sioux City street cars, "Beware of&#13;
Accident."&#13;
5 Sunday. Large number of new students at church.&#13;
6 Trunks and two loads of band boxes hauled up.&#13;
7 Enrollment begins.&#13;
8 Working powers of enrolling officers taxed by the heavy&#13;
arrival of all students at 4 p. m.&#13;
9 Frary confidentially advises the Illustrating Committee&#13;
that an Annual will be an impossibility.&#13;
10 Nuthin duin.&#13;
11 Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. reception. Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus&#13;
re-visit Morningside. Peters makes the "waist" places&#13;
glad.&#13;
12 Preaching.&#13;
13 Dean recommends Omaha confidence man, who takes&#13;
photographs and takes in many men. Prof. Van Horne&#13;
has the list of fleeced.&#13;
14 Dr. Buckley's lecture on "The Hall of Fame." Many&#13;
famous men mentioned.&#13;
15 Fifteen "Preps" covenant together to write their name in&#13;
the "Hall of Fame."&#13;
16 C. F. Eberly receives distinction at chapel. Wickersham&#13;
pays glowing tribute to him.&#13;
17 "Please arise."&#13;
18 "You are at liberty."&#13;
19 Sunday.&#13;
20 Hawkeye goat gets fierce.&#13;
21 Indoor track meet. Morningside wins. Basket ball.&#13;
22 Eberly lectures at science club. Astounding facts brought&#13;
to light concerning Sioux City water.&#13;
23 Somebody's birthday.&#13;
24 Miss Marsh entertains visitor. Morgan attempts suicide.&#13;
Is rususcitated by Dad Eberly.&#13;
25 Faculty all present at chapel except fifteen members.&#13;
26 Sunday. Miss Lydia Trimble speaks.&#13;
27 Dean forgets to order coal.&#13;
28 Fire all out. Jacob Riis lectures on Slum Problem.&#13;
29 Dr. Haynes tries four chairs, and finally finds one that&#13;
suits him.&#13;
30 Day of Prayer for colleges. Prexie and Yeager take a nap&#13;
in chapel, while Dr. Day preaches.&#13;
122&#13;
&#13;
February&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
10&#13;
&#13;
11&#13;
12&#13;
14&#13;
&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
20&#13;
&#13;
21&#13;
&#13;
22&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
26&#13;
27&#13;
28&#13;
&#13;
Annual christened the "Bumble Bee of 1903." Elixir&#13;
of youth works wonders at Zet. program. Calvin Hall&#13;
goes home with a girl on one arm and a highchair on&#13;
the other.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Underhill recites Rip Van Winkle.&#13;
Frary nearly stung by a Bumble Bee.&#13;
Miss Armstrong and Nash forgot to draw the blinds.&#13;
Ask Miss Armstrong if the candy was good.&#13;
Faculty submitted list of judges for Inter-Society debate.&#13;
Privilege of studying on the stairs is again withdrawn.&#13;
Prof. A. 0. Sifert of Blue and White Came visited the&#13;
college.&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Young and Platts hold preliminary debate.&#13;
Revival meetings in progress.&#13;
70th anniversary of Lincoln's birthday. Rousing business meetings in societies.&#13;
Dean late to chapel. Harding and Platts visit Nebraska&#13;
Wesleyan University.&#13;
Zet Grand Public.&#13;
Sunday. Great meetings at Grace Church.&#13;
John B. Gordon lectures on "The Last Days of the Confederacy."&#13;
Enthusiasm grows warm over the debate.&#13;
Enthusiasm grows hot over debate.&#13;
Societies hold all day sessions.&#13;
Inter-Society debate. Othonians win. Donor of prize&#13;
not to be made known for a few days.&#13;
Zets banquet the Othos. Delegates leave for Toronto.&#13;
Sunday. Harding and Platts, after woeful deliberation,&#13;
cancel order for Otho Tombstone.&#13;
The Misses Flathers and Harding enter pugilistic arena.&#13;
Pictures are requested by the Chicago American and&#13;
Police Gazette. No issue of the Collegian Reporter.&#13;
Cut out.&#13;
Prof. C. E. B. Sawbuck's lecture recital.&#13;
Delegation left for Oratorical Contest.&#13;
Weather Bureau makes a mistake and March wind&#13;
arrives fifteen hours early.&#13;
&#13;
123&#13;
&#13;
March&#13;
Intercollegiate Debaters named by the Faculty. Wilder&#13;
decides to give up entering the Intercollegiate Debate&#13;
until next fall.&#13;
2&#13;
Sunday&#13;
3 The making known of the donor of the Intersociety&#13;
Prize still deferred.&#13;
4 Debut of College Orchestra. Faculty takes corner seats&#13;
in chapel.&#13;
5 Harding gives war-whoop in chapel.&#13;
6&#13;
Lecture by the Dean, "Curiosity vs. Knowledge." Orchestra forgets to play march.&#13;
7 Great tragedy in "Prepdom:" John Price gets his hair&#13;
cut.&#13;
8 Miss Hazel Oak entertains company. Pa and Ma forget to go to bed .&#13;
9 Sunday. Preaching services.&#13;
10 All events blew away.&#13;
I I&#13;
Coach Flanagan hired as Dean of Athletics. Morningside wins two basket ball games.&#13;
12 Piled up what we did yesterday.&#13;
13 Photographer&#13;
comes to college and takes pictures.&#13;
14 Social rennaisance in Prepdom . Middles banquet Seniors.&#13;
15 Knoer and Mossman come to blows in recitation room&#13;
just as Dr. Haynes appears.&#13;
16 The Sabbath.&#13;
17 Othonian Grand Public.&#13;
18 Prof. Wylie reveals botanical facts to Sioux City Science&#13;
Club.&#13;
19 Social·time at Park Place.&#13;
20 Athletic Park launched. Color Committee appointed.&#13;
21&#13;
Wmdy day.&#13;
22 Logic class play "hookey."&#13;
23 Sunday.&#13;
·&#13;
24 John G. Wooley lectures.&#13;
25 Term Concert of Conservatory of Music.&#13;
26 Examinations begin. Morningside wins in basket ball&#13;
carnival.&#13;
27 Senior Preparatory Declamatory Contest. Miss Harding wins first place.&#13;
28 Ross Brown entertains Seniors. Frary moves "That a&#13;
fine of fifty cents be imposed on those mentioning the&#13;
nam e of the abominable Bumble Bee during the evening."&#13;
29 School out. Knoer accompanies Miss Hobbs to train.&#13;
31 Annual Board sits in session.&#13;
&#13;
April&#13;
Platts eats a bar of Sapolio without wavering. Verily the&#13;
inner man should rejoice.&#13;
Miss Cook makes cake for a friend. Lecture- Acres of&#13;
7&#13;
Diamonds.&#13;
8 School opens. Forty-seven at chapel.&#13;
9 As to who the donor of the Inter-Society debate prize is,&#13;
deferred till the decision of the Inter-collegiate is given.&#13;
IO Five Juniors and twelve Seniors are hung up till they find&#13;
it convenient to orate.&#13;
Senior President advertises for orations offering good price.&#13;
II&#13;
Ad answered by a Junior.&#13;
12 Doctor tests his eggs, to see about how many are going to&#13;
hatch.- A little more heat.&#13;
13 Sunday.&#13;
14 Ade lphian Society pins appear.&#13;
15 (a) College colors changed. (b) Othos submit question for&#13;
next year's Inter-Society debate.&#13;
16 Frary dreams of hunting Bumble Bees.&#13;
17 A new assistant in the department of Min eralogy appears.&#13;
Prof. Barsalou looks with displeasure upon too many&#13;
lady assistants.&#13;
18 Mosquitos arrive at Young's office. They take the editor&#13;
first.&#13;
19 Baseball-Le Mars High School 14, Morningside 6.&#13;
20 Sunday.&#13;
22 A new sprinter develops. Dr. Cook makes a sensational&#13;
run of half mile to fire in Dr. Lewis' cook stove.&#13;
23 Philo Debaters named for Inter-Society Debate next year.&#13;
Wilder postpones his plans for another season.&#13;
24 Baseball - Washburn 11, Morningside 4.&#13;
25 Heavi est straight winds this country has ever known·&#13;
$25,000 damage. All pictures repainted in water colors·&#13;
Miss Dimmitt loses umbrella. Prof. Wylie takes balloon&#13;
ride. Miss Lothian embraces a post. Street cars stop&#13;
in deference to the wind.&#13;
26 Dr. Cook acts as judge for Anna Eva Fayke.&#13;
27 Frary and Seaver write their orations using sacred subjects&#13;
"For Conscience Sake."&#13;
28 First Adelphian Public ("Howling Success").&#13;
29 Recital of Students of Elocution .&#13;
30 Wickersham Lecture "Chickens Come home to Roost."&#13;
&#13;
124&#13;
125&#13;
&#13;
Buzzing's&#13;
&#13;
of the Bumble Bee&#13;
&#13;
Mod est little Minkler&#13;
Cail ed at Hiawatha.&#13;
Who for? What fo r? Why for?&#13;
Hiawathaens do not know.&#13;
Which: -Is most irritating to the Dean, the janito r's watch or th e whoo ping&#13;
co ugh?&#13;
Park Platz ist ein schone r Plat z,&#13;
Ein scho ner Plat z zu gehen,&#13;
Wir gingen bin zu singen&#13;
Und die Madchen zu sehen.&#13;
&#13;
From the Archives&#13;
&#13;
A ll students shall be expected to receive the company of students of the opposite sex in the parlo rs of th eir b oarding place. The lad ies and gentlemen of th e&#13;
University a re expected to treat each other with the courtesy and civility which prevail in re fined society, and th e limitations in th e conduct of the sexes recognized by a&#13;
Christian family, will be th e limitations for the University.&#13;
&#13;
An&#13;
&#13;
every day event in&#13;
&#13;
the&#13;
&#13;
Suggestions by the Bumble Bee&#13;
&#13;
That Millner fall in love with somebody else's girl.&#13;
chronic apa thy.&#13;
&#13;
That the Faculty have a chapel card.&#13;
&#13;
The Bumble Bee Can Recommend&#13;
&#13;
Prof. Wylie to bra ve sparks in his Tab.&#13;
Shideler to part his hair in the middle.&#13;
Simon Stulken to eat with the cook.&#13;
Miss Harding on Hall Committee.&#13;
&#13;
room&#13;
&#13;
It is the best tonic for&#13;
&#13;
That someone make the Dean a present of a memorandum book.&#13;
That Minkler grease the hinges on his gai t.&#13;
That Dr. Cook b e provided with a small express cart in whi ch to transport his&#13;
hand grenade to and from fires.&#13;
That Park-Place Nunnery adv ertise for a few more resident Nuns.&#13;
&#13;
Will Fry to catch an 8:40 train.&#13;
The Basket Ball Team to win games.&#13;
Guy Frary to mak e fouls- "arm around."&#13;
Bessie Carl to substitute Bible for Latin Dictionary.&#13;
Hulser to kill a chicken, if you give him time enough.&#13;
&#13;
cloak&#13;
&#13;
To the Terrestrial Globe&#13;
&#13;
for eve ry seven years the reafter he shortens one inch in hei g ht.&#13;
How long will Asa Brower have to live&#13;
for his corns to give him the headache?&#13;
&#13;
Roll on, thou ball, roll on!&#13;
Through pathless realms of space&#13;
Rol l on!&#13;
What tho I 'm in a sorry ca se?&#13;
What tho I cannot m eet my bills?&#13;
What tho I suffer toothache il ls?&#13;
What tho I swallow countl ess pills?&#13;
Never you mind .&#13;
Roll on.&#13;
&#13;
The Evils of the Times&#13;
&#13;
Roll on, thou ball, ro ll on!&#13;
Thru seas of inky a ir&#13;
R oll o n!&#13;
Its tru e I've got no shirts to wear,&#13;
Its tru e my board b ill still is due,&#13;
Its tru e m y prospects all look blue,&#13;
But don't let this unsett le you!&#13;
N e ver you mind !&#13;
R oll on.&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
Novembe r 26,&#13;
&#13;
Mathematical Problem&#13;
&#13;
It is scientifically d emonstrated that&#13;
when a man reaches the age of fifty years&#13;
&#13;
November 27.&#13;
131&#13;
&#13;
Facultian Privileges&#13;
&#13;
Biology&#13;
&#13;
Black Board&#13;
&#13;
The Dean- To crack jokes and laugh at&#13;
them.&#13;
Kanthlener-To train for contortionist.&#13;
Loveland- To unmercifully slash orations&#13;
Greene- To flirt.&#13;
Greynald- To hoe potatoes on Sunday.&#13;
Dimmitt- None whatever allowed for&#13;
fear of trouble.&#13;
Hickman- To excuse herself from chapel.&#13;
Blackwell - The faculty's scapegoat (Secretary.)&#13;
Brown- To jump his job.&#13;
Patterson - To draw everything but her&#13;
salary.&#13;
Barbour-To storm when the sun shines.&#13;
Ferguson- To edit Red Deutsch books.&#13;
Wylie-To ask misleading questions.&#13;
Van Horne-- To get rattled.&#13;
Cook-To build new Science Hall.&#13;
Lothian-- To keep Emory's memory green&#13;
THERE ARE TOO MANY LOBSTERS HANGING&#13;
AROUND THE CLOAK ROOMS.&#13;
&#13;
Letter Ho:rne&#13;
&#13;
CRESCENT GIRL- (In accents of surprise)- Whv, did you hear that they had&#13;
the smallpox at Flather's?&#13;
AESTHESIAN GIRL- Who, vou don't&#13;
say, have the girls there got it?&#13;
CRESCENT-No; they happened to be&#13;
out when the yellow sign was tacked up.&#13;
AESTHESIAN- (Perplexed)- Why, people will be afraid to take them in; where&#13;
are they going to stay?&#13;
CRESCENT-I understand Mamie is going to room at Mrs.- -and Emma has&#13;
gone to Frary's.&#13;
AESTHESIAN- Aw ! fudge!&#13;
The Mystery of the West Lobby; or&#13;
How did Eberly's Cap and Gown get out&#13;
of His Locker?&#13;
&#13;
Problem&#13;
&#13;
HYPOTHESISSuppose one Dean Lymer held a Logic&#13;
Class;&#13;
Suppose there were nine present as&#13;
usual;&#13;
Suppose the Doctor is detained outside;&#13;
QUESTIONHow many persons can leave the room,&#13;
thru the window, one at a time, allowing&#13;
five minutes for penny matching, before&#13;
the Doctor puts in his appearance?&#13;
ANSWER- Nine.&#13;
This has been experimentally demonstrated.&#13;
&#13;
DEAR FOLKS:"Tempus fugit'' and with difficulty I find time to write this short letter. I take&#13;
bioligy now, keeps me hustling. Yesterday we had to count the leaves on a maple&#13;
tree, twenty feet high. Today we will have a centipede to examine. Prof. wants&#13;
me to count his legs and see if he has the right number.&#13;
Excuse brevity, for I must determine how old a water plant is before it can&#13;
swim.&#13;
Hastily your son,&#13;
JOHN.&#13;
P. S. - The price of board has advanced.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Ferguson's Memorandum Leaf&#13;
Found on the Campus&#13;
&#13;
PROF. CooK--(In chemistry class) "The young ladies may answer,&#13;
None respond.&#13;
&#13;
CHAIRMAN OF PICTURE COMMITTEE&#13;
(said of several)- I'm sure, it wasn't the&#13;
photographer's fault that her picture was&#13;
poor.&#13;
&#13;
"If a Senior meets a Freshie,&#13;
Comin' tnro' the hall,&#13;
If a Senior kicks a Freshie,&#13;
Need a Freshie bawl?&#13;
Every Freshie has his troubles,&#13;
None, they say, ha' I;&#13;
Yet when a brutal Senior kicks me,&#13;
I canna help but cry."&#13;
&#13;
Hark! hark! the dogs do bark,&#13;
The Seniors are coming to town,&#13;
None in rags, none in tags,&#13;
But all in Monkish gowns.&#13;
132&#13;
&#13;
DO THE OTHER FELLOW OR&#13;
HE'LL DO YOU.&#13;
&#13;
Gotz Lesson for Wednesday.&#13;
(Tuesday off day.)&#13;
Study introduction carefully.&#13;
Look up Goethe in Koenig's D eutsche&#13;
Litterateur Geschicte and read the whole of&#13;
Lewes Goethe. Translate fifty pages. Give&#13;
synopsis in blank verse (German.)&#13;
Spend all extra time in reviewing Joynes&#13;
Meissner.&#13;
See Will F. and Frank W. about back&#13;
work.&#13;
&#13;
133&#13;
&#13;
SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY ,&#13;
SYRACUSE , N . Y .&#13;
&#13;
Morn ing Side College,&#13;
Sioux City,&#13;
&#13;
I owa&#13;
MISS DIMMITT PROVES HER RELATION TO HORACE GREELEY.&#13;
SYRACUSE, N. Y., 3-24-'02&#13;
MY DEAR Miss D - - . I would address you by name if I were able to&#13;
make your name from the signature. * * * I close, recommending the use of a&#13;
Remington.&#13;
Very truly, - - The boy with the wild west name was observed standing before the store waiting for a car. He stood with hands in his pockets, and eyes cast to the ground, his&#13;
broad mind perplexed. Suddenly he turned and peered curiously into the window of&#13;
the store near the corner. His face lighted up with a smile and as he boarded the&#13;
car, he cast one more glance at the window. Moved by curiosity, we walked over and&#13;
saw in a prominent place a neat gilt cardbook, with this inscription, "My Grace is&#13;
Sufficient for Thee." The mystery was solved a few hours later when we met this&#13;
same young man in company with a fair young maiden whom he expectantly addressed as "Grace."&#13;
Prof. in Physics explaining the production of a charge of electricity on a hard&#13;
rubber bar.&#13;
"By rubber I mean the rubber that is rubbed by the and not the rubber&#13;
rubber rub&#13;
who rubs the rubber, there seems to be a confusion of terms, but you will understand&#13;
if you think of the rubber, the rubbing and the rubbed."&#13;
PROF. IN PSYCHOLOGY-T here is nothing of so much importance as the development of the Soul.&#13;
KNOER- (shaking his head)- For me I will pay my first attention to my Body.&#13;
PROF. VAN HORNE - (cal lin g roll)- Root,&#13;
Miller, Marsh, Maynard, Magirl.&#13;
&#13;
PROF.- What is hvdrobromic acid like?&#13;
Mrss K.- (who is somewhat "at outs" with the&#13;
boys)-Like an unrighteous man, unstable in all its&#13;
ways.&#13;
&#13;
USING INLAY'S ODORIFERAE&#13;
&#13;
THE SENIOR PROGNOSTICATOR WHO PROPHESIED THERE WOULD&#13;
BE NO BUMBLE BEES THIS YEAR.&#13;
&#13;
Corrections of the Spheri cal&#13;
Aberration&#13;
&#13;
G. A. PLATTS - "Fanaticism, whether&#13;
political or religious, has no stopping&#13;
place short of heaven or hell."&#13;
SAM KNOER- "He draweth out the&#13;
thread of his verbosity finer than the&#13;
staple of his argument."&#13;
W. L. HARDING - "I have seen the politician in great power, and spreading&#13;
himself like a green bay tree&#13;
But I sought him in the Latin and German classes and he was not to be found,&#13;
and in the Science and English classes,&#13;
but lo- hewas not."&#13;
Even though humanity appreciates&#13;
noise, it may be well to remember that&#13;
some people can distinguish between a&#13;
tin hors and a silver clarion et.&#13;
FREDDIE LEANER:&#13;
lf this boy were older,&#13;
If this boy were bolder,&#13;
He might pass for a man.&#13;
&#13;
KINDIG- " He is something like&#13;
wheel whose spokes tend to tire."&#13;
&#13;
MARY GILBERT- "If sandwiches are&#13;
not plenty where she came from, it is not&#13;
for the want of tongue."&#13;
STULKEN- "He skims his milk on the&#13;
top, then turns it over and skims it on&#13;
the bottom."&#13;
INLAY- "He looks as if he had been&#13;
rubbed down with sand paper."&#13;
BERT FERGUSON- "He could boast of&#13;
royal blood if the ass were king of brutes.''&#13;
WILDER- "Egotists cannot conve rse;&#13;
they talk to themselves.''&#13;
OLDS-"He&#13;
is a sort of a mental reservoir that may burst upon you and overwhelm you in a moment."&#13;
HINSDALE- "Like a disabled ship in a&#13;
fog, drifting among the shoals and breakers of a dangerous coast."&#13;
&#13;
PROF.-Philosophers taught that everything&#13;
came from fire, water and air.&#13;
WISE FRESHIE-lf that's so, Professor, chickens must have been made from "foul" air.&#13;
&#13;
136&#13;
&#13;
a&#13;
&#13;
137&#13;
&#13;
Yellow&#13;
&#13;
Back Titles&#13;
&#13;
"A Treatise on Botany," or "My Experiments with Roots."&#13;
-Rena Bowker.&#13;
"My Cook Book," or "The Delights of a Fry."-Prof. Blackwell.&#13;
"The First Battle," or "How We Lost the Debate."-Philos.&#13;
"The Mystery of a Lone Dive," or "What Became of Carmichael."&#13;
-Ex-Chief of Police George Stephens.&#13;
"True Culture," or "The A dvantages of a High Ideal."&#13;
-Emma Flathers.&#13;
"A Botanist's Retreat," or "Research in Art."--Fred Seaver.&#13;
"How Cyrus Gilbert Caught the Carr."- By Faith Woodford.&#13;
"The Prep of Great Price."-Florence Cate.&#13;
"A Romance of a Fair Young Couple."-Edith Empey.&#13;
"The Fauna, of Northwest Iowa and How to Trap or Killam."&#13;
-A. H. Maynard.&#13;
"The Mystery of North Hall," or "Who Stole Mrs. Barbour's Bottle."&#13;
-Janitor McCarth y.&#13;
"Prehistoric Relics," or "Age of Eberly."-J. W. Mo(r)gan.&#13;
"The Darkest Days of My Life," or "Randall's Illness. "-Effie Durst.&#13;
&#13;
Sayings Which Have Become Proverbial&#13;
and Their Authors&#13;
"This is very interesting."-Prof Wylie.&#13;
"Uhm, say agin. "-Prof. Greynald.&#13;
"Not because it's me. "-Stella Harding.&#13;
"By Dads. "-Will Frv.&#13;
"Some things. "-Dean L ymer.&#13;
"In view of the fact."-D. C. Hall.&#13;
"Guy says so."-Emma Flathers.&#13;
"Cut it out."-D. L. Young.&#13;
"Not to brag at all."-Nettie Fry.&#13;
"Those dinky outs. "-Harry Olds.&#13;
"Heck. "-Geo. Poppenheimer&#13;
"0 my! 0 my! 0 my !"-Clara Killam.&#13;
"This is the best thing, to my mind, that Shakespear has written."&#13;
-Geo. Platts.&#13;
"It was in the minds of the committee."-Dr. Lewis.&#13;
"Is dat so?"-Hiaman Van Dyke.&#13;
"No more'n a rabbit."-Geo. Stephens.&#13;
138&#13;
&#13;
A TIMELY SUGGESTION.&#13;
IF YOU KNOW A HUMAN NEED, SUPPLY IT- RUSSELL&#13;
&#13;
H.&#13;
&#13;
CONWELL.&#13;
&#13;
Ev i dence s of New Philo s ophy.&#13;
&#13;
One of our bright ci ty gi rl s was hea rd to remark: "0, I just love to work in&#13;
th e labora tory up-stairs. Prof. Wylie's assistants are alw ay s ready to h elp and th ey&#13;
are just perfect little dears."&#13;
Madame de Loveland, Lord High Preceptress of Park Place, hands us the&#13;
following edict fo r publication. "Any agreement entered into by th e you ng lad ies of&#13;
this h a ll after 10 p. m. will not be binding."&#13;
VISITOR- What are you st ud ying in geometry at present, Professor?&#13;
VAN H ORNE- H ast ily- We're cussing truncated p ri sms.&#13;
A Lock In.&#13;
&#13;
Acertain you ng m an ca ll ed to accompany his lady to a lecture. After waiting&#13;
in th e parlor th e usual length of tim e, h e became anxious a nd began pacing th e floor.&#13;
Happily some one entered just then.&#13;
"Why John, what is the trouble? Were you wating for some one? 0, Florence!&#13;
Well, I'll ca ll her."&#13;
Upon entering F's room no one could be seen, but from th e closet came a&#13;
muffled voice," Let me out, please." After diligent search the c loset key was found&#13;
and the lady joined her awai tin g escort.&#13;
A coll ege boy rushes up Frary's front steps. Door bell rin gs and it is ope ned.&#13;
He beholds his specia l lady happily talki ng with another you ng man.&#13;
What happens?&#13;
Well, John sim p ly sta res, stamme rs and excla1m s:- "I JUSt came ove r to tell&#13;
you you r door-bell rang."&#13;
Sam says- I 've heard it said that i[ a man tries to preserve his ow n life he is&#13;
su re t o loose it, but I neve r dreamed that when a ma n saved the life of a m aiden&#13;
(from drowning) he would loose her too.&#13;
139&#13;
&#13;
What Happened on the Porch of the Hiawatha Club&#13;
at the Close of Spring Term 1901.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
windstorm&#13;
of April 25.&#13;
&#13;
A number of Hiawathians, who fancied th e balmy days of springtime, had&#13;
gently turned to thoughts of love- and that to quite a degree. They returned in the&#13;
solemn hours of the night to the spot where farewells and good-nights had often&#13;
been spoken before, but this time it seemed almost impossible to say good-bye. It&#13;
meant a long vacation's separation--something seemed to bind them all togetherone to each. Time passed silently by without a word being spoken. It seemed as&#13;
'tho their hearts would break. Heads were bosomed on their breasts; mumbling&#13;
words were uttered by the boys; the girls began to sob; the strain and the pressure of&#13;
the hour became too great for some of the company, and one young man gave ve nt&#13;
to his feelings by saying, "Let us pray ." And then broke forth upon the midnight&#13;
stillness, such an appeal of earnestness and pathos, as would pierce a heart of stone.&#13;
With the closing of the prayer, their spirits seemed borne aloft to realms of soothing&#13;
ecstacy, and with little longer lingerings, and a few fond fondlings, and such farewells as only Erebus can reveal- they parted.&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IA., JAN.&#13;
Miss--&#13;
&#13;
18, 1900.&#13;
&#13;
--AKRON, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
MY ONCE DEAR LovE:-I am sorry to have to write you this note. I trust it&#13;
will not hurt .your feelings. I will be frank with you. I think our relations must&#13;
cease. A girl in Morningside has won my heart. Do not feel bad overt his.&#13;
Frankly Your Friend,&#13;
&#13;
B. S.&#13;
Professors Struck Dumb&#13;
&#13;
Visions before them rose&#13;
Of students and their woes,&#13;
And they grew very sad in their silent&#13;
way.&#13;
ln all the college range,&#13;
Was ever anything so strange&#13;
That three Profs should lose their voice&#13;
that day.&#13;
&#13;
Upon the platform stand&#13;
There stood a stately band,&#13;
Watching the faces before them so plain&#13;
While chapel passed away,&#13;
Even to the Dean's last say,&#13;
And the throng moved out to a lively&#13;
strain.&#13;
Yet three of that number grand&#13;
This day were not on hand.&#13;
If these Professors you should have found&#13;
Ferguson, Loveland or Cook&#13;
To question with word or look,&#13;
They could not have given an intelligible&#13;
sound.&#13;
One thought of a German song&#13;
And those fifteen pages long&#13;
That she meant that day to give the Class,&#13;
While another in greater pain&#13;
From class lecture must refrain,&#13;
While of Milton's Satan the other sighed,&#13;
alas.&#13;
&#13;
PROF. IN PHYSICS-Mr. Eberly, you&#13;
may give a definition of Dew Point.&#13;
EBERLY- Three days after the room&#13;
rent expires.&#13;
PROF. IN PHYSICS-Mr. McCarty, give&#13;
me a good synonym for focus.&#13;
McCARTY- The farm, because that is&#13;
where sons raise meet.&#13;
"I haven't the face to wear it," said&#13;
Jones, as he gave up trying to raise Burnsides.&#13;
140&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
SUCCESSFUL ROOTER&#13;
&#13;
141&#13;
&#13;
It Is Not Generally Known&#13;
What takes place in the faculty room.&#13;
To Null and Maynard who gets in last on Saturday nights.&#13;
How often Harding goes to Meriden.&#13;
How Peters lost his Junior cane.&#13;
Where Will Fry went Saturday evening after the picnic.&#13;
How the Preps beat the College in baseball Campus Day.&#13;
How Miss McKnight does so well in Biology Lab.&#13;
That the Seniors are contemplating putting a "nigger head'' on&#13;
the campus.&#13;
How so many young men "accidentally" find their lady friends&#13;
after church Sunday evening.&#13;
How four college girls got out of the gym one Saturday forenoon.&#13;
That married students who endure rules and regulations at&#13;
home, and rules and regulations at school get a bit nervous.&#13;
That the Alumni have been spared for next year's Annual.&#13;
That the English Department reports more class absences than&#13;
any other department in school.&#13;
That Stephens does not know what kind of a plant "Antonius" is&#13;
or was.&#13;
How two young ladies who returned to Park Place after "hours"&#13;
fooled the preceptress of the hall.&#13;
How "flush" the College treasury is.&#13;
That extensive plans are already made by the Sophs for an&#13;
Annual next year.&#13;
That Pathology is a study of Boston streets.&#13;
On what basis the Senior Prep orations were judged.&#13;
What became of Carmichael.&#13;
What answer Smith and Sanders received after they offered&#13;
their services to the Slayton Woman's Orchestra.&#13;
What some of the "history work" looked like which came to&#13;
the Bumble Bee.&#13;
That the Bumble Bee is different from a honey bee in that the&#13;
former always retains his stinger after using it, while the latter generally leaves his in his victim.&#13;
&#13;
142&#13;
&#13;
College Barber Shop.&#13;
&#13;
GOOD&#13;
&#13;
RESOLUTIONS&#13;
&#13;
WILL NOT MAKE YOU HAPPY. BUT YOU&#13;
WILL BE PLEASED WHEN YOU BUY YOUR&#13;
&#13;
Cont ections,&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Sta.ionery&#13;
f&#13;
AT&#13;
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Darling's Store.&#13;
ICE CREAM AND SODAS&#13;
STUDENTS '&#13;
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SUPPLIES&#13;
&#13;
OF&#13;
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ALL&#13;
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KINDS .&#13;
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St. Aubin Station.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 635 L 1 .&#13;
&#13;
Kind Readers of the Bumble Bee&#13;
·&#13;
&#13;
Y&#13;
&#13;
OU will now be pleased to know how to $ave dollar$&#13;
and live $ucce$$fully.&#13;
&#13;
quainted with the firm$ herein repre$ented.&#13;
&#13;
They will add&#13;
&#13;
dollar$ to your profit and in$ure your $ucce$$ if you deal with&#13;
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They are college men, progre$$ive and intere$ted in our&#13;
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They will treat you with courte$y and make your&#13;
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STUDENTS GET GOOD SERVICE AND SPECIAL RATES.&#13;
&#13;
The Durston Crockery Co.&#13;
&#13;
Music-Making&#13;
&#13;
IMPORTERS ANO&#13;
&#13;
D EALERS&#13;
&#13;
IN&#13;
&#13;
is impossible on some instruments.&#13;
It is easy to make music on the&#13;
Hazelton, Crown, Poole, Doll,&#13;
Cable and other pianos that we&#13;
handle. The best that the manufacturers can do has been done&#13;
to make these of the standard&#13;
quality. We want you to call and&#13;
see how fine they are or write for&#13;
particulars. We make a specialty&#13;
of Church organs, both pipe and&#13;
semi-pipe and reed, from $35 to&#13;
$10,000 to suit any size church.&#13;
Special Agents for C. G. Conn's&#13;
Band Instruments, Talking Machines and Records.&#13;
Musical&#13;
Merchandise, Sheet Music, Etc.&#13;
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CHINA,&#13;
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SCENES at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
321&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH STREET .&#13;
&#13;
•&#13;
FOUNDED IN 1865&#13;
&#13;
INCORPORATED&#13;
&#13;
IOWA Business College&#13;
COMPRISES THE FOLLOWING COURSES :&#13;
&#13;
You will Always be Happy&#13;
When you can have&#13;
All your wants&#13;
Supplied as well&#13;
As we supply&#13;
Your student wants.&#13;
&#13;
BEAR THIS IN MIND&#13;
WHEN&#13;
&#13;
You&#13;
&#13;
NEED STUDENT SUPPLIES .&#13;
&#13;
ALDRICH &amp; SIMPSON,&#13;
The College Bookmen&#13;
&#13;
Bookkeeping&#13;
Civil Service&#13;
&#13;
Shorthand&#13;
English&#13;
&#13;
Telegraphy&#13;
Penmanship&#13;
&#13;
If you are contemplating taking a course it will pay you to visit our school&#13;
before entering elsewhere.&#13;
The business men of Des Moines and adjacent towns have come to depend upon&#13;
this college for their office help. The railroad companies are taking care of every&#13;
operator we can prepare.&#13;
No institution has better facilities or more extensive equipments. We employ&#13;
the best teachers money can provide. More graduates placed in good positions than&#13;
any other school in Iowa.&#13;
School in session the entire year-enter now.&#13;
Catalogue free. Call or address ...&#13;
&#13;
IOWA BUSINESS COLLEGE&#13;
Corner Fourth and Locust Sts., DES MOINES, IOWA,&#13;
&#13;
J. R. HUTCHISON, President&#13;
&#13;
L. E. STAMM, Secretary.&#13;
&#13;
NEW EDITION&#13;
&#13;
Webster's&#13;
International&#13;
Dictionary&#13;
New Plates Throug hout&#13;
&#13;
25,000 Additional Words&#13;
PHRASES AND DE.FINITIONS&#13;
Prepared u nder the direct supervision of&#13;
W. T. HARRIS, Ph .D., LL.D., United States&#13;
Commissioner of Education, assisted by a&#13;
large corps of competent specialists.&#13;
Rich Binding s.&#13;
2364 Pages.&#13;
5000 Illustrations.&#13;
&#13;
The&#13;
International was first issued in 1890,&#13;
succeeding the " Unabridged." The N ew Edit ion of the International was issued in October,&#13;
1900. Get the latest and the best.&#13;
Also Webster's Coll egiate D i ctionary&#13;
with Scottish Glossary, etc.&#13;
&#13;
MYSTIC MILLING&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
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MERCHANT&#13;
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Co.&#13;
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Is a Guaranty of Quality.&#13;
&#13;
FLOUR and FEED&#13;
&#13;
Clothing most&#13;
reasonably priced&#13;
&#13;
First class in quality, second class&#13;
in xize."&#13;
&#13;
Nicholas Murray Butler&#13;
&#13;
eent on application.&#13;
&#13;
G.&#13;
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&amp;&#13;
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Springfield , Mass.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Street.&#13;
&#13;
R epresented:&#13;
Minneapolis, Chicago, London.&#13;
&#13;
Scenes at Morningside&#13;
&#13;
When You Have Reached&#13;
the Point where You can&#13;
go no Farther&#13;
&#13;
RIDER&#13;
&#13;
AGENTS WANTED&#13;
&#13;
one in each town to ride and exhibit a sample 1901 model&#13;
bicycle of our manufacture. YOU CAN MAKE $10 TO&#13;
$50 A WEEK besides havm g a wheel t o ride for yourself.&#13;
&#13;
1901 Models&#13;
$10 to $18&#13;
'00 &amp;'99 Models $7 to $12&#13;
to $8&#13;
&#13;
and Pa's Checks appear to be&#13;
&#13;
y&#13;
&#13;
only a Sacred Memory, spend&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
. ....... .. . . .... . ... ..... . .&#13;
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We ship any bicycle ON APPROVAL to&#13;
anyone without a cent deposit in advance and allow&#13;
&#13;
that last little bunch of change&#13;
&#13;
10 DAYS FREE TRIAL.&#13;
&#13;
no risk in orderi ng from us, as you do not need t o pay&#13;
&#13;
.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE PHARMACY.&#13;
WHERE IT WILL LAST THE LONGEST,&#13;
&#13;
no NOT BUY&#13;
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a cent if the bicycle does not. suit you.&#13;
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AT THE&#13;
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a wheel unt,1 you have w ritten for our&#13;
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FACTORY PRICES and FREE TRIAL OFFER&#13;
this ltberal offer h as never been equaled and is a guarantee of&#13;
·&#13;
the&#13;
quality of our wheels.&#13;
to distribute catalogues for us in&#13;
e o ay for ree catalogue and ou r special offer.&#13;
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J. L. MEAD CYCLE&#13;
CO.,&#13;
&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City College of Medicine,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
Th e Thirteenth Annua l Session Opens September 9th, I 902 an d Continues for Eight Months.&#13;
&#13;
The course of Study is carefully graded and extends through four years. This&#13;
co1lege, maintaining membership in the Association of American Medical College,&#13;
exacts of students such requirements as to Matriculation, Attendance on Didactics,&#13;
Laboratory and Clinic Instruction, and Graduation as conform with requirements of&#13;
the said Association.&#13;
&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
PICTURES&#13;
FOR THE STUDENTS ARE MADE AT THE&#13;
&#13;
STUDIO GRAND&#13;
ALL WORK IS GUARANTEED&#13;
OR MONEY REFUNDED . STUDENTS ALWAYS GET SPECIAL&#13;
RATES&#13;
&#13;
GRADUATI NG C LASS O F 1902.&#13;
&#13;
PHOTOS&#13;
&#13;
Instruction is imparted by lectures, recitations, Clinic and Practical Laboratory&#13;
Work in Anatomy and Bacteriology with bedside instruction in Surgery, Medicine,&#13;
Obstetrics and Gynaecology. Weekly Clinics at St. Joseph's and Samaritan hospitals.&#13;
FEES, Matriculation paid at once $5.00; Fees for Regular Session, $48.00;&#13;
Hospital Fee $5.00.&#13;
&#13;
ARE A THING OF BEAUTY WHEN TAKEN&#13;
AT THE&#13;
&#13;
STUDIO GRAND&#13;
&#13;
Women adm itted on same conditions as men, for furthe r information and catalogue ci rcular, apply to&#13;
&#13;
DR. W. JEPSON, Secretary&#13;
&#13;
Sioux City, Iow a&#13;
&#13;
KIMBALL PIANOS&#13;
&#13;
Union Printing Co.&#13;
&#13;
AND ORGANS.&#13;
&#13;
- - - - - - DUBUQUE, I O W A . - - - - - -&#13;
&#13;
Appeal to Artists.&#13;
&#13;
49 Years in Public View.&#13;
MAKE A SPECIALTY OF&#13;
Pre-eminent Now&#13;
Builded on Honor&#13;
Sold on Merit&#13;
&#13;
Fine Printing&#13;
&#13;
A. B. WHITE,&#13;
1105 Fourth Street,&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
Down on the Farm.&#13;
&#13;
Haskin's Grocery&#13;
J.&#13;
&#13;
L.&#13;
&#13;
HASKINS, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
Right Goods&#13;
Right Prices&#13;
Right Treatment&#13;
&#13;
The Bumble Bee of l 903 was printed by us.&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
&#13;
,.&#13;
&#13;
158-164 Fifth St.&#13;
Phone 491 L-3.&#13;
&#13;
Lakeport Ave. .&#13;
&#13;
ANNUALS&#13;
&#13;
A SPECIALTY.&#13;
&#13;
Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
&#13;
S IO U X&#13;
&#13;
C I TY I O WA&#13;
&#13;
=======HOTELS=======&#13;
W. A. KENT, Proprietor.&#13;
&#13;
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE PRINTERY&#13;
R. D. ACHESON, Proprietor&#13;
&#13;
The Printer that Prints&#13;
THE ATTRACTIVE KIND OF PRINTING&#13;
&#13;
The GARRETSON&#13;
&#13;
The MONDAMIN&#13;
&#13;
Rates $2.50 and Upward&#13;
&#13;
Rates $2.00 and Upward&#13;
&#13;
STREET OARS PASS BOTH HOTELS FOR ALL PARTS OF CITY&#13;
&#13;
First-class in Every Respect.&#13;
Electric Lights and Elevators.&#13;
Turkish Baths.&#13;
&#13;
The Favorite Commercial House in&#13;
the Center of the Business District.&#13;
Electric Lights and Elevator.&#13;
R. B. KENT, Manager.&#13;
&#13;
Neat Booklets, Leaflets, Programs,&#13;
Wedding Stationery Office Stationery&#13;
Fancy Stationery, Calling Cards&#13;
Posters Blanks Etc.&#13;
&#13;
WHEN JEWELRY COMES FROM&#13;
&#13;
ALF. WISSING'S&#13;
YOU KNOW THE QUALITY&#13;
AND PRICE IS RIGHT.&#13;
&#13;
Go to&#13;
&#13;
Sellon&#13;
The Boston Candy&#13;
and Ice Cream Store&#13;
(E s tablish ed 189 1)&#13;
&#13;
That's our strongest argument. Next time you need&#13;
a wedding present, come to&#13;
us first, then look around.&#13;
We know you'll come back.&#13;
&#13;
625&#13;
&#13;
Fourth Street&#13;
&#13;
For Your Ice Cream.&#13;
(All Flavors )&#13;
&#13;
FRUIT SHERBETS, FROZEN&#13;
PUDDINGS AND ICES OF ALL&#13;
KINDS&#13;
&#13;
cover by Frederic Remington, mailed for 3 stamps.&#13;
&#13;
MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Ct.&#13;
&#13;
Fancy Paper Cups and Mats of All Kinds.&#13;
&#13;
Perfect&#13;
Pictures&#13;
&#13;
JAS. F. TOY, President.&#13;
A . GRONINGER, V ice President.&#13;
A. S. GARRETSON, Vice President.&#13;
C. N . LUKES, Cashier.&#13;
J. FRED TOY, Assistant Cashier.&#13;
&#13;
ARE MADE&#13;
AT THE&#13;
&#13;
The FirstNational Bank,&#13;
&#13;
Genelli· Studio&#13;
&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
CAPITAL PAID-UP&#13;
SURPLUS FUND&#13;
DEPOSITS&#13;
&#13;
Students are always&#13;
pleased and satisfied&#13;
with their pictures.&#13;
&#13;
670 Fourth Street,&#13;
SIOUX CITY, IOWA.&#13;
&#13;
A&#13;
&#13;
GeneralBanking Business Done.&#13;
&#13;
$ 200,000&#13;
35,000&#13;
l,800,000&#13;
&#13;
Interest Paid on time Deposits.&#13;
&#13;
Epworth Seminary,&#13;
==============EPWORTH, IOWA==============&#13;
Sixteen Miles West of Dubuque on the Illinois Central and Chicago Great Western.&#13;
&#13;
Waltermire's Studio&#13;
PHONE l 12 L-4 .&#13;
&#13;
Field&#13;
Work&#13;
Interior&#13;
Views&#13;
AND&#13;
&#13;
LEWIS HALL.&#13;
Epworth Seminary furnishes a thorough preparation for entering college as a Sophomore; or a splendid equipment&#13;
for active and useful life for those who cannot go to college. The moral and Christian influences are very strong; yet&#13;
persons of various religious faiths are free from proselyting efforts. The Seminary stands for the best manhood and&#13;
womanhood among its pupils. Twelve departments of Work in the following five courses: Academic, Nor-&#13;
&#13;
A SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
mal, Commercial, Music, Art,&#13;
Address&#13;
&#13;
H. R, De Bra, A, M., B, D., Principal , Epworth, Iowa, for Catalogue or Information.&#13;
&#13;
703 DOUGLAS STREET&#13;
&#13;
Waltermire's Studio&#13;
Park Place Hall- Sce nes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
THE DES MOINES&#13;
&#13;
Insurance&#13;
&#13;
Fire&#13;
&#13;
Company&#13;
&#13;
OF DES MOINES, IOWA&#13;
&#13;
DO YOU KNOW that this Company has the distinction of having paid a&#13;
larger sum of money than any other Insurance Company of this state in&#13;
one Tornado, viz the Pomeroy Storm,&#13;
&#13;
Amount Paid $42,000.00&#13;
Scenes at Morningside.&#13;
&#13;
NOLEN &amp; FRASER&#13;
&#13;
LAUNDRY&#13;
411 Jackson St.&#13;
Phone 333.&#13;
&#13;
THE OLDFST LAUNDRY&#13;
DOING WORK FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS.&#13;
GIVE&#13;
THEM A TRIAL AND YOU&#13;
WILL BE PLEASED.&#13;
&#13;
ESTA BLIS H E D 189 3 .&#13;
&#13;
T o lerton , Wm . Mikhrist, C. C.&#13;
thelander, W. P. Manley, Chas. E. Faeth,&#13;
T. A . Thompson, T. A. Black.&#13;
GEO. SINCLAIR, Cash ie r.&#13;
&#13;
DIRECTORS-0. 0 .&#13;
&#13;
Woodbury County&#13;
Savings Bank&#13;
&#13;
DO YOU KNOW that this Company paid out more money for losses in Iowa&#13;
during&#13;
&#13;
1901&#13;
&#13;
than any other Fire and Tornado Insurance Company doing&#13;
&#13;
business in the state of Iowa,&#13;
&#13;
Amount Paid $178,246.12&#13;
&#13;
405-407 Nebraska St.&#13;
&#13;
A Bank of Deposits for Savings.&#13;
&#13;
HARDING &amp; HAWKINS,&#13;
&#13;
We issue Savings Pass Books to depositors&#13;
of $1.00 and upwards, and pay 4% interest&#13;
the reon which is add ed twice a year. We accept accounts subject to check and do a general&#13;
banking business. Attention is called to our&#13;
Board of Directors, whose names are a guarantee of safe and conservative management. A&#13;
private box in our la rge Safe Deposit Vau lt&#13;
affords a secure place in which to place your&#13;
valuable papers, je welry, etc.&#13;
&#13;
Agents at College.&#13;
&#13;
WE INVITE INSPECTION.&#13;
&#13;
WE ARE WRITING BUSI NESS TODAY, IF YOU NEED INSURANCE&#13;
SEE ONE OF OUR REPRESENTATIVES, THEY&#13;
ARE IN EVERY TOWN.&#13;
&#13;
C. H. AINLEY, President&#13;
&#13;
TO SAVE TIME,&#13;
IS TO LENGTHEN LIFE .&#13;
&#13;
. . the ..&#13;
&#13;
NEW BLIGKENSDERFER TYPEWRITER&#13;
NO. 7&#13;
&#13;
Will H. Beck,&#13;
The Sioux City&#13;
&#13;
Jeweler&#13;
The Newest you can find at Beck 's.&#13;
The Best you can find at Beck's.&#13;
Twenty-five years of active business&#13;
experience enables me to know the&#13;
requirements of the people.&#13;
For&#13;
whatever you need see me and I will&#13;
please you,&#13;
&#13;
WILL H. BECK,&#13;
For Twenty five Years&#13;
Iowa's Leading Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
Mondamin Hotel Corner,&#13;
&#13;
DOES BOTH&#13;
&#13;
JOHN F . CRAMER , PRESIDENT .&#13;
F. K. TRACY , MANAGER .&#13;
GEO . A . STRONG , SEC ' Y AND TREAS .&#13;
&#13;
CHICA60 NEWSPAPER&#13;
...UNION...&#13;
Sioux City Newspaper Union Branch.&#13;
&#13;
Ready Print Publishers&#13;
&#13;
With it, as much work can be accomplished in a day, as can be done on&#13;
any typewriter on the market, costing double the money .&#13;
The machine is durable, efficient and portable, and so simple in construction and action , that a child can work it, and yet equal to the demands of the&#13;
large business establishment.&#13;
Clergymen, professional men, operators, and newspaper men use them&#13;
largely, while a contract just made with one of the largest lumber concerns in&#13;
the north west for 15 machines shows how they strike th e business world.&#13;
&#13;
And Dealers in&#13;
&#13;
Printer's Supplies,&#13;
Electrotyping,&#13;
Stereotyping,&#13;
and Paper.&#13;
W, H. ROGERS, Resident Manager.&#13;
411 Douglas St., Sioux City, Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Two Styles No. 5, $35.00. No. 7, $50.00&#13;
&#13;
Harger &amp; Blish,&#13;
6eneral Agents for Iowa and Nebraska.&#13;
&#13;
Dubuque,&#13;
&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
&#13;
Curtis Sash and Door&#13;
&#13;
Corn Belt&#13;
Baking Powder&#13;
&#13;
=====GO.,=====&#13;
Special _&#13;
Attention given to Architects' Plans.&#13;
Mill&#13;
Work.&#13;
&#13;
Sash, Doors,&#13;
BLINDS, MOULDINGS&#13;
MANTELS, GRATES, SHOW CASES,&#13;
OFFICE, STORE and BANK FIXTURES,&#13;
PARQUETRY FLOORI NG, WOOD GRILLS,&#13;
MIRRORS AND FANCY GLASS.&#13;
&#13;
Factory and Warehouse,&#13;
West Fourth and Perry Sts .•&#13;
&#13;
is Guaranteed to Give&#13;
Satisfaction.&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 106.&#13;
SIOUX CITY,&#13;
&#13;
IOWA&#13;
&#13;
The Truth, The Whole Truth and Nothing But the Truth&#13;
UNCONDITIONALLY THE BEST TYPEWRITER IS&#13;
&#13;
THE CHICAGO&#13;
&#13;
$35.00&#13;
&#13;
No typewriter is worth $100. We have made a&#13;
mechanically excelling machine and sell it for $35.00.&#13;
We claim that it is the Superior of any typewriter&#13;
made. This is a broad but carefully weighed statement and is the Truth.&#13;
Awarded gold medal at the Paris Exposition,&#13;
1900, in open competition with all other makes of&#13;
typewriters.&#13;
Our descriptive matter tells an interesting story,&#13;
Send for it and learn something about a high-grade&#13;
typewriter sold at an honest price.&#13;
&#13;
CHICAGO WRITING MACHINE COMPANY&#13;
94-96 Wendell Street, Chicago, U.S. A.&#13;
176&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Morningside's Historic Photographs</text>
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              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>This collection features a vast array of photographs of Morningside College, its students, faculty and staff, and various events through the College's long history. Make sure to sort by subjects or tags to narrow the photographs to a specific time period, event, organization or person.</text>
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              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                  <text>Hickman-Johnson-Furrow Library</text>
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              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>Hickman-Johnson-Furrow Library</text>
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              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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                  <text>History</text>
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              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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                  <text>Hickman-Johnson-Furrow Library</text>
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              <name>Date Available</name>
              <description>Date (often a range) that the resource became or will become available.</description>
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                  <text>2016-06-29</text>
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              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                  <text>Photograph</text>
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              <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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      <name>Still Image</name>
      <description>A static visual representation. Examples include paintings, drawings, graphic designs, plans and maps. Recommended best practice is to assign the type Text to images of textual materials.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>Photo of the Students' Army Training Corps Mess Hall Interior</text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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                <text>Universities and Colleges</text>
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                <text>World War One</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="8927">
                <text>Interior photo of the mess hall built for the Students' Army Training Corps in 1918. The SATC students were housed and fed in 4 buildings built in late 1918. Morningside College was one of 400 institutions chosen by the War Department to host an SATC unit. The unit was demobilized by the federal government in December of 1918.</text>
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            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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                <text>Morningside College Bulletin, November 1918</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>Morningside College</text>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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                <text>Circa 1918</text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <text>Photograph</text>
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                <text>5.5 inches x 3.5 inches</text>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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                <text>Image</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="89">
            <name>Mediator</name>
            <description>An entity that mediates access to the resource and for whom the resource is intended or useful. In an educational context, a mediator might be a parent, teacher, teaching assistant, or care-giver.</description>
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                <text>Bamrick, Dane; Cataloguer</text>
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        <name>Students' Army Training Corps</name>
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      <tag tagId="51">
        <name>World War 1</name>
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